fh | : : A / “f He 4 CFT 3 An} ia Pe Ae pope ; | 4 a aay Lak The Weather ~~ we. | [+ - 7c ee ste page toe lition a 113th YEAR . me * * PONTI AC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, ees ie PAGES» — 1ATED PRESS xQRITED PRESS PHOTOS 7? —_ f k * kk Four Burned in ¥ * * * * * _ Paint Fire Gives Ott Thick, Black Smoke Turnpike Board | | at the Dynamic Manufacturers Inc. steel fabricating plant in Troy | Township, after ait explosion touched off a fire there early today. Cause | b the blast was not determined. Firemen from four communities bat- | ed the flames. : + BUILDING GUTTED — —— billows from windows of a building + Pontiac Frese Photo Heat Breaks Hires Two Aides - ‘Wolt-Whistle’ Trial Opens: ‘Record 3rd Day VanWagoner Is Named Consultant; Murl Aten: Secretary-Treasurer DETROIT — The Michigan | Turnpike Authority confirmed for- mer Gov, Murray D. Van Wagoner | as consulting engineer and hired former State Auditor General Murl K, Aten as fulltime secretary- treasurer at its monthly meeting | today. Van Wagoner, a former state highway commissioner, was hired | on a part-time basis at a fee of $1,000 monthly. Aten, a Jackson attorney, was given a month-to-month contract at a salary of $10,000 a year. George N. Higgins, a chairman, said Van would be used chiefly in a public relations role to help ee public thinking on turnpikes. “The public must decide Soni whether to go ahead or to forget | the whole thing.” Higgins said. Higgins also voiced strong oppo- sition to a proposal by the City of Dearborn that the route of the proposed Rockwood-Saginaw turn- pike through Dearborn be changed. Higgins said he had covered the suggested alternate route on foot and “could not recommend that the commission approve it.” He said the alternate route would require demolition of Dearborn homes, some of them worth $25,000 to $30,000 whereas no homes lie in the path of the route that was originally proposed. | The original route follows the’ Rouge River Valley. - 18 Indonesians Killed JAKARTA, Indonesia, Sept. 19 iww—Reports reaching here, today said_18 persons have been killed recently in guerrilla attacks on Celebes Island. Wagoner |. 340. ,| here, Viewers Frisked for Guns | SUMNER, Miss. (P—Sheriff's deputies searched spec- | tators for weapons today as they entered the courtroom | iti *. For the third straight day, a new | for the sensational “wolf-whistle” trial where two white | men are accused of murdering a 14-year-old Chicago. | Negro. | Sheriff H. C. Strider said he has received mere than |150 threatening letters “telling me I wouldn't live +through this trial.” “They're not Capital Boosted mess. by Pontiac State, tence is expected. Approval Given Today ** 2 Penalty for murder. scaring ™ Dist. Atty. Gerald Chatham said he would not question prospective jurors on their opinions of dedth | That apparently means the | by Shareholders for state will not ask for a death Stock Dividend | sentence for Roy Bryant, 24, and | , his 35-year-old half-brother, J. Stockholders of the Pontiac, W. Milam. State Bank, by unanimous action; ‘The minimum penalty for mur- at a special meeting this morning, | der is life imprisonment approved increase in the bank’s| Bryant and Milam are accused common capital stock by $100,000 | of murdering Emmett Till, a. husky by the issuance of 10.000 shares of common capital stock with a par | a wolf whistle at Mrs, Bryant, wife value of $10 per share. of the grocery operator in nearby The action is taken through Money. ‘declaration of a stock dividend jof one new share for each three: Lane Plans to Quit held by stocklolders of record to- | ‘Chicago’s White Sox day The capital stock, when the CHICAGO uw — Frank Lane. ts transaction is complete, wil] be ae to leave the Chicago White / $400,000, with a surplus of $400.- 000, in addition to other capital | funds in exeess of $200,000. Eden Defeats the Flu a want to leave, and I intend to | leave,” the general manager told the Associated Press today ,He said he and Mrs. Grace |Comiskey, ‘club president, will ' CHEQUERS, England (®—Prime meet “in the next two or three Minister Eden was up and about | days.”’ - The conference, in Which today after an attack of influenza which confined him to bed for sev- eral days. On doctor's orders he remained at his country residence Lane will request to be free from a contract ‘that has five vears to run, probably will be—Thursday following a two-game series with _ the Cleveland Indians. ‘ | negro lad who allegedly sounded’ Relief Is Promised for Tonight With Showers; Cool Air on Way all-time record temperature for this date was set in Pontiac today, The mercury hit an even 90 de- grees shortly before noon. The previous high for Sept. 19 was 88, set in 1948. | Sate ey’ s high in Pontiac was . The previous high for that — was 91, set in 1927. Sunday's high maik here was 94. The previous high for that date of 92.0, set in 1935. The heat wave brought lawn sprinkling bans to Birmingham and Berkley, but relief was _promised in the forecast of cool- er weather tonight and Tuesday, when scattered showers are ex- pected to precede the arrival of a mass of cool air from Canada. — | Today the weatherman safs it | will be partly cloudy and hof with | scattered showers or possible | thundershowers developing this | afternoon or evening. The showers tense heat today. Today's high in Pontiac is ex- pected to be about 94 degrees, to- night the mercury may drop as. ‘low as 64 ; The prediction for tomorrow will be partly cloudy and cooler with an expected high of 84 degrees. Downtown today’s low before 8 a.m. was 61. The thermometer reg- istered 92 at 2 p.m. —————— Paris Subways Running subway strike appeared ending to- day. Ninety-five per cent of the trains were rolling. Another strike, however, still kept city and suburban buses off the streets. The strikers are asking for a 15 per cent wage increase. Straits Bridge—Michigan’s (This ts the last of @ series of stones ‘| see the construction work on the; you have had to the ideal vaca- will bring some relief from the in- | PARIS (® — The four-day Paris | rurricane i und han Not arolin * * * r Troy Plant Blast ‘Township Rocks When Paint Unit Erupts in Flame Steel Plant Workmen Reported ‘Satisfactory’ By AL LOW?AN Four men were burned early today when an explo- ers Inc. plant at 4755 Roch- ester Rd., Troy Township. Listed in satisfactory con- seph Mercy Hospital were: Jack McAdory, 25, 451 Telegraph Rd.; William Krogmann, 22, of Mt. Clem- ens; Franklin Marshall, 21, of Romeo, and Archie Tay- lor, 24, of Royal Oak. McAdory also suffered a possible broken foot and Krogmann a possible bro- ken right leg. The men were working in .the steel fabricating plant's paint de- /partment when the blast, de- | scribed as ai dull-thudding ex- plosion, shook the area. Firemen, plant officials and workmen were unable to tell what sparked the blaze, which was put out shortly after noon. | ‘The fire was out of control more | than four hours, The fire was confined to the | paint department, a separate corrugated steel building located in the rear of the block-square plant. . Flames shot through the roof and windows as inky black col- umns of smoke billowed. hundreds of feet skyward. THe smoke pillar ‘was visible for at least .seven | miles. Plant personnel Manager James Walz said only the four men were |working in the. paint building j when the blast took place at about 7: 4%. - Paint in a large vat located in the center of the 300-foot-long (Continued on Page 2, Coj. 1) GM President Plans European Inspection DETROIT (INS) — General Motors President Harlow H. Cur- tice said today he plans to make | his annual business trip to Europe during Oetober and will visit GM installations in France, and England. | The GM executive will inspect | Progress of the $200 million ex- pansion program for GM opera- tions in Europe. He revealed the expansion during his European trip last year.” The bulk of this program is | shared by the three countries the ‘GM president will visit this year, |although four other nations are | also affected. sion touched off a fire at| [ger the Dynamic Manufactur- | aeeee dition with burns at St. Jo-|. Germany Double Storr in St. Joseph Hospital lop HURRICANES STRIKE — Map locates hurricanes Hilda and lone) rm Trouble _ ‘Storm Sweeps | Up Seaboard, | Headed by Rain Warnings Are ‘Posted From Witmington, N.C, to Rhode Island HATTERAS, N. C. (i — Hurricane Ione whipped in- _|today, and, sweeping north- .|ward, sent an apprehensive jchill up the North Atlantic / | seaboard. . “| North Carolina beaches ‘|and inland towns took | poundings from. terrific | = winds and high tides. Rain» ‘} | deluged areas miles ahead >| of the storm. lIone's gusts were clocked at 107 miles an hour as she s Se Wecebere | the Marine Air Station py hac: Point, N. C. jland .over North Carolina © as the twin storms lash at the widely separated coasts of Mexico and North Carolina today, Hilda pounced on the oil port of Tampico and winds estimated at more than 100 m. p. h. raked the already flooded city. Ione is nearing the Cape Hatteras area of the North Carolina coast “This is the strongest and largest hurricane to pass north. ward through the Middle Atlan.’ and is heading north-northwest toward southeastern Virginia. reaching Montevideo said Aires. mitters in Buenos Aires MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay nation. Army Minister Gen. Frankl sations. A later broadcast from the rebel fleet in the River tation. The broadcast from Buenos Aires said the decision to seek negotia- tions was taken because of insur- gent threats to bombard Buenos Aires and the city of Eva Peron. Rebel naval forces had an- nounced the, bombardment of Mar del Plata, a seaside resort town 400 miles southwest of Buenos Aires, and a threat to shell Eva Peron, the capital, of Buenos Aires province, only * 35 miles away, Claim and~ counterclaim from) each side continued to cloud the exact situation of the revolt, which began Friday. The broadcast seeking negotia-_ tions, first heard here at noon, was repeated regularly every 7 seconds after that. With the an- nounced purpose of averting blood. | shed, it asked that fighting cease at the present lines. There was no immediate reac- Curtice will confer with govern- | tion from the rebel bos in the ment officials, European business’ River Plate. leaders, GM executives, car de ers and newsmen. automobile shows. eal. | . He plans ‘to grano declared that Mar del Plata | visit both the Paris and London had surrendered to rebel forces ricane Hilda, swirling the winds in The rebe} station at Poste Bel- ‘through the Uruguayan consul. Biggest Tourist Attraction Rebels Refuse to Confer With Peron: MONTEVIDEO (INS) — Unconfirmed reports See ate taken refuge in the Paraguayan Embassy in Buenos The reports ' were relayed by amateur radia trans- city in the interior-of Argentina. Earlier, the Argentine state radio reported Pees: dent Peron’ 's offer to resign. offered to negotiate with the Argentine rebels, but they ,,. refused to talk unless he submits his unconditional resig- Plate said the insurgent command rejected the invi- on the Mackinac Le bridge.! By JOE .E HAAS Will the new Mackinac Straits | bridge than for any other single! tion land.” i attra¢tion. A check on the auto li-| The bridge poses a problem to largest ever, without doubt large-! but much further from the bridge | old, will find some allied use, or ily on account of the bridge con- approach than the 500 uniits on may Be converted ifito freight car- struction. What will it be like after the south side, | riers. None are scheduled for the the bridge is opened? | tie states in recent years, and mevement, “No great loss of intensity is expected during today and — The indicated movement bring the center to near the ene ington aréa around midnight and into central Pennsylvania Tuesday morning.” Warn Capital . The bureau added that winds will today Juan D, Peron has increase this. afternoon and eve- | ning over Virginia and Maryland, and will reach hurricane force over Chesapeake and Cordoba, a rebel-held tral and western Maryland and Vir | ous. | WEST OF HATTERAS | The bureau located the storm | this morning 75 miles west of Cape | Hatteras, It said the storm had n moving erratically as it / moved over land but showed most- | ly north-northwest motion at about fa (M\—President Juan D. Peron | The Argentine state radio repeatedly announced that | | 12 miles an hour. Highest winds in in Lucero, on Peron’s orders, | squalls near the center were esti- had invited the revolutionary command to start conver- | =e at more than 100 miles an our. The movement is expected te be generally in a northerly -di- rection at 15 miles an hour for the ‘next 12 to 18 hours, although it Pennant Race might turn slightly north-northeast, ata Glance The Weather Bureau called | W oL Pet. Bh. | lone a “dangerous storm” and New York ....... 91 56 .419 — warned all coastal residents to Cleveland ........ 90 59 .604 2 | remain alert for later advices, Chieago 81 62 586 5 | Hurricane warnings were or. dered displayed north of Wilming ton, N. C., to Block Island, R. L, | including ‘Chesapeake and Dela- ware bays and Long Island Sound, “Heavy rains a attend this - storm and amounts up to three /or four inches may be expected generally,. with local amounts of five to eight inches possibly in eastern sections of: Maryland and Soitlencteng: the bureau said, “This will result in dangerous flooding in small streams and all | Precautions should be taken.”* The Weather Bureau reported | that Havelock, N. C., a residential area housing many families of men Remaining games: | Cleveland 5: Away 5—Chicago 2, Sept. 20, 21; Detroit 3, Sept. | | 23, 24, 2m. New York 7: Away 7—Boston 4, Sept. 22, 23, 24, 25; Washing- ton 3, Sept. 19, 20, 21. Chicago 5: Home 5—Cleveland | @, Sept. 20, 71; Kansas City 3, | Sept. 23, 24, 25. Hurricane Hida 100 M.P.H. Winds Rake Flooded Oil Port; Gusts Swirl Toward Texas base, was cut off.from the west by high water, and that the residents of Aurora were being. evacuated by amphibious god BROWNSVILLE, Tex. W — Hur- dozens of eastern North Carolina communities. New. Bern lost its— 'her center 125 miles an hour, | power. | pounced on the already flooded oil | Crops -- mostly peanuts, cot ton, tobacco and corn — were in port of Tampico, Mexico, today. . | for heavy damage. The Weather Bureau here said | Two big portable gasoline gener the center was certain to have | | ators supplied power at two hose passed inland. Communications | pitals at Washington, N. C. The were out. Squalls and hurricane | Civil Air Patrol dispatched about force winds—735 m.p.h .or more— | 30 generators to other towns for went up the coast toward Texas. | Possible emergency use, - Shore areas tonight with gales up - | tral ond Ueename Seupieiatenalll ; stationed at the Cherry Point — Telephone ‘lines were down to bridge make Michigan the greatest tourist state in the nation? . e * The var ious resort and tourist, associations, not only in our own state but throughout an area that has four-fifths of the population of the U. S. A., are concluding that it will do that very thing. It now is in third place, led only by Florida and California, and these associations already are working, out a five-year plan to take care of the throngs that will come our way. Even when itis only partially built, over two years from -com- pletion, and there yet 1s little to) give one an idea of its magnitude, the bridge is proving to be Michi- gan's biggest 1953 tourist , aftrac- tion, _ Ble are — here this year to Se ae Al] surveys ‘show that more’ ol cense plates at its approaches the towns at its approaches and | Shows cars from most every state to the area for many miles around. and province. A pair from Mexico will it enhance or hinder the motel | was noted. REMOVES BARRIER PS * * The whole story is told in the | Around these approaches is now words of Gordon Ferris of Phoenix, | one of the biggest concentrations of Ariz., interviewed in his car while | Motels in the nation. They all have watching the antics of an enor-| _been doing a good business ever mous derrick at .the south ap- Since they were built, used by proach. He said: — “Spread a map of the United | States on the table before you, | and Michigan with its Great | Lak@s stands out with a wel- coming hand of joy above every- thing else. Its two magnificent ies ofher business. enterprises | there? . + This year's occupancy -was the es In Today's Press County News. ...,........5. 1 i peninsula¢ and their never end- Editorials ............ Tc. <€ ing attractions have a beckoning SNOT oe ccccecetes 2%, 26, 27 welcome not enjoyed by any |. Theaters ..... ngrr es 38 other state. The bridge, in itself | TV & Radio Programs asecele 37 worth coming to your state ‘to Wilson, Eari.. ..%3 see, removes the only barrier Women's Pugee. os 11, 8, 19 : a) ¢ | | +’ y | = ’ \ i \ ' = : ri) i » tourists as a stop over just before | ‘or just after crossing the Straits. 3,500 MOTEL ROOMS The motels in Mackinaw City probably have a better hold on} {the future than those in St. Ig- /nace, The south approach to the bridge leads directly from the) main highway which is only a couple of blocks from where most of the motels and other business places now are located, Bat the north approach is al- most two miles off the beaten path, and far away from the | present concentration around the | | ferry landings, + | | . Leading northeast from St. | hace, toward the Soo, there now | |are 350 matel projects within. the | first few miles, with an ayerage |of ten units each, or 3,500 units. These *still ‘will be on the main highway Jeading ‘in that direction, ; Ig- | For a time, new motels were | dump. being built in the Straits vicinity | The discontinuance of the ferries at the rate of 500 units sia rai But construction largely s' | when the bridge was i | now iad being resumed on a ‘imited , but is due for a boom, Us Over 1,000 men now -are em- | ployed on the actual*bridge con- | struction. This is in addition to | 200 others working on the blue- | prints and plans, and 46 engi- ‘neers always on the job. | Plans/for the disposal of the | five auto ferries when the bridge ¢ completeg already are under | way. The biggest and newest, the - diesel driven “Vacationland,” ts sought by a number of interests, | and may become a carrier for new cars from Detroit to other Great Lakes ports. The others, some already quite !and opening of the bridge is not | ped | expected to bring any local: em- t| ployment problem. The bridge operation will require practically as many men as now are employed on the ferries and their loading |. and unloading. With a great many it simply will require a transfer of jobs, with no necessity for moving from their present hopes. b * * bs Regarding the aerodynamic sta- | bility of the Mackinac bridge, Da- vid B. Steinman who designed it ‘and is the ‘chief consulting engi- neer, says, “It will be: practically | indestructible and with proper. maintenance will last for all time. There will be nothing about it that will hot be as enduring as the | pyramids.” . * Keonqmy Shoe Co., 452 N. Perry Re- feos be September 19, ae FE 5-0664. Reports picked up by amateur Last reports from Tampico said | radio operators said New Bern and winds estimated at more than 190' palnaven were isolated by high miles an hour were raking the water, [ city. Even fiercer gusts hit some | of the surrounding area, Small | buildings toppled, along with trees and signs, Rains that had fallen since yes- terday increased in intensity. Observers said the barometer dropped crazily. Electric power was out, Need Extra ‘Cash? Did your vacation expenses put i t. book? _a Press Want Ad. It’s easy, this ttle ad brought several 4 ers and everything. was quickly. , Rain was tailing in extreme south Texas. The lower Rio Gran- | de Valley, - still damp from rains | ‘dumped two weeks ago by tropical storm Gladys, braced for more) hard rains, high tides and possible | pQoods. : ; 1 ‘Hilda picked up speed. suddenly hast night, At midnight she , was believed located! about 70 miles east of Tampico, moving west- northwest pie se ‘miles an ‘hour, LOVELY PINK BEDROOM Chest, dresser and bed com j $60; 3 walnut tables, $12; —_ $5; . Floor lamp, #4, 0581, : To Place_Your Want aa} - DIAL FE 2-8181 es é | i facet an i hia Wins ‘af Orchard Lake Club- Championship, - Pro-Member Held Over Weekend Dr. Fritz Adams annexed the club championship Saturday to begin two full days of golfing! - events for members of Orchard Lake Country Club, | Shooting sub-par golf for the fi- nal round, Dr. Adams ousted two- | time club champ George Webb, 7 and 5. The new champion was 2 under par at the decisive 13th hole of the afternoon. 18, after posting a T on the morning test. Pete Whitelaw, 1954 champion. was elimated in the first round of | the match play. Sunday’s events saw the com- petitive course record tied, when | Knollwood assistant pro Joe | Thacker posted a,7 under par @ im a pro-member best-ball-of- foursome event. His partners Were Algie Hendrix, Bob Watts and Charley Hood. Other low scoring pros Jim Barfield, Jimmy Johnson and - Larry Tomasine with 69, and Waily | * Burkemo and Bob Gajda with 70. | Orchard Lake pro Tommy Shan- non set the competitive record of | 65 which as tied. A total of 26 | pros took part, playing with three Orchard Lake me mbers on each team. Burned in Blast at Troy Twp. Plant (Continued From Page One) structure kept the flames alive, he said. ~ Firemen, using chemicals and water were driven from the build- ing several times by the intense heat and occasional small blasts as stored thinner and paint bar- he exploded. - While more than 50 firemen from Soar Township, National Twist Drill in Rochester, Clawson and fvondale battled to control the cre leona arg of passersby lined Oakland County Sheriff's dep- uties, State and Troy Township directed traffic around the jammed with firefighting Hide Although damage estimates could not be made immediately, officials theorized that the loss would “‘be in the thousands of dollars.” Operations at the plant, which halted and employes not assist- ing in battling the fire were sent home, Mrs, Mildred Eneis, who lives across the street from the plant, | said she heard the explosion, say- ing: “It sounded like a dull thud -but I didn’t pay much attention to .Gonzales, Gen- evieve, Virginia, Victoria, Lilia, Augustine, John, Raymond, and Inez, all of Pontiac. Mrs. Delga- do is also survived by sixteen grandchildren. Funeral was today at 10:00 a.m. from St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery Adeline Margaret Fox Adeline Margaret Fox, 80, of 16189 Invernéss, Detroit, died yes- terday after an illness of two weeks. | | INCOMPLETE PASS — A pass intended for New York Giants half- |back, Kyle Rote, in the first period of Sunday's exhibition game in Born March 16, 1875, in Pem- | Detroit is broken- up by Detroit Lions halfback, Jim David (left) and! nan, North Dakota, she was the | Lions Jack Christiansen (center) on the Lions 20 yard line. Lions won, daughter of Hugo and Josephine a to 17. (Det on page 25.) | Knabe: She is survived by two daugh- ters and two sons, Helen L. Fox, KC Golfers 2nd at Owosso; A. Ruth Fox, both of Detroit, | George H: Fox of Birmingham Elk R U. t ] ‘and Arthur K. Fox of Ofuna, s Runners-Up at Sylvan ‘ion | The funeral took place today A three-under-par 68 by Sam Pontiac linksmen-were_ paced by | at 11:00 a.m. from the Farmer- Moinar, profession at Corunna, Harding, whose three-over-par 73 Snover Funeral Home with the was good enough for medalist hon- | Rev. George Garver officiating. five-man team to victory in the; ors in the four-team tourney. Dick | Cremation will be at White Chapel | Knights of Columbus state golf DeWitt, Jack Ross and Tom Cemetery. | tournament Saturday at the Owos- | Thumb shot 77, 79 and 81 respec- —— so Country Club. More than 40) tively. Two Royal Oak golfers, | tat K. of C. teams took part in the| Wally Smith with 74 and Ed Lowe | Minnie Mae Getz tournament. | with 75, were runners-up to Hard-| Minnie Mae Getz, 69, of 555 Sunset St., Milford died Saturday after a two year illness. | Hills Country Club, led Owosso's Pontiac's delegation, sparked | | ing. dhe = end spree i Born December 25, 1885 in Mu- place, three strokes short of the l ren ildren Flee nith, Michigah, she was the winners. Glen Harding, insurance daughter of Jobe and Emma salesman, fired a 75 as did Joe Sackett Randolph. She married Petroff, while Ed Wasik, 1955 | William Getz in Detroit in 1923. city medal champion, and | Fir e n arm Mrs. Getz came here trom Detroit Charles Riharb carded 78's. and had lived in the county for A four-man delegation from Pon- | Ay tewtss ar hesiend | abe 6a’ ours tiac also took 2nd in the South | |vived by two sons and one daugh- Youngsters Left Alone eastern District Elks Inter-Lodge| in Commerce Home. ‘ter, J. H. Burgess, Duane Bur- tourney Sunday at Sylvan Glen. | Escape Blaze | gess of Detroit, Mrs. Darb Brown Representing No. 810 lodge, the of Noblesville, Ind., and a sister, Pontiac squad posted an aggregate | of 314 to trail the victorious Royal | Oak team by five strokes. Teams - Mrs. Sue Smith of Pontiac. Two Commerce Township young- Funeral will be held from the sters, alone in their home, es- caped injury Sunday morning after Pursley Funeral Home Tuesday they set fire to the house, accord- | &t 11:00 a.m. with the Rev. Tom Do THE REV. L. A. LOVEGREN All smiles as he crosses the bridge into freedom from Com- munist China today is the Rev. Levi A. Lovegren, of Cherry Grove, Ore. The American Bap- tist missionary was released after almost 5 years captivity on charges he was a spy. Missionary Free on His Birthday Wife Welcomes Baptist Cleric; 2 Catholic Priests Also Leave Red China HONG KONG w — An American Baptist missionary held prisoner by the Chinese Communists almost five years crossed the border to freedom on his 67th birthday today, , He was reunited here with his wife. It was her 65th birthday. * | ing to Commerce Township Fire | Malone officiating. ‘from Port Huron and Ferndale Chief Ray V. Prie. . . Jimmy Hackney, 4, and his eight-, Gretta Hollister year-old sister, Judy, escaped un Gretta Hollister, 69, of 15 South Shirley, died Saturday after an completed the field. injured from a flaming room at iliness of three years. . | Handicapped tr mothers prea frame hore Classes Set young boy apparently was playing with matches when someting in the room ignited. The fire caused she was the daughter of Ranson and Sarah Curtis Able. She mar- ried Edwin Hollister, July 19, 1912 Classroom Sessions 2.00 a | at Ironwood and they came to the che: t Neighbors heard the youngsters | city in 1926. S duled = to S tart ery for help but both were safe- Besides her husband, she is sur- Oct. 4 ly out of the house when aid | vived by two daughters and a son, Dorothy Hollister of Pontiac, Mrs. Sarah L. Loper of Ypsilanti and Edwin Stuart Hollister of Allen- town, Pa. Also surviving is one brother, Arthur A. Abel, of Mus- kegon. Funeral will be Tuesday at 3 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home with Dr. Milton Bank offi- ‘ciating. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs. Helen McKinley | Mrs. Helen McKinley, 74, of 661° Corwin Ct. died Friday after an “ | arrived, Handicapped - children who are, Mrs. William H. Stockford of 143 unable to attend the public schools Cardinal St. told Oakland County | will be given special instruction sheriff deputies that the children's with the opening of classroom ses- mother, Mrs. Jewel) Hackney had sions Oct. 4 at the Oakland County | left the children alone to go fish- Society for Crippled Children, Mrs. _| ing | Elizabeth Kirkby, executive sec-| Mrs. Stuckford’s daughter, Nan- | retary, announced today. cy, 18, was to arrive at the Hack- | | Classes will be held Tuesday and | ney home at 7:30 Sunday morning | Friday afternoons for cerebal pal- | to baby-sit with the two children | ay victims between the ages of | when they awoke. The fire was 16 and ‘12 at the society's headquar- | discovered at 7:20. ters, 152 W. Lawrence. The three.) Mrs. Hackney, divorced from ee sessions will include both) her husband Theodore two years) speech and physical therapy. ago, had custody of the children ‘illness of eight months, ‘There has been nothing for | *!NCe the divorce | Born Nov, 10, J880 in Bay Mills, this age group so far that is not The uninjured, but scared young-! Mich., she was the daughter of costly,” Mrs. Kirby said. Our | Sters, were turned over to juvenile Henry and Mary Lawless Deumaa. service is free. With this train- | Authorities. | She married Arthur McKinley in msl rrelighapets gyn GOP Propos 0S QS ‘to the city from Brimley ‘Safe Road Plan the public schoo| program.” She is survived by pret childre Mrs. Kirkby pointed out that ce- and five step-children, Lewis Me. reabral palsy victims often are 5 Kinley of Bridgeport, Washington, exceptionally high intelligence, but | | Edward Revei and Mrs. Earl Hal- are handicapped by not being able _lumus of Pontiac, Henry Revei and to speak or coordinate their move | ‘Thomas Revei of San Lorenzo, | ee i eerie Calif., Bernard Revei of Haywood, . -Poi ‘alif., Mrs, George Bertr Mrs. Classes, fer the 3-6 year age 8 Point Program Asks Calif., Mrs, George Bertrand, Mrs Allen Bertrand, Mrs. Howard Rob- erts, Mrs, George Freeborn and Alex McKinley all of Detroit. Also | surviving are two sisters, Mrs. | Gertrude Holliday of Los Angeles, MACKINAC ISLAND o® — The Calif. and Mrs. Anne Collis of Republican Party was out today | Pontiac. with its own highway safety pro-| Funeral service will be Tuceday group have been conducted for the past seven years. They meet | from 9 a.m. to noon Tuesday, Thursday and Friday mornings The plan was announced to di-! rectors of the society at a quar- terly meeting, held Thursday night. ° State Speed Limit, More Enforcement Rules - Officers also were elected at this gram “for the special legislative at 9:30 a.m. from St. Xavier meeting | session Gov. Williams plans next Church, Brimley, with burial in Re-elected president was L. C. | month Bay View, Rosary Service will be dy A Delegates to a campaign confer- cence adopted an eight-point pro- | , gram for the guidance of the Re- H. Rollins of Birmingham, second — Publican controlled legislature vice president; Mrs. FE. Verne , Gov. Wilhams. has presented his McCall of Pontiac, recording sec. ON Inghway safety program. retary; and Ralph J. Austin of | Pontiac, treasurerr. : held in the Melvin A. Schutt Funer- al Home, tonight at 8 p.m Moore A. Peck Moore A. Peck, 55. of Gila Bend, 'Ariz., died Thursday after an illness of five years Born June 8, 1889, in St. Mich., he was the son of Luke and Lucy. Peck. He is survived by two daughters and a son, Mrs. Harriet Cannedy of | Lansing, Virginia Roundings and ' Harold Peck of Pontiac. Also sur- | viving are two brothers and three | sisters, Paul Peck of Jackson, Robert Peck “of Lansing. Lucy Gearheart and Mrs. Carrie Patter- Megee of Clarkston, Dr. Ralph 0. Haisen of Ferndale was named first viee president; Mrs. Fred The GOP highway safety pro- gram approved: The Crippled Children’s Society 1. A speed limit on two and ‘is supported solely by the sale of three lane highways. .Easter seals and private contri-| 2. A special traffic safety patrol butions, Easter Seal chairman for | within the state police expanded 1956 was announced as Gar A. ! as soop as possible to 200 troopers, Sweezey of Royal Oak. and financed either by increased | —————— license plate fees or from the ger: | Astronomers Lay Plans = «"™#! fund for Final Outdoor Party = 3 ¥ ® * State financed driver educa Born in Marquette, Nov. 10, 1885, | Johns, | The Rev. Levi A. Lovegren of _Cherry Grove, Ore., was the sev- enth American civilian freed by the Chinese Reds since Friday. The Communists promised during re- icent negotiations with the United | States at Geneva to release Ameri- can civilians still in China. Shouts of “happy birthday” greeted the Rev. Mr.. Lovegren as he came across the bridge between Hong Kong and Communist China. His wife Ida and a daughter Mil- |dred were waiting in the police station on the road to the city. Entering the station, the gray- 'ing missionary stopped and stared silently at the two women. Then they rushed into one anothers arms. As the family left the police station, 70 newsmen sang ‘Happy Birthday to You.” = * * * Three American Roman Catho- jlic priests — Fathers Frederick A. | Gordon of Somerset, Ohio; Joseph E, Hyde of Lowell, Mass., and the | Rev. James G. Joyce — arrived on | | be train from Red Canton yester- ay. | house arrest more than two years by the Chinese Reds. "Pontiac Man Hurt ‘in Collision Sunday \" A 19-year-old Pontiac factory worker, who reportedly fell asleep at the wheel of his car, was in good condition this morning at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital as the re- sult of a two-car accident Sunday morning in Pontiac Township. Douglas R. Higgins of 693 North- way Dr., received scalp lacerations according to hospital authorities. The driver of the second car, Joseph P, Zwicker, 23, of 18 Cherry Ct., told Oakland County sheriff deputies that he saw Higgins’ car coming over on his side of the road when he was struck by the | car. He was not injured. | A passenger, Dorothy ski, 20, of 48 Bloomfield Terrace, was treated for forehead abrasions | and released from the hospital. It was net known which car — was a passenger in. Higgins told deputies he “could | not remember what happened but | he must have fallen asleep. Detroit Father Kills | 2 Daughters, Himself DETROIT (INS)—A Detroit bank messenger under treatment for mental illness murdered his two daughters in their beds early to day, then killed himself with two blasts from a 12-gauge shotgun. . . Police said Lawrence Womack, 52, killed the girls—Carol, 20, and Linda, 17—while they slept in ad- joining twin The shots Kiced Womacks wife, Cleo, 49. She rushed into the hall and met her husband as he was leaving the girls’ room. She said he slugged her, ap- parently with the butt of the shot- j gun..- and said: “It's got to be this way.” Womack then went to the base- ment and shot himself twice, Womack's 11-year-old son, Larry cowered under a bed after shots had aroused: him. i! ’ They had been held under Skerkow- | - BIRMINGHAM — Two veports from City Manager Donald C. Eg- bert at tonight’s City Commission meeting, will give added informa- B | tion on two long-time projects: the | from Worth west 240 feet. -jease, a permit for an ad- dition to J ’s Home Deco- rating Shop @ report on Spring- tale s * * | ‘Two new polio cases, raising the city’s total to five, have been re- ported by City Health Nurse Anyce Gillette. The first is a 35-year old Finn-Red Friendship Pact Signed Today LONDON u—Soviet Russia and Finland signed a new pact today extending their 1948 treaty of friendship in a Kremlin ceremony winding up Soviet-Finnish talks. Moscow radio said the agree- ment to hand back to Finland the big Finnish naval base at Pork- kala taken over by the Russians the same time, ; Premier Bulganin signed for Russia and Prime Minister Urho | Kekkonen for the Finns. ° | Willets and Oak Streets on Commission Agenda The possible sale of city-owned | - | Bloomfield Hills. fourth attending Quarton School will be held in the homes of room mothers from 10 to 11:30 | a.m. tomorrow, Mrs. William E. Hartman Jr. will entertain in her Berwyn road home for Evelyn Horne's class; Mrs. Ruth Murray's class mothers will meet at the Westchester Way home of Mrs. C. C. Firth; .and Mrs. R. P. Hubbard of Kimberly road, will serve as hostess to the class of Hilda Levin. * * * Anybody lost a little boy about (OSCCOoeonoeseeseeesese and a -wtiite shirt? That's the question police are asking today, They're holding the young man—a hitching post in the form of just such a statue, until his owner claims him. A startled Mrs. C, E. Trathen, 1033 ported today. A basement loading Sunday's water consumption “of 5,436,500 gallons still did not top the May record when just under ' William. H. Morse, 40, vice- tt and sales manager of the Tool Specialties Company in Berkley, died suddenly Sunday at his residence, 3459 Devenbrook, He had been in business with his father. Mr. Morse leaves his widow, Madeleine R.; two.sons, William S. and Edward V., both. at home; his. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam S. Morse of Birmingham; and one sister, Mrs. R. J. Corkery of Birmingham. His bedy will be taken from at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Christ Church Cranbrook where he was a member, burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. doseph Pearson Service for Joseph Pearson, 71, a former Birmingham resident, will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Bell Chapel of the William R. Ham- ilton Company. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Detroit, Mr. Pearson died Sunday at his home, 1513 Garland, Flint. He had owned Pearson Cottages, a resort in Oscoda for the past seven years. Prior to that he had in World War II was signed at|been with Ford Motor Company | for 23 years. | Survivors includes his widow, Vi- olet; 4 feet tall, wearing blue overalls | cee sary j 2 eed Ae Di) pe Yeh ‘i " POUPE ee ; 4 = ; pata a eae - i ile has . f > . poet ’ . . Pe - THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MonDAY; SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 : | The Day in Birmingham - ..\ | pontiac Traffic Club Slates Meeting Tonight The Pontiac -Traffic Club will -| hold its first: meeting of the season —— at 6:30 at the Hotel Wal- A ~e film on. California will ager at General Motors Truck and Coach Division. Genuine HUTCH Brand FOOTBALL EQUIPMENT Costs Less ot Simms No. SWB OFFICIAL SIZE FOOTBALL *T 98 AC212 ‘Pro’ White Model - 520CL Wilson Foot- ball ee 0 6 ee ee oe 8 leather with black bands. Quaran- teed blader, with inflating needle . $2.88 Model ...... ee "$5.98 Small-Fry Molded Fibre Football Helmet : $2.50 a: : 1° FACE ne Clear plastic at- taches to Rheod 69 aggre No holes Tough Molded Fibre Jr. Shoulder Pad ; ota $469 3 to size, especial- e | pepo lite 8. No. 4 $8 Cantilever Style Pads .......... $4.98 « S12 Medium Style = Pads .......... $6.98 ¢ > SLY : and four sons, Joseph, Wil- | ® e 0 N. Saginaw —tnd Floor @ scoccecseooccocecesocee ‘liam, Norman and John. for as little as $169.00 « Miler’ S 144 Oakland Ave. - A - SEPTEMESR SAVINGS SALE Cuality pec y for Sarr ee A Beautiful Davenport and Chair—Covered in Nylon with reversible Foam Rubber Cushions Nelo ler abn eal i a & ve Sake pes me vis aes » 4 % aintlnnct eabtveiiibata tc obi . SECTIONAL SOFAS and DAVENPORTS F | 144 Oakland Ave. W here. You _ Our Lower Overhead Helps Keep Our Prices Lower— ‘ Just You Come and See! _~ pa Store Open Monday and Friday Evenings Po Closed Wednesday Afternoons € Our 19th Year of Greater Value Giving M ILLER FURNITURE Honestly Save "Careful Free © Delivery With or Without Matching Chairs ms Tops in Style and Quality : v { oy. counties that are square in area. Oakland is largest of Michigan's Dem Farm Chiels. Map 1956 elon leaders, including two former sec- | ‘the Republican party are meeting | to make arrangements for the GOP Aug. 20 at San Francisco. - Heading a Democratic egricel| tural advisory committee are. Claude Wickard and Charles Bran- | nan, former agriculture secretaries | of Democratic administrations. At Simms the ONLY Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES ® Savings of 10% to 40% ® Freshest. Pure Drugs © Experienced Pharmacists Save 54c on Genuine STNAS. BROTHERS yim AlS: 5 {(@ . 4} Lunch Kit and - Thermos Bottle ; Regular yh $2.98 Value © ection scenes on box and bottle. © ’ Kit has plenty of room for food, © i bottle is 10-08. size, As pictured. SIMAS.“4. i —iad Floor ’ 6M. Sognew ad Fi jl Goncmmarne gece. Rainbow Colors—Top Size 12 = 65 Bag of 25... osscs ves ccc es OUND VNR 5... TULIP BULBS Not 8 .. . not +0 but full dozen 12) bulbs at thid price. he ported direct from Eu- rope. Floor —as Seen on TV .. . as Told About in Magazines Preserve & Waterproof masa Shoes and All Leathers With DOW-CORNING SILICONE SHOE SAVER New SILICONE discovery penetrates into leather and lasts for the life of the shoe ... keeps water out but lets leather breathe . . . ideal for both new and old shoes. . specially fine tor suede leathers . . . shoe-shines last longer, stay brighter. Use on baseball gloves, footballs, hunting pacs, etc., too. Easy to use, just daub on. 4 ounce $] 00 aie Li bottle , 98 North Saginaw SIMAS.. ZD z, WINTER MING Make SURE Your Car is SET and SAFE Sak ANTI- PR ESTON E FREEZE Regular $3.25 Per Gallon 44 Sealed Galion Can Don't Pay More Than Simms Low Price! No need to accept substitutes—here’s a bargain price on genuine PRES- TONE anti-freeze (permanent type'.. No limit—buy all you want at this low price. 98 North Saginaw SPECIAL purchase? Men’s and Ladies’ Styles Imported Copies of RONSON & ZIPPO ~ |Lighters Values to $2.50 Special purchase of these lighters makes the low prices possible. Béautiful reproductions of Ronson automatics, Zippo windproofs, wdrk perfect- - ly, tdeal for gifts or for yourself Chose from. hundreds of models in prices from soe to $1.29. . 98 N. TSIM AS. eae Main Floor, _ SINGAPORE 4 — Ong Ah.Too, was United Press manager for “CHICAGO 7 — Democratic farm | wali a saaenens to death today for beaten May 12 year-old Chinese truck driver, Southeast ‘Asia. He was fatally + Tetaries of agriculture, meet today to formulate their party’s farm | policies for the 1956 election year. | At the same time, members of | National Convention next DAVY CROCKETT } 4 Lunen kit with Davy Crockett 9) ROX MASONRY PAINT | © PROTECTS AGAINST WATER LEAKAGE © BEAUTIFIES AND PROTECTS ALL MASONRY SURFACES © GUARANTEED NOT TO CHIP, CRACK, BLISTER OR PEEL INSIDE 2 Transforms dingy, |. iy wet basementsiato “* ()~ Fa - beautiful, usable es. = recreation areas +s Protects against severe water leakage. OUTSIDE. AFTER Ideal for brick, cinder block, cement block, poured concrete, asbestos siding, stucco, stone, cement sand plaster. Gives the most modest home that “C -alifornia-Florida Look.” ROX is easy to use, requires only water for mixin ap. Permanent, no primer necessary. Odorless, available in gleaming white and all popular decorator colors. 10 Pound Can ..$ 2. 85 50 Pound Can SIMMS.“ eee see ee These PRICES Are So Low-We Must SPORT Limit Sale to TONIGHT & TUESDAY cree, Purchase BOYS’ LONG SLEEVE Regular on CM, , $1.79 M% Fey i ® ~ ~ Value } Simms Price 4 YS a a ay i tt Neck Sizes 6 to 16 Full cut for. action, boys long sleeve sport shirts in assorted cclor plaids. 2-way rounded collar in Tz neck sizes 6 to 16 Tremendous % value at the LOW PRICE Soecoccesevccseseseseees Gay Stripes in Boys’ Socks. ¢ e Pair Assorted Colors Irrs. of 25c Value Complete size range 6 to 10'/2. Slight irregu- | lars of 25c. values. Choice of many gay colors in assorted stripes. SOOHOHHSHSHSEHSHHHSSHSHHHSHHHSSESOSHOSEEOSOSEECE First. Quality—PLA!D Sheet Blankets First Quality—WHITE Sheet Blankets $2.00 Value $1.79 Value 79x90 inch size $ 66 Plaids in’ rose, blue $ 44 Good weight. In or green. 70 x 80 white only inches a, Gay. authentic in- eeeseececoeseseseoooeoseagessoseoeseeeoeseeoeeseee ! $19.95 _ © Light—But Sturdy cbccccecaedeasasacceoecusocedeccecuccocceeses Famous BE ACON’ First Quality 64x76 Inches, dian designs in $ 99 true bright colors Big 64x76 inch size, soft mapped — e Lasley @ Weekender © Pullman Pe Look of This LOW PRICE on Ba 3- Pc. M eee Set © Stitched Bound © Plasticized Cover _ © Rustproof Hardware ® Choice of 3 colors low price while our Hmited stock - lasts Choice of popular colors, Pieces may be bought seperately (Pius 10% Fed. Tax: JURRRLEEDRLEEREUERLSE SAE RaYL —Basement It's Seams for Bact a } 37 Bring us your ! Color Prints, fast service. Minimum charges C “at ice an aes ae worker i i r Bist, \ joes _-. THE PONTIAC. PRESS... MONDAY, SE PTEMBER 19, 1955 _| Chinese Truck Driver [mut a ee |to.Die in Symonds’ Death Sere robin 29, of Dayton, Ohio, | BEST POSSIBLE —o @ ‘Kleciric ~ Eve’ Timer Assures “Bleek and White Ceon- trast from Every Print. @ Only EAS Paper an Chemicals Genuine TMAN @ Deckled Edges. @ Menth & Year Dated Prints. @ Prompt Service Money-Back GUARANTEE i you can find better prints ywhere in Pontiac at Sc ta 7c SIMAS.&. AMERA DEPT. —Main Floor laster ‘Flannel Lined JEANS « lining in assorted plaids. All 3 pieces at this 7-FOOT Size . 90M. Sosinew A A i," S$ Ae Oil Painting Sets Guaranteed $2.50 Value y 3 PICTURES 1 Large, 2 Medium Famous ‘'Craftmaster’’ matched oil painting set with 3 ready to paint canvas pictures. Everything you need to paint at this low price, paints, brushes and numbered canvas —2nd aeneta sy = Floor ‘SPECIAL BARGAIN PRICES’ Good for TONIGHT and TUESDAY ONLY! SPECIAL PURCHASE LADIES’ RAYON ney 7 eC } aice Latest fall shades, rayon hose with mercer- ized cotton toe and heel. Ail sizes 9 to 1, Buy all you need at this low price. 4 for $1.00 | eecceeeeeoeoee seseeeeeeeeeeees Children’s Wide Elastic Waist Regular 49 $1.95 Value ' Boxer style blue jeans with popular flannel 2 pockets, wide elas- tic tops in all sizes, 2 to 6. seeeeeoeseesoor. *% Weanaie * tial Safe and Comfortable Driv-R-Seat Convertible Style — Baby Car Bed & Seat $5.95 Value $5.95 Value $ 3” As shown sturdy car Use it either as car seat with steering bed or car seat wheel Safe and Metal Trame, safety comfortable style for baby SSSCCCECOS SE TESSSCCCCHS OSE SOSE SC SC Se COSC seeeCe Lowest Price in Years and Years My Genuine BIRDSEYE Brand ° Baby Diapers Regular $2.39 ] 64 **PER DOZEN He Soft and absorbent quality diapers by Birds- eye. Full dozen at this low price Preyer rer Famuos ‘WORLD'S BEST’ Expanding Style | Baby Guard Gates 3 — 1 499 VY | $1.95 ; ; «$2.79 9-FOOT Size... $2.95 | Positive protection on stairways, porches, play rooms, ete. Easy to hang locks securely. Rustproot hinges, smooth laquer ‘hardwood, SIMMS. f ag DA, 5-FOOT Size . -98 North _ Saginaw seeececesoseosseseeesoeeees sas ‘<\. Plastic Clothesline Shop Simms for Ease and Extra Hours “OPEN TONITE » UNTIL 10 P. M. For These Tonight & Tuesday Specials pate inere): SPECIALS TOUGH DURABEE WIRE CENTER \) * Won't Stretch %* Won't Sag $1 Value Cc 45 Famous ‘TITE-ROPE’ plastic clothes line with the \ \y wire center, Strong, stretchless, durable and yet uh easy to clean Limit 300 feet per customer. SOSSHSHSSEHSSHSSSSHSHCHCHSCECOCHOSECHCEEEOSEOSSECEEEE Popular OVAL Shaped—About 22x18x10 Inches Willow Clothes Basket 2. ske Lightweight, yet durable woven bas- ket with sturdy handles. Rim and bot - tom reinforced, smooth inside As pic- $1.69 Value tured. Limit 2 per customer, . , I cas ola j nos Rt Co ecccccccccccceccccccccccccocococooeoseseees 4-Gallon ‘GALV ANIZED Scrub Tubs 89 Value / € Galvanized scrub tub with bail handle, Limit 2 Popular 6-FOOT Length Wash Machine Hose ag ~ varaining and = fithin, ¢€ wash mac aan Pits all standard fauoeté, Limit 2 per customer GENUINE ‘NESCO’ GALVANIZED Double Drain TU BS. oe dtl ne oe ie ll Exactly as Pictured Complete with Redi- Drein Flexible Hose With Stand 3° | 4 515.95 Value ti * Double tub _ are H complete peel: 4 Hot dipped in pure ai tinc for extra long fife... Sturdy rein~ forced legs, easy rélling casters, Standard Size—FRESH GENUINE USALITE Flashlight Batteries : 10c Value Ea. ¢€ Fite all standard flashlights Preah stock, Limit 6 per person SOHOHHHHHSHSHHSSHSOSHSHOSOSSEOOOCHOSECESOESORE Save Exactly $1.51 on Genuine & Throw no nicks, irritation, Hands never touch the water, just squeeze the ~ handle and mop squeezes dry. Use for floors, Stairs, rugs, wails, etc. WAI FLOOR SPECIALS Away That Safety Razor—~ Soap and Brush—Now \ ®For. Underarms ®For the Legs No more lathers, creams-—this .pre- cision made electric shaver whisks off hair without fuss or mess no odors : mo scars’ Lady Shaver in petal pink or powder blue colors. M S BROTHERS am ¢ New Modern Design ;RANCH STYLE ° Mail Boxes Va ny * oooh w$ 3 44 take magazines as well as letters. Heavy steel, wrought iron See a th ganarnipy irks style. Sponge Mop 99 $4.50 Value You Can Afford This Famous $5.00 VANITY Ladies’ Personal Electric Shaver — TONITE AND TUESDAY ONLY 299 Complete with . Cord & Case i @ * . never pulled a throttle, punched a pattern show. * sot A | n yagi See THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 mn Join Trip in Ancient Train . Battle Creek Locomotive Shop Inspection Called Off by Intense Heat . By JOE HAAS With 478 cash customers, 161 of whom boarded the train at Oak- land County stations, the annual trip of the Mithigan Railroad Fan Club took place Sunday. * e * It was from Detroit to Battle Creek and return over the Grand Trunk, and with a variety of that ranged ‘from pid- neer days:to the air conditioned ie ‘i é i it worked) beau- temperature popular, was the locomotive it Battle Creek, but the day was so hot that the excur- sionists largely preferred to stay away from an inspection of any- thing that created more heat, and the three-hour stay in that city was spent otherwise. . were | Eikston, Ky.; and eight grandchil- Family parties took along their luncheon and many a drumstick —a picnic without ants. There was square dancing in the gondola, and even the three women who required the services of a doctor, one for a skinned ankle and the other two for eye cinders, all agreed it was a grand event, and said they would be on hand next year. The popular conception that this club is composed only of retired railroad men is erroneous. Its membership includes hundreds who ticket or ceneienty called a . station. County Births Biward Oa. Saas born to Mr. onal Mrs. €dward Timmers of Imlay City. Mr. and Mrs. Prank Jager, a City, announce the birth of a son, Dale La- verne. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wilcox, Dryden, are parents of a new daughter, Denise Kaye Mr. and Mrs. Patrick O'Conner, of Allenton, announce the birth of a s0Q, Patrick James Mr. d Mrs. the Sath of a daughter. The funds to build the .railroad siding to the present Pontiac State Hospital were raised by private subscription when it was built in the late 1870s, as they were not h Branch Gerald "Bielski announce Elizabeth Joan. in| Clarkston Tea, . ‘Tin "| Mrs, Wanda C. Durham of Harri- | Farmington; one sister, Mrs. Lil- bee .| illness. His body will lie in state ailroad Fan Club Puffs Aroand Michigan Fashion Show | to Be Wednesday CLARKSTON—Fashion Show and Tea sponsored by the Clarkston Community Women's Club will be held Wednesday, Sept. 71, at 1 p.m. the Independence Township Community Center. Mrs. Cornelius Migan will be in charge of the fashion show which will, feature fall styles available in Clarkston and Pon- tiac shops. All costuriies will be modeled by local women. The public is cordially invited to attend the event for which there will be no charge for admission. County Deaths Lealie J. Van Buren WALLED LAKE -—Service for Leslie J. Van Buren, 72 of 1231 E. Lake Dr. will be at 3 p.m. Wednes- day from the Richardson-Bird Funeral Parlors at Milford with burial in Highland Cemetery, Mr, Van Buren died Sunday at Pontiac General Hospital following a week's illness, — Survivors include his wife, Edna E.; five children, Russel J. of Highland; Roy L. of Plymouth; Mrs, Ada Mathews of Charleyoix; son; and Mrs, Dorothy Rank of lian Attley of Fenton; 28 grand- children and two great-grandchil- dren, Mrs. Ethe; Herit UTICA — Serviee for Mrs, Ethel. Herit, 51, of 12245 23 Mile Rad, Shelby Township, was held this morning from Schwarzkoff-Milliken Funeral Home and at St. Lawrence Catholic Church with burial in the St. Lawrence Cemetery. Mrs. Herit died Friday in St. Joseph Hospital in Mount Clemens, following a short {liness. Surviving besides her husband George, are one son, Ronald; one daughter, Mrs; Barbara Janicki, both of Utica; a brother Harold Brooks of Caledonia, Michigan; and one grand son. John Herman Sanders DRAYTON PLAINS—Service for John Herman Sandérs, 68, of 3826 W. Walton Bivd., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Cum- berland Presbyterian Church in Lewisburg, Ky.. with burial in Lewisburg Cemetery. Mr. Sanders diéd Sunday at the home of his daughter after a seven months’ at Coats Funeral Home until 8:30 this evening, before being sent to Kentucky, Survivors include one daughter. Mrs, Robie Clack of - Drayton Plains; one son Selbert of Lewis- burg, Ky.; Sharon Grove, Ky. and R. J. of ‘dren. Deaton Infant two brothers, Lee of | Your PTA Is Planning: Women’s Editor to Speak at Workshop Another workshop conference has been added to the list of conferences to be presented at the Sept. 20 meeting of the Oakland County Council of ‘Parent Teacher | Associations at the Bethany Baptist Church. Mrs. Judith Clemence. women's -section editor of the Pontiac Press, will speak to at- tending publicity chairmen. * ca ° Other conferences wil] be on presidents, programs, budget and finance, hospitality, safety and room mothers. a Holly The Holly Elementary PTA meets tonight at 7:30 with business meeting beginning at 8 p.m. The speaker will be David Treat from Flint with the topic “Teaching Sex Education to Your Children.” President, Mr. James Gleason urges all parents to attend. Almont “The PTA in cooperation with the Board of Education will sponsor the annual Teacher's Reception at the High School Thirsday from 8 to 10 p.m. Everyone is invited to end the reception. . Waterford Center The Waterford Center PTA ‘will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Waterford Center School, Gabrial Roth will lead in the opening prayer, Get acquainted games will be played. Frieda Huggett, visiting teacher of Waterford Township. will show a film “Preface of Life.” Discussion will follow and refresh- ments will be served by the execu- tive board. Chairman will be Mrs. Alfred - Keith Clarksten the Clarkston Community Schools will sponsor a pot-luck supper at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, in the Clarks- ton elementary school. All parents Show Oct. 8-15 Parent Teacher Association of | Conference table service and food to pass. Meat and — will be furnished. World's Dairy Rochester Schools Bulging at Seams ROCHESTER—Rochester school enrollment is stepping up each day since opening. Harlan Johnson, high school principal, stated that enrollment has increased by 10 per cent in all schools. ‘ * *« & Temporary facilities already be- ing used for high school classes are two rooms in the American | party to Legion Hall, ,_ Paint Creek Method- “ ER ship Hall have been rented for eleméntary grades in/the district. Board of education members are xpressing concerr over what might happen within the next few months when families will move into many of the new homes in the | area which are now only partly completed. County Calendar. The School i bothers re of the Newark | pias an to be given at Sars. Eiton Stock. | m. oN Gept. 27. Pro- | ers at he coeds 6. or the Limited Time Only! Save Today 10% Discount 3rd_ International Event. at Chicago Lists Contests Golden Spurs Rodeo CHICAGO — Dairy cattle royalty in 22 states and Canada are being primped by hopeful owners in prep- aration for the third annual Inter- national Dairy Show which is slated to be held in the Amphi- theater of the Chiéago Stock Yards Oct, 8-15. * * ‘Giving the show an international flavor, cattle owned by Argentine dairymen will also tred the tan- bark of the big arena, according to W.A. Wentworth, show presi- | dent, These are high-bred cattle sold by U. 8S. breeders for export to South America. The eight-day exposition extols the virtues of the dairy cow as nature’s greatest food factory. In addition to providing “a wéek of judging for bovine aristocrats, the affair puts the spotlight on nature’s -most nearly perfect food, milk, and all the foods that come from milk-butter, countless varieties of cheeses and the | multitude of flavors of ice, | cream. The show will get under way on Saturday, Oct. 8, after | a ;wo-hour parade on downtown © State Street. A $25,000 Golden Dairy acter | ‘contest will highlight activities in a dream kitchen where champions from among 20,000 contestants will | demonstrate their kitchen art with | are invited to attend and are asked to bring their own card table, dairy foods. The contest’s top win- ner receives a trip to Europe. THAT OLD WATCH CAN GIVE MANY MORE YEARS OF GOOD SERVICE IF IT 1S PROPERLY REPAIRED —SO. BRING IT WHERE EXPERT WORKMANSHIP COMBINED WITH sores ELECTRONIC TESTING ASSURES 2 SATISFACTION "sxaex™ LET US TEST YOUR WATCH IN 30 SECONDS NO CHARGE OR OBLIGATION NIGHTS ty! 9:00 eal 2QQv aster tests our work electronically Lally d a ara of accuracy. a a on distinctive , | PERSONAL to ORDER N ow - @ All in Tasteful Selections inating Demands! ° ® Avoid Unnecessary Delay . , . Order Yours Today and Save! Waite's Stationery—Street Floor © Everyone Created to Please Discrim- designed to give your bethroom magic glamour Deluxe Hand Painted “Lacey Ledge” Matching Accessories Famous Waite's Watch Shop—Street Floor ROCHESTER — Graveside serv- ices were held this afternoon for Baby Deaton, child of Mr. and Mrs. Byrl Deaton of 312 Third St. Survivors beside parents include one brother, LeRoy and three sis- ters, Brenda Kay, Beryl Jean, and Mary Etta; Grandparens, Mr, and Mrs. Sheldon Deaton of Rohester and Mrs. Marion Root of Texas. Slocum Road Crash Injures Four Persons in Pontiac Township. — Alfred Finlon, 50, of 229 Edison | St., was in fair Condition this morn- F. Parent, Parent was treated for fractured ribs and later released. The driver of the other car, Opal J. Sharp, 37, of Pontiac Township, received bruises to the left leg and was released after treatment. Mrs. Sharp's two-year-old son, Melvin, suffered facial injuries and was treated and released. Parent told Oakland County sheriff deputies that he started to stop and when he started again, vehicle. She told officers she was attempting a turn and saw the other car suddenly and was un- able to avoid the crash. Cass Lake was named in honor of General Lewis Cass, and Eliza- included in the state appropriation. beth Lake in honor of his wife. 20 Oakland County Models 4-H Club Miss Will View Flight to Fashion Tonight The 4H Club Modern Miss will be shown brand new sew-it- yourself fashions tonight at 8 in the Oakland County's Simplicity “Flight into. Fashion” The event taking - place in the 4H Fairgrounds, will take the well- . The first tra topped with a solid red corduroy overskirt; and a velveteen sheath that takes a jacket to make a suit Four persons were injured Sat- . urday morning*in a two-car crash | | on Slocum Road near Nichols Road | ing at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital | with back injuries. He was a pas-, senger in a car driven by Duell | 51, of 64 Whitfield St. | his car was struck by Mrs. Sharp's \ and a simple net skirt to tie on for - dancing Colnienater for the show will be Mrs. Russell Pickering, leader of the Bloomfield 4-H Club. The | committee in charge includes Mrs. | | Glen Johnson, Mrs, Eula Abbey, | . | Mrs. Alfred Smithling, Mrs. Agnes DeNice, and Mrs. Frieda Benriett, Home Demonstration Agent. Twenty 4-H Club girls from Oak- land County will be models for the . ; to. visit: the 4 Pontiac area came) of. the Clinton River, by way FOR DATA ON PLANT LOCATIONS TO _ CONTACT OUR INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT ' The. MACKINAC BRIDGE. ~ will make Outstate Michigan’: an even better place. to ‘WORK or So eae Under construction at the Straits of Mackinac is a great bridge uniting the Lower and Upper Peninsulas of Michigan. It will be one of the world’s longest bridges, with a centet span of three-quarters of a mile and an over-all length of almost five miles. Completion is scheduled for the autumn of 1957. The bridge will speed tourist and truck traffic across the Straits and make Outstate Michigan an even better place to work pr play. Outstate Michigan has many advantages as an industrial loca- tion... skilled manpower, central location, unequalled supply of fresh water, a favorable climate. It’s the place to build your new _ manufacturing plant. 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Waite’s Domestics—Air Condiloned Fourth Floor. : Weite'’s Draperies—Air Conditioned Fourth. Fleer THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac 12. Michizen Puolished trem T™, Pontiac Press Bullding Henote A Prreereate. Publisher ~ Gomne 3 ewonen ee SLPS scoeteeeeiasiuaie ianeeiumaememinammmiaios: Entered af Pret Office Pontiac Mich. s serond class matter “Trade pene MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED. PRESS Macom ts $12.00 « ules tm the are re? 2-816! nevanie im advance | Re Ponties F a MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 __. Kremlin Makes Start at Easing Censorship | United States Senators who have vis- s ited the Kremlin this summer have found the Russians most interested in - relaxation of U.S. restrictions on trade ‘ with the USSR. . On their part Premier But- ' _ Gawin and Party Chief Kurusu- ! CHEV promised that the Foreign Ministry's censorship of outgoing news dispatches would, be pro- gressively relaxed. — . a a ae 7 2 For some weeks after the Geneva = conference in July, events seemed to OF AMDIT BREAN OF CIRCULATIONS ' - eorrespondents in Moscow reported a they were having less trouble with the : official censor than at any time in the F recent past. Late in August the Kremlin took the unprecedented step of allowing direct broadcasts to the United States with- out prior ‘submission of scripts for cen- sorship. At the samé time certain news- paper correspondents were allowed to telephone their dispatches to other Eu- ropean capitals without official scrutiny. * * * All this led to the feeling that the whole censorship apparatus as applied to outgoing dispatches would soon be dismantled. But, alas, within a week broadcasting i without censorship came to an 4 abrupt end. All Western corre- i’ spondents were again required to “ ‘hand in their reports for exami- nation before transmission. * * * Regarding this situation KHrUsHCHEV is said to have told the Senator that he felt a good beginning had been made and they must realize that “everything cannot be done overnight.” A statement by Sen. Estes Kerauver helps explain how important this issue is. In his opinion, freeing Moscow corre- spondents of present restrictions would do more to ease tensions between East and West than any other single step that could be taken to that end. CSS Investigation Reveals 62 Fake Cancer Cures - An investigation recently completed by Duke University has shown that there now exists at least 62 fake cancer cures in the United States. None of these, according to an announcement of Dr. Cuartes E. * Horton at the university, has any medicinal value. They were made up of such ingredients as distilled _water, rhododendron paste, vine- gar, fig leaves, arsenic, zinc, lead and fat. * * * 3 Strangely enough the report points out that not all of the quacks peddling these fake remedies are dishonest. Some of them actually believe in the efficacy of their nostrums. A reason for this is that their “cures” have been effective 7 on patients whose trouble was wrongly diagnosed as cancer. * * * But for every “honest” faker, the report points out, there are two wholly unscrupulous charlatans. For example, some California quacks have been using a machine called an ocillucast. It is dishonestly reputed to have the ability to diagnose a patient's case from his signature. The only sure peterearas - against this disease are early di- agnosis by a reputable physician ‘and treatment by X-ray, radium . or surgery... REE Wild Ducks Plentiful ‘There is good news for hunters from ' Aanent agama an in- ¢ Sunday * foreshadow this promise. American - a the great duck breeding areas of Mani- tenationa! | organization for the pro- tection of these wild fowl, conditions of wind,‘ water and weather have been -_ most favorable this year for them , In Manitoba there has been a notable increase in mallard popu- lation. The same can be said of canvasbacks, pintails and blue " winged teal in Saskatchewan. All this means that by the time the hunting season is in full swing, there should be plenty of migrating ducks to test sportsmen’s skill. Saginaw’s S S-Men Our neighboring City of Saginaw is conducting an interesting experiment with the aim of promoting greater traffic safety. — Basis of the plan is the organization cf a task force of 100 responsible citi- zens whose names will not be revealed. They are charged with combating the ., menace of dangerous drivers by report- ing traffic violations by postcard with the license number, location, time and nature of the violation. x « *©& The Greater Saginaw Safety Council to which these postcards will be addressed, will carry on from there by sending warning notices to the offending motor- "ists. The plan is based on a similar program launched in Fort Worth, Tex., where the vigilantes are known as T-Men. It will be interesting to watch Sagi- naw and see how the experiment works. Contest Is Closed A Large Number of Entries Eliminated in First Game Waiter: In a restaurant, often the customer. With 3,273 entries that arrived on time and were in correct order, the MAT 1955 Football Contest closed Saturday noon. This is a larger number than in any previous year, But the 2,646 good sports who had picked Kentucky to win its game with Louisiana in the opening game Saturday night, and the 64 who predicted it would be a tie game, were eliminated in the first round. Remain- ing are the 563 excellent forecasters who picked Louisiana. For Leuisiana defeated the highly regarded opponents from the Blue Grass state by a 19-7: score, in a contest that upset the predictions of the so called experts throughout the nation. MAT wishes to thank all participants in the contest which took place at a time when the hot American League baseball pennant race has the stage, and when, in the wofds of a note accompanying one entry. “It is mighty difficult to-think of football when my thermometer is registering 96.” Next in the roster of the 14 games in the. _ contest is the Colgate-Dartmouth clash of Saturday, on which the 563 divide their pre- dictions: Dartmouth; 279; Colgate, 264; tie game, 20. Back from a plane trip to Mexico City, Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Critchfield and . Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Emerick report ey of rain—and a bull fight. Onions that tip the scales at one-half pound are grown by Hadley Burkheimer of Keego Harbor. They are a new variety, with an extra “kick.” He secured the seed from Mexico. 4 One of my Los Angeles scouts re- ports that the 110-degree temper- ature seared nearly every leaf in her garden as if a fire had spread through them. She says, “We wen't have to wait this year until things have become somewhat dormant to begin trimming.” Thanks for the kind words of R. M. Haller of Milford, who writes, “I have read the Pon- tiac Press for many years, and enjoy your column very much.” For the information of those who might think that the young patients at the Oak- land County Tuberculosis Sanatorium do not go to school, Business Director George H. WjMiams announces that classes have been resumed and will operate under the same. schedule as other Waterford Township schools. The family cat in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Abner Widener at Lake Orion fought off other cats in pro- tecting a nest of young robins,'and actually. looked disconsolate when- thé young birds were able to fly away. Verbal Orchids ¢ to-* Mrs. Rebecca Smith of 14 | Green St.; ninetieth birthday ; Harry W. Baer of -7 Front’ St.; ninetieth birthday. Mr; and Mrs, Ottis Bogart of ‘Oxford; ‘fifty-second , wedding anniver- "gary. “Ever See Such a Cagey One « as ‘That Adenauer?” David Lawrence Says: Dems Hold Hearing in Supreme Gourt in Effort to Discredit Security Program WASHINGTON Something different has been added by a congressional committee—a__ pal- pable effort to aid a propaganda movement by staging a show in the old chamber of the Supreme Court of the United States. The movement is part of the Demo- cratic Party's campaign to. dis- credit the security program of the Eisenhower Administration Ostensibly it was all in cele- bration of Constitution Day. The eleven witnesses sat on the bench of the court while the -senators joined the spectators in front of them. Yet the proceedings were officially recorded as qa Senate sub- committee hearing. This bit of theatrical procedure will be construed by many as a subtle attempt to influence the Supreme Court itself. Some of the eleven speakers talked in- directly to the Supreme Court and criticized past decisions. But much of the propaganda was directed against committees of Congress and the Department of Justice for efforts being made under powers granted by existing law to checkmate the infiltration by Communists and their dupes into the churches, the press, the theater, labor unions, schools, col- leges and the government itself. CHURCHMAN SPEAKS One of -the speakers—a_ promi- - nent Protestant churchman—made a pointed attack’on the position of the Catholic Church with respect to some legislative questions. It is a mystery why, if the churches of America were to be represented, only one man—a radical—was se- lected to speak. There was no spokesman for those Catholic or Jewish churches or for those Pret- estant ctiurches and clergymen who do not share the radical views of Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, chair- man of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States. * * Ld Dr. Blake charged that it was not ‘‘within the competence of the state to determine what is or is not American."’ So he objected to ihe name of the House Committee on un-American Activities. Actual- ly the Congress by-laws, upheld by the Supreme Court has proclaimed that criminals convicted of certain ‘crimes’ shall lose their rights as American citizens. The Supreme Court has never overruled that penalty. It is not customary for the committees of one house to per- mit attacks on committees of the other house, but no senator pres- ent last Saturday objected to Dr. Blake's attack on the House Committee on un-American Ac- tivities. Dr. Blake's main thesis was that “many citizens’ were being punished for their views and that the House committee has been “confused as to the difference be- tweerl disloyalty to our country and the holding of opinions which happen to be politically unpopular or publicly embarrassing."’ That's a parallel point made in the brief filed before the Supreme Court last week by the Communist Party itself. CONGRESSIONAL ORDER The real reason for the laws passed by Congress requiring the Communist Party and affiliated organizations to register with the attorney general is because Cdn- gresg has declared the Communist movement to be a criminal con- ARE UNESCORTED LADIES PERMIT TED ch i spiracy tied up with a foreign government that maintains and finances an espionage apparatus to try to infiltrate American insti- tutions. Dr. Blake,’ however, de- nounced the ‘extraordinary power of the attorney general” with respect to listing subversive organ- izations publicly as if it were an abuse by the executive branch. He omitted to mention that _ this function was specifically pre- scribed by Congress. Dr. Blake went on also the highly question of government ald for private schools and hinted that some kind of religious instruction might be given in public schools. He said “Some decisions of the Supreme Court have come closer to the churches’ ideal in this regard than others” and he warned that “it will be a con- tinuing concern of the churches.” Nobody present asked why if church schools complied with the curriculum established by state governments for public scliools and if, in addition, those schools taught religion on their own time why some of ‘the taxes paid by the parents of- those children should not be used to help pay some of the cost of the basic education of « «their children. rgue Dr. Blake had the floor all to himself on this subject and no other view was presented oh the other side of this controversial question on the same otcasion. And there is a lot to be,said on the ‘other side. (Copyright 1955, New York Herald Tribune Inc.)* Many Folks Aren’t Fooled by Trick Specialists Today By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Going through the heavy mail that comes from newspaper read- ers of high and low calibre, people with and people without degrees, people in all parts of North America, I note with satisfaction that a good many people believe what I say about trick specialism and the. phony ‘‘clinic” evils in medicine today. * * s I mean to say that four out of five physicians who hold them- selves out to the public as special- ists are pai 24 eneral practioners with lar ability but with a lot ma galf. I call them trick specialists. ° The poor souls who are most susceptible to the pretensions of these trick specialists imagine that a doctor who calls himself a specialist must have had better training, be more skilled and more competent than an “‘ordi- nary” doctor, that is, a doctor who does not call himself or herself a specialist. It is pathetic the way some of these simple customérs go for the specialist label. They really think the law demands higher qualifi- cations’ for specialists than for general or family doctors. The truth is that so far as the law is concerned, when a doctor gets a license to practice medicine and surgery, he or she may engage in general practice or devote him- self or herself mainly or exclusive- ly to any branch or field of medi- cine, surgery, obstetric—although actually most doctors who decide to limit practice to a specialty do pursue some months or years of postgraduate study in the chosen field before they announce ‘‘prac- tice limited to’ whatever the specialty may be. BECOMES BUSINESS At least that’s the way it was when practice was a_ profession. Now that the AMA has converted it into a business # is hard to tell the real specialists from the trick specialists. * 8 The Code (Principles) of Medical Ethics, pr the watered down ver- sion after numerous revisions. by” the AMA pointedly ignores the custom of announcing “practice limited to (name of specialty)"— and that’s the way the trick specialists like it. The reputable physicians in the community know what special- ists are genuine and which are tricksters.. When a general prac: . tioner or family physician en- counters some rare’ or difficult case he or she may call a specialist inte ' consultation or _ refer the patient to specialist ° for opinion and * ‘The family physician knows that a real specialist will mot try to supplant him as_ the patient's doctor. Trick specialists, which, as I have alreadye indicated. greatly outnumber real specialists today, are in unfair competition with the general practitioners of the com- munity for whatever business they can lure away from. the honest doctors—the patronage ot o_o People. ed letters, not more than one < to personal Dertainin; lisease, diag- or treatment, _ Aeed answered aay William Brady stamped, ressed envelope ts rom to the Pontiac Pontiac. _1955) Press, (Copyright page 4 Voice of the People Asks High Schoo! Courses be neces sary because of of Pull name, address and telephone number of the writer must scoompeny out urs it writer_ Bor ‘be se requests aniess the letter te critical tp % Somes I, as a citizen of the United States, do not believe in giving the . Commies an ‘inch’ of a chance. Be- cause then they will want more and even more until they make ene great plunge toward world-wide control. The Communists have gone too far to stop now! We cannot be friends with Rus- sia until it demobilizes its present dictatoria) form of government. I conclude in asking why not . have as a part of high school studies the philosophy of com- munism and dictatorship? Later on we will have that much fewer people to make agreements with those who are trying to gain con- trol of the world. Stop them before your homes, on Reds and. Dictatorships Portraits ey JAMES J. METCALFE Quite often I have praised my wife... For her economy . . . She ‘is the ‘ saving genius of . . "Our loving family . . . But now and then I do believe . . . She goes a bit too far . . . As when we need a meter-space . . . In which to park our car .. . She will not.take just any space ... But we must run around... To see what un- expired time . . . On meters can be found... Or if we use a public phone . . . We drop no money in . Until she checks on all the phones . In that returned coin bin... And when a dime or park- ing time .. . Her happy..eye has caught . . . We spend much more for something that . . . We never might have bought. (Copyright 1955) New Car Output Proves Theory of Obsolescence — By MERRYLE 8. RUKEYSES INS Economic Commentator The bringing out of new models by the automobile industry gives a clue to the economic philosophy behind our expanding national economy and the high standard of living. : This progressive industry ‘makes potent use of the concept of ob- solescence. Through invention and re- search, the autqmobile manufac- turers give owners of serviceable vehicles a moftve for replacing them with something better. Im- provement is the competitive norm. : Competition in the battle for first place between Chevrolet and Ford has been widely publicized, yet Ford Motor Company has in also been in contest with Chrys- ler. The comeback of Chrysler, meas- ured by the rise in ratio of ‘sales . to the total of the industry from upwards of 12 per cent in 1954 to between 17 per cent and 18 per cent in 1955, has been at the expense of taking percéntage «points from Ford, which had had such a me- teoric rise since World War II. Chrysler did not lift itself this year at the expense of General Motors or the independents. SHIFT TO THE MIDDLE Another related phenomenon, has been the relative shift of demand from the lowest-price class to the next one, consisting, among others, of Buick Specials. Pontiac, Olds- mobile, Dodge and Mercury. Henry Ford once toid me that he deemed annual model changes economically wasteful, but dhe industry today, including his own company, takes a different view. Accordingly. the accent is in- creasingly on selling, including the related arts of advertising and merchandising. One executive in the automotive Big Three recently told me. there will be unprecen- degted wooing of dealers by auto- mobile manufacturers in the next two years. NEW MODELS—SELLING TOOLS In, this framework, new and im- proved models are regarded as important selling tools. The widely publicized improvements in engi- neeering, design and appearance tend to make owners dissatisfied _with older cars capable of many additional tens of thousands of miles of service. The new models are, nevertheless, deemed econom- ically prudent in light of their abil- ity to generate a larger sales de- mand than would otherwise be expressed. In bookkeeping terms, -the model imprevement makes pos- sible the added volume, whicli otherwise would be _still-born. And it is the added volume in a rigid cost, or high-break-even: point national economy, that con- tributes so spectacularly to nef profits. Incidentally, the philosophy of big production inevitably becomes importgnt in terms of “social justice.’ The elite — the classes— cannot consume the product of the vast assembly lines, which in the nature of things must depend on |. the masses. In failing to think through the logic of technology, Karl Marx made the greatest bloop- er in the history of human thought. Smiles A four-foot, five-inch-tall bandit in Illinois was sent to jail for 18 months. The long stretch might do him some good. s * In asking for a diverce a trom- bone player's wife said he lavished attention on another woman. Just a toot- timer! | .% * . Now is i time when mos- quitos are havi their day— keeping all of us, from having our night. ° s * . A doctor says a kiss often de- stroys germs. That doesn't neces- sarily mean you have to murder them. » * ° Parents never seem .o appre- ciate the fact: that there's a lot of trouble their youngsters don't get into. a * * 2 Being overweight can often be blamed on the fact that a per- son's weak side is his inside. * = * Most folks think it would be a nicer world if the people on both sides of them would learn how to raise children. Case Records of a Psvchologist Hard - to - Get - Along - With Office Bear May Be Meek as Housecat at Home Milton is a brilliant engineer but can't get along with his immediate employes. He is a “projector” and a. veritable “bearcat” at the office. Some- times this means a- meek “housecat” at home. There is a close connection between our home personality and our office personality. so use the tests outlined below. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case P-343: Milton M.. aged 43, is a factory superintendent. “But, Dr. Crane, he can't keep any girls for longer than a few months,” the personnel director informed me. “For he yells at them and bawls them out even when they are not at fault. “In fact, he is a typical ‘pro- jector’ who blames everybody else for his own mistakes. “His last three secretaries have been nervous wrecks. We had to transfer them from his office oa the advise of our plant physician. “But Milton is a brilliant en- gineer, so what would you advise us to do next?” SPLIT PERSONALITY There is an axiom in psychology that the “‘bearcat’ at the office is frequently a meek “housecat” at home. * * « He may have a nagging, shrew- ish wife who bosses him around as-Maggie does Jiggs in the funny . papers, So when he eots out trom un- der her domination, he throws his weight around by being a harsh, caustic-tongued employer, This tendency. te project our ire is familiar to almost everybody It is well expressed in the story ‘ about the Army sergeant who bawled out the corporal who then jumped all over the private who, in turn, kicked the mule. Wives are well aware that their husbands pass the buck to them on every possible occasion and blame them even for the children’s mistakes - * * Everybody is born with the mot- to tattooed on his chest: “I Want To Feel Important:" Nobody can indulge in self de- preciation vegy long. so we soon figure out some excuse for blam- ing others, even for our own foi- bles. . SANDWICH METHOD 2 -If an employer is afraid he can- not handle his job properly. he may be hypercritical as a means of showing off and trying to brow- beat his inferiors into admitting his higher rank. Many 2 hushand who is secret. ly afraid he is losing bis wife's love and sweetheart” adoration, then hangs on’ to the purse Strings and at least coerces her : into begging him for money. : Such a hustiand often becomes : Ploys i generous as soon as his wife feigns . more ardor and restores his wounded sex ego to normal. In Milton's case, I recommended that some of his former secretaries fill out the ‘Test for Bosses,"’ men- tioned below, ‘but refrain from signing their names FRIENDLY TALK Then I suggested that the -per- sonnel director ask one of Milton's superiors, such as the head of the firm, to have a friendly conference with him. He should use the “sandwich” method of administering correcs tion. Build up Milton's ego with an honest statement of praise con- cerning his brilliant engineering mind. Then smile and lead into the meaty layer of the sandwich with a casual “I wonder if it wouldn't be better if you'd try to be niore tactful with some of the girls in your #ffice.” Then show him tho actual rat- ings by his former em ployes. But in order to take the d this, then end with another gemr- ous compliment for some of Mil- ton's virtues. The greatest cause of trouble” between management and labor is failure to chology. . Se send for my "Test 8 for Em- ployers & Employes."’ enclosing 5 nega return envelope, plus They are- widely used tty, in indus but fit everybody who en» even a single worker. in Aimaye Write to Dr 5S rh ab Pontiac “Press.” on adtre closing long 3e Je stamped. cover assed envelope and a > “and printing tots ine af of hig paychaloyical (Copyright 1955) i employ proper psy-. sting out of ~ Se aves Tooay's ASSIGNMENT FOR: “JUNIOR Faron | SRE =='20 Subpoenaed in Abortion Quiz = : Man and Wife Facing : . a | Court Hearing in Death ; S$ of Chain Store Heiress wAiIR = : = CHA | PHILADELPHIA u — Twenty : ‘s persons have been subpoenaed by : the state to appear at today's hear- i, ing for Mr. and Mrs, Milton : : . ; eid tached Get Him T Schwartz charges they per- “'y. . 8 | ecemeea er POP yi) | MONDAY ONLY tires + =e hat caused the death of Food Fair . e* ey ! ; rauch, pak and soe ae — eS hr. Doris Ostreich-| ! / : : be FOAM RU BBER acid tedignetion Phat hat's when tipy | er. Ly. | Tums can save the > wl For Tums neutralize excess stomach acid al- most before it starts. No mixing, lf Magistrate Elias Myers finds | there is sufficient evidence to jus-/ SEAT CUSHION ches tify keeping the Schwartzes in Seat sci scent Pome Lees pli cer som custody, they will be held for grand _—_- jury action. Prior to today's hear- rj 3 a, Paedichnardneny> @ i 000 j ; S-rell pha. 254 ' , ~~ aE hd ha = 1 0 A& HONEY- : * * @ In addition to being charged with Eosy performing the abortion, the Terms Schwartzes are accused also of P conspiring ° icher' iu ‘FRIEN BEES— ; . mother aes (oncea renee ‘. aed — : : Suave modern styling, genuine hard- ER’S perform the abortion, and with per. They Make Honey for Us wood construtcion and best of all-. M juring themselves at a medical) For breakfast, do you like honey on hot cakes or waffles? Then you examiner's hearing in which the should like bees, even while being careful that they don't sting you. , | cause of death ops gunounced. More is known about the honey bee than about almost any other | " _| insect. That is because it is so important to men and because men have ciedipay emery aac: read ‘been studying it for many years. months, went with her mother to Bees not only make and store honey that beekeepers take away the Schwartz apartment in North from them for your use and mine, but they pollinate fruit blossoms Philadelphia on the night of Aug, and flowers, If it weren't for bees a great number of Plants could not 24 and that the abortion attempt | set seed or fruit. took place there. Mrs. Ostreicher As you probably know, bees live in hives. In one hive there may be ||} died in the apartment that night.| as many as 80,000 of them, Most are workers, or stunted female bees. a budget-right low price. Beautifully covered with tapestry in red, gold, blue, © white or lime. Comfort-assuring foam rubber cushion over a no-sag spring seat and back, lustrous limed oak finish, This is truly a good. looking chair that makes itself useful in any corner of . your home because . . . it swivels. Ideal lor T.V. viewers who don't like to “move-about”. Buy a pair to form a front-room team that can't be: beat! Get Acquaint ted | Oter! 's Ct. DIAMOND V7 —) (oe °88 PAY ONLY ‘9.00 Now ‘1.00 Weekly Mve r | TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVERY THURS. - FRI-SAT. to 9 P.M Mrs. Silver is undergoing treat- ment in the Philadelphia Psychi- atric Hospital. 3 Prominent Sardinians Are Slain in Ambush NUORO, Sardinia “7 — Three prominent citizens of bandit-ridden central Sardinia were killed last night in an ambush.. - Authorities, faced with the fear- imposed silence which greets all inquiries into banditry here, said they had no clues to the crime. The dead were the director of the civic market, the director of a Air Force Uses ‘Copter There are a few drones, or males, who do no work. And just one queen ‘hee who is the mother of all the rest! For a bee collection, start off by pasting this picture on light card- board and coloring it as you like. Of course the butter should be yellow. The thoney in the yellow comb at the bottom may be either yellow or brown, ae A Big Bee to On Ont erence meena aeneeemere 9 a reg ! son AFB will land at the aiveraity . at 9 a.m. today, the precise. mo- to Recruit ROTC Men ‘ment when registration for fresh- . OXFORD, Ohio w — The Air men begins. a loud-speaker will Force isn't losing any time when | proclaim, “Sign up for the Air transportation firm and the secre- | tary of the nearby town of Oliena. | it comes to recruiting Miami Uni- versity freshmen for the ROTC} am. | A helicopter from Wright-Patter- Force ROTC and you, will be air- borne in five minutes.” As soon as a freshman signs up, he will be taken aloft for a ride | in the helicopter. —_———+* ». BARS OPEN ON 2 fe? actin: commana Full-width Humidrawer Reduced from 239.95! Auto. Defrost 8cu.ft.Refrigerator 19 Defrosting starts the second you touch button. Big freezer-has 39-lb. capacity. Egg rack and shelves in door. Large Humidrawer keeps all vegetables fresh. Price includes Delivery, Installation, Service Styled far ahead for ‘56 with new power, improved performance! Big 21 Screen MOTORO ee 16 95 Eas Terie Most economical 21-inch set in Motorola’s ’56 line. With all the fea- tures found in higher price sets. Stand comfortably to adjust set with right-up-front tuning. New accurashade, gated automatic gain control, lifetime focus 90° picture tube team up to bring you finest picture in TV. Compact cabinet fits anywhere. Finish blends to any decor. Save! NO MONEY DOWN | 4-Star Power Panel Flexible : Control Reduced fronr 169.95! Westinghouse ELECTRIC reine — 1382 You can’t change the weather. But with a dryer your worries cease. Large load capacity for savings. Flex- ible control for all kinds of drying. See them now! Price Includes Delivery ond Service Big Load Capacity - Clare Guard Picture Unit ‘SAGINAW AT -WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN MON, FRI. SAT. NIGHTS to 9° THF, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 | laration and Constitution several Thieves. Steal Deg Food * | years ago. LINCOLN, I. Thieves’ broke | The presidential exhibit is a sort ot special .bonus for history. lovers into a warehouse at Robert Sand- | ers’ Ike Names. Person. "| Presidential Papers Shown ws to Auditorium Group Roosevelt's War Message parks Archives’ Exhibit a le are hungry for the Reds Hunger for Gospel i mene we could put on the, LOS ANGELES u—Evangelist | Woice of America’ broadcast just Tommy Hicks, just back from’)! ed minytes a day of the areigy _ Preaching in Russia, says the So! |Bible message. nee pounds of dog food. ‘vey on are quartered in the kennels‘ but | Deputy Sheriff Ken Zifnmerman } said no one in the area heard any) One kennel and. took 1, 200 | ee | who flock too sce these priceless ieooagys in their huge bronze, ~~~ special exhibit will be ere em cl - NENVER w& — President Eisen. | . hower today named seven mem- bers to a commission to-study pro- | posals for construction of a civic) auditorium for the nation’s capital, Washington. These appointments were an- nounced at the President's vaca- tion headquarters here: Mrs. Virginia Bacon, George I. | Williams, Robert V. Fleming and Frank R. Jelleff, al] of Washing- ton. ‘ i Mrs. Elizabeth. B. Howrey of Jamestown, R. I., who has served as chairman of a group studying the possibility of a federally spon- sored auditorium for the capital; Hollyweod actor ‘George Murphy: and James I. Knight of Miami and general manager of the Mi ami Herald Publishing Co, Ex-Ford Worker Now Leads Red Delegation to U.N. By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. uw—A Russian who once worked in a) Ford plant will head the Soviet delegation for most of the UN. | "Yesterday, W ASHIN( TON (INS) — Franklin D. Roosevelt's original draft of the | Pear! Harbor. message Dec, 7, 1941, live in world a day which will his- | tory .. , In his own hand, F.D.R. struck out the words “world history” and | penciled in “infamy.” ¥ * * This was but one intimate glimpse of U. S. presidents con | tained in an exhibit at the Federal Archives Building The exhibit | takes its theme from the second article of the Constitution, which provides for presidential elections and sets forth the executive's pow- ers A long series of cases hold pic tures of the presidents with a sig nificant or historical signed by each There is a page from dames Menroe’s message to Congress | in which the fifth President laid |- down the Monroe Doctrine, warn- ing European powers that the Western Hemisphere was no longer open to serolgs interven. tion, began: * document | President ordered: “Let him tight | instead of being shot." | blockade of Cuba; Andrew John- | | son by his order removing Edwin | iM. Stanton as Secretary of War, | which brought impeachment pro- | ceedings TWO PROCLAMATIONS « . The exhibit contains at least two proclamations of war — Woodrow Wilson's with imperial Germany and James K. Polk's formally declaring a. state with Mexico. . There are at least two weak spots. Presidents William H. Har rison and James A. Gartield died after such brief terms in office that the archives was hard put to find any significant documents bearing their signatures, | President Eisenhower is repre- sented by his first executive order—that establishing the Pres- ident's Advisory Commission on 3 Governmental Organization. of war Other documents closely related fo the presidential exhibit inciude the original Articles of Confedera-- William McKinley is represented | ; by his proclamation of a naval | displayed for about six « months. | | | NEISNER’S Shoe Repair Department LEARN TO DRIVE Easily Sately indi- Correctly .} vidually DUAL CONTROL METHOD County Wide Pick-Up and Return of Students Instructions 7 Days a Week — chigan Driver Use your credit! Shop = wath Purchase Coupons! | . seman aie yrabso gs ye Assembly session opening tomor- ". Several wartime pardons are tien, forerunner of the Constitution FE 4.5668 yow. written out. in Abraham Lincoln's The archives wag made the pet 5541 @ Loweanea! Pontlas A ; 6 * scrawl. On one the martyred manent home of the original Dec- ‘ . ‘ ; 7 He is Vasily V. Kuznetsov, 53, | : : ~ = : first deputy foreign minister of the | Soviet Union. In the ‘30s he worked | er | INEST seas tol eas (China cas arene QUALITY GLASSES bow PAY MORE! nated to succeed the late Andrei | Vishinsky as first deputy fereign | —. and ody wor Frames Choice of . 100 STYLES | ONE LOW PRICE Nits: Dewy by Corsetry minister. * * .*. Kuznetsov will take over leader- | ship of the U.N. delegation when Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov | goes home, probably early next | month. Molotoy must be in Moscow for official visits from French and | Burmese officials, and must pre- | pare for the foreign ‘ministers’ | conference starting Oct. 27 at! Geneva. ‘ 4 : 1 GIRDLES AND PANTY GIRDLES For slimming the -average figure! * * * The Soviet delegation to the U.N. | is perhaps the strongest Moscow | ever sent here. For the first time | there is a delegate from, the Baltic | area — Yuozas Y. Matulis, a chem- | ist who is president of the Lithuan- | ian Academy of Sciences. Jacoh A. Malik, who spent four | years here as U.N. delegate, is) among the five top delegates. Schoolmen Meet Pull-on for the junior figure! 00 Wes 5.95 More control in a “Hi-Diaphragm”’ 1 . . = . 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Lawrence Phone FE 2-2895 E Matching penty .. 5.95 Matching penty .... 7.95 Matching girdle . 10.95 ? ae ‘ . Ss istrators today. Dress up for fall in SUB-TEENS’ ORLON* INTERLOCK SWEATERS smart rich pastel FLORENTINE ‘ Cardigan in red, Slip-on . hite, : . , el ae RAYON FAILLE white. navy, avaca- Cardigon do. . Sizes 10 ta V4. *DuPont’s Acrylic fiber 8.95 | Free Alterations SUB-TEENS’ COTTON BROADCLOTH BLOUSES Smatrily styled -blouses : in white. red, peri. 1°° winkle. Buckle voke, SUB-TEENS’ WOOL AND RAYON SKIRTS short sleeves, Peter Pan ‘4 } leat 8 Appealingly feminine —— flat- tering in style! Choose from these pastel beauties of luxuri- ous Florentine faille. There's a complete selection of 1 and » 2-piece styles with full or nar- row skirts, Hbng torsos. Bead, thinestone and shell trime. Ln hlue, pink, beige, turquoise. Sizes 9-15, 10-20, 1415-241. char- collar. Sizes TO to V4. printooen coal with contrasting stim, pockets, contrasting belt. 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SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NICHTS TO 9 x if al oer To Electrfy idle Clock 4 ome ‘as'Menon Cainthowss house is going to start telling Call Today . & Gregory Oil Go.|| = For THE MOST COMPLETE | 94 East Walton Blvd. at ans i |} the minds of the financial leade Phone FE 5-6141 - SELECTION OF DRAPERY iy atanbul for the meeting of the | FABRICS—BE SURE TO SHOP International Monetary Fund. en * * * . COCKROACHES ee } ¢ the danger of a ‘oe eg sheet Canada , Germany One Full Year Guerentes |i - . hanging on the coattails of mainly Lote “Guamaealal From Houses, Apartments, Gro- iy pt prong ip Dn leg De ah te | banks and business to show re- ge oc | | already done something about it.| [ stages and fan spend: signe used. - | | Creeping advances of prices, wild) § * ceil || The United States falls into this : | buying sprees in some lands by) 7 Rox Ex Company 11 N. PERRY “consumers with pockets filled. by PAPTPEIIEEIEEEE | no accte tnfationary. preneuree a2 ic Sok eet uae a at | steadily increasing wages, and the he 28 a fn andes stabiity ot the dollar of a public seemingly . =) — in foreian exchange is still AAA, Uncle Sam, noting the many ad-| | TENDER, TASTY vances in. the price of industrial BEEF BA A EY PSs)” See HEARTS.... “ASH MARKL TI | t. GRADE 1 . TENDER BLADE CUT RING | . | CHUCK BOLOGNA ee bb. ; ROAST eoeoo0e LEAN BLADE CUT . ‘ LEAN BEEF PORK ‘c-| SHORT aime... 1D Stephano- CHOPS ..... Poulos, vetueed te comment day JUNEDALE BRAND Thi Vale Coupon Good 2 Lbs. for + Ss ae Redi-Eat o = mc ii. romp ag air a aad “You drew your awn conclusions, tee | b Wed. ‘ ¢€ BY ANY STANDARDS, Cilassi- PICNICS .... | FORE LARD x marten, roy cy, wom. er Ladies Coats Nt. Mary's Legis woe) Seats fs Ce eet eae Meer, Thousands of tiny ele oles unseen by the human eye make them as warm as toast all winter long. are Milium lined, too. Camel, Reyer we Navy, cee » Seger and Boy styles! | S34 | St Mary's Coats For. Girls Pure Frosty Fleece Wool Lush frosty blanket ~ fleece beauty with | unbeatab omen? warmth and amazi ua ly may ep A que ity. Now afford. one > ease coats at special low mm prices. All have deep hems for ex- tra wear and all are lined with LE gE 7 THE STOCK — "WORLD SERIES" Climaxing a brilliant season of stock car victories, LONGEST VICTORY LIST OF ANY 1955 CAR! Chevrolet walked away with the big one—the y se here who's chamep ef the sock car You can see right here who's champ of the stoc NASCAR* 500-mile race at Darlington, S. Carolina. tracks! In every O08 of these “big cenee® races Chevrolet Chevy outran everything from the “big cars” on re Oe wine eet ee ee? ee down, to win both first and second—and seven — | - out of the top ten places! More proof-in-action , of qualities that mean safer driving for you! ; DAYTONA BEACH, FLA..- WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. Saten-dure. Choose =} What the world series is to baseball, to be a winner on the stock car FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. FLOYD, VA. cairo Kaerk a _the Darlington 500-mile is to stock tracks. It takes whiplash accelera- can Beauty, Scarlet, ~— car racing. It’s the number one event tion, superior cornering ability and Ee GRAND FORKS, N. D, Nude and Peacock. © of its kind. The toughest competitive handling ease, rock-solid stability— YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO MINOT, N. D. Sizes: test of cars and drivers. the same qualities that mean safer wrEet? © And Chevrolet won this year’s driving on the highway. And Chev- ~- ATLANTA, GA; LYNCHBURG, VA. 3 to 6x “500” hands down. Not only won, rolet’s got them like nobody else! ,. JERSEY CITY, N. J. CANFIELD, OHIO 7 ol 4 but swept the first nwo places, finish- Doesn't that sound like a good . ing ahead of a raft of high-priced, reason for you to come in and drive Sap Sega aw . MAWAUKEE, WiS. high-powered cars. The closest car a new Chevrolet right away? When PITTSBURGH, PA. CINCINNATI, OHIO in Chevrolet's field finished way you do, we'll show how easy we're ORO : back in fifth place! making it to own the winner these : NTO, ONT., CAN. PLAT ROCK, MICH. What's the answer? Simply that days! BELMAR, N. J. JEFFERSONVILLE, IND. ; it takes more than raw BOCeepOWGr Steten Asedeten tr Sst Cor Ato Ring CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA DARLINGTON, S. C. ; | Pre-Teen Coats BALTIMORE, MD. HAMMOND, IND. CHARGE ALL OF YOUR anes : ~ DETROIT, MICH. | PARK FREE IN REAR = STORE J CHEVROLET ff a THE SAFER CAR WINS... “ MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES, INC. ae F , 34 Mill at ant 211, = Saginaw Oe hoe _ preetine: Michiges and CHEVROLET IS THE BIG WINNER! ~ + THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 — Sensationally New - TONE ON TONE } You Save Not 1- Not 2 - Not 3- att 4 Not a misprint — actually 4 famous, nationally adver- tised CHATHAM — Huron Bay blankets — 4 to cover ' the whole family, and afl 4 at less than the price of 3, on pin-money credit terms. You've seen CHATHAM Huron Bay blankets advertised in leading magazines. You've admired them in the better homes. You'll revel in their snug warmth and lush colors when they grace your own home. And if you hurry you'll save $7.00. F a DECORATOR COLORS Green Rese Coral Blue Yes, you get all 4 of these famous CHATHAM blankets ‘—one of each lush color — Alpine Green, Midnight Blue, Wild Rose and Hawaiian Coral in the sensa- tional new Huron Bay TONE ON TONE pattern — fleecy soft, fluffy bordered design like expensive Canadian and imported blankets. Woven with 25% . wool for extra warmth— 40% rayon for tensile . strength and resistance to shrinkage and 35% cot- ton to withstand laundry wear! Tailored with shim- mery 4 inch binding and big: enough, 72 x 84 inches, Copyright RLL TIMER PRODUCTS evengrl to tuck in. Order your 4 blankets today. a 4 ‘nel Shimmery Binding pee Tes Omron PHONE TODAY “MARK JEWELERS, 45 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC FEDERAL 2-2400 Please send me the 4 full-size 72x84 inch tamous SORRY ONLY 1 TO A CUSTOMER CHATHAM Huron Bay Blankets at your friend-win- OPEN TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 P.M. ning sale price of $19.95. No down payment. | will PASS your pay $1.00 weekly. in 7613 DOLLARS BUY MORE at MARK’S OCI ANS | Print Address Primt Name .......6..6:-8- 0: eee City . : Employment Your’ Telephone No. Apt. Ne. San hs anne at this Low Sale Price Not just one : but oll five pieces. a] ~ ea THE PONTIAC. PRESS “MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 PONT IAC . MICHIGAN, LANSING (®—Gov. Williams -to- | day handed the Legislature a 14-| pronged weapon for chasing death, from Michigan highways and urged the lawmakers to accept it at a special session this fall. In a 17-page blueprint for traf- fic safety, the governor called upon Michigan to “show at least as much ingeeuity in controlling the automobile as we showed in io The document, labeled *'Four- teen Steps Toward Traffic Safety,” closely followed recommendations ‘released: earlier by Secretary of State James M. Hare. Its principal points are: Driver licensing by Civil Serv- lee employes instead of sheriffs and local police, the addition of illiams Draws Up 14-Point High 200 state police for highway pa- trol, compulsory inspection of autos every six months, grants te schools for driver education and to counties for sheriff's road patrols and a crackdown on bad drivers. session tenattively scheduled for | Williams will present the plan | to the Legislature during a special | | Oct. 25-28. at that time, he alsd/ the idea of relinquishing their driv. Wil-@8K ‘the lawmakers to adopt | erg’ licensing rights. Many are bit- | an emergency program for hous- | teyly to the*plan. ing mentally retarded childrert apd) The’ adoption of this program ask them fo raise teachers’ -sal-/ would put Michigan once more in ates $200 a year. "| the forefront of the war on traffic MEETING TODAY aceidents—the fourth leading cause | The governar is scheduled to of death in America,” Williams | meet with a group of sheriffs to- day in an effort to sell them ‘on| The governor, _Temindiag tax- ee eee ‘ om ae Apostrophe Use | : Causes Hassle Hells or Hell’s Canypn Spelling Sparks Dispute Over New Dam Site BOISE, Idaho “—The nation's deepest canyon is also its most controversial, There's even dis- agreement on how to spell its name, “We always spell it Hell's Can- yon,"’ says Sam Fretwell of Parma, Idaho. He's chairman of the Idaho- Oregon-Washington Hell’s Canyon Assn., @ group that wants to see a federal dam. ¢onstructed in the Deep Snake River gorge bordering Idaho and Oregon, * * * But Gilbert Stanton, public rela- tions director for Idaho Power Co., says, “It's Hells Canyon as far as we're concerned.” The utility and Fretwell's group have been fighting for months over more than just thé use of an apos- trophe, The Federal Power Commission last Aug. 4 licensed Idaho Power to build three private dams in the canyon area, : The dams would flood the site of | the proposed federal dam. Public) power forces have fought the util- | ity’s plan through more than a) year of FPC hearings. They threat- | en to take it to court unless the FPC changes its mind, | | The canyon dips more than 8,000 feet below the peaks of the Wallowa | Mountains of Oregon and the Seven Devils Range of Idaho, on oppo- | | site ‘sides of the mighty =| tiver tributary. It's usually spelled Hells Canyon | by both the FPC and the U.S. In-| terior Department. | It occurs both ways in the Read- | er's Guide to Periodical Literature the a WILL EXPLORE OCEAN FLOOR. — Inventor Edmund Martine and in brochures of the Chamber | ' checks one of the 12-inch thick optically ground portholes of his 30-ton | and cameras, —— meee arent erated po - ca fhe. ¥ * Pear United Prost Telephoto Martine hopes to travet into hidden valleys and caves of Commerce in Weiser, Idaho, the S¥bmarine ‘‘Cetacean.” The sub, designed to cruise alopg the ocean’ deeper than man has ever been, and he hopes to Péord ann Scnes city nearest the canyon, floor at depths of more than five miles, is eTerrd with bright lights | on film. Early travelers who looked with | awe on the jagged cliffs | probably gave the gorge its name. Sister N. Alfred Elsensohn, his- | torian at St. Gertrude'’s convent in Cottonwood, Idaho, writes of a man | named Haller who tried to navi- gate the canyon in 1891 but cracked; UNITED NATIONS N.Y. tINS) up on the rocks. —Nationalist China is planning to | ‘From a profane expression used , in Haller’s later recountal of these Challenge Russia and Communist difficulties,"" she writes, ‘Hell's China to agree toja U.N.-sponsored Canyon derived its name." open plebiscite on Many believe ‘Hell's Canyon” | vainland. was once correct but has lost its | * «. # apostrophe in. popular usage. This | has happened to Harpers Ferry, | W.Va., and many other towns. | {° | | | the Chinese The Chinese people would be asked to choose between Commu- nist rule and that of Chiang Kai- . . Shek's Nationalists. Both govern- | Indian Atop Capitol? ments will have to abide by the | WASHINGTON — The statue on | ™@Jority will the Capitol dome, representing Nationalist China's veteran Freedom, has a headgear of feath-| U.N. delegate, Ambassador Ting- ers, This often causes her to be! fu F. Tsiang, said consultations mistaken for an Indian. | between his governemnt and Boe UPSIDE - sown. - POSSUM — Pogo the ‘Possum |; strolls bottoms up along the pigtail of Pat Wiley, 12, tg . Tescued by Pat from ‘ts ‘ead mother’s , of. Allagdt, Tenn. “Pogo, now a playful pet, was) an automobile had killed her, those of other top U.N. members were under way to lay down this -challenge to Peiping and Moscow in the U.N. assembly. Tsiang said such a would have to be approved by the U.N. assembly, which conyenes to- morrow afternoon, and be organ- | ized on agreed pledges by the Communists and free world to at- tempt no interference with the | U.N.-supervised poll. He added: “My government and my people | would be more than happy to abide Lscrupulously by the outcome of such a plebiscite on the mainland."* plebiscite - AP Wirephoto pouch after China | . | change in oo existing. en Chiang Puts Commieson Spot , PEOPLE WOULD CHOOSE { by the terribly chaotic agricultural The Cttinese U.N. diplomat was | @"d_ transport. situation. Harvests_ | confident that a vast majority of | ‘and foodstufts rotted for failure | the Chinese voters, tree from po- | '0 distribute and stock them prop- | lice pressure and Communist co- | tly. There “is no jneentive for ercion, would choose any form of {4rMers because what they pro- | government other than one dami- | duce is confiscated by ‘the state. | nated by Chinese or Moscow Com- ** * munists, . standards breed revolt. Some day In emphasizing his reasons for in some obscure village or coastal this conviction by the Formosa Chinese, the ambassador Said: “All Chinese on the mainland are aware that the Peiping Reds are creatures of Moscow and that they have ‘in effect im- ported the Kremlin. This is im- portant to keep in mind, as the Chinese people naturally resent this imposition -of a foreign standard in government, unfurled. Riots will break out in villages and cities. Then we will Strike from free China and give substance fo the mainland war- riors for liberation.” City ‘Pooch Party’ Is Set for Saturday | “Secondly. keep in -mind that 14,000 mmunist soldiers cap- tured in Korea by the UN. re- fused to go home to the China mainland. They came to us, and are happy they elected to defy | Oakland Park, their Red bosses to live in free | today by the Parks and Recreation China.) - - | Dent. “Thirdly, we celebrated our na- tional holiday Oct. | we found the Nationalist flags | flow nvoluntarily by the public | ‘outnumbered the Communist ban- | classifications — grooming, tricks, | ners in Hong Kong and Singapore | best informed owner and best own- nine to one. These two cities’ are | er-pet combination, . testing points of the Chinese mind| There will be two divisions, one for us. |for youngsters 7 to 11 years old, and one for those 11 to 17, accord- “Starvation and the edge of) ing to Leonard T. Buzz, activities starvation has ben brought on in major areas of mainland China| Pontiac's annual be staged at 2 p.m. Saturday at g day Entry blanks for the event are department office at City Hall. * * * Pontiac Kennel Club = a mows leaner —— NEW YORK «P—One of old Ben Franklin's ideas is winning new popularity with a lot of folks—and causing extra grief for a lot of others. It's daylight saving time. would make much différence. Not so, though, for the television _ networks, railroads and possibly a few other industries, \Say the daylight saving extension, Several states and some of the even though in a proportionately | big cities have decided they want! small geographic section, is cre- | even’ more of it than before. In. ating a hodgepodge time situation | general, they’ve continued it from | with endess difficulties and con- the last Sunday in September to | fusion for them the last Sunday in October. * * | Now there are growing howls | The ayeise appears to stem! of anguish from some quarters | from the fact that a very small where the hour hand of: the clock | dog will bé wagging a gigantic | is king, notably railroads and tele- | tail. vision. networks ; | In this case, the little dog is the | * * * Northeast where the added day- “at's causing us one helluva lot | light has found most of its favor. of trouble'’’ moaned one harassed | The rest of the country is the tail, TV official.. | Last fall, most of New England “What a headache!” wailed a extended the daylight time period. raijrodd industry spokesman. | This year that area will be | “At first glance it wouldn’t seem | joined by New York,.New Jersey, that. such a. relatively eae Connecticut and the entire state of jcenses would be “Stavation and miserable living | point the flag of revolt will be| “Pooch Party" | for voungsters and their dogs will | it was announced | 10. Last year | available at schools and the Parks | ' Prizes -will be awarded in four | supervisor for the department. | | | Ohio cities are followi Sources in the two major fields |: ' clocks forward an hour. ay Safety Plan payers of an 18-million-dollar gea- sont fund surplus, said there is ° No way to save lives without spending money. He said he is perfectly willing to receive ideas other than those 'are better, we'll go along with them. The program is not frozen.”’ Williams called for; l. A uniferm driver licensing ice employes. 2 A three - phase ‘driver im- provement program.”’ Habitual vio- | laters would get warning letters | and would be called in for re- examination, If necessary their li- revoked, This program would require an addi- tional 117 employes. INSPECTION a 3. Compulsory inspection of all at private garagess licensed by the state. : 4. Annual grants pf-$25 a stu- dent to Michigan high schools for driver education. Williams asked 1'2 millien dollars for this purpose in fiseal year 1936-57, 5. An additional 200 state police and 33 more patrol cars, which will cost $1,107,628 in the next fis- cal year. 6. Grants to counties for addition. al sheriffs’ road patrols on a matching basis. The governor asked $425,000 for such grants this year and $850,000 next year. DRUNKOMETER’ TESTS 7. Legalization of “drunkometer"’ ‘tests already supported by some Republican legislative Jeaders. * * 8. Addition of 98 clerks. to the state's central file of traffic viola- tions. Only about one-third of an estimated two million tickets issued each year for moving viola- tions are now filed by the state, Williams said, 9. Establishment of a Traffic Safety Department at Michigan State University which weuld of. fer course in traffic safety. 10. Money to finance use of Na- tional Guardsmen for highway duty on. 10 holiday weekends each. year, 11. Radar speed control equip- ment fo be furnished by the state to local officers. — 12. An additional eight persons in his own plan—‘‘and if they really . program staffed by 500 Civil Serv. | — licensed vehicles every six months} is brightened, by the presence of new crop of Italian starlets, - any Saenee: 19 Active U. WASHINGTON wm—It! President Eisenhower is really du- bious about continuing in politics because of his age, he might check | on the staff of the State Safety Commission to handle safety re- search and publicize highway safe- 13. Establishment of mw traffic ety study commission jp. con- Y a Maximum speed Jaw and sitar of roadside vending, 14, Physical examinatiqn of all school bus drivers in addition, to ‘the it chauffeur's license re- qui Assumes New Post LELAND (®—Robert Kroupa of Leland, conservation aide. since the Leelanau County soil conservation distrit was formed in 1943, has been promoted to. a similar post in Cheboygan and Presque Isle counties, He will begin his new. du- j ties Oct. 9. ee eee | with 19. members of the U. 8. Sen- | ale, LJ + * As today showed that, about i{th of the senators: are, older” he President, who win | be 65 on Oct. 14, Ten senators are | a decade or more older and ap-| pear to be thriving. While not committing himself one way or the other, Eisenhower recently when he was by a delegation of Ohio Republicans to seek a second four-year term. He ‘pointed oltt he would pass 66 | before the November 1956 election and 70 before he could complete another four-year term. Most people agree that the presi- | but the lawmakers _ _ especially INSTRUCTIONS: Each word WHAT'S MY LINE? scramble as few as possible to guess my line. Answer appeors ‘under orrow, reading downward. TAMA. , * ¢ © # © © # © @ @ is related to my work. Un- > —pasaee THEAFER ANEIBE WRAST _ On — OLDEM VILE KUS ol OlhlCOOUN CUO UO SALIRO | GEMS NIiNE | need nee. as & TELF AAIRT Soturdey —OVdaNnN OU heoR (er J Whote My Liae, Inc. {rach wkd, uhited, latin, nat.ons, chinkse, 9-19 s answer rutilon WPegk, gfrmaon, Pennsylyania cities including Phil- | adelphia and several cities in Iili- nois incuding aed Ga | suit. This puts about 40 million peo | | ple, or about one-fourth of the na- tion's population, in the extra | light area. * Normally there is a three-hour | time spread between the East and | West. This remains the case in daylight saving months as far as New York and California are con- cerned, because’ both set their i. This year for the first - time, though, New York sticks with the | fast time until Oct. 30, while Cali- ‘fornia quits Sept. 24. During the) period between those dates the two coasts will be four- hours apart. *. * Ld see what is officials to) Thus it is plain causing TV networ Vermont, along with a number off lose their sunny disposition, Programs timed for the largest | audiences on the East Coast at night will hit the West while folks | are still ott in the yard relaxing, from work. And West Coast programs at the best. hours there will find New Yorkers catching their 40 winks. As for railroads, there is just enough of a checkerboard pattern on the forthcoming time situation to make things tough. Railroads*isually run on stand- ard time, but generally their oper- ations are geared to peak require- ments in areas served, Local time is a big tactop in this. so brought up the subject of his age | dency is a tougher job than senator - United Press Phete FARM BRIGHTENER—A peaceful farm scene in Maccarese, Italy, shapely Anna Paukani, ohe of the Perched on a fence with cows in the | background, an Sp Coen hae mistaken for a cowboy, at s. Senators Are Older Than President those in leadership posts or from | larger states—are apt to argue | Sbout this in private. Of the 19 senators older than | Eisenhower, 11 are Democrats and 8 are Republicans. Topping the list is vigorous Sen. Green (D-RD who will be 88 on | Oct. 2 and who was 69 before he / won his first Green was j elected to his fourth term in 194 and expects. to pass 90 before he decides about running. again. Sen. Neely (D-WVa) ig -the only other octogenarian, He will; be 8) Nov. 9 and still can make somé ‘of the most fiery speeches heard on the floor, * « ® Eleven senators including former Vice President Barkley are in the 70s. Barkley will be 78 Nov. 24. Others in this group and their ages before the year ends include: Murray (D-Mont) 79; Hayden (D-Ariz) 78; George (D-Ga) and |; Lehman (D-NY) 77; Martin (R- Pa) 76; Smith -(R-NJ) and Flan ders (R-Vt) 75; Duff (R-Pa) 72; and Wiley (R-Wis) and O'Mahoney (D-Wyo) 71. Somewhat younger but still im the “‘older-than-Ike” group are Sens, Langer (R-ND) and Watkins (R-Utah) 69; Robertson (D-Va) ‘and Byrd (D-Va) 68; Chavez (D- NM) 67; "nd Malone (R-Nev) 65, - Altogether, the 96 senators are 5.591 years old this year for an i average of 58 years and 3 months, | Sen. Long (D-La) has been the \‘‘Senate baby” in age for nearly seven years. He will be 37 Nov. 3. Sen. Kennedy (R-Mass)is 38 and Sen. Potter (R-Mich) will be 39 Oct. 30, They are the only senators under 40, although 22 are under Vice President Nixon, who was a California senator before elected to his present post, is 23 years younger than Eisenhower. He was 42 on Jan. 9. Tribes Total 20 Million | CALCUTTA — India has a tribal population of nearly 20,000,000. , These people live mostly in in- accessible hills and forests in ‘Bihar, Assam, Bombay, Orissa, Jand Madhya Pradesh states, Daylight Time Ruckus Rolls Around Again figure the odd situation is going to cost staggering amounts of money, Radio networks foresee no prob- lem because it is easy to record programs and air them at. the usual time. in each locality, Airlines expect no difficulties, and little or no effect on market activities was seen except possibly on the West Coast. The brokerage house men will have to get to work an hour. eatlier in California, _ Ben Franklin is generally cred- ited as the first man to propose daylight saving but the idea never took hold until early in the present / century when an Englishman got Many railroads yen ‘pubitsh their time tables.with local times. which will mean two publishing jobs this | fall instead of one. Too, there is the matter of train connectiohs the ball rolling. Even so, was the. first to adopt it, in 1 Many countries now use the plan and some places keep it going the... year-round: British Honduras; The — between. daylight and nondaytignt Dominican Republic, El Salvador, areas. ‘Executives of two TV networks. and Bedford the Gokl Coast colony of Africa‘ ok: oe, ae attains sai mnemeaita Beautiful Gleaning you ean So dee... »ssquality you can trust. The reason? Today's most ' modern method of cleaning and conditioning your garments! We Pick Up and Deliver Right on Time - Try Us and See! FOR FINER DRY CLEANING & SON eaners Plant and ny Oe Jeatya Avenue FATHER é Model SDV-91 Spcl. ~~ @ Frozen Juice Can Dispenser © Full-width Chill Drawer @ Tilt-down Egg Server ® Butter Compartment A @ Lots of room for tall bottles, cans, jors in Storage Door | | | | Cons Start War on Delinquency Texas Prison Inmates Give Spending Money. } to Slum Area Boy mk19 DALLAS —A group of federal | convicts believe they know how to} of juvenile delinquency. They're | so enthusiastic they're anteing up| ‘ from their meager earnings of $10 a month or less to prove their! |” ome * * * Their special project is Bruce | Williams, 10, by no means ajuven- | ile delinquent. But what chance did he have? | His father was dead, his mother | ill. He lived in a poverty-stricken | ! part of Dallas noted for its vio- | | lence and crime. The convicts are in Seagoville | |Zosecet Correctional Institution, a “minimum security’ prison near p= The idei came from_ the Personal Development Group, a club of about 60 prisoners. “J. 'W. Peterson, a Dallas busi-’ nessman who works with the club, ‘said the idea grew out of a dis- | cuasion of child delinquency. Many | ol the men themselves had been! | juvenile delinquents. The group concluded, Peterson | | said, that juvemle delinquency has | / roots in the absence of some of | , They kicked around the idea SOLD OUT THE LAST TIME! Now---Once Again We REPEAT THIS SPECIAL! a cu. FRIGIDAIRE. convicts. the little extra pleasures in a child’s life. contributing a little money into a fund for some child who didn't have much. Warden Luster P. Gollaher sug- gested they work through a recog- nized agency. They pickec\ the Salvation Army, | . Army Maj. ao Moss rec- ommended Bruce, then 9, a well- mannered child who attended church but needed some financial — * * @ So happy was Bruce with the YMCA membership the money got him, as well as new shoes and clothes, that he wanted to meet his new sponsors. So Bruce and his mother, now recovered, spent his 10th birthday at the prison. He was showered with presents, many made by the x Genvine Frigidaire Quality |! #¢ Brand New Model... Not Last Year's! A] |X Quantities Limited! = ~_ 4 Hurry While They Last! Compare all these Fine Features! © Full-width Super Freezer Chest @ Exclusive Quickube Trays with instant tray and cube releases @ full-width porcelain Hydrator for fruits and vegetables @ All aluminum, rust-proof refrigerator shelves © Meter-Miser Mechanism with 1-Year Warranty plus 4-Year Protection Pian LAYTON’ 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. o? | OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS — | “FURNITURE & “APPLIANCES: PHONES: FE 5-881! and FE 5.8974. KEEGO HARBOR | around the eyes. | prevent what they say is one cause | F™ Ne ae BEAUTY 1ASK—Theee tasecs | are designed to protect the wearer j not only from éyestrain but from Ms. Rare”, | wrinkles. On display at the 1955 Fair of Inventions in Nuerhberg, Germany, the glasses feature sponge rubber patches which are supposed to keep wrinkles from forming on the forehead and Hormone lotion is applied to the skin before the patches are are put < on. © Cleaned = uted “4” ~ [© Regulated “O Your Watch Expansion Watch Bands . er 9 Special *T 95 Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. Mr. Roberts ES PA ES STI OPEN TONITE o Sealy HOLLYWOOD BED SPECIAL! Includes innerspring mat- tress, matching box spring, headboard, and legs. Reg. $90.90 SAVE $31.40 msg” Complete SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE! GENUINE Valentine Seaver by KROEHLER Beautifully styled to add new charm and grace to your home. Choice of colors-and fabrics. Reg. $69.95 Each $ 5 5” 2 For ~ 89950 tn Avenscot ove 3 MILLION A Month - By Members of the , Pontiac Cooperative Real Estate Exchange a \ When you are selling use the years of experience of the Real Estate Exchange ... the Exchange offers truly great cooperation with hundreds of salesmen working for YOU. Trained salesmen who will save you time and trouble selling your property... when you deal with a member of the Pontiac Cooperative Real Estate Exchange you have not one but 19 reliable agencies selling for you.. So for faster action on your transaction. List and Insist On A Member | of the Pontiac Cooperative Real Estate Exchange B. D. CHARLES 1717 South Telegraph, FE 4-0521 , CLARK REAL ESTATE | 1362 W. Huron, FE 4-6492 DORRIS & SON 752 W. Huron, FE 4-1557 GEORGE R. IRWIN 269 Baldwin, FE 5-0101 LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD 163 E. Pike St., FE 4-9584 46 E. Flint St, Lake Orion, MY 2-2821 “q a LEWIS HUMPHRIES 83 N. Telegraph, FE 2-0474 ' JOSEPH F: REISZ JOHN KINZLER, REALTOR 670 W. Huron, FE 4-3525 L. C. LADD (GORDON G.) 2486 Dixie Highway, OR 3-2361 MAHAN REALTY CO. 1075 W. Huron, FE 2-0263 RAY O’NEIL, REALTY 74'g West Huron Street, FE 3-7103 CARROLL G. PORRITT 26's W. Huron St., FE 2-7124 531g West Huron Street, FE 2-0259 CLARENCE Cc. RIDGEWAY! 975 “en FE. 4-623 IVAN SCHRAM 1111 Joslyn Ave., FE 5-5091 SYLVAN REALTY 2383 Orchard Lake, FE 5-9418 JAMES H. WRIGHT 345 Orkland Avenue, FE 5-9441 eee 5 RICHARD J. VALUET 345 Oakland Avenue, FE 5-0693 BATEMAN & KAMPSEN REALTY CO. 337 South Telegraph Road, FE 4-0528 L. H. BROWN ‘ 1362 West Huron, FE 2-4810 *. r ALL MEMBERS OF. PONTIAC COOPERATIVE REAL ESTATE - SN. ANGE » E ARE ALSO REALTORS em eeemtont ~ — For a half century or more the Pontiac passenger railroad depot was naear Jackson ‘Street. , D Scholl Zino pads ‘the gar window. Hal Boyle Says: NEW YORK (‘*®—"'This is a most | unattractive section now,’’-said the little grandmotherly old lady, shak- | ing her head as she peered out “Isn't it terrible?" The lady was Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, She was looking at the site of the old Madison Square Garden atop which in. 1906 her husband, Harry K. Thaw, shot to death her former lover, Stanford White, in New York's most celebrated mur- der case. SALE! PIANOS of FINE PIANOS RETURNED FROM DISPLAY AT MICHIGAN STATE FAIR! RENTALS AND TRADE-INS t ¢ ‘ . ; . THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 THIRTEEN ¢ Call for Coreful Dan the Pontiac Laundry Mon in 06 Love Tragedy Returns Home She seemed'depressed at the way. the neighborhood has ‘run | down! /since, as she terms # now, “the tragedy” took place. , But after 49 years ‘the tragedy” has turned out to be a form of White, a famous architect who de-| The low point of the: “tour came | j century ago. Miss Nesbit ordered is | for Miss Nesbit as we drove along. ‘and drank a seidel of the same signed the Washington Arch, the only man she ever really loved, | | truck-crowded west 24th ‘street | where White's. studio once stood, | described him as ‘the most won- | where once at gay parties: she | derful man I ever knew, | swung to the ceiling on a red | social security: for Miss Nesbit. “He had one weakness — a love | velvet swing. |She's back in the broiled quail | lof youth, He would tremble all, 4 : oe her league again, A movie studio has | over when he came near me. Youth it = — loners ye ip paid her upward of $50,000 for a! —it was his weakness, But all wats the. matter with people? film based on her life called “The | great men have a weakness.” They tear everything down They | Girl in the Red Velvet Swing.” As to Thaw, whose acquittal on | 51. getting wackier and wackier.”’ | German brand beer she had once, shared with him. “Only one now, on a diét.” ; Then, dismissing with a smile ‘all the memories of her journey back into the past, she said: “You know what I really want to | | see most in .New eorkt A nice " she said, “I'm! “If you think I’m going to invest | grounds of insanity she helped t ; | big, broiled Maine lobster ‘ that money, you're crazy”. re- Win -by her testimony, ashe sr | A moment later she mused — ore _ 'marked Miss Nesbit spiritedly. “I | | “Luxury really doesn't mean, (Advertisement) never invest in anything but a good | “The poor thing. 1 guess he | anything. You become surfeited | meal.” Peary help what he did, although | with it. It owns you and you have * * © now I believe it was premeditated. | no freedom. | wouldn't trade my Why else was he carrying a pistol? life in my studio with my two cats ‘Zemo Great For Your Best. Buy Is Fluff Dry Fluff Dry Just Send Your Entire Family Wash The flat pieces will. be returned all ironed. The wearing apparel and bath towels will be fluff dried and folded. Very little left for you to do. i Food seemed more on her mind than sentiment as Miss Nesbit, now a Los Angeles sculptress, and I took a ride down Memory Lane in ia rented: limousine. At 70 this faded beauty of a faded past looks like a greying retired schoolmarm. He was a mighty peculiar person, | for anything. Health is the im- and he deteriorated. It would have ‘portant thing. A healthy person ‘been better if he had never been doesn't let anything bother him.” bern. Too much money spoiled | “> Ss him young.” ' The journey back Thaw inherited an estimated 40 Luchow’'s restaurant, still looking itchy Skin Rash Zemo, a doctot’s formula, promptly relieves itching of surface skin rashes, eczema, prickly heat, athlete's fost, Zemo stops scratching and so aids faster healing and clearing. Buy Extra | ended at PONTIAC LAUNDRY & CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS FE 28/101 @= cat =» FE28I/IOl | million dollars, reckoned a fortune; much as it did when she dined But few schoolmarms have her Strength Zemo for stubborn Cases, ‘in those days there with Stanford White half. a FREE * Delivery | bounce — and none, I suppose, | , quite has her memories Passing her old home on a avenue, the first floor of which | now. is a dress shop, she said: “No, Thaw didn't live there with | bastille “me. He resided in the then — in durance vile. Boy, the breakfasts I used to have in that house — broiled quail eggs, trouf, . coca 3 Rooms: * * We drove by the former location Y of Sherry's restaurant, and she 0...REAOYTO uve In! said: “Oh, the wonderful t terrapin they | served. The t-e-r-r-a-p-i-n”” — he | spelled it out, as if no one in the | present generation could remember | \it— “is a member of the turtle | family, only it -tastes better.’ The swiftly changing Manhattan | | scene bewildered her. Most of, the | ‘landmarks of her champagne youth | were gone. “Everything is so different,” she DISCOUNT HOUSE FRIDAY & MONDAY P. M, Blond BUNK BED STUDENT COMPLETE WITH Restokraft Ledder end fad Guerd Rail DESK Maple Finish ‘ wrvrvrvvvTvTvVT Vv vy; Boy, was she upholstered! hip, watermelon! Also a Large Selection of Spinets and Consoles Exclusively at Gallagher's Lester - Gulbransen - Kimball Brady, Stanford White was too snobbish to speak to Brady. He thought he was a frightful charac- ter.” Miss Nesbit, who still insists that 4 Is Unsatisfactory Gallagher's Organ Department Is = Open Wednesday and Thursday Evening From 7 P. M. to 9 P. M. at 22 East Huron Street. Come and Hear Mr. Lou Cry GALLAGHER MUSIC C0. 18 W. HURON ST. FE 4-0566 yw eee eee meMAIL THIS COUPON TODAY #eeeenwom, MOSCOW «Fh — The U bassy said today an unsatisfactory reply to its pro- | test against treatment of Rep. Jo- | seph Holt (R-Calif) during his vis- Davies Play the Famous |it to mencow ae = Organ Holt said he was held at pistol - ‘than an hour on Aug. 31 although accompanied by an Embassy of- | ficial and had all proper creden- | Soviet capital's suburbs.- OPEN MON. G@ FRI. NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 P.M. | viet reply to the protest deliv- ered Sept. 1, but said: “We con- sider this reply tinsatisfactory.” $ * * » Hip, | “No, I never met Diamond Jim | hata reread Sotrentes Spinet ect lvoe "R's po ceunaed. Wig | bony Finis Now $630 | have they torn down so many | } q ‘ we * CONOVER MAHOGANY LEONARD | beautiful old buildings: sat $ Small oes Then she was back on food again. | . Mecare 199 Bungalow $1 90 “T ate so much in the old days | BETSY ROSS SPINET LESTER ,I. still wonder why I didn't get) $855 Blond Spinet . ‘ fat.’ she said. “Lillian Russell was Now $650 $743 $663 ‘bowing out of the picture as I) Returned from Rental Now walked in. Styles were changing. | ‘20 Meraeoncin Communist Reply MICHICAN for Holt Affront it has received | | point by a Russian officer for more | ‘tials on a sightseeing tour of the | An Embassy spokesman declined | to disclose the contents of the -So- | . Please Forward cone information, e | q _— ‘ : U..S. Ambassador Charles E ; Fer eeneeeeereneecrearrenes Cove eteseceereeeereceerecscereceenes « : | Bohlen delivered the original pro- | ' BOONES ceikec ce icrencseecececoscccecscttesscceuceccccscetess sieve sas “4 | test personally and Secretary John | UP) ceenceccncen sslsiseis'e palnieis wots e'sicice! Zene..... (Male). ccsec esos t ff} Guthrie had called at the Foreign, —sasnnaan na concannoncankanameaocd : | Ministry five times secking a re- | ply. I lan Now , . e @« @ fe SN ‘ = = Or e Retirement Comf J Comiort ¢ If you want to buy a little chicken farm for your retirement, start saving for that purpose NOW. Save where it really pays... at PONTIAC FEDERAL. CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE 2% per annum, os We have never missed a ditidend > since our founding. in 1934! Pontiac a Savings | Downtown Branch’ : 16 E. Lawrence Sti " Rochester Braneh ~ ., +407 Main St. , 15-Pe. Breakfast Set A bright 5-pe. esc top $ 19° breakfast set in chrome or wrought iron. Plus a 10-pe. Sheffield cutlery carving set. ; SS ld Wa hii iat A ADD NEW FASHION TO YOUR HOME ON LONG EASY TERMS | DISCOUNT HOUSE | MERCHANDISE SURPLUS FURNITURE — oe ACES 15 E. Pike St., Just Off Saginaw. OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. Other Desks to $6900 24° ROASTER TABLE With Kitchen Stool In ‘red or white enamel, with electric outlet. ‘6 AUTOMATIC WASHERS and DRYERS- Name Brands SELLING OUT 1955 MODELS AT OUR COST! DEEP FRYER With Westinghouse Thermostat 10-in-1 ioe *] 0% Dormeyet Fryer... ». $14.95 G-E and CASCO STEAM IRON Factory Cartons a | 45 WHILE THEY LAST WROUGHT IRON Complete with mattress, ladder and guard rail. 69 LEWYT Vacuum Cleaner Roll around with ov, wheels, took rack. $99: value. ‘FE 48795 °K) G00 : : , : Aes ' ‘ - | ‘ . Re ss “e ee : : Shih f E : : ‘i , . ~ & ! \ & % ° % c 2 \ ; . ~ FOURTEEN : Z ~. MHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955' ae a. a a | DANIEL BOONE By Russ Winterbotham and Lane | 7 inmates Slug Guard Jen Seem eae __» VISIT or CALL } in Tacoma, Flee Jail former Marine ee - MICHIGAN || TACOMA, Wash. up — Seven | 10 he Vet valle Walla, He was — ) prisoners, one a condemned mur-| .onvieted of slaying @ motel opera Jp FIRST AID -derer, slugged the ‘officer on duty tor with a Japanese samura) 5° o for and broke out of the Pierce County | last Merde . SICK ROOM and yabineg WEEDS GOVERNMENT HOUSING FOR SALE aicalry 54 BUILDINGS, 141 DWELLING UNITS ; INDUSTRIAL FIRST AID SUPPLIES | ||; Temporary Dwellings to Be Moved From Site J fa . ie, Tie These buildings will be offered as individual items and are in id eed Wetec ron " — Jemima, « true daughter of her 3h ‘ various war housing projects located in the City of Detrort, as ; . LA : ribs fother, 4#t @ trail lan twi : listed below. Royal Oak Ses Hearing the girls’ screams, men rushed , tart , breaking wigs ‘ a AE came sg a ae, | | trom Secaahankeghe dressed in their ond dropping scrops of clothing. BNP. eit: mICH-20045 —Brooks Nemes cles 8 Buildings —42 = . ine. i ‘ : FZ a 8 baa. 5h ys ‘He 8 \ jomes.... - gs i _t - - Copr. 1966 by NEA Service, Ine ——— — w@ I! bite! \ VEE wees ae. oth rotary —Broeks Homes .... 10 Buildings—10 Units. - MICH-20212 —Meseley Homes ...12 Buildings —48 Units MICH-20213A—Douglass Homes ... The Public Housing Administration will receive otters for a period of 20 days, beginning September 14, 1955 and ending at 2:00 P.M. ES.T., October 13, 1955 for the sale and removal from site of these structures. : 11 lost in Czech Mine’ Germany's Prisoners of War in Russia Fiherm ! aN Uipeatacllea = ae . esults in Confusion | a. al io hi accident recently Are New Pawns In East-West Struggle CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. Ww — at Kreava, in Communist Czech: | ; ' Luther Steele took his boy Lloyd, | oslovakia, the Free Europe Bulle- | By JOHN H. MARTIN in a@ Swedish hospital of internal warfare, in Russia, then ‘returned 1 Fishermen’s Holiday All buildings are of frame construction, some are built on wood Mr. Roberts GAS HEAT! See our daring “Show-Down Chart” that compares leading makes of gas furnaces—feature by feature — and proves that Timken Silent Automatic gives you more lifetime value for your money. Phone for fects today! 73 S. Parke St. GIVES FACTS ON Established 1910 A. ELBLING & SONS SEEOUR DARING «24% FER WE © Sheet Metal Work © Rocling © Heating ® Air-Conditioning Phone FE 4-1504 | INS Foreign Director | broken in body and mind, now are ja pawn in the East-West political r war. | In exchange for a written agree- | ment to establish diplomatic rela- tions, West German Chancellor | Konrad Adenauer obtained from the Soviets an agreement—unwrit- ‘ten and unacknowledged in th, cen- sored Soviet press—to release the | German prisoners. Then the East German Commu- prisoners are released the East German Reds, with Soviet aid, will claim the ‘‘credit." Russia says it has 9,626 Ger- ; mans, all “war criminals,” to be released. Adenauer says he has | proof that the Soviets hold at | least 100,000, | In the argument over the whole | question — which naturally has \‘great emotional tugs among fami- lies and friends of thé prisoners i; inside Germany—it is sometimes. forgotten that an enormous num- ber of ‘slave labor'' people are held in the Soviet Union. * * * Estimates have been conserva- ‘slave laborers, Russian and _ for- | eign nationals, in the Soviet Union, |38 MILLION DYING | Otto Larsen, a Norwegian fish- lerman who died a few weeks ago | injuries which he had said he suf- prison camps. Larsen wrote a book of his ex- periences. Advance copies of thir posthumous document. entitled “Nightmare of the Innocents” - have been read by some British leaders prior to publication this week by the Andrew Melrose publishing house, tive in saying there are 20,000,000 | The London Evening News nist puppet regime members made | Quotes former British Prime Minis- their journey to Moscow. If the} ter Clement Attlee as_ saying that two things impressed him after reading “Nightmare of the Inno cents:" * * # The intense fear that animates the Soviet regime and the extraord- ‘inary stypidity, both of which he points out are common to most despotisms. ‘ BEYOND BELIEF Noted barrister Sir Norman Bir- beyond belief.” Earl Russell, the famous philosopher better known as Bertrand Russell, declares him- truthfulness of the narrative.” * * * kett finds Larsen'’s revelations of | ‘man's inhumanity to man almost | self “impressed by the unadorned | Larsen was a Communist. by |to work underground against the German prisoners of war in Rus- fered in nearly a decade in Soviet| hated Nazis. sia, many of them undoubtedly | slave camps, estimate there are: after the war ended 38,000,000 slowly dying in Soviet “ went back to Russia voluntarily. He wanted to claim a fishing boat belonging to his brother which was in Soviet hands. é This demand for payment on a miniature “lend - lease’ arrange- | Soviets clapped him in jail, with- {out trial, on a charge of anti- Soviet espionage and he began the long nightmare journey from one prison slave-camp to another. Consolidation has reduced the number of Oakland County's school the number of 25 years ago. ment of body and soul was dis: | ; astrous. His book relates how the. 1, fishing and they had plenty of \luck—all of it bad. : | ' On arrival yesterday at Hales Bar, 15 miles from home, they }found they'd left their fishing | tackle box at home. They found their boat half full of water and then while the father was trying to bail it out the boy accidentally ‘shot himself in the foot with a .22 rifle. 8 , Driver Shifts to Water DALLAS, Tex. W-—-Police said ‘these things happened to a 24-year- |old driver: He drove into a bridge | railing. Excited, he shifted into |reverse and backed into a 10-foot |ditch. More excited he jumped districts to less than one-tenth of | from the car and fell face’ down- | | ward into a pudgle of water. post foundations, others on concrete slabs (not subject to removal). The roots are both flat and gabled covered with asphalt roll roofing. Exteriors are of asbestos ‘or upson board siding with a few having red cedar. Walls and partitions are of plaster or wallboard. Structures are offered in their “as is’ condition and subject to the inspection of the bidder, Bids may be submitted on one of more buildings. The terms of the sale are cash. For General Conditions of Sale, bid forms, information as to loca- tion of buildings, etc., write or call, ; Project Manager, Woodward, 1-4358 1510 Gratiot Avenue Detroit Project Manager, Twinbrook 1-3896 4801 East Nevads Avenue Detroit, Detroit Housing Commission, Woodward |-0955 409 Griswold Avenue Detroit, Michigan Public Housing Adminisration, Randolph 6-5860 185 North Wabash Avenue Chicage |, Illinois - 2 = = They're | ANEW IDEA 1. ezoncom rane They'e BUNK BEDS.../icy TWIN BEDS TRUNDLE BEDS... All in One! conviction. He joined the Russian | forces in the war when the Nazis | overran Norway. He left his fish- | ing village within the Arctic Circle |to be trained in spy and Guerilla make it a matched team ! Match your electric washer with an electric clothes dryer Team your electric washer with a new | electric dryer and watch those “‘washday ,blues” disappear. You’ll have no more heavy, wet wash to hang on the line, no more sudden changes in the weather to worry about. Your clothes dry so sweet, soft, and , fluffy —only in an electric dryer. Enjoy. a carefree washday. Dry your clothes electrically—the modern way. see YouR DEALER or Detroit Edicon As BUN K BEDS | 4 A TRIPLE VALUE— ALL FOR ONLY A19 3 completely different bedrooms in 1 Use them as: e'’Rumpus resistont’’ bunk beds for the youngsters’ room! e Comfortable twin beds when the children start to grow! : e Trundle beds te solve space problems in small hemes, crowded apartments and gvest rooms! e Warm, Mellow Maple Finish . ¢ Beautifully made, With authentic Early American styling, these beds will give you a lifetime of sleeping pleasure. Complete With Springs and Mattress You have as many variations in room planning as your imagination can dream of. . ~ © “ CAs TRUNDLE BEDS rs ‘ Open Tonight and Friday Until 9 P. M.! YEARS OF SERVICE La THOMAS | FURNITURE CO. 361 South Saginaw Street - Ta 4 F : + mn " . THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOND. AY: , SEPTEMBER 19 1955. FE 5-0738 coma A Necessity Careful planning in advance is one of the Prime necessities in rendering a good funeral service. The results x such planning, thoroughness ond efficiency are quite evident in the superior type of service offered by the Brace- Smith Funeral Home. And, may we add, the cost of this service is decidedly reasonable. | | | Brace: Goin Forara Home 136 West Lawrence St. Pontiec, Michigan Let Me | Do Your Repair : Me, PHIL ORENCIA Certified Watchmaker Open to 9 P. M. Thurs., Fri., Evenings Sat. WORK | Satisfaction . Guaranteed Any time you bring your watch, | clock or jewelry here for repair be assured of our sincere suave te de & to your complete satisfaction y we can guarantee | work for you. This is 80 Bring -your work re All Items Insured While in Our Care - Mye ab (Advertisenient) Announce New Way To Shrink Painful Piles Science Finds Healing Substance That Does Both — Relieves Pain— Shrinks Hemorrhoids New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing poet to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain—without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. . And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all—this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors’ observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thor- ough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing statements as “Piles have ceased to be a (Advertisement) | sare And among these suf- erers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret, is. a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne®*)—the discovery of a world- famous research institution. Al- ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is rebate in suppository or ointment form called Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation suppositories or Preparation H ointment with s cial applicator. Preparation i ie sold at all drugstores. Satisfaction guaranteed or moriey refunded. Res. U. 8. Pat. Ort. Tsolation - -Nehru’s Answer to Goa NOVA Phone for }-trip loan. Upon approval, $300 24.53 | 17.08 ee ESE wastes cooeaeee If you are having difficulty in paying your bills . . . why ee J consolidate bills with our Bill Con. | don't you drop in and see how. we can help: you. Not a os te an Seb, we solidation Service Phone, or come in. loan company—One place to pay. on bel. above. Call FEderal 8-0456 | MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS, Ine. Let 9 Yeurs Credit Counselling Experience Help You | _ Above Oakland Theater 41% S. Seginew ne Bidg.. 7 Manager « PONTIAC ¢ FEderal 2-9249 ——— EN TONIGHT] 2nd Fleer « Lawrence WEST LAWRENCE ST. Gerald Harvey, SHOP UNTIL 9 P. M. AT LORD’S, WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD - CHROME DINETTE JEWEL Ges eee Complete 5-piece set. Ex- deluxe quality tension table and four chrome chairs. BUNK BED ter Complete with 2 beds, 2 mattreses, 2. springs and guard rail and ladder. Full - size large oven. When You Purchase Either a LIVING ROOM SUITE BEDROOM SUITE 5) 5149°° Come in-—take your pick of scores of wonderful suites o one Lord's, Choice of new coverings, new colors, new styles, fe S80 A WEEK BUYS THEM BOTH — IF YOU HURRY TO LORD’S TONIGHT MODEL LS8 WESTINGHOUSE AUTOMATIC WASHER and MODEL DS8 WESTINGHOUSE | AUTOMATIC DRYER -- WHILE THEY LAST! FIRST COME--FIRST SERVED! No More When These Are Gone — - Hurry ANOTHER LORD'S SPECIAL! HOUSE OF DISCOUNTS Pontiac, Michigen « MR, and MRS. JOHN H, IS Married Friday were Jean Marie Wasserberger and John H. Ostrander. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, _ George A. Wasserberger of Illinois avenue, and he is the son of the John E. Ostranders of Parkway drive. F. ollowing a honeymoon on Lake. Michigan, the couple will reside in Big sen. saul ? Carolee Coleman Wears Tulle, Tatteta for Rite A matching lace Juliet cap out- lined in seed pearls secured her oaece veil, and she carried a arrangement of roses, cpastenn. stephanotis and ivy. The bride is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. William Coleman of Covert road, and the bride- groom is the son of Mrs. John -"W. Hanson and the late Mr. - Manson of Walled Lake. ' Central Methodist Church was the setting for the 7:30 candle- light ceremony performed by the Rev. Milton H. Bank before an altar banked with palms and ar sae Mayflower Group Conducts Meeting Mrs. William Wilcox of Mill Lake entertained the Mayflower Group of the First Congregational Church Friday evening. Mrs. John Hotchkiss presided at ‘the meeting attended by 32 mem- bers and guests, The Rev. Mal- colm Burton spoke on “Righteous Living. The group disussed plans for Pompe to be held at the Mill road home of Mrs. Robert Sanford Oct. 14. “dred E. The Rev. Malcolm K. Burton of. First Congregational Church offi- ciated at the Friday evening serv- ice uniting Mr. and Mrs, John H. Ostrander’ in marriage. The bride is the former Jean Marie Wasserberger, daughter of |. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Wasser- berger of Illinois avenue, and he is | the son of the John E. Ostranders | | of Parkway drive. The fitted bodice of the bridal | gown was of lace trimmed with | tulle and featured a V_ neckline. | Lace was repeated in her long gloves. The bouffant hoop skirt was of tulle with appliques of lace. A‘ crown of sequins and pearls se- cured her finger tip veil of il- lusion. Her cascade bridal bou- quet was of white roses and Talisman roses. = - Janet May Wasserberger wore a bronze crystallette gown, for her duties as her sister's maid of hon- or. Her other attendants, Mrs. Al- Ostrander were gowned similarly in dresses of burnt orange and gold respectively. Their flower crownettes matched their gowns, SCATTERS FLOWERS Flower girl, Jane Lee Ostrand- er's gown was of mint green nylon net over taffeta. Her flower bas- ket contained jonquils, white roses and bronze and white chrysanthe- mums, Jane's brother, Robert Ostrander, served as ring bearer, Mrs. Carl Leonard sang the bridal recital, Aldred E. Ostrander’ was best man, and Donald Ostrander and Neil Wasserberger seated the guests. : Mrs, Wasserberger wore a rose beige lace dress with bronze for the reception held in the church pariors immediately following the ceremony. Mra. Onstrander's dress was of gray lace over pink with a pink hat and gloves. The bride is a graduate of the University of Michigan and he is studying ‘at Ferris” Institute, Big Rapids, where they will live after returning from their honeymoon | on Lake Michigan. Hand Care ints Beware! Cold weather will be -here before you know it, and if you're not prepared you will be caught with rough, red hands. Now is the time to review the news in skin care and choose a lotion that will make you proud to take off your gloves, Emma Jean Carter and Hilding A. Berquist were married Saturday evening ‘in a candlelight ceremony. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude A. Carter of Drayton Plains and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hilding J. rangements of gladioli and chrys- anthemums. | Medora Goebel performed the duties of matron of honor. Her gown was of pale pink chiffon over taffeta in a ballerina-length. She carsied a cascade a ' Call FEderal 4-0558 HURRY $ . and let us tell you how you 4 can restyle your furniture to per- 4 SAVE UP TO sonalize and beautify your : home. it costs so little! We will send a representative to your home without obligation who will show you the newest and most wonderful fabrics you | 40% By Buying Direct i from the have ever seen. He will gladly ‘ Manufecturer advise you in your redecorat- : ing plans. z All Work Guaranteed for 5 Years! re 23 Years! Furniture Makers and Upholsterers : ; 270 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. = m- Made fants ES Wittiam Waicut _| motions of asking you for the date. | : When ‘| calling you first. ¥ announces, ‘By ELIZABETH WOODWARD together do take each other tor, You get in a nervous twit when | granted in big and little ways. La It's a compliment. A definite e , ¢ : he* starts coming over without serge confidence. When he blithely * “Tl see you Saturday | In a close eens each at without going through the | ets to expecting certain things of the other. Their experietices of the pattern. a series of Saterday | might dates he counts on her to be ready and waiting next Satur- day whether he says anything * about it or net. night," | together have proven the design Taken for Granted? You Shouldn’t Worry! If he’s gone with her before to all the parties she’s been invited to. she naturally counts on him. to keep cooperating. It's a way of trusting each other. So whyare these girls disturbed’ | They write: When he rigs up double dates | ' without consulting you beforehand. | his conversation includes | /eomments that you consider too _eritical for comfort. He's taking | Plans tor Playhouse Tea Sparks Birmingham News Guild to Stage |Fashion Show Members of St. Gertrude Guild, “Dear Miss Woodward: The) st Benedict Church. are present- ee take vs {0° | ing a tall tashion show and card there's nothing else to. do: They| Party Sept. 21 at ==’ come to our houses to dance. and| Parish Hall. a we have lots.of fun. But when! The show will be their first ‘it comes to asking girls out, they penefit program. -Proceeds will always ask girls from other | be used for a movie projector for towns!” |St. Benedict School. | The. fashion show will feature fete , The = know that ciothes from Alvin's of Pontiac mid have = — ae modeled by Mrs Joseph Bonfiglio. over to your commer ey know! ays A. G. McConnell Jr and they're welcome; they count on) v4. | ard LaBarge you for the big part of their — Mrs. McConnell. president of the you for granted. Ana you don't. think you like it. * * * It works the other way, too. You're powerfully hurt if . he | doesn't show up every Saturday | inight. You're very put out if} there's a dance that he doesn't | take you to. And you're miffed if he re- fuses to go with you to a show | you want to take in. You're absolutely sunk if the party you | | plan falls on the same night | | that he has to meet his father | at the airport. . And your conversation takes a- nagging tone about the sport shirt. you loathe, the way ‘he notices. | every other girl around, and all his | _| interests and activities that de-| | prive you of his time. | You're Jaking him for granted. You're a bit scared when you | realize it. Afraid he won't like it. IT'S A COMPLIMENT : | | But two people who establish a pattern of spending their time Here's a SPECIAL OFFER!” $10.00 ing shampoo, all for 4.95! 41 N. Seginew For LESS than HALF PRICE Save “% and more and treat yourself to a lovely soft, mew permanent wave! You receive a condition- _ supervised test curls; our wondertul custom permanent wave and a styled setting... 4.99 Mezzanine FE 2-0531 Re ike PABLO gg AR 8h rete” A very personal question from 47 out of every 100 women are dissatis- fied with the way their bras and girdles , according to o recent, impartial study: Toe assure you perfect fit, Formfit makes @ wide range of styles and designs for every figure type. Personalized-fit is so important in under- fashions! For unless a bra and girdle fit you | correctly, they cannot slim, smooth and | support you to your individual needs. That's | | why Formfit tailors Life Girdles and Bras in such a wide range of styles and designs —to give you perfect, personalized fit, no matter what your figure type. Come in today and be fitted in your Life Girdle and Bra. Treat yourself to the new figure beauty and f{ree- dom that come only “i perfect fit! “ #566. New Li ‘fe Rom ance Bra shown. Danty cotton batiste wih ex- clusive Nylo-Braid inner-stitching for a lovelier, more lasting upliit / _Washes beautifully! 32A 10 328C / $2.00. : No. 1552, Life Girdle shown. Luxuri- / ous cotton and leno elastic for new ~ slimming and smoothing features. Pink. ” to 34, $8.95. . ° 1“ North Saginaw St. . BOBETTE corset sHop -| Which figure type are you? - BOBETTE | ~ HOSIERY & CORSET SHOP | STRAND THEATER BUILDING | Mrs. | Bishop, Mrs. F. | F. Pedder and Mrs. BIRMINGHAM—Scrap books de- picting the history of the Village Players since its founding in 1924 will be on view Sept. 25 when the Players give their annual tea for members and guests at the | Playhouse. . Co-chairmen in charge will be Ralph Skinner Jr, and Mrs. M. J. Crichon Jr. assisted by 30 members of the Social Committee. Pouring tea will be Mrs, Lane Clifford Guest, |Mrs. W. Carleton Scott, Mrs. H. | J. Stringham, Mrs. Anthoyn Daley Mrs. William Kegel, Mrs. Rolfe C. Spinning and Mrs. Madeline Tillotson. At the punch bow! will be Mr. | Crichton, Arthur Haines, Rich- ard Nette, George Howard Fox, Howard McDonald and Herbert | Royal. F. Clifford Guest is presi- dent for the coming year, Mrs. George J, Dix, vice-president, Louise Hersey, secretary and Mrs. F. C. Moriarty, treasurer. Mrs. Rolfe Spinning is librarian and other boartl members include Anthony Daley, John E. Hall, Eliot W. Higgins and Mrs. Stan-| ley R. Hood, ~ Comniittee chairmen are Rob- ert W. Keller, Mrs. John A. Parks, A. L. Genung, Mrs. Gordon W. Love, Mrs. Frank N. Mosher, Mrs. Charles D. McCall, Mrs. L. E. Colgrove, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Manhard, Mrs. J. Paul McConkie, Mrs. Ralph Skinner Jr., Mrs. Wal- lace R. Ivers, Robert W. Bills, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shaw, J. Miller | Hagman, Bruce Booth, Charleton’ Scott and Mrs. Richard W, Brown. An innovation this year are | three “workshop” classes for in- struction in directing, scénic de- sign and makeup. A. L. Genung and George F. Green are in charge | of the first two and the latter is | being organized. Mr. and Mrs. Denald 8. Bell. who formerty lived in Birming- ham, are from their ranch near Benson, Ariz. They spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Harris PD. Macchus and dre guests Of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Poole this week. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Tollzein, Mr. and Mrs. 4. — Cart W. Neumann are among who have entertained for them. Mr: and Mrs. Walter F. Carey announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan n Joyce to Terry B. friends | Dye, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Dye of South Bend, Ind. Susan attends the University of Miami and Terry is a student at General Motors Institute in Flint. They will be married in October. Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Blaumann (Barbara Fox) of Oak street an- 'nounce the birth of a son Peter 'Fox Sept. 8. | A son, David Wallace, was born Sept. 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Norman F. Goekel of Birmingham boulevard. Mrs. Goeckel is the former Jane Dadds. Mr. and Mrs, Richard Flan- nery, (Kitty Williams) of Beach read announce the birth of a daughter, Ann Barrett Flannery, Sept. 3. Mrs. Fred Sanders opened her home*in Epping Lane Tuesday for a tea for girls leaving this week to attend Bradford Junior College. | * * Ce Mrs.-.John Shaw of Kingsville, /Ont. is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Horace P. Shaw of Wood- ward avenue this week. ; * * * John T. Shaw left Wednesday for a week of fishing near Sault St. Marie. Chapter Announces Committee Chairmen Beta Chapter of Beta Theta Phi | sorority met at the home of Mrs. M. C. Worster on Wenonah drive, | Thursday. Standing committee chairmen for the year, as announces by the | | president, Mrs. Worster, are Mrs. 'Robert Tedcastle, program: Mrs. Donald Kaiser and: Mrs. Ward | Cummings, house and telephone; | 38. 40, Mrs. John Allen, budget; Mrs. Ida| takes 4% iene flowers and Mrs. Walter yard contrast. erry, ways and means. Mrs. Joseph Burgdorf has been | tome. gaged Pi aes simple | | eeekmes auditor. | plete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat-— } tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- | | tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print | plainly name, address with zone, | size and style number. inches away! | to look young, smart, attractive! The off-center buttoning of this step-in style spells flattery from collar to hemline! ‘Coming Events The Happy Hour Club will meet Tues- day noon at the home of Mrs. Cecil | Pox, 133 Elm St. for a picnic dinner. | Pellowsht Bibie Class of Pitst Deptist mee the Education “. wecoperative donner will be served at 6:15 p.m Mother Alien Prayer Band will meet at 1:00 pm. Tuesday at the home of | Mrs. Carl Measell, 344 Whittemore Bt. | | Ladies Auxiliary to Metropolitan | to be pasted on and came a crop- Spirit 6 will meet Tuesday at at the John DePauw home. 995 aero Bt. st Bide Extension Club, will meet woven in to make this fabric prac- Wednesday at 11 . for @ school girl |tical as well as pretty for cur- juncheon at the home of Mrs. Phil Cot- ii ter. 368 Lowell tains. 0bbo.... ~ E 2-6921 F house of finer cleaning sete ee LADY He Depends Upon You..... So many, many things are left for “The Lady of The House” “trusted to your good judgement methodical handling . .. like choosing the’ cleaner. Every time his business associates appraise him approvingly for the neatness, freshness, and appearance of his well groomed clothing he and they pay you homage ‘tor having them always ready. Ogq’s Finer Clearing Service includes many granteds’ too... littie services that we know make a world of difference in the finished appearance of our cleaning service For instance clegning out the trouser cults) emptying pockets, classification of fabrics and colors FREE process Caretul, skilled workmen pressing and finishing. particular inspectors who insist on high stand- ards these and scores of other services are Nofma! with us and included in our Finer Cleaning Service e.. at no added cost This is why we have so many satisfied customers . . . may we serve you too... to your satisfaction? FOUR CASH and CARRY STORES: 4481 Highland Road 430 Orchard Leke Ave. 376 Auburn Ave. 379 E. Pike Se. — 3-DAY SERVICE—. * es CLEANERS Office and Plent, 379 E. Pike Street fo ; Phone FE 4-9593 * . : * The right: silhouette can slim And this is the right line—for the woman who wants Pattern 4510: Women's sizes 36. | 42, 44, 46, 48, 30. Size 36 yards 35-inch fabric; 12 | Has com: | Polka dots on marquisette. used | | per in the laundry. ‘Now they're to handle: Things | and - “take for dnd finishing with our new LINT FREE, CLING| life When they want to see girls from out of town they have to make dates to take them out. guild, has announced that Techni- color films of New: York styles and models wil} be shown in addi- tion to the live modeling by club They don't know them well | members. enough to barge over to their - houses as they do your. Which btn rhe is a mark of confidence in you. PTA Activities And they enjoy the fun you pro- “wrneaday “at 238 ae Par ams vide. They prefer it to taking you” | per ‘com. A film trom t r out. They can take out-of-town MBrOiive Board members of Eastern High School PT’ girls to the movies. It’s only with | Ey nS es ce celmeipare you girls that they feel com-| office. pletely at ease and comfortable— .. really old friends. | And isn't that a compliment? | Winter Coats (Copyright 1955) - Girls’ and Boys’ Gabardine a. oc © m Sui 98 ‘Congressional P ieee s}1 ‘Women to Meet | 1-Pc. Brushed . NYLON COAT SET The Women's Institute at Pil- /grim Haven,” will be the theme | — $16 | for the Women's Fellowship of the | | Detroit’ Association of Congrega- | tional Churches meeting Wednes-_ day at the First Commoestionsl Church, Pontiac. Mrs. CarlMcClure, president ot | the Detroit Fellowship will direct both morning and afternoon ses- sions. | Workshops will be held in each of the seven key departments be- | ginning at 10 a.m. Boys’ 2-Pc. Nylon FUR LINED JACKET. Sizes 316% | Boys’ 100°, Wool or Nylon Garbardine, Mouton Collar Sizes 3 - 6x 98 78 Following luncheon, Mrs. Car! | 316 = 5] Leonard will sing. Mrs. J. P. Mc- Cormick, exchange teacher re- GIRLS COATS nap tole be Brushed Wool Lag ITB cety retured from Toke wit be || Senta “Sita Walmoth of Birmingham will serve | vanee as Bizes 3-12 as program chairman. $] $98 $1998 USE OUR LATAWAY PLAN Fellowship Group 'Hears Indian Chief i | A filmstrip “Strangers in their Own Land” and a talk by Chief | Standing Bear an the Chippewa | Indians comprised the program of the Christian Women's Fellowship FE 5-8415 j f First Christian Church when | qu — . —3-TRANSISTOR— ENITH "75-X" HEARING AID ~ZENITH'S Ynset Clalit |- /they met Tuesday evening. The program was part of the | group's mission study which con- cerns the American Indians. | Mrs. William Hoyt was chair- man of the meeting held after a | Family Night dinner at the, church. Mrs. Harry Kunse led the | devotions assisted by Billy Kunse, | Ruth Ann and Wanda Sue Vaughn. IF straight, unwaisted figure— Price Includes e# conduction fecerver and wtock eermald The reatest achievement in Zenith's famous ‘‘Crusade to Lower the Cost of Hearing!" You owe it to yourself to For FREE Home Demonstration Call FE 8-0751 Better Hearing Center 8 Mt. Clemens St. The fitted tunic looks best on finy waistline but the loosely fitted | tunic hides @ less thon perfect figure. The waistline is wandering from an empire style just under the bust to way down on the hips; and some- times it remains at the waistline. This makes good sense because Mr. Roberts there really is something for every- : one. DINING ‘i. TONIGHT \ w at Ted's naturally The tood is so delicious, there’s wonderful homemade breads and doubly delicious desserts to tempt everybody in the family . . . Family nights mean family fun. Family Nights Monday and Tuesday © és nate ‘By ANNE HEYWOOD . * * * We sit and dream of some day) becoming a big success—writing | | three children in grade school. a national best seller or coming up with a tremendous and world-_ shattering invention. But we forget that, before these big successes are possible, > A lot of wives Secunieie about housework, but not my Susie. She uses her head instead of her muscles, For example, some women spend a whole day just scrubbing and wax- ing wood floors. My Susie cleans and waxes them in one easy opera- tion with Bruce Cleaning Wax. It takes only half the time and a lot less work. Yet our beautiful wood floors are the envy of her friends, My hat’s off to Susie and her Bruce Cleaning Wax for making a tough job so easy. And J can't help but feel proud of both of them. > P.S, For lighter waxing on linoleum and wood, Susie uses Bruce Floor Cleaner. 1. Wwe have-te pile up a let af Bitte Success is a~habit like anything) Successes, else, but this is a fact we too| ‘seldom consider. bem I thought of this the other day read a letter from Mrs. * * * She is a young mother with You can tell she was feeling very low when she wrote the letter: “Here’s another Septem she writes, “there's so much I wanted to do this year: The work for the woman's club, the dress designing | keep meaning to get to, the new recipes I intend to Mr. and Mrs. William J. de Beaubien of Birmingham announce the engagement of their daughter Margaret Jean, to Frederick A. "| ANOTHER FIASCO? dream up. and the beautiful party decorations and table. settings, “But I'm as sure as I sit here that my plans will be another fiasco. I'll bite off more than! can chew and never accomplish a thing. Every fall I make these resolutions and every siimmer finds me exhausted from just doing the housework, period. “Have you any suggestions? How can I ‘train myself not to go off on tangents? How can I make myself really—aecomplish some ot these things?” She has already, it seems to me, taken the first step and a big one. She has come to terms with herself and realized that a firmer will is essential. Next, she must eliminate all the things that are really not of SHIRLEY LA MAR Mr. and Mrs. Robert LaMar of | Putnam avenue announce the en- gagement of their daughter, | Burne. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Clarence Burne of Westford, Mass. The couple will exchange nuptial vows on Oct. 8. MARGARET JEAN de BEAUBIEN Oakland WSCS Groups Meet at Members’ Homes Circles of Oakland Park Method. ist Church WSCS met recently at Deborah prime interest to her. If she really likes dress designing, for example. she must concentrate on it and forget about the fancy recipes and | the, fancy table settings. Nobody can do everything cau ly well. Attempting to do them all will end in failure all around. | | ONE FIELD ONLY By concentrating on one. field. ‘she can develop it. She supply it to the organizatior for’ which she does volunteer work; | and spend her free time devel- oping it, +e #. little successes which are along the same line and which will therefore add up. - * * If you are in this predicament, and do not honestly know which is your main interest, my House- 'Clab at she can callect articles about it; | This way, she builds up a lot of | wives Career Guide might be of, help to you. Shirley, and Donald Trammel. He | is the son of Mr. and Mrs, James. Trammel of Eastview road. An | Oct, 1 wedding is planned. Parent Club Siac |New Officer Slate Mrs. Max Coleman entertainer | | members of the Parent Guidance | her jhome street recently. Officers elected for the com- on Lanette |E. V. Overstreet, ing year are Mrs. Walter Mann, | president; Mrs. Vieriech, vice president; Mrs. Sam Joan, corresponding secre- tary; Mrs. James R. Fortier, re cording secretary, and Mrs. John J. Seliman, treasurer. Mrs. Harold Wert and. Mrs. Robert Dorman were accepted tt | to membership in the club. Hostesses were Mrs. Earl Foster and Mrs. Edwin C. Barnhart. Mrs. the homes of various members. Priscilla | ion Donald Weddle of Oneida road was hosfess to the Priscilla Group. Devotions were given by Mrs. Irl Williams. Plans were made for entertaining the WSCS in October, and -projects for the coming year were discussed. Mary Martha Fourteen members and guests were present at the home of Mrs. Eldon Sweazey on Bradford street. Mrs. Sweazey gave the devotional be at the home of Mrs. William message, The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. William A. Sherwood on Oxley drive. Ls a Re Hy Be Smart, Look Sharp! Call Fox for Fresher, Cleaner, Newer ITS A.JSOB a Looking Cleaning! 719 W. Huron QT THAT SUIT TONIGHT] FE 4-1536 Mrs. Ralph Gibbons gave devo- tions based on “‘How to Read the Bible’ when the Deborah Group met at the Kennett road home of Mrs. Vernon Gibbons. The seven members present made cancer pads. Mrs. Rowley Chase of Oliver street will be hostess for the next meeting. The group will present a skit at the November meeting of the WSCS. Rebecca It is a questionnaire designed Gordon Reynolds gave devotions. to help the housewife cease her | Mrs. Andrew Cherup of Pitts- jack-of-all-trades approach and: burgh was a guest of the group. find her own talent specialty. Send me six cents in postage. | and your name and address, Care be made with three teaspoons of the Pontiac Press, and I will send | Vanilla. and one teaspoon of al- “mond extract, A pistachio-type. flavoring can | Edward i. bers of the April-May group of the First. Presbyterian’ Church at her home on Friday. . Mrs, Leslie Huntwork and Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel ladies of St. Johns Lutheran Church |f $ 6 50 Thursday evening. Plans for a Scandinavian smor- | gasboard to be held Oct. 6 at the | presented the | church were made at the informal | Bible study. | meeting. Assisting the hostess were Mrs, |- General chairman of the evening. Mrs. Orley Hill) Mrs. Harold Person will be as- and Mrs. Josephine McLintock. | sisted by Mrs. Herman Holmquist, Mary Lou McLintock was a guest! Mrs. Adolph Hornblad and Mrs. ef the group. | Mic hkelson XL No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL Beauty Salon |] 20 E. Pike St. hb i Ba ae ied, Dik po ih eo af Oe Se [: ee \ u A silt tee (' OER MO ee L - ny i hie i — we Re a : / é F . un ‘ § i wo \ / ; ae ! | : THF, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19,1955 ( _\ a = NINETEEN BR; : > ‘April- -May Group |Group Makes Plang§ Short Curl ig Siiccess Ol ows mall mes Meets in Rochester | for Smorgasbord Pusmaneate a Mrs. Sydney Teague of Livernois Mrs. Hans Michkelsen of Mo- road, Rochester, entertained mem-{ hawk road was hostess to several | From FE 4-2878 mraths E * SK oy * * FOR FALL! Exciting! New! CREATED by ANDRE “SUPREME” Permanent Wave $750 540% 5495. Compete With Cutting and Styling “WHERE QUALITY AND SERVICE IS SUPREME” Haircuts $1.50 and $2.00 Open Wednesday All Day Friday ‘til 9 P. M. No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! Andre Beauty CSalon 2nd Floor Pontiec State Bank Bidg. PHONE FE 5.9257 a — Rebecca Group met at the home | ot Mrs. Basil Meidlein on Lowell | street. Mrs. James Deeg gave the | members .and guests present, Plans | were made for a bazaar to be held Nov. 3 at the church. Esther Esther Group met in the church parlors. This unit will join with the Rebecca Group in November for a cooperative dinner and project. Mrs. Kenneth Skelton will haye the October meeting at her Oliver street home. Church Group Hears Speech on Latins | Mrs. Jean O'Dell of Quito Ecua- | dor, South America, was guest speaker of the Missionary group of First Baptist Church Thursday evening. She also sang several songs accompanied -by Mrs. T. N. | Slosson. The meeting was opened with a | song by Mrs. Kyle Wilson. Pianist | for the coming season will be, Mrs. William Hakes. Mrs. John Mc- Cormic is devotions chairman. Other chairman are Mrs. W. H. Yearned Jr., white cross; Mrs. | Enoch Ealy, program; Mrs. Frank | Lefurgy, refreshments; Mrs. | George Cook, banquet cook; Mrs. H. L. Stout, dining room and Mrs. Lewis Peters is the group reporter. The Rev. H. H. Savage closed the meeting with a prayer. Planting {s easier and more even, when dealing with fine seeds | such as moss rose, petunia and | | Poppy. if you place t!.em in a salt | Shaker. : | SPECIALS Nationally known Label. : tion in in-between weather. tipper cite. Sizes for fnfants: -M-XL. ‘2-4 3-7. Boy’s and Girls’. Regular $4.98 and $5.98 For, convenience and 538 MARGARET ANN SHOP _ . TUESDAY ONLY! ® Weather Prediction! Fair and Cooler! wede fabric every baby. SHOP TUESDAY AND SAVE — Famous make obsorbent gauze diapers ... for Regular $3.75 | Per Dozen MARGARET ANN nO? Otte NAME BRAND DIAPERS LOOKING FOR THE BIRDIE? OR NEED A CHANGE NOW! 2" Old Fashioned BOSTON ROCKER 2495 » 34% @ OLD PINE @ BLACK G GOLD Antique reproductions of a- wonderful old rocker... comfortable and attractive . . will add personality to , your room .. . childs size only $14.95. ‘SIMULATED ANTIQUES From the Gas Light Era VICTORIAN ‘MR. & MRS. 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FROM ITALY COFFEE TABLE ' WITH ~:MARBLE TOP Antique reproductions of an old Victor- lan piece . , . solid Carrara marble top from Italy... solid mahogany base. . . oval shape looks beautiful almost any- _ where .«» Other styles too. :, END TABLES $65 to $80 J Me ~ » — WIGGS AND FRIDAY “TIL O PLM. |}. tapestery-. ./, these are magnificent pieces to slamorize’ your 24 WEST HURON | RIKER BU ILDING if. living room. . . custom ~~ to your order. ; IN K ‘- mn, 4 ee é ‘% | * ‘ t . } , y i - : . : i , : | . ‘ ‘ f ie | 7 ; m , : Pig pt a a r - tf u : i : ro De dt ae ot ae oe j i yt ce f \ se eS go a ini d eg ee ee pele ee For WILLETT MAPLE and CHERRY At Wiggs we specialize in making furniture to your individual re- . each piece is specially constructed just for you + 80 you get factory and a few weeks later you have a custom built tailor made wing the Waverly... one of the very . the back is Biscuit tufted seat cabins are optional foam rubber OPEN: MONDAY ‘ ' i ‘ ' } . \ \ i eG Ap , j Hehe eye ae +! ; \ ' : i} 0 \ i | i 5 | oo @weNTY : «_THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER.J9, 1995 |g — eons a Automatic Laundry” haces Special! EQUIPMENT | Sex Frail Blamed [Signed Constitution for Divorce Uptun Do You Have a Picture | LONDON. (®—A leading marri- of Thomas Fitzsimons? age counselor today blamed the | . growing equality of sexes for Brit-| WASHINGTON (INS)—Can any-, War, and household items fram ‘ain's booming divorce rate, now|one say what Thomas Fitzsim-' Mount Vernon. about four times the 1939 level. ons looked like? — _ Fitzsimons, an Irish-born immi- “It has really shaken the sta-, A nationwide search launched grant, was a friend of Washing- | bility of marriage and family life.” for a picture of the only one of ton, Franklin, Robert Morris, | “> MOVING AND STORAGE AR 3 an : 341.N. Perry FE 5-856 said Joseph brayshaw, general s€c- | the 39 signers of the U.S. C€on-'| George Clyme se manndia. COAST TO COAST MOVING | |! retary of the British Marriage = oe seorge Clymer and other Revolu ; Guidance Council in the magazine }Family Doctor. “Women now do almost ¢€very delphian, played an active role stitution whose likeness has not tionary figures. been preserved for posterity. » epppane ae Fitzsimons, a prominent Phila- | WAS ARMY OFFICER (Advertisement) He was an officer in Washing- ER ee ee lin the founding of the young re- ton’s army the night of the cross. | | ‘The plain truth is that the mod. | | public. - ing — and the fabled toss of a 99 iern marriage partnership is much silver dollar—over the ice-caked In fact, historians know all richer. It involves much greater | !telerance. And in aiming higher Are you worried and embarrassed by Weakness” (Getting Up Nights (too frequent, burning.end {tching urina- Sem Or Strong, Cloudy Urine! due to common Kidney and Bladder Irritations, which sometimes result in Backache, and nervousness’ do such irritations cause tension and loss of sieep so that you | tired and depressed’! n such cases, bene od gives quick, wonderful, | ing rough tts germ combating | action in acid urine, and its analgesic pe io | relieving value. Over a billion CY tablets Used prove safety and success. Get in marriage today, we are suffer ing more casualties.” lranian Jurist Dies at 71 GENEVA, Switzerland ® —Ham- ah Hedayati, 71, president of the i Iranian: Court of Appeal, died after a heart attack in his hotel here | | about whe he was and what he did, bat they have little idea of what he looked like, If there ever Was a portrait of him, it either has been Jost or is still unidentified. | About all that is known of. Fitz simmons’ appearance js a descrip- ‘tion of him by one historian as “a man of commanding figure, inated a representative to the as- Delaware River. * * * As a member of the shipping concern of George Meade and Co,, Fitzsimons -was named to the Navy board in 1777 and was desig- sembly in 1786. In December of that year he became a delegate to the constitutional convention. He helped to finance the Rev- Built-In SUDS SAVER at NO EXTRA COST from druggist today under money- for s agreeable manners, though some- As Iustrated NORGE NORGE AUTOMATIC WASHER AUTOMATIC DRYER Both With Full 9 Ib. Capacity, Complete With Normal Installation and One Year Service at No Extra Cost! NO MONEY DOWN OPEN MONDAY and — 2 YEARS TO PAY FRIDAY Nights "til 9 P.M. WAYNE GABERT ‘Your Electrical Appliance Specialist 121 N. Saginaw St. - Phone FE 5-6189 and Your Old Washer! back guarantee @ brighter tomorrow, | ve. i am ia? ' yeste rday. [pra stately and reserved.” olution and later contributed his | talents. to setting up the fiscal ? nas! Pry ‘y ‘ ™ = : - — hoes asic wl = amet }at St. Mary's in Philadelphia, in y tne National society oO 1778. As a member of the com- jton, the DAR has placed on ex-| 7, ; as ac hibit. a. new $10,000 collection | Fitzsimons also: was active in Maynard Johnson arse pp ceage si ontonaryger re j tures and some personal ¢ ° | Board of the Pennsylvania Hos- General lasurcaace Included are Benjamin Frank- | pital, subscriber to the old Catho- DAR PROJECT affairs of the new nation. | E INSURANCE. Daughters of the American Revo- | mittee of cates are letters. by the 29 signers of the | Civic life as a founder and presi- 807 Community National Bunk |, lin’s rectangular spectactes, a | lic Chapel in Willings Alley The search for the portrait is @| y qavout Roman Catholic, he lution. ie le « . |he was the first Roman Catholic In its headquarters at Washing- jfo attain municipal office in’ the Constitution . with . available — pic | dent of the Philadelphia Chamber lin’s rectangular spectacles, a | lic Chapel in Willings Alley, “an Phone FE 4-4523 |part of the activities for Consti- |)... Washington unig clean ate | city. See or Call ‘of Commerce, member of the segment of the coach used by | incorperator of St. Mary's and a | George Washington at German- | founder of St, Augustine's. | tewn during the Revolutionary Named Ferris Dean: BIG RAPIDS #—Ferris Institute reports that Ardwin J. Dolio has been named dean of the general education and professional division .’ of the college. He replaces Dr. Se- bastian V. Martorana, who re- | Signed to join the U. S. office of educgtion. ! COASTER WAGON Ye == wit make ee Filled with SOAP WS Feewis ebild. < 5] ae ey A Full : Year's Supply of Famous Soap Absolutely Free of Extra + Charge All for Only. . ‘79 New 1955 Speed Queen Washer has a full capacity, porcelain tub, equipped with aluminum, tangle- 7 ) proof, adjustable pressure wringer. ‘ Full guarantee. NO Racal N PA YMENT.. -ACTION MOBILHEAT - eady for delivery today! Right now you can experience wonderfully trou- tested— Mobilheat now contains a remarkable ble-free heating just by ordering a tankful of chemical additive that — Mobi , Fu il. — thly . new Mobilheat Fuel Oil. New es thoroughly 1 Helps prevent the main cause of oil burner failure . 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With the coal miners having just recently received an increase. in wages, we anticipate an across-the-board raise in retail prices © Metal Smoker § FEderal TM OPEN TONIGHT 108 NORTH SAGINAW UNTIL 9 | ay ‘vt oey! THE ae TO FILL YOUR COAL BIN. Don’t de- LAKE : | i | 4 $ i * Ag LJ if if x * { i * 5 Pd ‘ eee oe t \ oe . + yee er \y jPeter Te ee he Sa ss Le nt i 4 — 1 4 ae Sg J 4 | a { : ¥ f T t+ is i ‘ o # “al 4 ‘ Vi pis ee eae x } 3 ‘ ot i # ¥ J ce ' ‘ 4 \ : 6 yt } Li _THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 - by Cert Grabert | Jang Maintain Fish Remember U.S. Nets TOKYO Ww — The fishermen in Tokyo bay think the fish have memories and they're put. out at United States lowered anti-subma- rine nets at the entrance of Tokyo Bay during the Korean war! The fishermen said the nets kept fish from entering the bay. | Recently the nets were removed | and eager Japanese fishermen cast their lines. No bites, Now the fish- ermen are demand compensation trom the Japan Procurement Agen- ‘ey, the gobetween for U. S, armed forces and the Japanese govern- ment. TWENTY-ONE ‘OPEN ‘4 TONITE TIL 9 | MONDAY, TUESDAY, SPECIALS Life Insurance Sales for Juveniles at Peak NEW YORK—Purchases of life- insurance coverage on children un- der age 15 reached a record $5,- 000,000,000 in 1954 and amountéd to 16 per cent of all purchase. of ordinary and industrial life insur- ance during the year. At the start of 1955, juvenile life insurance in force totaled $21,400,- | 000,000, more than twice the amount owned 10 years ago. ‘Michigan GOP Will Woo Labor Vote Is Essential to Win Gubernatorial Chair - MACKINAC ISLAND. (INS)—Re- publicans met over the weekend at Mackinac Island and concluded that their party must attract sup- port from organized labor if they have any hopes of winning the state election. Olympic Peninsula Is Wild More than 50 different mam- mals, including bear, cougar, and the largest. remaining herds of Roosevelt elk, inhabit the primi- They claim, the fish are staying | tive wilderness of Washington away because they remember the State's Olympic Peninsula, says net was there. : the National Geographic Society. During the conference, GOP lead- ers admitted the Republican party is the minority party. happy frogs hopped along the high-| Motorists driving on the highway | uralist, said they were field frogs way after they were washed out noticed the hopping frogs and at | just jumping for the sheer joy of of their hidey-holes by a heavy) first thought it was raining frogs. ray in welcoming moisture rain. But Dr. T. E. Musselman, a nat after a long dry spell. Happy Highway-Hopping Frogs Leave Hidey-Holes QUINCY, Ill u — Hundreds of These committees will carry a message to the men in the fac- tories and shops that nearly all of labor’s advances were: made un- der legislation sponsored by Re- publicans. LABOR—LECTURE The highlight of the two-day confeernce_was a lecture.on labor by George Dean, president of the , Michigan Federation of Labor. | : He told the party leaders that they continually give workers the impression that the GOP is un -| friendly to tabor, while their - fegislaters at the same time are helping the unions. Speaking to a record crowd*of SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 We Are Open GOOD HOUSEKEEPING AE WOREREVWEEEE ET SADENGS a Low Prices--Stamps, Too 786, Republican workers, Dean rit Rec United Nunber to | FT AMELTON acted the first workmen's com- al Ss pensation laws, and that the party Price! . sponsored many advances in dis- Automatic Electric Clothes DRYER Now$ 95 Only | Imagine being able to buy this big, new 1956 Hamilton Dryer for this new low price! Best of all you need no special wir- ing or costly installation .. . just plug it in and start enjoying new washing thrills! Clothes are fluffy, fresh smelling, brighter colored. Gas Model $169.95. Installed Free, WHIRLPOOL |) Surgomatic A WASHER ability and unemployment insur- ance. In thd final session of the con- | ference, Secretary of the Army Wilber M. Brucker said the na- - tion Is better prepared for de- fense today than at any time in history. He said defense expenditures have been reduced because “Sec- retary of Defense Wilson hates | waste.” The conferees adopted resolu*| tions urging a speed limit on two | and three-lane highways: at least | 300 additional state troopers to) patrol the roads; compulsory driv- er education in public schools; more severe penalties for driving after a license has been revoked and legalized drunkometer tests. A D MIRAL Up--Right Freezer Big 10 Cu. Ft. Capacity 4 Refrigerated Super Speed «Freezing Shelves. Removable Door Rack And Fully Guaranteed! Originally priced much, much, higher! 199” classic and dressy , types. 10 to 44, Screen on Dash Allows Truckers to See in Fog cy CLEVELAND—Soon a new de- vice called the Fog-o-Scope will help truck drivers find their’ way | safely through dense fog. It con- sists of an electronic tube in a& square box, It will let a driver see, glowing from a dashboard screen, the shapes of obstacles that loom ahead. Because it is sensitive to the invisible infrared rays which warm objects emit, the device picks up radiation from a person or @ mov- ing car, whether illuminated or not, Is Ren SSE Use Our CREDIT TERMS PREWAY. as much as a half mile away, and show it on the screen. The invention also detects cold objects, such as road signs or stalled vehicles, by means of the The New “Touch-Button” Save *30.00 Trade-In Your Old Washer Now on Oil Space Heater BIG 4.6 ROOM CAPACITY Deluxe Furniture Cabinet ‘Model ss, infrared rays they reflect from = truck’s headlights. this New, Bigger, Deluxe Whirlpool. Regular $134.95 _ Regularly $199.95 . Gambling Fine Is Fine | | but Other Wasn’t Kind $99 95 CHARLESTON, W. Va. db — The . with seven men arrested when the cops y Trade broke up their game in the rear of a barbershop weren't surprised when they were charged with Get this new Preway now... get rid of your old heater... ‘Enjoy new comfort, automatic heat ‘control, and new fuel economy. 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When It Comes to |) DRY CLEANING -] TRADE IN They Choose Geney! ||| | uenmiea Soman NO MONEY DOWN! ~ refer “tt || FREE Delivery! Te OPEN mice, 1] FREE Service! A) HOUSEKEEPINC | Tonight and Friday GENEY Tl |i. It pays to buy where of PONTIAC tgp il 9 | 12 W, Pike St. 2 if tie get SERVICE, too! se 51 West Huron Recs : Phone FE 4-1555 ‘For Your Convenience 7 4 et vf . Se { \ { \ \ 3h ae ; ry pay U i ' THE PONTIAC. PRESS. IONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 19, 1955 ie Short-Changes Judge, Gets Suspended Term the | CHARLESTON, W. Va W—A man arrested on a charge of drunk- eness told Police Judge James MeWorter he had only $1.50 in his ‘|pocket and the bus fare to his home town was exactly $1.15. * * Sea Headlines By LOUELLA 0, PARSONS HOLLYWOOD, .(INS) — I am more sure than ever that Marilyn Monroe has already signed to re- How Can Marilyn Resist Signing for ‘Bus Stop’? a few nights ago he, Ann Miller and Linda had dinner at Sports- man's Lodge, Alec Here's some news for Sen. Kerr Cifes. “|Farm Recession Dem Solon Says GOP Can‘t Run Successfully on Prosperity Platform - COCKTAIL LOUNGE cx 1000 COMIC BOOKS uapended 20-day nd | Guinness, When he starts work on 1122 W. Hoven $e jail sentence | turn té 20th for ‘‘Bus ——a be > + FVUren oF. Will Pay 2¢ Eoch on the provision that be use the|Tll tell you why. nat 3 en el i sats WASHINGTON @~Sen. Kaw le Meren Bow! Side, ‘ 1.15 for the next bus back. A ppen to know that Jos : fiddle. : PIPER'S MAGAZINE OUTLET sewepaper reporter later checked | gan, eminent figure of both stage| Kay Marx; Groucho's ex, who ee Auburn A FE 4-240 | the fare: it’s $1.38. land screen, has been signed to | underwent surgery on her knee. | on. i. 1956 on A * pcornes = ae < direct “Bus Stop,” and that’s the oes back into §t. John’s for Gallet oa bug o8 B egy eons . one play Marilyn wants to do. second operation. roe ting in = rh an = Josh reports to 20th and producer; Loretta Young greeted her | calls a recession, 3 Sho N hil Buddy Adler in a very few days,! friends and busi Ws “Even Secretary of Agriculture cocktalis—her Benson now recognizes there is a cute rens since hve farm recession,” Kerr said in an | months’ illness, She looks better pene batere leaving today for for her rest, and very pretty. = 6 < | Professor Frank Baxter, of TV} Benson has said he js not satis- ‘fame, had an interview with Mor- | fied with farm prices and that timer Snerd and says: ‘‘He's the | specific recommendations for sup- best adjusted person I've ever | plementing the present farm pro- nor | gram will be submitted to Con- gress. But he added yesterday: ‘I think we are going to see some improvement in farm prices as we get a better balance between pro- Eva Marie Saint dropped in to | duction ‘and consumption in this wish Jackie a happy, happy. country.” That’s all today. > (Copyright 1955) _He sald | in an NBC television a ~ | With the exception of olive oil, ‘| Italy depends on imports for 50 to bod per cmt of its consumption and the picture goes in Decem-| a¢ Helen Ferguson’s home as ‘ber, so Marilyn can't hold out much longer. What with a deecer of the «f/ eminence of Logan, and writer | 'G Axelrod scripting, and Montgomery Clift being paged— well, I doubt that Marilyn can re- sist that com! nation, Starring BILL FARRELL The Wonderlul New Comic From the BOB HOPE SHOW Coming ' Friday! The Recording Stars with the voices and style you love ‘The Loreillis DANCE EVERY NIGHT Brave, indeed, are Esther Wil- liams and Ben Gage to pull up stakes in Hollywood and go trav- eling with their three children. Ben told me they've sold everything they own here and expect to leave in December for: New York. Frent New York they go to Jackie Cooper’s bride, Barbara, surprised him with a birthday party on his 33rd. Ye gods and little fishes, does time march on! NO COVER NO MINIMUM * « i | WATERFORD RAAl |i “SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE” “TROUBLE IN THE GLEN” = LAKE THEATER | MacaiNiahnatrosa | TONIGHT. LT) house of bamboo New York, Hollywood and Europe for the male lead in~our picture. Also, we'll sign ewimmers in Eu-’ rope for Esther’s Aquacade.” Cor, Williams Lake-Aleport Roads — Box Office Opens 6:45 P. M. | LAST TIMES TONIGHT NOUR Q,; oxfiel 1 These ei «KC ae EE LU oe _! ° » OAK L AND : MU 9-1902 Husbands and wives of'a mind might listen to-this and to ( A } Qu t . perp lngpre Gay ne lireing am connate Disneys eels Ma niversary and, of course, they a Wars, 7 = celebrated. A team of that long| @ sh Mist. bSraanens Se @ a - Quick Mears cal = : standing should have a celebration. HERBERT J. YATES presente | | JACK Tan! MONDAY and TUESDAY || .*.cz2." || THE ROAD Wee SAO Bere news ___Exclusive ene Showing ees nent DENVE Nyt ; , haa _Betty said that whenever they | | A save ROSUETION l PETE KELLY S BLUES - | thn ply anh, an soe = JANET LEIGH- EDMOND O'BRIEN | then play it back, and it sounds so silly they start laughing—and that's the. end of the argument. | PEGGY LEE -samy seve: uct marvin uu Fiizccr @ CinenaScoPE SNAPS: Sometime ago, Tab tow WARNER BROS. « WARNERCOLOR stentorwomc souno | Hunter wrote a magazine article FEATURES AT: 1:25 - 3:25 - 5:25 - 1:25 - 9:27 which he said that Linda Dar- a wes hs. Soverte wer. Well, "5 : ij ba Ot ee te SO Se ore’ score Oe em in | nell EXTRA! EXTRA! SPECIAL NEWS PICTURES—"FLINT CENTENNIAL” WALT DISNEY DONALD DUCK CINEMASCOPE CARTOON “PUNTS AND STUNTS” CINEMASCOPE SPORT REEL f c Ba. 7 : == STARTS FRIDAY - a. oe fet ‘er ey | =F JOEL 4 ” . sh ¥ rit e-ltin Opens 6:30 = | McCREA -in- “WICHITA PLUS SECOND BIG FEATURE Pheater ook ry | ON OUR § , : | GIANT | CincmaScoPE | SCREEN! 2150 Opdyke Road at Pontiac Road i . OWE OF LIFE’S MAPPIEST | 2s TEATURES—2 | | THE PICTURE THAT HITS HOME! cara sart | | “NOT AS. | | , A } VIOLATED IN. STRANGER” | hs Wonder ldventures of HAdSI BABA —_ KIDDIELAND SECRECY! il to the S the Rich and the Poorl Tol thay ton RIVE-IN: q LEME cee, Ps Dixie Hwy. (U. 3-10) 1 Block N. of Telegraph Rd. WE 5-4500 : Qy oF aa sit IHURRY-—DON’T MISS! TONIGHT — TUESDAY RORY CALHOUN PIPER LA URIE JACK CARSON MAMIE Van DOREN & E z wen. RICHARD TODD in “THE DAM BUSTERS” \S Also HUGH " ‘ ~ aOR McDERMOTT in “DEVIL GIRL FROM MARS : ~ nanan atl vf a | ante A-t- Stands alone!... first as. a book ee cen — ee | SCREEN -_“<- COMFORT. --.- now asa motion picture! TO > AY and TOMORROW ! Edward G George ROBINSON RAFT | >< : Meieased q N j aaTeTs CHARLES LIFE’S DEEPEST SECRETS MADE PLAIN! REQUESTED BY MARRIED COUPLES WHO FEEL THAT THEY SHOULD SEE THIS IMPORTANT | PRESENTATION TOGETHER. : SWEEPS AWAY SUPERSTITIONS, | ILLUSIONS AND HYPOCRISIES! NURSES IN ATTENDANCE ALL SHOWS NON-SEGREGATED AUDIENCES. : Kuen Bring your wives! Olivia de Havilland Robert Mitchum Frank Sinatra Gloria Grahame _ Broderick Crawford Charles Bickford . uith MYROR MCCORMICK + LOm COUUNEY + SERRE TEETR, Written for the Seren by Eine and Cduerd Agha Besos ote Revel ty MORTON THOMPSON Seed A Bullet ( fi ’ sree Joey. = JUAMY STEWART’S HERE | Gi ~ rwxk CAPRA'S STARTS AT 1:00-4:48-8:20 ener taet ar 1 PEt PR es see meaaeapeaneanlliberece |= Mother-in-Law Advice By EARL WILSON ‘Spring: ‘Byington Olers Stevenson's Bid Splits Dixiecrats NEW YORK—Spring Byington interviewed me aboet moth- | ers-in-law, I was supposed to ask her how she plays a mother in! law on) TV in “December Bride”—but. she outfoxed me and asked me how my mother-in-law manages to be so popular, “She's big-hearted,” I said. “She's never takena drink, which | is strange considering that aes oa she comes from East St. Louis. “But once when she won a bottle of Scotch at a bingo, she trotted home with it so I could have a blast as a night- cap.” Miss Byington was amazed ‘ . for so many mottiers- in-law would have belted the booze down themselves. “And at bingo!” she ex- claimed. “I wonder if I should gamble just harmless- ly-like on TV?” I asked her about her own vera secrets of mother-in-law suc-— SPRING BYINGTON cess. She has two-married daughters in California. “Well, I never drop in unexpectedly. g always call first and ask, x & * * “Then I try to keep my lip buttoned. I shut up and let them | etalk over their problems. If I feel I must speak, I write a letter, even if we're POO only two or three blocks away.” “I guess there are some husbands who could choke me for being so light about it all,” Miss Byington continued, “For as I fly over the country, I look down on Pittsburgh, Erie, Wichita, Kan- sas City, and the rest, and I realize that 9/10 of those homes do have a mather- in-law problem!” Miss Byington, here from Hollywood, mentioned that some years ago, she took a big side of beef to a daughter and son- | - in-law. They pretended to be happy. +) But she realized later that they'd been ~~ on a budget, were living within. it, and that she had “ruined their achieve- ment.” f “One of my daughters ivan) in Los Angeles and one in Santa Barbara,” Miss Byington added. “The one in Santa | Barbara's safer!” - | THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Gary Crosby and Ronnie’ Burns (George and Gracie'’s son) will be on Jack Benny’s first CBS show for Chrys- ler Martha Raye's croupier admirer drove in from Vegas to admire her closer-up . . Rita’ Hayworth sent word toe Dick Haymes via lawyers that she’s “putting him on proba- tion”—he knows why. salt dual 1955, The Hall Syndicate, Inc.) ——————— JUDY TYLER CLEANERS PONTIAC’S NEWEST offers you the most modern fa- cilities, and the finest service available. ee 1-HOUR DRY CLEANING and 4-HOUR SHIRT LAUNDRY | at NO Extra Charge! LR &. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE OPEN DAILY from 7 A. M. to 9 P.M. 339 W. HURON Pontiac (Corner of Palmer) . . AND, LOOK! We Give Holdens “RED STAMPS ‘ la public LEWIS - Fine Furniture _ : | Senators Russell (D-Ga) and Byrd | THE PONTEAC PRESS, _MONDAY. SEPTEMBER | 19. 1935 Surveys See Southern Dems Disagreeing on| Opposing Candidate | By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (f®—Adlai E. 5te- venson's expected bid for the 1956 | Democratic presidential nomina-) j tion seems likely to apouse some. i strong convention opposition from | the South. ; A summary of views of Southern governors, compiled by The Asso- ciated Press from questions di- rected to them and from their recent public statements, indicates No unanimity of opinion on a can- didate to oppose him for the nomination. Suggestions .on this score by Dixie governors willing to express view Among those named were Govern: | ors Allan Shivers of Texas, Edwin €. Johnson of Colorado and Frank Lausche of Ohio, former Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Caro- lina, former President Truman and (D-Va). ranged widely, | The Southern governors gener- ally agreed that if he runs, Presi- dent Bisenhower is likely edie = more Southern opposition 1952 when. he carried Eosworeg Florida, ‘Tennessee and Texas. | With one exception, Gov. rge Bel! Timmerman Jr. of South Cae | lina, they said there was little likelihood of a third party move- | missing Kansas uraniuny prospec- ment such “as that of 1948. - * * Asked whether Stevenson or Gov. | Averell Harriman of New York! ‘would make the stronger Demo eratic candidate in his state, Gov James FE. Folsom of Alabama said he regards Stevenson as stronger with the voters. Match From Air Rifle Ignites Girl's Dress An eight-year-old Pontiac girl was in good condition at Pontiac Genera] Hospital after a freak ac- cident this week that ignited the | | child's clothing and caused second degree burns. Loretta Krafton, daughter af Mrs. Morene Krafton of 195 Whitte- | more St., was struck by a flaming match fired from an air rifle, The | match immediately caught the girl's, dress on fire according to police. Pontiac Police confiscated three air rifles belonging to a neighbor. ' | bodies were ne arly 6.000 feet, from Fag mine entrance ¥ The. two disappeared Thursday Rescue Squad Finds 2 Prospectors Dead G EORGETOWN, Colo. H—A res-’ ctié squad found the bodies of two | afternoon. Two companions waiting | at the shaft entrance went for help. Deaths Last Night ltors in an abandoned mine shaft | SOUTHAMPTON N ¥ (AP) —Bruace early today. Smith, 63, nationally known expert on | police eee and administration " g “ing spe- INDIANAPOLIS—Dr Jann E Potsge: The ll-man squad. wearing spe a end of atlas Univers cpp cial breathing apparatus, discov-, department “and authori on {oss . ants . Born tn Michigan 5 ‘ered the bodies of Glenn Dew, 33 BEVERLY HILLS. Calif—Mtchael | . ; 'ORoutke, 4 . postmaster of Bete and Melvin LeBlow, 45, both of) Hits for 17 years and former city coun ° man in Columbus, Ohie Also helped Ulysses, Kan., after a search last-/ found tne National League — LONDON—Lord In vertorth: 00) British ing more than three days sit pping tycoon Who organized suppl raw materials far i eat effort du Said the Sheriff James. Sacra tog World War I IT’S THE Citizens Man FOR INSURANCE r '- FE 4-0588 Hard to Pronounce— ° Easy to Settle With! BRUMMETT-LINCICOME, Inc. 367 East Pike Street For the 2 - LEW IS — Fine Furniture You Never HAD IT SO THICK! in PONTIAC _ TWENTY-THREE ! (Advertisement) =~ ot “TY always Do-lt-Myself .. . Patio’ but this deal had me stumped.” tn eel Call Poole Lumber Co. at FE 4-1594 for information on Do-It-Yourself Alsynite everr my Alsynite ~ Patios today! 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Lif i 4 5 i i ES 5 isda I Cy | i =f 2 t i E z 2 eplel ib at Ui iEBGES f E E E HE e55 ie Ue pre! i i j : i re iy [t it] He ih i if if ft ay eites i i ‘ik 2 ! i Ht Army Noncoms De-cussed FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo., (®—Maj. Gen. Frank 0. Bowman, not to use profanity around the 17-18%-year-old youths who start reporting here Oct. 4 as part of a “Treat them like your own sosn,” * i forth between themselves?” asked ,|one paper editorially. Sperber has mined other facets of foreign thought as expressed in papers intended only for consump- tion overseas: “Qgonyck,” Russia’s big pic- ture magazine, runs full page ads that sound ominously capitalistic. One, paid for by a bank, reads, “Save your money and buy all this.” The ad features pictures of a piano, refrigerator, camera, TV set and furniture. Another ad pipeees a new-type vacuum cleaner; a third ‘“Sovietski Champagnski.” “Burmean,” a paper printed in Rangoon, recently carried an ad for a Japan-made sewing machine upon it and a picture of .a former ' |German politician adorning the lay- out. Picture of Adolph Hitler. Sper- ber reasons that the advertiser figured he’d impress potential Bur- mese buyers with the word “'Ger- man,” which to them means thor- oughness, and with a picture of a is dead. MICKEY MOUSE . Tito’s favorite newspaper, ‘‘Po- litika,”’ carries one comic strip: Mickey Mouse, The Istanbul Ex- press, as Terry Moore will attest, daily runs cheesécake pictures that would give. Minsky the shudders. | - The world’ dullest papers, .Sper- ber points out to his audience, are “Pravda” and its counterparts through the Soviet satellites. Their jfront pages are crammed with endlessly repeated plugs for super- with the word “German” imprinted. “strong man’ many do not know | paper Stewart's old film, ‘ Commy satirical magazines, , Stratton Story,” was called “Un known abroad. Friend and foe alike in foreign journalism take swipes at our “‘lack of culture,” “‘mater- ialism” and ‘Keep smiling” philos- ophy—and then the reader ig in- vited to turn to the amusement section, crammed with advertise- ments for American-made movies, Eiparks-Qriffin uneral Home gps wages,” he adds. “Theaghifel Service” , Radio magasines in France, 46 Williams St. Ph. FE 2-584! Beigium, Holland Spain nev- 24 Hour Ambulance Service er mention Gleason, God- trey, Hope or other top-rate U, 8. great applience... ol reguier wash. | a TWO WASHERS IN ONE Norge Dval-Time Line contre! gives ypu twe completely evtometic washing cycles in one @® Short Cycle. . . ter delicate febrics. At Last! wx suvs SAVING METHOD THAT DOESN’T WASTE ANY TIME ‘NO WATCHING... WAITING! NORGE 17'S ALL NEW — DIFFERENT — NOTHING LIKE IT! 1956 y-Wendelaake hats WASHER | WITH THE FIRST PULLY-AUTOMATIC reSUDSer Have your hot, sudsy water saved for you automatically! All yeu have te do with the amazing NORGE is vnieed ‘your clean clothes after they're washed arid spun dry .. . toss in next load... turn a button and walk eway; there's hing, waiting, guess refill and next cycle is automatic. New 1956 | NORGE WASHER ae 168° | * Low Down Payment * Easy Terms , - King-Size Trade-In NORGE prescribes “ALL” because ALL'S controlled suds go to work down in the water where the . clothes are. Every single speck of dirt gets out and is flushed down the drain with the rinse water. WAYNE GABERT 121 N. Saginaw &. BUSSARD ELECTRIC nd | 34 Osklend Ave. al | LORD'S FURNITURE 125 W. Huron Sf. ~ MICH. FLUORESCENT LIGHT sis gid | 393 Orchard Lake Rd. CLAYTON'S _ Keege Harbor, Michigan SWEET’S RADIO & APPLIANCE 422 w. Mores Street ROCHESTER REFRIGERATOR Rochester, Michigan F % : . ELECTRONIC SERVICE Birmingham, Michigan : D&DTV Oxford, Michigan . LAKE ORION APPLIANCE Lake Orion, Michigan oe KEASEY ELECTRIC ‘4620 Dixie Hwy, Drayton Plains, Michigan TWENTY-FOUR , . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 | aaaels seerifssiee - , : : : : ' ‘i fii) ee eee ; vt 9 POE : Bob Considine Says: A | : | _ | West Michigan Tourist andes a: ye. val oe More Comfort Wearing Foreign Press Report’Is Network Natural 225. | See a oreign es } Pp < ' which bad one of the biggest sum- to the inn. | Ga 6 powder. Sxtas tec 4 our at aa . ~ mers in its history, will meet in/. . popes sS4net they lel more come NEW YORK (INS)—Friend of| “What makes the Big Four think stars. Liberace and Mario Lanza | Honmune Change Son Destin.” (A | It's a pity Sperber's “Foreign | Grand Rapids Oct. 5 to map a The name ‘‘Keego” is Indian for |. Bete af oer. wey en gg test mt oto, rome | ar anes Dra) [re eta mae | whe bm es ie | as ans ee “a hegnageoareclliprad far -eDbase mere ton, debe Footer Dalles jo the | ComD columns are almost we} i aa Robert W. Holden, manager of | Lake. . tedeg 00 eng Gras counts SHOP MONDAY-FRIDAY 10 Ti 9 : Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat. 10.to 5:30 * FIRST QUALITY! Ye ie ary ‘ mi | \ ALWAYS wt’ YW : a : das. il THE FINEST CURTAIN FABRIC THERE IS hy! ve nel ee oe ae aan te - Wella ig with new misty-sheer texture... graceful fluid draping... in a pure clear ivory white! 96” Wide 90" Long “MODERN PRISCILLAS . . . STRONG AGAINST SUN, MOTHS, MILDEW! MINIMUM IRONING! If you’re practical, you'll love the way those Penney curtains last, the easy way they tub, the fast way they whisk off your ironing board! If you’re particular about. how they look you'll love the sheerness, the sparkling whiteness, the draping quality! These Dacron priscillas have everything including 6” headed ruffles, hemmed, headed tops, ruffled tiebacks. : Dacron® Panels ve. True —< White, Sheer, Strong - . Beauty, easy-care, long ; wear! These Penney (eae ’ are hard-to-wrinkle, - to-iron. Withstand heat, each sun, insect attack. Extra- ‘wide bottom hems! mh oombad : ide DACRON® TIERS : ‘Give Windows New Look ;\\ Give a whole room a face- lifting with perky, practi- cal tier curtains. Long wearing, easy to care for. Ls Sr 2 1 sabia Ba ™ Dede aes yg * i H f ; EEE toe Hi Bake J i E & F ee - i a8 #8 rl segees Yanks d to d Ry a 8 | ! i I g F i | ft, 2 i if Hy gt% espite Full Py Leading College Teams Readied - for Showdown UCLA, Maryland Set for Saturday Collision After Weekend “Wins UCLA and Maryland clash in College Park, Md., Saturday in the football campaign's first battle of the top teams. Each has one game under its belt. i UCLA, rated the No. 1 team in the. Associated Press Nebraska was upset 6-0 by the University of Hawaii. In addition to Missouri and Nebraska, Kansas was licked by Texas Christian 47-14; Wyoming _ shattered Kansas State 38-20, and Denver overcame Iowa State 19-7. Michigan, potenti Big Ten, begins rations Satur- day against Missouri, while Ohio State, which figures to provide the ‘Wolverines’ main opposition, takes on Nebraska. ; . ~~ - Notre Dame plays Southern Methodist, while Army and Navy, both ranked in the top 10, play , Furman and William and Mary. | Miami, which suffered a 14-6 de: feat by Georgia Tech in the NCAA TV Game of the Week, has an open date. Georgia Tech goes against Florida. ruler of the | gf at E 5 ; i i ai ERE eEELE z z Z lig across from the one on 4th down. Grin Denies He'll |Be in Front Office * @ « “As far as I know there's nothing to it,” Grimm said in the club- yesterday to clinch second place in the Na- tional League. Hillsdale 47, Anderson (Ind) 7. . W. Mich. 13, Great Lakes (uy 13 (tie). Alma na Central 0. 20, 2 Wittenburg (Ohio) 28, Olivet 0. Stevens Point (Wis) 18, Mich. Tech 6. Michigan Normal 27, Hope 0. Adrian 22, Wilmin (Ohio) 19. Marines 21, ) emma a 7 SATURDAY'S LATE SCORES — West Chester Tchrs 9, East Carolina 0 Louis Mies! Florida 19, me ya t bes of p= A 28, Otterbein 13 Louisville 14 - Murray State 33, a, Ind. 14 Head Knocking Over at State, satidees pau A a Gloating Over Wins DETROIT w — Detroit Tigers were a crew when they ar- rived in Detroit late las night— but they weren't gloating over at train from ub Cleveland. Will Stick With Argonauts Former Lion Indicates Desire for NFL Return but Will Stay Put Union despite repeated offers from the Detroit Lions. Dublinski said he made his “I'm not going to kid myself that I wouldn't like to be playing back there in. the National League,” he said. ‘But people have been so wonderful to us up here and Harry Sonshine (Argo team manager) has done so much for me that I think the only fair ‘decision is to stay.” Weekend EF: Pre Football sea [ptmoopy ad %5, Los hes 21 Green a inals 28 = Gunbay Detroit 27, New York 17 Baltimore 44, Pittsburgh 17 Hurricane Ione Packing Real Punch, Making Both Moore, Marciano Worry NEW YORK (®—Hurricane Ione, a gal with a real big punch, had heavyweight champion Rocky Mar- cjano and Archie Moore more worried about her than each other _ today as they idleqd away the hours, Trained to a razor-sharp edge, the fighters ended their long pre- parations for Tuesday's title bout in Yankee Stadium with short box- ing sessions Sunday. Now they had nothing to do but peer at the skies and wonder if Ione was going to throw a wet blanket over their plans. « If it should blow lay. The 38-year-old lightheavy- weight champion has been -wait- ing a long time for his shot. He campaigned more than a year for the chance and taunted Rocky al- most daily for “ducking him.” The ancient gladiator considers him- = a cinch to beconie the ~~ # » The tindefeated Brockton Blaster ig just as anxious to get at his challenger. Rocky admits that Archie's barbs have sunk | deep and while'he won’t make any Cl ruler may do just. that. Never.a Bax “gym fighter,” Rocky has been spectacular with both the power, <5 and precision of his punch- g. Marciano’s workouts have been t's. jus a matter sharpness."”* ; fis 8 THE PONTIAC PRES the | 85 a Chicago at St, Swar S. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 .Casey Smil ators as they beat Washington AM. MM, Minor Major Minor Major 9:20 3:10 9-50 3:38 Major Leagues AMERICAN “LEAGUE Won Lest Pet. Behind New as desu puein ns 8 . _ - Cleveland f EE 7662S - 82 6 S58 9 trott 3 72 ST 6% Kansas City ......... 63 8&5 «6426 8s hingt 51% «60349 79"® Baltimore 51 % 3409 SCHEDULE ‘ansas City at Detroit, 8:30 p.m—Porte earrero (3-8) vs. Biack 1) w York at Washin p.im.—Larsen ly games scheduled ~— SUNDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 10 Cleveland 3 : New 3, N ‘ork 4, Baltimore 3, Wash Chicago | ecu atid so 6 — ” Shy He ; m—Minner (9-9) . Louie 1 Gi finings) SATURDAY'S RESULTS New York 6, Brook! ; 2 Tu Y's SCHEDULE | Philadelphia a), 4: : | Patueburgh at New Work a. ine pm | Milwaukee at Cincinnati, & pan. Lous, 8 pm. * i 2 : ¢ : Pe . Kansas City @ (10 innings) | Wolverines Get. Life as Branoff Returns to Form ‘ANN ARBOR (#—The Michigan football attack has been given a lift with the return to form of powerful Tony Branoff. Branoff, playing with his left ankle still wrapped in protective tape, slammed his way to a pair of touchdowns Saturday to lead the Wolverine lst stringers to a 474 scrimmage victory over the scrubs. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan said it | would be the last major scrim- mage before the Wolverines take on Missouri . Missouri turned in a surprising performance in its opening game Saturday, holditig powerful Mary- land to a slim 13-12 victory. ; _New Speed Record Set |in 250 Mile Stock Race | LANGHORNE, Pa. i — Tim | Flock of Atlanta led from the 80th | mile yesterday to win the'250-mile National Circuit Championship late model stock car race, establishing _a@ recprd speed average of 77.88 | miles an hour. : . | . Flock drove his 1955 Chrysler | over Langhorne Speedway in an | official time of 3:12.35, a one-mile | dirt track record-for' the distance iyo , 4 { -ing which the Tigers inflicted the . | sured of the flag. The s, of Stengel App reciative . es Ki os Kindly on Victories by Tigers CLEVELAND (® — Cleveland's vanishing Indians, balancing on the brink of elimination today, owed their plight to the wrath of an ing, revenge-mad De- troit Tiger team they used as a stepping stone to record-breaking success last year. _ * « « Unknown to anyone but their close followers, the Tigers have been nourishing a secret i an overwhelming ambition to “get even” with the Indians. It was fot until after yesterday's game, dur- ond straight pennant that Detroit Manager Bucky Harris brought it to light. * ¢ * land for knocking them out of fourth place in the final week. of the season last year. “It was not so much that Cleve~ land them three straight,” added, ‘but that.they used their three ace pitchers—Lemon, Wynn and Garcia—against them after they already ‘had as- Cleveland's ‘Vanishing Indians to Wrath of Unforgetting, Revenge-Mad Tigers course, were determined to set the American League record of 111 vic- tories, which they did. “The boys never forgot it. It gave them additional incentive to go all out even though it meant little to them. I could see it in the dugout. “ ‘Go get your 111 victories now, you blankety blanks!’ our “guys kept taunting the Cleveland play- ers.” . * * * Yesterday's 10-3 loss, the third straight at the hands of the re- vengeful Tigers, all but nailed the lid to the coffin. Trailing the pen- nant-bound New York Yankees by two games, three on the important losing side, with only five games remaining, it appeared only a mir- acle coyld save their champion- ship. ; * * ® ae Any combination of five New York victories and Cleveland de- | play. : oT _ Surprisingly, the Cleveland play- ers didn’t appear as distressed by over the two previous losses to anti-climax, as * fh —_— ' “After all,” one Cleveland play- er remarked, “it’s only money.” It was intended as a joke but it yesterday’s defeat as they were) wir the i 3 stb cehesil on base, Klaus via Billy | out Gil MeDougald.. Gerry Col ; Martin's error and Ted Wiliams, man raced home with what proved behind Jim Wilson. _NEW YOHR u—"It's nice to see| Don Larsen will pitch for- the who walked. ~ to be the deciding run. =~ - .- se 6 | Detroit do‘so wonderful.” Yanks tonight and Whitey Ford o) eee Gus Zernial’s bases-loaded home| The Milwaukee Braves clinched| Casey Stengel -relaxed in his! Will work Tuesday at Washin run off Chicago's Dick Donovan} second place in the National) stocking feet, for his usual mono-| Casey, wouldn't announce his The Yanks gave Turley a two-| spiked the White Sox early in the | League with an ll-inning 2-1 vic-|jogue with the press after a New nee tenes, ee run lead off Willard Nixon in the| game and they never were able | tory over the St. Louis Cardinals. | York Yankee home game. he'd go all out every day. Ford first but Jackie Jensen tied it up| to do anything with the offerings | The New York Giants dropped @| His streaking Yankees had just| "5 i” the bullpen. in the ninth with a two-run homer in the third | of Art Ditmar. 7-5 decision to the while | opened up a two-game lead in the | Y°MePday. ready to come in if before Grim came in. The winning} In the only other American | the Philadelphia Phillies split with American League race by sweep-| =" faltered. a oe League game, the Baltimore Ori-| the Pittsburgh Pirates, losing the ing three from Boiton while Cleve- . “an ed the bases. As Ted Lepcio tossed! a seventh-place tie with the Sen-'21. . Le. But Old Case wasn't claiming any Top Ranked {1s - pennant. ry -| “This is going right down to the wire,” he said. “You just gotta wnt nt er» exe OF COllege Level nerer, to win every day. Don't 0 0 eV forget Detroit put me on the skids ‘ . on one of our Western trips. tm ouy wort tm ext |£O Vie for Title -wragped — — =. ae ly second string is @ grea eae | for i Howard (Elston Howard)|; UCLA, Michigan Set saved a game for me Saturday g H H naa Cary (Buh Gare} was ca to Begin Comparisons good on his base running. for Mythical Crown “If Mantle and Skewron be R Skowron) would get well, we'd NEW Y dangerous the rest of the year.”| nai fans won't have long to walt aerial even smilé when he no longer than this Ba is compari merits of the Mantle pulled a muscle and post mine tur 1955 national Both the games. Skowron claims he can play to-| UCLA and Michigan, mated night at Washington and probably | °2¢-two im pre-season estimates will get a chance. Mantle probably} by News Service’s won't be ready before the final] panel of experts, play Maryland series in Boston next weekend, al-| and Missourl, respetively, on though he took limited batting Ree practice Sunday, Those engagements took on add- Magic Number wat tute fo scrape throch - a over for tot Yanks "ci “crs bar, oe Is Simply 5 Peper on. bam Dey 4-13 a NEW YORK @—Five is the s : ' Y miliation by the Terrapins before a number for the New York - TV : 2 combination of ¥ UCLA tritmphed about as ex- Any combina’ five Yankee : 214, in te ri : will give New York its sixth Amer. | g#me with A&M, much . jean League pennant in seven| publicized transfer tailback Ronnie _ _. years. The Yankees have seven| Knox throwing three touchdown : 7 games to play, ie on ae passes, . ton and four at Boston. The With qnly four of the INS panel's oug OW TOP | Pipe Ean a ere x i ree at min pom hog ou nad oe ead fhe an et md CLEVELAND The American | hoping for the Bronx Bombers to; Indians to six hits beto: pa Fe. Gre cf Geltinnoce weta | uly one Unfie in this s League pennant hopes -of the drop at least two of their remain-| ing after seven innings, Indians the Yanks dropped all of their | rankings, Cleveland all but flew out | ing seven contests. failed to knock him out of the games. ‘ : dropped from. 4th to of the giant Municipal Ctadium Yesterday's setback at the hand| bex, however, The 90-degree Tth Southern California, Sunday afternoon when Detroit's! of the Tigers was the-worst-of{ heat just tired him out, Only ‘ > flexing its mucies with a 50-12 Tigers hung a 103 licking on Al) the series. The Tigers rapped| time the Indians could score rout of Washington State, moved Lopez’ warriors to complete | starter and loser Mike Garcia and against him was in the 7th when Squall ions into 4th place. : sweep of the three game series. | his three successors for 11 hits,| pimch hitter Hank Folles hom- bi The rankings: 1. UCLA; 2. Cleveland's loss, combined including a home run by Al Ka-| ered, following a walk to Lary ; MICHIGAN; 3. Oklahoma; 4. Sou with the Yankees 32 decision | line. Dey. .. ] W ern California; 5, Southern Metho- over the Boston Red Sox, left | Ironically enough, Indians were| Tigers’ blazing bats pounded ive empo in dist; 6. Ohio State; 7. Maryland; the’ Tribe two full games behind | tamed yesterday by a Tiger rookie| Garcia and Ray Narleski during ip 8. Georgia Tech; 9. Auburn; 10, the front-running New Yorkers | pitcher, 20-year-old Bob Miller.) six-run 6th inning as every one} nt’s Nayy. as the frantic flag chase enters Miller was beaten by the Yanks | in the Detroit starting lineup ex- President 2.6.6 . its final week, ° last week and there was a bit of| cept Ray Boone hit safely. False Start Eliminates ee aes running, but the Bengas dealt a|& untested youngster in & Key) tending average to 340 with his leading , Secple Bierman and grid writer crippling blow over the weekend. | @mé- * made good on | Romer in the Ist that gave the te and editor Francis J, Powers, all The Indians have five remaining | eee event Miller egainat | TST & 1-0 lead and two singles,| WASHINGTON @~Tempo VII} now talent scouts for the Shrine games, two with Chicago and] 110 diane coat Tigers picked up two more runs Gatieed te Chait of Ce Mee ee in cede ae ee three more at Detroit, and must in the 7th against Art Houtteman. | ident’s Cup Regatta after a mixed- nals ue pede eat figure on winning all of them while' The young lefthander held the Thay oat thelr final run otf rookie up or has Gee ap- Fhe, ph oer pa ren uirre in : parent ! - oa DETRDIT CLEVELAND Tempo, the Guy Lombardo boat| er to see action was Georgia Undefeated Year Predicted | gen 284% surat, ni} diven ty Daony Foster, was thira| Tech. A ancoaed, the Yellow Kaline, rf $18 Avie. 416! mile ' ile be-| etful Miami, finally cashing in on by Grange for Oklahoma | Piiic'c $2) 28 fT }3/mMy mee zorterday smile | couple ot breaks fora | Tutte. ef 2 $1 Rosen, 3» 4 61 Pepsi and 50 yards behind George | triumph. OKLAHOMA CITY aoe that Bud Wilkinson's Sooners| mim ¢. $i} $ 233 Simon's Miss United States. . ag A homa will go undefeated this | would have little trouble in extend-| Miller, p = 4 4:1 Gareta. 00 = me a= predicts Red Grange, a/ing their winning streak to 29 Marlowe, p 1 00 Marist» 8 $ | But officials ruled that both Katlin Wins Again. apelot per omae-p pen tem) [omonaw) Hear cor who open Sees fescue Tee ee coe t M59 R T he speaks of all, against North Carolina next Satur- Rigsinde Simon, piloting rack A Laphaphpeei gears Sr day, currently are riding a 1%] - can ; re United States, hag jumped the a ace | : Mlinois in m , Grange said | game streak. les hit home run for Hegen in ith. | St4Fter’s gun. 8 seren Mick Katli in_an interview here yesterday) “+The Inst time T was in Okie | gneve ‘were oo fr Rottonce ‘That gave the President's Cup wtaed ate victory Sunday homa, Bud was undefeated and | , Resslede grounded out for Augerre im) | wiaat aie himself on off | afternoon in the hardtop and old Solunar Tables | sin" going area.” said Grange, | teeed '"2127°2007:°03 $88 =| to a poor start when he missed| model show at the Ponting Speed. eee oo a ee a buoy on the first Iap and had| way by capturing the 25-lap feature Schedule- for solunar periods,| Oklahoma was ranked No, 2 na-! wines ewer i id, Masti hack oa Miss had been | race. Bill Kourt took 2nd and John. below, is taken from | tionally in a pre-season poll by | Poties serge. ob Matiteld. Kuenn, whoarng: | Pepsi had in| ny. Wallace finished 3rd. John Alden Knight's Solunar| The Associated Press. PS sar i og eae | the 24- t caieee winner ot| Dick Cummings won the semf, Tables. Days should be planned! The famed “Galloping Ghost,” prow titer a Gente {the points she bn in winning | followed by Chuck Allen and Jim so that you are fishing in good ter-| now a sports announcer, was here | Narieski 1. an 1. 4. | two heats Sa ° Brown. Wallace was victor in the ritory during these times. if you for an appearance at a Quarter-|8o-aitier’ ¢ inf; Mariowe'l is 4:| Trailing ‘Tempo at the finish| pursult with Katlin and Gerry Lat; wish to find the best sport each | hack Club luncheon today. caree BFP oa Nérleski 4 in 0, Hout- were Miss Thriftway the Seattle | near {aking 2nd and 3rd places re- day has to offer. Major periods; Grange arrived from Miami, | Miller 2-2 Marlowe 1-0, Garels 44,| boat driven by Bill Muncey, and| spectively, Katlin triumphed in the last for an hour and a half to two Fla., where he said, people are Narleski 3-3, pontionaa. +. Aguirre Gale V driveh by Lee Schoenith dash while heat winners were Bob hours, with major periods of/ picking Oklahoma to play in the |W. Miller (1-1). L—Garcia (11-19).. "U~: | gon of ‘owner Joseph Schfenith of | Gatton, B. Bater, Elmer Ferstle, shorter duration. Orange Bowl New Year’s Day | ™9%s _. * 7b | Detroit, 8 Marvin Main and Joe Dyle. ‘ TUESDAY against either Maryland or Duke, Minor Major =‘ Minor «Major “probably Maryland, an old enemy ad hee | of Oklahoma.” Owe Sad Plight “]WENTY‘SIX = = a. THE PON TIAC PRESS. MON DAY. \ ‘ SEPT EMBER 19, 1955 a 5 » |State football captain, co-cap- Nystrom Marquette Stor | vinci” Marquette high’ (Mich.) 3 -. EAST LANSING — Guard Carl ‘through the ue season in its his- t ~stat ho’ a 1955 Mic lana ttbck state prep honors 4 “COLLISION. WORK onl OLIVER MOTOR Collision Shop 36 W. Pike St. FE na See Robert Rectar, Mgr. for Free Estimates on All Makes of Cars Ne Distance Tee Great (withie reason) QUALITY TOOLS ATLAS @ CLAUSING @ DELTA _ SHOPSMITH © DeWALT - PORTER-CABLE © SKIL BROWN-SHARPE © MILWAUKEE RENTALS GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood BIRMINGHAM MI 4-0444 TT eemeneeemeenenml OAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 te 8:00 Eagles on Top After Exhibition Season Finishes Beat LA Rams 35-21 to Climax Successful Six Game Sweep By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The National Footbal] League wound up its exhibition season over the weekend with the Phil- adelphia Eagles just about the hot- test team in the 12-club circuit. geles Rams 35-21 Saturday for their sixth straight victory. Before the Rams, they beat Baltimore, Detroit, Chicago's.Bears, Green Bay and Pittsburgh. Adrian Burk, who shares the quarterback spot with Bobby Thomason, passes to veteran end Pete Pihos and another to halfback Bobby Walston. The Rams played with- out their No. 1 quarterback, Norm Van Brocklin, who appeared only in punting roles. Baltimore's Colts whipped the Pittsburgh Steelers 44-17. and the Green Bay Packers ended a four- game losing streak at the expense of the Chicago Cardinals 37-28. All-America Alan (The Horse) Ameche from Wisconsin and Royce | r Womble each scored two touch. | ES downs in the Colts’ one-sided tr | umph, Tobin Rote fired touchdown passes of 76 and 72 yards in the final quarter to provide the Pack- ers with their margin of victory | ™ over the Cardinals. pitched three scoring | CHICAGO WF — - The Be Ten launches its 1955 football cam- paign Saturday with nine games, one of them of conference caliber ‘and the others with outside op- ponents, The championship race starts with Michigan State meeting in- diana at Bloomington, Ind.- Both ‘teams are improved and 16 sports 'scribes, who made a flying tour of conference camps, picked the Spartans No. 6 and the Hoosiers No. 7 in the title struggle. - * Their Ist choice was Michigan, followed in order by Purdue, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan State, Indiana, Minnesota, Mlinois and Northwestern. Michigan appears to have the toughest intersectional . opener, taking on the split T Missouri Tigers of the Bly Seven af Ann Arbor, Mich.. Missouri came close to upsetting highly regard- ed Maryland Saturday, losing by one point, 13-12. Two Pacific Coast Conference ‘teams are on the Big Ten menu. Illinois travels to Berkeley to tangle | with California and Washington | invades Minnesota. California was wallopéd 27-7 by Pitt and fumbling Washington had to go all out to down Idaho 147, Rounding out the opening sched- ‘ule, Kansas State is at lowa, Mi- ami of Ohio at Northwestern, Nebraska at Ohio State, College of the Pacific at Purdue and Mar- quette at Wisconsin. Terry Brennan starts his ‘2nd term as head coach of Notre Dame when the Irish entertain Southern Methodist, one of the prides of the tough Southwest Conference in a | League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE (based on 375 -at bats) — Kaline, Detroit, 340: Power, Kansas City. aia; Detroit and Kell, Chicago. York, RUNS — Mantle, New York, 12h: Smith, Kaline, Detrott, 118; Tuttle, Detroit, 100; Goodman, Boston, 98. Py P ba IN — Jensen, Boston, “9 an, 100 100; Berra, New ewig Sievers, Washington, 101: Kaline ott, 193: Pox, Chi ge Kansas “City, inigan, Kaneas ‘cus. %0; White, Boston. TRIPLES — Mantle and Carey, New York, 11; Power, Kansas City, 16: Me- Cengeid, New York apd Vernon, Washing- aN HOME RUNS — Mantle. New York, 37; ternial, Ketmas City, 2: Williame hin, Boston, Kaline. Detroit and Berra, New York, 27 donee — — Rivera, Chi o 19; Jen wen, " Busts ye chicaee, La —, Cleveland, ry on decisions) — nS “YEAR-END SALE — OF NEW 1955 RS We clean out—you clean up! ~ PLYMOUTHS! Help us clean out our warehouses to make room for 1956 models, and youll clean up with the year’s best deal on a big new 1955 Plymouth! Wide selec- J : Act now! Save hundreds of dollars! flons of models, colors, power driving aids — all cars ready for fast delivery! Name your own deal on your new Plymouth During our Warehouse Clearance no reasonable offer will be refused. You'll be smart to buy now— prices may never again be as low as they are today. And you'll get the biggest, longest, roomiest car in the lowest-price field —Plymouth! You'll get the year’s highest trade-in allowance right now. Remember, your present car will never be worth more, and soon will be worth a lot LESS! With or - without a trade, come in today and see how much you will save if you buy.now! NOW... the smartest time ci the year to make the smartest buy of the year... ee SEE YOUR. ‘PLYMOUTH % DEALER TODAY! New York, ir, ag faa Corianatt i. Gilliam, ‘Brook- Byrne, New York, 6-4, York, 17-7. .708; Hoeft, Lemon, Cleveland, 18-8, Cleveland. 10-4, aay ane TRIKEO! 1800; ret New Detroit, 1 606 | 667 ; eehinanne =~ Cleveland, 215; I” pieee Chteago, | 138; Hoeft, Detroit, 133; Ford, New York, LEAGUE HOME RUNS — $41 (record m 1950). Kuenn, a; — Cleveland and Mantle, New is 973 wet | NATIONAL gm ade bats) — i amnpenetig eationally televised engagement. Most of the Big Ten’s other op- ponents already have a game under their belts, but were not im- pressive. Wyoming defeated Kan- sas State 38-20. Hawaii spilled 'Nebraska 6-0. Stanford tripped College of The Pacific 33-14. climaxed fall drills Saturday with intrasquad games. Len Dawson, Purdue's passing sensation, suffered a jammed right thumb and will be required to wear a cast. Coach Stu Hol- comb said he may miss the Boil- | ermakers’ opener. | Ohio State’s All-America half- |‘ Big Tes Race Gets Into Action Saturday back Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, strained a ligament on the i ot his right knee. He may be side- ‘lined for at least three days. Tony Branoff, whose injured ankle has caused concern at Michi- gan, taped it up and ran wild. He scored twice, on a 35-yard reverse land a Syard smash, to power the ‘Blues’ ‘over the “Whites” 47-6. , The Big Ten, for the most part, — aes, 12; RUNS BATTED IN — Snider, Brookiyn. 1M; Ennis Philadelphia York. 117; Banks, Chicago. 112; Kiussewski, | Cincinnati, 112 HITS — Kiussewek!, Cinciwatt, Aeron, Milwaukee, 183; Pos Cincinnati, 182; Mueller, ese ! BLES Aaron, Milw nukes, Z 33; Ashburn, Philadel . Cincinnati and Musial RIPLES ty York, - Clemente, Pitiepur, bo; Ban : Milwaukee and Ashburn, tou at LJ RUNS — Mays, New York, 4; innati, ts: Banks, Chicago lyn, 42; Post, C 21; Te Cincinnati, 19; iitiamn. Brook. 119; Mays, New | | GRINNING WITH GRIM — Bob Grim, center, STOL , 23; Mays, New York and Boyer, St. emple, lyn, 15 PITCHING (based on Newcombe, Srestya, 20-5, Brooklyn, 2-5. 12, .687; Conley, Meneses. 1-7, Ohl | Nuxbail Cineinnati, 17-11. STRIKEOUTS — Jones Roberts, Philadelphia, 152: Louis, 146; Newcombe Brooklyn and An- Labine, EF tonelli, New York, 138 LEAGUE ROME: nous - 126 (breaks wet 1933) record of Michigan State says it is looking for a “take charge guy’ for football team. - WANTED CAR SALESMEN New and Used . * * JEROME'S 18 decisions) — | its | Yankee hurler who pitched a no-hit seven-inning re- 1900; | lief stint yesterday against the Boston Red Sox, is | 706; Roberts. Philadelphia, | Coleman, left, a | Yanks won, 3-2 American League es in a eees | room by shartatop Gerry | land. AP Wirephoio nd third baseman Gil McDougald. opened up two-game lead in nnant race over 2nd place Cleve- Ward Wins Amateur RICHMOND, Va. U—Handsome Ward, 29, figured his first nine be a tournament player. My work | Harvie Ward lingered in the club-| holes in the 36-hole finals were 45 an automobile salesman will house shadows for one last glimpse he gained his golf.” Dusk had replaced the hot after- noon sunshine. The last of the gal hour earlier, Ward had mauled William Hyndman III of Philadel- phia, 9 and 8, for the U.S. Amateur Championship Ld Ward, who now has won every major amateur title, was numbling masters of golf, Byron Nelsaqn “Byron helped me improve my | game so much,’ had failed in eight previous at tempts to prove himself king of American amateurs. “Byron showed me the importance of hold | ing onto the club with the left hand when playing iron shots.” Mr. Roberts | eee aE HOW TO ENJOY HEAD COMFORT Bonpended ‘eather aanter me “Aaa, — One erty O OTWER WAT WAS IT! SKYFLEET LITEWEIGHT ~-- bY RESISTOL Let us assist vou in selecting vour New Fall Hat .. . from our large collection of hats styled ‘by such famous-name mak- ers as: Resistol. i t ' long ovals. a Two Fine Stores 51 North Saginaw ’ OPEN Monday-Friday ‘til, 9 p.m. OPEN TONIGHT Temple Form, and Dobbs. Sizes 6!2 to 7°, in regulars and » to Serve You Bettet! Tel-Huron Center OPEN Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. ‘til 9 | of the James River course where | j “greatest victory in { | lery was thinning rapidly. Just an | / something about one of the old said Ward, who | “the best nine-hole round I've | played a great round against Jim McHale in the quarter-finals of the 1952 British Amateur, but it was not as good as this one.” * * * Ward was out in four-under-par | 31 in his showdown with Hyndman over the 6,713-yard, par 70 James River layout, Hyndman was out in 36 and 5 down at the morning turn. Ward had him 8 down by | lunch time. In the afternoon, Ward | threw 10 straight pars at Hyndman | to close it = * * Ward said again, as he’g said 80 | “rn! many times in the past, that never turn pro.” * * * - - | “T won't even bé a real active | “IT won't | “ ' amateur. " Ward added ‘Gil Mains” Returns ‘to Detroit Lions ! DETROIT W—Coach Buddy Par- ker of the Detroit Lions said today ‘that tackle Gil Mains will get a | chance to play in Sunday’s open- _ing professional football game | agdinst Green Bay |- “We'll give him a shot at his ‘old job—left tackle’ Parker said Mains rejoined the Lions Satur- day after jumping to the Canadian | Football League. “They don’t play mv kind of bal! there,” he stated le Jim Martin as another returnee from the Toronto Argonauts. The Lions went to court to get Martin back in the fold. played in real competition. 1| The returning Mains joined tack- | come first now “Sure, I'd like to win the Open 'and the Masters, but because of my work, I probably won't get a chance t@ point for them. In fact, | I can't say now that I'll even play in them.” Ward made it clear he would “never point for another tourna- ment as. I pointed for this one. This was the tournament I most wanted to win.” My name's Pete Kelty. | play a jazz-musician caught in the gun-roar of the ‘20s. 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Dey and Evening Classes Sot tues BILL CORNWELL tenaciously tothe advantage, tav-| end ealmly split the uprights for | Eimy, who bore the brunt of the| Jackets made twe unsucessfut 7 You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. That ‘old extra point produced | ing off a resurgent Avondale squad | the all-important conversion. aan na a ae bids to score in the éth quarter. Post 3-2 Exhibition [oes Coceee o Oe See Complete wo victory for St, Michael and a tie} in the Jast half. Ader 6 enatelees © in| Sweep around right end from 11 : Win at Soo How 2-5661 for St. Frederick in their 1955 sea- = ss Ist quarter in| ards out. Then Dropps converted |“ bad case of “tumbleitis"” ham. n at Soo as Howe, cas Goce wat son openers Saturday and Sunday| Dick Doyon’s successful at- | Which neither team seriously | tne eventual winning point |Pered St. Fred’s efforts against) Dineen Lindsay Star ELECTR NICS INSTITUTE 3 *-<3 oo ee at Pontiac’s Wisner tempt from placement with Jess | threatened, Mikes mustered a 73- Shamrocks crossed the goal line | HO, Cross ‘tm a game which : Na A Reve : Coach Bob Mineweaser’s Sham-| than two mimstes to play em | yard drive to strike pay-dirt half-| again before the halt ended, but an | ™#‘Ked the debut of Gene Wright} SAULT °TE. MARIE @ — Dé-iIIB ssarees.vi-.0..0. seen = rocks nosed Avondale under the| abled the Rams to pall eat a |way through the 2nd period.| offside penalty nullified the tally. | *S Dead Coach of the Ramg. Vial. re himmortctcoresstasosot Mlifvexclatanels cece lights Saturday night, 7-6, on the| 18-13 deadlock yesterday after- by fullback Ron Elmy.}ind Duane Priebe scooped up an |‘ Tecovered three furshies,..one strength of « pectest placelliie by “moon te Pats Sete ws aly who starred both offensively andj errant Avondale pitchout ‘and aod’ Southas’ gottag wh "Searle ; Dan Dropps a (Cross of Marine . Booting |, Shamrocks © covered | romped ». Three Veterans Lindsay, Gordie nuarter touchdown hates theaiehl Enteriiiease idioma ioe atae: ta Gulends te 3° tie. flaoe’ later. Drovge eleciea ‘ight |©20'S 20d touchdown. Moms aad Bas Disoon helped the ” STRENGTH and HEALTH! end to score on a nine-yard jaunt,) After drawing ‘Ist blood, Rams! pos wings to s 3-6 margin be- Scientific Swedish Massage only to have am infraction spoil | Were forced to come from behind! tore Eamenton tallied two p . = his effert. for the stalemate, Frets, tt tn the final two misuies ot diay, |] @ infra-Red and Ultra-Violet Rays ouchdown Was set . Cabin a a 2 Doyon, who bloeked his hts ted sant af ‘Edmonton tallies were registered eae — ; quarter, After forcing Mikes | the contest, giving Rams by John McCormack, former Chi-|] @ Weight Liffing to punt, Yellow Jackets marched | sion, on the Holy Cross yard | cago center, and Don Poile. Exclusively for Mew : Sven dashing = six riod. St. Fred's scored in three | manager, singled out Dineen and , AL THOMAS Spas mn inied fo | ings tan the a. Da | Sry orb br ree son Health Club _ ' cking over one . ea coe en) — hw < oa Deter an lh EO Bat Adama reserved most ot|| In Hotel Pontinc FE 5-9661 back in Jim. Springborn, “Edmonton rookie goalie : ® _ Everybody Likes & Three Added to List & pass to Bob Serger add te e=| FOP Washington Race Starrett TOO LS a) i if ——————— Philly Tourney Taken by Kroll Extra Hole Putt Wins 7 a . | WHILE YOU WAIT $4,000 First Money in ) Duel With Doug Ford PHILADELPHIA (®—Téd Kroll, who says he’s lost four playoffs in - = the past three years, won a big one yesterday when he sank a of a sudden death match with Pentine Press Phetes > PGA champion Doug Ford to take! scone, A MISS — Two extremes in‘football action are shown in| 4 $4,000 first money in the Dall| te accompanying pictures, of St. Michael vs. Avondale (top, and) oo oo oy Cnitorm in. Industrial Supply Distributors Kroll was strokes behind | St. Fredericks vs. Marine City HC, above). No. 40, St. Mike’s Ron Elmy 2a: PLENTY | Ford. the leader, as yesterday's | scores a TD for the Shamrocks in the 2nd period, He was pursued by Save nageeey per one OF OFF STREET PARKING final round started but shot a one- | Avondale’s Ted Hyten. Holy Cross’ quarterback, Larry Schweihofer A saan —— “123 Ee na 4-8230 §| W. Pike, Corner Cass FE 2-0103 fora 1 that left them knotted at | Sunday. Tom Israel, (65) and Jim Duren (40) of the Rams watch the| "0 '® 14 . , 273 each for the. 72 holes. ball bounce out of Larry's arms. Mikes won (7-6), but Rams wound up ; \ Kroll, from Bethesda, Md., and} i a tie (13-13), in the elty paruchial openers, Saturday and Sunday. c> Lake, N.Y., took a 10-minute break e ay and then teed off for the short - Thorobreds 2 . t | . mae cn ai, ee LUBRICATION |||) Ce) / (7777 DAYTON’S ; Recemnianeidl ‘J: , xe zi yards. Their second shots left fs ; if Kroll 10 feet closer and after i nS Ford's 40-putt was 3 feet short of ° : 30-foot putt on the first extra hole ae — ren ae Cul ing 1 ols plies EAST LANSING — eeichigne News Open Golf Tournament. wore green. satins while on the under-par 67 while Ford scrambled | lets a pass get away from him in the 1st period of the tilt with Rams, Ford, who pays out of Kiamesha Dayton was 230 yards and Ford's was 215 the cup, Kroll ended the match. Slade, McBride Bout Opens Boxing Slate | Heading the television boxing Sat tor tne wn holds victories | LET'S GET ACQUAINTED—TRY US! over Don Cockell and Hurricane Jackson, meet Archie McBride of Jackson, mee , | gi Z e rene we neaweest 101 LaBelle’s Texaco Service rounder at New York’s St. Nichol- | é , as Arena at 9 tonight (Dumont). UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT On Wednesday night, middle- . - pill-Your Car's Best Friend weight contender Bobby Dykes of 874 W. Heron St. . FE 4-5400 Miami, Fla. seeks his 8th straight | Mon.-Set. 7 to 12 Midnight—Sun. 8 to 10 P. M. WE ARE YOUR FIRESTONE DEALER old tires be a healthy down-payment on new, ytafer General Tires. Beauty ..-..--06 «+ $795 1953 Pontise Chieftain 8 De- TUBELESS TIRE luxe 4-door, Loaded. One ® HEADQUARTERS Ownet ccseeteess FRONT END SPECIAL! | °csré ° rcntne MUFFLERS _FRONT Ex SE MOST $ 9 5 SEAN. VISUALINER «ss ail ‘work telly : rors 6 et S750] $498 * Studebakers | “T @ Shocks ond Springs . Blagk eee eee eeee $395 1953 Kaiser Deluxe 2-Deer Radio, Heater. A win of the year, at the expense aes Ee et eee Founder (9 pam. FS ABC: SPECIAL! THESE TIRES ARE PREMIUM QUALITY, FACTORY-FRESH TIRES! Ralph (Tiger) Jones of Yonkefs, : eee ; ; x faces Denmark's Chris Chris | They Are Not Seconds, Tread Blemishes or Second. Line Tires ! tae Cierland ey | MOTOR - —_—_ — . pm., EST, NBC-TV and radio). | SIZE REG. PRICE | YOUR COST | YOU SAVE fev toon ellehey | } ! a - TUN E- U P 6.70x15- $36.20 $19.90 $16.30 ner moot weno =| Woyp old tires are worth ||| 2 scrcs § 95 7.10x15 |. $39.60 $22.77 $16.83 Sorbet more wh et Ep ae so naam see 7.60x15 $43.25 $25.29 $17.96 jscaneesnsese= hhh Palette: Madhglatall | | Mia Proportionotely Low 8.00x15 $48.05 $28.56 1949" sg The Only a NEW...LONG-MILEAGE Ws Use Champion, AC. and ute ne | ——— = — fh Decler in a , Spork Plog . All Prices Plus Fed. Tax and Exchange “ | Pontios Giving § GENERALS : , THESE TIRES CARRY 2-YEAR ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE! Gift Stemps INSTALLED | REAL SPECIALS AT © COME IN TODAY! , fn | sone FREE FREE Secs: | aioe 1751 hen 2g] Deven tow ad et our - H a a H 3 a ‘ 5 — 25 1950 Chevrolet 2-Door ws Cearenteed wherever you go! FULLY GUARANTEED! ° ; ©@ Complete Front End Overhauling ice ane eae a : YOUR , , a ee i" mae SAGINAW | DAYTON'S BIG 3 . ) _ EASY BUDGET TERMS saa SSE ace MARKET TIRE 00,| ==: 312 W. Montcalm & ee ee ae | 1 : ot Ocklond 2 soanete Com wg | KOPEN 9 to 9 * FREE PARKING |) Ut Pa FE 4-9151 - — against all possible “Pontiac's Motoriist Headquarters”. NO MONEY DOWN ‘Open #16 # Deity : rr W. Huron St., Corner of Cass _ + FE 8.0424 : “aneuenaeheuneses : | | Hy eo 5 i ‘ . | . f { i : ‘ \ 7 | * ) | ; | ey 4 ' : : | ' /. : con 23) an gemaabates sr a, y i) ‘ : gre: } r . ‘ oe. | ii fe \ ei "1 5 bi . 4 fps ‘ a? ‘ A, j " et . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SSPrEMee 19, 19557 \ : : a a \ ie ae : f ” | ' : ; no ‘ iN . ; : - : LET S | AN at all — ' 200 "NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL WRIGLEY = AND BIG BEAR ‘SUPER MARKETS _ In Pontiac . NAMED NATION S TOP FOOD RETAILER Fy é . . ‘ ‘ , i . y , lg i ; o e \ Seay _ Costello Towers also is being re- ges ) “] Ly i a | Nd See THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 ‘TWENTY: ot EB DEEP STUFF —No hot studio lights for Gene Drivas who models her own creation of a cotton print play suit which also can be used for bathing. She demonstrated it. below the surface of the waters of Rainbow Springs near Dunnellon, Fla. Ask U.S. Army fo Quit Europe Soviets Request Comes After Her Promised Concession to Finland MOSCOW (®—Te_ Soviet Union is wasting no time in renewing its call for American troops to quit Europe in the wake of Russia's promise to return the Porkkala naval base bd Finland. Hard on the heels of Russia's concession to her Baltic neighbor, the Communist party newspaper Pravda commented: “There can be no the abolition by other ot military bases on foreign territory would be an important contribu- tion to the further relaxation of international tension and would bt that help to create the necessary con- SALE CONTINUES ALL WEEK! | The Most Fantastic Price Reduction We Ever Made i invy _ SUITES—BEDDING— DINETTES and APPLIANCES Everything Must Go! _ GREATEST | ‘Our Reg. $14K00 DRESSER, CHEST © BED. Choice of walnut or maple oP ee ee ee ee ee) $95 $110 $125 $135 or ee ereee see eee heer rnwe a. Pee ee ee Our Reg. $249.00 preesblagee SOFAS. A fine selection in vich Brocatelle and Matelasse fabrics. Shep early for Our Reg. $259.00-SOFA & CHAIR. pneagethaagy we cee meet eee eene ditions for ending the arms drive.” Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov | was expected to take the same tack before the United Nations | Assembly, opening tomorrow in. New York, as well_as in the Big! Four foreign ministers conference | in Geneva next month, » In another phase of the..compli- cated diplomatic maneuvers under way in the Soviet capital, the gov- ernment announced _a sweeping amnesty reducing or canceling sentences of Soviet citizens con- victed of collaborating with the Germans during World War I. This was viewed here as a nec- | essary prelude to the expected | official announcement of amnesty | for German war prisoners still held | by’ the Soviets. Their return was | promised West German Chancellor | tion of decorator styled covers. Now only... ..........000505 this sale waebeconeces Bao nneesede cosaues Our Reg. $279.00 2-Pc. SECTIONAL SUITE. Designed by Rowe in $145 Our Res. — bouets DRESSER, CHEST and new metallic tweeds. Clearance priced at... . 6.66 ne deluxe Korine $135 sag ger por depp apm lo yet eed ademas Cf bf) PY a —— SEDROOM. Dein 1 CUNO. cncies taaricecaveuss eg. dresser, chest and —— ey in Our Reg. $309.00 2-Pc. LIVING — SUITE. Styled by Rowe. $] 65 House and Gardens color. ........4.005; $145 Choice of colors in fine mylon friexse...... 0.0. -c ec ceeeee Qur Reg. $319.00 EARLY AMERICAN, Vanity chest and bed. Solid hardrock maple. $175 Our Reg. $329.00 2-Pc. SECTIONAL SOFA. The newest design in —- farnishings.~ Foam rubber cushions #155 su paes ccs ci seelce ne ae Our Reg. $359.00 Ee ee $185 Our Reg. $949.00 SEAMIST MAHOGANY BEDROOM. $170 EASY CREDIT Our Reg. $389.00 MODERN BEDROOM SUITE. Double dresser, chest and bed, styled by ’Kroehler”, , Our Reg. $389.00 FRENCH PROVINCIAL SECTIONAL. All the grace and charm of this Old Werld Peried. Now only $195 weal Ay tenga Ae oman iia. apace construction . . tiene fabric. Foam robber $215 1 DINING ROOM FURNITURE $185 oat eowe ee a Konrad Adenauer during his visit. The amnesty decree by the | Presidium of the Supreme Soviet | also said Soviet citizeris who were exiled or deported on collaboration charges, or who fled abroad and served in “anti-Soviet organiza- | - tions,” could return home and be | cleared of guilt if they came back repentant “to an honest life of labor and (to) become useful mem- bers of the socialist society.” This appeal to the exiles and refugees appeared to be part of the Communist world’s big. cam- paign to coax such citizens home from: abroad. Railroad Signal Retires MONMOUTH, Il. (#—Costello Towers, the C.B.&Q. Railroad's | signal tower on the edge of town, was the place of work for Railroad | Telegrapher Walter Hazen for 48 years. Hazen, 69, is retiring after 48% years of service with the road. tired from railroad service and hereafter signalling will be handied by remote control from the depot. Charke FUEL KIDS oil needs CLARKE OIL this week. Be, assured that you will have) the proper fuel to give the! most heat for the most eco- nomical cost. Order fuel from | Our Valves to $15.95 CHAIRS, Dining Room and Chrome Chairs. $500 Mony one OF a MOG i occ ccicciccnccsscccvecsssbesenucee Our Reg. $159.00 MODERN BUFFETS. Odd pieces from our better $35 dinnig room suites, reduced for fast clearance.............. Our Reg. $119.50 5-Pc. DINING ROOM. Duncan Phyfe table— $55 % ahaaien. Rah GaaeQany ins ccs nen oie oa s cessive he eeee _ Our Reg. $139.00 DROP LEAF TABLES. Fer these whe preter blonde : woods, some with formica tops ...............000sseeucs $75 Our Reg. $25.00 TABLE MODEL RADIOS. Sehebte fer use $15 Please Our Reg. $489.00 TRADITIONAL DINING ROOM. 7 pes. in. rich, $220 a Bnd amt enol RE hand-rubbed Honduras mahogany ....... 6... 006. see see eee ; Our Res. § $99.00 RADIO & PHONO COMBINATION. Table $7 5 model woed cabinet. Automatic 3-way record player .:. BEDS AND 2 PURPOSE SOFA BEDS Our Values te $39.00 ODD 6EDS. All sizes and colors. Wood Our Reg. $179.00 FULL SHEE GAS GANCE. Famous make. Specially reduced for this great sale. etheoene evves Our Reg. $209.00 FULL SIZE ELECTRIC RANGE. soap ef aed Tappan. Floor sample reduced tor clearance Peete reneeseeeereorrews ep ees enevren ee OO EOE eS Oe wwe Te WC ewewe rete ees | Our. Reg. = 50 DAVEN-NITER SOFA by day, $3 gs50 Our Reg. $259.00 REFRIGERATOR. 7 cw. f#. — model. Our Values to $89.50 BUNK BEDS. conic) with inner spring $66 Our Reg. $299.00 HAMILTON GAS mattress, guard rail and ledder.......... 200.6. e cece cee toby mele = $195 Our $229.00 Sealy HIDE-AWAY BED. floor sample ... hoice of fa eee eo \ AIG Our Values Up un PEASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED — No Carry re .B. orn Foy ON ro Chara: mane tp a 4, on \ + Os “* > JNEIN 0. 29 SOUTH SAGINAW r ‘s e GENEROUS T OW ANCE FOR YOUR OLD S pay A | Piel] I] i ; i] | F I TR NITUPE SARIN NEES eit EE RI 7ae oS é PSS til oe + "THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 DO IT YOURSELF iaee Oe parking lot, climbed in her car found the - _. Heating some solder, why? ; ee aq a 4 Kall, i ah” ' } Sian & a “BOARDING HOUSE BLESSED, EVEN IN THE HOUR OF MY TRIBULATION, “TO RANE A HELPMEET ~ ‘$0 STAUNCH AND UNCOM-. PLAINING —~ HAR PH! . “DID YOU FETCH A ,; iene . e . ‘ a aia a am ms , sedis se HAE AE ea : i awe , aes fe YES, BUT L DON'T KNow * S, WHY T DON'T BRING YOU - NCURE TIRED OF PLAYING WOUNDED HERO, L'M TAK- ING UP. FOOTBALL MYSELF. we AND TLL PLACE=KICK YOU INTO A 3o8/ : 2? _ * 4 hy / Agichqas ' . is E'S BOOKEO AT COUNTY * | : FAIZS.... On 1SION.... IN é THEATERG.... Geer. 1908 by GEA Servinn, he. ¥. Ot tng, © O Pet Om By Ernie Bushmiller mile: dl 'T MUST BE Beall || (GRccae "4 a. rer + GRANDMA — meee cane HOTS Bee eC Te MOMENT Var was AV oe me Pa... 4 oe j om 0 — You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Wont Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve el) your buying end sell- ing problems, To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 } _ and so & inexpensive. Enjoy Chewing Daily 1. ‘ : Si ’ ““WRIGLEY'S By McEvoy and Strieber “2 Edd Every Day in the Pontiac | os “Nothing's wrong, We're having X screaming contest!” wit : : "i : ‘ x } { * * 2 aS ‘ 24 - s \ 4 et eee ae oa “THIRTY-ONE | Grain Prices HICAGO GK. cuicaco, Sept. ie AP Open hoger Poe sovoacee 1.00% Dee sccccse. 2.00 MAr seccesee 2.02% May o.ccores 1 ‘News in Brief A $50 ring was (taken from the glove compartment of his car over the weekend, Guadalupe Buenros- told Pon- '- tiae’ Police. The ring bears the tre ,of 375 Central Ave.., initals Y G. Mrs. Nellie Rogers, of 52 Norton Ave., told Pontiac Police that her son's red and white bicycle was taken while it was parked in down- town Pontiac 6ver the weekend. To buy or sell in Waterford, Drayton Plains or Clarkston area see White Bros, Real Estate. OR 3-7118. —Adyv. ne Bane onne Safe-Way Driv- 2-2253. —Adv, ne quae test’ te pane cones 5-9424 or MA 5-4031. bail, Ph. FE FOR easi ae not using CASH? Make ily by -selliing through Phone FE 2-818]. BRANCH SALES and SERVICE 709 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. Fe 4-075 ® THATCHER PATTERSON G&G WERNET | €09 Community National Bank Bldg. FE 2-9224 Tuesday from the Sharpe Cemetery in Leslie. Hospital. Surviving are four sisters, Mrs. John Faught, Jackson; Mrs, Le- vina Grosshans of Stockbridge, Mrs. Charles Rouse of Birmingham and Mrs. Ray Parker of Clarkston, and one brother, Roy of Holt. UAW Walks Out on Canada GM Strike Affects 17,000 Workers in Five Plants Throughout Ontario TORONTO them a layoff pay The United sueguchie Workers (CIO-CCL) said- the best offer in the marathon negotiations : preced- ing the strike left GM workers far |, behind employes of the company’s | 25 chief Canadian competitors. The company described its 10- Service for Charles E, Mears, 76, of 158 N. Main St., will be held at 1 p.m. Funeral Home with burial in Woodlawn; low: Mr. Mears died Saturday in Pontiac General | stses Seventeen thousand workers in five General Motors plants in Ontario went on strike today after their union re- jected a company package offering plan. point propesal for a three-year contract the most progressive and far-reaching in Canadian labor-management history. The strike call halted the 10,000- man Oshawa plant, the Frigidaire plant in the Scarborough suburb of Toronto, the London Diesel Loco-| ur motive plant, the Windsor Engine | ® ‘plant and the parts and foundry operations of the company in St. Catharines. ‘STRIKE IS ON’ Negotiations ended late last night and George Burt, Canadian di- rector of the UAW, walked from a union meeting at. 12:30 a.m. to say: ‘The strike is on.” The 17.6-cents-an-hour package the company offered included an allowance of five cents an hour for the layeff pay plan and an across-the-board pay —— of five cents hourly. The average. hourly wage for production workers now is $1.64 and for nonproduction workers about $1.46. Lodge Calendar Areme Chapter No. 503 will have advanced officers night, Monday 8 p. m. 22 State Street. Officers’ practice Sunday 4 p. m. Ferne Crawley, secretary, rect veeliona oon 1 wad 3.00-3.18, ed “Lettuce: * eit leeberg 2 ie. ‘a dos. 3.75~-4 24, mostiy sa. Nectarines: ete? Pata Caltt, sacks: of they we odie in eal S yaew med. We mea: 3 aT ~. sas aye ale eee ol tahoe. ye rs 90 | sacks 2.15; Wishingten eng Whites Russets 4.00-4.50, §@ Ib sacks 2:00; consin Reds 2.00-2.50, Hie Chippewas 2.50. 2.25. Gems 2.35. Russets 3.35-3.40 diana = Chi as =69.25-2.36; HARRY W. MacDONALD and COMPANY Electrical Contractors Commercial and Industrial CUSTOM HOMES Call Us Anytime. “Phone FEderal 2-3080 1472 Baldwin Avenue, Pontiac, Michigan HARRY W. MacDONALD Res. Phone FE 5-4545 Don’t Worry INSURE And Let Us Worry H. R. Nicholie INSURANCE AGENCY 49 Mt. ——— Phone FE 2-2326 oe sacks 90-1.15, oan sacks 3¢ cents, (Late ame: Quotations @-lb. sacks 27 cen Admiral... - Int Silver 776 Alr Reduction 306 Int Tel & Tel 306 | ited Chem...116.4 Is) Crk Coal ., 20.5 Poultr Allied Strs.. 60.4 Jacobs... 104 — DETROIT L . ite Chalme: ot : Johns Man . ee ET, Gopt. 19 \APi—Prices paid | Aiteg “4 -----1h3 Jones & L . ste oer pound See. Dero tec Me 1) am pits. 366 Genelege iste quality, live poultry wah 10 am mCan ...... ali Kimb Clk . 82.7 Heavy h . ht hene 17: ca-|am Gyan |. 62 a ae. a8 -comarge “4 =) 2 : a yea. 311-40; | am Gas & El. 463 } pene _ young eavy type nes turkeys Am Motors. . 92 . eee Am Rad -.... 235 [Op dias te. 5 DETROIT EGGs Am Seating... Lib MeN & L 146 DETROIT, Sept, 19 iAP)—Eges, fob | Am Bmekt .. 364 ties aw My... 116 Detzatt: cases included, federal-state | re PEE e 78.3 Lockh Aire 444 eroces ath 3 «Loew's . 22.3 wnites_Orade A oo 67-71 weigntes | Amt SEG Lone & Chem . 64 average 48, medium $0, small) armeo sti ' 49:7 Lortllard 22.1 oa wid. oss 35: grade B large 56-57| armour & Co. 14.72. Lou & Nash .. 89.6 ‘wid. avg. 57; peewees 29 Arms Ck .. 291 Mack - 302 | Browns—Grade A jumbo 65-70 wtd Atchison .1444 Martin, OL .. 29.7 avg. 67%, aa 62, medium 48. —_ Atl Cst Line. 50 May _ Gtr ... 421 35: grade B large 6 ¢' C large Atl Refin ..;. 40 Mere 22.2 38; peewees 24-29 wtd. avg. 27. veo Mf, sue 08 Merge Line . 413 Checks 29 jalt & Snio . $1.1 Mpls Hon . 4 Commercially grade ied: Benquet Se Le onsen am Whites—Grade A extra large 61, large | Beth Steel 1644 Mont Ward .. 91.2 %5-89. medium 41-48 loeing Air .,.. 63.7 Pd . aS Browas—-Grade A extra large 58, large | Bohn Alum. ... 254 \aotor Wheel . 30 $2-66. medium 45-46, small 28-32; grade bond ‘6trs » 1U6 Mueller Br... 34 B large 43; peewers 20.24. borg Warner,, 46 wwurray Cp ... 305 prices Mic... es at Bi . 41 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS srun Baike.... 26, Net Cash R .. 388 CHICAGO, Sept. 19 (AP)-—Butter easy; | Budd Co . 204 wat Gyps .... 53 peng sa Sayan wholesale buying prices] Burroughs ., 28.1 Nat Lead |... 87.4 er rer 4a lower; Bal Lepote AA 56; Calumet & Bf” 13.3 Nat Thea .... 143 AS 0 B 36.28: CMA. case 68 | Some Soe eS ne Com 4 B sets: 09 C bas oo -. 196 Nia M Pow .. 33.6 Eqe* trreguiar: receipts 0.563; whole- “5 Norf & West . 61 sale buying prices unchanged to 1 low-| Capital Airl.., } No Am Ay *@ er; US. large whites 60-699 per cent 96; | Carrier Cp... 882 20 Mee i714 mixed 33, mediums 46: Us standards | Case, +» 02 vet Airline “2 45: dirties ks 32; current re- peed Ades 3 os Ohio Me — Cheyer on" og pec O & Ei. 626 eo ee ’ . r vip... ‘ Je Livestock Climax Mo.... 64 Param Pict .. # DETROIT LIVESTOCK ee ee ae DETROIT, Sept. 19 (AP)—Hogs salable | Cole Ot gd ‘ 1.500. Higher asking prices retarding poe Bra A ..,, 2 3 trade, no early sales. vod pg TRIS mae rf Cattle saimble 3.600. Receipts include | Gon Edis *".. $04 4 t $00 stockers and feeders, around | Gon w “5 e) 900 s; otherwise largely slaughter | Consum Pow’” $0.2 4 steer and yearling run: good rime | Con P pf 4% 110 fed steers uneven; few early sales year- | Gont Can 714 2 Iing steers around steady but slaughter | Cont Mot |...) 96 ‘4 steers mostly 25-50 cents lower. larget | Gont Oil...’ 88 1 Weights over 1100 Ib; lower grade | Gorn Pd oa : k; heifers mostly steady: cows Curtiss Wr... 26 rl fully 50 cents lower: = early sales bulls; Deere 96.6 i steckers and f y: bulk C Seag.... 435 othe ood and choice fed steers and yearlings | alhy Aire ,,.. T0.4 Spa ‘4.4 1.00-24.00, several lots steers | Dow Chem... 59.4 St Jos ' 339 2450-2475 few head 25.00: good and| Du Pont... Safeway > $3.2 choice fed heifers 20.00-22.00: most util- | est air L'*’: 8, ° 3 ity cows 10.00-1 ; canners and cutters | fast Kod ne Mi ‘ 3 mostly 9.00-11.56; some lightweight can- E] Auto Lite . 454 Seab Al Rk 61.1 a cows down to 8.00 or below; around |g) & Mus 43 Sears Beeb 107.6 load choice stock steer calves 22.5: Emer Rad 4 thell Oil 616 oad choice Wy fleshy native og Erie RR ...° 93.9 Sincl g. . 1 steers 2100: load mostly good 650 iB Cell-o .'.. 44 800 job $3 re 19.00; load choice stock helters frestéae 0 we . a seine Ry Pood Mach ,, 583 40.2 arcnlves salable 450. Market opening | preepot sui 693 of Orta 3 out steady on veelers wut _ fully | Freuh Tre “41 Ol Ind 3 ectabtiohed: cert ofan low | k 102 “ON J 140 choice vealers 6.00. hy < choice < f -— —— = = care | — Ps dee sat Ste one ae 77 er; en's Cleaners. ‘Lane Orio s EXPERIENCED driver a truck TENCED for established dry_ cleaning ro . Birmingham Pontiac Pres, Findt CLARA PAINTERS. BIR. pers ale area Cal) evenings. MI FURNACE INSTALLER CAPABLE complete installation of automatic. heating. Apply Me- —_ sheet metal. 497 8 Sag- naw FORD SALESMEN sell the ail new ‘36 Ford Jef- frey Ford Salex needs (wo new ‘salesmen ows emall sales force Plenty t play end company advertioing heapha: trae tion Liberal demo plan Bes set-up in area Call Mr J . OA 4-162 2 JEFFREY FORD 10 N Washington Oxtord trey. PULL TIME REAL ESTATE Saleeman. Aggressive office wi building orevram Phone O'Nei] for apvointment RAY O'NEIL, Realtor ~i1S W Huron Oven 69 Phone FE 3-7103 or PE i299 Co-operative. | Real Estate "Enchanse Fixture Sat: up Try Out Men Must -be capable of shooting trou jes Possibility of field service work a QO. D. Grinders Must have aa company ¢x- perience, Apply in person, “Detroit Broach Company, 940-8. Rochester Road. Rochester, Mich “Phone OL 1-211 HELPER ON DELIVERY TRUCK 20 to 25 with chauffeur's license. {100d Housekeeping Shop IF YOU ARE & SALESMAN We have an excellent op. ~ portunity now available tor ee tran to we ence in this field not neces: only the will to — foe Ontimit: earn nd het; We wil) teach von “ the business unusue! et up as all in- » .Jueries are strictly confi- Mential if vou think you are - cateomen come in afd < for Warren Stout Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ». ee ae. 2 West é Rav. be __Help Wanted Male * 6 o9gp risa CARPENTERS. “PE “KOREAN VETS AND NON-VETS . _See ad under Instructions» NEEDED Journeymen For Foundry Maintenance Millwrights Electricians Pipefitters and Machine Repairmen APPLY ' PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION Employ ment Oltice GLENWOOD "av SPONTIAC. MICH of “YOUR INCOMES SUFFICIENT for your neets? .f wou aren't making $100 pe week vou should be. $100 per week wuarantee. on Fb 25 to © and Spre Mr. Payne. FE IMMEDIA whe: OPENING MeE- chanical A Pe age increas ig Pn od and al be fe ts asee dees el _ ra. River, “MILK SALESMAN WANTED _Write PO. Box, 1240 MIDWEST . Manager eames: ae = re — We Poe rogr 4 =e domes Gounsas, PHARMACIST ity for voune pharmacist ehead. Be your own Write PRODUCE MAN WANTED See eae Pees PERMANENT POSITION Here is an opening with an éstablished firm for a man looking for a per- manent position. THIS CIRCULATION “w ORE gow AnniERS, c CALL a OPPICE WORK. A ca is one: ESSARY ® * If you are interested in this type of work, apply in person to FRED THOMPSON CIRCULATION DEPT, THE PONTIAC PRESS ves ere west oT BF ii Vhs, b Monteaim. 3 cae — Try-out— Men Mast be capable of sheotin peel Possibility of ibid O.D. Grinders Must have Broach’ company ex- piricace Apply in person, Detroit eeaeh Company. 886 8 Roch- ester road, hester Mich, Ph OL beni, PART TIME MORNINGS, AGE & to W, high schoo} tele ing. WN. ld ie tre service ot call WOodward 3-4181. PRESSER Experienced on men’s and ladies’ garments Apply For Dry an Ww. Huron Ez TENCED driver to deliver — to Calif References. _ Terms. 20 Moreland quent accounts and introduce new copyrighted financial service to Buriness _ SALES OND SALES PROMOTION with nationally known cigarette ‘eed "County to were » Oak- siarting. a 4 “5 -“s to 65. . ruc’ = A ey trowin, ‘aon area Li Li USA, ee | gd ‘~< M50_at Van Dyke - You Help Wanted Male 6 "TOP EXPERIENCED a There’s : s ; Cash Profit For 14 Year Old Boys Delivering Pontiac Press”. N TT COMES TO TURN- io. Toane YOU CAN.” BEAT BUSINESS OF BE- ING A PRESS CARRIER. IT ENABLES ENTERPRISING ¥ HAVE OFTT- ABLE BUSINESS OF THEIR A STEADY IN- COME, LIMITED ONLY TO EIR ABILITY TO v TH! NEIGHBORHOOD HOMES. BESIDES MONEY TO SPEND & SAVE, THEY GAIN VALUA- BLE EXPERIENCE, IN_ MOD- AND ACQUIRE HABITS AND AITS THAT wil HELP IN THEIR CAREER. Today’s Ambitious Teenagers RATE A PR ROUTE AP- ake THE CIRCULATION Spe ot MAY OUTE WOPEN IN YOUR VicINITY. THE | PONTIAC PRESS TAP MAKER a. * chemical engineers, ne cnpalinens . Louis’. KING & ASBOC,, on Monroe street, P. ©. Bos 671 : WANTED SALESMAN WHO is, @ i cae aaa tt i532 Bes, ‘ £2 i — e's TP : eae ° S. # Ss = . oad = 5 eo > 3 3 = < 200 . Saginaw. ss i 3 = > Hoe g283 HE iy # ¢ iy ene 45 Fp AIM HIGH CAREER GIRLS aE ce oe 7 a eenary, tor. t he revel a neat Sales Exp. * YY OPEN SATURDAY TILL J PM Midwest Em vob ce 406 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. La AMAZING | NEW FALL - iow af Cards Pam Uke ~— from sa —pey $52.50 on 50 cones Biggest he. lus BO- proval, $1.00 gift promptness, CR mak. Dept. 131-B, “ATTENTION WOMEN Without any experience yeu can earn edged for vour Christmas Poe wera Avon cosme- tics posi om Be im vour vicinity. _Yor information, call FE 44608. Ef 313 x ¢ ; rienced ferred. work! condition, : p Matihe Hargreaves Mill ist . : . BABY SITTER EVES. 4 TO 16. no Wed evening Trans portation ‘toraned, rE 4 BE AN EARLY BIRD AND BOOK —~CHRISTRAL “ARD PROFITS 3 CAN'T GET ll exclusive! Make 75 : . hew $1.25 TALL assortmen' FREE samples sell personals at J cents apiece hel amt te ee YARD. 30card $1 250 lead- ine seliers. towest por Nha bo- guarantee, free offe: t profits, - THB PONTAAC PRESS. MUNDAY, SKPALKMBER 19, 1953 “ 2 A Ses Wanted Female il 4-5355. DINNER R AND and waitress. ~~ GA| gad AN’ Z 3 3 25 to 40 yrs. Must be ed Sin ‘chitdren. Light wenetal hou work, Pisin, cocking, biee, vond 7 € vay ag fi. Em 40667. “ - Schoeller’s . Mbe. a 3 and 4 day we FE ren, a@ Week. +4264. ‘ _ DY TO STAY IN LP CARE 3 Board oped Ged according e $904! ‘mmediatety. NG AND . Live tn. OL fo Radl oseal : PS Lal ICIAN_ yf Posen TSoairapie ars or Seder: fology tre- City Hall own trans: wo MA 5-0802 6m. or peneiie Sea teats Be or Peas Fi Be Needed Immediately an Experienced ADDRESSOGRAPH OPERATOR eg _ MIMEOGRAPH a OPERATOR _- MACHINE ‘BOOKKEEPER COMP-TYPIST KEYPUNCH OPERATOR . AND ASTENOGRAPHERS ae nto taal renames tor ne | WAITRESS MUST 38 BE EXP§RI- ila fp the ‘puree for a child Personnel Trainer $300 wotown — wt. seeder oe ne & ent, Pontiac Bidg” rE. _ RUN. SPARE - TIME GREETING for sample on orn) tees = Gr se . De erndale _ Mic ich — REFINED LADY general, work Must children, Live “in. References. —2e SODA FOUNTAIN able woman we 2 hes sed er Experienced set Re like La ton Plains. OR 31303 ~| iui: Mi- INVALID LADY WisHEs white woman for _ Tight oan vein. PE 23-6378. ra HOME, GENERAL WOR re eased, group, Call MI 46911. S Wann ANTED: WOMAN TO CARE FOR aft Ad and 6 yrs. and keep house, in 6 da vate room, Re erences. Call OL 1-6542 Wa OuT work. Mary's Tavern, ut B ¥ Care fe ior es yr fe nha whe occas: bath qe? open for r Mi_6-4477, youno art TO DO work once @ week. White Ref- erences, PE 6-4242 104 Lincoln. ~Stenographer | . Good salary -idea)l working c 1 | “ tions —fast growing concern, Call | FE 43048 STENOS , AND TYPISTS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS AT BIRMINGHAM OFFICES TRACTOR AND IMPLEMENT ‘Division a FORD MOTOR CO. APPLY 2500 E. Maple Rd. BIRMINGHAM OPEN SAT 9 TO 1 ALTERATION LADY Expertenced on men’s and wom en's clothing, Genctiont catacy ond RAPPY" haTionat CLOTHING 9 8. Gaginaw MEN READY-TO-WEAR | MILLINERY EXPERIENCE “FOR poctnane evatiabdle im | Beer es? mn time po- Eee ne cream lone we = Please w our store tn the ores ree Center Winkelman’s- SECRETARY ALARY RANGE $2,750 per. year; 5 bead ton fits; tn area. Call Mid. west 17-0130 omieye Or apne Gl “petwoen een 8: and 7:30 p or ee Unusual cpaany for woman with ambition, personality and car, One ‘who can work 3 to 4) hours a day. eves. and needs to earn as much as: $85 week. | Call EM 3-0035 for inter- view, 9 to 12 noon. VARIETY JOB $250 Inte aweitse a gal Preferably | $400 MO. GUAR. COMM. a travel US sell Radio-TV grams. Emp. Sec. Comm. eral 2-010). . BOOMING BUSINESS MA opening available for responsible man or woman with car to call on farm women in E. Oakland Coun- ty toro or spare pe make Clark St... _ Preepert COUPLE ABOUT @ TO anage motel. Write Pontiac Box 111. Prese time od ny ai CAReTAgEe rienced’ references PAY Fon FHXT WEW CAR HE “Eat aiare swath prod EXP. ITE COU General house — Some driv- . Some or — we 4 in fam ogy me eps Birmingham. pe Say s pidalntan charges. 4 WA NTED: EXPERI- ENCED WOOL PRESS- ERS. APPLY IN PER- SON, 1 HOUR CLEAN- ERS, 26 E. HURON. | Dri , Day. evening and Sundays 23-4587, DRIVING LESSONS shiftchevy's Rn oe oe SATE- WAY DRIVING SCHOOL “KOREAN VETS AND NON-VETS Sicin fara” root. “Marens RAPTSMEN of TOOL-DIE D BONERS No previous veep eee education required E eotigue ¢ pot industrial o tative program Veterans must bring their Report "PIANO Y CESEO ONS Majors in be oe and gospe| muste i et les- sons in vate come 7-8943 TRAIN TO BE A CARBURETOR AND IGNITION NICIAN ~ * Big demand « high pay for men who know newest scientific ae bo be ep ao Learn time rite for FREE Pa ee Eng. Inst. Box 20 Pontiac | reas. ee Work Wanted Male 10 A-1 CARPENTRY P.ASTIC AND w theet tile a specialty FE S-#994 BOY, 19, WANTS WORK OF ANY _ Sete Outside work preferred. FE | GARPENTRY ( — NEW ~ AND | _tepair, FE 4-42 CARPENT OR AND CABINET work new eat . Murdock,” FE | “Shes | CARPENTRY, a FOR. mics work: attics finished, re¢e- ears are ROOFS ALL Marsh confiden- | Casa, ee at, FE _reation: rooms; | repairs. EM 39-4775. CABINET MAKER aND CARPEN. | ter Kitchens o specialty. Fe ELECTRICAL WIRING AND PAG. | tory maintenance 7 Licensed Ed Murray, F NY KIND HAND AF. ia ea ae HINGE A-1 CEMENT WORK LLOYD MONROE FE 4-6866 *u Cee Ph iitir wor Bax CK BLOCK AND CEMENT work Also chimness Ne tob too” large Residential end commer. | cial Guaranteed work Ph. __ +o0e4 CUSTOM UILDING FHA FI- nenrine Mode 2. SONCRETS 8) en ty HOUR or job Pree FE 20077. CARPENTER. REPAIRS AND AL- ere Quick service. Weather 5-71 18, 1s ALTY. GEMENT WORK, FhOORS drives, ete. Reas, Pres estimates. Jensen. 23-2340, wood : , or RK. craft, . FE 2-1485 Cor, Pontiac Lake & Scott Lake R4. bey, ~ maa AND BLOCK WORK. imneys fi 23-0033, . Veneer and I. after 6 A ee too big or small DEC CABINETS. DOORS. D. &. CEMENT & ~ CHIMNEY WORK Cleaned, rebuilt. buflt ing work Free catianate. Phone OA _ #2001. FLOOR LAYING saNnina AND fntshing. 0 yea experience. ANY “Quar, work. estimates. Joho Tavior OR are St Pete wae Ra ~2 PLOOR SANDING OLD FLOORS A per mon service. Noderiize With reliable butld Discount during Ave & we “an tyes of carpenter work . siding All other tynes of “lolations corrected, Insured workries INO D & M BUILDIN VICE 17004 Eves, OR 3.2276 ROUGH CARPENTER AND BLOCK _laying. FE 17-0071 a 2. SNYDER FLOOR oe @ and finishing STONE tgs och re cane __Building Supplies 12 ROOFING AND SIDING. WIDE selection of colors and materials || ALTERATIONS AND SEWING. Exp. on ladies’ and children's. PE +6952 & OR _3-6289 or FE 81427 GARDEN PLOWING, _ DISCINO, fort, Pin 7-0008. of Pontiac Air- 7 ARDEN LOWITNG, DIBSCING. Vietnity of Auburn Heights. T-04e. __ Laundry Service’ 18 —_ CURTAINS PLAIN OR RUF- . Phone PE 2-101. AMILY LAUNDRY Gees 84 e Laundry. 23-6101. to choose from at your door. Free estimates, easy ter fe 5. ed roof 2. yrs. M Roofing and Siding EM Mow _ Business Services 13. APPLIANCE SERVICE We service all makes of refrig- erators, washers radios, cleaners ry, © * types of-amall appmaaese. to 8. 06 Oakiand ve. FE *! Trucks.to Rent MODEST MAIDENS - . =. — \\ ‘\ wy Faran by Jay Alan J 7-4 CU = * “Oh, we're engaged all right, atl of ceuren il haven't pela him yet!” | Dresemaking, Tailoring 16 Furniture Refinishing 16A REPAIRING ANTIQUES SPE. ealty, FE 60162, FE erie, Garden Plowing 16B 16B OQARDEN . now a“ BULLDOZINO _ th Lake Rd. FE 42032 aT), a seaping by experts. Moving & Trucking 19 AA-1 MOVING eee res _FE 5-397) any time. A-l Moving & ¢ Tracking meri & delivery service ~ BEDFORD MOVING Local & Long Distance- FE 2-8787. CLEANUP JOBS sap TRUCKING Salm AULD IND wht > RUBBISH Liont AND MEAVY TRUCKING. fil dirt en tien sand, "and peed Gaur AND HEAVY AGCERG: _Reasonable, PE $9351. INCINERATORS CLEANED asi hauled Clean up FE +5134, LIGHT HAULING ODD Jobs. Cheap. PE 7-017), O'DELL CARTAGE Local and Lege Shere Moving Phone 5- 6806 TRUCKS FOR HIRE AT FARM- ington Trucking Co., 30815 W. ® Mile, at low rates and 24 hr, ser. veg 12 noon to 6 p.m. Cali MA 1 before or after brs. at _ address shown above. TRUCKING AND HAULING RUDB- bish. Any time after 2:30 pm. _102% Branch St. FE 3-6: emer etieeaaigaee % Ton Pick and Dum Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. Dai 8. WARD Open v +046) AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERV- tee on all Norge appliances, Call E 23-3065. Six Lake Refrigera- A-| TRENCHING. FOOTING AND flela me ear also septic tanks | Pate fil dirt OR }%TH8 or OR | ~™ ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS who's bor w routine anid wants a diverstfied . Bee Bett at Midwest Emp ent. inc St idg. FE WANTED: WOMAN TO TAKE care of 2 children and light housework. Heepl in. MY 3-3821. _Call_afier 5 WANTED: F RIENCED Ls help. y in persen age oot Hut ue, 8. wee AN OR girl for Care: of smal) T works. , OR 3- GIRL office housework. mothe $15 per week. WAN NCED work. ig of invoices imperative ny 50 Boosts. ‘avo Mr. Kam- WILL ‘aie TO WORTER Wom we train ior dental ist- ear be ble and will- ing stud, Por information _write “poe MM, Pontiac Press. enced. after pm, FE __ 35-8000, WAITRESS ce tae PARK INN. Apply tn me Ww. Fast” ®t. Live ta. | ore Seeds ol afl W WORK, Al hauling. Cutting, Ps al and bushes | __FE 5-1207 or MY 2-3603. PAINTING WANTED BY ELDER.- | | W man. FE $6838. | PLASTERING PAT SINO A AND | cement work OR 3-4637. | Pua LASTERING Nt NEW AND REMOD- oe oe eee Bucuhina WORK WANTED. Reasonable. FE 5-1016. OUNG MAN WOULD LIKE lighter sales work or along nana line. Some Cog Shopng and to learn, Call FE 5-€707 cover $8 and 7 ask for Mr. Gooch, Work Wanted Female 11 ACCOUNTANT - FC BOOKKEEPER Approximately 18 vears expert- ence ip all phases of bookkeep- tng, credits. and corrections. tax- es, financtal statements and_of- supervision, Prefer tutld- ers office. Write Pontiac Press, __Bor 95 2? WOMEN WANT Bit? Wasi Inq and cleaning, FE 7-223. GARE FOR CHILD, Dave. amt home. LeBaron School FE 102, GOLORED LADY ip nar pp ee with references, — wo CxS week, Houseciean’ AFTER 6 P.M. LAD as DA . vee and dishwash- ft R work, ing. AR E home. LaBaron Behoo!” District. FE 46102. Bead “BUILT CABINETS. - OR | A & B TRENCHING | -! Footing, water tile. Field tile. FE 5-9961. | BL BLOOMFIELD WAL Wa a CLEANERS. tks ve est rst. BO eee lon. FE 2-1631. DRY WALL 8 nf MACHINE FREE | estimate. No too big or small, FE 54-4628. ELECTRICAL SEWER CLEANING Sinks — Sunday Service, een patra ‘t roca Logarta" dh Pike | Pa Pe “eso, FURNACE WORK _ Cleaned. revaired. reset, rese: e8. | repaired. Home Swned regheerst company. If you en good work call us No ama- __ tours, FE_5-3701 FURNACEs | meee yD AND RE- ired. Otl, coal and a Ry service. ester Nelson, FE Electric—Sewers Cleaned 24 hour service, No —, Led charge: chemically treated at extra cost. Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners PE #1317 MING AND REMOV- al, Free esti: Stans estimate. FE 2-609 rs Painting & Decorating 20 writer and get: it! ‘abel woop Including Sundays | FE 41442 RE “DUC ED RATES _ Lar = van to serve you, Smith __Movir . FE 44864, = pl tae pacha Pate toll and wall papering, lor esti- mate. PE 40255. ores aetpeaee meieral FE ad Te & Found 24 PPPPPDAD LL PLA ALA el A fll LOST: FEMALE BEAGLE, 11 IN. near Columbia & Josiyn. Reward. _FE 54-7004. Loer Your onda bg Bs oy oy oly LOST: GREEN PARAKEET WITH ellow bead and black is on throat. Vicinity of iitame e. Named Toby. Call OR Lost: “MALE BEAGLE. ROUND sub, Near Walters Lake oa. t20008. 60 Toe with . Riverside. on it. if found. California LOST: FEMALE IRISH SETTER * vieinity of Jayne Adams School. OR 3-4454. LOST: TRAY WITH TOOLS VIC. _for return. PE ¢727 LOST } PAIR OF PARSCRIPTION lasses Sat. night corner of 8 moygebn le Lake Rd. FE 61286. Need, bad Lost - TaLLOW PARAKEET IN vietnity of General Hospital. Re- 7 were: _ FE 56-8979. “Jip” and face is ri few smal!) spots on Age 18 mos. Vicinity of Avon Twp. __3278_ Avalon LOST: VICINITY OF LAKE OnI- on and Pontiac Femaie lish Setter be afd white mixed License a Pl 6 oad = puppies and ts v un k tor heating. Please yp eward MUlberry 9-0015 or Lin- _cotn 6-177 Hobbies | & Supplies 24A ARGUS C3, USED. COMPLETE, $35. TDC. alide projector used. $20. Keystone movie with case, used $25 Polaroid cameras, tape preerere: = ecuipment Easy term ew nay “34 3D prejector. PADDOCK ILM be gt 1065 W NEW SCRABBLE SETS, $3. by number sets $169. up {frames to fit). BACKENSTOSE: 158 East _Lawrence_ PE 21414 Notices & Personals Re eh et Mieletpnercnd A 3. PAINT AAA PRIVATE DETECTIVES DOMESTIC, CRIMINAL, COMM’L. 30 yrs _exp Bonded. PE 5-5201 ANYONE WISHING _ TO HAVE records cut call PE __ +3058 ALTERATIONS, FUR REPAIR, plain sewing Te reweaving, _ Seneca FE 5-18 Aerotred Kanne Shoes | Have rehased all shoe records | from the former Arthur Sweet Pred Herman, OR 13-1502 ANY GIRL OR WOMAN | NEEDING 8. friendly adviser contact Mrs. ernon Vie. FE 28734. Confidential. The Salvation Army. DAINTY MAID FOR SUPPLIES. _Mrs . Burnes PE 2-8814, 63 Mark. ~ Charles Chester. Shoes Cc. A. Thompson 89 Pral) DON'T FUSS ABOUT THE MUSS soiled rugs Waite's Notions. keep colors ee rug @ upholstery clean- r, Waite'’s Notions KNAPP SHOES _ R. Elsworth 884 8 Sanford sss sPEE_‘8-6720 EARN | LOVELY GIFTS, HAVE friends in for toy ning of fun. FE Pm. or weekends. _ available. T, AM OPENING A NEW THRIFT Sh at 1218 Baldwin Wil) take clothing on consignment. used clothing for sale. ucas, arty and eve- 9881, after 6 Choice dates 4-1 PAINTING INTERIOR & EX- terior. 10 per cent disc, for cash. _Guaraniee Free est. D 40208. A-| PAINTING PAPERHANGING. i er temoved. Estimates. FE “435 “PAINTING, weuraeaes __Mason Thompson 4-8364 HALL. DRCORAT TORS paner | FE 22706 INTERIOR AND EXTE RIOR nainting and —, ——— Free | _estimate. FE 8-004 PAPERHANOING, 3 AIN’ le TIN G. plaster repair FE 7-0032 PAINTING. INTERIOR AND EX- terior ee washing, Free PAINTING PAPERHANGINO WALLS CLEANE TUPPER, OR } 7061 +4 Hunting Lodge for sale 31447 PAY CUT? IF SO, Let US Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind Restore Credit WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT Tear on $1000. | Painting & ‘Wall W ashing Free Estimates, FE §-2211 Physiotherapy 2A PVPBPBOPDPDA DLL LLLP LEIP POPE PL SWEDISH MASSAGE & THERAPY. oe oa foot ee ” Elim Television Service 22 DAY OR Ar ok apd TV SERVICE see 1296 or PE 5-83: GUARANTE WIRED TV pepsin A road 40738. MAKE. RADIO & 197 6. PARER br She ron. v- ice calls. FE 4-5607, “r TUCKER’ S RADIO TV or fuben, antenna Bhat en 30159, caer 168 E. GET IT QUIC K through Classified Ads! Yés, whatever it is—dial FE2-8181 for an ad- COUNSELLORS South Saginaw St. FE | Above Oakland Theater | 41% — hard work so cleans the with Fina Foam. Waite's No ions, 57 HENDERSON Sam toe. m eS TO NONE, THERE'S only one. Fina Foem for clean- ms he es and upholstery, Waite’s AUDIVOX HEARING AID RM 16. 101% N. Saginaw. PE 4-0539. TANNER’S KUSHIONTRED SHOES Brings new Joy and watkin A. Blakely, 356 Beward, eof SET OP CAR KEYS. CALL | Beott Ra, Pontiac & Watkins one Reward |. uf victor 1717.8. 4 tare 25 ! | | PRE 4-5825 Get Fina Foam and clean those | FOR BETTER CLEANING TO, (eamine use Fina ba Good Dixie | ONE HUNTING MEMBERSHIP IN| HANNAH'S HUSBAND HECTOR | RAY CURNELL'S MKT. | 33 i WEDDING INVITATIONS 97.56. Suth Studio 18-W. Huron Printed napkinge - fast service. Wed. Children to Board 26 Wid, Household Goods 27 ansiere. Dist eae OF PE 41676. NTED: LARGE QU. _used cement blocks, WANTED USED BARBER CHAIR. 40655. Would like to basa a ivedronma and WILL BI'y & LIST rouR LAKE property. rehasers Wi ome Poke Commerce ae. R. F. rMcKINNEY UNivy 16706 — FARM WITH eae ings pot Fo = peewee ay , yi 3 e ist m Wed Toad Wanted to Rent 29 3 ADULTS WANT 4 ROOM APART- m 54510 Sz the day ~— | _colored. Pontiac Press Box No. 14. Typewciter Service 22A | SESRONSIBLE EMPLOYED COu- OPN ttl elt al ll TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MA- tas Skuon hove noe ehine repairing, Expert work. NITY OF PONTIAC. MAXI- General noting @ Sup uM PER MONTH 860. PHONE Co., 17 W . Lawre a —— | Fe APTER 6 P.M. TYPEWRITERS RENT 15 ula 3 aa 5 Ox a peek at Te hee —— as TO RENT 3 OR 4 after 4 om. Upholstering ____2®| RESPONSIBLE_WORK* OLSTER| ing couple with 3 chil- aie Cooley Lake Rd. EM : % cctlmates, dren desire 3. bedroom As CROUTERING unfurnished house on or before Sept. 30. Close in, Near school. Reasonable rent. FE 5-5519. RENTAL SERVICE Free to landlords. We have Gr | tenants 7 ADAMS your choice. i in toda REALTY PE 2-7 WANTED ce ) Aeqeot UNFUR- En lo! wht > ry ee 1 om aren a iv e school age _ child. PE elit. . Share Living Quarters 30 | SHARE HOUSE WITH A or two men. Partially |_ PE ¢1772 | GIRL — SHARE 2 BEDROOM apt, business § girl. rE _ 20460 ‘vet Sand 9 p.m. WANTED LADY TO MAKE HER | “home with congenial elderty lady. > home and some wages, COUPLE furnished. |YounG WibOW WANTS RE- tired Woman or one working _bights. 499 W. Huron td. . Transportation 31 come WITH soepoes WHOSE brs. are from to From Elizabeth Lake Ra. to infirmary. Call PE 2-0137. between 8:39 and _5 p.m. Ask for Robinson. Wtd. Contracts, _Mtgs. 32 32 eee Cash Waiting For good contrac’ call or see = Ti cmonaoch "presonaly for quick, A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-253. | CARH FOR CANE oe CONTRACTS, _oR 8s” liana % MORTGAGES on fede OR SUBURBAN from ‘% acre with 100 foot frontage. No CHAR or closing fees. B. D. CHARLES, Realtor re. BUY OR SELL THE Us TODAY AND "START PACK: ING YOUR BAG WHITE BROS. pasion prone ‘On sera or OR s-170 LISTINGS WANTED ential, a pa parent cite your cal ivine prompt, PAUL ). HAMMOND r Pas mM eves. etn ZoULD LIKE Sinha bay = IN- eome, Reply Press. STOP—LOOK! % TO 1% A 1 5 p.m. - { uit, FE SMALL, CLEAN APT. 3 Mele. = fer = = men. rE 3-708. 3060 rs and entrance ery nice. FE BA A trance. ‘A BA’ entrance on bus PE 4-2847. FPURN. . * 5-306. PURN. APT 7 ROOMS AND PRE ¥ bath, 291 FURNISHED SMALL. MODERN APT. + en $15 per week plus utilities. _ OR 3-9389. “eouple:” Me My ee X= GE 3 ROOM STEAM HEAT. “as oa, et turn Couple only. & ned. A 3-700. School oe gay wed round monet kitchenette Pa. oy Near MOD! WE rt e r property. Complete * J a tee, by a well ones H LTZ 1011 . iu" Maro a Ee “pone ~~ PEDDLING Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 2 wien pei A yes UPPEn ArT et garage ROOMS AND a Heat i habits. eas and washer, _Florence Ave. de bath Dullties torn, heats r ' 7 ’ : s i YOUR PROPERTY? | only. $100 per month. 131 Oneida. IT DOESN'T PAY _FE _3-1404 Our method of showing only to| 7 — Chas & Bh pb A b not qualified prospects saves you time bl os | e 7) money. “Don* worry with | _ tricity, he lookers.”’ Call ua now. We need | 3%) ROOMS, an A farms, lake residential prop- t yy seen after 6 erties. We handle,all details for aia = call. 3-0513 4905 White financing and closing. 4 LARGE STEAM pjemel To Buy—To Sell—To Trade ‘YOU BUY IT—WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN ALTY CO,, REALTORS Cosnereuce Real Estate Exchange | TO GET rae ats FOR YOUR iand contract Realtor Partridee Open Eves. ‘ti! 9: Sun. 104 ts the “bird” to see. 33 W Huron FE 2-0263 8 Tae Ti CTIONT wee ew Huron A XT DOOR TO BRANCH 2 you have the contract-we have | ilies T_OFF. ce Mone °F ut Act tert. Rent Apts. Furnished 33 _Clark, OP AAA AL el Le wer RAVE 1 y LApoe CLEAN He HOUBEREEP. } < room $200,000.00 ——— 2 ROOMS & BATH. “EMPLOYED | Oe cecum Parehase, eix 2 couple preferred. iet W. Howard. our cifents See me before you 2 ROOM MODERN, PRIVATE EN- sell, ASK FOR BOB MAHAN. | -To Sell-To Insure IT- WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN . REAITY CO. one rative Real Estate Pe ange mn Evenings and oat | 1075 WwW. Huron Pb ‘Roos | SELL YOUR SUsinEae PARM, income property Many buyers waiting wit, ready cash. Not brokers: no commission to pay us. | R. H. Morley Co. Write Pontiee | _Press Box 10 2 $$ ACT & SAVE $$ _ ACT-By calling ioe our. bid on your contracts AVE — Discount and time by scitins to a RE- LIABL® firm with a large num- | ead < rhb investors. Ask for WHITE BROS. | eee | YOU BU REAL | REALTORS $480 Dixie Hwy, Phone OR 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 OR _3-7118 or OR 3-208} CASH BUYERS | WAITING We suggest you see cthers. then call us, Let an experienced con- | tract man handle your sale Call, | FE 5-0975 of FE $0471 and ask | for Ted McCullough. IVAN Ww | SCHRAM * Tf no answer Ph FRE §-2564 1 Open Evenings and Sundays | 1191 Joslyn, Cor. 3rd REALTOR | | Co-operative Rea! Estate Exchange i IMMEDIATE CASH FOR YOUR — poahanal or equity tp your | ik L. . Templeton, Realtor 3338 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 44563 AY best and Babess offer of vaiue, quick cash settlement. Nicholie & Harger | Co. | W. Hurop 5-8189 | iy Wanted Real Etats 324. TO SELL YOUR HOME, SEE GEO. L. SCALES, REALTOR. | 86% N, Saginaw FE 23-5011 | ‘ TRADES — sane hog rE trance. lake front Close to Pon- OR_ 41375 2 AND 4 ROOM A APTS. _ 7 Clark. if ~ ROOMS ON LAKE OR ORION. Washing facilities and utilities _ furnished _ $15, week, _ MY 2-198! ROOMS. ADULTS ONLY. § “Sate FE 2-0566. ROOMS. CHRISTIAN COUPLE, aaa Pahl — and en- _trance. 118 Howard ROOMS IN TOWN G “GENTLE. _™men only FE 5-4438 7 ROOM FURNISHED A APT. < cou- ple, children welcome. 820 Bald- —*in. Ave. FE 5-6607 ROOMS CE CHILDREN WELC OR 32-4701 COME. 2 as Se PRIVATE ENTRANCE, baby welcome. FE 5-5668 2 ROOMS. FIRST FLOOR. PRI- sate entrance Close rE _tlac, _ 2 ROOMS, ADULTS OFF STREET _perking FE 4-0808 or FE 5-2714. | 2 ROOM 2 2 -R ROOMS. ¢ eae 2 MEN. BUS | _Une _9_ Orchard Lake ROOM, MODERN, only. 72 ashingto C APT. oS FURN. ae Heat & hot water. FE _ 2747 FE? 7 0154 after 6 3 “ROOM APT. NICELY FUR- Bished 2 reoms and bath, Private entrance. 77 Dwight, _after 6 2” ROOMS FURNISHED ADULTS only. Huron street. Near General _Hospital, _ MA 5-3180 or _PE 4-8642. 2 ROOMS _ FURNISHED | ADULTS only. Huron street Near General _Hospital, MA $-31 3180 ROOMS AND BATH. MAIN floor Private entrance. 2 men. 16 _Florence. 2 ROOMS WITH BA BATH. SHOWER and wane _farntohes Refer- ences Parkdale Rochester. i3 ‘ROOM roan APT. 338 W. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, NR. AU- burn Hts Private entrance Cou- No drinkers. PE 4-€532. 2 ROOM FURNISHED APT 2 “COUPLE jaoonec a a hild re ean $\8 ees xs wk, 231 Os- 7 ROOM BASEMENT A APT. PART- ly furnished Pvt, entrance. Rea- sonable rent FE 4-46.25. 13 ROOMS 1 UTILITIES INC WALK- to town Call FE : days and ask a heise _Sweeney or MY 21 32-1064 3 ROOMS AND BATH. PVT _ france. Adults only. PE 86-1222, J ROOMS & BATH. UTILITIES __furnished., ed. FE 4. 4-3232, . CLEAN. “available ‘olin. OR 3-9522. Sept. R UNF. COU- __ 24th. On Lincoln. J ROOMS FURN. o1 OR 44954. ra satisfy Be not fee! “obilentes €n appointment « our the ‘possih{tit of your Ww are COMPLETE CARE Bs 2 egy school . eRe Sane oF Ca iret Licensed fom AY CAR parm, EB FOR CHILD, FE Pee ee eet mmaLtona ss &. Co-operative Real’ Estate, Exchange L3 7 ROOM A APT. 15 = Onty. 3 7 RICELY FURNISHED R entrance., close tn. % 4 rooms bath ‘and ter. ARCADIA APTS. a spy —_— bath. Adults only. “K. 'G. "HEMPSTEAD = E sores 4 UPLE. 3 irl 7. B. Call PE ADroet “Ent. bey and 5:30 p.m. DEI-RIO APTS. Private bath S| powees TED APTS. NEW RANCH living room. bedroom, din- kitchen, on lake and . 50-14 miles west of Pon- MU_ 44295 or EM _ 3-945 LARGE PLEASANT 3 ROOMS. Dining nook and bath. __Near_ Airport. | Aaah ORS +1943, LOWER_3 ROOM APAR RTMENT. bear GMC Truck. ta My ors ira heat sae water. 290 Fish- MODERN a om OOM APT country Asner Rochester change an average potent a ot cash rr a pests 5 ROOM ant, Near Gyivan Lake. Utilities furn. For. information call OR 3-1706 or OR 3-7722 Vigdacbael MODERN APT. 2 BED- water, re- Pigeraier * electric yard, garage «arden tance to Pontiac, Deer factories Good an bedroom. | available imm ; oe Te FE after’ 6, "rE 1172, Rent Houses Furnished 35 2 bat Soap | LAKE FRONT. Stainless steel sink & dishwasher. Thermostat contro] Tr / & month payable in advance, Oct. Ast one 2 BEDROOM _— ORION, WA- terfront 2ist. Automatic on heat, Chitl- dren welcome, but no a $80 ® mon. yr. round, State occupe- tion and age of children, Pontia _Press Box 62. 2 ROOMS. MODERN. ba heat - teellen uae 1555 Witlls ry En 3333 mr Lake Rd. rw $00 A month 2 months tn advance, 4500 Joslyn Rd. «BI BEDROOM HOME COMPLETE- ly modern, West side. References reouired, FE Middl va tons S| oo a ie ae =“ e. Lake. FE 47041. ¢°. 304 | Orchard Lk. na “ 5~REDROOM NE LA Practically new. ge ke pla cS Must seh — veciated. Ist to. ou Ist. aise belt ne Middiede! Ra. mile north of Long Lak . e 1, FE 2-562. ts ROOMS it In . schools and Call OAs. 8-2"61 AVAILABLE oe *S JUNE 18. Nicely furnished . bedroom house. utomatic ho’ water shower. 16 . $20 weekly, Bade Pome completely Furnished INTTIA! peters ipod @ month. ment, + THE PONTIAC PRESS : MONDAY, SuPTRAIRER 19. 1058 Rent Houses Furnished 35 For Rent Miscellaneous 42 42|__ For Sale Houses __43/SLICE OF HAM : or Sale Hoviees. _ a8 For Sele Howe a "For Sele ule Houses 43| For Sale Houses 43." HOUSE FOR RENT ONE Way | | a | N FURNISHED =o ate, THERE I GATEWAYS to TRIPP a ADAMS ig gre ». &, Hownee Dinie Complete bath ae seas 5 ta aha ‘orrers _*, HAPPINESS | ute hot alan xy = - ‘or Sale Houses ' oe : i : family: Sine 26x38, C K | = E H : | Near St. Jose y st Hospital OU ge Seminole Hills 12" inch “bincks Ont Oe NZ] ROCHESTER ‘ el Le e = cam home te | Youll uke thle sturdy canitrectes | An an — ‘Wceet Garage. pag Utell — Tak eeaeekieds | : i: good meet = base i 2 “Sadeesne” with sliding closet | x soe eae “| $8,500, — : > fenced for children’s salety. Car- : —— ni 1068. micely lan doors, fully insulated K foot | kitchen | danesaber! VACANT” G06 HOUR Goo KRAL Neo ld reap eiG . re Secs "aren: noe qiussines | ae Nbeonoely ~~ oe an ‘ 2-2842. Street uapsetinn “oe I gens i Ranch—Joslyn Rd. lms and screen gtanacabe | HA heat. 2 car garage. BUILD NOW — — ed for recreation 3 bed oa rane eavie brick aS pe | AD bran INSIDE | Ap excelieot family home, Jakes pent for 00.300. $750 DOWN ee ns ee ode Cherokee Road a, ae Lie Cc “PANGUS™ "1919 M MIS NEW SMALL HOTSE 4 heat. bus line. near 2 e Also 2 bed Z —o $140 All available Lovel . : ONION 3 : and refrigerator full ba ma Ea set ad sn. nished, 4 COBBLE STONE be taht 11760 2 mone , DON LSON PARK % bedroom hou ~~ ba = per month. Will PE a-2600 j GARDEN SPOT “gra trees, shade trees and oe | pl gérden oil of this . white ane j@ TOOmMs com pie- ‘INCLUDING TAXES and INSURANCE mented by ace. basem hot air heat. Cen- 0 FOOT LOTS traliy loe south of Rochester, LAKE PRIVILEGES this home is wkieal for retired 2 LARGE BEDDOOMS couple. $10,000, . TILE BA : STAIRWAY TO ATTIC W A PORCED AIR OIL HEAT $2 GAL. ELEC. HOT WATER 915 Baldwin summation 46203 ALUMINUM WINDOWS =a MANY OTHER FINE TURES Established tn 1916 DOWN—Neariy iacre ——— mile worth of city FURNISHED MODEL P T DAILY 5-7 P.M. 4- — ideat tor Hand iendy man, to'im:| SUNDAY 2-5 P.M: INCOME OR PRIVATE HOME— LOCATED AT’ oe eS a tr. = _5574 CLEARY heat ‘ie wea ney Si otis? Ht “tmerel discount fee cash. 2 blocks .east of the ss. ford Drivetn Theate: block off Willams tans Ra. Watch for open _signa. INCOME —West side. Corer loca Bateman & Kampsen oe fee S-rms. be ag fenced yard Full basement sto.| Realtors FE 4-0528 reed = i $7,450 Down of only $800. plus INCOME — ‘ WE NEED LISTINGS “GILES REALTY CO. 93 W. Huron pitt ede ADAMS) ROAD Lovely 4 room ranch with breere- ‘AIRPORT ‘AREA 6 rooms with 2 bedrooms down and one up — = "RIDGEWAY ; REALTOR 975 Baldwin corner, $10 100 M WRIGHT, ‘Realtor FE 5-0441 Br gm pipe teres |laoe on Of} heat, cit ter. sewer churches, bus and stores, $6060 $1000 own, W. COLGATE 8ST. 4 rms. bath utility’ room and floor — Near to eh treme Very $6600 $1300 Rose MeLarty,. PE 2-2162 or wv FE 82078. CLARK : Fi visa pela Pull, price yo fod ‘with per month = Vyelewen! CLARE res ESTATE 12 W. Huron Open Eves. Co-operative Real. Estate EF: — MY renee ON INCOME —— — discount, 103 WN. MODERN HOUSING 6 room brick Lowell St. Imme- — Doasession. $10500 with ROY KNAUF, Realtor. 26% W. Huron OA 8.3330, FE 2-7421 DONELSON PA BUNGALOW - BALE A home th n reea, flowers and shrubs, Prefers income prop erty | rade, FOUR BEDROOM ROME NEAR — MIKES. $7,050 acrifice price. Ideal | ree Gaiholic family, Good | | conditien inside and out with | | large tot. Bame frult. etal Sell or trade on farm | DANDY BUNGALOW $6,900 WITH $1850 DOWN | Walking distance to Fisher Body | Neat and attractive 2 bedroom | home with basement, oak floors, | giassed-in porch, nice bath and | to trade on | new garage. Prefer 3 bedroom home. BEAUTIFUL LAKE one home with basement, level, two fireplaces, bat window sills, gas heat, marble and exceptionally large living ™m with entire glass w the lake. Other outstanding sd intments BRICK TERRACE TERM : 5 were ie ace t4 live | ve exceptionally large rooms | with @ dandy besement. Good condit A olace to live end + save money. bade! Pee’ gro g faaee OW LE OR Aue | plastered Walls, | om terme or take contract or wmall bome trade. : | WE SELL —~ we TRADE * | DORRIS fe SON |g 2 W. erative Reel ‘Fete tate + Exchane TORS wee Pa eis 300, $12,500, $2, coo down, Lake Privileges— 1b Acres , Mederg 8 room ranch. built 1062. M Liv room, 15523, bietaslnctege watts itehen erm a ' range & oven. Master bed- room 12518. O41 furuace, alu- minum storms & screens: attached l‘e Gar garage $14,000, terms Clarkston 2 story frame duplex, §& reom & beth @ one 6 room & bath. Good income Price only $15,000 Seminole Hills 7 room home im ideal loce- tion. Features include vesti- Gessemun e Reel Estate Exchange poe fireplace, —— : F FE 2 0263 . on ist ie peng ooee 8 ee ee, | | NET DOOR TO BRANCH beth . Mew ell furaece a POST OFFICE sien reereation room 08E FOR SALE BY NER = enrages. . fenced rear ie ee Pontiag 4 2 —_ — = ee wel vaaaeeae gluminum siding. Bloomfield Highlands vaca cmeGiene patos a ‘tase. tom 8 7 reom bi iy ON Sine tine cedar pets | ak ad, Meee ato, O8 |. sunroom = Ww .. peo8, ° ms PR 9486s wake. drooms, large ToHavE OMY ae ; een <= apd 1% beths on 4. Hur ist floor; and r ag won't ‘ast tong, of 2 bedrooms 1 eterford area. bath. Carpeting and ‘bitnds| ¢ room — = Lg a Sunroom over- locating. ie te gy Os looks beautifull landeceped jccom houses in Waterford. Late law en eve fresus andevarious arvee | GEO, MARBLE, Realtor Fae eltached Pull, bese- | 081 Andersonville Rd Watertord ment and floor. rkvEL Like — Vousuatiy clever in des with loot eo & vate ake is this once in o ie - Roy Annett'Inc. REALTORS pews FEderal 31103 % = 2 and Sunda Open Lee VIEW bere INC, en A terms. 663 erson, i a. LARGE HOME val high coq Ohy ho large roome. bedrooms, . Newly panated. Can cman into . Large lot. $0,000, terms. $1,000 down. mode bed. room low. Clarksten schoo! om aot jear Dixie Hwy Lake Lea! Me NT - PONTIAC REALTY 137_ Baldwin __ FE +0718 RIGHT YOUR FAMILY WILL LIKE THIS Friendly north side heme, ott | Oakland Ave dear Wisner and | | Ulneoln Jr High Schoo! Well ar- | ranged § 3 maculate throughout, | Pull basement. electric wall heat. gilassed-in perch, landsca: lot Garden spot. Sold complete with | electric stove and dryer. Offered at $7,050. $1,600 down THE KIDS WILL LOVE IT To Buy--To Sell_To Trade YOU BUY IT-WE'LL INSURE IT MAHAN LTY CO,, REALTORS home = — td place ond will | opens Lo = CRAWFORD" D 5% Ww. ae “ Eu » iv pred we To R Rk TO tae: in the “Bird” to See. Walter G green MANOR ang” fut den BRAYTON PLAINS J. fu L: f ¢ right sine ba furniture. 21 h OW TV. pores for your retrigerator and stove. Re- Cicone either 3 or. 4 bedroom’ cope aaa sna bene | Sern * with rod ps near carpeted. _ —— ere i v + i fon ee Ee Tepe a » car @ ac) oad an center $0,000 2.800. down month, 2931 ebalt St. OR 3-1856, By | eunee ee: Incieding tats ce cay B FOR SALE $4,900 AS 18 ep tale BY OWNER: 3 2, y BEDROOM BRICK, Call after ¢ Call after Sse ae , tanddiebeti toon — ann Insurance bi) erent) ¢ RENAL OTHE R rts S: NEW SHOPPING ‘AL BUY. ONLY | sock Easy terms, P W. Dinnan 66 W Huron St avaow ; GARDENS, } BEDROOMS, CENTER WITHIN Ce ee WALKING DISTANCE | _aea tun bath PE 330860 venir ime) “ae | PINE LAKE Ta at trent | rng s, org, Wt, oe) ar pT Ea eashee. 2c te, terest | SQUARE LAKE AND | Sceresgtmters $,oceres. 16 ea ae aed ben cee | MADDLEBELT ROADS | St ee en en pear eerene . ae greed de ae rereew ene | NT Orth wood 15M CLARKSTON AREA. 3 poe . UPPER LONG pegpae pale tbl aro Utility Phone “FEDERAL +4101 2 TAKE FRONT . floors, Comacken | on Two bedrooms, living room ‘als bus at door. Only 7 mijes from Stouts with 2 pieture. windows. one over- Very socenatty ced — = treme toby sad betes at tents snes. altel aia B B ced kiteked “osromte utile bath, ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES. est uys all hardwood floors. large | ree. Nice corner location, 2 bedrooms, room, with firepli pening aeegs living room, combined kiteh- 7 out to lake level. Setve bath Today West Side Conveniently eng bed- room home with fail” banse- ment, tier arse Plows water heater, stor acreens od Bouse to fully tneulated, r very comfortable home. Priced to sell at $11,000, with terme, ¢ North Side Good substantial older — conveniently located to schools cad dactery: 5: 3 on bedrooms, oak floors, plas- tered walls = full base- ment with gee fur- nace Only sian Pi Troy Township Only $500 down moves you petro oI 3 bedroom home east of Pontiac, with “large family style kitchen, part bath. ated on 3. cies oats lots. Hurry on this Sashabaw Plains Only #7150 down moves you. tnto thi home ed to sel] at Oxford Area $7,000 for this 3 bed- me, close to schools Full bath, one car garage Fully tneulated and aluminum #torms end acreens Edw: M. Stout, Realtor 7 Es Saginaw St. Ph. ___ Open Eves. Till 8: fo = —— HOME IN perfect condi- "down payment. NOTHING DOWN build BY OWNER, Huron ~ Clarkston Area - rooms, Priced rea- nore) of Rochester fart bath over Consider hous. inches fo East Side 3. bedroo modern ‘hom At tached carers. Onie $3.050 with $1609 do. West Side Tn. aulet jocaten, ‘ ib rooms Bénotiful oak ment, | ¢ar ¢arage Oni Bigs REA TY. 4 room acre _ equity, &. bath. iM an OR Reta unfintabed but Hvable | . dows, combination aluminum storms and screens, front pore! pdt oat smal) ec! = ed right at $27.00 with . SYLVAN REALTY 2343 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 86-0418 Co-operative 1 Real Estate } FOR MR. / HANDYMA Three on tes! - Rental, $135 oy on with wn. L Sx Broker. tm UNION LAKE $i,- rE 37 BEDROOM house, lower level living room, _ sute. neat, fiberglass awnings, aluminum storms. 224 garage, lake vilege: $21,000 terms... EM 13. cklan, iwatt 3 3 BE aoe BRICK, Completely modern, Lake privi- leges $30 monthiy payments, Will 4+-TL31 after consider trade. 4. UNFINISHED 3 BEDROOM house. Full basement, OR_ 3-776 BY OWNER: 2 BEDROOM HOME | _ went of | Pontiac. $16,300. PE 5-6362, 7 Room HOUSE NEAR FISHER | Body, $500 down. FE 4-118 '3 BEDROOM HOME, MODERN. | __For_ appointment call | FE 2-216 LOT ®x110, SMALL BUILDING | _Owner. FE aAi4.- Elizabeth Lake Estates NEAR WATERFORD HIGH BRICK —living room 11%x22, nat- expansion @ for tw omore. peting, full basement, with | heat, corner lot 110x150 ft. Owner will our home, present o™ or land contract as trade Near St. Michael’s 3 bedrooms, separate eat room, ‘ large kitchen, gre beat, i's car garege. Paved st handie., fenedane gesthoranadl Lake Privileges Neat 2 bedroom hore Living | room {4x18 with off heat Large | lot Dattient ay is pea Galloway Lake -SCHRAM | se: FES-SO91 of FE 5-9471 O90 | If no asoe.r, Ph. FE §-2566- |: — Everiings and ye $2,350 will |: Family home ~ a 2-story brick, custom-built in 1928 All tp A-I conéition and plenty of extrqs. was-fired heat, 2 car ea- rage Located on a beauty 60’ shaded and land acpaed tet The , Price at rite~see it today Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W Lawrence St. Open Evenings FE 65-8161 or FE 42068 ¥ BY OWNER COZY WHITE FRAME bungalow. her: side. With 3 ve Ps rooms. Puli basement, Pe ~ Bloomfield Township | OPEN DAILY ‘EMBREE & GREGG had OR La Birmingham “ocation. Well kept up home, very close to main business district, Idéal of- fice or elimie Call for additional information. car garage. Call today John: K. Irwin an roont8 Lieder FE name A HOME OF YOUR OWN Wrst aaa - wars Trul neat . e frame jw out pong, hag sod cat vet rooms, tus) tot, utility. double rooma, ; a 700, termes trade r se in town with ent, Sg te a vo BE wom yt oom e100 fe tot. Patrly $11,500 with’ terms. WE BUY LAND COWTRACTS NICHOLIE}) AND HARGER 60... 33_W_ Huron &t. _ $500 DOWN Starter home, close to plants Compietaly finished outgide. TRA E Sharp 2 bedroom bungalow. for a bome near Fisher's bol weet store ith lv RT VALUET, Re Realtor 345 aes FE 56-0603 | Co-operative } Real? Estate Exchange NEW BRICK RANCH HOMES ar Sew homme value 14 Roman brick exterior rich wood 2 car port & Gas furnace, Oak floora and, Dpiastered walls, 150 with lake privileges, Well . po ae = > gy pn an . e _ will steer Bh lot of your choice, DONELSON PARK Like new, 3 bedroom bun- alow, 26 = rion, Clon ls eety en, tiled. bath, utility room, and attached ofl heat. % acre ) dl and rk prifileges to elson sit Geneatet Schools and Huron Bus # Price $13, = forma. Prompt possession CRESCENT LAKE Don't fat] to see this most stone bunesiow. ye estes poh +g Lake — rooma leges. Pres $12,000, JOnN KINZLER 70 W. Muron sizeet "hye 1111 Jos Cor, trd. 1 Comparative Real Eatate | Co-aperstive me el ae ite ) ‘ ae : ee 5 3 BEDROOM RANCH ON WILLIAMS LK. RD. BY OWNER, FULL WALK- OIL . OTTER HILLS OVERLOOEING SE ADTIFUL OTTER LAKE Directions; 2 * north of Or ehard Lake Dees cass Lake Rd. to Winderoft » PARCELL'S CIRCLE bt Rit SluaretEsistnd | Kew 3 om brick ranch OPEN 1-5 SUNDAY oe one Ld © mta. Saierad erates’ "P| GS Rae le amet 1, all sports on ft NEERIEMER Byivar . 000». Bh now onc y SEE fet or me ane, ean, 1% wry 7 BEDROOMS. POLE attached gepees. oe e.g einer fine Ay sites epemenle & side side finished. Nough ‘wiring. chy chim- — > : aa ney, ent Pa $oeei ; $22,000 to $25,000 Stove Fe staan OP “Oe S 4i 2 HOUSES ¢ AND 7 ROOMS FUR- VAN nished me Small down vay- . _ mem. PE 4-360 We WILL BUILD ON YOUR LOT REALTY Cost as beans su0 sown, #45 2383 Orchard Lake Ra. FR S-4018 mo. See our model. For eddt Co-operative Réal Estate Exchange Red Horse}. ss pce os O) GPs ove Pees eae Pe Flim | Gera cecias Sra ~ AUTUMN tes lote ‘ce yeurhome oe aes caters THECMATM. ELWOOD * appearance of ae = Mes ory bom, so well 8143 Case- Lake Rd. built by the @ on iat oo ft jot with privilegs. Mes 2 bedrooma, ‘ing room, pm closet =a nase cae: This le « Very buy at 610. ma STYLE «< Gace ue, gommaree Las and Attractive 2 bedroom, frame perme, ee icy OE et Bly for edly thitee on renssnsbie Beautiful Lake Front Home a ge pg yw sae am Baer wet ee | RIDGEWAY Exceltentiy inndvceped Wot. Terms. | 43a Main OL Tat Roch = Area tins 4g A} "keke er 1335600 $ rooms and be bemt,, sereened front poreh, a iaened sae ee a SYLVAN. REALTY eeagcrctet kate Bt PE eet $550 DOWN Project of 68 Homes Near Fisher Body Plant Off Montcalm St. Mod ot corner of pies school 2 bedroom, studio cefiing. ae heat, trimmed out callie sod oop ihe Be /SYLVAN- REALTY CO, MA Realtor ~ * Fay $* For Sale Houses 43° ’ i dition. mercially soned In | 500. Terms SUBURBAN ACRES. WEST . & rooms. full bath .on ist floor end part. bath on Basememt. furnace Shady yard. lia Terms. water -beater car garage, $12,50° OPEN 2 to 6 P.M. $950 DOWN New 2 bedroom modern homes at White Lake Large living room winder xeellent beth, of] forced air fur- $7900. Drive out Se te Watch fos open | Hit C. HAYDEN, Realtor FE 6-0641 Ji 86 EK. Wekon. Bivd Open _Eves KNUDSEN Cedar Island Lake é _ to oped the fal! 4 2 3 bat ws BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS $ mm | REDROOM HOME. 2 CAR GA. | 2 blocks from school. $13,- | cx | { — LS hall basement oo aftr $ pm my Middle, | i FE 8-0000 asking price of $1° 900 Solid brick eonstruction, plastered walls. o#k floors, beautiful fireplace pew carpeting. 3 large bedrooms, ful! basement. recreation room. 2'y far garage Large 160x200 ft lot seaped to perfection Seeing his home is ta want tt. The casi | est of terms By appointment oniy please. FAMILY ‘ Hére ip your chance ‘o tnvest only $2000 and get better than average return for your tnvest- ment. One unit furnished, auto oil heat, jarge corner jot Oniv @ years old Full price 60 900 See tt today. ; BEDROOM On 8 Jesse \r Piastered walls large room4, basement. gas heat Weili shaded jot giessed-in front poreh The full price is oniy 0.300 with terms ! Russell Young 412 W Huron Bi ,o REALTOR FE ¢ 46528 pen Eves ti] © Sun PE ¢-9461) Johnson FOR BEITER HOMES CAN'T BE BEAT Por the price, you'll have to look @ long Wars to duplicate this 1! room income Ww a 4 room end m apt up bringing tm $125 per month sides owner 5 @ room apt Large 2 story ga- rage. jot feet. om blacktop street. Hurry on this for only , $2.00 down. H yt van MANOR Beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch - home ‘vit, _— hed sareer new ater softene and . | prosimately 2 «rolline = acres ; West Side : VACANT For ee Mae ee | Mickories, large end small pines Close to High School 2 story And ready to move into ¢ room —Ca s for Leads! oak woods, Owner re frame & room | modern home with no) hassed | in offer MI 61 = : F , Enclosed i peren. “pesement. | and screened. in Neer! Roger B. Henry Inc. |g “aca eg. west SUBURBAN . for quick sale. Call us | pereet: close to pes nice, Stl Main Bt. Rochester _ Myers Real Estate. FE 4- f 3 — ones na oo Se an Frater ome only ORs 14-0111 or OL 1-012) — ia ; .. | | WEST SIDE—CLOSE IN 7 aie H, KNUDSEN | svenmnes anes 6 00 cau ae Metne | FOF! Sale Lots 46, (RSE mp Acreage ‘3 Ponte mal TOR scale cial ass | BY OWNER. HIGH CORNER UOT | Cnet aid sare perseis—cneh | Bf FE Pi fins | | OFFICE OPEN 04 i tate Restricted ae fo war paliding bey ot \ JOHNSON, Realtor | 23 _ equa, get ctr "3 mules wet = eaitor ¢ ° : | ! NOUN, © Lors jii0 EACH. 47 DOWN GR | . : | 1704S. Telegraph Rd. | $1300 for al) FR ¢-0604._ : , r are ee "FINE RESIDENTIAL LOT NEAR CARL W. BIRD, Realtor i FE 4-2533 dowstown, cated ot 160, Whitie. | 400 Community Netuonal Bae Pig, ag ——SErp CeUCDEL | i ri Call E 3 Off Baldwin NEAR GENERAL | Sota otter ¢om. Maal aij _ seve. FE CL ‘J hes home HOSPITAL Yor a oR Vag Egy ___ For Sale Farms 48 . ‘Five rooms, off heat, alum! =| To settie » n estate, 3 bedrooms, | yt tees. lake priv num storms and screens | 2% baths, off heat garage $11 - | _— . os FARMS AND ACREAG ' Vs a 950 500. Write Box #9, Pontinc Press MACEDAY LAKE ‘can "putiedge, OR F111 "ye 4-003 | Tenth theleding Wares And | SEVERAL GOOD MODERN 6 TO 10 60 foot lake frontage on high , 250 ACRES i fF insurance room houses. Easy terms PW hill overlooking jake One of the i . | oan fe « Ww uron most scenic gpots om the lake | a — eG P Colonia! | TERRACE “Ze ROSBHIRE CURT | Priced for quick sale at 84.500 | caer aac tue tees FR _oete | rolling with small stream, 7 A fa home con | NEW CUSTOM BUILT 2 BED. iF C W od C | farm home, also smaij tenant tifine ot 7. oo wre wee room ranch home Ges 5 Oo ALO. | house, large barn and full room be ed ie Foam 3 bathe | Comer Willems Lake Rad & M50 | ae yy HER REAL ESTATE 4 v room WwW re | kitchen, 4 ome oad Clerk ico aren wit take Con: fot xmer le) lee On ¢) car ga- i 3 "i : Here is ie: * lovely’ lot 100x130 feet on Nan - oc people have moved out of town and can have immediate possession Will take offer, ap- | pointment enly. | ONE OF OUR VERY REST values ie thie especally ap- | posting bungalow The 2 | J | | | | screened h. automatic gas water heat- er Owner has bought lterg- er home and is, offering this a! a low $7,600. You a rent as cute ey home for less than $75 But you can buy for $60 BRICK CONSTRUCTION hard to find ag any price but we have « bungalow | at 88.850 with $1,859 down { Hardwood ‘floora plastered i painted walls “12822 Hring | room @fe scatce in this price range toc Ful! base ment Wired fer eiectnic stove Statred sttie Really i it is value plus See it «oon { $1 500 DOWN - and moderate | payments Wilh buy" this ! abarp 2-bedroom bungalcw with stairway te @xpansion attic Painted walle oak fNoors Half-besement has wonderful new heating plant and complete laundry facsi! Hes Garage with overhead door ‘sg acre site im good suburban area. Schoo! bis at door Full price 87.950 BYLVAN CITY —overlooting the sandy beach with beat “and bathing privileges just your ome bi] with attached Tastefully decorated. § vard Completely Marnished if you wish -At only 811.2700 with terms A BETTER BRICK HOME for the discrim inating fam- ily Man. 2 ‘iving room, full reom 1 bedroom and th on first fioor levely bedrooms with in closets and er bath | up. Grand basement. par- i titiened for piay Hot wa- i ter ets ol fired (Timken) | stool basement dear i garage Tye landscaping is } excepti The lot ts extra | large Easyétrms RAY ONEIL. 14 WwW. Hu Op FE +7103. or Realtor eon. 0-8 FE poe | For Sale Lake Prop. — , | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange | a | , Lapig'sad RANCH BUNGALOW, | _ from nice sandy beach. poche & screens, auto, ol] furp | Penge Lae Cayo — to sell place fom, been looking — ¢2'950 3 450 f for Dg a BD ae "JONES REAL, ESTATE ~ * and select oak tadees No worrtes; 2_W. Huron _Ph._ FE _4-3505 ee ees space ‘this | MODERN 9 BEDROOM OUSE | ._ aod there's plenty of | mn. Near highway, Lake priv. ‘ for . This home ts) fleres 16 mi west of ited on «@ lot with a Bus service Newly secorated: He back yard, Yours for only! New Auto. furnace & hot water me. | heater, EM 3.3324. - : 3 LOTS. {f ON CANAL WITH Ac. cess to @ 2 facing same " , lot. Beautiful surroundings and * ~ + ‘coded location. $2,600 for , > WILLIS M BREWER i arke FE 4-511 EM 3-4a08 uM “COTTAGE OVER | Ciarketon. aie or * She eotpee 4, * 96% j OL, “For Sale Lake Prop. my POE et” KE FRONT LOT, WILL SACRI- | a cash. FE 40363. N SEY- | fice for cash LARGE | LAKE LOTS ON _mour & Lake Oa _6-2865 PRIVATE L AKE Rose Township. NE corner of Rose Center Road and Fish Lake Rd. 66 acres, small deep fed excellent fishing lake wood Kk ¢ast side of $20,000. terms Lae 2 ao? FE. site a . * svenings Pe satis TAKE YOUR PICK! Your choice of any 15 lots on puturesque take pear Clarkston Highly restricted for your protec- tion Convenient to shopping and geod schools Something just « ht fe bit different for vou, who de- sire lakefront property. Any jot ean be bought with only 25 per cent down Come in end takes your choice! Edw. M. Stout, TT N poe, Street Oper’ eve ‘til TROCKE OFFERS riviieges 2 bedrooms ‘, ear garage, hot ai: This won't Migh (uke. Realtor rm FE $0145 Long Lake full bath furnace énly Unton Lake privileges 2 only Led Terms Adjoining f! aevatla WAR NTON LAKE EM 3-4671 SCOTT LAKE For smig lakefront jot 4&3 frontage 300 ft deep. Cash terms FP. J Owens OR. 3- ft or Broker 1450 Suburban Property. _ ASA ROCHESTER INVESTMENT 2 Mouses Mod ero Liveable Live ip one and rent one Both for e000 es HOMESITES JUDSON. PARK Located . on sarnegey - . Adoring Planned ; community t R ANK. SHE PARD 1-75)1 Rochester | Lake Orton northwest of Pontiac planted for wanes Lot as low as 61.200 20 down Walter-Clarkston.Orion Acres Mere are some beautiful parcels, Some wood Som a paved road All moderately re stricted Priced ‘as low as § with $175 down Indian Woods Sub. We now have a few ee in this beautiful subdivision ahiy strieted for better hee front. Canal front and lake priv: leged tots As low as $2,900 cash Waterford-Drayton 100<150 ft lot Moderate}, stricted A nice location just north ef Drayton Plains As low $635 with $65 down Stevens Farms Ali tot new area Moderately for better living, Net many left As jow as $550 with $55 down Dunn Farms 1OGK1T@ ft. sites Well restricted ~Located appres 4° mi north Pontiac tty limits Seme wood ed Going fest see them tates ow as $875 with $8 down INC. 4206 iste Mw OR 4.2361 3406 Drayton ries Open Sunda Pontiac Lake Rd. FE 2-0207 Lapeer Rd or M24 FE 5-029! / For Sale Acreage HARTLAND AREA 200 ACRES OF | good land. good fences and other out buildings 4 bed- room modern home. oak floors and trim. e bargain at $250 an acte.. per cent down contract on balance Hichland area, 200 acres. subdivision land frontage. bedroo: ‘home in good conditsen, shade. Must be sold at the ee low price of $225 an acre. good dow: J. F STEVENS, BROKER *. 112 8. CENTER 8T HIGHLAND, MICHIGAN MILFORD MU 46571. as at least 100 ft. wide in a re«tricted = of road e lots of | geen recere ae oe ne | 4286 Mixie Hey. OR | f 30 Acres—$2; 000 Down suring | 16 Acres—$10,500° & — oe basement. ike age 0 CALIBRE _EM PICKUP TRUCK — MOTORCY- _ Saginaw $79 1? 4s CHEVY GOOD CONDITION a BLACK BOY'S CLOTHING GIRLS’ T Sree IN OAKLAND COUNTY , $400 ‘to $1,500 _ modern homes. homes not modern unfinished homes. garage homes. NATIONAL BUILDING PONTIAC FE 44120 1 On 2. On 3. On 4 On 200 Swaps 55 0 OR 31355, AND 8OME ASH ‘FOR _ieep or pick-uo. P Pr MA A_5-0786. PAIR canis AND cages Sale or swap PE 64-2481. EQUITY IN LAKE COTTAGE FOR pickup or panel & and some cash. Inquire Jims 66 Service ren 6 miles N of Clarkston on 17.000 actual miles. Will Lake lot, trade. small contract or un- jouse. DEER RIFLE. for 12 gauge egeal¢ es auloma shotgun or _3-2200. cle. FE 3-962. 30 8 etapa wE Garr aves 2131 | a fer one Not over LOANS $20 TO $500 | "Hane rOUrtaate sora HOUSEHOLD oe” main rere FINANCE CORP, _ | -S_feeraeh ‘Open ves, OF PONTIAC ioe HOUSETRAILER: WILL 1% ©_Saginew Bt. PE 4-0535 ay yout eauity AIDE home, or ' SWAP E pane = ‘3s FORD’ CUS- tom tine +2871, tor housetrailer, EM WIL. | So RADE, USEL USED CARS FOR = peas recall will pty these articles as acted Phere Brena iaraitog SALES oid trade for mayer retrig of equal value, FE 4-682: sto kis IN. mAveAG—2 GAS RANGE, good -— Exchange for electric range of same value 86-0723. __For Sale Clothing — =e. Raped $35 _ 56 $25. & nee Both sive 14 ING IN GOOD CON- Size 8 to 12 PE 5-237! TAN AND BROWN COAT, size 12, $10. FE +6376 Mayfair sas ditten. GREEN STORM COAT ke new. Also jacket, size 14 $0 Pe > 3883 | MEN'S SUIT, SIZE 3 . s YT. LaDY's; sit size 14 FE 5-6305 USE Roh EASY PAYMENT LAY-A-WAY PLAN We vere sell, trade anything. Come out and look around 2 acres of free parking » east of Auburn We Give Hoidens Red Stamps. ALMOST NEW GAS STOVE. VAL- | uabie nee love seat and chair to) =homatch love seat. OR 3-689) APT SIZE ELECTRIC STOVE) ' BEDROOM: SET. CEDAR CHEST, | 202 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. PE 2°9206 — NS $25. TO $500 BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE 4_W Lawrence St _ 35,000 Families Recommend Buckner’ Ss | Four 14 ient offices in Pontiac. area, where you can quickly bor- row up to $500 on small ence a month payments You eft full amount no deductions Buckner Conven- cost: OF BUC THAN You Pe one SERS !3 LESS THINK Get needed cash quickir from Ruckners friendly oan company. Buckner - Finance Co. Offices are located: Pont! ac Ind Floor National Bidg PARTRIDGE | Drestoa Piains, $412 Dixie Hwy Walled Lake. 230 Barnston ipext to Bank) Utica 45442 Van Dyke | One block North across free Bank LOANS Extr4’Fast Service You can borrow €20-950 autckl+ on rniture signature, car or se made without colareers for worthehile . to 20 months to renay "HOUSEHOLD FINANCE 73 W_ Muro pn 9-9 Corporation of Pontiat . Phone FE 5- “08 or Fs. 7292 uy South Secinew St Kav Bide Cooperative Real Es greene and FF oor Phone FEdera} 4.0535 20°. “DISCOUNT. I a for Since naeee | L IKE A REAL CAR © and fot, buyer — ‘BARGAIN? Lots of 'em in the Want ‘Ads! dasha te! ' i and Nore refrigerator, 835 each OR 3-680 mahogany drop 'eaf table, occas. chair pair lamps treadle sewing machine, a size washer. 2830 | Voorheis BED, CHEST, VANITY, SPRING and mattress Like new. $75 cash. 7281 “BONK BEDS COMPLETE $35. orl space heater $25 Washer Refrigerator $25. FE 5-2766. _— _ bor! TLE GAS $20 1955. aon ASHER 5101 REYMONT | BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHER. Bolt Pty style. Excellent cond. $40. MI 40142 $4 Sale Household Goods 87s DRAPES, osmoeee. CHAIR, throw rugs. de inch motel one every new ble =e mon ~~ * One of America’ brands, ccvetcted & $285) «value, Michigan Fluorescent. W3 Or- _chard Lake Ave ee SALE: GUARANTEED RE- frigerators. =... $30.95 Wringer w. rs . $30.06 er w iL eeoee r) acuum cleaners $ 7.0 Roy's, 96 Oakiand | FRIG AIRE REPRIG. PERFECT tion, Reaonable FE 4-8137_| 6 PT PRIGIDAIRE REFRIGER- In cond, $65. EM ator g00d ; 33930, 0 _ ee | GAS COREL BED & dresser, 9 oe room suite Ley ~— roen) Rd. Keego Har- | | | } 195) PANEL TRUCK LIKE NEW — ue bike "ToRcK ecu FR. WESTINOHOURE “RE. |, irteereiet 4 Bell or | in | |. | | FE 5-024) et | | | | Teneo Seman WASHER, good condition, $70 MA_6-3900 soovn® VACUOM. LiKE NEW. $4 ba |G IRONER CIKE NEW CHEAP 3585 B. Cass Lake Ra _FE 21196. LIVING SOFA 4 AND match ebair iter ‘a us excell ition. MI 6-2317. ¢ OW #1 HEATER WITH new. FE 65-3450 ROOM SUTTE. 3 TABLES _# 1 table lamp FE 5-9038 ¢ BURNER COOKING STOVE. _#es, PE 42730 LARGE - NORGE CIRC CIRCULATING heater, OR 3-0216. LATE MODEL ELECTROLUX. __Good | condinien. FE 8-0008 LINOLEUM AND PAINT | SALE ta price at decks 277 Bald Lord’s Specials S pe. dinette set . $40 2 pe ‘a-bed sees O40 05 Used TVs from $495 .... up Hide-a-bed from $¥F30.95..... up Used gas stoves 00 ‘Lord's. Furniture and Appliances |< 40583 he - Norge auto 125 W. Huron &t. FE _ ‘Where wrigley s Used To Be" MODERN TABLE TOP Gas _range, EM 3-201). MAPLE TWIN BEDS. COMPLETE | FE 5-6466, MAPLE HIGH CHAIR. PLAY PEN baby bed with springs and mat- ree buggy. 364', W. Huron, aft- er MISCELLANEOUS 1 goods, Call after 6:30. FE 45-7845 MAYTAG FULLY —— Special now at $196 & your old Washer—no money down © ane & delivered THE GOOD —— $1 W Huron PE 41555 Ox 12° LINO. RUGS. .$2.98 12812 LINOLEUM $6 39 | fee _ these! — gal. ras rl VINYL. IMLAID. TILE PRICE RUBBER —— PAINT GAL $3.50 | SYERS. 141 W Huron FE 1" SSE COMBINATION, WALTON TV Walton Cor Joslyn _FE 2-2257 | automatic | —*#!# | 06 me boa: 00. agothedl sphere » in. uto. 11 W Saginaw HOUSEHOLD WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC ay | ALL Ww, USED DEPT. jiteed washers . . . $99.95 F eqpeey * Norhonebece ttos . size gas stove’, : $29.95 iftorobe chest of drawers $22.59 pe. wood -d : ere yt pe bape, room suite - $29.95 Heavy ut twin beds. .. $ 0.95 3 or 4 room oi] heater ..... $20.95 Heavy wood 46 A... 02. 6 O08 $25 value floor lamps. $3 Many other items not listed here Easy terms Free Parking WYMAN’S W. Pike st. On) = FE ¢1123 ee USED M $23.50 aod up. R, B. Munro Elec- . trie W. * «CU. AMANA UPRIGHT freezer. OR bat . @ cv. » PRIGIDAIRE. CLEAN and in tien. $95. EM 3-2118 5:30 p.m. OTS aN iY FURNITURE CO. 361 3. SAGINAW ST AC, ONTI = USED REFRIGERATORS $5 A B. Munro Electric, “(oso . oe TV. $005 UP. USED RE- RE USED frigerators. $49.95 up. New Hot- it dishwasher, $329.96. now 5. Bweet's mnedio & Appili- ances 422 W. Huron. FE #1133. Sa : tabi fi cy 8 3 chair, es, Be plage fiz €pc. exiension } _ 40 % 161 Dwight av ING BACK ADI- tonal desk. Drafting set. Radio- one comb Maytar washer Queen Anne ir Kenmore sweeper. Goose feather _lows. FE WHITE = 00 Mt Clem: Bs ——— —— WAYNE GABERT’S Floor Sample Sale washer dryer jorge dix : ft retri« 95 Norge 10 cu. e. fu ity MAgY 2 YEARS TO PAY. FE 5-618 ope Diver Like new. $100 M Westinghouse OF Ge electric renge pee wide oven. bur $149 95: L. A WAGNER CO Opdyke, Cor Pontiac FE 5-022) 1960 N. Rd For Sale Miscellaneous oo 4-3064 | ALMOST “NEW Sen ON AIR compressor OR ELECTRIC TOOLS, APPLI- ances at wholesale prices to all. GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO, 258 Dixie Hwy PARK . FREE! '3 betas hat TABLES | 1 MARBLE AMERICAN” RADIATOR 1 HEAING top 1 140 8 Saginaw St PAINT IT YOURSEL!} Chests, tables ehatra, bookcases. room dividers Papotaiaet Ecos cupboards, ple’ PICK. rr PAINT STORI 143 Oakland Ave FE 5-0562 REPRIGERATOR. “HOT POINT 2 door refrigerator freezer Matog any coffee table. excellerit con- dition. FR 2-0662 or FE 4-9205 STOVES BOUGHT SOLD EX changed. Turner’ desks recor com ens SEWING ) MACHINE ¢ SALES & Service; . will adjust. of] and grease any make sewing machine within a radius of 19 miles for only & Parts extra, FE 4-930. 533 Auburn — SALE | os | * ft. refrigerator as is Used caoctes range, as is $1999 pees automatic washer as is. $20 05 reas fo Geome with freezer across “CRUE MP ELECTRIC | Saeed Auburo Rd FE #3753 IN burner: _Munro. 1016 W Huron. SINGER SEWING MACHINE WITH new cabinet Console. $30.50 Por-| penis: $2750 5 yr guaranteed Home demonstration OR 3-#702 Mt. Clem, } | 5340 Hig CLOSING OUT | ish. 4 Cherry wood boiler and off furner complete TEEN aoe E coaT. a oe i oe | oval shaped Also antique china, !002 FT steam FE 2-6016 of HS oes _cabinet. FE 40112 after 3. 0-2-7005 = —— NEW CASHMERE SWEATER ~ gIzz ALL WHITF STANDARD. GaAa®&s 36. Never worn. Cost $25. Sell for | 52 Gal. Electric Pe tan cece end Umer $ EM 3-4437 - - 7 | Water heater—name brand. Reg DEMING DEFP WELL JET ey dele pee) $149 #5 - Now % pas with fittines end pipes. | oar EE asa FALL MATER le N. Leds ner eee R i Cod) s yee. Cor mtiac Rd APARTMENT SIZE GAS RANGE, _NITY DRESSES FE 42347 i FE $022) | four burner $129.50 valine, $69 65 + DRAWER MAPLE CHEST pet] eased stratched Also several aby scales with ket. and full size ranges in- electric and ‘Sale Household Goods $7 highchair FE 54-3061 as at extraordinary values -FL. lchigao Fluorescent, 3®3 Or- APT SIZE GAS RANGE VERY feet Noodinan NO Sanit ah chard Ute ve 6900 condition OR #6127 | WA TENT To | Bout pAnYTHING YOU WANT) Guu co-WEFRIS 7 _CUIC FF — pie : pha tables eres aR) book: | Es Excellent condition $78 Call PE ie ee ners gone poard 8, comp! a __| Just in NEW axé and sheatinge. $24: retrgeraiore #23 up. ranges Plastic | Wall Tile...2c ea Taio OEINGL mee cn eniag ania os SS ceo rcaicn gs | LINOLEUM. suis’: $249) 9x12 Quality at low costs : he wh TV seta, #20 up: oe e. | Surpius paint $149) Reclaimed brick — fire brick 0 ao: casete eee < “eds Vinyl - tile 4c ea | Bargain priced new and used up. b room suttes goose _ hite mei $1 98 doors Plumbing suppies Heht Hving room : | Asphalt Ule 4 ‘ $ 03 fixtures We carry a complete mig tose (eaneas ain fact wD. Pile Harold's Paint & Lino lune of ails insulgtion. roofinc other items bulidie boards Windows made to vour order Save on. vouf bulid- ine ee nb Our estimate and SUR MBER RPLUS LU : MATERIA! SALES CO and Rd {M50:; OR 3-7092 VNC HOR FENCES ney down FHA anerees Pree ‘ESTIMATES FE. 5-167! \rosts’ "supplies, hobby lal si ii x cculnped use wew 00 E | ton ’Couret cad Gn i Tecorder: Call at 80 Pinegrove. — aw, OA 8204) . 1. r 3 OVERS CUSTOM AND | _Hopkt 5 , : 3 Seve op rout and car $25 RECONDITIONED “SINGER SEW. \GENESEE s€x0 Wirt 3 Pr. AMERICAN” (u” TAKE | SEAT WCOVERE CUSTOM | AND earns 7 BR 16 HOWN AND “ee mae —— and up Also trucks tractors and | ine machines ti 80 Fa 24143 rown from certified seed $2.20 4 | on we cl tad Ce aes TOPS. UPHOLSTERING, AUTO.) assume payments 464 8. Woed- | Sixes in¢é Biwhts farm equipment Trivie Serv 3123 for f be ¢ home demonstration: 2 O88 FE Avon, OL 1648 an! = STARTE. wa ingham, . Standard “raus’+ P.O oD. M24. Mobile -gas station, a STRAW # CENTS A “BALE: FIRST | g FY 1963 RICHARDSON, “MODs ECONOMY CARS 2 AUBURN New Ca St. FE. 3-9060. GUN TYPE “OIL CONVERSION | burner with wlower, controls & | oij tank. 1058 Premont. PE ' ‘Gas CONVERSION BURNE R | : with pipe FE 5-3378 G&M COMPANY | Saws on LAWN ee MA- CHINE SHARPENE | PLYWOOD — Ail kinds at iowest prices Also cabinet hardware wholesale and retail Pontiac Pivwood Co 1488 Baldwin Ave __._ FE 2343 _ REINFORCING MESH For Drives or Floors tq. ft. tm full roli«, FE 3 7835 7 7255 E. Walton | Fe per ‘ @EARING AIDS NEW AND 2 per sq. ft. cut to length. _used Phone Rules PE 27900 | |, EX! aemiow_ sotn eu HOT WATER HE/"ER. 30 GAL. Lad ti CK hd gas. few. approved for use on AYL Consumers’ lines. $9850 and COAL & BUILDING ay ¥ CO. | $119.50 value, $49.50 and $50 50 8 _Orchard Lake. Ave FE 3-101 These are slightly marred. Also | electric ofl and bottled ¢as heat- | ers at- terrific values Michigan | i eenec eat: 393 Orchard Lake | ve meu roe GAS CLOTHES DRY- er—Re $239 85 special now at $180 95 Fully ieet ed—$10 down. THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING $1 W. Huron FE 41565 $240 “WORTH OF PRECISION machinist tools. Includes 1, 2. 3! in mikes. Wooden box. etc. Used 1 week. $200 EM 3-2118 after 530 pm. USED . TWIN BULB “oO bb In 4 fluorescent lights $7 each. Keasy | 8° 8. Perry _ Electric, Drayton Plains STORM : SASH | 32 IN. STEEL FURNAC STORER ‘ ' t ; _ &_oil_water heater. | aaa vaeeee, Low LOW orice’! i HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY raTORE “F 4-6089 "| 7 miles out Baldwin Armstrong H flaor. coverne, eh Mac-O-Lac Sam of om | _ Paints Phone “PE” 7-8025 ~~ SEPTIC TANKS j 4 ROOM OIL SPACE HEATER ty | REINFORCED CONCRETE | ar after 3 SE 8. FE Pe 46428 3872 Biz Lk. Rd. | sav ON EAVESTROUGHS WAR- ‘FILL bint, HOME DRESSED PORK anv ? WHEEL TRAILER. 1965 NOKO- | _*! 12a Orhard take beet. bacon and ssusace FE! fips yrs at Pai | ‘ 76 — — —— | 30x24 (DOUBLE CORN CRIB 0° DPEREBTED, OF BRGTOGRARR | “Eih« Eade to mane eh Soe lies? See Classification HOB- G D SLIGHTLY USED |, DUO- O-THERNM { BES ne eT Ear Mt nt | apace heer Ww beat arms | AALAQE LOOTS is STORM [WINDOWS 2? AND We also have a complete ine TO CHOOSE FROM screens. Demmin um um p ee ee SPECIAL SUMMER OFFER Hallicrafter Halter . hey se version burners. Call Stan Gar-| Berry all steel fully cusranteed lazy saa cates abso, PE: 33001, | wood _EM_ +200 ee eee nace ae 6 CU. PT FRIGIDAIRE REFRIG- 7a oe tree = wi oe Be AMEL Res in good condition. on jm mt Genny Yj . aus co 9644 DOO 8. Sagi t. a SAVE Spey ne Saginaw | st STEEL BASEMENT SASH | ___De- tt Yourself ol REPAINTED, SAVE 20% |\~~— 15" x 16", 2 Lite, $3.50 ench | USE OUR TOOLS. DO vee OWN BLAYLOCK plumbing, —— repairing Spe r plete stgck soll sewer cro a ‘six marble colors 919% toch. COAL & BUILDING sorrLt CO Grama tue M a Biliders' 5 ENT EA H: $1 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 3-7101, Supply 156 West Montcalm. FF = Areas res = icatpeaatine hd | §4712. Fri. thru Wed. @ to 6:3 | with faucets and curtain * ad Thursday FLOOR SHOP | terrific value $3333 Lavatories Ceed_every Open 9-9 _ © 8. Saginaw St. | ‘2 GAL ELECT HEATER $82.05 30 gal. auto. gas heater $40.05 | Cab sinks & fittings ... $69.50 up Laundry trays. stand faucet $2105 _ Save Supply 100 8. Saginaw St LUMBER | case) seek) comet Cement... Mortar. ... : 1x8 white pine boards 4xax'q plaster board 16x48" rock lath Insulation, loose and blanket, Culverts for driveways 715 No. celotex shingles . 750 sq | 1 car fir bds.. at 11000 M Plywood, Interior and Exterior. White pine and Mouldings. Interior and exterior doors. Fence posts and fencing. | | \ | | | » Windows, Anderson and others. Oak and fir flooring Paneling Pine & Crdar Pau! St. Cvr Lumber Co . 6120 Bogie Lake Rei Commerce™ EM 2m | LIONEL & AMERICAN | FLYER TRAINS Authorized factory service and genuine factory oarts. Free test on factory analyzer _ TASKER'S. €3 W. HURON 8ST. 1D GRINDER AND HACK saw.) FE 3-7438 LAVATORIES, COMPLETE WITH | faucets, $24.50 value $1495 Also tollets bathtubs @shower stalls at, terrific values These are crate” marred “ Michiean Fluorescent _ 193 Orchard Lake Ave | a MYER'S PUMPS | Jets — submersible j KELLY’S HARDWARE | 04 eee at Adams, Auburn | Heights FE 2-811. / NEFW AND USED FURNITURE | Refrigerators cas and electric heating ard cook stoves and wa-| ter heaters ee housetraiters and cottages Term TRAILER EXCHANGE FE MAGIC CHEF “SPACE HEATER. Like new $50. OR 3-022 MAGAZINES FOR cae ~ WEST- | 2-3200 | | | ern and detective. small noveis 7 miles out Baldwin Av ree - re Buy now for tater use a Fr TEL = = | We carry a complete line of new FOOT DAIRY COOLER. « FOOT GAL UNDERGROUND OTL | putiding materials and have «| show y_case Call PE 40709. tank OL 2-8431 | modern hardwaie store. SHOW CASES COUNTERS. NEW LUMBER 575 SQ FT 2x4‘. | island display — pee 639 Lineal ft 2x@s 312 Lineal ft. | racks Hepa) fumed oak cosmetic $145 takes all. 2? “OR vee | N _case. 2 yrs. old Call FE 5-2761 $35, box size 4x6 7 \ bated datacenter = KEW 9000 BTU. FURNACE! ey “Sale Sporting Goods — 6S complete with oi! burner and con. | WREC KING CO.. INC. trols," $268 2 Thompson. | 31245 & Mile Rd AQUA-LUNO 2 frm. AND USED | Daily 6:90 "6 j orchard Wen stl 2 OUR C ‘ ally “til POWER MOWERS 1 RY | Sun. 10-2 EEawosl wanes ~ BUY _YOUR G GU y TILLERS POWER SERAYERS | SAVE ON SUMMER PRICES ON ON TIME cevaents availabe W oP Miller coal oy fuel aa Fan your be or ‘ 's Garden and Lawn Enauipment, an Cae akisad Fuel an Sl : ba h OF tee rd apy of 14 Punt oe Orchard Lake Ave. | ay ug ile rming am NEW HALVANEED LOIRE 7 | SEARS ROMBOGK PORNACE AND __ 630 Oakland Ave. _ tein. (2 ft leneths) Ile ft stoker. Good condition. Cheap. | GUNS - BUY - SELL --TRADE. --%e in) 121 ft length: laiue ft | For. quick sale 298 E Wilson. | Manley Leach. __10_Bagley_8t, ‘ SAVE Pt UMBING svprty | SMALL BROWN AND SHARPE KARIALL KAMPER TRAILER, 100 § Saginaw 5-2100 babe nos ais with Lay aight reasonable. 376 Gotng Street r sare! 75 PHELPS ELECTRIC } ee ARF. OR 31217 OR hullding supplies. this PAINT SALE Outside Diet white af $595 ga’ Pres 1 ot ait — CH RCI i ING . _ FE 2-024 — | POT TYPE OIL FURNACE 5 TO 86 room capacity. Reasonable. Call MY_ 2-4208 after 4 pm “MIBING SPFC TATS 2 omc. bath set. ‘A ouatity wi trim | $tls Open daily #@ to € Aruason Plumbing O50 MIS Phone 130 | | th Sun* 10 to 2 Supply Ortonville We delliver Save Money at BURMEISTER’S 800,000 ) OUU, Foot Sale ‘ | Bure tm fumber ae golng oi | AT BURMEISTER'S | OUR PRICES ARE NOT ONLY j LOW, BUT Rae oe 13 | 3 YARDS “TO SERVE you 4x8 Sheet Rock C & C $1.60 4x8 masonite, sheet $2.55 1x8 Std w. pine bds per M $49 00 ix6 w. fir bds per '- $99 00 | ixl2 w pine shelving ft iSe 24 RL.) fir std ft | te ix4 std flooring per M $130.00 2x6 std. Douglas fir per M $09 00 2x8 std Douglas fir per M $99 60 7 blanket ins!.. ft $4 45 4x8x% fir Plyscore $5 95 4x8x% fir Plywood $3 95 1x8 knotty pine per M $180 00 | 1x8 paneling W pine ner M 5160.00 Sof! pipe, $3.95 Comb. alum — ro $20 95 | Ww P Comb doo #1405 3 pe. colored bath * set set. cast rom ub FARDWARE ~ PLUMBING hs PINTS YOU ARE BUILDING A elbts S DRIVE ot TO BER ISTER'S AND Ee UP TO EZ are BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. #197 Cooley Lake em nite Ra — & ea, C h le e — rl h4i86 | all fittings $159 85 Ts |; ABOVE ARE CASH AND CARRY PRICES USED oa AND ¢ CHURCH Talbott Lumber | Larmber, SINGER Pot COMMERCI- al sewing machine, Perfect con- dition. MY 3-5371 sort. ee on Lot.” WAR- teks 2678 Orchard Lk. Ra. “Roofing an Combination Doors _ Insylation M. A. BENSON $49 N. Saginaw _FE ¢2521 SINKS FROM 95.95. 62 GAL. ELEC- tric water heaters, $79.95. 30 gal. gas heaters, $55. G. A. ole faucets, $1495 Tollets. $39 50 val- ue $1995 These are factory sec- | onds Michigan Fluorescent, 393 _ Orchard Lake Ave UNION — _ CELEBRATION. SALE | This week ts our 2 yr anniversary of our maim yard sales factilities ‘Home of the Union Wreck complete with gleaming Genak | “Seems kinda good to get back in harness again, doesn’t we” For Sale_ Mixellensous 00 Sand, Gravel | & Dirt 66 SAND AND ORAvVEL | peer FOR RENT hand steamers—wasers & Floor sanders - wail paper furnace vacuum cleaners land Fue) and Paint, chard Lake Ave FE 5-6150 Cameras, Equipment ‘OIA! sad Pokaan CAMERAS & eegardig hd | under “Hi & Sup _phee" ~ Cinssificntion aumber A Sale Musical Goods 62 APT PIANO FOR RENT. by_month OR 3-064 $400 120° BASE ACCORDIAN. CASE and staud Sacrifice $175. . $7565. SIZE month Inc Although we have been| 120 BASS ACCORDION WITH wrecking bulldings for meny case. OR 3-5180 _ years, it ts 2 yrs since we built | gj 999 Ac N_ PROFESSION. our hardware store and bultiding aera Win eacrifice coe FE supply yard Edw ehrow- 22 ski and Frank J Schumacher personaliy invite you to take ad- Vantage of this celebration sale. 2K4X6. 15e EACH 2X6 UP TO 12 LONG, Se LIN. FT. | 2X8 UP TO 1? LONG. 6c LIN 2X10 UP TO 12’ a; Te LIN SHIPLAP, $50 PE | DOOR: 4 LIN. FT lyon ASEMENT BEAMS, 60c BA tel TUBE, | NE «x 8.’ pLyscorD. $3 95 | PER SHEET $16 05 i~ eran SIDING, 106 & FT ait BoC 7 PINE $14.95 PER | D NEW 1X6 ROOP BOARDS, $790 | | PLAYER =e . TUNING AND REPAIR- ing, Oscar Schmidt, 32-5217 PAN AMERICAN | CORNET. GOOD | condition. Phone FE 2-5215 coe ANO. oa make Completely re! xce lent_ condition. _ 038, 08. 23-9036 SMALL APT. PIANO. { XCELLENT condition Gallagher's uw E. Huron, FE 4-0566_ TRUMPET FOR SALE IN condition, $45. STillweil — 1-7801 WEBER “GRAND PIANO, $300. Mi “Sale Office Equiment ¢ 63 ESK, ] MATCHING CHAIRS, $95. Legal file with pendafiex Royal typewriter with table - PER. 100 F Elliott addressine nit ... | NEW ASBESTOS SIDING .$12.25 Dehize intern m Serio PER 100 8 Storage cabinet sss $20 WALL TILE, l& 8Q "tecket machine $19 50 PITTSBURGH HOU ry = PAINT, 2 drawer letter file $750 $38 PER GAL Sampson chiits $225 ea spain WIT tins UTILITY FE 51582 or FE 44469) $2 te PE A NEW 3 PIECE BATH Room sat, | Sale Store _Equipment 4 WITH FITTINGS $133 05. HURRY Celebration Ends THIS SUNDAY | LARGE QUANTITY OF SHELV-: —— ing. showcases counters. fluores- cent lights. Tables ide store. need To be sold reasonable. Open | Gays and Sun. until) 5 p.m ler Lake Variety Store 2250 Baldw OVER AND UNDER, 12 GAUGE. $90, MA 5-3751 re i | Sy our Rye ‘DIRT. ‘1639 | sanders — | Oak- | —_ Or- | | A from 5 and | Have more than La BEAGLE PUPPIES. 83. | 40682 and wheels, Monarch jathe, 8” nda swing, 5 ft. d, taper attach- | 1012 WALL TENT. 12 GAUGE ment, DoMore grinder. Toledo pump gun. deer rifle with scope cutoff saw All equipment ac- 2701- Judah Ph. 71-6666 Call emer ceasories and in good’ working 400 condition UMIT«s8%t ... SHOTGUNS & RIFLES, $1250 UP SACRIFICE huT WATER BOIL- We my sell, trade guns. Burr-, er. oi] fired nearly new, Have shell 375 8 Telegraph rhanged to pax ton GR 4-5552 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR Phone Farming- SPF- / SPRINGER & GUN, Beautiful registered sorte a = KITTENS Sashabaw MA 5 PROMPT vesva tants AS “YARDS biack dirt or peat 30044 PROCESSED ROAD anieae AND ele stone. loaded of delivered da FE 43263 or FE 21466 ocean ) ROAD 4f DRIVEWAY | rave! Log run. 60 and cush- | on sm Wilkinson Sand _Orevel.— ‘Fe | 4-6318. PE 2-030 OAD GRAVEL 5 yds. $100 delivered. PE 46588 SAND, GRAVEL, PILL DIRT. TOP soll, OR 3-9560. SAND, GRAVEL AND TOP SOIL Cali FE 2-3400_ _ SAND, GRAVEL & FILL. FOR good deal, cal FE 1-0383 SAND, GRAVEL. PIT RUN ROAD eravel Fill dirt processed drive | way gravel, washed 60-40 concrete gravel. Mason sand, pea «rave! | Biack dirt and top soti FE _ 21768 Shredded Peat Hamas FE 7-025 (5 yds. $12) FE 5-1666 SOIL A-l. 8 <3 USED ON Sia Fideed ‘cet . Waldie, FE WASHED SAND AND ORAVEL | Pil) dirt, trucking. cement & mor- eutting alfalfa and brome 50 cents | a bale cond cutting alfalfa 90 cents. 20 puilets ready to lay. eto Squirrel | Ra _For Sale | Livestock 22 BEAUTIPUL BROWN pene Very ge 2447) #4 Pontiac Lake 2 AND WHITE entle Market Trail Walled , GEL DINOS. $68 E ACH 6-3TH -HOLSTEIN | waves 2 YRS. OLD. Fresh 6 weeks OA 8-3360 2 BLACK ANGUS HEIFERS — 7841 .Dinte Hwy MUST SELL SPOTTED PONY Also smal] Western horse, Kea- sonable. Pony buggy, in excel- lent condition, Also“pony saddie 46044. 1131 W Newark Rd La vice ; FOR SALE. E }-e381 caearenes S aEVIGT SHEEP suitable for 4H. Cheap MA 6.27703 sOTTED nor SADDLE AND bridle, OR 3-44 PONY. Se “YACK ~ Ww Hi N- cluded Shown at —— Sta-. ‘ Mile Ra _ __bies m1 W 14 __Wanted Livestock 73 WELCH FONY GENTLE A 63736 For “Sale Poultry — i” 74 __ }oo LEGHORN LAYING HENS yr old 2 miles north of Milford Frank Skarritt. 2700 Milford Red. MU se24 = Eh dy to lay Downe nm pullets ready Poultry Parm. 16026 20 Mile Ra pon Michigan. Phone PLateau * * Sais Farm Produce 73. APPLES McIntesh Glackmore Farms, 1900 hilver Bell Rd miles east of Perry &t DAMSON ples and pears b-olee PLUMS ORAPES, AP CORN FOR SALE. OR }6aee FOR SALE 1.000 BL CORN HO- mer Lowrie, 0001 Big Lake, Ciark- —— —_—— HALE PRACHES wcovpened NOW. Pick your owe Perteet fruit, Colonial Orchards S370 Fish Lake Ra, 1 mile west, ', mile north of Clyde GRAPES, #2 A BUSHEL to order, 533 N. Coats Rd Half mile N of Seymour Lake Koad OAkiand | Lee GRAPES “82.50 a BU 3030 Bhimmons Rd "RUTGER TOMATOES - \ 1 fresh with calf 1 bred MA 5-2487. | ‘CERTIFIED WHITE “LEG- 484 Corwin, FE | PICKED | “PE 52004. | err bousetraiier: electric brakes; used 3 months For sale’ or will take a smalier trailer as ‘down | | ; payment or a land contract. en Sale Motor © Scooters 82 3-6183 MOBILE HOME ESTATES MOD. ern. Bob's Picnic Park. 0516 High. | land Rd { NC CUSHMAN Bo AGLE, GOOD CON. | ion $160 T9071, i aa Se “EAGLE Goon | - FE 26808 condition F For Sale Motorcycles &3 1952 BUICK RIVIERA. 810 | own Woodward, Birmingham. 1982 BUICK 2 DR aod assume payments. Woodward Birming | 1985 Puliy eqquipped. Like new PE 63458 assume payments. DYNA Phone BUICK SPECIAL LA HOUSETRAILER: WILL | FEM trade for talig contract Vacant “~“~““~~~™~ ‘SS BUICK SUPER. 82695. RIVIERA. land. your equity in a home, or | FOR PARTS AND SERVICE ON | hardtop radio and heater, pow- cash $53 E Madison. FE 5-4628. | our Harley Dartdsop see Har- er docerire Ss power brakes, dyna- he 3 SALE HOUSETRAILER. = | by ecko Sales Co.. 372 Gouth pind) rete tual miles, grey ajace. 3 gas tanks, bath. dl- jaginaw | rection signals sleeps 4 new | gy HARLEY iO HOVE NORTH CHEVROLET | eondition throughout, You can't, 3.726 : weet incoin S-fieen Deen! Oniy i830 S new one at ile) as Rae. DAVIDSON 6) OHV. | = | r ‘NS Must OLive lt een takes Roch- i Highland ich an ester. OLive 1 Te od |p Meth att LATE MODEL MARLEY DAViS. uarante : iMferd son side car gud ¢om ry i WANTED _ $1003. 4070 Ross Dr sharp Used Cars ae ann al es and Models |! 8 to 22 ft, late model house- __For | Sale e Bicycles 84, trailer Must be clean and tesa- | GLENN’ S sonable PR $-3488 : ornts te" BICYCLE, 12 COOPER | | | “ag MOTOR SALES Boats & Accessories 85 2548 _saginew FE 41311 | NEW 1956 PONTIAC CHIEF ACOMP! Le ne ( TAGE IN BEAUTY AND i CONSTRUCTION NOW ON DISPI HUTCHINSON, * 1} | TRAILER — | seca cumepaggtteere set 2) pel set Sve pares os sa | 4 SAI ES | MERCORY Morons “ANB YE: woes fs at et 13° Mile he | low Jacket” 7 = Se | NO Dixie Awe. yr “HURRY! HURRY! | 4001 Dixie Nw ; CENTURY IF P. ’ { Drayton Plains MChryeler Fastest EF Inter- HURRY! AA are | Lake Regatta FE 6-006). 77. odaseda = Beal Aire | ie , | SVINRUDE SALES AND SERVICE. sos — 210 — Be | 2830 8 Dort Hwy Fiint chee Geak es AnD Takers Barings 006 Geviecs | al 4 Marine 2685 Orchard Lk. AL “new 1056 models : Aube WoTos > { - ive a tine selection | EVINRG So of used trailers | poe we 804 | 100. Select used cara. UP TO $900 ,DISCOUNT ON — Bi onoet ae aN GREAT CAKES CHAMPION | KETLY'S HAR North AND OTHERS ft will pay to LY'S HA DWARE eee . you buy reer ea Pm Fast epee Auburn t achange 8 Telegraph bd Ch I ¢ y| 1954 LINTZCRAPT 3 FT. De. | ev ot fuxe Bunk beds Shower = fair 61299 MOBILE VY Al ~~! FAL UMA- CRAFT BOATS. | we 2 CONVERTIBLES — Cadillac —T heater ter rare EVINRUDE MOTORS | Scot rubber’ i Michi AL wea se | 1850 Cheve Good paint, nearly new ' eT SERVICE | top. Nice clean cas. 422 8. TELMGRAPH 18 Oakle Ave. 23-2981 JOHNSON Saeeae MOTORS (| 1963 CADILLAC cd te and Trailers dr. all power, electronic eye, rything for the boat 23. miles, excellent condition Owens MARINE SUPPLIES re | ae precatag at Cass aod | a) ?- ti) e Cass 98 Orchard Lk Ave FE 2-800 chee Bargains Used boats and motors Slaybaugh's 630 Oakland Ave. 12 FOOT ALUMINUM BOAT AND new boat trailer, Reasonable 316 Going Street law WOLVERINE ROW BOAT, 4 (an must | Demenstresore, offietal care. ce "QO" - : ‘55 Chevrolets orthwest the “ ‘ee Ghovrelas ‘we have) te Pontiac Lake Builders’ Sup-| 10.000 plants loaded with red SR | tee htt | APARTMENTS: eS ee ee gd pees a mnma\ canrentt'|| , ‘ ec ee __Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 fust the way you like them. 61.25, CALIFORNIA BUYER | 3 pm occ | per bushel. Bring own baskets.| Stewart coaches are truly that AVERIL'S, 2020 = Hwy. BH aren CUT WOOD. LUMBER 4x48, ODDS | $3660 Giddings Rd $0060. | With storm & Jalouste ows PE 3-607 | D: neres and ends and wood material FE | ACHES “ARE RIPE AT sUT.| Plenty of wardrobe. new bigger | gp 32-8749 a= Orchard. 324 N. Lake An-|, beaters comple with fa ceocp late model cars... DRY SLAB WOOD $f A CORD | gelus RG. Oven ‘rom Oem. wo | se le firs., many other ty Sih se? 2) FS zs. tsi jams S| COMMUNITY *! . i HARD SLAB WOOD, $6 PER CORD | forATOR ._ ti PEN BUSHEL. | tratier pactage te history on this OR 2 FOR $11 PE 5-3006. 1419 Gashebaw Rd 3 new General Styiee. ne ily MOTORS TOF: | ar ‘ tra Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68 soa? es Andersooete Ra” MA Gond "selection. or rental | S661 == 803 N. Main, Rochester PLANT NOW 15 i 7 | e wil} take your contract car. OPEN Northern grown everereens at low Sale Farm Equ pment Sp eee eee ee onal hove OM OLive Gua Labs Landscaping. Free este ~~ } ou én used iratlers, le % et AME ARTE . INTERNATIONAL CORN BINDER. | “Oxford Trailer Sales | On and wheels, complete L "AKE SIDE NU RSE R Y like new aie soi ~ ie j —e bottle gas. Tratler parte | oN "wa 2862. , stock. 6310 aple, alle ct accessories, 4 9 n CHEAP CARS. paige ee eee Nase lie" soute @f feke Oren on one SCRAP CARS OR CHEAP CARE | Also Blackhill Norway. White. “FORAGE ——— Sort oom | WANTED — JONKED On Uae r, Douglas & Concolor, Pine; . PT STEWART, 2 BEDR | model, Austrian. Scotch, “Muse. A HARVESTER. full beth. 996 Lochaven Rd. PE poogat + d Need oad Too a ive 8 8 v TER r own Brine ourlap & tools Me Seine ee 3 3 ow | Perv oi WOUSETRATLER. CHEAP. BAGLEY AUTO PARTS Ra. 3 utice west of | Bee the wee Case Harvester. =. Sleepe 4 Inquire at lot 22 8-0019 1% BAOLEY 6T. Cummerce Village on vravel road. | fasiest, easiest running sae Ld MiG «CHEAP BcRaP CARA. bearing right at all turns Opes { ever built. eae ‘ROVCRAPT HOUSE- y_OF_eve, . datly 8 to 1. Greenridge Farm’ Seratee! (tala ier senae tor furni- |, TE HIGH DO CLAR- _Nursery, MUtual 40038. | ture Keego Trailer Park, Lot 10 wag THE HI ) DO OVER 5.000 BEAUTIFUL EVER- | noucnres ‘eS ON |" = Por h weed care We | 1 Ss greens 27 varieties, $3.00 to $5 00 New need them a” wel. anes miles, 3 De oto up to 6 ft tall Groveland Farms. $28 _N. hein coche ster ou *t e761 fae ral eT it sd pay vou ; Piredome 6 4 4r. Turn east at Groveland. Math. °— - | uw finish, radio, heater, Power 7 GARDEN TRACTOR 6 HP ews Clinic Half. way between OR ee Rototiiier attachment i: VANWELT t < route ane Mot ot'Duie Wish ale hes ass ip tack pe : Exchange es —cecinemene: ‘ | eid «=Perfect iti SUGAR MAPLE TREES 11, to 2% for 9300 Originay cost. $750 PRICE t THE Re nea - THEN aa! Is in. Norway. 1', in Any 2-2019 or FE 5 FRSON CHA MP ION. BILL SPENCE 3 De Soto re Pontiac’ “Landscaping JARRI SICKLE. cs —ALs 0| GREAT TAKES TO FT I Powermaster 4 dr. Power steer. are by | ,mall Waterbury tractor with the| BEEMER CREE, AND” TINI | USED CARS | tae. ey | following attachments. Cultivater, | HOME VACATION AND TRAY: @2 Oakland Ave FE ¢7333 | dio and heater Maroon and ater For ‘Sale Pets | 69 snowplow, lawn mower attach-| EL TRATLE “4 PT. . See M&M Motor Sales finish, ~— {| ment. Sickle bar and plow. Also | noobs trailers as (itthe oy ogee o $1095 AKC REGIBTERED BoxER [pea eden Se | pee Fan Dinte ey” ORs i005 | At_stud FE 46583 | HP TRACTOR AND ATTACH fishy’ aND USED TRAILERS ow | 201 Dis 1. F < AKC REGISTERED BEAOL® | —™*0'. $100 28) N Rosin __ | PURCHASE OPTION PLAN | WED wise a wg 2 De Soto — = mn i ES 8 and $ months old OR. NOTICE USED ONES AS LOW AS Oe CRED AA INKED $ Sam transmission, ra- _| WE ARE OUT TO WIN A FREE. re. Ss care, PE ©1463 hi AKC REGISTERED BEAGLES. _ TRIP TO MIAMI, Pls PARTS—STORE | Se LLAR WOR -CLEAW CARS $645 _months old, OR 3-7779. _| WE ARE GIVING EXTRA LAROF. | => Tele beng ye A im eng late ayn ‘ , BRITTANY, SEANTELA—ReOrs: | "IWADE IN UALOWANCHA ON pt dernke ete ae iia | BOOvOMY Cake, Awan _|'$1 De Soto SEAUTIFUL RED WACE COCKER | WITH PAST HITCH CAL Us| Sales Oper Eves & fun, “pM -| “Wanted Uses Used Trucks &9 heater eg = ee _*paniel. 1% yrs. old. } I a a aaa Rent Trailer ‘Space | wawtep 1 Om iu non wraxe} "at BEAUTIFUL FLUPI re | ~ “ i TON : A SUPrY TgTTTeNs CREDIT TERMS meTATEs. ene truck. OR 3-4985 $545 Free FE 585 Lowell, “FE i 2 YR OLD MALE. BOXER. REA- _fSonable FE 4-68: COON DOG 5 wt _trained. d. MY 2-4 2-4631. COCKER PUPS AKC REG {1QuT blond and white. an Hatenery | Rd Drayton Plat : 7 OLD” WELL CUTE Puppies -FREE_ | DOBERMAN FinecaER PUP. '__Bies. Thoroughbreds. FE 4-4143 FOR BALE. BEAGLE PUPS, 8 wks. old. $10. 30518 Brentwood Roya! Oak, near 13 Mile and | Greenfield GERMAN SHEPARD | “PUPPIES Woodland shores Kennels FE 5-845? FREE TO homes +44] Cameron KITTENS - PREE TO GOoOD homes PE 21037 PLOTT COON HOUND FE #-0558 Goon | PUPPIES GREAT DANE PUPPIES FAWN AKC registered MA 41247 126 Angola. Walled Lake 7ARAKEETS, OPALINFS CANAR- lee. Mt Clemens _FE 4-660 | PARAKEETS “AND _ CANARIES _2480 Auburn Rd. FE 46510. PARAKEETS MI 4-2057 Birmingham | PARAKFETS. C CANARIES. CAGES \ pikiceea lal : wiale, 1 year old, trained and ca iy ae cae toasty teady for field. Out of best stock arti ayers ib cilier eaciriest « $180 Also Ithaca pump gun. ex- pilen & v oth ce cellent condition, and 2 boxes of FRE GOOD MOUSEREEPING | thay 3.21, "Gearon v 31 W. Huron _ __ FR “esse | _ Plains _ ee = TOILET SEAT $795 VALUE, $1 93 WILLI 8 CUSTOM LOADS Also complete line.of ail colors 7720 Bridge Road In wood, plastic ‘and pearl] seats Clarkston, Rt. 1. Mich at extraordinary values Michigan Schultz & Larsen rifles, M54) Fluorescent, 4 Orchard Lake | 1270-.30-06—7261 Sharpe He Aveo Bimmons Ventilated Ribs THOR SPINNER WASHER. LIKE for shotguns new. reasonable. 189 Bassett, FE | Marker re aard chrome for 48508 gin res TRAILER. 2 WHEEL UTILITY 7 ft bed. Removable § ft vals Sand, Gravel & k Dirt 66 8u structyre. With. tarpaulin | I cover, $55. MA 6-6900° | “Gad grave EM S410 BAND _ USED FURNACES. OIL BURNERS, a gas burners blowers. stokers. and A-1 TOP & cach CRUSHED §TO STONE stoves. veda Beating Co Re FE_ e112 oF PE 2462 ‘onkiin. chester OL 2-0 ro s or + | forced air ot] furnace _Sbdie Phone 7 WHEARY | WARDROBE TRUNK. Very good condition 450. MI Reason- USED _ “OIL 81 from $20, _Perry DRAWER SOLID MAPLE chest. $15 Chest of pct with desk compartment, $10 End te- ble, $3. Large size tricycle, $10. , Mechanica} horse. *12 one MA _6-3585._ Call after 6. SPACE HEATERS A Thompson. 86 8. 4 SPS paint. sleo Spred Satin and Gold Bond were piumbing plies. Trim, wi a full iine of lumber ‘105 Oaklands Ave. Ph. FE 4267" ~ Used Bldg. A TOP SOTL, FILL DIRT. stone, sand anc erave! joward, +0403. BEST GRADE TOP SOIL SHRED- ded peat and black soi! Liovd Slade. FE 5-0448 PEAT MOSS inspected. FE BLACK DIRT & Shredded. State 5-5086 BLACK DIRT. $1 YARD LOADED, $6 for 3 yards load delivery 8883 _Andersonville Rd MA 5-6600. BL ACK DIRT, TOP SOIL, | FILL dirt. Basements, 4-6062. top soli, in- Fa 23-4670 or iT AND ae “fod vered. 0 ‘BROWN PEAT -HI-TEST - SHRED- ed. $750, § yards; Materials of All Kinds NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS doors. windows, pipe. angie trons, steej Open Sunday Pachoud Wrecking Co. 2361 Dixte Hwy, FE 58-9108 Beside: ene _Drive-tn Theater TRAILER. 2 WHERt “OTILI Y. ovable 3 ft bed Hs oper cover. 5. MA beame, t| sash, | ai Heb | arettere, With tarpaulin | ~~ eS pines al : crave), FE 1 ¢, bushel Pgh = basket. deat Goity ay, Bat. — i EM. ioe acl mw BLACK Di DIRT. he yas. $10, Delivered. Fr 46508 FILL-DIRT. GRAVEL sap SAND. one.of af kinds, FE 5-147). HARDWAYS 54768 Be SAND. oe | Food Since 1927 584 Oakland Av PARAKEETS spABiEs 71 MEL- rose, FE 4 | - ert “BUPPLIES. Dancev's, 230 Voorhels, FE 6-503] "REG. 3 months vid Reasonable Godd | field stock 12270 Big take Rd Aple 3 IRISH SETTI RS REGISTERED ENGLISH \BULL- | Gog puppies, 2 male, 1 femaie. Mra: Kenneth Thomas, 77 Parke, Oxford. SEEING SPOTS Poa YOUR EYES Once see these registered English “Pointers you will het walk home without one fale Each | steal your heart away. | with Reasonable tN 1D BOXER THIS AD WORTH $2— purchase of any baby perakeet | 61 at neat, Ben tines, Sun. | write rown WHITER RATS POR SATE S8- FR- males, Sc males With” or with- . __ out cages, EM 3-3546, | WHITE. MICE, HAMSTERS. ALL | __Pet Shop, #9 8. Astor, FE 4-433. WEIMARANERS. WHELPED JULY) and. $93 Menominee (Dogs Trained, Boa Boarded 170 | cee NG BATHING AND Wee 4". Perry. | i GATS BOARDED. "nog | some dirt. peat, ce i pa a Burr-Sbeil. 37% 7s ‘NEW AND FE “et 1112 KING BROS YOUR TH DEALER PONTIAC RD. AT _OPDYKE 'NEW CORN CRIB CAN BE __meved Weeder, MA $-7161. _ LEF THE TRACTOR MAN Will give 8100 worth of red stamps with the mirchase of an 18 rotary lawn with leaf muleher Reg $879.0 Leh FE 35-9830 Now 650 S Sales & Service 21 Mt Clemens “NEW IDEA Corn UBED and John Deere Portable cribbing _ery Ph. 4 Ortonville -RECONDITIONED NEACTIINES Farmal Cub Moser and Grader blades ro Ferguson’ Wagner Loader and Back Farma!! H Plow at ree iers Aes t ote termes FERGUSON SHAWNEE BLACKHAWKS PARTS AND SERVICE 70%) GRAND RIVER FARMINOTON Farmington 2043 or KEnwood 25400 1 SUPER M-TA FARMALL 3 eal Hoe tom 16 in slow Less tha wT old 1, §& section | FE 2-9203 FE 4-453! ; a ' ‘ i - of oe ‘ . ( WANT ADS! good used car, see Classi- fied NOW. "SO De Soto ~| Carry-ail Complete leather trim, CHEV. 1958 % TON PICKUP 4 ertas buy. speed tranbmisston, md beater $495 and defroster, } mic , rear =i window Used very little New KELI ER KOCH INC. oF wl o af 2 FORD SHARP—SHARP - $495 Pontiac’s Top Trader {IKE’S AUTO SALES “701 OAKLAND AVE. SAVE ENERGY, USE| ° To find a job, place to live or a. SA | Don’t Delay CHEVROLI ET 1947. dre: | | AS LOW A $1579 FULL, PRICE Noa I we ee ee “Take Advantage ot Our nn Act Today HASKINS Chevrolet |Oakland County's harass Growin (6751 Dixie wy at at M15 “pe. VER? Wal Chev. 3 © ve, as YO on _¢ash sn ion 's No Co-Signers! Immediate Delivery! Deal Direct! No Finance Co.! Buy Here—Pay Here Y'ALL COME. m 6 NATIONAL MOTOR SALES ‘52 Dodge secaiguteas 4 ar. Cannot be $645 KELLER KOCH, INC, CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH BIRMINGHL.M 13') Mile Rd * Nati drt _.. opposite the B ’ iss3 DODGE 4¢ DR. ¢i0 oe Nf and assume payments. 44 8, _ Wood ward a cham — “a told from new, ory Bay Bo owner oo lean. twee ands nme ate. If you STOP and LOOK BUY these unusual values. falda ome 3 oer. As geet 3S $3 Buick Lh achonye be -~ nee Low - $1405 ‘52 Che rolet a! Looks drives a. “= ‘ol tac 2 door See ceive inks “cay ane. Sty 'S "4 Buick special 3 door sedan, good as new ender: | ‘98 Buick 4 door, $800 eff, "SS Pontiac, 9600 off, Wide ate Make "tn off COMMUNITY MOTORS we ad Paste oh aaa es Mild > FORD. us MN | THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955 “EXAMPLE $1195 Burs 9 1006 Bord 2 dr. with re oped, Pord-O-Matic. It's “te @io, heater and values Fado this that makes Oliver Buick & busiest dealer, OLIVER BUICK sin =e Balesmen West Side Used Cars JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer OFFERS 1959 FORD ven 4: piamae mm BATE LARRY > Jerome Rochester Ford, Dealer MORE aA Se ; Mercury int $1395 M9 Mercury ope Oe radio and heat $345 KELLER K KOCH, INC. mwy AT Mis ‘FORD CUSTOM 4 DR SEDAN. , . real car, parks bg — RO ae hi Chane 1955 Demos. Courtesy Cars, Floor Cars Officials’ Cars we Today ASKINS Chevrolet—Oldsmobile Oakland County’s Fastest | Growing Dealer 6751 Dixie Hwy. at M15 is on Righty, tf “til ® ¥ PORD CLUn ci 9 COUPE. r, $295. e oye, flame reds TH CHEVE OLET Woodward st 13 Mile tte, encom §- $1100 FORD FAIR RLANE, TAKE Don't oie #8 FORD over ments. No equity wanted. | § we daa, ae 2 DR $10 me parrcents, 464 down and as: 5. _B, Woodward. Birmingham. CHOPPED. CHAN- neled, full engine body complete, needs W, Huron. “40 PORD. 4, 500B MOTOR 61 E Rutgers paint and upholstery. 610 "83 FORD a toaN $795. A WON- @ for a wonderfol car Any old car down N CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoin 5-11 _ i] POST - Sore good * pain! . ' er . fae Birminabar = . | iN LE, , excelent condition . Silverside . ‘Sa * DR. $5. ROBIN'S e Radie and heater. Only down NORTH CHEV BA *® SERVICE WwW. Pike PR 2-0380 1963 NASH { AND assume a dose ee a 8 Wood- ward, ‘ ; ot es fe pene 4 DOOR. tl NA FO choose } iv irives, Ld lown. cars are to go. ‘ Wood at f 100 4, 4 door. Radio, heater, hydra, turn signals, W.W. via Letane engine and : ‘SS. CHEVROLET tation is ‘Haskins at “o woDeON tN condition WN over — monthly payments. i652 ioe STATION foretell ONE " 18000 jes °662 ios3 HENRY J. 9305 THis ved an pommee 1 conditien berees NORTH gut ROLES Woodward 13 Mile Lincoln $-1160 _ HURON ‘8 PORD TEUNDERSIRD ' rd-...0......00cc cece eeecees $100 1949 Hudsom—New Motor ..........0005 segs 1953 Pontiac 4 Door ....... seceeeeceees Soares) 1953 Chevrolet .4 Door ...:......cceeceeeee. $795 1953 Hudson Hornet 4 Door ...........005. $795 1951 Olds Holiday ...........0..cec cence aes $650 Later Models 1954 Studebaker—Like. New 1954 Ford Custom 8 2 Door 1955 Ford Fairlane 4 Door Country Sedans 1953 Ford 1952 Ford 1951 Ford Convertibles | 1951 Ford—Sharp 1952 Chevrolet 1952 Ford 1953 Ford 1955 Olds 98 —Loaded Up To 24 Months To Pay! We Help You Finance! \\ - NW Cy Owens Your FORD Dealer 147 S. SAGINAW ST. FE 5-3588 Open'8 A.M. to9 P.M, ~ j 4 i ~ th personal attribates as integrity, Participa aated to grade the sfadustes on | yey rue! PONTI AC PRESS. “MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 1088 a Spine ~( hilling Report Teeners Rate High With Employers NEW YORK — Despite public concern over today’s teenagers, recent high school graduates work- ing for New York City firms rate fairly high with 255 employers re- porting on their work . 80 cial attitudes and basic fis. in a survey recently made public. * * * The compariies *graded their young employes generally higher ability to get along with others, desire to develope and progress, fairness, courtesy and neatness than in the basie skills of reading, writing, arithmetic, grammar and | spelling. * ting companies were the basis of poor, fair, good and excellent. The survey report ‘showed that 76 per cent posto the 255 employers believed development of better | work habits merited increased at- tention of the «schools, while 69 per cent would like to have more attention paid to basic skills and 33 per cent to social attitudts. | The General Motors — Grounds near Milford now com- about one-sixth of a whole town- ship, ae oday’s Radio Programs - - Programe turtced ty stations Unted ta this colume are subject to change without eotc. WIR, (700) WPON vse wn. ‘sae “y’ Andy WWJ, News oy Lewis CRLW, «nee, WW), cose) OAR, (ile) = WXYZ, cme) = WIBK, (1490) | WRON, (1400), TONIGHT 9:00—W —s c Clooney News, | Music :30—WIR, Mra. Pa: ww Hour eheow. Voice af Agrict.| WWJ, Midu WIR, Hatniine ware, Telee ot Pireston e ww. Be Maxwell 4 Wave. Breakiast Club ee Oe. oO. \ fi ‘oOby - entice} WJBK, wie J Shorr, ne CKLW' Guy Nuno WJBK, Tom George Bee, WJBK, News, Caliing Band of Americe Shine 10: ‘00 WIR, Arthur Godfrey pig Assignment 10 7:06-—-WJIR, Jim Vinal WWJ, McBride 6:30—WJR, Bob a Af Eddie Cantor Show) Ww) Bob Maxwell ~ - WXYZ, My True Btory WWJ, Ross nd ba anes Shorr WXYZ Osgood News, Wolf| CKLW. News. Homechates WXYZ. Bill Stern PA a ea Orville KLW. News, Toby David WJBK, News, Tom George W. Eddie Chase 0O-WIR Tennessee Ernie WIBK. News, Gentile WCAR. News WJBK. Don McLeod ue Fibber MeGee WCAR. News WPON, News, Pontiac Party WCAB, XYZ faw © Morgan MASON, Hews, Rive ow Shine | 19:29 wR, Arthur Godtrey WFON Roorts Giante | SURE. ere: ANGE Baore | *aeswaRy Mate Bal |e a Chance 71:00—WIR, Quest WPON News Cave ees wat WxY2. Whispering Bt WWJ. Three Star Extre 10:30--WJR, CBS Dance CKLW Terrence ODN , | CRLW Mary Gerrge Bin, WCAR. Coffee w WPON Rise ‘n’ WJBK, News, - Binge ee. WCA Rhythm Round ith Clem WPON. x . WPON Goes iim CELW, Pulton Lewis J WxY2 T f the Towti : 4 WCAR, Musie in “the Air WJBK, News Mickey Shorr} CKLW. Rollin with Leroy wien ae one nt aes WPON Pontiac Party WCAR. Sign Of WJBK, Mickey Ghor: 6:00—WJR. Jack White 11:00—-WJR. Arthur Godfrey WJR, Spanish Hour, News WPON, Zee and Orv WW.) Boo Max el) WWJ. Strike It Rich nap_am, ung arene |e Ratner | Rete Gem news, wot] RAYE compen, WWJ, Morgan Heatt ews, Toby vi anne Vi , WXYZ, Strange CaLW, Nedee Guat WIBK, News, Genit waka CRLW. Gabriel Beater WJBK, News, alee § short! Grow none WPON, News Party /PON, WPON. News and rts | 8:30—WJR, Music Hall 11:30—WJR, Make Up M WOM, Spantsh Hour 11:30—-WJR, Midnight Music | “ww Maxwell WWJ, Phrase That Pays 6:00—WJR, Mr. Keen, News| WWJ. Bruce ayer WXYZ, News, Wint WWJ, Henry J, Taylor - WXYZ Top of the Town | WXYZ. Sp ea | OT Ge Pers Be WXY2, Show Stoppers CKLW, Rollin with Leroy Wan: lee, pune. wink fe oe. CKLW. Gergeant WJBK. Mickey 8! WCAR. Coffes with Clem WCAR, Music in the Al WJBK, News, Mickey Shorr WPON, Cap aan contest WPON, Rise ‘mn’ 8hin WPON, Pontiac Pa WPON, News, Record Room TUESDAY MORNING 9:00—WIR Willtam Sheenan t2:@0—WIJR, Jack Whi $:38—WIR Talent Scouts 6:00——WJR, Jim Vinal! ow Minute Parade WWJ, News by Cederberg WWJ, Lone Ranger WW), News wx Breakfast Club WXYZ, News, Winter WXYZ, John Vandercook Wwxyvz. — Ace, Wolf CKLW, News, Toby David CKLW, Griddle, Riddle CKLW Broadway Cop cCKLW Dunbar WJBK, News, Tom George WJBK News, Tom George WJIBK, Mickey Shorr WJIBK, ee. Gentile, pa | News Ace WCAR, News _WPON Record Room, WCAR, TBA WPON, News. _Magte Carpet WPON News -- Today's Television Programs - - ee te Channel 2—WJBE-TV Channel (—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel. 9—CKLW-TV ' TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—(7)—Kukla, Fran and Ollie. in “Home ‘ariety. 6:15—(7) Dinner Theater. Little Rascals in ‘Framing Youth."’ (4) ~—News. Paul Williams. Cy News. Jac LeGoff. - , 6:25—- (4)—Sports. Bill Flemming. (2)}—TV Weatherman. Dr. Ev- 6. Ww. Acoenstictan HEARING AID SERVICES Ne Mere | Werry! Specta need Hearing Ald Supplies Just Diu your pons and call, os a — a IE ow ecentioen, acand_ wees We heve high an a pows ered models. Models @ Wear in the hair om the eye- Se @as a tle r Doctors say, “Try and be satisfied ‘waters you buy any Hear- tne Aid.” We agree with these Doc- tors amd want you to have without * PE TeSbay rcs Fea gt Aur Acoesticnn Medel 12-2629 for a Hearing Test & Fitting appointment in your home—daytime, evening or weekend. ACOUSTICON-WILLIAMSON COMPANY Phene Fedora! 2-9079 014 W. Meren 64. Pontiac, Mich. HAMPTON’S NOW HAVE GE REFRIGERATORS RANGES WASHERS DRYERS $25 W. Huron FE 4-2525 erett Phelps. 6:30—(7)—Greatest Sports Thrills. Films of events. at Madison Square Garden. (4) Tony Martin Show. Music. (2) — News. Doug Edwards. 6:45—(4)News Caravan. John Cam- . (2) — Julius La 1:00—(1)—TV Readers Digest. Ed- die Albert plays philosophical | ® cabbie in “Human Nature Through a Rear View Mirror.” (9)—Million Dollar Movie — Ev- elyn Keyes, Dennis O’Keefe in “One Big Affair.’ (4)—Our Town. Frank Sinatra, Eva Marie Saint, Paul Newton in musical ver- sion Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize Play, ‘“‘Our Town,” a col- orcast. The story deals with life in a typical American small town. (2)—Burns and Allen. Gracie interviews candidates for the future Mrs. George Burns from girls sent by a matrimonial agency. 7:30—(7)—Voice Program. Roberta Peters, Metropolitan opera col- oratura, soprano, sings “I'll Fol- low My Heart;” “Doll from “Tales of Hoffman,” ‘Love's Own Sweet Song.” (2)— Talent Scouts.- Arthur Godfrey hosts new talent. (9) — Circle 9} - Day. 12:30—(7) Beulah. Shaws 11:15—(7) Armchair Theater. Rich- ard Arle’ in “Lady and the Monster.” 14) Little Show—Ann Over Murder.” — Fair Weather. 11:20—(9)—-Good Neighbor Theater. Robert Cummings, Ida Lupino in “Forever and a Day.” (2)—Night- watch Theater, Don Castle, Au- ‘drey Long in “Perilous Waters.” 11:30—(4)—Tonight: Steve Allen with music, variety. TURSDAY MORNING 6:50—(4) Today’s Farm Report. 6:55--(2) Meditations. 7:00 = (4) Today. (2) Morning Show. 7:55—(2) Standard Weathervane. $:00—(2) Cartoon Classroom. 8:26—(2) Detroit Newscast. News Ace. 8:30—(2) Welcome Travelers. (7) | Wixie Wonderland. 9:00—(4) Romper Room. (2) Gar (H— 10:30—(2) Strike Tt Rich. 11:00—(2) Valiant Lady. (4) Ten- nessee Ernie. (7) Story Studio. 11:15—(2) Love of Life. 11:30—(2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Feather Your Nest. 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. 11:55—(7) News Ace. TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(T) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) Ding Dong School. (2) (4) Hour of 12:5@-(2) Girl Talk. (9) Prayer, Sign On. 8:60—(7)—Jumbo Theater. Helmut Dantine in ‘The Bet.” (2) — Those Whiting Girls — Barbara decides to get her own apart- “ment after a family argument, Margaret Whiting stars. Open Evenings ‘til 9 P.M. ee Oakland Theatre | 8:30—(7)—Medical Horizons. Per- ception and Personality Study, 2 a new method of personality rat- 1:00 — (7). Lunchtime Drama. (9) pag Mat. (2) Robert Q. air Good Cooking. (2) Link- letter’s House party. 1:45—(2) Home Pilate. 309 — (7) Stars on Seven. (2) Baseball. (4) Ted Mack's Mati- Grevier, Glen Dixon in ‘Mind | ry Moore. ®: 2) Arthur Godfrey. (7) Re quest Theater. 9:55—(4) Faye Elizabeth. , - 10:00—(4) -Home. (9) Golf Re- sume. 2:30—(9) Tuesday Matinee. (4) It Pays to Be Married. $:00—(7) Hi Theater. (4) Way of the W $:15—(4) First Love. $:30—(4) World of Mr, Sweeney. $:45—(4) Modern Romances. _3:55-~(9) News, 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Take a | Look. Puppets. (4) Pinky Lee Show. | 4:25~—(2) Scoreboard. ia bulldozer, |4:30-(9) Howdy Doody. (4 | Howdy Doody. (2) Sagebrush Shorty. 4:50—(7) Ricky the Clown. 5:00—(7) Auntie Dee, (4) Mr. Twinky Presents. (2) The Early Show, (9) Justice Colt. '§:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (4) | Rex & Rinty. Bell Asked Deaf Classes Begin i in United States Alexander Graham Bell, inven- tor ‘of the ‘telephone, persuaded Clarke School for the Deaf ‘at Northampton, Massachusetts, to start the first training course for oral teachers of the deaf in the | | Unite States in 1889. | Since then, more than 500 have gone from there to every State | | and 20 foreign countries to teach | |deaf children to talk. They have | brought comfort to parents in Ar- | /gentina, Canada, Australia, Japan, Turkey, India,.South Africa and | Norway, the National Geographic | Society says. | Oldsters’ Income Rises | NEW YORK—The cash income | of the some 14,000,000 Americans of 65 years of age and older to- taled about 20 billion Gollars in 1954 — the equivalent of about 7; cents of every dollar of total per- sonal income in the United States during the year. Cleaner Cutting Saws | ing demonstrated in test origin-| across Your saws will cut cleaner, ating from the Dept. of Psy-| 1 Tennis stroke f i B ty Ib i7 er ema mokiae chiatry. State University of New| ‘Teotrel Quick service on all types York College of Medicine. (9)—| ,$ lan . , in a joan. Mold ‘saws re Abbott and Costello. Bud and Lou |” Guide's scale z | “take to door-to-door salesman- | }} Hebrew month D. We Fitzwater FE 4-2687 | ship in “Fall Guy.” (4)—Robert | 1 Red Sox : YY 1213 Destes Ave. Montgomery Presents. ‘“Mr. and ——— Willigans Z " Mrs. Monroe,” TV adaptation of | 1 Unbetieved BE 11g three James Thurber stories. Mr. 4 — , wy ERVICE 9 | Monroe is a man of vivid imag- | 31 Pronoun Wy S s | ination. Edward Andrews, Au- | j2impel % Yy . | gusta Gabner star. (2)—Ethel me eteet of VY Yes! and Abert Peg Lynch, Albert 77 Tennis mateh ' Yi | e Bunce ir a | 9:00 — (7) — Hollywood Preview. | Rese Yj 1) | eT.V. Film to be announced. (9)—Box- if Wate nssnte — 5 Y @ Hi-Fi ing. 10-round heavyweight bout: | 7 th cedohon ; V4, ti | © Radic Jimmy Slade ws. Archie Mc- | 4 Watched ey, © Tape Recorders Bride: (2)—Studio One. Ralph | $) Animal batr © Reseed Ployers Bellamy, Geraldine a pf ote a | © lnter-C in “Like Father, Like Son,” 3 bal r ; 0.0A. _— wealthy businessman who doesn't 83 Russian city le Systems t always recognize. right from cs il ol echgp-2 $6 Laire . eeereensieneee ees — BLAKE %:30—(7)—Hot Rod Races. Fred *’ Nessun tote 1 Baints (ab) 26 Feminine 42 Apothecaries’ RADIO TV Oko cher ete) ete fie eee ie | lopy races from Motor City) 3 mattiedore and 10 Venture Greek letters Persian poet 3149 W. Huren Speedway. (4) Secret, File —Mys- « Treaties nA puted at Pcnas Sereard yl Ga bire en | - tery, adventure. 5 — 2 Essentin of ot} 4 4 wt ag again yl Gurr ao ame FE 4-5791 9:45—(9) =, Ringside Interview. | ,moupaine 4. taped 38 Total ; scar Chris Schénkel talks to’ boxers. throwing 35 Preposition 41 Wood and coal 10:00—(9)—News. (4) — Mayor of ™ ' a the Town. The mayor gets an opponent of new parking meter | JACK WEBB plan to change his mind in “‘Pop- | AS PETE KELLY 1! i j Now Thru Thurs: _ 10:30—(7)—I Search for Adventure. ularity Contest.” (2) — Back- stage. ‘‘Half the Action,” film. 10:45—(9)—Yesterday’s Newsreel. Film. “Kayuk Down the Nile.” (9) — Heart of the City—Pat McVey, Jane Nigh in ‘‘Fear, Inc.,” the underworld threatens violence to influential citizens. (4)—It’s a Great Life. Michael O'Shea, Wil- liam Bishop, James. Gunn in comedy; Ear! waits anxiously for an old girl friend. (2)—Movie Museum. “ and 11:00—Soupy’s On. — Johnny TELEVISIO REPAIR — All Makes Bussard Expert Trained Technicians @ ALL WORK GUARANTEED e Phone FE 2-6445 ' 84 Oakland Avenue—Free Parking SERVICE Electric Slagle with variety, music. (9) - —Billy O'Connor Show. Variety. } (4) News. (2) News, Jac LeGoff. | USED 7 TV ‘SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON TV % W. Geren FE 46-2605 For Factory _, Call. EF rE AL ‘Authorized Service 4.1515 993 Mt. Clemens Dial M’ Genius ls Doing Series ‘Cozy Story of Terror, With Twist at End’ ‘Is : . The typical American home ém- | first months of Director's Aim Ploys only about 19 general light. es. ing lamps. By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD W—A rich man is returning from Florida to New York in his car, He collides with smashes a prison truck, kills two guards. The man is completely paralyzed except for a finger on his left hand. He is presumed dead and taken to the morgue, his body rest- ing on his left hand. 7” * * This chilling situation ts meat for the macabre mind of Alfred Hitchcock and it’s one of the dramas that will introduce the famed director to .TV audiences. He'll begin the Alfred Hitchedck | bertes on CBS in October. * * *& ; The calm: Mr..-Hitchcock was | supervising the filmings of the drama at Republic Studios, The g7 fH sag eae ge 5 q Well-Lighted New Automobile Uses 22.8 Bulbs CLEVELAND — New automo. biles are better lighted than ever before. The average 1955 model passenger car uses 22.8 lightbulbs. Among light bulbs used in day's well-lighted car: back-up lights, parking brake indicator, clock, glove compartment, ignition switch, map, dome, under hood, trunk, hand spot, ash tray and compass lamp. Female Birds Work as Males Supervise ib; 5 g to 1V Set Sales Break . Previous Records WASHINGTON (INS)— Industry sources said today that retail sales of television receivers broke pre- vious records in July and in the ' According to re Radio - Elec- tronics . Television Manufacturers Association, July sales totaled 381,- 567 sets as compared with 368,634 in the same month last year. ¥ * Lo RETMA reported that sales in- creased by 13 per cent in the! January-July period, with a grand total of 3,584,562 moving through retail outlets, Both For. $17 295 | Juvenile Colon Is ‘Magic Capitel’ COLON, Mich.—Colon is known: as the ‘Magle Capital of the World” because the manufacture of magicians’ equipment is its leading industry. 69: Book Sale 10,000 BOOKS Including - Fiction-Non Fiction Values to $500 in 4K Matching wedding bands, handsomely tailored bands yellow gold. é A 5 : ? 3 lewelry Department, Old Prof Book Store 9 W. Lawrence St. “I hope Paramount and Warn- er’s don't hear about this,” he said. “They'll say, ‘Hmmm, a 30- | in nine days?’ | a a lot of difference, of not so much on quality.” TONIGHT hae aponvaine low, low prices remain Ton policy . It’s People’s Heinz Strained BABY FOOD J 10° LIMA BEANS Hart Brand JUICE Giant 46 Ox. Can. EOPLES BLACKBERRIES Florida Cypress Gardens GRAPEFRUIT PEOPLE'S ight, Tusedey ent Wedoceden, . it’s your chence to seve. FLUFFO 3 Ib. Tin ” sn: sali ‘til 9 P.M 4 SHOP Tonight to 9 _ PARK FREE — in peved lots et F both stores. Can ’ Sealtest Homogenized Mich. RSP, Pie, read =¢ “MAD SE TEP =SaAal Delicious Franco-Americen ‘SPAGHETTI 15% Oz. Sno-White Fresh Baked White BREAD ‘ ne 11: Tr 1 PARK Pn FREES F Tall No: =? gah ae é Wea Neda aT WR) wet as vai ee vi 25 | fe | al : | i ! : / : y 955 2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1 'e > Aluminum Combinations Storm, Screen Doors . Keeps your home up to 15 de oy Bynes in summer, saves r in winter. Easy to install. Mica Fill, 17 *. re el ” Ready-mixed for asbestos shin- gles, concrete, stucco and other 5 are easily : fn water. Get yours at Floor, Deck Enamel Made for Heavy Trattic Geen = 4,49 A tough, good looking finish , that is resistant to wear, weath- er and hard scrubbing. Won't spot. Choice of 10 colors— et Secs! bers ‘needs no sanding. Covers up to Plastic Added for Wear Reg. 1% Afistocrat of floor tile! Comfort able to walk on. 9x9-in. size, ‘pattern goes clear through. ‘ Rubber Cement, Quert.....97e Paint Sproyer Craftsmen Portable Model s0 00m 54.95 Famous Craftaman- ‘quality. +} delivers 2.15 cubic feet air per minute .. . for fast paempa! 4 hp, motor. See it now * Sero-Glo Enamel Odorless Scrub-tough Finish reg. = 1.49 o. Our finest finish for walls, woodwork, furniture. One coat covera most any surface. Semi- gloss. 4-star Feature. Save more now! . , Snowhite Enamel | Odorless; Perfectly White ‘neg 29 1,69 & The white that IS white, STAY white. 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