a — The Weather ae U. 8) Weather Bureau Forecast - (Detatis Page 2) ie ONT 116th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 —36 PAGES onrral PRS REET i ke, Says Re fee Ph Man Who’ S Going Places es See Pe. WHERE NEXT, MR. HART? — Before he - spoke to the Pontiac Rotary Club Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart (right) pointed out on a map to Edward L. Williams, club president, his yesterday noon, ator. Rotary Club Hears Senate Candidate Pentiae Press Phote past and next stops during his campaign tour as Democratic nominee for United States Sen- Hart Alarmed by Sovief Salesmanship By GEORGE.T. TRUMBULL JR., The Union .is being more successful in selling communism to independent nations: than thé’; Wnited States is in selling its free- dom product, Lt, Gov. Philip A. Hart warned yesterday. Hart, speaking before the Pon- tiac Rotary Club, said the Amer- ican people have nobody to blame) but themselves for letting the| spread of freedom slip from their grip. * * * He was.introduced by Harold A, Fitzgerald, publisher of The Pon- tiac Press, “Freedom isn't an end in it- self,” Rotarians were told. “Once you have won it, it’s the use we put it to that really counts.” The Democratic candidate for Peace Treaty Sought by East Germany BERLIN (UPI)—The East Ger- man foreign office announced today it has proposed to the Big Four and West Germany a con- ference to discuss a peace treaty for Germany. A foreign office press an- nouncement said East Germany in notes to the United States, Britain, France, the Soviet Union and West Germany said negotia- an East-West German commis- sion be set up to discuss the problems to be solved in draw- ing up. a peace treaty, The Western allies and the West German government in the past have rejected all proposals 3 Wee Tales About Formosa and Moscow WASHINGTON. (UPI) — The Defense Department announced it has suspended travel of mili- tary men’s families to Formosa because of the. present crisis there, MOSGOW. (UPI) — The Com- munist. organ Pravda accused the United States today of plan- ning aggression against the Chin- ese mainland and said Russia “cannot remain inactive.” WASHINGTON (UPI) — U.S. officials said today “the United States is trying to build world pressure on Red China to.stop using force in the Formosa Straits and start acting like a for East-West German talks. peaceful world citizen. Chrysler ‘59 Lines Stress Safety, Passenger Comfort, By ROBERT B. TARR Managing Editor, Pontiac Press MIAMI BEACH — Chrysler Corp. enters the 1959 automotive market early next month with its five lines of cars extensively restyled, and carrying engineering developments designed for greater safety, better per- formance and increased passenger comfort. a Chrysler President L. L. Colbert presented the ’59 cars to newsmen here yesterday afternoon. DeSoto Division will show its cars to the¢-—< public Sept. 23; Imperials, Plymouths, Dodges and Chryslers will be shown, in that order, from Oct. 6 through 10th. _ In eontinuing the dart-line styl- ing which has, characterized ‘Chrysler cars in recent years, the cars appear with new front fen- ders and hoods, new rear fin and fender panels, new roof and floor panels, new front and rear bump- ers and grilles. More head and leg ‘room and additional seating com: fort is claimed by the designers. . £54424 ; ‘ An innovation sure: to get plenty of attention is swivel front seats which turn at the release of a button to permit about half the corporation mod- els; available on all. Between the two swivel seats is a smaller third seat which turns down as an arm rest when desired. Other Chrysler features for 59 include: V-8 engines of increased displacement for all lines, with two new 383 and 413. cubie-inch engines; a new rear axle with a 2.95 ratio (the same as overdrive) ‘with which a 10 per cent fuel &conomy is claimed; torsion-aire suspension standard on all cars with new automatic rear air units)‘ available for cars carrying extra heavy loads, An electronic rear view mirror! (optional) which atitomatically dims reflection from following cars,. a new headlight dimmer, and push-button controls for heat- easy entrance or exit. The swivel seats ate standard on ing: and .air conditioning systems ‘are other innovations. Sen. Charles E, Potter's seat in Congress illustrated how independ- ent nations—‘‘who were used to going to bed at night a: h nation’”’—were being swallowed up by the “Soviet economic penetra- ‘|tion year after year.” NOT SELLING WELL Hart said this country’s freedom ‘product Was not selling as well on the international market because the current administration has failed to “head off the recession,” Hart urged the administration | to announce a decisive policy on the current Formosa crisis. The former Birmingham resi- dent said: “If the administration is committed to shooting in de- fense of Quemoy, this should be miade unequivocally clear so that; Red China and people at home will know exactly where we stand.” * * * An essential to maintaining free- dom at home and. stopping the flow of communism, Hatt de- clared, is to keep the free world informed, ‘chapter and verse where we stand with our compe- tition.’ “This Dulles brand of spur-of- the-moment diplomacy is unduly risky: and reflects the adminis- tration’s lack of any long-range policies to counter sporadic Communist flare-ups, any one of which might explode inte the world struggle we all dread.” Lack of a firm policy on the Quemony situation has placed ‘‘us again on the brink of war,” he said, HELPS BROADEN ECONOMY Communist China, Hart stated, is an example of Russia's endless attempts ‘to give such an impov- erished nation ‘‘a place in the sun’? by helping broaden its indus- trial and economic base. “The race isn't going to be won by the fellow that is first to the moon,” Hart said. “Arms are great, but ideas of freedom are more powerful.” It's a question of what this coun- try chooses between — butter or guns, Hart told the noonday gath-| ering at the Waldron Hotel. He said he believed the country could trim its 40 billion dollar de- fense budget without seriously jeopardizing national defense, He urged a sincere effort in showing the rest of the world we “are serious’ about wanting peace and world disarmament. Towards this goal, Hart cited a poll which showed natives of India believing Russians more serious than Americans, One prerequisite toward peace in the world is for Americans to solve their'\racial problems in Little Rock and other eves at home, Hart insisted. ‘COLOSSALLY ‘IGNORANT’ Our convincing ‘satellite nations (Cgntinued.on Page 2, Col. 8) Use Our SUPER ETHYL Gasolines ‘Slugging It Out UNSTY | ened ‘Forntosa;--the Nationalist "|concerned,” the statement (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ¢ in Tough Talk Many Ifs in. President's Warning; Reaction Is Favorable at Capital WASHINGTON (#) — Red China was.faced today with the prospect of having its mainland bases blasted by U.S. bombers if it starts a war in the Formosa Strait. pass, what Red China might start as a limited brush-fire could ignite a raging combat threatening to engulf the whole world— conceivably even a univer- conflict. This tough new U.S. attitude to- ward Red China's militarism was officially disclosed at Newport, R./ I., yesterday by a top U.S. au- thority. This official briefed some 70 hewsmen at the summer White- House after. Secretary of State Dulles flew there for a lengthy eonference with President Eisen-_ hower on the China crisis. The. briefing expanded on a strongly worded U.S. policy state- ment authorized by Eisenhower and read to reporters by Dulles. The combination , provided the strongest U.S. ‘warning yet to Red China not to carry out its threat of attack against Nationalist-held islands in the Formosa Strait. * * * The statement said: 1. Eisenhower would. order “timely and effective’ action if he decided any Red Chinese at- tack on the offshore islands threat- headquarters which the United States is pledged by treaty to de- fend. 2. Eisenhower has reached no such decision yet, but would not hesitate- to make it if cireum- stances warranted. — 3. Any Red Chinese extension of its territory by force endangers the whole free world, and “‘ac- quiescence therein would threaten peace everywhere."’ 4. Despite Red China's threats and military buildup, it is not yet! certain the Communists will at-! tack, nor is it apparent that the Nationalists would need U.S. mili- tary help to throw back any Com- munist attackers. * * * The statement.-called on Red} China onee more to renounce the use of force.except in self-defense. “The United States intends to! follow that course, so far as it is, t If things came to that sally dreaded all-out atomic}. WASHINGTON ( AP) — Team- sters chief James R. Hoffa has postponed a decision on whether to-call a union convention which could free his union from a court- appointed monitoring board. Object to the plan by the monitors themselves led ‘Hoffa yes- terday..to announce a Sept. me¢ting of the union's Internation- al Executive Board and the mon- itors to discuss the proposed con- TEAMSTER INVESTIGATORS — Teamster President James R. Hoffa's three-man commis- sion begins its investigation of alleged racketeer- ing in the big transportation union. The Hoffa _ Hoffa Delays Decision on Calling Convention. Begin Union Racketeering Probe appointees are: Under terms of the court order by U.S. Dist. Judge F. Dickenson Letts, which set up the monitor- ing board, the union can get the monitorship dissolved by holding) a, convention any time after next January and electing officers again. The election would be su- 16'pervised by the monitors. Letts set up the monitor ar- rangement as part of a compro- mise settlement of a lawsuit vention, challenging Hoffa's right to be- Hits Racket Committee state special prosecutor. said, State Bar President. Will Defend Hartrick Sharp criticism has been aimed at the Senate Rackets \Committee for its handling of testimony involving’ an lalleged deal between the late Oakland County Circuit. Judge George B. Hartrick and the late Kim Sigler, then State Bar President James E. Haggerty told the third lannual state judicial conference in Detroit yesterday, | 12 miles beyond the-offshore isla —— Bs Miles ye 5 = Galion. 8. RMER GAS & OIL CO. 22 Orchard Lake ‘Ate, ions oft Sag. St. ‘KEEP OUT’ AREA -- The broken line indicates where Red ; China. Thursday announced extension of its territorial waters to trespassing. edict includes. the islands of Matsu and — = well as Formosa and the Pescadores. AP Wirephote nds along the mainland. The no . ‘Stay Alive on Suds/ *“No one in this state has yet come to the aid of Ne ew in Line | isee to it that it is done.” Judge Hartrick. The state Bar and I -personally will Last Aug, 13, Robert P. Scott, former Local 614 officer and sec- retary-treasurer of the Michigan Federation of Labor, testified be- \fore the Senate Committee that he]: refused a .request by James R. |Hoffa, Teamsters Unién President, to intercede with Judge Hartrick in an attempt to: win a new trial! ‘for Harry Fleisher, a member of: ‘the old Purple Gang. Fleisher had received a 25-50 | year term for armed robbery. Seott said today he intended nothing derogatory about Judge Hartrick in his testimony, and that he was testifying only to what Sig- ler had related to him sometime in 1950 about the alleged Sigler- Hartrick agreement. Scott said that Fleisher and sev- eral other defendants before Hart- rick were to be given stiff sen- itences in return for which Sigler had promised to give Hartrick a seat on the State Suprenie Court lif he were elected governor. “This was a vile defamation through the instrumentality of hearsay testimony,”” Haggerty said. “I am going to procure the testimony which I personally will deliver to the committee to cor- ‘rect the record and to exoner- ate the highly ethical and dis- tinguished jurist.’ Judge Hartrick died in San Francisco the same day Scott tes- tified before the committee. a BERWICK, England (UPI) — €rewmen from the German tim- ber freighter Ericly Haslinger staggered ashore yesterday and reported they ran out of drinking its but managed to last 24 urs on — ; hue, Washington attorney;. former Sen. George H. Bender of Ohio, chairman of the group; and retired Detroit Judge Ira W. Jayne, _Sters lawyer George S, Fitzgerald inat¢onal committeeman from AP Wirephote (left to right) F. Joseph Dona- Union Leader Sits in Parley iat GM Today. Both Sides Maintain They're Flexible, Hope for Other to Give In Reuther personally. joined contract talks at General. Motors today, declaring his - United Auto Workers union: would do everything ize - sible to avoid a strike. His move came as new _| wildcat walkouts idled -|some 2,000 workers at Big Three- auto plants. Before entering the bar- ‘|gaining room, the UAW |president amiably shook hands with GM Vice Presi- {dent Louis G. Seaton. Seaton, GM’s chief nego- tiator,- also told newsmen the company would do everything it could to head -|off a strike. DETROIT —Walter P. come Teamsters president last year. Martin F, O'Donoghue, chair- man of the monitor board, earlier had protested Hoffa's announced plan to outline his conyention VICTORY NOT DOUBTED- No observer doubted that Hoffa could win re-election at a special convention. Reportedly, his plan is to call a convention in February, get himself re-elected, and then ask the court to end the job of the monitors. O'Donoghue consulted with Judge Létts on monitor powers and complaints that Hoffa is not following through on monitor cleanup recommendations. After the two-hour session, also attended by Hoffa’s attorneys, O'Donoghue told newsmen, “We are much satisfied.” — oO’ ‘Donoghue said Judge Letts had not given a formal opinion on the status of a rival cleanup group ap- pointed by Hoffa himself and head- ed by former Republican Sen. George Bender of Ohio. O'Donoghue indicated he would jtake any conflict with Bender's group into open court and seek a ruling from the judge. Lawyer Wants fo Explain Loan Teamster Fitzgerald Is Until Tuesday WASHINGTON (AP) — Team- isaid today he can explain fully his role in a million-dollar union wel- fare fund loan eunder fire in the Senate rackets hearings. He expressed resentment that the hearings were adjourned until next Tuesday before he had a chance to reply as a .witness to testimony involving him. The special investigating com- mittee headed by Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) heard testi- mony yesterday about a 1955-56 loan to a Detroit real estate pro- motion firm which allegedly has repaid none of the debt and not all of the interest. due. The loan was made from the Michigan Conference of Teamsters welfare fund. oe A staff accountant testified that the Winchester Village Land De- others a $35,000 fee for telling the firm where it could get the loan: Fitzgera’ d, a-former Democratic Michigan, told. newsmen: the pay- ment was made for legal services an@ not as a loan-finding fee. The accountant, Walter H. Hen- son, - testified that money from the loan was ‘used improperly for varions purposes, He estfi- La Angry He Has to Wait, velopment Co. paid Fitzgerald and) “I came here first because I | ot Se See “ strike target and deadline. “We are not Seaton, however, said the UAW had not‘ scaled down demands which the company estimates would increase labor costs 48 cents an hour per worker. HOPE IN REUTHER ther’s. reappearance will unlock the frozen position the union has taken since May 29,"" said Seaton. © That was. the date the old GM con- tract. expired. UAW mernbers have been working since June 1 without one at GM, Ford or Chrys- ler, seats’ Sashiied: “We are as flexible and as open as we can tag on union demands because he (Continued on Page 2, Col. ©) ‘Raingear Needs a Shaking Out; Moisture in Store Mostly cloudy and warmer with scattered showers. and _thunder- showers developing tonight and to- morrow is the weatherman’s fore- ‘cast for the Pontiac area. Tonight's low will be near 65. * * * Temperatures for the next five days will average near the nor- mal maximum of 77 and normal minimum of 57, Cooler weather spreading over Upper Michigan Saturday will reach Lower Michi- gan Sunday. Monday will be warm- er with Tuesday and Wednesday cool — * Precipitation will average one- half to one inch in showers tonight or Saturday and again around Tuesday. Sixty was the lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding § a.m. The reading was 73 at 2 p.m, Ree eee ha Re i Theaters /.......5..4 tre TR TV & elie Peas ae: ‘| (Continued on Page™2, Col. 2) “We are very hopeful Mr. Reu- Reuther declined to put a price In Today’ s Press Wilson; Earl + theeee serene RE - Las ceaaeah Pages seen oe aetna \ fie: County News... 666. cesedas TM * Editorials ....... eer Farm and Garden esha scaa ee Make |. ac AL ile Obitdaties 40. sFie. cc cee Sports foe. eee 20 thru b> J Owe ae ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; ceigiogs | 5, 1958 : / a4 ‘Schoo! Boards All Confused . , Racial Rulings in South) ‘ s i ‘ \" f f * ‘|fie cases was greatly improved, (The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — 7; aa State Police Sgt. Michael Sibal as he reviewed a National Safety City Receives Proposals for Boosting Trattic Safety — Bensinger died, Aug, 16 fo attack, . ‘Cre tions for the improvement of Bir- lowing ® heart — EHigy on a Oss mingham’s traffic safety program woliptete urnings Last Nig were made yesterday afternoon by pin ie, McMullen Service for Barbara Lynn Mc- ee te De we ey By United Press International unc tiaives Mullen, 15, of 3988 Lakewood Lane, The nation’s school integration etic record. of Se y's Tat Bloomfield Township, was held at ° controversy raged in Virginia and cs & oe 2-p.m. today at the William Vasu Arkansas today. Manifestations . 4 Funeral Home, Royal Oak, Burial of the racial troubles included the Municipal Court handling of traf- was in Acacia Park Cemetery. burning of a Negro in effigy in according to the study, Sibel told| _ The daughter of Mr, and Mrs ee Corolla, ee city officials. ’ Barclay McMullen, she died A tet of rules to guide the Wednesday at ! or home. Bar- , , Virginia’s integration spotlight ; les » can wes « ioe at | was on Chartottesville where the - eoart and persons handling Bloomfield Hills High School. Sin elty school board met to weigh lations has been suggested to the advice of Gov. J. Lindsay make disposition of the cases |- sophie 8 beside ~ Lainie ah : the Dayton Area Cham- pe ‘ more uniferm, he told cit . }a sister, Sharon; a bro ohn, » ‘sored by yt ‘a ao UP—Ben D, Mills has | Almond to make no assignments, |. a | . y of ae at hegre: "a ee pes head of Ford white or Negro, to any school ir Almond informed all - Virgiole back in school, Sgt. LeBair emp jyear, of which 4,284 were for mov- ers, Mrs. E. T. Marion and Mrs. eral Motors’ on Pree? tate pot ‘Co. a Mercury ~ Edsel- we fase of a federal court: in Ploy ergata ea pear ag P. V. McMullen, both of Detroit. . Kyes, who is GM group exect-| James. J Nance who resigned : er intoxication charges was urged eg tive “in charge “of the Dayton.| yesterday. Mills had been |,noy" Viren, federal Jude in the report. It also was suggested|¢ | shi ‘ Household Appliance and GMC Nance’s assistant that chemical tests be used every Soviet Sa esmansnl Truck Group, responded to re- Sere — ~~ OO s time police have reason to believe marks saluting General. Motors by |q open Monday ie a driver is intoxicated. ni ; regated basis pending the U.S.|. © A | _ 5 Gee cates of he bard Teamster Fitzgerald [sa =, Sedo on the | | AOCIDENTS INCREASE larming fo Hart St ee gue Little Rock crisis. He ordered ; Pontise Press Photo An upswing in traffic accidents Warning that “economic devel- Wants fo Explain Arlington schools to hold up’ ed-| ‘TIMELY REMINDER — Sct. Lawrence E. treme caution and low speeds are required in- |was noted ie that the Monicipal| (Continued From Page One) psa proline raga rt neste cada t 3 —_ to} LeBair, of the police traffic bureau, puts up one —_school areas. “Youngsters are often more enthu- |Court handled 18 cases L. that they should align themselves - — momat ‘ : seven white schools a r of the many safety posters that are being dis- _siastic than careful,” the sergeant said, ‘so it is |year, compared to »| with the free world, is handicapped or Oey 7 Powe oo pe (Continued From Page One) ‘|ihe study the petition of the ap-| tributed to remind motorists that children are up to the driver to be extra alert in the vicinity - | 4ccording to the report, The Viola-|ecause “our nation is colossally marriage syaaste, Plicants. hasized that ex- of schools and playgrounds.” tions Bureau had 15,815 cases last ignorant about other people, their “Develop and expand our econ- nh dghoek beards yeuterday that they “ : . ing violations; The balance were|culture, their ways of life.” pee gotten es oe only $104,000 of $279,000 ‘ ‘ ot A —_ for overtime or improper parking. Hart Wlustrated this point b pb jo iene agen on fos tnibanteest, be es ~ ver - ened w: |Free Press Dispute Idles News, Times es *¢ ¢ reterring: to. his, elght gel place, . Fitzgerald contended, however,| ment by the state’s pupil place- ° ) To further the excellent satety he said, could relate much “Intensify our efforts in the field) that the company hes other assets| ment D 7 I S d D program in the schools, it has been| “B® Be sald, ~ of fundamental ko eset hes ‘ tow, post tage — etroit In ts econ ay suggested traffic safety films be| Sout kings and queens of Great bbe eenge aor and said the money will be re-} “massive resistance . breaking through the barriers of} covered in full. The firm was or- « Bieenage magnified the)” With A N : ~rshown in local theaters. Britain, but knew little about ignarence fiat impede ws. ganized by Abe Green and Jack) eee eee aaah ane ithout An EWS] QDETS) Greater entorcement of. pedes-| Asian nations, their history and “Devote Gar utmost energy to!1, Winghall of Detroit to: develop|”ocg ex defendants in desegrega. | : trian laws should be made, Sibal| their people. 2 6, oe ee ; E . ceacalie SS Se An, fi finally, cling with the seal!" e me ag tion suits against Arlington and! DETROIT w — Detroit ‘ecicsch He ileamah tecteok: in Detroit poll S acute af ae be He touched on the creation of ‘of crusader: 7 thie wallet and| om s -“ Prince Edward counties and Nor- ; i Michigan State University Oak- of crusaders to the and; But Henson testified that $20,- ; its second day without newspa-|Thursday morning and the oress-| lice Department. economic ‘that have! 935.75 of the went for pur-|{0lK, the state’s sensitive. integra- di land as an institution to educate n . ©) 985. money Purl ion spots pers today because of a dispute/men met with him to consider Better lighting in areas of |giris and boys to become future _ given us so mich for so many} chase of 19 cows and a bull. P's ellect the oe widet S in which pressmen walked off their| what action to take. frequent night mishaps also was |leaders of the free world. a +. Bn he ge — oe lage federal court order to assign Negro| jo Duce Gee _— Bayh sgnane oe veeiihers is| suggested jn the report. oo es 4g __ ‘yes foresaw these developments | sell a piece of the mortgaged prop-|Suden's to white schools and un- newspapers, the Detroit News and|is aia enieee eee inar| At the conclasion of his report,! Hart, 45, was not a newcomer — of keen significance to Dayton| erty for $10,000 and buy it back a °C" © See - the Detroit Times, -was suspended! the joint contract with the three|S'ven at the Municipal Building, |/pefore Pontiac Rotarians. He ap- and its industries as well as tojfew months later for $50,000. MINE S1Y asslgiments, vas) HONORS WEBSTER — The |*er the morning Free Press failed| newspapers. Sibal presented the city with the)peared in 1954 when he was gam- “hae ~ ee Maas a said the — dollars (a faltering start toward school in-; newest stamp in the ee to roll off Lad — ps) —_ hi crea! a paigning fal ag governor. . po ea ee ga been deposited escroW tegration and some violence, _ American” series is this four- . : oes : - ec! : " s His yesterday p I, ‘Am Increase of almost two- | with the Abstract and Title Guar-| * ~~} cent bicentennial stamp honor- | , The dispute ‘Ynion chapel chai We Will Try to Avoid fee ee eee a imnllar award) centered almost eatirely on what : — ee of a antee Co. of Detroit autor soem Fire Xi Four Childran ome Nosh vee =~ sper caau af te Vies Pra Chiefs of Police was received here,| NC Called “today’s generation of holds with incomes of more ingly iron-clad ee lor its a likeness of him. Stamp : ® . crisis.” $7,500, : "| proper use. tle | placed on sale in Hartford, Robert C. Butz, executive sec- § § . . 2. “New concepts in refrigera-| -He said one of thie required White Parents Are Away -Conn., Webster's birthplace, on | retary of the Detroit Newpaper trike, ays Reuther noe ee a iprips State aes pled only when es ast. tion gree a for food prep-| the borrowers » aceate to the ab- Pechlenglag Ral oi = ston Oct. 16. — bass: bh pas bowyeg (Continued From Page One) safe at the Gare Seartee 1144 he refuted claims of Michigan Re- rae seb neon oe — + daviel te ductetl 5 thet . te while their parents were away. . cause the préssmen’s work stop- [said that would complicate bar-|W. Maple Ave. ; publicans that state Democrats id nm ) : Red China and U 5 page was a “violation of the joint | gaining. But he declared the com-| Ed Coleman of Detroit, owner|are “‘the tools of labor.” ~ and Developments| estate project, The abstract com-| The youngsters were Maker ade ; t in the of electronics will rev-| pany then had to pay the billers| Harris Jr., 4; Betty Lou, 2; contract with’ the three news- |pany had exaggerated the cost of Of the market, had not yet deter-|no WAIT FOR UAW _. olutionize the function and control Darcia, 1; and Robin, 2 months. Slug lt Out in Talk ao. the union — . eeey ~ caaaeee how MUCH! - ive never waited for ‘Solidarity of all labor saving appliances.”| Henson testified that officials at| The fire swept their apartment e striking pressmen were or- — House (Detroit headquarters of the ie dramatic strides . . .| Winchester borrowed stationery} im q four-family frame house. . dered to return to work by offi-| Beuther had no comment on| The store was broken into |UAW). to tell me what suit to in the of air conditioning and|from the Aero Realty Co. of De-| Mrs. Harris was visiting a (Continued From Page One) {cers of the local and international! current wildcat strikes but Seaton| through a hole drilled in the |wear,” he said. ‘Besides, I: was ” .|troit and sent themselves phony} neighbor when the blaze broke |‘unless and until the Chinese/Unions but the union members)referred to them as hit-run guer-| 700f, just large enough to enable [a Democrat a long time before I & Am “over expanding weed re beg vraag anger eee pal ~ out. Her husband had left the. cageaprars by their acts, leave ne . stay ae job. Another’ rilla warfare —_—- said-was in- otis to slip through, police |heard these (labor) fellov’s.” basis wing m apartment earlier. us no choice but to react in de-;-Meeting o pressmen was/spired from un eadquarters. : oe ee eee Sat SON | cgataet the tam. | fense of the principles to which| scheduled for 8 p.m, Friday, The dctive: back af hg 4ébin| iene oe mee ae ao io show Teamater, Prestdent|August Sales J ee - oe rec scram door safe had been pried off, and| what he sald was the “basic are: Tae =~ egy oe ge ncal Pedra cen ugus es Sump dedicated.” Butz said the publishers were Bee Pre Pog idied clos, |Tecords.kept in it were found seat-| hard truth all Americans must By greg hes eater ling te toon a figured in @PPTOW| WASHINGTON (UPI) — ‘The,| . The imited available congres- |contacted 26 hours after the start| (0 25/00 Nomers M1 Nes 3h) tered about the floor of the store’s| know.’ That is: “We will know and cdineuieahe” Piheos: > a aT: ? Federal Réserve System Feports | sional reaction to the’ statement |f the walkdut._byt_AAATi SDean- Fisher Body Plant in Eaclid, Ohio. office, no peace,” he said. 6. Senpuitiens Se tha vicket| és Pe * "| @ sharp increase in nationwide | mostly ‘was favorable. peor A al of the Inter-| me 7,000 were still off the job in * &® & and e travel fields. First Girl in 120 Years cepartment store sales last | «7 am in full accord with the ey —— continuing disputes at Ford, Chrys-; 1m preparation for its Oct. 5 re-| This is the result, Hart added, ‘capitalism has _ con- RICHMOND, Va. @ — Carole — a sige . a F ederal position taken, by the President,” ler and other GM plants, ception of new members, the Con- of the eternal struggle now going the a. aa serve index for July was 148 | 231g Sen, Irving. M. Ives (R-NY).| _ The publishers told DeanDrade, + « + gregational Church of Birmingham|on between the free and Commu-:,, Pow! ‘It’s My Husband!’ \ The Weather Lee’ Dent has established a record “iat a mighty tender age. Carole COOpETa-'T ee, bow hinrct O0 oo dir and per cent of the 1947-49 average, a record level. The previous high was 144 in August, 1957, RALEIGH, N. C, (UPI)—Tol- bert S. Wall came home the other night without his key. and found.the door locked. He. start- - ed to crawl into the house through a window when he was bashed in the face with a blunt Bagwell Heads North LANSING u — Paul D. Bag-° Gulf of red in’ i].|attitudes so as to make strike ac- object. Wall's wife said she | | ie au tu tue cee ee ee : , AT SIMMS LOW, LOW BACK-TO- t the News. At/tion unnecessary. thought he was a burglar. ai tervualen, a =F aap would at cae ae x & * SCHOOL SUPPLY PRICE SPECIALS imeet them whenever they step “Sooner or later we are going. to have to face the Communist men- ace head'on — probably the sooner jority whip in the House, “My theory is you might as all across the line, else there’s no end to it,’’ Albert said. * * * The official U.S. statement made no specific mention of possible bombing of the China: mainland. But when asked whether this might be done in defense of For-. mosa, the official who helped draft the statement said solemnly: ‘It might become so, if Formosa was attacked or imminently threatened from mainland airfields." THERE'S ELLA,— Tropical Gulf of Mexico about 450 miles south of Biloxi, warnings are up from Brownsville, Tex., to Pensacola, Fla. Ella j sent aircraft into the battle. the end of its press run, the chair-|and 250 who walked out peta 2 or 3-Ring is moving in a west-northwesterly course. If Eisenhower decided the Na-|™Man of the Free Press Chapel of/at the Amplex plant in De zi Bind Fill P \ ee We om Bureau Re = . tionalists needed U.S, help and if Han: Ge te 1a cee press returned. Some 1,450 Dodge Tru PPOr Sinters or Faper INELA VICINITY — Par . ‘the Red Chinese continued to Men's Union No countermana-| and 700 Imperial workers are still Reg. Reg. toudy and cooler today, high %5. erly wins 6-12 milles. Mostly, ee Brewing Off Coast launch air attacks, the officials ¢d an order given by a Free Press idle in other Chrysler walkouts.|®) haan . =) f Guauuiaras Games tos ns ee added, U.S. bombers would prob- foreman. U teiserrew, Low tonight 63, high tomorrew T ; H 7 Pp he lably then be ordered to wreck the. The union had been warned re- | il: winds 19-15 —— tonight and eXas In urricane at Communist airfields on the China. re 13 Killed as Typhoon hl ooaths tis Vo south southwest 15-20 miles tomorrew. AP Wirephoto storm Ella is idling across the Miss. Small craft be a Nationalist defense backed up by U.S, logistical support but no U.S, warships, aircraft or troops. If the Nationalists suc- ceeded in throwing back the at- tack, that would be that. But the officials sdid Nationalist aircraft probably would be per- mitted to bomb airfields on the China mainland if the Red-Chinese ithat time, the publishers associa- Butz said, that they would sched- ule a meeting ‘‘as soon as possi- ble” Friday seeking to end the chairman who was fired had coun- termanded a foreman's order de- spite an earlier warning against such a move. The union declined to comment on Butz’ claim that the members should have taken eevee action in the dispute. Detroit’s three dailies were shut down for 46 days in late 1955 and early 1956 when stereo- typers walked out when their contract expired. Other unions took similar action, * * * In 1957, all three newspapers tion said a strike against one was a strike against all. DETROIT—This the the back- ground of the labor dispute that has resulted in shutting down all three of Detroit's daily newspapers, the News, Times and Free Press: * * * Early Wednesday morning, at peatedly by newspaper manage- 2-man _ international board meets for that purpose. The UAW said in a statement that it ‘“‘recognizes that a strike is a serious matter and should be authorized only as a last re- sort when all methods of reach- ing an honorable agreement without a strike have been ex- hausted,”’ Reuther is expected to familiar- ize himself personally with the Selection of a strike date and a strike target has been scheduled for Wednesday when the union’s executive Reuther said the union hoped the corporations. will ‘‘modify their The UAW leader plans to report the union’s side to the public Tues- day. Public officials leaders from Michigan ,and Ohio have been invited to hear the union position before the UAW de- cides on the strike issue. Meanwhile, Chrysler Corp. re- called 4,500 workers at its Detroit forge plant after a week-long strike civic has scheduled three Tuesday in- struction meetings. The first will. be held Sept. 16 singer Memorial Fund for the church school. A teacher in the junior department of the school, nistic worlds for the smaller na- tions looking toward one of the two to help narrow the gap between system success in this direction,” wich te avrg, an te ef gin Dom md | es tal fy | Be manera, (SSS tae ie wi |, 8 PE the cee th ih contry rng and - king of the market place.” - |j, : A similar comment came from xs * # : io models getting into produc- The church also has announced/| Present. _ This constructive ‘give and take” Rep. Carl Albert (D-Okla), ma-| Butz said the Free Press chapel/}i5, establishment of a Robert Ben-| “The Soviets are pressing our with a large measure of Hart remarked, ERAT AND SATURDAY SUPER SPECIALS : * l or 3-Ring 2-Ring, Black Cover c Today iz Peutine mainland, ; * * ments in the past few months ~ . . = | and had agreed that such /[J* Lowest temperature preceding 8 am By Associated Press | The Weather Bureau at De- the pig question then would be Pees es cae O otders Wonid Hits North Formosa UW : At 8 om: Wind velocity 2 m.p.h.| Tropical storm Ella increased in) troit said there were two storms, (whether the Soviet Union would not be tolerated. } ‘ Fridsy at 6:89 p.m, size during the night and, very| one early in the afternoon, an- honor its mutual security pact ; N ee hae ie likely in intensity, the Weather other an hour later. Tree limbs |with Red China. Moscow propa-| The chapel chairman was dis-| TAIPEI, Formosa — Police nl Blue Canvas Bureau said today. | and wires were felled in some |gandists already have proclaimed charged. said today Typhoon Grace killed U BIND 4 : This probably would make Ella, | | out-county districts, Soviet readiness to give ‘“‘moral| At 6 p.m, Wednesday the press-| 13 Persons, injured at least 17, ERS B ole Ruled Sscuke, Soe Vides ja lumbering mass for the past =) Farlier vestesday. the Thumb|24 material support” to the Pei-/men reported to the press room. and left 8 missing in northern U 2 or 3 Ring iller Paper 9 days, a hurricane. ee ae ee hit by anlPin& regime if it becomes em-/There they were reportedly advised Formosa. 69c Value 230 Sheets Se Lead Pencils i: morning bulletin from the area 0 storm th © ree ee oie broiled in war, ‘to work by their own executive * 8 & ft ¢ Po ¢ Therséay in Pontise Weather Bureau in New Orleans poy, A need | erty a: Nationalist China today reject-|board, But at a subsequent chapel; The 115-mile-an-hour winds and (SS 98c (As tecorded downtown) wad tah , cok Power “8 property ©a™- ed Peiping’s unilateral extension| meeting, the members decided-not! torrential rains of the year’s NV Highest temperature ............0.- 87 gale warnings and a hurri- age over a wide section. ee : | Pigec temperature 02000050055521.69 | ane watch are in effect { ba its tert ritorial waters, ,asserting|to work, worst Pacific storm made 2,500 UN ok & ‘Papermate’ Aeon temperature "heia “rain: 78 | south of Corpus Christi to Galves- — q narrow belt of showers and|—uané_ Kai-shek’s regime is the| Efforts were made at the Free) persons homeless, knocked out cee One Year Ago in Ponti ton, Tex jthunderstorms extended from Se ent that lawfully can}Press until 11:15 p.m. to get the} communications and_ electrical W ° ; Pen e ontiae ; ; ‘ —- speak for China, men to work and submit dischar; erma Lowest, temperature 222.0000003 | An earlier advisory said the/Kagsas and Nebraska eastward) Communist shelling of the Na-|to grievance peabetené os is ay Sh estimated at cowl wl il Pap ~ oe! Mean ser Paniy ia Senay At storm was headed toward the cen-|across southern Iowa, northern'tionalist offshore islands, mean-|vided in the contract between the| lion dollars, Ball Point Reg. 49c ' Date in 86 Years rising tides.- nois into Fie! ne Great Lakes Assn., representing the Free Press,| Grace moved up the East [Es : a4 fm 1081 means * dS , Gir espe i Pes gees fell in Ina Shooting Mood? the Timhes and the News, and the] China ‘Sea yesterday in the di- f 44 : A spokesman for the Weather: : t inches of rain fell i P and ‘the pressmen’s union. of Sh y : 98c ¢ i $4\Bureau said coastal roads between/Pittsburgh during the night whilel” 1 ancinG up — Guns for sale ae angha., Seller . . Celt Point Pens n Galveston and Port Arthur and in/fairly heavy amounts were re-| poptyfi a th Jor sale. | At that time management de- | ~ . 4 . \ §* Louisiana's Cameron Parish al-|ported in parts ef Kansas, Illinois, igi shotguns ay 37 talent apa it was teo inte to: get out Robb Tak ” The nuine cate sane uy redhiv e vere 80° 73 ready were closed by water. The/Ohio and Nebraska. various calibers, will go to the ie pres acniggend aie. obbers lake $4,000 sues bee w tos coe gs gprceee 8 ar" os Weather Bureau said winds and e yk highest bidder Sept. 19 at the | tien v = fen eee tk DETROIT , . low prt low, low price. an ete tip 33 4) wcnuntain ; ner : ° | tion was suspended, (®—Bandits robbed a Pr a tides will increase today and to-| Biggest rainfall in the last (24) Conservation Department’s an- northwest side S. S. Kresge Co 63\night. hours was in the Central Plains.) nual -fall sale of confiscated | The News and the Times, under| store of $3,000 and an east side|SSs H+} with more than 5 inches reported| weapons. All were taken from the provisions of the joint contract, supermarket of $1,000 Thursday. | 98 North 43] Brief, but violent thunderstorms|in parts of Kansas. Heavy rain} game law violators. Bids will be |delayed — Thursday editions, Police said a lone gunman staged exci ‘80 é hit the Detroit area yesterdayjalso drenched sections of Okla-| opened at Gaylord, where the x ke & {the Kresge-Co. robbery and two 75 —_ homa, . guns are stored. An international representative guninen held up the sera | 2 VE o va) —t . ; =of $10,000 to NAACP F ‘ a ne e i : ' fas THE PONTIAC PRES S, "FRIDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER 5, 1958, afor the Advancement of cuted People. ii 4 Mrs, Mattie Dickson, 83, who had invested earnings made in 2% years .as a servant, ‘said she has given most of her life savings et aces Hy Aa winieg ~$10,000—to the National Assn.|to help fight- the “disgraceful ab- “luses in American democracy.” Gives Her Life Savings OAKLAND, Calif, (AP) — Are; tired, Oakland domestic servant His Noggin Broke Pistol, So Victim Must Pay ° ‘LONG BEACH, Calif, (AP)— Howard R, Bunting has been or- dered to pay for the damages caused to a policeman’s revolver that broke on his head... ’ Bunting, his head swathed in SUPER SPECIALS Tonite & Soturday Only! 2-Cell All-Metal 5 FLASH. LIGHT 79c Value ¢ E SIMMS SPECIALS for: NO me = iri For All Electric Razors rn nT) Fixed focus, 3 throws 500 foot : bandages, pleaded guilty to drunk i FRIDAY & SATURDAY | For Quick ASTHMA RELIEF / f LS 98 N. Saginaw TOOLS On Sole for Fri. & Sat. beam. All metal 2-cell with belt loop, Batteries extra. Flashlight $1.95 Value Protects Rugs and Floors RIBBED PLASTIC Protector Mats * Extra Heavy * Clear * Non-Skid focus. Throws powerful. 1500 foot beam. Loop ring om end of case. Many uses. Leckproof * 6-Foot —° USALITE bona C *& 27-Inch It's the perfect solution to floor damage and wear. Made of heavy, clear ribbed plastic, allows beauty of rugs and floots to show through, yet protects against rains, snow and stain damage, Limit 2. 10° : er duty leakproof patter s ey USALITE. Limit 3 per customer. $8 N. Saginaw —2nd : Floor 98 N. aE —Main Floor 9} A aOR ~ $1 HOLDS IN LAYAWAY Many Uses! £0, storact Steel Frame — Padded Top — Two Sizes TOY and CH ESTS $10.95 Value STORAGE 1$x27x15-inch SPECIAL PURCHASE — Save halt on this _ rugged, many purpose chest! Padded, | hinged top, washable vinyl fabric covered. + Big and roomy for toys, sheets, blankets, “clothing, etc. > HOUSEWARES ~~ «ad Floor Bae eR $12.95 Value ~— HERS 15x30x15-Inch 8 at 6.88 | we: nen aa = a Why Pay More Than. ~~ SIMMS Low Prices? BRAND NAME NO LIMIT—Buy all you want,. Choose from three UNDER- | PRICED groups at GUARANTEED cnr = restrictions—buy single items or assorted . the more you so the more you save! 4 for $400 Se CHARBET Breathiess Dusting Powder .,... * $1 TINJETTE Colof Set Pomade........ leew ® for $1.00 «= 75c WRISLEY’S SUPERBE Bubble Bath ..,...,..4 for $1.00 ; 75 NESTLE’S Deodorizing Cream Rinse .,......4 for $1.00 | GROUP NO. 2—Regular 59c to $1.29 Values = 3 for ™ 00 1 LANOLIN PLUS Hair Spray ... tereeeesd for $1.00 | 1.25*LANOLIN PLUS Medicated Lotion .......3 for $1.00 59c CHARLES ANTEL #9 Liquid Formula.......3 for $1.00 | q $1 ROYAL CASTILE Shampoo, 16 ounces.......3 for $1.00 | = $1.25 ROBERTA OWENS Skin Freshener ..... .3 for $1.00 ; $1.25 ROBERTA OWENS Foundation Lotion ... 133 for $1.00 | GROUP _NO. 3—Regular Values to $2.00 | ( Single Items—29c Your Choice (Single Items—39c) Your Choice Your for $! 00 (Single = Choice Items—59c) 73¢ BAN DEODORANT Roll-on Type ..... ceees2 for, $1.00 79¢ HAZEL. BISHOP Swivel Stick Dovdannt 1.00 ee ee “Melly Un-Advertised ‘Comat at Gu Paient Always shop and compare 1“ at eric A before you buy any cosmetic | ite member, A SATISFACTION - is p bore Reg ret gardiess: of how much east save! 2] # EA 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS 9-Pc. DRILL SETS In PLASTIC Case §0c Seller 29° Twist drills in sizes trom 1/16th to Limit 1. Combination Square suse . 69° Polished, tempered and harden- steel blade, machine cut With level and Polished | Heads 3-PIECE ' SPECIAL SAVINGS on: —Main Floor\E Me-inch size. | “9000000008000 000800086 and. resisting ‘arrest: charges yes- Thieves Rob Church terday, He was fined $125, The court said he'd have to pay for|of Crucifix, Cash the broken ejector on officer J.S. Folk's pistol because it was Bunt- ing’s fault Folk had to hit him, Most of the-gasoline sold .to American drivers is conveyed. be- tween 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on week- days or before the noon hour on Sundays. : ~ ca : This Weekend Offer! s (Frida ood Saterday Only)” Fe amous G E Telechron Alarm Clock et 2.66 - “DORM” model exactly as pictured. Silent-electric accurate timekeeper, buzzer alarm, sweep-second hand. NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Thieves broke into a church here yester- day and stole a silver crucifix from. an unlocked safe... -- “The Rev. James Aloupis, pastor of the St. Nicholas Greek Ortho- dox church,, set the value of the crucifix at about $130. He said the burglars also took $208 in cash trom his office desk. $160 taken from poor boxes at the ehurch. Z dustry is centered near -Wheeling, of first class glassware products. JUST ARRIVED! In LADIES’ — MISSES’ III 98 North Saginaw OO hh de deukade hududude — GIRLS’ NEW FALL STYLES ‘GUM-DROPS'-FLATS-BALLERINAS Geral ta e abate IAN Time for School Wear! Newest Styles and Colors 97 X Original ‘te $3.00 v Big selection at lowest prices! For dress and All sizes. —Bargain Basement 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor \ - | Weekend Candy SPECIALS 1 FULL POUND Orange or Pineapple Candy Slices 12° a pineapple and orange pitas. Tasty sugar coated Reg. 29¢ fevered Hammer Set $1.95 Value 97°) * Claw Hammer * Household ‘- Hammer * Upholstery ' Hammer Exactly as mctuzed SETS OTF Halt- round, flat and 2 fF SSpered styles in this early one for ¥ ‘=. every purpose. reeoecccscacccoccecece Electricians’ Leather TOOL POUCH $3 Value 1”. elec 24 EE. an we ise ers, scerewririvers, cut- ere, etc. s shown. All jeath- er with chain. li z Tasty milk ehoaets , epee pe nd! a $1.95 Value ] che TTICS ” 13-02. Box BRACH’S Milk Chocolate _ CHERRIES = 65° Low . Price cherries in the very tasty low price. SIAM). $8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Buy "rave r! this KING-SIZE Trays Serve-Carts Original $7.95 Sellers 44 7 Folds When Not in Use handle. Easy to carry carton. $8 North , Saginaw =e caiman ota ee a ioboetih FRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIAL PRICES Tubular steel frames, 2212x1612 inch trays, 2“ swivel casters, push: Beautifully decorated. - 5. re ho ae oe. ee Still a “Best Buy” ALL METAL” Tray Tables 172 x 13% x= 24” Legs Use for TV snacks, pic- nics, barbeques, enter- taining, bedside uses, etc. - Scalloped clip-on trays, tubular folding legs. $2.50 Value ‘In addition, they made off with}, America's handmade glass in-|— W. Va., close to deposits of fine : silica sands, a principal ingredient |E /NYLONS: ALL SIZES—81% to 11 eee eee eee eae. Ze. then Hurry to SIMMS Same as Press 25 or #5 PF 4 Flash Bulbs Regular $1.25 Carton 10 for 49° ulbs — same as imit— Outstanding Press 2% or #5 se. Lo i but none sold to dealers flas' ee ee amous . WEN’ ELECTRIC, Soldering Gun 99 $5.95 Value: | Just plug into Pigg 2 dem outlet - press trigger. get insta Oo ae tor fast durable soldering work Coccccccceccccoccoess 4 for $1.00 © |E DRILL & STAND 3 T 1/16th to V2 by 64ths $19.95 Value 6" Blue temper — bof west, wood Tass ajumi- ae sig in se plated stand, \ Model 20 SpeedDrill ‘SPEEDWAY’ 2.5 Amps 1%” Electric Drill With. Geared Chuck _ $24.95 1 0” Value proche armature bal) thrust bear- Univ: wares motor idencemtant ising, ¥ be @ 100-Wett Instant Heat Seeeseeosecosceseeoee $16.50 Seller ag Case Only $1 holds thi méter ie in eray* 3, wt. ? =, “neni Black For Argus C3 or Argus C4 TELEPHOTO or WIDE-ANGLE LENS $19.95 1” Value pa * sane? sing. ‘ ' . ¢ ' ' ® ‘ ‘ * ' ‘ « ‘ 1. 1 ‘ « LJ ‘ « * * . Bach $1 ho as in lavaWay. 98 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Are the LOWEST PRICES in PONTIAC! For 35mm Slides 106 Auto-Slide Projector > 00-watt blower cooled projector for An ene oon nae eee ccesedncaguul uibusass sca uashoen tet JIMM): CHECK the ITEM, CHECK the LOW PRICE... for What We Believe Choice of 620—120—127 Size RNSEO FILMS Regular $1.50 Value 3 ROLLS 88° All weather take snaps under any Pen head Black and white in choice of popular size. Limit 6 rolls. eee ew een eee enna e seem e tense ree Ansco i Wissdan reli 39" ee anager’ ttt fast f tas 5 stem for color =~ cltdes case Free tures. “Case in cluded $] Holds | eck c cath n oonccencochecneccteccnscpeccccccesS¥OUEsecoensncsseess REESE CSOS CECE E EC “REVERE MODEL ‘777" ; Mansfield "Fold-a-way' : eee 8mm MOVIE PROJECTOR : Movie Editor & Splicer : ’ MOVIE METERS $127.50 List ' H : $5.95 §g°° : $39 Value Value 4“ > ab da ‘ $i Holds” . LJ btannatarst § : eh Bane im gaia £ 400-foot capacity reels” Peday et sho wn.” 1 hoids wide-angle lens. $10 ; splice, ¢mm movies the e a in Inyaway. Case holds. ‘ r tor $1.35. ~ eee For Color, B&W. Movies, Stills No Guessing! Lens Adjust F ARGU $ L3 to Light Automatically amous REVERE ‘Electric Eye’ 3-L Exposure Meters 1 Movie Camera 11" for you! Easy to and movies. ener ELEVATOR TRIPOD } 5-Section $17.95 Value 1287 Only 17 ee cloged. = yet ge eee Pee eee eee ee eee TT to fa | when ley, Geared clevating 90 tion new au gee ag camera mount. aN — turret scamer for, 7 a mma ‘Lens 00 } : ae seutomatically rit iy me, any F lens. “(QM CAMERAS —Main C ROTHERS _ Floor SPECIALS. . 7-Inch Spool—'Hi-Fi’ : Recording Tape more §6=6 1200 FEET 1 $5.95 Value $48 1800-Ft. Tape * Magnetic base * sound rdin tape. No limit.” $3.95 Value For Movies a Stills Famous Exposure Meter 5 87 $9.95 . Value eS eee in Ag away. fmm ies Bye Comore, 149. 0 Rees eraser nae neaee eenenennen EDNA-LITE 2-In-1 Style Telephoto & Wide-Angle Movie: LENS $24.95 Value | 16.87, pus Kodak; Bell & Howell, Revere, E% stone movie cameras, $1 holds — i * hl lin clin ln tli ls dll li din dln ie Ae hl Ali hi i Me i hi i i hi ti ssiaaiieacenin LO EE OT OOO EOE OO TTT TTT i i i i é i Aili £ L | i ‘ . ‘Save More Maney & Time! ar SHOP AT SIMMS : 5 OPEN TONITE and SATURDAY ‘til 10 P. M: “SALE of Every Pair GUARANTEED Ist Quality — Perfect! Priced at 19¢ to $1 in Many Stores Pr. * FULL FASHIONED—60 Gauge, 15 Denier , Now in most wanted fall shades — beigetone, tantones, etc. Famous for extra wear, Sizes 8/2 to 11, For Figure Steaaing € Contrét Ladies’ Famous soSecc. \ Playtex’ Girdles * te * * * -_e« © © «@ Sie . -* * + Slight oe page $5 3 ‘en Playtex ‘Living Girdles’ made of new . figure slimming Fabricon, soft cot- ton and latex.. With garter straps, a extra small to extra large. Girls’ Flannel Lined | 2-Pc. Pants | ‘O-Teen’ gowne fit. “anor ao. ae 3 trim ‘ ‘Mning. Washable, © elast sal olor red or # pertect blue. 2 Adjysiable Straps — Gripper Crotch wn Corduroy Creepers ay Regular 1.98 Seller — Sew Only Washable and colorfast corduroy ¢reepers in red, vee or green colors. exe sizes 1 to 3. BARGAIN B Solid _ _ Ci MEN’S: REVERSIBLE Jackets Regsler 377 Vere 2 Pastels in one! oor sae Desay Wows or Black Men’‘s Oxfords | 9 a 4” Many styles siete Wing-Tips. mae Ht shoes with rubber soles & hee! ers. he megs tips, @ Work oxfords with Kor-Sole sizes 6 to 12. Dress and sport ayies. heels. Brown or black — . To $7 Sellers Sizes 7 to 12 Buy Now-$5 to $10 Suvings foe CARMERS STORE Cee Chelee of 9 —_ 10-Inch Heights 899 Full lace moc and plain toe styles, All leather uppers, cork soles, storm welts. Included in this price are black paratrooper boots. Sizes 6 to 12 Values to 24.95 INSULATED BOOTS ta | 1” Water repellent, all .leather uppers, eaeEEINR Deluxe: quality in sizes 7 to 12: ore es SIMMS)... Regular $13.95 to $18.95 ay Lea erat ‘SR Fos on eae | ie ny ae es ee oe Ce 4 [* hoes! * vive Fs = & = : . , j ’ ? } r) id J es ~ @ ‘ ' . ‘ - < a j J 4 é - f «4 yt ' UJ e _'THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1938 epee * Hal Boyle Reports: oll Not Even Good ‘Savagery’!| PUBLIC NOTICE Rock ’n’ Roll Not Even Good ‘Savagery’!} *VBLS NOI™ | {NBW. YORK (AP)=The~fine) “‘There are limits to human tol-,nal,"" ‘writes’ a weekly syndicatd)Spath, who began playing the|theif“own satistaction—not merely _ Watch Monday's, Sept. 8th, featured, ‘elderly man drew back! erancée,” he observed music column, serves as panelist] piano et 5, has preached the the-| because someone informs them it! : Pontiac Press data as if he had received a~ blow in c= * _|on a-radio show. ory that music is fun. _.. is cultural. | the face. i “| He believes the nation is in the 2k &* ".) “Parents often ask me when| At 73, Dr. Spaeth, who can play| midst of a spreading musical) “‘If:it isn’t fun,"* he demanded, |they should start their children| & “What do I think of rock. 'n'/10 instruments himself, is still one “ j roll?” he said. “Why; it’s nothing : , *!boom period. . ; what else can it be? People|listening to good music. I tell Tear Out This Ad) ne soviceo bute saxot Americas mort active drum, "rsey are mare people paying sl ake music for ther own tem, “The day a dil is born ise did it better. They used it| music. The noted “tune detective’|S0me kind of musical Anstrument| *#tisfaction, and listen to it for) You can't start much sooner.’” | to work themselves up to enjoy] agiivers 50 lecture year now than at any other time in Sal sousedrotin acyl or 0 3.00 * * *t ¥ . ge ih Lightning-Caused Fire {Cloverleaf Complex! life insurance policy to help take! . “Beethoven used themes as sjm- daw’ ) a: : We've got over the silly ideajLevels Frankfort Church care of. final expenses without ple as rock 'n’ roll themes, but. he U.S. Secret: Hard Work that if you want to play at all a burdening your family. developed them. They grew. Rock a pay 4... |in a room high up in the Medical Don't t B Any Furniture - . : oo you have to play well. The old-; FRANKFORT (® — Lightning- You handle the entire trans-|'n’ roll has practically no melodic! WASHINGTON—Seiichiro Wata-| fechi College of~ Virginia Hospital told value, It is simply a monotonous é fashioned teachers used to ruin| caused fire Wednesday night lev-| attendants he was developing ner- U t il y S Our Offers action by mail with OLD!| uveas bast) eegeated over an 4 nabe, assistant head of a Japanese| music for many of their pupils by|eled the Frankfort Methodist vous prostrations trying to figure | nti ou ee AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY.) \ oni ; steel company, who has just fin-| making it a form of drudgery./Church with losses estimated at|out the cleverieafs on the new ex-| _No obligation. No-one will call! ang pr. Sigmund Spaeth leaned|ished a study of American steel| They treated empty br eto aS @/about $80,000. press way through the city. John on you. - back, slightly upset. He has been|mills, says he used to think abun-| Potential concert performer. The one-story frame building had|Pershing, general manager of. the Write today, simply giving your|@ top cheerleader for all kinds of/dant resources and monopolies ee been a Frankfort landmark mor|turnpike, sent him a complete set name, address and year of birth.) music for 50 years. His 30 books|were the secret of America’s; ‘‘That was nonsense. We need| than 50 years. Fire Chief Raymond) of plans. Mail to Old American Insurance|range from “Great Symphonies’’|strength, but his observations have|dub musicians as well as pros,| Jaeger said the lightning bolt re- Co,, 3 West 9th, Dept. 1921A,|/ to “How to Play the Harmonica.”|convinced him that the real secret|Only a few have the talent to be-|portedly sizzled from the church} Fourteen of the states have an. es Sub weigh Kansas City, Mo. : But he draws the line at rock 'n'|is ethics and a hard-working peo-|come pros.” chimney to the basement, leaving| annual steel «production ca capacity| : aE ple. 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CENTER SECTION ONLY $59.50 : 3. Cone-Coiled Spring Construction Be Confident of Comfort! Every piece of Kroehler furniture is scien- Airtoom cushions by Goodyear eyailable of slight additional cost. i | @. Comfort Controllers tifically tested for truly comfortable living. Come in and stretch out on a : é . an od 2 Kroehler sofa. Feel the comforting difference. Relax in one of our . "SMARTSET '59” DINING ROOM SLEEP-OR-LOUNGE —— Spring or Airfoam Kroehler chairs and you'll see what solid comfort really means! or $7 4 5 0 4 Same style as sofa and chair— offty “SMARTSET ’S9” 7. Formule-Blended Cotten Pedding Be Confident of Styling and Value! Our fine Kroehler furniture will , ~ : opens into full size double bed. $ ‘ 8. Avto-Press Upholstery stay —_— with the passing years—be friendly wit! your present furni- SIDE CHAIRS $17.50 Each Available with Airfoom cushions by 27500 soften pees ‘5 950 9. Uni-Lock Assembly Plotes turé. From every point of view, you get more from your money when, eddihensl ; 10. Kiln-dried hardwoods _you buy Kroehler from us. eke eurrey 11950 4 el oa - ane EASIEST CREDIT TERMS! BUY NOW AND SAVE! OPEN HUTCH CHINA caBiner 514950 a ee oe a oe a oe BACK TO SCHOOL - SPECIAL GENUINE RATTAN Ideal for Family Rooms Choice of walnut or limed oak. The fronts are beautifully parquet veneers. It has a *69” ' Jrawer in the base and automatic tray. U LIMED OAK DESK 6-Pc.. GENUINE RAT TAN GROUP : Beautifully styled in mod- $ 50 This sturdy desk is ideal for living roo ern walnut veneer, It has student's bedroom. it has a 20” x : 42" top $ 50 All cubes have zipper covers for easy removal for cleaning and -raisi , ‘ vm re cigeerage choice es —. re or = colors. OTHER CHESTS sutcenattc: Beli-ratsing tray. rely Hay Peceravoagid i chest that sits So py = n there ere 4 eey drawers pain yee are ali genuine ormica” plastic t that are st ard arch esa elec Ops stain From $39.50 REGS cos 0 ses sncos esnecesions esieisesc envy a oo 20 On ‘iste ¥ | sale price 4 piece. sectional, matching = ver er | Bl \chair, corner table and cocktail rahi 50 4 \ \ ; ryies From — re Choose ® I. Foam, rubber cushions omniiable at extra N OTI CE ’ : \ Bu rn Ou | \ , cost. ; y oO r \ $0-Day Accounts Pp AR KI NG. ‘ \ - Pay No... 5 With Plostic Covers: . $239.50 "$26 DOWN CLOSED WED. Eusy Payment Plan dentine Chariie Now Park in Back of Our ‘AFTERNOONS | CREDIT TE RMS! °G MONDAY. | ‘TIL 9—OTHER | 10% IDOWN '— MONTHs TO PAY — oS Piet CHARGE IF PAID 06 a OTHE SAME Store and Use Rear Door! | | ie he lighted fot Enter at xe td . : ut 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street Opposite Auburn Avenue \ through Goukiée underped._ ; « on - * = | : c s SS f j F, sf - THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 ° v | z Mao Sets High Goal in Steel Calls for a Fantastic 100 Per Cent Rise in Red China Production {Tucson Seniors Admit Courses Are Too Easy TUCSON, Ariz. —A newspaper! intention of trading in his horse |= survey shows that 12 out of 13/andg seniors at Tucson High School feel|/heard of giving a parking ticket| they could have worked harder at|to a horse?” their studies, "Many of the students indicated they felt the courses should be/hospital beds and estimates show tougher. Horse Can Park Fred HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) —/|times. Fruit peddler Bennie Adelman has A fit of coughing may increase & pesnon's blond press hy tree cart a truck, “Who ever/} 1955 FORD HARDTOP 8 Cyl, FOMO., R&aH, W. W. Tires, he-asked, A Real Buy! The U. S. has ‘about 1,500;000 D 2705 Orchard A tasks Keego Hai a need for about 800,000 more, EDDIE STEELE FORD . my AP Foreign News Analyst Mao. Tze-tung is going to try to drive Communist China this year into a fantastic increase of 100 per cent in steel output over 1957. This project was advanced and approved a few days ago at the session of the broadened Politburo of the Chinese Communist party. How it is proposed to attain this. Vast increase in steel output has ; not yet been disclosed by the Editorial Page "President and Publisher Owned and "Published Locally + MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 Canada’ s Doukhobors to Go Back to Russia The Doukhobors of Western Can- ada are on the move again. About one-quarter of them, known as the Sons of Freedom, are disenchanted with Canada and want to return to their ancestral home in Russia de- spite having fled that country be- cause of bitter persecution. This religious sect was founded in 1740 at Kharkov, Russia. Its mem- — bers are pacifists and vegetarians and against secular education. In 1898 they settled in Manitoba, Sas- katchewan and British Columbia. A ‘few of them later went to Mexico and South America. Ko &..* As far back as 1910 this off- shoot of the Doukhobor cult was causing trouble and embarrass- ment in Yorkton, Sask., where they staged nude parades, sorie- times in 20 degrees below weath- er, and burned buildings because -“g voice told them to do so” as a - protest against certain laws. The RCMP barracks always had a supply of blankets to cover the . demonstartors as they took them _ off to jail—and then released them in the morning. ok kt The Yorkton Sons of Freedom “later moved. to the fertile valleys of - British Columbia. Because Canadian law requires them: to serid their _ghildren to school, they again have! been bombing railroad trains, burn- ing public buildings. and homes and "parading without clothes. In desper- ‘ ation, and perhaps with an eye to ms coe a troublemakers, _ the British Columbia government took some of the children forcibly put them in boarding schools -whete the parents had visiting priv- __«fleges only. The Doukhobors wouldn't a “prospered in “Canada and most of - them have adjusted’ ‘themselves more or less to Canadian laws and cus- toms, much as the Amish have done in this country. The Sons of Freedom, however, want the province or Dominion gov; ernments to pay the cost of their repatriation. The governments have no such obligation but probably will defray the expense in order to be rid of the unsolvable problem. ETS — De Gaulle Asks Vote for New Constitution Gen. CHARLES DE GAULLE, Premier of France, is on a 15,000 mile tour of French. possessions in Africa to ex- plain and gain support for his new French Constitution. Dre Gavtiz is offering the col- onies a choice of complete in- tegration as a part of metro- politan France, limited autonomy or secession and in- © dependence. Complete autonomy. of course, would mean an end to Frénch subsidies and many other economic benefits. The THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by THe Pontiac Press Company 48 W. Huron, 8t. Pontiac, Michigan Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday Rvesect. Basserr, Jon~ A Ruiter, Executive Vice President Assistant Advertising and Advertising Director Manager Earn M. TReapwrtt, Circulation Manager Bowargy H. Frrzcrrzaty mn, Vice President and . Business Manager G. MarsHatt. Jorpan, Local Advertising © |, PrTzoRRaL! Secretary and Eaitor Manager ee a core Groncr cy Inman, * Classified Manager “gseociated Prese ts entitied exclusively to tne use for republication of @il local news printed tm this as well as G1] AP news dispatches Parse is delivered by carrier for 40 cents ; where ad pally service is not @ySilable by mail land, Geneste, Vase of acomb, Lapeer and Counties it ts — a@ yetr; elsewhere tn- m ahd ai} other p in the United States fe 5 Pig subscriptions payable in é as matter at Pontiac, yf Phone Pontine FE 2-181. s 3 ie A . é “of 721 Joslyn Ave.: emeinimae offer would not apply to Algeria at the present time. x* *« * As a matter of fact Algerian ter- rorists have been losing ground both militarily and politically. Gen. pr Gautte has promised Algerians ‘equality and equal ‘suffrage with a view to eventual independence. The ‘Nationalists want their countrymen | to abstain from voting on the referen-~ dum or to vote negatively. The new constitution, which is to be voted on Sept. 28, would ~. | give the President and‘his Cabi- -net some real power and France a more stable government in contrast to the chronic chaos of the past. Since he became premier ‘on June 1, the General has been working toward that goal and a more elastic’ foreign policy. * * * If the referendum fails to approve the new constitution, Gen. pe GauLLE® says he wil] retire. This could lead to military dictatorship or civil war and ‘a breakup of the French empire. It- is to be hoped that the constitution is approved and that Franée gets yet another reprieve to set its ona. in order. The Man About Town ~ Hold Open House Public Invited to Inspect Wisner Home Sept. 17 to 19 Humidity: What we could en- dure if it didn’t get so humid. That Oakland County historical ering, the . : . Moses Wisner Home on Oakland Avenue, will be open for the : inspection: of the general public September 17, 18 and 19 between the hours of 9:30 and five o’clock on each of the three day. It is owned by the Oakland County Historical Foundation “and an inspection will cause you to give your unqualified endorsement to their ef- forts to preserve it, and make it possible for it to be open every day. According to ‘Mrs. Allan H. Monroe, secretary of the fouhdation; members will be on hand to guide visitors through the home, and ‘explain its wonderful background and- future. ities. Be suré to draw a circle around one of the above dates on your calendar. ss Twin girls were born Tuesday to Mr, and Mrs. Hayden Wall of Rochester, giving them seven children —and no boys. A colorful magazine that goes out weekly as a supplement to: metropolitan Sunday papers with several million cir- culation devotes four pages to “the great record” of ‘% Kansas farmer whose wheat yield of 40 bushels per acre is hailed as “the best in history.” On August 14 this. column told about an Oakland County farmer, George W. Miller _of 8266 Pine Knob Road, who had a yield of 67 bushels per acre. Several other farm- ers in the Pontiac area have reported yields in- excess of 50 bushels per acre. Born in a log cabin was i Arthur Stoddard of .Oxford, celebrating his 85th birthday in a few days. More evidence of the flight of time is found in’ the fact that it soon will be 40 years since _ President Woodrow Wilsdn ordered the registration for military serv- ice of all men in the nation between 18 and 45 years, the exact date being Sept. 12, 1918. * A number of extra large puff balls (member of the mushroom family) have been reported. The largest is that of Barney Arthur of Drayton Plains. It weighs 12 pounds. A potato that weighs 14 ounces, that he took from the ground on Aug. 30, causes Gene Felstrum of Rochester to wonder if that isn't a record for so early a date. Verbal Girchids i William R. Harrison of 395 West. Huron Bt; ey ae pete day. Mr. and Mrs. William Cullen of 241 South Sanford St.; fifty-second wedding anniversary. “Francis Breckenridge eightieth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey B. Gould of Keego Harbor;. fifty-second wedding , anniversary. And No Consolation Prize David Lawrence Says: School Issue Poses Major Crisis WASHINGTON — A _ constitu- tional crisis of major proportions is shaping up for America. -It in- volves far more that the issue of attendance in mixed schools. It involves the broader question of whether the Supreme Court of the United States may sud- denly declare that “equal pro- . tection of the laws” under the - Fourteenth mt re- Latin quires uniformity. throughout the nation on all laws affecting citizens generally. This could mean that the divorce laws of all the states must be the same, income-tax laws must be the same, laws regulating labor unions and corporations, . respectively, must be the same, and laws must be uniform throughout the country with regard to all kinds of licenses and privileges which citizens of different states may desire to ob- tain or enjoy. - ee Few people realize the potential scope of: the Fourteenth 'Amend- ment and, its far-reaching impact if the present Supréme Court con- tinues its ¢urrent program of knocking down’ state laws that it considers socially or psychological- . ly harmful or as invelving discrim- ination between citizehs in any field of endeavor. Many millions of Americans undoubtedly feel that they are being discriminated against be- cause they pay higher taxes to their own state than do citizens elsewhere. Many citizens object to the fact that, although they do business across state lines, they must pay »local taxes in varying amounts to different states and cities where they sell their wares. * * * If ‘the Fourteenth Amendment . means that no state shall deny “equal protection of the laws” to any citizen, the principle could apply as between citizens who live in different states instead. ‘of merely as between citizens of a single state. The theory could be carried to the -point where economic in- equality can be condemned by the Supreme Court as readily as racial or social inequalities, un- der the doctrine that it is an ob- ligation of government to guaran- tee equality as between citizens. There would be a condition of near chaos in America if. the Supreme Court invalidated, for in- stance, state laws on divorce, Hus- bands could stop paying alimony. Persons who had remarried in one state believing that they were legally divorced in another state could be made subject to various kinds of legal suits. : * **« * Yet, while such action may not be imminent, the stark fact is that the Supreme Court has set itself The Country Parson ' “Pye given away a lot. of . advice only to discover later that I should have used 4t myself.” * miliarity with var- up as having the right to meena at any moment all legal precedents of the past and to rule on what it believes is socially or psychologi- cally desirable. The latest challenge to the idea that the school desegregation de- cisions are the “law of the land” in the sense that they actually can -compel integration in every state has come from Gov. Almond of Virginia. Himself a former state dentaby: general and an able lawyer, Al- mond made a sensational state- ment Thursday when he said: * * * This is really the key to the pro- gram through which the Southern states. feel confident they can legally avoid forcible integration in the public schools. ' (Copyright, 1958) Dr. William Brady Says: Alcoholism Ranks Fourth in U.S. Health Problems You can't tell an alcoholic any- thing about the effects of drinking the early months or years of is addiction. At this stage he takes childish pride ‘in his fa-: ious concoctions, how .to order his drink and his abil- ity to take it without, as he: likes _ to think, showing the DR BRADY alcoholic, says WHO (World Health Organization), when‘ he begins to be concerned about how activities . might interfere with his drinking instead of. how drinking might in- terfere with his activities, A traveling salesman who has strayed beyond the boundar- jes of common sense and good judgment sends this SOS: “I am in a position which re- quires traveling and calling on business firms‘ which purchase from my company. It is almost an absolute necessity that I drink with my customers, I have tried to avoid it, but had a good deal of difficulty, I drink both beer and whisky. I am 45 years old, and whenever I do much drinking I feel all tired out the next day and it takes about two days to feel right. “Tt have heard there is some new drug that may be taken _ before drinking so the drink will not have an effect, and there are no after-effects either, I hope you can tell me what this drug is, so I will not have to resign my .posi- tion, (Signed) Ss 6 & If this man’s priplaver demands he drink with the customers, the practice is a sad commentary on American business, As a rabid teetotaler I am well aware of the pressure brought to bear on the non-drink- er in business, professional and social life, I have no solution of this problem for others, For my- self I just grit my teeth (they’re my own and ¥ have a right to grit ’em) and decline the in- vitation — but, you see, I'm a lonesome character, or, if you will pardon my conceit, a rugged individualist. From the salesman’s letter, I infer that he is fond of his job because it doesn’t interfere with his drinking, The miracle drug that enables a drinker to drink without manifesting or feeling ill effects or after-effects has not been discovered. faa! * * * Like most addicts in the’ first years of alcoholism, this one will. probably reject the idea of .at- tending an AA (Alcoholics Anon- ymous) meeting, Narcotic addicts (aleohol ig a narcotic) nearly al- ways insist they ‘‘can take it or = it alone’ and they need no 's help. Day by day, year after , they prove they can take it, but we have only their word that em they can let it alone, / if nature did not intervene by causing unconsciousness, Alcoholism stands fourth among health problems in the United States — outranked by (1) mental illness, (2) heart and artery dis- ease, and (3) cancer. Remember, alcohol in any dose and under any circumstance is a narcotic. * * * Signed letters, not more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis, or treatment, will be _ answered by Dr. William Brady, if a . stampéd self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1953) - Voice of the Peopla ‘Our Liberties Depend on a the Men We Put in Office’ Or coniing (ecddidedon So & wery Snipatanp-ihe eles tr comply officers, we will vote both state and national. Our nation is in a critical condition from any standpoint. You might say we are in the same posi- tion as was ancient Rome. Then the government slipped out of the hands of the people before the — — _ was taking place. Ae tation. we backs ttyereed the pohit Gui, wp trv a tpten ot Jaw and not of men, but the reverse is taking We must elect men who will stand for principle though the heavens fall, men whose convictions are in accord with both our Federal and State constitu- Sins snk whe Have the courage of their convictions. xk «*k& * ous liberty are the two fundamental principles on which Civil and ce our Federal Constitution is built and if we are to preserve our liberties, we must place men in office who will fight to preserve them. Milford ‘Dems Will Sweep Most of the. Offices’ After driving around the state, I believe the Democrats will sweep all state offices, elect a majority in the House and they stand a real good chance of controlling the Senate also. xk ko Here it is a great chance for us to take over Michigan and handle it as it should be handled. A cen- tury of Republican rule didn’t ac- complish much. If we handle everything for the next century, you will see industry wanting to come. back and there will be no more moving to Ohio and the South. 7* * * This is the chance us older Democrats have been waiting for " over 50 yaeets Righty . » Pushing Royal Oak ‘Let Eleanor Go Where She Wants’ This is a free world and Eleanor can go where she pleases. And I am sure she is paying her own way, not like some Republicans have done at the expense of the taxpayers. Please let FDR rest, and pick on the living. FDR-got you out of the mess Hoover got us in. Democrat ‘Why Do Dems Let Thugs In?” I was very much interested in the VOP letter from New Jersey. I have a good friend and neighbor who is a Democrat. How. can any- one vote with the party that has all thé thugs, burglars, Portraits. By JAMES J. METCALFE Some people think tomorrow will . . . Be just another day . . equal opportunities . . . And time to while away .-. . But they are very wrong because . . . Tomor- row may not dawn... And all our chances to succeed ... May be forever gone ... Today is all that ever counts ... This dawn unto the night .. . As we are con- scientious now . .. In striving to do right . . . Tomorrow is a fig- ment that’. . . May never be today . As sudden winds surround our thoughts . away... We have to act immedi- ately .. . There is no time to wait . . Tomorrow may not ever come .«. Or it may come too late, (Copyright, 1958) ‘crooks, hoodlums,. . With. ..And blow our dreams — LeRoy Dean grafters and the scum of the earth? . * * * How. can good people stand be- side the racketeers, the bomb throwers, and the murderers? If the trash wants a party of their own, why that’s 0.K., but. why should the Democrats allow them to take over an old party and then work along with them? x « & I wish the Democrat. would ex- plain so I could respect the Demo- crats as much as I did 15 and 20 years ago. Wondering Phooey! — Any day now I expect the na- tion’s news (?) magazines to start advocating: 1, Junk your “pil or gas guz- zling’’ heating system and install an old’ pot-bellied stove in the liv- ing room. 2. Give your neighbor that elec- tric stove which is “dripping with chrome” and start cooking over an: oper fire. 3. Waste no more time disposing of your “monstrous” electric vacuum sweeper and substitute in its stead one of those nice little compact hand swe@pers. 4. Don't be.a sucker for the electric company—rip out that wir- ing and start using candles. 5. Save money by cutting your lawn with a scythe instead of a power mower. Your grandfather didn’t’ need such new-fangled gad- gets. Ridiculous? \ No more so than the present, ‘unexplainable crusade being con- ducted by some of the nation's news mags to turn the clock back in the auto industry. ' They appear to want the manu- facturers to stop producing modern cars. and revert to styles whidh were popular 15 years ago—no chrome; less power, shorter, nar- rower: and squattier and minus such pie the as power steering, power brakes, ett. The Clinton (lowa) ‘Herald THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Se David reigned over all Is- rael, and executed judgment and justice among all his people. — 1 Chron, 18:14, : x & * Justice discards. party, friend- ship, kindred, and is always, there- fore, represented as blind.—Joseph Addison, Smiles When the only sympathy you have is for yourself it doesn’t amount to much. Case Records of a Payeholoriet: Childhood Fears Caused by. Adults Mothers, Jerry’s case. His parents failed to vaccinate him p cally, and that is just as to vaccinate him against polio, sma diphtheria! In fact, this daily column is simply vaccine against divorce, delinquency, fears and other common dilem- mas of American homes. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case Z-311: Jerry R., aged 5, is to enter kindergarten soon, “But, Dr. Crane,” his mother exclaimed, “‘he cries and doesn't want to leave me, “He grows actually terrified at the thought of school. What do you think is wrong?”’ BENT TWIGS “As the twig is bent,’ runs an old sayifig, which. shows that the “twig”? of Jerry's § personality has been bent. wrong- ly, Children do not have an inborn fear of school. No, that terror must be acquired. So how did Jerry be- come so fearful? Well, a lot of thoughtless adults still tease children DR. CRANE by saying: * * * “You're going to. have to go to school soon! You better play and - enjoy - your — while you can. Ad \ + This is the same bad idea that has too long prevailed regarding dentists, “You don’t know what. pain © really is till you sit in a dental chair,’ these old fogeys will pro- claim. as they try to terrorize children, please ponder ‘game uiwits know that a dentist is one of a child’s best friends and often able to add years to his life- span. * * * So why make a child afraid of the very people in his environ- ment who are his protectors? Yet thousands of parents also try to browbeat a child into walk- ing a chalk line by saying: “Tf you don’t do as mother says, a big old policeman will come and get you and lock you up in jail, etc., ete.” Yet the child is then supposed to react happily to the genial traf- fic policeman who saves his life at the busy street corner! GOOD “BRAIN WASHING” “Brain Washing” has developed a bad meaning because of the Rus- sians. * * * 4 But good parents simply “brain wash” their children toward desir- able things in life by proper early teaching. Many mothers, however, de- spite being sticklers for junior’s having a clean neck and ears and for attiring him in neat clothes, will fail te clean their mental outlook regarding school, If you want a child to like kin- dergarten, then do these basic things: x * _Accustom him to playing with other kids. Give him a couple of’: brothers or sisters as pals hefore ‘he ever enters kindergarten, * * * Itt that is impossible, at least get him into Sunday School every . envelope, plus 20 (hon-peo. ° weekk- so he can learn. to and harmonize with other young- sters of about his own age, . Meanwhile, teach as Sic home with a familiar baby sit- ter at least once per week when you go on a date with your hus- band, ° * And encourage him to spend an afternoon (later, an entire night) at the home of his grandparents or cousins, Get him acquainted with other kids in your block and concoct ex- cuses to have an occasional party at your home, to which he can invite other youngsters, * * * And always portray school as something wonderful to which he will someday be entitled to go when he gets big enough. In short, place a premium on school attendance by making it a sign of being a big boy or big girl. Many modern teachers urge mothers to bring their children to school for.a party the end of the preceding term so the new youngsters will get a good taste re kindergarten. A : For advice; send for my 200-point “Tests for Good Par-- ents,” a stamped, return te Bp Geo ne by ey ti Always writ in care of Pe ois Se to Food ss} ae Pg ma i ss 4 a a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1958 ~ ) SEVEN} © S| Bob Considine Says: | | ~ © | Greentand’s ide cap ts believed @ RX Sun Glasses GLAND COMPLETE Lens—Frames at High in Quality! - Low. in Price! Your Choice of Frames ... _Latest in Styles SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. @ Safety Glasses @ Repair Service @ Frames Replaced Come in and Have Your Present Glasses Adjusted — No Charge! Glasses Adjusted Properly Means Benes police spotters. Ground floor |b), breached one morning by @ Prescriptions Filled Double-parked ‘Russian limou- x * Baker QO tical Co \sines, aloof to police ticket because} Three Catholic nuns, invited to; p' e of the diplomatic license plates,|attend 9 o’clock mass in the chapel, 8614, N. Saginaw FE 8-4331 HOURS 9:30 - 5:30 — FRK, ‘til 8: (NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY) ‘ CLOSED WEDNESDAY + Across from Federal's— Abere Geig’s Shoe Store 5,000 feet thick. es: \|Reds’ New York Neighbors Need Flags) ne@i? won wet True Love Story Mags. NEW YORK — It ‘must ‘be problem. of gaining .entrance to the Russians weren't building were, J. Edgar Hoover's breath-taking; every man, woman and child in || We Handle: Bin ial Jokes, and Hlexciting living in the neighborhood/the mansion, to make the request. mone bedrooms. ‘warning: “In the postwar years,| the US. _ | prrer’s m prone srs QUTLET of the Soviet Union's Park ave-| Then the problem of getting to'| rach morning, during busier (Crime has. grown from 1,685,000) “Even though there have been|{ % 4sbare Ave. nue town house. For protection, | speak to someone who admits | tines, attaches emerge from the |major offenses in 1946 to an all-|vast increases in our expenditures several neighbors display the} being able to speak English. swank residence carrying the |; ly 2,800,000 in| fF education to meet our grow- American Flag in their windows. The showing of the flag in win-| Mattresses on which they must on record of nearly, 2,900, ing needs, the amounts we, spent 1955 CHEVROLET # ‘They need a sign of identity./dows and from the fronts ef other| have slept. . are more than matched by the cost Py ~ at fe Rg hon ar? Thomas E, Murray, for-|homes on the block became im-| They- put them in the trunks of} “Each year, our nation pays | crime. |] Come In and Price This One AEC ‘commissioner, once|perative after the’ Hungarian re-|their waiting cars and go to work,| a shocking ransom to the under- | “Crime costs $1.11 each year for EDDIE STEELE FORD bought an American Flag and polelyolt,. Hungarian refugees, and|presumably clearing the floors} world. The estimated annual cost jevery $1 spent on education. For large enough to block the view oe slave state exiles, began|for whatever receptions or meet-| of crime now totals a staggering jevery dollar. we contribute tojj 2705 Orcherd Bx. Rd.. Keego Harbor of the Hammer and Sickle (from|their sometimes vehement picket-|ings that are to follow. 22 billions ef dollars, or $128 for |churches, crime costs us $12.” the north, at least) when the Reds ing two years ago. hung out their colors. “*¢°* &« «tk — pe x & *& Their lines were sometimes so The handsome residence of Rus-|long that they overlapped the i | sia's top U.N. people and visiting| pavements in front of other homes: WRC. 108 N, & Ads IN T\\ A a brass is under 24-hour guard by along the block. the New Yérk Police. Unquestion- g Ee of the deeply reli- ably, the FBI and Russian Secret gious and anti-Communist Mur- As Low As... Police are also detailed there, act- ray family were heckled as they ing, of course, under separate) jog or entered their home, the orders, picketers believing ‘that the Whén Andrei Gromyko was in | whole block was ‘infested with residence recently the rooftops | Russians, - cosagy A gence and ica The Soviet citadel itself is all jouses. also were manned by |hut impregnable. But it was not- i} lights at the residence burned (three curious emissaries from an- brightly through the night. other world entirely. * occasionally block the properlyjof the Murray home, arrived 15, |parked vehicles of other tenants/minutes early and — to kill time’ lot the block. — decided to pay a visit to the | a x * * nearby atheists. , Getting somebody to move the) A startled door-keeper ad- | offending car becomes a diplo-| mitted them. They looked | imatic feat: First there is the} around the downstairs foyer for GENERAL WAREHOUSE 2258 DIXIE HIGHWAY NEAR INTERSECTION OF TELEGRAPH LOTS OF FREE PARKING Daily 9 to 6 "MADE BY THOR . SANDER A powerful sander, not a vibrator. Built-in fan prevents overheating. $25 Value A. FABULOUS VALUE 22” MOWER 2% HP, 4-CYCLE CLINTON SAFETY SLIP CLUTCH THROTTLE CONTROL $95 Value LEAF MULCHER FULL WARRANTY |] 10 otticers of the Waterford . A CLOCK RADIO. ' Cash or |\Fashion Your Figure Club were in- Fi Terms stalled when the group met THOR with Geared “Al VW"! Dril More power than any other drill ZN or near this price Regular $19.95 10” EE sag” a bit, thanked, the bewildered man,, and left for their Mass. Neighbors who knew the big house before the Reds came there ; 10 years ago are certain they; would not recognize its interior now. For a long time after the! Russians took possession the | sound of air-hammers from inside’ the building rattled nearby win-! dows. - One thing the neighbors are sure New Officers Installed by Waterford Club t TABLE RADIO ea es “19” ~eireuit . Color choice. ALL-TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO parang nat l pigheciny Saal 3 9°» -« ciency circuit. Tucks into pocket, easily! TRACTOR GRIP TIRES TL, éiadh Automatic “wake-up. WEEK pores o -- —_ 2 4°. hand. Powerful yor ‘[|\Wednesday at the home of Mr. Doris Malone in Waterford. They are Mrs. Daisy Baker, president;. Mrs. Betty Mawhorter, vice president; Mrs. Malone sec- retary; Mrs. Barbara Black, treas- urer; Mrs, Doris Hamil, record- ing secretary; and Mrs. Georgette , Broom, assistant recording sec: retary, Mrs, Baker won the trophy re most weight lost last week. | The next meeting of the group, peeee é We Il i DELUXE CLOCK RADIO... Limit One Per Customer Don't confuse this with Junior Size Wheelbar- rows Sturdy All Steel - Big Rubber Tires With COVER 1,99 USUAL PRICE will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Wediiesday att he Watertownship. High School. Automatic wake up to music or - buzzer alarm. Slumber switch pire | 95 matically turns radio off. Color choice, = * : Pan CUBIC FT. CAPACITY $12.95 _G-E TELECHRON. - Good for many years of service. Handsome raised letters for ap- pearance and readability Factory Price $5.98 $3.98 GALVANIZED GUTTERS KITCHEN | CLOCK Button-Free Mattress 4 DELUXE HAND MIXER LAWN es PARKER $2695 ROMEX PAINT PAN ! 14-2 and ROLLER PAINT! ELECTRIC 22 BOTH ONLY’ Big 24” Size Full or twin size “Golden Sleep” Mill New... Low Priced ‘W'SPRAYER NO aint,varnish, cquer, enamel, garden sprays and insecti- Futy suaranteed cides. Paints 3 to 7 times founee than a brush! 8 @ No buttons! No bumps! No lumps!- MONEY Sines @ Smart, durable, decorator cover Just plug 7 i, pall bei rh © Crushproof, pre-built borders DOW prevent sagging edges U 2 ra 19° » LIGHT FIXTURES SAVE 50% SPECIALS ONE WEEK ONLY ‘$19.95 Pulldown Fixture .........;.....$9.69 13,75 Outdoor Post Lamp Pee es eeacces 6.87. Pad Cireline Fluorescent ............ 8.95 Kitchen Recessed Fixture Eiveccis S88 3.48 ‘Bedroom Cei 2.55 Hall Ceili 2.59 Outdoor =<. 2° WEI] OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT Until 9 P.M. pbyedbteetemera DOZENS OF OTHER FIXTURES. To CHOOSE dinar @ Tru-balance coils for firm support ; 5 0° @ Vented sides—strong handles Matching box spring $38.88 ADVERTISED U8 a Week | mune ot, ot Fir, Or "Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping Phone FEdersl 3-7114 fer as soveanstt wes : : si efi Raimaaiing BS ae RIGHT $ 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 ~ Kills Ex-Gir Friend, _ Dies 8 Hours later hearts clubs, fired three bullets ‘into Veronika Greubel; 23, who aii tae te Welt Germany early last year. Alien then turned the gun on himself, He died at Hospi! came engaged last year but broke |* up over, among other things, Al- len's drinking, Allen had left a note in his room reading “‘Everything I own belongs to Mike Mullen,’v : Mullen wryly told pdlice: “He a didn’t own anything. He owed me : $40 or’ $50." \Ike Squeezing ‘\Plenty of Golf Into Vacation — to play -| Eisenhower arranged 'the Newport Country Club course for the-sixth time since he ar- rived: in thé-New England resort area for a stay ot indefinite dura- tion. * &® ey, He came to the U.S, naval Dase here a week ago today and has golfed every day but one-Wednes- day, when he went dety sue fidh- ing Yesterday he vate 18 holes in the afternoon after discussing the China crisis with Secretary of State Dulles. * * He golfed with two newcomers to his vacation retreats — John Hay (Jock) Whitney, U.S, ambas- sador to Britain, and ‘old friend William E. Robinson of New York, president of the Coca-Cola Co, The other member of the four- some was another old . friend, — > ee inessman and neighbor. Boy Scouts to Distribute Civil Defense Pamphlets Pontiac district Boy Scouts and other members of the Clinton Valley Council will help. civil ‘defense Oct. 11, when they join scouts across the nation in door- to-deor distribution of a prepared- ness pamphlet. * * * Van Braidwood, Pontiac district scout executive, said the pamphlet was prepared by the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization in Washington and is being tributed by scouts at the request of President Eisenhower. > ee FALL TERM | MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 Offer _By REBA HEIVTZELMAN Police calls are atten filled with humor, tragedy, happiness and pathos, as well as trouble. This, fact is becoming increas- ingly apparent to Mrs. Ruth Har- greaves, police radio operator, recording. daily police activities. Early in the morning recently, la woman called the police saying that she had been awakened by a loud voice shouting. found that the shouting was a dis-; big rooster crowing his good merging fs G0 Wye In another report, an abandoned car was found ‘in the middle of a vacant field, stuck in the mud. Wheel marks indicated” that the driver had driven all over the area, trying to find the road again; finally walked home. The report stated, “Checked license— found owner. All clear.” * * * A woman called reéently to say new Waterford Township - i Those Urgent Police Calls GREGG SHORTHAND - TYPEWRITING - STEN OGRAPH STENOTYPE - SPEEDWRITING - HIGHER ACCOUNTING BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION - SECRETARIAL that there was a “wild animal sit- "Pontiac Press Phote ting on top.of my breadbox—glar- LIFE CAN BE FUNNY — Newly hired Waterford Township ing at me.” When the police ar- police radio operator Mrs. Ruth Hargreaves gets a big kick out of rived, she had the wildlife shut in yeading some of te police reports that are too inconsequential for the kitchen and it turned out to be newsprint, but are still frumorous to an average citizen. i “There isas many opportunities for promotion. 7 West Lawrence St. PONTIAC POs tere ee ee feet Ue tee eee eee | NAME +r Tr rrr rr i li Al ll ln ln li Ml Ml Ml di Ml Me i i * if A EERTINS CALCULATOR - COMPTOMETER AND OTHER SUBJECTS : teady demand for capable secretaries, atenograpbari, account- ants and other well-trained office help. Salaries are excellent.. There are DAY, HALF-DAY and EVENING CLASSES The Business Institute ~ | VETERAN APPROVED | Fill In Your Name and Address Below and Mail for Free Bulletin i i he te ee te he ee te te ee i i i te i i te i et de be bt bn be he teh te te tintin te tlie tlt tle a huge rat. LAWYER CALLS FOR HELP - Some time ago, a lawyer called the police for help in evacuating a jmonstrous crow which had flown in shambles before the officers could finally subdge the terrified intruder. While on routine duty one night, patrolmen observed an old car completely wreathed in flames. They called the fire department, and found that.the owner was merely getting rid of his old junk- er. He received a ticket for burn- Phone FE 2-3551 i i rwwet«T.,twwfeTfFe6w§wFv°evpewpewvwwe iw *’ down the fireplace chimney right/er. The interior of the home was by he had parked hjs car, Police 1o- cated it through his license num- ber, several miles- away Near a tavern, and returned it to the own- A “hard-of-hearing” act put on Two women stopped the man and asked directions to a nearby church: When he answered, one of the women said he-would have to come closer, as she couldn't hear him. The obliging gent complied In her motions of blessing the man, tapping different parts of his *&- *£ The report that Mrs. got the biggest kick about a com) "s gon - started the cmb, at-ooadl hear a violent thumping, so he police, Investigation proved that a stray eat had become caught in the fan of the auitomobile. The report read: ‘‘Cat was released all in one piece minus considerable fur."’ You can be sure of plenty of hot water- -ifitsa Westinghouse automatic electric water heater DETROIT EDISON'S SUPER SUPPLY PLAN <3: makes Westinghouse electric water heaters even more efficient. You'll’ have all the hot water you want for all the family’s needs—24 hours a day, for an operating cost as low as $3.88 a month, Ask Edison how this new water heating service, combined with a new Westing- } house electric water heater, can mean hot water aplenty round thé clock. GET IT HOT... GET ALOT! OOOOH OCHHHOHEEEHHHEOHOEHEOHOE 95 Madel No. DE5282° 99 @e0e020000606000866 OSHC HCHHEHEECCOHEHHEOEHEOOE Check these value features! a CONSTANT WATER TEMPERATURE with ex- clusive Tri-Snap Thermostats. Bi-metal type, extremely sensitive. Minimum current con- spe: Héater provides hot hot water... ECONOMICAL Corox® Heating Elements. Two units, immersion type. All heat goes directly into the water; none is wasted on tank wall or ASTAL air. ALL ANYWHERE, nearest point of greatest el if desired. No flue required. Modern styling, finished in high-gloss Dulux enamel, “baked on over Bonderized steel. LONG LIFE. Copper-bearing steel tank, heavily galvanized inside and out. Tested to 300 Ibs. pressure. Westinghouse électric water heaters meet Edison’s rigid standards and are covered by a liberal. 10-Year Owner Protection Policy. @2eeeoeeeeod wea YOU CAN BE SURE . .. IF IT's WESTINGHOUSE See your Westnghowe deder O° DETROIT EDISON = , suit, she picked his wallet out of!) shut off the motor and called the f | SAM BENSON SAYS: 1 You haven't seen real values uritil posts looked in my store .« «+ e “And you'll save ‘$10 to $20 on your suit” or topcost. ook cmart! he sma Wy NOW! A good, smart Wardrobe is a wise investment — and: need not be expensive. So, come in and choose from our into-fall collection of men’s quality apparel and furnishings. You'll look smart— and it is smart—to buy now. Your * chorge account is welcome. rt! | ia } Advance Sale! Just Say. . MEGR’S $55.00 ‘PRICE MARKED. ON SLEEVE OF EVERY | COAT MY PRICE $9 937 | SELECT YOURS NOW! SH09 22425 xo BUY NOW SALE. IN LAYAWAY! OF MEN'S WEAR i I Cculd Sell for $59.50 NEW FALL 100% WOOL IMPORT SHARKSKIN SUITS MY PRICE $ At 87 ' See My New Fall Window Display I'M HAPPY AND PROUD CHARGE TO SHOW THESE SUITS IT! AT SUCH A LOW PRICE BUY NOW SALE OF MEN'S WEAR JUST SAY Sizes 28 to 60 é PLAIN’ FRONTS ~ Te] SAM BENSON [ for 37 N. Saginaw St. Weddings ‘Across. from ag re "s U. Ss. ‘Sitting ws on Fence Over Chiang’s Islands ~ ments by President Eisenhower q By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst : WASHINGTON. (AP)—It is still deliberately unclear ~~ after state- and Secretary of State Dulles — what this country will do if the Red. Chinese attack the National- ist-held islands near the China They're still doing what they’ve been doing: ‘keeping the Chinese Communists guessing. What they’ve said could be construed as ominous. Actually, ~ neither man has said anything committing this eountry to a course of action. * * * Both .men will have to consider carefully — before throwing the] - United* States into war with Red China for the offshore islands of Quemoy and Matsu and the near- by islets—what support ‘they'd get at home and from American allies abroad. Dulles, after talking with Eisen- hower at Newport, R. 1, issued ‘yesterday a 900-word statement about this country’s reaction to any Red attack on the islands held by Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists. * *® * But examination of this state- ment shows Dulles stopped a long way short of any flat expression of American intentions, He said in part, and this is the most perti- nent part: “. .. The President has not yet made any finding . . that the employment of the armed forces of the United States is we- quired or appropriate in insuring the defense Of Formosa. . . .” That can be accurately trans- lated into meaning Eisenhower as of now doesn’t think Formosa, Chiang’s_ stronghold 100 miles off the China coast, is in any danger of Red attack, tow ow o&®. Under this country’s Senate-ap- proved treaty with Chiang, the|a United States has to defend For- mosa if it is attacked, Nowhere, his ment about fighting for such out- as There was no clear etiahten in ‘Dulles’ statement of what Eisen- said: ‘“‘The President would not, however, hesitate to make such a finding (use of Amrican armed forces) if. he judged that the cir- cumstances made this necessary to accomplish the purpose of the joint resolution (passed by both houses of Congress). That language commits . the United States to nothing. It leaves the door wide open — with the phrase “‘if he judged that the cir- cumstances made this necessary” — for Eisenhower to decide the offshore islands aren’t important enough to risk war for. "* « * - - But, as-if to give the Reds a nudge that this country thinks those offshore islands . have. be- -|come more important to Formo- sa’s defense than ever before, Dul- les went on: ‘‘We have recognized that the securing and protecting of Quemoy and Matsu have creasingly become related to the asjdefense of Formosa, (Note: This doesn’t say they’re essential to the defense of Formosa.) “This fs indeed also recognized by the Chinese Communists, Mili- tary dispositions have been made by the United States so that in-|and has virtually no odor, will ap- ‘presidential determination, oa would be followed by side both timely and effective,’ - vw. * * This phrase — ‘‘presidential é& termination, if made’’—means that so far as it wants the world to know the administration hasn't yet made up its mind. But Dulles’ statement on the in- creasing importance of Quemoy and Matsu is not new, It's simply a repetition-of what Eisenhower | ¢ told a news conference last. week. The President said: Those islands are interlockéd with Formosa as never before, with-one third of Chiang's forces on them. i "5. -¢.- * This itself doesn’t necessarily | § mean the islands themselves are increasingly important to Formo-| sa’s defense, It could mean they’re. increasingly important only because Chiang has so many of his troops there that, if they were lost, his ability to defend Formosa later would be greatly weakened, By putting so many men on the| € islands, deliberately or not, Chiang therefore has put increased pres- sure on the United States to de- fend them. Expect Easier Enamel on Paint Market Soon CHICAGO — Water-based high- gloss latex enamel which goes on easily, Gries fast, can be scrubbed, pear on the market soon. |* * * It is considered a major advance in the paint industry. The colors are reported to. be brighter than in customary glossy paints After ys- ing it, rollers and brushes can be cleaned with soap and water. 262 Square Inch Viewable Area 262 Square Inch Viewable Area At the Good Housekeeping Shop of Pontiac For Blonds Only! RCA _ they last!) Blond Super on a base With. swivel and Hi-Fi 27 Wee 08 Aly Parts. 6 2-Year ac 51 W. HURON | ‘ST. of PONTIAC Open Fri. and Toes. “19-00 Blond TV Brand new 1958 models, 3 speakers. Deluxe chassis. Regular ee while “268” Super Model RCA Victor 2500 : ' 21” Blond on Swivel. Reg. $339. Without pirat ine $319.95 BLONDS By General Electric New Slender Trim 21” Console Blond _ Convenient top controls, full console chassis. Alu- minized picture tube: Regular $269. 7. a | 9g” » Free Delivery—Free Service Contract— Free Parts Warranty—-90 Days Same as Cash Motorola 21” Console Famous tube sentry system for extra long life on parts. Not a table model Regular $269.95. 218" ORDER BY PHONE ‘90 Days Same As Cash : Victor 21” 238” Blond but ‘a full wood console. FE ‘cisss THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 esd * We Will Cut, Measure and Install hn con = @ You Choose to Your Complete Satisfaction! ‘See Our Large Selection of Lees, Firth and Gulistan Carpeting Easy Credit Terms . WALL - CUSHION INCLUDED 3° CARPET 3 ROOMS | O- WALL Ample Free Parking See Bei an a SN by # £ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; TRAE 5, 1958 ; New Words _|Sneak Way ° ‘Into English — CHICAGO (UPD — The Encyclopedia Britannica Book of the Year came up with a list of words and phrases that crept into the English language last year, possibly while you weren't looking. have rendezvoused on the tiny Pribilof Islands in‘the Bering Sea each sprig to raise families and _ breed again: . A sampling: “Calypsomaniac” When winter gales strike, the) 4 lover of calypso music; “art- cows and the young cruise south-| saker”—one who believes strongly in art for the sale of art; “‘tele- venglish”—a TV performer's own brand of speech; “cinnebabé”’— a shapely movie starlet; ‘‘meter ward as far as 5,000 miles. The *tovgh old males-winter in Alaskan waters, but form a welcoming delegation on the Pribilofs come spring. . x * * Whales are stout-hearted —mi- grants, too. California gray whales summer in the Arctic Ocean and Bering Sea where cold waters. of- * fer rich pastures of plankton. They|jobs at the same time. swim 5,000 to 6,000 miles each And don’t forget “‘egyptianize”’ winter to breed in the sheltered. j—to expropriate foreign holdings, lagoons and bays of Baja Cali- las a wife going through-her hus- . fornia. band’s pockets, up parking tickets, There's also ‘“‘moonwatcher”’ someone who spends his time look- ing for earth satellites: and ‘moon lighter’ — someone who holds two 1958) maid’’— a policewoman who writes —_— Business Is Humming; Customers Get Stung |’ WESTMORLAND, Calif, (#—Cus- tomers of Delvin Ashurst get no|‘ assurance from him that they won't be stung. He rents bees, “They have found ‘that yields even triple because of the Carwash pollination caused by the —. ot Traffic Safety Lesson. ne ond Given Mother and Tot |. "sald Ashurst can be double Her . . and|darted between parked: cars on alfor jaywalking, downtown © ‘warned her * hoi crossing the |’. Then Patrolman Boye Clark TUCSON, Ariz, WA little girl walked up and cited the mother mother | crossed the street with her daugh-| Bla _igrabbed her, slapped her wrist-and/ter in the middle of the block. Using Acrobatic Biller? SAN DIEGO, Calif. w—Neatest week: A food store threat of the evolver into. the of _ proprietor Edward Sort and said: “Don't move or " “1h blow y your head off.” He. said she {Save : DR. RICHARD PORTER: The new attitude is wonderful. TRUSSES $8.50 and up Thrifty Drug Store | 4s N. Saginaw PRIVATE FITTING on — Eggheads Live in Social Boom Sputniks Help Change Status of: Scientists in YOU CAN HAVE SOFT WATER FOR A FEW PENNIES PER DAY! Do Away with Hard and Rusty Water! Have a whiter wash, softer clothes, lovelier com- — and even SAVE UP TO .80° on SOAP! Why Rent a Softener 2 Unit? Have Your. Own for as Low as $H43 Per Month Including Sales Tax NO MONEY DOWN rvTwTwrvrwrwrwewwewY " 10 YEAR WARRANTY oT PREE WATER ANALYSIS For Information Call: WMP ELECTRIC, Ine. FE 4-35734 U.S. Today WASHINGTON (NEA) — When more than two scientists get to- gether these days they call it a seminar and newsreel men rush in to cover the event. Russia’s Sputniks helped chbste this and other phenomena which are changing the way of life for) U.S. scholars and scientists. * * * “Egghead” has become a term of flattery instead of a snide jibe at a thinker type. Identifying yourself as a “professor” gets you) a_ hotel, reservation as fast as) i you're’ a corporation vice president. A “doctor” in ifront of your name~is. the social equivalent of a foreign title. And the recent consumption of green peas and chicken by scien- tists,. professors and engineers on S' the lecture circuit before Rotary, | | Kiwanis. and women’s clubs has P| become astounding. * * * A survey among the scores ot scientists and’ experts who have been meeting here for Interna- tional Geophysical Year events and scientific-military sessions re- veals this new, exalted position they enjoy on the U.S. scene. Generally, the science. clan ‘is delighted by these developments. | But -as trained researchers they hesitate to make too broad gen- eralizations from limited find- ings. “Oh, this whole new attitude to- Frigidaire 1958 Custom Imperial (Discontinued Model) Rated No. 1 by Both Consumers Reg. $684.90 Value; Now BOTH for ONLY Washer and Dryer Report and U. S. Testing Company 9* e FRIGIDAIRE Custom | mperial _DRYER Regular Price DN’S L FURNITURE * ‘CARPETS APPLIANCES “The store that proves Quality Need not be expensive” 3065 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD FE 5-9464 KEEGO HARBOR ward the ree yes: pla 38 ~ BIG BEAR _ SMASHES DOWN the HIGH COST of Home Improvement! VISIT OUR BOOTH AT THE MICHIGAN STATE FAIR YOU DON'T NEED CASH BIG BEAR _ FOR ABSOLUTELY | LOWEST PRICES Geen e. CALL NOW FOR OUR FREE PLANNING SERVICE 8-69 Ld tional Academy of Sciences. “Public acclaim is flattering. But the true scientist doesn’t oa Dr. Porter agrees. pals the Sput- niks were important in creating this new order. ‘But I think it was the development of radar |which first convinced the public inet what ‘scientists could do in the field of weapons and national security, This is when- the tide turned in our favor,” he says. Portugal Seeking Monte Carlo's. — Gambling Title LISBON (UPI)—Lisbon, one of the’ few continental capitals with ‘its own ocean playground, is gear- ling for an all-out assault on Monte Carlo’s supremacy in the European ‘gambling world. | City fathers have laid plans for ithe building of Europe’s swankiest icasino on the seafront at Estoril, only 16 miles from the center of Lisbon. * * * Teodoro dos Santos, who was given the gambling concession in the Estoril area, said the new, casino “will be the most modern and luxurious in Europe.” The old casino was frequently criticized as a gloomy institution which failed to attract people with money. The new building will have & cinema and a theater, three dance floors — one for private parties, one for the sedate and a third for the jivers—and various reception rooms as well as the gambling salon. Gambling regulations will re- strict tables largely to foreigners. Virtually any foreign visitor over 21, who is not drunk, can have’ a the large die cast locothotive to the Train is over 4-feet long, has 10-feet * * * Conditions for the Portuguese are much tougher, Native gam- blers must be over 25 and prove that they are not in government employ or holders of a job in a private firm where they have any [oaucenameled for cash. _ shuts off power antommetially when it 1955 FORD 2-DR. HARDTOP & Cyl, Aute, Trans., YOU MUST Bf SATISHED Ran, OR YOUR MONEY BACK All aboard for the greatest saving ever on Marx train sets, Nothing else to buy... Grants ‘Special’ is complete from UL approved. transformer has built-in. circuit breaker, ELECTRIC TRAIN SET 97 latest style tender. of track, Powerful ONLY $1.25 A week shorts, w.T. GRANT Co. —_ Oo oe Ot sine : 7 at ee OO tat we og ‘MIRACLE MILE OPEN 10 A. M. to 9 P. M. W.W, Tires, A Real Buy, EDDIE STEELE FORD if 2705 Orchard Lk. Water Pump Closes School «Waterford Pupils Enjoy Extended Vacation, but It Proves Short-Lived ship High School pupils had an extra day of vacation yesterday because a. water pump in the Regular classes were scheduled but when there was no water available, bus drivers who usually pick up high schoo] pupils, acted as messengers and relayed Lo news to the teenagers. Today, the pump is in perfect condition, intendent William Shunck. There are approximately 400 teachers in the school system, and many new ideas in educa- tional advancement are being introduced by the staff along with More than 1,600 Waterford Town-jchoked back tears as she accepted school’s utility room refused to/Commissioner, _|awards in’a brief ceremony here Award 2S ta te Troopers | Top Honors, EAST LANSING (# — One wife smiled with pride as her husband received the medal -of valor, high- jest honor that can be awarded by State Police. The other wife, now a widow, the posthumous award for her hus- band. Joseph A, Childs, State Police presented the yesterday. * * * The widow, pretty and blonde Mrs. Dugald Pellot, accepted the gold cross for her husband, shot! down by a berserk gunman near Clinton last Sept. 30. The 21-year old widow managed to hold back her tears. But Pel- lot’s mother, Mrs. W. H. Cohoon, wept quietly through the Michigan State Police and his name will be inscribed forever on the honor role of its most illustrious of- ficers.” ‘ The award is the State Police equivalent .of the ‘Congressional Medal of Honor. Mrs. Pellot now rates a salute from every member of the State Police force. Mrs. Pellot lives in Lansing with her parents, She has a son, Greg- ory, soon to be two years old. “My husband's dearest wish was trooper Douglas Vogel of the Clinton post. ‘ gun battle, through his sintsicks and out his his heart. l in Death | was that his son become a state trooper,” the widow said softly after the ceremony. “He’s too young to undérstand now, but Pil tell him later how his father died. rll let bim make up his own mind.” . Also receiving the valor award Vogel was me =e in the same - bullet passing back and the other entering above Student Dies. in Storm | - DETROIT ®#—A bolt of lightning was blamed today for the death of Jan Brookins, 17, who was killed in Detroit’s Denby High School athletic field. The youth was head- ed for shelter with other members of the school’s cross country team when a thunderstorm passed over the area and Brookins collapsed amid a loud clap of thunder. They Went Thataway MALIBU, Calif. “ (AP)—Cowboy actor Bill ‘(Wild Bill, that is) El. liott told: officers, someone raided the tack room of his Malibu ranch and went thataway with $2,600 worth of boots, bits, bridles ‘and spurs, regular routine study, - * * & the district, the new John Pierce Junior High School on Hatchery| Rd., approximately 1,500 pupils, Sep- tember 16. This will help alleviate the jam-packed Crary Junior High, Shunck said. Another new 12-room element- ary school — the Thomas M. Codley — located on a 10-acre site on Firest St., south of Cass- Elizabeth Lake Rd., is-now under construction. and should be ready for, operation by next semester, Shunck conchaed. To Test Pontiac Siren Tomorrow at 1 P.M. —_Pontiac’s-civil_defense-tornade— warning siren will be tested the siren at any other time, you'll know that a tornado is headed this way, CD officials _ gay. If in the open countryside, seek shelter in a ditch or declivity. If in a public building, stand against inside walls or go to the designated shelter area, There Go Typewriters From Ike’s Press Room One of the twenty schools -in/j is scheduled to open. to § ee et be re eet | | NEWPORT, R.L (AP) — De- DAYTONA BEACH, Fla, (AP) —Dr, Norman Dwight . yesterday, He came to Daytona Beach in 1910 after 25 years at Northewstern, Find Many Cars Faulty NOTTINGHAM, England — Some 355 of. the 398 cars. tested Flint St., who died early this morn- in a road safety week at this Mid- lands city were found faulty. : Black and White : Consoles _ Portables Table Models USED TV SETS. ee #6 422 W. Huron TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON Brand New Model 1987 Sets SWEET’S oo FREE PARKING ; Open Mondey and friday “til 9 FROM From $14, 95° RADIO and. TV SHOP FE/4-1133 eee & €% | SPECIAL PURCHASE « Khaki, Black Blue Sweater, Vests . 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Sizes 6 to 16, é 4 “Charge It” | SAVE $6 ON: THESE | On Sale Tonight, Sat, Moa. we ever offered them at this No limit—buy all you want. ® Kitten-Soft Orlon Cardigans © All Colors, including White ® Guaranteed Washable ® Sizes 34 to 40 Save on 2.99 GEORGE'S .NEWPORT'S 74 NO. SAGINAW S We Give Hol fe en ) Rex PECIAL PURCHASE ‘KNIT. SUITS Say “Charge It” Lucky sale of nationally Fae 4 tised suits in bulky and fine knits, New Fall colors, Sizes 10 to 18 Come! Save! d Stamp ry wri current is passed through water, positive ions move in one direc- .|tion, negative in ‘the other, cells loses some of its salt. Re- peating the process produced salt- {free water. bet to supply electricity for heat- “ting and evaporation of salt-free water. Reports on this use of re- actors is expected. later in the conference, Nuclear Power to Spurt by 1960 Five U.S. Plants Will Move About 700,000 Kilowatts: for Industry GENEVA (AP) — The United pe een nen se aaa | Atomic reactors are also one! So i ‘e. 4 } es es _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, serremné 5 1958 : : a : (Advertisement) | outside the street door to the City|tist minister twige retused to obey salle te Blocks Inflation ee Negro Minister King jas Hall courtroom, He and about 50|the onder, [ki men Set Chance. [Koved Moest Don't Neglect Slipping other Negroes were seeking ad- He was taken to a‘cell at plice|t Make Suggestions SEOUL — ‘Korea's wholesale- FALSE TEETH [Goes f € rt Toda “a rig , im |headquarters for 15 minutes and NNI w-Ki price index by 2.7 per A) 0 LOU y volved the Rev. Ralph D, Aber-| wag on $100 bond. ” CHEYENNE, Wyo, #—Kibitzers Do false teeth drop, slip or released on c {cent in 1957, the first decline since or ? nathy, another Negro’ integration city code a maximum of|have been given their chance. _ a tile when you talk, eat, laugh ¢ MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-|leader. $100 fine and six months in jail| A sign on.a partially demolished | World War II. Credit by auch PASTEETH ere, a ry | The Rev, Martin Luther King Jr.) _ © Fs. for Mieing, = " church said: ‘Is given to the program alkaline (non-acld) powder to ne a Negro integration leader, faces| City Policemen O, M. Strickland| King said’ the officers “tried to) “'S of the International tion| more firmly set. Gives confident feel- hearing in City Court today on|%4 J-_V.. Johnson, who arrested |breals ‘my arm, they grabbed my|ideas on how to wreck this build-| Administration, which helped raise| N&tmmy, gooey, Uo a gy so . : King, said they told the crowd|collar and tried to choke: me, and/ing, please leave note in suggestion - production. in 1957 by ~10 eee AoreeTR today at drug menage pt ne. outside. the courtroom to. clear|when they got me to the cell, they|box. Suggestion box. is on the|per cent and industrial counters everywhere, King was arrested Wednesday|the sidewalk and the Negro Bap-ikicked ‘me in.” — “Swot.” ; by 30 per cent. ‘ PLASTIC TOP 5-Piece ROUND TABLE and 4 MATES CHAIRS 3115 @ COLONIAL MAPLE FINISH " @ EXACTLY AS PICTURED @ 42 INCH ROUND TABLE | _@ ATYPICAL LEWIS VALUE $10.00 Delivers ‘Months to Pay Popular maple finished table and chairs . .. table has plastic top and edges. Mates chairs are exactly as pictured. Our buyers searched the markets to bring this attractive value to you.~ You'll love it the minute you see it. . if f eRe , | P Saannd said collectors in St. Louis. THRIFTY | a: Kingfish Exhausted . 95 Sa. Yd. ®@ CHOICE OF SCROLL OR BARK PATTERNS © WONDERFUL WILTON WEAVES. - @ BEIGE, BROWN, GREEN, GREY @ ALL WOOL — 4 YARDS WIDE Pontiac's: most modern carpet department brings you this fine value in quality carpets. Woven especially to our own specifications + ++ the-heavenly carpet by Lees. _ TWEED CARPET + A low price that ‘ait4 will: give very sat- Sq. Yd. isfactory service. Choose from sev- eral tweed colors. Home Service Phone FE 5-8174. Our Carpet Car Will Bring Samples te Your Home. - ~ Special Sale! Big Captain's Chair Exactlily as: pictured , . large, comfy, , Captains Chairs finished as ~~ lustrous nutmeg maple. You'll want several at this low price. Unvetty $24.95 SEE the. HUGE CHAIR in OUR WINDOW ~ Drug Store LOS ANGELES (AP) — Harry (Tim) Moore, 70-year-old King- 4895 Dixie Highway fish of the Amos and Andy TV SPORTS STARS / for thot extra jump... ¢ arch cushion insoles ® suction cup soles © ventilating eyelets © heavy bumper guard $6 Delivers Prices Start at "66 i $129 in Pairs These couches lead a double life and they're equally useful by day or night. furniture by day and wonderfully restful supersize Handsome, modern, sectional 84-inch beds at’ night) “Quality throughout with fine innerspring ~ struction. Beautiful Sectional Furniture \gumeeem Super Size 84” Single Beds ty NIGHT built con- Months to Pay VERSATILE TRUNDLE @ TWIN BEDS @ BUNK BEDS @ TRUNDLE BED @ GUARD RAIL Exactly as pictured, these are truly the beds for the children to group up with. Bunks to twin beds... . from childhood to college. PARK FREE BEHIND OUR STORE > BEDS @ MAPLE FINISH $57 $4 Delivers a South Saginaw St. at Orchard. Lake Ave. OPEN TONIGHT and MONDAY ‘TIL. 9 ae a . An ae THE PON TAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMEER 5, 1958 —_ Ea @ ‘ue They'll Gobble Up Fine Music if It’s Seer With Imagination ‘Parents to Blame if Kids Go for hal n’ Rollbi3™™ By PHYLLIS BATTELLE and sensitive age a child takes anjmade up a storm that sent grotesque offenses against music,|children, both of them, it is purély a sign that either: wrong company, or (2) His ts are devoid of|themselves in the country.” imagination and taste. THEY “LEARNED FAST This i the opinion of a father of| By the time his daughter was| how they were introduced to’|readily. to mind,- in listening to a and @ 6-year-old.who/five and his son'three, they knew! Stravinsky's ‘Rite of Spring,’ |piece of good music, Olevsky occe. a 4year-old sak tk Ab eel hee Eek ae which many adults still. don’t NEW YORK If at an early|When the music got stormy, I|them summoned up visions of| appreciate.” thejanimals, people, wonders of the He taught them to love Dvorak’s interest in rock 'n’ roll and other|cows cowering for the trees. The|world that shate.faiteg, Had saoaten “New World Symphony” by telling cinated. Puilaa wets te Gels i ia eset \. Bas! wanted sterner |music: For 8 ic- (1) The child is keeping the|‘pastoral’ for lullaby music at| stuff, So sot des I sald, ‘How ‘tion, Cleve tyler ire Sn night—-they sleep better, imagining} would you like to hear some (better accompaniment. tan sionally dubs in a familiar fairy | you're intrigued by the ruins of|th2ginian) ships, Roman or Etrus- tale. “But you have to be careful chink Rome, perhaps you'll con- can cities swathed in seaweed, with that, Fairy tales are often so| sider investing in cruel—they must be changed to fit|swim fins. , the tenderness of glorious music.”| ‘There are plenty of ruins under-|| 1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN * The Olevsky children once heard|chaeologists have found that skin- eS . ‘n’ roll. They/diving is a good way to explore|} . as daddy what was the story./| them. He shuddered. They gathered it} Many underwater field trips EDDIE STEELE FORD was music for spooks. Which shows |were described at the recent Sec-/[ 7 Orchard Bx. Be. Keege how smart kiddies can be. chaeology here, attended by more a ne a skin-diving archaeologists. Some told of finding lost Roman) . Archaeologists aces. Others dealt with Roman and| MIRACLE MIL E ‘OH in aqualungs and|‘races of city streets and roads of) Sept. 26th 7:3 MM Auction Bucks water along Italy's-coasts and ar- Automate Trone,, Wetter Perlect for a Second Car Boeeaa Star { FE ond Congress of Underwater Ar-| dote on Beethoven and adore Stra- vinsky. They get a trifle gaily os | Blut oll. | but doesn’t everybody? “There is no excuse for small children going around the house humming fragments’ of television coymmereials,” said Julian Olev- sky, the expert. : “Children are open-minded and open-hearted. They can understand and appreciate modern music that is so new in sound that grownups hold. their ears when they hear it. They have no previous impressions as to what is good and what is discordant. ; NOTHING TOO HARD “From an adult’s point of view some fine music is difficult to understand. Well, nothing is too difficult for a child.” Olevsky is a successful concert violinist. He was taught, early in life, to listen to good- music, his parents using what he calls the “imagery system.” From the time his first child, a daughter, ‘was able to understand the spoken word, he practiced the same tech- nique. “I began, of course, by play- ing on the hi-fi set a recording I that save you GIRLS’ Pile-lined GABARDINE ae ees ee) COATS with — hats planation written into the recording of ‘Peter and the Wolf.’ This is perhaps the test experience a child can as a prelude to itself. Now I had to use MY im- e agination to lure my child's interest.” a Olevsky chose Beethoven’s Sym- phony No. 6, the “Pastoral.” “This was easy. I told a story Psychologists Pei 2 Study Teenage | 12. 99 5 Patecs % Drivin H abits Priced far below cost! 85% rayon, g % sh abard: z ok 15% nylon sheen gabardine double- wart Sale Gane Semana breasted coats with tim-tom collars, be used to test results of a psycho- y rayon pile linings! Self belt,- logical study of bad traffic habits. saver, matching quilt lined clip: The aim: to see if habitual’ yio- lators can be | Dr. Robert “V. ‘Rainey. of hat with tim-tom pom-poms. Gray with pink, le, navy with blue pile. Really 4.99 Colorado . University: Medical: ¢ ter found: repeating =i tal among military servicemen showed a pattern of emotional hot- headedness. He wants to check these re- sults in aq four-year study of teenagers, starting when they’re 15 years of age and continuing through their early motoring careers, Rainey told a recent safety con- ference the habitual violators who had a high accident rate as a rule felt they were better drivers than pefsons with more normal records : He said the servicemen, ranging in age from 18 to 40, appeared to be more interested in their own satisfactions: He added: _ “They were less conventional than the other (non-violator) group. And they responded to traffic situations on. a_ highly emotional level.” Rainey concluded: . “They were men who couldn't stop to courit to 10.” Psychologist Rainey warned that the results with the ‘teenagers maybe, differnt, as might be! similar studies conducted with other age groups and occupations. tad Just Arrived! 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Wash-and-wear white cotton dress shirts . . « 1.89 BOYS’ hooded cotton SATEEN CAR COATS “ 99 quilt-lined MELTON SUBURBAN COATS. aw CAR COATS—With two leather trim | | SUBURBAN COATS—Reprocessed wool and pockets. Water-repellent. Detachable hood, nylon with warm quilted 8 oz. linings. Some Double-breasted. Charcoal, tan. 4-12, leather trims. Stripes, fancies, Blues, grays. 4-12, 7 ust oun CONVENIENT LAY-AWAY PLAN. .¢ NO EXTRA CHARGE +, ay agonists —. : cul “THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; SEPTEMBER 5, 1058 ge Gather for Beach Part ’ sok da tend eles, *#-*.-¢ Because the new earrings drop well below the jawline it- Attention, Students! e Accessories for All Instruments Check Your Needs ip > Birmingham Wellesley Club sponsored a beach party Thursday for eastern college undergraduates at Orchard Lake Country Club. Waiting for luncheon Garden _ Exhibit Shaping ‘county ex- ‘ % Wayne Siefert, the Tene of =a esa pee tension agent, will answer ae ect Bross Dick Bragaw of Dartmouth gives Carolyn Hun- —— ” a =| toon of Cornell University a push on one of the Saturday and Sunday in the om~-«»««—«~EOr«s | Orchard Lake Country Club swings. The students Waterford Community Activ- Check These Items: e » Woodwind mouthpieces for reed instruments had a chance to swim and play tennis at the picnic. Rush of Showers, Fetes Honor Sylvia de Steiger In the midst ‘of preparations for her Sept. 27 marriage to James Heath Cole’ of Lake Mrs. Fred Lawrence of -St. Clair Shores and Miss Edna Rein of Detroit, the bride- ities Building. Mr, Siefert will be at the conservation table Saturday from 2:30 until 9 p.m. Mrs. Standish Sibley, chair- man and Mrs. Robert Arm- therapy, will be on hand to _ demonstrate their work. Mrs. ‘Richard Gorman has donated a Wishing Well to be () * Ppentiae Press Photos are (left to right), Carol Williams: of Wellesley Col- lege, Hal Louchheim of Harvard and Judy Dodrill of Vassar College. . @ Reeds for all wind instruments Sherwood, former Pontiac lect’s aunts, gave her a show- featured at the show, and a @ Valve oil resident, Sylvia de Steiger of ¢f at the Lawrence home and = “relaxation corner” has been _. | East Detroit has been honored * ered ~ llr cogsittgyraes teiad planned by Mrs. Raymond |, @ Music Lyres Taare ee road, Mrs. Donald Smith Sr. DOMOTONS | i: ae ’ @ Drum Sticks of all sizes i “+ &® Bigg: an pronto or! . by five local. garden clubs: i e Drum practice pads es : Thursday evening, a supper Sylvia with a shower at Mrs. Dirt Gardeners; Better Home ‘ Es a rear st at oe Rein’s home. and Garden, and Pontiac, Wa- “Getting acquainted” was one of of Princeton, Barbara Hobart of Wel- a! @ Accessories for all String. Instruments cores ieahane Wojcinski at her * it * eigenen g lagiaar gy i chief purposes of the picnic. Dis- lesley and David Ritchie of Williams 4 init it line of Music Items Detroit home. — Sf —= Pay den Club. cussing plans for a fall reunion in the _—_ College. cf Poni gcde Ang Mrs. Ila man of Walnut Lake was given east are (left to right) Peter Loomis | Lou Wermuth, who will be a en of the editorial staff of The Bad Table Manners E bridesmaid for Miss de Steiger, Pontiac Press, ; - i . were the hostesses at a mis- Pe ONO as been Can Provea Block P l N f I te ti. A cellaneous shower at their honored at a dinner: party at Bad eating habits can he one ersona e€ws Oo! Nn r eS In rea . ‘deste i Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments Fenton home. - x * * the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Van. Wager of ~Drummond of the worst roadblocks to the Mrs. Jack Rammes of Rose- nac Island, Cheboygan and ton, D.C. is here visiting his and Baldwin Pianos and sats 2 teenager who is about to step : 119.8 sili, tive, | dream oe into the adult world. Too often, dale avenue, Mrs. John Katie Petoskey. | Mac tr Ghrer stent wane orth Saginaw Street Phone FEderal 5-8222 dutear sbvei wy Mic ankl Yee. tk ok offensive table manners are a of Bloomfield Hills, Mrs. Os- = | OM ating with the US. Navy Howard Heintzelman of Wixom. ‘The will be at 7 carry-over from younger days car Lundbeck of Chippewa road - 6 Stanley avenue will en- Band at the Michigan State p.m, at St. Peter’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, East De- troit, with the reception imme- diately following at the New when stuffing the mouth, eating noisily were common prac- tices. * * & and Mrs. Rainey Hire of Mi- ami road are home after a week’s trip in the southern and tertain Lt..Gov, Philip A. Hart and 14° Democtatic nominees at a lawn party at their home Fair. * * * Erma Jean and Ann Living- - i day. : h { Mr. and Mrs.' Hillcrest Country Club, Mt. : ; eastern states where they visit- this. Sun ate, Gametyers << x ans re September Special Only! — jug ating Habis are Pet ed in. Willamsburg, James at pe John P. Livingston, of Berk x *£ & lati The based town, Gettysburg, Monticello, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Case of shire road, have returned from : reguiations, y are Belmont avenue have returned Teton Valley Ranch, Jackson * tees DIGNITY | a BLUE RIBBON WINNER because... it's carpet beauty that will make your home a lovelier setting for you. anal The bride-elect is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Raymond P, de Steiger of East Detroit, on general - consideration for others. Poor table manners tag ‘you as rude and selfish. and Lancaster, Pa. * * * Mae Coan of Chicago was from vacationing for a month in England. Hole, Wyo. where they attend- ed camp for five weeks. : ; Nottingham Castle, t * * and Mr. Cole’s parents are Mr. ‘They can ur populari the house guest of Marie They saw ss and Mrs, Harold D. Cole of plomasisting* Soe eines Schimmel of Wenonah drive al ear a poet Mr. and Mrs. John Tuson of Drummond Island and Clear- “table terror’ except perhaps for the past two weeks. Gerdon avenue entertained . water, Fla, another one! ss e Husband Wins by a Nose—Abby Marital Peace - at The girls visited at Macki- a Price of Nottingham Notts. The cou- ple also stopped at Bedford — Beds and Braefield Beds, ‘where Mis, Case was born and has not visited for 54 years. Several days were spent in London before their return home by plane. * * * their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Elliott, and grandchildren, Diane, Dav- id, Susan and Mary, of ‘Dray- ton Plains, recently. On Sept. 13, Diane Elliott will leave for Ferris Institute. “ * * * Mr. and Mrs. Clarence See bth * Dr. and Mrs. Joseph I. Chap- : st am a = ae design has > eat man of Mary Day avenue with | of Syracuse, N.Y.; Lee Woods < ppear larger. . By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN on jelly sandwiches, and ginger proper advances toward my ~ their children, David, Stephen, of Elmira, N.Y., and Anna multi-level looped pile has a look of costly luxury. Finest all-wool yarns give you longer wear, maintain their -spring-like bounce. See Dignity to- day! Compare for beauty .. pare for value. You'll say, it’s Dignity. Six heavenly colors: . com- $998 “DEAR ABBY: — Regarding the woman whose college grad husband was an infrequent bather: I was always a be- liever in the daily bath. After marriage I found out -that my husband (also a college grad) hated -to take a shower. or bath. This was rather hard ale, for three months and it didn’t hurt him. I really think _ this kid ought to see a nut doctor. Or do other people have kids like this?” LIKE TO KNOW DEAR LIKE: Occasionally children get some pretty pecu- liar potions about what they will and and won’t eat, but a mother shouldn't tolerate ex- psychiatrist, One for her and ‘each other? . husband. He got real excited about her because she had red hair and a good shape, I wanted to give her a taste ef her own medicine so I went after her husband and I know he loves me. Should we confess our love and let them have each other?” ALL. MIXED UP DEAR ALL: Do they want You've turned first choice is usually your Rebecca, and Rachel, have re- turned from vacationing in the East. Another daughter, Carol, who has been attending Ham- line University in St. Paul, Minn., accompanied them. * Fal * . Mrs. George Alexander has returned to her North Johnson street home after a tour of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. -Lou Jarboe of Jackson were weekend guests of Mrs. Os- wald E. See of Williams Lake. a a a 2 Mrs. J, C. Stewart and her two sons, Bruce and Stephen, of Josephine avenue have re- turned from ea trip to Cali- fornia where they visited pri- vate James R. Stewart who is stationed at the Marine bar- Sq. Yd. on me as he tremes. An ill-b“"~need diet of what was probably just the In Sweden she visited relatives racks on North Island, San drove an oil this kind could do serious dam- _ sparks from an innocent flirta- = Stockholm and Vaxjo. Diego. On the return trip they Reg. $11.95 truck all day. = age to the boy’s health. If his» tion into a five-alarm fire. kk visited Mrs. Judy Reynolds of : , “After many mother permits him this dan- _— Don’t call out the heavy equip- ’ Paul F.° Allen of Wanting: Phoenix, Ariz. fights over gerous whim you should make ment until you four have this, I decided TWO appointments with the talked it over carefully. Your Dance Set marriage was one for the boy. best. Trabajamas a gi- e-and- x * *& x ke ABBY take proposi- “DEAR ABBY: I have been “DEAR ABBY: I am an tion and this was one of the going with Nick for over four elderly lady in’ an OLD The Trabajamas Club is Maria Cosmas has charge of takes’ I had to put up with. We've been happily married for six years and the peace is worth the price. GIVE-AND-TAKE DEAR GIVE: If you allow your husband to lead you around by the nose on this very years now and he has all. the .bad habits you can mention, hut if he’d ask me to marry him I would say yes. I keep hoping that if we get married ‘I will change him, I think he would gfve up drinking, smok- ing and gambling and even ‘ FOLKS HOME. There is a gentleman here whom I love very much. But he can’t hear so I can’t tell him.I love him. And he can’t read so I can’t write him, Please help me.” MRS, W. G. AR MRS, W. G.: He can. sponsoring a dance, ‘Bermuda Bounce Record Hop” from 9 to 12 tonight at the Roosevelt Temple. A local disc jockey will be on. hand to play the records. . Karen Metz and Jeanne Johnson are cochairmen of the publicity assisted by Kay Swen son, Contacting patrons for the dance. are Sharon Daniels, chairman; Janita , Benevides and Pauline Herron, In charge of the program , are Rosemary Fellows and important issue, I suggest that running around with . other ' decorating committee. The €n- - kay Slater. Georgia Hugiph- ‘ "No Morey Down-36 Pm ths ‘ [ you ask him to take a girls, but my mother says you _— a ey. | fire eldb is assisting them, reys heads the oun y on ° ay firm grip. It will be. © can’t change the spots on a x ek tee, and Gail Sederick is head A take that way. — leopard. Is that right?” RITA _ » CONFIDENTIAL, TO “MOM Ann Hamilton is head of the _ of door, prize cammittée as- You U enjoy shopping at Gentry s es © DEAR RITA: That’s right— TO ALL:” There is-too much ticket committee. Assisting-her ‘ ‘sisted by Phyllis Burt; ) “DEAR ABBY: I. married 2 but you ean change “‘leop. Toaming in your rooming are Phyllis Sehultze and Joan . The past dance committee woman with a l2year-old kid. = urd.” house, Get wise. ;, | Humphrey, In charge of en- consists ‘of last spring's This kid must be batty. He's @*rx * * * * ft . tertainment are Judy Dunham _ pledges. Sherrié Greemore, been living on peanut butter “DEAR ABBY: After twelve For a personal reply, write and Lynn Thompson. Retfresh- honorary pledge, heads the 4479 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2300 o sandwiches and chocolate bars for two months. She says ‘to leave him alone, He once lived \ s | f Fa -years of marriage I: started having trouble with a certain woman who was making im- to ABBY in care of this paper. Enclose a_ self - addressed, stamped envelope. ment committee heads are Mary Chasteen, mc Everett and | —- vee committee assisted by Janet Mihay,, Careen McClements and — Miller, - . fe OSL 4 ANNOUNCING... Our Fall Line of Nog yy lipstick shade RED .BA Hex. Deodorant ca Stick Form. ‘New ‘Neutral Beige BASE and: FACE POWDER. MERLE NORMAN GOSMETIC STUDIO Come In for a _ Free Demonstration = 12 W. Huron FE 2-4010 I New ‘Fingernail Biters What does F. B. T. G. N. LF. B.. stand for? Watch for our ad Tues., Sept * i. Magic Beauty! “NU-FACE” No discomfort! Face lifting and peel. Cosmetic and beauty ad- viser to Hollywood stars for 40 years. or Stockholm Graduate Specialist CAROLYN NILSON Fine Cosmetics Salon 771 E. Maple, B'ham Phone MI 6-7373 Mail Orders on Request Spiedel - Watchbands Dallan FE 2-5812 - 88 N. te Treasures from the finest homes AUCTION SALE Household Furnishings, Antiques Smart's Auction Barn | she carried two white orchids. |MR. and MRS. RICHARD H. BEEBE | _ Beatrice ' Joyce VW interlee and Richard Howard Beebe were. married Saturday Parents of the couple are Mr, and Mrs. Perry Koon of Mt. Morris, - Mrs. Herbert Curtis and the late _ Howard S. Beebe. Married in All Saints Rite All Saints Episcopal Church was the scene of the Saturday wedding George Widdifield officiated at the ceremony. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Perry Koon of Mt. Morris, Mrs. Herbert Curtis of Cottage street and the late Howard S. Beebe. The bride wore a white balle- rina-length Chantilly lace gown. Her fingertip veil of white nylon mesh was held by a white heart shaped tiara. On a white Bible, Mrs. Herbert Curtis was matron ‘To Host League Party Mrs, John K, Bagby, presi- dent of the Junior League of Birmingham, will join the De- troit Junior League's presi- dent Mrs, William C. Loud as cohostess at a party for par- ticipants of the eighth annual Presidents Council meeting of the Association of the Junior “Leagues . oe * The 18 weeds of Region ‘Four will meet Sept, 12 under the direction of Mrs. H. Ed- mund Lunkin of Cincinnati to discuss the future of the league and the association, 8230 W. Tienken Bd.—Rochester St. Cosa s-in-the-Hills Episcopal Church SAT., SEPT. 6 1 to 6 P.M. Duane Upton. Auctioneer Baked Goods Sale Soft Drinks Served Me DR. B. R. BERMAN I 17 N. Saginaw rE ¢-1071 SL PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enrotiments Available in Day or Evening Classes, Write, phone or call in person for Free Pamphlet | PHQNE FEDERAL 4-2352 NEW for FALL. . RANDALL . the CHIMICURL. Let. us adapt this new curl-cut to your features _ BEAUTY 88 Wayne St. SHOP FE 2-1424 5281 Dixie wr, Over 4 Ott Sale! English Earthenware HAND DECORATED AND UNDERGLAZED FOR EVERLASTING BEAUTY. | Choice of Over 60 Patterns at PRICE’ I | | | | i (Near ‘Weteeteel) Gay-Day Pattern in a corn-flower blue oil over attern. Completely dish | $ 95 rg and detergent-proof: Regular Complete 63-PIECE SET sere s All Sales Final Die Perrier |For Your Convenience. . I. Open Daily 10 A, M,- +9.P. M., Sunday to 9.P. M. | OR 3.1894 ( of _honor. length dress of blue mist over blue taffeta and carried a bouquet of .|white and pink carnations, Brides- the, bride’s aunt, of Mt. Morris, and| maids were Marie Koon, Stephanie Winterlee, the bride's cousin. ‘ * * * Miss Koon wore a° flamingo colored ballerina dress with a bou- quet of white and yellow carna- tions, and Miss Winterlee wore a pink nylon dress with a pink and white carnation bouquet. The bridegroom's stepfather, Mr. Curtis, was the best man. Richard Koon, the bride’s uncle of Mt. Morris was usher, The couple will live in Germany where the bridegroom is stationed with the U.S. Army. i Sorority Leaders Are Named President of Alpha Alpha Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Al- pha Sorority is Mrs. Elmer O. Johnson. She announced the commit- tee heads for the coming year when the group met Thursday evening at the YMCA. x* * *& They are Mrs. Fred Baum- gartner, vice president; Mrs. Fred Mueller, recording sec- retary; Mrs. Gordon Carlson, corresponding secretary; Ste- phanie Linabury, treasurer; Mrs. Jack Andress, contact; Mrs. Jack Holler, custodian; Mrs, Edmund Smith, historian; Mrs, Harry Rhodes, member- ship; Mrs. Ben Sweeney, par- liamentarian; Mrs. Bert Ans- elmy, program; Mrs. Ralph OQ. Allen, publicity; Mrs. Ed- ward Hurhmel Jr., project, and Mrs, Rex rie, audi- ray Cochairmen are Mrs. Robert Hasse and Mrs. Keith Clauser, : social; Mrs. Donald Stone and Mrs. Winston Hopp, ways and means; Mrs. Frank Jalosky cig chatter. * * *® . Mrs. Jalosky reported on the international convention held at Denver, Colo. She was inter- national workshop chairman for the past year. Sponsors for the coming year will be Mrs. Melvin Brim and Mrs, Burtha Lampkin. Permanents AT A LOW, LOW PRICE! All work done by senior ts under super vision of instructor. Phone FE 4-1854 Closed All Day : WW ednesday Call Miss Wilson Today for Intoymation PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16% East Huron Behind vatctiattinn 2nd Floor hd ; : a Le J i @ _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 . She wore a ballerina-| “Witttam &@ Mary’ | “American VicrorRian” we START your service...Now! * HLL-IN your service... New! |} A Limited: Time Offer | cert £— Gere is We must advance these special sale prices to their regular normal levels on October 16. Both are carried as Gctive open stock patterns. You may use our "CLUB PLAN” aa Pontiac’s Oldest ; | . Jeweler : : Pontiac Press Photo Mrs. Walter D. Appel of Com- Will-O-Way Playhouse. The fair will merce road, shown with her German benefit the Michigan Animal Rescue F r ed N. Pauli Co. Shepherd dog, Lance, is a patroness of League, with proceeds scheduled to- 28 a: on FE 2-7257 ward fencing the outside runs for the animals, this year’s Sixth Annual Antique Fair to be held Sept. 11, 12 and 13 at “The Store Where Quality Counts” Leal Emes Group Holds Meeting Antique Fair to Benefit Local Animal Shelter will be served and a bake sale will be held. Patrons for the fair include Mrs, C. 0. Anderson, Mrs. 'O. L. Beaudette, Mable Craft, Mrs. Harry Garrett, Mrs. Dorothy Gould, Mrs. Ezra Mason, Mrs. C, K. Patterson, Mrs. Ford Paddock, Mrs. Arthur M. Robertson, Mrs. Aaron Riker, Mrs. Clare~ ‘CLIP ME OUT—— a SEND FOR FREE Kitchen Planning Folder MAIL TODAY PONTIAC PRESS, BOX 5, PONTIAC, MICH. The sixth Annual Antique Fair to benefit the local shelter of the Michigan Animal Rescue League will be held at Will- O-Way Playhouse on West * Long Lake road from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sept. 11, 12 and 13. ° The shelter has been built in less than five years, and in the few months it has been open, | The Leal Emes Group of First Presbyterian Church, held its first meeting of the season Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs, Law- rence Shelton on Upper Pettibone Lake, Cohostesses were Mrs. Paul Blystone, Eleanore. Kellogg -and has cared for, placed and in- Anfia redmo: ch vestigated hundreds of animals. Scriven, Mrs. Arthur Schutt, |° Marie A sg Name WE web ec esresrcreerer o- ceeevesew. O: The building is -located on Mrs. Harland Smith and Mrs. Participating in the program i Featherstone road, and is the | Cramer Smith. were Ethel Graham, chairman; MONE os oo os cc ceesesdi Sits th Oe ee first shelter in Oakland Also patrons are Lelah | Mrs. Lawrence McDowell, and ; ona County pwned and operated ex- | Thorpe, Virginia Ward, Mrs. J. | Miss Kellogg who spoke on the Cc State : clusively by an Humane So- L Wood, Mrs. Arthur Warwick, Middle East, ity ee ee ee ee ee. ee ee ee ee ee ee een ee ciety. and Mrs. L. B. Young. Mrs. Paul Salter was elected ; oes hd i rimiti x «© * treasurer of the group to finish SEND ME IN ‘ = : to the more:elegant will be dis- From the Birmingham- — ee See : ; : Bloomfield area are Mrs. W. |“2%S- - ; played at the fair along with : nde f Oxford glassware, dishes, brass,:cop- | D. Appel, Mrs. Dexter Craig, | Helen Anderson of Oxford was a : Mrs. Max Colter, Mrs. Graham /suest, per and early American items, This year a booth will feature Staffordshire dishes.. Tea will WSCS Hears Miss Kellogg and Esther Voor- hees will represent the group at the Waldenwoods Conference Oct. |- 11-12. The group will sponsor a Stanley lemonstration on Oct, 21 at the jehurch., J. Graham, Jeanette Hubbard, “Mrs. S. L. Goss, Mrs. J. J. Nance, Mrs. D. S. Patterson, Mrs. Graham Shinnic::, Mrs. H. R. Turrell, Mrs. ‘Clifford West and Mrs. Abner A. Wolfe. From Rochester are patrons LAST DAY! P ar. ley Repor t ° Mrs. Frances Covert, Mrs. * * & 3 ; = Alex Duffield, Mrs. Charles ‘The October meeting will be held 4 at Luncheon at the Miami road home of ‘Alice Dilkman and Mrs. Frank Lam- bert. ee Jackson. Miss Voorhees will assist. The General Women’s Society of Christian Service of Central Meth- odist Church met at the church! Thursday for a luncheon. 3. ‘The Marian Shaw Circle served) ~ 2 EVERYTHING FOR THE HORSE and RIDER ... and SQUARE DANCERS - “It it's Western, we have it” B-Bar-B Western | ‘Su pply | _ 215-17 Main: St. Roe | Mrs. Percy Latimer and Mrs. Russell Vessells presented the pro- gram of the fifth national assem- bly of WSCS given ‘at St.’ Louis, Mo. ; Jr., and Betty Lou DeGroot,~. | Choose from 14 luxu- riovs weight patterns and save from $25.50 to $36.75. You pay only regular nation- ally advertised price for 3 place settings.../ ‘we give you an extra one free! Buy now for assurance you hove by MAC. O- LAC featuring: al Sterling to satisfy | your immediate needs. S-pe. place setting consists of teaspoon, place fork, ploce knife, salad fork, ploce spoon of teed drink spoon, OFFER EXPIRES — TOMORROW Flat Paint ) 5.39% Regularly priced at $6.39, . this amazing paint is now reduced to just a geuduat of The International Silver MIRACLE PLASTIC Fiat panty -Clear Varnish pr. $1.10 White Shellac Pt. BSS Varnish Stain pt. $1.00 Lacquer Pt $EL1O Nu-Wood Stain pt. ROE Oil Stain Pp. BSE JEWELERS 16 West Huron Street Se ¢ 256 Sbuth oginaw Street, Pontiac, Michigan oa : | we ii : | , % = , ’ i rf a be ox : ee 8 PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEM ER 5, 1958 ued 3 f ‘ ff jf : f sd é " } |Prepare fo Combat State Season May Top Last Year's ioe Births ros Ex-Minoatabe Flower . .”|ststt: ewer: 6 a ia 2. {UC ) ict i ST. PAUL—Minnesota’s legisla-|So in 1902 the state flower wag: jPetroi’s PolioRise "Tourist Business B OOTNS | sey meres we Pati te acd sss FRIDAY, Ja) yo.7:3 7:30 ANN ARBOR w®—University of Clerk's. office are ‘listed below by| Slipper or moccasin flower as the slipper. 3 eke Michigan medical center officials) yey Gate + Is the. seeon oan a In a series of py Wied ‘ In tact, the recession has turned to our |the name of the father. | oaeimemamedipemmmainains have announced standby plans.to) © i intended ave tm eewn, Seaton? y ichigans . advantage in that many Michigan resi- UTICA: a Be imeet any major infantile paralysis | - my is ing from the recessi ~ dents as well as visitors from nearby states | James A. Casdwick, 41303 Roland , : ES KW cute tn the Det area), BY ROBERT J. FURLONG. vacationed close to honie this year as an | poer.9, Gueey, sat tore UMM D Uh UE a A SAT. NIGH T meroaiin’ Pom last year | Secretary, Michigan Tourist Council economy measure. Also, some ~wage earn- | William Gritsinger, 8635 21 Mile 2150 OPDYKE RD. While announcing their precau- LANSING. (UPI) — Michigan's 1958 ers on a shortened work.week have taken James W. Henderson, 45925 Cum- FE 4-4611 tionary plans, authorities empha-| Summer tra¥el season has been a good one it as an opportunity to travel. _ © Allen 2. Closets Fro shannon “isized at the same time that the) and may well show an increase over last There are some rough spots in-the | John J. Kolaski Jr., 1095 Ryburn jnumber of polio cases is not ex-| year’s 600-million-dollar season. travel picture. Scattered reports of a “William R. Jenereaux, 2591 Lee pme. aed to increase to serious pro- The humber of tourists in Michigan-is _ _ temporary drop in tourist patronage of ete ane haar Peon ACTION TONIGHT ACTION Eight ‘polio heated have been ve-| the rise—but per capita spending ‘aps some localities and American-plan ‘re- Richard Liebe yee nied ported this year in the Detroit) Pears to be down slightly. sorts formed the other side of-the re- Sein a Lae tele Yen eee - WARNER BROS. present the big “Battle Cry” ® area, compared with two last The concensus of resort people I talked cession coin. Willie P Maddinanie. 40088 Rewer ist ory of the American Commandos! : year, Total cases have increased; to on a fact-finding: tour recently is that These are the factors: I would list as “ penwat: ay AN about 50 per cent over the same} their summer season ‘has§ been successful Ri * ‘ on ti to the seaso SS * rd F. M |period a year ago. - tributing e n’s_ succe . E ward F.. foares, “ras s te, vara | + | Dr. David G. Dickinson, head| ‘ Business was up in many places, —The almost magnetic attraction of er Oc al Oem of the University hospital polio| motably the Straits area and the Upper the Mackinac Bridge. cares Fore, = Acreard Lake | respirator center, said yesterday; « Peninsula generally. Increases even ran <-Good vacation weather during July | Bla v “Petrovich 2425 Willams | jhe had made arrangements to ac- as high as 30 per cent over last year at * and August. ' 4 aerey E- powell ee Bell ee . cept overflow respirator cases in} Saylt Ste. Marie. Wormag 7. Pyke. 374 Wilfield ‘MAVERICK the ‘university center if the need —A steady increase in vacation travel Tester C. Pitts Jr. @89 ©. Columbia himeelf in be Ore starring For the whole, Michigan’s tourist in- . throughout the nation. George 8. Payne toi Going” Dr. ‘Paul T. Salchow, director} dustry has held up well in spite of ad- <« —The combined effect of Michigan’s Phare soe ts nee jot Herman Kiefer Hospital report-| yérse weather early in the season and a continued local, regional and state promo- | 3e2 D. Byas. 108 Bondale . ed that the polio situation “seems! generally recessed economy. tion of our vacation attractions. Donald M. Burnla, 2875 Buick, ito be well under control at pres- : oo of See eens 1S, Jones ent.” He added: : out Jesus Bustillow 48. Parke “Even though polio is a highly). _ ; = . : Charles W. Adams, 5104 Reymount lunpredictable disease, it looks like|Fire Chief Concerned . mig pa ia within a8 t/Service Station Makes | Bisher? D: Allen “és. Monterey ; » 4 4 ra Robert E: St. Clai Rosett the peak is over. About Unearthly Blazes | “rday’s fire fighters,” he saia,|SUFPrising Gas Sale Donald P. Sione. 43 W. Chicago | ; ; ia, ‘ ster Soldan, 992 Cameron i Store Entertains Kids ASHLAND, Ky, (AP) —Lexing-|“™must soon have extinguisher de-/ | SOMERSET, Ky. —Sfc, Orville) James D. Stroud Jr 736 W. Huron | \ ton Fire Chief Earl McDaniel is|vices designed to fight fires in Phillip wheeled his vehicle into aj, i°¢,.% F Ginmscs See Mendel | COLUMBUS, Ohio (#—A super- thinking about unearthly blazes. {outer space.” — . service station here, afd said: ne ee TASH Pine’ nek | market here has built a miniature; He told the State Firemen's “Give me 100 gallons.” Charles J. Adair. 1109 Dover, ri "5S. theater inside the store to keep the|Assn, annual convention yesterday|. John L. Sullivan was heavy-| Phillipi, was ‘driving an M-47| wee we ee, ee kids occupied with cartoons while|fire fighters may have to develop|weight boxing eure from A882|Army tafik. The tank holds 233 Robert E. Alle. 65 Le Grande Mom shops for the groceries. a tire department suitable for con-|until 1892. gallons. Tans © Semoey. 7143 #. Hammend) 4 Adam ¢ Pee Ciena SeOrE DON MURRAY DIANE VARS! fox Robert O. Atherton, 785 Tvron Paul J. Audet, 352: Russell George A. Badalntz, 1848 Union Lake Boney Ball Jr., 761 Monticello . ; Seraie"P. aytarian, iat “Motorway | * OWL SHOW SATU RDAY * | ,Orvel L. Beck Tennyson | ey, | $Billie C. Beegie. 1m * cliftena -' COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATER SOUTH END OF UNION LAKE ROAD HURRY! HURRY! COME OUT EARLY! HURRY! HURRY! One of the Worlds Most Amazing Attractions NEVER ANYTHING LIKE IT BEFORE! NEVER! IT'S BREAKING RECORDS FROM COAST TO COAST! — 60,000 PEOPLE SAW IT IN ONE WEEK IN ST. LOUIS! BROKE ALL RECORDS IN NEW ORLEANS LAST WEEK! CROWDS! CROWDS! CROWDS EVERYWHERE! IT’S AMAZING! Filling Drive-In Theaters Everywhere! Many See It Standing! en ee Here is your opportunity to really save dollars on first quality carpeting: , All items are ends of rolls, short pieces, one- i : = of-kind items, etc., but all in perfect | t “a SBzZZA condition . . . so before you buy any- : a QAUAz where, be sure to see this collection. i pat Eee ea ll lg: Sips le es Ste salu: ea % | fs. , i. i) XS ' See This in the Privacy of Your Car! - SOME OF ITS SCENES ARE SO POWERFUL MANY ACTUALLY FAINT AT EACH SHOWING! IF YOU CAN’T TAKE IT — DON’T COME ALONE — MAKE UP A CAR LOAD! THE FAG of LIFE are Moral! A enables us ,to offer ; this nylon carpet for ; little. A wonder- fal pearls pattern [itis =—-Regular $10.95 le ~ Remnants “Roll Balances | Was NOW - | - SALE 12’ 9" White andGold.......... > 98.20 * 65.00 Heavy Rayon $ 7 *h 95 12'x 7'9” Grey Scrot ............. > 97.00 © 65.00 | Tweed Carpet.......... 12'x 76" Beige All Wool Wilton... °109.50 * 75.00 Beige & Brown , 5 12’x18" Green Tweed ............ 5191.80 $110.00 Nylon Tweed .......... , 7.95 5. RECOMMEND 12'x12'2” Beige Bark Tweed ....... °166.90 5110.00 — , FOR 12’x14’8” Brown All Wool Tweed ... $174.95 $115.00 All Wool Beige $ 995 6 95 ADULTS 12'x13'9” All Wool Bark Tweed Green *198.95 $140.00 | Bark Tweed ........... . 12'x14°7" Acrilan Aqua Tweed ...... $207.30 $145.00 All Wool Green or $ S NS ox Chile der 16 A 12'x18'7" Beige and Aqua All Wool . “324.25 5225.00 Grey Wilton ........... 11.90 8.95 / bye Guertion! : - _ FORMICA INLAID PLASTIC Custom Installation COUNTER TOPS LINOLEUM & TILE WALL TILE z ACTUAL CUSTOM 1 BIRTH , | Natures DRAPERIES : : Miracles: sg ei A GREAT +’ Pingo dl Department at. om = ge ete ae : FLOOR C Oo v E RI N GS ‘EDUCATIONAL Ricvsrchse] 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rood. . FE 47775 PICTURE | be gled to assist you = ied planning. Open Monday, 'F riday and, Saturday Evenings ‘ ba , wi | , THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 | | |___ SEVENTEEN _ Typographical Error. fy i K Seat Bee re r \Hand Flashes to Holster, | Will They Eat Rabbits? ace the people tt C Col _ DIXIE BAR Now Featuring Affects Ame idment |. Duck appenied ta the: Sia a skill ountr y’ Is Ranger Shoots Himself | srorrs, conn, (UPI)—The Unk ow Feat hamen Supreme Court. It would mab FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)—|Versity of Connecticut reports 're- com's na an neler atta ea] Now Displaced City [rem mer bay ieaasiare meen mete] ELAINE and THE 8 DUKES ig ree m a er uras nee of State Natalie Buck has said, By EARL WILSON — weal ipods a pis-|who raised 1,000 heads of lettuce For Your Dancing Pleasure “ee ees tual Now Mrs, Buck has appealed tol to do a little target shooting. |with the aid of a U.S, agricultural Friday and Saturday Evenings sdactution. calling ron passed "a radicnslave oe. na poser “THE MOUNTAINS,” N.Y.—I brought the Mother-in-Law| His hand flashed to the holster|agent, The farmer needs the rab- ELAINE at the KEYBO ARD Nov. 4 on an absentee deat what and Slugger up here to the Catskills to enjoy “the country." » jin the best tradition. Then, bang,| bits because none of his neighbors . . lov. ee pone fae rh hel | ‘thé mixup, There’s no answer yet. The country! Hendricks shot himself in the/will eat the lettuce. Thursday Evenings . right calf, ; of Article VII of the state con- i Here where Rip ‘Van Winkle slept for 20) °"\q43.° stitution, Spend 14 Billion for Fun years, it’s hard for a columnist to sleep for ig as pe ae "westaaed Bic arm gak sp ce ce DIXIE BAR ree on eee sed es phe ne os por » I had to zip by car from the $8,000,000, hung in the holster, consisting of just 24 stations, + copy that is to go to the voters|amusement.” ‘ 1,000-acre Hotel Concord where Red But- tons, Dagmar, Elaine Stewart and other D ANCING AND PANTOMIME D cin celebrities were helping TV star Buddy ai g Features At Hackett celebrate his. 34th birthday with i HOW . _* ‘ ade _a 9-foot cake, over to Grossinger’s where F LOOR S SATURDAY : saitinald Eddie Fisher, Elizabeth Taylor and about 1400 others went from a champagne | FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS NIGHT WILSON party to a new $1,500,000 indoor swim- | Music You Can't Help Dancing to by ONLY ming pool in which the first splashee was Florence Chad- “CARL and HIS GAMBLERS” . Pa — Western Style I was comin’ round the mountains at a goodly gait to get VER WooD B AR Music | from there to Kutsher’s, The Waldemere and other luxurious = . ; u , resorts where slenderizing salons, cha-cha-cha parlors andi’ §4 §, BROADWAY LAKE ORION a | jewelry counters now grace the slopes on which cattle oncé s ee ns UB 59D : | grased. 7. eae ‘at Pontiac Speedway _ e x * * Recording Artist of Stage and Radio Beer ~ Wine « Liquor - Food | On one of those hilsides, ee Demaret, ‘the chivalrous Texan, and golf pro at the ons Concord, bowed low when pre- sented to Elaine Stewart, the Hollywood and Montclair, N.J., glamour girl, and said he’d be glad to teach her golf. DANCING OUR |= ——— to the Music of _ _‘ o )\ eee tas r 4 the Bob Lawson Trio aly SD Friday and Saturday Sat A = * Also Scott Brady in “Ambush at Cimarron Pass‘ STARTING SI 5 “I don’t know how to hold Evenings lub,” impled, a : UNDAY aA ie aa “nae NOONDAY LUNCHES ARE OUR SPECIALTY...... DANCING THURS. @ FRI. @ SAT. @ SUN. | 4 REMARQUES FAMILY STYLE DINNERS NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS . teach you how to hold the : Rock With the Hound Do Pa Ing Ae |r” NEW DRAYTON INN vA ——- A Lifetime of Buddy Hackett — who'll : Happiness ina Few || be on Jackie Gleason’s new . , ioemeny Spmmmndace Beater? OLD DUTCH MELL Memorable Hours TV show—took off from 4195 Dixie Highway Hi. wr ; ee CinemaScope in here for the Duke Uni- a = : ——— AUBURN HEIGHTS @ Auburn at Churchill Rd. ae versity country to embark . s =." JOHN GAVIN upon, the famous rice diet ‘ - ~~ LIOUOR LILO PULVER || hoping to lose 21 pounds in _ Enjoy Yourself LIQ JOCK MAHONEY: DON DeFORE - KEENAN WYNN - oe 21 days. E . | PLUS: MacDONALD CAREY in “MAN OR G Alan King, Alan Gale, Pat Suzuki and The Gooters were] ™ : | un pet . — also big hits in “the mountains” — but the biggest hit by far Oakland County’s Newest Most E ad om e@.6.°86C lO was beautiful Liz Taylor who was merely a spectator. She} Beautiful Cocktail Lounge % ee : es . ; came up with Eddie Fisher, close friend of Mike Todd, as guest wey eas ation 2 | CT esc to tp, |/ot Mrs: Jennie Grossinger. | pret Bg cy Re,» ampy Mg ‘SANDWICH BAR SPECIAL! NOW TRA ha ip fees thew x *« * luncheon and and ‘dinner ment to ag ag the Span very Wig-talen’ Mare Saturday She caused a panic in the dining room. most i Open 10:45 AIF agi siics Ge th “ as big as Tsiah--11:80 to 3200-860 exch T 4 ’ “We've had the grea personalities in the worl AAA AAAAAAAANAAAAWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAN, . a oxether You'll With Mes! devnedhiod here,” Paul Grossinger said, “from politics, sports and show | _, COCKTAILS TOMMY “VAUGHN DUO ™ ING || business. Nobody ever caused the excitement caused by LUNCHEONS FRIDAY ond SATURDAYS ee . ” . rm a. this trl DINNERS - all ’ 11:30 A.M. mMmeonor : THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N.Y. . .. © Businessmen’s Lunches Served Daily . © aan it SMORGASBORKU NCAAEE Boxing champ Floyd Patterson’ll open 8 mene ___-.___ Open 11 A, M. to 2 A. M.- $1.2 . . : bi RSH! Rivekina . Songwriter Mack Gordon will finally vis a- om eee : . —— TEI ram WARNER BAS “er bo ||mazoo and ‘Chattanooga, for the first time. (He wrote (I Got H ae | Mi l I eres fos de Mut ae b-pook ___ | At 12:85 - 3:40 - 6:50 & 10:00 1. Ga) in Kalamazoo” and “ChattanoogaChoochoo.”) . . . enr y Ss Iracie unge 5:30 TO 9:30 P. ™. 1 00 PER PERSON . xk «* * —$ RSO e PLUS THRILL-PACKED TUR at (Formerly Henry's Bloomfield Inn) ' | a CO-FEA : * | Hillbilly singer Red Foley, father of four girls nape Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. 9 VISIT MANNY’S ‘THE N AKED GUN father of six more (including son-in-law Pat Boone's four | anny Ss SNACK BAR | witera-Parker - Mara Corday Batten MadLone ‘petting daughter Betty’s next will be a boy... Announcer Don | oat »NA @ & ; @ ._ || Wilson arrives this week to start rehearsals for the B’way stage | loin THER ; play, “How to Make a Million”—his first time away from Jack os o4 | STARTING SUNDAY . ., ANOTHER 2 HIT PROGRAM 3 yin 24 years. (Hie bas Jack's good wishes and it's a leave Continuing Its Traditional Supremacy we Oe : V% |\of absence.) . ae | Singer Jimmy Rodgers, who just pought a $40,000 home, | Woodward South of City of Bloomfield | said: “I spent so many years living in cheap hotels that every Long Lake Road | Hills, Michigan time I go home to this beautiful place I get the feéling I'm Five Private Dining Friendly Cocktail ! s Rae eo ie Upon A Horse Se. vaicing somebody else.” That's earl, brother.. Rooms sap Loney Genter | ’ Copyright, 1958) — en to Three [i Dining Rooms - i EB wie WAT HEY TY aD susie (oF Rees wT - (ori ‘ Hundred Guests | Selected Entertainment | . weeny} Marine Life Thrives |@ SQUARE ena ROUND os | | > ple . ° | i | “CAPDEN in Cold Arctic Water TA t Lem || FEATURING: | a DRIVE-IN rae 2] w _ GARDEN CENTER me poe | , hee # (q THEATRE f ; tro “nner fever - BALLROOM \° Dancing , Dine & Dance =; | rats EDEN” ; ter are beter solvent for lie Thareday, Fray ssid Saterday from 10:00 LADIES’ NIGHT A : 4 ° ; $/ near the Equator, Species are’ few- - EVERY WEDNESD. AY _ e | S|, bet te oe ar ale ad Fashion Show. sae ‘ See Page 18 $ | other sea ute. _ | - vials eecetectee caaanaas “FINE Each Wednesday at 1 P.M. Northwest Aleska boasts king crabs with leg spans of seven feet. A king crab may weigh up to 22 pounds, of which 25 to 30 per cent is pure pave perp cod, he half salmon other provi are also found in the TAHOE FOODS and | 3412 DIXIE HIGHWAY LIQUORS ‘Phone OR 3-9754__. “WE INVITE BANQUETS AND PRIVATE PARTIES” | DELL’S INN Ringslep Inn Midwest 4-1400 area. monet The Life... The ieee a oe The ovens OF Skipper of Big Tanker Takes 96 Per Cent Cut PORTLAND, Maine «AP)—att-| ‘Take-Out’ Service t sea, Capt. Bernard : ® B owen te Pes Robert Daytona Beach, = : e Sassy Hee Chops Dancing eee gre of Present on apne aavmeas is a un pe D en a yor ¢ s : all Not i 1 Ship si F ta 86 53 Wil ibe: Rt le ae “Roberts noctialiy paca the | © Fish ‘n Chips waeny | Bob Bailey Bobbie Mumbles Lewis Technicolor Sumac: HAVES + TARLOR = 528-foot tanker Esso Scranton, He) ® Seafood SATURDAY , § I Famous TV. and Recording Singing Star IST planned to embark today in his SUNDA unday s —— —PLUS— Powly purchased yacht, Scylax— Ph. FE 3-9821 fj mij Guest Artists satin a 20-foot inboard bee daush A Friendly Place to Go . gg A bab Night! .» The skipper a s daughter, | i ! }/Litlian, 18, figure the trip home, | 9 a | ngers_s One great big happy CARNIVAL of fun! frinss i seve vs one] EBOWB’S Ul sos tansy PSR) se Jo ANN wer com |e CHICKEN HOUSE TY | “All the crackling action... Ae Near Malta are two British | 497 Elizabeth Lake Rd, SCRI GB S RISS errs dinero mgt * — = = ae i. cane Phone Ahead... BAR & RESTAURANT Lovely of America’s brawlin’ , e is sland of Gozo, FEderal 3-9821 130 $. Telearaph Rd Q Novelty Star f, mo .: Y rjanarbe pint Racal the ea! 's Take Out Orders a Specialty oy Vologtoph Re. ° PE 4-698! ———ee WITH TWO Bill LAKE THEATER “MA 4-2151 PLAN YOUR juagsid 3 Z WALLED LAKE TONIGHT Banquets — Meetings — Club FLOOR SHOWS Richards _—— at ‘beautiful Cebow Pentlion. EVERY ‘ Comedy M.C. @ MODERN DANCING FRIDAY and e @ SQUARE DANCING SATURDAY r OPEN. 7 DAYS with Glenn Eastman Calfing ANO 7 NIGHTS JAM SESSION TUESDAY . ~ FRANK "PERRY ond HIS SWINGMASTERS Dell's fan Cid crt 4 BRANDON eHDE: EW by . , 2 7) | SQUARE DANCE | “SAT. hia a ET Rite - & CARTOONS — 2. SEATURES. SUN. “No Time for Sergeants” ; ‘@here you will find @ beautiful cock- tall lounge in which Lionel liquor and refreshments are served OXBOW LAKE PAVILION 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Taw Mien COMING SUNDAY. AN GFT wi GRIN LR WALT DESMEY'S 5 1 Short Blockt West | if Reservations re 2-2981 of Huron K . a pp, : * * those ‘in custody was Miguel Oragues, former air nab commander and its senior to/ranking officer, Sixteen commo- dores reportedly asked for retire- f ‘ment, Texas leads in ws spinach elfor fresh market sale ‘|picked up news and views I want to share with "e The islands are very| movie * * ‘minded and television has aioe "canna, tomes Tawaii Expects Status - Siete PeneeF. emer as. State by June 1959 By LOUELLA oO. PARSONS HOLLYWOOD — Hello again!|of the motion picture di hich {island trip to- Hawaii during w eae 4 GOD'S LITTLE ACRE” | wrouenest GUN IN TOMBSTONE” ~~ SATURDAY—SMALL FRY MATINEE 4 CARTOONS — 2 FEATURES |great favorite and their six chil- jdren are Honolulu’ s pride and Joy-|fornians visiting Honolulu will for-| ay isa ti get singer Charles Davis’ final | t Posed 5 ag given or Ine night at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. pi gone 0 —— at T\He won the audition held by the jmet Gen. te, Commanding OM | Metropolitan Opera Co. and he’ll cer of the Pacific Army base. Only be heard at the Met next year. a few: days ago he returfted from) - y4y old friend Winona Love made | a secret mission to the Far East. a.solo appearance and her magical * hands and body dancing the hula The general (who plays a fine) Wore truly something to remember. | (Copyright, 1958) | Donald at the Quinns. He comes cific’ was filmed around the area where Father McDonald has built Hawaii enhiicatat expects to be|become important ente our 50th state by June 1959. Eighty-|Movies and radio are the reigning! three-year-old Raymond. Coll, who|mediums. I gave several interviews | is still active managing editor of|via radio (even ‘thought I'd said ithe Honolulu Advertiser, told me|"I'd had. it!”)—also to the daily! there is little: doubt of statehood | newspapers. for the tropical island. His emphatic statement was paper. I met Mrs. Jim Farring- ton (widow of the owner of the (hours. Honolulu’ Star Bulletin) and she agreed with the two other news- paper authorities. One“ thing ‘sure, if Hawaii * * * per cent wrong. i ok most popular man on the island,| &"¢®s- with the Americans, the Hawaiians,| His one aim in life is to rnalen| his passengers happy and believe | | He was appointed to his. present/me he succeeds. He has the able: political post by President Fisen-| assistance of Chief Purser Higgins. | | hower. His wife, Nancy, is also a 2. ¥ ukulele!) told me that.our Jolinny churches. He told me thi conduct Here I am back after a delightful|exemplary while’ they we When I went to Hawaii, verified by the very attractive friends said, “You'll be bored to Lauren Thurston, publisher of the |death traveling by ship. You can fly there in a matter of a few This is to tell them they are 100 I sat next to Commodore Gil- achieves statehood, the most for-| lespie both coming and going on midable choice for the first senator| the Lurline and never have I had will be the present Gov. William; a more entertaining dinner com- panion. He is head of all the Matson sailing vessels and has ‘Hl ‘The handsome governor is the| had many fascinating experi- I don’t believe any of us Cali. 1, 100 Residents Flee of the Nebraska border, CLYDE, Kan, (AP). The 1,100 8: 8 spread throughout the town, wash-'reported at Green and Concordia. chairs on the. side. ‘LAUGH RIOT xevameatsto“havvomem OF THE YEAR S35 ee na ay OPEN 6:45 . HIYRUM, Utah (®—City Marshal ‘Elmer A. Lauritzen, 71, is, ready residents of Clyde fled their homes| Severe thunderstorms last night for retirement. He ‘has designed today as ‘Little Elk Creek’ over-|and early today dumped from 7\a collapsible rocking chair, Laurit- flowed, to 10 inches of rain over north|gen also has applied for a patent Water two and three feet deep central Kansas, Flooding also was jand hopes to sell a few of _ HURRY HURRY LAST 2 DAYS Show Starts 7: 30 P. M. - §, FOMO., R&H, W. Came in Today and - BAIRLANE SEDAN EDDIE STEELE FORD: 2705 Orchard Po ni Keego Harbor be ~ ee / es : a Cal 9 gabe THE PONTIAC) PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958” - ONE COLOR ary ee | «ting ‘away ber of small: build aan ae a neni Headlines Kansas Creek Spi, . [neways rare 7 cal 0 He's All Set to Retire. arrests W. Tires: © ice This One, ROCK WITH JERRY AND ROLL WITH NAT “KING” COLE i i | | ei my JERRY LEWIS AT HIS VERY BEST— YOU'LL LAUGH ‘TIL IT HURTS! ‘PARAMOUNT. PRESENTS . story of the birth of rhythm and blues! » 47 ‘seme ah i We ea gy a The warm as Kouta ; s ADDED THIS BRAND NEW HIT TO-DAY THEY CALL IT RYTHM AND BLUES ‘THE STORY AND MUSIC OF W. C. HANDY —THE FATHER OF THE BLUES— YOU'LL HEAR “Beale Street Blues” “Yeliow Dog Blues" “St. Louis Blues" “Careless Love” “Harlem Blues” “Morning Star and many more! at ae WA — EA i ein date rte ae At a es = vay ADULTS 80c CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE® | OWL SHOW SATURDAY 5 I also met Father John Mc- ‘from Kealio Kanaj and he has trained 32 Hawaiian, Japanese and Chinese children to sing. His choir is a great commercial success. Much of the movie “South Pa- DRIVE-IN THEATRE MHED LAKE | — ane | “GARDEN of EDEN” MA 4-3135 IMAL) Gates Open at 6:00 qe TIMI] Show Starts at 7:20 1y Ant t TH EA TRE | Zoi LAST SHOWING of at 10:20 DRIVE-IN © au DRIVE-IN EATRE| ae Et CAKE AT ERFORD HEATER DRIVE- iN a ee Ae Ro nee a nema a a a Se wee t and hell 4 ahead! BBE tA FRANOS wae et MIMI wt 9 ene Seven “tome mn. TED SHtROT Mae LANDON - ROSS han niacin Sens ae TECHNICOLOR® "SUYISION _— Aion Rede Sen Office Opens 6:45 P. M. FRIDAY _ SATURDAY THREE IT - SHOW | statarwe RUSS TAMBLYN JAN STERLING JOHN DREW BARRYMORE AND GUEST stags MAMIE YAN DOREN JERRY LEE LEWIS a RSE an os JOAN STAPLES SCHOEN PLAT OF LEWIS MELTZER a | ‘ ROBERT BLEES | Satin STORY oF ROBERT BLEES SietCTED HY ‘CinemaScoPE RHYTHM AND BLUES! The real story behind the music all America THEY CALL IT ay Dramatic Intimate Story of Morals Under a Dictator EXCELSIOR PICTURES pa ARDEN WITH MICKEY KNOX BPs. JAMIE O'HARA * em » , 5 = — eee SS resins Photographed in ‘COLOR eee “under the supervision and with the approval of | “4X gy THE AMERICAN SUNBATHING 3) 7 Oe tes a PLUS of him.” “WOMAN Filmed in Glorious Natural Color Among Florida’s Sun Worshippers: NOT RECOM- MENDED FOR CHILDREN “I don't have to marry him... just because I'm undressed in front OF ROME” BASED on ALBERT MORAVIA’S STARTLING BEST SELLER * and is a minst for Freeburg lovers. *: *'rar iv a Fi a THE PON TIAC PRESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 : PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, © - Southfield Councilman Cleared by Investigation SOUTHFIELD —.No Soa for criminal action have been found|@ against a Southfield councilman who admitted receiving $3,400 m connection with two land transac- tions when he was a township of- ficial, aecording to LeRoy -W. McEntee, assistant Oakland Coun- ty prosecutor. Robert F. Wuerfel, former chair-; man of the old township Zoning Board of Appeals, had admitted accepting $1,200 for one deal. and $2,200 for another. “I have found no evidence of criminal | joing’ on Wuer- fel’s part,” McEntee, “My laveetination a was looking in this direction, and 1 was not judging him on his ethics. in accepting |- the money.” Wuerfel’s action was brought to light last April when a’ candidate | for mayor of Southfield, Philip A. Maloney, of 23551 Noel St., dis- closed Wuerfel's part in the trans- ac tions, Wuerfel, of 25120 Circle Dr., im- mediately charged Maloney ‘with spreading political propaganda aimed at defeating Southfield .Township’s attempts to incorporate aS a city. * * One transaction involved the re- zoning of property on 12-Mile road’ so a professional men’s club could construct a new: clubhouse. “I looked here for any signs that Wuerfel had accepted the money as a bribe for getting the said, “| found none.” “All I could find was that Wuer- Oak Park Vote to Decide Bond Public Saféty Director Cites Need of Facilities! for Growing Services OAK PARK — For the second time, residents of Oak Park will be asked Nov. 4 to approve a $306,- 000 bond issue for funds to enlarge the city’s Department of Public Safety. : In the general primary election Aug. 5 voters rejected the same proposal by a margin of 1,646 to 938, Public Safety Director Glen- | ford S. Leonard said additional space is needed to care of the 62 personnel, 57 of whom are epmbination .pelice and firenten. Present facilites built in 1952 were designed to accommodate 17, Leonard said: If the bond issue. is approved, the money will be used to expand’ jail facilities, garage space for fire}, and police equipment, provide ad- ditional office space and a show: er’ room, the director said. The measure is opposed by Oak Park's Industrial Tax Study Group, which claims the city’s taxes al- ready are. too high. New Boy Scout Troop Forming in Independence |, CLARKSTON—A new Boy Scout troop, sponsored by the First Meth- odist Church jn Clarkston, is being | formed in Independence Township, Scoutmaster Jack Frost has an- nounced. The troop will meet . Monday, nights at 7:30, beginning - next m week. All boys 11 years + age or fel was paid the $1,200’ because he aided the owners of the club with securing the property and finding municipal services after other real- tors had failed,” McEntee said. x * *®, The second “instance centered around a $2,200 broker's commis- sion Wuerfel received for suggest- ing Burroughs, Inc., buy land on Northwestern Highway, ' McEntee said he found Wuerfel had helped in this deal iwth the asiuadaanaia of Southfield in mind. Ruled Out by Brandon Voters BRANDON TOWNSHIP — was 297 no to 218 yes: . Another proposal on the proved. trailer factory. 5-Mill Tax Hike Rejected Voters in the Brandon Town- ship School District. yesterday rejected for the second time this summer a. five-mill tax increase proposal. The margin The proposed three-year tax hike would have raised at least $33,000 for operating expenses, according to Superin- tendent. of Schools E. J. Hungerford. He said approval also would have made the district eligible for about $19,000 in distressed ai@, made available by the state to districts operating on a tax basis of 20 milis or more. ballot, that to authorize the school board to sell three parcels of schoo! property, was ap- One of them, a four-acre site, is expected to be used for a To Auction Off Many Antiques at Rochester Looking for antiques? A wealth of them will be auc- tioned Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. at Smart’s Barn, 330 W. Tienken Rd., Rochester. - Sponsored by the Lake Asgeal Guild of St. Mary’s in. the Hills) Episcopal Church, the sale will ironstone china, copper pewter pieces, along with an antique Vic- terian love seat and matching chair, according to Mrs. Halsey Davidson of Lake Orion, general chairman of the event. Duane Upton will be the auc- tioneer, Refreshments and baked goods also will be sold, Mrs. Davidson ‘said. Others in charge,of the affair include Mr, and Mrs. Edgar Beatty of Oxford, collection of items to be auctioned; Mrs, Arthur Dodge and’Mrs, Merle A. Yockey,’ both ‘of Lake Angelus, and Mrs, Deane /Spitler of Lake Orion, receiving and ticketing the meréhandise. -— jafik Head Ballard ‘NORTH BRANCH—Frederick C. the North Branch Pioneer Bank, was fatally injured yesterday when rhe fell from a ladder while clean- ing the eavestrough at his home, 6824 Jefferson Rd., North Branch. Death was due to a broken neck, Lapeer County Coroner Dr. Lyle Riddell ruled yesterday afternoon. A bor, Mrs. Roy Torr, wit- ntssed' the accident and ran to Ballard’s aid, but he was dead when shé got to him, she said. An attorney, and stil] quite active for his age, Ballard lived alone at the house, He has one son, Charles, who is associated with the Citizens Bank in Flint. Lone Bandit Robs Mart FENTON «®~ A lone bandit’ | Wearing a black mask and armed) with a-shotgun robbed the Har-| Market, here Thursday, flee-| ts with Cash estimated at between over may attend. $700 and $1,000, Disc Data and Chatter y awe M usic in. the Round ing record fan who usually ends up hearing more things he flips over at parties| dio, two current! LP’s are guaran-| teed to fill the bill. “Flames, Flappers and Flasks” (Epie LN-3493) by Joe Glover and his Collegians is a musical treat of sorts. It will take you back to the nostalgic era of marathon dances, ticker-tape pa- and the flagpole perchers, rades, bobbed _ hair, , Charleston, A half musical, half It dialog ie’ that’s also great for late “after- noon socials is “The Best of the. Stan Freeburg Shows” » ee WBO-1035), This LP is just what -it¢ title grown says, It's a set of two 12-inch We) consisting of pure nonsense, - guarantee it will delight. any, fin THE JAZZ NEST: One of the rieatest big band packages of late August was ~Capitol's “The New . James” / (T-1037) by. the Harry / James Band. It's a collection, of a good: stuff for somes who- rather than on ra- “| ‘|week, and then surging again last like|Game” by Tommy by Dick Saunders For the fun-lov-/ the sound of the late ’30's dvensed up in present day arrangements. “Jumpin’ With Jonah” (Cap- | itol T-1039) is Jonah Jonés’ latest, and contains some pretty good stuff (although the Jones ar- rangements are getting a little stale). A brand new dise ‘Earl ‘Fatha’ | Hines” (Epic LN-3501) by Hines lan his trio is worth close inspet- tion. Hines hasn’t lost any of his! stinging brilliance and rhythmic in- genuity. FIVE ACES: There’ $s no doubt, about this week’s leader, After coming on strong, falling back one {week “Nel Blu Di Pinto Di Blu’ by Domenico’ Modugno is tops on the best selling list in Pontiac. Second: is: “Rockin ® in” by Bobby Day,’ a “disc has first) appearance about three Weeks ago. In third we find. ate To You" byl w Everly ‘Fourth spot | goes” to “The Im- perials with their .dise of ‘Tears On My Pillow.” Making a fast ex- odus from the top five is “‘Little Star” by The ts, tied for include such treasures as tea-leaf| Dies at North Branch ‘Ballard, 83-year-old president of lage and resurfacing on M87 from |A, A. Rochester Board Approves Loan School Group Borrows $400,000. to . Meet Operating Expenses ROCHESTER — The Rochester Board of Education has accepted a bid from the National Bank of Detroit ‘for a $400,000 loan at an interest rate of 1.65 per cent. x * * Borrowed against late state aid payments, the money will be used for Cperating expenses, the Board said. Also approved at its Wednes- day night meeting was the hir- ing of 25 new teachers for the 1958-59 school year, bringing the number on the faculty to 165. A letter from William C. Chap- man, offering to sell a five-acre piece of property between First and Second streets for use as a. possible ‘grade school site was con- sidered by the Board. A 'tabled for further study. a * * * A special meeting will be held at. 8 p.m. Monday at the North ill Elementary School to discuss erection of a fence on the school's property. Board members Lewis B. Arscott, Mrs. Mary Ann Beatty were ap- pointed to represent the Board and answer any questions residents of the area may have concerning the fence. ‘ Reports Low Bids on 2 Road Projects . County road projects have been announced by the State Highway ‘Department. For one mile of grading, drain- Maple avenue north in the village of Holly, Max R, Frisinger, Ann Arbor, was low bidder at $72,809. The low bid for 1.2 miles of re- surfacing on M58 from James K boulevard, north ih «Pontiat and iSlyvan Lake, was $101,883 by the Asphalt Paving Co., Bir- mingham., Killed Trimming Tree DETROIT (®— Thor Nelson, a tree trimmer, was. electrocuted Thursday when he slipped against electri¢e wires while cutting nwas Wallace Hodges and) Low bidders on two Oakland | grade: ‘AND THREE MORE MAKES WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN. SHIP — The Stanley B. Garwood home in West Bloomfield Township was uncommonly quiet this morn- g. : Ten of the famil}’s 12 children had trooped off to school. Re- jmaining. were. Garwood's_ wife, Bernice dete Christine, 2% and Peter, 16 4 is. Grace, Giles and Gail, the cou- ple’s 5-year-old triplets. They’re attending the shorning kindergar- ten session at _— School, * eae In all, the family i represented at four different schools in the township. Dennis, the oldest, is. an ne grade student at West Bloomfield | Township “High School, where his | pg 3 ‘Kenneth, is in the Ath ave 8 | Stanley Jr; this week entered the , 9th eee at St..Mary High School | at Orchard ‘Lake, and four sisters Jare.enrolled at Our Lady of Refuge | Schodl. They are Arlene, 7th! Kathleen, . 6th; Julie, id and Mary in the first. — * * -* “Some people might think it’s a big fob getting 10 children off te school in the morning,” Mrs. | Garwood said, “but it isn't.” | 4 * * ' The big jump from seven té 10 went off smoothly, she said. The . | To Quit Willow Run. DETROIT (®—Northwest Orient | Airlines announced Thursday it| will move from Willow Run Air- port to Wayne-Major Airport Dec. 1. American Airlines and Allegheny i | | Airlines announced last week they would move to Wayne-Major Oct. 1; branches with an electric saw 20 = off the ground. fifth place with “t's All In The Edwards. : er, -_ Ohio; champion ewe, Bert fi ‘ when a new terminal will be opened. Croswell ce of F our DETROIT (# — Mrs. Beatrite, Clark, a 33-year-old mother of! four and wife of a Croswell| farmer, today was crowned ‘Mrs. Michigan State Fair of 1958.” Mrs. Clark, the wife of Jarold Clark, was nominated for the title by her 12-year-old daughter Angela. The attractive brunette was cited for her accomplish- ments in civic and_farm activ- ities. There were 12 finalists for the title. Old Timers Day award winners yesterday included William Mor- neau, 75, Detroit, balgest man; Mrs. Victoria ‘Boyda; 63, Déar- born, nimble, sixties” ‘etocheting contest; and Mr. and Mrs, ‘Hatry Schultz, Detrait, couple married the longest (61 years), —- gE Livestock award winners cluded: Sheep — Ch Sch in- mpion lincoln ram, Ralph. ler, Fairhaven Farms, West iF iDr. J, A. Rooker, Davison; Mor- igans, Jackman, Croswell; cheviots, | champion ram William Skelly, | | Litchfield; Oxford, champion ram | land ewe, Burt Jackman, Cros.) well. Swine — Grahd champion boar and sow, Robert A. Bristle, Dexter. Dairy cattle — Brown swiss, grand champion male, Gotfredson Farms, Grass Lake; grand champion female, Norvic Farms, Lake Mills, Wis.' Beef cattle — : Red Poll, grand champion male, Mark Westbrook & Sots, Ionia; grand champion female, Robert Russell, Battle Creek. Horses _ | Quarter, grand champion male, Frank Branch, . Onsted: grand champion female, Eddie Porath, Northville; Arabians, grand cham- pion female, Richard T. Good, Leslie; grand champion gelding, i once ae grand champion female,’ Wenloch Farms, Ann Arbor; | grang champion gelding quarter | horse, Nancy Dolm, ‘Dowagiac. # TEN’ — Off to school this morning for the first time are (from left) Grace, Giles and Gail Garwood, S-year-old triplets of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Garwood, older ones, especially the girls, all pitched in to help get the younger children ready. And the teachers are spared the possibility of mixups, too, by not having them all at one school. x * oe >. ‘|. 6; Ss, 8 & S' $s $ Mrs. Garwood and her husband, | , Pontiac Press Phote 3805 Green Lake Rd., West Bloomfield Township. Kindergarten pupils at Scdtch School, they've upped to 10 the number of children the Garwoods have attending four schools in West Bloomfield. Ten of Area Family’s Dozen Troop: Off to School Today difficulty. themselves Grace and Gail apart. Garwood said: * a heating contractor, admit a little in telling “Some- times it takes a close look,” Mrs. The couple, both 42,.will have a lot of stories to listen to when the HOLLY*— Much of the credit for keéping Holly free from juvenile delinquency is due to the m of Holly Youth hetialon Inc. Its membership has passed the 1,000 mark. . Dances are held at the multi- room of the Holly Area "| Purpose High School on Wednesday and Saturday evenings of each week. Junior Chamber of Commerce act as chaperones. * * * : How in its third year, the pro- gram ig sponsored by the Holly Police. Department, under the supervision of Chief James Park- er. A police officer is present at all times to handle any outside interference that might occur, according to Sharon Lynch, club president. Parents and members of local ~ 2p he ie ae ew SHARON LYNCH Attendance runs from 300 + to 500 at each dance. Ed Berry- man, Flint disc jockey, is featured on Saturday nights, she said. § Membership cargs are issued, and teenagers come from a great number of towns outside Holly, including Fenton, Pontiac, Flint, Detroit, Lansing, Clarkston, Davis- burg, Royal Oak, . Birmingham, Ortonville, Waterford, Milford, Linden and many others. oe * * The project is more than self- jsupporting, Sharon says. Through the sale of refreshments, and other fees, the organization . is accumulating funds for construc- tion of a building of its own. Other officers of the group are Ted Wagoner, vice presi- The group has been so success- ful,, Sharon -says, that other communities send delegations to Holly to study its operations. Loses Arm in. Baler MELBA, Idaho (AP) — Farmer George Harris got his right arm entangled in a burning hay baler yesterday, loose, leaving part of the arm in ithe machine, Neighbors put out ithe fire and took Harris to a hos- pital where he was reported in fair condition, The arm was am- Blaze in Basement. : Burns Romeo Mothet ROMEO — A Romeo mother suffered severe burns on her legs yesterday afternoon in a flash fire in the basement. of her home at 236 Croswell St. Mrs. Robert J. Ramsey was fill ing a power mower with gasoline when it overflowed spilling ont the-floor, As she was mopping it up, it suddenly came in contact with the pilot light on the water heater and exploded, Mrs. Ramsey's son Gary, 2. wid dent; Janice Hitcheock, secre- | was nearby, escaped injury. tary-treasurer, and Karl Swartz, age to-the house was slight, hanes publicity chairman. firemen. said. : a Mrs Ramscy was tested by & local physic’ 2-Headed Holstein Calf: Dies at Birth in State - farm died at aeth, Peterson said yet but jerked himself) terday, Peterson said the calt had two perfectly-formed heads, two necks, four front feet, two back feet, two tails and one stomach, He said it was the first calf the Holstein had children return this evening. Savings To You — putated above the elbow. _ . Offered by Matt hews-Hargreaves Chevrolet 104-1958 ALL NEW CHEVROLETS Must Be Sold Within the Next 30 Days! HURRY... While there is still a wide selection of models, eclene and body styles to choose from! HURRY... We need used cars and are allowing top’ dollar trade-ins. % while used car Prices are at their peak for’ allowances! ) ary -Matthews-Ha rgreaves Chevrolet Downtown Pontiac; 34 Mill St. - FEderal 5-4161 = ‘ sige te 2 < eg a ices eT ae ea _THE PONTIAC PRESS,» FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 ‘()) Enormous difficulties must be overcome before the building of a permanent manned space station is feasible, But its construction will be easy in one respect, if only in one: The absence of gravity (act gravity canceled by centrifugal force in orbit) will enable men to maneuver huge girders and plates about like feathers. On the other hand, the human tremendous. Each worker's spacesuit must be a self- contained “world.” The need for eating and sleeping quarters will limit the number of men able to work at , Earth's problem alone will be \C: (17) —Building the Space Station ; one time. Sudden movements from shadow into unfiltered sunlight will be a real danger to a worker's eyes. Space- suit failure will mean death: Other factors, some as yet unknown, may cut actual working time to a few hours. (2) A strange-looking craft is this cargo ferry or space taxi, Platforms like this will scurry about in orbit, gath- ering materials and supplies from cargo rockets. (3) Recent discovery, by means of the tiny Vanguard I satellite, of a band of hitherto unsuspected intense radia- tion some 600 miles above the Earth may seriously hinder man’s dream of space travel. Some sort of protective “suit” such as this may be required for any prolonged radiation. '. (4) Months will be station is ready to be + stay in space. A thick, lead-lined cylinder, it is a tiny spaceship in‘ its; own right. Explorer IV now in orbit is probing the nature and extent of this strange band of required to.construct the shell of the space station. Then more months to finish the interior, install instruments and equipment. Here, the completed provisioned. Zero gravity condition at the hub facilitates the loading of supplies. In the central ball, spacesuits can be removed, Tubes lead to the main sections of the station in the rim. Next: Inside the Station, the Moon Rocket. (This is the last in a series written Pe eg it Dr. E. Forbush discusses 1G Study Influence on Earth : _ IGY Scientists Peek Into Su Magnetic Equator are subject to a solar cycle variation. £ cially numerous in 1957. They di- minish toward sunspot minimum. Superimposed on the solar cycle Thus, pre-investigation of time n's Mysteries the cosmic ray particles with en-/in some, but not all, magnetic ergies high enough to reach the| storms. Such efforts were espe- ¥ variations of cosmic ray intensity, ssc klahoma Man 8 [ Ally He et 5 rid au Hf z some magnetic storms. x *« * Cosmic rays were discovered _. by Victor Hess in’ 1914. But it the earth’s outer atmosphere, con- sisted of charged particles of very high energy coming from all di- rections in space. This experiment, in which the earth's permanent magnetic field played an important role, consist- ed of a worldwide survey of cos-| mic ray intensity using standard-| ized instruments. x * Research has shown that more cosmic rays fall at the poles than at the Magnetic Equator, where the earth’s magnetic field deflects the weaker rays. And they are found at varrying per cent in in- tensity. from sunspot minimum in 1954 to sunspot maximum in 1957. This writer, at the Carnegie In- stitution of Washington, estab- lished the variation in cosmic ray Legion Prexy Ends at Chicago With Usual Red Denunciation CHICAGO (AP)—The American Legion ended its 40th annual con- 38, a lawyer and World Force veteran, nearly a 40th Annual Convention HUG FOR NEW LEGION — Preston J, “Moore of Stillwater, Okla., new the if be) gion called for U.S. military demned Communist activities in the Middle East, the Formosa in the Middle East by ‘“‘lack of a) \McElroy that America still leads the world in military strength. The Legionnaires also demanded a halt to any cutbacks in the de- fense program and asked that Con- strength second to none; con-|be gress ‘‘use every available means to finance the strongest. defense, and military preparedness pro- gram possible.”’ * * * In other resolutions, the Legion! backed the U.S. policy of aiding Formosa against aggression of! Red China and renewed its sweep-' ing opposition to any recognition; of Red China in trade, diplomatic | relations, or as a candidate for’ membership in the United Na- tions; opposed federal funds for ‘public schools as a possible step, toward thought control of the na- [tion’s children; and criticized the U.S. Supreme Court for having policy maker’ in recent decisions, including a ruling that the FBI) must make available its pertinent | intensity with sunspot cycle from continuous observations with ioni- ‘secret files to persons brought to. trial on subversion charges. : are wnable to pay Lu La GAN CREDIT ORRIED OVER DEBTS Rs and arrange for payments yes’ can afford regardiess ef how much or how many you owe. ; ts, debts or bills when due, see NO — ONE PLAC OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED Member Amerigan Association ef Credit Counsellors E TO PAY en aceass “Let 9 Years of Credit Couns Hours: Daily 9-to 5. Wed. and s a ‘MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Benk Bldg.’ FE 68-0456 eling Experience Assist You” Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't. Stickup Artists Draw Laughter, Nothing Else NEW YOR K(AP) — Anything that’s funny rates a belly laugh in Brooklyn—even if it's funny-look- So Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin and neighbor John Maresta put down their coffee cups and burst info laughter when three would- robbers wearing Halloween masks barged into the Martin kitchen last night. * * * How to Disagree With Your Boss and Pull It Off % WASHINGTON (UPI)—"Doesn't your boss like ‘yes men?’ Then learn to disagree with him wisely.” So advises the Bureau of Busi- ness Practice, which says timing is the important element in the technique of disagreeing. Its. advice is: don’t disagree with the boss when he is feeling depressed, irascible or ill, and find your chance when the two of you are alone. in connection with re- Instead, use such nettral phrases as “It might be worth considering ~ . .’’ “Perhaps you haven't thought of. . ."” etc. * * & When you do make the boss change his mind, don't belittle him by asking him for a state- . |ment that he has reversed him- self Discuss first what points you do agree on, so he might feel more! comfortable about capitulating. And most important of all — don’t disagree with the boss at all if the difference of opinion is of little importance. All Nabbed in Detroit — DETROIT (AP) — Two strong: arm robbers beating up James | Hill, 22, on a Detroit street were | captured in the act, They were | booked on a charge of robbery not, armed, | Detectives who questioned Hill, | Thieves ‘Mugging Thief; | about what he was doing on the The intruders—one brandishing |street at 2:30 a.m. said he admit- a gun—didn't take kindly to the ted having just burglarized an laughter. They made threats. Mrs. Martin, after her apartment. He was booked on a good charge of breaking and entering. laugh, didn't take kindly. to the ——— masked trio. “Get out of here now, or I'll call the cops,” she snapped. | Her ultimatum flustered the in- truders. - Resting i ‘ ntai ra Lk. Ré., Harbor Martin was her purse containing |§ 2705 Orche: Py a about $100. They got. on the table near Mrs. EDDIE STEELE FO D 1955 CHEVROLET 2-Dr., 6 Cy. Power Glide, R&H, W. W. Tires. Don‘t Miss This Buy! “adopted the role of legislative | ool: Titite ‘Skirts | The largest collection we have ever assembled! Versatile wardrobe of slim, pleated or jumper skirts. Sizes 8 to 18 and 24 to 30 From $ y de Eaton’ SPECIAL PURCHASE CREW NECK _ SWEATERS | Long Sleeve pullovers in white, blue or black. $ > ‘ 36 N. Saginaw Tax Shows Drop in Liquor Sales ‘ WASHINGTON (® — Con- viviality appears to have been among the victims of the busi- 2 decline to a total gin April-May-June quarter alcohol tax collectings totaled $749,410,- 000, well ahead of collections in the same quarter last year. A black widow spider’s venom is about 15 times more poisonous than. a rattlesnake. The black widow spider’s scientific name is Latrodectus mactans, which, trans- . |lated, means “murderous biting robber.” ‘Another Grade School Adding Our Lady of the Lakes Will Now Serve Fifth Through Ninth. Terms When school opens at 8:30 a.m. Monday, at Our Lady of the Lakes parochial school in Waterford Township, another grade will be in session, continuing a plan of accommodating older pupils in the area first. Rather than opening a school with beginners, Father Frederick Delaney has put into effect his dream of educating children in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades first, * * * As the children advahce, grades will be added until there will be a full running high school, complete with gymnasium and auditorium. The ninth grade was added this year. Our Lady of the Lakes is the only known parochial school in Michigan using such a system and Father Delaney said, “The plan has proven a tremendous Sues Hospital for Operating . in Wrong Place CLEARWATER, | Fla, (AP)— Miss Jimmie C. Parker a Largo schoolteacher, filed a $35,000 dam- age suit in Circuit Court against Morton Plant Hospital.‘and Dr. John D, Hagood. The suit said Miss Parker en- tered the hospital for removal of an ingrown toenail, that through negligence and carelessness she was placed in an operating “fpom as Hagood entered to perform sur- physician thereupon operated on Miss Parker’s.right breast. Hagood and hospital authorities declined comment. Story-Telling Thieves Snatch Cooler, Lumber LEXINGTON, Ky. ® -- After Jesse Ivy purchased a cafe here, four men drove up in- a, truck. They loaded a huge icebox and hicle, explaining it belonged to the former owner, Earl Martin. Several days later Ivy heard some disconcerting news. The men weren't working for Martin, gery in another case, and that the! 2,000 feet of lumber onto the ve-|. they were stealing the stuff. success sitice the opening of the Jolitta Schluhuber, this year’s Na- tional Spelling Bee champion, en- rolled as a freshman this week in high school, One of her required courses — spelling. Don't take chances with Sidon, At the fet ¢ school last year. Eventually we hope to have a complete schbol right from the kindergarten on | up.’* : Four nuns, under the direction of Sister Anthony, teach some 200 pupils enrolled, which is an in- crease of more than 50 over last year’s attendance. ‘ x * * Parents of the parish have set! up a car pool to transport the, children. However; this is still.one, of the biggest problems facing ad-| ministrators. ey | with the Board of Education, sim- ilar to the one in operation in La- peer, whereby the Waterford Town- ship school system would provide parochial children with bus service. 215 Guests Flee as Fire Destroys Bermuda Hotel HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP)—A fire that burned downward from the roof left one of = newest and largest hotels, the! Bermudiana, a total loss today. | Several firemen were overcome | by smoke but no injuries were re- ported, The hotel manager said all| 215 guests plus regular residents and staff members were moved) safely to other hotels. Cause of the fire was not im- mediately known, ~ Pontiac’ QUIK. Put Your 650 Auburn Ave. s FIRST HARDWARE Top Condition for Winter! Furnace Pipe Elbows BOADWAY-SHELL Hardware Budget Terms Available Mon., Thurs., Sat. 8 to 8 — Tues., Wed. 8 to 6 — Fri. 8 to 9 SERVE Furnace in Filters FE 2-6506 GET YOUR HOME READY NOW! Our LOW COST Modernization Loan can assist you financially—Repay like rent with payments tailored to fit your budget. | Apply for Your MODERNIZATION LOAN NOW F PONT a a a WT be sae nas: Sinn. “ast. 4 A ¢ "Branches ot WwW. Huron at Tilden’... N. Perry at Glenwood . . . Keego Harbor ... Walled Lake . . . Union Lake . . F.D.LC. \ * . Milford . .. Lake Orion and Bloomfield Hills, Kan. (AP) — _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958. INDIAN SIGN — Navajo Indian art makes. a nice frame for Barbara Brown, who holds a necklace. of turquoise and red New York. She wears a three-strand necklace in ‘which the turquoise beads are separated by coral beads in UPI Phete bits of shell. Formerly owned by the late Nava- jo chief, Chee Dodge, they are among five neck- laces displayed at the Museum of Primitive Art, at 15 West 4th St., New York City. Wall Street Puzzled as Buying Public Shuns Bonds and Goes Big for Stocks e | Roe & Farnham Stock Fund, half By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst ~NEW YORK (AP)—What makes “tiday’s investor tick has a lot of «Wall Streeters’ puzzled. Stock prices are so high in re- lation to dividends that the yields of many stocks are below the re- turns on some top-rated bonds. Still the public goes on buying| stocks and ignoring or selling bonds, New money pours into the market despite: the astonishingly |Worth Fund, 400,000 shares; Stein, high ratio of prices to earnings. * * * This year has seen a marked |. rise in the birth rate of mutual “funds, The new ones have sold mil- “lions of shares for millions of dol- ‘ars, Wall Street asks: Is a period of high stock prices the ti launch a mutual fund: The la ers answer yes, Obviously their; new shareholders believe them. | The argument is that stock prices at, near record highs put a prem- jum on expert portfolio manage- ment and selectivity. The Street has had two favorite explanations for the gyrations in stocks and bonds. * * * First, there has been such a “buildup in idle funds — such as ‘the ever growing pension funds and the insurance company re- serves — that the money has to go to work somewhere: Second, the public is sold on coming inflation — the belief that everything» is going to go up in price, including stocks, and that a fixed income investment will provide steadily declining pur- chasing - power, * * * Those who ‘invest in mutual funds seem to be bearing out his ‘view, many in that field point out. About 80 per cent of investments ‘in mutual funds have been in those stressing common stocks.. The balanced funds — those that offset the more flightly common stocks with sizable holdings of the more steady-going bonds and pre- ferred stocks — have 20 per cent of the market, Mutual salesmen say this proves the public’s mood today is to hold common stocks it thinks will grow in value even if income yields are skimpy rather than to buy an investment that offers an assured income, * * * Success of the new funds this year has been spectacular, Leh- man Bros. One William Street Fund grew almost overnight from Glenn Miller Orchestra Missing Its Sheet Music NEW YORK (AP)—With $1,500) © Sworth of sheet music missing, the| © “Glenn Miller orchestra at the Wal- dorf-Astoria. Hote] has to play some — <“mee memory. "The theft of the music was dis- covered when the 17-member band assembled to play last night at the hotel's Starlight Roof. The or- ae Se ee eee ang scores from the band’s full arrangements, 3 million shares to 16 million. | Lazard Fund jumped from 2%) million shares.to 6 million. | The Wellington Fund, devoted for years to a balanced fund only, is now latnching a common stock the public’s mood to protect itself from inflation, Other funds started this year fn- clude: Chase Fund at one million shares; Missiles, Jets & Automa- tion Fund, half a million shares; fund, frankly saying it's following | a million shares. Older funds have been humming right along despite the drop in corporate income fdtals and the slicing of many dividend rates, * * * The National Assn. of Invest- ment, Companies reports that net assets of its 146 mutual members is at -a record high in excess of 11 billion dollars, up 1% billion in ‘|. ANN ARBOR ® — It won't cost . {fees of $250 for Michigan residents; « |$634 for the year, including peene- U. of M. Freshmen. | | fo Pay Same Costs” | any more to send a freshman to the. University. of Michigan. this 4/ than it did a year ago. The university says basic costs) ta remain the same — $1,134. for] the freshman year. These include and $600 for out-of-state, $24 labora. tory fees, $60 for books and $800 for | réem and board. { * * * A study of budgets of 200 fresh- men showed in-state men acttially spend an average of $1,560 and in- state women $1,660. Out-of-state men average $1,920 and out of-state women $2,810. ek to These budgets include clothing, travel, recreation, and incidentals. | The university. figures that fresh- men able to commute to classes daily would have basic costs of ‘TIL 9 P.M. TO 9 P. M. OPEN SATURDAY DAILY 12 NOON Please Bring Your | - Room Measurements portation and lunches. TWEED CARPET Assorted Rolls Reg. 6.00 | 00 s,, Yd Making ‘Positive’ Bid WICHITA, Kan, (AP) — Demo-| crat George Hart has never held state office in Republican-domi- nated Kansas, and he’s lost several campaigns. But his confi- dence hasn't suffered. Hart, - candidate for state treasurer, an- nouneed this campaign slogan: “I will not seek a third term.” Reg. 15.00 $70 Sq. Yi. WOOL Tweeds Reg. 9.00 — Sq. Yd. Luxury Cotton Choice of 8 colors Reg. 8.00 54 Sq. va. Eliminate the MIDDLE MAN We Save You Money! DIRECT from the FACTORY to YOU! WOOL SCROLL Reg. 10.00 oy had Sq. Va fSLOUDT 2) ue ee ee 100% NYLON TWEED or PLAIN Reg. 10.00 54m Sq. Vi. BARK TWEED Reg. 12. 00 sh Sy Va WOOL TWEED Reg. 10.00 5h00 Sq. Yi TWEED SCROLL Reg. 11.00 ad Sq. Yd. Floor & Deck Paint Viscose Tweed Reg. 8.00 ‘ Sq. Yd. WOOL CANDY ‘STRIPE Reg. 9.00 SQ00 Sq. Yd. ALL WOOL BARK TWEED Reg. 13.00 $62 su. ve $6.95 Value .$5.75 Gal. $2.10 Value . $1.69 Ot. Hard-Wearing Weather-Resistant SAVE TT a year, and a rise of about 10 bil- lion since 1946, Wins Talent Match jown prize. to Miss Am ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. (AP)— Twelve years of ballet lessons paid off last‘ night for a Connec- ticut gir! entered in the 1958 Miss America Pageant. Billie Jean Turner, 20, of New Canaan danced her way to vic- tory in the second preliminary talent competition with her inter- pretation of Chopin's “‘Less Syl- phides.” * * * In the second night of swim suit} competition, meanwhile, ‘Miss In-| diana, whose favorite sport is! swimming, showed her winning form and got the judges’ nod. While Billie Jean performed be- fore a panel of 11 judges and a convention hall crowd of 7,700 per- sons,. Anita Marie Hursh of Goshen, Ind., waltzed off with her Anita Marie, a 19-year-old bru- nette sophomore at De Pauw University in Greencastle, Ind., stands 561 inches. tall, weighs 120 pounds and measures 34%9-24- 35, Billie Jean, who automatically receives a $1,000 —— winning - the talept - compefitio said she will use it to continue her dancing studies, . For her dance against 17 other Beauty Dances Nearer erica Title. talent competitors, Miss os] cut wore a traditional white ballet costume with satin bodice and} white net ballerina-length skirt, A| wreath of. flowers encircled her head, -* * * The preliminary competition, | which ends tonight, gives each of the 52 girls in the contest a chance to take part in-each of three cate- gories: talent, swim suit and eve- ining gown, In addition, each of the girls ‘is judged on personality in break- |} fast interviews with judges, The successor to Marilyn Van Derbur of Denver, Colo., will be selected tomorrow night. Buzzard Downs Plane SAGINAW (#—A private plane carrying James J. Gerity | Jr., broadcasting executive, and a crew of two, collided with a 20-pound turkey buzzard Thursday on a trip from Adrian. The plane landed safely with only minor injuries to one of the occupants. Treated for nose injuries and minor lacerations of the face was Al Wolfe, co-pilot and chief accountant for Gerity Broadcasting Co. We make toons For: P COME ib - $25 to *500 on your name only To get cash for vacations or for any other worthwhile Public. We make loans to . men and women—married ate CAR REPAIRS . or single. You are assured OF BILL and a monthly payment plan e NEW PURCHASES to suit your convenience. PHONE - WRITE ° J BERAL PUBLIC LOAN 50% to 70% R -ROOM ‘SIZE ASSORTED CARPET. REMNANTS Reg. 10.00 to 30.00 $4" to 5h SATIN GLOSS oom ee ee Reg. $6.95 Value — Highly Washable Cotton 9x12 Reg. 96.00 36 ‘mel 9x12 Reg. 120.00 “8 Wool 9x12 $59 9x12 Tweed 28} VINYL SANDRAN Reg. 1.69 5° Sq. Yd. » EACH ~ Pure House Paint First quay $7.15 Value Outsid int. colo ie Or Gal; TRAVERSE ‘RODS mu” $ye por ae Reg. 180.00 Reg. 170.00 | — $300 Rare a 7x10 $00 a5 . sq _ | PLAIN "| Woo: TWEED EACH EACH EACH [Bie263 $400) 6 54 WOOL a SCROLL spi | Prone wee each | TWEED 4c, | WOOL ancy DRAPERY REMNANTS (° Ea. VINYL ‘LINOLEUM Reg. $3.99 $400 Sq. Yd. Sq. Yd. WOVEN PLEATER TAPE LE eee or on other plans urpose come to General “( @@ er onarion Velvetone § 95° Gal. $5.75 Value Flat Wall Paint in PLEATER HOOKS Reg. | $1,09 C Pkg. CARPET RUNNERS Assorted Length 0° Fi. LINOLEUM RUGS ie og, 9900 Ea. $9.00 20 Colors and White PONTIAC Paint Mfg. Co. | 17-19 Perry St. FE 5-6184 FREE DELIVERY | Open Daily ‘til 5:30 Sat. 8 A, AMID PM. ( en en eee TLL 2 ey = Cs ) BS (DLESS H PERRY STREET f © —— ig 4% THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 lions Tan Ea * “3 wit # ' Dome ‘Dallas | Another ‘Schmidt? DALLAS, ‘Texas — Rookie center and line backer Wayne Walker says AP Wirephete TAKES A a Canadian middleweight champion Wilf Greaves takes a tip from an old but great. champ Jack Dempsey, who was once the American heavyweight champion. Greaves will make an appearance in Pontiac Monday night at Wisner Stadium when he faces Mike O’Hara, rising young newcomer from Milwau- kee in one of three 8-round features on the six-bout program. ee the title chances of the he has a lot to learn before he can defending NFL champion Detroit ** * * “But the Lion coaching statt says the rangy 215-pound former Idaho University player has the makings of another Joe Schmidt, top De- tr~'t defensive star. Walker, who averaged more than 50 minutes per game for three seasons in college, frankly admits he “doesn’t know much about football,” at least pro foot- ball. “I thought I knew my way From the ~~ Press Box. "Nothing kills « young fighter’s confidence more than Se Pee 0 0S Hiptose Daaide Sha: his aging ‘ex. ‘ "This was the case of young heavyweight named Joe ee ee & hoe ae Men Baker beat Modzele to a pulp and kayoed him in the 4th round. “dap ‘was the end of Modzele’s fight career. Such antics were ‘typical of Mintz especially where _ the dollar was concerned. — o* « Witeb Mite died tila widow took over ax mansger of = fighters he had under contract. ee ee ere Sees Conndinn by the name “of Wilf Greaves. Greaves had a few short- sia pro matches under his belt, but then was made easy prey for the big boys of the middleweight division in typical Mintz fashion. — . 2 ue 5 “Here was a 20 ‘year old kid showing-enough guts but | @xperience in losing decisions to Tiger Jones, Gene Fullmer, Joey Giardello.and Spider Webb. | ‘The Smith enterprises of Detroit saw a kid with “courage and great potential if trained and brought up in the ranks properly, so they bought his contract. | ‘Tony Ross is now his manager, and since whipping Duke Harris in Detroit a year ago, Gfeaves. has won seven stesight fights. ~~ *k fF He is now the Canadian middleweight chanipion, hailing from Edmonton, Alberta, and he will defend his Canadian title, October 3rd against that country’s top challenger, Yvonne Turrene, - _ Before that fight, however, ten two engage- ments, one here in Pontiac Mo ight at Wisner stadium when he goes against ihe heavyweight Mike Q’Hara of Milwaukee. + He also has a television date scheduled for September 4 29th against Paddy Young from New York’s St. Nick : arena. = x * * Detroit promoter Julius Piazza says, “Greaves is ready now to start moving up. The experience against the big dogs even though he got beat, will help him.” Of course Piazza would like to see Greaves win Mon- day night and then successfully defend his Canadian title next month. “This would give us a topnotch card for a Chuck Spieser bout in Detroit,” Piazza added. x * * If all this should come jo pass, the handsome Greaves could overcome that Mintz era of his life and make his climb up the ladder with confidence. more across the nation who can Pontiac Golfers Basilio Fights Aragon Tonight in Los Angeles TV Winner Is Offered Chicago Title Bout With Akins Los ANGELES w — Battle-test- ed Carmen Basilio of New York and California’ss unpredictable Art (Golden Boy) ‘Aragon fight for 12 Ray : Weighing-in ceremonies were set for 10 am.; PDT, at the Olympic Auditorium, with the battlers ex- pected to scale 152 pounds or so. , oe aoe 3 Tonight at 7 o'clock, PDT, they climb into the ring at Wrigley Field before an expected turnout of 20,000 or more, plus thousands watch the fight on (NBC) tele- vision. f Basilio, a rugged little gent from Chittenango in upper New York}: State, will be at least a 3-1 fav- orite, Cal Eaton and match- maker George Parnassus look for a gate in. excess of $200,000. * ig: * sd Eye State Title Pontiac's five-man golf team will try to regain the Michigan Recre- ation Association championship Saturday in an 18-hole tournament at Midland’s Currie Municipal City’ Medal Play champion Butler Cooper, 1957 city champ Paul Bada, Gien Vallance, Char- lie Barker and Ron Rothbarth will be the standard-bearers for Pontiac against five-man teams from nine other cities, Pontiae won the state MRA title two years ago at Grosbeck in Lan- sing, but did not send a team last year. Lansing won the 1957 crown, also on the Grosbeck course. * * * * Other ‘cities represented tomor- row are Ypsilanti, Livonina, Dear- born, Plymouth, Lansing, River- view, Grand Rapids, Saginaw and host’ Midland. Few Changes Made to Date in Pro Hockey League NHL Teams Shy of Big Trades TORONTO w™ — You won’t:five of last season’s players in the necessarily need a program to league draft but they are counting identify the players when the Na-| lon young men from their farm tional Hockey League starts its| system to fill the gaps. _ the Wings’ line-up, but the new * be from the minor) schedule next month. At least that! is the impression gleaned during’ the off-season. Few trades were completed among the six clubs during ‘the will be a few changes in| other years as many the previous season’s| ‘were dealt off. will In of The Toronto Maple Leafs stil! hope te grab at least one good | defenseman before the season opens Oct. 8. Stafford Smythe, who heads a seven-man committee that runs) the Leafs, said a few days ago the team had. the worst defense in the league last season. *« * * He is hoping the returning players will show improvement and that defenseman Steve Kraft- chek and goaltender Johnny Bow- er, both obtained from the Cleve- land Barons of the. American League in the draft, also will help. The Leifs also bought Mon- treal left winger Bert Olmstead, hoping the veteran would help ‘steady the youngsters and add strength to the forward lines. However, Olmstead was sen- ' New York Rangers lostitenced to six months in a Van-'again. couver jail on a charge of assault. The conviction is to be appealed early this month. Meanwhile, Olm- stead is free on $1,000 bail. Montreal, Stanley Cup winner for the last three seasons, needed little strengthening but neverthe- less picked up Danny Lewicki and Dave Creighton from the Rangers in the draft. They also sold de- fenseman Dollard St. Laurent to Chicago. Boston and Chicago will reply mostly on last year’s team plus some prom players from their farm systems, Both clubs tried unsuccessfully to negotiate trades. They did get some play- ers from the minor-league - drafts, So the strong clubs in the 1958- 59 seasqn will probably be those, with the strongest farm systems. That is not including the Cana- diens, of course, who are favored to run away with the league championship and Stanley. Cup CHICAGO .......... |DETROIT . son, Maxwe a? ¥ a { ‘Rookie Wayne Walker ‘Is Held High by Lions: around pretty well, so much playing time during three seasons at Idaho,” Walker says, “but the first couple of days in camp ‘Buster Ramsey, defensive coach, threw things at me that I had never heard of.” * * * Walker .will team with Schmidt as Detroit. plays an exhibition game with the Chicago Bears to- night in the Cotton Bowi here. &. .*. & . Ramsey describes the youngster) as “one of the top prospects in camp. He really loves to hit when he’s backing up the line and has plenty of speed to work into our pass defense alignment.” seventh draft choice in 1953, im- pressed Ramsey so much that a veteran was, traded away te ‘make room for the rookie. Since then, Schmidt has been|_ team. captain three times and rated the top linebacker in NFL been a virtually unanimous choice for the all-pro game four straight seasons. = LIONS NOTES: — Line backer Joe Schmidt says his darkest hour in football came as a sophomore fullback at Pitts- burgh in a game with Michigan State. The all-pro defensive star seys he was held to a minus 30 Artiyards in nine times by the Spar- after having! PAW PAW’S HOME. — Charley Maxwell, Tiger outfielder, scores from first after Billy drops the relay throw at home plate. Martin con- Martin bunted. Catcher Sherm Lollar overthrew _ tinued to third on the two errors. Note Maxwell's. first base and then had a second error as he grip on Lollar’s arm. AP Wirephote 4. a Tigers Belt Sox, 17 AA Bunning Still Unable to Go Full Distance Fails to Go 9 Innings 9th Straight Time Is Winner DETROIT (UPI) — Jim Bunning still hasn't pitched a complete, nine-inning game since his no- hitter early two months ago. He has tailed to go the route 9 straight times. * * * But the slim Tiger right hander is making progress. He finally won his second game since the master- piece yesterday, an 11-4 decision over the Chicago White Sox to set his record at 10-10 far short of his 2 victories last season. ~ Bunning had a string of big leads immediately after the no- hitter but couldn’t hold them, Then he ran into a streak of good pitching and no hitting support to add fuel to the argument that a no-hitter is a jinx. He finally got the pitching and hitting together as the Bengals ‘|pounded six Sox hurlers for. 16 safeties but he was lifted for a punch hitter in the seventh and Hank Aguirre finished up, allow- ing the final Chicago run in the ninth. er Bunning started out like Herb Moford and Frank Lary in the pre- vious two games: Moford set down 16 in a row at Kansas City Tues- day before the A's got their first hit and Larry didn’t give up a hit until one man was out in the sev- enth Wednesday. Sherm Lollar, leading off the the fifth, was the first man to reach base against Bunning. Lol- lar singled to center and by the time the inning was over, the Sox cut Detroit’s lead to 5-2. Chicago got two more hits in the sixth but a doubleplay ended the threat and with one run in and two men on base via walks in the seventh, Harvey Kuenn saved Bunning with a leaping, cross- body, one-handed grab of Jim Landis’ liner in deep left center next to the fence for the final out. CHICAGO DETROIT abrh bi abrh Landis.cf 4000 Kuenn.cf 501 Fox, 2b 4010 Veal.ss 411 Goodm'n.Jb 40106 Bertoia,ss ee 0 Lollar.c 4110 Kealine,rf 23 Torgeson,lb 4331 Harris,ib 522 Mueller.rf 3000 Maxwelhif 313 Smith, If 3012 Bolling.2b 321 Esposito,ss 4011 Martin3b 422 Moore,p 0000 Wilson,c 211 aJackson 1000 Bunning.p 301 Latman,p 0000 aF’ncona 161 bBoone 1000 Aguirrep 609 Qualtersp 0000 Shaw,p o0obvo0 ePhillips 0000 Lown,p 0008 Staley,p 0000 eBattey 106000 Totals 36 11:16 10 a—Struck out for Moore in 3rd; b-- Called out on strikes for Latman in 5th; c—Walked for Shaw in th; d—Singled: for Bunning in 7th; e—Called out on strikes for Staley in 9th. . 000 029 101— 4 . 40% 002 40x—11 , 3424 Totals t E—Mueller, Lollat 3, —Chicago 24-15, Detroit and Torgeson; Fox, Esposito and” Tor- geson; Martin, Boiling and Harris. LOB -———-Chicago 5, Detroit 5. gino ear“ Torgeson, Maxwell, Wil- = aa ate Harris. “BF—Smit! Pp Lotter. vU-—Umont, Semmer, Hon- ochick, Soar. T—2:38, A—3,461, eoncwoomwascone AP Wirephoto OUT YOU GO! — Umpire Tony Venzon gestures toward the dugout as he sends. Milwaukee shortstop Johnny Logan out of the game last night against the Phillies after protesting a close play at first. The Braves won, 9-5 in 10 innings. Only ed. AY’s GAMES : 7 ol; m.—Brewer Chisege. ” oh casetiane ‘3 « Wynn aca re iw ‘ork, — cual (7-10) Ys. fan! (26) : City at Detroit, 7 m.fgarver (11-4) vs. Foytack . (11- at ~ NATIONAL LEAGUE : Wen Lest Pet. Behing Milwaukee . o 8 . 57 Francisco ... 71 63 oe senses 7 63 326 9% Cineinnalt coscone 6B 69 §=.489 14 aoe 8 Ree Chicago ......... 61 74 452 19% 1 .. S88 73 443 a. to ne ~Jyt RESULTS 13 bee A ngeles s - an" ee . Philadetphie 5. io innings, Cincinnati at Pittsburgli, postponed, rain ad 1 | Mawankee at Pittshureh, 7 p. m.—Willey vs. Witt (7-2). tac ype at St. Louis, 8 p. m.—Kipp (4) ¥s. — Poa San Frarftisco at Antonelli “Oe vs. vrs. Sree fy TOMORROW'S Cincinnati at- PMindeipa, ec 4 p. m. Milwaukee a sigs ot m. Los Kon” angeles af 8, aul 43, m ™. TODAY'S GAM - Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 7 p. m.—Had- | h (8-7) vs, Roberts (14-12). ® a To ea E ight x if E Pupil’ George Wilson Faces ‘Teacher’ Halas: for First Time * a * * This will be the first meeting: ~| between the.two since Wilson. took. over as head coach of the Lions The past two seasons, Hal- turned the reigns of office game streak going Giants, 26-7 in their most recent. outings, * * ‘The intra-conference batjle be- tween the Lions and Bears marks the first time in many years that Detroit has met a team from its own conference in pre-season play. In regular season play, sitico 1934, the Bears hold a 30-16 edge | to clinch a share of the lead | in the Western Division race; # Five members of the Lions will be playing “in their own back yards” in the Cotton Bowl, Quar- Wen Lest Pet. Behind |terbarcks Bobby Layne of Texas % @ 4 2% [and Tobin Rote of Rice, guard ‘ ¥. | Bi ‘: Harley Séwell. of Texas, defensive ** 65 67 42 17 ‘|halfback Yale Lary of Texas A FL Me ny |& M and Bill Glass of Baylor 8 77 417 2 j|are all former Southwest Confer- Seeeener’s Speetes ence stars, The game will be broadcast on radio. ‘ Brittanies fo Run in Sunday Fun Test Michigan Brittany Spaniel Club will sponsor a “fun trial’? Sunday at Highland Recreation Area, with a puppy match starting the day- long events‘at 8 a.m. Trial is for Brittanies only, but any Britta: owner, providing he is an ama- teur handler, may enter. Only restricted event is the all« age stakes, for the club’s rotating trophy, won last fall»by Otto Hy- land of Flint. This test is for club members only. Derbies and all-age events are also offered. Tftophies and ribbons go to the winners. M . = Charley “| THO 215, San Di if. Lee Jones, 192 vga — PO, Sat ae, j e, by Jones, 158, Oakland. ‘cat 1 is Phillies’ Farrell ‘Takes His Lumps From Braves By The Aavesis ick Press When the last out was made in the All-Star Game, the National League had only one hero in de- feat, Philadelphia’s relief ace, Dick Farrell. He had shut out the American League without a hit, striking out Jensen, Skowron, Mal- zone and Ted Williams in a near- perfect two innings that came too late. j Farrell was tops, spinning along with a 1.17 earned run average and allowing but one earned run in an eight-game string of 15 2-3 innings going into the All-Star break. * been * * He’s yesterday's hero ce. , Farrell has won only once in seven decisions and has managed just four saves in 22 appearances over the last two months, And he’s been battered for 25 earned runs, in 29 innings over that span. The kid right-hander took his lumps again last night, getting tagged for four runs on four hits as Milwaukee. beat the Phils 9-5 in 10 innings.’ that kept the Braves’ lead at nine games over San Francisco as the Giants broke a tie for second with rain-idled Pittsburgh by wal- h,| loping Los Angelés 13-3. St. Louis jdefeated the Chicago Cubs 42 with Sam Jones becoming ° the o third NL pitcher in 30 years to strike out 200 in one season. The Braves: buflt a 5-1 lead on Wes Covington’s -24th home run, a two-out shot in the fifth, then nailed their eighth straight over the Phils in the 10th on singles by Casey Wise and Hank Aaron, a walk, Frank Torre’s tie-breaking, two-run single, and Billy Bruton’s two-run triple, “handing Farrell a 7-8 record. The last place Phils, 2044 games behind in a plunge that has paral- led Farrell’s, had swung for 12 hits ‘off Lew Burdette, chasing the big right-hander with four runs in the fifth for a 5S-all tie. But they managed just one hit the rest of the way off southpaw Juan Pizar- ro (5-2), who walked two, struck out six in 5 2-3 innings of “shutout relief, Richie Ashburn was 3-for-4 for the Phils, regaining the NL bat- ting lead with .342. Stan Musial of St. Louis, out with a leg injury, slipped to second with his. ,340. Willie Mays, fourth with 335 be- hind: Aaron’s .336, had three hits, one his 28th home run, for the Giants, who seored eight runs in the first inning. The Giants rapped! * a°16-6 edge over Los Angeles for the season—their best against the Dodgers since 1937, when they had the same record. Stu Miller (5-7), the little junk man, went all the way, giving up five hits. Carl Furillo drove in all the r runs, with a sacrifice fly and two-run single. Johnny Podres (12-12) lost it as the Gi- ants collected 17 hits, with Or- lando Cepeda also hitting a home run, his 25th. * A pair of unearned runs in the fifth inning the job for the NL All-Star Hero Hit Hard Cards against loser Dave Hillman (4-7) as they tied Cincinnati for fourth. Jones (12-11) gave up five hits, with one Cub run unearned, and’ struck out eight for a total of 201, The old Cardinal high was 199, set by Dizzy Dean in 1933. No one had fanned 200 in the NL since Johnny Vander Meer whiffed 202 with the Reds in 1941. Chiefs Face Job for Harri With only three lettermen as a nucleus, Pontiac Central High's cross-country team this year faces a big job of rebuilding, if it hopes to enjoy a winning season, Coach Dean Wilson (whose 1958 track team won a 4th straight Michigan schoolboy title), has only John Jefferson, senior miler; and Ken Smith (junior) from, the 1957 —! for his leading run. ners. Rafus Anderson, who won a letter im 1956-57, but was in- eligible last fall, will give needed ‘ help. ‘ Jefferson is the top man, ‘ ‘having shown marked improve- Wilson, issued uniforms and ho. Rebuilding er Squad equipment yesterday and. today, First hill-and-dale drills begin Mon< day, over the Beaudette Puy, course, * * * Wilson called attention to plans for issuing uniforms for Northern High harriers.» The boys from the new high school may get their equipment by calling at Pontiac ‘Central athletic office any time after school, today. Bob Ri@vards (senior, track let- |terman) and Columbus White (sen- jior, track letterman) rate high among non-letter winners on the réturning list; A promisirig sopho- more crop may ‘produce some ad: ditional strength, ea ie / ® 8 “THR PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 & , 1958 pn 1958 Ford Convertible "8 om ¢" , Ante. Tort, Bam ak Miss This Buy: EDDIE DIE STEELE FORD Hold First Horse Sale CHICAGO (AP) —Ilinais oughbred breeders held their first annual sale last night in Arlington |Park, Sixty four horses were ee | grossing $103,500 for an average of $1,617 per animal, Here Are Buy Now Savings You Can’‘t Afford To Miss! Check these values on other sizes! | 6.00 x 16 Fits older models of Plymouth, Ford, Chevro- let, Nash and Studebaker, 1195 7.10 x 15 Fits most pre- 1957 models of Dodge, Buick, QP SUPER- CUSHION Goon? ¥ EAR 6.70 x . Fits most pre-1957 models [a Tats | Chevrolet, Hudson, Studebaker a Here's What We ee it Wheels (Reg. $5.00) PAY AS LOW AS $1.25 A WEEK | ‘Nash, Olds, Mercury, Pon- tiac and Hudson, “1485 7.60 x 15 Fits most recent models of Dodge, Buick, Nash, Olds, Mercury, Pon- tiac, Hudson. 1625 * Blackwell Tube-Type. Pies Tax aed Recappable Tire. . ‘Your old tires can be the down payment! Pay the balance as low as $1.25 a week! SPECIAL $995 BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL 12” USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN | i'The Derby is for $20,000 added, | for three-year-olds at a mile and one-sixteenth, C. W. Smith’s Hillsdale and SERVICE STORE | 30 .S. Cass FOR MOST CHEVROLETS, FORDS and PLYMOUTHS - Comparable Low Prices for Other - Model Cars FE 5-6123 For Building Supplies See BURKE LUMBER Pre-Season Favorite for All- : -American@ Honors: : 8 tete eee *, aes | ALUMINUM SIDING by Keystone @ OUTLASTS WOOD by YEARS @ SAVES ON FUEL : @REFLECTS HEAT | @ BAKED-ON ENAMEL © WASHABLE, Save on PAINT Fastens on existing wood siding for remodeling or on. work. sheathing in new ‘24 per 100 sq. ft. This Is Maximum Thickness .025: White in Stock—Color Obtainable _ OPEN SAT. 8 - 3 ‘BURKE LUMBER C0. \ “Where the Home Begins” 4406 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 3-121 1 a .22 pistol. Na ‘Have pected support if they seek Amer-|Monday, ican League approval of a move) to Minneapolis. Two club owners, Harvey R.|if Senators’ presidewt Calvin Grif- indicated he would not interfere SEASON’S 18ST BEAR — First | black bear to be reported by a | Pontiac area hunter was the 290- pounder taken a few days ago near Newberry by Stan Tominsky Jr., and Beatrice Tominsky, 431 Mar- ion. It was Tominsky's 3rd bear, Stan downed the big male with a 30-06. Beatrice finished the job with Pentiac Press Photo They also face|Hansen of Detroit and Darn Top-/fith pleads a convincing case for In National Tennis Play May Have All ‘Aussi Final FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) — Ashley Cooper, the tall, handsome Australian, admitted today there was just one obstacle that might “Bikeep him from winning the Na- tional Tennis championship. Michigan Derby Runs Saturday With the arrival of three new- comers within the last twenty-four hours, the field for the Michigan Derby to be run at Hazel Park Saturday, today appeared to have at least a dozen certain starters. zel Park by van from_ Chicago last - night, ge : Racing Secretary Robert P. Me- Auliffe announced the following SS creas Sted lineup of horses on B. Te ameck's Four ¢ Cycle. TA. Grissom's Litte, Reaper; Robert Hedrick’s Dixie Hil; Harry Hough’s Bay Boy; Mrs. Katherine Price’s Refugee; Mrs. Ada L. Rice’s Talent Show; Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Salman’s Nunya; the Paul F. Ternes’ entry of Skeno and Flirtation Walk, Hillsdale, Sea ~ |were on the program. Top-seeded “I've got to improve my service,” he said, “Otherwige I'm playing well enough to win this tournament, * * * . “Anyhow, I’m not seeded No. 1 this year and that takes some of the pressure off. If you’re No. 1 and you win, you're just doing what’s expected of you.” Cooper, who moved into the semifinals with a 9-7, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2 victory over Vic Seixas yesterday, figures he will meet his Davis Cup teammate, Mal Anderson, in the final, in a replay of last year’s championship, * First, a course, he must get past Neale Fraser, the left-hand- ed Aussie who turned back Alex Olmedo of Peru, 3-6, 6-1, 8-6, 3-6, In today’s quarter-finals, Ander- son went up against Dick Savitt and Herbie Flam met Ulf Sehmdat, * « * Two. women’s quarter-finals also Althea Gibson tangled with Britain’s Christine Truman, and 13 Players on Option Recalled by White Sox of outfielder John Callison. Callison is a 19-year-old left ican Assn, in home runs with 28 He is with the Sox farm club at Indianapolis. players will report to the Sox later this month. 30 Sandlot Teams Eying ABC Title Thirty sandlot champion from its own domain, begin the long road that leads to DETROIT (AP)—The Chicago]! White Sox Thursday announced |: the recall of 13 optioned players]: and the purchase of the contract] ” handed hitter who leads the Amer-|# Others who wil] report this|7 month are catcher John Romano, |? — pitcher Don Rudolph, both at In-|) dianapolis and two players from]; BATTLE CREEK, Mich, (AP —|#¢p teams, each aj® gers. ‘aot WASHINGTON rt — The Wash- opposition if the question comes|ping of New York, refused to ington Senators may find unex-|up at a league meeting next;commit themselves. But Hansen transferring the team. Topping hinted he would object. Detroit: had been one of the clubs | reported against moving the Senators. Griffith, meanwhile, took steps to keep himself free of legal chains at the Monday meeting in Chicago, His attorney prepared to oppose a stockholder’s request for a court order.temporarily restraining Grif- . |fith from discussing a franchise shift. x * * The order was sought by Robert R. Rodenberg, ex-owner of the Baltimore Colts football team, who holds 75 shares of Senators’ stock. H. Gabriel Murphy, who com- mands more than 40 per cent of the shares, also has thrown a federal court suit against any plans Griffith may have for bank- ing promised revenue in Minne- apolis. Neither case will be settled immediately, but each has clouded the picture for Griffith and other league officials. Hansen said by telephone from Detroit that he could make no positive statement because “we have nothing specific on which to base an opinion.”” Then he added: * * * “As a general policy, I don’t feel that any Major League club should stand in the way of an- other in- moving when it- demon- doing so.” strates the economic necessity for Elisian Races. at State Fair Ea Elisian, the race driver whose About 60 cars are expected to try to qualify. The fastest 40 will start the grueling test at 2:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds track. Former Major League Player-Manager Dies has iF nation’s top dtivers will be eomelil LOS ANGELES (AP) --. Wade’ “Red’’ Killefer, 73, former major league baseball player and Pa- cific Coast League manager, died Thursday . after a long illness, his big league career as an outfielder with the Detroit Tigers. in 1907, He later played with the Washington Senators, Cincinnati Reds and New York Giants. ‘Beach—-Swimming Pontiac Lake MOTEL Rates $8-$10 - Free TV—Free Boats Children’s Playground LAKE it talon us. ne lenger now that before the war to give you A-l Mechanic Service on your car. Ask wus about that needed service om your {| car now. You'll be amazed when you compare eur price. ELIZABETH (Next te wetecee: store) | STILL GIVING 1 TERRIFIC DEALS ON 1958 CHEVROLETS, PONTIACS AND- hte HERE'S AN EXAMPLE OF OUR CLOSE OUT PRICING 1958 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR - Utility Sedan 1795.00 Delivered. Incl. Directionol Signals, License and Alt State and Local Taxes. Callison and four of the recalled| fe ae Sa EDseL LINCOLN English Ford Line MODEL CLOSEOUT The Price Is Right Starting at $1,595 “232 S, : Sagin imam * FE 2°9131 Three teams were bracketed at) 16 gross honors in Pine Lake|It has shown a definite ability to! $ , 69 and seven tandems tied with) country Club’s mixed doubles event}hang onto the ball. Fumbles hurt] Sle 70s, including Pontiac entries Dick! 4, Labor Day were shared by|the Wolverines in several games Pri Brobertson-Dick 1 DeWitt and Wally|tn, teams of Mrs. Lee-Mr. Mc-|last season. rice ’ ‘en . . x , gr rears it soend paktgs be Duffie and Mrs. Blaisdell-Mr. Bull. Includes: 9 WALL AND Each team. carded 84, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Spencer had low net of 64, Defending champion Tony Sko- ver won the club championship at Doug Dodson won Chicago’s Hyde Park Stakes three times — High Shine in 1945, Bewitch in 1947 and Princess Lygia in 1951. BASE CABINETS @ SINK FRONT @ CABINET FOR BUILT-IN OVEN Meadowbrook for the 4th time by defeating Bill Jordan, 1 up, on the 37th hole. Skover won the 35th' and 36th holes to even the match, then birdied the 37th for victory. It was the 4th trip to the finals ege| Wout suecess for Jordan, Dr. Robert Schwarz took club | Units Are Adaptable to Many Arrangements CARL SHELL and SONS. 4994 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains OR 3-5043 Open Friday ‘til 9 P. M. MIRACLE MILE GIANT AUCTION Sept. 26th 7:30 P.M. Auction Bucks at All Miracle Mile Stores Start Savane Now? x Pontiac’s 2nd annual Janczarek’ Memorial Best-Ball golf tourney is. scheduled Saturday, Sept. 20. The Pro-Member outing at Tam O’Shan- ter will be held next Monday. * * * The new head professional at Big Rapids Country Club is Tom/f- Ice of Niles, former assistant pro at Kalamazoo CC. Jewelers Win ‘Benefit Game Carl Shell’s Waterford League} All-Stars played Shaw’s Jewelers last night at Drayton Plains in an exhibition softball game for the DONT TAKE CHANCES & driving a car that needs repairs! Complete Parts and Service Department Bumping—Painting—Alignment—Frame Service BILL SPENCE - Rambler 211 S. Saginaw FE 5-9297 benefit of injured Don Seeterlin and everything was a success ex-/fF cept the final score as far as jWaterford fans were concerned. Shaw’s, city Class AA cham- pion, defeated the All-Stars, 1-0, on Edgar Mullins’ run-preducing single in the 6th inning, the only | hit made by the winners, The All-Stars also got just one safety, a single by pitcher Doug Hall. Jake Mazur and Perc McConner hurled for the Jewelers with Mc- Conner the winner in relief; Har- lan (Fat)Keigh, Hall, Glenn (Wim- py) Johnson .and Arlo Fiesher twirled for the All-Stars in that or- der with Johnson taking the loss. Approximately $80 will go to See- terlin as a result of the benefit game and additional contributions ean be made at Carl Shell & Sons, 4994 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains, Seeterlin broke his ankle} in post-season tournament play. DEMO. SALE Save up to $1,300.00 on NEW and Exec. Oldsmobiles - Cadillacs Jerome Motor Sales: 280 S. Saginaw FE 4-3390 IT COSTS LESS TO ENJOY oSehmidts Famous ror Quality Since 1875 é is fi a THE PON NTTAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 "Scoring Sie Signed by Champion Hawks ST, LOUIS (&— Bob’ Pettitt| and Cliff Hagan, the top two'scor- BY Pee Auscciated Press The Yankees increased — their lead and reduced the magic num- _ @rs of the National Basketball |per of wins ‘needed to clinch anoth- Assn. champion St. Louis Hawks, signed their contracts Thursday, each for a raise_in salary, € 4 ¥ er pennant to nine yesterday with- out even throwing a ball. - Detroit ae it possible byl. a * idrubbing the White Sox while the, New Yorkers were not scheduled. Boston defeated Baltimore 5-2 and Kansas City clipped Cleveland in the other American League con- tests. drove in- the two key runs as the Red Sox dropped Baltimore into a tie with the Tigers for 4th. A three-run seventh handed Detroit er Milt Pappas his 8th setback against nine triumphs. Rookie Bill Boston batting ace Pete Runnels |Monbouquette won with relief. help = Major lea E—Boyd, Monbouquette, Busby, PO-A— Boston 27-12, Baltimo: ~ re 27-13. DP—Gard. pa Miranda and NO AOV ANCE IN isosdareng Gernert. LOB— Canadian. Middle- U. S. vs, Canada and Canada vs. Mexico. . In the afternoon, the players Sri ee of IS, Detroit vo. 0 I | meet in singles competition, both MURRAY 4 rounds. FLOYD HARRIS, | today and Saturday, Each squad Detrelt Heavyweight will meet a geed Hinumbers seven’ top golfers, but GENE GRESHAM, Nat, av —_ boxing ELI LEGGETTE Dettoit, rounds, Mexican CELISO. HIDALGO xing LEROY JEFFR u opponent, 4 round: Bo, rds Runnels, Buddin ton 5, Baltimore 17, runs were unearned as the losers led until the 5th. Pontiac's Chuck grounded as a pinch against Walj in the 7th. Roger Maris broke up a Shutout Oertel - hitter que Boxes z a = renoert. FO-a-Sen Fi 9, i: | Pros in more than a decade and es ~15. — Erskine, Py am and Larker; O'Connell, Bressoid and the biggest rainfall in months, Idle Yanks Move Closer to allowed only four hits in seven frames. Winner Ralph Terry gave up nine safeties but had a shutout pitching shutout ball but Maris’ blast following a single by Bill Tuttle had done the damage, Boston’s victory gave the Red going until Vic Power tripled and|Sox a 10-9 edge over Baltimore scored on an infield single by Min- nie Minoso, Terry is now 911. Alling Cleveland southpaw ‘star Herb Score got into action again. He worked the last two. innings in their tight season series with | three games to play, Kansas City clinched. at least a split with Cleveland for the season, The A's hold an 11-9 edge with two to play. | Tif e ‘WESTERN HAND TRAPS” $5.50 Hawk owner Ben Kerner, still duel with his 24th home sag SHOTGUN SHELLS celebrating his first title, com- SAN FRANCISCO Los ANGELEs __|two-run elt in the sixth, as the ° : mented that the combined salary nosTon ab rh bi samo, Alou rt “€'3'3'3 Gitiam a ee ntuiA’s ended Cal McLish’s winning | t al o $2.25 Box of his. two aces is about equal to|puaait,"S, 213% Butens 310 6[Davenp' % $121 Cimoll if 311 0/streak at six. McLish, now 147, sae entire payroll of a squad he Tatoos ge 4010 Nieman 4 20 1 9) gable ¥ 2040 Furl Fa 4obal HUNTING, FIELD and rae Sen es 060 coe ip HESS Sowers Hees pen, TTT Hates BPRS a bubble 7 SPORT SHO Dek 7 r8 Re” 700 o[Bressoud ss 5133 bValo 1000 Heavy Rains Ma : ES . 7 ER re ) - ‘views G BOXING FANS! Walp = L000 Paps > 2000, Podres p 9098 ~ ; Irish Setter — Coujar pstein p x » | We Positivel | teed 888 eeer> iH¢/Delay Utah Open ~~ City Club e Positive y Have - Totals 31566 “'felals 232 MeDevitt 869.6 8 @ ¥ ” Wisner Stadium ai Grounded, out, for Monbouguette, 2/ otal 4411712 Petals’ 31383] SALT LAKE CITY (AP). — The ‘This Weekend Only PO NTIAC ¢ Grounded out tor Gerduer in wi Popped out for Zimmer in ® ah ens uk $15,000 Utah Open. golf tourna- Witt’ $ 50 NEXT MONDAY, ——- 901 10 300—5| force out for McDevitt in Me on gngig (ment 80 far has brought two $21.00 N ow 19 & Baltimore ..............--- 000-2 |582 Francisce ............. ; oF ; ‘ Sept. 8, 1958 "Zev Les panies Hodges, Brest” Mo S| things here, the best roster of FURNACE FILTERS, Reg. $1.11 Torre, Bruton. HR—Covington, 8 — Jones, Fernandez. weight Champion ~ | Bruce Castator, champion in his r B ER BB BB 80 Boxing country, and Eric Hanson from |$ L oe $ IRISH EDDIE |Toronto, and Mexico’s Enrique Bekel = oe ita a ; 3 | Never Be (OHARA = Farias Jr. and Ignacio Lopez, WP-—Burdette, Farrell. U—Sudol Veo- e ; ae ee ar - ~ cs In = team ———. vaste ue gon, Secory, (a Sonlan. T—2:57. 57. &—14,969 Theawn some plays one , Shooting a’ ee oo ternate strokes, Actually there are American Sets Sets Jap . 4 SORING three competitions in each of the| —— ~ Z 4 abe L Ne ale decries three sixsomes—-U, S. vs, Mexico, or @ LOSS Ri High Jump Record, | YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) —) John Thomas of Cambridge, Mass., Thursday leaped to a Japa- nese high jump record of 2.09 When You Champion WILF GREAVES: ‘2B—Daley, Runnels . $B—Pier- Cepeda, msg A lice ge yee ogg) Winds and nearly an inch of . Bimsowe, 2 Ris EDDIE O'MARA” sall 2. §Monbougueite se, Daley mn up s0| 6a. Fravcincy $,° Los Angeles. 3, _ * * * The aslo drinker prefers a light drink... FAY'S 1” Thick 57° Ea. catiautee man Oe re wenee, Brees Se 04) .. r ¢ 3 4 8 luvs. gb Salder SF “Purillo. °° |rain spattered the Salt Lake Coun- and Arrow is bubble light... makes your favor- be tn z Hare's ee: M'nb'te (W, 2-4). $$ 38 8 Simmer wsn f 8 3 23 3 wes Club any aery and ite drink taste more delicious. For a smoother OPEN : ‘ r 8-Roun ORO ee Podres (L, 12-12) . 13 4 6 6 3 Ojdrove practicing goilers to cover. Martini .. . Screwdriver . eucosy Mary . , HARDWARE i Poser Stevens, = | Tickets Now on Sole fixe wets Sai BPH meen i 8 dt ¢ $| The sponsoring Utah Golf Assn. other mixed drinks or straight... ask for : Friday Nights ‘til 9 P.M. For MT Ee Klippsteln’” U-—- Crawford’. suit’ }erossed its fingers and the weath- Arrow Vodka today! Corner Huron and OPEN SUNDAY TONY BELLESARIO’S A a ' Dascoli, Donatelli. T— 2:36, 412,441. “jerman predicted more ~ - ‘ Telegraph Rds. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. i merica § U same for today’s opening of the High Class Pro Fight Card en a prmager rnwlfourday, T2-hole affair. aa a Ex-World : pod ig ; - Dg as WaITY DEQINS Saket il ee Guest Referee Pafko if 0100 Pender ss 3110 . Torre 1b 5222 Sawatski c 1010 Sponsored by Crandall ¢ 5121 aRepuiski 1000 re? Entel gelbcs open dots af|Ficee v” S808 Parts ° AES : amateur go! 0 e 0 P ine — the American Cup today with Bl Tat ena? a a w5135 (Each Spenser Will - Peavoe al rful team i) Hillman Ro b—Struck tf Semproch Sth; id SSW EE saris, | and trve Wand lading of eos SS = Metch Maker JOHNNY PERRO ee eee ee a nam ee Poi uiswsinte Sear Pat has a great all star show... Robbins, defending AM-| adeiphia 30-9. DP—Schoendi an pion from Memphis, and San|snd "Torre: “athews. Schoendienst “and STARRING Franciscan Ward, who won the| Pisa re Schoendiensi. LOB Mllwav- WILF GREAVES crown in 1955 and’ 1956, play|*%,"cyendail’ Bouche, Anderson, 3B jonly. six play at one time. meters (6 ft. 10% inches) as he Firing practice rounds Thurs-|surpassed two previous perform. day over the Olympic Country/ances he set in Japanese-Ameri- Club Lake Course, scene of both | ean good will track and field the Americas Cup play and the|meets within two weeks, : 7 = Thomas his U.S; teammates which “begin on-“Monday, Ward) a bhed 1 few ihican ‘while, the Tickets Also "st Perey Pharmacy, Japanese All-Stars took six in the Welden Sip Gitsiers "* “** Hisecond straight day. Robbins had| | For Meverentene, Phone FE 8-1430 Ff t Johnny Ferro o's 3500 SEATS AT 99c Reserved Seots ... $1.50] Ringside ..... ~...$2.50 SEE ANY PONTIAC POLICE OFFICER FOR TICKETS 1958 Factory Officials’ Cars aS Sedans, V-8's, $1 1954 NASH RAMBLER i , yo aes nse HY - Bae Fordomatics ......... It was the third in a series of seven meets participated in by an eight-man U.S, Amateur Athletic 1954 HUDSON JET SEDAN, Hydramatic, Radio and Haeter.....< 1964 FORD CLUB COUPE, Fordomatic, Radic and Heater SOCCEROOS eee FH Gain Softball Finals STRATFORD, Conn. (AP) —| Fi. Sat. and Sun. $1.50 “A Clean Car Rides Better, Lasts Longer” KUHN AUTO WASH 149 W. Huron Across from Firestone Tournament Thursday night with a thrilling 2-1 win over the defend- ing champions, Fresno, Calif. Stratford pitcher Bertha Ragan won her own ball game with a | two-out triple in the 10th inning. } |An estimated 13,000 fang then watched her score on a passed ball. | | ‘Mo thre receive ores 1495 | 817 IN) 1953 OLDS 88 - HARDTOP, Hydramatic, Radic, Heater and White Wall Tires ....... 885 ‘8 238 “188° 111 Richard D. Kahn oven eeeee 1953 FORD ioe ae a — 1953 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN, Radio and _ Heater. Jet Black tosesees 1952 FORD CLUB COUPE, Fordomatic,. Radio 4 and Heater eee ee eee eee 2 1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN, Radio and Heater... sc00e 0 & NEW ‘58 JOHNSONS at BIG PRALOUNTS!. die Rk SUM PW em ON ie cl Ma) Aellbt me Sage 88 $995 | pee Pontiac i a $999 | 1952 PLYMOUTH +168 roetal COUPE, Radio and “00 Were $162.25 Other Models Also At Similar BIG SAVINGS! . . in addition to the low discounted prices, we offer a LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE on your used motor, emis 1951 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR Power Glide, Radio and Heater eo eeeee S88 Fee 1950 FORD ’ 6-Cylinder with Factory Heater... Ls tence 1949 FORD | fos’ 8, 2-DOOR, with i see ee a less of make or condition ! Easy Budget Bank Terms Arranged (SMALL pinanice WHEN AMOUNT DOWN ‘CHARGES |OUT OF WORK ; oy Take Up To 18 Months To Pay sed nocraae! ‘will hold in leyaway for 60 doys. All new ‘58 Johnsons cre guaranteed for 18 _ inateed of usvel factory 3-month quer. NO PAYMENTS in. n BIRMINGHAM ne “Turn to Turner’ 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham. MI 4-7500 © R Wi RE DEPOT . 28 IN FARMINGTON: 9 ORCHARD LAKE RD. bon 12 & 13 Mile Rds. GR 4.7020 THE stlietnis PRESS, FRIDAY,. SEPTEMBER 5, 1058 ay “How. come?” he asked. Told “PONTIAC STATION ERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC “Formerly Brown Bros.” **At the rate they are going,” he said, “they will have more money’ of under the ground than above.” FE 2-4242 se 4 N. SAGINAW 3 Rules of the Road Jexcess will be '$10."" - Set by Farmers, Hard on Autoists DENVER (UPI) — “The speed on country roads will be a secret, and the penalty for every mile in This was one of the ‘ ‘Rules of ”-which gaverned tratfic in Colorado nearly a half-century agp. Pong due to the activities the Farmers’ Anti-Automobile League. Other rules ig. 1912 included: “Autos rypning on country roads “Country Store Qwner: Looks on Bright, Side Be if a 5 gs id 3BEE ta FIRST ¢ = 1 ALWAYS WHAT A BUY! JUST 7.95 FOR-HIS LINED PARKA! Penney’s makes everybody ha «4 Junior gets a heavy dut ton, 4. 95 Pipe tog de, daar Foal a bone wer {ae trim on the pockets and cuffs! and zip-off dynel trimmed hood = Zip hood, smart roll collar. : you pocket Sizes 6 to 12 *In Lakewarm Water big savings. 1 - Mainline tied Waa Maladies MiMadaatinmaniaaddatiath dk, te, tec art Hasdn cn, cl en, oi kad, Ao tne, ak COMBED COTTON SATEEN PARKA HAS SPLIT HOOD 13" sizes 10 to 20 A heavy 16-ounce quilt lined parka designed for warmth with a dynel lined zip-off split hood, heavy duty zippers ... every B34 extra. Charcoal, blue, kicker. Greys, tan! FEEL THE QUALITY IN LUXURIOUS FLEECE This is it in suburbans. A dark l 9 95 charcoal or grey coat that is tastefully subdued in rich fleece of 75% wool, 15% nylon and 10% cashmere. Quilt lined. sizes 36 to 46. Practical; too’. to smooth, water repellent ‘Warm-up time! Here’s a heavy 16-ounce blend’ of. nylon and cashmere fleece with quilt lined sleeves, plaid rayon and acetate NEW LOOK STRIPES Ih PENNEY REVERSIBLES Hi-style ’n then some! Big and bold stripes on soft, fleecy nylon! . they reverse taffeta! Machine washable. only *1 holds your suburban or jacket, on. Penney’ S Lay-away plan ee YOU MACHINE WASH’ “HIS NEW PENNEY PARKA No more cleaning bills and lots | 95 — pea sizes THIS WARM SUBURBAN | IS ORLON PILE LINED 14" 3 sizes 10 to 20 IN 12° men’s sizes 36 to 44 nylon _ soft, GO AHEAD! WASH: THIS LUSTROUS COTTON PARKA 9-ounce combed cotton sheen, quilt lined with Célacloud (proc- essed acetate) is machine wash- able*. Zip-off hood, inside wrists. Charcoal, tan. *In Lukewarm Water “LODEN eryunet IN FINE COMBED COTTON SHEEN! “Yes, 100% combed cotton... lustrous,’ Penney - tested for wear and ba¢ked throughout with warm 14/ounce quilt. THE AUTHENTIC LODEN LOOK IN 100% WOOL Here’s that vital Alpine styling you want, with a couple of smart new Penney twists anda solid pedigree of quality. 19-ounce fabric, full quilting, ‘zip hood, more! on. hood, extré warm-up pockets. I" sizes 10 te 20 knit Zip- , sizes. 36 to 46 17 | ~ sizes 36 to 46 MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS: DOWNTOWN PENNEY’S STORE HOURS: Open Daily Monday thru . | Open Monday and Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Soturdey 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. "All Other Days 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P. M: 5 _ “ i at ie! ——- a 14" | eg arrears sreerentinenneeaeramreeeeereeeeeereenneeeeee YOU CAN AFFORD THE BEST WHEN PRECIOUS YOU BUY HER & ON EASY TERMS at SHAW'S ‘‘Michigan’s Largest Jewelers’”’ : 24 North Saginaw Street Pontiac State Bank Bldg. . DIAMOND BRIDAL ENSEMBLE Regular 69.50 Gorgeous solitaire set with a radiant diamond. Matching wedding band. Your choice of 14k white or yellow gold. A simply styled; dignified bridal duet that will be cher- ished for a lifetime. wert $4g°° $1 A WEEK eeolP Wile], lemerelul-1 eee). Regular 125.00 NOW 00 $la Week Unique arrangement of sparkling diamonds, En- gagement ring has side diamonds. Wed- ding ring has 3 dia- monds. shelr.V. [el], lemme) £0}-10) 1) 3 Regular 145.00. NOW 50 $1504 Week « Mo a ern engagement / ting displays 2 matched f side diamonds. mond wedding band 14K gold moufitings. 10-DIAMOND BRIDAL DUET Regular 200.00 : $ oT Week Grocehally designed | 14K engagement s ring has 4 side dia- monds. Matching wed- ding ring has 5 dia- monds. A wonderful value. re ee A Year 115 one A breath king display of lovgtr iamonds. Fiery er diamond enhanced by 4 side gems, 9-diamond wed- ding band, MAN'S DIAMOND RING TAD. $1 a Week A_ handsome diamond tin: of fine classic design, Mas- : . eo: 24 N. Saginaw St. — Pontiac State Bank Bldg. * (eee * * ' | ~~ . F a Agent Gives ‘ By WAYNE B. SIEFERT {tried it, you'll discover it not only County Horticultural Agent improves fertility but kills lots of Covering up the garden with a| weeds, too, lot of green grass often seems to!’ Roving Sus three pounds. of rye be just “asking for work’? when| grass seed per 1,000 square feet spring arrives. But once you have srousd this! week seals nonians_ See 2 PLANT EVERGREENS SPREADERS Pot Grown Pfitzers—-]5-inch across . Pot Grown Andofras—12-inch across ...... Pot Grown Cuspidatas (Yews) ....2.95 and 3. 95 B and B Pfitzers—large size . . 3.88 B and B Cuspidotes—large si size .. UPRIGHTS Pot Grown Pyramids—3 Ft............. - B and B Irish Junipers—3 Ft. .......... 3.50 Specimen Blue Spruce .......- 14.95 and 19.95 Many additional varieties too numerous to list. Beautiful Golden Vicari ..... ce ee ces eis « Large Potted Red Soherry: a. eeee oeeeeane "ROSE CLEARANCE Peace and Other Good Varieties.......... 1.50 BORDINE GREENHOUSES 1835 §. Rochester Road 1 Mile North of Auburn Read Rochester, Michigan ee eer tables, such as carrots, beets, po- tatoes or cabbage, because the grass plants are still too small. During the spring it is wise to top dress this rye grass with 10 '|pounds of 12-12-12 per 1,000 square feet. If this is a couple of weeks in advance of spading or plowing, it causes a nice green growth ef the rye, creating: an ideal organic manure. In addition to the fertil- ity aspect, it aids in maintaining a loose soil and holding moisture. FALL TRANSPLANTING There is no doubt that fall trans- become suecessfully established. In a great many cases, spring transplanting has proven: at least as successful and somm.,mes seems to do better. One of the best arguments for fall ‘transplanting is the known fact much root growth occurs .dur- ing cool weather. Fall transplant- ing permits root establishment during fall and early spring before September is the best time of the entire year to sow perennial, 2 meg seed. Start your new lawn now. Select - eat, wastuldiog soastios —-—$incere_and expeff assistance _ ‘ is yours at the Regal Stores. Kentucky Blue Grass... .. we eeeee. LBD. 69e Creeping Red Fescue.......... ... Lb. 69e Highland Bent Grass.............Lb. 69% Astoria Bent Grass............... Lb. 95e Danish Blue Grass.......... oo... Lb. 79 Penn State Chewing Fescue........Lb. 90c Penn Lawn Fescue............... Lb. 97¢ | Meadow Fescue ................. Lb, 50¢' Kentucky 31 Fescue.............. Lb. 40c « CHOICE LAWN FERTILIZERS ...ece, 80 Lb. Bag $2.65 Regal Organic.......... 80 Lb. Bag $3.95 Milorganite ........... 80 Lb. Bag $3.95 G & F 10-6-4. 7577" 190 Lb: Bag $5.95 Special 10-6-4 ........:. 80 Lb. Bag $3.35 Special 3-12-12. . Pontiac Drayton Store 1 Store Phone Phone OR 3-244! FE 2-0491 FEED and LAWN SUPPLY COMPANY leaf growth appears. Convenience needed to keep her trim. soi] is firm and well packed. * * * Natural plants usually have one or more days reots below the frost line which keep the leaves and branches supplied with water It ag prevents any muddy|). places where children can spoil |) their shoes and it does not harm|/ the quality of any of the vege- ® planted plants often survive and favors fall transplanting when the i Early ide planting omits the hazards of winter injury and can aed cash in on early spring, root! arm t EXPLORERS FIND — These ane Township children found this huge eight pound puffball mushroom while they were ‘‘exploring’’ this week in a marshy area near their home. a THE PONTIAC PRESS. ever SEPTEMBER 5, 1908 three Waterford. growth. But late aie transplant- ing is always a poor third choice. We miss the advantage of root Left to right are Albert Roth, St., Phillip, 11, and Rosemary Bugsby, 13, both of 6841 Roby St. The bushel basket shows the actual size of the mushroom. the roots of necessary food. * Garden News PE ee eee ee growth before top growth and usu- ally have shoots present ‘which rob |-. ‘1D, of 6870 Roby ¥ Don't Wt aueuner’s and hard ae ® PPiIcr irr) * [Seeting This Fa humidity ee ns tan ke GS ES es Spas Oat Dowie heckd & 5 5 le heat, CRF ges om gies plow start—ples more ew cnsaieal Protect Your With the flowering season over, the housewife looks to gardening- time again for her last fling with nature before she takes to hiberna- tion from the wintry elements. ‘Working in the crisp air does wonders for a lady's complexion, and fhe late fall gardening chores afford her the exercise Preparing the garden for winter, Raking leaves and cutting branches can blister and roughen sensitive hands; stubborn thorns 4Y,/out of doors as much as possible. the|Fresh air and sunlight impart a/| Hand When Working in n PF all Gardens - slate gardening Season.__The smart ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” and protects her hands before they're hupt by in- vesting in a good pair of garden- ing gloves. * x * The to select have an ab- sorbent tough neoprene outer shell that re- pels water and withstands tears or ‘There |ptmctures from the roughest treat- ment... . In addition,- these gloves are so flexible, they allow complete hand freedom even for the most delicate garden tasks. Their tapered fit and which so many women object to. ee ee xk -*& -& It’s generally a good idea to get STRIP FAST safely, with Regular Strypeeze, the paint remover with the Housekeeping Seal. Easy on wood and hands. At leading paint and hardware stores. Scotts SALE Sale _ Price Scotts PICTURE Seed large box $ 7.50 Scotts FAMILY Seed large box 5.95 Scotts PLAY Seed 2 large boxes 8.50 TURF BUILDER, complete 2 large bags 8.30 grgss fertilizer ‘10 large bags §=—- 36.50 COPE, grub proofing large bag 3.40 Scotts SPREADERS- 10.95 13,95 19.95 saves lawn $$$ : Right now! this fall — the best time to put new, life, new. beauty into yoer lawn D> at selected dealers throughout the area PONTIAC ~ McKENNA HARDWARE KELLY'S HARDWARE Orchard Lake pamnen’s rep svone 900 Jesiyn Ra FE 25408 90 Buturn Pont STRONG BROS HOWE 8665 Hho OR 3-9162 F } POOLE 3375 Orchard Lk syn te “4-4 Pe 147 Oakland FE 4-1594 Drayton Piains FE 2-6353 ca 2 HARDWARE own BAY - Sa REGAL FEED & suPPLY «Oxford : Syivan Shop cere sesa1 7292 8 18 4268 Dixie M A.KAMM FEED & GRAIN " - BAY'S HOWE & $PTC GDS 3.2441 33 Pleasant OA 8-2293 906 W Huron FES-8389 © REGAL FEED & SUPPLY | Gachentet 'g HOWE & GDS «= 28 Jackson ST-FE 20491 — uawiitom FUEL BSUP CASE”S HARDWARE 1S Telegraph VITALITY FEED STORE | 204 N Saginaw ME 4-5211 335 Main St OL 1-4211 NG BROTHERS plod kage Keogo Harbor Union Lake $301 Pontiec FE 4-0798 ; erat < "AEBS nanowant McKIBBEN ‘a ‘igo bit Lane FE 21409 nubyn RFE 2.1628 * Fe hies tiv 3807 You Save! $1.00 1,00 1.00 59 3.00 55 2 .00 3.00 « 5.00 , x jnatural beauty which is unattain- able with even the best of cos- ke. Gardening is great outdoor | in. Like any other hobby, though, one should be well-equipped to do the proper job. Be sure to take your gardening gloves along and | wear them. . Poritlac Press Phote IVY GERANTUM—Mrs, Frank L. Shaw of $1 W. New York St., proudly holds one of the numer- | ous bright pink. flowers which | are on her ivy geranium located | along the northeast side of the garage. Last year the new plant was six inches, Today it stands seven feet, At an average rate of 30 miles per hour, it would take an automo- bile more than 11 years to travel over the 3,012,520 miles of rural highways maintained’ in the Unit- - saves you iolles this fall. most important time of year to invest in lawn improvement | ; : t ed States today. ie 10 Ib. bag ......0... _ 97e} 95 Ib. bag ..........$2.25 a || VITALITY FEED STORE 756 NM. Perry, gal follows the old adagé that “an: t-cotton lining and a/ lightness eliminate the clumsy feel | After butterfat or cream is re-|milk constitutes more than half moved from whole milk, the skim] the weight of the whole milk. PRICES SLASHED PATIO SLABS 16x16 Inch. 16x32 Inch. Save 50% 24x24 Inch..................$17.00 42s Jeek. wo acs: $ eevee a ee ee RIDE | wh ile Y / C ) i/ === FEAOTS4 = FE A-IL/2 == _ SALES AND oe SERVICE o tae FALL CLEARANCE SALE ALL TYPES OF MOWERS AT LARGE DISCOUNTS | BOLENS DELUXE RIDE-A-MATIC 60 50 . $1 35 saves lawn $ ¢ $ Right now! this fall—the best time to, put new life, new beauty into your lawn : ; < SALE SAVE! Seotts PICTURE® Seed large box $7.50 - $1.00 | Scotts FAMILY*® Seed large box 5.95 1.00 | Scotts PLAY Seed 2 large boxes «8.50 1.00 | TURF BUILDER® 2 large bags 8.30 5S 10 large bags 36.50 5.00 CoPE®, grub proofing large bag «= 3.40 55 SCOTTS SPREADERS 10.95 2.00 | 13.95 3.00 ! 1995 -5.00 | BIaeey .. . first in luwns KEEGO HARDWARE No. 1 | 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. Free Parking in the Rear of the Store "FE 23766 Keego Harbor NO LIMIT! FILTERS '1"—All Sizes Buy Them by the | Case of Six ORIGINAL DUS r s TOP NO TMT! With Rubber Tire. LARGE CAPACITY sm 6.6 HP TRACTOR Powerful, durable, all your outdoor chores. light tractor . that lets you ride with ease thru Tractor... . $506.00 Rotary Mower $100.00 Credit Terms Available KING BROS. 2391 Pontiac Road. at ‘Opdyke Road F | =F | FERTILIZER SPREADER Reg.$9.95 5 4° Compare This Price THEN PAY LESS ee | mars 190-6. $439 We believe this is the lowest price in Pontiac. On purchase of 10 pounds « or more. No limit. PERENNIAL RYE GRASS po PONTIAC 9 Week f sewer \ SA Mt en tel in HARDWARE STOl te oa a il nN cll a iret an i eae rd * ; . , j : a : ae : p y/ ag I | | a 7 Bos « A a A : =. | eo / a , ee pe /THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1958 SO gin Meee ole RTE ED ao ae ee , BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ea hide til * Be harles R. Walled Lake , -. |Marriage License, #s'se‘simitiss’ §=—- [Boston Museum 7", Teor, Applications =» | Bs rn Ase Will Bring Swiss P : , Ba : | Loretta S. Long, Ber : . Robert e : te WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ Seems ieinle F'Ssaman; Washington | Frederick app, Lake Orton, thatthe Sis are as god at draw = ing maps as they are at making Sa MO CC Glaudette M Gress, 136 Auburn Pairicis M. Plsches, Birmingham |nies of Ceuadliee Praline BERANE monn | EARLE EEG GaSe |e, beat mapped ‘cuntry ithe ; Gide D owen Getto | So's: Wortman: 99 Dwight ger four ahd a halt centuries, rt - Swiss cartographers have been Mary A Nalghbors, Wallea Lake — Baltimore Tosses Out lant acle ue ar oe Berol A Patrin, Drayton Plains 116 Tons of Old Papers country, “mapping and refining cs Jerry Sanders, 521 Nebraske mapping techniques. | wait , Rigceu Rawande Detsoat BALTIMORE (~The city gov-| “As a result of Swiss expefience DID YOU SAY ABORIGINAL?] | EITHER THE DESIGNER ernment has thrown a nearly apping mountainous ” KGINAL 2] | EIT THE Bums? Dolure hirminghen” two miles of ontdateg retord is eons Suen setres NC WASNT IN HIS RIGHT Humbert A. Mularoni, Bloomfield Hills |the past two years. - |gaid, the Boston science niuseum ty Mary J. Bipe, gham That's how high ‘the records|has employed the topographic di- Ronald J. 131 Murphy woulld reach if piled one on an-jvision of the Swiss Federal Mili- Neney Mt Monts, 4 W, Troquota other, says the Record Manage-|tary Department to map Mt. Mc- Zohn E. Peming. Doitott ment Office, which has disposed|Kinley—North America’s , = 5 re of 116 tons of official papers since peak—'‘using their own creative Ralph C. Ferdon, 364 Auburn : Betty d. Mackey, 272 8. dock 1955, : Vv 4 b ¥ - BOARDING HOUSE _ ‘ YU; I) CHARLEY Nov A COLLEGE “GY — Uf p, PLOFESSAH, MASAH HOOPLA Y ) y mum WHY YOU : j DIXIE DUGAN ee See ERWHELMINGLY, ¢ ELECTED OV *- YOU MAKE AS MUCH A NOBLE CAN'T! I'D HAVE OR WOULD IT BEAC a. ALLEY OOP_ ‘Perm Pann in coal, Baynes vs : e US Put. On i AM] © FREYsE Point Barrow’s petroleum and OUT OUR WAY S75 matural gas resurces are known. ‘H Norman Wells, in northern .Can- : » | THAT'S WHAT I CALL WELL,I VY THAT'S UTOPIA, < a ada, refines oil produced on the » | AREAL MAN--LHIT ]{ ADMIRE \ YOU THREE--THAT's | CAPTAIN EASY spot, and even supplies diesel > / HIM FER A CHEWO’ _\ YOUFOR | ‘TH’ WAY PEOPLE APT. fuel to DEW Line siter. From prea “T’BACCER AN’ HE SEZ, \ ‘THINKIN’ \ SHOULD BE LIKE, j 2 Port Radium, on Great Bear Lake,| TF | “GO BUY YOUR T'BACCER SO--WHAT | I GUESS, BUT I [Hi eame m { \ AS ME?’ HE’SRIGHT, / CHARACTER!) TOLD HIM TO feat. The Smoking Mountais r AN TADMIRE Him | /> TAKE HIS MOLDY ied Cats | Cora | eae coal — have been burning, ac- 4 Se. ba — “8 By’ Ernie Bushmiller Re esa one uNK RECORD iy 2. ra 1956 by Geet toners tyetiowe, me. SEPT, «Fo MORTY MEEKLE _ ~ By Dick Cavaili T.RWILLIAMS : TM, Reg. US. Pat. OF. THE BROKEN CHAIN © 1950 by WEA Servicn, me. FS ; ; PUTTING ON A I ‘sone’? ohn Morris UTTLE WEIGHT ARENT KNOW =~ I(T DION'T ANY | | ; OLD 2 CAME FROM @ ‘ a) ow go 6 ~~ i*) GRANDMA Bor GRANDMA one ee peers You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way to solve all your buying and selling problems. To Place Your WANT AD DIAL FE 2-8181 /WELL, HOW DO YOU LIKE THATS — HE CUT ME COLD/ } yim i By DONALD/ , a : Pa b . aff = oe “ “i - f ih oe ’ & THE PONTIAC PRESS, _FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 e Students Burn | ‘Negro in Effigy Boycott High School in Arkansas rretotng Integration | 7 VAN BUREN, Ark, (AP)— ae a guard's threat to shoot rebellious white youths Coma | Sere bv ames ree campus of integrated Van Buren any Negro pupil from entering the x * * Several of the 50 boys who staged a boycott of the school yes- terday boasted that their parents were behind the group and had/ given them permission to: strike. Parents of most of the youths held -a meeting last night. The mothers and fathers appointed a committee to ‘look into what they ’ termed their “‘legal rights.” say:‘"The kids took the first step (the boycott) today; now it is up| Lyon to us.’’ * * * Van Buren, a west Arkansas city of 6,000, integrated its high school under a federal court or- der in September 1957. Thirteen Negroes are enrolled, There were no reports of vio- lence last year but resistance to integration exploded when the 1958-59 fall term started Tuesday. Chrysler Corp. Buys Up More: Stock in Simca MIAMI BEACH, Fla. u — Chrys- ler Corp. has increased its interest in Simca, a French auto company, from 15 to 25 per cent. L. L. Colbert, po ened president, in- position in the world auto market. He said Fiat owns 30 per cent of the French company. One 35,000 ton battleship re- quired, 150,000 pounds of rubber, enough to equip 2,000 passenger automobiles complete with spare Ms Z LOUIS C. LUNDSTOM - Heading the 1958 Advisory Committee for the 12 Oakland County townships _ participating in the Metropolitan Detroit Unit- ed Foundation is Louis C. Lund- strom, director of the General Motors Proving Grounds, Mil- ford, The 32-member board in- = representatives from Ad- son, Commerce, Farmington, Groveland, .Highland, Holly, , Milford, Novi, ‘Rose, Springfield and White Lake town- ships, Clarence 0. Bales of 8210 Commerce Rd., Walled Lake, was renamed the region's rep- resentative on the UF’s Board of the Directors, and Harold O. Hansen, Huron Valley School District superintendent, was elected to the committee. ~ Business Notes Edward J. Henkel, of 31625 Briarcliff, Franklin, has been ap- pointed director of Swift Engineer- ing Co., Inc. of Royal Oak. He is also. vice presi- j the sheet metal” HENKEL and die business for the past 25 tire. years. In Lake Michigan Off Sheboygan Di&cover Remains of Ship Believed Sunk in 1847 | SHEBOYGAN, Wis, (UPI)—Two Army specialists fave discovered at the bottom of Lake Michigan the remains of a ship believed to be a four-master that sank 111 years ago with a loss of about 250 lives, The men are SP/4 Richard Blackman of Los Angeles, and SP/4 Harry Laviguer of Auburn, |Lake Wash. They are with an antiair- craft arfillery unit at Camp Haven near here, * * * The ship—about 1,000 -feet off Sheboygan’s shore—is believed to be the Phoenix, which met a flam- is death during the winter of 1847, There are no accurate figures telling how many were lost in the catastrophe, but it is esti- mated about 250 persons were killed. Only 46 were saved. Nearly allt of the 300 passengers were Dutch immigrants who were headed for Sheboygan. They had boarded ‘the ship at Buffalo, N. Y * * * Bad weather forced the ship to pull into Manitowoc, Wis., where it) took on fuel. When the high winds subsided, the Phoenix started out, * in the dead of night, for Sheboy- gan. About an hour out of port, the al! Ie saa ca 11316 is Ziriaiei CIARIE Te PA be hee He LN Jl) Pe Alb lel y) ITIAINIAL pfs i IL) EIVIEIN, iditbed _|definitely, © They said they could see the out- line of the ship beneath the water. The soldiers, both amateur skin divers, decided to have a look at the remains. According to their reports, the wreckage appears to be & four-masted ship about 180 feet long and down about 20 feet, They said there was no doubt that the ship burned before sink- ing, but they had no positive evi- dence that it was the Phoenix. The men hope they can retrieve some of the ship's navigational equipment in order to identify it Tree Expert Offers Reminder for Safety KENT, Ohio (UPI) — Planters are reminded, to. attach pieces of ground stakes, help keep th trees rect until they have developed root networks to anchor them into place. But Davey warned that the wires could easily trip an unwary passerby unless they're made clearly visible. 4 (Grains Steady, ‘Dealing Slow feelings disappear). and skim milk are more satisfying than other diets. —Bulky salads also are hepful in decreasing hunger because they —Diets containing high protein. take a long time to chew, —Fruits and vegetables of low calory content are good as “space fillers” and also provide many necessary food elements. Interlake Iron Slips CLEVELAND (# — Directors of Interlake Iron Corp. today de- clared a dividend of 10 cents a share on common stock compared with 35 cents at this time last year. It is payable Sept. 30 to stockholders of record Sept. 15. MARKETS |Few Progress e=lin Today s Mart} 2 Judge Doesn’t Dig ‘Burns SALT LAKE CITY’ @ — Judge Willis. Ritter doesn't dig these and shave, explaining that he wouldn’t pass sentence until the youth appeared with a presentable haircut. A ‘bear,’ in Wall Street and on other stock exchanges, is a broker who sells for future delivery) >" securities which he does not own Zenith Rad .. STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK— (Compiled by the ‘Aa- sociated Press): 15 60 _ dndust Rails vin. coal wags Net Elvis Presley sideburns. When a Noon Friday sin run) Lint 24 186 $ 17-year-old juvenile appeared be-| week ago sreess q43 Mine 81.5 ise fore him for sentencing on a mis-|Weer™ ger ty 18% “Hit demeanor charge, Judge Ritter 1988 high seas 4 i127 92% 1987 ordered him taken to the Salt|isst nigh [2.1 3000 150? 7S lone County Jail for a hair cut|!987 low [11'/2260 76.2 06.2 1508 oe co Nephler o.) . Pigures after Socsenet aay og are eighths High Low Noon 2 at the time of the sale. Allen Elect & Equip Co, * 2.3 5 — Pests Co. F eve 14.6 15.6 Co xe 26 a7 GL ons & chen co ow 186 £16 18 Howell Elect M Co * 6.6 6.5 Peninsular M Prod Co * 9.3 10 The Prophet Co *....,.... B44 4 Rudy Mfg ‘co. Saar eet 8 8 Toledo Faison CO ores. 45 145 145 Wayne Screw Prod Co, * 32 «£5 *No sale; bid and asked. ing. \ 4 \ x &* * “It’s an urge from the heart,” said Ertle, president of the American Culinary Federation, as the group opened its con- vention Wednesday — 150 top U.S. chefs in attendance. \ “Men have . more of the creitive urge,” he said. “They have a great natural talent, and they take the cre- ative arts into cooking.” , What‘s more, they've been at it longer. CAVEMAN THE CHEF - “When the caveman: hunted and made his kill, he cooked it over an open fire and — “Any man who ‘More Creative Urge,’ Says Chef ‘Any Man Can Outcook Wife’ LOS ANGELES (AP) takes over in the kitchen can out-cook his wife.” . So says Eugene Ertle, a chef, a widower and a student of the soulful side of cook- Ertle said. “Then it an. women still - other piece ter nourished brought it home to his woman that way,” _ “Gradually she took over the “whole job of food preparation.” And, said Ertle sadly, too many “THe average “American family is bet- Ertle, who is‘ from Alsace-Lorraine, the French-German borderland, times American women are a iitle care- less in the preparation of the f _Ertle is chief of the Unitéd Air Lines | 210 Orcherd Lake Ave. flight kitchen. ” ee ‘zone manager in Los Angeles prior , to the announcement of his new — Lodge Cdlendar _ mmunication of Pon- " Bept. 5, oN ay pam. Gerald i “Mioors, News in Brief Tom Croskey Jr., 39, of 48 Jacokes St., was found guilty yes- terday of drunk driving by Mu- nicipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. He was fined $100 or 20 days in jail. Bauman’s Restatfrant, 600 E. South Blvd., was burglarized last night and $32 in change taken) from a cash box. Austin-Norvell Agency, Inc. > 70 W. Lawrence, Corner Cass FE 2-9221 was discovered food could be made by grinding meal. That was a tedious | job, so the man turned it over to his wom- x * * regard cooking as just an- of household Gatee-- than those in Europe,” said “But some- Now’s the Time | for Thrifty Buyers WE MUST CLOSE OUT _ ALL 1958 Buicks! * Huge Savings for You.) re * Limited, Scipply: So Hurry! OLIVER MOTOR ‘SALES Phone FE 2.9101 é 7 ceatgy Nill -enirvagtior. Bonga 2g Be turned home in late afternoon from|lished by the American Medical] attack, , : CHICAGO (~The grain futures|Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK @—A few issues/her husband’s funeral, she saw a/| Association. : ata, SR WR gs _|market was s oer nny | Dettet Baleed et Markets, ab gf eMe eee ey teemeal danke toned onan hae’ As Mrs. A. looked at her “dou-|.4) persons may have autoscopic _. in rather slow early dealings on/ Tuesday, stock market early today. Trading} As she turned on the light, she|ble’ she felt that it was more alive ces, especially in mo - the Board of Trade. was fairly active. noticed that the woman wore ajand warm than she was, Dr. Lu-| ents of. stress, he said. One *¢ © *€ Produce -Most key stock showed fractional replica of her own coat, hat and |kianowicz said. Feeling extremely| suthor believes them to be of no Dealers said the trade appeared gains or losses. veil. Without bothering about the|tired, she lay down. As soon as since hallu- to be restricted on one side by|, mae a r The. market was mixed in, an|intruder, Mrs, A, began to undress. |she closed her eyes, she lost sight | cinations “are merely activity” in : ; bluet berries Merater ie’ gts, 2... Sguglactive opening. Prices continued|'The other woman did the same, jof her apparition. Almost at once , of. recall: prospects for large yields of the a the brain’s area major crops and reports of mount-| Canteen, (orate) - 3%) uneven as trading slackened some-) Only then, looking into the stran-|she felt stronger, as if the “life of|" wien : the Peaches, Red Haven, | .. 3.50 | what. ger’s face, did Mrs. A, realize that|this” astral body” was coming|,...\ 1. ing tension in the Chinese Commu- Pears, Bartlett, bu. “38 double” usually appears suddenly nist-Nationalist situation, Watermelon, bu. - 2.50 American Telephone, selling ex- she was staring at herself, as if in back into her body. and without warning. Most fre- Most price changes were limited . |dividend, was up a point at the|a mirror, She continued to be visited by quently the patient “sees” only: the to minor fractions. 2.75 jOPening, but virtually erased this Mrs, A. was experiencing an her double daily, usually zo dusk, face, or the face and bust; less Prices had sosheass sseas . 349)gain later. , unusual, yet long known, medi- _— she was alone. ime would frequently he sees the whole fig- what near the end of the first 320) Kroger, still affected by ru- | cal m—an autoscopic |S€¢ it — when looked |e, The specter is seen clearly hour, with most contracts on |° "+30! mors of a stock split mats ee hallucination, in which one’s own straigh ck & and with — It generally has ‘ orn, sweet, § doz. ..... Chae eees -90| dividend, resumed its vance, | body © image is projected into | no color frequently the losing side. Wheat was % |Cucumbers, ail ie Mi ccaecacsss O00 Whenever it happened, Mrs. A. bushel lower higher, gS er ee 75| gaining well over a point. Art- | visual space. S , parent. .It usually imitates all perl $1.86); way to % pert tu ee dos. inseaes near 138 loom, which tripped more than 2 The first report of autoscopy aelt ” 2 had +, pee movements, particularly the facial oem, Gates ba a poi pad fag Lee nto bch I dos - Z sear eet = points yesterday, recouped about (alent a uae ss could nok an ta haba = uies” A gegen expression, of its “original,” , AAO 9 4 ; half that loss. . * ered changed to % lower, September [Pess. dieckeye, bu. .............-+. 2.08 a walk without seeing his double|pjained, ‘In a detached intellec-| ‘The most emotional 6134; rye unchanged to \, higher, Pertioy Rost, ‘vehs.i des. : as U.S. Tobacco was more than aicoming toward him) is attributed al way Tam fully aware that my| reaction to seeing one’s double Is September §1.26%4; soybeans un- |Ryaioc. (OAs) (50, Ibs. --+++.+- 1.20\ point to the good Steels, motors,|to Aristotle. Although the roman-|*double’ is only an hallucination.| sadness, often amazement or changed to % lower, September |fadisher white, Mhebe.* doa. ccc. aaj arenas, wry isregal and utilitiss|tic theme of the double appears in/yet I see it; I hear it; I feel it sees, on ee $2.23%4; lard -unchanged to 3 |squash. summer "JINN 90}were narrowly irregular wereimany 18th and 19th century lit-|with all senses. faction, author said. cents a hundred pounds higher, |Timstoes, No. 1. baxt,) 14° tbs. ".. 1-00 about unchanged and chemicals|erary works, it was introduced into|y feel it sag a living, integral part| subjective sensory feeling of Export business through the gov-|capbage we GREENS 1a Westen paced ew Ssetooaly end of the last century. of my own ‘astral body.’ It is me,| quent. Collards, BU. ......ccececcseseesssoe L2S1IN @ SpUrt O! i ” ernment subsidy program broad- |Colards. b 25) A bit on the minus side were|, yates yet, ~ has been written split and divided The phantom 2 appears } ened slightly overnight. Must oo'yJones & Laughlin, Goodyear, | me © agre phenomenon, | we cause of Mrs.-A.’s difficul- |the visual space in front id it bnetuded $00,000 boahels of eee aban Wi '"so-7----s22:,t46| Woolworth, United Aireraft, Souta-|7 °°" osbital. Bristol, England. | © i Bot knows. It seome to be jpatient. The Whole | expements said it included 900,000 bushels o : ern Railway. and American Cyana- ‘en cases of auto.| *mewhat related to other hallu- od corn, mostly for September and SALAM GREENS wal inid. He reported seven cases 0 and may occur from once ina Se er oe pees oy ot ee Sl ee erm ae (es one ee of ba ; i els of 0a scarole, ached, BU. ..ssceeee E a : : and 36,000 bushels of rye. ees me Cee? Ot 13s} New York Stocks . capes: tn teenie oobhi ‘* * & c > . (Late Morning Quotations) senths | ee an eee nee ies|..No yor for autoscopy is rain Prices Figures after decimal point are ¢! on ac 0 Or - : « sacnes amen Poultry and Eggs acura ...... 13.2 dacods os (LS shout a i treatment of _ coexisting ae ‘ u A J . _= 3 giicaao, ich ans a DETROIT POULTRY Allied ch 89 kelsey “Hay ".. 386 sult of some irritating process = ran elon, par P rg cing Pi helpful. gra . oa ,| pDETROIT. Sept. 5 (AP) — | Prices Allied Sirs: .. 478 Fer nscott i SS romotes ree the ‘brain, and the psychologic, nace Bee. Siocs Ebase Bee 000000 BH Re a2 aunty liv poultry: Dr Tor alum Ld oe Me Kresge, 88°01. 8 . which sees in autoscopy wip deral Men. B Mar. ..,... 9T% Mar. ........ 67% type hens 18- ¥Pelam Airiin .. 215 Kroger ...--- 5 ; jection of “‘memory pictures, n a May .csove 1.96% RYE he 3, heavy type brol -—" and Am Can ....- 47.2 Lehn & F sags 34 ry “s 2 e era. e g oii iage ale SL a Gi BE BP tee | Appointments in Soles aa. i sation te suet tat) OT cop ot Bee ES May TTT Lang] 7% Corer 8 BY Bae Am Motors .. 17, Leckh aire ::: §8'| Go to Copeland, Curie|Sooensatory or wish - fulfilling uck Qnooters co ee Am Tale Tel 16s Vent 8 tn 24! and Vorhes mechanism, illustrated by one P2-lart Harsen’s Island Deo. ccs:. 118% Sep. .-+e.- Be ae me ott ts Se ata: “federal: Anaconda, ; $0.3 Low, & eet wi tient who saw himself conducting ; agree Dec. 21... 11-10! state grades ‘Armour & Co 1®1 Manning. .... 255 an ETROIT (UPI) — Federal 1 Three personal appointments have dD Fe atta: large S-as| Archit, --- 724 Mels"cs'.-° Gibco emnounced by. Frank V.|,_S¢% intelligence, ecucation. “8° |agenis and Michigan Conservation Sve, 3800; small 38°29, wed. avg. s0%.| Balt & ie 2 ee ns Ss Bridge, general|*™ oor ‘Neither Aieos t agents eoneet : Truman Staff Goes Grade B large, 48-51. wid. avg. 40%5.| Boeing air 1. 442 Mere ch & 8 | 163 sales manager of{702_ 1% autoscopy. ‘N om thaahon's Saeed oc maid ; grade A extra large, so €/Bohn Alum _. 19.6 Mpls Hon .... 98.6 ; there seem to be a particular type 128 ath 53, jum 38-40, wid. ave. checks d Str ... 18.7 Minn M&M ... 93.2 Pontiac Motor for ‘the|this morning and arrested 18 per- : 30-32, wid. avg. a 436 Monsan Ch... 34 of personality necessary sons for shooting and selling wild + on ela ayro = rgecsipts of government! Borg Warn .. 326 Mont Ward .. 382 Division. . Among Dr, Lukian-/5 0). 5 ae wt 8.3 * Ms a Mrs. Tt asen graded; none. Bron Balke io iy Mueller Br oH Pirie een Pigg teee ging tonne per- _The 18 * wets scheduled sy Sa KANSAS CITY (AP) — Former ae i Murray : 33 ope: , fecti tale: oe Eat so mel araiened before Federal Judge President Harry S. Truman’s cler- . Cal Pack .... 49.7 Nat Bisc .. . S08 been named as- onist 3 Ralph M. Freeman (at 11 a.m.). ical staff of three is going on the Livestock Gampb ‘Soup 424 Nat Dairy ... 448 sistant dales pro-|narcissistic trends; one was 9 (YP. The federal agents, two deputy | federal payroll, — Gan Pac |... 283 Nat “104.8 otion manager. a U.S. marshals and conservation Thomas G. Jay, regional com- DETROIT. Sept TAP) Cattle: -Sal- Capital Alri. i No —s Se oe joined Pon- echinophrente. agents met at 6 a.m, at the Har- missioner of the General Services affair. steady wacattered salen wily Case. JT ne 213 Ror Se Pw : 308 tiae in 1937, and a seems to be no signifi- _ . rag « aig hye ry. ov- ment "was, recched. yesterday | {Sts Sender atte essen ate) Greet OF. GO e Seems SMG, , tistant car dis:| Payehlatric disorders asd aute- |off Algonac, The marshals had ment was reached yesterday, [og et ser ety eens toe 18. eee Glize ave “gal Pac G & Bi uas| COPELAND Maggs is.| scopy, he said. However, there |their van and hustled the 18 back i re and ; ‘. 50 Pan AW Air 17 |tributor, district manager, assis-| § : »* : é 4 ee |pension bi cassidy Cmasene| n’Compared Inst. song pce slaughter Guett Pee *7 42.2 pan er iice '. 4zg(tant zone manager, and zone mana-| does ‘seem to be “more than |to Detroit after getting many of ‘Aug. 28, It provides $50,000 to for-| s . ow beg: + Sarg ble conte = = Soe Palm “es Parke Da .... 916/ger. ° ; mere chance affinity” between jthem out of bed. = : é spats ca ; Most good to low choice| Co! Brd A .. 343 Penney, JC .. 98 zk ok Oe autoscopy and eptlepsy (two of | State Police, who didn’t have & er chin: mai peaiien help seata ESOT teeeed fea eeks| Com Mo aed 2. ean’ Pepsi Cola": 24 | ‘Named managér of - Pontiac’s| his patients were epileptics) and jpart in the raid, said the federal \ 9; aroun our is . : * . ie the ' aa expiadinds ree afta ind veime: 1900-1108) Com Beis 33 00d aaa Nebraska sales zone is Robert V.| migraine, although its character jagents still are looking for three - caical ad panies nd paid for |*e%,2! 24.50; most and Cont Bak .... 38.7 Phill, Pet .... 402 = lon and pa 700-900 helfers 24.50-26.80; utility|Cont Can. 49 Broct & G ... $4. the ducks clerical help out of their own|S8¢ standard heifers 20.50-24.06; citer eS ie HS ROA Oo 02! 3 wl keep a pervonal| on a Sead ae One BE RE BY : 2 ee a cu Py ||. 112 Rey B.. b 5 _ secretary,.. an administrative ~ ad stendy Ife higher, |Beere ee a 43 Royal 7 trey Stat and 8 stenographer. are 1 we "el Be Pktee EP BY - ; “oa ars b.. 325 H py I we Sie oo Bal S: oo gy red last, week: slaughter! East fod... aa¢e Sinclair... 507) @ Fad ene eee Be in ardaer good and choice 22.00-24.00; utility and| serie RR .'.. 9.5 Sperry Ra --. 19. Saas sir ears peated Be Be: to Lose Weight 60-5 Ib. feeder lambs ‘19.50-22.00. ot as Be = 33 25 cents lower: i ay Tre 6 Stevens IP. 6 LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Fast oy haa 2 & te butchers | Gen ete) _ ae: J eaters have a harder time reduc-| |b. 30. 6-34.20: load No. 2 219 1b. weights = Bice $33 caer she = 33 than other people, according] 17.00-18.75 oaiions oe sae Sylv EL Pa 2. 404 | are : CUP a Oe ture free a farmers mark- ioe Los Angeles County Health eeeet y= eet and Gea Shoe Be Tex 2 ou .. a re ol 17360 Locherbie St., et; yee tai : oad -8 baseball oes “s summer, wumeeel ‘3 Thomp “Pd .. 55.4 thfie! — : The explanation is that persons Gerber gg Timk R Bear 42.6 float parade. Climax of the three-day event ~ who don’t take time to chew their Wait Till You L Gootien a Temeasae $2] 2; ernee the new manatee e 4 & will be reached at 12:30 p.m. Sun- food thoroughly generally overeat ' ov Learn Goodye 923 Twenty Cen , 33.7 he the- Jackson- of the ; = because the brain is slow in reg. About Teachers, Honey! Orn oeire sgh Un Carbide 1081 ony i that the stomach is full. Grevhound ... 161 Un Pac ...... 30. arabe ie" * atten oe oo Horan Gros ss. ¢4 4 Galt Alves. $44 Holian 11 : 50. A Health Department article said : “~~ to “"!* g9.9 Tn Gas as dieters can lose weight with less|Shoqq, Seance Of Starting iosgse, Bs" 33$ Oe moe os discomfo = ust Ra : eee . ih trom the table feel|>,7%*,dauahter of Mr. and Mrs ing and) 03 UR ey, i. # —Getting * . h “Conrad C, Brown, Cindy returned linteriak Ir |) 216 Westg A Bk .. 25. pt slightly hungry. ( ptr gd from her first day in clas¢ and int mere” 399 wun 2 Os ae eeling will disappear in about told her parents: ‘}imt Nick .... 822 Woolworth .. 484 an hour, the article said, and as} «Now 1 know what kindergarten |Jt Paver ::.108) Yale & Tow 30.1 ‘the bod used to the lower = Int Shoe .,.. 34.6 Young B&W . 34.4 2 y Grows e is all about—no mamas! Int Silver °°". 36.4 Yngst Sh & T 102.7 food intake, Int Tel & Tel $i the after-mea] hunger imo: ea" 6) VORHES ae » THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5.1958 } ln vs ge Pore the! in 1863 ; Refuses to -Recognize|jabiea “Military Hills” \ where Northern Michigan copper deposits “gli ‘o a ip e Red China Proclamation etate corted: arnas slowly: slide |r cone Peninania Of 12-Mile Sea Limits~ | ‘The $2,700,000 project generally! the stretch of U.S. 45 under : construction winds through hilly LONDON (AP) — Britain today country laced with small creeks “announced she fully shares Amer- ica's concern at any attempt to impose territorial, changes by use of force in the Far East. The Foreign Office made Brit- ain’s position clear in a statement on the warning issued to Red China yesterday by Secretary of State Dulles, * *& * Dulles emphasized that Presi- dent Eisenhower would not hesi- tate to commit American armed forces to the defense of Quemoy and Matsu Islands if it became evident that Communist attacks on. them constituted a threat ‘to Formosa. There is little doubt however, that Britain would be unhappy if power was thrown in to defend the islands. American military x * A Foreign Office spokesman was asked for Britain's reaction to China’s proclamation of a new * 72-mile sea limit around its coast. He said the British government does not recognize territorial wa- ters of more than three miles in extent. ‘The extension of Chinese terri- torial waters complicates British ~ US. on Formosa #- i] : aN Be ia early today. * * * The Duke, Barnum of burglar, having pocketed scrambled for freedom, earn its Pa 2 2 have the same mess of country home at Woburn, 7 cents—to look over. Duke Is Bored « After Losing $100 to 12th Burglar LONDON (AP)—An. enterprising burglar locked the enterprising Duke of Bedford in his bedroom bluebloods, heard. the key turn and scrambled for the phone. The watch, heard the phone and “Tt’s becoming a bore,”’ said the duke, who was lately host to a nudist convention in his efforts to make his — country home “This is the twelfth time we've been burgled — and always we glass to clear up,” he explained. The burglary was at the duke's London apartment. Thieves have always stayed clear of his huge he charges people half a crown— about $375,000. _ . x * British a $100 ninsula, broken | pacity. ich | hill. which . +* follows the course of. the military for miles, making the average eost about $350,000 a mile and putting it in a class with some four lane. expressways. Plans call for a two lane, 24- ‘\foot roadway with one bridge, ov. er the Ontonagon River, costing * The route has “a light traffic count — only about 400 cars a day — but strategic importance, especially for vacationing motor- ists northbound for the Porcupine Mountains and the Keweenaw Pe- The Military Hills are two big lumps of clay separated by a wide virtually unbridgeable notch ‘ cut by the Ontonagon River. The. characteristics of the clay pose one of the main problems. Reddish, it has the consistency _| when wet of tooth paste and tremendous water retention ca- Fissures break the ground at 30 to 40 foot intervals as the sur- face stretches in creeping down- * Always near saturation, the clay Take On Fabulous Road Job in UP ROCKLAND w — Michigan road flooding. road foundation. rs hope ing clay. x * imade before the course is applied. per for military moved on it. Wilkins, bridge floor ‘ protect against To solve the problem of sliding clay, more than one million cubic yards of waste rock from copper mines will be dumped into a wide trench in the center of the right of way being excavated to depths of 30 feet in places to provide a Designe , heavy and solid enough to resist the sliding action of the surround- The roadway will run _{on top of the rock fill. As a hedge against unforeseen difficulties the finish surfacing will be done in two separate operations spaced a year or two apart so that any needed corrections can be To help overcome water and drainage problems, 2,009 feet of the bank of Sandstone Creek — an Ontonagon River tributary — will be riprapped, culverts will be constructed up to lengths of 500 feet and the new 350-foot bridge will be set in at an angle. There is an ironic historical foot- note to the tough highway job. Its ancestor, the Military Road authorized by Lincoln 95 years ago, wasn't finished until the Civil War was nearly over. Little, if any, cop- And only a few years later, Fort the other justification cited for its construction, was aban- 4 it will prove * * * final surface * purposes ever them. * ‘House Bombed inLondon Riot Two° “Policemen Trying to Put Out Ensuing Fire Besieged by Mob LONDON (AP) — hurled gasoline bombs into a Ne- gro’s house last night, then be- sieged two policemen who dashed in to put out the blaze. The house in Paddington, an ° area adjoining London's racial storm center of Notting Hill, had been bombarded with milk bottles" and garbage earlier in the day. The mob gathered quietly short- ly before midnight. pants, a 27-year-old Jamaican and his wife? were not at home. Neigh- bors on either side were quietly told to move out. . The door of the target house was broken down and bombs were. hurled into the hallway, Two Policemen dashed in and threw one bomb back into the street. It burnd two girls in the crowd. Then the -mob — mostly teen- agers—turned on the police. They dashed back into the house and barricaded themselves agaipst a barrage of stones and” ‘bettles. Fire engines and’ police rein- forcements turned up to rescue Race rioters more than‘ 65 billion dollars. This was an increase of 3 per cent over SG + 2 W. 61°15°05" W. a. be oie raced to the district to break up| A" = zoning ing M gangs chanting “‘Lynch the nig- he “tye in eee pated Town- gers.” Three men Were arrested feu nt mar ex : A : ADSIT STEWART. Construcfion Record Set _ WATEREO te OARS WASHINGTON — For ‘the 12th : ~ straight. year, construction in_ the sits.000 United States. broke ddllar-volume COMMUNITY SCH records in 1957, reaching a total of “eeyaro COUNTS: x * That part of Sec. 2 an a it. TIN, ROE, ship ot Plat No. 2! th rs e Town-| $10 if a June 1, 197 called to be redee 1956 by the © 8 . trict, han an, Par value of $179,000, will be received by | or Re “purpose of awarding the hu ve be received by the pan pul . ie, Vilage the nterest. cost of ach a ‘ * §* Board. ma: co = of commlesiinare of Cl eats ean gn ae — be computed by deigrmining, ft ota of hg 24 (20 Pontiac ¢ Road, Pontiac, |on ries arc day of September. dollar value of all ee cate Michigan, until 1:30 och m., Eastern | 1958, at ay," i ‘and place said bids from October”, 1958 Standard Time, ‘September “22,| will’ be publicly opened on pa | maturities and —, ung be awarded to poe and will ‘be wbllay «2 Pan and iit will tea « — s ee nader whose bid the a date po furnishing the i oe Ah y $1,000 p< “wil be num- computation Lado get _ Toweat eer r season's requirement of Calcium |bered utively in the direc = fad parchene a Jess than alt of the x * ne oa —— ae pode =. ree | bee - ‘es he = = bonds or at a price Jess than ae ill be red. “*rnformatt » bidding blanks and s a their date a rate or ne ee ex-| Value, w [fications may be obtained upon Freq Feques poe ll ser Fir per annum, payable on Sr or cashier's natn b- in The occu-|Bids must be made u Oakland County oe ag Hn hho a fon Pig poe a — on mgt bidding ¢ December 1 and June 1 | SRO to the order of the Treseurer proposale mus must = plainly marked Each" ha shall state the annual interest yer tke istrict ‘must eccompan as 7 the’ rate or rates upon which it is submitted, ach bid as ‘a guarantee of ait The Board -teserves the right to Pelect | ex in multiples of % of 1%. The) Onno nant of the bidder, be fore any or all pro or to waive defects |in aro Fis ta each coupon period on|fiiseq as ih wiésted dateaaes if ouch nde op +o, = bond shall Be at ons rae(iet eiatatte the bidder fails to opinion of .the rd, is in the best/on is yin interest to date of de- take pay for the bonds. No interest and to the advantage of the/livery of such bonds must be: “paid by | pace Pe ant SF” eliowed ey the goo Board of County Road ssioners of|the purchaser at the time of delivery./ (oth checks and checks aes the County of Pakiens. a ‘ d bonds will mature serially on the) !2t0h,) bidders por i coh > ee of the County of Oak. ist day 0 of June in each ge Sg ogg oy to each bidder's representative or by v4 en year from ister: mail. OP THE |and 18 000 in each year from 1076 to| "8! UNTY OF OAKLAND, 1904, a Hi years inclusive. Bonds matur-| ids ‘anal De conditioned upon | 4 MI : g in the years 1969 to 1984, both in- Dene McKean and Cudlip ‘Claude’ H - SOL D. LOMERSON elusive, are subject to TeAenpaen fd | ores ok Gamal. avers ett, ROBERT O. FicLT the school district prior to maturity, in| Brovens. 0! ving the le aiity ie ok’ * LEE 0._BROO! inverse numerical order, on any one or pond e' Th ug oe St ah sald cond) opinion Sept. 5, 1958 more jaterest Fo aor we Teen —— and of the printing of the bonds will r June a r an NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN OF Alinterest plus a posted on each bond aa = Pe eve en *Betroit. Michigan. ublic hearing to_be held by the Water-|in accordance with the following ge ight is reserved to reject any tons ip Hall, Zoning Board” at i ae led to b di d or all Naa i . 5. eane: * } mober 1 e redeeme on or 10, 1958" 7:30 p.m, to Cons! er the 7 1968 but prior to June|, Envelopes containing the bids ~~ be ae mares “Proposal for Bon Dai ed Bente r 3, 1958. To change from Recreational to Com- * 930 if called to be redeemed on or , mercial: after June 1, 1971 but prior to June Sec A _w rALTON T. oF ation That part of the East 350 feet which|1, 1974. Notice 4 any ather cteer that the aboves is not now zoned Commercial of the fol-| $15 if called to be redeemed on‘ or mentionsd issue of bende hes ‘qualt- gi description: after June 1, 1974 but prior to June fied to the extent of 100% by the Mich- or|igan Superintendent of Public Instruc- tion pursuant the to Act No, 181 of OR_3-7061 proper- and international shipping traffic can absorb little rainfall, making|doned permanently without ever a} In Notting Hill, firemen put out |§ on ae pee County" 0 of berinning a 1 a ee prior to. June Public Acts of 1885, as amended. to and from the British colony of} The U. S. has more than 400/for a difficult runoff and drainage|shot being fired at Indians or any|a blaze in a basement occupied! s "NW corner of Walton Blvd. th (gad Pon-| 35 it called to be redeemed on or sank 2 WALTON bee INS. 4 ; steel plants in 250 cities. ; problem, and for a high other targets — except in practice.'by a colored family. A~gasoline $135" Woolies Gh there We. eee atte June 1 1980. oe pee 7 5 'S8. 8. e 80 Notice r ption shall p Sept. Death Notice _ roves 1 ecee: J Wanted Male 6) Help Wanted Female 7| Work Wanted Male 10| Building Services 12! Moving & Trucking 19| Notices & Personals 25|Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 32 PP PPP LALLA LALA” HOME FOR MIDDLE AGED COU. PPP PPP DPB LOL PPL LLL LLL PLPPPL LL son anes Executive, Salesman | SRM5 ponte oP Be Gan | Heit Meta aGaNE| © ROOR REPAIRS | 14 ize magung 2 mumnnn.| OD aYRPOGay ARI | cCORENAGTE MARTE friends, s, relatives Perm "position with protected FE 44049 of value, All work guar-| ZEAVESTROUGHING FE 4 per load. FE 28-0145. OR 3-342! Williams Lake Rd. & ors 44813. Ask garde, and acts Kindness ex:| Wiriiery, 30 Michigan, also Siinsts, sooMEWORE Hi 3 ORGE, BED I | oust, Fe Rea teed, FE 41738 TRERCING. EXCAVATING FOR | TTING” FOR | 41 MOVING — RAULING — Baal ee Glare. mrement in he fonot Lcone| nea™vepeis yenriy™ Thats oak | RIRGHEN HELE FOR “NiO | “Lat, cleared. tite eoimuie. PH | _fitcee & Goat walls on Yous | Reasonable PE ois — FE 2200 |hi0 stmonci nsanisd har ‘IMMEDI ATE Br Dumitrott, A special thanks to| fess repens, yearly. Thess post: Curb iris, days only. Ap. | $8802 WE DIG BASEMENTS UNDER| AA-] se Rates | OR 32008 0 Rev Saaier , wR s| FE $$008 ‘for interview. Blut Big Boy ee In. ub | FouNG ort at ay 21, DESIRES PART houses Bock & cement work. FE) goin aeving Large van of ey WAVES 00 FOR SCHOOL ACTION neral Home, Husband, Mike Dimi-| FACTORY | BRANCE NOW AC after 5 p.m = 50084. pickup FE ¢4864 + Porethy'n, scrner ot ‘GARE FOR SCHOOL r FAMILY MAN NEEDS_1IGH erry. trot & sister, Mes. Frank Gordon. | {POURS SPPDStUoe ioe itso | -ADY ota Bt housework. Building Supplies 12A | FAMILY” Man LIGHT Ou any good land contract. New in Memoriam ai BS. 2 23 : | Sf Union Lake ‘Village. IM: Work Wanted Female 11 | ~~ " moving, rubbish. § oN ea CHAR LES CHESTER | | %y seasoned. Your cash upon sat. MEN NEEDED FROM THE UTT- 3-4203. HAULING & RU AIR CUSHIONED ‘SHOES isfacto inspection 'G@ MEMORY OF KEN- Rochester. Lake Orion, W HOUSE- ~ Complete Your Home our Urice Any wae ae 4 aE ©. 5B MILLER 3-4042| and title. Wemebue. sh ehe paceea suex | me Betis aiver’ Pasw ume in_ Like 1 DAY IRONING GERVICE, $3) Tired of living te incom: | FER MOVING — ib TRUCKING, DAINTY MAID SUPPLIes - 739| K, L. Tem A en “re Realtor . 5, 1950, Position, Knowledge of music nelp- pe ng * References." Midwest eee eS ICE ai piste of basement ee ae cheaper. FE §-1348. FE 8- Menom' Mrs Wallace FE) 9350 Orchard Pies : Somewhere ae f the sunset, Write Pontiac Press, Box 91.| 5918, te. eu VICE, %/ Gown payment. Low rate interest. | LIGHT CHT, TRUCKING aN KIND | _ 7008 ae xis Be thas tad d'the gold of the _. MEN 5M week. 30 _Juiemn Gi. | 14-1 DAY SERVICE ON TROK You're Better Off With | gous no-meavy-wRoaema | & 56 Gillespie. FE 3-1283. SOLD Mother and Pe 2) NEEDED Tg MES cade | te and delver. Fx olen” es BRS i reat nd loading P4400" |" gomimodnio 400 Yor oancuats td drs, Philip John-| Must “bring your wife at time of Bat mand Sun. off. Must |3 WOMEN WANT WALL Waser | FE s-sse0 #2 W._Huros RWANT RD [ARTICLES PICKED | Pantsc” Crea ri sTiot ‘betore WHAT YOU SEE ON OUR * a i ; le 1 Soe RE | Ea esas betes P|, ae a |sooecenring — farezame| __Busivens Services 13 thts: s"esuttig gree rox | Soot Fae a et Tate sper 1.9: Bat: zi "S AIDE, PULLY EXP. NO| through L Statement. ACME ASPHALT PAVING. ouR | —Stske truck. PE 8-6453. In Debt? PROPERTY. ALSO BUY ie hy the . w other ‘need apply. Conv prices are below that of last|MAN WITH % TON TRUCK. LAND CONTRACTS AND EQUI to train for ——— — excep dese Home. a Auburn Rd. CHILDREN — Ce 3 — “IN years. Call] FE 5-1917 for free wants work. Call any time. FE| re you are having trot trouble le meeting | TIES - sweet flowers are “ever| tonal right man. a calls, ase... ristian home 8-999. : ca ae. our paymen See 135 _ Faron 8A FOR YARD GOODS. DAY WORK WANTED ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS WicmGan CREDIT COUNSEL: 2538 D J OLL REAL “TY Le ee -Department experience necessary. PE 8-4638 repaired by factory trained man| | [L]C S to ent LOGE IEC Ems Fonties xi HWY PE 44561 ah Ba Sone PET time work Fabric Mart. 6) Gy OULD LIKE BABYaIT-| S¢,Cet office. General Printing & State Band Bidg. FE #0486. Ready, Willing and Abi More for home than wages. N. Saginaw. No phone calls ting Se ane in Pontiac City — nee ot Pon ae evbe 303s ,_—= FENG aetiunee ~~ KNAPP SHOES Cash A ae for mieas ~~ Shoe Sal Ex a — Ye-ton Pickups 1¥-ton Stakes Pred Herman contract. Call Realtor Partridge, oe Salesman, P. oy as ead Pai LADY WILL BABY Sir we pervice _— of wringer Dump Trucks Semi-Jrailers | 207) Airport Rd OR 3-1599 | _FE 43581 Good eB yt cei mee. rite time, Susette, 241 Pierce, Birm w WANTS He Cee Ew ORE = service a washers. 30 yrs. Pontiac Farm and eine Gi aie & ECO. “ a Te CONTR ACTS. VERIFIER SALESLADIES wAfonday anit, Wednesday, FE/ROvs. se ‘Oariano re saon.| Industrial Tractor Co. | Der-a-plet “Tablets "8 cents at OR 31355 aetcalted “rote “HY ws" S8 yt Mant Sersonsiity Experience in | MIMEOGRAPHING. TYPING sao |, ASPHALT PAVING Open Datiy Daily = "Ofnelnding Sunda tay ON AND ZPTER_ THis DATE Wanted Real Estate 32A route. apparel. Sale retaria) service. EM 32842. ; RELIABLE 4-0461 Sept. 5, ill not be re- Deo Saee st Fontins, ‘Mort Lave car “rampect’ to ¢ e. Su-| GIDDLEAGED LADY WOULD| Driveways, parking lots, & ete. O'DELL CARTAGE | sponsible fe oe y asbte contracted ATTENTION OWNERS ro interview ‘cai! Fie| _ete..201 Pierce, Bam like ba afternoons or| 7ree, estimates. 24 hr. service. 1E ty any ther then m We need listings on houses mee WAN TED | WAITRESS. DAYS. | evenings In Sour bonee, FB 2-¢003. | —MA_ $1206. FE _5-5623. Local and long distance moving. Pavre, E. ist e| farms; acreage. We buy and sell = - Part full time. XXX Ham- ~ASPH. ALT PAVING Phone PE 5-6806 _ Orion, Michigan, ge Poespehonio ce" us on the sale EE: cpg Se a gue: burger. 35 Ww aan eee Pe cae OFFICE ta P ainti & tin 20 ON AND APTER D e hand I | od i ire stimate dri ! Dec 2170 & Sasies Biv. TOYS qual FUN PLUS you’ 13 | PONTIAC BABYSITTERS BUREAU | or arksn 7 fot. We belp finance = nota permeate ter tay Gaus oom: PONT IKC REALT ¥ a SALESMAN No investments "a0 dell — gents ber nF Adult sitters. OR| 1 Bepsodabie Acphat Paring | '97,CLAS® PAINTING AND DuC.| ‘ested 07 Gay einer tae, my. : ee ee ee) eS ae ONiversity 1-508" af late evenings. ivON-TROY CARPET CLEANERS SINERS a HBA... wee eee es $ CASH $$ > leon See food ‘service caupmens. Drow © | TOYS — TOYS — TOYS | *onte.2” DAY OR WEEK. FE| Furniture & carpeting cleaned in| “ine Decoratig, Res’ PE ten| ,, REDUCE NOW 48 HOURS - i ar allowance — ‘have car. — a erart : pal es : - : © pounds in six short days As FUNERAL HOME | ice iey piagmo 3) Benepe az tig | WARNE DORE DT MY HOUE| Sialoe™ nat "Rue Set | ig” oer teamed Pe OR | fee nae Seat) HOME — EQUITY Plane or Motor | HUFF REFRIGERATION CO Sie. Mie dae) uesenaney ne WOMAN WANTS —IRONINGS in| Det, Cleaners. OLive 1-022, Roch-| 4-1 PAINTING AND PAPERING.| ened Call for appointment LAND CONTRACT Punerai | Ambulsnee HIGHLAND, MICH. __ lecting, no delivery. Find out why | HOME, $2.50 A BUSHEL. WHITE SULLDOZING AND LEVELING: Mason _Thom PE _4-8364. aay. 4131. . Donelson-Johns| "aaa acres | roma eran Ee a i ee a A Pinitmoret P| “tet o.pe ern aie, iercaa | Wed. Children to Board 26/ Wright & Valuet . wom gone pets ~ 2 son . REALTO: : Donates and homer. z| fen Gey thought they could ful | weaning AND TRORINGS REAE, | gee oF FB E1eTe, Pree Est. FE 4-020. M5 OARLAKD vENUE |_-spestened™fos Funersten | _ {sh rece | Were cea—tget Sa. | —wastints aa irowtncs— | Wet cena intint arses | Punetmr b allng PO SIN | “ae MR aed Prism DAY | PE Fen FE oa Pt) : ‘ : PAINTING AND PAPER HANG. aDREN LOVED AND CARED Sa. Tears Lots 5 | "\n Auto parts end tire sales that pH For Prosperity, Bossom press. || WEERND IRONING 32 30 EEREND_INOWING. WSU. Chimney - Furnace Work | _ ing. 25 yrs. exp. 37. | _for. FE_2-1730 Sell Us Your Equity CEMETERY paw MOE ers Lake Ra. at Mid. Summer rates on all chimneys, | PAINTING HOUSES i “BARRE. PROFESSIONAL CARE. LI| Don't lose your home cash vom wren g108 er or 6 St oe SS he wens diebelt . WoMAN won ie TO GARR | Cleaning. repairing. and building. | Pree est, MAple “5-6108 or gensed home. fenced yard. FE| ing—no tape. We also need ; Pontiac Press. N LIGHT Iderly patients. Home nights.| !5° furnace, fireplace, water ste ee Sem or MF 5-0575. ~s stings Giroux. ranks. 4305 Dixie *puneral . ee Raves. wb Ww Female 7| Smmrwss. mers for home Ges| 2 Vcenee__ repairing dose ‘now. ‘Specialists, | PAINTING = PAPERMANGING | Wig Household Goods 27 Wo ait ans 25. Six graves $300. LI 2-2167 or elp ‘Wanted Female SS a t= pep targa Pat estimates ruppen’ Atis CLEAWED be FL GAVE OUALIFIED BOYERS ns this he Puneral Home after 7 pm. evening. and and will eat he at the e eparee Griffin Funeral Home until noon sSatur- HES, SEPT. 4, 1958, — faoed e Rd, age nd illiam Le } fear sister of Mrs. Effie aren, Mrs. Paulins Brown, Mrs, Esther Ammons, Mrs. Olivia Brown, and Emmett Hobert, ¢nd Herman Puneral serv- = will be held Monday, Sept. 8, 1:30 pm. from Hunteon Focacis Home with Dr. Tom Malone officiating. Interment in White 1 Cemetery. Mrs. Hughes will He in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home. _ JENSEN, SEPT. 1958, ROBERT Craig, 2491 Lotus Dr., Waterford: beloved infant son of Robert W. and Jo Ann Jensen. Puneral serv- ice will be heid ey. a €, at 16:30 ‘am. from Donelso: Johns Funeral Home with Rev. foward D. Auchard officiating. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Robert is at Donelson- _Johns Puneral Honve MUNTEAN, SEPT. 3. 1958, NIC NICK Z_ 119 W. Pike St.. age 63. Puneral service will be held Monday, Sept 8. at 11 am. from 8t. p Romanian Orthodox Church with Mr. Muntean will lie in state at the Pursiey F — Home. rE. SEPT. . 1958 WILLIA Mj Herbert, Pes i Washington St. Milford, beloved ton, St. of Mrs. Corrie "Nye: dear father | of Mrs. E. W. Lyons and Leon L.' Nye; alse survived be 2 grand- ehildren and 9 great-~grandchil-! dren. Funerai serv: - Il be = Saturday, Bept. 6. 730 from Voorhees-siple yo el Pith | Rey. Paul T. Hart officiating. In- Park Ceme 1 3 . terment e* Perry Mt. asin WILLIAMS. SEPT. 3. 1958, IVA L, 30 P; Yee. Loe ' penen, Caltt | t Mrs, Frances : rs ‘Mrs. Sone sinter f Williams and) roid Parmalee. Pyneral arty held Saturday. Lol t from the: he Voorhees :Siple Funeral Home. 2 pm, ‘aa Mhe| $00 | i ‘Om | i George | interment in Oak Hill Cemetery | | tery. Mr. Nye will lie in ase at EXPERIENCED — cy mn red to! LI 1-7150 : The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-818! From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. iil All errors show aceon. The noon the dav previous to oublication msient Want Ads of pu first insertion. CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1-Day 3-Deys €Da et mek 2 $1.50 $1.86 : 3 1.50 2.70 3.96 4 1.80 3.48 5.04 8 2.25 4.05 6.00 6 2.70 4.86 9.20 q 3.15 6.67 8.40 8 3 60 6.48 «= 8.60 ® 4.08 7.29 8 8=610.80 “f, Help Wanted Male 6 A; ROLLING MACHINE MAN ON Yoder & Tisken. Must set bre | rite operate on molding parts, Pontiac Press Box 83 AT ONCE | One good salesman to sell Real; Batate Must be well qualified. Excellent man. but will consider training = man. Ask for Mr. Brown. Brown Realtor. 1362 W. Ph. 2-4810. Maven, CANVASSERS & ERS FOR ‘modernization sales. Draw & com- mission, Aiso telephone solicitors _PE 2-8248 DRY CLEANING route driver, apply Main creamer __ 4480 Elizabeth Lk. R ‘CAB DRIVEKS, 25 OR OLDER. FE_ 20205 \EXPERIENCED OIL & GAS BUR. | ner installation & service man. ; J Fawcett & Co 908 dams Rd., Birmingham, g, doterment EXPERIENCED STOCK BOY. UN- der * years old. Apply in per- | ee Food Center, ee HAND, MUST BE to milk with ‘machine and F art oy aa . able do general farmi furn, GReenleaf WAITRESS WANTED. MID- iT ST CALL POR TOY DEMON- Sandra Parties, MI evens Earn = much as ay | rE 9 "til noon Feces OPERATOR Must be experienced for steady position. No eves. MI 4-2666, COOK — HOUSEKEEPER, CLE. ing & ‘dinner for. bachelor. § ernoons per week. Union Lake. Must have transportation. Mrs. Brooks, WO 2-5660, ‘til 4:45. CURB GIRLS, 18 YRARS OLD Apply al Jim's’ Drive In. 5430 _ Dixie Hw “Clerk: -typist- -couple : For large eax Estate Co., both full time. Cash $300 month. plus > free: adjoining small furnished —— apt. with private bath; Felectr (afl peda ‘at tele: shone: elec 7; use electric rator-sink with dispo- ae 5-3 756 FOR COM oe ~ lady, Very light work. FE after 6 p.m. DENTAL ASSISTANT, EXPER ence not necessary—must be neat I- State age, educa- and dependable, : tion and experience. Box No. Pontiac Press. EXP DINNER WAITRESS. ernoon shift, 7005 Cooley Lk. Ana. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. AP- ly Beminen 4 Grill in Keego. oO calls. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. AP- __Ply_in person, Pontiac Lake Inn. EXP WAITRESS WANTED, NO Sun. or holidays. Eton Grill, 601 _5_ Eton Birm. ee EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR COOK- in and general, live in, city crews’: Bham area. M EXPERIENCED LADY AS SHORT order cook in restaurant, Room and board with reasonable wages — Call anytime between 8 am. and 1 pm, EM 3-964. EXP. ~ WAITRESSES AND SALAD woman Bloomfield - Restaurant. 6535 _ Telegraph, Own Trans, EXP GIRL. GENERAL HOUSE- work, live in. 2 days off. Good pay, MAyfair 6-3104. EXP, WOMAN FOR GENERAL house work. 3 days and 2 nights. A 6-6607. lees ROOM & BOARD is EX- change for baby sittin light _housework, Call ®E eine Free Toys and Gifts Have A “HOME PARTY” Quality — Low Prices. 8395, GIRL FOR SHIPPING & ASSEM- a dept 719 W “Heron: =| WOMAN FO SILK PRESSING. ea monen Apply Fox Cleaners. WAITRESS AND CURB GIRL wanted ye ag geo Te ogg be over ¥ wa ly in White Swan at ‘at Pontins wane ae EXP, FOR “par. time time work. Apply in person ribs Lani and staurant, 130 __5, Telegra WOMAN a ee FOR CHIL- dren. Live in plus wages. FE 4-1034. . WOMAN TO LIVE IN AND CARE for 3 children, more for home than wages. FE 4-4429 YOUNG COUPLE DESIRES MID- dleaged woman to care for 2 chil- looking. oe you don't find it? Have opening for man or woman. Can make Shere ripe ly wage. Perry, 8 to 1 COUPLE TO imac wee ment building, Free rent and per- centage Good rtunity for re- tired aoe og 188@Mrs. Bill- ing. 9 to 5:30. Clerk-typist-couple : For ebig Real Estate Co., both full time. Cash $300 month, plus free: ‘adjoining smal! furnished heated apt. with private bath; food, cooked & served, TV; tele- phone: electricity; use of electric range-refrigerator-sink with dispo- sal-unit Laundry sent out. Age 23 to 35. Permanent, Good health. Shecomces. Must have car, both drive. Call Mrs. Kelly, JO 46657. Cook Woman with own transportation. Hours 6 am. — 2 idwest Employment, 406 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. FE 5-9227, EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE 511 COMMUNITY BANK BLDG. FE 4-0584 Instructions 9 FE §-8395 | Apply Fox Cleaners, pertly trained. FE 4-840 enced teacher. Call Mrs. Paul FE 4-8458 Work Wanted Male 10 eh, egal SAB pe Ore NEW— Repair FE AVAILABLE