4 ‘Tha eater | UM Weather Bureas Forecast
Chance of showers.
— Mietalis rage 2
xieth Lean REY PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958~—86 PAGES
e Legislators Compare Notes _
CONGRESSIONAL CHIT-CHAT — Looking .
back yesterday over past experiences during the
85th Congressional session were William S.
Broomfield (left) and Charles E. Fotae. Peter, Pontiac Press Photes
United States Senator from Michigan, chatted
with Broomfield, Oakland County’s representa-
tive in Congress, before speaking to the Pontiac
Rotary Club at the Waldron Hotel.
Pontiac Rotarians Hear Campaigning Senator
Reuther ‘Dangerous fo Labor’ ~Potter By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR.
Crooks and racketeers in labor
unions are bad , said Sen.
Charles E. Potter, but “‘even more
dangerous to the labor movement
and our free enterprise system are
men like UAW President Walter
and political power in the hands of
a few labor leaders like Reuther,”
Potter. told Pontiac Rotarians
Thursday noon.
Introduced by Harold A. Fitz- gerald, publisher of The Pontiac
Press, Potter predicted “this con-
centration of power will destroy
the Democratic party just as it
did the Liberal pary in England.”
“The average wage earner
doesn’t know where his dues go,”
City Schools Show
300 Pupil. allie iieaiesta Increase
ein nual neues ancien
ing day, as cOmpared*with last year’s figures, Assistant/on-
Superintendent Philip Proud disclosed today.
He noted, however, that the boost was some 500 less
than had been anticipated+
by the administration last
spring.
Total coctlaeaie for Pontiac
schools is about 19,225 with another
hundred expected by the end of
the month. This compares with
19,015 on the fourth a=Mny Wi sont
September.
Elementary schools are 525 un-
der expected enrollment, junior
highs reached the predicted figure,
while the senior highs are about
100 over, Proud: said,
Elementary schools that ran well
over expected pupil enrollment are
Hawthorne with 50 extra, Will Rog-
ers, 51, and Herrington Hills, 74,
he added,
“Fortunately,” Proud said,
“these are new schools which had
extra classroom space to meet
future growth in their attendance
areas, so We are not cramped
for space.” .
Fifteen elementaries are under
predicted figures, led by Bethune, 100 less, Mark Twain, 80, and
Malkim, 60, he stated, . —
The Junior highs anticipated
an enrollment of 3,499, Proud
said, and have 3,450 right now.
Eastern is down 40 from pre-
Highest Court Ponders Human Rights dicted figures and Jefferson is
off 50,
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 37
Low Tonight of 56;
Chance for Showers
. Partly cloudy tonight with the
the outlook for the Pontiac area.
Tonight's low will be about 56.
According to the U.S. Weather
Bureau, tomorrow’s high will be
near 74, the low tomorrow night
warm until late Sunday when a
cooler trend will set in for Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Precipitation will total one-half
to three-quarters of an inch in a
few possible showers Saturday and
again late Sunday or. Monday,
The lowest recorded temperature
in downtown Pontiac .preceding 8
a.m, was 44 degrees, The mercury
rose to 70 at 1 p.m.
15% Million in Parks
LANSING (®—More than 15%
million ‘persons --have visited
Michigan’s 59 state parks and
recreation areas this year, the
State Conservation Department
said today.
| Men Come and Go—the Law Remains — Pontiac Central expected: 2,101 a.
chance of a few showers Saturday)
~ fand little temperature change is the 41-year-old veteran who lost
both legs in World War II said.
“Well, I'll tell them. It’s the main
support of the ADA (Americans
for Democratic Action). ~
‘BEEN IN A FEW FIGHTS’
The Republican senator charged
the United Auto Workers with try-
. jing to block his election in 1952
. |by spreading stories that he lost
his legs in a jeep accident while
being AWOL from his Army ‘post
in Paris.
“This shows you what those
guys will stoop to, to knock me
off,” he said. “But I’ve been in a
few fights before and I don’t
exterminate easily.”
upreme Court
Racial Integration Ord "a4 i * 2
al > eit x a2
: ;
5 C = * =.
cae 3 } 5 es
ales 4 2
‘
:
+
ke Tells World U.S. Will Not
Appease Reds Radio Speech Warns
China to Stop Pushing
or Expect to Fight
WASHINGTON (#)—Pres-
ident Eisenhower has drawn
the line against Communist
aggression in the western
Pacific in a momentous
speech telling Red China to
stop pushing and negotiate
or be prepared to fight.
Immediate bipartisan
congressional reaction to
his White House address
last night was strongly
favorable.
It remained to be seen whether
Red China and the Soviet Union-
accused by Eisenhower of “work-
To Resist Red Attack
WASHINGTON (UPI)
fense Secretary Neil H. McKtroy
said today the United States
would resist an assault on the
Quemoys by thé Chinese Com-
munists, Report GM and UAW
Separated by 12% Cents
DETROIT (®—The auto industry
". lintensified its contract talks with the United Auto Workers today
amidst reports that the gap be-
tween General Motors and the
UAW now stands at 12% cents,
were held against a. backdrop of a
UAW Wednesday strike deadline
at Ford if.no agreement is reached
there.
x « * The speeded up negotiations} weekend — GM proposals would
have given its workers about 642
cents an hour. The UAW in-
Ford Offer Delayed
DETROIT (#—-Ford Motor Co.
resumed contract talks with the
United Auto Workers today but
said it was unlikely that any new
offer would be made, at least
before tomorrow.
The Big Three said no new con-
tract proposals had been made to
the UAW but all parties issued
cautiously optimistic statements
after yemeeneny s bargaining ses-
sions.
Chief interest centered on Ford
where UAW President Walter P.
Reuther took personal command
yesterday of the union’s drive
for a contract to cover 100,000
Ford hourly rated workers,
“ Unusual Saturday and Sunday
talks were scheduled by the Ford-
mer out an agreement before the
strike deadline. GM and Chrysler
said they had not decided whether
similar talks should be held over
_ |the weekend.
— De- |UAW, GM SILENT
The report of the 12% - cent
spread came from a usually well-
informed source who insisted on
anonymity. UAW and GM sources
had no comment,
ity to the wage earners,”
said. “But rather they have pec
eager Pet a eA Bro
"ter called fr election of mt
tional lawmakers who will re
(Continued on Page 2, Col, 5) western Pacific—would take him ing hand in hand” to enslave the He said that when the GM con-
tract ran out May 29—followed
ar Eek ee, Coe See UAW teams as they sought to ham-|- oe
talks ended with expiration of the
contract. UAW sources have never dis-
closed what they figure their con-
tract demands would cost GM.
The company said the original de-
mands would have cost 73 cents
an hour per worker.
GM said the UAW, in the final
hours before the old contract ran
out, cut these- to 48 cents. The
average hourly wage for auto;
workers is $2.43,
A Chrysler spokesman, asked if
that company was within seven
cents of an ener declined
+comment,
Admit Negroes
Without Delay,
Little Rock Told Chief Justice Reveals
Unanimous Decisio
Packed Courtecti :
FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES
WASBINGPON <3: 25 *
Supreme Court today de-
nied the Little Rock School
Board any delay in inte-
gration at. Central ‘High
chey told a rally of 100,000 cheer-
ing Russians at -Stalingrad last
.| night that any attack on Red China would be considered an attack on
the Soviet Union.
in’ his va- Eisenhower interrupted
cation to make the blunt speech,
perhaps the- strongest of his ca-
reer.
In his nationwide radio-TV ad-
dress, beamed around the world
in 40 languages by the Voice of
America, he deplored the bom-
bardment of Quefnoy. He called
it a tragic affair which already
(Continued On Page 2, Col. 2) Seeking to Pare! 4
Hospital Costs Willman Orders Full
Repair ‘Need Inspection
at Old Pontiac General
Confident that extra repair costs
in the old Pontiac General Hos-
pital building will be reduced, City
Manager Walter K. Willman to-
day ordered a fine toothcomb in-
spection of defective electrical,
plumbing and heating installations.
It is anticipated that city in-
Opens in Pontiac Thursday
56. Temperatures will continue|
Slate Shopper's Festival A carnival spirit will pervade downtown Pontiac for
five days, starting next Thursday and continuing through
Tuesday, Sept. 23.
Sponsored by the Downtown Merchants Assn., a festival
for young and old alike will feature~30 carnival rides, an
outdoor, chuck wagon-style restaurant and booths in front
of most of the stores.
Merchants, starting today are giving out free tickets
which entitle youngsters to reduced rates on the carnival
rides to be located in the city parking. ae on E. Pike
at Hill street.
. The outdoor restaurant will be set up on Lawrence at
Wayne street and will featyre barbecue, hot dogs, coffee
and soft drinks served at outdoor tables.
Merchants will offer special values from booths on the
sidewalk manned by colorfully dressed employes.
pectors will find a large propor-
tion of the installations serviceable
or salvageable, Willman said, The
inspection will take place this
weekend,
x* *« *
“By Monday, we should have a
fairly good idea of which materials
have to be replaced and which
don’t,”’’ Willman said.
A Monday meeting is sched-
uled with Harold B, Euler, hos-
pital administrator, to determine
| how the repair jop looks from
the city’s point of view.
“We will have a preliminary es-
timate of the cost by then, but this
figure will be reduced even further
after we meet with contractors and
architects,” he said,
x * *
While the city is studying the
installations, Willman said, Darin
& Armstrong Co., prime contractor
(Continued: on Page 2, Gol. 1) TAIPEI (#—The Chinese
with more artillery fire. ~ Both Peace and War School.
—,.
pete
Chief ‘Tustice Warren )
atat it chapped “iprsidaieny ‘oremeniiaghi ng continued Red
China artillery attacks on Quemoy and Matsu.
Shelling Forces Nationalists
fo Hold Off Aid fo Quemoy Nationalists ‘held back an- other attempt to run the Communist blockade of Que-
moy today while the Reds peppered the offshore islands
_As the Formosa Strait crisis rounded out a third week,
Nationalist military headquarters reported Red shore
batteries sprayed nearly 300 shells on Quemoy and the
of Little Quemoy, Ehrtan
and Ttan.
Although the shelling, was com-
paratively light, the Nationalists
decided against trying again to
push supplies to the besieged is-
land in the face of the Red gun-
fire which foiled the last two at-
ld
Some Nationalist military men
and the Talpel press voiced de-
mands for more American. action
in getting supplies to Quemoy,
They wrote off as ineffective the
»"Eluse of U.S, warships to escort the
Up on the bench, nine men in By SAUL PETT And as they talked in the high- Fd. ;
“ ' ceilinged room, man seemed to jack robes listened. WASHINGTON (AP) — ‘‘I don’t and the law larger.
care where I sit,” the old lawyer a
Earl Warren studied the speak-
er with an intense frown. Felix
Frankfurter rocked gently back
and forth in his high leather chair,
waiting with a smile to pounce on
in thought: William -0.
scratched his sandy hair.
Clark, without apparent gesture,
sent a court page off for a law
book. -
“Tf the climate of public opinion
in Little Rock in same 2%4_
years from now, the school
board ask for another delay of
2% years?” | Don’t state officials take an
cat to uphold the federal Consti- Y Abd
ment
the illogic ‘and logic, for the ex-
traneous and the essence, for the
road to nowhere and the road to
courtroom began to clear. The old
blind lawyer in the back stood up
with pride and satisfaction, .
The lawyer left. The, law. re-
supply ships across the Formosa
Strait only to within three miles of
Quemoy.
| | REDS ‘EFFECTIVE’
Associated Press correspondent
A James Cary, who was aboard a
-| Nationalist supply ship which was
forced under Red shelling Thurs-
\|day to pull off the beach at Que-
||moy before unloading, said the
’\grim fact is “that the Communist
blockade is highly effective and
critically serious.”
There was increasing talk in
Nationalist quarters of air drop-
ping supplies to the
island and aérial assaults on Red
Se Se
warships of the U.S. Saws
|| 7th Fleet which had, escorted the
convéy from the Pescadores Is-
\lands remainéd 3 to 12 miles off
>| the beach, in line with U.S. policy
2 not to incur the risk of a shooting
_ | duel. with the, Communists.
The Americans ignored Peiping’s
= |recent declaration extending Com-
-|munist China’s territorial waters
*\12 miles to seaward, holding in-
4 — to the traditional three-m ile
t } nearby Nationalist islands+
No Quote
as Faubus
Hears News LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) —
Gov. Orval E, Faubus merely
nodded but said nothing when the
news reached him today of the
Supreme Court decision ordering
integration in Little Rock Central
High School.
There was little immediate re-
who are affected by the decision,
or by federal and city officials,
Mayor ‘Werner Knoop, head of
the Little Rock Board of Direc-
tors, immediately summoned a
meeting of the board to set up
plans for preserving peace in the
ity.
U. S. Atty. Osro Cobb and
Justice Department aides sent
from Washington said they were
man said it will be some time
before they announce their next
move,
The first official reaction came
from Wayne Upton, president of
the Board of Education.
“Naturally, we will have to try
to operate under it (the deci-
sion),” he said, “We, of course
.do not know what Gov, Faubus
plans to do, but it he orders us
to: close the school we will close the school.” F
Another board member, Harold
Engstrom Jr., said the board will
meeting.
Faubus was sxtciding over a
meeting of the State
Commission when: the news
reached him, action either from Negro children :
probably. hold an emergency|
studying the decision, A spokes-|"
In Today's Press |
SOCRATES T
Caen: vis .escabeccsamestd MO
County News | Pesetarsoesbes il
Editorials . tee eseuse ebeecees “SS 8
Farm & Garden . seserenateee
Markets Pee etsaeeeteretereee 30
Obituaries PHC COOTER EE -4
School Deeeeetbeeecetageeeten 19
eidnees b0t8 Give 20-24
Theaters .......... sensee 26-39
TV & Radio Programs .... 27
Wilson, Earl ae b
Women’s Pages ........ 5.17
oA
*
e >
& * iy
RESS, ‘FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1058 eas 7
= _|The Day in Birmingham a
Great Books Club Opens
Fall Series Wednesday ror Text of High Court Opinion} : WASHINGTON (AP)—The text of the Supreme Court’s
: | ‘Noisy’ U.S. Jet
-_|Airliner Hardly
unanimous opinion in the Little Rock integration case: | BIRMINGHAM~Meeting et the pe the direction of trained mod-
The court, having fully deliberated upon the ora¥ argu- Community Birming-
ments had on Aug. 28, 1958, as supplemented by the argu- ham Great sone pry rng ea ———— — we at. Rag
ments presented on Sept. 11, 1958, and all the briefs on file, ee ae, hardin wa ne a Mies ae,
is unanimously of the opinion that the judgment of the Divided into fourth and first- adults, ;
Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit of Aug. 18, 1958, must
be affirmed.
«x * *
gee
a Reed ‘City girl. In view of the imminent t of the nev of the Great ) ‘s The Pan American World Aix ew of the imminent commencement of the new The of Anns Club at 1 p.m. Monday. A The —_— fe tanga dg ways four-jet plane has been un. |. School year at the Central High School of Little Rock, Ark., -| Books is to promote a broader [notiuck luncheon will be served
toe State Police post. dergoing tests in London and | we deem it important to make prompt announcement of interest iq. the claanice of ancient under the direction of Mrs. Mat-
“Tee, Pan noggerwes | Sere stir et at | CUT IUMEeDE affirming the Cont ot Appeals Sr aber ot |, Mr Shree found bound in a coral "Tues- its noise is not ciactoubie. The expression of the views supporting our judgment are in charge of registration. [yy-s Phil Williams. _
poe lip georges tied witha | The airline hopes to put jet will be prepared and announced in due course. ; lists of books are} Arthur pd
a towel Wag wrapped | planes into regular transatlantic $ P ‘AP Wirephote | available to members. The books|jeweler, will speak on “Diamonds around ber neck, a It is accordingly ordered that the judgment of the ¥ a
ae uo cent choae al. eta ne rene in, | Court.ot Appeals for the Sth Circutt, dated Aug. 16, 1968, | BUDGET DOLLAR — Chart suai: ewabteis af teteral . lene aigauaees st tp montis Beira. Preciows ema
“palt-mile from the State Police post| Wild Airport decide it is quiet | Teversing the judgment of the District Court for the Eastern ead eee a oy 8. esha ak tedgst’e Bey Miss Myra Showman, registrar ~ - > ~ ij . i *
and had been missing for about) enough. ‘ District of ie gar pecan June = bcos! ya apaagee = cakdyear terlew of: Peas. Elhoredr a budget . Hi h Co rf 0 r d e IS had “ crafts we ae apace
Osceola County Sherif Donald|/Na Anr + | Disteict of douse dated Aug. 28, 1958, and Sept. 3, 1957, | Icome taxes, representing 67 cents per revenue dollar, felt off ign Lou ” — Inounced today there still is time / ' ’ ‘ . * > . is * ’ . =
_ Grein said Judith also underwent No Appeasement enforcing the School Board’s plan for desegregation in com- Lame: ype — segs nape va sagpince potag gaara (Quick Int ration to enroll in some of ‘the sessions, -
a lie test ‘but the results won't be ) va. Boara | Donte ie Cees wee Se , integ Registrations are being ac- . cone : > pliance with the decision of this court in Brown vs, Boa: ing trom bumper harvests, and anti-recession outlays. a : >
aa , lke Tells U. me Reds of Education, 347 U.S. 483; 349 U.S, 294, be reinstated. (Continued From Page One) | cepted res oe eae
five or six i BE = xk *« illion Deficit Feared . - decent high school education be~ | riittinery, adult painting, photog- ”
in her d Coen Ve Pewe One) It follows that the order of the Court of Appeals dated $12 B D F 2 es ee raphy: Tt ae pauline +: dy Sele aan" has ‘killed or wounded 1,000 per-) Aug. 21, 1958, staying its own mandate is of no further ef- ae ; Fay Little Rock Federal Build} design. pane
_ She said her attacker was wear-) But the issue, he fect. The U. S. attorney's office,| second section has been formed,
_. ing a baseball cap and a plaid tan} coe of *ealprea pornos The judgment of this court shall be effective immedi- U, S. R ans {in R ed a the Suwa Justice| she said.
jacket... : pledged: “No American boy| ately, and shall be communicated forthwith to the District. integration ee Pca a There also are openings in. the °
ever be asked by me to fight! Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas. “WASHINGTON (UPD — Presi-, Stans said the deficit would be worked, was closed to painting. and drawing classes in
. Lawyers bustled back and forth |the youth section for both after- $12,200,000,000 for the fiscal year school and Saturday morning ses- ident Eisenhower’s budget director, i
Insult or Injury?
Hoffa Called to Testify Pick Up Virginia Youth
in Staten Island Killings
_jently wi
1}was the murderer, said yesterday x & &
The newspaper said Mrs. Nimer
by a detective as she ley
thout making any state-
ment.
Saturday, and twice since, that he
that Mrs. Nimer had described her
assailant as a man about her hus-
band's size. Braisted said he con- dying| this year will outspend the Re-
.| jon-supported candidates get into admitting to a “sense of. discour-
agement,”’ last night revealed the
treasury expects to wind up more
that 12 billion dollars in the red
Budget Chief Maurice H. Stans
adding to the record peacetime
deficit.. ; which began last July 1 and ends
next June 30.
He told his news conference yes-
terday that the President and his
advisers must decide within 60
days about raising federal gasoline
interstate highways, will be ex-
hausted next fiscal year.
* * *
publicans ten to one, Once un-
office, men like Reuther start de-
manding “their pint of blood”
from them, the speaker said.
ing members of Congress who, he
said, vote on every issue as Reu-
ther dictates without deviation.
“There’s no group that demands
conformity like they (the UAW)
do,” Potter remarked. ‘‘You better
be right their way 100 per cent
of the time or you're purged.”
Contrary to what he said the He criticized the union-conform- ,000,-
anuary that he anticipated a half-
billion surplus this year. But this
forecast went out the window as
the recession hit bottom, cut sharp-
ly into government revenues and
forced expenditures up.
The statutory debt ceiling now with documents and in confer-
ences,
More than 50 deputy U. 8."
were directed to a courtroom,
where they were briefed in
batches,
construction gang cook.
Burglar Gets Nothing
but Tears in His Eyes
dy gal mt |, NJ. @—A would-
ag 2 into a lumber
company office but left with tears
in his eyes.
Police said the tears came from
tear gas which filled the office
when the burglar tried to smash
a handle from a safe. The gas
was a built-in protection feature.
sions.
Keith Dearborn, choir director .
at the Congregational Church of .
Birmingham, has invited all chil-
dren between.the ages of 9 and ow also indicated the administration ; T the . : taxes by close to one billion dol-| They stood in a line outside the/3 to register at 4 p.m. Wednesday
‘is no, the : may seek higher federal gasoline|),.. next year because the federal office of Beal Kidd, U. S. resi-|for “membership in the Pilgrim
‘that princi.|Old Negro has been picked up in| aid. wthe th daw 40 'e iq|bighway trust fund, used to finance/dent marshal repo! Choir. .
South Oakland Couaty Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega will hold its to pre- ons tees — vam, to Mev ed we =— Stans declined to torecast Eisen- - annual tea 2 p.m. tomorrow at York World-Telegraph & Sun re-|that she and her husband had| |
RP very! * * * |eries and had been stabbed by a Potter Sa Ss Reuther made clear he personally was Asks Fyamination Pilgrim St., Birmingham. Alice . repeated. The couple's eight-year-old son,| full-grown man wearing a’ white , |shooting for a return to a balanced Stark Stenz, noted auto-harpist,
Kes 8. | Melvin Dates ia wader psychiatric hood, r ry |budget in fiscal 1961 and would |s Hit R Death will provide the entertainment
tragedy examination after eaeey NEES. Hee story sapeeealty acbctentint, Dangerous fo Labor uae a ee ee In Filt-RUN Mrs. Walter G. Siecker "|police that he killed his parents one first told to officers Service for Mrs. Walter G. . in their bed with a kitchen knife. the youngster. . - (Continued From Page One) |° sl : George E. Stansfield, who P0-| (anita) Shocber. 67, of 679 N. Eton _| Previously he had said a masked) ,, : Congress recently added one |lice say has confessed to the hit-/;) pirmingham, will be held at 1
this warn-| prowler choked him and killed his newspaper gave no indica- | support candidates whose political! cent to the cost of first’class and |run accident which killed a Dixie|> "tomorrow at Bell Chapel of and appeal tion of what led police to the | convictions are directly opposite] sir mail, but Stans estimated the |Highway pedestrian Tuesday night,|5™". a fs. with with an urgent Virginia youth, whom it identi- | those favored by the unionists, Post Office will have [appeared yesterday before Water. (the, William R."Hamilton » W
tion—b the} ~s . fied ‘as William Fletcher Jr. It |tarians were told. = | a deficit of 735 mulllion dollars |ford Township Justice of the Peace| unis! in Grand Lawn Cemetery, and Red Chine oF.|Cify Schools Show | ssi@.he_ tad been staying with | Potter mentioned the 1952 presi Detroit. = the United Nations. his mother in a rented Manhat- | dential election when, he said, a| ‘u%,7°M» Partly because of new |Donald E. Adams. x * * ae aK hes : , Gi tan room, miles from the Ninr ereub auniher of waclnce euppexiod petal pay ierenses. Stansfield, 31, of 22 Augusta St.) Mrs. Stecker died Wednesday at
= 1300 Pupil Increase | cs sate tana nome, and had {President ‘Eisennower, bu” thar] He sid that fhe administration demanded examination Which washer ‘cotage at Pine Lake fe : “disappeared about two days ago |monthly dues were going toward|took a “‘consistent” position, the|Set for Thursday. He is charged/an jliness of a month.
( wien One) | 2nd returned to Virginia.” Adlai Stevenson's campaign. |White House would ask Congress|With leaving the scene of an injury) She was a member of Piety Hill Page : for another postal rate increase| accident. Chapter, DAR, and the First
, the assistant super-| . Tne or yah pr med winnie! Gene fete use, een (next eomlan. _ | Killed in the accident was Elmer|Chureh of Christ Scientist. while Northern _ funte, Potter anlg, Demecrs Stans’ review estimated the gov-|Robinson, 28, of Benton, Ark., a ~-s-* Surviving are a son, Walter G.
of Birmingham; a daughter, Mrs.
Lawrence E. Long in Venezuela; a
Birmingham, and five grandchil-
dren.
Rocket of Sputnik Ill
to Appear Over State
CAMBRIDGE, Mass, ® — The
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observ-
atory reports that some Michigan
residents may be able to see the
rocket. of Sputnik III -twice over
“weekend
question|. mM sidered it possible thdt she had is $288 billion, increased by the last|The burglar went away empty-/|the i
t for|in Probe Again Monday | seen her husband going down the|Wu0n’s Publication reported, Sen.| Congress from $275 billion. handed. First sighting is expected at States figh ay Potter said he voted for an amend- islands?” stairs and mistaken him for an in-| ment in the last session of Con- about 5:29 a.m. Saturday, It will
WASHINGTON @®— Senate | truder. gress te give bicrensed pensions| be moving from the southwest to
prepared today x * * for the aged and blind. the northeast and may be visible can be | for next seek’s climactic ques- | Assistant District Attorney between a line from Lake Haron the Chi- | tioning of Teamsters boss James | Thomas R. Sullivan, questioned| Potter is pitted against Lt. - RAYS |r tre sue ‘Carctnn Coast and a
on Aug. | R. Hoffa, whom they accuse of | about a death-bed statement by| Gov. Philip A. Hart, Democratic , line from Lake Huron to Louisi- not just) scheming with mobsters to en- Mrs. Nimer, was said to have ac-| #ominee for the U.S. Senate, ana.
of Que- | rich himself, knowledged to a World-Telegram| Mart addressed the Pontiac Ro- “On Monday morning the rocket
is indeed | x ke ._ |& Sun reporter today that she had} tary Club last week. Od f 4 will be visible at about 5:52, be- armed con- ccs Ss rr also mentioned a mask. The Republican nominee warned tween a line — — —
ee ae ‘ “She was asked certa . |that Reuther “can win” in his ef- to Minnesota and a line from West-
al ot ee ee Oe eee | pas oak ee lave Sua an forts to destroy our system of gov- ern Georgia to northwest Michigan. resume Monday. swers,” the newspaper quoted | @rmment. CLEVELAND \#—The $17,000 car|hand-built cars have failed? Luntz | ot nay mark fhe final round | Sullivan. “I believe she said | “It behooves all of us, irrespec-|being made by Richard S. Luntz is|is convinced the answer is yes. |Burglars Stedl Clothes a running feud between Hoffa : ; i | to time—in his g governments and the ittee. The something about a mask and I tive of political ties, to become|going run a long e— “] feel,” he said, “there is go- ° *
hostile to the Unit-| Sow ts oe toe “nonth of hy | cannot comment any more until |2s dedicated * = this sys- words, “3, 35, 40 years... | ine to be a senaioonmes te ime From Cleaners in City
world. a - | 1 speak to Mr. Braisted about |tem as Reuther is in trying to/definitely.” nited eople Burglars pried off iron bars at:
Wianian| Toe ereruntion charges — _ destroy it,” Potter concluded. This is the Amand-built Argo-| © Se enoree eae ia window of “Charlie's amare)
(D-Ark) has announced the in- Braisted. and top police officials
revealed late yesterday — a few
hours after Dean had been sent to.
Bellevue Hospital for mental ex-
Rehearsal for Winter
BOSTON (AP) — An inch of
naut, constructed with “everything
the public who could afford it
would want.”
It is ‘the product of Argonaut
ginning to appreciate the finer things ” ;
He declined to say how much
money had been put into develop-
370 Bagley St., to gain entrance,
it was reported yesterday by Pon-
tiac Police.
They took a few items of used
and soberly, my friends, the wal , Corp., a new company trying tojing the car. It will be sold by| clothing includin; . . quiry will recess about midweek | amination material wit : in ; g a summer tux GREETS, Tent. (UPD — Jt United States camot accept the! saat atter the Nev. 4 clections. |that they were exploring outot-|New Hampahire’ overnight. The break ino the highly competitive|fealers who have been handling edo jacket and two pair of men’s at Get rid jresult that the Communists seek.! 5 wig switch then to other mat. | town a new lead which did not in- temperature dipped to 24 degrees! q.-¢ ay 0 ee pants, an frosty, ee suitor. She |Neither can we show, now a weak- rats wolve the bey oda . # dent. Pssacs ~— anyone ridge an -
chased away with gunfire [ness of purpose — cas : : : : rgonaut a it for 10 to and was fined $51 — ey Despite the $17,000 price tag, |j7 Sune win eee oe in the| A Young Hotrodder? discharging a firearm in the city “it history teaches anything, ; Luntz says the Argonaut, with nae . og : : end.” « .| STOKE-ON-TRENT, England * appeasement would make it more an all-aluminum, Italian-made “tt i be inchs nd ‘
likely that we should have to body, is not for the very wealthy would be foolish So bey ead) (UPI) Peal Becher, 2, took The Weather fight © vabjer war.” aiaian,. tie tx Gheahig’at hase whe keep this car two or three years.| his first solo drive yesterday. *
, buy ceive hues corm 8 built to last 10, 15, 20 years| Paul climbed into his father’s
Pull U.S. Weather Beress , ||, Eisenhower urged an early start as “ oes tices odion or more ,.. in 45 years a man| parked automobile, released the
PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Pactly in projected U.S.—Red Chinese . might take (today’s) Argonaut) brake, steered the car 200 yards cloady today, tonight and Saturday withitalks at Warsaw. If these do not What goes into a $17,000 car?/straight across the country with| into a ditch, then walked home, oad not 20 coal tonight, pilttle temper-'fully succeed, he said, he might The 38-year-old Luntz emphasized| absolutely no question.” ‘inhurt, °
10 males Gecoming. suthwesteriy 10-20 turn to the United Nations. that Argonaut Corp. started with);
Soriberiy Levu night Miphtodsy 72 - * * an idea for a car, not a price. | ZAUUIIIHHIHIIIIIIIUNNNINININNNININNNNN10000001101000111 tow ¢ 86. High Saturday 74 'Lew| The President hinted he could “We built everything the public|== ; ; Saterday night 56. go to the United Nations Security who could afford it would want.|== Tonight and Saturday Special Today im Pontiac Council, responsible under the We refused to put a figure on it/== |
ee on charter for maintaining world until it was completely designed.” SIMMS SLASH PRICES At @ a.m.: Wind velocity 0-8 m. p. hb. thwest.
Sun sets Friday at 6:47 ery
Sun rises Saturday at 6:10 a.m. mn.
if a.m. sets Friday at 6:09
Tises Saturday at 6:
Downtown Temperatures
peace, because ‘‘Communist Chi-
nese hostilities in the Formosa
Straits area do endanger world peace.”
* * *
Argonaut Corp. seeks a reputa-
tion in engineering, arid the first
showing Oct. 10 is to be an engi-
neering showing “without the dis-|== on Génuine
OMMicc. 2050. “4 1 OM eco cee cc. 66) ‘ — - \
, rene 44 12 noon... 6 tracting influence of the body,” he |= <== Rn A
Bocmeeccesecee Bama Warmer Weather srs tools =
bas ) oe vzice ous: & Furnace FILTERS upeceen sence, (n Way for Nation tremely "rugged" = Highest temperature ......<+.++.....68 For example, brass piping, in- |== Poviler Si Fit Most Make :
ERY sence sere stead of rubber hoses from en- |== Popular Sizes to Fit Most Make Furnaces! ete By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS gine to radiator. “Rubber hose |== ; rie eifen ; A late summer cool spell con- lis in fiv és 10 = Values to $1.21 “YOUR CHOICE
Highest temperature... se,...79 {tinued across the Northeastern ies Oa & ae i ae Lowett temperature *...............64 |section of the country today but oe me Sew tne, be 16x20 20x20 + eR OOS RHE He we warmer weather appeared on the sa. ; == 16x25 20x25
»| Way. He claims the lowest center of == -15x20 10x20 The autumn-like weather cov- gravity and the widest track inj== .
ered areas from the upper Missis- . |the industry for Argonaut, The|=s
sippi Valley and central Plains front and rear adjustable shock |==
@5;eastward to the Atlantic Coast. absorbers are controlled from the|==
%3| Some of the cool'air dipped south- A ' cockpit, and’ there is -a-.separate |==
ward into the Gulf states. SPEED RECORD, THEN A SMOKE — Gen. _ AP Wirephote jradiator to cool the engine oil. — =
Pisags geen was in areas’ Curtis, E. LeMay, vice chief of staff of the Air stop at, Andtews Air Force Base near Washington | He declined to give horsepower =
gine gan eastward) Force, nonchalantly lights a cigar after flying a today. Average speed on the trip was 570m. p. h. {figures but said they are “very/Es
: through the north Atlantic Coast KC135 jet tanker to a new Tokyo to Washington and most of the flight was between 35,000 and high.” . \ = Y¥ i 4|states and southward through , = sie =~ wa The. Argonaut Corp. shareholders |= qucuine DUST-STOP brand, fikee- Pennsylvania. Temperatures were spee record. He flew the 7,100 miles in 12 hours 40,000 feet. Because of crossing of the internation- were identified only as men ‘“suc- gas filters, guaranteed Ist quality, |
in the 40s in most areas, with} 9d 28 minutes, about an hour and seven minutes al date line the big-ship reached Washington —so | cegsful in industry’. in the Cleve- [nen ge siden ‘filters at propor . HARDWARE —2:d~ Floor.
faster than the previous recoMd, The general was some: sections re
in the 3s. |
| 2 p
rs a | far as the clock and calendar are concerned ~
32 minutes before its takeoff in Japan! , °
¥ land-Pittsburgh area. Can they
succeed where other makers of
ie
porting readings
at the cohtrols wh the big plane taxied to a UNVNVUTOAFAOUUOEOUOEOOAE ' i | ‘ 2
re os
mC
/ &
fo Ee ore : es F - é ; é pice * q :
- , 4 r = “ “ 2 4 é c . : : j : < : ee
4 i es + * : : ‘ * ; poe ; * fos
‘ , . | za f ¢ : . P ei . ;
! F a 7 : 4 £ ce : - a ¢ f . / |
. | wo. ek fe es oe, “THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPIEMBER 12, 1958 : "ae
‘ : ee : ; 7 : : i)
Woian Slight Inj ured cent de Paul Church; spent. two) Society “a the Boy Scouts. of |e i
erator ionkes Award Scouts: Soerith ke coatened dee desea. I SAVE Mote MONEY on DRUGS, VITAMINS, || Boda
net Ege sree | che eens te ees __ aud PRESCRIPTION at SIMMS DEEP Sa 5 B two-car smashup at Baldwin oe - rn ncaa he has SS meeting included roundtable dis-|E
| sete Thre |f C | { uppor pounds. " |eussions, program announcements |— ices’ — Sai x Specials : 4 Ss JIRDAY
day night, resulted in minor in- OF onserva ion nee et Oe -. -and presentation of a 10-year vet- se . bios ; : ) e #
juries to Mrs, Rose Lainear, 17, >| The bridge will enable fire equip-| eran award to Leon Lackey by ' ‘tif 10 Pp M : ie
of 89 W. Fairmount Ave. ‘Pontigg ‘Trogp 15 Firatiment {9 seve 5. Saahene wip det Fania, ¢ Digit... Commvarioney é , : 4 Es
Lafnear ae or other roads to reach ti enn Lackey, his father.
ty te oe i at LER] fo Clinton Vebey UA ee . s : Families That Have to
Claude 23, sa ‘ve ts saapaaania treat a iid poles, the was! to. Receive 2ineme cos | Weekend SPECIALS! : 1 lel; _ §-T-R-E-T-C-H Their Dollars
Pi released. : —— : | Famous * ‘ | Fs =
Police said the Lafner car, wait-| Pontiac Boy Scout Troop 15 last|available for outstanding conserva-|i ‘Hlectric Butch = | ——4 Watch SIMMS Advertisements Every Day ; tion by the New York Zoological | )
ing make = tam, wis sirdbjnight became te Eis ow, Hair Clippers _SCOTTS WERNETS to Learn Where BIGGEST BARGAINS Are! from: behind by an auto driven by|the Clinton Valley Council to earn r EMI LSION ' De :
Clifford C. Crossman, 53, of 1559|the William T, Hornaday nationall, : U 7 a nture Powder ‘
— St. Crossman was ‘unin. conservation award, : s oe ee ae. 33 I ,
j The presentation was made at . 43 letrie barber dle Reg. ¢ I $1.79 |
° Camp Agawam. where Pontiac’s ASTH Mm . RELIEF : pers wt . —— $2¢ r] a . i
Attends Mayers’ Confab [pack troop and post leaders held : ; = ! yen |e .
|their annual fall kickoff program. Ask thous | $25.00 ‘OSTER’ . . Mayor William W. Donaldson, x k«k * i I _JUMCO *1 5”
pack in the country after a month's The troop earned the award with j CLIPPER :
U.S. Conference of Mayors in Mi:|7720 Dour® of work in conservation | Hilla BABSIALa) : ae Dag wmagg vapor SPRCIAL PURCHASE — Direct from Maker! ayors in Mi-\.+ the Bald Mountain Recreation this low, low price I '
ami this week. Donaldson is ex-| ea gp aed : = , wou have to $5 to $7.50 more if we soar
pected to return to Pontiac early : ° @ : ait sa ch JE orgeragts
next week, in time’ to preside) Maurice E. Fitzgerald Jr., Mm ae) aroTares 1 1 ede a ‘lucky * and pass ee
over Tuesday night's City Commis-| scoutmaster, and his brother, . Saginaw ~ Mein Fleer! | 1 ee
son sae FC oe ev awend trom |22.N- Saginaw —Main Floorkk , ' Men‘s and Young Men's
" = Tle Van R. Bairdwood, Pontiac dis- TITTY rv ; ; ~ COLGATES | ry LINED inter
HUNTING LICENSES) ‘it scout executive. SAVE ON SHOES at SIMMS! Lo gla A ' Now at SIMMS! In earning this national recogni- : . | t
os Bf tion, the troop of 20 boys under- 3 Reg. ¢ ' . ,
i : took many soil erosion projects, $1.49
planted-400 batternut trees, igre 8 Settle of 190 Tableis 1 Relief from Colds
ed 1,300 black ‘lecust trees, built .
HUNTERS @ animal shelters and cleared a mile- and Su rcoats
long fire trail.
GeV redily “ k ok 7 Guaranteed Valies .
The troop, sponsored by St. Vin- |. from $14. 95 to $17. 50
PYYTTTrittt as5—VOUR CHOICE— Nationally Famous Brands
‘Remington’ & ‘Western’
Shotgun Shells Typical Simms Bargain!
17 Styles for Girls—18 Styles for Boys ,
ENDICOTT-JOHNSON ‘Playwelt’ Quality
"Ls ‘
Sone ma: ONOES Regular to
$2.95 List
(Field Load) .
$979
SAVE $1.46!
Genuine ‘GLASBAKE’
4 : Ld e
@e.; e
e ° *¢ .
e @; e e
e . e|
e e
*s e
e e
Ld e
° e
° . e vr e dt - Ps
\8 Woven BASKET Base : a ' 4
° rs ; ° SIMMS Everyday Low Price: ‘ s
wavy roxas: FISH Servers ; to $3.40 List ($ ye on ee -s r
one $977 3 Regular $3.95 a : ’ '
.) 2 ° ° 1 1 e Wool Plaid Winter SUR-
ee ~ . ‘ 1 - COATS, Deluxe Lined a
an Bees . : oe ; Innerlined a
Seal i soe y | oiteste [8 CMM ©, eed LGN Reveals ° al for gift... for yourseH. e@| ° aes ad
© Bake and serve in same dish. “4 Boys & Girls BREWERS t LUSTRE t UPJOHNS. Weshable
Mie full 18-inch length. Exactly ¢ —8i_ to 12— 1 : |
@ as pictured. e| YEAST " CREME : es @ 100% Wool RAMBLER |
AB Ty 3k nin es Ve 77 | 58 Coats, Quilt Lined, Knit ty
As Pulser fe ; c oo ¢ $f ¢ sii 2" % Collar & Cuffs |
- 4 G 2nd FI ; a sar sat * Buckle Styles vine 100 Capsules E x
j IFTWARES n oor i] es
Zecccccccccccoscvccoeed, 3 * Moc-Toes dileahian sees 642 IN THE LOT!
* School
* Dress Oxfords Sandals
* Patent Pumps- * Loafers = | E98 North oi DRUGS
* One-Straps * Casuals | “Street J 5 mM mM ad BROTHERS oy geeogeasesoceooooooosse :
WHY PAY
FULL PRICE? : very coat guaranteed
FIRS QUALITY and
worth much more than
$9.88. Sizes to. fit every
Water-Repellent Trecied
Hunting Coats Buy Now ai This * Sport Style * Others moan from 36 to 46. Smart-
$8 — $ 98 eee pares UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE 3 styled comfort on coldest
E mubberited . Backed by Endicett-Johnsen & Simms 3 ee winter days. We invite
pocket. * 30-46. Genuine leather uppers . . . long. wear- TONIGHT and SATURDAY. ONLY! . price ond quality«com- Pm ing composition so “rubber heels. 2
Made by the wer 's “Jeading maker 3
popular-priced footwear,
sen Brown Duck
Hunting Pants
ptraight leg or s
: : rison at store in
’ Latest Model “SHOWTIME” 2 /
, k “$1.00 Holds Yours :
An Layowoy sHoEs {(Q=re Pilon = im mM od BROTHERS a ral Eastman 8mm Movie
PRESTONE ANTI-FREELE el ttoms.
sizes
- Holds 24 Shells
E Shell Vests
$1.98 Sites 36 to 46. Heavy
pe duck ma- jf
SPECIAL PURCHASE Sale!
QUILT LINED—Mouton Collar
| ysis Jackets
industrial-Rated! OG 2g | i, Ee
7 aed PO WER ; ‘ L@ ‘i $8 Holds Yours Push-Pull Magazine Feed
BR 8AM cove: - vran, | "303" Slide PROJECTOR ih; Vie equals
rr ~~ . —e. dita Fe | ee seminoma. ‘cx; $3.9
NAME WITHHELD Fully Automatic — Famous Brand
tert
bir ate with game
pocket ......... $4.69
Regular i.
3.25 List ‘Ses
—NOW AT SIMMS—
66 : Fiberglas INSULATED
VESTS
$5 Quality
$2.99
hn
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Line
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A
hi
Mn
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Men
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de wiv
VeTeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeereererrerrrrrrrrrrereereereereererrrrrrrvr” E> water- repel: gabardine,
— = warmly lined and inner-lined,
4E | zipper front, slash pockets,
Re
Pet
eer
rrrts
TTT
TT
TTC
ihe
ie
AUTO NEEDS -Z2nd Floor cecccccsecsccccococest urmin | withou | 1E
» ears Seated - ELECTRIG-EYE chmrna shells, ans : 3
| $99.95 LIST |
100% DAGRON qr i Fost (2.3 Lane $7999 Men's INSULATED Latest Model Guaranteed FIRST QUALITY!
U-Suits : » Saree Au Tne ees : dl megane Triple-Turret-—Smm Size
] 4 List Price . / ’
: | —ONLY AT siMMs> OY | Kodak Movie Gamera rte 9 59 Miss. Pa oe
$2.95 2 for $3.00
ALL SIZES—Smali to Large
Panty or regular styles in white Light as a feath- Regular $59.50 List
= = R sitohed. @ Tele-Phote Lens
@ Wide-Angle Lens 39 PPO
OPP
SAG
en
te
tata
oh
eA
‘ ' i" ATTY peTete i @ Regular Lens
: SIMMS SALE of Famous
E ELECTRIC MASSAGERS
{MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS _| “Famous WAHL’ Make ‘ 88 * Cuts 2x4’s at 45° Angle
* Powerful Ball-Bearing Motor
Patented slip clutch prevents
kick-back. Hardened steel 7”
blade. $ HOLDS YOURS. Pine £2.32 lenses. Silent-constant motor,
Deluxe viewfinder. $4 HOLDS yours.
6 Pc. Movie Outfit
THERMO-Enit
t.
Electric Massagers meine SIMM3. 5. Set Oot cr Shirt & Drawers ) , Worth $52.95 Complete Poure fide’ ak warthw ines iuvae Irr's of $2.95 Sellers Powersage J 4
* ft Kodst fee Comes $29 Co eecccccccccessccecvevccscococcooccocososes:
LADIES’ LADIES! : * 4:°G-E Flood Bulbs
NYLONized Tricot Take ss in-or-outdoors, SLI PS $10.55 Value
5% £0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000009;
if YOU Want an ‘Old Fashioned’
ot oe maine That REALLY CUTS—
— Camera mounts on “pat light:
($3 HOLDS in layaway.)
Super Special!
'
eee 14.60 WAHL Super- SIMMS Has © vase $1.59 Quality $1.59 Values
Rubber Pacs gn tend Vitor. 92 95 | Genuine “Old Forge” : 2"
Top or Full Lace |B $9.85 WAHL jumbo $EQS di CASE 88 —688
$ 44 a 2 Pull or half styles, if, of round ne 83)
$10.98 7 Doras ok pakistan a | ee
Velue Lace trim. All sizes. 4 ‘
‘Knives. . Movie & Still Cameras | seesesenssnscedcarsronccocsscosgnesonsnences SPECIAL PURCHASE —Just Ariveds. © | All rubber, Pies gy =o Choi
; Pontiac's we
PXT
ITI
de
|
Phat
ttt
ttt
teeta
e
terest
ett
= colors,
sizes 6 to 1d Hg
ae pe
: Street Floor : 1
Ragin BROTHERS } camera a ) ») , |. ~ eae
fe we BROTHERS Biel JIMM oD scorh irs al OOo
98: North SAGINAW St. + 7 ims i 7 :
“ = Fa . \ é é +
‘ Pa cd * j \ ‘} .
p | . : \, \, } | . . ¢
a . i . - Nn i + * 4 = d
. , \ . .
4 to 10
ne nc ar
S FAMI LY ena tama
WOMEN'S SIZES
| | sre fr tetman ol ot Town-|resulted
| Thursday.
scemmaie: Mann Jr., 34, of 13701
| grandchildren;
brother. .
HChapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs.)
Worden's body will be et the fun-
eral bome after 3 p.m. Saturday. igranddaughter, Mrs. Jeanne Me-f
| Gillibray of Pontiac; three great-
a_ sister and a ‘ ‘wut mer (RObert W. Service Dies Bloor Hostal at Age of 84 in France
ROBERT W. SERVICE roe __THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER/12, 1958 aan ESS ees ee oa : iia yas . rember, when you. used. to - Death Notices Famed Poet. of the Yukon [Press to Hear Admiral 8 8 exective with. the. Genera wish for the hicome You can't get Dynamics‘ Corp., builder of |the|wish
DETROIT a — Vice Admiral|US; nuclear "powered submarine
press confer-|
ence here Wednesday on nuclear Averngs legit sien sakjbad a welng
submarine warfare. Momsen now|is about 12 feet. Wilson. .
Shop Tonight Till 9
* * *
‘He was working in a bank
Yukon end wrote pbb!
‘Comfort and ‘Eosé
«indoors and Out!
JONES
Service said be sat up
= ei ‘of Detroit and : bank \~ : +in the bank,
Driver Escapes Death
Crashing Into Train Here
A collision between a train and
__|motor vehicle at the W. Huron St.
Grand Trunk. Railway ‘crossing
only in a minor injury
St, Oak Park, was
Mie omentiid eased Haggerty
{ Mrs. William Barrett of sas. wing of tie Uninet Baies ore men,
Why run the risk of losing cash — checks are
so easy and safe! Pay all your bills, including
utilities, by mail and let.the mailman do the
work! Every check is a legal receipt providing
_@ permanent record of expenditures backed
up by monthly statements from the bank.
Choice of accounts: Regular if you use many
checks, and special if you write but a few
checks each month. Open an account today —,
downtown, or at any of the four branches.
_...NEW-ACCOUNTS~50 CHECKS IMPRINTED
WITH YOUR NAME FREE!
| when it’s a question of money,
NET ace your banker first!
’:
b
Aid to Better Health - ye : ¢ 8O) ~
Wherever your doctor orders massage tor better blood circulation, wo will receive immediate benefits by uerg your Faept tone Contour Pillow, j
ee
For Tired Feet Ae
On your feet all day? Placing your feet on the Pigure- Ton Pillow for even just a
féw minutes will float away fatigue. These few minutes will send blood pulsing at a faster. rate, cooling, refreshing, and soothing. ae ag"
el} *
Phone FE 4-2511 o Charge Yours at Waite's «+ Street Floce é a
"The American Legion's national
charter
in 1919. was granted by congress
MIRACLE MILE
GIANT AUCTION
5 €
1 | _ + "THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
Crosby's Son, 20, |st suted_abuse at newspaper! Prefer U.S, System ls
—t__ H eld on-Suspicion tion and had to be restrained from| CAPETOWN, South Africa (UPI)
of Drunk Driving| te car be was driving was|liament recommends an American.
SANTA MONICA, Calif, {AP)—lKathy Crosby, poll pre eg apnoea, Ee . ee Lie ! YY, Pouce . Bing Crony's Son Lunds, 2 | witha gael gered | Ri
ot 26th 7:30 was hooked on suspicion of drunk p of Beverly Hills and James|tem of pounds, shillings and 2 | pt. 26th 7:30 P.M driving last night after his car|Pugh of Playa del Rey, were not) Tine soit. would be the eq@valent er ee ee
photographers at the police sta-
attacking them. . —A majority report tabled in par-
20,/two youths with him, Charle8|stead of the present British sys-
Auction Bucks Monier Sones MeClain, who oe Sore H mucha be divided, pow ] Ye
at All od ook ee young Crosby Winter Greets Lapland [1 cents. iz
Miracle Mile Stores ek * HELSINKI, Finland (UPD—Fin-| The prime minister of Turkey, ne — i
SUPINE NOW. two friends. No one was injured.jreports reaching here veltriag administration and is directly re-| OPEN MON. & FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M. FREE DELIVERY
McClain said the husky young-!said, i sponsible to Parliament. ; . | eee
= ae oe ae i i: i
, 13 92: ALL 7
soo te | sre coun e CES nites 6 : . Ne LetEOReSsep
, nn Page \ 2ouvore Pie BOX sppinS ~
® oon ' ye : ‘ ‘OAM PILLOWS
warners Z Se Me YOU SAy
persuasive corselette 24 MO | PAY—99 DAYS cn i ‘AS CASH Ss
4
4 _Gently” bloused pajama with “Big Apple”
FREE DECORATOR ADVICE—WELL VISIT YOUR HOME
the fashion: ‘
A dainty mink collar graces this suitdress of
softest Cashmerette (rayon flannel and ace-.
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has a smart peplum effect, the sheath skirt a
knife pleat in back. Blue or red, sizes 14-20.
. 24.98
Waite'’s Moderate-Priced Dresses . . . Third Floor
featuring
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' pockets, flirtatious little black bow accents.
Gay red-on-white ““Adam-and-Eve” print on. Come to Waite’s
snuggle-soft flannelette dreamwear
snugglé-soft flannelette to keep you fashion- ”
ably warm. Sizes 32-38. / Sn Oy:
| Spacious: Sectionals | Dinette Clearance
ee i!
[ “FOAM RUBBER! =~
REVERSIBLE CUSHIONS =
NYLON COVERS 7 |
WHILE THEY LAST!
| Regularly | 5.Pc. Dinette egy moan
ST 18 88 : *379.95 _ Formica Extension Table $3 5%
All. Sectionals on Sale. at Regular $79.95
Ridiculously Low Prices! :
All Sets on Sale at Ridiculously Low Prices!
All Purpose Metal Utility Box }4 ne. PAINT BRUSH SET the foundation:
Warners corselette—an all in one foundation
that molds perfectly under fall ‘58 fashions.
Featherlight, it’s nylon sheer and embroidered
bra lifts tike magic, while the power net side
panels perform vanishing tricks with no bon-
ing. White, B, C, 34-40. 16.50
Expert Corsetieres Will Fit You . . . Second Floor
— ‘1: . PURE HOGS HAIR BRISTLES :
PAJAMA PARTY be) | $:
Sduranks
13%” long. Durable enamel finish. Includes hinged >”
WALLBRUSA
tray.
ideal for fishing, sewing, storing valuables, ete.
Phone FE 58114-5 |
Tae Sima ol COMPANY |) Ea {ii - “Saucy Sailor’ baby doll pajama with attrac-
tive rope stripe print and smart braid trimmed
collar, Patented action-fit sleeves. Skipper |
blue, flame: red. Sizes S-M-L. - $5.98
164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE » PONTIAC "anor nousmow 4
ie “ ~ FURNITURE PICTURED TYPIFY SIMILAR SELECTIONS © 2 Step, Only $1.00
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 158
"After discussing the newest hos-
» pital development with City Man-
; ager Watter K. WitiMay, this news-
> paper believes: Danmv’s and ARM-
: . grrona’s estimate for completely re-
-~@oing the Hospital's plumbing, heat-
“ ing and wiring is probably accurate
for the full job.
- BUT THAT ISN’T NECESSARY.
re. 2. eee
- Further investigations suggest that
the City Hospital probably has no (
Fn, Tha tin ih, il ci a i aliediia te ts le a
~ of the facilities mentioned than any weg
Ceres CR UK ee
Certainly if there had been
serious defects in these necessary
: t re Os ee
moat yee eae
es MThese things build up over
_&@ period of time and we have no
reason to believe that the City
~ Plumbing Inspector has been neg-
’ ligent or inattentive in all the
a —" that have’ gone
Ok as ec blcaae cag este
| RE peated Ghat hal aeltion oonler
Scholastic, Entertaining
— Shows. Should Stay
_ charges Ge cosa and cheating
“nthe V show, "ai" begs St
nite sense of regret.
Lovectiie ded shasiy. 4l. thedk: hever
_ were anything but a left-handed pain
in the neck, but the other hand,
intriguing. A few
“pad real merit and gave every ap-
It commanded attention.
It sounded square and fair,
< oot ee |
Hence, when one tags the con-
- We hope “Twenty One” vindicates
itself and earns a clean bill of health.
It produced good, sparkling enter-
_ tainment and had a definite educa-
tional value. A recent news item said
there were more than 60 quiz shows
started at one time or another. The
big bulk of them were cheap and
tawdry imitations of those that suc-
ceeded.
x *« *
The leaders are worthwhile.
: The others are pure “blah.”
| Let’s keep the best and can the
rest.
And if there actually has been
dirty work at the crossroads, we
hope someone gets the big rap
and serves time. The public de-
serves the best, the finest and
the cleanest.
THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by ‘Tus Poxrmec Parss Compsny
48 W. Huron &t. Pontise, Michigan
‘Wrade Mark Daily Except Sunday
Reessert Basser?, Jorw A, Rite,
Executi President Assistant Advertising
' fae. M. Taeapweit,
bo aa st Circulation Manager
e Y — Jonvam,
‘ _ Manager :
Groece ©, Ineaar, Classified Manager
nates exclusively to ‘the
all aie Printed in this
(pol os. 82L AP ew
payabie in
at Pontiac.
more need for a complete installation.
other building of similar age and
_. subscribes to this view. “T would never |
pital Can’t Need Full Repair
figure,” said he. “That may be ac-
curate for re-doing everything there
is of this nature in the old section
but that can’t be necessary. The
building has had lots of service and
we will pick up the worst features
and gradually re-do the older section
over a period of years.”
x * x:
After City inspectors have re-
viewed the whole situation again
‘this weekend, a new approach
will probably cast an entirely new
light on the requirements. . 2
The City Hospital has suffered
enough without undergoing this
newest indignity.
: a rr ~
Anyzpopy with teenage children
finds it difficult.to understand how
farmers can possibly grow a surplus
of food.
—_—_—_—_—_—
Warn1nc: Don’t allow yourself to
become so angry that you get purple
as ca es aaa
| ‘The Man About Town
Larger or Queerer
Local Growths i in 1958
Producing Rare Results
Football: What accumulates an
extra early interest when the
baseball pennant races are a
A tomato in the garden of
Blair Smith
of Keego Harbor resembles prostrate
Siamese human twins. —
Long considered my top dahlia grower,
Mrs. Flora Goodyear
of Bloomfield Hills has blossoms ten
inches in diameter.
ns
Og some sunflower seeds from
’ Mrs. Adaline Arthur
IORERAD oe Cath et eee elt i su - ing, We place “21” in that category. more prolific than the usual kind, but »
flowers are much smaller.
Formerly with the same company at
Pontiac several years ago,
John J. Kolbow,
who has been ee for the Michigan
Bell Telephone Co. at the Soo for the
past 15 years, has been appointed man-
‘ager of the Lapeer suburban office. This
covers Fenton, Holly, Grand Blanc,
Flushing and Mt. Morris, with a total
of 24,000 phones.
Our 1958 football contest will
be announced in Monday’s col-
umn,
Delphinium plants seven feet tall are
growing in the garden of
"Mrs. Florence Ackley
of Drayton Plains, some with 40 .blos-
soms.
Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Austin
of 335 Prospect St.; fifty-sixth wedding
anniversary.
Mrs. E. Maxfield
of 258 Orchard Lake Ave.; ninetieth birth-
day.
‘Mr. and Mrs. Berl W. Watson
of 34 Crescent Drive; fifty-fourth wed-
ding anniversary.
Mrs. Jennie Hess
of 112 Palmer Ave.; eighty-fifth birth-
day.
, Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Dowling
of 1015 Baldwin Ave.; fifty-second wed-
ding anniversary.
Mrs. Mary J. Bradford
of 6 Tasmania Ave.; eighty-third birth-
day.
, Mr. and Mrs. James Carpenter
of 71 Pine Grove Ave.; golden wedding.
A. B, Decker _
of 1565 Naylor 8t.; eighty-seventh birth-
day.
Mrs. Rachel Kleeman
of Auburn Heights; eighty-second birth-
day.
” Mr. and Mrs. George Wetland
of Keego Harbor; fifty-second wedding
anniversary.
Rutherford H. Crego
of Waterford; eighty-fourth birthday. |
Ulysses H. Birchman
_of Birmingham; eighty-sixth birthday.
Mrs. Minnie Tucker
of Rochester; eighty-first birthday.
‘Mr. and Mrs. Randall Merson
of Lake Orion; golden wedding.
Mts. Honora Steelman
of Walled Lake; eighty-second birthday.
Charles -Berger
of Fenton; ninety-first birthday. -
oY
te
NEA Service, inc,
If ’Taint One Thing, It’s Another
David Lawrence Says:
Seek to Mix Races at All Schools WASHINGTON — The supreme
school board of the nation, better
known in the past as the Supreme
Court of the United States, has
troversy.
In New York
City, for instance,
Negro: parents
have boycotted a
public school bee LAWRENCE
_cayse it is predominantly Negro.
Temporarily, several Negro chil-
dren are being tutored privately as ~
a protest against failure of the
city to send them to other schools
where the teaching is allegedly
better. .
It is argued by the parents
that the city mot only must as-
The parents are, of course, just
taking literally what the Supreme
Court said in its 1954 decision. The
court ruled that it must regard
“intangible considerations’’ as con-
trolling—that is, the “ability to
study, to engage in discussions and
exchange views with other stu-
dents,”’ the court added:
“Such considerations apply with
added force to children in grade
and high schools. To separate
them from others of similar age
and qualifications solely because
of their race generates a feeling of
inferiority as to their status in the
community that may affect their
hearts and minds in a way un-
likely ever to be undone.”
x * *
Everyone knows that it’s only
because of race that Negroes have
for generations found housing un-
available to them in certain areas
of New York City. Hence, to per-
petuate this form of “segregation”
by insisting that residential re-
quirements be strictly. followed in
school assignments is to impose an
unfortunate handicap on the edu-
cational opportunities of Negro
-children—at least that’s the argu-
ment the Negro parents are mak-
ing, and they have the Supreme
Court decision as moral support
for their viewpoint.
It will be insisted that school
boards can legally assign stu-
dents on the basis of residential
* gones and require those who live
within certain districts to attend
schools located therein. But this
is being characterized as a sub-
terfuge as it crops up in connec-
tion with “pupil assignment’
laws in the South.
Many states have assumed, just
as New York City does, that they
can assign’ students within geo-
graphical districts. But this does
not conform to the sociological
doctrine proclaimed in the 1954 de-
The Country Parson
‘Some folks take up religion
‘as a kind of insurance against
‘hell—and then are not willing
‘to pay the premiums.”
|
\ cision, which says that ‘‘separate
educational facilities are mherently
unequal.”’
* * *
This means there must be com-
mingling. ‘‘Token’’ integration is
theoretically objectionable because
it doesn't offer the opportunity for
Negro students ‘to engage in dis-
cussions and exchange views with
other students,”’ as the Supreme
Court has affirmed.
Some Negro organizations are
saying that ‘‘integration’’ will not
be complete until every school in
‘every city has the same ratio as
the Negro population of the area
bears to the white population.
This means in some instances a
50-50 division.
But the goal to which many Negro leaders are working is
that previously all-white schools
should have substantial numbers
of Negroes in them even if the
city. or state has to pay trans-
portation expenses to bring this
about.
Who is to decide all this? The
school boards of the cities and the
states? Not at all. It now has be-
come the problem of the Supreme
Court, which must somehow en-
force its rulings if it is to be con-
sistent. |
x * *
As for -“‘enforcement,” the de-
mand now is coming even from
churchmen that military force be
used.
Dr. William Brady Says:
How to Resuscitate Child
by Breathing Into Mouth
A panel of physiologists and other
experts selected by the National
Research Council, has recommend-
ed to the American Red Cross that,
for emergency
resuscitation of
infants and
young children,
a description of
mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation and
of the prelimin-
ary maneuver to
clear the ait-
way, should be
included in the
American Red.
Cross Manual of
first aid.
Here is the technique for -ad-
ministering the best method of arti-
ficial respiration presently avail-
able for infants and small children:
Step 1: Clear the mouth of any
foreign matter with the middle
finger of one hand. With the same
finger hold the tongue forward.
Step 2: Now place the child in
a face-down, head-down position
and pat him firmly on the back
between the shoulder blades with
the free hand. This should help
dislodge any foreign object in
the air passage.
Step 3: Place the child on his
back and use the middle fingers
of both hands to lift the lower jaw
from beneath and behind so that
it “juts out.”
Step 4: Hold the jaw in that
position, jutting out, using one
hand only.
BEGIN BREATHING
Step 5: Place your mouth over
the child’s mouth and nose, making
a relatively leak-proof seal, and
breath into the child with a smooth
steady action until you observe the
chest to rise. As you start this
action, move your free hang to
the child’s abdomen, between the
naval and the ribs, and apply con-
tinuous moderate pressure to pre-
DR BRADY
vent the stomach from. becoming _
‘filled with air.
Step 6: When the lungs have
been inflated, remove your lips
from the child’s mouth and nose
and allow the lungs to empty.
Repeat this cycle, -keeping one
hand under the jaw and the other
hand pressing on the stomach at
all times. Continue at the rate
of 20 cycles per minute. After
every 20 cycles, rest long enough
to take one deep breath. . -
It at any time you feel resist-
ance to your breathing into the
. child ahd the chest does not rise,
repeat Step 2, then quickly resume
mouth-to-mouth breathing.
Pressure on the belly may result
in regurgitation of water swallowed
during submersion or of recently
ted food. If this happens, turn
child into prone position im-
ediately—as for Schafer’s ‘man- |
prone pressure artificial res-
peeiice,, em Seo tence > one side and BOTH arms, palms
down, extended well above the
head. This permits any fluid in
the airway to drain. Continue arti-
ficial respiration by the prone
pressure method.
For a newborn or tiny baby
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
should be done with small # geo
of air from just the mouth and
cheeks.
* *® *
Signed letters, not more than one
ge or 100 words long ing
senped & self-addressed envelope * sent
to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan.
(Copyright 1958) A Voice of the People
This Su
City ond
of putting all mice and also some of the rats around Pontiac in @ rocket
and sending them to the moon. On second thought, this would likely
hurt our good neighbor policy. Poet ree ree re
Your for Clean City passengers. —
Says Pontiac People
Can’t Be Fool
You can fool some of the people
some of the time and you can fool
some of the people all the time, but
you can’t fool the good people of
Pontiac in regard to this Kierdorf,
Burke and Harrelson case.
*x* * *
Why not get to the bottom of
things and get rid of this ele-
ment? Remember, an election is
coming up soon, so study your
candidates and get rid of some
of the people who are afraid to
convict.
* *
Also, I hope the tax books of.
Pontiac will be audited. Thomas
King, . Burke's parole officer lost
the 36 monthly reports on Burke's
case. What is wrong with people?
Disgusted
Two More Write About Police Vote
The President should stop all his
worry aboyt Formosa and let the.
soldiers over there take a vote and
let everyone have a nice vote.
*
Let’s keep the Chief and replace —
the force with men that understand
law and authority, ~
Mrs. 8.
Our Political Cycle
Causes Bad Times
Give the working man his pay
check. Ike is on his last lap, po-
litically and otherwise. How can a
sick man. be expected to straighten
out a near depression when even
our former New Deal President
Roosevelt went to his grave follow-
ing the great depression of 1929.
* * *
What does the working man’s
full pay check mean? It means
a full lunch bucket, extra money
for a full life, the right to the
pursuit of happiness — every
American's birthright,
x * x.
What I'm getting at is abolish-
ment of the income tax. I've seen
tie happy day when the tired
working man of yesterday came
: home at the end of the week with «
his. eheck to give an umworrled
mother and happy children. The -
worries of the average American
housewife would try the patience
of Eleanor Roosevelt herself.
Glance at the youth of Amer-
iga, They bear most of the fi-
nancial worries of the house-
hold. I’ve.seen boys right in Pon-
tiac who contribute weekly to
their parents’ income, and they
are the youth you call, delin-
quents.
* * * :
* Put the blame where it belongs
—on your rotten political cycle of
four year elections and chanye
your code of morals for a better
America.
Emma Trumble Steffens Adds His s Hopes
for Another Party
1, like ‘several of your readers,
‘would like to see another political
party made up en of states-
men. We would rid of the
seven sources of sin and the 10
fields of high sciences that sit on
Washington’s door step like a pair
of star boarders. This, of course,
is only wishful thinking ‘and -can
hardly be, for where the carcass
lies there the eagles have gathered,
presumably for their substance.
Joseph Gynac
4852 Oakgrove
‘Kennedy-Ives Bill
Better Off Dead’
The House killed the Kennedy-
Ives bill and well they did. It
wasn’t half strong enough and
didn’t begin to‘cure the abuses.
If that had passed, it might have
stood for years. Now the next
Congress can come up with some-
_ thing that really puts these union
racketeers- in their place. 1
imagine most of the union mem-
bers want that themselves, but
even if they don't, the other 140
million Americans . do,
One of the 140
‘Pay Cut Would Be More in Right Line’
I read in The Press that Oakland
County employes would not get a
pay raise this year. Well, isn't that
sensational, If they have a job,
they’re twice as lucky as most of
us. They ought to expect a cut to
keep them in line with the tax-
payers who pay their salaries and
who haven't had but a few months
pay in thousands and thousands of
cases. *
One of Them
Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE
The summer now is waning, as
. . « September days pass by...
And some there are with wistful
hearts . . . Who breathe a gentle
sigh . , . They wish the skies would
never change . . . The leaves would
never turn . . . That they could
always keep their dreams . . . And
never have to yearn . . . But life
on earth is warm and cold...
With sunshine, snow and rain...
And none of us has any cause
« To murmur or complain...
comes and fades away
. . Winter bows to spring...
And then the summer days return
» « « With all the joys they bring
« » « As God ordained this cycle
of . . . The seasons of the year
« « « So we should greet each
season new .. . With cheerfulness
sincere.
(Copyright, 1958)
* THOUGHTS FOR TODAY
He restoreth my soul: he lead-
eth me in the paths of righteous-
ness for his name's sake.—
Psalms 23:3.
There is a god within us, and
we have intercourse with heaven.
That spirit comes from abodes on
high.—Ovid.
Case Records of a Psychologist:
Don’t Fall for ‘Trial Marriage’ Doris is wavering. Her boy
friend wants her fo enter into
a “trial marriage” arrange-.
ment. Do you know what trial
marriage involves? Better face
the facts and get hep to real-
jiy. Morality is a matter of
cold logic, so don’t let sexual
gluttony parade as marriage.
It takes brains to make a real
marriage.
By DR. GEORGE W, CRANE
Case Z-317: Doris D., aged 20,
is a very efficient office secretary.
x & *
“Dr, Crane, I am in love with a
man named Don,” she began, ‘‘but
he is the sole support for an in-
valided mother,
“So he feels we |
‘cannot go ahead ;
end get married. @
Instead, he ‘now #
suggests we have
a trial marriage %
we can réally be
married at a later
date, . DR. CRANE
“I have been taught to view
such a thing as very wrong, but
my sweetheart is very persuasive
so I am almost ready to consent
to his plan. What do you think of
our chances of happiness?”
ESAU ALA 1958
If Doris should follow Don's
plan, she’d be an excellent ex-
ample of a 1958 model of ‘ancient
Esau, who sold his birthright for
a mess of pottage,
* * *
"Trial marriage is much like the
obsolete méthod in business of |
placing merchandise in a store .
\“on consignment.” back at no cost. Se he doesn’t
try to make it a successful item.
Salesmen learned long ago that
“consignment” is thus a very poor
business arrangement, °
* * *
And trial marriage likewise
means both parties need not make
any serious effort to produce a
permanent success of their union.
One or the other can drop out
whenever the going gets tough. So
neither may make a sincere effort
to sacrifice and forgive and forget
for the aim of establishing a
happy home.
SEXUAL ENFATUATION
Trial marriage is usually sug-
gested by a person Who may feel
— infatuation but not true
ove,
There is a whale of a differ-
. ence! In true love, you are un-
selfish so your main concern is
the welfare and happiness of
But when. you are infatuated,
~~ you are selfishly concerned with
your own desires. You are think-
ing primarily of self.
*«* * *
Trial marriage definitely does
not benefit the girl. She makes
the sacrifices and is likely to be
left without a wedding ring, though
she may then be pregnant and un-
able to earn a living for herself.
A lot of shortsighted teenagers
are deluded, hawever, by this trial
marriage
third of all English babies are now
conceived out of wedlock.
WHAT IS RIGHT? :
And don't make the mistake of
thinking that whenever a majority
do a thing, that majority vote
makes it right,
* * *
Morality is based on logic; not
on the results of a popular poll.
Often the majority are 100 per
cent wrong, as when Pontius Pi-
late’s courtroom voted 100 per cent
to send the innocent Jesus to the
cross,
Whatever does the most good for
the most people over the longest
period of. time, is right and moral,
even though 100 per cent vote on
‘the other side of the issue.
Husbands & Wives,” enclosing a
cents (non-profit).
Ladle: acl amemaiamain Lice
. marriage,
Always write to Dr. + Bag od W, Crane in cate of The Pontiac Press, Pontia Michigan, enclosin tg ie espe,
ti and printing ie ate fo. send
f psychological and pam-
(Copyright, 1958) gestion, Would Aid
Further Research
ss auanis 1 te lod andind aed SAMs ve le fib
“ Fad
{
co HE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 Me
-
German Miracle Recovery Since War Years (Fits Se ¢ the ontaind of two articles
oted W: ‘ton sar
Ey on ae ompleted rreapondent
rmany 10
visiting the bomb-wreck oe wie’
By RUTH MONT GORERY :
WASHINGTON — ‘The whole of
Germany is a park! Lusty, boom-
(Adverbisement)
COPY DOWN THIS NAME
AND ADDRESS NOW ..-
-., and write today, to find out
how you can. still. apply for a
$1,000 life insurance policy: to help
take care of final expenses with-
out burdening your family. Mail
a postcard or letter, giving your
name, address and year of birth
to:
Old American Ins, ‘Co,
3 West 9th, Dept. L3321A,
Kansas City, Missouri. &
There is no obligation — and
no one will call-on you. You can
—— the entire transaction . by
mail. to 80
‘with Germans on tour, jing, bursting with factories and
‘mechanized Garmisch-Partenkirchen, nestled
farms, it has never-|in'the Bavarian Alps at the foot
theless managed to-retaiji the spot-
less, waste-not-want-not look that/seemed such a
has long made it one of the scenic/of enchantment 10 years ago that
wonders of the world,
Except for: the occasional ruins |had
of bombed-out bridges, the all-day
Rhine boat trip from Bonn to
‘Mainz is as peaceful, romantic and :
ethereal as in 19th Century days|ent Bavarians in their liederhosen
when the grand tour labeled it a .
castles still dom-
, and the groaning
vineyards. rise. in never-ceasing
ladders to the peaks. “must,” *
» The crumbl
The pleasure boats, crowded
glide
effortiessly along beside the
heavy tankers and freighters ply-
ing their workaday trade between
Switzerland and the North Sea.
The autobahn from Mainz and
Frankfort to the Bavarian Alps is
mass of
castles palaces makes — the
Washington Monument look like a
quiet reading car .
(Advertisement)
Helps You Overcome -
FALSE TEETH - Looseness and Worry
No longer be annoyed or feel {ll-at-
ease because of jocee, wobbly fi fies
B. improved alka- A. decade ago when I toured
Heidelberg Castle, “‘Mad” Lud-
wig's Linderhoff Castle and Ober-
ammergau’s Passion Playhouse,
lone guards eagerly escorted me
through.
What a different setting today!
Hundreds of tourists now queue
up to buy their tickets and await
the guided tours in several
languages. ‘ tze,,. had
never land of the majestic
I hesitated to revisit it. What if I
the quaint cottages
with their exterior murals, . the
earefree bierstubes.with their
native dancers, and the independ-
Says Chinese Isles
Should Be Neutral
OMAHA (AP) — Sen. Estes Ke-
fauver (D-Tenn) said today that
Quemoy and Matsu should be neu-
tralized “under Uniten Nations
trusteeship.
The senator, a for a Mid-
rally, said west Democratic busier and’ more beautiful than the party
Pennsylvania Turnpike, and ‘the he had not heard President Ei-
rman sightseers at the senhower’s talk last night and re-
marked, “We had the same issue
“lintervening period some action
should have been taken to neu-
tralize the islands and hoped they
still can be placed under United) ¢
Nations trusteeship.
‘We certainly wouldn't want a
world war over these two little
islands,"’ he said.
The nation should stand behind|
the decisions of President
hower since he ‘is the direc
Sevgp Sehey. be et of
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MIRACLE MILE
y, ‘OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO.9 P.M.
and green, lipias hats loaded with
trinkets? I wanted to remember it
as it was.
* * *
Almost reluctantly I drove into
the little town, and it was as if I
had never been away. The same
porcelain and camera shops beck-
oned with their enticing but more
plentiful wares, the magnificent
backdrop of mountains was mir-
aculously unchanged, liederhosen-
clad men strolled along the quaint,
narrow streets, ané the murals on
the cottages glistened in vividly
renewed coats of paint.
After checking into our 18th—
Century Inn studded with ex-
terior statues and murals, we
noted only one change in a
decade. The streets and bier-
stubes, once populated almost ex-
clusively by native Bavarians,
.were now teeming with tourists
from all part of West Germany.
The Bonn government, somewhat
to its own surprise, found that in
1956 approximately 344 m i llion
Germans took holiday trips. The
number must, have doubled this
year, as the economy continues to
beom despite the recession across
the Atlantic in titan America.
* * *
German recovery in the 13 years
since the war has accurately been
labeled a miracle. In 1947, 24
months after the cessation of hos-
tilities, German production was
still in such a state of collapse that
economists estimated that each in-
habitant would get only one new
suit of clothes every 40 years, one
shirt every 10 years, and a pair
of socks each four years. The food
ration was less than 1000. calories—
a near-starvation diet.
Today Germany bas full em-
ployment, the average diet is
3,000 calories, wages have risen
far faster thap the cost of living,
savings are exceedingly high,
and the standard of living sur-
passes even pre-war times. Due to Plain Hard: cer who had directed the.
dismantling of a huge ped bone '
plant after the war, later revisited
the same West German factory.
-After watching the thousands of
workers busily employed at thou-
sands of new machines, he
“We made a mistake.
We chould not have removed the
machines, but the people.”
‘Aquarium Supplies And what do Germans’ think of
the American conquerors . who
stayed to occupy, and'then to man
their military garrisons and air-
fields even after the republic was
restored? Who really knows?
From the Northern Rhine to the
Southern Alps, we found them
14,000 Chemists Study
Science Developments
CHICAGO (UPI) — The Amer-/;
ican Chemical Society held its
134th national meeting here with
more than 14,000 chemists and
chemical engineers from all over
the U. S. and several foreign coun-
tries expected to attend,
Dr. Clifford F. Rassweiler, pres-
ident of the Society, said the main
topics for discussion include new
developments in science education,
advances in the control of air pol-
lution and progress in the chemical
attack on cancer, in the reserved,
of equals on first acquaintanceship.
Never did we detect an air of
impatience or resentment.
courteous, cooperative and friendly
manner
On a crack train from Duessel-
dorf-to, Bonn, we stood with hun-
dreds of Germans: because the
second class compartments were
overcrowded. When the conductor,
on collecting our tickets, observed
that we were Americans he smil-
ingly. unlocked the first class com-
partment and ushered us to seats
in lonely splendor. The standing
Germans beamed approval, al-
though we had asked no favor.
Germans are grateful for
Marshall Plan aid, but the
French and Italians who received
more have not matched their
recovery. Germans, traditional
respecters of law and order, are
not afraid to work.
Perhaps the ‘‘miracle’’ of recov-
ery.can best be summed up by this
significant incident: A Soviet offi-
BRENDEL’S 2441 Auburn Rd,
Frozen Brine Shrimp in Stock
All Times
tw
Open Tonight
Versatile! Beauty for the home... sturdy
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@ Honey-toned Salem maple finish
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@ Rugged and extra heavy! Weighs "full 21 pounds!
@ Built-in comfort with curved back
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Big in size,
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: g " Choice of .
‘Several Colonial Tables From $49.95
Ample Free Parking— Easy Credit
big in beauty and bigger
: ap SOUTH SAGINAW STREET + PONTIAC
A
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25
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POC
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High Court Clears Up
, Business
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‘Wonderfully comfortable, wonderfully livable
_ Early American furniture at prices to really
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in a wide selection of decorator-selected covers!
SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION
OF COLONIAL MAPLE ed
ee , §5-pe- Colonial Living Room | vt :
ou 3199
AB ian
aie tiie ec : ea : ees ace repeee oe
va
i $20 DOWN’
-
‘c
ip ‘ i i a
at ; i i
y | |
a8 ui
Acting Couple Splits Up
HOLLYWOOD (AP) —- Actress
Melinda Markey, daughter of Joan
Bennett and Gene Markey, is sep-
arated from her actor husband
Don Hayden, Hayder’s attorney
disclosed the rift.
SEPTEMBER >.
cc, fae
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ALL-PURPOSE =|
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JUVENILE SPECIALS | ONE OF THE LARGEST DISPLAYS OF
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CRIB and
HOURS: | KEEGO | Hardware *1 3041 Orcherd Lake Rd. | .
Keego Harbor FE 2-3766
Monday thru Thursday &
i
Saturday 7:20 'th 6 P.M. |
Friday 9 PM
Sunday © ‘tl ¢ P.M.
FREE —<: in tear of store
CRIB and MATTRESS
© Wetprocf Mattress
® Full Panel Crib
® Dropside
® Adjustable Spring 3" For Both
CHIFFEROBE
SPECIAL ' = “Ss
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$0050. Ee" . corm 3 Moats en $10 DOWN © Exactly as Shown
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ae — CLOSED WED.
AFTERNOONS
OPEN FRIDAY
AND MONDAY
‘TIL 9—OTHER
HOURS REMA THE SAMEY
a 86 to 96 South Saginaw Street Easy Payment Plan
i ss
Sm
»
Bf my Pos ;
aoe ah had escomtradienn nt CHT siete b's ee ‘THR PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958) -
i Revenue STEWART-GLENN COMPANY-----PAY LOWER PRICES WITH CONFIDENCE "OF QuaLity= AND SERVICE %
231
232B Buffet, 46x19; Ht. 34 .........4. &
#2 ve
COLONIAL! You have only to look’at these handsome Colonial pieces, to know at
once how much extra quality you are buying at this exceptional price
in Cushman’s Sudbury Group . . . how much exira enjoyment you will
derive from the warmth and charm of this true Colonial with its fine
finish, authentic details . . . and the superlative craftemanship
distinguished Cushman piece. wp. inherent in every isti
Fy, 240-1 Round Extension Table (one leaf) Top closed 48x48, open 48x60;
: Ht. 29 eeovebeeeeoereerieoteon ee @ eee $99.00
Side Chairs, Seat 17x17; Ht. 34
et ben eee $99.00.
$99.00
also available
231A Arm Chair, Seat size 18x18; Ht. 34 $29.50
dae ge
SOLID MAPLE “3 50” 8-DRAWER DRESSER : ws
and POSTER BED
BEAUTIFUL “SALEM” WAXED FINISH
Beautiful’ finished solid-maple rubbed to a fine lustre.
All pieces dustproofed, center guides on drawers, noth-
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. are 19’ deep and double dresser comes with a large
28” x 34” plate glass mirror. 232T Hutch Top Only, Size 47x12; Ht. 36 $59.50
ES
148° 32” 5-Drawer Chest..... .$66
100% Nylon BROADLOOM
CARPET-W @ SEVEN COLORS
@ 100% NYLON
BROADLOOM
@ U. S. RUBBER FOAM PADDING
@ TACKLESS
INSTALLATION
@ 5-YEAR WRITTEN
GUARANTEE
- Installed
_ Complete
e Yd.
ay No
¢
¥ “14” CREDIT TERM
90-Day Accounts '
Carrying Charges
cd
: q *,
Ys
ear Opposite Auburn
Is ALL-to-WALL
Avenue Goukler underpass, ca ts ., i : ;
| ———
if aod]
i at : og
| q % i
2 f ‘ “and j
ae. t
Sh | Ye
S! 10% DOWN — MONTHS TO PAY — NO CARRYING CHARGE if PAID in 90 DAYS
PARKING -
Now Park in Back of Our
-~ Store and Use Rear Door! = ©
@ Well lighted lot. Enter: at =
alley South of Store or through
fl S _ # i t
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 ONE COLOR |
REMEMBER THE LOCATION 63 North Perry Street——near Huron
Street — just two blocks North of our
former location!
‘Here is your golden opportunity to buy rugs, tile, linoleum, —
paints, etc. at a fraction of their original cost .. The entire:
remaining stock of McCandless Floor Coverings are priced so
low that it will pay you to, travel miles -to share in this once
in a lifetime event! ,
Please Bring Room Measurements
NOW YOU CAN AFFORD TO BUY THE CARPET |
YOU HAVE ALWAYS ‘WANTED!
5 sy
TWEED | _ Assorted
TWEED or CARPET PLAIN
Assorted Rolls
~~ Reg. $6.00 Reg. to $10.00 ar oo gage perry :
$1 sy va ] ml TWEED | TWEED or Reg. $10.00 Reg. $10.00
SH: Sq. Ye RM Sq. Yd.
ee MultiLevel ‘WOOL.
Assorted | LUXURY
CARPET | COTTON
Remnants | choice of 6 Colors WOOL )
Reg. $10 to $30 Reg. $8.00 WILTON TWIST. 4
5700 ;, R00 | $900 Sq. Yd. Reg. $13.00 few + ec =
Heory Neel Wool | All Wool a
THROW | WILTON RUGS. SCROLL CANDY > BARK |
STRIPE TWEED
a bsob | Reg. $9.00. 54 $11.00 ty
site es “SAVE UP to 90% on DRAPERIES Save 50% to 70% on TILE and LINOLEUM )»
PLEATER | CAFE VINYL | Lookat | TILE
Reg. 30c Yard ‘Reg. $1.89 Rea Fhe Save Up to
| cy. | LINOLEUM - : C Ea UC. 13 at. a 60% ‘
| 19 _ | ° Standard Gauge RUGS :
INLAID 2 =—|SCMINYL LINOLEUM (| Reewor so.00 | LINOLEUM
Reg. $3.29 Yard — Reg. $3.99 Yard
Lil ind bali (ole - each Reg. 1.99
TRAVERSE
RODS each —
prapcny | PLEATER | [es
-—waroware | HOOKS | BAA GRYAIDS ESS _ , Reg. $1.09 Pkg.
“0% OFF| "’gge | FLOOR covumuNes om. is 63 North Perry Street
4
i ? : a i i c ;
/ ‘f j , aa a Bee Pe %
Ee v
: : ; ; 1 \ , s
‘ : - . ‘ e ; : pares : a ' ; . : j %, ; BY ee eee
; : , ate : it ; : ho i ee
I
a
_THE PONTIAC PRESS,
FRIDAY, Ne 12, 1958;
EAN NORE {Whisky in Cornerstone Oscillatin ting Water Affects Power, Navigation . |
ao " Proves Only Rum c phorentide (that ene > word),
| 5% SEMI-ANNUALLY xountze, tex an — Fe OKE CF ie Like a Giant: at tub years there. has been a rumor
5 Page hig Fe Dees Ee ns at te ~ ANN ARBOR (AP) — Lake Erie was Gillies said the winds over. the lake i = Act. Ne, t —- P County Contam. Yesterday the likened to a — maps yesterday. _-eause the production of hydro-electric pow-
¥ 1 . : :
y von: ies ‘ie ncn 9 a gt ig viens As a moving person In a bathtub sets nv a ra pea a alee attogy a tie : x
4 TWO TO FOURTEEN YEARS Citizens said whisky or no, the] Water oscillating from end to end, wind navigation on t roit River, : ; :
Sa aeee Sere Mission. whole thing fits in with the! over the 240-mile long lake pushes water x wk * | ee Rese tka ee — .
Flame ots Bonga CD = “The town with a] trom shore to shore. _ He explained that the water level at | FORCED AIR ‘FURN ACES ‘The bathtub effect in Lake Erie Buffalo, on: the eastern tip of Lake Erie, = : : deals
| r as moet Rea — oe by D.K.A. controls the flow of water in the a THIS. PRICE ;
: illies of the hydro-electric power com- River and thus, Ontarlojhydro’s 0 rode 3
i Ar 4 ST IVED! , ‘mission of Ontario at Toronto. of power. ey an INCLUDES .«. COMP LE TE LY ,
; y JUST ARR EMDR AMATNG «|. Fe atitient's paper st She Madional “The miore we know about forecast- New 85,000 B.T.U. with 10- INSTALLED
1h saiac af th our aes oe aah aye a & ing the flow in the river and how much ud warranty furnace, all new . | Fal :
: complete EASY CHAIR TV TUNING neottng ate — — hydro power we can count upon,” Gillies ment warm air pipe and og
! ‘WIND GRABS WATER’ said, “the lower our production costs cold airduct connected to pres-
‘ with 3-stage volume control _ “A&A wind from the east grabs the water because the less steam power we would ent register, wiring and gos
4 -and pushes it west, causing the leyel at have to schedule,” Piping. ae!
Toledo, Ohio, to rise and lowering the level A wind from the west causes water to ‘NO MONEY .
: | at Buffalo, N.Y., by as much as three to = pile up’ at Buffalo, lowering the level at DOWN!
: four feet,” Gillies said. Toledo and in the Detroit River, said
: “But because the water is so shal- Gillies. '
: low (10 feet), it piles up and can’t re- That is why, ships frequently go aground: _ CONVERSIONS
} turn.” in the fiver’s es Channel, he said. AND BOILERS
| SPACE COMMAN ) [Along Michigan Shorelines «= [toms gnne eeu LU 8-0088 te Control TV Tuning . * Other routés will run along the MI 6-9292
ans cenic | Wd S east shore of the Keweenaw Pe-|
: w |ninsula from .a connection. with CALLS TAKEN UNTIL 9 P.M.
; : ; - |Hancock to the Fort Wilkins area
in the Upper Peninsula. The dther
7 | FLINT «— The state is goingjof Lake Superior from Detour in two, both in the Lower Peninsula,
2 to ald von Gast, ise hig the eastern end of the Upper Pe-|will run from Ludington north a
‘ ways .“ peer in the|ninsula, west to Sault Ste, Marie|Manistee and along Sturgeon and 7 nation for scenic beauty and grand- Cecil Bays to Mackinaw Ci ° , eu Highway Commissioner Job ve en to Munising, about 150/752 ‘Michigan. ty along Formerly the Temprite "Go
| ~ Mackie ; 1025 E. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM
Tray are om hag aera “When constructed, without Rien are heard*much easier in LE, et =
a ’ will ai lan i . : lead in a. talk a provide ‘ug with p air than in dry air.
Flint civic club. . f
occa jk
“When -completed,” he said,
they will rank with the Mackinac
Bridge in terms of tourist interest
and will provide Michigan: with
inew shoreline mileage of national
reputation and importance.”
‘ Mackie said he ordered loca-
tion and cost studies of the four
routes this week although no
Seeivctoe “ts he temoliaie construction “in the P
: me” wee, we ities! Bring the family to Robert Hall— you'll find a bargain-a- SAT. 9 TO 9 said, ever, he was hope- °
Fi ul he would-be abie to assign minute for Dad, for Mom, for the kids! See the newest Fall SUN. 12 TO 6 cons! ion pi a J
pletion of his 1957-62, five-year, one —_ °
pletion of his 16742 Sivesyeas one fashions— priced so low you can afford more for everybody!
way construction program. é
The longest route under study|
would run along the north shore
'Scofflaw Pays in Full,
| Draws Court Warning
“ BERKHPEY, Calif. (AP) —
* $100 and
s. warning: “If you get » ea & reitickets, we'll have to : use more serigus methods.
: RADIO. ond. The payment was the final i
, TV stalment on parking
- FE 4-1133 [Public Health employe had col-
in two years FREE PARKING lected in O90 RTE Open Monday and Friday ‘til 9 plained and added, “I've rented a
parking. space.”
P COMPLETELY INSTALLED pile
as pictured FOR
. No Money Down! sityp
q y 4 J 36 Months to Pay!
For Our Free Planging Service Within 50 Miles of Pontiac
Operators on Duty 24 Hours Every Day
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
92 WEST HURON ST.
AR a
P
Men’ s fully-lined
GABARDINE
BLOUSE JACKETS
Fine rayon and lustrous Ladies? quilt wai
FLECKED BLACK
SUBURBAN COATS
So much fashion for so little
money! Smart color-flecked sheen gabardines .. . that
black short coats in a rich are water-repellent, spot,
blend of reprocessed wool stain and crease-resistant!
and nylon . . . sporting a __ Fully lined throughout with
two-tone bulky knit wool ~ high-count satin-finish
scarf! A style you'll love... rayon ee sep satoned
with detachable half-belt stitching! Fecha read
in back, 4-button front, poate knit "trim model. with
slash pockets! Rayon taffeta ae? deep slash poc!
lining quilted with warm | % Charen, navy, gray,
wool! Misses’ sizes. taupe, 86-46;
we
AMERICA’S LARGEST FAMILY CLOTHING CHAIN
200 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Michigan’ | a a4fone eee roe Poy
Ue we f f ' 4 : , OeTe : a
ne 2 u PONTIAC PRESS, PRIDAY, some 1, 12, 1958, . eee oe
, Vata foe tas Rmeo Schools | , Ses sai 29 Sol Bond Vole ‘ects a Sook Loan be a ak cal wll stennion Frolich of 32 ga
: premecieae i of 320 Oak St! Board Votes in Favor]. a
Maat ee ink Heme Rhoonateegliiee’ aimiacais as ae toes tou Iwated Laker High School band will 3 t ‘ at *
prevent | schools, and additional school sites Seuiny evening’ ot 4:30 of Applying for $50,000 open the Multi-Lakes Conservation |Assn's. Outdoorama with a parade} .
and concert at 12:30 p.m. Saturday.
witb bc on 's
$860 Newton Rd., ‘Saturday and It also’ will include the replaee-|jy the St. andrew Church Hal, | t0 Meet Expenses.
a new wing, completion of & $¢-|the Rochester area for 40 years,| ROMEO—The Romeo Board of
*|Education last night voted to apply
new junior high, A new administra-| _4 solemn High Mass of Thanks- \to the Michigan Municipal Finance Sunday.
tion building is another facility to gig il beara ate: [Om anes Me * * *
be ecied | aeeay eeet G0" years age to (against future state aid to meet Highlight of the program will. be
NO TAX HIKE St, Anthony Church in Detroit. current operating expenses of the the crowning of ‘‘Miss Outdoor-
' lama of 1958” between 5 and 6 p.m.
aye afl district.
i wae agree will be prbeat Members also accepted the bid
‘Htion: bond issue, there will be a|William O'Toole of St. Michael/of $5,235 for alteration to the Wash- ai ‘ ee
" |reduction of 40 cent per $1,000. as|College in Toronto, a lifelinig ington School | sewage disposal Rede sition Se vg snd wards United Conservation Club. 7
equalized next year in. the school o couple. Assisting|system presented by the Stanford de The Oakinnd: Cour- An Armed Forces: display will
will be the Rev. Edward Baum-'Co, of Detroit. Work on the project y evening. feature a jet plane and other
tax. rate ‘ : . gartner, St. Andre ‘ ty Sheriff's Posse will be on | .
The present rate is $5.70 per |the Rev. award pi Rlawagt we ee een. x : DORIS STAUFFER head . during the parade to “Al fas at and ind aren
| ef a ala enguaro OTA el Superintendent of Schools T. C.| . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stautter of yrs a Pa: of creme ec aad as
| sagcow time gene SE sceg yh ng Broniteat for ‘the’ tmmodial bcd yi ering gama hve gsi siphenelengieopelirtnes r tale a by aes + psa: :
9 a ato ta pean ei gin enigma roll ges or Ray seek mec of Cnr aughtr, Doris to weer and teinine, spare, trom trom jin Civil War type battle ‘
at the of a nephew, William bility of a rotary-cut dividing door| Sid of Mr, and Mrs. |4 to 5 p.m.each day. __-—s_ ||_ Former Detroit. Tiger pitchet
A 50-cent reduction in operating|Nieman, 317 Maywood St. . . |for the gymnasium at the new high Warne. 5. an ot 9062 Wt Leader Dogs for the Blind, Inc.,|Dizzy Trout will umpire a Little
expense also is forecast, - Mr. Frolich is a retired employe|school. The superintendent was| Dr., Maceday of. Rochester will demonstrate the 'League baseball game. 2 4
x * * of Fisher Body Division in Detroit. | authorized to proceed with the 4
Nera omy Loe i cheney a Both he and his wife, Minnie, are oan Ce gre door should they _qecerstbererseRnetning
prove e® 4 os :
groups abeut the bond issue, said : oe” "Sure is a low price me, ee
‘fit it should fail to pass schools P sagctag yo sragipe iannangon! oe for a station wed * And ‘ainda ‘everywhere’
would be forced to go om balt(ROCHAStEr Man Hif . | sep. tx wm sncrnate bide oe | 3: | . . _pthats FORDI day sessions. This move, he said, -| 1958 and-’59 models. ‘
would result in’ additional expense; ‘ se, Srikied
to the district because it would by Car on Main Street Plans’ are being completed for
double ‘the cost of bus transporta- the employe reception to be held
tion. from 7:30 to,9:30 p.m. Sept. 25 in ROCHESTER—Theodore Burck,
Bids on the new junior high 73, of 1228 N. Main St., Rochester the cafeteria of the new high
school will be opened Oct. 2. | was in fair condition this morning|SPO at Pontiac General Hospital oa Board members were told three
SGT. AND MRS. RICHARD D. WORTH Seek Federal Aid efernoon on N Main street, dust a renee “chat subsites “are
for New Hospital |e, eee ents. Cov-|filing in temporarily “8
Near Romeo at, t 3 Ae Se . \Helen ]. Norris Marries Home told errs sence ™='Troy Boy, 8 Struck
stepped off the curb in front of his
jin Walled Lake Ceremony jem ict 9 28 "Se, mt covont by Car, Badly Hur ture of his right leg.
WALLED LAKE .~ Coloradojron of honor, and best man‘wasjat the new Community Hospital :
1 Springs, ,Colo., will be the home|her. husband, between Romeo and Almont, _ |Train-Car see? Rieger r 155 stuore inch viewoble area. Out
‘= ; poy iia: front: sound. It’s a best seller. —
vant |e ee, ae Matching G-E ¢ DRYER |
re Neel — 3 ae he i “fe
| aero, | gaia” FRIGIDAIRE @) | ex ne $ | — = =) = WITH @ COMPLETE
SALE ‘on J}. &sovens YOUNGSTOWN |
ouse : 40” wide with automatic timer,
White i Brand light .and storage drawer. ‘ Chiteme swing faucet —
7 Regular $349.95 dep non-olh bowt—,
House Paint 7 egular § | S : NK K S S A 1 E eis eto
oy 68 steel. Under sink stor-
99 Get The Second _WITH age with shelf. Roomy
TRADE utility) drawer. Baked
' Gal. © Gallon For 1¢ Hf WAS eetle eo. | , ead teh
Perennial i , Eavestroughing GFA vik : FRIGIDAIRE Reg. $114.95
RYE GRASS ba byte | | = — = Thrifty Thirty SPECIAL
Ce ae gf : = vee ste Paphos at
em “| AF Gz) fang Fa $8995
NO LIMIT enn | sia’
o Complete Line of Fitngs : : ey G
e Sous bal pm
4 | fecoon HOLSRERNG 7 ~ of PONTIAC S1West Huron St. Ova Memert immer FE 4-1555 42-INCH Maren CABINET SINK shod,
>
a
eee
— SF a Se SS Aa oS ae = ioe ae!
: o a tety Water!
Have a whiter wash, softer
clothes, lovelier com-
and even SAVE UP
TO 80% on SOAP!
Why Rent a Softener
Unit? Have Your Own
Including Sales Tax.
Mi And he's anything but footsure.”
iventor of the telephone, spent 35
j of his summer vacatiors at Beinn
overiooking Baddeck Bay, Nova mosa’s future and its territorial we |
limits, <
“You, the people, will do the dy-
ing; by thé millions, if (Secretary
of State) Dulles falls off the brink.
Alexinder Graham Bell, in-
vent seam- _ Shop For. QUALITY & SAVINGS
Penney’ s for Work Clothes
7
"fab for wash,
good
HH
| Bhreagh (Beautiful Mountain)
A __ SHELLS <_ nt $2. 29 "3 Box act |
5 4
BLUE ROCKS | millions of men .
la JN GET OUR os _ Get the pants in 8%-ounce twill with -
‘oot deep Sanf:
eee ” BEFORE YOU BUY! ‘. raggbererngiaen soll
. SHOP PENNEY’S...
, STOP THE PRESS
SPECIALS.
5 Hoops . . 89*
GALVANIZED
CLO
$2.98 “100 Ft. Clothes Line $105
a [$19.95 rvs ye $995
|$3.98 Cie Sd Dip Sat of 99¢ f
* <
' 19.95 JOHNSON CENTURY SPIN OR CASTING REEL. COTTON-NYLON
PER FOOT
U.L. approved. Price
3e foot under 50 ft. _ FLUORESCENTS
PULL DOWNS
RECESSED
WORK SOCKS
: 3 for 3]
°6.91| A 2 for $11.49 sizes 10 to 13
All Steel—Heavy Duty
106” high, 2%” 1. Ss diameter, tc are welded, 4 hooks comfort and wear! Cot-
ton and nydon through-
,out. Nylon reinforced
1 heel, too. Easy to wash.
Grey, white, random. '
| Foremost makes ’em for
ii
q
SEASONAL a
Reg. $19.95
8-PLAY GYM SET
rao 29 eee! Reg.
% i) $19.95
| $1079 of 41] with Jacobs
1 Chuck
Thor yy,"
Electric Drill
4
Test
Them
Yourself
LAST CHANCE
AT THIS PRICE
DISSOLVES
GARBAGE
FIREPLACE FIXTURES
49.95, 3-Pc. Ensemble $19.95.
Electric
Heoter
1320 Watts
Moter Fan
Thermostat
; a
SF Ee
Z e 7 BS
\
|
T-Pc. - ii
Ensemble HEAVY CANVAS
i Reg. $69.95. WORK GLOVES
L 34%
5 nn 79S
“MADE BY THOR
em Reg. THOR 6% SAW | $30.60 Cuts ¥n4 45° oS Foremost makes
Rio Fence N ] in heavy duty 12-ounce
included canvas. Comfortable
‘ “Sat ink: knit wrists keep dirt out,
$1749 Bpee give added protection.
A | Use for work and home-
makers Jobs.
Dollar for dollar you can’t buy any
finer twills in America today!
‘ Penney’s took the measurements of
. designed action
free twills that fit no matter what
your size. Then Penney’s tagged. _
‘em. with a low price! And more; ..+
they’re sanitized® for lasting -
freshness, sanforized, vat dyed,
mercerized ... . machine washable.
fly, trim styling! 3.29, waist sizes
28 to 50, inseam 28 to 36.-.
Get the shirts in 6-ounce comfort
weight twill with proportioned
sleeves and extra long tails, good
looking dress-up style. 2.69, neck
sizes 14 to 19, sleeves short,
69 SHIRTS »
PENNEY POLOS TOP | YOUR SPORTS WARDROBE
98: small, ogre large,
extra | Soft, combed cotton, knite to a
full, non-binding Towncraft fit!
And Penney’s tapes the shoul-,
ders, reinforces the neck with
nylon! 7 machine wash-
able colors. ;
CHINE WASHABLE. COTTON FLANNEL Sites 1414 to 17. Colorful plaids in”
a’ long wearing cotton - flannel
shirt. The yoke is backed with
satin for strength and permanent |
‘fit: Machnie washable ag San-
ie forized. ~- -
FOREMOST Suber Denim
PACKED with POWER!
Authentic Western! That’s
the way Penney Foremosts
are made! Ruggedly built
of the strongest cotton
denim © (1334,- ounce) _ re-
infroced, vat dyed, San-. sizes 28 to 36
forized.. ~ ‘ f
BIG MAC denim jeans ... really
reinforced! .
79 sizes 39 to 46
Add it up.., you get the/
comfort you want, the /
tough construction you | /
need... and to top it ,
off a famous Dounepddw
price! Fully cut and’
strongly stitched in
- 10-ounce denim.
Sanforized. tf
washable.
BIG MAC HEAVY DUTY.
ACTION. FIT WORK SUIT...
498 This one’s got it! Tough 10-
‘ounce fisher herringbone, rugge®
2-way zipper, free-swinging ac-
tion back. And everything San-
forized, even the *foot-deep
Penney-tested for extra wear. ~
ELK-FINISHED > COWHIDE,
J id >
: ‘ ‘
bee . £
bi 4 ki : i .
aif 6 Sg i THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
Buy One of These Fine Pianos
or ORGANS and SAVE!
: Special Offer
Free Piano Lessons
santas INO “LESBONS when ‘yu purchase’ or Tost
S when you purchase or rent
-* © NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) —
mother in a
crash here last month, is the cen-
ter of a custody court battle. «
Her maternal grandfather, Ar-
nold Duce, a summertime cab
driver and a fisherman during the
winter here, has petitioned Pro-
bate Court for the child’s custo-
dy. .
Philip Young, of Dayton, Ohio,
the father, opposes Duce’s peti-
tion.
.. 4 Used Grand Pianos Used Limed Oak Spinet
Used Walnut Spinet BIG SAVINGS - ge
Yesterday Nantucket Selectman Robert B. Blair testified that three
days before Mrs. Jacqueline
Young died in the erash that took 23 lives Aug. 15, she had tele- Open Mon., Fri. til 9 P.M.
“ GAULAGHER MUSIC CO. ? 18 E, Huron‘ St. FEderal 4-0566 for her waitress job back in his
7: £ *&
eee ee ey ian
led- funds to return to Nan-
|he’ll furnish enough funds to get
irid of me.”
Duce testified that Young told CANDLELIGHT and. SILVER
for DINING and LISTENING
460 WPON “MUSIC from PONTIAC”
MON. - SAT. 6:35-7:30 P.M. 1460
Rush in...
get ’°em
at this low
one day price! |
’ TRIM-TAPERE
CORDUROY
SLACKS: These are one of the greatest
buys in Robert Hall’s bargain-
__ studded history! Imagine—only
1.99 for wonderful washable
corduroy slacks .. . tailored
the way you like em, with hi-rise
waists, trim tapered legs,
neolite belts! Come in black
and lively Fall colors! 10-18.
But hurry—this sensational low
price is for Saturday only!
Jey-away pion...
ew }
Lae
i GIGANTIC SAVINGS . }yeeks Custody op |
PIANOS and ORGANS. of Victim-Child
Displayed at Michigan State Fair ew Gid, 2, Who}:
him from Dayton to ask].
he .said. was limited to a month ae the material is fitted with| We in 1909 ond 4h was deed $0.0 beonk Lominateaed Sheets > wd in New Drive-In Phone :
jeown Light Up Like a Lamp =“ | pjuggea in, Gets Caller in Trouble en Duce denied his wife ever drank - <7 yy
excessively but said she was a| DETROIT — Now on the market Some of its possibilities are drag HOLLYWOOD (UPD — Milo |
member of Alcdholics Anonymous.|are ‘sheets of an electrolumines-|eries, wallpaper, and ‘eimilar uées.| anc lett work late one day’ at/2%.Wim the caF radio f
cent material. Rah np Mira a| At peemet: & nequices BAGIOE WE acer and Saag he ee nS ;
‘Thailand, smaller. than Texas,|lamp. A “sandwich” composed ofjtage than found in conventional , noticing drive- the car radio t that. a
has 18 million people. ceramic, transparent enamel, and| homes. . , lin telephone, decided to try out the!like a juke box at the corner bar.
Be confident with
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shown in textured nylon frieze
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4 rs rf ' 2
\
(ee . S E eae e Oe
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. -PRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 eee ee. ee Oe De ee See ee ee ee ee ee ee ee
ASA Re ne 152 yallons, the sav-
SEESERS
bg attributed to waste and leak- “Electronic Brain Per. person dropped! age. e
See
“]Flunks Out Fast i euitits Maid Drowns
jin Actor’s Swim Pool
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Marlon).
Brando's maid drowned in the ac-) — Work May Be Better Idea ' CHICAGO (UPI) *— Suitable vide may be more bene- 4 Killed, 1 Badly Hurt
as Auto Rams Tree
PACHAUG, Conn. (AP)—A car
slammed into a tree with terrific
t, the livestf fence Jeet iit taking Vv Stricken Airliner ion
LONDON (AP) ‘— A DCIC of British Overseas Airways landed
safely on three engines early to-
day after turning back 45 minutes
out.on a flight, to New Zork. Pas-
tor’s swimming pool yesterday, | ficial than. rest and retirement for persons suffering severe ekg
D : a oe Bat Brando's wife, actress Anna| heart disease, a N.Y ik telar lntees S : plan
Pontiac's FIRST High School Experiment] kasnti, found the -body of Mrs. ‘be de Sissex colonies peraaer’ ne y ee critically. | er BOAC plane, .
SE ii K Te for Assigning Classes /Hisaka Aizawa Milligan, 31, in the) would be considered unemployable, but whe were wine State police said the auto missed Sulfanilamide ign ‘iownd by an
PUI -SERVE Has 2,000 in a Jam wpe sta ett shad ag patconatets in nee 25 bs, ee Austrian a
*
Writing in the current journal of the American Med-
feal Assn., Slipyan said the physical condition of some of
the bad heart workers actually improved after they began
working. Miss Kashfi said she was in the
house while Mrs, Milligan was
swimming. The maid was just
learning to swim, she said, Brando HARDWARE : LOUIS (AP) — A noble
See eA ae ee oP aE ane pe eee re aerate ME
: i chap taal UE
tion—believed
in the United States—has short- Ritchie, 18, Jewett City,
; SHOTGUN SHELL ! circuited St. Louis’ biggest high|¥@S not home, On the basis of his study, Slipyan suggested a possible x * *
; school. change in the medical rule that persons with severe heart Charles R. Avery, 25, broth *
x« *& * 2-Year-Old Bread Wins | ‘disease require constant rest and retirement from work. John, was in poor’ condition
Trop Load .......... $2.19 per aes foe of ieee ee eee ce A tl 2 OR 7 hospital Police aaid be Was ap cia pupil Beaumon , . me Most industries, he said, refuse to hire cardiac patients tly the driver.
:Heavy Loads ....... .$2.69-per box assigned an electric|of bread 2 years old won a first! pecause of the fear of absenteeism and prdomesch pear ¢) caica! prize for baking for Streeter Blair, Margerine was first developed PTAC STAMP & STEN 0. |
; ” rere: 190 veatert But among the 19 persons studied, including three who
- All Sizes 1” Furnace Filters Pa Poa — Fist Neadinird Comms Fake Raph we digrere | ‘bad suffered two heart attacks each, the low absenteeism” |°” * * banged amar tga aor 94 SOUTH CASS AVENUE
: Ale 2s ents which classes to attend his orange loaf in 1956 and stored| tate “was remarkable” and there were no compensation (4 result of the Franco-Prussian) ©. FE ints
claims, meee _ [tn 8 fares
[FURNITURE and APPLIANCES GO in « | 8 ec ONE NS a a et crue ae Re war,
‘ 75 ~ Now Is the Time to Fix tia Youn Voennes’ tas
+ tthe Coming Winter Months
ee ime |
-BOADWAY-SHELL Hardware | ‘ange ade is FE 2-6506 |
Budget Terms Available :
Mon., Thurs., Sat. 8 to 8—
| Apap Sto GFri. Ste 9
SPO a AMO A a he en ee
Principal Walter Gammeter sai i
owes SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE ©
a : “Lazy Boy | as : © * -| a Y {.% ,
1 Recliner Ghairs Wi) -trere eviseoty were errors on| | es 2 ae SN Lb aut
: 4 1; RE SEQ ogg ge) ne LV fe A |
: ian sigue he aeiiae ad filled out the punch cards| y : :
2 : the brain lives on. ee | = ;
A a Decoretor visited. the school z i
| a Table Lamps cin Sat |
1 oe $3.00 WE MUST CLEAN
Dee = OUT IN A HURRY
, "1 Mile East of Auburn Heights
FURNITURE SALES Sertak Library
3345 Aubum Rd. (M-59) I. Draws Students 9-4 MON. thre SAT—FRI. “ul 9—FE 5-0041
jat U. of M. : at Your. Prices! OPEN EASY TERMS
FRIDAY ‘TIL SMALL DELIVERY
CHARGES ON SOME
10 P. M. ITEMS
above the entrance to the
"BUY THREE |
rei=s are) | =
; FE =I t/ <2 VE EW
E catered the building inthe six
a os oe ee
outside and inside, and its com.
ened. For home use alone, pos
-lversity libraries reported a
culation of 537,175 during the ust.
58 academic year, This was a 10,
per cent increase over the previous ,
year and a university record,
2nd Hydrogen Bomb|
Dropped by Brifain
LONDON (AP) —
another
the central Pacific yesterday. The
bomb, equal to at least a million
tons of TNT, was dropped from,
a Vickers Valiant jet bomber.
It was the second British H-.
bomb explosion in two weeks and
was announced shortly after the,
United States and Britain agreed |
to meet the Soviet Union in Ge-|
neva Oct. 31 to seek agreement |
on banning nuclear tests,
ARTISTIC-SEALY-KENT-OOFF Y-TONK-KARPEN
KROEHLER-SERTA-INTERNATIONAL |
_ DAYSTROM-HOWARD-HARTSHORN
BASSETT-THOMASVILLE
Dangerous Guinea Pig HUNDREDS OF :
SE ITEMS TO START YOUR SERVICE HIS EASY WAY Sitaad Be Returned ITEMS TOO DREXEL
BUY THREE “Toke advantage ofthis | MCALLEN, Tex. (AP) — Ajj MENTION INCLUDED!
6-PC. PLACE GET FREE wonderful moneyaay- |Stinea pig taken from a labora-| :
SETTINGS ing offerniow.Big épe. |tOrY here a few nights sg MOY LAM P no such a : 3
cavemen eat vidan Steer. BED ROOMS " : D Whi h id th im
BUY SIX Hollow Handle Forged wat take elite oe teen | GUARANTEE :
6-PC. PLACE Knife, Fork, sue ilar —_ for experimental pur-) LIVI NG ROOMS ; TABLES
$ dSalodFork. jiposes a that the new ower j :
SETTINGS peene _— stands a good chance of infection. | We guarantee . re
It was suggested that the new | : : 2
orrer |e ight wnat to leave: the! DI NI N G ROO S COST or PICTU R ES 1 in a box at th t Dr.| ; av apmmem) see es tent Corer + M BELOW COST
vo remngmiesat of MATTRESSES ale it * CHAIRS are within 60. miles of each other) H H
“ 3 LIMITED in California where Mt. Whitney) single term ~
- < rises 14,496 feet above. sea Meet . sold during this
< > TIME and Death Valley sinks 276 feet : ‘
é : below it FIRE SALE! Pp LI, NC E ONLY
USE OUR EASY BUDGET PAYMENT MIRACLE MILE
4
PLAN OR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY GIANT AUCTION TERMS OPEN
| Sept. 26th 7:30 P.M \ ARRANGED FRIDAY "TIL
Auction Bucks NO PHONE : : Pe 10 P.M.
at All CALLS — as '
Miracle Mile Stores PLEASE SAT. TIL §.
: : JEWELERS Start Saving Now! § a Aer ME en = i. “ 5:30
: “16 Wess Huron Street FE 2.0294 || : ae on - - is : 1 , " | " Ke : | . -\ ft / \ fy
The Auxiliary to Fintiac Covered Hospital held
© its dhnual Awards Tea at Pontiac Federat Savings and \
: ~~ Building Wednesday. Among those honored:
| foes
Says You
_Try Food ie By. EMILY POST
“Dear Mrs. Post: I would .
very much appreciate your
comment on the following ex-
perience: I had friends of ours.
to dinner and for the meat
course served hot sliced
they
“tor tongue. It developed they
had never tasted it but had an
aversion even to trying it.
‘refuse to take & little taster™.
$8sEF eee ge ag ERAS isi pifeee er HEERee za ci 7 z2 Mm
“Dear Mrs. Post: When the
+ bride is coming down the aisle
‘after the wedding ceremony,
is she supposed to look straight
possibly _ she directly catch the eyes of .
* someone.
Fly to Churchill Fete
LONDON (UPI) — Randolpif
Churchil] and his 8-year-old
daughter, Arabella, flew. to
. Nice for today's celebration of
the golden wedding anniver-
° sary of Sir Winston and Lady
j Churchill.
Olympic Trials Spur Party Plans
BLOOMFIELD HILLS —
Bloomfield Open Hunt will be
"gay again next weekend when -
riders from all points of the
compass come to participate
inthe National Amateur
Olympie Trials. Many famous
* horses will be shown by their
owners.
Mr. and Mrs, Irving A.
Duffy -will-opéen their Manor
road home and plan on over
a hundred guests ors supper
on Sept. 20.
i, ‘vall colors: will, scodiiines
in the decoratioris: and in the
The Dutty’s son, Frank, is a member of the U.S. Eques-
is Two of the hospital auxiliary mem- Bers to receive ry ao of apprecia-
tion were Mrs. C. B. Steffey (left) of
Answer: It would have been Woodbine drive and Mrs. Robert C. *Pohtiac Press Photes
were (left to right) Mrs. Collis Scott of: Franklin
_ boulevard, Laura M. Cobb of West Huron street and
“TMrs. James St. Louis bd Watkins Lake.
drive. .
News of Bes Devens] Interest ’ Phillips Ir. (right) by Walled Lake,
Presenting the award certificates was’ ie:
Mrs. W illite Dean (center) “40 ——
Make Trip Through Seaway -
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B.
- Hogue of Franklin are return-
ing home today following a
week’s cruise on the SS North
reveals that an interesting cer-
emony was held at Massina,
N.Y., for the opening of the
Long Sault Spillway Dam.
* * *
TR
—_ at Orchard Lake are
Mr. and Mrs. Gary .L.. Shore,
former Rochester residents.
#ic kw .&
Home from a two-week va-
x &
Receiving a bachelor of sci- —
ence degree in electrical engi-
neering from Indiana Techni-
re College; was Guy T. Reece.
n of Mrs, Mattie Reece of
Irwindale avenue.
* * *
Laurel Lee Ostberg, daugh-
ter. of the Karl W, Ostbergs
of Oneida road has enrolled .
at Elkhart University in the
trian Team which will be sent
.to Chicago for the Pan Amieri-
can Games in Chicago next
year and to Rome in 1960.
*x* « *
_A dinner Friday evening
will be given by Mr. and Mrs,
Henry C, Johnson at their
home on Quarton road.
This affair will be in honor
‘ of Mr, and Mrs. Howard Har-
rington who recently moved
to Grosse Pointe from Bioom-
field Hills.
FALL FAIR PLANNED
The Bloomfield Hills branch
of the Wornan’ s National Farm
Association will school of Medical and Dental
Technique.
* * *
Walter 8, Brown, son of Mrs.
Lucille M. Richardson of South
‘Josephine avenue, has enrolled
in Johnson Bible College, Kim-
berlin Heights, Tenn., for his
senior year.
* * *
Area students receiving mas- -
ter’s di at the end of the
summer session at University
of Michigan include Bernerd
-D. Barach of Porttiac drive,
George W. DeQuis of Motorway
drive, Barbara J. Frank of
Overridge drive, Wesley R.
Maas of Maplewood avenue,
Janet L. Simpson of Lancaster
drive, David H. Freeman of |
Waterford, Helen M. Gaferth
E. Hartik Ward of East Bev-
‘erly avenue received a B.A.
degree.
* * * :
Mr. and Mrs.. Allen. J.. Aus-
tin (nee Marjorie Reddeman)
of Waterford announce ‘the
birth of a daughter, Diane
Elizabeth, Sept. 4 at Pontiac
General Hospital,
Mrs, Milton’ Reddeman of .
Oxbow Lake is the maternal
. branch will meet at the home
of Mrs. Leslie H. Green,
+ Gallandet leave Friday for Z Northampton, Mass. with their
daughter, Andree, who will en-
-ter Smith College. -
Edson F. Gallaudet It will
return to the University of.
Michigan to continue his
studiés which were interrupted
ty two years of army service.
Michele Gallaudet will go to’
‘Salem, Va., to continue her
le ee ee daca see nd paternal
ere Mr. ea Mark.
Frmsan Auotia of Lowell streq
~ ~ *
Mrs.) Nellie Y¥
* yeceiving congratulations on
the birth of a son Sept. 10 at
~ Pontiac General Hospital.
Club Plans
-Monday
Luncheon
Pontiac. Woman's Club, fall
‘activities will begin with a
12:30 p.m. luncheon Monday at
Bethany Baptist Church,
Mrs. E, J. Kemps of the Bir-
mingham Woman's Club will
present a book review “Apple
in the Attic.” Reservations
may be made with Mrs. M. E.
Club members have earned
funds for a nurses scholarship
Madison PTSA
Board Will Meet
Plans for a dinner to be
~ held ‘Oct. 13 will be discussed
. by the Madison Junior High
‘School: PTSA Board when the ,
‘ -group meets at'7:30 p.m. Tues-
setrsinacincisiata van haias i
OTN Mrs. R, L. Bronoel (left) of Pioneer drive. and_
Mrs. Forrest R. Wood of South Tilden avenue ‘(second
from right) were honored for their service as chair-
man of High Fever Follies of 1957. New chairmen
, Tea table arrangements were han-
dled by Mrs. ‘Allan Denham of Oriole
road, Mrs. Willard Beebe of - Tro-
Don’t Lie for Married Don Juan—Abby quois road and Mrs, Anthony Cefai of
Miami road (left to right).
the committee was Mrs, A. ]. Zujko.
This: Fellow Bowling for re
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
“DEAR ABBY:. I am a
young man who 4
ried. Our office
sapes FREE &
He bE fae F
fi if fs
so ignorant and kept expect-
ing her to call my mother at
the last minute, but she nev-
‘er did. You can imagine how
I felt the whole evening. Now
I can’t even look her in the
face because I am afraid I
might say something terrible
to her. My mother says to skip
it. What would you have done?
VERY HURT
DEAR VERY: I would have
asked ‘my husband to call his
mother and request that your
parents be invited to this par-
ty. No point in crying over
split milk. It's sour anyway.
; * *&
“DEAR ABBY: Since I had
my tonsils out-when I was four
I have had my heart set on
marrying a doctor. I thought
of being & nurse but that's out E because I can't stand the sight
of blood, Have you any sug-
gestions?" MARCIA
Bridal
Shower
Given
is the daughter of Mr, and
Mrs, Oscar Schumann of Dell-
im and Mrs. John Such of
New Kensington, Pa. The cou-.
ple will speak their vows in
St. John Lutheran Church Sat-
“urday.
* * *
Guests attending were Mrs.
Schumann, Mrs. Clifford Mc-
Lean, Pat Sinith, Susan Ladd,
Karen Barling, Shirley Suro-
witz and Mrs, Richard Slade.
k * +
Others were Mrs, Jim Car-
tier, Pat Ronan, Nicki Folsom,
Barbara. Wilkinson, a
Mair, Mrs, LeRoy Kelley, Car-
élyn Hawn and Ann Combe, -
\ts. Hill Hostess- -
“t08 Queen Mary Unit | : ~ _ab-ing. Queen Mary Section of
Needlework Guild opened - the
season with a meeting. at the
home of Mrs: Nelson Hill on |
Draper avenue Thursday,
ports on, knitting and sewing
were given by Mrs. Alex Joss
and Mrs. Harvie Little. drive and Mrs. John J. Sellman (oe) of Mohawk ;
road.
‘Also on
stop take the best job he can get
—but nof until, , * ¥ *
“DEAR ABBY: Will you
please help us settle an argu-
ment? Would you call playing -
Dr. Ramos
for LeBarget
LeBaron PTA meeting wie
held Thursday evening. Dr. Se- veriva Ramos of the
Islands was speaker,
Participating in the program
were Dennis Greg-
staff
Mrs. Walter Hubner, PTA pres-
ident, introduced officers and
committee es
| Have You Tried This? |
Forget Calorie Counting
: recipe for you readers. It is
for a rich dessert that will set
the “girls” to oh-ing and
* *
_A former -home. economist
for: an appliance. company,
Plans ate uhder way fox the | = Mrs, Conde is now a young:
annual Ingathering, and re- homemaker.« She is president
of her PEO chapter. Golf is .
her sport. When You Eat Fudge Pie
are ( fiir Pi left) “Mrs. Clyde Dearing of Oucioa*!
'
| 1
4
:
Sess
cilia,
Ucn
Bead
a
a
- Fred N. Pauli Co.
pass eS
| QMACHINE SHORTHAND)
New Classes Are Being Organized for
“MONDAY EVENING: Sept. 15
Bp “The son tastitute hes been receiving many Sacwtsis
for this training.
A: beginner's course under the instruction of a well-
qualified, experienced instructor will be started Mon-
day. Typewriting, English, or Bookkeeping may be
included. i
Our graduates of ‘this course are holding excellent posi-
tions, some at reporting work, .
The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence Street Pontiac Phone FE 2-3551
- Call, Phone or Return This Advertisement for Information ae
pee eee cg puled Silees «van cases deneevcteesssr cae
* : Name a Ada
VETERAN APPROVED |
—
2 CHCLEC PLUG DISPENSER WHEEL |
4T AMAZ| VT Aj PRICE! ¥U
NOTYPE & STENOGRAPH iS ing Pienm
| workshop.
_ into a ring of renewed beauty by having |
it reset for her anniversary. The senti-
ment of your gift will give her genuine
pleasure — and you will add to the
inherent value of her diamond. The cost
is moderate—the transformation
amazing! -
» ~ Pontiac’s Oldest Jeweler
~ 28 W. Huron FE 2-7257
| "The Store Where Quality Counts” #
4 on the wall, Swing
the wall and swing the left leg.
@ “My brows and lashes are
| very light. I am a blonde but
| oxided.”"
A. Use 9 light trown. eyebrow pencil on your
feathery strokes and then
yebrow
hair at intervals, brows. Use light| .
blend THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958.
A, If the skin of your neck is
dry I would not use one. Instead
do firming exercises and use cir-|—
culation creams and also oily lub-
ricating creams. " @. “I have unattractive brown
. This mild hip and abdominal exercise can be
done in the:limited space of a small apartment.
Club Auxiliary Plans 3 Events
Extension Group
\Plans’for:Rally
The Ogemaw road home of
for the club's Christmas Mary K. Jann Married
|to Theodore Wuggazer
bell skirt and back bows with tails ’.Mary Katherine Jann was mar-
ried Saturday evening to Duane/extending to the hemline. Her
Theodore matching headband was encircled
with ivy, and -she carried rubrum
lilies in pink and red hues with
ivy and pink sweetheart roses.
quets identical to the honor ma-
tron’s,
For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs.
Jann wore a sheath dress of rose
embroidered peau de soie and shell
pink and brown accessories. Her
purse corsage was of pale pink
.|cymbidium orchids. Mrs, Wuggazer
wore a copper colored sheath of
lace over peau de soie. Her ac-
cessories were beige and copper,
and she wore a purse corsage of
brown cymbidium lilies.
A reception was held in the Rahn of Philadelphia, Pa., were
bridesmaids.
x & &:;-
The honor matron’s dress of dus-
ty pink taffeta had a modified
church social] hall, following which
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the bride changed to a beige wool
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x *« *
The bride attended Wittenberg
College Students
Feted at Party
A final get-together for college-
bound students was given by
Clarice Graves Saturday at her
home on Dick avenue. - :
Guests included. Sandy. Sommer-
ville, Ann Hamilton, Dick Hatha-
way, Elizabeth Gregory, Donna
Chilvers, David Davies, Karen
Bowman, William DeBeaubien,
Judy Elwell, Diane Haragal, Barry
Church, Larry Sampson, Judy
Lauckner, Terry Ball, Sophia Skin-
ner, Alan Higgins, Kathie Gaines,
Dave Holt and Bod Thompson. Hips to Reduce Them
month’s winners,
Omega Mu Sigma '-
Has Gift Exchange —
Cherokee road Tuesday evening. Mrs, .William Woodruff were last
Mrs. James Newbigging was re-
ceived'as a new member, and Mrs.
Frank Reichert and Linda Stratton
wére selected as captains of two
teams. The teams will compete for
weight loss in a six,week contest.
. Mrs. Frank Lamie, president, ap-
pointed Mrs. Wava Forker chair-
man of a committee to plan for the
annual banquet to be held Nov 4.
The first meeting of Omega Mu
Sigma Sorority was held at the
home of Mrs. Merrill Petrie on
Plans were made for a demon-
stration, which will be held at the
home of Mrs, L. B. Livingston on
Woodbine avenue Sept, -23. Secret!
pals were revealed and gifts ex-
COSMETIC STUDIO
Come In for a Free
MERLE NORMAN:
-» Demonstration!
112 W. Huron —_- FE 2-4010
A. So far as I know no one ee
knows what causes this. You can 2 ice dncdings
cover it up with make-up, ‘ Wy
a SAV pads?” es >: x ,
A. I'suppose you mean the little| > me ee
cotton pads whieh you.dip in ice] : | |
water and then place on top of >
the closed eyes. This is most rest-| w?
ful when the eyes are tired or in 4 en
hot weather or after a hard day.) > ; :
Q. “Lam 50 years old. Is. it ‘ a Offers
too late to Mang tony I 4 : LOW
always wanted © ut r
learned how and believe it or not Peer
ha ) Mies a beau whe loves to 2 [ONTHLY
A. Heavens no, it is not too
late! Take Lene ee : 4 : RATES 8
Tomorrow; “You Must Assimi- 4 for
pon Pg You Eat to Gain > iG :
eight.’ :
oe. : a
Fashionette » Permanent
ob H. 4 ae Club Holds’ Guest Gym Night } Available After y 19 y : Sept. 15th .
ee oar Club held Rds’ : >
nasium night” Tuesday evening at
Adah Shelly Library with Mrs: *. > Call FE 5-9224
James Ryan in charge. ‘ See the diagram—even a begin-|> -
ur ae ian a gee nt ner can stitch up this pretty jumper, > 120 S. Telegraph Rd.
Mardin. Mrs. Martin. Miller andjim a day! Curved neck reveals
blouse beneath, back has inverted | :
pleat beneath a half-belt. Daughter |
will love it! —
Printed Pattern 4828: Children’s, 2-Pe. 1847 * s *
sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 jumper} Children’s Silver
takes 1% yards 39-inch;: blouse
takes 1 yard. $y
Printed directions on each pat-|
tern part. Easier, accurate,
Send 35c in coins for this pattern
—add 10c for each pattern if you
wish ist-class mail. Send to Anne!
Adams, care of The Pontiac Press,
137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th
St., New York. 11, N.Y. Print
plainly name, address with zone,
size and style number, Special
mt IPE 2-5812 lewelers
Ut
_ 88 N. Saginaw
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Here is Colonial designed to meet today’s
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
Jill Maneck Honored
wil Maneck. bride-clect of David
Ligon, was honored Wednesday|
- evening at a shower given by De-
lores‘ Price at her home in East
Detroit.
The couple will be married Sept.
in the First Methodist Church
Birmingham. Parents of the
bride-elect are Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Maneck of Middlebelt road. Maneck, Wisi Nmacks'vea Mees Lena Thomas,
\A rehearsal dinner at The Vine-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert G.
Ligon of Bloomfield Hills.
Mrs. Vernon Ridley gave a re-
cent shower for the bride-elect at
her home on Middlebelt road, with
Attend ina weer wink 11 guests attending, By ‘MURIEL LAWEENCE
Mrs, B. writes, “Four years ago
when my only child was three
years old, I was divorced from his
father, But I did not tell him this
until recently, always speaking
about his father -nicely. Now he’s
suddenly psig 2a bedtime fears
of nightmares and ghosts, As I wok, we live with my parents who
are very good to him...
ing her child of her divorce? .
Was she ashamed to tell him?
Did she hate confessing that she
had deprived him of 4 “normal”
home by choosing the wrong man
for his father
The besetting problem of all di- Why has Mrs, B. postponed tell-| drep. i Did the Best | Could’ Will Free You vapeed‘ginaite'ts tasks solute
sense of, guilt‘toward their chil-
If Mrs, B. told the truth to her
son apologetically; he might indeed
respond with bedtime fears, For
she was presenting herself to him
as a bad mother who had injured
him, and so invited him to expect
Mrs. Robert Carlton of Farming-
ton, Mrs. Forrest Foster of Bir-
mingham, Mrs. Richard Rapa-
port, Mrs. Richard Toma, Mrs.
‘ Anna Germaine and Mrs, George
Peck, all of Detroit.
Also attending were Mrs, William
Magic Beauty!
*“NU-FACE”
No discomfort! Face lifting and
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years.
Stockholm Graduate Specialist
CAROLYN NILSON Fine Cosmetics
Salon 771 E. Maple, B'ham
Phone MI 6-7373
Mail Orders on Request
Permanents Former Pontiac residents Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
E. Pace.and their children, Darwin and Sherrie, are
shown in their stateroom aboard ship at the Port of ‘New Orleans as they embark for Brazil. The fam- more injury at her hands. Nat-
{need to reach. : . ot the hame ot Mrs, Caen: Dorcas Class Meets as. oes
— to see how unreasonable it|i
Se long as we're content
secretly believe ourselves
parents, children give us
ful time, They fiercely resent
self-depreciation and will eal
li
Es
and cherish
for a lifetime * This is a point that Mrs. B. may
To reach it she may require.
someone to help her. Not those par-
ents who are so ‘‘good” to her little
LEONARD'S" _ % Assured Satisfaction
20 North Perry Street (Corner of Lawrence)
ily will reside in Sao Paulo, Brazil, where’ Mr. Pace
is associated with General Motors.
AT A LOW,
LOW PRICE!
All work done by senior
“students under super
vision of instructor.
Phone FE 4-1854
Closed All Day
W ednesday
Call Miss Wilson Today
for Information
PONTIAC TMrs.-Allen to Head
Janette Geiger Circle
Mrs. Archie Allen is chairman
of Janette Geiger Circle of WSCS
of Central Methodist Church.
Assisting are Mrs. A. Murray
White, vice chairman; Mrs. W. E.
Blynn, secretary, and Mrs. N. A.
Stroupe, treasurer.
Sept. 17 Meeting Set
for Whitfield PTA
Daniel Whitfield School's PTA
executive board held the first
meeting of the season Monday at
the home of Mrs, Jack King on
East Hammond Lake road.
Programs for ensuing PTA meet- BEAUTY COLLEGE ings were discussed including a 161 East Huron get-acquainted meeting to be held
Behind Kresge's, 2nd Floor = i/Sept. 17. The annual school fair
will be held Oct. 17.
EVERYTHING FOR
THE HORSE and
RIDER... and
SQUARE DANCERS “It it's Western. we have it”
B-Bar-B Western
_ upply - 315-17 Main St. Rochester
By RUTH
campuses, here’s a problem
A mother writes:
at school who will also be a
lowance and the boy’s par-*
ents increased his.
’ “He has already talked it
over with his parents and
they said it was up to us. If we
were willing to pay half of the
young couple's
they would pay half
“My husband and I heve talked
whether we should tell our daugh-
ter they will have to wait to marry
until they can support themselves.
We’ would like your opinion on
this question.”
I can't give an opinion on this
matter as it affects your daughter
PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich.
Enrollments Available in Day or Evening Classes
Write, phone or call in person for Free Pamphlet.
PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352
because I don’t know either the
girl, the young man or either set
‘of parents. Such a plan might work
out well for one young couple and
give another young couple the idea
that their parents will always be
there to fall back on.
This isa matter the six of living expenses
it over and we aren't sure whether
we should agree to the plan or Subsidized Marriage
May Not Be Right
MILLETT
With married students no longer a rarity on college
that must arise fairly often.
“My daughter, who finished her
freshman year in college, is engaged to a boy she met
sophomore this fall.
“My daughter tells me that they want to be married
and figure they could manage it if we increased her al-
you will have to decide for your-
selves. But I will say this — I
don’t think you have any réspon-
sibility for subsidizing a mar-
riage between two young people
who have three years of sc
ing still ahead of them.
Having to wait a while to be
couple who are really in love. And
a marriage, supported by parents,
isn’t really a complete marriage.
It is a marriage that doesn’t
young couple. A few years of
having a marriage without respon-
sibility might not be the best prep-
aration for the years ahead when
responsibilities will be great.
* * *
After consideration you may de-
cide that in this particular case
you think ae subsidized marriage
work out all right. If you do,
that’s fine. But at least these are
points that should be considered. married never hurt any young/ence of
demand much responsibility of the| == Homemakers Plan
Rally Day at CAI
The first meeting of the year was
held by the Professional Homemak-
home of Mrs. H. James Elliott on
Sashabaw road.
Movies of the group’s Hawaiian
luau were shown by Mrs. Thomas
Ss.
Plans were made for the group
to attend Rally Day Sept. 18 at
the Waterford CAI building, and
a workshop Oct. 11 at West —
field High School.
Soroptimists
Hear Candidate
Mrs,
ident; Mrs. Raymond Swackham-
mer and Mrs, Richard Paschke.
Contact Lenses
VISION .
DR. B. BERMAN | Optometrist
i? N. Saginaw ers Extension Club Tuesday at the/f-
Hope Gorman, Republican
candidate for the state legislature, |
Delegates to the regional confer-
Soroptimists International
to be held in Indianapolis Oct, 24.
‘and 25 will be Taimee Surola, pres- |, ee
* Guoronteed Quality |
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ROLL-IN CARPET REMNENTS Sale |
| pave [No.|Size | Type of Carpet $306.00|$199.00/72 12x12- 8| Plush Wool
75.00| 39.00/73
147.00) 93.00\74
86.00| 48.00/75
166.00) 107.0076
207.00) 132.00|77
135.00| - 81.00|78
156.00; 115.00|79
140.00} 98.00'81
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420.00) 250.00/91
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210.00) 126.00 100|12x12- 2) Wool Biege Random 12x15- 0
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feter Sepe Mle ee ee ee See er, PR oe Oe ee OMe gh ee Sep et Poe een Se Se ee eS a ee ee ee ey ee ee 2S ee eee ee ee ee ee er ee
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 es
GEORGE’S-NEWPORT'S --- Be ‘aie ir. we wes
yrs Bank Position’ [Hal Boyle Finds:
‘<= 2 World Peace Is Security to Today’s Youth . “The younger generation nowjof the student leaders who ap-; To her knowledge not one of the
“money, and securi-|is also interested. in security, But peared on her program. 1,000-plus student leaders has be-
’ to it a real world peace, not mon-| “They .are doing terrifically;come an adult delinquent. None
ey, stands for security. well,” she said. “A number arejhas been arrested for forging a
“We had to learn to be inter-jtaking active roles in _political|/check, holding up a bank, or brib-
nationalists. The young people of |parties. ing @ mayor. today born into a world) “The White House has two of * *
without boundaries—and are at|our kids. Two more are in the vice} “Some have run for Congress
president’s office, The State De-jand got beat,” admitted Miss
x «*« * partment has six. Fourteen are|Hagy, ‘‘And if losing is a form of
“They are often more interested|working as administrative or leg-|delinquency, I guess these. are our
than national|islative assistants to senators.” ‘only delinquents.’ : in international
problems, Hopes for peace which
wine" nme atc Parents Seek to Expel |chairman “Na t , - ae.
roe and producer-moderator of Wed High School Gi rl
. i Since 1952. more than 1,000 stu- MIDLAND PARK, N.J. (AP)—jasked the Board of Education to J§\ dent leaders have appeared on the/Do marriage and high school mix?|expel the girl or at least bar her scientific from
!
f
xclusive With Us
\* ¥
oe ~ * wey | | Porn Rhine ber Bare Age Spa a ek *
: 3 1 , “e 2 , | 5 5 a 2 The in the
SELF-SERVE RECORD * 0 pertinent and probing the ce-|Can't pal por igs steppe Biv ow pheqeetembeedge on
DEPARTMENT * But a group of parents in this|the high school was opened two
kK ¥ tormer Philadel:|C™™unity of 6,500 feel the mix-|years ago, is ‘awaiting. a
3 e wo Se Fe. #, Soper ei iq] ure $2 © dangerons one. , They've lcpénion, trons: Borough Atty John
| m ” : | tod ae : Meanwhile Hope keeps going to Complete Line. of sf é6 gia Stockbroker, became interested), », 4 4 school every day, and the parents.
A | net ws vos Virginia School |x. The storm broke without warn- ee or deen : nig ie: ing Tuesday night, when about 30
“ad TAPS! MM? Poe Closed by Court xscees, tier i
in school.
linquent, silen . _ oe
pers e : . a. victim of too much! Federal Order to Admit! us. daughters came home the
3 She doubts that sch general| 22 Negroes Brings On fret -day and. talleed. of nothing Laren SA +. jelse,"’ one mother complained, _ Classical, Pops, Top Ten D [accusations any longer have much! Temporary Suspension [“"“ies the ‘number one topic i
~ by DECCA, CAPITOL, { jyouth today is largely idealistic — oa py ee | ited in good government,| _RICHMOND,.Va. (AP)—Warren| Hope, queen of the junior prom
willing County’s only high school closes|last spring, is head cheerleader |
and to take on civic Te-| + the end of classes today aa the|and active in a number of schobl| COLUMBIA, LONDON, Sveun 5 ates.
ALL DOLLAR
DAY
SPECIALS in Thurs. Pontiac Press
4. ~ - RCA Victor, KING ‘. “ow direct result of a federal court ——— In addition, the! - :
, 107, elc. “Kids are afraid of being-called order that the white school admit/pretty brunette works as a part- 6 9 s
s ne square," she remarked, “The| 2 Neeroes. time mode. 1 New “Four-Way” Poplin Coat e » ] : ~ & ghost ncumeed Pal oaee re Hope ts al = a tee eclghe ts W W y ; > . equally as the athlete or “temporary suspen-| Hope ways in the limelight a big wheel on the campus,|sion” of the school at Front Royal|School and said they fear other ont as inter Coat, Raincoat, or
; _ lyesterday. The board said the Ne-|girls may follow her example and Car-Coat Changeable as Weather! - a general|groes would be enrolled Saturday|get married.
i of the couri-/ and Monday, Under Virginia law, x * * *
: on, It’s no|the assignment or enrollment of| In asking for a legal opinion,
: student, It's|@ny Negro pupil in a white school/ Board President Fred E, dePlan- 4 is more of /@utomatically closes that school. |que noted that state law provides |. .
college stu-| The school officials came tojfree public education to all per-
§ litical lead-| Richmond to talk over their prob-|sons from 5 to 20 years of age,|— Charge It
2 lem with Gov, J. Lincsay Almond/|without mentioning anything about
Mh conde ry, hg por _— — - -— a - With a quick zip you change this coat to sult the weather.
: : was ae Waet action; spe , was hot pres-/ Water, cold resistant, Bal tyle . . . bei ly... ; : Pee me - 5 might come from the meeting, (ent at the meeting, denied discus- 8 an ° Ga cna sear pee supoly belon ony —_—
a ae ‘e. a erg Rage has carefully fol-| At a news conference Almond/|Sing her married life with other ‘ .
budding career of most | hinted — without further explana-|Students and added: ‘When I'm ” pees Oe hinted — without further explana: [students and paved: “When OTHER RAIN ‘N’ SHINE COATS $11 TO $25 eee other plan that could keep schools|4nd at home | act like a house- se Se oe
~ from either being integrated or| Wife.” es
, . a The girl oak ee th with " 2 F | * e g¢ e mon
Get /riple [ncurance... Esse Repeat ofa Sell Out |S = a . on em | w long the schoo] at a van worker, They were subse- 4 | Front Royal would be suspended,
; but he expected a formal closing|MeMtly remarried at the Wyckoff 99
z pecan aap tiaada tE ET | order from: the state by Monday.|®eformed Church and now live at . SBR oe e | ‘The school board has not con-|*e Skinners’ home. . : ; a st “Ey sidered or discussed the possibility) Harold A. Skinner, father of the = Ss \ ; ; of asking Almond to allow the |Dride and a member of the board, CARDIGANS
a ‘ school to operate on an integrated |*4id other parents are simply jeal-
p. basis without state funds, he said,|©¥S of Hope's looks and achieve- 2 * ff He knew of no plans anywhere in| ™€nts. ¥ the county to establish a private : school system for the pupils in-
volved. :
= Under Tractor
I | OTSEGO #® — John B. Hippen-;
steele, 47, was killed Thursday in
)a tractor mishap on his farm near}
Otsego. Alelgan County Undersher- Say “Charge It"
So tremendous was your
response to this terrific
buy of Reg. 4.90 sweaters
that we rushed In an-
' 5
: ; \iff Robert Whitcomb said Hippen-
. | steele was crushed by the vehicle ON SALE en Ut oats =
' PU R | when it overturned while he was TONIGHT, praalt pogeny 8
t pulling drag equipment up a hill. SATURDAY
| : eer te , 4%
Every WKC Diamond is NOTARY | To Quit Manistique Post 7] Ship ‘x’ Shore $900
], sonben, cerririen PERFECT ond MARI Ciena yo
sold with a written guorantee ‘ermore, Manistique city manager (Se 4 pede
| since 1953, will retire Nov. 1. Liv- ,ermore, now 64, was street superin-
— here six years before be-
coming manager.
74 N. SAGINAW ST.
will allow you full purchase price on a
WKC Diamond anytime in exchange
for a larger diamond.
3 30-Day MONEY BACK GUARANTEE!
e . 2 100% TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE! We
hme
200 Extra Warm
Here They Are! | Girls’ Car Coats ‘Men’s Perry Como Boys’ Jackets ,
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35 =a 795
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JUST SAY “CHARGE IT”
Here is the hottest style for fg Come save $3. These 10.99 Warm Coats men for sport, school or work. extra. warm because of heavy quilt
All colors in all sizes, lining. Styled with mouton collars, Red,
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Crew Neck Sweaters.... 5 for all, 3 to 6x, 7 to 14.
. . Other Boys’, Girls’ Jackets 1.59 to 14.99
Levi Chino Pants
The perfect pant 99 BIKE WINNERS for school or sport,
Khaki, blue char- LARRY NICHOLS
180 State, Pontiac | coal or black. Sizes
27 to 38.
SANDRA PENNINGTON | }
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: Samora se *175
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Bo Represented in the Press? _THE PONTIAC PRESS | yes OF ie ry Watch for School News
€
Each Friday’
Faupay, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 é - PONTIAC, M ae ar
Pontiac Central Pupils Welcome
Exchange Student From France By JOANNE Woop
weeks of school this fal) at Pontiac
Ceggal High Schoo! ie tm meet «
WELCOME FRENCH STUDENT — Pontiac
Central High School’s first exchange student, ~
_, Jacqueline Baron, (left) of Rouen, France, is
greeted by Rosalie Lake (right) of 650 Lake
Angelus Shores. The American Fyid Service certain senior . .
Nia _atirSilnen agepag don.
Pad . the first ex-
One of the musts of the first few| Change” student in the school’s
ry.
makin will live with the Dr. Jerome Finks at
9 Ottawa Dr., while she attends school this year.
Sherry Fink, (center) Jacqueline’s new adopted .
sister, is making sure the French girl is getting
’ acquainted with her fellow students. queline Baron, and she’s from
Rouen, France.
Since she will attend Central
throughout the school year, Jae-
Pontiac Press Photo
PNH Is Streamlined Factory of Learning rangements; Iama C. Hook, school
* abroad to spend the 1959 summer
part of this exchange program.
DRIVE OPENS MONDAY queline is living with Sherry Fink,
her new American sister, and her
parents, Dr. and Mrs. Jerome
Fink of 9 Ottawa Dr.
Preparations for the August 24
arrival of the American Field
Service students were made by a
committee under the chairmanship ae |
Meet 4 Times a Week
of the Rev. Galen E. Hershey. afternoon fo
x * * Y hop to be held tonight in the parish
Other committee members were: hall.
Mrs. Alfred Rothweiler, home ar- x * *&
relationships and Mrs. Paul Gor-
man, publicity.
A PCH teenager will be sent
with some European family as .a
The Student Union membership
drive. will open Monday. This
year’s goal is set for 73 per cent
of the total enrollment of 1600).
members,
w 7 7s
Student Union -sponsored by faculty this year. oe Sister
Donald McMillen, is an organiza- Ann Dolores and Sister Rosurtha.
tion which any student may be- The language de: ent has also
long. Their object is to cut down been expanded .to include four
the individual expense on basket-|: ’ : : % years of Latin and. two of French,
ball and football games. DANCE PLANNERS — Making final plans Pontiac Piess Phote * +.
The student is guaranteed the
year book; a Quiver, 15 Toma-
hawks, the newspaper; and two
pay assemblies which only Stu-
dent Union members may at- for tonight’s “School House Rock,” held at the
~ Waterford Township High School
men: Lanny Younger of 4260 Elizabeth Lake Rd.,
Sandra MacAbee of 1048 Orchid = and Barbara are. committee-
tend. Membership cost is $6.50.
The Student Union staff for this
year consists of 26., Those mem-
bers returning are: Lynn Ander-
son, Sue Steinbaugh, Kay Hamil-
ton, Kathy Hunter, Val Vasbinder,
Gloria Guenther, and Char Osmun.
Others are Judy Castell, Donna
Gravely, Barb Strang, and Latry
Flood.
* * i
New staff members are ‘Alma
Hodge, Mary Aughenbaugh, Mari-
lyn McClintock, Mike Nosanchuk,
This summer the cheer leaders Karen Miller Leads
Lake Orion Scholars
president of the National Honor So-
ciety at Lake Orion Community
‘| High School. Karen Miller has been elected
x * *
Other Officers ‘elected this
Judy Cudnohufsky, youth center H old ‘School
By JEAN REXFORD
“School House Rock,” a disc
jockey back to school dance,- will
Waterford Township High School
tonight. Cole, 3674 Lincolnshire St. Seated left to right
are: Cecilia Roberts ef 1950 Crescent Lake Rd.,
derson of 3769 Lincolnshire St.
at Waterford High Tonight
Lois Pety and) Mary Tsekery, || both art; John Fear, football and| ;
be held-in the gymnasium of the|/=nglish of 1173 Alhi St. and Karen An-
House Rock’
driver education and Robin Thoral,
An orientation assembly ‘will be held Tuesday to introduce the
faculty and student council mem
Dress Is Casual. dents will have the opportunity to
teria.
J Orcinitn Pep Club
at St. Michael’ S High
Sam Hartman, Ann Donaldson, were Douglas ‘Black, vice The dance, sponsored by the rusne five away games scheduled.
Gail Gibson, Bonnie Marlowe and| president; Beth Woodward, see- | student council, will be from 8 the ch o
Mary Wood. retary; Elaine Urban, treasurer; | to 11 p.m. Karen’ Anderson is cheerleaders 4 sppnsored
By ANN ESS MORROW lights have gone modern for of cafeteria could:be a tailored Bonni & to raise funds for their project.
A’ whol Id of ne bulbs have lost their plumptiess, | ballroom. Until it opens, however,| Yee genic depenipdies radeot count - Mt ga t W. Bl fitted | Zee ter classes pave whole world of eWNeSS| in electricity in tubes long and |the students bring lunches and eat velop a better squad and make | ley, representa- Sandy MacAbee, aie | 4 ‘ oom 1é: added to the school curriculum.
Stretched out this week as Pontiac shapeless, like the styles in jright in their fourth hour-class-| "°¥ cheers. ’ tive, Barbara March, decorations; D & . ht They are music arts and choral
Northern High School opened its! chemise. room with the teacher. Sandwiches} They sent two members of their} Handbooks containing 17 pages|Lanny Younger, concessions; Ce- ance onign ’ | elasses.
doors for the first time . . . new
school, new classes, new faculty,
Everywhere at Northern there's
brightness with corridors of glass
have been foreed
to turn down a
horde of record
Duke Ellington's fans asking for
latest LP, due to
a slight case of . =< by Dick Saunders
In the past two
weeks Pontiac
area record shops FIVE ACES: A wild melee this
week for the top spot makes the
choice difficult. We'll have to call
it a dead heat between “Nel Blu
Di Pinto Di Blu’ by Domenico
Modugno and “It's All in the
Game”. by Tommy Edwards.
x * * ,
Second in sales is ‘Rockin’ Rob-
in,” by Bobby Day. Third spot and milk are available for those
who wish to buy.
equipped with book shelves and
storage space, and right within
this work area, the department
head has his convenient office.
The main offices are, easily. ac-
cessible, and so located as to com-
mand a singular view of all ad-
jacent rooms. They are. banked
now with welcoming floral tributes.
Nearby, the counselors’ offices are
fronted with deep-color doors,
which open invitingly for help with
— and with scheduling.
The homeroom period is being
put back once. again into the high team to Camp All-American in
Hartland. They were Jeanne
Jim MacIntosh, vice president;
Santhy Annas, erage Jeanne} practicing for next Friday’s game,
Johnson, treasurer and Char -Os-
mun and Tom Shordi, librarians. of school rules were given to each
president of the A Capella Choir|Beth Woodward, Barbar& Bowers, |.
this semester. Other officers are|Karen Green, Mary Fisher and By LINDA BELLOWS
Casual dress will be the attire
Misses Vantine, Uloth
Join Brandon Team
By DORIS GIRDLEY
Two: new cheerleaders have |
School senior varsity squad
tderating by bea er goes to “Bird Dog” and “Devoted|school program. At Central thejfall. They are Gwen Vantine and| New — * * , To You,” the Everly Brothers’ disc|homerooms are comprised of boys|Kay Uloth. — *
“Black, meee and Beige” (Co-|selling- on both sides. Fourth is|and girls of the same grade and Other gris returning onthe team] Mobilheat lumbia ~ CL-1162), on which the/«Tears On My Pillow” by The Im-|same curriculum; at Northern, of
Duke teams with Mahalia Jack-
son, has surpassed all sales ex-
péctations, according to a spokes-
man at Columbia’s Detroit- offices.
° * * *
THE JAZZ NEST: The fire and
enthusiasm of young blood:in jazz
a team of veteran musicians, These
men “feel”? their musical all the
way and play with the understand-
ing and authority derived from
long years of experience.
—
Waterford to Debate
British School System
“Resolved: f
perial’. In fifth is “You Cheated”
by ‘The Shields, are Wanda Zuehlk, Judy prea Piteen the same. grade, but different
curricula. Janet Rader, ond. Doris Ginciey,
meee ~
CASH and CARRY PRICES!!
who have been practicing ||
: |
i!
4
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perb relaxed and swinging dixie by | : dere :
M WEATIN WAC Schedule 7 (le Classes at St. Fred’s;
oan eee See
‘new student-body. . . . & One-floor building where| CENTRALIZE ROOMS . es ee = first week of school, N early 1,700 ats of the: West Bloomfield Township ere three’ new teachers, |
In awery way this factory of |Windows stretch themselves into) One of the special features is the oe outstanding girls <5 ene recor , of grade “40 pe Sant 2 Mary ‘ge of St, Rita's, De- F
is streamlined to | Walls. building of each of the various| 6 ‘op det ix Oot Ge For tol Octeber 3 bux been eet an the] throagh ° cheat a Sonnet they attend Gridiron Hop.| i tae a modern education, meeting |. Without its multitude of tubular-/units around a court, instead of iN) ing such outstanding participants] date for the homecoming festivi- ganized tied day last week. * by the! ss “Angustine’s, Kalamazoo
needs and facilitating the learn- (legged, red_plastic-backed chairs|a straight line. This entails much! y.anne and Karen each received - Instead of the previous seven; John.
ing process. Even Northern’s and gonvenient tables, the acreage} more walking on the shiny tiled| toonies . fies when. Lake: Ques. Sites SN ee ay there are. now’ six. ;
adjacent to others in the Sati ot offigers. thid sumer. They are| this with other ‘club repre-|tom 55 to 25 minutes. i
Dise Data and Chatter ox 4 6 Jeamhe Johmeon, president; Isabel to plan floats, conces-| Marcia. Cameron has bee: Hach wilt, elso, has its own|28¥n, secretary and Joanne Wood, | sions and the election of a queen elected president of the Thespian :
faculty casen fer leeeoh prepara- ———— “ x *« * Troupe 995 this semester. Other :
Music in the Round ice sme te] nafen an fon eee] Cees Peay Chere, Jane, vi e a continuous work-counter, Wii tcchneret aia fone Wieee
bilheat_
features of the British system of|
education” is the _resolution to}
be debated this year by the/
members of the Debate Club, /
They include: Bob Cooper, Jean/
Rexford, Dave Wilson, Joni Whit-|
temore, Carol Saul and ‘Lanny j
Younger. . -_* *® ®& |
Other are Avlene Bulter, Pegzy
Ballard, John Teeuwissen, Tim]
_— and. Harry ‘Nicholie.
NO MONEY DOWN — -LONG TERM FINANCING
“EL &.V AWNING and WINDOW CO. PHONE FE 5-2102 |
DICKIE LUMBER C0. 2495 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE |
63 W. MONTCALM
ee & a, i aes Msi <
4 \ < , & F y i P te :
a a Oe ; i '
; J
fd j i
THE ‘PONTIAC. PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER, 12, 1958 po Pe a Ae ose
Kocsis ‘ayoed in U.S. Amat el ek
ae Meet Eagles Saturday Night : . War d Another
\Bears After 5th Win'sVieim ve ustan wie amg Of Match Play
Gene Woodward of Detroit ‘card-
ed a %4-35—69 in‘ the opening
round of the $20,000 Denver Open}.
Centennial Golf Tournament. The
score placed him among the top
twenty first-day finishers.
(2-1) vs.. Philadelphia (1-3) at *.& ® By Roval Oak’s Frank The Chicago Bears seek their Okla.,, and Green Bay/a West Coast highlight even on tae
back at erohe where Om Stiermece quarterfinals, Ging, eit Seve teed He tied the with a ee be sale will con-| fan Michigan State game — then|later ly conspiring to fix a race at gg ay ello tae: peered skippe ST eee ae Hse oes
— es ee ee fucther action ageinst’ them by| tying out sothe new wrinkles — | the front nine in 33 strokes and |"ir Chico hasn't shown Sawyer|and counted the winning run on ue eo: local * |Orioles and Pontiac's the Sullivan County District At-| 24 of course Dave Middleton | grabbed’a 4 up lead at the turn. ~—|nave Philley’s pinch single for a : ta aig teenth: tatters tt 06 , x hasn’t been with us very much.” | He never let up and finally three-run eighth inning that beat
“team will be honored at a ban- ee ee en . Chuck Ocrtel, the first Pontiac Charles Wingate and Harry think of them, the Lions are a rful’” said K hed-
“quet Saturday at 7 p.m, at the | "5 of the game. resident to make the Majors In |Burright were suspended indefi-|said to be no better than second) “He was wonderful, oc. .| It was the only game sched- _KC hall. Detroit Piston center | This means that fans in Kalama. several years, will be at Briggs by New York/or third in material in the western|sis, “there was nothing I could uled in the National League.
“Phil Jordon will be a ghest at zoo, Jackson, Bay City, Flint, Lans- State Harness Racing Commis-| division, This was the case last/do. is Fernandez, who never will let
“the affair, Team star Hal Trott | ing, Saginaw and other outstate| Stadium with the Baltimore Or |-.. George P. Monaghan, The|year when the General opinion x* * * the Dodgers forget they didn’t
Swill recetve a trophy for heing | cities could see the game on pay-| eles for a two-game series charged Wingate|around the National Football} Ward also was an upset victim want him, singled for the Phils
“named the most valuable player |TV. against the Tigers tonight and |and Burright witli fixing the sec-|League was that the Balimore | to collegian first hit in the third inning off
“In the state tournament, _ ey QR 2... Saturday afternoon. The outfield- | ond race at the newly constructed|Colts, San Francisco 49ers: and|Ward Wettlaufer in the morning Johnny Podres. His eighth-inning
z e *' kS ‘The national TV commitee de-| er has been used mostly as a | Monticello track Sept. 5. Los Angeles Rams had morejround, 3-2. | hit knocked Podres out of the
* Toe Blake had signed a new one-| cided that since the game was:a| pinch-hitter since being pur-| Wingate allegedly took his horse/ talented , personnel. A rawhide-tough ex-champion, game and hung a 13-13 re
3 contract with the Montreal | sellout anyway there would be no| chased from Louisville Aug. 31. {to the outside and permitted Bur-| It is known the Detroit coaches|two surprised collegians and a the southpaw, who has won :
He has piloted the/point . : He was second in batting in the |right, driving Rip Man, to gojfeel the Chicago Bears, the Colts|virtual unknown today battled in one of 10 decisions on the roa , ts tates setatlet we eo American Association at. the [through on the rail and win. Rip|and the 49ers have great personnel |the 36-hole semifinal. round of the se * Stanley Cups. _ | MSU spokesman said that, de-|.fime of the promotion. Man paid $10.50 for $2.. Jand a solid title chance in 1958. (58th annual tournament. Dick Farrell (8-9) won it with
two innings of perfect relief after
Bob Conley, making his major
league debut, was lifted for. a
pinch-hitter in the seventh. Con-
ley gave up six hits; but didn't
walk a man, Foote, a junior at UCLA, met
Aaron. Texan Billy Maxwell won
it that year.
In the other semi, two 34-year-
olds ‘dueled — Charlie Coe of Okla-
homa City who won the national
title in 1949 and Roger McManus
of Cincinnati who says he hopes
he’s a better salesman than a
golfer.
This quarter, with a distinct
southern flavor — McManus was
born in South Carolina — survived
from the original field of 200 who
started over the Olympic Country
Club’s Lake course on Monday.
AP Wirephote
ILL — Ed Walsh, 77,. member
of baseball's hal] of fame was
placed in an oxygen tent yester-
day ‘ and was failing rapidly
today in a Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., hospital. He pitched for
the White Sox from 1904 to
1916 and finished his career
with the Boston Braves.
Weightlifters
MIRE
ie em
Ae
eg
e
3 For both Foote and Aaron, this is . tot Lost Pet. Behind é the first time in the U. S. Amateur. New York ...... : Aaron ousted exttitlist Dick| eR F Chapman and 1956 Kocsis in yes- eee a a an 14! »
fe terday’s two rounds. Chapman in 0 m Baltimore ......66 4 <
3 went out 3and2. + Waking! 90 tae” Gn Me
¢ McManus dropped putts of 25 __ Yesterday's Results:
‘ feet at the second hole, 10 on | STOCKHOLM ® — The Ameri-| Washington J. Detroit 6 can weightlifting team for the 1958
world championships has been
training hard since its arrival in
Stockholm last Monday. Friday
their toughest competitors, the Rus- 13, 15 on 15 and 35 at 16 in elim-
inating Wettlaufer, who earlier
had ousted two-time champion
Ward.
Coe eliminated two collegians
yesterday. He equalled par 70 for
the hilly course to oust San Jose
State’s Dan Morgan, and then Only games scheduled.
TODAY'S GAMES ]
Eastern Standard Time
— at ———— 7 p.m.—Bowsfield
i New York, at Chicago, 8 p.m.—Turley
Sore, are ‘eee, Baltimore st. Dett oft 18 p.m.—Wilhelm BS more # is —
dened Deli “thats “i Waking or mamas City, 9 f | t) nsas . Ram 4-13 Herbert 6-7. Americans count as favorites. Tom- ake a
*
LEISURE HOUR-U.S.A. Day's end...a Nation relaxes and enjoys its favorite—7 Crown
d ® / This is the hour that soothes a day of hasty words, hurried steps, urgént after- .
—- _ thoughts. It is the time for the sociable drink or two that so sensibly introduces the |
* — eyening’s earned and longed-for leisure. It is a calm and special hour, and across a
vast and dusk-lit land 7 Crown is its universal spirit.
Say Seagram's and be Sure OF THE FIRST AND FINEST AMERICAN WHISKEY
fe,
“BLENDED WHISKEY. 06 Proc’. ci Geum mcuTRAL SP)R/7S. SCAGRAM-DISTILLERS COMPANY, HEA YORK CATY,
y e ~t [> i . {on the 9th and 10th for birdies that Deane Beman of the University of
Maryland, each 1 up. Beman beat
55-year-old Johnny Dawson 3 and
1 in the morning.
Foote eliminated Don Bispling-'
hoff of Winter Park, Fila., 2 and 1,/
and then downed Taylor, last
year’s runner-up, 4 and 3. He
successive putts of 40 feet
on the 7th and 8th and 20 each my Kono and Isaac Berger are
in top shape and the new heavy-
weight, Dave Ashman, has con-
vinced the Swedes that he will be
a world record holder, Berger is
a featherweight from Brooklyn,
Kono is a lightheavy from Sacra-
mento, Calif.
The odds now are that the Amer-
ican team will take four titles
while the Russians get hold of
clinched the match. three,
MILWAUKEE (AP)—If bosses
of the St. Louis Cardinals don’t
hurry up and publicly fire Fred
Hutchinson as manager, he might
beat them to the punch.
Top officials of the club insist
they .won’t make a final decision
on Hutch until the season ends,
despite reports he already is out
as the 1959 manager.
* * *
But Hutchinson disclosed yes-
terday, upon the club’s arrival
here, that he already has _re-
ceived four “solid offers for jobs;’’
is not giving definite answers on
them for the time being “‘but I
probably will in about 10 days.”’
That will be one week before
the reguldr season ends and the
time set by the Cardinal brass
for a definite decision.
If Hutchinson should announce By Resigning Before He’s Fired
Hutch’ May Surprise Cards acceptance of another baseball
job around Sept. 21, the Cardinals
might not be ready to announce
his successor,
Alvin Dark, the veteran 35-year-
old infielder traded by the Cardi-
nals to the Chicago Cubs earlier
this season, is believed to have
the inside track for the job if the
Cardinals are willing to pay the
price in baseball talent that it will
take to get him back.
The only way the Cardinals
could acquire Dark before Sept.
29—the day after the season ends
and eight days after Hutch indi-
cated he will make his own deci-
sion—is on waivers,
* ® &
Cardinal officials, in their te-
cent public statements, have indi-
cated Hutch’s future with the club
might hinge on the club’s per-
Phils’ Ink Jerséy Lad
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The
Philadelphia Phillies Thursday an-
nounced the signing of Bob Mont-
gomery, 21, Princeton, N.J., to a
Cc: league,
|
‘y the , 1959 contract with. Balxersfield in formance during the remainder Of | pi
the season
The ‘Car ‘Cardinals have beer
pretty) well, winning seven of their
last ten games, but it's unlikely
a breach between the. manager
‘August
doing | State's TOMORROW'S ee Boston at Cleveland, p.m.
New York at Chicago, 15 p.m,
Baltimore at Detroit, 1:30 p.m.
Washington at Kansas city” 2:30 p.m.
SUNDAY’S SCHEDUIE
Baltimore at Cleveland, 2,
New York at Lanes City, 330 p.m,
i LEAGUE
n Lost Pet. Behind
Milwaukee
Peewee 87 _
Pittsburgh —tij.... TT #64 61%
San isco ...71 69 OT BR
Cc Wiens 7% 72 4 4
Site” RB He Chicago ..neuss 6 O76 eT
Philadelphia 62 7 446 20%
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia 4, Los Angeles 3, night
ly game led
TODAY’S GAMES
San Francisco at Philadelplia, 2, § i=
Gomez (812) and Antonelli (1412) vs. Cardwell (2-4) — th (13-9).
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, 7:15 p.m.—
grate < ) or Mauriello (0-0) vs. 12-14) or Law < it).
Gian a
as Briggs (5-3) ve. Nuxhall (12-
St. Lois at Milwaukee, 8 p.m—Mabe (2
5) vs. Burdette Cielo
TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE
San Francisco at Philadelphia, 32:30 oy
Los Angeles Le ths. gen h, 130
Chicago x Cincti t
St. Louls at awackes, 1: p.m,
SUNDAY’S SCHEDULE
Chicago at nee! Ry 12 PAE Geng
St. Louls at Philade p.m.
San Francisco at sGiheinpal, 21 p.m .
Los at e, 1:30 p.m.
N. C. State Has
Two Open Dates,
Hopes to Fill I
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — “Have
football team. Will travel.”
This was the advertisement put
out’ today by Earle Edwards,
coach of North Carolina State's
— Coast Conference cham-
ee unexpected shuffling of
football schedule -plus the cancellation by a prospective foe
has left the Wolfpack with two
open. dates Bed its 1959 schedule,
Edwards .
4 only one. The dates are Sept 28 ~tand Oct.” 31, %
* a
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 ||
Wind Up. Quarter-Finals
TORONTO (AP)—Canadian rep-
resentation in the men's singles
of the third annual International
Invitation tennis tournament rests
today with Bob Bedard,’ He has
ne easy. job,
* * *
The 27-year-old thre¢-time Cana-
dian champion ‘meets Dick Savitt
of East Orange, N. J., semi:
Buckeye Coach
Chases Writers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Coach| Hes
“Woody Hayes Thursday chased a
group of touring sportswriters
from -Ohio State's football prac-
tice field, but later apologized for
the ‘action.
: /_ *« * -k
Hayes met the group of 17 writ-
ers making a plane tour of Big
Ten football training camps and
explained he had barred them
from the Buckeyes’ morning prac-
tice because of his dissatisfaction
ever a defensive drill,
“I' wanted to give some play-
ers_a little hell and I didn’t want
to do it in front of outsiders,"| 2
said. Hayes, The Buckeyes are
strongly favored to retain the Big
Ten championship,
R * *
“I never give any of my boys
a whipping through newspapers.”
The writers, who had left La-|5*
fayette, Ind., home of Purdue, at
an early hour to attend the OSU
practice had watched the .Buck-
eyes about I minutes before
Hayes ordered them off the field. retired now but still orie of the
strongest amateur ache a in the
world,
The Bedard-Savitt match and
one between top-seeded Mal An-
derson of Australia. and veteran
Budge Patty of Los Angeles and
Paris will. complete the field for
Saturday’s semifinals.
Billy Knight, the British Davis
Cupper, and Luis Ayala of Chile
made it yesterday, Knight with a
6-3, 6-3 victory over Gardnar Mul-
loy of Miami Beach, and Ayala
6-4, 61 over England’s Mike
Davies.
Tiger Box Score A rg yg DETROIT ¥en ate Ab RH
Rbi Kebi
t 3231 Kuenn ef 6111
C-Lav'es ss 6100 A 4020
Plews 2) 8120 E-Zernial 1011
Pearson cf 3022 F-Boros 9000
Sievers if +; 12 Kaline rf €212
Courtney c 4011. Harris Ib 5011
Lemon rf 4026 Maxwell if 3001
B-Chr'ley rf 0000 Bolling 2b 3100
Zauchin 1b 4120 Bertola 3b 4120
Brid’s ss-3b 4-100 Wilson c 3000
Pascual p 1000 Moford p 1000
Rom'osky p3010 Cicotte p 0006
Clev'ger p 0 006°0 A-Alusik 1000
Susce p 1000
D-Franc’a 1110
-Totals 35 7 146 Totals 36696
A-Struck out for Coote in 4th;
B-ran for Lemon in 8th; C-ran for Yost in 9th; D-singled avg Susce oe
9th; E-singled for Veal im 9th; F-ran
for Zernial in Oth. .
WASHINGTON ,,..... 101 200 201-7
ETROIT cavicsnenees 002 000 013-6
Harris, ‘Wilson.
Detroit Fly 14, E-Alyatez, Maxwell,
PO-A—Washington 27-8,
ee ep Harris. LOB—
Yost, Kaline.
3B—Veal, Harris. SB—Bertoia. SP—
Pearson, Yost, Sievers, Maxwell.
te BR ER -=—
seual X-2.5 2 2
Romonosky (W, 2-4) od 233 3 i
Clevenger 210600086
Moford Pry 4.2 1 2:1 Cicotte (L, 3-4) 1% 4200 0
Susce : §@3211
X—Faced 3 batters in 3rd.
UP—Papareila, popes Runge,
rte tet 2: 28, A—1,66:
5. Dan > Chet 40” DA-L
8. Masel potty 137 M
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sadlies 6. Dorothy Keller, - :W.
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EPPERT’S CAMERA SHOP
“FE 5-6615 Wash- | base.
with two out and two on in the first Nats Win {3th From Tigers for.
Season's Edge Baltimore Has Sights
on First Division — in
Two-Game_ Series
DETROIT (UPI) — The Tigers
have been forewarned. © Paul
Richards brings his Baltimore
Orioles into Briggs Stadium to-
night in a fight for fourth place
and Richards will be pulling out,
all stops.
Called the. “smartest manager”
he ever played for in a national
magazine article by George Kell,
Richards is one of the few in-
novators left in, the game.
He had three pitchers in his
starting lineup at Kansas City
yesterday working on the as-*
sumption that #f the Birds could
start a first inning rally he'd
be able to juggle around some
of his better hitters.
pitching spot in.the batting order.
Richards started a lineup: that
lineluded Jack Harshman in center-
field and Milt Pappas at second
Neither took the. field but
and Harshman due at the plate,
Richards inserted Gene Woodling. |
It would have been a better
ending if Woodling cracked out
| a hit but he flied out to end the
inning and Kansas City went on
to a 7-1 victory.:
held onto fourth place going into,
the weekend after losing again.
yesterday to Washington, 16,
when the Nats shoved over four
a Detroit rally in the ninth
* *
Richards can be crac to do
anything from here on out. Since
joining the Orioles as combination
manager-general manager in late
1954, Richards has improved the
club every year reaching fifth
place last season, one game be-
‘hind Detroit.
over the weekend. They're only
one-and-a-half games ahead of
Kansas City.
| tonight
| (2-8).
| Although raked for 14 hits, the ‘trio of Tiger pitchers — Herb
'Moford, Al Cicotte and George
Susce — deserved a better fate
yesterday. Detroit committed
three errors and all figured in the
Washington scoring.
: * * *.-
Washington held a 2-0 lead in
the third but the Tigers tied it
and the Nats came back with two
unearned runs in the fourth. They
never trailed from that point with
Eddie Yost's ninth inning double
and Roy Sievers’ sacrifice fly
scoring the eventual winning run.
Rookie John Romonsky held De-
troit'in check from the third to the
ninth, allowing only one hit in that
span and retiring 17 men in sue-
cession at one point. He weakened |
in the ninth when Detroit acoredl
three times and Tex Clevenger
finished up. against
Russ Dawson
ALL
ERCURY
DSEL
INCOLN MUST Go...Go...Go...
Billy O’Dell was in the regular |:
Thanks to the A’s, the Bengals)
unearned runs and then “|
|
|
The Tigers can fall to seventh i
Frank Lary (14-14) gets the nod
to open the two-game Oriole series
Hoyt Wilhelm
+
LANSING (?—-New experiments
hold up the happy prospect of a
year-round bass season with no
size limits = Michigan fishermen.
* *
Fred A. deren: chief of the
$tate conservation department's
fish division, said five-year” tests
on several Lower Peninsula lakes
indicate bass fishing ~ regulations
could be liberalized without dam-
aging populations or reducing aver-
age size.
On Bear Lake, Manistee Coun-
ty; Pontiac Lake, Oakland Coun- ~
ty, and Whitmore Lake, Washte-
naw and Livingston counties,
eatch of previous years,
said,
With no size limits set on Duck
Lake, Calhoun County, and Fine
pnly a slight decline in bass more
than 10 inches long, Westerman
said.
* * *
The season on largemouth and
smallmouth bass this year is June
21-Sept. 14 in trout waters and
|
| | Lake, Barry County, there was New Tests. Delay State
|Year-Round Bass Season
June 21-Dec. 31 im all-other waters.
Minimum size ts 10 inches.
Decision for Fullmer
SALT LAKE:CITY (AP) ~ mer middleweight champ Gene
Fullmer last night applied the
pressure for another title shot with
a 10-round. unanimous decision
over sharpshooter Spider Webb.
full-distance brawl with 159%- For-
159% for the}
pound Webb of Chicago.
Sylvan Lanes.
Located in Sylvan Center
Orcharll Lake at Middlebelt
1958 FACTORY OFFICIALS’
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1952 OLDS 88 HARDTOP, Hydramatic, Radio, Heater
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1953 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR, Rosie. Heater, an ¢
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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRES PITCHING—Ned Garver, Ath- ae beat the Orioles 7-1 hen
four-hitter, striking out six,
Dabde det ued teovkes 5 we:
{hit shutout over the last six in- : '
x * *
HITTING — Chico Fernandez,
Phillies, tied game with a two-
pgs msec gy fag yo
after stealing second, on Dave
Philley's pinch single in three-run
eo oS mit, 20-year-old left hander from
West Palm Beach, Fia., was signed
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The Fall
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USED | ‘ CARS |
‘ . : , a
3 f po |
1 | Suir e _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1058
SA sala sit hesceit Mounties got a pinch,
pga pened ao ee gu ag RA
; 1S sect : uy
| Drls Slow Up at MSL J) precvene” ANY ARBOR dit doesn't take Michiggan's Sh ia im-ff SS Gas rt
much to change a coach's . \ outlook on life, Look: what a few! mae a st ay | Wall Heater ee eee on ith ha: bit le wes iad |] (oil Pre-eegincered Thew-the Well Vea)”
couraged,” Oosterbaan said after/tact work. Sophomore John Walk- Pre vents: Permits: : dispatching his squad through 4/0, nis hip better, scrimmaged in f ‘
~~ re ‘_ |Herrngtein’s place. Herrnstein willl Costly lastatletion Zone-controlled Heating 4
“I had been depressed until forego the rough stuff untib next : a _|
ty npr gpd awe Ping te wok, Loss of Oxygen Completely Automatic ==
betfer, the blocks were ‘EAST LANSING i —. Today isi 1"0™ Room Air Heat ft good,
Even though we have been |the last time this fall Michigan :
the always Cold Floprs Decorator Styling
mioving the ball okay we always |State football ‘players will have to : had missed one or two blocks, hit each other twice daily, . Apevenr Heat : eaten Ce
“Now I think our progress’ is; As practice prior to the first | during Power Failures : Ideal for Add-on Rooney ak
Z 4 ks #2. coach eg csi of }
. A oA h the wall by. means ; rn nounced the squad would go to ...and it “breathes” throug q
dn youaee duit than at any| Sftermesn-only Grills starting “an exclusive Snorkel-like vent for complete heating
stage’ since practice began, Right| Monday: safety! . , |halfback Ralph Myers was a star te morning sessions will vg te
iit Lote com eloe ee WEST BLOOMFIELD HEATING co, We ane ple to ack E, 7 as : . be featured the drill with several Daugherty also’ planned only an Orchard N
our service manager. : ‘will see just what makes a nine-year-old champion tick. Little point passes for long gains. - afternoon workout for Saturday—| 8726 W. Maple Lake FE 8-3953. FE £3865
ik iia had diets Wilin 82 eecrs expletiice to "Carol Christopher, recently crowned Metropolitan District junior | Noskin, who was delayed sev- but this will be the’ toughest. yet ; : 3
champion will be seen in a display of archery, stressing accuracy. |‘ora; days by a. summer school this fall. He planned to send the
automotive field, both and domestic ys by | tae Hes pes eh safety. She is sponsored by the Gasco Sports club, Detroit, | course had been disappointing. ceenad “act Sic nt ken
: a New 1958 Two Michigan Games on Tap Saturday : pavers wal get pir tothe pene a ss |
Te . :
: wend eat" Olds & Cadillac lEarly Games on College Grid Scenes22=== =| ay eapp 1 ae ae sere =| CLEARANCE
es
¥
=
es
7
See sata
rh | Ping ona fae i
= at nid upt asa a a Sad Sir as Save Up to %1300 ; sf - || som since he took over as the esprtiiees ce - ee Chips? head coach in 1961. pa assignment, _— 199) : | a
* | early-starter, goes to Northern Northern ilichigan wil throw ep|" se erome S- ac . | Michigan for one of the games (a heavy but relatively inexperi- |
seta visits Michigan ‘Tech. | tion's intin eink Asch Top Man 280 South Saginaw Street
The Northern Michigan wildcats, : i 2 ie
s/unier Sach Fray Fence, wil backtes! have ben ted at lif) RACE POINTS
The best Northern Michigan ever| while 160-pound right halfback Jer- $ $ = §
.|did against the Chippewas was a|ry O’Neil of Marysville and full- Pa gy oat 6 78 ae) — See 25 to - 500
in 1929. back Johnny Palmer, a 180-pound- driver trom stra Calif. lost the! ‘ve your ising enly
«ie er from St. Louis, ‘have run the | : Indianapolis 500-mile race to Jim-
| | a. | In 13 games against Central, the| distance in 9.8. 4 (sr lypcblg~ Regaradbened widats have have failed to register a) > ary be ‘ead ae or on other plans : | lesser lights find Florida State ; standings into tom ’s Hoosier
? Letinc eaieomen ech ant + oe Tigers Sell Fischer . |ssmarctt "° “™"""* . __, To get cash for vacations or S| Bradley facing lowa Teachers. and only once in 18 meetings has — : x * 1a sribinol Se Gameet
Northern scored more than a sneleltoy Nats on Waivers | Bos. tie, Phoenix, combay| mee Fekke teoke Joop te gan. That was in 1948, but Central) 1a on the circuit after winning the!) men and women—married
-|won that time 46-14. - eR RE re $105,000 .top money. in the -$305,- or single. You are assured Fischer, one 000 Indianapolis Motor Speedway/| ING of prompt, personal service
chica eine seg deere Thirty-four eeritiy tate Jud} @
“ ’ |Larson of Tampa, who set} >= ‘
| Fischer had a 2-4 record with [a race record of 91.751 miles an| 7 Come 1 is PHONE * WRITE
#@ Detroit and had hurled only one hour and a qualifying record of| Gj “
| jnning since Aug. 15. He was | 98.522 last year. x
} obtained from Chicago along x * * o
with Tito Francona in the deal | Other contenders will include)
| that sent Ray Boone and Bob |Johnny Thomson of Boyertown,
Bee 4
r pos
Sosa pcbdhaetlt Needs tor “Department cpeitahs ‘siete dalenent
Sox. ; Pa.; Rodger Ward of Los Angeles;
him yester- and Eddie Sachs of Center Valley,
highest level of 1958..." piaed by breached Duy 3% for four weeks ending Mi |
, _ =Wel| Seat Jounal - its Gocks downs” pe dae Des Sisal sare i —New York Times
| Wockgton predicts.” fa ‘38 exceed July “57 hove week of last. year.” pee —Wall Street Journal —Wall Street Journal Dun and Bradstreet
“There's a Great Year Ahead!!
POURING TYPE ‘
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ON ALL 1958's
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* * * ee
¢
ic THE PONTIAC : PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
Bosox Lose but ‘Thumper’ Is Back on Top
Hose Sweep Set, F ace rs By The Associated Press White Sox. swept the three-game|season with a. fourhitter, ey,ards had two other pitchers in
| Well, well, Mra ans tak sale tod-ntbs a Ticgrone land over |acoted eo ie Maha aA“ Milde SEALE Ween hee wee
lead. A guy named Williams from|the Red Sox for second place. ball in the third inning, but Gar-/ mon in center and Milt Pappas
] Rina CA shai
Mon. thre
$150.
YOUR
CHOICE The New York Yankees, who|ver (12-10), a Comeback of . the
| It's. been a long haul for|could clinch the pennant Sunday, Year possibility, gave up only one|** Second—hoping to get a quick
until July 1, Then he had another 25" LAWN SWEEPER aN
spit spat with a booing crowd.
Steel + * t B om aot a day a few
r wee ck, when the Red Sox
° beat Cleveland 86 with 15 hits,
Rake jbut Williams didn’t have any. He left six men on base in that one.
19” with 21 x * ‘*
fiat steel teeth. Then he spent his 40th birthday
2 to a Cus ‘fighting a virus. The sickness
tomer. kept him out of action from Au-
. . gust 24 to last Tuesday, when the
big guy was fifth in the batting
race at .315,
Williams has gone 5-for-11 since,
iitying teammate Pete Runnels for
the lead at .320 yesterday with
a 2-for-4 day although the Red
Sox lost 41 at Chicago. Right be-
hind is Bob Cerv of Kansas City
at .319, with Cleveland’s Vic Pow-
er fourth at. 315.
Williams, shooting for his sixth were idle, They open a two-game|more hit, none after the fifth,|pinch-hitter, Harshman,
set at Chicago tonight with a 1044-
game lead and their magic num-
ber at five. ;
Washington took a seaSon se-
ries from: Detroit for the first
time since 1954 by beating the
Tigers 7-6, and Kansas City belt-
e¢ Baltimore 7 to 1 in the only):
other AL games scheduled.
_* * *& .
Dick Donovan (13-13) gave up
seven hits for the White Sox. But
he needed Turk Lown’s mop up
after giving up his only two walks,
one to Runnels, who was 1-for-3,
and Williams’ single in the eighth
inning, The White Sox counted
their four in the fifth, Two-out,
two-run singles by Jim Landis
and Nellie Fox did it against Ike
Delock (12-7), who has lost seven
oi nine decisions since Chicago
ended his two-year winning string} .
at 13 on July 26.
« *« *k
Ned Garver, who had lost
eight in a row to the Orioles be-
fore he shut them out May 25,
knocked ‘off the Birds for the
fourth time in six decisions this
Le a title (a far cry ‘from his winning
388 of last season), drove the
CAULEING by ‘axa Boston run yesterday as the
eg.
NOW $] Ea.
851° Gey
‘[[Lanorem SHELLS = |
FAY'S wie os aie M fen who ance «lin HARDWARE oe Sais he ee and Sunday.
Good. weather for the: two-day
3rd annual Outdoorama at Multi-
Lakes Conservation Assn., at| such
Reed's Lake near Commerce will
attract some heavy competition for) 5
the many sportsmen’s contests on
a jam-packed program. That’s the
ComerHuroaand~ | gneMewoiPeM> fg meSmR same rty : M: tol P+ M- $ a.m., run all day, Telegraph Rds. Al persons in the out
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MARKET TIRE Co.) tice ca FE 8-0424 | 77 W. Huron St.
FROM
FACTORY
LIST
_ON OUR
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HERE'S AN EXAMPLE! ~New BUICK 2-Dr. Sedan
1. Dynaflow 5, Deluxe Steering Wheel
6. W/Wall Tires
3. Defroster 7. Large Wheel Covers
4. W/S Washer 8. Two Tone Paint
$2AGA"
Buick
2 4Dr. Hardtops
_ 9 2Dr. Hardiops
2 2-Dr. Sedans
sreck rinses | Pontiac THEY'VE GOT TOGO
DRIVE ouT
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SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, Inc. (Formerly Community Motors)
233 Main St. : ROCHESTER “OL 1-8133 1 Chieftain 4-Dr.
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1 Bonneville Con-- vertible Coupe
oe
aa a = _ |Heavy Competition Seen
ae = |for Outdoorama Events
duct the trials. This is one of nu-
merous special features that bring
such experts as world casting
champion Ben Hardesty, Slingshot
Johnny Milligan, world junior skeet
champion Eddie Brown and many
others to Multi-Lakes.
Cincinnati Legion Leads
Annual World Series
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., . |(AP) — Defending champion Cin-
cinnati cashed in on eight Green-
wood errors and defeated the
South Carolina team 6-5 last night
to become the only unbeaten team
in: the American Legion junior
baseball world series.
Everett, Mass., clubbed Billings,
Mont., 7-0 and ousted them from
the double elimination tourna:
ment. Preston Ward’s sacrifice fly gave
the A’s a 2-1 lead .in the fifth
against Billy O’Dell (14-11). Cerv’s
lone hit was his 33rd home run,
run eighth.
Lt. Nye Paces
State Shooters Fires 100x100 to Top
Slow Fire Test; Detroit
Police Team Is Winner
Trophy yesterday at the 2ist annual
Michigan Police Shoot at the Jack-
son Police Range.
The Michigan State Police num-
ber two team was second and the
Lansing Police number one team
placed third.
Pontiac's Lt, Harry Nye was
first in slow fire, with a straight
100, that included five X’s, He
had 278 with the Pontiac Class
were (in top 10); Floyd Black.
man (282), Bob Verhine and Ted
Villelia (280 each) and James
Lafmear (254),
In Class B. competition, the four-
man’ team of the Lincoln Park
Police team took first place with
Oak Park and Jackson teams sec-
ond and third respectively.
Holland’s three-man. police team
captured the Class C award, fol-
lowed by Allen Park and Livonia
teams,
In Class D, the two-man Grand
Haven number one team took first
place. East Lansing’s number two
team placed second. with the
Ecorse Township number one team
third,
A total of 120 teams and 407
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KUHN AUTO 149 W. Heron. Acros from Firestone '
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Richard Dy Kuhn
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JACKSON — The Detroit Police)
“!Department’s number one five-man ji.
team won the Class A Governor’s] | \'
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| = THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,1958 if Hf ‘
: ; i fi 3
i REE | . - : - + Ls a ti fz
a é * ; F
Farmington, WL, Waterford Seek Jays’ Title {
#
Wyandotte 9 Advances’
rere. Jim Buco
McLaughlin. i. . ee (UPD he
: S t fi | |. a : be 3 | os * } « . i t night to top th ; on
ou h le d L rid ge ee . Cincinnati, Hous-
pected ‘from Berldey and Van|five seasoried tinemen are on hand many observers x wie the too | Wisandat e ti
we scree fergie et Dyke, although their returning|to help solve the Jay’s problems,| title, the Skippers: apne ed Baste AABC TW By BILL CORNWELL gridiron talent is thinner than the Jack Hayes’ Farmington 11 | M2 224. finished ima tle with jchan bat repute a we Len rest, as the up-and-coming Inter- Van Dyke for last place. the outcome squads have championship fight was the surprise of the loop a the four-team
» Meetings to Be Held three and maybe four schools is|Lakes enters tis second year 8S 8) 124) seo, making « mighty Nobody is predicting sensational | qualified Saich start talorta to Next ‘te Di a distinct possibility, this fall in|“l@ss A ¢ for the crown before losing fo |things for the Skippers this time,/pattic Creek i. Week to Discuss the Inter-Lakes Conference foot- eye Southfield in a showdown battle. |which is OK as far as coach Dave i ~
Realignments ball race with good balance as} Despite the pessimistic moans) q,, bik ean bak as ave ;
the overall picture. and groans of Southfield coach| 4. — spent —— My it Hayes [Freeman is —— steer When you have these...
a Monté Charles, his Bl are : will definitely field a team, - how-
COLUMBUS, Ohio @ — Minor Defending charapien Bout on cape in the 1958 cam| C22 find a few capable line Fe- |2\.,, and might become a deluxe
league baseball will try next week field, 1956 winner Walled Lake | oion placements, troublemaker before the season is
to curb the huge bonuses being and Farmington, last year’s |" vite has his problems, par. | Three members of the ’5? back-|ended. paid rookie talent, pena lig: gn Babe ticularly in the line, and the |field—quatterback Al LeSage, halt- * * *
George M. Trautman, president << “dark hate” enles " | piysical well-being of halfback |back Tom Grimshaw and fullback} Freeman is looking for help in|-
of the National Assn, of Profes- Pay Tom Ridley is still a question |Nei) Stevenson—are ready to go|‘M¢. forward wall where only,
sional Baseball Leagues, said 13 Definite improvement can be cx-| mark, Ridley, whose ball carry: |again, along with All-County end|t@ckle Barry Campbell can boast
of the country’s 24 minor league ing paced the Jays to their first Frank Clappison and guard Jack|™UCh experience. End Tony Hiller
presidents had accepted invitations as LL grid title in 1967, injured bis |; awing Farmington’s big problem and guard Duane Hooper are both
to meet here Tuesday and Wednes- iE : : leg on the basketball court last |i, the middle of the line etter winners who will help, but
day. | 00 ie Jaco season. | le eo. Freeman needs aid from his sopho-
Also on’hand will be the farm ; : Surgery was necessary and Rid-| qhere are several indications|™ Tes ‘© erect @ solid line, directors of the 16 major league , ley’s recovery has been slow. If\mat Walled Lake will be a rough The Skippers will be fairly : ' elubs, | Denver Leader Ridley - 7 = Charles | customer. ‘The return of Frank — — a7 J ; ~ |manages to patch up halfbac’ veteran quarter’ endy
: EP gyuiserdingl yl corlbsipaeng wall, Southtield could easily enioy|king-sized "reason loa Tes Meyer, halfback Mike Ewer and > + belt me p said, : | its second undefeated season in @lreturn of the rest of the back-| fullback Dick Finkbeiner. Bill 4 7 ee Fires 65 to Start Play jrow. (etee footing. hel Fink was great as a sophomore): guty are quarterback Dave
Se. oS tool Al Souchak Fined — [hmeack het he Vikings ‘rolled /chamberlain, halfback Dick Pierle, Starts Monday i * “One thing certain to get atten-| oOuc CZ. ine to an unbeaten season, but his effi- guard Jim Licholat and end Steve
t > tion is legislation to put some kind| _ It TON ciency suffered last year during @/Rosevich, Finley will bank heavily i ee $100 by PGA at quarterback. Coach Dave/,, on halt & dozen promising sopho-|
+ So teaaae gee wen hee ep Smith ia now certain that hall Eliminate + many things to talk about that a ee aren & Ot ee Halfback Tom Marshall and end Tuesday night session will be nec- Golfers Assn, Thursday that ee * Ha among seven|
essary, in addition to the Tuesday Mike Souchak of Grossinger. N.Y] Ross Whitcomb, Steve Galland eee an den Tear te Coste the MIDDLE MAN Wednesday daytime meet- - been or and Ken Hynes will provide expe- Van Dyke. Once again,
-oe ag : appear for the Denver Open Cen-|rience in the line. Walled Lb earn tn om = ‘We Save You Money!
72 2 tennial Golf Tournament. , will field largely a veteran start-| dere is how the teams are exec
‘Shi omy tn toe tournament se aie depth is), Meouthtieid 1 DIRECT Fr om the LJ i = 3
so-so performance in opening Thursday at the Wellshire 3; Watled “Lake = ei comeback trail this. seer sinanied « a : Crs orem wes Wellshire| Waterford was s huge disap ; ay | FAcTory be bo
*s failure to appear. 5 the
This Weekend at Lansing Long Island Boat
yacht . ;
DDGA, MPGAi in (4th Duel Pacing Point Race OXFORD, Md. (AP) - Skip
cardiac Etchells led a 48-boat fleet le
Mais cman Wiekd Wistekeatiag ist. Se tid nbeid-wektare, the eight points today as they sailed
the Detroit District Golf Associa-|same as past tournaments. Three the fourth race of the North
: CN ene einige ai imei |team points are at stake in every Jn fe om
sand gee somata raectcerel ON Etchells, “representing the Cen- D dity "57, ; challenge * * * tral Long Island Fleet, N. Y., fin- oO you e a ’ g
; been mark c both of yesterday’s races to move! 58
. mas - inte. Sree. save te the. standings or care heey & Deck Paint z five-race : 1 (a
; teams, “The last Publinx victory reap | $6.95 Value. .$5.75 Gal. 4 ‘ was scored in 1956 at Barton eegrage wi 9 i | $2.10 Value. .$1.69 Qt.
i e gave him 137 points, Hard-Wearin
3 1 ; with 129 for his closest WeatbuaRedlepent
Johnson, 0 gum Pune 4 Hadden of New Crieane. Haat, | ViailiS Uti Mt : - the in the r : " # i, kau piloting En Gerde II, added t H _
: CL. (tee os ' o Ty Bianco, to his third on opening day. | New ubeless Tires at | ae : NC UlCT SF cata last year, 905 ; ‘at Studebaner, ; The final race is scheduled for 1 ee
| TE eam seouneram, wx. un | nec carnert wt pel Rumrent: Si wed base Menene LOW 10 W p PR {qa5an we : ' line conducted differently. Tomorrow, PUBLINX SQUAD SMR TNE 1
man teams wage alternate| Mixe Andonian, Ty Caplin, John For Building Supplies See
shot competition in Walker Cup| Wien” ns} iceberg” Doo 'welson, Bel | | | sve, paying i Sold ouromes fasta gene Sy .
Ken Parkins, Jim ry for 18 holes. Priest, Claude 4) Ahernatee— Bill
ty GOODFYEAR
‘19: —— our —. : ae 3] “You pay no more ‘SUMMER 95 = =
Piso Sot Eton | AVRO eRe || }~6CLOSE-OUTS Pere ait te tues Mrayoa
Mockwall, plus tax
tat beslpedie Ge
a ts as Bag
MIDAS
Ml FFLER | the SAFE, SILENT .
| COMBINATION SCREEN
and STORM DOORS
® Removable Glass Insert
@ Galvanized Screen _
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3’ Wide, 6-8” High
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3” Wide, 6’-8” High
CHECK YOUR SIZE AND SAVE}
TIRE | Me Tete | We Totes |" fa
sie | oe. | Fe tae eo.
530.80 750x14 [$19.95 $24.60 25,15
00x14 | 22.25 | 27.25 | 27.55 | 98.75
50x14 | 24.40 | 29.90 | 30.20 | $6.95
*AN prices plus tax and recappable tire.
MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES
THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND!
SERVICE SPECIAL Here's What We Do-+
@ Balance Two Front Wheels (Reg. $5.00)
@ Complete Front End Alignment
A you
eine Pure House Paint
First quality $7.15 Value
rs § SO EASY you
save /2, AND MORE
= X GUARANTEE = : In Writing c
' For the Life of Your Cor [=
tacos bye wOAS EE GUARANTEED si0.08) $ 95 : = -to-Coast Network (2 Against Rust Out, Burn Out, $ 95 @ Adjust Brakes (Res. chen? 33.00)
SA aera THRE Blow Out LY rg mee Brake a ~—
Reg. $20.10... ....:.... OUR GUARANTEE
gL! IB Withstands All Investigation PAY AS LOW AS $1.25 A WEEK Velvetone $495 Gal
go oe REMEMBER —_
caging srotessionsh Reiser 15 Minute Service While You Wait WM SOWiebumae a $7 00 BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL $5.75 Vateo :
tt’s loads of ind it saves you Fiat Wall Paint in NO CHARGE | . money, too. Stop in Vet Shqip Ene en ae ; S & FOR MOST CHEVROLETS, 20-Colors and White. FORDS and PLYMOUTHS Cémperable Low Prices fer Other
Model Cars For Labor on Front or Rear Pipe INNING -CHART. PLA € When Purchased with Muffler WOOD SASH INCL. eac MUFFLER ‘1 y Xs
eS eee ithiuicad nied tet, ho ee ee ee
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CARL SHELL Toden—Eie Aperintatet Rootes Yard Prices Only USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN a
KING’S , Paint t Mig. Co.:
_ and SONS 17-19 Perry St. ° | 4994 Dixie Hwy Midas Muffler Service | | BURKE LUMBER C0. FE 5-6184 t
‘Drayton Plains. ‘ 256. South Saginaw St. FE 2 2-10 010 | “Where the aii Begins” | ‘ ‘PREE- DELIVERY :
: OR 3.5043 | (Next to Jerome Olds) | -* Open:Daity ‘et $390 +
Open Mendey Thre. — ‘vil 5: nm ‘til einen til § | 4495 Dixie Hwys Dray risus OR $1201 wneeles Sat, 8 A.M: - 12 P.M. J
bes Friday ‘til 9 P. M.
"og
Save 50%
nigh ec PATIO SLABS
Roger A.. Authier Co. keen 8) Grae THE, PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958_
meeelil. Gairede
in-a lawn,,it makes a guy alittle
disco’
to a lawn like this, and still be
able to afford it? -
been- squirting it.down every night "Ailes dalled aI. ten lhows shea
Just what can one do) «+ 4 brown becatise of lack of
How about coneiak) If he has How much water is this? Un-
the soil is soaked six inches
deep. a, \ =
It’s kind of hard to let a lawn fine on-to keep it actively grow-
water, but here is what happens.
{Some ‘of the weak grass plants die.
new leaves develop and the plant
is back in business,
leaves ‘when the new ‘growth ap-
pears in the fall? Many try one
close cut to remove most of the
dead stuff, then cutting taller so
the new growth is above the old
stubble.
Is fall a good time to reseed?
I believe reseeding is a waste of
spots, then reseed with the same
kind of seed, \Don’t Reseed Lawn in Fall patches of grass, try reoveling: Tn
some cases, it doesn’t work, be-
causé the fungus kills the seed too.
| If te-seeding isn't the answer,
tint is? Many lawns are thin and
full of weeds because there isn't
enough fertility to maintain a big-
ger or second grass plant. Put a
will spread rapidly in ‘the fall if
wel] fertilized. And this thickened
for Several’Uses.
build a. garden bench for added
outdoor convenience,
Plan your units so they have
may serve for sun bath-
. Small benches may serve
as coffee tables, Wide arms can
” Any hammer-and-saw man can
more than ene use, Extra wide | Build Garden Bench a
24x24 Inch. ee dan $9.00 First of all, he can be sure he |But the vigorous plants become|time and money. There are ex-|{all ee ee ee eliminate the’necd for side tables. |or* ony pe Mal i
~ 12x24 Inch. i$ 60 hasn't been it, Has dormant roots. All the leaves die,|ceptions to this. If 4 rye grass lawn/fertilizer na He en Locate permanent seats where|Conference at Michigan State Uni- :
16x16 | ahead ach aiid tell Gok he been cuting it tall? If the but the clumps are alive, Whe njis thinning, out, reseed, mot withjof the eras! we Riredlly ve. |there is shade at least part of the} y was : 16432 ‘ari ae eet oo at two (Inches he’s {cooler weather, rains, and ferti-jrye grass, but with hase ey ad All three common lawn’ greases day. Late afternoon shade is usual- ing of Pontiac Mills, ee f
x WOR nck eo kcateke. nen $1 35 ine, lizer revive these clumps in the fall|fescune, If a new seeding has iden @rain “bent otut unk feetne . cote =o :
FOR FALL PLANTING |
other it 2 a pie, he Bans ABOUT DEAD GRASS ee ee turf will make it plenty rough on
10570 nk it with kindness, Thi dead iseases killed out! weeds next spring! . ard ma M-59 ' 7200 Cooley Lake Road Belt watecteg ‘woleleds: the all What about all the dead grass; If fungus d have pring
Next to Union Lake Village
Phone Evenings EM 3-2459 = 4 Miles West of Airport just enough to start new growth,|
_ Phone Days EM 3-4825 but net.enough to keep it going.|#™
Either don’t water and let «.the|?
grass go dermant or put enough|®
*Evergreens * Potted Roses
° Flowering Shrubs.
* Black Lawn Seed ° Fertilizers
* Garden Tools and Supplies
Landscaping Serie.
Condition Your Hay
Conditioned ‘hay to speed dry-
, seeding gets a quicker start and.
keeps right on going -+ flowers will
i ight frost. ing time is gaining more and more
shrabs to more luxuint, late season ee : “sore Dixie Hwy. (Near M-15) Maple 5-2200
foliage and better root development. - dition hay at once has’ been de- “HORE 2g ;
SACCO used for fall-planted bulbs. _|veloped. Crushed hay is more : a
assures larger, more colorful blooms pliable and palatable to stock and ¥ PL NT
since. it ‘can be put up sooner, NOW
nant sating SAECO is. te complete it also has more nutrients. plant food, containing all the ele-
+ tents needed for plant growth. Get
mecum SACCO Plant Food now at hardware
% stores, garden centers, and nurseries.
EVERGREENS SPREADERS
Pot Grown Pfitzers—15” ay teenies 150
Pot Grown Andorras—12” setae es
Pot Grown Cuspidates (Yews) Me oS os 3°95
‘B&B Pfitzers—large size 88
BG B Vee 2 WIG tah Ss It is estimated that West Vir-
ginia has coal resources sufficient
to last 400 years at the present
rate of production. +
*
bs
in
eee eer eee ees
re eas 3.50 | "$1495 ana 19.95 Plus many additional varieties
Beautiful Golden Vicar... ehh ae een @eeoeae 1.50. |
gbush 1.95 tee eevee tere ewer ee s
WO. oc sceetecsees 1.50
BORDINE GREENHOUSES 1835 8. Rochester Rd., 1 Mile North of Aubarn Bd:
Rochester, Michigan.
KILL CRAB GRASS @eeeseeee KE
re ) eweens
ADDS TO HEIGHT — Professor Peter B. Kaufman of the
‘University of Michigan botany department demonstrates how he
adds height to rice plants. He applied giberellic acid to the stem.
The results are shown in the plant on the left. The process does
not diminish the quality of yield,
Every
Day
Halt Home-Grown Jungle,
Decorate Abode Carefully|
Too much of a good thing in; floral portrait. A plant stand of
your home decor can ruin the ef-jsix or eight plants of the same
fect. That goes for plants, as .well| type—geraniums, begonias, African
as grandfather cocks. Violets—may be used to decora-
wiate tive advantage, . complementing
j A plant can be.a l J°Y+ | your color scheme. serving the home. decoratively. 5. Static effects in plants should Bat even a well kept plant can ; be avoided. A philodendron grow- become an eyesore if grown with- i al alt agucke § flow.
out imagination or if not integrat. |'"S UP Bong SCS he . . |er pot can be dull unless the plant
ee Bas is fully grown, with an abundance > a te of ‘lush leaves, and can be dis-
| apanese achieve charm-| played in a place where its height
ing effects with small plants, and ’ will prove to be an advantage.
| the tiniest bit of flora becomes a} 6. Most plants may be dressed
conversation piece — an arrange-| up
it that is eye-catching sim- Thott ter a " meni e or a Vi is charming with
ple plant that is beautiful enough geraniums. There more
to stand on its own. that are compatible.
Americans take plants for’ grant-
ed, and there is little effort to
dress up a plant that might as well KITTY: LITTER
be artificial for all its lack of
glamor. Straggly little vines, ab-
surd snake plants or other green-| 10 Ib. bag ............97e
25 Ib. bag veedetay «ee
CHECK
THESE REASONS
Bast
YOU SHOULD OWN |
“TUFTWOVEN ACRILAN CARPET
i
i Sic,
| |
‘ es : Le i \ vy
'examples of bad taste.
i room. Why not give a sweet little
tering 10 other awful little species’
| faithful attendarice to the watering
can. : ery, identifiable only by the own-}
er’s knowledge of horticulture, are
VITALITY FEED STORE 256 N. Perry FE 6-023 Garden Supply Dealers
PLANTS NEED PURPOSE
A plant should have a purpose
in life. A collection of house plants’
should be a meaningful asset to a’
plaht the dignity of an interesting
container, so it may become gt
of the: household?
Why relegate. it to ignominy flat-|
of plant life, grouped together in
sickly style on a table or tray, liv-
ing only for.the satisfaction of the\§
grower who revels iri having made
“something” grow. A child caniy @
keep.an ordinary plant healthy by/i
x *& *
Colorful piants such as the be-
gonia offer a challenge to the 4 |
ing room gardener and flattery to
the home.
Here are some pointers for mak-'
ing plants an asset to the house-)
hold:
1. Philodendron, ivy or other |
small plants grown individually || Kentucky Blue Grass. may be put in attractive contain-
ers such as a cache pot. A small
clay pot may be imbedded into a
28 — peso =e) Astoria Bent Grass. . portan rge Fg dips base ben Danish Blue Grass .. .
broken are ideal for this.)
| 2..A> strikingly beautiful ant!
may stand on its own, needing)
nothing more than a large clay|
or wooden pot that will enhaiice!
it by contrast.
3. An inexpensive ceramic con- if
tainer in an unusual shape may)
graciously offer respite to a few
small plants, These should be ar-
ranged with anh eye-catching pat-
tern in mind. Meadow Fescue ...
Kentucky 31 Fescue.
Special a he Wies
Regal Organic...:...
FLORAL PORTRAIT Milorganite oe 8 © @ eo 6 © ee ee 80 Lb. Bag 95
‘Sat Hans ative “es G&F 10-6-4 ........,. 100 Lb. Bag $5.95 7 or na i -. : ’ ; ; >: a
i 4 or picture window can be | Special 10-6-4 oe epee ese te 80 Lb. Bag $3.35
extremely effective, looking like al S
j ee ee ee ee ‘ ey
| Wash Paint Away {|}. 7c" | —. 1 h ore ;
« from pneen: ct eat aya Ose i Phone eee . i new Strypeeze ial water- 1) ‘
; rissable* pated rihavier with ig. OR fia yea ff bd 20691
the Good Housekeeping Seal!
Saw om Tce wesw mmm oenwd
** ee @ ee 4
Creeping Red Fescue ..........:... Lb. 69e
sara Noo engl Db sseriaeuas
Penn State Chewing Fescue.......
Penn Lawn Fescue..............
eee ee oe
oe ee ee
CHOICE LAWN FERTILIZERS
| ie Cond Seen Sent 5 FEED and LAWN SUPPLY COMPANY September ts the best time
af the entire year to sow
perennial grass seed. Start
your new n'now. Select
your seeds from these perma-
nent; turfl-building~ varieties.
Sincere and expert assistance
is yours at-the Regal Stores.
ceva Lb, 69e
. Lb. 69¢
Lb. 95¢
- Lb. 79¢
.Lb. 90¢
Lb. 97¢
. Lb. 50¢
. Lb. 40c © ost @ eo © + 8 O ®
** *+ ee? © *
*
.
*
*
.... 80 Lb. Bag $2.65
v... 80 Lb. Bag $3.95
"SPREADER
Now on Sale *
$12.95 Model .. $10.95
$16.95 Model... $13.95
$24.95 ot «« $19.95
Scotts. Turf Builder : tte irr ey
Scotts bid Seed
for This Locality
FAMILY
MIXTURE
5 Ib. Box—Reg. $6.95 REGAL FEED & ser rnin Aah
L ‘eee | a ee ae , | as f fis Ae ror
= ee | « ¢ * # b s
|
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS; FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
*
‘.
ee ae ae ¢ ie u AN ee
ae Ae via a * Pr oa. 4 ee - a
No Formosa Solution| (== oan which it does not own and which)think Red China should have the) []] PLP&S" ,
ieee belongs to Nocten as friendly islands, to work out something like| || COMMNS 1:
ie so government’ (Chiang’s Nationalist/thig:, : Vee | ONC?
Fy adhere a eee eas be tn thuk itu, Bi oe bark thet : ee to ‘i ;
He 2 Ge at’ thatlog shaves, if wansed to, t= pres Such a | of \\\
i talks (with him into yielding the off) ok ®t Pe Na ae LSS r:ne. nag, 0.8, Pat, OFF.
4 course, mean the end of Chiang’s i
t if letting the Red Chinese|regime, He'd have to go to some
friendly asylum elsewhere, But).
stop shooting—is ruléd out, what/this is all pretty iffy. Both Chiang
can this country possibly: negoti-|and the Red Chinese t reject
~lany such proposal,
But -if the solution doesn’t lie
somewhere in these ideas, then
any solution at all seems remote
and the world» can just hope the
Nations. There an effort might be|present, ‘shooting stops short of
by U.N. members, who'war, — ef eves iT
:
d
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i
F
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if Hi
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ifs
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S38 8
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s
Ag 3 a,
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.
: __ BOARDING HOUSE _ “
YMMMM@ZXZH/,, SURE, SAKE} HOW'S CHANCES
OF THs TEPEE,EH.Y Conenaee | ATEN-ctoT, GY WELL T.AINT ZA THAT TWAS J UAKE,WHILE, YZ
SHINY HLS OUTS OWN we EM fend, an | { SEST TO MAKE THINGS MORE /\ eirciness 7] DIPPING FROK
co & at
ia!
regs
a ry . bs
oP * f | ; . Me
T LUCKS IF THEY TEACH THAT | 1 am | : .—CcU hE by
D OF LEANED WAS DUMB \ | NOW--PSYCHOLOGY/ se” atte ome \ \| oe j> 6.
ENOUGH To | \ BUT I'M AFRAID
jects | | Bicheno ser ! MACHINE “ “BUNer IN TROUBLE TO TEACH 'EM HOW | | Wig
i . TS wd
i Se L.
? hs p Oe. Pek GOL
4 »
eq
.
ad
S. a
DEAR NANGY,
OLD PAL=-- WILL . YOU LEND Me.
FIFTY CENTS ?---
YOUR DEAREST
BUDDy, SLUGGO |
ETE COVER UP oes
John Morris
: MT VTL
, a "By Chaeles Kuhn « YOU'VE GOTTA BRING HECK, I CAUGHT ABAD |...Q01N’ BILLY'S ARITHMETIC
: SOM 6]| |COLO LAST WEEK... | |PROBLEMS WITH MY SHOES Se'somerHin’ oe Me \ (mm, © AN’ STOCKINGS OFF//-—
You'll Find T' COUNT WITH / bed, ; —
Every Day in the Pontiac
Press Want Ad Section
Take advantage of this easy way
to svn) _polirietlos and
selling problems. ;
g San ise aaa ote
sael¥s To Place Your ae
1, the live WANT AD By Walt Disney
| DIAL. FE 2-8181 Tet Bees
“I think T'll send MY problem to the above column in care of thie ‘ff ;
ot ah
THE. PONTIAC: PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1906
pitarinal atria. adhe rahe. de a a Stadia
Wie, Om URLW, (oe ww, (50) ara WPON, A ened ‘WIJGK, in »
ble” in order to take advantage of
.T day’ Tele P r< aaataaae e) Ss. lelevision rogramns - -- He | on t Res . 1 | Frograms furnished by stations listed tn this column are subject to change without notice Ie i 1
‘Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel (—wws-rv Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9 CRLW-TV on Past Laur els ’ | .
‘Foon Tv mou hs ge tg lh Ry for Cs, Takes Dance Lessons,
TF De pau Te. Secale. | Remaes : Brushes Up on Jazz I ler —
(4) News. escapes, (Re-run.) 6:15 posta coven Bible. pra at Keyboard ™ 21 TV ike New $59.95
(2) Racket Squad. 9:45 (4) Fight Beat, 6 7] OBEL }
: ~ wend 9:30 (2) Ca ‘By DICK KLEINER TV
@:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. 0:00 (1) Hot Rod Races. hae cane Kangaroo waw YORE OUEA)—Jack T —_ 3930 Elis, Lk, Rd, FE 4-4945 ,
ews. anching = : ,
GH 0 Box, foe (4) Special. Tour of Mexico.|19:00 (4) Howdy Doody. ech cnasts Samak wy :
6:30. (7) Comedy Aconi.) (2) Undercurrent, Scheming (1) Don Wattrick, Sports. |show, Twenty-One, isn't satisfied to } :
(8) Rocky Jones. director uses innocent man rest on his gold-inlaid laurels. i
(4) Mr. & Mrs. North as pawn when’ he overhears|19:30 (2) Mighty Mouse. He’s turning himself into a come- =} |
(2) News: LeGoff, actor vow to avenge his) (4) Ruff and Reddy. dian, , | ews: . daughter's death. (Re-run.) “This isn’t the end of my on oo | tt a
340 (2) Weather. 10:15: (9) Weather pele - i aan ee _ ee, _— om 48 allot 82 Lampreys . Fury. gZ a top on a top show, vn pate aon a wee
om Nee mee Wien Pere. 11:30 (2) George Hamilton IV mata ee ‘ neem & mage ses
1:00 (1) Sports Parade. 10:30 (7) Hot Rods (cont.) ‘nem , : es Fs: 20 Roman roads Anewer to Previous Pussie
cog “The Bi ag Appear. Jack 11:55 (9) Billboards. : tied ty: Nght bis: pipe FH 24 N ee See. Lees
ace Beery, * g Carson, John Lupton in com-|"~ a new acquisition—and exhausted 25 Smart ele) (eer irieis ith RCA
House.”” (’30.) edy ot behind-the-scenes| 4 av ates a few matches in the futile cause. :' — ——, inal as ISIOte Ten ;
(4) Driver’s Appeal. Movie “Press Agents.” TURDAY AFTERN The idea is to branch out, de- peancHING OUT—Not con- | 1 Damages 30 Cut in cubes Als me iCiea 4 Tp NL
(2) Medic. _ @) Thin Man. Nick’ suspects| 9.99 (9) Lone Ranger = =e Who knows how tent to rest on his laurels as a| 3 Kerwnt 4, 32 ve forth LAPMLA aA eae deiattioin Channel 6
7:10 (7) Weather aa by star)“ (4) True Story. cay at oot acdc it Ca top TV emcee, Jack Barry is | 4 Witch of ——— ~» Teton and iat ‘a Bie ete
errs ids fant Ge] (9 Doser, (imal nut ames yur—nay ny ns oe conedan [Zoe ™ eae, Eee || Antenna Kits ‘9:15 (1) News: Daly. yop (9) Country Calendar Ghana quiz show, it senme to have O'S. teking dancing. lessons, 1 § SSeS o French ca street renee coy . . (2) Harbor Command. : pevenciogical’ pasciar eed the studies singing, and is brushing = “ § Light ual PIO ee re ic} mata at i dt. : CONDON’S
. TIA IC Bp Diels
%:30 (7) Rin Tin Tin. Rusty trans-|1199 (7) Soupy’s On. . 12:80 (2) Cartoon Frolic. otherg lack, So perhaps it’ll go on “P °° his piano. playing. H Ball city Se ees eet
fers affection from Rin Tin (9) Theater. Robert Stack, (4) Detective’s Diary. for years. But perhaps not.” - scene 2 thd.
bong to reg lal wan ero ('52.) | Gites Karrive. In case it doesn’t—and even if SALES +4 a
Movie News: W’kamp. : it does, just for variety’s sake— H ‘
(4) (color), Big Game, Quiz| °c) News: LeGot 12:55 (@) Pro Football Ht does, just for varieiy's sake | Dedication, Open|Mutual Radio Sold Guilty of Manslaughter 1 5 Pt a ata |
“ 11:15 (4) Weather: Eliot. 1:00 (4) Farm Report. senthar. sie. of House at Home DETROIT «®—Two men pleadedij — Factory Authorized Service
8:00 (7) Walt Disney. rll y (2) Miss Fairweather. (2) News. habe the past six pyaie, a he {0 Hal Roach Studios guilty Thursday to er mY
et ata sie 1:15 (4) Window ‘Shopping Nelle Fisher mee icone = lOf Pastor Sunday in the apartment house slaying. of}
& 11:20 (4) Sports: Parker. . w ° the Sid Caesar Shot HOLLYWwoop (UPI) — Mutual] Robert Forguson last Feb. 19. They
oy tis doen (2) Sports Final. (2) Warmup. raga as! ute dedication of te house se proacasting System, the words |dre Jay. Dilan, 2, of Trenton,
* : il ” y *
@ ‘Storybook Phyllis Lovelzi:95 (2) N'watch Theater. Dick|!*9 (2) Baseball. eee wes ee said. eran church in Waterford Township Se an ets Pete. Sacha een iat tae
apa: Raggy tel Gee tees te Ao selee Genceh- a step in bis tiled, 5, Gen eaeien held &|than 2 ailtion dollars in cash andiGept. 25: Bévvint :
_ fends outlaw’s wife. (33) , " }9:00 (7) Ramar. At the beginning, 1 was murder—|gervie at red church the mee” ge) ae ri cae § pee ogy ang! l
| ways ™) Reuben Norling conducting Hal Ir., who will ledgedly returned and shot Forgu-
8:30 @ Disney lenot 11:30 SD ehsek ee 2:30 (7) Movie. syn Lo liage gael oe Sashin asl ties. Arvid EAE onan = Wi _ become sm ae
(4) Story (cont. (9) Theater (cont.) . - 3:30 (9) Film Fare. derson and the pastoral committee| for Mutual, termed the acquisition
(2) Destiny. Tallulah Bank- (4) Jack Paag. , i
head, “Eyes of a Stranger. (2) N’watch (cont.) 4:00 2 ag Movie Party. :
#:00 (7) Album. Part 1 of “‘Mon- (2) Scoreboard, :
ganga,” ypiomersgg ~~ SATURDAY MORNING (9) Movie. ;
Belgian Congo. 8:05 (2) Meditations. 4:10 (2) Movie.
o Boxing. Len Matthews|8:10 (2) On the Farm Front. 6:00 (7) Wrestling. ea om fi mn the ~ectenae pipe Be
yeas Tyeamy nad bes on “a (2) Electrici t Work. @) Movie the church itself pits at rte men 8p
(2) Phil Silvers. ame bce : — ‘ 5:30 (9) Wild Bill Hickok. of humor, a good delivery and|port and Williams Lake Rds:, was The move combines the facilities a
to sell western film to. TV|880 (2) Christophers. . he’s sure of his sence of timing.|dedicated in May, 1957. vdgrwwmlgi tye vie grenadine ,
network, ¢Rgrun.)....... (1) Government of Michigan.| Thousands. of residents of the |All that remains is experience and) _ latge ante te
British Isles were killed by smog |the ability to size up an audience. ? Rees le ta caine Gal
$:30 (7) Album (cont. 8:58 (4) (color) News. (the smoky fog which affects He's had some good nights, some Jumps From Motorbike | Paves the way for the |
@) Special Agen sections States) in|bad ones, in his benefit, appear. fou Viety Pee eee ee CALLUM & DI ‘AN pa Boxing as 9:00 (2) Michigan Conservation. December 185 et i ances. But the general feeling has 0 Escape Serious Mnjery + * % | Cc
. - ; ai we ok & serious injury Thursday when he| York, the new president of the net. ss anacitaniven: Pedied a ban. guilin
t ea : “T've aldo told my agents,” he|jumped from his motorcycle be-| Poet SON sleviion st ii al st os ai
-- Today's Radio Programs-- eens ee by er ate sitios
ET FREE WITH, ANY ,34
"MAJOR APPLIANCE PURCHASE! *
GET A PARAKE
RCA COLOR TY
Enter Parakeet Speaking Contest!
TONIGHT 11:00—WJR, News, Sports i, ews, pen PRE leaped from the southbound motor- 4 ‘Teach it to say: :
ww. : a revue or do a t comedy : -
6:00—WIR, News, Reynolds war News, Surrell a ewe er exLW, own Davies part.” on va cr ren before oll Sales and Service | PR noon have bongains in in Home
as . sah ; ppliances, Near the New Post Oifice —
WXYZ, Sports, McKensie WoAR News, Carl shook WJBK, be |Bronson, 61, of Clio, who Ue Ta
CKLW, News, Chase . News, 0:90 —WJR, Jack Barris For Barry, all this would : was! BY Jaa tee end Just as Reliable”
WJBK, News, McLeod GRLW. Breaktest club 2:00—WJR, News, very new. He's not an old-timer | making a Jéft turn across his path, os Cent Ende Dace 25, 1958
Weow, News. quis ue Ub has Ware, Pom ‘in show business. In fact, he was |deputies M FN Television—Crand Prize
Ween Henne Bee —— Se 10:00—WIR. News, O: Drake WAYE, Fun-e-Rame rm . 3 ; |
a RLS, WW3. Melody ‘Parade Wik: Baseball in the handkerchief business,.| Camire was taken to St. Joseph’
rig a saruanar wonwma | TEE meme gente Mackinnon “pat I somehow knew Fa get inte |Mercy Hospital where he was) ES HAM PTON ELECTRIC
wxYa, J . : 5 show business someday, although |treated for a sprained ankle =
WEON, ers achat, | « “wg, Rewy siaxwell” wea ert wii ra SS, = not as a quiz show mc.” released. 825 W. Huron St.’ Open Nightly ‘H9 P.M. FE 442525
lews,. Davies : :
wa News Sicen oa News, Geum WORLW. News, ‘Bd. . $:00—WaR, Orchestra Bos Beglon aE rohan cod I’ ‘ I il ee
Hte"F'p item | Sean Bete, Spotian | WEAR Neve Vioodine™ |"Wiea) MeeaMamtor [NUM T® "Dongn going atrong|P CLS “Alligator Smile COMPONENT STEREO HI-FI WOAR, News: Patrick te nericaare | Twa Men Méledy WEAR, News, Bennett They've had successes| Delays Lassie Show , a
. ‘ ww Nice siege ana, sin Gah shows an Saves DAY, The Ultimate é 0 WilSG Gnd Valse!
2:30—WWJ, 3 Star Extre Wie News, “Deer CKLW, News, Da . | WW, News, Monitor Dink: and Life Begins At HOLLYWOOD (AP)—There was mate Wm wality, idelity
CRW, BY Davis sary pid Bowe, | Wink mera © ale WGK: elsoa yn dare constantly working|a gasp of dismay when Jon Pro- Free Demonstration!
, vi . *. af ’ e *
oe "Geiw, News, Gocamorn, | 11:90—WWy, News, Melody sve Parade, of Bends|on new shows. =; vost, 8, Lassie’s pal on the TV CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS CO. ne tee
WJ8E, Hews, Goorss CELW, News, Davies | Caw, News, "Knowles So Barry's ambition to make|series, smiled at the camera. 4540 W. HURON st. on some | -
re ee WON, Bob Lark TE t himself into a comedian has noth- “He looks. like an alligator!” | —_——
CRLW. ——— 1:30 — Music Hall . ing to do with financial neéd. said ; . on ne ies
WOAR, News: Ez evs. ores SATURDAY AFTERNOON a Th ag, wall As he says, “a man has to keep x* *® * New and Used TV Sets en a ee Ae eee
sae. cael News. 18:00—WIR, er Farm | WCAR, News, Bennett moving, doesn’t he?’’ Jon’s winsome smile had lost Kathorteut 0 =
WW, Boxt 00_WJR, News, Giest Warr. (News, ‘single 5:00-WJR, News, Music some of its charm—two front baby ZENITH, - MOTOROLA -
_CKLW, Bible NXYE. News,” Wolf CRLW, News, Bud Davies | WWJ, News, itor teeth _ were He didn’t
WJBK, Baseball xt missing.
cay. News, Good Morning WIBK, pews, Den McLeod wae aes un-a-Rama | To Head Nuclear Meeting vedic previous shots Lat ier the Open Friday Nites
res WJBK, News. oeore WPON, News, Lewis war Rews, De i filmed show. "til 9 P. M. 4
FT pte | SELB“ ee ence |e en ait Sayyed operdartaoarer ae seetp-strwed. ipecte CKLW, News, 2, Good Morn saa) ir Regs, Rosia “ra R, Music Hall Motors Corp., and Walker L, Cis- san does soe — Beverly 770 Orchard Lake Ave. 5 Lb. Bag Giais ‘Seed, Per Bag. . vac eee
WXYZ, J. surrell emi swan ws Bows, Mi wae pes Kaow ler, president of the Detroit Edison ‘aie with . FE 4-5841 ;
CKLW, Knowles e0--WIR. Hews, Pose WATE. Be wean, noee Co., will serve as _chair-|P two teeth to fill the gap, ee Heavy Duty Spade or Long Handle
ee WPON, a WPON, sports, MecKinnon and work resumed yesterday, ‘Shovel, Reg $3.95. Now $1.98
HEADQUARTERS. We Service RCA Victor Color TV
} Plus All Other Make TV, Radios, Hi-Fi
Also Expert eta Service on
| ELECTRO MART
Are Here!
A Few 1958
Model Sets
Are Priced —
| at
Big Savings!
C&V
Extra. Ss pecial!! " Saturday, ee 13 Only
Remington
Blue Rocks
Full Case S
of 135
‘With purchase of
$5.00 or more,
Saturday, Sept. 13
only. Limit one
to @ customer.
Gucranteed Not to Have One Broken
Blue Rock in the Entire.Case
Please do not ask us to extend this one day
special beyond sane as cost prohibits us from
extending the sale d
SLAYBAUGH'S —
~ PAINT -SPECIAL _ Highest Quality Rubberized Latex Indoor Paint, Wash-
able—fast drying, Reg. $6.19:....... be beaks Ota 2"
gal. Now oe ee eee oe olay ithe ght ahs ortercge gal.
Set of 4 paint brushes : “Ff
(different sizes) ee re wee Pee ee ee ee
Closing Out of Famous Moke Fishing
Rods and Reels Save
26” American Made Boy’s or Girl's
Bicycle
O’Cedar Sponge Mops,
Reg. $3.96
Admiral Table Model Radio, 4-Speed
Recorder Player Combination Vn
45 RPM Spindel and 12 new Mercury -
Records, $96.66 Value Now
Sunbeam Model "G” Men’‘s Shaver, | AG,
Reg. $32.50... . Now $12.95 With Trade
OPEN SUNDAY 10 A. M. to 3 P M
Mon, to Thurs. 10 A.M. to 8 P.M—Frin Sat. 10 A.M. to 9PM.
VERKLER "sor | We Sell Wholesale to Rveryone—Pree 90-Day Layaway Your "Round
1550 Union Lake Read EM 3-4381 © 50%
33.95 eee © HO ee ee Oe eee ee
46 6 6 ee © ee oe Oe ee ee
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Open 9 to 9 Daily FE 8.0453.
‘FE 2-3781 OFFICIAL PICK-UP STATION FOR |
Park Free Reat of Store WILLIAM'S GUN SHOP
- Le 4 t
a \
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 _
's IN Ni] I Red China Guns F ind rious damage, Pa A a) Hor = ; i] st curs ny ihe
THE rR Show Starts 7: ma ik t ioe i.
a
t
“See, this lucky. ship,” ha anid
<< MEL SHYDER” | By JAMES CARY orient gor tint GARDEN of 40 nf
et 10:20 —
Novelty Comedy MC... louemoy (AP)—Lucky Old 247 - ' ; : : | p ot
WALLED LAKE
" ‘laa tate treme TR MA 42151
“JODIE by Communist shore guns
ima ee DRAKE Old 247 is a battered-and clank- Rock & Roll ing veteran of the World War
Stylist landing in Sicily, a
eon ae ‘ * LSM (landing ship medium),
js Negel pilsers tat she Ge box wiTH TWO DIGK ship afloat, DE ~
FABULOUS KEFGEN “his i auch ship one tl 4 ) p ELVIS : SHHOT | |
cpm AY and ee exon dont have to, worry even|| rf | Az FILMED IN COLOR AMONG FRIDAY ant eo if we to
ed eee | ———————— FLORIDA'S SUN WORSHIPPERS!
SATURDAY = OPENT DAYS Bog tion has’ been| : ee 25 AND 7 NIGHTS : ef By
JAM SESSION. TUESDAY A gwes ae by GEORGE every a. @ : May or PS | ol coins weonesoay AW aw . | Bob Boiley : Gina ‘gat ber “OUR SPECIALTY FRIDAY pot Wis |
‘ond His SWINGMASTERS. | fiat se eee bums wn oe oe on ee to tho parmesan meet anit , - the Communist shore guns furled| Western Music A, % ANNO Wight! itheir then-record 41,000 rounds —~ALSO— a » Yi hes la Py
: feng 23. eparyol peat lid A Variety of Sandwiches’ BOB | BAILEY aN se Welcome
Ed ee i | WE ry ew
se Sige SE sfc ind me SCRIB nN DAR i RESTAURANT - with another canvoy later epavack 130 $. —— Rd, FE 4-6981
[today La Gnde, Chang Ch War Gackt EM 3-0611 t i
fel
i &
!
3 of
uy
Hl! eet
DIXIE-BAR Now Featuring
ELAINE and THE 3 DUKES For Your Dancing Pleasure
Friday and Saturday Evenings
ran i 3
{ : i fF
fh F.0.E.. #1230 289 W. MONTCALM
Fish or Chicken
ama Bettis E
f i
g
; : ¢
3
: , ELAINE at the KEYBOARD
‘ og nn tgs ay PRI. 5:30 TO 7:30 gee
tN orl DANCE S27, MIGHT | | See gts ot tak crm aber got ok poe . jwhere. The whap-whap-whap of = ithe growing barrage sent the | a
[| DANCING AND PANTOMIME | vical rah oaainenel the Bob Lawson Trio }}
Fri and Saturday
iting Fn
FLOOR SHOW FRIDAY ond SATURDAY NIGHTS
Sat. Kiddy Matinee 1 PLM. 4 CARTOONS Plus Reguler Program
NOONDAY LUNCHES ARE OUR SPECIALTY......
FAMILY STYLE DINNERS NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS — “CARL and His GAMBLERS” :
_VER-WOOD BAR. || EY oes NN | if 4195 Dixte Highway , ONene fl ry . Enjoy sea :
, : Oakland ea a Newest Most
‘iia : —- Beautiful Cocktail Lounge
-
BEUK SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD. Sle a wey you dl ether and
FE 4-4611 x , ee ey ae pant, ‘he
ae COCKTAILS
LUNCHEONS
DINNERS
© Businessmen’s Lunches Served Daily . ®
Open 11 A. M, to 2 A. M.
| Henry’s Miracle Lounge (Formerly Henry's Bloomtield Inn)
Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Rd.
’ Fashion Show
Each Wednesday at 1 P.M.
- At Catalina Room
with Tommy Vaughn: Due
SANDWICH. BAR
gee ext se, re wi 1:86 to 3:00, each.
the door
; af . 4 : Family Nights 2 7a is oe ke? a ke ee Se
Bingslep Jun |i} 2s toa COMMERCE Mies 4-140 | Rebteeled Haven || DRIVE IN THEATER : SSS | wen ba from = End of Union Loke sgoess a
7 | SMORGASBORD Hell... __ TONITE Sp ilteae o i |; peti | Bg , TSTIMEFOR —*s" - DANCING THURS. @ FRL @ SAT. @ SUN. [JB] oti Fi | to boe" ete the gir = = nIS
Rock With the Hound Dogs a a eame ME : ci
SNACK BAR
at Miracle Mile
Shopping Center OLD DUTCH MILL with it. _ AUBURN HEIGHTS @ Auburn at Churchill Rd.
x , LIQUOR
Manny’s | COCKTAIL LOUNGE Heren & Elisabeth Lake Rds.
FE 3-9528
— PLAN YOUR
ime ls oi Banquets — Meetings — Club BO B’S |
Parties — Receptions, Etc.
at Beautiful Oxbow Pavilion Cake-Out’ Service
| @ MODERN DANCING |] © Steaks © Chops | @ SQUARE DANCING Chicken — | ith st Calling
4 Musie by “a ™ © Fish n Chips
LEE SLOAN 3," © Seafood Ph, FE 3-9821 * | A Friendly Place to Go :
BOB'S CHICKEN HOUSE. 1 497 Elizabeth Leke Rd.
_ Phone Ahead... *
FEderol 3-9821 | Take Out Orders @ Specialty || SQUARE DANCE | | CLUBS INVITED
ONE OF MICHIGAN'S
sagt faey saree, tall fetnge Ta'which 4 finest aw and
refreshments are rved,
ana ~ WINK MARTINDALE: DEULA REESE THEROVALTEENS -
THE TYRONES Pivils NEWMAN COM WS JO" ARN eee Pas >
“ OXBOW LAKE PAVILION tro COMES UGB
< 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. EPS BPE PP
Pr « sy by VERNON ete ~~~ fain alae
Doct by DUO SRETRCNER + & COLIN PCTIRE " ee ee Me - siais aa a 4 . z 2 . *
7... 4 . . : : 7 oe : i és \ t ; ° ' & . i : . or:
\ : ‘ ; he : : =e
pe . e ss \ . ' i .
a 7 = . oo . 4 ee eee eee ee a a a - - oe - ic
, THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
oY
WER v!
(Hollywood Headlines
(United Artists President
Set for Trip to Moscow
By LOUELLA: 0. PARSONS
mer
that
to SONS OE Had Gidelll teenie.
tion of Catholle women on “Ideal
Hollywood Marriages.”
Judy Gerland and Sid Luft are
on, their. way home from my for-
success there has convinced her
opry
tomers, The Lafts ost the ‘children
will be on; ‘Person to Person’’ in
December,
Wouldn’t you know Alfred Hitch-
cock gets Cary Grant to commit
movie murder in “North by North-
west” by having him Push Andy
Williams off Lincoln’s nose.
(Copyright, 1958) COLDWATER, Mich, (AP) —
hometown, Chicago, Her great
birth of the 10,000th baby since
she can now go into any
house and delight the cus-
Order Duplicate Prizes?
Duplicate prizes may be in order
at Branch County. Memorial Hos-
pital, which is celebrating the
opened in 1939, It seemed very
senna when, Mrs, Ehrie Cranied
entered the delivery ‘roona ail ebrteenlele Te answ -
she gave birth to win boys, only three tage.
Should Be Eosy’ to Spot | } ae. T ITED
SCOTTDALE, Pa, (AP — Aj 1000 True
itimember of the Charles Killiner| We ante
| tists, leaves for Moscow on Oct Buddy Rogers and Imogene Ford, |
10 on a cultural exchange invi-
* © «& the first visit our’)
| Youngstein told’ me that, of
vent be wealde't make the wo area,
t tuation between the U.S.A.,/ All six of the M:
and Russia gets any worse, children are in Heir ig
chance of making a picture behind
ithe Iron Curtain.
ot SS wtaeA'S a as Want of Penta | and Bob Wagner paid me es West of Pontiac over the telephone set me for
an day. 1 coubtert sapent bat Airport on M-59
TONIGHT Doors Open 6:30 f
| Dodge (Gregg Sherwood) —
duced herself to me, She said s he
SQUARE and ROUND
DANCING GARDEN CENTER
nunssus Wh
w... Only time for love!
A lifetime of happiness
in a fe
memorable hours
JOCK MAHONEY: “DON DeFORE- KEENAN WYNN « A.UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
ALSO
THRILL-PACKED WESTERN ADVENTURE!
MacDonald Carey uiaCas
=| . Audrey Totter
“A CERTAIN SMILE”
Artistic
“
Starts SUNDAY
CONTINENTAL, EYEBROW RAISING AND
BLUSHINGLY ADULT
ROSSANO BRAZZI
JOAN FONTAINE
. ———— a os >
L €C°SZb we me A OPEN 10:4
Mater STARS Ties 25¢ to 1 P.M, oor manent CONDITION
RUN for YOUR LIVES...the KOOKY KILLER IS on the LOOSE
|
A NEW KIND oF THRILL
SENSATION
—STARRING—
HUGH O'BRIAN
DOLORES MICHAELS
ROBERT EVANS
EVERYONE WILL B
DON'T BE ASHAMED Ta SCREAM .dacsuine witw Your
Starting Sunday... The Bigness and the Boldness of
“THE NAKED AND THE DEAD”
| _IN TECHNICOLOR — ALSO 2ND FEATURE “WOLF DOG”
==
a Teal OF ‘TERROR _ SCREAMING
WITH
SUSPENSE
Michigan Premiere — A New Color Film from Russia |
— ati as Sey, gaa
the GRASSHODDER's.- ee we 3 er
* Sane
a SON PL AOS ce St Mle BAAS He! Beet ot ta ‘
* *
Now!
Thru MONDAY ——EXCLUSIVE——
FIRST RUN DRIVE-IN THEATER
EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING 3 UNIT SHOW
The Boldly Daring Story
of the First Man,
the First Woman
and the Original Sin!
FILMED in THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN
NOTE—This Is a New.
FRANKENSTEIN Picture!
WATERFORD a
Cor, Williams Lake-Airport Roade—-Box Office Opens 6:30 P. M.
WINNER et the ee fs
GERMAN POLICE PUPPY | or Choice of Its Cash Value
EDGAR D, PLYMPTON | 6698 MANSON ;
WATERFORD, MICHIGAN :
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CYCLOTRON
and the
ATOMIC
REACTOR!
The
AWESOME THING of The FUTURE! 5 KARL a
FRANKENSTEIN
B Cinmaeco
MYSTERY SATELLITE ENCIRCLING the WORLD!
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CAK ONLY DE ONCE! |
Ae TIME IN
engi jaan
“SPY_IN THE SKY” A Deadly Secret 1,000 Miles Above the Earth ;
SAR A ea
ToVol\havctoun
DRIVE IN: Reare | tm a ma
“Open at 6:30— Show Starts 7:20 “ADAM and AVE” iat 7:20—10:45 COME EARLY fer GOOD PARKING
ADMISSION—ADULTS 90c
CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE
Naturalness
in WIDE SCREEN
With STEVE BRODIE—SANDRA FRANCIS..__
cular
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958
Wh. 238) will, rh Monday at
Tp.m., there.
Registration for the following
courses in Pontiac, which are all 1 ae at two credits each, is Tues-,
They include: Conservation ‘of
Natural Resources (Con, W194),
7:30 p.m,; Administration and Su-
pervision of Special Education (Ed.
B235), 4:30 p.m.; Introduction to
p.m.; Problems in Art Education
(Ed. p12), 7:30 p.m.; Vocational
and Practical Arts Education in Group Dynamics (Ed. C122), 7:30|tate Appraisal I, 7 p.m., Pontiac PrP School (Ed. E100),
4:30 p.m.; Special Problems in Vo-
cational "Education (Ed, E105),
7:30 p.m.; Physiological Psychol-
ogy (Psych, 155), 7:30 p.m,; and
Introduction to Group Dynamics
(Soc. W122), 7:30 p.m., Real Es-
Central High.
Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. prospec-
tive students of Educational Psy-
Wildcat Strikes Dutch Girl, 17,
Leaves Hospital
chology (Ed. C102) and National
Politics (Pol: Sci. W192) should
register at Pontiac Northern High.
oa er ee
Thursday students may register
for Teaching of Music by the Ele- (Easter Tension
Pushes Grains ‘CHICAGO (#— Far Eastern
tension was a major influence in
early dealings again today on the
well ahead with some gains run-
ning to more than a cent a bushel).
within the first few minutes.
Some dealers said there ap-
peared to be an ominous note in|a” Board of Trade and prices moved]
them in wholesale
Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of|Start
ursd =
President Eisenhower's address to
the nation last night on Chinese
Communist aims and that. it
brought out a good volume of
short-covering in all contracts. Ma-
jor commission houses were under-
stood to be among the eager buy /Carro! Produce
FRUITS
A an McIntosh, fancy, bes. - $3.50
pitt ries (crate) 12qts. ..... os PREP ree eee ee eeee .
cord (bakt.) pk......... 2 Peaches ete ee Pears, Bartlett, by. eapnece -. 388 ums, mson, Peeeeracoaee
Waterm WE. ese Wecate kecves - 2.00
VEGETABLES
Beans, Wax, Du. ...sers
Beets.
ome Li a) ee seeeqenseveves
topped, peseenessse wees SOW
Canutlewer GOB. csvvcsecccvesssece i
MARKETS [Vigorous Start
==Loses Steam Quotations. are furnished by the| NE NEW YORK @® — A vigorous ‘pushed the stock market a
bit closer to its record highs
early today, then the rise lost its
steam leaving prices irregularly
jhigher. The ticker tape was late for a
period of five minutes at the open-
ing in a wave of heavy trading.
Dealings moderated as prices soft-
ened a bit.
The market was at the thresh-
old of its record high and the
- averages stood at a two-year
peak. .
(1) After an absence of nearly
: @mplorers return to a jubilant reception on Earth. Just
-as Columbus’ voyage across an unknown sea fired the
‘imagination of Europe and opened
Covery on this world, So the successful bridging of the
(at minimum) gulf
Mars will usher in the —_ age of exploration of other HH “@ ‘These iii the planta | that make ¢ up our solar
_ system, are depicted in ‘roughly relative ‘size and order
" trom the sun: (a) Mercury, (b) Verius, (c) Earth, (d) fe). Juptier, (f) Saturn, (g)
[sy habiosal
nations will pens | before man, driven by his insa-
s
4
\ y
[©1958 by NEA Service, Inc. i
two years, the Mars
the great age of dis- permanent
separating Earth and
_——, (h) Neptune
Jupiter?
‘ After that, tiable curiosity, ventures as close to the Sun as little
Mercury, or as far as the very limit of the solar system,
to lonely, frozen Pluto.
Before that, other Mars expeditions will seek to set up
colonies on that planet.
{ Venus, called Earth's sister planet, will
beckon. Investigating Venus will be a totally new adven-
ture, for ever-present clouds mask its surface from our
view. But here, as with Mars, the quest for possible life
will spur men ‘on.
And just what are the rings of Saturn composed of?
And what are its nine moons like? Or the 12 of Jupiter, /
the five of Uranus and the two of Neptune? And the un-
counted aesteroids lying in a belt between Mars and endless. tite
world (if he ever does,
and oceans in min
ported first. This roc
we can only guess at.
Next: What Does It’ And will men ever reach the stars, seen behind the.
flaming solar disk? Or other galaxies, those star. systems
like the Milky Way, that stretch as far as we can see into
infinity — two billion light years? And, somewhere in this
endless universe, will we encounter intelligent. life?
The questiong: Rameires,: a8 ‘the ‘possibilities, are
(3) But long before man ever sets foot on another
but it is certain he will try), rocket
travel will have transformed life.on Earth. Cargo and
mail first, then human passengers, will cross continents
- unless nuclear bombs are trans-
Pee pee ene Ae 8 tears ee
a of ef
STOCK AVERAGES
NEW Pre)? wens by the As-
sociated Press): 18 =
Indust. Rais Util. Stocks
Noon today ....282.1 113.1 83.5 $89.5
Net change os+ 24 +2 +2 Prev. day »++..261.4 112.9 83.5 189.2
baad QO ...65:278.0 11.1 82.6 186.9
onth ago .+..272.0 107.9 81.6 183.4
Year ago .....:269.5 112.3 72.1 173.8
1958 high «..... 81.4 112.9 83.5 189.2
BB low ..0+..234.7 80.9 72.9 156.6
1057 high ..0¢..280.0 134.7 77.5 188.8
1957 low . -2276.0 78.2 66.2 150.9
DETROIT, STOCKS
(C. J. Nephler Co.)
High Low Noon
Allen Elect & Equip Co. * © 22 #24
Baldwin Rubber Co ease 16 16.
s Gear Co *. ....08 2606 27
G.L. Ot & Chem ce; bean 15 2
Howell Elect M Lj 7
Peninsular M Prod "On. ‘¢ 9.4 10
The Pronhet Co* ........ 84 69
{Rudy Mfg. Co. ......-... 85 85 85
Toledo Edison = pesowals lie 14.5 14.5
Wayne Screw Pr 32 5 od. Co. *No sale: bid and Sood.
Bacteria Aid Recovery —
of Metals From Ores
used successfully in laboratory ex-
periments to. recover nickel, co-
balt, maganese, and copper from
low-grade
dizé sulphur in the ores, forming
sulphuric acid that releases the
to be more efficient than . other
Ne ee eae ae
generate heat for lucirig syn-
Mean? ;
». thetic fuels from a shale.
The follow-through from. yester-|
BOSTON |— Bacteria have been| _
. The bacteria. oxi-\]
free metal. The process is said | 'tsle ‘Debbie Sure: . i
| Eddie Wont .
Come Home
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—“My =
band and I. aere. Separated. He
isn't coming hom
These words ral misty-eyed
Debbie Reynolds summed up the
situation today between Debbie,
her husband, singer Ed-
die Fisher, and Elizabeth Taylor.
Eddie would only discuss his
health (‘I’m sick. Sinus. Mono-
nucleosis.”), And Liz was so well
hidden even her business manager
couldn't find her.
Fisher said he didn’t want to
talk about the separation because
“all the statements have been;
magnified beyond reason.”
After Liz and Fisher were seen
field behind their home Monday.
Clinton County Prosecutor Fred
Lewis said yesterday results of the
first polygraph test given Henges-
bach were inconclusive. Lewis
had obtained a first degree mur-
der charge and Hengesbach was
to have been arraigned yesterday.
Hengesbach demanded the sec-
ond test and was taken to State
Police headquarters at East Lan-
sing. He told police he was in
Lansing at the time of his step-
mother’s disappearance.
REGISTRATION NOTICE
Electors desiring to register fone the
General Election November 4 do
so at the Town Hall, 7525 Highland. Rd..
at the following times:
Tuesday, Sept. 16. 7 p.m. to 9
Seipeiay, Sept. 20,. 9:30, a.m, to 12:36
mg 2%, T pm. to 0 p.m,
Wednest ay, Oct. ry A p.m. to 9 p.m.
reeeny. Oct. “4, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30
onday, Oct. 6, 8 to &@p
Mond ay, Oct. 6 Ay “tee i 5 maa? of
registration for the November Genera)
—, ted Sept. 8
a
Ee ® * * f ers.
1 to Live in Area. {mentary School Teacher (Mus. Ed./"" 1. the end of the fitit hourl\Gerar'awest S dent cr7ic0.. at iday’s vigorous advance whs short-|night-clubbing in New York, Fish- f e 121-221) at 7:30 at Northern and $ ~ SF eee ss0\ or returned here, argued with - id for Nursing Information for Medi- wheat was % to % cent a bushel Di (behs.) God... ...00- eebenersee & ved. It left an assortment of and ed out of their
_ |, ROYAL OAK — The i-year-old| 2 Assistants (a certificate) at|tigher, September. $1.86%; corn|Essplant, bu... .--. jor taste ovens + Giniccralts, “electrical equipments, is d nied being the “other
se ‘Three Intensifies |Uuehter of an immigrant Royal/s.59 “p.m. at St. Joseph Nutsing A, higher, September|Kohirabt, (ve i do. ‘iiniesstcs Bas}ehemicals and drugs higher, but|home. Liz denied t “They weren't Oak couple, who narrowly missed) je. $1.24%; oats % to % higher, Sep-|L0ks, (Behe) dom. | |, ---+reer-++ 188imainly by fractions, Most motor/Woman
_ Negotiations With UAW being aboard the ill-fated KLM tember 60%; rye to 1% ,|Patsley Hoot, behs.) dos. ‘-2.-...-+ 1:00|stocks were unchanged. There were|8*tting along, anyway.’ Dutch airliner which crashed in| Registration of individu- | september $1.30%; soybeans-1% to ieee Game be! Racca 00! losers among steels, rails and non- * ek _—
Over New Contract the Atlantic last month, was to be| al courses will be taken at the |13, higher, September $2.20%; lard Peppers. hot. OU... ..- onedygersees its ferrous metals. Debbie hotly denied this. ‘‘We've
ee By ‘The ‘aenstet tren released today from the Deborah Peet Sep pete eassions ot cles. : to 3 cents a h ee ee 60 Ths. esate eee he oo e @ never been ore Toa
4 Sanatorium in Brown . | Courses may be carried October (chs. oe, ar,”
Wildcat strikes continued to idle Pade be a semester hours of snc Yn Ber a EN oe Radishes. white, er eee poeese 8 Lukens Steel jumped-more than gage ae announced
some 8,000 today in auto plants sta ‘ork or © credit unless other- . . 8q De DU. s-.s1>sreve8 £60/@ Point as did Youngstown Sheet, | wodnesda night, but there has After assiving in New York on} or graduate Grain Prices N 2.00 y across the country as the United). ther flight, “Marjike Pennock,| wise indicated by a certificate. Tampa laopi a eee soe 2:59|0Ut Bethlehem eased and Republic|,een no mention of a divorce. Auto Ao Workers ( Union and the bigi, tuberculosis,patient, was barred| The fee is $13.50 per credit hour nse ee ee cone GREENS oS ageag was off a fraction. Debbie left the door open—figur-
three — General Motors, Ford and)),., immigration laws from coming] in either case. - (grain. (Goliad, ve ~ esl ei Una ahs Bu Pont. and Ffizer were up |atively—for a © return. es
ve ) Bep, ..seoee Ly Veet iars 1 Pr qusonepntomapenseesesere about a point each. Smaller | “I don't want marriage
negotia She The nursing information ‘course Bee. verses rts Dee: eee prt bear ge _ Resenteny tedenpeess Sil gains were posted by Montgom- |break up,” she said. ‘‘There are to be taught ‘at St. Joseph's is ajyar °‘..°** ei W aereccsc OT Spinach Ws cccecccsacdasentees “is children and a beauti-
00 | special one for assistants who work) May ....... 196% May «....... 67% |Swiss chard. bu... . “III aso] ery Ward, Boeing, Douglas Air- jour lovely ar
of in doctor’s offices but are not Teg-|”’coRw (GLb Sep Sam: lcatecy cane ee eee so| Craft, Commonwealth Edison, In- |ful life ahead of us.”
i istered nurses: It deals with the|Sep. ...;... 124% Dee. “iss.ss 130%| Endive, bleached. bu, wos seneeess er ternational Nickel, Allied Chem- | The separation didn’t leave Deb- 4 Dec, seckss < 115%) Mar. ..vere. 131%)! ae bie mo at home. She attended
, various carried out in| sar it age 1 Sone | Lettuce, head, (erate) dos, wo he ical, Eastman Kodak, Union Car- ping
— a physician's office and with the|_ i ty! 771.77! Lasve|Romaine, bu; ‘,cscs.c.-esetsece 125| bide, American Can and Gulf |a movie last night with a girl WO: 4 Dec. vessece 116% - . . |chum, And neither Eddie’s marital ee special needs of children and the| sar. *: EB Get. nmvsee BRIS Oil. — and West ce ar ak sc idchata ta ee . id. BY cemnree Pa es inghouse were firm. mono!
: aged 4 + * dly. sesese. LZ Jan. -seanse. ig Poultry and Eggs T= ‘act s Rand, blood disorder) kept ago B
Wednesda . uded Sperry ibe a
stteedl att Two courses will be available) ____ DETROIT POULTRY American Smelting, Southern Rail- Pomp fatal greene for pros-
seaggbaaees at the Pierce Junior High School : . PO gt ly nd Baltimoré & Ohio and Penn-| ot; terday
el wens he Woturfond, Surnghip. They Are mployment in Area suze pouty’ on | Texas. ' ee Somnel w Workshop in Elementary Educa- p y Heavy type bens i7-19; Lo gh 2)
say tion (Ed. B106) and Workshop in int Sh Ri , ne | nooks 2 Lodge Calendar
| th en Secondary Schoo! Curriculum (&4.|DEQINS SNAP KIS@ | dtexines’sc! 2 ts pesvy tbe Young] New York Stocks g ; ! B227) and both begin September| | : ert ie gees (ate Morning Quotations) |p, Spe! oot - aehedated ,}23_ during two ysessions, 4:30 and| After an anticipated drop in DETROIT EGGS inaurte eft acer pias oe ening TE “No aL, P&AM, 1 AM, Fit, 8 "BeBe
week, died 5. able, employment during automobile|rab. ‘Detrelt, im case’ lols federal stats| A at Hay ...384(8ree. Gerald L. Moors, wit :
‘ey DD 151) will be held at the Rochester "ant, "BOdel | CRaneC vs eat aatce; rade, A extre large 62: Janne A ae 3 oe i ak ~~ High School beginning September has hegen (0 Side’ sein fed ite!‘ 'Ro Browns. Checks Sou" ie 5 ay ee News i in Bri ief - im another 24 et 7:30 p.m, Michigan Employment Graded eggs: 9,574 cases. Am Airtia 1. 213 EOP Glass "Be
- ‘pate. And | For the first time in the his- reported today. omen © graded: Am Can 0. 48) Ligg & My a Al . diaeeee a twee
ernstedt | tory of the U. of M. extension | Model, changeovers affected! ars: S(aditns seat oral’ Mt] am Meme? - Gf Evy“ 383|s¢. was arrested for drunk driving — Craabresk Scheel will ar te ars ST: or ee a. ies Mas Korine’ "[gta|by Pontiac police and was found
And be used to hold classes. periods, . the MESC ne In the : Am Tob ..,.. 871 YU# Nash <-704) cuity yesterday by Municipal
Po aaa Ford a 1 , } n High, Development in the Near Boge offs. Livestock jArmear @ Co. 16:1 May. B stes 22483 mes Seterred pending a probation| -
last. Friday. i low: 7:30 p.m., m. ‘Topics in Medern Mathe- The ¢ level over the | _,, Ort LIVESTOCK lean’ & Onis. 25-4 Metetn Litas "<-t08 in Ts matics for Teachers (Math, 187)| 2€xt two months should continue | sai Trades cleanup affaiz||Bete Steel «. 412 MerF'Gn 8‘ 13| Keith I, Hamilton, 23, of 47 Lor-
at 4:30 p.m. on the 25th, Psychol- tise teste ca Oe eared patos re dQ Strs oes) Mino Maw “sige rane So a ee d ‘ 50 ts t a c. een cues oer eden a m r r pur-
Cats) at 7-30 pm. Sept 24 and| i transportation and retail |: s5#%,inmtsers, "0022228, 2085" [Beitee Mt “"c-'8) Mont" Ward" 322 [poses. Municipal Judge ,Cecil B. National Politics (Pol Sci. W192)| trades is anticipated by the utility cows 18.50-20.50; canners and cut- ares Balke . 46-4 Motor 1 Prod... 544 McCallum today sentenced him to
lat 4:30 p.m. Sept. 24 | 4 ‘| MESC, Gesmercs = week: Slaughter steers Burroughs . ..35.6 Motorola . .. 47.6;one. year in the Oakland County
re Mid-August t tem-|sows strong to 80 cents es Rigi eolphet:| Satu dew. ks Mates Gp. 3a | all up ..4J. . 49.7 .
_Psychlogy and Teaching _of|porarily rose to 19,000. In July, it ance om, ey gong, aig iiendy tel Can Bry 183 BS 24, 83) cuttord ©, Crossman, 42, of 1550 Reading Writing, and Spelling (Ed|stood at 15,500 and a year ago at| seers 212077 18: Joed nigh choloe 130 Gapital airi'..-tea Nat Deity -- 45° \stanley St., pleaded guilty today C107) will be held at aie ae a 5,900. eee eg ry ent several loads, high chotce 1000-1140 Ib. Case, cD ...-e Nat Lead -:-103.6 to drunk driving before Municipal
High School beginning at|made up per cent total Ree eas cnolce ie| Cater Trac ..,.79.6 No ¥.-+ 393 |Judge Cecil B, McCallum. He was
7:30 p.m. and the. y ofjlabor force, the MESC said. paime ioiesitse ib steers 36.00; ‘amalllEheyaler™. <-./$84 Nor 8 Pw .. 203\fined $100 or 20 aos in in a Child Develop _ (Ed. C175); Last month, — ent in-lutity an steers 20.50-24.50:|Giark Equip’ oe ee
rt - 24 at 7:30 p.m. at the/surance payments by the Pontiac inept good. Wo. helfersiciuett Pen’ ....42.2 Owens Tl Gi. 73.4\q Used clething =
E ie ain entary office totaled $1,912;763.|ib. ‘heifers 2650: utility and standara| eee Com 188 Pac G&E .. 58.1 12. Cat building, ake A 9 to
in Lake Orion. There were 2,105 insurance claims] he!fers_ 20.00-24.00: ty cows opened|Col Brd A ::..343 Pan ‘gpl... 51 |Rd., Waterford week at 18.00-19. trade mostly/Colum Gas ....20 Pict .. 42.2 exhausted in August, bringing the/18.00-20.00; up to 20.50 on Thursday:|Con Edis ...... 34.1 Param Pic
29 his 5,994. canners and. cutters mostly 14,50-18.50;!Gon N Gas ....47.2 Partke Da.... 97.4) Rummage sale at 461 8. mo
Surprised Burglar Flees |‘! this year to 5.99 ca pus 3200-2490) strenewelghi|Coasum Fw ("bse Penney, JC (St. Saturday, Sept jon 9 : w ee ae "3|/am m.
-|With Purse, Wallet, $300). . #0-22.00;, few email lots medium ito(cont Bak ......404 Fepel Cole 2/COu rch ‘of Auburn Heights. ¢ : $3 Spider Web Envelops _|fas. 87 Phileo 6.2... 212) farday Sch si aS Pike St be ; . : s—Salable = ¥ - . ls a
Hopkins St., told police she sur- se; Is Insect Proof Lee grt week: an advance Copper Rng os 98-3 Press &,° -: s, a
Yesterday morsing ee sheryl 5 sosng round seat, oe pee ee cots RCA eat 2 |Fri. 9 to 5. Sat. hy ee m i ‘ : ; o> geeers434 Renyl aia .
Mrs. Garrison was in bed when| opie cis! . een pal Po voor Mate’ trade "36.00| Dis © Beag’ 20.31 << io she heard her chides crying at pes, and down; standard and 25.00-32.00,|Doug Airc ....582 poy Tob B.. 80.5 loch Coul
SE eet ee ro Ge Bverglades, completely en-|iois atig is + gel and Bow cas S82 Repel Das” Gs Huttenlocher, Coulacos ee velops Indian houses * eal East Air 1 ...35.4 ‘een 3: Board
a man ransacking her purse which! proof, Eventually the webs form) ny H d This O ye “: 33 Sears Roeb .. 32.2 . . ; 6 8h vase Newly-elected' to the Pontiac Ar- was lying on a table in the living/an almost fabric in| “ever Mear is Une Bmer Rad ....66 shell Olt ox
. = 2 Soe fees ea Junior Chamber of Commerce
“ee made a noise, the|irich the spiders lurk ‘to pounce) FLINT (UPI) — Oscar Law- |Paity Mor... 382 Socmy ...-.s. 4t [Board Of Directors are James
hk ten oe knee on be conc ans welcome! rence had an excuse Teady when Raa: 3 Pac --++- $27 Huttenlocher and William,V. Coula-
= oth Trooper flagged hi 711,488 Sporty RO... 18: insuran
with him the purse and her hus-| might be a nuisance. ‘The spider| Sout tor spceting aftera chase (Prspe sul c..c96¢ She"Brang 22 gna|c7s: ott ce agents. band’s wallet which contained|web is strong enough to hold large poipindian nen he a oid Fruch Tra 187 Sea On cal’. 614| | Huttenlocher, of 6201 Mi Middle Lake 5s es 'e wrence : ie? “ae .. be lepend OWNnS:
$300. pe: Eheatong a he was rushing to the town of (cs Bia 'it gta ou Ba =e emepssacer E. Weddle, recently Beulah to complain that he was Gen Fas .....to4 Stevens, JP .- %7lelected first vice president to re- F * lowed. - is ||: .. 180. . Devere Crashing Sound Barrier |Budworms. Reappear ule os Gee tan Sen Motors 403 Bria? tt — sony: vereaut, who
Shakes Up Texas Town __|in Forests of Oregon Gen eh cccirged Ten @ Bul 314 Coulacos, ‘of 102 Sheffield. Ave.. ‘ ¢ ; ‘ : illette .. «6.42.3 Tex "* g7'g|\Teplaceg Howard Wedden, who re-
ee es CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) — | CLEBURNE, Tex. (AP) — Jet| PORTLAND, Ore — A new out--At Home With Stripes —Scetel_BF +--+, Trak R Beer 42.8/signed Tne post for business rea-
Moré Buy Tires in July | Max Dworkin, 72, a fruit ped- |planes broke’ the sound barrier|break of spruce in north- Gcodvenr <. soy Fran W Air 138 : dler, received a suspended sen- lover the central Texas towns of|eastern Oregon has infested more) MOUNT VERNON, Ill. (UPI) |Grah.Paige 59 cwenty Cen .. 326 lay FE 41 h NEW YORK — July replacement) tence yesterday after his horse |Stephenville, Dublin, Hico and/ than 600,000 acres of Douglas fir,,| —There’s a real jailbird in jail |Guif on ...... ae Underwd | '-: 20.7 De ay Formal Charges
passenger car tire shipments in-| went through a red light. “I’ve |Hamilton yesterday. white fir, and Engelman spruce.| here. The bird—with breast of | tk 7404 Un Pac... 30.2/in Westphalia Killing creased to 6,502,078 from 6,387,446) been driving that horse for 25 | The sonic booms shook up the|The pest was believed under con-} white ‘and back of black and |Hooker El .....63 Unit _— 2.
the previous month, according to) years now and the only trouble jtowns and damage to plaster and/trol during the past two years as| white stripes—flew into the po- jindust Rey :...19.7 Unit Pruit .. 47.7) WESTPHALIA @ — Formal
the Rubber Manufacturers Assn.| I ever had before was getting |plate glass was estimated atja result of the aerial spraying of} lice station , Made it- |Ing Rend ...-:09 Un Gas CP -: se zicharges against Vincent Henges-
This is the highest monthly total) him started,” Dworkin told the |$13,000. Identity of the planes was/ 4,000,000 acres with DDT during} self at home and refused all nepir Cop .---34.4 US ~—e 4!6/ bach, 52, of rural Westphalia, have
since July, 1950. judge. not determined. the preceding six years, invitations to leave. z Int Bus Mch ; 4014 US Tob ++. 26.3 been delayed pending the results| -
nt Wick Saree West, Un Tel 26.7 of a second lie detector test.
et esi -. 95.2) Hengesbach is held for investi-| a Exp oa 5. fies Gee ....i. 3 et
OU TWARD TO THE S TARS (22)—New Ageof Exploration | (EB nie Gees rene roe n zane sl Crk Com Woolworth... 487/t0 death of his 63-year-old step- Lf 0 y and 4 tal fase se — ; oe “a3 Yale & Tow cn mother, Mrs. Anna Hengesbach,
Fa Jones & "54.7 Zafth Red -.112.6|{whose body was found in a corn-
ALLIED AUTOMOTIVE
OPPORTUNITIES crenat°y acce nO A Sa. automotive
ar ah
distri tien ip "this areas and. supe stahe.
Smal Tovertment—Ra Turnover—
Assured
For lsinenetion Coll or Write:
RSA PRODUCTS CO.
Pg
| \
h \ bd
Gri
te
neral “
IN_ LOVING a MEMORY RY OF ERT Banderas: on, who away 3
wal dead to. us. be foved him, oe ee > Nard, memory,
Badly taissed bY Bis ‘hs is Wile | and Chil-
" Faneral Directors 4 _
“A HOMELIKE A’ :
a CORES” _ FUNERAL HOME,
Dray
FUNERAL HOME
Box Replies
At 10 ay, dee, Ore
were replies at the Press
in the following
boxes: 1 2, 3, 4,,8, 10> 11, 14, 18,
25, 27, 28, 32, 50, 63, 74,
85, 90, 91, 96. uy
ESA alesmen to ED two a 1 Dodee. ‘cau
in Mesopenen Detroit @ tring
or call ¥. E. Doonan. Hedges.
. dn 360 8, W ward Ave. 6-029
-_— = DINING 9 noe
Cc NO
vasing. only, werage. ie
leads. Better than grernee
CAREENTE
fog cement m Service x: sry Soe
we MAN 25 — ~. —
in people.
oy earn aon NE service, Stead
MAN
machine & genera iar i EY, Re rence required.
shed, no more than
. GReenleaf 4-6733, aft-
er
FACTORY BRANCH NOW AC
genting ations 1064.
Ww B. between ye 11°30
Pigeted 108, A Se Ee te 3 ‘eds
Fastway Service, Daytona Beach.
HORIZONTAL JIG BORE OPERATOR
Sedat meine Fase ct ing and round machine ¢x-
"McGregar Mfg. Corp. 2785 _E. Maple Rd.
NATIONAL CONCERN 1 HAS OPEN- for married m ss 3. 0 thes
older. Must be able to
ti with business men. =
Ly
mee.
MECHANIC Must be first class, No other need
a. 22 A Inq, 22 Auburn
PLEASANT OUTDOOR WORK FOR men with sales ability. Possibility
of ogi samge employment for the
right m:
Salary and Car Allowance
MR, McCULLY
Circulation Dept.
PONTIAC PRESS
DO NOT TELEPHONE
SHEET METAL
FABRICATORS
et metal men with
expe 2
experimen- knotch sh
Bod sdeeteatinn
in protot
THINK!
mep Frame - vers ac .¥
rson: tview
THOROUGHLY EXPE
along men’s clothing and fur ail abr Me ee eset Arbor. 0
schoo]
some bioyment and
CAPABLE FURNACE IN-
‘PE 2-7
WOOL PRESSER OOD P.
steady Mf i coon ENS
ers,-1253 8. Woodward. MI 44620,
_ Help Wanted Female 7
Attention, Housewives Earn $1,000 selling to
usual © g Choose " veer own
‘and phone necessary.
DONT PASS UP MONEY !X Sell unneeded
Seng ci for cash
through .Classified Ads!
FE 2-8181. Servicé=Piane or Motor
es tana,” < erred
,
* THE PONTIAC RES. ERIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 f Z *
_Work Wanted Female 11
7 Open ke Tth
"pegenmit and pole. work S] ay
weak: “Gur usceoss
EAGED HOUSE Hel fi
adults ait cot DLORED GIRL ’
ma eae “Wana coed
NTS
erewert or ae... in Seen
iipoLEAGmD. Lany 5 w dl : L =
enins
GIR. 8 -
by. sitting an bw Pushte 5 re pe nights. Call after 4.
ualifi- Wr, BABS @ BY DAY On
A netic ee ational
rey wore EXCELLENT SERVICE
; able 5. — FE 2-290
of , AA-1 Reduced Rates
pase Prati sei Smith Moving | Large van ot
ew me positions are - tn F. ar
sale Fy utara), A-A TRENCHING | Fast a, ee 343 " Northwood, Fi OR YOR G AWAY.
—Mich,_ A&B ING concrete side walk. FE 5-8679.
Women Wanted ngs, water tines, field tile | HAULING & RUBBISH Na MY Me
A national organization is seek- Fa i ~ Bt vm neopets
ing women for “Cosmetic sales.| ALL NT WORK &- MOVING NG,
Top pay plus cash bonus 1| floors, drives jaity,. Reason 51348, Pigtin page in rs Di-| able. Jensen. FER, fia CKING OF ANY KIND
me olfering. free samples Wil | “i Block. —— & bond: aw eh -g = oR 4. OR 3-5686 r | Rubbish Pill dirt, top bi gavel
ness, Experience preferred, Part|AL TYPES, 0 | oe e ,_ vB .
time Pagut es sonfi-| Fi are our specialty. OR ANTED AR’ P
Sow much, money you must, cara iny. FYE OF HOURE PLA GOVINO jaavLEeG wir TT wh * PY tlae Press.| - custom wo OL 1.8200. EM/|_ stake track, FE 803.
ih Dixie Hwy. Dre: on Pees, “ASPHALT P AVING a wn work. "tal on any Fath SE
dren "and housework Bors tor iat us Note = ge aS :
— ice we Trucks to Rent
~ WATE’ s TE ate ceamittees TAND EQUIPMENT. 8 T Ww te-ton Pickup caaieads | Stak
Pant ane eeu, rome | 580d fenlenee MA Sete | Dump True Semi tralers
- SALERLA Re eo P & ce Pontiac Farm and
why ot comet 8 he Panson : aes SS SuLEGgaNG Industrial Tractor Co.
_ pel Waites hee wo" otier BRICK BLOCK AND CEMENT | Open Dally wOfmeluding Sunday — { OWN yore. ‘ ee No job too 40461 j +1
help "gis cchilgrea Could” stay] gist, Ou 2 cmmer-| ~~ O/DELL CARTAGE — eves. GR #1 1 al and long of moving.
__tlelp Wanted 8} _ work: : te ear ice —————
Are You Satisfied with
Present Earnings?
parte: *
FE 5-4955 or FE 4-6490
ARE
ay
Can ms Yr
150 N.
Real Estate ffice Experienced or will train Pull
wae. rtunity for 54300 or WH S-tbee or @,
]
week. 8-6028,
““ WASHINGS AND IRONINGS uy to Cali 5-0724
{| WILL =e SMA ae or ad wame S aight, 4? Pio 47 Flo
_enece. ide doo:
alt GouLD LIKE % DAYS. WORK.
Good references. FE 2-7264,
Building Service —
A-l SAND & iad yg 5
Pon,
Co! ¥ i r maloterane Free pos e venines. Pope your = ns) ca fe pore poet eos
T WIDOW Db raha 2,
EouaRy day, evening sof LAWN BUILDING,
wee. nsportation needed, OR ise be a sang. seeding, sod-
te A hare LS)
; . Eile tetaria! nabted EM 42. Ravel warding, Beck ri
12)
‘ss pita oe ‘senvice, RE Fe 211
Sst ute
LANDSCAPING, SODD. ing, evergreens pee siioes.
dirt, Res soil
moved OR. 3-2163
LAN G
ell Reatucky “ie guar Ba! ay with back end
= 6 rds $10 ig re a Pe 4 a ve
ylime, FE 2-5463, N BL LUE SOD — 25c & Jic
45c delivered. 2601 Crooks
Auburn. TW 2-1174
sq. yd, Rd, ‘North of
NEw Lawy 8 ‘ 18h
sates Backfiela top soll, FE
SPRAYING Commercial or residential
Dutch FE & pest control ‘im
—- or ayraeue
PHD 4-46)
Harry White & Sons, Inc. __151_S. Cass Lake Rd.
Moving & : Trucking 19
A-t 7-9 ond, a 8018, & RUBBISH.
em .
Cook Wo! with transportation.
Hours 6 a.m. = mn Sawest
fens State
WARDS’ EVELYN EDWAR S’ wa ‘comets Sor bi
ce aca.
ESEL
HEAVY FQUIPM ENT We are men in thig area peary
rvice, nee v4 Pontiac
t Agencies 8A|Fz
ors, FE baa. Fi ON iG,
ran &
B Munro Eleo-
tric Co., 1060 W Huron.
Sheenee builder. FHA pe rE
Bs ding oy 2 oa Lavi FE
AIR.
TRENGING.
85 wells. ¢ te, Tooting
mae NTs UNDER ses Block & cement work. rE
or FE .
Business Services 13
JANITOR, PORTER & CARE- “hater, Al} A-l Ref, Call Al, | fe 44-6446,
Gall FE 56-1017 for free
5 eae oe ar
FE 29-4021.
ASPHALT PAVING
in
very. vy moth roohing rmer Berkley | Car-
oR es Olive 1-0222, Roch
“4 Reagounnle|
estim rice returns.
REA- Painting & Decorating 20
PLASTERD [= ley
“ROOF [REPAIRS oom
7 2sisi. wai Dial F E
18ST CLASS PAINTING AND one.
orating. Cash or terms.
Television Sebvice 22
VICB ,CAYLE AN- mae q pomp br. night.
ALE ease
A §-8300 FB. 5.1296 oF FE
~PORRITT'S NIGHT SERVICE. Radio and TV. FE 5-5770.
PEWRITERS AN ADDING Na rt
PAINT BY NUMBER PICTURES,
Book Be og Backenstose
Store. 15 E. Lawre Lawrence 5t,
" Notices & Personals is 25
AUCTIONEER WITH OVER 28
“auction = other MMe you. ha Magpie §-1341
IR “oe OMAN af adviser teens FE entias The Salvation
nee, Vireinia
Perm
3
so CASH IN A
lassified Ads. = sold als
_of The Pontiac Press, | Co’
Hobbies & Supplies 24A
AM-
ite.
43844
STRESS . camp ac |H URRY, sell things Fe stun or FE ask ot
| through CARNIVAL
Hie by Dick Turner | -
TI. eg, US. Pat Of.
@ 1968 te MEA Service, ity
“You know cops — never there when you want one!, This
guy I started to stick up nearly beat me to death before they
got there!”’ -
Notices & Personals 25 Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs. 32
BEAUTY IS
EVERYONE'S DUTY. —— lifting, sare shecuhaine gras Swe
EB. H. MILLER OR
DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES =" 130 Menomines rs Wallace, FE
“Beptember ii, 13, 1958,
not be reopoialble for apy. debts geit. Seat - hee sier, “a Aubasn
In Debt?
df yen ore terme Soiie weet iicmbGan CREDIT COUNSEL
HANG Wtd. Children to Board 26
*| A-l BOARDING HOME, BY DAY
Licensed. PE 6-3534.
or wk.
AND C
32-1730.
fd LL Bl F
enced
tl Wtd. Household Goods 27 for.
censed
56-9575.
‘CASH FOR _ VUREEUnE and musica! ents,
ape
gre ng Your price is ) MA-
ple 65-1341 or
FURNITURE NEEDED
Typewriter Service 22A | "in.
Wtd. Miscellaneous 2B
Wtd. contac “ites: 32
$50,000 To Tavest in Land Contracts
mpt Action
BDWARD M, ehTOUT Real | OPEN 6 PM, ~ N/ SAGINAW Br. iF vba ae
CASH UNLIMITED |
me Gx
‘| Buyers waiting aes eave contracts
Reasonable i yee. oenanet t
ARRO
yh et of SE ,TOR
FE ies.
Mr, Clark. BS. eS 1
Ready, Willing fog ce
cae ae Yah Fe a CASH WE NEED
LAND CONTRACTS
og Nicholie & Harger Co. nw FE_5-8183 crs. N ation, Call 4-4526 or
DR Sou. Atk for Ike Wideman.
SMITH-WIDEMAN
BELT SPE" STE ASH _ AVAILABLE FOR LAND og
O OBLIGATE iN. MALL
A. Johnson REALTOR, . bd Tt 8 ‘Telegranh Ra.
IMMEDIATE
On any or se
and
K. i Temp on, Realtor,
SOLD | sIoNs ALL 9
Eee satel AITING.
CONTRACTS HAVE BUYERS FOR NEW OR
Sie "HAvDEN. NO OBLI
ba Kol HAYDEN, Realtor $6 E. Walton
$ CASH $ 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACT HOME — EQUITY
Wright & Valuet
345 OAKLAND 65-0603 PE 56-0441
Sell Us Your ur Equity lose home -cash wait.
e
Expe ro aa General Prin and Of-
fice Bupply Co., 17 W, Lawrence. | 94° OR 36” COAL “FURNA'
Upholster ing 23) Masities, eens, 103 ow B. Huron, FE
CUSTOM UPHOLSTER. | 3oxe0 BIULDING Ming tte Gooey Lake Rd EM | “housg coreg of Re manatee. gig and. prompt Bee ong 15 ft. “ —- “Sal 2
wits FES sss | _ Sitar” Goce GEORGE BLATR
Lost & Found 24| “tater. Write Pontiac Press Box | 4596 Dizte Hwy, 8 carne 22281
FOUND: COCKER SPANIEL.| fRAILER SIZE Eves. 1708 7
Must identify Owner must p@Y) Duo-therm, OR 3 31033 GI AND FHA
UsED WOOD DUCK DECOYS, FOUND: MONDAY sy? STRAY reasonable, PE tania fr 6 p.m. wea we can ee your fa - } ee hn Sans Water et + oS 2 gf ,3, Bedroom starter, homes, | rin tt percent down aie == foot. ‘ot Sadement aed my
' a” ate en Zit fall Sanement 4% DAVISBURG FARM | privileges.
352 & East Beverl reper ok peciig eet ey tpt) FIRST LEVEL | Bra teete| Sie era nee, gn Noase | trint ad Mendes Fug ii
: st ever : : . | SS eee n, ue
‘ leverly -y aiape 7 ey ROOM — Dining room Sorner Wilieme Lake" ms i Fins attached garage: Now ey fie rea, a Baie ete Wet per =
. ee ABR Era S| SEPTEMBER SPECIAL) rerio meres LAT op F.C. Wood Co. on - A ne suena from this room, ed , ki nee
on ane. 9 ‘tract room and Ful Corne $TO 8
ocr BASE. + ug CLARKSTON | SECOND LEVEL Boo" neat "Tandscaped fot, ‘Cedat Sas Meareae wit Basement ns heat, Lot 50 : Pw aes Ha, mse
py MA NpscaPED 2, Cctnd, eines Seales t- Re : cai, of livine area, fas tiving | patio le lee Wor aa toes | = fo eee A a5 PERFECT PLASTER
LOT HURRY. tng room with, fireplace, recrea- ¢. room pith Sreplace—den Fa, din dining rm. 10° by 14 Kitele privileges on Otter Lake: Only per month, Brick 3 bedroom ranch in Shelby.
“Zero ” Down roskenes in the Ppasement. ‘ate . : Himeter olf heat" A real buy at down “Tul handle, - ) NW. peo oe tenes 24234 brick ga-
o1. — © eas HATCHERY RD. / reaped Net and a spot to place BEAUTIFUL STONE ae whe —_ sop zabett Lake | R¢ S RAM Seat Tae
sh a Lost Sif ole, Waa” wen TERRACED _ De us eens ~ ( * rE ssa CI { slorme iad” wide fot. “Fowl
- BREEZEWAY AND " Ga- . LANDSCAPING And, have limited capital,” this OPEN DAILY REALTOR | FE 59471 ~ Sool
* ace and is acne | KINZLER- x TREES dusdeatcai-tinelsmds ~ | Sieapéclas ofier oa this 3 bed: Sitti eae rage, tin ha oven | “opie ave Reduced By ad ie &
A / es, lots of large maple trees d school room home in convenient loca- and dhe NDAYS imagin : ate te
on the 1002150 ft. level Convenient — Churches — St. Hu- = aree oe LISTIN @ where you can
RJ. VALUET: Reattof ge ine gia, Borel Lot spas | gee ik i ls Ge oevpre, tnt ange, | wtf ey Sale aE form, taft,teme sumed fat
o1) W. Huron St Ph, FE * e008 bedrooms . Convenient—Shopping Area. cou Lane. North Johnson St. attached 2 car garage,
‘ain ND AVE. Huron St Ee rE CMM) Beate dining roo, st fh enclosed Z Bown payment 7 $500. ‘Priced Just uotin of Watertord Mi "| « goog choaa, room, motern home| Term eae tees bine. fomily
Euan tee =30 =| pear porch, Screened frotif’ porch, {i - G wooded lot. Avon
: | Ril" pesement automatic off heat peta a *EMBREE & GREGG | 11102. Seven. TESTO", san) come location. Terms. oie ils. Immediate poe.
; A oe ae neinnmada: mal a pe mufon re osseo |? Sone Fe, *. with S| Pee . WMMA. _ KNUDSEN HOYT REA
21608 Open Evenings til 8 .2 age attached. REALTOR BALDWIN drooms. VTY: .°
rE soi” ‘We down. OB Sint r Isa Bresing No. Wm Bas05 Poe 8. Teestagne \4 : wag He, 1 8, ‘Telegraph ee
‘ : . " | ‘ ‘ hee . - gw . ¢ {
\ 2 ‘ \ “THE PONTIAC PRESS, he
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958_
By
*
‘For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43
GOOD 6-RM. MODERN
HOUSE BY OWNER
$500 DOWN 180 WALL _FE 2.3736 BY
BY OWNER |
homey gmail deve bas payment. i.
4 Bedrooms Near LeBaron School.
r home, but one you ean
ge a car garage. ti thin, fn ws me lor nothing
sn iartins iin the city, Au a —
key — © appointment
GILES Se CO. 15 ran BALLON AVE.
TIPLE ListING SERVICE
LAWRENCE W.
Gaylord
@ very usable r
Spacious living room. Near
Loon Lake on # quiet street
in a f iy 2 nelghborhood.
Extra large — ard and
2 r ga much
value shes rs can : $500 |
ore ware sen ee a pep,
m | a acre Harbor:
weniences, aluminum storms
and fre sa4t. $8,500 with $600 dn.
partes het = ae good gard iy Lake privile "9 Close s
seat aes Rear Sa. RB 3- or MApie
3 BEDR' i B
Wall-to-wall ting, ull Cassment * Gentee tone
Vacant. 375 First ard.
rms. $10,500. OR 3-8083,
SYLVAN LAKE Warwick atu new RE. bedrm. Bam brick irilevel eat.
ie me a: . Rie serwoge. er
~ Take over Geet interest
V-A mortgage bedrm. ranch t home on As- |
St., Clar' + $800 moves
you in, Call MA $-1201 or SL
__ Income Property 43A
2-FAMILY
ZONED COMMERCIAL
Thi Pelekorete 3 family petea me, which ts eosles’s 0 732x190 Huron Gy hove
has such desirable features oe
Ca: g, tiled baths, off fired
= er —. full price $16,-
HOLMES-BARTRAM
OR 31950" gf Ay OR 3-3230
ONE aoay ae ae
bedroom home with a
32f basement in a
— homes on
‘fa makes th ‘—n price
® good
TWO FAMILY
Income home on West Side.
value of $115 per
nee, All in good condi. tion. Only 000 down pay- Gen. $2 pay
136 E. PIKE 8T. OPEN EVES
FE 4-9584
2? LARGE 6-ROOM HOUSES, NEAR Fisher Body, $5,500.
Ld ala hb sd apres a i
8 units ra brick Completely
rivileges. Show-
mon *
paym
Tl Sai taby
Dorothy
For Sale Lake Prop. 44 Se aay Soper Lavender TEs
_MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
STOUTS Best Buys
Today
E. BEVERLY
Owner transferred
SOLD OUT: ? Then consider
‘ oe
ww
god aerena a $7,600 with term:
$300 DOWN
belt ned Fisher Bots. ‘close
Now recat vacant — weet fo for
CONDEMNED!!!
City water. sewer,
Investigate
full price with
down. 2
ELIZABETH LAKE
FRONT ot ee with 6
ake fron 230 feet deep.
ha reolien fal district
Edw. M. Stout, Realtor
77 N. Saginaw r. FE 54-8165
Open Till 6:00 P. M.
MILLER RED? STOP LOOKING! Soe” found the dream Geel ¥ee| oneal
Ree 5) Lake
oree — close
Petes facies, New 1955
ee LIVING “this
bea brick contem
rary! Large gy room with wie
dows from floor med —
on irae”
oun wie lake lh . 4 rooms &
3, “000 . ag cael e e trade for good rite cous
William Miller
Realtor 8, 2-0263
BROWN DOWN — geal —— bunga-
se ot wi Only 3
edt bath. ‘Oak floors.
bedrooms. youre on. ved st, Excellent
i. cian
e two bedroom
rei
$7,500 ea sore Letoeg
so § room. @
nee ay tt i} le m ness. “Must ey oP
$9,800 @. tite es
“it, Sota Large ram acres
and Royal Oak. cat
eect. — peas Se
Game me fom 8 m Bapement Leg
New erful lot. “A
" ot ho CO) 7 fe money bene, Re
: L, i. BROWN, Realtor — eh 1% new new"
Nery) i ; 4 DRY LOTS. BLOCK FROM OX-
bow Lake. $300 each or 4 for
$1,000, Owner oving. FE 8-3684.
‘\f1 FOOT FRONTAGE ON WHIP-
e Lake. By owner. Sandy
beach, fenced” in landscaped lot.
Suita $5000 table for tri-leve] home.
terms, FE 17-0411.
BASS LAKE PURN, COTTAGE A gr for year ear living.
conveniences. car ga Will sacrifice Owner, . + ates.
200 FT. LAKE Monroe
for only $40 per foot. Will
sell al) or divide. Call to-
day pe
ICHOLIE & HARGER CO. FE 5-6183
N.
33 W. HURON
BEAUTIFU
lot, moe trees,
Rn. £ e,
Owner, FE 2-1306.
Ueescent™ Lake, 680 8c 2,
4-7898.
Lorene | LAKE LOTS (FOR YEAR
homes) Paved streets, water ig TRE ee west Pontiac op
eNotes YSoOK, INC.” EM _ 3-653! Oven 10-4 Dally
LAKEFRONT. Exclusive
— tr ag HE site — 145
—_—s sand ch oe oo 1, Absatutely the pen) , Also
e"”
pe MOniy “Dow —
soober: lot on Orchar
$9,600.
Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor re sahea on at
Lakefront Clarkston Area By owner, New 3 badroms —
plac
to "lichen. = = ane |
v ela 5 hood
formica, pghone jacks. bath-
Toom
Pull ted. basement with plastered
ceiling, knotty pine walls, “% bath
with shower. Electric dryer, auto-
matic of] heat, Basement opens
out on lake. rms & screens.
Has ‘balcony po c. = of
house srereeens lawn.
$17,000. Take M15 thru ns Clarheen, turn 2 = ‘ater Ra. Turn _
Br Tan Pes Wau gah Ra. e e me;
Briage
ce Fe raes
Bax — oa fi t
‘+98
Watertord Ais Ne tf 10,000
rth BROS. REAL ESTATE 3-1295 Rwy
nm Eves, ‘ttl 9; io th 6
erenbee, bs owner We bi tex
Sag, Si
i
be
j OP SATURDAY & SUNDAY
LAKEFRONT
BARGAINS
Lakefronts Galore
FOR YOUR
TA & INSURANCE 5 ES Ae nad Ra.
aie at potine Lake)
OR 23-1349 OR 3
Seymour Lake Front A ver see SS — con
structe ted You
sh it nares a have can lake home just the Way y
have Bad Tos wanted it! Located wood-
va se quiet living,
eas ke fishing, “hl exee ny '
rice, ith $500 d
ractive dicen for cash,
WHIT BROS.
|For Sale Resort Prop. 444
| ORASS LAKE NEW CABIN. ree lot Center resort area,
8 adwin
Maat ving room ace, 1 bedroom,
and } Fag ho Rage
natural
Exceltent hun’ Write i
Biel ss
HORSESHOE AKE NEAR
cael. os
a * “the ea an
oF en uP, D ar eter senvicn
\ wt rh 40547, JA. Taylor| & |
ite z Estate:
dre Fos FOR abe a BY OWK OWNER AT EB reen on Preda Drive
eo Road off Crescent Lake
FROY — 7 LOTS. $200 BACH OR
rf on time. Owner P.O. Box
TAKE ORION. ONE 62 LOT. $500.
WATERFORD TWP, § Nice buildin sites. Lots 15 = 184. 61.180 each.
ZONED MANUFACTURING. 88 x
132, North Side $050. Terms. lots, 140
ern
Wee Bao Zoned ——
a. “ down
Parcels. West
be divided
into ‘Ets ‘i. "£90 Terms.
x, ae ACRES. N. Suburban.
mA © HAYDEN, Realtor E. WaAlton
OPEN Eves. *™
For Sale Acreage 47
1 TO 8 ACRE PARCELS. BEAU tifa! baliding sites. $100 down $20 month Will’ a.
os PANGUS, Rosier
1919 M-15, Ortonville NA 17-2815
op Ae pemnir pons nr, :
$3,500, FE 47661.
~~ OXFORD AREA . located nortyweet
MY ae
For Sale Farms
FARMS, 30. ACRES & UP
P. W. DINNAN 66 W. Huron FE 4-577
TRADE
27 ACRES 6 room farm home, at bara, chick-
baseme live
ileg . = Peo
te “model free free
tract or home Pull price $17, 500.
Clarence C. Ridgeway
REALTOR . 975 Baldwin Ave. A 8-3122
48
FE 4-620
ES — Good farm land.
4 Bedroom modern home.
— Paved road. Neer Ox-
LAKE PARM - — Of 116 acres,
e
farms are priced for the
soeesevey’? “‘puyer— Terms
— out of town owner.
H. P. HOLMES, INC. 2531 S. Lapeer Rad, FE 5-2053
-| Sale Business Bl ae 49 Bg | SLICES OF HAM
ee retiree keene
eee ® “What kind of an expert did he say he was?”
8-0441 r
Business Opportunities 51
“LEYS TALK
BUSINESS” é
Cleaning Concern A deal for the side inves-
tor, This F gectoroygl package
is locate itr _
Ferndale area. Good gross,
. Teasonable down payment.
Variety Store Small town operation. wes!
for retired man and_ his
wife. Present — other
work makes this good investment. A melt down
payment puts you in busi-
ness.
MICHIGAN BUSINESS
SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDMESSER, BROFER
PARK aT OUR R FRONT DOOR
HOT SPOT DRIVE IN RESTAURANT and
near high ae aia Year around
business, 100 ft. front on main
State Highway. gaseneie living
uarters. Real opportunity for
usband-wife team. Call at ask’
for Mr. Hoyt for full deta:
HOYT REALTY FE 2-9840 PON-TEL CENTRE,
254 8. Telegraph Rd.
MODERN SERVICE STATIONS
for lease. Good potential. Finan-
cial assistance availabie,.
SHOR HOOK I8 RETIRING after 31 rs in sad present
location Pin: e Will sell the business “and prop-
ease to
iv See me 3730 ‘Or-
chard Lake Rd. No jlaghens
¢ ease.
BY 30°. RENT $43
Baldwin Ave. FE . al r mo, 277
comme
win
ee é,l. | eee
979 - 985 Oakland 150 ft seater. — 2 commer-
cial bidgs BASCOS Orne 3-6211
-| SMALL GAS STATION & LIVING
100x150. quarters. Lot Sell
trade
Light Manufacturin g
Is- th
baths v
lower floor [yong or can De used together.
price for quick sale, terms
TEAC REALTY 731 Baldwin Ave.
ALMONT — Large building. =
apartments, lower front —
doctor’s office, On main or
SS in center of town. sie.b00;
rms
On main cor-
poner oe Has
@ use:
Possession at
rms, ner ner in Vilage. of
hom
home,
000 = Term as 0 Sines.
North rt of INDUSTRIAL —
city, easy access for truck jines.
a: th 2 new block
and brick buildings, 3500 —
each, One rented, 1 vacant otal
price, 8.000. may be sold sep-
arately
Roy Annett Inc. Realtors.since 1923
FEde 28 E Huron fal 8-0466
Open Evenings end Sunday 1-4
1 ROOM HOUSE & 60 170. .
Ragga | commercial fo frontage, SALE: GROCERIES, GAS, Center ct Sse quarters. Owner.
EAST BLVD. SMALL BEAUTY SHOP IN LOVE-
2 acre commercial jot, having ap- | ee ch-type home. Good loca-
- 500 oa conker 5 pen so ent Pe t. Ideal ~ for Por cS a as partment Phone OR 3-5400.
eg, Seat Cees Sees ed ant 1% OUR NEW PALL
WILLIS M. BREWER } geimlegetsglist Sout business now JOSEPH F REISZ, MOR. ciates 1050 W. Huron. FE 4-3581.
53-65 N. Parke 46161 DRIVE-IN
w KEN BEST LOCATION ON I wien area bear new tT
— in a gy tone Se — state park. Business eg yo
ell year. Buy now & og —
money back one year from now.
Attractive living tarters included
fn lease, Only $4,000 down puts
you in business.
MOTEL 8 UNITS & —— On the fabu-
nde ft. frontage
be . <2 _
an Fel busi-
meet
more units.
“STATEW IDE Reel Esta Bervice s aren
pS. Pe “Telsereph ny AE 4-0621
Detroit Office TWinhrook 3-3286
‘=| Hempstead CHURCH BUILDING © ayaees 30x68 ft... -_
” Bt. Shown Por price, tt terms ce me ae
of E, Huron st. 4-8284
. FE 5-0510 FE 2.3971
Partridge 18 THE “BIRD" TO SEE
A Super Hardware
Commercial Building Just south onc Pontiac on Tele-
x 1800 square feet
roximately
tal for 952008.
ie Be ee
Business eerhiaslics 51
‘fe Er OPER. RICH same
ees c Working fits Bt
Clarence C. Ridgeway
“REALTOR
975 Baldwin AS
AUTO SALES M, S&F Forts gas station, used car lot.’
‘or gale or lease, MArket 4-2801.
WANT TO TRADE 8 ROOM HOUSE located in
Wie Catt eaege Town 000, Loc college miles f Pontiac ‘tor down
4/ LEASE | West Side — Ground floor—
Private
TOM BA
Bateman
-Kampsen REALTORS FE 4-0528 AN,
Se aa ha Bd
rae St, in ‘ORiando nat,
vr hy i — TED Me
ogg! 5 section
good profi ‘he
last ag Ratan 4 ent
party “wil! take 2 bedroom home
5 ie % ROOM INCOME
rick building,’ close dowtown, ‘ ¢, phone FE “400. °
\
try. y A, au. . capacity 125 p
used) rest reemne & i forced air — Pienty
Want A Good Mortgage? epprove~
dated
i *ERDEROFE FE 8-6580 . Huron-|
55
“PEP IEEE Ph. EMpire
Swaps
2 ROWBOATS
Trade for car =
3-4444,
7 SMALL HOUSES BS TRADE FOR
vacant or sell. $7,000. 58 way. Lake Orion.
igen oF wood TORS Taylot Ra, off J
will
OLDS, SDR_RUNS GOOD, Ai
| 1 Bg ng Ba om ts or eel ot i
1950 PO . SELL OR ir
for seria *“ dewp treeze, OA
iss F i FORD CO NVERT
F ic
~ for an
stove
NEW TOP. ty meg housstratier or cash.
e
3216 PRIDHAM,
bor. Balance vowing, Hato
F
__ (State Licensed Lenders)
202 N. MAIN
ROCHESTER, MICH. LOANS Pe TO 8500
neuen See. notre 6-071) ety Okt. 1-979) “Once bog i Bag A eon oon"’ greed — $60 per mo
able, Seer 102,000 gross per | ALUM WINDOWS AND D OORS.
ear ae bet oi Busy | “Comb. pri ow ey
bi ao - aw oN : psors Toute’ fer typewriter, r. golf © clubs boat or
only cole Gai cae. One dn. 7.1 f Chau “FOR USED TV. WORE
REALTOR PARTRIDGE Clcaag Out At Cost
Fe - sey tee ee aul lawn Goning “tackle elec. we gataost :
Money to Loan 83 fete Fe ems
“4 | seross “irom. new city post offee| |
TEAGUE FINANCE CO.
ENGLISH POINTER
for shotguh. qonee,
ef, or _ FE 2
GARAGE ORDERS
TAKEN NOW FOR TER PUPPIES, e, power mow-
CRI. OFF
‘| WORKERS
. of w maxe ot No rt oi ‘or in ment uaritil 5 roetpe %
work for 30 Sys
Our Requirements Are: 7 Sty you own furniture or a
5 That you are e ee
resident.
3. That you had & good w a pa record ig
fore becoming unemployed
“ you owe btits and are being pepeeed xin Fy! one be
of ware. We hs
in you and tn your commu-
*
Loans to $500
‘Made Quigkly
always receiv jeasant
p= A considerate ae
fs reat emt at R.. 2 one of ow
‘BUCKNER
nen
D LAKE
SECTIONAL for bed davenport in good con-
dition, FE 2-
"a "46 FORD PANEL. GOOD For snrall ar of equal valub. EMpite 3-223 3
WILL. ie fer 2, DELUXE
Charset or aed of
= val BS ti las
WiLL SWAP TAVER®.
; ay tas pein cane classe FE Sinan ve
“WE WILL ae ~ as imo on
ay umbing ce rarpente to ‘accept ork of eek.
mele ears, land tract, vacant land _ kk for. rown.
62 Pb 2-4810.
_Evenings call On| 8-2618.
ee Sale Clothing | 56
i, CHAIRS ONE oaED
ig
conse =
Don't wait. ‘Sale Household Goods 57
aaa, |
TE REG RT BEE 5
never been worn.
G- co, ag ee —
a
Ppmeed %, toed a Ma TouNG
2 $13, 1 new, $65, FR 2-€701, Nelson 8t. 4 ait
DUOTHER SPACE HEATER | with blower. 3 years old, 645, FE 8-9026, | _ ‘ lounging chair, ironer, FE 41409. oe
~~ ly VEN AND ee
‘| Gas Ran age
aoe cate Sa A HLECTROMASTEE, prove. $15.
deatees roth mm
er, eg ee ov
Loved on
ae) bolts 5. FE
pani,
FALL SPECIALS
—— oo a
“ : T teed. Store. FALL BUILDING “Bae we RCA 0 Union Village, Enpire s-e811, WOOD & COAL RAN OR 3-2360 oa apptiances., 3 We aw Sinatgp with asp leet. Same
GOOD LIVING ROOM SET FOR | j-poy— SMALT RA S08 AND | —Uel's_ Appliance. _
single ee ne door, and rtables, $6 | to $12. FE 6-t Peri USED CRANE OIL
SURETRATLER 8 FT ROVAL.|AMANA. 167 Tank wicelient condition, s years if . o
Fully equipped. Sell or trade for | freezer. 1857 mode! sis, Inver old. MAyfair 6-3407
Zeer, sauiy (Ot, pane | centres. ble bed complete "with dust rut-| USED AND MODEL ~ A PICEUP, 9150 ~OR ie 6 rame, a
ODEL aay or nets ator & misc | 1155
7 METAL N size BEDS. CTS a springs-and mattresses. $50. OR Oyn quar nee R Sts $30 Thee
7 PIECE BLUE MORAIR, GOOD SAE RANG EeeCTRE ene RIG.
_Srayton,, Rees, 2668 Litehfie erator, A and corner tables.
7 BABY BEDS. 1 HAS CHEST ene PE +1634 oF 185
Money to Loan 53) to, match. t idea) laundry, tu. | HOUSE FOUL OF Fo FURNITURE.
(State Licensed | Lenders) ble _ 4 chairs Daystrom. 1 de- _ Quick §&
eat COE humidifier, new. t poreenia work | IRON aie ROnER N-
UICK $25-$500 LOANS - table. 1 dog bea, OL 1-1308. aition, te’, mos. old. s100. Detase
SEABOARD FINANCE eS ROOM) fae" Gill St. Oxiord. FE 2076 Easy PARKING. sa la ad FES SECTIONAL | DAVENPORT, TRONRITE IRONER. GOOD CON- | sr
a an
~ WHEN YOU NEED yenoF sutaitare. Alumigum tilted Ge wringet 2 Setter
$25-$100_|e pestis oe 3. oe SUITE, COM- water ter, ‘used 1 yr jh guematic, wesh-
eer Comten Ot. ce anon it 43573
t% quickly on 4 RCA BC. TVWING i
signature, oy susie furniture No Bocce player, $20. eth meson —— o x en storm Rs
Budeet, ct We wi be, ind pe ce * ie Surana, By syiven 1 re, 8st.) Det it nt ea
= =P, i LIVING ROOM | LINOLEUM & PAINT SALE,
~ ati, “t xe, cond, On 38. oe eeke oe oe i
: Tun eke i water pee 3 3 Bloomfield rerrace. auesese.
i =R
FINANCE co. | lla iar See paket can | Pa qgea me og tachi” Bal for lose en ot for lege than
FE 4-1574 109 Pontiac State Bank Bide. a . FOUL ; BERD NORGE G + e = i,
re few davenport and phair | Kelvinator refrigerstor, #40, Ken-
ee table 2 decorator lamps All son sane mood cond. oniv '. pode a itlantaastins, SO
“ X i RUG AND PAD, $35; : : $25 TO $500 — chair, nag On —
ae bad : :| POWERFUL ELECTROLUX VAC-
Chatter ene | Bee "ad ai tgr eae | eum somegies Maman Yonge, Dente | Harvey aars oe | Uietnimete tie Beckie 5-8121 J, us at our office. items. . $55 cash.
H & Auto | 9x2 Felt Base Rugs $5.95 | tet ome te | RANGE. ate wor
LOAN CO. aA-Ft. Ft. Wall. Tile Zc | oe see gee 2=N Perry St (Corner Pikes Soi B PAINT Gal, $3.75 | __MA 5-2289 eves.
Mortgage Loans 54 ere Me erties rebate iy oO} te — Special”
A Mortgage P roblem? rator a Marie wringes hole oe we yr. guaran-
We make mortgage loans ine washer, Reasonable. FE +. ace
your —— "Any groper, 31, 640 E. Columbia. Elec ux vacuum, — new, 1 yr.
any amount. Prom . 1? 'NCR TV. 4 4H rr
bur ‘and ‘contracts, abd real es tioned “Ph Of 31660. after § p.m 23H:
we B wat ;
CHEFF MTOR. & RLTY_CO freemer 3 ees 10 W HURON 87. PONTIAC cu. ft. upright ow... ..ees FE 6-858 ——=_—sEBves. EM 30048 SWEIGK sbeboginy wits gud oes | “covering od
Seenags sate Bees) “ETT DING? Then wake cure it's
Burmeister’s
Open 8 a.m. te 8 p.m, Bun. 18 to 2.
ae
sears
ereneees
eeebebeeonees
— ‘teas "32>
of 2 a iat ag
met g ig ey help om any expofion ie, Ca prob-
BURMEISTER’S
Northern LUMBER CO. WR Coney tate Oe EM_ 3-417? Open 8 a.m 9F Poe
BFS |
naces, water and ers, automatic water heater =
isrheese:
ae
quantities, by ag F * ood eg w Taher ihe fie
slack contra furnace, snermpetat 4
FE 2-6701, Shs ‘eison
“GET QUICK, iT
through Classified Ads!
Yes, whatever it is — dial
FE 2-8181 for an. ad-
writer and get it! -
"
eee ee
eee ee
= : preees vA te ceeeeee
oa Mahogany, good 2s ....... ite
cant Us ON”
dwin Ave. we
Deluxe 21" ree! nb eee eke eens
1488
Dr.,
ood zn Excellent yee ea
he hes
2
_ eee 2 ee ee ee ee eee
* seeeweenene
+S ee 3°
d
No
Deere a 5089 Dixie Highway
- Drayton Plains
"| Every Friday .....7 p.m.
Every poy yer p.m.
Bu
ORlando 3-2717 3
tractor, John De bottom 14” Miraties low plus
Clerk. Feet (ee as i B&B Sales
*§
= i @
<
Ld
& es ”
1957 MALLARD 4 FT, TRAVEL
Ce branes, sleeps 6. Sratier, Elec
br
Maz
8 Bivd oe ifasine Sic, Ԥ. Saginaw
De! nr lt. sree "88 ft. , a4
= with Me: eels Mark 30. $905, La Cross. 1 ft ft. boat with ercury — Big discount on
‘ocr serie. of boats and m a.
“Big Discount eee er
Ca. new and useg boats and mo
modern. Exc. cond,
2128. Telegraph Fea. — pee {Across from: Mile)
| Oxford Trailer | gaa are Orion, MY S-iss8 or MY 30000.” Sales ~ BOAT CLEARANCE
Newsterens | pave HUM br erals-Holly ats is
Great Lakes-Zimmers ior Eig gad ok wl est 8 to 10 foot wides, all lenghths, cate cnaee — # DINGHY — * Sitar pink. ‘Fradlee parts bettie | Cost 065, sell 425. FE 45382.
ges and accessories. 1 mile South | “y EVINRUDE MOTORS”
a Fr, 96 . BCELLENT | Clearance Sale
TQUR-AID TRAILER BETGH AND | oy ote discount
55 SPARTAN sia Orchard Lk. Ra. pail net 8-8. FE 80112,
pirat mein, | Pen ea OE Ask for Keith Bridges Pe 1) HOLIDAY LAS
Sri oF Gh Same | ue ean Mea INBOARD, 45 H.P.
Os od bedtm PE Soes
SELL OR RENT — _' NEW ay Ph ee tee ote.
Prv TM
{27 Pr. SCHULT. MODERN. LIKE
“ina thes and
TRAILER EXCHANGE
New Andersons
We buy, sell and trade.
Used 8-10 Wides USED TRAILERS ON RENTAL PAYMENT
Bottle Gas
Parts and Supplies
1 ® to 6: Closed 5 Sundays
Pontiac Chief _ - Detroiter
Me agers TF 8 & 10 wide
cor Gael re you buy. Re: member. 70 you will save hundreds
Bob Hutchinson
Mobile Home
Sales Inc.
4 whe Foxtias wort
R 3-1203
Open "bays a Week
SHORT OF MONEY?
ine se ¢ A gp your er, saoeetee. jcomonatrate,
so you receive Rash fn mediately
a 10 per — We —
Sern or waluse, Cs ani Marne |
Ce Wiliams Lake Rd. or S280
VAGABOND 16 FOOT CAMP
& ler. Will sleep 4, Reasonable.
_MUtual 42060,
79
Rent Trailer Space
HGTS. MOBILE
"Tage. The finest % mile 8B Bou.
170 N. yke FE_ 5-6519
OXFORD MOBILE MANOR 2 FOR = want the best. 40x80
_Lakeviile Rd_ Ph. OA 8-3022
MOBILHOME ESTATES. MODERN al and playground. EM
PARK AT PAREHURST
INLAND LAKES cal
PE 4-7121. 3127 W. Huron, 32-6122
INSIDE R BOAT STORAGE,
FE -5-6365
price
Glasto Craft 4811 Dixie Hwy, (Corner Walton
& Dixie Hwy.! Drayton Plains
ron ere
E STORAG:
eae Boat W mas
pe en” "Open, Susie cee Open Sundays SPECIAL
wood runabout with di
thru sea rr.
Shower’ $s yy & & Service Auburn Ave, FE
NEEDA US"D TRUCK? PICKUPS from to "ST
Panels from 5H to "56 25 trucks to Call Bob Butler at Turner’s
MI 4-7500 .
PONTIAC'S TRUCK CENTER
GMC
RETAIL BRANCH -
Oakland at Cass
Foreign & Sports Cars 90B
1958. ENGLISH FORD STATION ‘a exe, ¢ iw
mileage MA Siii6. N’°61 STATION WAGON. Will trade, OR 3-2002.
91
*
For Sale Cars
‘$1 BUICK SUPER
REPOSSESSION
GAR PAYMENTS TOO
some? Rg = m help vou
some ive
Lake Oia em moter —
1958 STATION WAGONS — 4 DOOR:
ALL COLORS & MODELS
$1694 And op
NORTH
CHEVROLET Hun vd. at S. Woodward Ave.
Birmingham" Mr “<8
OLIVER:
ing wheel on a, ow trailer,
"iat ntti we! Motor Sales Shey pace ; . to sell $550. ’58 Chevy Wagon «.$2395
ome A coaar ctr boat, Aber-| +87 Buick Sedan «. .$1995
Used 14 ft cedar edar strip Wademaker 457 Buick Convert. $2295
our | hp. Bvinrude, Al An fo $88. 2°57 Ford Victoria . $1995 2 S" poats and Evinrude | 50 Buick H’top ... .$1695
See us beface you buy. Dawson
Sates — co Lake, take -_—
turn Ge
Rd. about 7 miles
Rd, turn left and
Transportation Offered 87
CARS FOR Pow ane =. Gas allowance to
re dans Pa 3am otter # pm 2, FLY 4 ENGINE
fornia, Haw. 300.10, Ferry hg On’ 31064.
eet ee are Fe TRUCK GOING NORTH PART PART load, either way. FE 5-6806.
Wanted Used Cars 88
A-l a Fhe CARS AND
scrap. Fre . OR 3-6015.
A “BETTER PRICE | Out of state dealers on the lot
will *out-bid Michi: — pmarket
on ‘5: ru ’5i
Nice cars ry rougt
Call ad Be FE
Sears.
HT AT 6:30 P.M.
& % _ west of for every
in the home mmore
electric stove, Sahl Chet oil er, Frigid
other nice antique
p= Thad "Brass on
stand,
commode, drop. leaf -| A-1 USED TIRES. $3.50 UP 1954 FORD 6 MOTOR, ‘51 FORD 6, fal iceman motor. 197 8. John-
~ For Sale Tires 80A
WE
buy, sell Also eevecats,
STATE TIRE
503 . Saginaw 8t. :
ENGINE, CHRYSLER "87,
ble inches. Truck clutch,
4 transmissions,
$285, s 60 en
transmission, $85.-
and
any engine, machine work
fair 35.
d | STANDARD BRAND, NEW TIRES traded in on General Safet
U Abed — cent off. B
w
ED “WILLIAMS 451 8. Saginaw at Raeburn ck ©
er Sales
Pe:
18 PT. out Venice
ot Cass Lake soe W. Huron. (Plan
to join one of ‘Wally Bryan's
excfting caravans.)
PT) oO ik ed . 937
263 Rd,
Auto Service 81
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear, ong 8 rebored Zuck Ma-
chine Hood, Phone FE
22563,
~ Sale Mater Scooters 8&2
ALLSTATE MOTOR SCOOTER —
1953, good c $65. FE 4-5382.
'SHMAN RS + SERVICE
re 3 PAD: ea FE 4-4246
For Sale Motorcycle. 83
1949 40 HARLEY, DAVIDSON — 125.
cond. OR 3-827.
‘$7 TRIUMPH *
__ dition, 400 BE.
A FOR PARTS eis woe Davidson our Harley Davidson, see Harle
vyidson Sales Co. 372 8
<_<. Sale Bicycles 84 PBPPPAPA LP LOLOL PLL EEL LPL LL
20° & 26° BOYS & 26” ome
bikes, like flew, reas, FE 2-3664.
28°" GIRL'S BIKE EXCEL.
eon. 1066. $20. rE 45382. Hickmnott, kmott, guctioneer, Oxford. OA no ey club howe and 42214
aa ee tiac. Also trailer sales. Base rate LUCKY "AUTO SALES
sselecilon of ome - | $20, Phone MYrtle_ 2-4611. 193_ 8. Saginaw
sto Rag ~ Sigg 2,com-|~ Auto Accessories 80 - CASH
fies te Heats Se oe | NyMERGUNY, ENON, FOL) Tomb Cake ust ae old Fords, $125, PE: 82771. Community Motor Sales AUBURN AT EAST BLVD.
FE 5-858
CONTINUED "SATISFACTION
THAT'S OUR
SELL Us_ YOUR CAR
FOR GREAT PERSONAL GAIN
“THE BRIGHT SPOT” |
ORCHARD LAKE AT CASS
FE 8-0488 OPEN aie 10
H, J. VAN WELT, 4540 DIXIE
Hwy., Drayton Pisins, pays the
High Cash poy for all late
models fh 8 3-1355.
. , Ph OR _3-1355,
AS MUCH Aa 50 FOR JUNE AND 2-2668 cheap cars days or
eves,
BES ST PRICE FOR, poRE CARS,
CASH “FOR CARS ay Se MOTOR. —s
Cass at Pi FE 5
DON'T HESITATE
Bring Your Car to
GLENN'S ‘Motor Sales Fo
Top $$$ Dollar
Bee NEED CLEAN sen
T OUR NEW LOCATI “952 W. HURON
Cars. “8 to '58 models Must be clean.
AVERILL’S 2020 Dixie Hwy, FE 2-9878 FE 4.6806
See M & M Motor Sales
For dollar, on late model cars.
2627 H OR_3-1603
TO mB UARY MARI AKE OR mo Sn“
ete tin? acorns
ANT cars, Also used tthve. PE bin.
s 7398 | ‘58 PONTIAC 56 Ford Conv. V-8 $1195
’°56 Ford Victoria ..$1595
’°55 Buick Sedan ...$1195
55 Chevy V-8H-T $1195
55 Pontiac 2-Dr. ...$ 995
’54 Chevy Wagon ..$ 795
’54 Pontiac Cat. ...$ 795
’S4 Ford 2-Dr. V-8 $ 695
53 Chevy Sedan ...$ 495
53 Buick Sedan ...$ 545
53 Olds 88 2-Dr. ...$ 495
’52 Buick H’top ....$ 195
ASK FOR GLENN+SAWYER OR HENRY SCHLAEPER
IN NEW CAR DEPARTMENT.
ANS-
COMB OR DWIGHT BLINN.
OLIVER
BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave.
FE 29101 - Open_Eves.
"61 3
CADILLAC, ¢ DR.,
ful shape. $480,
_ ONE
OWNER CARS
‘88 DESOTO FPiredome 4Door
Radio, Torque, Power steer-
ing. Demo SAVE $800 | _ $650 DOWN
"66 hag Pavey Pegg +
r H-top — io, Dyna tee.
$345 DOWN — $5558 PER MO.
Bag noe e800 mile
— “alleges Power steer.
$345 GOWN — $55.58 PER MO.
8 Oa -_— 1 PER MO.
"BS ‘+ ge pg Plaza
~— Radio and Heat-
$180 DOWN: - $34.80 PER MO.
BRAID DESOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER | cr xetes ral Dealing
_ FE D018. :
RENT 1T FAST
through Rent Ads! Room,
house, apartment, any-
thing — Want Ads. ov
‘you ACT ION. Dial |
He ae ‘ie f ce 4-1006
co Wise, Economize
RAMBLER "BILL SPENCE
saas Sa, oe * gen via
oR hh
Auburn Motor
Sales — CORNER PIKE & E. BLVD.
R. & C. Rambler SLOGAN
=e ye pat ali: any deal; 185
"56 Buck special, hardtop ... $1305
"56 Rambler, 4-Dr. sharp, Make
58 Chevy, 210, Nice car $ 145 *64 Chevy, Bel Ais. eDr. ‘veir as
ee seaes
Pe
| USED CAR PRICES
Complete Se: service 6 ts. a.m, tl 8 p.m.
Cheap Transportation
‘$1 Nash 2dr, Nice body
" Nash Rani ¥en, At... tH "6 Paneee’ i "I
$1 Chevy, 2-dr. Nice Se eee ee ae ers netssnnes
15 mo CARS TO el
om eS ll
| ECONOMY USED CARS
22 Auburn (off Saginaw)
FALL SPECIALS «Dr. Deluxe, radio
ae eeenenere 1696
sha
54 Olds 4 Holiday Cpe., load-
ed with power
"88 Ford . Conivt., a real nice
"36 Bulek century. Dr, H-top,
‘HOUGHTEN & SON
Merelige, Te ap el Saaet mis it loday. Poe
ott eee Tord,
1957 2-DR. CHEVY HARDTOP. ate payments. Plus $50.
iS OWNER 03 CHEVROLET hardtop,
heater, wer ones, nee, re-
tires, 38,000 91.085. miunr
OR 31188,
1957 Mg ag AIR 4 DRE
Sion i966 + arate ROYAL LANCER. oe —_ pba! tires.
ye clean. No Goalers. ri
MA 6-1313.
DESOTO 2 DR, GO! oY “hardtop. Compleiely equipped. New toa tire: 4
pa Dy Fe, buy 0 o wher MA Sze.
HUDSON
sedan,
DLX.
" Pe. owner. 46,000 = In
ror R R_& H Nice tires, 3 fone,
at FE $3635.
TOP, TOP, besatiful Co
EL. ad
8 sen. Yelio heater, Look Soe one over! ONLY $1703.
COLE'S UTO SUPER MART “PL i wou r a
1000 Pontiac Trail
Walled Lake Kr 4-451]
ECONOMY PLUS ‘64 Studebaker, R & H ....:. bf
$2 Kaiser, R & H .........,
"62 Willys 2 dr. Overdrive .... $125
Roger’s Sales & Service 695 Auburn Ave, — FE 2-9555
YOUR =e. & WILLY
FOR SALE 76 SURER: ‘ST i + dr, Chev Rad,
Powergiide, er
potlight,
Tah i ADgGLOTELY NO ‘MoNny
at iM Mr
ae at MI oe ‘wareid Tur- ner Ford
~ National |
Motor Sales
560 ‘Auburn at Marshall
FE 8-459]
1949 Thru 1953 Model Fords - Chevrolets
- Plymouths, etc.
AS LOW_AS
$00 DN. ALL CARS GUARANTEED
| Absolutely No Finance Co,
o Co-Signers .
No Credit Checks
Immediate Delivery
x0 BAD CREDIT
NEED po 000 CREDN
« Bus Stops at Door
Walk In & Drive Out
-NATIONAL | MOTOR SALES
560 Auburn Avenue at |’53 FORD V-8.. Haskin’ per znene —— of car § i]
Haskins ens. 6761 A -g aS pen al t Sage
MAple
‘SE Al pd pe. 7 ~ ty ‘
FOR og | .
cit tS rat Mt :
HAUPT Pontiac Sales For Good Will Used Cars Chevrolet, V-8 4dr Bel-Air
a ardtop, . Powe: dio,
eater. Power bi
Ah ee ys whitewalls,
4dr. sedan Hydra-
- ag i heater, white-
1954 Pontiac 4dr, Starchief, t
Hardenburg _ “ST Chev. 4 dr, BA Ht...... "ST v
ue = DODGE C CLU
Stoee ate re sen, 5 or term, Cal
1953 DODGE SEDAN. 6
DOTHARP. FE ¢a0te
$85 R MEMB R TELL EVERYONE YOU ED KNOW
Dixie "OK" Lot SPT ra Toe CLEAN
oa LIBERTINE OR HARTLEY, OR 3-6111.
RUSS
JOHNSON
Lake
2} Orion
GOOD
Used
CAR
vale 55 RAMBLER WAG-
ON teseeeeeeees SI145
New tires, gas savings.
Gem.
- $895
‘54 PONT. WGN. .
Hydra., Power brakes.
‘532, FORD WGN.....$445
2 tone, clean & dandy.
33 PONT. CAT. CP. $575
Hydramatic, shar
|'54 FORD CRESTL. .$745 V-8, auto. trans, power
steering.
’55 FORD V-8 CON- *
VERTIBLE .....$1095
New tires, A beauty.
‘54 PONT. CAT.....$895
Starchief, full power.
65 BUICK, RE-
VERIA .........$1145
Full power, Sharp.
'56 FORD, PICKUP $945
This is a good buy.
$445
Auto. transmission,
'51 CHRYSLER ....$195
Good transportation.
54 NASH 4-DR.....$545
A-1 condition,
’S1 FORD V-8 ......$195
Good transportation,
WEEKEND
SPECIAL.
Only 58 PONTIAC SrA TION WAGON. 9 PASSEN: GER, FULL POWER. ‘Save $1,400, See this- one.
RUSS
J CENSON
MOTOR
SALES. PONTIAC DEALEW
* | Marshall > FE 8-4551 Ne oan Lake Orion x
j
i. i}
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1958 4
For Sale Cars
USED CARS Mahar Olds. Super 88, Holiday ope.
1956 go Ford Country sedan. V-4
Rei, mu 6 ean BA ah
Fee ees ek hardto ey te «8, 5 ent. Sets ; $ 895
* Mae Sel * Prpatiow, 28 29,000 ctual-
‘ Sasa ‘Bees bel aie ddr 1D ST r Fra of Basen. at White eal
. radio & ‘heater. ” uxe $
rH vara Radio & mea eee eee
“SHELTON Pontiac - Buick
ere re 8 Rochester ‘OL 1.8133 ce pe sich, "Yi Deaving stare Arien wer oF | arr ees 4 PAs == _— wg 15 isis a Seeeitalat ie" daa’ pick un. alae pohinwsed Perry Park.
“TAYLORS | Sreaennns ok coheane:
Chevy-Olds Walled Lake|i#®® eee ee Ns MArket 4-1561_ Ti a MERCURE 3 gis eta FORE i today: Eddie Steele
ae ROCKY ‘CLAIR, EX- ore _ EM’ 3-24 cond. 1
Gl isag WERCURY SRURION WAG: won. $8 MI ese AO ‘$5 RAMBLER WAGON. 36.
New tires Overdrive. “
Russ Johrson Mtr Sales, Pxeeltent owner.
Ne | 1952 3 RAM BLER STATIO i WAGON,
or Ford for eaalig §i $1,200
D4 DF, V4, STD.
rea FE clean.
ms SeavakT hat , FOM, like new. Must sal
fea Eddie Siecle Ford.
és feering. Beautiful be ies ‘a. See. Mr.
down. Mur-
on im bier. 666 8. Wood-
wa
7 R, FORD Ly E, PE| ——
4-4168 or FE
§
money down
Sie Me Murphy, B’Ham
Rambler, 606 § Woodward, MI
: Tear
Down
WW. Oni} ;
ee ‘67.
"S3
a
Ml ay ene oe pe pestle woney Ove:
ments of x (BON mo, ai te gi
ar. Mr Big! at MI 4-7500
_ Harold Tu
1956 N is 8T SEL (Mok
Eddie Steele Ford. ve aia
‘$1 PORD FAIRLA
vertible. $0 MAyi hy yey
DR, SUP 8
Hydramatie transite. 3
366.
"orl ma
arks at, MI 47500 Harold ne
5 a
Fu S166,
OUTH HOUSE CAR. GOOD
“e ear $126. FE 68-4480, 2563 James
3 PLYMOUTH '
REPOSSESSION Porfoct speine, good ee ont
dr Bell Great tease Teas 1957,PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE, 4
ar., Must sell to-
and
Sedhie steele Ford. FE: 50204, “ FLTOOT tee BELVEDERE RE. 4 dr, paraee ‘V-8 Super
power & gor ae
glass, Gee car. MI 4089
FOR SALE BY OWNER, iy PLY-
outh, 2dr hardtop. V-8, yetque
t transmission. H w
tires, Windshie
washers, direc-
mos. old. G
eS om miss: R&
‘ai id i) -fioo. areld’ Tur tiona) signals, Padded dash. 5
%% FORD aT CAD- th 8
8, FOM.
ba
g Pia » FOR 300, 2D
Excel Sood Will take ater car
in trade, M. :
2 FORD = f oT V3. STICK. —— res Take over
58 Demonstrators aes “PLYMOUTH
wo Maple at Pontite Tra
® Sunliners fully equipped. Sart) Walled Lake MA4-4511] -
Inc MU_4-1718 1
eee a en JE seen. Hunter 5 . — $600 Bi
| Bit Fag? 4, CARE Se oboe Must geil eis nadie Bteele
ms Toate a gg 4 1958 PLYMOUTH pee. DERE, factory ‘icials,
ku-tone ‘se sportone,
COLE’ 5 91h
DO YOUKNOWA | _ BARGAIN WHEN .
* YOU SEE ONE?
Be 3
ites By 2 naan Hid
ef ; attain bis on | BP. i... 5 2.5: $1905
N- a, “PONTIAC € sTATION RY HT. DEMO. At
“BOB FROST, INC. 0034 280 Paveined Blvd.
ass. around Birm
ins acres: Se, Pee gt roy Terms.
Ciaviston otor “Sal es CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH DEALER MA 56-5141
LYMOU H BEL Hardtop. he gage en R&H. Power
ate and rin; ike new.
tivate owner $1,166, MI 62517, "58 on TIAC, PERSO RSONAL
gg i pall i Like new, wm: 4
dr, Cata a equipment inc
pee other | Wade, also Baan for
Bud McHugh FE 3-117, PONTIAC, TARCHIEF CATA- “fina, wee eens 58 © Soames
ae PONTIA .G._ BONNEVIELE
with setae mn Ghnlves Wal tase older car in trade, OR 3-240.
iiss PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN 4 DR. condition,
9233
BLACK i053" BONTIAG “DR, 4150, Beechums arage.
Dixie Hwy. . alton Biyd. on
45-4900,
1954 PONTIAC CUSTOM, 4 DR.
Starchiet, like new, ve clean
tow mileage, 187 ‘Chandler.
atts Tenet 14.000 tiles, Na
One ener. Otis Bai ai owne “2re 07 or Sun.
2 OR
$4 PONTIAC ay MUST SELL,
best offer. 3-3843
‘s, PONTIAC Perea an. $195, £M 3-0081. 1H. eens
WAGON.
dition New tires. FE
_ Seas.
53 j PLYMOUTH (CO CONVERTIBLE. _Pully equipped. $230. FE 6-7718.
53 PONTIAG 4 DR. EXTRAS. Pvt. owner, ‘7855 Locktin., Afte:
N. Shore Union Lake, 5:30.
19909 PONTIAC,’ EXCELLENT Sots Phetsant_ Bt R&H. H. Manning.
‘83 PONTIAC. AG. VERE
ae me) oe
asa
1956 PONTIAC 7 DOOR HARDTOP.
Radio, heater, Hydramatic, W
sidewalls, low low eage Bri
tires. Price $1200. FE
45435.
_ PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE,
. Will trade, H, Manning
Boas asant St.
Lag 8 RENAULT. MUST sec TO-
day. Eddie Stéele Ford. PE 5-9204.
bas are eae gly ;? ER.
shape 15,000 miles. Ip 331
First, Pontiac. FE fast
ibs VOLESWAGEN. SUNROOF, U import, best aber over si100. 4-308.
1956
Volkswagen ~ $1450
Larry Jerome |
Prices - Only Half the Story
(Corner of ant f, Montcalm.) : SALE | Values Galore TO
Give You
MORE!
NOW |
1958 |
CHEVYS
| GREAT SAVINGS - MONEY IN THE BANK IF YOU BUY NOW
Company . door Se eyeerette: Ex-
Officials Cars |..." es
PL MO TH Only A Few Left ‘56 P LYMOU
YEOMAN ee iiss
Satie ween, Pover Se Goat, V4 engine. Honey BEIUE ee cin =— & heat
YEOMAN 9 | ceeootste $1044 |
Station Wagori ‘6 5 OLDSMOBILE
«Ben at PUETATS ACOEY| OR Regt, swe
YEOMAN = _|'55_ PONTIAC Station Wagon STATION WAGO
4 DOOR — 6 Passenger. = Pow- jafari — Hyéramatic, power
erglide, Fathom BLUE. cates brakes ee $1305
BEL AIR ’ 2 DOOR SEDAN — W3:v-# motor. SoeGewacon Bincd vases see steering. 210-8 ey. power brakes,
SINCERE Ce cn aon aL Oe $1174
BISCAYNE 55 CHEVROLET 4 — _ aoe eens. “Radio B-AIR ‘ DOOR
Sliver SLUR & IVORY. ea of Mee a
4 DOOR =e Solid 155, FORD ,
CREAM paint. FAIRLANE 4 DOOR Ford-O-Matic, radio and
BELA - heater; 23,000 actual mei
i Boom afl rower do|o eh Eres
V8. Gien GREEN &
BISCAYNE Bc ae nme sean v-4, a ae a er ee seas $ 794 9 oupeMostL mer Wiper we:
_ Versary GOLD '& tvoRT. 4 $3 PONTIAC :
YNE re
“same ree Rea a $495 -BISCAYNE, : 48 PONTIAC : Ss 60 CADILLAC, oe owner .
4D BEDAN — @ Cyl oe '
side, Silver ay
: _Matthews- | lo
‘Hargreaves ro ay Cumenctte Dealer
The £ ‘Lot. ; OAKLAND AVE. ed E =
/ 58 CHEVROLET B-AIR HARDTOP
Radio & Hoste eee = ara New!
ber é CHEVROLET DEL RAY 2 DOOR
Le Tobe Heater, Ivory & Surf
1G ade dse Needle swauwencccae aes $1474
’S7 PLYMOUTH WAGON
“7 ar -O'’Drive,
cesses ed aon
ef OLDSMOBILE SUPER 88 H.
4 door. "pont power.
. $2105
137 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON 00)
we fit
he ime
eax
4-17 OME “Bright Spot”
Gives You Quality Too!
191/95 4
og NASH RAMBLER — Coun-
“31095 7" CHEVROLET ape. SEDAN, exs
a sharp
$1095 54 OLDSMOBILE - Door,
Power steering, poet brakes
$695 “EX engi mil CHIEFTAIN deluxe 4-
695 $4 FORD CUSTOM V-8, radio and
heater
$2150 "ST _— 4DR. HARDTOP, full
~~ $1595 "67 FORD 8 CYLIVDER, radio and
heater
"1095 56 DESOTO 2DR, SPORTSMAN,
It's aw beauty!
*790 ‘S44 MERCURY MONTEREY 4¢-DR.,
beautiful job —
*950 "34 oLpeMosrtt CONVERTIBLE,
red bottom and black top
5OY9 '§ PONTIAC STARCHIEF
sedan
*850
«DR.
Rivie
*1350 "55 OLDSMOBILE “‘88"' HOLIDAY,
full power
*1395
JEROME “Bright Spot” | Olds-Cadillac Dealer
Orchard Lake. at Cass
ERY DEFENDA- . | These 7
~ 12 Orphans
Need a Home!
WELL BEHAVED
‘54 MERCURY 4 DR., Mercomatic
53 FORD 9 PASS. WAGON. Overdrive.. oS
GOOD ‘56 CHEVY 2 DR., Powerglide ce ceucecueees $1195
‘55 PONTIAC Starchief Catalina............ $1395
55 FORD Fairlane 2 Dr. Victoria .......... $1145
BRATS 51 BUICK 2 DR. Standard Transmission ....$ 195
‘51 CHEVY 2 DR, has cust ss ..censcseroe: $ 95
49 OLDS 2 DR. 88, need§ paint ..... sees eae 165
Many fist: ic Choose from
RUSS
DAWSON . Mercury—Edsel—-Lincoln
English Ford Line |
232 S. SAGINAW
FE 2-9131 57 FORD WAGON, Fordomatic ....... «$1895
’56 MERCURY hardtop, power equipped. ..:$1495
"56 FORD tudor custom .......seeeeerreees $1095
'S5 CHEVY WAGON, powerglide ......++ $1245
<
DO: YOU | Trust Your Wite. AND YOUR CHILDREN to an old unsafe car?
You'd never forgive yourself if
they had an accident,.so don't
take the chance .
COME IN TODAY SELECT Hopi. wes StS RECONDI-
WE LL HELP YOU :. ; Arrange Easy-to-Buy Financing ©
‘96 OLDSMOBILE "98" $1995 Radio & Heater, Hydramatic.
ms 5 eg Loaded. BLUE & WHITE Paint.
oye) BUICK OP — Automatic Transmission, HARDTO:
ie sg Heater. Power Brakes.
‘57 PONTIAC Power steprin a
IVORY
eeevee eve ee @ @ 56 FORD —" Power. Bieciing. cater. “Hord-O-diatic.
‘99 PONTIAC
‘53 OLDSMOBILE Radio and Heater, Hydra-
ped ee he Paint Very clean.
‘57 PONTIAC * 2 8 2 © © © Ore we oe He
oe # * © © © @ @ &
Radio & Heater, Hydramatic
9.000 actua; miles. SORAL and
Radio
o e's 8 © © © 8 & 8
oe © © # @
“ee © * ee ow $1295
$2095
. $1395 § *
$1195
$ 695
$2295
sad ‘Meater, wOuer Bueriaae Power rhrakes men
59-BUICK . 6... 220-0204. $1395 CENTURY HARDTO:
‘0D PONTIAC _
‘D0 CHEVROLET L AIR 2?DOOR - Radio & Heater. Sharp!
‘54 PONTIAC Radio & Heater. Hydramatic.
4 EUS wero’ Pe. aad & Heater, Straight
57 OLDSMOBILE Pull Power, Automatic Transm
‘37 PONTIAC .......... CurmyT are oo COUPE — Power Steering
08 PONTIAC
cram +RoOR, Pie Mt GEE
‘56 PONTIAC Radio & Heater.
Power m coring & Power Brak cs ee ee ee 8
, Heater, Hydramatic.
“es © *# © &
or 2 0 @ © © © # @
oe. * © © © © 8 e @
“eo * * © * © # @ ©
apenas Transmission, $1095
$1095
$ 795
"98" $2495 |
$2695
$1495
FACTORY BRANCH
PONTIAC. RETAIL STORE
“GOODWILL USED CARS ! E°3-7117 65 MT. CLEMENS ST.
4 LIQUI ———— een
(BEHIND THE POST OFF Ick)
84 — 2-DR. HARDTOP, super |}: BECAUSE—
"a" Ford 2 DOOR
$145
STOCK NO. 693-0
5
Ford one
- Buick © 4 DOOR
$69
m3 tA
Ford VICTORIA STATION WAGON
$245 — $295
STOCK NO. 2182-A STOCK NO. 654-A
Dodge 4 DOOR CLUB COUPE
$295 $295
STOCK NO. STOCK NO. RP-1i
54 Ford 4DOOR
B49
FE 5-4101 FE otal Oren till 01h . Dodge he.
STARTING NOW WE MUST MAKE ROOM
FOR THE ’59 MODEL TRADE-INS ~
These Cars to Go On Sale
-F RIDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER aa
—NO DEALERS—
STOCK NO. 702-0
- Dodge 4 DOOR
$125
a DeSoto 4 DOOR
$125
STOCK sO STOCK 52 RS-B
Plymouth Plymouth sTOCK NO. 2142-A
4 DOOR
Boo
: sth ae 59 =
Chevrolet 4 DOOR
$145 lots
2 DOOR 4 DOOR
$65 $245
STOCK NO. RP-19 STOCK NO. 680-A
55
Buick HARDTOP
$945 ‘4
Chevrolet 4 DOOR
$545
"Gy" OWENS Your Friendly F ORD Dealer
Open 8 a.m. to9p.m. “FE 5.3588 “Why These Prices?.
MI 6-5300
ACTION
BIRMINGHAM
NEW CAR TRADES
EXECUTIVE CARS
FACTORY CARS
All Must Be Sold!
The Time of. Veen Has , Arrived
to hold our...
ANNUAL -
SALE
If you. are looking for a
VALUE PACKED. -Buy, You'll Have to See Our |
Selection
ZY. Warranty
Bank. Rates
UP TO
#36 Months
TO PAY
Spot Dialiiea YOUR OLDER CAR NEED NOT BE PAID FOR |
‘SATURDAY ONLY |
SEPT. 13th NOON ‘TILL 6 P.M.
Everyone Welcome
| VALUABLE GIFT WITH EACH PURCHASE ON SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, ONLY
SCHUTZ MOTORS INC. DESOTO - PLYMOUTH DEALER
912 SS Woodward Ave.
BIRMINGHAM 2 DATION
it
tk
ia
Li
ap usa cl i ia i ii ot
4 *
i
eMmic | But Then — What it He
3 a =. oe we * . 4% i * ‘. ~ * : : : 3 r misinterp : :
ok, 2 se mu, ER Oe ‘ |quist, general industrial relations|executive to leave the company/when he was hit by.a car alvtle Toll Up 169; of By EARL WILSON é manager at Ford Motor Company, |in the past.severel days. A week US. 31 ‘south of: Douglas. ;
Boss *}gon w a sign on hi announcing, “This Z . -Edsel-Lincoln | 20, of Denver.
' Secret I Don’t Know What I’m Doing.” i. aaa 28 Ne
, Jackie Gleason played a practical | field Township, Ee! ae sue nee sees keen a0 MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS joke a ee drive his * a, ee en, ae ee Really Was Well Off i rae storm, says the National] 76 Mi Siete Bank Bldg. | an heme
Gordon Dutt, to collapse. During re- | John S. Bugas in the Industrial] Los ANGELES (AP) — His Society. eg! ee: hearsals for a drinking scene Jackie a paper ra. he | r@lations Department, but has had cronies thought Abraham Green- pped champagne; » Om camera, Ne “| little to do with contract negotia-|span, a shabbily dressed shoe- made believe he was loaded. Everybody | tions now under way with the Unit- maker, was eccentric, He some-
was in on the gag—except Duff, who jed Auto Workers. Bugas has full|times showed them a worn money
“Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Expe ‘
Hours: Daily 9 to S. Wed. and Sat. 9 to 1. Evenings by App't.
~~,
SAM BENSON SAYS: ©. *
THEY MUST BE RIGHT! Yes Sir! My Customers must be right when they
keep coming back to buy their suits, top coats:
Shuddered. ans gg of the company negotia-| belt and claimed he was well off.
Ueana Nieves, the Mexican import (Missi ikke Geneon, es os ee
Havana Hilton), ls working dally with Marlon) However, although Lindquist’s| day. In the belt police found $25,- -™§ Brando toward appearing opposite him in| resignation became effective last! 496 in cash and bonds. WILSON “Guns Up.” Meanwhile she is being introduced : servile
to L.A, society by Conrad Hilton. eos
Add “Funny Signs”: (Spotted by Joy Gallagher, Hamp-
ton, Va.) On auto bumper: “Please Don’t Blow Horn. Drivér
Sam Benson Says:
paying it off at $29.50 a month
... Anna. Maria Alberghetti
Bregman in November.
Ae . + Ice skater Freddie ‘Trenk- ‘ is ae ,
ler, injured during the Ed Sul- ;
livan TV'er from Madisoh Sq. Garden, will be out of the ice
show for a week. Nylons! Dacrons! Blends! Cottons! Reg. Sizes! Half Sizes! Junior Sizes! Tall Girls! Whi
Colors! Special Orders Taken!
Pretty as a Picture, 7 ek aoe :
yee Westbry, nes if Figure Fatierers Budget $1 © TWEEDS MY PRICE | THUS P.M 8 4 an 4 a wn,”. a : ? Nig ; Ie
- | Giimpsed in Fort Wayne, $ 7 oo © BRUSHED WOOLS j eg Ind., by Bob, Springer: “Have 3 a . Reg. $25.
ee oe LIV © ‘SIZES 35 T046. gan
ee. $ hie 3° to] 431 5 ion taal $1687. with /in her plush H’wood home, is ; | hese ou
a:
3 3 4
3 3
_ CWopyright, 1958) ~~ — a
BICYCLES YOUR 88 CHOICE EACH
. 3.50 Down |
20-24 or 26 INCH
for BOTH BOYS & GIRLS
VA ‘ V" i — it Kids everywhere love the smooth, stream-
“ IN hk lined style, gleaming chrome plated
handlebars, hubs and sprocket. Regular
coaster brakes for more safety. Comfort-
designed seat. 1.75-itch tires. Hurry in jf
today while this sale lasts.
COME IN TODAY-BIGGER SAVINGS |
Ip; |shop Sears
TONIGHT
v~wewewevrevweereerrrreereerrererrereeYeYeY} \AAAAAAAAAAAA AAA AA A bh bt bb tb tb et
@ CHARCOAL GREY 3
UNTIL 9! ¢ EBONY CHAR BROWN § 87 nid an Electric © SILVER CLOUD GREY
, 3 ee ND j bike Hom |) § 9 BATTLESHIP GREY : ~ od Sigg mits Be : . Reg. 1.59 to a *
vision "hse Ginter anced that Football Outfit for Bike Basket With 1.22 ee viel ALTERATIONS FREE
VWelsenvaiier a. Shoulder Pads ys Up to 10 Yrs. endbar Mounts ‘Chromed case 7 ees The court tok the reqyest under 7 : Z with push but, OVER 2,000 PAIR MISTER! SEE OUR | | ee A | Reg. 1198 9.77 Reg. 1.29 99¢ ng. ‘been N | = ,
Detroit Population Dropty aucoed, moved ter body facden shelin pods cae Zneiated bastey, winlocing UMMed disbor’ “Save, | EW FALL PANTS Jackets! —
© PRepitation decreased by 1000] od colton padding. Wid yeam ode > Fits 2a, dein bikes 2.68 Speight. s4,.45 41.99 Save $3 to $6 ~ Suburbans!
Saas 1. The Daten Meetopole Sparting Goods Dept. Perry St. Basement ° * nih ace u ur ans
tan Area Regional Planning Com- 0 as . @ IRIDESCENT CORDS mason sald was believed to be A NEW LOOK ° SHARKSKINS . Car Coats!
| | e ardines ® Sheen Gab. S $ FOR YO ave $4 to $ SPECIALIZED SERVICE | UR OLD WATCH. © Worsteds 54 to 58
| New modern case $m"87 $87 $@87 $ 87 To $ 87
| oT. Vv. Custom-fitted by 5 6 3 es .
i eS canens ie: experts tg aslieabinshaigacn¥ou Chiles SELECT YOURS NOW!
Je neconp cancers | vas AS LOW AS , ,
sp oboe | J. C. Higgins Peb-Tex Football Larry LACE FUNEROS FOR WEDDINGS
¢ OFFICE INTERCOMMS Football and Tee With End Stripes — Says: yy , ~~
° SERVICE FACTORY || tes. ase §©— 3,77 Reg. 249 = 4,99 7 Wale? \. Hi! | S Ope bee
fe | Official weight and size. Split “Official size ond weight, Peb- RN . + soil Rarely AFTER ep (See our - MARTI AR, : = |
| > BLAKE — ff copes. toate ball tan Tex, cover tate cere cnd (BEFORE Written Guarantee Wee Bist? selection | OT NORTH SAGINAW ST. RADIO TV kicking tee. feel of leathér. Tan color. % — ' P my aCe ge eas ei ian ’
au w.Haros ll CSatiglaclion guananioed on your money back” 154 North Saginaw St 1 | Torre Tonite | PARK FREE! 2522 Siu, | ‘FE 45791 ! ' guanantied Ov fy : PD) Phone FE5-4171 — siecciastiabilisiaiaaaiiniiaaatal, mn TA in the city with purchase _
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