* 
The Weather. U. 6. Weather Bureau Porecast 
Partly cloudy and cooler. 
- (etalls Page > 
  4 
HE. PON’ 
  LAC. PRE 
    Ss 
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116th YEAR” ’ * zkkKe*K ye PONTIAC, ‘MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 +26 PAGES » ‘ 
  
  ille 
  as Pass enger Tralee 
  
+   
What Do YOU Do in Hot Weather? 
+ NOT AN ICEBERG IN SIGHT — If you think 
the days aré hot, consider the poor fellow who 
This fellow in a 
Rome Zoo apparently came out looking for a wears his furs all summer. 
EAR-WASHING — Well, the ends of the melon section do not 
quite reach the ears this time but it’s a sure bet that a goodly 
portion of the lad’s face will be well massaged with the sticky 
juice. A good beauty treatment, perhaps.       
v 
cool breeze, or 
a hot, scorching 
  
Alert Special 
Saves Life of Woman, 21 
One of Oakland County’s special lake deputies 
reached a drowning woman 
Sunday afternoon on Lakeville Lake in Addison Town- 
ship.* 
ship, grabbed the arm of Melvin Pierce, of 376 Rochester Rd., Oakland Town- Lake Deputy 
just in time to save her life 
Anita Simon, 21, of 13890   
Maine St., Detroit as she+ 
sank beneath the surface, 
he reported. 
The near drowning took place 
near the middle of the south chan- 
nel of the lake. Pierce said she 
me Was wearing 
} street clothes and 
: taken a dare that 
she couldn't swim 
         
   woman 
wearing 
lacks anda 
sweater of some 
knitted material,”’ 
he said. “She en- 
PIERCE tered the water 
at Bill’s Park and made it across 
the channel] to a dock.” 
“On her way back the mater- 
ial in her clothing began to 
shrink and she had trouble mov- 
ing her arms or legs,’’ he ex- 
plained. 
Pierce was standing on. the shore 
at the park when he heard her 
scream and saw her splashing wild- 
ly in the water. 
He jumped into his-patrol boat 
and reached the floundering woman 
‘just as she went under for the 
fourth time,” he said, 
She was taken to Avon Center 
Hospital and treated for shock and 
exhaustion: 
  
- Better Get In Step 
. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI. — A 
thief who stole six sample cases 
containing 250 assorted shoes all 
for the’ left foot may still make 
Gt cay be mllews (he tip of the man who lost them 
Jem Game, Woodlan Hills, 
gg digest omg aver 
States is another salesman for 
en lls mn ata ge a 
daar cclammeuatl These Fish Got Away! 
SMETHWICK, England (UPI) 
A skindiver yesterday solved the 
mystery of why none of the 7,000 
the angling club’s pool here five 
years ago hak’ never been caught. 
All the fish had escaped through 
an outlet pipe at the bottom, 
Will He Know How? 
LONDON (UPI)—Sept, 27 will 
be a red letter day for porter 
Bill Lamb at the Edwalton Sta- 
tion. On that day the first train 
in 10 years will stop there. The   icebergs which he left behind. But he found only 
carp and gudgeon dumped into | 
| gingerly wading-in process. When perhaps recalling the refreshing 
sun. 
a 
x *&* *® 
They Dunk 
in State's 
Cold Seas ‘By PHYLLIS BATTELLE 
SAULT STE. MARIE — Long 
before it was recognized that pur- 
ple people could be eaten, the state 
of Michigan realjzed. that purple 
psychoanalyzed. 
almost everybody .is purple from 
tim@to time — except, of course, 
immediately after lunch, when. to 
plunge in a lake is as sure death 
as to plunge in a knife. 
* * x... 
The purple people psychologist 
in these parts is known informally 
as ‘Frozen Fanny Jones,” because 
of her unorthodox manner of enter- 
ing the water: in upside-down jack- 
knife style. She always said that 
whales didn't mind the cold be- 
cause of excess fat, and she knew 
which part of her could best afford 
the first shock. 
“FF” claims to have spent a 
lifetime studying- 
Visiting tourists who come to the 
northern lakes for vacations, and 
has a file of more than 200 
procedures for immersing one- 
self in an uncomfortably cold 
swimming hole. 
“Don’t rightly know why they 
do it at all,” Fanny says, chuck- 
ling raucously, ‘‘all the hollerin’ 
it causes. But I guess it’s a ques- 
tion of once you got a foot in, 
you. can’t tell the kids you're 
scared.” 
(One of her pet theories is that 
the only reason men. swim in cold 
water after the age of 40 is to 
defend their honor or save a drown- 
ing blonde.) 
FIVE TOP TYPES 
There is scarcely space here to 
list some 195 of the ‘procedures 
of potential purple people,” but 
Fanny describes the five top types: 
1 — “The Toe-Firsters.” These 
include most men of middle age, 
and all women with unnaturally 
wavy hair. It begins with a 
the ice waterline is at mid-calf, 
the Toe-Firster embraces him- 
self with both arms, remarks 
“Brrrrr,” and continues slowly 
onward, looking back toward 
shore at frequent intervals to 
  train is a special for a football 
match.           receive the’ assurance of the ‘lease, authorities here were 
Herman. 
State Police officials issued 
statements foday denying 
State Police officials had asked 
old business agent for Flint 
into St. 
his body. State Officials 
Deny Dissension 
in Torch Probe Refute Rumor of Rift 
Over Kierdorf Case : 
By PETE LOCHBILER 
As state officials denied 
reports that Michigan State 
Police are “dissatisfied” 
with Attorney General Paul 
Adam’s handling of the 
Frank Kierdorf torch death 
to delve again into the dis- 
appearance of his once 
Both Adams and high 
that a rift has developed in 
the investigation of the 
bungled arson of a Flint 
dry cleaning shop, where 
Frank accidently received 
his fatal burns. 
It has been reported that some 
Adams to step out of the case, 
which he entered last Wednesday, 
two days after Kierdorf, 56-year- 
Teamsters Local 332, staggered 
Joseph Mercy Hospital 
with burns over 85 per cent - 
One official (unidentified) was 
quoted as saying that Adams’ 
direction of the case has “cre- 
“Utterly ridiculous,” was Adams’ 
reaction as he indicated his in- 
tention to stay in the case today. | 
x * * 
“Adams has denied charges of 
“politics,” saying that Gov. Wil- 
liams ordered him into the case 
and consequéntly, he has had to 
cancel political appearances, 
“IT am in this case solely for the 
purpose of bringing about a-speedy 
solution of the crime and convic- 
tion of the person or persons who 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
It ll Be Cool Tonight, 
Warm, Wet Tuesday 
It will be partly cloudy and 
somewhat cooler in the Pontiac 
area tonight, The U.S. Weather 
Bureau reports. The low tonight 
will be 62-66 degrees. 
* x * 
Tomorrow's forecast is partly 
cloudy and ‘a little warmer with 
scattered thundershowers by after- 
hoon or night with a high of 84-86. 
Tomorrow night will be partly 
cloudy with scattered thunder- 
showers and a low of 66-70. The 
outlook for Wednesday js most- 
ly fair with normal seasonal 
temperatures. 
The weather bureau’s five day 
forecast predicts temperatures will 
average. around three degrees 
above the normal high of 82 and. 
norma] low of 62. 
* * * 
It will turn cooler Thursday and 
warmer again Friday and Satur- 
day. Scattered thundershowers are 
expected Friday and Saturday. 
The lowest recorded temperature 
in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 
a.m, was 68. The reading at 1   
  (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) With Atty. Gen. Adams} 
COSTLY . BREAK — W. 
Fifth Avenue’ in New York, 
brooches, each worth $9,000 = display behind F. Stanton, ‘a vice _ 
president of the famed Tiffany jewelry store on Window Was Shatterproof 
  removes two AP Wirephoio 
: shattered shatterproof window Sunday. Burglars, 
‘in ‘the quiet of, Sunday's Fifth Avenue dawn, 
sledge-hammered two display windows and made 
off with jems valued at $171,500. 
  
Thieves Get 
$171,500 in 
Tiffany Job 
NEW YORK (UPI) — A team 
of daredevil thieves smashed open 
two display windows at swank Tif- 
fany’s on Fifth Avenue and lifted 
out jewels valued at $171,500 yes- 
terday in one of the city’s most 
brazen daylight burglaries. 
A foot patrolman assigned to the 
area had just been withdrawn to 
help fei Russian Foreign Minis- 
ter Andre Gromyko. 
ff 
_ Coupling deftness with svartlinn ‘Not Proven, "WASHINGTON (UPI) 
This refers to a verdict, gators reported last night their investigation failed to 
turn up evidence that Sherman Adams tried to influence 
a Pentagon board in any Army textile contract case. 
Chairman F. Edward Hebert (D-La) of the sub- 
committee which investigated the case described the 
group’s report: as a “Scotch verdict.” Adams Pentagon Influence 
Say Probers — House military investi- 
  passengers, 
  \Missed Signal 
Brings Head-On 
Wreck: 25 Hurt Locomotives Telescope; 
New York Smashup 
Claims 3 Crewmen 
+ STERLINGTON, NY. 
-|—Five persons were. killed 
and at least 25 injured to- 
day when two Erie Railroad 
passenger trains crashed 
head-on as the result of a 
missed signal. 
Two of the victims were 
a man and 
woman. Their bodies were 
cut from the wreckage of 
the first car on a four-coach 
Mitchell, a brakeman; and Martin 
  
  
  possible under Scotch crim- 
inal law, of “not proven,” instead of “not guilty.” It also |F . 
  
diamond‘ ang platinum ring 
“wed at $16,000. Ignored by 
Amazingly, there were no known 
witnesses to the theft from the 
jewelry store, situated at the south- 
east corner of Fifth Aveneu and 
Sith Street in the heart of Man- 
ping area. 
Nor was either of two watch- 
men inside the 121-year-old shop | 
which eaters to some of the 
world’s wealthiest women aware 
of the fantastic burglary coup. 
The thieves—police believe there 
were at least three, and possibly 
four — struck btween 5:45 a.m., 
when the policeman who normally 
patrols the area was removed, and 
6:15 a.m., when a second officer 
discovered the two holes inthe 
windows on the Fifth Avenue side 
of the store. 
ex k 
Although Tiffany’s is equipped 
with an.elaborate alarm system, 
the windows are. not protected 
since they wefe considered impene- 
trable. A metal paneling around); 
the windows, which is included in 
the system, was not disturbed. © 
Heavy oak paneling and dra- 
peries back of the windows were 
w sufficient to muffle any 
sound that the pounding of the 
This is believed to account for 
the fact that the two guards inside 
the building said they heard no 
  Pp. m. was 81. noise, hattan’s most fashionable shop-) 
}gain in good 
sledgehammers might have made.! Ford, GM Try Again 
‘lon Contract Talks 
DETROIT (UPI)—Negotiators at 
Ford Motor Co. and General Mo- 
|tors Corp. today began “last 
chance” talks with the United Auto 
Workers Union in an effort to reach 
a contract agreement without a 
strike. 
Chrusler Corp. will resume simi- 
lar talks with the Union tomorrow. 
Chrysler talks were recessed to- 
day to allow the Union negotiating 
committee to caucus, a usual Mon- 
7 ee 
wee toile weve rasta aie he 
weekend to give the union’s execu- 
tive board time to decide-whether 
uae. companies, 
UAW President Walter P.. Reu- 
ther said the board, top governing |e 
body of the Union, voted to defer 
action on requests by the Union's 
Chrysler, Ford and General Mo- 
tors national councils for a strike 
action because the “‘time is not 
ripe.” 
k *& * 
“We decided to give the com- 
panies one more chance to bar- 
ith before calling a 
strike,” r said. “The time 
models. — 
  
McNamara Says. Okay 
WASHINGTON (® — Sen. Pat- 
rick McNamara says that if 
members of the Teamsters Union 
want James R, Hoffa as their 
president, he (McNamara) ap- 
proves,   is not ripe fnow because the in-| Bere, 
dustry & 20 committed to its 1959] _ is defined as “‘an jnconclu- 
pronouncement.” 
Hebert told reporters there was 
“no doubt” that Adams, by for- 
Serene inquiries to the Defense 
in prodding 
*:. & .*& 
But Hebert and nine other sub- 
committee members concluded 
that “there was no evidence pre- 
sented to the subcommittee which 
his prestige wag used to get fa- 
vored treatment for others. 
Adams has denied bringing any 
improper pressure to bear, either 
in this case or another involving 
textile manufacturer Bernard Gold- 
ortade sila devsivon'o Wad Gee 
II contract to Raylaine Worsteds, 
(Continued on Page.2,Col. 1) 
  
Colonel Gets Answer 
From Office Honeypot * 
DAYTON, Ohio «® — At Wright- 
Patterson Air Force Base near 
they swear this happened. 
A newly assigned colonel 
walked into hig office and asked 
the cute young stenographer: 
‘| “What is the normal complement 
of this office?” 
“Why, colone},” exclaimed the 
‘girl, only a few months out of 
Jackson, Miss., “I reckon the 
most normal is: ‘Howdy, honey- 
pot, you’re sure lookin’ luscious 
thig mornin’.”     
Committee Asks Regulations for Gift Collecting   
WASHINGTON» (AP)—A House 
committee wants laws to protect 
the public from what it termed 
unscrupulous professional fund 
raisers who have collected dona- 
tions in the name of some veter- 
ans groups. 
In a report charging that the 
public has been fleeced. in-some 
fund Grives, the House Veterans 
Committee said: — 
dn is doubtful that the. Amer- 
ican public would be as liberal 
in support of some fund-raising 
programs of veterans’ organiza- 
tions if they knew that such a 
| small ‘percentage of . the con—. 
tributions were used fr chari- 
table purposes.” 
  that Congress pass legislation to: 1, Require that at least 50 per 
cent of gross income from uner- 
dered merchandise sent through 
the mails be spent for the veter- 
ans in whose names it is solicited. 
2. Prohibit those who use the 
mails for charity drives from sell- 
ing mailing lists of people who 
contributed. 
.3, Require fuller disclosure of 
organizations chartered by Con- 
gress: or organizations mailing un- 
ordered items such as ball point)** 
pens with the aim of collecting 
many in the name of veterans. 
x -® * 
The. committee report” “summed 4 
up findings of hearings last spring 
on eight veterans’ organizations— 
  gress and-four not chartered, 
Of these, the committee particu- four of them chartered by Con-|- 
The committee codsianimaaeal ig . larly criticized two—the Disabled 
American Veterans, a chartered 
group, ‘and the now defunct Na- 
tional Assn, of Veterans Employ- 
ment Councils, which was ut- 
chartered. 
The report said the DAV, 
In Today’s Press 
    TV & Radio Programs . 
  Women’s Pages eeeoeree ‘eas 
nl 
    _|. This, the _committee said, which gets most of its money 
from selling car key identifica- 
tion tags, spent $312,000 of its 
funds collected for veterans on 
a speculative television program 
that flopped. 
And the report said the DAV 
“|spent more than $50,000 from 1950 
to 1957 for gifts, most of which it 
said were bought by DAV Nation-}- 
al Adjutant Vivian D. Corbly from 
“ja supply. company in. which he 
owned stock 
“ap-| 
6 |pears to be a clear conflict of in- 
terest.” 
af , * * & 
There were reports an attempt 
will be made to unseat Corbly ' 
the DAV national convention wily 
  ing today in Louisville, Ky, William N, Morton of Cincinnati, 
who said he spoke for Cincinnati's 
convention -delegation, said his 
group will spearhead the ouster 
move, 
Morton said the DAV “is being 
wrongfully harmed-and misjudged 
by the controlled acts of the na- 
tional adjutant.” + 
Of NAVEC, the committee re- 
port said ‘the group’s executive 
director, Harold A. Keats, rent- 
ed buildings he owned to the er- 
ganization; that he got money 
| through-expenses_and_per diem _ 
payments; and that other 
NAVEC board members “also | 
enjoyed extremely liberal ex- 
pense accounts,’” 
Of the other chartered groups, 
the committee said: 
}   House Group Hints Misuse of Donations to Veterans It found only occasional fund- 
raising abuses by local American 
Legion posts and that this was. a 
problem. for the Legion itself. 
The Veterans of Foreign Wars 
buddy poppy campaign was basi- 
cally locally conducted. 
* * *& 
The American Veterans of 
World War II has insufficient na- 
tional control over fund raising by 
state departments, but that the 
fund raising was deemed limited. 
Of .the other. nonchartered 
seeking . donations publicly now. 
The committee told the Military 
  sive decision or ambiguous)” 5, 
Blinded--Veterans—Assn._and_ the) 
iJewish War Veterans were not!   
  
Kil Dealer Square Lake-Telegraph — 
_ Smashup Injures Two 
in Other Car 
Armstrong died Sunday morn- 
ing at Mt. Carmel Mercy Hos- 
, Detroit, after being trans-. 
ferred there from St. Joseph Mercy 
Hospital. He was 
Oakland one of the drivers, 
Toll 
in 58 
cad   
      
Hospital, 
She is eae 
tion and Ford’s condition is listed 
as fair today, 
of 16204 Dexter Ave., Detroit, 
“£8 2 
      
  
        
          
      
        
      
  *. teglhowers 
* terete 
  * Tie 
cares | _ THE: PONTIAC PRESS. MoxDay, AUGUST 11, 1958 
  oo   
  tate Traffic, Lake 
  ccidents   
Over Lebanon Ike Meets With Dulles 
“en Plans to Offer U.N. 
at Emergency Session aan 
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ® 
pared today for a drive to get the 
U.N, General Assembly's emicr- 
gency session to demand with- 
drawal of U.S. troops from Leha- non and British troops from Jor. ib 
dan. 
* *~* * 
Gromyko was expected to speak 
government ct 
; Siders the question of the with- 
“group holds the bal 
‘fh the Station Assembly. | 
     
            however, ifr at : Z 
I Jue 
"The crux of the dispute was a 
two-sentence memo written April 
‘ 1957, by board member Roswell 
M. Austin when Raylaine was seek- 
— another hearing. 
“Because of. intervention of Mr. 
  
Oil Woos Lady Luck 
MADRID — Superstitious Span-. 
-jards pour a little olive oil in a 
» pan- of water to bring good luck to 
      
NEW YORK TRAIN CRASH — Diesel locomotives of two Erie 
. Railroad passenger trains are jammed together after a head-on 
collision killing and injuring a number of persons. The accident occurred near Sterlington, N. Y. (35 miles northwest of New York 
City) when one train missed ordeps to wait for the other to get off 
. its track. 
    0 
AP Wirephote 
  
Plastics Industry Growing Giants New Types Affect Cars, 
Glass, Steel, Textiles, 
Lumber..and Building 
CHICAGO (INS) — The plastics 
industry, that “‘war baby” of 15 
years ago, is a giant today—and 
> Erik R. Neilsen, scientific ad- 
visor at Armour Research Foun- 
dation of the Illinois Institute of 
chemistry 
development or progress. 
And, he added, Plastics now.go 
far beyond chemical fields — to 
giass, cefamic and other indus- 
tries. 
  thought plastics had_ been com- 
  maar tubes, — said. 
* 
also was stepped up during World 
War II and from England came 
the important development of poly- 
ethylene, one of the most common 
plastics in use today, 
Neilsen said the future of the 
plastics industry sees to be un- 
limited today. 
Clothing, tires, car bodies, oute 
and missile parts, oil pipe lines 
and protective coatings all are 
possible uses of plastics today, 
according to Neilsen. . 
The advent of new methods for 
making polymers rapidly is mak- 
ing available a growing family of 
new types of plastics, Neilsen said. 
* * * 
In home applications alone, he 
tics indicate they soon will find 
their way out of the kitchen and 
home constructions. 
A plastic prefabricated house is 
one.of many possible uses for the 
newer plastics, Neilsen said. 
Hot and Humid 
Sticky Outlook   
  The Weather 
Full U. & ‘ 
- 
8. Weather Burean Report 
AND ViCINGTY — Partly! 
'y 
pille warmer with scattered thunder- | 
by afternoon or night, high! 
© 84-86. Variable winds mostly northerly! 
5-10 miles today becoming gentle vari- 
. . ho ge rer night partty| 
cloudy w scatter showers or thun-)| 
Gneitorme, low 66-70. : 
ia Today in Pontiac | 
Lowest temperature preceding 8 a -m 
“at @ a. : Wind velocity calm 
Sun acne “Monday at 7:39 po m 
Sun rises Tuesday at 5:35 a. m 
Moon sets Monday at 4:51 p.m 
Moon rises Tuesday at 2:53 a. m % 
& 
Downtown Tem Temperatures 
BO.0 ocecaces 68 11 a.m. 
7 am... -» 68 12 m 80) 
8 am. ......: 6 1 pm , 81] 
- 9 a.m. Peres) 
“19 §.m. specu { ed 
Sunday in Pontiac 
(as recorded veciciaadalias 
“Highest temperature ... A 
Lowest temperatire ; 
Mean temperature eden 
Weather—Partiy 7 cloudy. 
One Year “Age t fo Ponting 
“70 .. 80.5 t : 5 
temperature ...0........ 
mo Temperature ......... 
- Highest and Lowest T Fomperateres This 
: Date in 86 Vears 
3 in 1044 “60 in 1882 
“weed {Temperature Chart 
Alpena “ € 1 Marquetie 76 
90. 74 92 
S33 New Orleans 91 
New York 28 
“Omaha OF =e 
Pellston 
Phoenix 
Pittsburgh 
4 Fri TERISGAUSEAAE 
    seruszssse$ eae ‘of the Rockies. 
72 
; jnorthern Indiana for Midwest 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
More hot and humid weather 
areas of the | country today. N 
igeneral relief was indicated im- 
\mediately. 
3 * 
A few areas got some relict dur- | 
ing the night 
isteamy weather. Showers also 
brought temporary relief to some 
|Sections. 
Moist air from the Gulf of Mex- 
‘ico covered nearly all areas east! 
* * * 
Showers which fell across wide 
areas yesterday afternoon and, 
evening ended in most places dur- | 
ing the early morning. However. | 
ia belt ef showers and thunder-|Lyndon B. 
-ggistorms ~extended from southern | House Speaker Sam Rayburn (D- 
.%8|Lake Michigan eastward across!Tex) has set a public target date “4S practicing whipping his .22-, 
and|for adjournment of the 85th Con- © aliber pistol from a new holster isouthern Lower Michigan 
into northern 
Ohio and western Pennsylvania. 
  
We're Sorry, Honey 
CHICAGO (UPI) — Ten-year- 
old Paula Watson, Savannah, 
Ga., wrote the Chicago Museum 
of Science and Industry to ask 
whether her allowance of 50 
cents weekly, if saved, would be 
enough to buy the famed Colleen _! 
Moore dollhouse 6n display at, 
the institution. ' Officials regret- | 
fully wrote’ Paula that the doll- 
house, which contains some 2,000 
tiny pieces of furniture and has 
gold and silver inlaid floors. is 
valued at $500,000, °, building, textile, lumber, stetl,~ 
   
     He said Allied skate research | 
added, contemplated uses of plas-}- 
become a more integral part of! (Continued From Page One) 
committed it. At this stage of the 
proceedings, I am here for the 
purpose of coordinating the work 
of the, prosecuting attorneys.” 
Adamns issued his statement 
from his Lansing office where he 
has gone, he said, to study tran- 
< Scripts of testimony taken during 
the first week of investigation. 
In_ Flint, a high State Police 
source > said 2 the reported criti- 
cism: 
“We don’t know a thing about 
it. We are checking to find out 
where the statement came from, 
since it certainly was not au- 
thorized by State Police head- 
quarters, State Police don’t have 
the authority to tell the attorney 
general what to do.” 
In an effort. to discover the 
whereabouts of Herman Kierdorf, 
  Neilsen said many person s| mer business agent for Teamster'| 
Jeint Council 42 in Detroit, Myron 
attempts to cover his face as he w 
Jail today to face questioning at 
  D. Weiss was to be questioned in 
Pontiac today. F 
Kierdorf, an ex-convict like his 
nephew, dropped out of sight Mon- 
authorities what is now believed 
to be a phony story about how he 
received his fatal burns. 
LAST TO SEE HERMAN- | 
Weiss, a meat dealer and stock- 
holder in the National Meat and 
food Foundation Inc., of Detroit, is 
the last known person to have seen 
Herman, — : 
He was identified as the friend 
who drove Herman away from 
the Royal Oak used car lot where 
Herman sold his Teamster-owned 
black Cadillac Monday, 
Picked up over the weekend 
Weiss has been held in protective 
custody along with Donald Keller, 
34, of Detroit, who also was with 
Herman Monday. afternoon. 
    
  Keller told authorities that after 
a 
Pontiac Press, Photo 
BEING QUESTIONED — Detroit meat dealer Myron D. Ww eiss 
as lead from the Oakland County 
the Oakland County Prosecutor’s 
office in the death of burned Teamster Frank Kierdorf of Flint. 
Weiss drove Frank Kierdorf's uncle, Herman, from the used car 
lot where Herman sold his Cadillac and then disappeared. Deny ‘Rift’ in Garciee! Probe 
day after coaxing Frank to tell) 
-Flint blaze and about a dozen 
, explosiuns and fires at Detroit-area   
*sauto wash and cleaning firms this 
‘ Congress Anxious to Quit, 
Rushing All 
WASHINGTON f¢AP) — An ad- 
journment- ‘minded Congress  be- 
igins tackling a heavy backlog of| 
legislation today in an effort to 
close shop by the weekend, 
But it was a big question wheth- 
er the legislators could complete 
'their work without going into next, 
week after yesterday's, 
* * * 
Neither Senate Majority Leader! 
Johnson (D-Tex) nor 
gress. Nevertheless, several! 
other legislators, especially those 
November, have’ expressed strong} 
hope the session can be ended Fri-| 
day or Saturday, 
With the Hotise fihished with | 
most of its major bills, the ad-| 
journmant drive’ focused on the | 
|Senate—which has been.alerted to! 
expect overtime sessions _ this 
jweek in an all-out attempt to w mm 
jhe ‘ih the next few days. 
* bs *   
crease Social 
the 
ipropriation bill and federal aid to, Security benefits, Car i in River, y Drown _ _ Major Bills 
education legislation. All three | 
have passed the House 
A renewed attempt also is ex- 
pected to get House action on 
‘omnibus farm bill. 
  
Man Displays His Pistol, 
‘Shoots Self by Accident 
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—Philip L. 
Hartmeyer, 26, Kent Village, Md., 
when he shot himself in the right | 
thigh, Here visiting a friend, he! 
facing tough re-election fights in, W@S taken to Corhmunity Hospital | and reported: in fair condition. 
He told his friend he had.a sim- 
ilar accident. -recently while. prac- 
ticing the fast draw back in Mary- 
jland., That time he shot — 
in the foot. 
  
- QRIZABA. Mexico (AP)—A car- the sale, Herman and Weiss 
dropped him off and continued on 
together in a green and white Ford 
istation wagon. 
The meat company is located 
near another car lot where Her- 
man attempted to sell the car. 
Herman's son, Jack, of Clawson, 
is associated with the company. 
SUSPECT HELD , 
Held in Flint is Jack Thompson, 
41, also a. business agent for local: 
332, who is suspected: to be Her- 
man’s: and Frank’s accomplice in 
the arson attack, on the cleaners. 
Thursday, Frank Kierdorf main- 
tained that he had been turned into iwas killed Saturday night when 
Up to the time of his death) Jammed Roads 
Claim 16 Lives 4 Drownings Add to 
Toll as Motorists Flock 
to Country, Beaches 
By The Associated Press 
At least 16 persons died in traf- 
fice accidents on jammed Michi- 
gan highways over the weekend, 
including four in one smashup. 
Motorists flocked onto state high- 
ways in near-saturation numbers, 
especially in the metropolitan De- 
troit area, 
The Associated Press fatality 
count ran from 6 p.m, Friday to 
Sunday midnight. 
* * * 
In addition four persons drowned 
at crowded state lakes and beach- 
‘les, bringing the total weekend fa- 
tality count to 20. 
Four persons died in one two- 
car collision on Garfield road 
34 miles west of Crump in Bay 
County Saturday. The victims 
were Joseph Quileltte, 19; Jose 
C. Valadez, 21, and Melvin Stein- 
graber, 20, all of Pinconning, 
‘and Jacob F. Zawislak, 21, of 
Detroit. . 
Lester Bolden, 53, of Detroit, 
was killed Saturday night when|_3 
he: was struck by a car while 
walking north of Britton. 
’ Beatrice Johnson, 40, of Chicage, 
the car in which she was riding 
struck an overpass abutment on 
the John Lodge Expressway in 
Detroit, 
John M. Hastings, 64, of Pellston, 
was injured fatally Saturday night 
in a two-car: collision on U.S. 31 in} 
‘Little Traverse Township, Emmett! 
County. 
John King, 22,‘of Petoskey, was 
‘killed Saturday night when his car 
iwent out of control and struck a 
tree on state road in Redmond: 
Township, Emmett County. : 
Robert G. Hart, 16. of Kalama- 
zoo, was injured fatally Friday 
night when his car went off a 
rural Kalamazoo County’ road and 
istruck a tree. 
* * * 
Sterling Green, 53,-of Farming-! 
ton, was killed Friday when struck 
        a “human torch” by two gunmen, 
  Flint home, doused him with in- who took him for a ride from ‘his| outside Detroit. 
Agnes L. West, 58, of rural Lan-   — liquid, and ignited it. 
Officials now believe that Kier- 
| dorf, burned when he bungled 
| the arson job, was taken to Pon- 
tiaec by ‘his 
throw authorities off their trail. 
The State Police Crime Labora: faye -confederates to _ sing, was injured fatally Friday, 
inight in a two-car collision at an: 
intersection in Lansing towels; 
lIgham county. 
Kenneth C. Miller, 21, of Jack- 
son, died Saturday when his mo- 
torcyele skidded and overturned 
    tory. was continuing -a series of 
tests on clues believed to substan-! 
tiate this theory, Being tested were | 
a flashlight, a five-gallon Army) 
gasoline can and a pair of glasses, 
all found at-the scene of the $14,000) 
cleaners fire. 
Frank Kierdorf wore glasses, but! 
none were in his possesison when 
he stumbled into the hospital. | 
BURNED SATURDAY 
The torch victim was buried Sat-| 
urday in Flint, with the arrange 
ments for his funeral being made j 
_ by Thompson, described as a close! 
friend of the victim. 
About 49 to 45 friends and | 
curiosity seekers showed up amid | 
the heavy floral displays. 
Looking for a motive in the ar-, 
son, Adanr shas said it is not 
known whether the torch victim 
was extorting money from Flint 
cleaners against a .comise the 
Teamsters would not organize their, 
shops, or whether he was working!in Portage Lake near Houghton. for a cleaners’ owner who wanted 
to reduce competition. | month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. on the outskirts of Jackson. jeach. Instead of 72 hours, motor- 
by a car in Farmington Township) ,The Day.in Birmingham LAA BUR S P 
  
BIRMINGHAM — Parking vio- 
lators in Birmingham soon will be 
greeted by a brand new, stream- 
lined ticket, Chief of Police Ralph 
W. Moxley said today. 
The new tickets are designed to 
save hundreds-of hours in the Vio- 
lations Bureau and to make fine 
paying convenient for motorists. 
* * * 
They will list the types viola- 
tions, the fines and penalties for 
ists now will have five days in   
Dunk in Michigan's 
Ice Cold Waters — (Continued From Page One) 
crowd, Fanny says these ago- 
nized souls subconsciously hate 
water and admire their mothers. 
2— “The Stoop-Squat-Squinters.”” 
Following the Toe-Firsters prelim- 
inary technique, the SSS wade forth 
until waves reach the waist. Then 
they stoop down and splash water 
on arms and chests. Then they 
squint, holler “‘here goes nothing,” 
and squat suddenly in a remark- 
able show of bravado. Fanny says 
such people didn’t really come out 
to swim; they just don't like to 
take baths. 
* * * 
“The Tippy-Toe Ladder 
Duckers. " These are women of 
small courage, and men when no 
one is watching. They descend, 
derriere to the horizon, from lad- 
ders attached to docks, shivering 
conspicuously with each new rung 
that is achieved. Their favorite 
remark to people: It’s not bad 
at all when you get used to it. 
Fanny’s analysis: They suffer 
‘quietly. They're masochists of the 
ifirst water. 
“The Daring-Doers.” Al- 
Ways men, they race out of cot- 
tage or bath house. and splash 
in head first, swallowing consid- 
erable amounts of lake on the 
final word of their war cry, 
which ig “Last one in’s a 
(glub).” They should get a hit 
in the head, says Fanny. And 
sometimes they do, too. 
* * * 
5 — “The Nose-Holding Belly 
Flopper.” This is a breed that 
usually comes male and in small 
sizes. It is reckless, daring and 
brash. It never seems to notice 
ithe cold,) but the people in the 
lvicinity of its belly-making con- 
itact with the water do.. Frozen 
"Fanny says this type might well 
be abolished from the earth, and 
added that.all in all she is glad 
to hear that such a thing as purple 
peaple eaters has been discovered. 
  
          John Armstrong, 29, of Detroit, 
|was injured fatally Saturday when; 
jhis car was struck from behind 
Iby another vehicle on a road in’ 
Bloomfield ee | 
* 
Ricky chee) 10. "él Galoma| 
was killed Sunday when he was | 
bicvele was struck by a car on 
ia Berrien County road. 
Oradunn Ramsey, 26, of Broham, 
was kileld Sunday when he was, 
strick by a train at a crossing, 
‘in Woodland Park, 20 miles west} 
of Big Rapids. 
Dean Roy Williamson, 15- 
George Williamson of Byron Cen- 
ter in Kent County, suffered fa- 
tal injuries Sunday when he was 
run over by a car backing from 
a home where his parents were 
visiting. | 
David Danis, 23; of Laurium, | 
drowned Saturday while swimming 
Mrs. Margarite Bart Jr., 22, of 
East Detroit, drowned Sunday 
whole swimming in Bishop Lake   CLEARED IN LIE TEST 
Late yesterday, a lie test and 
“other evidence” cleared Herb Har-} 
rison, owner of a cleaning shop’ 
across the street from the Flint! 
arson site, of any apparent con- 
nection with the fire, Adams said. | 
Officials are still wondering if 
there is a connection between the 
year. 
In efforts to tie the arson as- 
sault te Teamsters Union activi-   ties, more than a dozen Team. | 
ster officials, mostly from Oak- 
land“ County, have been qus- 
| tioned. 
{ 
“indication that the questioning has| ithe Wonderland firm. So far, authorities have given no, 
produced any suspicion of an Oak- 
an Nand County tie-up in the case. 
x * | 
far’ 
were} * 
Meantime, authorities 
away as Hollywood, Fla., 
checking on a possible connection 
between Frank Kierdorf and an- 
other bombing. 
The operator of a Hollywood 
laundry and dry cleaning plant re- as State Park in Livingston County. 
William J. Neilson, 60, of Grand 
|Junction, drowned Saturday when 
his boat overturned on Saddle Lake 
near South Haven. 
Edward L. Hybrowski, 33, of 
River Rouge, drowned Friday night 
while fishing in the Detroit River. 
Wonderland Shop 
Adds Partner, Store 
Fred J. Niedelson, owner of W on 
'derland Shop, a children’s cléthing 
store at 39 S. Telegraph Rd., in 
\the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, | 
has announced a new partner in| 
and expan-. 
sion plans for an additional store| 
jin Birmingham. 
Irving J. Gordon, of 37 Bloom: 
field Terrace, who was manager’ 
of children’s wear department in a, 
local store for the past five years, | 
is the new vice president. | 
_ Gordon will manage the new Bir-| 
|mingham store at 175 W. Maple) 
‘St. which is scheduled to open/   
  
ported that it had been bombed; | Friday, Niedelson, firm president, | 
three times, twice in March and| Will continue to manage the Tel-| 
again on July 28. 
On the night of the second bomb-) | 
i 
| 
jing, it was reported that a light- 
colored Cadillac circled the plant] 
several times and a man of Kier- 
dorf's general description was seen 
on foot in front of the building. 
et & & 
Only three weeks before his 
‘death, Kierdorf had purchased a 
‘home in Hollywood and a light-col- 
ored Cadillac with Michigan license, 
~tplates Was reported seen parkd in| 
  his driveway. Kierdorf had report Huron store, which is in its fourth | 
year. 
Chile Claims Argentina 
Landed Marines on Isle 
’ SANTIAGO, Chite (AP)-Chile has charged Argentina with tand- 
ing Marines on the island of Snipe’ 
in the Cape Horn area and de- 
Chilean and Argentine claims on) 
territories off the tip of gSouth |     Nos ad of picnickers on their way edly been vacationing in Hollywood: America sometimes overlap. Chile| 
The chief bills still awaiting a! home turned over on a curve yes- untik July 16, when he —— hd says it has unquestionable rights 
‘Senate vote are a measure to ih-|terday and’ plunged into the swift: Michigan: 
‘Blanco River, drowning nine per- 
dren, 
‘> vestigation, The -laundry owner | saturday! 
3.518,000,000 foreign aid ap- sons, The dead included five chil-,asked the FBI to join in the in-|Chile’s _maintaining 
lon the barren island, 
~ lover Snipe, but the protest note 
indicated that Argentina objects to; 
a jighthouse jrive in time. 
‘Sutton, of Port Jervis, He was ta- 
stroying a lighthouse there. _ = 5 Killed, 25 Injured 
‘aS Trains Collide 
(Continued From Page One) 
man at Erie railroad headquarters 
in Hoboken, resulted because a 
freight train was standing on one 
of the two tracks near the Ster- 
lington freight station, 
The combination baggage-pas- 
senger train, No. 53, boung from 
Hoboken to Port Jervis, N. Y., 
was routed onto the other track, 
and instructions were sent to hold 
the commuter train, No, 50, trav- 
eling in the opposite direction, at 
Suffern. 
The order apparently did = ar- 
Among the seriously injured was 
the conductor of No, 53, George 
ken immediately to thé operating 
room on arrival at the Suffern 
Hospital. 
  
Convention Men Meet 
‘" COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Rep- 
resentatives from more than 50 
convention bureaus—old hands at 
sending other people to conven- 
tions—are —here for a four-day 
meeting of the International Assn. New Streamlined Tickets. 
ito Greet Parking: Violators 
ilick te yak ine fine Wine pee 
alty, or to request a court date, 
The Bureau no longer will have & 
and owner of each violator had to 
be on the ticket. — 
A detachable stub, which will 
serve as @ receipt on ermes. 
further will reduce clerical work 
* * * 
Approval for the rfew ticket was 
given last week by the City Com- 
mission. Prirfters now are making 
‘up the new tickets, Moxley said. 
They probably will be decorating 
— within the next two 
wee 
Teinhealiion eiker city cpeusntenianers 
have scheduled’a public hearing 
tonight-on a‘ special assessment 
district for paving Graefield road 
reg to the Graefield subdivision 
e. 
A hearing on the necessity of 
has been placed on the agenda. 
In other business, the commis- 
sioners will discuss a petition from 
56 residents of the area requesting 
a sidealk on the east side of Hen- 
rietta street between Brown and 
Townsend streets. This one-block 
area had not been included in the 
1958 sidewalk paving program. 
Wednesday is the deadline for 
making reservations for the Huron 
River canoe trip Aug. 17, being 
Birmingham   
sponsored by the 
YMCA Youle. Adults group. 
They may be made at the “Y" 
office, according to Marion Can- 
non, secretary of the group. 
Mrs. William Van 
Service for Mrs. William (Ade- 
laide) Van Every, 76, of 3803 Doro- 
mingham resident, will be held at 
1 p.m. Wednesday at the Manley 
Bailey Funeral Home with burial 
- pres and Park Cemetery, Royal 
Mrs. Van Every died Saturday 
at’ St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. 
Surviving are her husband; two 
daughters, Mrs, Richard Hart of 
Waterford and Mrs. William Stapp 
of Clairmont, Calif, and a son, 
William R. of St. Petersburg, Fla. 
Two sisters, Mrs. Edwin Colby of 
Birmingham and Mrs.-S. L. Mc- 
Call of Milford; two brothers, 
James B. and Russell H, Fisher, 
both Birmingham; and six grand- 
children also survive. 
  
Townsend Tells 
Romance Story; 
*\Margaret Hurt — 
LONDON (UPI) — A.London 
newspaper said today group Cap- 
tain Peter Townsend has lost 
the friendship of Princess Mar- 
garet because he helped prepare 
‘| a forthcoming book about their 
former romance, 
“The People’ said Townsend 
met Princess Margaret at Clar- 
ence House 10 weeks ago and 
showed her extracts from the 
book in order to reassure her 
that it was “in the best possible 
taste."’ 
* x . 
The Princess was not reas- 
sured, the paper said, and de- 
marided that the book be with- 
drawn from publication, When 
this was not done, Margaret de- 
cided to break off the friend- 
ship that replaced their head- 
line romance of several years 
ago, ‘‘The People’”’ reported. 
ot * * 
The paper said the book, en- 
titled ‘“‘The Story of Peter Town- 
send,” will give an inside ac- 
count of that romance, includ- 
ing details of intimate conver- 
sations between the Princess and 
the suitor she renounced, 
* * * 
The report said the book was 
written by journalist Norman 
Barrymaine, a friend of Town- 
send’s, and that Townsend him- 
self read and corrected the man-   of Convention Bureaus. uscript. :   the Brookside alley paving also 
thy Lane, Waterford, a former Bir- 
  
All Quality 
| Offering 
Our Lower Overhead 
+ 
    “Our 23rd Yeat at This Same Location” 
144 OAKLAND AVE. 
Closed Wednesday Afternoons Open Friday Evenings Miller’s Annual Summer 
Clearance Sale 
@ Living Rooms. 
@ Dining Rooms 
Greatest Savings in Our History 
"You always get the most for your money at Miller’s’ 
EASY TERMS, TOO! ® Bedrooms 
Furnishings 
You the 
Makes The Difference. ~ 
COMPANY 
   : 
+   
        ms 
  
- its beer. The match company had ‘Dingésur: in. 
at Ultramodern Museum | 
DINOSAUR NATIONAL MON- 
UMENT, Utah (UPI) —.That bull 
in a China shop. bit is old stuff. 
But a dinosaur ina glass house is 
something else again, and officials 
_ at this national monunient hope 
the public takes to the idea. 
The —s what, is left of    a 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, auausr M1, 1958" 
    
them, went on ial with a 
flourish and ceremony June‘1 with 
dedication of an ultra-modern 
visitors’ center here. 
prehistoric bird.   
Johnny ieciesiad ~ 
Expert Woodsman 
ASHLAND, Ohio —John Chap- 
man, better known as Johnny. 
Appleseed because he planted 
many apple trees in the late 1700s 
and early 1800s, used his know]- 
edge of trees in more ways than 
one, historians here say. 
‘* * *. 
uring the War of 1812 against 
‘British, he is reputed to have 
slipped through Ohio forests on a 
54-mile round trip from the block 
house at Mansfield to Mount Ver- 
non and back, in one day. 
The purpose was to warn settlers 
of Indian massacres incited by the 
British and to bring-sdldiers from 
Mount Vernon. to defend ‘ the 
Mansfield block house. 
  
Ads on Book Matches 
MILWAUKEE, — Book matches 
got their start as an advertising 
mé@iium in the 1890's when a brew- 
ery ordered 10,000,000 to promote 
facilities for making only 2,000 a 
day and machinery had to be in- 
vented to fill the order. % 
  
Tire Output Sets Mark 
NEW YORK — The nation pro- 
duced 56,500,000 replacement mo- 
tor-vehicle tires during 1957, an 
increase of 360,000 over 1956 and a 
new record, according to the Rub- Along one wall of the center’ visitors will} * * * 
tiles in what is now their natural 
habitat -—-a clay quarry. 
be able to view? bones of the 
beasts right sores, ee eS 
ses found Dem. 
* 1% * 
pldin how the nation's largest 
pened to be among ‘the sun- 
parched. hills on’ the Utah- 
Colorado border. 
their doom some distance to the 
north in what were then lush 
jungles. Strangled in the mud of 
Mesovoie rivers, the reptiles later 
were swept downstream by such 
waterways as those now ¢alled the 
meet near here, 
Completion of ‘the. new center 
culminates a dream that began 
late in the last century, It was 
in 1892 that scientific studies 
proved the bulky bones actually 
were those of dinosaurs... 
started a sort of archeological 
gold rush. 
Luckily, dinosaur bones soon be- 
came a drug on the market. But 
not before the men with picks and 
shovels had unearthed nearly 
»- |eomplete remains of 26 dinosaurs} *: 
from a dozen species that ranged] © 
in length from 6 to 84 feet. 
* * * & th te at dase wells sul ganar ing roof that vaguely resembles} 
_|the lop-sided aye ee 
It is the first museum in the} : 
country to show.the ancient rep-| | 
ioterioe Department hosts ex-| 
known dinosaur cemetery hap-|/. 
They point out the critters met = 
Green and Yumpa Rivers, which) |   
  iarohes: True Life Adventures   
  Tue RACCOON- -COATED LOOK 1S FINE FOR TEEN-AGE KING PENGUINS. 
Walt Di ©" Prideciians 
World Rights Reserved 
    
          Distributed by King Features Syndicate, 
BUT STRICTLY FORMAL ATTIRE 
IS REQUIRED , FOR ADULTS.    
  
The grave-robbing finally . was 
halted for good in 1915 when the 
area, through a campaign by Dr.   
Earl Douglas of the .Carnegie 
Museum, was made into a na- 
  ber Manufacturers Association, tional monument,   
    
         Missile School Trains ‘ 
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (UPI)D—The 
  GLASSES 
COMPLETE 
Lens—Frames. ; 
11" Bifocals $3.00 Extra 
High in Quality! - Low i ae Price!    
   
      
     
   
     
        
    
     
   
     
        
   
    
      
  Your Choice of Frames. . . 
Latest in Styles 
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 
@ Prescriptions Filled 
@ RX Sun Glasses - @ Safety Glasses Army Ordnance Guided Missile 
|School here is answering the chal- 
lenge of our modern missiles by ot- 
a course. in reading im- 
provement designed to increase the 
jefficiency of its staff and faculty 
of more than 1,500. 
* * * 
search and curriculum division, 
has organized the course in hopes 
that it will increase the reading 
efficiency of the staff members to 
Hinton guaranteed every stu- 
dent a 30 per cent improvement 
| in g skill and final tabula- 
; tions have more than justified his       
     
   
    
    
   The lowest percentage of im- 
provement was 31.7 per cent, with 
a 10 per cent increase in reading James L. Hinton, chief of the, ’ 
training section of the school's re-} 
ter; 
@ Frames 
—~ Come in and Ha @ Repair Service 
Glasses Adjusted — No Charge! - 
Glasses Acremiet Properly Means Better 
Vision        
       
        Replaced _ 
ve Your Present comprehension. 
crease was 531 per cent with only 
ja one per cent loss in comprehen- 
sf6n. The 
increase in reading rate now reads 
1,357 words per minute on diffi- 
‘Heult material. The highest in- 
student with a. five-fold 
  Baker Optical Co. 86, N. Saginaw Across 
CLOSED WEDNESDAY from‘ Federal’s— 
Above Haig’s Shoe Store 
poly 8-4331 
HOURS - 5:30 — FRI. ‘til 8:30 
(NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY)     
   
   
   
       
     
   FOUR FAULTS 
Surveys have found fow™ com- 
}jmon reading faults: Regression or 
rereading, vocalizing or lip 
movement, duration of fixation or 
reading syllable by syllable: and 
| word by word and sfnall span of 
|Tecognition or the width ef space 
covered by the eyes in reading. 
x * * 
  
Two simple devices are used to   
    
MICHIGAN CRED: AN CRED 
afferd, regardless ORRIED OVER DEBTS: nae to yments, debts or bills when due, see | 
ir couNselLo yments yeu . Gear camera. 
w much or tye ack “il <. By 
  
  NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED 
ONE PLACE TO PAY 
Member American Association of Credit Counsellors 
    
“Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” 
Hours: Daily 9to 5 Wed. & Sat. 9 tol 
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 41%¢ 8. Saginaw Evenings by App't. 
Above Oakland Theater    
     
       
          
    
    
         
      correct. these faults; the tachisto- 
     
    
        
   
  
    
<< 
    
  If You Are Nee Employed Now, 
THIS IS THE TIME 
10 GET MORE TRAINING Enroll in the DAY, HALF-DAY, or EVE- 
NING CLASSES and prepare for a position 
which you can’ fill when we are again © 
enjoying mppeperity and abundant: employ- 
ment. 
There is always a demand for well-trained 
secretaries and stenographers. 
New Classes Are Being Organized in All 
Departments for MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 
VETERAN APPROVED 
Fe or Information Call in Person, Telephone 
or Write for Bulletin | F j 
       
       
     
    
   
   
    The second reading improve- 
ment device, the acclerator, is a 
small metal box with a hinged lid 
urider which a book or printed page 
.is placed. The accelerator, moving 
iat a steady rate of speed, covers 
the page from top to bottom .as 
the student reads, much in the Teachers 
a sheet of paper and cover each 
line after reading it. . 
The rate at which the accelerator 
operates can be increased as the 
student's reading skill improves. 
Comprehension is not sacrificed 
at the expense of greater reading Improve Reading Skill, Speed speed. Comprehension tests follow 
the accelerated reading priods, 
and should the student's compre- 
hension fall as his speed increases, 
he is advised to slow down until 
he has a better mastery of the|~ 
reading technique.   
Deaths Elsewhere 
NEW YORK (AP)—Dr. William 
Frederick Durand, 99, whose pio- 
neering researches ranged from 
ship propulsion to- jet propulsion 
and won him the title “Dean of 
American Engineering,” died Sat- 
urday. He was one of the original 
members of the National Advi- 
sory Committee for Aeronautics 
formed in 1915. tack Saturday at the scene where 
a T33 jet trainer crashed, killing 
two men. He was a former fighter 
pilot in Korea. , 
| kt * & 
WASHINGTON (AP)—Rep. Wil- 
liam E. McVey (R-Ill), who start- 
ed his House career at 65 after 
spending most of .his life as an 
educator, died last night of a heart 
attack. He was 73. 
oe ee 
NEW YORK (AP) — Edgar T. 
  * * * 
LO _ (AP)—Earl Baldwin 
of y, 59, Socialist son of a 
former: tive prime minis- 
@léd yesterday. Oliver Bald- 
win inherited the title from his 
father, Stanley Baldwin, the first 
earl, in 1947. He wes a Labor 
member of Parliament for sever- 
al years. “ 
* * * 
WASHINGTON “(AP) — Brig. 
Gen. James B.. Gowen, fret.), 85, 
former chief of staff of the 38th 
‘Division in France during World 
War I, died Saturday. He was 
former executive officer of the Ar- 
my War College in Washington. 
* * ++ 
‘BEAUMONT, . Tex ‘(AP)—Mrs: 
Aline Michaelis, who in 1935 be- 
came the first “woman to be hon- 
ored as poet laureate of Texas, 
died yesterday. She was former 
society editor of the Beaumont 
Enterprise. She was born in St. 
, | Louis. « 
+ * 
NEW YORK (AP) — Reginald Rouzéau, 53, one of the first Ne- 
gro war correspondents, died Sat- 
urday of a heart attack. He cov- 
ered World War II in 26 coun- 
tries for the Pittsburgh Courier 
and later was the first Negro to 
serve as a full-time reporter on 
the city staff of ‘the New York 
Herald Tribune. He was born in 
Jamaica, British West Indies. 
* x 
ST, LOUIS (AP) — Oscar K. 
Ruhl, 51, associate editor of the 
Sporting News, died yesterday of 
cancer. Ruhl, a newspaperman for 
30 years, had been with the base- 
ball paper since 1943. « 
Both Claim ‘Dixie’ 
WASHINGTON—The song ‘‘Dix- 
ie” was composed by Dan Em- 
mett, a Yankee from Ohio, as a 
“‘walk-around”. for a minstrel 
troupe. During the Civi} War, the 
lively’ tune was claimed by both 
Sides, but eventually it became 
associated almost entirely with the 
Confederacy.. * 
  Plants Are Few. 
on Coral Atolls Coconut: Palms Provide 
WASHINGTON — Coral sand, 
gleaming between blue ocean and 
green palms, gives Pacific ‘atolls 
much of their charm in the eyes 
of those far away. 
To the people who live on it, 
however, it presents problems; 
ew plants an grow in it, 
The coconut palm takes its 
well-publicized place as provider 
of food, housing, and clothing on 
the islands partly because it has 
little competition. 
Nukunono, a string of islets 
beaded around a coral lagoon 
between Samoa and the Equator, 
is a case in point. The staples 
are fish and coconuts, the Na+ 
tional Geographic Soclety says, 
with breadfruit in season. 
The Polynesian islets are eight 
to ten feet above sea level. Rain 
filters easily through the sand 
and coral rubble, leaching out any 
organic matter that might build 
soil. 
agriculture by digging pits and 
mixing. vegetable refuse with the 
sand, They use coconut husks to 
‘lmulch the handmade soil in an 
effort to stop the erosion of nutri- 
ents. 
Recently, a nun stationed at the 
Nukunono. school tried importing 
dirt from more favored islands to 
grow vegetbales in tin .cans. She 
found it effective, bat too limited in 
scope. 
With the assistance of the 
lgrewag plants. in 
water, with no soil at all, 
Life is simple on Nukunono, a 
‘|New Zealand territory that is part 
of the Tokelay group. Society is 
based on strong family ties. Vil- 
cil of elders, who. represent their 
families. ~ 
The islanders live in frame 
houses, with walls and roofs of 
plaited pandanus fiber. 
are produced for trading. 
and unbalanced to outsiders, 
NO ROBBERS 
on Nukunono, but they haven’ 
freedom is little circumscribed. 
Only 600 miles from the Equa. 
tor, Nukunono is cooled by trade 
winds more than half the year. 
The average’ mean temperature 
is. 82 degrees. When the winds 
fail, however, the sand becomes 
blistering hot, 
Fresh water is proyided by heavy 
rains collected from the roofs 
of buildings. Although rainfall of 
three inches can _be expected on 
almost. any day, precipitation is 
extremely ‘irregular, Total fall in 
as 30 inches. 
te ke 
four months. Then. the 
of coconuts, 
An early auto was designed by   
  they had nothing to féar.   
Kent Hammerstein, 61, veteran 
‘stage director, died Saturday of 
a heart attack. He was a younger 
bro 
car Hammerstein II. 
* * * 
CLEVELAND (AP)—William W. 
Raynolds, 79, an assistant manag- 
ing editor of the Cleveland Plain 
been associated with the Plain 
Dealer since 1909. He was born in 
nae. Ohio. 
x * * 
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—William 
tary of three Indiana theater owns 
er organizations, died Saturday. 
He was ‘born in Buffalo, N, Y., 
* 8 &* 
DENVER (AP)—Capt. Robert 
L. Ruth, 40, Howe, Neb., informa- 
  same manner as if he were to use      
   
    
   
      17 WEST LAWRENCE 
  tt 
, 2nd Fieof, pogecod 
- The Business Institute ~|—~ om <rvasincs oF rons FON TENG MOU! ; : vt i tg 
7 W. = Lisa PONTIAC FE 2-355: 
es sewbves ae ore ace = 
. ras . , : ’ e \ e* + 
* bs 
= a RS eee Weer Ta ini tals enianSe Sosa 
  1 Up Summer bills! * 
International Credit fod ll + perce 
offices! 
+) 1 ng ae PONTIAC r of producer-composer Os-; 
Dealer, died Saturday. He had} 
A. Carroll, 51, executive secre-| 
and at one time was a sales exec-} 
      
    
    
   tion service. officer at Lowry Air| 
Force Base, died of a heart at-| 
ee ~~ You get: 1. ‘CASH to pay off back bills! 
‘ 2. EXTRA CASH for vacation! 
3. CASE-CREDIT wherever you go--with 
        + Food; Housing, Clothing |paigns against laws passed by sev-|Pa 
on Pacific Islands oe — mania ous housing perry 
Natives carry on a, little;    
   
     
     
        
    
           
             
               
       
   
         
     
  Londlonde: 
jHousing Cc 
in Major Cities - 
CHICAGO wen — A housing ! 
publication reports. that landlords ins are «conducting determined cam 
  
The depeail ne ee said 
landlords in Chicago, Baltimore, 
Md., and $t, Louis, Mo., occasion- 
ally’ have been effective in their 
efforts either to block the laws or 
render them ineffectual. 
    
  
its enactment last December, 13 
persons lost their lives in tenement 
blazes in eight days. Mayor Rich- 
ard J. Daley implemented 
code by getting mortgage bankers | 
to agree to ban loans on buildings} 
broken up into smaller units in 7] eee 
illegal mes or ae 
de eal sdeetias: ‘the Journal said,|| - 4 
landlords in Baltimore managed toi} 
evade a new law there, and St. 
Louis landlords tried. to substitute jf 
laws of their own framing for ex-/ 
nine, 
Chain Letters Urge. 
Salesmen to Work 
CHICAGO ~The chain. letter, 
a product of the 1940s, now’ is) 
being. cole ee ee 
ts   
1621 S. Woodward, Reyal Oak 
3 Doors North of 10 Mile a 
  
  
  
ness, 
The letters ask each 
engage in at least 30.m 
  additional selling time each d 
spend the time in wend’ the 
  Plaited, 
mats and other handicraft objects! 
There are no welfare or reliet| powe literally to the country 
problems among the less than c — 
500 residents: As long as enough a $$$ 
land for coconut trees is available} » ee gees : ; e 
and the ocean teems with fish, Q ; pe 
the islanders will not. starve, 
though. their diet seems limited 
Three Tokelau caheatie live 
much crime to attend to, except 
petty offenses. There is no jail. 
Culprits are sentenced to labor on 
public works, but otherwise their and planning. 
“By exerting every effort and] 
all sound sales sacieiied the na- 
tion’s salesmen have it within their! 
           
    out of the recession,” Stone sald!   
t 
       D0 YOURNOW ews a ri tn 
different months may vary as much 
Busiest days on Nukunono. are 
the ‘ones. just before the trading! . 
boat arrives, usually once each 
islanders 
rush production of their only’ ex- 
port crop — copra, the dried meat 
Urian Smith of Battle Creek with| 
an artificial horse head protruding 
from the front to convince horses   
    
  Fy   
   
       
       
      
       
   
          cleaner to goo cleaner— 
gives you more clean heat per 
galion . . . new freedom froen 
service costs, # -¥ 
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CLEANER Amazing new additive, RT-98, now in New 
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fuel 8 actually cleans as it heats! © 
      
    
    
   
        
      
     
    
   
     
Be sure of having 
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home next winter ~ 
by ordering N E W 
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TODAY--- 
DIAL 
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  AND THERE’S ANOTHER PLACE where you can reach al- 
most everywhere in the world without moving. It's the 
|- place where your telephone sits. That telephone is your 
"magic carpet—far faster than a jet airlinet and much, much | 
less expensive. For less than ten dollars you can talk with 
people in England, Germany, Norway, the Netherlands, 
or dozens of other places. For less than two ‘dollars you 
can be talking with friends or relatives in ‘California. You 
don’t know anyone in California? Well how-long since 
you've talked with your sister—or brother? ‘Remiember 
you can call places a day's drive away for less than a dollar. 
Ly i 
eee ee 6s € HEE CNSR ees 
AND SPEAKING OF LONG DISTANCE 
—you may think you're a long dis- 
tance from a phone, yet you need to 
make a call. If so, just keep your © 
eyes skinned for one of our many 
Public Phones~in stores, gasoline 
seneatis lee 4 
phone Booths. They're « teal-boon 
to travelers who call back when they 
Sage See en ee 
Rie Kiet ee ee 
(Reps PUNT NON SMe GRRL VANDA AOL 7a Gein CARS SMM AEA MP Na LSP OR: Sug Ua Phen) acd». ty ee 
    
    
   & 
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, Avebsr 11, 1958   
  
    Personal 
News of   
  -1S HERE AGAIN! 
Let Us Make 
Their Clothes 
“Fresh and New             Again with Expert 
Dry Cleaning 
! Father & Son 
Dry Cleaners 
941 Joslyn at 
Mansfield St. 
FE 2-6424 
Open 7 A. M, to 6 P. M.       
     
    
       
     
    Interest Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce 
left for their home in Alton, 
IL, after Pca Mrs. Pierce’s 
mother, . J. L. Doyon of 
Cottage beste 
* r * 
Home from Marion College, 
Marion, Ind., for a week's va- 
cation is Mary Catherine 
Kent, daughter of Mr. and 
’Mrs. Ralph Kent of . West 
Rutgers avenue, She is in 
her third year at Marion. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. William H. 
Truetiner (nee Josephine Roth- 
» man) of Ann Arbor announce 
the birth of a daughter, Laura 
Elizabethh, born Aug. 10 at St. 
‘ Joseph Mercy Hospital, Grand- 
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Wal- 
ter J. Traettner of Bloomfield 
* Hills and Mr. and Mrs. Edward 
E. Rothman of Bloomfield 
Mr. and Mrs, Donald Porter 
      
  
    
     
    
            
       
  
  
Clearance 
all 
SPORTSWEAR | 
BLOUSES 
_ SKIRTS 
PEDAL | 
PUSHERS | 
SHORTS 
Values to 5.98 
2 
Boperre Snop 14 N. Saginaw St.    
     
      
          
    Dear Abby. «:;   
This Bfarpiage Shipshil?| _ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN 
“DEAR ABBY: I am 
ashamed to ask anyone else 
with 
another girl 
who also taught 
school When 
they came back, my daughter ° 
had a man with her and they 
said they were.married. They 
said they were married by a 
CAPTAIN of a ship. Now tell 
me, Miss Abby, are they mar- 
ried in the eyes of God and 
man? I doubt it.” 
CONCERNED MOTHER 
DEAR MOTHER: A captain 
of a ship is authorized to per- 
form civil marriage cere- 
monies. Call your clergyman 
and ask HIM if YOUR church 
HONORS this marriage. 
kt oe * 
“DEAR ABBY: What has ABBY 
house (for us to tend) while 
DEAR WONDERING: I 
think you ought to change _ room so half of it is hers. We own lives. If they don't wake 
up and realize how precious 
parents are, they will -have 
many long years In which to 
regret it. 
* .¥% * 
“DEAR ABBY: I am 122 
years old and have a 10-year- 
old sister. We share one_bed- DEAR NEAT: “Draft” 
nuttle slater to help you they tp! 
your half, and you help her 
tidy up her half, Many hands 
make light work. 
ew * 
CONFIDENTIAL TO DE- 
BATING PARENTS: Let the 
boy invite his own friends. 
Your plans’ sound like more 
BAR than MITZVAH. 
* * * 
For a personal reply, write 
to ABBY in care of this 
paper. Enclose a_ self-ad- 
    
are supposed. to keep it in or- 
der. I keep my half in order 
but you should see HER half! 
It is very hard for me to 
clean MY half without clean- 
ing her half and sometimes 
when I- clean MY half you 
can’t even notice it because 
HER. half is so messy. Can 
you tell me what I can do 
with her? I am not allowed to 
hit her. Thank you. 
NEAT SISTER   . dressed, stamped envelope. | 
  
      
    
  
Cub Scouts and Brownies. 
  
of them with club meetings, com- 
| selves. them selves. 
  poered eareer of her own 
mod: ~yet never neglect her) 
munity work and so on, either| 
someone else is looking after her 
children and rurming her home or 
-Pher children are looking after 
/Trick for Short Gal 
claim their husbands and children 
And probably some good-natured 
neighbor .is mothering the brood 
whose own mother is more inter- a good wife.and mother and to take 
I feel are absolute ‘musts,’ such as c 3 By RUTH MILLETT 
att gives me an inferiority complex,” writes a- ‘moth- 
» J times more outside their homes than I do, and yet are 
good wives and mothers, too. 
| “Tt takes all my time, strength and energy just to be 
in the activities 
urch worker, PTA, 
“How in the world can a woman have a string of cat: 
+. 
v   
There are only so many hours in 
the day, and if a woman fills most 
    
  
    WILL BE-OPEN MONDAY, AUGUST 18th 
~~.» » refreshed and ready to build fine new 
furniture or re-upholster the old! 
William Wright ; - 270 Orchard Lake Ave. Furniture — 
U pholsterers 
Over 27 Years 
FE 4-0558 Serving Pontiac   
A short, long-waisted girl 
who finds the shorter skirt look 
ungraceful on her can “trick 
the eye” by raising the waist- 
line of her dresses, wearing 
her skirts a bit longer than 
the fashion, and never wearing 
them skin tight. FLUFF-DRY 
Make Mondays Sunny-days — 
What a relief to send all your family wash to Pontiac 
Laundry! Oceans of gentle suds and man 
it oh-so-bright! Clothes and towels are SERVICE 
rinsin 5 me 
folded. Then when Careful Dan returns ieee atmos 
nothing left to do. vost you like this service? 
  
  Free Plastic Bag ‘with Dry. Cleaning     
DRY CLEANERS   
  7-Hour Service at Our 
3 Locations 
540 S. ——— Rd. 
. 2682 West 12 Mile—Berkley 
$33 S. Hunter—Birmingham    
     
        
       
       
    
      20% Vasil Yeos Subetees’t apenioy a 
Se SE + SON ee OO Oe On < 
     
    
      
   
       
           
  speatecmtar sale of cashmeres! Ze ® Gee IE eo Sey 
SPECIAL PURCHASE. 
SALE 
Classic and Dressmaker 
CASHMERE = 
OWEATERS 
“~ 
     
         
         
      
       
        
      
  
  
Sy 
  ‘WOODWARD AT 
SQUARE LAKE RD. 
f    
            
             
    
  
Diet 
as 
awe. 
é 
Usually 24.98 to 29. . 
<F 13.90 15.90 
When you see them... when you 
feel them . . . you'll know their 
world famous Cashmere trade 
name! 
Styles Include dressmaker, 
cardigans, detailed pullovers in 
short, long or three-quarter 
length sleeves. Choose 
your back-to-school ‘sweaters in 
pink, peach, blue, lilac, 
grey, moss green, brown, 
rust, black, beige or green 
: Sweaters — Main Floor    
Shop Mon. and Fri. 
Nites ‘til 9 P.M. 
* 
  
                      
  
  
  
  Makers and 4 : 
    
    Reg. 7.50. | Your Fashion Store 
Sale! 
WARNERS" white cotton 
Reg. 2.50..... eer 
Sizes 32 to 38 in A, Band C cups. White only. 
GIRDLES AND PANTY. GIRDLES 
oe 2 6 we ee le ke ee 1.98 
- 398 
The wonderful Warner's quality you Bepecd) 
+ on. White only. Sizes small, medium and large. 
_ 3 - Foundations — Second Floor                     
      
Not just cashmere . . . but thaws    
                 CONT 
EVENT In September these 
coats will sell for $99 
An event specially planned to 9 
  bring you these NEW 100% 
Cashmere Coats at this low 
August sale price! 
5 beautiful shades in 
-2 distinctive new styles 
quality cashmere . . . coats of lightweight 
warmth that you'll wear three seasons 
out of the year. In nude, . 
bamboo, blue, red or black. Sizes 8-f8, 
  
      a i 
Cc 
se 
    
  ap 
a eae 
ae   psa 
HE 
Ae 
wasn 
AO 
      
           
  ’ Shaw's Jewelers, city. Class AA 
softball champions, had to go eight 
innings Sunday for a 1-4 victory 
over Van Kleet’s of Souithfield in 
an exhibition game at Beaudette 
Park, Jake Mazur and Pere -Mc- 
Conner combined for a four-hit 
shutout with McConner the winning 
pitcher in relief. Vern Keebaugh 
\ drove in the deciding run. 
x * * 
The Shell brothers starred on the 
mound yesterday at Drayton Plains| 
as Spéncer Floor Covering swept 
.- @ @oublehader from the Oxford 
Merchants in exhibition softball. 
Gene Shell twirled a two-hit shut- 
out for a 3-0 victory in the opener, 
then Dick took over and allowed 
only one hit for a 51 decision. 
14 ee 
Rookie linebacker Gene Alder- : ton voluntarily withdrew from 
the Detroit Lions football train- 
ing camp yesterday to accept 
a freshman coaching post at his 
Alma Mater, the University of 
Maryland, ~ 
* * *      
  Pa     Foe:    
      
  
“ONE DOWN — Earl Torgeson, White Sox first 
forced out at second base by Frank Bolling who gets the ball away 
trying for the double play: Billy Goodman was safe at first. The 
Tigers lost the first game, 5-2 and won the second, 4-3. 
  * &® * 
Braves Collect 33 Blows, Dump Phillies Twice “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 11, 1958 
x &£ ji 
k & 
  
¢ AP Wirephote 
baseman, is 
  
& Hamtramck, the Michigan Pony 
League champion which has won 
its first two starts here, takes on 
Akron, Ohio, the only, other un- 
beaten entry, in Paducah, Ky. to- 
night in the eight-team . regional 
tournament. 
* * * 
Mickey Mac Donald .of Kalama- 
zoo, won the Class D stock hydro 
championship yesterday with the 
fastest time of the Great Lakes 
Division stock outboard meet. He 
edged out Bill Janz of Chicago for 
the title. 
* * * |  Bowsfield, 
jand Tomanek’. . Unheralded Pitchers 
Have Profitable Sunday By the Associated Press 
Woodeshick, Hyde 
. ever hear of 
Northwest Detroit, Michigan 
titleists in the Babe Ruth League, 
has lost its chance for the na- 
tional title with a weekend de- 
feat at the hands of Kentucky, 
10-5. 
* _* * 
The American Legion state tour- 
nament will get under way in Bay 
City Thursday. The tournament will 
Jast three days. 
_* * * i'em? No, they’re not partners in 
a law firm, Each is an-American 
League pitcher. Among them they 
have a. total of six complete 
games this year. But yesterday 
they reminded you of Lefty Grove, 
Carl Hubbell, Hal Newhouser and 
some of the other mound greats. 
Ted Bowsfield, making only his 
second major league start, held 
the New York Yankees hitless un- 
til one out in the seventh inning 
‘las Boston rebounded from a 7-5 
A Detroit bulldog, Ch. Vardona/ defeat 
Frosty Snowman, entered by the 
Vardona Kennels, won top honors 
in the non-sporting group at the   nual show yesterday. to whip the American 
League champions 9-3, 
Hal Woodeshick, Cleveland rook- 
ie, lost a 10-inning 4-2 decision to: 
Loraine County Kennel Club's an- Kansas City after the Indians had 
\walked off with an 11-2 triumph in 
  
  
  
  
    Dayton Thorobred 
SAFETY SPECIALS ENJOY A CAREFREE VACATION 
  ~ SAVE PLENTY... : | Dayton Thorobreds ALL-NYLON or-ALL~RAYON © 
  
       USE YOUR CREDIT 
TIRE             
    
          
    
     
   
   
    
      
   
       
  run homer off the left-hander in 
[the tenth of the nightcap to snap 
¥Z 
the opener. But for six innings he 
held the Athletics without a hit 
and it wasn’t until the ninth that 
he gave up his first run. - 
Washington relief expert Dick 
Hyde, overshadowed by Rine Du- 
ren’s spectacular rescue roles 
with the Yankees, achieved his 
16th save in the Senators’ first 
game 6-2 triumph over Balti- 
more, He made his 40th appear- 
ance with two runners on base in 
the ninth and secured Pedro Ra- 
mos’ 11th victory by retiring three 
straight batters, Baltimore took 
the second game 6-1. -~ 
| Diek Tomanek, a_non-distin- 
guished left-hander, turned in a 
spectacular two-inning relief chore 
for Kansas City, He relieved Tom | 
body out and the score tied 2-2 
in the bottom of the ninth, and 
struck out Larry Doby, Rocky 
Colavito and Dick Brown, The ex- 
Indian fanned two more Cleveland 
batters in the tenth after Kansas 
City had broken the tie in the 
top of the inning. 
‘Bowsfield, a - 22-year-old resi- 
dent of British Columbia, lost his 
bid for a no-titter when Norm 
iSiebern singled with one out in 
‘the seventh, The Yankees chased 
him with four straight hits in the 
jeighth but 14 Red Sox hits against 
iBob Turley and two relievers in- 
sured the young lefthander’s first; 
major league triumph, : 
Cal McLish, backed by a 15-hit 
attack, including home runs by 
Doby and Vic Power, won his 12th 
\for Cleveland in the first game. 
Roger Maris, who snapped Woode- 
l shick’s hitless string with a single 
in the seventh, smashed a two-   
Kansas City’s six-game -losing 
streak, — 
  
95 6.70-15 RAYON 
BLACK, TUBE-TYPE AMERICAN LEAGUE 
; Won Lost Pet. Behind 
iNew York ...... 72 3% 65 — | 
Boston —s iw. ss ess 56 §3 514 154% 
Chicago ss .vanes. 5 8604 05 «16% 
Cleveland 65 85 500 
Detroit. —..aseaess 52 55 ARG 
{Baltimore  ...... 49 57 462 
| Kansas City 48 «5B 453 Washington ..... a 664—sC ABB 
AY'’S RB TS 
Boston 9, New York 6 
Washington 5 
Ch 9, roit 3 
Cleve 5, Kansas City 1 
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS 
New York 7, ton 5, ist game 
Boston 9, New . 
Cleveland 11, Kansas City .2, ga 
2nd game | Chicago . Detroit 2, 1st 
| Detroit 4, Chicagd 3, 12 innings 2nd game: 
| Washington 6,. Baltimore 2, Ist game 
| Baltimore 6, Washington 1, 2nd game 
game 
  
    size ‘eV 4 ' 
TUBE-TYPE + BLACKWALL 
7.10-15 17.95 19.95 | 7.60-15 19.95 21.95 
TUBE-TYPE » WHITEWALL 
6.70-16 18.95 20.95 7,10-18 1.95 23.95 
1.60-15 23.95 26.95 
TUBELESS + GLACKWALL 
cs : be ee 
i. 21.95 | 22.95 TUBELESS « WHITEWALL 
russ | ios | 3838 10.15 | 2695 | 27.95 | 
&-Z TERMS... AS LITTLE AS |? oe 
save youn casn | 1,25 Pen pe 
| 
= FE 8.0424     
   
    
   
     
         
         TOMORROW'S scueatse 
  
i oo 
ia 7 .~Pur- 
NN eas . Gorman with the bases full, no-| 
  me} Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2, 10 innings 
Kansas City at’ Detroit, 8:15 p.m. 
ton ‘ashington, 7:00 p.m. 
|Baltimore at New York, 1 p.m. 
\Chicago at Cleveland, J p.m. 
NATIONAL LEAGUE 
Won Lost Pet. Behind 
63 = 45 53 
sy 52 523 6% 
56 52 519 2 
53 55 491 10 
S51 54 486 10% |2 
és 53 4«592~Cfss«wATsd2 ; 
88 40463 13 
463 «13 
   By The Associated Press 
season’s largest crowd at Phila- 
delphia’s Connie Mack Stadium 
will forget the Sunday fireworks 
display staged by. the Milwaukee 
Braves, 
Those 33 Milwaukee hits in the 
Braves 8-7 and 14-3. doubleheader 
sweep over the Phillies must still 
be ringing in the ears ofthe 32,- 
117 spectators, as well as the six 
Philadelphia pitchers who tried in 
vain to halt the National League 
leaders. 
* * 
Oddly enough, there were only 
two Milwaukee home - runs—both 
by catcher Del Crandall—bot Fred 
Haney’s crew bombed five triples 
and ten doubles. Hank Aaron, 
who had five hits and scored: five 
runs, had a pair of triples and 
a double. Eddie Mathews, with 
seven hits and six runs, had a 
|double and triple. Frank Torre, 
who drove in five runs, had a 
double and triple, 
Another top-season crowd, this 
one in Chicago’s Wrigley Field, 
saw the Cubs split a doubleheader 
with the St. Louis Cardinals in a 
comedy of errors, The Cubs won 
the opener 9-4 as the Redbirds 
committed four errors. St. Louis 
scored five unearned runs on as 
many Chicago errors to win the 
second game 6-2, 
* * * 
A Los Angeles crowd of 20,831 
watched seven home runs in the 
chummy Coliseum, five by San 
Francisco batters, as the Giants 
outslugged the Dodgers 12-8. The 
attendance swelled the  three- 
game series. total to 112,107 spec- 
tators. 
Pittsburgh's fast moving Pirates 
completed a four-game sweep of 
Cincinnati, winning both ends of 
a doubleheader 3-2 and 43, A 
Forbes Field crowd of 26,426 saw 
the Pirates win the opener on 
Dick Stuart’s 10th inning sacrifice 
fly, and the second game on an 
eighth inning force play. 
x * * 
Relief pitcher Humberto Robin- 
son .shared   
Bloomfield Shooter 
Shotgun Champion 
ey of Saginaw. 
in the bird course, 25 in the regu- 
lation trap and 23 in the skeet 
competition for a total of 71 out 
ef 75. But Pace outshot Hickey 
22 to 21 in the shootoff on the 
bird field. 
Joe Hagerty of Freemont, Ohio, 
73. 
  
Ready, Aim, Fire! 
title chase will be held Aug. 17-22, 
| 
icaliber) 
|Aug. 28 to Sept. ‘6. the spotlight with 
DAVISON (UPD—Paul Pace of 
Bloomfield Hills took the fourth- 
annual. Michigan all-around shot- 
gun championship here yesterday 
in a shootoff against Arthur Hick- 
Pace and Hickey both shot 23 | 
won the non-resident title with a 
93-24-24—71 and the professional 
champion went to Robert ‘Erickson 
of Minneapolis, who shot 70 out of 
CAMP PERRY, Ohio, (AP) — 
The month-long National Pistol 
and Rifle. Championship races: 
start here tomorrow, with the pis- 
tol. competition lasting through 
Friday. ; 
The small bore (.22-caliber) rifle 
    Milwaukee Has Hit Torre in Milwaukee’s first game 
It will be a long time before the!victory. Robinson hurled two hit|pounded loser Robin Roberts and 
‘hall through the last 6 2-3 innings 
ae en reliefer Gene Con- 
ley in the third. Torre, who batted 
in four runs, drove in Aaron with 
the winning run in the. eighth. 
Aaron had opened with a triple 
off loser Jack Meyer. 
* * * 
Mathews had fovr for four in 
the second game, including his 
aU major league hit, Cran-   for four runs as the Braves 
three reliefers for 19 hits, includ- 
ing seven doubles, three triples 
and two home runs, Rookie Carle- 
ton Willey won his seventh against 
three defeats. Richie Ashburn’s 
15-game hitting streak was snap- 
ped in the nightcap and the Phila- 
delphia outfielder fell behind Stan 
Musial in the batting title race; 
k *® & 
Cincinnati's double loss dropped p artins Injury Dims Tigers’ Sp 
with Los Angeles. Roman Mejias 
winning run on Stuart’s long fly. 
eighth inning of the second game, 
Ted Kluszewski walked, Bob. Skin- 
ner singled his pinch runner, 
Mazeroski homered in each game 
    dall’s pair of homers accounted the Redlegs into a last place. tie for the winners. singled in the tenth, advanced to 
third on Roberto Clemente’s 
double and scored Pittsburgh’s 
With the score tied 3-3 in the 
Dick Schofield, to third, and Scho- 
field scored when Frank Thomas 
forced Skiner at second. Bill    Bertoia’s Bunt © 
Gains {2-Inning 
Nightcap, 4-3 Attempted Steal Home 
Sidelines Martin for 
Possibly 3 Weeks 
DETROIT » — Third baseman’ 
Billy Martin may be lost to the 
Detroit Tigers for as long as three 
weeks. 
The injury to the aggressive lit- 
tle infielder dimmed Detroit jubi- 
lation over a come-from-behind 4-3 
triumph over the, Chicago White   
    
‘ 
  RES) 
       Sox in the second game of a long 
doubleheader yesterday, Chicago 
won the opener 5-2 on a three-hitter 
by Ray Moore and Early Wynng 
Martin was injured in the 
fourth inning of the nightcap _ 
when he collided with White Sox 
catcher Earl Battey on an un- 
successful attempt to steal home. 
Net only did Martin suffer torn 
ligaments about his ribs—but the 
out helped kill off a budding De- 
troit rally. 
" But by a strange quirk, the ine 
out... .. we : : 
Bertoia, once the club's regular 
third baseman but benched for a 
    
      } 
followed by the high-power -(.30-|strong teen-agers can challenge 
rifle competition from: anybody.” 
      
  
  ee sas BRS — _ 
By DR. CARY 
   
  © their opponents sink a lot 
7% EEO 
ES: es 2 
PATIEYT’S COMPLAINT: 
TREATMENT: I’ve heard many golfers bemoan the > Putt!” 
{ DIAGNOSIS: Half-hearted Attempts. 
: fact that they “never” hole 
¢ is generally accompanied by a further complaint that 
        <—who have three - quarters 
“that long “putts seldom NATIONAL HONORS — This is the trium- tiac team took six first places and five seconds. pew = 
phant Pontiac Roller Skating team which took In the picture are (left to right) Louis Parker, he was taking an 
the high-point trophy in the American meet last ~ Mary Clouse, Sylvia Ritchie, Marcia Muthum, [long windup I decided to try it.” 
weekend at Cleveland for the 4th time. The David Marchewka, Sue Welch and- Ricky Mar- | Starting pitcher Bill Hoeft ended 
trophy is awarded to the team with the most tins. ‘ * |the eee cee 8 
ints covering all divisions of skating."The Pon- third Detroit pitcher, George 
” : = ne Susce, pitched two-hit- relief ball 
over the last four innings and got 
. & . v | e credit for the victory, his fourth 
: against one loss. Jim Wilson hit a 
Swim Picture for 60 OI ics. Bright er | ice Sh ie a , i” , . : he faced the minimum nine batters 
ica’s young swimmers didn’t chal-|successfully defended its team|meter freestyle was an American'in three innings of relief work. He 
lenge Australian and Japanese|Championship with a young crop,and AAU record and better than|was the fifth Chicago hurler, .— 
records in the AAU National cham- of native Ameritans. The team/his accepted world record, but he} The Sox wrapped up the first 
pionships over the weekend, buf champion seldom has repeated in|has had a slightly better time not|game early for Moore, who owns 
they will be contenders, at Rome the AAU. . ; yet accepted. a 10-2 lifetime mark against the — 
in 1960. Jon Henricks and Murray Rose,| Henricks*won the 100° and 200-|Tigers. Four singles produced 4 — 
"That is how the U.S. swimming Australians borrowed from the|meter freestyles in meet record |pair of second inniig runs and Jim 
situation was sized up by such University of Southern California|times of 55.8 seconds and 2:05.2,|Rivera homered for two more in 
veteran coaches as Beb Kiphuth, by the Los Angeles Athletic Club,|the later also an American rec-jthe fourth: He drove in another 
in his 42nd year at Yale, and|Were as terrific as \ord; swam on Los Angeles’ win-jwith an eighth inning sacrifice fly. 
Mike Peppe, 28 years at’ Ohio they couldn’t push their teamjning 800-meter freestyle relay|. Ex-Yankee Bob Grim was to op- 
State. . higher than second, 83 points to/team, and beat Indianapolis’ pose the Tigers’ Jim Bunning today 
<< « “t the IAC’s 93. young. Bill Case in « siziting finaliay the Kanne City Atedct came 
“If the Olympics were_ today,” « * * leg of the 400-meter medley relay. |to town to close the home | 
Peppe said, “Australia and Japan! Frank McKinney Jr. of Indi-| | ,._ Bunning has failed to win since_his 
iwould beat us. Bys 1960, these |@napolis, 19-year son of the for- nif no-hit effort against Boston July 20. 
: ‘mer Democratic National Chair- unIor ase a FIRST GAME, 
jman, successfully defended both CHICAGO aieu DETROIT ote 
|| ‘The Indianapolis Athletic Club/his 100 and 200-meter backstroke ~ | aparicio ss 50.10 Kuenn cf 402 
championships, setting an Amer |S} a0 A ie fh meee ie ene ia g,(can and AAU record of 2:20.8 in am \" eft Lollar ¢ 40006 Harris ib 300 
TAS the 200. He was pushed to the Bake" 3508 Bane’ a 388 = i |limit in the 100 by Cleveland’s} . Goodmn 3b 4220 Lau ¢ 311 
| Louis Schacter, the | oe high Cranbrook, Boys Club, [prre'? $392 Foyact p iee 
Our 0 tlaau record’ of 1:045. Yanks Take City Titles more> seis Sfroncus. Sie 
-_| The Indianapolis team uncorked) in Sunday's Finals wren > 8080 eS tes 
MIDDLECOFF - . a couple of real surprises in Mike Gouna ie 
© Troy, a June high school graduate Totals 355103 Totals 2823 
“I Never Sink a Long 
mers:    
  we 
e 
* a long putt. This complaint 
of “lucky” putts. I figured 
this out a long time ago. 
The ones who don’t ever 
get a long one are the ones 
given up before they even 
hit the putt. They know 
  
] 
give it the old college try. 
edge of the green. 
It’s that simple. 
        
  ja, 7 p.m. 
: hg at ret, 7 p.m. 
Louis at San Francisco, fits p. m. 
+ ; 
yor 
          
   « drop, so they just don’t 
* bother to REALLY TRY 
oF coors 
know that chances are against sinking along putt, . 
but they get down and level on ‘em anyway. They 
”~“S0 every Once if a While they drop 
(Copyright 1958, John~F. Dille Co.) They just make a half- 
hearted pass’ at the ball, 
vaguely hoping to get 
somewhere close. 
The “lucky” ones try 
, for everything. They) also 
‘a Whopper trom the-= See 
      
      
who tied*the AAU record of 1:02.8 
in winning the 100-meter butterfly, 
and Allen Somers, who still has 
a year of high school but finished 
‘a stout third in the punishing 1500- 
imeter freestyle. 
~*~ * * 
The 17-year old Troy, although   
“/he swam for the Indianapolis 
||Athletic Club, is. a product of a 
© |public parks age group swimming 
=|program, Such programs, Coach 
Peppe told newsmen after the 
_\meet, is the way the United Statés 
"|ean overcome government-subsi~ 
i \dized swimming programs of 
_|some other countries. 
Rose, the blond vegetarian who 
“|won the 400 and 1500-meter free- 
“\style events, also was surprised 
iby the American youngsters in his 
‘first AAU outdoor meet, He was 
especially impressed by Somers. 
Rose’s 4:25.5 time in the 400- 
  
| Pee Wee Grid Clinics 
|| Will Start Tomorrow - 
“Registrations and weigh-ins will 
: start the Tuesday and Friday clin- 
- lies of the Pee Wee football Leagues 
‘tionarow. 
All boys 55 to 110 pounds at- 
tending the clinic at 3:30 p.m, at 
Whitfield School must bring their 
own pads, helmets and shoes. 
The twice-weekly clinics will con-   we 'tinue for four weeks.   
League. 
play for the Widget champion. 
Boys Club nailed down the 
Midget title in sensational fash- 
ion whhen Tom Zink pitched a 
ion when Tom Zink pitched a 
B&B Cleanérs, 1-0. Rady Ranson 
hurled an ill-fated three-hitter for 
the losers and gave up the 
game’s only run in the 6th th- 
ning. Zink’s masterpiece featured 
11 strikeouts. 
ered for the winners. 
wy 
  homered for the Yanks, 
Fa Cranbrook in Class D, Pontiac 
Boys Club in Class F and the Midg- 
et division and the Yanks in the 
Widget group are the 1958 cham- 
pions of the City Junior Baseball - 
The four teams wrapped up their 
divisional’ crowns Sunday in the 
finals of the annual playoffs at Jay- 
cee Park. Class D, F and Midget 
winners will now enter the district| Cf 
tournaments, There is no further 
Cranbrook tallied once in the top 
~|of the 8th for a 7-6 extra-inning 
win over Lytell & Colgrove to take 
the D”’ title. Tom Demrick hom- 
In..the Class F final, the Boys Ae ; 
Club hammered out 13 hits while os fn sh vest tor Veet . 
crushing the Auburn Heights Boys! force p tor Me : eg 
Club, 22-4, Bob Rabaja made four ott, for whan safeties in five tries for the new cnicago/ ... 
for a 10-2 rout of the Little Braves; ‘2p Apericic, Landis, 38- 
in the Widget title game: Joh n'Mrreell gB-Rivera, 8 Aparicio. Kealine 
Krause -and Dave Burhans both 
BOSE 
STVOSCTSSOCOKe 
a~—Walked for Aguirre in 6th: b—ran 
for Goodman in 8th; : c—struck out for Pischer im 8th. val oes 
LOB—Chicago 7, Detroit 1... 
HR—Riveta. SP—Rivera, Martin. 
P HR ER BB SO 
Moore, (W, 8-3)}...7 3 2 2 1 @ 
WYRR  -caecccccs. ss? 08 OG UG CU 
Poytack «L, 8-10)..356 4 4 1 4 
wirre ...........9% 86 4 4,1 6 
Clestte ..........81 391 1 14 § 
Fischer Ae 2 0@@ 0 @ 08 
Morgan .a...6.. 0: 100 06 @ @ 
X—Faced 2 batters in 8th 
  
  SECOND GAME . : 
Chicago abrh bi Detroit abrb bl 
Aparicio ss 6110 Kuenn cf 6020 
Fox 2b § 100. Bolling 2> 6130 
Landis ef 61231 Kaline rf 5000 
Boone 1b 6011 Harris Ib 511 
Smith r85000 Maxwell f 311 
Goodman 3b 400 06 roth f #1100 
Esposito 3b 100 Martin 3> 2018 
Battey 6020 Bertola a4 0 #4 Phillips If 3020 Wilson ec 401° 
Rivera if 1000 -Veal ss 201 
atmen p 2000 cZernial 1o1 Shaw p 1000 dBanning 000 
Lown p 02000. Susce p 100% 
Fititele 198 Setincten 188: Fran: 
Wilson p 0000 m=? hoe 
re 
eVirgil 3b 20098 etter ee ercrnecngle 
Totals 46392 “Totals 46413 4 
  in 9th; 
‘Detroit we S 109 | ae oe 
“The Yanks collected TO" hits and sage Hs *becra Heiris, Bertola. PO.A-Chi scored the same number of runs; vinnin run scored in tee Detroit 1 
‘q:WP-Hoeft, HBP. ‘Busce, Espogito ors ‘ on. U- 2 
'Steart. ron: i2,608.   
  
            
      
    so ¥ 9 ? < 
ee sf t 
     
  ae Meee . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 7 : NINKEKED 
' 7 : ‘ 4 yh 
es AK re ’ ¢ : , ; as Sennen a Ae one prevailing in capitalist; BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ‘By Edgar Martin 
| Sfillbom Baby (coecicer torte Health System |e a an, {PaRtoueeenns val “out } to Conductor for Life : i Virtually all doctors in Hungary THING) EVERNTHING! AND ONE, 
Se Ne : ' “ 2 , get a salary from the govern- LCANT SEE OQ 
ea == eT | CHICAGO—Once a railroad is-) : ee ' ment, Patjents- pay for health 1] POSSABLE CHANCE FOR |] WER TANCE) J cgi 
| ticket puncli ‘to a conductor service in the form of social in QR 1 
: a sues a a uc * F rE 6 , 
ak se on if < ct x ae U a surance fees deducted from their bemedihass | . — 
: it is his as long as he remains narhairtiag - 1 J | } 
| ives with the road, Many have used). bled .| There are complaints that do¢- we VW A 
Bone Marrow From a oe long. - a belt ese pains Plan tors neglect their insured patients an W) fo = 
Be ' . cen then passed -it on to a orks ut Same asin favor of private patients’ who : “ 
f. : Aborted a oy son who followd in the father’s) . A ies World (Pay, directly. Sometimes insured : ga : Curb Radiation Effects foatsteps. Sometimes a in Capitalist Wor patients als pay tei doctors on Et 
4 »),|when he retires as a memento of ee , py ose than the ae pd I | Cilan, 
- BURLINGTON, Vi. (AP)—Still-|, Gan catkitae becuse BUDAPEST (AP) — Hungary’s|‘ paki people Wy, 
born, aborted babies may help) | probeeliy to his punch he was|COmmunist government is com- we gg = re Debeschall ~ 3-/7 Brent 
save living children and adults) ried with it in his hand, plaining about the way its system) wrote in the monthly Belpolitikai! fo tse oy wan erin, nT. ag US Pt oF LE Sree from damaging effects of atomic 
radiation, a government nuclear   
scientist says. 
Dr. Alexander Hollaender said 
that’ some scientists have pro- 
.@uced what looks Jike very prom- 
ising evidence that bone marrow 
from aborted mouse embryos is 
safer to use for treating the ef- 
fects of radiation than bone’ mar- 
row derived from fully developed 
mice. 
* *®* * Biblical Manna Story 
Backed Up by Facts 
TEL AVIV—It is recognized in 
Israel that the facts back up the 
Biblical story of manna being pro- 
vided for the Israelites. In Sinai in 
the summertime scale insects se- 
crete a sweet and nourishing sub- 
stance in droplets that seem to ap- 
pear mysteriously on bushes. 
: formation has been impared by 
. This appears to be lessened in The inference is that the same 
may be true for man, he indi- 
cated. | 
Injected bone marrow has been 
used in animals fo stimulate 
formation has been impaired by 
radiation exposure. 
‘Dr, Hollaender said the marrow 
feom fully-developed animals can 
-éause undesirable side reactions. 
marrow from mice taken by abor-     
BusTEeR/ CLYDE! MACKS   of socialized medicine is working 
—partly because over a third of 
this country’s 10 million people. 
are still outside it. 
“These people,"’ says Health 
Minister Frigyes Doleschall, ‘are 
forced to buy back their health 
from the doctors and in case of 
more serious illness, must pay for 
hospital treatment. In other words 
they must obtain medical care in 
a‘manner that hardly differs from   Szemle (Review of Domestic Poli- 
tics), “this means that the old 
capitalist system exists and_ that 
those who pay their doctors get 
far better treatment and many 
more advantages than those who 
go to them. merely within the 
framework of the health insurance: 
system.” 
Dr. Doleschal suggests that a 
special code of regulations should). 
be drawn up and a doctors’ ethi- 
cal committee should be formed.     
BOARDING HOUSE 
+ 
  
TARE YOU THE SAME @ YEAH, AND ff 
EGAD, YOU'RE THE MOST 
WELCOME SIGHT SINCE 
ie Bees hgale eae 
Ri EXPEDITION RE : 
N BESIEGED MAFEKING IN_A\ YOU OUT OF HERE TO BAIL GUY WHO WAS SEND- 
AGO2 WE CAME A WIPE OUT Yo TWEE 71 NATIONAL   
    
  
    
          
THE BERRYS   
  
SATELLITES, SHOTS AT THE MOON, ATOMIC BOMBS 
  
_DIXIE DUGAN ~ ~ce *e 
>   
  
  
         
      
      
  
UPHEAVALS IN CUBA, =a CYPRUS, ALGERIA, TRIPOLI | AND FORMOSA..WHATS THE WORLD COMING TO2|   
  
™ 
  
    
      IF YOU THINK Pee      
      YOU SHOULD TAKE A PEEK AT JACKIES ROOM ! >— a :   
  
    a 
So 
tion, he said. 
x * * 
The scientist told about it in out- 
lining seme of the reports to be 
made at the world's first Interna- 
tional Congress on Radiation Re- 
search, opening today at the Uni- 
versity of Vermont. 
Hollaender is chairman of the THE BOER WAR/~~COME, 
YOU MUST BE AY GDESTS AT | 
DINNER AND TWILL A 
TALE UNFOLD,AS THE FOET ipa UT IT/ ow YOU'LL BE , SS AMAZED: j YOUR HOTEL, 
FIGURING THEY 
WERE HOLDING 
YOU FOR 
RANSOM!                                 
  _ $elentists from both sides of the 
tists ‘are listed to give papers. 
Noise Tests Slated 
. for British Jet Airliner . NEW YORK (AP)—A British :: IV jet airliner, © _ By T. V. Hamlin 
TB oz > 7 
. - °     
4 4 
          
      OUT OUR WAY 
YUH COULD O' CALLED 
ME, IF YUH DIDN' KNOW 
HOW TO SHET IT OFF’   © 1068 by MER Borvite, re. Te eg UE Pe OF 
By Leslie Turner     
               
  :   z 
E   i 
    
  I i |    if   ; g 
Fer |             
        h,. 
ae By Ernie Bushmiller a |   
    
  
were effective on the ocean flight 
~ and did not cut the plane's power 
materially. ; 
  Cunningham said the silencers | 
:     
          What, No Bullets? | Feed 
SACRAMENTO (AP)—Bartend- | | 
er Dale L. Davenport emptied the, - 
cash register while the gunman       
   
                   
LEMONADE | 
10¢ aaa 
ee 
eee -~ 
                \ tm. Rog Ut Pet OF. — Ait right, conerwed 
Cope 1958 by Uemed Meares thpndingtn, tt, 
      \\\ k= 
gun flipped open, he saw only a ill ; 
cap compartment where the bul- i 
lets should have been.     TRwiitiams 8-tt 
. ©) 1988 wy NEA Service, Inc, TM. Ses. US. Pat. OF,   
      
    
  
               
  
      
             
              : LF E CASTLE is | PT THINK 7 —~ Caan J 
HALE ACRE CAST! John Morris | THIS 16 A GOOD SPOT I BUNT, ANO wane (C1 THINK THEYRE) +. | 
ee ea TO CROSS THEM UP WITH? WINTHROP -- WHY | 3 , EXPECTING ONE i 
f.. MYRTLE WON'T eave Teas Cn es WET Your A BUNT, CLARKEY’ NOT? } 5 5 ee 
: LET ME PLAY IN THE SYSTEM / e : 
: TOURNAMENT NEXT = ‘ 
: SATURDAY / i 4 
- 2 
: =H 
: = ae 
Ee than”: A i : 
: yan (| (2! z ; 
: “te ay 
© @a #-! 3 
              
  
        
By Charles Kuhn   
  
  
  
               
            
  
      THE GIRLS By Franklin Folger lee craves aay TLL ee TL ENO WE On SOAR eo cert (GEE, THANKS, GRANOMA/ 
EATEN COOKIE | |~ =n | } ON TH’ CHAIR’ & : 
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                                                       WHY R " ° 
Y : : ’ : 0 AS 
NO MON LA 4 | Fer Sele: ; . - tH : 
BO EY |pecua PRIVILEGES | "Tule Houses _43|SLICES E PONTIAC PRE ecg 
WN wechgane nomel TT A Use AND PORN| OF HAM $8, MONDA “os 
875 PER z,uedroom,, large tam : a Y; ‘AUGUS ee a 
eae! "MONTH - firesia ving meer dining room| om A: EN | _ | T 1, 1958 3 es 
FOR INF OF FLAS AREA mneal on Os complete , mirrored CEDAR 181 A ke For Sale Houses f 
DRAvTON Pl OH 343 and i eee shrub wooded | car gare hase” 9 “beats 61° pane _|3 BEDROO ouses 43) 
- YTON P 4381 ing to Pe “Reon oi srs, “ereen-| $40 oe , |2 BEDROOM BRICK FUL vas Pe For Sale H ) 
farae ‘kite frame. La: INS or at a Rd Iwan acid i Ae eal aimed Plus 2 ae Mit he Bl en ee ouses 431° : 
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,, Russell A. N aon Only Qukiand, Gs ori. | fami ea FHA Sen oot SO INT xz |" Wnipple Lake to BEDR Fer Sale Lake 
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NOW OPEN : deg mall Home = ION, a aca ae Lee 
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6 NEW 2BEDROOM HO cont Drsoetty ip gas s $4,500 Serge 2 APARTMEN wink. Fike: 50 — jocasiin: FAMILY HOME IN D . : ae rile Nice fe and" oat. 
| — In The Heart of oa > = Room Home | monthly + os one oe font to ep ag bois ang. churches) 4 shoppin : rare Am, WED wir ‘ 
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Sead wn K ve 2- ~ a i KEN AS ie. schoo} r Len: 
| City Sewer & Water= pom. on b soon wae 86 E,W Realtor D TANCE to St Be full basement, Gecea: h BARGAIN 
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| gills, FO, ice $9,950 with $1,200 down. 6 rooms & bath, Living GE ample Be Mr) prose De- Aptiay harem BA Y COl well jpeater. full basement nn Bo 
onatagt es ITOUXx- F B . basemer large 3 Bearden fe bath wena fen bas eit MULTIPLE ne A tapeergelta ant 2 eo ge ‘ready red 2 nome 
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: DL CALL: . 3 as. peyment if neC8, nang ; : a 34393 = Vilage. maintained Built in negroam DRAYTON COMPARE ae J fe 
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| ORAH BLDG. CO ate gfental Sh kode 2 dl LEAVING © M_3-3314 dalag soon nh opeeee TH PLAINS On ae M 
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BY OWNER: 2oina| FHA ‘mortgage. a es priv: WN —_ e ee ae Stee te BED.| scaped ‘ot, re “souibo jane IN THE ABOVE AREA” Seymour Lake 100 ft we 
FER ROCIO oem meet Bees) ye Ve, a. os eam ce itera | "Estat erngaes ane eae 
‘ 5 : 5 = ¥ @ . . e = waee is 
| Uily cnet lings i 3 BEDROOM” BR "| Mo . “You woul octane jcbuvomlie “Pe Foose, burches Ney | th Cree gees aie ect une Anaelue as $,'%q acre .. $ i000 
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Gls NO § Gi eat MOD ToRES) Rustin iy BRICK, Buu |" Tem Bs Bee feat ‘anh paved mins,wen| Mabe “getcent morigage Sacto ae Dunham oe 
a! 2 cin Many ion mode 250 f Pi dista street Ww Sods per month in- me. Weestion sees k 
W ell L EL OP ack r’ Man and scre - extra toil. rn white ior this 6 ains shopping nce of ithin love e everythi onth in- price $10, xcellent nice lot € Frontage 
a - WEE E h as Cera other f ens, school et in ba. frame hom eted liv pping area. Drayton it! ng. You’ 500 with Jocstion CHAPIN 3 Lots A tage 
LOW FH. dD DN. andscaped KDAYS alf bath, mi¢ bath, eature & o sement e, b ing ro 13x25 $850 d — Rea vailable 
A TE ped Lot & SUN d Oni also. extra Je Selement. Coe © edrooms, 12x12 with car-| RAY 2 OF BEAOT LTORS 
fyb ep . = KceeT FRIDAY. own, or” mort slates “cite gatse Ss bus ine, t qi ee een fireplace. RAY O'N : ENO AM Le OR 3-898 
Full eens 5 Price . 5 166 Stan FRIDA TO 1 F.H.A. ortgage cost ith $4,750 Large t Fred’ . terms. ern Suchen. 8 ee carpeted 262 N EIT R : M.TO8P™M ee a 3-8982 
_ BODEL OPEN :_ $11,200 A a hare | ool tocar sto new| 100 3 family = “] out. ee Oe tiron F cae ., Realtor |? J. ue S030 at 
y m a incum Glassed red od- | FE_3-71 graph Rd Lg 636 DIX JOLL. R H ter 6:30 Call 
Bet. Por py etna ngage or a W teasly. bine tone e, lovel ment in porch through- 03 . oO 1 eee TALE ORSE p.m. My 
ee <a Easy Tern WESTOWN : EST. toderd ape recht ee ge wa diag Hil Orton Fil bese: HOUSE  ONFINISH recess | MU PE 44561 Branch. SHOE LAKE WE 
OK ore 8-010) wy ‘ £2763_or eel De Side, City built p gus heat will yey cae with $2.00 down. Te iaiPie UlevinG a $4,000 terms Ml ‘surilshed em year 
. ‘i PM..A. NEAT LI_2-4677 ner lot. water oo sew rounder sa in quutraeti 8 uray F pEERVICe LAKEFRO! Sosa 
EN Pert & COZ er ito toca pull} er, cor-| WIL $3,000 down sur $5,500 HA. TERMS G.I. . Make FE Hor . 
/ K erfect for sm x er cisckion: etre ew be LIS r| if you . TERMS ~ = OFF 
! ee ee ee inee. metiee tee. tear em repeat ala sh BRE WE Dad con ney oes per, 3_BED —— > NO ~ Mid 
{ é located ith new 3 has this you like ee car ga- 55 N. Pi REISZ. ZR let us ile y $60 per pay down JOSL ROOM HO DOWN 8 e yr ian, 
ior wo HmREAETO _ former gt On pared rst fo is ALL (BRICK HOME aiken PE Sib room nome const Ris new. 3. bed: JOSEY NUL Le BASE JON AMERY lhe eciae sits Lake - 
N r _ Huron R - $60 eego Ping Lake | 950, te - 1 8. FE 8-08 4-5181 ar shak structed ed: TEM | ALAR: = this mortga “ doc tot. ‘ 
ear Wisner S Open Ev FE a ae are oe eke] rms. COMPARE = Walter's akes with oo amt (:| YARD AWNINGS, pence Wily (ebarntibe e costs on| Gh x. Will take sme ent, high 
Conveniently to chool enings "tl 9 390 mmediate » pos- um ' Custom built 1 E THIS at plant 2 ots be 26x35, home Ha ‘ONLY. FRUIT = wm home. | Clear 2) EM “sou a. aows home 
m fami cated 3 ° m bri ,200 sq ee lee astere as, a, full e VE IN $850 oors. f Sides hire paym Mg 
heat ay oe < bea- FOUR O : r1e basem ck Tr tt., s, jar walls, 1 base- . TO wate amily t g _ birc —- 
ith “4 B : V FE t ent, 3 anch h bed- ture e ba ots of cl r sof ype kite 
nnd god ate gas EDROOM e 2-0474 S Trance. tirepl ome. FE s, attracti with col Os- basem tener ben 
re living r. Fea- U BRICK 83 ON. Real with 1M bath aces, slate ‘ull mica and ve kitch iored fix- JIM W sto nent and and ful. 
ree living reowy aless Tele tor oF vanit 8, ce en-| Ma 2a oon hopes VR ° rms a alum 
main, eating, ace hitchen We eat doa rend ls, 0 re paeig't Cee take By necHEe' Berna SERVES (ory el piston Walls, oak he ae Ise “abil | MOAT REALTOR menis , approtimate far | Maceoay 
bath w 3 bedroo own- bed bd s wind ad. FE VICE oO garage. A p, the f co such EV AVE. h This | vy $67 autiful LAKEFR 
th p. Nea ms and room _ b erful { 4-1661 —— custo: mn your u at ca inest hi mmercial | MUL ENING! FE Fun ‘pets. me os ho bea lot wi 
—— Bric mt Coen ppeeggel Bie Lotele | ber} ; Neat 2 t ACRE custom tly Oe aa 0,500 n be bought. ‘heating _ TIPLE DINGS UNTIL, 8: set H price itso tor. Raesiciecty ok w Qh ee Ed, own — 8 
your das fs down. . carpetin m with fi arge — Blvd edroom ~ famil BRICK 8-1198 ce MO red. house 
Sonny corpeting aa dre replace Bice = ot Xen bath. Off pay Some OR CAN L = RE BUILDIN mie 
Eliz Raat e ers Eo" in- $730 1 ow Cab. $5280. frepiacs: yee 2 baths BE 2 c O nT on G SITE 
“lizabe ‘ akfast ng roo 50 Down $5250. ols, rm Low oi] heat, LZ r t : terms - P 
rae Lake Estat per tlaryag wnook, "downstairs sar baths. 4 Tpedr Large 7 ¥ _Terms, astb diy n Low taxes ex. 3 — ee FOR S: heed ie the ou WALTE riced right 
2 lots. ered es — summer plarge screened 2 pedreons ST SIDE “PONTI rma, Close-tn eo 3, BEDROOM : rr 230. sides | ine nea edrooms on s hilltop se “Se pects oe Hotere sebea oe $2.200 ERS LAKE FR 
eatu vl F a rch ned i 8. $0 U m 5.8 t Re floo 4 ook: e 1 price ONT. — 
moi oye Se ee eee RONTIAC REALTY SP tat evap | ote wd feeeke| Sea ek cay EGS See vat ei witoat| Er isa ete 
. lots ce. dint bath and as h Ful screened $3,500 EQU 420. ‘om tach in th, or D c ot 182 n G wail » | ‘onve Tele ce. r that oc An 
boards ef kitch ng ble b with sho bar; Pile: eat, 2 1 base =) EQUITY PE 5-827 . ed 2 ca. e basem ad's ti E ae L to Al mient to graph Rd. cottage excellent 
. lar en cu } rick wer, Dou- nty-of shai nice lot ment.| room FOR ‘E 5-8275 ( scaped r gara, ent. At- stricted ip pliances, so has eve \. 
ceerse Sree ee cl Me eta, mokinn bee a Two. (2) cash te Sn ete onsen ne room arora $1,400 IN 11. RES ee ere ge. Large | a fre suvdivision well _ Pret Snenad cares: WALTERS 
ets, den ardrobe ed home w se x 110. (2) small d mortgage. ecg spire acre country’ hom IN 7 ) RESALE r boat. $20,75 a@ spot to and- gowns and clea. win Monside? ont y lots and i garage, 2 pine LAKE : 
basem with bul clos- built’ the. uilt w This own pa. oh a aillacen| payin a inen at 2 5 R : aes : 0. FHA t place| f ayment. nats Lome as Hae $10,950 Gis priced celle: constructed corTas 
basement, ith builtins, = built ine eet men they N ORTH <I coupe payment. ae PIREPLAC inp erms. formatfon popes a pels ase for i can =< nt area. Saty EA 
—? car puree "rear ter. soe Sof man who Splat io SIDE w me ARPORT. 993 8Q. ETTE WHITE BRO a bert C. Davis, . sia 88 LAKEPRO: “fi80" down. 
sco" 3 car gerace,_ #58 side home “for” bis ree living room. "t RA AREORY 00 9. FT, OF ¢ = BROS $6 - $900 D ene, jake fronte ' 
one, look t wait 000 Giadly for his west 1% ca g room, fu full bath, B um $81.50} $500 DO OF OR o. 2 5 Down W ake f rT a 
kow this nel ote gr family. g7000 with 1 basem COLO} Suomes te WN AND fey aaa ine or 3b wn | SABws. ay ee: tt 
“Bud’ So rote E80 2 sen Pinee ni RED — 2, Ne CS MONTH IN Open_Eves.” ) Dixie Hwy home, lot edroom bri This 3 bed witb $1, pric 
ud Ni te . : rthet de- NO at rns 3 Be _SURAN § AND IN- BY OWNER il g: Sun. 84 x 300 ck start clean room hb 300 dewn. ofc 
icholie, R WES 5 = RTH rg = WE eon: low Pgarateany IN- 5 NER, 9 un, 10 “til 140° ft. on er ood and neat ungalow is WALTERS LA at 
ealto T SIDE SS. | ee IDE: sale ph RS sal R cece ti Wanty: Cher : Ft. pave- goed’ epee and in v sand 
Si pe r fae 3 See = Tau SER RX. J. VAL J ey sa ae gi Lake F ee acs wet can ery| Comx take “ti 
| tt sagt re Ke ne Thre Reece) meee ail bath. ti! = VICE | 345, OA UET,R ay Ave mall yea’ ronta ing ee ae rent- mmunity Ses we 
| e bedroon a 1 — rest ¥lse DpocK | © KLAND ealt : cn” itn’ pence se rice oe $5,950 wate A-l ares. 
V Tr as tans heae m Penllcaar vailabie. payment. GI . 950 : thes motel Ma FE or ; : Complete basement rng with . irst he 0. You ~ Full $1,500 Santee. “ 
= PO ACANT 3 — > eet cigar . GEORGE erms 6 aM TIPLE aeons UNTIL 8 on y fenced, one nici win. e to be| ~ 
eS oe a BLAIR cmObERY gv domes ) om CL Ar se earner al 
$895 Auto e Hw: fms. uro: INSON. 1143 1 erty, asement 5 
An Saws DOWN 6 a ss eS DRAYTO Pik on D. Gardens. 7 LAK. 608 CY = ‘$5,900 
— ee a, livin a6 ee. ect : apy oe hats Hl ested Ded ens, 7 e | on A TRION SOE GAN Pp : on terms.” on prop- 
at ‘cabinets. Kitten’ with room, — 300" with sy OWNER. FIVE sine. this, 8 / RM HOUSE on’ E. IRW NLY $350 MICHIGAN Vy SYLVAN 
wi | HU! WNER 1708 ‘ AVE. M ss frontage BUI RWI bedrm DOWN. NT. on 
tage, 10, Uuility Attacks Dewy | _— cocas aaa gsi beet_ nem le PWV. $300 CASH. 8 Your, new N ~ otere. aah zo on thi cine a = 
Near Walled fa aves “strect mong es f verd. is a eeerpecae. | 66_W. Huron DINNAN thes facies. to ee ele Toe AT y FE ny ‘nasemanh pa vengaiow, homes” Priced $30,000 
8. rr 4 ¥v i . 
R- TE . stores, schools 600. rth property F Peay with Exe Bice foe ee B e : FE 25 how ay poms that po fae! mee eee ake pe year TRACTIV Ez ano, oo a heat | FE 500 BROKER at se. 
1195 W LW ICKERSHAM bedrooms, ‘ving fora TA St buys neEXCHANGE, STR m| features Bled ng you sare a | Tansee ame deme. ano, washer, ‘softener,-‘wall "To 6 + 
. Maple Kitch and dini MULT ern painted 7 EET our trade- a Oni west 1g and dra E = . 
RUTG Mayfair ment, of] Seat Full b ng IPLE LISTI T Onl name ni room mod : SACRI e-in Pridham, ya Si y $13,200 side Pncb rac Tw E ~ 
ae eT rage, Lot eat. Double ase- = | DRAYT NG SERVICE oad Only $1,140 ce lot. shade. > pec Fog wo N — 3216 on PHA terms. Neto ATE 
red Ww 190 el RAYTON W y KE ter e. edroom b onma + as rhor, Good z rms. me & at = 
ONLY ais hucaeos Plas. ONT , 5 room RION od terms baths, f rick ra 94.6404) at fizing Ts ; van 
$2,069 DO woe fits. OODS beaut ey Excellent garag enced neh hom ._Bal a 
—— > ge. yard. e, 1% eos take $60 per —— 
DRAYTO A wid . SPENCE $10 180 pode aa Large 24 =xa, ‘20, for equ a 
N  PLAI the nieaece bas NCE STRE Lae scaped jot. sYL x30 | FOR 5-8183 equity. 
NS moder lawn a ST a EAR rms Jot. VAN SALE B 3. : 
$190 Dow ew 3 bedroom Reg ees Ge aici, ot) Eom meme, vi Bagi Geeta | A beaut ranch Pont Name’ an’ brce tal Base | Kan 
#0 _OTaER n wood” foot. "walls." hae: » O replace Ki apart as car: in thg most benutiful st ne SSecr * acres. Deautitul wood. . Se itebea built Sees cea ise: oat Sr woke Pull price mpsen 
: - COSTS oo ‘d- place 2 : tran c. .V 8 iG scrib ord ood- room uilt-ins full . ui mation ce 
2 bed , hu m, comb st le liv ‘i raeacer “a Nenu wi baths Tata with ti estibule see eit s won't ent. wit 2 fire s! 10x25 f SALE re Tane, inquire | 
(raga ome ie ae kitches. A prep is _ poster Gre! with bull Fee ne nthe fe oe — stile coc J oe Easpiscen | en od BY Ow Milford. REALT 
comet A f be shoul o. A ash, fi rece! locks dishw firep} livin leads a e to ar atta plete eae bath. NEP 3 ORS 
screens, tic heat “built id reall roperty Or rad W ay ne asher. |. lg place, fult room with L ) rly pos- 24x30, Ci ched pl. rec, . Liv. r * . BEDR: = F m 
vnene wad treet, rl. oPe and ~aainrse. to uke Mali. ae er oa pte Sie tras: room, ‘eheerfil ee: 2531 I P° HOLMES SAKE » | east at _ Fro meme a garage New lal kitchen gf rons M8. S17 8. Telegraph _ FE 4-0528 LAKEFRONT. 
= couse 05 Im mediate t and eer on eagy bie itchen newly remod- peer Rd. FE 5. i Attrac E tifu tar? drive pl 2 car ene Eves. & 1 Ridge” Exclusive 
possession I FORE i | ards and with birch Z : 5-2953 cties 2 to fenced, cated garage, L . . & Sun. —h ; 1% A. site 3 
EV DAYS ST LA ers of tormsica “aeuae ‘ Days J pepe Mus skates tnndasnnen ITTLE STIN : : —— = 
a sux, TO HO Ce ees J8 LIS iy bed best workmanship, plete with 3’ lots” muuiity, “Com: sae “4i8. Alberta cea hen: 3 rooms Me STINKERS bargain, but it's “Nos 
ment, ob HOUSE, FU 8-9851 | aoerd hall cu: ; We ue ee — 3 love: $975 J $7,050. m-| 5 nike: Lake _ } Blvd. Hopert vacant. Fe tla le of Pontiac primate $5 7 Bh gg best! 
| mike dat? dy S'S ow ARGER CO fate and cove eg Naps rams tie bath With shower Soc HockESsION” ohn K. Irwin & S BEDROOM BRicK. FOL at] Ee Leth see ae rd igi on" Orebard 
ry, MY a . Huron ) ft covered car an ment with sets Ful er, edroo ESSION LL PR R on lot. c e. livin LL e . ame yo m i 
WE T 3-2829. OPE E living roo: reer po ga oil he recreati 1 base- off - m bun Mod — apap = Lake close to g room. ASE- V ur own te ake an I e 
NEAR RAD N_EVEN FE 5-81 — meee m wit pete 318.980 7 Iomdes tone Only 700 Baldwin ies hate i 313 wsince, 1838 ; E Rd, + enost yard h noche 4 ACAN TMs. slie R: T 
Rtaclte pen oor" ieee okt om) Ent ch “vine, fan eset Soe) | on nage, eat eg eee Subir | § Beage Ra eesied otf Hat A al 3 
ement Gag room hom ms e, 3 ex with — . , ent. oil oak floor: kitche e. FE 3- in ated o 2198 
cE. Stent at 0.0. Ss | room. "knotty poe batts and PERRY ST. 9 ACR | seapeg Pot blackto svtullbare: | ONLY ue ro, bower. LE ESTATE Reme tf oe cue boi Psa 
course — ETH LAKE room include resen feet tr ES ei p street. = INLY $300 payn & tneo Sylvan Paym r own dé inte . 1 block 
— ce cen — Golt| \) oo oe carpeting in| ai, fost tramtane <8 $1.360 A ey DN. Ler Appr ld ee). aes Lake ents $50 per month r 
a Full W seaped. J cl ighwa new di- ‘Dow |) watts “sentrera id at oy yg tills = aaa , 
stove base- ILLI ot 100 ose to n y in city 1 WEST | th stai for th FE once M M own th. 3 
SEE OUR og = $00. and oven) @ AMS L Include ew -Northe imits, ner bonck 4 BEDR dormit tway to is 2 4-6089 ake me ust be _W 4 
home in DEL— I terms K. : JOHN masenry modern rm High. Tos lot with BAN. L ooms.| adit ory attic rates Pare foe an offer. ood q 
MODEL Pegutits own — jus 1 con 6 roo a iy raga la) ami ba ore onal b ich ed = . oF ; 
fein | pate Pa Se Na mongers ert ZL. a See wan | Bnoatas sartte Rel Bee | ea ie see a ceeee sons, corn TEE OE S| . 
day trom 2 a Open eee Ge iving yes ver? xcellent i ailoway Lake. erste @he so ath down 2 ARIE HELTON Sephageie te ‘m_ come OR, ia a. 
2 to 6 thi se, Close to sam  ekee ca. 670 W. Hi hie here, Gar moe het here | . 3 pe. bath” sep: noe ctate winaew Pet on yo 1238 Mse 
. Hu : ‘ er roo ath, room ind: Wood ur 
° ELWOOD REALTY | cease oe in om Me Pe as wih terms egee mate ob full basement ree one as renay Outside. mult, bath, Otiity LAWRENCE: W e. 
44 or FE 1 men price. | 7 . ¢ $3, 250. Full price, * ETON r stop at eae Cab toon: hw 
2-5452 5 “ACR $750 ‘D 600: FO ull price, | $850 ON We ha offie f g Call tod . 
YEAR ’ ES autif OWN lasal Hon ce A DOW we lots avait wlerasaton 
u ‘ m ae N. : avail ation. A , 
AR ‘ROUND HOME genta, furmbos empleton Dean eh otf from?) ie fies "enep road Scoot Jc HAYDER™ YiOraye , 
shai pple north utili bath s cute 4 aths, artme plus f 8 car r and with - . 
By own S LAKE parr 2 barns eae L - WHI ty room. home. pl nac baseme ite ithe congrone land garage 2% septic. 2 6 EW ealtor A Wi bal Sele > 
re wienealen 2-bed pd one—only $6. ots of) 50° TE LAKE Loder room. Excellent ae eS a co soy) med peperate ; My acres of | alton” ORD TO TH Resort ‘< 
to private cn cupel noth. acoees L Sppo yee] a frontage. Love cE possession immediate prices sii.soo. fed fur- ° FE 8.044 E WISE Prop. 44A Z 
aS get co with sccess AKE AN ge ghd per ee ely 2bed . vate $13,500 boo. | “OF SArage, Leslie R. Mi 2 Womes hago r 
oe ee ced for quick| path: NGELU pols aie edidas ition. Large. liv- -WEBSTE R Mi ; DO Get ic why we tae, —i CES DEER HUNTING AND ; 
op ae intend. Mo ee = Rn eae US RD. oe Bp borap Aopen Dist: BSTER SCHO ‘ RANCH TERE E BE FE STi 183 ddleton RRIS sen te bees beak . oe AU ND ' 
Sg ae Me soe Bee oa Se buss pia ta a Bor cree ne ~'on 3a ESR Fyn Sag a "AUSABLE RIVER | 
style k et tenes Tapes 1 urnac orated ome and arge ¢ 5% rooms MBE 8-6003 ic : aay 8 gy cabins 
i. hoe ‘kes Sal ieee ro tes ey a oecared sel ah Hoh preleh laos tehen ,, din- TIPLE LI a v N' tiful ‘erick fireplace be = 
3 BEDR ached garage. J om with fire- K, y $27,000 w a Leeda and Uitorge floors. fall Banca fe combined, DRA STING SER : : ion silnce Tueeen ot Luzerne & Red ac and | up. 
Ganga oom MOD ached garage. sand 2 car te- T Templ t mer ses ~All g nledll Baas: full basement oom. 3 be, beth | RAYTON Woo VICE om ma es B oe Mio, 
_ Garage. | basement. ERN HOME. Jot. Pull Se ee t- | 2339 Orch pleton, R on th tee oe 2 es ial ten hon red walls | 2 bedroom r DS LAKE F Sieekad gern eaaetee: te ort USINESS - 
Press ow: =: Aiea mo price just nice corne ard Lake R ealtor terms is lovely possessio CL eet FH. ite ic heat, | kif th large anch type FO * FRONT . érive. Hi garage — te or near Mio. Re 
h coun re $19,600, < After 6 FE 4 FE 4 home.. FHA z ARK + . Terms. : tchen and living or bungalow A won UR: BEDR . landsca ‘alf acre of ved ls, ase sta’ . Restaurant 
EM 3-416 or Eh TY REALT CL WISN 2600 TO REAL kitchen and uthity room. ‘8 low situated on af Ooms ssaeesl ces Gall! a v. BS DaLey’ tat ' 
164 or_E = ARKS A pecas and ven pe - BU BUY, T ES | aod shrubs. Has | com. Situated | | ee care baeare a A000 class ads. Tn thi ALEY (Bi ; 
M eh TON <n as and sun EE? ILDI FE O 8EL TATE] 08 take Hon ot with nica | lot with a beautif home pointment te Call fo e lc MIO Micuioa : 
1 after 6 Have be: bath artm porch — Tw -DING SIT 1362 W. “0402 L. TOT 15 floors. as plast flowers} "0a spreadin ul lake front te see todas ap- ABIN ) fe 
KE tri-level autiful im < Von Geen te down aoe. large } E M OR rE RADE | Sle corauce. Eeemced “eeu dist eens eee ieede trees: A BARGA ay. R a 
thin yp 2 prego 2 car baseme rent. 3 co Waleors wt lots, “MULTIPLE LI orl | FHA ance. Ci and . rict, Al Scbuae fckeci IN Re per week. 
gq. f ‘arkston te br! gare nt, of . 2 te ern nea LE | \ terms ‘an b vestit | in uminw: ac 8 Hill: % 
GARDEN NT Middie Take. 2 canal with every: per PONTIAC =o" down. $65 only ‘$000. =e ed to sell wae G.I. NOTH Listing TING SERVICE * e| crsTOM B © bought co} Sn cling. full bat mpisicing. gieam- In the country Oras 5S ecleemalaans 
OF ied cle te fees er ___TRAL oy) eee a ps Fees stad eee ne Sete a ret . x 
fon, arkston’ 40x to eS, lots, D = e. 12 room dy as $9. m h te ng @ otal : rge lot . fh fores E 
good ee $40,000 Soi on’s fine school ponies t ‘large | Oo E- IN 12x13 x18 i fami! r sh 000, Wi ome Pi d price wi _ $6,100 shin: t. Good ‘a, 
TDEN st|P and s street. € wner k dint ving y i ake, bri ub for i¢ i own. th onl mo. 8. $1,005. ante - 
you HA EDEN ponsible tlh terms AA aul M toree $1,000 d yey clear will a¢cept itchen ng room, reom = ng. Full b ck or spulld ce- 5. 1. SPE 4 y $600 saeesks u $100 ‘aa: oe 
ne ae CLARK 832 W. Hur Jones, R oe pn. come ore oud eb Ops Ul 9x12 reation ipeet anton wipenanind (ay 23x34 dpa€ <CIAI S | TWO ACRES \. Mich, GArden oe 
almost. im Gott eee H STON -- —— a uron » Real Est. Se reoee te, ; ea meat, 1% tate sun eed Clee aa sutomatic hes t oak floo ious bungalc be, Gan, Se 
the wa impossible ae that is Bers! 8 anoth i , Do Yo * FE 4-8: : near ie parcel s lavely . on the E lo baths ent with of closet 5 oak floo heat, slaminges plast galow with “Gives EAR 
of the vA beauty describe rs im ie 2 sears brick in C Her u Like Pri = 550 just Figaatd Villag Located just 2% ast side’ Located the best. pace. Workma -and lar, lot. rms tere walls ee L lots of —_ ROSC 
sible wheat sand and with one| — ac old—this i eee may it is—lar ivacy ¢ bes thls ae blackt limits, ellow Heed © irc of town anship wit, Nenlte rivi screens,  desltsing Loa ot Gan for a OMMON a ze 
landsca — you see = eae e porch me garage Si droom fron | peter new 3 bed and you’ ad road. only ol Frgpocet Clee Lohg- ~ CG eges $8,950. ranches grapes — trees Pnilgas, jog cabin. z 
realize se artistry @ array of Pr ason—8t only is the bu creened ay Livin: ne Led. room | _. buy it. AN move you ng cost eor j (b>) Attra: way er garage and roém Blectrie ae ee 
Garden 7 wo oad tls ope vee ie way ot ee ovely. kitchen Fee sig Seton Edw OTHER tn. ge ' Gensaing che beh op as bréeze- we. oc: pump. e. : 
of Eden this will . Call ft arge gia chen ti g room dward A2 GI BU REALTO TW Too: w, plu me fiv L this for bedroo $2750 and rol- 
| Priced spot the or| of sto sseq bre utility. room! | 77 N- [. Sto 2 bedroom. bul Vee sain te in| t mon rear paneled” tae terms. V $13, 500" with cacy a oe 
at $27,- Ho . tached ate space ezeway. = Sagina ut, Re 1 expansi m_ bung. FE 5-010) BALDW nished d ear and family imm acant, ith eas J. Cc. Hz ‘ ad 
: ub ient w St. alto ele a Slow Ww = or NA eetaned Gormioey two ediat, — MA . HAYDEN, ~ 
wa || teens taser roughout. At- Open Ph. r droom ce for ith ___OR ve oll he ¥ bed: large e possession you N 
1 tre ze. 8 At- Eves. ° FE 5-81 =H A tatee ‘Chee 3441 i assem canes room, b. BUILD R : 
5275 J d E. F you fin es, Thi acres w til 65 3 eatin ge k rd - S| 975. r gare Ase- | - ING SIT 86 E ealt 
RE arkston |—-— ox| Grier mance Tecate mR aetna, iti -ANNET eae bi Mamie") : twats eat 
as “AL ESTATE. INC yton Plains Dorothy Si Babes actin oe : aa. riatene An et de Meee T’ S $10,200 for a Gand is price of youll a ble with « vi — K PROEERIY. aaa 
« Pa : . ,000 : erm and y fiv 0 ow priced ’| s enjos ew a few ntage 
c cross” Clarkst , . REA Dies L DOWN VAL three a neot, e room | ed-to vy. Call Reas. f ft. to Bt on Us 27 
Pacer kanes “yet ane Est. avender |2 A large 5 lot beautiful bere cen met 136 E. P Meee ate 1" or cash PH. FE. : : 
: . ; - y _ PI nce, GIN, PH. river. 
Open Daily 910 9 eat, OWNER RE M3 "ES ee a (MeN giner entra FULL BAS with Ifxa0 ving Poor ranch INCOME OR ae eee ced aclmtlns TEE, "FE 95 OPEN EVE ee ae y 
— a U E as, $1 EMENT P a room, ral HO | DO “ 5 Ss and R 0G 7 ; 
N EW aa ree d wants to NG A $1123 a” owner “seg wt ‘only “98 330 heat. re Bnew School weet oS | 952 . “ wee REALTO —___ Multiple Listing | 5 Be parce ren Sad ear Cg ‘Rowe ie 
Di Nati erator s beautifu DO _ _ | Month’ “$11,780. umace. Upst furs” PdON: RS rvice ding. PE 53 Read 
IT’S LO sists of Village. ro age bee of Wi th: 5 room b WN IVAN w. onth. $11,750, rented fo pstairs PHONE ; y 
ADED feng Teen ai is home cons Ae Puree wee tems. FE 4-1557 
a m ms, cons wae DRAYT ae For 
’ it Must Be Seen place and lovely ites et ee | Paint Ceeek Hi eee DOWN mer oe M Pontiac in, good local UNLIMITED N Ye ACR Sale Lots. 46. 
ii iheson wt Featu OWNER ontage. rey yard Lo reek Hills Hetlengeees 2 bed Oran nee 2 fire rence cod location, ee b at FOR OUR FUNDS $330 DOW nison E WOODED 
: x27 ft. f with ~ b res SAY cated on = s good soi! roem EV COR ail heats ae 2 built in ed- ‘FHA CUSTO OW N—Lo: Roc Acr 8u LOT IN 
i agi ft. asity rece uilt-ins. Yes, this 2 bed S SELL becwe a is. this ranch type "CUCKLE me tee 4 fa MULIBLE Lisn RSUNDATSS oun heats atinched 2c barsmene | CONVENTIONAL MO BERAL feets OF Rg ecto fb oar ronsonatie. Senere he Wear 
- nae ch ir $500 ING Ys x 12' ar ga MOR storm: il A seme ga- | _ 1-005 $2,200. 8 
14"27 = pn hay carpeted priced me « - lowe bungal of! ‘aaa shen on type LER RE down. SERVI R 1. $22,800, rage Thig n TGAGE orms & Cc furn nt. Oak 1 Owner. | Very 
13xl4 ft. master tee baths. — picngg e eH. 55 we have on scapin ith Leautifut acres 236 ON. ALTY CE ROCHFATER ee ride! service Ss cently de screens Til Aluminum 2 LOTs r. Tuxedo 
bene 3 ecrecm room. xeellent beadrnte Gag = roca-ony Mearguhe pdupicoey jand- mo ' On Wie Eee | you. A your ice makes it ea aw Su ey bh MEX 
lixl4 ft.- bedroom, carpeted BRIC NC es imming. fi and lar, e brick, sto fea- FE 4-40@1 ; ar creek on scenic 3 @ in Paint, Chast nd also h e with ca raph ed street. -}| Kenn nett Rd. 124 pow LAWN 
as eee ee carpeted. K NCO — te] rlor inclu overstang., Inte OFF PONTI ic cree on. pronene fe eres with | oon ees neice whe oar $15.500 SE mire) ete oe 
100x160 “ft pa vee : The down ME and lar des 3. bed Inte- ata ees LA IS THE e room. 3 fitep’ ceiling neo) ODS down ‘paymer with a mat a BY al’ oP residentia Zoned ‘coms 
pat os, cost pa den, e famil edroom new 3 KE RO, “BIRD” rooms epiace and fami w yment mini- | lo eautiful ADE — ouue ential, FE iva 
min . parcel ; on yment 2 tire yr 8 shinin bedro AD = D h a cathele 3 ly hit w wi 1 3b L - RIN 4103 
|. eae pontine, tn, &_ good ond Seater eee Ren rgd et, water forced air heat, vi am Tanck with! que, BRICK roves | thm"Eeat ‘Radiant’ foot feng pes Pireplace, Helos Sarees mito ou ,220,, Very. reasonah 58 
| Other. extra fer Warat’ te per Se ie ee s: eaanar aud and Ju itchen ving room 13x31, A ye RAN ; . ving ar @. good beac eee ch Goan teen Sa rm onable 
* Dishwashe al a tre Tents for $50 e sec~ ca er and d combinati st $400 d a @ room m 13x21, |-~ Dre ys attra: NCH GREE ea.| casy ter beach, v view cf eaper hom beach ‘will Boat | LARG . 
dit. er, garba lude such : a a Sowers 45 taal plastered ryer. Also 2 mertgage. ¢ Ae “2 thae 2 pte! bra: ea LAKE F i<3ne ao $12.5 e etrege ‘accept | E LAKE 
built-in range | and Be 1 1g Oe geet ee Bit | Brice ‘has’ plbsilas rey to $11,850 FHA [ pbs cree oan nd _ new Gellent beach. FRONT—06 ce galy ,$12.000 Oe. Pr private lake LOTS 90x 
lass relly ~ _ oven, ne elling . This rice has ‘od pode Soa — Se oven with b me. Beau- a p. Nice y 55° on r of ex- Ceda or best. P: UNTRY ent down $3,000 wi 275 ON & 
f, clos jaree) “tor ental 29,900 been ting. HOME corner with: rot uilt-in rea and sindacened. “ci 130°; 1 Tr Isla f rice LIVING. 3-6210 MU th 35 
amily room Win beet. * 13,900 Wi ‘S. e for quick se duced {0 3 OFF SA - and firepla isserie, U grin | Spaci fruit trees aved, ga year nd lakef or quick = Hae . oeis or fae 
of cupboa xtra rd room ge bho th seen to ho, sale. M a shell hoe room, ful SHABAW and living roo ce between nusual| 4 Tetras living es.. Built in rden| rooms, brit ranch cost Lovel Must be sale ae uced $3,000 Lake t EM .s 
equip td space arge am RLOCGn ALTY ttawa H ec ‘cpevadaiee, -| or wil! © waneesa { 1 basement -Plastere a uality dining en rooms, 2 eine a a 1950. feature: car gh ome. 8 fiat room fa cash Pay ades, please. “hig nriivileges 
Seare’ booting. & tes! tox ¢ is| ee fotos i, One ¢ ills . trade. no. money for $300 down | Wait Enjoy. the pi Heated fire. screened ieaug arcane place. | 001 wail Sneling built in Set Saepiecets 1, Large 4 bed- oe dots. $2,000. Large 
oe spactouen fa a real Tonery base: omar inabeth — fre a and noses ta | Bek money down. oa now Pleasures vofa| 4 Sect bear ea Baseme a on pe wall carpe throu nt ernized rita A peat aa ox: Oren 8310 tasy term for yalkout : 
, only hom 6 w es Bae EDROO . : or soa 8 read a garage. —, Call MU at in. fteine e@ room to mod- 3-6210 8. MU + & 
see 900" with living. For Al rooms a ell forated | Custom M TRA T Just $1 and| 4 ACR $45,000 nl peel ag od retire, peted living Piclu bottom. = 
oe on ‘or 80 @ breakf nd 1% bat ment, built ran RAD 4, on b ES LA = = EM 36210. 17x17 ving ro re window All chard a: 
iS LADD" 7” ser ek wanerel tea ne. Be. sae ch with ful E YOU ac Wiel a Soeseene 10 ML crane reid Hea ey Pie, 135 Piso’ Hinting 5 
2 car natural {i , Car: rs, pla ic, heat, 1 base- you’ R HO sandy be vel ranch, NT—New full lovely ‘Oo car itehen 0: ely der. [Tor eee st xe 
ben S; ING. arage. Pric replace, closets sp hecho walls, select bak a t's re lookin U SE redwoo ach. Ler 150 feet er _ hardwor basem large bri land. Sch garage’ T x60 barn. e IN DRA hland, Michi, 
in awn pies ae location on Gechcied:. sounrban tee 3 Gees ing fer 2 tance bere te living roo st | (valle. leagerosk (fic jeri foo Sk bool bus at ren acres of more, Drayton BOGE aad 
sign. We ~ pad Ne pletely fin! dean toostaly pod Pains $3.- too bevek Seen Coun Suburban | hack arn er to-Keep up, Suistiee ticker ee en a gerock firep plasters Gakicnd “Gea oor. Here rayton Plains. 
e “% enthly pa alance i dissatishe a large ous lot. I batk vs just tt ngalow i p up,| room ve kitch creation om. | duilt and bric eplace. a ed County est value: s 
a : eer ame A --paasalle ov as . poe h ed with equity and if shad yard an one. Nic n town 3 , 4 large nea, and br room, Lar in oven, r k in bas _liv- $1,500 DO' s in : 
a M W ee ere is your your ‘present My earl aig 48 » pee. hel tame Seren aie Pron Soir breakfast | Tee ae tee ‘ange and ainent, | 3106 WN'—Inco i 650 
oy a M. H. : chance to nice cha: of hom et us ince and | © tront with i gitinee sey a1 baths | efisy in a hore vervthin snity. opt per incom me special 454 
eee REALTO: KNUDS -| for you. ee che make: nnd | diant heat, cy ecue grill. elec: en Ne pat He. San | “incl tyee.| Lasaied ugar stead) OSE IN 
yt R244 EN- IN _ Yr You. e can mak now. | 86 t heat, c door, 20 elec- 6 ae 4-2045 with in Pay ed near r own WITH N. 
} 6 £E nb TEL ea trade’ aped gr clone f ned ra- 4 hte ad | EM cluded. street A down- H TR ; 
neem Ee FORAP LIAM | RE. @ tes and carpetin ee ace | Milford. 6 — ee 11 furniture PAV EES 
8 SPR SCAT «me Siren on PARTRIDGE] R- ne eee ig encore im “H-BROW roan meman aAE, 
a i 8 . m ront e e, 
= OREN ee Ww. stalls Roy An Eanat front, gxfon ‘wiry 1 ron 968 Wa N. Realtor fo live i yea cae he ‘vied 
ING I $600 down, she “| Multi ts || LA : _ 
. SeRvicE | 2s 2. RoALTOP nett, ric § rooms, lovely ranch ple citing Pi pth ee MUARGE R a 
| SSL toes ae . Waterford: storms tad ypebems| | OLLING XES. | AREA 
Open Kvenin (CE 1923 downtown Pont ik ome i eee 8 ____Income Pro col nm 5 EA 
3 eet Tewral #006) | RIC ae me seats | Nie ne Property 434 I NV 
y 1-4 | 135 HARD '8T 3-621 2 -FAMI Da ADD" 
M-59 PELE, ; Marshal LY IN - H 3 INC. 
ts Hi REALTOR \y ment = ee COME. 80 IGH H 
. ghland, Michi 1 Une. 3 car ered walis, UTH Sal ILL- VILL 
igan 814.950 Sith si On base- esmen LAG 
yr ene th $i, city bu on prope 
ee eat * ; 3, : $00 dn. at Drive m, iit Sone 
. | "Reser Ras ) 
i 2 
9 ‘a . 
i ys 
       ‘ \ 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1958 
Ce, 
Wa 
  
     
     
    
   
     
  lb er 
jed to an axial tube inside a 
“in two Tubber bowls — one 
: the 
fthe container. Made of alumi- in the device is lighter than 
tional golf bag. i. ' 
  
prohibit, 
  container. Their heads! of 
  
- you were born      
  @ $1,000 life in- 
icy (for people up 
tor-age 80) so that you can help 
take care of final expenses 
without burdening your family. 
You handle the entire trans- 
action a, mail with O 
AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. 
No obligation. No one will call 
on you! 
“Tear out this ad and mail it sday with your name, address     
        
      
         
          
  f birth to Old Amer- 
. ce Co., 3 West 9th, 
Jept L821A, Kansas City , = let us tell you how you can| 
till apply for 
ce 
  
  ‘Fate Claims 2; 
een Others Survive Iron River Man; Son 
Friend Die as Plane 
Plunges in Storm 
‘IRON RIVER #—Fate p. 
a role in a weekend plane crash 
fatal to an Iron River man and 
the teenage son of a friend, 
Gary Jackson, 16, of Stambaugh, | 
and Tom Rucinski, 40, of Iron Riv- 
er, were. killed Saturday night 
when their storm-tossedlight plane 
nosed into a Wisconsin swamp, 
*x« * * 
A second plane, piloted 
Gary's father, Everett Jackson, 
and with Danny May, 16, of Stam- 
baugh, as a passenger, escaped 
storm in an emergency landing in} 
a farmer's field. 
had covered about 
miles. 
FIND WRECKAGE SUNDAY 
The wreckage of the Rucinski 
plane was found Sunday afternoon 
near Armstrong Creek, Wis., 
miles south of Iron River. The 
bodies of the victims were taken 
      
the planes lost track of each | 
ether remains a mystery. 
‘One theory was that Ruc 
River through the storm and 
finding no trace of Jackson’s plane, : 
turned back into the storm to aid 
him, .   A sudden, violent storm hit 
the planes as-the men and boys | 
were returning-on a 230 - mile 
flight from Milwaukee where 
they had watched an air show, 
+ Disaster struck near Wisconsin's 
Nicollet " National Forest. The 
LD planes   
       
     
    
      | | 
' by 
39, 
the 
    NY ROEBUCK AND CO. 
        
      
  
  180 
30 
| 
        
        
        
  
      
       every day is BARGAIN DAY 
at B&G TILE. es 
the market” 2 
  
         
            
»e ~ Extra Special! CEILING TILE | aad 
alls pace ue 
ae 
: 
iF ES I a. 
my 
id oa 
tS 
Lily 
Easy to Apply 
Asphalt :Floor Tile 
Datk Marbleized 5¢ Ea. 
Lasting beauty at lowest cost! 
Ideal for basement floors. 
Pattern can't wear off, goes 
clear through tile. 
Viny! Asbestos Tile, ea. 12Y2¢ 
    : Cartridge 
Caulking Compound 
(39¢ 
Gray-tan caulking compound 
.. perfect to use with caulk- 
ing gun. Ideal for filling cracks 
belore painting Cartridge 
  
; Brand N ame 
PAINT SALE Pay Regular Price of 
$5.95 for 1 Gallon 
GALLON 
FOR ONLY 
Howse & Trim @ Exterior Primer 
@ Masonry Paint @ Flat Enamel 
| @ Giless Enamel @ Semi - Gloss 
--@ Primer-Sealer Undereoat 
@ Vinyl @ Latex Wall Bond SPECIAL ON 
Plastic 
WALL 
TILE 
All Colors 
ie       
     Skeleton Type 
Caulking Gun 
Ss Only 1.39 
~_A rugged caulk gun for filling 
cracks around fhe home. Long   
Shuffle Boards-/, Off....... .59.95 
Shuffle Board Set-Special.... .°6.95   
SPECIALS ON FLOOR TILE! Corktone Asphalt TILE, 3 Shades, Box of 80 $5.60 
Spatter Asphalt TILE, each ............ | de 
* Inlaid Linoleum TILE, each 
Vinyl Plastic TILE, Lifetime Guarantee, ea. 6c 
6c see ee ee 
  
    Robbins Plastic Reinforced Rubber TILE, ea. 14¢ 
Open Monday, Thursday, Friday til 9 
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday ‘til 6 
‘FREE PARKING 
      9-inch barrel holds caulking 
cartridge. 
    Clear Plastic 
Utility Dropcloth 
1.98 » One giant seamless piece of 
sturdy plastic. Protects furni- 
ture while you 16-ft. 
cord to tie cloth 9x12 - 
paint. 
down.      
     
      
  Made of Highest Grade 
Aluminum Construction — With the hot summer weather moving in now you can have that cool 
comfortable screen door without the bothersome flies and mosqui- 
toes. Made of the highest grade extruded aluminum. 2 storms, 1 
screen insert included. With door closer, chain check and all hard- 
ware. Hurry in during this sale and save! 
dv Buy Now and Save on This Inset Style Window 
fingertip ventilation panels change in seconds. 
save $3 on every window you buy! 
HOMART Genuine 
Ceramic Wall Tile 
29° A beautiful china-like finish- 
that's as permanent as your 
home. Won't: stain, burn or 
scratch. Spacers assure good fit. 
Yellow, aqua or pink. Homart Adjustable 
Iron Railings 
4-Ft. Length VW ‘Lin. 
Reg. 6.95 a 
Simply hack-saw stock lengfh 
railings to size and assemble! 
Fittings extra. Hurry in today 
and SAVE! : 
i ha OR al 
Sq. Ft. 
HS 
               
        yf 
   Ehoooinase: std Soa ones ~~ = “4 7 "a 
Do It Yourself with Use Rock Wool Pellets 45 
HOMART Jack Posts to Insulate Attic Floors eee 
Reg. 9.25 7.95 House stays warmer in winter, cooler in summer, when 
; you insulate with easy-to-use rock wool pellets! Bag Quick, saf y to k X : 
boas at its Tees! ‘best, Parace covers 25 square feet. ee ) 
tp to 20,000 Ibs: SAVE Rock Wool Batts (Bag covers 50 square feet........ 3.99 
       
         
  Master-Mixed - 
Red Barn Paint 
14.75 
Paint stays bright, gives pro- 
tection in most severe weather. SO —= i ee | 
o a Better Job— 
Use Undercoat! 
4.59. 
Master- Mixed House Paint 
Undercoat for longer wear and 
  Sealing Primer - 
1.95 
Paint this primer on where 
rust has already started. A ~ 
Quart Gallon 5-Gal. 
¢ 
special pigment checks rusting! better appearance of finish Easily applied with brush or 
Dries in 10-12 hours. coat. Seals new wood. spray. Paint, protect. 
bg 8 
=  Non-Fading s . 
Non-Staining T Ld s 
rim Paint 
   
   GALLON — 6” 
Color trim can make your home     
Plastic Finish 
Graining System 
4.98 a stand-out in the neighborhood! 
Master-Mixed Trim Paint is sloy 
Only i ..chalking . .. Won't wash down 
1 ‘i i int A 
doptieial old dark ce ‘No or stain from rust or copper. 
scraping, no sanding! Your Stays a brilliant shade for years. choice of blond finishes. 
Workmaster 
Econoniy 
Stepladder 
4” 
Our lowest priced stepladder. 
Grooved steps braced with steel 
for surer footing. 4-way steel 
spreaders open, 
Large folding pail shelf. All 
hardware treated or painted to 
resist rust SsFt. 
High - 
  Sparkling Snowhite - House Paint 
Gallon 6 3 9 : 
BEST BECAUSE, one coat of 
its ~brilliant white hides _, the 
darkest black. Dries smoothly 
without brush marks.      
  95 3.50 
DOWN 
~ Homart Aluminum Combination Windows 
“Tilt-Action” extruded aluminum windows... so convenient with 
Hurry in today and 
. -rubber. Chisel tip. 
close easily. , if Z ~~ = = 
    
          
       
  <M ~y re 
                
Reg. 16.95 
i3* 
      
         
   
   
  ee 
Easy Operating 
Steel Garage Doors 
8x 7-Ft. 5 ] 95% 
Easy up-and-over operation, 
needs no sib | pushing or 
llin Weatherstrip along u : 
Cotioa. With all hardware, 
9xu7-ft..59.98  16x7-fr..113.9$ 
  HOMART Insulating 6” Siding — Reg. $8.00 _— 
Beautifies your home, protects it from weather; also cuts 
fue] bills. Never needs painting, lasts for years arid years. 
Fire-resistant. Let Sears arrange for expert low cost 
installation. Dark gray, dark green and dark brown. All 
other colors at 10% off. 
        
  Workimested Finest 
Nylon Brush 
5.98 Of tough DuPont Tynex Nylon. 
Outwears ordinary bristles 3 to 
5 times! Bristles are locked in Handier. and Safer 
Ladder Jacks 
6.49 Easy to adjust.steel side rail 
ladder jacks places weight on 
the rajls, not on the rungs. 
Save today at Sears. 4-Inch Pair 
Paint alas, ; oe Serta! Men estan fot 
  AEBS 
Master-Mixed House Paint... 
15 Smart Colors to Choose 
.@ Regularly 5.29 | 4 4 
@ Gives New Home Beauty 
@ Richly Formulated GALLON 
Bestow new dignity to your home! _ Thrill to the rich fade- 
resistant colors. Be/assured of the best wearing surface 
possible. because pure linseed oil is used. Mildew, 
fume-resistant without discoloration. eC 
Paint Dept., Sears Main Basement 
154 North Saginaw St. 
‘Phone FE 5-4171   
  ¥ ‘ T