f ; é / The Weather U. 8. Weather Bureau Forecast Not Much Change in Temperature (Detatis Page *) 117th YEAR x*t eq _ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959—48 PAGES . THE PONTIAC PRESS _ . UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL , ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ ie Home / Edition aS gh Williams Shuns GOP Plea to Support Tax Plan ; . Appraiser Says City Art Find Worth §8-10 Million | | Other Experts Cautious; Ten Paintings Claimed to Be Masterpieces Again ee gt Together ging | BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (P—A Chicago art appraiser} today hailed a set of paint-| ings dug out from under an} immigrant’s bed and a| closet as “the greatest art! \find of the century.” He. said they’re worth 8 to 10| million dollars. ~—~Some art authorities) | weren’t so sure. They said) | they'd like’to see the works’ ‘for themselves. | * * * Alexander Ziatoff-Mirsky, art | appraiser and restorer who has, ihis own studio, declared 10 of the dozen paintings are masterpieces from the Italian Renaissance. | Que of them he identified as | | the ‘‘Madallena” by Michelan- | gelo de Caravaggio and valued | | at more than one millien dollars. AP Wirgphote A HAPPY MOTHER — “Oh, my baby! My baby!”’ cried Mrs. Marilyn Vickers, 19, of Pontiac after being reunited with her four- month-old son less than 24 hours after he was abducted from a Chicago hotel room by a baby sitter. Mrs. Vickers had recently ~ MRS + J ‘WATCH YOUR HAT’ — Ducking under an airplane wing during their inspection yesterday of hangar facilities at Pontiac Municipal Airport are (from jeft) City Manager Walter K. Willman naa fficials Tour cm AIRE eee | Sees eagle ices Rak SS Sree ae a Ss - @ ee and City Comn John A. Dugan study of its use Submits Record $4,622,780 (This is not the same Michel- jangelo who painted the Sistine) Chapel.) Even as announcement of the! |\discovery came Thursday in film- ‘land attorney Jerry Giesler’s of-| ifice, a rift developed between the jowners and their agent, moved to Chicago. She vowed today to return to Pontiac. Pontiac Baby Is Foun Sate After Kidnaping The long wait is over Tor Mrs. Marilyn Vickers, @/ine: Charles di Renzo a friend|$4,622.780 — more than $1,400,000 young mother from Pontiac working in Chicago as a.who developed into their agent,/higher than 1959's—was adopted By PETE LOCHBILER By holding the line on wages * + a. ‘again, Pontiac General Hospital Alfonso Follo, 40. a television|hopes to end its four-year streak lrepairman, and his sister. Maria|in the red next year ae ™ Airport = he 4 visual SR sath a, vf) * 25a Black Rakes Rebel Dems Over Coals In something fike £ DR.'s fa mous fireside chats — but without the fire — Michigan Supreme Court Justice Eugene F. Black raked Democrats over the coals last nigh! for their opposition to a constitu- tional convention *® * * The outspoken justice urged his fellow jurists to drop everything else and rule on whether the 1958 statewide can be affirmative despite being defeated as it lacked a clear majority of those voting election. | Black said it should only take a simple majority of those vot- ing on the issue to pass, as he opined as Republican attorney general in 1948. The vote for a convention - cut in the Democratic Party better |stop its negative attitude toward Fund, I'm compelled to say off- { }a convention,’’ he urged. ‘‘We can't sit around and say we aren't go- or | Senate Session Ends on Almost Hopeless Note Without Trust Fund, Nuisance Levies Are Inadequate: Governor LANSING (?—-A dtamat- ic Republican plea to Gov. Williams fell flat today, leaving Michigan’s cash crisis situation as hopeless- ly deadlocked as ever GOP Senate emissaries called upon the governor in his office to appeal for Democratic help in putting through their emergency nuisance tax program. “Without the Veterans Trust hand it's no solution,’’ Williams told Sens. Paul Younger of Lan- Pentiae Press Phote (ing to aid the call of a conven- sing and Frank D. Beadle of St. 1issioners Wesley J. Wood and Four other commissioners also toured one of the city’s two big hangars during a by business and private fliers Pontiac General Eyes Balanced Budget tion until we get this or that.” * * * Democrats opposed a convention last year saying delegate repre- sentation under the present sys- tem would be heavily Republican “The reason the Republicans are in the soup they are today is that they were against every- thing,”” he said, ‘‘Let’s not let that happen to us.’ Black spoke to some 27 mem- bers of the Bloomfield Democratic The budget forecast showed a'that its financial estimates were Club at the home of Mr. and Mrs year-end operating deficit of only only good guesses, since the ever- Joseph § Radom. in West Bloom- $329 changing status of the physical field Township. This estimate was arrived at only after provision for $187,000 to be set aside to cover depre- ciation, : tees -last since the hospital's operation waitress. had made the matter public ‘gil syered “_o by was cointel bs the expansion Her four-month-old boy, James, was found unharmed, Mrs. ae aan aw \Ccmmnission.tor approval . tages eee oe hes Patt ; ;~,| Ohester, , know | ste ; in red and re- by FBI agents last night m now whether the pictures will be lhe * , ‘serves pon Th. depreciation have Adding up its estimated reve- a Gary, Ind., hotel, about} offered ftor/ sale or exhibited. an expenses in 1960,|SUtfered worst of all, 16 hours after he was kid-| “It’s all up im the gitmew,” be [18° found it has a good ’* * &t naped by a baby sitter. pou ar said the enantons| R22 Of ending up in the black.! Once again, the hospital warned mn child, vowed ‘to Bieces es as | united with 9) adore ‘ecatalogist for the : ‘ leave Chicago today and Tetum to|Vaticad and an expert on Renais\CQUtist Plunges Nice Weather Seen Pontiac. art. Porcella spent four F Ball “Ob, may baby! My aby: et ee ate yo Bey for Football Fans Mrs. Viekers, 19, erled as she Hodis said to New Record embraced her son. The blond, blue-eyed baby had ween — — _— st night! Vatican museums said Porcella after Sasi crogee ~ Ah ge was employed as a technician in 7 a oS So ad begn the reorganization of the Vatican aoecane ies See eee pes Art Galleries from 1933 to 1934 or sii room while she was at work.|1935 but, according to available FBI agents arrested the fitter, records. was not in charge of cat-| Mrs. Diane Varner, 27, 1 night! sloging or evaluating and did not while she was drinking in Gary, | hold a top job. Ind., tavern several mile m the | . ce | (The director added that he had Chicago hote| where Mrs. Vickers) nad us official ti ith and her son lived. / | The baby was fou alter the Vatican for at least 24 — | (An official the Italian jin a room at the ngarby Stanley | of Hotel. Physicians af Gary’s Meth. oo eele is art department ‘odist Hospital said/he was hungry Force#a is oa | but tharwine in id ect caution, first-rate and second-rate art bend Mrs. Varner, /who is separated perts although he may have be- ame ner “ame : come a_ recognized authority WASHINGTON Ww — The Air Force today claimed that the longest parachute jump in his- tory was made this week from an open balloon gondola 76,400 feet over New Mexico. Captain Joseph W. Kittinger made the record-breaking leap, the Air Force said, surviving low as 104 degrees below tero in the descent to the desert at the White Sands missile range in southern New Mexice. Kittinger took off in an open basket borne by a 300-foot plas- tic balloon filled with helium gas. It took 90 minutes for the balloon to reach its maximum altitude. At that point, the gon- dola was cut loose from the helium bag and _ Kittinger plunged about 66,000 feet in a WORKED IN VATICAN / (In Rome, the director of the: DIANE VARNER Hunter Charged in Fatal Shooting * * “Ve have alwavs * |Women's Federa) Reformatory at| known ‘the, , . , | Alderson. W. Va.. where she served | paintings were worth a gteat deal) free drop before his parachute Former ‘Potato King a years for an Amarillo, Tex..'of money,’ Mrs. Hataburda said.| opened automatically at 10,000 ae lanapping. ' |\“Of course. we didn't know how, feet above the earth’s surface. ls Termed Victim of Mrs. Narner was arraigned! much.” | The Air Force said Kittinger, Manslaughter ;Thursday night before U.S. Com-| The paintings have been handed, whe is with the Aerospace medi. jmissioner Wilbur Glendening at\down in the aritsocratic Italian) cal Laboratory at Wright Air . . Hammond, Ind., on a charge of|family for generations. They were} Development Center, Dayton, An Emmet County hunter wasiigfaoing’ and. taking the boy|shipped into the United States in| Oblo, was tm “good shape” after charged today with involuntary; /Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | the drop. ee manslaughter in the fatal shooting | f Jack Williams, f ly of ® ° ee Oxford Township, SS, Parting Words of Public Works Official Schone Roy Bauers, 52, of Carp Lae, | Emmet County was fo be arrai in Cheboygan Municipal ‘ourt | later today. Known in Oakland County as the “Potato King,” Williams, 62, of Mullett Lake, was shot if the back of the head Wednesday while hunt- : .. ing 10 miles west of Cheboygan. fy = is > and shoul-| slow tm getting things done. ers above any other county in| Schone placed the blame 6n Ca-} State Police said Rawers | vichigan, Harold K. Schoné said'rey and not on the other eight! hee orange! — the fm |there’s plenty of room for improve-| members of the committee, which, ie _* on he went ment. jto date, has accomplished but, one! me aie ae hy |, Needed mére than anything else| major reform—the merger of the| 7 7 inde on is. a top administrator, declared) offices of county clerk. and register! aid oot ‘know was | Schone, acting director of the Coun-|of deeds. firing at a deer. ty Department of Public Works. After the shot, Bavers said he went to investigate and found Wil- liams lying on the grouni. Branches apparently set up as a blind surrounded the body. Although be said Oakland Coun-| John L, Carey, was “way too done under present Jaws. Asked why it hasn't, Schone said some officials are reluctant to en- ee + | Schone, 45, has been aésociated| with some form of government; since 1933. He is considered one of the country’s top public adminis- ae es ani He ts past chairman of the De- Bauers and his brother Charles! «oaxiand County is probably| troit Metropolitan Area Regional called police. |mere progressive than the majority, Planning Commission and has Police said Roy Bauers first jof counties in the United States,'| served as president of the Detroit — told them he liad shot at a deer | Schone said. Metropolitan Area Chapter of the and Williams moved into his line &:i:%. American Society for Publie Ad- of fire. He was critical, however, of the) ministration. Williams was the third hunter) won ee et tinea «! *~ * * to die in Michigan of gunshot) nny indy nial : oa The former city manager of Bir- wi s since the season opened SPCC’ study committee created) mingham, Oak Park and Harbor} Syhday two years ago to study reforms ID) syringe: said some Oakland County) He had a potato farm on Bald- | ‘he goverment, Officials are wrong in believing win road in Oxford Township be-| He called for the abolishment [that law changes are necessary be- fore moving to Mullett Lake about) of the Board of Auditors and sald jfore reorganization steps eight years ago. j the special committee, headed Football fans are going to have it perfect weatherwise this week- end Saturday will be cloudy with a high of 38, with a chance of light rain or snow by night. The low for tonight will be 25 The thermometer which rose to 36 Thursday afternoon has fluctu- ated slightly today. At 10 a.m. the wind velocity and direction was one mile easterly. At 2 p.m. the thermometer read ing was 35 in downtown Pontiac News Flash VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — America’s eighth Discoverer satellite rocket reared skyward today in quest of a long - sought majo r break- through in space exploration— recovery of an object from orbit. Prime mission of 78-foot Dis- coverer VITI ts to kick out a 300-pound nose cone capsule se it can be caught in the air or plucked from the sea. By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. | Springfield Township Supervisor |realized. Much. he said, can be act the necessary changes believ--were — ing the ‘‘line ofleast resistance is sometimes the easiest.’ “A lot of the fault rests with , the lack of initiative on the part | of the Board of Auditors,”’ he said. Although he praised veteran jhead auditor Robert Y. Moore, for {contributing much to the growth of the county, Schone said “the |job is getting too big for Bob.”’| by naming an administrator, who Believed by many to be in line for Moore’s post — if he had RYLAND AEA |stayed on — the DPW head mod- lestly said one of the r@asons he was leaving his $17,500 position |was because he felt it wrong that! some officials were attempting to ‘pattern Oakland's new government so he could head it. He said he thought this was hampering the ireform movenient. { ~~ * * Would he ever return to take the!’ itop spot here? he was asked. | “If at the time they developed! lsome reorganization,” he an-| iswered, “I'd consider very strongly | j~based on what the conditions, plant under the expansion program makes long-range forecasts diffi- cult. “Our setup will be . quite changed next year, so that it is impossible to base this budget entirely on past experience,” ex- plained dames Clarkson,. Board chairman. The hospital more beds in use than ever be- expects to have) * * * His family room discussion went way back to 1898 when Michigan first thought of changing its 1850 constitution. He called this the start of ‘‘a comedy of errors ex- cept for its tragedy,”’ Like it is today, wasn't sufficient. | cial m it was ruled then that a simple majority for @ convention Clan A few minutes later, the Senate adjourned without further action and Williams took off for Toledo, Ohieo, where he was to address the national convention of Young Democrats. Williams restated to Beadle and Younger his position that 110 mil- lion dollars in new taxes are re- ‘quired to put the state back on its financial feet He said there are ‘no mathe- matics under the sun’ that would bear out Republican contentions that the 74 million dollar emeér- gency tax program wil! adequately meet the state’s cash crisis prob- em. GOP ‘IN LINE’ Younger said the Republican cau- cus, badly split in seyen hours of closed door meetings yesterday, substantially had fallen in line be- hind the tax package. to the current finan- “‘Biack predicted worse! The surprise huddle apparentiy’™™ fore, more patients and more gross trouble in eight months. “We've the situation as hopelessly , got to get rid of the bitter parti-/@*adlocked as ever. income. Gross income is expected to sanship which is tearing us apart,” jtop $5,000,000 for the first time./he said. He didn’t sey bow. | | Correspondingly, the hospital éx- * * * Beadle and Younger, the Repubii- loan caucts was adjourned and the pects to pay out more in wages); Now considered a non-partisan entire senate quit until Tuesday bigger institution. NO WAGE HIKES But there is no provision for any across-the-board wage in- creases or for any additional posts in the administrative staff * * * As part of last year's crash pro- gram during the height of the hos- pital’s fiscal crisis, hourly-em- ployes had to forego annual raises. There'll be more employes — about 50 were hired back last month — but the hospital in- tends to continue to keep its present ratio of 2', employes per patient, slightly below the state average, said Harold R. Euler, hospital administrater. There were two cautious as- sumptions in preparing the budget Anticipated revenues are based on the probable income from only 349 beds — the number expected to be in Dperation at the end of this year, Sometime next year. how- ever, the hospital expects to have another 40 in operation. These will come whenever remodeling of the east wing is finished and the ex- pansion program is completed The final 49 beds are expected (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Oakland County Good, but Could Be Better submitting my application like anybody else.’ Schone, who takes over his job on the West Coast Dec. 15, said q weakness today is that there's much to be done but mest officials don't know whose responsibility the task is. He said the government hierarchy is too unwieldy. There's very. little chain of command. Oakland County could solve this (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) In Today’s Press Sn REE hart ea CR Paonia Ph Be Comics 40 County News 2 Editorials 6 High School . Markets ; : 4 Master Your Tensions 9 Obituaries ee . 8 | Sports .. 32-35 Theaters 38-39 TV & Radio Programs 7 Wilson, Eari ren 39 Women's Pages . 20-28 \ did, however, say he wished jus- tices could return to the old sys- tem of being nominated, elected and serving as partisans. ‘‘The present system is loaded with evil.’ Black said. Justices are nominated at pojiti- cal conventions, yet are elected and supposedly serve on a non- partisan basis Chicken Out of Show LONDON (UPI)—Ofticials of next month's National Poultry Show announced yesterday that no poultry will be shown at the show because of current poultry diseases jand other expenses to operate a!-:nemocrat’ on the court. Black "st. Only five members showed up for today’s session. ' Younger told Williams that Re- publicans are “trying the best we can’’ to comply with his rerequest for mutual responsibility in work- ing out a tax answer. “The people are most anxious to get the problem solved,” he said. * * * In addition to the governor's ac- ‘ceptance of the emergency tax package. Younger asked Williams to go along with the Republican plan on constitutional ballot propo- sitions next year One of these calls for a state- wide vote on a penny increase in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) —— —$ Sorrowtul Curtice Attends Funeral of Friend He Shot ANN ARBOR \? — Harlow H. Curtice, retiréd presi- dent of General. Mofors Corp., planned to attend the funeral service today for his friend and onetime aide, Harry W. Anderson, whom he shot and killed in a hunt- 'ing accident. Arrangements were made for a Mormon service at First Presbyterian Church® at 2 p.m. The Mormon church here is too small to accommodate the expected number of mourners. S. A. K. Legan, crown attorney for Lambton County, said that an investigation disclosed no grounds for a formal inquest Anderson, a retired GM vice president, was killed while duck hunting Wednesday with Curtice on Ste. Anne's Island on the (a- nadian side of the St. Clair River, 3@ miles northeast of Detroit. At Wallaceburg, Ont., Dr. C. A Henrich. Lambton County coroner. said no date has been set for an inquest. Provincial _ police turned to the accident scene ves- terday to take photographs and | question witnesses. RETIRED IN 1957 Pallbearers at the funeral include Louis G. Seaton. who succeeded Anderson as vice president in charge of the GM personne] staff. and Earl R. Bramblett, director of labor relations. Anderson, 67, re tired two years ago A grave and careworn Curtice told a news conference in Flint yesterday how the accident. hap pened “Mr. Anderson was one of my closest friends and associates in \ re-! General Motors,” the 66-year-old industrialist said. “I knew him for at least 30 of my 45 years with General Motors.” Curtice retired as GM president (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Read the Press tor Grid All-Star Picks Saturday The high school football sea- son is over and the time has come for The Pontiac Press te honor the best gridders in Oak- land County. Tribute will be paid tomorrow when The Press announces the 1959 All-Oakland County football team selected by county coaches and The Press sports staff. A 13-man squad makes up the top all-star unit, followed by first and second honor teants in class A, B and C plus a list of honor- able mentions. Oakland County's “Coach of the Year” also will be named, with two other cut- standing coaches. Don't miss Saturday's Pontiac Press for the ‘announcement of the finest Oakland prep football players of the year. \ After hearing a report fron ey Te 5 FSS el We le tine, SUR AMI dl oe ee 3 +, _ _ ; _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 Saas Sorrowing Curtice — jsame in unwind. ba Seuare D Waterford Board OK’s City Hospital Seeks The Day_in Birmingham — . | Plans for Two Schools ‘ EndtoYearsinRed Mediterranean Fine Arts, Attends Funeral © mate's andenon wt : : Executive Dies : a Waterford Township Board ber, according to superintendegt | (Continued From Page One) Cratts Displayed at Gallery (Continued oe | baradalred proses: oid sha bela of Education last night approved William Shunck., to add substantially to net profits. Charles Welch, 78, |pretiminary plans for two new ele-| 4. yet not named, one of the, Another cautious attitude was ta-| BIRMINGHAM—A collection of Ind. The body will be at Donelson- | - last year but 1s still a director. Curtice was asked why Ander-| Ourfice as she coe, well ga an experienced hunter, stood day or her husband’s . . ri ah ik i esti ti of th . ad son, of Bloomfield Hills, Ig mentary sehools and will open con-| .noois will be located on a 9lot' ken im mating use e hos- Mediterranean fine arts and crafts\Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac, un inthe duck blind just as Cur-| 4 statement on her behalf was struction bids on the buildings De-| site on Pontioe Lake yeed, one-half pifal by the public. Although occu-| wij) be on display from now until ti] 6 p.m. today. = o are Lake ; - . 2-gauge shotgun at Heart Attack Victim (cember 7 2 & /mile south of “the present high PArcy wi aye ts . record 9.9) Christmas at the Little Gallery,| Retry. dled ot be + —, - Pests “ manls ty PAdhaee Goan ayo . r cen ar this year, . Mrs. today floc rhead, -— |torney. school. The second school will be pe ye ng 915 East Maple Rd, home after a nine-month itiness. “T don't know,” Curtice said. * oe 4 *« Part of the $5-million school bond : io,|1959 one of the hospital’s best) ’ ‘i . ., 1 } h oad | ; Charles G. Welch, a retired! iggue approved by voters last eke teak gi gee he Rapa years, next year’s occupancy rate| She is survived by a son, John|“That’s one of the things I can’t) 11, said “She understands the Bloomfield Hills executive died March, each of the new buildings was estimated ly 87 t.| From the collection of Mr. and) ld Hills and nd. He may have stum-) ’ we MM Vicia ten be ded the con. “4S estimated at only 87 per cent. |P. Charles of Bloomfie S and understand. He y |circumstances of the accident and yesterday aiternoon on the WaY wil! cost approximately $300,000 racks oe bart eerie — wads ke =: cemaavalivn all \Birs. Albert de Salle, examples of grandeen. \bled. He lurched my way. The ;, deeply sorry for Mr, Curtice. to William Beaumont Hospital fol-)¢yy) uipped : |material and workmanship from was very uneven at that| “S puny equlppec. te, ta into consideration |<. ; | | ground ry Mrs, Anderson says there is not a lowing a heart attack ’ ~_~ * * mate, taking in e |Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey int.” | shred of bitterness about the tr: * * * The schools are expected to be | Negotiations for the Pontiac Lake the low occupancy rates during | wij) be featured ‘GS tB pom". shred soiree ial Welch, 78. of 1225 Vaughn Rd. Teady for operation next Septem: (road school site have been com- | 1957 and 1958. Wise: colicin tenia: ia cul overnment Buys Newsmen asked Curtice whether edy—only grief. +. oe “2 ~ |pleted 4 : | joc’ reveals uni- lhe had any suggestions on prevent- * *. was a former board member of [ple Last year, when the bospital pre-| yersatity of beauty and erat. Beef for Schools abpworlap de oniag a _s the Square D Electrical Manutars . The school board approved a | dicted a net operating loss of $45,- turing Co. and was president ot!D B b § { | fequest authorizing the borrow- |500 in 1959 (not including $156,000 the Industrial Control Co. until the ontiac a y a e ing of $200,000 agat the 1959- |in de iation) the tv companies merged. 60 state ald. According te Shunck, (figure was forecast at 87.7 per cent, Bom in Oak Park, Ml, Mr. After Kidnaping the State of Michigan ts approx. slightly higher than the 1960 pre- Weich had been a resident of | imately $250,009 delinquent in diction. iniat Blocrnfield Hills for 23 years. He (Continued From Page One) state aid payments to the Water- * * * | ings, probably done in Siena in the, had retired from his position at ge ford Township school system this | Square D in 1949. across state lines. She was held in| year. ‘the Lake County Jail, Ge wae a member of the ~*~ * * | _Board members approved Opera~ it of $43,406, instead of a loss, But! 1958 Bloonifieid Hills Country Club, ; . __ tiopal procedure involving a pay-|,, . b : In a tearful voice, Mrs. Vickers oy \this profit still does not take into the Detroit City Club and the (14 M4. Pontiac Press before she rol! deduction plan of union dues account depreciation on buildings Mountain Brook Club in Birming- ;,”” @ Ponuac © ress Detore Sh€ for custodial, maintenance, engi-|* cep | Also included are several exam- Pe learned her son was safe: “If I eer and bus driver personnel and equipment. When that is fi8-| ples of ikons in the Byzantine tra- ham, Ala. get my baby back, I'm going back , *’ lured in at the end of the year, Mr. Welch is survived by his to Pontiac ; : i : Two represen the Mc- son, Ch > Jr] Mrs. Vickers , tatives of the wife, Anne, a son, Charles G. Jr.,| Mrs. Vickers is the daughter of Vittie Parent-T . more than $100,000 of Hudson, Ohio, two daughters,|Mrs. Martha Dietrich, 85 Henry, *, | Eas' “tay S , as Oe tion, were present asking the, !t is still undecideq whether Mrs. Knut Onsager, ton, Md.,|Ctay St., a nurse at Pontiac Osteo- ©'2™™ | and Mrs. Prince DeBardeleben Jr.|pathic Hospital. |board to help solve the transporta-| the hospital will be im financial of Birmingham, Ala Following the return of the ba- dren going to and from school on| °F only part of Its depreciation |). -4a, after she ran into the rear = * * by, Mrs. Vickers restated her im- least and west Letart street, and| in cash. of another car in front of Harlan Services will be held Monday at) tention of leaving Chicago te re- | Qimstead road. | The hospital's financial aim, as} Elementary School on Adams road. 11 a.m. at Kirk in Hills, Bloomfield) turn here. She has been separat- | 1, parents had asked the (stated by Clarkson, is to be able, Hills. ) | ed from her husband James since ' i to have bus transportation (when the expansi program is) Burial will be in the Forest, January. His whereabouts are un- within 2 one-mile radius, or as- |completed, to fund depreciation Home Cemetery, Milwaukee, Wis. known, A divorce suit is pending. sist in getting adequate road lin cash. , ~*~ * * Mrs. Vickers said she would live signs: They also discussed the ~*~ * * His body will be at the Bel) with her mother. “We'll be safe) possibility of side road paths. | A breakdown of the budget Chapel of the William R. Hamilton | there,” she. said. “I'm never going There was no action on the mat- | shows the hospital still anticipates Funeral Home through Sunday. |to trust my baby with anyone | ter. |big losses on state and county al- don’t know ever again.” , by , request was received from su- < Mrs. Vickers and her husband pedintendent of Ann Arbor schools Service (Eine Cross) | didn’t want help from anyone.”’ ing. Elzay said his group was in- patient at Pontiac General. Cont From Page Mrs. Vickers had met her hus- terested in agenda contents, pro- * « * Hall. ¢ — en band in Chicago when she went cedure of business. and operation The Blue Cross loss is estimated 1946 by the U.S. Army among the there to work two years ago ‘of the township's school system, (|@t $149,750; the loss on county| personal effects of Hataburda. Pig Vickers said she hired the | x «kt. |welfare patients at $54,000; and the guest speaker. Her topic will be HIRES LAWYER ter on the recommendation of a! Preliminary plans for a second !oss on treating indigent and crip- «Christmas Time.”’ Giesler was hired to represent hotel manager. senior high school which had been Pled children sponsored by the “Just before I left for work,” approved at last month’s meeting, | state, $44,000. Di Renzo, whose sister, Mary . Jane Russo, is Giesler’s wears =H bigenin said, — woman were again reviewed and another ‘There are estimated losses of secretary. It was Dj Renzo who, | baby. T is Is an awlully sweet special meeting date has been set $40,000 in such areas as the pub- ; the plans and specifications. them appraised. Mrs. Vickers told the sitter she > cs 600 expected ts unpaid Hi. be hel * * * jwould pay her after returning!) On December 3. the board wil] Tota! losses are set at $462,400, ; ——_—_- — addition to med be Zhanaee |rO™ work but the woman replied: again meet, and give final approval CUtting into the budget forecast of paintings nam y ON-| “You don’t have t as ' i , . : $4,991,706 income from patients Mirsky were: a picture of Baccoot e to pay me of the two new elementary school Noah by | Tintoretto, | entitled an and her baby in her room teftion to the high school plans. /$93,145 from the hospital cafeteria| semi-nude interpretation of his borhood - | As e , the bud listed | daughter, Lavinia; Bernardo Ca- bey mo neigh restau Says 10-Cent Papers depreciation: 8 record "$2,908,290 vallino’s ‘“‘Saint Cecelia’; Luca in salaries and wages; $1,239,950) Glordano’s “Rape of Dejaniro”;} About 9:30 p.m., she said, a in other operating costs; and $292,-| Artomicin “Gantinecste "The Ax:| ot osun Was ater esreytng the Coming Inevitably G00 in fees, for, professional serv. ‘i re 1 down a row street. The : - iation’ a Mn baby = "me | CHICAGO The cost of metro- | Pathology. The hospital levies spe- - D ; ~ eos jotand ents staggering politan newspapers inevitably will | cial patient charges to offset these | Santis, “ 1a With Saints.” : : rise to 10 cents, according to Ar- | ‘®®4. = cant Chicago Daily News! . fice of! “at wid yerodicat astribo- Williams Rejects ; P| : t ; i Color on the Floor the baby sitter or her child. tors ‘meeting the price increase will By painting the floor in a beau-| Police too'’c the teen-age mother pe one of several financial reforms R bli T P| tiful color, you can add to the at-/on a tour of skid row saloons yes- necessary to enable newspapers to epu ican ax ea tractiveness of a room. Use either |terday. Detectives escorted her on expand their role as interpreters| a complimenting or contrasting 4 tour of the South State street/of world events in the 1960s. (Continued From Page One) shade. Sand the floor lightly before | taverns. He said newspapers also will the job. The best results will be Lar pipe oo Base re-/have to hike advertising rates, by applying two coats of | ceived a that Mrs. Varner had publish fewer editions each day, a - : paint. When the first coat is dry, | been spotted in a Hobart, Ind.,\consolidate management to a — —————E lightly sand, dust and then add the/bar where she had once worked point, and better control internal — second coat. |Her arrest followed. |cost. The governor repeated his in- | sistence on ‘‘first things first,”’ | — that is an emergency tax set- tlement before cousideration of | Schone Eyes Government Changes ' ==... with our people in this situation,” | | Y said. (Continued From Page One) Jin separate studies of Oakland|self-taught Schone suggested put- oa Gas wasn't enough! would have as one of his are lama conducted in 1932 and ting two of the three auditors on substantial caucus support for an duties those now. assigned to the! |a per diem pay basis, like they income tax or a corporation prof- auditors; cutting the S3-member Appointment of an administra- |“°™® before. its levy, solutions preferred by Board of Supervisors in half; and tor would, for one thing, get more “In this case we have three Williams. cutting the number of committees day-by-day business done faster, | people who have pretty much Then he asked for. Democratic of the Board from 28 to about 7.! instead of having to wait for | equa} authority,” he said. “I votes for the nuisance taxes on *~ * * | committees and then the Board | can’t see three heads of some. Peer, liquor, tobacco and services. In addition, he said, a so-called) of Supervisors to meet, he said. | thing.”’ - x e& ©. administrative board should be) ‘ “I don't believe the Democrats 2 | The administrator would bring!) Although he was critical of some ,. : created consisting of the chairman) these lesser problems to the ad-) phases of Oakland County govern- would be doing the state of Mich- | “4 Dict m2 igan servi ivi iri of the Board of Supervisors and ministrative board which con- ment as it is today, Schone, who welin). 0 aaa on wire ed ee n of the proposed *€¥"\ceivably, could be given the au- never went to college, said his gash crisis for a few ths,” | shooagpe a mendations |thority to act.on them without criticism was not being voiced for Williams replied. _— Schone pointed out, were contained further referral to the Board of/the first time because Tam ready] After four caucuses consuming | : | Supervisors. |to leave town.” seven hours yesterday,, the GOP, = 7 * .* * Senate majority all but despaired| The Weather He said committees today are) “‘I've said these things and put of an answer to the state’s cash tackling too many minor subjects, | them down in writing before,”’ he crisis last night. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report (‘Which the administrator could do) said. Many of these recommenda- Basically, the fight was be- | PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly instead. jtions were presented to Carey's tween backers of a 14-millies. | cloudy today with a high of 38 ts fere-| , ar aa east. Light variable winds today an@| Schone emphasized, however,;Committee, but no action was tak-) gonay package of temporary | tonight. Mostly cloudy tonight s @ te- that proper control still would be en, he said. nuisance taxes and of a com- merrew with little change in tempera- : 2 ture. Lew tonight 25. High temerrew 38. maintained as the administrator | * bed * bination = personal-corporate in- come tax package. j inueneeee southeasterly 44 board would be responsible! Home-rule for Oakland County— a second major reform being con- the sales tax. The other would open the door wide-for any form to the Board of Supervisors, Lowest waa = yew 8 ‘sidered by the committee — met _The despair that gripped the - 5 perature preceding am As importast as these revi- with Schone's approval only as it ‘TSsis-weary Capitol came in the B Ee, m: Wind velocity 3 mph sions are, Schone cautioned, the |would eliminate the practice of aftermath of a weird and wild day, Bun sets Priday at 5.06 pm reforms in government come [county legislative agents running f oratory, i Rigg ce ge stenty. But, he added, this to Lansing every time a new law Lincoln's Gettysburg Address Moon rises Friday at 942 pm ts doesn't excuse Carey's commit- jc needed. was read on the Senate floor by | Seusiien Conpieclintée -_ | Counties, unlike cities, are gov- Sem L. Harvey Ledge (#-Drayton | fom cceecee 2 1Dam... ..... 31) After an administrator is hired e™ed solely by state laws: Cities,, Plains), whe complained little at- | sam rerertt 3g 1 pm... '''!'' 34 and beard named, another step)|in addition to coming under state, tention was paid his plea for ic peeregese: dl ee 38 would be drafting a code granting,!4Ws. too, have individual charter, sound management of what /E oo additional duties to them in their) Controls. money the state has. | nate Fp Rebexrno inew roles *. * *# “Nobody listened to him then! recor a Highest Nemperavure veeneeee es veeee 36 * *® “You can't operate an efficient either,” Lodge said. Mean temperature 2220000. Gf! schone took some of the blame Z°ve™mment if you have to go to! The shouts of Lodge and others: Weather — Pair. { : | Lansing every time you have awere clearly audible during the} =e joff the Board of Auditors by say- problem to solve.” the Bt One Year Age tu Pontiae ling under the present setup it! , rming-| closed-door caucus sessions. Highest temperature ................ 59) : |ham resident said. Home - rule Lowest temperature ......... s-sssee 38 doesn't have enough authority. He}. a be a 3 objectiv Mean temperature ................. 4 said the supervisors could vote, ou a long-range objective, | . - Weather — Cloudy, cold. snore | atelligentty’ ea wmatters| suid ‘New Episcopal Bishop Mighors anc Lowest Temperateres | should auditors submit a recon ae ary dane meetauty »,[DU0 in Michigan Soon 67 in 1933 12 in 880 mendation before each vote. improve the coutty’s government t Seesdbays 7 ige thet. | “Senees today dea't get ‘| GRAND RAPIDS (UPID—A new tititowy b B ecms op Ba the tact,” he sad Reiet § Prepeeallt Wins. Nanages vant m emp . . ‘Raj nai of Western Michigan will be Bismarck 34 27 Miami B. 7% 72 Reject Stinging Proposal | Brownsville 70 48 Milwaukee 34 21; Annual budgets aren't detailed! | ging \chosen at a special convention of | pswtewad 34 7) Minneapolis 35 27/enough to inform supervisors and) LONDON (UPI)—Sir Godfrey clerical and lay delegates of the Cincinnat? 50 33 New York 42 33 citizeng alike, Schone remarked.’ Nicholson Offered the Ministry church beginning here Monday & R Smees, «=: 8-38 More explanation should be given, of Agriculture yesterday a sure |night. . ce cum 32 $2\for increases ard decreases each’ way of solving a dispute about | A successor will be named for) “ cone = ttl year. whether certain flavor sprays |Bishop Dudley B. McNeil, whose | © francisco @7 $3| ~ & * | harmed bees. Sir Godfrey of- resignation was accepted last Traverse C32 4) AS am intetim step in the direc-| fered ‘to bring a deputation of |month by The church's House of Chy Baan” Sr \cplnem Of Mining an sdulaiotrster at] angey Bean to Rosheyey. He Fees. McNeil resigned for re-|} Angeles 10 Tampa 7 iithe top of the county hierarchy,) was turned down, tirement reasons. ae i b manship though it is representa- | ; | tive only of the Mediterranean (4 -riculture Department has an-| sone blind,” he said. |tan, and a sister, Mrs. Agnes Pe- nounced the purchase of 5,985,000 - ee suggestion. | te of Cadillac = “That m * |terson : The collection includes a book of pounds of frozen ground beef for) 7 iiean just one pa in use at a | Cross said Mrs, Anderson is a chants with eight miniature paint- | $2,423,000. time.” Mormon. Anderson was not. area, the De Salles explained. ‘budget predictions has resulted so|of wood carvings made by a con- beef purchases in recent weeks)” \far this year in an operating prof-|temporary primitive in Madrid in to a total of 10,584,000 pounds at ©U |$4,278,000. The meat will go into) | the school lunch program. ‘office in the Genesee Bank Build- dition, a Spanish coat of arms US. ports against fire, sabotage,| ‘negligence and other important | D perils. *- * ‘the hospital will show a lo8s of| ang a group of flamenco dolls, A Ti-year-old Birmingham wom- admitted to St. an was ition, and walking problem for chil-| position next year to fund all, |\iercy Hospital and released yes- Sprague, 3108 Talbot, ran into | a car driven by Robert South. | 4500 N, Adams Rd., | Troy, after he had stopped for a Police said that only minor dam- lowances and Michigan Hospital age was done to both cars, . h ; : : "208 2 ” 1s A Sa Art ad lived in Pontiac at 27% Stout Jack Elzay ; : The losses come about because the! The Women’s Fellowship of the raiser S tizay, to have a team of é , wl pp 'St. She went to Chicago last month . established rates paid by these Congregational jbeard members and administrators agencies do not quite meet the mingham will “one “because J wanted to make a liv-\from his school system. attend a Worth Millions Found ing for myself and the baby. I waterford Township board meet. average daily costs for treating a meeting and luncheon Dec 12:30 p.m. in the church Social William Milligan will Mrs. Lillian A. Berry Service and burial for Mrs. Lil-! I'd like to have one like for Tuesday for further study cn ho lian A. Berry, 68, 1427 Kirkw i ee | ‘ y of 175,- | : v5 : rkway when shown the pictures, hadiyin, +» lic clinics and a whopping $ Bloomfield Township, d Sunday in New Castle, _ |Rd., STATIONERY Full Count 350 hints OTEBOOK PAPER * 69° d for 2 and 3 ring note- i} Adds & Subtracts | 995 | eee Adds and H businessmen. accoun- i tants. etc. Easy to use. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The) «] think that there should be a 4-year-old daughter, Jane Kris- x * * Then he added ‘‘I have been told - ~ , That 1959 occupancy exceeded/early Sixteenth Century to a group) This brings the government's by many of my friends that it) Uncounted thousands of miles Id have happened to them.” —| of nerve fibers comprise the brain Curtice talked to newsmen in his|and nervous system, one of the many marvels of the human body. |ing, He sat on the floor to — ‘how he and Anderson were seat Tropical fruits grow in southern The Coast Guard protects all in«thé duck blind. Tick wild ie le wal: tats ECOYs IN FRONT the climate is almost Arctic in “The decoys were in front of/severity. SAVE $8 OFF Maker’s List Price Automati ncmac «~Fry Pans FULLY GUARANTEED —In Original Factory Cartons Regular $21.50 (Model FPM) NBWEST MODEL in Choice of 3 COLORS The original, the genuine SUNBEAM with accu- rate thermostat for uniform, perfect cooking results every time. Pink, yellow or turquoise Metal covens te Mateh at Prepertionste Lew Prices Electrical =e DIMM: : erece emma eer neem DRUG PRICES SLASHED for Week-End Shoppers ANOUS BRAND on PARADE 2 mone} Saving p ees ROTHERS BUFFERIN Tabs FASTEETH iitom Afc Regular $1.29 pack of 100 tablets. g Regular 67c value—powder adhesive Does not upset the stomach. Limit 1. to hold dental plates in firmly. ALKA-SELTZER §° ABSORBINE JR. 1* Regular 65c¢ seller. Full pack of Regular $2.50 bottle of fungi killer 25 tablets. Dissolves in water. especially for athlete's foot. LISTERINE ‘Vase 3 DRISTAN Sass 2' Regular $2.89 pack of 100 famous Regular 89c bottle of 14 ounces decongestant tablets for colds, antiseptic. Kills mouth bacteria. BAUME EXLAX PROTEIN 4-WAY ABDEC BEN-GAY © LAXATIVE POWER PAC COLD TABS VITAMINS Reg. 89c Reg. 79 Reg. $3.00 aan Se Reg. 35.08 69« 53° 239 42¢ 37 New greaseless egg ge Oe ae Verne agne’s a wae Bottle of 100 vite- ointment in tube. 48's protein. ‘abiets. for cokis, min ‘kopevae. Regular 90c seller — bottle of 40 Regular 98c seller — deep heet rub pills. Aid to the kidneys. . that penetrates the aches and pains. REGIMEN inser 89/MAALOX Liquid 406 DOANS PILLS 6° DEEP-RUB. C Regular $3.00 value—pack of 78 safe . Regular $1.95 bottle of 12 ounces reducing tablets. Advertised on TV for heartburn, indigestion. Limit |. PALMOLIVE RAPID ~1 KLEENITE DENTAL SHAVE BOMB Cl] PLATE CLEANER Cc Instant lather for shaving. Regular Regular $1.00 seller—powder clean- 79¢ can pressure lather. Limit 2. ef—no scrubbing of plates. Lustre Creme UNICAP JRONIZED SHAMPOO VITAMINS YEAST Reg. $2.00 Reg. $3.11 Reg. $2.49 122 239 179 ee) poe Be oe & ot BABY NEEDS BREMIL LIQUID INFANTS’ GLYCERINE gag BABY FORMULA 21 C} suppositories C neby formula. Uae 12 cans. ‘ suletan es eho coe + 2 ae Dextri-Maltose 1" BABY POWDER c Famous Meads #1 formula in bi Regular ohnson- - 22 can of famous powder. Limit 2. . sev tokcom tyr tite dans F —— Qfc| BABY CREAM 770 Regular 49c¢ bottle of this popular infants’ laxative, ~ = \ ; x ’ 72 THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ee, censes Revoked, Suspended’ | fate Halts Driving of 62 in County | xty-two Oakland County resi-, han G. Felts, 1809 Rossel St../unsatisfied judgernent and ican 's have had their driver licenses, ms N. Palmer, 631 University Pi., the scene of a personal injury ac;| W t After Weather, (ait. Sots Sts: + ago «Simms Store Hours - 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Went Atler Wealner, |icane moving in revere at) Extra Shopping Moors—Litra Valves to Make Shopping Worthwhile Po |he had encountered a snake. Raced With Racer hem that it was only a harmless| blue racer, Conte said, ““‘What do ST. LOUIS W—Weatherman Jo-jyou expect? I'm a climatologist, | 'seph Conte started for the roof to,not a herptologist.’’ make routine observations, He did) “1.00 cineas”s assis | a "OPEN EVERY NIGHT ded , {Ro | wi i . ne nan recently ac-|"478) Stkison, 1368 Key West St., Troy. |Cident. not make it, | Other than gold. Colorado ° pro | g to the Michigan secretary | |sanguert Lavine, a7 Townley ay James K. Hood, 9600 M15, Clark-) | His fellow workers were aston- ‘duces silver and _sugar - iE 'TIL-CHRI STMAS tate’s office in Lansing. Mprank J "Prett, 2400 Massena St.,|ston, had his license revoked for! eres COCOOOC CENCE ‘« . 4 ~*~ * * [Cclohn Mt. “Spess, 01 om. Wereen | ex. [physical reasons and failure to ap-| ered to furnish fi «! pear for re-examination. a _— _ ; : eniinlty dur Gade nn eat ee SS Soe ©. . « * SPECIAL PURCHASE — Direct From Famous Maker conviction were: a Nee right es vant | Delphus Rush Jr., 3997 Dart-| item L. Hiscock, 117 E. Hopkins St.. jas on oie -—— bol, |mouth Rd., Clarkston, lost his| You buy ‘em and we'll hide ‘em ‘tit Christmas canines aut ec Hughes, 371 W. South Blvd, Pon- U@sement was Jose abdol, license for violating license re- y a Oo S of 195 Whittemore St., Pontiac. istrictions, and Ralph H. Doeren, quality and low prices anywhere in town! Friday and aturday — E. Marsh Jr., 35 Lo ’ : arsh Jr., 35 Lorraine Ct - * ‘* 4139 Me. way Rd., Birmingham. Shoppers yg ici A. P 1 | mgt ia eace, 606% Mt. Clemens 8t..! ‘Tose who lost their licenses due|for driving with a suspended palliedoains cai Polyester Filled — Quilted Nylon Inside und Out ani Wood, 1046 Meadowlawn 8t.. to unsatisfactory driving records license. HE’S NEW U.S. SENATOR — hn Alvaredo, 77 Osmun 8t., Pontiac. were: | Forfeiting the right to drive for At Bismarck, N.D., former North <<< < <4 ees pon A. Childers, 08 5 Mantcolm &.. pRichard A. Hayden, 33 Charlotte 8. physical reasons were Brian E.| Dakota Gov. C. Norman Bruns- c UNDERWEAR thr 3 Gratopp. 75 Bloomfield Blvd.’ william L. Trawick, 621 Stirling Ave.,|Kemp, 85 Barrington Rd., Bloom-! dale was appointed to the U.S ho M. Collins, 6470 Alden’ Dr., west PORMAC. | os webster at., field Township; Arthur B. Culver, Senate Thursday by Gov. John miteld Tounels Pontiac Trail, or-|2y®!, Oak 1204 E. Roberts St., Hazel Park; E. Davis, filling the vacancy Now you may buy tops, bottoms or com- ¢ Lake Village nom B /- ig 9 Holabaugh. 426 Rhode Island 444 John A. Baker, 146 E. Hazel- created by the death of William plete suits. Compare prices anywhere tc — $ nington ’ arate George D. Bently, 326 Baker St., Roya! hurst St., Ferndale. Langer. orge Vaillancourt, 22038 Springbrook | i D. Hart, 23919 Grace 8t., mg P. Davidson, 6685 Cooley Lake nour OS ceees we le + ie al toa Milfor |Claw: ayne W. Roth, 70 Elkin Ford Rd. Charla Scywenn, 446 John R. 8t., \ or item . Dent, 4338 Territorial Ré Pred ‘Moultié Jr, 21702 Gibson Ct., Sp ecial S El l | N GI. \ ison — T. Piynn, $83 Auburn Rd., Avon) os learn how much more you save at SIMMS = 3 Hb gst r% Medium Weight — 3-Ounce ; 2 i ‘ Tops or Drawers gos PE a a H. Banks Jr. 21384 Beth- + 5 COOLIO E ns. ae, Orava, ai8'y Main ot FTaRe 1 Houtbelter, 28 W. cambourne| PEN SIZE RANGES—8 to 18 ¢ CORE ONE: COOOOOOCCEL, ee seta eid iii j —Many Styles but NOT Every Size in Every Style 4 —Priced Individually— . i 01 Reape ar 2018 Willow Beseb : y Choice— Toy Dept. Special ; 4M Lowe, 1141 E Nine Mile Ré., ‘ our ° —Tonite & Saturday— Bs ge McNabb, 70 EB. Brickley St., CAR HOWE Robert Spencer, 37 Depot St., Oxford. ! j d George A. Strong, 465 Jos) Rd., 7 Lake Orion = ‘Fruit-of-the-Loom’ Quilt-Lined . * . ~ r Maker's Original Ordered to furnish financial re- Ladie H d : $55.80 Lis! ea LA 1 sponsibility due to unsatisfied S oo ; sclom hell oo ‘ed selgement were: 4 fn y she! olyester fille quilt lahat J. McDermott Jr., 4650 Mc- ( or ( oats snap tront . . hand washable. Large is “Ra. Holly no t | oni | paerald BD. Seigiried, 2032 Latteh st.,| and extra large sizes only le : : loge L. Weckle. 25 Pleasant 8t., ‘ _ Sub-Zero Weight Full Zipper Style | Alita’ B. Luth, 1560 8 Bates St., $9.95 7 ONLY HOLDS Full 5 OUNCE DELUXE Quality fog > m Ww. McCaffrey, 15619 W. 13 4 a TOPS or 66 TOPS or 44 Mile Rd., Royal Oak Quality ‘ — ee at "hovel bee 107 W. Hudson Easiest Camera to use,- too' You get perfect pictures every time rge Tsoukalas| 50 W Dallas St, with tamous Cintar color slide lens built-in focusing Daye of white or yel- oe vroight in brown low. Snap front tops, or charcoal. Our very elastic waist drawers finest. 100% Nylon Medium, large and extra shell. All sizes large ’ (Complete Suit— (Complete Suit— 2 pieces 8.88) 2 pieces .. 9.88) * Precision Cintar Color-Slide Lens * Built-in Focusing for Sharpest pictures %* Full Range Shutter Speeds for Both Scenes and Action pictures. * Synchronized for Indoor Flash Pictures * Easy to Load * Guaranteed by Both SIMMS and ARGUS. Brilliant 300 Watts cena ARGUS PROJECTORS Automatic PUSH-PULL Changer $62.95 List 49" Now Only 500 Watt Model.. $56.87 Blower cooled. super brilliant : Warm quilt lined car coat with mm quilt lined hoods. Water repellent outer fabrics, wooden buttons front pockets. As- sorted colors wen, « Cotton Ladies’ Ski Jacket $12.93 88 Quality Losing the right to drive for un- . . - lawfully driving away an auto. Child $ Chair were Cicero Bullock, 249 Harrison St., Pontiac, and Thomas H. Coley, 4 For Indoor or Outdoor 416 E. George St.. Hazel Park Regular * * * $4 Value | 88 : Leroy White Jr, 788 Brushwood Better Than St., Walled Lake; Melvin L. Slatten, Pictured ‘3114 Hilton Rd., Ferndale; Jean M. | |Robertson, 1809 Petrolia Dr., West! Bloomfield Township: and ’ Peter A, Snure, of 2293 Earlmont St., Berkley; had their licenses re- voked for unsatisfactory driving ‘records and fajlure to appear for re-examination. . Keeps Cold Out & Body Heat In! THERMO Knit Extra Heavy Weight — Finest Quality Shirts and Drawers Cc a i sa like expensive im- furniture junior size ig yo ideal gift for chil- drem to 10 years old. Only 144 at this price of 8 88 8 8 EPT lined ' hood ojections Magazine feed, holds Toy o oo O. Liberty.3224 N. M Nylon quilt i , pile lined ‘ Se anaes Come in and let us project es and ain draw string bottom and hood, zipper f your: sides on this projector Ideal for Outdoor Workers. Hunters, Skiers, Ice , Royal Oak, lost his license tor pockets knit cuffs of red or sand Fishermen, etc pis 1%> FRIDAY & weet — Fe ai Choice t edovhdeally Popular warmth-without-weight-bulk THERMO KNIT underwear for active men. Easy to launder iA any machine, Long sleeve shirts, ankle-length \\ Loner All sizes to extra .large 3: UL Approved —First Quality Covered ROMEX Wire = Cnt Cut Any . wie Lica 14-3 DOME & Oound, post 20¢ Flashlight Batteries - Ea. ihe ° —< 9) 7 6 Vv | La B son bay trim. quilt lined Fully wash- ‘ Avigo : 0 t ntern mall able. Compare , Long extension legs, Lighted pan head $7.95 Value ! $12.00 Deluxe Tripod 87 with Elevator 8 $3.99 § f $19.95 Deluxe Tripod 87 $7.95 ARGUS Lighted 99 4 ; with level for legs 13 Slide Viewer s J j , $21.95 Large Tripod 15” Regular $1.19 Value Genuine EVEREADY battery for most any size lantern. 6- oS volt. Limit ee 25¢ Toggle Switches 13° __ Single pole toggle s switch in heat resistant bakelite cup ¢€ : 20¢ Receptacle - Each 13° ¢€ PopuJar viewers let you see your extends over 5 ft. slides in full color, large size PARR One Lot of USED METERS. Famous makes. Over 1200 $25 Value. each PAL Exposure Meter. Regu- 499 | lar $5.95 Value—now . GE MASCOT Meter. Regu- lar $10.95 Vieleoa-n ow . 899 ARGUS L3 Meters. Regu- tar $17.95 Valueraow 1499; Guaranteed WASHABLE WESTON DR Meters. Regu- 1 6.99 , lar $18.95 Value—Now GE GOLDEN CROWN Meter 9.7799 | Plush receptacle w ae narrow ears. Save Te on each one 39+ Receptacle Boxes - Each 28 _2 inches deep— for switches. With Romex clamp 30* Octagon Boxes - Each 4-inch box. Galvanized finish, clamp extra .... General Electric Brown Single Pole | Silent Mercury Switch | Regular $1.00 Value Silent mercury switches are com- pletely noiseless —- no loud click when switched on or off, No limit at this low price. 16¢ Switch Plates - Each __Choice of toggle or receptacle plates. Metal or plastic _9 35¢ Ceiling Receptacles 74 7 SALE OF EXPOSURE METERS / § | Bete Choice of popular colors, full zipper fronts, quality tailored. Smaller sizes have fur-trimmed hoods is ee hn i CORDUROY $34.50 Value—Now neti Used with movie or slide picture taking | Work Pants Folding Flash Gun 3 D COLOR REELS | Charcoal. Navy, Brown Colors Viewsnnster ; S1zes 30 49 viewers 4 to 42 o “eee eQS4 5% py 7 ne to Simms now! Save up 4 87 3 for Long wearing, perfect fit 35¢ Current Taps ¢ to $5.00 on a WOOL a finest tailoring. - Zipper fly, 0 B | : 25 boat sail pockets. Tap complete with pull chain. Save 8c on each one .._..-.- : \ L Guarantee Ha | nge 9 =P Fits most cam : j os ye : = : P) ‘ eras small and —— 3 SS g a , 4-inch box with galvanized finish. Gave lic on each one os flash it eye ie, gs Bunny. na ; . / ; “wun bectery. | Shoe rom ns ny nen TIMELY SALE! All First Quality Modern Square LIGHT FIXTURE Regular $2.95 Value—Now Only For dining, living or bed- rooms. Latge square KODAK BROWNIE 8mm Movie | iim corven | Siravcs’ LENS §] Sheet Blankets 454545" shades, patterned glass. Pye Regular $2.49 Quality Bulb oe sa fix- Regular $15.95 Value ante 69 ; t t i 5 27 Scie atag | T Tres i 25 Ft — iz EL Brownie £2.3 or Inches Rubber covered, swing open metal cage. aig sol ; ' O00 lyr Pah jumbo 80 x 108-Inch .. 1.99 waist pleat styles, shaggy wool plaids, 00 leather case oft. leecy nap, - ip - stitchec r batteries (extra) others in tweed effect, smooth wools, etc., ie fe. WIDE-ANGLE B edges, lilac color only Oe omex St . 100 for ¢ in many colors and combinations Some $19.95 % aPee o she "ek ra cOrduroys included. Sizes 22 to 32. (geoph naira A ne prdned - Pull box of 100 Romex staples for positive holding of wire . 5+ TV Lead-in Wire - Per Fi. 300 Ohms, plastic Weather resistant insulation - WIDE ANGLE C3, or C-4 models, Kodak Pony, Signet - we. m0 Heit Electrica! | 98 North Saginaw Street . CLOTHING —Mein Floor Te ae eee Te Oee Tee eeee , | we ee aay | ype \ \ .) \) \) \ \ \ \ \ \ . ) % ~ \ jist Arrived —big, selection of A * ) 6 % \ % » \ \ 4 \ ) \) \ . * 98 NORTH SAGINAW ST. —Bargain Basement c- & ) FOUR -_ :. it _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ax re | , | ky I -L P Panama Official Motor Scooters oc fsciis cas Tae — | to Beat Boredom . s | | Cla Inf f | Pose Problem | MEXICO CITY (AP) —‘ Soviet ims en on | KRISTIANSAND, Norway ‘AP) neouty Premier Anastas I, Mi- : Rockefeller’s father-in- koyan has offered Soviet agricul. ! i ° |—Steven Relegse of Sovereignty 100 Killed Last Year, |. has gone into the gasoline), 4) ining and industrial ma- | . . law for Canal Attributed to 4,000 Hurt in Accidents business. He’s selling Rockefeller ‘chinery to Mexico in exchange for Milton Eisenhower Involving Vehicle _— too. e- * \Mexican. cotton, minerals and . ffuit. CHICAGO (AP)— More than A_ retired fish exporter and ek |100 persons were —— = merchant, . Kristian Rasmussen,’ yjikoyan, the Kremlin's top ex. ithan 4,000 others injured in motor s , neavy on hisipert on forel ane rowers brtber and. advise on } er accidents in 1958. the Ne ue ane he cae taitiad the cclagogs. Thereday in a hower’s brother and adver on! HYBRID BOMBER — A missile-nosed Martin B57 Canbeyra UFI Telephate tional Safety Council said today. (TT ® "sit to his daughter Anne-|meeting with Mexican Commerce Latin America, told him last year! jet bomber takes off on a test hop at Seattle before departure for the front. The converted B57 will serve as a simulated “‘Bomerc | Most of the ee tne them. Marie and the Rockefellers in the and Industry Minister Raul Sa- the United States would Nee mal more tests at Eglin AFB. Florida. The hybrid aircraft gained its air defense missile. Its job will be to check the Eglin missile test ne ecg ee ee | United States. So he went to work linas Lome ae ; : ) J Bom | — ‘ . Panamanian sovereignty over T€) needie-nosed appearance when the nose and part of the guidance range’s capacity for handling flights of the 400-mile arew | When the motor scooter acci- In downtown gas station keeping Mikoyan, who is here to open Panama Canal Zone. om ' issile w issl ccounts and selling gas. section of the new Boeing built Bomare-8 missile was grafted to _misaile. . dent problem came to the fore- “ee eae ee eee a Soviet trade and scientific ex. PANAMA (AP) -Finance Minis- | ter Fernando Eleta says Dr. Mil-; * «wie . | — UC~< te nae acca front more than a year ago the be li il] meet wi se Wedicioy” avery wt De. » ae a3 - : NSC urged laws to restrict =i on, = — * eae eatativen ek ‘ee vane ae eet ey cet in an atte. BOb Considine Finds Ex-President Busy and Happy lcensing of persons under 16 and) varie married the son of/and Exporters Assn. and with condemned unlicensed operaict | Nelson A. Rockefeller of bankers next week, He is expect- dinner conversation Sept 13 “Givi a a cine eecoter| oe 1958, that the U.S. declaration| abt "L. WAG said, 4g like New York last August in @ much- ed to press hard for more Soviet- * * Seer would be made the following Nov. | é 9 f H to drive; | cublicized wedding in the nearb ‘Mexican trade, which last year ‘ : ; baby , . ing in nearby ’ y 3 in connection with Panama's In- A Day tin | e O a } } y ] YUMNAN evr: ' by i aie cap aa mmunity of Sogne. \totaled less than $500,000. dependence Day and the 100th an- sate: enemas niversary of the birth of President . ; Theodore R velt, under whose) INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — The volved is the Public Building veto of the Bank Bill of 1832; par-. In the same showcase is a Copy | administration canal was built. “day” of former President Harry Service of the General Services dons signed by Lincoln; the Alaska of «Marlborough, His Life and! The declaration was never mad¢|; -tyman begins somewhere be- Administration. A 56-cent admis- Purchase Treaty, Wilson’s Procla- Times.” It is inscribed, “From and Panamanian nationalists have |” ; ; sion fee enables the library to ‘mation of War against Germany ; stepped up their demands for it. ‘ween 5 30 and 6 o'clock each Oo. its own way. and — on loan from the Roosevelt! Winston to Harry — 1949."° an incorrigible habit \Library at Hyde Park, N. Y. —| Truman treasures particularly a! You don’t have to be rich to enjoy ‘ j On the holiday this year more than morning — . 80 persons were injured when na- he picked up as a farmboy. I live only six blocks from ¢ p R's Pearl Harbor message. _firéplace removed when the White) tionalists trying to plant the Pan-| ‘The passing years, the explosive here,’ Truman told me in his of- «grye IN INFAMY” House was remodeled. Its old pees amanian flag in the Canal Zone tame the niche in history, the fice, “but I've quit walking tO, The first draft of that enduring inscribed with a passage from ' clashed with US. oom and semi-mellow retirement have not'work. Too many people stopped document began, “Yesterday, De- Rtg getter geen Peg o ; Canal Zone police and Panaman-|stereg this regimen. Ito talk to me. Made them late for cember 7, 1941, a date that will ieloved Abi a ray TL card! o Soaee an Py Truman sometimes reaches his yop(.” live in world history . : .”’ Roose- i cance on nal of blessings on office: in the north wing of the Accredited scholars are admitted velt scratched out ‘world history this house, and all that shall in-| $ 9 U.S. Under Secretary of State Livingston Merchant is due here | Truman Library as eafly as 730 to that portion of the library which ——— the unforgettable habit it. May none but honest and Pint today in a special effort to im-| The library, built without cost (contains the state papers, historic| * z=" wise men ever rule under this prove U.S.-Panamanian relations.| te the government from funds ‘documents and personal car-| And hosts of photographs, auto roof.” Code #943 ——_—_——- donated by many organizations respondence which each president |éraphs, | exhibits walang the ——__—__— = ani@ individuals, is a fine-looking, may take with him when he leaves M4ny Sides to a president's life, a 8 p f Chi f | erescent-shaped, low-slung a ithe White House |200-seat auditorium where Truman Hamtramck Asks Court $480 . } e : . | 0 ice le S$ | ture on U.S. Highway 2%. | mleace, hete te what was once ee a tk Cee Upset Tax Ruling It is 525 “pe long, has 70,000) a rough-hewn litte ——- the stage’s grand piano, gifts that} DETROIT «» — Hamtramck has 4/5 Quart ever Set at Sar put te ea) pots far Se ocnrent oe irene fost cas ecrewia lvoe t+ cont in an punt to Cote 3 en U s tr ’ s, nas i , is prese a . |birthday greeting to a gem-encrust- | upset a State Tax Conrmission cut = one saat, sooma, ens faced] reo Samat papers Som [ed ck word presented by Kingaf more than 39 min doles } “ =" ‘ A i Th S d ith Ssess val é Church Group Dislikes|ins daily. The great Thomas Hart) man’s seven years in the presi _ Mlexest tax source. the Dodge Benton began his massive lobby) dency. And the table on which the ‘Main Plant of Chrvsler Corp | | > . a a , Bread, Water orion nae thls ‘wo o | There are, of course, his eon hsy‘aniliyol —, aes | Circuit Judge Nea] Fitzgerald for Young Offenders | ‘ies tartans Deadheads Was tha We speeches in their several drafts; | 0 2.500-year-old vase f Greece |" *® hearing for Dec. 4 after arm petitio. to set aside the reduction | “|his historic decisions and the pa- sal ofan office in it for life. and per per-work involved (Marshall Plan and twe autographed a was filed yesterday, Ter ar PD et -ereg Mag arg d PA or Regge ga aid, Greek-Turkish relief, Point| "Pcie! nete. ; Hamtramck terms the reduction | defense of a judge who is under|ing an ex-president: A huge mail \Four, U.N., Korea, MacArthur's) One of these, a copy of Crusade “arbitrary, capricious and confis-| attack by a church group for sen-| countless requests or autographs, removal, use of the atomic bomb in Europe,” is inscribed ‘To Pres-icatory.” It also contends it fs tencing young offenders to solitary| information and favors, and invi-| “&*inst Japan, the V-E and V-Jjident Harry S. Truman, with the\unconstitutional because it is confinement on bread, milk andjtations to speak appear. cut a rib-| Day proclamations and countless|request that as my commander- retroactive, and ‘‘would impair vitamin pill diets. bon, lay & cornerstone ’ lother memorabilia of a momentous | in-chief since the latter days of |contracts signed at the start of Circuit Judge Alfonso A, Mag- The rest of the building 's wafer administration.) World War II he will accept this,the fiscal year and result in the notta of Calhoun County has sen-|\the direction of a fine and intelli Re eee volume which ts, except for those|power of taxation being surrend-| tenced nine lawbreakers to terms gent little man named Philip! There is also on hand, John Ad- going to members of my immedi- ered by the city.” ams’s First Inaugural Address, ate family, the first presented to! The assessment cut, the city in solitary up to 45 days on the Brook lati hiv a é n ary up ys B s, of the National Archives Thomas Jefferson’s request to Con-'any person. With lasting respect. says, would cost it $500,000 a year A BARREL OF QUALITY IN EVERY BOTTLE theory that the punishment might/,ng Records Services : ; . : ‘gress for funds to outfit the Lewis admiration and friendship—Dwight |in revenue, plus ‘ly $250,000 in| give them time to think and get) oo svemmment agency tw land Clark Expedition, Jackson's D. Eisenhower.” ee | STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY + 86 PROOF + OLD QUAKER DISTILLING CO., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. back on the straight and narrow.) i — Now. -. a dramatic ie Tues peace ne Go te al=\iameorelarer-] ol ania ™ . # truly functional [V SA) Alololalohe> a ENDORSED BY OTHERS But six Calhoun County police chiefs, from Battle Creek and Springfield and the townships of Bedford. Battle Creek, Emmett and Penfield, all endorsed the Magnotta punishment policy. So did the five youths already released from solitary. Richard L.| ‘Babic, 17, when he was released) ste 26” wide 17” deep 23'/." high $1995 The fine detail snd mch finish of these Bacler last month, said he wanted to) . thank the judge for being “‘lent-| tables will dd charm ood ent” with him and that he believed | grece vo your room me ting. Carefully, crateed we bring out the inner’ glow of the highest grade he had learned a lesson in fail. “T think it was successful,” he said. * * * Magnotta has sentenced nine . maple 3 young then to solitary confine- ment, with only the Bible allowed) as reading material. Four are still | in jail. Luke Hart Re-Elected by Knights of Columbus | WASHINGTON (UPI)—Luke E “Hart of St. Louis, Mo., was unan- imously re-elected supreme Knight Early American tables harmonize and blend with every trend. Styles chat — ‘eae ae 36” long 18” deep 17',” high $1995 d : ‘ ! Roll-Anywhere TV Pag —- sr | that’sSLIMand TRIM § 7 OY! - j i i ' of the Knights of Columbus last | , * A GRACEFUL CONSOLETTE night by the board of directors s * beautiful optional of the Catholic fraternal society, Faster and safer than Sun As Little As f * mee fom - Hart has been the head of the | shine...Ozone lamp built- — - Knights of Columbus since 193 in for that wonderful out. s ‘ > The directors also unanimously door sweetness, SQUARE COCKTAR every angle adopted a resolution compliment o Automatically shuts off when : 28” wide 26” deep a ee irae oS ee a8 ! nae: ly 12” THINE || headquarters in New Haven, Conn ° siedce "Ne Meets” boa Alter Down a ck $1995 on y N! A seared ~*~ * * yaatomatie Sprinkle” seb Y TABLE MODEL ’ Other officers unanimously elect- ed were deputy supreme knight, Wiliam J. Mulligan. Hartford, Conn.: supreme secretary, Joseph 3 F. Lamb, New York City; supreme treasurer, Francis J. Heazel, Ashe-| vile, N.C.; supreme advocate, Harold J. Lamboley of New Haven, | Conn., supreme physician, Dr. Ger- ald J. Lunz, Hamilton, Ontario, : afd supreme warden, Fred W. Col- by, Fargo, N.D. © WASH & WEAR" Cycle — FLOWING HEAT air circulating an rte simeny woe pm ort a at ot © Famity-size capecity—20 tos, Everything dries thereughly, evenly, of ciothes safely. Magnificent Magnavox quolity—the world’s LAY-AWAY finest —has come to portable TV... and what a wonderful difference! Here's fine furniture beauty N OW FOR from every angle—no old-fashioned “hump-back” or unsightly appliance look. Clearest, shorpest CHRISTMAS 155 sq. in. optically filtered pictures and fine Magnavox sound from two up-front speakers, bring you all of your favorite programs. Tele- scoping antenna, too. In five 2 beautiful finishes. 3 90 OF KEEGO HARBOR 199 ; : in mohogesy—mebile stand, extra 3065 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD KEEGO HARBOR “Me in Today—See, Hear and Compare ; OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS ‘TIL9 P.M, ~*e08Y0F---the finest TV of alll TELEPHONE FE 5-9474 ~ a New York to Put Light | on Juvenile Crime | NEW YORK ® — The city will illuminate its playgrounds to help ~ cut juvenile crime, says Mayor! Robert F, Wagner, He announced Thursday that bright lights for 20 playgrounds in the worst nighttime trouble spots will be provided at a cost of $80,000. An additional $1,060,000 has been requested in next year's capital budget to light several hundred ad-| ditional playgrounds. gan “ 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH... UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY z = & t .% nd State Good Spot for Businesses Research Man Claims Michigan Has Location;| Must Get Wise } DETROIT (UPI) — “Despite all; the publicity given to the prot business climate and its financial) | problems, Michigan is and will continue to be a good place for industry,” Dr. Paul A. Herbert,| State economic development: de-| partment research chief, said Wednesday night. He cited the fact that Michigan is growing and will continue to grow in population at a rapid rate! when he spoke before the Detroit! Secretaries Assn. ‘ “Add to this the growth in the number of consumers in the sur- rounding states,” he said, and “it makes the east-north central states the greatest regional mar- ket in the U. 8.” j Proof of Michigan's recent | growth, Herbert said, was seen in| the higher designation given! Washtenaw and Muskegon coun- ties by the U. S. Bureau of the Budget. Two other counties, Eaton and Clinton, were also added to the existing Lansing metropolitan) area. Herbert said, however, ‘Michi- gan cannot be complacent and as- sume it will get its share of the Crown Prince Alexander of Yo- i h ; goslavia, 14, strides along at the anne iat eee thet] Culver ‘Military Academy ia rs Cul Ind. Called ‘Alex’ b of the population increase spel -_ 7 . his classmates, he carries a full MUST SELL STATE academic program and is as- “Industrial development promo-| signed periodically to work as a tion to sell Michigan is necessary waiter in the dining hal} and to because other states are doing! a dormitory cleanup detail, The | everything possible to attract in-| son of King Peter and Queen dustry. However, in the final an-| Alexandra, now in exile in| alysis, location of an industry gen-| Monaco, he was born in London erally depends on where the in-| and has never been to Yugo - dustry can make the most! siavia. money.”’ * * : * During 1958, Herbert said, ich-|f) Fj N igan manufacturers invested more; rug Irms ext am industrial buildings than” they!, ° id the year before. A p be But he said Michigan shou | nfitrust r0 look for diversification of industry) WASHINGTON (UPI — Three | by adding the manufacture of new! major drug firms have been in-| Products, rather than keeping only vited to lead-off Senate anti-| the industry types that “made it! ly hearings on alleged! the great industrial state it is|over-pricing of prescription medi-| now.”’ | ines. | Herbert i° | said new industry now Chairman Estes Kefauver (D-| tends to establish in tente os rs where Tenn) yesterday gave details of) there is a | a pool of research... imquiry which will stert Dec. ‘Michigan, while it c 7 and probably run until spring. of its scientific phi agen The groyp also will look into behind some other states in this|POssible patent abuses and finan- respect,”’ he said. ‘cial links between drug firms and \big ranking companies. A minis‘er complained that the! Kefauver told a news conference | only time some people come to/the United States has *‘the finest| church is “in a pram to be|medicines in the world,” butprices | christened, in a car to be married |for them are “getting so high they | and in @ hearse to be buried” .. .|are un@vailable to many people.” The way things are today, you| Officials of the Shering Corp., can get killed Wriving while drunk /M and Co., Inc. and the Up- —or crossing the street while |; Co, have been invited, to be! sober. Earl Wilson, ‘the first witnesses, 5 (© 4 | Install your own Armstrong Cushiontone - FREE Tile Weekend Wonder Apron © Classic ... When you buy an Armstrong © Full Random eeling. Offer expires Jan. 1. 1960. © Textured , Armstrong Decorator Series A COMPLETE LINE TO FIT YOUR NEEDS Decorative Wall Panels sang —— rT} a wie moe That You Can a Install Yourself Sg LASY— ECONOMICAL— EXPENSIVE APPEARANCE Finished Panels © PHILIPPINE MAHOCANY These V - grooved panels have ® RED OAK © CHERRY a super finish that means no finishing, no sanding, no seal- © SEN (Japanese Ash) ing . . . no extra cost . . . just ® WALNUT BIRCH install and wax. Natural Wood Panels @ Wormy Chestnut @ Redwood @ Tavern Grade Oak @ Birch These are natural ,woods in full 34-inch thick panels . . . all in stock at our yard and at prices that save you money. BURKE LUMBER CO. 4495 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains ) OR 3-1211 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 | - Ly ng pre? TM w a CC a og 4 tad Ad “ P “ey. f UE AW Tangy =o > we V7) Z ‘yn SPECIALS! Set of 2 Wood Boats, Plastic Sails 66c Sew-It-Yourself Hat and Pouch. 66c Colorful Musical Jungle Book... 66c Bag of 12 Plastic Baseballs. . 66c Water Color Paint Set... 66c Playfoam Stick-On Adhesive... . 66c m Walt Disney Plastic Cut-Outs.. 66c - Aerial Ladder Fire Engines... . 66c AND MANY, MANY MORE! Weekdays 2-5 P.M., 6-8:30 P.M. WAITE’S TOYLAND ... DOWNSTAIRS Goal] met “da Gy J Lowe ‘ SHOP TONIGHT, SATURDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9! ll be at Waite's Tomorrow at 10 A.M. ¥% with FREE Candy for the Grand TOYLAND OPENING! SANTA’S HOURS ‘TIL CHRISTMAS: ow * ' Friday and Saturda 10 A.M.-1 P. M., 2-5 P.M., 6-8:30 P.M. - r A a . 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Wooden Horse and Musical Wagon $4.98 Riding horse and musical wagon filled with © sponge blocks Imported Hardwood Table and Chair Set $19.95 Highly polished hardwood table and four sturdy chairs. IBM “Electric” Steel Typewriter $4.98 Authentic copy of -the real thing. With ribbon. ‘ r ee ae ef 48 West Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 Owned and Published Locally by The Pontiac Press Company HAROLD A. FITZGERALD . President: and Publisher Howssn BH. Prrecrmsie @. Jouw W. Prreoenap A Riser Vice President Gecretary and Editor Treasurer and Business Manager Basncr J. Rew. Managing Editor Ban, M. Tegsoweie Circulation Manager Advertising Director G. Mesemat. Joapan, Grones C. laeman, Loca) Advertising Classified Manager Manager Diplomatic Immunity Has Gone Too Far Well, papa finally says he'll send that little Irish tramp home. But papa stalled around until a woman was killed. x * * “Diplomatic immunity” has be- come a badly overworked courtesy when a little punk like this Davin P. HEARNE can get away with all the in- dignities that he perpetrated in this country. Finally, he killed a woman with his automobile and it became the fifth time in eighteen months this young hood escaped talk- ing to judges by invoking an ancient privilege that was conceived 170 years ago for ladies and gentlemen. x * * The current case is probably the most flagrant violation of good manners and international ’ amity that the nation has wit- nessed. Son of the Irish Ambassa- dor, this adult delinquent has already been ordered out of a res- taurant for unbecoming conduct, knocking down a policeman and kicking him before reinforce- ments arrived. x * * Why he wasn’t ordered out of the country by his father long before is a mystery that the family of the dead woman will never understand. Why his family doesn’t waive immunity on him now is something a lot of other people can’t comprehend. x * * Only two days before his auto- mobile killed the woman, the State Department had sent his father a communi- que outlining his misdoings and misconduct. —— When diplomatic immunity allows things like this, it’s time the custom is reviewed — or some fetters placed on, automatic ex- tensions. National Catholic Shrine Is Dedicated Today Thirty-nine years after the corner- stone was laid, America’s largest and first “national” Roman Catholic Church, belonging to people of all dioceses alike, is being dedicated to- day in Washington, D.C. * 7 * The Shrine—it is not a cathe- dral—was the concept of the late Bishop Thomas H. Shannon, rec- tor of the Catholic University, who proposed its construction in 1912. The shrine will not be com- plete on the inside at today’s dedi- cation, but final cost will reach approximately $30 million. * * * Medieval in every sense of the word is probably the best way to describe this huge basilica. It is medieval in appearance and construction. It has massive walls and columns of solid masonry supporting roof and dome. Oddly enough, there is no structural steel in the shrine. Instead, rein- forced concrete and huge piers of brick were used. ° * * * Officiating at today’s cere- monies of Washington’s National Shrine of the Immaculate Concep- tion, the world’s seventh largest church, will be Cardinal Spellman of New York, chairman of the board of trustees of the shrine. * * x Emphasizing the permanence of this national church is the fact that theoretically the edifice is construct- ed to last forever. No major overhaul is expected in the next thousand years. Government Lotteries Would Aid Taxpayers Probably there’s no greater “au- thority” on gambling in all forms than “Lucky” Luciano, In case you've forgotten, this is the big time f, Washington ' hood who was deported to Italy when other methods of taking him out of circulation had failed. , * * * There have been many suggestions that Federal and even State taxes be paid in part by Government con- trolled lotteries. LuciANo’s current comment on gambling from the depths of Italy where he still resides unhappily are interesting: * * 4 “Legal gambling would take the profits from racketeers and give them to the govern- ment. Why not give the tax- payer a break?” Gambling has mostly sordid and unsavory sides, but a Government operated lottery would not be any- thing new in the world and it would ease the burden of the taxpayers and shift it to the shoulders of those who paid voluntarily. The Man About Town Any Survivors? Of Boys Who Pumped Pipe Organs by Hand- Champagne: What too many men drink on a beer salary. — Now living in Toledo, William R. Pullen writes me that as a lad he pumped the pipe organ in both Pontiac and Birming- ham churches over 50 years ago. This was the days before that job was done by an electric motor. He wonders if there are any other local survivors of that occupation. The boy was hidden behind the organ and supplied the necessary wind for the tubes by pumping a bellows with his hands. Sometimes the boy fell asleep during the sermon or just before the doxology and the organist lacked the wind to carry on. How many of our readers are members of that fraternity of former pipe organ pumpers? My nomination for the champion but- ton collector of Oakland Coumty, with a challenge for state honors, is Mrs. Seymour Arnold of Holly. At her last count she had 9,855 buttons, no two alike, most of which she has mounted on cards. The Pontiac area will be well represent- ed at the International Livestock Exposi- tion at Ciyfeago Nov. 27 to Dec. 5, as the farm of the late Howard L. McGregor of Rochester has entered eight Aberdeen Angus cattle. . The acme in real estate values in Pon- tiac is reached in an adv. in a copy of the Pontiac Gazette of May 14, 1886, handed me by James J. Friendly of Birmingham, offering ‘full size build- ing lots on main street within two blocks of courthouse at $75, with $5 down and 50 cents a week.” In {ts campaign to land the Olympic games, Detroit lacks a swimming pool to meet the required specifications, but Pon- tiac's . R. C. Cummings tells me that his Huron-Clinton Metro- politan Authority may build one at its Metropolitan Beach on Lake St. Clair. After reading of the hunting fatalities caused by defective heating equipment, Lancy Jardine of Oxford didn’t take any chances on one he had taken with him. He threw it on a junk heap near Mio and “suffered it out.” Ly Verbal Orchids to - Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ogden of 46 Oriole Road; 54th wedding anniver- sary. F. X. Touscany of 830 West Huron St.; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Gilmore of 385 Prospect St.; 52nd wedding anni- versary. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Caswell of Holly; 62nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Berlin of Reese; golden wedding. George N. Cleary of Rochester; 80th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Rudduck of Holly; 55th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Ann Freeling of Metamora; 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Rawleigh of Lake Orion; 52nd wedding anniver- sary. | Mrs. Rebecca Hindsman of Keego Harbor; -8ist birthday. } bi] WORR/ S-0 Legare. Shall We Tell Him? David Lawrence Says: Why Dodge the Loyalty Oath Law? WASHINGTON—Leading univer- sities and colleges have every legal right to refuse to participate in a government-loan program requir- ing student beneficiaries to sign “loyalty” af- fidavits, but it may be questioned whether the ex- ecutives of these educational _ insti- tutions realize the extent to which they are striking a blow against their own govern- ment’s efforts to thwart Communist espionage and LAWRENCE subversion inside the United States. When the Congress set up the program for loans to college students, it included the require- ment that any student getting a loan, in addition to taking the oath of allegiance, shal] file with the U.S. commissioner of education an affidavit declaring that the student “does not believe in, and is not a member of and does not support any organization that believes in or teaches, the overthrow of the United States government by force or violefice or by any illegal or unconstitutional methods."’ The college presidents who are objecting deel generally, as one of their number said in a public statement, that the affidavit re- quirement ts an “affront’’ to students. It is further argued that it would “present no bar- rier to those it is designed to catch,” as such persons would lie anyhow. But that’s precisely the reason for the ‘‘oath’’ itself. It is difficult to prosecute a Communist or Com- munist stooge in this country today because of technicalities raised in various court decisions, and about the only way to ferret them out sometimes is by means of perjury indictments. CAUGHT BY LIE Thus, Alger Hiss operated for a considerable time in behalf of the Communists while he was working in the Department of State, but he wasn’t caught till years after- ward when he lied in testimony be- fore a congressional committee and went to jail on a perjury con- viction. It is well known that the Com- munists operate on the campuses of many Colleges. To select one group and not others for the “loyalty” oath re- quirement is, of course, dis- crimination, and, Congress has been slow to make it a general requirement covering all govern- ment benefits or privileges. Nevertheless, teday every per son who works for the federal government, whether appointed or elected, must take the “loyalty” oath. This includes hundreds of thousands of people. The Federal course, has every government, of constitutional right to impose a ‘‘loyalty’’ oath or any other condition As a basis for granting a contract or a privilege. a big campaign on There is “It’s lots easier to tell what you would do if you had the right chance to show what pre 8 chance you education all along the line. But one thing seems certain — those who want such benefits will have to conform to the conditions laid down by the Federal government. It is strange that when other re- quirements that interfere with “freedom of association’ are im- posed by the. Federal government —as, for instance, in connection with employment practices — there is not much protest from the heads of colleges or from the in- veterate champions of ‘freedom of association.”’ Thus, it isn’t even a law of Congress but an executive order under which companies that have government contracts may have them revoked if the President's committee on government con- tracts finds that discrimination is practiced in hiring because of race, creed or color, In the*tase of labor unions, Con- gress has gone even further and imposed criminal penalties to meet the Communist menace. The labor- reform bill adopted at the last session prohibits any person who has been a member of the Com- munist party in the previous five years from being on the staff, in any except a clerical capacity, of a labor union or of an association of employers dealing with any labor organization. Congress either has to repeal all restrictions placed on the exten- sion of government grants or privileges or be in the position of favoring one class of beneficiaries of government money as against another. What is needed is an ex- tension, rather than an abridge- ment of the “‘loyalty’’ oath pro- gram, (Copyright, 1959) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY And the Lerd answered me: write the vision; make it plain upon tablets, so he may run who reads it. — Habakkuk 2:2, * * * But truths on which depends our main concern, That ‘tis our shame and misery Rot to learn, Shine by the side of every path Dr. William Brady ‘Says: Keep Those Chilblains Away From Radiator The best way to prevent chil- blains is live in Coral Gables or Beverly Hills. If this is not con- venient, the next best way is to keep your feet dry. If your feet sweat much, it is difficult to keep them dry; but you will get some ° helpful sugges- tions from the free pamphlet Ex- cessive Sweating for which send me a_ stamped, self-addressed en- velope. Getting the feet wet by stepping into a deep puddle or by walking, pr. BRADY working or play- ing in snow or slush rarely if ever causes chilblains because vigorous physical activity maintains good circulation which prevents both chilblain (first degree frostbite) and blistering (second degree frost- bite). Usually chilblain occurs on the heels and borders of the feet, but sometimes on the fingers, ears and nose. It is wise to rub the affected skin gently if at all, because too vigor- ous friction may cause blistering, which makes infection more likely. * * * One with chilblain should avoid close proximity to radiator, stove or fireplace. Such heat makes the chilblain burn and itch intensely. To prevent chilblain of the feet soft woolen stockings are advis- able, or at least woolen feet on cotton, silk or nylon stockings. Do not wear tight stockings or shoes. It. is not just my notion but the belief of various physicians of years past that a suitable dose of calcium daily combats or tends to prevent chilblains. The only dif- ference between the old timers and me is that they called calcium medicine and I call it food. Since chilblain is first degree frostbite it is well to mention here the emergency treatment of frost- bite commended by a top author- ity, Vilhajalmur Stefansson. Place the bare hand under the clothing in the armpit to warm it, and hold the warmed hand on the frostbitten spot for a minute or so. * * * Signed letters not more than one ease, diagnosis, or treatment answe 7 Dr Brady, stamped, self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1959) Voice of the People Urges Voters Voting to Change District Boundaries It is time for legislative boundaries to be changed, so why not get them on the next ballot for a change? In 1958 55 Democrats were elected to the Michigan Senate representing 3,435,659, .and 55 Republicans repre- senting 2,936,107. * x * Some of the upper state districts are Republican with a small population, and others in Detroit and heavily populated areas are Democratic. There have to be ten of us Democrats in some districts to equal one in another district. * Suppose * * you're sitting beside a man from the Upper Peninsula and they give him ten ballots and give you one? You would be plenty mad, so why not get it changed? 114 E. New York Ave. ‘Glad TV Doesn't Control Autos’ Nice that the TV industry doesn't control used cars. For the benefit of business, I’m sure glad all the autos running around aren't fixed Bert Steiner 84S. Perry St. ‘At Least I’m Not Alone Anymore’ Insecurity has overtaken me. My thoughts have been running akin to this: Michigan should secede from the Union, what with the State finances and the steel strike making it worse, Maybe Michigan could declare bankruptcy and start a mess of its own, or we could join the one Fidel has going. Maybe my husband would be laid off after many years of service to Pontiac Motor. Then I thought I was saved. Good, old, reliable Pontiac Press started its ‘‘Master Your Tensions” series. Things began looking up. And then you did it. * * * In spite of being an independ- ent, I knew I could always count on reading praise for Eisen- hower and kicks against Gov- ernor Williams. Just as I was really returning to my formerly well-adjusted self, good, old, re- Hable Pontiac Press criticized the Eisenhower administration's back of the hand talk and “shushs” on publication. So now I'll have company. You, the editor, have also gone mad, and just as I was doing so well. It's probably a State institution for me. I think I'll form a non-con- formist group of my own — I don’t like the way the Beatniks dress. P.S. Love that Pontiac Press! Other Half of Split Personality less of their poorness or ., . millions they are worth .. . But I cannot agree with her. . . I think the rich and poor . . . Are equal in the problems and... The torture they endure ,. . . TI do believe that all of us . . . As God may grant and bless... Have sorrow that is balanced by .. . Our share of happiness... Even a sudden tragedy .. . With sor- row, tears and wails .. . May be almighty God's own way... Of balancing the scales. Thomas Thrower ‘Keep Democrats in Their Place’ Don't forget Democrat Woodrow Wilson dragged us into World War One after running on a platform of “He Kept Us Out of War.’’ Demo- crat Franklin D. Roosevelt (‘I abhor war'’) plunged us_ into World War Two. And Harry S. Truman (Democrat) led us into the Korean War. x & & Wilson and Roosevelt won their wars but each of them lost the peace from here to the rear side of the moon. And Harry lost the war, the peace and world respect. x * * Keep the Demmies where they belong — out of the White House. Shot At ‘Senators Deserve Such an Honor’ Those Republican Senators in Lansing should have their names enshrined in sifting sands and pre served for 15 minutes, Disgusted Democrat ‘Let the Designer Use the Driveways’ The fellow who designed the driveways at Madison Junior High School should be made to use them, especially on a rainy afternoon when his time is limited. Parent ‘Chalk Another Up for Soapy’ The Ferry Morse Seed Company has moved to California, Goodbye, Soapy. Fight it ogt with your Senators and los® some mere. * * During a fire in a school house in Indiana all the children marched out carrying all their school books. Really, kids, was that smart? * * * What tickles a dentist like a new candy store opening in his neighborhood? * * * Fall is that time of year when Dad wishes he had fixed that broken storm window when he took it down last spring. Case Records of a Psychologist: Hostile Attitude Handicaps Worker Bill’s case is common in mod- ern America, And it illustrates an ‘old adage about human envy. Why aren’t Communists unselfish, like the Christian missionaries? Because they are greedy und envious of capital- ists. They plan to unseat the wealthy and then take that wealth for themselves. , By GEORGE W. CRANE CASE D-405: Bill Z., aged 29, is a talented machinist. “But, Dr. Crane, he resents tak- ing orders,” his foreman said. “He grows belligerent and goes around with a chip en_ his shoulder all the time. If it weren't for this hostile attitude, he’d be an ex- cellent man, for he is smart and a fast worker. “BEARCAT” vs. “HOUSECAT” Sometimes a boss is always throwing his weight around and barking at his employees. * bd * We psychologists call this the ““bearcat”’ office behavior to cover up the ‘‘housecat” at home. In short, a henpecked husband ° may then try to take it out on his employees. Well, the same “bearcat” behavior may be « factor tn Bill’s hostile attitude, But there ‘are other possible ex- . planations. For example, notice - this adage from personnel psy- chology: a “The more violently a worker resents taking orders from his poner pee Where. envtong. ie OS The most ardent leaders of Communism, too, | are really capitalists at heart! They don’t tear down the capitalists out of sympathy for the poor and down- trodden. Not on your life! They attack capitalism because they want to unseat the present wealthy leaders and soon take their places. Look at many ardent labor lead- ers in America who inflame work- ers against employers, citing the large profits and fat salaries of the employers. Yet those same labor leaders may draw $50,000 salaries, not to mention ‘“‘free’’ housing, ‘‘free’’ Florida winter estates, and auto- mobiles, etc. PERSONNEL STRATEGY In the classroom, when a teacher sees a boy with more energy and leadership than usual, but who is becoming a troublé maker, the teacher often appoints that child as a monitor or traffic policeman. Leaders, whether of labor unions or management, often have much in common, They are usually high ‘in I. Q, fortified with a lot of physical vitality and drive. * * *® At the outset, it takes very little to change a potential John J.. Lewis into a champion of manayge- ment. For leaders are like college @ebaters. The latter don’t care mach which side of the issue lot of trouble on the job by his resulting ‘‘bearcat”’ actions. For a man who has a happy home life is not likely to be car- rying a chip on his shoulder when he gets to work. Some pugnacious workers have felt imposed on during childhood by overly domineering parents. Or they have had to fight their So send for the ‘‘Tests for Ems ployers & Employees,” enclosing 4 stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). They are wide+ Always write to Dr. George W. Crané@ in care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, typing and Dr h his psychological nul cant ity ad gif afi e & i ~ MEN'S 100% WOOL SLACKS, REG. 9.99 ‘9 WALDORF coTTow FLANNEL, SKI PJ's 2 55 Reg. 2.69. Two styl f° for! ‘Sanfotized, week ancy, solid colors. Full cut in sizes 6 to 16. Save now! Worsted wool flannel, woven flannel, two-ply twill gab. Double pleats, zipper close, five colors. 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No-drip spout, plays “Tea for Two. ™ 249 4 ’ 7 . EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas ‘ist sono MRS. EDITH J. HALL Mrs. Edith J. Hall, 87, of 630 E. Beverly Ave., died in a,De- troit hospital this morning after a long illness, Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Dora Hubbard of Detroit, a son, Claude of Pontiac, a brother and a sister. Service will be held Sunday at) 2 p.m. in Huntoon Funeral Home with burial Monday afternoon at North Alice near Onaway, LEO W. PALM Leo W. Palm, 55, of 57 So. Rose- lawn Dr., died unexpectedly at his home Thursday morning. Besides his widow, Dorothy, he is survived by three sons, william | and Harold of Pontiac, Richard of Bay City; four daughters, Pear- less, Janice, Delorese and Gayle of Pontiac, Also surviving are a Dodge Dart The New One in the Low Price Field HEATER, TURN SIGNALS, DUAL ARMRESTS, VISORS, OIL FILTER, CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE } { | | | | She was a member of the Pi- brother and sister, and two grand- children, A Moose service will be held Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home where the funeral service will be held Mon- day at 10 a.m. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. OSCAR M. AMBERG TROY — Service for Oscar M. Amberg, 72, manager of the Ed ward Wiggle Feed and Supply Store here, will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday in the Northwest Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., 18900 James Couzens Hwy., De- |troit. Burial will be in Beth El | Cemetery, Detroit. * * * Mr. Amberg died unexpectedly ;of a heart attack yesterday at his home in Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Freida; three sons, Martin, Charles and George; and seven grandchildren. MRS, OPAL M. BEACH held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Lewis! E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston. | Burial will follow in Lakeview Cemetery, Clarkston. , * * * Mrs. Beach died unexpectedly | yesterday at Pontiac General Hos-| pital. oneers Club and the Royal Neigh- | | He had been head of the English INDEPENDEN“E TOWNSHIP—|™#tics and public speaking the ‘Service for Mrs. Opal M. Beach, | @St 18 years. | |72, of S751 Ortonville Rd., will be| eV one “Alien. Staniey and ETROIT # — Fire, believed to FRANCIS L. SCHAAR. WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Francis L. Schaar, 6, of 2089 Kingston Rd., will be held < @ * * at 1 p.m. Monday at Donelson- i Johns Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial! will be in Bay Port. been vacant since Mrs. Torrey’s Mr. Schaar died yesterday in| Pontiac General Hospital after a! year’s illness. Surviving are his wife, Marie; a daughter, a son, three brothers and five sisters. | On checking the mansion, the po- | ALLAN PAUL SPRINGER ‘| licemem said they found it filled FARMINGTON — Service for| with smoke. ; Allan Paul Springer, 68, of 22195 Most of the roof and part of the Gill Rd. will be held at 2 p.m_jthird floor were burned. | today at the First Methodist Church, Farmington with 7 snelai lke 's Passive, Meyner Says iday following a heart attack. Department at the Detroit Country Cites TV Scandal and) Claims White House Acts Only in Crises | Surviving are his wife, Mabel, Howard, three daughters, Audrey, Flora Ann and Carlie, 10 grand- children, and three brothers. TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)—Gov. Rob-| jert B. Meyner of New Jersey to-/ |day described President Eisen- ’ | how “ i todian Frank James Son, hovs,as 7s.Bassive, custodian in only when problems reach crisis Refired Farmer, Dies >on, Meyner, ‘in @ speech prepared |for delivery to the National Young | | AT DISCOUNTS OF 20% to 50% Day: School_and instructor in dra-| | Convention, again )Donald G., Herbert R., Robert C. | nephew of Jesse, is dead. WINDSHIELD a ee LIBERTY, Mo, (AP) — Robert | nemocra . 0, — | \ WASHERS | Surviving are « daughter, Mrs.| Franklin James, only son of the cited the Raymond Graessie; four sons, J ' cited the recent television probe | as an example of what he called | Republican misadministration of! $138" DOWN and Charles R., all of Clarkston;| The 82-year-old retired farmer|such agencies as the Federal ‘and 15 grandchildren. Several | died Wednesday night in a hospi-| Communications Commission. brothers and sisters also survive. ‘4! here. Cause of his death was x * * 80 PER . not announced. He blamed the television rig- $63 MONTH JON. EWANEOK He was the only son of Frank ging scandal on the Eisenhower 4 ROCHESTER—Service for John James, chief lieutenant of the administration in a speech at |Ewaneck, 73, formerly of 303 E.|Jesse James gang of train and Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday. | Fourth St., will be held at 11 a.m./bank robbers who plundered the! The governor called Eisenhow- ‘tomorrow at the William R. Potere, Midwest after the Civil War. er’s appointees to head the six No Payments ‘til | Funeral Home. Burial will follow) Robert was born in Nashville,/major federal agencies ‘‘incredi-| | 211 8S. SAGINAW ST. ROAD SERVICE FE 3-9123 BENNETT TEXACO SERVICE Telegraph at Voorhels Rd. Next Year! ‘in Mount Avon Cemetery. | Tenn. His father was hiding from | pie” | Mr. Ewaneck died today after a| the law at the time. “The bumbling, inept, myopic ® long illness. He left no survivors. He is survived by his widow, | john C. Doerfer, chairman of the John J ‘mith sONN NARSIN Mae Sandboth James. |Federal Communications Commis- | ‘ ORTONVILLE — Mrs. John ee cee DODGE, INC. (Mary) Narrin, $4, former Orton- Deaths Elsewhere accident. He fits’ the pattern of | ville resident, died early this morn- ing in Chelsea after a prolonged illness. dren and two brothers, Roy Wolfe of Ortonville and Clare Wolfe of! Lancaster, Calif. other big six appointments, which | OLD LYME, Conn, (AP)—Tru-|have been mediocre or worse,” man P. Hardy, 69, chairman of|Meyner said. t the -board of the Celluose Corp.| ‘‘What is obviously meeded in| and vice president of the Celan-|Washington is active and continu- | ese Corp. of America, died|ing direction from the top, an in-| Wednesday. sistence that the departments of ~*~ * * government carry out their ap- DENVER, Colo. (AP)—Richard| pointed tasks, and the regulatory J. 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Value sherbets. % : MICHIGAN SHOVEL h We carry the best mechanical toys by the best makers. GILBERT MICROSCOPE and LAB. SET Volos $359 VF Meg hy | $10 Value MEN’S and BOYS’ GALOSHES (388 3. 4 BUCKLES FELT INSULATED CLOSEOUT MEN’S -- LADIES’ Ladies’ White RIPPLE SOLE SHOES in full assortment of Men’s in broken sizes, Sizes Boys’ 11 to 2; Youths’ 3 to 6; Men's 6 to 11. —— a? Comperes Favorably with Boots Selling ot $8.95 SUPER KEM-TONE ELECTRIC weaDquaRTERS | SANDER : ] 58 Ladies’ sizes. SAVE 50% Dinle_ Highway Store Ooty Thor-Speedway Electric Dixie Hwy. Store Only STEEL REINFORCED — ALUMINUM Full Oscillating Action Regular $24.35 Regular armature motor assures this sander will not overheat like vibrator motor sanders do. SAW CASE: This Week Only With Every Sew Sold “2” "ios. SUNBEAM Mirre Automatic PROCTER Big 1142” Size Hectric Big 13 x 18 Inch Size FRYPAN WITH COVER . WATCHES Pays a ‘I 2° 7 wel dress. Watches in ‘ eqguiar alue re nr hate Gai F Regular $1995 ion: See. Wash ft OPEN MEN’S 17 Jewel Waterproof, Anti - . Has Laminous Hand. Rigiber sass. $1495 Models that are Shock- ic, Seen os) and Sweep bd DHAILV } | CENERAL Warehouse Co.' ’ : ‘ f- 9 4 MIRACLE MILE ONLY A ae: , . ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 | 7 __/ SIME Master Your Tensions © whee he's Raving trouble i - : Show Love. for. Children eee GEORGE S.STEVENSON, M.B.1. After the first week, a miracleyways, and asked her neighbor it) From 6 f0 Regt tapcaigen and HARRY MILT began to take place. The. pale. [she would give her advice and gup- |Uscesecion ¥ pj Aged Children can be: wonderful. But/listless babies began ta.laugh. They port. Mrs. H. cheerfully took on'),entaj and bodily skills he’s go-| : they can also be horrible. They Started to gain weight, They be- her new new charge, and slowly Li-\ing to yse for a num : pore Grae They are messy. They\“@™¢ Playful. After severaljella began to change. PIANOS - ORGANS into trouble, ‘They bicker and|™0nths, many of them had made) At first she had a hard time reek great gains, physically end-men-|curbing her impulse to shovel food| 4 Stantmether | recsatly com But ‘aren't these disagreshble |: : into her ¢hild, to scold and slap,| “ented: ob S behavior traits the very same ones WHAT'S YOUR ATTITUDE? but gradually her patience in- eyed awd Pee ates FLOOR MODEL we have found to be associated’ It is instinctive rents t = , é with tensions in adults? ilove: their chikiven. ‘Bee rhe wo child changed too, becoming far : We firmly believe that a funda-|.. petitive strivings color our less fearful and fidgety. For many youngsters, adoles-| DEMON STRATORS com, mental, sound attitude about chil-| love. We wan There ate times in a child’s\cence is a period of great disturb-; . dren, and a knowledge of the ba-| 4. pce atta 9 yg ae life when he’s apt to feel particu-\ance. In their unpredictable be-| a sic things children need to make! chijdren, $0 we can show them|/@Tly insecure, and especially in havior, you sometimes see evi-| Substantia them feel secure, can help elimi- lott. : need of your love. Here are some|dence of the grown-up, or evidence | Savings! nate many of the problems cf) Children sense this and’ resent/of them: of the child. Yet it is during this) Small childrearing. ‘it. They want to be loved for them-| When your child has seen Period eo they pei easy | Down Children sieed love. The im. |selves,'not admired for what-they|through a wearing illness. alle pe sg ar tele Payment portance of love in their lives |do. When he hurts himself badly. yaR wre rstanding. ae) has been recognized for centu- | You might well examine your) When he’s gone through a fright-| ~ * * ov oe ries. But it took a dramatic ex- Don't walt fa the ‘geod, report} When he, poes re For years they've been free of| om Lay-A tor Christ riment to preve that love is n't wait for the good report n goes to pital. jmajor responsibilit But sud-| . — zay-Away tor ristmas coental even for physical er eat ip ola pease, "te SE, aon citaalteaeet teres denly, Mother and Dad Baill ‘gsc er aiecar aamicoommna of te. cuieper ot bare Yo OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT cellent ¢o ition either is away for theme: ; feSs- | N MUL Al é 7 — ” hug _ merping. <> 5 Gow zon ve sel. Barges such as this carry coal, lumber and steel h the | Dr. Rene Spitz made a study of/94 kiss them. an unusually long time. growing up. now, and.you're going) When a new baby comes into heart of England over these ancient narrow channels in places ¢ LBI MI IS] CO hemes top SpunMings. The cidren, Try pouring Eee wan shew ia, family. | Cet eee ee ee are only seven feet wide . — ranging in age from infancy to) doing nothing outstanding, when ."'No wonder teen-agers feel) . ‘ four or five — were getting good they’re just being themselves. When the family moves into * re ent at the prospect of) — ety PARK FREE IN REAR food and medical care, but almost new neighborhood. growing up. ow ™ all were pele, weak, sickly andj Parents sometimes say: “‘Why| When your child is having treu-| (Condensed trom “Master Your Ten- The U.S. consumes more choco-. Mére than 70 per cent of the 119 N. Saginaw FE 5-8222 dispirited. ido my children have so many|ble with his friends. \Geor ond Enjoy Living Again.” bzilate than any other country in the | world iodine supply comes from * 4 ‘ (problems? I never did when I was} When he starts school. Mit.) . ’ 7? \ word. \Chile. Then he | into their case '* — . ; 2 Parents forget. They remember | . peaclen wees a | mostly the fun they had as chil- ; dren. Viewing themselves as they mother for a few months and then th their chil lost her through poverty, iliness/4"<, ‘ty be like —_ = or death. Something very basic and dren high ee a important was missing from the) ted ont. = lives of these children — love. Judgra ee * Dr. Spitz got the nurses to act| . as mothers would — pick up the ite boy Aor an hai = and make a fuss over become disappointed if ‘‘their , . |little man” cries when he falls. |They become angry when their lolder child has a slump in school \or lets things slide, forgetting that ‘this i¢ what they did, too, as | youngsters. Put yourself in the place of an | infant. For the first year of his | | life, he has every need taken | eare of. But suddenty, things | | change. | ‘The do’s and.don't’s begin. Don’t ‘throw things on the floor. Don’t’ ery. Don’t bite. For a little child, it is bewildering to distinguish be- tween wrong and right. TIMES OF INSECURITY More difficult is the process of beginning to detach himself from) his mother, to start to think and) act for himself; to defend him-| 2° Bad alone to school. ry child has to go through | oy “But whether he goes through! it with relative ease and with a great on the attitude of his parents Difficulties are at a min- imum whew the child is by understanding and love. a Rervous, excit- able mother. She worried By the time her child was two, he was. confused and frightened. Next door lived’ the H’s and jtheir five children. Luella. used! to marvel at the way her neighbor never fussed if the children didn’t IT TAKES LOVE — Love, -in eat. She had the same easy-going equal proportions to all, will attitude about other things. gwe your children a feeling of | ‘ ~ . security. Luella dec cided to » Copy Mrs H's s > amen Sompere | PENNEY’S 3-D KNIT THERMAL PENNEY’S COMBED COTTON CORD | UNDERWEAR TRAPS BODY HEAT! 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SCARBOROUGH, England (UPD—David Jenkins got into Planned by Rambler wit Present his car yesterday and listened ‘ , , Stage Door politely while the woman in the KENOSHA, Wis. (AP) — An kaa American Motors Corp. official ORTONVILLE — The popular; Cruise the... Caribbean 7 : three - act comedy, “Stage Door,”’ | said Wednesday that the firm prot- by Edna Ferber and George 5S.’ Kaufman, will be presented at, Brandon High School tonight and. tomorrew night. Curtain time is 8:15 both nights. * J. J. Timpy, Detroit, American . é Motors vice president, aid the Cast in the°fading roles are} Why Not Give Your Family new assembly part Sandy Ferguson, Mike Troyer and gram during . | Also included In the cast of 32 | ; Wouldn’t you and your family like to try a He said the plan still must go are Sue Romeo, Sandra Sherman, scnamlately ditterent way of celebrating this before the company’s board of | Lynne Fink and Delores Cox. year... . enjoy the delights of life on a luxur- a ee ee AP Wirephete| The production is under the di. ‘ous-cruise ship . . . and the change of scenery pected. WEARS VEEP’S HAT — If 9 rection of Lee Moore, director of a by sunny tropical ports Roy W. Chapin, executive vice) year-old Deanna Smith chooses |dramatics. \ president and general of| to run for President she has the | Set in a girls’ theatrical board- Come In and Talk With Us Soon belle right hat to toss into the ring — it belongs to Vice President Richard Nixon. The Vice Presi- dent, on a visit to -Wisconsin | Rapils for a speech, left his hat in a car where it was found by Deanna's father. ing house in New York City, the’ play depicts the conflicts. which’ arise when aspiring young ac tresses vie for recognition on the |New York stage. Tickets will be available at the door PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE 698 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 8-9611 ———— | Thanksgiving Feature! Phone FEderal 3 7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW Pentiae Press Phete FIRST MSUO FOREIGN STUDENT — Aydin Studying to become an electrical engineer, he Tigaz, 19, is a Turkish guest at the home of Mr. _ likes professionaj football, and ‘‘the good Amer- — ican food.” : | 136-Pc. Homemaker Set Thanksgiving Daily Affair isd wna it tind ese in Turkey, Says Student for eight persons. Each piece is in the exclusive ‘Petal Lane” pattern. THE FIRST TIME that dinnerware, silver and glass have been combined in a matching ensemble! By REBA HEINTZELMAN | Every day is Thanksgiving Day in Turkey, according to a Michi- gan State University Oakland's! first foreign student who is living! at the William Shunck home in Waterford Township, *® * q to visit Waterford Township be-|third to a neighbor and one-third cause _of its rapid population to the family. f growth and the fact it is next to x * * a large metropolitan area. Before Aydin arrived in the. One of the teachers on the United States, he graduated from | | tour of the township was Ay- his own high school. He took rigid | | din’s mother, whe became so examinations on all of the 15 sub- _ \jects “he had studied. The exami- nations lasted 31 consecutive days. Now, quite firmly established in| American surroundings, . Aydin is| beginning to enjoy professional | football, American teachers and the culinary efforts of an excel-| 4 2 pray five times each day, but also/ hosts whenever they feel especially ap-| tale dae aac Aman preciative. have the same experience. Aydin Tgaz, 19, (pronounced | The feeling was mutual, and aft- the Shuncks’ 16-year eld daughter |o¢ cultural views it was decided Patricia, who is living with the (to go through with the exchange. Iigaz family in Istanbul. * of Waterford schools. * * * It all started last summer when a group of Turkish educators chose | English, to. help toward his goal GRAND RAPIDS (UP1)—Famed of becoming an electrical engineer. poet Robert Frost, who delivered The tall, Railroad Engineers Cc r ~ to gineers are scheduled to take 4| * * Chan welt Bee seehe ‘I strike vote within the next few This is the time when giving : weeks |thanks takes on real meaning for * * ® * *« ‘everyone. This is especially true Police said they received an an-| Guy L. Brown, general chairman|during the “Romanzan” holiday, "ymous telephone call reporting) of the Union, said he called for|® one-month long tasting period.|* bomb was placed in the church, | : a strike vote to force ection in = day, but myo eh Pema COMPLETE Silver, Dinnerware and Glass, ALL MATCHED em. wage negotiations i . program tween the brotherhood and the na-| Some time after the Roman. pany y's ice wae @ 62 pieces American Dinnerware, platinum edged in “Petal Lane” motif. tion’s railroads. zan fasting, there is a four-day rmed of vanegetioe pasbragain 8 Dinner Plates, 8 Salad Plates, 8 Butter Plates, 8 Tea Cups, 8 Saucers, Brown accused the carriers of | Mosque, niente head . the | comment was, “It must have been) 8 Soup Plates, 8 Fruit Dishes, | Covered Sugar, | Creamer, | 13” Plotter, reluctance to bargain for a set- house arises at § a.m., and dig aug 2 Oval Vegetable Dishes. tlement. This should force some a biggest and best sheep = 4 thorough search of the inside action, he said. ree portions. ‘and outside of the building. failed @ 32 pieces Exquisite Glass in “Peta! Lane’ motif. Four needed sizes: 8 iced The brotherhood said it will be One third goes to the poor, one-|to turn up any explosives Drink Glasses (13 oz.), 8 Water Tumblers (9 oz.), 8 Juice Glasses (5 about three weeks before the ac-| > tual vote is taken e Wage negotiations between car- BR 4 riers and the brotherhood have NI been going on since Sept. 16 The| Cte engineers are seeking a 12 per) ne 4 cent pay hike. Railroads have Yahte asked for a 15 cent an hour pay, (a= cut, Work practices are also a big! issue, with management charging! featherbedding Under the involved procedures of| | » “INSTANT shall te Goer. would: provediy} E ecthic KETTLE’’| oz.}, 8 Footed Sherbets @ 42 pieces Famous Quality Silverplate by International in exclusive “Petal Lone’ pattern. 8 Teaspoons, 8 Dinner Forks, 8 Dinner Knives, 8 Salad Forks, 8 Soup Spoons, 2 Tablespdons. : NO MONEY DOWN Choose GIFTS NOW for CHRISTMAS vicndship Special ] Tat, M U TRICNUS not begin before spring, according | to a brotherhood spgkesman. EVIGs REPAIR SERVICE on all makes * Reasonable Prices TWELVE a Hours Long, Pay Small but Meals Free Santa Schools Flunk Bad Ones = By TOM HENSHAW ing Santas and their familiar col- NEW “YORK (AP)—A few years lecting chimneys on street corners ago, a glowering youngster in since 1901, learned early in the Long Beach, Calif. defied tradi same that an untrained Santa can tion by étealing up on a street cor- Mean disaster ner Santa Claus and kicking him ‘It is important to us that we be in the shins. properly represented on the cor- “That's for not bringing meiners,"’ says Col. Oliver P_ Strick- what you promised last year,’ Jand, the VOA's,national field sec- snarled the disillusioned lad. retary. “‘A bad Santa places the * * * Volunteers in an unfavorable The particular Santa—or maybe light.” it was another one—had earned) The nearly three-week course Is the boot by forgetting one of the really a training in courtesy. and cardinal rules taught by the Vol- tact. unteers of America in its schools * * * for Santas | The rules to be learned and ap- * *® * plied range from ‘Answer ques- “Do not promise children that) ons’ courteously’’ to ‘‘Keep your they'll get the gifts they ask for;mustache and whiskers on but send them away hopeful and/straight’’ to “Ring your bell loud- happy.” iy enough to be clearly heard.” The Volunteers of America, an} * * * organization similar to the Salva-| An evening’s class consists of a tion Army, conducts about 75 San- reading of the ten Do’s and eight ta schools in the larger American! Don'ts for Santas and a discussion cities. First graduates of the Class! period during which problems that of ‘59 hit the streets Friday have come up in the past are _ The VOA, which has been plac- hashed o over. A few students flunk the course, chiefly because they are too shy to ring their bells loudly or just can’t resist the impulse to wander away from their chimneys. SCHOOL IN SKID ROW The VOA’s school for Santas ‘in New York is the Bowery Taber- nacle, a mission in the heart of the city’s Skid Row. Students are recruited mostly from the elderly residents of the area “We never have to advertise for Santas,’ 6ays Col. Strickland “‘A lot of them keep coming back year after year. The new ones learn about it by word of mouth from the old timers.” Veteran Santas are many. Some have the same stations year in and year out. John Matison, for instance, has tinkled his bell be- 'side the Christmas tree in Rocke- feller Plaza for the past 1] years * * * The Santa season laste from Nov, 20 to Dec. 24. The hours are long, from 9 a.m. until 9:30 p.m The pay is smal] but there are THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, crying need of the money. berg, in his 70’s, dons the red suit! | year after year mostly because he likes the feel of doing something. Lion Chews Trainer, . | Punctures Windpipe | KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) lion attacked trainer Joel Hart- man after a performance of the Ararat Shrine circus Thursday; and punctured his windpipe Hospital attendants said man was in serious condition. He was bitten on the shoulders and throat The lion and its mate were pur- chased by Paul Kelly circus lion act, Wednesday.| Hartman entered their cage alone to become acquainted with lions. The lion knocked down Hart- man and pinned him to the floor, the for and George Fraser, former owner| of the animals, drove off the lion with Its mate didn’t join in the attack. | about three minutes. a long-handled meat owner of BROADLOOM CARPET AS LOW AS *1.99 SQ. YD. ifree meals thrown in. For most, | |the tiny wage supplements a pen | sion. Some, like retired pharmacist Herman Stenberg, aren't really in| i Sten-| | NOVEMBER 20, 1959 __ —-A Hart- the Kelly} fork. md Sine aE" he 4 SR we RCA Whirlpool Gas Dryer Big 20-Lhb. Capacity 148 Exceptional Values for Giving! RCA Whirlpool Automatic Washer 169" NO MONEY DOWN FREE INSTALLATION a 55 SQ. INCH VIEWING AREA usistim $159” Kelvinator 8 Cubic Foot Refrigerator ony 5] 58 2 . Pay No Money Down = OPEN TONIGHT "TIL 9 P. M. or Shop by Phone i Surprise Her With a lronrite lroner For Christmas Eve Delivery! Kelvinator 30-INCH Full Width Oven Completely Automatic 219 FREE DELIVERY 51 West Huron Street, Pontiac —HOOVER— Fost bag chonge - Etoslve tokes onty 5 seconds Double-Stretch Full horsepower New low, light, rug and floor nozzle Swivel Top Vac CONSTELLATION With All Attachments 49" $1 DOWN $1.25 WEEK General Electric Automatic Washer With Suds Saver and Lint Filter 5 1 | You Pay Only Motorola RADIO IN MAHOGANY voany $1 485 In Colors ................. $16.95 SHOP BY PHONE! Ps) of PONTIAC 7he (0D HOUSEKEEPING, Open Monday and Friday Nights Until 9 PM. FE 4-1555 90 Days Same as Cash! eS "100°, Nylon Twist mus $7. 99 Mises oF a Nylon Tweed 5-Year Guarantee Reg. $7.95 All Wool Wilton Tweeds and Plains Reg. $11.95 "100%, Wool Bark Tweed and Plains Tweed and Plains Reg. $10.95 Reg. $9.95 . | 9x12. | ~ TWEED | | AXMINSTER COTTON | | RUGS 3 Yr. Guarantee | SPECIAL Res. $5.95 | only $5Q9° $399 | ; . No Money Down! 36 Months to Pay! Home Service Make Appointment Today to See Many Wonderful Carpet Samples in Your Home, 9 *Acrilan Fiber by Chemstrand \ CARPETS 4528 Dixie Drayton Plains CARPET Monday and Friday 9:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. — Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:00 A. M. to 6:00 P. M. — Saturday 9 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. FREE PARKING in Rear and Front of Store OR 3-4109 OR 3-2100 LANL LIdUWD ~ LSIUNOd -- INIUIHLYY - GHOIXO~ WOOTLUY - NOOTY - WOIMUV ~ LINOYOD-3d9VW NOIMGUVH ~ SILLWI9 ~ AUNGXOU-HLUIS ~ SNMOD ~ FIDVAN~ YMVHOW . De oe \ Is Your High School , _ Watch for School News Represented in the Press? I HE PO? . I LAC PRE SS On This Page Each Friday FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. 7 oO THIRTEEN | ‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes’ Waterford Curtain Rises By JOHN, TEEUWISSEN club who joined this fall will be, ing this henor were Bill Poffen- ! Dramatics Club will present the The curtain goes up at 8 this made official members of the o1 berger, Leo Frankowski and motion irae te _— beecsaer - ‘for ‘e | Carol Saul, Cause’ at its’ meeting Monda evening on the first performance ganization. é ; lof “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” P evening. The film starring the Jate | Presented by the Waterford’ [ters of commendation went James Dean, is the first of several Township Hi sh School Brant _| to three Waterford students from [notes to students who rated bigh movies that the club is sponsoring j si -: the National Merit Scholarship jin the competition but did not|this year. The public is invited to | iClub, the ple tells the stor f i i , jClub, the play tell oe Corporation last week, Receiv- ‘qualify for the semi-final test. {see this picture. itwo teen-age girls and their ad-! lventures on an unchaperoned trip ito Europe The letters are congratulatory Most of the action takes place in Paris as Lorelei and Dorothy are in and out of trouble with money and handsome gentle- men. The comedy, adapted from Ani- ta Loos’ book of the same name, is the first production of the Dra- matics Club this yea The performances tonight and tomorrow night are the result of work on the part of the cast, stag- ing crews, committees and direc- tor, Patty Looman \THANKSGIVING ASSEMBLY Waterford’s annual Thanksgiv- ing Assembly will be held next Wednesday. The program includes numbers by the choir and choral groups and an origina! play writ- ten and presented by the address class Monday night will be the organ- izational meeting of a new club at Waterford. The Future Business Leaders of America, affiliated with both state and national organiza- tions, will be formed. The FBLA club from Holly High wiJl be there to give assistance and advice as Waterford High students launch this new venture. YOUNG AND GAY — These Oxford Area Community High formance tomorrow evening. The principal characters in the three- School students seem to be enjoying their roles during this re- act comedy by Jean Kerr are (standing) Clinton Yerkes as Leo, sg _— hearsal of “Our Hearts Were Young and Gay.” ‘The play opens at 8 Diane Yost as Cornelia, (kneeling) Jerry Brown as Dick, and |, ¥ Teens will hold — ng tonight in the Junior High auditorium. There will be another per- (foreground) Kristy Pearson as Emily. [YWCA. The ae bape ssi or ' - . > - $ : Jur Hearts Were Young and Gay’ Clarkston High ¢t. Michael's Has )xford Presents Comedy Wa, em netY Thanksgiving Dance Welcome | ii e a By BARBARA ARDELAN Sta le at BATTLE OF SEXES — Waterford Township tain goes.up at 8. Shown during dress rehearsal By PAULETTE KIMBALL ; . High School actors rehearse a scene of rivalry above are (from left) Susan Shaw, 3071 Old Or- a | } By BEATRICE KRUG | Yost as Cornelia Otis Skinner: The Thanksgiving dance spop- The Senior class of Oxford Area! Kristy Pearson as Emily Kim- The curtain will go up tonight sored by the combined junior between the sexes in the school’s production of | chard Dr.; Roger Myers, 5743 Cooley Lake Rd.; ommunity High School is pre-. berough; Jerry Brown as Dick (on the Clarkston High School senior|classes promises to be a success “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” Performances afe Kathy Bray, 114 Calvert St.; and Don Wennsten, enting the delightful three-act | Winters; and Clinton Yerkes as |cjacs production of “The Night isj4t St. Michael School judging by) en ra slated for tonight and tomorrow night. The cur- _ 944 LaSalle St. omedy, “Our Hearts Were Young} 24¢ MeEvoy. lthe amount of tickets already sold.| —————— SSS nd Gay.” 8 p.m. today and t = oe a dance “Redskin Ramble,” iE notte ete et mite Da etn |g manana care "AA Cy Walled Lake HighShelton Voted Band rium, i | ‘The play was shown to the the date yet to be announced. | Pontiac Central High School stu- g e on 0 e an {Kennedy, Ed Erskine, Lucille At- : : g - y, rskine, junior high school Wednesday | jieading the committees are Rus-\degt, and faculty are happy to| Singers Tune Up E R h | | xec al KOcNeSsIer |My Enemy,” a mystery thriller ” —— oe _— | wood, Rod Wingett, Pam Broome,) and the senior high Thursday in se}] .Greenlees, tickets; Margaret! welcome back Principal Francis Claudia Wood and Karen Doug-| ™atinee performances, Tonight Steck and Kitty Daugherty, dec-|staley after a mild heart attack Jo.) , a lorating; Bob Sabourin, refresh- which sidelined him the first two sit ort ern for 60 Chorale . las. ° | Nest Bloomfield * * t Though primarily a mystery, the ments. geo ios -_ = months of school. By JUDY DUCKWITZ nal oh eheldon wa pone wel uJ ° 2 'story is filled with a warm ro-, en, publicity; and Andy An- Staley has been back part time| 3 i . Sheldon was elected chie ,eNnIOTS Produce The directors are Richard Siler, derson and Al Tunny, door prizes.|for two weeks and soon will be By ED SANTALA | Six Walled Lake High School stu-|, -soutive by popular vote of the land Jerry Limbert. The student di-|/ mance and moments of comedy | The famed* University of Michi-'dents last week attended the first P ’ hy : : . ~ & .& lassuming full time duties as prin- y om“ pina ag tp Rochester Senior High School Henrietta the 8th rector is Peggy Rich. j ~*~ * * Sharon Saxton heads the enter- cipal gan swimming team, former rehearsal of the 1960 Michigan Cho- Band Students on the makeup. s9m- | includes Paulette tainment committee , national champs, will give an rale at Ann Arbor. . By DODI DWYER Bae are Janie Langley, Pipl Lucy, Gakley an Rae ‘Diane vided the Ferros aad Nick and tee! Dering his absence, C. T. exhibition 8 p.m. Tuesday in the| They were Jackie Meridith, Ter- page ones bateee a The senior class of West Bloom-|Mann and ‘Kiku Hayashi. Working | Moller, Sandy Hollis, Bob Lawson, | Jaguars. | Foreman, necietent priscipel, |Pontiac Northern High Schoo! pool ry Wik, Lynne Ashby, Dodie Duct Se aemecte eld High Schoo! will present the Costumes are Paula Mann, Ja-\Georgia Robinson, Jim Manning,| Music will be provided also by has carried out the | One of the special events of! witz Dan Jackson and Jim Men-|S**retary-treasurer. lay, “Henrietta The Eighth,” |net Bass and Harriet Moore. Bill Rausch and John Kiett. records principal as well ‘as his own. ‘the PTSA sponsored show will be| ton Willa Huizenga, Cathy Hohnke, A new project has been launched # routine by the Northern all-girl More than 400 students from | 2%™ Frost, Jackie Scheehan and p.m. today in the gymnasium * x * = \Catalina swimming club Stedente appedting tn the cast | Members of the scenery crew | by the Business Education Depart-| : | southern Michigan schools at- Mary Lanktree, all juniors, are / ° / . . ment this semester. Each hour,’ The Catalinas in the show will the semi-finalists from Rochester are Linda Saunders &s Henrietta are Diana Raman, Sharon Souders, | G Id ( d l] H t t O 7 : ; , ditioned for the 1960 Michigan 7 Carver, Sonja Johnston gs Wilma |Janet Miholek, Edith Magee and | O a I ac I a r10n Gro icine Sones = soem be Nancy Hibbard, Linda Under- | Chorale which will tour Europe | High being considered for the a, oo - oot cee Waal, way a in| are in the teacher's workroom, hill, Sandy Hilderly, Judy Kern, | next summer to give concerts un- foreign exchange student whe 4 5 By DAVE NORTON 'Shafer. narrator: Carrol Wiltse, typing and duplicating copy for Ann Phillips, Carol Campbell, | ger the auspices of the Michigan | Will be sent to some country in ton, Jack Parker as Baggy Pants charge of properties \* hore | Baldwin, Charies Graves as Dir- When William Shakespeare wrote Sandy Sheldon, John McIntyre, teach ‘ig ; , fessor 0. wes Charlotte DeRouse and Ruth (Council of Churches’ “Youth for | Europe this summer. zy Lucas, afd Steve Melzian as A dale High Ski \“Julius Caesar” he had one thing Harry Rule, Mike Batinski, Sharon caivapia’ pally i spoeecaatedl Ann Kramp. Understanding Teen-Age EX: | ‘The five were picked after they P a: — . r Larry N ke i z . = r ‘ ” | t - Jimmy Howard. vonaaile Mig 1ers ‘in mind. He hoped to create a Tawor, Larry Middleton, June school service, thetie girls are gain- Included in the U. of M. squad change Program. wrote letters of application in - = ee oS ee ; ; play that would draw many the Drake, Jerry Exline, Marilyn” . Ce ; __ |are national champions Ron Clark Others are Kay Crawford as An Are Getting Organized |Woodcock, Al Ron Bell. (2% excellent work experienc 5 Dave Gillanders, Dave Ge : Garci which was included a 500 word atergoers to his Globe Theater. emiim Most of them are seniors and wil rlack and Emmanuel Pupils Start — abelle Mason, Scott Couzens as ; ‘ill \ nay Taahwik E tay Taylor, Nancy Macduff as| By IRVIN GINGRICH | Lake Orion High School's pro- Ville. Doug Miekena and Janet }. enzaced in business jobs after TO" ashni - , ; it ellen tee teen sed ts ~ ~ ‘ e oe e = . > *k et *, Maggie, Judy Wahlberg as Lizzy, Believing winter is here to stay, duction of . The Solid Gold Cadil- | Workman. i +. « | graduation. a ican sents tow sine ents Work on Yule Program New York where the final decision nd Sharon Thornton as Martha.| Avondale High School's Ski Club !@c” received such results as last | . ; | Tickets are mow On sale for “The oe ot nent oottieers. of the’ By EVELYN CHAPEL will be made and announced some Director of the play is Lorna d elected it t., night's opening. | Student directors are Janet pjiary of Anne Frank,” starring “““" , ‘ nies . a4 itime in Feb ; March Vildon. She is assisted by Jody Ras erganiees end Ce =* {Workman and Karen Craven. ‘Judi Johnson and .Jim Baker, to combined Co-op Club of Northern) Officers of the student body at} ruary or Marc 7 sane , A bea | A Bago torment ts expected | x * * fs held in the Pontiac Central audi-|2"d Central are Central's Bob) Emmanuel Christian School have! Sue-Schiecte, senior, was chosen Nilford, Marianne Jackson, Paul) for the second and last per- 3ennent, Bi Bergman, Judy Elli-| Barbera Tallman was CUMS | ne 6 p.m. today in the Committee chairmen are Jean torium Saturday night, Dec. 5, and Davis, president; and Northern’s| begun work on a Christmas pro- rd the faculty Rochester High : mee : - , a , af compete th students from to t, Bil) Deveraux, secre- | 2 Lewis, Otto Knibbe, Bud Bass, |s : 6. All seats|careen McClements, vice presi-/gram. pig ica ee tues oe: aod nr end Clifford Rock, treasur- | *ROel's speech room. Karin Church, Beverly OrTysen, ane reeceved. The ticket cients dent; Carolyn McBurney, secre-| Planned are’ band concert, hu-jother schools in Michigan for the seh Masters : : er. | The play’s cast includes Jim'Caro] Wallis and Pat Beraud. 75 cents , ~ — jtary; and Joanne Dembinski,/morous readings and vocals by the Deughters of the American Revole- ies ° a : treasurer, senior girls trio. The program will'tion award. —_—_—_—_—— ms ae | ee eee ed “ ——— - a ~ ° Rie ee ae , ’ “7 ans mone ia fe ®. 4 p é * af yoo Full 1% Carat Diamonds Fashioned and Designed to Excite Any Diamond Appetite 200.00 Value Priced at $] T P ha . Only Guarantee Bond Issued =e IMPERIAL CULTURED Men's Cuff ts! | PEARLS with genu ne Sadive See Our Complete set in 14 Kt. Selection of Finer nelheais Diamond and Pearl 100.00 Jewelry Priced at vee Unusual Savings +60 From $697 Transistor Radios in all the latest styles, makes and Our Silver Dept. main- teins a daily stock of models. every item vou may choose. Chafing dishes Ice buckets. candle Zenith, BCA $ 00 sticks, compotoes. trays. onanes from Olympic Save 0 Up To 0 LEONARD'S ies > 4 tees yee. fs At Our New Location . aie : ' ; ly trac | 45 N. Saginaw — 4 Doors S. of Court House THEY ALL EMOTE — Lake Orion High School seniors are producing the Broad- evening in the school’s speech room. The above picture shows how some of the Jows iS | : ‘ 2 ” characters emoted for last night's audience. They are (from left) John McIntyre, DOWNTOWN PONTIAC y it, ‘The Solid Gold Cadillac,” and hoping for similar response. The play was on er at the opening last night.: latent performance will be given this Harry Rule, Mike Balinski, Carroll Wiltse, Sandy Sheldon and Sharon Taylor. f ' \ A ; ‘ p _FOURTEEN _. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 _ : 4 death. but authorities did not rule Move in Power Struggle Flooding Rai out the possibility that more dead Olficials of UAW Sugge _, Payola? Sure jurors Present House to Probe freoti"g,r"s Blast Destroys suir.ranan “= ® Judge Beer og! The death ‘toll would ‘hale ‘been 6-Month Leave for Gosser “We Used lf’ JaParting cit Detroit's DJs 9 1222 Inches Fell 1,400 Buildings AS jes oth iy we | | MIAMI, Fla. # — Rain which poured inches j workers within DETROIT (UPD — A six-month Record Firm Owner ace ae aes about pfigy inn 5 Other Metropolitan. ’ Miami - ~ gusty . ord YOKOHAMA: Japah (AP) —-A the! a pueet bel -dooap ced to cover in leave of absence, suggested by top Says He Has Checks Court surprised presiding Circuit Areas to Come Under | — Lg liens predicted tiwe ina ata 2 plant touched | raves ‘ot behind earth ‘apd con ve ate vere ee oF iy to Prove DJ Bonuses 2ude® Mim dia a therm, Serutiny in 2 Weeks —turther showers. ‘off asseries of gigantic explosions was a Japanese navy ammunition ficialg for Union Vice President 7 ‘Sia Ae 2 * omen Thursday, there was a daylong jin a heavily populated Yokohama depot j Richard T, Gosser was the latest CINCINNATI (UPD Sydney Along with the sef was a card, WASHINGTON u—House inves- deluge. Numerous streets were suburb today. More than 1,400 La development in a_ long. internal tigators reported plans Thursday \flooded bumper deep and some buildings were destroyed or dam- : Nathan, owner of King Records, signed by all jurors, printed by Avani struggle between Gosser and Presi- : ; ; aaa 2 Pennsylvania has 107 institutions d W. > Re Inc. Cincinnati, said today his the commercial artist husband of to look into the activities of disc “°T® impassable. Hundreds of aged, and 376 persons were , ent Walter P. Reuther. : . a \cars drowned out injured of higher education, including a Gosser. last of the “bread and firm has paid off disc jockeys all:juror Mrs. Wanda D. Schultz of Jockeys in at least six major met-' y butter” unionists, has been re. over the country and he has the Huntington Woods. The card read ropolitan areas within the next two Ne residents had to be evac- * * total of 76 colleges and universi- moved as head of the UAW's or- checks to prove it “with respect and admiration’ to weeks. uated, although water lapped. There was only one confirmed ties ganizing department and asked to Nathan, whose books have been the judge * * * into many a front door. eee a ee ec take a six-month ‘‘vacation,”’ it subpoenaed in the New York in- It was presented this morning Robert W. Lishman, chief coun-- Business in the uptown section | vestigation of disc jockey payoffs, shortly after the 9 a. m. roll call sel of the House legislative over- came to a virtua) standstil) and | }said he will turn the checks over by Judge Beer’s clerk, Larry A. sight subcommittee, said investi- no sightseeing buses were seen| to Frank Hogan, district attorney, (Girard, who was asked by the gators will be sent to Boston, Chi-/hauling feurists who chose to| was revealed here last night. Union officials denied the re- We Sell What We Advertise Seer agenng poe part ae jwho is conducting the probe panel to make the presentation. |cago, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, }spend the day in dryness and com | EARLY AMERICAN top ranks. A spokesman said | “It is a dirty retten mess,” Although the jury officially con,New York and Detroit. Ps we a : SUGAR BUCKETS (10 Different Styles) $7.95 Nathan sald, “and it has been cjudes its term Dec. 4, the presen- Im addition te questioning disc | Motorists who did venture on Reuther himself, who was meet- | getting worse in the last five tation was made today as some jockeys and others in the ra- | flooded, rain-slicked streets drove | ing with trade unionisis in ALL METAL WARDROBES ....... . $14.95 Europe, would take over direc- years. It is getting so you can’t jurors are being excused early dio-television industry, i with snch care that the police e- tion of the department. get your records played anless oS said the investigaters also will _ : _— peer Gncanaeet AR CHESTS $15 95 + norm: The spokesman said Reuther —_ —— me ° nn CED pee - , would direct the unit “in concert Nathan said he has never paid Rochester Area Bull —————— 5 PC. DINETTES with all six of the unon’s elected Ric HARD T. GOSSER money to any Cincinnati disc # He defined this as including not Dividend Declared officers, including Gosser.’ ee jockey but has sent them gifts Wi T : only allegations of under - the - (Chrome-Browntone-Wrought lren) . $49.95 * * * He said, however, that one Cin- ins oronto rizes counter bribes to disc jockeys to DETROIT ™ — Udylite Corp.! : UAW Secreary-Treasurer Emil cinnati disc jockey banned King’s plug poplar music but also has declared a dividend of 2 cents STRATO UN INE Mazey said the decision that ord “Two Waterford Fires recent hit. “IT Love You Porgy,” ROCHESTER — An Aberdeen ‘Charges of secret payments for a common share, payable Dec. 15) LOUNGER RECL R ser, 58. of Toledo. needed a performed by Nina Simone, on the Angus bull, Great Oaks Bardol Plugging products and individuals|to stockholders of record Dec 1-jj UMMAH ...--.-- 2-2 eee erties $69.95 rest was made jointly with oe Sel b Y { ground it contained a ‘‘dirty line” am 2. ’ item Greet Cala fon TV and radio, kickbacks for The dividend is the fourth of 25) . during a top-level meeting last y oungs ers referring to “‘hot hands.” Stock Farm near here, won the promoting music sales and con- cents this year. FURNITURE SALES week Nathan said the dise jockey ‘¢tior and grand ch i ¢ flicts of interésts by disc jockeys | SS ‘ y grand champion o af . (Me He said Gosser suffered a | TWO Separate fires in Waterford made it clear he would relax the las at the Royal Winter Fair who also have an interest in mam Foreign showings of American; 334° au RN ee Lsaid slight heart attack during the Township within an hour yesteriay ban if King would pay. “He last night in Toronto. ufacture and sale of records. {fim bring about $100 million ek “wo ou Always Buy for @ AFL-ClO convention in San Fran- wich — 7 en ee made no bones about it,” Na- The farm, owned by Howard L. revenue a year to U.S. studios, 0-6 Mee. hd sat, Pri. "th 9 PE B-9tat cisco and has been troubled by lighter, tches to t a, Ane than said. The record company \icGregor, is at 1106 W. Univer. Iceland is about the same area |according to Department of Com-| gout, aca according P refused, he said. sity Dr. as Ohio state. merce estimates. A wnion spokesman said the| The 4-year-old son of the Robert Nathan said neither his firm nor move relieving Gosser as head of jcCombs at 4272 Hatchery Rd ®"y of its agents ever has tried to the union's Competitive Shops De- | set fire to his bed as he played hide payments to disc jockeys partment, the UAW’'s organizing with matches, firemen said. Dam- “We have always paid by check, ( unit, was taken to decentralize the| age to the house was estimated ©t cash,” he said Union's organizing activities =| $750. a putting more authority into the) hands of the 19 regional directors Another fire at the Walter Ba- ‘Birth Control Nations across the country. | ee tasted when the syear, Deserve U.N. Aid Most’ ast Daye. Kennecott Settles Sian Merwe are ney. og PRE-CHRISTMAS United Nations’ assistance to un = derdeveloped countries should be With Steel Workers Mrs. gy oye called the fire de-jimited to those reducing their Ni | Y prernery tere ‘ had the or under rate of population increase 1) SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—Ken. Control before they arrived. Dam- cit Julian spoke Thursday be necott Copper Corp. announced Aa the sofa was approximately +... the Planned Parenthood Fed teday negotiations have been 7 eration of America, which ten wel completed toward settlement of dered him its annua! Albert Lae - ify ® 08-day old strike with the Thief Has Big Plans ker Award United Steelworkers of America. ‘The very continuance of hu- PHP Kennecott and the USW said DENVER (UPID—A young man man civilization,” he said, ‘is they expected to work out final stole seven blank marriage li- now threatened, not merely by the Ral details of the settlement im a | censes and the city seal from a_ possibility of nuclear war but even meeting tater today. ' city hall office yesterday more gravely by overpopulation.” “MICHIGAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS’ : : ENTIRE SPECTACULAR REDUCTIONS ON TOP BRAND MERCHANDISE SAVE NOW— PAY NO MONEY DOWN—TAKE A YEAR TO PAY After 27 years in business Marks Jewelry Co. closed their doors and Thanksgiving Special COMMUNITY SILVERPLATE sold out their entire stock to us (52 Piece Service for 8) at a fraction of its original cost A complete table setting Reg. $98 This $75,000 stock of nationally for 8 people at this spec- $ 20 ial low price The value famous merchandise is now offered to you at unheard of savings. Most of a lifetime for your- self or for gift giving tems from our inventory are also included to give you savings of up to 75° and more. Shop now for Christmas . Sensational Savings For Final Clearance Entire Stock of SHEAFFER PEN & PTT Ee : 70% 40% OFF on DIAMONDS Pc. CARVING SET Everything must go! All diamond rings , Sane Price nee from Mark’s ond our own stock reduced to bring you the greatest savings we ever Just one to sett ot $1 288 offered. Come in and see for yourself the fabulous diamond values we have to 400 Day Gold Clock offer. All original Price Tags of Mark Mark's Price $42.85 Jewelers still on merchandise. HUGE DISCOUNTS ON FAMOUS WATCHES Just one left $] 288 = —o Price The newest styles for ladies and men. Jewelled movements for utmost accura- = LADIES’ DIAMOND Engagement . ‘chested! Gecem if Ring Va Ct. wiht Brillient size dis- 14 cy and dependability All watches are fully guaranteed by the maker and monds $300 .......... us and will give years of trouble-free service. Buy mow for Chri ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES : uve service. Oy aa te ; LADIES’ DIAMOND, Full Carat $ QQ 2 sevings you never dreamed possible. VW off SOLITAIRE, Imperfect Big Values! 1 | We Feature BULOVA-ELGIN-GRUEN 24 Pe. Set Bee SBS ene CoiakRing $488 BENRUS-HAMILTON-LONGINES-WITTNAUER STAINLESS STEEL | 20 —_ | Mark's Price 3595 $288 CENTS’ DIAMOND WEDDING 349% BAND Newest Design Reg. $47.50 ALL TRANSISTOR Value Spectocoler BINOCULARS CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED RADIO SCHICK BUTANE T | With Genuine Pigskin Cases ; $57.75—7x50 Now $28.88 with Speaker _ LIGHTERS $45.75—8x30 Now $22.88 Cl Out ose-Ow R la As nove a | 95 95 4 $37.75—6x30 Now $18.88 Cavctnne Four Roses Fas doen eae | $53.75—7x35 Now $26.88 — | DECORATOR WALL CLOCK America’s most gifted whiskey | enemas. $7488 CUCKOO CLOCK The diamond-point quart decanter proudly Mark's 326.95 $] 288 All Styles of Men's Set Rings §¢ pours the favorite of gift whiskies—mellow, ak ess me 12” \4 perfect Four Roses. At regular quart price. $16.95 Blond i $434 CUCKOO CLOCK =| Shrstmes Giving Vaiuer io 9988 aati, MTT Ll aad 4/5 QT Just One to $988 8 95 a ee ae i es . . > Pies Sales Tax Sell at Ladies’ Solid Gold Wedding The festive fifth comes superbly gift-wrapped —e Rings Values to 24.50 ...... with famou recipe tucked inside. : . ° 8 AF Wisephote nates the northeast section on his tractor on their land. Even if it passes the student Ap houettes featuring quality fabrics, pay ae ee Fee f fine tllring, new colors! Size fr uniden uskegon fire- | é c y, | ? ee ; without approval o i) , me wit man takes time out for a drink |north of fhe Capitol. Meanwhile, a special permit gean of students. And, King is on misses, women, juniors, so ° re hi - ine | from the State Conservation De- record as ailariy . costly fur trim! Don’t miss this while battling the $250,000 fire | 909 FEET HIGH record as not particularly favor which raged through a 26-apart- | ” ines ‘ blend th partment allows Oeverman to go ing the measure. great sale! No Money Down! i d Hosler’s clothi The shrine is a . ot me hunting right from his car. “I’m ee ment unit and Hosler’s clothing | py7antine and Romanesque styles. ; store in downtown Muskegon fiom the ground to the top of ‘its not really at a big disadvantag One-seventh the tota) area of early Thursday. The general | gold tipped bell tower is 329 feet. he says. “I've got a radio, heater Ireland is peat bog . z PO aa a EN _ . —_ — = _-_ = "a tee + alarm brought six pumps and an |r. wail behind the altar is 459 acum 7 ; cane aerial company to the scene, 50,-| Freezing temperat } pered | ‘feet from the entrance across “2 i ae tga ie oe Sa ee FRIDAY - SATURDAY - MONDAY SPECIALS ‘half the huge interior, the rest be-| : ing taken up with the sanctuary| Loo and altar. Cathedra | | ‘Most of the interior ornamenta-| * VaR anti AAAS TOYS SEEN tion is still to be added, but an; if bt for Gar les enormous mosaic showing a seated | -" 6 tee? ON TV... figure of Christ in brilliant reds) AP Wirephote . ~ Gen and gold is in place behind the TO BE DEDICATED — The upper church of the National ) @ ; ae Toys Church in Washington altar. Shrine of the Immaculate Conception which will be dedicated in \ © Doll Cribs — Washington, D. C. today is on the grounds of the Catholic Uni- ® Doll Buggies Needs Sculptors Who Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of versity of America. It is the largest Roman Catholic Church in * Sewing Like to Experiment St. Louis, chairman of the bishops’! America. In style, it is a blend of Byzantine, Romanesque and : ——— ‘committee in charge of building oo the shrine, gave the dedication WASHINGTON (UPI) — If YOU sermon. He called the ceremony modern architecture, with a blue and gold tiled dome rising 237 feet and a bell tower 329 feet tal]. Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York will lead the dedication. A procession of 1,000 priests, ® Tables, Chairs ® Pianos, Games ® Trucks, Cars have a talent naan hal ee oy = eee pie archbishops and cardinals will open the ceremonies which will last . = LS tel Washington Cathedral wou e! avs. fo hear, from you the United States. | _ nian days ee © Tool Chests , os ITNESS © Typewriters x * gone si An ordinary watch crystal will pressure, according to laboratory | ® Electric ‘This shrine stands as a ma- es at te The long a-building Episcopal sesti- and compelling witness not Tack under about?) pounds of tests oo © Grosser Seis church needs models of about 30/only to the physical and mate-| igus a | © Chemistry or so fanciful gargoyles, chim-/rial maturity of the church in our, cf Pe Sets is otesques or what-have- land,’ he said, ‘‘but particularly # you for ie putter system atop the ‘© its spiritual vigor, magnificent) 3 URDAY - MONDAY SPECIALS! aa . : unity and dynamic faith.’ ; gothic structure. And Dean Fran- He said the shrine was an “‘ex-|| 16.99 Long or Short Buy Now for Christmas 5.99 Complete 11-Piece DRINK ’n’ WET DOLL Ideal Gift for “Little 3 f cs B, rome ea pression of the Catholic democracy, # AVE: SERENE of the United States and of me Bean —Seyre—carefully_noted Catholics’ love and devotion of that the gargoyle project is not Mary Immaculate.” if a contest and no prizes are to * * ‘ be offered. The only satisfac- Other special masses will be of- ’ tion, should your model be fered during the dedication period ~ picked, woald be that your work —Oome tonight by Richard Cardinal * would be carved into the stone Cushing ‘of Boston and another fabric of the cathedral “‘to re- Saturday by James Francis Cardi- h nal McIntyre of Los Angeles masin: here EECeEn ee MEER Starting Monday, the shrine will Gargoyles are ornamental water be open to visitors daily. ‘ spouts that throw water from the Funds to build the shrine were > Quilt Lined, Men’s SPORTS JACKETS ap? 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LeddS © Fine Broadcloths church is « Dr. Bonham Appointed - M Weetleatber @ Embroidered Wools ~ or R t of Ombre Dean Sayre noted that today's Chief Trustee at MSU Driving Gloves 2.99 A Sellont! . “ © Meltons ‘demons’ — anxieties, phychoses' Fast LANSING W—Dr. Douglas, # and corrupting ideologies — ‘‘of- Dunham has been named head of H fer endless opportunities for ¢rea- the Michigan State University De-| tive fancifulness in carving.” partment of Social Science by the’ . is SAVE 50%, 19.98 16-PC, ELECTRIC TRAIN a NO DOWN PAYMENT Photographs of any work to be MSU Board of Trustees. You Get All This: submitted should be sent ta the He succeeds Dr. Walter R. Fee |. Sale of 19.99 AMONG THE BETTER THINGS Clerk of the Works, Washington who will continue as head of the « Wool, Quilt Lined Diesel Engine .... 5.98 Cathedral, Washington 16, D.C. 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Saginaw Neat Huron . Saginaw Near Huron } { , SIXTEEN King Saud, Feisal Fuss, Feud THE PONTIAC PRESS, October Building Arab Nation Teeters on Tempers Falls by 5 Per Cent. By WILTON WYNN BEIRUT, Lebanon W — The [fu ture stability of Saudi Arabia de pends on agreement between (wu brothers who often disagree. The) are amiable, free-spending King Saud and dour, tight-fisted Crown Prince Feisal These are the two oldest living sons of the fabulous old Lion of Arabia, King Abdu! Aziz, known to the west as Ibn Saud. The old king left his sons the strongest, most secure kingdom Arabia has known in a thousand years. with oil revenues so great as to seem unlimited Today it is clear the two brothers must hang together or hang separately. Without Feisal's austere hand on the financial throttle, the country | is likely to run into economic chaos. And without Saud's internal political skill, the dynasty may lose the support of the tribes who ire its main backers Even so. the brothers disagres so. often that they've reached a breaking point three times in a ear and a half Saudi Arabia has heavy Amer jean investment § through = the Arabian American Oil Co. (ARAMCO). The U.S. Air Foree has an air base at Dhahran. This correspondent has just re turned from a visit to the coun try, which admits correspondents infrequently Feisal — a sick man who has known pain for most of his life — was in hospitals in Europe but! telephoning daily to try to keep the country’s finances in order Saud had taken off on a trip through the desert north of Riyadh for the Saudi equivalent of a baby- kissing political tour. He visited mudhut villages and bedouin tents, Afro-Asian Plea Problem in U.N. West May Be Split Over Policy Toward French Sahara A-Tests UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -A lively debate shaped up today in the General Assembly on an Asian-African resolution opposing French atomic tests in the Sahara Desert A key group of delegates faced the choice of offending France or making an exception for her after going on record Thursday night against further nuclear weapon tests. The showdown is slated afte: the assenibly gives quick and una- nimous approval to a U.S.-Soviet proposal to turn all disarmament proposals over to the 10-nation East-West conference opening in Geneva in February. The disarmament resolution is sponsored by all &2 members, so thelp approval in the assembly is a formality Lola Albright in Hospital With Nerve Condition HOLLYWOOD (AP) Actress Lola Albright has been hospital- ize@ for observation of severe hest pains. Her doctor said the pains ap- parently were caused by nerve ir- ritations in her chest. The blonde-, co-star of the ‘‘Peter Gunn’’ tele-| vision series was taken to a hos- pital Thursday and is expected to remain there several days, PAYDAY LOANS $50 for 2 wks ... only 70¢! other loans te $500 with 24 mos. to repay CASH YOU | REPAY IM | REPAY We RECEIVE 2 weexs | 4 WEEKS $25.00 $25.35 $25.70 $0.00 $0.70 $1.40 atmoeet at 3% per month on beleoen to $56, T;% per month berwece $56 and ie, and %% per mewth co ony vomaindee ASSOCIATES LOAN COMPANY a DRAYTON PLAINS: 4494 Dixie Hwy. Carl: OR 3-1207 n PONTIAC: 125-127 N. Saginew CALL: FE 2-0214 2255 S. Telegraph Mich. Mirecle Mile CALL: FE 8-S641 WASHINGTON (UPT)—The val-} ri ; accepting hospitalitv of the highest October Feisal whe Premier ae ol new consiruction, completed in October declined by 5 per cent with gifts of cash, with specially;Feisal wanted to appoint an acting partly because of the steel strike, arranged marriages to Jink fam- premier in his absence Saud in- the Commerce Department said ilies to the House of Saud, or with sisted [bis was unnecessary and Thursday. It amounted to $4,800,- new social and ecenomic benefit that he would handle the govern-' ggg 900 and lowest and rewarding them had hi. latest quarrel with Saud ment himself while Feisal was Both private and public con- the tour ina ed Pid AoA in ayia away struction slumped for the month district alone. In those oll-fi Feisal threatened fo resign and showing a more - than - normal vor _ = finally issued a decree on his own’ change ranapendhr a. pee any Saudi gets naming. his uncle Prince Masuad ree medical care. However. the October dotal was Saud | per cent above the corresponding fiwure for October 1958 acting Prime Minister in acquiesced Just before his departure USE THE WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN No Finance Company to Deal With All Payments Made at Our Store : =) 5-Piece Dinette last month was $3,400,000,000; a idecrease of 4 per cent from ser That Flag Fly Hion, which amounted to two bittion| Special Day Smart 7 Piece DINETTE With Extension Leaf ‘EO FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 | ee a jured when a crowd of national (Future Sun Test Thor ists clashed with U.S, Canal Zone |” 7‘ | a soldiers and Panamanian Fired Over Atlantic t- AVERAL, Fla, (AP) tempt te plant the Panamanian CAPE CAN 5 flag in the Zone. —An intermediate range Thor, like the missile which will attempt Members of; Aiken, a member of the Senate ig poost a satellite into orbit 7 per cent in October to $1,400,-|Panama’s National Assembly sug- Foreign Relations Committers, met —s. sun next vag = 000,000 gested Wednesday night that the President Ernest de Ja Guardia launched on a full-range , _ However, the ven ots said | Panamanian flag be flown along-\Jr. and Foreign Minister Miguel| Tweretay no official be. aan { this year totaled|*!4¢ the U.S. flag in the Canal Moreno to discuss current tensions’ ont on the result of the test, in s 0 ye Zone during the country’s Inde- between Panama and the United which the Thor was to drop a nearly 46 billion dollars, an in-| , ‘ ; crease of 13 per cent over the 1e58|Pendence Day aslebretion Nov. 28. ‘States. ' | simulated warhead off the. island ‘of Antigua, 1,500 miles away. aie | The suggestion was made at a — “ jmeeting with U.S. Sen. George 4s Jontine has become one of Astronomers believe the moun-|Aiken R-Vt as a _ “@Y the world’s chief exporters of The first photo-eleetric cell, fore- tains‘of the moon are as high and ° ane ponte gt nig violence 5 rain, mostly corn, but stil) pro- runner of the television transmit- even higher than any to be found SUCH as aceuETe ne Es duces much less than the annual ter and receptor was developed in on earth More than 80 persons were in- US. crop. 1888, < RADITIONAL rs The value of private construction Panama Asking tember. Private housing construc- dollars, also dipped 4 per cent. 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OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL NINE - =—4f = -— & & SF toe THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 SEVENTEEN OBSERVATION SATELLITES xpert Krafft Ehricke, would be nissile system being planned by hould Replace Nike-Zeus | — This one conceived by space the targets of the new defense Defense Dept. Jan New Missile System 0 ‘See, Destroy Satellites Zeus will be impractical as a de- WASHINGTON (NEA)—By 1955, |fense. By RAY CROMLEY » Department of Defense ex- cts to have a guided missile/Pentagon military scientists ex- xt will shoot down a satellite.|Pect, both the Russians and the The object: 4 U.S. will be able to launch mis- ject: to destroy eneMY| siies with hydrogen warheads from rellites — and, eventually, ene-|some sort of space platform. y space platforms—that spy from » sky. These missiles also will|system will be these: designed to blast enemy missile-| 1) It will be able to seek out By the end of the 1960's, these The virtues of the new missile Tt Ot, \ Sale Ends ‘SATURDAY --9 P.M. Shop Tonight til midnight-- Sat. 10 to 9 1 A THE inching satellites, triggered to and destroy enemy ballistic mis- {siles that zig and zag or other-| e on the U.S. in time of war. Details of the new missile sys- | mm haven't been worked out pjast enemy ballistic missiles fired et. It will be at least six months \from Russian space platforms hun- efore Radio Corporation of (dreds of miles up in the sky—and merica—which has been givet (catch them high enough to protect $000,000 “‘detailed-study” com- the U.S. ract—comes up with the pre- bserve” the enemy ee’ what it’s doing—by radar, ra-red, or some other as-yet- known device. It will send“ that formation to the earth. It will) ve some sort of “homing” de-| se — maybe infra-red — to help ide it to the enemy satellite. | it a major share of its guidance| ll be from the earth. | * * * } There’s one big bonus inherent) the new system. Though de-| med to hit satellites, this sys-/ n is likely, defense men think, replace Nike-Zeus. And, fur- srmore, it’s likely to replace, » Nike anti-missile even before) at multi-billion dollar network fully installed and operating. | Some Pentagon planners think) » new missile may be the fore- nner of a new series of guiied ssiles that could begin to re- ace ballistic missiles in the late | the is fully operational some- | in y “mm me sady will be largely ineffectual gainst the advanced missiles 0 Russians will have by then. | at by the mid 1960’s, Soviet mis-| es are likely to be of a type) at change their course. They'll) ther be some sort of zigzag mis-| ¢, or a type that gradually veers | ym a predictable ballistic course. | 1d, worse yet, the Red missiles, then are likely to come in from ch a high altitude that Nike- .5. Toy Business uite Profitable NEW YORK (UPI) — The na-| yn’s toymakers will do a $1,500,- 0,000 business this year and their | erage profit margin will exceed | per cent, according to the merican Newspaper Publishers ssn, * * * The association also predicted e average U.S. family will spend 9 on Christmas toys alone, and irdware stores, a fast growing | ~w toy outlet, will sell more than | 09 million worth this year. obbery Was Foiled nd by Small Boy ST, LOUIS u—Two robbers took’ small boy along with them on| bank robbery. They drilled a le from a dentist's office into) e bank, and the boy squeezed | rought the hole and approached) e vault. The alarm sounded and within| inutes a cordon of police sur-| unded the bank, capturing the} 0. i The boy had tripped an alarm! he made his way toward the’ ult. INSTANT CREDIT ON CLOTHES THE FAMILY AND A People’s Credit Clothing |; 8 N. SACINAW STREET — \wise change their course. 2) It will be able to catch and from high-in-the-sky atomic blasts. This anti-satellite missile will not be cheap. An operational sy» tem would cost in the billions. Probably a lot of billions. But Defense Department men hope to make some savings by incor- porating in the system as much as possible from present-day mis- They’re working, in fact, on see ing how much they’ll be able to salvage ‘from the Nike-Zeus sys- tem to Use in this project, if and when Nike-Zeus is installed and this new system is ready to go. So it’s not likely that all the! Nike-Zeus construction funds will go down the drain. WILD BIRD SEED An attractive mixture of sunflower Hi) seed, milo, kaffir, millet wheat and canary seed. . Bird Feeder AND 5 Lbs. Bird Feed $1.49 e REGAL SUNFLOWER SEED Medium size seed, heavy and well filled. Very attractive to cardinals. @) WHEAT and CRACKED CORN Right size for birds 10-Lbs. 25-Lbs. ......... Pe ROCK SALT for Thawing 100-Lbs. 2 SALT For Water Softeners Kleer-A-Rock .. Kleer #2 Rock. . = | REGAL | B Feed and Supply Co. 8 Hh 28 Jockson FE 2-0491 * DRAYTON STORE 2066 Dixie MA 5-3791 eee e ee eee 65c BF _...1.708 Ladies’ Mink Collar COATS Regular $79.95 *59 ANNIVERSARY ITEMS Boys’ Tom Sawyer CORDUROY SHIRTS Regular $3.98 $99 Ladies’ Winter COATS Regular to $55.00 *39 Reg. *T Ladies’ 100% Cashmere COATS Clutch or Button Styles 349% Men’s All Wool DRESS SLACKS Flannels & Worsteds Men’s All Wool SUITS Regular $55.00 *A3 to $14.95 O°? Men’s All Wool TOPCOATS Reg. to $59.95 Tweeds & Saxonies $39 and . Quilt lined, Ladies’ Poplin Storm Coats “11 orlon frame hood Men’s All Wool 2-PANT SUITS Regular $72.50 *53 Men’‘s Porto Ped SHOES Reg. to $20.95 Selected styles from regular stock *1939 Ladies’ Famous Brand WEDGIES & FLATS Regular to $8.99 A wonderful buay/ *439 Children’s OXFORD & STRAPS Regular $5.99 Buy several pair! *3 89 Men’s Famous Name Oxfords & Loafers Regular to $14.95 Even Italian styles! 6” -g” Ladies’ Raccoon Collar Storm Coats Quilted Lined Poplin Willow or Beige Reg. $24.95 ST Ass Ladies’ Flannel SLACKS Grey or Brown Reg. i These Items-9 to 12 Friday (Tonight) Only! All Wool $7.98 Toggle Coats Pile Lined and W/Hood Reg. $35.00 7 5 Men’s Boys’ Hooded PARKAS Orlon Lined—Knit Collar and Storm Wristlet—10-16 Reg. $14.98 $799 Girls’ Car Goats Quilt Lined, Convertible Hood, Wash ‘n’ Wear, 7-14 Reg. $10.98 a | ha Men’s and Boys’ Foamtex SLIPPERS Red and Grey Plaid Reg. $3.95 $799 Leather, Ladies’ SNOW BOOTS Black or Grey Reg. $78 Fleece Lined $8.99 Wash ‘n” Wear Flannel Robes Reg. $5.98 si 99 Men’s Men’s Dress Socks Reg. 55c 3 PAIR 99: Ladies’ Wool Leather Palm GLOVES Wow! What a Buy! 99: ‘Use a Convenient Lion Charge for All Your Purchases! EIGHTEEN AP Wirephoto TESTING POLITICAL WINDS—Sen John Kennedy 'D-Mass! stumping across the plains of Kansas today. is shown Thursday with former President Truman at the Truman Library in Inde pendence, Mo. Kennedy told about 1,000 at a Wichita, Kans., fund raising dinner that hel] decide in December whether to run for President. Series E Bon d Owners Can Swap Em for Hs WASHINGTON (AP) of the popular series E savings bonds wil] be -given a chance to swap them for series H_ bonds, which pay interest twice a year Those who make the switch will be able to postpone paying taxes on the interest they've earned on their E bonds. This interest is col- lected—and taxed—only when the howd matures or is redeemed. Its ewmhange for the series H bond would delay the due date of the tax until the new bond matures The Treasury announced Thurs- day that, starting next Jan. 1, any one who owns E bonds may ex-, change them at any time for H bonds. The offer also is being made to owners of series F and J savings bonds—types no longer sold, Officials believe hundreds of thousands of people wil] make the switch. Altogether, between 35 and # million Americans own E bonds. Owners ture. The H bonds mature in /nations of $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 Details of the exchange proce- dure will be announced next Y month Call The Treasury announced also that $1,600.000,000 of series F and G savings bonds which mature next year may be swapped for FE 4-2531 a notes which mature May hea comborsdily. a _ leisurely at home! * . “ Our carpet con- Michigan Forest Fires sultant will bring Decline Two-Thirds f | samples to your home so yOu can LANSING (UPI) Forest fire choose the right reports in Michigan released today carpet and color show nearly two-thirds less acres have burned through Nov. 13 than through the same period last year Some 3,662 acres of public and private lands have burned this year compared to 10,410 by Nov ne a year ago 10 years and are issued in denomi- THE PONTIAC Federal Plan Assures Cranberries for Holiday: A new WASHINGTON (AP) labeling plan helped today to ease the cranberry scare The government Thursday as- rsured housewives they didn’t have to worry about including cranber- ries in their Thanksgiving menus —if the berries they buy are lab- eled as being safe * * * Secretary of Welfare Arthur § Flemming told berry shoppers to look for one of these labels 1. ‘Examined and passed by the Food and Drug Administration of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.” 2 “Certified safe under the plan approved by the U.S. government for cranberries.’ This statement must be signed by the packer dis- tributor who has the testing done US in line with government proce dures. Flemming said * * * Mistine the ibels will be re garded as rime. the secretary added Cranbe: ndustry spokesmen assured housewives there will be plenty of certified berries for the holidays The cranberry scare developed last week when Flemming told a news conference that traces of a weed killer A big inspection program was had been found on started last week. Since then, the! Wallops Island, PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 _ Sodium Cloud Test Flops Second Day WASHINGTON (AP) — For the The aimed at | second day in a row rocket sclen- wind currents at high altitudes. tists failed to release a cloud of jsodium vapor 150 miles above Va. The rocket some berries grown in the Pacific government ‘has instituted seizure’ worked fine, but again the sodium Northwest. He said the weed kill- er Aminotriazole, had produced) cancer when fed to laboratory test rats ARTHUR 8. FLEMMING actions against eight shipments cranberries on the grounds they were tainted with Aminotriazole. The latest seizure action came Thursday in Atlanta against a smal! lot of fresh Wisconsin crar| berries Although Flemming advised last! week against consumption of cran-| berries until the situation was cleared up, there ‘was no general ban against cranberry _ sales. There still is nothing to prevent the sales of berries not bearing the labels approved Thursday by the government. * * * As for cans or small lots of cranberries already on _ pantry shelves, the government said _ in- dividuals would have to decide whether they wanted to take the risk involved in eating them One official said it would cost from $25 to $50 to test a package of cranberries that cost only about 25 cents. The length of Afghanistan is about 600 miles, containing about 250,000 square miles of mountains | and fertile valleys. of did not eject as planned * * * day at dawn when civilian space sctentists lofted a two-stage Nike- Asp rocket to 160 miles, but got {No spectacular cloud of vapor. Only the first of the series of |three sodium cloud experiments! |—at dusk Wednesday — wo correctly. That cloud caught the sunlight above the earth’s shadow and the flare was visible as far north as Worcester, Mass. * b 4 * No more sodium rockets are scheduled at this time at the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration installation at Wal- lops Island FE 2-1026 estimates and decorating for your decorating scheme No obligation. Free counsel payment plan to fit your needs Deferred The swap offer, authorized by! Congress last summer, is expect-| ed to appeal particularly to’ retired people who would like to receive regular interest checks to, supplement their income Both E and H bonds pay 3% per| ‘60 RAMBLER RADIO $174§800 HEATER Cacese Tour Owe Equipment BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER Mi 6-3900 cent interest if held until they ma- Sam Benson Says: You Know How Conditions Are... THE MFGR’S WON'T WAIT... 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MURPHY & ASSOCTATES Model Phone OR 3———>= —__—-—— KITCHENS Designed and Installed MODERN YOUR [—— KITCHEN 7 ei MAKE YOUR KITCHEN | LOOK LIKE NEW We specialize in: the com plete design and installation of kitchens bathrooms porch additions and other home improvements’ CALL TODAY CARL SHELL and SONS 4994 Dixie Hwy. Open Friday ‘til 9 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 Will Be Sixth Country on Ike’s Tour By United Press International Iran, sixth country on the Eisen- hower grand tour, is a desert won- derland of romance, antiquity and tumult sitting atop a vast pool of oil. Its very name, the one it bore for 3,000 years, is one to conjure with —Persia. * . * Its ruler is one of the world’s most handsome monarchs, Shah- |In-Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, ‘to Persia's peacock throne has |sadness: Princess Fawzia, the |beauteous Princess Soraya, and jnow—with an engagement an- the young, doe-eyed Farah Diba. These in succession have shared — — 52 Stores and Services ONE LEVEL SHOPPING Free Parking fer 5,000 Cars CLE MILE ‘Herre CENTER T ph at Square Lake Rd. MI 5. PONTIAC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPER 2 South Cass FE 3-7129 < TWO-WHEELER is still a fa the giver and the receiver. This or will share as queen one of the world’s oldest thrones, once oc- cupied by such names of legend as Darius, Xeres, Cyrus and Ar taxerxes. Once the rulers of the peacock throne held sway ever an empire stretching from ‘Gireece to India, from Russia te Libya. Within the past 10 years, its occupant has had trouble holding his own palace. Today Iran is the bullseye of the Middle East target for Russian 4). His sad quest for a male hew propaganda and attack. But tu- ‘mult is nothing new to Persia. It and divided by Romans, Greeks, Arabs, Tamerlane’s Mongols, Brit- ish, Russians and Mohammed \nouncement expected any minute—| Mossadegh Premier Mossadegh, nationaliz- ing oil in 1951, managed to toss out both British influence and _ the ee eS vorite Christmas present, both for is a middleweight model Iran Is Desert Wonderland of Antiquity shah A three-day revolt brought the shah back and clapped Mossa degh in jail. Since then, while the world has watched the shah’s romances, Iran has stood up squarely to a barrage of Soviet threats. It camps on Russia’s southern doorstep, blocking the way to the Persian Guif—and in March of this year -it signed a defense treaty with the United States. Iran's 19,000,000 people are spread over a desert area bigger than Texas, New Mexico, Arizona |been all romance and fairy-tale/has been threatened, fought over and Coloraddé combined. Oil gushes from five major fields at the rate of 750,000 barrels a day. Yet fur- ther. resources go a-begging: Per- sia’s potential oi] reserves are cin- sidered the largest in the Middle East. * * * Still an agricultura] country in spite of its oj} and desert. [ran produces grains, wool, tobacco cotton and Persian carpets Ruins of its former greatness stud its plateau: Persepolis. the capital Darius built; the palace of Cyrus at Pasargadae; the im mense reliefs of Naksh-I-Rustam Iran was an absolute monarch) until 1906, is a constitutional mon- archy now. Its army is tough and strong, its people independent and Moslem, its future hard but prom- ising. Ramps Now Opened LANSING (UPI) — Interchange ramps on the Detroit industrial expressway at Merriam -Road will be opened to traffic today the Highway Department said. The ramps, built at a cost of $825,254, will allow access to Metropolitan Airport. _ + NINETEEN ® Black-magics, meitons, zibelines of reused and reprocessed wool with nylon! © Smart shaw! collars! Convertible pop-up hood-collars for all-weather! ¢ Fur-warm pile linings! Cozy quilted linings! Stripes! Plaids! USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN ... NO EXTRA CHARGE ee eat Fy < » _ LUXURIOUS *ORLON — * ere “KF 58 o* fitting push-up front closi aos s ee a a A ‘3 @ TWIN GLIDE-OUT HYDRATORS roomy enough for a week's supply of fresh fruits and vegetables. Both have rust-resistant porcelain enamel. shelf for frozen food packages. Bottom door has 3 big shelves . . . lift out tray for 24 eggs. e AUTOMATIC DEFROSTING! ® NEW MAGNETIC DOORS seal air tight all the way For Further Information: Call Crump Electric, Ine. | UL 2-3000 — FE 4-3573 | Se arhrs | ore SPE " iat cue Re due. 2) Sen aight aay aiaRa it ae Rea “sai Fasmog Rete poy = x i oy a oe ee 5 ee: xo ae pany me ae: fe gtr AB Drache ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1959 TWENTY-ONE | ee et . ° " be Here it is! Per Week “ No Payments ‘til Next Year ~ FRIGIDAIRE & , ; H zy ' 12.6 Cubic Feet Deluxe Refrigerator-Freezer } Imagine! A family size deluxe 2-door model at this low 4 price! The refrigerator section has cycla-matic defrosting 4 And there's flowing cold to chill food faster... keep them § 7) fresher. But that is only the beginning. e4 “4 ‘4 Just look at these features! 4, fs ' LAST 2 DAYS: TO SAVE: WIGGS ANNIVERSARY SALE ENDS TOMORROW! * SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 — * ott adh Pieces Shown: 48’ BUFFET BASE with OPEN HUTCH TOP $139.00 ON ethan Allen SOLID ROCK MAPLE FURNITURE Fine Ethan Allen furniture is, skillfully crafted of solid Vermont rock maple, 48’. DROPLEAF EXTENSION TABLE Complete with 3 10” leaves and hand-finished in a rich, glowing nutmeg brown tone. Co- ordinated for living room, dining room, bedroom, family room, and den, — Ethan Allen offers you over 250 pieces to choose from! Start your Ethan Allen collection now, at our special Anniversary Sale prices. DINING GROUP Create an atmosphere of warmth and hospitality with this Ethan Allen dining group of authentic Early American design. $ 89.50 24’ x 48" closed Opens to 78" with leaves. STURDY MATE’S CHAIR ...... Other Ethan Allen Dining Tables: 48° ROUND EXTENSION TABLE, with 3 Nevamar Plastic Top .... 30 x 40” OBLONG TABLE, with 8” center leaf and Nevamar Plastic Top eee. re ee ee ee $ 19.95 oh. 10” leaves and ++. $99.50 see eeoe Other Chairs from $16.95 to $35 od - 0 FQe% i rd Better than “built-ins’’! Pieces Shown: 30’ 3-Drawer Chest 30” Upper Unit with 3 drawers $59.50 NOW YOU CAN HAVE A COMPLETE 10-FT. FLOOR-TO-CEILING WALL OF ETHAN ALLEN UNITS FOR ONLY $395 and shutter doors 69.50 30” Shutter Door Cabinet .. $64.50 Corner Desk ............. $52.50 24” Bookcase Base with 2 drawers ..+.. $55.00 24" Upper Unit with shutte eee eee ..... $59.00 Desk Chair ........... Tee Spindle Bed, full size ...... $52.50 Base Units shown are 18°’ deep are available in new, slim-line 14° depth for Buy limited floor space. Now for Most Ethan Allen pieces are available with Christmas Same units ‘look like wood’ plastic tops that withstand years of hard usage! EE ee ONE ee a REGULAR CHARGE ACCOUNTS BILLED IN JANUARY 90-DAY ACCOUNTS BILLED '4 IN JAN, Ve IN FEB. — Ys IN MARCH OR USE WIGGS DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN A 10-foot Wall of Base Cabinets with Drawers and Shutter Doors and Bookcase Tops with Adjustable Shelves . . . and All Completely Finished in Glowing Nutmeg Brown! . Here's furniture that adds a custom-tailored, built-in look wherever you use it... and it’s scaled to fit heautifully into average size rooms! All pieces have magnetic door closings, antique brass hardware and adjustable shelves. Buy Ethan Allen for “real value by the foot’’l & cr * be ED ii This attractive snack set is the perfect answer for TV entertaining ETHAN ALLEN COFFEE TABLE The authentic Ethan Allen table is perfect for Early American decor And you'll be delighted with the fine quality and rich hand-rubbed finish! Colonial styling of this $1395 WHITE MILK GLASS SNACK SET 8 PIECE SERVICE FOR 4 $295 The Set snacks, buffets, bridge parties, and informal Wonderful for gift-giving, too! ee ee EE Bk ae WIGCs 24 WEST HURON STREET ® PONTIAC ° * FEderal 4-1234 = —= «=F —_ - > bef ins a a __THE PONTIAC PRESS. _ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 . Ross D. Moody Marries | Cancer Unit | The Shrine of the Little Flower | Elects in Royal Oak was scene 0 ° uniting DL Officers the double ring wedding uniting Di- Milo D. McLintock of Bir- anne Elizabeth Jones and Ross mingham has been elected Donald Moody. Some 200 guests ‘attended the Saturday ceremony president of the North Oakland County Unit .of the Michigan performed by the Rev. Charles Cancer Foundation. TWENTY-TWO Child Resents Manipulating of Social Life! “A smercy I didn’t want, I jumped to!and fled to my room with my Though I knew that my. mother | my feet, said, ‘‘Oh no, thank you had tried to improve my social life : with the best of intentions, I was furious with her for doing it with- out consulting my feelings about) it i y e . 9 Have You Tried This? Nor do 1 think T was « partic-| ularly sensitive child ‘Cook’ Icing Off Stove, My response to this effort to % i. By MURIEL LAWRENCE The summer that I was 12 m) parents gave a for visiting young-lady cousins. Among the guests was the 22-year-old, a! tractive son of a neighbor. | was secretly in love with him As a special favor I was allowed ‘wounded pride. party some Coughlin, i to stay up to watch the dancing manipulate my social life may £% Mr. and Mrs. Rebert J. Jones Serving with him are Pon- Mostly I watched Cal. He danced B 3 | = W, t be interesting to a Mrs. D. who “% + of Berkley are the bride's par- tiac residents Dr. Glenn W. very well. As he whirled on Beat ver Ol ING OQ cr writes: ents. The bridegroom is the son Bylsma, first vice president; 2 i VOUS, Hate PaUs : A “We have just mpved to a town on - = Moody of Oak Mrs. Philip L. Francis, second ut of the living root By JANET ODELL pumpkin cake and top it with ie we have no friends, What do noll road, vice president; and Dr. Leon- - peetaes penuneg 7AHIN Has Pontiac Presa Home Editor me ee . you think of my giving a party for Of Italian silk, the bride’s bal- ard Klausmeyer, treasurer. I felt less envy of them tha ind more of you nive FOUR MINUTE ICING our 14-year-old. girl so that other lerina length gown was styled on Mrs. Walter E, Lentz of Hol- f ae : rs are sending me rt By Mrs. Conrad Zebler youngsters will begin to invite het princess lines and featured a scal- ly is secretary. — od \ fils happe . - y for f pes through the mail That ; raatcen ies of tartar _lo theirs ? . " loped neckline and long tapered This —— s rege 1 oxi her hsp t — Sta ‘le like {can't possibly con se eR EDC On ae r I think you should first discuss sleeves. She wore = seed pearl chiefly by the Pontiac Area de net e-tinia® : S meceteesiyx Yebios KES MEINE: ip erettisted sugal fide voanipulative pakiy with bey tiara with a shoulder length veil United Fund. _ 1e Jooked over at me where ! Mix ingredients together in oe dee and carried a cascade arrange .ee “Ask Muriel to dance She hanks today to Mrs Con- from stove, put top in and ¢ |i BIving parties. | Honor attendant Patricia Ann RTRAIT must feel awfully left out of it in rad Zeisler of Birmingham beat mixture with electric MOTHER FIRST | Jones. sister of the bride; matron! MRS. RCSS D. MOODY PO this young people's party.” She sent in a recipe: for an beater for 4 minutes. Add de- Perhaps the best wa) to improve of honor Mrs. Richard P. Barry — | But T wasn’t having any cor caked: Seine. MERE @ slbed Hiveling j a chi’d’s social life is to start im- of Indianapolis, Ind.; and brides-| | oratdiaesk xctenteer. When. Cl a0 . proving our own. Why doesn't Mrs. maid Donna Moody, sister of the R th U it aeueched ae on the eifand, vf ‘ D make a point of joining her bridegroom, wore matching gowns Uu Ni — _ = <> PTA? When she's made the friends of emerald green chiffon with! she lacks herself, the idea of com- bining on a youngsters’ party could be the natural result of her mutual bouffant skirts and carried gold Fugi chrysanthemums with ivy and burnt-orange ribbons Planning — y » : interests with other parents And Donald L. Cox of Lake Orion D | nne r j CG, Ss her daughter would be spared the attended as best man. Gerald FURNITURE impression that she alone needs Moody, the bridegroom's brother, The Ruth Unit of the Augus- i tana Lutheran Church Women at St. John Lutheran Church completed plans for a smor- gasbord on Dec. 10 at the her social life improved It is our shyness in seeking new friends that is often reflected in hildren's shyness and Mark Peck ushered, * * * A wedding breakfast followed the ceremony. After an afternoon reception at Devon Gables, the FINE et | | ° new Mrs. Moody changed to a ‘Thursday meeting in the | FURN ITU RE MOMS Un it one brown tweed suit with brown and church parlors . 4 | beige accessories and a red rose * ¢ * | PHOTOS corsage for traveling to Wiscon-| sin | and CARPETING Meets Here Members finished sock dolls and knitted slippers for the of Yourself, the Children or Your OR 3-1225 Come in or call for appointment itn your decorator counselor. home with our home meeting was held at the Sec- ond avenue home of Mrs. Lux- ons daughter, Mrs. Galbraith Pritchard. e Mrs. IL R Naugle offered a prayer of Thanksgiving and Mrs. Malcolm Seantland = re- ported on a recent breakfast project The National Board of MOMS of America will meet at Mrs Scantland’s Squirrel road home Nov. 30 Mrs. T. M. Nelsey will be hostess for the Dec. 17 Christ- mas party at her home on Gale road. There will be a gift As slim-skirted hound stooth check skirt is teamed with a full\-lined double-breasted shaul collar pac ket in this cot- ton woven suil al and PisCOLe from Junior Miss California. Extension Club Has Workshop Yuletide Candy Mrs. Bud Patton. ways and means chairman of the Beta Mu chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha, has announced § t h-e group again will sponsor the sale of Christmas candy. ~*~ * * The proceeds will help sup- port the mentally retarded of Oakland County, the sorority’s project Plans were made at the Wednesday meeting at Adah Shelly Library, with Elizabeth Rockefeller presiding : Oakland County Children’s FOR THE HOLIDAYS Mrs. Harry Luxon was host- 2 . ess to MOMS of America, Beta Mu Again tome Seles X Family — | Ine., Zone Eight Past Presi- Mrs. Dallas Avery was ap . . ° dents Club Thursday. The —_ Plans to Sell pointed leader of the group for The Gift That Will the coming year. Mrs. Carl Leedy will continue as record- ing secretary. | ~ 4 Luncheon hostesses were Mrs. John Cartson, Mrs. Al- | got Nasstrom and Mrs. Oscar Bloomquist. Mrs. Claude Kitt- ner conducted. the meeting. Drayton Woods Club Sees Hawaii Film Travel consultant Mrs. Mary | Thorburn of Green Lake showed a ifilm on Hawaii at the Drayton | Woods Woman's Club meeting Mon- Last a Lifetime 3-8x 10's and 3-2x3's 5] g% Groups Extra Phone now for an appeoint- ment. Fine portraits take C.R. HASKILL ONLY A Christmas workshop was held when Mrs day at Drayton Plains School. sénior at Waterford Township Members voted to sponsor an Ha- | High School, in this country Waiian party with Hawaiian danc- with his family from London,’ (ers and orchid leis at the March England, spoke of the differ- meeting. | Tamm road home. Mrs ences between Britain and ‘the | Brown and Mrs. Howard Reynolds’ United States. The family is ] . | Irving PTO Sponsors Peter Whelan, a 16-year-old 54 Dixie Highway of Waterford Vermont Solid Hardrock Maple ; exchange. —__— — Harry Gemmell was —_— STUDIO 1 Mt. Clemens St. FE 4-0553 hostess to the Huron Gardens Ex- tension Club Tuesday, at her Norman os - i directed the activities here on an immigrant visa. A cooperative dinner was served * * * SPUDNUT * * * Pledges attending the meet- | A Christmas party will be held) ing were Bertie Stark. Mrs. Book Fair SPECIAL Dec. 8 at Devon Gables when Joseph Swengros, Virginia Fer One Week Starting po Vanilia Cream er Lemon Bars Spec. 33c 2 Doz. THE secret pals will be revealed Smith and Mrs. Ray Ebey. Cleric Speaks —tair ana to WCTU Unit eek | Parents and interested adults The Rev. Theodore R. Alle attended a coffee and discus- bach, pastor of Oakland Ave- sion of children’s books led by The PTO of Washington Irv- ing School sponsored a book fair and sale Tuesday and Improves and Beautifies any Fireplace | nue United Presbyterian Mrs. Orville Gauthier, ele- SHOP | Church, spoke at the Anna | mentary librarian Tuesday 42 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 8-8721 Gordon WCTU meeting Thurs- | morning | day at the First Baptist | * * * j —$$—$—$——— | Church Climaxing the sale was the Thermo Rite Mrs. Edna Matheny presided and gave a report on the state convention. The annual Christmas din- PTO meeting Wednesday eve- ning Gerald White moderated a discussion of the school’s read- Come In for Your Free Demonstration in Our Downtown Studio FIREPLACE ENCLOSURE Treasured tn Fine Homes Everywhere ner and gift exchange is | ing program. \ planned for Dec. 17 at the | A social hour and refresh- First Baptist Church ments followed. MERLE NORMAN 12 W. HURON re Beautiful Solid Brass Fra Heat Tem Monogrammed Dazzler Blouse Sep 99 ri - dry converta collar. Roll-up sleeves. Your choice of 2 Free Monograms. Ideal for clubs, bowl- ers and gifts. me ered Glass ors! UNUSUAL FIREPLACES . . We can screen “em! eeee cr tte Whatever it size or shape we an supply VERMONT WINOOSKI custom built screens for your Wide t White with Red and Black monograms. Sizes 30-38. fireplace selectior styles. and fin Pieces Illustrated ishe« THE CUSTOM BUILT LOOK Panel Bed ....... $ 49.75 ndividual pieces that can be combined to aoe eee tee tgs © Copper Spindle Bed $ 59.95 serve o mult tude of purposes. Use singly ute op ties e Black ne OEE ee ~, dd as required to meet your needs B. 40" Base sa $89.50 . Night Table $ 29.75 Made of Genuine Solid Rock Maple ino x, ohn Top ve Sento e Driftwood 0" 4D hest $ 89.50 rich butternut finish and built to last. Bras C. 24” Chest - $34. a7 Bisa here gUnvEC teal ard ees tan seas + Bras te. A , " mer * ore accent. A harmonious blending of design D. Student Desk .... $79.50 48” Double Dresser $117.00 ond color that will bring charm to any room E.GG. 30” Chest .. $64.50 Inland Mirror 24x36 Plate $ 39.75 1 the house. (Available with plastic tops.) F. Corner Desk ...... $54.50 . | Lakes Sales 3127 West Huron St. UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY OR 3-2300 elemies S74 wys DRAYTON SMART LADIES’ APPAREL Open Fri.. Mon. ’tli Sat. Night ‘til 7 Open Weekdays 9-6 Friday ’til 9 P.M. “4 BURTONS Cloved Tuesdays 1 75 NORTH SAGINAW Deve er < HOME FURNISHINGS [ieee eas ‘OR 4479 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS New Hours: Monday, Thursday, Friday 9:30 te 9 P.M j Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 9:30 to 6 P. M. CONTEMPORARY P. M. 9 P. M _THE PONTIAC PRESS, She Can Rationalize to Any End FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959: Gold Star Shopping Is Woman's Release By GAY PAULEY gus . po “A woman can rationalize NEW YORK (UPI)—This wil} cp agian would quar- herself imto almost any: pur- | The November meeting of Amer-' come Bs So meprie ods mad pono ee coend chase," he said. “A fur coat, | R ican Gold Star Mothers, Inc., Chap- man who foots the bills. But for goods, the more we pro- she tells herself. is warmer, | roun ter Nine was held Tuesday even-| one sales expert says a let ef . duce.”’ will last longer. She ignores the | chanully lace, ing at the Disabled Veterans’ Hall feminine buying is for gelf- * * * fact that there is the cost of reward Cowee's firm, the M. C upkeep and it may not be | re-embroi- on haba avenue 7 “ “Reward for what?" I asked Schrank Co., is so eager to warmer at all.” . bre . ee vee ‘° rear Howard M. Cowge, vice presi- take advantage of our self- * * * dered in gold a ora “A ae ” wa Ae dent of marketing for a lingerie indulgence it has launched a The marketing expert said lowers th ioe eer | wae "id vi t e eend manufacturer and a former newspaper and magazine ad- extravagant buying no longer plowers wel - " ee “we : diac professor of marketing at New vertising theme, “‘You don't | is seasonal—or a pre-holiday —_— peg a ae Pieeina York University. really need it, just want it.” } habit. Typical purchaser: “The eu ni . fue . = ee “Well, then eall it self- The “just want it” items little secretary. who tells her- | Jeweled County Tuberculosis Sanatorium indulgenee,’’ Cowee replied. include nightwear for Milady, | self she has been good all | . * * * Cowee released the results some trimmed in imported | week, so on Saturday she de- | centers | Mrs. Lola Erb, Chapter presi- of a study he and regional chantilly lace, some of it with | serves a new hat or a new dent, gave a report on the state managers did in 103 stores Canadian white fox collar, cost- | lamp for the apartment.” achieves @ {board meeting at Lansing across the country. The man- ing up to $100 “Even Christmas buying is svelte heauty Other members attending the agers talked with sales per- sonnel and unearthed some intere:.ting buying patterns: * * * —Psychological factors rather than need are the motivation of 60. per cent of yearly pur- thank goodness,” said Cowee. Are women more inclined to splurge than men” Cowee answered that most men “‘‘react to emotional ‘ap- peal, but they usually reason before they buy.” | an inverted form of self-indul- gence,’ said Cowee. ‘Builds the prestige of the giver. shows he can afford a costly gift, shows he has the taste to make such a selection.” € | “te gu | Se or | a7 4 rs hy Jacques Griffe. in a ballgown Mothers to Buy Gifts state meeting were Mrs. Lauret ta Stockwell, Mrs. Edna Olm sted, Mrs. Mae Archambeau and Mrs. Edna Matheny. Mrs. Olmsted will open her home on South Telegraph road for The prettiest Provincial Pattern you've ever enjoyed. Rose and blue blossoms against an earthy ground. Color-fast, over-safe. 6-Piece Set +16” 50 PIECE SET . SERVICE FOR 8 ...... a luncheon and sewing session Tuesday., The December ‘meeting will be Dec 2 at the DAV Hall * * * | $ 59°" chases. wrinkles are BRIDAL SALON 5 W. HURON he said. “Or a sports ‘car. Or << oa. new cfiicecs. elected. Gifts elgg exchanged am creased into trem —_ — . - res hi-fi on to stere . . Mrs. Ray Patton entertains the : —_ — a eeees trae! Hit om io iene . Some friendless ones, perhaps Named president was Mrs. group at ber home on Richard Or, the woman who wants mink ; ,are so tense and unsure of them- Gerald Hust. Other officers Were street Dec. 15 ing —— points jselves that they can't let their Mrs. Thomas Presseau, vice — —$—— ® 9 Or, who buys jeweled or fur- own personalities shine through’ president; Mrs. Ethelyn Peter- tis. ee trimmed sweaters. She has and so lack naturalness and son, treasurer; and Mrs. Fer- Mrs. Lemaux "i warmth man, secretary. i helped to make the boutiques— where higher priced, specialty items are featured—a big busi- ness for stores.” “We're extravagance prone, Opens Home to Sylvan Club | Mrs, Duane Lemaux opened her Shore View drive home to members of the Sylvap Shores The important thing for the per-- Faye Donelson showed colored son who finds it difficult to make slides of her trip through the West friends is to be honest enough jast summer. Mrs. Amy Johnson with himsetf to figure out why he gave a talk on “Saying Thank jig having trouble You"’ and Mrs. Paul Ferm4n pre- sented gelections on the organ. | 6" Anniversary ad * * * 6: Then when he understands why ' jhe is failing, he can begin to cor- jrect his mistakes | Women’s Club Wednesday eve- ning. Sponsor Candidates W The mistakes might even be for Moose Group Carl Bradley, guest speaker, omen that the person has so few in. | | discussed the Tribute Fund of tereats eutaide himself that he __ Ts. May Worth, Inez Demas,' the Pontiac Area United Fund. € INSURE has Mittle to offer others. If that |Mrs. Richard Hohn and Mrs. Eu) = Plans were completed for is the case, he should concen- Johnson sponsored two) the Christmas party to be held . YOUR FUTU RE | trate ce broadening his own 1a- \eandidates for membership at the at the home of Mrs. Lyndon terests — instead of worrying Women of the Maose business’ Salathiel. Prepare yourself for a about making friends. Whea be | meeting hld at the hall, 359 Mt. Refreshments were served career in the Beauty as ae meee enti ager Clemens street this wek by Mrs. Claire Hinckley, Mrs ® Profession. c hg tame Somes wit CeDamentonted ot ac| Baw Lyon andre tiem, ur Famous blouses by aura Wheedbe acquaintances that can ripen \cordion solos by Mrs. Harold Finn.' H. Hutchinson. , | Enroll Today into friends. cae — — mee - == \Ve Had to remove the labels because we cannot mention the name. Long sleeves and roll up styles in solids, prints and stripes. were $6.50 sep Skirts and domestic tweeds and solids in darks and pastels. $790 ., $9 Bulky Knit and Fur Blend Sweaters A wonderful time to select your holiday gifts. $790. SQ Rows of pineapples create a rich, | elegant border for scarves you'll i. no small problem — for all of use and use and love that US need friends. But it is never a Pattern 993: easy-crochet honed oblem for the pers nda thee to amy tee =~ 1 ypelesg problem for person PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. | Enrollments Available in Day or Evening Classes Not being able to make friends Phone FE 4-1854 Miss Wilson Closed Wednesday x 3%. 15 x 50. 15 x 43 inches in who is willing to ask himself Write, phone or call im person for Free Pamphiet an d $7 95 No. 30. In string, smallest size What am I doing wrong?” and) PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 2 (22 x 5A) te smart runner. then corrects his mistakes. — ——— | PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 1644 East Huron Behind Kresge's 2nd Floor Send thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern — add 5 cents for each pattern for Ist-class mailing. Send to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11 N.Y. Print plainly Pattern Num- ber, Name, Address and Zone Imported were to $14.95 Store Gift Buy” Essential Serving Pieces Select your gift here ae 49) ae = a were to $17.95 ae we owe nm penn + + eee ene = -- - 5.00 cirts Bon Bon | Cold Meot Fork, oo . 7. eo Jelly Server | stroll a ee : 3 ; Lemon Fork = | Gravy Lode i sar Pickle Pastry Server ’ e . es he ae Ceramic lurke ara. 7.50 GiFts | 15.00 cirts Pp . Silk S ok i tle aldan Arranged for your Thanksgiving ; ul e os I i eparates tenet a Salad Spoon, large table with fresh cut bronze § 4) Solids, prints and stripes in the season’s smarest shades. ee and yellow pompoms ............. 10.00 cits ; | saere S 9() Tablespoon + ll aaices indoie Free Delivery Te Your Hostess e . rerctiespooe | aderel t= Other Centerpieces in Bow] Arrangements ........... from 2.95 $19.95 Treat yourself or someone else to ia gpienelr ae serving pieces. Our Own SALE <= <= ae ae ae oe ae ae om oe eae Each carefully a to a Home Grown 20% OFF . t serving : / . Chrysanthemum All Fall and Winter Desioner Coa ~ wR INTERNATIONAL Plants Dried ow) - | Choice of Colors Arrangements Imported and domestic tweeds and solids in the season’s STERLIN x... loveliest, by design Cornucopia most wanted styles. From *4. Shown, Reg. 4.95 ie Two Sheps to Serve You... | Pontiac and Lake Orion . € were Layaway Now for Christmas to $110 “The Store Where Quality Counts” fs. F. N. PAULI CO. 7 _, ’ y Jacobsen’s Flowers Gs | y Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store ’ PE 2-7257 HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 to 9— Tues., Wed., Sat. 10 to 6 *4 S. Broadway in Lake Orion and 101 N. Saginaw FE 3-7165, MY 2-2681 Delivery twice daily te Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills and Detreit. AP Wirephete LEARNING TO LEAVE SPACE CAPSULE — This mockup of the Project Mercury space capsule at St. Louis is being used to train the astronauts They learn methods of leaving the capsule after the first American returns from orbital flight to a planned Janding in the Atlantic Ocean cally inflated upon landing Aircraft Corp of exit U. of M. Honors Emily Stevens, Musician at 94 ANN ARBOR more Stevens, 94-year-old organist, pianist, writer and ‘cultural am- bassador extraordinary’ of Detroit and the state. was honored by the University of Michigan today University President Harlan Hatcher presented Mrs. Stevens jsaid she has developed a (AP)—Emily Gil-| iand is best known as The four large bags are automati- Here an engineer for which is building the capsule, shows one method McDonnell with a Regent's Citation, which gift to the point of genius and has joyfully shared it with millions of listeners."’ Despite her age, Mrs. Stevens pays a repertoire of composers from the classical to the modern an inter- preter of the keyboard works of | Chopin Glass has been manufactured 6-10 of a cent an hour over the for about 4,000 years ee tee, ee > ee i el Offer Just Rearrangement — TE ee ee Tl THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. a at 2.199 McDonald ‘great | Union Refusal Dims Steel Peace Hope | —Hopes for)by the jndustry on Oct. 17 in an- called for the companies to take! 7 PITTSBURGH (AP) a settlement in #ébe nationwide stee] dispute were dimmer today after — the United Steelworkers spurned the newest proposal of the basic steel industry R Conrad Cooper, chief indus “try negotiator, disclosed the new offer Thursday. He said it was a ‘fair offer to do what can be done and still keep within noninflation ary bounds in the cost of steel production.” * * * USW) President. David J Vic Donald, termed the proposal as “something only a company-con trolled union would accept.”” He suid the offer was just a rear rangement of ‘‘the same old pack age offered by the industry on Oct. 17.’ The new offer was submitted to the union Nov. 15 during secret negotiations between both sides McDonald said the union's 33 member executive board turned it down the same day Had the proposal been accepted said Cooper, it would have meant a 30-cent-an-hour package over a three year period. He added that ve new Offer also tempered in stry demands for more Say } over working conditions * * * McDonald disagreed. claiming that the proposal would mean a gain of only 24 cents an hour over the three year period “The only changes in the work rules issue are a stay of sentence in the same old attempt to deprive steelworkers of hard won gains and protections,’ McDonald de- clared “The offer is almost the same proposition which the companies had made in October and which was rejected by the full wage pol- icy committee as recently as Nov 12th,” he added * * * Industry estimated that the new proposal provided an increase of [34 ce cent hourly package offered [ SPECIAL PURCHASE! Reg. $39.50 $13.88 Reg. $49.50 $26.88 Reg. $69.50 $37.88 $49.88 Reg. $89.50 . FLOOR TO CEILING POLE LAMPS Choice of $ 8 88 SOFA BED — ry: Choice colors ‘BEDROOM SUITE . - Large Doable QQ” | presser, eho qos, a Colors, Special Selling GOSSIP BENCH a= 15" 2-Pc. SECTIONAL Good Se ee $ hg -DISCOU NTS POLAROID LAND CAMERA We Carry All Models $49.95 PARKER T-BALL JOTTERS Reg. $1.95 Value Ball Point Pens 97¢ COLUMBIA STEREOPHONIC 4 Speed—2 Speakers $29.95 G-E ELEC. CAN OPENER CHRISTMAS TREE CLOCK RADIO 1960 B.V.I. Model LIGHTS—7 STRING Model 435 Reg. $24.95 $19.97 $12.88 975 ZENITH Royal 500 V.M. HOOVER > TRANSISTOR RADIO | TAPE RECORDER | STEAM or DRY : ® Transistor 4 — ps 20 IRONS $59.95 Jn $14995 $8.18 ZENITH SYLVANIA ADMIRAL Space Command 300 17" PORTABLE TV 17" PORTABLE TV 1960 Model 1960 Model 1960 Thin Man Model No $189.95 | 2, 129% weie. | 0, 139% 222. OPEFOE ADAGE LEFT Eee ene rg: THESE ARE OUR EVERYDAY LOW, LOW PRICES! OPEN a eee MONDAY & FRIDAY SEES EEN EESFEPEETEEETEETE a a i kKkkkkkke other three-year proposal Cooper also added that the new offer contained improvements in employment benefits and a new plan for resolving the working conditions issue. The industry, he said, proposed that the work rules issue be turned over to a commit tee with equal industry and union representation This committee would have had until June 30, 1960. to resolve the issue. If not settled by then, the dispute would go to bindifig arbitration Cooper said the new offer bad also posal TIKIT KI IK IT IK IK ITI A A IAT 4 Open Daily ’til 8 p.m,—Sat ’til 6 over the entire cost of health and life insurance now paid for jointly 3 by management and the workers. |” The steelworkers, now working) / under a Taft-Hartley law injunc-! tion invoked Nov. 7, are earning an average hourly wage of $3.11 % under terms of their old contract The injunction stipulates that the National Labor Relations Board conduct a _ secret ballot among the steelworkers between Jan. 5 and Jan. 20, if the steel dispute is not settled. The workers will vote on the last industry pro- # SAVE aN Waterproet Brie Cap Installation Cen Reg. Easy Terms on Any * BUY NOW AND FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! 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the new Futuresq and Tessarra Corlon. It’s fabulous! ’ Sq. Yd. FLOOR COVERINGS FE 4-7775 Open Friday, sil? and Monday Evenings a ae: as raeTHE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1959 TWENTY-FIVE Farmington Votes Monday on School Issues \ Farm Labor Should Have Followed Spray Directions Rules in Effect Horticultural Next Month | WASHINGTON (UPI) — A con- Agent lo Retire troversial new set of farm labor regulations will go into effect late next month Labor ¢ scretary James P. Mitchell announced last night. The rules apply to farmers who hire domestic farm labor through the Federal - State Employment! After 29 years of service wit ’ *« Service. Michigan State University, Kar! D. Aminotriazole, involved in the The rtgulations would require Bailey of Bloomfield “Township. cranberry incident, is one of 56,500 employers using this service te district horticultural agent for 10 chemical formulations registered | provide farm workers with pre- ‘counties in southeastern Michigan, With the Department of Agriculture vailing wages, housing and work- will retire Jan. 31. for use against insects, rodents, ing conditions, and transporta- | jis retirement was announced ist spt sting ~~ tion. ‘today by Lyle B. Abel, MSU's Co- the farmer and home gardener. . neal ~~ | How is the public health pro- Farm organizations and Agricul- —— Exteneion Service direc- tected against any possible danger ture Secretary Ezra T. Benson op-|tor for Oakland County. trom these products? - posed the new rules. | Bailey joined the extension Benson recently denounced them’ service staff as Oakland County as contrary to the spirit of the agrieultural agent in 1931 after kisenhower administration | teaching vocational agriculture at | Holly. He has been southeastern horticultural agent for 10 years. He earned his B.S. degree at MSU in 1921 and took postgraduate work at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University. Bailey organized the first county- wide +H Fair in Oakland County, the Oakland County Soil meets 4 of Agriculture telling how the prod- tion District and the Southeastern |. ; oe ex < uct is to be used Michigan Fruit Growers’ Society. . * * He recently developed a program The department first heard of | oo ee ck ee oces aminotriazole in 1955 when Ameri-' rhubarb industrs can Cyanamid asked that it be SAO \approved for use against weeds in He also is the author of ‘“Agri- pastures and areas where no crops, culture in Oakland County,’’ a are grown. land-use publication, * * * Bailey has been president of the The following year, after many, Michigan Association of County tests conducted both by the manu lAgricultural Agents and was facturer and by the government, awarded the distinguished service the department allowed the com- certificate by the National Associa- Pany to register a label specifying tion of County Agricultural Agents he spray could be used on lawns, By JOHN W, BECKLER | fuss stirred up by the discovery that a weed killing spray can con- itaminate cranberries raises a ‘question about the use of chemi- h cals elsewhere in agriculture. Served 10 Southeastern Michigan Counties answer is to follow the brief | history of aminotriazole, a syn- thetic chemical containing car- bon, hydregen and _ nitrogen atoms in an arrangement figured out by the American Cyanamid Co. Before it can put a pesticide or other agricultural chemical on the, market a manufacturer must reg-| ister a label with the Department | department said okay on the other suggested uses. And for corn, it could be used only be- fore the crop was planted. After still more tests the de partment permitted the company in 1958 to register a label specify- ing aminotriazole’s use in cran- Growers Share Fault in the government. In addition, state Bloomfield Twp. Man WASHINGTON w—The great Corn fields, but turned down the experimental stations with any knowledge of the spray were close ly questioned by the Department of Agriculture MUST BE CLEARED But, that’s not all. Any spray intended for use on a food crop needs to be cleared by "Three Proposals Cranberry Scare Yp {or Decision the FDA bases its decision. Such research can be long and costly. it generally requires twe years of testing with laboratory animals to discover if a product has harmful effects. In the case of aminotriazole company scientists establish@d that rats fed large quantities of the berry bogs—a week to 10 days after|the Food and Drug Administration. “M€™ical developed cancer of the the harvest. Still another revision last month okayed it for apple and pear orchards—either before the fruit forms or after it has been picked. * * * Thus for four years there has been constant testing of the prod- This agency of the Health, Educa tion and Welfaré Department must grant a tolerance—in other words fix the amount of the chemical ithat may safely be left on a crop in the form of residue. It is up to the: manufacturer thyroid. The FDA refused to grant a tolerance and when residue was discovered in parts of the 1959 crop, the cranberry crisis erupted USER RESPONSIBLE This case history shows that no matter how carefully the govern A good way te arrive at the uct by both the manufacturer and to conduct the research on which ment watches over the marketing of a new pesticide | posed to touch a cranberry. The Officials Say Approval Necessary to Continue Present Standards some of the ultimate responsibility for seeing that it is not harmful lies with the individual who uses it. | Aminotriazole was never sup FARMINGTON — Voters manufacturer clearly specified here will be asked Monday this on the label. If the direc- to approve three separate tions had been followed, the school proposals in order to cranberry growers would have ; f spent their usual enjoyable continue the same type 0 Thanksgiving. education program present- The same is true of all the other ly set up in the Farmington sprays on the market. The De- School District, according partment of Agriculture continu : ally checks them, taking them off to the School_Board. store shelves to see if the manu- The School Citizens Ad- facturer is maintaining the speci- yisory Committee has rec- fied standards. State and county agents are in close touch with OMMended approval of all farmers, advising them how to use three propositions after a study was completed of the area's school needs. The first proposition asks that voters approve transfer of $463,- 000 from a previous $1,300,000 bond issue for an addition to the O. E, the new chemical products. * * * But there is no policing of the individual farm to see just how the spray is used. The government can extend its protective arm only so far. oe * @ « |Dunckel Junior High School. build- A Department of Agriculture ing. * official who works closely with the * * pest control problem provides) Money for this construction is probably the best answer to the available except for a legal tech- question of how the public health nicality can be protected against the chemical sprays * * * “We'd have a devil of a time digging up one case where any- thing went wrong if directions were followed,’’ he says, Use of bond issue money approved by voters in another election is Ulegal unless approval is given by voters to have it transferred. Proposition two asks voters to approve a $3,000,000 bond issue to defray the cost of erecting and furnishing a new junior-senior high school building and new cle- | mentary school buildings. Seek fo Eliminate MARION J. LENZ The engagement of Marion J Lenz to B. Ford Thpmpson II has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Lenz of Sebewaing. The prospec- in 1948 In recent years he has utilized his annual leave for the collec- tion of natural history material | for the university museums at | Ann Arbor and East Lansing and the Cranbrook Institute of Sci- along roadsides and other noncrop areas, but not on pastures where cattle grazed. In February 1957, the company | proposed that aminotriazole’s use be broadened to include cran- berry bogs, corn fields, soybean ‘WOULD CUT COST The bond issue would help also in cutting the cost of erecting and - Residue From Milk WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has launched a drive to eliminate henening spakions' te xmas residues of penicillin and DDT school buildings and acquiring from milk. schoo! sites and additions to school ence in Bloomfield Hills. fields and apple and pear or- | chards. Ten months later the tive bridegroom is the son of Mr and Mrs. B. Ford Thompson 151 Albertson St.. Rochester. A summer wedding is planned He and his wife Elizabeth and two sops reside at 9279 N. Adams Rd. néar Birminghain, Auto Mishap Breaks - Horticultural Society to Meet in December GRAND RAPIDS ‘#—The Michi- e gun Horticultural Society will meet to Tragic Death here Dec. 1-3 with discussion cen- tered on mechanical fruit harvest-| WICHITA FALLS, Tex (UPI) — /¢& when he was hit by a car| ing, grower association bargaining Mrs. Margie Sweeten, her flimsy Yesterday on West University and selling, asd chemical insect|nightgown in flames, tossed her ‘ive near Helen street. and disease control developments. three-months-old baby to his death| Jack Olsen of 415 Walnut St.,| Dr. John A. Hannah, Michigan today from the second floor of an|Suddenly left a group of boys| State University president, will ad-|apartment house engulfed by fire. Standing near the curb and ran dress the group Dec. 3. A fireman caught her other child. into the street, police said Mother Tosses Baby From Fire ROCHESTER — A 10-year-old. Rochester boy suffered a broken But bystanders thought the baby The driver of the car was Sociologist to Talk was a doll she was trying to save. Owen a Suetker, 30, of 2116 i It landed on its head on concrete Crane St., Pontiac. He said he at Session of PTA pavement saw the boy, blew his horn, but The charred body of a man was the boy seemed to “freeze’’ in his ROCHESTER — Dr. June Col- found in the gutted 32-apartment tracks. Guelker was not held lins, cultural anthropologist and \ nite frame building He was not. The youth was taken to Pontiac sociologist at Michigan State Uni- jp,mediately identified. Mrs. General Hospital versity Oakland, will be guest cy eten was hospitalized. oe speaker at the Rochester Juniot oo High School PTA meeting at 8 Boost Pork Support pm. Monday Timber Production Up ] The title of Dr. Collins’ talk wil WASHINGTON (UPI) The Ag- he “Your Child and His Heroes.) WASHINGTON (UPI) The riculture Department announced She will explain how moving to U.S. Forest Service says timber yesterday that it had purchased 4, the suburbs causes changes in liv- production in 1939 will total 524,000 pounds of pork and gravy ing habits and affects families and ,11,200,000,000 cubic feet of wood.|in its effort to bolster hog prices family relationships |The figure is 9 per cent above by taking pork and lard off the Refreshments will be served. /last year. |market. “sip Sete aia eran ei aid The special service will be held in the new audi- torium-gymnasium, a major portion of the addi- tion, at 3 p. m. NEW SCHOOL ADDITION — The $310,000 ad- dition to the St. John Lutheran Church and School, Rochester, will be dedicated Sunday. Services Sunday in Rochester Will Dedicate School Addition General contractor was Joseph | Palazzolo and Sons, Inc., Detroit. The new facilities provide seven additional classrooms for the | ‘school, a library and conference, jroom, two offices and a reception) ‘room, auditorium-gymnasium with! istage, dressing rooms with show-| ec ROCHESTER—The youth center,tendent of Lutheran high schools, and school addition to St. John Detroit. Lutheran Church and School here. | Others participating in this will be formally dedicated at 3 service will inclade Carl J. Ux- p.m. Sunday, the Rev. W. G.} ad ake of the belies Gerken, pastor, announced today. committee; BR. L. Williams, con- * * * gregation ; Calvin Guest speaker at the special| King, chairman of the board for services, to be held in the new) parish education, and the prin- | auditorium-gymnasium, will be the| cipal, Erwin G. Bauer. ae rest rooms and a heating! Rev. Dr. John F. Choitz, superin-) Services St Tiambagiving “elso| an -trtereommmunication system will be held Sunday morning, jjnks all rooms. . . .|}Thanksgiving Eve and Nov, 29, the x *« * MSU Experiment Station Rev. Gerken said. St. John day school has an en- i! wt. roliment of 200 in grades one Releases New Broccoli | "The grey. W. Harry Kreiger, through eight. Students occupying EAST LANSING (P—A new va-\Traverse City, president of the temporary classrooms will move riety of early maturing broccoli Michigan District of the Lutheran into their new quarters this week has been releasec by the Michigan |Church—Missouri Synod, will de-| Some 500 are enrolled in the State University agricultural ex- liver the sermons at the 8:30 and Sunday School. perinent station. 11 a.m. services Sunday. The Rev. Gerken will preach the, MSU researchers iid the vege- The addition was designed by 7:30 Thanksgiving Eve service table, called Spartan early, can be Chance Enterprises, St. Clair The special community service is om the market 10 to 14 days earl- Shores, and constructed of steel, scheduled for 3 p.m. Nov. 29. jer than some of the more popular cinder block and brick at a cost All services are open to the varieties grown in Michigan. jof more than $310,000. 1 |public, \ gets bigger and better. lentries are pouring in, according to Rochester” Area Chamber Commerce members, the event this year. tered so far, said Thor Ulseth rade chairman dale High School | Junior and Senior high schools plus floats entered by clubs and merchants. Rochester Boy's Leg | PARADE ATTRACTION — The ‘“Rae-vens,”’ all-girl precision drift teanr from one of the featured attractions ninth annual Christmas parade Dec. 5. Sponsored ance of Santa sleigh above. Ponttac, wiil be in Rochester s by the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce, Rochester Yule Parade Brings Santa Here Early ROCHESTER Santa Claus will arrive in Rochester a little carly again this year He will ride his sleigh down Main street Dec. 5, only it will be pulled by popiés from the John F Ivory Estate in White Lake Town ship. (Santa's up at the North Pole for Christ- mds Night when they traditional- ly whisk jolly old St. Nick on his rounds.) Each year the Rochester parade Already, of sponsors of * * * More than 40 entries have regis- pa These include bands from Avon- and Rochester local service Other participants will be the Buick “Liberty Drum and Bugle Corps” from Flint, the “Rae- vens,"’ all-girl precision «rill | team from Pontiac and popular “ BARBARA JO ANNE STOKES The é@ngagement of Barbara JoAnne Stokes, daughter of Mrs. Clayton A. Stokes of 75 Highland St., Lake Orion, and the late Mr. Stokes, to Gary Allan Hendershot has been announced. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Allan Hen- dershot of 7127 Arrowood Dr., West Bloomfield Township. A) March 26 wedding is planned. 4 reindeer are resting ' aid ae The practice is being encour- -~+- -- television star, ‘Sagebrush Shorty” riding his horse, ‘Snoop er.”* Two Nike missiles. one from the installation at Auburn Heights. the other from the Utica site, will be included in the line of march, * * * The parade will form at 2 p.m at North Hill Plaza. proceed down Main street to Third street, then |turn up Walnut street to the Amer- ican Legion Hall where it will dis- band Coffee and hot chocolate will be served to all” participants in the ground to competition by reduc- ly Heritage hall after the parade. \ The Rae-vens Pentiac Press Phote the event also will be highlighted by the appear- Claus riding In a pony-drawn - color guard is shown | ; | Predict Decrease. in U.S.,Canada_ | Exports of Wheat WASHINGTON (UPI) ture Department experts predicted Agricul today that US. and Canadian wheat exports would drop in the current marketing season Over-all world exports were not to > expected change much But there are larger supplies available for export in nations outside North America * * * The experts pointed out that the United States and Canada have a- vital interest in avoiding any serious breaks in -world wheat prices. They said this meant the two countries would have to give ing exports The FDA disclosed yesterday | Sites, the School Board stated that orders to start the campaign School officials claim the went out to the agency's field of- money is required immedia *ly fices last month. Officials said t@ satisfy anticipated classroom some milk samples probably al- needs in 1961 and 1962 ready have been tested, * . . | They said it takes a minimum of A spokesman said the residues|!8 months from the time a bond were not considered an immediate issue is approved by voters until public health problem, But he said new classrooms can be ready for they are illegal. If FDA inspectors occupancy. find any interstate shipments of; No increase in the 1959 tax rate milk with penicillin or imsecti- of $12 per $1,000 in assessed, state cide residues, the milk may be equalized valuation will be neces- seized, ‘sary to meet the payments on the * * : . $3 million bond issue, school Pu- Before the enforcement cam- thorities said i paign was ordered, the FDA, the) Agriculture Department and farm} organizations conducted an educa-| tional campaign to convince farm-}| ers of the need for care in the! use of penicillin and insecticides. | They said by the time the first payment comes due in 1961, they estimate that it will be possible to reduce rates on previously approved bond issues enough to _—_— | @ffset the rate that would be . added by the $3 million bond Commerce Methodists rae to Mark Anniversary The third proposition calls for 3n Meth. increase of $2 per $1,000 in assessed odist Church will join in celebrat- Valuation for a period of five years ing the 175th ‘anniversary of the to pay part of the school district's Methodist Church in America with 0Per@ung expenses a special service at 11 am. Sun- LEVY PRESENTLY $16.52 day. The present operation millage All four choirs of the church tax jevy is $16.52. It was estimated here will sing a commemorative that the proposed two mill increase hymn written for the occasion by would provide $140,000 in additional the Rev. Donald Williams of North operating money. , Andover, Mass } COMMERCE—Commerce n Perr Teacher's salaries account for ne Rev. Perry Thomas, pastor, , major portion of the operating will preach on ‘'Possessing a Good- expens penses ’ There will be no 8 a.m. service Sunday | School officials said a con- siderable portion of the money realized from the two mill in- OWOSSO (#—With overproduc-, tion and surpluses plaguing Amer- ican agriculture and its farm mar- \kets, a growing number of farm ers are voluntarily snapping the padlock on their farms and hand- jing the key to the government to keep for three, five or 10 years * * * jaged by the U.S. Department of {Agriculture Yhrough its soil bank | program. In return, the farmer is given a payment for each unused acre and left free to join the ranks of industry or seek some other form of livelihood. Shiawassee County, which ranks high on the agricultural income list in Michigan, has seen closed-farm count jump from zero in 1956, the first soil bank year, to 67 in 1959. The figure is expected to reach the 100 mark in 1960 | The farms involved average {about 100 acres. Their owners are ‘either elderly couples who can aug- ment their government payment with retirement income or young to early-middle-aged farmers who are beckoned by the financial se- curity of a city job. They apply for a farm shutdown through tbe conservation reserve program of the soil bank, admin- ‘istered on a county level by an | Agricultural Stabilization and Con- servation Conimittee * * * The committee, elected at large Government Is Paying to Close State Farms from the county, will quote the maximum price-per-acre it consid- ers equitable for the involved. If his application is approved, the farmer will be asked to declare the lowest payment per -acre he can afford to quit farming When the county soil bank acre age quota is announced from Lans- ing-in November, it is apportioned who require the among farmers lowest payments Contracts are then signed stip ulating the farm will be left dormant for three, five or 10 years. Nothing can be harvested and livestock grazing is not al- lowed. The national average for acre- age payments in 1959 was $13.50 Michigan was paid on an average of $15. Shiawassee County, with better than standard farmland, drew an average of $16.50. Payments to any one farm were limited to $5,000. The government's attitude to- ward closed farms was delicately indicated in 1958 when if pushed up the national average payment $3.50 an acre. Under the conservation reserve program, farmérs may shut down part of their land, receive propor-! tionate pay. and farm’ the re- mainder. But A:S:C. administra- tors would rather it be all or nothing, encouraging total shut- .downs with a slightly higher pay- ment. Once “out of production,” the | crease would go to improve the entire teachers’ salary sched- ule, Approval of all three proposals would result in a tax increase of $16 a year for the average tax- payer, school authorities estimate. This is based on an average home having a state equalized valuation of $8,000. farm owner must plant his land with what the conservationists All registered electors will be call “‘cover.”’ This can be either Permitted to vote on proposition grass, legumes, trees, bushes or three. forage crops for small game. Only taxpayers will be per- mitted te vote on Proposition I available for seed, a minimum aad H. amount of fertilizer and labor and polis wil] be open from 7 a.m. gasoline used for planting. The ex- tg 8 p.m. Monday at the Farming penses are shared about 5090. ton Junior High School, 33000 Woodlots can be planted on the Thomas St. and at Dunckel Junior same basis if the land is retired High School, 32800 Twelve Mile for the full 10 years. In some Rd instances approval under cost shar- ing will be given for damming streams as a refuge for water animals and fow! * * * Although the conservation re serve program is not designed to make the farmer rich, the fact that 1960 applications in Michigan are now almost three times the state’s quota limit indicated it ex- erts a strong popular appeal. Government cost-sharing is ee Says Administration Fights Farm Props DENVER, Colo (UPI)\—The Na- tional Farmers Union charged to- day that the Eisenhower adminis- tration is trying to discredit all farm price supports The Farmers Union executive committee criticized the Adminis- tration’s plan to ask Congress next vear for reduced supports on The Avondale Board of FEduca- wheat, tobacco and peanuts tion ‘will hold its regular meeting’ The farm organization said that Monday._evening at the Stone the use of the term ‘‘price sup- School to le} parents in the Stone ports’’ to describe the Adminis- and Auburn) Heights school areas tration’s proposals was ‘‘a fraud see how board sessions operate on the language.” Schools. Supt. Leroy R. Watt; The farmers which said “it is said the beard will welcome dis- now obvious that the administra- cussion of board. .policies and tion's only program is to pile fail- future plans for ‘the district from ure on failure until all farm pro- the spectators grams are completely discredit- The meeting will start at 8 p.m. ed.” Board of Education to Meet for Parents se TWENTY-SIX ~ Lewis’ UMW Brother Plans rvs - in Chemical, Road Building Industries WASHINGTON (UPI) 4 D (Dennie) Lewis,” younger brother of Jobn L. Lewis and head of United Mine Workers’ District 50, said Thursday he plans stepped-up organizing drives in the chemical and highway construction indus- tries * * * He said a little-noticed effect of the new labor reform law will help enlist workers in District 30, a diversified Union including gas station attendants. taxi drivers and factory workers in its membership Lader the new law. District 3 can petition for National Labor Kelations Board (NLRB) elec tions In which workers choose bargaining representatives. It was barred from doing so under the old Taft-Hartley act because John L. Lewis, UMW president. refused to sign the non- Communist affidavit required be- fore the union could use the NLRB's facilities. The new law eliminated that requirement TAKES ADVANTAGE FAST District 50 lost no time in taking advantage of the change. It has filed 57 election petitions since ICE CR Can Turn These Words Into MONEY Want Ad in The Pontiac Press IRONS IRONERS ICE CHEST ICE BOAT INBOARD BOATS INCENSE ICE CREAM MIXER IRONING BOARDS Sell Them with PONTIAC PRESS Want Ads FE 2-8181 President Eisenhower signed the legislation on Sept. 14 Dennie Lewis said District 30 already has won some important elections, including a Union Car bide Co. plant in \/heeling, W. Va., and a Dow Chemical Plant in Marquette, Mich. Lewis. who was ( The younger named to his post on the recom mendation of his brother, indicated that the multimillion-dollar treas- we're raided.”’ ury of the parent mine workers was available to back the organiz ung drive ® * * District & now has more than He sald about 200,000 members— the nurnber of miners no UMW “District 30 is on its way,”’ the younger Lewis said in an inter view. ‘We are willing to try to give the protection of a labor prganization to anyone who sin cerely asks us for it.” AFL-CIO and other independent to the unions long have accused District sian scientist Said SO of raiding their because of what they call its catch- ‘ , ‘nough to put a man in space but ‘ >ace all organizing tactics enous P pa lest the launching of a peaceful ! | \ | | USHERS features and bushy eyebrows that haracterize his more famous Congressman Proposes brother, says District 50 is the inion that gets raided, however Step to Prevent Start ‘ / dis ten peo aoe | OF Monstrous War members are in plants that were bypassed by other unions be- \VASHINGTON ‘(UPI)—A mem- ber of the House Space Committee proposed Thursday international registration of satellites to prevent > nur . 2 w working - . Rocket Society in the soft coal fields who belong | e y ussian Daddario, in proposing reg- jurisdictions the Soviets have rockets powerful Others have expressed concern |that there is no plan to do this scientific space vehicle be min- \American Rocket Society’s annual/such vehicles. jthe safety ‘interpreted by another nation as Sedov, the beginning of a missile attack. ia that the possibility of manned —1 w euggest,”” Dedéarie ¥ ight in space is being investi-| se : | sald, “the need of a basic law | gated but that ‘‘this is not a thing) | for registration of satellites to | to be done in the nearest future.”| 4. 49 hed, Goch 8 ‘ nen. | | Te carry out such a flight, he | tied together with a proper check: — —————————— << ~~ ——— — al THE PONTIAC a FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 _ a Registration ‘for Satellites? Dennie Lewis, who has the same cause they were too small, or too hard to get, or for other reasons,’ he said. “After we organize aplant possible triggering of ‘‘a monstrous war * * * The proposal was made by Kep. Emilio Q. Daddario ‘D-Conn) at session of the 14th American a space law annual meeting of the istration of satellites, said that it is imperative ‘that we find a form of world law to avert Needed catastrophe.”’ “If we fail to achieve law and order as we venture into these , uncharted fields,’’ he said, ‘‘the A Rus- cost will be immeasurable.’’ Thursday that pea MISUNDERSTANDING Scientist Says More Research Is to Safeguard Life WASHINGTON (UPI) in the near future The scientist, Leonid I. said, it Is necessary to provide | ing system, could alleviate the great fear that every launching return unharmed te earth. | might lead to a monstrous war.” He said problems involved in| He also proposed international doing this can be solved but that | agreement on radio frequencies for the solutions will take time. space vehicles, liability for dam- Sedov is leader of a four-maniage or injury caused by space- the craft, and return and landing of for the pilot’s safety and for his Soviet delegation attending meeting here. Rep. Peter W. Rodino Jr Sedov was asked whether Rus-|(D-N.J.), a member of the House sia has a program, such as this|Judiciary Committee, also pleaded to develop a rocket | for an international space law. with 1,300,000 pounds of thrust. His) ‘The conquest of space will be! answer was “just now, no.’ ‘meaningless,’ he said, “if we He did say, however, that the | |merely project into this new arena Soviet rockets on hand could carry| lour distrusts and tensions, It will| out manned flight projects even|™mean our final disaster if we) though none will be attempted till permit space to become a new been battlefield.” country has, factors have worked out Honor U. of M. Woman Sale of License Tabs ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Irene E. Murphy, a member of the Univer- Gets Off to Slow Start sity of Michigan Board of Regents, LANSING (UPI) — Auto license will receive an award from Philip- sales for the first 17 days of the pine President Carlos P. Garcia 1960 license year were behind a for her work in starting the Com- comparative period of a year ago,munity Chest by nearly 25,700, the secretary of Philippines. Mrs. Murphy leaves state's office said Thursday. next week to attend the presenta-, Sale of the 1960 tabs amounted |tion Dec to 70,612 for this month compared _ to 96,298 for last year’s compara- tive period. movement in the 4 at Manila The great. flood of 1927 when the | |Mississippi broke its levees and ‘spread over 20,000 square miles, | Low pressure tires for automo-|caused extensive property losses |biles came in use in 1922. ee ‘estimated at $300 million. There’s a Size Club for You DEPOSIT NEXT NOVEMBER RECEIVE $ 1.00 Every 2 Weeks $ 2.00 Every 2 Weeks $ 4.00 Every 2 Weeks $10.00 Every 2 Weeks $20.00 Every 2 Weeks... CHRISTMAS — WRAPPING PAPER: “AT ALL MOBILGAS DEALERS DISPLAYING THE SIDEWALK SIGN Regular 98c Value . | ay with the purchase of 8 gallons ( _ of the 1960 NEW CAR GASOLINE . iE: ved at ta Detroit's : Proving ‘ : Grounds! ie You Can Give All The Gifts You'd Like To Give With a CHRISTMAS CLUB Here’s how to make next Christmas the greatest and grandest ever ... Have the CASH for all the gifts you'd like to give with no drain on your regular savings . . . Choose the Club that fits your needs and do it NOW! Bank o F P On Tf ft BRANCH OFFICES AT W. HURON... N. PERRY... WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR ... UNION LAKE... MILFORD... LAKE ORION. . WATERFORD . . . BLOOMFIELD HILLS . . . ROMEO Member F.D.1.C. _ Americans Spend $2 Billion on Candy WASHINGTON (UPI) - year, according to the National Confectioners. Assn. pieces of candy were consumedjan estimated Ameri- every day of 1958 in the U.S, The miles. MIDNIGHT SPECIALS! Open Tonight Until Midnight “ad ; — ~ Sg e ng” SNe — — a ~ a Ne “. Sy ~*~ , OS - whias @ 2 MATTRESSES — MA a aot] & BOX SPRINGS @ STRONG SPRINGS S. © 2 FOAM RUBBER GROUP NO. | PILLOWS Special At © GUARD RAIL $1995 @ LADDER Years of Comfort $ 50 GROUP NO. 2 Special At Complete $74 10-Year Guarantee GROUP NO. 3 Special At $2995 10-Year Guarantee ae Hollywood Beds Deep tufted mattress, matching box springs, headboard and legs $4450 | NOTHING DOWN! UPTO fa] MONTHS TO PAY! MODERN’ SLEEP SHOPS Miracle Mile Shopping Genter Buy In Exclusive Basear Area—Next to Pontiac State Bank N f Call Now—FE 8-9551 Call Now—FE 8-9551 INOW. Buy Now! ‘cans spent two billion dollars on|NCA—says that candy manutge- | three billion pounds of candy last|turing‘is the eighth largest food | processing industry in the county This means that 8) million --r. surface of the moon contains | 14,657,000 square! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ‘TWENTY-SEVEN bea mk, 4 ROYAL LESSON for $35 a Working as a shorthand teachet g week in Lausanne, Switzerland,. Princess Ferial of Egypt writes stenography characters on the blackboard. Just turned 21, the oldest daughter of ex-King Farouk teaches at an exclusive school from which she herself was graduated five months ago. She wanted to be a secretary, but her father said office work did not become a princess. Happy in the independence of her new post, Princess Ferial says I have a job and | can take care of myself.” For Hoover’s Priceless Collection Name Library Director SAN FRANCISCO (UPIi—Cana-'sons have added to the collection dian-born Dr. W. Glenn Campbell’ which now contains the most com Thursday was named as the new plete history of the Commuhist director of Stanford's fabulous movement in the world, a full ac count of the Nazi movement and Campbell, 35, presently director innumerable other documents that of research of the American En- are priceless to historians iterprise Assn., Washington, D. C * * * was appointed to the vacant post Some of the items are locked by the Stanford Board of Trustees and officially designated not to be in a meeting here opened until some future date. Among these is a trunk believed to hold the highly confidential docu- ments kept by the spy Mata Hari Hoover Library The new director will have charge of some 25,000,000 items |-stered in the famed 280-foot | tower on the Stanford University campus in Palo Alto, the world’s largest collection of 20th Century social literature. The libarary, officially nated as the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace was| \dedicated by former President) . desig- | |Herbert Hoover in 1941 te store the ele UMBER aLaele GH . Charlotte and Howar Stodd Lansing Bank Seeks “eu i “are a a ‘ F president o ichigan Nationa HOOVER ito Buy 2 in Charlotte They said the State Banking CHARLOTTE (p Shareholders Conimissioner and the Federal V ACUUM a of two Charlotte banks will vote Controller of Currency have ap- Nov 24 on a $1,200,000 purchase proved the proposed transaction, SALES and SERVICE offer for the Sena by Mich subject to approval of stockhold Authorized Dealer igan National Bank of Lansing ers of the institutions to be « * * absorbed a — The offer was announced jointly xpert ce vesterday ‘vy Philip H. Barber Although the surface of Lake president of the Eaton County Superior is 602 feet above sea BARNES HARGRAVE Bank of Charlotte and Vermont- level, much of its bottom is far] 42 W. Heron s FE 56-0101 ville: Clyde A. 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PACKAGE or GALLONS—Ready-Mixed See It Today! OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Leke Ave. Park Free Rear of Store FE 5-6150 BOSTON tric of refrigeration Springfield, Mass Ohio tion Eastern Gas & Fuel Asso shut down permanently a pig won blast furnace at Everett which had been operating evel Westinghouse Elec Corp equipment from to Columbus, ending a 44-year-old opera- lates \lass GUITARS from $15.95 VIOLINS trom $17.95 Masica) Instrument Line Ley-Away EZ Payment Piss EDWARD'S ¢ so. saginew since 1926 When Nicholson File Co. de cided recently to close one of its three plants, if chose to stop production at Providence, R.L, where it had been operating for 95 years This is a wy plat y { the yn tinuing drift of industry away from New England * * * Connecticut, Rhode Island. Mas sachusetts, Maine. Vermont = and New Hampshire appear to be run ning hard on an economic tread mill New Englands manulacturing employment in August was 1.8 per cent below the level of August 199, while the U.S. total on the sume basis Was up 8 per cent In the past 40 years, the num ber of manufacturing jobs in New England has declined 5.6 per cent while the U.S. total in the comparable period has risen 38 per cent. Labor costs in the area tend to be. higher than in regions This is so, authorities believe, be- New England and its labor force had a longer period in which to build its average levels and to obtain various fringe fits most cause wave bene * * * Also the region contains many inefficient, multi-story plants in cramped city localities where tax burdens have become increasingly ‘heavy. One of New England's most severe handicaps is strictly geo ' graphical. ft is not tavorably situated to be a national distribu. | tion center. Still, makers of consumer goods perhaps would be more reluctant to leave if New England's popula- tion were rising as sharply as that of the U.S. as a whole. But New |England’s share of U.S. population is now 5.74 per cent, down from 6.1 per cent-im 1950 and 7 per cent in 1920. — * * * “Take New England as your center for a large marketing cir cle,”’. Says a spokesman for a con- sumer goods manufacturer, ‘‘and you'll see that its sales area cov- ers a big chunk of ocean.’ Westinghouse cited better dis- tribution as the reason for put. ting its alr conditioner, water cooler and dehumidifier produc. U FE 4-1518 FREE! GOLD {fg BELL GIFT STAMPS tion in Ohio; Ford division of ¥ Motor Co. gave the same tien for deactiy ating Its completed the transfer; Industries Moving Out of New England Area assembly plant at Somerville, Mass. tligh taxes and labor costs in Rhode Island led Nicholson File to facilities at! official Associ close its production Providence, a company says. kastern Gas & Fuel ales closed its blast furnace at Everett becuuse “‘the New Eng land market for pig iron has been constantly shrinking and no ignger will support continued operation,” according to a spokesman *® * * Labor costs were one reason for Bridgeport Brass Co.'s moving its Tubular Plumbing Goods division from Bridgeport, Conn., to a new plant at Moultrie. Ga An outspoken critic of costs and taxes in Massachusetts ts General Electrie Co., which ranks as New England's second largest manufacturing employer. The cost of doing business. in lassachusetts is high” asserts Robert A. Burns of GE's River Works GE has had plants in the Lynn iveu for some 75 years and re ports that in the last five years it has spent $40 million on new equipment * * * Despite this GE has expanded neither’ production nor employ ment in the Lynn area although nationally both have risen more than oO per cent since the ne of World War Il. In fact em ployment at Lynn ‘cals 30.000 now, off from 40,000 just four years ago A GE official burls these charges at Massachusetts: Workmen's com pensation rates in the state are the highest in the country, the state is the fourth highest nation- ‘THE PONTIAC PRI 25S, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ’ HELLO, OLD MAN — It isn’ year-old Sheila, Crayne to imagine that thas or- dinary squirrel is every bit of that’s one of the joys of childhood Actually the Auto Industry Speculates That DeSoto May Go Next By BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT Discontinuance of ally in state and local per capita the medium-priced Edsel revived, taxes; the state debt ix the fourth: ooeculation in the auto industry highest in the land india dha’ “Chevel Fucn nat . * * Oday 1a wysiel La | may Taking into account an excess drop its slow-selling DeSoto line profits tax, the state's corporate * * *® tax is the nation’s highest, this suvh rumors have been preval official contends ent in industry circles for several eo years. but have been denied every Wife Has Her Wa time they have cropped up y; “Observers noted, however, He Gets Workhouse KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)—Mrs. | Willard Edward Lynch had her way when her husband pleaded ly three autos are selling at a guilty to a drunken driving slower pace than the DeSoto. These | charge are Chrysler's Imperial, Ford’ s| Before City Court Judge Charles Lincoln and the Edsel, in that} Kelley could decide on a sentence, order Lynch's wife arose and said * * * * * * DeSoto production for the 1959) ‘Judge, I think he should be sent calendar year so far totals only) to the workhouse. It might learn slightly more. than 30.000 units. The him some sense!"’ * * “Lady, you took the words right out of my mouth," the judge de- clared as he fined:Lynch $175 and’ sentenced him to 30 days PUT un-Fire Home Refineries Sun-Fire Fuel cleaner than teed to be th on your yearly heating bill models THUMB ON A GOOD from one of America’s Most Modern Special that Ford Motor Co. had previ- ously denied it would stop pro- ducing Edsels. Yesterday, the company said the line was being dropped becarse of poor sales. Production figures show that on-|_ 1960 DeSoto line is limited to six) t Sales have slumped generally | in the medium-priced field since ‘the 1955 model year. Packard, Nash and Hudson, both in the | | YOUR So =m « rr FUEL OIL Ope ee Heating Oils come additives makes Oil burn hotter and ordinary fuel. Guaran e finest. Saves you money SSS Guaranteed Watch Dog— Keep Fill Service 351 S. PADDOCK t hard for six- 103 years old, “walking cane’ medium price range, have been casualties of falling sales in re- cent years. The Edsel was discontinued aft- of production end of er only 28 months Introduced at the 1957. Ford dicted that 200,000 would be the first vear. Factory ing the Edsel’s existence slightly short of 110.000 cars * * * Ford announced discontinuance of the Edsel line after publication of a prospectus on behalf of the Ford Foundation announcing plans to sel] another two million shares of Ford Motor Co. stock The prospectus carried a one- August enthusiastically — pre- sold in sales dur- fell its animal is a baby pet named Frisky; AP Wirephete and the that lends to his elderly look is an ordinary cigarette line footnote on the Edsel. It read: “Introduced in September 1957, and discontinued in Novem ber 1959."’ The company advised customers who bought the 2,700 Edsels pro- duced in the 1960 model year that they will get a $300 certificate good for use on the purchase of any domestically produced Ford Motor Co. auto African Firm Attempts Man-Made Diamonds DETROIT wW—General Electric Co., which discovered an industrial diamond-making process four years ago, is intrested in reports that «a South African firm has come up with a similar process * * * GE has been producing man- made diamonds for two years DeBeers Consolidated Mines Ltd.. announced Tuesday in Jo hannesburg, that it had reached the laboratory stage with a man- made diamond process. Citizens Uncertain About Value Toledo Malls to Stay? I t's December Problem ‘TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) ~ They Me ree away Toledo's $50,000) malls in trucks today. | And the city fathers debated whether to spend $432,000 to bring} 'them back for good x * * Opinion was still] divided over whether the malls were worth the trouble and expense as this Great Lakes prt ended its 109-day exper- liment in which four choice down- town blocks were sealed off to! itraffic and converted into pedes- ;trian paradises. Lawrence Murray, city plan- | ning director and a mall booster, said City Council will decide next month if Toledo should build per- manent park - like malls, with | pools and statues and benches and pedestrians criss . crossing | any way they pleased. | Murray said if the decision 1}s lyes, the city would probably pay half the bill and the downtown ‘merchants would be assessed for the other half * * * That's the breakdown used in Kalamazoo, Mich., the first city in the United States to adopt malls as a permanent feature FEELING IS MIXED Even though installing the malls would be costly, 80 per cent of the merchants on the temporary malls and 65 per cent of those on other streets favor them, Murray said, Most storekeepers thought the | malls accomplished their chief aim, attracting shoppers down- ' town again, away from the glit- | tering suburban shopping cen. | ters that dot Toledo’s fringes. | Some _ housewives disagreed Mrs. F. Dwight Haigh, whose sub- urban home is a 1>minute drive from downtown, said she had not been downtown to see the malls, which opened Aug * * * “T only go downtown once ot twice a Vear to see my dentist Mrs. Haigh, the mother of two married sons, said I use the shopping centers. My husband malls are thinks the neck. He has to drive practically six blocks to find a parcang space. $$ OPEN TONIGHT-PARK RIGHT AT THE DOOR WAREHOUSE BRANCH—STEWART-GLENN CO. A 40, 000 SQ. FT. FURNITURE SUPERMARKET +e: te “DON'T BE “MISLED BY DISCOUNTS” We Have a Reason for Lower Prices and Everyone Pays the Same Low Warehouse-Direct-to-You-Price! COUNTRY WALNUT or CHERRY BY KROEHLER | Your Choice of Woods in This Nationally Advertised Group Chest SPINDLE $48.8; Come in — see and buy at our special low prices. Beautifully fashioned of enuine Solid American alnut, distinctively ac- cented with antique Brass hardware. Detailed with quality feature through- out. “Precisionized” draw- ers. Dust proofed construc- tion guaranteed mirrors Your choice of over 20 decorator pieces CREDIT TERMS: $-G «: $59.8; Corner Unit $54.87 ALSO DINING AVAILABLE 90 Days Same as Cash ROOM PIECES DOUBLE DRESSER $119.87 (ENITE STAND) $29.87 TRIPLE DRESSER & MIRROR $149.87 WAREHOUSE CLOSED WEDNESDAYS RNITURE SALES FE 5-9279 20 Franklin Rd. Just Off S. Seginew St. Open Mon., T hurs., Fri ‘til 9:00—Twes. Sot. ‘til 5:30 a pain in the; “The main department stores all have suburban shops,'' she said. “And they’re nicer and newer than those downtown, * * * “I used to go downtown to have | my hair done. It always cost me 65 tents to park.” Pencil Marks on Wall Make This Man Glad JERSEY CITY, N. J. Pencil marks on a kitchen wall that measure a little boy’s growth bring more than the usual smile to Dr. Philip H. Hennernan of the Seton Hall University College of Medicine Dr. Henneman has made it pos- sible for a few dwarfed younge sters to gain ap inch or two in height through ‘administration of shots gleaned from the pituitary gland. He is engaged in research here, hoping to expand the program. Claimed to be the oldest public building in the U.S. is the Palace of Governors located in Santa Fe It is more than 340 years old, ac- cording to New Mexico historians ARISTOTLE ONASSIS G Muth! qth! Why has Aristotle On- assis —— the Greek shipping magnate —— been called the most evasive, fast-moving millionaire of them all? Why does heclaim all facts written about him are myths? Is he in love with Maria Callas or is hisinterest “purely professional?” Be sure to read the in- side story of Aristotle Onassis Fabulous NEW WAY to COOK a TURKEY! “There isonly oneway to cook a turkey” says famed writer Richard Gehman “and that’s my way.” You may think this recipe is crazy but once you use it you may never cook your way again. See and save this fab- ulous recipe... in The American Weekly. plus... DETROIT'S NEWEST, BIGGEST TV SECTION See Sunday’s €> DETROIT imes Fer Home Delivery Phone FE 2-7921 HERMAN 8. STENBUCK 367 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac pom M i were 150 More GMC Buses Sought THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBRR,20, 1959 State Insurance Rates Will Fall —— Disc Distributor Claims Payola_ | Cost Him Plenty | PHILADELPHIA \®—A Philadel- TWENTY-NINE. | The first railroad was built in New Mexjco in 1881. Before that principle means of transportation he stagecoaches on regular were t schedules. . — ° DSR to Ask Okay for| a7 Firms to Introduce ~ rec eaennds pepewed i ‘ A re Nas pal Ousanas of aoliars - balan sean 2 150) | Plan Favoring Drivers to get records played on local, © TORTU R E e A ready es Order | With Good Records radio programs. He estimated per- S TESTE D ! e | haps 20 of the city’s 200 disc : e The Detroit Street Railway Com-| LANSING um — Twenty-seven in- jockeys took “payola.’ : : mission will be asked at its De-| surance firms next week will offer “Edward D. Cohn, proprietor of e New McCulloch . cember meeting to authorize pur-| |Michigan motorists a new low cost pesco Distributors — one of 16| ¢ : chase: of 150 more buses from the| automobile liability insurance pol-| record firms in town, said he paid ONE/40 — Motors Truck and Coach! jicy designed to appeal to “sale disc jockeys $5 to $100 to play . e Divsion, it was learned today. {drivers popular records he was pushing. | :. eoeee ee eeee Under a ‘‘merit rating’ system, He said he stopped the practice GMC already had been awarded a contract for 150 at a cost of $3,800,000. to his accident experience. The- ,, ' For The Money | oretically, a good past record I got to the point where e Torture-Tested A Division spokesman today | ; would indicate less-than-averpage would have to spend the profit non Depeneaunnr said an option for the additional | 150 was offered to the DSR when | the bid was first awarded. DSR General Manager Leo J.| la driver’s premium will be geared iprobabability of future accidents. The insurance companies, members of the Mutual Insur- ance Rating Bureau, have won approval of the new policies and because it got too expensive from the first 10,000 records sold the disc jockeys if I'd Cohn told newsmen. to pay gone on,” Cohn named no names or Sta- tions, but said ‘‘there are five sta- Nowicki yesterday rece J ived per-| mission from Mayor Miriani to buy proposed rates from Insurance tons in sii a n ct em 300 instead of the original 150 or- Commissioner Frank Blackford, ~~ Bil es 1 eS thing to There are a score of | dered. Deliveries of 50 buses each are| scheduled for January, July and} November. If the DSR Commission| okays Nowicki's request in Decem-| ber, orders will be increased of 125 buses each for July and No- vember, | | effective Monday. Blackford said cost of the pack age policies will depend erages selected, the motorists age the use made of the car and other factors Blackford increase in rates for workmen's on COV also announced an radio stations in the area Cohn said he wasn't ashamed of giving ‘“‘payola’’ brt hoped the practice would end. He said he listed the payments under pro motion for tax purposes and paid the disc jockeys by check, ex cept for one who made a prac The Truck and Coach Divi- . = compensation coverage, effective tice of demanding cash pay sion official said the Division ». ; ¢: >xhi at P > Centri : ingree / side The local society ché : a on dered the glamor coach | neers are shown examining part of an exhibition at Pontiac Central Brown, of 115 Pingree Ave., president. The loc al ociety chapter ‘ave bien avieked iii credit FREE DEMONSTRATION of the transit bus industry, accord-; High School last night. Instrumental in bringing “‘The Cutting sponsored the show jointly with the American Society of Quality (jncurance ind a ceiling fixed of 7% | ing to a GMC official. | Edge,’ a program of the DoALL Co. of Des Plaines, Ill., were Control, Detroit Branch cents per $10 of initial ulebied: WASHINGTON (UPI) — The = ness, Blackford said National Milk Producers Federa- This type of coverage protects |tion has elected Russell Waltz of the lender in consumer debt trans-|Seattle, Wash., to his seventh one- and until 1958. was notjyear term as president of the| 2391 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKE ROAD regulation Waltz defeated W. H. Austin, of Blackford said he will order!Lake Cormorant, Miss., in ballot- FE 4-0734 FE 4-1112 further state reductions if expe-|ing at the federation’s annual NE rience justifies them. convention here. 2 STREET Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Unveiled recently, the new mo- del has a 53 passenger capacity, fluorescent lighting, textured alu- minum side walls, a V4 diesel engine and a new heating sys- tem with ducts located under the passenger windows for more even distribution of heat. actions subject to Insurance Department |organization. ommissioners Tour Hangar, Seek to Formulate Rental Policy The latter question was of most/small, but choicely located offices|out the undesirability, for airfield on the ground floor fronting the | Purposes, of the remote areas airfield. They pay $30 each rented by the coil company and th “hery she Frank Macartney, © archery =P “We were lucky to find people A new seating arrangement is incorporated this year, according to the GMC spokesman, with mod ernized lower contour seats U.N. Calls on France NORTH Fve city commissioners braved cold weather and guSty winds yes concern yesterday terday while marching across the ramp at Pontiac Municipal Airport to inspect the once-bustling Ameri Renting offices or shop space in the hangar are the Pontiac of president can Airlines hangar. | Coil Co., Grimes Archery, Su- Aen Oa es was on the tour He who wanted to rent these areas to Cancel A-Tests One there, they poked into dusty. perior Instrument Service, North- (Said Northern and Land O’Lakes for any purpose.’’ he said unused lofts: discovered some old, lwould have to move out if Aerody- PS * t ern Flying Service and Land 0O’- Lakes Flying Club. The coil company, located in an rusting city equipment in a door- less storeroom and found some corners humming with activity namics moved in, since his com-' Hoskins also pointed out another UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ® — lpany wants offices for its own op-'office space that used to rent for The U.N. General Assembly : " ‘anc t $96 but has been vacant several ae on be France —_ = conch Making the long walk from the addition at the rear of the hangar — months ° s atomic test explosions sched: office of Homer D. Hoskins, alr and away from the airfield, pays The other renters can stay, for | - $ eserves t e ST Because of the pending lease, he explained, there was no at- tempt to find a new renter when uled te take place in the Sahura the time being at least, said Macartney, including the private plane owners who store their craft in the hangar proper at Valley Flying Service moved out rates from $20 to $50, depending | of the office this summer. | | on size. | The Commission plans to study Both Northern and Land O’Lakes a report by Hoskins before mak- protested the move proposed by|ing a final decision on the pro-; Aerodynamics and Hoskins, and pased lease Tuesday. The report | ifronts the airfield on the second/this protest helped bring the in-|will indicate possible revenues if Commissioner Milton .R. Henry floor. |spection tour. the present rents are raised and missed fhe inspection tour because} Northern and Land O'Lakes have! During the tour, Hoskins pointed all the space rented PLAY SANTA IN ‘60 The big hangar is one of two; A port manager, to what is now ealled Hangar No, 8 were Mayor Philip E. Rowston and Commis- | sioners William W. Donaldson, John A, Dugan, Wesley J. Wood and Robert A. Landry. lond floor and pays $88._ A source of envvy was Commis-,| The instrument service, which | sioner Floyd P. Miles, who pro-|does considerable business at the} dently drove across over the open|field, pays $125 and partially | 200-yard stretch in his car. $119 a month. Its coils occasionally are used in aircraft. Grimes, which makes bows and arrows, is located in an out-of-the- way section on the hangar’s sec- - Desert, But the French made it clear they will ignore the appeal. The decision was a bitter de feat to France which, with the backing of the United States and Britan, had fought stubbornly to avert such a U.N. request. The vote was 51 to 16 with 15 abstentions. Reports Ford Slates Overtime Tomorrow 2.0” °°" DETROIT — Ward's Automo- renting its offices and hangar space tive Reports said today Ford has to a_ half-dozen businesses and scheduled overtime production -to-,about 20 private airplane owners morrow for Falcon, Lincoln and/It is grossing presently about Thunderbird and has returned all'$10.000 a year other assembly plants to a five day EASY : Advanced Electric Io GiveThe - Razor in The World! |purchased from the airlines by the ‘city about 20 years ago for a WITH Before the Commission now ts ek "Ford American Motors § and not ea opes nae e ° . Studebaker-Packard. are the onl , p t F t d | | tri Sue Pant om rm. Aerodynamic, ae. which ontiac irst and only electric razor wants to sell and service air- planes and electronic equipment. If the lease offer isn’t accepted, said Hoskins, the rents of the present tenants will have to be raised He admitted present rents are low. but explained they haven't been raised in recent years be cause the city has been looking for a big company to lease the entire hangar. Hoskins recommended the lease, saying it would mean more profit. less output for the city in main- tenance costs and less administra tive bother. During their hour-long tour, commissioners were confronted with at least two big questions. Should the city be interested | | only in the greatest profit, or in | providing facilities for as many people as possible, with money | | only a secondary consideration. | / more. 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Lawrence St., Pontiac 407 Main Street, Rochester 4416 Dixie H’way, Drayton Plains for CHRISTMAS NOW! $1.00 Holds Your Purchase 24 N. SAGINAW ST. 3 ee HEL sn once ua nausjnlaepiglgtialaammpalignitanedaaemnissd 5.) wu ' : ‘ THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 - Late Dramatic Experiment Shows Fantastic Results British Hopetul Over A-Reactor War Shocker France Planning = Sse Smash Sellout Huge N-Force S32 | bate on France’s 1960 budget, } Christmas Without Toys? We shall do all we possibly con to see In addition, the fuel elements are| F ho amumily cnet aes hae that unemployed union members have By ROBERT MUNSEL The ball, measuring 135 feet in n addition, the ments are . some ‘ 7 Brutal West German LONDON (UPI) — British sci- diameter, is the largest pressure there's any unscheduled increase in | Will Be Approved but ties said it posed a financial bur- toys for their children ee Film ‘The Bridge’ Stuns entists working at a nuclear sta- Vessel ever built and probubly the temperature Some Deputies Worry! % Frasce cannot afford. | Toys at our usual low discount ces Audi | i oe ton nett Gution of Galen protected building in the No one at Dounreay believes About eo 4 Premier Michel Debre rejected plus layaway price protection. . a ) oO a > y ( 3 ’ . : ; ‘ Le AAO ames Scottish coast are trying to milk vos . there will ‘be an incident, despite . ances ithe overspending charges and, small deposit we will hold your toys til It hotses almost every conceiv- these elaborate precautions Dec. 15th and if you haven't drawn a the atom of usable energy j : up to The Freniy said the $3,310,000,000 budget is/ ture, which makes war look like BERLIN . — A brutal German ‘eater than ever be- @ble safety device capable of re Spokesmen hope to get positive ree) PARIS (UPI) — film about war is drawing sellout — a eee ee acting automatically to sults from the reactor in a few! overnm lined plans — one per cent higher than the} paycheck by then — you pay when you i Bed i West fore known acting automatically t potential months gove ent has outli Pp 11959 military outlay { id ences in t ley . oO i i . ° oa PO EEN AMEE dramatic experiment, launched trouble at the hundredth-of-a-sec- _ _ building a powerful nuclear strik-| «py, must shoulder the re-| ~eooher nothin more (no added Most critice agree that the pice 2¥@ days ago with the ““Dounreay ond speeds the human mind 1s not! ing force of planes and missiles | sponsibility of her own destiny,”’| eme ’ g een een vac lock like ¢xPerimental reactor’, has brought Capable of and can barely com, US electric output multiplied! capable of serving “France's des-|Debre said. charges ore tacked on to our low, low by almost exactly six times in| discount prices). its participants closer than ever prehend insane nonsense, is one of the ; TI sherinatirel of tt _ the rter century from 1926 to!™y-” se ein * before to the hairbreadth line that ve spherical shape of the re- the qua century 0! ne | He said France intends to con-| greatest ever made in Germany separates atomic destruction from 4Ctor is itself a safety factor a 1951. The plane were laid before the | tinue working closely with its! Just bring ur badge and do your Called “Die Bruecke” (The (ontrolied nuclear powe! design which can contain any sud ~ ” _— . \NATO allies but that no alliance) shopping y- Bridge). it was turned out on a den increase in pressure and local- The first oi) wells in the United Natignal Assembly as the handi-| should result in “submerging the | shoestring by Bernhard Wicki, The quantities of radioactive jp. any accidental release of ra- States were drilled at Titusvile, work of President Charles de country’s fundamental objective to’ a Swiss actor-turned-director material being employed ap * dioactivity Pa. in 1859. ‘Gaulle although he is currently|those of other countries. who works mainiy in West proach that utilized im an atomic Sa bee ee LS : = | happened to seven German ¢8s used at Dounreay also issim- gg a schoolboys—aged 16—who were ilar to that of the bomb. With @ 4 drafted into Hitler's army just chain reaction vf the release of i . a before the hectic end of World emergy goes on at high speeds — a War I. with no effort to slow it. Ps oO 4 The film shows how all of them. A “breeder’’ type of reactor, @ T O % OV ER ( OS Y | rs save one. died in defense of a Dounreay actually creates more B = * small South German bridge that fue] than it burns. Neutrons re- a Ht = = was worthless from a tactical leased from the enriched uranium g ROOM ADDIT . viewpoint or plutonium in its core are cap @ | SPECIAL FINANCING— ° SIDING eeppacee H * * * tured by a “blanket” or ordinary eB « a = BUTANE But this isn't what stuns the uranium or thorium and reflect. 8 We'll gladly accept cash,.of course, if you @ FINISH SHELL . audience into riba a silence eq back into the core to continue ~ want to hdndle it that way. But if you prefer HOMES « that lasts till the crowd melts 4, fantastic labors 2 « away an the areal their fanta . s or wont credit, you can take advantage of @ KITCHENS | BRITISH HOPEFUL Big Bear's exclusive Personalized Budget @ REC. ROOMS : ' a See ee ee vere is Meee we thlenew declan, - Financing Plan. This wonderful plen permits @ ATTICS 3 : LAYAWAY NOW! Sa WA manner in which the child- | ? \ i! rar # —— soldiers and their American ‘{ time proves it successful, will B you to lump all your payments — including @ BASEMENTS Ss y asian, tn: bring them closer than any nation @ mortgage or land contract and any other ANY HOME ° DAGRON FILLED They do not die like heroes in a i” the world to tapping the full ® outstanding bills — into ONE lower monthly e IMPROVEMENT =I wild west thriller, who spin around Potential of the atom a payment. Take to 15 years to pay. No charge s and drop dead oihnet 6 tes. Atomic power stations are pres- g for this valuable service. | Instead. the German kids and °™tly conceived can extract from a the American soldiers die scream- 0P€ ton of uranium the energy CALL NOW FE 3-7833 : ing and blubbering, with terrible ¢duivalent to 10,000 tons of coal. Aig s wounds spokesman for the Atomic Energy g a Authority put the potential yield g . . at equal to 10,000,000 tons of coal. & « Town Is Growing 1,000 times greater than now real- ~ BIG BEAR CONST 60 e ed * * - EDWARDSBURG (UPI) — Perry | _ marty e ete W T a $ 88 Stoops, 30, held office today as Such a prize clearly no _ a Edwardsburg’s first full time po “thout its risks, and the giant : 92 . HURON S ° PONTIAC . 2 Pe. Coat & lice chief. Stoops, a former Cass| Stee! ball which marks the @ — Pants with Cor- County detective lieutenant. was; Deunreay experimental reactor g . duroy Cutts and sworn in replacing Robert Welsh, leoms above the Scottish coast- § era a 2 Wrists who held the chief of police post, lime as a symbol of man's tacit ~ s i sis. acknowledgement that the atom & hgh ogo "stoops 84.700. an will not willingly work tor sci. & CALL ANY TIME — Operators on Duty 24 Hrs. a Day a INSULATED BAGS ually ence. TILT itt iii SLEEPING e LAYAWAY NOW [ ees Stainless | Seer Salice Pan tH omnes CH tooo: c 7-Pc. Magnetic Va" Electric \ bo s 3 Screwdriver Sel POWER DRILL E 88 \ Twit e fy ove §Q \ : Coupon ~ JUD count on TOASTMASTER satly a == POWERSHAVE the electric water heat $095 With Approv that stands on legs! eee on . i teeememeeeenenenneill . ree Demonstration! 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HURON STORE SUNDAY 10-5 see your Toastmaster dealer or DETROIT EDISON Super Bargain Cent | WEST SIDE — 1052 W.-HURON ~ (r=, EAST SIDE — 526 N. PERRY ‘Se wrisiess) DOWNTOWN (Back, of e ® — 142 WAYNE ST. .,:2e4,if,, h ( ‘ | } i t | { (_THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 a _ __ _THIRTY-ONE 20,000 Relics Relate jat the-Army Signal Corps Museum }4 : rived in the United States, heiny;-:.¢ . tt a be le and bit E unaorian, 26, Learns . Vicious virrel Attacks of @ bean pole a and [ h [ in expenses for the newly created re 9 7 . knew only the Hungarian sym- 5q clawed McDonald severely ven t e awyers post of county executive, Story of Communication | The display, spanning a century Second Sign Language |bols of the sign language. A Man, 90, Spraying Beans . of signaling history, started as a’ couple here has taught him Eng-| FT. MONMOUTH, NJ. ® — post museum in 1942. ELIZABETH, N.J. — A deat-lish and the American sign, trom a shed and threw them to Can Speak Clearly ty Corporation C. Stanley Perty, More than 20,000 military com. _ H - , ' HAMPTON, Va.- — A squirrel ; set a record for brevity, It reads munications relics fro ri a i a had language. aoe the squirred, hoping that he might} : “Yes.” — from wig-} switzerland } kept out of 0 learn to speak two languages \didn't like it when Newton Me-|40i0, aying. The rrel, how.| MILWAUKEE \®— The finance committee of the Milwaukee Coun-| A committee member comment- wag signal flags to electroni ; pont Pe . ; satellite models — may be re ener wars for more than 150/in silence , | Mary Baker Eddy founded the Donald, 90, started spraying his ever, attacked again, then scamp- ty Board sought a legal opinionjed: “I didnt think lawyers’ could y nei) , _ _When Paul Vida, 26, first ar-|Christian Science religion. lima beans. The squirrel leaped ered off. ‘on whether it could provide $500 use language like that.” The aged man got some nuts The opinion, returned by Coun- who but a IGEN. has ARMOUR gobbling-good turkeys . 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AVERAGE ............. 39 «+ UNSLICED STUFFING BREAD Plain .... « %% 21° Seasoned .. . %%: 23° Prices effective thru Wed., Nov. 25, 1959, at Kroger im Detroit and Eastern Mich. . ~ THIRTY-TWO _ No League —_ i ti i ee ee a ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 —— =-— _- = Honors at Stake in OSU-'M’ Classic = 95,000 Figured fo See Buckeyes Battle Michigan’ Each Team Is Hoping to Improve Position in Big Ten Race { | ANN ARBOR ‘®—The Michigan-| | Ohio State football classic — for! years a pivotal contest in the Big) Ten title fight — will have only} second-division matters at stake lwhen the traditional foes square off for the 56th time With both teams mired near the conference cellar, only the renewal of a bitter rivalry and a last chance to improve final positions in the conference will hinge on tomorrow's meeting be- fore an expected crowd of more than 95,000. A victory for coach Bump EI- liott's ninth-place Wolverines (2-4 in the loop) could boost them as| \high as seventh in the final stand- | ings — if Purdue whips Indiana. | But a Michigan loss, coupled with | an upset of Wisconsin by the last place Gophers, could knot the Wolverines and Minnesota in the cellar with 2-5 marks Never before in Big Tem history haus a team finished last with as many as two victories, . AP Wirephete BUCK HUNTER — Ohio State quarterback Tom Mafte will be at Ann Arbor Saturday hunting for a Wolverine trophy. The Buck- eye was the secret weapon against MSU couple weeks ago and thus Michigan will have to guard against his passes and rollouts He is considered a fine runner, being originally at halfback. But Oxford Bows in Ohio State desperately needs a ‘victory to avoid handing its flam- boyant coach Woody Hayes his! first losing season in an eight-| Rugby Dawkins Stars on Defense OXFORD, England —Injuries sity’s rugby union team yesterday to teammates on Oxford Univer-|sejection of the squad which will robbed All-América football - play-| | | 5 ' s [es \ s. SF er Pete Dawkins of any chance to| Major Stanley's team, made UP) each team of starting fullbacks sparkle on offense in one of the of international and former Oxford|— the Buckeyes’ Bob White, one | an ————————= | stars, defeated the Oxford team, | of the great line crashers of his jtime, and tough Tony Rio, Michi- : | — vear coaching career at the Buck- | school. The seventh-place Ohieans (3- -b on the season) have never lost more than three games in | one year since Hayes took over the head coaching reins in 1951. eve jteam’s last matches before the ;meet Cambridge Dec. 8. Injuries probably wil] deprive 146. | A Because of the injuries, the los-|®4”'® lithe 182-pounder. 0 had to play most of the game’ firstjine right guard Alex Calla- with only 13 men, instead of the han, who will sit out his final regulation 15. Consequently they college game on the bench. X-rays |were forced to play a defensive! yesterday showed that the hard- game, and Dawkins’ strong tack-| working sentor has-a cracked ver-| ling helped keep down the oppo-|tebra in the lower back. nents’ score. Michigan holds a 34-17 edge over | Dawkins, of Royal Oak. Mich. the Buckeyes in the long series,’ who played football at West ag four others have ended in . | Junior Wings Score Malcolm Phillips, mainspring of the Oxford attack and the man ex- - pected to tend Dawkins racing sor OA Hockey Triumph the line, was injured after only 10 minutes, He suffered a pulled leg) RIVERSIDE, Ont. (UPI) — The muscle and had to retire. Forward) Junior Wings hockey team took a Denis Evans was off the field for|41 victory last night over the Riv- |20 minutes in the first half, and erside Regents to put them one {Colin Payne missed the last 15/point behind the league leaders. iminutes. The Junior Wings took their fifth | Oxford plays Harlequins, a top hockey victory against two defeats London team, on Saturday, and it/and one tie to give them 11 points is expected Captain Phillips will in the Border Cities League. The announce his team to meet Cam- Jeading Chatham team has 12 bridge after that match. points. Although he has been playing; Detroit's Dick Devine took cred-| the game only five weeks, Dawkins/it for two goals and Ned Runey is in line for a ‘‘blue,"’ the coveted and Bernie Roch each scored once award for playing against Cam- last night in the rout over the bridge. The last American to win Riverside squad. ja rugby “‘blue’ was Fred Hoyle; The Junior Wings will return to of the University of Minnesota in| home ice at Olympia Stadium Tues- 1931. lday night to meet the Windsor Mic Macs. +e e a = a Philippines, smash DOUBLE HEAD-ER — Mexico's Ernesto Fi- gueros (left) and the Javellana Kid from the simultaneous blows to the head in their 10-rounder last night in Los An- AP Wirephote geles. The Mexican had blood streaming from small cuts over the eyes but he still won a unani- | mous decision. Each weighed 136 pounds. | Another Michigan casualty is _ | | —— shia Se a ak RS nk al ~ Bears’ Tactics .« in Spying Are Known by Foes Detroit Coach Wilson Is Wise to Tricks of George Halas \ : DETROIT w — George Wilson | The two arch-enemies of the Na- tional Football League clash Sun- day at Briggs Stadium. . And until Sunday, the Stadium |gates will be shut tightly to prying | eyes. spying tactics of the Bears and | | their coach, George Halas.’ Halas | is notorious for his methods of | learning the secrets of the Bears’ | next rival. The Bears’ old master has been Pontiac Press Pheote The National Basketball that Pontiac’s Guy Sparrow is averag game with the Philadelph in eight games, picking u The cut may be either he or is trimmed. x * Bruce Sias, a junior from Drayton star of the Central Michigan swimming team. x * ia Warriors. He p 22 points and 15 rebounds, Ernie Beck when the roster - From the Press Box DIGGING IN THE MAILBAG WE FIND: . Association statistics show ing 2.7 points a has appeared * Plains, is a freestyle * Former Pontiac Central cager Rod Treais will start at forward for Eastern Michigan College. It just seems like Rod was hitting the hoop for the Chiefs and now he already is a senior on the Huron squad. x * * The PGA Quarter Century Club golf championship, which Al Watrous of Oakland Hills won in | 1958, will be played at Dunedin, Fla., Feb. 10-11. | * * 1957 and * A new kind of sports doubleheader will be held at the Detroit Olympia, Dec. Ist. Wimbledon stars Althea Gibson meets Karol after which the Harlem G Fageros in a tennis match lobetrotters will play the Baltimore Rockets in a basketball game. x * * A friend drops this column a joke which some coaches may like but which officials may not appreciate: The devil was always challenging St. Peter in base- ball, football, etc. But St. challenge. Peter never accepted the Finally, the Dodgers, Giants, Tigers, Pistons, Lions, Bears, etc., all went to heaven. So naturally St. Pete called up the devil. “Now I'll arrange a schedule with you in baseball, football and basketball” he said. “You'll lose,” said the devil, “you'll lose.” “Oh yeah?” replied St. Peter, “I’ve the greatest col- lection of athletes you eve r saw.” “You'll lose,” said the devil, “you'll lose.” “What makes you so sure we'll lose?” asked St. Pete. “Because we've got all the umpires and referees down here,” laughed the devil. Get this you quarterbacks. Earl Morrall was asked to explain the touchdown play to Dave Middleton Sun- “It’s our 8 look-in, with |day and this was his explanation. green left slow, which like a bend-in deep. It’s not much more than a back divid- ing to the left, but the same as swing in the flat. We did it this time off our opposite, calling it a 2-right.” Thank you, Earl. Now about that play——? Pro Football Leagues PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Pro football officials in both the Na- tional Football League and the in- fant American Football League ances about the possibility of an- other full scale salary war. Acting Commissioner Austin H. Gunsel of the NFL foresees the hopes it doesn’t materialize. ==i=“Prep for Draft Battle | Max Winter, general manager jot the Minneapolis-St. Paul entry, disclosed that each club will be ;Fequired to pick four backs, two | lare approaching their draft meet-|ends, two tackles. two guards and Wilson is well-schooled im the (ings with tongue in cheek utter-|a center as its first 11 choices. |He said this was the only way to prevent an imbalance with every- ‘body going after the quarter- | possibility of a money battle but backs and other highly publicized ‘backs. Each club will be allowed ‘Cincy Sells Hurler CINCINNATI (AP)—The jcinnati Reds Thursday night as- signed right-handed pitcher Wil- jlard Schmidt oytright to Seattle lof the Pacific Coast League. ~*~ * * who saw service with jthe St. Louis Cardinals before | coming here in 1958 appeared in ' |36 games last year and had a 3-2 record. He is 30 years old. | Schmidt LANSING (UPI) — The kill dur- ing the opening days of Michigan's regular and special deer seasons |was generally the same as last year, reports from the conserva- tion department's district field of- fices indicated today. | There were about 98,600 white- itails harvested during the Nov |30 season in 1958. All-Star Pin Points A taste of excitement... smooth as silk... Not too light in flavor... not too heavy in bouquet. Not too expensive in price. KESSLER $4939 PINT mn in + 6%, exo:se tay | SOUS KESSLER 00., LAWRENCEBURG, IND. - BLENDED WHRSKEY - 86 PROOF - 72<% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. a j Bod FINAL TOUCH — Frank Clause “lifts’’ the ball over. eats AS PLANE LANDS ON STRIP By FRANK CLAUSE As the fourth and sliding step is completed and the ball has ended its downward arc, you find that the thumb automatically comes out of the ball with the fingers remain- * ing in the holes a split-second iong- 1M Retriever Trials er The ball is ‘“‘lifted”’ smoothly | RENO, Nev, (AP) — All 45 Portage Trail, Oxbow Lake. This| over the foul line from 4 to 20 BIG BUCK ENTRY — One of the latest entries for The Press’ big buck derby was the 180-pound, 7-pointer, shown by the lucky hunter, Richard Willis, 840 Ennest, Milford. Deer was bagged near the Soo, where Willis has been hunting for the last 16 years. His brother, Jim, was with him. Returning Area Hunters “Bringing Back Big Deer Those big bucks, which up to yesterday, had been a rarity among returning area deer hunt-| ers, are now being reported in increasing numbers ford, a 17-year-old Oxford High School senior, Tom downed the big deer near Newberry, with one shot from a 30-30 rifle. He was with his father, Joe of 361 Specia Dr., Oxford and Harry Among them is the 190-pound- er, taken by Tom Baker of Ox- | ford men. ' Tom's dad hasn't shot \ buck in 16 years of hunting, he reported. Tom's deer is the current Press’ contest leader. Ex-Champ Does Well reported by Howard Raymond, 9477 championship dogs Thursday fin-| buck was said to weigh 210-pounds, | known to hide suspicious figures in Harry Wismer, president of the as its first choice any college sen- |dark corners of the stadium and!jeague spokesman, feels the sal- jequip them with binoculars. Tele- jgram messengers with photograph- |ic memories have been disptached| Ito the practice field. Somehow they | ary scale will go up but not high enough to hurt either league. * * * In the late 1940s the NFL and AFL’s New York franchise and a inn school is within a 100 mile radius of the selecting team. * * * The NFL's 24th annual draft is slated for Philadelphia Nov. 30. |arrived right in the middle of the the old All-Afmerica Conference | Each of the 12 member clubs will other team’s workout. * * * Bears. “They knew everything we | did,” said quarterback Johnny | | Unitas. “They seemed to know | what we were going to do when I changed signals at the line.” But Wilson is wise to these tricks. He learned the subtleties of | self. The Lions coach played for the’ Bears under Halas for 10 seasons. Wilson was one of Halas’ aides for; two additional seasons. | “The practice field is shut to all One other really big prize was Visitors,” Wilson declared. “I want | Bell, to beat the Bears. There’s no team} I'd rather beat.” Wilson himself might be cooking, up some new secrets this week be-| graveyard. Wismer himself last night offered a case in point which could be the tipoff of things to come. Lucas would be New York’s first pick in the AFL draft at Minneap- olis next week, Asked if bidding for a player of Lucas’ pro po Sweeney and Bill Martin, Ox- pro football from the master him-|tential wouldn't fire a new battle of dollars, Wismer asserted: “We're not going to fight any- one.” * * * Gunsel, softspoken former FBI agent filling in for the late Bert approached the problem realistically, He said: “It is inevitable that in some case there is going to be heavy bidding. Salaries are going to go inches out on the lane. as an air-|ished the first series of the Na- taken near Germfast in the Upper ind his Iron Curtain at Briggs Sta-|up. I don’t see how it can be plane lands on a runway. As the|tional Retriever Trials, opening | Peninsula. However, no weight slip accompanied the, report. ball is reledsed, it passes close to|four full days of top competition. a; ic / the left ankle, The left leg is bent slightly at the knee and the body at the waist. The left arm is out! away from the body to provide bal-| dogs demonstrated their ability tO! five years, taken at Standish; Nor- ance. } The right arm continues tts |a marsh at nearby Spanish pounds, Pontiac: Edwin Thorpe, | swing in an arc. Don’t pull back | release, Stay with the ball. over the foul line, keeping your head | and body down and forward. j It is important during the re-! x * * Other lucky area hunters includ- The starting series was a tripe eq Earl McSpadin, of Rochester retrieve on water, in which the! with a 10-pointer, his first buck in bring back three ducks thrown On man Underwood, Pontiac, 196%- Springs. 'Marceline Stoddard, Pontiac, 7- chairman of the trials, said all bear near Alpena; Thelma M. the retrievers worked well. He Mathews, 140-pounder. observed Spirit Lake Duke, the pay! Bayterian, 4127 Motorway, 1957 national champion owned by got the only buek in party of four dium. Only two weeks ago he had a| midweek closed door policy at his practice field and came up with several changes. The bie one was the transfer of Terry Barr from | defense to offense, a move that has been worthwhile. jin Pimlico Futurity By The Associated Press Bald Eagle, winner of the Wash-| j prevented, But, of course, there are other things the players will have to think over. “There is the fact that we are established, offer a player secur- ity. We have a hospitalization, in- surance and benefit plan. The players know we've been here a long time and will be here awhile jlonger. We aren't looking for’ a or stop the arm at the point of | Peter Jones of San Francisco, pointer, spike, going back after , Bald Eagle Top Entry ne money war. It won't do any of us any good.”’ Ld . * * * The AFL is going to take first crack at the college player grab lease that the wrist remains firm,| Mrs. George Murnane of Syosset. at Luzerne, his first deer. J. R.jington D.C. International last | bag. The new league meets Mon- the thumb at the 10 o'clock posi- * tion. Do not at any time get your hand on top of the ball in an effort to make it spin as this will produce a very ineffective ball. The stuff on the bal] comes from showed up particularly well x *« * 155-pounder and two does; Ted Competitive points are not dis- Johnson, 16-year-old Bloomfield closed until (pe trials are fin- ished ~*~ * * Y., was among those that Harris Mrs. Harris, Mr. and Mrs./ week, and some likely 2-year-old|day to draft 40 players for each Duane LaFave brought back ajcolts will hold racing’s spotlight/of its eight teams — New York, | Saturday. | Los Angeles, Hotston, Dallas, Minneapolis-St, Paul, Denver and Hills high school junior got a spike-| Bald Eagle winds up his 1959| Boston. The'latter became the fi- horn, his first deer, near Barton season in the $75,000-added Gal-;nal member of the circuit yester- the grip of the fingers and the out-| Jones said about 20 per cent City, hunting with his parents Mr. lant Fox Handicap at Aqueduct.|day when Philadelphia's Bob Car- ward and upward motion of the hand and arm, .| trial. were expected to finish the fulljand Mrs. Theodore Johnson, and ‘others. The 2-vear-olds tangle in the $50,-; \000.added Pimlico Futurity. | penter. passed up an opportunity to apply for a franchise. ‘spent milions of dollars in com- S¢lect 20 players — the number |peting for star players. It drove) was reduced from 30 to 20 at last Earlier this season, the Balti-|the AAC out of business. Both|Ye8r's annual meeting. Teams will more Colts cried espionage at the appear to be whistling past the | Select in order from last to first | according to the standings at the jend of play Nov. 29. The American League, starting |from scratch will select 320 Play- | He said that quarterback Richie €TS, while the NFL takes 240, ~*~ * * | Actually, of the 240 men taken by the NFL, some 60 will make | the clubs if past season’s are any criteria, Thus in the long run, the |AFL will have another 189 men to draw from it their initial selec- |tions don't pan out. Toweel Makes U.S. Ring Debut Tonight NEW YORK (AP)—All the male members of the Toweel family of Johannesburg, South Africa, are or have been prize fighters, but fortunately youthful Len Mat- thews of Philadelphia will have to meet only one of them in the 10- round main event at Madison Square Garden tonight. * * * The one is Willie, a former Brit- ish Empire lightweight champion who will be making his American debut, and he hopes to make Matthews a stepping stone toward a title match with welterweight champion Don Jordan. * * * Matthews has been gunning for a title bout with world lightweight champion Joe Brown. So both men have a stout in- centive, not to mention the prom- ise of a shot ‘at Carlos Ortiz’s junior welterweight_ championship \for the winner, , THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1959 THIRTY-THREE : : o 3 5 : 5 P Jerry Pittman Fires 67 NEW ‘59 JOHNSONS agers wreete OFFENAl KalNSNewcomer Mobile Leader] st me nscourn ’ / MODEL - (18ST SALE! ; Electric Sta 685” . MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — The first: youngsters Eddie L&ngert of Min-! SUPER v-50 $857.00 & ne | -- : a |$15,000 Mobile. Open golf tourna. neapolis. Minn, = bas of Wil at ee. anes : Ground Battle | ment had a distinct darkhorse’ 2" eet ee ea plese ‘Rapids | Mioeiets eterting dens 504” . ~ Cc » 1 ’ ; tinge today as play entered the Mich Manual Starting 423° : . SEA-HORSE 35 $529.50 0 e 00 £:.$ second round + * * SEA- rT) g ‘ ; At the head of the pack was Thirty-two players in the field] MORSE ™ sony 318° by ooms on f tease Jerry Pittman of Tulsa, Okla. a 129 equaled or bettered par] gorse 1 $813.00 "250 *" newcomer who turned 23 yester- °V°" the 6,383yard Mobile | RORSE 3 $161.50 139" wv “ ie ee cipal course where par is 36-36—/ : | RED BLAIK « P 0 B day. Pittman, who won only $815 72 ‘The course is only two years: a ee . $232.50 186” in his previous 11 tournaments, old and is still ragged in places. | CPM WE Ss i EE i LENDER LEP OEIC EINE In range OW came home yesterday with a 3- The 70 bracket listed Monte ACE HARDWARE DEPOT A eee ns CO Bradley, Hillsboro, Tex.; Howie In Farmington NEW YORK (AP Rain H Possibili ” reel RS = under-par S267 Johnson. Meadowlark, Calif.; | 28859 ORCHARD LAKE RD. the { ' )—Last Saturday I heard many groans ain urts ossibility oa Bunched two strokes in back Walter: Burkeemo Franklin Hills. matwoun | ih cualts baile baa: from the fans when their respective teams were penalized. of Look-Curci Passing oe were two more Z3-year-old pros, \ich- Miller Barber, El Dorado, Phone GR 4-7020 Some remarked that the officials are more prominent than . . pg! a veteran club pro, and a peren- Ark.: and Bill Griffith, Gazenovia, Open Daily 9 to 9—Closed Sunday the players. Others yelled that the whistle tooters were getting Duel at Miami nial tournament threat. Billy. yy | . ready for the round ball season Maxwel] of Odessa, Tex - : _—__— - — Football rules are complicated and call for considerable, MIAMI; Fla. W — Michigan 6 EE Se ad . x judgment in the calling of some fodls. It is a fact that coaches State and the University of Miami ae Maxwell, who has won $26,000 believe an eager official could detect some unintentional viola- Will play their football game to- in 34 tournaments this year, was ° tion of rules on nearly every play. night despite torrential rains that in a commanding position and Something to eee . ; ; ¢—__—— left the field a swamp and the en- hurting for a tournament victory fal or ae by and = tire meeting a& mixup The Texan has won a meet a call remarkably One games and/which has undergone a remark- ve ‘ year since 1955 but hasn't taken % when your team is penalized more able civic face-lifting, will be fur- __"# looks like we'll have to use fon money 8 far this year. than the opponents, relax. This is|ther adorned with a Crimson sun- °UF belly series all night long; | Matching Maxwell's 69 were part of the price the aggressive) set. sold Dest ch Duffy Daugher- ; team often pays for its victory. Tenne \ kK wecky. U ty. “We'll just tell our boys to | Sure —— . : . b Here are this week end’s victors: | \ J ia eee by Ole Miss ee pol : af pend she Satie: Canport 3388 * Jerome Is Always Working ‘ : a by ang Onto a ow up ie le anger © 3— 0s e S 4 . Michigan State over Miami to- | left the Vols psychologically field. ay uecawall 3349 Ye 7 7 7 9° Hight. Look has stronger support scarred. Monte Bradlley 36-34-70 t ( ive y ou the Dea You ant. “Ty ~f ses OG / in the quarterback battle with 7 lis sure is rotten weather. But Howie Johnson 35-35—T0 ; evel. Ohio State over Michigan. Buck- it rains on both sides of the field. oe ge South ae ae eye sophomores begin to show 1960 If it keeps up until game time, Bi Grit 35-35 Soutern Cal over UCLA. form the very sad thing will be that two Chi) CHET 37.347 Henry R. Red Sanders Memorial Pittsburgh over Penn State. To great passing wenrtertencks won't Bob Hamric: 38.33 71 J = rh of. ee pee cols be different, but not without rea- have a chance to show their stuff.” Bob ‘Gots . et ‘ou 0 onor Monday is son ke t Erne Rorsner me i reet, Pontiac should add to the inspiration the! [llinois over Northwestern. This Seu. inves Miaste Bean Cand |ilon ee oat 280 South Saginew St 7 FO Bruins always carry into this,;is a sentimental wish that Ray , - a . aera oo oem FE 4- FE 3-7021 game. But the edge lies with the! Eliot retires with victory is considered every bit the match Rink There was some speculation thal penefit game to determine the | ‘ MI 6-0406 805 W. Long Lake Rd., Bloomfi Sullivan might turn to Boston Col- city’s top team \ lege, where he was once a pub- Covley High meets St. Ambrose} licity man. The stadium there ac. i" the annua] Goodfellow Classic : _ : it at Briggs Stadium | eee oe, “6.000 put cous Cooley was rated a 12 point SS SSS888 Sullivan gave no indication of favorite on the strength of eight = how he intended to solve the sta- atraigmt wins. St. Ambrose’s sea-'@ dium problem but he appeared °°" mark is 7-0-1 confident the team would have a place to play. When questioned, Top Tourney Catch he pointed out that he and the - nine other members of the group, SAN CARLOS de BARILOCHE, whom he declined to name, had! Argentina w— A Santa Barbara, posted a “large’* guarantee with'Calif., fisherman has scored the’ the AFL to assure that the team biggest catch so far in the inter- g would operate national trout and salmon fishing @ tournament in this lake resort city @ The Les Angeles = in Southwestern Argentina. = MON. thru THURS. == 9129 $1.50 Open 7 A.M. to 9 P.M. the New York Knickerbockers are Orange or Gator bow! bid. in the wrong division of the Na- the Eastern in the straight burgh victories including last night’s 13Q qa, “I sure hope our kids can come Stadiums in the area but most of through and win this game."’ ithe owners have indicated no de. Miami has a 5-3 record go Sire to provide orp er} pro pul ; - -” ing into the game and the Hurri-'ders. A team wou space for! 'to win top honors in the second day canes want ey much to beat\at least 25,000 fans while at home’! star and assistant coach. of the tournament and record the |g Michigan State and look good doing to break even | McBride will be rejoining his event’s top catch since its startig Rich it * * - old boss Frank Leahy, who is gen- Monday. nT ii A win over the Big Ten power Boston's last pro football team, eral manager of the LA entry = would put Miami in positiqn for an|the old Boston Yanks who left in| They left Notre Dame together in 1948, played at Braves Field, which 1954 was purchased by Boston Univer-! The ex-line star has been in the sity after the baseball club moved trucking business since but kept to Milwaukee his hand in the game as a scou PITTSBURGH ‘(AP)—The Pitts = = and special consultant Pirates announced Thurs- Boston U. and Harvard, which Former Navy coach Eddie Erde will not operate farm’ also has a large stadium, have |atz. reportedly headed for the shown vo interest in pro foot- Rams of the NFL. rejected an of- A. C. Posal of Santa Barbara |@ reeled in a 23-pound trout Tuesday | Kuhn Bucs Drop Farm Clubs they !\ clubs next season at Salem. Va Monday thru Saturday KUHN AUTO WASH 9 149 W. Huron St. PTT IIIT ELL LLL Across from Firestone The whiskey with the zest of the GUARANTEED FOR Royals. Their record is five vic- or Idaho Falls, Idaho ball. The same may be said fof fer to boss the Chargers toriee and seven defeats. All of : . the victories have been at the ex AS LONG AS YOU pense of Western division clubs ° OWN YOUR CAR including two over Minneapolis Oe ee os é 4 . and one each over Detroit, St.° ,ee? aa ° wo % % ; FREE INSTALLATION Louis and Cincinnati. Five of the < -_ 4, i. seven setbacks were by Eastern * ; teams ° fet eeee TAKES ONLY The Knicks, who took advantage : Why 18 it safer % of off nights by St. Louis’ Bob) ° 15 MINUTES AT Pettit and Minneapolis’ Elgin . to buy a : Baylor for the first two victories e ’ . YOUR of their meager string, profited ° FORD Dealer 8 : last night by Cincinnati's ragged : 9:6 play. The defeat was the Royals’ . aS i] ~ eighth straight in a 312 season ie A -] USED Car of if a, MIDAS record a * * . Pe aa MUFFLER Unofficial figures showed the ° ds Pi re woot” @eesetes e ‘ OPS Royals lost the ball 28 times with so { SH out getting a shot while New York : & : was guilty of only 12 such errors. ee P |The Knicks got a 25-point night :3 ss from Richi Guerin and a 21-point 5A eer performance from Ray Felix . Jack Twyman paced the Royals * 4 with 25 y) Ps *% , *e COAST-TO-COAST [NEW YORK = CINCINNATI | ; an OPEN MON. NIGHT "TIL 9 P.M. | naulls 7 T15 tTwyman 19 825 s % TUES., THURS., FRI. 9 A.M.4 P.M. J Sears 4 412 Paimer 4210 ; mn SATURDAY 8 A.M.-5 P.M. a 2 ‘ Reed ; " } rs * Ye . ra ,) Embry 6 vw . ®e 256 S. SAGINAW Jor, 3.21 iocenorn 3 $11 ~ a auae Pee, Next to Jerome Olds Reenk § 313 Petits 339 \ \\ ! y . 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Cy Owens, Inc. same four-sqeave valve! WwW. 8. Andersee. ox ini tind BAR'S PRODUCTS OF MICHIGAN 5671 S. TELEGRAPH ROAD, TAYLOR, MICH. f el oa 2 147 $. Saginaw St. Pontiac. Mich. 2705 Orchard Leake Rd. Keego Harbor, Mich. AMERICAN BLENDED WHISKEY + 86 PROOF 72.5% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS | 5806 Dixie Hwy. Waterford, Mich. PAUL INES MISTHIING COMPANY LOUISMIULE, KY __ THIRTY-FOUR EE —— 24 VOD too, Over-the-Rock with any beverage. ARROW LIQUEURS CORP., DETROIT 7, MICH., 80 AND 100 PROOF, DISTILLED FROM GRAIN bp pile = a ee nel ei -* THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 KA s or Straight Insist on Arrow, the charcoal filtered vodka that blends beautifully no estl| odio. TV (NBC JANUARY 1 | announced R@e Bow! at Pasadena, 5 EST—Teams —O———— of the New Orleans classic would Miss completes its season against Here's how the where the Persians were turned ,;hrough Sept. 8, and rowing from » j mate DECEMBER 12 _Copper Bowl at Tempe, Ariz., 3:30 p.m : "WY Shrimp Bowl at Galveston. Tex.,-Quan ae eee a late ‘< ——— all like to pit L.S.l against third- back in 490 B.C., and Athens. | Aug 30 through Sept 3. [elton cant. ($1) “ede , ai SECENEES ‘e corset ranked Mississippi in a rematch of The Greek who ran from Mara- * m x are — “pou Sun wl at aso, ex sT— - ear f : ’ { ~ | Blue Grass Bow! at Loulsville—team*) worth Texas State vs. New Mexico State their earlier thriller but won't be; thea to Athens with news of the | yack and field opens Aug. 31 | Flower Bowl at New Orleans — un-| 14.000 able to make a move until Ole victory dropped dead. and closes Sept. 8 with an open Italians will day between the last events and | undetermined, 100,295, national TV, ra- Mississippi State next week \ \dio (NBC) U Tec as stage the marathon: the marathon. | Sugar Bowl af New Orleans. 2 E8T— ndfeated Syracuse, meanwhile,*"° $$ $$ _____—. ———— | | Teams undetermined, 83,000, national TV |radio (NBC) . | Cotton Bow! at Dallas, 3:30 EST—Syra- |cuse vs. undetermined, 75,504, national TV, radio (CBS). Orange Bowl at Miami. 1:30 EST — State Bowmen Give Support.to ® Try bubble-light Arrow Vodka in a Martini Chan e of Law Teams undetermined, 76.90%, national TV! only other major perfect-record ... Screwdriver... Bloody Mary . . . Gimlet g ig llr Orlando: ria. 2.15'team, is a nine-point favorite over .. + Collins... or with Tonic. Delightful, see Btate, 12.000 U.C.L.A. A proposal by the state Conserva- “prairie View Bowl at Houston, 3 EST tion Commission to allow archers |—Prairie View A&M vs. unannounced, 18.- to possess and transport strung 4 = JANUARY 2 | 2 iles—providing the yator Bow! at Jacksonville, Fla.. 2 EST bows in automobiles gece g th —Teams unannounced. 42,000, national TV bows are enclosed in a case or (CBS) w . . : = | ast-West game at San Francisco. 4 50 carried in the car trunk has been EST—All-star teams, 60.000, national TV. given the support of the. Michigan radio (NBC) remains an overwhelming 30-point choice for its Saturday date with Boston University. Second-ranked Southern California, the nation’s In other major traditional bat- tles, Purdue is a one-point pick over Indiana, Iowa is 14 over Notre Dame, Florida is 15 over Florida State, Stanford is 5 over California, and Yale is 6 over Harvard, — A third a by MELBOURNE (AP) straight subpar round strange Aussie Has Big Margin in Canada Cup Tourney and playing Peter with a strange bal] (a small Eng- country All-American Bow!) st Tucson, Ariz. 3:30 ' é Bow Hunters Association EST—Major College All-Stars vs. Smal! HOCKEY AT A GLANCE Thomson held Australia’s now al- lish ball) with only two days rest. The commission, at its November | Coles? ae : wes = LE most insurmountable 7-stroke lead — = meeting, decided to ask the legisla- — at — Ala. 3 EST Montrea! at Toronto . over Canada today. All other : pas _ i-star teams 605, national TV Det t ston . & ture for a change in the existing (nac) - Seite © RECEN TEAGEE hopes for the Canada Cup gol : aes ati { JANUARY 10 Providence at Clevelan sluding those of the Unit laws covering the transportation Of 4, pow! at Honolulu, 7 EST — Aue Buffalo at Hersey ee we bows. Presently, a bow must Be star teams, 25,000 lunstrung and enclosed in a case a lwhen carried or possessed in or | upon a motor vehicle. The only al- ternative is carrying the bow un- strung in the trunk, where a case lis not required. | According to Michigan Bow Hunt- ers president Kenneth Hoffman of Holly became the first area ski | Midland, the present law is a hand- club to open its slopes this week ieee to the many ‘archers who use with its snow making machine pro- quivers attached ‘to their bows. viding 10 inches of the white fluff ‘Such a quiver makes stringing 4 for the skiers. bow difficult and often ence ee _ unless it is removed. The law, adds . |Hoffman, also presents a hardship, Hillsdale Bow]! ‘for women and youngsters who | may not be capable of stringing > " ie of wringing HOpes Brighten | ttheir own weapon. / 8s a ‘ + bow in cold ether he reminds, Despite Setback can be troublesome. Holly Opens Slope KANSAS CITY # — Hillsdale’s bowl outlook has brightened. NGELES—E Figueroa, 136 sees AGny. outpointed Javellane xe. The Dales were dropped from SC HILADELPHIA — Carl Hubbard, 149,;5eCond to fourth place in this Failedeh . —— Frankie Ansiem, week’s National Assn., of Inter- a a lcoliegiate Athletics ratings follow- THURSDAY'S FIGHTS last Saturday. Monod at 7:30 p.m& one round left to*play, was 420 Camber $ 50 It was Hillsdale’s first defeat and followed by Canada at 427. The Caster at the time it looked as if the Dales United States and South Africa Toe-In Mest Cars the “MAIN EVENTS” Always Take Plac HAROLD \ing their loss to Northern Illinois had been dropped campletely out of the Holiday Bowl picture. But the new ratings give coach Muddy two winners will go to the St. Pe- tersburg, Fla., bowl Lenoir Rhyne of North Carolina ‘ held onto its No. 1 spot in the NAIA ratings. Western Illinois took over Hillsdale’s old spot in second ‘Third was East Texas State. | e At TURNER Detroit Soccer Teams to Play for Late Star DETROIT—Detroit soccer forces Area Ski Interest Perks | merly at Mt. Grampian, is as- * * x States’ Sam Snead and Cary Mid- dlecoff, drowned under an aval- anche of bogeys } ~~ * * | Thomson, four-time British open! :|champion who grew up within a stone’s throw of this Royal Mel- bourne course, added a 2under- par 68 to his previous rounds of) 67 and 69 for q Sthole total of 204. This gave him a 1-stroke edge over rugged Stan Leonard of! Canada in the individual competi-| tion. They had been tied at 136 at the halfway mark of this 4 day, 72-hole medal event. Quebec at Springfield The machines began making snow on Tuesday and one slope has been in operation this week. A new instructor, Pete Weber, who has been here only a few weeks from Germany, is the ski pro at Holly. Hal McInnis, for- si ; : sting him Leonard sank a birdie putt of 8 Helly and Mt- Grampian will al--feet on the final green for a 69—, ternate in promoting the area high one of three subpar rounds this school ski program. A total of 25 humid day—for his 205. Snead re- schools with a total reaching nearly mained third with a 73 for 211. | 3,000 ski students, are taking part * * * in the program this year. - : Thomson's brilliant round offset Tonight at Mt. Grampian, the a mild blowup by his partner Kel) Coupon Sale! STRONGEST M OF ALU THIS COUPON WORTH [S| Sara eae eee UFFLER THEM ALL MINIZED—Resists Rust Best $960 tite | Muffler UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE FREE INSTALLATION public is invited to attend the color Nagle who soared to a 76 after movies and special ski program previous par rounds of 70-70. 4 undér the supervision of pro GerTy| The Australian team total, with’ WHEEL ALIGNING are tied at 433 and hopelessly out Durelle, Chuvalo =: | Each Draw $9 507 The worlds wealthiest and most TORONTO ®—Chamption George Chuvalo and loser Yvon Durelle each received $9,507 for their Canadian heavyweight title bout, Matchmaker Deacon Alan said Thursday night strokes over par .and left ‘the course grousing over lack of prac- tice and unfamiliar playing condi-| tions. Snead got his 73 after a good start while Middlecoff, his Durelle, from Baie Ste. Anne, once proud and precise game in N.B., also received $1,100 for ex- tatters, shot a 75. j BRAKE RELINING Waters’ crew plenty of hope. Ford $ 95 Four small college teams will successful golfers of a generation, Chev. ] 2 qualify for the bowl playoffs. The Snead and Middlecoff soared 8 aaa nel. Liming & Laber 20.000 Miles or One Year Unconditional Guarantee MacDONALD TIRE CO. | “Where Only the Tires Are inflased, Never the Prien” | SAGINAW ST penses, including transportation * * * and accommodations for his man-| Snead and Middlecoff were so ager and trainer disgruntled they sped away. from Chuvalo, of Toronto, retained the club within five minutes after his title by knocking out Durelle, completing their rpunds and didn’t 8 ; = . . GIFT CERTIFICATES Track Events at Finish maerovies IDAUIE TOF DOW! DEFTNS : Shift Will Add Shop Early | Program shi ] P i ] ° Free Bowling By United Press International , Thanksgiving day. But if the |up Rose Bowl berths. The Badgers! represent the Big Eight Confer- {entertains Michigan State Friday, Luster to 60 O ymplics Instructions Dail The battle for bowl bids will) Longhorns lose, Arkansas will can clinch the Big Ten bid by! ence in the Orange Bowl if it night, Clemson has a Saturday RATUETO y ; the college football, P@*s ¥P the Gator Bow! for a beating Minnesota if [linois downs’ turns baék Missouri, provided date with Wake Forest, and . ; _ -s will Assemble by the ee eg a 4 ae crack at Syracuse in the Dallas Northwestern while Washington is| bowl-ineligible Okinhoma whips Georgia is idle this weekend. ROME w — The Italians have, The pry ie Atweltis — the MOTOR INN front ue weekend Ws 1 = = classic. expected to gain the West Coast) lowa State as expected. . * * made a change in the Olympic a vig es a aun oatue re a dozen teams competing for pos : Fs 5 : : -_ : , on ronze e 2S - RECREATION season junkets At least five more berths in the cen if it gets by Washington Leading ‘candidates for the oth-| Penn State is expected to be program that adds luster to the naining from Roman times. They Hubbard Bidg. 18°S. Perry Only two major berths have been Major bowls should be filled by me ' bad Orange ene iactude bes Sat dieeinn te 1 anvonet eee | 1960 games. os ‘will descend the great stairway FE 5-6032 filled thus far, Top-ranked Syra- Saturday might. They include both’ Kansas will earn the right to 'son, Miaam — ae son-ender against Pittsburgh. The! Track and field, the center of to the foot of the hill for the start ; cuse accepted a Cotton Bow! in berths in the Rose Bowl, the visit- Nittany Lions, who are seven-point; the great international sports of the ee et : . . . vitation last Saturday and anKen ing team in the Orange Bowl, the favorites, reportedly voted to ac- festival, has been put at the end e SANDERS sas agreed last night to play 1M post team in the Liberty Bowl,. and — B ! seanum eunan al i ReCeee venti ae ee 7 ian Way, Rome's ance ’ ” le tor s0\ oO ti ji > . ' —— a€ ~ € é 2 ee é a , FOR RENT oo ee eee ee perhaps both teams in the Blue OW = OW S OW S season game at a secret meeting [n the past, the games have the opps = zante 4 ancien ; ; basis Grass Bow! : yesterday. opened with track and then trailed <4 pacer ets Gne eee ta j rT. : * * * . . ; he Arch o onstz te 4 TRAV is8 Texas will serve as the South- eee and More Bowls Officials of the Blue Grass Off in interest and emotional in- ‘h Coliseum. Torches wilf Tight the west Conference representative Wisconsin and Washington are Bowl have indicated they. vill tensity ip a flock of lesser sports.'/te ©° ise J ak HARDW ARE in the Cotton Bow! if it beats seven-point favontes to knock off tender an invitation to the win- » * * jway. It would be athe! to make 458 Orchard Lake Av FE 5-8324 = . ; a ee _ : j AS e spectacular _— . FOX RINNE Re CXpERteM) MO TPIS TAY PIES An Map mes Ae Fr ee | Blue Bonne eee on. 3:30 Est BEF of tomorrow’s Kentucky-Ten- | Now swimming will hold the Fate) Toes Pee Footbal) bow! games. locations. dates ~eoame unannounced, 70,000, national TV, nessee clash, which is regarded center of the stage at the outset, On the following day, Sunday, eee se mnese: So eilate seating ( ca Bow! af Philedelphie:‘1:29 EST 2% 8 toss-up in most quarters. hiilding up a climax on Saturday, | Sept. 11, the games come to a NOVEMBER 28 a 100,000, national TV,, The other bid may go to Bowling (Sept. 10 | close with the traditional a" ; : 1 Ww t Excelsior Springs.| ; ; ‘s N . r events wee Fie cee. eee Holiday Bow! at St. Petersburg, Fis. Green, the nation’s No. 1 small On that day starting at 5:30 | spectacular equestrian 8-1) Austin (Tex) College (1),|22:30 EST—teams unannounced. 10,000., college team. , . the main stadium. . / Byes vs ustin 1S (playoffs Dec. 5 at site to be ° | p.m. will be staged the mara- 7. Se . 7 t/ A t ll —_— | “eres DECEMBER 2% Fourth-ranked Louisiana State,, then — the 26 mile run that of They open on Aug. 25. Swimming / ospitalit : » M ~—-Hender- = 3 i - ‘ your rea l ne er € S ron ‘County’ Junior College Athens, Tex. Santa Bow! at Houston = inced. which closes out its regular sea-| all Olympic events is mest will be staged from Aug. 26 ae li, be. perp iss. Jupior Col- tn south at Miami, 8:13 EST—All- SON as a 21-point favorite against, steeped in tradition. The dis- through Sept. 3, with the same —_ ' DECEMBER 8 7 We iceeccy ak ism mery, Ala, Julane, remains the top candidate tance (actually, 26 miles 385 | dates for water polo ee ee Se” pigni- | 2:30 EsT—All-star teams, 22,000, national for a Sugar Bowl berth, Officials yards) is that between Marathon. Basketball runs from Aug. 8 will join together this Sunday aft- the Canadian and British Empire take time to dress. ernoon to honor the memory of Jan lightheavy king, in the 12th round ~~ *& * Sawicki, a League star, and to aid of the Tuesday night fight, which’ “What can you expect.” said his family. drew a gross of $40,000 Middlecoff bitterly, ‘‘coming to The St. Andrew Scots postponed | ———-__—_— SS Local Boys on All-MIAA D championship to oppose the Michi- gan All-Stars in one of two games on the McCabe Field program ‘55 The Scots were notified last bler $ CHEVROLET weekend that they drew the Roch- KALAMAZOO (AP) — Hillsdale from Waterford on the offensive ‘ ASH Ram Sedan, R lester (N.Y.) Italian-Americans for end Jerry Taylor from Walled as 58 N RGH : GH, team, was the lone repeater from Station Wagon, , Air Conditionin the opening round of Open play. Lake was the only player to make the 1958 selections. although Jin f W.W., Auto 0°" , 9....., They asked for, and got, a delay both the offensive and defensive jrinq “Albion offensive f k , , = OLET $ 54 of the championship game until 1959 all-MIAA team. this year’s list shoei Pien Jose 2 BRUCE KESSLER ? HEVR MER Sunday, Nov. 29. That game will * * * af ane Mise ; a Sales Manager ae RGH, CURY .) also be played at McCabe Field.’ Jim Larkin, Hillsdale tackle ‘ction before missing out a year Hardtor, ROH ee 2 ee SEE US FOR ute. .- . I A teams play under unlim- coRD Retractable : 54 PONTIAC FREE INSTALLATION! 20,000 Miles or 1-Year Written Guarantee i:aa substitution rules EXPERT SERVICE ON ‘57 Ford- onvert, RGH | The teams: e P para ww yeramatic . ¥ ETE PRECISION INSTALLATION soprnnsive. e PoMrine O-Matic, Om De COMPL REC! OFFENSIVE = inental pa eee® ‘ | nee ad Taylor, Hillsdale. Tom f Cont! $ 33 Chevrolet = TACKLES _Jtm Larkin, Hillsdale, Rog- @ BUICK 151 FORD -Dr., R s oe eee | Lotion Wagon, + R&H oh ee 95 jane Raiser, Adrian ® Millsdaie: Du- fF “7.5 Minutes from Pontiac’ vy , UARTERBACK— Jim Nerthrepe Alma, RGH, $ LS | Ford Sed yTALPBACKS — pilike Stone, Albion . er i coe oe vate | Homer Hight Wagon, OOS Ree Fe, ee a Ronto- Matic 7 / Balanci FORD—CHEVY PLYMOUTH Am Harkness Albion uussale:, Rex Ford-O- ‘52 OLDs ing Alignment Gane sae Seenmneher. Alma: 0 ors Tremigm e0 a R & H 88, $ Power Brake 1-Hour iin oo Hope; Ron 106 S$. WASHINGTON 3s paps LINEBACKERS ‘aot an ie patie ks) ON M-24,- OXFORD oe a ie sw b ( sive 5) | = = : While bigs Jer toh ape Jim Kreider, Al- PHONE OA 8-2528 iain Units. $3 Per You Wai | PULLBACK—Del Walden, Olivet. | Car Extra. LL OTHER S ou ait SS re TS SS SSS — A USED CAR IS THE KEY Te | = mowne ATIC COMPARE THESE SAVINGS! | BR AKES RELI NED Nenana?” SuocKk . . List ve! 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WOODWARD — BIRMINGHAM MI. 4-7500 } a2 WAYNE ST., PONTIAC | — behind Federal's ee allie Be acre, bia itt ltaTHE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 _ rep Basketball Is Back—Ready or Not By CHUCK ABAIR Basketball is here again — ready|most of the pre-season . not. others will be absent for the Although football gear is just/2#™es due to injuries. ‘tting stowed away at most area! Getti * # gh schools, several of them will| ———__ » playing their cage openers in pout 11. days, Many of thé gridders who also lay the hoop sport will be just cetting their basketball legs back »y then. TIRES 2 for 6.70x15 *23.90 7.10x15 *25.90 7.50x14 *24.20 Plus Tax and Retreadable Tire “Guaranteed Bonded Brakes Relined $qy75 Ford-Chey.-Pi Wheels Packed Free 20,000 Miles er 1-Year Guarantee. 1,000 Mile Adjustment FREE INSTALLATION EARLY CASUALTY — All next six weeks. Coach Art Van 1949-°53 Pontiac, the jump on everyone —— tral guard, can do now, is practice his left hand dribbling for the Some football players will moss!will be North Branch and Dryden.| te Edset Ford. Avondale and drills and|They clash next Tuesday night at Rochester renew their court ri- early |North Branch, South Lyon enter- jtains Clarenceville the next night. Pontiac Central will head the | Ist big prep aight Dec. 1 as host Pentiae Press Phete that Henry Robertson, Pontiac Cen- Ryzin lost the high jumping cager for this expected period of time when he fell and fractured his right wrist early this week in practice. | MUFFLERS Chev. or $gp 8s Guaranteed fer the Life of Your Car Call Us fer Money Saving Prices en Your Car Muffler Kuhn Auto 149 W. Huron St. FE 2-1215 giate soccer teams in the Mi west. Now there are 47 + 7 Meee et ell Gasca Gnien 40x30" ... 4330 14.95 2612"x59%" 38.72 15.87 |, 5 Alse Copper. 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Serve You BURMEISTER S—OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. to & P.M. — SUNDAYS 10 A. M. to 3 P.M. BURMEISTER S~-OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. to 8PM SUNDAYS 10A.M.to3 P.M BURMEISTER’S ) 4 / A { t i ‘ ~~ na 6 &2e es = ots - «= © 706UC9%mlUh Se OO 4 SS’ > oO ‘(Aeeouynrnreo om THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 —— outh African Study Points That Way THIRTY-SEVEN or state Democratic leaders. * * * the President's ‘‘justifiea- said tions” for withholding the informa- Trenary Man Renamed s Smog Behind Lung Cancer? NEW YORK (UPID—Yet another,South Africa ‘ge-Scale statistical study of a w familiar subject is notable cause it didn't get the familiar sult. it concluded that a greatly in- eased atmospheric pollution over ies may be the ‘‘major factor’ the sharp rise in lung cancer aths over the past few decades. It is notable alse because its asic statistics were the lung ancer deaths among the white ppulation of the Union of South frica. This population smokes wore cigarettes per capita than ny other in the world. But its rate of lung cancer deaths s been and remains low when mpared with the rates for the rited States, the Irish Republic, d Great Britain which are sec- d, third and fourth in per- pita ‘cigarette smoking. * * * This inspired Dr. Geoffrey Dean Port Elizabeth to study the ‘ll-kept South African vital sta- tits with the help of government atisticians. Between 1947 and % the lung cancer death rate nong males doubled. Yet this was a smaller rate of crease than in the United tates and Great Britain. Dean elated this to the fact that outh African urban atmospheres ecame increasingly polluted in pat period. Those atmospheres ere less polluted, however, than nose of American and British ities. Dean compared the lung cancer ath rate of males born in South rica with the rates for men who d emigrated there from Great ‘itain and other countries. Among en who were less than 65 years t when they died, the rate was per cent higher for British nigrants than for natives or for her emigrants. Above the age of there was no difference. * * * This indicated to Dean that the itish: emigrants under 65 had en subjected to the polluted mospheres of British cities for nger periods before they moved the relatively cleaner atmos- eres of South Africa. Relying on her statistical tables. he assumed at the older men had been in before you buy, build, modernize or add new a strain on electric heat All th CLEANLINESS devised, electric heating means walls, draperies, carpets and furniture stay cleaner longer. With electric heat, there's no soot or other products of combustion circu- lating in the CUSTOM COMFORT... Keep one room at 72, another at 65. The temperature can be up in one room, down or completely off in another. Choose from several types of electric heat |ing the death rate was HARD-TO-HEAT ROOMS? A hard-to-heat room or porch can be so uncomfortable in cold weather its usefulness is lost. It also puts aystem. Eliminate these problems with any one of the several built-in © Says Ike's Secrecy fo Spur Legislators Quarters Opened to Push Brown; He Is Dismayed tion would be studied. He said there would be ‘‘a renewal of the debate over secrecy in goyern- ment’’ and probably new legislative | Fred G. Dutton, exeuthon daeee to Agriculture Group tary to the governor, said Brown); LANSING # — Robert J, Debe- “gasped” when told of the move.|jak of Trenary Thursday was te- WASHINGTON (UPI)—A Vir-|proposals on the subject of “the! “We knew nothing dbout this), ,.ointed by Gov. Williams to the i. , known.” | SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — A *"m sure governor is not mich longer and so smoke, smog, traffie fumes, etc.—|ginia congressman warns that People’s right to ™ ” President’: ~~ ~_ BP this type,”|Michigan Agriculture Commission had the same risk as natives ” ‘President Eisenhower's refusal to ~ Brown for a ma ery ectiviy, (re, f t i Sept. 6, 1965. ie - |may be a major factor, — rs th the United ters was officially opened here! Dutton. said. or a term expiring Sept. 6, : give Congress, a government re-; | Still another statistical point on US. aid to Viet Nam will States have increased 71 per cent was a comparison of lung cancer | | death rates in cities and in rural ‘The famous bottomless pit in the ear districts. In South Africa, the Big Room of the Carlsbad Cavern over secrecy in government. rural cigarette consumption is National Park in south New Mex: | * . * comparable per capita to that of ico is said to be "700 feet deep. irtirnt’S [PRE-HOLIDAY INVE |Senate confirmation is required. * * Wednesday by Emmet F. Hagerty, Louis DeMonvel who resigned. cipal factor In lung cancer, ‘the lung cancer death rates would | be comparable. | But they weren't. The urban ‘rate was much larger than the irural. Dean went further. He com-; 'pared the relative atmospheric) pollution of South African cities, ‘and showed that generally speak-| - pegged 7 ithe degree of pollution. | In his report to the British Medi-! \cal Journal, Dean said’ “‘environ-; mental factors” jad to be chiefly’ responsible for the increases in male lung cancer death rates, One ‘such factor, he said, was cigarette smoking cigarette smoking were the prin- =—— | + * * * “However,”’ he added, “‘‘the relatively low incidence of lung cancer generally among the heavy- smoking South African men, the higher and rapidly rising incidence in the growing cities, and the high incidence in the younger age group of immigrants from Britain, sug- gests that the air pollution which ¢ occurs in modern industrial life—| morn %x [oconat. Yor Eanty AUERUAN. 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Home improvements very often alter the heating requirements within a home so drastically as to make the old heating system entirely unsatisfactory. When they do, electric heat can solve the problem fast. And you'll get living comfort never before imagined, too! ese benefits— yours with electric heat! REDUCED RATE... In addition to the money saved on cleaning and decorating, residential customers can now take advantage of a new, lower rate. Just 2¢ per kilo- watt-hour when monthly electrical use is over 750 kilowatt-hours. Though other fiving costs have been rising steadily during the past several years, electricity rémains one of your biggest bargains—now more than ever, with this new and lower rate step. CARES FOR ITSELF... Set a dial, then forget it. There are no moving parts at all in radiant systems. Forced air electric heating systems are long-lived, too; they use low-velocity fans. In either type, there’s little to wear out, need adjustment or replacement. . .. The cleanest heating method ever EFFICIENCY .. . Electric heat lets you raise the tem- perature in one room without firing up the entire heating plant. And with electric heat, all of the heat created is usable heat—none is wasted up a flue. _ FLEXIBILITY . . . Electric heat can replace regular base- boards—can be built into the walls or ceiling. Whether it be one room or the entire home, there is a system to give better heating—electrically. SAFETY . . . No combustion process. No worries. Con- centrations of superheated air are eliminated. Electric heating systems distribute heat safely, gently. DETROIT EDISON, Room 350 ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP... Works on an entirely different principle from other electric units. It is a year-round climate con- trol system which heats in 2000 Second Avenue, Detroit 26, Michigan Electric heat sounds interesting. Please send your free illustrated booklet on the modern way to heat homes. WALLS ... Walls can be a source CEILINGS . . « Insulated electric BASEBOARDS . . . Baseboard units, winger and cools in summer NAME. 7 heating cable can be embedded in ‘heating both by radiation and con- of heat with the installation of —automatically. The elec- ten. Fer complete —— ta (Please print) . ~ ceilings or floors to provide radiant _vection, can be used to replace the radiant panels or forced air units tric heat pump also filters “— —— wp wider lord a right P . . Pye ; your me or te coupen acorREss warmth throughout the room. baseboards now in your home. set between partition studding. and dehumidifies the air. for tree beoklet about slecirie heating. + DETROIT EDISON ory rone provides Southeastern Michigan with versatile electric energy > / e | : . i ‘ fi 4) THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1959 oe _ — Needed at Waterford Center | ,tvalishte | tor «| wortsner Acts, Avoids Rubbing Noses ree | ! . UNTRY TT) . . keeping the files up to date and TOWN &e anna Seek Volunteer Librarian rs ta. Eskimo. Warming Up to Coast 190, Those interested in donating their’ time and services to the only pub-) Members of the Waterford Book, operation three dsys plus a few (j- library in the township may| By JAMES BACON wants to meet Rock Hudson and families. Her Dutch father is Bar. Review Club are seeking a volun nights a week. contact the CAI or Mrs. Valentine. | HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Warner Kim Novak row’s richest ee fe owns a i teer librarian for the Waterford A futyre librarian must like peo- Br Thurséla a cet x * * big reindeer ranc wo trading " in Co » Center aa _ | ros y signed a 1%) ‘ I have never seen an posts and the town’s main restay. Fi Township Community Center. | ple — especially children — must | B C b p k loll Skins actress whoae ont is And . *~ *« ®* have some Knowlédge of book re- e aron U ac 'the last stopping off place before '&!00. she told a reporter . ran ;- ze << ve Mrs. Kenneth Valentine, who has pairing and of the types of litera- the North Pole. She also destroys , sta e-| Sor sted AG Goes @ i lbeen associated with the library,ture distributed, Mrs. Valentine Presents Awards * A * side conception bow ke ‘ae saclancestons ava Bebéuies r . pete K csar 5 | BE “T su it woulc stors ‘ : < oil i. its Saleareane pene Se “i VOLUMES | Proof that the movies will find bing aaaeaee ith a boy friend but) “I am more than 50 per cent ae Nh Lake ’ { you’re pretty enough is Dor- of my. girl Eskimo,” she said proudly. Her ) nte nt Cub Scout Pack 66 of LeBaron YOu If youre j neither I, nor any my g For An Et ening of E dertinne Requirements for the local i. | There are some 7.000 volumes in School held its monthly meeting eas Brower of Barrow, northerm + .nds have ever tried it. We grandfather was Charles DeWitt “SULLY | brary unit are few, Mrs. Valen- the small weg with over 3,000 Monday night. most city in Alaska, U.S.A. kiss like anyone else Brower. author of “50 Years Be Jo | tine explained. A person must be registrations on file * * '. The studio signed her to play x * * low Zero. - 250-Ibs. of Musical Rhythm- Master of the Keyboard free to see that the rary is in | Book club members are usual- kwards eesnied ta aie naturally . enough, Robert Ryan's Her favorite sport i6 water ski- Will Rogers and Wiley Post now playing for your enjoyment 6 nights a week. jf) ————— - — Pssiar’ a . young Eskimo wife in “Ice Pal ing put with a difference—water, were on a visit to Dorcas’ grand- Stop in and say hello to Sully | r ing: sett, Ter Waitiest ace.”” Her visit to Hollywood is the |” .jiq ice—and a snowmobile— father when a — crash took aniel bitat. — ves in 1935. - oe SMMORGASBORD DINNERS —a== §| >] | Larry Johnson, Larry Harris, Bob- ede of her native habi ae ad of speedboat is ail erica a ae Pace Daily Luncheons Dinners Sunday by Haney, Gary Lawrence, J. Rob-| She left Barrow in a 45 degree us as comes from one of theof the famed cowboy humorist “m3 "$1 35. “$2. 00 "$2.00 kr ~ ad =i Mike Thome. [below biizenrd for the flight to suty frozen north’s ‘most distinguished’ and the round-the-world flight Lens . ris Veryway a } OMmP-\ny and watm California. What’s,—— —_—___— Cotfee, Hot tea & Tax Included : is , | more, yang ae — ; Kitchen Open fer al’carte ‘til 1 A. M. Others receiving awards were|weather the polar bears . * . ' - “ss | Mike Longstaff, Steve Reinert, Lar-jlikes the sunshine. ‘Hollywood Headlines: : is family fun ry Bers Tmothy Broadwater so * — 4 Cennis Farnsworth and Kenneth) A Warners talent scout spotted M yY C t I Op Hi t Tuttle. ‘her acting in college. plays in Sit- alr OS a Ss I ka. A black-haired cutie with a C 1: | | Farmers use 20 per cent of the! radiant smile, Dorcas is like wd , Alter T V ommeIrcia S | nation’s ‘petroleum | products. other American teen-ager. S DANCING By BOB THOMAS ' Hurok has big plans for her. in. : cluding a Jack Benny TV special, 5—NIGHTS-—5 Wedarsday — Thursday AP Movie-TV Writer J UMBO JACK _ HOLLYWOOD (AP) — The big concerts and a European tour. news in the opera world is a one And next summer she plans to time door-opener named Mary make a movie abroad with Maur- Friday — Saturday — Sunde ‘e Chevalier. It will rritten ’ To show our appreciation for your Costa ice Chevalier. It will be written, sn nl ase eet _ ee , TV fans will direc ted and produced by her able Frankie Meadows cman meapsaaaee aaa anpeneaamanypeeny wonderful response to last week's vemember Mary| husband, Frank Tashlin, as the blonde, | — beauteous sales-! A erat tor} HAVE YOU ie aims | BEEN TO show. She pat-: ted mare fend- Presents FRED FEW Comedy MC, specials THIS WEEK we offer our FAMOUS, 14 POUND BUTTER FRIED HAMBURGER WITH JUMBO JACK SAUCE ed mae tn meio! BETH'S C BUY ONE FOR 45¢ AND a used car sales | GET ANOTHER FOR THOMAS season. for , and the Hi-Fi’s SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DANCES {W Wed. the 25th - Thus. the 26th | Ginger Darin Lévely Exotic Dancer Now the doors are opening for ism.” B DRIVE IN JACK Albert Goldbert of the Los An- DINER— geles Times called her ‘‘an enor- B ET H’'S mously gifted young singing ac- __DINNERS— Fri. end Sot. [i SATURDAY (Except Sunday) JAM SESSION WEEK Mary. The reason is her sensa- Merv | ONLY ONE PENNY tional debut with the San Fran- i: cisco Opera Company. She drew | y) r Shiner | GU YS—TAKE YOUR rave reviews up and down the Pa-| SMO ’ - RCA Victor cific Coast, especially for her : WITH TWO Recording Star BEST GAL OUT FOR A musetta in ‘‘La Boheme.” : } P Martin Clark of the Oregon | ‘OR SHOWS JUMBO JACK TREAT Journal in Portland lauded_ her YET? | ‘“‘amazingly warm, lyric colora- FLOOR ERY } FOR ON LY ONE CENT tura with a sweetness and warmth rarely found in this type of voice.”’ FRIDAY and TAKE OUT Alfred Frankenstein of the San Open Sundays F is Chronic} aised h . eat iT HERE PPE OM ‘“Stevict Francisco, Chronicle praised her] 12 Neem ‘til 8 P. Mi. EVERY TUESDAY WITH FRANK PERRY AND HIS - 7 Jam Session Monday with SWINGMASTERS oes hes a, - = Ther, | tress” and said she ran off with : FE 8-9900 the show, | ° En RESTAURANT 3 CHARLES VICTOR MOORE. Dell Ss Inn (Ste ied Cave Ua ke Telegreph S108 Biste Bee-—— fevers 20t0W ‘ - Back in her Beverly Hills home 476 W. Huron St. 9 Dance Friday & Saturday Nights Call For ' Short Block West ———SS 7 after the rigors of singing in five A F a . 5 To the Music of Reservation FE 2-298! of Huron | operas, Mary is still aglow. And | A¢rees From Gonoral Hospital 2 | well she should be, because she FE 3-9383 8 | ’ now has the ace impressario, Sol 5 g | Hurok, to mastermind her career. ii Just after the opera season end- ili ed, she signed a dea] with Hurok ili that will guarantee her $250,000 . Woodward South of Long Lake Road i]| over a five-year period. Listen To Bloomfield Hills MI 4-1400 | One of the biggest kicks in all 3 i \ ‘DANCING bs > © Thur., Fri., Sat. & Sun. me in Hollywood. One of the peo |:ple in the Chrysler Corporation this,’’ sh rked, “‘is i PEN : camice of pene wo mes | WOUtH Forum ‘ } | | said to me, ‘Gee, Mary, why didn't : ae cipely you sing like that on our show?’ on the air unda - ' | They wouldn't let me!"’ Y il! She is glad she turned down a 1 Sun. 1:00 p.m. | contract offer from the Metropoli- | Thanksgiving YOUNG ‘tan. It would have tied her down © ERNIE CRAIG © JAK FINE Ito small roles and small money Featuring @ Bill WIGGINS @ Dan MARAGAS until she “had developed.” No 7 Sau ii LIQUOR NY - . — a i]| doubt about it, Mary is developed | “Dont he Hich @ NOBEL LEE & RAY SCAFE | What's New? ‘MAD MAN MILTIE from Hough- i now—physically and artistically. | ontiac “rea Filg i] School Students os ;. . | | Discussing Today’ Family Dinner S | Worms All Around aioe Topics” Cull Peeler Logs on PORTLAND, Ore. (®—Fishermen seeking worms have found a para-| dise in big cull peeler logs. \ Crewmen bring in the huge logs ih that have sound, well-seasoned ton Lake, Comedy M. C. and the Drums, has joined the Bob Lawson Trio. Announcing New Food Service For Your Dining Pleasure we have just installed a new Barbecue Oven NOW SERVING Barbecue Chicken and Ribs Also Complete Meals of Steaks. Chops, ete. New Drayton Inn RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL LOUNGE OLD DUTCH MILL Avburn at Churchill Rd. Auburn Heights green MODERN and SQUARE DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT with JOE at the Organ—HAROLD on the Sax and RAY on the Drums BICMAR LIQUOR -- BEER -- WINE Take Out on Beer — Pizza — Sandwiches FREE PARKING’ FE 3-446 | if paris, OF Smee sac ll VST OUR open to sefve your pri- [. Banquets vate cet-togethers. LOUNGE 6 N. Cass ot Huron -/ PHONE OR 4-0022 4769 Dixie Hwy. — Drayton Plains Just South of Williams Lake Road Open Daily 3 a.m. to 2 a.m—Sunday 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 1650 N. Perry ot Pontiac Rd. FE 3-9732 Ln knAAAL AAA AAA hdd de 4 94 West Huron St. —Music By— ixi ray 7 in their interiors e eXx- : ee ata he cite tbe aca EL tortor sections we “ae hank “ cand Sallie an W SSS See Worms really begin to fly when| 3 ae ~\the lathes start peeling off this, AIR COOLED 4 Prien exterior to get down to FOR YOUR COMFORT 3 SATU RDAY SP ECIAL The happy alge a home Now Available- 3 12 A.M. to 1} P.M. — ——— | = > BALLROOM | eFISH 2 Montana Is Jolted i. A Lunches — Short Orders $ Mell Fried Chicken, French , Li “9... Call EM 3-9124 |] @SEA FOODS 3 aetna ia cag, a | 25 BOZEMAN, Mont, (AP)=Farth isten 7 « s s which ranged from stro — 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. || @CHICKEN = cainadtre's-seet ; Breed Basket ond Butter oo ee a Fe Choice Liquors eSTEAK when you call. $ FOWLER'S ee ratte ufier i pa - — ee > FINE FOOD quakes which claimed 28 lives in 'CLALL ALAA Ahh ddd Ff BOB’ \ CHICKEN HOUSE s ane 3 STEAKS—CHOPS—FISH—CARRY OUTS—BAR Oe aes as oles eck BAILEY % \ 497 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 3-9821 $ 253! OPDYKE RD. FE 5-9381 man said eight separate temblors “Mayor of the \ 1 | * —————~ $ AT WALTON FOOD = 2 a No damage was el | qi te : wit . GREEN N Velcome to the | / LARRY HEATH ‘iy PARROT NEM XL THE CONSOLE voca 7 77 \ Specializing in Good Food N CLUB TAHOE “KENNY DAVIS JOHNNY SWAN | ON THE LEAD \) tele Lbebelabebebebetede 7 \ FINE LIQUORS, BEER and WINE * JERRY CREEN Footaring the top in Western | 4 * SUNDAY SPECIAL . \ Pleasant Service in Modern Surroundings Sher hows Frida ot music - $450 aN . LADIES’ NIGHT Every WEDNESDAY Presented by day & Sat. 4 + STRIP STEAK = a Mon. thru Sat. Noon to 2 A. M. Closed Sundays E d RUDY FORTINO * p.m. to 2:a.m. | 4 © Potatoes, Vegetables, Chet’s Salad, ba a JOE an : 4 Hot Roll snd Butter. Open Thanksgiving Day - DANCING EVERY NIGHT at the . PTT TTT TTT i N Music by the “3 LITTLE WORDS” PADAFORE et a ial elie illfirst through railroad train / ted across the U. S.-from ~ tic to the Pacific was sion train sponseréd by the n Board of Trade in May| ~’Ben. Hur \ Praised | by Movie Critics NEW YORK (UPI)—New York /movie critics used their most ex- travagant adjectives Thureday. in accldiming the world premiere | performance of the third film ver- |sion of ‘“Ben-Hur,"’ the most ex- |pensive—and longest—movie ever |made by Hollywood | “Super - spectacle,’ “stupen- dous,” ‘thunderous,’ ‘“‘mam- moth” were some of the adjec- ‘tives used to describe the 15 mil- lion dollar technicolor version of the Gen. Lew Wallace novel. The |film runs for three hours and 32 minutes * * * actress Haya Harareet,-and actors who arrived in limousines to at- State Theater on Broadway, Also} Starring : : ety [in the opening night audience of! to tagoid Mader ac hye 1,800 was Ramon Navarro, star of, the 1926 silent year-old novel. * KIDDIE MATINEE SATURDAY 12:30 * * While the critics generally ac- EXTRA! EXTRA! : claimed the film for its artistic MALE ‘HOUR CARTOONS and pictorial merits, several ex pressed the opinion it ran too long metpeeenies | = PONTIAC : ] D R J VEIN 3 ig Dixie Highway (U8-16) 1 Bleck Nerth ef Telegraph Rd TO-NIGHT 3 FEATURES || OPEN 6:30 P.M.—SHOW STARTS 7:00 P.M. EXCLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING! ROM THE SUSPENSE-LOADED ATURDAY EVENING POST SERIAL! WARD KEEL INE HEYWOOD ... CYRIL CUSACK ALSO FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING! A flaming Hell of greed and hate! warm IN-CAR HEATERS _ ,%:, Cozy @Outdoor Movies in Comfort@ Charge a tt ee Ee eee ee ee i Cae ae airs THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, Three of the film’s stare, Israeli Chariton Heston and Stephen} ‘Boyd, were among the celebrities) tend the premiere at The Loew's) version of the 80) kept down. balanced and spending went up. ,Truman had budget troubles, too. itry’s beginning—in the first two jwere only four million dollars— backsliding ‘calculations field in the world 3) A RY 4 DRIVE-IN THEATER Rd 3 Opdyke FE 4.4611 TONIGHT @ SATURDAY @ SUNDAY GREAT FEATURES EXTRA BIG BONUS: NO CHARGE FOR HEATERS TO FIRST 300 CARS Canned Laughter Kick Doesn't Scare Benny By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — I asked Jack Benny whatever happened to canned laughter and he said, “Nothing.” * * * I said I'd heard it was gping to be banned from TV , by order of the big bosses and Jack shrugged eloquently. “I den’t use it with live shows, but with filmed shows when you've got an audience of one person, you've got to have laughter,” Jack said. “You've got to know how to use it. I use it so nobody can tell it’s canned.” And if the public can tell it’s canned, the guys who put it in get canned, so there. Eddie Fisher had a tremendous Waldorf opening—biggest I ever saw there — just like Hollywood only bigger — with Eddie singing SNe WILSON many love songs that seemed aimed at Liz Taylor Liz had personally invited about 50 Big Names—Gloria Vanderbilt, Audrey Meadows, Aly Khan, Phil Silvers, Red Buttons, Ingemar Johans- son, Arthur Loew Jr., Edith Adams, Johnny Mathis. The crowd was so great in the lobby that the 12:15 a.m. show was delayed till 1 a.m. One table of 12 which had seen Eddie at dinner wouldn’t go, so Liz had to pay their $450 tab to get them to depart. Eddie in a closing speech said, “This wouldr’t have been possible without the greatest BENNY | little lady in the world. I'd like to have her take a little bow— not too big a one—she really is Mrs. Eddie Fisher.” * * * ARTIST STORY: An abstract painter had just finished a celebrity’s portrait. “I don’t like the nose,” the painter said “Why don't you change it?’ asked his wife “I would,” said the painter, “but I don’t remember where it is.” TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Ima Washout complains that sci- entists have now. gone too darn far: “They’ve fooled around and invented something besides liquor to cure a cold.” WISH I'D SAID THAT: Home today is the place to stay while the car’s being fixed —Quote. That’s earl, brother. iil 1959) —+> ‘Roosevelt Had Same Trouble Ike Losing Battle of Budget ,jas Spending Nears Record By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) — In that long ago time—the 1952 campaign and its problems keep getting big- ger. — President Eisenhower had visions of balanced budgets. And he always insisted spending be But budgets got un- jJ WANTED: 1,000 COMIC BOOKS 1000 True Love Story Mags. Wwe Handle Tricks, Jones and Novelties. e ~ & * PIPER'S MAGAZINE OUTLET Harry Golden ‘Nervous’ Seeing Play About Him By JACK GAVER UPI Drama Editor NEW YORK — Harry Golden, the stout, cigar-smoking, eminent writer and editor of Charlotte N.C.. doesn't find it an easy thing to sit in a theater and see a slice of his life portrayed on the stage * * * ‘It makes me nervous.”’ he said of “Only in America’ by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee which was presented last night at the Cort Theater “There is a large area of em- barrassment that I can't quite explain.’’ The proprietor of the Carolina, Israelite, paper of personal com-' ment that has attained national) circulation, was in audience, as were his Genevieve; their three sons, Harry Jr., William and Richard; and his two brothers, Jacob Goldhurst of Springfield, Mass., and Max Gold- hurst of New York City PRAISES PERSOFF * Golden had nothing for Nehemiah Persoff still rather but praise the stocky and young character of 1959 actor who manages to achieve a startling resemblance to the editor in both looks and mannerisms The best thing about this Her- man Shumlin production (Shum- lin alse directed) is the work of Persoff, which cannot be com- mended too highly. The even piece play itself is a highly un- of work with an almost desultory although sometimes amusing, first half as it tells how Golden establishes himself and his | paper in Charlotte and wins over the community ‘despite his out spoken comments in favor of school integratior and m other touchy subjects Most northwesterly of the New England group of states is Ver- mont SQUARE and ROUND DANCING GARDEN CENTER BALLROOM 2952 Weedward, Detroit Danctng Every Thars. Sat.. —AL8O— CAMPUS BALLROOM diggs =; poleag on Dancin Te Pine EST. DRC uEaTmad AT BOTH BALLROOMS ADMISSION $1.25 —COME STAG OR COUPLE- Sun vat TODAY & SATURDAY > FIRST SHOWING! IN THE CITY OF PONTIAC! er OS pee MARK SI This fear, for instance, his bud- |] 35 Auburn Ave. FE 4-8240 STEVENS * get called for 77 billion dollars, a, == peacetime record, but spending mygy may hit 79 billion, For the coming |& year his budget is expected to be | 3 around 81 billion, another record. & * * * If this year’s budget turns out me to be unbalanced—because spend- ing exceeded income—it will make|& the fifth year in a row that has|% happened. iz But Presidents DANCING © eee Ven 30 by the OVER 30 CLUB +t PIECE ORCHESTRA E URKEY FOR DOOR PRIZE = EVERY & SATURDAY—8:30-12:30 = LPP and Rucseslt NO LIQUOR ALLOWED ( = a Roosevelt had said* he would bal- x» ENTERTAINMENT a (N THE WHOLE WIDE WONDERFUL WORLD! 2 Bis OE Set oe « ore & O80.) SONU, ee by he OL THE MOST WONDERFUL iNSOM PARKER soon EDDIE HODGES crm nteitey Pan tee ta) CnmanSoor® COLOR wy vetsx serene to» UNITED BE) TST THE DAY A COLD-EYED KILLER PISTOL-BATTLED : HIS WAY INTO OUTLAW HELL... FOR THE HOTTEST REVENGE A MAN EVER TOOK! UNITED ARTISTS Sat. Matinee EXTRA 8 -CARTOONS -8 ance the budget but never did in his 12 years in office. Truman al- so had deficits as well as three surplus years * * * FRIDAY Doors Open 6:45 | SATURDAY Doors Open 12: HURON 45 THEATER History has been against all three Presidents. From this coun- years of its life, 1789-91, expenses the cost of government has been going up, with just occasional * * * THIS IS THE NEW ARMY ON MANEUVERS! That has been particularly true in this century with its three wars, | a big depression, and a series of! recessions. All were problems the economists couldn't figure in their Besides, the population has been exploding. So as a result govern- ment obligations have been in- CHRISTINE creasing in all directions. To put AR itt another way: The government F, F Iran Oil Field Richest Iran has the richest single oil 8nd yer eS Nothing More ¢: tha COERUEN CROSBY: MOORE: are vith SAL MINEO h ins PLUS 3 FEATURE NO. | The True Story of the Crime That Shook the World — OMPLESION a sore ORSON WELLES - DIANE VARS! DEAN STOCKWELL BRADFORD DILLMAN =35- CINEMAS COPE ate tate ¢ SEO SUE FEATURE NO: 3 SUDDENLY They Were the Center of a Menacing Ring... FEATURE NO. 2 The Sun Never Played On a More Savage ¢ ACTION! WIDMARK COBB - LOUISE -HOLLIMAN THRILLS! RICHARD HENRY ANTHONY DOROTHY DOLORES WIDMARK- FONDA: QUINN: MALONE - MICHAELS SUSPENSE! ~ WARLOCK” EXTRA SAT. MATINEE 6 CARTOONS At 100-0:39 5$:16-7 HOPE LANGE STEPHEN BOYD -SUZY PARKER MARTHA HYER- DANE BAKER BRIAN AHERNE] ‘2, Sane sa iui Sw © STARTING SUNDAY | 327°" At A BEST SELLER BIG AS A STAGE HIT! BIGGER AS ONE OF THE fA Ee OF OUR TIME et ee Wie RGA Geta? Nar THE oh HEART-WARMING ee STORY Ms . OF THE TEEN-AGE GIRL AND HER DIARY THAT AROUSED THE WORLD! ‘ROE SIENS ALE PERK THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK > JOSEPH SCALOMRAUT SHELLEY WIKTERS GUST) HARER.. £0 WYN Baumann TODAY Last Times! The whole wonderful worid of youth living its glorious adventure in nature's own backyard! It's the great-to-be-alive motion picture with the “SFABULOUS FABIAN and t BLUE DENIM” GIRL! Filmed in Sun-Bursting COLOR and CinemaScope ARTHUR DODI AA CL DOORS OPEN 10::5°--"""" EXTRA LATE SHOW SATURDAY STARTS at 10:50 P.M. a. PLUS! TODAY'S GREAT ADVENTURE! WALT DISNEY presents EYES IN OUTER SPACE Cretreeted by BUENA VISTA PLM Bistribetion Oe. tne —— Coming Soon! “THE WARRIOR AND THE SLAVE GIRL” f ) ’ ‘ a Rein = =—l lll OU lee Oo eee eee .™ THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 FORTY : . é : By Lou Fine Kilauea Hurls Fiery Debris 1,000 Feet High | ADAM AMES | MIS SEMBLE— . ; } To- F [ Burst | a ine as oat oicano Frorms NeW Lone IN Lava DUFsT |. leas alee Z| HONOLULU (AP) — A new vol- steaming rock 1,000 feet into the fore Kilauea Iki — a mile wide day, sending its fiery fountain! ty) cano cone was born today as air from a week-old fiery vent. and equally long would spill 1.150 feet high for a new record " ’ mighty Kilauea volcano spewed A * * over in the history of Hawaii's : tons of glowing, molten lava and , fs - * * volcanos | Siamese ~ : The cone, half-moon in er An overflow would not threaten | * * * began to rise pera a — surrounding farm land or the few — rbd ra one . fissure in the southern wall o : no recorded volcanic founta in hundred inhabitants of Volcano : : F Ly Kilauea [ki crater. It began to yj, ; Hawaii had reached such a height af ; illage, about a mile north of the J ete take shape after seven days of _ T ‘ow ~ *© * . ce eruption flowed an estimated 10 erupting § crater he ia Three inter-island aircraft were* —— million cubic yards of lava down would not move toward the settle- hit by high flying bits of lava and rec UJ @ the crater's gentle inner slope in ment, but into the main Kilauea rock but this failed te dampen the BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Martin a 100-foot wide rive: crater less than a mile west of airlines’ volcano excursion trade ————— ~*~ * * Kilauea Iki They reported booming business. rh ROT A = Jud e Decides Public At the bottom of the crater, a * *® * Windscreens on all three planes TROUSLE Ww. 9 lake of lava had risen to over 20) Thousands of spectators were —a Hawaiian Airlines Convair and . WMRT'S TNS ABOUT MARERS on't Get Report ON ‘eet in depth And it was rising at Warned to remain in their cars|two Aloha Lines jetprops—were YOUR. BENING & Rigged TV Quizzes a rate of three feet an hour while viewing the flaming spec-|shattered when they flew at 1,000 TROUBLE MARERZ * * + tacle on Hawaii's southernmost is-| feet over the erupting crater ; -Seismologists continued to mini-|land. The warning came after the| Wednesday night. ee NEW YORK 'AP) — A grand mize any threat of an overflow, |unpredictable volcano burst forth) No serious damage nor injuries jury's report on its probe of saying it would take weeks be-|with a tremendous thrust Thurs-' were reported. | rigged television quiz shows will|——- ~~ $$ —___-—___-——— —————— 4 not be made public \ Pa 1CL General Sessions Judge Mitch- . BOARDING HOUSE ° ell D. Schweitzer ruled Thursday - ? A fp ’ 4 that “where private citizens are YJ) YY; WA si THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE MASOR, involved, the function of the grand jury ends when it determines that no crime has been committed x * * “The grand jury is not a ve hicle for the public airing of the noncriminal .immorality of pri vate citizens.” The grand jury drew up its findings in a 12,000-word present ment last June. The panel heard 150 witnesses over a nine-month period. A presentment differs from an indictment in that it summarizes a situation and often makes rec- ommendations. But it carries no criminal charge. * * * Manhattan Dist. Atty. Frank S Hogan and the grand jury con-, tended that the presentment) should be accepted in the public| interest, Acceptance would have! meant placing it in the court rec-| ords, which are public Last August, while weighing his) decision, Judge Schweitzer grant-! ed a request of the House legis-, lative oversight subcommittee to see the minutes of the grand jury’s evidence, as distinct from! the presentment. * * * The minutes were used in the subcommittee's hearings in which Charles Van Doren and others ad- mitted complicity in rigged’ shows, Nixon Headquarters Opens in New York | NEW YORK (AP) — A “New| Yorkers for Nixon'’ headquarters opened Thursday on Madison ave-| nue between 55th and 56th streets. Several hundred persons crowd-) ed into the 12-by-75-foot former) store to sample cider and dough-' nuts handed out by supporters of! Vice President Richard M. Nixon! for the Republican presidential nomination Chairman of the group fs Peter| M. Flanigan, on leave from his job as vice president of Dillion, | Read and Co.,, a Wall Street bro- kerage firm. } The 37 organizing members in- clude corporation executives, law-| yers and advertising officials Burroughs Wins Bid DETROIT (®— A 35-million dol lar contract has been awarded Bur- roughs Corp. by the Air Maferiel! Command, aeronautical systems center. The contract is for ‘‘a ra- dar station housed in an RC121 reconnaissance aircraft to provide a seaward extension of the SAGE system. It will allow a greater) sweep and coverage for America's early warning lines.”’ DONALD DUCK ——+ 4A YOUR FRIEND'S INVENTION HAS 44 AS MUCH CHANCE } ZA OF GETTING OFF F 1, THE GROUND AS 7( A STONE KITES THIS CONTRACT IS UTTERLY WORTHLESS / Uy 0 OF THE KOYALTIES LAM TO RECEWE/«. EGAD, TWIGGS, IS THIS YOUR IDEA OFA MONSTROUS PRACTICAL MR. CORN HIMSELF SIGNED IT/+ SPUTT-TT/ 5 ae DON'T A PUSH MY BUTTON! LET'S GO A LEAN ON MR, CORN*S 6UZZER/ co ane | HAMA ACNE UHL LUAEU EL He . = HAD TO TAKE = VA ¥ MASOR BY THE HAND = //- B&O @& 1989 by MEA Service mo TM Reg US Pat Gs OUT OUR WAY LOOK AT THEM HANDS... RUINED = \ WHAT SHOPS DO =? TO YOU! WHY, I CAN'T GET ENOUG OF TH' DIRT OUT i ee ee ee ero re a TM. Reg U.S. Pat. OFF FER LIFE’ THATS O’ THEM CRACKS HWPS~ THE SOCIAL BARRIERS HAVE THEIR WIFE NEVER H ASKS YOU TO BUT THEY DO GOOD POINTS-- TLL BET YOUR RUB HER BACK, ER HANG OUT MY HANPS-- FEEL TH’ BABYS ) USE THAT @) STILL, THEY’ RE DETRIMENTAL TOA FULL AN’ HAPPY LIFE... I DON'T DARE WASH MY FACE WITH I HAVE TO CANNED SAND - TRWILLIAMG 959 by WEA Gervice tne "1-20 By Walt Disney Wut Dprs- = é For real) chewing satisfaction be sure it’s WRIGLEY’S SPEARMINT You'll Find PROFITABLE OPPORTUNITIES Press Wont Ad Section tvery Day in the Pontiac Take advantage of this easy way to solve your buying end selling oroblems To Place Your WANT AD America’s Favorite, By Franklin Folger NANS DIAL FE 2-818! 2 Get is some today WRIG CHEWING G ‘Personally, I find television very énlightening. Every time my jhusbahd turn’ on the set I go into, the other room and read a book.”’ WI ; A Service, ine. TM. Rag. U.S. Put. Off WHY DIDN'T YOU gr HUA WAKE ME, DEAR2 I MUST’VE DOZED OFF! | I VED HE YOU WITH THE DISHES! | LPED i 150 by MEA | nohen Te Bee, BS. Pat, OF By Ernie Bushmiller rs eonpedion - a SS a) fj » _! PUBLIC T SCHOOL || -—- |] 72 «tl oot GOING OuT OF BUSINESS a, = — BORNE BU SMALL A fe» By Dick Cavalli @ 1960 by NEA Gervics, ine. 1.4. Reg. US. Pot. OFF YES, !T’S MY NIGHTTIME, MOVIE-GOIN’ HANDBAG / ae = = i A BIG aires cK O° > wrFTevwvwveeee2easTHE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 FORTY-ONE rain Declines Slower Pace 'HICAGO (# — The general de- e in grain futures prices was umed today but at a somewhat wer pace than during the closing uutes of yesterday's trading. * * * Vheat was off a cent or more in ts on opening transactions but t some scattered support at that el. Other grains were down stly small fractions with strong- pressure on the nearby con- cts. ring the first several minutes speculative dealers appeared mmmercial buying still was scribed as disappointly slow. yheat was unchanged to 1 cent ushel lower after about an hour, rember $1.985s; corn 44 to % er, December $1.10%; oats 5s er to % higher, December ,; rye 49 higher to \% lower, rember $1.32'2; soybeans \% BEA j 6 er to % higher, January $2.20%. | capnage. ma. 1, vu. seeeeeeen seas Ol 8 cautious optimism prevailed on the Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN HICAGO, Nov. 20 (AP) — Opening Dn: Theat MOP. cccesccs 16\% . eocceec 2.00% May ....0... 13% Fat gprietele ales 20346 Jily + 66% 2 Bemorone f Bep. ..csscee 645, eilse cicce «hie ¥O Ry aoe AGG DO. sccnces 1.32 orn May. ....00.. 1.34% LL eememene nike MSY cccseses 1.3344 i eeeebe ek. ec | Meenssrioe 1.27% Pip eleersisies 1.17% Sep Pisa Se Se . 1.18". Lard (drums) Oe 1.16% Dec. ....<.; 8.78 ats Jan. 8.70 : oeeree ed Mar. ......., 8.67 Lodge Calendar ‘amily ni 21, Sat., to ng dish nilies and friends invited. Les- L. Hotchkiss, W. M. Adv. jpecial communication of Pon- ght at Pontiac Lodge Ov. 21st at 6:30 p. m. » Lodge No. 21, Friday, Nov! h to confer the F. C. Decree ige opens at 7:30 p. m. Leslie L ich W. M. Adv News in Brief The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Farmer’s Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Wednesday. Detroit Produce FRUITS |Apples, Delicious, DU. ....00..000e00-$3-75 bes born Apples, Gr WG ccccocecosss eae spotty at t and was by the Apples, Jonathon, bu. ... 3.50 industrials, Apples. McIntosh. bu. ... . 2.75 * * * Apples, Northern Spy, bu. , .. 3.00 . Apples, cider. eel: case . ; Eo Leading stocks were up frac- Maes Re ements - tions, mainly, with a few chemi- came eee oo C28 and selected stocks rising a | Beets, topped, DU. ......0+--s.e+r+- $20 point or so, Rails arid utilities did |Cabbage, Curly. bu 2.00 little | Cabbage “4 . (Cauliflower G08 Wecece. eesee: s 733! The electronics-missile-rocket [Colery, Feet, dee. ....ccsccosscreccs 1.75, group stole the show with gains |Horseradish, pk Parsley, curly, doz. bchs. ........05 Parsnips, Cello Pak. doz. Parsnips, 42 bu. | Potatoes, 50 Ib. bag eerie en's 1.75 | Radishes, black, % bu. 1.50 | Radishes. hothouse, doz. . 1.50 ... 1.70 125 - 1.25 | Rutabagas, bu. 'Squash, Acorn, bu Squash, Butternut, bu. ... Squash, Buttercup, bu. .. . Squash, Delicious, bu. .,... eee 1. Squash. Hubbard, bu. <<< Lae Turpips, DU. cccccccccecercecccescnce 2.00 Callard, No. 1, bu. SALAD GEEENS Celery Cabbage, doz. ....... seeeeeereereeees . $1.75 | Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY | DETROIT, Nov. 20 (AP) — Prices per |pound f.0.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality |live poultry: | Heavy type hens light type jhens 9; heavy type broilers and fryers |3-4 Ibs. whits 17-18; Barred Rocks 21-22: |caponettes over 5 Ibs. 26-27; ducklings | 26; turkeys heavy type young hens 29-31; |heayy type young toms 21-27. DETROIT EGGS DETROIT Nov. 20 (AP) — Eggs f.ob Detroit, in case lots federal state graded: Whites—Grade A extra large 40: large 38; medium 50; small 24: Grade B large 35; no brown eggs reported. Checks 20. Total weekly receipts of government 14-20 were 10,430 17-19 graded eggs Nov. cases Commercially graded: Whites—Grade A jumbo 19's-41: tra large 35-36; large 33-35'2: medium ass and utensils.| 25-27; small 18; browns — Grade A extra| | large 35-36; large 33-35'2; medium 25-27; ‘small 18; brown — Grade A large 34-35; large 32-35 medium 26-2742 small 21's; Grade B arge 28. Time Confusion Finally Settled Back In 1883 —, With Congress Would Mrs. Lanza was sleeping when it was decided some months re \the children—Coleen, 11; Elissa,/to record in advance the portion lerman Cross, 283 Raeburn St.) NEW YORK (UPI) — Sunday, New York Stock Be More Useful |9: Danyon, 6; Mark, 5—were Of the program seen in all time ) eo ew Yor OCKS ; yon, 6; ‘ : orted to Pontiac police that bur- * icy became known as \taken to the airport. When their Zones. Otherwise, he a vere rs broke into his home and stole |'t e day with two moons”’ in many| NEW YORK, Nov. 20 (AP) — Stocks WASHINGTON (AP)—President | Private school called to report|/0n the West Coast wou ve to 38-caliber pistol, a watch val- Parts of the pai States—because Hira Tr Pa . 14.3\Eisenhower has turned down ajtheir absence, Mrs. Lanza con-/S¢t up at 4a m. to see H, since at $100 and 35 silver dollars. |that’s when “standard time” was allied ch 11111126 Kellogg»... 361 suggestion that he take a top tacted police. it begins at 7 a. m. in New York. \born. [Alum ‘Led. .'5. 398 Kennecott’... 92.4 Democratic leader with him on his “There has been no eecret irs, Nellie Jarrell, of 2903 Ad- Until then, according to Harri- Alcoa ..... 94 Kimb Clk |... 70.2 foreign tour next month . . jabout all this taping, no secret s Rd., Avon Township, reported son J. Cowan, author of “Time;4m Qu" °" nt pee ag SS ‘. sie ’ a Paint Plaid |whatsoever. It was given all the Oakland County sheriff's depu-|and Its Measurement” (World), |Am Cyan +» S03 Leer... .+.. 183 dd te thous d , , | publieity our press department yesterday that someone broke the country ran on ‘more than 300/am Met 238 oor eet. *". wea Me a desig Si cee Dungarees— ‘could give it.” oo pen genre trons | a, times: iam nour its USE ANE °° $5alstonal leaders of both parties! . | ’ ’ os | +e m e e ; eae ee sumer | git Sfetul be sare, whe An Tobie Ets Him woud be more usetu, He andj Ed @ Deer | ; eral blankets, two gold wrist) y ; phia lanac W&C |., $2, Lofle S Gas .. 381 he has already proposed such an D | y d P | Sh f es and other seaienors| lw ee Sn Armee ou eae Lorillard ash. 71 4/arTangement. MONTICELLO, N.Y. ()}—Baby, e q e 0 aris 0 , . Seite |Atchison .... 251 Mack Trk .... 45 | The President stated his views| a tame deer who had the run of Fj d § f | ns. and 11:45 in Wash ee : M 434), : 45 w imgtes fares Cory aes one + pasha soe in a letter to Sen. Thomas J. this Catskill mountain town. is ire uccess u y ats Lieaned And Blocked, $1.) Cowan whe is technical director | Beth Stee! ... $4.4 Mont Ward ++ $0.7/Dodd (D-Conn) from Eisenhower's dead. H hot b h iv . Saginaw Street. of the Longines-Wittnauer Watch| Boeing Air. - 3 eel +s do |vacati — Ee : | t , ‘Borden ..... 86 Motorola 130 |vacation headquarters in Augusta, CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — ypti-Mrs, Rummage Sale, Sat. ©, Inc., = who will be in charge | pore aie. cc 121 Nat Gash Bs» ena (Ce- Dodd made the letter public) ®™ss though he had “pet” paint- 'r,. Navy successfully fired a y, 2lst. 9 am, at A Abed _ of timing the winter Olympics at Brist My 43.6 Nat Dairy .. 50 |Thursday night. There was no fur-| ed on each flank and a red plaid |pojaris submarine missile today, Clothing @& household artic Ee age ice nie (aaron rene Badd Co — 34 5 Nat Gyps ..-. $¢8 ther comment from Eisenhower. | shirt and pair of dungarees tied |ending a five-week delay in the ‘ombination Rummage & Bake ’ i's tha ‘ é | Burroughs : NY Central 2 | * * * around his neck, - face eee Cre — a Lari ing standard |Gsn Dry. a No Am Av. 358) The letter was in reply to a * * * An’ announcement shortly after : . ‘ m, ita - 13. "4 - — ‘ ime throughout the nation, for tt CoPrer aS 353 Nor Pac - 43 suggestion Dodd made last week Baby, who ate spaghetti and |launching said that “preliminary had become hazardous to try to|Case J1 204 Ohio Ol! .... 356 tummage sale, Fri, Nov. 2@ catch a train or meet one. \Cater Trac... 4 Geer cor that one or more Democrats ex-) meatballs, was adopted by Mr. |data indicates the shot was suc- 3 East Maple, B’ham. Adv.| “In 1883, at noon on Sund ay, \Chrysier Ob .. 0 pes G& Bl 61.3|Perionced | in international nage and Mrs. Norman Pittaluga after | cessful.” by-(Nov. 18, all railroad clocks were regi a a cn aa) phe ccna oars trip. He) the deer’s mother was killed by | This was the first Polaris ee Noy 20 8 p.m. Adv, (Changed—many being set forward Coca Cola '...161/ Param Piet a76|specifically suggested —_ former/ an automobile. Every day the jlaunching since Oct. 12. That eee lor back as much as a half hour—|Coe,Pei™ **: 38) Penney Da: {34 /President Harry S. Truman, animal made a trip to meet the | missile failed, as did the two that tummage sale, Baldwin re tay en conform with what was later |Con Edis * '' 596 Pa RR...... 16 2 among others. three Pittaluga children at the | preceded it, and the test program urch, Sat. 9 to 1. V. called standard time. This was an| Gon N Gas 475 Pepel Cola «a0 38 alae coe tae eat calle &| school bus stop. The animal also |was slowed while engineers sought tummage sale, Church of God. epic event, and it became known |©0"t Can ..... 463 Phelps D ..+0 57.4)“Us enjoyed eating hamburgers, ba- |to work out the bugs. a ’ op & ere 21.3! . ag gg ao gid At-las the day with two moons.” {Cont mo SET Phin pet. 423 5 at ae ees ae ee. M. ETS. NO. 6. OBS. y. ‘| a 498 dc er gl 86.2} Children outgrow their shoes ~*~ * * re-Holiday Food Sale. 10% off) I3 CA """**" g5.1/every one to six months until they; With the hunting season on, C ks N | g all aegis exce . ape bien Seaway Cargo Tonnage |Deere we “38 Republic Stl .. 721 peach the age of about 15, accord-| Baby was painted and dressed up | 100 0 on er arettes a. meat. ockK up now . h | . 1959 Dis C Seag 32.5 ped Drea oes 48.6\ing to studies made b foot) t - 7 hi | ~ ron Friendly Market, 884 W. Rises S arply in Doug Aire 386 Reva Met .... 605! a y foot) to prevent his being mistaken A (| UJ ron. Qpen So ST days, AON) TTAWA Ww = Seventy-two per Deere ate Rev FoR cua. G24 specialists. see A Bee re Leaning Up Pp— s - East Air L... 334 feway St ....35.6) tummage Sale, Nov. 19, 20, 21, 7 , -arried East. K rt il 8. "Bethany Tabernacle, 8. Cem more cargo was carried Rio, ire...) soz Beorille Mi... 288 CULPEPER, Va. R—A service stell cor. First, Rochester. Adv. through the St. Lawrence Seaway | BI Auto L .... 50 Sears Roeb .. $0.2 station operator, suspicious of two j El & Mus 111 Shell / - to the end of October than through Sinclair 49.5 Th : ; Rummage sale, Nov. 22nd. sar the old St. Lawrence canals in |Ex-Cello-0 48S ony rete: oe Opu ar a Ss ine Busy neh ie et Se ee = ren, St. 6 to 12. ” _ the corresponding period last | Firestone pce gou Ry. sss: $0 ; Hatiog, called: pee. jimmy — Post Number 12. | year. [Food Mach ... 496 sta B 8" 95.3! ---§ H I t R m d Police found they were selling ets and, sugary rum 40| The Seaway Authority said Fri-|Preep sui i Sid Si ea $e 4 O fie invents heme Y the filled jugs as a household burn. ° day that from the start of the/Pruen Tra ... 276 gid Ol BS... BOSTON (AP) — I cleanser, The product sold was a navigation season in April to ihe|Ose Bek ag Stud Pack |... 25.3 n this case, necessity to reach a popular | wuxture of water with a small irl by teleph ; |Gen Dvnam. 44] 8un_ Ot . 57.7) & y telephone was the mother of invention. srapefruit was not generally end of last month 17,400,000 tons) Gon mm. a7, Swift & Co... 424 amount of a commercial cleanser catia! as a fruit of com-|were moved from Montreal to)Gen Pas 2ndns To 77 The i ~ * * colored with grape and orange rcial possibilities until it was|/Lake Ontario — 7,300,000 tons Gen Mills... 322 Tes G Bul °°: 17.1) e invention is a device which, without any manual | soft drinks. roduced at the Chicago Exposi-|more than in the same period in SP & ie : 5 4 Timk R Bear a operation, keeps calling a busy telephone number until the The two men were convicted of n in 1893. 1958. Gen Tire .... 81. Erg nc 30.4) call gets through. peddling without a license . 5 wen en : . ° |aliiette a Underwood 23, | The inventor is Vinod Sundra, a native of New Delhi, . Pesan nl - 1306 Un Pac) 301) India, now an engineer with Clevite Transistor Products, i ’ Gt aap | 362 wait Aire. 373) Waltham. Rockefeller Slates Trip d 2 Tn ruit . 2 * County s Corn Contest |33" <1 Tegar'eo -.. 3, He told all about the invention and demonstrated it yes- |of Midwest Next Month . Indust Ray 183 Ug Rub ...... se. terday at an electronics show in Boston. ALBANY. N.Y. (UPD Go 3 US Tob. |... 24:6 ian sBANY,. N.Y. (U os Vv. Winners Announced ree ace tt Gola ny, gh] WASTED TIME ee ea meee |e Nick... tone weste 4,Bk - 281| Sundra said every time he tried to reach a certain young ed invitations to at least three) Vinners in this year’s Oakland achieved a yield of 124.6 bushels Tre wane’ 1B White Mot”... 617) lady, a student at Commons College, her line was busy. Be ead ounces in : : Int Tel & at , s 5 unty Junior and Senior Corn'per acre, having planted Pioneer |; = ti 403 Younsst shat 1% There were times when he'd waste many, many precious diana, Minnesota and Wisconsin ntests were announced today by y Poffenberger, county agricul- wnship, won the junior contest. >remier Farms of Avon Town- John Kiekbusch of 1470 W. nken Rd. The Tucker brothers had 2 386 corn on an alfalfa brome sod. He used 10 tons of manure, 150 pounds of 5-20-20° fertilizer at planting time and 33 pounds of actual nitrogen as a side-dressing. contest, others who grew 100 bushels or more per acre were: * * * Clark Miller of 2885 Geymour Lake Rd., Brandon Township; Leslie Wright, 2600 Seymour Lake Rd., Brandon Town- —_ Sam Miller, 6391 Ridge Lake Rd. Independence Township; Carlton Craw- ford. 2535 S. Hill Rd. Milford Town- Ellison Austin, 8660 Kier Rd. eld of 126.4 bushels of dry, jof 811 Rd.. Oakland Township: elled Funks 6-26 corm per don fownehip: Sianrt. Brata gh re. They had plawed down os oe ae ms of manure and 80 pounds To Rip! sian Allen, 1901 1. Oxford t acre of m 12-12-12 fertilizer |*4;, eet? sem wow Re | alfalfa sod. Plant count at Adaivon Tor “ m Hutehtos, Bor irvest time was 14,000 per acre. srr Riewea Ra ten mer. n the junior contest, Long) Grand Blane. , emia 3¢, for Ampex which is being touted Of the 28 contestants in the senior | yr, | Space Issues Soar Forward NEW YORK ® — Space age is- |sues spurted again, inspiring the stock market to a moderate gain on average early this afternoon. Turnover was fairly lively over-all. Advance of the pivotal stocks was running to half a dozen points | in some quarters as a split can- | didate. In addition to favorable Wall | street comment for electronics jthere was a published prediction that space spending is headed for) almost double present outlays in the government's next fiscal year.) Steels were narrowly ahead as} SANDBURG PLACES WREA | prospects of negotiated steel settle. after Sandburg laid a wreath at |ment before the Taft-Hartley, back- coln biographer, walks from the site where President Lincoln de- livered his famous Gettysburg Address in Gettysburg, Pa., 96 years ago Thursday. Men dressed in Civil War uniforms presented arms he recited the Gettysburg Address at the National Cemetery. WASHINGTON (AP) Lip- sticks may follow cranberries as the subject of the Food and Drug Administration’s next battle with industry. Last month, FDA banned the use in lipsticks of certain coal-tar colors it said had caused death) and illness in test rats. The ban, jif uncontested, would have gone into effect Jan. 6, 1960. * * * But lipstick makers, in vigorous | protests just filed with FDA, are, contending that most lipsticks on Dave Garroway Strikes Back } | Takes 15 Minutes to ! 4 | Answer ‘Smears’ on | | | ‘Today’ Show | i NEW YORK (tAP)—Dave Gar- roway used a quarter-hour portion. \of his morning - television pro- \gram today to answer what he itermed “unconscionable smears” against the show because of its advance recording. Garroway said such smears re-| sulted from a previous episode on} the NBC ‘Today’ program dur-| ing which he showed emotional, stress while speaking of Charles ee AP Wirephote TH — Carl Sandburg, noted Lin- the memorial. Earlier Thursday | to-work injunction expires. As the “‘glamor”’ group took off again, Motorola ran up more than 5, Texas Instruments more than 4 and Zenith about 3. Gains of bet- ter than 2 were made by Litton Industries and Varian Associates. Raytheon tacked on about 2. Gains of a point or so were scored by Sperry Rand and Radio Corp. * * * | BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. ww — An attorney for Mario Lanza’s widow says she will be reunited In the rocket fuel department,!with her four children, probably Thiokol gained well over a point! today, and general tire was fractionally) higher, Merck was the best of the drugs, rising around 2 and In- ternational Nickel scored a simi- lar gain, highlighting the non- ferrous metals. Fractional gains were made by such leading steelmakers as Beth- lehem, Republic Steel and Jones & Laughlin. U.S, Steel eased. Oil continued backward. Jersey Standard and Texace dropped frac- | * * attorney * j and Police Truman Won t Accompany ke | President Says Talks Lanza’s Widow May Get Four Children Back Today Van Doren. * * * | Van Doren had just been fired) ‘from a position with the network, alter admitting to congressional| probers that he lied in denying, he received help while a contest-! ant on the former ‘“Twenty-One”’ |quiz program over NBC. as Garroway said the ‘‘Today’’ pro- jinderstanding. * t ee had been attacked as de-! ‘ceitful in some quarters because, | They told this story: Mae Hicks'his remarks had been recorded’ | and Shirley Borregaard, mother}on video tape the afternoon before and sister of the singer’s widow, the program was aired. | | Schutzbank labeled Thursday's kidnaping scare a family mis- Jerald) Muriel, visited her recently. Mrs.| ‘‘We have been accused of de-| |Lanza has been under great emo ceit. Our integrity has been at- ltional strain since her husband tacked. I feel I must answer di- died of a heart attack in Rome rectly now. When I'm accused of Oct. 7, \dishonesty I feel I must answer,” ~ * * ‘said Garroway. The mother and sister sent the’ “This program is taped. The children, accompanied by two words I'm speaking now were | Italian nurses, by plane to Mrs. recorded 14‘ hours ago. I thought 'Borregaard’s home in Northbrook,!everybody understood this. Appar- TL. ‘ently that is not the case.” * Garroway went on to say that * * minutes trying to get a call AVERAGE STOCK 8 NEW YORK, Nov. 20 — Compiled by the Associated Press. Pigures after decimal points are —— Low Noon Allen Tlectric & Equip. Co. 2.5 2? 2° MORE THAN ONE win Rubber Co* ...... 28 Gear Co* ....... 7 27.2 28.2 He said he also has devel Gok, Setee Oe & 2 B as ao owe _ Blec’ ce cs : ‘ Peninsiilar Metal Prod. Co.* .. 8 86 A push of the button will The Prophet Co.* cokse 20. 086 Rudy Manufecturing Co.* .... 10.3 11 Or eles 15.6 15.6 15.8 Pale ie tet bad anak. busy businessmen. ’ [ only one telephone in the dormitory and swains always were trying to reach the 20 young women residents. at the other end finally rings. a buzzer ——s Indust, Ralls UU, storks : So Sundra went to work and developed a mechanism which eek Ago 3394.7 1271" 968 2217) keeps ringing the number. See ee # det cee IN Ugh oearemalin 1988 High .... 312.0 1365 95.7 2143) 80es Off at the caller's end an 1968 Low .... 2347 809 1729 1566 phone and begin his conversation. EERIE LI mem | td me mechani tata he earn 15 Utils. 86.18 off 0.04 . Wine hee toe hans device net Porn = ore his dates but it gave him achelor o nce in (c. 5 Nephier Co) Massachusetts Institute of Technology. into which can be inserted several telephone numbers. Sundra says the mechanism has excellent possibilities for . through. After all, there was [are definite’ and the trip “may be enlarged upon” later. Rockefeller will attend a Repub- lican fund raising dinner in South Bend, Ind., Dec. 12, a Junior Chamber of Commerce dinner in Minneapolis, Minn., Dec. 14 and /a dinner at the world affairs coun- jcil meeting in Milwaukee, Wis., | Dec. 15: Thefts by Employes Bankrupt Firms SYRACUSE, N. Y. (UPI — A jmanagement engineer said a study showed that thefts by employes forced more than 200 firms to go out of business in the United States in 1958, d he can pick up his own tele- lectrical engineering thesis at oped a drum-like attachment ring any of the numbers, \ \ \ used harm, they say. Lipstick Furor Will Follow Flemming’s Cranberry Fuss the American market would be af-|tests are now being conducted fected. The 17 shades of red, yel-|with some of the lipstick colors. low and orange the FDA cited are If the ban goes into effect as key ingredients and have beenjordered, no new lipsticks can be for many years without;made with the 17 forbidden color idyes. FDA spokesmen say there x * jwould be no _ action, however, In fact, the manufacturers say, against lipsticks already made the ban could ruin much of the and in warehouses and stores. lipstick industry, whose retail * * * sales are estimated at some 80 FDA‘ issuing the ban order million dollars annually. Oct. conceded that the amounts The industry contends there has\of the color which may get into been no substantial proof that hu- the human digestive system from mang may be harmed by what' lipsticks are much smaller than they claim is an_ infinitesimal the amounts fed the test rats. amount of color that gets into the} * * * digestive system from lipstick. But, under the law, the govern- A spokesman said the lipstick ment must ban the use of any makers are just waiting for the coal-tar color that is harmful in cranberry fuss to end before they/ significant amounts in the diet of raise a lipstick furor. ltest animals even though its use It will include demands for a jn smaller amounts could be safe. Hits Pressure mits use of only those colors which the FDA has certified as harm- less for use in foods, drugs and cosmetics. There are 130 approved dyes, but none suitable for lip- sticks, the makers contend. The colors aren't right rom n us ry Demands already have been filed for public hearings, but no Labor Economist Says Bureau of Statistics at Corporations’ Mercy date has been set for them. The! decision what to do about lipsticks, rests with Secretary of Welfare} Arthur S. Flemming, within whose | department FDA operates. FDA started {ts lipstick color; DETROIT W—A top labor union crackdown after 90-day feeding economist says the Bureau of La- tests showed they can harm lab-'bor Statistics in Washington “has oratory rats. Some animals died. pheen subjected to tremendous pres- Others showed retarded growth, sure’ by managemen’ in the liver and kidney damage, enlarged’ pyreaus study of the nation’s pro- spleens, anemia and other ail- quctivity trends. ments. | ~ « #* é : Ww t in-| . oe Sen eda te In a speech here last night, Nat volved, the drastic procedures like | i seizure used with cranberries were Weinberg, who directs the United not invoked, an FDA spokesman | Auto Workers’ economic analysis explained. , |department, said the pressure However, FDA pharmacologists |C@me from ‘‘certain business and say cancer would not show up in| Political groups.” such short-term tests and it is) Weinberg said “business has generally agreed tests of at least) powerful leverage for persuading two years are required to disclose; the bureau to do Its bidding. The cancer effects. Such long-term) corporations control, and at any time can shut off, the flow of basic data essential to the bureau's operation.” Weinberg declared ‘‘major polit- ical stakes are involved in the measurement of productivity.” * * * “At stake also,”’ he said, ‘are The name of the Waterford, untold millions of dollars to UAW Township Senior High School will, members and other workers whose be changed as of September 1961. | wage increases and living stand- | The Township Board of Educa-|ard improvements depend upon the ‘tion decided last night to call it)rate of productivity advance in lthe Thomas A. Edison High the national economy, whether be- |cause of formal improvement fae- | School. | a The tor ihe thanew \tor_ revisions or on a less formal | that a second school, to open | in 1961, will be known as the Charles F. Kettering High Waterford High? Nope! Call It Edison in 1961 | * * * Weinberg demanded public dis- Scheel cussion of the question of measur- . ing the nation’s productivity. He A committee chose the two said it is now behind closed doors. names to honor two of Michigan's “We hope,” Weinberg said, greatest minds. . Four other names were ap-| ‘that by bringing this issue out | im the light of day we can hel proved by the board for elemen- P tary schools in the $5-million build-! free BLS from the improper man- ing program voters approved in| S#ement pressures being brought March. | to bear upon it and thus enable The names Della Lutes, Carl) leg pure i of be Sandburg, Edgar A. Guest and hed a ae — ‘ cinda H. Stone, were selected be- of cause of their outstanding contribu-| # @xpeet from the bureau. Weinberg’s speech was made to tion to Michigan, according to the| chairman of the names committee, the Detroit chapter of the Ameri- Mrs. Donald Adams. lean Statistical Assn. TV Newsman Fired for Payola Remarks DETROIT \ — Television sta-!part of American -business. This tion WJBK in Detroit has fired|is certainly not to say that I, or newscaster Jac LeGoff because it! the broadcasting industry, condone says he violated station policy with the practice, but I say, let him who editorial comment on a news-pro-|is without sin cast their first gram. |stone.”’ Dismissal of the 37-year-Old, yiohaets said. “This editorial- newscaster yesterday followed his} izing material appeared - on program Wednesday night when he| station extemporaneously without attacked critics of payola—payoffs | the prior knowledge or approval to disc jockeys for plugging Trec-| o¢ tation management. Such ed- ords—on the ground they were un- itorializing, regardless of the fair to broadcasting. merits of the content, is com- LeGoff criticized newspapers for pletely cgainst station policy.” their play of the payola story. Ken Cline, a WJBK staff news- Commenting on his dismissal, |, ster, is taking LeGoff’s place on LeGoft said, “The story I used ithe program tonight. The station Wednesday night expressed my |.5id no successor to LeGoff has own strong feelings in defense of been chosen. which I have been a part for LeGoff, a native of Chicago, many years, worked at radio stations at Aurora, “To express my own opinion was Ill., and Youngstown, Ohio, before a violation of station policy but I coming to Detroit. felt the newspapers were crucify- | ses ————————————— ing our industry with accusations jabout practices that are a part of j}most American business today.” ~*~ * * | LeGoff said he had no immediate plans for the future other than ‘'to stay home for a change.” Bill Michaels, vice president | and managing director of WJBK, said the station’s program direc- tor read him a transcript of Le- Goff’s remarks. Michaels was in Miami Beach, rla., and did not see the program. | “We came to the conclusion that | jit just could not be,’’ said Mi-, FOR LEASE NEW MOBIL SERVICE STATION Clintonville and Walton Rds. Training at Company's Expense Financial Assistance | |chaels. “It was a direct violation | . Available of stated policy done with his eyes | For Information wide open.” | FE 5-9466 In commenting on charges that! many disc jockeys promote records FE 2-3433 in return for financial awards, Le-| After 5 P. M. Goff commented on his program: | | ‘Have there not been other accu- | = |sations of this same sort in the |government, in the Federal Com- \munications Commission, in the garment industry, in any number Located on Franklin Rd. ‘of international unions?” ayes Se ee * * * |] majer ays, Wil te LeGoff told his listeners, ‘Pay-| INDUS. RIAL PROPERTY | ; SY-\t Bice Investment So. TU 3-0110 ola in one form or another is a| : fe] i FORTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ————_< Says Oath Nix Can Hit Student. Administrator of Loans | { Sees Injury to Needy’ if More Schools Quit WASHINGTON (UPI)—The ad- ministrator of the Federal Student) Lean Fund said Thursday night needy students will suffer if any more colleges drop out of the pro- gram because of the loyalty oath requirement. John F. Morse, the administra- tor in the Office of Education, said| this could lead to the ‘‘destruc: tion of a magnificent program.” Morse said in a statement that he was in sympathy with the | reasons given by some institu- tions for withdrawing from the program. But he said he wished they had “seen fit to stay in the program to work through channels our gov- ernment provides for the amend- ment of objectionable legislation.” A bill to repeal the loyalty oath requirement which has drawn ob- jections from many college offi- cials was brought up in the Senate this year It failed to pass, how- ever. * * * Support for any new repeal move was voiced today by T. Keith, | ' \ Glennan, director of the National) Aeronautics and Space Administra-| tion. He said he was not opposed! to the oath but felt it should not be a condition for obtaining a loan. to join the program because of — ' the oath, { | { The genera! antipathy of educa.’ tors toward the oath was high- lighted this week when Yale and Harvard universitiés and Oberlin: College withdrew. Ohio State University also has voiced objection but has not with- drawn. There also are ‘‘rumblings”’ from the University of Virginia, officials said. * * * | Other colleges which dropped out | this year are Amherst, Antioch, Reed, Sarah Lawrence, | St. John's! of Maryland and Wilmington of; Ohio, Register and Pay, Tax Lobbyists Told at Lansing LANSING W — Waiting with pen and open hand, Secretary of State! James M. Hare today reminded lobbyists campaigning against a Republican nuisance tax package that they must register with the State. Hare sent out the notice after ob- serving two dozen or more new faces among the ranks of Capitol lobbyists, who prefer to be known as legislative agents. The group s lobbying against one or more sections of. a revenue program calling for 74 million dollars in new or increased taxes on services, beer, liquor and tobacco. Among them were a representa- tive of the tobacco industry from Virginia and a distilleries agent from Pennsylvania. Lobbyists must pay a $5 registra- | tion fee. Violation can bring a, maximum $1,000 fine and one-year! prison term. “If any of these gentlemen would, like to register, we will take care of them immediately,”’ said Hare. ' “We can use the money.” State Foreign Car Registrations Drop LANSING (®—Foreign cars reg- istrations fell off sharply last month, the Department of State reported Thursday. As against 2,062 titled in Septem- ber, there were only 1.331 in Oc- tober, a drop of 731 units. Secretary of State James M Hare speculated that American compact cars were cutting into the imported car market. Mrs. Avis’ Alimony Hiked to $2,700 Monthly DETROIT «> — Mrs Packer Avis. estranged wife of former car rental agency owner Warren E. Avin. vesterday rary alimony, had asked. Circuit Judge Carl M. Weide-| man ordered Avis, 44, to pay his| 31-year-old wife $2,025 monthly! and additional expenses estimated | at $624. Mrs. Avis had asked $4,000 a month to support herself and the | couple’s three children. } Included in the expenses were. schoo! tuition for the Avis’ two, sons, Warren Jr., 9. and Wayne. ' 7, taxes and insurance on a 40- room home in Grosse _ Pointe Farms and a car for Mrs. Avis The couple's third child is Wend 1959 at 601 Pontiac State Bank Bidg Pontiac, Michigan. Nov. lee 20, 1980 Cc SALE Susan was | granted $2.700 a month in tempo-! $1,300 less than she “ WisR—Cumz == a7 C=C ' NM NUL —— ‘ ‘ d B and Thomas Ambulance Death Notices _ BERRY. Fi 20, 1968, L A 14 Kirkway, Bioomfield big 68. dear mother of John Home, New Castile, Indiana In- in Spiceland Cemetery, New Castle, Indiana = Arrange- ments by Donelson-Johns AECL Home BEACH, NOV. 19. 1958 OPAL 5751 M-15, Clarkston, mother of Donald G . Robert C, and Charles R_ Beach and = Mrs Raymond Greessle, Also survived by 15 randchil dren end several! brothers and. sisters mera) service will be held Saturday, Nov 21 2 pm from Lewis E Puneral Home. Clarkston ment in keview Cemetery Clarkston, with Rev Paul Vanaman officiating Mrs. Beach will Hie in state at the Lewis E Wint Puneral Home, Clarkston FERNALD. NOV 18 1959 EDITH P. 136 Woodside, Royal Oak, 86 dear mother of Mrs C_M_ Poole, Ww Fernald, John P Fernald and C. A Fernald; dear sister of Bert Pruitt; Also survived by 18 grandchildren and 35 grandchildren Funera) will be held Saturday, Nov 1989 at 2 pm “from Spiller- Spitler Puneral Home, 836 N. ‘ain Street, Royal Oak. Inter- ment in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak with Rev Paul 8. Durham officiating Mrs Pernald will lie in state at the al Oak -Spitler Punera! Home, Royal Oak GILL, NOV 18, 1989, PLOYD B, 2694 Chrysier, Waterford Town- ship; age 63, beloved husband of Blanche Gill: dear father of David Gill, dear brother of Horace Gill, Charles Holley, Mrs John Roberts and. Mrs Abe Harris. also survived by six grandchildren FPunera) serv- ice will be held Sunday, Nov 22 from McMullin Puneral Sullivan. 1]! Interment in Keller Cemetery, Iil Mr Gill will be taken from the Donelson-Johns | Funeral Home to Sullivan, Ill, ' Priday afternoon | HALL. NOV. 20, 1959, EDITH J. 630 E. Beverly, 87, dear mother Mrs Dora Hubbard, Claude Hall; dear sister of Ralph Smith and Mrs Laura Guy. Complet Charles; Also survived by 1 rhage 7 gee Puneral service will | grand Sunday, Nov 21, 1059) Far Seveaers: Couden Punera! | EXPERIENCED CASUALTY AND Home. | | | CARNIVAL Help Wanted Male 6 aUTO anes ges ol 30” par “eg _— experienced ven of , EE ag . Foote asi “agp ae AUTO MECHANICS Imported car res espa 7k ee but not necessary e work gel good pay. Inc 467 Auburn __until 8 pa ¢ CAB DRIVERS, 25 OR OLDER COMBINATION BUMP AND PAINT man. Cal) Stan Y 22601. Russ Orion. Johnson Motor Sales. © spits DIE DESIGNERS, | 2255 Elizabeth Lake Road DRUG DEPT HAS O' R salesmen No Sunday work. eae aoe. —— ot 98 N naw o ph one Ca. DRIVER wir PICK-UP TRUCK to make part-time deliveries a el re hag nile radius of Pontia Pe rson, Sat. morn pol Highte and Rd.. 2 miles west . Pontiac Airport DO YOU QUALIFY? $85 PEP WEEK a al : A” Av H SCHOOL e 3 APPEARANCE— 4—PERSONALITY—! If you can meet these basic fleations and stert im at a minimum of oer th, then call FE 8-8103, 9 am. to _pm ce P SALESMAN POR — CAR lot. Avelyn erson, Roger's Gales & Service. 56 Auburn Ave. é Bt AKs fire insurance sales. Must be li- censed in Mich Full commission By Dick Turner INS} s H-20 | “You've got to give a boy some hint that you're serious, | Janie! Tell him we're redecorating i = room! aad inn SB cm We 1-A Reduced Rates stiri Movie’ co.” FE" ae MOVING SERVICE |. oes WORK OR aE Om yout HAULING. Fast a he TRUCKINO— AY 5 ou Pe Wed. Household Goods 29| CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP- Odd pieces or housefull. Prompt. courteous service. FURNITURE NEEDED Entir home or odd lots dolla r. wi pee “ye | sell it for you. Community | OR 3-2717. A (*) hold goods, either by private sale _your price. Any tm BE 8-000. mute dl BE NAME | & he Ss. | HAULING AND RUBBISH $2 A | load, Anytime. FE 4-0264. E. Smart Sale Farm. Rochester, | or blic auction. Appraisals. L. Michigan. OL 1-5631. __Wtd. Miccellaneous 30° HAULING MOVING | of any kind, chep. 8-2494 LIGHT AND ~ HEAVY TRUCKING. Rubbish. Fill dirt. top soil, sand, gravel and front end loading. FE PICKED 2 ee UNWANTED ARTICL _5-4638 up free of charge. F Trucks to Rent | by-Ton Pickups Stakes Dump Trucks . Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. berg 8. WOODWARD FE ¢0461 FE 41442 Open Daily Including Sunday | HAVE adding machine or piece of office furniture or equipment not ' use? We will buy these items _OR_3-976T. HOUSETRAILER, vd —* OR ieee | with toilet. FE PAY TOP aT ae FOR | standing timber. Alberta Lumber Mills, FE 68-6131. ce ANTED USED TWIN STROLLER ood cond _ Reasonable. FE 43135. WANTED: ry pi CARRIER | “Share e Living Quarters 33° i il | WANTED — with child to share home. PE _5-9580 | WORKING WOMAN .. 1” fasee Ee. sa PRIVATE 3A O22. Rent Apts. Furnished 37 i Ta atu ae General oe | a OR, pee clean & quiet. ities tur. a: _ 68 Norton. 4-8419. 19% Wi +-RM PURN. APT, $40 MO. 3 Primary 8t., Auburn Heights, 3a Baldw you A TYPEWRITER. 13 RMS & BATH UTIL PORN. 118 wk. io 7 RMS & BATH To z come . Call after 4 p.m. OR 4-0062, ROOMS NICELY . & OTHLI- a. —— AND BATH. Nice location. Modern. _ FE 4-1500 or OR 3-0103, _OR_4-0168. ROOM. PRIVATE BATH & ENTR- & ROOMS AN Pine Knob Re. OR 3-1887. 'D BATH BASEMENT apartment. Ll furnished $60 per mo. 5 RMS. rr an & ENT. OR 3-1388 ii O'DELL CARTAGE Local and long distance moving. Phone FE 5-6806 Painting & [ Decorating 2 -_ CLA8s D! DECORATING. PAINT- and wallpaperi FE 4-0255. iat CLASS PAINTING AND DEC- orating. Cash or terms UL 2-2940 | 1ST CLASS. INT £ EXT. PAINT- ing. Reas. Don Beck OL 1-3141. | a LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Papering FE 8-034 first year Should earn $7600 annually. Age no barrier. John | ee Chiera dank Foo ore be J 4 Yoodsard. Birmingham, “Micn.| Help Wanted 8! INTERESTED IN A CAREER AS A era suey WATKINS ROUTE life insurance salesman? Security & above average income for life aie” | pon or part a AY- Call FE 3-7193 or FE 4-5007 for, He ie e ie am hr 150 N e funeral arrangements will be an- nounced later by the Huntoopn Puoneral Home. a Bead 19, 1950. LEO W, 67 lawn, Pontiac, $8. Beloved day, 1959 at 10 am from Melvin A. Schutt Punera! Home Interment in Perry Mt Park Cemetery. The Moose ge will et - service Bunday evening a from livin A Sener "Puners! 1968, cls Road White beloved husband ; dear son of Henrietta Schaar: Gear mother of Bernard Schaar and Mrs. Juan Gantos, Also survived by 3 brothers and 5 sisters. Funeral fee will be Monday, Nov 23, from Donelson- eral Home. Interment Mr. at the ¢lson-Johns Funeral Home. em Vv ae. 19 PA sr seid Sigband : ov usban = oe ae & Jane bins | Sratner or at in state at umerfelt Funeral Home, Orion. In _M-moriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF FRANK ae Ocerkfits who passed away ¢ rs ago today our presence is ever near us. Your love re: with us = You rere _ k of husban cei mine Funera! Directors 4 Donelson-Johns fo COATS Draytoo Pising En erin Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME 5 aa or Motor —@PARES GRIPPIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service FE 32-8841 ___ cemetery Lots 3 4 LOTS. WHITE CHAPEL. REA- sonable. FE 32-8847 PERRY PARE CEMETERY graves. & uw. 40882 NEED A FINANCE FIXER? Order Classified Ads to sell, rent, find a good job. FE 2-818] .. 18 the Want Ad num- ber! BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. Today there were replies at The Press office tm the following boxes: 5, 6, 14, 15, 24, 25, 35, 58, 60, 63, 67, 69, 70, 71, 73, 74, 80, 94, 103, 106, 110, 111, 116, 118, 119, Help Wanted Male 6 12 AGEN 18 TO 28 Salary $75 per wk Only willing to work need apply | | " No'SALESMEN le | CALL FE 8-8103 FOR APPT AGGRESSIVE MEN 21 TO 30 Are you looking for a new excit- ing money making job? Heres the opportunity of a lifetime! A) career business and we train you at our expense. Earn $2 to $3 an hour to AR MURRAY STUDIO needs ambi- tious young people for executive developments. Know the thrill of becom Sgro an expert dancer and teacher pass up this op- portunity. eon now 25 E. Pike, 2 to 10 p.m. Mr. — No ex- rience necessar CAREER N : expansion, a 65-year-old Life Insurance organisation has an opening in this area for a full or time man The man we want interview should be between 25-50, ambitious, character, must own a car. Have the desire to earn a better-than-average in- come with all plus advantages } } { paid for by the company. If you meet these : cifications, please call Mr Cla MT 6-6690 or MI 6-660) evenings BOYS AND GIRLS NEEDED AT once to handle Christmas Wreath orders Cai’ PE 2-3912 THE ANSWER TO) YOUR PROBLEM:| Want Ads! To sell, rent, | hire, it's FE 2-8181. IP YOU ARE A Goop MECHANIC or a bumper man and want to in business for yourself you can't afford to miss is ope | a ne For information cal] FE LOOKING FOR A JOB IPF &O, write Pontiac Press Box 75. | OPPORTUNITY FOR blelaad el peopl not apply. Preferable college, but will accept a grad. Write or nl 3-706 1606 elegraph, PART TI ME SALES MAN & AB C SALARY apt. bldg Must be sober & hone. and vacation Radio Paid hosp Give references & tence. Corp. of America. For appotnt- This is s part time ‘ol Reply ment, FE 5-6110 | Pontiac Press. Box Hs | ORGAN TEACHER WANT WE | PART- TIME furnish sap ig free of char ae If you are free 7-10 p.m., and are Cali Gallagher Co 18 E pi appearing and have a car, Huron 8t. on H REAL ESTATE Balesmen or ee — ex- oaie $50 per week, and still retain rienced preferred. Pont ise. Mu your regular job or information ford, eas. call Mr. Allen OR 3-0922, 7 p.m- Lake, city @nd custom ‘home 9 p.m. sales. New Photo-listing program. A 8A _Call FE _4-4526 for interview Old established firm needs 3 men } SOLICITORS to take over branch office. OR To work from office or your wets a — pa a = _— SALESM WANT- quality one - or ne ser tel time. Laks __*ppointment and custom home sales. Bal eae 3-0085 for interview appointment. “BA "* “BUSINESS OPPOR- TUNITY” Two franchise dealer- io Pontiac area. Un- No investment. Be in business for reeif. OR 3-6565. _Emplayment Agencies 9 BOOKKFEPER $400 Pemale full charge, able to do monthly reports, statements, etc. typing 5 PHO ANVA hom roize days. Midwest Pcerctellary 406 soar rE 307 oo ~ Pontiac State Bank Bidg. | ah =o galeean 9237 On {f Oakland C ors dest e@ 0 n ounty's © ce . 2% Genlerehipe expending to} EVFLYN EDWARDS meet the needs of . fast growing NEEDS ®e unity. Live-in ae . 0 PER Beattie Mtr. Sales, Inc. | 2% E, HURON SUITE 4 , $806 Dixie ° Hey Waterford 40684 — 4 1429 PHONE OR 3-1291 OFFICE > MANAGER | WE HAVE THE > WORK, COLLI sion, trim. giass, body & sheet; Male 4 a Mi age a metal, but we heed men with| Dusiness adm ratio a some ~ this line. Inquire Nerf Se ee as Yoke ust ve exper e Warren —— will be supervising i 7 ont WaNrE | fe, iaeset sere c ance service man, must be famil- $9227. one domestic refrigeration and automatic washers jtead Sect’ —— and loss | | Building Service 1. 13 BPP BBA LA BOO > RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL industrial Mason gen contracting Also store y re oe ohn W. Caples. MY ' A-1 BRICK BLOCK AND ENT work. Also Spo 3-0402. a ually work Ng: orl aaa “leg gual STRUCTION co. MA 2253 63283 AL UMINUM . le : Winter prices. Get our bid. OR 3-6428. TIONS, REC ROOMS, & ene Complete building service. ALL aa work 15 mercial, | ALUMINUM ne tg Home Additions, stairs, attics. remodeling. 25 Free estimates. I GO AWNING remodeling. rE alterations, windows, complete kia’. at DEV LLDOZING & TRUCKING — DON TURNE 5-2853 scion, = EXCAVATING - = redgi — Trucking ot a eee on ta in- led. Free estimates 3-6932. si6a REPA brick, Diock, IR. ASTERING Rt cement work. FE BLOCK, BRICK, WORK __and firepisces. FE 5-8907 BASEMENTS WATERPROOFED Work guaranteed. Free estimates. FE 40771 COMPLETE PLASTERING SERV- ice. PE . CARPENTER W EW & ne ir. Small one & specialty. 2841 or FE 5-2017 CARPENTER CREW AVAILABLE. EM 3-0333. CEMENT & BL LOCK WORK —- FE w : OTERO TOO large or small, ” years experi- ence. Free estimate. OR 172 8STOM HOMES BY LICENSED | builder. Free estimates. UL 2-5 sate & ey OR Cc "| eabinets. 'A-l PAINTING & SECORATING. Wtd. |. Contracts, Mtgs. 35 ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST AC- our land contract. Cash Lr ers malting ag 1 r Realtor Part- | A: JOHNSON, Realtor | 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. | FE 4-2533 | 1ST FLOOR. tie. “16 gt kl, i t St. Clair. seni as a * 90 SAKES rooms and bath Clean. Heat & month Bee ridge, PE 050 W. Huron. furnished. $55 __ caretaker. _ 86 COTTAGE ST. 1-3-3 ROO mod., all util, furn Apply B-1, _ Mrs Cooper. PE 8-2284. to invest. ama) land contracts 359 N CASS | AVE. 2 ROOMS ANS equitie bath. FE 2-0548 ATTRACTIVE, MOD- a 3 rooms. West side. Adults. AVAILABLE Di i8T, IDEAL Paper removed. FE ae M) ATE ACTION | Centra! High Schoo! Liv. rm., din. Ai PAINTING INTERIOR. EX- A a \TE ACTION | rm, kitchen, bath, 1 bedrm., heat terior 1 per cent disc. for cash. | On any good land conlnison sat. a6d utiltiies furnished $95 6 Guaranteed. Free est. FE 40205 isfactory inspection of eee | ere rE 4 Lawrence. PE -| KAA PAIN & DECORATING.| and title. Ask for Ken ae or "26 years’ experience. Reasonable. K. L. Templeton, eahor CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT. 16 Pree estimates. Phone UL 23-1308. p Hovey between Cottage and Os- A N PAPE: ING EMOV- 239 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 4-4563 __ mun w FE 22313. CASH FOR CLOsE TO c OePit, ae TERINO WT Teme H. 2. VanWelt, 4540 Dixie | 73% room upper, redeco 2 OR 3-1 — mated ery ang ponent overs nencasky eta” | CAND CONTRA BUY on turnished. atl to sell. Bari ser erels’ EM. 3-881 R 4. (Dick) V VALUET Neca Thompeon, FE | —°¢ EM 3-006. Ranging. NO RED TAPE | 345 Oakland ane — Pto® 7 ope jas Eada ae Ct ‘buy or sel oe aOR URE TAgEPRONS a r 5 . - tract or equity. ast cou us 2 . service. Free pe | _Mo_Ne drinkers PE Baie. x } FOR Television Service 24 airoux & Franks 4985 Dizie Hwy 7, 00m td a So BBP BBO - ee ee SHOP AROUND, THEN SEE US — EST TV_& RADIO. 1 coc | To Sell your land contract | FOR nam T: 3 Root private eK se ‘vice. re 5-5370. | CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOC. | rivate cntranes. < calaswan |BaY re HT ‘Ka. | 2 > cee = -0961 | town PE $-5749 or FB 2-9343 rE. tne Sraaka _|__ Wanted Real Estate 36/rinst FrioOn, 3 BOOM Any, erwers Tv SERVICE. AFTER- - furn. Small child welcome. FE |""noon & evening. Call PE 32-0495. |? 3 LARGE ROOMS, get fr | 37-6226 or FE +3758. WA aG 10 & TV.| nished 832 Mt_ Clemens PREE 2 RM. JA! A R FE 8-0071 188 N. Johnson | ACTION YOUR HOME — FAR part time caretaker PE 2-7720. LAUINGER REALTY OR_ 3-813 aise FURNISHED ; some oattAT AND aaa rE” ae electr ooms - Upholstering 25 | ALL CASH _quire 100 Aubur as GI OR FHA EQUITIES | GROUND. PLOOR, 7 ROOMS, PRI- EAKLE'S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER- If you are leaving state or need vate bath and entrance. FE 5-4861 8174 Cooley Lake Rd. EM fe ALS UPHOLSTERING FE 4-8797 THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 207 NORTH PERRY ST. FE Lost & Found 2% | oor LOST: LARGE FAWN BLACK | faced male Boxer. He left 730 | Bcottwood Tuesday evening. Chil- dren's pet. If seen please call FE 8-996) LO8T: BIG mAs TOM CAT PET Nam 8 y. In_ vicinity of P1088 , ral Reward rE IN PONTIAC LAKE A! AREA__ German gw? Ans. to a Ph. O LosT one re, answers to ‘‘Thunder’ Vic. of Princeton and Baldwin. Call FE 2-0930. DRY WALL TAPING AND ike FE 68-6781. y. work — Pd y for Nine righ’ 30 for town office. ing. Free estimates. black and on Franklin a? ntiac Prees Box 70. Shot ae and "ake shorthand. EARL’S CONSTROCTION Road. PUEL Midwest merase . 406 Pon-| Garages, additions, cabinets & etc. : WHITE AND x on truck driver, Must familiar k Bidg. PE 5-9227 EM 3.3650 terrier in the vic. Elisa with local area and apply in per- we 7 WwW Male 11) ®uzctRic L SERV -FPREE EST. e Estat FE 6-180. Reward. _900_ 361 8. Paddock BB tcdictclos! “Wanted Male 11 _PARINEY ieee a ba 5-439 | Lost: SUM OF DOREY GHDAT WANTED—CL HEP MUST BE BLECRICAL R. €:30 p.m. between Pike and Law- | experienced. MY 2-6193 Lake | A-1 CARPENTER WOR eee ete a emainimance.| Fenee Btrect oo Willams or in _Orion. and Ce EE a Ed Conpup Electric, UL _2-3902. Taxi cab In small dark bdtue ~ Help Wanted | Female 7 Ae a WALL PA-| FREE ESTIMATES ON WIRING, | Epber bas, Oenerous reward Pate Mood : for water heaters, me and | J sate = BOOKKEEPING ALL TAXES dryers, \aunre POOD a PRICOT VICE ALL LADIES EMpire 33416 _Electric Co., 1080 w. Sauron ” Seyno. Adams School. OR 3-3735 Full art time to fill our CABINET MA AND CA x a pe - TRENCHI rsonals 27. jewelry. oder from home xa ter. Kitchen a specialty. FE i ULLDOZING - EM 3-0681 — ~ Notices & Personals 2 manent positions available 4-6000. oun GaRAGE CABINS, ADDI- —1-1000__Miss Murphy __ | CARPENTER ant | “Gone. “ieensed butlder PHA — Aly ware complete ae be X-1 DEPENDABLE YOUNO GIRL mind Reasonable, Call after €). Terms FE +0000 cny's. to bet bala org migt and mars | _p E 6-0439 wa. MO} FOR REM sine bee NEW | — Tt oe of og ve in Private qua HEF OR CHEF's construc’ o repairs ers salary. Weekends off. | BPG S yrs. exp. 16 in sea food, nckr 165 N Perry | : KNAPP SHOES OR 0738 re 4-180. ask for Bill ie, — pine Pred Herman 3-1592 ATTRACTIVE WOMEN 2). 30 | WAN WOULD Like WORK OF ae | Ew " AND nny, 0 JOB | erry MORPTE Are yau looking for a new and Mtind Sande. 2 PE 5-9556 too small. Brice reasonable. EM | eM Guillen een Hr se ais | _Es more exciting job? Do you want | MARRIED MAN 30. WOULD LIKE | _*006l. STR SiROUYSIS CENTER | more fun and make more money? | 7 kind §-3372 HOUSE MOVING. PULLY CA Apply now at ARTHUR MURRAY | _Work of any PE 40s80. L.A. Young.| {0F femoval of unwanted halt and start a career as ® | MARRIED an DESIRES PART PART | _°auipped__ %:| (face. body). Martha Wilder, dance teacher at 82 to per time work. OR }-6682 ___ | PLASTERING & REPAIR. State Registered OR 3-2898. a i es TRUCK DRIVER NEEDS WORK | Attics finished. #0183 or FE) days. eves advancement Pike, 2 to| Pull or part time. FE 8-074 | ©4272. ainy 6 r-) : 10 p.m. Mr. Jones. We experience | gy (G- INTERIOR, BY JOB PLASTERING. NEW . REPAIR: AD & friendly advisor. Phone PE y “ot br. PR 2-9453 a ee ee 2-b122. “After pm. or If no sa- COUNTER PERSON FOR | DRY | "WALL WASHING BY MACHINE @ NEW & REPAIR Confidential. a. ee Costs less. FE 8-6420. ‘No Mess.) Attics — Rawl's. PE 4-9153 "8 BUDGET YOUR “DEBTS | ferred, but not necessary. Steady work 615 EB. Maple, Birmingham MI 68733. CAPABLE WOMAN TO 50, eneral housework, private room YOUNG MARRIED MAN DESIRES early morning or evening jani- torial work 2-4301. YOUNG MAN WANTS WORK C OF ex | | ath, board, uniforms and $1 any kind Restaurant kitchen help mo, to start. Must like children. @ porter or short order ¢ook. ee wre ee 671, Prank-| FE 4-5072. _lin, Michigan YOUNG MAN WANTS _ INSIDE CURB WAITRESS, 18 OR OVER, work of any kind. Call FE 5-9556. _Telegrey ghee aaa Chief, | Ask for Freeman. elegraph near xie ae DRUG DEPT HAS OPENINGS FOR _Work Wanted Fe Female 12 12 2 exp salesiadies. No Sunday work Mrs Billings — 2 WOMEN WANT WALL aSH- Bros 98 N. Saginaw o phone tng & house cleaning, FE Vise. oale, ____. | BABYSITTING DAYS IN YOUR CED TELEPHONE s80- home FE_3-7373 oa at salary and commission. | Hay WORK WANTED, TRANS TRANS ph and reference. FE 50 ; EXPERIENCED W WATTRESS REF. REF- | EXPERIENCED ORitt "COOK. _ erences. Call MU 4614 iS stry. Write Box 65 Pon- | ELDERLY WOMAN TO ais t FOR réss also tiac 2. ~=pre-school children Room, | EXPERIENCED GEN ENERAL OFFICE board & wages. Call after 4PM | “cashier, office machines, preter | MA 5-9687 | __1 or 2 girl office. PE 8-304 | EXP GIRL, GENERAL CLEANING, | —— FOR COLORE dD ironing. 3 days Must have car. Ref $18. GReenieaf 4-7412 @ rms. and bath full basement | EXPERIENCED SALES PERSON, Prospect St. Call FE 44444 8 am eo lor $ to 7 pm to sell quality toys party pian. | pourly wage and commis — | GIRL DESIRES DAY WORK ON Phone FE 3-7256 from @ to § or after schoo! — ener for intment i ee | GOOD HOME AND WAGES FOR young lady in exchange for child | care and housework. PE 5 Medical Stenographer — Immediate opening Starting sal- ary $322 rt month. Liberal per- sonne! policies. 40 hour a week | TRONINGS SUPERIOR QUALITY, Must have 3 years experience and 3-5885 5 command of medical term- nology. Apply personne! Depart. | ent. Pontiac General] Hospital, | tionally good ref. FE 8-054 GIRL DESIRES } STEADY ao HAVE , references FE 5-39 | GIRL DESIRES STEADY JOB — lave teferences FE 5 TRONINGS S -WANTED 3-6685 ! ——— those | | ontiac, Michigan. ~ TRONINGS. a BU | MATURE WHITE WOMAN ¢ PE_2-8457 or week. FE 5-7516 au ears of age, general housework | LADY WISHES — WORK 1 BY DAY | OAKLAN by | FURNACES OST wi WED” AND y the day. must have own trans. | | a | | after 5 PLASTERING. NEW repair work. No job too rae none too small. Top Tec facade Pp. __us for free supers MA 4- 2654. ING, & mt a Vern Ketter. UL 1740. R. G_ 8NYDER FLOOR LAYING, sanding and finishing. Phone FE ROOF REPAIRS BAVESTROUGHING FE 40444 PLASTERING & Ro — REAS. Pat Lee. FE 2- sear neh Seeavitine FOR fc tanks. Aig Dae Les ditches and boat_w 2- __ Building capeie BLOCK, BRICK, CEMENT WORK, _fireplaces FE 'S-0734 or FE 5-8007, NEED CASH FOR REPAIRS OR new construction? See SEABOARD _ FINANCE, 1185 N. Perry, PE 8-9661 Business | Service _15 ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained man t office. General Printing & Office Supply ge w tLa BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Wall and windows Reasonable. FE 2-1631 DEER HUNTERS Let us skin, cut, wrap and freeze our deer torage if desired. oyal Oak ‘ozen Foods, 1902 _ Crooks Rd. LI 1 ELECTRIC MOTOR SER = talag, og be al APPLIANCE PARTS AVE. _FE_ 27-4021 RVICE RE 218 «~E. poss to be free to ive is/ LADY WOULD LIKE HOUSECLEAN- serviced. C. L. Nelson, FE 5-1788 or short periods occasionally ing, some washing and ironing. | HEATING SERVI AND INSULA- | MI_ 40251. | Days PE 2-740 | tion. 24 hr vervice MA “4-200, |NEED 3 LADIES 21 OR OVER’ LADY WANTS 3 DAYS PER Oj, HEATER, CARBURETOR RE- for saleswork. For interview call week work References. FE 88043; pair FE 2- §998. B 5-496: or UL 2-3782 MOTHER | WITH | 1 CHILD WANTS | ORCHARD LAKE 6f SHINE REGISTERED NURSE WANTED, house & core of children. SERVICE. We specializing in dye- | | Live in. TOR 3-971 MIMEOGRAPHING, TYPING, SEC- retarial service EM 3-2842. ah time for doctor's office. Must | Write own transportation Pontiac rene to box 73, ress RED NURSE TO WORK In | PERSONABLE, ALERT, CAPABLE REGISTERED NURSE TO WORK IN | woman would like to be recep- sires re payaiiae s office in| ¢ienist for doctor or denuist, West ownship. Office ex-| Pontiac-Milford ares. au See ee not essential. Please state age, marital status, children | REFINED LADY and relerences, with applicetion. — housework, live in. FE _¢- 1429. Write Box 71, a Ww & IRONINGS. UP SECRETARY wire INSORANCE and deliver. FE 5-9724. experience. Electric alg age a | WILL CARE Ba INVALID OR dictaphone equipment sick. FE 4-7639 _* to 5, Eves MI 41396 =| WHITE WOMAN WISHES DAY work. FE §-0322 or FE 8-0546 after TED'S 1 anemic WOMAN WANTS D DAY WORK. Have immediate 0 Have Mon. Wed. Sat. open. $1 1 for CURB WAITRESSES on the night shift. Must be 18 Apply in TET ED'S Woodward at Square Lake Rd an hour and transportation. FE | 4-6839 WASHING AND IRONING, P.CK , up and deliver Ss. FE 4-313 tactnt Puen ell fice work, nurses mn ier ll — aici oh COMMI8SION. 80- work Experienced. FE 5-65 eitine’ from own (bome.« Write! «4c: ot es Box 68, Pontiac Press. _ Building Service 13)! ON LO lll let elt WOMAN WANTED FOR DINING Danish 1-A ALUM STORMS. | Sony and kitchen hel SIDIN awnings WALLELY ¢ CO. OL 1-6623 | id Peoples Home _ OL 30311 | wOnEae FOR ,EPHONE ‘SUR- | A-1 BRICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT vey work Will train. Kendale's| ‘work Also repairs. OR 3-046. _1¢ 8. gaginaw. |A-1 FLOOR SANDING. WITT — | WOULD LIKE CAP. the Moor sander. FE 5-3723 able woman over 30 yrs. to baby- =a C . = sit from 12 noon to 9:30, & day A =a ments aad t side. FR 3-7637. Attics 8 WATTRES®S WANTED APPLY 2387 — GET MY B - Dizsie Hwy. i J , YOUNG LADY WOULD LIKE OF- TAILORING. ALTERATIONS FOR 14 Lost: GERMAN SHEPHERD, tan. Lost Por poe of best bet . to get o ut of debt see Financial Advisors, Inc. % 8. ssomiaw FE 3- m3 DAINTY akc a Mrs, Wallace. oe 5-7805. a oe od ee IN DEBT? IF SO LET US Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WF ARE NOTA LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS RM. 718 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG PE 8-0456 Member American Assoc. Credit Counsellors Michigan Assoc. Credit Counsellors IF YOU NEED $500 ip Joa eal NY ergency W om e SEABOARD FINANCE, 1188 N. re Sst, FE ry oee! LIF-O-GEN Bnoreeety, medical oxygen, for th me a home supply — invaluable for the treatment of Asthma. Bronchitis & disorders. tank holds 7 gals. oF _GERMAN money quickly, call us. Immediate 48 HOURS HOME — EQUITY WRIGHT-VALUET Ee 53-0691 , FE 5-044) GET CASH FOR YOUR HOME | — or equity through an FHA or GI salé. Phone for particulars ‘Clark Real Estate. | W. Huron FE 3-7888, Res FE 44813. Open eve- nings & Sundays. Gl AND FHA CASH POR Youn Hom RADE BUIL T D DORRIS & SON REALTORS 752 W. Huron FE 4-1557) WTD. 3 BDRM Preferably brick ar around | home wit rts = ash waiting OR 3-1231 WANTED LAKE CONTRACTS | Farms and Lake clap Don’t | @ can sel) it) Paul } M. Jones, Real. Est. | 832 W. Huron +8550 | WILL PAY CAs aa to $5,000 tee smal] home REALTY | MODERN HOUSE’ +9550 | NEAT IF YOU NEED $500 ANY emergency we can help you Cali ARD N SEABO PINANCE, 1185 Perry St. FE 8 +e KITCHEN FOR 1 OR 2, 6i5 a& $16 a wk Utilities furn. Call after _* OR LOVELY 4 ROOM ee Elec. stove & refrig pe laun- dry room. 3 bedrooms, lots of closet space Only $60 per mo. MAple 5-9621 LOWER 3} RMS. & BATH, PVT. , Util. furn. FE 8-018 LAKE ORION. 3 RMS.. HEAT FURN. _ Adults, $65 mo. MY 3-7491 LAKE ORION HOUSEKEEPING cottages. Al) utilities. Winter rates 468 S Broadway. MY 3-9988. — LARGE, MODERN j ROOMS. GAS heat, $40 a mo. Children welcome. FE 23-3706. trie furn. $18, vicinity of Aubura _Heights. Adults only. UL 2-2494. MODERN UPSTAIRS APT ae turn. Phone PE KITCHENETTE APTS. Bice fare furn. fre," per week #478 Eaiond NICB CLEAN Ls sis ae, ier w. | ROOM. PRIVATE BATH and entrance. 2 blocks from hos- EVERY- 32-9754 ULTS anaes re sLWOOD | 7. PB 4-5203 pital. Call FE 8-2052 or FE 49490 " PLEASANT CO} ABLE CLEA _Rent Apt Apts. s. Furnished 37) 4 rooms, convenient! ag hs 213 5. Paddock. FE 2-6 |. 0R 2 ULTS, UTILITIES PUR- | PARTLY FURN APT. | Le PvT _Bished “oy 45863 MA 62800. 6311 W. Maple I FURN ROOM $@ PER WEEK. Foo __s____, | (‘442 Orchard Lake Ave Partate 4 ROOMS AND BATH ¢ RM APT CLOSE IN_ PRI_ | UL 32-1320 3286 Auburn Ave. Couple only. FE 4-8768 | _ Auburn Heights. _ lg 2 APART. TWO 2ROOM APARTMENTS — | ROOM. BACHELOR | Ments, on East Howard Oationd | | _8-2008 | 2 biog AND BATH $1250 WK. | Side in city. OR 3-608! } 32 7 ROOMS & ND BATY, NEAR BUS. Adults. No drinkers. 25 Monroe Bt. FE 5-2140. 2 FURNISHED APARTMENTS | Excellent location, across from | city library. Nicely furnished. In very friendly atmosphere 38 WIL- LIAMS, Apply Apt. 1 — FE 8-4355. 2 AND 3 ROOM, trance. 389 Osmun. vin ay, 2 S ADULTS. CALL APTER § 325 Voorheis 2 > 3 RMS. CLOSE Adults. FE 5-6162 WE TO SEARS. ATHS, HEATED. 6 & Hs 8 +1456 & BA Laundry ee ti Anderson. MB FRONT AND BATH , 225 Plorence. 2 ROOM. $11 . 31 Mt. Clemens Street. PE 32-1194 2 ROOMS, CLOSE IN. BABY W Wel. come. $13 a wk. FE 2-2300 or FE _ 51600. 2ROOM, KITCHENETTE, CHILD | __Welcome. 431 N. Perry. PE 2-5170. 2 ROOM APARTMENT, $10 WEEK. 124 8. Johnson, FE 5-0312. 2'2 ROOMS KITCHENETI£ ON Pontiac Lake. Modern. Clean, gas t. Responsible people. R 3-5292 after 6 p.m. 2 ROOM a | } { | } BATH. PARTLY | } oe af month. 647 2 pone. fe OUREKEEFING rooms. Adults. 71 8. Jessie | 2 ROOM APARTMENT, $10 A WEEK. __util. furnished. 75 Clark. 3 ROOM PURN. & PARTLY | APTS. furn. Severa) available by end o week. All utilities included. $17 $0 Tt week. 249 Orchard Lake Ave Il LI 2-4677 eves Se app't |3 RMS., PVT ENT, & BATH, FE, 35-8466. 184 Mt. Clemens St store. 2 children welcome. _ Fou. White only. 231 Osmun 13 7 ROOMS M8 UPPER, PRIVATE EN- trance and bath Walking dis- | tance to Pontiac Motor. only 11 ounces. Call G 1 Pie 685 8. Telegraph. (ost WEioim SAFELY AND economically with newly released a tablets. 98 cents at HAND MADE SHELL JEWELRY. 461 S. Telegraph Lot 76. ATE, | Inquire 22 Auburn Ave 3 A WE. Osmun_8t., 4006 al 3 RMS. & Ts. FURNISHED. Private entrance, bath. OR 4 3 ROOM, PRIVATE BATH, 354 South Broadway, Lake Orion. FE 2-0549. & BATH, PRIVATE EN- trance, $12 per week. Baby wel-— come. FE 8-143}. | | 3 ROOM FLAT. NEAR BUS AND | 2064 gis | 3 Reas.|3 LARGE ROOMS | re Inquire 273 | | (1 BEDROOM CORNER Children welcome. FE 8-0500 UNION LAKE — 1-BEDROOM aP?f Modern a bidg. Everything __private. Adults. EM 23-4386. | UNION LAKEFRONT AP. APARTMENT. ee Private, i or “ae NEW POST office, 3 bath Extra lge living rm. ries 4 furn $90 mo. All util. paid. 3-7403 ‘| Why Pay ie HEATING “7 = WINTER? We ty _ nowy. de te ay SLATER APTS. 63 MN. PARKE 8T. (between E. Piet E. Huron) Nites Sunday, see Caretaker MR” CAROL, 1 ARCADIA CT. Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 = Pree par opping and transportation. tact Mrs. Hollenbeck, 86 Murphy, 2 AND 3 ROOM MB. PARTLY PUR- Hollywood A ollyw rtments ee E nd Apart 13 ony. pr a welcome. $50 mo. _ 4-7581 or FE 4¢-0090. 2 Boaar SECOND FLOOR. CHIL- dren allowed Call FE 98-4436 3 RMS. & BATH. ARA' Util. furn Near General Hospital. _ PE 5-6766 3 ROOMS & BATH, Ri GERA- tor, stove, hot water & gas = furnished. Newly d FB 544. ROOMS, & bath. fiehanane eaten Adulte. 2-7236 after 8:30. '3 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH. Adults only. FE 5-6650 BATH. utilities, private entrance. In- 7 ues 100 100 Mechanic. BEDROOMS “AND GARAGE. EM 3 SOOM APT. GROUND FLOOR $65 per mo. White Bros. OR 3-13 37-1295. 3 RMS. & BATH, REPRIG. & stove furn. Adi 50 ve —_ only. $62. BATH AND GARAGE. mo, | 4 ROOMS, i eH ‘%S; pledge November 20, 1959, I mit, ne not be} Saiawin. co oo All newly decorated. res or an nm = Take Ave, FE 3-9145. _ tracted DY any other than myself. | 3 ROOM UPPER PRIVATE BATH| 4 ROOMS. BATH. HEATED | & PLASTER NEW REP. Roger a . entrance, no c ren. wal - . Work guaranteed” FE’ 5-030 Drayton Plains, Mic Auguste, 0 £3166 or UL| Hosp. FE 47108.” nai Dressmak’g & Tailor’g 17 joist 7 _ WELL Roomm |* rw 24856 or FE'3-0208 6” OPAPP LIL ILI DEBTS 7 Pvt. bath & hal), 4 large clos- 3 ROOM AR ae ALTERATIONS. FE ¢sees. #1 ‘ ets. Utilities furnished. Gas heat g Racial Florence Ave. sas consolidate all your bills &| Middle aged couple ore a yias | —sble._ Downtown. Call FE 8-8176. ALTERATIONS ON BOTH MEN| fave R or PE 23783. | 5 APAR #70 women's clothes. PE «8668 BubCer SERVICE 7 ROOMS, NICELY sROOe AP AnD, iT Florence Ave., Pontiac. Newly decorated. Utilities, Adults. ' progr b ay atny DRESSES. SKIRTS, COATS tA | — 103 Mechanic. FE _2-3460. AT 10) BLOOMPIELD shortened, reas, FE 42017 +s 3 ROOMS AND BATH IN AUBURN TO ST. JOSEPH Hi DRESs MAKING, DR AL- Party Favors— Raighie. everything furn. $70 9 | _ PITAL __terations, ete. OR 36196. WEDDING | NEEDS mo._FE 2-800i. DRESSMAKING, TAILORING, AL-| —Greeting Cards — Stationery— 3 ROOMS $, BATH, GAS HEAT. oo Motors. FS terations. Mrs. Bodell, FE 40053. OIL PAINTS j Bt. = 98 | DRESSMAKING. TAILORING. AL- . | 3 RMS. PVT. = & BATH. Ba- pg wy $ formals done | is mast Fp rE 21416 | _ She" Call after 4, FE forntehed $55 re nth. “bes WE SEIN. CUT AND WRAP YOUR 7 RM & BATH. TV. WASHER. bo. OE ee : men & women. Dressmak’g & fur _‘eer. Call PE 5- | Cottage, PE 4-8612 Se vg het 5 ER is repair. FE §2538. Edna Warner, Wed, Children t te, Board 28 3 ae a VATE 5.4153. ‘ COMPLETE FAMILY LAUNDRY time. FE _2-5031._ Licensed. ROOMS. PRIVATE BATHE FORT perview = Shirt, cervios Yeats ELIABLE CAR . =? | Laundry, 540 8. Telegraph. FE Day, hour of week. 36101 wn Cane Sons Gat IN Landscaping 21 on home. or part time. A-l ACE TREE service. re-| Wtd, Household Goods iy me Get our 2 Y ee Bat Be Baws BARGAIN NEEDS NOW, | _ vate 3 furn., & ¥ . Top soil. FE 2-0603 Top prices. Please ph. =M 4 TH E PON TIA CP RE SS ’ FRI DAY Y, NOVEMB Aa ER 20 , 19359 FOR TY -THRE E Rent ; 1ed 38) _Rent Rot Howe Unfors. 40 ___For Rent Roor Rent Sacais 42 : Pas Sale con ad ~ ___For Sale. Houses ~™ ” ~ TIZZ : Y By Ka te Osann | ___ For Sale Houses 49 Heuses 99 |UF Pues B.-A Sale Heases ” |2 BEDROOM | ares. __ 0 S$ =e UNION _ = LAKE vais |: é “ - CALL rE 3 vetrood™ ow BRE sy Py 0 xbow Lak efron t { CLO SE T O PONTIAC 2 BEDROOM cintty Lak e SING: eae m ‘ere ne TTR ruR e ster 1607 RM rae —_— ane oe we : ates ROME ta rE : BEDROOM, a eegem h Knott 7 i; Cals Paul A ; ee ee ca sro nom nag ares, abel Met, oe ey ‘ee mannan 2 . RCH Kern, pe BEDROO! 855 ey aes Se cs | oot ace, Enotty HARD st porns dae bee mmo mg) ti ders tse aot —B ene 7 BEDRO Of or FE 423 deement a ere it ‘go. seo moder are ee Ts T ROO} Sao TEAM | bath desired telephone O11: Te. oe AY ut y moseced ina CON M MODI Mi nent i Also’ oe Aral _ FE in. 3 bed of a ye i aan C ODERN e hot | CLE. sles AR’ $-333 TV a T room tu: lek e e-m ar’ oo 3 Led 2160 PA rE A tte 8. ees . Tote A erat thre reali ome n ED— N HO N : Y 1 Es os Hy wv = to Pontise t Great pene OME for retired ol ae Med =" w utiful view raves uy Reduced oi eee ees etm Perry raimle te a 4 r rgpine b iarae "pic Tg! -—- crates. 1909 De eae eat ie ete “ta ROME eel ok BOONE, 2-78 ipace Ea sot cee Benutifal -ty Barone * Gal sar 8 £ NA r | $3 ON y ploy jou rds. ae ee otaer ke Extr Pulls dining apt ets arimont dev Se QUSE. REPRE NEWLY “218 | 2 SLEEP. rates 1 garage! $00 full hen a = te “aper ori mn poor 4 after = . 5 ach he a wi eat a ei ore re: a _int tats. ‘OH bt ths aga pe | ‘ re ; 8TO ny . Race ae va ue Fs a ee a oe r OWNER, Me ee Sern | FES eee i serial son be ve ee Hs Spence sad ENT 7 a ¢ eee a :| Gee MUST SA wil oe Me ae iii oe a. ped a opus ern Rivare en a Se eeee are ca aa I Sn = _ \ a t on — ! } ea Se Spy s = BE tod ater fates | ay owneR ees a poe a aD H = yee .™ ears 3 ta ter Pa +i UTO ae H8000 wie | —~ 2 and geod. P | — Poel 3 2 D. HOUSE . OIL one cates tor T A tide.” FE i O a rms divin ; a3 rt. | nes al 8 BE a a Si wom = eo a ae | open est Senta Tags N . : ; Only esale I r 1 3005 A mF gun. 10 . oar FE loges_ 0 che lady Ake , imm ER cK, — oo “a S WE Must session. sarees. CLOS Living ee ate omepm.| Si ete FUR SLEEPING RO Pe G-s40 re} en ee pay. ie full b “Suburban A: with 900 pesermen s immodiste pee. fences.” Hu Spe Mg ~Heated m. 7 REDRQOM, cp aejcome. Ch N. | trance ROO 3 per a 3, story ; 2334 Aaeane drive f'va asement © Dan CLOSE — Chase te pee. al _ et ee oe URN tier hee 470. e. Che on! POE ca fest oom. 8ID pay- iS ERR Pe with oi 2 el —— o gg ele on City 875 be | — oldeing 3 tier OR 4 sad “bee _— Ob Roo 038 ae u gerege om. aT SIDE FR _ SBOR iia ace blacktop | 2 BR ho otis ot a“ nln — a elegy ea Se a 5, ae an eae a den brea Brick « PE Vito. oe soy ta atte rxcat Tao rE Bc Ba | as; . , A M “= n R P % Ss te Are 0 3-710 Rete eusignte. 3 " J cect Whit room, « Boa FE 2 FHA. pen yoga plac fed 6 tANCH Es ; 100 6A Te 1 tu 4. Bu ee the ti you IN URE erences ing. BDRMS burn R ~| he BOA rd 4015 I ond t. > e. irepl atta. ms HOM 6 { CRES rms, rnace mt peac es ade bs Fy ta heat ae * ection on 3 satu Ee ae Bord 3) haces mE Eas oe cane, fe ee em) ee. fee te ; oe PPT tion on 3.280 EE ook = HCE, DOUBLE oomfi merger _ 8 ited: alumina oe ae | pace "iden tale A a, Maa bb orehse ent end! an, 8 Beaeon M . oi pie fiel vase! ate hipaa Meaae ° See - Highs $5,000 r rent for pore att ROO & BA’ Qui a ee Attr d Hi : ns ia tee im ats ce FP eto 1 ighwey. inform room Ww re wives GOOD | ith ta good S } s E n P 2 or w at in or $56. a ‘a: M FE AT jet. ir b acti ch { EE ‘sta’ 100: de sto ain a ' pay a a ae: ant st, ean we a “gee, ees seine | erg aeh A THE ai tsa ts Wee) done neta oi os yom Be abies * maple chee iD. Newl = nail 5 onto ho ‘ b Aicape 2 hom (west Tate ee | ts the “for P gad orbs poet Willie . Wo dul h x DUPLEX alesc me oe (oe eon | up s1D 's. FE aie th Shot ee gard Bee } ms od am st Kg. Hemp’ eat Ae a orated | A - 2 Close aanaar ne lot a E.3 ase 203 k ios. } Roches L . | 5 912 2 Pp 2 After ak ee gs eke Po aoe a ee mes Sat he "Belertint np aban ‘ Se = adie eee . Po in 3 | riy ER. 2 pw po: 1 r EY Ss e. Mique! 7 Rlia Fer appsints athe oe ERTOL, ‘Homes 4 2 ects Sis Mad Bi oat ee aoa 1a AYDEN oes,| as sroN a ss ot 4 AND ‘urnished. * gape & at eat | re. dovh HOME F oo = ae adage urnace jORBA ea. MA ang =. N Fr =, - &- » ron Se eer at as wma |* 88 iu ae finn ta se ee ma: ete wa ate al-U ame re cress ae reirgeraiat. T SIDE «Rooms od SMPORT oon eer = ot moras wid igh corer oe | FOR a 4-041 Ce vlog 7 nba fur “a ashe AND corn. tare . FE +00 pe \y [ 7 sen e La onab Ne RO down WEST iD | ee Mm car's reation ted. r. | BA et pee ‘aoe ron i _ Vat ce tee sel wk used = BU a ce an car ecard ied & in — store 2, be aa | sone, ~ pci -S ro STE ww leetnn cea ie i sha sip Ys Y es plas’ Mea in i room or Good 1 n ED tion ed h A AN 8M Hi aie rp regs in ect: a iow eet eee el a a MME als Sales cele ae va fon Bt si VOY uh pa oar Wan erator, | 5er — 0.” bas zs Stor and woke wor Miiford. ALTY Roose fr rms. eatyine 47 fe ore Nana ADEs | Sor’. BEDR "000 ‘on te +0 ‘Seaar mena ebeal _ “ER TR: ~ x "B\ SZ, Se Lae wpetween Hg “ trade sinter, | Bgrinee! srase, tense terme he — ? e n SBLQOMrIELD ed, wave! waren oP wal meee = | aa mee | eve meses? “Ms un A ongaias ately neta pistes Menges a ae a aol Bt ea = ee Spee ttc a erie eed | Satta, Si me ve ov LLS INOHAM SR HOUSE 1 * > ota. house -R —= | ie a Redre Lk MU '/-20 | kiteb Han URBAN. in | pony hee wits fvin erytning aAM Sum M iG ene a —- gy bs utfey"r00 ste AREA “3 : } vaca fenced KEEGO— ‘| a oe youl at y L& oe he ‘5 ROOMS, 2 BEDROOM Soar ° , ent Of 231d ott ey ——e S wi eect ing roo on \ sink suas y ng byes NO sae BLT PLOvS jot — ae Ne gst ™ 7 fi Se | ¥ _—_ ourself rament 7 21C — . Poon ° enty Comforta and rig mes orth tee son re Reale re a - caae: fe Tepair care. ellaneous 48 “Ewin Phone aote a) 2 ICK - EN TO SEE ie ys ae Dow um “tthe eat one ois construe Planer rns oe Pp —N ~ a 1 e uw Baty a 2 tem ae 081. ca — CAR s 48 eau FR" nd. west aub- — — $7 cris ie Lg Pate - alte Pa « acre s beat. i) hdres = on _— at =. roger MO. 4 ae ‘this lee TARE sub- Greaie rooms, 00" SH awe bath, «toca heer ‘with meek ec Terms bail egnat, nee) ON TR owith ‘ - c . re 5 tl * gate “ use. : ke : ay HOMES o- st va ao priviiea com arge silent Me TED ngs mage = 7 aor DESIR ar garag oa pico ADE 3 Per PO! ca ‘aot c H inte na vileces: plete mi id eect k h. at AB rag hase t ROOM | PY vas ry Bt $t -_s ouses ait oS 3 bedroo : , Pon. — * ulvestmen Bone ba ogi pore nae F $1 “ARRO REA = oll eos pba — = IN . Pry Smal rt offe ty furnish | Telren ot 4-0082 1‘ lime I Desement. 49 aaa LAE BO a 1 BEE o easy Sonn samediate aoe FE SI re rar ted ais inatae. pian w]e tht 9 trade og |e iteat : eo soe | ee td nt ies Ba te _ eat ee nan i) rary tg Shere: ws Ba. = N srivee Lt a rari 7 y 3 TEARS =, Park os Bigeoo4 Sdea HA oe ee ane HITE os at |, REALTOR ye easenally ems AOE tered new 3b pur | too dota team mice 32" 22 eran aS Fo] St tp ee set i oe UTE B mal cyLVAN \ rey See ees aa eee ars At - ES Bese * eae li fossa oe set VW ALT pie Bae “nSXEYAN 2 prvoenusy 1 carte pias vee a or piae Ru som ea an. | as Posey AN a a, ing 5 Be 4re J ey oy tlable canal Pull bedroom ¢ Lar Schoal ON ~ piite i | dei EVEL N V Sundsy | ment ust b bar rec. are | drei age teens ars oe bee oneept ee tne to axe ¢ BATE. i puilaule Dont 0 aR 4 Red i acs| ent ou st, e ney | Mis ‘Gi A ee pis} JO a i “— a Located ai ish r 18 = 94 en & Pi ~ Monthly _& the car "ann NT It pa ed h down ot alas a ra C haic-linked chad Be til 7 Glen a GE } ink m by cer} po e — exches by wel + he rmiteed 986 Seite Abt bee trom co. Fr cansiaered “~ nie tad hi *s E _ A. wood. vogue | R Irwi car! Some LL HOUS ™ See § Sa Re 12. FB ae i > room. Ou ” Lake 18 andizs N angus Be 3-3311 = ae it oon = . M. Cat fon at rene we ALORS, Sor dens — E = ow iid a aa TER: si 1- $8 mara : St your own 5G ieee ve sa ice Cc tell, * z Ay 1925 18 dandy Coole neat three we — part 1 mo. 3 Roseuire th pag at, k 4. eS & ANCE b a t ' val b neat OSE B __Ev! urep wom Aig og Lak roo Bae: _ eye NCE 5 _nogMas 2 i “of Sisthung "aoen, ae DRAYTO pane. iss |” P rr | sem am m wilder See asa PO rome te rae te 7 os ie nee Beco ET miss spent, artris Bee | "| See te or w Le. 4663 eee 38 $65 & ED 3 2 F AR AB e re & —— = rust | | 4 paler iv a —- ey crete mnie. aremsnt, teat shove # = $100 DROOM Sere PRI ee, "SMI T ‘ea iste wie ts | LO Aa pies a 1-07 0 oes ’ : ‘ . | a vies eee Ee lena otto WOMre | © faraaee Su aoe MIT — SSiat t pene rione PON R Nae 5 beth Brn pay- Ay we sha fit oat a or OU a nom hear al, = | F pai an garage, ios =, root - NTIAC O Saginaw tout R ROO} © dri 1 ren : . , cee WN ost 7 stor Too! AREST EPH S mod ‘or Ls mode GH : Dail » KE Mile. aN he =! if FoR ni a0 Peer AND | city ROM = REALTY ms Tee ee y 7 ore enclo daipe AR . Ever} r teas ** Iso" Ceramic bath. vn were gee FE FFICE y a 8 ealtor ROO! “oat eae oR RENT 4 oon rE Om | pm. ae Brick, 7 FOR BA R Pee trans. witn au — ry a ee a Heh Boece. a fore Plastered jute E 8 OPEN ¥-01es it aoe 5am NICELY tion « ROOMS me. 24018 |? a ‘ 2 ¢ emont ALTY es. Pric t porch et K weet. Pull’ price = wear Q ves i tion, Ez Ra on 1 bad CK. EDROO! oR mre “AR OA. OR TY ae dow Pri rou porch, hom price 018.900 ‘Lake walls. DO Es ae | re ae | fe via Ber ieee ad Shes o ca | Erste i ese , R300 ter nee Be S'peaa, tate na BATH bs MT BATH afters Se 1 DRA to pu nauced «ora acre living room BURBA peive you cap ne ace cae} ee tert niece. | fom eon eau, wi re ¢] cREPRDM ‘es Past coy eetation ot vince, So eee i ore momorg tate, i _ Tiams ae uple fr aooM sta ME a7 nee wed alt : Apo le. - Clos wi ho: into _FiMhowoseed toe per, Loca Loom 3 bed e ‘om te. ba “ KNOTTY | nd hots with | 8 ce eae e th k me thre rT ong ( ROO Vacant BE ae re lems laketr ae = nr | bergein Oo 2% BR bed alum ee } R i Ov —— i td Full see A ie a Yn a A Pilea 8 rey ti I ears A ar er bt rge -aesporm 12n12 al Ag EL catoe | ane: ‘ot ee rare ls. gare ay rene o pearl wae UnCE OR iM, $1 sn RA fireplace “ MODE * pane fe a i eg APTER pesca H venutl i= pe ppc ; ri vath aa clon fre room HIG any ane tor onl MALL : Call us be sr gy Floo Sania _ Sa oo eae dare genx | Harm than 1 ea ae ft or baa Sa | screens aoe ae aed omnes ¢ a acne alias See ee worth st te Fe oa ge. $180 fe 8. ear 800 i's ane’ ya potter th % mye h bn of fo De a bs wi os Union 4h, 2 eoeae Morea 8 REWE #180, yard. Clos an oy sown Or tum.“ t. OLD ter P your ae and range. well ke like ‘ne | Abe bah, ne ining ares eat fieers. per te tron = ae = rae ok pan a ag ie ES Bee bE ernie ene tS | Be ee ws! eget oka La Lak bedrms (iy en or FE MG “ROOM. M oO & alum Cc OS ent 5 $21 i) ve er tt sid le ns t ri rf ite | ur a . "ats fae INFORNISREE (Remon eT mon. | frre gate, pe | rn a ae segs in ae | ite jae vetener gd a eatin gon Ste care it R e he uire 7 % tons 4 pri shed OD nt sank Gi SEMINO su a4 eH S ttre col- nt or " pa me tleges ts with he at | WRE good bu ens h FORRIERED HOME = ae aie ar a noon | ‘a ge SPER, ONG! os Sa | ate” 2 SRO % Smitt cine] mom ot ew i eagede tte ns 7m wee “te : HED DUCK eee ‘ket. ub ’ ROO! low NO 1 or err raph rR ade or oO ces -Bed le price was Lak on L ae _p.m. ig a Hills rapt RS ES v Y you sand Poe = ake nd _ on Ms do ed Low, 8183 : B M Sunt é al Fu TER .- F T La Too aS aes Fe ae LPH Sh “epee Cat ae = Beco = NI ee Toone pe sat HOO :) —_ R trom Rance a _tertor. SED COUPLE as som Sicaen ae a 7 oo ¢ rme IR aac _ will Litind —_— a8 | si a ; BAN ALTY _REALTOR garage cup eat ac 248 ROOM HO m h ON e {e) $-8264 _to lors nd Do / . 8 — pr e walls on tae ———_——— = ¥ -well-landses! Mocenfieté K oboe nee MO Co onan r_ 8. : — yeect bath R iN ER ney oly tie = FE ’ E eniowen exterior oe REGO 7 ad ODERN a ag is 7 = In $45 PET ‘ orn 2 hg or ba “—_* ae A trees ae —- 2-0066, ur Y oe — . beer pn oom H on | ace RN ¢ ROO aE. HURON = ER ras Le S rage $13 508 : nes oD 8p, | te N Loca tied family nBreplace, «Rit welcom from ARB Pr n sc hem —r oe this we tend M 5 A de c m. — 3,500. out haem ap- hite 50x300 toe } fami tile . hie Tiree OR [ODER ols. on tae sin ree, pedres MON st 11VE ae ; — ot white treme Rte om le bethe. dames __ weekl peeiens 1896. race in ols. NA Aw —— age al ——— NTH bed tak A Tm Gl ms. ster Clem: on eee cit patio oo nfory a oak me ; =. ‘vedroom, Bore aise vou BEDR 7-365) poe Mm ing shor | insurance pacsedrtape ere WAY own eR This es 1 SPECIA — — and 4 rnime i ty limite operch ee A aw ing. flabing ——— pad EY re eto M. HOME — rks: Cc pe taal iilead Eeec — wy B genome bait Is bee _— fered rg vam a 2 EDIATE RGE R NO DO mon “tata x oor “ a el See sts x - Ot | An $18) tan . wc ene 1 EXC , | 2160 PA oars. 3 alu wai: peers = at = hos te al on Hag eat Hrd ac —— hom full rooms aiasend and wn u full MO Bud” NOW ae r Road ly A Ge fe) oc Cc. N e lum : oan ae ne 1 a 3 n fo ww ti eal 0 ly st e. This ct re igo pri +23. deter — m HUNT |_Per viKO & 1 alit _M-1 GU: ec tnum reet, ins oo a A cm eee his rede orp ly — $10. a Oa ——— in 10N ach {PAYMENT ce Ni ! fecal We imiten tre ish sea & RE r\3 (18 ort C Re: caret, 1608 inte ip 20 Pay- growing ate fama well- ——s or ane la Se wich is home ie 1 Gorse — @ os - |e + icholi mily | nit too ie need Ox ae 2 EE | BEDROO rtonville Realtor Wood (a wae A ame lly hase. for — room on ee aree Pickary purchased ne el in porch Call an en ick, and ral 1201 Mt. holie R FE #-9661.| . ut re A Ly | lag mod Maggy er eal on on | ble Pn 2 = ea m Led night MODERN. tiee | rk agg ~ D 9661. ce a. le gn NA oO he oven e Lane, He y- nish ath e Fe cee m ern full La s mily w nel a feet . cone outs! t Tam or ens Ito cor wed a ee nee reac ee | Seen eee eet eer me | Be ‘aha me | Eh same Sores | Axx, oRI0 jou eo “—n y Snyd cea gas |at Bats = all Room L edsin' yard Nee re when could tne ite sia . Ch, earee? lus eoaievel: rip Severe" Fan “base with. brick a wants garage, ne rem — om Ph 700 Realtor e $ mo. 8 road ath eno Le ea ba could | P ath ment int ~ aa e plu ine e ip oe a eat se rpet ck ss with : te EB igre “eterno la mm eslie R Be new Ne ent, —™ ‘. 1% basne “ oe story Steen Th loveliest — ® burr tle ah ro rooma 0 init mp tain lakes. Tred repel — « departs on t repl M r Ick 4 ON, 1 BEDS ee | _ Renner month i HOME 1 Lapeer | TRO Huron Realtor house fe ehh aoe ite ei erate ED and ‘pave siete ce pease ines Sane | ogg. mY HE aber x ed sig Bee cal Fn eaves ron = ae By oe ee ba Pie pie eiaanemn Lak =e Er 10, REWL nes oom ly $75 Coa 800.00. $2800.00 44278 | wectifice oe oe sieoping Coie aye a intr fine $858 sho dy gar and 3 BEDRO y appetnt 2 ee TATE PARTLY FO ‘10 8 Lee oR. house nae fetter be ® _ 2° bedroon DRA Miadle Btraits | soecha MU Gwoer bet SEL $0856 keep . cee ad alae om ite, with bea ae " homes mec © Fale en ee ers a) oa re oe mE | ist Sia ae toe eee ee ws wee nae Pe ian seeu al a ee mon a aaat Oar ERT OR GALE tine Me 120 4 ool Must #6 Peoeed is pisces. Ua RETIRED Pris heat play! Bedrooms con up = “ue sifu REA Pu Tamily room Lecnsed S SON ke th. hea ome 8A onl Mot ROO Bu 50 ust ced t Le eeo he riar eat All Eco! me" plu foveche SE LE ADE LTO Ful oak roo! arge s Pitta iste 8 Couple re on ae PES OM sds 3 sem ag “Y in pad a, live. ro gg 2 Meo ae i eee a ni I I “onli rE RS ment sa Sa < 20 U ON AEE ese. An - ee bed re PE 5-845 gaudien all Y 2-378 wi Paging ART as — S es l Go 8 Pe te t fir eaeea| ne YEA R Ort soar ER NLY DESO: n Car roo BuY ake. R M 3 Subdivision t ™ M amt Fae Re he me m $1 com cadet ir hi to TY ER +15 er | is Of Les a Terenas ANIEL RS on. fA Ren m™m E ONTH isi home dP in ren mt T Ee od. 2.900 pa nd eat ge ook ne a E or oe eee ee See eel ere Bete) 2 a eer, Et Seuss | Se rare mar nite Be shes 00 hen vis Ut 1 hington.” Par a ME MOD. 6 : ake parent ALTO! Bde look ADE Sg —— e ong Bonet 1 #0 5, Bellevue te noth oe lity On, ‘or $800 D aii ut | a MOD. ¢ i ments = row sas ers at L KE ULTIPLE | o¥™ ight en. car strict, Attracts NOTH -6 0 bd home. . eM F ne — ’ thy Snyd r terms fer 2 peer N. PY ana | Flint, Mi gu Fr hes evervt — A HAPP | E LISTIN REALTO! you in Brg ofl ‘Modere es 3 cn. . ING Fence carer PE egy ven er Lav mle rammedia YMT ‘ RKTT » ONO Fe om rom Pires eau mite pienso aes WEBSTER si8oo “down teh room “ba DOWN ilities groun: 0 _ 4 Y¥ end Cc ON tale pe : bed “FR yeaa mata ar aay ace. ro ecomaa! pat f str 8c wn Mot bane N! wa . 1 fo 2388 303 Rd ear er Ss $1 © ° ns oO 71 a ecre d our: di le disine all of oF ful tet A mo di — : < rity. 24 months repay. Our $3.50. Couch, $0. ae al berg Pe CRUMP ELECTRIC 30-gal. auto. heater, $54.95. RD FINAN 1188 N. TY. metal awnings and picture win- FOR RENT OR LEASE. USED service is fast, friendly, and hel $10 each. Rug & 3465 Auburn Rd Cab. sinks fi . Hvar up eee ear General Mospttal, spotless dow. Reduced for quick sale 7 500 OR Tn ee ARE, USED | ful Visit our office or phone FE 38. Girls "20" “tuts, sie | UL 2.2000 FE 43573| Laundry trays and stand & fau-| NICE Sera ‘sires DRESSER WITH rooms rge ving room e on Baldwi . NERAL ELECTRIC RIN > cots. 9.95. Gash a bev ror piece Vv with ft . hug room, ! Siar Ge Mauee ave HOME & AUTO 2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SET, Sl bar cpus wishdne ” sence’ Dookie ‘SAVE PL ko” — like “new. Men's al sun olga. Bend — ya oo -e — LOAN CO. _ condition,” 2 Loner wr Ss, good prea laundry tubs with cover. 172 8. Saginaw ss FE._‘5-2100 —". vlc aipgeca cent, cise 36. 1 _OFFI condition, reasonable 36114 aple finish chest of drawers. | 225 GALLON INSIDE TANK, | —_—_— becca tee te pee aseesion, 4- 05 8 £44 EAST BLVD. wat omen apees On ‘rem 1 N. Perry St. Corner E. Pike 3 LGE. AND SMALL DESKS, $10/ Set of six steak knives and forks, | used 1 year. OR 3-4473 | NEW 1ST QUALITY B 2 fast nasa es ee up. 3 pe. dedrm. 429. Bota beds, | brand new. Call PE $-7710. | {982 NASH STATESMAN. FINE | 9°? prey sanding totes West FE ¢3560 FE 5-584! SELDON 0528. BATEMAN MP- $15. Beds, $4. Living rms, $19 | NT pg oSLOHTLY motor, bumpers and glass, body | a pe NACE by —_ “REALTOR — a . A NS © a. = eeirigr.. washers, | marred. 1060 W. rusted, 815. 2 storm saab end : wivcta. Maple 61901 yunsereS , 377 i FE 4.7833 - a sizes, up. eaters TONERS screens for x24"" uble hung WM. A. 8. TELEGRAPH: OPEN EVES WANTED. TENANT TO SHARE| ‘©9870 9000 — $28 TO $500 $20. TV's, $23. Everything for | FE 3.8183 windows, like new, $25. 2 Firestone | OLDS ‘51, HARDTOP 98. NEEDS lease of building in Drayton | 39 & COMMUNITY LOAN CO the home’ EZ terms. THE BAR- | KENMORE ELEC. SEWING WA: | S0nis Sina ‘hives, “gaa re | imagnanlcel wore, Aba gas eed Plains Ideal locat i p CE FE 80421| GAIN HOUSE, Buy-Sell or Trade | chine, 9x12 FE : Ox15, small mileage, $22. FE| utility trailer. EM_)-4634. i] Income Property 50 _ ts: Press "Box ply Poo PRIENDLY SERVICE 103 N. Cass) at Lafayette, FE SeWMORE A See es i VERY 4-378, Monday. ______| Ong aiIico QTL BURNING Wwa- i ee Ga OR jaNT Pan: GET $25 TO $500 6842 oe \UTO HER AGAR's SUPPLY, 1016 MT. CLEM- ter heater, 20 gallon e u0 W HURON ST S 2 PAMILY APARTMENT. ¢ ROOMS | ficating, Approximately | 1500 on rouR ~ J ROOM OUTFIT BRAND NEW. | KENMORE WASHER. I ee ee ee ee Call PE tude ; up and 4 down. Close to schoo! square feet with garage door and ‘ All for $295. Pay only §3 week- wiinzer A Said LIKE NEW. a P pol. ormica. Insurance Peavy G_EVER GM * -@TRATHMORE 231 WEST pper apartment occupied, lower office. Write Box 93, Pontiac ly. Pearson's Purniture, 42 Or- _timer. $35 od a2 aa rollers, | eater jl ogy Oy A Oe wtone eeaaenabie. 38 Waldo. Satur- ‘ V Nothi D See preety can coe ea | 1QI lature j= aa cx | KITCHEN STOVES. ak wo WOOD | Water Beater, 967.30. Open T' days = — rty as only ’ 38. CI ILIANS Ing own eb for appointment after 6 Business Opportunities 59 Up to 24 Months to Repay ‘en new. FE 4- aie” = combination. MAple arma CORK-TONE TILE. 4% wc nee ‘Sanaa Gal., $1.10 PDL PP BA A - 2 . ee ) ii - Pibered f - 7 AN ACRE of land for the INCOME SPECIALS COTTON C.ANDY MACHINE PH. FE 2-9206 6 PIECE SIEVER GRAY BEDRM |CARGE CRIB AND MATTRESS | CSch’ peg-sopg | “MOO S| Rolled smecth Teoting 3.98 . $190 kids to ang What a buy 4 family apartment house $27 booth & gu or First §225 ad karge ichiest - wantt saapae Brand new, $15.95. Pearson's Fur- = - Rolled slate roofing ...... $4.70 mous Cope Cod family Bee eee i en tee | Dane All for $50.0. Pay only ¢2 week” | Toveeess re ene Ave. No” Asphalt Shingles & Galv. Nails ous ape fami ¢ on Auburn Avy 18,500. ig : - EUROP! mn mons Cope Cod fomily 2 a0 Ae e. Only $ so DRIVE: a ‘RESTAURANT ly. Pearson's Purnitur Or- LEAVING POR EUROPE DEC. i8T. | 9x9 Inlaid: Tile oe. -6¢ Ea. is a OTHER COSTS cu and ae dees: 4 BRICK § FAMILY APTS x20 = building, 60 foot front- Loan Company chard Lake Ave. : ~~. for sale inclu: match- Si Oxcane tale Ae 3 ‘wa = tan rooms end space for Walking distance to downtown. SFr Rotphed for nectancant | 202 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. |7 PIECE -IVING ROOM SUITE Belabin Soin ope tent | “BuyLo” UNCLAIMED = a ~ ‘years ‘Auto. hest end hot) Path up pera P al M | ce R IE Good location for any business Ss Ses. Bad. Sonate Seriganet | Brand. ew Saveepecs ond enels.| Soe ieee Scrat, etre ue: “TILE OU water - screens. Aviting aul MM. jones “s ust se with $1,000 d , ] “IN i ou oa oa modern step table tchi etc. inowapple. Clarks 2488 Very nice. _ comparison at $11.00. gome aad eS, Neal St. | peut mM. JONRS.” REAL BSTATS | TEAGUE FINANCE CO.| cottee ‘table. 2 decorator lamps, | _MA 51587, ¢1 pm aly. | AA HEADOUARTER’ SI ECIA Vecant Upmedinte pessceston. cheat teas clear nao FE +8380 ie 0500s ee 202 S. MAIN cottee, tae’ Bay cahr on wants | GGhOLeOM = Paar aatx mais | AA HEADQUARTERS LS walk to and look at tt and ve tuterest tools OC nie oi 214 E. ST. CLAIR| tate ate ee rene eS AUTOMATIC” boas for chain saws from $89.50. We Cage wen rt Fes Sale Lake Pro rt 51 le ul etal parien Ons 7 ake Ave. | NESCO AUTOMATIC ROASTER. guarantee we will save you BxtzB Pime ......00-.cc00 SOC 06. FINE EAST SIDE Dutch For sate Lal pe y ity parking 24 -ROCHES STER ROMEO ,® 9 VENETIAN BLINDS. EUREKA $35. 307 N. Perry, money. Terms. 30 days. DAYS WO 33380 wine sotaral fssyinte. Dee COOLEY LAKE HOME and BUSINESS LOANS $28 TO $500 carcatus, & feces Atlee, OF pea, ce LEE'S SALES & SERVICE Aeon Paee Seees, grehant eae Sat. & TO 8008); Fae ee i Nedruc Season 3 ici run | | SELL OR TRADE AUT washer, dresses, size 16. coats.| Reasonatien SON. eaning silver. | 921 Mt. Clemens PE 3-9830| Firebrick ... 100 ea 2S bed - basement. auto oil furna GR 2 GAS PUMPS LIVESTOCK Kelvinator refrig. & misc. PE sonable. Telegraph. FE — soot SSQOOSCOOUEC ; Gan bantoeles ant Gok oil furnace, near | GROCERY. |: HOUSEHOLD GOODS : | _8-9894 ANCHOR FENCES " sement, gas heat 2- bl akes grocery. $6,500. $650 LICENSE 2 My tg OL oT OL 1-971) — 44-4301. ~_____________| NORGE WASHER. FLOOR MODEL. | oe ¢ PHA 4 100 9q. ft. insulation ..... $ 3.87 pe e Near church, . : 2-3518 L 2-3510| 9 PC. BLOND DINING ROOM SET, own approve: aes and. bus line Hurry Paul M. ones, Real Est. | 2,ACREROF LAND. Steck toven: | TY Patewpry senvice $150. MAyfair 6-5017 teria, $128 we Joes pe PREF ESTIMATES =; os , 00 Ib... ..... 3 on this one—It's . ed ee pcre Netanya 9x9° RUG. 3x9 RUNNER. 6 PC | Store 8. vice | BOLIN GARDE & 5 Storm windows any sise & sha rE asso W: Heron ss aiss| 400 monthly. Owner retiring, Good Borrow with Confidence | “dining rm.; 2 blond tables. Trade | _5-6123. any ENGI: attachments. OR_3-7461._ spores Glew sigs ie Mpa SETUATI? o& 6 greet bg F mS ee meat and grocery business. Near $25 to $500 or sell. PE 5-500. _ OVER $0 USED TV SETS, Rom BOWLING MACHINE. RING-A-| Snot Pine anciing. sa. ft 16s Established to 1916 gray cedar or Sale Resort Prop. 52 52| 3 lakes in Milford area. $22,000. 9 PIECE WALNUT DINING | 4.95 ball. Ctean. For recreation room. shakes bungalow ving « ———V—OOoOOoOeeeerreeeeeem $7,000. Down or wil pp land Household Finance suite, like an MA's 21 Boos = SU ra _ a $35 each. FE 2-1320. mplete line of aid be aan — Bore Na Tied bed Penced naturally Very cirnetivs LOANS TO $500 FOR DOWN Pay-| CoDtracts or other real estate in Corporation of Pontiac 9 X 12 RUGS, $ “a WALTON TV BEEF AND POKB 8 AND bi materials = Cire Matinee vce Woe) icons plewavans | RIMS PUES Sh pity! | Sart nel Eilts Wins | Mt cette So asoe Toutes Fat, ties 215, E Walon cunriers Opéree kt. PE S181 | FHA Te FREE Estimate rarer cee Ose, Ne | TN oe Pocry at. FE 8 St FE. 3-1e88 Res PE easly. | QUICK $25, 70. 4800 LOANS Shover’s OLDER MODEL REFRIGERATOR | “Sus furnaces. Hot water ds steam Open #-8.30 MON. thru SAT. = $425 ' s 204 E. Pike St. $55. Studio sofa $1 : Deadtory Iat. Wite 8 room mes-| see this woe.” “_ Suburban rban Property 8. 53 HAGSTROM NSN. PERRY STREET. |¢-FCTRASITIONML- OUTING Fir | Mable fist too deat “chair, $0 | purdeare sise: sappine aera | ORPLUS LUMBER ern 7 with cer, Uled bath Tue meee bent tee | Basv Parking — Phone FE %-9661| set. 2 pc iiving rm. set, also |—weple hutch MI 62330. tile bo Heo st ys oe Ng cody & MATERIAL co. ~Y = c n- e B dome. 10 csr garage) RAY O'NEIL, Realtor M t sudan cig 3 beatae kone wi) |6OWWLLES YOU NEED | 232 eee. oboe Rebuilt Trade-I =i) meer Wemlans aad sane te, FLOOnS: —I mAs sa sgn mi oon es! IVLETATIOTA | featiuttee iit "en eitiar | $25 TO $500 | Zal2 Felt Base Rugs aoe eee ace came er ceeeag | apenas tig. anc? TNT’ . equipped 30x50’ restaurant doing | We will giad to help you. AL. $3.15| FRIGIDAIRE Auto. washer. In- HTS Y minutes. {ote ‘conage. Fart bath, imme. HUNT AREA an excellent business That Jou) STATE FINANCE. CO, | ALCOHOL, HI-TEST | ystaied, Guaranteed. Tike-new. "| Sor nnPeer Ra Fe_4.sen | _Warwicn 2078 orenara Ur Ra diate all derattere. # ACRES — Remodeled Ranch an operate for a minimum of 4%-Ft. W a |MAYTAG WASHER wm pump.|BOLENS AND WHEEL HORSE —— te ae a. _ house w-barn — $26,000 expense There is approximately 702 Pontia~ State Bank Bidg. \y- t. all Tile ene .25¢ Guaranteed, Deliver tractors snow biades jan | r gg price i $3. B00. 10 ACRES | — Remodeled Farm | 2:2 scree of land with 288° front FE 4-1574 Syer's 141 W. Huron PE 4-306¢ MOTOROLA TV. 21’. “Guaranteed, snow blowers Will piek up and | | Genuine Sebon! Desk, only $3.88 : le py eeee see ae wis , lowers. Will plek up and | Cupolas—Special ........ 7 2 acne — “ 8 ACRES <"" Remodeied ies you the value in this bargain Mortgage Loan 62. ® X 12 RUGS, WOOL FACE. $15.95. GE REFRIGERATOR. Like new. mowers. ete Give us en Ev. | Garage Sid s+ eee $19.50 on paved Pr aoe pas House w-barn — opportunity. $23,000 down. Own- nw ortgage 8s P4 Reversible, $1650. I orted, Guaranteed. Delivered. ans Equip. 6507 Dixie Hwy. OR | Clear fir. 100 ft. pnd bet with brooseway Pega OXFORD -L kK “ORION ee part trade. Inves- 070 OS sag Axmpeter. gs.te. Ru _ 31024, MAS-7878 LE | Black — ard. , Hues se Ides! for garden ly ACRE lit-Level : “meas ence: TO $2000 Orchard Lake A wee COMB. STORM DOORS, hogany Ply. 4x r = 1 edit AT GOOD $450 40 Ma y 4x8 $4 a pets: Sse Mast] | $950 Down » ACRE = SpittLevel 4 bedrm on Oakland County homes, Mod-| iz" table mogel TV “Hes | sO URE KEEPIN Pontiac | Sat ll hot water heater and 220 | AUBURN LUMBER : ay OE oe A good buy on this 3 bed = | 3 ACRES — 3 bedrm. brick ranch m so = 17" $24.95 |§1_ WEST HURON | FE +1506 | Tsien “Orese ‘tank. 600. PB AUBURN HEI EAST SUBURBAN — Convenient near 8t. Michael's ‘Large ‘ ACRES = Lake front 4 bedrm ags TO Vors & Buckner, Inc. 24" Rs teen table model ..$44.95 aPectal 0X12 RUGS 424.95" MC- CIMBALOM—1 DICTAPHONE, R —— a a down “ter “this y tne oe ce ee brick raped — #44500. EALTORS 200 National Bldg. _PE 64729 / 8). other sets to choose from, | PE 210 ne” WoOdward. | ducing eit Jig saw. Thor troner = | SIMPLEX CHALLENGER. GO- rm. e ment with new gas fur- 5° ACREg = Lake Yront 3 bedrm 4900 monn abn D ™s BIG BEAR CONSOLIDATION| 4 eg PM sk _| Chrysler convertible. Trailer. TV Karts 1 or 3 es. $29 do Sipe nna cy he] aah ch Perhteen | AM ct tae? RST | AIR TESETAN OR MON | Monette nes Sr tay | ihe Seana ted ane PIER, ROTOR POP CE rte ee | ee ee . Immediate pos- “Die ‘ d -035 e man who has one. Call us, changed. Turn ; - he = Jot Reasonable total price of| Session. SNY DER. mar eat Oe Fo 7 pin? £82, Ree Jou. ono . Most sets new picture tubes. We | ens FE 2-001, 2 Mt Clemr COLEMAN fa Eg 5 FI ie | SPECIALS aM & es _ Ove re FI Family Home KINNEY & og | See, Soe Slee Uven (ii Ww. BURom Ore 3-185 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. FB 44048. a gy ee Oe FURNACE WITH BLOWER, bireh finish pines * RD gd O) yd ent Inc., Realtor 4 dedroom “with ‘partially B ENN if rT | down. Take over lease . 33-7342 Swaps 63 | ee Ji $14.95. Wringer type washers. | 060. UL _ 32-3427, ee ee ere 3," select white maple G2s *hi7 oa 2200, Dixie Hwy. st Se ge | fimished attle thet could be OA 8122 MI_47000' MACHINE SHOP SPACE. WARM. | aes ad oe conversion. FE | Stowe. Terms. Curt's Appl. FE| Cash & Carr Specials Genuln i appa 65e 7 = ves used as Sth bedr 2 [aa i : wr 84. AMPLE CU PARKING garage Full basement Lo- . For Sale Lots 54) oe “on main” highway, Enquire | z ierfara Drive kl Trade, eaniy ih) 1 BLONDE © __________| 80FA BED, SOR GooD GORERTIGIE | ankwes coasting | ae *yeldwin Are Oo rs 5. os bing oe ene ae ae eee LAKEFRONT LOT. LAND®CAPED { a iat Highway, Drayton} 24 - & clear housetratler. car, ‘very ee Oe ee | 1x12 WP Shelvin 00 sq. ft. 390 SWING SET & SLIDE ik yaaa information. Barbecue, also lake privileges lot | nd _contract. or what? OR 3-3371-| 1955 BENDIX AUTO. WASHER 1x2 W.P. Stripping G2 lin ft, | — fe. 6220 Ascension, Clarkston . _Terms EM 3-2961 | ; Owned eo rag _ | Exc. cond. $50. FE 3-7744 Shingles 318 i 7 oe hig SINGER ELECTRIC SEWING ANNE Will Trade — oF ees o i ar Yl e ment on this modern home North | 1058 SIEGLER OIL SPACE HEAT- eee ed Laue art dt oO eoig = in walnu: 2 family inside the city on a lot? See g side Black top street Basement ers. At’ pre-season special prices. . = oni: Oe Par tel Wil tak housetratler or > aoa A Pe 8 0661 CO., 1185 is TRE “BIRD 4 oa ml bath. Total price G. A. Thompson, 1005 M59, West. Oil Gas Home Heaters HAGGERTY “LUMBER pn ge I al —_— new ear for 5 mica Lf “BIRD” TO SEE 7 at $76 r month} BTOV > . se Nin dt — Only $150 Down jee Scismeen tal ie phocarts pair EORCED TO SELL 4 a. Roy & ins ore int ' FE 40340, 686 B Columbia Pays foal rey & SUPPLY ps teed AGE OF THE BAR us a 3-roo sacrifice — lar wooded lot 1 CW. ad fis ate session 1947 4 at AR amet enmetians ts jes 8 2iyom | apartment eet ett Soren ane OAKLAND COUNTY J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor AUTOMATIC WASHER $65, MA | NO MONEY DOWN — TRADE IN wateaesica” ‘een t es Fixan CE uss) N. Perry. FR own ‘this 3 Dedroom home and large lot Can for fur- biack top roads. near eiemen-| [LAKE HARDWARE | 8% F Walton PE 8-044) | — $28 ee, CIRCLE FLUORESCENT Lidia. | —~s* Ee hcl Sit) fer “wlormatin In" sc "Sat esi JAKE LARDWARE 7.5 2" Caxauaanpatons | Maaztna GROW HQ za aw. SCHICK'S "MA S.s711 | WSitaire Mee ich | Bp SARIATION RY at Riahway ‘ riental rug. by Karast: Like cabinet dinettes a STORE rem Antam, chomek GILES REALTY CO_ | amen PROEECTED, || atthe tgtatateiiee oar | nr Sitter weer | Eta, UCM cTat Ar | Ee faehy Myke Re | Bag ioe Fectory| Bulle battant etett . Price reduced to §6,-| FE 5-8175 a BALDWIN AVE ite i=* be loutatat pand into boats and marine type = | «6eerifies fer ete.66 Co. 1060 W. Huron. mended actory Showrooms. anees. ~ your neighbor-| sales. $10,000 down and stock 5 ]° J rg ee Per Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard 118_WEst OPEN 9 AM.9 P.M hood - don't buy where you a $45 ER MONTH ments of $9.15 per month. Capitol TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON 2 “ = Ow tL - _ MULTIPLE Listing SERVICE | house will be down graded. | aa Includes taxes and insurance for | —APPliance. PE Be9407 |“cuble ft. freeser. 56 upright. (one TALBOTT ‘LUMBER ne eaving tate You Can Be Sure this 2" bedroom modern home. | ABUUT ANYTHING YOu WANT | OR Een CASH WAY Redwood fence | pickets. Glass Beautif ric fram . 7 rT > t ‘pc ‘orced @ eat, stered walls, OME BE RANG oroses, or wate ” ranch, convenient tana COLORED WHEN You BUY IN- RI I IRE IN 10 \ RSi7 hardwood floors, aluminum storm FOUND AT L & 8 SALES. | a R B. Munro - Ra...3 _ LUMBER PRICES Wood Lag i at a“, Lack to o3 oa ba ly oe carpet-| HI-HILL VILLAGE ney ae bi look into this pec gv epeigeni Will trade Gate out me way but a lot | 1060 W. Huro STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS out. 1025 Oa room ning e! | @ restricted c t ith! ‘ iallenging combination. Present equity for late model car, trailer bd pay ure and appili- | USED sTOR Winaawe za . basement with! ON NEVADA STREET. between! Winding paved streets, Besatiful paid selling to enjoy substantial or_what have you? \ vik of all inte. 3 NEW & USED. | Th RADE -IN DEPT. — ‘ ' eral sizes. i. evenings BEY. a Ge heat | ftagley & Motor A 5S year old | Tolling sites with command views. | ms fp pane cher =71t 5) © Modern, C. PANGUS, Realtor bargains. wate dept. tor tea) | Porch gates $ 98 urmelster S 42678 Pr aped lot, paved; 3 bedroom. i-story frame with | Some wooded Extra large par-| Mmjalure super market. appliance | 2160 M-15 O ; | Oce. table: 3495 USED WA ive. garage. $15,000, terms! auto ol] heat Large utility area. | cels. Low as $175 down. j and furniture store, sporting goods rtonville NA _7-2815 | w 24 MONTHS TO PAY Heavy typewriter cabinet ... $9.95 NORTH | TER SOFTENER, LIKE "thee k | teint Mnelac tS yas Soe | RSARETARAE tills wt Me tagn wseame uaa Cock | Sn lek grosne P aczet W tiee | Baby aioe es ‘company OBER | cero coms. 000 ; I “c - g rural town on trou re . s ree. er oad Area with parments of about 973 per LADD’'S, INC. OR 3-1231) here. $40,000 down and will trade | ty. $8500 ‘or will trade to builder | parking, Phone FE 5-641. ** | Baby bathinete. 0...” $2.93 | 1940 Cos late ha. kM 3-4171 |__Reas. After 6. MA’ ese Brick ranch. on lendecaped sak Tae ek ae ok ok OPEN SUNDAY 11 TO 6 propert® So many more interest-| _&3 down payment. FE 5-6028 daa ook ge (Fe | Book case eeeereenee $3.95 | Open E aim to 8 p.m. daily USED WATER SOPTENER, it 1956. 2.000 s and & credit) Cor Silverbe!ll Rd. & Lapeer Rd ing details you must see us on| CASH FO 1s . 9TO° | Doll cab $3.95 unday 10 a.m. Ag COM- ft. living eres. radiant floor stable employment or Perry St thie! ASH FOR USED “tv's. TAPE] «¢ mutes ul Pontiac or 1 mile | Baby ak $3.95 Deliveries m evatiable Par es ttemete. Reasonabie. gig = oe vais | ACROSS |——> VY 1ToOT | working or. ag 4 ed v Aubare Heights on Auburn | VYMAN’ Saar are - tema an Family room, | SRE Pompano LAKE near) OU TAL ITY L OTS Send for free Fall Michigan Busi- | svauwenisawe ei bb nike we Rd. _ : AN'S sees lash READY MADE, ee on, SPACE HEATERS, $10 sched gerege’ Carpiting's| room home complete with brick | HI-HILL VILLAGE | "OM a es CRIB AND PLAY PEN, GOOD 18 W. PIKE FE_¢1122| chimney’ cape, Ponise ‘Presuni | get? Schick's, MY_23711. Ae eAGE | 1 : on Huron | _ condition. FE 5-404 ea oS sei he Pas Coty) RPGS: chtlgeige Doone | Freres pinto: quality, Rivers “unton Late aren He | __Used Trade-In Dept. | Bigo62."& w.themaa: "Fe OsED VBRICR. FOR GALE. WO - i omes surrounding these excellent J 7 o Therm heater 9 VICTORIAN WALNOT ROUND FAC sere | Fuser ced marvege atpotat amit | hile "Bome' with eens Alon | ar tridg | Rin Price. tao, ite'aorn | BANKRUPT STOCK | stetio couch 00 ut8s | COMBINATION DOORS | "SrONas wapNeT hance . s. Some w rees on — . pave rt afd chair ...... / an, $9. Sportsman's Paradise Memesement with gas heat.| winding paved streets. 160x170 ft | ASBOCIA 2? pm | Living room, Bedroom and break oe Mange... dn So0.80 ALUMINUM & WOOD Mews skates, 1 white figure bunting. fishing & al) sin one front with Aluminum | corner. $325 down. | FE 4358 1000 W HURON | BAV EDROOM HOMES, fast sets. Chairs and rockers. meets hate ‘50 ievation ae ‘omen's hockey other oe s, Enclosed front porch. at- BUSINESS THR ot! Beat, large lots Eas ers. | Hamilton a ¥ . skates, size 8 and men’s hocke .- or - co ea tached garage Back yard fenced -ADD'S INC. Pe a —- monthly ayments Close to Lampe a — — res Table nate senatre ™ $30.00 BEN SON I eC en co. size 8. perfect c Lad h: . r own acres with trees and shrubs. Lot siz Open Bun. 11 to ¢ fe —— t ; mattresses ust sell im- F i» . RCA clock rad y erty has. beautifully remos. i 197 Bear Ge bast of schools. | 4286 Dixie Hwy, Drayton Plains SERVICE 61a ATIONS ror LEASE. fer oaulty, cor. lots. o tare gg oe ee real RTHOMAS ECONOMY Tank PORE as ee ae overcoat, sie, ae ul} price 000 — Make offer R 3-1231 a ease call be- lana : = g Co. CLARK - PAROCK amps and pictures. | “3561. ate. oll heat" Dome mith) Of down parment over $2000 | SEF an ew sites AT | oe. rece ee er] : ther A A tb 1000 re Open | 361 8. Saginaw PE 24181| “epacity, top running’ 300 pf tg CHA KEW: 4 losed! ymente = bh 5 - = . ° < i Baad ' wean ree at Sone SO Per’ ie i'CHEROKEE HILLS PURE OIL CO JIM WRIGHT, Realtor Oo A & P Market. at | UNFINISH ED BUNK-BEDS, $14.95, 1 ee Te ge A bat rice, $70. FE , . the’ ONLY $550 DOWN on thie 3 BEFORZ YOU BUY! | SrTaw ; ST) = | 343 Oakland Ave PE 5-9441 | portable sewing machine’ $10. Tbs. Fork elecation 60". equi ” atin es Suse fa bao a al veel tke Gee ceeded. von, 2 LO NDARE OF CO | Open ‘til 8.30 SEAUTIPUL GINGER SEWING | [ite conch. ele. Chima cabinet./ with 18 volt battery & ‘Ho ror Christmas Trees 67A art oe os Fico > — — Hage auto gas heat Led *. sites fontrolied to pro- | appeal te aS —, Main at LOT 100x350 POR CASH, TERMS | Aree zig zag equipped. Cost | a Dg ig coien om tars *4 3300 old. Good cond. | wren al; to wall carpeting Lot size} ec etter homes, and their uron, Milfor raining & fi- or ete 1401 Tull Dr OR 3-9827. | 50 new Pay balance $61.7) . meta ane x 44 Won. 7 i : : 1401 | BTU. $50 Chifterobe, $19. Pear- sata | CHRISTMAS TREES — aera buy for anyone | eg TNentOS ORI WTR Ber out Elizabeth Lake Wa. to "scott | Broadway Sala. aiter oe REFRIGERATOR — KELVINATOR, | tea eee 8 months. Call | son's Trade-In, 37 Orehard Lake | Doo ROUaES. Bg lh con] sprees, fir. cn your own Gee oors at $40.- | : bs : ” and trouble free ili sell for ‘$35 = | ve | v ng tools. ; , cme. | $6000 FULL PRICE with pay. | jake Ra. Tura right 3 wiccks | OF | or consider trade of washer, sew- aroni £0200. A&A Home Products. GpyHOLSTERED CHAIR $18 DAY D0, €O0 BAVE A PAINT OR| Sleeth Ra. 3 miles ‘weet of Pg MOT ANNETT INC. REALTORS, MPPs % #5 per mo on Anis | TO BUY—TO SELL | $9863 0% (Melevision. FE lg Pa = CON, | bed $12, Fiber rug $10. Occasional | Sean tat ceca eenrees | Sareea st Wines Sa Sees 1's story home on Central b : s] r > HOTELS - MOTELS - BAR | | table $8 Coffee al pA = rom, terior 0! xom Rd. & Oped Evenings x eviday 14 | tween EBivd & Going Sts A Soe RIRD. Realtor "GRockries - FARMS" Hun: |WAIBK, SOFTENERS TO RENT | Gepartment PE 2-331 Michigan | Sante "aa St FE end matching * fabrie” sotese Sto See Dene | low down payment will take this pp qey' unity National Bank Bid dreds of business rtunities | OF Sell. $350 month. OR 3-2360./ Sewing Center | _Jamm_ Rd. Berry Je! led selection. | ——_~_— one. 3 Bedrooms with full base. | -%2"! Eves. FE 5-1 of every kind throughout Michi- | F = eS L 4” GAS RANGE . Magic no drip | LONG NEEDLE PINES. NO N Fibavent d mane New? nat or Sale Clothing 64 8RAND NEW WROUGHT IRON {| patat, Wholesale. EM For Sale Acreage 55 La gl ations | airite: daily || bunk bod complete with springs Excellent condition. Also Nesco OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT =e eenle, EM 39-3747. _ | mmanmommnenpamnmre ae HE nae wae << bon “K. MOEERAT Oar: and mattress $5888) eee nes | roaster with stand. MI 46147. | 436 Orehard Lr. Ave. PB 5-6150 SUITABLE 3 BRICK RANCH HOMES tn the | S OU_ POSTED. | *s of MUSKRAT COAT,| Furniture 42 Oreh *| USED TV. $19.95 UP. SWEET for auditoriums, 4 isp] East Blvd. Heights section Can} 2 ACRES STATEWIDE good condition. MArket 4-2013. Sant chin ard Lake Ave. Radio @ Agel. a8 @, teres. oe g 4 ta 64o churches. lodges. homes. a 2 and a eyeawace * 4 $250, down} In @ neighborhood of good 1 FOR STOLE. $100. WORTH $450. __Rew. Double ak on 7 aa +33. Le. me . an ai! ee “ft hy —— mn hw ag te ‘ONE mo. Bach’ tite % Seomontt’ Rif | Romet, On ‘a hit’winn "a beau | meat matate Servita'ot Ponting | Zsieis TS? “8 OE BLOND TELEPHONE. STAND 3 | "ere qryers televisions. and built | Doub zie PINES ARG EPR eee basement. auto gas 0) ‘heat own REALTOR a pai iece livi - . Double Dow! MRE .nrccccce ae Tain or “sat — near Rochester Newiy| Some come complete ‘eh ainm | CRES mt “8 Dpeegreph FE 40521 A esos [Women's boots. bid wall’ pictures’ MI ia = 2 large ine. Sam Sen eee vis- | Yin, hard eee ees 48.88 3-2001 or MY pase TRUCe. bedreoms end a screens ou must} On @ paved road with 2 acres 9. Children's dresses, size 7. Ma-| CASH FOR USED TV'S, FURNI- srservoes 166 ft. my . fiir bedroom tn ‘basement, i;| RATE good credit and @ good) of woods. Excellent building site. | ~~ _ Sale > Land 1 Contracts 60 ternity clothes, size 15 and 16. 2, | ture & mise. PE 2-0367 SPORE ena.” ease tation A Shove . Christmas Gifts 67B natural fireplace and “incluces| "¥estment Company, Inc Ono hill with a view overloek-/25 PER CENT DISCOUNT. BAL- OR sore eT COM, size 15. | CRIB UP TO ¢ YEA AiO aR | _ #1881. : ‘in. K soft presser MeN ae ; . x h 4 +, = po aie and draperies. Separ- pg lake. CRES ance $3,900 payable at $45 month- 3 PORMALS, SIZE 1 li a MMs Bon WESTINGHO USE 30" 870 Vv E, | 3. A oe s with trim 3 . Opnone "re sink’ giaing room, ©) heat. Doubie ASSOCIATE BROKERS | asa: ote t -< by ce ig ed after 6:30 CUE, Sear TABLS. a i ae Vins eee Flower arrangements and Christ- : ™ s INVESTM eal site for small farm. Good | ome y | Bde ere tantcben fc at lene iH rhees aN “Rennias | US OMEN ERS MAS GES | ih aood dranaes, Some ‘recs | Fe SRS” nee rg" Cane" 'Ay | pum ftom ioe” wire feom oe: | CLOTHES IRONER CHEAP eave | _fyeted aby sets, wood fiber aod a A s | tor seg this ene s, Bet |FE 8-0663 After 6: FE 8-1900 $ dow i | — hed Mr. ne aiso —— worms and ofackle. eran Hi-Fi, TV & Radios 66 mM. ated FE 5-2100 ore 13 BEDROOM RANCH HOME ON | 11 ACRES LAND CONTRACTS To B Ca | _Open 7 days. 389 Orchard Lk. Ave. SASH FOR FOR 4114 PRIS ees Full lin f b ildi lakefront. FA oll heat. Stone fire. | A corner parcel with 1335 ft. of | to sell Ear! Garrels, EM 3.2911 BSAUTIPUL PERSIAN COAT. ‘Lie | ASH FOR EURNITURE. TOOLS| 12” TABLE MODEL TY $19.98 ine of building =| ara lace’ Plenty of shade trees | road frontage A smail pond | _or EM_ 3-4086. | Rew, size 48 worn 1 winter. $"q, musical instruments. 17’ GE TV $24.95 & plumbin materials Wbebat gavaie treme eee Could be split up into several | LAND CONTRACT, $1,450 DIs8- noe ™ - a1" Jay table mode) $44.98 Py aN OFFER mote Fx. fs V narveaic. 1500 aoe Sa Gee ee _MAyfair_6-1300 DEEP FREEZER CHEST MODEL. P'S tapen one Ww WOLVERI . MENT. ($7,180 full price tor. this onn ermett LADD'S INC Fandie. $08 cor mance i? «= | BLACK PERSIAN PAW FINGER , _ \tke_new. $75. OR other sets to ch NEL LUMBER 3¥ex" pave FRID mi i Mace! ae on al x , i " chaser 10 years at Pontiac tip coat. Good cond. $45. Size 18 'SonT 1 Walt TO oe PURNION. All sets rebuilt & guaranteed for 0 8. Paddock FE OFEN SUNDA rr Eid y § svat room. Ot is Gomer ALTY me 3. _— Pd Le ng - Motor. Secured by new 4 _FE 25004 before 3 pm. Fix . rc. at SEABOARD Sok ce s. Parts and labor. | amancs fax — 05x150, SEE Wr ropa?’ i ses OR 3-1231 “ —| oe ee ee “fees, £2 it LSOGINGS. SLUR. 2681 a ee) lane trades “at, Obel ba 3930 m Raincoat, 2 ckets, _ FE | EN f Fu aces LIST WITH TO poyion emu, = | ACRE MIO. MICH.) JIM WRIGHT, Realtor | 2% creSpre S8°OR sa" | OER PREREE FOR SALE REA-| Sam toppm es TO” | 348 Oakland Ave. rE 8-9441 | ITATION FUR COAT, SIZE-12. le. OL R SALE A Sree a and gas. duct work | as 9 deoos D is ACRE ae Open ‘Til 8:30 eke new. OR 3-0766. weememee an WHITE Hi-Fi components. H. H. Scott K estimates. . OR 3.56% H ° ( lar ksto | Pres "ram West of Pontiac. Money to Loan 61 Cont subteen 1012 ems give bee | Make that dream AS say wh Fo gg Beh eS SS enyon Hea Service umpnries TL | _frcey from’ gto per’ aere““onis | __ sstate Lleemed tenders» | frnce"legat uaa 110 imanie tan | fugereees anne ea er, Revere Ini!" tape tecorder. | "ountet deer PR CAaT = SPAT uu coat , bi x “4 oN. Open Eves. REAL L ESTATE, INC. |C. SCHUETT. FE 8-0458 LOANS 825 TO gabardine top coat 42 : = tome" jun washer or electric stov vox double prneg Wy «7 GUN TYPE OIL CONVERSION UNIT / 2- _ SELL, BUILD OR TRADE BAXTE LIVINGBTONE Persian chet size 12, very] sun's et Ee 7) trom enc A custom - aveieg tank and controls. $45, utreies iene Open Day Sunday 12 to 6) BY F OWNER > ACHE 3 BED | has Lvrenee Bt * J ‘5 _ | 61341 2 noon tilt pm | squipment feet ag it * Y 3-2726. i 6-8. BOYS " Sat. as iss * m home. M | E 4- 1374 | hobby Noree. Dito FTk. 4, ayes ane dee Mon. an. y. cost a "He" ass. Bh - all the! rooms. Used 1 year. f ; es | ee en - =" ee 6 ee — ‘ ae ‘te — — — > get HE oO ’ 4 + 4 as ’ N E Christmas eeeeaeeaeeeeeers*s eee Gifts 67B\__ For M or Sale i nae TRAIN. Image ro Sale Pets 79| F BBB LBL LL LL BOLL Goon A or Sale FOR wd td walth dog. FET 3a, Eee See fee rane ee 89 RENT _____ Ok is FT Ly LaY Wa =a é /HAMBTI OR 3- 7 $1 TON wanted Lees Sek | polishers, ‘baad sa 5 ew PERS AND OUINA SALES 495. a Used Ca sand G 4 & RENT! WA rs 1 ere for | 7 teas aE ag ORE Gna Ga" os ANTED JUNK C o1| MODEST . fy ee a De be eee on rs MAIDENS i. pups ANY O cw AR, , wt : S tir sxIL saw PAPER SIAMESE 0. MI XFORD SHARP CARS WAN FROG By Jay A «a 3B MAROW AR a CARS WANTED! ~ wy RP ce TRAILER <@ fp Dole poe ees m ra) me 46105 = bo will mak to is R } 1) CHEVR fhe. Ope eavestro muh opPeR MAS ae ‘the «food home SALE 312_W. al akland a (ments PE £0036 after 6 aad nnn nate Used Gers I s ; enc- te Cc aft seas 4 Rete is Pakakents ALTER Os, S| eer aot M Bho RO MEATER. OF a on eae 106| __ Sale Used > *Saontealmn. Pood sine ERTS CANARIES. OW | Son Motor | Sa eat DOWN" OGY ic corner_Aub ee ware | Cars ° Sale Musical Goods 71/74 aca Goods Ti PARAREETS” yrs im | O8N 1960 Bn: A lasaleen sles | Creat of 820-25 N Assume ELY | agen “keer | or YMOUTH 8 Fs 32 OCT. al Goods 71 Panag 183 BF. ries. ave: | Abriy ZiMMe: i ett; = A V OR. x 1603 ee Merola Tu Parks Geli | _ rebuilt “Segines _ NEW TIRES, 1954 een TATION wa ‘A [ = ——— at ——— 1 | GON, 9% OCTANE BRAOME YLOPRONE, RAREETS— CANARIES, yaGA | Campers and GARWOOD ERILL’S eee arte tport Mt ~ “owed So sagen mc “ *ianoratns a 68 Sie @ OCTAVE ong, | —2-2200. herr n.| used on used tral timaasn | jes charm 1 oni ae “cor Oued Gare Are’ Pound ee a: a ee dition. OL MARIMBA. "7 ‘REG. BLA Auburn. | trade or — plan. —* Some -9878 ixie Hwy. Hurry — Has po miles yb CA e Found | Winteriaed,. tres, RUNS d 3 PEDAL “30 Goob con-| 23% LACK POODLE =a | Lake orion ot mile pou sel, JUNK soo — 45. This ——— tender RPENTE eee —— goes ecndl- ws eoaeal ARD ORO 77 31. male as PPIES. | PONTIAC To Choose on 32-0721. Pe OR 3-29 ANTED. \ MI 6- ER, 666 4, BIRMINGHA a CHEV R . usa ual organ. mahoga: AN, |"45_ $2 ‘Hudson anaes CHIEF & DETRO hank 9 : “ine ot ESS, | I Commerce Rd | pa EPOSSES a player’ pis oF mos cl ATE eal ciainiat hdl househota ~~. — 1200 N Berry and BROKERS peste moe haste oe | 65 FORD, ¢ CYLINDE EM 3-4101 bey only | a SION an ad DOO’ r " DER Sou came peg ok Hunting Dogs ve cue Se FPR ER "EE 45100 ee eee eee ae hee | CEU oa aa any Bpinet net plane. ce $479 LABRAD is Dogs 81 } ae ie UTCHINSON'S FOR JUNE 1 buy at ta Sere ae Lom cae ae i | ard ac teh eM vie . oR- ee n Plains __ CARS. No h MI 6-3900 666 8 RMIN OMAM. i955 engine. Exce! EE Sri gat tal) Sate Meo C eae Le ee hg og «| “Hay, Grala & Fee yas | Smee ae XBW, DEAL | Petra thChev. [service oe | ate eee “7 “ et pane| ma rae ce ia ceeds oe pees [Motor Sales. itaiaghear 9 Nonny ds | eat 2 | Sagi w Ph maf tes ‘agers “GAL TACT 000 BALES HA Si agg Tg | Hoy LY NE s heer 210, MI $2135 | y 91295, 34, payine 1955 PO : a E OF 4D _ MI $-2735 | er 24 and NTT 1s E. GACLAGHER'S S terms. aS ‘tumbers Mh Fat ng PARKHURGT Z| su ORCHARD L Clean Cars | 2 ere Gales na . or e385 BIRMINGHAM. gown ot oi sar 00 =e fon tt ae R $8 = CHEV PE WARD MBLE rade | i rfect red & ° pee onl SALE YPES OF st & S T ANY KE__FE 1k v4 39 MI R, 666 e. $195 Absol white —— loaned fr oe sizes aeliver Pe ad and D 1640 TRAILER SA T Ww. ,-L iN MAKE OR MODEL aacvices save POWERGLI \ | THONDERBIRD, 2 pace . BIR ee payents ta ith lessons. ‘PE 5:34 sie or core. Wit speer iY LES uron. FE 41800 Bales. 923 “MUS re vest’ Ot or i— M15. Ortons' ROWER DE- ainaina RGA: "Hania. i 28. h A Featu e MUST N re rtonvill urnb a Pc dad on Bab ay. MA & TINE a 1 Orion TOP 58 MAKE : ae ull, PONTIAC 1 8. YY Grand —_— 5-1742. HORSE T BoA Pind ousm DOL: BT Chev. Beauts > ROOM | ‘53 Pord C 0 ne ARD tt 3900. letel Pia \ a HAY our-A-H ra. O akes. Ne Por all Mod LAR ‘8? Ford. R& uty, R&H Moet 8 ust, FO an and no r . comin te x may, 8ST, oT ee sia 3 Fore OM | Bio ee ne ae Reta ie aa rice for qui A al ANTED STRAW, 1-761. Te | RENT OR er yr mama enn’s M os ahs Be . $198 | at poe Bi eose ait er steer STARCH rll oe ah ee A BN a eave cree Ser ey Heaton, gape cone ea CARLOA -Hur>n. 567. Across ae For Sale Liv . =r SHOR after 5 before § xt : RON ‘o Che ackards $195 | a FORD se alate COND. 15 ires. $1,380. beater Ross | fa OF LES Livestock RTs Mt and : FE 41707 ‘40 Ford . Lis 1 FORD DOOR 32 PONTI $0. Ma 5-04 wipes, pood . pinet TER BA ck 83 83. ALES OsiLI TOP 1797 56 and soe 7; RADI : Aan ee col AC 4 ate S. Just aeiae | bon SPA Feat E HOM Pi "53 Cad . § 9 | IC aoe Tee oe __condition C 4 DOOR 1 $20 Fetal arrived. Th ‘board h CE AVAIL B arms =? VICE E $$ enty oth iliac Re ..8 B TRANSM ATER. A RDTOP loon pon ae Bonen ‘Balan ey CH orses, PE ABLE. w eemer. C oe 6 $ Econom ers, $45 as LY NO ISSION_ UTOMAT- { NTIAC YE 5-9120. GAL L ce 36 mos $595 ETS WEST! 5-40 mt. | & bottle ‘om plete 11 portsman- P loss y Used Ca and up. payme MONEY N ABSOLUTE. jelly equi 0. BE bo AGHER’S j for the ERN NOP” cars seep itehe ne of parts FOR AID Pm, ¥ CHEVRO rs 29 A ree of $39.7 WN. As : rayton 4K M r¥ ie 5. Bares Pie ts, entire ». GIFTS traile We'll eel install GOOD ~y 8 e LET CO ubure | 7 Mer 6 per sume | '55 PO eins. onroe FOR C | TT hats, bel family. 8 lana Ww. for y sell y ed & USED ” An heat ngine, P NVERTI 300 =H Ma Parke Call INTIAC &. ASH FE | oy, b ts, et hirts. | w.H ou. our use CARS Didn’ AWN er, big owergli BLE. arold T arks at __ $600 0 A aR CASH TO PURCHASE M 4-066 ana W ee oe rine urop . uss idn't I eae Shia a slide. eg lags R_ 4-0285. ts, } lg ‘Long La ohn R a meet r. whit ne, loa radio, | 1955 ord PONTIA » 4 FINANCE see ea ee ee ee ne ee aI ent T FE 49743 232 ws — you\gefore — | ooo e wall u ded with | FORD gh gay Ay 8-9661 CO., 1185 a Dee AD | PESDER PI to 10 datly. | railer S 43, £ S. ; on i ————— ore —atah 061. Spe od a real res A one gon, rad COUNTRY | te H. Auto 3 og | CATALIN iB PLAT Cl Perry Ojo PIG Tw y.| AUBUR ce 90 aginaw_F —— orse show | cial at only $1837 Stock | eg sama SQUIRE Hon, FE pias ATALINA ee CAT 6 Srroe Fe eae” ALSO N HEIGHTS. BUT DON'T 1 igri a~waale Used — decibel something?’ | x BIS: reek eo. 1003. Fre automatic | 5033. HS aE eee! gooo ye ang ae BP Eka oe ae vi. | [BUT wa tuiNn you | e Used Trucks 103); Sa none eee | North Ch sgt ne een at a | ; REPOSSES @ lessons E-- Pigs FOR SA end OXFO! yke Niall R YOUR CAR A- | H | __ Sale Used -—— | Hunter B er] | N | ION frost of c & 1 month's rent. Re 7UP dat TA gence MA FE 5-3361 JEROM ‘AR AT | ousetrail ee U Cars 106 fee opt at 8 Woodw V. ' orth C King Ag ages cash ‘needed rour bow home. e. the me|__ For 13 ee lente coment ANOR FOR “ E tler | “se,000 “actual 106 i re ard Ave | Birmin ev, van tea ade? wee Pa sees ” "GR selieg f et BeP mont ese Ville "rosd wast of Os: oy Ag 7 IS, BRIGHT SPO Owner aise, 6 Ne Mie, Far. bows | isso nt “SHAPE EXC Birmingham os TREN. Auto. hi wee a. ROOSTERS Si ee se = T” S or ap aw teen wae 33 CHRYSLER xc 1057 FO = a ne o shift. Gr ATALIN 7 8. Sa SRINNELL’ S rchased.| heav MOBILEH 8-3022 Lake- ard L. PULL ae ything of res. $150 power, & H SLER | R RD 2 “M1621 FE Good A. gina | y hens. TO ern FE ake '49 GMC YOUR er pay valu down | EAT SEDAN ADIO & DOOR 8 Al _4-2735 | 1956 PO 5-5033. transpo HO! be PE 4-8594 362 7 LBS lakef . ATES 8-0 at < MC Rm OW Vern yments e, al nj TRANS ER. N RAD WA & HE § CYLINDER INTIAC FE HO) er coosa cae, ike —_ eee zene = HENS, a enon aw Tew a - = ae Oe ee DOWN ee of 197 amo. ‘cal { STEERING | ABSO p Cromarie | bei eae noe ThE mace Radio. heate DOOR ew. EM ION & ake Ori IND ACES cheap 8 $5 es. equipped “ dd FE m DOWN LUTEL 1 om T1L_per ssume D MON. | inish —- b rt, Hydr eae naTSLE PARTY WANTED 1% 3-0040 after wees ane i 2- giallaaa a ES AVATLARL. LS Se cue eae $295 Wa ments of $i¢2 lume car Ue Bees at al a a m-| car. a ore ls an puree cane a PA St G HENS 4 ’ nd platto crete B THIS da ND | n cay ans . edit M 27° «per e pay- __Turner F at MI 47 redit Mar. | ock No. awfully ite Bpinet: no mente we 7 WANTED TS Rome. 2 miles 8, ORNs FACE for. gee le BARDERBCRO™ MOTOR USED me SCHRAM T RUC LECTIO Bay a New Car? | tea cae hare Pot Cau) MERCURY oR 1900. Harold ee toe ctpal— h Pe aa _After 4 E. of f tak George ranted ack to and cont , Cass at Pik CARS w CK Cc INS & SEE OUR ti ad SLER Ford tres. FE R. GOOD BO No : arate een prem . Prin-| Sa pm. of Sat @ Orion. en Witee a sss ge irect| JUNE . LES patie holessie—R. S SQUA <3 OF, MEW AND ax-| tren St Regis WT Power. | 963, Me ade Rode Boos rt Ch r mon S ~saing ~ Sate Facn Produce $6 PAR Walton e tle Bins CARS oror_§ 4 OR 3-1209 Hwy. etall OA ARE DEAL 1 ALW yam | tr rat R&H. T. Powe KER. miles CURY MON 5 p.m. Hunter B eV ee tk Cae = be | rn. Produce | a ast of Baldwin, AND TR e Pon vert eee LAT. Ave a | CHES a alle oe r, auto black Elderly TEREY a +e , _ Mt. Clem & Cresmer Den an be APPLES ce 86 Fe TF RATLER | ders ROCKS: OF 30311 EALERS. FOR pe dao ‘George _E 196. wii| $208 Greawa kein.” Low —= Woodw = toes RAILER W P Z 0311 FOR OLD’ | De ER M 3- No ive. rad ar, soli ‘35 PON ard Ar ee Dealevard. | elder, POPULAR s. Wond Th. LER| you E N ont , ba an DEST Juxe 4 "54 NEW 3855 HAM-R money d io. Bpot d| FE TIAC 2 MI ean cin te purest atomennyt |e gare gat un eee ee Bote Ste dp mien Truck Cent Bot ta teen _ RB aS fete be @ se. A TH ie Gee Wa arket | YOU" rion r up p dol s we nte A eat and er st c | MERC Badd D- -s on“ Ait went whe Bur spies. uc winer e AN O Pa ia ben Macata taka’ = +135") _ van Trade dows GM “Yo I |~ finance ‘6 ei Radio Servic ae Roge OOR, EXTRA ‘34 PONTIAC . on. N R- rk. FE uar Now T : WELT ur FORD | 51 on Can e. FE 2-9 ers 8 A 4 DOO: = 1 E. LAGH eC | APPLES—H o Sunday 2-5205 e Lake Tr OP CAS 4540 | $806 DI Dea) a n 1952 ME ales and | Deluxe R SED. Saat ER'S veel 2 popula: WiOWEST QUALITY, AL > Auto Acces aller £0 CASH 8808 FOR Ct er res Factory Bra At te WY. er Since 1930" ‘5S DeSC oe eee ee ~GOOn TRANS: apd a pot _ A OE PIANO, Tn Oa a Seanty tie at $1 ig ALL | 1953 DO cessories 91 WA NOM CARS down CARS | *5) OAKL AND ees Ww bt i wick FIREDOME 5§ TO | SEE ea. FEO: ww ne beni is pool mag " — aA O | Ske Orchards. 2208, om DOs agama TED JU 22 AU | INTL ss Age gc 3 gb ieaiaaae | 2 OU uled. gine m= WANT! merce 2 cider 1953 Pi MOTO: ~ | trucks. UNK = BpurN! ,™ Pick! bod pel = AL DOWN Door UR > } fi For ma Wie vsED i, am | Eee Meee — ‘82, Se ones FE n2eee wie Phoue FE mer Ae | HEATERS. No m eds some — full pri V | throw D. 6. ls. OR 3-432 53 ord. 71500 boca 30 pe 4 new auto- a are E. — Deal PAPRAL ADP IPAA 7 Ha TERS ba’ oney 4 e bod ce L ghout. ER 7 PLYM ash do yment: and — Telegraph. Burr-sheu 318 Auctio OL 1-078 Hie ene oe ee ise FORD Pal ae Pe e22i¢ 8s Voeky “Aut iT CF ee ta soe) eee REPOSSESSI MINGHAM - RA = riers fow a eu. 375 aon SNES “aa | PO BoE Lore - 7 Soon PANEL. art ae , Se epee + oo Y caee EFT 1952 FORD aa Rig- | ed full price. SSION a RAMBLER eed 8 10: E SALE uCcT SECO E MOTOR BeOOTE es 957 WHITE TR. CIA ~ VE TER DOOR R. y No ‘ 1965 RA 8. nai _ Rem. 140 fp gg mage ee PONYCYCLE M "E 4- sae ar ica ee on | cali FE soot « DOOR MONEY ABSOLU __RADIO | Ring Gea ie a HEATE: ee ADL © 80 SAT sis onl: \- 4246 1 cTO __ % _ 8-8041 { SEDAN. . me Dow TEL M De R. $134.50 Rem. a 2a Orien. re mi. pc PM | _3-2885. y. Used one work Pid a. “fons a CON. we caenouE Spm AN. 2-Doo < he of fs EE xO Ww r. Bell. rE. 16th. OEY AUTOMATIC Reg. ry, 3206 very roo of f Lak rs yr. peal 44 , ——— Ready for excel 8 STA _ : rs & 4 : ar per m pul 0402. Y¥ OpABSOLUTELY NO 9 98 w rifle stove m in th urniture e| For Ss j —__ lor 5-6068 lent c ANDARD re =Iba | 4-7500, H Mr P o vate to B ments of N Y in. $99 of Me refr e hom for ___For Sale Bicycles 9 A — cH ondition j Stato : 01S a arod T arks & DUV a N it M $18.76 pe Assum NO 1.65 — Ma sees 4, 30-30, 9 nice clo erators, e. Also! icycle: —— | if 4 — EVROLET. FE on Wa FORD G urnert Fo { MI 8 SURE New C Herold Mr per mo. Cali a Used PM user circa oo 9u0.ss from 9 til . ant rugs, a lot, 3. BOY’ s 96 | arge S . top. V-8 "1959 IMP __f I gons loaded. 103 ALAXIE. rd SELECTION ‘@ 8EE ar? ea tee le 30-08 i . . “o5| ment 1 6 iques. Qp ab BICYC Select radi autom IPALA HARD- | mpal 1954 EH 4 DR U Ss OF OUR | | MI ¢7500, gid scope .. ooo $19.95 puildit daily. Sa. m. for con en le FE 56-97 LES. R | ’ OF ion ea and hea atic transm - | as D “FORD R uron St HT, ALWA J8ED CARS NEW : * "979 50! ng . e held in sign-| B — EASON- USE 7 end steerin ter, power jon. | A DIO & HE. ANCH WAC | ak OY FIRST | Se ne a Wane Lien wer § oh ea MT ALL TIMES TS) SS Bovale gaa fe + ow a gotten naeTEY ahha ge KELL TRADE 929.5014 eae ee ue- | 1514 rie AT AT : ent condition Seeker. Benet | nents of $22 greeter beled Fila CELA LAND | os Prom bh TRADS as \ UCTION ET o chi | #2 FOOT ‘ s 97 L TIMES 1987 ponaiion cet MI a a A eae Bo Assume pay- FORDS Dest DEAL 5890 : ABI ’ MINES agon com Wa ais E LOAN MONEY 7 ms FE 2-8811 mnt — foie 9 are wearer + ne $400. ge | 50 se _— Exc. cond. 1 o- 2 DR. - ‘33. FORD i Ford MI 4- red. | 1930 wire ABOA RTIN eS a Ce Coleen er 37 ett” tedeee ' ° 9 M rl digg Mg fictals’ ers, Bales ai SH) AR PORCHASED USED Pe Coe pat iG rnitu m. Com st. begin- Moto: ts. Motors UTS | O ] uto. tr on wea aaray and 2-9555 ales @ ARP Sow we ae Rance, “ies “W ing, foom’ ite nea ite Mare | O0 ‘rimterisiog & or All M els | suse Eeciet! uke ant “rates Sie monte oe eat Haas | Zour, FORD KxD. THANKSOIVIN “_—wv~ ; Mitnows, | Et ‘| comp a Tetrigeravors. Ad rugs, et ee Wy and Modei ~ Doses 24 : @ payments pager pA LS adr ena 7 DOO At age aed Since 1930 car, EXTRA os CRA memmows, Bic. f 75| & ie eerie Aa mirai 8-4402 T BO Se Ge eis “Tuas a Haréto NO MING me maar tee R, °35 Stop ii OR a mares cance A her ge wa be AT SA BUDG Sold. dio & hea p. A ape t raat g ciangae oh Plym ight tn 3-1291 worms, 2 @+vbz.z Also. s & m kitehen en Eves. 65. W LEs | ET biack. $1 ter. Whit uto. | OODWA RAMBLE own BIR- | $2 Po outh, Rad. Waterford for 0c for de; SOc, ec; RED “ge tamfly br car Name, Tul 7; alton Bivd. | AT OUR 1957 ads. ewells. | pent _= EV. 1956 RD. MI R, 666 ‘as bee wood work p Tackle big worm. ££ hot wate brick ho: items. ~ ALU & Sundays _ oa Desoto Birmin lvd. at 8 b FORD 2 6-3900 = on + oglleepaeile eo ~.. b288 2 ee a, 00) man, ancl tet eat Mee Anne] seal ies aoa BIG" wiage'Reais Avhesters Exe.‘con | M anaes oir ton. radio. BOR, VICTORTA, 33 Sitter ‘sation. Wi 8 «3 _Sand, G rat Ave | r. Phooe PL. 2-2151, ces pany Se sion T : " op, Aute | ila cae AY a ee on Fraser Gatien, Wes.” Try us f ravel A 22151.| ‘erm ao your odels from $249 r k C 1957 Buick aru ae ee ‘3 pa dee omis- | 53 Pontise” 2, ¥-6 ‘ or an offer 2 De, BL & Dirt 76 uction Sale pt Sel evens ane easy uck Center flow ‘Nadie @ beater. ‘10. _ater 330 pam eRe | Sit’ sietontn! Forster 33 porting me rl 2", EBS, BLACK DIRT OR PEAT DUN 3275 HO) r. $146. Sarai 7 a BOO; 1) | 954 ition, $275 AT lege oll SS 0A STONE very or PEat| Ch 2265 U JHAN H ; {ER - rept to tell f Rw 4 FORD V » FE Econom oo others, pass ‘ l a! 7 2 yd. eae oF Christian Bai ao Pater t PM pee Onin Mate ne ’s ATE uro 15 min HIGHT MT waarae 0 {rom new. pee pt RD VICTORIA HARDTOP. | y Used Care’ 33 Aub oe CHEV ari Also 1ZE Barn prize. MINUM BOA E LIZABETH Oxford, utes fr RS ing. OL 1-177 er Gl Id and arp. N Ford RDTOP 2 A ROLET ee ae “rane wane. age Stanley Ba to 28 Se 4s ame Aue- ronrege «okt: en Eddi LAKE RD rv BUICK 8 om Pontiacs >: CHEVY aaa 1-1776. ide, power payments, 1 10 enna radio | burn , OPEN EVES TI COMPANY __baw, Clarkston. 1! e = . r } jie, Gama MA Eel nal | ee ae |, ieSteele | equbped, Bit I Tass | een ee sie Eee OT = a LL & er or wi lercury — 3-008 : = ond. $475) = 3900 8. Ww HAM NTI — GRAV B r separate. MI 6-3 Hl sell to- ig 1. “COST 7% = ooDW Last ae et ~~ BOAT D e. MI 6- i al rm §-3177 ORD — REPOSOD sn. Rew uae oak a ; eee Te mporarily L BR AC AUTO sa On OCK —— 1 CHEV $95 full S10 for a sed. You’ FOR REPOSSE! v-8 NO P aid ‘s8 OK ; cR vel» Be Con Aucti uae aoe Lake. R CKAGE ; _Good ¥. nice UP Wien, $-0861 i ety No cash N aboy ss aa on ont get a $145 full ISSESSION WHI peg Laid Off: > aT — a 8 ERS lin ion S eserve T, $250. TERIZED ing A mo. D needed “ . Re will” ge or Price. ‘7 TE NTS a ck, RM. . a XN EM 3-008 ED | "35 uto. A Be ue Jan. . Cost Le member th save Kine “Aut $7 Ps cash No M MPORA RI Edsel ¢ HT. Nice |||. $1608 ge te RA 5089 ales 2268_ 0 DUNHAM!’ NEW A. BUICK. 4 1 PB 8-0402. yea Wale hake. | e name’ — qmibe_Auto ae mooted We have arreny Do * (oes a ay, St. - $1088 ROAD 3-053 VEL » Dixi : nion S 60 ig BT. 2. | or _Us led Lak 100 West Ma- 35 FORD CRO\ * neil Jan. ist. ave arrany wn? ‘67 Ford pecial, nT. ‘Sharp 3 $7._ Delivered : ixie Higl Lake Ra__E | Dod we carry psd rage gel Sg Ma-| Be D CROWN | FE 8-0402. Pull ged to f ‘58 Custom “sharp sles : Lak LN autiful WN B_ 8-04 purcha: inance ‘38 Metro A rp $1 . 5 \bs., Drayto gnw ay Bave 2 BOAT KITS M 323-4164 F Bes Pickt rae CH and Servi sell both ew 3-2084 car, vic it se price 56 Chi . AT. B . 4 i n P = 8 5 cost -———— actory $i, ip EVY ce, : _ $1060 8 A-l _SEE OR (36 Chev. ad . Bn spo age 4 dirt and SOTL bid Frid. lains terme. S She — —Michi causpmient & 3. CHEV 3- OTR gt We have a EEPS 1987 FORD Pvt. OR KING CALL US TOD or Buick gry Air... $1195 8-6642 fill. lE ay 7 erul oat | 7 n Bal fed 1c 2. CE CAR. | wag good doo STAT AU AY Ot Fors 44 .. 61 3A . FE 5-664 very S seeel | Oak oT Lo is price inelu wee cca tedner HEV CHEAP. Riggins a 'd_ Jeeps supply ea 7pm TON WA | 115 8. Sagin ro 51 Pi PE agg gay é ND, 7 3 or! Eve y Saturday 7 P.M. 301 8. land | Marine E a R mie hme Bg oe 8 p.m. UL 2-37 A CALL BEI eons ohana trucks < me) sg 1 sacrifice ger or. 4 | aginaw SALES 37 mir 6. auto — ay ¥ Call sy & GRAVEL ry Surid --/ p.m. Open Eve xch MLE me laa i ek RE ROOER'S , Reema | Very RD, V-8, yOu 6- —— ‘36 oer’ te ton 6 OD agon, $1095 ._DRIVEW ont : B ay .- 2 = ae FE Byt hedlh ta) R-DAL $ Chevrol ON 695 Aubu _— A = clean $650.__ iM, CU 53 Buick ton + seseee § 088 soul, AY uy and S .& pM, | x ou 8-4j01 | - MAIN LAS money 4 at. do to. doe ND SER 50. MA STOM. | '56 Ford Super 9p = crave Ok we, Fe 0 Sell Dai *|'59 ae §8 GMO , ROCHEST ments of 437.30. r. V-8, No!’ at ey t ——— Bones Sar . $8 - . et , R all JOL 5 GMC 20111 ER du of $27.2 See. wake Ta are ou 92-9555 : ; rns Trans. .... 4 Wood, ¢. PE|__ DOOR ane 3-2717 . Joli SON MOT S13 re “eiase ON a i Fire me pay Mave ci STATION apeciany” | ‘38 ought eee 88. Pull power $ 905 Woot, ont 6 Fe 7 Tovs, T BAT. & SUN. | eke Lake 4 “MOTORS I ——_ PICK-UP ginaw. Phone —_ trend as z Glest. Sood oa v8 Lae Holida en’ Ss. O Or $4 Por Custom 6 peony = ANNEL An 0 ri Sia Cae Een : +221 VE $1075. | - y Sede a peu a . Auto. ... ee a men More Toys | ie TORAGE & MOTOR ETON urner's (36, CHEVROLET : Ae SME i grea a Real! ne ales 3 sade 2 “a San. 3 1 ofl. g wood. 8; CE, None J small. :30 p.m. , ine & R- | Ther T HARDTO psa "ech ecembe 100 | power. Sh 44 doo | fake Ra ead ys J or, te. $ 95 peed-| 10.00 wih be Must be’ sot HAR repair | 4 ae P 8K sine: ‘Bel Ait x r. first | ‘SS we os t Sedan | “uma 1260 Perry 1 cab & 95 24 in 4 & 1 other } held back i sold RINGT Tru and this ypc { DAN a little mor el Air scayne 2- Olds 88 —_ 3-4155 Up ton | ‘at Madison ; FREBLRER WOOD LAB iehe , ie hee : ON ( Sarttes will” or qu chicka oneeie. | eae mat! 24 N i cE 2-11.20 Pie eat hae Maas) WORKS ue M enter qualify, ¢ ‘ ome are and black, ay North Cherzol FE tow, for. De- C power brakes Hydra- | 98u z te oe zB 7 re es rine PO och maewaree. git Teme NRUDE, DEA MIN ee ae | oe et Co Birm' Ou THINK - Bast kin ag or Mas poral sll gy po ny alee a i poe C ciceishn fase punctutved.. re tor, driving | ‘32 TRANSPORTA “_ Ou . | House "Sr Us; WE AR eae x OL ig “AND sat y now for pitances tne of tor for only i" aKD i “i% hevrolet - _ mE iait et Litre an E oe - TION—CHEAP g te AMIN aa aor 1 PONTIAC- Cc r furnace . het as. y- 2-0828 ansen Ir per $100 175 TON 12 PT sr eeee 595 f e yo o mak wall | "64 sh, 2 oe we I } . : R ° é A for p.m. fe) eee or Ins. A of 54 . . BT s) IFS o-.- u hav e this Ram ar. : : | Fo « 5 D Mii. re sbosie* SS" hutptshings Yor every yist at |" man sre eaan 0 Ts Chevrolet. -..$ si tere" inen oui | fg $8 | O Biba u_covre ENDL 3-6022. da w antiques every toom ome er boa’ —ON WA ___! 54 STA ae 595 ROG ; _ Ollar 1s bi rbler | white Eldora y ot Onte Spen Pi ae aoe oe GE- 54 Int STARE. 572 srs Y nN a bi ca pore came 0s wan TPE me, % SE gens rg Am A Evinrude = snternatio 695 Aub BALES our Prie gger doll a oa h green, with wood. Soe a aes munity Auc- oan Cis ow and sav lem LON FICKO nal ...$ 595 ' bok AND. 8 BER | ean bak et af tke new. $3,205 an 3 cord. . Sem north y Auc- Oo L SALES e "54 C UP. ese 295 : < WINTERIZEL VICE | N CAR aler ine $3,205 way e $14. De sacs pa Py of Ox Ww. H “s Ta at | hevrol T ‘ 57 Chi IZED FE 2-95 528 N AND 8E SALES seat. = + aucti ‘i Hi la ke M5 % olet $7 Ford’ 2D @ READ’ ~Eisenea || ) NN Main RVICE | | : east For S Siomucionee, | Mate ignand, Rigwhos ‘53 I issman | Har ie eee p_ Rochester Ott coos CADIL » or Sale A a . to D Ford I79 ae oi" --- tae - 1-976 OUPE LAC $15 delievered. For Sale Housetrailers 89 —_ Ope pena follow 14 FT pes Bro .. $ . CHEVROLET ard cece $1245 a N oe. (Lay A, power. Radio. Plants, T FE 2-847. |38_ Foor HO 8 89 Fi Main S217 ha i TNO 4 pe ia a ROCHESTER CORNER C enburg ( | erponditioning, 91.588. heats Bonn rees, Shrubs Elizabeth poy Oa —._hiberglas | 5 GMC V. = : | EVES. TIL ASS & PIKE 195 78 Road . 825|/BOA ~ 08 8: wr. ata. mndis ix | MA ® OL ' PE 5-7398 | SUPER 958 O 7 OTERAL pent ode niga ad Cae oe — “op § 1295 5|__all 7 oe lia D j a oe LDS v7 s fibe LASS 5 ES R mu NIQU 1e ts er N. B TEit Raa 3-4619. es, Revie Auto LAD AL pats e. . tbe sold This month d Cars INT Bs “eyares aye S shite. : 2 , Orion racer rust N sete e th R es. Th matic radio iagORABLE ee A-l . D RB a race F | Transportatin Offered 10 seated evi S YS PERERA Gaon USED C | EST | 1087 PC Te CARS DAILY TO 100 35 | PICKUP, w§ Cg O | Bose MANY ONE ECKED |} ARS | IN | poe ee ONTIA — Unvewviy A e- Ford wee CosTOM CAB. a ge age "00 Ford Pal OWNER CARS 967 Rambler cust | heater etanon NTIAC e-a-way, TRACTOR bewe 3 , power b r, pows . Ramb’ con, Nk he inish, stom se U res. Pull rametic. ' Radio. TIRES. R ..3 995 rakes. er 58 Bui ler e new ater, H low dan, | $1,695 y equ . Whitews ti cynthia fink oe ag ge ad fF FY LG gor asi “* vardmatie. Sete “i A ipped, A bes j 56 Che ALE. le with ‘walls, Co atic | + Gpev be a e cylinder c. Very radio. | ; = | vrol au in beautiful rdivan y 21044 on $2005 | 195 engine mc a . 1% TO o: - car. terior. genuine ym. 4 dr. ret arens Sav 7 Che iA AL 2 Forty, ‘peuncenie. § if mee 67 Dot VAN. ooo $1195) « Factory ‘officiel | -se Chev. ee ¥ oi oY hevrolet station. w UES eoxnaareee BUICK Le HM ase | us TON PicKUr, ooversbie. ‘8 Boatine, 24 aagumer Hm ary motor wt x Be} | 1958. B ener eeuipped, Rash ae Than FO Ing V-8, AUTO oe 995 a Ford-o- gie80 | 2° fe mks SS , im on. lennon with, "Powerlie. | Sate. bone ita arnation Rn a RO . PE 4-5906. 5g B. AUTO eee Cok be Mo —" aoe ‘sa bots wardtop spt sect 795 soe cw cae cellent buy wn ue eu at cou pean rior. ee with on wall tires, wi . PART or = . All bl walis , radio, | e wig olga $ gece egy Im «+= - 61645 wick eeet @ as wer throughout ~ Wanted Used Cars 101) Pate rat eA $ Sadat ed Bin eb | By A tate | piciraec cman tae Byoatcn. ‘Poser ctimes 1958 C Wiest sed Ca EL. REA .. $1295; ou Ti, | 34 Pontiac © “gg ool ee eae ae ae rakes M $905 ORE 19 n gine 8 2 dr. 395. MElrose 46771. £ acon {cet aes aes bree. PONTIAC” $7 ‘Oldsmobile toatl oa a Hydramatie 19 cone 8 | sets woentrs Roedetea oe nee forone. Bore Pr a ot st BO ner ae STANCHTRR., CATALINA, Sales ines rd Reconditioned : AC ly 5. he to ac mos. y AT 46 DODGE. ie TON Be 1100 Lar Warranted com VROLET atic ee 5 4.¢r, Bare Rartmaser” poner ee ALINA SEDAN 5 p.m. Cheap. OR pide after arry “THEY TAC noe ores $ deer ned $1195 | for. po ae vehiewala Jus pao z eae ane erome Di — diide. Very good « heater. deluxe | a BUICK ‘2 at a eel match. 81.008. : condit! ower- andy dr M as D 1x1e O ' on ..$ 445 | 1054 gg only a "inten. i p eM | ar askin ates Racy, a Hew . is DRAYTON. pth: T SASHABA S uate’ Dixie H S hev. ak aii ss0e. —— Waite. P. 4 NB, MIC. Ww ple 5- 507 ighwa H. . ee M ‘ONT pen nites ‘til 9 Mis. More te 1AC-CADI s a Yoke boca be a wert 0 From LLAC and 81 Mu Avle 5-8866 mPa y heen W mA e MA by’ f ape Aad a: Mt ame ' ) hs _FORTY-SIX __ CAR WONT START? GLENN'S WINTER "END" BARGAINS 7 wail . Your Troubles . 1, Payments Matthews- 1960 Hargreaves wn. 106 Sale Used Cars 106 ~~ —_ eee YOUR RAMBLER DEALER HAS a large selection of 1960 Ram- vlers We need ubed cars very bad Let us make vou a real deal Open evenings until 8 k A © Rambler Sales 8142 Commerce. Ra Uniop Lake EM 3-415 wi t } b " eas 920 - MOTOR SA les »G.M¢ OUR NEW LOCATION 4, TON fg Sl FOR TOP VALUE” USED CARS 5.000 Mies New spare i) Re ey Used a passenwer unl! Lr “ PHU _— Bolid Granite Grey Ele 4472 EB 4-170) os $1505 (00D "S88 CHEVROLET CHEAP FLESTCIDE 's TON P-UP Transportation Radio & heater New firer We Specialize io 2nd Care Roman Red paint & NO ME NEY DOW N . ‘ SLRS 52 Chesy 4 door, needs motor work 8 45 : * » 51 Chevy A-1 motor $ 75 56 FORD 5! Buick Hardtop A-1 running $ 75 SEDAN DELIVERY 53 Chevy 210 erfect mechanic Heater 2 tone alls $150 ST eee S O85 33 Ford 2 door. RAH , $125 * 53 Plymouth Hardtop, sharp 24! *S3 FORD 53 Chevy, 2 door, _ _, $245 PICKUP Station Wagon, lymout 33 %6 FON Tool box Solid Sher $295 Heater Pp Colonia! Grey $2 Pontiac Catalina, al! black $295 ¢ 385 51 Studebaker 6. make an eater 2 YOO 9 84 Buicks, Century and Bu Sharp 405 : 55 Pontiac, Star Chief Catalina full power, loaded $695 54 Chevy Bel Air HT Auto $305 a CWS- 55 Buick Century Hardtop” Like new $605 54 Ford Convert. Real cherp $405 WE TRADE UP OR 25 MORE CAR SELECTION Any Pair Offer Considered Stop in today to buy or sell that good used car SUPERIOR AUTO SALES 923 W Huron FE 4-7500__ Hargreaves OAKLAND COUNTY 8 LARGEST CHEVY DEALER “OK.” Used Cars and Trucks 631 OAKLAND AVE FE 4-4547 ve SALE sm GIGANTIC November Bargains DECEMBER PRICES — Only 2 Days Left — — IMMEDIATE DELIVERY — ON ANY 1960 FORD IN OUR LARGE 8TOCK '56 RAMBLER "85 CHENS Cross Sountry ¢ Door Beau. BEL AIR >DOOR tiful tone factory finish Hy- Original factory turquotse and dramatic, radio and heater vory sh Powerglide, radio & beater Oneowner Only $495 New trade $895 cer "55 MERCURY "56 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE STARCHJEF HARDTOP Now is the time to buy this 4 Door Ortyinal factory 2-tone dark green y go finish. Hydramatic, radio and with Mercomatic. radio, heate heater, whitewalls power steer whitewalls and ful) power Oni Only $695 ani power brakes $895 ine _ WE HAVE ONE OF - The Largest Selections of ‘52-°55 A-1 RECONDITIONED USED CARS __ YN OAKLAND COUNTY OVER 100 TO SELECT FROM ANY OF THESE CARS CAN BE BOUGHT As Low as $5 Dn.-$2 Per Wk. ‘$7 FORD $3 FORD LANE 4DOOR 2TON STAKE ne rd engine Fordo Compete with side racks matic. radio heater whitewails factoiy-installed heater and d} Gold and tvory 2-tone One ectiona} signals Like-new owner Only nd ital Must be seen Only $1095 $495 "35 PLYMOUTH > ate. BAVOY #+DOOR V4 = aa Orr TIBI E _— Original factory finish Pose Pate Mecdawaten tre: flite transmission radio ar ear ahitewail full power Save mone on tl beau be Gaaes — “ . ‘re the spring price increase e-in Only $495 Additional Bonus -— FRIDAY AND © VTUKD "FREE TURKEY" TO ANYONE TAK! ey ar EAL peti ATION RIDE !N Truck eta) le $1295 New or Used rer fa Eddie St —FOR OUTDOOR VoLt M SHOW ROOMS MEAR I r = -2705- ~3275- ORCHARD LAKF RID WEST HURON ST KEEGO HARBOR AT ELIZABETH LAKE RD FE 5-9204 FE 2-2529 fk 53-3177 FE 5-086] For Sale Cars PIII ST ‘65 RAMBLER WAGON REPOSSESSION $395 full price. No cash needed Pay only $22 mo. Due Jan iat King Auto _Mr. Bell FE _8-0402 LOOK! BUY! SAVE! 1958 BONNEVILLE $3,305 Station Wagon Power steering and brakes, Hydramatic radiu and heater whitewall tires, rec and white finish Hurry’ vow RAMBLER $2195 Custom Wegor Rad heater Oniy 7.000 actua miles Most economica! and,-just lise new 908 FORD $1895 Fairiaue 500 Hardtop Powe steering V-6 engine, Fo: domath ac heate: whitewaels A real 95s CHF VRO!I Fl $2405 Impala Hardtop V6 engine Pow«- erg e redic heater wnitewal: es Heres a real bus y58 CHEVROLET $2005 Be A.r ¢door sedan V8 egine neater whitewal, tires Ce ‘Umnpare this .aiue 1958 BUICE $1895 Special 2door sedan Dynaflow adi) heater ilke new whitewall tires Beautiful green finish 1958 VAUXHALI $1605 Vietur Super 4door sedan Want econom)’ Map this is itt! 1958 CHEVROLET $i795 Biscayne 4-door sedan V-& en Kite Powerglide radio heater wiitewails Like new 1957 BUICE $1695 Koadmaster 2-coor hardtop Pow- leering brakes and windows dont .ome any nie! 037 BUICK $1505 2-dow Hurdtup * Dynafiow au heate whitewel) tires ynlv 14 000 @ a! miles and like ee 1987 CHEVROLET slses 2-door sedan with radio heater Powerglide wWhiltewa tires One owner end sharp 1987 PONTIAC $1795 Starchief ¢#door haidiop Power steering and brakes radio heat er whitewall tires Very snarp 1967 OL DSMOBILE $1895 Super “88 4¢-door hardtop Power steering ay brakes, Hydramatic radio heater, whitewal] tires 1986 BUICK $1205 Super ¢door hardtop Power a lg and brakes Dynaflow radio heater whitewa!l) tires 1986 BUICK $1295 Super Hardtop Power steering and brakes whitewal) tires plas tie covers never been off 1956 FORD WAGON $1295 Country Sedan with V-8 engiue. Fordomatic, redio, heater white- walls Green and ivory finish 1956 BUICK $1305 Century Convertible with full-pow- er Now is the time to buy this one for less — ge tae ce $1395 “88'"' Convertible Power woras and brakes, radio, heat- er Hydramatic, whitewalls. red and ivory 1986 PLYMOUTH $005 Savoy Hardtop Power steering and brakes, automatic transmits- sion 24,000 miles. One owner 1955 BUICK Century, ¢door hardtop $1045 If you PAO _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ee a —— see —_ - —— Want to go first class, this is it 1954 CHEVROLET $505 | Be! Air ¢door Sedan Powerglide Extra sharp 1953 OLDSMOBILE $445 Super 88" 2-door hardtop power brakes. hydramatic radio heat- whitewalls SHELTON - Buick ROCHESTER OL 18133 Across from new car sales _ Open — ‘tl 8 _or later er, Pontiac 4-DOOR 1949 FORD 2-DOOR 1948 Chrysler 2-DOOR 1951 Plymouth 4-DOOR 1951 Chevrolet ( Wie iP OLDS 4 : M IK BUICK 2-DOOR 1951 MERCURY 4 DOOR 19353 NASH 4-DOOR First Come YOUR CHOICE fine selec nsed \.e also have a trom Cal Showroom FRESH!! 1960 Pontiacs Ramblers of late marvlel 5S] N. Broadway at Shadbolt and M24 at Shadbolt LAKE ORION RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES AUTHORIZD RAMBLER DEALER Al THORIZED PONTIAC DEALER 51 N. BROADWAY LAKE ORION MY 2-2871 or MY \ 3-1461 FOR THE . RETURNING HUNTER No 353 °36 BUICK 4-Door Century H'top $1195 A pretty black & white car rarin to go! No. 362) 'S6 PONTIAC 2-Door |rardtop ...$ 995 This is a petty Liue car and «!| cleaned up No 363 750 WHE bes leCDStCh ee ee $ 695 Que of those collectors ms complete: renovated for that college boy or girl Be the Sheed of Bre Si armpns No 372 755 PONTLEAC 4-Door Sedan $ 795 Heres a uice biack & White car Gone compieteiy through from one end to the other A mere $705 No 387) “99 WILLYS Station: Wayon $9525 2 whee drive Here's another Willys Wagon completely re- stored at the low. low price of $505 No. 393) "56 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop err $1095 A special in A-) condition No. 395) 7°57 BUICK Convertible .$1595 A pretty cream colored ~specia) comvertibie just awaiting some ‘ucky owner Buy now at winter prices for the full pleasure of spring driving No. 899) 7°36 BUICK 4-Door Hardtop . $ 895 Here's a sleeper priced way below the market The only thing wrong is the price No. 4000-755 BUICK 2-Door oo. FOS Weve spent the money ou ll get the pleasure No 4100 137 BUTCK Super 4 Door PPtop S595 One owner ctu tip top shape : No 41 53 BUICK Special 2-Door $ 795 Standard transmission beautiful car in top shape No $130 (36 BUTOK 2-Door Hardtop LpPOOS Heres agother one cof those fine 1056's awaiting a new owner No 428 58 WERCURY 2-Door Sedan . SP SQ5 Weve removed a!) the kinks ang its rarin to go No 424957 BUTTOCK special 2-Door He top .. $1495 No, 426 "56 BUICK Special 2-Door HVtop .. $1005 No. 428 5S BULK 2Door Special Sedan . § 695 To drive it is to buy it No 431 [57 BUICK Roadmaster . . $1495 ¢Door Hardtop Heres another sieepe A eer with lots of get up and go No 432 ‘§3 FORD 4-Door Victoria Sed $ 695 Lovely. clean car in tip-top shape No. 434 735 BUICK Special 4-Door Sedan. .§ 79> Plenty of good economical transportation No. 439) 7°57 BUICK Special 2-Dour $1395 Here's a fine automobile for a fime price No. 441 56 BUICK Special 2-Door Ef top . $1095 This one has been checked from end to end engine nt transmission Rarin’ to go! No. 46 °57 BUICK Roadmaster Convert. .. $1505 Here's a lovely green convertible completely renovated Another car at winter prices No. 317) 38 FORD Wagon SAVE We have advertised this car at $1605 which is way below market f you bring this ad with you and present it to any- one of our used car salesmen we will sell this car $150 less than the advertised price of $1605 OLIVER MOTOR SALES, | rt The formerly ts now avaliable for sale New OTHERS MAY DO IT, BUT. Look What “Russ. DAWSON DOES AGAIN & AGAIN & AGAIN “We Challenge You”. 1 BEAT THES PRICES DURING South End DEALERAMA Only 2 Days Left 1959 THAMES é 5 CWT VAN The ideal small delivery and service van 35 miles per gal- ton The truck that makes Free Service’ pay for itself $1,323 —DEMO— 1959 MERCURY PARKLANE HARDTOP beautiful big Parklane owned by our boss ar Warranty inciuded SAVE $1,000 G9 MERCK Ss ation Wagon ........-.. $2895 +DOOR Power steering & power brakes. power back win- dow radio & heater whitewalls, auto trans. This car like brand new Y LINCOLN 4 Door H-Top ...........-- $4355 BRAND NEW Radio & heater, whitewalls power steering & power brakes Beautiful midnight blue. Our last 59 Lincoln Ss VUE NDERBIRD eee $2995 4 PASSENGER Power steering power brakes. power win- dows. auto trans. radio, heater. whitewalls 89 EDSEIL. Corsair Hardtop ......... .... $2069 4+ DOOR Radio & heater, auto trans. whitewalis $0 FORD Country Sedan ......0.56064:+: $1095 STATION WAGON Auto. trans, radio & heater, whitewalis One-owner "58 MERCURY 2 Door Sedan . $1295 Radio & heater standard transmission ‘38 LINCOLN Premier Hardtop .... . $2895 4DOOR Power steering. power brakes. power seats, power at a price you windows. air conditioning The luxury car can afford 5? FORD 2 Doéor Hardtop: « «505 «0 ox $1295 CORAL & WHITE 2Tone. Radio & heater, auto irecastiesoh “Russ. DAWSON MOTOR COMPANY Lincoln-Mercury-Edsel ~English Ford- Ae. BIRMINGHAM Quality Used Cars ONE OWNER TRADE-INS 2-Year Guarantee on All These Cars "36 NASE ‘56 OLDS CUSTOM RAMBLER WAGON 98° 2-DOOR HARDTOP Radio, heater, automatic and Full power. A black beauty sharp $1395 58 DeSOTO FLITE }DOOR HARDTOP $1095 58 PLYMOUTH niomtiRoriuy matoons, ow Tey coupeeamteattg Pm 1. $1795 $2195 ‘30 FORD "35 FORD CONVERTIBLE real nice car. “f$795 2-DOOR Three to choose from $1095 / PLYMOUTH ‘37 DesOTO “WAGONS ‘4DOORS”™ Two to choose from Three to choose from. Tuese Your cats are sharp choice $1595 $1595 ‘39 DODGE ‘30 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. ee FROM Custom Roval. full power a Low As $795 "36 LINCOLN $2990 ‘38 PONTIAC +DOOR HARDTOP PREMIE power sharp Full power, real sharp $2195 $1595 We Have 50 Cars to Choose from — All Cars Winterized — Low Down Payment BUY NOW! PAY NEXT YEAR SCHUTZ MOTORS, INC. PLYMOUTH — DeSOTO — VALIANT RE HARDIOP Ful 210 ORCHARD LAK hg 232S.SAGINAW COMPLETE CS OOD ANE | ce ‘ wae OPEN oa FE 2-913] area = ct MI 6-5302 JO 6-1546 \\ C i O WELCOME TO F ACTORY BRANCH Y WeENS Dod City” x ge City | Closeout Price & Quality "N OW" Is The Time To Buy ALL PRICES SLASHED 3 DAYS ONLY DURING OUR SOUTH END “DEALERAMA" HURRY-HURRY-HURRY ‘59 VOLKSWAGEN 2-Door ...0000000.... $1745 ‘50 FORD Convertible «<<. : $2495 S8 FORD station Wagon $1545 SS PLYMOUTH 2-Door $1198 57 FORD Station Wagon $1495 57 PLYMOUTH 2-Deuar ; 905 57 FORD 4 Don: . $1195 So MERCURY 42D < gas SO FOUR TY 2 Devens S$ ROS 55 BUICK 2-Door $505 "ss PONTIAC 4-Door .0000.00.0...0.2208. $ HOS S4 FORD 4-Door .0.0 0.00.2 eee $ 395 S4 PONTEAC Station Wagon ............ $ S95 33 DeSOTO Club Coupe . {anes Oe 0) GHENVROICE DT 42000n Geyeees nee eee $1595 "Cy Owens Your Friendly FORD Dealer 147S. SAGINAW ST. PE 93-4101 OPEN 8 A M.-9 P.M. Where Prices Are Always Low YOUR CHANCE FOR Extra-Plus $avings DURING OUR FABULOUS 3 DAYS ONLY SOUTH END "‘DEALERAMA’™ Where Can You Beat This? 1960 DODGE DART \ Full-Sized American Automobile $138.15 Dn.-$63.80 Per Mo. ‘NO PAYMENTS ‘TIL NEXT YEAR” Check These Features: - Window Washers \ir Suspension Tyrex Tires lectric Wipers Unibody Construction Dual Arm Rests and Sun Visors Onl Filter — Horn Ring Life Heater lurn Signals Jorsion Credit Insurance John SMITH Dodge INCORPORATED Dodge—Dodge Dart Dodtje Truck-Simca 211 S. Saginaw FE 3-7055 ALE Bargains $$$ Galore BRICES SE ea, The Line WHY PAY TOP. LLAR ~~. near 3S Fah wae A LIKE-NEW CAR CAN AND $1,000 Less. Money WE GOT ’EM — GET YOURS NOW 09 PONTIAC .......... $2495 CATALINA VISTA — Radio & Heater, Hydramatic, Po Stee 09 PONTIAC... $2695 CATALINA 2-DOOR cower Besrine & Brakes. Beautiful Ganon Blue PONTIAC BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE - Steering & Power Brakes. CHEVROLET DELRAY 2-DOOR - i & Heater mission. Really sha arp PONTIAC ........... aa STARCHIEF 4¢4DOOR SEDAN — Radi He Hydramatic Power Steering & Power Bra oe ater, PONTIAC STARCHIEF ¢DOOR_ -— bower Steering & Power Babe Beau Tone FORD $1595 RANCH WAGON ECONOMY 6 - Standard Transmission — / eee BELVEDERE STATION WAGON PLYMOUTH PONTIAC “Walls, Yelow & ivory i 595 SUPERCHIEF CATALINA COUPE — Radio Heat- ui ower Steering & Power Brakes. PONTIAC $1595 Fr 4 _— pl Pg DOOR sono , &.. —— nye '57 PONTIAC. $1695 ARCHIEF 4+DOOR HARDTOP — Radic & Heater, arcane, . . , ‘96 PONTIAC...........$1195' 2DOOR “870° — Radio & Heater. - FACTORY BRANCH PONTIAC RETAIL STORE “GOODWILL USED CARS" 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. FE 37117 (BEHIND THE POST OFFICE) Ra Power 08 08 08 08 eee © © ©» © © 8 © $1495 Standard Trans- a ‘O/ ‘0/7 Se + «€ © © es 6 a ee ee Ce: "8 © © © © ew a ) ‘7 ' 8 © © © © we ee ‘ \ ‘ -¢THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 a TV News and Reviews Ingo the Only. Benefactor ee in Incredibly Bad ‘Killers’ J FORTY-SEVEN. He Crashed Party but Not Right Way TULSA (AP) — Officer Kenneth —~. — - Today's Radio Programs -- | #38 oe CELY «ee ! Carbohydrates furnish more than; The Ohio River and its tribu- 50 per cent of the energy content taries carry the most river tom of most diets for human beings. nage in the U.S. — STEREO HI-FIDELITY , , TONIGHT 16:06-—WJIR, Concert Ww. News. P v Clinton broke up a gambling, "qws, Boxing TR ame. Genres CEUs. Jon Veo game, but not accerding to plan. | 6:00—-WJR, News : WPON Chuck Lewis . ' i CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS Co. ts * * WWJ, News ye sen thee | Soe Rowe con: fttte~wam. Time tor Music By FRED DANZIG ton acted as the killers. Dressed \ From a building roof Clinton | tr — — News, Musie 9:06—WIR, News, Page ‘Wwi. News, Foote «| NEW YORK (UPD—Ernest in geting A —— a sawed 4540 W. HURON open won a eri. ts §=©=OR 3-9700 hed k 11:30-W5R, Music {Hemingway's last TV representa- off shotgun and menacing George * watched a poker session through) weon. Gown. Sports ms WWJ, Faye Elisabeth rige—wws Football ; Raft-type dialogue whither they'- ———— —— = oe a window of an adjacent building. | — WXYZ, Shorr WPON, Footba tien before Thareday nem was went = * When he started to descend, some| * — yal Date aoe weamme CELW. Toby Dorie wipe: "Football For Whom the Bell Tolls,”” which . . = & bricks crumbled and he fell from | Wxyz, J. 4 6:00—WJR. Agriculture WE. Sewn, Weeding 2:00—CKLW New eee ; 7 : MOST RELIABLE TV ER op of the one-st | WPRON. ‘Candlelight & silver! © 100—CKL ‘ had to be left out. Ray Walston, as George. the EVER... See eerie d ealidiinaie WW, News, Roberts SSR WIR, Jock Harrie sae WORK. Fe tball * * * owner of the diner, turned in the * * | 7:00--WJR, Guest fou wxy Wolf “‘w rH ae . ; WWJ, News, Maxwell LW. Good Morning ea ag bf a Made rp “The Killers.” first of four Hem. Most convincing job of the night Lt. Ralph Duncan, in an alley, WRYZ,8. P. Mo WJBK, News, George WWJ. News, Haggard Ree : a below, broke the officer's fall, but) GX&¥: & Lewis Jr. Music] WCAR News, Sheridan WXYZ. News rr 3:00—WJR. Footbal! ingway-as-adapted-by-A. E. Hotch- Dean Stockwell as an eager-beaver elow, broke the officer's fall, but) wJpk! Jack. Bell WPON. Early Bird CKLW, ‘Joe Vat WCAR. News Bennett . oducti to be on Nick Adams was burdened with Clinton was hospitalized with a| WCAB. Woodling ‘ WJBK, News, C. Reid CKLW, Davies lt abet ttteh SL ecen ; hallow } . dia fracturer pelvis 7:30—WWJ, 3 Star Ext a8 7% nage Rt wees ee es “Td say the snly pairs ho ‘ae . cr 3 ; ra WJIBK, News, rge 4:00—WJR, Music < . , ‘d say the only one who hene- ~ j 16:30— WIR, Hour fered because too much story had . , In the (commotion tre poker, Cale bg RS ays 1:06 WIR, Mews, Music WCAR. Wews, Woodling pM gp hloll io be threwn in fitted from this show was Johans- game ended an players van-| WPON. Ton J. WWJ. Hugh WCAR. News Bennett ; son, Having considerable charm y ished. WXYZ, News, Wolf. J] 100 WIR, Yer ire the Jury) WJBK. Scoreboard As a result, the 90-minute pro- , LDEN td | | y E posite W. Goog Mornt ews, rd , as a singer on a Dinah Shore ‘ww evs, fonitor wiae. Mews, George” ps Sty | agg 4:20 WIR, Muste Hall duction was incredibly bad. show. he now seems to have some ews . e ews nnett : Bo : About 8 million American chil-| WB. MBU ‘Footve . News, Casey clot ok Te WJBK, McLeod The? reason I say this is that natura] ability as an actor. ENGINEERED TO LAST 100% LONGER dren take musi¢ lessons. $:30—WCAR, Woodling 1:30—W OR, R, Muste Hall 13:90 ial 5:00 WIR. News Musie lyou can’t play around with this —<——— : JBK, eorge Time ¥ ~y rarer rreg. . #:06 WIR. News, Topie — . WCAR, News, Woodling CKLW, a | particular Hemingway short story THE CHANNEL SWIM: Betty 8:06—WJIR, News. Guest News. Bennett | about a man who is not the master Garrett and Dick Van Dyke join y ie Bas ‘Pan. Am. Mel. Toby wid 2 RATURDAT. Ar age wave Bhors jof his fate ithe cast of Art Carney’s Dec. 4 Tf 7 on the average ww 0:00 WIR Music WWJ. News, Maxwell §:30—WJR, Music Hall * * * NBC-TV comedy special, ‘Ver , CKLW, y special, YY Ratnosh owls WCAaR, Hews WXYZ. P. Winter ee Cae eee anes It's a story that is charged with Important Pepple.” Nes - fatalistic dialogue and philosophy’ Ernie Ford, whose parody of than any other tubes EMBIE Boy ; . |which sends the reader's imagina- ‘‘The Mikado” was a success last ' '‘ 7 jtion going off in all directions. The season, again turns to Gilbert and ~™ oda y S elevision Program —=. {proper setting for the storv is the Sullivan on his NBC-TV show of ever put into home TV AT LOW PRICE OF imagination, not the TV stage Jan. 14, with an abbreviated ‘HH % ~ — , ' .q ™.S. Pinafore.” | A TABLE MODEL Channel 2-WJBK-TV Channel ¢—WWJ-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV_— Channel 9—CKLW.TV sacieeany? tect Mite: point et s ~ —_—_—— ~ New 1960 , _ | with some shrieking, something TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS | (7) Fun House. | (9) Pro Football. | of a minor love story, and Moscow Approves WITH 6:00 (2) Movie (began at 5 p.m.) (2) Heckle & Jeckle. j2:15 (4) College Football. (color)! brushes against other forces that : 1 wh (7 (4) News, We Py 10:00 (2) Mighty Mouse. \$:30 (7) Wrestling. might have altered the fate of ather, (4) (color) Ruff and Reddy a | his hunted hero, Ole Andreson. () eum (7) (9) Movie. . T V Curtain Time. 111:00 (2) I Love Lucy. j ; ; 2)” OVER-ALL | (9) Popeye. . 4:30 (9) Six Gun Judge After disposing of the original : H (4) Fury. : . NEW YORK uP Th Co) b DIAG MEAS 6:1 (4) Californians. 11:30 (23 ae Ranger (2) Wrestling story’ in about 20 minutes, though NEV g e Columbia 263 SQ. IN. PICTURE SWIVELS for easy viewing 6:25 (2) Weather , (4) Circus prin (7) Amateurs on Parade. you can imagine Hotchner’s prob- Broadcasting System announced : S U :25 (2 i y. ; Teibes fi ing aoe ia VIEWING AR —— > 6: (2) News Weather 11:55 (9) Billboards. 5:00 (7) All Star Golf. lem =— 0 so eit over me mele on a a owe = (4) Californians cont.) (9) Comedy Time caabon Caer y (7) Curtain nasak ; . - : 5:15 (4) Football Seebourd Of special interest in this pro- bureau : tI : (9) Cisco Kid | SATURDAY AFTERNOON 5:38 (2) Bowling. duction was the dramatic acting The Soviet Union barred the net : YN '12:00 (2) Sky King (4) Casey Jones debut of Ingemar Johansson, the work after lodging a protest 6:40 (2) News Analyst (4) Milky’s Party Ti sax shy Lea to Bene heavyweight champion of the against a drama, ‘The Plot to (1) Sports : Se ee , i hes “ world Kill Stalin,’”’ which was carried \6: 45 (2) (4) (7) News, Sports (1) Soupy Sales Answer to Previous Puzzie by CBS-TV Sept. 25, 1958 Eee Te Fe ids COGN AEROS: 2 ’ Portraying Andreson, In£® “jonn F. Day, director of CBS (4) Clutch Cargo, (color) 12:30 (7) Bowling Champions x : handled bis limes with the proper so... said a correspondent would (7) Cannonball (4) Detective’s Diary | S feeling, bet big movements were be named soon (9) Brave Eagie (9) Gabby Hayes, ‘O = on unnatural and indicated that Di- om oe ee 7:30 (2) Rawhide (2) Big Story , rector ‘Tom. Denevan ‘had ever- Snake in the trans-ocean cables (a) People Are Funny 1:00 (2) Detroit Bandstand ical coached him. can usually be traced by shore (7) Disney Presents. Adven (9) Pro Football TT Dane Clark and Robert Middle- stations to within one-half a mile ture: Elfego Baca continues » (7) Realm of the Wild 1 2 SPEAKERS; BULLTAN Swivel io help wandering Mustang- . . oa iti raat tear pee ia rl BASE FOR ANY-ANGLE VIEWING . «ne : = 2: ) Movie ers in their battle to settle ) Lions Prevue my FREE e 2 6-Pac PEPSI COLA ° FREES Blacker black, whiter white on ane become farmers. . AY Mavis . | BBIRISN is WITH EACH LARGE PIZZA 5 from 20,000 Volts Picture Pow- ™ Sstesery Coler) $ 95 (9) Million $ Movie. Musical ee __ _\s * er. Golden iy de sty * Unit. FROM Betty Grable, ‘‘The Lady in a i * Golden '‘M’’* Tubes Case 5 95 Ermine” (°48) , - ACROSS 3 4 7 1 “ s neg Tuner. Colors: Ma . 1 Comedian . Wal BI 21° diag. meas. 262 #q. inches 8:00 (2) Rawhide (cont.) P — Sener 7 = s 21 126. nut or Blond. M we A 2 Trade. pee mp meio (4) Troubleshooters. | 4458'S" Hi PIZZA : neal Disney cont a Fa r 4 H (9) Movie (began (: 5 | 13 Danube a Tae 5 * 8:30 (2) Hotel De Paree. aoe a is FE 5-8192 a. TV Ra i (4) Telephone Hour. (color) 7 Before T is ex ry s d 0 a Shert- Musical: All Gershwin pro-|}§ Sragrelereg Ld x OFFER GOOD s Service o No Productie gram with Marge and Gow. 3° Grades s MON. TUES. WED. THURS. & it cuts 4 "Service er Champion, Ella Fitzger-| Bivalve ~ . . : ' a Open Friday Nites ° Hones Super Horizen- ald, Vic Damone, Polly Ber-!3$ Cut of mest © 23rd 24th 25th 26th a "Til 9 P.M. gen, Andre Previn. Fo Baby garment @ 37 W. Ypsilanti car. Baldwi Heurs Sen Mon Toes. Wed. | hassis jn | . Psila Q a n 3 p.m — a : alive D (7) Man From Black Hawk. 35 Qavertisement ey Hi Same Building as Nationa) Feed There. Fri tat épe soe. 770 Orchard Lake Ave. . Zenith Sunshine pic- (9) Movie (bege at 7:30 4 parm poplars @ FREE FREE H FE 4-5841 oe ctresses ture tube p.m.) Allen and MoT E PELL Ld ; Fyll Power Transformer 9:00 (2) Desilu Playhouse Dre se Foie my ay a — —— i push on | ma: ‘The Lepke Case.”’. I” Turpir pe | (4) Tele. Hour (cont.). |37 Footlike pars Bag 1 (7) 77 Sunset Strip. 40 Painful ‘ 41 Pearl WEET’S | tameres feaen ff e BIGGER THAN EVER THIS SUNDAY! S EE S (4) M Squad ) 3 Tosuiitied 2 | (7) 77 Sunset Strip (cont.). 52 Region ° - r sur 23 Harok 34 T Radio and TV Shop (9) Country Hoedown 1" ronment 5 Bewildered ig 40 Persotration | 18:00 (2) Twilight Zane, Drama: 3s Frys et Bikar e* 38 Soper, neta = - FREE PARKING Burgess Meredith is the last se Finest" 8 Thailand. 2A careae r . ‘an iration | OPEN.PRIDAY .MIGHT man left alive after the bomb *? S#PReL tea " foie ae ” 422 W. Huron falls in “Time Enough At; ! Pormer 1 Thecriog a Baghtehs aun ‘eindiens . . 1eavy it 1 rie 2 Eng lis ueen ne s Last.’ : champion 17 — 31 Mail aa 47 Title . e ra e ) ee, Pe onste Co gs 33 M 8 Small branct | FE 4-1133 (4) Cavalcade of Sports. 2? accian ares Tek one deccared 6@ Chest bone } Lightweight bout: Len! ¢ Liquid 19 Push away 1. 1 a | Matthews vs. Wille Toweel —— : (7 >tectives SONOTONE 9) Cape David Grief ! j E (2) Manhunt House of Hearing (4) Sports ‘cont. ). , , H . T (7) Black Saddle ree earing ests (9) Person to Person 11 Pontiac Stat Visits \ Charles Collingwood Judge Harold R. Medina and authoress-actress Ilka Chase (4) Jackpot Bowling (2) (4) (9) News, Weather, Sports (7 Soupy’s On (2) Weather, Sports (2) Nightwatch Theater Double - feature. Mystery Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey, ink Bide SEE RCA COLOR T.V. AT CONDON’S T.V. $495 Warehouse Sale ©@ Complete Listings for the entire week of all TV ‘ stations in this area! Thanksgiving Special MADE IN PENNSYLVANIA 3° FRUIT CAKE as low as Includes Free 1-Year Warranty eae on All Parts Including Picture | ee ee a | pal @ Full-Color Photos of TV ian drama: Tube. Free delivery—tfree set up. Flame.” Stars! CHECK OUR TRADE-IN (4) Sports. ALLOWANCE—GET THE TRUE (9) Telesco ; i FACTS. “BUY YOUR TV FROM 11:38 (4) Jack el @ Stories and Previews . rn i. (7) Shock Theater. Melo- | of TV Shows! USED TV VALUES—LOW PRICES drama: Dick Foran, “The NEW TV VALUES—90 DAYS Mummy's Hand” ('40). RCA os sruvames DB) eran: Tener Neay| , © Now!—More "Channel —— . ma: Robert Taylor. Hedy, CONDON?S Lamarr, “Lady of the Trop-! Chatter” Every Week! ics’? (°39). a e , ®@ Now!—Each station’ Radio and TV SATURDAY MORNING coma €. 99° . ch station’s Sales and Service var i tis FILLETS Tender 24 per box istings on separate 36 S. Telegraph be 4-9736 7:4@ (2) On the Farm Front. pages — with larger, 9-5 P.M. Friday 9-9 F+-45 (2° Michigan Conservation. T-BONE 100°, C . — - = 8:00 (2) Capt. Kangaroo, STEAKS Trimmed eis Net easier-to-read type! 18:30 (7) Genius. , 8:55 (4) News. RCA COLOR TV 9:00 (2) Sagebrush aoa DEL MONICO Real ae Wes Ee c | Sales and Servic (4) (color) Bozo the Clown. 1 - | : : : (1) Crusade for Christ. STEAKS Tender 12 per box ; 9:30 (2) Jeff's ie. Sweet’s Radio TV 3 OUR BELT Man ,..on. mo 40c | Open Mon. & Fri. Nights (7) Three Musketeers. STEAKS S i. ‘ne . 422 W. Huron St. FE 4 14:08 (4) (color) Howdy Doody. ized per ber eR =. N.Y. CUT CLUB Loam & igor wer Es. 5g * HIGH FIDELITY || steaks = tate et NO EXTRA COST! / & HEADQUARTERS SEE — HEAR — COMPARE MAGNAVOX HIGH FIDELITY TELEVISION Styled for every Setting!! Priced for every Budget!! Superb "ee like”’ eng Amazing “life-like” sound. than Mediocre TV Sets. “EASY. TERMS_-FREE PARKING McCALLUM & DEAN 409 E. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM Mi 4-5230 ALL MEAT U. S. GOV’T INSPECTED @ Wrapped for Your Freezer @ Seve—Quantity Buying @ Closely Trimmed @ Box Lots Only All Products Gueranteed a ONLY WITH SUNDAY’S SATURDAY ONLY 9 to 4 , , : | 124w.HuURON|| Detroit News — PONTIAC | - RALPH LONG, 388 Nelson, Pontiac, Michigan ‘ | f ra / FORTY-EIGHT —_ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS; FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959 ey aren THOMAS/ECONOMY en: ys bs 5: ash hs sr ‘ Saris wey Matching lomineted plastic fopa resist heet end sol vents such @s fingernail polish remover, eicohels ~" dazzling White Satin finish highlighted by trim with a - golden hue. The gleaming mirror frames and legs are tarnish proof. White Satin was developed especially for STARFIRE and is acknowledged to be one of the most durable furniture finishes available today. Here is modern furniture with luxury, elegance and built-in quality ... furniture that homemakers of all ages will be proud to own. Big, roomy double dresser and framed tilting mirror (may be used horizontally also, if desired); Seven-drawer , | a Chest and Full size Panel Bed. wv JOHNSON-CARPER : ee T 9 9 9 5 High style Triple Dresser, Framed Tilting Mirror and Dual six-foot six Bookcase Bed with Swing Frames. Only $20 Down Night tables in each suite extra ‘CHOICE — y ae | 2 EACH : / ie th matching chair make o versatile odditon | PIECE... : , ae ng Pieces in the STARFIRE g Desk .. . 579° Chair...*°2?9°° $7 Down ci , Beiculcatye)s Jee Veber jh... ee. eee — 26) SOUTH SAGINAW STREET + PONTIAC