ASSOCIATED: PRESS UNITED PSk8s PHOTOS ve INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE ; ; PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, © 0S f td “RUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1957 =30 PAGES é i ital Bonds for ' Furniture Store Blaze Brought Under Control Estimate Damages in| Thousands ‘of Dollars at Orchard Lake Shop A late-morning blaze was) brought under control to- day at a downtown Pontiac furniture store, but only after damage believed to! Tun into thousands of dol-' lars had been caused by smoke. The fire centered in~a>~ | one-story rear addition to| the Orchard Furniture & Appliance Co., 164 Orchard Lake Ave., at the corner of Exchange street. Firemen said that flames man- aged to break briefly through a rear fire wall into the main por- tion of the store. Smoke billow- ing through the store may have caused upwards of $20,000 damage to furniture on display, said Fire Marshal Charles E. Metz. A co-owner, Edward Bloom, of 13321 Oak Crest (t., Oak Park, said damage to the rear room probably reached $15,000, putting the preliminary estimate of total damage near $35,000. The other owner is Bloom's brother, Murray Bloom, of 17603 Freeland Ave., Detroit. * * x A salesman, Edwin Barkey, sa he noticed. smoke coming creat) the rear room, which is used for | Storage and display, shortly after ll a.m, Metz said the biaze evidently began on the floor in a‘pile of | ASS new mattresses rolled. up in wrapping paper. The cause of the fire had not yet been de- termined, but Metz said he would investigate if a careless customer had dropped a ciga- | rette into the mattresses. Barkey said he had been in the rear room about 15 minutes be-| fore the fire and maticas nothing unusual. ~ * * The rear addition has cinder block walls and a wood roof, which was destroyed by the blaze. Edward Blooni, Barkey and two other employes were able to flee the building in safety, al- though Barkey later cut his right hand while removing office rec- erds through a broken window. There were ne customers pres- ent, * * * Firemen, under the direction of Capt. Lee Nye, assistant Pontiac fire chief, had the blaze under control shortly after 11:30 a.m. Shepherd Given Life Sentence Birmingham Man Gets Maximum Jail Term in Slaying of Wife A maximum sentence of life im- ’ prisonment today was imposed on James D. Shepherd, 36-year-old Birmingham man convicted of the second-degree murder of his schoolteacher wife. . Cireuit Judge Clark. J. Adams ordered Shepherd to serve the sen- tence in State Prison of Southern Michigan at Jackson. * * * Shepherd, former salesman who. admitted. stabbing his wife Eliza- beth, 42, to death in their home at 1509 Pierce St. last May 27 heard the sentence impassively, He had not asked for leniency. © Conviction of second-degree ‘\ murder calls for imprisonment for any number of years up to life, Shepherd had originally been charged with first-degree mur- der which carries a mandatory life sentence. ; Judge Adams <_< oe fe Shepherd : guilty t lesser charge after a non-jary trial today chose to impose on him the highest sentence possible. in. Michigan. - x. * ** ' Although he admitted wielding the knife Shepherd said that at the time of the slaying he was “blacked out’’ because .of ‘com- ‘bined use of alcohol and tranquil- lizing pills, . ft Kiwanis Annes! Rummage Sale Btarte Thuraday, October 31s ‘Three big fing, * Pontiac = ~~ Water st, as ima _ Control Flames at Store = “gt eons ae ee i . Bae ES <. oh Be ae 4 eer ea ae q ' Pemtiac Press Phote in a recently bufit storeroom and show room at the rear of the store just before 11 a. m. Firemen had the blaze under control by en 45 a. m. Dam- age was eutimated at t eben $35 FAST WORKING FIREMEN — Pontiac fire- men worked fast this morning to bring a blaze under control at the Orchard Furniture & Appli- ance Oe,, 164 Orchard Lobe Ave. . The fre began Yule Parade Will Frolic “Through Pontiac Nov. 30 Train bs Car, d Nov. 30 on your calendar. ° Killing Driver | Mark a big red circle arou | For on this day you'll want to take the kids, as well! as yourself, to see the colorful “Christmas on Wheels”| roe sponsored this year by the Downtown Pontiac | Officials of the association held an organization meet-| ling } Monday to map plans for the annual extravaganza. _at Unguvarded Crossing | A Walled Lake man was killed ‘They-appointed Allan F. a ee eee Cady, advertising solicitor res The Pontiac’ Press as reek ty a New York. Ceateal , passenger train going 80 miles an |parade marshal. hour. | ~*~ & | There will be some, 25 floats in ‘this year’s line of march, depicting religious Christmas and, children's toyland themes. There will also be seven bands, majorettes, ‘Detroit Edison's calliope, military march- ing units, and a flock of clowns. According te Keith Ellibee, ex- ecutive director of tlie associa- tion, entry forms for eight church floats, seven from schools, and six bands have been received = date. Ellibee emphasized that this is. the first year in which the parade will be conducted in the afternoon, It is slated to head up Saginaw street at 2 p.m. Church and school workers who will aid in the construction of floats have been asked to attend a meeting Nov. 2 at 3:30 at the| Waldron. Hotel. Ellibee also made a plea for * * * revorted that Albert L. Stein- berger, 48, of 28294 Beck Rd., was killed at a crdssing on .Hannan Rd. about '3 mile south of Mich- igan Ave., in Nankin Township. Deputies said Steinberger was going south when he approached the unguarded crossing. The east- bound train scattered the car down the tracks for almost a mile, * * 7 7 Detective Harvey Aner, of the) Acrossing. This was the fourth death at the crossing in three years, he to indicate Steinberger had at- tempted to stop. ALLAN Inside The Press Today: F. CADY the ‘Merchant of Rated among ,th speakers nearly 500,000 listeners yearly. He comes to Po lac sponsored by ‘Gene Motors Corp’ An ardent United Fund booster) he is the past Assistant Director, al Red Cross off breakfast In response to an man Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, Born in Zanesville, Ohio, Irvin received his education at | versity and Michigan State Uni-| tary services \ to make no cuts in —|versity and holds B.A., M.A., and) Oberlin College, Ohio State Uni- |D. ED, degrees * * * He has served as both full and) Secretary of Defense Neil H. Me- and surprised with the results. part time educator from 1935 un- Elroy, who took office Oct, 10, yes--Some leveled “off the record” til 1957. He taught business speak. iterday announced inodific ation of criticism at those that opposed the | ‘ing and communications at Ober- lan Aug. 17 economy memoran-| $950,000 issue, lin, Ohio State, Allegheny College and Michigan State University. In addition to hig spealing, he Walled Lake Resident) writes articies tor professionst | | Dies Following Collision journals. “He now devotes full time to speaking and consulting - Principal ‘sheaker at the Pontiac Area United Fund - kick-off breakfast Monday, will be Dr. Charlgs E. Irvin, essage.” top six in the \United States, Dr. Irvin speaks to Military Welfare, American Nation- | He agreed to speak to the fund | volunteer workers at their kick- invitation from Campaign Chair. | Dr. | * Pe *- DR. CHARLES PF, Restore Funds r Research McElroy Tells Military |..to Make No Money Cuts on asic Studies IRVIN. | WAsHNe TON Ph — The Defense Department \pas ordered the mili- the $1,700,000, jvoted for basit. research in the) current fiscal year a 1 which Congress Light Turnout Defeats Issue by 3, 530 to2 150. ‘City Officials Confronted by Big Problem to se Furnish New Wing An echoing second-round no” has leit another big : question mark hanging over the $4,000,000 Pontiac ‘General Hospital addition today. Property owners residing in the city yesterday repeat- ‘ed their stand taken in May, rejecting a $950,000 bond issue by an unofficial margin of 3,530 to 2,150. The city had asked approval of the issue in order to. iprovide funds to furnish and equip ‘the new wing. It ‘appeared evident from an impromptu meeting of hos- pital officials last night that the possibility of continu- ing the project was almost nil. It was just as evident that they, as well as city com- missioners and city officials, did not know What could * * * Officials Ponder What to Do Next at City Hospital Hospital afd cit defeat of the hospital bond issue, as to what could be done now, ‘were. puzzled last night, after the | ‘be done to finish the pro- ect, | The trend in Monday’s election was visible about |half an hour after the,polls cl precincts reporting, only 11 y officials alike Showed a favorable vote on the issue. Precinct M4 at the Public Hous- ing Commission office showed no ‘returns from the 32 votes cast All said they were disappointed when the machine was opened for dum issued by his \predecessor ‘STAND IDLE (Charles E. Wilson, \ The Wilson memo hod the ef. | fect of curtailing some basic re- search spending, although Penta- gon aldes sald ‘this had not canal intended, > sales training, management | and business and indus- | | me communication. 2 — | this. morning when his car was, Wayne County Sheriff's Deputies) 1 Sheriff's Department, said that 8 vee signal is being installed at the’ added. There were no skid marks) % convertible.owners wishing to offer) ° their cars for use in the parade, as official cars. Interested owners) have been requested to call him) at FEderal 88991 or FEderal 5-6148. All Aboard tor Outer Space, Page 10 Straits Bridge Is Ready, Page 17 | Life Story of Louis B. Mayer, Page 30 | solicitots-from Pontiac and Water- Scientific matters .also got ‘President Eisenhower arranged t Over 200 United Fund volunteer meet with government officials and) \ Isadore 1. Rabi of Columbia) \ ford Townships are’ expected: to | University, chairman of a special iDr jattend the kick-off breakfast at scientific advisory committee. ithe Elks Temple. Manufacturers’ Association. The breakfast is being iponeered| Meanwhile, jagain this year by the Pontiac major factor in the quickening in- Dugan had no comment, ~y ® * * Russia's - Sputnik—a terest in U. S. research-—stiently} The companies making up the |orbited the earth at 18,000 m.p.h Association are American Forging! 4 Baldwin onl & Socket Co., Company, Consumers Power Co, Dostaf Foundry & Machine Co., Fisher Body Division, Jig Bushing Co., GMC: Truck & Coach Division, Pontiac Motor Division, Pontiac Varnish Co. and Universal Oil Seal Co, gots ae why So aes se rey In Today's s Press COMMS ik neiGe ed oeeose res 22 County News ...ccvccccesces 2 Weaerale scscccsseisscves 6 Mywlery oo... ccc cen coees x tt ere 23 Mbitwaries .......... i) Hports .....ccceseee. 19 Thru 21 Theaters vevnal8 TV & Radio Programs 90s OD Wilson, Eari .,...... ..29 Wemen's Pages ...13 Tora hed Soviet Rulers Delay Decision on Marshal’s Future | LONDON (INS)—Marshal Georgi The feeling that Zhukov, his ouster from the ruling Soviet his weight in the Communist, ithe contrary was throwing his own Presidium, has rallied some sup- Party, and not subscribing to the: ‘weight around and becoming un-| port, and has managed to delay a party's belief that the party and pleasantly dangerous to him. final decision on his future—pos- the armed services were — in- x eke sibly until] Wednesday. dissolubly one, erystallized during} The campaign was begun to oust, * * * Zhukov's recent tour’ of Yugo-|Zhukov while the marshal was out This was the-word reaching Lon- Slavia and Albania. ‘of the country. Strong measures don from authoritative sources in Moscow late today as the Central Committee of the Communist Party again met after its incon- clusive session last — and early today. Before ; this new information was obtained a Soviet diplomatic source in East Berlin said that Zhukov, ousted without explana- tion Saturday as defense min- ister, had been under detention by the Kremlin since his firing Was announced, Accusations against the marshal reportedly included one that he was building a “cult of person- ality” on the. basis of his military, leadership—the same charge that) . Communist Party boss. Nikita Khrushchev made against the late dictator Stalin. : #8 &, ‘The new {itformation from ee cow sources built up the following picture of events leading to the Central Committee's ‘Tong debate: Ps TOP MAN IN. RUSSIA — These are three ~views: of Soviet Communist Party boss Nikita } ae Oe nee Zhukov Rallies Support in Kremlin services, ileading to the current flow of in- __ {their the military, the Army disclosed. its new Hawk missile, which is de- signed to blast low flying planes. out of the sky, An announcement sald the mis- sile has a radar device that ig- nores stationary objects and speeds the weapon towafd mov- ing aerial targets. The Army said the Hawk can destroy invading aircraft even at treetop level, combat issue and an, Army state- iment said the Hawk brought forward rapidly.” * * * Wilson's’ Aug. 17 memorandum ‘had: stirred much criticism from members of Congress and others. The order told the services to cut spending by; an amount equal to 10 per cent of.the $1,- 700,000,000 approved for basic re- —< A spokesman said Wilgpn had. intended that the -reductions be! made out of $3,600,000,000 set up. for procuremeént and production in} research and development, rather) than trimming basic research: fore-| The impression became firm in also were taken to reawaken pasty) funds. K. Zhukov is fighting back against most Soviet soldier, was not pulling) ‘Khrushchev’s mind that Zhukov on) ‘consciousness within the armed| But the interpretation the var-| ious services attached to the mem-' ithe curtailment of basic research | |spired editorials as well as pep, ‘spending. ‘talks within army commands. Zhukov -was confronted with a (Continued on Page 2, Col. TF) Khrushchéy who ‘imal hei taken Yeidiapated control of affairs in the U. S. 8. Ro” Pm: Elvis Disputes Sinatra Attack HOLLYWOOD (® — Elvis: Pres- ley, replying to Frank Sinatra's denunciation of rock ‘n’ roll, said last night he considers it ‘‘the greatest music ever , . . because ‘it is the .only thing I can do." } * * * Sinatra, writing in a Paris mag- azine, said:rock ‘n’ roll is “phony ‘The Red moon was launched Oct.| The missile is not. yet ready “for ‘“‘must be) Some menrbers of the hospital's {Board of Trustees hinted that they | \should let- the new wing stand idle) “and let those that opposed this) iworry when &n epidemic or tor- nado strikes Pontiac.’ lWhite House’ attention ae Wearing the resulta; Curt §. | Flath, new hoxpital threw up his arms and said, “it's anbetievatle.”” May or Willlam W., ai | | | See Editorial, Page 6 ia tally. City Clerk Ada R. Evans |was to seek-an explanation from the manufacturers this morning, ¥ * * |\May 2, 6,895 property owners jcast a thumbs down “no” on a $1,500,000 issue by a 2-to-1 margin “i ‘lot 4,331 to 2,208, it was apparent in Monday's defeat of the issue, as well as in the May Vote, that voters saw director, | Donaldyon 9 possibility of a tax increase if. walked out of the hospital with) the - issue carried, This was fellox Commissioner John A, Du- gan and said, ‘We're all stunned.” (PROPLE SPOKEN Willis M.\ Brewer, the Board of. Trustees, said; disappointed. And He placed the major reason for the defeat as resentment of “| many taxpayers that non-resi- dent of of the city use the facilities lac General and only my a 15 percent surtax. Brewer mentioned also ‘the fear of increased taxes” as being an- other big reason for the rejection. * *« * < Paul A. Kern Jr., president of the Pontiac Taxpayers Assn., which opposed the issue, said the lresults of the election were a vin- idication of the belief of many tax- payers that “we.can't provide (Continued on ial 2, Col. 8) chairman of} “The | In the latest of a series of an-|People have speken for the second nounced technological advances by ‘time, Naturally we are all very) I just. don't) some information yesterday about) know.what the next step will be. i j (Continued on Page 2;-Cof. 4) Winter ar Ducks Out; . Fair Weather Back Winter has left the seene at temporarily, and. October |promises to’ end with 100 per cent lfall weather. For the Pontiac area, the U.S, Weather Bureau predicts gener- ally fair climes with mild tem- peratures tonight. The low will be 36 to 40 degrees. = For tomorrow, partly cloudy is the prediction with little change in temperature. The high will be 56- night is mostly cloudy with al ow. ‘of 34-38... \ Thirty-seven was the lowest re- Pontiac before 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the reading was a mild -53. Film Giant Louis B. Mayer of M-G-M Dead at 72 | | HOLLYWOOD (# — Louis B.-Mayer, 72, the sentl- , ‘mental film tycoon who assembled the biggest array « of istars in motion picture history, died today. His death was believed to have been caused by anemia, — especially the army, dum resulted. in the end, in from which he had been suffering for some time. Mayer was hospitalized in San Francisco last August, ‘but his condition improved+ fornia home Sept. 16. when his condition de- days, on Rock ° n’ Roll leesiaratad, and he was admitted Ito the UCLA Medical Center, Mayer had been receiving blood transfusions several weeks, His condition took q turn for the worse last evening. He entered a coma and died. at 12:35 a.m. * * * and false’ and is “sung, played! and written for, ithe most part by cretinous goons.’ | “Sinatra has a right to "whad lhe warts to say,” Presley said, \“"He is a great success and a fine |© ;actor, but , don't think he should’ lhave said | “He is A about this. This Mayer—for a lone of the movies’ most powerful lexecutives ‘and from 1937 to 1943 - ithe highest paid worker in the ‘United States—began his business areer assisting his father’ in a ship salvage. business. Born in Minsk, Russia, July 4, 1885, he was taken at three is a trend, just the same as he; months to St. John, N. B. -|faced when he started years ago. [ consider. it the greatest in music. | That was whére he joined his AP Wirephote It is’ very noteworthy, and namely jfather’ s business after a*short iets i because it: is the only thing: I canjlie school education: }do,” He entered the eater movie € , quarter-century and he was allowed ito re-|industry as ian, exhibitor “in Mas- ”| theater owner-manager, then a film distributer and finally—need- He had been home only a few), ing more films to show—the co- organizer of M-G-M company. osed’ at 8 p.m. Of the 43 60. The outlook for ‘Wednesday - corded temperature in downtown — ; In the—fiest reund vote taken ~ ~~ jeriee cf # g i $ i gs ‘Graham Calls for Conversions : ‘Asserts ‘Acceptance of to Defeat Communism NEW YORK (#—Billy Graham says ‘that unless. its “half Chris- tians” are converted into “com- plete Christians’ the Christian quali-| world will be defeated by commu- * * * Graham spoke last night at a dinner given by the Protestant Council of the City of New York. _ Earlier in the day, he learned that he sustained a slight frac- ture of the knee when he was but- ted recently by a pet ram at his son Jr., orthopedic specialist, told the evangelist he had a slight ver- tical fracture at the knee, a deep bruise and that the condition ~ Grakam was -to-stay his t Pte pt sa ae : for three weeks. He also must wear stiff knee braces. Seay * * At the dinner, Graham Veclared that the Communists, directed by ja handful of “dedicated: and dis- ciplined leaders, may triumph un- less the Christian world meets the challenge He said “we stand in a mad arms race that's about to blow us _jall, to bits.” Graham said two answers are available to the world: The Com- munist answer “which offers only the intellectuals the answers to their problems” and the Christian answer which “comes not from without but from within.” * *® * ‘ Plaques were presented to Gra- Graham said he was grateful for the hospitality shown in New York City during his crusade, which ‘ended' Sunday with a relig- fous meeting at the Polo Grounds. . Soe .| “We had never been to a city where we had been treated with such courtesy—by Catholics, Prot- estants and Jews,” Graham said. Man Forces Deputy, 5 Others Off Road known as ‘‘water-on-the knee" had|" developed - = Waterford ‘Accepts Land | nnd Christionity Only Way |! Anastasia Pal Held Under $50,000 Bail | $50,000 bail as a. material witness yesterday in General Sessions Court the and I thought Mr. Ana hadn't any either. May God a a ne s."" Reports Administration Sounded Out Adlai —- NEW YORK @—The New York Herald Tribune said today it was learned on good authority that Adlai E. Stevenson has been quiet- ly sounded out by the Eisenhower the new civil rights commission. A Washington dispatch to the newspaper added that Stevenson, presidential candidate, has dis- cussed the matter with close -asso- ciates and is reported inclined to turn down the -offer, | Hearis [but H Issue 3,530 to 2,150 ) als | » |Unemployment Next Year 17,000 in the city. Mrs. Evans reported that 26 votes were made void when voters apparently lifted up write-in slots on the machines. This too would be checked with the firm, she said. WHAT NEXT? . Asked this morning what the next with an emphatic ‘I don't 2 & : g, $ z § i i a] ; i i Bt Z "# administration for appointment. to|,,; Sehool had the largest with 285. The first paved street in New York was Stone Street. It got its name because the large cobble- stones they used to pave it made it “the stony street.” , No Progress Since 17th Century? |Assails High School Math CHICAGO (AP)—American high schools were said today to be-so far behind in mathematics that “any 17th Century ‘mathematician, reappearing on earth, could without any preparation teach the mar: curriculum.” oe * Howard F. Feuhr, president of the Nation: Teachers of Mathematics, told the Conference on the American High School in a prepared speech: Mathematicians themselves are creating new branches of pure mathematics, much of it knowledge that did not exist 60 years ago. Applied and pure mathematics have burst the ‘existing compartments that hous. arithnietic, algebra and geometry,and have made most of the classical treatment of high school mathematics obsolete.” — High schools have continued to teach, with 60 years ago, he said. Pa j eee ee ae oe | fi = * 4s Fs t } ul » tS Economists Present Bleak Picture Governor Williams Fears _ LANSING (# — Gov. Williams, after consulting with his economic advisers, says he feats a nation- wide «business slump that willl. . lngam ebove-netmal- in Michigan's auto industry The governor said he also is apprehensive that state tax income |: will not come up to expectations and that Michigan, along with most other states, will be confronted in 1958 with a “very severe fiscal problem.” * * * ‘ He talked with newsmen for an quarterly meeting with his eco- nomic advisory group, consisting of university economists and key state officials in the areas of revenue, employment and state budgeting. Williams related that the ad- ‘visers had a. pessi mistic mood” and sald that one foresaw a recession ahead of the proportions of 1953-54. None was optimistic, he said. He quoted Dr. Lawrence Seltzer, Wayne State University economist, |that a drop of as much as 10 per cent. might occur in the Federal Reserve Board's index of. produc-| 5™*™ tivity, which this summer: stobd at 147. Dirty Football’ Claim in East ~ Colleges End Relations Over Deliberate Injury Controversy BOSTON (INS) + Northeastern and Brandeis Universities today severed all athletic relations in a controversy over whether a North- ‘leastern player deliberately injured a Brandeis star in last Saturday's football game, eo The break came after coach Benny Friendman of Brarideis ac- »|cused Capt, Bob Lyons’ of North- eastern of deliberately ‘‘elbowing”’ sophomore end Mike Long, break- niing his face guard and causing cuts which required 42 stitches to Friedman. When it was not forthcoming immediately, Herbert W. Gallagher, Northeastern Direc- tor of Athletics issued this state- ment: - “It is deemed inipossible to carry on an amicable intercol- legiate program with this (Bran- deis) institution and for this reason it is better that we con- . Gude any agreements we might have made with Brandeis Uni- versity.” Friedman,, who is also Director of Athletics at Brandeis, replied with a statement ‘saying: — a gram would be better served by a discontinuance of athletic rela- tionship with Northeastern Uni- versity.” Prices Are Revealed for Studebaker Cars me See ee * £: * / ee Feuhr, head of the Mathematics Teaching Department of | Sean se te ae government hands, and the states could do little. . ° “They're tightening the screws, tightening the screw s—that’s what I call brinksmanship,”” Wil- Hams said. “Trying to squeeze inflation to the last drop.” He said this has brought the country to the edge of an economic abyss, although he emphasized that he considered a repetition of the great depression impossible be« . [cause of the built-in controls of New Deal times. Board should “‘quit its tight money policies,” and at another point, declared, ‘“‘We don't need the brakes any more.” : picture presented to you before?” a reporter asked. “No, I haven't,” said Williams, who soon will start his tenth year as governor. Asked if the report came as a “shock,” he said that it didn’t House Speaker George M. Van Peursem, a Republican, has pre- dicted that Williams will come in with an “economy” budget next year for political reasons. ! How City Voted ? 1 Jefferson Jr. High School 35 4 2 Fire Station No. 2...... Ko 2 pay Ley RO = bo 5 Ww School ..., 180 104 €@ Senior _ Behool...., 87 rt) 7 Stevens ces 30 2 8 Webster School ..—..... 132 69 @ Senior High School .;., 38 “4 10 Crofoot School ........ 3: 38 It Oak, Co. Office Bidg.... 17 4a 12 Wisner School .......... 43143 13 Lincoln School ..... ++: 390~Ss«aZ 34 Lincoln Bebool ‘...:..... 21 63 16 Owens seeerewoee 17 16 LeBaron wee] aveve a | 142 iceman i fe he . * 19 St. Michael’s Hall ..... a SB SMOM ocosns :.veccsess 98 2 21 Central School. ......0+ 13 8 22 City Hall .......0..0.0:, il 63 Ay Eeagteer ‘Sehsel ” Oise $$ MeConn ell Behool 20... “ 9 st Wilson School -ts.cscccs Pa |38 Wilson Senoat scares we 3 30 Cong. Brnai lerael...... 140 81 31 Webster School ...... oe bi) Wever ebook... -..... 38 “ oh be a in i ak. oe FA Jr. High. Sch. 42 Bchool ........+ . 2 ? Behool...... 83 90 ‘ — . = ae apris 160 ¢ Ovens. FR, wm ganna rH 1 San ee Se Sresecceencpeseess 2000 BOD ie : tt eRe 3 itn Be Z were completely came from members of Western : E 5 “Have you ever had this Bleak aly 7 | 4 al i ala I pire F i is eo i if Ege z sf < it Be #3 i? a 5 8 2 2 will be at 9 a.m, Thursday from the funeral home Mrs. Gravlin died Monday at her home after a long illness. * * * She is survived by her husband; two sons, John C. Munger of Royal Oak and James E. Munger of Oak Park; her father, James C. Mc- Mahon of Detroit; one Ponder Next Step at Pontiac General (Continued From Page One) service for all the area on our money.” . He called for a hospital aathor- ity to finish the project at Pon- tiac General. “I only hope the future waits for us,"" was the Comment of William | Gromer fo Present Atlantic Coast Film Dr. White Gets Laughs ° i at S-Mile-Wallk Talk DETROIT (INS) — Dr. Paul Dudley ‘White, heart specialist and physician to President the medicine a me werlf's rice. crop’ bs reduced WasHmicTON in—Federal aid for school construction, last fo years, has been quietly), now ony $175. ATER SAE: $995, For a limited time only you may now purchase this handsome new 3-piece sterling silver coffee set by world-forned Reed & Barton at a big $50 saving. The “Hibiscus” set is full-size, (10 cup capacity) and: of excellent weight. Matching sterling and black micarta tray, 15" diameter, $45 Fed. Tax inc. JEWELERS 16 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 2-0294 fp ey = EyesChanging Missile Policy ‘jthe Army hopes the Defense De- jpartment may. loosen its limita, jtions on Army missile ranges has of the Cntinental Army Where there is @ need... ‘there we serve "FUNERAL HOME “THOUGHTFUL SERVICE” “46 WILLIAMS ST. PHONE FE 2-5841. ener Jon the traffic. jticketed for a House committee pigpoanale -at (oe TER epeten. the House subcommittee on gen-\g * * “Politics, the bitter school segre- | gation issue, and Democratic jr- ritation with President Eisenhow- er’s leadership in last session's school aid battle were all factors - contributing to the decision, Army ‘General Seeking: ‘on Range of Rockets * : WASHINGTON i®—~A hint’ that come from a general critical pt the policy Gen. Willard G. Wyman, had Com- mand, discussed the need for ground force missiles in address- ing the Assn. of the U8/ Army yesterday. / ~ © * / “T consider it dangergus to fet- iter our development now with ar- |bitrary range fimitations and rigid | definitions,"* Wyman , ‘said, | A directive now / limits , Army authority to a 200-mile range for bombardment type missiles, and to a 100-mile range for antiair- craft guided missiles. At a subsequent news: confer- ence, Wyman was asked about the remark. Wyman replied he thought that when former Secretary of De- fense Wilson ‘issued. the restric- tions, in ‘a directive on the roles and missions of the armetl forces, he recognized that the area on missile development ang. use was “somewhat cloudy.” : And, Said the general, he thought “the directive recognized that “there would be changes from time to time.”’ | Wyman put his views into a speech which he read. But anoth- er }iigh officer discarded a pre- pared speech which took pointed’ issue with some ph les and claims of the Air Force and lim- ited his actual talk to a mild dis-) course on the Army’s role in air| defense. Lt. Gen. Stanley R. Mickelsen, | who is retiring as chief of the) Army's Air Defense Command, scrapped his original text which said such things as. “‘interceptor) aircraft are obsolescent” and the Army’s present Nike antiaircraft missile “can reach and kill any bomber that flies today.” Seeks Crackdown on Teen Dope Use DETROIT — Juvenile Judge Bailey said. Speaking to a reporter, Bailey: asserted that as chairman of the |g school legislation he intended. to, j Lifting of Limitations. sit on the bill at the next session & 4 ‘of Congress which opens in Janu ary. “The administration had its chance last year,” Bailey said, re- ferring to the 208-203 House defeat handed a 1% billion dollar aid bill ministration's proposals, * * * ; On this vote, 111 Republicans and 97 Democrats teamed to kill the bill. Against killing it were b+ Republicans and 126 Democrats. “First of all, the Eisenhower administration wants to make .a M. Bailey (D-WVa), chairman of pF which reflected most of the ad-/M—R yinseuaenaneseeasesrsuesnsanaussas, A ¥es—for- Daly. ONE CENT CENT You La Get an EXTRA PRINT 'g Wednesday and Thursday Only! : NY Size Black and White +1 I potened PRINT. roils) When You Pay Regular 4c Each for the First Prints Bring in any size roll, pay only regu- lar developing charge and have TWO PRINTS of each picture you actually PAY ONLY 21¢ PER & 2 (No limit on number of s SIMMS) 20 iclllesltllaiaatttasitttatttsay SATISFACTION GUARANTEED K@ lfalase) —Main Floor 1 political —. of school grants,” Bailey ed, “An election year is a bad time to play politics with sthool needs. Bailey, a strong backer of school grants, said he expects Ei- senhower will renew his request in his 1959 budget message in Jan- * * * “Furthermore, until such time as President Eisenhower can show a majority of his own ae is in favor of the legislation, I am not sone to take any action,” Bailey Bailey said he was also forced reluctantly to the cpnclusion that! the integration dispute — cutting, strongly into’ School aid support: “would mitigate strongly against. passage of federal grants at this time.” While planning to drop’ goneres| | school assistance next year, | Bailey said his stbcommittee plans to continue spécial assist || ance to local school districts over- burdened by pupils from federal, defense and military activities. | en er 2 This federal program of school) aid to impacted areas has fun-| ineled around $1,200,000,000 in fed-' eral school construction funds in- to some 2,300 local school districts in the past six years. Additional millions of dollars of federal aid have been spent for)’ WEDNESDAY—One Dey.ONLY! Guaranteed: Unbreakable —_ HI-IMPACT SFYRON “Porcelite”’ Dish Pans end UTILITY PANS Choice of ROUND or SQUARE Original $1.89 Quality 88°: : oe aye Size Easy to Cle & Choice of Colors Unbreakable, shape, high - grease holds acid-proof, gloss sheds KITCHEN NEEDS maintenance and operation of overcrowded buildings in impact- ed areas since the program begari in 1951. The current budget pro-|. vides approximately 69 million dollars for this purpose, Another education subcommittee headed by Rep. Elliott (D-Ala) is expected to consider federal. tui- tion and assistance grants to’ ‘Nathan J. Kaufman says he has received detailed a greg: . the existétice of a dope ring tha peddles marijuana to high school teen-agers in Detroit. He has called for a meeting of) police and County Prosecutor Sam- uel H. Olsery to map a crackdown * * * Kaufman said a 16-yeardid was arrested Sunday along with three other teen-agers on charges ‘in- volving narcotics violations. 4 He» worthy. students in technical train- ing fields, - 1 African Imports Up CAPE TOWN—Souti Africa im- ported — $1,385,400,000 worth >f goods during 1956 compared with $1,346,800,000 the year before.” Citizenship in Monaco is- limited to families which have lived there four generations. said it was the second arrest in| five days involving teen-agers on dope charges, cede atk te wpe E listed names, dates and places where marijuana could be | bought : : companions were arrested after po- lice stopped a taxicab on a routine check and found a match box full of marijunana in the youth's) The youngster told Kaufman he} and’his friends bought the narcotic with money they got on the sale of stolen Judge Kaufman withheld details of the information given him. He called for the meeting with | Haw. officers for. Friday. t é Es a ONE ‘STC ‘OP ave c ait via Midway Terminal FASTEST WAY! Only 1 hr. 48 min. Other 4tingine Service” ONE-STOP - MILWAUKEE The young informant and his] New It’s at SIMMS NEVER BEFORE at This Low Price! ~ re Handsome WROUGHT IRON - * Mail Boxes 2 STYtess Reg. $4.99 3 88 ' YOUR CHOICE Exactly as pictured, choice of upright or horizontal style boxes § — both in black wrought iron “with brass medallion. Scallop §} cover, rustproof style. E Factory Representative Here WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.M. REMINGTON E Electric: Shaver RECONDITIONED —While You Gy) : NEW SERVICE—Rem representative will be ery WEDNESDAY of every week. peries and ot ith 4 that covert Ser | mineral apray it covers eolors, A CATION cari Everything you need . pega 98 North . PYTTTYTTTTTYTrTr yy Time: to. Brighten Up' jor the : Holidays |} FABSPRAY. Renews COLOR Beauty to Faded, Soiled Fabrics. 12-Ounce PRESSURE CAN ge chairs, adfas, dra tains, spots, fading, “4 sha catia colors Vacuum action 100°5 wool dry mop holds dust and dirt ‘til whirled free. Magnetic action, never \ lints, @ bear for wear——stays fresh ‘n’ fluffy. Mop- head rerrioves easily for quick hand washing. SIMMS A 98 N. Saginaw Bright New COLORS for Faded Fabrics — Now Ineluding Charcoal—Gold—Turquoise—Cherry ir tabrice come int, tint, or Poet) ee ee ee ee mC em) [ mm J BROTH a : Pi 2” 7 * golid colors. Ladies’ Dresses Regular $2.89 & $3.68 Choice of (25° dresses. Print, counter soiled.! Sizes [1, 16, 18, 38, 40, 42, 46, 52. 10, 15, plaids, some 12, 14, Ladies’ Purses Regular $1.89 & $2.89 Genuine leather and plastics in popular styles Only 16 to go at Slight scratches and mars this, price. Maternity Dresses | $2.88, $3.88 & $5.88 Values Only 15 maternity dresses in. assorted styles. Prints and plaids. Sizes 10 to 18. Your choice. 4 4 Ladies’ Uniforms $2.89 & $3.89 Values Workers, nurses, etc, All sizes 10 to 20 Ladies’ Full Slips — Regaler 2.89 Value Washable rayon taffeta in pink or white finest quality slips on Adjustable straps, Sale. Girls’ Pajamas — Regular $2.49 Value Washable flannel, coat style tops, elastic waist bottom, Pink or blue prints. Sizes 8 ‘only. Nylon, cotton uniforms for waitresses, lab mae Slightly soiled sleeves. ce ee eae oy Girls’ Dusters. Regular $3.95 Value Washable quilted cotton duster with 44 length sleeve. Choice of assorted colors. Sizes 3 wd Ox popular - Ladies’ Dusters Regular $2.95 Value First quality duster with short sleeves, Washable, polka dots, fronts, patch pockets, Small only. SVAN MOP ovate) aiala hE Pillow Shams -Requler $1.29 Value Cotton plisse pillow with rose floral designs. this price s in white No limit at button Bs Plastic Drapes. Regular $1 Value -. Only 36 pairs of these — go on sole. Some have patterns, are " Bathroom Sets LID COVER AND RUG _ Final clearance — mis-matched stripes, Both for 18 x 30° rug and lid cover, this price. 3 Throw Rugs ~ Regular $1.29 Value 18 x 30-inch rug with non-skid ae berized backing. Assorted colors. limit at this price. 63° 63 Men’ s Dress Shirts Regular $2.89 Value 00 Slightly soiled broadcloths in white and pas- tels. _Santorized. 6 Broken size ranges. Chenille Drapes - Regular 3.98 Pair 69 x 90-inch size.. nille—guaranteed first quality, Colors. only, Washable tufted che- 54 Boys’ Pajamas” lor $2 Value Printed cotton gg ed pajamas with boxer Sizes 6 waist, fly front, Gripper fastener. Boy’s Trench Coat — Regular $9.95 Value All weather coat of rayon acetate, breasted, belt, epaulets, Sizes 10 to 16. Q9nd FLOOR S$ Ice-Cream Scoop Regular 1.49 Value Ideal for ice cream, rriashed potatoes, vegetables, etc. Metal — wood han- . dle. dutta’ Spee | PECIALS >. Coffee Percolator Regular $1.29 Value Handy 2-cup size. Highly polished alum- for this special inum finish. tmported for price. : 78 Drainboard Tray | Regular $2.95 Value 15% Colors. x 20-inch size, draining tray with sloping taper to carry away dish waters: i ‘ pound roast. Modern lamp stands Brass with blue, pink or black trim and shade. Enamel Roaster Regular ! Value Oval roaster for 6-pound fow! or IC- x 92 en size. 1434 With cover. 63° Electric Fry-Pan a $12.95 Value Round all metal fry pan with control for cooking. Cover and cord. Only 6. o” Table Lamps 2 for $2.25 Eac ; bulb extra, 18% inches high. Stair: Treads With Riser — $1 Value Carpet textured stair treads in assorted Lseiig oe: — riser. Eac eee bees _No limit. eeeeee JIM M2: 98 N. Seginew— Bee ROT KERS Pek hardening *~ * * It is A ks le om ie Alte NN a-Si gt Ea Ay believed that: persistent high blood cho- lesterol levels and short blood clotting time may “We believe eral health. a ‘Southeast Feels Cold Move In : Region Extends Into : Alabama, — Mississippi ; and Florida By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - There was ‘a switch in the weather, temperaturewise; today, with many parts of the Southeast colder than the Northeast and the Great Lakes region. ‘Temperatures were mostly in the 30s from the Ohio Valley and the Virginias southward. Some - places reported below freezing readings. = ; *-* * The cool belt extended into the northern sections of Alabama and Headed for Pacific in ‘3 Rees sasiiiddh sea Va lot Wodlg _“Roronary ote ee ett saa, inilinesal: tad Sasha sate f- is clearcut evidence that socio-economic stress pice shila West Meiatidamy/ex owe cant of the accountants showed highest cholesterol | levels at the times of greatest work stress, and {a % per cent of the subjects, lowest cholesterol . was found at the time of least stress. The physicians said the changes in cholestefol | levels in their experiment could not be traced to | “any differences this change in the iewiate bed’ in weight, en 4 wes or gen- Stolen Plane Search for Suicide Pilot SEATTLE m™ — A Codst Guard cutter, hampered by rain and low! visibility, Yoday sought for the wreackage of a stolen single-en- gine plane whose pilot had radioed he was making a suicide dive inth the Pacific 100 miles off the Wash. ington. co: re = » * *« * The plane, a rebuilt Stinson owned by B. K. Louthan of Seattle, was stolen yesterday from Boeing Field here. It buzzed downtown of- fice buildings and a Puget Sound ferry, then headed west and dis- appeared in the clouds. ’ Last heard from the pilot, who identified himself at “J. A. Green- awalt of Seatile,” was a radio message about 2:45 p.m, (PST) also brought warming trend. was reported from Texas northeast- ward through lower Michigan. * * * Dry weather prevailed in most of the country, cg oe Georgia. Both Ra- , cooled . 3% degree marks. pap eeg t was 43 at Boston,’ a Minneapolis, 41 in Detroit and 38 in Chicago. Temperatures in the Ws also) Were general in the northern Plains and: the Northern Rockies) but southerly winds warmed the expect Southern Plains and the Middie| Mississippi Valley. Westerly winds Plains. Fair and warmer nis was the outlook for most areas east of the Mississippi River as well .as in the lower and Middle Missis- sippi Valleys ‘and the Southern Snow flurries and cooler weath- er was forecast in the Upper Mis- sissippi Valley while showers were expected along the North Pacific Coast and in the southwest desert region. ——-———— le A ae ae ee we De pe il aati tee aoa so tena ity dl ntl ee aa ee * SE Re ay sete ke el nena GET SATISFYING FLAVOR... SO FRIENDLY TO YOUR coast, said a militayy radar station hat: spotted the plane going down aerosol-container 88 sold in the United year at an average of $1 per re- tail item. holding nonfood items climbed 23; per cent over—1955 and were 10) times those of 1951. Civ it hbvainiiiial) | sicaaar| tion officials in Hoquiam, on the from 11,000 feet. * * The Coast Guard cutter McClaine was dispatched by Coast Guard headquarters here to the scene from Aberdeen, four miles east of Hoquiam. A plane was sent ‘from the Coast Guard station at Port Angeles on the northern shore of the Olympic | Peninsula, The plane failed_lo find any sign of the Stinsorg Weather ‘permitting, another plane was to join in the séarch | toda 'y. ‘ . | Greenawalt was identified by | the CAA as a former controller trainee at the Seattle Alr Traffic’ | Control Center, He resigned Sept. 7 after working there about a year, Officials said he was 2%. Greenawalt's wife and two chil- dren are believed fo be living in! Fairbanks, Alaska. At nine — Container Sales Climb. | NEW YORK — Some 390,000,000] products were | States last! Sales of these contain-| — U. comme omen Hl Early 8. gold pieces were) counterfeited in platinum. 1 filters the smoke —— does not filter out the Pall Mall flavor! — oe eee ee WINNING THE WESTI . after the famous American artist FREDERIC REMINGTON "A New Year on the Cimarron” The. great whiskey of the Old West ‘is winning new friends everywhere! The smoothest of fine Kentucky whiskies has the ‘taste, the mildness, the quality that will win you too! od hgh ‘The frontiersmen of the West favored whiskey ... and were Cede #ms Partial to Sunny Brook's Kentucky flavor. Today’ $s whiskey-wise Americans, S$ 420 _ too, prefer the superior quality and mildness of Sunny Brook! 1% Qt. - Code #54 KENTUCKY _— +A BLEND a he Me. $ e THE OLD SUNNY BROOK onal LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY, DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY + 86 rRoor 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS -_ Ce if “FAMOUS CIGARETTES o., me shemale voeacco couranr= reeacco s ‘ove moove wwe fs ails - THE seer PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER, 20, 1957. AP Wirephoie VACATION’S OVER - a Siam appears ‘pleased as aS trainer, Joyce Vidbel, directs her into a motor van after a 13-day Catskill mountain vacation which started when a horse scared her from a barn in which she was housed. MITCHELL HOLLOW, N. Y. & . —Siam, the Catskills. elephant, munched today on whisky-soaked feed while residents of this--area relaxed. The unlikely safari was! - over. The 24% ton female, gonsiderably _ chastened by a-cold and hunger, talked. She her legs. galloping shorses. Then she lumbered up a ramp and was off to the farm she had fled when she was frightened by ly Ends Catskill Rompie'sise.™* =" cotirhasbiadk utiie lashing quick check with. a 200, ~ oat istered a shot of penicillin and prescribed whisky in the ane: lee: Mapaiide wore: deppped tu jether in a van in oder to keep The the Pata ia that \. Siam's temperature was one de- gree below norma! and that ‘she 3 had g-cold in her eyes, But lie found the 13-year-old ‘suffering mostly from . upset nerves and shock, _ ‘ Mrs. “Vidbel said Siam received an excited and noisy welcome from her- two fellow performers,| jof Dying Mother The three spent last night to-|Porchlight campaign to raise funds) Siam warm. + Mrs. Vidbel pronounced her #4, > charge a Sine ~j oped The money will be deposited in: ported insd-as ” bl a, the Mickey Luebke fund at the coholic rd ater : Clarkston State Bank, Mrs. | After the k’s rest, Mrs. Vid- Luebke, 34, of 6571 Sashabaw Rad., bel said they would ‘begin a re- ifresher course to make sure that er of 10 who is dying of cancer, raised $224 in Pontiag last night,, learned on Mother's Day that she long. habits during. her onyeeey in the i) les . -A similar porchlight campaign’ will be conducted in Clarkston to-| Owners Uneasy. in House That's , ~ Accident-Prone ALTOONA, Pa. Walter Evans slept a little uneasily last (night, So did his wife. x © ** ’ Late” yesterday, .afternoon two autos collided at an intersection a few feet from the Evans home at . |nearby East Freedoni. The autos ers, simply walked up to her and while an as- sistant put hobbling chains on locked together and smashed into a wall of the house. Little more than three hours later a‘ truck and auto> came to- gether and they, too, smashed in- to the Evans home. The wall of the home was damaged but no one inside the house was. hurt, Two of the four : night,. and in the Drayton, Sasha- idrivers. were ‘injured. One. Peter baw, Clintonville area Wednesday W. Odenthal, 44, of Portage, Pa., night. Persans may also mail con- was reported in critical condition tributions to-the Luebke fund at the today. : < Clarkston State Bank. “It makes a person wonder if Three of the 10 Luebke children: they shouldn't move to a- sater have been adopted, and six remain’ location,”- Mrs: Evans said. at home. Another is living with) relatives, Luebke, a welder, al- Finds Wife Dead in Car, Se ee ae ee Succumbs to Stroke - ! ‘MAYSVILLE, Okla. w — ’ ,|Pilot Lands in Street doctor said a traveling salesman ‘ discovered his wife ie their to Ask About Airport ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. w— fear here, and shortly afterwards ‘was found dead in the same car ee sr tt Puna ar Pe The doctor said both deaths ap-|"85 OM€M Deen asked for direc- parently were caused by heart/tions—but never before from an attacks, airplane. ‘The light plane landed on a city street yesterday evening. near! The victims were identified as John Hugh .Wilson, about 75, -and Mrs. Florence Wilson, 75, of Okla- |Eversull’s patrol car and taxied/ homa City. over. The unidentified pilot leaned: submitted meekly to her caphers yesterday. ~~ = Thia_.was_not _ the_ sigue ait acriene Funds for November Relief whe had been romping in the ~-BEEESE= Ack Supervisors for Extra $100,000 Aid: Today she was back at the- farm | ments through the end of the , out and yelled he was “going to! Montana” and where was the’ nearest airport, The stunned policeman gold him and the pilot took off. “T should have given him a ticket,’ a Eversull recalled too late. | Volunteers out collecting in af: for the family of a Clarkston moth. i. had cancer, and would not live) | the Social Wel‘are Department, | es 0) oh. CUA Is tops ‘Starts Today, Ends Yolmorvew of $001 | - Sorry, No Mail or. Phone Oe No Detiveriae, 7 All Sales geal: Ew 0 Mens | AT LEAST ¥/ OFF! STOREWIDE! FASHION ACCESSORIES — Street Floor Reg. to $1.98 Better Costume Jewelry 66c, 88c Reg. 99c. Famous Make Hosiery. 44e Reg. $1.65. Famous Make Better Hosiery. . 88 Reg. 39c Large Hankies, Print Cotton... .. 22¢ Reg. $2.98 English Woven Cotton Gloves. $1.88 Reg. $1.00 Cotton, Silk, Collars & Scarfs... 44c Reg. $1.00 Cotton Shorts, Sizes 10-16 .... .22¢ Reg. $2.98 Long Sleeve Cotton Blouses. . $1.88 MEN‘S WEAR — Street Floor Reg. $4.98 Zippered Jackets, Small, Med. $1.88 Reg. to $5.98 Long SI. Sport Shirts $1.88, $2.88 Reg. to $5.95 Dress Shirts........ $2.88, $3.44 Reg. $3.98 Dress Shirts .............. $1.88 Reg. $2.98 Dress Shirts”... $1.44 Reg. $15.98 Terry, Rayon, Wool Robes $5. 88 Reg. to $1.50 Underweer Some Soiled ........... aa 22, 44c, 66¢ DOMESTICS, CURTAINS — Fourth Floor Reg. 79¢ Cannon Stripe Both Towels .. 44c Reg. $5.95 Chenille Bunny Rugs,........ $3.88 Reg. $1.69 Huge Cannon Bath Towels ..... 88c Reg. to $2.29 Tailored Curtain Panels ..... 88c Reg. $2.19 Window and Door Valances ... . 88c FASHION SAVINGS THIRD, FLOOR 2 ORS ER SEE ae @ FURS e 2 Mink Scarfs, 3 Skin, Silvery Grey Rey. 99.00 $44. 1 Mouton Jacket, Smoke Grey, Size }2 ei MB Reg.. 79.95 $44 : 1 Mouton Jacket, ‘ Brown é Reg. 129.00 | $86 | Mouton Coat, %4 L she fled Oct. 16, After a week's, Oakland County Supervisors will respose ‘‘to settle her mind’ she|be asked tomorrow to appropriate again will take up the television|$100,000 in emergency funds to bol- wos that the state cut Its con- tritution to persons on relief . Reg. =e 99 36” Sombes Cafe Guneins . $1.88 Reg. year, The emergency appropriations and circus life that she had for-'ster direct relief in cae saken for a simple pastoral exist- * ence. + * * mal yesterday several miles month. through woods until she finally. halted near a quarry. She had been caught and had broken aeay twice during the day. __ This apprcpriation oi be in ad- dition to $100,000 «lready appro- A posse trailed the tired ani- priated for the same purpose last the Board of Auditors, predicted @hat another $100,000 would have are in addition to the [683,500 budg- eted by the county for relief this ‘year. Through September of this year, Moore said, the county had spent $778,833 in direct r_lief. | County officials listed two main ‘jreasons why the 1957 relief budget was used up before the end of the year, | to be appropriaied next month | The prifitipal reason, said Alfred Vidbel, one of her train- | to continue direct relief pay: | George Burt, vice chairman of — “No trouble at all, Joe, have a phone right here in the bedroom” Extension phones make your home more comfortable. For example, a bedside phone means a lot of step-saving . convenience. Your wife would probably like it iri color, including adjustable loud-soft bell. Extension phones cost only about a dollar a~month after a small one-time installation charge. Extra one-time charge for color. Call the Business Office to order yours, * MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY: . Oakland County ical ee duly 1. * * * ‘The contribution was cut from 530 per cent of the total aid to 30 per cent, and the county has had to dip into its pocket to make up) he difference, Burt said. * * * The second reason has been a} five per cent increase in the num-| ber of persons on relief. Burf said there were 1,698 per- sons on the county's relief rolls last week, compared with an average 700 to 800 a year ago. This increase, he said, not only) reflects an increase in county un-! employment, but also the increase | in county population, which has risen from about ~ 580,000 a year) ago to an estimated oo today. ~*~ -* The emergency nite said, are being transferred from/} ~ the county's courthouse building’ fund. If the expected total of $300,- 000 is transferred to direct relief this year, it will leave slightly| more than $1,000,000 in the fund, Moore said. ~ © . Other r action expected at the su- pervisors” meeting tomorrow: Re-appointment of Moore, Cor. | poration Counsel Harry J. see Reconditioned PORTABLE Round Bobbin SEWING MACHINES rit: and ten other county officers ‘mee a ._.| _ TERRIFIC BUYS men a new mem . io the Soc Wattre Tepartment: |, IN FLOOR MODELS, Jui “ a ‘tab smandie committee to study reforms inf Res. 99.00 New Portable Elec- trie, Forward G Reverse. . . $69 Reg. 159.00 Domestic Round Bobbin, Blond Oak Console. Forward G Reverse. ..-... $99 Reg. 303.00 Full Rotary White, Forward G Reverse,’ 3-Drawer Maple Desk $179 Reg. 383.00 Auto, Zig - Zag, Forward and Reverse. Mahog- Report - the Welfare C mit- any Desk - RS OOE CRS acid tee on so-called sub-standard hous- White Sewing Center ing in _ Pontiac for families on 1 Waite's ... Fourth Floor * * Deferment of a * election on the proposed ‘covrthouse until | eee eee ewe appeal may be heard early next spring; base * * are you a little short this month? Most of us have months when we are a little | short of ready cash to pay bills, buy new clothes, take weekend trips, meet medical expenses or for other worthwhile purposes. If you can use some extra cash right now, _ Get a $25 to $500 Loan Today Phone FE 8-9661 j for immediate action! 1185 North Perry Street “Parking No Problem” NG _PIMANCE COMPANY 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown. Pontine; ; - Nest t© te New A&P Supétr Market | Reg. call SEABOARD~your lending neighbor! | -) SEABOARD $3. 88 Reg. - Reg. Reg. Reg. $6.95 Full Foam Mattress Toppers. . $3.88 Reg. $7.95 Princess Decron Pillows ...... $4.88 . Reg. 59c Cotton Print & Solid Fabrics... .. 22c. Reg. $7.95 80x84 Patchwork Quilts... $3.88 CHINA, HOUSEWARES — Fifth Floor Reg. 45c¢ to $2.98 Ass’t'd Dinnerware 8c to $1.88 Reg. to $1.49 Imported Gloss Pieces...... . 88c' Reg. to $10.98 Table Lamp & Shade... $5.88 Reg. 88c¢ Potato Boke Racks....... 2 for 88c Reg. $1.98 Paint Roller Cleaner .... . . 88e NOTIONS, STATIONERY — Street Floor . $1.49 Terry Covered Foam Dolls. ... 88c . $14.98 Sliding Door Wood Chests. . $6. 88 . $2.98 Children’s Halloween Costumes, . 88¢ . $1.00 Beautiful Ceramic Ash Trays .. .66c . to $3.00 Slightly Soiled, Boxed Stationery .66¢ to $2.44 . $2.98 @oumaes Metal File Boxes. $1.88 LINGERIE, BRAS — Second Floor . to $3.50 SI ler. Briefs, Trunks. ..... $1.88 . $1.98 Nylon Briefs . $5.98 Pastel Cotton Percale Dusters. $3. 44 . to $3.98 Nylon Tricot Slips . . to $5.98 Van Realte Half Slips, see ee ene eee nes : Slightly Irregular Lee eee ees $1.88 Reg. $10.98 Cotton Housecoots ..... ... $6.88 ‘Reg. to $5.00 Famous Brand White Cotton Bras ............... $2.88 Reg. $1.50 Cotton Breas .............05.. 88 CHILDREN’S VALUES — Second Floor Reg. to $3.98 Girls’ G Subt. Orion Sweaters $1.88 Reg. $3.98 Boys’ 2-4 2-Pc. Knit Suits... .$1.88 to $2.98 Girls’ 1-6x Cotton Dresses. $1.44 to $8.98 Girls’ & Subteens’ Cotton Dresses ........... $2.88 to $4.88 to $5.98 Boys’ 6-16 Gab., Flan. Slacks $1.88 to $3.98 Girls’ & Subteens’ | ; _ Slightly Soiled Blouses............ Reg. $39.98 Famous Brand Youth Beds. “$24. 88 Reg. to $3.98 Cotton Crib Blankets, SI. Irr. $1.44 RUGS, SPORTING GOODS — Downstairs Reg. Reg. Reg. Reg. $29.95 9’x12’ Cotton Loop Rugs...... $18 Reg. $39.95 9’x12’ Wool & Nylon Loop Rugs ow Reg. $29.95 Twin Box Spring ............ $18 Reg. $149.95 5-H.P. Clinton Outhoard ; with tank .......0000 00 oe ee $88 Reg. $5.98 Large Score Ball Games. ....... 88c Reg. $29.95 Ladies’ 21’’ Wardrobe Case... $18 Reg. to $1.98 Group of Toys............. 88c APPLIANCES, TV — Downstairs _ (Ploot Models. Demonstrators, Used) Reg. $149.95 30” Gas Ranges (2 only)... .$88 Reg. $99.95 30-Galion Ges Automatic '» Weter Heater (1) -......0... 00.0.5 58 Reg. $169.95 Deluxe Wringer Washers (2) ee 18 Reg. $179.95 Electric Dryers (2) . ~, $99 Used 17" Westinghouse Console (1). .. $88 WOMEN’S, MEN’S eine veh Reg. $49.50 Men's Benrus Self-Wind (1) $19.88 Reg. $49.50 Men’s Benrus Celender (1) $19.88 Reg. $33.75 Men’s 17 J. Elgins (2)... .$17.88 Reg. $37.50.Ladies’ 17 J. Elgin (1)... $19.88 Reg. $47.50 Men’s 17 J. Elgin (1)... $19.88 Reg. $29.95 Ladies’ 17 J. Wadsworth (1) $17.88 Reg. $42.50 Men’s Bulova (1) ........ $17.88 . MISCELLANEOUS — Street Floor Reg. to 98c Novels, Mysteries ...... em aot from Rental Library............ 2 for 88c (Street Floor Mezzanine) Reg. $1.50 Heavy Silverplated Flatware..... We Reg. $1.00 Silverplated Butter Dishes..... 122¢ Reg. $1.50 150 Bath Bubble Both.......:. 88c Reg. $4.98 Harjax Steam Vaporizer...... $1.88 Reg. $10.95 Heating Bandages (AC-DC) $1.88 | Reg. $10.95 Top Electric Razors......... $3.88 Reg. $5.95. Silverware Cases, Hold 72-Pes. $2.88 Reg. $3.00 Sardo Lipodermic Both Oif...... 88c Reg .$4:98 SI. Soiled Fitted Kits $1.44 to $2.44. Reg. to $3.00 Elmo Cosmetics... ..:. 2 for 88¢ WOMEN’S AND TEENAGERS’ SHOES Patents, Suedes, Leathers in Purnps, Slings, ' ; Straps. _ all sizes and colors, Regular $288" to 9.2 < ij STREET ELOOR $4.95 Twin Foam Mattress. Toppers. $1. rey 88 to $1.88 Reg. to 5.98 or anacgronet, g Reg. 129.00 $86 ate eenertmeninrvonen ental © Better Dresses © 24.98 588 | Prints and solids. Broken sizes. Reg. to 24.98 1488 Winter céttons. Groken sizes, aie Reg. to *3 : ~ SPORTSWEAR F (Broken Sizes) ‘ Reg. to 8.98 188 we ~ Slipon or- cardigan sweaters, "orton or kharafleece: Reg. 7.98 388 I Jaguar print es scart & collar ig > Reg. 14,98. 388 a & Slim or gored wool shirts. fi . he * Reg. 1798 BRB S . hail cotton dresses. 2 @ Better + Blouses e Reg. to 7.98 388 Reg. to 5.98 188 _ Nylon dieu blouses. Sizes 30-38. 288 Reg. to 3.98 188 Square dance blouses. Sizes 30-38. FALL DRESSES | Reg. to 5.99 $288 a _ Reg. to 8.99 $388 3 Reg. to 10.98 $588 : Reg. to 14.98 $888 f Expo’ voter fallen Co _ tons in sizes 7 to 15, 10 to 20, . 1442 to 24%. sired egtors. gd MS, Se ae e Daytime | Dresses e pesca ke Cee we Reg. 5.99 188 and 3.88 Reg.-to 5.99 88¢< Cottons, Jersey in stripes, prints, solids. Short sleeve, sleeveless and jacket dress styles. Sizes 12 to 20, 12% to 2414. @ MATERNITIES @ Reg. 6.99 — ” Reg. 14. 98 Bes: Tweeds, crepes. Sizes 10 to 18. © VELVET HATS © Reg. to 6.98. ban Feather and satin trims, — beitex and colors. . re id ne i ei Ree Ait ge gt c Hospi “hl poe is in the civ dog. Saisie of voles were at- — interested to show up and express their preference. “Less than £6,000 appeared and the move needed ‘bare 2,150. In prize ring parlance, ‘this would be termed “no contest.” ; <2: oes This is the second defeat. ~ The voters feel they've been =deceived. ; When the taxpayers placed the *O.K. on the three million dollar bond * issue, “to build and equip a hospital,” ae : * apparently they meant JUST THAT. a x * * 7 Rumors sprang up quickly after * this approval, suggesting that ' the three million dollars would _ be ased mainly for walls; and + further methods would be em- ployed to finance the completion — ‘and the equipment. These stions reached The Pontiac s and we immediately printed an editorial (November 22, 1954) and counseled strongly against this procedure. We urged the complete job be done with the three million dollars voted. x* *« * + However, the City and hospital authorities felt otherwise, saying the ances in costs were. responsible, ‘and they used the money primarily ‘for enclosing. Then they went to the lpeople oe ope ee to finish ‘the job. ~ | . The answer was a fat “no.” em" The .current campaign cut the amount to $950,000. But again the majority of the voters was in disagreement. They shook it off —decisively. City Manager Walter K. Will- - man tells The ‘Press that money could be diverted from other *. funds to finish the job. It would seem inexpedient to do this with- out putting the switch up to the people. The voters should decide whether they want to give up improvements in walks, ° streets, city buildings, etc., or complete the empty wing. ' x .«© * We give very slight chance to any See ae ee ee a ae a it: eM et *“popular subscription.” Other com- ‘munities will smile. sympathetically jand suggest we build our own hos- {pital. From Birmingham south, there twill be no use to try, as Beaumont is * discussing another campaign. Presi- dent ToMLinson asserted Beaumont thad outgrown its size the day. the {front doors opened. eR he. - ® In the meantime, St. Joe is “standing by” waiting for the City Hospital problem to be re- - solved. If business picks up in the spring, the chances are they will approve a drive destined to raise three million dollars. Certainly it’s their turn. é ° x gf °=s. Ce oe ee ee RG A Re et Rte - Smate. We feel it is against the - Jadamant. 4 “P's. Don't get very sick. $3,415 votes to carry. It received a. countywide drive to raise funds by -s poeriad PRESS. by Tua Powrnme Patss Company Pontiac. 12, Michigan Daily Except Sunday calla of the planned 41,000 milles of _the interstate system have -been signed at a:cost of $1 billion. Con- gress‘had estimated that $27.5 billion would pay for the interstate program, _ Since passage of the act in 1956 costs of steel, concrete and labor have risen considerably. It now is estimated that $3 billion more will.be required to complete the -work in the allotted 13 years. x &%-*® “The interstate system is to be. built from Federal trust funds coming. from use taxes on gasoline, tires, etc. In fiscal 1956 this income fell $60 million under the expected’ receipts of $1.5 billion, ‘Congressional committees will . . review the question in the next session. There are at least four alternatives — to raise taxes, re- duce planned mileage, appropri- ate more money from general funds or lengthen construction time, . x * * -Few would be in favor of curtailing this vital program. It may be that lengthening the time would be the answer. Some Federal officials think § the period should be increased to 16 years. In the meantime should the cost of materials and labor decrease, the work again could be speeded _— benefit to the economy. ———————_E=_= The Man About Town Big Day Nov. 9 Celebration in Honor of What Industry Is to Us Aspirin: A Pi A of” which should be standard re on a TV, act. Chairman of the Pontiac Area Cham- ber of Commerce committee in charge of that Nov. 9 event, L. Clare Utley, tells me that our city’s ) Salute to Industry that day will not only give a whopping introduction to the 1958 Pontiac cars and GMC trucks, but also a day-long celebra- tion of what industry means to our city . and its area. Citcle that date on your calendar. A stray cat that casually. strolled into Red Cross headquarters at 118 Franklin Blvd., has been adopted as a mascot, with the quite ———— name of - Clara Barton, and appears to have become a permanent fixture. In our football contest, if California wins Saturday's game with UCLA, \John Burch , of 73 Putnam St. wins the $300, being the only surviving contestant to predict that way. If it results ina tle game, Mrs, Alice Cue of 2275 Silver Lake Road, is the winner, as she is the only one to forecast such a result. But if UCLA wins the game, as ‘prekt ed by. C. D. Whitfield of 544 West Iroquois Road, and — \ - Mary Ann Baer: The Press regrets the current stale- of 2900 Judah Road, both carry over Sb. best the Georgia-Florida game of Nov. 9, in which the former picks Georgia and the {public interests, but the people are tatter picks Florida. ‘Our apple ¢hamplonship has changed hands. One of the Wolf River variety, grown by . Arthur Billsbrough of Huron Gardens, measures 21 inches around. Usually the first blossoms to arrive in the spring, crocus plants of Mrs. and Mra. George Brimley are ee Keego Harbor. Born tn Pistia one County, being a native Township, ‘ of: Oxford : Mrs. Clara Wixon, ” Lapeer County's oldest resident, soon = Sout, “In that time contracts for 2,227. One Little Bump and — David Lawrence Says: Time to Send ‘Sputniks’ to Russia ° WASHINGTON — The Soviet’ It publicizes the existence of chance to get possession of but upon reenforcing them with the deterrent and retaliatory power of nuclear wea * * * ‘Here in plain words is warning from. the Western leaders to the people..of the Soviet Union that, if the Kremlin starts a war, there be * “massive retaliation.” Warns ts * {one foths think religion ts lke a parachute—something to feb whee an. ‘emergency the missile of | of a precipitated war. The sudden removal of Marshal Zhukov has started a guessing game ‘round the world. . * * One thing is clear, the World War II military leader of Russia’s from his high office as minister of defense while he was away on a tour of other ably arranged so that he would be out of contact with the army that The mystery and the secrecy have merely emphasized that dic- tator Khrushchev removed the man he fears most and took or of Zhukov’s absence to- pull off the “purge. ” Will the allies have the courage to proclaim the truth to the people of Russia? Will the Congress here cease its policy of unwise par- simony. and give the government enough money to send a thousand “Sputniks” of information into = heart of Russia? The only way to assure peace is to have a government of the people in every country, so that . war ‘cannot be ordered by one man or a committee of dictators. (Copyrighte, 1957) he leads. Dr. William Brady Says: od Finds Way to Reduce . A Midwest reader writes: __ “I have followed your teachings ‘for many years. Have had excellent results from Instructions for preparing and using the Foolproof Home Made Cough Medicine are given in the booklet Call it C R I. The gist of - a-hundred other lessons is in the red book titled What to Eat and Why. For either booklet, send 35 cents and stamped, self-addressed : ee & &. One ingredient the recipe for medicine calls for was freely eae si letters, not ‘Sick Headaches, Coughs. though Yor some reason or other, a good many readers now whip up - ¢ a batch whenever a miember of the family — infant or adult begins to cough. But even if the baby gets hold of it and drinks the harm: ‘ whole batch it can do no * * than one to personel words cco Denis, See ~“Feite goat cipal Weak bees i te, seek thc crosses sadadtaens Golithea te a day. This, means it is more yun tna tt Be eat ko eek —* reer ea oD Toe 6 eV ea enth day is the Sabbath of ‘the Lord thy God, The Catholic Church, by of the Divine Mission, changed the. day from Saturday to Sunday, be- cause the Catholic Church, in the Council of Laodicea A. D. 336, transferred the solemnity from Sat- 35 Bagley St. * * * Scriptures doesn't in any instance establish which day, but does spec- ify a rest day, Some choose Satur- day and some Sunday. But what if the good Lord started His work on Tuesday or Wednesday. That would establish the Sabbath on Monday or Tuesday, Will someone tell me where the Bible says which day it was started? *get you anywhere... Clark 8. Davis bf ile: ru cai itl SESSE GEE z i el i int x8 REE 4 FE ry 5 if 2 nie i fs waning Mother for smoking while nursing a baby. Let's praise this girl instead for feeding baby as nature intended. Smoking or not, this girl is still putting first things first. - Dector Letters will be sary because of Sener tome me eriter must acompan iters but theae will not be published riter so re- p oeainell unless the letter . critical in ite Portraits | By JAMES J. METCALFE Why are some people nasty when . . .. It’s easier to smile . And rudeness never has been, and « Will never be in style? . . A ‘nasty disposition does . . . makes more enemies .. . drives you to despair . . . For you are never welcome in... The least society . . . If you are not considerate . . . And friendly as can be... But always there are ‘ae Until some- ee Records of a Psychologist: Smile Contains Universal Appeal By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE » If you wish to be popular and obtain accident. So learn the proper strategy. And start your cam- ' paign by imitating the serene described below stewardess Case W-332: ae “Now we come to the highpoint of our opening exer- cises,” Joe adds, OR. CRANE * “Let's see your es.” For Joe is a meat dealer ond a star salesman, too. So he realizes the importance of having church people show cordiality, “As a result, he has not only _ prodded the class into adopting my “Compliment Club” as a whole- some Christian “wet he has likewise prompted “that we ike then and their presence. Woe han 8 vers os “And.it we hired you to be an. “Smile at your reflection in the glass. Smile at strangers. Smile even though you feel very self- conscious, For soon it will be- come second nature.” * © ®. And it did. Six’ weeks later this girl was hired, for her smile was now atitomatic. For further advice on winni good jobs, send for my ‘“Vocati Guidance Kit,” enclosing a jus. 29 © san asi i aaa {phe hes, oR DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1957, ht aie i at PONTIAC PRESS, TUES 2 ON ts By Carl Grabert | 4 Yage™n) iW Security for You Will Combine Checks fo H During the next ‘six months, the Soctal Security Administration combine most of the The project will start. in Novem- ber and continue until April when the Social Security people figure the job will be-completed, . = g on can be spread out over a period of time to keep the * * * case, if you don't tell the Social Security people you ob- ject, the second check following the notice, of the change will be combined with your husband's or wife’s check. For example: If your Nov. 3 check has the notice along with it, your Jan. 3 check will. be com- The Social Security people don't expect many objections because it already has some experience indicating it. ; FEW OBJECTIONS Since September, 1956, it has) ; been combining the checks of most of the husbands and wives who've “Keen added to the Social Security rolls. In every case, permission . to make the combination was re- quested. Only about two ‘out of a hundred objected. Se x * * The Social Security people did't) — ask, however, the husbands and wives living at separate addresses to combine their checks. It doesn't plan to do“so as part of its current project either. Certain other groups of husbands and wives also. will not be asked to do so, including situations where one of! the persons has been declared competent. The cost. of preparing and mailing a Social Security, check is about six cents, so you can _ see the savings involved with some 1,700,000 wives or husbands now on the rolls. Although: the full amount won’t be-saved by combining a wife's check with her husband's or vice versa, it’s likely that about 5% cents a check a month will be saved, in- three cents postage, the cost of the eheck paper, envelopes, other supplies and equipment as well, as some reduction in the number of people handling the checks. Besides this savings to the Social Security Administration, the com- bination will save a lot of time and money for .banks and the Treasury Department. The move to combine the checks largely grows out of the results of combining in recent years. the checks paid to children living -in the same. household. (Questions on Social Security problems may be addressed to “Social Security,”’ in care of The usband, Wite Pontiac Press. Questions will be answered by mail from the Pon- tiae office of the Social Security Administration, There is no charge for this service.) U.S. School in Japan Closed Because of Flu TOKYO ™ — The American School in Japan is closed for a week because of influenza, -,Headmaster Frederick Harris of Cleveland, Ohio, said 115 of the 500 students and 8 of the 30 teach- ers are ill. The school will reopen next i | Monday. City Army Recruiting Allotted Europe’ Posts | A limited number of vacancies have been allotted to Pontiac's U.S: Army Recruiting Station for, direct service in Europe. | The llth Armed Cavalry Regi- ment, presently located in Europe, | has a number of vacancies for) volunteers. Enlistees will receive | basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. Michigan volunteers joining the | llth are assured of staying to- gether during their entire tour of | duty Interested area residents may, obtain full information concerning | this problem by visiting the re-} cruiting office, 534 W. Huron St. | Incandescent lamps generate four times more / heat than the) fluorescents. ‘ \ The immediate savings will be COAL TIME IS HERE These are Good Coals for | Your Furnace or Stove! BLUE - HARD COAL SOLVAY COKE — POCA. BRIQ. DISCO COAL POCAHONTAS — STOKER COALS — KENTUCKY SOFT GET SURE FIRE COALS COAL & SUPPLY CO, 140 N. Cass Ave. ff - > FE 5-8163 SIBLEY CALCINATOR, YOUR A DAY GARBAGEMAN, GETS RID OF GARBAGE AND TRASH AUTOMATICALLY 2199” » W6-S801-48 OFFE HURRY... SPECIAL INSTALLATION THIS ‘SATURDAY NOVEMBER 2 v R ENDS 24 HOUR NOW AND SAVE . . We'll pay you up to the full amount you paid for your operating 17” or 21” black and white table model toward the purchase of this new | RCA Victor | Big Color T nniv ersary % We'll Give You Up to What You Paid | ~ for Your Present TV} i Nov. Nov. Nov. 2—Big Ten See These Football Games In.“Living Color” RCA Victor TV 16—Oklahome vs. Notre Dome 30—Army vs. Navy New RCA Victor Big Color TV is, dependable You'll see programs in rich, vivid “Living Color’’ plus all the regulor shows in clear black-and-white. It's like and easy to tune! two sets in one! NO MONEY DOWN! S$ OI5 Weekly Pies ALL THE LIBERAL CREDIT YOU NEED!.. BUY NOW! Brand New 1958 RCA VICTOR ; Console 1" TV It’s a. new kind of console — sleek and slender. Has new top performance features, too. ‘’High-sharp-and-easy”’ tuning with new ‘One-Touch’ on-off: control. Rich improved balanced fi- delity FM sound. 262 sq. in. of big, clear, viewable. picture area. Beautiful mahogany cabinet. NO MONEY. DOWN! “PAY ONLY $e 50 Weekly VAST SELECTIONS OF FAMOUS BRANDS!..BARGAINS! RCA Victor | 1958 TABLE RADIO Choice of Colors! Enjoy big console-like sound. Printed circuits give extra dur- ability. New styling. = 319” FREE PARKING © IN WKC’s LOT © Behind Store! — ‘New HI-FIDELITY Console Phonograph Nowerful new high fidelity console. Plays 4 speeds. Has three speakers! Provision for Stereophonic sound. In beau- tiful mahogany. No $ 50 Don! Ma Weekly RCA Victor Automatic . > CLOCK RADIO — Wakes you to music. Dial window for . convenient tuning. At night pre-set it for the sound level best for you. Wake : i 7 | © y Layaway r Christmas a * eae ee i jaa z: n i ~ f ee, / Zo 4 ere: C3 i Te 7 & pee ee _ome H PONTIAC F PRESS TUESDAY. cTOWER. 2, 157 alles fruitlessly ~ in ow continuing ef- forts to liberate the men. * * * News item: Disk Jockey picked. And besides, where else could stage gizz-mo that squeezed © Murder By ERLE STANLEY GARDNER | NO INHIBITIONS “Two others." Mason waited expectantly. Mrs. Farrell shook her head. “I'm afraid not, Mr. Mason. They're indicative of a charms to men or to cameras,” “I'm shock proof,” Mason said. “T'm not.” ‘(I am going to have tse for it,” progress-jthe Atlas in which the photograph 4 ing friendship, Evidently this young 4;Wwoman doesn't have the slightest }compunction about exhibiting. ber photograph out while I'm gone. * * ® When she had left the room, Mason hurriedly moved over to had been concealed. He riffled through the pages but was unable to find any other photographs, Mrs, Farrell entered the room, the Tth Fleet > PStaying in Pacic HONG KONG (INS)’— Adm. Arleigh Burke, chief of U. S. naval} operations, said today that even if war breaks out in the Middle] East the 7th Fleet would aay | sink aa in the Pacific. * * * " Burke, speaking to newsmen be- fore leaving for home after an in spection tour of naval commands in Korea, Formosa and Japan, noted that the 7th Fleet is 1% times: larger than the 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. The admiral said more ships were kept in the Pacific because “the East is more important.” * * * Burke predicted that. despite nuclear weapons and atomic-pow- ered submarines navies would play a vital role in any future war. cher THE ONLY THING YOU'LL. LIKE BETTER THAN QUALITY IS ITS PRICE! ~~ Copyright 1957 carrying a tray with two tall xs *& she told him, “but don | The ad went on to extol the’ Mason strove to keep his voice ~ selmi ative — —— —ae virtues of the specially-made Bi- from showing whdue interest. “I kini bathing suit. wonder if you've been able to lo- “Yes,” Mason said dryly, “I've! cate the model?” he asked. - Your first lesson is seen these ads," “I have located the model." coe "i absolutely free at any \ “Evidently my _ husband an- Mason raised his eyebrows, : swered this,” she sald, “pur: | «she ig Rose M, Calvert, and Arthur Murray-Studio chased a suit by mall, and per--| 4, —. you're interested, the Find out how quicklyandeas- | *2aded this young woman to put | «n° stands for Mistletow, belleve ily you can become a popular the suit on. it or not. Her father, I under- : .. partner. Come into the studio | Mason studied. the picture) stand, insisted on the mame. It | = for a free, half-hour trial les- - | thoughtfully, “This is a posed pic-| turned out te be quite appre. . son and discover Arthur Mur- ture?” priate. - - tay’s shortcut to good times “Tt is.” “Rose Calvert is an employe in : and popularity. Studios open Again Mason studied the pic- thésbrokerage firm which handles ture, accounts for my husband, and, I 10 AM to 10 PM: ARTHUR MURRAY 25 E. LAWRENCE FE 5-9438 | Your Watch sani, $f e Reraiated ~ | Georges-Newports The clipping illustrated a curva- ceous woman clad in a Bikini bath. jing suit and across the top of the ad was printed in large, black letters: “she'll love it." In smaller type appeared: “And ghe'll love you for it, Get these private - |Bikini bathing suits, A wonderful, intimate, the right girl.’ ad present, for just Mrs, Farrell said, “For your in- formation, Mr. Mason, either: the suit was donned for the 6ccasion or ,. , well, I'll be charitable and say that the suit was donned for the occasion . . so very attractive that you're completely engrossed?” “I'm sorry,” Mason said. ‘I was ‘trying to make out the back- “Well, it's dark and out of focus. I'm afraid you can’t get much from it, Mr. Mason, However, if you'll notice the pattern of the rtig beneath those high-heeled: shoes, which are designed to bring out the )shapeliness of her legs, you'll no- itice a certain very definite pat- ‘tern. For your information, Mr. | Do you find her’ ‘is living on the fat of the land. wrong with the’ shutter, when he was taking these pictures.” * * * “IT see,” Mason commented dry- ly. “I take it that there were then two other exposed pictures ‘on this roll?” . “Yes,” she said significantly. “Tt was a well-exposed roll, and the model was well exposed." believe, for some of the other of- ficialg of the Texas Global com- pany. My husband hag a roving eye, and Rose Calvert — well, you can see from the photograph what she has."’ : “She's still’ working with the brokerage company?’ Mason asked, ; * * * i “Not Rose, Rose, I understand, She has an apartment at the Lane Vista Apartments, number 319, but I'm afraid that's just one of the perches where this young bird lights from time’ to time, Appar-| ently she drops-in for mail, and to change her clothes, I've had, the iplace under surveilence for a- few go to the kitchen. What do you) SCOTCH OR BOURBON She laughed throatily and said, “All right; sit down, I'll have to| like, Scotch or Bourbon?” “Scotch,” Mason said. “Soda?” “Please. ci} \today ‘SEOUL UB-—-The U.S. Army said one of its ambulances struck and killed a 3-year-old Ko- rean child yesterday near a bridge on the Han River. The. Army said the child, Bo Sun Yi, darted from behind an ox cart. into. the path of the ambu- ” “Make yourself cciatertabte,” lance. The Army did not announce ros ~ ( ) . ~ _—se York — something te cane |" Mason studied the face of the|giasses. : 8 girl in the picture, auf Mason held his drink to the : could reached by sending in te RRL OME. 80 PAR: Jerry Conway York a couple. of months ago.” pe Pi 2 Sos Wigdulees Cake games and paign Giller Farrel. socharved “] gee.” Mason said. Mrs, Farrell sald, somewhat (light. “That looks pretty stout. Las Dodgers games. | proxict' end Sunt Coney’ afthe | «My. husband," bitterty, “Pm afraid you men fe | She laughed. “You look pretty Or, @ that’s too costly, games | fiockholders mesting of the Call- My husband,” she went en | all the - For your informa- | stout yourself, Mr. Mason. 1 may involving the World Champion |terious hy call 6 woman alti Siieely, Ste something cf ba) tom,-20N Mason, the anatomical | a, well confess that you're one s Milwaukee Braves, whose play- hereetf meoel aatiers ‘ te supp! ely §| amateur photographer, He took | exaggeration of those curves will of my heroes. I've followed your ers are mow abundantly well- | Farrell hes, scquired Thousn be | ‘His Picture and two others, Evi- | be swallowed in fat within an- jcnses with the greatest, Anterest. known Bere and everywhere cles. |ihoe her “altars annie: inertia: | Cently he wanted something. te | ether tem years.” I like your way of fighting.” Incidentally, a San Franciscan ase | oe “Yes, I'm afraid 80," Mason| “Thanks!” Mason said. friend predicts that Los Angeles re for a ‘sange for | “And how did you get them?”’ said, handing back the photograph,| Sti@~ raised her glass, will not take to i : te “tor eee er never a cee las way, ans likes them well-| “Here's to crime!'’ Mason said. “They're not nough for ing res a appened to notice at myjcurved,"’ Mrs. Farrell said. “Here’ fd h Southern California,” he observed}! per tne Somme gt ed husband's camera which is usually! yrason almost automatically! this Sea at ber ules 8 to hie, ne cooly. ; oun, A Conway, which he ‘takes — bg Any aang _——— glanced at the lounging pajamas.) her eyes rest steadily on his as * * * fired Kk oct sumeate a . i Ia Mrs. Farrell laughed and sald,| she raised the glass to her lips. See one of the most Rye Bevan, on Chet Huntley's —— nd ee a roll of films in the camera and)", ay right, Mr. Mason. I don't -M raited until she had 7 *Outlook” Sunday, said: Sod seks for the Key “tothe ‘he hevet (three films had been exposed. I'M) make any secret of it. Now, how|_. sé herent aes ©: beautiful and varied displays 4 a the U.S. is inui room. Detecti convinces jafraid I have a nasty, suspicious|apout a drink?” jseated herself, said, “I am * his pone — continuing) {he hotel” is Boswell, | disposition, Mr, Mason, - sia interestedin how you were able of Personal Christmas Cards Boe-recognition) attitude to- Rrardefed, inthe ute, seer Bi “I slipped that roll of films out] Well,” Mason said, “I could be|to secure the information that you we have shown in many of the mrokink the ‘bad sen list lof the camera and replaced it with|duced if you twisted my arm.” offered Mr. Conway — the list n y a year. tate a ry Brabgeline another, I turned the film to num- Hold it out,” she said. of proxies.” , Greetings that are as warm ! . s from jber four so that in case my hus-| Mason held out his arm. “Oh that!” . eds te “own nr ae band investigated he wouldn't know| Mrs, Farrell took hold of the) “Well?” Mason asked. gs sincere ... and as friendly ign there was anything wrong, and in|*Tist, held the lawyer's arm tight; —-_ (Continued Tomorrow) as a handshake. i “ eli dane aan case he had the films developed|®ainst her body, gave it a gentle - . and found three perfect blanks,|'Wist. | _ \U.S. Army: Ambulance Come in soon... Chapter 11 he would think something had gone| “Ouch!” Mason said. “‘I'll take! |’ 1 it! I'l take it!” Kills 3-Year-Old Korean see our complete selection Bon a EQUIPMENT C co. 123 North Seginew St. 2« FEZ4831 1968 RAMBLER 6 is the all-new jet stream styled edition of the all-time économy king— the car that holds the official NASCAR border- ren meme | ate nln ss lewelry Dept. 74 N, Soginew Se. | Mason, that rug is in my husband’ s pesrene Apparently the picture was taken while I was in New days.” “There are then two other pic- tures?”” Mason prompted. | - DOUBLE HOLDENS /< TRADING STAMPS | "Rambler Cross Country Station Wao, ono Hale Ran nd Rane Bal Vl fr 108 NOW—With All-New Jet Stream Styling... All-New Pushbutton Driving... Choose from 17 Models .. TWO Wheelbases! Now, the car that’s first in economy, first in sales gains, is first in smartness, too—brilliantly new with jet stream styling. All-new Pushbutton-controlled Flash-O-Matic ° . Transmission. .. Pushbutton Windows . . . Pushbutton Transistor Radio . . . Powr-Lok anti-slip differential | , . America’s first full-dip rustproofing. Economy Six, Rebel 215 HP V-8, and entirely new 270 HP Ambassador V-8 by Rambler. Airliner Reclining Seats, Twin Travel Beds, lowest-cost All-Season Air Conditioning. Get the best of both: American big car room and comfort’. . . plus Euros pean small car economy and handling ease. Get the all-new cars with the highest trade-in value . . casecme "58. , LESS PRESCRIPTIOI { SC cf «-) t LSJ A ty | ES SPECIALS for WEDNESDAY C h orgqe Oa if esd) ‘ o} ~ i i hs a Tablets a Os Eee» ow OE Only Rambler Gives You The Best of Both: | 9% on Room, Ride AMBASSADOR wet orc Aner Co untry Club hardtop se ; Mots Mm Ha ' acy B Chaplet. sade 270 MP V-8 station wagons. meagre heared “mod age ” : : ————— SEE YOUR RAMBLER, NASH OR HUDSON DEALER ules wih D.. ie é : * ; wf a TIAC : “AUBURN HEIGHTS ‘MILFORD |. - WALLED LAKE ROCHESTER ogers Sales & Service Village Motors, Inc. Sales H&CMotorSales _Kaverley Rambl 495 Autor Ave, FU 5.6101 BAR Auburn R4. FE 4.4535 7442 ivy ep ) 8145 Commerce: Rd. yy hats St. OL sai EM 3-406 mM 3.0142 7 Aero ae eae ee pa “ita, PAR PONTTAC PRESS. TURSDAY, OCTOBER, 29, 1957, SRT. Monies Mined &222==5"eaths in- Pontiac and Naty Areas UN: WillHear Seungewarse oi Little Rock | . Northey, 5%, of 1200,Hartwig St. 6 Re ly. fy suid hs we Pern OL omyko a ; : d su yesterday his mother, rs. Sarah Northey of| bikes Gawele “coénsaes 3-Faith Unit Integrated 60 white pastors and 40 Ne-\morning in the Riker Building. / | Surviving besides her husband|Royal Oak; a daughter, Mrs. May| Await Length’ Speech || date back to as early as 1928. More Than a Year Ago; groes, The Protestant, Roman; An electrician at General Mo-jare six children, Mrs. Paul Howard|Klibbe of Troy; one son, Kenneth on Charoes Lodge A — 23 | Catholic and Jewish faiths are in-jtors Truck—&-Coach Division; hejof Grand Rapids, Calvin of Ros-jof Detroit; two sisters, Mrs. Mil- n 9 Y e * Teach Brotherhood | cluded,.and. the Rev. Ogden is pre/was a member of First Metho-\common, Charles of Detroit, Mrs./dred Pyles and Mrs. Dorothy; jn Mideast Crisis ° : ° dent. dist Church, Z Cleve Chamberlain and Edwin Lin-|Birkhill, both of Royal Oak and) =~ | en Arab nations into the Red terday of a group which fostered/ple raising their children in Fl ao Thursday from Donelson - Johns/f 204 Dellwood St. died Saturday|several months of illness, will be camp. .. : racia] integration in Little Rock/Rock, how to live “more like in|Funeral Home with his pastor, the" Pontiac General Hospital afterjat 2 p.m. Thursday from Pixley Chief U.S. Delegate Henry Cab- more tha - sags as i ici jan illness of two years. She was|/Fumeral Home. Dr. J. Douglas eal High sgl the Cen-|the brotherhood of ‘Jesus Christ'.” Sart al gon ait kh mest: lm; Parker will officiate, with burial int Lodge matched Russian's cur. ~*~ * * section of Oakland Hills Cemetery.) A member of the Church of God,|Mt. Avon Cemetery here. rent: tough tone Friday with a free-| : 4, 5 : ; Misd as bern in: Swinging speech in which he, The school's. nine Negroes had Expect Safe Harvest Mr. Deevey’s body will be at the/Detroit, she leaves 12 grandchil- ad aah wee a = or warned that Soviet threats would, ome m, ’, dren and eight great-grandchildren. ; completed one more day of class- funeral home at 7 p.m. today a hot stop the United States from’ Service will be at 1 p.r_ Wednes-| Jewelry store for 38 years. She |e ot the aims of the ‘Ei-| es — with fewer troops and more f 5 B C JAM URNIE day De-| retired yea , : freedom. For the third day, the 0 ugar eet rop Pisin i. FOCRNIEE day from the Church of God, ; i = my yah he a Mrs. Sethower Doctring to aid‘ Red- nine mad William A. Fournier, 63, of 112 troit with burial in Oak Hill Ceme-|_ Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Hous made the trip to and from| Cnet Ri . ; ; ; May Benson of:Rochester and Mrs.|‘hreatened Middlq East nations. | Central Hi DENVER w De lays|N- East Blvd. died Monday in St./tery, Mrs, Walker's body is at|May Benso gh without military es- av — Despite delays : Marigold Hultgrén of Evanst Russia has acciised the United cort, withou caused by October rain, snow and|J08ePh Mercy Hospital after an the William F. Davis Funeral/Ma — = on. /States of goading Turkey into an t incident. ae ilingss of three weeks, Home Ul, and several nieces and)" © tt © mud, it appeared ‘today Colorado i : invasion of Syria in an attempt to An employe of Oakland Tool & : nephews, farmers were going to get their RS : cMEISTE split the Arab world. considerably’ more troops were |suvar beets harvested before a| Me: Co. of Birmingham, he was MRS. JOHN HAGEMEISTER ‘WEDNESDAY 1S The current rumor was that removed. Lodge) LAPEER — Serv MRS, WALLACE REED Backers of two rival plans to’ = oe o- ——— we w*® damaging frost hits. The harvest! ta \ny amy 1 oe “lJoha siaash eaoucnier rn "ot| LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs.|settle the Syrian-Turkish crisis ———— Yet the Rev. . pe orn them about 35 million’ \7- Fournier leaves his wife,{1120 Jefferson St. here, who died|Wallace (Esther Lucille) Reed, 44,|appeared determined to wait for MONEY CHEERFULLY RerUNoED Dunbar H. Ogden/dellars for the sugar alone. Myrtle; a daughter, Mrs, Rodney| Monday, will be at 2 p.m. Thurs-| Will be. at...p.m,, the other to make the first move. dyom Jr., white pastor of Little Rock's) Latest forecast by the U. S. Rowles of Lake Oakland; two day from the Baird Funeral Home,|Ross D, Northrop and Son jj Syrian diplomats indicated pri- seeeeeessoccccccccococovece ee Seccccccccccccces = oor brothers, Clarence of Pontiac and|Lapeer. The Rev. Frank S. Hem-|Home, 22401 Grand River, with in-jvately they would not put in a ° in will officiate, with burial|terment in East Lawn Cemetery|resolution embodying their de- Established in 1898 ¢ tons. This is the largest since the re pigs ie igen eco rtin Lam Sueur. owe here. Daughter of the late John/mand ‘to send an inquiry commis- e record crop of 1947 and aimost a ‘Rochester and Mrs, Mary Need-| Mrs: Hagemeister, lifelong rési-|and Eva Hummer Lomerson, Orion sion to the border until they see fs rm S o (third larger than last year. jham of Highland. ident here, is survived by her son,|Pioneer families, Mrs, Reed died at|“What the other side will do. er- nover S| ceveral things contributed to the| Service will be at 1 p.m. Thurs-|Floyd, with whom she made her|her home, 19366 Negaunee Ave., ——_ | FUNER AL H O ME $|800d crop. There was plenty of iday from Donelson-Johns Funeral/home; and nine grandchildren, Detroit, after a long illness, 'U.S. Offers $500,000 g)rainfall and irrigation water all'Home with burial in Oak Hill A member of the Bethesda Luth- : mile, 160: ' $\during the growing season. Meth-| Cemetery, i. WILLIS G. NORTHEY eran Church of Detroit, Mrs. Reed for Foreign Scientists W. Huron St. - FE 2-917] @ ods of soil fertilization ‘have been TROY—Service will be at 2 p.m.|is survived by ber husband; her PARKING ON PREMISES improved, the seed is better and) MRS. GEORGE LINDERMAN j|tomorrow from Price Funeral/daughter, Mrs, John Robinson of} PARIS # — The United States -@|production techniques also have| Mrs. George (Irene) Linderman,|Home here, with burial in WhiteDetroit; her sisters, Mrs--flarry| offered half a million dollars e@ CO CCC CCC COE Secoececocoocoeseesoeceeoeoecoeoees improved. 82, “of 112 N. Tasmania St. died|Chapel Cemetery for’ Willis G.|Reppert of Elkins, W. Va., and} worth of scholarships today to * nie Mrs, R, A. Dernberger of Oxford;| train Western European scien- ‘land brothers Sol D, Lomerson and tists. J, M, Lomerson of Orion; Elmer The offer was made at a J. Lomerson of Anchorville, and| meeting of the 17-nation organi- - ‘ Gene E. Lomerson of Attica. zation for European Economic | Cooperation, A MESSAGE FOR MICHIGAN | eed ME CEORGE'S] ) 3 NEWPORT’S Saratoga Hospital, Detroit after an illness of one day. Mrs. Hender- son was a member of the Berville Methodist Church and was a life- time resident of Allenton. She is survived by two sons, | Harley of Saugatuck and Cleon of | Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. Robert White, Berville, Mrs. Ar-/| thur Metcalf, Caro and Mrs, Edwin | Dobberowsky of Detroit; a brother, | Jeffe Russ of Flint and two sis-| ters, Mrs. Albert Ball, Armada, and Mrs. Thomas Ball, Lesterville; ten grandchildren and eight great- frandchildren, Service will be at 2 p.m. Thurs- day at Tiffany Funeral Home, Armada, with Rev, E. Studaker of | Berville Methodist Church officiat. | ing. Burial will be at Willow) Grove Cemetery, Armada. Repeat of a Sellout! Another Shipment of $25 ~ wie, =€=©6CAR ==" COATS cess styles, Sets 3 to 6x, coats 7 to 14. [Detroit Woman Killed NORTHVILLE (INS) — Mrs. Syivia K. Hildebrandt, 49, of De- troit, was fatally injured yesterday when the car in which she was/| riding collided with a dump truck * | in Northville Township. ‘SAVE UP TO 33% WITH NATIONWIDE’S NEW HOMEOWNERS’ POLICY... 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" Detroit 26, Michigen - ‘ woe ; = e 8 - | — — Phone—WOodward 3-4920 ‘ aboness | 7 Ol 2.89 Cannon Sheets . | | om Od freee ggg t of folate. and ‘fits «* é ' o I'm also interested in Nationwide’s Property Fire coverage. <. Ee ee tla ‘ =a : . ' ; . s, i) Cin a . 7 : as a : a " Rr ea nee , : : 4, \ i i t ; , 2 ; ' : dl ' \ me ad : Ee ‘we. ‘ ce 4£ Es © 2 ee J PR Py aa *RESS, TUESD Rese: Sais saa 28. i ae : ith & AY. OCTOBER 49, 7 fd sth ons. Rg PO 8 a ey ag Msi Pe Pe s. « __ |fure. There's previous little air to - terrible time with weight-| four te fem time or: This wor es heat up, a maybe many more, Expert|!m of weightlessness, from jack|" *°me Parts of : ) 1 | The side. of the ship exposed to : ot gravity, A With no gravity the sun gets very hot, but the side ' that Your brain told you to litt your|i) oy one could a ' in shadow is very cold and radi- age has opened with ajhand gently to your noge. But youl votipmless your ship. The little pioneer tes heat into space. Special ar- man-made moon circling the Used the same effort you would)/°% sends you flying into made moons found this chance |# . | have used on earth. Here, unde-\"i". Sneeze, and you was fairly small. Your ship has |rangements of materials and coat- eae terred by gravity, your hand would|*® >@ng against @ cabin wall. double walis, the outer one halt- jings that reflect or radiate heat move up like a boxer’s lightning| WHO'S: UPSIDE DOWN ing tiny meteors. An alarm sys |help keep you comfortable inside Setatiientp wah ab Meer tga | Is that passenger across the ‘tom warns of any hole fer quick ia For your ‘ship is really falling|cabin standing upside down—or are|circulate automatically piegeing. | The nothingness of space te through space, not influenced: by|you? At meals, drop a piece of And your ship is made of special) 4" is black, also. There is ‘They will discover actual space|'™® °a*th’s gravity. ‘You have no/toest, and it hangs in the air. Your materials to reduce risks from!) 1 't, scatter light. . Stars eaditions end the hazards which weight, neither does anything else|meat. would be fastened to a plate,|you of oxygen. . . {radioactivity of cosmic rays and hine with. brillant steadiness. 4 partly wil Gdleratne whan end aboard the ship . (you might eat it by grabbing § it * * * X-rays from the sun. Again, the) . how humane go journeying acieh High-flying jet pilots experience with a clamp, The lift of a fork Oxygen ‘cs short moon trip IGY moons spelled out the risk. Up ahead shines Mars, and soon cietaty ateme "'Y this same thing sometimes for brief Gould send it flying to the ceiling. comes perhaps from liquid oxygen,, Yu gaze out the porthole, and you'll know for yourself just what ae . __ |moments when their planes’ cen-|- But your ship preferably is spin-|turning to gas as it warms. up. On| Wonder how cold it is right outside his “canals” really are. Rocket and space experts have (trifugal force balances gravity. ning. creating centrifugal force to this many-weeks jaunt, a special|in space. The captain explains:): (Next: The How of Space — drawn the general plans, even They tind | » atranze |SUbstitute for gravity. The direction : Space has no temperature really’ Travel) it a mighty strange * a rection greenhouse of algae or other plant “Pace | pe designed ships and protective Pie: Hy there's no calan s of | down” is the outer edge of your jife-supplies the oxygen, using the| ~~ + m plastic squeeze bottle, with the! ALTON L. : e:¢: @ 1 —- vault —_ te our up or down. Your usual senses round, spinning spaceship. ‘carbon dioxide you breathed out. Thirsty, you drink some water, Se oun Pe 2d fail you. Some find weightless. Gravity gave you a bad mo- | Your cabin is, of course, pres- : i oc e ‘but not from a glass. It comes from apne ness upsetting; others say it's not | ment, you recall, at take-off from |surized. You know you'd live only Have your next drink with BLAKESLEE . It’s only your ‘second day out on bad or even pleasant. earth. The quick acceleration |a few seconds in the vacuum of a , Plant Nike Launches by 1959 - | | wre hapa depots and commu- Clearing Okinawa’s Sands pictus goat, tl ee motto \for U.S. Missile Sites = |= \Nike-Hercules will be virtually . ° a the frist line of defense for the ST. BUCKNER, Okinawa (INS) ‘The cost to the U. 8. for the |isiand, the weapon is a souped-up —Bulldozers are chewing up Oki- _ ag page See ee eccaciaas of the original Nike-Ajax, ' exclusiv 5 : making ey Bor geded lce| "one Sementven..” (ch now cordone mont of Ame that will give this pivotal U, s.| The tab, however, covers com- aga Pay —— en me base in the far Pacific some of the Plex electronic equipment and Nike-Hercules is bigger, faster best anti-aircraft protection to be three separate radar systems that and deadlier than its forerunner. Magnate Pays |[—*" ten nee Cabbie's Fare london Hack Driver '. . and Wife Get American eae Vacation—Free ! CHICAGO wn—Jack Wall, a Lon- don cabbie who hadn't had.a va- cation in 10 years, is living it up in Chicago now—and he says it's -- . r » Pn den nate cme Perfagmance figures for both mis-| all possible because of a secret y easly 1508, eight Nike lawns se pean a siles are classified, but. the De- ing sites will stretch in a rough| The Nike sites will ring this vital] fae, ‘ne | partment says this offi- ie sage ee a — —and highly exposed—U,. S, basej cially of the Nike system: der 4 mile tong pe of eter with what some Army officers con-|- “Its kill potential has far exceed- : sider the best ground-to-air mis-|¢d expectation.” American benefactor. The stocky, ruddy - faced Wall said his benevolent. friend—whom WORRIED OVER DEBTS? k. we ONE Menitty anly.os 8 chipping “Last month the U. $. Arm } , 8. y gave/|sile available, ; if te pay your payments, debts or bilis when due, sco magnate — footed the transporta- Okinawan contractors the go *~ * & Airline to Use Jets . ndash tro UNeEAOES cee s Soe fer payments yeu ene tion bill for him and his wife from ahead and an estimated 5,000 la-| Sleek, 2-loot long Nike-Hercu- England. borers began moving earth. les missiles will stand along fe} BOSTON uw — American Air. | No SECURITY OR ENDORSES REQUIRED * ¢ According to the Okinawa engi-| beaches of the East China Sea, the| lines today disclosed plans to — PLACE TO PAY wae who a = ad neer district, “‘We're moving an/Philippine Sea and th: Pacific| convert its fleet almost com- | Member American Association of Credit Counsellors t told a reporter ' awful lot of dirt on two sites and|Ocean, ~ pletely to turbine-power jets and > ape —_ makes an average of $20 a week. fo Wis a. ~']| |we've actually started working on| Inland from the beaches, across|“propjets by 1961. The company Monat Bete ek eS maatinn Experience Assiat + all And why did the shipping ty- with, SOS" yee ee ~«tyNed |six.” Okinawa’s rice paddies, lies an in-j earlier had placed orders for i ; . oer coon do it? Officials figure the whole job will|credible multi-million dollar com-| 30 jets and has plans for in- Michigan Credit Counsellors “Purely as a humanitarian,” QUESTION: Are elephants afraid of mice? take 16 months. plex of air bases, ammunition| creasing the number to 70. 41% 8. Saginaw FE 8-0436 Abews Oskiané Theater _ Says Wall. x* *« * eam = : “r Tt all started, the S3-yearold; ANSWER: Probably you have heard the saying that ele-} . Le. cabbie said, last April — he| phants are afraid of mice. It’s a story that has been knocking} ‘ a ys oe Sonk Game te around for ages. The stampede of circus elephants doubtless’ 40-minute drive to the city con-/@s been blamed occasionally on the presence of mig@, But) . versation turned to Wall's long-| the fact is that elephants actually don’t mind mice. There are, lectronic number keeps checking standing dream of an American|mice around elephant stalls\in zoos nearly .always, because vacation. mice are found wherever there is fodder. And 200 keepers will “I mentioned that I had never) te}} you that elephants see them all the time without exhibit-, been more than a few miles from ing alarm. As for the explanation that elephants fear lest mice | London, but that my life's ambi- : \ tion. wag to travel. to America, 1/'¥" up their trunks, that isn’t very logical. One powerful snort told him about my wife's relatives, bY an elephant would blow a mouse across the tent. in Toronto and Chicago.” . x * * : , - “When he paid his-faré he said ‘FOR YOU TQ DO: See an elephant in 200 or circus when’ fo let him know when I was ready | you ean and see the many interesting ways he uses that trunk for the trip and that he would do/o¢ his. And: color this picture, paste it on cardboard, cut out! © de tificati f = wong, eet &. around the.outside black lines, fold the front panel forward,| 1aenturcation. ior : a the other back, and stand up in your bookcase. "Pontiac State Bank! * Re: ye ramen s * costs down, means positive . ' who maintained that a “man of * x * 4 that caliber doesn't say a thing (Arthur Vaughan, Franklin, Va., get the $10 award for this like that unless he means week's question. Send yours on a postcard to Violet Moore’ = er said ghoogee d Higgins, care of The Pontiac Press.) executive kept his word, Tomorrow: Why. is a black cat considered unlu Wall related. He arranged in mid- ae anf sentiered euluehy? . ‘ August for Wall and his wife to | ‘ - fly to Hamburg, Germany, and » 4 ‘ * , . | i there board a ship for the United Youth 17 Gets Term Strangles in High Chair | : States. Aboard ship they occu- ’ ’ 7 pied the owner's cabin, Wall said. DETROIT i — Richard Caudle, They have a reservation far the in p [ ison for Holdup 13 months, slipped in his high, return trip Nov. 12. _|chair, caught his neck between Wall told & reporter that-as part) 4 47 yearold Farmington youth the seat and tray, and strangled 7 ; Pressed by his wife, Rose, 50, oR orem, Ba ” JAMES C. MORRISON 1768 SHERIDAN DRIVE PONTIAC, MICH. of the bargain he would not dis- ie magnate. Auburn Heights market was sen- id yesterday. ; = 8 8° &- -itenced yesterday to 3-15 years in Men's, Ladies’, Chi ; ~ The Walls stayed in. Toronto) gta; n of en's es Idren‘s with Mr. and Mrs. Kelle, and Mr. rr “ ; / and Mrs. A. Amster, In Chicago WATCHES ‘they are guests of Mrs. Wall's sis-| The youth, Richard W. Beier, | PONTIAC STATE BANK ter and brother-in-law, Mr. and) was sentenced by Circuit Judge $ PONTIAC, MICH. Mrs. Daniel Segal. Frank L. Doty. 95 | < ’ With free transportation and x~ * & matched generosity from their) Two companions who had plead- _Qelatives the Walls said they'vejed guilty to the armed robbery ’ Spent al] but $5.60 of ite $280 they/Sept. 27 already have received 100% —2 Yeer Guarantee | «were permitted to tal them /3-15 year terms.. They are Frank — for their family in Eng- W. Spencer; 21, of 820% Baldwin PERRY DRUGS _— : a Ave. and Curtis Beatty, 18, of 86 East Bivd., Corner of Perry ; ene $5.60,” he says, “was for/Lafayette St., both sentenced by FE 2-0259 — insurance. Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams. | ‘Contes Pivsboros | Fateful Warning About Suez - PITTSBURGH A strike of| ge Spe Ss teint bens caste Given in Strange 1951 Prophecy first | The number you will soon see on the Pontiac State Bank checks is your new “electronic signature.” It is an important canes romelt, aymern ie part of the new Post-Tronic electronic he steel city—went into its 16th A strange man in Los Angeles for three thousand yeats ty the Hay today with no contract talks known as “The Voice of Two) sages, which enabled many to pm) f . | ~ bank posting system we have installed. gan ederal ad vente mbdntack Worlds,” is offering, free of charge/form amazing feats. He maintains | It assures you of positive identification when 2 ‘ to the public, an astounding 64-/that. these immense powers are! 2 stepped fey of “ ee Fon 8 page booklet analyzing famous| latent in all of us, and that, meth: | your personal checks are processed, There rarily last week as world prophecies covering these |ods for using them are now sim-| is no chance of a wrong entry being posted to your account through error—similarities of names or not legible signature, for example. Your number and signature -— positively identifies you. . - Your “electronic signature” number should pea ollie gf seegy , stherg times. Written in 1951, it success plified so that they can be used by Railway & Motor Coach Employes fully predicted that the next great almost any person with ordinary retreated from their positions. world crisis would be at the Sues intelligence. . : Canal. It shows that four of the; The 64-page booklet he is now greatest prophecies could not come offering free to the public gives, GENTLE - |} true until the present time. But/ guidance for those who wish to) now they cah, and the years that|prepare themselves for the mo- always appear on your deposit slip. It change the world are at hand./mentous days ahead. It gives de-| : ong Great ¢ ie but . still renter tas ot ints at és t, and ‘item. “a ; eT. meng hg te Secunda ae ae provided, _ NATIONAL CASH By a POST-TRONIC confront forward title . nak. ‘or eposits, ea : | opportuni i “Beware These ~ Ah “Magnetic memory” . ... the black bands looking people in 1957. , |Days. a PONTIAC s We, too, are faced with rising costs these on the back of your statements are saiitte neues “The Voice of Two Worlds,” @ STATE BANK |{t days, yet we can give you the latest, most strips, Invisibly, they retain all of the facts about - efficient check service possible (at the same YOUR ¢hecking account with us... memorize _ : . information entered in the National Cash Register low Pontiac ‘State Bank rates) through Post-Tronic machine, They assure you that all record. | AL | the miracle of electronics, -- keeping is done with electronic precision. re ee BRANCHES: AUBURN HEIGHTS — BALDWIN AVENUE AT YALE _ IN PONTIAC’S \ | . DRAYTON PLAINS — MIRACLE MILE TALLEST BUILDING cae a ALL DEPOSITS INSURED TO $10,000 BY F. D. 1 C. a : Z E 4 . 7 — < : = | * : £ i 1 j \ vw a Ht Fy Ney § t i CHEVROLET “DREAM CAR" — Che® set offers in it 1958 Bel Air series two Impala /models, named after and strongly rem- iniscent of a “dream car” a the GM Motorama. This is the Impala Sport Coupe. A new engine, new frame and two hew suspension 1958 Models Go on Display Thursday Chevrolet Longer, Lower, Wider DETROIT — The completely new automdbiles with which Chevrolet hopes to regain top place in output and sales are longer, lower and wider and emphasize flowing. sculp- tured lines from dual headlamps to flared rear feriders, Prices are up an average of 4.5 percent Ae; * wt 1957 level. display Thursday, The Impala is in the Bel Air series, with six models, In the middle range of the low- price’car bracket ig a Biscayne 38 _ oil springs at the rear wheels have Been adopted as a standard suspension, ca 348-cubie inch engine “which 's new from fan to flywheel.” The optional turbo-thrust V-8, de- combustion chamber, greater torque for improved mid- * range performance. It is one of five V-8's and a six-cylinder power called desks and Ramjet fuel injection intro. duced by Chevy last year again is offered as an option on the 283-cuble inch Vis One six-cylinder and five V-8 en- gings are carried in the line, in- |cluding one new V-8 called the’. turbo-thrust, Optional, extra-cost Students Sent Home at Willow Run School systems are but a few of the chassis advances that keep pace with the fresh re-design of the Chevrolet bodies. The 1958 Chevrolets will be seen here at the Matthew St. equipment includes fuel jection, air suspension with ride Aevelizer, in the rear fender/treatment. These units sweep outward from. the body, r greuped in separate housings, | Rearward | slanting windshields Eran EESCAYNE FOUR-DOOR SEDAN — The slda-and war ireel- ment of the Biscayne four-door sedan points up the complete job _ Of restyling on the 1958 Chevrolets, The broad, flat rear deck lid, the graceful gullwing sweep of the rear fender line and the full- PAG TEE. © 's-Hargreaves showrooms, 34 Mill length molding marks the latest development in “sculpturamie styling.” The Biscayne series is in the middle price range of the 1958 Chevrolet line and like its contemporaries incorporates major chassis as well as body changes. A ° Suit of Six Doctors” Put Off Until Nov. 1 Por Huron Team Wins Drill Contest DES MOINES # -- The Blue Star Mothers of America drill team from Port Huren, Mich., last night ‘}won the drill team competition for the 10th cunsecutive year at the group's annual convention here, * * * The 16-member Port Huron team —ranging in ages from SO to T0— defeated its only competitor, the Columbus, Ohio, drill team, “The execution of movement and then. curl around the tail light ensemble to form a shape which stylists term the gullwing design. A new instrument panel ex- tends rearward into the sides of the body. Major instruments are time would be available at the— later date. The doctors charge that certain regulations at the city hospital prevents them from unrestricted surgical privileges there. The speedometer is oblong and spans the entire cluster. increase visibility, Windshield wip- ers on all V-8's are’ electrical. Commi ion Meets Tonight timing of the winning team Was outstanding,” said a contest judge, Col, Julian Wade, who is comman- By INTERNATIONAL NEWS WILLOW RUN VILLAGE—Some 605 students at Edmonson Junior High School in Willow Run Village were sent home yesterday because of broken glass littered in the building by vandals who caused ‘more than $6000 worth of damage. x * Authorities said 40 windows in| doors Jeading to classrooms and; ‘offices were smashed and halls and classrooms were covered with foam from fire extinguishers. The vandals sprayed paint from paint “bombs” on walls, cejlings, fountains. Willow Run Superinten- dent Albert C.. Johnson said the vandals probably entered “the school Sunday mortiing. Sheriff's officers said they gained entry by breaking a window in a first floor * * * A movie projector, typewriters, clocks and musical instruments } room. | Dlant carried in. the new line. ss C ity to Act on Hunting Ordinance Two city ordinances — one pro- hibiting hunting in the city and the other enforcing reckless and drunk dxiving violations — will be acted on by the City Commission tonight. City Attorney William A. Ewart |is proposing the first to outlaw the hunting of birds or animals any- where in the city limits. Last week it was discovered the aca had no such ordinance. n . * * * The second will bring a city't traffic ordinance in line, with state: law by allowing for the ‘arrest of: reckless or drunk drivers upon “any area designated for the park- To Show Our Appreciation for Your Fine Reception We're Repeating Our @ GE ELECTRIC @ GE ELECTRIC ® e @ 6 BEAUTIFUL CENTER PORK CHOPS..... FREE FREE FREE FREE Still Time This Week to Sign Your Name and Win! @ GE ELECTRIC FREEZER—500-LB. CAPACITY STOVE - @ SIDE OF BEEF—CUT AND WRAPPED FREE @ 2 ELECTRIC ROASTERS @ 3 CLOCK RADIOS “@ 2 ELECTRIC COFFEE MAKERS @ 2 ELECTRIC STEAM IRONS | ~~ @ 2 ELECTRIC SAUCE PANS KITCHEN CLOCKS 15 OVEN READY TURKEYS 15 SMOKED HAMS - TOWEL SETS CUT S , ae “Ee a ae MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER LEAN, HICKORY SMOKED - der of the Iowa Wing, Civil Air Patrol. . * * * . “The team had stamina equal to that of the men under our com- Ewart ‘will also discuss a lease/Mand," he said. agreement between the city and the Borden Co. for use of two feet of alley for a conveyor ramp. ments for city improvement pro- jects. A public hearing will be held this evening on the intention of the city to construct two-inch = In New Jersey it is illegal to drive a stagecoach on Sunday. blacktop pavement on Orlando ave- nue from Monticello avenue to Oak- -Huntoon Funeral Home 79 Oakland on Avenue 9 _ FE 2.0189 © One Member of _ National Selected Morticiaris Waterford PTA Fair Heralded Saturday _ A covered: wagon pulled by tiny will be one of the high- lights of the Waterford Village P.T.A. Fair to be held at the ~ laa tes Saturday, Nov. 2, In addition, there will bea rum- weights, pulleys were- invented by the in 1650, i , if i FLORIDA me FLORIDA a FLORIDA @ Pnite: ? f fils ] CITRUS COUNTY LAND BUREAU, INC. 4 - Quality Beef. CHUCK ROAST........ LEG-O-VEAL or SHOULDER VEAL CHOPS Mon. thru. at Our New MEAT BARGAINS ~ GALORE STORE HOURS: Wed. 12:00 - 9:00 Thurs. thru Sat. 9:00 - 9:00 Our. Policy. Only Grain Fed Quality Beef and Meat Will Be Feotured SHINNER’S MARKET. We will continue to serve our many customers the some tender, lean, economy beef at our downtown store! *2 North Saginaw Street | OUR PROMISE: We will save you money on your. meat at both stores. _ 39: LICED KLEIN’S GRADE 1 pORINEESS 9 ‘idiapaaasiiailiaitiis a mee he Southfield. Petitions WE MUST HAVE This board has met and a nette, president; William Pred vice Dorothy Ban ‘president: a eee woe, rahe Galbraith, Margaret maaan sen) one! 6 Se delegates to the MAP HALLOWEEN PLANS — octonEn 29, 1957_ Orion Junior High: - Sunday School students of Elm- a , president, Rah Radford} Wd Church, Avon Township, will"go calling — 100 strong — on and Donna Linbom, delegates;| Halloween night for UNICEF funds. The costumed youngsters, | High MYF Committee; Blanche Sims School: Margafget| Starting at 7, vill meet back at the church at 8, for a party. Above, , president, Margaret Thorpe) working out plans toe. tt the occasion are, left | to right, Ruby Stover, YF. and Lorraine Jarvis, delegates; Ams er os poner ara i al Proper, Carpenter, and W r : Dorothy Wiltse ie (Milfo dC le 5 125th B ~*~ * * ~uintn tn veMilford Celebrates 125th Birthday be at 3:45 p.mJNov, 13, at Blanche! , Sims School, ity sae | HEINTZELMAN Old-timers from all over the United States are swarming back to Milford this week-end, to help tor Own Post Office SOUTHFIELD — Residents ‘here would like to have their own post A petition signed by 1400 citizens ~~ asking for the new post office was 125th anniversary. Sun bonnets worn by the celebrations th its history. From the time the huge Pet and Costume Parade gets underway at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, until the town quiets down Sufday evening, there will be festivities that resi- dents and guests will long remem- * * * Ee: An old time engine, caboose and car wilt be on the tracks for dis- play at the C & A Depot on East Huron street. Every window on Main street has a historical display of some memorable item or event which bas. taken place in the last. 125 yea A tour of scenic areas and points of interest will be departing hourly from ‘the Main street Library, serving- as a ‘Hospitality and ' |Registration Center" during the ‘}4-day celebration. THURSDAY IS YOUTH DAY Because it is Halloween, the Executive and Advisory’ boards have designated Thursday as “Youth Day.” postal addresses none of which is in Southfield They are Birmingham Royal Oak 4-00.Seuth Main and Huron streets and proceed up Main to the new - Village gong lot, where prizes will be awarded. Games, contests and treats have |been scheduled for the youngsters, followed by a street dance under the supervision oi radio disc _ | jockey, Don Lee. = *. * * Friday has been designated as “Neighbors’ Day,” to. honor the hundreds of new residents in- the area! After an old-fashioned noon- day meal, served at the Presby- ferian church, guests may wit- ness an elaborate “Co-Ed Style Show” at the IOOF hall, a block north of the church on Main. ‘At 5 p.m. there will be a. Band ‘Concert at Van Camp's let ‘and ‘at 6:30 p.m., judgittg of the "Whiskerino Contest” will begin. SELECT WINNING BEARD Some maié residents have been allowing their beards to grow for the last ten weeks, and residents are looking forward to the win- ning “‘long-hair,” according . to FIRST-RATE SCHOOLS president — rrp _ Published as a public service {| - atsasibiin sti: will take by The Pontiac Press —+place on the lighted football field in cooperation with where the Brighton squad, tradi- The Advertising Council tional rivals for the coveted ‘ewspaper Advertising {Brown Jug, will battle the Milford i Redskins. Betty dreams of a career in the sky —but will her dreams come true? What a thrill for ‘Betty the day vhe becomes « full-fiedged airline host- ess—pert. little cap and all! But, the chances are, that big day may. never come. Betty lives in @ community where. there's @ serious shortage of class-: rooms, teachers and good school- books. That means less. schooling for Betty than she needs. Let's see that this.doesn’t happen in eur schools. You can help by sup- — porting our School Board, by at- tending PTA meetings and school | conferences. " for more information writs to: SCHOOLS 9 E. 40th Street, New York 16, N. Y. their home town celebrate its’ . |ber, according to officials, | zy combination mail and passenger .. A, parade will get underway | Sn MILFORD’S TINIEST — Weighing a mere 414 5, Mary Lou 7, pounds, and only 10 days old, is tiny Melissa Tressler. Watching her is her mother, Mrs. Wal- ter Tressler and her four young sisters, Margaret 88. 3 TURSDAY, 0 : netemneceares — Pontiac Press Phote president of the Junior High MYF; Don Stover, member Senior - Monroe Fredrick, chairman for the - UNICEF drive, and. Diana Owen, president of the Senior High Pontiac “Press Photo Martha 9, and Marcia 115. The Tressier family traces its ancestry back to Mil- ford's beginning. They are preparing to help cele- brate its 125th anniversary this’ weekend. in Their’ Home ae As Wallonees night fast ap- proaches communities of the area continue to announce plans. Most villages will have parades and parties while many church |, jand school groups will collect coins |" for organizations such as CROP or UNICEF, In Holly Mr. and Mrs. Joe Haas continue their annual custom of welcoming the parade of village children into their home where ‘before the fireplace all are givefi treats and favors. J _ Helily Sponsored by local ‘organizations the “Holly Halloween celebration |will include a parade at 7 p.m ending in Cyclone Park, Costume multi-purpose room will follow foot- ball games betwéen local seventh grade teams and the Holly and Durand eighth grade teams. * * * for 500 including horns, candy, balloons, trick-or-treat eect and other accessories. The annual ‘Halloween party for parade from the Congregational Church to the Daniel Axford Sehool. The village counci] and fire department who sponser the af- and dole out doughnuts, hotdogs and cider. A special entertain- ment will follow, planned by Ox ford’s football coach Dick Figs. night in Oxford will be used by children affiliated with Oxford churches as an appeal for coins seas, rather than for candy for -| themselves. Through CROP the Christian distribution by relief committees connected with the National: Christian Councils ‘of saa countries, '|Lutheran Churches will be cooper- ating in their efforts and will carry | special identification badges. Rochester ‘One Holly ives Plans!° ‘|Council prizes will be: awarded, refresh-|f) ments served and a dance at the |} The home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe|f Haas which has been the magnet |P) for Halloween celebrators for over|> 40 years is prepared with gifts|| “—wxrerd | area children will be held at 6:30/%) |p-m. Thursday, beginnir.g with a/f) fair will judge the best costiitiies | ¥% “Trick or Treat’ on Wednesday} to provide food for children over-| Children of the Oxtord Congre-| S44 gational, Methodist and Holy Cross/¢ mt eailed the Oxford Fire De- Party for? 500 Youths jpartment Firemen worked for nearly two hours eliminating the [smouldering threat. Rochester to Award Water Main Bids N ROCHESTER—Village cd Council! opened bids for the water main extension from Main street to Eliz-| abeth “and on~Romeo and Park- dale. Bids ranged “from $22,296 to said bids would be tabulated and awarded at the next meeting of the counci] on Nov. 12. A resolution also was passed by making the Rochester Branch of the National Bank of Detroit the depository for nine dif- _|ferent accounts of the village. Nov. 12! ne in short session here last night) $11,751. Engineer ‘ George Schmid! urged to hear Mrs. Albert F-. Aimayer, the speaker. : Mrs, Allmayer, who has been flewer arra *- ~*~; * Dessert luncheon will be served at 12:30 p.m., with Mrs. James Robertson as chairman of hos- | tesses. | a —— = ne ee” ‘Church to Serve Ham The annual fall ham dinner of ithe Covert Methodist Church will be hefd Friday, with serving be- ginning at 5 p.m. Proceeds from the dinner will be used for kitchen improvements, @ | DR. "HENRY: Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things ia Sight” Open Friday Evenings AL MILLER Street Closed weeny Afternoons ' Pays M Deposit your surplus savings at any one banking offices. vst Paul’s Methodist Senior High! — -|treating the United Nations ee Children’s Eme Fund. The idea is to go out on Hal.” loween evening and instead ot w causing mischief make it an eve- ning of creative and constructive endeavor to collect money to help: children in ojher patts of the world, UNICEF's. job is to help the chil- dren of the world especially. those in war torn and economically de- pleted countries. The group will meet at the church at 7:30 Thursday evening. All young people tenth through twelfth grades are invited to join with St, Paul's group, Bette During the half time period, | @ salute to the 125th anniversary [ure Chest.” will be given, with officials, bands and parades fo be pre- sented. HONOR PIONEERS be “Pioneer Homecoming Day,” Downtown at 9 p.m., merchants'Saturday, when: pioneers’ ‘and vis-| = a A Quietly Competent Organization Tr ‘The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home mgintains a complete or- ganization of unusual compe- tence. Each member is thorough- ly experienced and qualified for every service rendered. The experience of serving “so many families, plus our unob- trusive. but planned performance of duties insures our better service. 2 Copyright 1957 A. C. Hamacker 4 Phone FEDERAL fink aU... cue On Our Promiss of the area will open their ‘Treas-|itors who have returned to revive old friendships, may celebrate. The highest peak in Greece is Most impottant day of all, will yount nella feet. New Hiadson At the. New Hudson School, PTA members will hold-a party for all children of the community, in the gymnasium. Time: 7 p.m. Thursday. Halloween on behalf of @ THE ~ COMMUNITY NATIONAL : BANK on SAVINGS CERTIFICATES National Bank 24% a Year; savings or investment of our 8 convenient ## ¥ PONTIAC My. Me " p will go trick or} Prete SAVE FUEL c0sT by Properly Insulating Hit Armstrong Fiberglas Wool 1)” ECONOMY FIBERGLAS BLANKET, por sq. ONE coat SEALS AND COVERS: Cement bloc ks, Tile, Brick, Stone, ; py arte . - PONTIAC PAINT tM. co. . FE 5-184 przle. South Perry St, sy an 2” FIBERGLAS BLANKET, per sq. f....... ee. BALSAM WOOL BLANKET INSULATION, per sq, fi..... Boe §!/2° §!/2° ASK for FREE Plan 356 for DOWNSTAIRS REMODELING ~ HANDY MAN ‘ BOR 2 Ee we ES oe - om ee E Lumber - Hardware “ Building Supplies OPEN SATURDAY ’til 5 - Save-on Roth’s Cash and Carry Plan! ~ Circle Drive sa eer pading - - 3360 W. Huron LUMBER (0. i __—_—_— a un 2 Mrs. Marie Lanham, occupational therapist at Pontiac State Hospital, displays the mixmaster in the new family living center. Young women patients about to leave the hospital are given courses in family:budgeting and meal planning. Pontiac Press Phetes Prepares Patients to Return to Their Homes Family Living Taught at Hospital We've said so much about the care and treatment of patients at Pontiac State Hospital — but there's still more to be said. There are many methods em- -ployed-by-the hospital's staff to prepare the patient for his re- turn to society and for re- employment. 5 * * * The family living program for women patients ready to leave the hospital is one of the most important phases of treat- ment. WORK SIMPLIFICATION ‘ When young martied women patients are ready to’ leave the ‘hospital, they are entered in the program which Dr. Ivan A. LaCore, medical superin- tendent, says is to help them . with work simplification in the home. 7 * & * “We hope that it will give them a feeling of more se- curity,’’ remarked Dr. LaCore, and he added, ‘‘We believe that it is a good rehabilitation proj- ect that may have renee value.” The family living soci which ‘includes an all-modern- kitchen and living area was made possible by the Birming- ham family of the late Henry Mouw, according to Mrs. Eleanore McCurry, director “ the si aaa Therapy De partment. Included in the kitchen are table-top stove, wall ovens, a mix-master, dishes, tea service and all electrical appliances. Included in the very comfort- able living area furnishings s a hi-fi radio, ai TAUGHT BY EXPERTS Eight patients attend the 12- week sessions for which Mary Hixon, home demonstration agent, and Mrs, - Josephine Lawyer, consumer marketing information agent, are ‘the instructors. * * ® The classes are given on Monday and Thursday morn- ings. Following -this pilot pro- gram, Mrs, Raymond Giffels of. Birmingham will teach the classes. Dr. Phyllis D. Bursey, as- — sistant clinical director, is medical consultant and refers - the patients to the. department. Assisting her is OT worker Mrs, Patricia Hansen. * * * “ Some of the items covered Isabella Daughters Install New Officers Daughters of Isabella, Lady. of the Lake Circle 479, conducted an. installation of officers Monday evening at the Knights of Columbus Hail. * * * , Officers from the Queen of Angels group of Birmingham and the Sweetest Heart of Mary, Oak Park, joined in the program. Installing officer was Mrs. Margaret King of. Flint, state regent. _SLATE OF OFFICERS Officers of Our Lady of the. Lakes Circle installed were Mrs. Nora Ashton, regent; * Mrs. * Dan Scott, vice regent; Mrs. John Stevenson, recording sec- retary, and Mrs. Maftin J. —, financial secretary. * x Others were Mrs. Louis ‘ Koprince, treasurer; Mrs. Omer DeConinck, trustee; Mrs. Fern Sturman, custodian; Mrs. Pose Fairbrother, monitor; inner cellor, Mrs. E. J. "Duffy, scribe; Mrs. Warren Cosgrove, © organist; Mrs. Ernest George, priveh. ape Mrs. Duane Heaton, second guide, and Mrs. John S. Keesling, banner bearer, were also installed. * © = Entertainment followed, with Mrs, Frank Schmidt as chair- man.. Barbara Nelson and Linda Rollfson, presented a tap - dance and Cynthia Sack ‘did a, ballet dance: Seweral accordion | _- numbers were played be de wigs: Ann Dejager. " ae Log Our Fairbrother, sulinia by Mrs. “Arthur Birchmeir, Mrs. Ben- jamin B. Budwit, Mrs. Walter Bendig, Mrs. Frank Tuinlan, Mrs. Alonzo Barnard and Mar- garet O'Connor. « 1 * * * In charge of arranging the decorations in an autumn motif was Mrs. William Donahue, assisted by Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Robert Landry and Mrs. Koprince. - & th DOLYN BLAINE smi: in the sessions are use of equipment, cookery, oven and broiler meals, housekeeping, low-cost menus, family living, budgeting, choosing colers and _ relaxation, ie islator ._ pddiesses GOP Club The Pontiac Republican Women's Club met Monday afternoon-at-the- Moreland. ave- nue home of Mrs. Clarence Senger. * * * The guest speaker was Far- rell Roberts, state representa- tive from District 3, He an- nounced that the new Repub- lican headquarters in Birming- ham will hold open house Nov. 5 and 6. —- * *® * Plans were completed for a countywide speaking tour by George Van Peursem, speaker of the Michigan House of Rep- resen{atives, Nov, 13 through 15, * * * Guests Leslie Dean and C. A. Ebey were introduced by the Club’s president, Mrs. W! "E.G Huthwaite. Mrs. Lula Luby presided at the refreshment table which featured a center arrangement of fall flowers in shades - of bronze and gold. ; Help Out Charities. While you're getting transi- tion clothes ready for storage, weed out those that you're unlikely to wear again and - send them to. some charity. It's wasting money to -dry clean or launder. cloties that are not really bacohing or useful to you. _ Mrs. Stuart . M. Smith of Birmingham announces the engagement of her daughter, Gwendolyn — Elaine, to John Melville Evarts, son of —* C. Melville Mr. and Mrs. . » from. MSU Patients at Pontiac State Hospital eligible for the family living classes are under the supervision of Mrs. Eleanore McCurry (standing) director _ The joy of cooking. is explained to patients in the family living class at- Mrs. Clara Pontiac State H ospital, Therapy. Se ment and Mrs. pervisor of Women's Occupational of the Occupational Therapy depart- Patricia’ Hansen, su- Ray, therapist, tries a tested recipe: in the kitchen which is a part of the Occupational Therapy Department. Molly Kasan Brings ‘Egghead’ to Broadway ; She Writes Play Backwards By JOAN HANAUER NEW YORK (INS) — Molly Kazan wrote ‘The Egghead’ backwards—she researched the play after it was written and figured out act endings after it was in rehearsal, The tall, slim, gray-haired woman with a young face, who _had.the added theater advan- tage of being married to famed director Elia Kazan, explained that she had the same trouble s as most serious playwrights: “I did an awful lot of work on the second half of the third act. before rehearsals — almost as much as the whole play. Once*it was in rehearsal, it was mainly a question of trim- ming and rearranging. » OTHERS ASSISTED “Biff MeGuire, who plays one of the FBI men, figured out the second act closing. Then Hume Cronyn, the direc- tor, came to me and Suggested a third act ending. “Yt "Was a long: ‘time before hé risked tell- ing me the stage manager had Evarts of come up with the idea. Fredonia, _ a * ‘ lot of “The trimming made a lot o N. Y. The difference, but the actors start- bride-elect is ed to go crazy. They kept, tell- the daughter ing me it’s easier to learn a ' whole riew scene than make of the late little changes. If they do have Mr. Smith; ¢ to substitute a whole scene they : +2 > feel like heroes and martyrs. M ae Smith . “Hume kept saying Jess (his ‘ attends _ wife, actress Jessica Tandy) Michigan and he would never put up ” % with thig Kind of*rehearsi il as : State aétorsths | * University: She aid she researched her and her fiance. plag after the fact, Visiting ‘to verify their ane am & ‘Williams €o)1¢ ge, her hus,’ ‘was ar aduated . ‘band’s alma mater, and show- ing her play to.an- ex-FBI ‘main “The Egghead,” which stars Karl Malden, in a “‘portrait of the liberal as an old man,:’ is Mrs, Kazan's first play to be ‘produced on Broadway, but she said: “I've got five more in my bureau drawer. It a first play is produced, al- though the writer would cer- tainly Jearn faster, “Of course, I have some of . the severest critics in the ‘busi- ‘ness, _like Bob Anderson who wrote There's Elia and people It's rare that - ‘Tea and Sympathy.’ They faithfully read each draft and told me what was wrong. - “This one is better than the others; and‘the-main reason is ' because it is plotted. That's the hardest thing to learn. I was-a play reader and I know the writirig can be good, the character fine;the humor fun- “ny, but if the plot does-’t- shape up, the play doesn't go. “If the plot is. there, the ' play will go even if it doesn't have the best writing.” ~ Beta Sig yma Phi S Cucticll Meets — at Soper Home © Thirteen members were pres- ent at the October meeting of the Beta Sigma Phi City Coun- cil held at the home of Betty Soper on Cherokee road. — A report on a recent money- council mem bers discussed other projects to raise funds for elvie and charitable dona- tions, Luana Slaughter reported on the state convention held in Saginaw. The treasurer re- ported that a. $436.29 check was presented by the counci) to C. K. Patterson for the Pontiac Foundation, Folldwing the meeting, re- freshments were served. PEO Unit “ haking project wag given, and ~ Told About ‘Recovery’ Panel Discussion Heard by Chapter at Matson Home A panel — by state and local members of “Re- covery, Inc.,” was presented to members. of Chapter CL of PEO Sisterhood. Mrs. Charles, Matson was hostess to the group at her ‘home on Denby Drive. _ * * * Leader of the panel was Mrs. Edward Buckmaster of Howell. Other panel members were Mrs. Charles Dean, Mrs, How- ard Smith, Mrs. Henry Daniel, Patrick Scanlon, Mrs, Don Royston and Mrs, Albert Par- menter, STUDY THEME PEO's theme of study for the year is “The world is made over by those who use their best energies to bring enrich- ment to the lives of other peo- ple.” The organization is phil- anthropic, educational and cul- tural, and owns and operates Cottey College, a junior college for women. The college is sup- ported by contributions from - members, Students come from_ _Guests at the meeting were Mrs, Jack Every, Mrs.. Elmer Hotchkiss, Mrs. Elton Thomas, _ Mrs. John Gemmell and Mrs. Henri Buck. Perfumed Shoes It probably won't take this _by storm but it's an interesting notion: shoes. Paris has discovered a — way to perfume leather. # =. The lasso line is the Paris-inspired look for Setting a gem-pace is this jewel For the flattering pendant earrings, huge winter fashions. tariat. _jot being She Plots of the Mail | _ Beatrice Aten Seeks Faster and Cheaper. Ways By JANE EADS WASHINGTON — Dr, Bea- trice Aitchison, one of the na- tion's few women transporta- tion economists, says she “came up the hard way” to become the first woman In a top-level policy position in the Post Office Department, ~ * #. She served 15 years as a. career government employe be- fore her appointment in 1953 as Post Office director of trans- portation research. She likes her job, MOVING THE MAIL Specifically, Dr.- Altchison's task is finding better, cheaper and faster ways of moving mail between points in’ the United States. “We want to get the mail home. as fast as we can," she explained. - ‘“We have to move letters, packages and circulars to and from any plage in the United States. This is the equivalent ady to jump any one of a ways at any time,” + + * *) | About half. the postmasters in the country are women. Many women deliver the mail often under great hardships and over hazardous routes. MARD WORKERS “Women are tough,” Dr. of the water with the horse. * * Cd If it's only knee deep on the horse--cars can cross, If its above knee deep, only trucks, If its “belly deep” no one but the mail carrier on the horse -gets through, FROM HER FATHER Dr,. Aitchison inherited her interest in transportation eco- nomics from her father, Dr, Clyde B, Aitchison,- now 83, a former member of the Oregon Railroad Commission’ and member of the Interstate Com- merce Commission from 1917 fo 1952. , - ‘The two make their home together in a pleasant nine- room house. ; sg poets are mounted in a cone ‘of rhinestones. Your*Luck Is What You Make It By ANNE HEYWOOD You have to give luck a chance. I know absolutely that some people are luck-prone others are not. The difference seems to lic in that capacity for letting luck happen. STORY OF MRS, T Mrs. T. is a woman who has that capacity, I'll tell her story * go you'll see what I mean, * * * Mrs. T, was a widow who had a bare. subsistence. When her husband died, it became apparent that she would have to learn a skill atd get a job so that she could support her- self and avoid becoming a bur- den to her three children, They all had ‘growing fasion of their own. After she picked herself up emotionally and had made some. kind of adjustment. to ey grief, Mrs, T.. sold the ise; took’a small apartment 5 % in the city and enrolled in a school to learn shorthand and typing. * * * “It was the most practical thing and’ it sort of interested me,” she said, “although I missed the country, badly. QUITE A NUISANCE “But my well-meaning friends in the city were quite a nuisance. They were always dropping in to cheer me up— and interrupting my practice” of typing and shorthand. For a while, I almost gave it up. as a bad idea.” ~ ® * That's what the “unlucky” - person would have dane. “There's no. sense ‘trying to , study’ anything. at my age.” | they would have said. “I can't concentrate any more,” ¥ * * “But Mrs. T. didn’t give. up She called a coyntry cousin of hers, who loved the city bit a who had few chances to visit it, and arranged a. six-week swap. TRADED DWELLINGS “I gave her my city apart- ment, to live, in, to see shows and shop, and I took her coun- try place, where I ~ould prac- ‘tice in peace.” x *k After she had really learned the rudiments of shorthand and thing ‘that proves she’s “luck- “T told all my friends in the city,” she said, “that I would welcome a chante. to practice dictation if they had any cor- respondence to be done. | | a a ‘One.of them, who's married. a hotel man, was having a y wedding ‘for her daugh- - on had lots of correspond- ence.with-out-of-town relatives. a a OS *% well that she told her husband about me, “Just at that time, the ban- quet manager at the hotel needed a secretary who had typing and sliorthand and who had experience with invitations, meeting people, — menus, et cetera. I got the job! “Now, wasn’t that lucky?” * * * Yes, that’s lucky. Mrs..T. has a job that com- bines her years of igre as housewife and ‘hostess, her love of people arid her newly _ kills skills. The reason she got it is be- cause she kept putting herself (in a place where tuck had a ' Chance to happen to her! * * & : It you're interested ‘in the hotel field, ev pbnex geo self-addressed envelope and I'll a bi date. in the field. 4 Cane OTF | ‘Movement iM ition and a half . | = : A fine piece of tismiture can last a lifetime og oe _ it needs is a top-quality reupholstering job by our skilled craftsmen! [et us show you somples and 3 ident; Georgia Humphrey (third from left): secre- tary, Lona Lambdin (second from a wad treas- urer, Rosemary Fellows (extreme left), estimate . Ses You'll be pleasantly —,* at our Open Evenings. by Arpininen! ‘e+ et + +. oe el ee oe el? ee Oe oe Oe, el ke * * * * © * * * Members i Month End SPECIALS Ready Made Drapes SOLID COLORS m gold, pink, bisque—to fit windows any width up to . * * * in nutmeg, turquoise, Greeted at Viernes Dance. \Mark Halloween ; jevening was sponsored by Pontiac {tin’s most original costumes won the prize. Don Schumacher had bs Northville State Hospital at which .}main introduced the pane] mem- -|IDAV Chithen: iand Auxiliary: A Halloween party held Friday |Memorial Chapter 101 and Aux- * ke Entertainment was presented by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph O. Ellsworth. B. L. French of Flint provided music and Mr, and Mrs. John Mar- charge of refreshments. * * * Others assisting with party ar- mts were Mrs, John Mar- cite Mrs. Roseline Hickman, Mrs. |Amy Harp, Mrs, Zoie Williams, Kenneth French and dina Cre- mer, Program Attended by Oakland Nurses Oakland County nurses attended a United Nations at a@ panel discussion was held by five nurses from Norway, Japan, Australia, Indonesia and Uruguay. Program Chairman Lucy Ger- bers as exchange scholarship students at. the Thursday ‘session. iary, DAV, at Bemis-Olson Am-| _|vets Post on Oakland avenue. Julia Barbara Steck and James Herbert King were married Saturday Mr. and Mrs. | Stanley P. Steck -are ~ parents — of ‘the bride, and the bridegroom Is the ‘son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Dewey. * i= and ans JAMES H. KING Julia B. Steck Marries’ in Our Lady of the Lakes Arrangements of white chrysan-|pital road and the bridexroom is Council Fire f Pp t @ NO PEROXIDES usED! Or rarents © NO RISK TOA oon | : SINGLE STRAND! Parents of Gig] Scouts at Wil- It lasts 5 weeks... _jiam Beaumont Scholl gathered at | takes 5 minutes, Crescent Lake Park Sunday after-' costs only ingon to be entertained by their] $ daughters at the council fire. 3 oe * *# — With of Without ollowing a supper’ consisti i Appointm chili, hot coffee and doughnuts, the J = if group rallied around the fire for) the traditional investure of the] |: FES to 9 entering Girl Scouts of Mrs. Olaf jours: Rose's troop. Mrs. Richard Simp-] °- Around the Corner son, neighborhood. chairman, pre- From Kresge's sente@ pins to the. girls. Providing entertainment were members of Mrs. Hugh Smith's Miller street, and Gerald Saftord of Grand Rapids. ' Parents of the bridegroom are. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bennett of. Stout street. x * * The couple left by plane for California Friday and will live in. San Clemente while Pfc. Bennett, is stationed ‘at Camp- Pendleton. Scouts Hold 1 oe E COLOR A FINE Way TO TRY iF YOU DON’T DARE TO DYE! "_ @ NO TOUCH-UPS! @ No TIME Lost} —__} Troop 116, who presented a square | dance, and members. of Mrs. Gar; | net Smith's Troop 119, enacting a skit. Community singing, ending with) taps, concluded the program around the fire. MIRACLE MILE themums banked the altar of Our) the son of the Robert coy of Lady of the Lakes Church for the) Saturday morning wedding of Julia Barbara Steck and James Herbert King. The Rev, Frederick J. De- laney performed the ceremony be- fore 100 guests. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Steck of Hos- Grand Blanc, ‘ For her wedding the bride chose a gown of Rose Pointe lace’ and nylon tulle over white satin featuring Rose Pointe appliques and a fitted bodice with scalloped neckline, A queen Anne head- piece held a fingertip veil of ' i” 130”. Fabric is fortison rayon, is faceproof and a and Mrs. Harold ; @ superior quality. ) welcomed back -F | pew rs are 145° te 47° onan : Less 20% "Tl PRINTS — in three modern patterns and two. eadalenal patterns, all light backgrounds in single : widths only. Lined with:a 1 high count sateen. Ex- ig ceptional value. i - Prite Is 17” Less 30% 2. 8.2 6 8 ee es eee oe tt ee eg ot 8 8 ee 8 we 8 ee . * —- THROW PILLOWS A selected group of discontinued numbers in koolfoam zip-covered, and kopok filled, in a variety of sizes and colors suitable for furni- ture or beds. ete 3! SY "Less 25% | * oo 0 8 6: 88. ~ * BEDSPREADS “CHINTZ COVERLETS double or twin, in col- ors: blue, brown, green, lilac, pink. Matching ruffles in two-tone stripes. 18” nee RUFFLES In two-tone stripes. ] 950 Less 30% ODDS and ENDS in faille, fortisan, chromspun ond cotton. | Prices 1 ore 425° te 240 Less 3370 age ranges from 5 to 15. Sufficient to do iB slip covers, bedroom windows, utility rooms, J : R garages, etc.—oll are first amy: LESS. 33 50% ar) ——e — ea 3 _ * Piles pa + Less 30% eee aaa er error ererararararsarerarcrcarerarerca * * ee er) ° ~ Prices Are rau CGY OL YS EELS SDE OU Ends of bolts i in every type of fabric. Yard- a Your Win Coa lection A magnificent col- solid velours, seal fi eee , ‘magic, and novel- Shower Given ties; tuxur 1. for Bride-to-Be a Joan Hoffman satin, orlon pile or alpa-— ca. The finest imported and domestic fabrics.: 69" OTHER COATS $49.95 » $169.95. . French tulle.. The bridal bouquet 2 ‘Three sisters of. the bride, Pa- tricia, Margaret and Mrs, David) Jones served as attendants. They - were. gowned in taffeta dresses We Have a A, Way With Hair Be sure‘ to make your next appointment with us and take _ advantage of our well trained staff. Permanents 56” with matching chiffon overskirts in various shades ‘of turquoise. They carried bouquets ‘of baby chrys- anthemums. W ILKINSON’S BEAUTY SALON $255 W. Huron St. (Corner sof W. Huron & Elisabeth Lake Rds.) FE 4-a149 x * * Romaine DeFrain of Grand Blanc was the best man, and Jack Kipp of Grand Blane and Stanley | Steck of East Lansing sgated the guests, For receiving guests at a re- ception in the Dublin: Commanity » Center, Mrs, Steck chose a biue lace and chiffon sheath dress with a peppermint carnation‘ cor- sage. The bridegroom's mother wore a mink brown faille sheath dress with a corshge of harvest | carnations. Before leaving on a trip to Flor. ida the new Mrs. King changed to a black wool sheath with black and| white accessories. The couple will live in Grand Blanc. : The bride was graduated from of tweeds, groom from Central Michigan Col- Bride-elect Joan. Hoffman has been honored with several show- ers. A bridesmaid for Joan's Nov. 16 marriage to Earl Schulte, Grace Schulte, gave a miscellaneous shower for 45 guests ‘in her East, Detroit home. Mrs. Earl McHugh and Mrs. Wayne .Miller entertained for the bride-elect: in ‘Mrs.. McHugh’s Syl- van Shores home. Fall flowers shower attended Bhoniela 2 from | i Nazareth College’ and the bride-|, decorated the house for the kitchen |. Dr. gies W. Black — OPTOMET RIST — Now Located at $513 ELIZABETH LAKE RD, 1 Block West of M-59 Corner of Cass Lake Road, Pontiac OVER MAC’S DRUG eros Formerly of Rochester EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT | Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wednesday a ‘ Vast . . .. exciting. : in every color... . every length! Whatever you've envisioned is here at its most glorious. Pe i | . By sosePmIvE LOWMAN If you always have thought of home as a safe place to be, let Christmas places are a motor car and your own home. Of these. 95,000 deaths, 40,000 resulted from motor acci- 8775 DIXIE HWY. Aeross from Waterf "| falls, .|the- National Safety to consider the real danger of Falls. cansed 20,000 deaths. in 1985. Of these, 13,600 were in the home, It is interesting to |'°° note that women lead only in wobble, -_ — =. heels Which are housework, step-| ladders a Pi are insecure, scat-| ter rugs which slip, inadequate} lighting, and the rush and huff and puff which most women live shoes which fe which are . According to information from ouncil, in 1955 men contributed 69 per cent of all accident-deaths, T5 per cent ot car fatalities, 86 per cent of those who drowned and 70 per cent of those who died from poisoning. Women accounted for 51 per cent of the deaths caused A little thought and good sense moderation and preventive meas- ures, May save you lots -of ex- pense, time and. pain—and may even save your life! This turns my thoughts te the dangers for the man in_ the house. Every summer I warn against the very real danger to the weekend athlete, or the sed- entary man who sits at a desk * * * So, let us pause for a mément ,P. ©. fidents and 28,000 from home acci-/by falls. OR 3-7144 dents. : The remainder were from work ' ' fatalities and public accidents. PPPPAPRESPPRPAPR YS OPA ° MARY KING SALON JoAnn Streeter and Robert E. Warman -were a married QR F. riday : ORA OBRECHT . At Se - ~ ‘. aints Specializing Episcopal _ ne Church. Hair Sty ling Parents of and Permanents Complete Beauty Service 52.N. Perry FE 2-3053 the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Case Streeter WANAAAAAAAAAANAAN NA and the . bes Er is theron GET WISE ‘Mr. and Mrs. ; Amos R, OMOGERIZE Warman. Home Delivered in New Pure-Pac Containers ~ NYE DAIRY FE 2-6786 i One hundred and fifty guests ; witnessed the Friday evening wed- New... ding of Jo Ann Streeter and Rob- |performed the candlelight cere- ‘mony in All Saints Episcopal \Church, | Mr. and Mrs. Case Streeter of |Stout street are the bride's par ‘ents, and the bridegroom is the 'son: of the Amos R. Warmans of Douglas street. For her wedding the bride wore a gown. of Chantilly lace ever satin featuring a scoop neckline trimmed with sequins, _ In the November Journal} tong, pointed sleeves and a chap- | . el train. Her bridal bouquet was TV QUIZ CHAMP | ms mt “am, crane TEDDY NADLER Mrs. Robert Morin served as her What will the For Fall Knitting Knitting Needle 452 W. Huron FE 5-133¢ x * * which formed streamers at ithe back. She carried a cascade bou- quet of harvest carnations, Bridesmaids Mrs. James Van- Dyke and Mrs. James Crable, a MR. and URS. Vows in All Saints Rite |Women's Units Party Opens Fall Season for Cotillion Members 6f Cotillion Club exit ered at the Orchard Lake Country Club. Saturday evening for the + \club’s first anes of the + jseason. | Greeting members and enits in ithe receiving line were Mr. and ‘Mrs, Thurley Allen, Mr. and Mrs. ‘James Jenkins, Mr. and Mrs. Rob- lert Boynton, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde {Dearing and Mr. and Mrs, Don Newman. Also, extending greetings were Mr. and Mrs, Robert Castell, Mr. and Mrs. Don Cotterman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greenhalgh ‘Lawrence Burt, Mr. and Mrs, Reg- Mr. |_ Home Can. Be ; Baan d Place J ' ie week tat Gen veces ‘tu and overdoes on the golf course or on a hike or a vacation. Many -of these men dic df heart at- tacks and others damage them- selves immeasurably. Perhaps it. is time to remind you that shoveling snow and chip. ping ice are very strenuous ex- ercises, I do not have the exact Statistics on fatalities due to shoveling snow (heart attacks) but I do know that the number of men who die as a result is quite sur- prising. So, take it easy! * * * Tomorrow: Give Attention to Breathing for Better Health, Looks, Merry Mixers Mark Halloween Members of the Merry Mixers Square Dance Club met in the {Waterford CAI Building Friday for fan early parede of Halloween characters. x ® °® ; Master of ceremonies for ‘the evening was Lee Kaines, who ap- peared as a clown. * * * At the intermission doughnuts and cider were served, Guests for the event were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hickson, Mr. and Mrs. inald Edwards and Mr. and Mrs: ia Harold Hadden, Rowena Beauty Salons for Your Better- Permanents Our New. Salon in Clarkston is Now Open at 14 S. Main St... » Phone MAple 5-1000. ROWENA'S BEAUTY SALON ° 4831 Dixie Hwy. 1216 Baldwin On 3.9541 FE §-3735 * % SHERYL DAWN VINYARD Mrs. Norma Vinyard of Lo- gansport, Ind., announces the engagement of her daughter, Sheryl Dawn, to Pvt, Thomas R, Smith, son of Mr, and Mrs, Arthur W, Smith of South Til- den avenue. The bride-elect, daughter of the late Charles H. Vinyard, is a senior af St. Elizabeth Hospital School of Nursing in: Lafayette, Ind, Her fiance attended Flint Junior College. The couple plans a Dec. 21 wedding. Attend .Workshop: Mrs. Fred Stimpert, Mrs, Allan Monroe and Mrs. Sixten Netaler attended an all-day YWCA per- sonnel workshop in Grand Rapids Friday. and Mrs. Ralph Norvell and Mr. and Mrs. L. Raymond Samp-, son. i New members welcomed were Mr. and Mrs. John Blamy, Mr. and Mrs. Hart Morris, Mr, and Mrs, - William Thomas, Mr. and N Mrs. Charles Campbell and Mr. jand Mrs. Charles Gaffney, | | i i f ROBERT E. W. ARMA! Hold Meetings sister of the bridegroom, wore blue lace over taffeta gowns styled like that of the honor attendant. recently met in members’ homes. | _|They carried cascade arrange-| Meeting in the North Ardmore ave-| ments of yellow carnations. nue home of Mrs. Floyd Crawford Terry Lea Straub, cousin of the|was Marion Shaw Circle, while bride, was the flower maid. She|Helen Doris Brown Circle met fh wore a blue nylon and lace dress|the home of Mrs. Clayton Rule. and a white carnation headpiece, ATTEND BRIDEGROOM | Arnold Smith served as best man, Charles Warman of Clark- ston, Kenneth Warman of Detroit, |,; Martin Bacak and Charles and panes = ine to members of Kenneth Warman, brothers of the Beach home bridegroom, seated the guests. ag and drive - x*.* * ting for a meeting of Margaret For a reception in the Rose|Johnson Cifcle, Mrs. George Kheale Room, Mrs. Streeter chose |Mueller-of Wolfe street entertained a rose beige dress with black ac-|Members of Vivian Otto Circle, cessories and a corsage of pink and the Voorheis réad home of and white carnations. Mrs. Ralph Carr was opened to| members of Beverly Root Circle. ~ The bridegroom's mother wore - a navy suit with blue accessories and a red rose corsage. Before leaving on a trip to Ni- agara Falls the new Mrs. Warman changed to a beige suit with brown accessories and a corsage from | her bridal bouquet. The couple will live on Stout street. members of Jean Bagnall Circle, and Grace Otto Circle was enter- tained in the home of Mrs. Syl- or Dust. Mrs. Claude Johnson) AMY HOGLE > Piano - Voice - Theory sister’s matron of honor wearing a ex-clerk do now? ‘|gown of shrimp eolored lace over taffeta with a draped neckline He was earbing $1.98 an hour when his fantastic memory won him $152,000 on TV and fame Certitied beyond his wildest dream. To- Teacher of day he has no job and com- Michigan plains, “We'll be broke in two Music years!” Find out why. - | Teachers’ , Though disliked. on TV at Association sidered ; first, Teddy is now con one of the most popular con- -testants of all times. Read “Famous Overnight” and also, Dr. Hohman’s parr nied champ. ° of this famous “| Lost 95 Pounds” -.. 250 to 155. Learn how in — Dunning C of Improved Musie Study Phone FE 2-7547 _MEN’S - LADIES’ \Bland Veal - | “From Hippo to Slimmo.” Com- plete with diet menus. a S 7 Cleaned ALSO: PACKED with IDEAS ‘ ‘eed FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON E on © Thank feast ¢ H made China car stare fol Blocked it i ts ; hie : THE HATTER me ALL, 36 articles, stories and features R bi a cau Bre Get your copy today! MARGUERITE’S | 1 , YARN SHOP | Learn to Knit Free Instruction Classes World’s Largest Magazine for Women 1” 8. i Auburn Mixes Well First. Methddist Church circles, Mrs. Arthur Stewart was the set-|_ | ' | Tel-Huron Center There’s no better way to make slippers! Make Osmun’s Town & Country Your Headquarters For ... Evans HAND TURNED FOR THE LADIES... If your man is an Osmun man, we have his sizes on record, Town & Country “An Osmun Man Is a Well-Groomed Man” _ Open Mon., Thurs., Fri., Sat. ’til 9 P. M. FE 4-4541 With Ham . ‘Mrs. Dickie Bakes Combination Loaf!™ in 2 Coffee Cans . By JANET ODELL - Pontiac Press Home Editor Yesterday we gave you a recipe); for a regular meat loaf. Today) ‘we should like to give you one jthat uses only ham and veal. Try| this unusual combination sometime) * ‘for a change from your regu 3 recipe. ie * * * . xa Mrs. Fred J. Dickie of Com-| merce contributed this recipe to aj ~ local cookbook published over ten)/ — years ago. An active senior citizen,| Mrs.. Dickie works in her chufch); group and in the Eastern Star. heel-hugging, toe-free fit looks good from any angle HAM AND VEAL LOAF By Mrs, Fred J. Dickie 2% pounds veal shank, ground. 2% pounds smoked ham, gtound 1 cup oatmeal 1 large egg or 2 small ones 1 cup milk Pepper (no salt) Mix all together and put in two panera oa Bo aera: “Soft, light and very fashion . baked in one pan it will take about two hours. ‘ta i Making news again is “THE FORWARD LOOK” of the.Roaring 20's ed for you by our hair stylists. . . Park Free Waa new softness. .. . adapt- » Betty LeCornu Beauty. Studio Huron Center FE 2-5221 aes textured calf Purite to live in.., .. in calf with a texture thot means new eye-appeal, See the collection now. Appearing in VOGUE. B95 ana 995 new ee Ee ee ee ee |} Custom Picture Framing ' > 7 > —— = ~wewewwwwwewwevwvwvuevvvwvr@r7lytvt«t tt" 4 “Group Pictures Are Special Here” ; 52 Augusta FE 5-3409 OPEN 3 P. M. TO 9 P. M. + ‘ia - Ceiba He aeorti ae haps ra ji al Two Wonderful Ways to Look in Wool! e The SHEATH P LU’ eee * 4 ++» & Jacket equals @ costume that’s practically unsurpassed for versatility. The jacket, lightly fitted with @ stand- out collar , . , the sheath dress made with a high, split neckline, neat hip pockets, Sheer wool in red, royal, navy, or black. Sizes 10 to 18, i nilaelaiel alice tlattering .. MANCE" BRA features for fabulous fit... count them! 1 Equalift sapporing straps for balanced _ uplift, definite separation! 2 Elastic under-arm for no-gap fit! 3 Adjustable elastic bottom band fits snugly yet breathes with youl A Circle-stitched cups keep their shape and yours! 5 Ladder-stitched cup sections give smooth line under all fashions, are always comfortable! 6 Elastic back-strap releases give freedom - no-bind movement! For a new fashion figure in new comfort, wear _ “Romance” Bra No. 562. Six special features give "superior fit, wonderful shaping. Added plus, fine white cotton broadcloth that wears longer, washes so eosily. 32A to 38C, Ask for the NEW “Romance” bra. Foundations—Second Floor |” b , t : f . : | | , Try a naturally genile bath with Hollywood's favorite soap _* | ++. Cool, retreshing green +. . 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Like White Lux, Lux in Color is time to try all of ior a reminder]. i 4 B ie ue more wonderful folor to your bathroom. Of course, , .. guaranteed by Lever Brothers to satisfy completgly or them! Ady , a ‘ -. _ |. this is the same mild and gentle Lux Soap you know. your money back. — | . rg et “ : ‘ . Af : Ab Pink, green, + ee : . : aoe yellow, blue : : : eee , — 5¢ offon 2 BUY NEW BATH SIZE COLOR LUX BY THE COLOR OF ITS FOIL WRAPPEF bars of any ‘of - 2 ; } * ‘ ; : » e ’ m ae F % @iis : 4 q. es : A ( yo oi) \A \\ 1! : | 1s es ; edt 5 ‘i ; i 3 i . : * , \" e il ee a a ee OR 5 oe : a Paes i ts gS MI a THE PONTIAC PRESS = * 1 PON TIAC, MICH IGAN , , SEV. ENTEEN “Few Feet Short of 5 Miles Long to 10,350 Men and Cost 100 Million Dollars Here are some s.atistics and interesting data regarding the 108 - million - dollar Strhits of Mackipac Bridge: LENGTHS ‘Total length, 26,372 feet (28 feet less than 5 miles) Length of steel superstructure, * 19,243 feet Suspension span, including an-“ chorages, 8,614 feet Distance“between towers, 3,800 feet. HEIGHTS AND DEPTHS Towers above water, 552 feet ’ Depth of tower piers below water, 210 feet Mid-span above water, 199 feet Depth of water at mid-span, 295 feet ; Ship clearance at mid-span, 155- feet CABLES Miles of wire in main cables, 42,000 . Number of wires in each cable, 12,580 Weight of cables, 11,340. tons Tension in each cable, 16,000. Cable diameter, 241; inches CONCRETE Total concrete, 466,000 cubic yards In substructure, 451,000 cu. yds. In superstructure, 15,300 cu. yds. Total in one anchorage, 91,600 cu. yds. Total in one pier, 80,600 cu, yds, -— WEIGHTS Weight a whole brtdye 1 024,500 tons | Concrete, 931,000 ‘as Structural steel, 71,300 tons Reinforcing steel, 3,700 tons Steel in towers, 13,000 tons Concrete roadway, 6,600 tons Cablés; 11,840 tons Total weight superstructure, 104,- 400 tons _ Total weight substructure, 919,- 100 tons Total weight anchorages, 360,380 tens . RIVETS AND BOLTS Rivets, 4,851,700 Bolts, 1, DRAWINGS Engineering drawings, 4,000 Blueprihts, 85,000 . EMPLOYMENT At bridge site, 2,500 At quarries, shops, mills; etc., 7,500 Engineers, 350 Sentenced to Prison in White Lake Death "A Flint man, Harold Frye, 35, was sentenced yesterday by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty to 1-20 years ‘in State Prison of Southern Michi- gan for the auto death of a White Lake Township mother of two last summer. Frye was tottvicted of negligent homicide on grounds that he had been drinking and was driving on the wrong side of Airport road if Waterford Township when, the accident occurred July 15.~ Mrs. Ri D. Schultz, 28, of 9510 Portage was killed five passengers with her were injured. ' m The bridge, four years 7S making and with a 7 400-fo0 pate re ee formally next June Sein and| bridge operation—from an esti- ao aaa os * Monarch of. the Straits ! Most Experts Think Bridge Will Boom Bebibniy EAST LANSING — Opening of the new Mackinac Bridge is certain to benefit Northern Michigan—but authorities disagree about the amount of economic expansion to expect. rub their hands in anticipation of a great new prosperity boom, some take a let's-wait-and-see attitude. Michigan State University spe- cialists offer contrasting views con- cerning this new Gros highway link. A member of the folie and Resort Servite’ :sees the Straits Bridge becoming one of the nation’s top tourist attractions and a mag- net for tourist dollars which al- ready mount up in’ miillions each year. ys Dev Robert W. McIntosh, MSU extension specialist, points out that traffic is expected nearly to double ‘in the first full year of mated 1,000,000 cars via ferry and bridge this year to an esti- | amated 1,927,000 in 1958.. * * * fhe greatest @ffect probably will be in land use and increase of Capsule History of Gigantic i Here is the chronological history of the Mackinac bridge: Mackinac Bridge Authority created June 6, 1950. Financing and construction authorized, April 30, 1952. D. B. Steinman chosen.engineer, Jan. 1, 1953. t.:-%, ® : Bonds sold Feb. 17, 1954. . Equipment assembled for Foundation corstruction ‘started, Ma Anchorages reach 10 feet First wittter shutdown, Jan. 14, 1955. First reaches a bedrock, * * Cable spinning started, July 18, 1956. : ° Oable spinning completed, Oct. 19, 1956. , Third winter shutdown, “Pec. 15, 1956. ' ‘* * * Final gap of steel closed, First automobile crosses; Sept..11, 1957 (driver, Gordon Dallas, assistant resident engineer for D. B. Steinman). _ First woman to ride across, Mrs. Amelia Cole, Grand Rapids, Sept. 11, 1957. (Rode Chapman & Scott Superintendent). (main towers) started, July 13, 1955. Main towers completed, November 1955. Second winter shutdown, Dec. 19, 1955. recreational facilities,” Dr. Me- construction, March 1954. y 1954. above water, November 1954. April 30, 1955. * May 17, 1957, with Bugene Yanko, Merritt- While Upper Peninsula residents| Intosh said. ‘‘Land prices are jump- ing now." ¥® * * The Mackinac Bridge will join the locks at Sault Ster Marie as a great tourist attraction, he added, pointing out that man-made objects always are the greatest attractions —‘‘like New York City, Washing- for example.” ' Dr. McIntosh predicts heavier traffic in beth directions. Even- ton and the Golden Gate Bridge,| tually, he pointed out, a four-lane divided highway from Detroit. to Sault Ste. Marie will be integrat- ed with the 41,000-mile national system of interstate highways, “creating for many American shippers the shortest route to the Pacific Northwest and the Rockies.” A 10-minute instead of 10-hour crossing for deer hunters will help too, he added. ere “And outstanding scenery is one Stirs Question of Profit to UP ” of our greatest resources,” agrees Dan Sturt, MSU's: district exten- sion director in the UP. “Of equal importance, the bridge will mean closer markets for -our farm and ‘timber products,’”” he added. | However, Dr. Bennett T. Sande- fur, professor of geology at MSU, points out: ‘The most important Upper Peninsula products are lime- stone and iron and copper ores, all of which will continue to depend upon cheaper lake shipping to com- pete with other sources.” ‘Increased tourist trade in the UP Told of Lower Seaway Tolls Rev. Machrowitz Hears. Plans. for-:St, Lawrence From Administrator WASHINGTON & — Rep. Mach- rowicz {D-Mich) says he has been assured. that U.S. officials will work -for the lowést tools possible on the St. Lawrence Seaway. “T. fee] reassured,’’ Machrowicz) said after a meeting -yesterday in| his office with Lewis G. Castle, U, S. Seaway administrator. The meetng was requested by Castle after Machrowicz last week accused Castle of siding with East- ern interests in advocating tolls be discouraged. “I hope, with good cause from Mr. Castle, that he is going to make every effort to make tolls acreptable to the users,” Mach- Mackinac Span | Tops All Others on Statistics so high that Seaway traffic would) rowicz said. “That's my job,” Castle added) at a joint news conference. As a result, said Machrowicz,, he is withdrawing his suggestion) that the St, Lawrence Seaway De- velopment Corporation headed by Castle be replaced by Secretary of the Army Brucker in oo ae toll negotiations with Canada, But Machrowicz and Castle (were still far apart on some points. The Detroit congressman said he continued to oppose Castle's posi- tion that tolls should be high enough to cover - additional ex- penses as well as the original cost) of the seaway. « With the longest span suspension bridge in the world, travelers can . minutes, move’ between peninsulas in 10 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Mackinac Bridge has the longest over-all suspension in the world, 7,400 feet compared to 6,450 for San Francisco's Golden Gate. Michigan's Mackinac Bridge is the world’s costliest. It cost 100 million dollars, compared with 78 million for the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge;— 35 million for the Golden Gate and 20 milliof® doliars for De- troit’s Ambassador. ‘The concrete anchors for the Mackinac Bridge weigh a com- bined 360,380 tons—a weight virtually equal to all the steel ahd concrete in New York's Empire State Building. End-to-end the Mackinac Bridge lacks 24 feet of being five miles long. There are 42,000 miles of wire in. the cables of the Mackinac Bridge. The Mackinac Bridge's towers are 552 feet tall—equal to the height. - of Detroit's 4i-story Penobscot building. Over all they are 772 feet, The roadway of the Mackinac Bridge at its highest point is 199 feet above the Straits of Macki- nac. . There are 4,851,700 rivets..and 1,016,600 bolts holding the. Macki- nac Bridge's steel superstructure. together. Michigan’s Upper and Lower Peninsulas are joined for the first time by the Mackinac Bridge. It jamps the Straits of Mackinac, which. link. Lakes Michigan and Huron. Its designer; ‘Dr. D; B. Stein- man, estimates the Mackinac Bridge could — winds of 6x2 miles an’ hour, \ ’ A FY could be balanced sdmewhat by losses at St. Ignace and Mackinaw City, present ferry headqudfters, ihe warned, with some tourist traf- fie moving on into Ontario resorts. Pontiac’s Air Reaarih Gets Recruiting Trophy A trophy has been presented to Pontiac’s 613th Air Reserve {Squadron for leading five other staté squadrons in recruiting ef- forts. Presentation was made by Col. Lynn Erratt, Commander of the 9124th Air Reserve Group. . Accepting the award was Major John Underwood, squadron com- Maj. Hercules Renda, recruiting officer, “and Capt. Dodge Mel- konian, information services of- ficer for the squadron. 1 completely Travel by Bus - Over Bridge to Cost 50 Cents Hanna C to 5-Day kinac Span to Open Frida a ST..IGNACE @® — The Mack- inac Straits _Bridge Authority has purchased two buses which it will operate for commuters and transients over the new Mackinac Bridge. The buses were bought from the Detroit Street Railways sys- tem and reconditioned. They will be driven to the straits from De- troit this week. Bus fares will be 50 cents for a- single trip with commuter tick- ets available at 15 for $5. The ferries charge 25 cents per trip for pedestrians. The buses will Operate between various points in Mackinaw City. and St. Ignace, rather than just across the bridge. The ‘Authority paid $2,000 each for the buses, They have been reconditioned, res paired and painted to match the bridge color scheme of green and ivory. . . Will Cut ork Week TRON. RIVER @ — The M. A. mander, who attributed much of the squadron's success to work by | Hanna Co, has announced plans to cut back from a six-day to a five-day work week at. its four Upper Peninsula mines Nov. 3. The company said the work-week cut was prompted by a decline in the demand for iron ore. The company employs 1000 workers at Upper Peninsula installations. Electric Signs to Flash a 45-mile-an-hour speed lim Speed Limit to Be 45 MPH ‘ST. IGNACE (AP) — The Mackihac Bridge will have it; but no load limit provided vehicles meet limits set by the Michigan Highway Depart- ment and Interstate Commerce Commission. U-turns and stops will be prohibited. . Mackinac Bridge Authority police will enforce rules and regulations. There will be’ deputy sheriffs in three different counties: {The bridge’s southern coun Mackinac, Emmet and Cheboygan. They'll take offenders to justices of the peace. terminus lies in_ both Che- boygan and Emmet Counties). " Electrically iNuminated or ice conditions. mile long bridge can be used to flash speed limits of 15 } or 30 miles an hour if such are needed because of mishaps be crossed only in emergenties. ordered to a stop by remotely controlled signs, sf x * * signs spaced along the five- 2 a oe The signs also could direct Jane shifting, but the two-~ foot wide center mall, which ‘about: four inches, will some | _icold blue Wwaterg of the Straits of become one ‘Isfill be an U ||Lower Peninsula, but now they were joined “forthe first time. | He Calls Bridge | a Wedding Ring Soo Reporter Crosses Early; Finds Freighters , Look: Like Toys (The following story was written y Woodie Jarvis of the Saulte Ste. atie Evening News, who became, by accident, the first reporter to cross the new Mackinac Bridge linking Michigan's two peninsulas. The bridge will be opened Nov, 1.) By WOODIE JARVIS Sault Ste. Marie Evening News ST. ‘IGNACE (# — They tell you the Mackinac Bridge is the longest suspension bridge in the world, and you can well believe it. when you fide across, It isn’t just a bridge... it is a wedding ring. Quite by accident, Irode across the Mackinac Bridge the’ other) day. RODE TO MIDDLE Boarding the bridge on the St, Ignace side, I rode to the middle. Three miles away and 200 feet down, the buildings of Mackinaw City seemed like toys on the soutlt shore. It occurred to me it was some- what similar to taking an air- plane ride with both feet on the ground, * * I gazed / down 200 feet ee it seemed like a thousand — to the | Mackinac. FREIGHTER TOY A huge Lake freighter looked like a large toy. The wind was strong enough to blow your hat off. 1 fully expected to’ feel the bridge sway. But it didn't. I sped down the Mackinaw City ‘side and came to a high’ board! ibarricade.- A guard cange out of a little guardhouse. A two-sided letter in a clear plastic «sleeve let me pass. Sta- tionery was white on one side, green on the other, a short turn and found myself on the main street of Mackinaw City. suspension 5) ing a Michigah that had suddenly tate, Peninsula and a The giant span ‘was erecied by All traffic could be. _ u I swung off to the right, made | | I had crossed the worki’s longest |i I. was travers-|f There would). U.S, Steel's. American Bridge Di-} Forenoon Williams fo Pay First $3.25-Toll Big Dedication Saved for Favorable Weather Next June ST. Bridge will be open to traffic at ll a.m. Friday, according to Pren- tiss M. Brown, Mackinac Bridge Authority, : The official linking of Michigan’ : two peninsulas will - be wi fanfare and marked with “o ficers and the Legislature have ‘been invited to a pre-opening in- spection trip. Immediatety following this, the “governor and the Aw ot- ficials will drive from ackinaw City to St. Ignace with the "gev- ernor paying The first toll, $3.25, to .mark the opening to traffic and dramatize the fact that the law prohibits free passes. “The big dedication celebration will take place during the last week in June 1958, when we can a le ore_cortain of the weather : than We are now, “© * ‘* “Our present objective is to get the bridge open, and break in our operating crews so that we can handle the huge flow of hunting season traffic efficiently," said Brown. OPENS ON SCHEDULE It was never intended to have iginal schedule, cable wrapping, painting, landscaping and miscel- after the bridge opened. However, the cable wrapping is practically spect flagmen who may be sta- tioned at intervals along the road- way at some, periods of the day for 10 days or two weeks after the L “We are very proud. ot two facts,” sald Brown. “First, we stated in December of 1963 that the bridge would be epened te traffic Nov, 1, 1957 and ‘we. are meeting this date; , - Second, we figured the: construc- tion cost would be about 80 mil- wit no charge for occupants. Truck tolls will be graduated up- ward depending on the number of axles to $14.00, All toll collections will be. made on the St. Ignace side of the Straits. © CONVENIENT © CONFIDENTIAL OUT - OF - LINE WHEELS CAN CUT TIRE LIFE in Firestone WHEEL ALIGNMENT SPECIAL IGNACE — The Mackina¢_ chairman of the . ceremony and no speechmaking, \said the chairman, e The governor, state. elective of. the final touches 6n the bridge . ‘huntil 7958. Aceording to this or- laneous items were to be finished - Brown cautioned motorists to re- Passenger car tolls will be $3.25. Ea IIR Meee PT OR a gi GN ere 5 os eae ie, : ity eee Baooe ‘aie » = F : i | ats 4 3 A concentra 4 | BLUE SKY icc || STARTS TODAY! | SENSATIONAL TRIPLE SHOW! sh king 3 BECAUSE MARRIED ‘ sen LIFE! \ \ -_ m= .| f NBL j \ . j \ CLEAN! MORAL! | ——«. FIRST SHOWING | “Not Recommended for Children” AN Does at Bop EAN AG OF BIRTH Plus Hit No. 3 if “SECRETS ait ee ae MARRIED | . | Catherine Harrigan Crosby, jhandsome, white-haired, shar tongued woman w z Yo 3 3 i 3 = i eu +h i i j * j E as they did when Hi f F E » son Everett wrot . VESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1957) / : : | LAST TIMES TONIGHT JOHN STEINBECK’S Va lotr - Wartnd | is run by -Southerners.” ‘ Jayne Mansfield Dan Dailey jthing to anyone I meet down: Tonight - Wed. -- Thurs. a Fel hav. \ om. Exclusive == i gts eh a pace scae Se cdeeanreatiest h, "JANE RUSSELL — Hollywood's Highest Priced Glamour Goddess “HIGH VOLTAGE! HOT oa oo First Pontiac Showing WAS EVERY INCH A TEASING. peer |AUNTING COME O78) BLONDE mcm en he RRR BEC go ed hi DRIVE-IN: N VEE (a ae’ Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. North felegraph Rd. MAMIE VAN DOREN — The Girl Built Like @ Platinum Powerhouse! : i gE a 3 F : : ri! : id ree z 3 z B5 e78 ig ae a! Saddened by the death of his MacMurray. found companionship with June Haver, also unhappy from a se- ries of personal tragedie: martied when he was 45 and she was 28. She seems perfectly con- tent to forget her career and take care of Older women were among Clark Gable’s first four wives. As his happily wed, fifth, he chose Kay Spreckels, 20 Humphrey Bogart, 45, had a/years his junior. on May-December Unions; complish what three other wom-| en had failed to do—tame Bogart. But she did ‘it, and his last ade was the happiest of his life. dec- s. They and their “OPEN 6:45 MA 42151 ~ ‘| COMING NOV. 5-16 HURON THEATER reatest Event in Motion Picture History! | CECIL B De MILLE'S , ___THETEN “COMMANDMENTS Rite ene onan connie LAST — DAY! | 20m CENTURY.POn preneen’ Pyy CARY GRANT DEBORAH KERR » AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER COLOR bv OF LUXE CiINngmaScoPeE Adventure Films... “DIVIDED by the SEA“ Starting st bea) i TYRONE POWER AVA GARDNER ~ MEL FERRER ERROL FLYNN EDDIE ALBER Satchmo Thinks Southerners Run U.S. Government BUENOS AIRES (®—Trumpeter HURON Louis Armstrong says the U. S. government could “put its foot! down” to stop race disturbances “but, you know, the government Touring South America with his, band, the famous Negro musician told newsmen after his arrival are beginning to refuse to be x * * “We don’t take that jive now,” he said, adding “T’'ll tell the same, here.” | Armstrong after the Little Rock segregation riots announced he was rejecting a State Department invitation to take his band to Rus- had changed his mind and would if the State Department want- 3 to. , last night that American Negroes|{- : CON ty OftUNE - PAT BOONE TERRY MOORE JANET GAYNOR DEAN JAGGER ene Cons CINEMaScoPE EXTRAT COLOR by O8 LUKE ... TOMORROW ... Breathtakingly filmed in the streets of ' ‘Paris . . . in the bull-rings of Madrid . on the beaches of Biarritz .. . amidst the romantic splendors of the world-famed Festival ‘of Pamplona! THE HEMINGWAY LOVE STORY THAT SHOCKED THE WORLD! 3 » DARRYL F. ZANUCK’S most provocative production — CS ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S * © moet tantalizing novel | ee Po ¢ | EXTRA! ADDED ENTERTAINMENT 2nd in a Series— “Around the World in 10 Weeks’ A trip to the ageless city of Athens, capital of Greece, birthplace of the Gods, Flower of Western Civilization — truly a land of legend and beauty! . “LAND of LEGEND” MONSTER BERSERK! NATURE AMOK! | TWIN HORROR HITS! eH, (Writes by SAMUEL MEWNUAN and PRIA. QANGELIM - Teche! Pte) Pn wv sone, em a fects Crawted by RALPH KAMMERAS ond GEORGE TEAGUE The Most Explosive STARTING TOMORROW! seeeneatiemneanl owes JEFF MORROW > MARA CORDAY RATIMAR + Directed by FRED F. SEARS ‘A CLOVER Production » A COLUMBIA PICTURE r AND a7 If any Wayne-Oakland teani is to halt Northville’s drive for another ; * * * Recruiters at some of the South- west schools are hounding a 6-5 Pasadena, Tex., prep ace gous Bert Coan. The unusual thing about the skyscraper halfback is that he ran. the 100 in 9.5. -~ ke e Les Rothbarth, who rolled a 208 average at Saginaw in the state qualifying for the national tourna- ment, Jan, 6-16, is listed as a num ber one alternate for the nationals “ Eaglet Harriers Win Over U.D. High Team Led by their No. 1 distance run- ner, St. Mary’s High of Orchard Lake yesterday defeated U. of D. High in a dual cross-country match at Palmer Park Detroit. Eaglets compiled oo. U. Pg High 38. - Chet She GF Ps 34) led the pack, which included Eaglets’ Don Donakowski (2), Tel Kosnik (5), Zandrzyzki (6), Con Nawars ), Bob Kula (9) and-Con Brandt 10). University of Detroit High's Bob McGill (3), Reg Kent (4), and John Hurford @ ‘were in the top 10. * * *. Eaglets will take part in the state Class C meet¢ Saturday at Washtenaw cc near Ann — AP Wirephete VETERAN — At 67 years of age, Mrs. Lester Fry of Akron, O., still takes a healthy cut at the tennis ball during daily outings at the University Club in Akron. She is the grandmother of Akron’s Shirley Fry, former women's amateur tennis champion who won the singles 4. titles at Wimbledon, — and Forest Hills, N.Y. in 1956; Now Owns BY, Per Cent Bing Adds HOLLYWOOD i®—Bing Crosby has acquired not only a lovely young bride, but also about 5% per cent of the- Detroit. Tigers baseball team, The singer's brother and long- time spokesman, Larty,. an- nounced last night that Bing has exercised an option to buy stock in the tam, which finished fourth last season in the American League. ~*~ *« * Bing was a member. of the syn- dicate which bought the Detrojt team last year, At that time, Baseball. Commis- sioner Ford Frick ruled that The Groaner could own only a token ishare in the Tigers because he After Almost Quitting - BOBBY SHANTZ cy +. H Conferences Scan. Differences in Cage Rules * * Shantz AL Comeback Star year in an Associated Press poll of baseball writers on 32 ballots. Ted Williams of Bos- ton, who won the league batting title, was third with 12 votes fol- * owed by Washington outfielder Roy Sievers and Baltimore pitch- er Billy Loes, — ve nine. > Shantz's modest reaction was typical of the tiny southpaw who almost quit baseball two years ago because of shoulder miseries. His troubles started im Sept. 1952, the year he won 24 games for the Philadelphia Athletics and was se- lected the leagtie’s most valuable player. * * * Shantz, whose 11 victories this year helped the New York Yan- kees win the American League pennant, said he had a lot of peo- le, to tank tor bis comeback. Elliott, Taylor Back PCC Rules SAN FRANCISCO #\—California| football coach Pete Elliott and Chuck Taylor of Stanford - say winning football can be played under Pacific Coast Conference * at The two testified yesterday be- n-\fore the State Assembly Subcom- mittee on Intercollegiate Activities hearing on a bill to set up a state ee athletic commis- sion, ence of California, Stanford, UCLA, Southern California, west, Southeast, thern, Atlan- tic Coast, Eastern 4) Bor- der and Missouri Valley... / | Last night the : tes, attend- ing the con of tional Assh. of Collegiate , ers, used Cal squads as laboratory Col- lege of the Pacific and San Jose ie. © : Assemblyman Clark Bradley Tiger Stock also held stock in the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National League. * * * Larry Crosby said that, if Frick approves, Bing's four sons ulti- mately will buy the singer's ap- proximately 10 per vent interest in the Pirates. ** * + Frick's office said Tiger direc- tor Paul O'Brien contacted the commissioner in connection with the Crosby deal. But Frick asked? ‘Tor ‘a-written statement of the ne- gotiations before making any ruling. * * * Larry Crosby declined ‘to dis- close the value of the Detroit stock, However, when the club changed hands last year, the sale price was 5% million dollars, Es- timnates of the Tigers’ 1957 profits run as high as $500,000. ~*~ +* & “Actually, I'll be a very minor stockholder,” said Bing, who came here yesterday to record “a radio show, He has been hohey- ed five Voted Football's ‘Player of Week’ NEW YORK (INS) —- Bob Stran- sky, the magnificent halfback who was a hero in defeat as Colorado just missed a stupendous upset of mighty Oklahoma Saturday, earned college football's Player of the Week award. : * * * Stramsky, 2 21-year-old senior trom Yaubien, 5D. who.is sec- ond in the nation in individual ground-gaining offense and leads in rushing, scored one of his team’s touchdowns and lateraled off for the other as the Buffs came within one point of tying * * Other selections: Game of the week—Oklahoma’s M-to-13. squeaker over Colorado. * * * Coach of the week=Earle Ed- wards of North Carolina State. Play of the week—Kevihi Fur- long’s “steal” of a would-be inter-|ton ception and the touchdown he|~ *-: lowa a 6-to-0 win over North- western. (Oklahoma Slips. ‘After Tight One ‘Against Butts. ™mponing at his ranch near Palm|. _| Springs with his ,[aays, Kathy Grant. - voted for Shantz Gee neoaine Colorado Ace Is ‘|Saturday to play Georgia Tech's scored in the fourth quarter to give |15 The Aggies, meanwhile, rolled over Baylor 140 for their sixth straight this season and their fourth shutout in six starts, thus gaining stature in the eyes of the sports. writers and broadcasters [participating in the AP balloting. Out of 166 voters this week, 59 put the Aggies on top and 54 listed them second. Oklahoma drew 51 first place votes and 54 for second. On the basis of ten points for each first place vote, nine for second, etc., the Aggies outscored the Sooners 1,457 points to 1,418. It was the closest con- test. for first place so far this sea- Only these two teams were ranked in the first ten by all 166 voters. No’ one put the Aggies lower than eighth while Oklahoma place and two for tenth. lowa's Big Ten leaders retained _jthird place with 20 first place ivotes but from there on down the order bore little resemblance to the top ten of a week ago as up- sets and close calls brought about la fast shuffle. The top 10 teams with first place votes in parentheses: 1. Texas A&M (30) 1,467 % Oklahoma (51) ....csceneees oy 4 48 re et ee rere rs: 4. AlUrm (10) occa eww er eee 1001 & Notre Dame (4) - oo ceccsevseees aol 6. Michigan State (3)... .ccesvene 70 7. Duke (3) ‘ 6i6 %. Ohio State 1) .. 74 s, 243 \ North Carolina ‘State " eigoumwasen Second Ten . Arkansas (5) ....... oeeeer yee eer eee ee 7 & ae Duke Fngages Georgia Tech Shaky Engineers Meet Unbeaten Blue Devils Saturday at Atlanta ATLANTA (#—Duke; one of the nation’s top football powers and a leading candidate for the lowa's Hawks Retain 3rd Spot, Spartans in Sixth Position tm ee eo % Four Big Prep Ganon on Schedule. * Sooners ti “BY BILL CORNWELL If you're looking for high school football thrills this weekend, there should be fe gps 8 to stand your end right here—in_ the ty area, hair on ships. Grid Thrills Slate Four big games headline this Friday's prep schedule, three of| Southfield; ‘hich will decide league champion- 6 The conference heetewes are: ‘The 4th spotlighted contest pits Pontiac against Flint Northern in“ Oakland ate at Lake a Ranke Sty Oe a rion; and Farmington will Tri-County — Rochester at decide awe ee eee oe Romeo, - Inter-Lakes crown in an afternoon inter-Lakes — Farming‘on at EES All the others ate slated lunder the liglits. The Southfield-Farmington -_ showdown is a huge surprise to most area observers. Both were expected to dwell in the league's 2nd division this year, ‘But the pre-season forecasts were knocked into a cocked hat Southfield, boasting a powerful ground attack, has raced to five wins and a tie ih six starts and rates a slight edge Friday, Farm- ington’s overall record is four wins, one. loss and one tie. * * * Lake Orion will be favored. te dispose of Troy, but there is every | |indication that the ‘affair will be . |hotly contested from start to -fin-~ The pressure is strictly on Troy in ~ encounter, Orion the Oukiand B- If the Colts win, only hapless Avondale would stand in their way to a title share. Clawson could make it a triple share of the glory by downing Avondale and - | Madison, A ee The Rochester-Ronfeo game wilt grab the lead by winning, Lapeer Friday — was given two votes for ninth/ A WORD FOR CASEY — Walter O'Malley, seated center, president of the Los Angeles Dodg- ers, whispers to manager Casey Stengel of the New York Yankees at Los Angeles~ yesterday curing « a \ big, luncheon | welcoming the Dodgers to right, Dodgers the West Coast. Listening in are Councilwoman - Rosalind Wyman, Mayor Norris Poulson, seated bet, and Hank Weaver, radio and Ww announcer. AP Wirephete Manager Walt Alston, standing Triumph Over Bay City Clinches It By DAVE DILES*~ State AP Sports: Editor Everyone called’ it the “game of the year,”” and the two teams ; battling it out for the mythical state Class A high school foot- 30 ball — put on a tremen- dous show. | Midland High's Chemics won ‘the Saturday night encounter at Bay City Central High stadium 4. before a jam-packed throng: of more than 10,000 by a score of | 20-14, Today, that triumph, achieved on three first-half, touchdowns and a defense that rallied when the chips were down, put Bob Stoppert’s Midiand team all alone on top of the Associated Presq state rankings. Midland and Bay City Central waged a bitter due! for the top spot and had been déadiocked for the No.1 position for two weeks. The AP’s panel of sports editors who name the weekly “top ten" Orange Bowl, will come to town below-par Engineers. Tech, which usually ig beginning to get bow] fever about this time every year, is virtually out of the around the state unanimously selected the Chemics for the top spot this week, Central's defeat, its first in six games, pushed the Wolves -~ to 2nd place a step post-season, picture. The Engi- neers, almost 50 per cent sopho- Duke is unbeaten but was held to a tie Saturday by North Caro-} lina State. The Tech-Duke series is one of| ~ the most gélorful in the deep South and-has been marked by surprises and wild finishes. Miah New a out “Young Jos 2 ton, 146, Hon- ee M5," Hone-| — YORE K—ormy "Tivos, 12 — Frankie Ippolito, PROVIDENCE, R. I 1%, New York, knocked Waleett. 151%, Bridg ota outpotnted Lem Lake Orion and Hazel Park Just like pins on a bowling alley, today.ischool football teams in Oakland the number of perfect record high County keeps toppling edch week. _ “| following "s 70 demise at the hands of wson last Friday The two members of the circle are Class A Hazel Park and ‘B’ power Lake Orion. Both squads are clean after five gamesi 2 County Teams ay Clean Huron and East Detroit, while Troy, Romeo, Holly and Oxford block Orion’s path. Two county teams dre unbeaten, but their slates are marred by ties. The Southfield Bluejays have en ra nen oak one TO Hambletonian Champion Is Sold LEXINGTON, Ky. (INS) — De-} mon Hanover, the 1948 Hamble- tonian winner, has been sold for $500,000. The figure equaled the highest price ever paid for a standardbred horse and was purchased Monday in Lexington by John R. Gaines, Midland Voted State's Top Class A Team ahead of Muskegon Heights and Ann Arbor. It was a disappointing defeat: for Elmer Engel's Bay City team. This was the third straight sea- son the Wolves had been involved | -|the title picture by « — ne | also 1-1, would stand to umph, maining loop foes — Northern, Bay Was ousting Lansing Eastern City, and Flint Central, from their éth-place deadlock, After sharing that spot last week, Ann Arbor whipped Eastern 26-7 in’: their Six-A League scramble Fri- day night. The defeat shov Eastern to 10th place. ye contest preyed regarded! Here's the way the AP panel * Standing Ovation Given as “game o} year.” Each “top.ter,” with lost. Over 000 time they have come off on the Hd record chided dehy O'Malley by 1 apeceen : 4. bay Chey Central | bet) Fans a s+ dagcgr pond pserrnd a Maker os» gta ELES ‘Pla 19-7 pe Grand. Haven 3 f Sana ; Bet ap wie : on speakers’ over ae roaee’ Potnie (6-1 (Bel) j Guests at ’ for its Sth straight victory, stayed 1: wae pow ag BS (s-1)___ {table let fly with rubber baseballs in 3rd place while Ann Arbor ; Muskegon (4-2) _ j=to the delight of the more ' = 1,000 fans, who scrambled With I : eee bleacher urchins. scene was Kelly Out njury ing civic lincheba for-the trans ted Los Angeles Dodgers Wi baseball club, ; Inds | Drop 0C le Pair". -|brought . up defenseman Bucky “He's too slow for this league and has been in the ‘minors too long,”” Adams said of the 27-year- 28, for a syndicate he declined to|*. identify. The trotting star, which has been used as a sire, was sold by Robert Critchfield, owner of Gay Acres |Farm, Wooster, Ohio, where the famed horse will remain until after the, 1958 breeding season. Then Demon Hanover will be moved to a central Kentucky farm. Detroit Youth Shoots Ace at Bald Mountain Lynn: Chalmers, 17-year-old De- troit golfer, fired a. hole-in-one Sunday at Bald Mountain Golf Qub. Playing ‘his 3rd year of golf, won five and tied one, Holly ‘has won four and tied two. ; Five area teams are also spot- less. Almont; Highland Park St. Benedict and Detroit St. Rita- own six victories apiece, while Warren and South Lake hold’ 5-0 records. Last week's ‘area casualty Brown City, which fell before mene power, iis . Chalmers aced the 170-yard. 17th hole with a No, ~5 iron. : . Witnessing the ace were his father, George, and -Ed: and Phil yer, both from Pontiac. Chal- mers, who lives at 19485 Black- —_ ‘ghot 92 for the round, It was the 5th hole-in-one reported pre fe yal scoring recon. -of 122 points with Seattle in the \ the Western Hockey League last season, Ullman would be moved up. to the who went back to Seattle. At the same time, Adams sent rookie winger Bill McCreary back to Hershey in the American League on 24-hour recall and/ ’ pEE- WEE FOOTBA: ne (Eastern sion) w ib oll COC Pree 6 #8 Beers .. eoeseses 4 1 SUONS nv castaricscsjaeiss 2 3 Red Devils 5 eiveeed € Giants eee ee i + (Western Division) we. Cruahders .... Ascocvacensgiid 1 AL-OtOTe ... ssa udeee oo, el potians ‘ -sscnneouteeeaes “2 > ae tio aa ges es de Ca a = in s satuRDAYS {mesuits i Crusaders 26, Cubs Giants 47, Lakers vg (The Crusaders and jAll-Btars Pi afternoon inper will this season at Bald ‘Mountaip. for The: w soot — Rams Saturday to decide the league a me : : old Idaho-born Fielder who set a/ Adams said that veteran Norm/{ No. 1 line with Gordie Howe and| ‘Johnny Wilson. to replace Fielder | are ceftér Lynn Terry and quarterback Mike Lewis. The haye a 1-31 record despite the efforts of the senior pair, a an cde ng esse Friday, — General manag chuckling for more than an er Jack Adams, musing somberly/pfollingsworth from the Pennsyl- weet on the woeful showing of his Na-lvania club to teplace the injured| a “Preudent ; Walter, ’Muhor, tional Hockey Champion Detroit|/Ret Kelly. who told the group: Red Wings this season, admitted) Kelly, a 10-year veteran and “T hope the next time you wi today he had erred in his pre-icaptain of the Red Wings, had albe asked to stand | will be season estimate of rookie center |leg he injured a week ago put in|/Duke Snider’s first Guyle Fielder. ; a cast yesterday. : Los _ Angeles.” . Touted by Adams before the season opened as “the best piay- making center we've had in years,” Fielder was cut joose from the club yesterday as the Wings prepared for their first major road trip of the campaign. .: : Hawkeye Coach First Top Rating or Southwest 11 Has Lost Four in Seven Years to Alma Mater secon gpa sociated Press poll today, it| 'owa Attempts to Snap) j marked =the first time in seven Michigan Hex Saturday : in Televised Game ; lyears for a Southwest Conference football team to attain that rating. Coach Paul Bryant of the Ag- __ fiat 80 ou was voted No. 1 in mid- eet ie a fe ng] a 0 ‘won ate © cley.| Sewski, when he became head) football coach at lowa in 182, had LAZELLE AGENCY, Inc.| standings, There must be strong incentive this week fer Evy and Fla. After the ’ AP Wirephoto ceremonies at the ball park the school kids swarmed Lew for aufographs, hand- ing them out as fast as that notorious arm would write, three aims. “The SMU team of. 1950. was; Two have been achieved: Jowa pushed to No. 1 when it won five|won the Big Ten championship straight games. . The very nextiand the Rose Bow! last year. Dp wat : week Southern Methodist was The third goal remains. And : a beaten by. Texas 23-20 and fell out cu 3 © . WOMEN'S it is, perhaps, tite biggest of ‘ Pt : Pts./Of the No. 1 spot in a. hurry, Not eNed’s Drillers —-36- ¢ fos 4 all, Evy wants to beat Michi- "Beroh’s is Pontiac Rec yjonly that but SMU went on to} . his alma mater. rPomt Fleer Cov 18 Test No. ii 13/lose ‘three of its Inst four games| “**™ as “Lion Store ie oley-Beardsley Hiand wound tip tied for next. to He gets his fifth crack at the antes HH oeere* §— Bilast in the Southwest Coottecynce) Wolvertnan at peng nation.) 4. "’ tias Texas took the champlotahip | lly telev game 5 : ‘was earns, Mawes vt ENN nd aa in the Cotton Bowl.--|~ Evy, who.was Tom Harmon's blocking back in 1938-39-40, has = _ = only bitter niemories of the last four Michigan-lowa games. . :. | The Hawkeyes could haye won 4 . Se _ ‘pall four. Instead, they didn't win : _ NO SNIFFLES — NO DRAFTS |v. de q With © J Towa was ahead 14.13 in 1963 a and 1904. In 1955, the Hawkeyes | - STORM WINDOW sf tea 40 at haittiene, ‘They loa 3 ’ d 33-21 a8 the Wolverines, led by 4 - REPAIR SERVICE dim Maddock and Tom Maentz, p00 SERCH — — Lew Burdette, pitching . Pontiac M Gloss roared to three touchdowns in | ace for the Braves in the World Series, had a by : Mirror & | the final quarter. good use for that arm yesterday at the reception —ee | The Hawkeyes were rolling along} elebrating “Lew Burdette Day” at Sarasota, :' unbeaten in five games last year.|~ : | They skipped off to a 14-13 lead at © Custom Designed Glass © Jalousies jhalftime, Agiin it looked as it'4 Qqin Draws | | |the “Michigan jinx” would be 9 © Aluminum Prime Windows © Casements | mapped. _ \Playing Chess, " “a2 ee Ee : PHONE FE 4-5395 ‘]| But with 68 seconds to play,|Checker Champ - : 5 Mike Shatusky, an obscure haif-| ~ Pp j back, bulled across the goal line| Four checkers players last night PONTIAC MIRROR & LASS for the second time in the game. rained draws with Newell W. Coc . |The result: Michigan 17, Iowa 14./panks, world: champion. blinatold 732 West. Huron ‘St. ee FE eee eS Bie ieee ee CTY 1008 tices’ and checkerdiplayer, ‘ai ha = : exhibition staged by the Pontiac Chess and Checkers Club. It was the third consecutive year that Robert E, Dunham, -70, and his son Delos A., 39, both of 272 Cottage St., and Dwight Fisher, 60, of 800 N, Leroy St., Fenton, earned draws with the champion in check- ers. his staff. Three of his aides also played for—Michigan, The lowa forward wall, which The. fourth was Clair Atwood of A begrudgingly yielded yardage, is|g71 W. Stirling Ave. anchored by ge America. tackle + * * Alex ‘Karras, a 233-pounder who Challenged by 34 players, Banks pestered Michigan Jast season. kept his winning ways intact last |He’s ably assisted by 205-pound INSURANCE For Your Every Need Sh dededtiide tidied db pphe bbe reir riririiiiiiiitt | Four Oakland County teams will take part in the Northwest Subur- ban Christmas Invitational Basket- ball Tournament to be’ held at Farmington High School Dec. 26, 27 and 30 it was announced today by Farmington Athletic Director John K. Cotton, Cotton will manage the event which will include a total of eight teams. Trophies will be awarded to the. top finishers. Walled Lake, Southfield, Hazel Park and host Farmington are slated to make up the county representatives in the holiday hoop games. Annual Eastern Michigan League | Plan Holiday Hoop Tourney; ley. Redford Union and Thurston. power East Detroit, Livonia Bent- * * * Four games are planned for each of the three days with the losing teams given an opportunity to stay in the race and battle for the lower places in the final ranking. Afternoon and night contests are planned starting at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. on each of the three days. The tourney champion will be decided- in ‘an—8:30 _battle on Dec. 30. Opening round pairings will have Walled Lake meeting Southfield Hazel Park playing Farmington East Detroit against Bentley and Thurston | vs Redford Union. ‘ eveni by not losing a_ single ® DWELLING—PACKAGE guard Frank Bloomquist and 280-|game in either chess of checkers. | 4 | pound center Mac Lewis, He played 15 chess and 19 check- POLICY | ae -y Gibbons returns atlers games. em end and is the: chief target y: ® HOUSEHOLD—PERSONAL for quarterback Randy Dunean’s BALL @ CHAIN COLLEGE STATION, Tex. w— ate #2 5 : - passes, : ~& = S PROPERTY Rounding out the Hawkeye back- Team Re. 2 33 18 Green Tov. i 14) The heart of the Texas Aggies as : field are left halfback Mike Hag.|S"*,8e%" 18 ia Cities ae. 4 is/they roll unbeaten along the foot- ® BURGLARY--- B-/Pon. Cater. 1¢ 18 Team No. & i3 it ball trail rated No. 1 in the na- ler, who ran for two touchdowns |Pen- Ree 6 Beavers 11 21 a TH EFT in the Rose Bowl conquest of Ore. oneee highs i Individual, A Pee ga tion is a big guy who just likes ss gon State, right halfback. Bill| Stitt 18 Individual series, Pete Town-|t0 Tun over people. : 2 ati G 1 and tun send, ge, and Mary Galek. 616, teem He’s John Crow, a 210-pouné | ® PERSONAL rave! back John Nocera. ifn ene cetiea, » halfback who never considers de- LIABILITY gt a “en | osaaves/ vou e AUTOMOBILE Boston a acseesenee Lae” te : 2 gyrecame | IISTITT 1 ie IC ar \" ea Ing . 4 PONTIAC STATE cverenb bern me | 50 Crean aes esesssesestens 1.9 2.900 ate S BANK. BUILDING | Minnaapetie 8 } | MONTREAL (#—Maurice “The; This formidable “trio, far and ie TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE Rocket’ Richard, the 36-year-old) away the riost sigma line in : MOND : scoring wizard 4 ontreal|the league during the t three PHONE FE 5-8172 No games tied. ee mm = . weeks of the season, has account- - Canadiens, is off to a sensational start in his 16th season, leading National Hockey League scorers with 16 points. i lp eight-games The Rocket has; scored eight goals. and collected eight assists, In only one game has he failed to register at least one point. ; Right behind in the official NHL statistics released today, are his ; |linemates ~— brother Henri ‘The Pocket Rocket” Richard ani Dickie. Moore.. Henri fs and “Sore vig ot has seven Mek ‘and. seven assists for it Be he ed for 20 of Montreal's 33 goals— a potent factor in the top spot held by the Canadiens. ‘As if 123 ranking weren't enough for the-Flying Frenchmen, Jean Beliveau holds fourth place with 12 points on four haces and eight assists. The leaders: o Crow Is Heart of Aggies feat, He’s the fellow who assures the coach there's nothing to wor- ry about, that the team is going to win the ball game come what may, “It doesn’t matter to Crow who does it either. For that reason Coach Paul Bryant says he’s ‘‘an All-America in my book, He has only a burning desire for the team to win.” Florida Race Track Sold for $3 Million CORAL “GABLES, Fla. ®%—Wa- terford Park, a mile racé track inear Chester, W.Va., has been bought by a Cleveland race horse owner and two Huntington, W.Va., businessmen for about 3 million dollars. Announcement of the sale was made here yesterday by Horace Wade, racing secretary for Gulf- stre: Park, near Miami, who will “be executive ‘vice president and ‘managing director of Water- ford Park, A Pts, 1, y. Richard, Montreal ...8 3 16 2. Lage =! Montreal .....7 7 4 iM Ber eee Liiisices 5 8 2 i" eau Oner 5. Fi » Boston § 9§ $ Boston. bodabe : LJ Becki spesepes : j Detroit iaveres 7 8 10. "Gadi, Rew New FORK ssacii.- i ; ; i ene vs New York ae a ee Nicholas Tweel of Huntington will be secretary-treasurer. L HEATER & DEFROSTER. LICENSE & TAX EXTRA Correet ind Alga tll We veld to make way for '58 _ models due soon. You con bag the biggest prize in the : ne te mare wee Ma 8. 5 wooowaan ‘AVE. Installation of Any Muffler Purchased at Harold. Turner's for Any Ford Car! “You Pay for ‘Only the Parts! Your Friendly Birmingham Ford ‘Dealer ML 4-750" i \ "4 i “BIRMINGHAM: ty ball te that makes lose. + | nt She ine lad of ejholding to the fairway, In football, you miss a tackle on the line or. the hole and you suffer. Foot- The Redskins, ioci-detnogs of - the National Football League . *|have these results to show for a id|2-3 record to date: Lost to Pitts- burgh, 28-7... 37-14 . beat same Giants, 31-4 . beat Chicago Cards . lost to New York, 24-20 lost ‘to same Cards, 44-14, ve Nothing pho icin in ‘eeacaammesieainiiee Pistons Seeking pro footbalJ, where all teams are pretty much in balance and each has the ability to score on any play from. anywhere on the field at any moment of the game. The Two Big Men. - Arnelle Nearing ‘Army ' Discharge, Kalafat Is Already Out DETROIT « — By the time the Detroit Pistons open their road), season in Minneapolis Wednesday night, coach Charley Eckman thopes to have definite word on two big men ‘who might solve a couple of Piston problems. Eckman has been notified that Jesse Arnelle, rugged 6-feet-5 for- ward from Penn state, will re- turn from the army this week. | Arnelle, who played briefly with | the Pistons two years ago, orig- leading passer, artful by end Johnny Carson and fine running -by rookie backs Jim Pod- oley, Don Bosseler’ and Ed Sut- ‘|Redskins have made hay with P: by lit- tle Eddie LeBaron, the ‘league's receiving ton. Defensively, they've had good days and bad. Talent aside, Kuharich listed ‘fumbles, interceptions and offi- cial decisions. at ‘crucial moments as the most telling factors in a football game." DeMarco Faces Slight Margins ‘Make or Break ‘Derby’ Entries fast-moving Pontiac “pheasant derby.” inally was due out in December. And Ed Kalafat’s whereabouts aren't known to Eckman, The big former Minnesota center, obtained by the Pistons in a trade last summer with the Minneapolis Lak-|' ers, was reported out of the ser- vice last week. But he has not been in touch with the Pistons. Eckman isn’t sure whether Kala- at will report to the Pistons or whether the big guy will retire. It doesn’t take much to either make or break an entry in the Press For instance — in the latest. bids Akins Tonight BOSTON’ uw» — Former welter- weight King Tony DeMarco and veteran Virgil Akins meet for the Massachusetts version of the world’ s 147-pound championship ‘tonight in a scheduled 15-round bout which shapes up as a slug- fest from the opening hell. stay in contention for world rec- ognition, both fighters were pre- pared to shoot for a knockout. in their Boston Garden clash un- available to television and radio audiences. “Tl be looking jae a knockout, but I'm ready to go the distance if I can't find the opening,” a determined DeMarco sald, ‘‘I just want to win—and | will.” Realizing victory a ‘“‘must” to dlong bird divisions fractio for leadership in both heavy and of an ounce and small parts:of an inch determined the new leaders. \ Jesse King's (Pontiac) lead- ing heavyweight. (3- pounds _7- ‘the: winner of the Detroit elimina- |will bow! in Pontiac simultaneously ounces was only a half ounce ‘heavier than the previous leader. Then there was the bid by Rus- sell. Clucci, 84 Chippawa Rd., whose bird lacked a bare eighth of an inch of equalling _ the present leader, But even the latest figures are liable'to be erased. There are still 12 days left for contestants to file entries for the $50 (heaviest) and $45 (longest) entries U.S. Savings bond awards. Noon, Nov. 12 is the fina] time for entries, all of which | must be made at the sports de-| partment of The Press, State 5-Man Teams to Bowl at Huron Huron Bow! will be the outstate seene of the eliminations .for the State Five Man Team title Nov 9-10. The’ winner here will meet tion tournament for the state title. Teams from around Michigan to the Detroit eliminations. The teams will bowl three games Saturday and six games Sunday. Winners of the Pontiac and Detroit eliminations will then select their home sites and bowl 24 games in home and home matches for the state title. NHL Standings . WL TGF GA Pts. The only thing... you'll like better than PM. quality... : is its price! “109 ee RATIONAL DISTILLERS PRoDUCTS’co., i Boston 4 4 6 24 22 g | NEW YORK, BLENDED WHISKEY. 86 | Chicago 34118 % 7 PROOF, 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS | DETROIT 3°4015 4 6 if |Toronto -2 5 6 17 21 4 . TODAY’S GAMES at DETROIT at Chicago. SANDERS . WEDNESDAY’S GAMES FOR RENT Montreal at Toronto, ‘ DETROIT at New York. . TRAVIS THURSDAY'S GAMES — , ont me 458 waht ROWARE 55-970 New York at Boston. eines Ay ee & 2 E hin | ine | THE pontiac PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER R 29, 1957 bad & |Marquette Has Lg ——— ; : 16 Losses but 0r ers i Out crim mage Coach to Stay : MILWAUKEE (#. — _Marqsette NS Atbal yhntiy ‘Di EAST LANSING (# — A coachja lot ot feinbies and defensive tor the Spartans, Stato. hea only ja valuable ‘regular might be crip-|srrey b ep otinty — {is supposed to be happy after he/lapses the ~ ee ans) & slight’edge in passing and the |pled by one of his own teammates.|¢.o. school offtelats, returned to. wins a football game. © . ’ “er line play and blocking sometimes | The third team and those below day to the task of rebuilding the : maybe revise some of them, y But Michigan State's. boss man. The top two teams haven,t scrim- looked lackadaisical. ‘ have been trying for blood regu-|Warriors, owners of the nation’s Duffy Daugherty, generally @l,aged on a weekday this fall since| The Geety. @ Midkiens tate larly. But the top talent has been|jongest major college losing streak cheerful type, wasn't laughing to- the Indiana rv. In tact, they ; ry : a ome iplaying for keeps only on Satur-/—16 games dating back toe 1955. day. Instead, Datgherty has been) qian't pened an at elt last pi has been that scrimmage duringiday afternoons, Following Saturday’s 26-7 Home- feeling mighty low and getting) wither once play started. mid-week was too dangerous for} As another indication of the mood|coming loss to Texas Christian, pretty tough. The mave shows enacies areithe top 22 men on the varsity. of dissatisfaction, coaches called|the Rev. John Holbrook... $._J,, an abrupt halt to practice for those |chairntan’ of ‘the Marquette Ath- Pa ee ie caer an — oe eos — = abwaya: be basen that who saw Seme agtion at 5 P.M [letic Board, said he was particu- im two years after a season (19-14 verdict over Illinois, even bd . : = larly happy With ‘the team's show- : ‘ nrg ares gs Reger a ce od it Paces (| Five: squad members were hos-|ing in the last two games, against MOTO RM A p T : ' : re ' pitalized over hight with colds. It|Cincinnati and TCU. SEVERN EN stage an all-out scrimmage. score the week previous. 8-Game Streak was explained their ailments were! “We lost both games ‘but the AUTO PARTS “I'm not mad at the tea One goed reason is that for merely ba dcolds — not the flu,/boys showed that they have not , Daugherty insisted, “but I think|-the Ist time this fall, Michigan JAsian or otherwise, and the hos/given up, that they have confi- a little hitting will help to aa p sreede ep preivtap arlar Pe pital rest was only precautionary, dence and faith, ” he said. sharpen our operation. We've had! ga 200 yards ove: o Or a mou muiinierececonvaneesiemetcmiadaeivimetiaterconss = Desire Helps Makeshift = ALMOST LIKE . Bass Drummer Blamed indies Run Up lodsest Colorado Calls Sooner Win. Siping snet? Nears JET PROPULSION... | F ‘U t ] ik | HANOVER, N. H, W — The . ans nsportsMmam?nl e siadesehitt Ledges toot hall CLEVELAND DRILLS , = e lteam is riding its longést winning take — ~ at higher DENVER, Colo, (INS) — Colo-;disgusted about the treatment his/streak in 19 years on a steady ae eine bd ay sty redo University football coach Dal|team received, however, at the)diet of desire. perg om. Pontine Press Photo |Ward said Monday an “unsports-|hands of the more than 60,000 fans), A fullback playing guard, pan AVOID COSTLY PRODUCTION HEAVIEST — Hunting with a party of four others, in the Bald |manlike"” crowd and Oklahoma's), itnessing the contest at Norman, — _ amennglnncge “h StOW DOWNS! ; Mt. park area, Saturday, Jesse M. King (above), 235 South Sanford, |base drummer cost Colorado one Ok! - 4 many - the incredible Indians myaic ii ons a. Pontiac, downed the current heaviest bird in The Press’ “pheasarit | touchdown at least in C. U.'s near ~. - mere: ht eet pay a mayer. sng cy) cedperpreceher oy 7 derby.” King’s rooster weighed 3-pounds, T-ourlces, displaced one {upset of Oklahoma Saturday. Paine! pokes Lg gts 1] “We feel spirit is one of “os direct from stock. ; entered Oct. 22 by Don Ernst, by one-half ounce. Others in the party | Ward, however, refused to say saneias Mavreet: vital factors in football,” energet: e f were a son, Don, Dewey ‘Wilder, Glenn Watson, Harman Wilder | the crowd and drummer meant |" wien our (Colorado's) quarter-|!&, coach Bob Blackman said. veuda Iudbkbivs evilks Distaiauroe eres bees, SS Pee the difference Wetween winning (1.04 signaled for silence, the “Every man on the squad re- ; : : and losing, giving *tull. credit to . wal ceives at leastzone letter a week) : . 2: partisan crowd would scream all . ‘| coach Bud Wilkinson's No, 1 F len so: the from the staff during the sum-|f- ‘ . ‘aciad daaauib. " jthe more. And it wasn't only mer. We do everything we can CUTTING TOOLS & SUPPLIES INC. , ‘ crowd. from a morale ‘standpoint.’ Oklahoma beat the Colorado Bul- I'u always remember that bass Dartmouth is the only shajor' W. PIKE, cQORNER. CASS “ i aie eee RRM tee 8 AND HER BUDDIES By Edgar Martin re WHATS THS? "NEW | (WELL, WELLE JUST WHAT THE CHIEF 1 | \DEAS FOR TV J , WANTED! - TH ] PROGRAMS. = | aan Ag £ Sw Lil 10°29 ¢ - - sal < cm ‘DIXIE DUGAN ly. ONE ; & aaa + | [H-M/ I WONDER WHY THEY ALWAYS WANT A ’ t et é . al , e«* 7 in . * : & » i, MD “a -y , * { : | ine 4 west Sos z ’ ie j is | < | » a * or tete +49 PR: Y : E | : a | | | ie > i ——? # . a A N } i . a“ { \ se} wee AZ eV Bes ‘a | om OF : igedinats, Pos MEN ~S tS p oa ‘ ‘ : | . RD of EDUCATION A a * « ‘ bal ‘ eee @g ive re DONALD DUCK Vj ; i) ' Ae THERE, HE PONTIAC PRESS AWENTY2 ~ Wheat ig UESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1957 Stocks ihe =i leaeed jeu i Mainly Local in Early Trades. tie "=a 3" : sa g $2,727,143, ‘equal to 39 f f zl CHICAGO’ W®—Grain en Mar months of 1957. The . JIC ry by growers and sold by them! NEW YORK ® — The stock|Ported net, profits } Secdits - Sidetracked V0/ ly easier on the ~) a (market was higher in moderate|equal to $1.07 a comimon share, Af Probe | : 2/0 vi fh. bg nngyt Mt wate Se Detroit early trading today. for the corre /| From Probe Into Sears Ls rie ie 1,2, Stocks advanced from trac-|last year, — | Labor Policies oa r * tions to a point or more. There was : ‘ a Trading in,wheat futures was a scattering of losers. NEW YORK eneral Motors NOT | ee mainly of # local character with) Apples Pelictous, i. so .0- +++. :.88.00 * * * Acceptance Corp, has reported its WASHINGTON w— Sidetracked \i 3 Very little’ outside business in the|4bples. Metotosh. bu”. SEIIIINI $8] U.S. Steel, which opened un-|Ret income fof nine months de- briefly by a Teamster official's mm. market-in early dealings. pon ae oe 4 aE 5.00 changed at 4% on 2,000 shares, clined to $31,010,$41 from $32,003, - yachts, the Senate Rackets Com- 0 - | File trade considered as bear: a bal iii: PB) went ahead around @ point, “Big 475 a year Ago. This income. in- ‘}mittee moves ahead today in its oO a & government forecast of ” Vegeiabicn iste!” reports after the close today |Cluded ngs of Motors Insur- Reshe : la a eee a setta, tonitad” ee on third quarter earnings and diyi-)®#ce » Of $839,293 vs $1,583,092 inquiry into Sears, Roebuck & Co. at tat Se are! | Broscolk =e SIE Hildends, a year /ayo. Retail receivables ne es es of acres signed Carrots, Topped Seteeesenseaess Purch in the first nine months ‘ : ca te up for the 1968 [Cot pped, bu, ner) Lukens Steel, only up a frac- totaled $2,875,000,000 compared Nearing the end of testimony BU | cum 4s _ start, picked up about with /$2,818,000,000 ‘a year son. about an unsuccessful unionizing was under. pressure od , . ' Boston : harvesting weather. There, was|Oulo ie Wall Street analysts still saw the EW YORK (—McLough Steel 1553, gentle Bess he some buying of the December de- 1¢e/market in an adjustment phase|7orp. of Detroit today announced sReuapehe tates, tec qusoticling 1 livery by commission houses *i4slatter last week’ s wild .swings (net profits for the first nine Indianapolis store, for questioning ‘ ; against sales by commercial in- }2o/most foresaw a probable test gf|™Months of 1957 totaled $7,535,966, about —_ _— — : O terests. lech - 128\last week's lows before another/¢qval to $4.38 a share. This com. ’ ~*~ * & wate (bes oe. 6. 138 |sustained rally. )*|pared with a net of $6,333.54, But several other witnesses re- : Lh . sevens |. } = : t aces eae ot a sy m/e mite paed"ua re “| RIROMON MELPER- eC, ree te Ponte |S” Ente" "eimml ==. wea’ tions. : ssa! Me ains of around a point/or so, ’ State Bank, is shown with one of the new electronic accounting - ie #£ Pela .|Wroblewski, also known as Ed at _ end of the first hour, Cabbage, ba oosenoneen voocececees 195|Were made by Anaconda/ Kenn Hu machines the bank has installed to handle checking account book- [Robey of Chicago, a representa- ; . as % lower to % higher, , bu, TINT, 130 ,cott, International Nickél, North, uron Valley Schools keeping. With him is Mrs. Lorraine E. Owen, operator of the ma- {tive of Nathan Shefferman’s La- : Dec. $2.16%, corn % lower to \% we Age seiSnxee - | $3/American Aviation, Martin Co. and: ‘Budget T $1 Milli chine. > ‘\bor Relations Axsociates, Inc. i : higher, Dec. $1.18%, oats % lower|goinacky bu: oo°00000.10.0.0000.01 1} Chrysler. : get Tops illion i cs * | (e) fi) Swiss Chard, s Hee wweeneeeerenee ae ; ” s . é Neher Ben’ = ~ ehh ing WUE, WE. secs aevasaceenenaseas 1.80 . byes Telept was up Valley’ chee, ~— for Huron P tia S t t B k H Yesterday's hearing brought tes- changed to % lower, Nov. $2.21, Lettuce & Salad Greens oe ae a “poing. pal Corp.» = . - ing the = a ontlac a e ank as jtimony from one Sears employe, can lard 9 to 7 cents a hundred pounds Celery Conhage, | OO: sony. ses. scene OM ; / » Was “ at ] me go ‘ m = James R, Donoghue,. that he had } lower, Nov. $11.25. Endive, bles: DU. ss scssscssres 2.50| 7% on an ope bleck of 1,000 |!ar mark for the first time in the N E] t . M h * agreed to let someone “wreck” Dividends pect Leal, tee. ie STEEL [43] shares following -news that the |47ea history, ew ec I onic ac ines his automobile with the under- _ Grain-Prices - Atomic Eneygy Commission has | Supt. Harold Hansen submitted standing that the action would be : es - Poultry a a hold-the-line policy om [a $1,114,837.50 estimate for school Nei lectrenie ‘sesouiting- run-\They veslice ii muchas: tires ey blamed on the Retail Clerks Union This is not o recent # CHICAGO GRAIN : aaa sn purchases. operating costs to the Board of! . : ther: trying to organize the Boston||| change in dividend Hf DETROIT POULTRY EAacation hove chines to handle checking account/required to do the same work. store emploves. : ; im CHICAGO, Oct. “29 (AP)—Opening ; es je * i bookkeeping: have been installed at eee policy, but has con- reine: pDUTROST. Oot: 30 (AP) for hot Rails/edged to the ‘downside. the Pontiac State Bank’ president! 7 8?_, machines Will preduce ~ * * ii] tinued for the past 25 Dee reese. .e BASM BY oso! Laayg) analy ive By ih Fe Be Opening blocks included: Rho-) Ducks have a telescopic eye-jMilo Cross announced ‘toda ie nank'n nnd the customers’ | His testimony did not develop! years | OP gecsccx. 2.20% Rye" Heavy 19; light type 13-| design Selection Trust, u: t 2%\si a. ae ‘3 ¥. records with an unprecedented |with whom the agreement on : BF veces BAT” Dee wes. L979 |B) ities W “type testers ond fryers (2!- P ‘4 at 2's\sight. They can focus their eyes! The six machines represent an ‘af acct ai fo a i Sly”. vessees 3.86% Mar La hites 18-20; Gray Crosses 19%-/on (0,000 ‘shares; General Motors|for neir 6 tar vidi | degree of accuracy and speed,” | wrecking the car was made, _ May ......” 1.29% h: : bartea Rocks 20-21. Caponettes (over "lopt % at 38% 3, ar vision. investment of more-than $60,000.) Cross said. * «*« «€ ‘ Dee ....00-- 118% Lard 4% Ibs) 20-23. Ducklings 29-30. Turkeys; Ys at 38% on 3,000; and Beth- . ' —: ie Mar "21.00." 139% Dee s..... 12.25 |heevy type hens 24%-26, toms 21-23. “Wehem, off % at 39% on 3,500. The The machine keeps a depositor’s| Before. resuming jts Sears in- We have never missed | | © FMR wee 4 aac > DETROIT EGGS / latter posted a fractional gain later. checking account balance on con-|quiry after a weekend recess, the ® Dividend Period DETROIT. Oct. 2% (AP) — ventional-type monthly statements, |committee detoured yesterday in-|]| {Since Our Founding | Settlement f Di f FOB. Det Detrott, cases included, tedgral- New York Stocks vily ‘lin the form of invisible magnetic/to the affairs of a Teamsters in 1899, 0 ISpu e wade: : as & jumbo 58; / /extra (Late Morning Quotations) symbols As a result, an operatgr| Union Official, | large | re we ted avers 8 a: | Admiral 2... 1.4 Jones 3L .... 48 cannot make an incorrect pickup ** * * Averts Buick Strike 4. wed avg 47; gmail 32- 38, wtd avg 37. rr ge “ee 4 ag naar gerd i of a depositor’s balance, elimina-|. Raymond Cohen, who commit. | ae “ large — wid ov gee . Allied Stra .. os Kresge, 88 i. 83 ting a frequent source of ‘error.itee aides said was elected as an, ge 04-8. wid aye $5; mediym ta Glass. oe * © international trustee of the union : Alum Ltd .... 3 . FLINT a — General Motors| ‘sf ee ‘arg 54-88, “mat bic eealAbes 715, 4 Lip seman “7. ES Kesteas Genel the deviee|at its recent Miami Beach con-| Capitel Savings Corp. announced today settlement/ave 35. Grade B, large , re gs 346 Ligg & My .: 644 ates at vention, declined to answer & Lean Assoc. of a labor dispute that had threat-| Check» 39-38 wa ond ae Am Gea ....1 35 Lock Aire 323} By SAM DAWSON than those about horse races. But|is verification that the proper a2 ehantiens. Sle id net Pog ‘ ened to close down its Buick plant] Wnives Grace A. ierge 4044-54; medium|am- Moters .. "ay Lone 8 Com. 383] NEW YORK W — The stock — mp own —_ today check ts charged against the s00R-l a, With Ausondment’s peo- 75 W. Huron, Pontiac ' in Flint. a Grade A. large 40's-a's; (A Gee: 412 Lou a Nash’ 62 |market has been telling us since sons pobre al — bears cs aaamans peas — st1D8 tection against self-incrimination, FE 4-0561 i Edward T. Ragsdale, general medium a¥eral, small 32- = Am Geating .. 20:2 Martin Gi :.: a23)Mid July that businessmen are| Qn hundred = industrial ledd- sn ot presi pra Dae wr taney but, quid he had “a right not to aa manager of Buick Division, sald Uvestock Am Tel & Tea vee eecrew | H ... 06 tee scrip a ne off 5d mild ers have advised the Department|netic memory. bands. Invisibly, bear witness against myself." ‘mace 4 on Looe me at toe petmorr Livestock [Am Vicor". 38 Mere cna 8 1¢ | boom. Tom the long business of Commerce that they suspect a|they retain all the facts about the} °° & *& ® tee, Se Bes mild recession is starting and! account. He was asked how he acquired United Auto Workers without in- DETROIT. Ost, 29 (AP) — Livestock: qraee OS --- St teen MoM. ws Stock traders felt that if such @liney expect it to last until the ge worth of yachts while serv- AUTO INSURANCE terruption of work, ues tal tan ond “nelfers. Qusiity Atchison ..... 188 on Fe See ee — activity and earn-| middie of next year at least. U . B Fe ing as secretary-treasurer of the The union had threatened to call cholce predominating: : Yew loads average| AVE? Mig a eS wool was in the works, then most * *« *t : tica oys QC@ Teamsters Local 107 in Philadel- 0,000/ a strike of 20,000 Buick workers)? Dish chalice in early recetpts;|Balt & Oh .. 4 ec. 388 S were over priced. phia. $20,000 ck ers cows comprise around 40 per cent; about Bendiv Av ... @ Nat Cash R 50.4 * * * The National Assn. of Purchas- Court for O enin * * * ) in a dispute over seniority and|1# siockers and feeders offered; early | Benguet... i, Nat Dairy ... 35.6 ing Agents says its members are Pp g aes Bodily Injury trade fed steers and heifers moderately | Btth Steel ... 39.4 H They have a number of items|,~ ony Counsel Kennedy said com- job classifications, active to slow; most demand on average|DO*!Me Air .. 31-4 pd Pe : ry: in tod turing even more cautious now S it h 7) 4 the and choice fed stéers: prices Bore warn |. 924 Nia M Pw... 37.1 ay’s news to bear out their|hecause new orders aren't com/“W1ICD ON TCD _ | mittee has information that Coben ,000 Property Per folly steady; swe opening steady; other Briggs Mig... 6.1 Be am av ... 24 — ss — times may bel ing in at the rate they had hoped Ajnow has a yacht acquired with Domi Quore | Brist My ..... 52.6 Nor Pac ..... ending owas UTICA & — Three boys who|$24,000 of union funds and also Lauds Royal Oak Man ti, eke! Pelee ee ‘high chotee/Brem Balke -'. 38.6 Ohl OU... 294 * _: | - ..,_lalmost wrecked a New York Cen-|that he bought another in 18 her ——__@ —— ROYAL OAK — In recognition! nd talce et ete seett, tes At [Burroughs <<: 38's Owens Tl gt” 44 The question. tales is whether| Steel leaders are revising their!tra) Passenger-Freight train will|$17,000. Cohen declined to say of meritorious service and loyal] Witt, ant standard “mixed offerings Stun eH lie. Pan AW Air i2sithe correction in stock prices smagge of fall = winter busi-| ye arraigned on juvenile delinquen-|whether he used: union money. to JAY RANDALL AGENCY cooperation, William A. Romain,} ners and q cutters 16.00-13.60; utility andjCan Dry ----- aot — fia since mid July has gone far ltl ea vaheu « oe s Ham er cy charges Nov, 14 in cae maintain the boats, 9 : president ef Sherman Produets,|{s eis on 71) | * 15-00-1800: cutters capital airl 113 Penney, JC .. 74/enough—has fully discounted in " ie “y -6 ROW &@\' County Circuit court. . _ Chairman McClellan (D-Ark) or- MA 4.395 Inc. of Royal Oak, has been award-|.,CAives and. vealers — Salable 200. Carrier Cp... 37 ea cola!” jrgjadvance . the business recession around § per-.cent of capacity. Railroad police who lay in wait|@¢'ed further inquiry into what , ahd prime veal- . : Prise poet FS hich A few weeks back the same ones police vy y in wa “ — ed the American Legion Frank|ers 27.00-36. to low choice 21.00-/CNG" On |. $33 Phelps Ds: 42.2); EPR mt be Gems talking about a fall snap-/three nights finally nabbed the trio, npenely oid gp Aan: “ha i jhe o Meriter Post No. 253 “Citation Bet attr gtte cena ea Chrysler ..... 0.3 Ehilco sas. 13 me e**® % back that wold bring production|Who bad opened a switch on the a a datos — ed : of Me! " ce rl Calhoun "ak pape bet noms "Balable 00. Fed lots mixed i niall rea Pillsby” Mis 313] Some think the market has over UP‘? maybe © percent, of exp: Faced Set Pieet aieing. Ben Lapensohn, former union busi- DON'T LET Presentation. |wo. 1 and 2 220 Ibs 17.15, around 38¢ sie Palm 465 Proct & G@ ... 47.1\discounted the ch { acity, ‘The youngsters — 16 14 and in Ca . over Monday, but. market not fully es-| Co)" aid a 23 6Pure Ol... 33 | chances of a reees- + * «@ 9 old — told rail ness agent now in Canada. . YOUR MONEY Syl Council N ee “ins Belable i.000,{Col Gas 153 RCA . 28.5|sion—that the big snapback last 12 years old — read po- Yivan Council Names —gitigtier lambs “steady with Mondsy's|C® Edison’... 41.2 Repub st --. 48.3/Wednesday marked the end of the| A survey of 202 business and| lice they apened the switch to Wilhelm to Fill Vacancy |1i Sayre), simuanter sheep, steady te ConPwPt 45) fo. Reyn Met |. 37.3/pfice drop. university economists by F. W.| “see what would happen.” Smorgasbord Served Y ie s mostly choice wooled slaughter lambs | Com! Ol... 478 Rey Tas B -. 003 * ke Dodge Corp. shows most of them) Fortunately the engineer of the ) 4 Joseph A. Wilhelm, assistant of-|22¢" shatce “lamer 2° 95:35 08" oaks corm PAs 38 Safeway, Bt". 104] Since the stock exchange is an|/Oking-for-tess industrial produc-|petroit-to-Mackinac City train saw|, UAKE ORION - The annual] eae fice manager at Pontiac Motor Di-|choice slaughter sheep 4.00-9.00; good Hurts WF --- 381 st Ree pap | 25.¢/auction’ market in which some|“0" in the months ahead but ex-'the req light signalling the open|* "TS" of the of the vision, has been appointed to fill a|°"* “hele feeder lambs 19.50-20.00. Doug Aire -.. $0.6 Seorill Min! 32° |want to buy and some want to sell ee I hs = the — ON switch. The train would up on the the Lake : tree S007 pam, at will vacancy on the Sylvan Lake Cit ¥ han Sears Roeb .. 28 |there are m: rho feel just = BTOSS | siding. e ; Council created by the resignation Illinois Woman to Talk Bast Air ite sincia one ie opposite. ‘They hold thatthe stock voluene Ody at Baird Funeral Home here.) peTROIT wm — Ford Motor Co.'s} other lines and all at 1958 | Rummage Sale: Christ Church,|| °! ** leoding exchonges = oO ors, hnc, STOCK AVERAGES Surviving are his father, feo Edsel car, developed at an an-| prices." - Cranbrook, Lone Pine Rd., Thurs. 716 Pontiac State-Bank Bidg. Compiled by the 4 Associated Pres Oct. oie — —— as nounced cost of more than 250 mil- When the Edsel line was put on/Oct. 31, 9 am. t6 2 pm. Men, FE 4.2895 , GIGANTIC — Comptieg by cocogatea Pres er, Mrs beth Zsolczai of 3430|jion dollars, apparently has been the market Sept. 4, the suggested| Womens, Children clothing, House- ; Oct. 29. 0 Fish Lake Rd., Lapeer; a sister, /fighting an uphill battle against an| rie range was from $2,300 for|hold goods, snack bar, : ie nae, nals vit grft,|Diane and one brother, Joseph|industrywide cleanup of out-going |the two-door sedan in the Ranger USED CAR SALE Gy eo oc BRE GE By HSAIPa Doth of Lapeer: hie grandigs7 models at cut prices. lpries to $5,480 for te convertible 0 Month ago ..» 248.2 1046 708 166.5 rs. Marga e of} Figures compil the trade bay a / sf Huge Clearance Sale in preparation for 1958 models. Due to our loot High ~ 380.0 Bea 3 les Lapesy tnd Mrs. Netiig Bush of paper Automotive News show the tasers wad cmeneasay tition rose ) “a Om QO tee AY sensational 1957 Chrysler and Plymouth Sales, we are now offer- 9/1957 Low ...., 226.0 874 66.2 1509 Bay Cty. Edsel division has built slightly cost accessories. INSURANCE ing a large number of choice new car trade-ins at 198 Low... aad da82 oe Ime) more than 48,000 cars since it put tees 133 the new’car on the production lines} Industry observers pointed out to- WHOLESALE PRICES TO ALL! peraotr rors Deaths Elsewhere |m'iy stn yor” rv ata tn” escent ens oan Figures after decimal points are eighth! have not been announced, but they new line of automobiles always is Aute accidents will happen... 1957 PLYMOUTH 9-Poss. Station Wogen papppeny coe Bish Low Noon| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (are known to be sustantially under |a difficult undertaking. It is made 4 ‘ake ere that yur ea ie : 1956 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-D Sedan, Full Power, Low Mileage | Bt@™in, Ruvber Co* -. 136 148) FRANKLIN, Pa. w—William E.|'P#t total. ee a surance coverage is adequate. . 1956 CHRYSLER New Yorker Newport 2-D. Hardtop, Beautiful | 2oWell Blec. Motor Cos’ | 54 3 Barrow, 77, former president and| Latest development in the os ; ode! win d sats se 8 see ws for full details. You'll be 2-Tone The Prophet Go* -.... ” 733 "g4|general manager of the Job Mfg.| Edsel picture was disclosure this sane ng . ro rasucany glad you did. 1956 CHRYSLER Windsor 2-D Hardtop, Full Power, R & H, Ete. f)RUty Mig. Coo... 19, 19. 1°. /Co. in Franklin and retired bank| week that the former Ford Divi- |Teduced Price tags. 1956 DE SOTO Hardtop, Power Equipped ‘fl wayne Screw Prod. Co. 21 21 21/executive, died Monday. sion Plant at Somerville, Mass., (Advertisement) HL w. HUTTENLOCHER Agency 1956 DODGE Lancer 500”, Special Hardtop, Full Power 1956 PLYMOUTH Sedan, Powerflite, R & H 1956 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon, Powerflite, R & H, Sportone 1955 CHRYSLER New Yorker, Powerflite, R & H 1955 DE SOTO Hardtop, Power Equipped . 1955 BUICK 4-D, Dynaflow, R & H 1955 PLYMOUTH -2-D V-8, R GH 1954 FORD Station Wagon, Fordomatic, R & H, 2-Tone 1954 CHEVROLET 4-Dr. Bel Air Powerglide, R & H 1954 PLYMOUTH 2-Dr., H. T., Power Steering, R & H 1953 BUICK 2-Dr. H. T., Dynaflow, R & H 1953 FORD 4-Dr., V-8, R & H The Above Cars Will’ Be Sold AT WHOLESALE PRICES! ing ter a good used car, this is opportunity knocking in! Try Them! ‘Drive Away Your Choice! R Motors, Ine, Your adit tnt, Deelee ‘724 Ocklond Bye 86801 *No sale; bid and asked. Conference to Urge Better Diets for U:S. WASHINGTON ® — A national food conference to urge better American diets will be held here Feb. 24 under the sponsorship of 20 farm and food industry groups. President Charles B. Shuman of the American Farm Bureau Fed- eration is serving as coordinator in arranging for the conference. Lead- ers in the fields of nutrition, sci- ence, education and medicine are being invited to participate, “The conference, the first of its kind ever planned, will spotlight the eccnomic, social and nutritiofial]. lroles that food. plays th the lives =i Atmericari Foe” “Shuman, 7” —, NEW DELHI «®—Gen. Andre Costadoat, 67, former chief of the French Army Medical Corps, died French delegates to the confer- ence of the International Red Cross meeting in New Delhi. Lip-Reading Class Held at Lapeer High School LAPEER — A class for the hard of hearing and deaf has opened at Lapeer High School. This is a lip- reading class given in connection with the adult education program and under the direction of L. S, Beach, This is the first year lip- reading has been offered at. the/® school. / . ee ee The class has seven members and more are expected to enroll. Meetings will be held each Wednes- day from 7 to.9 p.m. in room: 311. Monday. Costadoat was one of the) - which has been making Edsels for more than six weeks will be retooled for Ford moded produc- tion, Some Edsel executives say this in line with earlier plans. Robert S. McNamara, group vice president of the car and truck division of Ford Motor, explained the Somer- ville operation thus: _ “The necessary buildup of the initial introductory, stock of Edsel cars having been successfully com- pleted, the Somerville plant. will revert to the production of the Ford line of cars which is cur- retitly enjoying one of its best sales years, ‘ - J. C. Doyle, general sales mana- ger of Edsel Division, said: , “We anticipated a slight de cline in sales during October in the cleanup period of ai 1957 models. It will not be possible te correctly evaluate our sales — nent ASTHMA ing, wameesta , cou bs ad breathing Bee ae sah a chit oy tenon ¢ king Working MENDA iy aloe fonder pte reas brone fal tabes, remove aids freer breathing rey wouner' MENDACO at drug- sists, Mon weap ek guarantee, : (Advertisement) New Way Quickly Stops any further soreness, even years a : i —— is called TORAL, A ‘ meals at bedt! days is efi you do. ee » Doctors are ame: Oo pre: scription is now needed. Obtainable at Kinsel's; Simms; Coen 3-¥; Dun- seith's; Cole's; Low's; Quality; Slank- pter & ; Keego Drug, Harbor; Morst's, Auburn MHeigh ‘potentie’ until we are able ta. Aris, Drayton Pratiia, —, most ares: stores everywhere. % j a. w. Huttenlocher 306-320 Riker Bldg. - A Max E. Kerns FE 4-1551 STOCKS - — _ BONDS Consult Us for First Hand Information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member of all Principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute quotation service available at all times. . 818 Community National Bank . Bowes 8 ‘Sam ti D a. C. J. Nepler ‘Co, . FE 2-119 |i} a _ Me PowT1Ac PRESS, TUESDAY, ( OCTOBER i es alae, mo lent found: {Gcamoaeersc] in Parolee's Trailer . Guided Missile DAYTON; Op it — stontgom.| With Parachute detectives today sought after they reported . og tt oliday Farms Sub vison’ os ie emes dls fs $12,500. The preliminary plans were pee Se Ame| The pater, 9] ne cay y homes will The lots in. : py > uit Lafiaile’ avenue near board. Action will be taken on this appointment next week. permitted the Matador to be re- covered and réused. This means that troops may be given much more intensive training in the launching se- quence and the cost will be sig- nificantly less, the announcement - The men have taken a 10-week civil defense training course and have been approved by, the State Police. Four were deputized by) Sheriff Frank W.-frons. The other Pontiac Tot Injured Dashing Between Cars last night and was charged with concealing A 4-year-old Pontiac boy was receiving and stolen property. The lieutenant said Cole was FLATTENED—The owner of this Volkswagen ' will never be able to fix this flat as his tiny auto lies squashed beneath a giant truck at Darm- over on the auto which had stopped by the side of the road because of another accident ahead. The Volkswagen driver, only occupant of the car, leaped to safety just in time and escaped unhurt. two, Peterson and Hubbell, already carry deputy cards, Johnson said. The men will work under the supervision of the Waterford Town- ship Police Department and will be paid one dollar per year in order to be bonded, receive workmen's compensation coverage and insur- ance. REZONING DISCUSSED _ The rezoning of four plats of land from residential to commercial was discussed; but no action was taken until people living in the immediate vicinity have been in- formed of the zoning change. cording to facial cuts accident, annually, injured slightly when he ran from between parked cars into the path of a passing car yesterday, ac- Donald J. and Mrs, Francis J. Gauthier of 151 N. Jessie St., was treated for Hospital, and released. The driver, James R. Smith, 37; of Vester St. said he*had no time to avoid the which occurred in front of the boy’s home. It is estimated there are 500,000 cases of pneumonia in the U, S. paroled Pontiae police. ‘ Gauthier, son of Mr. at Pontiac General 10a years at Marquette, State Prison for armed robbery. Timber Output Gains AUGUSTA, Me. — Maine's 1956) rect examination, harvest of softwood sawlogs to-| When used as a target drone the taled 424,881,488 board feet and|Matador can be recovered if no sawlogs 124,302,479|hits are scored, © board feet. This compares with} Martin said the section of the 375,018,518 board feet and 87,386,-| missile containing the warhead is 37 board feet, respectively, the|/replaced by a recovery kit. It in year before. The harvest of pulp-|turn can be replaced with the war- wood in 1956 was nearly 125,000jhead, making the missile com- cords greater than in 1955, hardwood a year ago after serving _Mich., said, ‘In addition, when the Matador is used as atest vehicle for ex- pensive guidance systems and there is a malfunction, siles can be brought back for di- the mis- pletely operational again, _ Funeral Directors 4 / Donelson-Johns PUNeRAL —— . AMBTTCAN & as +131) A ; FOREpr is “CHAPEL A = Drayton Plains a vr is ‘ Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance ee ednes-| Cemetery Lots 5s PPL : 8 CEMETER tars Park, Mrs. —e - will he fo. stake et Sparks: ot ‘Retormation Prive Gee, Te a ae * 10 pare work one Thu tober Fist, 12:18 te tenacts p.m. be at least 16 years of age. _Apply in person Tuesday to: BERT FALKNER CIRCULATION DEPT. PONTIAC PRESS ACCOUNT ADJUSTER go Be oy Ay 6 | @ beginning job iso ay advance- -& t to __Help Wanted Male 6 # Salesman: Full Time Men's Clothing experience = We offer mplove benefits. Must be He or over, Apply in pergon ROBERT HALL CLOTHES 200 N. SAGINAW > REAL STA Experienced salesman for large, ustom home Dagleet, Parming- . Township, 60320. Mr REAL ESTATE SAL ESMAN | Have opening in ie PeABaNis "ae: frites ae Eves ‘til 8; Lo heating, . Area ” Waterford, Grand Blane Ortonville. Un born area. Write Pontisc Press REAL ESTATE SALESMAN | xperienced or homes. « rR person, Miracle Mile Cen wt ee cea a A sive man to cot be ay outstanding service. Bome actual accounting expe necessary Need ear. Excellent earnings and rapid ad- Yancement for hustler, Age 30 to « Write ful about if. Bes ly yourse Biggest a aon 6-5517 mien appv POR OLESALE ep. bel dealer shsttadiins pn he = Olve Hay ha & exp. Pos, for ap- : Discount Saginaw ve. BARGER STEADY TO “REPLACE | mar whose aren Bild. 00 per week Pontiac | : CARPENTERS ROUGH. MUST BE rm time dav or night. 10 W Ton qraaiieren artes. ‘i rienced on met work. Only service will be held We Gal 3 sore anne Sed fe atl Be trom Chureh of cab bat Wee aE pr in a oe FEPiENCED, LICENSE 4 Kistete Saleeman, desirous a rea 4 ture with * EXPERIENCE SINGLE MAN FOR airy and general ——, a... 386 tr RG 6% Miles N. of Roch- _ee'er EXPERIENCED COUNTER HEP. ogg od retirement . geod working conditions, Ap- . KE. J. Shinner Co. Here Is An Opportunity for An Ambitious Young Man Work involves supervision of ¢ar- rier beys anu contacts with pros || pects im new subdivisions. Also A te eich tie Tt is 6 lonesome here without her, Various. types of promotion fs de- And weary vine 'e way; a The Rowers We vlaced upon ber) sirable Salary od car allowance or anit “decay. who sleeps} “4 other usual benefits. cE Apply in person to: Fred Thompson ge geen | Circulation Dept. were to his haven not rest, i aie "ae banat: Pontiac Press we pr work Ve pray Lord, when, our have} | We meet again beyond the Pe cas AND 2 SALESMEN ‘ (00d working con & SERVICE SNEED: A _FINANCE- FIXER? Order Classified to sell, rent, find a | hoap!tali-a- } | some office work. Ability to write | . eb Fe 2 Biante the xr = aaa thet “OPERATOR Must be fully ex pol set = Baten ° toms Pltice cen’ oat exce agg and able | in per Eimpiloy- 5 p.m. AN EXCELLENT "oneranit tor aor"t ae. Write FID ME Ay ROMP aT #4018 - WRIGLEYS Wrigleys beautiful new Bloomfield store will open soon, Join one of the fastest growing chains in this area, WE ARE NOW HIRING: Meat Cutters Butchers Produce Men—Full Time and Part Time Day Stock Clerks Permanent full time positions for nalified men. Exc. working cond paid vacations, many other employee benefits and iy oo oe } ties for advancement rson at Michigan _— ae urity Commission, 8. ar yee —— Oak, Mich Oct, &3 Apply in 1400 Highland Ra. (MBe) a Man Fo OR NIGHT OFFICE es industry. “Help ates Female 7 A A HOUSEKEEPER, aay SITTER FOR ehildren Williams Lk. vic. OR 23888 OTY OPERATO Basil's of Bham 3 8 Woodward ae ater Be “ABLE To _Help Wanted Female 7 CURB WAITRESSES Ted's has a limited number of openings for curb weitresses on the night shift Must be 18 yre old. Apply in person only, 'TED'S. - WOODWARD AT SQUARE LK. RD EarnN YOU RISTMAS TOY! by having « demonstration in your home. pecial rates for ehure’ or schoo ycrgunmeanens. ELDERLY WOMAN, ae with children only. MI 60885 exe WAITRESS FULD OR PART jn Apply Hamilton's Grill, Kee- a iT Live in. $10 pe | EXPERIENCED WATTRESS For nichts, apply in person afier. 4, —_ Mia Restournat 1673 Wood- wa FULL TIME GIRL TO WORK AT our Spiege] catalog order desk 4 insurance, vacations, sal comm ‘ssion Mr Berk. at 115 N. w. GETTING READY POR CilRisT. To work in doctor's office, must be able to take ba have ag tee of modieal term- a) Ee able to complete med- teal naurance forms and assist doc fice N- svenin- ; _lent to qualified person, OL 1-122, *\LESLADIES FOR DRESS AND sportswear department. Apply in person Peggy's. SENSATIONAL NEW PARTY Compasy delivers & enh 7 | __Ne_ investment. OR 32-3201. ~Stenogravher | Tateresting careet ition, Legal & social ag dictation. Position gore Center, on benefite & secure, vane work Starting Pomaerns 7 $2, to $3. er yr. We fo on exp. Merit con Fy “3 ig Per- Panay - Office, County Bidg.. yette &t., Pammne 71 oat TREASURE | ISLAND TO TOY PAR- 3-860 one oimta a ey A & W wirfhass Sanrah: "ARK ENN, | | 9% Orehard Lk. 4 to. 8 p.m. | WOMAN OR GIRL FOR INSUR- ance office. Muct type weil. Write Pontiac Press, Box 35. WOMAN POP GENERAL , OFFICE e tude Pontiac Press, Bor 04- g WORKIN 0, MOTHER. AND bath old son vad Are like R hom ~~ wages. jor ay 730. “IN & CARE t, Toom, MA “Dk, Wit HOUSE- ate bath, bap a wo ABest WiTks No Nice apartment cot wit __MI 44095. private fiers Apply a4 — hk a. CASHIER age WE WILL TRA one HALL CLOTHES 200 N SAGINAW Clerk - Stenographer 1 in cary or : AC 3 pe me vacation and other ty iD supple- ine am 8, ~~ WOMAN TO BABYSIT. p. LIVE in, ys. a. ee Call OR 3-3530 ~"WRIGLEYS Wrigleys beautiful new Bloomfield store will open soon. Join one of the fastest growing chains in = area WE ARE NOW HIRING Cashier—Full Time or ‘Part Time. Meat Wrappers Produce Clerks—Full Time and Part Time Dairy Clerks Steady full time position for qualt- ed son, Ex ork fi rr c. Ww cond., Paid vacations and many other employee fits, A) per- son ate fn ent : Eategetse noyal Ook bas Oct. 28, 20, & 31. r : Help Wanted 5 ‘ pip NIFIED BA _ TO sent a distingv: roduct. Pontiac Press ‘box . ‘ AR \ ‘* shop in winter. lawn ‘work a summer Wife to te home. ¢ furnished. children ren gait — = oe k. Work involves bandling ~ Employment Agencels 8A BKKPR. Would prefer full charge, but will . $300 ____ Help Wanted 8 ALL MEN OR WOMEN DESIROUS Fd makine #2 to = ng hour, = time Smith, 150 Perry & oa > anit ESTATE pares PEOPLE Experienced preferred, will train. have larg: list prospects for train exp. woman, 5 days new homes e, 1-0002 start. Bee Miss Carlson at P T. Smith ig Wh ~~ appointment Career Center, -B-1 Riker Bidg. WFORD _PE_soue Bullders of se bulk Homes _ REAL ESTATE SALEEME Jr. Steno. bid ae a ertord and Utica arcs Exp preferred eee full —Reaity Co KEnwood Personable young lady with -good SALI ES Pp E ‘OP L | skills to train ag secretary. 5-day week: Downtown office. Bee Miss MEN and WOME N Carlson at Career Center, B-2 WESTERN AUTO has © renee tor i Fe oe rary mn Set ea ie = ae mas Season. i) ¥ for per rmanent employment, Guaran- Instructions 9 ed —— fond —— eaten ba ~ ———— - ———- ,count on it neludin, ner ES y? ’ toys," & other “pene ts. Pleasen ATTENTION weenie 08 conditions. SON DRIVER TRAINING 18 NOW er fu teaching in Rochester & commiuni- hours | For information call OLive W ESTERN AUTO MIRACLE, MIL, Mr_ Christensen, Nur tee veces | JOIN OUF FALL CLASSES IN , ting. Expert training. Employment Agenceis s 8A ties. 1-6344 rs Pridham 8t. Keego Harbor. Ph. FE 44033 VoIce Lessons - CALL MRS. turin- one of the EXPERT CARPENTER’ & PAINT: ing. Inside or ovt Fred estimates. ® 4 as og 4 most famous in oo an for a young, attrac- tive Clerk - Typist. Type 50 the world, w.p.m Mon DESIRES WORK OF ANY aaa PE 4-227. or 4-9645. :| GLAMOUR J $278 Sante AGE 4 ANTS FULL 1 mia This is an "opportunity for an work, FF 16 ___ Building Se Service 12 A-l BRICK LAYING. BASEMENT _& cement work. FE 8-8044. 1 CUSTOM CARPENTERS. Rough-ir. finish. Remodel. FHA terms Gordon Plattley, EM 3-0482. A-l BASEMENT PUT UNDER resent homes Under “ania and ouse raising, PE | eee K-i LAYING. TBANDING & FIN. Quaranteed work. PE 3-7647. Pon- _tae Hardwood Floor Service, AAA Floor Sanding Floor Laying — vee c. BUD BILLs "E2060 A&B TRENCHING Footings, Water Line, Field Tile. rE_ pa ny ANY AND ALL TYPES OF BUILD- ing and moderntzation FHA fi nanéed, FE 8-3533 or "E aay ALL” TYPES" OF CARPENTR | modernization E. 03 ee wil | finance. FE 8-3 EB 5-2517. AL”, TYPES -fRCRELTNS: GA- rages, breeteways, additions, utii- it; rooms porch enclosures, storm windows & awnings, cement work & brick or stone. All kinds House raising and basement. All material & workmanship guaran- teed Licensed builders. EM Se aean war beens tod today FE "Paul, PE 4-0488, 686 Stan! 1 Ave. ame te Se uaeliaeed MD SAYA SIMRAN Ge Ro aa i Scor Ra ae sULLboaING. TRENCHING SEP. Giri Scout Professional _Bur_ FE 22333, ‘Rea FR 8108 | oe instaliation anc repairs Pull time ns district director with ‘DW ARDS LEARN WELDING NOW! BIO DE-| ying "EM s a campin Or. * an n we ustries — —\ = shlary & ‘benefits Must have col- Spare time trating in Hellarc, BRICK, BLOCK NJ 0 {CRMENT | lege deg good references { gas wit? welding oper’ r-4 aati Pettey Jo. —— age io “work "PE Bois bMon-| VOCATIONAL COUNSELING | fhat. Hox 13, Pontiac Press. cial | Ouaranteed work, Ph. MY am | HOURERREPER ? POR PVT. HOME = a hae REA. Sukie} WORK. NOTING TOO sona dle i child. Best wages. Pvt. rm DAINTY MAID SUPPLI Es — 730 Menominee, Mrs... Wallace, FE 5-7805. Eh ee EE LADIES—UNWANTED HAIR RE- _moved. Call evenings, OR 3-2805. In Debt? Tf vou are having trouble ——— : ‘our payments, see M gg ee aad a, LORS, 4 ; Oakland Thvetee Above AND AFTER THIS DATE, 28, 1957. I wil) not be re sible for any debts contract ~ any r myself. Carson Mick, son, 358 Dover. Pontiac, g ¢ Pow NTIAG Wi. C NAVE MOTHERS TUR: tage ‘Baliding. "00 © Bane ot, iron Sat Nov, 2. 1957 from 6:00 to CATION OF : rrell or John Distel or for a 1986 license No. GB4175.. Phoné OR Wed. itiarae to Board 26 A LICENSED BOARDING HOME. or- week, FE a By day fizensed home. ¥ ens expersie Vic. Waterford vata set . THE ANSWER 10 YOUR PROBLEM: Want Ads! To sell, rent, shire, | it’s FE 2-8181. THE PONTIAC PRESS, “TUESDAY, oGroneR oo 198h _Wanted Real Estate 32a OF Have client low WANTED * aed rm. +: brick with. base< semua Ai" in gece Archer. "PONTIAC REALTY BT Baldwih FE 5-8275 __Rent Apts, Furnished 33 (DAIRY BARN) Gag ST FLOOR. 3 3 RMS. & BATH. Pvr. “ea icanens ok Auto. heat & e caLe OR 3-3496. n OR OVER. 1 LARGE OOM BACHE: *S3_or. later model. Om San.) bare and tetrig. wo atete st st. ER, GUN Type! —"E 20566. . . Size. FE __j|1 RM RGE. ROOMS, 81 t Wanted to Rent 29 Auburn Ave ‘PE ea ve. : “ie ee 2 FAMILY STEADY EM- ae hes 4 or 6 = oature Reas. seen, FE_ 2.0920. LAN wire. at ESIRABLE i peo- tea Sg es SL Me | "Hwy. OR 3-8111 Aduite only. sy) a cous. ten. 186 N. Perry. FE 2.5236. 1 2-BEDRM, PART FURN. LAKE- front apts. 8615 Pontiac Lk. Rd. tracts 2 ROOM APT. CLEAN, EVERY- Sander 3 ROOM APT. COMPLETE, FOR 2 ROOMS. SHARE BA LOS: in > Parke Place, betwesa . inaw. PE 38420, 9 wm. ts Share Living Quarters 30 Lotese. MY 2906 _ | _t ‘pm. omen |% ROOMS & BATH. WEST SIDE,|} ROOM APT. PRIVATE ¥ Ee. CHRISTIAN GIRL TO at tional ‘women Business or profes-| trance Utilities furnished. Paral real nice i Near Tel-Huron. | S058! _ wo PE 5-504. furnished FE 4-1964. FE 2-365 for appointmen _|2 LARGE ooMS. LOWER. suiT-|3 RM AND BATH tC wirw BARE. ELDERL BALE AX WOULD URE = > "adults or 2 children. — gg her * ayy - poe - 2 1 00. ‘ ir lady. MU ie ie er se ese street. FE 2-5408 or S417 e ‘enter. “. SHARE WEST SIDE HOME.| + NIC 3 ROOM UPSTAIRS APT. ON vores wr or widow, near| ae MICE LARGE, ROOM BRICK So ptivg maga me. pleve and fe- eee oe 56851. Call on ae Inquire 24 Auburn, office Fes 2283. — ee So ——. | } ROOM. ALL b MODERN, “HEATED = 7 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, 4i2.|° ® water '* ‘urnished. Wid. Contracts, Migs. 32 Te] mM APT. APPLY BEFORE ne Wel corned ii on 4:30, 19 Clark St. ad . abn Plains ty ( oN = 7 RM. NEW REFRIG. . | RE 2-3044. aa Pvt. ent Adults, FE 41319 “ROOMS AND BATH. BABY WEI- : AY 7 a come Partiv furn Heat furn. 235 a a ’ , thing furnishet 40 300. cs Unlimited ee cae es free. imag ATH. ORPER FRONT) Rent $14 9 week ¢family apart- Fox Lge pa or new iand | bus. Adult md only. 2% Monroe st. | —™eet..FEderal 2-6170. _ Mies Reasonable _FE 5-2140. . Pi & BATH $59 MOQ. FE 7 RMS.. NEWLY DECORATED. oe on vee | Pvt. Kintr & bath. 107% N. Bagi: | 3 LARGI OOS AND ~ BATH. ARRO REALTY 3 a jy ROOM, LOVELY FURN. APT. |3 ROOMS & Sark NEWLY DEC- FE 43844 | Pvt. bath & entr. All utilities orated, very clean ee util, and ask 1 tor Tea Mevullough, Broker ‘urn. 2 adults FE $-7166, furn, solt water bat. 43 Cass-Elizabeth Rd. “Y ROOM APT. Inquire caretaker, cor door, 308 QUICK CASH For your Jand contract You'll iike our service. Ask for Jim Dink el Jerry Anderson. or 3 _W, Columba, 2 LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING RMS. en Elizabeth Lake Rd. 3 FURN. APT. ADULTS OOM " enly. . 617 8. Paddock. WHITE BROS. —? water g a peat prt Bath a 5 Sodas & & siTm. “CLEAN. UTILI- 5660 Dixie Hwy. Open Eves. ‘til @; Sun. 19 to & _eatt, ‘Adulte enh only. a MORTGAGES ROOM CABINS, $10 AND ¢i2 PER ON GOOD PROPERTIES % acre fronta. or more with 100 ft, B.D, ce oe es 8. Telegraph ent week City gas. 1 block from Tel- Huror Huron Treiler Park. FE YLARCE UPPER RMS. CLEAN. Modern Pvt. Gar ye ‘aon per 7 aah = Barre 2 aed ork a aa. : & OVER $1000 is: fleor Adults. 221 N. Cass Aval to purchase land eon | _ AVY tracts mimnediate action! Call 3 RMS. CHRISTIAN COUPLE. PVT. Beer Sere. W Huron) bath & ent. 116 E. Howard. AND 3 ROOM APTS, 890 ROB- CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS ow 2 N. Perry. H. J. VanWelt. 4540 Dixie Hwy i7i, ROOMS. FURNISHED. 180 5. Huron St. Shirley Apts. C A S H 2 fy 2 RM INDIVIDUAL MOD. All util, Winter rates. = | Sein Tru Rustic Cabins. 468 | ae pe Lk. Orton. oe \2 COUPLES OR contracts, see = we Site Near Bus line. 88 fie Johnsen nea ~ xa reel ee ‘and el - 2 RMS PyT BATH & ENT. peed BE 5 186 N. Perry. A. Joh nson:: 1704 8. eee Rd. FE 23-5236 or FE 5-7805. "ROOM APT, GARAGE AVAYL- _able. FE 5-8268, after 4 p.m. 3 RMB | CLEAN, _ PVT. BATH ENT ic & oa ng Mi. Geaaae FE Bal. —=FOR § SALE House Mra at $800, Lan gescond, disc. <= oi __Near_ bu lace, "ROOM aa FURNISHED. ON ay 1. i" $17 weckiy * trata and a nd week. For 7 RMS. BATH DOW’. — APT. un. Al uti). furn Garage. Adults. 258 Orchard Lk Ave. 3 UPPER WITH PVT. BATH AND ent., nicely — Clean, couple seria 2 _only, no pets. 20 Norton. 3 ROOMS FURNISHED OR UN- N. Saginaw. T ROOM | ome © ge wae RION. _Gas heat é EXTRA Anos ne AND bath, furnished if wanted. Upper. Newly decor. Util. furn, Garage. ent. MA 5-903 _ Pvt. F ROOM, NEWLY DECOR. A! APT. i Pe weeeme. ome * . ‘4 FLAT, Exc. GOND Bide ‘location, On bus 2-6388. After 4: 4 Wie~By- Aireti in xior ei save rr ger ed. OA 8-367 ¢ ROOM aPT, 2 x S TERED 7 AL- lowed, $35 ora FE 2-0173 be- ‘00 Oakland Near Huron Under new pare gag one Newly decorated 4 room apts. $60 per month. See CARETARER. | © FE 8-5330. hiand Rd. Corner Airport. OR 3-9361. 429 WEST HURON. SPACIOUS M r 2 ‘Pe Ideal location. Ph. _ Ross FE 42554. ‘| APT. HEAT, HOT WATER AND lights furn. 700 Auburn ATTRACTIVE NEW DUPLEX type unite Nr —— & ogy org Locate* n Pontiac. oony _Bivd. Or Call FE '- ARCADIA 5 APTS. 3 rooms and condi- tion. Includes cael heat, hot & cold water. Children permitted per onth, K. Hem p- _ stead _102 E. Huron, FE 4 CLOSE IN. 3 ROOM APT. PVT. ent. & til, furn. Call after CHOICE NEWLY DECORATED D rooms and beth jr a located -te te do Edw. M. Stout, Realtor T ON. Saginaw st. Evenings ‘tf » tae INDIAN VILLAGE. LOWER APT. 5 rooms & bath, newly decorated, furnished. No smokers or drink- ers. 1 block from P.O, FE 463%. fC —— " ee Huron oa ACT ION 3 ROOM AND BATH ZOwER 86 UPPER ji AUTO. 31_Btowell. matte tht neat. new poprated. On any: contract, new or ) RMS. WITH PVT. BATH & ENT.| 10 am. to 4 pm anw MSiocy tapettion ef property| chile welecme, 6:2 pe 8H 7 i. as ‘ chil Oi ig oT and tle. Ackfen Templeton. | 6-143, LOWER YE ROCs AND BATH K..L. tact bate Realtor |3 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE | Lake Some furniture, Stove and 2039 Orchard ake Rd. Rid. PE +4003) _¢ & bath. 111 N_ Telegraph. _ _tefrigerator MAytfair 6-3*05 3 ROOMS, PVT. ENTR. Wanted Real Eset 32A ONE BUY OR SELL how to get cash * up to =e con ol eclalizing fn Busine Parms, 3 and Land rac. 5 full time salesmen Call and ve usa i “We buy ay equities. . D. RILEY, Broker 509 Elizabeth La: rE alist “ GS NEEDED POR BUYERS aa are waiting. We will show for houses B C & BATH. Uti. furm., adults only, 29 N. Anderson 7 ROOM FPURN. APT PVT. BATH ane ent. Childreti welcome. Lake Drivileges OR 3-8004 3 °ROOMS & BATH FE 8-3263 : Children welcome. FE 5- _PE 5-2707. TRY RMS REFPRIG, WASHER. PVT. & bath. 2 298 Central,” 3 ae APT. NEWLY DECORAT- ed. Pvt. ent. @ bath, 2 adults. _10 Florence. =e 2 ROOM GASEMENT APT. Clean. Working bachelor or work- ing rT eae No drinkers, 532 Jud- 3 5 ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATH welcome. a ie a FE _8-1431, Inquire 340 Baldw 4 ROOMS, NICE, WARM OrFER: Adults. FE 47267. 4 ROOMS. GAS HEAT, 2 BED- _Trogms. FE 4-0808. ¢ know the AB Cs of {4 {LARGE ROOMS _& BATHE. selling al all ties of _ PA Private, close in| FE 2-4 ms e_ tp. FS best servioe in this area! * Hoctiren ( FURN. APT. INQUIRE 738. CLOSE IN PVT Edw. M. Stout, Realtor * gotet s Ges pluie. ‘Me Myiniow: 7i N. Saginaw St. FE 5-8 Oven evenings ‘til 8:30. ROOMS FORRES a APT. CHIL- dren alowed. $90 mo. or $22.50 __per week. EM _ 3-4207. LIST T ROOM NEWLY DECORATED. WITH US FOR FAST & EFFICENT arkston nee ark- hee tg arated eae he "haoa types.. We will strive to please.! e also BUY, SELL & ADE, $16 WEEKLY, 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ‘ask for Mr, Brown. Evenings call OA 8-2818. 3 L. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Ph. FE 2-4810 Naultipie le Listing Service Heat = elec “ot Baldwin. jock oaat Baldwin. FT. HOUSETRAILER FURN,, 718 week, FE 8-80) BACHELOR APT., HT. 60 COT- : FE 5-6863, bath and entrance, tricity furnish Pe 1 bloc eae es MS. eit CUPBOARDS MORTGAGES BACHELOR APARTMENT, "ALL : me, in. “ane heat, “stove in kiteh- wu ler rnished ca close en. _ LISTINGS WANTED | to down town $i3 weekly. Call K ampsen 7 BEDROOM, MODERN, _ OTL BUYERS WAITING. LET at 286 N. Perry St. , seek Drivileges on Waters Lane. vss 9 You. HOW TO tsa a Rag rll ENT. FE MY '2-0940 or MA_ 5-0682. PESPERT ete PCY laRAND_ NEW sez |REALTORS FE 4.0528] RMB SHOW, 55,08 — ‘Everything w aby aaie Near down | 377.8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. {ROOMS AND BATH, PARTLY Leslie "R. Middleton | town, _fi_ Florence St. Rent Houses Furnished 35 ee etn pam. i B. BROKER —", 1] GLEAN. at . PVT. BA’ “BATH CLOSE : Wixom Rd MA 41961, 00 in, no drinkérs , 4 LLE- rR BEDROOM AKEFRONT|@ RMS. & BATH SOUTH BE ADES GLEAN 2 RM APT. 19 HOVEY| tomes’ Ence to og Nigga mg ‘Lovely | _vue. Lake Orion, Phone FE 4-2337. St. Near downtown, between Os- rounds - 12 a. aaeeckaeea plant, |4 RM { HOUSE. 3 2 BORM., “9 CHIL- : mun & Cottage. fo miles Pontiac, ent thru May, * Bee welcome. Inquire ‘a3 Port- Call us _ wetn Pl dae CLEAN 3 Ru. APT, ORK] able’ EM 3-0134. land. , cow only. um- BEDROOM at 200 OMS, Pst Y Ereding” nf: crea es “are janes bs, _imit. 2.6454 after 4 p.m. : BED bath, fo onig Be nice * fare, n. 1236 Pontiac | : ne Ly ~ iliogins Heated. Call us for further infor |CLEAN APT., BUS, ADULTS, $15. working. couple Nurses or bache- (Ris. aS. & BATH CHILDREN WEL- mation. No drinkers, 1035 Oakland. __ | _Jers come. WE TRADE, BUY & SELL EAN MODERN KITCHENETTE |2 BEDRM. MODERN, TILE BATH, | (-RooM HOUSE. p. UNFURNISHED. Bonnis & SON REALTORS | apt. A r week, neludes heat, oil furnace, Automatic washer.|" peas 8588 Cooley Dr ron St. PE 4-1557| lights gas OR 3-0369. a, 10 miles from Pon-| mont §-8662 for appt. eunyiew ARLINGTON 1 AND 2 ac i TIALLY MOD. To Buy - To Sel] *bectoom apts: "Butitin di" kiten- | Mob. tie ROLES Wee | ot Rowe. Sear en Colored bath fixtures, Gas a * Beach, ao Har- | GARAGE hee disposals. incinerator, 5 ROOM MODERN WITH REAL ESTATE blocks to rine | par - ; BE Valens HOUSE wa| }atge sates ¢ soon out. f ti a a ~ HOME MART REALTY eas sae es. se Pan fure., e8s | Ronis HOUSE POR RENT 00m Fe 5-940) after 6: FE 5- Crooks Rd, Royal Oak. Cail Lin- = aoa —HOUsE, Cooley Lk. Rd. WILL BUY OR LI8T You Wize coin 2 eine Park. WELL YOR HOUSE: | @ ROOM NEW HOUSE, 6268 TUBBS property Purchasers we walle. FURN. "apr. “ON EAST gIDE OF Sie. eee . __Re. OR 3-9522. ~—seBwE : wn. MY 32-0040, _ € ROOM H NOOdE ON LAKE. Vv 8890 prarcabphetd Ra a 2 BDRM8., HOT WATER, SHOW- Pn Pontiac EM 33315 Meme bath, (NEAR HADLEY. 4)? (Nears Patricks. Bid 20303. | q fefrie. turn. Fue, ‘nace ata TraL TED VERS) Farge yard, srt [Sieay priveets 1-3 NOOR ROUSE SIODUERE, | 207. best__Sal_AVeoee a per mo. Phone : _M K TER BL. waitin fot commercial AP hie _ Hadley iat) gay bows i | ‘tpetlities, s° s pos oul Seem, Siac Sts. at will give vou imm ac- ~HOLLYW OOD APTS. i south Red rent, Dawson & Wat- 2 partly son, uh B, Bagine w. FE 2-5420 -| 9 a.m, : . ROY KNAUF ished, outing’ ao 116". x. Modérn, close to “whe. Reas. MA 7 ROOMS & BATH. 0. ALLISON $7h_w, Bere © Fe sun LARGE ASANT 5 sats : WELCOM St, FE PF . eee a rt. Adult. OR oR 53043. 15 per mo. plus utilities, EMpire CYA ASL am”; :. peed : moders “ant. ‘both private, Ress. |S BEDROOM HOUSE, WILL Reet |. TT? #5. “Chnedin "12007. That i ir all it takes te have one) 204 Ferr "with lease or option’ to buy. tt Piuie. owne _ ROOMS Sa ee adc mr courtebus uaiitied gales. NICEL NICELY FURR ND, heat “ _tine, : ‘at your door. for an arage. : met and a edna oe of ox tide, dan $20 Per "fer meta. FE 2-464 or er BIRMINGHAM home ‘on Oe ve trea’ vtheon ‘weatelane 1223 COLE Bnew how at. at your service. NEAR WOODWARD, BUS, ES floor e of 7 Tooms, including 2? bdrms. & bath, Also _ Humphries n. Tee Nero a SBevies | rR Eres,| “MODERN HOUSE. ig ATOR SOOERR B3 OAT ME ecora von _Bunding 817 Pike. . NEWLY Lsteongan 5 RMS. and tile bath. Laundry factlities, Heat ——— $100 per month. _FE 5-2053. Days NICK 3 ROOMS AND BATH. FE 4-0401 after 5:30. : REL-RIO APTS. 281 OAKLAND 3 rms. & bath. Stove, -refrig.. & util, furn. Couple with baby wel- come. UPPER FLAT, HEAT FUR- — Pe aig Peer No children. $75 f PE 32-5273, mo. cprah bath, utilities furn, 200 N. Perry. UPPER FOUR ROOMS AND BATH. WATERFORD 1 bedrm, apt. Living room, kitchen, i eo — ground floog W HITE. oe 3 ROOMS, PVT. ENT. WEST 6IDE 6 eco ets rooma, ofl peek, ET, Upper of brick 2 family. 83. WEST SIDE bath, wath lower. ences require Bateman —4 and aa Weerly. Ref- rs|— UPSTAIRS UNF. APT. | j &). 1a CARNIVAL Fy ’ by Dick Turner | ar / 0.29 TM. Reg. V.8, Fer. OFF © (WS7 by NEA Bervies, Ing “It's hard to believe that she couldn't even siy Daddy’ |. until she was almost three years old!" « Rent H Houses es Furnished 35 ee 3. BE >) BEDROOMS LO LOVELY LAKE- front at Waterford, Modern. $100 _-month ¥ OR 3-4519. Jj ROOM MODERN WOT WATER heat. $20 week. Everything furn 1555 Williams Lk Rd. corner of _M-5e ee en ET. 3 ROOMS. NEAR TEL-HURON, $15 week. 030 LaSalie @ ROOM AT CASg LAKE.” OIL heat & automatic hot water, _$60_mo, FE 5-0377. _ RMS, FURN. EX CEPT iL. Watkins 100. SRM. BRICK DUPLEX IN ROCH- Gas heat, basement, ga | | Olive 32-4623, HOUSE, FURN. Royal Can JU 83451 Wrest SIDE. 6 sinen” bes or pa yee: . References required, 6183 € ROOM HOUSE FURN_ Ment and attic. $00. A_ taht, BO “HOUSE 7 NEAR ,BLuE $35 modern. FE + cere "2061. “Oslioway. ~ BASE- _8-0985. Cass AKE - 3 BEDROOMS. brick. Radiant off heat, garage. Thru June 15th. $75 mo. security. UNiversity 3-5654, TWinbrook 32-4935 CLARKSTON. 6 noe BRIE Sais. CLOSE IN. 3 BEDROOM MODERN home. 1% car ic gereee Quick pos- session. sae Floyd Kent, Realtor. | _FE 5-61 ena es: ae a GOMMERCE LAKE, SMALL) _ house 2 5 oe call after 5 p-m.- 3-8413 MS. FURN_ THREE ROO people or lakefront. PE 8-2815 KEEGO , HARBOR, NEAR ROOSE- velt School bee ale A socoranee 2 podroeme Niegly furn., $70 Mo. _FEe _ S-e0es. ie 2 BEDROOM. - ROCs ROUSE CHIL ian eam ag 4 Keego S haere. $75 mo MODERN ? 7 BEDRM: M. HOME. OIL heat. MYrtle 3-2805. RANCH TYPE HOME. AUTOMAT- ic gas heat, paved road, conveni- 4 = Pew chee so and — eins ains-Watertfo area. No sma dren Rele: pontes required, nei on 2 inkes. $1 per estes month, SMA SEAM MODER N. sup — On busline Near grocery ‘ouple preferred @E 9-4855 __ L-HURON AREA. MODERN by ek te al Couple only. FE _ 32-1188 rd WALLED LAKE, a AND 3 _Tooms, on lake. 126 . Lake Dr. ~_ Rent Houses Onturn. 26 2 BEDROOM FRAME HOME. Pull basem ment. on yard.. $75. ERRY E 2596 _ Dine *ighway.. 01 OR “a1 i. ROOM HOUSE, PARTLY MOD- - saan white. asda Frement. FE * . Bs Mile ores a3. mo. my, sere. UNFURN. REASONABLE 7 PORN ue PE tas 7 BEDRM: RANCH-TYPE BR BRIC’ ick . Ail modern, $70 a mo. 1% eights, Pho 5 & in FE 100M HOME, 1640 E. LONG Rd., between Rochester a ohn R = KITCH- BATH EACH 2-745 * 7 BEDRMS LIVING BML : cs end beth bath. EM 3-3474, fee LK. i YR. cit HOME, {Ex Ps are UIRE R MAPLE 5- 3} BDRM aM, RANCH HOME, EXCEI- lent refer _Write MeNelve Mote], Pr clarkston. 7 RM. GARAGE Bi HOUSE. NEWLY decors: idren & no drink- ing. FE 6116. 3 3} BEDROOM BRICK HOME, 2 YRS old. Full basement, er he JERRY M Oe eae. OR Deill. | IN WATERFORD FOR REFINED _Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 BRAND NEW HOME TO RENT, reasonable rent, DI 11-1162. 2976 Hampton, near corner Bucking- hem Rd. and off Pontiac Lake Rd. Key next door, Call eve- _ nings : $8500 sell, Rent _ $78 mo. Lease FOR RENT OR FOR BALE. VERY small down payment. Nearly new 3 bedrm, home, 2 fireplaces, elec dish washer. Pull basement, 80° ; " anes subdivision. MA HOME NEAR HURON 8HO OPPING 6 rm, Ground floor fst of Telegraph. Marion 7980 couple Stove, town kitchen refrig, Youngs- ee) windows. No | _Pets, $66 OR | LAKEVILLE. 3 BEDRM 6 RM house. Automatic heat, & hot wa- | ter, Partially ‘urmn OAklanod. 2378 | LAROE } BEDROOM HOME vic Auburn Hgts. Paneled in knotty ine, fireplace auto ol] heat, _full basement, Call FE 6-330), LEASE 3 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, family room includes carpet and drapes Orchard Lake Village, Cass Lake privileges. $225 per month. ROY ANNETT, INC. Realtors 36 F, Huron 8t E 8-0466 Open evenings & Bun 1} to 4 - Lovely 5 room modern, ranch | home Basement with of] heat Attached garage Lake privi- leges. $1 per month inc)ud- ing heal. A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704_S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 MODERN 2 AND 3 BEDROOM homes, $60 per month and up. _ PE 5-6767 or WEbster 34200, MODERN 3 RMS.7a@ UTIL. Orb heat, 1 child welcome. OR 3-307 Inquire at 3626 Oakview, Drayton els. i MODERN 2 BEDRM. HOME, NEW, After Nov. __ Ist. Call Sanus, | ON WHITE LK. MOD 4 bath $65 mo. OR )7807, "Dar ally furn. RENTAL UNITS Attractive a4 he sind Pt untta, Reasonab! in Pon- tla, op East ‘Biva — bons St. CALL PE 47833 | SALE OR RENT 3 BEDRM. YR. round lake front. MY 2-0581 ; SMALL “HOME. $45 MONTH OR 7 RM. MODERN house, 2 car garage, 2 acres of K. L. Templeton, Realtor | 3330 Orchard Jote Rd. FE 4-456). A 23-0502. |, Fe Rent Lake Co Cottages 36A CPD PBA OL LL al 2 COTTAGES NEAR WATERFORD. One $40... One $50 «mo. _OR 34376 9 ROOM CABINS OTILITINS I cluded Winter .ates OR Fosse. bya odd Trailer Park at Pontiac COZY FURN. COTTAGE. _ ALL util, furn. including washer ane TV, Child welcome, FE 6-27 and FE 47253. For Rent Rooms 37 1 CLEAN RM. GOOD LOCATION. PE 5-8466. 184 Mt. Clemens St. 1 PB seg SLEEPING ROOM. LA- oe. Close in. N. Saginaw. FE 1 SLEEPING RM F 1 OR 3 ? MEN. New home. FE 2- 1 LARGE ROOM, ileges _ Drayton. SCT PRiv- Gentieman. OR 3-3672, “4 rea. Gor LIGHT HOUSKEEPING ood twin beds. 36 Norton A WARM PLEASANT ROOM, 51 Pine Grove Ave. at N, Johnson, ATTR TRACTIVE ROOM, | Gt RL OR woman, PE 4-.483, Flore: AT BUS STOP. for comfort, FE CLEAN, COMPORTABLE RM, FOR gentleman. Garage availiable. Call after 6 p.m. FE 2-6978. avn YTHING §-7332. 2 7 BEDRM HOUSE AUTO. OIL _tooin. 23 ae back yard. $85 screens, 2- monthly or will rms of discount: owner. DESIRABLE ROOM FOR BUS- iness girl. Westside bome. 54-1603. FE tADY NICE WARM ROOM, __kitchen priv, garage. FE 3 3-173. LARGE CLEAN Bug FOR GEN- oeeen_ ft ae . 945 Nelson &t ROOMS — GIRLS, EVERYTHING furnished, Mother and child wel- come, 32-0663. ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN, NEAR downtown, FE. 4-1344 ROOM FOR RENT, NR. BUS LINE _& piant, 91 Home St. — RM. WITH COOKING PRIV. ee young man with ref. FE RM WITH OR WITHOUT BOARD. _2 men or:2 women, PE 86-0427 ROOM FOR RENT, SINGLE MAN _91_ Woman, Colo lored, J FE 2-12 ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN, ¢ aurat for dint: i — WITH BOARD OPTIONAL. FE 5-4572, Home privs. SLEEPING RMB. . ot WK. AND up, 16° N. Cass) Ave, 146 E. Pike. SLEEPING ROO} M FOR V WORKING in Pvt home. ‘aN _ Mil, “SLEEPING ROOM, INQUIRE. ad 8 Miller St WARM “aeEFINO POON, ner home. Near Piasts. ; WOMAN COOKING “PRIVILEGES, _P vt. entrance FE 4-: __Rooms With ‘Seine _38 ROOM. DAY WORK- BOARD A AN ers FE EXTRA _ meals. 14_ Ms REO. NURS - .with three women. Near General Hospital, 1 FE 8-1833 ROOM “WITH Bape. Vv ‘VIC. OF” _. Airport. OR_ 2-877! ROOM gee RO home. Boulhern ¢ rege f fort rent. OL pet Convalescent H. ‘Homes 838A HOME CARE FOR SEMLINVALID. IN PVT. , Also ga- ___ Motel Rooms Hon L. AUBURIN. Day or 39 LEASE WITt OP) on Store building wi in rear, Also 6 on second BIRMINGHAM. cE hess Area, @ rooms, _ein 6-3018 OFFICE” Sige ¥ Reas, Center of Aubur _ 3342 Aubura Rd TRADE OR S \7 acres & house, 7 miles rai & oem erm Pontiac. wooded $912,000 meen dock floor mi __Fent $109 per month FE 5-4 ___Reat Office ‘Space AL [200 aq. ft Bultable for shopa, offices, DOWNTOWN” ugcaTion.- ~~ FE & For Sale Houses To BUY. m bpariment ee Total 106 L avsi- EL ‘Ait ABLE. nm Heights. 4595, ___ For t Sale Houses 43 \ Pot tg Se gor “a ome, ee ** SPs oor ome, arpee y, 4 wut ew, nd nreonewar, 8 Rar a ‘REALTY ‘ N Saginaw FE + es, FE 2.7990 tion red i“ well w 40m BY F OWNER. FINE BRICK. Tihs: ‘RM. reach of average wage anne ee, ee ee Rr | fect ty ater ® ME Wity BATH, ehureh, Even is on the bus ted Tn Luserne, line. omen : i : ane PL S008 A Five-Minute Look : Beets, a Waeneang words on ome, Oak floors, plas ter walls, basement, rec- reation room are seme = ELL Nicely BRENDEL LAKE HEIGHTS Comfortable - kitchen yO ee ay rage ac off M Oakland County 2610 Union Lake EM_3-4164 or EM ranch home, Saal Large ; or and ga- weed Dr, Realt y Ra after — $300 DOWN New 3 bedroum — ares Donald” cn 32817 today or * formation, We have able alse, starter home vena extra‘ large kilch- ac $495 DOWN ‘New :2 bedroom home - on doth. 008 full — Wood for oe coal J. C. HAYDEN REALTOR 86 FE. Walton FE 8-044] Open Eves BY OWNER. FINE BRICK 6 RM. _ house, west side, FE 6-863, SHELL HOUSE WATERFORD Drayton Area, OL 1-779. orth end. Comnpletel Garage & extra jot ~~~ “CIVILIAN. bedroom anch Pa ag BEDRM. HOME, LOCATED IN Pe so00) S es Pee A > ST ANL i ‘" ** KINNEY _Modei Open MORE HOUSE For The Money CLEVER DESIGN Won't wall ye 4 LARGE BEDROOMS. 2 CERAMIC BAT FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPL 2 CAR FULL Crk “VT NO Silverbell “Ra. _FE Temple Plastered walls, bus line, Re ment, K. L. Templeton, After | 3 BEDROOM. ner lot, trees, Terms. OR 3-1349 $500 down, $60 a Pat's eburch. 3408. Oakland lake front, siuminum siding, sen. raced price $27,500; Terms. Tel- “eer As See. 413 Furnished front, lovely grounds e beauty, boat Terms, OR, 3-3148 BRANCH CE ___.1133_Highiand Rd. ARF YOU HANDY? We b de inside finishing. a, - payments like rent MODERN CONTEM Lakefront tio, carpeted Bring a for only $2,800 d WE HAVE SEVERA homies IN _ TH pip IVAN W: FE 5-500, Realto Open Eves, & Sun. Res, f 4 NEW MOD play with 3 bedrooms, and arrange financin talls, 1 block east = south from corner and OUT In Bloomfield This built contemporary rf size rooms, new carpeting take $29,500 xt Only $1 000 Down For this sharp new bungalow. 22 oil furnace. Agood an sise to Price 670 W. Huron st Open sives: ~ LIKE A REA BARGAIN? Lots epee. aE eves. eA. | A A eereeen y CANCY” FOR BLDERLY PER- Aa a a in the Want Ads! 28 OT her Lake Ra — 6, PE 30003 landseaped grounds Sandy beach, enon. _ $b 2_com ba walls, ou ars gril a baths. One with pooens. family room and 2% baths bedrooms, famti for an exacting owner, , large cov- nu in NATURAL LARGE FAMILY eTYLE KITCHEN GAR. W! HIGH HILL VILLAGE Corner of Lapeer Rd. or Perry at 9202 ton by Attached 1% car garage. Close to asonable down pay- Realtor FE 44563 $10,500 ~ t month, 2 bed room bungalow and garage. Near Phone’ OR ranch type, sand beach, ter- Full OR 31300 ing area. 4 bed- P aay eon garage, Gas heat, lake A real ver. J. &. REAL BaTATE a SSteswon FFI OR 3-13 Rr (MSo) down PORA RY with 6 large Mautiful the |i f L 2 & DERN ie) ty UEBARON SCHRAM | PE M1 sone. Corner ards _ MULTIPLE LISTING 8E SERVICE _ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE OPEN DAILY 2 TO 7 ELS Colberry Park family rm. 4 bed- and one lock dae ee | ogeere st Lake Road. DRIV A Very Special Value is a brand new custom anch, hutlt 7 extra scaped lot. Total recent cost to owner Was — — 600, but will $8000 dow for quick moth This is one ray a Blue M 2 foot Bring room, ighbor- etersining. KIN ZLER . FE 4-3525. \L CAR of ’ém west of | A are ‘more Only Sih eTD tee ¥ oe a tal price and can be bought . on terma, WATKINe LAKE POON eco « — ron, 4 fs ba een Rochester ovely liv room | w replace, saree! nd drapes included, - Aa 3 pan ‘fring oe re 74 mily room, 2° baths. ras | Voce garage, with « diant heat, Soar aftached ga- work a * overhead ont rage. Paved drive sprinkling sys- peting tn wt tem. “All this and more on” 46 room ving pad din ven | ft. welllandscaped jot. Call for all SPs goed Call for appainiment today, appointment to see tqday! | COLORED n.: . 10 room, 2% story tucome .a-t| Brick One-Story condition, & and bath down tor North side of fown, Well- owner; one J-room & e 2 built home with all jarge reom apartment up. Ful base- rooms gas heat, carpeting ment, See it today. Only $13,000 are some of e eed 9g 2 with $3,000 dowa. tures. Twocar garege, full basement over- looking Union Lake. Fenced cor- shrubs, On ies : open Bree. “D6: Bunday lo to 5. 4 1) SMITH- ls priced to sell and is well worth your time to eee al ence WIDEMAN REALTY 412 W, Huron FE 44526 5-Bedroom Brick In Rochester —- Belng used as two ily home. Giassed-in front poreh, full basement, garage, Lots of ade 4 beat of term ome DY has a * nreplace. Bete Caw oom home near bus t Bven ‘1 s ‘ h th. k fléors, er call ua at once if in- ward beet ie. ba viet ult tasented. LJ r rds, vel an, pire ree, onahen basement, A LAWRENCE W vita at only $12,400~§ aoa GAYLORD“ CRES © ae at only with $1200 136 KE. Pike & Open Eves. down and a 3 bedroom | FE 4-9584 home needs some’ finishing. This eS es io « rere buy, see it how, $800 $100 DOWN- m home on baldwin Ave. § room bungalow neat and clean fa elty mite — must ad nares | Full poy pe by pirechaser, Contact "iat O11 Co, FE 20172 bet, a a” A RARE BU FY 3 bedrm Large ving em, rr. din- rm., oe kitchen, Pull base, hea ig ard plumbing. 78° fot At “bets each Golf Cousne. 84 heal, gare nice shad baly jatso fai price wh ‘an possession, Jim Williams REAL ESTATE ‘ Inst ANce. + blks from school, & e 1238 Palew's Are ye : privs. Owner builder, will sell at cost, $13,700 EM 3-4231, A RARGAIN Michaels School, off N arge 6 rms, storm Acement, — Ei otreet wot1 be, PONTIAC. REALTY Near St | | Or . a Saginaw DWIGHT &T. = 3 bedrooms al! | on one floor in this cory bungalow | | rege. make this @ very desirable WEST | BIDE jece on, at a low prise of 137 Baldwin ae. o-827 $9500—Has living room, ning ¢ room, kitchen. & bath, full base- $395 Moves You In meat, garage PE aged EBSTER |New 3 bedroom brick, full base- school, C oN ate ment Model — 280 veniences. quick FE 4-676) of WEbate: WATERFRONT — New CEDAR _W IT. L T RY ADE SHAKE RAN sin prrcenetey | LEDOERSTONE REPLACE in living room, Me with attrac. tive breakfast nook overlooking water, sie den, 2 large comfort ‘in bathroom, full basement with OFFERS erases? Needs a Romar | m live room #® chen e ° ’ ute Northside this eute home | 4 rm. modern ems. full, base- shade: t niyeevus-vansl Be ee pase WILL TRADE — 27 acres plus 3 DRAYTON PLAINS | _ dedroom: PRAME home wlth 1b Fayed reets, & tiegeara to dows Nearly new 2 bedroom bungalow, | * glen gg OW ody ¥ ri payment, carpeted living room and hall. | basement, "ba ICKEN : Tile bath, forced air, oll neat! COOPe & garage. bur fast farm | Waters-edge sareee, Paved drive and fenced | _— in 3 days, so rush on this | 50 ft. of water frontage that leads yard. Only 911,900 with substantial | one a a wa reps ” rear “ a SIDE | HOYT REAL Le aly tales besemnent pr ‘ae ead te eel. ATE 4 ' | FE sew, IMMACULATE 4 ROOMS, PLUS terms. full and util, Oi heat wpe 8. _Tetegrepe ns ———s = Resale—4'14% 3 bedrm. brick ear port. wo ® Purl “peice gia-bee $12.080. rancher with “WOOD, PONTIAC LAKE soreens, Hempstead be BE DROOM BRICK EAST ‘BLVD. Oak floors, gas beat, TE” Almost new three bedroom brick; water, paved street, § room, sinlos ell, Terms, kitchen with dining ‘area & tiled} — Smith-Crawford, Inc. Pally “ied asement ell “heat | 99 9° manner Rae OL, 1.0008 was water heater. Owner leaving | iso9 py Auburn Rd. Ob 61226. oougy et ag —_ mo , : Giese. . i KFEmOO {Anson 2 tw yo 3 “PRICE, REDUCED perch. utomatig Ot, feat. 1-300. Here is 2. ony a large ES, dow ame y fon: fami) uicone ba ‘ up me os pad room, 750-1091 Nn modern kitchen & bedroom dn./ wice 3 bedroom mine located. fully tied basement with stool, flo. (Oe gy 4 gees § gas heat, gas water heater, Phone PE 46612. en Ca raved street BIRMINGHAM 3 — BEDAM. Off, acre. to schools, and bus line. Price reduced to $30,500. heat, Basem yerd. ae eth BF an ite. Mid- K. G. wee a- | 102 EF. Huron Street FP _ 4-8284 | 7 Modern housing brick. 6 well- * A Dandy Buy janned wreome, screened pored, For Handy Man | en ol furnace,” automate “wa: Only De mon + heater. Close schools for r. _— with eu — Full Price $6,600 Big Ranch type home with 2 ony, 00 dorm and ater mo.| ewdetat Mua genase including interest, Located on nice Wisner meoin $0x125' lot near Crescent Lake:| Bchools., ur Biaine Bt, it. ice. Practically new bungalow. Oil one vit 9750 an eit furnace. —. ull bath. . a Dn., . mnomets ea ces : ad | yrs. ra eld i pom a = ite ear Pg Giroux-Franks |_."* GENERAL REAL ESTATE 4395 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9701 KNUDSEN Brick Ranch Type ows home ge WHITE. BROS. —— room carpeted, . = : roma unique ore 5 ‘on’ i. eplace. tra + m Winter Won't Wait oobi arog ge Weta wid Why Should You? NOW!!!! Not et e bath ig cermaic after winter comes, is the time tile. Also home theludes a to buy that home. Get moved nee settied before winter comes. is the : been wanting for. situated on Clarkston, Lake Privileges, auto ott heat> Extra ne re utility rm., Tile bath. All and more ist only $11,500 en $1,400 Dn. | openers and ull ment. "wo nelsocnnt yard with paved driveway makes thie home a good value at poled May we show you now a 4% per cent mortgage and . tee per month. Pioneer Highlands “ 3 bedroom ranch-type home Are You Fenced In? with eceramte tile bath and spacious modern besgreog Then you will enjoy this Bae 3 ~ — excellent basement “ond norade Sail road, ng Landse pepet, top ™ |e includes garage.’ us for a showing, the modern conveniences, large Bim Rye : nnn pice § en, fu asem glassed- in front porch, 2 car garage, SE 7 home a warage has Caste: W M. H, KNUD aN stone front, ar well ne 4-4516; REALTOR 244 8. PB tas na, FE aves. 7: Gass with $2,900 down, Full Price $5,700 RAINBOW - Buy this 2 bedroom home with i od kitchen, living | SANDERSON STREET — In e room, full “bath po iar eo} home, priced for quick sale. near yton Shopping nter.: ——_ only per month. 3 suone HOME - Wall-to-wall carpeting, modern kitchen. Auto, gas heat. RAINBOW REALTY FR 2-2614 og 6. TApoom WHITE J BROS. a | front = = Bulltin oven \ i) Phone FE 5-447 DOWN PAYMENT ree, i 3 or 3° with fall t fog. On Kise +6449 # BY BUILDER New 3 bedrm, home with with base ye Huntoon Lake area. Don McDonald, OR 3-287. MIDDLETON ‘SPECIALS WN eat of Bia Be Bearer. ail Soe t sat ae oe joor, Auto, ne weret. fore Pod LOCATED 9 miles west of Lake Orlen on all rkston . Cos wily ur R.. aded w down mile LB too. LOCATED Only pos- at — Lake, 4. : bath. and hot Avhoges, Only $6,260 with Bo down, Immediate pos- LOCATED on yee off au i bedroom wr ull basement, es! wee race and — possession aly Ay Bo eR | Leslie R: Middleton ROKER 188 N, JOHNSON FE §-17al FE OPTION — RENT New 3} bedroom Rate 4 Also iets ate oy re UICK RES RESULTS Tera [aan TE 4-2533 MUST 6 aL, HEDRM. , Hove. ve door eos, $33.19 @ For Colored Families oe Varenas. on , S. oe | jf —y “eo 8. othe ie the ol house tau sell on OI Perry @. 7 rooms—good for in come Nice yard, shade, ae iy : and garden. Price $4,900. $1,000 ; down 8 Jessie St. 4 family joceme. New roof i in good ¢ tion. 4 baths “pe 3 _ cuanets. A rent Fr f mo ee re pega, ls fies es or | John Kinzler, Realtor | 670 W. Huron 8, Ph. PR 49528 GILES Near fa, Heights — Lat home, ut Pharr “ auto. off M4, Pu On 6 nice Brand new 2 bedrm, modern] Drayton Woods jote. Only $1,000 down will Be an slew wim extia Jarge rms idk Bi-level hes all the features andle patches. Dooutifi perdvend Ore, yitng BM Siremees $650 Down sen = Bent It Now Weent and Ceramic tile bath a For this 3 ° pot ay arage Priced "et $17,780, Bhown near Auburn Ave. Pull base- WII | rAMS. LAKE ¥ appointment only. ment, coal hot alr heat, Vacant 3 bed rm. modern bun ? sobs ° —e | STB ATT AG JERRY Faas co] A ee ee er CB Hey. FE 44861 3-Bedroom ‘Brick ITICA AREA F. C. Wood Co. 3 Dedroom brick ranch, 2 baths, basement, also a: ent we Realtor reed. floors, must seen, Bic ge Be . Be le hie own. Sorcery ugg Lane Raa Hs | BC TT RANCH : meal “eday ot Segara PG 2S REALTY CO. fer 4 FE 208 or FE Sau Tohnson. FOR BETTER HOMES SUBURBAN A neat iittle & house. 3 om lot, Wa distanc ng 74 . = on anneal and nee Bg pay per it, re@- o = e. Te * andse: pree “ 500° wi venae terms, COUNTRY LIVIN With 3 home. With basement and recreation room, 2 beihe- 12 x 15 master a & % Seen serpee = S ched » q Lovely Se iu 3 ‘ Sant of Fm : ; ing : ’ potag, we ¢ eall Mr. oa EE Ae e “2538 FE 4 John K. IRWIN Sparkle Bright abe invite your Inspection a income, side Without question cleanest, many features. Only” = wo terms Southeast Side 7 rooms and basemen’ aved street. Only teoo down, oll he 500 "with Perry Street woah 2 family income. 2 apartments, Shows - ineome, $14,000. Sylvan Lake City Mere ts that re peeee the retired couple or weds, Extreme aly att ty room home with full mi and 2-car garage. aith : John K. Irwin EAL cute & —, 4 Buy Thru Partridge List Thru Partridge easgeee vas OWNER FULL BASEMENT NG WINDOWS HOT WATER HEATER ON YOUR LOT MODEL 2601 GORLAND DAILY 5-8 OF LAKE OFF MM A NS, : MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE VALUE PLUS Baatene IN . INCOME $950 DOWN mnegate & room, banse, rt. Large 2- Tater heater. ee Bateman. Kampsen a FE 40528 1,500 DOWN NICHOLIE Donelson Park Large landscaped lot—lovely setting for this excelient Cape Cod Snite frame home, There 4 & bedrooms and full bath and 1 bedroom. or den and invohery down. Center hall en trance fireplace in living room = bookshelves}, full dining screened porch, e big kitchen with breakfast area. Full basement, heat, water heater and ‘colvaner, wardrobe recreation area. ‘wo car garage with breeseway |. DUTCH COLONIAL. In very best of condition. 27° living Leslie R, Tripp. Realtor 7 W. Huron Street FE 6-616) or PE 56-2800 “Did You Say? “Room”? bar see this large brick rancher, aq. 1 in ‘87. Has 3 bedrooms, living’ room, di he roof, Storms and screens. See for yourself—a very pl property, .- OPE 536'and 540 GRANADA i, ue an Oa an Bivd } EVERY DAY Pg sa FROM 3 PM 30 to THREE (3) BEDROOM BRIC HOMES WITH ace} BAS PER CENT INTEREST WEST BIDE INCOME Four family brick with ¢ rooms and bath each Separate ‘fur- neces, water heaters, utiliti¢s Corner lot. good income, rec- sonably priced; terms. WEST SIDE ‘ Malf block eff Huron St. A six (§) room home aij on one floor, full basement, gas heat, double [ erg Front and rear porches riced $12,500 FOR COLORED Une aa a + family or your own 10 room house. Carpeting in- cluded. 2 full baths (1 up & 1 dig 2 — — poring roperty e condition Priced at $13,500 with $2,000 NICHOLIE & HARGER CO 33: W. Huron Bt. rE. §-0183 Open nm Evenings ~ 3 Badr. Ranch | $500 Down This brick & alum. home thas a large family room, ample Kitchen with birch cupbs., full base., louvered sliding closet doors, plenty of room to move around in. To qualify, you must m|152 Eastview, Lake Orion. tall Tyee Y% mile east of M-24 out EF. Flint St. east of “Sunoco gas station, turn south. For inf. call FE 8- PS, bapa Elizabeth Lake Estates Beautiful 6 room neh home, featuring full dining room, J bedrooms, double pow mono full aement, the discriminatin buyer, on 1 Heat $e. , terms. Sell. or Trade 7 room bungalow = eee aide with 3 bed- rooms, full ——r en- closed front h, 2 nice dscaped Gara oa Only $10,956, terms. Will sell. or trade for farm. Call PE 4-2545, 5-Bedrm. for Colored Modern § room home in excellent condition, inside and out. Located on Rae- burn street. Features full basement, auto, oll heat, 2-car gerage. pg “to péting. Only $9,500. $2,500 down Call FE 4-23543 Ji A. Taylor L ESTATE & INSURANCE 100° "OAKLAND AVE. PE 5-2544 ask pas a LAKE OFFICE ode! SPECIALISTS F PONTIAC T.G. Trocke} CIVILIANS 3 Bedroom Ranch Type Pg ode a STANLEY “& KINNEY bedrm. frame home. ‘fnseenent, rage. Lar landscaped lot. ear garage. 100 ft. sand beach. M-59 MMERCIAL deena agro 225 - ft. win smail Lotlaine rm, . HURON” VALLEY - at MS®9 at Pontiac Lake "BUD" Birmingham — : ac Bud Nichole, Realtor ve a a Osewmmey b 1067 by WEA Gervion, tng, . “I'm not going ‘out on any more double dates — there’s always another girl along to spoil. things!" door opener for 1% car ara, =. 1 ge _ rene ee wage, ction y R ANK SHEPARD OL_1-7611 OL 1-110 OXBOW LAKE. per LEVEL. 8 bedrm.,, fireplace, & 3 pc. bath on each level. sereuiien room, 2 car attached garage. Patio & Sun deck. Sunken Gardens. On 3 lots that are all terraced and exquis- itely landscaped. $23,800 on Terms. Chloe Nichols, Realtor 1880 Williams Lk. Rd. at M-5e Pontiac Lake OR 3-3831 EM 3-0366 have good credit. See it at} 100 ALTOR 143 Union ia Rd. EM 3.4671 * oe $8,000 with low dowh payment. LAKEFRONT 7 rm. fanitly. home. 30° Hving. rm. poe rm. 3 large bedrms. 2- Boat included. $19,500 with | OO ranch home = exc. — hy Call 3 OR 3-6001 ONEMBER WESTERN OAKLAND IN THE MIDDLE OF AN ISLAND artsy FLOOR 4s hall entrance, » posiens liv. any floor. Sy i = CP ef - roo! tha be — 4 tac, we ur you 1¥ n. Puli price only 47 7,000. et COME — SEE — BUY Clarkston REAL ESTATE INC. a ea ttchen. - oo ven i na orl rooms, living room. hx} paved streets, face brick sieve: Bidg. Corp, FE 723, N. on Perry” to Pontiac Ra” right “% mile to model No. 2485. F AMIL Y HOME DOWN 3 bedroo: ~ S peo ag rch, large living reom, dining - room, kitchen, full base- ment, gas furnace, man wa- ter heater, nfatse front porch. Ga- reee ¥ 4. garde wg ig lorth side, J. R. Hiltz Realtor 1011_W. Huron PE 5-618 You House reaete landscaped’ lots. This erty truly a ba ol ang 7 Mg fioioeg with ty §1.400 "down Only $1,450 Down Will buy this modern 5 room ae. oO ‘ap neated” across - cludes is: ancling Seer be eee gees. only $8, J. A. Taylor REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE @ Onkiand Ave. FE 4-254 _MILLER | ranch dcar ne . Nesutifully landecaped A SMALL FARM.— Just out of Pontiac “as mits. 4 level acres, excellent 2 bedroom modern bun- galow, full basement, » i Bog way to 2-car poreae. © rich garden soll. Loads of trate & berries, This is a real good one. VACANT 4 ACRES — 400 young bearing fruit trees, variety of ap-| gi] ples, pear, plum, peach, cherry & apricot trees..3 -hives bees. Plenty of toom to garden. William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 Ss W. Huron a Next \9 Sesion Post’ Office Multiple Listing Serv: "| CQUNTY BOARD OF REALTORS bedroom brick, immaculate condition, carpeting in living den, lovely dinet room . and “ te and kitchen, . lots cupboar tile drains, bath down, 1 . Wp. Pull ment, onl water, Pd down ie ‘tee. "cost | eh et Elizabeth Lake Privileges . 7 3. bedroom im =f a fetes living. rate “big & Gala fom ‘gas heat and hot Auburn Heights Here is a lovely ‘arge two bed- room grog 4 with w full — comp jetely fini ira oe, ) agrey a den oom 2 4 recreation room. Faun ig gh Lidndecaped Within "walking distance to sebool. IMMEDIATE Possxasion Priced it: $1,000 ih $2°500 This meme nn be sold to settle &: KENNEDY PPP ee OWNER MUST SELL : For Sale Houses 43 aw . yr.old modern & room i low, just redecorated, 2 elt from bus and schools ( } or rochial), 1 block to Feritarcn BLA $1,450 DOWN Drayton — 3 bedrooms, Liv- util 4 SILVERCREST re ggg i Ag Ri Excellent location, $1,000 down, or will consider rental with option to os to — party, Im- “SUBURBAN 4 room. Modern. Full bath, of! heat. Lot 100x300, nicely jand- scaped. Good rden spot, Will |. : = ag ton Seo pay-| "GEORGE BLA LAIR SORE TOM 4636 Dixie Hw OR 3-1251 DRAYTON PLAINS Eves. OR 3-1708 enACRIFICE sale transferred. Ee See cme "en Price Slashed for ick Sale . open House sar. & sun. se aale by owner. *, a ranch type. Huntoon Lake: Puli base- ment & attached ga at _}ont. siding & coral OR ~~ Buy thra Partridge List thru Partridge 8 RM MODERN. ONLY $0,000, 8 rm income. With fire Srepiace, > car garage, easy 5 EB oon, ke priv, Only $10,- 7 trade. 2 family (brick on Perk & — more, 6 rms & bath each, real buy. fam tly Income, Easy down pay- ment. Will trade. P. W. DINNAN W._Huron __FE 42577 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE bot weter. Oar ger Ben arr’ ies r gerage oa, send robe ig BE. - down oay- ment, tuated van Vacant and quick posses- sion. (George R. Irwin LTOR 60 Baldwin Ave. _ OR 3-4416 FE 5-0101_ or A very neat, bath, waitterwal vearpeting. ven ARRO Something for Everybody 456; We have @ sharp 2 bedrest home, ted on north local side. For lady c a gd kitches with ain ing iddies — a aay a with Anchor fencing, Al : : lation. Land all ready pan for. Very Mealy format Lakefront We have s — cottage on Cres- = Lake . 50 f° of jake sg prope be the high prices ‘eter? oe.son with terms. West Suburban t Rancher | odern kitchen bar, itetime tile on kitehen floor, Full basement, with tiled foors, auto heat, storms & screens, 2-car attached garage. lot, e ly landscaped. $13, with terms ARRO REALTY TED McCUL «LOUGH $1 Coss-eiis om re 8.1284 Open ‘Dall Bo ahem Multi-Lakes Realty _ POR RENT One, two & three bedrm. homes. Lake privileges, List with us for quick “action. 3060 8. Commerce Rd, MA 41578. RILEY AMES ST. West « oe iy ed foot ee fata! ea Ex cori paym $500 DOWN Becht falta epee fas oe en, *, only $5, ala $475 DOWN / __ For or Sale » Houses Special | = GOWN will buy this ed $10,800 $00 HURON © 4 years old. nter. ‘Two large lots Bechided mt) 00.” “Here Z. . pon gg wy H. BROWN, Realtor HURON /_ PE 32-4810 a ~ Listing Bervice PE $-0063.— Russell A. Nott. Realtor Buy tee Partiidge Partridge List Thru Partridge ae Gal a ane pmaanee ‘built on @ - Me Mt. lot, ry car garage, full) 4 wey fine 2 family m pavenient in living eas et eed ah $14.50. ing distance < downnew ; 2 car RERBERE CD C. DAVIS 4915 Irwindale. PE 5-431!) 8 sk Ooms and € rooms on 3nd, Pull price $17,900, On terms. -SYLVAN VILLAGE MONEY Beautiful, modern, 3 bedrm. ranch ae home in pleasant sylvan Village. an Large living room with eye- - DOWN ' eatching fireplace, Efficient ra- diant heat. ear attached ae Wall bu built 2 or 3 bedroom rage. 8 tous 100° x 145" ot. er home witn ment on your | terms, Donald Oh 40831 incited "Doo ii NR. WOLVERINE LK. ment, Every a Dishmaster tnclndra: ized pir e ved arte . 3 6 ‘age, e. block. 2” trom Lameren RAY O'NEIL. Realtor oe Ta aa DRAYTON WOODS—NEW 3 }- iis DN 4 FAMILY INCOME 418: Berd OR 35660 ae Be Lites ngietbor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKEFRONT — 3 ake ek —_ painted wale, wall to sage bergge in ba large liv- ng window wewniee sparkling waters Tennessee Ledge B ase fireplace giving in “ long. low ranch home ‘ing space, too. 1% baths with Ceramic tile and colored fixtures. 2 car farage, cement drive. many Se All this and only fone sheonens — 2 st. eo ie. picture nl Feting area in the -kitchen, lots of cupboards car garage, Spacious lot for is long, Only 63 per month including taxes and DRAYTON PLAINS. room home. Pi tiae High and ‘eity y brary YOULL EXPERIENCE Spence street location of this fine 3 bedroom home. has and both” ‘the family Toom a room ere carpeted wall-to~ Basement, gas heat. good deal for some lucky iy. . RAY O'’NEIL, Realtor 262 8, Telegraph Rd. 9 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE DORRIS BEAUTIFUL RAxcn plat NUMEROUS APPO rambi 3 buff brick pong with reat bee ud to show to pill nr buyer, Aut “com parable sur BEAUTIFUL FRUIT FARM ‘AN x ode at a listing we « tor or offices, bic sil, 075. | NEARLS Ew" 3 BEDROOM A very fine 6 room ranch home brick, 3 Grepiaces Ceramic tile| on paved ng with ‘em ear h. ted uv room: ri pr ment. “Setemanto Cun orien Hectitetes replace. Metai awnings, Aluminum] Owner moving out of town storms and sc Attached riced -for immediate sale at oe. Lar jot Might consider seasoned feng contract as 13,650. On easy terms. Payment. Priced at $16,050. , TT : 1 Tot fon ee Po rit YEARS REAI TOR FE 43581 Ph. S06 or “Mutual +8417 ores ieee i r WHITE LA iia New 3 bedrm. brick, 33 ft, recrea- a tien rm. . kitchen, living & dining rm. Attached 3car gara nants , irae planter boxes, beautify closed with. tvelone ence’ On | $950 Down = paved rd. 18 minutes from Pon- mane we forms. ths § room Pome, cb clove te whiown . acar arane, horve ae Se chicken bath first floor 4d bath coop. to eer $i4, on second. Basement, Ideal wus ede” edsy ~ 5 of na Total price, Center St Thighiend rm. nna Steele, — 4-2045 5 ROOM HOME NEAR gg N yom and church. On |e: * $6500 with low down pay- ment. Cal) OR }-1340 Large lake- front ellent = division, ey a on eke ate vty Terms. OR North Side—Paved St. Attractive 2 bedroom bun- galow built im 1954, in ex- cellent _ condition. Pull $1900 4 ranch, 1% ti ofl baths. Cia. [soo noord jot, én 7 heat. Paved drive. $1,000 31348 down, only $85 per month including taxes and in- Pontiac Lake Front. Lovely furn- surance. ished home. $15,500; Terms. OR 3-1348, $300 down on vour lot or ours. , Starter ae bedroom home. Full N Magee com Rg i ge to @ on easy . terme. OR 34 Brick Ranch . Let us sel] your property. We are 3. bedroom = brick = ranch “results tive company ang will get oll y ng "dian “pie fleor in ment, gas L ‘ESTATE yao neighborhood of new homes BRANCH OR 31349 to Mark Twain 7732_Highianc Road (M59) school. $16,000, cash to GI mortgage. NEAR KEEGO a. $8 ROOM modern, Ga» hea B ishade. Quick . rage. Flowers & shade, ick ; : fa $1,000 do ose Niclarty. ‘Broker Clarkston Ranch Attractive ranch home eit- uated on Jot 100x150, has living room, — room, 2 bedrooms, bath, and utility room. Full base- Buy NOW at FALL price on- this brand new Early” meni: Lake Frontage can home, ted 44 acres on Indianwood at beautiful Cranbe: Lake, Lake, paved road‘ open only one mile north rk. year round. A very scen 8 usual floor nm in- spot in of beautiful cludes. 2 bedrooms, bath, large pines, Home has living living room, ng room and room, kitchen kitchen jus one large 2 ample bedroom, bath and large - closets, tile bath, spacious ly room or 4th bedroom up. knotty pine family room, All this plus 2 car brick ga-; full enment ® 5 pod for only $33,900 with Priced at $29,500, terms. rms. $7,350 Tota! price for this cute snd . clean 2 bédroom home located : west of Pontiac, near Union ‘ Lake. Price includes 4 lota and ; 2 car garage. Payments only} Rochester Area Dg BF -- — on balance. z Serer, with wittl! fence corra rm $499 DOWN stalla. expertly | remodeled That's all folks, to move you’ — room Tarm home. 2 miles into Ss. 3 bedroo: x. Jo. pM age ond and new high cal rk ow full bath, utility room, alumi- cated peal a” pneighborhood num storms and screens. Best ‘ou Wo! prow oll all ell you ean have immediate ve in. $35,000, terms. meWHY FIGHT? R A , I Your way into the city all Oy nnett nc. winter when you can live in|. REALTORS pape aden — — = 28 E. Huron FEderal apace -year-old custom built rane Evening: y 2 shome only a short distance on = het from roto Newly deco- rated, ree — cleoeta, | © ma windows, pool basem race, and quavet in somment pies, full tile bath on — t oor, Only $14,700 with te ’ in Gee cial Beiabtabed tn_ 101 Open Eves. Tun #38 WEST SUBURBAN in 1956.) Lovely kitchen: with eatt space, oak Richer flush Biren | doors, colored bath, full base- 4 BEDROOM BR screens, nice large lot. Owner MRANCH HOME Bune in 10st, poole Mh ge $6:800. $3,000. down, — sidewalks, eur, = iy # Sriviegee ie Lake cakes | AUBURN HEIGHTS many: desirable features, im- 850 mediate mia $16 . 7 ROOM m modern home with 2 bee. rooms, e en eat- $1,700 DOWN. 3 BEDROOM BRICK] j, a nies fiving toon. RANCH HOME. Vacant, immedi- fu sement, garage. Also ate possession, desirable neigh- small 3 toom house im rear, borhood. Many desirable fea- now tented, many nice fruit E'Shemst" Ste eter" all Sst Sel a Sees n » Oak floors, : ecorated, plastered walls, ves- bv at We OUR culy Fh. : tivate —— aad closet, - asement, as ‘urmnace, wa + sear eusrvation area, Only FARM HOUSE . WITH § bedroom $2,500 DOWN. COUNTRY HOME. kitchen with fot lots 4 "cupboards Large lot 140x255 feet, 2 car dining & living > room Be" poaenee ait oy = Close yy on sores road, With feet, toomes, some and ecorating living room, well toh: "this wola make a home, “ with dining area and le | Only $9,750, terms. See te ee ieee “LOOK NO FURTHER > laundr: - Pull price = | You'll like ft. we | pane DOWN and be year own land: PERRY ACRES. $4,000 DOWN. Ate’ ments, Possession at once tractive 3 bedroom home, butt this ve a — om north 1987. ht home. 13x22]. © side, trance closet, oak floors, set. y. esll. today, inted “plastered walls,. fully Full price enty $4,500, vermis. insulated. storms & screens, oi! |- heat. Fulh price $13,980. " Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor oie “FH CLARK REAL ESTATE Teveerah hn WE 4-4013) PARKING Be --Muitiple Listing bervies sae acd «cameltoe ak BS | } \ . \ us |. te Surupiene ai esent range $20,000, Roc . ERRY E. ADAMS CO. EW 2 BDRM. elec. nr a, FPorm‘ca a. birch Sa ee oe et . e ca Sites ‘or * sina tami- LOVELAND _ y 5 miles from dedutove. toa: ediate possession.” FE 45203, ano — MODERN bedrm. hom 2 i SEVERAL spied LAKEFRONT For Sale Resort Fae “A We Finance—We Finance ws buile your cottage or re- tirement home on -ur new: north- ee COTTAGE BUILDERS 1601 M-16 St Helen Michigan ’ For Sale Lots BARGAIN FOR a PT. ying IN CITY. JIM W RIGHT REALTO 343 OAKLAND AVE. INGs 60 a ang SSIDENTIAL a nd in Pontiac. 3h ACRES Bateman Bape ima" ON tention Bead embership, _FE 2-60 D. Durkee, LADD'S SelectHomesites | iF ” eB Buys Rr Selene ane Today LAKEFRONT T 3 —— La niet tar on sewer 51 furmiahed A cofner parcel on 2 paved roads, LADD’S ING. 286 3008 “Lape? nek) Fiains " 8.0292 ~ $90 DOW. N BUYS Oakland County West | Convenient to N’Western Exten- DL! — sovers 4 ‘oo P ag rn Cc. ak Realtor 1400" Highiand Rd. ‘Buy. thru Partridge List thru Partrid = FOR qUIcK Rest — RESULTS List OR BUY Thru Johnson, FE 4-2533 Fall Is Gorgeous at CH IEROKEE HILLS! the cad eto of ad foot, "wide de- ane Blitabeth hak mile west oft Lake Rd. Turn Lake mile. Carl W. Bird, Réaltor J Community National Bank Fer A PE 44211 Eves, FE 5- _For Sale Acreage 47 suchy RES. Tne INOS, | | IDEAL SUBURBAN’ | © ACRES of rolling tend ‘with 8 fine 7 4 bed. Page = oy vasement.” Smati barn ype a i eee ps.) ft. living room,. vestibule en-| City sewer Ogee nice large gain today. ‘only y $3,000 terms, d Kent nt Inc, Realtor Leslie R. Tripp, Rea Realtor ve sisi or PE 520s ~~ For Sale Farms 48 tS Sap Qoe wa. 6. van Vieet REAL ESTATE 975 Baldwin —aae 128 ACRE S — TRADE ane oe home, Jerse bi and house, all level & tillabi or will trade for home or drive-in res- room ern ee s, ies e barn with * 3 8, house, 2 silos, tool panes Hl Located ‘on new biack- fp rea road on! g Wy: from estate at only $60,000 with reason- able terms. 80 ACRES A-1 soil now under yoga with modern @ room garage, house. An excellent investment here with frontage on three roads, Only $5,000 down will handle. Im- mediate possession. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor ial "een tives Tw és: yt peiss ine a Bae & ACRES FOR SALE OR TRADE.. P. W. DINNAN 66 W. Huron st. - FE ¢3577 Buy thru Partridge List thru Es e FOR FARMS A Call Rutledge OR St rE 4.0003, Rent Farm Property 48A 48A Phone OL. 2.1681 Sale Business Property 49 BLK. BLDG. Mx mercial, Good ieeataen Bonaer bith Ber Buy Thru Pai List — Partridec iy, buildings Ks equipment. FE Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 494° 3 STALL COMMERCIAL L GARAGE. can be) commercially or for quire at 340 Baldwin Ave. FE . seasseans . Call FE 3-04 7 or FE 2218" . ' 1800 SQUAR RE FEET For light mfg. Rent or lease. 10 miles west Pontiac on M30, EM DRAYTON PLAINS 24x30- store with rtment above = 3 hee ns : rest fx: $100 ‘ps r month. Holmes- wer ieeoees tan PE 42507, a! ther 6, call PE eae | For Sale or Exchange 50 BEDROOM HOUSE, Gas REAT, months 0: pd —t i Bal ae 0 paym 5 _month. Olive 1-1351_ 00 per short _— $75. Exc, Pheasant 2 yrs, old, rs. FE . inn WIDOW WILL EX lakefront 6 bodes. saoter oa home sry ad C3a % Perit ren -| Business Opportunities 51 ~ Buy T Thru Partridge List i=. Partridge FOR LEA, LIN a ae 23-000 mon 36411 before 6. FOR room on mets Make ht ‘Nie = Foon could et ‘ all 32932. paym: required. RESTAURANT ). 2729 Orehs hag im S — Lk. part | Maoh Or, A ert two-bay station on main high- way for | "i r" FE 49536; eves. Of R 31582. Buy Thru Partridge oe List Thru Partridge SUNOCO Station Available immediate! These a sf eeicolninies ged “tations a a hea rly atavele ms of large new subdi- ee nh Bivd.-Mt, Clemens Com sistance avail Bieile « per- . Call toda: 4-1584, aront & DEPOT. § Rid. home on : ‘ die NA aires bg wit —_ THE ANSWER TO YOUR PROBLEM: od teesie Want Ads! To sell, rey "hire, it's Lae 2-8181, Be er Ky HE PONTIAC ay C PRESS, : TUESDAY, OCTOBER. 29, wot % Pas ching 86 MODES ee T MAIDENS SHIELD STORE : b . 18 W.1 AWRENCE . by Jay Alan For Sale M Some, Mcotiansene 68 used 60 For Bg ge oo Beste faranees Montane. £0) “Bele __ Pe Br a.m. to § p.m. =e a RY Sporting Geode < rar ’ nr uaitl 8 pm. r S| te feats : — | v4 | are we goanaee atl ate sae Bor Sie | ca, abies | he, apa ae Baus FS "Elsa Noe Ont cose EE ge TS HUNTER’ ao te, help |, Household Goods 57 BEAUTY SHOP , — ge HES, Bagi _SP : | em problems. a cee ae ee STA ‘ere 0 ca ol oe Eee Ra,oaeen 9 a ECIAL | : 7 wrk SALE \ iets, tae ate LD TAVERN F i cate ots. = : My he rine - | GE PART . of ar ‘&8.D.M. on td INA NCE Co. 1 8 Pc. Bean Thege are tack ee . ina ove Propane ‘tu with M RMAN SHEPHER! ws agte a ao Leo viPcue A sacs o| ginare te ave a Wiser aorkge tank ALE AND PrIALE sete aera] —CASIT LOANS — i omen NR RWER wi] Se ete ah rorries H LOANS Cima fare OA Balt rat f rapes. x: ATE ANS fini Weet slap HOP A gait. rere Bee CALL WIDE to $500 Wires Sere taase oe : OF MARTER SAW. COMPLETE. Soyo Meshal per L. rie ean REALTOR wore. Y8 fa Y SPECI courier | Th site Sa eater 6 tie Estate 8 anon ve : tats «| BUC 5 | rank Chee, 7 ere fist au iriatth fee" hater | - ANN ARBOR CA CKNER |ge@2 Fr PRICE Ea 2 spe ita | PR NERS DRG oP a Se ‘ a 2S Bron house | == Ylourebroken, OL eet ee ‘ \ - ’ , ie est white ken, Ol 2-801 A S iz Finance Co. ened | KX yes mente if aiaty a a SEE ‘hog nandervea Ph 7 aod mortgages. _ sf ates Mets re eee s aN VS mi rig th oh Na) ae yo whew eo Teta pnd, ertesees Pontiac wet $4088. ill Wi, 1 (i) B) ary esnoart MERCHANDISE M Your partne UT . 5 with a vacuum $40, ' mona 4250 DI cE C oR Sauiy, woetaline ‘tm Drayton Plai mn in Sate. storage ebect: | {| ) Wi ih een From ruAINs,| —F a. n 7 PIECE BEDROOM Wi iii ‘9 POLISHER, _ For th cna ans BENT Walled _ feces W oe eS cagerruane | Dodge ie ¥en ow “pte Gente emg eae ghey . Lake TORT eat GRO and mattress, Wh K Ray He aie Ss ia ymouth Dealer | 2" keets Guar. yo Fag By » buy. the property {OR 8 RM crRCUi res) ambs 688 PU at. HAR FINANCE ENCE Fis ee Ls . | limamallea i Door fn) Srase, par ve 3.38 Talbott 0s 8 es vt es yD ALL 2-40 nde ee CO. E FINAN Mh ME BREAKFAST . |] Blanket, eels nn. ae] Bid sumber Lite Wee ee AR iis FOR BAL! 21 DI 1-8680 202 N. MAIN - oO. oe taltee et wi et, SS i | 4 tnsulation, 100 ny Bae 1 FE} Hard “otum bin gg aly Wee WARLIN ty f FE 5-000, ik ve Oe P yap Be eR | os et Selec se SLE tne se Gap | ane ee a Tn 9e ue es Be ~~ edly ae »| a Y aPACK WE | wan (Re, EEAIp WONTING Rea -_MAple PC. LIVING rig. I just —y- bright and a als under 80 Bouth PATHRS, goo | MAN'S 0, MA 6-338) ‘ COCKER le $1832, 1s ge a: a ae Brand new. da ROOMS going t had some terrible. way 4 — BURMEISTE! \pson & Sons. Perry, G. a; fut ont, PLAID HONTING eee b 9-434. SPANIEL PUP- THE “BIRD” Rochester, OL 6 Goops rm step corpets & chair, 3 o have him. hom news! John’ . NOR ‘a fond. $20 re Of walat. NG] red DACHSHUND — 70 = OL COT OL term} Pe tee te Be Seeetes” every day!” 8 retiring and I'm "RN USED HEATING port ss. | scone -bosenia Wi a DISTRIBUTORSHIP. | PONTIAC'S ee oe Sale Houmehld oe Hee sr, one aM SEO EARS | Hee Dee ra | ncn Fak ms “DISTRIBUTORSHIP, | NY, oes ORE BET Su Stemi) Pak PRE ra ee, must ‘$l GAs STOVE, Sal A _ daily urnaces — ats now hunting aries, Crane’ a feet, oe ia ts New i Pc. jay, 812. reoser, $125. patna ‘onan je Household Goods 57 sii packs DOORS = Qu furnse oo ie a a ag 918.95 Aube as oe — equipment Only $0000 “dn other est PC. MAHOGANY DINID «3 $123: |_Bicctrle “ove i $38. ON apace |, TR Goods 57) -Aflshesns id ee Aiams, -Aubura Hgts eae THORGEQHORED » . “plus Loan Offi erat 1 snele male. 0 ROOM HOTPOINT | we cng oa rere ADE-IN RUGS ag IY Ny ‘Beery ‘De Priced mene, —e NEW 30:30 POR use ‘pant. TROPICAL rr art ea / TR G . 1ce 5 Sanaa Are a chal Se) etal CTRIC RANOE. oy -tibtet den elvet i... fangs : s. . Gul foot turnaces weaziwaron es 0 MODEL | pela apes ae “NORTHERN BOWLING WANT. $25°T0 $500 ve png BOM sh, * sormoue ts et are Haat ti, BS Sage PLT ERR? eee rane m| ie meee wi Alpena . in perous 31 IN wee TO $500 9 cu. A 1 aise ‘yele mun, | 9212 1 ‘al W won Wilton 74 6 aes ie = o 8. og Ahan apa: Wa ered YOUNG Wits BLES SOR ae a Sate | ant uae wage, Hl RAs” Pee oe age | CEs ce Ie hes oes wa Rev | FE 20ss, "| JURB 18 ; —_ ‘ D AND ALUMI - w k. ir wr \- ods Mee modern ys aise : Fey narone hia ese Imported an Ti aaeean tel CLEANER, ome Ta = ae re 41122 “mit See Me lg Se om * COMBI- rare, tee, reir 3 see Roe Baverman, Phone stor bia , $5.95 Pearson’ FS equal trade for = Bive : 67823, cond, | BEN 4-252 wa. case, $10. F ogs “Te i puget hill | SEA PLA Dia Pare " i | Ea, igen 0-09 up: CA, en AvENPOT,. [HARE BENSON LUMBE WincMEareR i ained, Boarded 70 seeing we every) PNA Rp | R12 Fett Base Rugs $3.95 Kanner Roig ae ta | ee i, Halong srt | _M we c0,| Senge ey | a = tty f N Sale on $s , a . PE 2- IR es #1133. | 5 heel boa! . Refrig... 38 . ac ~ red enon Burr-the » D Se ao Re PPE we a ae 2 SS) achinery __60A| bated a EE ', 5| Saran a Fee a est WARD E down, PARKI New A * P Ps . —— Asbeston t. ip i ai tuc te | een cond, $46, 7a ante cua er T. In sag he oe ra uur and 209 US UseD ati ud ARNOLD ‘pm. ott Satenery 770), 3118 ay, Grain & Feed 71 REALTOR PARTRIDGE "Mortgage “pe La’ | “ayers PspatNr Gel. oe ~ SEWING MACHINE. | {> ange et gs | two 20 fe ateel = Soe tae. treat) Bind “m tifoud “eels and heat | Huntin nD = een gee 4.3581 LO 54 Se ue :| so a re ‘ye "band. | Eisetric Se ee | bog to. aie a nme | _trent "Mutu mot te alee nel | eee neon OPO mae am oft Dou, Ray, a0 ALSO U BUSINDSSES A , $38, R tv, ac KELVINATOR Wl Fes Be TO DEATH 6-8030 . 3 3o80 Ww OHURON St, eee 4100 ia CU FOOT. AMANA ORE Ee Sly chair 9 oben. Sloe th Dremdand howe ____Do It Yourself ot bad a ate asics, Mea"Eaten _ "TIL 9 30446 new, $70.98. Milk’s Appl. MI “0 leat wo a ; pete Sohne CA : ees Ls Th — allay or ect te | | O88. ine themes call OR ‘eee WASiiER, ~ TRO} THOM Ag table, buttet, = posees i ramp an suse Win- FOR RENT Ol] tet. ee aan. ness ; Gstiver se We BU TALK oo rial wesher, $280 no, davenport as ee FUR ‘ECONOMY pool ogg Be aes Hog hg me cansekiT erat ore HUNTING a FE 2-9008 WHEAT’ sTHAW SINESS” ° ‘m_or enclose ey "Ses0. Shand’ bedresm set, 4 > poss NITURE 0. goed aa, Ay ng tor ures | MANE SANDERS” Dn County, pirgene ee. V 300 BALE ee , « te So $238. Brothers boat “| 9f 38 @ Ges - reeoré-| ¥ 61_8, Saginaw St on ann sl anatase Re “i Ontonagon| __ Fo Fl la 8 ge $150 ers kn é, 5-4664. power eee : on Ma 27703 er SAW: oe cA . cr Sale BEDPORD Shop Byte — se on 3-60 _ knitting machine, KIRBY VA mower: FE) iat wit Na he sgt rayeeen, Plaine FE 3020 laa . Can i is ~¥R Livestock 72 Park area. This ale + Bgl National’ Build a. contest, | NOE az te ye eases at artace. | © ceperete os “May W. Upebureh sins. | Pike’ “on eaToRD |= si ck top Teed, erding. Gente, with 3 ‘modern dui in phone Ht Bs electric phn i RGE SIZE D WALNUT Ogemaw | — rE DOU. CLOT TOO! 8 Rental De ballast iia: REO Gentle, ened Apantan Sona wives. Wee” ~ Swa Bel. $3 per atyer Revosse AY-| $rStee poeta oar, | Oe ere Fi ——— ean Sand, yes, HAMPOIA Bs Mo iened. Geesy wale ees cote: fd 55 pen ante pe oe model, eeteed. | ino PRI a 2 Dre ae Fee s74x FANUINO, TOL floor" sand mikers cud trac Gravel & Dirt ayckarein rar =Wes 8 any reasonable offer. t porno Ae ~ | pick: 2 sa range. valued Ppa condition. OR “y aR EEaER. " Washbowis wih fi tere RS few ; ey 1 TQ joe 19 ea es Handearved. 2s P . lathe, =r. 66 spout . LIVING ROOM mR. 15 ce beth sets fittings 8 oH ee poten "mowers chain 68 tillers, a top sail oom, oe PTE or new. on PERSO. me | Foe ee te |e Me somu| Eas ea aN | Sy ee He) ie grea oot, na Hot Ec | onan are Ue. fa oe t = FE F 0 * ana Party Food seer we pm ne oSe ants A te ‘out ot sai BE POUND |" New innersprin uM sie her ee tim Eivg ti sian 5 om was atiet Bh So 17s Se ea ‘ a eae Teer ow 5 7 te 6. Penn ane Sir segeomge | Sages et Se aoe saa ae a et] See TT on Shen | POR AACE OFT FHT 4, FOR RENT Fa a t= oreo EEE s operator could aoable “uve” or 9600. FE Batbros eaters, canal pm —— 7s 288 GUN TYPE ¢ te 2 oll, PE Pt eee santos — bees , gr ‘ “Wik _ PUREBRED s cate Bt . rl for TON 6TakE = gg age wprings and — + fr anand on Draw ASHER. Ni midier complete, Tat eanizl 15,000 Paine ectaee Sate ail racket ae eat or ete. TV suite: 1 rent and NO PLUMB used od §-61 Lak ar : MICHIGAN BUSINESS fp iT0 5-A rein tuicd| Her" Shetyan entra cowina Soe | aA Mahe ave cr, ORPORATION|“« RE PARCE ames. Dine pe) ruton pbeowtely porter rage NOME. Gar ar? SEWING MACHER ORY mi revel. aie ION 1 trade pe CELS er misc. ite: and mm Terrific values name fob | LA OME TRIAL Ta : oe . fs A JOH N| tracts, equities, ms. NEW any| them. Com’ WAG ae ge or | trae » Gi . ne = bg py BROKE oe PANGUS R —_ U “bu - E SED. eet me oo papplea. ome 4927 REAL Est ~ a =A OR alue. EM 2.3972. 5 bed pay or 90 days—sam OSPITAL ee EN, — a and — Saenan LIKE NEW. Perry ) Ga. he he all i CHET AT ion near G Ay on BY. Aubura ATE “Boat od trait FE oa a" ¥ eas _afer 6 thom 8. eons. CR FE =— —~ e! kitehens mattress ;, PANEL || END 5 Soe A ee T ian Gin % “ai So RY RO Fone oe ETE Swap. Bur on FE 24708. . 121 AYNE OABERTS. ONE © exid ow 8 vr gown, — 7 —= and ‘eee ay Mie 5, Be Greteeh, 8 ating bulldosing, ¢ weie: i ; 5 406, ; per aw. : satirras t ggeenne- ‘A ROTATORS, 3 CENTS Fiend tucount Cal O8 FON fee ae roe ae OE Pa eee ete eae tad ot GLE shod Poca ES rece * Soe oe tie fgg, be Brne cota : , matchi R oh y sets = estimates, for or st ARDS or terms. « . rs. 3 good INVEST line ‘Bassinette — bend. Open ever: ING OCT. ISTH W "A $0.95.. 1 Of, BURNER diated es crane ty covers PE 32108 i Pea ape direct EEN POMPEINE BU land Coe for with y afternoon LION T" with cont: NIT, a" Perto in cover a ae ehote farm is, BUY sale. Priest poor for | gee ca GUE FRE. a = —) 2 vgun." Fara 2 3s uu E ONT V rts 0 OL. agg tank Toye i sine sng type | SAX CLARINET | Se St your servic ’ courteou 32 gneve line ‘Aiitiq a,” sliver, OIL HEATER nan D on ARE wh 16 TIRES, 7 “hoo. LAYLOC é , jane weet discounts Eee "pee cutmen ah rw far ae, nig RC oa a lon mtd Oe Wee ae | wm nonoina wURRLY 00] ER LESSONS ~ -HALLOWEEN FE 8-0441. layden at BARNES mms = Soe ee aes re Te eae Pony 0 (AxD REFRIG. “Body Sho ATT nla More Clearance a Tet. roneing Fee nant fe Ph ae C. HAYDEN, R S Fi Fon mag stasie gas 8 © ae exwino aes WACwiNe one op Equ geen standard makes of veral ay ag .” ‘ce Realtor wren ine You Bere ee ams.) 94? maker. FE 0-640. | ,QT. a PA system. PE 6-35 nae and tillers iste ot MLA ‘ M tons for oa IN you OM ge age RB ayments 96. mo. Caf tens PRESSURE, COOKER. |¢ oe ut 20 per cent il MUSIC CHER ea kien, BADE ha oney t . ete. FE sieke oe you Interested tn or? Are | REB Se 6 inch wheel e, training. bi disco and u 18 EA Sale 0 : J Loan 2-121. or 3 and & cleaner i UILT Ww jewing Center, | © INCH heel. OA 83640 bike, unt. (C Pp 13 + & = Farm Money to Leen. 9 w on 3" er homes’) Weetrie , WAGEINO SACRINES. | TILT ARBOR SAW WITH ines a a omplete en-| MUST anon | er. Equipment 76 Dog nORSOLATED, | STU Water sat er new & Sone Eectrie. SB. Jobnsce. le (ELECTRIC 3 router. #18, PE pases, | aul and mower over-|_+0 ah, RARMouY YY Kine. | uct AAA EQUIP ae 79 Yea a Ag Sn ANTY. CALL" S onten By Ny ny Hy REFRIGERATORS. LAST, YEAR’ ghasycenectiy. Lie Like conte. St E service.) Evans | PLAN a ma wes. Coment end martey Form equipment, MENT “MONEY SERV Bertman, Galetoh| Rosca wit te famiy| bert sanen, perfect reas |? TE wz | Pawemnent 5" palrog, FORKS PLAT ‘a| Berries You can: RVICE WILL T a Romschennee, dea aaa ¢ ok.| ames apen Secteet, in ome 8A am lwy. MA 5-787 ixie fuitmeyer. OL “te eo ‘re et gidest garden sll eae a a Your Sit Bate cS BBS | Baga BAngain PRICED. fie, Main as. toe ee sierra 16 acraan ied NOW. , ze _itove,_ MI & oe | TP SIN ante | 3 ion Root! at carry $147 fit S.4 Tempe * foxes, Manley _Leeeh,_18 LL, TRADE. * Bs eeFR IC a % 1b Ih, oF | taal ore is FAT WARWICKS eaten ca (meted teveas : ¢ aq 235, , : iat em ie te med of Butiog if fats We a “ oar: ont lazaway pig ng & ak / 4 sso vty PES, tt ac - — om woton in Pies ‘pet he feild, We de rifle 7 betere vo yea | Bl ARTS. Sele Ga ORE PN Oe | 2 SUiePLUS LUMB SigLLow hard bake pair” and code te own un fe ! oO : 50 a ER & f; at overhauled, Fue OR & TANK, Big fms g week. Open _W. Huron, . Co, |B e oR SINGER &F wih ‘ 3-449, tS Center. itt Drover + et" Free AND OG b 37084 | fll sacrifice 5, E di MACHINE. iH BE +é7TTl,; molly _— estimate, ADING. | $9.80, due ao. Hess porment Sh unting Coats & Pant ee PE 2397. ae. Sewing Center, ‘a ~~ itaulat a ts JOE'S Ate oat es, va 90 ‘pe seme Fer Sale Pots ise y i Pi SPOON ee ae AE i HE SOR Se Pole adi escent ee tAIS ER Ce a. Ee | He | ROLAND a0 gn Mobile Manor 2 > Be Fot Sale Tires 80A 298 sxow TIRES, TURES, ‘wets ‘Al U8 TI STATE witewals 503 8. GOODYEAR 670-18, $12.98 Teepe + oe eres whitewall ~ ED. y WILLIAMS. 451 8. Saginaw at Raeburn Aato Service 81 ontiac Auto W. " rokers "tJ. VAN WELT | “See M & M Motor Sales Inte model cars. CA anY Gonpy- PE 89157. = i, to 63, sane. . RETAIL BRANCH WD AT pitithe rend i LMOBILE DUMP|- SELLING OUT ALL CARS. EDDIE =| Steele, FE §-6204. Keego Harbor. a toe) “He ‘ ee ae HAUPT Pontiac Sales I Ray 2dr. V8, eguee. “hg Pr . heater, tite Rican, tesutik nietap, A reall. sy) Ponting 4 dr, sedan. a. Bvt at . Power steering, io & pete 4 ar, sedan, soteeatt My Ska Aly hardtop, Redio & heater, y “tel ble sonc penne a arg ei or $-1141 aL CARS. " 5-204. NORTH EX'|1000 8. Woodward, Birmingham SELLING ALL CA Te Steele, FE 6-9204. Keego f SEL! HOT SPOT eae agrmy ee HOUGITEN & SON Rochester’s Friendly: Olds Dealer 528 N. Main, Rochester OL 1-9761 “CARS. . FE 5-6204. Keego Harbor. “QUALITY” USED CARS ‘CASH FOR : 3 sessssss | a >| CLARKSTON | - Motor Sales ‘| Chrysler : Plymouth —_ ww. tone paint, price 1986 Plymouth 4 dr. Low mileage. 1 owner, very clean $996. 1963 Pontiac Chieftain gy } door. R&H. Bnd 2-tone. clean, $045. Terms. —~ 1986 Plymouth oe vV4_4 Le: bution Se isos. ben 1 ner” “beauty. This week's 1. Pt - outh pao Be og ge ar. Yi auve. | - R&H. $396. Terms. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS Spen Evenmge——Plea se Open MAple 5-5141 2 8. MAIN 8T., CLARKSTON SELLING at ALL CARS. EDDIE Steele, PE 5.0204. Keego Harbor. Pontiac Auto posers tS Bite # 5 z i 2 : “ ig * : e oe 32338 gesteasade 1951 to 1957 Models We Pay You OUR CAR HASKINS CHEVROLET 8 FRIEND” re Oakland ‘County 8 Fastest Growing Dealer” at M15 MA UJ “© STA —_ on, ryed steering, radio heater. Two tone paint with leather. —— V4 mo Stet nae low nae, He Take Over apa ‘$2. Chevrolet station wagon. tires, very good shape. OR pain after 5 pm 1982 HUDSON HORNET CLUB eoupe. treater, and 2-tone paint. Our stock No, *3910C. Runs good, $188. ~ NORTH CHEVROLET MI 42733 1000 8. Woodward, DELUXE FASSEN- ‘3 CHEVIE DEL t * coupe, clean, FE yi + a ee 54 Cert 2-Dr. ieher: Secor: tack ooeee Some. rubber. a reen body. Be mg & ive ‘this. one, it's a AUTO SALES 68 Oakland "FE 22351 ‘sé CHEV. #-TOP, LOW Sy A OE 4 . e S Call : Mr. | eli Belting pikes 1745. Lake Orion’ Motor Sales : a OF SALES No baer Dae | ener én. ret | | ees AP Newsloatures OR Birmingham | . : 1085, MERCURY — rT mo. . Seereen "| 1986 Se FORD 4+DR. WAGON. Full SBBS — i ae TER FAATION WAGON. oD. ‘3 $ Nell errs? ______ For Sale _Cars 9 For ‘Bele Cars 1953 « 83 “FORD CUSTOM. 2-podR, + . A Ohe-owner sharpie. ba ~ No. 63043, $489. Several | ‘53 Chevrolets at the same price. NORTH. CHEVROLET | MI 4-2736 1000 8. Woodward, Birmingham HUNTER'S SPECIAL Converted | International bus hed in blue. Mechanically Wired for 110 voits. ili take he te McNEAL For the Best Deal Dodge - Plymouth Dealer “aT Birmingham 638 8. Woodward MT 4-2042 "83 CARRIBEAN CONVERTIBLE. Pull wer, wire wheels & conti- “ysis. | Dental 28,060 miles. _ 52236. — RAY CHEVY 2-DR. 6 cyl, standard trans. R & H. Exc. cond, FE 3 1951 NASH RAMBI.ER, NO MONEY SELL MY EQUITY IN ‘57 Coronet Cony, D500 tras. Gotng in service. Ez Ex. ‘ion BIRMINGHAM} ¢=: SAFE-BUY USED — CARS NO MONE Y DOWN IMMEDIATE DELIVERY RY 8MALL DOWN PAYMENT MONTEREY — price. MERCURY CONVERTIBLE. Dome er Full price $1606. CONVERTIBLE. wcLiee Hanbtor. Sharp $905. “36 1350. ' y as" = v4, Bob F rost, Inc. LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER 280° Hunter Bivd. (U8. _ By-Pass. Around Birm en “til 9! “62202 MI 1962. FORD CUSTOM @ CYL. 8 19.76 mon pl Credit rks. P ae west 47500. frou Turner Fo DEMOS, DEMOS, DEMOS. 1987 Pord and Mercury Demos, Go- ing for the lowest price. Lake Orion Motor Sales M24 AT CLARKSTON FORD .— MERCURY My Pan “NO MONEY DOWN . ‘S. Ford 6 'R & M, 9306. ‘ & EF MTRS. 101 Senstanbe. PE 8- sik NV. RUNNIN CON- "50 be aaa! D GON re iG = ee: ~ salient Ze rt. rea |. pont. ki ° ai arn ° ‘62. FORD 4! AN I ‘DELIVERY. Good ” qa ILL. ACCEPT ‘hn (FORD, 9 RBDAN. rea ie ar oe + Da 8-2406. ‘63 PORD RED ‘aims BLOND _top. 78 B. Colombia. after 5. 1954 FORD CUSTOM 4-8 poogs. MI 42735 1000 8, Woodward, SELLING OUT ALL CARS. EDDIE _ Steele. PE 6-9204. Keego Harbor. | — radio, heater, original paint, nest No. N-J047. ced to es | NORTH CHEVROLET Birmingham SEE GROUCHO HERE |" NOVEMBER 1ST. 69 P.M. "55 PONTIAC “BRAID Rg FAIR UD EALINO DESOTOP YMOUTH DEALER CASS AT W. PIK) PE 2-016 .| St PORD 6, STATION WAGON, MILEA\ LOW OE, SPOTLESS $308.” PRICED TO SELL. 81 FORD ? DR. Va. PE 32-0568. 1987 FORD” Sickness forces me to be = Bi this ardtop: « Pairlane 2 white ¥-6, radio & heater operes: matic, white tires, nearly new Just take over my payments and let me nave some old car. 3-8250 i680 FORD RAW. \4. NO MONEY awe Assume yments of $8.65 . Cail Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks “Midwest. 47500. Harold Turner Ford, ie iene _ Bargain, me. SELLING OUT ALL Chas Bebe PORD, COUNTRY SQUIRE station wagon, EM 3-0081 ‘Steele. FE 5-0204. Keego Harbor. SPECIAL ‘eo sedan with Ford V-8 696 Auburn Ave. iiman métor, Studebaker rear end, full price, $125 Roger's Sales & Service VROLET BEL-AIR. 4DR. ‘$5 R&H, | ‘52 DeSoto down, As ° —" | 124. padi Ave. Cad, AT. RED & WHITE- aa Leal ‘hes ‘ABT. Pull AAA QUALITY 6 Months Guarantee R. & R. Motors Chrysler - "Plymouth $2305 oa ‘ome. c Sineahot” Full nt oe aiek Dr. Dyna. R&H, . $1206 na, R&H $ 7&5 sy Btae heat aja auto.” Be 308 $i ” pubber, ti ENINGS FE 28-6801. ‘83 PORD 4 DR. $5 DOWN AND assume small pay ments of $27.24 per month. Li Auto Sales, 1% 1s) 8 segs. 7a oes ‘$1 KAISER. RUNS CHEAP. _FE 4-7000. OPEN EV MERCURY MONTCLAIR Ld (ONTCLAIR, 1965. HT. nase very viaes | 6818-Cooley Lk. “Bright Spot , tare en te ek AUTO SUPER MART “5! CLEAN FULL ‘Tie 2 8 Meet FE) WINTERIZED NASEL SPECIALS CLEAN CARS |, Ghey Pel Air2:Dr. Siranemission =" $1888 |'56 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe BS eT Fm $5 Pontiac 2 Door "36 — 2 door blue - sb “4085 |°55 Cadillac Club C ae oe mectieeiae ‘SS Buick Convertible "MH AMbasendor & door. 310 “piss '55 Ford Club Coupe 1 eee Lancer’ 4 $1908 | 54 Cadillac 62 DeVille ALS ’54 Pontiac 2-Door SP EC] ‘4 Férd Se Pe : uper r ‘ Pe ae we is 33 Ford Holiday Co é oliday Coupe a "53. Chevrolet Club Coupe CHE, PIES | 82 Gheyster Sedan el Ee / n ! . JS Bey ‘at BH eT ord ( Convertible aha Fagg '51 Pontiae 2-Door ae 1 hardtop $485 50 Ford Pickup ; "Birmingham | JEROME - “NASH | Olds -Cadillac) eae Lake at Cass » E 8-0488 i + MI 42735 ear | 1000 5, Woodward, Birmingham OR CAR AR PAYMENTS. “TOO | BURDEN, FE 32-0555 | FOR! ‘| 22 Auburn, off Auburn FE 4-2131. ae SELLING OUT ALL CARS. EDDIE Belvedere V-8 4 dr, hardtop, auto. “| Belvedere Club sedan vV-8,- ALSO 3 1957 popass Biratnchas 635°8. Woodward mt 4-2042 ee vewwne eee eee owners de erebee iit NASH RAMBLER. NO MON. Slo.06 me eit inelt” it a. beds +1600, - Harold Ford. SIAC PEPE | Pia ~ see at Lakes " ae: NORTH CHEVROLET | top CDEMOSILE Pe ae new car trade- SELLING OUT ALL CARS. EDDIE alae 5-204. Keego Harbor. 1 Sharbow Mtrs.|; OLDS 1D 565 8. weodeera oo am * | OLDSMOBIL! 8, oe TOP. BR. “Power snites @ ing. Hy Low mileage. 314 Coolidge. NORTH Re 1954 Chev. Bel Air Hardtop 1953 Buick ‘ppociat —: 1963 Ford Custom Ser 4 MOST MAKES AND MODELS CHOOSE AUTO SALES 312_W. Montealm PE 40151 ” STARCHIEF 4 Radley enter sist. SACHS: SELLING OUT ALL CARS. EDDIE Steele, PE 5-9204. . CEN TRAL LINCOLN «1 M [ERCU RY "Safe-Buy"” VALUE. USED CARS CASs AT PIKE §8Ts. re 4-3885 PE 2-9167 Let use help you adiust boyy some lesa expensive model. Lake Orion Motor Sales CLARKSTO! Ma AT Dd | FORD — MERCURY MY 2-261] raxE ADVANTAGE OF OUR TER- 'S) OLDS CONVERTIBLE RIFIC SAVINGS now. ALL rae | : OR 3-9162. _ -ARE WINTERIZED. iss] OLDS 68. Ra RA, NO fia? dows, Assume peymenh of 32 Buick Special .:$ 495 ; onth. Mgr. Bed ri tt r. Parks. Midwest 7600. Har) $0, Seden nearly igh ‘eat old Turner Ford : years younger, pF Ry F . ee me wal bay Sie $5 3 Buick H’ top . x22 $1595 ake Orion otor Sales Sewer iJ Mae AT brakes, _ on Pig and white GOOD CHEAP TRANSPORTATION “ho ee taaet 1954. PONTIAC STARCHIEF. CUS- _ tom. 4dr. 18.000. miles. FE 5-0)78. PONTIAC 1966 2 DR. 2 TON . Whitewalis. Very clean. 12 &. FE 46378. _ Steele, FE 5-9204. Keego _Harbor. ~ Final . Clearance Sale’. 1957. Plymouth | Only. 6 bet: Savoy V-8 club sedan, —— white oe a, on “pain » $2171 ‘2. white walls, heater, electric factory invoice $2389. Belvedere V-8, 4 dr., sedan, auto. is, wash- electric paint. price to- eg sold Pesactly at factory fncoive $2209. Belvedere Sports coupe, V-8 hard- . Power steering, power brakes, = transmission, white © tnt, has everything. List price $3290 to be — at qunetly factory invoice steer washers, crvhine, fet and etc. 4 e price, $2906.29, “Y sai ; ae eee cues & 2 club sedans ~ ba =! old car or can ng | iy L . cin oo the tele BEE ‘McNEAL | For the Best Deal. Dodge - Plymouth Dealet 1963 WILLYS AEROLARK 4DOOR, Original Bor) 30 Reduced to sie, 1°54 Ford Convert. wz | 55 Buick Special .. trans. |"52_ Merc. 4-Dr. Sed. $ 495] WF tS eee oe od Fanieiaton ee "02 Chevrolet 2 4 & M2 to choose” trom” #388, ie down ‘and srt tow i mileage wilt eo <6. rok Mtr. Gales. e: 1950 PONTIAC RB. NO money down, Assume pa’ mane g. $8 65 Call Parks Ferme Ports 4-7500. Har. oa fom Hydramatic ry oe ae. 4 owner very clean. PE 6-684). SELLING ALL CARS. EDDIE _ Steele. Keego Harbor. So? 8T SCOTSMAN, 2 dr. Heater, . Turn Signals. wheel disc. Up to 29 Miles per. al, 61,660 delivered. Mazurek | _Mtr. Sales. 4-0687. _. "57 VOLKSWAGON Loaded, R & H. Undercoat, out- side mirror, . WW shield | w rs, ¢ e disks. Will take boat and car in trade. MY 2-1665 after 7 p.m, be seen at Walt's Barber of corner Walton end pang to 6 week- days. Ys heater and overdrive. NORTH CHEVROLET 1000 5. wel Birmingham rLL TOTE YOUR | EVERYBODY's CREDIT 1 GooD HERE wAsy ED is D Real ED. JON ES Used Cars 115 e STATIO $1 EEP ecw - “cy” OWENS Your FORD Dealer 100 ios” New Goodyear Tires. . Available on all '55-’57 models Car Guarantee On all "51 -'57 models—as long as you own the car. . DURING OUR ANNUAL Model Changeover Sale NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY! South Side. 211 S. Saginaw '56 VOLKSWAGON '56 PONTIAC $1605 RDTOP on . ‘i ar }1 7) 36 CHEVROLET 86 FORD us 55 CHEVROLET "55 CHEVROLET . ee . STATION, WAGON "$6 PONTIAC i STATON ay Acon 'S4 PLYMOUTH - : STATION WAGON '54 BUICK - $000 84 CHEVROLET 54 FORD - = 9746 53 CHEVROLET 52 CHEVROLET : eens _ “ee 51 PONTIAC ‘SO MERCURY ” rates Sano 56 FORD - $1195 North Side 63] Oakland Ave. S57 VOLKSWAGON ~ "86 VOLKSWAGON $1795 $1695 ao 56 KARMAN GHIA ‘857 FORD $2345 “500” u- ‘7 CHEVROLET ‘55 OLDSMOBILE Ri $7245 ; "$5 BUICK °55 CHEVROLET ' CENTURY HARDTOP HARDTOP $1445 $1445 55 CHEVROLET 55 PLYMOUTH #1095 $205 ’S4 CHEVROLET _ 54 FORD $746 $695 'S4 PLYMOUTH * °53 CHEVROLET $505 * $695 MANY TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS From $95 to $245 —* YOUR TERMS A Phone Call Brings a Courtesy Car to Your Door MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES "Your CHEVROLET Dealer” FE 4 4546 FE 4.4547 147 8. SAGINAW. ss PEC sO5-4101 SPUT-NIK'S — |- CAN NEVER COMPARE '. WITH OUR ALL NEW "B-58" * aw. | 56 Pontiac Starchf. $1995 Custom Catalina ocring and ‘brakes, power pad and & ome owner beauty set to give years of worry- ree service. serv: . -$1095 Bright red for the t hearts and in excellent for those who want more for their money. It's low in mileage and ® one owner. 54 Buick H’top ....$1095 ped with ar I power. ‘a and . $1495 #Dr. —. radio & heater, > tone gree white tire Clean. Drive it, you'll buy iti 53 Pont: 2-Dr. Sed. $ 595 8 cylinder. radio & heater, Hydra- matic, rung good, needs some ’53 Pontiac Convert. $ 795 £. sree. Myfrematic. radio . esboutenie ‘ase. ” seal oss car. 7 ‘54 Ford 2-Dr. Sed. $ 445 8 cylinder, exceljent running éon- | dition, needs some body work. "54° Pontiac Starchf, $1095 rT. Sedan, eee, eekee, Hiydramede.-¢ | and white fin finish '53 Buick H’top .. pv ary heater ‘inh, a broke. Its/a car to own, . -$ 795 5 youll be 0 Buicks (2 only) $ 195 "tar tos. 51 Chev. 2-Dr. Sed. $ 295 pate & heater, Powerglide, good 51 Buick 4-Dr. Sed. . $ 295 Excellent momaneshy sat equipped. 52: Pont. af Dr. Sed. $ 595 | ne ¢waer es ear t with’ 30,000" toiual ‘33, Ford Victoria . .$ 795 Swine sn Ra Ratt 1|'S1_ Pont. "Zr, Sed ..$ 295 Hydram: jouxwx atl ce FLYNN “OLIVER | BUICK | 210 Ofthord Lake Ave. FE 2-910 a del waft ee 6 © © we Sng Flowers , INSTEAD OF THE - WHEN YOU DRIVE A Goodwill. Used Car" car comes from the Pontiac Retail Store. '54 Pontiac 4-Door Sed. .$1095 ‘54 Ford Convertible Radio and Heater, Hyd atic - $1495 ‘56 Pontiac 2-Door Sedan $ 895 ‘$4 Ford Hardtop , Radio and Heater. standard Transmission. ‘03 Chrysler 4-Dr. fa Pontiac Catalina Cpe. $1595 '54 Chevrolet 2-Door . . ‘54 Pontiac Sta. Wagon 91195 Radio and Heater. : $1695 'S3 Pontiac Catalina Cpe. $ 895 YOU’ LL THENK OF \\ i PLOWERS Everyday is like a spring day when your nvert $1095 '55 Oldsmobile 4-Door ‘55 Pontiac 4-Door ...... Radio and Heater, Hi-Drive. ‘ 5 695 ‘53 Pontiac 2-Dr. Radio and Heater, Powerglide. : $ 3 99 ‘97 Chevrolet 2-Door ... ‘56 Pontiac Sta. Wagon . .$1995 ‘56 Pontiac Catalina Cpe. $1995 ESIC, fet Meter Mrerema, Pover ‘99 Pontiac 2-Dr. Sedan 91295 Redio and Hester, Standard Transmission. ‘55 Chevrolet Conv. V-8 .$1595 55 Ford Convertible . ”.. $1495 Radio, and Heater. Pord-O-Matic “PONTIAC nm REAL STORE. "GOODWILL USED CARS" 65 MT. CLEMI ST. FE3-7117, BEHIN D THE Post ~ FICE ” (22 he a =a or _ THE : PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1957. z { [3 ¥ * Seater acrscyt fea .- Today S Radio Pista = is > , WR, OM) CxLW, 900) Ww, (050) WCAR, (1198 WXYZ, (121) WPON, (1460) WIBK, (1490) TONIG WW, Tke $:00—WJIR, Wm, Sheehan | 1:90—WJR, Dr, Malone 600-WIR, Hows 11:00-—-WiR, Lenhart Ww, Minute Parede | WWJ. Harris, Maxwell WXYZ, Wattrick, McKensie| W Top of Towa W. e CKLW. News, Chase © WIBK, News, Casey WJBK. News, George 2:00—WLR, Ma Perkins WJBK, News, McLeod 11:36—WJR, Music WCAR News Martyn WW, News, Maxwell News, Page ; With Mason. WPON News. Lewis ae = i. eeches - ak © WCAR. Bhook :00—WIR Barris Vx into Wwa" Maxeel WEDNESDAY CFLW. ws, Dovid WCAR, Don Zee if MORNING wz rs 7: tom a legtcmgm ari Arthur Qodtrey "Sei. ews tnd Mrs. Burton WCAR, Page's Party WWJ, News, Hugh Roberts,| WxXYz, ‘Here "0. “O." Andergon| WCAR, Sports Pa Pie Music With Mason ant Woit ue awn & ese Pree, | nag hy :00—WIR, Guest House WJBK, Clark ' Qebrge 3:00—WJIR, Pat Buttram Wain 5 P Morgan WOAR News, she WPON, America to ienece'| WWJ, News, S-stay Matines| Say Fae Lewis Jr, ey "> | 10:30—W'V), Bandstand WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR. Patrick . iture CKLW, News, rail Morgan| WCAR, News WIBK, WJBK News, Reid WEGe: Chess $:30—WJR, House Party ramsey aes im | BEER BS ace [SST ct) hha eae CELW, ‘Heaiter, Music om | Wave peal Gitte: CKLW. News, Eddie Chase WCAR, News . «| 1:00—WJR, Dan Kirby CKLW. News, Davies $:00—WJR, Amos *n’ Andy, . ww, hg Roberts WJBK, News, Reid 4:06—W IR, Bands, Ans. Man WWJ, Great WXYZ. News, Wolf WCAR, News, B. Martyn WWJ, News, Confessions y Weather, anes CKLW. News, Toby David Don Mackt WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenaie : ‘Treasury Agent oun, sare ee 11:30—CKLW, v, Hurley, David wok moe Suny woe News, Caszy I Bcig News, McLeod 6:55 WWO. Wightline Tle WIR, Music Hall WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WJR, Musi¢ Ball W. Pimpernel 12:00—W. Vinal) “Ww. Jim “Deland WIBK. U. of D. Casey Siem: ee Devt WW, News F. Elisabeth | WXYR, News McKensie 9:00—WJR, Weather WCAR, News 1 Greet lavectees | SOEE Seka Mnees WW), News, tline . : WJBK, News, Sr. Bports, WXYZ, ly a t:t0— WIR, Jim Vinal WCAR. News Bruce Marty! 5:00—WJR, Lenhart, Musie aewte VWI, News, Roberts WPON, News, MacKinnon WWJ, News at 5, Deland WJBK, News, Casey WxYz, News, Wolf 12:30—WJR, Time for Music] WXYZ, Wattrick, McKens: 020 WIR, Oo You Kn CXLW, O'Dell David WXYZ, News, Winter Ww. Chase Wink, set Wi8K News Reid CKLW, News, Davies WJBK. News, McLeo¢e WCAR, Sheer 00 ‘AR, y | “ir see Pres. Biseabower | WPON: News. MacKinnon | MA) Waa ‘Mexwel | WPON, Music With Mason | $:30—WJR, Music Hall Jim Reeves 5:30—WJR, Music Hall Wie’ ee oo wiBK ioe ©. Oenen CRLW Nees Roches ews, T. KLW, q ee te a ser WCAR, WPON, Chuck Lewis ° WJBK. Sports, McLeod -- Today's Television Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. - Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—-WWSJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS - :30—(7) Big Show. 6:00—(7) Mr. Danger. (9) Popeye. (9) News, Sports. (2) Code - ©:15—(4) Weather. -€:%—(4) Box Four’ 6:30—(7) Annie Oakley. (9) M. Rooney Show. (4) Arbritator, (2) News. | 6:40—(2) Weather. - 6:45—(2) News. 7:00—(7) Sports Focus. (9) State Trooper. (4) Casey Jones. 2) \ny 7:30—(7) Sugarfoot. (9) Million Dollar ‘Movie. Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon ‘Blossoms in the Dust.” (4) Nat King Cole. John- ny Mercer. (2) Name That Tune - 8:00—(4) (Color) Ed Fisher. Betty ; Grable. (2) Phil Silvers, - 8:30—(7) Wyatt Earp. (2) Eve Ar- den, ai 9:00—(7) Broken Arrow. (9) The- ater. (4) Meet McGraw. (2) To Tell the Truth. 9:30—(7) Telephone Time. Story of family tensions in ‘“‘The Other Van Gogh.” (4) Bob Cummings. (2) (Color) Red Skelton. Mer- cedes McCambridge. -10:00—(7)_ West Point. (9)- Clatk’s | Jamboree. (4) Californians, (2) | $64,000 Question. 10:30—(7) Theater. “Black Jim/|? - Hawk.” (9) Steve Wilson. (4) Crusader. (2) Highway Patrol. -11;00—(7) Soupy’s On. (9) News. _ - (4) News. (2) (Color). News. -11:10—(9) Weather. 11:15—(9) Starlight Theater. Signe .. Hasso, “Strange Triangle.’’ (4) | 4 ther. (2) Miss Fairweather /11:20—(4) Sports. (2) Sports. -14:25—(2) Nightwatch Theater. “Fight for Your Lady.” Ida Lu- pino, 41:90—(7) night. Night .Court. (4) To- WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:60—(2) Meditations. 6:55—(2) On the Farm Front. 7:00—(2) Jimmy Dean. (4) Today. $:45—(2) Cartoon Classroom. 8:55—(4) Faye Elizabeth, 9:00—(4) Romper Room. 9:30—(2) Ladies Day. (4) Amos ' Andy. (7) Our Friend Harry. 10:00—(2) Garry Moore. lene Francis. (9)* Movie. 10:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey, Treasure Hunt. 11:00—(4) Price Is Right. _ 11:25—(7) News. (9) Billboard. _—— Strike It Rich. (4) Truth or Consequences.. (7) Robin and Ricky. (9) Howdy Doody. 11:45—(7) Noontime Comics. (4) Ar- (4) WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(2) Hotel Cosmopolitan. (4) Tic Tac Dough. (9) Children’s Shows, 12:15—(2) Love of Life. 12:30—(2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You. (7) The Erwins, (9) Mary Morgan. ’ 12:45—(2) Guiding Light. . 1:00—(2) Douglas Fairbanks. (4) Tex and Jinx. (7) Charm The- ater, (9) Movie. 1:30—(2) As The World Turns. (4) (Color). Howard Miller Show. :00—(2). Our Miss Brooks, (7) hf Little Margie. 2:30—(2) House Party. (4) Bride and Groom. (7) Topper. “UAW on Trial “in U.S. Court the UAW,” locally. Charges “Union Made legal TV Broadcasts During Election DETROIT ® — The United Auto Workers Union goes on trial ii U. S. District Court here today orf charges of making illegal political television broadcasts during the 1954 Congressional campaign. . * * * The case will be heard by Judge} Frank A. Picard and a jury. The union is accused of violating a section of the Federal Corrupt Practices Act which forbids banks, corporations and labor organiza- _jtiong from making political ex- penditures in‘ connection with fed- eral elections. The p were called “Meet and were televised * * * Union attorneys argued that the indictment violated Constitutional _{the depression days of the early Until his meeting with the psy- 2:50—(9) News. 3:00—(2) Big Payoff. (4) (Color). Matinee Theater. (7) American Bandstand. (9) Corliss Archer. 3:30—(2) Verdict Is Yours, (9) Movie. 4:60—(2) Brighter Day. (4) Guna for a Day. 4:15—(2) Secret Storm. 4:30—(2) Edge of Night. (7) Do You Trust Your Wife? 4:46—(4) Modern Romances. 5:00—(2) Susie. (4) Comedy Time. (7) Fun at Five. (9) Dance Party. : 5:30—(2) Beat the Clock. (4) Ray Milland. (7) Mickey Mouse Club. Picard agreed with them and in February of 1956 dismissed the in- dictment without a trial. No individual is a defendant in |the case. If the union is found guilty it could be fined up to $5,000 on each of four counts. Quartet Nearing guarantees of freedom of speech.| - |believed that a guy nearing 40 “LedtoCareer _lby Psychiatrist Paul Ford Says That He Began Acting at 38 on Doctor's. Advice By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — Psychia- zooming. to movie stardom made it the hard way,— head ge o Not just discovered on couch, though, cy hn oe that. Much The psychia- trist came right out and told full-ef-fears, unsuccessful Paul Ford he was an actor when he didn’t even know it himself, The psychiatrist, the late Dr. olon el Hall Heads for Screen Shantole at t 56 OUT OF UNIFORM — Patil Ford, who plays the beleaguered Col. Hall on»Phil Silvers’ television show, switches to a romantic comedy role in his new movie, ‘The Matchmaker,” with Shirley Booth. Ford, now 56, became an actor at 38 on the advice of a psychiatrist. ’ ling the Union of South: Africa. been a difficult decision. She W. Beran Wolfe of New York, laid “it on the line for Ford, who just co-starred with Shirley Booth in Paramount's “The Matchmaker" during a recess’ as the nation's best known Army colonel, Sgt, Bilko's commanding officer on Phil Silvers’ TV show. * x * It happened years ago, back in 30s. But it's as vivid as today's big paychecks to 56-year-old Paul Ford, who didn’t become an: actor| | _ until he was 38 and: the father of five children, chiatrist, whom he asked for an walking down the street and sud- denly I'd be afraid but I didn’t know what I was afraid of"’—Ford was everything except a success. * * *« He was a newspaper proof- reader, newspaper ad salesman, door-to parents who objected to his marriage to ex- Miss Universe Hillevi Rombin of Sweden. These friends say the bride is intelligent and a lady, and why. the conflict? . Il asked Elsa tk * ; Comedian Larry Nixon of ‘Miami! says he's at the age that, ‘Mrs. Errol Flynn (Pat Wymore) is re~ turning to the U.S. to hear more about his troubles . . .. Jane Morgan dyed her hair pink to match her new wardrobe . «+ Darla Hood of the. Merv Griffin ra- .|dio show is the former child star on ie “Our Gang” comedies. Inside stuff: Liberace, doing the Big Record” show, wore leopardskin under- — © wear... Bx-Mayct Robert Brisces vl - Jeasel's next album .., Sophia Leren’s husband, Carle Ponti, may appeal to the Vatican for apprceval of their marriage. Ava Gardner refused interviews to three major magazines in a week. just after he pulls his stomach in , somebody says, “Why ‘don't you pull your stomach in?” I checked up on how Jerry Lewis is making out as a single and found that in addition to busting night club records, his) _| “Delicate Delinquent” movie will gross $3 to $5 million, and that “Sad Sack,” for Hal Wallis, is expected to do even more because’of the title, Paramount’s delirious with bliss about it, and while wishing he and Dean Martin would get together, fears it’s brag now, since Jerry’s done so well financiaily, TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Rob’t Q. Lewis’ secretary insisted she wouldn't work after she was married. said, “if it’s good enough for Queen Elizabeth, it’s good enough for yout” «+. That's earl, brother, “Honey,” Bob (Copyright 1957) actor was born at the age of 38. Broadway stage and: radio act- ing followed—‘Everyone took for granted I had been in the theater] for years,’’ Ford laughs. ‘No one was just starting out in the busi- ness.”’ x * * Tha Army colonel role in ‘‘Tea- house of the August Moon” on Broadway landed Ford in the com- edy spotlight and the Phil Silvers TV show put him in an even brighter one. Now, the grandfather of seven with three more due, Paul Ford is headed for film comedy star- School Sinking Fund Carries in Monroe MONROE (# — A special four- Augustine, 39, of Milwaukee, began a one-year probation term today | following his conviction on a charge, of negligent homicide in the Oct. 11,1956, traffic death of Mrs. Mary Cosson. Circuit Judge Ernest W. Brown imposed the probation after com- pletion of a non-jury trial here yesterday. Mrs. Cosson; 86, of Menominee, | ‘|was killed when hit by a car driven attempted toi} by, Augustine as she cross_a street in Menominee, Rhode Island, the nation’s small- est state, has the shortest motto: “Hope,” dom in “The Matchmaker.” 1:45~(2) News. 8:00—(2) Captain Kangaroo. uf Cartoon Carnival. kilowatts. \Goal After 4,500 The Grand Coulee hydro-electric plant is rated at about 1,316,000 Miles in Canoe JACMAN;, Me. # — Four modern voyagers have reached Maine on their rugged, 4,500-mile canoe trip alle pinn from Denver, Colo., to Old Town. Valerie —— i After an eight-mile portage yes- ‘a terday, the quartet camped for the 13 Withdraw | night at Penobscot Lake, just in- ot Coan side the Quebec boundary line and 16 Gombiir's ) about 20 miles north of Jacman. sian —- 17 Worm ' They still have more than 150 20 Tart gruelling miles to go. Much of 21 Gives : the lake and river waterways 26 Thoroughtares ‘ | they. cag cover = mmc 5 ) low this fall, gnd weather q AR AN times : oe | growing worse by the day. Old = _J Town had a minimum tempera- sos 16 above early today. group are Gerald Hewey, n-yearold ski lodge operator at | Aspen, Colo., who comes from Cape Elizabeth, Me.; Earl Rickers, 29, } a writer from Chester, Calif., and two Aspen ski instructors—Ed Ves- up} tal, 29, and Bengt Soderstrom, 32. mistakes” ms ‘ee A local inventor is mgking a her real contribution — peace. Pe Deeds He’s wo rking on a bre: ble chil- 41 Get -up ways to handle a woman,|. - bf nee I says Quote,.and adds plaintively, Si Permit “Does anybody know ‘what they i Paving are?’’--Ear! Wilson | Le vcs * * * He's been in six movies before, playing detectives,’ .a.. Western sheriff, a police captain. His com- edy talents weren't discovered an- til “Teahouse” in 1956. Detroit Men Sentenced Driver Gets Probation for Negligent Homicide MENOMINEE, (# — Eugene J. RCA COLOR TY Sales SWEET’S RADIO-TV i ¢ and ocrvrice for Holdup in Reno SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Two Detroit men have been sentenced to five yeats in prison by Federal Judgé Sherill M. Halbert for an attempted bank robbery at Reno, Nev, The men, Petru Doncea, 25, and Howard Shanks Jr., 23, were ar- rested in nearby Aburun last month. FBI 4gents said they tried to burglarize the Keystone branch of the First National Bank. of Ne- veda, but got no loot. Both pleaded guilty. . Ors) audi | & [- UIT iP iPIiMiOlelT irish jad J te tt ‘Ol | Ga iis $3.80 4/5 Quart Code No. 770 71 years hefore the Airplane began distilling fine whiskey WILLIAM. PENN BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 3995 STRAIGHT WHISKEY, 6 YEARS OR MORE OLD, 659% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. | GOODERHAM & WORTS LTD, PEORIA, ILL. WILLIAM $2.39 cote No, 771 By BOB CONSIDINE (Last in Series) NEW YORK (INS)—John Daly was in radio news before “What's My Line?" was a gleam in the collective eye of Mark Goodson and Bill Todman, There's a story behind how he and the radio microphone got together. It is not easy to condense, for everything seemed against that union, includ- * * Daly was born in 1914 in Johan- nesburg, South Africa, second son of an American mining engineer from Boston and London-born Mrs. Daly, Tragedy struck the little fam. ily in 1923, The father died of ulcers. and tropical diseases picked up during explorations for the United Mining Corporation. The widow made what must have Daly was a lonely kid at Tilton School (N. Hampshire), which The other boys railed at his “accent” and the clothes his mother thought proper for a schoolboy to wear, * * * When finished there, he went on to Boston College, a Jesuit school, and weathered two tough depres- later was to hail him as its fore-!— ‘|most graduate, Worked Way Through College: Daly Endured Hardships Before He Earned Fame thought on an early panel show named “Celebrity Time,’ run by Conrad Nagel. Eighteen weeks in the role of Walter Burns in “The Front Page’ enraged critics but gave. Daly additional confidence before the camera, Goodson and Tosman, like Big Brother, were watching. They had found their boy-for “What's My Line?” The rest is history. Daly eats like a longshoreman but stays like q whippet around the . beltline, He is a rarity in his in- come bracket in that he has no agent, knows how to read a con tract, argues his own income tax returns. He plays the market and the horses shrewdly, gets a week of pent-up physical fury into his backswing on the golf course, is a notoriolusly subtle check likes a drink of old Scotch when day is done, is regarded by poker playing triends aa manna, *. * But ke he's a reporter, and we're grateful he chose other media, | HAMPTON SPECIALS x, © ne tag paling Sune, bi on } GOOD T.V, SERVICE MEN bO- IT-VOURSELF. Tube Tester, sion years. To pay his way, he drove an elevator, sorted wool for a house engaged in that trade, dabbled in amateur theatricals, was a part-time employe on Station WLOE, for which he told the time, COUNTED CAPITAL * STREETCARS Daly moved to Washington in 1935 to'save money. He had met Margaret Criswel] Neal, a William aeate TV's But wasn’t as bad as he RCA COLOR TV fall Us-Free Home Trial, i aaieeeeeaeiteeaineemineninamemmemamenennmenanneremesseneaaanl PORTABLE TELEVISION 6 te te 95 Up ‘OPEN 9:00 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 Have VALLELY’S - Install ALUMINUM SIDING ot Dae not He $77.50 a week, which is | " roughly what Uncle Sam permits NO MONEY DOWN. him to keep of his salary today, FuA TERMS ae During the early Washington summer of 19%7 Daly learned that | OL 1-004! Station WRC was anditioning sum. Evenings OL 1-4623 mer-replacement : COLOR TV SERVICE RCA = SYLVANIA WEST! "GENERAL ELECTRIC ALL SIZES! ALL TYPES! _ Don’t ‘Delay — eee Act Now! NOW IS THE TIME TO LET US BUILD YOUR GARAGE! NO DOWN F.H.A. PAYMENT TERMS DERN! FEderal ~¥ s. Jessie ‘<4 Rede “Build With the Builder’ COMPLETE SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES —s_ | 2-7004 - +. toa eS & EVE. and = OR 3.2276 : Dd g M Bui ding Serve \ ZATION a mm PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, octonrn mm ts : Add a twist of lemon _ peel and you've got it made. Be sure it's Smirooft the Vodke of Vodkas gin, Ste, Pierce Sire! Fa, (Dn. of Hoenn), Hartford, Comm His great talent as a discoverer “DON'T WAIT - ACT NOW SPECIAL! ROCK WOOL ; “Snes 98 ; We Also Have a Complete ick of @ BALSAM WOOL = ALUMINUM FOIL ® ROCK WOOL @ GLASS WOOL “casi CARRY 4 Wood or Aluminum DONALDSON LUMBER , 27 Orchard Lake _FE 2-8381 Eo Sashes Combination Door | i | banner the greatest galaxy in film history. ‘ Johnson and Margaret. O'Brien. | ster” MGM's | erama Productions Carp. |ture as dissident directors of | Loww's, Inc., ‘meeting elected Mayer a director | but a court later held that the ses-|and MGM's profits rose with the in- creased output of glamorous, over- stuffed movies during World War\Goetz. Il; After the war, glamor wasn't jenough, nor were stars. Mayer eventually was eased out and Dore Schary, former ’ production boss at RKO, was selected to bol- ® sagging fortunes. Mayer became chairman of Cin- This hic siber. he was projected back into the MGM pic- the parent concern, itried to take over management of poate Joseph -R. Vogel, Loew's | president, charged that Joseph Tomlinson, Canadian contractor, and Stanley Meyer, directors, had been “conspiring, with the guid- ance of Louis B. Mayer, to seize control of the cormpany.” Dissident directors at a rump sion was illegal. variety theater in 1907, rebuilt it booked the passion ‘play, a hand- colored movie of the rok sme in. stage 4 eb Aare i Apotg Hite mali took over part of the stable op- erated by his son-in-law, William Mayer's salary was the highest in the nation for seven years. In 1943, A a la as are it was ’ | WDy UL asses. € needing pictures for its ved theater chain, bought the: company he had helped to or- ganize, * * * Mayer began production with May-| er at the helm. Productions under his leader-| ship included ‘Ben Hur,” “The | Big Parade,” “The Merry Widow” ts MARTIN! For SMOKELESS and ODORLESS GAS _INCINERATORS ¢ PRICED FROM 569. 95 Call ‘ WITH 10 Yr. WARRANTED J Y¥ler 8-5044 ) ™ "for the ‘Full FIRE BRICK LINING, forthe e DISTRIBUTED +. 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