4 The Weather U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Partly cloudy, cooler. (Details Page 2) THE PONTIL a 117th YEAR kkkk EONES: MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1959 40 PAGES Key U.S. Satellite Litt-Off a.Success CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, tAP) — A powerful Thor-Able rocket carrying a 142-pound ““paddle- | wheel” satellite roared aloft today. in an apparently successful | launching. The Air Force said all three stages ignited properly. A brief announcement 15 min- utes after’ the spectacular blast-off said: “The second and third Stages of the United States three-| stage ee able satellite Jaunch-' Tax Talks Fold; Solons Go Home Will Return on 3-Day Week; Hint People May Vote .on Issue From Our News Wires LANSIN G—The Legislature started a part time work schedule today as a result of a wide open breach between the House and Senate on the state’s tax puzzle. bd * * There even was a_ suggestion the people could be asked to settle the revenue muddle in view of collapse of tax negotiations vesterday. Most legislators headed home last’ tight and today because the thing that was keeping them in Lansing—talks on taxes— folded. House members, both Republi-| cans and Democrats, insist some! form of business profits tax -must; be adopted. Senate. Republicans. with a 22-12 vote control, said they ‘“‘don’t want any part of any, kind of a business or corporations! income tax.’ The reaffirmed Senate stand, ; just when it appeared settlement might he near, lative turmoil. * * * “It is a form of obstinacy that is beyond comprehension,’ said Rep. Louis Cramton ‘(R-Lapeer). referring to the Senate position) there should be no new taxes on business. “I've never seen anything like | it in my life.” the 83-year-old: veteran lawmaker said. © DEMAND BUSINESS. TAX House GOP floor leader Allison, Green (Kingston), said negotia- tions were collapsed “‘at least for now” and that a tax package! without some form of business! levy would not get through the | lower chamber. | * x * | The House had previotisly- ap-| proved a package including a) surtax on business profits. House speaker Don Pears (R- Buchanan), said Senate action was a “great surprise." However, there were indications | the apparent united front shown, by Senate Republicans wasn't’ solid. a | Sen. Clyde Geerlings (R-Hol- land), chariman of Taxation Committee. said he! “reluctantly” offered to try to get! (Continued on Page 2, Col. &) Cloudy and Cool on Saturday; Warmer Sunday Cloudy and cooler with occasion- al showers ending tonight is ihe weatherman’s outlook for the Pon- tiac area. The low tonight will be near 62. Tomorrow will be partls Cigudty and a little cooler with a high of 78. For the next five days temper- atures are expected to average near the normal &2 high and 6% low, A warming trend is likely Sunday with cooler temperatures and possible showers returning. about Tuesday or Wednesday. In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature recorded preceding 8 a. m..was 65. At 1p. m. the mer- cury registered 76. '6812 triggered legis- | the Senate. ing vehicle lanched at the Atlan-: ‘tic missile range has been fired.” kk * . If successful, the satellite could! open a new era of larger, more, advanced space research vehicles. Launching time was 9:23 a.m. Four minutes later’ the Inter- national Telephone & Telegraph- Mackay monitoring station at Southampton, N.Y., picked up signals frem tke apace teaveler Shock Kills Stung a by Hornets A 30-year-old Keego Harbor con- struction worker died of shock yesterday afternoon after being stung by hornets while at work in Drayton Blaine: William F. Stephens, of 2857 Knowlson St., a member of an Oakland County Road Commission ditch-cleaning crew, was operating a grade-all mac hine when it dis- turbed a hornet's nest, Township Police said. Stephens was stung “a num- ber of times’ while getting away from the ditch, fellow workers told police. “He truck,” went around said John Lawrence. of Drake Rd. Walled Lake. “and then went around the front and got into the cab. He acted behind the ‘real sick and laid down on _ the ‘front seat and died.” He was pronounced dead at the scene by Oakland County Coroner Dr. L. G. Rowley. Rowley said Stephens apparently had suffered. shock from the bites. x * * Stephens is survived by his’ wile, \Thelra; a daughter, Sandra Anna, ‘and a son, Theodore, both at hodie., News Flash GOTEBORG, Sweden ‘P—Inge- mar Johansson said today that he wanted a full account of his | | earnings from the June 26 bout with Floyd Patterson by Sunday or there would be né return bout on Sept. 22 i | The new heavyweight cham. | pion made his demand, which he said was an ultimatum, as he returned to his hometown from yesterday’s secret meeting with Bill Rosensohn of New York. promotor of the June fight, in Paris, HIGGINS LAKE State Conservation today approved an expanded | special deer season despite some. vocal opposition at an earlier hearing. Deer experts estimated the liberalized season would wm — The | nearly double the kill of does and fawns — from 26,862 last vear to 45,970 Soy year. sumers Power Co. street lights brightest nighttime commercial De Re ee ee ee ae in Today's Press EPRI BOC WEE aR Comics... ee .Fditorials oo... oe... 4 Farm and Garden | Markets _.. ae Obitwaries ............ Eniowiee 10 Special... nec stews. fl Sports ........60eee. ase SET Thenters (0... eee 28-30 TV and Radio Programs... .39 Wilson, Earl ..............5. 39 Women's Pages .....,...17-19 s Waterford noon | -er than required for Commission | LOOKING NORTH ON SAGINAW — New Con- street turn. downtown Pontiac into one of the: igan. This. view looks ‘northward towards the busi- The station classitied the signals as good. -| ~ The called Ex-) plorer VI if it orbits, contained a ‘flying laboratory to investigate, many mysteries of space. i \ * * * The three-stage - rocket was) ,aimed at a highly elliptical orbit | ‘that would take it as far as 277000 | imiles into space and as close as| '160 miles to the earth. Because of this eecentric | course, the. National Aeronautics | ; and Space Administration said it | | will be hours before it can be de- | | fermired whether the satellite | achieved orbit. The announce- | ment will be made in Washing- ton. satellite, fo be s Fifteen Bee experiment de- viees were rammed “into the| spheroid- shaped satellite which is 26 inches in diameter and 29 | inches long. Its-main mission was WASHINGTON (AP) | —Explorer VI satellite is | in orbit and will remain aloft for more than a year, the National Aeronautics | and Space. Administration announced today. ta study the radiation belts that surround the earth, Knowledge of this potentially deadly radiation is a key to manned space travel. 4 SOLAR VANES Dynamite Truck BI + e x . = TOWN IS SHATTERED — Dynamite loaded in a truck caught fire, and in a Mighty blast exploded in Roseburg, Ore. Eight per- sons were killed and many injured. This picture was taken during the earls The satellite was called a oe i dlewheel because of four vanes designed to poke out its sides, These paddles were designed to convert the sun's rays into elec- trical energy to power radio trans- ‘mitter batteries. If successful, wv |ture deep space probe rockets wi employ this device to send "aia sol: from’ t ] mation back from millions. of miles in space * * * Launch time was 9:23 a.m. The 90-foot rocket accelerated) rapidly. _ Affer about 30 seconds, it arced high in the sky and spurting-a brilliant tail of fire. All three stages were designed to ignite in about 4! minutes, | sending ie satellite hurtling into space at 22.000 miles an hour. This is 4,000 miles an hour fast- the normal earth orbit. The third-stage rocket was ex- ‘pected to go into grbit along wih ithe satellite itself. | A five-pound ‘kicker’ -rocket rode at the base of the satellite. ‘Lie Test Clears Doctor s Wife Mrs. Nothing of Husband's Death, Police Say The mule of SB Wi ‘as tiac doctor ‘connection wi husband after she voluntarily took: a lie detector test yesterday after-| ‘noon at the If needed, this was designed to be | fired by a ground signal. jtists planned to use it only if they! ‘determined that the sateyite, }would burn up in the earth's. at- imosphere The kicker would add 50 to 100 ‘miles to the payload’s Tow point. The satellite was expected to make only one orbit every 12 hours because of the long | journey into space. This com- ‘pares with an average of two hours for ee — palenites: lining Saginaw areas in Mich- Scien- | at Judson street. Post. Lt. William er of the tective bureat Carleton Wa mu ith the sl Redford State Police; Nesbitt, Pontiac 1, said the attractive! / 44-year-old blonde Ww Erick cleared rdered Pon- of any aying of her command- Police de- ife of Dr.| Joan, ‘cleared 100 per cent.” Nexbitt said that “nothing about: nothing” knew2 | the murder. Dr. Warric “kK, TI, Mrs. was ‘shot by a gunman July 24 in his office at 2412 E, Huron St. the following night at General Hospital. Mrs. Pontiac Was! | of morning hours. Several blocks of this lumber center were It’s completely wrecked, many homes burned. Firemen w fire from jumping into the resid the Umpqua river. ea, 4 a ills windows over a wide area | | | | AP Wirephoto” | shattered and | ere successful in preventing the | ential area on the west side of Not Principle but Money Anti-Flooding Hopes Dim By. PETE LOCHBILER . ‘to prevent basement flooding. t there's little possibility that, the plan will be made a reality, ‘in the foreseeable future, accord-| ing to City Manager Walter K.! Willman. Why not? “Where are we going to get the $8,723,000?"" is parry to that question. There® not enue reason to! | Warrick Applaud Ike He died - Willman’s | jthink that voters would approve a Tee al way to raise the money. | Pontiac voters, he pointed or /haven't approved a genera igation bond issue since th |hospital construction bonds. Cone ‘sition to bond issues has been _ strong since then, sometimes bit-' | ter, < bd * * At one point in the history efforts to improve the city’s drains Labor Reform Supporters : S Appeal | ligation. From Our News Wires | WASHINGTON — Supporters of tough labor reform! ginning with Pontiac Creek, we Warrick told police she legislation said today President Eisenhower's nation-| 'should begin with the Clinton’ Riv- was unaware of the physician's wide TV-radio appeal should provide enough votes for financial Revenue an estimated transactions. agents repor tedly in the Huron street office Mrs. Warrick said her (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) New Lights Brighten Downtown ness district from the middle of S. Saginaw street The overhanging . fluorescerit lamps are the brightest ever produced for street lighting, the power company says, and Pontiac was the first city to install them, Internal found three-qtarters of million dollars in stocks and bonds —— a husband passage of the bill. Airport Fund Nearly Ready State Lawmakers OK Michigan’s Share in Construction Expenses Funds for Pontiac's $356,000 ex-. pansion program at Pontiae Muni- cipal Airport next year were virtually in the bag today. The House in Lansing completed legislative approval yesterday of a $89,000 allocation to Pontiac. The bill went to the governor for signing. The money represents the total ; amount which the city sought from the state ‘n order te attract the maximum amount of federal aid for an expansion program recommended by the Michigan Department of Aeronautics. The federal aid formula consists of 50 per cent federal funds, 25 percent from the state and 25 per cent local funds. The City Commission has al- ready promised to put up _ its, $89.000' next year and Coneress, included $178,000 for Pontiac in et Airport appropriation this year. The 1960 expansion plans ate in the hands of the Federal Aviation | Administration, which controls re-' lease of the federal funds. t+ * * ° Big items for 1960 include con- struction of a $137,000 apron for parking, loading and unloading ‘aircraft in front of the new iterminal building and a 1,500-foot lconcrete extension to the main ‘east-west’ runway. bringing it. to |5,500 feet in length. Advocates of a | milder bill, however, said the address *would boomerang and help, flow of storm waters to slow them because it injected: partisanship into the issue. x *« * In the 15-minute speech, Fisen- hower called on Congress to e- spond to an “overwhelming na- tional demand” for a stringent re- form law that would end the “na- tional disgrace’ of vacketeers, of | causes the flooding,"' ithere was an attempt to finance: Warrick Knows: The city has an $8,723,000 plan general obligation bond issue for| improvements on a special aSSeSs-| that much and there's no other| ment -basis, Up for a consideration was a ‘| proposal to tunnel Pontiac * Creek; 954| around downtown. That was in 1951 iwhen the cost was estimated os $750,000. f | Assessments were to be spread | over the entire drainage area ' served by the creek, the north. | west quadrant of the city, | More than 300 property ‘overflowed the old city hall, ‘istering the most protests en | against a single proposal. Intimidated city commissioners |quickly shelved the project and have never dusted it off. * * * “In the first place,’ says : Will- man now, ‘‘a project of that mag- nitude should be a city-wide ob- I ree. ‘In the second place, first things ishould come first. Instead of be- rer,” which is the outlet for the city’ s storm waters.” A plug or bottle-neck In the Clinton River's outlet causes the all over the city, he pointed out. “Eventually the storm waters) start backing up and that's what he explained. ; It is conceded, of course. that focal flooding is usually caused by local bottlenecks in the storm drain System. * * * “But if you eliminate one bottle- i Physicians 32 in Hospitals Following Blast in Oregon Town Explosion Ruins Blocks | of Warehouses, Stores in Business District ' ROSEBURG, Ore. () — A dynamite truck parked be- iside a burning building ex- ploded with mammoth force early today. At least ‘eight persons were known | dead. The blast shattered build- ‘ings and spread a raging |fire over /area, the downtown Hospitals held 52 persons, at i least three of them critically hurt. and _ blood plasma ‘were flown from nearby Grams Pass. The hospitals reported three bodies. A mortuary said it had four bodies, and fragments ef at feast one, and perhaps two others. Only two, Asst. Fire Chief Roy “McFarland and Herry Carmichael ‘were identified. * ® 5d The -blast and fire wrecited six blocks of warehouses, small bus- iness places and residences. Debris was spread through an- other six blocks, including the heart of the business district. The fire, fought by men and "| equipment from as far away as Eugene, 75 miles north, was con- trolled four hours after the biast came at.1:20 a. m. There was a crater 50 feet wide and 20 feet deep where the truck, from Pacific Powder Co., Tenino, Wash., had _ stood. ek we ; The truck blew up moments after a fire siren had sounded an alarm for a blaze at the Gerret- sen Building Supply Co., beside which the driver had parked the truck while he got a cup of coffee. KNOCKED DOWN The driver, George Rutherford, Chehalis, Wash., said he was walking back toward it and was knocked down by the blast. He was hospitalized, with injuries be- lieved not critical. Volunteer fireman Tony Shukle isaid he was knocked down, blocks away. “There was fire all over," he said, ‘“‘the big one and probably four or five small ones.”’ For‘’a time “there was fear that crooks and other eqrrupt elements neck, the storm waters simply will’ 4 Propane gas storage tank might in labor unions. The President gave examples of “blackmail” picketing, sec- ondard boycotts and land” cases, After each one, he looked directly into the TV lens and declared .sternly, “f want that sort of thing stopped, So does America.’ Ile praised a Reps. Phil M. Landrum and Robert P, Griffin (R-Mich) as “a good start toward a real labor reform law. He also pointed out (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) bill proposed Hurricane Dot Vents -: Fury on Kauai Islan HONOLULU (AP) — A howling ‘hurricane turned the enchanted movie island of Kauai into a mass Lof devastation today. Tt blew down houses, unroofed others, knocked out contmunica- tions and power, flooded sections, left roads impassable,| | cut. water supply to some com- munities, * * * The rare mid - Pacific storm,) known as Hurricane Dot, swirled) up on Kauai from the south, hit it with 75 miles-an-hour winds and torrential rain, and moved north out to the opefi sea where’ it began to- disintegiate. Damage \coyld run into millions. & é ; Fe * ° “‘no-man’s | by | (D-Gar some: start backing up again at the next ‘bottleneck down the line,’ Will- man continued. “The way to remove bottlenecks is to start at the Clinton River outlet and work upstream.” Convinced that this philosophy was wise, city commissioners authorized an engineering study to improve the Clinton and Pontiac Creek several years ago. j The city’s engineering consult- ants—Jones, Henry ahd Williams! of Tolede—came. up with a $12,000 Pepert ™m 1957. recommends widening, ntening and deepening the) two channels and embodies the! 1951 suggestion—tunnel the two: irivers around downtown- Pontiac. a | Pontiac Creek and the Clinton) do a lot of meandering in- the downtown area, the report noted, sjand as a result the flow of storm | waters is slowed to a snail's pace. | Cut out the meander, divert the (Sompinued on Page 2, Col. 5) ‘Warren Store Robbed | DETROIT \®) — — A lone gun. man robbed a Warren Super. market of $5,000 in cash and $500 in checks last night. Mrs. | Bernice Evans, 22, of Warren, fi: cashier at the supermarket, said | the ‘man pulled open the door of | | ntialat her check-cashing cage and de- manded money. Pe | ) explode but firemen cooled it with ‘water. * * ¢At the height of the fire ‘six-sfory Umpqua Hotel's 65 guests * .and employes were evacuated. The manager, Dick Smith, said that at his home, windows were blown out. For Real Fun on Your VACATION ara Call: The \ Press Ciredtation Dept., FE 28181, and your paper - ee Se fiom, —_ the two miles away, ee sy; = SY =. . “ em X . qe ee "Mr. K. Should See Military Bases’ McElroy, Soviet Official © Disagree on Frem Qur News Wires WASHINGTON — The Soviet am- then will go back to Gettysburg bassador doesn't include U.S. mili tary bases in the list of “many, Across the ocean, European na- AYIA YW - THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 7.1950 | 1 | | Trip Agenda’ morning appointments. But he) -'for an indefinite stay, pleasant and interesting places” tions concerned over the prospect Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev jot a “big two” approach to world is likely to see in America. ‘affairs began a round of talks to- Secretary of Defense Nei] H. Mc- day designed to jnsure that their Elroy said Thursday at a news interests will be ‘protected. conference .it would be construc-; U. S. Under Secretary of State tive for Khrushchev to see some Livingston Merchant arrived in of the bases during his tour here!Rome to assure the Italian govern- next month * * ® McElroy said he knew the Pre- Khrushchey will not have the ef- mier had said he had no wish to fect of dividing see American bases. But McEl- roy added he thought it was pos- sible that Khrushchev might want Foreign to change his mind. ‘ment that the coming exhange of ‘visits between Eisenhower and the world into | 'two spheres of influence. At the same time, West German Minister Heinrich Von ‘Brentano was preparing to report) Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Men- to Parliament on the situation. Re- shikov had a prompt reply. Khrush- ports in Bonn said Chancellor Ade- chey “doesn’t -usually change his nauer’s cabinet is seeking a pledge ~ the Eisenhower-Khrushchev talks will cause nip weakening of mind.” Menshikoy said. ithat * x * McElroy, in response to a news. the man's question, said the purpose Jaywalker of having Khrushchev visit bases would be more to inform than to impress. He said some American) 4 . officials like himself have wen With 3] Tickets concerned" that a Soviet miscalcu-, . jation of U.S. military power cain, Goes to ] ail result in Soviet military action. | Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn) today proposed that Eisenhower invite: Khrushchev to take a cruise on) the atomic submarine Nautilus dur- ing his U.S. visit. * * * “It would be a most exhiarat- ing, enjoyable and challenging ex- perience.” Gore told a reporter. Western position in Berlin. mad mosquitoes,’ said the jay in jail. | Kolman_ Shklnik, “It would be both recreational Crosséd a street against the light. and informational for him to cruise, A Policeman handed him | in the Gulf Stream off our beau- €f ticket, his 31st for jaywalking tiful coast on the Nautilus.”’ x * * Eisenhower is expected to take Khrushchev to his secluded Camp David retreat in Maryland for in- formal talks at some point during the Russian leader’s visit next the Lie Test Clears Wife nein situs wig tana. Of Murdered Doctor tive plans for the Camp David) Judge John D. Watts. DETROIT «— ‘Policemen are walkingest man in town yesterday as he was sentenced to 10 days 77, a white- bearded retired butcher, was on his way to court to account for ‘three jaywalking tickets when he isince 1955. | Unable to pay a $100 fine, Shkol-' ok was we pil by “« Elizgbeth and Philip i Expect Baby in ‘60° | ‘Hungry’ Youth Arrested Today © in Burglary A 17-year-old youth was held for investigation of burglary this, morning after admitting to Pontiac | door of the East Side Market at 226 E. Pike St. in an attempt to break into the building. c * * Larry Rose, who told police he, lived with his father at 169 E. Pike St., was arrested early today. Someone passing by the market heard the youth pounding on the store’s front door and reported the incident to police. The youth, however, did not | realize how much of a racket he was making, for Rose is a deaf mute. He was taken into custody by Patrolmen James‘ Bachelor and Raymond Dickinson as_ he store. Rose was questioned at the Pub- lic Safety Building by the officers. The patrolmen wrote out their queries and Rose replied on paper. the store because he ‘‘was hun- gry. “I knew it was wrong,’ wrote. Pa i" “tl Support lke’s Appeal for Labor Reform (Continued From Page One) that his still were before Congress, Eisenhower rejected as too weak a moderate Senate-passed bill and an even milder measure approved by the House Labor Committee. He said neither ‘'will really do the job—to curb the abuses the Amer- ican people want to = see rected.” * * * gave sharply different address on the House labor reform |showdown expected next week. Chairman Graham A. Barden '(D-NC) of the House Labor Com-| mittee, who favors the Landrum- Griffin measure, said the “‘situa- tion looks very good"’ for approval | of that bill. Landrum said, “I think we are going to win.” Griffin said the speech would help ‘win a bat- tle that the American people .. - ' cannot afford to lose.” But Rep, Stewart L. Udall (D- Ariz), a leading backer. of the Excavating Co. cor- a The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — Dirt is flying along,.poth sides of 13-Mile road near Birmingham’s new Groves Junior-Senior High School as work- men install a gas line and sani- tary sewer. ’ By next week the six-inch Con- \sumers Power Co, gas line should ibe in place, according to foreman Maurice Morneau, and will run Police that he hammered on the) Backers of the rival measures along the south side of 13-Mile assess- ments of the effect of Eisenhower's road from a point just west of the school, to Cranbrook Village subdivision. The line will serve homes in the subdivision as well as the new school which is seheduled to open this fall. iroad. workmen are _ digging, trenches for an 18-inch arm of the ‘Evergreen interceptor sanitary ‘sewer. It will run from Kennoway icicle east to Pierce street with ;completion planned by October, ac- !cording to Bill Beaker, field en- gineer for the Nelson M. Sharrow Workmen Installing Gas for New Groves School own recommendations: lin the American Recreation So- ciety, National Recreation Assn. and the Recreation Assn. of Michi- gan. Martin will assume the posi- tion on Sept. 8 . State Tax Talks Fold So Solons Go Home On the other side of 13-Mile (Continued From Page One) a 1 per cent corporate profits tax |through the GOP caucus. | It was Geerlings who also said \legislators have discussed an elec- ition for Michigan voters to decide which tax they would take. Michigan residents voting: on a list of taxes ‘‘is within the realm of possibility,”’ he said, but added that an income tax would not be on that list. SET 3-DAY WEEK The Senate voted to meet every crouched in the doorway of the, 4 hands” j labor committee bill, said the Ei- senhower speech ‘‘plays into our) sue of reform legislation. | Fchief author of the Senate bill,,olic Church in Beverly Hills. Monday, Wednesday and Friday Plans are well under way forjuntil there was thi by making a partisan is-'the annual fashion show to be werd thee. tak presented by the Altar Society of Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass), Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Cath- ‘on. It was expected that a full ‘Senate would be present only on Wednesdays while negotiators worked on the tax problem. He said mate union movement.” . AP Wirephote SHE’S VERY HAPPY — A Buckingham Palace spokesman in . London today announced that Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip were very happy to announce that the Queen was expecting her third child early in 1960. Prince Charles is 10 and Princess Anne is 8. The entire royal family Jeft: Thursday for a vacation in Balmoral Castle in Scotland. The Queen only returned Aug. 2 from her Sea- way trip. LONDON ‘AP) — Queen Eliza- and Princess Anne Aug. 15, 1950.) jspeeded up, the report recom-) tubes, each 10 feet in diameter. | | | i beth Il is going to have another Queen Elizabeth's coronation was taJks are emerging from U.S.-So-| viet negotiations on arrangements . for the Khrushchev visit, which | begins Sept. 15. < i Officials said Eisenhower and ‘Khrushchey would have a much, better chance to get down to brass’ tacks in a discussion of cold war) problems in the relaxed, private) atmosphere of the mountain re-| treat than at White House meet- ings. . * * * | President Eisenhower's close-as- social@'said today he appears to, be in good physical shape for his' fo i round cold-war | meetings with. world leaders. The. chief executive heads for; (Continued From Page Gne) x : : | - baby. “her third, probably in Jan- gave her $55 monthly for house- uary or February. hold expenses, | A Buckingham Palace spokes- Police were still without a m0-, man announced today that a royal . . j tive or suspect in the two-week baby is on the way, disclosing the’ old case. The man who found the 33-year ld Queen was pregnant wounded doctor in his office short-| during her long and tiring tour ly after he was shot, Lloyd J. of Canada this summer. | Tunnell, 53, of Waterford Town:| The spokesman said the Queen Ship, was cleared after taking ajhad rejected suggestions. that she truth serum test Sunday. lcalled off the tour because “‘she| Police said that hundreds of “knew the disappointment it would leads are being checked out in /have caused.” | an effort to solve ‘thé baffling The birth wil] be the first in. case. 2 more than 100 years to a reigning aoe . | British sovereign. Queen Victoria “Right now. we're not far from gaye birth to Princess Beatrice where we started,’ Nesbitt said. jn 1857, | j | June 2, 1953. The Queen returned to London Sunday from Canada. She called in her doctors, Sir John Weir and Lord Evans, the next day. Only then was her pregnancy con- firmed, the spokesman said. Since then she has spent nearly al] her time resting. After her doctors confirmed that she was pregnant, the Queen stayed close to home — Bucking- ham Palace, But Thursday she left for Balmoral Castle, her home in the Scottish highlands, with her husband, Prince Philip, and the children. his Gettysburgh farm today to be- =e gin an extended vacation. He de-. Two State Police officers. Sgt. parts for Europe later this month Lynford Smith of the East Lans-| for talks with allied heads of’ gov-'ing Post and Det. John Olepa of ernment before he meets Soviet'the Redford Post, joined in the Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. (search for the killer of Dr. War- ‘* * * rick. Eisenhower is scheduled to in-| Six detectives in the Pontiac Po- terrupt his vacation for a 24-hour |lice Dept. are working full-time; return to Washington to keep somejas the search for the killer con-) Monday afternoon and Tuesday tinues. Sentenced to Prison © | The Queen was smiling as she boarded the train for Scotland. * She appeared fargfrom exhausted \despite the rigors of her 45-day Prince Charles, heir to the ‘throne, was born Nov. 14, 1948 Anti-Flooding Hopes Blea. Costs Appear Prohibitive (Continued From Page One) ‘waters through big, gently curved tunnels, and the flow would be mended. The Clinton tunnel would be from a point south of Orchard Lake road and west of Grand Trunk Railroad to a point north of the municipal parking lot north of Auburn avenue and east of S. Saginaw street. The tunnel shouid consist of two) according to the report. For 1,200) feet of double tube tunnel, it said, the city would have to spend $1- 498,000 in construction costs. | $108,200 for right-of-way and) $191,400 to revise existing sewers, or a total of $1.707,600. The report also recommends that the city install closed double box concrete conduits—each box 9-feet-G-inches square—at each end of the tunnel, 1,900 feet on the east side and 2,400 feet on the west side. The total cost for the conduits— including construction, right-of-way and sewer revisions—is estimated at $1,376,400. ‘ The report would treat Pontiac Creek in similar fashion. The creek shold be divertéd through a double tube tunnel (each tube 10 feet in diameter) between a ‘to Chicago. ing birth, the palace spokesman. said: ‘‘Her Majesty and. Prince Philip are very happy about it.” The Queen has canceled all public engagements. She called off her visit to Ghana, which was to have taken place in November. A new royal baby will change] the line of succession to the Brit-' ish throne. | Princess Margaret, the Queen's’ tour of Canada that also took her|point west of Oakland avenue and inorth of Lafayette avenue to a | After announcing the forthcom-'point east of Perry street in the vicinity of School street, the re- port said. , Total cost for 1,300 feet of tunnel would be $1,464,900, the report estimated. - Double box conduits—running 900 feet east of the tunnel and 3,500 feet west of it—would cost another $1,146,500, the report figured. Conduits and tunnels would relieved of the Pontiac Creek flow for about- 1,900 feet. * * bg would trim 2,000 feet off the dis- tance that river travels in its pres- ent loop through the downtown business district. By diverting the two streams around the business district, ‘‘the present stream bed can be re- claimed: and future development of the areas will be freed from the restrictions imposed by open stream channels,” the report stated. warned that the Maat eee He said he tried to break into!measure might cause a congres- {sional deadlock that would kill an ireform legislation, he: measure would “wreck the leeit the The fashion show will be di. | The House took no immediate rected by the St. Joseph and action in line with the Senate's St. Michael Guilds of the church. decision to meet only three days The show is to be held at the a week. oa Country Club Sept. The rapid fire developments ~oe occurred after Sen. Frank | | | Beadle (R-St. Clair) told news- | Chairman of the event is Mrs. {Richard J, Egger of 995 Canter-- men the GOP caucus “is not |bury Rd., Birmingham, and Mrs. interested in anything in the James J. Stone of 1480 S. Bates nature of a corporate profits |St.. Birmingham, is co-chairman.’ tax.” | Tickets for the show will go on . ‘ . 8 Such a tax was a key in one The Clinton River tunnel alone sale in about a week, said Mrs. : wee . Eeser, major possibility the six-man , : House-Senate negotiation commit- | ; ; ; tee Ww S ying. | Six Beverly Hills families from. © was st . sk * week at the YMCA Family Camp the Congregational Chugch of Bir-) ‘mingham have returned from a The statement blew the lid off what had been a quiet day in the capitol. inear Silver Bay on Lake George in upper New York State. W ah tars ae “y ac They are the C. Phillip Bartlett Jan. 14,” said Rep. T. John ‘family of 15911 Lauderdale St.: Lesinski (D-Detroit), chief nego- |the Clair Du Valls of 15920 Lauder-'tiator on the House team ‘dale; the Robert W. Collins family, | , 15921 Lauderdale; Donald Conrads, _ “We're all done until the 16155 Beverly Rd.; Frank Spitz-- Semate comes to its senses,” he nagels, 16136 Wetherby St.: and. said. Lesinski had just stalked the Jack Marshall family of 5575} angrily from the fifth conference Westwood Lane. | committee session. Atter Wite’s Death A 20-year-old estranged Pontiac father, who admittedly forced his * wife into a death ride last month, today was sentenced to Jackson Prison for 4 to 14 years after serving aS his own attorney and telling a tearful story of vain at- tempts of reconciliation. Oakland County Circuit Judge William J. Beer imposed the sen- tence upon Delbert Zimmer, of 219 Willard St., after Assistant Prose- cutor Jerome. K. Barry Jr. ‘was granted a motion setting aside The Weather Foll U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy and cooler with eccasienal shewers iteday. ending tonight, high teday 86, lew io- night 62. cooler, high 78. Southeasteriy winds at 8-15 miles, shifting te westerly nerthwesterly this evening and becomin at 8-15 miles temight oad nertherly te- merrow. Teday in Pentiac iia temperature preceding # am At 8 am = Wind velocity 10 m ph Direction—Southeast. . Sun sets Priday at 7:45 pm Sun rises Saturday at § 31 am Moon sets Friday at § 20 pm Moon rises Saturday ai obs am Downtown Temperatyres 65 6 am 6 liam 7 am ' 6 12m am 68 lpm Sam 7 10 a 73 Thursday in Pen tiae (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature - wate os -s Lowest temperature 5 ey “ Mean temperature kes 76 Weather—-Sunny ' # One Year Ago in Pontiae Highest temperature ......... Ls] Lowest temperature 66 Mean temperature)... ........... 74 Highest and Lewest ‘Temperatures This Date in #6 97 im 1941 Yegrs ie emerrow partly cloudy and - on the 76 lishing charge leveled against | 48 in 1684 f "Ge Marayeine Ye 63 “have found a better way.” Zimmer's January passing bad checks. Barry said that, in light of the accident, Zimmer was a bad pro- | probation for, ; i] bation risk. - ; Zimmer's wife, Sophia, 17, was: jkilled July 30 after Zimmer, a former mental patient, dragged: her from her apartment at 226 S.! Parke St. and minutes later, crashed his new car into another at the intersection of Judson and- South Paddock streets. After relating his 20-minute story of how he tried to convince his: ‘wife to return to him, Zimmer broke down on the witness stand describing the night of the fatal accident. He admitted he had drunk four bottles of beer, ran a stop sign,: and was driving nearly 60 m.p.h. in a 25 mph. zone before the ‘crash. He said he couldn't apply the brakes when he saw the second car approaching “‘‘hecause I was unfamiliar with the new car.” He told how he cried, ; : : please let my wife live” after pull-/°! the Pontiac Area United Fund. i The announcement was. made ing her body > ; : . y from thereat: today by Leonard Lewis, presi- Today's prison sentence was dent of this year’s UF campaign. original uttering and pub. - HOWARD SUTTON Name Director f UF Promotion Howard Sutton Chosen Public Relations Chief for Pontiac Drive 9 oJ Howard Sutton. of 6149 | him and his wife last year. Bar. | of the Michigan State University | Ty said he didn't know whether | School of Journalism, will be | the manslaughter warrant against Zimmer for the fatal ac- cident would stand. Zimmer sobbed and wiped tears from his eyes as he told how he “partially forced” his wife into the car “because I was afraid if I stayed around her place the police would arrive and arrest me as a parole violator.” He had been or- blicity and promotion of the tiac Area United Fund. fund is a central fund- organization for 55 health, recreational and welfare agencies throughout North Oakland County. While attending MSU, Sutton was the recipient of the Harry Suffrin advertising award, business man- D4 es 73\dered by his probation officer, |ager of the Michigan State News, hh Mem iB. 6% i, | Clarence Simuel, to leave his wife|received. the’ A. A. Applegate 5 Ae 81 ¢ alone. Journalism scholarship, and was . * % 63; Under cross-examination Barry|accepted as a member of Alpha 8 Omaha. 8i 8 asked Zimmer: “Did you ever|Delta Sigma, national advertising ° — 4 4 .#2\threaten to kill your wife?" fraternity. 8 Seer . {i * * Sutton was previously in sales * s. 4 a “tl might have in anger,’ he re-|promotion work with ‘the Capital 4 Beat te 25 i plied hesitantly. “But if I intended\Sales Corp. in Lansing. He will “ ne ol ait kill my wife” I think | ‘could|move with his wife grid daughter to the Pontiac area. « 28-year-old sister, is now third in bring the Clinton and Pontiac line. She will drop back to fourth.|Creek together just west of Rich- Sutton, a June 1958 graduate i responsible for the advertising, | Ahead of Margaret now are Prince Charles and _ Princess Anne. The palace did not say where the birth will take place. A palace statement said: “The. iQueen will undertake no further be shortened by some 1,300 feet! ‘but the Clinton River would beimun and Terry lakes. public engagements. . ardson Park, five blocks east of their present juncture under Wes® Lawrence street between Wayne! street and Cass avenue. * * * Not only would Pontiac Creek The conduits would extend the Pontiac Creek improvements as far west as Johnson avenue. Total cost is estimated at $3,108,000. The conduits would extend the major Clinton River improvements as far west as a point west of Bagley avenue, 600 feet south of Wessen street. x « But the report envisions minor improvements to the Clinton from; Auburn road on the eastern city limits to a proposed $85,000 flood control dam at the eastern end of Crystal Lake in western Pontiac. ac * from the dam to the conduit. East of the business district, it says, a the sewage treatment plant at East boulevard. The river should flow through another: 23 foot wide concrete channel east of the sewage treat- ment plant, the report says, and from the Grank Trunk Belt Line east to the city limits there is a 60-foot wide earth channel rec- ommended. The improvements would short- en the Clinton by 3.300 feet, the report said. Total cost would be a, whopping $5,615,000, it estimated. Jones, Henry and Williams said that for better flood control, Pon- tiac Creek should be improved! Later, he said he would attend Glenn L. Sawyer of 16023 Eliza-', sixth huddle set for toda el : 2 y. beth Rd., Beverly Hills has been; sen Carlton H. Morris (R-Kala- appointed Detroit sales manager ma7o0) for the Wolverine Tractor and Equipment Grand Rapids. He has been the company’s serv- ice director for the past 10 years. W. Donald Martin has accepted the position of Director of Rec- reation for Biimingham. He has been program supervisor for the ;Oak Park Department of Recrea- tion since April, 1958. Martin is a graduate of Wabash College in Indiana, and received his master's degree in recreation top GOP Senate tax Strategist: Lesinski and four other negotiators had been on the verge lof striking off an agreement to lincrease business taxes 18 million dollars. Basically, their proposal was to whittle one mill off the base 6% mill rate of the business activities tax and to put a one or one and one-half per cent surtax on corpo- ration profits. In.-this..way¥=-they-sought to an- swer demands of the politically di- vided House for a business. tax It recommends straightening the channel and widening it to 40 feet 28-foot wide concrete ‘channel, should be constructed to Paddock street, leading into earth channels) 50 and then 60 feet wide, as far aS | pilot from Indiana University, In addi- {tion, he completed a year’s rec- ‘reation internship with the Mil- -waukee, Wis., Recreation Depart- component to a package shaped around a one per cent increase in the use (sales) tax. iment, as an appointee of the Na-| |E SHOP at SIMMS ond SAVE on BIRTHDAY BARGAINS FRIDAY & SATURDAY Only BIRTHDAY BARGAIN WAHL ‘POWERSAGE'’ Elec. Hand Vibrator Reg. $10.75 sual |tional Recreation Assn. The new director served as a | in the U.S, Air Force from ,1952 to 1956. He holds memberships Picking Up Signals JODRELL BANK, England (AP) —The radio telescope at the Jod-: rell Bank Observatory picked up’ signals trom America’s paddle-' wheel satellite today half an hour’ : after- the observatory had been advised by U.S. officials at Cape Canaveral, Fla., that all three hee of the launching rocket fired successfully. j It is now estimated that a baby second somewhere in the world, Ideas Greatest Source of Power, Says MSUO Official, Loren Pope By MAX E. SIMON Russia’s Sputnik served as “intellectual Pearl Harbor’ for millions of Americans who pre-. viously were disinterested or com- placent about education in the United States. That observation was made yes- terday by Loren B. Pope, assis- and former education editor of |the New York Times. Pope was guest speaker at the weekly luncheon meeting of he Pontiac Rotary Club at the Waldron Hotel. 3 “The man-made satellite whirl- ing through outer space drove ne the obvious fact that ideas, ‘and not armies, are the greatest ‘source of power in the world to- day,” Pope declared. * * { *® aware of this for years, he as- serted, yet their pleas for assis- tance have fallen largely.on deat ears. sO Dismissing, general attacks on the overall educational system, -Pope said schools in this country today are better than they were 10 years ago, ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT “They're constaritly improving, bit theyre still not good enough,” Ke said. Leading educators have been) | Pope felt the problem of edu- an Cation was not related to the Rus- ant, president emeritus of Har- sian scientific advances drama- ‘tized by the Soviets’ thrusts into space. . “Not enough interest and at- | tention is being paid to turning out nourished, healthy minds _ from our classrooms,” he assert- Cottage Dr. Haslett." has been tant to Michigan State University ed, “God, |4PPointed public relations director Oakland Chancellor D. B. Varner} | The MSUO official rapped the j knuckles of the federal govern- ,ment for realizing the importance ‘of technological progress while al- |most. completely overlooking the ‘need for progress in the edu- ‘cational field, . * * * “Huge sums have been appro- priated to the Labor and Agricul- ture Departments,” he pointed out. “The budget of the U.S. of Education has been pitiful.” “This is a once-in-a-generation event,” he said, “MSUO's opening is the most important happening in your lifetime — for you, your family, this area, and the state,”’ ‘he told Rotarians. , / LISTs 5“\FORCES - - Pope: said five important forces % are currently the of education in the United '§ : He listed these as: \ 7: 1. The report of James B. Con- vard University, on high school programs, Conant’s report, he said, stressed the need for a tougher academic program and more for- eign language instruction. * * * Pope called the report ‘‘invalu- able’ because it points out the need for improvements. 2. The Federal Education Law which fixes responsibility on the federal government for the qual- ity of local school programs... The MSUO administrator called the law one of the most signifi- cant ever passed by Congress. 3, Research of philanthropic foundations which aré striving to find ways to use teachers and fa- cilities more efficiently. . 4. A system of education em- ployed in two ‘New. York schools, one in Long Beach, the other in Ossining. Half the day pupils re- ceive work in foreign languages, not grouped by ability and are pushed to the limit of their capa bilities. , * * * Their remaining time is’ spent in specialized fields such as_mu- sic and art. f ““ “It’s believed,” Pope said, “that since the world ts con- be taught to communicate with others as well as possible. “On the other hand, specialized, intellectual subjects are always excelled in- by a few especially competent leaders, In these class- es, students are grouped by abili- ty.” 5. A plan employed in Boston suburbs where students are grouped in two's and three’s, work- ing out their own problems. “Apparently they advance much more quickly,’”’ he said. ‘‘Cooper- ation and mutual support are [stressed rather than competition among individuals.” These, and other new theories, Pope said, will probably be in- troduced into this area by MSUO. “With advancing technology and the growing sophistication of our society, more and better educa- tion must be provided by the schools,” Pope said, “Tomorrow's laborer will be at earning a living. . a “Train: them for life — they'll pick, up the tricks of the trade,” declared. , ty, Dr es ws ‘ \ ‘ : aed : et, : northwestward eventually to Os- is born on the average of every Elec. | | | Powerful mas- fingers for re- laxing massages. Re- duce tension, aches and pains. As shown. Famous Name ‘WAHL’ Hand Vibrato _ JUMBO , Reg. $9.85 595 With four at- tachments. SUPERSACE’ Reg. $14.60 8.95 Famed OSTER ‘STIMULAX' _ Hand Massager Saar 19" aches & pains. Gives B power to fingers. : $44.95 OSTER Scientific $99” = Professional Vibrator : Famous OSTER ‘suTcH @ Hair Clippers 3 Reg. $17.95 3 12° ® Motor Driven f A fy Better ‘electri Reguiar $29.95 Value tired muscles, pees Heer Ph 4 # ; {@™ wee powerful’ motor 2 | . ! ven, ¥ | “» > erren vena a ——, THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. AUGUST fo WAKC To Contain Sensitivity Tests Jackson Sheriff Explains Story Kit to Help RAS wondér drugs will help. Misunderstanding The doctor will take a newlyig JACKSON uw — Sheriff Fred [developed | testing kit in his own Hovemer ot ijacteon County said. office to find out quickly the right drug, or antibiotic, that there was some truth t0jback on your feet. to get you) Doctors ; Oe ee = ra oe antiotis This is — treated are placed on the discs, | . + |pose a mysterious ection has|bacteria build up immunities to Claims Order to Join you down and the doctor isn’t sure|penicillin, Aureomycin and other ferent antibiotic. GOP Was Caused by what’s wrong. Maybe one of the/antibiotics, just as your own sys- tem builds up immunities to the erms themselves. James R. Brown, bacteriolo- gist at Tennessee Children’s Hos- pital developed the new test- In a transparent plastic case,| on the discs are a glucose-pro- the size of a box of candy-coated | tein compound and a chemical chewing gum, are placed paper) known as TTC Triphenotetrozo- discs — available in bottles uke leum-chloride. The glucose com- aspirin — which have been soaked! pound provides food for the ‘in-: in solutions of various antibiotics | fection-eausing germs. i § ns he infection to be | pecimens cf tne in 65 If the antibiotic kills the germ, In solution with the antibiotics \do, the TTC turns the disc red. 7, 195° t.jthe disc remains white. But if, the _ Soba ol pebed oko) to >lantibiotic is ineffective, the germs|Sensitivity test as it would to do, ‘digest the glucose — and as they|a blood count, and this is done in The docter reeds to know only, lwhich disc represents which anti- biotic, and he’s ready to start treatment. | ko ok “With this test,’’ Brown said, all doctors’ offices/everywhere.”’ “it would be just as easy to do a| ‘Youthful Qualities Win | The reason many female swim- iming champions are’ teen-agers is because they Rave the proper combination of “baby” buoyancy and muscle for pov -r About one-half the United States. wood harvest comes from pri- ivately-owned lands. fat for! | oom ¥ 7 4.8 (Advertisement) poFALSE TEETH Rotk, Slide or Slip? FASTEETH, an tmproved powder to be kied on in place. Do not siidé, slip or rock. i feeling. ing. FABTEET A saikaline ye (now acid). Does not sour odor or lower | firmly # _ stock. Aurora refines Speedway reports that deputies in his de-| partment were ordered to join the Republican party or be fired. He added, however, a misunderstanding. * * * Hammer made the statements! at’a hearing called by the Couniy} Board of Supervisors to look into allegations of irregularities in the sheriff's department. The board's ‘probe was touched off by receipt . of an anonymous letter alleging charges of minor profiteering by Under Sheriff Glen Mann and the, use of trustees by Mann to build a personal raft. * * * Hammer said that Mann had ordered Deputy Max Russell to pay dues to the county GOP organ- ization or turn in his uniform. demic spreads through your child’ s| plicated methods. Helping him that the|schoo] and your doctor has never'| situation developed because of|before come across anything like | and Dr. ‘but both times it should show him Sensitivity tests go hand-in-hand' Basically, | ing method when he became x *& * impatient with the time and Take another example: An epi-| expense of present, more com- were Dr. John M. Woodward of Knoxville. The test will work with any it. That testing kit again may, show him which antibiotic to use. In neither case will the kit | show the doctor what is wrong, \ith known antibiotics and from ‘which specimens can be obtained: what’ to do. Each test may take if ep - « « as little as 30 minutes, and the Brown’s new weapon gets re- doctor will need no medical. lab- ‘sults in 30 minutes to six hours, oratory or trained technicians. ‘compared with 24 to 36 hours now ~ * * ‘needed with laboratory-type tests, The testing kit, called a sensi-|which require special skills to use. tivity test, was developed by aj; Brown, 30, the father of two, young Knoxville bacterioligist. It/said a Miami firm hopes to have is expected to be available to all his test on the wholesale medical doctors in the country by Christ- isupply market by the end of the mas. year. it works like this: Hammer said that he later | talked to Russell and explained | that Mann had exceeded his | authority and that the deputy | was not being forced to pay dues | to the party. Russell later voluntarily pajd the annual Republican, dues. | x ke * Roy Taylor of Grass Lake, a member of the investigating com- mittee, called for Mann’s resigna- tion and Alan G. Weatherwax, ~chairman of the board ways and means committee said that Mann's! usefulness to the sheriff's depart- ment has ended. Man is the brother-in-law of Sheriff Hammer. Hammer said that he will not ask for Mann’s resignation. The investigation is continuing. | U.S. Approves Merger of Speedway, Marathon WASHINGTON (UPI) — The government has approved the mer- ‘ger of Ohio Oil-Co., Findlay, Ohio, , and Aurora Gasoline Co., Detroit. Under the- merger, Ohio Oil as- sumes control of Aurora in ex- change for 874,422 shares of its 79 gasoline and Ohio Oil refines Marathon gasoline, Ohio Oil stock | turned over to Aurora shareholders” 16" MONO TRIMMER CHAIN SAW | “We've Made a Good Buy on These and | Are Passing the Savings on to You! Full 16” Cut Weighs 19 lbs. Only $93” | We Also Have | 23H.P 4H.P. 6H.P. 8H.P. SAWS | Way Below What You Would Expect to Pay! LEE’S 921 Mt. 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Johnson, $299.00, terms 7—#1774 Shakespeare Spin Reels... 16.50 8,25 g9s Revere 1! rei ea. ot ec eee eeccce's ow ; = Swimming Trunks ........ 2.95 2.00 1957 30 H.P. Mercury, $329.00, terms 9—Rod & Reel Combinations, close-out at. 1.94 | Sauce Pans, ea. ................ now O49] 6 White Water Sets... 219 1.29 1954 10 H.P. Martin, $74.50 “TOM’S HARDWARE | KELLY’S HARDWARE | KEEGO Hardware No. 1) IM CHILD I ardware No. 1) McKIBBEN & CHILD'S 905 Orchard Lake Ave—FE 5 2424 3994 Auburn at Adams, Auburn Heights , 3041 Orchard Lake Ave.—FE 2-3766. 1576 Union Lake Rd.—EM 3-3501 — 4 ~ wt * er et & INSTALLED WHILE e the YOU WATCH ¢ % igh at Boulder Saturday _ . mip AS. Meet in Exhibition MUFFLER || | National ‘in the first ‘game of the 1959 season. The Chicago Cards had the firs ‘taste of battle on Wednesday when |they lambasted Toronto of the Ca- inadian Big Four Football Union, 155-26. Tomorrow's Rams-Lions Lions-Rams Start With Clean Slate The Detroit Lions and Los An-'first of 39 exhibition games be-| figured that Matson was the run- igeles Rams, two of the big 1958 | fore the season gets underway, Football League disap- pointments, begin their ‘‘wipe the ‘slate clean’? campaign tomorrow |. all-NFL exhibition Si s ‘ning power the Rams could have | Saturday, Sept. 26. ‘used to beat out Baltimore for the _ The Rams carried on one of the most extensive house-clean- ing campaigns in pro ‘football history. In one sweep last Jan- t! uary, they traded their second, third and fourth draft choices, and four varsity performers for halfback Ollie Matson of the Chi- cago Cards. General Manager Pete Rozelle |The Rams finished third. * * * “We could use him as a flank end or a defensive back,’’ Rozelle said. Matson is definitely slated to handle the punt and kickoff re- turns in addition to his ball carry- ing that hetted 505 yards in 129 carries for Chicago last year. | jgame at Boulder, Colo., is. the ‘Hot Putters Share Cleveland Open Lead Detroit, with top draft choice Nick Pietrosante at the College MUFFLER SNOPS COAST-TO-COAST OPEN MON. NIGHT "TIL 9 P.M. TUES. THRU FRI 9 A. M.-6 P.M. SATURDAY 8 A. M.-5 P. M. d ay, 256 S. SAGINAW |... Next to Jerome Olds * « * FE 2-1010 champion gave up the tou Ferrier, Cooper Fire 67s CLEVELAND (AP) — Long ab five years ago in favor of teach- ‘sent and colorful Jim Ferrier | ing. He settled in California, made "was back in the golfing wars to- | infrequent his potent putter as hot as | near-Hollywood events and hasn't er yesterday. with Coach Sid Gill- All Stars camp, must go with the brittle John Henry Johnson at fullback. Lions coach George Wilson, whose team finished with a 4-7-1 record in 1958 after being world champions the previous year, still feels he has the nu- cleus of a title contender. The Rams worked out at Bould- appearances in the |; won a tournament since 1952. x *e * |man sticking with his decision to luse ex-Rice star Frank Ryan at quarterback for the first quarter The Australian-born 1947 PGA! But the 44-year-old .pitch-and-| and have regular signal caller Bill r some|Putt master from: Down Under Wade take over the second quartet ‘was tied for the top today as the and finish the game. here TODAY : in the sports-car inspired a '$25,000 Cleveland Open wheeled} a= into the second of four 18 - hole) The Rams will also be without rounds : Fede r _ the services of halfback Jon Ar- Deadlocked with him was 4+ nett and Tom Wilson. and end | year-old Pete Cooper’ of Lakeland.) pon Clarke while end Jim Doran |Fla. Each fired a 67, four under and tackle John Gordy are doubt- jpar at Seneca Golf Club's 6,966- ful Lion participants 'yard layout. | : | The two veteran campaigners— Ralph Guglielmi and Eddie Le- ;each a pro for more than 20 years, baron hit end Bill Anderson with '—used their putting skill to stave, two touchdown passes last night ' | ‘Ferrier had 10 one-putt greens,) a Washington Redskins intra- ‘five birdies and one bogie. Cooper | squad scrimmage, 30-13 11958 Western Conference crown. ‘Baltimore Orioles can put in for} iovertime young s.| as the West edged the East in | : off par and younger opponents. | 4 s game of the season—with nothing) games because ‘ | L « ; AP Wirephote CAUGHT STRETCHING — Detroit rightfielder Neil Chrisley is tagged by Yankee third sacker Cletis Boyer as he tries to advance two bases after’ Charley Maxwell's single. Mickey Mantle’s throw to Boyer was in time for the tag. The Tigers won, 4-0. White Sox and Orioles Jie 1-1 in 18 Innings By The Associated Press , season. Chicago won both of them, The Chicago White Sox and 6&5 on June 4 and 43 on July 25. iThey also played a pair of 10- 2 inning games. pay after struggling; The tie game cut Chicago's through 18 innings — the longest!American League lead to 1'2 Cleveland beat on Rocky Col- to-show for their work except.a 1-1; Washington 5-2 Wilson Homers, ‘into Boston today for a weekend * vi ee. . VS of 4 - 4 . *e ‘ * ) Ie ~~ «+ *ewiwr#wTFetetsrfeFeTfe?TsFse Fy eee Te - ‘ a : | / THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST %, 1959 . , | po PRESS BOX Al Drake, Red Wilson and Joe Leslie were in the foursome which witnessed Johri Benser’s ace on the 8th hole at Pontiac Country Club. Benser, a state police officer, used his 8-iron on the 135-yard hole and finished with an 87 for the round. Singles Twice in 4-0 Triumph Yost Also Hits Seats in Series Clincher; at Boston Tonight * x * Michigan’s most famous horse, Hilisdale, will be back at Hazel Park Aug. 14-15, Jockey Tommy Barrow will be in the saddle in workouts between races. * * * Clarence Peaks, ex-MSU back, . at Us look Bo made four touchdowns in a scrim- on tie oes ie Rew S| mage session of the Philadelphia 0 X. d “ Eagles’ cam erday. Paul Foytack gave the Tigers | . rj ig iM the edge in the three-game Yankee series yesterday when he pitched a masterful three-hitter and beat the slumbering world champions, 4-0. It was the strong-throwing righthander’s best effort of the campaign and it assured the Tigers of an edge in the season series against the New Yorkers. Detroit has taken 12 of 17 de- cisions. Don Mossi and Frank} Lary have five victories apiece over the Yanks. and this was Foy- tack’s second triumph. He has split even in 20 decisions on the season. BOSTON (#—The Detroit~Figers, fresh from their latest conquest of the New York Yankees, moved The Detroit _Raiders have signed ex-MSU end Jim Himesly and ex-Hillsdale end Andy Kin- cannon. The Raiders play their first game in the Canadian Big Four Union Aug. 13 at Kitchener and are home in U. of D. Sta- dium Aug. 22 against Sarnia, OPEN BOWLING . EVENINGS — (Except Sundays) © Resurtaced Lanes Now Ready for Bowling Practice : © Summer Prices—3 Lines $1.00 © Teams and Individuals © Register Now for League Spots MOTOR INN REC, — * * * All the hits off Foytack were singles and none was the type of base hit that gave the Yankee team a reputation for power. Gil McDougald looped a single to center leading off the third, Bobby Richardson beat out a pose! bounder to short in the fourth and losing pitcher Art Ditmar beat out ‘59 RAMBLER a hit to second base in the sixth. RADIO $ 00 Home runs by Red Wilson and || HEATER 1648 Eadie Yost eased Foytack’s Cheese Your Own Equipment task, although the Tigers did not || BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER score until the fifth inning and Mi had Foytack toiling on a one- run margin for seven innings. Wilson hit a solo home run in| molded fiber-glass"15"RUNABOUT Thrill at the flashing speed, the luxurious comfort, the and a double bogie. ‘Baltimore Cooper has won nearly $20,000|Sanford was termed ‘‘satisfactory this year, and Ferrier only $200,;but there was no indication as they lead the way toward the;time if it would cure the c $3,500 first . prize. atiment. |had nine one-putters, six birdies, An operation on the knee ~of Colts’ linebacker Leo’ _ SP »ithat permits no inning to start . ’ at this after 11:59, Baltimore time. They hronic Just Were nicely getting into No. '18 at that time. inning workout. Billy Pierce, * * * | Hoyt Wilhelm, |O’Dell in the ninth, pitched 8 2-3 hitless innings and wound up by allowing only two singles in a 10- tie, stopped by the curfew law./avito's two-run homer, in the Baltimore has a special curfew Seventh. It was No. 32 for the breaking a 2-2 tie and assuring Gary Bell of his 12th vic- tory, Bell’s double had given the Indians their first two runs off loser Russ Kemmerer. Boston had only four hits off Kan- sas City pitching but made them count for a 4-3 victory. Loe Kiely pitched his way out of a bases loaded jam in the ninth to save sh Jerry Casale’s eighth triumph. |Dick Williams and Bill Tuttle of relieving Billy Chicago's styli the fifth and Yost cracked his in; the eighth. The Tigers added two | more runs off ex-teammate Duke | Maas in the ninth without getting a ball out of the infield. xk & x. Wilson started it with his third hit, a bunt along the third’ base | line. Wilson stole second on a) strikeout and Frank Bolling re- ceived an intentional walk. Hector | Lopez, who helped the Tigers con- | for you—with Cutter’s revolutionary, ultra-fast mono- hedron hull and rugged, maintenance-free fiber-glass construction. , _— COMPLETE MARINE HARDWARE & PAINTS — HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS “Your Evinrude Dealer” Layaway or Bank Financing 1899 S. Telegraph Rd. SoA FE 28033 |¥ _ SUNDAY SH IISIMISISIDIITOLOOLEDIILI SOC OII £73» exciting beauty of the new 1959 Jet de Ville! Designed AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. Behind! 3 42 _ |San Francisco ... 61 | NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lest Pct. Behind) peers 46 570 I 6. d Srnec 63 45 -583 1% 1 600 : Cleveland Los Angeles 61 48 360 1 Baltimore ..... 54 505 (10 Milwaukee . 58 447 552 2 | Kansas Cit 52 54 491 11% | Chicago .. SL 55 481 9 94a Detroit se 56 486 «12 Pittsburgh . 52% 56 481 9% New York . 51 54 486 «12 Cincinnat! sces, 50 36 472 1043 59 4.449 16 = St. Louis. 50.58 463 11% 61 419 16 n 44 SO YESTERDAY'S RESULTS 21 | Pauacee Chicago 1, Baltimore 1. tie game, called? San ‘Francisco 7. . 44 : 1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 1 3nd 18th curfew, night | | Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2 Cleveland 5, Washington 2 night Pittsburgh 18, St. Louis 2, night Detroit 4. New York Only games schedul Boston 4, Kansas City. 3 DAY'S GAMES TODAY'S GAMES 'Cincinnali at San Francisco. 10:15 pn m.— (Times Eastern Standard)- } "Toole (2-5) vs. Antonelli (15-6) Kansas City at New York. 7 pm.—Daley Philadeiphia at St Louis. 8 p.m.—Card- (12-6) vs. Ford (10-6). | well (5-7) vs. Mizell (11-7) Chicago at Washington. 7:05 pm.—Show Pittsburgh “at Chicago. 2 p.m.—Kline} (10-3) vs. Fischer (8-7) (7-10) vs. Drabowsky (4-8) Cleveland at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m—Score Only games scheduled vs. Walker (55). - TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE (9-9) | 7:15) p.m—Bunning cincinnati at San Francisco, 3:30 p.m. Detroit at Boston, (310) vs. Monbouquette (3-3) Milwaukee at Los Angeles. 10 p.m. FINAL REDUCTION selected styles.... now | 4: 519.95 to $24.95 Last few days to save on famous Florsheim Quality! Odds and ends, broken sizes — but if we have your size you get the best shoe buy of the year! Hurry! ahd ! at | Kansas City at New York. 1 pm. | Chicago at Washington. 1 p | Cleveland at Baltimore. | Detroit at Boston. 1 SUND. | Chicago at Washington, | Kansas Cit | Detroit at ROW’S SCHEDULE {Pittsburgh at Chicago. 2 p.m. | Philadelphia at St. Louis. 1 p.m. ' SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE | Pittsburgh at Chicago, 1 pm Philadelphia at St. Louis (2), 1 p.m. | Milwaukee at Los Angeles. 4 Aa 730 p.m. m 7:65 p.m. Aes NDAY’S SCHEDULE 1:30 p.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 1:05..p.m. at New York (2), 1 p.m. oston (2). 1 p.m. Cincinnati at San Franciseo. 3 “AMERICAN ASSOCIATION EASTERN DIVISION jer this season when he worked the \had three hits. The pitcher was s left-hander, had the longest tour of duty of any major league pitch-| the A’s hit home runs. first 16 innings. Turk Lown came; Fys 8 ® “ite District Field Wilhelm was thrown out at the = plate in the 15th; when the Orioles, 2 John Molenda, 20-year old U. of! bination of a single by Sam Es-|D. golfer, led the field of 152 a passed ball, an in-jertries in the qualifying round of the Detroit District championship ball by catcher Joe Ginsberg on yesterday by firing a 34-37—71 at Wilhelm’s knuckler put men on : second and third with two out. He |the Country Club of Detroit. | Molenda, playing out of Lake- | worked his way out when illy | Gardner raced back from| second’ pointe, had five birdies in taking/ base to take Al Smith's bl r in| medalist honors. short right. In the last of thé 18th, Willie tes ardent Waa Tasby singled with one out. He Steven ; Jol ning the field. Stevens moved to second on an infield out) | ad ra & sieve Web but Walt Dropo bounced out to ee By aps a ¥ me the piteter, ami the game. bish had a 7% in peer iay’s The first hit off Wilhelm was a ampere Peco a ag made a single by Billy Goodman with two! PF “ out in the 17th. | Art Olfs, of Birmingham, but The same two clubs had played\playing out of Lansing, was run- trying to score from second “in Billy Klaus’ single to left. * * * Wilhelm’s knuckleball got Balti- ——————_... ! Won Lost Pct. Behind PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Louisville wee, Uo) AE 610 — Won Lost Pct. Behind Minneapolis a, Ta 50. .590 Qty Sacramento ....61 54 530 — = Indianapolis ... 60 60 ~ 524 1042 ‘ortiand ....... 58 54 518 1% Bt. Paul .....2.. 8 60 512 12 Vancouver see. 60 56 517 1% Charleston 60 8663 488. 15 Lake ....... 59 | «56 513 #2 «} ‘ESTERN DIVISION MIX == wee eees 58 57 504 3 Omaha... 63 63 0 San Diego ...... 58 58 500 3'2. | Fort Worth ...... 60 61 496 wy pokane ....... 56 60 483 Sie | Dallas : a So | U8 447 6% Seattle .... 4964 434 11 } Denver oe 5368 438 7% es | Houston : 49 75 395 «13 INTER-CITY CHURCH —_— (Softball) FEDERAL SAVINGS BASEBALL | we Wwe (Boys Club) Parkdale 91 Pontiac UM. 5 5) ro we. ' Zion 74 St'rg'hm UM. 1 7)\ Braves 93 Pirates 34 Christian 6 4 Nazarene 1 9 Yankees 93 White Sox 35 54 \Red Sox 6 3 Indians 25 | Svangel ANNUAL AUGUST SALE NEW 1959 MODELS @ CENTURY BOATS @ CHRIS-CRAFT CAVALIER @ CRUIS-ALONG @ CADILLAC-ALUMINUM @ HOLIDAY FIBERGLAS @ MERCURY MOTORS @ FAGEOL VIP. PP rer POLL NL LRA LS POL IIAP LE PAPA PPP ALSO USED TRADE-INS BOATS — MOTORS Todd’s Shoe Store “Shoes for the entire Family” ‘20 W. Huron St. FE 2-3821 a LAKES SALES Mon., Thurs.., Fri. ‘Til 9 P. M. — Sun. ‘Til 6 P. M. INLAND LAKES | : « Junior Golfers Hi) * : Larry Bianco, Dearborn 36-37—17 Are Eliminated Tom Grace, DCC ...........++- -36—73 ; Harold Brink, Grand Rapids 35-36—73 . seg iich + ng Hills coe . : John tt, ern le BD ™\ Gary Mouw, of Birmingham,|Tom Draper, Red Run eit” 32-38 a3 ! j Tom McMahon, roit. ....38-37— who survived the_second round of] Dery "Byard, Red Run ....+....38-37—75 Aithe National Junior tournament in|Prank Connolly, y bana ae eon Palo a2 ean was tbe Hast of Sim Bacon, Dearborn gee : sate aye’ i~ a gh, DGC ..weesee . six Michigan p es to eat Tom Skover, ee pete Sores inated. Howard Wikel, Barton Hills ... MP |5 and 2 after he had beaten Ron|Sity° whiting Red Run ....s0. 38 Frantz of Indianapolis, 5, va 1 y | in the morning yesterday. ff) | Ahern of Royal Oak, Dick Brooks|Gienn Johnson, Grosse le ... ¢ of Royal Oak, Bob Wagner of Randall Ahern, ace kes saree ; 0 Libor and Gary Pageau of Detroit ? | were mi who had a 69 yesterday. two 17-inning games earlier in the nerup yesterday with 72. Among lendelon and Don Cochran of In- All6 M ichigan \dianwood and Dick Weyand of Bir- 1 QUALIFIERS Lakepointe. ....34-37—71 ee 36-36—72 | John Molenda, Mouw fell in the third round to|Don Dykstra, ae main’ Jim Grant of Wethersfield, Conn., Chuck Gransier, a MPOA and 4 Ben Smith, Pr ‘loaded. ithe area non-qualifiers were Bob; HR—Wilson, 'mingham. ) Tonight's Fight Even 3¢|Madison Square Garden. 7|garded that wagering on the bout | ca is at “even money.” siderably last trip to Detroit with his fielding, bobbled Coot Veal’s slow grounder and the bases were “MAVERICK SPECIAL” Jeep Foytack was credited with a. hit when his bouncer went so high the air that Maas could not ma’ a play once he retrieved the ball. That scored one run. Another, came home on a force play. * * * This was the llth time the Yanks have been shut out this year. They had only 10 white-| washings all of 1958. The defeat, dropped them back into sixth place, the Tigers taking over fifth by wifining two out of three in the series. NEW YORK DETROIT § abrh bi abrh bi Rch'd'sn 2b 3010 Yost 3b 6122) Kubek lf 4000 Chrisley rf 4010 Mantle cf 2000 well 6010 : Berra c 4000 Kalinecf 4000 movers ces Mannie seiem : auer r arris : Bebieds P18 Geet is 209 wengteede nh er olling mapere 1H8t Foun, itt ! aas p ac Ditmar p 2010 Seats six» Hauls % ton of cargoe eed White side-wall “Captive- Air” Totals 28030 Totals 36 4 10 4/8 Safety Tires A—Fouled out for Boyer in 8h; B—iB. y and choice of two- Pied out for Ditmar in 8th. ‘one finishes, at no extra cost. Oetrolt o.oo es see 000 101 012—4 New York q 000 000—0 E—Lopez, PO-A—Detroit 27-4, New York 22-14. P—McDougald, Richardson and Howard. LOB—Detroit 8, New York 4. Yost. SB—Wilson. S— Richardson. IP H R ER BB 80 Foytack (W. 10-1019 3 0 6 2 7 Ditmar (L, 7-8) ..9 8 3 1 JOOP Vehicies by Willys Motors See it! Drive it! OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC. 210 ORCHARD LAKE RD. a. NEW YORK (UPI) — Welter- weight contender Gaspar Ortega meets a lusty substitute for a sub- stitute tonight in a TV 10-rounder with Cuban Benny (Kid) Paret at Although Paret is unranked, his speed and skill are so highly re-' tet salah Other Michigan players Dennis ee Gresia seneee Be beeee Owosso, Larry Joseph of Ann Ar-|Bob two/|Grace vs. Dykstra, Connolly vs. Whiting, Olfs vs. Skover, Newton vs. FP. Zinn, rounds, Brink sae yg eynittingnasn, Granader, vs. i in i ; eynolds, Molenda vs. Bacon, Jorda i Sixteen remain in the field led Miller, Bianco vs. J. Zinn, Byard Ys. by Bob Small of Long Beach, Calif.| Smith, wilt vs. Wikel, Scott vs. Johnson, | MeMahon vs. Woodard and Greenhsigh | vs. ern. COLOR CORNER ‘547 North Perry Street, Corner Glenwood beaten in the first | America’s No. 1 Interior Paint % PHLA. and V.A. Approved 3127W. HURON FE4-7121 FE 2-6122 (Formerly Townsend’s) * CUSTOM COLOR MIXING i __ New Owner: JIM GEORGE, FE 3-7270 DEVOE PAINT Lustro—-Wall Tile FREE PARKING IN THE REAR * L. C. WILLIAMS On the Sales Staff at Homer Hight SEE US FOR | EXPERT SERVICE ON @ CHEVROLET @ PONTIAC — @ BUICK. CHa sacro support Join thousands Cass Lake Pharmacy 3000 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD ee: : . ERGO HARBOR , ek yg 3 FE. 3-783) oe F THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1959 =~ tine Allin, lle. 9.2 4 We're Selling ‘em! (THE PRICE IS RIGHT!) 4-Doors — Hardtops — Convertibles 2-Doors and Wagons They’rs In Stock and Ready To Go Big New Wide-Track Pontiacs These cars listed below include the following equipment: Power Steering ard Brakes, Radio, Heater, Hydramatic, _ Turn Signals, White Wall Tires, Deluxe Steering Wheel. Wheel Discs, Windshield Washers. Decor Group, Foam Seat, Back-up Lights, Oil Filter, Oil Bath Air Cleaner, Tax and License. CATALINA 4 Door Sedan..... STAR CHIEF 2 Door Sedan...... 3039 BONNEVILLE 2 Door Hardtop..... 3345 Ready to Drive Out the Door! oe © © 6 2929 BANK RATES IMMEDIATE FINANCING — BRING YOUR TITLE Fabulous New Buicks — These wonderful new Buicks include all of the following equipment: Radio, Heater, Dynaflow Transmission, Power Steering and Brakes, (except the LeSabre) White Wall Tires, Deluxe Steering Wheel, Decor Group, Non-Glare Mirror. Back-up Lights, Deluxe Wheel Covers, Tax and Transporta- LESABRE s9999 ~Does not include power steering or brakes INVICTA 2 Door Sedan. ELECTRA Poortedtoy AOS Ready, Willing and Able to Go, Go, Go! oe e © © © © 8 GUARDIAN MAINTENANCE Football Winners! MRS. NELLIE BENSON 62 Chippewa, Pontiac : Winner of 2 tickets to the Lions- Performance Service Steelers game in Pittsburgh. Specials | MR. ROBERT GORSLINE Complete Lubrication Club Rechester, Rochester Winner of 2 season tickets to the Detroit Lions games. SHELTO Engine Tune-Up Steering and Front-End Check Rotate Tires and Balance Wheels “Bashful Bud” SHELTON “Honest John” DONLEY “Roamin’ Rube” ’ STATTON “SPEED” BARBATO “Tom the Bomb” TRACY Whoops! Working in Pittsburgh area only. “Timid Tim’ THOMPSON SS vw “Chrome Dome” McCOMB “Reliable Ron” SHELTON “Fat Pat” » JARVOS PONTIAC ° BUICK ’ Telephone OL 1-8133 223 S. Main Street, Rochester Big Local Sports Card for Weekend Bloomfield Hills Country Club, ‘had its first ace of the season| -when J. K. Campbell of Bloom-| field Township sunk a 165 yarder ,on | played with R. C. Fisher and it) was his first ace. He finished with, a Ti. | | the 9th hole with a 6 iron. He PUT-IN-BAY, Ohio tiac Yacht Club, crew skippered Detroit River Yachting Associa- ‘by Don Van Doren won the Inter- lake Assn. junior sailing cham-| ing crown Aug. 31 at Noroten, ipionship yesterday. The victory gives Pontiac the puaicy Hills Ace , [Junior Title for PYC The Pon-, >} LMU GO! Outboard Motor Clearance 30 HP. 25 HP. 25 H.P. 15 HP. 15 HP. 15 K.P, 10 H.P. T3 HP. 6 K.P, 5 HP. 73 HP, 1956 Johnson 1955 Johnson 1955 Mercury 1954 Evinrude 1957 Johnson Oliver ...... Mercury (4).. Mercury ..... Mercury ..... Elgin (2)... .. 23 HP. Johnson ..... Water Ski SPECIAL! 14 CHEROKEE @ 30 HP Johnson Elec. @ Windshield ©@ Steering te ! @ Controls @ Lights see 8 oee8e 1957 Scott- Atwater eee ° ioe :795 5345 5216 5195 5115 .5225 5125 5160 + 15 .5 95 5 15 setere STOCK ruvvvwveuvvwew™ yevvvvvvs , TWO IN > ? yewwwvw* wu PRPPPPPPPPIPPP PAYS PAPRPPPP LS PPO i i i i hi nd 17’ THOMPSON SEA-LANCER | IMMEDIATE DELIVERY > rwwvvevvvvvervvvvvwv~vwvvvvv’ i Ne Me ON WO, NE MME OM INN MCW Ns al ng SLAYBAUGH’S 630 Oakland Avenue FE 8-0453 Stay Near Top ‘battle for #he NSSA (world skeet; jchampionships) all-around title at right to represent Interlake and tions in the Sears Cup series for the North American junior sail- | Conn., Yacht Club. Van Doren’s crew, which includ- ed also Joan Grey, Dan Rodgers and Tom Van Doren, sailed the last two races cautiously, staying away from competitors and finish- ing fourth and fifth. By taking a first and two sec- onds earlier, Pontiac went into the day's competition with a comfort- able lead. t Area Skeeters Eddie Brown in 3-Way Tie (295x400) for All- Around 2nd Place (Special to Pontiac Press) LYNN HAVEN, Va.—A red-hot Princess Anne Gun Club here, found 14-year-old Eddie Brown of Birmingham, Mich., one of three tied for 2nd with 395x400 in pres- ent standings. Brown, 15-year-old Miner Cliett (Childersburg Ala.) and veteran Ed Calhoun of Salisbury, Md., were one target back of leader Barney Hartman of Otta- wa, Ont. Hartman hit 100 straight to take the lead. Brown had 99x100. Cliett hit 100 straight to take over the junior all-gauge lead. Bob Thiefels of Pontiac Mich. shot 100 straight to tie with Ken Sedlecky of Baldwin for the first round of the 250 all-guage event. Other leaders were Katherine Fitchett of Baltimore, Md., gauge; D. B. Braun of San Fran- Conn. (100 each) pros; Dave 100} \straight, for lead in women’s all- cisco, Bill Palley of New Haven, | ™ ‘City Medal Golf Tournament at Municipal Links | Swimming, Racing, Polo and Diamond Playoffs: Among Activities | | | An interesting weekend of sports| activity is on tap for local fans. with the City Medal Golf Cham-| pionship highlighting the schedule.' The city tournament will be held at the Municipal course with 18 holes Saturday and Sunday, fea- turing 29 players including seven former~city champions. | Tee off time each day is at noon. The low players of Saturday will tee off first on Sunday. For swimming enthusiasts, the is staging its first annual com. | petitive swim program Satur- day at Pontiac Northern’s pool beginning at 9: 00 a.m. These are the preliminaries. The. finals will be held Thursday Aug- ust 13th starting at 7:00 p.m. * * * Also for swimming fans, the, Pan-Am trials are taking place. at Michigan State’s pool each day except Sunday continuing through Tuesday. | Sports car racing and a ten: ture attraction, bicycle racing | will take place at the Oakland | County Sportsmen’s Club Sunday | afternoon, while hardtop racers | present their Friday night pro- | gram tonight at the M59 track. | Sunday the quarter-mile midget) racers will have practice runs at the Miracle Mile track. The Ivory Rangers will play an exhibition polo match Sunda y| against a Youngstown, Ohio team) at the Cooley Lake road polo field. | * * * » In tennis, Oakland Hills Coun- try Club stages its annual invi- tational with 30 doubles teams entered, The finals should be | | ® Yager, Anoka, Minn, (100) over- all pro division. Michigan scores: | Eddie Brown, Birmin Ler |Brown, 97; Bill Brown 97; Nira Ham! in, : yeceece yon, 96: Schmidt, Royal Oak, 96; Jim Ashm Perndale, 98: Howard (Walrus) Confer: 99, Chet Crites, 99: Ron Kelly, 99; Al- bert Pruman, 88: Ed Richcreek, 86 (all Detroit) William Brown Sr. Birmingham, 96; Bill Ellis, Mt. Clemens, 95; Ains Borsum, Baldwin, 98: Jerry Fushlow, ae Park, 92; ‘Frank Keefer, Taylor, ‘enter, St. John’s Reaches Church Softball Finals The Pontiac Church softball play- offs were ddéwn to the top three, teams from the regular season’ following the elimination of Sal- ‘vation Army last night. aa championship. » §t. John’s Lutheran did the trick '6-2 on the pitching of Walt Saddler. 'First Baptist and Trinity Baptist itangle Monday with the winner ‘playing St. John’s Tuesday for the BEATTIE MOTOR SALES EDDIE STEELE, INC. / buy used cars trom a Ford Dealer because he always stands behind evety sale! Every LZ) Used Cor and Trock ts Inspected, reconditioned, reod-tested ond warranted 5806 Dixie Hwy. * Waterford, Mich. See your FORD DEALER'S R VALUES Easy financing terms fo suit your budget 2705 Orchard Leke Rd. Keego Harbor, Mich. held about 3:30 p.m. Sunday. i. Local water skiers, beaded by) state jumping champion Tony d| Mitchell will be in Ann Arbor,| | Saturday and Sunday for the state) :| meet. The tourney is being held on’ the Huron River on route 23 in| Ann Arbor. The city’s four junior baseball cided Sunday of the unbeaten teams in each division win. Up- sets would force either a double- header or carry the final over to Monday. Softball will have a playoff game, going in ae. D. Weekend nd Calendar of Sports Events GOLF Pontiac City Medal Play at Municipal | Coures, Saturday and Sunday—Noon | IDGET Sead midget exhibition racing at fracle Mile track—Sunday 2:00 p.m. AUTO RACING Soatee hardtop racing at ronuse Speedway, M59—Tonight—7:30 p.m SWIMMI Rereation dpartment swim competition | appear eae weates Northern pool, ur ‘ WATER SKIING State Water Ski Championships on | Huron River at eae an Sat. & Sun. US. Rowing pe ponenipe on Detroit | River Setares? on We Sports car araclbe at Oakland Cow nf Sunday. TENNIS Oakland Hills Invitational, Oakland Hills Comat ce: Saturday and Sun-) day, 11:00 | cae aes rena | Spertemes Club, | LO Ivory Polo Field, Cooley Lake Road, | Youngstown-Parvers Frhibitien, Sunday. BA: Playoff Finals—Lytell-Colegrove yt Pen Nicholie, Class D, Jaycee No Pontiac Boys Club vs Auburn aig Boys Club, Class £E, Columbia-Joslyn —- diamond; Northside Kiwanis vs B Sewer Cleaners, Class F Jaycee No” 2 Park; and Ace (Hall) vs Ultra- Stone. Widgets, softball diamond No 2 All are Sunday starting at 1.30 pm 80) ALL Moose vs Huron Bolw in Class D play- off at 7 p.m. at Beaudette Park sapeeesY ‘Ss FIGHTS * The sociated Press Los ANGELES — Raymundo torres.| 134; Reynosa, Mexico. oxtpointed Pauie | \% playoff championships will be de-|f GEORGES FRI. — SAT. — MON. for a good FAMOUS 2.V.D. Sport Shirts | sspo9 Choose from plaids, checks or solids. Broadcloth or flannel, sizes 5, M, L, XL. Low Holer Sweaters... .. 3.99 Get in step with new Famous “LEVI" @ Wash 'n Wear @ Continental @ Cinch Back All colors in wash ‘n‘ wear materials. Sizes 29 to 38. Levi Blue Jeans eee ee 74 NO. SAGINAW — Armstead, 132, Compton, CY OWENS, INC. 147 $. Saginaw Sé: Pontiac, Mich. WANTED! Franchised Mobil Home Dealer Business Experience But Not Neces sarily in ‘Mobil Homes All Inquiries Answered Promptly Michigan’s Most Prominent Mobil Home Maker. Write Pontiac Press, Box 19 , = TECE? VO CO Le ad i | & 2 INTACT! UNCUT! Based cpen be MOLT SCRIPTURES ond other anccen! wad medom =tnge * Pradered by Poten Prctew Aeseescinn, tox. * A Pasemoent Protase Sem - ADULTS 80¢-Children Under 12 FREE \ Ree ST Se Ne ee a. wa we Ue Ue oe 7, 1959 1S he btel pil _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. AUGU Hollywood Headlines: DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writér. Car Williams Eaber—aepeet Roads+—Box Office Opens 7:30 P.M. ‘EXACTLY AS SHOWN ON BROADWAY -to do a walk-on in a movie? * * * This is the riddle Sen. Jacob Javits (R-NY). here for a role - in “Who Was that Lady I Saw You With?’’ She has three brief scenes as secre- tary to the. New York FBI chief, performing with iTony Curtis, Dean Martin, James Whitmore and John Mein tire. The whole the prett y brunette. THOMAS thing started, Le THE MIGHTIEST . HUMAN DRAMA EVER! The story of a man tested and tempered by the temptation of riches, power and the flesh... fighting his way upward in the most significant life a man ever lived! Grown-Up Margaret Will Wed HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Remem- ber that little girl freckled face and the married Saturday. charm won millions of fans. old brunette busy actress years absence, ert Allen Jr., _art student. * * * after ae ed in St. Catholic Church. The couple honeymoon in Hawaii. Upon their return, Margaret plans to con- tinue her career, Harold his stud- ies. OFBRA * ABSTON. BRYNNER: -BAXTER- ROBINSON: DE CARLO. PAGE: DEREK POCA ICAI A HARDWICKE- FOCH: SCOTT: ANDERSON - PRICE Westen [o> the verwes by AENEAS MACKENZIE» SESSE L LASAY. OR JACK GARISS - FREDRIC A. FRANK Nixon Fails to Learn of 11 Airmen WASHINGTON (UPD pt ee Fe Fc) ORD BD s23ca CTS IOAICIO SSIES ( = You i= = NEVER= 2S353533S883>° = = FORGET = oe pixie Hwy. (US-10) President Richard M. Nixon's talk with Soviet Premier Nikita S.' @ Khrushchev and other Russian} leaders failed to solve the mystery % of the 11 missing American fliers.) )% Nixon presumably sought fur- ther information about the missing yg airmen, but his talks shed no new % light on the mystery. MANE RTETUTEN ELE A, ag Soviet Armenia on Sept. 2, 1958. “1 Block North of Telegraph Rd. og with no word about their fate. Sen. Javitz’ Wife Trying | ||Acting to Ease Loneliness. posed by) Marion Javits, bright-eved wife of | She is) said gave for when she had talking to one of the young wives. with the braids? Well. she’s grown up and getting j,aintain a strenuous social sched- | ‘ule at home from September ‘to: Not the little girl who lived next January, or during the congres-| Margaret, now a serene 21-year- The ceremony will be conduct- Martin of Tours Roman cial Research in New York and will with Gertrude Lawrence Ld but the other 11 are still missing} at 22 Junch one day in °Lindy’s in New| /York City. Her lunch mate was a HOLL YW OOD, (AP)—Why «does friend of George Sidney, who was|network of the National Association | a senator's wife leave a-busy life eating there, too. Mrs. Javits told | ‘of Educational Broadcasters. \the director she had alwi ays want-| lei to act. * * * “You've-got a job!” he replied. But her yen goes deeper than just the desire to act, It has to do iw ith the life of a-senator’s wife. | “It can be’ a lonely life,” she , remarked. “‘The campaigning is) exciting and fun, but there is little | that a wife can‘share with him. | “Some women can live with’ ‘loneliness. I think it’s easier for ithe older wives to adjust to it. Bue Mor the younger ones — and there are only about a dozen of jus—it can be very difficult. | * * * “T remember attending a lunch-, eon which Mamie (Eisenhower) | the Senate wives and She was pregnant, and she was imiserable about her existence. ‘It's too lonely,’ she said.’ Mrs. Javits has chosen to keep) her. home in New York City. She! goes to W ashington for social oc- easions, and her husband flies are in Washington.” * * * She does no Washington, but the as they Javitses door, But Margaret O’Brien, the sional recess. Besides her duties child screen star whose wistful'as a senator's wife, she has three young children to look after ‘and campaigns for mental health, beauty and again a and the National Arts Fund her an awkward- weds Harold Rob-! hg commercial | husband is sponsoring. Then why does she need to act? ‘Because I always wanted to,” she explained. “I studied dra. matics at the New School of So- at Co- lumbia. I even made the rounds of the producetrs in my early days; 'I never got one job. But I did |work as a production assistant.’ | She hopes to do radio and TV, ibut ds herself, not in acting roles. ' ‘I would have to study again be- ‘fore I would do any more acting,” she said. __Nonstate Students Spend $45 Million | ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Colleges represent a big expense to the | state, but they also bring consider- | able wealth into the state. “_ *« * 1 | The current issue of Michigan! There were 17 Americans aboard] Alumnus quarterly review esti-' _a C130 which was shot Joan inmates that out-of-state students! | spend $45 million annually in Mich-' faba The Soviet Union returned the’ igan. — ,s remains of six of the fliers—four; identified and two unidentified—/son, places out-of-state enrollment 000 or 14.9 per cent of the to- The article, by William F. Daw-' \tal colleee enrollment in Michigan. | Open 7:00 P.M. — Show Starts 8:15 P.M. A a UCI PICTURE THAT MOVES--- -PLUTEAR AWAY THis P Bani BETWEEN Us!” He wanted her, no matter what the price or Penaity—and Swore that neither the hate nor lust of the Scandalous Rambeauy family could destroy their love! Rock HUDSON - JEAN a recraad HEAVEN AND EARTH TECUCECESC ES Shas ELSES SEES SECC ESSE that Rocked THE VALLEY OF THE SUM! co-starring < Produced ty JACK HOPE + Execotion Prodyeer BOB HOPE Deevcted ty NORMAN 2 Me E00 tie fh DOROTHY McGUIRE - CLAUDE RAINS BENEDICT BOGEAUS vara TAYIOR - LOUISE PARKER ICED ¢ Cc ee A Hated Name Hung Around the -.- Marshal’s Neck Like a Noose! The Most Hated Lawman in the Territory! Serewiglag by JAMES LEICESTER ond Bauxexmexxexeesrers NOW! thru TUESDAY BOB HOPE: RHONDA FLEMING WENDELL COREY Scrnenpiay by WILLIAM. BOWERS ond AMIEL D. BEAUCHAMP 2nd THRILLER! HE DARED TO LOVE A ri Nala PRINCESS! WAR OF THE HEADHUNTERS! ARTHUR SHIELDS - TED de CORSiA* FRIEDRICH LEDEBUR 4 HOPE EXTERPRESER. INC reosucron - Color by Dé Luxe feared my EJ OMTED ARTISTS. #, Re MIGHTY ADVENTURE BY THE AUTHOR OF MIGHTY sd llc 4 ARO! D YACOG Saat ‘Camp at Interlochen to Get FM Station home three and four times a week | —‘‘congressmen in the east are, ‘expected to be at home as much | entertaining in | kt ok | _ Steel .industries of the United, North Caroline raises and sells States employ upwards of 660,000, ‘more peanuts than any other of ; workers. ithe states. INTERLOCHEN (UPI)—The Na-| - tional Music Camp will have an) FM radio statiom within a year, | camp President Dr, Joseplt M.| | | Maddy said today. Maddy said the station will op- ‘erate as a part of the 160-station | South End Union Lake Road EM 3-0661 TORITE-3 FEATURES-ALL COLOR | | HIT NO. 1 | . Walt Disneys “WATE WILDERNEs * * * ‘ Maddy said the station will be, non-commercial: and wil] operate’ on a year-round basis when it goes on the air. Eventually, the National Music Camp, which is, now open only during the summer, months, also will operate through-| A True-Life Aaverture Feature TECHNICOLOR ‘out the year, he said. Interlochen programs are now HIT NO. 2 2 broadcast over four educational BOB RHONDA radio stations in southern Maen HOPE FLEMING gan. ALIAS It's A Double- Barrelful Of ae High Wide And He Switches Chambers - Ransom Hii! § MUSKEGON «?— John T. Hay has resigned as secretary-manag- ‘er of the Greater Muskegon Cham-. ber of Commerce, effective Oct. 15, to become general manager of ithe St. Paul, Minn., Chamber of 'Cmmerce. | Cater by DE LURE - repost om MJ vuiTen arT8 Ts HIT NO. ¥ JOEL McCREA FORT MASSACRE MA 4-3135 4—CARTONS—4 LAST eae STARTS 3_-rpaTuRES—3 10:15 P.M. HOPE: FLEMING '| JESSE JAMES ig DRIVE-IN “THEATRE e MAPLE ROAD : EAST OF ceaties «= WALLED LAKE PLUS “THE THREE STOOGES” & EDWARD UNDLADOWN > WALTER FTZSi@MLS Ge also starr ime PAL BROWN BARBARA SHELLEY - WICKAEL COOOLIFTE Fred = NocMLRPN Jeon HAGE EXTRA! THE THREE STOOGES A NAMER TM PRODUCTION ¥% PH on! OAKLAND) NOW PLAYING Features at: 1:10 - 4:54 6:38 - 9:25 [POR ONE EXCITING YEAR A TREMENDOUS. BEST-SELLER HAS BEEN BRILLIANTLY CHANGING INTO A TREMENDOUS MOTION PICTURE... IT 1S READY aTWeD ZINNEMANN'S PRODUCTION OF TECHNICOLOR® Py Filled with unexpected drama — deep within a seldom-seen world — deeper in the pageant ... Now she knew ; ; she could and violence of the | nolonger African Congo — bea nun and. deepest of all in the conscience of _. a young and y ' \ beautiful } girl...” CO-STARRING PETER FINCH as the cynical Congo Surgeon, Or. Fortunati | asostammc DAME EDITH EVANS DAME PEGGY ASHCROFT DEAN JAGGER W wity MILDRED DUNNOCK SCREENPLAY BY ROBERT ANDERSON FROM THE BOOK BY KATHRYN C HULME proouceo BY HENRY BLANKE ovmecreo ev FRED ZINNEMANN presenreo By WARNER BROS. ' MUSIC COMPOSED AND CONDUCTED BY FRANZ WAXMAN NEXT a - ATTRACTION! eS ee er, | a li Se i J * E 4 ee we a i en ne RRR IRRENR A marae PE nick coal a in 1928-29 and Detroit Tech from . ern, Pontiac West and West Bloom- Le. THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘FRIDAY. AUGUST 7, 1959 Soybeans lead [ MARKETS |Space Stocks Grain Decline CHICAGO (®—Soybean futures led another general downturr on the Board of Trade in early deal- ings today with setbacks running to more than a cent a bushel. * * * The grains were down mostly minor fractions with offerings find- ing slow acceptances, Some dealers said that with over most of the corn and soy- bean producing areas the weath- er has become a relatively min- or factor in futures pricing. Both were described as now in good moisture condition for some time. x *« * After about an hour wheat was unchanged to % cent a_ bushel lower, September $1.90!s; corn 14 to 12 lower September $1.197s; oats %& to 3s lower, September new type contract 6836; rye Wy to 19} jower, September $1,3042; soybeans 53 to 1 cent lower, September 2.1456. The following are covering sales of cally pa Ee te ey ea nan ke Market by growers and sol them in wholesale package "loge Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of; ™arket was uneven in slow trad- Tuesday. . ° d Detroit Produce FRUITS Apples, Dutchess, DU. ....c0..coeees | Appice Red Bird, bu. |..... 1325 Transparent, bu. .. + 3.00 Rlokteriea SGte. . cece. - 6.00 ee No. 1, 12 pts. ~~ ae antalou DU. .c.o550 cee . 5.50 Peaches. Red Haven, bu. .. - 5.00 Pears, cisppe. Boe aiereisiale 3.50 Pears, Sugar, waleie 2.50 |Plums, etca “Wy bu. wens ees. 2.50) | Watermelon, bu... sseccsccess 3.00) ; VEGETABLES Beans, green, flav, bu. SIDNEY F. MAIN Kiwanis fo Greet £22: New Governor Sidney Main Will Be Welcomed by All Area Clubs Here Monday The Kiwanis -Clubs of Pontiac, Birmingham and Draytorr Plains' DETRO will greet Sidney F. Main, gov.) Deter in case viots federal vate grades: ernor of the Michigan District of, Kiwanis International, at an “In- ter-Club. Qrama’”’ luncheon in the Elk's Temple Monday at 12 m. * * * Main, a Kiwanis member for 17 years, was elected governor of the Michigan District at the organiza- tion’s 41st annual convention in Lansing last September. Elected lieutenant governor in 1956, he holds a perfect atten- dance record at Kiwanis meet- ings for 17 years, As governor,. Main is the leader of 178 clubs in the Michigan : District, with a total membership of 9,300. In 1944, the Kiwanis official spon- sored the first District Conference on Conservation which took place} hi at the Michigan State Conserva- tion Training School, Higgins Lake. | * * * Main attended Ferris Institute 1938 to 1940. His business is ab- stracts and title insurance. Clubs included in the Greater Pontiac Kiwanis organization are Pontiac Downtown, Pontiac North- field. Nixon Will Be on TV Sunday Night 7 to 7:30 NEW YORK (AP) — Vice Pres- ident Richard M. Nixon will ap- pear on television Sunday night to discuss his tour of the Soviet Un- ion and Poland. The program will be aired na- tionwide by NBC from 7 to 7:30 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. Part of the program will consist of Compared last week barrows and gilts steady to 25¢ higher, full advance on film taken on the tour. weights over Ibs; sows unevenly steady to 25c higher. National Guardsmen Get Ready Some 85 area National Guards- men wil] be busy loading cars and trucks tonight for their annual two-week encampment at Camp Grayling. Then the guardsmen of Company E, 2nd Battle Group, 125th In- 'antry, will load themselves into ‘wo buses, 10 cars and six trang- ort tricks at 5 a.m. Saturday ind proceed to join some 8,500 ‘ellow guardsmen of Michigan’s th Infantry Division and.at- ‘ached units at the training site. This wil] mark the first time the 46th Division has assembled in one place since its reorgani- zation under the Army's pento- ing to Capt. A. J, Largent, commanding officer of the local company. — > “That means we will get more) sae = training at a swag level! tor Camp rather than individual training as has been the case in the past,” sid Capt. Largent. Sgt. Neil South will represent the local unit in competit’on for the Gen. Wilson Trophy, awarded. to the best soldier, South was runner up last year. * * * Gov, Williams will observe the}. division in its annual’ review Sat- urday, Aug. 15 and will deliver the major address at the traditional memorial services for guard heroes of the past the next morn- ing. . The second week will be marked by participation in a tactical field exercise named ‘Exercise Mack- inaw”, Aug. 17-20. Another 1,700 members of Michigan's Air Na- tional Guard will undergo training during the same period at Phelps ‘Collins Air National —_— — Retreat Again NEW YORK &® — The stock ing today as space age issues con- tinue their retreat on prospects of a thaw in the cold war. ‘some of the oils, utilities, chem- | icals and electrical equipments jmade moderate gains. * * * Steels drugs and rubbers edged off. Airlines, nonferrous metals and aircrafts were mixed. Rails showed a gentle drift to | Dorfman Lawyer Slams Kennedy Calls Rackets Group). Counsel ‘Little Mobster’ After Swindle Charge CHICAGO (UPI) — Robert F. Kennedy, counsel for the Senate Rackets Committee, has come under the fire of an attorney for an insurance broker linked by the alleged multi-million-dollar union} swindle. Stanford Clinton, lawyer for Allen Dorfman, yesterday described the youthful Kennedy as a “‘little monster” with an ‘‘insatiable ap- petite for scandal.’’ Clinton termed ‘untruthful in every material respect” a Rackets Committee report charg. ing that teamsters boss James R. Hoffa channeled $3,000,000 in union welfare funds to Chicago mobsters through Dorfman’s in- surance agency. Negotiators Cooperating Pontiac Press: Photo Steel Mediator Hopetul NEW YORK (AP) — Federaljhis rare was based on the “‘in- mediation Director Joseph F. Fin. creasingly workmanlike way” in negan says he is encouraged by which the negotiators are ap-_ »|the cooperation he is now receiv- ' proachirnty their [Pontiac Rockcote Paint Store CASS—CORNER OF HURON ~ OPEN PARK FREE — HURON ST./ LOT — BESIDE THE STORE FRIDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 P. M. ‘FE 3-7129 = SSE | ee \ . aed THE PONTIAC press. ERIDAY. AUGUST 7. 1959 ; ae : For Sale Houses 6 Death Notices BOX REPLIES __ For Sale Houses ¢ At 10 a.m. Today tere Quick Possession were replies at The Press This tri-level in Union Lake area LLP LL OL LL BANNISTER. AUGUST 4. 1958, has 3 large rooms, 1/2 baths, Laura Ann, 1967 Sturtevant, De- office in the iatewing every room is bright and airy. treil, age 97; dear mother = bo Playrooi in ment. Al on Mrs. Marvel Ralph, Mrs. Pr xes; large lake priv =I lot. Can be Fhomas, Rufus Bannister, = ~) yours for only $2,500 down. neilus Bannister, Philip Bannister, ee Luella Bailey and Mrs. Gar- 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 14, 22, 28, John J. Vermett lias Hoot and Mrs" Allce Meyers. | ¢ 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 56, 58, . £ : | : as Hoot and Mrs. Alice : ou, ¢ , D het LTY WALLED LAKE _two Walled The Michipan Council of Punerel service will be peld Gat- 59, 60, 63, 90, 103, 107, 119. 9203 Cor Agr Fy aie . ar . i , i Feud rday, , > 1203 _Couym fe ee 6466 Lake families. are welcoming e¢x-|Churches’ “Youth for Understand- | . from the Parmer-Snover Funeral . VACANT | | Home with Percy Walley officiat- — 15 OAKHILL. $4300 cash. Will take change students today. ing: program is their sponsor. ing. Interment in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Bannister will lie 6 housetrailer in trade. ~~ For r Sale Hi ouses 6 The two girls arrived in Ann) * «x *® | in teins Parmer-Snover Pu- |... ~~ 816 LEDYARD. Modern §$ room : , s pr bei preeted by the con-| ners Be home. Attached garage, 2 lots, Z Arbor -at noon by bus fron Mon- After being greeted by the con cows: AUGUST t 1958, OTIE-D: |? BEDROOM, LAROE, LIVIN | en choot" ou aioe with * _treal where they docked Tuesday. suls of their respective countries,, 270 Prospect, age 67; beloved hus- -Btorms and screens.’ West subur-| $500 down. reer will accept * They are among 162 students from the mayor of Ann Arbor and Oliver bend ia Warner aeas ban $8,500. Mortga ¢ casts down | some trade on anything of value. T se, assis incips of | brother of Mrs. Raymond Fox. Or weversa-. is aaceercgee STATEWIDE 4 Germany, Holland, Finland,.T. Rose, assistant principal of D Grandchild also. sutvives. Fu-| BY OWNER. 7 aeeaco HOME, : France, England, Italy, Austria, Walled Lake High School, who 1s neral service will be held Batur- re ved cede ia pale hs M aldins Real Estate Service of Pontiac ; , i : as F sractor axchanve | . L a : m ve, - i. ; Japaii and India who will live in also a director of the exchange | ee Ale Sparks-Oritfin Chapel! able 241 W. Ypsilanti. FE 5-954. iii bh raaeeee Eee ea Michigan for a year. program, they met their “‘adopt- | with Rev. Harry Lord officiating. | FoR RENT OR SALE: 4 ROOMS : e a 4-521 a ee eee parted h! Interment in White Chapel. Mr.| 4 bath, full basement. ‘ Williams aaa - ed’ ‘families and departed wit Ciowil will le tuo stele at the || Ge cece. Sfuat sell. iransterced SCRAEtn law loertnn them for their new homes _Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. out of state. Will consider any MADISON HEIGHTS a FICK, AUGUST 5, 1959, SHIRLEY | reasonable offer. FE 2-T750. _ Welcoming Liisa Marga Hin- | Van Auken, 526 Langholm Dr., 8-ROOM HOUSE: 4 BEDROOMS | Attractive 3 bedroom brick, storms Decorate Their Boats : Winter Park, Fla. age 40; be- | and screens, fence, carpeting, tikka of Helsinki, Finland, were loved wife of Nelson Pick, dear | pen carn lee, mene. ae large utility room. $14,400, Terms Mr. and Mrs. Ralston W. Cal- A Sep ck cuter of Carl i. aod * Larg? eee iaiete tases dean thee ot iis per cet More, | : 7 Ww Dr, They a Lewis W. Loch, beloved daughter Hwy Ful price $ ont f f nu ala e vest of Si atuga 7 ee of Mrs. Harry F. Loch and ate Private owner. 3145 bab tags Dr., ! and their son, Jack, who will be Gaughter of Harry F. Loch. P&- _Drayton Plains. OR 3-585 BY OWNER. 2 BEDRM., RANCH, it ¥ 1 ing neral service will be held Satur- FOR COLORED | 4 years old. $8500. 2641 Walnut, UNION LAKE—Trying to out a senior next year, are planning day, August 8. 1959, — oe - O _JUniper 8-2581. itech Chcbntcbebd £7 aide ~ to take Liisa on a trip to Green from the Sparks-Griffin ape 6 rms. & bath. Nr. school & bus. ; fear’s entries, Un- . fe vith $150 down: FE 2-3043. do previous year’s entries, Un ; = i with Rey. Richard Stuckmeyer o _ $8,000 wit FE 23 4 ion Lake residents are devorat, | TAN) Wis level Ns onl” Mn are i ee eae tye ae living , j At the Virgil J. Slinker home. state at.the Sparks-Grilfin Fu- edrm. rancn type 8 ing their boats in preparation for =“! he Virgu v. a Home rm, dining rm., :arge kitchen. the third annual boat parade to 3039 Edgewood Park, is Ingeborg LEMAUX, AUGUST 6, 1989, DARYL Tie tse ae fies pssered : d be held Sunday at 1 p.m Tobote of Oldenburg Germany, Ee aye eee iy einci ns caeaeeeoee Sei. ‘ot, close to : _ : 5 aes eloved husband o Se 5 Union Lake Water Patrolman, the same town from which Lothar dear father of Robert Lemaux, | - - are $3750—S$850 Down “tna. Schlafke, last year’s exchange stu- dear .brother of Duane Lemaux. Oe FA e ‘DRAYTON Privileges on Maceday Lake—A Claude Harcourt, of 3625 Elm- : < ‘ : ] granddaughter also survives. 4 fie hile oF bedroom heme on view St. will lead the parade dent, came. Ingeborg will not have fae ee be shel Sat- MAN “LEAVING TOWN. SACRIFIC- muinics’ shaded 16t) nesdal some ugus 59 «x = : inning at the fishing site. time to be homesick, for there are urday, Aueevarks-Griffin Chapel| rooms. ful’ basement and ga.| ‘x8. good location : : mu : ‘ ht Slink fi 1 d th with Rev. Galen E. Hershey offi rage. FE 8-867], rs g ree = in * * x eight olnkers sive gas ae » ciating. Interment in White FOR COLORED S45 $650 Dow ; : boys, to keep her company, Chapel.’ Mr. Lemaux will le in X $4500—S65 own Prizes will be awarded to the ys, p Pp : aye , state at the Sparks-Griffin Fy- 3 bedrm. home. $450 dwn. FE Near Williams Lake—Why pay wost original and unusual crea- Diann@ will be a senior and Judy; , nera. Home. _- 8-4308. " rent? Payments are only $43 per, 5 Ww h st have in- a junior at the high school along STANTON, AUGUST 5, 1951, JO-|3 sTORY, 2 BEDROOM. 2 CAR; month on this edro tions = = e co ave aj eb m ‘ ie 8 | seph. Tampa, Fla, formerly of |” garage. 2 lots. 22ft. living room,| With large living room and {ull eluded “The Union Lake Sanita- with Ingeborg. The Slinkers plan Kecgo Harber aye 83: yaar large aun porch, fireplace. me at all now. - ——— S 5 is ather oO Ts. eter «Veola: con @sona’ w t. tion Tug,” and a “Japanese to take their guest up north this Ma ete uae: Beaiiica. Wagner s Lace om isto PA™ paymen ; oa Tea House.” month. | Mrs. Shelvy aflice) Sturgeon. = : $10,900—(..1. Terms a ECT HaTa ote hire George RUSH. HURRY. PLEASE. NEED ——— asides dear ean ee CATES Cr Cooper,| the Money. Investor's dream or | Maceday Gardens—Carpeting {s ccm williems Clark and Mrs. | home buyer's cers te 2 Bedroom included in this 2 bedroom clean Charles Flor 4 grandchildren modern. nice location on Wil- as a pin, built in '53, part base- ana 3 gicat grandchildren also | ree “ner across from Mace- ment, lovely comfortable home. survive. Funeral arrangements | 8) Lk MY 3 pice hh small balance | ing. will be announced later from the |; —°* C J. Godhardt Funeral Home, ‘3 BEDRROM HOUSE, BASEMENT. Keego Harbor | _ Sivas near Auburn ene East STEPHENS, AUGUST 6, 1959, WIL- lvd. Terms. FE 8-2340 -$11.700—$1500 Down Maceday rooms, built in "55, good location, * Donna Kay Colton Weds Almont Man in Commerce. liam F, 2857 ®nowlson, Keego < and large rooms make for en- 7 1 Harbor, age 50; beloved husband c ~ ROCHESTER joyable living, landscaped and of Thelma M. Stephens. dear a pe cer Colonial, brand, new, | * partly fenced. i father of Theodore C. and Sandra 4 50 at . 4 mee eal Ate un . : COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Bo Anna Stephens, dear brother: of _ dow! “OL aa © $ $4500 Se ee “*s u- Mrs. Wilbur @velyn) Marten- ore Ze) _ $11.800—S$2700 Down “quets of white gladioli were used | baker and James Stephens. Pu- | $4.750. $500 DOWN. Two bedroom |= : * * neral service will be held Satur- bungalow on Emerson Strect, va- Near Waterford High—5 rooms, to decorate the altar of the Com- day, August 8, 1959 at 22, cant. nice | lot, close é school. pate ae ae ee ee P ict’ Chore or from the C. J. Godhardt nera alance monthly. ark Real ge | merce Methodist Church for the Home, Keego Harbor with Rev | Estate FE 3-788, Res. FE 4-4813 | that make this ome a good buy wedding ef Donna Kay Colton an Stanley A. Munro oficiating. In- | WHITE’ LAKE. 3 BEDRMS. Ga- terment in Perry Mt. Park Ceme- rage, carpeting. new furnace and Daro Edward Jasken, . z tery. Mr Stephens will lie in hot water heater. $9500. $500 dwn $14,400—$1500 Down The Rev. Perry Thomas per- Soret tals €: di Godhara’ Fe- pepe ead Lip ae 2608. See it) Clarkston—3 bedrooms, den and formed: the double-ring rites” WATSON, AUGUST 4, 1959, CON- cones. ester_Or bie Brenig Ie atendine Se The bride is the daughter of stance M.. Oroville, Michigan aus | IN_ BLOOMFIELD 9 scenic acres| Dduilt in “$7. Don's delay. Mrs. Sarah Colton of 118 Robin Johnson, Mrs. Doris Patecell, Mrs. rvivage, shen, ue? Laced babysit ey. Connie Bolske, Robert A. and $14.700—Cash to Mortg. | Rd., Commerce ~ Township. The | Richard Wateon; deer sister of | Ant frult tees. Be sure to sec) bridegroom’ s parents are Mr. and | Ralph King, Herbert King, Mrs. IN COLONIAL HILLS — Excelient Near Waterford High — 3 bed- Eva Cantrell, Mrs. Edith Dreary. home featuring large carpeted liv- rooms, full basement, plastered Mrs, Edward Jasken of 6284 Tub- | Mrs. £thel McNeil, Mrs. Mildred | {1° ait ainlne ceeins Gina 6 ria walls, 2 car garage, brick, gar- spring Rd., Almont Hubbell and Mrs. Marjorie Fors: * Ateplace 3 piciure windows: Full bage disposal. carpeting and “ a . lund. Funeral service wate. trom basement. Enclosed breezeway. drapes, included. A real buy. Saturday, August 8, Patio. se Hraicunm we : 5 Attached garage. Large The bride wore a floor-length the Pursiey Funeral Home at 1/ 172. shaded lot. This ts really nice | t - organdy gown with short | Ficlets: ‘iaierment i, Periy | NORTH OF PONTIAC Temes $15.500—C ash to Mortg. = ; Mt. Park Cemetery. Mrs. Watson | “¥ , ioe cres Near Drayton—4 bedreoms, 1‘2 = sleeves and featuring a basque will arrive in Pontiac Friday am.| With nicely remodeled 4 bedroom baths, brick, plenty of closets. ee waist, bodice and bouffant skirt and may be viewed at the rere ‘eres aur featuring. oe baa oaeer cents privileges on a { ida m. water aklan ake i. 2 of embroidered organdy and a — tuners) Home after 3puy Friaty heat. Attached “garage. Stable for & a - . . ion | ~ _ *saddle horses. Shade, shrubbery 5 large organdy bow in the back. Card of Thanks 1) “Owner leaving State” You'll like $15 050-=Cash to Morte Z \ - this one! d19.90 ash to .lorte. ae A floral crown held her Anger | WE ‘DEEPLY AND GRATEPULLY Watkins Hills—3, bedrooms, l'2 3 * appreciate the svmpath~ give . H. P. HOLMES. INC bat ceramic, fw eep base- . tip ne of ren illusion and she | by all our ee uring — ; 2531 3S ‘Lapeer Rd FE _5-2953 ment, fire landscaped corner lot 3 carr) aca passing of our oved wife an a < : white flowers. © arrangemen of Wm. Ruby No. ee tones iy RAPE, See ze aq = < : - « * i Wisk Go Excess GOR jleges on 2 lakes for 3 bedrm. $17.500—Cash to Mortg j with basement, FE 4-5628 Indian Point—7 rooms, 2 car ga- deepest thanks and appreciation. TRADE GUR EQUITY FOR $500 rage. large porch, excellent jo- MRS. DARO E. JASKEN , latron of honor was Mrs. Jack | fapouy sane ade Beranbars) or something of equal value in| cation. fully equipped including —_ @Calvert of Commerce Township, of kindness. sympathy. and flor-| Uf 2 bedrm. modern home with dishwasher. illness offerings during the walk out poserent oil furnace. {aunt of the bride. Lk. priv. Bridesmaids al and recent bereavement, of our {were Carol, Colton of Dearborn, dear wife and mother Mis. Eliza-| DRAYTON AREA, 2 BDRM $18,900—Cash to Mortg. beth Bickford. Special anks to ranc ha acre lot, aluminum City of Pontiac—A-1 West aie | cousin of the bride, and Charmane the Rev. William Hakes of the storms and screens, tile kitchen location. 12 rooms, 5 bedrooms, | Jasken of Almont; ‘bridegroom. Best man was Jerry Kirkwood of Leonard. Seating the guests were Walter Lamphere of May- vill Sister of ‘the First Baptist Church, Mr. Kyle Wilson for his message and song, and to the Huntoon Funeral Home. Harry Bickford one family. and bath, lake privileges, $7,500. $500 down, $70 mo. OR 3-8645. $100 Down Complete exterior, 3,bedrms. Full bsmt. Rough wiring. $6350 on our full basement, carpeting included, large porch and recreation room, very attractive home. “Chess Prodigy ‘Appeals for Aid Lake Fronts $7950—$1500 DO Manden Leake 2 irons: full In Me! Memoriam 2 Nothing Cian on your lot. lot. cousin of the bridegroom, IN LOVING MEMORY OF EARL C.| MA 6.3858. FE 5-5078. Wath sarace, neautiful lot. nica Bobb Fisher Lacks ‘and Kenneth R. Colton of Com- ne todae Anca 739: sia sandy eac ioe tbe young ones Tee merce Township, brother of the Goal fe RE Sista as epee’ $2,000 for Expenses bride. A place ts vacant in our home. \\/ A | 'H Lake Fronts (Cont.) ’ x* * * Se ee ee ee eee loved $12,900—$3000 DOWN . adiy missed by those who love Lotus Lake—4 bedrooms, large to Yugoslav Tourney | The. reception was held in the him. | front and rear porches. in ex- cellent repair, large wooded ot. IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY 100° of water frontage. Husband Thomas Robert Thomas (Bob Thomas) who passed away . church parlors immediately follow- NEW YORK (UPI)\—The mother ing the nuptials» Upon returning The Nationals one year ago, Aug = of America’s chess prodigy, Bobby from their honeymoon, the newly- Do not ask me if I miss him, Go Up! $18.250—Cash to Mortg. Fischer, who hopes to wrest the Weds will live in Almont. Bae Pity heen ae takers ° Lake Oakland—This fine 3 bed- Sect Peaesia, copeaied dosiay: tet Pin elem Ban karte | NOW STARTING | beach Pho theVenttaren® plus” s Seviet Russia, appealed today for Buby Sh No lL Friends may think the wound 8! (()\STRUCTION IN picturesque view of the lake. financial aid so her son can enter, y oes No Longer ante oT pS ~~ NL ut they so little know the sorrow - the playoffs in -Yugoslavia. Can Dangle That is in my heart concealed. J d h L k $23,950—$6000 Down si Revita Fischor of Brook- | g Inside Cars —Sadly missed by Wife Evelyn. | u a a € Williams Lake—A oe lo- im % = lake, 3 rooms, MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Those E cation on the r . : place, recreation room, 2 car ae “ne pee Ee eT baby shoes, dice and other items ____Funer al Directors 4 states garage, ita, baths. poet nd ace , & —— us i" include n't m s grand master in the world, have ae ited a of - COATS NO. 4 < rly $2,000 — half the 2Utos operated in Wisconsin must ME , eaves heatly S200 = ne ‘come down. Drayton Plains OR_3-7781 . . $37,500—$17,000 Down : amount needed to pay the ex- G Gaylord Net “ at sees See for Yourself... Lake Angelus Outstanding 2 acre ov. Gaylor elson has signe location with sandy beac penses for the nearly two-month zu oe = THESE HOMES BEING hs. 2 car garage. long tourmareat a bill that prohibits driving a car One1SON}O ns BUILT FOR AS LOW As: large. ao oe ork, Srecreaticn | “With another $2.000 Bobby could ‘containing oy object that would =_Dasiened ‘for Punerals” _ room rraly pe line "bene . ab take- obstruct the driver’s view PARKS-GRIFFIN CHAPEL . A . | oie wormanere re Father through the windshield or rear moughtful — i Boe NOTHING DOWN Some Specials a ; 811.500 — NOTHING DOWN —G. I. said. Be window. Voorhees-Siple $82 Waterford Townshi - p—This 3 bed : ae room home has full basement | Frank Brady, business man- The nee, OF PUBLIC HEARING FUNERAL HOME _. CLOSING COSTS oe BE feces Me nal og este ager of the. US. Chess Federa: 1m 208Bk, Board. of Independence Ambulance Service Piane or motor | $70'PER MONTIL | isster wells, allt i967. a stent tion, said that if the Fischers do | fi! hold’ s Public Hearing on August re ror a i not raise the money within a ‘Hall, Clarkston, PS Mpbigge: ts cence Gemetery lots 5, ‘FH A= ; S14.000— $300 an . yy! . : F the followi bh ‘farkston—. rooms, fu SC~ few days Bobby probably will | (.°. ihowine changes in Township Zon- | eee D | ment, recently redecorated, this. ‘ not be able to participate, 1. To rezone from Suburban Farms to BEAUTIFUL 4 GRAVE, SECTION $375 DOWN | Teally beats paying. rent. 4 ‘ Residence-1 | 2 Perry Mount Park Will sacri- | INCLUDING CLOSING COST | “Actually the International SE_'+ of Section 5, T4N, ROE. | | fice Phone MA 5-6046. i i ; a ? To grene from “Agricultural to | CHOICE 4 GRAVE LOT_IN O4K- 73 _ §26.900—New Mortgage Chess Federation has stated that Commereial land Hills Memorial Park $125 Welertord Hill = New Celeciel -fermal notice of availability be p Par Thee ewed ‘aot aie Ue aot N. Owner, KEnwood 71-6792 PER MONTH | with full basement, 2 car garage, 5 cies _ me ul s be ng a . | t forwarded to the federation’s head- ca distant 8 01% 3" W 1336 93 ft and 7 ge 325 pee Se DIRECTION ; eget Go eigen = 8 89°12 20° E 3 D arters in Swed b Aug. 35." 33.0 ft. from the center COME OUT drive. « qua m sweden by AUg- 9, of said Section 15: thence running N . ° Brady said. aU 33° E 2330 ft. to w point. thence § PRICES ARE GOING UP 6 miles North of the heart’ THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO PICK UP CEMETERY LOTS AT A DISCOUNT. Must sacrifice 4 lots Perry Mount Park; 5 lots Qakland Hills, (South of Walled Lake near Novi). 4 lots White Chapel. SMITH-WIDEMAN 412 W Huron 8t. Open Eves. FE 4-4526 "12°20" EB 7160 ft. to a point, thence soini6 10" W 2336 ft. to a point in flexibility in the date and I’m sure thence ene? te ow ae Road, that if Bobby raises the money said road center ta the eunt ef oe by Aug. 10 his formal guarantee S7P'n8. excepting all of the right-of- : : i way of said Clarkston-Orion Road. that he will play will be accepted.”’| A map showing the proposed chances S ? in the Zoning Districts may be ex- of Pontiac on Joslyn Rd — maich for “FAIRWOOD _DLORAH BUILDING COMPANY E 2-9122 “Buildor of National Homes” “However, fRere is a.dgree of $27,900—New Mortgage Waterford Hill — New ae liv: 24' ee room an Truly a fine y. The candidates tournament is isy Totty Tosmenip Hall icuring == “scheduled to begin in Bled, Yugo- | pons ED TUREK. NOTHING DOWN : : Secret Beautiful bi-level & tri-level starter slavia on Sept. 6 and will last Independence Tom petip Zoning Board ee fee are jeettas (foe ; The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FF. 2-8181 From 8 a.tn. to.5 p.m. until Oct. 31, This will’ be an _@imination tournament and the - winner will face the present ; “world champion, Russia's Mi- f _khaif Botvinnik in 1960. something different in the line July 21, A y ug 7, ‘59 of starter homes—then you can’t COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK _ PON pA Mle BROS. OR 3 Open Eves. an ba “Bunday 10 tr 5 5660 D Hempstead tunity. Nothing down -. on lot or we have several cee Mich 4 7 lots available. Pon NOTICE OF SHARFHOND RR MEETING Notice is hereby given, that pursuant to call of tts oirectors. ‘a special meet- ing of the shareholders of Community from Nationa! Bank of Pontiac will be held RO REALTY TED McCULLQUGH. Eero Mrs Fischer said that 5143 Cass-Elizabe : . 5 Spee at its b { Open 9 a.m to 8:30 p.m. Sunday t-5 Piarch to June Bobby represented thaw’ gireet nin tne ie at bone All errors should be_ re. | PE 5-1284 e ____PE 4.3844 > he United States in international State of Michigan on Saturday, August oe Jemedistedy The 2 BEDROOM HOUSE, ELIZABETH hess events Argent Chile 2776, 1858 at 10 00 am for the purpose clean -l'g story home. 2 BR. on Ist floor 1 Large room on 2nd floor not ttnlened-_only sub floor in. New kitchen. Bath. Living room rug and dining room fur- niture included. $7050. Low down payment. S. ANDERSON $3500 is the full price for this 2 B.R. home. Gas furnace & wa- ter heater. Terms. PROSPECT ST. Good 3 Bedroom home. Pull bath on 2nd floor, Stool on Ist floor Basement. Furnace. Garage. $7500 Terms J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton FE 8-0441 CUSTOM BUILT LAKE HOMES. Twin Lakes Village. W. of Pon- _tiac. Starfire Bidg. Co. EM 4-6531 6 RM. HOME. NEAR SCHOULs. Large lot. 91 Euclid. OWNER LEAVING } STATE 4 bedroom, 2 story home, near General Hospital. Must sell. $12,- 600 cash to mortgage. AUBURN G 4 room and utility, oak floors, near high school. $5,500. $500 down. Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 832 W. Huron FE 4-8550 __ FE 8-1275 HAYDEN E BEVERLY 1', Story Home. Immediate Pos- session. 2 B.R. on Ist floor. Base- ment. gas furnace & water hat- er. Alum. awnings. 2 car ga- rage. $11,000. Terms. Owner will consider trade. e Off Baldwin. Immediate Posses- sion 2 B.R. home. Basement. gas furnace $5950, with low down payment. A good buy. E TENNYSON i 5 Room—2 BR. home. Exvellent i condition. Basement is tiled. Gas furnace. Paved drive. $10,950. Terms. ESCENT LAKE Very ie Nice 32 BR. home has tile “@bath with shower. Kitchen has Only $8500. on low P.H.A. 3 BEDROOMS This 26° x. 37’ home has alum siding. Pireplace. Tile bat aa soil furnace. Yes—there is a ge. And a 10° x 20’ Patio wit ieee becue. $13,500. Terms. TOWARD ROCHE North East of Bed- room home of frame & brick construction. iving room, drapes included. Kitchen 17 x 8'1l with pag in range & oven, hood an Bath has built in vanity. All pedresais have double coe 14g car garage. Only $1620 I. Cc HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton FE 8-0441 _ Open rer. Sun 10 to 2 Terms. STER Pontiac. 2 BEDRM. HOME IN Waterford. $1500 down. $6100 Terms. OR 3-9670. RETIRED, OR NEARING RETIRE- ment age? I have a 4 room m ern house perfect for you. Ex- cellent condition with nice yard. $7500. down, Reasonabie monthly payments. Immediate ssession. rect from owner. £ 5-1094 for appointment. $40 PER MONTH. $300 WN 3 bedrms., full bath, newly dec- orated, lot 50x180 on Midland Bt. Open Sunday 2-5. FE 3-7! 7862. SMALL HOUSE, NEEDS REPAIR. East Auburn. No down payment. _ FE 4-7928. PEN SUNDAY 2 te) 18 aoe - Room oncaiow: 2 car gar Ha floors, inted ‘vals, full basement. Pine see it. Terms al SAIC RANC Il basement, lot xt to woods on pav rion Bluegrass, rose bushes, ter softener and incinerator. Many more features. $1400 down to $13,500. 4%° GI. mortgage. FE 2-6165. INDIAN VILLAGE, 7 ROOM BRICK. | dining rm. bedrms., gas heat, vestibule, fireplace. §16,- 930. "Ph. FE $-3558. BRAND NEW | 3 bedroom ranch home ‘with full basement, extra large lot in good suburban area. Close ‘to shopping center. Aluminum siding, co cat : prumoing. and birch a Priced gut with k sale Co. cen Rd. at M59 After 6 p.m. MAple 5-1601_ __ a a camraon 2-car garage. FE_ 5-3955. 3 ACRE fanceeene noes: $8,900: $1,000 down, NORTHSIDE, MODERN, 2 BEDRM., el mee Low down payment. “BUD” $400.00 Down Quick Possession on this 5 room brick terrace. Convenient East Side lecation, handy to bus and and featuring nee set room 2 bedrooms 8 nd full ba . good w tomatic: gas hot water. price only $5, , BORAT. buy it while you “can It’s A Knockout Near Pine Lake Country Club Nearly new 3 bedroom brick rancher with attached 2 car garage. offering more living psp aly in fine surroundings. er the view Gh lookin, e¢ Lake, fir in living room and addit cant fireplace in — and bat p with —_ dis» Gi etd Bel fer your appointm “BU p* Nicholie, Realtor Fe Houses 6 BY owNER. 3 BEDRM. RANCH. Paneled den. All ——. Car- peting. Marble fire aoe