Po} ITIAC PR SS_ keke ‘PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 —44 PAGES “°° TED PRESS . INTERNATIONAL NEWS BE: VICE RESs PHOTOS PONTIAC STAR CHIEF CUSTOM CATALINA 4-DOOR “HARDTOP” SEDAN FOR 1956 United Fund Is Reported at 63 Per Cent of Goal \tion of a toll road in Michigan = Michigan Legislators Tour Ohio Turnpike “If we can be shown construe- tour spoke in favor of a toll road for the state, while one The Pontiac Area United Fund drive has collected is feasible, we're not going to $358,026 since beginning last Tuesday, 63 per cent of the $562,175 sought. - Campaign Manager Robert M. Critchfield made the announcement today before 250 volunteer workers; (have any one man stand in its way.” : This statement was made fast |night at the Commodore Perry |Hotel in-Toledo by Rep. Emil A. from Pontiac and Waterford Township attending a) p42 (R-Rogers City), chair- Ask Court Rule of Stanley Mack: Action Follows Slaying, of Younger Brother in TV Argument ., LAPEER — Undersheriff Wil-| H. Wayne Gabert, firm and |employes, contributed $355; liam J. Porter will file a peti- tion recommending ‘that Stanley A. Mack, 7-year-old son of Mrs. Florence Harp of Lum,.be com- mitted to the jurisdiction of the Probate Court of Lapeer County as a juvenile delinquent. This action follows the death af Lawrence Mack, 6-year-old brother of Stanley, afternoon. i$R5: on Monday).. ——* report luncheon at Stevens man of the Michigan House's said he would not commit him- self until he had gathered more facts, The group had entered the Ohio! Turnpike at Maumee, Ohio, and' been conducted east along it to out,”” he stated, Favor State Toll Road After rip “which I feeli-was ‘moved, only so that the) resulted mainly from individual change would benefit them. selfishness. “It was rumored. that ‘the | route would bisect Elyria, when actually it barely nipped our northeast corner. “It was said our most exclusive | fit.” in Showrooms Friday ¢ “Hundreds of armchair endi-| neers suggested just . where the 4 and 2- Door Catalinas Available in All Three | Series for Coming Year | pike should go, disregarding the’ jfact it had been laid out by. | skilled engineers to do the least} | damage and give the most bene- Elyria, Ohio, by members of the residential area would be ruined J. E. Greiner Co., consulting en-| and residents there made’a loud gineers for both the Ohio and noise because tney had the fi- The turnpike has ‘not proved to be a “Chinese Wall,” as | |Hall, Pike and Williams streets. . | ‘Recent UF contributions . audited at headquarters in the Hotel Pontiac in-) iclude Stewart-Glenn Co., lirm and employes, \$803; Pontiac State Bank’, em-' ployes, $511; Drayton Plains’ branch of the Pon-, tiac State Bank, $150.\ Fed- eral Department Store, $500; Oakland County CIO Council, $100 and Outdoor Parking Co.;! employes and firm, $700. P. T. Standard Parts contrib- uted $100; Hagler’s Radio Shop, | Warren Alloy employes, | $173 and A&W Root Beer, $65. “Early reports look encourag- ing,” Critchfield said yesterday, although somewhat slow in }coming in. If workers will bring) Stanley loaded a .22 rifle and to headquarters what they have, shot his brother following an so far, instead of waiting until ~~ ‘altercation over the switching of all calls are complete, we can’ channels on_the television set. judge our progress better.”’ The rifle belonged to the boy's, stepfather, Robert Harp, em-| ployed by Pontiac Motor Divi-| sion, A. conference Tuesday by! Sheriff. Gregory Clark; County) Prosecutor George D, Lutz and, Mrs. Bernice, Tunison, county “juvenile agent, resulted in the decision. ‘to place Stanley under the jurisdiction of the Probate) Court. Mrs. Tunison has pointed to investigate and keep Stanley under surveilance in- definitely. Man, We’re Fatties DETROIT (—Overweight! Michigan residents are carrying picions that all the Rus- around an excess of 36,288,000 sians wanted from the So says Mrs. Tillie] “Geneva spirit” of concil- pounds. Lewis, a nutrition expert whose survey indicated that 1,944,000 of Michigan's 7,200,000 residents ‘are overweight. Festival Makes Profit CHEBOYGAN (®#—The Chebby-! believe that what will come out against this gan County centennial committee} wound up with a $146 balance on the celebration held during July and August. been ap-|. ihas remained steadfast in his| observers feel the threat of a Roads and Bridges Committee. Peltz spoke after. he and his committee plus some members of the Senate Highways Com- _— were conducted on a r of the new 241-mile Ohio Michigan turnpike authorities. raged in his city of 35,000. when it was learned the Ohio toll road| was routed in_its vicinity. i “A hysteric al reaction broke | pe road by the Michigan Turn- pike Authority (MTA). The “one man’ referred to) in his statement was taken as | meaning Michigan Highway Com-| missioner Charles M. Ziegler who | resolve to build a north-south freeway in the state paralleling the proposed Rockwood-Saginaw toll-road routes ° If Ziegler does not back down, aralilel freeway taking potential | traffic from the toll road would | rhake it impossible to sell toll- 'rgad bonds. VAfter seeing this Ohio turn pike.” said Peltz, “I wish we ‘could have one in Michigan. ‘if legiglation is necessary to make it feasible, I will support it.” Four of the five other Michi- gan \Jegislators whe as bene Catholic Priest, Red China Captive, Reveals Horror of Communist Prison ' Kong border by British officials! MUSKEGON (P—“. . . Da.not worry; -I. am fast becoming my old self—a human being.” Rev: Harold W. Rigney, re- leased Sept. 16 after ‘four years and two months as a prisoner of the Chinese Reds, sent those words in a recent letter to re-) assure his sister, Mrs. Thomas Haggerty of Muskegon. / Father Rigney, former /Dean of the Roman Catholic Fu Jen! University in Peiping, wipe from Hong Kong; “Tam at long last tree from four years and two/months of heli!!!! May the/ good God eternally bless yor for all you did for me.” srpcnamnititaistieniinte fo - / condemned chains that cut deep into my, Dulles Holds Little Hope of Talks Ending Unrest WASHINGTON (INS)—John Foster Dulles mee the Russians in Geneva next week\ without any’ Lugs F hope of an early end to the cold wal : eae If the Secretary of State had hek paign to dominate the Middle East by eidling for influence. That is real+— ws. - cold war. 1 A bate @ ot | That campaign tended) progress wld tied to confirm Western sus- als Area Prediction tempera ‘Europe and a free hand jain with ‘everywhere else. contacts. iation generated by the summit conference last July was a stalemate in The best brains in Washington, of the Geneva meeting of the! foreign ministers of Britain,' France, Russia and the U, s. starting Oct. 27 is this: European security system and disarmament--just enough progress to rrant another foreign ministers mee ting/ later. \ / d 2. Some progress towa have tacts. to. take ‘a calc relax restrictions jon travel, 4 In Today's Press Cloudy, ( Cool Again The U. ¢: Weather Bureau pre- | dicts hittlé change in -weather or) res tamorrow. . Th e| skies will be cloudy today and. contjfnue through the night! and tomorrow. The forecast for: today is a high of 60 and a low, toni ht of 40-44, ‘omorrow may be a little armor with a high of 60-64. A year ago today was fair with a Yigh of 30 degrees. The lowest thermometer read-, ‘ing before 8 a.m. this morning in downtown Pontiac was 45 and registered 48 at 11 a.m. i County News ........66805: 26 Editorials oo... 6..6.ccceees 6 Sports ......+...30, 31, 32, 33 Theaters ...ccccccveseueens 7 TV & Radio Programs ....43 Wilson, Karl.......... ai Women’s Page. .....s0000.28 | being forced to admit, | Chicago, |nancial means of offering protest. facts came to light, “People seemed only con- cerned with the disadvantages. They | didn't cage where the route His letter, describing the cap» tivity, said: PUT IN CHAINS “In my first 50 days of im- prisonment in 1951, I was allowed only two nights sleep. I was getting delirious, seeing ‘animals ajl around the wretched; rat-infested cell. and the court room. In this condition. I was to death and, flesh, I walked out to the execu- |tion grounds to be shot.” He wrote that, on another eceasion in court, he Was so inh | many feared, he stated, “All Elyria Mayor J; Grant Keys) They organized protest meetings, crossroads were either under described the controversy which) but their group dissolved as the! or overpassed, There was no isolation of school districts. Residential building was not forced away from the road. We (Continued .on Page 3, Col. 2) 'and British and U. $. Red Cross. | “L- felt like. Rissing ground of, Hong. Kong... . I will sever forget the kindness of these good people.”* Father Rigney' wrote he has lease... He intents to confer with his Hong Kong superiors about the plight of Fu Jen University then fly to Rome to present the major problems to ¢hurch. officials, U his Rome visit is postponed, he will fly immediately to the United States to visit with his gained 25 pounds since his re-| | ' By ROBERT B. TARR Pontiac Press Managing Editor : Pontiac's 1956 cars go on public display Friday. New models in a dazzling array of new colors and color-combinations have been rolling off the assembly lines here since Oct. 3. The '56 Pontiacs will appear _jin a wider range than ever before, with 15 models in three series. For the first time there will be six Catalinas: Two and four-door hardtop models in the Star Chief, 870 and 860 series. Other major developments for the 1956 Pontiacs include: Completely new hydramatic trinemdaslon! Larger and more powerful V-8 engines. The new cars will be shown here at the Pontiac Retail Store, Mt. Clemens and Mill streets, beginning Friday. Display rooms will remain open until 10 6 so Saturday. After a record year in which 552,000 of the 1955 models were produced, Pontiac Division of GM has iset its minimum goal at 700,000 for the coming year. This will be 9 per cent of the total estimated indus- try production for the coming model year. The new automatic transmission, introduced for the first time, employs a controlled fluid coupling. | exhausted he could pot keep awake and “confessed” he had | led a plot to murder Mao Tse Tung. The Red judge ordered | execution by firing squad/ but’ | postponed. the sentence, . Father Rigney also wrote of falsely, junder torture that he was an| |FBI agent and éndured added lacts of brutality because of this. ALMOST LOST MIND The priest's letter. to his sister continued: ’ “In January, 1964, I began to lose my mind and it was only by strenuous effort and prayer that I could hold myself from the tortures of the cell- mates and the cruel Communist brutes, and keep from going stark mad as others did.” Father Rignoy, formerly — of thanked all those who helped him gain freedom. Many Western Michigan residents had answered Mrs. Haggerty'’s plea and joined a letter-writing cam- paign urging the State Depart- ment to intervene in obtaining his release. GAINED 2% POUNDS The priest told of a wonderful iweleome given him at the Hong | relatives, According to R. M. Critchfield, general manager of Pontiac Division, “it Tepresents ‘the most important *improvement in automatic transmissions since hydra- Three Chicago Teenagers P ound Brutally Murdered | CHICAGO (INS)—A stunned Chicago wanted the| answer to these two questions today—who killed three model teen-age boys and why? search for the slayer in the history of the city. There are few clues for police to sift through in the search for the killer of three Chicago boys. Police today admitted they have iitle evidence of how the youths were brought to Robinson’s Woods, a forest preserve on the edge of Chicago. Their bodies The triple murder set in motion the greatest) were discovered in a ditch. A black, oily substance was found on the feet of the boys, Robert Peterson, 14; John Schuessiler, 13, and his brother, Anton, 11. theory they were slain elsewhere and then taken to the preserve district parking lot. The body of one of ‘the boys * ‘ ® ; ; 1 — ‘ bow oan That led police to the! jhad abrasions on the back and elbows. . Police say this suggested the body had been dragged. It also had impressions on the back, indicating it had lain on a corrugated .surface, such as an auto floor mat, after being stripped, : A search for the boys’ clothing uncovered two pairs ‘ot shorts, a blue shirt, a piece of, white cheesecloth, a rope (Continued on Page 2; Col. 6) The new transmission design includes a parking position on the control lever. This makes it pos- sible to park on an incline and stop and start the mo- tor there without diffi- culty. Foremost among the mechani- cal improvements in the 1956 Pontiacs are the new V-8 engines with 227 horsepower in the Star Chief series and 205 in the 870 and 860 series. The greater horsepower comes from the: in- creased, displacement, higher compression ratios: up to 8.9:1, and improved carburetion, Pontiac _ offers series in 1956. Longer by 24 inchés overall, the 15 new body styles have a longer, lower look- ing silhouette. Most luxurious of the three series, the Star Chief line com- — three body — matics were introduced.” . tes, city attorney, | no believed that it is | ie be pat F : 7 ites il * : — eens ferred ton Post and former secretary of been Weather orth winds 16-15 ir mm becoming variable, tclpeceture preceding 8 a.m + Wind velocity 12 m.p.h. Pe ee 51.5 Pr) ed LJ Pee el z Co cceenerweeeeneers This 4 im 1975 TT Hf rin ae iekit: Lele aL if Ee $F “| the Clinton River and Utica's wa- ter supply. sion plans with Federal Social Se- \Parents i i Bloomfield Club to Present Show on Native Africa curity, Donald M. O'Hara, executive tirement System, said 18,053 of 19,- 333 who have voted so far have accepted the plan. “That is more than 9 per cent of the 23,000 who are eligible to Vote,” O'Hara said. More re- turns on the balloting, conduct- ed last week, are still duc, Approval of only 12,500 employes was needed to put the program in effect, O'Hara said. Under the plan, employes will pay three per cent of their salaries ‘to the state pension fund and two per cent for federal social security. _ Resulting benefits will be 100 per cent higher in the upper wage . and 2 or 30 per cent higher in the lower pay scales, O'Hara said. He'll Stay Right There /a charge of intoxication, He will | serve time in Orange County Jail, |where he is employed as a cook. | Mrs. Hobby Honored | DALLAS, Tex. W—Mrs. Oveta | Culp Hobby, president of the Hous- secretary of the Employes’ Re-. | February of 1955. For transporta- > NEW CASTLE, Ind. —The Na- | tional Guard had orders from Gov. ~_— CHELSEA, Vt, ®—Henry Jel-/ ted States staking | bert, 49, of Chicopee, Mass., won't a Philippine vic- have to go far to serve the 30 delegate, Brig. Gen. Carlos P.| yesterday in Municipal Court on w saa! ae : OCTOBER 19, 1955 eee AS death. * * i z ‘i i : i had county morgue, fell to his knees before his wife and cried: Our ' Faure Viclor in Africa Vote Oxford Man, 2 Riders. ‘Henry W. Weckle, 20, of Oxford | ‘ released - French Premier Wins Month's Respite From Parliamentary Attack | forward to a month's respite from parliamentary attack. He won his latest victofy last of Murdered Boys Appalled by Brutal Deaths|is cuicacd (INS) — High-sounding theories brought no consolation to the families of the three boys found slain yesterday. They, and all Chicago, wanted to know why the boys were singled out for a cruel . able to concentrate on applying The tree youths were described as “‘good boys” by their parents, friends, teachers and minister, Their school principal also said they ee * * * ‘Every year this happens to the child of some family. It seems they -have to.be killed. When on earth are they going to stop this?” side, ‘Mrs. Anton Schuessier, 37, sat on a couch and mumbled: termmeent, the A bly “My life... my arms... my legs... now gone.” Over and over again she repeated these words. Once she started up from the couch and shouted:. ” bodies of his two sons at the The Bloomfield Hills Camera Club will sponsor an exhibit of color slides dealing with the cus- toms and mores of the African natives by Isadore Berger, Detroit attorney and traveler, at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Cranbrook Insti- tute of Science. Berger will give an account of his 30,000 miles of traveling with the presentation of the color slides and will also introduce a tape re- and other sounds of the African world. Departing from America in De-| cember, 1954, Berger arrived in Cairo, Egypt in January and then proceeded to make his journey southward along the. Nile River, over the mountains of eastern Africa, through the jungles of the Belgian Congo, and finally arriving at Cape Town in South Africa in tion, Berger traveled by plane, boat and train. Some of the highlights on the trip included the sights of Victoria Falls, Mt. Kilmanjaro, tribal war dances by the various African tribes, the Sudan and the visits into the famous diamond and gold mines of: the Kimberley mine fields, Governor Orders Guard Cut at Perfect Circle Craig today to cut by half the force patrolling Perfect Circle Corp. strike areas, and Craig had a personal pledge of no violence from President Walter Reuther of the CIO United Auto Workers. The Guard force will be cut to about 300 Thursday, but martial law will remain in effect through- out Henry County and in Hagers- town east of New Castle in Wayne County, from Reuther in a 700-word tele- | health, education and welfare, will | be presented an award by the | State Fair of Texas as the Woman of the Year today. i thought the Governor had double- | Circle dispute, gram in which he told Craig. he crossed the union in the Perfect ‘Archbishop LONDON (®—Princess Margaret | dines tonight with the Archbishop of Canterbury, leading foe in the /Church of England of any plans | she may have to mary divorced ‘airman Peter Townsend. ‘| The 25-year-old princess, her sister Queen Elizabeth II and other members of the royal family head- ed the guest list for Lambeth Palace, the archbishop’s venerable brick residence across the Thames from the Houses of Parliament.’ Also invited were all the church who along with the royal family were to attend. the pre- dinner dedication of the palace chapel, damaged in the war and now repaired, present mance Family to Dinner Tonight . Townsend was not on the list. Bd be fe The foremost thought with all whs certain to be the ro- between Margaret and the + Invites Meg, press and public over whether the princess would flout laws of the church by marrying a divorced man, all the dinner guests likely would observe discreet silence on the embarrassing subject. But this did not preclude entirely private talks among the principals, either before or after the dinner, on topic of prime interest for most Britons. * *¢ «© The 68-year-old archbishop, Dr. Geottrey Fisher, is hrimate of all England, Both he and the Queen ~who is constitutional head of the church—are pledged to protect its regulations and traditions,. includ- Pontiac Deaths Elmer Cyrenve | Beecher taken from the Pursley Funeral Home to the Gerher Funeral] Home, Wakeman, Ohio this morn- ing where service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday. Burial will be in Berlinville, Ohio. of his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Lam- bert of 1550 Petrolia St. cording of the tribal war dances Ir. ak ean of Thursday from the Voorhees-Siple Chapel for Lawrence J. Mack of The no- violence pledge came | Elmer Cyrenus Beecher was He died Tuesday at the home Howard Jackson Jr. The funeral for Howard Jackson and Junita Jackson of 334 Howard MeNeill St. will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Trinity Baptist Church. The Rev. Richard H. Dixon Jr. will officiate with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Howard was born in Pontiac July 5, 1951. He died Sunday after | a, brief illness. Besides his mother and father, he is. survived by a brother, Paul and two sisters, Cathrine and Jovee, all at home. Friends may call at the Car- ruthers Funeral Home after 7 this evening. Lawrence J. Mack Service will be held at 2 p.m. 5744 Lum St., Lum. Dr. Tom Malone of the Emmanuel Baptist Church will officiate with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Besides his mother and step- father Robert and Florence Car- pell Harp, he is survived by sev- eral brothers and sisters and two grandmothers, Mrs. Amy Harp of.) Pontiac and Mrs. Ann Borrell of | Chicago. He died suddenly at his home Monday. Lawrence ‘was born in Chicago June 18, 1949. He had lived a short time in Pontiac. Oxygen Chaser 2532 ‘gt q i g Tt i bere é TE 1 Ike Meets Dulles Geneva Strategy hower, getting around a bit in a wheel chair now, meets with Sec-. of Soviet sincerity. * * jand fresh air. * * * In voting confidence in the gov- approved resolution it had turned Zz Today to Discuss DENVER (—President Eisen- Dulles flew in from Washington last night for another hospital con- ference with Eisenhower on United States preparations for the Big Four foreign ministers parley opening in Geneva Oct. 27. This is the secretary's second meeting with the recuperating President in the last nine days on that subject and other foreign pol- icy matters. * * Yesterday, for the first time, the President was lifted from his bed into a wheel chair and taken to an open terrace for 30 minutes of sun That's What He Says 2 z e i Hf 25 EE ie] iy they had gone to see a’ movie in downtown Chicago, They last had been seen at two bowling alleys. SEX CRIME? An autopsy revealed that none ‘sexually. - However. Dr. Harry R. Hoffman, Beers et. the Cook County \ Clinic, said: . “The person who could com- to whom the act itself is a gratification of the sexjurge.”’ The psychiatrist stamped the person who ‘had a previous record of sex offenses, He pointed out that all three youths had strikingly handsome ls the Real Reason found : > * * * bit"’ but moist sighs the most. much as 2 degrées, .* * * ratings. Upon Educator's Grave CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Helps Drinkers Sober Up Fast COLUMBUS, Ohio —If you're the tipsy type that usually has one | drink too many at the tavern, now. Hy Koppelman, president of a. soft-drink firm here, has invented what he calls an “air-o-meter.” You drop a quarter in the machine, put an attached mask over your nose and mouth, and inhale pure oxygen for five minutes. That, said Kopperman, should bring you out of pink elephant land. “Of course,” he adds, “some- times it'll take two quarters to do | it.” Koppelman said his machine also can be used to “bring relief from asthma, hay fever, migraine head- aches and especially the tiredness that drivers get after much rid- 36th annual cozvention of the Ohi State Restaurant Assn. ing its ban on the remarriage of are still alive. |. An earlier Archbishop of Canter. bury, the late Cosmo Lang, was! Barber Shop, 320 Wessen St., last credited with a major role in fore. | ing the present Duke of Windsor to abdicate the British throne in 1936. when he insisted -on marrying =i lis Warlield Simpson, the twice-divorced American, Wal- Barber Shop Entered; — divorced persons whose ex-spouses- Thieves Steal Tools night made off with equipment valued at $32, Pontiac police said, today. They apparently entered Greenwood School, Wakefield, died last Sept. 29, ordered that the | headstone his marked: “No School Today “Teacher Gone Home.” on grave day. ‘ TOKYO W—Dr. Miho Daigo of SLAYER NOT SANE the Central Meteorological Observ- | atory set up his sensitive recording | vanced by Dr. Thomas Kennedy, instruments in Tokyo theaters and “Tear jerker’’ sequences boosted | the humidity as much as 10 per cent—‘‘tears probably contribute a Climax scenes at all-girl revues (the ones promoters call sizzling) raised theater temperatures as “My associates and I are mak- ing these tests solely to determine | health factors involved in theater a aM a Seecns et ' ‘ going.” said the scientist in a stern, thought the crime was the work refusal t} make public his show features. a sex crime. His theory ts thaf someone” possibly lacking personality in- tegration or a system of values perpetrated the crime. He be- lieves that the slaver was not necessarily. satisfying a sexual impulse. | of an older group of boys. | them.” Ht Te cas ii LPs g% = ge - af "¥ E 4 Rg g iG if F started Sunday night, hours after | of the victims had been molested | will be served at 5, 6, and 7 p.m. with a snack bar in constant oper- mit such an act as this is one | ear's- White Elephant booth will triple slayings as the work of aly, S pls A difference of opinion was ad- |. associate professor -of psychology | at Lovola University. He said the superficial evidence now available does not pinpoint the slayings as Sheriff Joseph’ Lohman said he He | believes it was highly improbable | | for one person to have held the . | three youths captive, as it appears | Strange Epitaph Placed | that they were, murdered them | and then transported their bodies ' to the forest preserve ditch where (®—Ross | they were found 36 to 40 hours Vardon, long-time principal of the later. who | * * Lohanman said a teenage gang be may have manhandled the youths. | |"“Then,”” he continued, ‘something | may have gone wrong to frighten ‘the youthful gangsters and they | : now The order was contained in Var- killed all three. te-make sure they you can literally breathe easier. qon's will, filed for probate yester- would not give evidence against Guard Officials Stressing Need for New Armory Two National Guard officers told land‘ and building is shared on a the City Commission last night | 75-25 per cent basis by the federal, that the city may lose its two state and city governments, under guard units if a new armory is not| current regulations. The U.S, and state pay 75 per | built within two or three years. Lt. James R. Crawford, of the 107th Ordnance Co., told the com- «missioners that under the govern- ment’s new reserve act, draftees will be assigned to reserve or Na- tional Guard units. Effect of the new program will Be felt in two years, he said. “We _wilt have to send the men to Flint or Detroit,” he added. said Pontiac. is “definitely on the. Thieves who broke into Milton’s list for a new armory.” A 1958 armory site as part of a civic cen- | target date for completion has ter development. - i ; After the meeting, Lt. Crawford | “We have a one-company arm- said he had. been told by high-| | Fanking officers that the Pontiac unitis would be disbanded if they could not handle the area man- been: set, he added. ory with two companies,” he said. “Many men run down to Detroit ” * after seeing our armory. through a window on the east side of the buildi The officers said the cost of the | power. cent and the city 25 per cent, they said. A $350,000 building on a 10-acre site is contemplat- ed, they stated. Water and Mill streets. City Manager Walter K. Will- man said three factors were in- volved: site, the city’s contribu- tion and sale of the old armory at He was instructed to confer with | Lt. Jon Garau, of the same unit, top guard officials on the matter. F Et: t ad HE ; i tit £3 FF i 7 bir Hj e] i F z which fun to have first at the annual PTA fair opening to the public at 4 p.m. Friday. But the star attraction, they say, will be comic Seupy Sales, of TV tame, His performances are scheduled for 6, 6:45, 7:30 aad 8:15 p.m., with tickets to be available at the audi- torium door. Buffet-style dinners ation, cle” ride, fish pond and a cherry tree whose fruit when picked, will reveal a surprise, A feature of this be items contributed by local merchants. Mrs. Harry Mudge Jr., mother vice president, is fair chairman. Among those assisting are Russell Haeger, president, and Mike Quinn, father vice president. * * * Holding its 58th installation of officers at 8 p.m. tonight at the Masonic Temple, South Woodward avemie will be OES, Ch, 22. Mrs. Selma Brown, Past Grand Matron, will lead the in- stalling officers who are:. Mrs. Elma Kidd, mistress of ceremonies; Mrs. Ann Main, in- : Z 2B as lllegally Killed Deer _ There will also be an “‘auto-cir- | i i | ; i g 2 i 4 a . Brings 2 Jail Terms Arden Rice, 17, of Rockwood and Peterson, also 17, of Wyan- dotte, yesterday were found in pos- an illegally killed deer and was sentenced to $35 fine, $10 costs or 25 days in jail. The fine was not paid. Rice, who also appeared before Justice Butler, was charged with having a loaded shotgun in his car, Pleading guilty, he was sen- tenced to $20 fine and $8 costs or 20 days in jail. The fine was not paid. It’s How You Translate Meaning That Matters BALTIMORE (®—Driver Fran- cis Hartlove brought his No, 6 bus | to a quick stop the other day after _a female passenger cried: “Wait! Hold everything until I get my clothes off!" Hartlove’ spun around in his seat. The woman, fully clothed, finally managed.to get her bundle of laundry through the rear door and off the vehicle. — — Wrong Number Victims Seek $15,000 Damages AUSTIN, Tex. — A $15,000 “wrong number” damage suit was filed here against Southwest- stalling marshal; and Mrs. Elsie Baynes, installing chaplain. All ling Grand Organist and Rose Marie Toormina, Installing Grand Soloist. * * * { three are Past Matrons. Others in are Mrs. Marion Doench, Instal-| telephone was incorrectly listed as \the night number of a transfer Taking office for the ensuing year will be: Mrs. Bessie York, Worthy Ma- | calls for transfer service. ern Bell Telephone Co. W. D. Adams and wife claimed their petition that their home company. They alleged they have been awakened constantly at night by The city has been eying the | Now WE CAN MAKE YO DRIVING SAFER AND LENGTHEN THE LIFE OF YOUR TIRES See _ Roy C. Pulver ys 25 Pine Street — : %4 Block North of Pontiee nr : UR FE 4-2505 Tire Co. } A /\ o ~ = es steel am 74 toes S821 eaiclators Inspect Murray D. Van Sei a ° New Ohio Turnpike, |‘ e,rutse sx | on Display Friday (Continued From Page One) | Will not.. 1 wish they could have) (Continued From: Page One) aa ies bail ss | ON ON IO cintedt, Ad the Satart Station. Wagon high-type subdivisions ee ae | 92 tttnchy wheelbase. adjacent tthe Pa rune rank | bil would be similar t0 the Ohio| Te Pen inch wheelbase are the Catalina two and _ four- door ““hardtops,"’ a four-door .se- dan, a two-door two-seat station iwagon and four-door three-seat th | station “wagon. Comprising the low prited 860 series are the Catalina coupes and sedans, two and four-door sedans, two-door two-seat sta- ; tion wagons and four-door three- in the divider strip cutting down chances of a-.runaway vehicle crossing over to cause. a headon collision. 7 nite) ‘seat ‘station wagons. The inside shoulders are ee Newly designed for Bieasened | wide and the outside, 10 feet. They | cargo space, the Pontiac two-seat are blacktopped to assure a {TM | station wagons have a folding seat base even in muddy weather. | with the back-rest and the cushion MTA Chairman George N. folding into the floor. In the. three- Hig- | era of industrial and business || gins, of Ferndale, said he had sé@at wagons, both the back seat expansion and is one of the | arranged the tour to give the legis- | and the center seat fold into the greatest things ever hap | lators a first-hand view of turnpike | floor with a split seat arrange- pened to our city.” ' | benefits “which Michigan could | ment on the middie seat so that Following the mayor’s remarks, |have also, within 39 months.” | one-third or two-thirds of the seat with paint, os ae: | ean remain in place for passen- stain, or in natural. apn nonce Wome | gers ee cares es (GOODBYE CORNS jivccd ic Collision ofrgttsed stn, similar on Come in todey bee Injured in Collision | all three series. A wrap. a socodlly remove aching Five Pontiac residents were re- | bumper vl ——— agp : corns wits th wales: AIT ported in “fair” condition today in — Ge ane Sem © Cost bute trifle. EE Yy Tonia County Memorial Hospital “* © aft three-car collision Mon- There is a choice of 357 new D! Scholls Zino pads } eam 107 Squirrel Rd. FE 2-0233 IDEA BOOK! CHURCH'S, INC. Auburn Hgt’s. DRY SKIN ITCH? First applications of Zemo—a doctor's soothing antiseptic — relieve itch of surface skin and sealp irritations. Zemo stops : scratching and so colors ‘in two-toning or solid colors in the new cars, and in- St. was driving a car. which | teriors utilize new fabrics apd a contained. Lena Diskner, 65,| ‘eather in a wide range of of 243 Chamberlain St.; ‘Ann Fyfe, | | colors. 62, of 22 Lexington PI.; Martha | A new radio automatically se- Hudson, 63, of 19 Matthews St.; | leets the strongest stations and a and Kate Warner, 65, of Drayton | rear seat sound system employing Plains. ' two speakers also is available. Police said the drivers of the| Optional equipment is a new day on U. S. 16 near Ionia. ae Bruff, 60, of 103 Hender- | other two cars were 73-year-old | dual exhaust system. Chrome twin | Leon Harrington of Grand Rapids | exhaust deflectors appear as. an | and Charles Bowers, 58, | aids fannie Muskegon. In addition to the strato-fight You've got to be great...to win 6 straight ! SARS tet the Star - Chiet series, offers an i -hydramatic transmission for the + $70 and 860 series and a new syn- chro-mesh transmission. | of a pert assembly. The press fitted king pin bushing reduces friction and improves lubricating quall- ties of the front suspeasivin. Completely new power steering, lifts are available as optional equipment. the hood which was pioneered by with a number of new features. | ‘The new unit will give greater | cooling, easier operation, more | compactness and simplified instal- located above the radio controls. The new Postiacs have more than 130 safety features in the de- | sign and engineering specifications. | the eye, prominent ‘on the models are safety side-reflecto located on rear fenders. ‘Group Hopes to Reduce ‘Rehabilitation Time Lag liams today that it could Teduce earning capacity of injured indus- trial workers. the referral of an injured employe to a rehabilitation service. \ years. see ‘Youth ls Charged power brakes and‘electric window : } rent mounted air conditioning, | ‘the system entirely located under Pontiac in 1954, will be continued lation. The unit's control panel is— LANSING u—A special commit- | tee expressed hope to Gov. Wil- the time required to restore the The committee said it hoped to reduce to less than two months 4, M. Kavanagh held today that the time between ‘the injury and the municipal judge of Traverse Nationally, committee members condition of probation. said, the time between injury and | of | integral part of the rear bumpers, | | rehabilitation has averaged seven | thie secretary of state may offi- -| pieces of yacht wreckage to Chi- With Killing Mother PASADENA, Calif. —-A youth apparently recovering from in- juries suffered, police said, when he threw himself under a_ truck has been formally charged . with murdering his mother. ‘The complaint was issued against John P, Hawley, 19, He is accused of killing Mrs. Iris Haw- itey, 45, ‘with a hammer in her | fashionable home early Sunday, j * .* *& Police said that after the killing, young. Hawley drove . the family | | automobile to Cajon Pass near San | Bernardino and, attempted to end | his life. ‘He suffered critical in- | | juries when run over by the truck. Hospital authorities say it will be a week or 10 days before the youth can be transferred to the) ‘prison ward of the Los Angeles County Hospital. He underwent ‘eight hours « argny Monday. a Detective Liteal ae of San While many are not mgr glial Bernardino, who said the Hawley | oe youth has a history as a mental | patient, reported the youth told him, “I did it, 1 killed my mother.” | Pasadena Detective Richard L. | | Jamison said Hawley told him of | an argument with this mother) Sunday after they had taken his | father William Hawley to the air- port for a flight to San Francisco. Legal Right to Suspend Driver's License Upheld LANSING «—Atty, Gen, Thom- | City has power to suspend a mo- ‘torist's driving privileges as a The opinion conceded that only | cially suspend or revoke a driver's | license. but it added that munici- /pal and justice courts may order ‘a motorist .who violates traffic | laws to stay off the highways and | to leave his license with the court for a stated period as an evidence | obedience. ‘Study Yacht Wreck Wreckage GRAND HAVEN ® — U.S. Coast Guard officials are shifting 30 |cago to continue investigation of | | the missing yacht, Tyree, and its | | industrialist owaer Phillip Atwood. | The wreckage was recovered last | week along 150 miles of Lake Michigan shore. Atwood and the | yacht disappeared. 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Single ll cut for you. 16 x 20 inch. 59e 16 = 24 inch. 69e 20 «x 22 7% TE: inch. 49¢ ¢ he He told of lecturing Byrnes ver | ae bally and by letter for his be- that's me for TUMSI havior in failing to report ade- Lots pA ayia ourselves La quately to him on the December too much, 195 Foreign Ministers Conference | and smoke too eo a suffer in Moscow, Truman described his cabinet troubles with Byrnes, Secretary ot Commerce Henry A. Wallace and Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes, who is now dead, His recollections were reportéd in the final installment of the first volume of his memoirs, published by Life magazine. =4 FIRED WALLACE The former President said that | when he fired Wallace, the cabi- net officer “was. so nice aboul it ‘1 almost backed out.” He asked oe SERVICE We'll Plan Your Tour Free! Phone Mi 4-5711 Tickets, Reservations foreign policy was “hitting at the | President. " Truman wrote that he still | thinks Ickes was-“‘imistaken” in ’ Senate testimony agains, Edwiti to Anywhere! |W. Pauley, California oliman Grace Plummer Reilly | wom the President had nomin- 379 Hamilion, Birmingham | ated fo be Under-Secretary of the Navy. His nomination sty- imied by. Ickes’ testimony, Pauley for Wallace's resignation because he felt the secretary’ 8 criticism of | ignation effective the next day. * * © In his latest article, the Mis- | souri Democrat said that despite | | months in office, he did not feel he | was really President in his “own iright” until Sept. 6, 1945. That | was the date he submitted his 21- | point “Fair Deal" domestic pro- i gram to Congress. BYRNES USURPED POWER He recommended that when the vice-president becomes President, the office be filled by election. He said he thought presidential elec- tors would “probably do a job of it" resentatives. Truman wrote that Byrnes had heen given “unprecedented free- dom ef action” as war mobilizer by President Roosevelt and thought he could have a “‘com- pletely free hand’' as Secretary of State. He said Byrnes failed to keep him posted on developments at ) the Moscow conference and an- |nounced its results without pre- ‘viously informing the President, | Byrnes, he added. asked the White | | House to arrange a broadcast so he could report to the country. Large Selection such as workingmen. LJ Ld * This approach is in the traditiun of Henry C. Carey, head of the Philadelphia School of Economics, who advocated the “harmony of the interests.” In his formulation of objectives _of the consolidation, Walter P. Reuther, head of the CIO, in a statement before the CIO executive board meeting earlier this year, commendably spoke of a desire to obviate corruption and racketeer- ing in the house of labor. He said: s s 2 “We have laid down in this docu- ment (the proposed constitution) the constitutiona] @eclaration that we are determined to’ keep the united labor movement free of cor- ruption and racketeering, free of Communist penetration, and we provide appropriate internal ma- chinery to implement these princi- ples. The agreement is very spe- cific.” This is all to the good. DOUBLE STANDARD? “Now, I have not been around as long as some of our old friends here today, but I have been around long enough to know that keeping the labor movement clean is not an easy job. We live in a society in which the acquisition of ma- terial wealth and personal gain is considered the measurement of success. “In a society with an acquisitive philosophy -it is perfectly under- ‘ what is in our heart . that are accepted as perfectly prop- er in the business community. “When a businessman makes — a fast million dollars, he ts _ looked to as a real sharp, suc- cessful businessman, But when a labor leader makes a fast buck, he is corrupt, , .” Reuther, in a subsequent inter- view with this writer, remarked that he is in favor of free enter- prise, But frankly, if our free- choice economic society is to en- dure, then it is irresponsible for a leader to cast aspersions on the moral foundations of the system. * s * After occupying a ringside seat on the American economic scene for 34 decades, I would like to audit the implied libel, and to testify that business progress, by and large, rests on personal in- tegrity, not on cutting corners or proceeding unethically. Crookedness, fraud, stealing, sell- ing out the principal for a_per- sonal bribe and chicanery are not deemed proper in that segment of our society known as business. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE It is not what we say or do... Or what we write in ink... But rrore important in this life... Is what we really think . . . Our words and actions may be false . And any scroll or chart . May be the very opposite . . Ot . And so no matter how we strive... To make our meaning clear... Only ourselves and God can knqw . .. How much we are sincere... And therein lies the lesson, as . Almighty God knows all . We cannot hide our smallest thought . . . Behind the highest wall... So let us speak and live and write ... . Sincerely 6n this sod .. . We might defraud the world but we . . . Cannot deceive our God. (Copyright 1955) Case Records of a Psychologist: Extra Rooms Bring Extra Income, Happiness When Used to House Aged Myrna raised an interesting. question. Discuss it in church groups as well as school courses on economics, For Myrna’s idea would save us tarpayers money and retard the insidious’ trend toward socialistic tion of our citizens in their old age. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case P-369: Myrna O.. aged 42, is an efficient registered nurse in Phoenix, Arizona. “Dr. Crane, my husband had. a stroke a couple of months ago, so I stay home to look after him,” she began. “But ‘a few months ago I re- member one of your Case Records in our Phoenix Republic, which dealt with the loneliness of am- bulatory old folks. “You mentioned an elderly lady in Chicago who wanted to get out of a Nursing Home but was kept there against her will, “Well, it seems to me that there are plenty of fine homes where an extra room could easily be rented to such persons. “For example, my husband needs companionship and other people to talk to. * * * “And I need a little financial assistance. So I could easily take care of another person on a straight ‘board-and-room’ basis. “We have a nice modern home here in Phoenix with an extra bed- room that is unused. “Since I must cook meals and reaimenta- - ‘It might be an elderly couple, or a nice old gentleman or dear old lady. And it would not bother us for them to prattle about the days gone by. “We belong to church and have a Christian home. Several churches are near us, so they could enjoy their life here and at a moderate price. . * * * “Meanwhile, that extra income would be a great boon to me, too, so we'd both be happier and better off.” PRIVATE VS. SOCIALISTIC It would be far more efficient for American taxpayers if we could save ourselves the outlay of cash to build huge public institu- tions for the aged and, instead, let them use the vacant bedrooms in the thousands of private homes like Myrna’s Ld * '&* In every small town there are dozens of widows occupying a full house alone. They often have but a meager income. Yet they may have one, two or even three extra bedrooms now unoccupied. In these villages of 508 to 1,500 population, there are usually several churches So if elderly people could con- tract for board and room, and thus live in these idle rooms already available, that would render a work at home to bring in $50 more per month?” many widows: write to me. around under their own power is also better for their morale t they be free citizens instead inmates of institutions. Don't readers agree? Always te, steele 2es Fi W. Crane to CLA gh ee Ne j ok fit Nee eee re ee Ay Pag Ce Me We ea Vey fy } j \ ¥ ‘ pols 4 ff Jit i y } Ge ae ale Kp } oa f ao ae | a4 THE pontiat PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1055 | aeeanemecmemememaemmaanant a, ( | a . Hal Boyle Says: Elnis SMALL PAYMENT HOLDS IT on our YF LOOK-AHEAD-TO-CHRISTMAS PLAN. wl REDMOND'S , 2 sign Wd ied aes cashes. ceidha NEW YORK (# — There are tty Em pandas heweenton ‘day that will enable a listener to tune out a television commercial, But they do little to help the veteran video Viewer in his real predicament. Your hardened TV fan no longer rants against com- ‘mercials as he did in those faroff ' to talkative wives. The moment a really. boring commercial begins 'to flash on the screen they turn oft their ears, a glaze creeps into The TV addicts have developed | a protective mechanism similar to) | that acquired by husbands married | entertainment ever offered the Tey eae aatiand te tee ot bilge, including too many cash- | and-carry quiz shows to which the | contestants come poor as church mice and leave rich enough to endow a cathedrab (although none | has done that with his winnings as yet). % * * —_— look at television — it's a. ‘complete waste of time," | shows ignorance, He js like a man who refuses to have electric: lights in his home ‘because he has heard electric lights are also used to illuminate shooting galleries or gambling dens. - The truth. is that television is growing up faster than many of wealth of worthwhile things’ to os not excepting bundling and | millions who would have enjoyed jal marriage. jit missed it because they either But anyone who still brags, “1 only | its viewers, It has an increasing | F Needed: Gadget to AeA: Good Shows ‘fomnd samneteans peelty ‘gcad Neh oop gala “Don , way in an ‘average season. But- That's the kind of gadget serious t| TV viewers say they need most didn’t know it was being put on| or had no way of knowing in ad- vance it was, wp quality. A program-scanner gadet would end such disappointment, It would filter out the trash and when it ' Advertisement) pier wey * ELGIN PRENTICE, z t ; | blue ka: Adv. ee or Pe yee fale ecpentettant [fed after dinner speaker. watch, pean lon ON $7180 ewels. $625° $3975 In some homes commercials are * *. cREOMUCS Prices include Fed. Tox even stoutly defended by parents Just this week Jose Ferrer and because of their hypaatic power | fine cast on a memersite | 7 va room emaamm aman Only Elgin has the heart thet never breaks, to quiet chlideen, es gerac,”’ ‘a acd French drama Pile Tort ure : 9 Optometrist—Jewelers REDMOND’S 81 N. Saginaw St. the gvarentess DuroPower Mainspring. FE 2-3612 ‘ested in listening to rhyming com- | mercials, they don't ask me to | read and explain Mother Goose | to them — and that’s a real ben- efit,” said one father, ‘“‘You know many of those Mother Goose verses are a lot of nonsense, “I couldn't understand some of them when I was a kid, and they even less sense to me now. “Take Tt From Me, there's nothing like ft in Detroit" SAYS BELLNOP CaRt DAVIS {=> So how can I explain them?" *s- Me Another father said his 4-year- old son had learned to carry a tune by joiging in singing ‘TV com- mercials. But he made one mis- take. He let the boy stay up after bedtime one evening listening to some later programs which have commercials carrying different messages. Three days later when the min- ister called at the home he heard | the little tyke galloping around the “Since slat kids became inter- | that has broken every love-sick col- lege boy's heart for half a century. It was good theater, it was well- advertised, and millions saw it. But others are still complaining, “I didn’t know it was going to be put on." surprise “sleeper” drama, “A ly done Irish play by James Cos- tigan starring Julie Harris, It was | as good as anything seen on Broad- Just last month there was a. Wind From the South,” a splendid- | Soothed in Few Minutes Act now for fast relief from tor- ture of piles. Don't wait’ another day. Apply Peterson's Ointment at. once. This cooling, soothing, astringent formula has given joy- ful relief thousands for 40 INTRODUCING A BIG AND VITAI GENERAL MOTORS “AUTOMOTIVE FIRST”! ROR eee eee, ee? oe SEE. YOUR NEAREST PONTIAC DEALER See cee — | living room cheerfully bellowing: aetna ROE “Zilch’s is the beer for me, boys, Zilch’s is the. beer for me.” 4 “If you haven't stopped Despite such occasional embar- ' at The Sheraton- rassing mishaps, a gadget to tune ; Cadillac in the past out commercials isn't the TV in- ; couple of years, zeae dustry's major needed invention. 4 never recognize the What is needed is # gadget that : hotel may. will pay no attention to commer- - 2 Everything — cate bat instead seek out a flash i A mean every- on programs. Z thing — has been ' Television has mushroomed fas- 4 ’ redecorated. ter than any other form of free 7 the lobby, the rooms —_— ‘ 3 cil new, ‘There's a large screen Mamie Sees Styles . F a radio in every roma hare tn et hundred roo eee pane been air conditioned Our guests are very happy. “Come see the new Shératon- Cadillac for yourself. You'll agree with me .. . there’s nothing like it in Detroit.” HERATON- ( ADILLAC Hi The . First Lady smiled and . } OTEL applauded enthusiastically each: ‘ . ——s showing at the fashion review pre- + sented by the Daniels and Fisher 4 q ae oe Consval eee department store of Denver. ‘< i ine wages GON oan cae : Mrs. , Eisenhower wore a black = | silk faille dressmaker suit with a :' oo 4 very full skirt, Her hat was a 5 Bring the whole family | small rounded Sally Victor model * for a weekend in Detroit. No charge for yourlysters under 14. i in Big Denver Store DENVER (Mrs. Mamie Ei- senhower was a picture of happi- ness as she attended a fall fashion show yesterday: It was her first public appearance since the Pres- ident’s heart attack Sept. 24, * * * “We have something to smile about,”” she told reporters and cameramen as she left Fitzsimons Army Hospital en route to the style show in the hospital officers’ wives club. And that tone pre- vailed throughout the afternoon. | in pink beaver with two small rose- | buds pinned on the right side. Her | wrist length fabric gloves matched | the pink color of the hat. o Blue Cross * Blue Shield Non-Group Program for people who can not join through a group! Sa 1 Regularly 269.95! Including decorator stand at low price! Giant 24-inch screen and smart decorator base at one low price, Pic- 3 Speed, Ebony finish PHONO 95 EASY : TERMS : Sensational new radio-phonograph that- combines precision Admiral-built 3-speed record changer with a rich-toned, super-sensi- ture tube is aluminized to give twice the brightness: and twice the con- Everyone in Michigan— trast. Entire picture is projected out toward the viewer. Safety glass . aff recent. chai shir ak Ga under age 65—can apply! is removable for easy cleaning of tube face. Limited supply! 4 Styled to fit in a sapeiigg aes chaos: AT wow! - | , : sayencemet | NO MONEY DOWN New, greatly increased MATERNITY BENERTS . . . plus 20% Increase in hospital ROOM ALLOWANCE . .. plus all these hospital “extras” with no dollar limit for 30 days (another 30 days available 6 months after you have been out of the hospital): operating and delivery room ¢ laboratory services « drugs and dressings « physical therapy ¢ oxygen e basal a © many others, too! No physical needed! tive Admiral radio, Automatic shut-off turns You must epply before October 22! Application does not enroll you. We will send you a complete list of benefits and full information before you are asked to make your Jefferson Ave., Detroit 24, Mich., or, for full rece rit Pontiac, FE 4-154] cain FILL IN—CUT OUT—MAIL TODAY!-—-— Print Lest Neme Print Firet Name Print Middie Initial Do not write in these spaces Street and No, = = e of TRASH , e Security Mo. Bs H, M, SUBSCRIBER . 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A tartcx nas sox) () ae |. / before they become garbage .. . all ‘burnable trash, too... right in Company Where Wage-Earner Works —— your home automatically without fuss or muss. Calcinator dehyd- : —— fe! us rates refuse, reduces it to powdery ash. You wrap it, drop it, forget it. Hurry’to Federal’s today and see this sensational value! FEDERAL ici. stores : _ gre DETACH THIS PART CAREFULLY AND RETAIN MHS; benefits will be available only/for hospital admissions and for doctors’ services on mand aftge that date, 2n00yt that benefits for the he effec. SAGINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC ! OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 & The f conditions are part of your mictucan AN HOSPITAL si SERVICE (BL Ki CROSS) and MICHIGA 1@AN Cia EDIGAL SERVICE (BLUE SHTELD) maternity of aambinidy aie “dca ad cae ef o furnish reports to yabaoee vo corto: Service and “p my ol ‘sgneeaa Service Your coverage. wit be effective -~ upon thie appli by Michigan Hospital Service « tion of such acceptance to you and payment by you. "The effective dates of the contracts will be determined by of notifica- THE PONTIAC PRESS, :\ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 1 |Electronic Device Records|(—_ Tank's Action on Screens | ANN ARBOR —An Army tank, brain. Now the tank opens up. The oe SF ae See eee es re the other side. But it all really hap-| screen pened in the imagination of @n| Finally it hits the obstacle, its electronic brain. front wheels go up, the rectangu- | S LK Scientists and engineers at. the lar bar pitches back, Finally it OF SECURING. FOOV FOR University of Michigan have pro-| crashes down on the other side . roduces the tank in action GAUZE HAS BEEN DISTINCTIVELY MO De Uitte form: aera | nnaare cad seating ot the| == TYPEWRITER RIBBON]; ~@UIPPED- Omit ar et ete sen te | Ratna tart, Wi LOST ST 52 POUNDS then in its “imagination” the | be taken of the whole procedure. ‘ ’ } ; , | 'Y Columbla THE Je i brain “sees” how the tank | These and other methods of fig: ; works, The picture comes eat on | watching the tank in action are In int t Ss enne FoR THE siauiked H U firs RD, what looks like an ordinary tele- | helping engineers study the action | i e vision screen. / of tank suspension systems for the | “1 w to recommend Ren- | which is not had. Not gal ve , - but Rennel has ~~ Actually, the screen is an oscil- | Detrote Arsenal. ' risen as whe peed 5 Seseeee eoaerd yes | te me for har a I lograph, very similar to a televi-| Irvin J. Sattinger, staff member. Williams, 226 E. Lakeview, Flint, | praise it ly. 1 will keep on taking sion tube, which converts electrical ©*Pl@ins that the moving pictures} Mich. “I was At. so fat my heart | Ret ganador it a privilege to THE SPOON BILL impulses into pictures. The com- | #F€ Not as precise as some meth-| was being onl nese he facts about the 08 of recording the tank suspen- ly set around. 32 HAS A WELL, [oon & oe * sions but they do permit an inte- of Papael Consesiente esi , eee 2 , tank. and shoots its idea to the | they permit an ‘in ds. Now I b So itis | ose illograph. pone picture of the entire mate! and am not so clumsy * * that other ra *hods miss. My weight has gone from On the screen, the staff MEM- | gy bers see the tank take form, A| % © Copyright 1955 Walt Disney Productions A SPEAR, World Rights Reserved { live and multiply, That's ex- long rectangular bar represents ¢ the body of the tank and the six|(@ - y 3 TO 10 TIMES circles below are wheels. a W S & LONGER LIFE NOT MUCH “ @e re . | BY ACTUAL TEST : It’s not much of a tank, but! (= 4 ¥ its pretty good tor an cectietie Be Mi @ z ; Lint free pure silk, plus Colum- a te bia's exclusive fluid inking o~ F. OV ing S eee I a: * Saturday, Oct. 22nd hi nt writing. eng tay i. AFAMILY AFFAIR ie All records and files carefully *| long wear. Pidewting. nove picking und to. . moved to our new address . : ORDER NOW PROM eS. tale signs of Pin-Worms ++; sly e @ General Printing : Heune: |S Sot See ai7 S. TELEGRAP H ‘7 3 THE KING FISHER, may be not know it, - We’re taking our same phone number with us... so call us at FE 4-0588 or come out and park free at our door. 17 W. Lawrence St. | set the tablets into,the bowela be: } , , caters, proves very te, and Sch” Seitat, app ae Next to the Bateman & mame Bldg. i | what, they ask, reaching for an- ae nadie Spelt paaelat ee ArgumentOver Nothing | es, we = st 9 setekoe za ce Doughnuts taste like doughouts, —The Holeina Doughnut | witr’c iit hoies anyway Sis Shree ee : the Only 17.96 per cent of Arizona DETROIT w—Apple cider bas year, contend _ oe land is privately owned, the rest for over 100 years. doughnuts go hand in hand mystery long ago ¥ have being federal, state and Indian | Brummett-Lincicome Inc. * * 377 South Telegraph Free Parking Space S, Halloween parties and October) raised a plaque on the home of! reservation lands. socials at the church. — the inventor. |: —_——_—_—_—_ | | Fall gatherings such as these | ory, a native of Rockport, Me. - Save at L. Spadafore Sons on Quality Meats! an argument that goes back ’ The Pilgrims, it is said, learned Armour Star yemeve fried nies from boiling | fat. He was sampling the results and found that the cakes were not cooking in the center. He proved his point by poking out the doughy part with one sharp thrust of his finger — and so the holeléss doughnut was. born. Others say.Gregory used a fork | fustead of his finger, and still | others insist it was during his days as a helmsman on a ship that the great moment occurred. Gregory, it is reported, was eat- ing fried cakes during hi« watch | at the wheel when the time came that he had to use both hands to keep the ship steady. Being a resourceful man, he stuck a fried cake on a spoke of the wheel—, and there was the hole! ANOTHER STORY Years ago, however. the Na- tional Dunkers Assn. rejected the stories of how Gregory invented the doughnut hole. Some say the Indians pierced a fried cake with an arrow just as it was dropped | into a kettle. Sensotional Buy on Heavy Gauge STEEL sHeLn) Gregory to poke the hole in the vy owe? | Armour Star Rolled PORK SAUSAGE............!. SMOKED PICNICS........... — Your Choice — tena'es’” SPARE RIBS......... tb. PORK LIVER......... 2.00.2 Ibs. ury, and perhaps even beyond. | holes—from a Dutch cook on‘ the consume halt the 10 biltion doughy me story el how it came to be Armour’s Crescent PETER’S LARD. eeoeeece 2 Ib. pkg. SLICED BACON.........1b. layer BORDEN’S BISCUITS.....3 Cans — Your Choice — READY TO ASSEMBLE! NOTHING ELSE TO BUY! f ©@§ EXTRALARGE 17° 2 98” form. } Nevertheless, Prof. E. B. Reynard of the Colorado museum . * . General Printing & Office Supply | of history says Americans learned | doughnut making from Europeans, 17 W. LAWRENCE ST. PONTIAC J "fm the Indians, i All of which, say the doughnut Pe ADNUSTABLE SHELVES Ani hes explained tiew | e © COMPLETE WITH SHAY | = tribe of Americen todinns, af | . ou j 0 T O A T “id ema , oe Am Oa . | lea ca - ‘the P web, made | S] RLOIN Your Choice 2 Blade Cut Lb. 3 5 ¢ Better! cunt ‘om ror Fines | have been found in petrified | or | P R S .*" , | Fresh Ground Beef HAMBURGER ¢ 3 Ibs. ROLLED RUMP lb. 3 5 95° ROAST ......... CUBE STEAKS * 79 poratoes... 10“ 25°] | S"" pork'ciors «= * 79 sweeT wer... “59 ) MATLIK |sioxtoisns =“ 89° TISSUE... 429°] 4 Qe [Pork stears, =“ 59" Gal. T-BONE STEAKS . “6 5¥¢ TOMATO SOUP x 3 ™ 29° Complete Line of Beer. Wines, Liquors to Take Out—We Reserve the Right to Limit Quanity 6 yt i; . PORTO RICAN 4 Lbs. 29° §. ! YAMS...... a INTRODUCING A BIG AND VITAL , BEANS... ee 109° . @eeeseeensse . GENERAL MOTORS “AUTOMOTIVE FIRST”! og dd read 24 Ox. « AQ: 997 OAKLAND AVE. 197 OAKLAND AVE. Peanut Butter . . SUPER MARKET ROUND STEAK SWISS STEAK Boneless Pati ae THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1055) eee “NINE Certification Given Dr. Ivan A. LaCore Word that he hds been certli- fied as a mental hospital adminis- trator has just been received by Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, medical su- perintendent of Pontiac State Hos- pital. Certification was granted by the American Psychiatric Association Committee on Certification in recognition of the leadership Pon- tiac State Hospital has main- tained in the field of psychiatric * medicine, and its continued high >) ~ President's. * - jident’s photograph “‘comes to you | . state and national reputation un- der his direction, Only two other medical superin- tendents in the state share this nner ee Dr. —— pe 1955 LaCore, ause out- standing attainment: in his pro- fession was elected a dew ts in the American Psychiatric Asso- ciation, the highest honor the asso-. ciation can award. Dystrophy Victim Gets Belated Gift From Eisenhower CHICAGO w — An If-year-old boy, afflicted with muscular dystrophy and confined to a wheel chair, has received a belated birth- day gift — an autographed picture of President Eisenhower. The photograph was enclosed in a letter written by Mrs. Eisen- hower to Lance Arellano, who had written the President and sent him six plastic soldiers. He also ex- pressed wishes for the President's speedy recovery and that he have a happy birthday. Lance noted in a postscript that his own birthday, Oct. 7, was a week before the * = “How very thoughtful of you to send the t some of your | toy soldiers,” Mrs, Eisenhower wrote Lance. “He asked me to | tell you that he sincerely appre- | ciated such a gift and your good | wishes." Mrs. Eisenhower added the Pres- | with the good wishes of the Presi- - dent and myself and hope that _ you will be much better soon.” Battleship Wisconsin Ld - Stranded in Gotham . NEW YORK @—The huge bat- | tleship Wisconsin was stranded on_ a reef in New York harbor for * nearly an hour yesterday. A strong tide pushed her aground while she » was being towed to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. ; * . * A ficet of 16 tugs pulled the 45,000-ton vessel off the mud bank at the mouth of the East River, some 500 feet off the tip of Man- hattan, The Navy said the ship, which is 885 feet long, apparently suf- fered no harm. A spokesman said * the Wisconsin was under control of a civilian pilot and being towed by civilian tugs when * grounding ” a ee The ship, her own engines idle, ' was being towed from Bayonne, N.J., to Brooklyn for a general overhaul, It was the Wisconsin's second | grounding in New York harbor. On Aug. 23, 1951, she went aground | on mud flats in the Hudson River. es More than 4%% million American families.own more — mg car, an increase in number o —_— than 70 per cent in the last years. ry MYER’S Get Acquainted Offer! GENUINE BLUE WHITE 13 Ct. DIAMOND 88 PAY ONLY °9.00 Now 1.00 Weekly TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVERY THURS, - FRI-SAT. to 9 P.M 4 Third of Series on ‘State's rue Problem or imocent persons in & tragic . | accident. The central file was established to keep an accurate record of the violations and accidents of all dealing with poor drivers. The Secretary of State's office estimates it now receives and fe. |cords reports on only slightly. more than one-third of all the motor violations committed throughout the state. The other two-thirds are not being entered on’the records of drivers who may: ;isome day cause fatal accidents due to lack of personnel. Sufficient funds should be appropriated to operate this vital system on an effective basis Establishing a state-wide sys- tem whereby driver license examinations would be given by trained civil service employes rather than by local police and sheriffs is the controversial is- sue in connection with driver Hi- censing. Under the proposal, the present functiqn of issuing li- censes would be taken away from local enforcement officers and put under a division of the Secretary of State. Michigan is the only state in the | country which still mafhtains split | responsibility in driver licensing. Primarily because of this, Michi- | gan's driver licensing program | was ranked 30th among the states | in the National Safety Council's , | 1954 appraisal. While city police officials gener- ally have approved the proposal, sheriff's have fought it, bitterly. -Yet no one can effectively deny that the present system: has been responsible for many ae drive ers receiving licenses. Numerous cases have. been documented -of persons being li- censed who could not see, who able to read. the word “stop,"* or were afflicted with physical dis- abilities which made them danger- ous companions'on the highway. of any traffic safety program. Opposition to a change, they say, stems trom a reluctance to _—-——— were so illiterate they were un- |. r Driver Improvement Plan Will Reduce Trafic Toll give up the fees local police and sheriffs now receive for issuing | license. That makes it @ matter of dol- lars vérsus Human beings.. If the opposition to a change has no. stronger basis, it deserves little attention. During the years I have been associated with the traffic safety program, I have seen sufficient evidence to convince me that a change is imperative. In my opinion, Michigan would be well served if all local enforce- ment agencies were relieved of | authority to issue, driver licenses | and this responsibility centered in a state department with the examinations given by trained civil service personnel immune to Yocal political pressures and friendships, Adoption of this proposal would Since 191] ee witr ec Vis 44 STATE AVE. PHONE Feder! 2-4732 have the her advantage of freeing many ‘Yocal. officers, now tied up on licénsing, for other po- lice work, | enforcement. including traffic = Editor Slated for Talk ANN ARBOR (#—Norman Cous- ins, editor of. “The Saturday Re- during the Michigan Assn. of Jun- versity. of Michigan Thursday and Friday, Cousins will speak Friday on “The Information Crisis ‘in America.” Plan Together Now - for Your Payment Plan. Family Memorial Now you can purchase your monument from income. Convenient monthly payments can be arranged through the new and exclusive GUARDIAN Insured Time- Choose your monument now when all may have a voice in its selection. GUARDIAN SEB US FOR COMPLETE DETAILS We Erect Memorials in Any Michigan Cemetery Pontiac Granite and Marble Co dm—um—< | SOR, Ody Pa, COR, ' x Be | | one EE ag i ome ne “TOUGH AS A MARINE” Leatherneck Twill by Martinelli ' 2-pants suits Stays New Longer! Wages War on Wear! $ 7a It’s small wonder that this suit is taking America by storm! It’s | as handsome as it is rugged. It owes its stamina to a special twisting process in the weaving that multiplies the strength of every yarn of its.Australian wool . .. it’s the leader in the field of long-wearing suits. It’s also fortified against friction and tailored with special care at the important points of strain. - You'll choose from a magnificent selection of enriched colors in ' regulars, shorts, longs, extra longs, portlies, and portly shorts... and remember, $71.50 includes 2 pants! See and shop this handsome, ruzged Leatherneck Twill 2-pants suit tomorrow! } We Invite You to Open a Convenient Osmun’s Charge Account ae Pre aes a er Two Fine Stores to Serve You Better! Buy your clothing this sensi- — ble way ... get the garments : you need, as. you need them. © . And by using our 30-Day © 51 North Saginaw Plan there is no need to dis- — + rupt your budget. Es OPEN CR TRI TORRES NR Monday - Friday ‘til 9 P. M. ae : at ; We , ¢ : | é ‘ Tel-Huron Center OPEN Thurs.-Fri.-Sat, "til 9 P. M. cuts your Remember: doubles the wear ... and It’s the extra pair that cost in half! Get Your Reserve Seats for the HIGH FEVER FOLLIES (Ponting, General Hespitel Bapefit) at either of OSMUN’S TWO BIG STORES Downtown or Tel-Huron Shopping Center ° GEO. SLO. . 269 Oakland SHONAKER & SONS FE 2-4800 ... brings you the newest 2-pants suit in America! view” will be the featured speaker ior Colleges meeting at the Uni- - emg Le ea MMR ac OB ts 3c i ig gala i 8M eee eet Sire ae) Seam crt A SNE ec epi = Mpa “ . er ae. sell Nets a ee de dp Mya y ha ak “oats, ioe jadeinniampaditiiinaihaidiatée Re A Pa ln b ” \ i | Pos | , ff i F ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19. 1953 Hopes to Shed FALSE TEETH . | » | TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS Conibs' and. Winifred Dunaway, transferred to Owsley Circuit Court ¥ Change of Verve Given in. Sheriff Shooting Case Police End Probe They were charged with killing oe And then I tried Ben-Gay”, writes Mrs. Henry Super of San Francisco, Cal.: “With one application and the ald of my heating pad, the pain and soreness were relieved. After the second application, I awoke the next morning with fot a sign of pain or soreness. I feel I can't praise Ben-Gay enough. I'll keep it handy always." Countless people, like Mrs. Super, rely-on y for fast relief from muscle aches and pains — and for good reason! Ben-Gay is different from any other pain-relieving prod- uct. It contains up to two and one half times more of two famous pain- relieving agents than any of five other widely offered rub-ins! When you rub in Ben-Gay, two things ce happen. First, extra blood is brought | coursing up through the affected area. Second, a pain-deadening ac- tion starts instantly to bring warm, soothing relief. When sore, aching muscles trouble you, use Ben-Gay for sure, trustworthy relief. Rub in Ben-Gay oe tub pain away! taking ‘his own life. — | George D. Bryson Jr., 32, shot | Sylvia Dahl Hess, 22, twice and | i then ended his life with a bullet jin the brain at a busy intersection | yesterday, according to Sgt: Floyd | Alsbury of the sheriff's office. | Peace Justice Hugh Duval or- | | dered an autopsy on both bodies ‘but he said it “was obviously a case of murder and. suicide.” Alsbury said Bryson went AWOL from his Army unit m Germany two years ago and took Sylvia, who had * married an ordnance | |major while on a tourist visa to! |Germany four months earlier, on , i ‘a wild ride through. the Black | | Forest in a stolen jeep. ' He was caught, court-martialed and dismissed from the service, but brought Sylvia to Miami and lived with her unti] about a month | Bryson left a note, addressed to police, in which he said be was romance.” * * just no other way out.” Sylvia was still married to the Army major in Germany, Alsbury | said, and Bryson left a wife and \two children, now believed to be ‘jn Bethlehem, Pa. Sam Benson SAYS: MEN! I never thought it could fo me... an J this . . . that’s why I need *50,000 CA and that’s why you are ABLE TO SAVE SO MUCH at the start of the season! happen SH ty like HEAVYWEIGHT, WATERPROOF ‘GABARDINE JACKETS || Extra warm Wool Quilted Lining .. . and made with Knitted Cuffs and Bottoms for keeping the cold weather out and warmth in! ‘the I COULD SELL ‘for $14.95 BUY NOW-—SAVE NOW! PANTS Winter weight pants made of VALUES to $8.95 $5 00 spot-prool, wrinkle - resistant fabrics. TAKE YOUR CHOICE GA OMbY. .. cc ccceneveneenevens DON'T MISS THIS SPECIAL! PANTS CLEARANCE weights, Shark- - Medium skins, Lightweights . . many colors to from. VALUES TO $10.95. CHOICE SAM BENSON FREE PARKING in any lot or garage in tewn, with purchase! 20 S. Perry St. * YOUR *4)00 ago, Alsbury said. | ending ‘“‘what was once a beautiful “I’m not sorry for ‘what I'm_ going to do," he wrote. “There's | FE 5-6159 — > ‘ | > | “oe — - | HORSES! HORSES! HORSES: The Arabian Horse. 3. The Arabian is one of the oldest breeds and from it have developed | a great many of the world's finest horses. and useful. affection between horse and rider. Slender and graceful, the Arabians are very fleet of foot, intelligent Arabs: living in Northern Africa ride the horses great distances across their desert country. There is a wonderful understanding and | The Arab pets his horse tenderly; When a colt is born, the mother | best of care Arabs mounted | can gallop along at full speed, rise game, or swoop low to the ground | ing their speed » and baby are taken into the family tent for a time and given the on these horses are bold and daring riders. They | in the stirrups and shoot at passing and catch up a rose without check- Arabianwhorses are given fine saddles, rich saddle blankets, tasseled bridles and reins to make them look even more beautiful. Here is an Arab boy, Ibn I) Abou, on his Arabian stallion, Aba Ben | Yusuf. Paste the picture on cereal box cardboard and color with | crayons. Use the brightest colors you have for the horse's trappings. Cut it out along the heavy outlines, fold back the end panels along | | the dotted lines and the horse will stand. TOMORROW: Rosella and her horse Rosette Roosevelt Election Fund Collecting Dust in Bank LOUISVILLE, Ky. w —In u straightfaced legal manner, the | Citizens Fidelity Bank-& Trust Co. | | advertised the following deposit as added to the Pontiac City Li- proved reducing Army manpower, | being unclaimed in its vaults: LJ + * “Rank & File Committee for the a cis Building—$13.91." The advertisement yes- terday tidn't say which Roosevelt | or which re-election. ORDER Clean Winter Comfort NOW! SPEEDWAY OAKLAND FUEL and PAINT Co. 436 Orchard Lake Ave. ee ta Matching wedding bands, «handsomely tailored bands in 14K yellow gold. lewelry Department MY STORE OPEN . 9TO 9 Meon., Thers., Fri, Sat, Nights « Toes, Wed. | “i 6:08 | FINEST QUALITY GLASSES # GEORGE'S NEWPORT'S _ Choice of 100 S TYLES ONE LOW PRICE! FIRST QUALITY FRAMES & LENSES @ Your Prescription Accurately Filled @ First in Pontiac with the Newest @ Fast Service New Books Placed Library Shelves — on | divisions despite a cut in Army | Two dozen new books were. funds for the current year. When Congress earlier this: year ap- | | braries. collection, Librarian Adah | Shelly announced today. Included are 12 new adult fic- | fiction selections. They are: | Adult Fictien } Amberwell, D> £E. Stevenson Call of the West, P. E. Lehman | The Case gf the Nervous Accomplice, | (EB. 8 Gardnér Cast a Long Shadow, holser The End of Eternity Esther, N. N Weinreb Heritage, Anthony West The Rare Adventure, B.‘E. Fergusson The Return of the Kid, W. D. Over- holser Ww. D. Over Isaac Asimov So Tiberius, E. E Mannion These .Lovers Fied Away, Howard Spring . 2 A View of the Sea, Elizabeth Pair Adult Non-Fiction The African Giant, Stuart Clocte Basal Reading. Instruction, G A ' | Yoakam | The Chelienge of Scandinavia, W. L Shirer | Cooking the Chinese Way, K H C. Lo The Fifteen Weeks, J. M. Jones Freedom of the Press, WL. Chenery | Hands Laid Upon the Wind, BIW) Overstreet hs High Adventure. Edmund Hillery A History of Latin America from, the Reginning to the Present Cc. Her- ring 1 Threw a Rose into the Sea, Alyse | Simpson Mars tm Capricorn Religious Factors tn W. E Oates Beverly Cross Texan Sends Margaret ‘Get-Married’ Chapeau ~ DALLAS, Tex. | designer - manufacturer Richard Englander has sent a ““get-mar- | "| ried" hat to Princess Margaret of | | England, | * * | “It's something blue for her to wear,"’ said Englander yesterday, | adding that the hat was fashioned after Texas’ state flower, the blue- | bonnet. The creation is a pearl-trimmed, | blue satin shell in the shape of a | heart, symbolic of romance, said | the designer. The size is* adjust- | able. * * Actress Alice Joyce | Leaves Large Estate LOS ANGELES U—An estate of more than $175,000 was left by former actress Alice Jovee, who died Oct, 9. * * * Her will filed for probate yes terday left the estate to her two | daughters, Mrs, Alice Moore de | Tolly, 40, of Dover, Del., and Mrs. Margaret Harris, 34, of Clark Fork, | Ida, : : ” | | Fears Russian Trap WASHINGTON (INS) Sen John L. Sparkman (D-Ala), just | returned from a trip to Russia and | other Communist countries, cau: | |tions against the U.S. lowering | ‘its guard just because ‘‘the sun _ of Geneva shines upon us."’ He warned that any budget-balancing defense cuts may be ‘‘falling for an alluring bait in a Soviet trap." (Advertisement) HEAR NOW! New 3-transistor “Royal-M" THE SMALLEST, LIGHTEST HEARING AID IN At powerful as tome hearing aids at least | | | Mental Iliness | , | uw—Dallas hat | | ZENITH'S HISTORY! | | } WASHINGTON (®—The Defense Department hopes normal] turnover among its civilian’ workers will) - help it meet a goal to shave 68,000 civilians from its payroll without resorting to layoffs. Secretary Charles E, Wilson told. a news conference yesterday that he counts on a cut in the civilian 'work force to play the major part in a drive to save half a billion dollars and hold defense spending within 34% billions this year. * * @ Me The expected reductions in the | civilian payroll were outlined in a. new memorandum providing “guidelines” for efficiency. Wilson emphasized that no big-| seale layoffs of civilian employes is planned. The secretary said miost of the | reduction would result from ‘‘attri- | tion'’—the normal turnover caused by workers reaching mandatory retirement age, resigning, leaving because of ill health or dying. By the simple procedure of not re- placing these, the present civilian employe payroll of about 1,154,000 could be cut. | | | | | | * The 68,000 reduction between | now and next June 30 was esti- mated from percentage figures in Wilson's memorandum. This pro- , posed, as a “‘target" goal, that the number of workers be reduced 2 per cent by next Dec, 31, another | 2 per cent by March 31 and still | another 2 per cent by June 30, the ‘end of the fiseal, year. The average pay for a civilian employe js estimated at $4,372. Wilson made it plain the econ- | omy drive will not result in new | reductions of To a question, Wilsor said he ex- | pected the Army would be able to | retain 18 or 19 of its present 20/ there were plans to trim Army unit strength to 17 divisions. Farmers in the United States | Re-election of Roosevelt, 307 Fran- tion works and 12 adult non- | use more than 60 per cent of the world's tractors, — itwo of his former deputies, J military personnel. | ae r*] ‘a of Army Officer ae | BEATTYVILLE, Ky. Sheriff | Need Not Embarrass Murder-Suicide 2 «2 | Hampton Palmer's popularity and | 33-year-old George Reece June 11 seo a IVI ans |influence would make it impossible | in an exchange of gunfire during oat Ter tinbarrassment because MIAMI, Fla, (—Law enforce- v | to obtain a fair-minded jury to try | a raid at a moonshine. still. thetr pene m a. tinged vee ment officers today marked | . ‘ him ona murder charge, the state ' | ihee in feer of this happen to you. “closed” the case of a former | - Wilson Believes That | claimed yesterday. | Scientists report that 25 per Just sprinkle * iste Sratra os oe Army first lievtenant who ended | Normal Turnover will t- e-% leent of the growth response in plates. Hold false Sell fismiy, his illicit romance with a major’s | , | So Lee Circuit Judge Ss. H. Rice pigs is inherited and other 7% per co. thay foe more seuntertabie, Core wife by: killing the girl and then | Cut Defense Payroll ordered the trial of. Palmer and cent depends on feeding from the | jure breath), Get PASTERTH at any. hm | prenatal state to marketing. Man, this is whiskey! Made by Hiram Walker to taste as great whiskey should | drug counter. BRAID MOTOR SALES Cass and W. Pike St. Pontiac, Michigan YOUR DE SOTO DEALER PRESENTS GROUCHO MARX IN “YOU SET YOUR LIFE" EVERY WEEK ON BOTH RADIO AND TELEVISION 45» NOC NETWORKS, hee (Open 9-5:30—Fri, ‘til 9 OTHER MODELS AT $75” and *125” Fred N. Pauli- Co. | 20 West Huron FE 22-7257) DISPENSING OPTICIANS Phone FE 2-2895 Room 2-3, 15 W. Lawrence ‘ . bs ; if, | | | 3 al f ‘ A ef i y NEW YORK — An extended-ac- | immediately. and CHICAGO — During the ee |® big gain over 1949 when 75 per one tion “medical pill has been de- | dose effective for 3 or 4 hours, and five: years the Greed bes been 80") of total construction was for ee Poh as ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 | y 3 . —- : and eliminate, . ‘ a8 Tenn, . One-family structures. made up | ¢; nights when. two armed bandits . New Pills Are Effective = 2n¢. — ieee esd Housing Trend Veering | iiaaee ‘sewes edad First Days on ‘naps Job fee hima tap ‘and sabbed the place | $6 Stogies Cost Plenty UNITED Over Longer Periods. |e ica mr Single Feily Units (Sr ren eacing for Gon Pamper |i hrc nat mr lS, ee TED EW Yt saath Bh gay BO agra nnygpt CAMDEN, S. C. @— John) ist ordered his tank filled up with | 35, when he told them he cauldn't | SHIRT Sema, . the | veloped that produces its effect wend - dagietamity excitement in a new | bo: ‘i d x of cigars he took out-of a drug | ods service station. Railway f passenger cars. average | store. They said Grimes ha( only \ee Tel-Huren Rhoadus experienced ye ot| gas but drove off without paying. \ find a-clerk to pay for the 6.50 D | He had been at work only two 72 feet in length, $3 in his pocket. | single-family units and almost 20 dinary-type tablets, which takes | United States Savings and Loan ‘"é evenly throughout the night or day | hours to dissolve. League points out. | per cent for multifamily dwellings. Foodarama BUY ‘EM BY PEAS Big, tender pees packed et the peak of flavor freshness 4a NO. 303 CANS 60. Cut Beets Ax 49: Stokely brand. In Tote Home bag ,’ . ane Corn KERNEL In Tote Home Bag . . Green Beans Stokely Cut, Tote Home Bag $457 AJAX cctansen Park & Beans => A* 4 In Tote Homie Bag .. 4 Cone 49° wea Sweet Peas 4259 Kraft Dinner Hot dish for cool weather . Cat Food ws: In Tote Home Bag . . 2m 29° . Beans NORTHERN tim Ane 39° 7 Freshlike Timy Tot . . » Avondale brand Tissue ™ =... AQ Veg-All Larsen's’ Mixed Vegetables - Delsey. Super-soft, <, FLOUR ENRICHED Nylon coupon inside every ~~ - yours 2x 49° 5:39 Wax Paper. Pineapple Ju Juice 460 Cut-Rite . . . « «© © @ « Dole brand... s+ ee ee eee Kleenex wo AQ Muffin Mix = 4° White. Everyday low price . : areal Jiffy brand. So easy to fix... . . ° Rolls Pkg. Tissue © Elbow Macaroni 70. FT Ape Northern White .. . Kroger brand . . 1... 2 ee es ew Canned Milk 4 z= Kroger evaporated . . 47° : Tomato Juice ‘= 22° Kidney Beans =] Q° Avondale brand. Everyday low price . Orange Juice 2 97° Butter Beans =.» A 0° Old South Brand ... eoees--! oan of Are brand. Everyday low wee Limas west swe - 14%4-0x. C Cen Everyday low price . ee see a | “te al ‘ ' nw TT \ vera oe > : é t ewes RES, * i 4 Soon es od vet te i ey: Faiut Ripe Bana mas Lor | Estates 10: 59" Mushrooms. = 29° Fresh, serve ‘em with rteak . aire} fc ce | feet Fare wr: ae FREE TOP VALUE ‘STAMP i jd select, llow sweet, Golden-Ripe! Start Saving Free Top Value Stamps Now! Only 67 Days ‘Til Christmas. We Reserve the eight to limit or Prices effective scieaart Sunday, Oct. 3B, 1955. hi THE BAGFULL!! ‘Swift's Smoked ee ie A Fooderama Super Spociet a FULL Peed Extra SHANK Lew to Save HALF You More Butt End Lean and flavorful. For baking . ..... i Be Si RN Bie RR i Siiide @ ron Hygrade’s. ge with eggs for delicious = 29 Pork Liver C Fresh, young flavorful. Serve with 29 Porterhouse ™ ., Q¢ | Fresh, tender “Thrifty” meat . Eleale es... 45 2A Pork Chops u 95° obec oy + a vac. Ham Slices ‘x Choice center cuts, for ae or Pa ol Ground Round, . §9° Broiling FRESH HAMS ie Lean and Tender. Priced extra low”, rays = 59° Maple Leaf Sliced. All choice willis on cuts Veal Roast Fresh and Lean, for Prving @ Boiled Ham - 49: Rolled, no bone—no waste . « « . «+ {Fresh EGGS 49° Shortening #3 » 5Q* Velveeta «on Reg. price 69¢, with coupon Plain or pimento . . . « 2s Lb. 79° Spaghetti st 2Q° Margarine = = QBe Chef Boy-Ar-Dee. New family size . Eatmore. Everyday low price Chow Mein «:.< Orange Juice § «=: 89° 2¥4-L. T 9° Beef or Chicken and pkg. of noodles” ° Kroger frozen KROGER Crackers = =. 9Q¢ White Bread Ss Kroger brand, priced extra low . 10¢ coupon for Kroger Strawberry a | r | Mince Meat Sc: ns AQ® Preserves witvitin ic- 2B Borden's, 5c off reg. price . . . With 10 ~— from White Bread Cinnamon Loaf - Pecan’ Ring sto ,.., Fresh Kroger Sliced. Light and fluffy . . Kroger fresh baked. With delicious pecans < ‘enue’ "A" Medium . 4 h, Se 4:39: Parsnips =: | 9 = 3 Or Turnips. Fresh and flavorful . ee Br re oe eee St ees sol pom ere Pay. e EVERY TIME AT YOUR K ROGER a) Michigan Jonathan. Sweet and juicy, delicious eating ORANGES ~~“ Presh—Juice-Laden. Large = Totem Home Sale. ere ee ew we ED ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS. w EDNESDAY. OCTOBER ‘19 1955 MASSACIC Step Taking Pleasure Extra steps in the Massagic! Famous for comfort and style. \\ +qwo1zo ECONOMY SHOE STORE Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Tilt 9:00 P. M. 552 N, PERRY | Pontiac City: Affairs Property’ Bought by for Future Civic Center Acquisition’.of another piece of property across from the new City Hall was approved by the - City Commission last night. The commission approved pur- chase of small frame house on Parke street, two doors south of | Pike, for $7,500. tastic’” for the building, but pointed out the city was buying | the land, which runs back te the | Clinton River. The house will be | razed or moved. | The city is purchasing property Your Watch te $450 © Adjusted Expansion Watch Bands. Ladies’-Men's 95 Special Georges-Newports | Jewelry Dept. | | NEW By PHY LLIS BATTELLE | costing us millions of atnual YORK (INS) — Time headaches apd dollars. on the block bounded by Pike, eget i ag Se saying ae “The radio-TV nefworks alone Mill, Water and Parke streets as ¢ ." mAneLY 3 ‘tes en WEAVING - HK say they. lose about $2,000,000 a it, becomes available for a pro 4 drunken ™ or. | year because of |. this ‘inconsis- posed civic center development. — | tency,’ says Kane, president and In other business, the commis- sion approved transfer of ownér- ship of a [package beer and wine license at“1019 Joslyn Ave. ; | Also approved was a $39,000 con- City Manager Walter K. Will- | tract for sewer construction to man said the price was “fan- (Chris Nelson & Son, Inc., of Royal Oak. The commission nod also went to an agreement for paving streets in the new Herrington Hills Subdivision on the east side. The ‘twice-postponed matter of | reissuing a license to the M & § Parts Co, was referred to the next informal meeting. Sent to the Plan Commission were two letters from a building firm concerning the proposed Pon- . | tiac Knolls Subdivision in the northeast section of the city. A public hearing was set for next Tuesday on a special assess- ment roll for a water main in| Pearsall street from Bagley to! Wrenn. The following special assessment rolig were confirmed: Third from Water main in avenue | Laurel to lot 214, Highwood Subdivision - Water main in Second avenue from Ivy to Laurel ater main in Laurel avenue from utter and drainage in Blaine avenue from Oakland to Montcaim Combined sewer on Richard avenue from trumk sewer to alley south of Walton Combined sewer on Rutgers avenue | from University to the railroad Combined sewer on south side Colum- ‘bla avenue from trunk sewer east of | ' Carlisle to Stanley, . "56 Chevrolet sets new Pikes Peak record RE SS ON ke ee eS ee aE ee ee in top-secret test! A RECORD-BREAKING NEW CHEVROLET i 3 back-and-forth, cra+) 'zy and: inconsistent, that's what | the time situation is,” says Robert “In-and-out, founder of the. National Time Re- ‘search Institute, Inc., “and rail- roads, airlines and stock exchanges H. Kane, “‘and something's got tO ..6 also hit hard through the be done about it.” summer months, Not to mention,” What Kane is referring to is | he adds sadly, “the average guy the long-standing feud between wi ‘elities on daylight time and: cities | Portland. Ore. on standard time. Their refusal “Why, he's got to call Portland to give in atid be compatible is | to get the straight dope on what Seeks to. Borrow Competent Hangman TONGA ISLAND—It so long since a man was hanged in Tonga, the Kingdom of Queen Salote, that quite a problem arose | when two young men recently | were sentenced to death for the murder of another man. Murder is so uncommop that the kingdom suddenly had to start ooking a a hangman. The last execution was in 1927, when a young man was hanged for mur- dering a girl, At last reports, in Nukualofa, the Tongan Government. was look- ing into the possibility of appoint- | ing a hangman but meanwhile | had inquired about the feasibility of bringing in Fiji's hangman | from Suva by plane. Russia Controls Traffic Between Berlin, West LONDON wW—Ruséia. which granted Communist East Germany sovereignty Sept. 29, will continue to control ‘‘for the present’ mili- tary traffic between West Ger- triany and West Berlin. A note to this effect, by the Moscow radio, sent to the Western Big Three. replied to a note of Oct. 3 had been has been warning Russia it keeping isolated Berlin free open to the West. 2.5 Million Sag aan NEW YORK iINSi—The politan Museurn of Art hit time attendance record last year when 2,541,749 visitors entered the museum, this figure topped ‘the 'record by nearly 90,000. previous Not long ago a hush-hush, camouflaged '56 Chev- rolet scorched thé nerve-breaking road up Colo- radé’s Pikes Peak for a new record—the first time © that old King of the Mountains has seen a new official stock car record in years! And what a road! Nearly 1214 miles of loose dirt with 170 chilling turns and no guardrail] between you and the great outdoors! The NASCAR* people did the official timing, supervision and certification. The first and only time a new model ever proved itself such a great road car before its introduction! And every- body knows that safety on the road begins with top performance. With cars that can zip, stop, corner and run. That kind of performance makes driving ‘safer—and more fun. So don't do a thing about a new car until you see the car that beat the King of the Mountains! *Nationol Association for Stock Cor Auto Racing whose officials timed and certified the performance of this preproduction mode! The hot one’s even hotter! _MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES, INC. 34 Mill St. . 211 S. Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan’ ho wazts'to go someplace like ~ | was introduced. in World War 1 broadcast | It} U.S.-British-French | would still*be held responsible for | and Metro- | an all- | A trustees report said | City Nobody Knows What Time It Is in Portland. civie groups—city by city, state by state. Eventually,” he hopes, | wostingn within five or six sears I foresee our working up to the federal level. Oh, joyous day!" cost of same, the individual needs and wants of - industries and private citizens, and make a report on. the findings. He is pretty certain the report |. will come out heavily weighted in’ “ypop everybody—excluding lov. favor of daylight time and then, ers, sot .course—will . know what report | in » hand, he will approach | time it is in. Portland. : ————— time he's going to arriv ‘e—and that city changes its ming on time so often I'll bet there are even some | Portlanders who don't know _ | time it is!” dU ST AGGRAVATED Kane js not, bitter, understand, | He's just aggravated that the oth-| erwise clever, technically advanced | | United States has muddled along | so inconveniently — clock-wi for more than 30 years. Daylight } | time (which is simply setting the: clocks ahead to give one more. hour of daylight in the summer) | * /as (‘war time.” * *, # “>! “And since then,” he says, “the country has never been able to make up its mind whether jt wants it Or not. As a result, we have about a 50-50 breakdown of stand- ard vs. daylight areas. Some states | like Ohio—man, it's crazy there! — are all split up within themselves, | with about half the cities on day- Professional Type 3-Speed _ Changer intermixes records of different sizes, shuts. itself off after last record . now real hi- fidel- ity! Come in and , check our com. | light and half on standard," plete Hi-Fi de. »- * 9 partment. Kane, whe is-a public rela- tions director for a construction | company, took up. his time | studies in 1950 after he missed | a news conference which he, | | himself had ‘set up in Boston, | “How was I to know that staid | old Boston would have been mod. | ern enough to go daylight?" he remembers, He was an hour late to his own party, and the reporters were fur- | ious. Kane was hysterical, He | checked up and discovered that no federal agency was keeping | track of times around the country, |so he took it on as a hobby. It | bas now turned into a life's work. HE'D SURRENDER “I'm a daylight man myself,” he admits, "but I'd sooner see the j; entire country settle for standard | time than be undecided and incon- sistent as it is.” The chief oppo- {nents to daylight time, he says, /are these; * * | 1) Theater owners, whose busi- ness would be hurt by the extra daylight hour; 2) farmers, whose | fathers had the notion that cows | don't produce as much milk on daylight time, and 3) a.small per- centage of mothers the country over, who say they can't get the kiddies to bed: while the sun's up. FEdera/ 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW | Kane thinks he can overcome these objections. He is setting up a committee of experts to inves- tigate the inconsistencies, the i Automatic Thermostat if you buy a Duo-THERM Home Heater A4to 5 Room Oil Heater FROM ad A? No Down Payment—2 Years to Pay! The Duo-Therm looks like a. fine piece of furniture. In cordovan mahogany finish. Keeps Ate 5 rooms warm and cozy in coldest weather. as the famous Dual Chamber for perfect heat FEdera/ and economy. Thermostat, too! WKC 3.7114 OPEN 108 NORTH SAGINAW Up to 2 Years to Pay! Use Your Credit... Phone Friday and Monday Night ‘til 9 i t \ A i * Support the United Fund. | “, Give Once for All f hf 4 } if / } Ht lt f ) a | : ; PO f NTIAC PRESS’ f f 4 } | i } is Your United Fund Needs Your Help — Now! oA EL Sat BERS AE ee ia Be 8 8 \ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 . PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THIRTEEN Four Return | From Week. inthe North Members of Keloa’ * Attend Breakfast at Stapp Home Mrs. Helen S. Teitgen of Tilden avenue, Mrs. Norman Buckner of Pine Lake, Mrs. Jerome Varon of Ottawa drive and Mrs. F. D, Ro- deck of Orchard Lake avenue have returned to their homes after spending an enjoyable week ‘in the northern part of the state. * * Mrs. Janet Dow of Lexington | drive is spending several days in| Chatham, Ont., visiting relatives. | = * se Marsha Stapp ef Inverness | avenue entertained Keloa Klub members at a “come as you are” | breakfast Sunday, Joyce Whit- | field, Nancy Nickolson and Judy Lockner assisteq the hostess, e we * | Sailing aboard the SS Queen) Mary today for her home in Kil- marnock, Ayshire, Scotland, is | Mrs. Mary Dempester. { She has been visiting in the States for several weeks, spending | some time with her son-in-law and | daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John S. | Judge of Bonnie Briar drive. * * Mr. and Mrs, Roger Hoyt of East Lansing are receiving con- gratulations on the birth of a daughter, Linda Kay, Oct. 15-at Pontiac General Hospital. Grandparents are Mr and Mrs Ernest Hoyt of Silver Circle drive and George Svetkoff of West Tennyson avenue St. Joseph Guild | Planning Nov. 2 Spaghetti Dinner Mrs. Lester Lyons entertained | the members of St. Joseph Guild of St, Benedict Church at her home on Chippewa road Monday evening. , * * * Mrs. James Gottschalk, Mrs. Clinton Richards and Mrs. James | Clark were appointed, cochairmen | » of a spaghetti dinner Nov. 2 at the church. Mrs, Nelson Hunter and Mrs. Jack Seebald will arrange the dining room and Mrs. Keith Schachern will supervise the serving. Others helping In the dining room will be Mrs. Donaid Fraser, Mrs. Lynn Allen, Mrs. Ray Lyon, Mrs John Schmitt, Mrs. Willard John- son, Mrs. James Devereaux and Mrs, Anthony Matyniak. Mrs. Walter Hiller will handle publicity and tickets “J the affair. * Assisting Mrs. Lyons as cohost- esses at the Monday meeting were Mrs. .Grant Carlson and Mrs. | Wayne Harbour. The group will | meet at the home-of Mrs. Edward Collins of West Iroquois road in November. Working girls—to keep crisp and neat during the long, rainy fall days ahead, check with your tailor to see if your office costumes will take kindly to a treatment of one of the water repellents. There are six pages in | today’s Women’s Section | Packing “Parcels for Peac e”’ are United and men, Church Women (left to right) Mrs. Fremont First Presbyterian Church for World Com- | Alden of Hallman street, Mrs. John Walser | munity Day, Tuesday. They will then be of Pontiac Lake road and Mrs. Harold forwarded to refugee centers abroad, to be io ett — is Mrs. H. B. Harbage (cent - “Ss * “ . > Ss ‘ ae i * fe * valet Soa we president | praying “Give Us This Day Our Daily er), Wright of Crescent drive. The packages are | distributed through the Food and Agricul- ‘filed with sheeting, denim, bedding, chil-| tural Organization of the United Nations. |dren’s clothing, suits and overcoats for boys | . of United Church Women, goes over final| Bread.” Mrs. George Garver of Edgefield arrangements for World Community and road is seated (right). The women had just United Nations Day to be held Tuesday at finished mending clothing which will be sent the First Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Fred L. to refugee centers abroad through the Food Haushalter of Scott Lake road (standing) and Agricultural Organization of the United displays the poster on which children are Nations. Womens Section + | | | Bridal Party Given for Marlene Beattie Mrs. Glen Crawford of Birming- ham entertained at a bathroom and kitchen shower Sunday after- noon for bride-elect Marlene Beat- tie. Guests attending were Mrs. Roy Beattie, Mrs. Arthur + Crawford Mrs. Allen Parkinson, Lessel Craw- ford, «Mrs. Louis Crawford, Mrs. Glen McClorey and Mrs. Norman Crawford. Others attending were Mrs. Dale | Damn, Mrs. Clair Crawford, Mrs. Richard McClorey, Mrs. Milton | Crawford, Mrs. Harold McComa , and Mrs. Clayton Crawford. Completing the guest list were | Karen McComa and Mrs. Daniel Crawford, Coming Events 184, Dames. of & pm Corrine Sisterhood Malta, will meet Wednesday at in “Maita Temple, 82 Perkins St. Welcome Rebekah Lodge Sewing Circle with Mrs, dphn Nunly, 1478 Opdyke Rd., for a noon’ co- operative luncheon. The Friends prayer meeting will be | held at the home of Mrs. Mattie Jack- | son, 27 Miller, 8t., Thursday at 7:30 p.m, | | Hoedowners Hold | | ‘Precision Dance’ 20y Burch was master of cere- monies for the Hoedowners ‘‘Pre- ” Assisting Mr. Burch were Harvey Gilchrist, Robert > Grosjean, Howard Fraley, Cecil Elholtz and Dewitt Hart. . Guests for the evening included the George Holzers, the Ed Farrs, the Ray Bullocks, the L. M. Con- verses, the Henry Kuechles and cision Dance | Mr. and Mrs. John Flock. The next dance will be Get. 29 at Owen School, ‘ Ses “> hg a ; + pa. , oa ; to Aaa le! * fomen Join U.N.:in Program for P eace © Pentiae Press Phetes Watching Stan Radoye of Clarkston as he stacks the | First Presbyterian Church Tuesday, on World Community sacks of seed, corn, wheat, beans; peas and oats are Mrs.|Day. They will be handled through the Food and Agricul- rison of Cherokee road, both United Church Women. The bags will be sent abroad, along with articles brought to the i “7 Cogs : é, t Seated on the grain drill at the Fred' American farmers send grain, dried beans Shultz farm near Lake Orion were (left to and peas to-refugee centers abroad for dis- right) Mr. Shultz, John Trocke and William Kimball, both of the. Oakland County Agri- cultural Extension Department. The men were applying fertilizer prior to planting. . > | % & The boxes will be taken to the 8. H. Ogden of South Johnson avenue and Mrs. John Gar- |ture Organization of the United Nations. At the present time, this group has a membership of 71 nations. Treadle sewing machines are also needed, a ne; ; ree Oe ee NE ieee. Pha Milking in one of the barns at Wabeek| from farms throughout thé United States, Farms on West Long Lake road is Don Mor-| processed and sent in powdered form _to ley, who assists in managing the farms. The | refugee centers abroad. The United Nations 63 registered Golden Guernseys produce | distributes the food and clothing through the 150 gallons of milk daily. Milk is collected | Food and Agricultural Organization, tribution, United Church Women work with Farm Bureaus and agricultural agents in sending “Parcels for Peace.” Their Aim: to Increase World Food City Group Plans Community Day on Tuesday — he he United Church Women at the First Pres- byterian Cuarch. « r Registration will begin at 10:30 a.m, with Mrs. Fred Haushalter serving as chairman, Luncheon will be served at noon. The petition, “Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread,” has been chosen the theme for the day. For many years, the church has been trying to answer that prayer, but the need was so great that the program never reached far enough. Nor, when our government joined to help, was it possible to meet all the overwhelming prob- lems of want in the -world. The solution seemed to be for nations to act together.. * * * In 1943, 44 nations agreed to work for freedom from want, and the United Nations’ Food and Agri- culture Organizition was born, HOW FAO WORKS The FAO works like this. In | Africa, James Smyth, a Scotsman, is standing by a fishpond in Li- beria, A fresh-water biologist, he has spent years in the tropics, working on increasing the protein diet of people by raising more fresh-water fish. He has been dig- ging ponds all over the interior of Liberia, * * * He has had help from the United Nations, mission stations and jn- dustry. They. are all in on the experiment. They not only have more fish but more understanding among the people, : It is the same in animal hus- bandry. A Liberian girl who is working with others for better chickens, pigs, goats and cattle had training at Tuskegee Insti- tute and ig back helping her gov- ernment, ° Agriculturists work with the FAO getting rice to grow on dry land. They are also producing bananas, cocoa, coffee, citrus fruits, pea- nuts, cassava and beans, all be- cause they have “know-how.” * * * Nationwide offerings will be gathered. Everyone can share. One of the most urgent calls is for clothes for men and boys. aa * * American farm families have been given the opportunity of help- ing the needy in other lands by collecting farm surplus products, such as wheat, flour, beans, pow- dered milk, cotton, rice, corn, corn seed, rolled oats, cheese, butter, lard and dried fruit, : : Contributions will be accepted from anyore wishing to share, The “Parcels for Peace” pack- ages and sacks of grain will be sent from here to Nappanee, Ind., to be loaded.for shipping on the freight, train, Mrs. Lyndon: Salathiel is chair- man of arrangements, ; t . pee ; } vd : o mA yee PONTIAC PRESS, “WEDNESDAY, ocToRER’ 39, 1955 Rie FOURTEEN If you're short, take it éasy = enveloping stoles and coats. Don't \ overwhelm a you won't) - overwhelm others. HEAR WITH HAIR BAND! This lovely hair band helps you hear! Amazing Micronette Hearing Aid by Avdivox, suc- cessor to Western Electric Hearing Aid Division, is worn 6 miracle woys: os hoir bond, tie clasp, berrette, ‘wrist watch,” brooch, or with eye- glosses! Try it now at MIDTOWN SHOP 101% N. Saginaw FE 4-0539 Beauty Clinic by Edythe McCulloch HOW MUCH TIME? A beauty schedule is ig A if it is effective and it is effective if it is simple w 2 REPRE bh et : ej Ene fe a f Ege AG E : i No Appointment Necessary IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 29 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 i Parerita Must Use Love or Fe ear By MURIEL LAWRENCE be _ Spanked. | * This sheroacn: he ignored the warning, Desiring white paint, he | climbed up on a box to select it, from the cans onthe garage shelf. | With the can in his hand, he was; preparing to clamber down when | him. He dropped the can, and the Bryan was not spanked. His mother’s hand impressed no pain upon his body. What she did was cry, “Look at that | those paints alone? Go —s | out of here before T hit you , So we see that her love ade | | paint splashed out over the garage | | floor: mess! Weren't you told to leave | | . {his fear of pain nor his reason's| Only last weekend, Bryan was 4ppreciation of A warned that if he didn't leave the ‘paints in the garage alone, he'd this experience undisciplined by | Fa | either fear or love. 'SHE’S UNDECIDED Why does his mother limif her ‘control of him to complaint? I think the answer is*a: simple) one. Bryan's mother’ has just not | | decided whether ae’ s for control- As a result, ev an ‘emerged from | ‘ling children by love-—or. by fear of | pain. - * * * Oh, yes, she'll threaten to spank him. But ‘she'll never do it, She i can't..For spanking has been sold ito Bryan's mother as ‘“‘uneducat- * and low—an | punishment that rates i 'an unsophisticated yokel. she can't either. user as The sad thing is, | coutrel_bim by love, his mother called him. It startled | LJ q b no effort to impress reason on his - mind, either. Faced with her son's | Bryan's mother) ‘ put controls upon it neither thr oars | heedless action, Mothers Gather at Boys’ Club The othe Club of the Boys | Club met Tuesday evening at the | Boys Club. Five new members ‘accepted were ‘Mrs. Patricia Van | Emmerik, Mrs. Charles E. Lewis, | Mrs. Roscoe Zimmer, Mrs. Wil-| | iam Wood and Mrs. John Neaves, * * * Plans were discussed for the ‘Fall Carnival to be held Nov. 18 iat the club, and for the Christmas | party Dec. 6. Dolls brought by the | members for the carnival were on display. Mrs. Janet Odell, home editor of the Pontiac Press, was the | speaker of the evening. Her topic | was “Are You Getting Your Mon- | ey’s Worth Out of Your Food Dol- i Jar?” g * » » Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Cecil Elsholz and Mrs. Floyd | Halpin. Fall Clothing Sale Scheduled by Kirk en's Association will be held Fri- day from 9 am, -to 2 p.m. Toys, household items and jew- elry will also be sold. Mrs. Bertie | Tweedale is chairman of the project. Proceeds will be used for | kitchen equipment for the new church building. ly for dramatic personalities. If! The asymmetric styles are chief. | Kirk in the Hills fall sale of | | clothing sponsored by the Wom. | jan “A” in fashioh, wearing this at | Lakeshore House on. the ¢hurch | grounds. |yards 39-inch; blouse, 1% yards. | all (i EP by Ana Ah It’s a jumper for now — a sun- dress for summer! For schoolitime, make one in cotton plaid, another in solid colors, She'll love the blouse too, with short or three- quarter sleeves. She's sure to rate smart twosome! Pattern 4808: Girls’ sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 jumper, 2% This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. | Send thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class miail- ing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pontiac Press, Pattern Garden Club to Hear Talk by Ohioan Mrs. R. G. Schulke of Brecks- ville, Ohio, will be the speaker at the Birmingham Branch of the Women’s National Farm and Gar- | den Assn. meeting Tuesday at the | | Community House. | Mrs. Schuliee . a: cigtaanedl teacher and writer, as well as a lecturer on flower arrangement. teacher for state flower show ‘ schools, Mrs. Schulke will speak particularly about table arrange- meats. As chairman. of the day, Mrs. ‘Raymond Smith will give a brief | history of the club and honor the | past presidents. . °° * Mrs, H. G. Wood is chairman. of the tea committee and will be assisted by Mrs. C. C. Adams, | Mrs, Robert Chissus, Mrs. Earl | Triplett and Mrs. Norman Berry. | enecerenencemasemcommane Oakland Park WSCS Attends Indian Program An Indian exhibit, worship cen- ter and program were attended by 35 members and guests of Oak- land Park Methodist Church WSCS at the October meeting. Mrs. Elton Behnke, missionary | secretary, Was program chairman | |and Mrs. Sidney Barber presented | | the Indian version of the 23rd Psalm and a prayer, Mrs. Emerson Brown explained the use of the Women’s Division's money and informed the group that ¢his year financial ald would | go to Dulac, La., and the Odanoh Indian work at Washburn, Wis. Others participating in the pro- | gram were Kathleen Hertel, Mrs. | , you're not that type, be wary when | nent 243 West 17th St., New York | William Childers, Mrs. James | * you buy or iad may be chary to! wear. FEDERAL’S i mse DETER PAN Gives perfect uplift for average figures! ANNO 3.95 Pre-formed cup gives won- derful lasting uplift. Cotton, Sizes 32-36. A and B cups. ll, N. Y. Print plainly name, ad- | dress with zone, size and style) number. PTA Activities Wever Junior High PTA 9A home rooms 103 and 300 will hold family | Georne and re. Basil Meidilein. | Mrs. Trl williane. president, an- | ‘nounced the observance of the week of prayer and self-denial, starting Oct. 26 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the church. night at 7 pm. in the gym. The film,| World Community Day will be - th en Hester ae of educa. Tuesday at 10 a.m. at First Pres- will be Event speaker ‘at Wisner Scheoi | DYterian Church. Plans were made PTA uréday at 7:30 p.m. inifor a family-style turkey dinner the sel sym. Her theme will be “We Read in School.” Nov. 3. OV Lf~Sf- [II f{IfIfIIfIfm AS Q Your ‘Christmas Slippers f ~ Now at OSMUN’S &% ty “old- fashioned" | x ‘cians tardies samen self that she believes in control by love, she really thinks: it’s impractical- And T think her point of view| is quite general. little control. ‘They are not getting enough real fear—it takes fear—nor enough real love. “You must control one wa: something—or you _— iE rs the 3 lieve in control by love, ef . = 33 a rf Fy 4 it the decision, For until we move on there's no possible way ing it's been the wrong one. can't tum from it to the right one. Doris Reed Wed. in-Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Mrs.. Harriett Burton Reed announces the mar- riage of her daughter, Doris, to James A. McKenna, son of Mrs. W. K. McKenna of Detroit and the late Mr, McKenna, Oct. 13. The Rev. R. D. Dewey read the service in the Birmingham Congre- gational Church, and Mrs. Reed |gave a bridal supper in her home on Harmon avenue. The neylyweds are on their wed- ding trip to Nassau for a fortnight. On their return they will live in Allen Park. a e gf g F 'Crook of Farmington. Married Saturday in Farmington were. JoAnn Butrick” and Donald Allen: Crook. She és * the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Butrick of Birmingham, and the B. L. Crooks of Farmington are his parents. MR. and MRS. DONALD A. CROOK JoAnn Butr ick Is Wed in Imported Italian Silk Wearing a gown of imported Italian silk, JoAnn Butrick became the bride of Donald Allen Crook Saturday at the First Methodist Church of Farmington. She is the daughter of Mr, and Prs. ary a E. Butrick of Birmingham and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. B.L. The scoop aici a the gown was sprinkled with iridescent se- quins and ‘seed pearls. The bodice was fitted with a dropped waist- line which accented the bouffant) skirt. A finger tip veil of nylon tulle fell from her tiara headpiece | of. sequined lace. - She wore a single strand of pearis and tiny seed peari e ear- Jeanne M. Rogers Wed in Tennessee Ceremon YY A floor-length gown of ivory sat- in was worn by Jeanne Mary Rog- ers when she became the bride of Richard Maurice French in Oak Ridge, Tenn., Saturday. * * * Her full skirt extended into a ‘eathedral-length train. The sweet- heart neckline was fashioned with _a wide lace yoke insert and her long sleeves eaded in points at the wrists. A crown of lace embroidered with pearls held her illusion veil, and she carried a white prayer- book. The bride js the daughter of Mr. ;and Mrs. Earl Dixon Rogers of Oliver street, and the bridegroom the son ef Mrs. Morris Chester | French of Charleston, Ark., and the late Mr. French. | : * s Mrs. W. P. Rockey of Drayton Plains was matron of honor, Doro- thy Rogers of Nashville, Tenn., and Marian Fox of Oak Ridge were bridesmaids. The attendants wore ballerina-length dresses of pale pink velveteen with sweet- heart necklines and full sirts. Their , | flowers were red roses with pink velvet streamers. ATTENDS BROTHER Warren G. French. of Lexington, Ky., was his brother's best man. Seating the guests were George A. Rogers, Robert W. ‘McWhorter of Chattanooga, Term., and James Ww. ve and Norman Parish of MRS. RICHARD M. FRENCH ed from Nashville and Chattanoo- ga, Tenn. Mrs. Rogers wore dusty rose lace over taffeta with pink acces- sories and Mrs. French wore a light blue pleated nylon dress with navy accessories, For their honeymoon trip to Ber- muda, the new Mrs. French wore a navy blue suit with lighf blue) accessories. The newlyweds will reside in Oak Ridge on their re- turn, * * * The bride is a graduate of the University of Michigan, and Mr. French is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Arkansas. | tion chairman, j Anglican tradition. In the business | | meeting plans were completed to. hostess the Sunday coffee hour at. |: rings, a gift of the bridegroom. Her bridal bouquet was of white chrysanthemums and ivy, Peggy Ann. Altemus of Farming- ton was’ maid of honor wearing a 2 white silk ‘faille dress fashioned| ~ with an empire bodice of horizontal |French pleats and a full skirt. Her ‘headpiece was of white tulle and i baby bronze chrysanthemums, Kay Yates, Dona Crook and Mrs. Andrew Young, all of Detroit, were | the other bridal attendants, Their gowns and headpieces were identi- /cal to the maid of honor, Paul A, Steinke of Detroit was best man, Seating the guests were Wayne Kroepel, Walter Me- Kenzie and Andrew Young, all of | Detroit. For the reception held in the eve-| — ning Mrs. Butrick received the guests wearing a mihk shaded taffeta dress with beige acces- | ” sories. The mother of the bride-| | groom wore a dress of gray satin | ~ with red accessories, When tlie couple left for a honey- | > moon trip to the Bahamas and | | Florida, the new Mrs. Crook was wearing a red velvet dress with | | black accessories. ‘ Guild 10 Gathers With Mrs. Swett * Mrs. home on Motorway drive to mem- bers of Guild 10, All Saints Episco- | ii 2 pal church, for a dinner Tuesday evening. cooperative | Violet | |'McCoy and Mrs. Glenn Stephens | | assisted the hostess. — | Jessie Brewer, Christian educa- | reported on the | the church and for the guild's. booth at the bazaar being held al December. The next meeting of the cual will be held Nov. 15 at Stevens | | é Hall. Panel Talk Heard by Hawthorne PTA Cecil Cox was moderator of a panel. consisting of James Hunt, | Paul Allison, Jo Seeley, Mrs. Alton | Madden and M at the October | Hawthorne School, The panel, Harry Swett opened ber ae William Aitkens © A meeting of 3 which discussed the a Travel Program Given Tuesday *|for Pillar Club Members and guests’ of Pillar Club enjoyed a travel program given by Mrs. Dexter Craig and her sister, Jeanette Hubbard of Birmingham, at the Tuesday eve- ning meeting held at the home of Mrs. J. L. Van Wagoner. on. An- dersonville road. Colored slides taken during a European trip last spring were ~ shown and described with interest- ing sidelights on several countries. * * * Following the cooperative din- ner, Mrs. Fred Conner presided at the business feeting and Mrs. Gale H. Hedrick of Birmingham gave the devotions. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Harold Northon, Mrs. Arno Hulet, Mrs. C. T. Forsman and Mrs. Hedrick. Mrs. George Wasserberger will open her Illinois avenue ‘home to the group in November. The new torso lengths call for a warning to the short-waisted. Moral: Be sure it's just ‘for fashion, for you, not 4 Sam Benson 5 Says: Surprise Yourself # _ Come in... look over my i © outstanding selection of | j good quality, f igure- © flattering Wonderful Buy! White on White UNIFORMS RAR EUs Re eo in any bot or garage in town «. with purchase. Riba divsaaweasi® » ATTENTION * “Women in White” * DACRONS * NYLONS % SEERSUCKERS * COTTONS Choice of one-piece, two-plece, _ three-piece styles. Half sizes. 2" Bt responsibility of parents in send-| |. ing their children to school, spoke — of the necessity of daily attend-; © ance, stressing the fact that often- | times pertinent information may | be mentioned in the classroom only | once and absent children miss this | | valuable instruction. Hostesses were Mrs. Peter Mi-| ‘hay and Mrs. Louis Norbert. Mrs. Ronald Carr and Mrs. Carl Vallad presided at the tea table, SAM BENSON 20 S. Perry St.- Open 9 to 9 ‘Do automatic zigzag stitching S > U preferred C : quality U F-v-I-l-e-r Measure and ni | for you with Miracle craftsmanship n) y] , SINGE R ’ ) | N with the new | dtio den — — i these wentortely flexible off-duty ~ . ° ‘avorites ey're soft, restful. Hand , too Trtoss - +» the utmost in slipper jacaeys _— < automatic Zigzagger Mk 9 WEEKS ’til CHRISTMAS! SINGER models, portable and cabretn eee This is the time for your Christmas Lay-A-Ways. & rrowh 3.9 5 A choice of exceptionally fine slippers. $1.00 f) No biving needed — it’s @ ° bind rence complete! aan oy Small bust? Natural ¢on- will hold. S556 te 50.98 S complete aE pmrpene @ Comes with set of "4 in” att oh aac : — are built in this wonder ALSO BASS—-FRENCH SHRINER—WOLVERINE SHOES iL Is today's most aodsca bles each marked with b sitar it ran — . bra! Cotton. 32-36, A and B. U Cannon Dish Towel inside! New @ Goes on in a jiffy. “ “ ” “ vv" _ Expert Corsetieres will fit you! ) washes clothes whiter, brighter 9 RRIEER PERS A SNIGER “Excteaie” i’ t' S| Sas takai Co pm . $1495 TOWN AND COUNTRY U Beweat ihe ne inctce MME oceremn § ws tate ton re ew yc ONLY SHOE DEPARTMENT | ee : : EW ‘TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER ~ — ootennt” Peet SINGER SEWING CENTER jou Daily 9:30 to 6 P. M. q my x wees | Thurs, Pri, Sat. 9:90 to 9 P.M. ~ othe whe PONTIAC BIRMINGHAM Phone FE 4-4542 | \N the — . 102 N. Saginaw 177 W. Maple 3/2 -- Modern Detergent for Laundry and Dishes FE 2-0811 uj } fj » = sort 7 on a ad os ij LLL LL. : MI 4-0050 ) . | ae ee ee | ? edie A a ie eer 7X * ¥ al sep ees a aa a pie fi ; i { ; j ' f K | al i i rey é bd +) 1 o¥Y cy ar | - ‘ | oe FTEE: Glass ovenware is now available | a glass. The new ae in a modern speckled pattern @| ure gives a glamorous touch from pink or yellow, as well as in the! kitchen to table. F Fi / } ° ‘ , } ‘ } | fi } eae _ io ‘ “THE 1 HONTLAC iL oalese, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1 ee eee Speaker Says U.N. Holds Key to Peace in “hicm Age Sisterhood Addressed by Educator big family—she answers with a’ twinkle, “They dot” * Mrs. Cente pid hastens to add, “It's better to be shouting than shooting." Speaking before the Sisterhood of Temple Beth Jacob Tuesday, Mrs. Gentile, a noted eater and lecturer who returned from a year’s the Uniteq Nations, said: “The United Nations Utopia.” But she. added her belief that the U.N. holds the key to peace in this atomic age. + * fel is no * And beyond the hope of peace, — she said, it carries the ideal of a dar-increased standard of life for the backward areas of the world. AREA OF UNREST The area of the globe where so- cial upheaval is im full swing, Mrs. Gentile said, is the crescent of Arab-Moslem nations. * La] * MRS. PHILIP GENTILE 8 a.m. “Those people, who once CON-| ge» THE FLAGS sidered their way of life inevita- ; ble, now consider it intolerable,” she declared. sun isn't shining at 7:45,"' she said. And she told them if they ever visit it themselves to go on a sunny day—or at least a day when the sun is shining just before | “The flags don't go up if the “And it's important to see those | first stage. They still have to’ pass the second, : Mrs. Gentile's talk was arranged to coincide with U.N, Week, which begins Sunday. Mrs. Gentile, the wife of a Meth- odist minister, is employed by the University of Michigan and . the Detroit Board of Education. She was introduced by Mrs. Her- man B. Stenbuck of the sisterhood. : |Malkim School Completes Plans for Friday Fair Plans are completed for the Malkim School Fair being held at the school Friday from 5:30 until 9 p.m. Mrs. Howard McConnell is gener- al chairman of the affair assisted. by Mrs. Ronald Bailey who will be in charge of the kitchen cupboard; Carson Cascadden, hayrides; Mrs. F.J. Dennis, general. store; Mrs. | Edward Dewey, games, and Mrs. Joseph Watson, spook house. The usual fair atmosphere will be created by the candied apples, fish pend, baked goods, movies, and fortune-telling booth. A men’s style show is being ar- ranged by Eugene Hoisington, She laudeq UNESCO, the U.N.’s ‘60 flags representing the teember| Howard McConnell, Mike Zusack, educational, scientific and cul- ‘nations.’ tural branch, for its job in help- | ; ee ing to raise the living standards = Tliey denote two things, in many retarded areas. Mrs. Gentile, whose year of U.N. | study was sponsored by the Ford Foundation's Fund for Adult Edu-| UN cation, took the sisterhood mem-|~" In addition to the 60 members, bers on an imaginary tour of U.N. headquarters in New York City. 21 other nations have passed the /~ PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enrollments Available in Day or Evening. Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphlet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 2 eS acca ee? Pe. Se ae ~ Party “and Club Entertainment JACKIE RAE STUDIO Senior Student Talent on Review Call in Advance for booking dates Jackie Rae Studio 214 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-2128 eS A, Ried a ee eee ee She | ‘said. The first is that these. na- tions have adopted the U.N. as} part of their foreign policy. The! | second is that having accepted the the U.N. has accepted them. -|Mr. and Mrs. *| son of Mr. and | George Jones, Allison May, Ste- phen Turner and Car! Vedane. A family-style dinner is being served beginning at 5:30 p.m. The PTA has extended an favitation to + Mrs. Dorothy Crager of Euclid avenue announces the engagement of her daughter, Joyce Loreen, to Fred Maurice Madsen. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Madsen of Tacoma court. The couple plans an April wedding. ‘JOYCE LOREEN CRAGER learned of the origin and the pur-' when the association met Tuesday evening at Pontiac General Hos- pital. Nola Blair, anesthetist at Pon- the public to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Morris were married Saturday . evening. She is the former Shirley Ann Duddles, daughter of Lloyd E. Duddles of Gregory road, He is the Mrs. Raymond | S. Morris of West Brooklyn | avenue, Beautiful Selections of Gift Ware Gift Shop FE 2-3220 718 West Huron Shirley Ann Duddles and Eugene 'R. Morris were married Satur- | day evening at a candlelight cere- | mony. in Gingellville Baptist |Church. The Rev. William Miles | Performed the service in the pres- ence of 200 guests. “EXTRAS” accident. reserves the right to accept renewal premiums. Phone: FE 5-9251 MEN ) NO | WOMEN LIMIT Pays Hospital Room and Board, Surgical benefits on a scheduled basis, ‘cash for covered such as operating room, X-ray, laboratory, etc., on each covered sickness or Can be purchased on an annual, quarterly, or monthly basis, and the Association DETAILS FREE — NO OBLIGATION Write: 1715 S. Tel egraph, Pontiac , Polley Forms 3HO-BOn ~ Andre Presents “HIGH FASHION” 7 -*10- 51990 cou with Cutting and Styling A Staff of Expert Stylists Await to Serve You! HAIRCUTS $1.50 and $2.00 * Open Wednesday All Day— : Friday til 9 P.M.) - ‘ No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service! 2nd Floor—Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Andre Beauty Salon | —— | \ i Phone FE 5-9257 attendant, | roses and pompons. black accessories for her costume moon at Niagara Falls. MR. and MRS. EUGENE R. MORRIS "4 | Shirley Duddles Married The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd E. Duddles of Gregory road, and Eugene is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Morris of West Brooklyn avenue, A gown of tace and tulle over | | slipper satin was worn by the HOSPITALIZATION | bride. The bouffant tulle skirt fell trom a fitted lace bodice. She carried a bouquet of white roses and pompons. Marsha Wolff. the bride's only pose of Frontier Nursing Service f of the service, accompa- nied her talk with movies, She told the group that Fron- meas and surgery. ° Frontier Nursing Service offers its field of work for observation and study to physicians, nurses, nurse-midwives and social work- er, who wish to learn its tech- niques for use in other rural areas. . During the past four years peo- ple have come from England, Austria, Finland, France, Swe- their work, sociation at this meeting lanback, treasurer. * LJ * Pontiac General Hospital on Nov. secretary of the Michigan State Nursing Association, will be pres- ent to address the group. Surprise Child With Delicious, Easy Train Cake wore a. powder blue | waltz-length gown of satin and | lace. Her flowers were bronze | roses and pompons. * * * Roger Duddles was best man, | and seating the guests were James | ~ Duddles, Robert Pickett and John Xenos. For the reception held in the church parlors Mrs. Duddles wore ' a teal blue sheath dress with pink accessories and a corsage of pink roses, Mrs. Morris were a dress of shell pink with black accesso- ries. Her corsage was of white The bride choge a gray suit with when the couple left for a honey- Baby wants to learn how to get ‘up and down off sofas and beds | | as soon as he’s walking. Turn him ‘over on his stomach and let him ‘learn to slide down easily from | low spots, feet first. He'll soon | do it unaided. BEAUMONT, Tex. (INS)—Con- struct a “train cake” the next time your youngster has a birth- day—it takes only a little time 'and imagination and your efforts | will be appreciated with wide- eyed joy. * * Mrs. Christine Simons, of Beau- mont, Tex., made one for a neigh- bor child this way, Frontier Nursing Service Is Explained by Speaker Oakland County District Nurses; tiac General Hospital who trained |uader Mrs, Mary Breckenridge, lounder den, Ceylon, China, Canada and | many other countries to learn of The Michigan State Nursing As- | te Convention is being | Rapids Oct. 23-26. Representing the local association will be Mary Wenzl, president, and Mary Nel- | The president announced that the next meeting will be held at 15. Helen Gabrielson, executive Hostesses Disagree ion 2 Guests One Doesn‘t Want to Invite Friends of the Other By EMILY POST “A friend and I gave a large. party together a year ago. Many of our obligations were to the same people so we thought we would give one large party to) gether to repay these obligations. | It worked out very well. “We would like to give another party this year but a problem has arisen on which I need your | help. There are two women on the other hostess’ list whom she would like to invite to this party. “These women are very snob- bish and, as a matter of fact, cut me on two occasions, IT not by inviting them to a party: “The party is to be held at my | house this time and, under the! circumstances, 1 think these two) names should be taken off the. invite them at another time. “She refuses to do this and says that they are her guests and not mine and they will he under no obligation to me. Nevertheless, I think she should ‘consider my | feelings in-the matter and oot | invite them. | “Should they be included; could | | my name be eliminated from the | invitation sent to them? Please | let me hear from you.” “Dear Mrs. Post: A friend tells | me that you said it was better) not to look fot the hostess to say ‘goodby’ at a large party and to say ‘thank you’ for having in- | | vited you. To me this sounds. very rude and I can't believe | that you have made any such | statement. I would appreciate | hearing from you on this matter.” Answer: 1 said that if you are- | leaving a large, general party very | | early, it is better to slip away | quietly than to call attention to your departure. But I did not say | night stances. Wall Clocks Add Decorative Note to Right Rooms under ordinary guest list and my friend should | ' that you should fail to say good- | | circum- NEW YORK (INS) — A wall clock should be able to do two things at once—give the time and add to the decor. | ' . * For example, there's an electric clock with a ceramic look that can be decorative both when hung sing- ly and when put between two pieces of ceramic tile. If you've a white wall, a dark charcoal clock might be striking, while if you want to pick up an | accent color from other room fur. | nishings, you might find what | | you want among soft spice, — meadow green or coral sand | colors. If combining a round wall clock | 48 N. Saginaw St. ~ It's Arthur's Young Folks’ Shop for... HANDSOME ROUGH and READY WASH and WEAR TOGS WARM and RUGGED ONOW UIT ». 10.98 << to (9.98 Washable in 100% nylon inside and out. Also cotton poplins in pastels and red, royal, cocoa. Sizes | to 4 and 2 to 4x CHARCOAL and PINK BOY’S COORDINATE The perfect matching set for cool, brisk days before snow suit time comes. (ELIE ~ Medium-Large X : a Matching SHIRTS In Flannel Suede 1.79] FOUR PIECE WASHABLE ETON aUIT Coat—Shirt—Tie—Slacks Sizes 2 to 4 .. 8.98 Styled ‘like Daddies for little Gent in warm, washable, wearable fashions. the She used a jelly roll fag the en- | with tile, try geometric contrast | gine and pound cakes for the four by using square tile, particularly cars, The first car behind the €n- | those with rough-surfaced texture | gine was cut to resemble a coal jnfprest. tender and the last car fashioned , with a little roof to resemble a caboose, Wheels were made of marsh- mallows and gum drops and the driving rods on the engine were licorice sticks, The bell on the engine was made of a candy kiss, and the engineer’s cab (part of the pound cake cut from the coal tender) frosted and held on with toothpicks. | The coal in the tender was choc- olate chips. .The smokestack of the engine was a candle about a/| | half-inch in diameter. The Business Institu experience in training for new bulletin. 7 W. Lawrence St. KOREAN VETERANS Young men who are trained in Higher Account- ing, Business Administration, Secretarial Science, and other types of office work are tremendously in demand for business, industry, and government. positions with opportunity for advancement. For information, call in person, telephone, or write DAY, HALF-DAY and EVENING PONTIAC Phone FE 2-3551 APPROVED for VETERAN TRAINING te has had extensive veterans for desirable If you want a “unified field of wall decor, use a round clock with round, pretty plates or circle) Matching Vest “eee @ Oe ewe Two Piece Sets.......... “en eee . $4.98 up .. $1.98 framed pictures with a cameo look. by. © those new Big Eyelet © SADDLES o” BROWN-n-WHITE! BLACK-n-WHITE! Buck with smooth leather! Red rubber heels and Al i Mii soles! 6.95 Shoe Saloa—Mezzanine —-BUICETPRICED ) Vinee + ; t } 4 \ é Js saree | ae ? 4 j : A i i : ] \ ; A igs y F Pea ve d “ ; # si id 4 \ f is ‘ Af ‘ : \ ae Ea j z 3 ae ro, 4 i f ap i ‘ | you a little more support and > prevent 5 o'clock crumples, evening | || dresses are done in sugar mint) }| colors such as lime, orange and! and a dress of topaz taffeta with. This evergrowing event, spon- sored by the Women’s Auxiliary, | is a means of furthering social service work done by the church and has gained fame as one of the ‘largest sales in Michigan. The French Room will have more good clothes than ever, and to the conveniences of a nursery, coffee and doughnut table, and checkroom has been added a snack room for lunch time. Mrs. David Walker Lee and Mrs. Parbury Schmidt are co- chairman of the sale and have various chairmen of committees assisting them. Amohg these are Mrs. Vernon J. Meyers, Mrs. Frederick G. Weed, Mrs. C. R, Weir, Mrs. Rus- sel Robbins, Mrs. Robert W. Budd, Mrs. Theodore Yntema, Mrs. Frank Graham and Mrs. Ormond | Wessels. ‘Darragh and Mrs. John McCurry are also assisting. Others are Mrs. Lynn Hershey, Mrs. Robert Barrett, Mrs. Rich- ard Wagner, Mrs. Henry W. Wool- fenden, Mrs. W. A. McNamee, | Mrs. Vernon C. Genn, Mrs. Thomas H, Adams, Mrs. Harold Holmes, Mrs. Benjamin Brewstex and Mrs. Clinton S. Hall. GIVES LUNCHEON — Mrs. Fred Sanders entertained ;at hincheon Tuesday in her home | ;on Epping lane. The luncheon was | given for her houseguest, Mrs. Hutchinson Choate of Bridgeport, Conn. Mrs. Sanders and Mrs. Choate were classmates at Brad- ford Junior College. , Mr. and Mrs. William R. Yaw of Wabeek Farms are spending 10 days at the Homestead, Hot Springs, Va. They will go to New York and Washington, D. C., be- fore returning home. |parents but returned to Ann Arbor ‘from their cabin near Oscoda, | tained for them are Mrs. Morgan |D, Douglas, Mr. and Mrs. Royal | Decker, Mrs. Irving B. Babcock, | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smart, Mr.’ ‘and Mrs. Milton F. Coulson and turned home Monday from a week- | end in Brown County, Ind., where | they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Cantrill of Marion, Ind., at their summer home, Mary Barton accompanied her 18 ws em ba ee as Oe oe “SIE Pt, where she is teaching this year. Mary, Nan Adams and Mary Kemp have an apartment there together. Also in Brown County for the weekend were the Bartons’ son-in-| law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. | Paul Matter UI of Bridgetown, | N.J. Mr. Matter is Mrs. Cantrill's son. Ps VISITING IN HILLS Mr. and Mrs. William R. Tracy, who formerly lived in Bloomfield Hills, have been staying at Bloom- field Hills Country Club for 10 days. They are on the way down where they spent the summer, to their winter home at Fort Lauder- dale, Fla, Among friends who have enter- 674 —_——___———._. by , or Wee: Here's a thrifty way to decorate , every window in your home—with new, modern cafe curtains! many others. Mr, and Mrs. Tracy were hosts at dinner at the club S . . Saturday evening. end for Pattern 674. It con * @ tains all the newest ideas; plus : | heels are unpardonable; so a ; | thoes have to go-to the repair. | flared base. If your work means a lot of walking around on scratchy pave- ments, the very slim-based heel is almost a pure liability. However excellent the leather - used to reheel these slivery jobs, | / it rubs right off in a couple of| ; days of walking. Run-over heels or lopsided L slim heel may mean that your | “man once a week. This is not too costly, but it! keeps the shoes out of circulation | for a large percentage of the time. If your job is sitting (with some walking) around an office, do get the slim medium heel. * * * But if you must walk or stand, search for a more “old-fashioned” medium heel with a somewhat It is practical and ve} 4 Skirt length has dropped for dressy situations. tf bolances the tube shir? end harmonizes with rich fabrics tor | Jadylike look. | Chanel! started the anklé-length , dress last season. Today every , house showed ankle-length dinner ‘Perfume Adds Extra Dimension ; | dresses. A long look lengthens the to Loveliness | short figure but the tall figure too can wear ankle-length. ' In addition to wearing perfume! _ as an accessory to fashion, wear | it, too, as a vital part of good) not ugly at all. PROVINCIAL a Gay Party Note IDEAL for INFORMAL and GAY GATHERINGS. You'll want this richly colored and refreshing “PROVINCIAL” pattern. Bold reds, greens and yellows of the stylized design, coupled with the deep ivory colortone (underglaze) edging on all pieces of the round Greenbriar shape, adds that extra something to make “PROVINCIAL” a standout pattern. 20-PIECE SET....... °6” Fall Jewelry to Complement Your Fall Costume Dixie Potrrery : For Your Convenience Open Daily 10 A. M. to 9 P. M.—Sunday, Noon to 9 P. M. 5281 Dixie Hwy. A Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 ;of ancient music by the Alfred Cranbrook Musie (: will open its season Oct, 26 iu Cran- brook House.. ; Pouring coffee after the program easy instructions, diagrams, cut- | . ting guides — for making these STooming; as a moral booster; and glamorous cafe curtains yourself! most important of all, as your Send twenty-five cents in coins | OW extra dimension of beauty. Reserve Your Hot Barbecued RIBS for this pattern — add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. No need to feel that you must be gowned in your:most glamorous Send to 124 Pontiac Press, Needle- | Clothes in order to use fragrance. | CHICKEN - HAM Deller Trio will be Mrs. Leroy |W. Dahlberg, Mrs. Benjamin Brew- craft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old} ister, Mrs. Robert P. Nevin and ‘Chelsea Station, New York 11, | Mrs, Martin Archangeli. |N. Y. Print plainly pattern num- | * * *& ber, -your name, address and zone. | ‘Holds Discussion | on Guided Missiles Mrs. Willard Stephen led a dis- Mrs, A. H. Magnus has invited cussion of the Nike guided missiles , | members of her blood donor com- when members of the Xi*Pi Ex- mittee of the American Red Cross emplar Chapter of Beta Sigma to a breakfast Monday in her home Phi met Tuesday evening with Eliz- on Brookside drive. abeth Halsey of Lorraine court. Jean Warnock assisted the hos-. California’s giant redwood trees | tess. . grow from seeds that are only | Mrs. Ruth Slaw gave a report of | about one-sixteenth of an inch in the City Council of Beta Sigma | their length, 'Phi at the Tuesday meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Miller will entertain at a breakfast Sun- day at Bloomfield Hills Country |Club. The Millers returned today ‘from a trip to New York. * * * WEEK-END SPECIAL! Regular $2 4-inch Pot ’.Philodendron $ 1 25 Pearce Floral Company | Cash and Carry 559 Orchard Lake Ave. Phone FE 2-0127 PCCCCSOOLSTOOOTESSE OOOO OOOOCCOSOSOESEOOEOLES /On the contrary, scent, like lip- i stick, is just as “correct” and pleasing to those around you when worn first thing in the morning as it is during the after-five hours, for it starts you or’your day feel- ing and looking feminine and well- groomed. PYYTII III iis; custom-made | PERMANENTS £ You'll be amazed when you see the hidden beauty in your hair brought to life with one of our very own custom permanents. Individual Hair Styles Created Just for You by Tony and Carl New Hair-Drying Comfort! Relax and enjoy new hair-dying comfort with our “Beautaire” air-conditioned hair-dryer .. . like the sum and breeze on a summer day. Coll FE 2-1021 DAVE’S MKT. North Perry at Glenwood S24° Riker Bldg—Rear of Lobby FE 3-7186 OOOO SOO SOS SOSH SFO HEOTHESEHHHEHHHHHSEHHHHHSESESEOHES sya femneg setoun et pai Hime ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS.” WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1955 Ps SEVENTEEN Saturday evening. She is the former Janis Sue — . Harmon, — daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Samuel J. Harmon. of Kemp street. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Ellis of Hickory Nut street. Honeymooning in northern Mich- igan are the new Mr. and Mrs. _ Richard L. Ellis who were married Saturday evening in Oakland Park Methodist Church. : * * * The bride is the former Janis | Sue Harmon, daughter of Mr. and MR. and MRS. RICHARD L. ELLIS Janis Harmon Becomes Bride in Evening Service Mrs, Samuel J. Harmon of Kemp: street, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Ellis of Hickory Nut street are parents of the bridegroom. A ballerina-length crystal silk gown with a fitted lace bodice was worn by the bride, A crown of seed pearis secured her veil. A single strand of pearls, a gift of the bridegroom, was her only jewelry. : White chrysanthemums centered ; by a white orchid in a cascade | arrangement were carried by the bride. .. ' Doris Harmon, bride, was her only attendant. She wore a ballerina-length gown sister of the | of peacock crystallette with a matching velvet headpiece. She carried a cascade bouquet of bronze and gold chrysanthemums. ATTEND BRIDEGROOM John Ellis of Ann Arbor was best man, and seating the guests | were Ray Traver and Robert Mc- Callum For the reception held in the church parlors, Mrs. Harmon wore a Dior blue lace dress with match- ing accessories. Mrs. Ellis was gowned in a turquoise dress with’ matching accessories. Their cor- . Sages were of pink roses. The new Mrs, Filis chose 2 navy blue knit sait and the or. chid corsage from her bridal St. Joseph Alumnae | Plan Card Party | Plans for the annual card party were completed when members of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Alam. | nae met in the cafeteria of the | hospital on Monday. ' The party will be held on Dec. | 1 in St. Benedict Hall. Entertain- ment will be provided by a local dance studio. “Let's Keep It Simple’ was the topic discussed by Edythe McCul- . loch when she spoke to members, following the business meeting. Films to Be Shown A showing of colored slides and movies of Alaska will be present- | ed Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in Pentiac | Federal Savings and Loan Build- ing. The program is sponsored by | the . Gold Star Mothers Chap-| ter 34. | "MySal knows herstuff!” I have to hand it to my Sal. . She's just a whizz at taking the work out of housework. For in- stance, most gals practically kill themselves scrubbing and waxing | wood floors. But not my Sal! She cleans and waxes thém in one easy | operation with Bruce Cleaning Wax. The job's done in half the time and | with a lot less work. And you should | hear all the swell compliments about our beautiful wood floors! My Sal iV and her Bruce Cleaning Wax sure/ make simple work of a tough ed ” And they make me : mighty proud too! p.s. For. lighter waxing on linoleum and wood, Sal uses Bruce Floor Cleaner, * ee bouquet for her costume when the newlyweds left for a honey- moon in northern Michigan. On their return they will reside in Drayton | Plains, Alice Webber Wed to Richard H, Guy Alice. Joyce Webber and Rich- ard Hollingsworth Guy were mar- _ |very rare ones may still be found ried Oct. 14 at First Presbyterian Church in the presence of their immediate families. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Webber | of Kimball court are the parents | of the bride, and the bridegroom's | parents are the Ernest L. Guys of Brookdale lane. After a short wedding trip, the newlyweds will reside on Cass-Elizabeth' Lake road. nil Hears ‘Wildflower Lecture that there are many flowers found here that are not found in other areas of the nation. "He also told how wildflowers are becoming scarce because of the spreading population, but - that in undisturbed habitat. : The group learned how the wild- Mrs. Turris. McCully, Mrs. .Clar- Mrs. where plants are removed in large | quantities. Mys. * * & Forrest E. Brown was chairman of the Monday affair | assisted by Mrs. Daniel O'Dea, ence Myers, Mrs. H. F. Simmons, Mrs. Elmer 0. McLean, Mrs. Glenn Behler, Mrs, Nettie Hy- mers, Mrs, Albert Simpson and Fred Waterson. Mrs. Little Hostess, to February Group ‘Members of the February Group of the First Presbyterian Church met at the home of Mrs. J. J. Little on Franklin road Monday. Mrs. H. O. Whitfield assisted the Fashioned for Fall... . - Professionally - PERMANENTS, from... . CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 N. Perry FE 2-6361 hostess for the dessert luncheon. Devotions were given by Mrs. Roy Fosbender, and Mrs. Brad- ley Scott gave the missionary study report on “Christian Wom- en in Her Hotisehold.” - Plans were completed Yor a benefit luncheon to. be held at the church on Thursday. . \ ee eee Pe. ms _ RUTH HAIGH | Custom Lamp Shades — Picture Framing Old Prints 165 Pierce St., Birmingham, Mi 4-2002 HOURS: 9:30 TO 5 P. M. DAILY — SALE! $ Special Purchase! beautiful knit dresses | were 39.95 were 45.00 Rich fall colors! 2 1662 .S. Teleg @ ‘ rich color$! Sale loomfield raph Rd. SHOP psuton Shop Every Night ‘til 9—Sat. till 6 P. M. Regularly 99.95 COAT SALE fabrics tailored in new slim lines and easy clutch styles, superbly detailed in very SOA Forstma nn and Stroock fabrics | $Q4 4 Fabulous sale! These most elegant luxury NOTE: of regular We can’t urge you too strongly to shop immediately ‘ for these greet “buys!” imagine! finest imported tweeds,: NOTE! these coats and suits on sale starting tonight! Only a very special purchase brings you these fine suits from a famous maker; regularly 55.00 and 59.95 SUIT SALE Hh Fabulous sale! Fitted suits, tweeds, mixtures and solid colors. Loose jacket — suits and 3-piece suits. Every one in the fine fashion class! _A special group $65.00 and $69.95 suits. Never have we offered such coats this early in the season at only $84. Every one bears a fine fabric label,’’ plus the “Bloomfield Fashion Shop.” OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT! * | a : go * ies’ : iS ee : Don’t Cinscdinale on ‘Dream’ “Job. 7 band. Keep it firmly to yourself until the job is in the, bag. TOO MUCH SUSPENSE Many ¢tiines, you could handle | THE f PONTIAC. PRESS. Try to send out enough job-hunt- | ‘/ing letters and get enough inter- views so that you uncover three |- or four dream jobs. Then -no one phone, go out and dig up some more prospects, .. If you're so busy that you've for- the most awtul experience in the world—waiting for a beau to call you Up. “But now, I'm job-changing and 1 know there's another experience just as horrible—and that is when the employer who has the job that you're dying for tells you he'll tele- phone and let you know if you're | the one, “He'll promise to call early in the week, but the whole week goes by and he doesn't cant ae “What can you do for this type of telephone trouble?" IN ONE BASKET In any job-changing campaign —as in social life!—it doesn’t pay to have. all your eggs in one bas- ket. To want one thing, desper-' ately, is usually to get so tense | about. it that you lose it. is too important and you relax. Don't rest at all until you have see “anet sy tees, See Instead of sitting by the tele- gotten all about the “dream” job, chances are it will drop in your lap. And don't discuss your prospects iad onyene-- teat. mother, hus-. , NEW YORK (INS) — The most stylish new hat of the season is a | hat which only oné woman in the ‘world dared wear for 30 years. It's the toque—the hat that the late dowager Queen Mary of Eng- land favored so much that she wore it constantly. " According to the dictionary, a toque (it's pronounced with a long o) is a little brimiess hat. According te 1955 fashion, it's a | big brimless hat that sits square on the head, : : The French designers revived it first in frou-frou versions of tulle and feathers which looked like over-size powder puffs on the head. Now it's being made in almost any material for day and evening wear. It is, in fact, that “bulky” hat { you’ ve been | hearing about. Toque Wearing in Vogue | But stores report that women who | try on toques in ‘comparison with ‘smaller hats generally take the Women who have spent ten years getting used to pint-sized pillboxes may be afraid of wearing toques. toque. The secret is that the bulkier hat makes the face seem smaller. The main point to remember when trying on a toque is to see yourself in a full-size mirror. A bulkier, higher hat should be in proportion to the body or it can make a woman look like the stalk to a mushroom cap. Toques come in various heights to suit all fig- ures. Dandelion greens often are fed | to silkworms when mulberry | leaves are scarce. STORE HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 9:30 a. m. until §:30 p. m, Allie roy! 2-Hour Free Parking HAVE YOUR TICKET VALIDATED WHEN YOU MAKE A PURCHASE AT JACOBSON’S la ings ‘obsons MAPLE at BATES _ Exciting, new day-into-night wardrobe Fruit Glaze | to which she belongs also receive | lorange juice, Every 15-20 min- | Ver by Lynne Benter, president. of little heels that slenderize your feet! Tapered | to look || slimmer, | taller, | and} to add ’ more youthful |) fashion to comfortable demi-heels Top: Dressmaker draped - black calf sandal; bottom: brown calf with beige or black calf with slate grey open- toed pump. demi-priced 12.95 “use your Chorg A Plate SHOE SALON STREET LEVEL BIRMINCHAM (Of juice (on a 1214 pound ham. Stoles Are ‘Stand-Ins’ the waiting and ‘the suspense alone, but it becomes heightened if friends are always asking, “Heard from the Blank Compariy yet?” Then it stirs up ‘in you again and you get tense and im- patient. ‘ * € &,. When you have no interviews and find yourself eyeing the phone wistfully, get busy. Ge to the library and read up in the field of your interest, Or take the time to get your ward- robe all spruced up, se that you're ready at the drop of a hat. Or take a long walk, for the good of your skin and figure. | ‘But never, under any circum. stances, sit glued to the chair waiting for the telephone to ring. It can demoralize you for days! (Copyright, 1955) for Ham Easy to Do Mrs. Barner Uses Can of Orange Juice for Basting Meat Admiring the afghan which was made from yarn given by the DAV Auxiliary to the Occupational Therapy Depart- By JANET ODELL Pontiac S . pn Seatice Press Meme latter ment at Pontiac State Hospital are auxiliary members Mrs. Baked ham is probably the fa- vorite meat for buffet suppers and Mrs. Anna Moy Lavchuch (second from left) of Utica. Peatiac Press Phote (second from right) is supervisor of the women’s division of the department, and Mrs. Eleanore McCurry (right) is director of occupational therapy. Knitting is one of the T. W. Doolin (left) of Norton avenue and Mrs. Paul popular activities in occupational therapy and is valuable in-that it stimulates coordination and concentration, large dinners. If you buy the pre- cooked hams, you need only heat them 15 minutes to the pound be-. fore serving, Mrs, L. C, Barner found a simple way of glazing one of these hams just recently, Mrs, Barner isa pleasant per- son to be with because of her merry disposition. She loves to sing and is a member of her church choir and of Tuesday Mu- sicale Chorus. Other church groups Initiation Conducted by Stabafa Tuesday New: members of Stabafa were welcomed into the club and pre- sented with club pins at the formal initiation held Tuesday evening in| and the home of Terri Fortino. in i Sharon Holland, former- club| The wearers should, too, taking | member, was voted junior spon- | advantage of supple clothes and sor, Miss Holland presided at the ‘handsome high points to bring | pink and white decorated tea out the best in a face and figure. | table, Seid . Articles of clothing were donated, 94 the wepemten cb Oat pase by members for the ingathering| mateable of accessories, the of the Needlework Guild, and plans) gearf, Take a peek at what's for the coming year were discussed | most popular on the clothing in the business meeting presided! packs and see if it's not true. The skinny look is everywhere. Whether it's the echo of the Paris look or our own favorite dark suit classic, it’s being worn by every figure that can bear it. The dash | of a scarf is wonderful here. On ‘a dark suit, two brilliant 19-inch squares add and line sparkle. Be Chic Yet When fashions are limberlined her services. ORANGE GLAZE FOR HAM By Mrs. L. C. Barner’ When you put the ham in the oven, pour over it 1 cup of canned | utes during the baking time baste| The next meeting will be at the the ham with this juice. Add more home of Sharon Gale on Navajo juice when necessary, Mrs. Bar- | drive. ner thinks she used about 2 cups | She says the ham was nicely | glazed by the time it was heated | Tunics look new if buttoned | through. tightly in a double-bre, asted effect. | |, Stoles become ‘‘stand-ins" for jack- Baby gets a lovely new-toy from ets “or even coats if they are his grandparents. ‘It may be a_ trimmed with buttons and pockets. horsie. or a toy car, but it's too old| Even the cardigan you already for him. Get a snapshot of Baby own can have a new stylish life | admiring it and then store it away by means of shiny leather or fancy until he's ready to enjoy it. | jeweled buttons. | other floats over the shoulder to soften the dark splinter of suit. BARENESS POPULAR Bareness comes into popularity for evening. Properly managed, a cut-out neck is flattering both to Sis Miss F. P. \ REGISTERED NURSE Mus RT. £. Min J. KR AY STUOENT NURSE DIETITIAN Mise B.C. DENTAL ASSISTANT Nitlig en | Min AL fh MS AY a8 TECHNICIAN Mint ON Miss Mf ge SS SUPERVISOR THE CLINIC SHOE r vee Uren cen Ua Remember... and compare when shopping: @CLINICS ARE SOFT OCLINICS ARE SMART OCLINICS ARE STRONG OCLINICS TO FIT YOU...sizes evailoble to 12, AAAA to & OCUMICS ARE PRICED MIGHT... #795 44 #995 PAUL'S SHOE STORE our tee 35 N. SAGINAW M 7 and Friday One goes on high; gilet-style, the Fashion Demands Scart Functional ;the full bosom and the slender one. This look takes a scarf with de- light. For those who consider their ‘necks and shoulders assets, a scarf | provides a frame. For those who | jfeel_ they have modest bosoms, a scart is an artful touch, A low square neck gets a handsome compliment from an oblong ribbon scarf. A Jacquard pattern adds a texture pote. It gees high in back to cover bare shoulders and is draped low in front, as a satin cuff, to fill in the square with a look that's aft- er-five but never teo uncovered. The sweater look is perennial, but never such a hardy blossom | as this fall. It's a soft, smooth, typically young American look. To change the look of a favorite | sweater from one wearing to an- other, a scarf is perfection. It j}can be tucked in, looped through | ' about one, this trick of traveling a cardigan or worn, sailor-style, on the slip-over. SWEATER CONTRASTS As a contrast to the monochro- matic sweater, glowing paisley col- aie! and the traditional pattern | are perfect. | Each top look this fall has its scart, plus imagination and exper- imentation. Tie the knot between | the clothes and the accessories in| a manner that is perfectly indi- vidual, CAROL LOUISE HARROUN Mr. and Mrs. F. Earl Harroun of Kenilworth avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Louise, to Jackie Dale Payne son of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Payne of Fuller street, No date has been set for the wedding. ' | about, Nice Fragrance Adds Glamor to Girl’s Walk How nice to smell nice! Swishing up a delicious fragrance on entering a room can be even | more becoming at*times than smel- ling sweet to those who are near you It adds a real aura of glamor ‘to gals who like to make a dra- | matic entrance. The idea of swishing it up while | walking was discovered by Lilly | Dache, who, in addition to her millinery duties, is president of a well-known perfumé concern. Miss Dache suggests doing it the following way: just before going out, spray legs, feet and hemline | with a fragrance from aq push- button bottle. She points out that this locale |for perfume is often neglected. yet these are the parts that move stirring up the air and spreading the fragrance about. In addition to charming those in a cloud of scent adds to one the feeling of being surrounded by a very personal air of delight. Anyone .who knows the dressed- up feeling of wearing brand-new lingerie, even though no one sees it, will know this feeling of self- assurance from moving in a cloud. The fragrance Miss Dache sug- gests is one of her own, one that's halfway, between a perfume and a cologne, combining economy and staying power. All four scents come in. plastic bottles with pressurized valves at the top. Bonnie Woodard Becomes Bride Mr. and Mrs. Charles Woodard of Ascot road announce the Sept. 24 marriage of their daughter, Bonnie Elaine, to Airman 2.C. Ron- ald Eugene Traylor, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Traylor of Clark- | ston. Mr. and Mrs. Traylor were. wit- nesses for the ceremony performed in Angola, Ind. The new Mrs. Tray- lor will reside in Clarkston until she joins her husband who is sta- tioned in Albany, Ga., with the U. S. Air Force, Combine Separates There are overblouses and tuck-in blouses, middies, jerkins. weskits, torso sweaters, bolero sweaters, dress-up sweaters and dress-down sweaters. Today it is possible to put [7 gether a complete wardrobe o Separate tops and skirts, ae from school-and-office outfits to —— a Ne Ne Do YOU ARDMORE Plan to Use \in the True 39 Oakland Avenve —— Inspiring Scenes for Indoors or Outdoors 60% OR - Dimensiohal—Full—Round— Weather-Proof. bea nee rr Many Displays to Choose Frem, Christian Literature Sales, LIVE ON | STREET? irit of Christmas These 7 FE 4-9501 —————s k | re er sl ab ee ike tes Pe eee, te « pes ay Ly Customers’ Corner Necessity is the Mother of Prevention! In order to give you’ your money's worth of .good eating, foods must reach you Pat the peak of freshness. And this necessity is the origin of A&P’s program for the prevention of staleness. It's called Freshness Control... and it requires the exercise of constant care in an ‘unbroken chain from source to sale. This means that all items— both perishable and non-perishable—are stored at proper temperatures, inspected at regular intervals and con- stantly checked to insure that they meet A&P’s high- quality standards. Result? You count on getting fresh foods at your A&P no matter when you shop. This is just one ex- ample of how A&P does everything possible to make sure you get the _ value for your money . always. Come see... come save! CUSTOMER RELATIONS DEPARTMENT A&P Food Stores 420 Lexington Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. Chuck Roast IT’S CHEESE FESTIVAL TIME WISCONSIN TANGY, YEAR OUD CHEESE 5% Sharp Cheddar - Ched-O-Bit 2 .%: 69% Sunnybrook Fags "SREP... oot Cottage Cheese sows _ . . cm 23¢ Phleleipie Cream Cheese . Silverbrook Butter "= quaury , Wesson Oil . pong e @ PRINT mw. 35¢ 2... Bs 6% Baby Food sums ... 5 3% 47c Chili Sauce wm =... . . 2 3% Vegetable Soup = .. 2 ust 27c Trend osmonn x" 43¢, . 2 He 35¢ so 30c wr 7c 2m, 25¢ oonn Town” DOC Joy Liquid roe Lifebuoy Soap s"%'%. Breeze ‘Wist"ism' Te Ajax Cleanser... . . 4&8 49% 30c se" 72c 26¢ wn 25¢ 14c Cheer. ..... 8 BATH SIZE REG. 2 FOR 25¢ SIZE Cashmere Bouque REG. SIZE 2 3 FOR 26¢ Palmoli ve Soap Argo Corn Starch. vax Argo Gloss Starch .... tox 1 fr) SPARK KLE Up to ‘1 28 value! 3-Color SIGNAL only 60: plus FLASHLIGHT box top from any conn eecue, Vik Gol SPARKLE + essert FLASHLIGHT is @ “must” for the cor, et home, on wipe... makes @ dondy gift too! Get yours now! GELATIN 5 PKGS, 27‘ | ' INSTANT Pudding 4 rcs. 25¢ Pudding - 370s. 22c Ketchup “sutnet : ‘ort 39¢ Tomato Soup Arce, , 4'MOF 35¢ | ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 “SUPER-RIGHT” MILD, MELLOW Smoked Ha _ WHOLE HAMS OR BUTT PORTION Lb. 49¢ “SUPER-RIGHT” BLADE CUT u 43¢ Beef Roasts Ammon evoum curs = « 53¢ Standing Rib Roast ‘Fasrs's0s '* 69% Boneless Beef Brisket “sur#-ronr =. 69 Boneless Rump Roast quar tr ‘ 79¢ Spare Ribs 210s rounn ms... % 45¢ Pork Chops ‘Chor conn curs, «= '* | 796 Sliced Bacon “Fancy” .... mo. 45¢ Grand Duchess seer steaxs « ‘wo, 45¢ .] *Becavse meat represents about 25% of your foed budget, it's impertant to know © . A&P’s “Super-Right” Quality is « reliable standard of top meet value. “Super-Right” assures you that whatever you choose et A&P is Quality-R ~ Controlied-Right . . . Prepared-Right , . Sold: Right and Priced-Right. YOU CAN PUT YOUR TRUST IN MEATS! | “Super-Right” Quality* SHANK PORTION LB. CENTER HAM SLICES ....... Lb. 89 “SUPER-RIGHT"—CHOICE CENTER CUTS Round Steaks « 1% ‘Sirloin Steaks wat'tumuo ... % 89% Large Bologna Sic”... 38 Beltsville Turkeys 2y"a"Ave... “ 59 Lamb Shoulder Roast “surte-now 49¢ Pork Sausage ““Guainy ... rou 29¢ s. 79 Frozen Fryers sore, FRESH, COMPLETELY DRESSED White Bass u 37 White Bass Fillets rm ... 4% Fresh Blue Pike compurny oresseo ts, 37 ¢ Blue Pike Fillets i ...., uu 49 Halibut Steak ........... 3% GARDEN-FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES FLORIDA, SWEET, JUICY 45-54 SIZE NEW CROP Grapefruit... 3 - 2% Fer National Apple Week, pick wisely from A&P’s PRIZE APPLE ASSORTMENT eS a ees ee A&P—and sold at thrifty prices, naturally! ‘Michigan Apples | oy, tao 949 pm ! 4 rounss 25¢ Fresh Cranberries. wny acts ‘saa’ 19¢ Brussels Sprouts cence ae «Be 290 SULTANA TART-SWEET, FINE QUALITY Salad Dressing — SULTANA CALIFORNIA—FRUIT Cocktail... 3 2%: 1.00 Home Style Peaches “or ‘on Sed: 3 Cans cs 1.00 Grapefruit Sections mest quainy 2 ans 27¢ 29-02. CANS Sliced Pineapple =" . 3 TE 1.00 Prune Plums sums... 2 a 3% Grapefruit Juice“? . 5. 2 CE 48 Pineapple Juice “r 2... Tans 99C - FLORIDA FANCY WAXED Cucumbers 4 = 29< Tokay Grapes « 10¢ WR 25¢ Fresh Carrots SPECIALLY SELECTED CALIFORNIA GROWN - Michigan Potatoes ».+ "+" 48 i 99 Head Lettuce | "Seiut"macs” Red Radishes. . Fresh Tomatoes “Grown Idaho Potatoes v.51, , 2 ror 3% ee bing xo. 19¢ 10 sto 59%e x 35¢ | A&P—OUR FINEST QUALITY Apple Sauce 4 “i 49c Tomato Juice rwast avai . . 2 Cans 45¢ Cut Wax Beans '0n4 4'tine 49c Sultana Rice Sm... RE 29 Peanut Butter suman |. iat 39¢ Eight O'Clock Coffee ..2... US 79 CutRite Waxed Poper .. . . . "Bil 25¢ ANN PAGE Apricot, Cherry, Peach, Pineapple or Damson Plum /\Preserves...... 4= 99 1ONA BRAND—CUT Green Somes lona Apricots RAALVES a @ 15%-OZ, CAN - 3 Gans 79 Evaporated Milk ww wouse 6 w’crn. 69¢ French Dressing “cn'curirms sot. 27 Mayonnaise 4" race)... iar 55¢ Grape Jam AN race aay 9% Bartlett Pears © ....3 Tins 95¢ Fancy Tuna |“, Sou rack 702 Borden's Starlac “Sxim'mix’ . « sgt 39% Hi-Ho Crackers suvwe , ,,. , tox 35¢ A&P’s ALL VEGETABLE SHORTENING dexo......3 c& 6% Quick Oats suvnvrm> |... me 2. 17¢ Wheat Puffs suvmrrm ., . , , SOF 15¢ Food Color Kits svrnerrs , , , , tacn 25¢ Post’s Raisin Bran... ... . ‘nom 27 2%-48. Cake Flour sunyvrmp . ko \ Sprite Detergent vow... , , 20 97¢ Boned Turkey swansows, . . . , <2h 35¢ Planter’s Cocktail Peanuts .. . 2S? 37¢ Blended Syrup avnrace ,. , , 'SR™ 27¢ “sce ee 2 thes 19¢ , (oo | NINETEEN | Sane Parker vincn he aa Pie 39c — Reg. 49¢ Other Jane Parker Values! JANE PARKER—Save up to 6c a Loaf White Bread 17¢ Potato Chips ""2NS AMY... bk 59¢ Layer Cakes vamarco, ... . .'S8"4%e Chocolate Chip Cookies Low Paice Neke, SOE Te-4B. LOAF Dinner Rolls AND SAVE cc cee cress Sunshine Cake ‘4tonce nino. . . OMY 39 Cake Donuts SANZ... of 25¢ JANE PARKER FAMOUS FRUIT CAKE OVER % FRUIT AND NUTS « 1.45 « 2.79 uw 3.99 “vaste pas geen FOR veneiey oo. WEEK Glazed Donuts me VALU oF ta 2% ; 3% VALUE “user's Beef, Chicken, Turkey, Apple or. Cherry Frozen Pies. 4 = 79% Nifty Frozen Waffles ...... ora 10¢ Strawberries fromm ... + 4 Cane 9% Garden Peas foun ..... 2 mon OC Enjoy National Macaroni Week with ANN PAGE MACARONI SPAGHETTI and NOODLES Macaroni... ... 3 me 45¢ Prepared Spaghetti 2'tit 25¢ Egg Noodles... . . inet Get Set for HALLOWE'EN A BiG 4DOZEN PARTY PACK OF Jane Parker Donuts CHOICE OF PLAIN OR SUGARED 4 = 69c AVAILABLE AT ALL ARP STORES STARTING PRIDAY, OCT. 21 PLACE YOUR PARTY ORDERS EARLY wo 59e «+0 + 24 sox 8% o + + 2h mitox 99 MICHIGAN MADE" Sweet Cider .. Candy Bars sVanen Se VARIETIES Cracker Jack ‘St imat Jolly Rolls = “AssOeno, we ws ue Chewing Gum fineness. . 20 mcm. 59 Hard Candy Balls IND WRAPREDe s © PRON” Taffee, Rolls ino wearer. « « « OO mo, 49¢ | All rce in thi detective through St, Oat. 22 : ! ! "} e J , , THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 | ine Since ah 5 co By Carl Grubert, , . . ) O-Jib-Wa Bitters Made It Possible To Eat Any Food Without Indigestion . | Burlington area. ‘The theft was dis-| THE BERRYS | eovered when a lineman went to nip eee ee st | remove the wires, which no longer Ea ee a oo OH DEAR! HOW DO I ALWAYS ORDER FUEL | Low! — com & LAD TO TELL EVERYONE HOW THIS AMAZING MEDICINE HELP. €. FRIED FOODS, CAKE, JAM OR ANY KIND OF SWEETS USED TO UPSET MY STOMACH, CAUSING GAS AND INDIGESTION have governments which are less || MY CHEST WOULD TIGHTEN UP AND | HAD TO TAKE SODA TC ie bd ] See Us for Quality Fuel and | - Pea e than two weeks old.” |] RELIGVE THE GAS. ALL | NEEDED WAS A STRAWBERRY JAM SANO- Johnston said he expects to hear | WICH TO BE IN MISERY WITH A GOOD CASE OF INDIGESTION from the Arab states “very short- [1 SUPPERED THIS WAY FOR ASOUT A YEAR, UNTIL A FRIEND OF Fast, Courteous Service Jewels Worth rage ky Seen 'Arab-Jew Ora tact | Mee a set a @Ege or Nut Coke = $125,000 Stolen Against Scot Law Span ()yer Damn ten tet ist Tks, azar | Sere uttnng neat eae aus, et sates ne A | ABERDEEN, Scotland — Locked | in disguise.” ‘TACK SINCE. PERSONALLY, | THINK THAT ©-J18-WA BITTERS 15 ~ mf | it : ‘| THE VERY BEST STOMACH MEDICINE EVER MADE.” AVAILABLE AT © Quality Stoker Coal | 2 Gunmen Force Way °° tormuls that perhaps coud) Riv@r Development Plan | ime", Washingtons National Att S806 STORES ) Into Home of Wealthy revolutionize Scotch whisky mak- | Would Irrigate Areas Airport after ent trom his | — @ Kentucky = Pocahontas - Omaha Widow ing and earn millions. | in Middle East Soar wip te Coe t | It would enable the maturing of | (Egg or Nut) | OMAHA W&- “They really Whisky in 8% hours instead of WasHINGTON a» — American’ . . three years, according to Tom! ' ° e cleaned me out,"’ said Mrs, Mar- Scott Sutherland, who developed officials are talking hopefully ni ° ; | garet Kellogg today, motioning to! jt with the aid of two chemists. ain about winning Arab approv- | 4 a big bedroom safe from which’ But he does not know what to do al of a river development plan | rN \ ‘/ WH cash. . | perts who identified it as three | cial envoy Eric Johnston said last . | two masked gunmen had taken, With it. conceived as a means of reversing | ai pa sked ae and $20,000 in Sutherland has had his whisky, Arab-Israeli tensions. __ | = pee ~ only a fortnight old, tasted by ex-| “Prospects are very good," spe- OG F upstairs. LONDON (INS)—A whole new | in Washington last week, The as-| SUPER : S$ ee i - : *.* °» | world for London's blind has been | Ses8ment then was that the 120-/ | The women said the gunmen opened up by the inauguration ot million-dollar irrigation-dam pro-' Tender Beef oy : | had come to the head of the stairs, | Thames. The “voice” of London's | anon and Syria,.voted at Cairo to : © : , ‘one shouted, ‘She's the one we | ‘amous river—ships’ whfStles, fog | delay it for further study. 4 CLUB c want,” and dashed up. | horns, the chugging of tugs, the | “The Arab states asked for more A, maa bb | Mrs, Kellogg retreated to her | clank of cranes—is giving new | time and that seemed like a rea-| Jf \ i ‘ ——S : ‘into the big brick home on Oma- | the law changed he can do nothing of State Dulles on the status of, ~~, SaaS ee |ha’s fashionable West Side~ last | with it. |the Jordan River development | 9 yy at | night while Mrs; Kellogg, 58-year- : | plan, , h sda ‘old banker's widow, and three H | 1 | This attitude contrasts strongly | Bazley Ss ur y women friends watched eso Bling Now Tour River . | with the gloomy picture painted | | when they spied Mrs, Kellogg, who| ~80und-seeing” tours on the River | after the Arab states, led by Leb- actually see is picturesque reaches. | “After all, both Lebanon and Syria | ‘The robbers smashed their way! years old, But unless he can get | night as he reported to Secretary’ “78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET . | ene ‘tanwons and cuted, wale posal was on the verge of collapse STEAKS Kang ried heat ae, Seo mS a ee { eee ihis shoulder through the door | panel, jammed a pistol in Mrs. TS * » h 1 This Vaal Coupon a. gem ie, ind ee CHURCH OF CHRIST | with lranstormer Powere D te a 1th Limit Fresh | ‘ dem anit tented ‘to roc 1196 JOSLYN AVE | ‘ie ‘ Good a9) on the floor and tossed the jewels “ . ° | Ch D 9 S | f : 4 REMUS Thers- lb. : foe Bae pei me dng voller ke _ Worship Each Lord’s Day Morn, 11 a.m. assis I on t ett e or ess ! PBUTTER fo eS tun if omc Beats ee lates" You to | . chihuahuas, ! pena sadaredds taeda During the confusion, one of the A SERIES OF GOSPEL MEETINGS Etssoo’s ful qaaity powerplant out- — : —|women, Miss Gladys Rohrs, | values by a wide margin other slipped out, alerted neighbors and || _ ocr. hel bi 730 P OCT. 30th that san tttieged of tomabemwesad on : net | pas: neighbor ete ightly 7:30 P. M. other essefitial features. Every new . . . : ee and police arrived shortly. after- | | With | a licegei has this —. ward, but the gunmen escaped | ' , mmy i ich assures you of de- safely in a waiting car driven by | ’ Evangelists Tommy and Fi Shaw, ! pendable, fine quality performance. a third man, ALTERNATING SPEAKERS —_—_ | 3 Whooping Cranes. SINGING SCHOOL Conducted by the Shaws in the Rudiments of Music Sighted in Refuge | NIGHTLY 6:00 P. M. AUSTWELL, Tex. ) — Three | This Singing School Is Free and Open te the Public whooping cranes, vanguard of an| - expected flock, were sighted on! a Aransas National Wildlife Refuge | Paul Deems, m5 Elizabeth Lake Road. FE 7-0226 yesterday by refuge manager | Julian Howard. Howard said he saw the birds, ; 7 two adults and a youngster, from = / MAKE a refuge patrol boat just before | noon, He said the young whooper | ba : was hatched last June near Great | tl] : ’ Slave Lake in northwestern Can- | aS POOLE S g ada. ‘ u thi * * * 4 | B Y Last fall, he said, 21 adults that | YOU R i] | had flown north im the spring came Nothing Less Gives You Maximum TV Enjoyment Oo5/ This Bottle of SNO-BOL The Original Liquid TOILET BOWL CLEANER PHKCO 4136 New 21-Inch Cwivelot Turns for jj Easy Viewing Handsome mahog- any finish with self. leveling brass feet. 21"" Aluminized picture tube. Per- formance unmatch- ed at its low price. back with no young. The -cranes are America's tallest waterfowl and scarcest species. | | Canadian wild life officials spot- | ted six young on the nesting range | this summer. Value Scoop! New 21-inch Console = = — need for , dependa enjo nt. ‘Transformer-Powered Chass 21-inch Aluminized picture tube. Golden Grid Tuner. FM sound with inclined ker panel. Built-in UHF-VHF aerial. Mahogany finish cabinet. | Plans Year in Sierras | TOILET MOF. ‘Living by Gun and Knife | 3 COLORS A we” |_ «RENO, Nev. WA 21-year-old | former railroad worker says he. COPYmGHT 1958 $NO-801 CORP, plans to spend a year in the Sier-. ras with nothing but his gun, a | knife and a sleeping bag ‘to help him survive Terming himself .an “amateur stientist’, Fred Smith said ke wants to show a man can brave the elements in the high mountain | country and return to civilization : la well and intact. | ' ‘ , He ‘said he will walk to Truckee, | RA Ce CE REE 35 miles to the west, then head ~ into the area north of Donner Pass. He said he would establish a lean- | to headquarters and forage for food mx ge aE within a 25mile radius. eps : | FENS ‘Classic Beauty in a 21" Console Richly styled in mahogany finish with smart golden appointments, Transformer Powered Chassis, 21-inch Aluminized picture tube, ove Tip Tuning. Built-in UHF-VHF aerial. Exclusive Golden Grid Tuner. Guoronteed to wear one yeor Come In Now and Get Our Huge Trade-In On Your Old TV Set! ALWAYS LOW PRICES > || AND YOU STILL GET ALL STYLES, [elle Saag | © SERVICE © DELIVERY © CREDIT SIZES Aigeen || © GUARANTEE @-TRADE-IN! and PRICES eas : Open Evenings ‘Til 9 P. M. HAMPTON ELECTRIC) HARDWARE CO. | _ Near Tel-Huron Shopping Center sn aaNet actoea || 922 W. Huron FE 4.2525 + ETS oe a CING A BIG AND VITAL GENERAL MOTORS “AUTOMOTIVE FIRST”! DUR NEAREST PO » F NTIAC DEALER THE PONTIAC PRESS. fi WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 ae saat t 5-9562 ; coast Sotwe OhA-A-/4 f those ‘ss . OLDSMOBILES! h-h-h! What power! w Rocket 'T-350 power! . +. What smoothness! New Jetaway Hydra- Matic smoothness! . . . What glamor! New Starfire Styling! You'll say “Oh-h-h!” for eure when you see Olds for ‘56! | “OH! Day” te Nov. 3 at your OLOSMOBILE Deasier's! Newsmen Flunk. Trucking Tests Champion Drivers Give Exhibition at National Convention Site WASHINGTON, Oct: 18 @ — Many motorists appear convinced }. that (A) any simpleton can drive | a truck and (B) truck drivers are | snarling savages, dedicated to scaring the rest of us off the high- ways, Weill, members of the American Truck Associations are in town to- day for the 22nd annual convention and they are working hard trying to knock down both impressions. To answer problem (A), they invited a group of newspaper men to a parking lot, plopped them into the cabs of fancy new trucks, and let them try out as drivers. The results of this test were in- conclusive, TERRIBLE. JOCKEYS True, the reporters proved to be terrible jockeys. One daring Robin Hood of our typewriter set tried a test used on champion drivers. He attempted to herd his truck so that the big wheels passed through two rows of rubber balls without dis- turbing any on either side. A truck driver is urhappy if, on two trips through the lane, he knocks off one, Our hero, with un- | erring inaccuracy, knocked them | ' all off, Still, does that necessarily dis- prove the theory that any simple- ton can drive a truck? As one newsman said, “my wife asked me, ‘why,are you trying to learn how to drive a truck in one afternoon, when, after 20 years, you still can't crive the family ear?’ "' MORE GENTLEMANLY - On (B), the experiment seemed /on firmer ground. For the state champions fetched in for the so- called National Roadeo appeared far more gentlemanly than, say, a trucker who insists on staying a foot behind your rear bumper | as he roars through tunnels on the | Pennsylvania Turnpike, } WV HAT'S | MY, LINE? “ @ westww= Yesterday's enewer: atete, pAtrel, sTreet, On, evRtamn, € 1955 What's My Line, Inc. endure, spler, poliCe, {O-1 Chronic Nepotism Stunts Growth of Good Business | leading South American news. | So he tries to see that they in. | NEW YORK «—Many a busi- nessman has looked forward to the day when he could add “& son‘’ to the firm's name. And many a cor- poration executive has looked around in‘ his organization for ‘a job with sufficient prestige for his- son-in-law, * * Is that as ae for the business | jas it is for the relative? This very human practice of. placing relatives in responsible | jobs with first regard for their | kinship rather than for their merit or qualification goes by the name of nepotism. It’s been around a long time, in politics and business, and the name originated in church practicies of an earlier day. | RAMPANT NEPOTISM In a family-owned business it's the family's own affair how nepo- tism works out, The “& son” cai be a family indulgence; Quite often the son does a good job, some- times better than Dad did. In a publicly owned corporation, | nepotism is the concern of the 'many stockholders as well as Harry Eads of Detroit is Michi- | others in the management. |gan’s champion at driving with | | two big trailers hitched on behind. | /His truck-trailer is so big. it's | barred in most states, so national | here anyway, “You know," he said, people don’t realize it, but a truck | driver has a lot of valuable equip- ment, and he’s got all that valu- |. | able merchandise, and he has to! | take care of it and get it over the | Porations hurting anybody, | aged, the | That’ 8 a lot of responsibility, and | Points out that “chronic nepotism | road without I always have tried hard to live | | up to it.” | ‘Magazine to Be Mailed WASHINGTON (INS)—The Post Office Department has approved 'mail distribution of the January issue of Confidential magazine. A Federal Court ruled a week ago | that the department could have |the prior look at the magazine |which contains alleged expose | articles about well-known person- | alities. The matter was taken to |court after federal lawyers said | they had received many com- plaints about. contents of the pub- lication, against which libel suits }are pending. . ment. Curjous as to bow much nepo- tism there is in business in this /country, the American Institute of | competition in this class has been | Management, a nonprofit . founda- | dropped, but he got a free trip tion, studied the directorates and | executivés rosters of 23,000 com- “most | panies, It found nepotism in about 12,000. | STUNTS MANY. FIRMS Stressing that many such cor- are excellently man- institute nevertheless |has caused the failure of many ' | enterprises and companies, sturited the growth of many others, delayed | and hampered ‘still othets.”” Trouble can arise within the cor- poration, the institute holds, be- cause the choice of relatives for top positions more or leass defeats any program of executive develop- Also it breeds jealousy. Other executives see little chance for advancement. Sometimes it leads to struggles for control- There is the steep federal and state inheritance tax. This often keeps the chief owner of a large company from passing control to his children, or leaving them as much of an estate in other forms (as he would like. FAR ENOUGH SOUTH TO INSURE SEMI-TROPICAL VEGETATION FAR ENOUGH NORTH TO INSURE A TEMPERATE CLIMATE! OF Grow oranges, grapefruit, other fruits and vegetables in your backyard here When you're ready we'll build home for you from $5,000 with $5,000 tead Tex pti Ne state personel and no state inheritance foxes. Free, One Yeor Paid Membership in Junior Ch he of C Perfect location for retirement Roads at Ever JR. CHAMBER COMMERCE OF INVERNESS TO INCREASE ITS POPULATION SPONSORS Inverness Highlands ou Sibatl of Inverness ii LARGE PRIVATE LAKE s"* 17 Mile Long Lake Tsala Apopka Close By LOTS ---.5100. $10 Down, $2.50 per lot Monthly All Lots Minutes From Lake Homesite Street Signs at Everg Corner NO LESS THAN 4 LOTS, NO MORE THAN & LOTS TO A PURCHASER ONLY 5 MINUTES TO CHURCHES, SHOPPING, SCHOOLS & MOVIES LIVING Costs) limate you have longed for Come to enjoy hobbies ARE VERY, Come here to raise a family Sports, fishing, boating, hunting VERY LOW) Over 60 ft. above sea level ---===== Mail Coupon T Free Guarantee Title Policy a0 nen te eae Cros County band Serene, fe —— 50 minutes to Silver Spr. Inverness, Florida P-PM 30 Day Money-back Guarantee 55 ainstes te Rainbow Spr. ftoone sand ng ruse cOLDEND SROCIEME why Free Exchange Privileges 2 hoor to Deytone Baad | “"™ "* Mlvenen vpen me 1) bewrs te Oriende Mome Free Warranty Deed 1% hours te Tempe _ Average Temperature 70° 1'h hewn to Serenste herit top positions, even if the tax collector gets most of the proceeds | | of the’ stock holdings. Seeks Red Spy Ring | WASHINGTON (INS) — Senate | Internal Security Chairman James /O. Eastland (D-Miss), says his | investigators are trying to unmask | the operations of a new secret Red ‘spy’ ring in the U.S. appearing on a network broadcast, he declined ‘to spell out details but confirmed his belief that hidden Communist in the country. . + died.early today. * '| Heating Systems espionage cells are still operating petitive trucks Chile Diplomat Dies in Capital Hospital | Organization of American States, vv * ! an operation for a kidney. ailment. | |A heart attack last Sunday | hastened his death. The operation. disc losed that Dr. | Davila suffered from. cancer. But ‘he refused to give up and did. /much of his work almost to the) -end of his colorful career. The OAS is an organization of the 21 American republics. burial. * He * Dr, Davila served briefly in 1932 / and from 1927 to 1931 was Chilean ambassador to the United States. He had lived in this country most | of the time since 1933, serving as correspondent for a number of papers, He had been active also in United Nations affairs. We Service All Makes ol Oil & Ges We Feature the Williamson Furnaces All Work Guaranteed Free Estimates L & R HEATING Engineers 228 Oakland Ave. FE 5-6623 WASHINGTON ®—Dr. Carlos | | Davila, secretary general of the The 68-year-old Chilean. states-| man-writer had been seriously ill | since last June when he underwent | An OAS representative said the | body will be flown to Chile for Don’t be tied down during your retirement years for lack of funds. Build up a supplemental retirement fund NOW by saving i at PONTIAC FEDERAL. as provisional president of Chile, | |/| ; It’s easy to save with us ... save by mail. It’s profitable... current rate is 2‘ It’s safe... each account insured up to ‘Ii $10,000. Some see us. Pontiac Federal o per annum. - Rate of Dividend Navings and Loan Association Branch ‘il Main St. Rochester Did you know that the new Blue Chip ' GMC-acknowledged leader in mod- ern features — in smart styling — can now be bought for less than many com- — due to recent’ price. increases in the industry? Take advan- tage of GMC’s present prices today. You’ll get Blue Chip GMC quality at. the greatest bargain in history. Co The original pa _first on GN MC. Hydra-Matic Dri end al without increas! nor for better visibility, ive —4-speed, 8-speed and: Twin Hydra- 1 clutch rep: oading damage, shock-l ng road spee ds. Peak amic windshield greater safety ear Matic models to " acement, slash cut road time Diesel horsepower ' economy records in a Extra-heavy, Boulevard styling ¢ Blue Chip GMC 2 PF for its owner. Home Office 761 W. Huron Branch 16. E. Lawrence ngines — - 6, V8 and hat have made il fields of work. nd efficiency ¢ top-rated front 4 axles. hat makes every estige- -builder is ® Hydra- Matic standard on many models opt Here’s what Blue Chip GM C quality means... Greater stamina— the ick. yore features of Blue Chip G Leonel struction for more years O cost service. e-in value—the advanced f America’s most m e ern trucks commands a bi rade in value than their outmoded rivals. ional at extra cost O* some orhert Higher trad engineering © See us, too, for Triple-Checked mee trucks WILSON GMC Co. 675 Oakland Ave., Corner Oakland and Cass Pontiac, Michigan i SS THE ponirac PRESS, web SDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1935 ‘wa on TOMS. fo iG, a io) BARGANS! LLB at — FILL UP YOUR fa » € Z, <7. Shopping Cart « WITH BETTER FOODS FOR LESS | AT TOM'S! /// SALE STARTS: WED., ORCHARD LAKE ROAD OCT. 19 thru TUES., | BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 25, 1955 Quan Qn We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities | -" MAXWELL HOUSE $ 1 49 6 OZ. o COFFEE NORTHERN Twice Softened Toilet Tissue 6-39: ||: VEGETABLE ~ SHORTENING LIBBY'S Quality BREAST O' CHICKEN LIBBY'S TOMATO|| TUNA Sliced JUICE || FISH PEACHES CHUNK STYLE : _ LGE. 2% CAN J ) c SSS G ) Vp PRICE SALE! KEYKO MARGARINE ee Buy y -Lb, Ce rn tg H E i Ni Z , MEDIUM GRADE A . = Ctn. 16 OZ. CAN | G SAVINGS O - ~B 5 Pure Tomato EGGS , Dp 0 R K L Q | N K E T C " U P | |B] WISCONSIN LONGHORN c FLAVORFUL CHEESE * 1. pat < >) -— aes cS ics sale ) ¢ ; ) Fresh or Smoked Sraunschweiger (Ge ion curs ee | Moz. " | Iitiver’sausice =—- #9}, “3 D ee] PORK = = } : | | Grade 1 Large . ) | — BOLOGNA sz: OO GRAPE JUICE «sin. 29° | GLIM “seater 30 =| “GOLDEN ) RIPE iy) FARM CREST Frozen PLES tsx . GOV'T GRADED U.S. Choice Standing ‘SMALL LEAN MEATY FRESH SPARE | cated ar GREEN PEAS pari 7 39%. | Ad. SNOW CROP Frozen " 9 LBS. 09° — it\| Fr. Fried Potatoes ne s Cc RESH AND LEAN LB. ....35¢ 5 99 STRICTLY : 2 Lbs. 69¢ : HUNT'S ~ DIXIE COMSTOCK Brand WHOLE UNPEELED Homogenized Sliced — Sie ieee we 3 3 DILL 2. 9Q¢| AP APRICOTS || SALAD || PIE $ — ee DRESSING APPLES NO. 2 } CAN 3 i ~ PILLSBURY’S ‘2 PRICE SALE! © _ BELL GIANT SIZE — RIPE no c| PIE CRUST MIX ‘OLIVES met Dna DF |! Sree enone EET 4 es oT ae 1 Loe ‘ [ Gh abe a 3 3 ae te Re ERLE ee Fo ee ee ee ae eee o Pee Gece ee ee a oe * ly i. fe QP peer ee ee iis L ie Stans d v Py SeSe wes oe en aemeriees 225 ie : A We ‘ ; ; / J ee, if ey 9. ‘ a Se ee ee f \ 1/ sae re | 1 7 X\ a ae Bey ‘| oo : . RAE EO THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 , che ENER ao OPEN MON., FRI, SAT. NIGHTS to 7 The world. famous | fleece . . . now in fabulous colors! New! Designed for ‘55 fashions! | Seamless for comfort and control! intermezzo _ f. _ Panty | by len' oo Mp in Girdle nach Son ae we HOH ew 250 — 5.00 FROSTY FLEECE IN Excellent underline compliments new fall silhouette— * ‘The marvelous panty girdle shaped of one continuous strand e: ives you higher, more softly rounded curves, yet of yarn. Fits like your own skin! Follows every body move- co ATS ‘. co AT SETS irm control. Perfect fit and uplift. Delicate nylon ment! Bias knit actually changes direction to follow: and ' . lace and cotton. Rose, white only. A-cup in sizes 32 firm each. contour. Exclusive-Silf-skin patented seamless to 36; B-cup in 32 to 40; C-cup in 32 to 42. Buy now! crotch. White only in sizes S-M-L. Try it on at Federal’s? 2 by RAINBOW SHOP WITH FEDERAL’S CREDIT PURCHASE COUPONS. BUY NOW, PAY LATER! 4 Ad95 95 , and ; i 4 The same wonderful, long-wearing fleece Children’s BLUE BIRD i - : v ) ) pane colors. ™ them’ now! SADDLE OXFORDS &% as | 3.88 DIRECT FROM DISNEYLAND—young Ameri- ca's favorite footwear! White with black or brown saddle oxfords. Here is Blue Bird quality that means comfort, wear and foot health. 814- 12; 1214-3. Hurry to Federal’s and save! 7 * + ca a oy St = i Ae | ~ Men’s, QP * 2% > «+ : iS Pillesgeol “33. } ~ ‘ a*.°6 : ES -s Tots’ coat set, 4-6. ; “. : & 95 S he “se Leather uppers in smart te Je! Women’s in white, > ye Men's in black, 6-12. So e @ Elk uppers @.* Sizes 2-4 coot sets...... @ Nylon sewn ‘ 4.95 @ Maple wheels Sizes 4-6x coat sets... prestipereing | CHiN 2495 BP dded tongue urdy, popular, fo-everyy. ° ; ae Women's, 5-9 — casuals “E Ligh wan 8 | ) : Sizes 7-10 coat Pa ' @Men’s, 6-12 ey ehion crepe sole. freee, 8 . — and red. In Sizes 4 to 9. . Sizes 7-14 coets ....... 24.9 Sizes 10-14 subteen oonenenenen * LACK CASH? BUY ALL YOUR Don’t be stopped by lack of cash! Open @ con. venient credit account at Federal’s and shop in N. EEDS WITH FEDERAL’S any department with handy Purchase Coupons! — : fay Se a Buy all your needs now at Federal’s low prices PURCHASE COUPON CREDIT! ... pay for them later on easy terms arranged to fit your budget! SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC OPEN MON. FRI. SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 en t \ < | N ; 4 ; ‘y ‘ ’ : Px ae oot | A : TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 ! 4 tioned, During hot weather it's) Soo) hoose Firemen | 14e National Forest fire, report- | Sits Aid Eire Railwa too soft for a man to walk over./ Pays Himself 11.50 Ml. @ —~ Fred) curtis is advertising it no end. RTE, Tet. = A toe ; Traveling ©” 5 year of milled pest there. |F Son Warren Se el ne oa loeee sean Uma ne a, Oe on ar mee a alae hae | RO ‘took { 2 narrow a soul turtle.” The step for each ‘movement of the slithering through the darkness to |<". "tary. te tuay” almost any |#2use Fallway track across large| lee ae has been living | eyes made in an eight-hour day | escape hot rock nests near Divide tanta that weabe the | Peat bogs near Boora, Eire. Lay- KANSAS CITY — An estimated) figured motorists wr Sears eam 8a, poet Sa, Be SE ce ees ees cope oe wt of |e nate apes See nel Seu clon manne |" the bank's cooling system is sta- Fad The Finest GIFT STAMPS / and the LOWEST Everyday ey eee VELVET Homogenized ce 33: Te ie ) KE SYRUP 12-90. Botte PEANUT BUTTER cscciisiwe 8 - 39: _ Fresh! Pure! Delicious! | MACARONI or Spaghetti 2°27: — 10-oz, Plain > 29: MOST brarsTinE sHoxTmuNe he a 23 77: 216 BEAR oe WRIGLEY ok Gai ‘ - Reusable Tumbler Del Crest Coffee 1. Bos 75 | , KRAPPS Mew a P Italian Style Dressing 29° : ; Stic on m 35: @ 69: Stokely’s or Cypress Gardens [“* “ace rpose Bettie ewe : j i 2 4 : ‘ ( « é . - i - a rT¥r ‘ 4 | | = TOP FROST Proses ? : ‘ ot Nate 8-oz “4 All Beet © TURKEY , ' eS eee nin =. he ditatt s yk vr bs " 7 M Ri 4 { t ¥ ° q “a w DS 7 nt # Yee He or ee ; . " 7 a ‘i o F j f 3 j fr ' be ’ , L a ‘ py J j é f , | rd he , ? « / f 4 Fi f\ i < ‘ y i ' . ‘ ' f THE PONTIAC PRESS, “WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 ee ee TWENTY-FIVE Triplets Close Debate They used all three names as Hail Kept, From Temple ml Matianal Geographic “° |Timber Yield Sets Mark |“! The 1 timber eu vas val Some Days It Poys of | ny ur on oe Pistol mye in Pi - ialkt etn: ai Rahew daw: | | Tibetans’ abominate hail as the WASHINGTON — The Agricul: | 5 497 400 in 1954. to Keep Careful Silence # She went, along to jail too, on & ‘Most expectant parents, and t ; mischief of devils and believe that » ture Department reports that the ) re PORT ARTHUR, T al eee ee tes it must not strike the holy build-| ‘The rhinoceros does not have timber harvest froin national }for-| » ya w—When sol charge Angeles supermarket ' owing but a More than two-thirds of Ameri: | cops picked up a man in a tavern, noceennentncmmeanantatis plans to- install several | in6* of Lhasa, long the city of the | a gaged. habe ests during the 1955 fiscal Year| ca, households own one motor Selina Booker wanted to know how. Since the beginning of the Fg flere gar ee Se atid etary peemanee g gD d SA SESS - leet, com two or to in| 1H of they | to resemble bone. 5,365,113,000 board feet in fiscal | dustrial. surveys, win — piste, - me ceccy og Bom , Musselman’s Pie Filling puaercie 2S. 39° Real Prune Prune Juice “Mmc%iia” “tem 19° Libby’s Pumpkin for Pies “27%, 2. “cm 35° Durkee’s Pumpkin Pie Spice 8 39«s ‘cs 21 Kool Krisp Dill Pickles xa." “i 49° RATH'S Black Hawk or WILSON’S Certified Sugar Cured moked Try One for a Perfect Family Dinner! s Cut from 12° te 16 Lb. Avg. Hame— DOMINO SUGAR . ° OLD FASHIONED BROWN afie i | Butt Portion, Ib. 55¢ mm 6: YELLOW Odkia IZ . * CONFECTIONERS hee : Your Choice ¢ 1 Ib. Pkg. y Michigan Mild Store Cheese PINCONNING £452) c } . OF BEEF : Ib Grade “MN All White Strictly Fresh Med. Size U.S. Graded CREAMERY BUTTER “scx” 61°. E G G S Choice WISCONSIN , ‘ BRICK or MUENSTER CHEESE sz. QS a Ground Beef isnt Sem, 5.39" Boiling Beef ‘ar atii"."s.tet 0 15 Sliced Bacon “ICS Nowint 4.555 Sliced Bologna “2444 "5c0 1 3.Q Shrimp-Fancy sésr.3," 8. 4Q LOIN ROAST Blue Pickerel Fillets natn ten 53 ti on ; 7 aaa 3o Ib. Naturally Tender TABLE TRIMMED 7 inch STANDING For Sandwiches, Snacks, Cold Plates or Served With Pie ASSORTED CHEESE LINKS i= 25° 0a. RINDLESS SWISS CHEESE << 65° 9 °™ ppc BEE ie . ay " " = as ice : ~~ |Gertrude Kish. ‘October 24 at MSU THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 __- “TWENTY: STX Walled Lake Asks | $750, 000 Planning New | Construction Boord Also Sells Bonds Concern of. Southfield By NANCE BELLEFLEUR | The township is unable to take Press Correspondent , action to vacate the cemetery | Amounting to $275,000 SOUTHFIELD—For the past 18 land have the bodies removed to a | months, Southfield officials have | more suitable resting place, said. at Meeting been trying to find out who really | Swem, because it does not wn | > he property. WALLED LAKE—The Board of owns an abandoned cemetery sit- |‘ | Education here proposed a $750.- uated at Eight Mile and Shiawas- | Officials are now debating tak- 090 bond issue for schoo! construc- see Roads. ing the matter to court to have the tion at a@ special meeting Monday title cleared night. The program planned would cos $$850.000 over the next three years | tained 22 graves of early and would require a $750,000 bond | 8nd Detroit families, of which only | issue to supplement $100,000 al- | six tombstones remain, it is a ready on hand, This program | ‘scene of desolation and neglect. | ‘Entre Nous would provide classrooms and fa- Tangled underbrush and weeds © cilities for an increase of 1.090) cover the overturned tombstones, ‘to Install] New pupils tn the elementary schools.' anq@ rusty tin cans dot the little Past experience, plus enroll- | graveyard. Ofticers Friday | SOUTH LYON—Open installa- ment projections, indicates te | Qne tombstone, barely legible officials that am increase of 1,000 | carries the inscription ‘Baby Son elementary pupils by 1958 Is ® | of John M. and Lottie C, Bodin, tion of officers of Entre Nous | comservative estimate. ~ | Oct. 4 , 1886." Another is inscribed | | Chapter, OES will be held Friday | It the program: is : by, “Charles C. Rogers.” | evening in the Masonic Temple. - Walled Lake School district citi-| Supervisor Eugene Swem said} ‘The ‘following officers will be zens, the bonds would he sold at recently that he fears Southfield’s| tustalied: worthy matron, Lois intervals during the three year rapid development will over-run| Burger; werthy patren, Frank | period. This. would permit the| the property and lead to desecra- - * * ° Known as ‘Bodin Cemetery” and * * * | believed originally to have con- It would then be up to Southfield Southfie eld | authorities to remove the bodies ‘to another resting place. Board of Education to finance the | tion of the graves. construction as needs develop. hfieia official William Sewenth secretary, The balance of the $825,000 bond ae ee ak tas Selanleny aioe Grace Gardner; treasurer, Hilda issue, voted Nov. 29, 1954, amount- 3 talents pict owned by early | Bennett; conductress, Kathrine ing to $275,000 was sold at this) » le the ‘ Siauter; associate conductress, : Boe ey »| Swem said th Beca the ee Bosworth Co. at an average that “ use interest rate of 3.2684 gto aneaeey one ene ee o Sitar tiers are Ada, Patricia The proceeds of this sale to rest of t was trans- Gewete Dente: Martha. used to complete present construc- ferred, it is almost impossible to.| Rett Aner: Electa, Ruth Gready; tion payments, itrace ownership of the cemetery. sentinel, Clint White; ‘organist, | Mrs. Frank Gready will be in-. stalling officer. , Make Bake Sale stale Plan DRAYTON PLAINS—Pians for a | bake sale will be made when the Blue Star Mothers meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the school, The sale is to be held at ee Parents Will Take - Abandoned Cemetery Is Romeo Group | Slates Artists of-the Elementary Schools Club of of the club as his subjects. ante 7. Oct. 25, at Dixie Recre- | : 'Dinner Marks 'Golden Wedding atImlay City ~ IMLAY CITY—Mr. and Mrs. }. ‘Carl Kempf celebrated their fit- *thieth wedding anniversary and 'Mrs. Kempf’s birthday, Sunday, iwith ,a dinner at the Homestead Special Guests Will Demonstrate Talents for Club | Restaurant. . The couple's children and their ROMEO—Two top-notch Detrojt families were present, including nine grandchildren. Mr. Kempf has been in the shoe business here for more than fifty | years. commercial artists will be fea- tured at Thursday night's meeting | Semmes, at the South School. 2 * * 4-H Club Holds Annual Show Crop Exhibits, Awards Karl Larsen will draw carica- tures and profiles, using members other special guest, | George Worth, will demonstrate | layout techniques, He will do some actua) sketching to illus- trate the problems involved in | edrrying out an idea in the field of commercial art. Following a short business meet- Featured at Wednesday | ‘ing scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. Luncheon WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — At a speaker representing. the Com- . an annua] banquet held in the munity Hospital Foundation will, The Oakland County 4H Club |Community Activities Building | address the group briefly concerp- | heig it’s annual Club Crop Show | Tuesday evening, . the Water ford | \ing the need for a new hospital | Toastmasters Club installed its at the Waldron Hotel yesterday | aeviy elected tinte of officers in the aren. | afternoon under the sponsorship of | y . Refreshments will be served | the Pontiac Kiwanis Club. Retiring President George A. after the program by the sixth | Crop exhibits and presentations Luenberger presented the gavel to, grade room mothers. Girl (of awards featured the luncheon | Ed Chandler of 4431 Parnell St., Scouts will act as baby sitters. (given by the Kiwanians. | Clarkston, who will take over the | * «ie In the petate crop awards, | reins for the next 12 months. Interested residents of the school | Roger Voorheis, of White Lake, | President Chandier introduced district in addition to club mem- | won first place and the $10 ac- | his team for 1956: Jerry Mejeur | bers will be welcome. _ | companying it; Robert Middie- | is education vice president; | ton, of Lake Orion, placed second yr Senry White is administrative County Agents Meet. and received $7.50; and Calvin Voorheis, of White Lake, won third place and $5.00. Middleton was chosen to repre | sent Oakland county at the grand Reception Held for Newlyweds All the county = agriultural |finals:in Chicago next February, | agents, home demonstration agents since both of the Voorheis brothers to Live in Dry ‘d na and 4H Club agents in Michigan had previously made the trip and | tives end friends attended ths will attend their annual conference | thus became ineligible. In the fruit class, Robert Middle- ,ton, Lake Orion, placed first in both the apples and pear division. | The corn crop class had nine | j recent wedding reception for Mr ,and Mrs. Daniel McMullen at For- lest Hill. Mrs. McMullen is the daughter at Michigan State University next | week, The yearly meeting for per- sonnel of the Michigan Coopera- | tive Extension Service will be ‘A’ award winners. They were | of Ann Arbor and Daniel is the Place of Students , WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — | Parents: Will be students when the high scheol PTSA meets tonight | at 7:30. Sons and daughters will ‘take their mothers and fathers to’ | their classrooms for 10-minute ses- | sions where théy will be briefed | on high school subjects, LJ * * | The high school choir will pre- sent several selections when the members meet in the auditorium before “school” begins. MR. AND MRS. M AKOLD J. HOUSE | — - House-McGoughey Rite x a better job of serving Michigan | people Vanderhoof, White Lake; R. D. Perry, Oxford and Earle Perry, Council Will Check eee of Clarkston, |Leonard Woman's Club In ih rain lass, the oats award n the grain class, th ’ Elects New Officers winners were Stanley Owens, | Holly Water Service HOLLY—bn account of a sub- stantial decrease in the revenue received by the village water de- ‘partment, the council is making | a check on the service, and an) _ increase in the rate may be neces- | | sary. ° The decrease has accumulated After awards and presentations | | over a period af increased pump- were made, the club members at“, age, and an. effort is being made tended a local movie. | to discover the leaks. Holly; Scramilin, Holly; Dick Scramlin, Holly; Larry | and Stuart Hutch- | ins, Rochester. The wheat awards went to Raymond Glynn, White | |Lake; Dick Scramlin and Larry | Scramlin. both of Holly; and Jim / Ogden, Holly. LEONARD—New officers of the Leonard Woman's Club are: Presi- dent, Mrs. Stella Church; vice president, Mrs. Shirley Patterson; secretary, Mrs. Mabe! Ousnamer, and renner bers. ie Kiger. A 1 o'clock Yuncheon is planned for the Oct. 27 meeting at the | home of Mrs Viola Blum. of the world’s supply ot mica — Performed at Waterford about 54,888,000 pounds a _year. ORTONVILLE—The Waterford! Heathman of Pontiac was best Community Church was the scene| man and William Engle and Fd of the Saturday marriage of Joan ward Sernig seated the 25¢ McGoughey, 4aughter of Mr. and guests. Mrs. Rufus McGoughey, 335 Ball | ‘ osu’ " After a reception in the VFW St., and Harold J, House, son of Hall in Dtayton: Plains, the. new Mr. s: Sleveid a wr IS "Orton L. House, ate and Mrs. House left for a wed- , * * * ding trip to South Carolina. On their return they will reside at A floor-length gown of imported lace and pleated tulle over satin home Andersonville Rd., a was chosen by the bride for he { wedding. The fitted bodice had . Optimist Club to Meet | V neckline edged in iridescent se- ELD — The Southfield: MACOMB—The Macomb Coun- ty Citizens’ Committee for Pontiac State Hospital will hold its first meeting at $00 pm. Thursday at the Civie Center, 6) East Broad- way, Mt. Clemens. Dr. George H. Reye. staff psychiatrist at the Pon- resentative George Steeh will be the key speakers The Citizens’ Committee orig- Will Study Mental Health |tiac State Hospital and State Rep- , ; SOUTHFT quins. The fingertip veil of lace —— Club will meet at 6:30 was held in place by a pearl and Thursday at Fruitridge Inn, | sequin. gap. Joan carried white|1; hile Road at Southfield Road | roses and baby mums on a white Harold Schone. Oak Park City Bible. Manager will be guest speaker Sister of the groom, Mrs. De- His topic will be “My Job as a lores Heathman, of Pontiac, City Manager.” served as matron of honor. | Jeanett Ferdon and Judy House | The Belgian Congo is larger were bridesmaids while Sandra (than the part of the United States House was flower oa _ dames Wing ena at of the Mississippi River. | ————— DEFIANCE COFFEE Planer Aist| HALLOWEEN inated because many Macomb County friends and relatives of | present and fermer patients at Pontiac State Hospital wanted to associate In an effort to learn all they could about mental i. ness, By learning they could then edacate their own communities in ‘a better understanding of the problems confronting the mental- ly it. The group will also pro- | mote fund raising projects to | provide recreati and associ- ated facilities which~will be of benefit and aid in the recovery of patients at the Pontiac State Hospital. Pontiac State Hospital has a pa- »fent _population of 3300 _and serv- —- Start Scout Training FOUR TOWNS — A Cub Scout l ee course starts at 7:30 to- | night in Stringham School. Any- one interested sheuld take advan- ices a ten-county area which in-! The temporary officers of the cludes Macomb County. The aver- group are’ Ray Callens, chairman, — of the course. age Macomb County population at Mrs. Vernon Kerwin, secretary. the hospital is around 300 patients ani Uanewace Stech, treasurer. | ~ County Calendar The original citizens inter@sted tn Other members of the organizing committee are Mr. and Mrs. Leon North Branch A son Thomas Vern, was born to Kandt, Mrs. Alfred Beck, Mm and Mr and Mrs. Amon Siljers a ’Mrs, Lawrence Martell and Mrs. | and ts ore hance parents of a daughter, Evalette Marie Mary Garman. Ted A. Panaretos, | The ‘Bere Bi: Imlay City forming this committee were aware that ‘no such organization was in existence in any.of the ten counties sending . patients to the Pontiac State Hospital. They | felt it. their duty and responsibility | paychiatric case work supervisor | meet Thursday. Tee cies oueetiod 'to pioneer such a dedicated effort. at Pontiac State Hospital. will act gt as consultant to the group. er Community Claus will special communication of Imiay City ge No 341, F&AM, Wednesday” eve- ning. Supper will be served at 7 pm of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clement held from Monday through Walter Cudnohsky, of Lake | .on of Mrs. Leota Chisholm of Thursday, Oct. 24-27. Orion; Larry Middleton, Lake | Dryden. The pair were married The county extension agents will | pean Pa _ lesa | Oct. 8 in Lexington. si confer with the state staff at aan Maines aeoolem — Mr. and Mrs. McMullen will | | MSU h ide do * . MSU and exchange ideas on doing Hutchins, Rochester; Fiward jmake their hoime in Dryden. TOASTMASTERS’ NEW PRESIDENT Waterford Toastmasters Hold Banquet vice president; Del Wright, sec- | Toastmistress ‘a, assisted. the retary; Lewis Long, treasurer, | formation of the new Waterford and Howard Fougner is yergeant- | Club just one year ago this month. at-arms. | With an active membership of ‘ Lowell Stuckman of 1095 James 21 and a constitutiona) limit of 30 | K. Blvd, gave a talk on “Consider members, the Waterford Toast- the Husband,” a plea-to the wives | masters Club meets each Thurs present. Elmer bepp spoke on| day evening inviting men who are “Middleground or Battleground.” | interested in character develop- Celebrating the thirty-first birth-| ment through speech development | day of the first Toastmasters Club |to contact President Ed Chandler, in Santa Ana, Calif. it was noted | ORlando 3-4492. that there are now over 2,000 such; In above picture, retiring pres- clubs throughout the. world. Pon-' ident George Luenberger, (right) | Hae, having both a Pontiac Y/ i hands the gavel to.new president, Toastmasters club and a _Pontiac! Edward Finance Commission Okays Borrowing ‘Extension Club Names New Officers at Meet | LEONARD—Two Towns Extern | sion: Club ‘has elected the. following LANSING—Public borrowings new officers: | approved today by the State Mu-/ Mrs. John Jarrett will lead the nicipal Finance Commission in-| group; assistant leader, Mrs. Har- cluded the following school dis- | old Rowley; chairman, Mrs. Mel- j tricts. vin Thorman; secretary-treasur- Oakland County: Royal Oak er, Mrs. John Sutherby and pub- ‘and Troy Townships School Dis- licity,, Mrs. Herman Weigold Sr. The next meeting is set for Nov. 8 with the “Christmas Workshop” {discussion planned, ‘trict No. 11 fractional, $30,000 capi- | +tal improvement tax notes to buy sites, | a, . Today You Can Depend on Your Pharmacist! Our experienced pharma- cists quickly and accurately fi your prescription to ‘doctor's orders.’ You can depend on us to carefully serve you and your family as a source for all health needs. Our job is to safeguard your health. Bring your pre- scription to us. Our pharmacists are always on duty! DRAYTON DRUGS whose purpose would be removing stigmas, prejudices. and miscon- ptions associated with mental ill- | | Ness, By such an association fit was | believed that- they could do things for the hospital patients and also educate their communities to be more understanding and accepting of the patient who has recovered | and is ready to once again be- come a contributing member of his conimunity, The Citizens’ Committee recog- nizes mental illness as a disease which can be treated, just as tuberculosis, cancer and other such diseases, Lb, 79° d Dressing SOoKiEs hO: 2 heise: Motes Crisco or Fluffol saic DEFIANCE OLEO FRESH GROUND BEEF Farmer Peet's No. 1 Grade OR 3-1544 rave Food Market Tm the Perty that Money fer Buckner : You Can Park 4512 Dixie Hwy. 4490 DIXIE Pr dahet DRAYTON PLAINS — Other: Offices: OR 3- Pontiac—Walled Lake—Utica Phoned About Borrowing e New Engine s Finance at Our Door! Drayton Plains 1221 * * * The Macomb County Committee for Pontiac State Hos- | pital extends an invitation to all persons interested in mental health | to attend the meetings. non Kerwin, secretary to the group, can be reached by card or letter | at P. O. Box 266. Mt. Clemens, | Michigan Citizens’ | Mrs. Ver- lea Mary Narrin Cirele of | Church will meet at at the home of nh _ Richard Blue. Com Catherine Booth c day with Mra, Royal Street. The Penske, y Scouts of poined until Dee 3 r Towne | Supper oop 67 has been post- e Deborah Circle ts meeting at the | cot Munn of Malcolm 8t Rg of Mrs. Feng e4 at lp on Herman Rubritius, stuffed Pcninigis for t ‘banaar of Pour Towns Methodiat Church the Methodtst pm. Thursday 4480 Dixie Highway OR 3-1433 rele. wml meet Thure- ne Stay-put comfort for a busy beauty! Warner-Wonderful planned .by the) The Lage 4 is work. Oo men’s Style. 4516 Dixie Highway rad ° ® ba = | a | = | eR a o bee | a fo) z Shut out the cold... right over your skin, where it does the most good... with Duofold 2-Layer Underwear. Let its lightweight #msulation keep you warm, comfortable and free to swing into action. Stop in and see Duofold’s special Sports- We Give Holden Red Stamps GREEN A Men’s Wear _DRAYTON PLAINS Duofold Z Gayot WEALTH UNDERWEAR enemas can't ride vp or bind! #2129 in A, B or C cup, $2.95. D eup, $3.98. Just ene of mony styles, from $2.25 4494 Dixie Hvy.—Drayton Ploins—-OR 3.7224 Open Monday ‘til 8 Friday Nite ‘til 9 OR 3-1807 TWEN'TY-SEVEN Coach Lines, Inc., Grand rman ene ‘of this year. The line carried Pecaienriny oil 1) oe D 1 @ i Now the: FRAY - ‘SATURDAY and and ryyy -Tr heater rive A Treat fo: the Whole Family 15 VARIETIES TO SELECT FROM PIZZA PIE ‘he named “Earlsday.” for Suffering Helpmate “Thousands of women could. add years to their. lives—simply by telling the truth about thele ages.” — Martha Seott. : By MRS. EARL WILSON NEW YORK-—My husband, Oil is just plain daffy about say- Edwin Scott, i and Mrs. Russell Wainscott, all of. Pontiac, heard the three-day se- | ing time. HIS time, I mean. Yours he. doesn’t mind wasting. Some ee ago he installed an 8-day week in himself, * ft: ¥ gm. " ys : — wer i ay cy . 5d ie a iy La: dk eA R ae ; : “} ! | A ) | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WED ESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955. Bus Profit Reported | operating brofit. beloré taxes of] : Cc | Holl ood Headlir i A, [SUAS fe the a atic ele ay .,. | Cancer Volunteers — | Hotyw -. sae tg lin d Mrs. Wilson Pinch Hits ‘ Attend Conference Grable Will Be Starre A group of Pontiac people have just returned from attending a | volunteer leadership. training con- ference of the American Cancer | | Society held at East Lansing. } Mrs, Ted Koella Jr., Mrs. H. Mr, Philip Francis | ties of lectures. Also present for the course were Hard? Not for my Oil. By being 10 minutes late for all, | Mrs. Ray Kingsbury of Drayton | instead of wallowing around in the cov- ers for 10 or 12 seconds, by shaving while ' showering, and not cutting his head off, either, he saved 24 hours a week. That 'gave him an 8th day eyery week which Anyway, one day last week,.I said, “Your dentist said you'd better drop around while you still have some teeth left.” He sort of sniffed superiorly that he was too busy and that it would be a waste of time right then. How- ever, he was going’ te budget some time for the dentist, who is a lady, the next couple weeks or so. “According to my time-saving pro- TIME RAN OUT appointments, by getting out of bed the instant he woke up! Plains, Mrs. Milo McLintock of . , Birmingham, Mrs. F. J. Pierson of Milford, Mrs | Rochester, and Mrs. Water Lentz iof Holly, ’ | Miss Barbara Amundson, the Oakland County co-ordinator, ; whose office is in Pontiac, was ; With the group for the training | course. | The Michigan Division and the Southeastern Michigafi Division (held the conference in cooperation ; with the Michigan Cancer Coordin ating Committee at Michigan State | University, neem ie Baer in Movies HOLLYWOOD w—Former heayyweight boxing champion Willard Dickerson, | in | Ry LOUELLA 0. PARSONS HOLI& WOOD (INS) ~ | Grable was surprised when 1 told ther that’ I knew-about the setup she has with United Artists for six independent pictures, “Did you get the story from them?" she insisted. “New Betty, you know better than to ask,” I said, “Let's just’ sav I have the story. What do you plan to de?” “! have no'story vet,”’ she said, “but IT am asking that two of the six not be musicals. I would. like to make a straight dramatic pic- ture—not heavily dramatic, but perhaps with one or two songs. “In ‘I Wake Up Screaming,’ I only had an incidental song. The same was true in ‘The Yank in the RAF’ which 1 made ‘with Ty- rone Power. They both made money, too.” ‘ DESERVED PRAISE Betty street in New Orleans | Dietrich, I was glad that the Los Angeles | compliment when it was revealed ‘how much Eddie has contributed to his former daughter-in-law's judge gave Edward G. Robinson a Independent Pictures. ' the wonderful music in ‘Bourbon | It will be filmed in New Orleans with several name bands, and, of course, you can't be in New Orleans without getting in on the ° ‘hottest jazz in the world If this keeps up Mike Todd will | have a star to every 5 feet of | footage He's just signed Marlene Frank Sinatra, Red | Suetton and George Ratt for only ‘one sequence of “Around Ge World in 80 Days.” LPI aa aaa A mw. WHERE GOOD FRIENDS MEET DANCE WITH ME \TONIGHT Music by the KIM-TONES MANRY’S @ BEER @ WINE @ CHOICE LIQUORS @ DELICIOUS COCKTAILS ttt ia LIBERTY COCKTAIL LOUNGE j VEAPLALLALEALLALZLLALLALLAL LE oie, tasty Hallam feeds prepared for you.te take ~— a phage} inefficient of me to go till two weeks from Max Baer has been signed by Co- support. Pi i eaien” deserves 85 North Se ursday ” he sa lumbia Pictures to portray a some words of praise, “al Or ginaw ‘Jee's Famous Spaghetti House By a strange coincidence, he had a toothache the next night. champ who ends the rise of a Eddie has just signed a new W. Huron at Eliz. Lk. Rd. 3 1038 West Heren St. FE 3.7398 “Better go,” I told him. young giant. The picture is “The ecentract to do “Nightmare,” and | uiraaaaaat Cw 6 Fs &Reoden. 018 P.M —Sleep ee, “I told you I haven't time now.” he snapped. “I've got to Harder They. Fall,” a Columbia producer Bill Thomas tells me | SssSnISSSUONNGRORGRNSRRS finish a project I'm working on. I've budgeted two hours for ronniaesent a ot & Pied is oe —— = Heme DOORS gout ON OUR q1* this tooth week after next.” . | wail < Miaee*. tem e NgAt mM | since ath of his partner 7 Weekdays, 10:4 CIANT ked wa hug . FOR FINER FOODS Well, what a pleasant weekend we didn't have! Prine Caiman to win Ge same. pide Sundays 12:45 SCREEN It’s authored by Cornel Wool. rich, who wrote “Rear Window,’ and it's a | suspense story plus all TROY) DRIVE-IN THEATER STEPHENSON & EF. MAPLE (15 Mile) Saturday night his tooth was killing him, Sunday he | weight championship in 1934. was dead with it, Sunday night he'd practically been buried with it--and, what was worse, during this whole weekend ~— Ay a of the world's there hadn't been a lick of production. The roar of the type- | {5 "\vcid chronic hunger mevs ae writers had ceased and time was a-wasting. Population Reference Bureau. The tooth hurt so bad that he had to take a strong sedative “It doesn't help,” he screamed. = © D A N C E x *« * * “That was enough for a horse,” the dentist said on the AT THE NEW LOWE'S RUSTIC INN lizing in SOUTHERN FRIED CKEN—STEAKS—CHOPS Hours: 7 a. m.- 7:45 pi m., except Sundays 577 €. Auburn at East Bivd. KEEGO CAFE Now Operated : j phone, “but so all right, take another one.” By =RANA = ESTHER He did—and after that he slept two days. When he Club Tahoe | MU. 9-1902 . : corar eee regained what he calls his consciousness, his face was so Home-Made Pies, Bread and Rolls swollen he couldn't have the tooth pulled for another day, 3412 DIXIE HIGHWAY | NOW THRU SATURDAY sete Ore 3 : He just tessed around in bed like a cha cha dancer, getting 2 ; 2729 Orcherd Leke Ave. over the sedative. Figuring that he has an eight-day speed- LADIES’ NIGHT 6:50-10:10 ) up week, he must've lost two years in these four days. E A Sandwich and Coke Well, the tooth’s finally out, and thére’s talk of a ‘nine- day | Every Wednesday AT IN A Malt and Hot Dog week being put in temporarily to make up for the lost 10 ° years. The moral is time, tide and teeth Phone OR 3-9754 YOUR CAR ek a fe, 4 A Full Meal Is Good at. EFi-MAR DRIVE-IN Restaurant... Dixie Hwy. at Silver Lake Read wait for no man and, as Slugger says, “That's the tooth, the whole tooth and ' 7 NIGHTS A WEEK! #' nothing but the tooth.” Liquor, Beer, Wine THE MIDNIGHT-EARL . . . | = Herb Shriner invited us submarine- STARTING ridin’ . .. Dorothy Kirsten phoned from | SUNDAY | Music by “3 Little Words” | Towering Over Anything ALSO — WALT DISNEY “BEN AND ME” — CARTOON. | You've Ever Seen! HURRY! LAST 2 DAYS! Bie AUDIENCE AWARDS , PROGRAM! of the YEAR'S BEST PICTURES! GOOD FOOD—FRIENDLY SERVICE Catering to Banquets and Private Parties Pp U R E FOO D RESTAURANT ond BAR ® Breaktasts — Luncheons — Dinners 253 Seuth Saginaw — Across From Jerome Meter Sales Open 5:30 A.M. te 2 A.M. — Closed Sunday BEER — WINE — LIQUOR Scribd DRIVE-IN 130 S. Telegraph | San Francisco to deny our horrid story that. she's planning surgery. Says she’s, blooming, and has a big season ahead. Susi Peters was named queen of the Screen, Publicists Guild ball at the Pierre ... Tallulah Bankhead, selling her Conn. home, said it'll boost real estate values, “because the place’ll be much quieter.” ... Corinne Calvet said she'll make another film in Spain before the baby arrives .. . Joe Di- Maggio flies te Puerto Rico this week te write a piece on winter baseball. Bedridden Joe E. Lewis got up out of a warm gin game to greet Author Joey \ Adams’ new book “Strictly for Laughs” | ** at Danny's Hideaway. Silenced by laryn-' - gitis two nights, Joe's back at the Copa. The Dean Martins’ splitup, recalls his SUSI PETERS line at a party he attended without Jerry. | Dean said jokingly, “I'm here to end the vicious rumor that Jerry and I are getting along fine.” : * * * * TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: “Mothers-in-law,” claims Woody Allen, a bachelor, “are like seeds—you don't need them, but) \. | they come with the tomato.” A guest in a B'way restaurant.told the walter he’d made | one setting too many at the table. “Leave it,” sighed the waiter | —“may be I'll sit down with you.” That's earl, brother. (Copyright 1955, the = Syndicate, Ine.) Dick & Jim Invite Fou to DINE & DANCE FRI., SAT., SUN O A K IL A N D ~ trang MARILYN MONROE -TOM EWELL fo the wonder of EROGPUGING SOUND + Geteden’ ty QED Conteny-ten x ~ ~~ a ~ ha § ps TYRONE POWER MAUREEN O'HARA BICMAR INN AIR CONDITIONED ALL NEW SANDWICH BAR Specializing . 7 Bicmar inn KOSHER CORNED BEEF 94 w. Huron New 6.) Se a O), 5 ee vet -7 Av LINE . STARTING... __FRIDAY ' LOUNGE . W cecccccee —— Ty oo: asmanpmamas 0 waawtns. |. SHOVE ic wowoesra g pawn TEXAS ROSE... I, mr. Matto” roma | Tonicut: |! ARN Al i! | uv Ssannnant a ae SLADE... he man whe tracked her down! ——_ NORMAN La ZAR MC-Versati!], with fast moving chatter to spark a gay. colorful show. STARTS FRIDAY “DADDY LONGLEGS” . “STRANGER ON HORSEBACK” OUR SPECIALTIES Broiled Live Maine Lobsters ’ Fresh Seatoods Shipped CONTINUOUS DANCING re go Us Deily or ENTERTAINMENT © Delicious Roast Prime All Evening Ribs of yet with Choice Ps of Potatoes - 3 U. S. Prime Steaks MINA FOGH wor’ - DONNA DANIELL 7 oe r ae |] Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph Road. FE S-4500 : » Lovely song stylist direct Fried Chicken ——PLUS——_ | TONIGHT _ THURSDAY | from a long night-club / Roast Turkey tour of famous spots. Everybody's saying: “Don't miss it!” re J Eight compartment Relish * / Tray just brimming over Movie-romance of the year! a. | with Tempting Appetizers— : e # including our Famous Anti | — 8 Toast, Prech “Baked Rolls é | | and Salt Sticks from our intel : RAMONA BITTLES | own Bake Shop. SUPERSCTOPE | FAMOUS nas eon Acrobatic Dancer extra-ordi- Glenn FORD ‘Eleanor PARKER JOHN ERICSON nary. We're just sure you will. | gd: eae - with Roger MOORE « Cecil KELLAWAY , A like Romona‘’s act and cos- § FROM ALL OVER THE onamgit$O tumes. ‘ WORLD | a cnoama | Bee @ THEY IDA LUPINO « HOWARD DUFF BRING THE LUNCHES || —StaRTinc sunpay— | 9 yp STEVE COCHRAN DEAN JAGGER LADIES TONIGHT Open Every Day! ¥') “SIMBA TERROR OF ; pe Phone: MAU MAU” is Private Hell 36 It's Ladies’ Night! —And— NIGHT “KING DINOSAUR” r ra OR 3-107 fl seeneanaeu ys ot aaa ey — a ei _ , —— * ™ i ee cr = > Te pS : f | ; tie # , i Yaa ] . ¢ is r} ‘ A, } fi 4 f . f é se PRESS, WEDNESDAY, salen el cat lal At :. a A | f FT | Bs i ROS 1S 1S STOCK-UP MONTH ON s é, DEFIANCE FOODS > "UNPEELED ES Detiinsce " . Defiance | eee © | |) Tomato CATSUP APRICOTS — Juice 14-oz. Bottle _JL> Ne . Va 3 O° now wens ? “ 35 | . : 9 9: : ) <==) __ Defiance Mixed ; Mretica weet Peas Detiance : “ .* a , No. 303 CANS DEFIANCE | =e : KOSHER Defiance ; — 2" 35 POP CORN . . Os DILLS , No. 303 CANS | ¥ , E ba or YELLOW MARe Y . , 7 Cello Bag 29° 5 RINE 29 ‘ | | ; = | | POUNDS 99: ? . , . . y = ; : No, 303 CANS = ‘ Def = F / A Y >> Defiance ae , _—_ Yellow Cling x | TET PEACHES ’ED TART CHERR EAD ma ~=6=—Ssté@ fiancee Pe a. No. 244 CANS” Defiance Detianc | : c noc FOOD stg e my Dark Sweet ? for 69 CHERRIES APPLESAUCE 6 AG! a 2 20:1 2) Se CHERRIES N= S49 % 299239 oe 2G N— SHOP AND SAVE EVERYDAY AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD FOOD STORE TEL A COMMERCE Halves or Sliced City Side Market Lunstord’s Market Shovel’s Market 10) £. Livingston Street eo ' con PONTIAC STORES weal mapbtond Bend 1716 Joslyn Read 2005. Walton Rood 392 Squirrel Reed sce’ ator FARMINGTON. | HOLLY ORTONVILLE ets Coe pp aceon fe MACOMB COUNTY John Phillips Super Market Cut-A-Way Market Mandalari’s Market BIG BEAVER 518 rahe Brown's Market ©. K. Market Company Fred & Addie’s Grocery ogy — py te —— STORES WEST SIDE 360 Franklin Road 71 Auburn Avenue 402 Central Street tric’ Food Merket 7394 Orchard Lake Road 514 N. Saginaw Street 1948 M-15 Highway 301 Main Street Groote 6 MT. CLEMENS : Bauer's Market 115 Huren Street . Atlas Super Market v 5 Nick's Food Market Conroy's Market & Food Locker ND LAKE NION LAKE 1461 Beldwin Avenve art eT as feed Don's Market 263 Auburn Avenue ae paceed nest pavisduRe 23534 Farmington Rood KEEGO HARBOR OXBOW LAKE Row .° U om —- fn, & Sone Super Market * , arket ‘ . Grocery Giroux tuclid Street Burch’s Food Mort Shore Merket Opdyke Market 1647 Rochester Road Johnson's Market : Dee's Market Sere mnkcn neko Bucs 1111 Rewnd Lake Read 1535 Union Loke Reed Posletra’s Food Shoppe 158 Baldwin Avenue 2425 Veorhele Read Sos ide a Mechee 2485 Opdyke Read Senmer's Mu B's Meshes 33314 Grand River Avenue 1420 Cass Lake Rood Hunt's Super Market 809 Coss Avenue Clark's Grocery ‘ Perry Priendly Market 1037 &. Maple Road anatony Kirk's Market SIX LAKES 1598 Union Lche Reed sone Padus Some B08) Buesters Lake Rd. Eden Food Market 1220 N. Perry Street 22595 Middlebelt Rosd 3152 Orchard Lake Reed OXFORD ‘i kis Sek a ae UTICA Bay Comelts Cosh Market 185 Edlieon Strect Pcimeei’e © BIRMINGHAM DRAYTON PLAINS Maron's Moke? Granada Market 9266 Cooley Loke Read Union Leke Super Market Rebinsen’s Marker 2310 Orchard Leke Avenue Eiingsen’s Feed Market 425 $. jeasie Street Fomily Mart b Reed Mart oe LAKE ORION 24 $. Washington Street 7275 Cooley Lake Reed 1690 Aubern Reed Diny’s Market 332 N. Perry Street Seabee ten. aden 1137 S. Adams Road 4490 Dixie Highway Siler's Market SOUTH LYON ramabetey ae a0 Acer dona. Ried Loke Ouklend Grocery 27610 Orchard Lake Road Carcadden Market WATKINS LAKE WARREN Den’s Market 608 W. Huron Street Farmer's Market rae tee wt i 4580 Seshabaw Road 18 S. Broadway PONTIAC LAKE Showerman’s Market 184 Sendersen Street sities nia 484 Auburn Avenue Tom's Meat Market ane E. Waedenel heeaee Pecrcen’s Meshet 186 N. Lefayette Street Jecobson’s Market Celb’s Eiisobeth Lake Read 44 N. Peddock Street, Virginie Market eatd detcbery Read GINGELLVILLE Cayler’s Market - Hasley’s Soper Market 3591 Watkine Lake Reed 32040 Ven Dyke Reed Hart's Food Market — “ Gilmer's Market 608 S. Woodward Avenue a Surat 27 E. Flint Street 7611 Highland Read SPRINGFIELD Roman's Super Market BON. Comtend Fete Aaenee M. &. Vackare’s Super Market 326 East Bivd. South Topalion’s Self-Serve Market Hy hr eg sae Cingetville Market Siandie dence Pension Lhe Morhet WILLIAMS LAKE 31851 Mound Read M. et Baldwie venue Street win 8 ‘ Highland G cer) S98 Gabler Arnos si Side ce Crogely’e Mestet Street oe CLARKSTON 4260 Dixie Highway - © ” Dixie Highway Bigier's Market WASHINGTON 17 Wh —— Stognesedh Lewis Bros. Farm Market Thomeck 6919 Williams Lake Read Felice Quality Market 438 W. Heron Street ; OAKLAND COUNTY 6673 Dixie Highway GREEN LAKE MILFORD nares: P30 De Washoe $500 Netehory Reed” sors? Ven’ Den 220 $. Telegraph Road Wilemen’s Grocery STORES . DUCK LAKE Voie ‘Geni ‘Sena Mathat —— _ 6500 Hatchery Rood 58737 Ven Dyke Reed S70t Shectors Leke Rd. EAST SIDE —— 4 3. Main Street Leke Shore Grocery 6990 Green Lake Road — _ 339 Wilcox Street THOMAS Huron Friendly Market Ben's Market 148 © Noword — AUBURN HEIGHTS » Fh - = Pets ake 1012 N. Main Street Thomas Grocery LIVINGSTON WAYNE COUNTY 884 W. Huron Street 327 Midway Street itis b- ta tsi Siskin etaca wd EAST HIGHLAND HIGHLAND 408 N. Main Street n D. Johnson’ Moerket 441 First uaa COUNTY STORE STORE Loten’s Dixie-Telegraph Market Colabrese Market . - 4 ie, Grseary Gee's Grocery — Plotuer’s Market .- be 2135 Dixie Highway 430 S. jessie Street 920 Joslyn Read sa Auburn Reed aod — Read 2595 1 Wihlnd Rae lal ace ta. ites tee Mosen's Feed Market TROY HARTLAND GARDEN CITY Mesas’s Maske? Charlie's Market La Grocery letbreck’s Grocery Grocery codtill’s Market Market Forsyth & Hohner Marker Malmes Crocery Crown Market 118 Baldwin Avenue 524 N. Saginaw Strect 2250 Pontiac Rood 2366 Auburn Read 8960 Sashabew Rood 2923 E. Highsind Read Myers Super Market et ee : 390 haan & Read 39869 Dequindre Read 3620 Aven Resd 51226 Ford Read 7 image ia de SAE Sanaa in ee eS sa Sigh eee ee Se eager f a a si 8 EE ee ie eee ae Hee ps chowdeg a ears ods yh } if albny, te he is fog Aye = fe 2 i " ei Ne 4 é lato au oe yp Br i Pe, ‘ Se y i i uy ‘ é . ae / i et ‘ : |.) THE PONTIAC PRESS, Eviegets Eafe y vase wade SP aig Ss ss : ! pe Op pee de ' rt , } j WEDN ESDAY, OCLOBER 19, 1955 if 4 f \ jpartans’ Planutis Is Name Fullback Gerry Planutis of Mich- | igna State, who plunged for the bes touchdown against Notre Dame Saturday, was selected | Atlantic Coast Loop Eyes Bids for Terps, Duke See Added Receipts if Both Continue on Undefeated Path BALTIMORE # — There's a i, i Hl EF oF ne math of Big 10 Win Spartans Feel. Illini Will Be Next Victim. at Homecoming Game The game in Macklin Stadium Saturday, is a. sellout, its the an- nual homecoming and it's the start of a brand new rivalry. — = - There’s a tradition that any team must suffer the fi Saturday after playing Notre Dame because of the physical beating the players take and the emotional letdown, MSU coach Duffy Daugherty doesn’t go ,along with that this week, * * * s The Associated Press Back of) eastern Pennsylvania with Hazle- | was fitting for him the Week today by a narrow mar: | ton's Plazutis topping Coaldale’s| the vital points because it gin over Navy's George Welsh | Welsh. “ out the bitter memory of 1954 whose forward passes crushed| A national - television audience he failed to convert twice and ” State, pee * * | Dame line. with savage line bucks | Ni , It was a contest between two|as the Spartans moved to Caate | the winning touchdown, but he lads from the anthracite region of | winning TD in the third period. It the stage for MSU's final TD i AP Wirephote AERIAL ARTIST — George Welsh, Navy's poised pawer, is the nation’s major college leader in yard-| 15 of 20 passes for 285 yards and two touchdowns. age gained as a result of his spectacular aerial dis-| His four-game passing total is 635 yards, but he has | play Saturday against Penn State. He completed | a minus one total for rushing. SUBURBAN CATHOLIC LEAGUE —_ power. Eaglets have revealed a Still trying for victory, Gene | the National Football League. Eaglets Eye SCL Title | Sanguine Outlook! Over , Ryder er on : Ryder-Cup team hasn't beaten the Fullback Joe Childress of Auburn | United States since 1933." but was praised for his i he | One Het Caceerage Ge Bettieh- Pasaolt work . patho he in Jurgensea of No, no, .a thousand times no. Duke, who tallied the winning TD| “I” fact,” said Dai Rees today, “the boys are bloody minded. They've got their. backs up against the wall and will play all the bet- ter for it.” i i Rees is a bubbling little Welsh- | 1s nominated included Tom- ™&N, serves as captain of om teehee of Oklahoma: John the British team. At 42, he also is Roach of SMU; Frank Sarno of the senior member of the team in termed Welsh the most accom-| Washington State; John (Drums) , Points as service, having been a plished passer in college football Majors of Tennessee and Jon Ar- /member since 1937. Holly Essays Against W-0 Loop Leader Bloody-minded or no, the Brit- STANDINGS | opposition only 13 in their five scored twice in Texas A&M's 19-16 . | upset over ron 3s Christian. * * ® ishers are going to have their hands full in the matches at the. | Thunderbird Country Club in Palm Springs, Calif., on Nov. 5-6. The American entry is composed of Captain Chick Harbert, Lloyd Man- grum, Jerry Barber, Tommy Bolt, | Jackie Burke, Doug Ford, Marty Furgol, Ted Kroll, Chandler Har- bepieines as _ my 1.| straight wins. Three have been | oe 37 ‘a loomfield 1 3 loop wins. Nor ville 7 i epics le Wf Clarenceville gets past Holly Clarenceville tia sGuaraston & stew Friday, its path to the crown will | toa ier ‘Ling $8, Northville "13, 0@ blocked by only Brighton and the West Bloomfield Lakers, Last season, Holly fell to the Trojans, 25-0. Broncos face a much tougher ecard of remaining contests with Northville, Clarkston and Oakland Oakland League football title. B's Lake Orion. Holly head men- Head Coach Nick Ianni's Tro-|tor, Reese Protz, and company jans hold ist place in W-O stand- | have compiled a 2-1 league mark: | ings as the result of their impor- chalking up 75 counters . against tant victory last Friday over the 63 for the opponents. defending champs from Clarkston. | . In a 2nd conference match. Ed They have marched and passed | Hintz's Clarkston Wolves hope to | to 80 points while allowing the make up for their only loop loss, | fg rapetiny Regen nn Ameche Grabs | grounds. tiintz looks to his st Top NFL Spot grounds. Hintz looks to his stalwart | backfield combination of George for Rushing Ex-Collegian Still | Lang. David Swayne and Clyde as Powerful as in (non-league), = * The Holly Broncos will have an opportunity Friday night to throw a monkey-wrench into Carence- ville’s hopes for its Ist Wayne- | British ‘Bloody Minded’ Cup Test per, Cary Middlecoff and Sam - ‘That's a mighty imposing array, but it doesn't bother Rees. ne man Pontiac Team Big Favorite for SVC Title Annual Test Set at Flint, Thursday; AH Top-Rated Threat With little serious opposition in sight, Pontiae’s high school cross- country team today was ready for the annual Saginaw Valley meet at Flint, The two-mile event will be run over the hilly Swartz Creek Golf Club Thursday at 4 p.m. Flint _ Northern is the host school. Chiefs’ all - winning harriers have set up a remarkable win- ning record, that started back in 1948, Up to now PHS teams have won 37 straight dual tests. This year’s ¢ has won five in a row, And, Wf they win tomorrew that will be Ine 4th straight SVC title. Strongest opposition is expected to come from the Arthur Hill run- ners, headed by Don Brown and Dick Fisher, who have run 1-2 all season in ‘Jack duals. Hillites are also unbeaten this season. Abe Huerta is Saginaw’s big hope, and Dick Rendell paces the _| Flint Northern crew. Flint Central has Larry Tilley, always a high finisher this year. Bay City has na rea) threat. PHS hopes ride with Perry Wil- liams, ace miler, and state half- mile titlist Bill .Douglas. These lads have tied for Ist in every meet of the year, but Thursday's | meet will be an all-out affair, with eath trying to beat the other, ‘A similar duel is in sight for Rod Treais and Gene Cretal, close | Kizer to bring a much-needed win Amateur Days | if the team is to hang onto the i = PHILADELPHIA m—Alan Ameche is making a runaway of the ground gaining competition in | has counted in the standings, the | 21-7 defeat by the Trojans. They were trounced last week by Cen- ter Line, 59-13, i In the only other W-O game, lease — ye sauteed. Cepar- AP Wirephote relling Milford seeks its 1st “win " : droppi j _ TOP BACK-—Fullback Jerry Pla- ofer “s four loop tilts. | nutis of Michigan State was named va ae |the Associated Press back of the Kramer to Miss week ty, tr is lay, agus son of Green Bay, ts a distant | Notre Dame Saturday. sears tr e'tsavere, "(Minnesota Game, unidentified Archer 67 carries for a 4.9 average. ANN ARBOR «® — Michigan's Kills Young Bull Elk: The former Wisconsin star, number one draft choice of the Baltimore Colts, has gained 176 yards on 77 attempts for an average of 6.3. Howard Fergu- Ameche, who starred in the Big lat has overshadowed the work of the line. But impressive perform- ances by tackle Tom Gardocki, and ends Pete Madelans and Stan Majewski, among others, cannot be overlooked. — Now apparently over its tough- wh pow wt} stout. defense when occasion de- Wright's St. Frederick Rams Sees sit a 22 | manded. Clements became the Ist tackle a rebounding St. Clement, Bt, Clement | 3 } Frederick © 3/ foe to cross their goal line twice crew Sunday afternoon at Center | on. m. Mary ©3) in a single contest. St. Michael Line. Loss to St. Rita extended Last Week's hy age ey me was whitewashed. |Rams’ winless string to 21 and Bt. Mary es st. hte 19, 8. Frederick, Eaglets’. veteran backfield of hopes for snapping the skein Sun- be ee we | Ted Kopacki, Gerry. Leszczynski, day are slim. . Orchard Lake St. Mary’s con- Paul Fran , and Len Mal-' Rams’ hopes will be riding with Ten as a line cruncher, has lost none of his drive and power as a pro. He picked up 72 yards last Sunday against the Chicago Bears in a losing cause. Pittsburgh's Fran Rogel with 282 yards on 73 attempts and a 3.0 average ranks 3rd among the ball carriers. halfback Dick Doyon, who has ‘scored eight touchdowns this sea- son, St. Benedict invades Hazel - ston han | Gas Cieabens f te Wevwes O00 remaining Suburban contest. m s ~~ shows the way. The NFL's 2nd Ron Kramer, whose battle to be an All-America end was inter- | rupted with a pair of fractured ribs, “definitely will not against Minnesota Saturday.” | Coach Bennie Oosterbaan_point- | ed out that Kramer has been work- ing for two days now in a sweat | clip. “But he’s fust, geting a little | LANSING-— An unidentified | archer killed a two-year-old bull elk near Vanderbilt the first day 'of the archery deer season. | Conservation Department field | sources say Michigan's elk herd range. Hunters, especially in the Van-| _ ‘is up to about 600 animals at In the passing department, “old” | suit for about a half hour at a, present and spread over a sizable est hurdle, St. Mary resumes its | quest of the crown Saturday atter-| Amateur Tennis noon at Orchard Lake against St. : undisputed title is in| Mary of Royal Oak: ~ sight. ’ St Ranks Thinned as Hart Quits Michael's Shamrocks, tied Rev. John Rakoczy's undefeat- for 3rd place after last Friday's ed Eaglets have loop games left 32-6 rout of Royal Oak s Trish. Doris Becomes Pro with Royal Oak St. Mary, St. face a rugged assignment Sunday Frederick, and Highland Park | afternoon in Wisner Stadium when Teacher at Hotel St. Benedict. The Royal Oak | they tangle with St. James. The in Miami Beach club and the Rams have yet to | Ferndale aggregation moved into . win a decision, and share the a 2nd-place deadlock on a 21-18 MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (~The cellar. Only Bens seems to stand | verdict over St. Benedict. +,fanks of United States amateur tennis were further thinned today Bob Mineweaser’s injury-rid- | with the announcement that Doris died Mikes broke a two-game | Hart, the nation’s No. 1 woman losing streak by their win over player, had turned professional. chance of pulling an St. Mary continued to be a high- tions of 57 passes for 531 yards, | while.”’ ' three touchdowns and a 9.32 aver- | - age. yy ‘ . e . Colts’ Brass Pessimistic Notre Dame's Team 4! Known World Over Despite Team's 3-1 Mark nown or ver BALTIMORE «® — Owners and | summer and three victories don't SOUTH BEND — Notre Dame coaches of the Baltimore Colts) make a champion,” is the way gives you a fresh slant on why|have no delusions -of grandeur | Carrol Rosenbloom, principal Gwn- its football games are sold out | about their team’s 3-1 record in er of the Colts, put it last night. early. the National Football League. Jovy Ticket manager Bob Cahill re- ceived a note early in August from elk. “Three swallows don't make & years” he added. “Nothing has 1955 issue of the weekly statistics, air,” Oosterbaan’ said. ‘‘He's not | derbilt-Gaylord area, are urged to | shows Graham with 35 comple-| ready yet and won't be for a| be sure their targets are deer, not | stil] give ourselves five / together in near-top finishes. Pete Cox is also expected to get. into the top 10. Memorial Fund Set for Agganis Red Sox Head Yawkey | Donates $25,000 for Foundation Start BOSTON wW—A $250,000 goal was set today for a Harry Agganis Me- morial Foundation to honor the Boston Red Sox first baseman who died at the age of 25 last June. Establishment of the foundation and a gift of $25,000 from Red Sox President Thomas A. Yawkey was announced yesterday. Specific use of funds contributed |to the foundation was not made ‘known, but the fund was “‘to carry out charitable ideals.” Mrs. Georgia: Agganis. widowed mother of the Lynn.Classical High Schoo] and Boston University ath letic star thanked fund leaders ‘for what you are doing for my boy.** Rabbit, Squirrel Paws Wanted for Lab Study | LANSING — Southern Michigan just} vaunted St. Clement defense. scoring machine Sunday against a Eaglets have tallied at least four touchdowns in every game.. Against St. Rita of Hazel Park they scored five. - | In addition fo their offensive ' the Irish. Until their 2nd-period Miss Hart, an active amateur touchdown against St. Mary, for 20 years and winner of all the Shamrocks had struggled world’s major women's tennis through nine scoreless quarters. | titles, will become a teaching pro A four-TD explosion in the last at the Flamingo Hotel here- a man in Florence, Italy. “T'd like tickets,” he wrote. "I read: in the Rome Daily Amer- ican. that your general sale had opened.” . period really made up for lost — * * «© soncteemmimesinesionaiiiantse time. Just a week ago Tony Trabert, : . ; the men's amateur champion, Bobcats Get Protection Eastern’s Indians hung up their 2nd scalp of the season in three | tries Tuesday afternoon at Wisner Stadium, defeating inexperienced Wever, 27-0, in a Pontiac Junior | “We won didn't we?’ said Daugherty. ‘‘Now that they know) how good it feels to win a big one, 1. think they want another.” Not that Daugherty is underating Tilinois in the least. ane | He pointed out that Mlinois cur- rently is 2nd in the nation in total) offense. Brooklyn College | Abandons Football NEW YORK (INS) — Brooklyn, home of baseball's beloved world champion “‘Bums,”’ buried football | Failing to win a game since ¢ CCNY five . nounced it was ‘srced to quit the “on becacse of a series of that all but decimated the thin squad. There are 4 Sport Pages \ se 9) 4 pes \ i ane % * 7 A i High League football game. It was Wever's Ist start this fall Indians wasted no time vester. day. After Walter Johnson re. covered a Wever fumble on the opening kickoff, Bill Hayward raced 30 yards for a touchdown | on the Ist play from scrimmage. Mike McClusky plunged for the extra point. Later in the Ist quarter Eastern hit paydirt again. John Dew rammed through the center of the line and rambled 70 yards for the tally. A pass, Hayward to John- son, added the point Winners were then held in check for two periods before striking twice in the 4th quarter. Guard) Ken Vipperman picked off a Wever | ‘| Gatski to Play 100th | and Wagner with the Pro Game for Browns CLEVELAND (®—Frank Gatski, | 240-pound center for the Cleveland’ Browns, goes after his 100th pro Dodger football game without relief next Sunday against the Green Bay | Packers, The 33-year-old West Virginian, 4. but it was not a record. Back Eastern 11 Downs Weve, "ic iin: vio vas conser 27-0, in Junior Hi Loop | Gary Christensen for the conver- | — game carried her to the | block today when they face Jeffer- ‘son on the Wisner turf at 4 p.m. | turned professional at Los , Ange- ; , 1st time in Michigan's history bobcats will receive protection from hunters and trappers. The recent Michigan legislature closed the lower peninsula to bob- cat hunting and trapping except for a Dec, 15-Mar, 15 hunting period. The law took effect Oct. 15. sickly almost from birth, took up the game at Henderson Park in. Miami at the age of 10, after an fumble and ran 70 yards for the Operation. 3rd TD. Gene Gidcumb passed to| A hard-driving, fast-serving and sion. * . * * * McClusky. Indian scored the final couchdewe an an Frustra ted Coaches Fin d 8-vard. sweep. McClusky had ’ scored two plays earlier on a 63 ( 'h I t th A yard aerial’ but clipping canceled ange sn e nswer the play. . \ ‘NEW YORK. (#—The names of job with the Edmonton Eskimos the coaches may be different, but of the Canadian Pro League last there's a familiar story at the 37) year, colleges who have new football; Blackman, 36-year-old master- coaches this autumn It's one of, mind of Denver's Skyline Confer- | frustration, | ence champions last year, switched Most of the new coaches have over to the Ivy League. i Frosh Star Looks | tasted better success in the past, | Saban, who moved up from an but this year has been one of many assistant’s position under Bob Good to Gamecocks problems which has caused more Voits, has tasted his defeats at grey hairs and ulcers. se hands of the strong Big 10, . . . ' Five of the new faces are really little Miami of Ohio and Tulane. COLUMBIA, S. C.—South Caro having their troubles. Their teams ina nominates a freshman for fu- ture All-America status. * * * | | haven't pierced the victory column | h B |once, Tony Cavallo, a former high | ay aw on a school mentor who took over. the The Gamecocks believe 165- i : ; reigns at New Mexico A&M, leads W Ti pound King Dixon is one of the | the pack with an 0-5 record, at rong ime finest runners in the college ranks} The other four have identical FORT WORTH—Ji im Cooper ran now. The Laurens lad made the | 0-4 marks. J, B. (Ears) Whitworth All-America ‘scholastieteam. ~ “| of Alabama, Clif Speegle of Okla-| UP to kick off for Texas Chris- - homa A&M. Bob Blackman of! tian—and set in motion a chain Lead Not Mark * * Washington's Braves will put their 16-game victory skein on the nt Checker Club Plans Ist Session Monday Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department's Chess and Checker at 7 p.m., and-every Monday night thereafter, at the Adah Shelly 'Pranch Library, Perry and Glen- wood streets. . , Chess and checker boards and pieces will be provided. Instruc- tion in chess and checkers will be furnished upon sufficient interest. There is no charge for member- | attend. Further information can be ob- tained by calling the Department of Parks and Recreation, FEderal *7131, ‘Michigan and Maryland, Nation's Top Teams, Demonstrate Im By the Associated Press Defense is king in college foot- ball this vyear—that'’s why Michi- gan and Maryland are setting the mid-October pace. * * * The Wolverines and the Terra- | Pins top the nation's grid giants by making their, breaks while on de- fense and capitalizing on them. You can't prove their strength by their yardage totals. In fits last three games, Michi- gan has scored -only one of eight ship and anyone is welcome to) changed. No one wil] take any | Tabbit and squirre) hunters are | profits out of the Colts until we | being asked to mail forepaws of j have a champion.”’ | their game to the Conservation Rosenbloom indicated he didn't | Department for laboratory study. | think that would be this year. About 2600 hunters who were Coach Weeb Fwbank shared his | successful last year will receive boss’ lack of self-satisfaction. special envelopes for mailing the “We're still building,” Ewbank. forepaws. Conservation clubs and LANSING—This month, for the Club will meet Monday, Oct. 24, Std: “There are still loopholes we others are asked to participate have to fill as recent injuries have and can get details of the pro- proved.” | gram from the Rose Lake wildlife | He said he had been planning Station at Fast Lansing. since last year to get off to a fast | : a | start this season and had concen- Spot Bull Moose | trated his training on beating -Chi- sdk cago in the first game. LANSING — A bull moose was Subsequent victories over De-| Seen recently near the mouth of 'troit and Green Bay were more or the Tahquamenon River in, Luce less surprises to him, Ewbank said. | County. Then came last Sunday’s 38-10 Shortly after, a smaller bull and loss to Chicago in a rematch a cow moose were seen Six miles Next Sunday, the Colts play host south of the Ist observation to the Washington Redskins in an Conservation officer. Ear]. Kaiser _intercity rivalry that's always been of Paradise said the’ moose were ‘ rugged. reported by fishermen portance of Powerful Defense ‘make mistakes—with the help of average is 39.8 yvards—hest in the _ jarring tackles. | * * * | country. . _ - Of Maryland's 14 touchdowns. ¢ | Michigan has forced four oppo- were launched bs intercepted pass- nents to fumble 19 times and has be 1 by a blocked punt and 1 by a recovered 11. The Wolves have in- bad pass from center which put tercepted 8 pastes and allowed/ the Terps in an advantageous po: sition. launched against them. They h * 9 «8 A Unbeaten Oklahoma, ranked third in the current AP poll, trav- eled only 34 and 7 yards for two -| touchdowns in its important 20-9 vamped defenses the victory over Texas because of pass . Missotrj convinced Maryl touchdowns on a long drive. Four of the scores were set up by fum- | Dartmouth and Lou’ Saban of of events which left officials dizzy. Northwestern find themselves in| He missed the ball completely The Dodgers held a 1212 game the cellar of their respective con- | and an alert Kansas player raced lead in the National loop last July | ferences. (up, grabbed the ball off the tee ; Whitworth moved from Okla-. and headed for the goal line. homa A&M to his alma mater in, After a long consultation, offi- | with the Browns since they were! in 1912 the New York Giants had a the Southeastern Conference. Spee- cials ruled the ball never had been | organized in 1946, savs he has no | Pontiac Press gate of retiring for a long time a renes. place Pittsburgh Pi- 142 game lead on July 4 over gle, who.replaced Whitworth at the put In play and the Horned. Frogs | Missouri Valley Conference school, were penalized five yards for de- | held down an assistant coaching | lay of the game. ‘ ble recoveries, one by an intercept- ed pass and another by a blocked kick. The ‘six usually were within. 25 yards of the enemy goal. Today's grid hopes are most safely entrusted to. those who are | trained primarily in harrassing en | emy runners and passers until they ' ‘ 7-0 decision over UCLA/Sept. 24. thievery. The key play was when Mary-| Look at Navy's 21:0 victory over land center Bob/ Pellegrini a fine Pitt team. The Middies held slammed into UCLA’s/Doug Peters Pitt to 59 rushing yards, and gave who was about to dive over the the quarterback time to try anty goal line, separated him from the one pase which was intercepted. ball and recovered on the Terps 3. Definse has reached a level of Maryland then held Bruins’ ground | constant shifts, roving linebackers game to a minus 21 yards. Mary- | and detailed breakdowns on moves land's five-game rushing defense of opponents, } Js / / ur j ys / f ! ) ‘ f si / i ; : S : a) i . ts ae | THE piiveraS PRESS, “WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 ) THIRTY-ONE / : — , _[Ptaaeaatessaeretasseeesnnnsssnnary ‘ 5 \ oe ‘mit - ar ter in it e Go i FACTORY REBUILT 5 , s s CINCINNATI Wallace (Bud mt) be web ca‘ batid tor: i Great hs ‘oun the chumaptenhlp 06: bs of the purse would be imate outsto | & and . 5 Smith, a young fellow who has yét | view of the ecrap, Promoter Sam | basn't had a pay day as as title hold-| the fighter alone. : NEW MOTORS = 5 to cash in financially on the fact Becker still was hopeful, however,|er and, even though he is the - —— joe a s he is lightweight boxing champion | that he would be able to sell all champ, his guarantee trom from Becker Re ee |e New Low Price! . Se of the world, makes his first de- or most of the garden’s 15,000 | of $9,000 is exactly the came a0 feet catad nate a eed | Me Rare Panel s- tense of the crown tonight against| seats esa | that given Carter. They a so 8 : . New Car Guarentes! & of on agg “° ” Carter ‘generally was being reted | ae television money. | Bee ™ wa. < eh: Gomi en, Hy : halagy EA hye lh | a ith, inci f four-time champion in . : : champions! p from Carter, « New | d ion in history. He already is| who, if anyone, will get « man-| zs Gece ONS'OATE ree Toten eee Sap H Yorker, in bout in Boston last | the t three-timer. shi of Smith's puree, His | . June 29, . 1 - | The finances of the fight were as ee mantan ot eed cer | Be Biceps MOTOR EXCHANGE co. - * ¢« . | strange as Carter's up-and-down mine Graziano and Tony roemate| * “ankle 401 $. Saginaw Phone FE 3-7482 s Se Ne ee a net i —— * res TIiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiittiiti ii Promoter Becker had quite a Pennsylvania because of their as- | | Tiapectea Weights Cincinnati Garden, The bout at 9 Hassle with the International Box- | sociations. p.m, (EST) will be televised na- ing Club before he got the fight | * ¢ ¢@ tionally (ABC) but with the area! and he says he will not receive’) .As a result Smith signed the within a 75-mile radius of Cincin- any of the television money. He present fight contract on his own nati blacked out. | says it all goes to the lighters and and George Murphy, secretary of The most prevalent guesses were the IBC. | the Cincinnati Boxing Commission, | that there would be a crowd of Smith hasn't had a fight since‘ said the check for Smith's share Pack | Adjustment 98 scouts Give Ray Ulcers Reg. $1.00 Reg. $1.75 Eliot Worries About State but Win Would Make Illini Title Contender CHICAGO (#—The mere thought | Football Writers via telephone | mitted he hasbeen ‘“‘pleasantly of meeting Michigan State Satur-| hookup, said: “We're all getting | | surprised” over Illinois’ showing day is worrying Illinois Coach Ray | ulcers Natoning to our scouts” | this year. Eliot but a victory would hoist the | * | “I didn’t think they could do Hilini into the Big 10 title picture. Reports elased 7 Eliot, of | this well but the boys have a lot Eliot, ‘speaking to the Chicago | course, carried the tale of Michi- of spirit and have worked hard,” a ar aes ~~ | gan State's 21-7 victory over Notre | he said. bd ° ® |Dame which lifted the Spartans *°- ¢ FREE Brake Reline | among the nation’s Top 10. Duffy Daugherty, Michigan State eWIS T ic S Eliot said he only hopes Illinois | coach, was still bubbling over the : an put up a good game at East | Notre Dame triumph but took time lonabe but added: “Our boys | out to express concern over Il- FRONT err they can take ‘em.’ | linois. Ford—Plymouth ay- -TOU- Michigan State and Illinois have | “‘I'm hoping the boys don't let Chevrolet identical 31 records and are 1-1 down because we're going to run 2 . EF the Big 10. The similarity is not | into a good IWinoig team. We cer- ’ ia ‘ END Bended $3.00 Extra | unusual, Two years ago they tied | | tainty aren't looking past Illinois i ; 0 un ie the conference title. | and we'll have to be at our best,” . ; : 4 Last year the two were picked | said Daugherty. ; . < “We might have to play without ag cc ne er Ca ag kc adie 5 cast yea to repeat but both fin- | Attorney Says Pension ished in the segond division. Michi- | Clarence Peaks. He's one of the | gan State, however, is favored Sat-| best backs in the country and I Plan Would Gain Nine | urday mainly off its convincing wouldn't trade him for anyone in - FOR USE EITHER WITH A TUBE OR TUBELESS. Million From Series | victories over Stanford and Notre | the conference: He runs, passes,| | Dame. ase Set See” NEW YORK w#-—A stagzering | _" The usually pessimistic Eliot ad- Dengharty afited total of. $9,000,000 for. four gam could accrue to the Major league | ‘set, that would be $5,000,000 per | Goo0oD EAR Players’ Pension Fund as a result | game. If the series went past tow | iner of pay-as-you-go World Series tele- jaucnes, it would go past $20,000,000, | SERVICE STORE vision, Attorney J. Norman Lewis | “But on the basis of $20,000,000, | revealed today. about 25 per cent would have to 90 8. Cass FE 54123 ae aged eg egghirceiage Ae Boss of Coast Stere Hours: 8 A. M. te 5:30 P. M. Lewis, who handles the players’ would leave $15,000,000 for base- videy 8 A. M. te 9 P.M. interests in their dealings with the ball, and under the terms of the oil owners, added that most of the pension agreement, the players; Ret igns peeve in the entertainment busi-| would get 60 per cent, or $9,000,- w Slugger s 9 ness expect the federal a and the club owners central as General Manager ment to approve pay-as-you-go fund 40 per cent, ee, San Dieg eventually. Lewis has numerous | ° of : je Padres close connections with show busi-| Commissioner Ford Frick, who| SAN DIEGO, Calif. @#—Former ness. s empowered to negotiate the new National League slugger Ralph “If this type of television goes contract. and the club owners are | Kiner—his home run’ hitting days | into effect—and it may be the ulti-| opposed to pay-as-you-go TV and | over—now must connett at the mate answer to all TV—we think as far as Lewis is concerned, that's | gate in his new job as general e a revenue of $5,000,000 a game ail right with him. | manager of the San Diego Pacific | ao _¢ ee melt Lewis. | “Whatever method they decide | | Coast League club. | “Right now there wee about 40 0” 'S fine with the players,” he| Kiner, 32, yesterday signed a : fe) or une-' million TV sets in the country. By said. ‘‘We were just thinking in| One-year contract ag front-office | j 1957, the year the new series Ty | (erms of the future in discussing boss of the Coast League Padres ‘ the pay-as- wae wv. " at a reported salary of $25,000. contract goes into effect, there ° He hired his old Pitts- All 6- thee — 2 should be about a milion. | Frick ‘rend an hed prelimt- | vores teammate, oo a. > « ‘nary conferences concerning the | ° field manager e Ped —_ « Lge new contract, which will have to| for the second year. Elliott piloted be signed by spring. The current contract is for about $1,000,000, All work done on our brand NEW 1955 Auto ute Safety Glass meaning the pension fund gets| Kiner, former National League ee ae ee Property, Quickly about $600,000 out of each series| home run king, finished his play TREE) LB, COFFEE whether it’s four games or seven.| img days with the Cleveland In MARKET TIRE CO | ies 1 fur eames o wv a Jar He war ree ; ° ne _— Menered! by the Indians to take the San 77 W. Huren $e. Open 9 te 9 6E 8-0424 Joe Bedenk coached Penn State | Diego offer from the club's new ‘ Hub J Auto ¢ Class Co. baseball 25 years without a losing owners, the Westgate - a. ae {28 Oskiand Ave 4-9008 Ot! season, .Tuna Packing Co. CORBY’S NOW When You Need Tol... $ | | | ) made tice. boss oe t PRICES SLASHED OW , : | Firestone : Firestone BATTERIES NEW TREADS : song | BEE \. seg oto Bo § “oman : | Ol pmmmbecea _* Zn weed | Be * | Almost 50% Of : @ low Pile " New Winter Tire Coat: — ) ! atents x ha ee arene 45: — Exebonce edenge : Low As Over 253,000 bottles of Corby’s restr tertvewines;wen || ‘Semeeommenm § 75¢ - se ne - PP, with the grand old name end — taste © fame Treed Design as Mow Vives : A sold in Michigan in September $364 $930 ° | i mtecmstuonaem 3 WHEKI ial | © Same Troed Width os New Tires 3 eee andjat your favorite bar or tavern FIRESTONE STORES BLENDED WHISKEY 86 PROOF-68.495 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS—IAS. BARCLAY & si ir reoma, rumors | 4° «(140 N. Saginaw 146 W. Huron . FE 5-2620 FE 2-9251 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 ASSOCIITES bo have A motorist is im good company when he drives as an AAA member,. for it is the better motorists all over America who belong to the AAA. And motorists are in extra good company when they are insured at this Insurance Exchange at the Automobile Club of Michi- gan. Here are the selected risks, the better, sefer and more responsible owners of motor cars. Just being insured here says nice things about the imeured as a motorist. Betreit Autemebile Inter-Ensuranee Exchange bterncyrmnfect: Ralph Thomas Charies L. Wileon ' Rey M. Hood Robert C. Jamieson, Conerel Manager at Antemebile Club ef Michigat Chiets. Tr Again, Friday, for SVC Wollpack Hits Top Position ‘in Prep Poll _~iBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Powerful Bay City Central to- | day replaced Ann Arbor as the No. '1 team in the Associated Press Class A high school football poll. Coach Elmer Engel's Wolfpack took the top spot with its smash-| ing 32-7 victory over Saginaw Sat- urday night, after Ann Arbor had ‘narrowly squeezed past Battle | Creek, 19-18, Friday night. Here's the list: Pte Ba it rw a HBr veces 257 ' Aa Arbor © h. Coat. “tis 0515." 308 a. o Re is Cat (ly ¢ ’ | Seerene (BO) ..newerenee ise Second ten ; | Saginaw Arthur wu, Wyandotte, Grosse Pointe and Musk , Liticoin ‘ | Park, Royal Oak, Kalamazoo, . Niles, Seuekagen, Lansing Eastern and Flint Turpin Quits Boxing ‘After KO by Wallace | LONDON (INS) — Former world | ‘middleweight champion Randy, | Turpin of England quit the ring he was knocked round by Gordon the dresisng toom after the. bruis- ae ing London fight: “‘Randy will take ee no more punches for me." RE ° . 7 ‘ ae Handsome outside, mellow inside = no wonder Century Club . is 80 popular these days! ‘Barr Finally Starts to Boom ;| unbeaten | six-foot: frame, Barris built for of, coached." as M's Big Gun Terrible Terry’ Sets Pace for Wolverines’ Last Three Wins | ANN ARBOR # — As the big | gun in the single wing of top-rated, | Michigan, “Terrible” Terry Barr has finally begun to | boom. Barr is the Michigan left hat. | back—the bread-and-butter post in | to | the single wing—and he's built | smail for the job he's doing. | He scored three of Michigan's touchdowns in their latest vic- tories over Army and Nerthwest- ern and he set up two others, besides playing a -hard-bitten de- fensive game. “T think I'm beginning to get | the hang of it now,” Barr says. An almost-thin 172 pounds on a speed. But coach Bennie Ooster- baan says, “He's one of the most determined boys I've ever ‘no matter where the ball is, | out, I said to him, ‘Man, why didn’t | Navy’ s Welsh Heads List of Nation's Top Passers By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS pleted 15 of 20 passes for 285 yards George Welsh's spectacular | and 2 touchdowns, and added 3 aerial display against Penn State | yards on the ground for a 288- has vaulted the Navy's poised yard total, top individual feat of |passer from 4th to first place, the year, and the second best pass- among the nation’s major college | ing show in five years. football yardage gainers. * * * Despite the damp weather, the’ In 0 John Ford of Hardin- 164-pound Middie quarterback com- Simmons completed 20 of 25 heaves | for 293 yards against Arizona State. That was the only other time in five years any major college pass- er completed 75 per cent of 20 or more attempts for that kind of | yardage. Willie’s Taps Chasing Drives | * * * |Mean Sure Outs With his total of 634 yards rush- NEW YORK—The Dodgers were ing and passing (minus 1 rushing, talking about Willie Mays. | 635 passing), Welsh became the | “Any time he taps the mitt once | fourth different: player to head the he'll’! offense lists in as many weeks. | The other pace-setters were Joe | Clements, Texas, Claude Benham, * 6. * 'Columbia, and Art Luppino, Don Newcombe looks up. ‘Man | Arizona. | that’s what I told him at the | Luppino, second in total offense All-Star Game. Remember the | with 606 yards, maintained his grip | catch he made on the ball Ted Wil-| in rushing with the same number liams hit off me? The one he | of yards. A new pass leader was jumped a mile for at the fenc. | unveiled, however, in. Dartmouth’s Well, when he came back to dug- Bill Beagle. goner. Willie, you got to keep get it,’ somebody said. you tap that mitt? I didn't see you do it and I thought it was a/| Hampered by injury in Michi- gan’s ist two games, Barr, a 20- | year-old junior, came into his own yards, almost two-thirds ‘of Michi- gan’s passing yardage, He scored one touchdown bucking the line and returned a punt 82 yards | through grasping Army players for His the wetine finger aimed at the | spots where Army backs tried to erack the Michigan. line—and | Barr's lightly built frame played , everything from linebacker to | safety. tappin’ that mitt or your pitchers'll seals Purchase | get heart trouble."” Offer Near End | Race Driver DePal DePalma \in Critical Condition Greenberg About Set $100,000 for SOUTH PASADENA, Calif. w—| to Pay Ralph DePalma, 72, who earned | PCL Frisco Team 11% million dollars during his 27) years as an auto race driver, re-| mained in near critical condition | SAN FRANCISCO @®—The deal je following head surgery. | by Hank Greenberg, general man- jager of the Cleveland Indians, to buy the San Francisco Seals base- /ball club appeared in the bag to- day. ; “We have reached a_ verbal agreement on the sale,” said Greenberg last night after confer- The ain racer tired ot boop | tal life last night, however, and took a cab home, unknown to his | wife or doctor. DePalma also has | |pneumonia and other complica- | ‘tions, | \ Bia women’s BOWLING SHOES Buy now on credit with handy Purchase Coupons. ring with Damon Miller, president a " of the Little Corp., controlling the eee Seals franchise in the Pacific ede | Coast League. * Miller, who struggled with slump- ing attendance and growing debts | all last season, broke into a big | grin. | “T’ve gone over all the books, but ‘there are still people and things \1 want to know before coming to Seeing: «if 3 (ae so a said. If all turns out as expected, ia t Oppose ‘Jacks in3rd Valley Tilt of Season Hills 11 Victor Over Flint Central in Only League Encounter | i ; | ; Pontiac High gridders for their Ist 1955 Saginaw Valley Conference victory, Friday on the home lot. Chiefs have played two loop contests, and have lost both. the 1st to Bay City Central's front- | running Wolves, and last weekgnd | to Flint Central. Friday’s opponents, Sagiuew | Arthur Hill, has won its only, start, over the Flint Indians, who dumped PHS. 26-7. Coach Ed Graybiel, who has | seen the ‘Jacks in action, tags the upstaters as a “very tough team.” i “We've got to be up for the Ege: ais af He ; i F definite decision.” Greenberg Greenberg said he would make a | day The offer made to Greenberd. | | Miller said, would be a $100,000 | | deal. ‘Hank would have to assume | a $50,000 bank note, pay off $30,000 still owed the Pacific Coast League | and purchase 100 per cent of the common stock, which is worth $20,- .|000,"" Miller said. New Brunswick BALL & BAG 2588... Famous “Black Beauty” Mineralite ball. Drilled to fit. Lifetime guarantee! Cle Table and 4-player TENNIS SET 3788 Includes full size table, 4 paddles, net. instructions and bail. Hurry, save! Wilson 5 . 8 8 Helmet construc- ‘Molded fiber tion. Rubber . cushion padded. Buy now, save! Wilson 4. 4 4 Football Red Grange model. Offi- cial ‘size. Genuine tan cowhide. Buy now, save! 4.44 Pius U.S. tax Pen-Chrome accents the Bowling Ball Bag ° Choice of black or brown keystone style. Lots of room for ball and. shoes. Men's and Seeeaaee PaYT LALLY HOUSE of COLOR WALLPAPER 3.98 Cushion insole. Choice of 3 colors for women, sizes 4-9. 2 colors for men, sizes 6-12. 1028 W. Huron 1% Blocks West Tel-Huron In ROCHESTER House of Custom Colors 417 Mein St. OL 6-0211 otdeague encoun encounter. Bowling Clinic By BILLY SIXTY HOLD THAT LINE—It may feel a bit awkward at first, but extend- ing your left arm as you stride to | |e foul line is the key to sound footwork. Without it you'll be in forced to veer to the right by the | |weight of the swinging ball. All| | top bowlers extend the arm, more | or less, depending,on the length of | the swing. | The sketch (third step in four-| | step footwork) shows how perfectly | ‘the stretched arm compensates for | the ball weight; how it creates fine | | balance. Extend the arm as soon | | as the ball drops downward into |the backswing at the end of the | push-away. If need be, swing the free arm away from the body, force it out, but extend it. I sug- gest you develop it in practice, sliding to the line without a ball. After 20 of 30 trial slides it should | begin to click, and shortly, then, | it'l be as natural as picking up a knife or fork. You'll feel sure- footed, relaxed. But, more im- portant, you'll be releasing the ball consisteritly on either your target spot, or on the board you pick over get your HUNTING LICENSE PHEASANT Season Opens Thur. | SHOTGUN SHELLS BIG REDUCTIONS All Shotguns in Stock reduced ...now is the time to get that gun at sav- ings! Choose the gauge you want... choose the make you want. HUNTING COATS Just the Thing for \\ Wet Weather Hunting Rubber Boots 12” quarter lace. 8.75 Wool Sox... 95¢ . 60¢ . 1.10 1 24 E. Lawrence St. Phone FE 2-2369 which roll the ball. Roger’s are closing out al! CLEARANCE. BRUNSWICK BOWLING BALLS are pre-drilled balls. Shop early as they will go fast, Reg. $23.95 17% floor display mode!s—ol! 24 E. Lawrence St. Phone FE. 2-2369 ' Alex & Kelly 20 4 Lakeside . ny, 4 \THIRTY-THREE fh THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTORER 19, 1955 on Thursday The Aberdeen. club of the North-|. Mickey Mantle was the. first ern League executed two triple | player in 1955 to hit home runs in plays in five days but lost in both|every park in the American N games. F this. We can think of few | shooting. Fair weather or foul, | atic Lenthap than te con {thi is the time when the big ae : ‘and fewer | Permission to hunt on another’s| tinue to abuse the hespitality of | Sights fimnel into this area. Given EXPERT SUR-SHOT 12, at 19% ‘Gratiot, |lande does tot carry with i the long-suffering landowner. | bit of breeze to stir the birds and 12, 16, changed to permit a Shiawas- | license to cut fences, trample seed| While pheasant hunting will ob-| a bit, duck’ hunting for the next and 20 Gauge SHOTGUN SHELLS — befére sunrise opening on pheas-| 8¢¢ Counties. In recent years Are-| clover and otherwise behave like | scure most other field sports, week just can’t help being splen- ‘ f ants tomorrow. Now, while we| mac and losco Counties have seen/ @ yoot. smart duck. hunters will hit for | did. NOW ONLY $1.79 ne ye ey dined es ame ~ ' . — Coe eres eeoererereses Box my of gear i our. 5 re we didn’t happen ~ diet all pheasant ars Duck Flights polunar Table 7 Urge State Hunters Beautiful New Fireplace Fixtures : * jer & copy | tories, bet te mows gts up of vr 3 stated bobor, ee oe — fo Return Game | 5 See This Complete Line Now opin] an i Ba et f M John Alden Knight's Solunar Ta-|" cece ewe ant area. Lapeny Sates, become in 0 ove agg, Larne edge LANSING — Hunters are urged BARNES HARD sur word for sl, rates much ete for ring hunting in good cover during these | 7 bear, woodcock, pag WARE Therefore, for | neck range. ‘. Diving Wildfowl Now coming weeks. waterfowl and other game to con- their benefit, ee Reported Along Huron) Maior periods begin at the times pe 742 W. Huron Pienty of Parking Phone FE 5-9101 and for the bene-| , Mest serious Renters have shown dott leat for am bour ond a| SUR Senne. fit of ariyone elsc| 18S since lined up shooting ter- | and Saginaw Shores | hait or two hours thereafter. Minor | Waterfowl bands should be re- | in dna ad] Sart fe ein Se, Se pero nre af gpmevhal ne | Md, Fah end, We |-——= pheasant season, made by 8 ph age a euote rom the | Bae become, In many cance, 8 LANEING—Fiights of Gach pre | Garetion. am. | bands can be mailed to the Con- NEW REDUCED RATES full-time Oskidnd County resi: | game law digest: “On Oct. 20, in| ™easingless gesture the last few m tant, pe Ses | Carvation Depeetunent ie LOWS HT. ainsts Vick $ 4.00 ‘ The bird may be takes | Zohes 2 and 3, unlawful to hunt| 7°*** ve $38 370] These agencies need to know|| © Single Visit ....... vevceeee eS & anywhere in the state where such before 10 a.m. EST.” There is a very large number of ie 19:18 3:86 where and when the game was @ 15 isits ee eeeseeeesene oe $45.00 hunting is legal. Winner will hunters, always on the increase, So iiet $:38| killed, and the mame and address || @°50 Visits .......... eeceees $100.00 receive’ © $50 U. S. Savings | _ Tule has been a good breeding | 4 mostly from south of Oakland $50.3. $38 | of the hunter. @ Weight Training ........... $60.00 pret Barca pn gadis County, who pay no attention to| 09, ne Sam 1:28 1:38 74! In the case. of waterfowl, the Retiusively tes Men entries must be brought to| areas. Good areas for the birds |%2"S of any sort, who will not) mene birds are in. Hunters took Fish and Wildlife Service sends a Pontine Press Sports Depatt-| rather closely parailel the best | att the farmer first” or show) isis pins trom the Mouiiiee | ‘De first week of the season, but | report to the hunter, telling where AL THOMAS for photographing and/ farming lands, hence the big pos Fad ph, om Be gg marshes the first week of the | Picture was expected to| and when the bird was banded. 5 weighing. Weight only will be| popalations im the fertile Thumb 4 te omen vensen, ee Oe 8 re |: quia the ead Health Club a ee It should be remembered that] In the Swan Creek area, hunters | the middle and late part of | was a jet fighter ace in the Korean || Pentiae Hotel, Hours 12 to 8 P. M. FE 5-906t pede Biggest concentration of birds,| any hunter whd is on lands niot| had taken only 21 geese through | October. | war 3 4 | elit E within two weeks, Bowling Results . vo owe 11 8 Team No, 3 qu 207—870; Sparks Griffen conse TOPPERS - . Tt RSssce Rickman's ckerman's wes Walled Lake 14 10 r= 3 Fy 5 — tJ = * = s u2> HE = 4 Es Peua30 769, Walled Lake 2142. - L Striker’s i 8. 3 Twin Lakes DAW-ClO Pts. Kingpinners ¢ 3 Wi Spartans 13 10 Jets : A. Marshal and J. White Men: O. Mathes 222, 7. Smith ; 061, King- 170—417 Spartans 961, $64; Kingpinners, pinners 2709. BALL & CHAIN wth Mandalari 20 4 Team No.8 1 vers 14 10 t. Ree. V. Butler 211, F. Boyne 858. PONTIAC SQUAWS wth Aristo 13° 7 Sh Ted's 13 Team Mo 4 13 T Devary’s M. Anderson 223—628; Ariste WEST I LADIES “3” Tom's Mkt. Woodman's oe ae ven + 1311 Team Mo. 6 zg. Peites 178, . Palle 461; Mkt, 109—1007, LADY EAGLES NO. 1280 wt Summers 11 5 Loulse’s Bobbies 10 6 Woodeums L &@ 8 97 Greenwood ® Ottmar's ® . ™., Kretchen 197, A. Toma-M. Kretch- en 460; Summers TT3—21%. “a NO, 1298 w eenand Smeear wte Les 18 2 Cass Brake ¢@ 11 Oak, Puel 18 Sam Benson 8 12 Powler Bar 15 8 Eagies 1230 6 20 Poole LH 12 8 Greenwood 0 20 M. Bacak 950, A. Sherrill. 642; L & 8 1062—2909. . BELLES & BEAUX Pt J. * Lilacs 16 Dandelions il Orchids 13 Larkspur 10 Carnation 2 Datstes Del’s 12 4 O’clocks e Lille. @ 12 Giortes 6 Roses 2 lips i Cc. Durnen 58939. HURON BOWL HOUSE wt. Ww Puertas 16 8 Westside Rec. 12 12 Birmingham 15 8 Osmun’s 111 Oak, Coin 15 8 C.V. 11 13 Slaters 15 8 Lorens eu Pabst 15 @ Drewry's 80 pont. _— 13 11 300 Lounge 716 & 12 12 Aub. Hts, Mfg. 7 17 J, Milford 247, B. Castle 611; Oak- land Coin 993—2834. Mr. Chief Captures Jackson Feature Pace JACKSON @® — Mr. Chief, with George Kile at the reins, captured the feature pace at Jackson Race- way last night, covering the course in 2:10 4/5. He paid $5.80 straight. Rudy Brooke was 2nd and David Merry 3rd. An Appropriate Winner One of the race winners at Gulfstream park in the 1945 sea- son—and on Christmas Day at that—was a horse appropriately named Santa Claus. A Good Used Car? COMMUNITY woTens Rochester and SAVE! PURE repeats its ‘anti-freeze guarantee that. protects your = pocketbook as well as your radiator my ...that’s all! - No charge for any refills needed to keep your anti-freeze at original strength all winter long Drive in now. Your Pure Oil dealer will check your cooling system to make sure there are no mechanical defects and that all hose connections are tight. Then he’ll add the right amount of PURE ONE-FILL Anti- Freeze for this climate. From that moment on, you need never pay another cent for anti-freeze all winter long. If any replacements are néeded;he’ll add them without charge. *# at “ i‘ r There's always something new and better “at your Pure Oil dealer's ACT NOW! Be Safe With the ORIGINAL Guarantee Plan. Another reason to BE sure with Pure | \ Me gH 44 = at 4 . 2 ’ FR SE SES Re RETR OE, Ria aie oT aaa ihe 4 ' ' J So % fees rae fe ‘ “THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 = Wilson's Certified or Rath’s == Blackhawk suger cured = FULL SHANK HALF Lewisiang Yellow YAMS WRIGLEY'S SUPER MARKETS Molst Sweet Tender = = special! thursday, friday, saturdey | famous maker wool knit dresses 19 usually $29.95 to $39.95 Unbelievable values in Fe TTT TITIIMILIMLM MUMIA MMM MMMM MMMM MUU LLAMA knit dresses, the finest you could own. Carefully cut by famous makers. Large group of two- piece styles in various weaves. sketched: Dark, bright, light colors. Misses sizes. . special, $19 TEL-HURON - SHOPPING CENTER all wool iit lil ! iiitl aaciti s. ‘ PRETTTT ETE ° — 4 . E> , — * * t - MMMM TLL “4 SAVE MOl This Week at . ae CUNNINGHAM’S . Grandma's Favorite : FLOUR SACK DISH TOWELS 5 i 5 ¥ 19° | CUNNINGHAM'S Self-Serve — Pic ‘n’ Pay TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER | GOOD NEWS FOR YOU! Mony of the stores in this big, friendly shopping center have added extra- evening hours for your convenience in shopping. MOST STORES OPEN EVERY THURS., FRI., SAT. TO 9 P. M.—Seme open Mon. See each ad for the hours these modern, well-stocked stores will be open. It is another way Tel-Huron Merchants are trying to make this your peacaeen one-stop shopping center. SHOP EVENINGS: - PARK FREE | @ SAVE TIME — SHOP _ See Ads for Hour 800-Car Parking Lot In 15 Stores Under One Roof CTU LLU LOU LLL) Regular $14.95 Famous Haggar GABARDINE SLACKS SPECIAL PRICE S-t-r-e-t-c-h your wardrobe with these quality slacks, tail- ored to fit better. Continuous waistband. Choice of navy, brown, or charcoal. THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL! EO aE ee ERE Big selection of colors. 2 PENCIL POCKETS! Sizes 6 to 16. HVAUANESQ4NUUUOUCREEEOEELOOUUUOLLOOOOAALALEEOOOEOOMT EUUOULLOUNUUHUUCUUGEUAUUAUEdUGUA UA TVUUVUUYULUCUULAOEAAOUAUUUUTU AEA Open an Osmun’s CHARGE ACCOUNT!. OSMUN'S TOWN & COUNTRY Tel-Huron Shopping Center pies _ TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER DURING OUR if FALL SILVER f Wednesdey and Thursdey LADIES or MEN‘S 2-Piece SUITS « GLEANED - PRESSED and French-Glo Finished by our modern methods. $419 each acreage I ect. IN Sala iche AA. ule TS cet, gl iaesG 1S4/ 1847 ROGERS BROS. America's Finest Silverplete FT TTT TT GINGHAM CHECKS Cold Meat or Serving Fort, 1 Grevy gi tollO™ apt 2 adie, 1 Long Server, 1 Round Server 8 patient hE 36-inches, fast colors, wrinkle orpenol 7 “i f= resistant. Light and dark col- Cc an ti Ya ibe ors. Small, medium and large | \C" pe rs sy , BN = checks, yd. FELT 72-inch width, wool and rayon in solid colors. Ideal for skirts. Hid ST TTT TTT PUOUURTLUEAOEQAUUAUOGAAUEEOOAEOGONNEUUUOAALUUUAAAELEO UU re BEL) WS \ ia Cer We Give Gold Bell . Gift Stamps OPEN to 9 P. M. Wh I rome mice FRERGE. me ii HOUR CLEANER Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. TEL.HURCN SHOPPIN . _ FE 5.7934 evenings j eae : } Gig es ae me THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 No. 17 in a series of Rare CREATURES: / / . / ¢ THE : PETRIFIED an WARY Se so rooted in caution he can't move a muscle | | a : The wary is a manufacturer who thinks the advertising field is strewn They believe in backing their products with strong, stiles advertising. with booby traps. 7 They believe, fof example, in saturating a market to gain dominance; in. He gets buck fever swatting a fly — and wouldn’t crawl out on a limb two testing markets to obtain answers to sales potentials. inches from the ground. Naturally they use newspapers — because newspapers blanket any market The wary plays it so safe he’s left stranded on base while the competition with maximum impact, creating mass action at the retail level. runs away with the game. 3 y 8 \ Smart manufacturers start — and keep — their national advertising at the Fortunately the wary is a rare creature. local level — in newspapers! Most manufacturers realize that business is highly competitive and that | half-way efforts will get them precisely that far. All business is local...and so are all newspapers! ~ . This message prepared by BUREAU OF ADVERTISING, Americon Newspaper Publishers Association, arid published in the interests of fuller understanding of newspapers by - THE PONTIAC PRESS z »* a * ¥ i s * * d & \ . . a : 5 aa $ } } ae t ‘ 4 Fi ; ty é a ‘ i £ i \ 5 sd 5 / f j j “ gt ‘ of - j yes i) - F 3 ice oN " : : : : : i ge ‘ ‘ ao) ay j ea fi A iat wee : es ‘ ee i ‘ TE aa - 2 , Mae eae Ny ee ve i Vise toe per ee at ee Be pe peo it ee “ = J jae he ens iy gy Peet foe et gee eee on, Gee ieee 3 SOG a hee ae - ‘ 5 : . eB Pagtasea: eS, r. Ay Sesh oa Seah Pape dpa Eh se Sep Ae eS f ' ee oe NICK HALIDAY =DO IT YOURSELF 4 /Aheicxn ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 WIE. Hy, HLLO, BROTHER DEAR/YY ZA EGAD, JAKE! COMING BACK TO THE A FOLD AFTER A DAY OF TOIL, AND FINDING YOU HERE CON - SUMING MY CIGARS AS FAST P BOARDING HOUSE YEAH, 1 BORRIED A SEEGAR ~~ SMELLS LIKE A PILE O. LEANES/ ~~ 60 wy = . Eg | voy - u SDI &. ASAE RASA will next spring. a Y wy CRAWFORD- _ INSURANCE SMASH-UPS MEAN PAY-UP! | DON’T GET CAUGHT Insure With..... DAWE OF 716 Pontioe Stete Bank Bidg. WITH YOUR FINANCES DOWN! WE-GROVE aa an 2-8357 ‘Quack Dentists Pose Oral Cancer Threat SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — The head of the world’s largest dental organization warns that “bootleg | dentistry” poses a grave threat to give much milk, they tend to lose provide a corporation office. Full- | the health of the American people weight unless they are given scale building is scheduled to begin, —especially in cases of undetected mouth cancer. The warning was sounded by Dr. Daniel F. Lynch of Washington, D. C., at the 96th annual conven- tion of the American Dental Asso- ciation of which he is president. | dental laboratory technicians, and told of its frequently tragic re- sults. Ford told reporters his com- pany’s sales “are not as high as we'd like them te be.” Present tractor production, he said, ts centered at Dearborn and uphol- stery production is centered at Highland Park. Robert S. McNamara, vice presi- ident and general manager of the firm's Ford Division, was asked by newsmen about expansion in the South. “Over the years ahead,” he said, “production wilf increase as the market in the South expands.” Truck Strike Causes Layoff at Chrysler ‘probably say: ‘Golly, what happened to that roof?" The reason is that it slopes in: every direction at once, and Uni- versity of Mfchigan researchers believe that it might come into | popular use for homes and schools. | If you took up “hyperbolic | paraboloid” in the dictionary, | you'll fing it's “A quadric with | real generators which touches | the plane at infinity.” You can tuck that away in your space helmet. It's really like a big cardboard rectangle, propped up | with different length sticks. Suppose you wanted to make a model roof in this shape, Here's how you'd do it. Take a flexible cardboard, like laundries use to fold up a man’s white shirt. 1 paraboloi and the architects say that it's very strong. ae The model they've built at the university is quarter inch rein- forced concrete, as strong as a flat slab of concrete four inches thick. ISN'T FIRST Of course this isn't the first roof like this to be built but the expense of forming the complex shape has made it impractical in this country: University architects are inter- esteg in developing’ a mold that can prefabricate the concrete roofs and lower the cost per unit. If they can do it, they say they can make the roofs cheaper than conventional : strain ie iis ue er ae Oe HOR FOP ee eae ey cap, gee eg Ty a ie a> Ere WE? Te oe ee Te eee oe ps | aay se ek ye Np! i a, ’ {: | ES Hy en es Mise j ry ics A | t yr oe i J be Lae is a0 fe / wl) fh il ’ , = / if ; 2 . , | , yi ‘ : ; ‘ J | i : 4 bees ‘ ‘ . ae 7 Peet Oe : "oe dy y i [aes , 1 j i : ; * i 4 . OS, s THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 . -THIRTY-SEVEN a et is ’ ee : * ) oe Wee ip 5 Dividends Help | ae Find A-Parficle, Corn, Soy Dip | MARKETS [Divi p FING A-E article in Dull Trading | ...--=-=......'Boost Market fo Erase Matter in Dull Trading | 22" : arket fer DETROIT, Oct. 18 (AP — Wholesale : : ae oa , Merkew: | Search of Generation s : 2 é $.00 . Pic CHICAGO A slight price dip| ya: Mo. t 4-44. be; Gervnings, | NEW YORK (~The stock mar- Ends With Discovery of — fancy, 3.29 bu.; No. 1 280-300 bu Jone- | 1+ ahead today with good nds iscovery occurred in corn and soybeans in| than’ rancy, 3.39 bu. Ne. 1 230-809 bu. | Ket SWUNG Antiproton in Chica another dull trading session on the 200-3 60 ou‘) Wealthy. Taney. 3.80, ou | earnings and dividend reports pr nin Chicago . Board of Trade today. Both | 3%," Nctnern ‘Spies No” 1 Hin-4.00 helping to boost the advance along. 4. * from the start. | 2%: taloupes, 2 bu.| Prices Were up around 2 points BERKELEY, Calif: (#—Atomie. cereals were easy -| Grapes No. 1106-228 WE Deki. | at, the’ best in significant areas science took another big step for- Other grains opened steady and ett fancy, 680-£.98 bul No 1. 350-400 | while losses usually were frac- Jacinda then tilted lower. Bement Ne’ 1" 148-20 te bet “breoe:| tional. pn ee eS In the dectine was sim | 9.4 ok Ot 8, Seeresions * | an major divisions had e hand » [ment of the Gecovery ef’ S pars ply « continuation of yesterday's mise: Beana, green, fiat.| in the rise, although minus signs ticle which annihilates the basic slump, largely based on the pro- three 28-25 ‘bu wees ‘Ken- | crept into the aircrafts and air.) — ® | unit of all matter. 3 nounced weakness in cash corn. Beets fancy soe sab” cemsn~ benches: | SA*: & epee : » S44 | The discovery was made in ex- But the soybean slump was a re- Pn $e bens: tepeed, Ko b Johns-Manville was up between wes : ' ; ) . . "| periments utilizing the University versal of yesterday's movement. | 0-19 "soso le bu,” Cabbese, 1 and 2 points after reporting | four-door hardtop] safety items are standard equipment. The cars will be on display Fri- ; ; pre) ig ee ee PLYMOUTH FOUR-DOOR 1 of California's biggest atom There was some pickup in 3 ‘ equal to : at Braid Motor Sales, 70 S. Cass Ave. 71.6 bu; No 1, 1.00-i.80; standard | third quarter earnings Plymouth in its 1956 line of cars. | day and will be shown in Pontiac 7 ae bean receipts and hedging pres- ee oe en Sieksh ba hese ee $2.25 9 share as against $1.47 a is an entirely new miodel introduced by Fire | and Ris hneider Bros., 232 S. Saginaw St. smasher, the bevatron. It was an- sure, bona tapped Ho Ttseksb bu, Cau: | year ago, Acredytamic —. —, — o : = ~ sehen 6 fy ies . ‘ nounced jointly last night by Prof. Wheat near the end of the first {2°"Gsery, no 1-'4.00-4%8 crate: celery Bohn Aluminum was up nearly ~~ 0 : ) Ernest O. Lawrence, famed mu te wes holes ‘corn Me to % | eEmeh Me, 100-a08 Soe Meg. cucu: |? points after directors declared . . ‘ clear scientist, and the Atomie cember $2.00%; corn % to %4/ bers,” Wo, 1. 3.26-3.75 _ bushel. | ividend of 50 cents as against | C | d : Historians Note: Energy Commission, which fi~ lower, December $1.26%; oats ¥%4 | DML No. }., 1.00128, gorets “bushel: | 35 cents paid iv’ previous quarters. e a en af ymou . Xecu ive ea’s nanced the 9%4-million-dollar ma-- to % lower, December 62%; rye jong type, 75-90 pk bskt. Horseradish. | General = iy opened on 2,200 ; 5; Texas Fair Total achine. % lower to ¥%, higher, December | $5 4 25 des bette. Leck 0.86 | shares up % at 133%. United Air-| Special communication Cedar '- The new particle, sought for ® $1.07%4; soybeans 1% to 2% lower, dan, bobs.” Okra, No, 396.200 Be | craft ‘ques oft a. point at 57 on > wt Ealing y age ge: 28 ms. ; Is Six Boys Shy generation by researchers, is November $2.35, and Jard 15 to 25 Ip bagi green. fancy.’ 1.30 dos, bebe | Ho. 2,500 shares, , lg ag gs oS as ew ngine a [ ’ 0 age | the antiproton. “ om 55 - lower, Oc- son3 0 ag vs, Fras, hackers. Good gains were shown by North Snover, Adv. DALLAS, Tex. ®—If any his- Although it is a powerful ober $11. Fo. ae 0-240 | bushel Poets: | American Aviation, Bethle' : torians of expositions are reading ° nihilator of matter, it constitutes rai i pak ereen 4, te me "sa oores.| Steel, Cheryeier, Goultyear, Lock, A ; Safety Features, More this, correct your figures from Says Automation Trend no threat as a super-weapon, no Grain Prices 1 1.5b-3 00 bee Picaten tee. S$ heed, Zenith Radio, Consolidated News n Brief ; : aan tc More Jobs new hazard to the world. | tis Pumpkins Nol, 1'00-).25 bu Red- | Natural Gas, Allied Chemical | | Hardtops Presefted in 393.24 to 323,20. _ Will Create More Jobs nm huart opens up the way for CHICAGO. Oct. 19 (AP) — Opening | No"'1, “as'bo “donen’” bunches: white, | Westinghouse Electric, and Stan-| Two-year-old Blake Bennett of Cars Ready Friday The State Fair of Texas Satur for Working Forces exciting new. discoveries about orgie. nay ...ccece 00% | re ee Oe FES | cara 08 (ND). Rochester was treated and re- ; — _s* sue aliagaintlnerytinn - |the nature of matter. Conceivably Mor 21: 07% | 100-150 "bu; Huboard, No. 1, 100-150 New York Stocks leased from Pontiac General Hos-| ry 1956 Plymouth to be intro 393 994, | WASHINGTON W—The head of some of these may | lead to great Sag 225 : rise ts iy bu? Gummer, Taney, 1.60 : jaar Dcgrangar — potty aed duced Friday will have ‘an entirely * * 'a leading electrical firm said to- NeW Practe a Dec. se. io. ts oy; taney. 200 halt out | Admire Ss 3g Bt cm Coal 28 by his mother, Barbara, 21, was|new engine, re-styled rear end, Teew ee teat day the nation’s major problem in| May por, fener 1 Ta DE DARE: NOL: SP igs | Allieg Sere “.. S67 Jonas Man $14 | hit from the side by William John- | push-button transmission and built-| fom Mise Batty ccunel Skint the machine age ahead is more . ous | ~~. Bene: Sepped, No gig ou Alum Ltd ... 103 Kelsey een son Jr., of Mount Clemens, Sher- in safety features, Miss TT om ’ said the fair should likely to be a labor shortage than a 10 ams | ng , Mar collaga, Mot, (8-125, 0a. Kale, Me Am Airing 222 me Clg, $34 |li's deputies said today It will be offered in four sep-| increase its official figure by six) mass unemployment. . : Citaeeia wi Muataré.ce BLUR Am on.” at Breage ®® °°" 34] Johnson was also treated and| lt "ill be eturel Ot Ot OP | temas she saw that’ mumber of ee Operational Tests Presents Kent Budget Fe te ee ie | o's Ess 1 dees i |telemet added to the line are & fourdoor| boys avoid the turnstiles—and| Don G. Mitchell, chairman and : Lettuce and salad greens: Celery Cab-| Am Motors .. 9 Lis, & My...1.3| if your friend's im jafl and needs avoid paying admission—by climb-| preskient of Sylvania Electric) Amateur radio tors in mo Sn : hardtop in the Belvedere series qpere eae ee tae an | aeLwS bi; Chaed teh beRab| die Recs’. es bare's coe. seas | Wall PR PR S064 or MA $4001.) OT hardtop in the Sa-| ims the fence, | Products, Inc., said he does not bile units tonight will practice ; a l a 5 f J . 5 us ‘@ a i _—e ” Kent County badget, calling for ex-| a | Reeral yf, seca jtemet |am ed 83 fee ee Aa | ay serie. share fears that automation, or the stablishing cc penditures in 1956 of $2,934,100, was. pinb No. 1, 1.56-2 basket; Butter | am Smelt... 46.2 Lou & Nash... $0¢| Rummage sale Thurs., Oct. 20, County Deaths growing use of labor-saving ma- work between six Oakland County presented Monday to ihe Board of | ¥%,,2 3.00. bu:, bead. i, 180-2 0 bu: fe Ton Tg) Martin 00... 81 Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Altar ae oo _~ | Bane iy cesult In fewer jobs, (Cospitals. in. time of disaster. Supervisors. Controller Leonard V.| {fo.gige, "1018 # Remelne, No 4) am, Vitcowe © $08 McGraw H... €2, | Soctety to Burmingbam J one eale displacement and an 8 to 1 comm Charles Portico Instead he said, it will create more |p ne. Wil be. contere - # Cc. Mead . 62.2 | ing a fall rummage sale, The sale — ' " : Pontiac General and St. Andrus said much of the $326,000; gs on Armour & Co. 151 Merck |... 384] hours are from 8:45 a.m. to$ p.m.| pression ratio, It Is available im | IMLAY CITY — Service employment. hospitals in Pontiac. The increase over the 1955 figure re- CHICAGO, Oct. 19 (AP)—Butter about sc 204 Md) Gon by fire. $2,780. walls, Lot 100x 9 room home — ideal carpeted down vere ent or oo Gaee ene ye ag — Me fooms bones or conversion ‘ seen pane te = garth price ot she.s00 with 92060 tine Genera! fospital, Pull cereened ‘ th fiber- fag vo tof me, Ave. USED HOMES: acon | “ “ gla, roof, water 6 furniture » Cash or gvetiead radiant heat, st. | _ term _termis."tait Baldwin.” vanetre oo DOWN to construction. Brick of ‘sourse. Near Downtown tached garage. Large . kefront. A fishermen: | & — landscaped ot, #16,800, Ba te Mere is 8 $ room home thet Reeds surtice bu re Coremie’ thea | sian into income. er room man attractive year val valk . Priced Bloomfield Highlands bath is’ in’ end the house ie inc] geen'“at any’ timate OO O° #2 crtata 88 cash ‘erick tome spacious Seeds some’ paigt Por See fell | SYLVAW 2 A Rare Offering: live room .| New Contemporary Sree al down deserves | Tekan, MANOR — Ranch home en. I% oka tee 3e, prone id alténtion—see i today! rooms with 3 bedrooms’ each, ae Colonial and floor has 2 bedrooms| — fine"er. at will thrill you has wardrobe closet and 1% with 3 specious ded. 9 : living baths. Screened porch. Lot 80x rooms, oan Sos . handsome out. Bub toom “overtecks hg yt — Immediate Possession , BS Ogaer merits to Dewen.| Sun. Meee Memes veem. Se. es landscaped lawn end Therm: window Owner transferred — that's cied Feereation rom. With garden of evergreens tarough to ae the owner hb home ite ampli reened rch and various shrubs, Full| pase et. | dg A E — BRICK at ample se po} basement, floor, oli — So be Marre’, And has Priced |" 914,960. Ne better value on and jovely picture . heat attached. 2 car ga There are a host of other was built io 180d io Bestiog War — ee it tadeor "and outa live rage. $31,500, terms. fea ins Lake has bedrooms with 2 on first floor. a & hea com pe’ well high ards 3-7109 or FE tion, With tte e lawn comfort and eosreazenes, HOME & 10 ACRES cot FE Real Estate ce and safe y . this 2 BEDROOM. ATTACHED | 4. the highest price, Consisting tn ton tor eer fe = ot » © tile A Py heeled BE Sg ee ; ' fenced rear yard loads rooms . Also « Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor . . of shrubs ‘ou'll love it. room ir, A very Evenings GAYLORD —— chen wit ite of," cupbon ee Washi et Park wan SS oo ; FE 6-616] or FE 2-1306 asnington Par garage aren WEST Four Bedrooms 3 bedroom home Hee ebout 6 scree of well cel. lou consiing " argo * gleaming oak floors, tivated land rte potatoes, A} room, y new home tn im, 2 bedrooms, full —_ acres of good land. tile bath, paneled recrea- nice wooded lot tn a Pe ® modern kitchen with room, and gas heat erty, Owner w * arm. . Utiiity room & basem 000 doen ont ‘_ as 60,000. 63,500 for sce. Located on @ well com pees. fo a ite ear garage It's ; tra another home, This, one * vi wanted, 7 Brick—Three Bedrooms even they price of $13,750. 1 ACRE HOME oem ome ip~ el Beet iy is Established in 1916 Attached two aur .] 5 perme. ——, paceman. before you buy. Asking price is ry ® highly restrict Magic House, reward you oe aes aes at wang es communi unity mo wear 7m ta e ated at east village ABETH LAKE ESTATES. mode: é : A good value for $16,800, for. howe | one Gane oon Clarkston ® good 1 R home uated ms trea gy Bm me a alg éows owner. Two rooms at 7 Consist ots wed 2, “tiving sises. oa bananas Bent 7. —_ eee well con- ine “drapes pulitios and ONLY $6,950 -@ishwasher, Hot water, RADIANT house Call tonight "Os 7 8. so 110 150 La arpeted . HEA y tracted om » sutomatic gas fenced tot trees tag "Foom, kitchen. m fod the Pace at ane, _ = w. 0 on ge and an extra iarge garage | - full bath. partial basement with| mend gauss, | oe oe West suburban mee dition. ‘Total price #12600, terms VALUE: _— bot wate a act, clumtes iy finished eon double n or it — oo im this weil con- : . storms & screens. This house 1s first oor w bard py os “ving = eeemnnces. fun toot. Soot Lecetes” te en enter | Tri-Level located on « lagoon with access mentee Collesen ment, Shade trees and lake _ beat. im. excel- to, Van Norman Lake and 1 other . lat aeighingoed allie paves! | contrasting area o colored Ey es a england Gk — oy ~ Geer “WHITE BROS, i ae Dasement with recree- 37.500 total ‘price TO SELL YouR RY. OUR harmotous exterior. This . omEALTORS RS on ui tog, soom, tate e. Only i 4 indeed. Kenenisa POR 30 DAYS split level design provides Phon 31872 © co had . 'O SALE-~NO CHARGE ¥ OR Prue or OR fintshed 2nd fir. Pull basement. Te Buy To sell-To. Insure Sod with. so. many. many ore 46492 bath, oll beat, Large lot. ood AWRENC . extra features, met is im COUNTRY ESTATE DE, ein al binet wee. Tent istehen GAYLORD pone this home in print. ° UClak "Real E Estate Prot at $3'050 and hon Pry 136 B. Pik Ys — & Bu thie" 3” bedroom ‘beauty ‘at roving of, cette, teat, te 0 | owretee eat Bien mens | exors . a : area ne 01 jus | Co-operative Real Estate Exchange = . Co-operative Real Estate Exchange only $21,900, a ‘renovated colonial home sadn Bare, RANCH, bedrm. Tull INCOME HOME. § RMB. DOWN. | Fact Side wae a faa pumery, wing, Leet] A HOME OF YOUR | basement, ofl neat sea this sington Parkway, this tovely be Soar tafthneata Rice, Svs | Runtaan, Gmuleunesetce | fecfaren's'hoge jie Term et | OWN Satay eres SS and schools 82. fooms and bath down, large Gown Tasm at up, 1 to wail fireplace, large dining room home for $16,300. Near Silver . ; : carpeting, gas heat, garage, fireplace, ree try kitchen, | NORTH SIDE Lake. and modern to e minute, three| Large & room mode 3. bed- ‘BRICK BUNGALOW Only $7,950 with $1,500 down bedrooms and full basement. all] foom home. Pull ent. 688 | gy, DOWN —see this west subur- SQUARE 2 ACRES You'll be sorry if you miss storms and ecreens. Ot] hot water| heat, imesulation, storm sash & home” seeders 2 tht : heat and @ garage. $30,000, terms, | ‘#creens, metal awnings, fenced ftehen’ her ¥ walls, fully tn- iNT AL im a s. ard. Close to school, stores & guiated. M car garage. 2 nice és vinasiow ries upecious Seminole Hills J.R nyamnente aeting” gr aa oe ee oe . “_ Pee only $6,950. Call tonight. rooms henge ne ont. re A hom 6 designed and con HILTZ Insurance. $8, af rrec' 14 asd tania err tn coset with 4 ‘this notable adieet. ; WEST SUBURBA QUALITY BUILT It's brick with 4 bedrooms REAL Estate and Insurance Roomy 4 & bath tn nice shape HOMES hardwood floors, plaste and’ and full tile bath do 3 1011 W. Huron 8t FE 6-6181| © one acre. New 2 car garage. ae painted wa walls, opiate “ile. bath rooma and tile bath up. Open 0 School bus a door. Full price Just arrived! Plang for new 64 7 ite hy: is a master- Speites| Etc s (lee | Se at . fac - EAST — or rms. reakias ties. Brick 2 car erage too! Includes byutt-io oven and f VACANT tiled and many other at- MENT! $16,500 full oan ‘aarual tusleeres in mcrenaee ATE AYS to ‘! toom _ poe Caner RUGS, 4x6, CHEAP. FE 2-0804. 12 CU. FT DR. REACH-IN Kelvinator. Cheap. 2487 Oakwood Rd., corner of Baldwin. ANTIQUE WALNUT AND VELVET pull-up chair, 620° Provincial in- door shutters, pine. solid panels. 43x33 inches. 68 a pair: i and piano stool, $3 and tique silver sugar and seumener, pr; Folding fireplace screen, JR. DINING ROOM TABLE, EX- tra leaf, and . & chai _OR dare PMG: & chairs. $25. LARGE KENMORE MANGLE AND Hoover vacuum cleaner. Deluxe Pee 62. Cail FE 45262 after 65; Traverse rod, adjustable, for double window, $1, Swinging joor, 80 x 30, &4: Regular door, fame size, $4: pid oe, ghting oln, _Mté 40234, id APT. SIZE OR TRAILER GAS | Unusual bamboo fixture, $8. B irmingham. stove. Good condition, FE 2-1104. | R : VINYL. INLAID “ru; APT. SIZE FRIGIDAIRE REFRIG ; $40. Must see. to ‘appreciate. 34 Williams. 6 ROOM OTL SPACE HEATER. — aw and vine included. vine ROOM SUITE, GREEN peg och or aa chair with otto- men lounge chair wt same “Spections fabric, 895, 46-4198 | 9x12 LINO. RUGS. Soe 12m12_ LIN $8.39 BG % PRICE UBBER BASE PaInt GAL. $3.50 BYERS. 141 Huron, FE 4-3064 LINOLEUM ND PAINT SALE. ‘4 price at Jack's. Kitchen sink, lke ‘| $16 ie FA FURNITURE CO. 14 8. Lad rE 106 8. Seginay COE 305 “es sles door. dine, Waites A aw . 744 TAR ABS at ERs ee Plastic 3 Wall Tile. ..2c ea. s) eee “S$ 5 aanseatanedees i] ccecessaseens @8 OR. 88 03 Tasnes ale”, # seeeeneneaneen- anew * faite, it W . Ypsilanti, PE 23-0631, ee aad ani Clearance brent Se: er ia pg ag Re i £2 ,% —™ blond bedroom ite, erate a2 davenport oft sleeper full inner - $130.50 BONO |g oss sacgvnreneagiacess \d Ry cricket rocker,..9 13.95 So gag vavces “ Pearson’ s Bank Furniture e Ave. apr.” in at prices, My storm sash. Cost $87, ~~ ‘will sel) for. 870. i ky ey FE phe 4 6 Duc Therm, FE » t. TOP hot water heater, in con- $10. 894 Parkwood Ave FOR SURPLUS LUMBER & MATE RIAL SALES CO. Rad. (M59). OR.3-1082 ig TONS OF 8 INCH H BE 30 ft, lengths, Call PE 2-7268. *aowe bighchalr. 3 materait o 5 dresses, sise 18. PE 20414. Inch LC PURNACE _blower, FE 3.7319. 5 3 WHEEL Call wy Die Yorner mar perenne yaee Speco ayer po IT can always threaten to speed up!" For Sale Miscellaneous 60 For Sale Miscellaneous 60 a Ba yee psum, to 2% cent Birming — Woadward Ave, Artists’ supplies, hobby . supplies—c our clas- sification “Hobbies and/ cance és. Lowe ros. be HTS SUPPLY) 2685 Perry FE 46431, 6 oes ‘Cab, sinks & $50.50 La wore faucets $23. SAVE SUPPLY, 100 w IN U0 THERM, HEATs 5 a3 ft note 137 Waterly St. BU CLLDOSER, LT BLADE. _ $3000. rE iin. avy - _, DISCOUNT AND SAVE. H, C. LITTLE fully _aute, on iter > £~-y*» -—| aE LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO. 5340 Highland Rd; (M50). OR 3-7002 ft. | TRADE GAS RANGES ELECc- | 371 trie, R. B. Munro Electric, 1060 W. Huron TRA IX... pair — Ci $25. “Pr oa ise a ES Laas REFRIGERATOR. me AND R. Munro Electric. 1060 6 ea fas LATHE, 06 thread: Stand "s ip ng 4 4130 com * _ plete. OL 1-6646. CLOSING OUT te Tite Vox. (2 Te INL AID, LINOLEUM, . woseee sewer eeegees a | 43e3eaees. ieee 18 W. Pike St. Easy terms FE 4-1122 oe Con- USED SION, dition, enn ir ces: $20; Waite's sAogheness, dowusteies _ Store, FE 4 ———e: $68.50. TV, $29. . New Hot Point dishwash- $229.05, Sweet's . Ho 12%", USED HOT POINT AUTOMATIC now jliances, 422 W. Hi 41133. Used Tradein Dept. Television set , .... $19.95 teem eweeneeae hea $3) 6 piece ‘dining room suite eas + gear —vodbl bd 3 6 piece ainet THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 3. SAGINAW ST. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WINE, MOHAIR DAVENPORT and chair. 117 Exmoore St. After 6. “KEN TILE Six merble colors 5 CENTS EACH |" FLOOR SHOP $9 8. Saginaw St COAL SaRNACE AND SIDE ARM heater, with tank, FE 5-7048. DRAW TITE HITCHES = tind. that elt 4 er a makes of ca P. “< Howland, 3245 “Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1456 aa poe ‘FUEL TANKS. NEW. tM or oad $20.50. Also other sizes. McClain Tanks. F FE 4-0927. 3.) MILKING GOATS. GARDEN sprerer. 1 walking cultivator. ie 1 41973, scat FOR SALE HAWALIAN GUITAR, ood condition, boy's bike, 10, 612 Oakland. 50 FULL SIZE BED AND SPRINGS. crib, table wt 4 _Steel_ wardrobe. FE 4-11 FUEL OIL TANKS _ ¥deal for housetraller ~ $25, oof 3 gal meat. FE 5-1 FIRST QUALITY 5 FT. BA $40.50; B ie lets, $19 88: 32x71 double sinks, $14.95; bana nag trem $10.96, G. A. _Perry chairs, 28 WASHER, $20; REFRIG., 835. Odd chairs and other items. FE 5-3766. or ee png EASY SPIN- dryer with a: spin and rinse, good contitien. rs MA 6-€268. 46x70 APGHAN. RED AND ROSE. Will sell reasonable. FE 4-2760. ht ogy JUNGERS OIL 85,000 BTU. Like new. 1 ter e ge Werth-qneruiag heating stove 48653. Miiford. H wale $20; REFRIGERATOR, $35; odd chairs and other items. FE 54-2786, Dk WAYNE GABERT’S new. $12. Two dressers, $6 each, i All. kinds a heating stoves $5.95 Pod Sam iple Sale | | $168 ABOUT ae YOU WANT and up. 30 gal. tank and gas hot | gig 95 Norge dix dryer ee BE AT L & &.| water heater, $16. 277 Baldwin. 95 Norge 10 cu refrig $199 End. tables. $14 $1 ta up; new book-| Lots of parking. 232.50 Kelv 30 tn. electric Fra Pa = vk — 8 , ee oats ats fully Besar . TT as & clee $6 up. beds. all sizes — Lord’s Specials “refrigeraiordreeee? ft $209 up: radios, $5 | § pe, dinette set... .......... : OTHERS up: new chrome dinette sets, a pe. | 2 pe. tofened pesecees wag sae - 9 up; chests new & used. $5 | Used TVs f up TRANG TO PAY livin .—r vuttes, ¥i2.0 up; z swig “og som “Tbe s.. e| SL: rE Seis = Foam tultes 410 90'up. Many ee tord’s | WALNUT JONIOR SIZE DINING ftem Use. OUR Easy OR LAY-A-WAYT savant PLA Furniture and Appliances 125 W. Huron 6 *S Lg ey trade an ring’ Come “where Wel .. a Used "e Se free verking, MAHOGANY - DUNCAN PHYFE cuwoate ts fone | Sareea mening ate L_& 8 SALES CO. ¢ mi, cast ot] pr 'Sets a pe wane More. Pon ._ Heights om Auburn Rd, We Give Holdens Red Stamps. ae INCH RCA CONSOLE, $20.05. antenna kit. $9.95 WALTON TV Walton Cor. Josivn FE 2-2387 rong ; “4 sp as ge. Used mos, i PISCE LIVING ROOM SUITE, | ET Sip. PESseaos, 0x12 RUGS $16.98. $29 06, $30.95. : NEW ebatr, rubber boots, lined $40.95 Jat bie savings. Pesrsons bunting shoes, galoshes, size 8. ank Furnit A : ve. « PIECE DINING ROOM SET: maple, $55, ee 5-1481. ‘ashe Contest 173. Al id ae, *0 few com’ Pe radio and reeord on 835, Olive 23008, 4 Poni ” auto, watts be 4 oe MOVING TO FLORIDA. ALL ee fr 3 ; i. con’d. 601 E. Mont- table with ¢ chairs, PE 5.3344. For Sale Miscellaneous 60 _ ATTENTION Home Owners Builders b are over stocked w bso. ft. choice er sizes at Teal savings. Hg. used tum! e estimates ee given, sURPLUS LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO. PThAGES =) “x 6 een EM_ 33386 GUN-TYPE OiL BURNER AND M-H controle, $25. 220 tank, $10; both. good. 117 Sartemesn, ~ G&M COMPANY _ SAWS AND LAWN a MA- CHINE, SHARPEN PE 5-78.35. 2255 FE. Walton FREE, Sr: “ANDING TOILETS NLETS $21.96 x 32 double sinks ...... Washbowis with fittings Colored Bath sets, w , Seconds —Irregu 100 3" in ated ti . agine w _ =» jen. HOT WATER WATER TANK oe COAL heater. EM HAMILTON | RRO WATCH. 3 years old, PE $-8014, after §:30. HAYRIDE PARTIES ____Food furnished. FE 2-3231, HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY STORE 7 miles out Faldwt; 5-2100 AND RESSED PORK AND bacon an sausage FE fioT T WATER ER HEATER aS ar. eos, new & for Consumers lines raea.se and “pii9 50 value $49.50 and $50.50 There are pom. ge marred. Also ee — iT fille valeeee Scniean Fh Presreoceat 393 Orchard Lake Ave. HOT WATER BOILER WITH ABC burner, ero with alf con- _trois. OR “HUNTER wa ae BALANCER “mane Youn #130 50, $090.50. These are plightly — fs Alea geversl “a LION & AMER ee EYER TRAINS a Sea eet eT, REVERE oao ¥. celotex ss braroet, Sei Interior and exterior doors, Windows, Anderson and others, ot ort Lembo &. Boats Te aati Seles while at 65.58 gut. chinehs H's ING. fy ps with 18 gal. 19 bp Jet hi imps shallow deep A. $i raed - Sum} $30.96 Myers Sempe. jets and submerst- i a Hl arse miMy 3s a i Telegraph & 9 Mile Detroit SINKS FROM $5.95, 52. OAL. ELEO- trie water heaters, SAVE , 8, Saginaw St. Save Money at} &i BURMEISTER’S LUMBER 0,00 "AT BURMEISTER'S. stnvick 1 cee e ee BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co, 8197 Cooley Lake PL 14196 ING Lm o open head e°3 P. Sutton Joslyn Ra. STOP L Por sale: 55 rams. $1, 4 jis0 POWER SAW FOR $00; LikE new A : rvice; nasi ol aod fe within s radius. has for ave Be gtease any ® radius of KELLY'S HARDWARE | 97h tune ENS SORELY, £0, hetghs, Fe oe “wee STORM SASH PLUMBING SPECIA saa doors, Low LOW reicelit eater eel EE Sa Open daily 8 to 6; Sun, 10 to 2.) 8 a.m 12 Arnason Plumbing Supply SEPTIC TANK Prone. ‘is We deliver pe ania ie Lk. Ra. PHELPS ELECTRIC HARDWARE, | TWIN’ BED He Tag supplies, OR 312717 OR oe eae pottetye sezyetal biets 20} Dine Hey Pe 8.0108 “a ewer oom PORCH LIGHTS IN EARL? VE EA A aes somone, Old og = ms Boss's complete sélee- * tion of lights for every room ge pice fae Se omens house at terrific values. Michigan) 4; . a a? rH a 303 «Orchard =Lake FI -? re mnene Ave. tseD Oi, SPACE Hea TERS PLYWOOD EA —— & A, Thompson, 80 6. All Kinds at lowest prices. Also — hardware. Wholesale and Pontiac Plywood Co, 1488 Baldwin Ave. FE 32-2543 RENOWN CIRCULATING HEATER |. ¥ 1701 La Due ci) ROM PT. Ltd cor only @. “A. ‘Thompson, 86. 6. | 28% _Perty. eee ncaa QUAKER Of, HEATER, LIKE Shipla; new, $45, .with fan. _ FE 2-6119. TAPE a ears old, original gansta ih ect condition. $80. FE Beautiful et, stdin ax4's, 26s. ane’ ap, ay vy aay rae, | Sink pine panee BUILDING SUPPLIES A 6-581 61 Dite_ Hy. _ Cartan a wabie pump. mers WW lectric dri. Piexible « : -4 Push carte, Gas 4-7623 so, 8 Mi Beem t Sunday 10 to 2 location Wrecking PBSFFr 7 ” Many other ftema UNION WRECKING CO. INC. (ain yard "4. Comer Or near you it STORM WIRDOWS, Es) * |’ Oe Poe $0068. al = rE oa, ; Roofing and Siding Comblantion eees Insulation M. A..BENSON Saginaw | FE 2531 Bie PuARDWARE ve : Cameras, Equipment 61A "EE slant cies | WASHED DRY be ote, stone © OR LOADED, PON- TIAC AREA. AND AN Fill dirt, Ww Wood, d, Coal & } Fuel 67 PER CORD. P tor sit, Delivered. PE 46568, SLAB WOOD, TWEEN 9 AND 4. had 2-2965, “FE 4-3263, or CALL D GRAVEL. a1) Ae | eEfed HARDWARE auvure i Mee CON di $3. Lr tb tires, info a F 15 tires, $12.50. each. - cials $00.50 ag gt py 3106 we $100 Savage. 5.05". Mhace. feather “hah Heavy toate ra i ge $ Dg arees, Laven hid sute, ‘5 complete line ot iscount poy van Remington and Super + Shells all at $1.05 ing and fishing ‘needs at TR BEESON HDWE. 8. TELEOR. 2162 APH .| FREE PARKING FOR 100 ema burn Mi ed. ey Ba TWO 5- ; B : each. S640 Oster Dr., Crescent Mon., Tues, it. 9 to 6) Thurs, and Pri. 9 to 8; ‘Sun. 10 to 2 . RmTEOTGN a AOR. LOADING rifle. 1 box. shells, $75. Call after | j 5, OR 3-1449 Twp. seaKind OUTBOARD MO- LARGE SELECTION OnE uy __#auge WINCHESTER 36-30 M AKC BEAGLE. FEMALE, at frog a rg RAINED pea ae : fear Wai 70 BU Phone ‘OL 16611, ‘s to 5. Sale Farn Farm Equipment 76 HEADQUARTERS — FOR ( AIN | SAWS sales AyD See us now for stration. Pi a son HOUGHTEN & ALLIS-CHAL ce +» tenes err eee eer oe eeeee am omen eeeendl 23-40% Closed Sun. rcs: Weotinnd'sharss Kew: | NOW ON DISPLAY N 3-2029. RATED RANGERS TREAT GIVEN. 2061 Rockhaven, 1 mile east Au- hts. Lake” testes. 431 Marion. Inquire after Pp. $65; 8 mm Monsey ritis sporter ‘conversion, 2186 mi Avondale. oF and rifies, $19 and wp. Office, 4 Patterson, GAUGE AND ONE 12 ¥ shotgun PE 25770, 17% Ben’ Alice A carbine, New Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 | SOARDING. BATHING aa. trailer, eee BOARDED, 008 Hey, Grain & Feed i} Trailer Sales rod, Hom :| ALFALFA, SECO: CUTTING, CE Jewell, 10 N. Worth, Shem, gitaifa "and br or mine sua Hunting Acco G5A) timothy mixed i “0038, teat 2 NICE CABINS OW LAKE wear Ali TYPEs Y. ; x Stine te son | second cutting. Also straw _bale, $2790 deliver. OA 8-2178 _ Sand, Gravel & eines 66 gt be Bay. fh er WA cow a Nptane rom Le sis | Hay sal il ‘aie TRS THOPRY GAITED $250. Gee he nes OS Oe ee neh Riera gees Se monies > nev. Ever see o trailer 12 % high? DEER HUNTER SPEC, 10 USED TRAILERS TO PICK FROM $195-$595 BUY NOW! See it her.’ 12 M%. high Oxford Trailer Sales Michigan bottle gas, Trailer parts i For Sale Cars 1 1952 BUICK . nicely a tees $ * 2 DR: SED. : 4 a is : 5 r rn — . Bo : the = A s IAN tis < : z ‘ ‘ 10 to 14 am, ahs REAL VALUE “ $hoes ; 5 e i ‘ - mn 4 USED CARS pene - = Pontiac Retail S ay : PONTIAC C U ST BY aad A etail Store “s 4 DR. SEDA 4 e, ; A7 - | 6s Mt. Clemens — 1 oe «Seen ae pr Fully Eaipped Inch P . FE 3-1117 : B NICE 2n4 CAR - wding Taxes and L License ‘te svorrnanenets QED $39 oe West Side Used Cars 1930 oso GMC, rit shana mod ioe CALL AR gbich . ; 468 M i Your Ol Cer 2. on ° out where orerbead Stow | Soft ATT. OO i ti Sie ; 3 FORE as. DR OVERDRIVE Ford Coupe mig rt 6 Mode : ar >. Is Worth $125 ___For Sale Trucks 90: “We me me eeerence. uy | RIEME ce ea em ete New tires. MY 26402. _ | poomonet mance Pontiac Retail Store | ‘S2 FORD FA ee nas cones | wes et Side Used Cars | 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 Meals, Otod ieneporaion PE : CAR a at3t | . : sas . | Like new toside and ES | : Beau | N ; ; . $10 DOWN i" ae. Seamnene FE 3117 - $ : |i Eee were OLDS | edi SEE Pr aE wn mace mace) bes Mo. bale ten oe Poms Men | Credit "Lacon SS | ee ole eal | = ike) Deters Powe ; — |e oe | * CONVENTISEE. 2007 eee ee tame | See, condition. $400. MI | | | Like new inside PICK-UP ] ie : P] teal Bogy power windows, pow brakes, |, i | Traile ai oe inp BR, oot hoses ae an ; fee si : os jon. ars onte Ei” : + ‘e pomrac STAR CHIEF cus | : | : — DOwN WHEN TRYING TO” | from $1185 for” i relto, Many signal secker _& trade aot oh ging ‘ane | . 2 www, Demo's = aiage 2 ese dekenelNaeie | Sa samt one, PONTIAC LATE SF“ DODR at A-] Buys Cheapi extra set snow | ‘ S | BAD eT a No ¢ ; _ “ieee he NORTH CHEVROLET | Exc cond. two tone. Bi. i .. ; eaples Mechanic, Oxford. | Final | SP gave a doo0. ‘@ FORD con 3 = ___*Tincoln’ $1100 | Muse Working ‘or competitor. 53 Buick Riviera $1199 ‘SOF 1, * Clearance |.OF "4 — ‘6 SELECTION | good Tae Ce SHARP, | oer M Reasonabie. Orig pa wae 30 Ford 2 d _ Sa eat aCe ast tated. 8 " Financial Problems | VERY ee a eee TIP TOP VALUES | — antl ce C. Cp. $1244 49 Chev ae DODGE 3 TON. 1a, WOOF ust Your WEEKLY | PA AND XN - 4 '55 Ford C. ‘ hela TO. ‘te nee cond. "6-28 tires. (Car Down =| MTTLE AS ©. valid F Jal thea chetrane wie: CO | Cneice CLEARANCE 1954 PONTIAC | 52 sak Bivien. 0644 ‘50 Plymouth 2 dr. $199 re arteue SALES HASKINS Bo (ro-agaete Py sccensories. PE 2118. “BIG ne ~ 4 DR. SEDAN 54 Ford 2 dr......$999 | a Ford 2 dr......$144 iy Sn Chevees | Immediate Delivery ! Cyt. INCOLW CLUS COUPE 18 BIG SAVINGS THI ‘53 Mercury 4 dr...$899 Chev. 2 dr.....- $199 nee 6751 ar eames ; * Deal D te y $200. €, jis, Excellent worenre: : 4 RYSLER S IS ONE $4 Stude.-4 dr =e "$799 49 Plymouth 2 dr. $144 Hwy. at M- e i isi HENRY 3 GOOD MECHAM. ; + siaceece ’ “ORD _"_ MAple 5-5071 pis _ Deal Direct! cats couttion. Best afer. 4 Lge Pontine 2 47... FOR THE FAMILY _|| ‘52 Chev. Dix. 2 dr. $544 MaDe Sete 8 SinelZt | Img BUICK CENTURY 4 DR se ( Botpence Ce Beit ee ca | bsg Chrgaler Highlander v: ite $1,395 '51 Ford Cus. 2 dr. $299 SO Pontiac. Sed. s:80% Soom RARESMAE to tera tiee | So, Ta, aE, tek Hy a, woe 53 Plymouth? de 64 | me PE en @ ¢+DR SEDAN ' y’ , - wonder a tie Mile ' 195@ Kaiser aving avectrt | P . 53 Ford R W , : ‘ ; 1941 FORD ‘8 CADILLAC CoUl ALL COME a WODEON gis ALL Cc aed ontiac Retail Store | 53 De . Wan. $899 ° % TON 4 SPEED A-l condition. N PE DEVILLE ro ined and read ’ “ALL WINTER: | LARKSTON 53 Dodge 2 d 6) i147 © dealers. OR NATION eee Se Seece pr eels weather. MO paye-gee | 6 Mt. Clemens bea aka re r.. ., $699 Co : ot] AL NORTH * TOR SALES } . FE 317117 52 Ford ¢ dr es : nverti les , } CRRYROLET Clg Coure MOTOR SALES oy ped 8 MAIN gt | DR ee ee ee UME JERRY ans over ‘ments. re equit: 111 8. SAGINAW Lincoln &1109 cury sL PuYMourH -| a5 4, DR, CUSTOM. STARCHIEF io ot d Sta. Wyn. $3099 4 Ford Conv. ..$1299 JERRY (SA seat —| oars ue | Gerace an S1 Pinout Zar gam (SS Ford Com JEROME one oo ert ee FOR ‘is OLDS SUPER 0s SACRIFICE. CM ge j| "34 Chev. 2 dr.....$999 53 Buick Conv. . .$1044 R che "Res, oe TRICE. PONTIAC iepAys, =| '52 Mercur 2 48 F . ochputer Bord Dealer ee. | OF he Pansy OLDS ae SUBS oh eet ee | condita. FE Seas NNN | 'S5F ac roan 799 ‘48 Ford Conv. ....$74 “FOR, MORE Oey . | ee los on ae | tan ps Fe nee Nine ane SS PONTIAC 8T ‘ord C. 8 2dr. $1344 52 Ford Conv $699 0 iad : enfecracn F . Tour CARS. WHAT HAVE full Nontn mpeealion mes | _ a htis low Stas Cay, Care: "52 Pont. Dix. 4 page SO Ford Conv. _ “$299 $400, FE 5-0542 aan N FOR © | ’S ‘ "5g tees wa : TODAY goes ree as ; be ahd ; dr...... $699" be Chev. Conv. ,..$999 aes bears eat ; 1952 CHEVROLET A chew. 8 Ge, ratte, heater.) NF OP TRADER _FE +0172 w . 1952 PONTIAC | 59 ake “a poe 51 Ford Conv. ... .$444 " oo . ry, 1 ‘ss . "| » ’ r . Hi FORD TON PICKUP EX. 4 DR. SEDAN ‘hener aegl Mee resi IKE'S AUTO SALES | | 4 DR. SEDAN | 3 Kaiser 4 dr... ..$399 t condition. Best offer. EM DRIVE {T saredie heater. nya wasen, 4 60. ig Kalaar Teg et pei 951 PACKARD ane OBNER | oq Pod gy se $044 T ° she G2. Pell power. hgh ho AND 4. DR. SEDAN “ ie d. $1399 rucks Are YOU'LL B — redie, | ~ "ard. Pirmimgbom * R. SEDAN _ || °51 Buiek Truck L BUY IT __ | Ponting ne .. $695 ys $399 ruckKs Our Business | sens O4 eating, stareniet « ar, onaan, | LINCOLN - FULLY EQUIPPED | Bef eend Hardiop $129 54 Chev. % t pick. $699 ¢ Studebaker D CAPRI | 55 |. Ponti se |} °54 ’ ; bh ata GMC} pontiac R wes sy COUPE ™ ontiac Retail Store [1 ’31 Mere. Clb, Epes i Dodge + fick $99 ontiac etail Sj aw MI . 9 ‘ i @3 Mt. Cl 5 * + ane ee ae pic AT CASS: | 4, wn. com tore DODGE 8. | ROYAL Bt oe _ 1954s 1953s Pontiac Retail Ste omens FE S117 | hr Ford Victoria..$799 ‘94 Chev. ¥% t. stk. ene rdtop, beautiful il Ste *52 FE?SA EVENINGS Fe 31117 Hap and delune ve 1955s tore | | S1 oe 3 2 dr... . $899 48 Ford ! 4 t. k. $199 aetery . . ———— 51. Nash St. W /2 ic 9203 FE 4-453] | 1981 ctevro Enage RADIOS, HEATERS, © . Comene FE 37117 | 3! BONTIAC Wition Wiser || ‘50 Pi Sen bi ag $399 '53 Ford 1% hd ‘ERS afer ¢ ee jie Wie tigseche | ing DQDOE CLR cou Bob D FULL POWER - | Soest salen ia, rants, Wize | y. Sta. Wen. $997 _ 12 uke. *. $699 , * Clean, no rust. FE 62317. a * Kamalloaimalia Se te err pe ge rs Po = mi EM 32162 wes [ Fer OWT # om 1 owe "ator uaa oe ob Frost, Inc. | stpriaset tnetast an mse pte ollet ear | Sale ? DR. ties; FULLY _ Woodward, payments: 464 §. 850 D DEALER YMOUTH «4D | PON e. PE $8373.00 H on Corson] “ER, in FORD. DR at MERCURY 30'S, WOODWARD. | 288- SER RABID, AND "Barcty ipartmae, Rea | arold T tele sot Wactr“ajoe, Carne: Woodward et 13 pny - By dg oe an 6: « < eaedheeenabersti 7 — urner ord ster djoe, Crkne | CHEVIE ih.” DR 0001 Biv seas .mcurweed eval met: | Yes OR -W aee | cua | | ' Sp soameseren ies =. | nescouaie. Mi +DR- G000. inte YORD. +DOOR DELUXE SE- nowt Hon. “Good lires, Reasonable. | 18% CHEVROLET. FoRDOR | ; 95] | 2 BIG L ea kn _ Pec. Pie steer. o4 3am yet Ae Owier, 4m Squirrel “Rd. nea ib SECORT | DR. ile DOWN i ee Wicca | OTS | : 3467T1,| ments, wn and assume . __ Dutton. near) Wood and clock, seat co & M . ae BUICK SEDA 464.8. Wood pay Woodward, et _tirectional ners Midwest 4- . F bp B+ $333; _ ham. ard Birming. | "Ww PORD. Ingham per week. signals, $11.0 st 4-7500 V-8 EN dyna W was ‘ - wsw 3-DOOR, V4 ELDERLY 2 Ford, Che NGINES _ iy 3 mast 6 CHEVIE, $40. GOOD Wow. low mileage, goed eat. | sell “a MeLADY | WISHES. TO 1054 | Desot N JOrd Liberty 9-4000 Olds, Buick. me IS 3 bal ee ig es nee eich, fry food net ed for quick sale aie be W. Manstela mi Like mile Seeie neers Ge ( , magn PONE Liberty 9-400 . . Lat , 56a Cuter * , n Men: RADIO AND HEATER, looks new RAMBLER HARDTOP, $16. nee and Golex trans | 8 : my # 1 5 s, 3608 Oster. _ 21 Mechanic ‘ j ss C \ LINDE Immedi ” . ° SEAL We SEER DEVEERA. 90 Down “ ng a FRAwabon. | "3S FORD t- BOOK VAIRLAWE | * tee Fe vine * — per wees R 2-DOOR* tate “Spot” Deliv vt ; w payments, R- | Fordome FAIRLA 31 NASH SED. 1953 Desoto & . . ery sbi Ct Hake | dan peLoxe oe | wae ee ite 1959 . ——— = SS rsa me wo. she Service ‘ater "seas Rian ye x ences CRO aaror | § Ste, 5 ge women Ss $33.85 - Chevrolet ae he Shoe Re a] beret i . . r Fe sthereise. aston sist D Bagi. ole ‘i CHEV. SEDAN. Sims; ALL. NORTH CHEV: 1963 Dodge | , |1955 D yy — A é Besar | EP ee at JWN } 5 ta NASH BTATESM { j | €moOs Woodward of 13 Mile iv t Alans MAN HARDTOP. we pee § pébeiten. Bester. a | LARRY | 3 ; loor Cars, pEMONeTRa noe ice | . NORT ers. ‘One signals and WS . he | : : : =i Cars Doster, door. V3 P Fouts ae eee er Ss : Woodward at 1 Mlle 1953 rewean site ‘per Beat R J EROME | | 3 8 Fins ory over Bee tt’ tone . . wT NASH pte mi mileage. Ra a jaflub team, Low | Roc hester Ford 1 Dealer | ' PP sik he 4,Deer tetany | one Pe Sie oe renee. Buick Fea oe —aFATIOR | "0 oe cues \ acre ACE wm REARS A | . 2105 10s “Bel Ai Airs + private, one iar doe eee ate = On| Sony exten One Mester and | iets PowPiac DELUXE poe : pat . : | Stee tn , | oe ie hos were SELON eat A Marl Bieta | : Sixes and Eights - | CHEVROLETS “ALL” BODY (0m ORTH CRRKVAOL moking | Mr Willys # Fordor meds: seat: | Coupe, at oes CONVERTIBLE : ee, So 6. 6 from: your ehetce ie a ee : ' Woodward at 13 Nile We caches Ueto 30 umes car ‘52. PONTIAC Ae Po 2 © Car Quarantee = | eg eng Ag ice ee ar ee Yul) me gallon. $6.78 per to 30 miles per! [°* for fall , SEDAN; WAS 9995. ‘ es Mag = 2 aeiiiiiea gains i, NOLTDAY:~yizes. | 1952. DeSoto oe wee: | NORTH clearance only. $71 z . A S Wo “yperd ey TeNie Really Wee ny radio: heater. Ee, Pome. v4 re Light i — ont Tocoin'S dad te . 2 aT wiew Gey : CHE tt waa 2. Po C . | Be nag CONV. e . You w FU ‘coe rt a 095 seam ae |. fe Dee, Sua srs, scrompucrein iter case | ce ce eco par for ihn Bega! cand Sethi | 1954 Buick S Ree ed ae co ae Set paring Pe ILL PRICE . FALL S SPECIAL Hardtop oe age; oat Ch oe mile- tat Pibmouth canton After mneees: Call FE 3 4ies | . $425 sell. sis Rr a a cS set | “oe mpi rae a ~~] 1953 CHEVROLET 1S é € 72. nee . ~ | a i iE - \ LE Po . Take sevtetan vag a fone bees 3 bes | seer. Mio get this tit ee the mare etine Cass "and res Many | 1950 PONTIAC i diene ani ae Glide and i siaecsenteii ise vermont’ Levetion Ss Dale oe ee +4 New Buicks C } sont bogey ag OLet price. $9.10 per. week — - Serect “Sas ie meas’ ach Oooo Same cast tad masta STARTERS Location a ‘caten hydr $ 495 7 suicks € oming | ned at 12M 2 DR. SE . as ® pin. as neat and clean it uty with the masstv grey. ECO . ring a power) Nov - _Lineoin 5 1951 PI “DAN ng chr € spark- SE ha ee SAVE a sph nee ae tt Rueeste tee tia ‘FACTORY EXC. CA cee hae ad" ufara, = Otor Scooters 82 AS YOU HAVE NEVER | sf Olay fae: ae ene Tae, Reuter. Sehine east tres er week.” fogons car st | ORY ENC. CAR} 1983 p ao" | $565 CUSHION A $ 895, . $305 53. PONTIZ . qian rm Sees SOND SON | 1h, SAVED BEFORE “HURON MOTO _ | Woodward at 13 Nile 1951, Plymouth Cranbrook sl 5 TAG 1953 PLYMOUT 1 ar ects ee n’t Delay — Act Today | SALES R | $1,085 |- Lincoln 5-1100 directional sina Radio Beater, | | Smee Mae Sem fae s a i‘ For Sale M +4592. | H j 2.8 Huron ~ | ’ ; | . -| per. etc. $10.97 | Ponti , _ | and a light ng, radio, heater heater. Beige and ris and * a otorcycles ASK a 5 ontiac Retail Stor green finish. Sh ih tusber ana ioe man. ron PARTS AND sERvice =| I N 5 Guaranteed | R Sg Special — | T Low Cost Malrectional lena gent covers 4, Mt . i“ $1195 miake thie the car for you, ON ea j; Re -H, Dy'flow, 2” | tran * si $11.67 per week. n Clemens | . : . 45 Davidson Davidson see Rar. | Chi } v,2Tone | sportation | re 3717, | 1953 PON ; Basins evrolet Sharp Used C a | F953 PONTIAC 7 “Boats & Ac Oakland All Makes and poe | , BRAID |< || Convertible 8 H 1951 CHEVROLET apa wed ComtysFaces GLENN'S . peenttorat. [then € 47 | SEPPERE GPS, a get | Liew wie" Sees SS en Hurt x oat | 6751 Dixie Hwy. ot MOTOR SALES | 12 Eourteous Sal M. Chev. Club Coupe $195. * Desote- . ames LORAGE | HE Nights ‘til 9 | cuEY DLS FOLLY Boor Packard 4-dr ‘ 06 8. Perry st. | woe eee , sited ARINE SALES a iusiee | we . es. FE 47305 ache " “eee aes $195 : spew: FE 2-5106 aT Fata n. FE 4.0255. v | i ’ 4 -teog PLYMOUTH SE UDEBAKER V he BiG Pe eerre ERE’ Ss) haue oe S $2 395 ; Buick Sedanette ...$ 95) we ere oat feet baat TRUCKS all eth. t | iful_¢ us 2k ae HGDICOUNT BUMPER 5 AR am esruesyeit | “488 a ee [DS FORD |” tose CHE J 8! * ; ardtop, 2, a _ , Mi %e e' = F % an ‘TO. | Tee p.200Miles (Sorry Sree aT |" Teron oa ait gm fst Mtn mee cvs wa ‘ 2-6200, Re | “49 CHEVROLET: H. EM _3-3000 : y codward. Birmingham. 8 Wocda Assume payments ge Uke poles pony This V8 is just heater and 4! in seal box, ge $ en tf ; GOOD | |‘. PLYMOUTH | ard Qirmingh se It. D rection signals. gine Ker. vite Sales BUMPER Rt ree 600d a 65 Cars to Go | ‘49s | duced from 8606- “overdrive, ‘Re: | “dee cea in trade owt TAKE . $1195 “mT me Jfansportation Offered FF 354. Need febuilt motor 875. | We Mean Br NORTH CHEVROLET Call after 6 Rochester, OL veieet ae 985 n Offe a7 | C , Isiness luick Suser oodward at 13 Mile as Fé pm 1 | 1951 CHEV . TESS gO NORTE Pa | ‘Ae SE ee Ruck Sper ts $298 vege gen SP, REAR | Tee ze AGERE ie Gue j { 1 cleara Wanted Used Care an ur" BLUE iy = | incoln Cosmo .....9205) Sixt. Rew wine eee) Serer me | seh aches deat tneeantn This he nr : ‘ owerglide > r. | ‘ t : or en nks. sts ocaar cans savers . "$2 Buick Roadmaster ¢ door # 805 sa, _siase. Sows ected tires, tint: | $825 | ' 50 coatine, ble. ‘corals — =o witty Lleol $10 le truck igh loading capacity. Fine horse of a ioral ne work - cp seen 2a) CARS. | "53 Buick Riviera 3 ¢ $s _tall_ Phone te or ' 1952 R fal i Ss | aries te hep A Ma: suse Eat Deve JEEP $375 ready to prove it. == - _ Ds ioe r ak cAI cor. sites CHR Patek nikon CONDITION $2 Buick Speci Chev. 4-door P.G. . x)E 284, after 4 pm. plow : "EALIFO "K = a Rs. ‘S9 uation oor. Power | oeeRS ee +1854 CONDITION lirdtp.,, R&H a ; Huds ae *, ee HYDRA. YouN a pl BORN! UVER | . en TO 1084 ) 184 FIREDOME ¥, Pow. , Dy'tlow udson Club Coupe. . $195 poo gyn gl ea PERFECT | And We wr the Price! Support Ye : __FE 29018 of FE 460 ryt | 56 made one 8 Hs | Ties "Fires. Sera sad heater Sits | Pontiac 2-do NORTH CHEVROLET Mone e Mean Just That port Your Local United Fund & nip Inte ‘os ee FOR coupe” Commenter iss aT ‘ Li OF sere $454) ne Mimcol 1100 ae ames Demos, COMMUN nin tom ews car or pickup ia tans incoln 4dr, Hydra. $395] Ph ot | . f ee etal omen #505 hon Texaco ee £ Beege OLI " ‘ 19 . off. Hurry! , ¢ e MOTORS ds dine ‘tera 4 vecvcesces. 8 OOS | cl DODGE TDR Wid, WAS 605, . R Bright Spot” ¢ 51 PONTIAC 4 rs Chrysler : Door Bid < rhenesg sieall NORTH clearance. pe 2 DR ! oma, BSN. Main, Rochester | COMMUNITY rer bate tana: a Jerome's. | 4 neat rine s 33 Base she | Ne 19 PM. ITY | ine 7 Re 1100 |: Olds-Cadil 4 REAL FINE BU 33 Plymouths 13)" . van ee a = iE SIERRA STA- ‘ | ‘Cc illac i = BUY 53 tysler V8 . alae MOTORS dition , > clean. ne oom | ass at Orchard Lak ‘ Bg Buicks (2) pees “1,150. tea\. vows. | ¢ 210 Orch FE 8-04 e $595 ga! pOlds. - Sharp : es | i DODGE CONV sae YOU | 10 Orchard Lake Ave. 7 88 |. | 49 tee, Sharp . | ge BE RE : : . Anas? os AM od — ; . REACH cAsH cus.) Poise Retail store as ge ee Where Your Customer Sends His Friend $a Fora ‘% Fe Pickup i Tyas ‘$0 OMC Van 9] l S S ' , ’ \ 118. Saginaw St. FE 4-4546 803 N. Main, R poy Na A od ochester | ' re Pu Manager to get this : | SES | : Pie gag ho oe h Classi- 4s st ae fied! Ads. Call FE28181.| ee mm: | RIEMENSC Tt : ; MENS HNEIDE ig a _| 232 S. Saginaw PE 29151 | bar Say afi > Gat i) yi 4 y Re yy v 3 4 7% sis oe if a re: - ia, 4 aR bs 4 : ¥ ae f ‘ the. : a >¥ A as ec ea p aie ore — yi = x i } r . Yh F | ; \ a t i j pees Sas , } f 7 / f Fes goa & jpn 2) * ea laiets , 4 f ‘ - { ; MT fs ge APE : rte wee ! . nh ‘ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1955 pi ® ee rte, ree | ON Today Marks 2nd Anniversary of TV’s Noisiest . a LaRosa Career Israel's population has approx-| : | . ee: ‘ ee hee in Westchester," an ayartment on : - : imately tripled since 1943 to more -- 100 : R a Pr es oe Sutton place, has considerable ‘all mavimtun seem! -- TOOY's Radio Programs -- |MORUSG Mave | Sea scs, (ener Margaret Truman WIR, (0) CRLW, (900) WWI. ae) -—*WCAR, (110) —WEYR, Cte) WIBK, (1000) WON, Gave Kee Growing - a 2 Has Own WV Show _— TONIGHT WJBK, News." Ghorr ) @:30—WIR. Voice of Agriclt | 9:90-—WJR, Mrs. é' tended Clearance ee ed Pee grat WHY, Pred W WEYZ, “Breaktant ‘Club Frank . Se | Fete | Bee ES wee] See trae | Arthur's Public Ouster CALE of | fceeom. (ses | Sb Bce |S ean te Bn ti toon ‘Fe Ran Bob lees W000 Me i Nixon ee = Ry wh i = Young Crooner 3 » P. Morgen . * em tw U TV’ ous. some Chase we News. hi | oy Ww. ; ‘News. Gente, Binge wean toms, Tom George By JACK O'BRIAN sed S 1.00 —WIR, Quest Howe | Wa0- WIR. Tennessee Grete Tas Wa Music see teise WIR Arthes Gedtrey| NEW YORK (INS) — Today is te Ul BER Bette | BEE akin | EAR See hn | EAE Govmas e™"! Ment tamous tn the history Of| hie fine high gelaty’ “noua ty , : ne : -. Tom oh . —_ —$$$$—$—$—$——— ny Every Set in WPON, News, Record ‘fon Mbeki, aoe Orvite WOAR. Gaftee with Clem Wear. Musie ‘othe air | modern American trivia, an event! Chesterfield—his old boss’ old YOUR ‘KITCHEN! | Good Working wa , e, Beatty WWJ, Bruce ~~ ee sel Wan deck Wi 11:00—-WJR,. Arthur * Sodtres that proved more fascinating than | sponsor. Nice ironic happy ending. | WXYZ, Sports. Top Town | WWJ, Bob Maxwell WWJ, Strike ft Rich global conniptions far beyond the SEE Condition wax gee Po news, Shexey Shorr outw. C7 cuuw. Georg Yume eall of front pages. a nifty, noisy Baseball Expert THE hay OF vege the 4 Record ms Mees, Sperts WISE. Hews, Gentile, Binge| WJBK. News, Tom George | throwback to the era of wonder WITH CUSTOM-BL i 3—10" Sperten Sa eg ae a oe alee Misses Big One CUPBOARDS Console ..... $14.50 |) Wank. News: Wicker storr| Wink Balan) win ‘Caer Wx¥E. Os od Wait Mxvn News, winter’ | Mt will be just two years ago) 17 Quiz Show 5 ig SPECIAL KITCHEN ge “Fey tates. | renmar womrme | SOE Star eS") EOE ESL wr | Re tr Hm wt CABINETS $100.00 ++ s+ 29,507) BARe seen Vendercose | aco —w gency oer eae ee sanan | 18ee WIE tae ‘Sikite | Arthur Godfrey fired the crooner | NEW YORK Baseball. whiz Up to 12 feet includes hard- 1-12” Zenith Ww Mickey Shorr ww, i: ww ute Parade 3, News by, ,Cederburg heard ‘round the world — Julius Patrick (Paddy) Keough of St ware. Estimates given on lots Record WXYZ, News. Pred Wolf | WXYZ, Ciub WXYZ, News, Winter Louis struck out last night on the ial Table Model. 29.50}, *e—-¥2. J. Carson W, Rooster Club CKLW. News, David News, Riddle LaRosa of 6 or more. ws . WWJ, You our Life Ww. Gentile, Binge WJIBK. News, Tom George} WJBK) Tom George $52,000 question bi 2-33" Gerembern- WY2, Semmy Kaye WAR. TBA WCAR. News WCAR, News | it was an amazing incident, + * * ‘ - ‘4 a, ‘ Coren...” 39,50 aac — a as ae ek eet |e en ae ee Pontiac Window Co. | i Smeets aV sore as a col tion prize on the CBS: ms I—12” Zenith T id vk ] ‘ ‘ Pp | mass psychosis or weuresis im- | television and radio giveaway show | 357 N. Cass Phone FE 5.3281 After 5 P.M. -- — —| volved, certainly a new insight | The $64,000 Question, me ..) : os Son Cental"... 3950 oday's Television Programs - -, riracensiniy's sew mig |The site Question "| pat Brunswick. - Programs furnished by stations listed im this column are subject to change without notice. vision personalities upon the | man, is the first loser at a prize — obts Model. . 39.50 |) ~ Cannel 2—WIBKTV Chanacl @WWETV Chane 7-WYETV Chame @—CKLWIV | toe tape tan bee ot Oo Ome A Limited Time in 1—16" Sentinel * | Jt was & tiny enough incident: | "He was asked what baseball Pontiac! 7 MS ph cae -+ 49.501) ronicurs Tv miGHLIGHTS | s:00—c) Wetneotay Aan ag 7:00—(4) Today. (2) Morning polling or ndhey ng the part | Player nate te record batting — : unts " } : Wallace; Show, ; Arthur Godfrey — instead average three different major mete 59.501 wre ne ny nt Ole, | “Bud” Smith vs. Jimmy Carter. |8:00—(2) Cartoon Classroom. ping amy don mad nt | league teams, \the names of the Effie Jones comedy. (9) Circle 9] (9) Theater. Drama TBA. (4)|8:25—(2) Detroit Newscast. Parker being the indeed very|*ems and the player's record 1—16” Motorola __ [| Theater. Gene Autry in Moun-| ‘This Is Your Life. Ralph Ed-|s:30—(2) Welcome Travelers. (1)| senior earbender Godtrey | “erage with each. of Shreveport, Le. pan 59.50 ee eee ee wards re-creates lite story: of} Wixie Wonderland. gang) in parece in- Keough identified Rogers Horns- 1—17” Teletone ; oo surprise guest. (2) 20th Century/s:ee—(4) Romper Room. (2)| cination toward the sensational | by as the player and the St. Louis EVANGELIST om ¢15—(7) My Story. “A Cowboy's! Fox Hour. George Sanders, Dana} Garry Moore. him to hurl Julius publicly | Cardinals, Chicago Cubé and Bos- Console ..... 44.50 || Lament,” (4) News. Paul Wil| Wynter, Robert Stack in|s38—-(2) Arthur Godtrey. (7) Re-| “4 1) CBS-TV onto the na-| ton Braves as the teams, has been advising 1—17” Zenith liams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff.| “Laura,” drama of man's pos-| quest Theater. —— He got .424 as Hornsby’s record and helping people 59.50 6:25—~—(4) Sports. Bill Flemming.| sessiveness that leads to mur-|9:55—(4) Faye Elizabeth. . — Ps average with the Cards, and. .389 wee : @ TV Weatherman. Dr. Ever der. . | 9300-4) Home. The Myearcld lad staggered | With the Braves. Stumped.on ‘the =e was 12 _ loge — (9) Jackie Show. | 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich. crue! world in| Cubs average, 3st—|f years old — with stond ... 69.50 |/¢:30—-(1) Dimeyland. “The Story|” Comedy, variety. (4) Mr. Die-|18:65—() News. ot ee Oe oe et 6, ae Tee eyed gue see $91 Aesbucsoder of the Silly Symphony” includ-| trict Attorney. DA traps rings |11:00—(7) Story Studio. (4) Ten-| 0 TUS. POs Cue ne) was 380. advise on every phase. Table Model... 79.50] im& three full-length cartoons, | of ters, | nessee Ernie. (2) Valiant Lady. | 7.999.090 radio-TV witnesses Two other contestants made the |} of life. * ae nee “The Kittens,” “The| introduces new Nat Cole record. | 11:15—(2) Love of Life. : : grade on the $16,000 question. 597 Franklin 1—21” RCA Old Mill,” “Ferdinand the Bull.” |9:45—(7). Don Wattrick. After 11:30—(4) Feather Your Nest. (2)| ALL NOT SERENE Don .E. Self Jr., 24-year-old 9 Road with stend ... 89.50 ]| (4) Eddie Fisher Show. Songs.| fight Search for Tomorrow. The impact of the story had a | physicist from El Paso, Tex., who -Fiderel 5-5152 . Beorrimarces - ; (2) Detroit Lions Quarterback. 10:00—(7) Film Playhouse Zach- 11:45—(2) Guiding Light. day's lag in landing. Jim Kil-|is working on Long Island, did . ae Many Others Van Patrick and Lions talk ary Scotte in “Wings of Danger.” 11:55—(7) News Ace. . et in his mythology category. : Two set couplers .. 1.95 || bout pro football. 5 North. THURSD. FTERN ice got tip on story ; _ ro Outdoor entenne kits, 6:45—(4) News Caravan. John OT ees ae, a¥ oon reported it; the ramifications fol- The Rev. Alvin B, Kershaw es 9.95 || Cameron : ning find beautiful: blonde mur- |1%:¢0—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (2) | lowed—the rector of the Holy Trinity Episco- FE mies ‘95 || 4:00-(9) The Lone Wolf. Louis| dered on New York-Florida train| Ladies Day. (4) Ding Dong) but strangely fascinating informa. | pal Church in Oxford, Ohio, made Hayward in “Boy Story.” (4)|' in “NorthHomicide Limited.”| School. tion that all was not serene grede in bie jazs catagury. Screen -Director's (4) Amos ‘n’ Andy. Kingfish |12:25—(9) Prayer. Sign On. family-like among the Godfrey) Self and the Rev. Mr. William Sagoyan's “A Midsum-| gets a dose of his own medicine | !#:30—(7) Beulah. (9) Story Book. | sang- mer Day Dream,” starring Kim| in “The Convention.” (2) I'm| (4) Hour of Shows. The first post Hunter, Don Hanmer, Keenan| the Law. George Raft in ‘Fall-|12:45—(9) Maggie Miggins. earned $360,000 for Julius. The | Radio & Television Wynn, Bea Benedaeret; story ing Star.” 12:55—(2) Girl Talk. - fiscal La Rosa year finishing at a young man who wants to get/19:38—(9) China Smith. Dan 1:00—(7} Charm Kitchen. (9)| 11:30 a. m. today adds another the marriage license bureau. {2)/ ture. (4) Traffic Court. Judge Q. Lewis. . book. : Set. FE 2-6967 Arthur Godfrey and His Friends.| kautman and juvenile prob-|!'3—2) Linkletter Houseparty.| je had been guaranteed Biwlelct Variety. lems. (2) Top Plays of °’S5. ets Show. News. (4) | $150,000 a year by Tom Rockwell, 1157 W. Huron St. [)7:2— MGM Parade. Excerpt! Drama TBA. $:00—(1) Stars on Seven. (2) The| Nant of Genera) Artiste Corp. from Greta Garbo’s “Anna/11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. Soupy| pig Payoff. (4) Ted Mack's whe ted to sentlarty sstvent Christie”; visit with Lena| Sales with comedy, music. (9)! Matinee. tachion inte the higher brackets SPARTON TV Horne; talk with Robert Taylor,| National News. (4)° News. Paill| 9:3 (2) Bob Crosby Show. (4) It} “MOM “inging citizens as Bing \ , Leon Ames, Clinton Sundberg in| Williams. (2) News. Jac LeGoff.| pays to Be Married. Crosby, Perry Como, Jo Staf- “The Amazing Mr. Nordill.”” (9) |11:15—(7) Premiere Playhouse. |s:¢0—(7) Heartthrob Theater. (4)| "rt Peasy Lee, Frankie Laine, Million Dollar Movie. Dermot} Jean Simmons in “Cage of| Way of the World. (2) Brighter| At this precise instant Julius is | pe Walsh, Kathleen Byron in “The; Gold." (9) Good Neighbor The-| Day. somewhere in Night of the Full Moon.” (4)| ater. John Emery in “Let's Live |3:15—(4) First Love. (2) Secret | mother on her } FR | 9 Father Knows Best. Betty be-! Again.” (4) Little Show. Leo| Storni. native Palermo; last ihe 5 comes sports queen for her! penn, Joe Mantel in “The Light |3:30—(4) World of Mr. Sweeney. | Sent his young i : smile rather than her tennis} ouch.” (2) Miss Fair Weather.| (2) On Your Account. same nostalgic tour. y | score in “Advantage to Betty"! Bette Wright. 3:45—(4) Modern Romance, fas a es: | with Elinor Donahue, Robert! 1:29—(2) Les Paul and Mary | 3:58—(9) News. oak ine | Young, Jane Wyatt. Ford. Music. 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Jus-|¢ eT. 8:00 — (1) Masquerade Party. | 11.95 «9 Nightwatch Theater.| tice Colt. (4) Pinky Lee, (2) | Como show—at $5, © Hi-Fi Make-up hides guests from panel |i ose toward in “The Scariet|, Sagebrush Shorty. off to Las Vag © Redie of guessers. (4) Television The- . 4:30—(4) Howdy Doody. (7) Auntie | be Paid $12,500 for Pimpernel. A weeks at Rancho Vegas, © Bene Rscerdon ater. Lillian Gish, Richard Kiley Dee's Rascals. cans, mia in “I, Mrs. Bibb,” story of een i Tonight. Steve Allen | 5:99(7) Mickey Mouse Club. (9) peng Rpg cine ~— | Reseed Players ator’s widow who succeeds variety. Dance Party. (4) Mr. fiscal year } © Inter-Comm. Systeme husband in’ office and is re- THURSDAY MORNING . | Presents. @) The Early Show, a lovely bang at the bank. © PA. Systeme sented by younger man who /|6:50—(4) Today's Farm Report, /5:38—(7) Mickey Mouse Club, (4) | HE’S IN THE MONEY : BI AKE SE TBA. (9) Howdy Doody. Julius now owns a fine home RADIO TV Jf ie tar: "sorane ‘vgn * 3 = Bai a) = 3149 W. H sc cis Cosa ts a sae ‘sau 3 SPECIAL iY FE 4.5791 eS ae. el 9 teens | | | | - : (2) vs Got a Secret. Panel quiz with ib Permit Complete LUBRICATION Garry Moore, host. 16 Bngiish poets, | George and nd : 1 Fite. ten y __@ | farewell ty Yy &§ , a 7 Tt BRAKE ADJUSTMENT 4 Brazil a INCLUDING PULLING $495 a For Factory Authorized | 3 gereen | WHEELS TO CHECK LINING : Model 147007, Cordeven Model 14T008, Grey & ivory B 3 Pe FE 53-4102 a all FE 41515 fis CY OWENS a CEV TV. 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But it | js contagious enough at that to be transmited by a handshake, or it can originate ‘from fear, cmuinee ment, shock, anger, sudden noise and looking at a picture of Marilyn Monroe, BIG TAX BITE If you think the war's over, go to a nightclub and get slapped with oe Okay, if ft isn’t the A-bomb | causirig floods; hurricanes and typhoons all over the world, what is it? _ It Truman were in office, he could be blamed. that's The Western world gained its bus, whose ships wallowed through one in 1493. It paid little attention for centuries, THE PONTIAC PRESS, _WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, ae : +7 ere : i an saline Gate pestaetion SOOM ~ Sawe delight, is returning for kicks. the T for 7 hn ae Se gine develops the incredible strength of 16,000 horses. forced ar sive them we. Shave wasn't a country in the world that didn’t have one running under sometimes violent conditions. The Model T in all probability is the most famous single piece of machinery ever made. Dealers fought for them with frenzy. The company's archives have Philip’ Van Doren Stern's “Tin Story of the Fabulous ord,” which Simon and Schuster has just published. It’s for car bafts, tinkerers and So Who’s Causing This Violent Weather? | SHINNER’S MARKET PINE. 5. .caccc oe Sides..........° 35° NO CHARGE FOR CUTTING SHINNER’S. BEEF FE 2-2931 2 North Saginaw ———— yielded Stern. much lore, includ- that 20 per cent tax bite. It came | in about the time of World War | 1 “WAFFLES TASTE JUST LINE HOME-MADE! As recently as 1900 the warnings | of Jesuits stationed at the Ob-| . servatorio of Belem, in Havana, I as a “war tax.” Whatever it's! were totally ignored by U. S. areas | name now is, it’s still one-fifth in the path of a tremendous blow. | more added to your bill, | As | Jimmy ' Petrillo’g union says it) much of the Texas coast was flat- | | belts at Jeast 50,000 U.S. musi-| tened. Marjory Stoneman Douglas | | cians out of work. is doing a book about the Carib- - , bean-born | Jerry D. Lewis’ book Dealer's monsters for Rinehart, | (published by Barnes) is | | Choice” SNEEZE STATISTICS a treasury of poker stories and Americans will catch half a bil-|lore which should appeal to any- lion colds this year, says the St. | body who ever bellied up to.a Louis cold-pill firm that makes’ a card table. . | Never knew till now what can } | I ! } be done with those 52 Devil’s Pasteboards. You can deal 2,598,- | 960 different combinations! You have one chance in a deal | and a quarter to get one pair; one in 20 to get two pairs; Ss on Sane ee 254 to get a straight; for four of a kind; for a straight flush 649,740 for a royal flus! Your deal. Convair’s F102, a delta terceptor just joining gf ij £ g Many more women than men the Kefauver Will Enter Ring It He Has Money-Support Kefauver had praise for Steven- .|80n and another potential rival for the nomination, Gov. Averell Har- | riman of New York. only the promise of some substan- tial financial and organization sup- | 25 MISTAKEN port to nudge him into the race He listed both as “forward- | the 1956 Democratic presiden- | looking Democratic leaders.” But he left the impression he regards os 2 ¢ himself just as capable of attain- Kefauver, who won some prima-| ing what he said should be his | but not the nomination in 1952, | party’s campaign aim—returning | 4 conference Monday | the executive branch to “liberal | up his mind whether Democratic leadership.” becomé an active candidate next | He said those Democrats are | year before the filing deadline for | “mistaken” who believe they will | early presidential primaries. have a comparatively easy time | :' electing a president if President | Cedar Wardrobe Regularly 59.95 Only $6 Down ° Lovely cedar wardrobe, 22x 362x68% inches. Has hanger bar and wrought iron hinges. Yes detightinthe mingling of oldond | Hie Jett the impression he hasn't} wT ee ee new jn wendertil Canada. And the fe jin sight te estimated minimum of| But Sen, Kerr (D-Okla) couldn't $200,000 he said would be needed | agree. He said he thinks the Demo- to finance an active race. He said | cratic’ nominee “could beat any Fe} other Republican.” He added that the chance Eisenhower will “‘per- mit himself to be forced into the | race is such a remote possibility | that speculation on the outcome | would be premature and inappro- | priate.” ie the nomination in 1952, said in an interview Kefauver won't get his * e¢ 6 support next year, He said he is} GOP Chairman Leonard Hall backing Adlai E, Stevenson, the | said in Philadelphia Monday that 1952 nominee, who is expected to Eisenhower may wait until just announce next month that he is| before the August convention to available again. announced his plans. 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