J — mn
The Weather
Pollen count $1
(Details Page 2) Partly cloudy, and cooler
THE PONT
113th YEAR xk** «kx a PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGU ST 29, 1955—34 PAG ES a
" ARBOCLATED PR
Eas
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERV ITED PRESS ‘PHOTOS
ICE
+
Detroit Police Kill Maddened Gunna
Colorful Skeet Entry
PUERTO RICAN TEAM — One of the most colorful teams entered
in the National Skeet Shooting Assn. annual championships starting at
the Oakland County Sportsmen's Club in Waterford today is the Puerto
Rican police team shown above. In
Rosario Loyola,
* * *
National Skeet Shooting
Gets Under Way at OCSC
By H. GUY MOATS
Pontiac Press Sports Editor
Action in the opening round of the National Skeet
Shooting Assn. championship at Oakland County Sports-
man Club started slowly this morning, but at noon the
tempo was beginning to pick up speed.
First event was the Preliminary Day Gun Handicap, a
100 target affair with the
beautiful Pontiac Press sterling serving tray. Detective William Fernandez and Detective Angel
Gonzales, In the rear, left to right, are Jaime Loyola, Capt. —~
Guerrero and Capt. Julio Vegoreaux. Pentiac Press Phete
the front row, left to right, are Capt.
big award for high gun the
School District
Named in Suif Taxpayer Charges City
Board Failed to Award
Low Bid ‘Contract
A suit which could halt con-
struction of the Linda Vista ele-
mentary school has been filed in
Circuit Court by a Pontiac School
District taxpayer and his wife.
The suit, filed by James and
Margaret Fettinger, of 15
N. Tasmania, is directed at the
Pontiac School District. It aks
the court to issue an injunction
restraining the schoo! board
from awarding contracts for con-
struction of the new school “to
other than the cement respon-
sible bidder.”
It asks also that the court order
that construction contracts be
awarded the lowest bidders.
The suit charges that the school
board on Aug. 19 “after consider-
able discussion. , .and having been
advised by the architect. . .that the
(general construetion) contract
should be awarded the lowest bid-
der. ..failed and refused to award
to the low. bidder.”
The board also failed to award
the electrical contract to the low-
; ot bidder, the suit states,
“IThe only reason advanced,” the
ll of complaint continues, ‘was
t said persons to whom con-
tracts were awarded were local
contractors.”
HEARING SET
A hearing has been set
Sept. 6.
v
Early leaders in the all
day shoot included a Bar-
berton, Ohio “skeeter” Ken-
neth L. Baughmann, who
fired a 23-25 for the first
two rounds. He has one of
three 25 straight rounds
among the early squads. He
shot with the first squad to
get under way.
However, the leader was a Renn- ilof the nation’s
i} plants.” ~
[jthe Century of Progresy
jolution that has changed
» | the lives of all Americans. Diesel Engine Production’
Milestone Marked by GM ; CHICAGO — General Motors today signalized an im-|
‘| portant milestone in the history of America's industrial |
economy — the production by GM of 100 Million Diesel
_ | Horsepower.
GM President Harlow H. Curtice hailed a frent as |
a “modern industrial miracle.” “In the short period of little more than 20 years, ” he,
said, “General Motors has built enough Diesel engines |
to give the country more new power capacity than all|
General Motors ere
its first modern lightweight
two-cycle Diesel engine at
exhibition here in 1933.
This was the beginning of
an amazing industrial rev-
To observe the milestone Gen-
eral Motors on Wednesday will
open the Powerama, its giant
“World’s fair of power,”” on one
million square feet of Chicago
lakefront. The spectacular exhibi-
tion will dramatize the scores of
industrial achievements made
sible by Diesel and gas turbine
engines.
Curtice told a news conference
at the Blackstone hotel today
that it teck General Moters 22
years te produce its first 100
Millien Diesel Horsepower.
Today's milestone of 100 Million
Diesel horsepower is only the be-
ginning of America’s progress in
thie Diesel and gas turbine engine
field, Curtice said. Looking into the
future, he forecast:
1. “A further acceleration of the
present rapid growth of the mar-
ket for Diesel horsepower,” which
will result in the production by
General Motors of the second 100
million Diesel horsepower by 1965.
2. Many new developments in
the Diesel field, including ‘‘sub-
stantial increases in horsepower
per unit of weight together with
improvement in fuel economy.”
3. New applications of power
plants which GM's Electro-Motive
Division now builds into locomo-
tives. Two that hold “tremendous
promise” are for oil drilling rigs
and mobile electric power units.
Utilities find the latter units par- pevetely ees a generating
Fenton Attorney
to Face Charge Warrant Will Depend
on Recovery of Farmer
Shot Friday
to withhold issuance of a warrant
against a Fenton, village official
who allegedly shet a tenan farm-
er Friday night, ‘the prosecutor's
office said a charge definitely-will
pos-| be lodged late today or tomor-
row,
Clifford Dye, 53-year-old Fen-
ten village attorney, will be
charged with either first-degree
murder or assault with intent to
kill, depending on whether the
farmer survives, said George F.
Taylor, chief assistant Oakland
County Prosecutor.
The wounded man, William C.
Clark, 27, was reported in fair
condition today at Hurley Hospital,
Flint,
Taylor said a neighboring farm-
er stated that Dye, who is being
held at the Oakland”County Jail,
told him recently “the only way
to deal with Clark is with a gun.”
Apparently no argument precipi-
tated the shooting, Taylor said, al-
though Dye and Clark had been
fe for some time. Dye has
been king a Circuit Court in-
junction breaking Clark's lease to
operate three farms ¢ by
Dye's sister, who lives’ ‘in Louis-
ville, Ky.
Curtice Hopes
ticularly well adapted for the
needs of rapidly growing commu-
nities, ‘
4. Development by GM’s Elec-
tre-Motive and Frigidaire Divi-
sions of a new mechanical re-
sylvanian, W. Franklin Hollinger,
of Harrisburg, who has 24-25, His |
brother, William, also of Harris- |
burg, had 21-23. - .
Another Ohioan shooting |
straight, was Charles D. Irwin,
Rocky River, with 23-23 in “al
|same squad with the Hollingers. |
Other scores of the early shooting
included:
R. M. Barry, of Wichita, Kan-
sas, 24-22; Lee VandeWater and
Mrs. Viola VandeWater of OCSC,
with 22-22, and 21-20; Dr. 8. P.
| Williams of Huntingburg, Ind., 22-
20; R. J. Dunnebach, of Diamond-
dale, Mich., 22-23; Tyrone Starr, of
Kansas City, Mo., 23-22 L. B | Kitchen, Flint, 23-21; Gerald B.
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) frigerator car which will revolu-
tionlze the transportation of per-
ishables. This new car, Mr. Cur-
| tiee said, will make the old-style
(Continued | on Page : 2, ot 5)
| Airman, Reunited Fomity
Continue Honeymooning
PORTLAND, Ore. (INS)—Airman
2.C. Daniel C. Schmidt and his
reunited family were en route to
Idaho today in a new car.
The airman and the wife who
said she married another man in
belief that Schmidt died in a Chi-
nese prison camp returned from-a
honeymoon at an Oregon beach re-
sort and received the delivery of
the car in Portland yesterday.
DENVER (#—Dwight. D.
orado.
a Ike and Mamie Enjoying
Vacation Time in Colorado
Eisenhower and his wife
Mamie are havnig a fine time vacationing here in Col-
Of course, the fact he’s president makes it something
deal less than an all-out vacation. Work goes
along with a chief executive wherever he moves.
But at the end of two+
weeks of* this fourth sum-
mer visit in a’ row to this
state it’s obvious once again
how much Eisenhower loves
this part of the count
and how the change m:
a new man of h
with tears streaming down
for Effective
Road Legislation
President Harlow H. Curtice of
General Motors expressed hope to-
‘day that Congress would make
enactment of “constructive high-
way legislation the first order of
business when it reconvenes.”
Curtice, speaking at a news
conference preceding opening of
General Motors’ spectacular
Powerama on the Chicago lake
front, prefaced his suggestion
with the statement that President
Eisenhower's proposal for a 10-
year, twice-as-big road building
program represented “the kind
of thinking and leadership that
is needed.”
“Unfortunately,” he said, ‘“Con-
gress failed to implement the
President's program with enabling
legislation.”
Curtice said Congress’ failure to
act during the last session left the
federal highway program and
many of the allied state highway
programs “at a standstill.”
“The result is,” he said, “the
country is going to continue to
suffer an economic loss of an
estimated five billion dollars a
year. Solution of the highway
problem is of the greatest im-
portance to the present and fu-
ture of our country.
“TI sincerely hope that Congress
will make enactment of construc-
Avon Township Man
\Drowns on Vacation
drowned
Saturday in Saginaw Bay where
he and his family were spending i
ae Although authorities continued | Gunman Loses Battle With - 122 _ |
44, of Leoma, Tenn., as he wri
licemen ta:
as a third ( DYING GUNMAN’S LAST RITES
priest administers last rites to Charies Luther Rol-
29 police bullets. He was cut down when he attempted | — A Catholic |
thes in pain from
POLICE ATTACK MOVES IN — Two Detroit po- |
a steady field of fire at beseiged house | staged a four-hour gun battle with 200 police. Rollins
(dark uniform) moves up to shoot tear gas | was riddled with bullets when he attempted escape | remonstrated him for
through the. window where ‘Charles Luther Rollins | a few minutes later. Police
AP Wirephoto
4)
AP Wirephote Berserk Janitor
Cut Down Trying
Shotgun Escape Tennessee Man Wages
Four-Hour Battle With
200 Law Officers
_ DETROIT (INS) — A
‘trigger - happy madman,
barricaded in the home of
a gun coHector and unaf-
fected by clouds of tear gas,
wounded four persons in a
four-hour battle with 300
Detroit police last night be-
fore he sallied out to his
death in a hail of bullets.
Dropped by 29 bullets
and shotgun pellets was 44-
year-old Charles Luther
Rollins, a janitor at the
Ford Motor Co. He emerged
firing a shotgun, wearing a
bandolier of ammunition
like a belt.
The end came in the
glare of squad car-and fire
truck spotlights that at-
tracted a crowd of 5,000
curious, almost foolhardy
spectators,
Although riddled with shots fired
by 10 policemen, Rollins lived for
a time after he fell on his back in
the mud and water, The Rev,
Brian Mahevy was summoned to
to shoot his way out of a burning, tear-gas filled | administer the last rites.
Detroit house last night. Rollins held off 200 police in
a four-hour gun battle before he charged out with a
blazing shotgun in an escape try. Police were forceg to withhold
their fire much of the time te
avoid hitting bystanders, They
dren in thelr laps, to get a
front row seat,
Most seriously wounded was
Senior Inspector Walter Wyrod,
who led a three-man charge into
the house midway in the siege, He
was struck in the hand by a -shot-
gun blast that drove the officers
oft.
HEROIC FIREMEN
Even more heroic were firemen
who ignored the fusillade and
moved up to the home to extin-
guish fires set by the tear gas,
Although 150 gear gas shells and
bombs were lobbed into the small
frame home on Detroit's north-
west side, Rollins was seen moving
from room to room, smoking a
cigarette.
He fired an estimated 100 shots
during the battle, two
neighbors slightly with
. a ‘
pellets and a patrolman during .-
his final charge.
The home is owned by Bernard
Smith, a nurseryman and gun col-
lector at the moment en route
home from a vacation in Tennes-
gee.
Rollins is Mrs. Smith's uncle. He
was told to move out last spring
because he had set fire to a daven-
port. A week ago, after the Smith
family had departed, he gained
access through a window.
MENACED NEIGHBORS
Since then, he had startled
neighbors by fondling guns in the
backyard and menacing all who
pproached.
Once when Mrs. Mary Mardis
knocking
| over one of the Smith beehives in
East Receiv
the entire east coast and pro ‘es All-Clear
‘as Hurricane
MIAMI, Fla. (?)—The all-clear was sounded today for Edith Fades
bably for Bermuda as far as
Hurricane Edith is concerned.
made its predicted turn to|
a north « northeasterly
course and will keep its 80
to 85 mile winds over the
0 sea, said Gordon
nn, chief storm forecast-
er here.
“The entire east coast is in. the
ia prokehty m will -not. experi-
hurricane winds,” Dunn re-
“There is a wide open path for
a, rhe Atlantic storm has?
See Cloudy, Cooler
Weather Tomortow Seattered showers and. thunder-
storms tonight will be followed by
partly cloudy skies and . cooler
temperatures tomorrow, the weath-
erman says.
* * *
Today's temiperature was ex-
pected to range to a high of 96-90
degrees. High tomorrow will be
80-84, Uraes State Dems
to Capture House MACKINAC ISLAND (®—Gov. G.
Mennen Williams today urged
| Michigan Democrats to aim next
year at a target which he said
cannot be missed—election of a
=} Democratic majority in the State
House of Representatives.
Williams told a Democratic con-
ference that the House of Repre-
sentatives is a Republican weak
point,
The Democrats now have 51
out of 110 seats in the House,
and 11 out of a seats in the
Senate,
+the backyard, Rollins snarled:
In Today's Press
County News deusecesaciten’®
Editorials © teeeerere PTT ris as *
Sports * tt Ree dteneas 23, 24,° bY
Theaters . .....606-+6+ os
y ege nit ¢ E
+ were amputated,
suffered f E
f
Geek : Ry. iH
7 as stiik =
SF te : i i] i &
t» i
it i: ean
i af
H
Africa's Lake Victoria which is
one and a half times the size of
Switzerland will have its level | *¢?:
raised three feet by a new power
irrigation dam.
The Weather z
™ é
m.. #
Tvesenees
Mee peneee TT
Bisssewes .]
ee
ree
EEO EO HOM ee
a \
38
Nationalists.
*
we eal eres
: e want to make it as repre-
sentative as possible.”
U.S.-Japan Talks Fs
|
tof
Hi agi |
Peretti So Gs ur
at |
HE 4 i Eg
i i i aM
8 iis nt Lit
EZ
Planning
Commission. Black areas are those which had 100
| :
100% and over
60 10100%
35 to 60%
20 to 35%
under 20%
under 300 units
Power Failure
in Southern City Electricity Lines Dead
for Nearly 7 Hours in
Monroe, Lovisiana
MONROE, LA. ®—This 5
& Th aise [sift
they say was involved in an acci-
dent yesterday which caused in-
juries to two persons, .
Treated for a sprained right
ankle at Pontiac General Hospital
and released was Mrs, John A.
Dellapost, 26, of Cincinnati, Ohio.
pickets to the left knee and released
or of rth gponorason, Srvird Mrs, Dellapost's busband, John,
he values at $130,000, told officers that he and his wife
Olshansky has filed suit and Keck had just stepped from
for an injunction to prevent picket-| Mis parked car and were waiting
ing by Local 594, Hotel & Restav- | {or traffic to clear to cross John-
-|rant Employe’s International Alli-|%o Ave. near Huron St. when the
ance & Bartenders’ International | “identified car struck the two.
“Seo aan, bet tho obey cor ted oftap | Olshansky says union threw | 2%, car
wp & yiries tne va Oe Dee Woy, Dellapost pulled into the hospital
Se veueent’ Giner: demseatioge| = that he negotiate a contract. He ¢
Sor he fs be wont po en «| SKORE Shooting Gets to open tae —!
for business.
Under Way Here City Man Pleads Guilty (Continued From Page One)
. raffic Charges Cleaver, Rockland Center, N. Y.,
oad 19-23; Fay Briles, Palos Heights, Alter pleading guilty tp two traf-| Ill. 22-22; Bud Fowle, Lakewood,
on me ote Ohio, 23-23; and Dick Parker, of
# David W. Keck, 27, of Utica was With nearly 600 persons receiv-
ing tree examinations this month,
future stops for the mobile blood
testing unit were announced today
by Dr. John D. Monroe, County
health director,
Persons 14 years or older are
eligible fer the tests, which
are given to detect unknown or
inadequately treated cases of
syphilis
sult a
If no word is received about two
weeks after the blood examination,
persons may conclude that no ab-
at Dem Conference
County Delegation doctor, Dr. Monroe ex-
Park,
Many also are attending
the session which ends
Two Juveniles Arrested firitit nn §
g i
*
i Mobile Blood Test Unit Stops Announced in City
normalities are present, Dr. Mon-
roe said.
The blood testing unit is not
concerned with blood typing. It
is staffed by one technician and
a clerk, while bleed samples are _
sent to Lansing fer examination.
The first program of its kind in
Pontiac, mobile unit operations are
and the U. S. Health Service,
Marks Milestone”
‘lin Engine Output, - (Continued From Page One)
refrigerator car “‘ag. obsolete as
the steam engine.”
5. A great expansion in the road
machinery industry “both because
of market potential and because
fof forward strikes in product de-
‘velopment.
“Applica of the torque con-
verter nose wtimg a General Mo..
Curtice said all of the non-auto-
motive fields in which General Mo-
tors power is applied ‘‘hold tre-
mendous promise for the future.”
uf dl
i i fie
j i § 3 i
_-'THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. AUGUST 29, 1955.
|The Day in-Birmingham — i
Parking: Area Owners
Asked to Attend Meeting ‘BIRMINGHAM — Property own-
ers in the area of a third pro-
|| posed municipal parking lot have
been invited to attend tonight's
City Commission meeting.
Plans will again be aired for
two suggested lots on Hamilton
avenue to serve the northeast busi-
‘| ness section. One would be located
between Ferndale and Park street,
north of Hamilton and south of
Oakland, .
ing east from the alley behind
Birmingham National Bank.
Financial problems with the
Eton Park skating rink will be
another item for discussion. Costs
are over the $125,000 bond issue
which voters approved for the
rink, without even considering
parking facilities. $15,000 of the
bond issue was to have been used
for parking improvements.
TO PRESENT AMENDMENT
City Attorney Forbes Hascall
will present an amendment to the
city's “nuisance ordinance,”’ which
would prohibit the keeping of all
animals not. classified as house-
hold pets, and not even those if
they are considered offensive.
Already in progress are New-
comers Club plans for annual
sponsorship of the Red Cross
Pontiac Deaths
Artemas E. Hall.
Artemas E, Hall, 83, of 3147
Hospital Saturday after an illness
of two days.
Born in LaMotte, Feb, 5, 1872, he
was the son of John and Elizabeth
Hulbert Hall. Mr. Hall came to
“Pontiac in 1913 and was employed
in the maintenance dept. of Pon-
tiac Motor.
Surviving are one daughter, Mrs.
Zadah M, Bass of Auburn Heights,
two sons, Leon O, Hall of Auburn
Heights with Whom his father
made his home, Lysle E. Hall of
Florida, four. grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren. He is
also survived by a brother, Clinton
of Pontiac. t
Funeral wil] be Tuesday at 1:30
p.m, from the. Huntoon Funeral
Home with the Rev. J. Harvey
McCann officiating. Burial will be
in Almont,
‘| Joseph (Fred) Shouldice
Funeral for Joseph (Fred)
Shouldice, formerly of Drayton
Plains and recently of Saginaw,
will be held at 1:30 p.m, Wednes-
day in the Pursley Funera) Home,
Pontiac. A Masonic graveside
service will be held in the Ottawa
Park Cemetery. Mr. Sbouldice
died Friday.
New Polio Cases
Noted in County 9 Incidents Reported;
None of Victims Were
Inoculated
Nine new cases of polio were
last week in Oakland
County, three of which were para-
lytic, according to Dr. John D.
Monroe, County health director.
None of the nine cases were in-
oculated with Salk vaccine, he add-
ed. No new cases were reported
under figures for 194.
ih i | ; i fh -
Hj tt z ‘ “4
aa 28
* e Caroline, died in St, Joseph Mercy |™
‘
liam Forsythe, Mrs, Walter Riley,
Mrs. Harry Wilbur, Mrs. R. .H, I
Tine ELH bE tt E ;
22 Traffic Accidents,
6 Drownings Reported
in Michigan
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Twenty-two persons, including
four members of one family, were
killed in Michigan traffic accidents
during the weekend.
Six persons lost their lives by
drowning.
Four members of a Jackson fam-
ily and a Midland man were killed
Saturday night in a two-car colli-
sion at the intersection of M66
and M-115 near Marion in Osceola
Victims of the multiple acci-
dent were John M. Lebel, 39, of
Other traffic fatalities included:
’ Cecil Little, 50, Flint, Sunday
night near Flint. “=
Teresa Kocol, 24, Highland Park;
Sunday night near Mt. Pleasant.
Mary Giannola, 16, and Linda
Troutman, 13, of East Detroit, Sun-
day night near Romeo. .
Maude Owens, 53, Hartford,
Saturday, in Van Buren County.
Jobn Bartley, 70, Grand Rapids,
Saturday.
Forest J. Weaver, 68, Boulder,
Colo., Saturday, north of Green-
ville. °
DROWNED WERE:
William Shirkey, 24, and his
’ Herbert, 12, Ro evi nd
: ;
Ew ut § z ai
yt
‘ay?
OPERATION
“Crug
PONTIAC
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“Wants Federal :
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ST 29. 1955
nsurance Setup Senator Says Program
Would Cope With Big
National Disasters
WASHINGTON (®—Sen, Lehman
‘ll ask Congress to
et up a federal risk insurance
‘lan as part of a permanent pro-
ram to cope with major disasters
ike the Northeast floods.
Cd * “a
Lehman said he would have a
wroposal ready for Congress early
ext year so “in the future, Amer-
cans will not need to live in the
ear that all their possessions, sav-
ngs and hopes may vanish in a
ingle catastrophic blast.”
The senator’s proposal, an-
iounced by’ his office Saturday,
iso would call for broadening
he operations of the civil defense
dministration to include. any na-
ional disaster, in addition to. pos-
ible enemy attack.
* * *
In Denver, President Eisenhow-
‘nt, yesterday studied a Red Cross
f on flood relief.
.*E. “Roland Harriman, national |
ted Cross chairman, reported his
wganization already has raised
3,866,000 in flood relief funds, The
oal is eight, million dollars. as *
The Red Cross announced in
‘ew York that its latest survey
eSCiiptions
At Simms the ONLY | not burrow into the skin, as some — | _ ~ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, “AUGU
showed 35,661 families in the six-
state flood area had suffered’
material, losses. It said 13,480
families Nhave__ indicated they'll
register for Red Ctpss” rehabilita-
tion assistance.
Chigger When Adult
Won't Feed on Man
ST, LOUIS — Chiggers are the
young of a mite, A chigger does Canal Zone ‘Time Bird,’
Rufous Motmot, Is Rare ™
PANAMA ciry—A weird little
“time bird’ lives. in “the forest
depths of Batro Colorado Island,
the Smithsonian Institution's jungle
wildlife preserve in the Canal Zone.
The bird, the rufous motmot,
dwings its elongated tail regularly
from side to side with an almost
precise interval per swing of a
little more than one second.
www a hi ia hin ia hie
r sets
VM @\
Vara
persons believe, but attaches itself
to the ‘skin at the base of a hair.
Probably the, only ill effect that
can result from a chigger bite is a
secondary infection from scratch-
ing the bite,
When the chigger reaches the
adult stage it is an eight-legged
mite and does not feed on man,
but on other arthropods and their
eggs. Contrary to common belief,
chiggers are moré. closely : as-
sociated with the ground than with
weeds and brush. They are active
both day and. night.
fhe Value
As pictured; -biack
frame with pink
or white figures,
Choice of 5
signs.
Japs Catch Cop Killer
OSAKA, Japan «P—A_ dapper
Japanese gunman today killed a
policeman and a taxicab driver
and seriously weunded another cop
in a& $13,000 bank robbery. He fled
on a moter ecooter. de-
ILLES sd BROTHERS 4 4
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@ Beets © Carrots LESS Than
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ee “a W
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w Super Bonded LEAD
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po “one |? Pencils “ Worth Sc EACH Cheese Slicer
Leaving Town for
LABOR DAY?
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and Tuesday
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WODATHROME SOLOR Fim
mm Movie Roll zs) $
é $3.65 value, Simms price
$4 iMovie Magazine $69
15 value, Simms price
16 mm Movie 106 ft. roll $
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35 mm—20 exposure
$3.25 value, Simms price
35 mm—36 exposure ‘3
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#28 Bantam size $
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m ln la i ll nh a Mt An i ti i Mi Nin Mi hn Ni hi Mi nl i hi tn Maal
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Ct ing. Save nearly 4c each and §
IMA BROTHERS buy as many as you want @
while our supply lasts. :
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| and City Planning Commission in
preparing plans to qualify the area
Friday approved a $200,968 appro- | for rehabilitation federal aid under |
priation to-draft plans for cleaning | (he’ 1954_ Housing Act. Officials
up skid row in the near downtown said two-thirds of the planning cost
area. The money will be spent by | eventually could be regained from
the Detroit Housing Commission the federal government.
HALY PR CE —because the famous moker
cs bea this — OK Slum Clearance
DETROIT ~The City Council
Original $2.
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NEW LOW PRICE on Easy-to-Clean
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iS L M M Sam. 98 North Regular
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a ou nee for top efficiency in all make i, you need.
~~ Sizes 6 to Sizes
7 to l4 $989
Sizes 3 to 6x., $1.89
The cutest dresses weve seen
for teens and littie girs —
so you can afford several Priced
Cotten With Lace Trim
Girls’ Slips Save $1.21 on terry cloth seat e
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car seats against dust and dampness Value
wash and dry like @ towel Cheice of Fi
2 styles.
In White Colors Only
slips with ruffied bottom,
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lace trim, built-up
All sizes 2 to it
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'
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Full or Pleated Styles
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$ | 89
Simes 7 to 14..,.....- $2.89
‘Large selection of corauney. gad-
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plaids, plain or stripe patterns. Sizes
3 to 6X
Boys’ Plaid: Shirts
$ ] 69
Piannels in gsgorted patterns in-
cluded. Gueranteed in writing for
weer and washability. ‘King-Kole’
18 Years
Boys’ Popular.Coat Style.
School Sweater
$ I 97
Choice of 3 Colors
Warm 40% Wool sweaters in popu-
lar coat style. Long sleeves, but-
ton front. Taeal for chilly morning
16. $3.49
Value
ec wear. Gizes 8 to
Flannel Lined Poplin
Boys’ Jackets
$359
Choice of 4 Colors Sizes
Pg te 16
Water repellent, yet fully wash-
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’ Popular tan chino pants . Cottons and Broadcloths
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Plain or Petterned Styles
Great select{an “of tailored or frilly
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$998
Genuine ‘Play-Welt’ Quality
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Assorted Colors and Stripes
Boys’ Socks
5 pair 2 All Sizes 6 to 1042
socks im assorted blazer
Nylon_reinforced toe and
heel for jong “Wearing
Sanforized—Zipper Fly
Boys’ Chino Pants
$979
for everyday schoo! wear. Pull cut
and well made. , Large pockets. Sizes
6 to 18 *
Popular Splash Colors
Corduroy Pants
= 3°
ty, ed “curted bottoms.
Reins 3 harecal, ive oF brown. Sizes
6 to l4
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Children's Anklet Sox
3 pair *2 Famous ‘Buster Brown'-or ‘Humpty
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Dumpty’ braids. All sizes 6 to 11,
Bolid color er pattern tops.
- Choice of Several Materials ° ® ® é
Girls’ Panties : Girls’ Jumpers
Sizes 2 to ¢c Sizes § 89
12 Years 3 to 6x
4 Panties for... .... $1.00 Sizes 7 to 14........, $2.89
Fine rayon jersey, run-proof, Quick Assorted colors in citduroy, flan-
drying full elastic waistband. nels, checks and pottens. Newest
Needs no ironing, just @ry out
styles for back to sehool wear
Genuine Endicott-Johnson
Boys’ Oxfords
$998
Genuine ‘Play-Welt’ Quality
© Tough durable
© Endicott-Johnsen, composition soles, r Sizes
8% to}
se «6oxfords, by
ther uppers,
ubber heels,
Popular Spread Collars 2
Boys’ Dress Shirts
§ ) | 89
White or Pink Colors
Sanforized dress shirts with spread
collars, regular cuffs. Choice ‘of
white or pink colors, Sizes
8 to 16
td = Yip
Gaucho Knits—Long Sleeve
- Boys’ Sport Shirts
97 Regular $1.89 Vatue
@ Pine combed yarn in stripes and <4
patterns. Collars and eufts in don-
trasting colors. Save 02c. Sizes
6 to 16 ¥
PH PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST. 29, 1955 e
fay visit to the nation's capital.
While in Washington, Nancy left
‘ peach pie at the White House
Yor the President, and delivered °
lanother in person to Secretary of
Agriculture Ezra ‘Taft Benson,
: This _ morning the stately
~ beauty “appeared on Fran Har-
‘rte television “Home Show". In
. Detroit. Tonight she will be infre-
: Guced as Romeo's goodwill Am-
“bassador at the Motor City
: Speedway.
Early tomorrow morning — the
peach queen will appear on the
John ‘Merrifield television show at
6:4 a.m. in Detroit, and Toby
David, radio dise jockey, will be
her host on CKLW radio station at
® am. Her busy day continues | AN Res
radio program.
: Yo of her final appearances be-
fore the festival will be at Briggs |
Stadium in Detroit at 1 p.m. |
‘Wednesday.
She will reign over
at Romeo Sept. 35. Pe
Seer ee ——— |
CORRECTION Due to error, the loco
tions of two dealers
were transposed in Pon-
tiac advertisement ap-
pearing in the Press on
August 23 WALLED LAKE — All students
| will report for a full day of school |
| here -on- Sept. 8
Supt. Clifford Smart will
| 165 teachers
‘E| the system
greet
when they meet for
new high school at 9 a.m. on Sept.
6. Combined PTAs of the district
will be hosts to this annual event.
Brief meetings of the Walled
lake Michigan Education Assn.
and the School Employes Credit
Unions will take place after the
address to teachers; The balance
| ef Sept. 6 and 7, teachers will The locations are as
follows:
Lake Orion, Michigan
Keego se oh & Service,
3080 Orchard Lake Rd.
Keego Harbor, Michigan | buildings.
The school addition at Glengary
|will be ready at opening time,
not
i yantil — is completed in PEACH PIE FROM A MICHIGAN PEACH—Sec-
47 of them new to!
breakfast in the cafeteria of the |
meet with principals in their own |
while the one at Commerce- will |
Students of the Jatter will be |
informed where they are to attend |
-
& J. SMITH Cc. BRACE
a
Beare Sen ith Ti. n eral Ho me
138 West Lawrence Street
Pontiac, Michigan
Ambulance Service Phone FE 5-0738
Before you buy
any gas furnace, ‘BURNER OR BOILER...
Look for “hidden features” that mean
extra value. The exclusive Timken
Silent Automatic cross-over burger is
just one of the extras that assure years
of trouble-free, economical opera-
tion, Phone for facts today!
Establsihed 1910
A. ELBLING & SONS ' @ Sheet Metal Work * Rooling ® Healing * Air-Conditioning TaMnE
Aulernete
tetra Opening Date, Meetings October. The high school gym is |
expected to be finished in October
| also
Buses will run on approximately
the same schedule as last year.
jIt is expected that all cafeterias
| will be in operation, with the ex-
| ception of Twin Beach, which may
{not be completed
Students, grades seven through
12%, are expected to. purchase
books in advance of opening day.
Hookstores will be open in beth
junior and senior high buildings
from 9 a.m. to $3 p.m. now
| through Sept. 2. Those who have
credit slips should bring them
| when purchasing books. Books
for elementary school students
are furnished.
| New students who have not al-
ready enrolled are asked to do so
in advance of opening date. Princi-
pals are in «heir offices from 8:30
jam to 3:30 pm. daily
School days are scheduled as
|follows: senior high, 8 am. to
2:40 p.m; junior high, 9:20 a.m
to 4 p.m., and elementary, 8:45 |
am. to 3:10 p.m. Kindergarten
students will attend a half day,
according to the area in’ which
they live,
Romeo Board Opens
Pleasant Knoll Bids ROMEO — School Supt. T. C.
| Filppula was authorized to adver-
tize for bids on the rrr oe Knoll
School, by the Board of Education
at its recent meeting here. Bidding
will open Sept. 8.
Bids will also be accepted on |
‘three driveway plans for the South |
| Grade School site.
|
'Co. to install heating regulators
‘in the North Grade School was
| accepted. This contract will hinge
| upon acceptance of the bid for the
| plumbing phase of the work, from
/one of two local plumbing and
| heating concerns, upon approval of
|the majority of board members.
Maynard Vick was hired to con-
| struct a driveway and parking lot
‘a the Washington Grade School.
To Drive for Members.
FOUR TOWNS — The Ladies
Auxiliary here is planning a drive |
| for new members. The group will
F. 73 S. Parke St. Phone FE 4-1504
—«149 W. Huron
TODAY | ‘Pontiac’ s Largest.
AUTO WASH
| Monday & Friday .......8 AM—9 P.M.
| Tues., Wed.. Thurs. Sat. .8 AM.—6 P.M.
| kin. >.) SAR—2 PL
| reopen regular meetings after
| Sept. = : =
ACROSS FROM
FIRESTONE
During Our Ist Week
6 Libby-Owens
GLASSES |
with each car wash
BALLOONS FOR
. THE KIDS
WASH FE 2.1215
!
The bid of the Johnson Regulator }
{who . attended
She returned to Michigan Friday, and will reign over o & “a,
Walled Lake Schools Set S$. to Relieve *
Potato Surplus Announce Payment Plan |
for Excess Diverted
“From Regular Channels
WASHINGTON .—The Agricul-
| ture Department announced it will
make benefit payments for pota-
toes diverted from regular com-
mercial channels because of pros-
}pects of a big crop this year.
Secretary of Agriculture Benson
told a news conference the potato
industry “‘is in difficulty” because
a crop of 400 million bushels is in-
dicated this year, ‘‘That is more
than we normally consume,” Ben-
son said.
The surplus would be diverted
to manufacture of starch, live-
stock feed and flour, Benson sald,
Benefit payments for potatoes so
diverted would be 50 cents per
10) pounds up to Dec. 31, then
drop to 40 cents until March 31,
1966, and afterward to 30 cents
until June 30, 1956.
It probably will be Sept. 26 be-
|fore the plan can be put into
operation, he said, and the de-
partment will help out only in
States or areas where the “industry
develops and operates an approved
plan.”
The diversion program, he add-
ed, ‘‘will be an industry respon-
sibility."
Primary Schools
at Holly Busy
Enrolling Pupils
HOLLY—Grade school teachers
\in the Holly Area Schools are reg-
istering new pupils every day this
week between the hours of 9 and 4
o'clock. Children are requested to
register in the school nearest their
home.
With the roster of teachers com-
pleted, Supt. C. G. Coggins an-
nounces that the schools will open
on Sept. 8, with the exception of
kindergarten where the opening
date is Sept. 12.
Teachers will report for pre-
liminary work on Sept. 6. Pupils
the Holly Area
Schools the past year need not
register before the opening day of
school.
, Arrest Area Youths
|at Gang Fight Scene
Fourteen teenage youths armed
with everything from pocket knives
to wrenches, were held-today after
police broke up an impending gang
fight near Palmer Park in Detroit,
Booked for investigation of felo-
nious assault were Larry Soper, 17,
of Hazel Park; Lester Vineyard,
18, of Ferndale; Jerry Owens, 18,
of Clawson, and James Rohling,
17, of Highland Park.
The others were juveniles.
The arrests were made after
Highland Park authorities heard
the fight was to be staged in the
rear of a supermarket Saturday
night. The youths were rounded
up as Gay aspombled.
slate Benefit Dinner
RD -— The members of
and Lakeville Cemetery
auxiliaries will serve a dinner at
auxiliary hall, at noon W
Proceeds are to be used for cem-
etery upkeep, Driver 2 Girls Killed
in Romeo Crash ‘| Both Cars Demolished
Collision; Second
Unharmed
ROMEO — Two teenagers were
killed early fast night in a two-car
at the intersection of — in
,. 16, of East
Detroit, was killed instantly and
her er, Linda Troutman,
13, also of East Detroit, died en
route to St. Joseph Hospital, Mt.
Clemens.
They were passengers in a
ear driven by Robert 8. Mayer,
1%, of East Detroit,~ which col-
lided with another driven by
Vincent Umphrey, 26; of Romeo,
at the intersection.
Neither- driver was _ seriously
turt in the smashup, which de-
molished the two c: rs.
State police of Romeo covered
the accident. The drivers “were
scheduled to make statements to
the Macomb cy prosecutor to- with her appearance at the office | retary of Agriculture Ezra Benson got a feast for the White House especially for President Eisenhower. |
«of Mayor Albert E. Cobo i troit | eyes as well a sfor the palate when Romeo Peach }
at li a.m., and in the evening | | Queen Nancy Kovack of Flint presented him with a! the Romeo Festival Sept. 3
: > appear on the “Guest | | luse’ ious pie during her three-day visit te Washington last week. Miss Kovack also delivered a pie at the | day
County Deaths Mrs. Frank Carey
ROCHESTER — Service will be
held at 11 a.m. Wednesday from
William R. Potere Funeral Home,
Rochester, for Mrs. Frank (Adeline
K.) Carey, 67, of Rochester and
Charlotte. Burial will be in White
Gas Memorial Cemetery, Mrs.
Carey died early Sunday.
She is survived by her husband,
Frank; three sons, Wayne and
Omer of Charlotte, Emerson of
Rochester; four daughters, Mrs.
Ruth Mills of Lansing, Mrs. Mary
Argus of Pontiac, Mrs. Elizabeth
Kitchen and Mrs. Maxine Corne-
lius, both of Rochester: 23 grand-
children, and 5 great-grandchil-
dren.
Steve Yombik
UTICA Service for Steve
Yombik 34, of 39393 Marne Rd.,
Sterling Township, was heid this morning at the Schwarzkoft-Milli-
ken Funeral home and at St. Lawrence Catholic Church, here. Burial was to be in Mt. Olivet
Cemetery.
Mr. Yombik, who died Thursday,
is survived by his wife Beatrice;
his mother, Mrs. Mary Yombik of Warren; two sisters, Mrs. Emma VanPoelvoorde of Allenton and Mrs. Mary DeSutter of Fraser.
John A. Kochenderter
“Service for Johti A. Kochen-
derfer, 72, of Davisburg, will, be
Huntoon's Funeral Home, Pontiac, with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery, Mr. Kochenderter died
Saturday.
He is survived by three daugh-
Mason of Pontiac: a son, Donald Kochenderfer of Pontiac, eight grandchildren and three great-
grandchildren,
Mrs. M. R. Cooper
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. M. R. (Hazel)
Cooper, 53, of Union Lake road, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
from the Davis Graham Funeral
Home, Fenton. with burial in Hart-
land Cemetery. She died Saturday.
She leaves her husband, Marion;
one son, Leroy Moore of Hartland;
three daughters. Mrs. Marian
Brown of Detroit, Mrs. Joann
Bentler of Union Lake, Sandra at
home; one brother. Frank Van
Husen of Pontiac; one sister, Mrs.
Beatrice Bryant of Washington,
D.C.; and. seven grandchildren,
Odie W. Scott
UTICA — Service for landscape
gardener Odie W. Scott, 49, of 2836
Gravel Ridge Rd., Avon Township,
will be held at 1:30 p. m. today
from Schwarzkoff-Milliken Funeral
Home here, with burial in Rose-
land Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Scott
died Thursday.
He is survived by his wife and
two sons, David, at home, Neil of
Birmingham; two daughters, Mrs.
Shirley Hadden of Washington,
Carrol] at home; two brothers,
James ‘of Birmingham, John of
New Orleans, La., and two grand-
children.. :
Arvilla Maxine DeLaire
ROCHESTER, — Prayer service
was held this morning at William
R. Potere Funeral Home for Ar-
villa Maxine DeLaire, day-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
DeLaire. Burial was held in
Pigeon. She died yesterday mate
ing.
Surviving besides her parents
are two brothers, Donald and Rob-
ert, and one sister, Barbara, all
at home, and a grandfather, Thom-
as Pillsbury, of Owendale.
Mrs. Walter H. Sackett
MILFORD—Funéral service for
Mrs, Walter Hi (Gertrude M.)
Sackett, 71, of/501 Canal 8t., pe
be Tuesday ,at 1 p.m. from her
residence. Burial will be in Wood-
mere with the Rey.
Charles Rickey Sardo Sied Pb body is at the Richardson-Bird
Estete deal—Top 2 Qualified Salesmen Needed:
$2,000,000 Subdivision Now Under
Construction . + All Fine Homes.
Fine opportunity to. get into an excellent Real
Phone for Appointment — See Mr. Edward Beaupre
MULTI-LAKES REALTY
Ripe asta nee
held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday ffom.
ters; Mrs. Stanley Dc of
L’Anse, Mrs, John Ramba Ft. }
Lauderdale, Fia.. Mrs. Albert
After Season ‘WALLED LAKE — An éxperi-
ment in international understand-
ing ends today with the return’ of
30 “Michigan students, including
three from the Walled Lake area,
who have spent the summer as
guests of German families.
The trio, Bill Duckwitz, Mary
Roach and Shirley Wooden arrived
at Yew..York today after a flight
from Luxemburg via Icelandic Air-
lines. They are spending the day
sightseeing in New York, includ-
ing a tour of the United Nations
with the rest of their group.
Mr. and Mrs, William Duck-
wtiz of Westacres and Mr. and
Mré. Royal Weoden of Twin
Beach will meet their children at
Willow Run this evening. The
Dick Reaches of Pontiac Trail
drove te New Yerk to meet their
daughter, Mary.
June 18 the group parted com- |
pany in Hamburg to spend the
summer with their various hosts.
They were not together again until
last Monday when the Michigan
group met in Dusseldorf to entrain
for Paris and three days of sight-
seeing in the French capitol.
Bill spent the summer in Peine,
near Hanover in the British zone.
He enjoyed many side trips in-
cluding one to Cologne, Benn, a
steamer trip on the Rhine, visits
to many towns in the Hanover-
Brunswick area as guests of the
German Rotary club, and one to
Frankfort where his host was par-
ticipating in races with his athletic
team.
His letters tell of the excep-
tional friendliness of the boys
and giris and the efforts of his
hests to make him happy.
Mary's hosts were a Darmstadt
businessman, his wife and son.
She visited the Black Forest, towns
in the American gone, and also
was able to get to Berlin. Her let-
neral Home. Mrs. Sackett died at
her home Saturday.
Surviving, besides her husband,
are a son and daughter, Noble J.
Seranton of St. Petersburg, Fia.,
and Mrs. George Eberly of Mil.
ford, and three grandchildren.
Mrs. Vietor Althouse
OXFORD — Funeral service for Mrs. Victor. (Lottie M.) Althouse, 85, of 3175 Noble Rd., will be Tues- <= 2 p.m. from the Bossardet-
Madley Funeral Home, with burial in Lakeville Cemetery. She died
at her reside Sunday.
Surviving are a son and daugh- ter, Andrew of Royal Oak, Mrs. Ella Marks of Mont Pleasant, 6 grandchildren and 6 great-grand-
children.
Mrs. Tica Booth Heads
MOMS at Pontiac Lake
PONTIAC LAKE — ty s
America, Unit No.
Other officers chosen are Mrs,
Earle Dwyer, vice president; Mrs.
Lorena Ong, secretary; Mrs Steve
Alexander,‘ treasurer; Mrs. Mi-
chael Palazzolo, chaplain, and
Mrs. John Cronan, histortan.
Next meeting is scheduled to be
held Sept. 9, at noon, at the home
of Mrs. Margaret Carnes, 7337
Union Lake Road. Members are
asked to bring own table service
and a dish to pass.
Almont Boy to Marry
Girl From Harrisville
ALMONT — Mr. and Mrs, Carl
Steadman of Harrisville are an-
daughter, Dorothy, to W. Eugene
Lane, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Area Students Returning
nouncing the engagement of their |
in Germany. ters also reflect the enthusiastig/
reception she received,
Shirley was the guest of two
women social workers in Lubeck
in far northern Germany, Three
others of the Michigan group were
also in Lubeck and they did con-
siderable-sightseeing in the area.4
One of the highlights of her sum-
aa was a three-day trip to Den-
Shirley was impressed by the
appearance of prosperity and the
cleanliness of the people and the
oa ange
program, named “Youth for
elle em by the Michigan
Council of Churches was the first
of its kind. In previous years the
council has placed German stu-
dents in Michigan homes for their
senior year. The German parents
their friends proposed the Install Auxiliary Officers
for ‘56 in Joint Ceremony
NORTH BRANCH — American
Legion Auxiliary Post No, 457
recently installed its new officers,
headed by Mrs. Jean Lamiman, in
a joint installatién ceremony with
units of Imlay City, Almont and
Lapeer,
Other North Branch officers
pwere Mrs, Theresa Daiduck, first
vice president; Mrs. Jo-Bohnsack,
2nd vice president; Mrs. Eliza-
beth Westen, secretary; Mrs.
Leota Kreger, recording secretary;
Mrs, Rita Wright, treasurer, and
Mrs. Jean Thompson, chaplain.
‘Squares’ Plan Meeting
FOUR TOWNS The Four
Towns Squares will meet at 8:15
p.m. Friday at the: home of Mr.
and Mrs, Lloyd Taylor, 7835 Lock-
lin, for a wienie roast and swim-
ming party. _
summer for Michigan stactents to
show their gratitude. Mrs, Cecil
hostess, Ries will be co-
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“ the coconut, Stripe the cupcakes THE PONTIAC PRESS. ‘MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1955
Announce Mr. and Mrs. Frederick B.
Darden of Adams road announced
the engagement of their daugher,
Elaine,—te Lawrence D. Heitsch
Sunday during a party at ‘Dar-
danelles."
* * a
The prospective bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D.
Heitsch of West Iroquois road.
As the guests arrived for cock-
tails, telegrams were presented to
the couple's friends revealing the
news.
Green and white flowers dec-
orated the home, and a heart-
shaped arrangement of smilax
centered with a colored photo of
Now You Can
Make Edible
Crockett Hat
Here's how to maké an edible
coonskin cap for the young Davy |
Crocketts in your life.
* * *
The idea came from the home-
making department of a shorten-
ing factory at Sherman, Tex., just
a short Way from the town of
Honey Grove, where the “king of
the wild frontier’’ is supposed to
have killed his last bear on the
way to the Alamo.
Start with a two-layer cake (the
cap itself):and six cup cakes (the
tail.) Cut a half-inch slice from
the side of each cup cake and
place them in a curved row, cut
side down, alongside the layers.
‘Ice all with chocolate frost-
ing, and..gover the sides of the
layers with toasted coconut and
make stripes across the top with t
crosswise with coconut.
To toast coconut, place it in a
thin layer on a baking sheet in a
moderate oven (350 degrees) for
15 or 20 minutes.
A few plastic Indians and horses
around the cake add to the frontier
atmosphere.
Late-day dresses. this autumn
are simple in cut but elegant of |
fabric, Necklines are higher, shoul- |
ders are covered.
SCHOOL CLOTHES
WASHABLE RAYON
. OR CORDUROY
Dresses Plains — Stri
Pigured — Plaids
Permanent Pleats
scoaee 1 49
USE OUR LAYAWAY
Coat Sets—Snow Suits
end Jockets
Book Sale 10,000 BOOKS Including
Fiction-Non Fiction || 2:
Juvenile
| Values to $500}
Old Prof so as to create a lapse between
its application, removal and your
makeup. the couple was used in the draw-
ing room where “Trixie” and
Larry received their guests, -
The bride-elect wore a_ beige
dress of brocaded satin in leaf
design. The fitted bodice of the
|win W. Newman exchanged nup-
tial vows Saturday evening at Cen-
tral Methodist Church. The Rev.
J. W. Mulder performed the 7
ceremony.
* * *
The bride is the daughter of Mr
Lake avenue anti the bridegroom |
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Newman of Miami road.
New Depilatories
Melt Facial
Hair Troubles
Hair on‘*the face is a source of
embarrassment to any woman.
Even fine down around the lips
can ruin a perfect makeup. And,
of course,
feriority complex.
* * *
One psychiatrist points out that
a large percentage of his patients
are frustrated by facial defects,
particularly skin blemishes and
hair.
Until the. advent of new facial
hair removers, any woman with a
heavy down on her face lived in
the shadow of her beauty. Heavy
makeup couldn't conceal it, the
razor only threatened with a stub-
bly regrowth and the average de-
pilatory wasn't considered safe
to use on the face..
Seme women laboriously re-
moved each hair with tweezers.
Mishaps frequently occurted as
the result of tampering with
this hair.
New hair removers deter fuzz
around lips as well as rémove
real hair growth. They may be
used as part of the regular home
beauty routine.
One new odorless white cream
contains lanolin, a carefully-con-
tfolled formula that is completely.
effective and kind to the skin.
» Just put it on and zip the cream
‘oft with a cloth, removing the
hair with it. It shouldn't leave
a burning or tingling sensation.
* * *
It is better to do a job of this
sort before bedtime, so that in
the morning after a good smooth
creaming of the face, foundation
and powder may be applied im-
mediately.
This doesn't mean, however,
that if hairs reappear and are
noticed before an evening date, 4
But use it as soon as eons
io
In Detroit Hospital
Vaughn Kay Mériarty, son of == ily following the ceremony in the |
| parlors of the church.
* s
Mr. and Mrs, Calvin J. Moriarty
of Keego Harbor, is recuperating
at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit,
after recent surgery. _ Book Store
9 W. Lawrence St.
ie
———
oft READY FOR Ack 0 scnoot ae a smart new ,.
t In the presence of the immediate |
families, Betty Harnack and Er- |
3 |
j and Mrs. L. W. Schoof of Orchard |
For her wedding the bride chose |
Helpful Hints it may cause an in-|
Washing Dishes dress fared into a bouffant skirt.
At her shoulder was pinned a cor-
sage of pink: cymbidium orchids.
KINGSWOOD GRADUATE
Following her graduation from
Kingswood School Cranbrook,
'*
.
ELAINE DARDEN
Pair Speaks Nuptial Vows a blush pink princess Siyle gown |
of crystallette
j of crystallette and carried a white
| orchid.
Her only attendant, LaVerle
Upcott wore a mist green nyten
chiffon gown and carried an or-
chid.
Serving his brother as best _man
was Wesley Newman and seating
| the guests. were Ward Newman Jr.
' and Lyle Saum
A reception was held immediate-
*
For her honeymoon in northern
Michigan, the new Mrs.
The couple will make their home ,
in Pontiac
to Save Time
CARBONDALE, fil. (INS) — A
home economist at Southern Illi-
nois University claims the average
housewife spends six and one-half
years of her life washing dishes.
“In today's fast-paced economy,
that's a lot of wasted time” ac-
cording to Mrs. Agnes Ridley. who:
has worked out a system to whit-
tie dishwashing time down and
‘still’ do a first-rate job."
Mrs. Ridley recommends clear-
ing the table by stacking dishes on
4 tray in groups so they can be
transported to the extreme right
sink, rinsed, and placed in
ing order. Silver is placed in
a glass of warm water to remove
food particles,
Too much suds results in a
search for dishes and too little +
makes cloudy dishes, says Mrs.
Ridley.
Glasses should be washed first.
The left hand holds the glass while
the right grasps a brush and
washes with circular motions.
Coming Events The Mother Allen Prayer Band will | ally with easy,
| where the Elaine Darden’ s Betrothal Trixie attended Centenary Junior
College ‘and is presently in her
senior year at Michigan State
University. She is a member of
Sigma Gamma Association,
Larry is also a senior at Michi-
gan State University and is presi-
dent of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity.
* *« *
The wedding is being planned
+for June, following the couple's
graduation.
Suit Fashions
Feature Slim,
Long Lines
“NEW YORK (NEA)—The longer
suit jacket makes fashion news this
fall, It's really a long jacket,
sometimes tunic length and usu-
fitted lines.
It’s sometimes difficult to tell
suit ends and the en-
semble begins, Many designers are
doing jackets, skirt and blouse in
related colors that might be termed
‘year for late day wear, “ensemble’’ but might also be
termed “suit.”
Easy lines mean that even the
unfitted suit curves softly to the
bedy contour, Pockets, placed
low, emphasize the long-torse
look,
The A-line suit with long jacket,
| the long line tunic and the cutaway
are three new suit versions for fall.
And all three have one common
denominator: the longer jatket,
whether curved to the body or
j not. But there are no exaggerated |
curves.
LONG LINES
Long line suits are shown this
too, : in
satin or textured wools collared
in mink or ermine.
with a pink lace |
| bodice. She wore a matching cap | color and elegant in quality, And
Newman |
was wearing a pink cord suit with |
which she wore white accessories. | The box jacket is back but it's
;a shaped jacket now. The straight,
| really boxy look of the past is
gone.
Tweeds are important, rich in
| tweed is given a soft, gentle han-
| dling in chiffon weights and in the
| heavier weights, too,
Greens, soft shades of rose, ele-
gant ‘black, blackened tones, blue
(particularly q darkened royal
| blue) and some gray are the
colors that repeat in sult show-
ings,
The skirt line all the way through
is generally a narrow one but some |
eased skirts are shown just as.
there are some shorter, fitted jack-
ets for the woman who feels that |
her strong point is a pretty waist-
line, Wall-to-wall
shrink if they haye not been pre-
| shrunk. It is wise to check the
|label before buying. cotton - tufted rugs | MRS,
for European While honeymooring for six
months in Europe Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Warrilow will visit rela-
tives in The Hague, Netherlands
and England.
* *
_ The bride is the former Tine
Charlotte DeWilde, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Andries C. DeWilde of
Pleasant Ridge. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William
J. Warrilow of Berkshire road.
First Methodist Church of Fern-
dale was the setting for the three
o'clock ceremony Sunday ,after-
noon, The Rev. John W. Parrish
read the service in the presence
of 175 guests.
The bridejs gown was fash-
loned of rose pointe lace set in
nylon tulle over nyton satin. Her
fingertip length veil of_sijk tulle
was secured by a lace Juliet cap.
She carried a cascade bouquet of
| white glametiias and roses cen-
tered with a white orchid.
Caroline DeWilde was her sis-
'ter’s maid of honor, With her
j lavender crystalline and nylon tulle
'dress, she wore a purple. velvet
headpiece and carried a cascade
bouquet of yellow glamellias.
Mrs. Jack Winfield, Kathryn
Nagel and Petra Kaphanke, the
bride's other attendants, wore
| yellow gowns fashioned like the
Their match-
honor attendant's.
meet at the home of Mrs. Pauline Pair-
‘ ‘ a 8. Paddock St., Tuesday at MARY ‘MARGRET WIESLER Mrs. Norbert
D. Wiesler
announced the
engagement
of her
daughter,
Mary
Margaret, to
Charles
Joseph ‘Faltz,
son of
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Faltz
of Rochester,
N. Y., at a
dinner party
at Bloomfield
Hills Country
Club
Saturday. ~ }
, She was
at graduated
8 pr om Stevens
is a graduate
:0f Rochester
University, oe ae
And:
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Robert Warrilows Leave
e: College and he} Tine Charlotte
* DeWilde and
Robert W.
Warrilow
were married
: Sunday
afternoon at
First
Methodist
Church of
Ferndale. The
bride is the
daughter of
Mr. and Mrs.
Andries C.
DeWilde of
Pleasant
Ridge, and he
is the son of
Mr: and Mrs.
William J.
Warrilow of
East Berkshire
road,
Honeymoon ing headpieces were of purple
velvet and they carried cascade
quets of lavender glameliias.
William T. Hopf served as best
man and seating the guests were
David Warrilow, Kees DeWilde,
Robert Walker and William Alli,
A reception was held in the gar-
den of the bride's home following
the ceremony,
This gay “girl” apron is a won-
derful aide when conipany comes
— keeps you looking neat and
pretty! Easy to make of scraps!
Pattern 876: Gay ‘Cover Girl’!
Embroidery and applique trans-
fers, easy directions for making
this cute apron, 16 inches long.
Send 25 cents in coing for this
pattern—add 5 cents for each pat-
tern for first-class mailing. Send
Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea
Station, Néw York 11, N.Y. Print
plainly-pattern number, your name,
address and zone,
Polishing lengthens the life of
shoes and so doeg ng them
frequently, Rotate your shoes and
keep shoe trees in those you're
not wearing.
Interview
Check List
Suggested Faced with an interview with
a college admissions officer just
in town for the day, or a trip to
a nearby city for a job interview,
a tenager may be tempted to
chafe at this calender-run life.
It would be easy to be. self-|
possessed and beautiful if one
could pick the day, after arising
and seeing how one feels. But
the day is picked a long time in
advance, and whether one feels
miserable or pimply, it's still the
day.
Clothes, you remember, should
be picked and tald out in ad-
vance. But what else should one
earry?
A mental list of points you want
to bring up or questions you have
to ask is important,
much on mentals lists,
short notation on a clean card.
to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft | Where is nothing wrong with
saying; “‘I have a few things I
wanted to remember to ask you"
and whisking out the card. Don't
keep staring at:it. while your
questions are being answered by
the interviewer. ce
You'll probably need a pen,
se put that in your aaperrags
well-filled, If your pen tends to
be cranky, take a ball point,
Check over things you'll need.
Your driver's license, your social
security number, any high school
records that haven't been
mailed,
If you have any evidence you
want to take along, keep it mini-
mal. For some jobs, a resume Is
asked. Type it out on one sheet
of white paper.
If you have records, testl-
monials, articles in the school or
local paper you think” may bear
on the interview, take them folded
neatly in a notebook,
Don't drag out your heavy
artillery unless it's asked for or
you feel it fits in te the conver:
sation, If asked about extra-
curricular work, you may have
an oppertunity to show a review
of the school play or other mate-
rial,
And don't forget you're looking
over the job or school as much
as they're looking you over. Ask
Keep Traveling’
Equipment Handy
A smart mother keeps baby's
traveling equipment handy and in-
tact, to prevent last minute fluster,
His carry-all, “visiting” toys,
washcloth, bib, extra diapers, soap
~all should be kept together neatly
for unexpected outings. To keep
this paraphernalia clean and ready
for instant use, store things in
plastic bags.
Tie or a the bags and, for
jextra p jon, keep them sani-
tary with occasional mernt
water washings.
If you're not |
make a!
William K. Cowie
— 421 Years of Practical Experience!
378 Orchard Lk. Ave, FE 4-2867
‘EE p—3-TRANSISTOR
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A Staff of Expert Stylists y
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~ Haircuts $1.50 and $2.00 :
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FE 5.9257,
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: 2
Doe aa eNuh eRe a ® \ a ee a ah HE PONTIAC PRESS,
team of professional] E. B. Mc-
-— Inman and Smith posted
is of 34-33 over Tam's 35-36—
71 layout wpile the McElmury-
Funston duo shot 33-35—68.
Pro-Am tournament was origi-
nally scheduled for a 36-hole dis-
tance, but was cut to 18 by
decision of the tourney commit. Elmurry and Jim Funston by one | tee. Sunday's field started play
in heavy rain, which slowed ac-
tion considerably, and officials
felt that the 59-team entry could
not be adequately handled over
36 holes.
Inman, assistant pro to Horton
Smith-at DGC, pocketed $250 as
the winning professiona) and run-
ner-up McElmurry took home $200.
! ‘ ‘
Sam Snead’s
Golf Clinic Pavan, ; Watch your address and follow- |
through naturally, don't hurry on |
an uphill lie hiliside shot.
The easiest of the various types
of hilside shots is the one from |
an uphill lie. It should offer you
0° Physical or psychological sty-
mies.
. Take your normal stance with | :
the ball in about the same position
with respect to your feet as you
would play it with the same club—
whether it be a wood or an iron—
on a level lie,
But bend your left knee some-
what mere than usual in order to
keep your shoulders and hips
level and ig the same relative
position as they would be if you | with husky 12-year-old Garry Lee,
were standing on flat ground. Township, came out 2nd best,
All you have to do then is take a | son of Mr. and Mrs. Verlin Lee, BiG FISH, HUSKY ANGLER
to stay down and follow through. | pounder.
Don’t hurry the shot as is often the |
tendency when in an abnormal po-
sition. Five Crowns for U-M
If the slope is sreesanced the | .
chances are you will get a muc h | ANN ARBOR
higher shot than usual It's a | Mic higan athletic teams during |
idea to use a somewhat | 1954-55 won five championships,
straighter-faced club than you or- | including an NCAA hockey crown, dinarily would to. miriimize the loft | Bie 7 titles ln indoor and
and compensate for the decreased | and Big tee Ulles in
distance.
(Copyright 1955, dohn F_ Dille Co.) nis
Littler Wins Canada, Test
With Sensational Finish
MONTREAL —A routine par would keep the sudden-death play
he Gene Littler, 25-year-old Cal- going, was short a foot. He walked
jfornian, snuffed—out Vancouver's | Ver and shook hands with Littler
Stan Leonard in a sensational =e ee: University of
outdoor track, wrestling and ten-
*
lat Pontiac
Pentiae Press Photo
A smallmouth bass that tangled
Scotch school pupil, West Bloomfield
as the photograph above proves. Garry,
4892 Mapleview was casting with a
normal, natural/swing, being sure’ | plug near the shoreline of Cass lake when he boated the 18-inch, 3-
Kelly Wins 50- lap
Title Race at M59
Rusty Kétly won the 50-lap club.
championship race Saturday night
Speedway in the time
of 17:13. Kelly wag chased across
the finish line by Chuck =
and Chuck Powers.
Ross Heichel captured the semi
feature, with Harry Saltzman and
Jack Harvey taking 2nd and 3rd
places respectively,
Carm Regatz raced to victory in
the pursuit and popular Mickey
Katlin won the dash. Heat win-
ners were Milt Salisbury, Jerry
, | Laffner, Bill Dillard, Ralph Pooley
‘and D. Zanoni.
extra-hole finish to win the $26,800 |
Montreal Open Golf Tournament
Leonard's bid yesterday fell
short because of a blooping chip
shot. Nine holes back, Littler holed.
out a 2%5-foot chip—“the shot that
really won for me"'—and the two
eventually went into sudden-de nattt?
play.
The pair had finished the 72- |
hole tournament tied with eight-
under-par 272s, galloping past |
Doug Ford, 33-year- old links vet- |
eran from Kiamesha Lake, N.Y.,
who started the final 18 with 203,
one stroke up on Littler and four
ahead of Leonard
Ford, who took over the lead
with a 68 Saturday soared to. a
last-round 72 and a third-place fin-
ish at 275 with a couple of old
pros—39-year-old Ed (Porky) Oli-
ver of Lemont, Tl, and Sam
Snead, 43-year-old West Virginian
from White Sulphur Springs.
On the first extra hole, both
players had good drives, Leonard |
ahead by 15 yards. Littler put his
second on the apron of the green.
Leonard hooked his second shot
und the ball was headed out of
bounds when it struck the fence
and bounced back to the side of
the green.
Stan chipped. It was his bloop-
er, the ball landing 10 feet in front
of him and still just short of the
green, Another. chip left him 7 feet
short of the cup
Littler, chipping from the apron,
sent his ball 8 feet past the cup
His putt was 5 inches short. Leo-
nard, rd, going for the par 5 that
TTT Pe
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al Smith Take State Pro-Am Title Remainder of the $1500 purse was
splitamong the next 15 pros, which
ineluded eight teams tied for-—ard
at 69 and seven tandems dead-
locked for 4th at 70, Seven teams
tied for 5th with par 71's to finish
out of the money.
Defending champion team of pro |
Al Watrous and Tom Sheehan did
not play in the best-all tourna-
ment. Watrous became il] Sunday,
forcing last year's winners at Bat-
tle Greek to withdraw from the
field, Watrous pnd Sheehan have _ MONDAY
Among the headliners at 69
were the Kocsis brothers, Al and
Sam, Jimmy and Glean John-
son, Bob Gajda and Blaine Ey-
non, Mike Dietz and Lee Diegle
and Pete Cooper ang Milt Elson.
Heading the 70 shooters wag the team of Walter Burkemo and
Riverama Meet
Honors Close
Club Activities | Williams Lake SWim Club con- |
cluded its most successful season |
jin history by giving a creditable |
performance in the Detroit River- |
ama Meet. —
Ed Kummert placed 2nd in both |
the 25-meter freestyle and 2%-|
meter backstroke. Mike Harring- |
ton placed 3rd in the 2- meter |
breaststroke, Ronald Sias - took |
3rd ‘in both the 50-nieter breast- |
stroke and 50-meter butterfly, and |
Gail Lapucki took 2nd in the 90- |
meter butterfly. |
Glenda Roberts Kathy Kantar-
ian, competing with swimmers
three to four years above their | M
age group, also did well im the
state AAU swimming champion-
ships. The two Williams Lake
girls swam the 50-meter freestyle.
Biggest pari-mutuel payoff at
Hialeah was not for win but for
plaee, Baal returned 484-1 for fin- |
ishing 2nd on Feb, 4, 1932. | nals Jal
UST 20,
AUG
Harvey Hubar. Serteensd — al
70, an admirable figure as ad-
verse weather conditions, to match
the best-ball total.
Also. shooting 70's. were Horton
Smith and Bob Babbish and John
Barnum and Harold Brink.
Bob Inman-Ben Smith 4-33—67
EB ‘Mc#imurry-Jim Funston 33-35—68
e Bone try Radom 33-16—49
Mike Diets- “—_ 44-3540
Leo Gonrey-Tom tat a! ta 4 ‘6a
“a. ocsis 34-3$-—-
Pete per-Milt Elson Fhe Bob Lag ene Eynon 35-3640
I 5-70 John Dalrymple-Jim Young 35-35—70
Laps? Tomasino-Tom McMahon 35-35—~
John Barnum-Hareold Brink 26 .35-~10
Dick Stranahan-Ray Palmer 34-35—ie
Horton Smith-Bob Babbish 35-35-10 |
Ray Malain-Lioyd Martz 37-34— nn
Joe Thacker-Art Rosenburg 36-35—
@John Orlick-Stan Kwasiborski Jr * n
Gene Walsh-Dick Wibel 36-35-91 Bilt Graham-Dick Loge nnty ag 36-35 a
Ener Prieskorn-Bill Nettle 34-16-
John Carsock-Joe Szalkowski 36- rian 1955 |
Records Tumble in in
Rifle Competition CAMP PERRY, Ohio, (P—Two |
into the third round of the high- |
power free rifle competition at the
National:Rifle Matches here today. |
Arthur C. Jackson of Brooklyn, |
N.Y., topped the field of 90 with a}
score of 764. His score of 383 in|
the kneeling 300-meter shoot yes-
terday broke his old national rec- |
of 387, set by August Westergaard
of Whiting, Iowa, ‘last year. His
total score of 758 puts him second. | Singe 1927, a tota) of 7,981, 573| games played in the University of
spec tators have attended the 163) | Michigan football nadie,
new record holders lead the way |f
ord of 378 set here last year. |
E. O. Franzen of Minneapolis yas i ence
shot a record 391 from the prone asy to-Settle With/ 2
position to break the old r-cord IT’S THE
FOR INSURANCE
FE 4-0588 BRUMMETT-LINCICOME, Inc. 367 East Pike Street
\Meads Third Guard :
| fo Lead Michigan
ANN ARBOR — Linemen have
led Michigan 4éotball teams dur-
ing all but one season in the past!
decade, Captain Ed Meads of Ox-
ford, a guard aiid this year’s lead-
er, is the 3rd guard to lead the >
Wolverines into action since 1946.
He succeeded Ted Cachey, last
|year's leader. Dominic Tomasi in
1948 was the ‘other guard captain.
The list includes also three tack
les, two ends and one quarter-
back. The jione backfield leader
since 1946 was Bill Putich in 1951.
t Thrilling Moment
DETROIT — A recovered fumble
and a 25-yard return for a touch-
down against the Chicago Cardi
is Detroit Lion guard Jim
Ricca’'s most thrilling play in four
years of pro football. He was play- +
ing for the Washington Redskins
‘at the time.
«
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INC. Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer
479 S. Woodward Ave.
* ——“Birmingham Midwest 6-1200
he SEB OG E60 Use &
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Sell-a-b
147 South Saginaw Street
t
pa es wie es Sara, 2 £22 2 |
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Alia cats: eorentiae
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1955°,
Corn, Soybeans
Failin Comeback CHICAGO Uf A forecast of
scattered showers in most of the
midwest prompted . some hasty
selling in corn and soybeans, the
two dry weather favorites, on the
Board of Trade today.
In active dealings these two
grains sank a couple of cents at
one time. They showed no im-
portant rallying capacity, Other
cereals followed the lead: of corn
and soybeans, heading downward
at a more leisurely pace.
Wheat near the end of the first,
hour was % to % lower, September |
$1.91%; corn 1% to 1% lower,
September $1.27; oats unchanged
to % lower, September 56%: rye
% to 1 gent lower, September 95%;
soybeans 142 to 2% lower, Septem-
ber $2.25 and lard unchanged to
20 cents a hundred pounds lower,
September $10.90,
Livestock ROIT LIVESTOC DETROIT go 29 (AP)—
1.200. Barrows and gilts fairly active
ebout steady with last Thuraday
* mixed US. No 1, 2 an
and gilts 180-240 lb 16.00
$0 fer 190-220 1} Hogs salable
sales 240-300 Ib
5-16.00; not established on sows.
pexfied Salable 3.100. Largely a siaugh-
ter: cattle run, includin, several loads
southere @rass steers heifers, about
25-3 r cent receipts cows; good to
erie ed steers opened steady to weak
mostly steady on weights under 1100
Ib; some interesis bidding lower: )ittle
action early on grass catile; cows fully
50 cents lower some bids offer more; no
early sales bulls; stockers and feeders
about steady; 19h 1081 ib
steers 24.75; most sales good to.
ae ‘oni sd ams pains 25, mostly
holce gr 19 head
high choice A ib fed heifers 32.00; early sales utility -cows 11.00.12 50
ers 18.00-
prime inaividwate 26
Sheep salable 600. undertone lower. nig chotce and
00, or above.
No early sales,
German Wildcat Strikes
End With No Pay Hike
FRANKFURT, Germany —
West Germany's big wildcat
strikes collapsed today.
Strikers at two shipyards in
Hamburg and at the huge Hensch-
el locomotive works in Kassel
went back to their jobs without
getting the immediate pay boosts |
they demanded.
However, new wage negotiations
for the locomotive workers got un-
der way as the 7,500 strikers began
returning. Pay talks for the 12,000 |
shipyard workers are scheduled to|
start tomorrow.
Three Britishers Killed
While Playing Cricket
LONDON ® — Three men died
yesterday in British amateur crick-
et matches up and down the coun-
try.
Kenneth Edwards, 31, was struck
on the head by a fast ball and
died on the way to the hospital.
Alexander Patterson, 50, dropped
dead on the pitch at Bristol. Wil-
liam Gillian, 26, collapsed and died
white fielding at Walington,
Business Notes Marvin C. Copenhaver, 596 W.
Huron St., graduated recently from
DeVry Technical Institute in Chi-
cago, after completing a home,
training program in Radio Main-
tenance and Television. An Army
veteran, Copenhaver is now em-.
ployed by the Pontiac Motor
Division. ,
News in Brief Female Help Wanted: 6 women
to take signatures, house to house
this Tuesday, Aug. 30th only. Hours, 10 a. m.%o 4 p. m. Pay is
$10 each. Apply Tuesday morning
in front of Pontiac Pottery,
8. Telegraph promptly at 9 a. m.
See Mr, Grant. (This work has no
connection with the Pontiac Pot-
tery, it is. merely the meeting
place.)
Floyd F. LaClair, 34, of 282
Russell St. was arrested on a
charge of disorderly fighting by
Pontiac Police yesterday in front
of the Russell residence.
Red Charge)Ends
| Amateur Boxing
Event in Austria
SALZBURG, Austria @ — A
Romanian, boxing team's entry in
an amateur contest here ended
suddenly over the weekend when
the visiting Communists charged
they were being threatened by
refugees.
* *
Fifteen boxers, seconds and
trainers, plus two officials of the
Romanian legatién in Austria, ar-
rived last Friday for bouts with
local Austrians Saturday night.
On Friday night, the Romanian /;
team spent an evening in an inn
with Romanian refugees ame * in
| Salzburg.
* *
Shortly before midnight, police
said, the Romanian diplomats
called police for protection, saying
the refuges were threatening the
boxers. Police supplied two officers
for the hotel. The following morn-
ing the diplomats said their team
wanted to leave. Police escorted
them to a Vienna-bound train, and
the match was canceled. In
Vienna, the team was reported on
its way back to Bucharest. Ya aE eee
Suspect Couple
in Murder Case Pair Arrested at Border
Alter Story Concerning
Death of Californian
KINGMAN, Ariz. (®—Property
which police say was stolen from
the home of a city official in Palm
Springs, Calif., today figured in
the questioning of a couple charged |
with his death.
Police Chief August G, Kettman
of Palm Springs said that Robert
Kenneth Miers, 30, a bakery em-
ploye from Baldwin Park, near Los
Angeles, and his 28-year-old wife
Elizabeth have changed their
- | Stories under questioning about the
;|death of Donald E. Graham, 60.
Graham, a building inspector,
setlip as
<'“Communist.. obstructions
“lers and was found dead Friday at his home
in the fashionable California re-
sort town. Deputy Coroner Robert
Drak said the victim had been
beaten severly on the head and
was soffocated by hig own blood.
The Miers couple, accompanied
by their four children, were ar-
|rested at a border checking sta-
tion near here Saturday night on
California murder warrants. They
waived: extradition and Kettman
said they woulg return to Palm
| Springs with him sometime today.
Sheriff Frank Porter of Mohave
County said Miers first told him
he punched Graham in the face
and wrestled with him because
| the widower made advances to
ward Mrs. Miers.
The victim was to have been | cotties w
married this week to Mrs. Marie | Deere
Everett, 47, formerly of Pittsburgh,
Pa., and Tucson, Ariz. She was
flying west from New York to | 2°
meet him when the body was
found. .
Wonfen’s and men’s clothing, a
watéh, a diamond ring, some books | Brie
of ‘green stamps" and a vacuum
cleaner were taken from Graham's | Pirestone
home, the chief said. Porter said
Miers earlier admitted taking $20
and $1 bills from Graham's wallet.
The man had $50.32 and his wife
$180.52 when they were arrested.
U.N. Agrees fo Cut
Korea Truce Teams
PANMUNJOM, Korea (®—The
United Nations Command agreed
today to a cut in the controversial
truce inspection teams in Korea.
The Communists agreed pre-
viously to the reductin.
* * *
Going even further, the UNC
asked an end to the inspection
the only solution to
and
frustrations.” -
* * * :
Violent demonstrations by South
Koreans opposing the presence of
3099 | the teams has resulted in injury
to 44 U.S. soldiers and more than
100 Koreans,
* * «©
Communist Czechs and Poles
make up half of each team. South
Korean officials have consistently.
accused them of being Red spies.
Moslem Terrorists Kill
12 in Indonesian Raid
JAKARTA, Indonesia #--Darul | .
Islam terrorists swept into two vil-
lages 120 miles southeast of Jakar-
ta Saturday night killing 12 villag-
burning 14 houses.
A military report said other
members of the fanatic M
Anthony-Van Doren
Wedding in Toledo
Stock Marke
Continues Rally NEW YORK w — The Stock
Market: continued its rally of last
week with higher prices and active
trading in early dealings today,
Most gains ran to about a point
and losses were in fractions with
a few exceptions to this pattern.
Steels continued their leadership
of last week and most major
divisions of the market showed an
uptrend.
Standard Oli of Indiana, fellow-
_ing the multi-million-dollar fire
at its Whiting, Ind., refinery over
the weekend, lest a point.
Opening blocks included Colora-
do Fuel & Iron up % at 31% on
6,500 shares, Westinghouse up %
at 67% on 1,500, Union Carbide up
1% at 106 on 2,500, New York
Central up % at 46% on 1,400 and
U.S. Steel up % at 56 on 7,500.
were up over a point. Republic
and Crucible Stee] also were gain-
ers.
* * *
- Reynolds Metals advanced over
5 points, Kennecott, American
Smelting and Phelps Dodge were
other gainers while Anaconda was
off slightly.
New York Stocks (Late Morning Quotations)
Admiral . .... 233.4 Int Paper” 107 6
Alr Reduction 345 Int Tel & Tel 28.3
Allied Chem ou 4 Isl Crk Coal .. 26.4
Allied Strs Jacobs ...... 10.2 Alis Chalmers mt Johns Man .,, 864
Pike) oe Jones at 494
ae elsey Hayes 32 6 Am Airline .. 242 Kennecott. 137.4 am Gee es ae Kimb Clk 82
Am Gas @ Bi 019 Ereee M3 mM & Fdy 272 Lor Glass 80.4 Am Motors .. 91 Lib aicN & L . 18 m N Gas . 665 Lig: & My .. 676
am Rad ....- 34-6 Lockh Airc... 44.6 4m Beatnig .. 33 eew's "31
4m Smelt - 364 Tone 8 m 618
‘Am Tel & Tel 1762 i Tob a4 6 Lortllard 21.5
Am Viscose .. 576 pore wks aa Lg
sues Os #23 way D str’.. 403 Anec W&C .. 624 870°C pf
aimee G co fe} Mec? Bt rmour o
Arms Ck a hl Midi - Pa <6
Atchison . ..140.7 Mpls wee kl Atl Cet Line .. 46.1 Monsan - « Atl Retin .... 36.1 Mont Ward .. 19.7 Aveo Mig .... 6.7 Motor Pd .... 46
Balt & Ohio . $15 Murrey Cp ... 307 Bendix Av ... 48.4 Nat Bise aA Benquet . ... 1.2 Mat Cash »”
Beth Stee! 196 (“Nat Dairy : by Boeing Air ., 63 Nat Gyps ..... & ‘
d sire ... 37.6 Net Lead .... 0% Borg Warner . 22.3 rhee rat Briggs Mig .. 223 WY Centra :
Bris My .... 305 . a sc a
Budd Co .... 04 Corl & Wem. S Burroughs . .. 29.4 <° Pa bd ’ $6
Cabemet & M. 16-1 Swat Airline a ih Campb Wy .. 38 he Can Dry ..... 162 5 On ai Ft
Cia Pas ..... 0 em ae Capital Alri .. 33 * 102
Carrier Cp... 814 * 92
Cater Trac .. 61.7 “4
Ches & Ohio . 624 42.5 Chrysler 46 "6
Cities Svi . 44 14
Climax Mo .. 682 0
Cluett Pea ,,.47.4 “45
Coca Cola 137 46.3
Colg im ., 546 46
Col Brd ‘A ... 263 a1
‘ol Cas ...... 3. . 76
Comw Ed . 47 : 0.6
Con Edis .... 61.3 -» 46
Con N Gas . 4.5 100.2
Consum 49.4 63.2
oo Ete 107 .. 32
Cont Bak 39 07
Cont Can . we . 13
mk Mot ,... OT . 1
Cont Oil - 6 eo 9.8
Corn Pd . 225 R - sc esee
rt r ™ «os. 3
conse a6 Rock seis
Dis Seeg "ane, 8 ae ty Seag .. ‘* see
Doug Aire .... 68.4° St Re va vee $ w Chem ... §7 Scovil S--- 3 Du Pont “'gas.4 Sead A RR....
Best Air L... 0.9 seers Reed... Bast Kok -. 9.6 simmons "ag
El Auto Lite . 44.4 Sinclair oC! a6
Ei & Mus . 34 ee y Mob... 60
Emer Rad 14 Sou Pec ...... 61 RR ..... 23.3 gperry Rand . 24
Ex-Cell-O +. 52) sogtd Brand .»
Pairb Mor .... b oil nuit. *
tees 4 Oll Ind... Pood Mach ,.. 55.6 br ro 134.
Free: ne or poy = Ot) Ohie., £
re . “ 8, :
Gen Bak . - 10 itud Pack .... 9
Gen Dynam .. 86.3 Sun Ol ...... 4
Gen Elec ..... 83 uther Pap..., 48
Gen Fads .. 624 ont fee
Gen Mill 1 The ae.
Gen Motors ..1274 Teams Co ...,. 102 Gen Tel ...... 43 ex G Bul..., z
Gen Tire ..... 87.1 Laoeay Ay 4 . Ps Gillette .....,. so.6 Timk : Goodrich 6a fram W Air 2
Goodyear ‘69.9 Transamer ..., 43 Grah 2 petite. 8 Ot Wo Ry..... o1.1 Eaterwoed.... 2%
Gs Won 8... HS Gant ale Lis... @ Greyhound ... 156 nit Aire “99
Galt Oil 83-4 Unit Pruit |... 56. Hayes Mf . 65 In Gas Cp : 3
Hersh Choc .. 45 1S Rubber,.., 45
Holland PF ..., 45 feel eeu. 56 Homestk .... 1443 US Tob....... 19
Hooker El .... NA Wi nD . 0.
Hooker Ei pf . 41.6 Warn B Pic.. 21
Indust Ray .. 83.7 West Un Tel . #
TH Cent ...... €2.4 Westg A Aa
Ing Rand . 66.4 te . 48.
Inland &t! . 7.2 Wihte Mot .. 11.
Inspir Cop ... 64.4 Wilson & Co . 63 ., 24 ‘00! » » 66 Inter!k Ir .. a
Int Bus Mh ..409 Yale & Fe a3 Int Herv ..... 38.6 Young S& . Int Nick ..... 06.6
STOCK AVE NEW YORK,’ oe, Aue. Compiled wy the
Associated Press. »-. 8 is
ae Rails Util Stocks
Prev. day ,..... 2448 133.1 74.1 1745
Week ago ..ee i. @ 132.2 «73.8 1713
Month ago .eoes 2415 1326 75.8 173.6
fang os gi mt Bh iat ‘ear : r
i ee ae . ‘
Ss 94 igh oc... 211.9 223 68.2 188.2
ast hie eo seeee ae ded 65.4 106.0
Creda Planning
Dealership Changes
DETROIT (INS) — 2 HibbeH i
ey
i ! Bethlehem Steel and Wheeling | ;
GREAT * True Life Adventures
WHITE HUNTER
CAMOUFLAGED FOR HIS GNOWY
USING HIS FRONT tows AG RUNNERS, H PUSHES HIMGGLE he 19S >
Wak Seles
World Righs,
yw WHITE EXCEPT FOR HIG NOSE,
THE POLAR BEAR is cuNNINoLy HUNTING GROUNR
OWARD THE PREY.... , as HE CAUTIOUSLY
Lag, ees
[B77] -°- THEN CLOGES SWIFTLY WITH A RUSH AND SLIVE.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. w—A news-
paper led to a reunion of a mother
and daughter separated for nearly
a quarter of a century and there
was no doubt of the kinship.
* * *
The story began early in the
depression when Mr, and Mrs. R.
A, Underwood of Nashville were
separated and Mrs. Underwood
was unable to support her daugh-
ters, Erlene, 11, and Pauline, 3.
In 1930 she placed tge children
in a children’s home in Memphis.
Later they were adopted and the
mother said Welfare Department
finding them when better times
came.
of Mrs, C. G. Truitt of Memphis
and lived with her until her mar-
ge in 186 to Arnold Eddins,
now a sergeant at Ft. Campbell,
Ky. : i * * *
In 1945, Pauline learned her
father’s name and former address
when she obtained - birth certifi-
cate. She evidently wrote to ' all
the Underwoeds in the Nashville
telephone directory in an effort
to locate them. e *
Finally she told her story to the
Nashville Tennéssan Saturday.
The Tennessean printed Mrs,
Eddin's picture with her three
children, Paulette, 8, Ginger, 6,
and Steven, 5, in its Sunday edi-
tion.
Her mother, now Mrs, Ethel
Underwood Covington, 48, saw the regulations prevented her from |
Pauline was placed in the cared picture and hardly needed to read
daughter and grandchildren. The
similarity to herself was obvious.
A telephone call to Ft. Campbell
resulted in the family reunion at
Mrs, Covington's farm home near
here yesterday afternoon.
” * *
Both are now hoping to find
sister Erlene, whom: they believe
to have been placed with a Chat-
tanooga couple in 1930.
Russia Takes Note
of Song Shortages
LONDON (INS)—There is a song
shortage in Russia.
This sad state of affairs was re-
vealed in the Soviet publication
“Literary Gazette"
arrived in London.
* * *
The Gazette said smartly dressed
young men are selling the words
of the latest movie hit tunes in the
streets of Moscow without paying
copyright =
* *
The meee said the blame for
this should not be placed on the
young n but with state music
Ppublisiing firms. *(e ©
Russian people love songs, the
Gazette added, but too few are
published so bright young fellows
with typewriters are able to earn
small fortunes at the expense of
the songwriters. the caption to know it was her |
which lately |
Newspaper Story Reunites|Report Aerial Clash
Mother and ‘Lost’ Daughter of Eqypt and Israel ‘
CAIRO, Egypt w — The first
aerial clash was reported today
in renewed fighting along the tense
Gaza Strip frontier between Egypt
and Israel where six were killed
yesterday
A reliable source in Israel-con-
trolled Jerusalem said the encoun-
ter between planes of the two coun-
Egyptian |
jets of the British Vampire type |
territory east
of Rafa, neax the juncture of the
Gaza Strip and the Sinai Penin- tries began when four
flew over Israeli
sula.
One
Israeli army spokesman in Jeru-
salem reported tnly that Egyptian
planes which penetrated over Is-
territory had been driven raeli
batk.to their own area.
Tourists Watch Suicide
Jump at Niagara Falls
NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.
Robert H.
a hospital.
Police said Persons jumped a
just above Prospect
Point. Tourists were too far away guard rail
to stop him-
His body was identified by rela-
He lived in East Aurora, tives.
N. Y. . Egyptian plane was hit
by gunfire from two pursuing Is-
raeli planes, this source said. An
a
Persons, 58, last night
leaped into the Niagara River and
was swept over the American Falls |
as dozens of tourists watched. Five
hours later he was seen crawling
on a ledge 35 feet below the falls. !
He was rescued but died later in s Hobby
of Ferde Grofe Noted Composer Also
Spends Day Off With
Tyne Collection
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (INS)—
Ferde Grofe, a musician with a
working knowledge of every as-
pect of his trade, has a hobby that
takes up where his working day
leaves off.
Naturally, the hobby has to do
with music.
* o *
For the past 47 years Grofe has
been collecting sheet music. At
last count, he had assembled near-
ly four and one-half tons of paper
with manic writing on it.
* * »®
The collection, probably the larg-
est in the world, is neatly cata-
logued in: special cabinets in his
Santa Monica home and Grofe
places its worth beyond the price
of money.
Included among the musical.
| treasures are more than 200 of
Grofe’'s own compesitions,, plus
many arrangements he has fash-
jened for such stars of the enter--
tainment world as Paul White-
man, Wayne King and Rudy
Vallee
A sure way to stir up memories
accumulated by the 61-year-old mu-
siclan is to turn him loose around
his collection.
* * *
With a certain piece of music in
his hand, Grofe might relate how
he once used the tune ti set the
mood. music for a silent Theda Ba-
ra movie, or how he suddently_ was
meres to write a hit tune, which
maybe did't take more than 20
minutes.
E * * *
‘Formerly a pianist with White-
man's orchestra, Grofe turned |
strictly to composing in the early
1920s and has since turned out
such world - famous melodies as the
“Grand Canyon Suite" and “The
Gettysburg Address."
Israel's milk production in 1954
increased by 12 per cent over the
year before. Cows yielded about
340,000,000 pounds, and other ani-
mals, primarily sheep, gave 68,-
ROTICE OF 94p Buick, mstor No boat le to we held eh 1:30 p.m., 1956 at 142 N. Main Street, Walled Michigan.
BRANCH SALES
and SERVICE
0 Pontiac Bate Bank Bidg.
no
'NEISNER’S. Shee Repair Department
SEE
THE NEW
COCKROACHES One Full Year Guarantee
From Houses, Apartments, Gro-
cery Stores and Restaurants. Re-
main out only three hours. No
signs used
Rox Ex Company 1014 Pent. 64. FE 44-0008
a 4 Advertnement)
Zemo Great or
Dry Skin Itch? doctor's soothing ae
pom ptly relieves itch of
‘surface skin rashes, eczema, psori-
asis, Zemo stops scratching and so
aids faster healing. Buy Betra
000. 000 pounds. WE catonen: Zemo for stubborn cases.
MEN WANTED To Train for High Salery Positions in Electronics,
Redio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow
You to Remain Fully Employed While Trainina.
Bias Capes oo Cas te Compione wo 2- 5661
ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE :°
ITT eee
2487 Woedward (Deneven Bidg.)
Blecks North of Fox —
i oT nensaceh.
Phene. seeeee eee ewer os
vestors over
appraised valuation,
with your bonus (or discount)
person buying
- history. le
of these sound contracts,
liars .worth of
Opportunity. ‘ e about the most sound investment.
SSorain outside investment money. LAND CONTRACT
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY 6% land contracts on Flint Area Property During the next six
$400,900 worth of 6% land contracts on new,
each contract is $6,100 payable at $61.00 per month. These homes have a bank mortgage appraisal
value, established by a licensed. appraiser, of $5,250.00. The cost of the contract to you is $4,-
880.00, $1,220.09 (bonus to you) less than the contract balance, and $370.00 less than the
When this contract is paid in full it will have earned $2,379.00 in interest.
, means that your original investment of $4,880.00
earned a total of $3,599.00 — a nearly unbelievable increase in capital of about 74% —an overall
return of $8,479.00. Where can this be equaled? of $1,220.00.
Any person or company buying one of these contracts will be furnished the following items;
1. A credit report from the Retailers’ Credit Bureau on the
the home.
2. An up-to-date abstract of title showing clear title and tax
3. A warranty deed and assignment of contract.
We recommend that you have your afiorney examine all papers.
If you have never purchased LAND CONTRACTS FOR INVESTMENTS before, we will gladly have an
agent call to answer your questions and explain the value and simplicity in obtaining one or more
at no obligation to you.
pressure sales talk, only an explanation of the facts.
If you have bought contracts before you will rec ognize ‘the fairness of the offer made here and
will no doubt agree that as this County, and especially the |Flint area, continues to develop, land
Partial proof of this statement is the millions of
land contracts purchased in Flint each year by people from all watks of life. How-
the: building in Flint has now become so tremendous that it is going to become necessary to
Therefore WE are now offering the people of Pontiac the above
$500,000 worth of these contracts sold by myself in Flint each year for the past several years.
WE BACK THESE CONTRACTS WITH OUR EXPERIENCE AND INTEGRITY months, #
rm homes.
Make an investigation; will have available to in-
The balance due on *
«
This amount, together
/
there will be no high
Attention, Attorneys and Brokers ~~ closing fe wil be paid to you
a pneees 2 content *
~MERYL sTODOAKD.. . ‘0a
Land Contract Broker
Member of the Flint Chamber of Commerce
end the Rotation" Coodit nber of Com 4231 E. Potter Rood Flint, Michigan PHONE CE 5-8058 Call Collect
¢ tomorrow.
Federal
161 W.
* etnies Branch
16 E. Lawrence St.
Her -husband saves for long-range
security at PONTIAC FEDERAL ...
and she saves at the same place for more
immediate needs and little luxuries «7
like this new TV set.
Make saving a family affair at your
house and see the habit pay off hand-
somely with dividends at our current
rate of 2% per annum! Get started
TO SAVE TIME—SAVE BY MAIL
Pontiac
* and Loan Association ~
Savings |
Huren
. x ™ ty igs Fa
THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1955
For Sale Houses 43)
Year round
ee lake. at
Drayton Plains
sad, ve
gant
a a walla,
fereed air off heat.
A real home for for appolmtment. ea
John K. Irwin Year Around Cottage
8. with £
with nice 5 rm, bungalow
lawn. Large corner lot front porch
plastered
q Lake Front =
Architect-designed sparkling
white Colonial; 3 extra large
bedrooms, 1% baths, den, reation roo 2 fire
places, full @ rootn spacious living room and
‘screened te: Magnifi-
cent site, perfect
sand beach. built,
| enera od Pine, Lar e
| Welles ace i eines at exactly $42,
beats Ze car erage, ‘Local
pee is S nigel cee 8 it today!
Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor Ev
STILL
NOTHING
DOWN
FOR GI's ?
$3
HE MACEDAY discon od L BUNGA
Just Attractive, ath By Bus
ii <7 A ata Realtor Oakland Ave. rE Co-pperative Real Estate Exc’
GI HOMES
bath and kitchen, Large lots.
pee Lae with $ per cent down. Con-
¢ equities in trade.
ge pte RD.
neat and downtown, $1.500 down, $66
S-o4al e
LOW $1,400 clear as pin. motes two bedroom
doors;
home
show for
room
jassed in
o0x130 ft. ing aber
shrubs
corn
bath down
mart fi
Attractive
alow with
ment, gas
paved Orr: BARGAIN $6.500
Owner leaving res California and will sacrifice this attractive 2
bedroom home with 12x20 living
y with carpeti: a
porch, ‘hew Harage
Very sitractive
Ideal layout with
Owner transferred to
oors, plastered walls,
street, joraly kitchen and bath:
that we are proud to
$8,350.
ceConn ieee
and
corner lot with spread-
trees, flowers and
SI x Re BEAUTIFUL ROOMS ZRN HOUSING
frame located on
a 2 car
room
and two bedrooms and
Beautiful basement
it tile floor, oll a.c
Denver,
IDE BUNGALOW
71% DOW
five room frame bun
stairway to oe oak
full it base: heat, fenced lot
Priced at 67, $25,
ELSON PARK
parace. oll
reation
ad
WE
DOR REALTORS
753
VACANT
one story
ment.
ST. MIKES
Six floors. parece walls.
for $6,500, bah nda eas: room
trade on two family.
SELL-WE TRADE
RIS & SON
Hur on”
get Ra Eaaae |
“a. GAYLORD WEST BURON STREET
me with three
iC. Whittemore street, three bedroom home. gas heat, oak
good value
asopable down bay.
rare beer in Net tligpor,
en car
310 . @areae. ‘rotal: orice 88.
DISTRCT
room one story home with a room & @
erences oa street. Williams and Nelecans lakes.
FULL BASEMENT 3 BEDROOM BRICK a fene
LA nice kitchen
ed vard. bioe i trem ehurch &
down pay
136 Co-operative car warage with
WRENCE W
GAYLORD FE 4-9584 E. Pike 8t.
Real Estate Exchange
Bateman F] x : . . ie netween bowee Indian Village Colonial
Oren DAILY 8 aS ee ” e n
DaE LT bon atte Wwe & Mis is one the most distin-
TO NORTH VILLAGE LM guished presentations of the
8. AND MODEL ROME aco | eqyeidrspanpppitrt io " se! wn
DRAYTON WOODS _ own © bedroom brick, com-
vere 2 dan atrective living |2 for 1 room with fl ¢, dining room, Four rooms and bath down
2 bedrooms and tiled poo! down. for Ge . rooms —_
room with pective pee
p ginny closets, hen with ribo geet oy no = is —
modern Comp that ton—no
Bares ee ren | Colonial onia
oo satan this ieee real] A genuine family bome coo bao home. Priced attractively ne got 20h — - Terms. ith wood ring firelace,
ELIZ. LAKB ATES fur dining room. remodeled
5 new ranch type tchen, 3 bedrooms and —— Veins and . ors . 2 garage. ce-
* with pic window ment drive, close to grade
new carved nylon carpeting, 2 and | high school. At ine bedrooms, pr peneeneas zi is quality with room, 2 car ga- ° tat fw suarenped for. ‘
$13,400, ‘Te St. Mike’s Area Dorothy Sa nyder Lavender| immaculate 5 room bunga- low with an ee
3140 Ww. Baron PE 24411 Ritenen nd enraes Fou i
say .
A Home of Your Own Only $9,000. This you should
WATKINS LA A stone's the water! | 3 Bedroom Brick , Very nice bedroom home with Located a ost of
ae pig son Gem seichen, heat. seaped jot. Convenient lake privi- Anderson windows through- iss Storm screens. out and modern price
$12,500, of, 814.500 is nother of tte
NORTH OF Near W aterford High one Se a down payment and a 8 i:
‘ ‘ame home about 200 tre usted” on eseclion, parcel Louise. IT'S VACANT. ost Verv at-
-| Realtors
modern
porches,
Bia
alm:
testre decor Polish
fons It's
> tg only $10,500
Kampsen
wi = » me aa oak olf
heap of "ivin’
with §$2.600
FE 4-0528
te" Bughange water heater, Eerie tds » | 377 8. Telezrah rative R pa ‘with #1.300 down gis0,| Co-operati ¢ Real Esta
ADAMS
4 bedroom home located near
school, near bus, eas heat, very.
: 2 ene tosed T
nae PREALTY co. PE 43393
ALUE garage }—
nd
ment, w
with
ene kon
GATEWAYS to
HAPPINESS;
EXCEPTIONAL
ft. liv with picture win- td 2 lovely bedrooms.
Utility room with new wesher
and dryer, attached gara
nd and outside grill.
Bis od $2.060 down.
IRST
CLARKSTON AREA FINISH AT A ihpoetbien
Ranch home 34x2
pal 4 rooms and bath. rooms: Lot is tox 298 Ottered at ee with $350 aon
YOUR CHANCE TO OWN YOUR
OWN Hi OME.
A SPECIAL HOME FOR A VERY SPECIAL SEEKER
Just 2 miles west of city. Brick
‘ranch type, 2 level 86x36 ft
Elaborate decorations, -and feel-
ing of spacioysness is bound to
impress you in this eutstanding One floor plan, consisting
of "hve large rooms with stairwa
oored attic, ample for
future rooms. Vestibule exirance
with Heatolater fireplace. Ca
bes dining room, attractive k “a
2 mammoth rooms, breeze-
wer finished in knotty pine. Tele- phone p plugs in ali rooms, Full
ve kg tea home designed arage This en
living. ba or comfort and eas
A
WITH Lake PRIVILEG
To Sell—To- To a
You BUY It ~ WE'LL INSURE IT
MAHAN REALTY CO., REAL
rative Real Estate pe
ae "th @ Sun, 10-4 Co-o)
post OFFICE
IZEN KON Established in 1916
INCOME - Over $285. per month in- come from this east suburban
property, 5 units now rented
Each has private septic unit.
This also modern
appointment only Call for de-
tails.
HOME OR BUSINESS East ae
on
fessional man’s clinic 2-car ea-
rage. Phone for additional in-
formation.
WEST SIDE. Two family, near State St. Brick income on com
ner lot, rms ath do
&rms, and bath wostairs
——— with stoker heat
down. $80 per month
ber nab at HOMES. structed your lot or ours
Rambling S-bedrm. 66 ft. brick |
ranch home that includes full basement and attached garage
$13,060.
See model brick home, Ideal for citv lots. Available in 2 or
3 bedrm., full basement. Open 1-4 and “68 by anvointment.
Other ol: Con-
ne droo im the office soon
side 2-bed: E WEST SUBURBAN | |
145 Oakland A E 5-0441
Co-operative | Real Estate Exchange
a | sh
b
Co-eperetive 5 "Real Evtate Exchange by. Hershberger,
aay
to Fisher Body—edsy terms.
JIM W RIG HT, Realtor
NEWLYWEDS SPECIAL
DOLL HOUSE
Sure a cute home! room bun-
alow, al] plastered walls, tile
ath, carpeted livin, auto-
matic heat. i floors, garage,
storms #& sereens. $7,150, terms.
BY APPOINTMENT
We can show you this mervelous
4% roo erm bungalow
Every room decorated in good
taste, 2 bedrooms. built-in bath,
~aak floors, full basement. O11!
heat. Lot 60 x 136. Complete
i Se a modern | in Cee All tn good repair Full
ry ei Price reduced to §7,
Joseph F. Reisz 83% W. on &t
Evenings
ANNE OFFERS
North Side—2 Lots ., ‘ rooms & bath sce
almost
large. ~ nee
state house
trailer in Lies $7230, low down paym
Silver Lake Area 4% room. unfinished second
West a Family 4 rooms & bath each with
line. Total price $8.00,
NEAR areroes 24 acre lot and . home, Full basement, oil Venetian
roo!
den tnd fruit. See it co perm: wee
ad W. Lawrence Ry
Next to the Consumers Power
NEW 3 BEDROOM A raat type bun w has full basement with au’ forced alr
ol] heat, auto hot water heafer,
saenaey trays, arise for elec.
were S aed a —
cedar sha ake ai je ™ Pulp price #10500 other extra:
plus lot. Not vaaak time
WARD ROAD 3 bedroom bungalow with nice
kitchen, has 1% car saree on
3° lots, full price $8,750 with
terms.
George R R. Irwin Bent Lrircied — aarti
Co-operative Real Estate Exchange
. Birmingham TRIP IN TIME to se
booed two bedroom _ brick vanen VE NINE =
sary trips elsewhere, te find }
privile has low taxes. ay ee nite
en with fireplace, “poss
two car garage for $10,900!
Benjamin and
Stephens, Inc. Midwest 43232 259 8. Shere
_, OPEN .
TOPS
FOR T
JOrdan 45726
| ean
Little explorers, ra and In-
dian signers. will ithe ee
reg in BEA VAN MANOR, And ney of thene
ence oe
three and four bedroom brick hom = yee
3 AND 4 B ~CARPORT
NEW CENTER
*. Per Month
Taxes
PM URNIGHED EXHIBIT HOME UARE LAKE RD. & IDDLEBELT ROAD
Northwood
sr FLOYD KENT,- A eae 5 ae fully
residential — area.
in-
terms.
Seminole Hills 7 Nera home in ideal loca- - . Features include vesti- 3 on second floor
in price of $16,000, |. 2 ; VAI Z=
= Cope, 1955 by MEA bervice, tae
“Hm!” a
wy
For Sale Houses _ 43 ‘For Sale Houses = 43
INDIANWOOD LAKE, LAKE CINDER BLOCK RANCH-TYPE, 5
Orion, large ranch me in re- rooms, bath, %% ‘acre. $6,950,
stricted subdiviston on janwood $2,000 Pies Ol 1-8263. Between
> early no a Llp __8:30-10:30 a.m. except Monday.
lates wother features. which bave A DANDY HOME
Sun or veveee eee! FOR SMALL FAMILY
, wu Wcities” Pith “tat athe . aterfo f eren BARGAIN lakes. Neat, clean and cory, auto-
790 down-—§ rooms and bath—oll ae ne ~~ —_ wa eee and
furnace—half acre — needs
Gecorating GIROUX we FRANKS e . rat ENERA. REAL ESTATE
$500 DOWN 400 Diss Hwy. OR 3-0701 New starter home-—located close | Open unti) @ Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.
For Sale Lake Prop. _M4
BI-LEVEL BRICK. CUSTOM BUILT
last year on Upper ie
By owner. 826.500 FE 1-9780 aft-
er 5 p.m
€a88 LAKE PRIVILEGES, 4 BED-
room modern, basement, garage,
~ BUSINESS BUSTS —
OWNER
SACRIFICE | Beautiful 3 bedroom contempo-
rary lake front year round home.
bociongg ve pany aoe fire-
| APPROX. $ $1,600 DOWN
te Pangus 1919. M15 Ph. Ortonville 132, collect.
Cass Lake Front Brick & frame home with
view of le
window, e.
Living room with fireplace.
dining room. screened ter-
race, 4 good sized
library 2
® s
& public schools Reasonabiv
priced at $36,500 with terms.
Sylvan Lake
3. bedrooms, living
with fireplace, dining L. breakfast modern
kitchen, all heat. 2 car «a- rage attached. a a any
way. Lot 150x175
l00yards from lake. 518.000
terms.
Roy Annett Inc. ALTORS FEderal 3-7193 23E of y Evenings ¢ and Sunday 14
LOTS CLOSE _—
Pontiac on Carpenter Lake, Small
down payment. ae terms, By
wv ILLIAMS
$8,060 with
if ROUND LAKE
3 L preter utility. vatage. 66's
365" lot with trees, fireplace, Dic.
Be ae mee. 810.300 with 82.500
wo. PAUL M. JONES, REAL ESTATE
$32_W. Huron Ph. FE_ 43506
~~ NICE BUILDING LOT.
FE 4-7207
ace,
nook & laveotry
garage, fenced rear yard.
Brick Ranch .
South Bloomfield ales time offered. Built in
Toom.. .
gs ben : 180," aleely nt garage oe
Brick Ranch Situated on bgp er
home aneled liv- ing room-den, 13025, natural
fireplace, a
no . arepeecs.
tiled Boer’ buses
$34.750, terms. basement
at door
Roy Annett Inc. EALTORS Bog oe ~ 3-7183
_Open Evenings junday 1-4
a
O'NE -y
% FE . Huro open. Evenin
car ee Lakes esirable ie, wage and Borg
baveest -- and Bi
Sylvan irteges on Here's an op
portunity- Priced from $975!
CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 503 Comments National Bank B
FE «4211 ves, FE Pat
ROUN : bath hereae. wxtre tot. LJ
e. Good br for eash.
R \
Eolirmod sooo tbs ett
Picnic sup-
¢ 231 Linden,
“TAR an MO! oe £235? -|
s"¢ ‘75
el 38
$6750. room home. $1600.00.
Glddings, 2895 Jackson, | Whi Laks, iiford, MUtual 42161 or
Sale eer Prop, 45A
SCHOOL DAYS
Move next week to this nice 3
older home with base- aoe Harry
ite
OWNERS MOVING
poe SUBURBAN - Mod-
room brick. Oak
floors, plastered ws walls, and ex-
ion attic for oy extra
pans bal oa apace.
160 Wot
the. full pe 50. Only 8 i pres om —_ $8,
WATKINS LAKE ~ auntie.
privileges,
matic hot water boo gt Mig y 4 are. Shade
pone g #10,
wianf reproduc:
ment tn Rochester, Gas heat and
garage, Living — and . dinin
room, carpeted. A good buy al
$13, 11b5 Jay St. off Cooley Lake Rd,
Nice 2 Sedreees with, bosons. breezeway gg —-
room is carpeted acre is fenc
A steal at § 12,
ANK SHEPARD OL 1-761" Rochester
For * Sale L Lots 46
ue aaa WITH FOUNDATION
m, Farmin . Contact Freo navder 3316 Lone Lake
2 LOTS OPE WALTON. WEST OF EEOPE oe Vast OF
. YOUR LIFE’S MADE
fied Ads. To solve every-
day — quickly, dial di
FE 2-88,” Senta meeeeciacan |
AP. C. Wood Co.|.
ot ‘only $1750 w:
= =O
BY OWNER: Téx2r. PONTIAC eo LK. __Vielnity. Call after 6. OR 304867,
Pai Bing ae | Me oe LAKE FRONT LOT
F MACEDAY LAKE vilege: sccens No. abce’ bene ach
house. “sod Sota
bp Williams Lake Rd. & by |
Oe afer 8 call OR 3-70
Realty RCHARD LAKE RD.
=—*s aT ae eos
ORION: Excellent bullding site, east edge
of town just off lnoshacter Orion
Rd. Overes size, 120x180, price,
$1650. ter MEAGHER REAL ESTATE
Oxford, Mich, OA 68-3122
What Is Your Wish?
We May Have It Lots and small acreage is rin C)
we will try “and get it
ai ae
-~INC e
4286 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Libr
OR 32341—Open Sunday
3406 Pontiac Lake Ra
Lapeer Rd or M24
PE 5-0291
For _Sale Acreage = 47 | —_—
: 3 “ACRES lovely 3 acre parcel about
Pon Size 150, neo
gardens soil. Lots of
trees and a live stream across the
back end of the Tih gan i rrwed A
miles from
ft. Good
ith $500
A €@ acre parcel in Brandon Twp. |
4202060. Lov a ‘and |
mesite in
oat fi road
too far o Priced Pv) only $2,500
with $500 down.
“0 ACRES Here is a lovely 10 acre parec]
rea!
ww ft of fron!
— ox Pe
= LADD'S INC. 4286 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains
OR 3-2341—Open Sundays
3406 = Lake Rd.
Lapeer Rd. or M4 |
FE 54-0201
6 FAL CR Es. "WEST SUBURBAN
3 a ACRES aw ALDON RD.
one o over paymes
PE +3340 43340 betw i
30 ) ROLLING NG ACRES |- $235
"
EASIER ‘through Classi- ‘ a =F For Sale Lots 46 For Sale Farms 48
BEAUTIFUL Bd IN CENTRAL POR FARMS: AND ACRE EAGE
'Y 3-3732. Call Rutledge OR 3-111) PE 40003
~~ 80 ACRES
v
by 10. silo 2 “by 33... room Large lakefront ™, in ing. hog | Poe
ea bee Hie Eh cement ck mee Wl PaNcUS 1919 MIS $1,800 with $20 , cus & » room simodern "hou oue rol PANGUS | Je Mt
cnet Full price, -}| Phone Orton _ collect
WILLIAMS LAKE SIDE OPPORTUNITY.
Nice quiet neighborhood with lake ‘FOR TRADE $2,500 to cash ze red.
privileges. on south side of lake | 125 acre term and machinery. puniee yearty poole, Shs pas
— $886 to 8088 with = ae 1 miles ‘from. Pon. Idea). for olfice clerks, achers,
a bares. silo’ Com cribs Chick en | factory workers or retirement p
e. Cattle shed, Private jake Business Opportunities 51 Ee aa eine
‘BUSINESS AND HOME Owner
on
main way. Grossing $100,000
year, is @ nice 2 bed-
room, lake front for relaxation
ent irs, Just enjoym: after how oa wae “fav ventory down for
ten scr timbe H giving factory your phone
adapted to “nenerd reuse ond widfens Sor appointment. No
any type of livestoc __ belli
we PRI TO SELL
Ses 7 Ot eres Seed PLUMBING BUSINESS busiest
"RIDGEWAY
7 4-6203 Co-operative win Estate Exchange
ACR: a ROOM aa
large
"2 ares 20.000 re ion: A all Hints of er —— apr 8
le a
ry brani | me
wimastet
lumber. Make niment an see details for Bos:
MICHIGAN BUSINESS
SALES CORPORATI PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. PE +1682
Sale Business: Property 49
TELEGRAPUH-BUSINESS FRONTAGE with
BUILDING
Located avproximatelvy ‘| mi south
of inters Telegraph and
Orchard Lake Rds The |
is of brick construction. 1,760»
ourchased
payments like
D the cooperation
ot "Real Estate Brokers
Office Oven a ennes Mon through
ri. 500 on Am contract,
We invi
GEORGE E
Markley, Inc. aple JOrdan 45800 |
1223, 460 W. M
Birmingham. Mich, ss Mi. 4
LOCATED ON MAIN AR-
and a
OMe. showing
y $37,500 with lavorable terms.
J.-A. Taylor’ LTOR - INSURANCE
+} 100 Sehiosa ave PE 42544
| Open Eves. _Free Parking
ZONED BUSINESS This 31x78 ft. 2story brick bidg.
har been built for a church. Has
modern 7 rms on top fir. with |
ground fir. -whlen
eat. On good vaved Pontiac
street. Can be used for store,
ehurch or clinic. $25,000 with
$8,000 down
FLOYD KENT, Realtor | w, Lawrenes, — FE 5-6106
__Next to the Consumers Power
Rent-Lease E Bus Prop 49A 49A
NT; TO BUSINESS OR
Large ‘ouse across
ew shovoving center In-
Chicken House 497
riigabeth Lk Rd. —— DIXIE HIGHWAY COR ER, %
mile north of Walton Blvd. Store
building 20x30. OR 3-0414
WEST HURON 8T.
Near branch post office. 2 units
18 x 22 ft
or 36x22 ft. at $
2 years lease available
—To Trade | you” Au yinewe: i INSURE IT
MAHAN
Clarkston area — good neighbor- Cooperative Rest’ Frtate, Decanee
ast off Dixie Hwy. Lovely 2 2-0263 Building tte os Lf e} ue 1075 W. HURON
i ’ DOOR TO BR.
GIROUX & FRANKS Post OFFICE on nas REAL ESTATE WORK SHOP FOR R -
eo Hwy. OR 3-701 ness Suotrict. RENT IN BUST |
a 8 Sun. 1 to $ p.m | any kind of busi PE 409602
‘ 5 ACRES Business Opportunities: 51 Good tocation Lapeer Rd.. north
bet tile Good Lash iss ft.
PONTIAC REALTY T31_Baldwin FE_ 54-8275
RIPE FOR
DEVELOPMENT
160 ACnEs on Baldwin Rd. in Brandon Township. Price, $35,000.
ACRES with lake pemees:
Los to go at $500 per
300 ACRES including «a private
—_ Near Clarkston. $1,000 per
re,
40 ee with 1 mile of lake
fronta, north of Pontiac, $600
per nere.
We Assist in All Phases
of Development
J. A. Taylor REALTOR - INSURANCE 100 Oakland Ave. FE 42544
Open_ Eves. Free Parking
PRIVATE OWNER, 3 lao 200
ft: frontage, On Sashabaw
_cash Call MA 5-0351, after 4: ae
LAKEFRONT - LC LOTS, 3. CLOSE”
Pontiac on Carpenter Lake, ‘Small
down payment. Easy terms. By
_owner. 4-90958.
___ For Sale Farms 48
SMALL FARM. = is a lovely 4 roo story
. Ona beautiful > 5 13 Leer!
wi 100 ACRE pier
Slese eter ‘ CONCRETE BLOCK MANUFAC- turing plant and building are
ie now in operation only pian’
@ growing area. For rebhanee tion call MY 2-66 -6611 Bun. of eves
FOR SALE CARPENTER SHOP
and planing mill Liberal terms
te suit buver. FE 5-328] or FE
DRY CLEANING AGENCY IN
elty. Ve Teasonable, nice for
cywnle. Meat pame address and
Pontiac Press
A SMALL RESTAU-
of Bay
City. seats 30. Real estate, ban ba
ment, 3 room house, bath, built
in cupboards included. Sickness
reason for selling. For er in-
formation write or see Fran
LaPan, Pinconning, LaPan's Grill.
HARDWARE & HOME Small hardware on Dixie Hwy.
in Drayton Plains. Corner loca-
Deriness: clean stock.
aS for core
oor con
a on Butiaings
beat this. Uiness tereet sale.
GIROU) & FRANKS oes REALESTATE 4305 Dixi
Open_un' tit 8 ~— Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.
PRINTING & RUBBER STAMP ine! » oresses, pa-
Son” iT ete Write
& FOUNTAIN EQUIPMENT
of two 6 aw red wetery cous
wall cases, bebe g section.
1 Sealtest-type soda fountain, back bar, 34’ linen Formica counter, -& 14 stools — : 1 6 Fishman Bobtail soda foun-
1 Bastian Blessing carbonator &
ot gauge. Ham Beach malted mixers.
——— salad & sandwich
1 Meins Soup kitchen with 2 hot
Inquire. aes Pearet SHOP Huron
FE 48163 FOR SALE:
=
Show
“BIRD” TO SEE
ay S SPECIALS.
BUSY yareee near growing
No food. Only $12,800 down.
MAIN RESTAURANT in Owner downtown mu
sell due to ieess. Best offer
takes all! .
A SUPER MARKET in
&
) WBE, (1400) WON, (1400) Will Be Popular
rontbut 000 WER, R. Clooney WPOm, |e ewe, ae oh 0:20 WIR, re. Poge : 4 w felephone Hour 6:30—W alce w ube ade |
“ua Bees te tect | SRS Some of Pema) Ga, Sp Merwe eu | New Shows to Include Wve. wart Mc CKLW. Top Gecret Piles | XYZ. News ion. Wot || CKLW, Toby Dalid
cuLw wonrtek. Kenmie WJBK, Mickéy Shorr, News| CKLW, Guy Nunn Ww Georg i a6 ‘
Wika pe od | .WPON News, zee, Orviie| WJBK, News, Binge, WcaR, Rhythm Roundup Answer, Cavalcade WCAR. as ~—_ McLe 0:38—WIR, Ames 'n’ Andy WCAR, Coffee with Clem WPON, WPON Goes Calling | . A
Tox he WWJ, Band of America WPON. Rise ‘n’ Shine \¢:00—WJR. Arthur Godtrey | World-Wide ‘Medic’
WXYZ, Freedom Sings 100—WJR, Jim Vinall wes McBride, Peale
6:00— WIR. Bob Reynolds CELW. Eddie Canter Show] ww) Bob Maxwell XYZ, My True Story WWJ, Ress Mulholland WJBK, Mickey Shorr WXYZ. Qsgood News, Woil cKLw News, Homechats |
WXYZ, Bil] Stern WPON, Zee and Orville CELW. Newa, Toby David WJBK, News, Tom George By CHARLES MERCER
CKLW, Eddie Chase 19:00—WIR Tenn WJBK, News, Gentile. WCAR, News NEW YORK w — As fall
iy d,s Sk WPON, Sports Siants CKLW News. VaénKuren 325 Gin Music Ba ad 00 we Arthur Bodtrey | proaches, the air is full of televi- |
7:00—WJR, Guest House WJBK, News, Mickey Shorr) ‘ww Bob Maxwell oa sion program plans
WWJ, Three Star Extra News WKY. d News, Welt] CAME senmrering merece |
Wave “elare ot Arver” [#5 WIR “Cue Orenestre | Gaim: Berne Obi | Woh, Tem’ Geert” |, Netti.” which has been show. CKLW, Fulton Lewis we, Binge. ing re-runs sum. ‘ s WIBK, News Mickey Shorr WXY2. Top of the Town | weak. Coffes with Clem | WOON usta party | : “ oe * News Ace A Seaktes a Leroy N, News, Rise ‘n’ Shine| < - nde new seaison bn NBC-TV Sept. 5 with
WPON, News, Don fee oe ae ee o00— WIR. dock White ' ows. ae Rice | @ dramatized story of a woman
wie Me eee Eo» pa 11:00 WIR. Josepd Hainiine | wxvz, Osgood News, Wolf ways Comoengen — teacher who suffers from
., ) CKLW, & Toby Di - elancholi
SEW Gaarelgeauer | | BEE Secs dort, | Sake: Bee Seolun™™ | SARE eee fam One | nce diecast the dcceve a ce a sefio . he we. ew ro WJBK, News, Mickey Shorr bt reg Psat WPON, News, Party | " or as ° ee digestive
WPON. Don Zee Oe et ee eee ae WIR Muste Hay 11:30—WJR, Make Up ming) act. Other medical problems min, eo ‘eat ne en ht Music Bob Maxwell ‘, WWJ, Phrase That Pays | “‘Medic’’ will dramatize in later 6:00— WI *, Seon belied hom damcedilg WxY?. News, Wolf| WXYZ, News, Winter Ne inel vii ww, Henry J. Taylor WXYZ. Tap of the Tewr cain Toby David CKLW Queen For a Day | Programs i ude sterility, meno-
WXva. Show Mere CKLW. Rockin with Leroy | wJBK. News, Binge. WJBK, Tom George | pause, plastic surgery, unethical CKLW. Sergeant Presten WIBK. News, Mickey Short) wCAaR. Coftee with Clem WCAR, Music tp the ade WJBK, News. Mickey Shorr} WPON. Cap. Gown Concert! WRON Rise ‘n’ Shi WPON, Pontiac Party | medieal practice, acne, leprosy, WPON, News, Don Zee ® “TUESDAY MORNING 9:00—WIR. William Sheehan | 1?-00—WJR, Jack White obesity. $:%--WJR Talent Scouts 6:00—WJK, Jim Vinal) WWJ, Minute Para WWJ. News by Cederberg |
Wxvz ae rwend x WXYZ, News Ace, Woif CRLW: fees Te eg pS vere i eee f %, John Vandereoo ‘XYZ, News Ace, We CEKLW, News, Toby Dav W, News, ree Suma | iw Ps
CKLW Broadway Cop CKLW, Jim Dunbar WJBK, News, Tom George] WJEK, News, Tom George For the first time the program
WJBK, Mickey Shorr WJBK, News, Gentile, WCAR, News Ace wean. News will be shot on location around the
WPON, Don Zee WCAR, TBA WPON. News, Magic Carpet! WPON, News | world -
Detroit Free
gram's hoped for audience appeal |
| American troops liberated Detroit
| The title of the opening show ap- |
which | WA eason | rograms -—
ee ee ee ee
Ue
HRS S “¢ ges
From British Eyewitness Reports of
Liberation Spark State
History Accounts
DETROIT, Sept. 29, 1813 wy —
today after more than a year of
British occupation. The citizens in
Detroit greeted the stars and
| stripes with great rejoicing.
* * *
Many who lined the streets wept.
The city had fallen to the British
Aug. 16, 1812. ‘Now, American
troops, under Gen. William Henry
er while the main body of Ameri
can forces pursued the British
across Canada
General Harrison himself con
tinued with Nis troops after the
| British. He apppointed Brig. Gen
Dunean MacArthur to take a de-
tachment into Detroit.
The American troops began
clean-up operations in the city
against marauding Indians who
were pillaging the town, Only
twe days ago, the British troops
‘burned the citadel and the fort,
leaving ently the barren earth-
works asa defense.
defeat of Britsh Naval Forces
| hind him, ordered American troops
to advance from their base at San-
dusky Bay. The English General,
Henry Procter, saw his position
was untenable with control of the
upper lakes gone and withdrew
from his western-Canadian bases
* a *
He is believed to be retreating
with the main British forces to-
or toward York.
The British abandoned Detroit
| herstburg after Perry's Lake Erie
Victory.
Real Coal Gifts
$ 88 PAY ONLY ‘9.00 Now 1.00 Weekly
Myve RS
First Record Broadcast
NEW YORK — In 1907 the first
record to be broadcast was trays-
mitted 12 miles. The following year
a recording of the “Anvil Chorus”
~p o
broadcast. United States Signal Corps
In 1999 ° Marguerite “Tl Trovatore” was broadcast | ployed
Mazarin sang an aria from ‘‘Car- men” in the first live musical
program, broadcast from New
York,
About 000 persons are -em-
in
ing establishments located in
¢
TEL-HURON SH
OPEN EVI
FRI. - SAT. G CENTER
RY
THURS. to 9 PLM
CGV TV
For Factory Authorized Service
Call FE 4-1515
993° Mt. Clemens
___TWp-OVEN . _ Bake end Greil at the Same Time!
Convenience, Flexibility, plus Big CAPACITY!
ed pal seeks haven in “The Re- | 6:50—(4) Todgy’s Farm Report. Colt. (4) Mr. Twinky Preseute. : utom ARLESTON P—Gov
turn of Johnny Burro.” (2) Ethel | 6:55—(2) Meditations. (2) The Early Show. * Meoaclots ore 1 use the begs to wilian rag ao pines new and Albert. Comedy with Peg}7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning | 5:30—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (4) dispose of chewing-gum and candy leduustvies for the state passes out
Lynch and. Alan Bunce. Show. Renfrew of the Mounted. _ | wrappers, cigarette . soft-|small gifts to industrialists
ACROSS” drink containers, and the like in-| They're cuff links manufactured 1 Young dog — 1 2 6 ub b 1 SELLING OR RENTING your) stead of spreading them along the | by inmates of the Federal Wom-
& Cougar aim? Classified ads are the time-| roads. Once filled, the waterproof | en’s Refromatory, centered with a
ie . Eleetrente- TY Service Association
STORE
HOURS
DOWNTOWN
STORE
Opee Mondoy
end Friday
‘it 9 PLM
TLL-HURON
STORE
Open Thurs.,
Fri. and Sot
‘ti 9 PLM. TONIGHT ‘til 9 P.M.
~ LAST 4 DAYS! - to buy these special
“WRIGLEY DAY” TICKETS
at the
Michigen
STATE FAIR
Friday
Opening Day is Wrigley Day
IN
PERSON _Wrigley’s Own