ee eee ee x iti Nee Pee ne ee ee ee See ee ee ee Se A ip ERE Se Ee Tae rf a ree ee Se re ee | eee e ¥ aa “wo i — : . ‘ r ¥ ot : ‘ The United Nations Steering “Some relings have been |” . me hard feeling ; Committee put Soviet Premier engendered in putting this thing . ; across,” said Haas, “Some ver Nikita S Khrushchev's disarma- bal and printed dirt has been ment plan on the General Assém- thrown. But teday we're all bly agenda today and Russia im united. So tet's eet busy in throw ing real dirt.’ . debate on it Pont bac Press columnist Htaas * * * had reference to the long argu No objection was made in the ments and legal fights which ’ 21-nation committee to Soviet marred the birth of the new build Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. * * * Kuznetsov's request that the plan There were those, led by the outlined by Khrushchev here last protesting Oakland County Tax- priday be included in the assem- payers League, that charged. in ‘biy's agenda Jawsuit that the county had ac cumulated funds illegally for the But Kuznetsov objected vigor courthouse The State Supreme! ously to Brazilian Auguste Fred- erico Schmidt's proposal that the Khrushchev plan be lumped with in,. » Court said differently we wt * jand Health Departments | friendship in this city which gave ple of San Franéisco have posi-| stopped at a supermarket, and in w aTR? . . WHICH SITE’ In another labor front, the Inter-; They. raised no questions yes-| From Our News Wires lhim his warmest welcome yet tively charmed us. | felt as if I)a twinkling of- a Sputnik turned Going hand in hand with this realy Daca der deen tae national Longshoremen’s Assn. ap-| iterday when Charles E. Cardon,} in the United States were among true friends who are the place into frenzy = Aaa which rupted when the. committ left that deci io t peared’ foday to have approved|Oak Park supervisor and chair-| DETROIT — After 10 weeks, the * & Iv Washington President Eisen i wun ‘filed in 196, was the gpl * omen Se 8 Vius ’ € J LG affiliation with the AFL-CIO de-|man of the board's Civil Defense steel strike has forced an auto. the soviet Premier professed ines, le, ae sel hower éalled seven top advisers ye . at * spite heavy votes against the move Committee, said, ‘‘It's up to the |plant to close. More shutdowns can himself no longer mad at ANYONE! ic saw a housing develnoment to the White House today+te~ = ,in some New York area locals. board to judge if our efforts (in \be expected shortly if the supply,— not even Mayor Norris Pou Ison | He ‘cared ee et by noet him prepare for his crucial wee The ILA was booted out of the teaching thes course) are sincere iof Los Angeles. He quarreled font end talks with Soviet Premier AFL five. years ago on charges it and necessary.’ roughly and publicly Saturday He dropped in unexpectedly on Nikita Khrushche. was dominated by racketeers. night with Poulson in Los Angeles of steel remains halted. * * * The AFL-CIO convention now) ieaee ra ve handed | First. casualty was the Colum- e explanation on the })). é ie under way in San Francisco is ex- . bus, Ohio, plant of General Mo Im his farewell to the West * f th terd : : : purpose o' e course yesterday, | - Coast — wh h ( th pected.to~invite the ILA back into mainly because Southfield Su- hold Tenaci: Devs w ; ve | a — eee ee the ranks, carrying out a recom- Ree Rb ay _ercwere > eed { the AFL-CIO E pervisor Donald L. Swanson in jfor GM cars. It halted produc- woud like to help build a so mendation of the -x€CU-| May criticized the appearance of |, yesterday and will lay off 2- | elety in which all men woud be. < tive Committee. former Congressman Kit Clardy | brothe | '800 production employes during the | rs. He reiterated a plea re . Basicall * th * , * ; as a kickoff for the course. pens week a ‘ e for total disarmament. By SAUL PETT asically, the plan requires) - OC | ; urlions involved in any sort of Swanson then, in objecting 10 8! Ternstedt officials said fin. He said he seeks complete SAN FRANCISCO M—It was like the happy hour in pute with a rival—over job right — peg ee my oe | ished inventories were sufficient Bee and eee i a manie depressive ward, like the year of the locusts, jurisdiction, raids between unions, | a ce ee fone Clardy “the’ to match the umber of cars but we are guided by noble as ithe bull in the china shop, like the night the dam broke, boycotts of rival union products, /©P!tome oF Meta yism. | GM can build with steet now |PU' we are guided by noble as- like Gras or even organizing ethics—to let! x * * available. pirations in our struggle for com- y, man. , : Based on this criticism. co munism, and we are going to! We who were there. doctor, will never again go t an outs : never again go to a if ntide feces Judes, ms © aiablore ef the courses being) The auto industry is the big-| wage this struggle not by the a 6 wach deka aoa be decided] leonducted in nine Oakland cities, gest buyer of steel and General force of arms- but by our words,” supermarket without see-> ° |thought it bestto-expiaiy the pur-| .|Motors, biggest builder of cars, ap- he said. ‘ing red. Blame the phobia candidate for sheriff, debate with on its own merits, without setting pose of the two-roll communism! iparently is worse off than any of * * * on Nikita Khrushchev movie moguls, baw! out a mayor. a Peeercem. ‘phase of it. Swanson and other su: ‘its competitors ', Ahead in lowa is an agricultur- | = sibel : ; threaten to go home because of , Failures to provide such a (pervisors were silent yenerday| x ke ‘al schedule that should keep) We have been everywhere” and) peetders, change course while binding judicial terminal point |when Cardon asked their feelings) A GM spokesman said an emer-|Khrushchev, a former sheepherd-| done everything with Nikita coating im San Francisco Bay, for frequent union squabbles— lon this “highly controversia| sub-|gency supply may be obtained jer, in the ame glowing mood he Khrushchev, We have chased DIM) wang fate a union hall, extend (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8)- | ject.” from Phoenix Steel Co., of Harris-|enjoyed all day Monday on planes, trains greetings to the workers and — Seca : . ee = | burg, Pa., if negotiations can be} In Des Moines he will tour the motor scooters and by foot walk out wearing a white cap, ears boats, ;He. said this would provide very|plant, speak at a dinner tonight kiss babies, shake hands like a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) ee ee relief. ‘tand.then Wednesday visit a farm, | into November. Ford, which pro- |'hat tall corn grows | uens half of its own steel, prob- Khrushchev is a man of many 2 | ably can hold out that tong, too. | moods, but Monday he was jovial ave Q 0 0 U umn American Motors and Stade. | and joking. He didn’t lose his , baker . Packard also reported | temper once. Over and over sufficient steel for another two | again he stressed the words months. se peace and friendship. Although the fall season officially arrives at 2:09 p.m.| 7, saber bite eat air! the ee eit Prakbent £- (Pontiac time) tomorrow, the weather will not heed the is that steel shortages will ham-|senhower had begun frank discus- call. [per progection right at the start ofjsions is Washington, and he hoped cece, whal companies predict second round begin- The weatherman for Pontiac and vicinity says “un-|). pet pe Miroxazared olan: sling Fede out tite on aa seasonable” mercury recordings are expected for the) * * * countries substantially closer to- next four days, averaging about eight degrees above Another brief resting was = gether. ce a normal. for the steel industry and the Unit-| 44, mee “a It will be partly cloudy, continued warm today and ed Steelworkers of America, who| Khrushchev sacar ight- ee 10 weeks om tonight with a high of 88. Se ae ets making Low tonight will be 65. ‘ing their traditional blanket "semen of al ery cg ee "Gas Tax Up One Cent ‘the stands. Thundershowers hit most "7... hich temperature in the | Yesterday’ of lower Michigan late yeS- northern part of the state is ex-\\as agape ews si (3 fo 4) on Oct. 1 terday and last night, but | pected to be a cool 68 .today and| 5 Joseph F. Finnegan said today’s! | te should drop to a lesser reading by es ; little damage was reported. {pould drop 10 = less a probably would be #8) wasNGTON (AP) — Siarting However, Michigan Bell Tele-) ‘ ' og n & ‘Oct. 1, the federal gasoline tax phone Co. said storms ending About | aa Ls _midnight caused water to seep into) &T6** tonight ia the Upper Pen- os: lephone cables and eee: pay forthe mile interstat on $000 -seluphenes. tr bagi seeng Tomorrow's forecast calls tor | In Today's Ss Press highway ein, Be zoo and Battle Creek area. Some Scattered showers or thunder. mpegs sre _ President Eisenhower signed the 3.000 phones were out of service in storms with a‘high of 84, torning : le. Kalamazoo alone... a little cooler by evening. eee 2 | meet his objective of keeping the) artic P Belt . | Winds will blow up’ fo -15 ‘miles: County News ....,....:.... 18 |highwa y programm on @ payone d ales es oa Pa ae os |per hour today and tomorrow Pere & ‘you-go basis.- ss What | aad ——— agra Dr. Fine... 9 | ** & Doesn't need a pot. No tea | From 10:15 yesterday marning "é@ueation by customers by tonight, after crews (4) ine same time today .10 of, Markets ..........060 cers ti | Eisenhower said he it < leaves to throw away at the finish wore eegé is trem Geand (until the same time today .10 of ‘ | sa signed i ; AP Wirephete a : r apids. an inch of rain fell in downtown) Obituaries :....... bak .. 4 | “in order to avoid: serious dis-| vey as YOU AND 1 — Nikita Khrashclicy, “ California, yesterday. Watson is president of IBM. [PG po wate —_ o— While gridders here are in dan- . Morning winds were 10 Sports ....... Pega Sha ens ‘18-19 |ruption of the highway program ° q . : tor h he make exactly what you need. — ger of losing some valuable pound-|miles an hour. The lowest temper- Theaters it evituw sian 16 | with ite attendant adverse effects| °*t Tying a tray of food, even ay you and I, walks and was Nikita's host for the tour through ag and I sapere age without consternation to shirt-| ature recording preceding 8 am. TV & Radio Programe ......7% ‘Jon ‘state’ finances, -highway con.) With his host, Tom Watson_Jr., to a table after plant. The Red leader said he enjoyed the cafe- ca uk. toe sleeved bleacherites,. upper Michi.|was €6 degrees. The mercury Wilson, Hart veceveey $7 [tractors aind workers and the| serving themselves i af the cafeteria at the Inter- teria experience. Of course, he ignored picking ae of the oki cans waa gan lootball spectators = be tot- Ictenibed to 75 at 1 pm | Women's Pages ...... 1.1 11-43 Jeconomy generally:” ; national Business ‘hines plant afSan Jose in up the check. ; ards. ieee ae , ‘ e eas oy A _* ‘ : “ ms ; : A t ‘ bs : : ‘ A y c . completed by the end of the week. city, stop at a farm implement We have seen him tickle pigs, looking like = an: overweight + dispite where the ‘courthouse “Seheuld be built. Some, mostly down town businessmen and lawyers, sisted it go on the present down- Kuznetsov said Khrushchev's proposal should stand by itself for discussion and not be “hidden away among other proposals where it might not “be given suf Others, which ineluded the fjejent attention as to substance Board ef Supervisors, held out * * * for the Service Center, They said The Steering Committee met be it was a natural as other county fore the full assembly went into a bulidings were erecteg there als session in which. the United Stafes ready. hoped to match or better last After the first lawsuit favored year’s yote In beating down at them, supervisors plunged them. tempts to seat Communist -China selves. into another short-lived le in the United Nations gal delay by awarding the biggest The 82-nation General Assem ot three contracts to a local firm.’ pry heard U.S. charges yester which was not the low bidder gay that Communist China was This later was dropped and new 49 “international outlaw’ that bids submitted this month had started war in six countries Haas admitted he once was On jn nine years. the side of the keep-it-downtown yroup—‘‘because it was closer to The Press building” but later jumped on the supervisors’ band town site US.) diplomats hoped this ac counting of the record would per suade the General Assembly to at least equal the 44-28 vote which shunted aside the bid to seat Peiping last year ® * * In New York, Adlai be Stevenson last nivht advocatéd admission of Regt China to the United Nations Stevenson said the United States should cease leading the opposition fagainst admission of Red China to the world body. Stevenson said that if the Red Chinese were in the UN. “thes would have to answer almost daily ifor some of the things they have done of Jate that has provoked ‘the “ Pindigiia tion of the whole world.” My Dear Chap, Why Not Try ‘Powdered Tea? | LONDON & — Somé foreign tbounder wants to Sell the British | pow dered tea | But tea, my dear old chap. ts |not’a powder. Comes from leaves. | Distinctly remember the old days in India Now, says the company trying | to sell instant tea, there’s going fe be a social revolution in Brit- jain wagon Representing the Pontiac City Commission, Mayor Philip E Row ston said, ‘As long as they ve got to move it, I'm glad it isn't any (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) * * *. It says you just take half a spoonful of thisy dark brown tea powder, stir it in boiling water ’ land you've a cup of instant tea & indistinguishable from the gerttiine ~——s mediately demandeg a ridaiail a egy sacl ee fe : » we em gos a " = ot et tS att i | ae es AY ‘e f % est 4 Pf ate i y ~ a x : A j 4 i » g x . ¥ +d : aoe: di 11 ec ‘ge ate jee 5 i as : ‘ ant j tet ee Se : ~ ae f : i a 4 eee tia fs ee oe ty: Co ag Ss _-THE PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1959 A Re ee ane : : F wm |The Day in Birmingham Z i : ; TDN | - Citizens’ Hone to Cut it ‘ LANSING im — George Romney |parties would adopt the CFM pro- says the “‘fat cats” of political|gram. party finance will be cut down to| “If they domt accept them, size if his “Citizens for Michigan” |might you run for office?" he was movement succeeds. | asked. The influence they wield will) ‘That's an iffy question. I'm not} yield to that of an awakened |0ing to speculate that far ahead,” and better informed electorate, he a8 the reply « Lad Brown, Pierce Stop Signal Ruled Successby Engineer - BIRMINGHAM — City. Consuit- hear i _ling Engineér T. M. Vanderstempel/quest of Mr. and Mrs. Manley reported to the City Commission) Bai last night that “since the four-way| Lots 13 and 100 of Taliaferro Es- stop - sign ~has been installed. at i Brown and Pierce streets the ac- cident potential has greatly de- creased.” A survey shows more than 600 vehicles per hour enter the inter- zone Lots’ No. 11 and 12 of the same subdivision from single fam- ily to income bungalow classifica- told newsmen after CFM officially | Earlier, Romney once again |. section betwéen 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. | tion. got off the ground yesterday with) had disavewed any political am- During this time, congestion caus- Romney installed) as permanent! pitions to an auclence of 300 | ing minor delays occurred only 12 s bl Calman sprinkled with “name” persons times. Congestion causing a com- Circuit Court The American Motors Corp. | from across the state, including plete stoppage of vehicles ~within the intersection did not occur at) Docket Changed _ Motions. to Dismiss 3 | educators, clergy, unionists, bust- fessmen, profes: onal men and civie leaders. president said by “fat cats’’ he meant labor unions which pour money into political campaigns as Well as wealthy Individuals , and corporations, directly or in a ‘‘thousand other ways.” any time, according to the city engineer. The survey was conducted from “| June 22 to Sept. 17. A hearing of necessity will be “If [ were nominated by either| party, or any other group, | would} not accept the nomination Tf I Ile said power in Michivan has were drafted, | would not run,” he held Oct. 5 for the determina- . become centered in big money, said t Midiang to @ =eet: Charges of Gambling and if necessary, the nt eéatract of the Peake Asphalt Paving Co, will be extended to include this work at the unit | Harold C) MeKinney Jr. of Dim- ondale, secretary of the Michfgan) (Council gf Churches, was elected permanent secretary und Joseph V. Brady of Howell, vice president of Citizens Mutual Ins treas-| both Republican and Democratic. ' and that this was bad SLEEPY CITIZENS! The primary deficiency {rom which the state suffers, he said, the Jack of citizenship partici pation in government which he Bring Sudden Shift Last-minute mofions to dismiss prices bid under the present con- gambling charges against-Basit W. tract. Y . Burke and two other defendants * _|have necessitated some rushed Total estimated cost for this pro)-| switches_in-today’s opening of the Cy ure! hopes to combat by enlisting ‘‘hun- dreds of thousands" in CFM CAPS MAKE NEWS FOR TWO CAP.-ITALS — Nikita Khrush- chev, Soviet leader visiting in the U. S., has fun when he exchanges ect.is approximately $5,000. Adjustments to the 1959 road oil program have been completed. f AP Wirephotes iOakland County Circuit Court fall jury term. ~ x «© * ile said it resulted in “an wwe UF Workers: reliance on ecopemic groups and| money power,” lhings plus these other “Ss Face Big Job 1. A ‘polilical-economic dead. | lock, 2, Adoption of political methods that have caused people to have | too low an opinion of politics | and politicians, §. A citizen reaction against blind partisanship as being as sociated with narrow-mindedness. i in San Jose, and tags the white cap (of ‘peace) to Tom Watson, president of the company, and his host. While Nikita was having fun with his cap, President Ike was using his golf cap to shade his eyes during one of his relaxing games. Intense concentration seems to give both leaders (even the caddy, Tommy Gunch) the same grim profiles under the now-famous cap brims. The sign ordinance revision plan’ Circuit Judge William J. Beer has been referred to the sn legal’ yesterday took the motions pander advisor to draw up an ordinance 4 avisement for a week after hear- within a few weeks: ‘ing an hour of arguments for and . * ‘ * * eon |against the suppression of evidence The sign ordinance, number 529,) 114 quashing of information permits signs in residential areas: egainst three taken in a State Pe- Chairman Fred Poole ) to advertise the rental, sale or): gambling raid in Aug. 2%, Tells C ial M 1: Y i | a a . | i vertising | fond Needs Mere «Nikita! Bulls Through ‘settee Sy Supervisors, “i? RSTO dige ceed / . . any one subdivision and signs ad-| rosecutor Frederick C. Zeim - fied Pons Comme aio Supermarket Tour County S Budget Is Approved opens ba ivertising buildings under con-| . criminal docket today with the la what | "2M chairman of the 19.9 Pontiac jArea United bund campaign, told his headpiece for a longshoreman's eap atthe International Long- shoremen's and Warehousemen's Union hall in San Francisco yesterday. As Khrushchev puts on Longshoreman Dave Adrian's cap, the Red leader said: ‘This is an exchange of peace.’ Later on in the day, he visits the International Business Machine's plant | struction. ( Charehes Sed pcheoks aad clu: | conspiracy case against Burke of 29 Salmer Ave., Mrs. Gladys ‘The last point, he said, (Continued From Page One) nakes many persons shrink from : ceed , ri . - ‘ning | , : ; lar itutions may have a sign : ‘caring a political party label “i a on Hors this MOFDIDG) wrestler headed for the golf The Oakland County Board of vote was cut and dry before we'pleted before Smith's committee eit a ing 20 square inet in J. Gullet, wife of the former aril ire k , f "yy ce oo yer pty in Paiking . , . ve : ‘ at’ : ss i . — aan | ui actively’ tailing, pert in party thier ehare sn 847 FOR IK @ Mocthaast Supervisors yesterday put its 75 to even came in. What's the use Of delved into its hearings. area and a overall height of 6 | deputy Pontiac city trea: y allan | weir share of the $647,498 UF goal ; ; fighting’”’ A h de level | James Prazor of 4 8S. Saginaw, s lu keep its own skirts clean on! “Tt means a seven per cent in ma we ge hev s¢ one that 2 stamp of approval on the 1960) He said he had reference to past! After calling fer a revamped eet ad LSet! Lata ang Charles D. Apley of 29 Sel- ; the money-power question, CFM Crease over what we raised last/ Will always wake Us up scream- county operating of history of the board which shows! approach to budget preparations, The Penning Board gpesiingion 4 mer Ave. budget at # ing was the one Monday In the that a revision of the sign ordi-| that the supervisors usually vote; Huber was assured that his sug- | In June, Judge H. Russel Holland along with the majorit¥ veteran. gestion would be tried next year. |D4Nce be considered that would) Sydney nembers . : _| permit signs no larger than 19)Gropped ge aoe ei ig a ‘itec. coreidered|.. RY “ete colnet it! square feet in area and no higher 2841S" “i's. aus ’ Smith's committee, considerec now is the wrong approach,” than four feet above the surround-|Rue. who had been deputy treasur- most influential of th Huber said. He said Smith’s com-|ing ground level* The sign could|¢t for the city since 1955 when he committees, avoided nittee was non-committal to be made of noncombustible ma-|“@S arrested. exchanged MOTE Cpposition to the budget when groups and county officials that terial, be lighted during the hours. x & * : i. restored. with reservation, a appeared before it because the of ‘darkness and contain no ad- $32,500 appropriation for the Oak- committee had no firm commit: | vertising thereon. * dopted in its bylaws a limit of year,”’ said Poole who spoke ; $14) on individual contributions to- [breakfast orientation seesion this _ pe “ i tam i * * * . =. ~ (morn at the W ; AS always le §6CAme nm sur ard its proposed $75,000 budget. | . nel he Waldron Hotel rounded by helmeted police, ner-| Voting’ agamst it BALANCE DIRECTORS We're not naking for the same vous US Secret Service men and)Frid, Northville supervisor, and The fledgling organization, now) ®* lant year. he told the solicit. sijlen Soviet security officers, all Duane Hursfall, Independence one of the vith about 1.000 members, also| OT “We're going to have to ask ‘‘iehting off encircling photograph- Township supervisor board's 28 willed 16 ancorporale. chose a @ | for a little bit more in order to o:< and reporters . | politically balanced board| CPCrate our agency program en | Down the rows of groceries they f ditectors with 10 to he added the same level as bast year jwent with a roar “Now it's /$12,626, 784 were Angry words were preceding the roll call vote when Frid accused Fred W. Smith, rere and Apley yesterday asked Judge Attorneys for Mrs. Gullet, Barke up to sou" land Child Guidance Clinic, which pent on how much salaries would | * Beer to dismiss charges of con- * wer and authorized four areas of} { Children screamed Women held chairman of the board's Ways : : ily | Attending the mecting were Re up babies to see Teenage girls and Means Committer, of being (treats emotronally disturbed Chil: take of the 1960 budget In other action, the Commission SPiracy to violate state gambling The study groups will under. jtail Pand 2 and the Finance sec-| squealed like it was Elvis. Boys’ “alt mixed up’ when he sup dren + Salaries and ‘alaries reserve'’| decided to hold a hearing Oct. 12 awe axntnst ana ag ante taken tel deicrnine “whet male 00" in jeans raced around behind and pesedly was quoted as saying Smith's committee of seven next year for hourly county em-|to consider the request of Edmund '* that, there hid al los fn ae government services people real _ * * on top of shopping carts. House- the county was headed for some — came in for some sharp criticism |ployes will make up $5,432,751 of P. and Maria Brennan and Mrs. and scien’ pis Pan Ee - ly want, the best way of paying |= Others addres sine the orienta. wives pushed housewives, Old financial trouble. when it at first left out the clinic, the budget. Included in this amount | Carrie Johnson to rezone Lot Nq.| rackets ie pa a ecard for them, desirable changes In (ton session were Robert KR El- ladies, swept along in the flood, While Smith, a veteran of og Claiming it was part of an overall is $223,203 for employes raises — 18, Browns’ Addition No. 1 multi- own on our places and arres slate government structure an dred, keneral chairmen of this cackled, “There there's the Rus veare ar the ey i: , 1 . th economy drive, and besides, the jsomething they haven't had gince family residential classification to the five persons. 4. means of pr ti economic [YOANN Campaign, John, Wo Hin sfan, the cute fat one’ fuming. Spring ee eee en”y clinic was receiving funds from January 1958. |non-retail business zone district. ; we ; ; - jlinger, manager of the Pontiac &. Springfield Township Su- - as j eg oe * * * | Ng motion has been filed to dis- growth. lArea Chamber of ¢ . and). Photographers, reporters and = pervisor John L. Carey sprang to other sources, Smith said. Along with this salaries schedule & heuring ae Ae alsa’ the charge againet | Prusor Left unanswered was the ques Joseph I! Shatis alauere tdinn-| kids out of school climbed on his defense and said Fiid’s remark Some supervisors privately said approval came. the aiding of — A pearing is % i: a a ae But should Judge Beer grant the tion. whether CMF, once it) has ing chairman of thin ens drive. | show cases and counters. Care. was “‘enfirely out of order’ Frid they would have voted against the New deputies to the Sherift el |new motions, thep rosecution’s con- Hrought forth its recommendations, , fully balanced pyramids of tn- (said he'd retract it 1960 budget — $341,061 more than ment as part of switching the | Ispiracy charge would disintegrate stant coffee jars disintegrated in | * * a cracking glass. Soda pop bottles, | Resides Frid saying cans of pears, chill and apple | the 1959 budget the vill then carry the ball in ctiecting | They praised the solicitors for | 2 khem, their effort, in communlty the seven adds up to $35,000 extra’ ney Romney said he hoped the major drive and asked them to make | every solicitation call count, Other orientation» for | jCommercial Division solicitors are SiOnS Rain Dampens Scattered Areas of Nation Today iday as the sturt of thi cam. | /paign draws nent A parade on Shonaw street fol-| Veal owed by a torch Jectitors ¢ Lemony | ; ; at Oakland and Somes “streets! By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS eo | the evenine hE Oct Twill kick off Heavy rain and showers struck , this years dine | at widely scattered sections of the country early today The Weather Bureau reparted Which Way Did He Go? thunderstorms in) South Dakota ind onorthern) plains, -the far) Brie BooPse told police Vester: | . Pacific Northwest and the lower, day he failed to chtise a burg (reat Lakes | lar and his tty “bubble get * * | away car because he didn't know | Strong winds from. 2 too 4g) “bat direction the car was go- ! mop.b.—ranged over Oklahoma, 1% Posaw him climb into the | Kansas and Wyoming | bubble car und went to over- : o a In six hours up to Monda mid take him Pye said. “But he night, Aberdeen, SD, had nearly, S28 £eins bactwards. [couldn't inches af rain, Soux Falls, §D tell the front) from the back nearly Voinch Lafayette, Ind gat) oe Seen oe IT came songside 113) inches he started gomy forward and, In Chicago. a late Monday) “hot eff in’ the opposite direc. | . ‘ ‘ ‘ i | storm dropped nearly one — half tl inch of rain, ending a J\-day dry spell and equalling the rainfall in the area the last 48 days The Weather Bureau ecattered showers today Through out the northern half of the mid section of the country and from the Great Lakes -enstward into northern New England. Some ratn will fall in western, Texas and the farther towston is a Pon- Gulf area from Texas to Florida [Hite attorney — It was plain to see that it The Weather (Continued From Page One) AWAY. hadn't taken construction crews long to stake out the proposed site since the supervisors ap- Full UV. 8. Weather Bureau Report i ' a « PONTIAC AND \ECINITY. — Partly, Proved contracts onty last Mon- cloudy, continued warm today and te-| day. An area had already been . Chance of showers tonight High! today 84 Low tonight 65 omertew| cleared. mostly cloudy with scattered showers) And even before most of the per- sons attending the ceremony had a bulldozer and huge Today ta Pantiae earthmover were back at work on Lowest temperature preceding @ am ithe excavation, ’ OF At 8 am’ Wind velocity 19 mph, James N. Savage, president of Direction | Bouthweaterly i . ™ i ir an acts “Cosetae ot Gal pm ithe general contracting firm, O. Pile ina Weatendey al 620 am iW Burke Co., said, “We'll be go- oot ‘wet RWednend t 12 29 Vievare on " Moon tives Turstey at 9-80 pam. (ing full steam tomorrow." He said — __ the building would take about 18 or thundershewers and turning a Ultle cooler by evening. High 84. Winds seuth- wenterfy 10-15 miles becoming light and! somewhat variable tonight beatae fam 44 llam t Tam 44 i3m 3);months to complete. Ci Ges ncnices a6 lpm . . Pam oo... 7m _ |j|A ROUGH TRAIL 19 am il Before Levinson turned the ml- icrophone over to Haas, Hamlin ; a declared that it had been “a rough as and rugged trail to get to today's ceremony.” .| Few of the offieials who wit- a i} nessed the dedication of the pres- ttc. “ent courthouse dedication Nov. 2, Monds¥ in Pontiac ‘as fecorded downtown! Higheet temperature Lowest temperature Mean tempature ‘ Weather — Sun. Rain One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature a Lowest temperature Mean temperature ,. Weather—Sunny sauce went flying across the | alales. A photographer climbed on top:came from but three other super. who was the only frequent visitor |ties, the new budget calls for hir- to budget trimming hearings last ing month, was milder than some ex- County Althougl Stnith, whose commit. pected when he questioned whyjturned down in their original re-| The copa and the security offi- tee had a major hand in drafting the Salaries Committee couldn't quest for 69 new workers as part) jscheduled for tomorrow and Thurs-|Of shelves of canned goods The visors top shelf split, tumbling him onto! the floor under a pile of cans cers back moved forward the Volga at flood tide mob pushed Somehow Khrushchev relentlessly. like Smiling pushed. The pers, questioned clerks, fingered packages of potatoes oranges. and hot dogs, posed for pictures at the meat counter, near the ham The mob moved on, cans and | Jars still flying. A store official necessitated scurried behind like a hen rac ing after chicks gone mad, pick | Ing up cans, threatening children proved in April with the electric chatr, wildly pleading with photographers. Finally the nightmare ended on granted but) $2 62-the same as’ * * * the sidewalk Nikita Khrushchev last year’s county tax rate—while! thanked the manager saying, the county needed $617 to meet of Isaac Crary Junior High School,|tary; Mrs. Vida Walker, south side “You have a fine store "' It used to be oud Million Courthouse ~ Under Way at ‘Center’ |Besides the spade donated by the Burke company, which later was presented to Levinson, Macdonald contributed two chrome - plated shovels. Harry Horton, Royal Oak su pervisor whe was chairman of the board's Buildings and Grounds Committee when the courthouse was in the embryo stage, was presentéd one, while Haas received the other. Haas said he planned to turn his over te the Oakland County Historical Commisston, A beaming Macdonald looked upon yesterday as the ‘completion of my mission.” Back ir 1942 — ‘when people were afraid to talk ‘about it''—he instigated the plan jand fought all odds in achieving a new courthouse. | Haas described Macdonald as “the father of the courthouse.” He stood by it when it wasn't so pop- ular,”’ he said. A BIG MOVE “It was a big and a radical move then to moye it from: down- town out here,'"” Macdonald - re- called. te out giving figdres to substantiate! funds his claim — that the 1960 budget) * ¥ * was “out of line:* questions on it! Troy Supervisor Robert J Huber, | *,* *& the record-high budget. said he have didn't expect any opposition to it, some appeared in the offing after several new supervisors lhe shook hands, talked with shop- tioned expenditures during budget Area School Officials hearings EYE NEXT YEAR Too, more -attention had focused on next year’s budget be CALISe a forced economy move Smith's committ.« chopping $1,279,800 out of the al- terford location budyet ap Monday morning been area were represented! SUPE rVIsSOrs This was necessa y as the Oak. kramM at Pontiac Northern High land County Tax Allocation Board School the preliminary budget * i Frid today said he opposed the budget believing — the county should “spend only what we take in.” Smith said this was the purpose oof five hearings his | committee held, mainly to make | expenditures balance with antle- | ipated revenues * * * Hursfall, although he didn't take the floor to state his position, later said he voted against the . budget hecause it provided for pay raises for 1,198 county employes, while some of his township employes jhadn't had raises for five years. Asked why he didn't explain to the- board, Hursfall said: ‘This 3 Plead Guilty in Thett of Tire From Wrong Car Oakland County Circuit Judge William J, Beer yesterda6 accept- ed guilty pleas from three Pon.) tiac men who are accused of bor-) rowing a tite jack from a Birming-| ham patrol car after stealing a wheel from a car belonging to the mother-in-law of the chief of de. tectives. Sentences for larceny fro ma | motor vehicle. were set for Oct. 5 for Willis Brock, 2%, of 788 Monticello, Ave., dose Garcia, jot teachers in the budget. Get United Fund Briefing » m2 9% 104 peice ine vieum = lnad been annoying his wif for, Elementary and secondary sonnel throughout the two school) schools from the Pontiac and Wa- systems. Area United Fund orientation pro-| Premo jitation by area are. Maurice Van \Gordon, Pontiac Central services; | Paul Riley, assistant principal|Warren Abbot, North side elemen- ‘Waterford Township, and educa- elementary; Philip Wargelin, Pon- ‘tion chairman of the Commercial tiac secondary: John Hills, Water- | Division, briefed the solicitors who|ford centrl; Donald Arsen, Wa- are responsible for the solicitation |terford elementary and Miss Helen and administrative pe: Bulla, Waterford secondary. Bowron, cous Besides these seven new depu- Husband Stabs new employes. | head: rere | P «as vernal ce. He Tells Police Victim. Was Bothering Wife; three other department its recommendations com-iof the fiscal belt tightening. | -- — Had Been Co-Worker, | | DETROIT «®—A Sl-year-old \butcher was stabbed to death last | night as he fled from the home of |more than a year. * * * | Paul Wesner was stabbed in the, Robert Langer, UF assistant |stomach about 30 yards from the! é Fi i PP a Sy ue for a Pontiac’ director, explained the various east side home of Leon A. Briskey, 50, a mailing supervisor for #e tional materials. | : t j Responsible for individual solic-/Detroit office of the U.S. Internal Revenue service. Briskey, who was held for in- vestigation of murder, told police Wesner was impaled on a kitch- en knife held by Briskey when Wesner attempted to hit him with his fist in an argument. Police quoted Briskey as saying Wesner came to his home and tried to break in by kicking in a front window after Briskey's wife Eleanore, 46, refused to speak | with him by telephone. * x * Briskey said his wife had worked for Wesner about 20 years ago as a waitress in-a tavern owned by the victim. Police said Briskey told them Wesner had been annoy- ing his wife for about a year and had come to Briskey’s home last May and threatened the couple. Briskey told officers he got the knife and chased Wesner down the street when he refused to leave. He said he had. tried to reason with Wesner but the man swung at him and was-car- tied into the knife by momen- tum. Briskey said he had not intended to. stab Wesner but only wanted to persuade him to leave his wife alone. * * *® Wesner was married and the father of a 14-year-old daughter. have a married * High Winds and Hail Sweep lonia Region IONIA, (UPL) — High winds and 1905, Were on hand. Today's home : . : Highest and Lewent Temperatares ‘of the Circuit Courts cost but $113,-| Lately, Haas added, there's been} 18. of 670 Ojista Ave., and Don: This Date in #7 ¥ “ Mas) BEC . O1 in 194] + sen i one in 1089 323. ° “a lot of bickering and differences ris Rodgers, 18, of 840 “en —— ve, Tuesday's Temperature Chart But taking their . turns | along of opinion. But they were honest * * * eonie ze $8 Marquette §=22 Se iwith Haas in-tossing some earth ditterences of opinion. Today we a 0 * Bimarck 663 88 cainncnee - ti iwere Ml.year-old George J, Scott, ani ta ——_ _ Lip — Two Birmingham patrolmen took Brownsville 93 18 Mingsopele §) siivice chairman of the Tuberculosis bos tobalay re to roan wo need their names and license number Putte ie Se New Yorn” ye a3{Sanatorium Board of Trustees,|_ Missing from yesterday's crowd, after lending them the jack from Cincinnatt 84 62 Omaha $ Wand Albert Weber, 70- plus, — its which included representatives ofjthe patrol car after they had a Cleveland - b+ relics : chairman. ’ . {local veterans groups, were repre-ifiat tire. This information led to’ Detrott 85, 66 Pittsburgh 64 58 sentatives of the Taxpayers their arrest Sept. 12 when thé) Port, Worth OT B Francisco 14 88 aps cont 5) Salida ke League. . ‘same -patrolman: noticéd the tire, 0. ids 83 63 8. &. Marie 71 54 Singled out for his untiring ef-[ The independent group had’ gone from a car belonging to Mrs.’ Houghton bod 4 Pocnrage & FS Siterts was Macdonald, now chair- fought and lost its battle. The! Eunice Wright mother-in-law of Los Angeles 78 63 Tampa #1 71-man of the Social Welfare Boapd.!courthouse was unger way Lt,’ Merlin Telmquist. | : fh, ws ° BRIEFS SCHOOL SOLICITORS — Paul Ripley, assistant prin- cipal of Waterford Township's Isaac ( and education. chairman of the 1959 Pontiac Area United Fund Coriniéreial Division, briefs. solicitors of the Pontiac and Water- ford school systems at Pontiac Northern High School. ' ' Davis, two miles north, of | . — had the clinic partment from the current 48-hour | , [since it’ takes more than one de but with. been cut off entirely from county, schedule to 40 hours. Addition of nnoys oman; fendant to form a conspiracy. , Some 90 jurors heard instruc- tions from presiding Judge Beer this morning before they started —on a limited 9 a.m. to J p.m. scheduled this week—hearing some 200 civil and 150 criminal cases, The extra-heavy load puts some doubt on whether the panel will be through by the usual Thanksgiving time, according to Louis E. Fairbrother, acting as- signment clerk: Ziem said he'd start the case of George Zins, alleged bad check passer, with Judge Frank L. Doty this morning, while Judge Beer planned to-conclude oral argu- ments in the Burke case. The other three circuit judges will hear civil cases. ae Labor Unions Have Plan for Disputes ( Continued From Page Onc). | constant splits among unions for decades—was the root of the, trouble that drove labor organi- zations into rival AFL and CIO camps in 1936. The peace plan is the real prod- uct and binder of the 1955 AFL- CIO merger. Leaders expect it to solidify labor ag never before. It is the result, they said, of the threat implied to other unions in the continuing steel strike and business success in. getting Con- gress to pass the new labor control law. ~*~ * * In other words the unions have decided to close ranks. Under the plan, due to be okayed at the convention here, a special five-man committee is authorized to proceed to work out details of a disputes solution plan based on the arbitration principle. The committee ts headed by Al Hayes, president of the Ma- chinists Union. It would be submitted to a spe- cial federation convention in 1960 for required constitutional changes. - Death Notice BABY BOY ROCKCOLE Prayers were offered at 11 this morning at Perry Mount © Park Cemetery for Baby Boy Reckcole, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Clar- ence Rockcole of 747 E. Mansfield St. “ Surviving besides his parents tare q twin brother, James A.; a sister, Diana L: at home; and ; Mrs. Emma Kep- . | grandparents. ford of Muskegon, Mrs. Alta Engel of Detroit and Fred Rockcole st Flint. ' a The baby was dead at. birth Monday at St. Joseph Merty Hos- the ‘city, was struck by lightning with fittle damage resulting. / a: ae pital. ngemetits ‘were ‘bythe | Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. a pe | Ps HL Sissi fewest i A ha itera cemmai te te as Bob Considine Says: THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1959 Japan's Yoshida == = : | Nikita Travels Light, Shirtwise NEARS CENTURY—Grandma Moses, famed painter of primi- tive rural seenes. is shown’ as she celebrated. 99th birthday at party held in Schuylerville, N.Y. Di Salle Urges Seaway Council - Ohio Governor Wants takes States to Get Most From Waterway COLUMBUS, Ohio # — Ohio Gov. Michael V. DiSalle Monday proposed a council of Great Lakes states aimed at “getting the full benefits” from the St. Lawrence Seaway. DiSallé announced he had writ- ten letters to governors of New York, Indiana, Michigan, Pennsyl- vania, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Illinois, suggesting mr form the council. If they are interested, DiSalle said, he will call a council meeting to be held in Columbus. The council would have a num- ber of objectives for discussion— industrial development, freight rates, port development and pub- licity, economics and genera] in- terest problemsit..~-... Doesn't Know He Pulled Brother From Car Blaze DECATUR, Ill. (UPI)=A motor- ist pulled a man from a blazing car then drove away without learn- ing the victim was his brother, police reported. Donald Jinks, 23, died early to- day at a Decatur hospital from burns suffered in a ‘fire at a two-car crash near here. The victim had been pulled from the burning wreckage last night by his brother, Willard Jinks, Chi- cago Heights, who heard an ex- plosion, turned around and drove to the wreck, police said. Khruschey to take him back?” ‘daurs save ati dr a a But when. Victor Sukhedrev transiated for the ballroom crowd at the Commerode Hotel, and all TV as a matter of fact, he put it this way: “Ged is with you,” It sounded as if Khrushchev was endorsing capitalism. My ‘favorite typographical slip josh,” Harriman. It came out, in his overalls. Scratching. long, in Bellefontaine, Ohio, 1892. which 1 used to describe Khrushchev’s kidding of Averell Josh Harriman.” I can see old Josh now, standing tal] and spare First concrete road built in the U.S. was a 50-foot strip, 220 feet in The dictator was introduced to only one of the hordes of stars who filled the commissary on the 20th Century Fox lot for his rambunc- tious exchanges with his host Spy- ros Skouras. The star was Mari- lyn Monroe. Khrushchev had nev- er seen her (or anyone quite like! her) and, what’s- more, plainly had never heard of her. Asked what she thought of. Khrushchev’s slam-bang speech, Marilyn cooed: “Interesting.” A new Hollywood record for un- derstatement. We checked into the Ambassa- dor Hotel in L.A. in the immediate wake of Kbrushehev’s arrival at the same inn, sirens still shrieking. security men still frisking nice old ladies who knew so little about Khrushchev that they kept saying “Gesundheit” whenever they heard the name. “What do you think about all this?"’:we asked the bellhop as he took our stuff up the elevator “Think we'll win it,’ he said, jaw set hard. “The Cold War?” “Are you kiddin’? I'm talking about the Dodgers-Giants series.” They're telling a story about the backfiring on a good deed at- tributed to the Big K. Seems that | during his tipsy barge through Yugoslavia a few years ago Khrushchev got so chummy with UPI Phete near Waterloo, Wis. Built in 1863, the church was used until 1905, when it was closed. Still well preserved, it was reopened recently for a cele- bration at Waperion: FAITH PRESERVED — Its weatherbeaten showing the ravages of nearly a century, the) wooden St. Wencelaus Roman Catholic Church looms against a white cloud-filled sky reporters that one of them — a Yugo — said to him, ‘Please do something about my poor brother He’s been held in Russia for 11) years and there's nothing we can do to get him: out.” Khrushchev said, “That's ter- rible. Give me his name.” The fellow wrote it down and Khrushchev stuffed it in a poc- ket and reeled away. The reporter who made the re quest was seen again not long ago by a friend from Paris who had been present at this unusual ex- change between the Communist boss and the working stiff. “How did, that ever come out?” the Frenchman asked. The Yugo shook his head sadly}. and said, ‘‘My brother came home just three weeks after I spoke to Khrushchev. The bum hasn't done DJ “The waoiid agrees on - ‘Gilbey’ S, please’! 4 Gifoey’s Distilled London Dry Gin. $0 Proof. CEI SAD Aa __ SR ates ae Rhee biaal by Reet Hettien Retete Cony it a 4/5 Qt. Ff dicensed to drive private motor oF -——-~< Coded’ Genel Hive Late eto sec- in the Dominion, is! prohibit the sale or distribution of aE SO: mates _— made by grieon, inmate Eleven states have laws which Is 81 Years Old Shaped Nation's Policy Following War; Held Premiership 7 Years CASH MARKET TOKYO (UPI) — Former Prime. WEDNESDAY SUPER SPECIALS AT BAZLEY’S Minister Shigeru Yoshida cele-| SLICED pacon «54% brated his 81st birthday today and LBS. looked back on a brilliant record OF iof postwar leadership that saw Japan bridge the difficult transi- LEAN tion from occupation to sovereign: E LBS The man, who has been called . “Mr. Japam” was responsible OF more than anyone else for shaping Japanese pelicy after World War DELICIOUS Il. Skinless Wieners for 9 0 00 Highlights of his BROKEN SLICES premiership inchided the signing of the San Francisco Peace Treaty eight years ago this month and the ratification of Japan's postwar BACON constitation, which he eee BOILED The elder statesman, long fa-| HAM miliar to all by his pince-nez, CANADIAN wing collar, silver-handjed cane = = and erratic temper, was the first Japanese postwar premier. i He was elected to that office when he Was 67 years old and) held the position for seven years, 1 longer than any other prime min- ister in Japan's history. D Trostrttten a 1 SPECIAL ! uso SINGER cd an te RE, nc ngeee et At the ‘end of the Pacific War, Yoshida became head of a nation | that is geographically on the rim | of Communist Asia. a A staunch anti-Communist, Yo- shida once declared that com- munism is ‘“‘more destructive than the hydrogen bomb.!’ “The Japanese people do not wish their country to go Com- munist,'’ he said seven years ago. | | rm PORTABLE . FREE attachments. Trade-ins rebuild and service all About 35 per cent of American women from 20 to 4 years are] « vehicles. Console $29.50 DEMONSTRATION FE 5-4049 After Hours OR 3-9702 Free bonus gift. All purpose zigzag CURT’S APPLIANCES 1077 W. HURON . $19.50 © New Cabinet @ Reconditioned Head @ 5-Speed Moter @ New Moter @ 5 Year HOME Guarantee $ accepted. We Terms 1.25 makes. : Per Week a New Idea fora New Era gL Your al Insurance and Save! PERSONALIZED PROTECTION. You select only the acci- dent and sickness coverage you need... ouly the benefit amount you prefer—with Nationwide’s new personalized INVINCIBLE policy. CHOICE OF COVERAGE. This low-cost plan offers a choice of seven sound coverages including income protection, hospital, surgical, accident-medical expense. But you pay only for the coverage that you actually need! CASH BENEFITS. Cash benefits are paid directly to you... you choose your own doctor and hospital... protection is world-wide...and easy budget terms can be arranged. PROMPT SERVICE. So see your Nationwide man. Even if _y0u have a hospital policy how, you may find an important " coverage is missing—one that you really need. For imme- diate service, contact the nearest address listed below, WILLIAM F. PICL NATIONWIDE INSURANCE. vesas James Cousens Detroit, Michigan Fe Rrra 1-9380 iia ONWIDE u RAN CE Ati NATIONWIDE MUTUAL IN OFFICE. COLUMBUS, OHIG SURANCE CO HOME _ Sized by weight for perfect fit. Maize, Pink, Mint, and Blue. COTTON KNIT SLEEPERS WITH SAFE SKID-RESIST SOLES! Low price! Check these features! Soft, breathable, plastic soles! Gripper® fast- eners at back and waist for easy dressing! $ gon , Sixes 1 to 4 # cr asceaaeh cae" A % ~ cae “cunt skeen teks tee meaaeoee nae — eg ge ee en ; 5 ; en ae Ox soe oor oe Oy ee ee ee err ge tata te tp ays alee a Bp ty pH So a eon nah Se: tn Pact } ae : ea | % ¥ f 5 i j j : i anf PSS Ngee pap ag EIGHT . . THE PONTIAC PRESS, ZRESDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER * ee : ier - j te or Ti cena Sik at ig <7 Os ee | aitnaiieca enamels aoe “ ‘ on lhe me cm ie ae ow age ee = “ast 7 oes : : j é <—S r “ : : Sonera } / 4 ie ee f + i + is eS iB Be f eae. i ee es Xe ~, ‘Goes 115 Miles an Hour —Could Be His Funeral WAYCROSS, Gas (P—A mo- torist -was brought into City Court on a charge of driving 115 miles per hour, The motorist, Julian C. Earles of Lannett, Ala., told Judge Ben Smith he was going to a funeral and was hurrying to be on time. She'll ae Her Dad... Maybe The judge fined him $100°and ~warned: “Yours may be the next funeral."’ About 7 per cent of the world’s agricultural output—including cof- fee, tea, cacao, cotton, rubber and try in which it is grown. By PHYLLIS BATTELLE YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio —I come, wool—is exported from the coun-|| am proud to report, from a very sneaky family. WH | + i) (HE PROOD * ve “on Sl al a = = eptspeit oo ee, Straight trom Kentucky — a truly American whiskey 2 way THE BUBBLES DANCE FOR JOY! L ERE are highballs as they should be — sparkling and zestful, rich in bourbon flavor. Yet—and here’s the big point—they’re light and mild, and so gentle to drink! The reason? 86 proof Old Taylor—lightest full-flavored Kertucky bourbon you can buy—is the same in quality as our famous 100 proof bonded bourbon. That, of course, ° means the absolute top! A deeply satisfying highball ¢an be light on the palate—as your first taste of Old Taylor 86 will prove, delightfully! Old ‘Taylor 86. - a ad 4. 4/5 QuART “The Noblest Bourbon of Them Alt” Code No 940 KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES © 100 PROOF, BOTTLED IN BOND + 86 PROOF THE OLD - a Yes— with modern methods . too. He has to be your fuel oil dealer is?a modern man _ And modern ideas since he j is ultimately re- —— Michigan. ® TAYLOR DISTILLERY COMPANY, FRANKFORT & LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY » DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLER PROOUCTS COMPANY la sneaky peak, Surreptitious, every one of us. Hate routine. Love to skulk around surprising each other. * * * On occasions such as birthdays, | Christmas, April Fools, even rare all-A report card days, we reached That is to say, members of the family would creep around the house grinning, burying presents under pillows, slipping | congratulatory messages behind | picture frames, and stewing | neighborhood friends away in |‘ the laundry room to await the moment when they could all leap | out yelping ‘‘Surprise!”’ We had a Hell a time. Sometimes, like on mother’s birthday, there were as many as three surprise parties going on at once at our haewse—with dad, brother Gordon and I all planning our individual shindigs without con- sulting each other. The bushes gifts and-tuna fish casseroles. It started when I was small, My father had a habit of dropping delightful little hints, like, ‘‘Why don't you dry the dishes and sur- prise mommy?” This was a devi- ous way to break the child labor laws, but I was not only taken in, 1 loved it. i Mother ,would pull the same dodge on Gordy: “Why don’t you surprise Dad and learn to play ‘Silver Moon'?”” Gordy hated the piano, but for a surprise he'd do anything. In return for our strenuous all- out attempts to catch a parent unawares, they gave us regular surprise parties whenever our be- havior — or birthday — warranted. As we grew older and more savvy, they had to plan these soirees either before or after the birthday, or whatever, because we learned to anticipate the unexpected. BECOMES COMPLICATED It became so complicated that sometimes a birthday party would be held on Dec. 6—thought the offi- cial day of birth was not till Jan. 4. And finally, the day came when \the whole family were such mas- ters in the art of pre-guessing a surprise that we could ‘‘smell” a party 36 hours in advance. After that, the challenge was to surprise the surprise party guests _|Magnetic Storm Starts WESTON, Mass. &» — Boston College's Weston Observatory re- ported today that a very strong_ magnetic storm began last eve- ning and ig still continuing. The Rev. Daniel Linehan said it may have an effect on communi- A Modern Man cations, —— ae es with Modern Methods variances in heating season temperature. This is the result of the degree-day system, developed by a fuel oil dealer right here in (that's a non-! gambling card game we loved) of | were loaded with guests, bearing! 4 a5 Phyllis Is ‘Distinguished Speaker by looking surprisingly surprised, whether we were or not. Twelve years ago I left Ohio and came to New York, where life is so constantly amazing that the most soothing form of celebration is a well-planned party with polite- the program committee has hinted that it may be the governor. Or the vice president. Or at very least the premier. As I stand in the wings chewing on nails, | remember one birthday | when I had pleaded for a pony. ly predictable guests. You drop in ‘and surprise a neighbor in New, York City, and you not only lose) a friend—you gain an enemy. So it has been a long time since ‘I have seen my mother clap both) ihands over her mouth in real or) courteously feigned amazement; and seen my father fall backwards ~ ‘into a chair gasping “Great balls’ jot mud—what’s all this?’ And now suddenly I am in | eity of Certified Public Accounts is holding’ its annua! convention. My pop is the outgoing president, singing his swan song with re- lieved regret, hosting fellow dignitaries and presiding over banquets. At one of these banquets, there is an unlisted “distinguished” jspeaker. In srieaky Ohio fashion. a -_—--—_— a _ Youngstown, where the Ohio So- | At the surprise festivities, | was ‘given a stuffed horse instead. I \was so excited by the surprise ‘that I couldn’t be to disappointed at the bustitution . , . I hope Dad—President Battelle, that is—will feel the same way. (Advertisement) TAKES THE “BURN” OUT OF HEARTBURN Tums soothing antacid medi- cines quickly relieve the “burn” ... top the upset... soothe and set- | tle your stomach fast. 3 rolls, 30¢. atelan’ Stamps, Easy Cre dit, Too! GEORGE’ 74 NORTH SAGI INAW size slices _ “¢ THIN SLIC Whole Kernel Golden Green Giant Cut Pillsbury’ s White, Yellow Green Giant . ‘Top Taste Hickory Smoked c 1-Lb. Pkg. Wednesday is Double Stamp Day at National 2 : sponsible for the heating comfort of 16 million homes in the United States. ‘Whether he has one truck or fifty —he has one objective . . . your comfort and conven- ience, and he does his job expertly and effi- ciently. Enterprise and competitive growth have keynoted the rapid expansion of the oilheat industry. The modern, clean delivery trucks, which service your home are a far cry from the horse-drawn sleds which supplied fuel to oilheated homes in 1916—and that was only 43 years ago. Since 1936 oilheated homes have had the distinct advantage of always having an ade= quate supply of fuel on hand despite extreme Many improvements in equipnrent and service have been the direct result of the in- genuity of fuel oil dealers all over America . 1959 marks the centennial of the oil indus: try and oilheating celebrates itsown story of progress right along with it. Today 16-million Americap homes are oil- heated and are serviced “d by more than 11,000 individual large aad ‘amall fuel oil distribu- ‘tors utilizing todern equipment that keeps pace with the times. Automatic refill service and the efficiency, economy and safety of fuel oil makes it the most beneficial method of home heating now and in decades to come. OAKLAND OIL HEAT COUNCIL Prices Effective Thru Sat., Sept.:26 2-Lb. Pkg. American or Pimento Cheese Spread KRAFT'S VELVEETA NIBLETS CORN .... GREEN BEANS ..... er Chocolate CAKE MIXES ...... CREAM CORN ..... U.S. No. 1 Michigan ‘Hand Picked’ - 3415 Elizabeth NATIONAL’S STORE LOCATIONS: Lake Rd.’ at M-59 4889 Dixie Highway at Welton—Droyton Plains 8040 Cooley Loke Rd.—Union Loke Top Taste Hickory Smoked THICK SLICED wise prices _ , NATIONAL FOOD STORES a oe Hillside Sweet & Lean MEDIUM SLICED 1-LB. Pkg. We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities. Sylvan Loke Shopping Center, 2375 Orchard Leake Rd. at Middlebelt "685 East Boulevard at Joslyn 1249 Boldwin'et- Ypsilanti . Fr = - TO ae * RE eee ae ae ee — oe Sa | - a * Ci ble ipisodt Relnntty 3 filringcincitaan EEC Sa ap ann enn getty oe ees Sige pe. lie apm neta na NRC IE ae ee “eh a ig ip ngs pay es Cp ah RS tng ge ES — | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ee 22, 1959 Shirley Yvonne Decker (Oxford Girl Cuan Your Pace ) Wed Saturday Evening Winnerof Mental F atigue Prevention Ra pe mp yo ‘Scholarship 3 Methodist Church for the Sat- By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN ee oe a ene Bet Som one, Se merenet Bnet be: Yvonne Decker and Thomas re ee cee Case yt eeerany T suawested Ghat tel ar own fault. Good mutton calories por Kour. Newever, sea ~*~ * * lationships, , popularity) your attention twe other kinds of The bride was escorted to the * * * and even on inner sa _.|. fatigue—that which comes from cai “theisn an cote altar by her brother, Allen The announcement was made| I did not mention the weariness) mental work, and nervous fa- words, leasant working condi- Decker of Walled Lake, wear- at the meeting Saturday in the|which comes from lack of sleep tigue, There has been much dis- | tions, boredom at work, and pres-| _ ing a floor - length gown of home of Mary Parker. of Lakejor incorrect eating or too little) cussion about mental fatigue. (sure, can make one tired even Orion. Twenty members attendud./ exercise. These should be taken Theoretically mental work should | when the mental effort would not. Chantilly lace over satin, Sh® wore a fingertip veil and car- ried a White orchid on a white Miss Haines will start school im- However, those who are called mediately. Sawers of Ft. Wayne, Wil- liam Sweeney of Lake Orion, and David Peterson of Pon- some 50 members of the Fel- lowship Bible Class of First Mrs. John Appleton was in charge of the program ant up a batch of Green Tomato Mincemeat. You'll be glad you did when it's ple making Chop tomatoes and drain into pan. Measure amount of America's first practical ans lC. R. HASKILL STUDIO § : Baptist Church met for a co- Mrs. Duncan McColl gave a : : juice before discarding it. st iscon frustrati oline automobile-was built by the || 1 MT. CLEMENS 8T. lat; . * * operative dinner in the church talk on the convention she at- me) next ‘wumer: Take same amount of water and wueey pre pore this eae Duryea brothers’ in- 1892 in Spring: | FE 4-0553 A reception was held at Gin- educational building. Mr. and tended in Denver, Colo. Mrs. |* x * ® -- and add to tomatoes and ap- Do you weep et the dcp of a field, Mass. “| aes a gellvilie Community Center. Mrs, Ray Linabury were chair- LaVerne Steward also took : Mrs. Rick Thompson is to-. ples. Cook five minutes. Add hat? Do you jump when the tele- = Before leaving for a honey- moon trip to Northern Michi- gan, the bride changed to a dark green jersey’ suit with the men of the event. Elected to office for the coming year were Edward Luscombe, president; Warren part. Pontiac Student Geos day’s cook. Mrs. Thompson and your Food Editor have long been telephone friends. She is a creative cook who rest of ingredients and cook slowly until tender and slightly thickened. Stir frequently to prevent sticking. Sea} in hot sterilized jars. 3 ‘PERMANENTS Complete with Haircut ane oe Set No App't Necessary FE 5-8000 BEAUTY sDo0 THELMA CROW. Owner i 5 Gray, first vice president; 7 likes to try all sorts of recipes. feel a tension oe ih te on wr Earl Campbell, second vice to Tell Guild We have turned to her in the Very good, says Mrs. Thomp- . ably een anaes LOUIS SHOP dron road. president: Mrs. Albert Bar- of Sta Abroad past for special recipes. son. surface? 10 West Huron—2nd Floor Next to Buckner Finance Mrs. Decker wore a light’ eee cain . ge ic Y é : You aged agi reorganize : ee re: rs gs, a sec ry; ” - ' 3 ‘ yo wig *% 2 wiy ol Ae ee ees | your whole t must t| bine) ane oe navy Basil Vernier, treasurer; A. . wd Koprince will be guest more rest—even act rot pared | New | eee Fall Hair Styling and blue satin. Both had white | W, Degen, assistant Jreasur- / SPealer of the supper, mest. Pythian Sist during the day — and you must) B Pp er, and Murray Dejghton, g of Oakland County chapter |Marian Group Sets ythian sisters somehow plan for more play, ve asic Permanents rosebud corsages. Writing Styles Are Described for Zonta Club Dr. Norman Smith, former Pontiac dentist, was guest speaker at the luncheon meet- ing of Zonta Club International . Thursday at the Hotel Wal- dron. * * * Dr. Smith, who has taken up the study of handwriting, stressed the importante of grapho-analysis in business, in. the field of education, in child <. _ derson, teacher. Committee-at-large members named were Mrs. Clyde An- Mrs. Harriet Seaks, and William Barron. Mrs. Ira Davis also partici- pated in: the meeting. Sylvanites Open Fall With Dinner The Sylvanites Club of Syl- van Lake opened the fall sea- son with a dinner Thursday evening at Sylvan Glen Commtty Club. Arrangements for the dinner wete-.made by Mrs. William “Almas. Table arrangements were made by Mrs. Anthony of Valparaiso University Guild. The meeting will 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Grace Lutheran Church. Miss Koprince, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Koprince of West Iroquois road, spent the summer in Hanover; Ger- many, as the first exchange student from Pontiac Central High School. Mrs. Richard C. Stuckmeyer will conduct the business meet- ing. Other officers are Mrs. ‘Alvin Knorr, vice president; Mrs. Ralph Rotsel, recording secretary; Mrs. Richard Rei- ter, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. Herbert Selden, treasurer. begin at. Congregation Meal Plans for a congregational dinner to be held Sept. 24 in the parlors} of St. John Lutheran Church were completed when the Marian Group met recently Mrs. Harry T. Hahn was hostess at her home on Dele- ware drive. * * * Mrs, Lillian Quayle and Mrs. Hahn participated in the pro- gram. featured. A panel discussion was x * * Mrs. Gene Eriksen of Seminole avenue will open her home for the October meeting. Have First Meeting Mizpah Temple No. 7 Pythi- an Sisters held their first fall meeting Thursday evening at Fellowship Hall. Mrs. Karle Erickson, most excellent chief, presided. Plans were made for initiation ceremonies to be held Oct. 15. * * * On the refreshment commit- tee were Mrs. Glenn Pitten- ger, Mrs. George Newlin and Mrs. Hilding Berquist. vw + American homemakers use over each year -in home laundering. interests and activities. x» * * Tomorrow: ‘‘This Kind of wick) ing is Good for Your Figure.” ¢ RANDALL'S HARPER METHOD SHOPPE 88 Wayne St. FE 2-1424 FF. . __f Oe ay 600 million quarts of liquid bleach) ee lace Bible. Nancy Walker was appointed ' fatieae) ia : q . Before this happens it is 3 Mrs, James Perry was ma- secretary, The club.will have a 4 : tron of honor, Bridesmaids rummage sale Oct. 9 and 10 ter || Have You Tried This? : ais for : Avert Brooks ot Fl, Wayne ta vain wade mi” | Green Tomatoes Make yee wns. wan ana, | WOOBIAE RATS | , a oe _ Mrs. Wik, The next meeting, Oct. 17, will|® Lorraine K. Splude, daugh- J scmureson for the maids, compli- : : ee be held at the home of Mrs. Dom # \ A714 dorful Mincemeat ter of Mr. and Mrs, John | Sst yatta "tetas winderta : : i 4 Mm ° esi sand | ¢ inf 1 phot * dressed in blue and the brides» * 4 r ' onde u INC =O Willard A. Bell, om of Mr. |e | of covery ‘aeta vat your "we ‘ding bE maids in pink. They ae MRS, THOMAS HANSEN N a Cj l : By JANET ODELL Green Temate Mincenseat and Mrs, William H. Bell of come to. . or phone for your ap- 4 matching bouquets of gl aomi Circie * High street, were married Sat- joli. / i _ Pontiac Press Home Editor By Mrs. Rick Thompson urday at Friendship Baptist 4 * FOR YOUR WEDDING : 4 ts Gety te | First Baptist Meets in Home — |} you may tind yourself with P52, pn in Church ©" QUALITY. & QUANTITY | “amiower girl was Cindy Te. Pec Pp “Town and country. in social | @ lot_of green tomatoes on 5 cree teapeed ene aces Attending the couple were | ¢ 12 PHOTOS IN 5x3 ALBUM ; . ringbearer wa y Bible C lass © . | affairs” was the theme of the |~ hand soon. If you don't want =} Peoesaoca the bridegroom's brother-in- (9 $X™WenpinG GUEST BOOK = | — Paiis — . evening meeting of First |" to go to the bother of wrap- 1 tablespoon cinnamon law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. |. © A MINIATURE MARBIAGS 2 Decker of Oxford, was best. | Elects Ofticer s on Church held im | ping each one and letting it | tablespoon lle sali ee he keane a [thats a= ma | ied 5 eed arquette street home ie ‘ orange is | man, Ushers included Gayland Officers were elected when | Harold Brown, recently. ; ripen in a cool place, make —_t+_pound mint vest bride's parents, - All for only $39 95 | ® guidance and court decisions. * x * ° He studied under M: N. Bun- ker of the International Gra- pho - Analysis Society of Springfield, Mo. Osler. Mrs, Robert B. Smith gave an illustrated talk on her re- cent trip to Germany. FALL SHOWING | Coat He analyzed the handwriting | Girl Scout Leaders uf of Zonta memper tive | toAttend Weekend ; look for in all types of hand- | Girl Scout leaders and interested _ OF. ew. erns , writing. adults are invited to attend leaders : weekend Sept. 25-26 at Sailor’s Cove at Girl Scout Camp Sher- wood. On the agenda will be na- ture craft, lashing, knot tying, toot craft, compass reading, trail laying, advanced cooking and charcoal fires. For further infor- mation contact Mrs. Howard Fletcher. . Bib Necklace Big Mother-of-pearl necklaces ap- peared in the recent Paris collections. Some were white and some had been dyed deli- cate pastels. But all necklaces were bibs. bo peat ries You've never seen # their equal — they ~ wash and hang dry:in 7} minutes as beautiful 7% as ever without even (7 a touch of an iron. | They never shrink, © never stretch, and ab- © F ‘ormer Bhepsior Man Weds Bride From Ohio Living in Cleveland, Ohio are Mr. and Mrs. James Lee Elliott. The former Janet L. Fisher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. © Charles W. Fisher of Williams- Most exciting blend of the season. Precious fur fibers combined with wool gives a more luxurious hang than cashmere. Clutch or burg, Ohio; and Mr. Elliott, solutely will not fade. — ee son of Mrs, Lillian Elliott of What is more, they Ruticalstyes Repeat Drayton Plains and the NEVER SUN -ROT, & or petite. Black or late Percy A. Elliott were NEVER MILDEW — 7 married in a double sg Rtn Try them in your 7 Bamboo. mony recently at Methodist most difficult win- Church, Williamsburg, Ohio. mm 4 be The Rev. Donald Albasin of- oe you'll just love @ ficiated. them. Jud { Sandusky, . ; op: Ohio Sg as "ot hotiok sad Prices Vary Slightly @ Mrs. Robert Scharfenbergen According to Pattern of Cincinnati, Ohio was her sister's matron of honor. Length _{__1 Width 1% Width | __2 Widths | _3 Widths scsas's stars ae Aclneomele : 90” $9.50 | $15.00 | $20.00 | $82.00 Rex Egres of Pontiac was 84” 9.00 15.00 20.00 32.00 apo poe a | a1 | 850 | 14.50 | 19.50 | 31.00 — Ohio and the bride's brothers, oe 72” 8.00 | 13.50" 18.50 29.00 Other coats in Forstmann _ Robert and Thomas Fisher. MRS. JAMES L. FISHER 63” 8.00 13.00 18.00 28.00 . . = ) 54” 50 | ‘12.00 17.00 26.50 a| solids or designer tweeds. 714 Community Nat'l 45” | _. 6.50 | _11.00 need eee Untrimmed or fur trimmed Bank Bldg. 36” 6.00 10.50 15.00 24.00 SS TE ane: LOVELY PRINTS Modern, traditionals, scenics ... ‘SOLID COLORS Glowing new decorator shades from which to choose. LIVING ROOMS, BEDROOMS, KITCHENS Styles suitable for any room. Phone FE 4-1568-9 |) BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen $59.95 » $235 in new patterns and colors. “BETTER : ' Better than average in fabric end workmanship, ALL STYLES : All styles can be had in yard goods if you wish to make your own. . "ae : Draperies Park Right at . . the Front Door Molls re agreds™ 3 | HURON at. TELEGRAPH Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 to 9—Tues., Wed., Sot. 10 to 6 FE 4-0516 1666 South Telegraph, Pontiac a“ cs ia Sf ae ee EP og a, Ee 6. Pa Pos sf ae eee REP OG OT ee : i - ‘ - ae oe i 4 : . : : pare ~ é & * : 3 a 8. ee ae j ' Pr’ os pee ae ey aay af ang ong

to become q feseareh msociute at Yale University. head ing a project that has resulted ain the preparation of mote than W volumes on the culture anc eleties of vaniou foreign un {rie * * * Fitzsiminons wa arbi bens first three volumes published last year on Poland Jordan and tray , In addition, Fitzsimmons had THOMAS FITZSIMMONS 23 Holding Doctorates Twenty-three member of the ‘faculty at) Michigan’ State Univer sity Ookland hive ther Ph DD de grees, which is unique since in the average university only one in three members has the doctorate Phe first) freulty member of Michigan State Univeraity Oakland iwas hired late in March. the last one Sept 9 end . (ree COMING FRIDAY, OCT. 2 See it at your local authorized ena dealer's over the 18-car special train as it| sped northward. State Police cars| ‘traveled highways paralleling the | railway, each auto top marked with a large letter to permit quick) identification for emergency direc-| * * * In the locomotive cab and spotted through the railway cars, State De- partment security agents, railway police and local officers were hooked into the radio network * * * Under bridges police Jaunches'| with their radios on the same fre-| quencies plotted the course of the ispeeding train as it swept its ‘cargo of. officials and newsmen north, , Khrushchev himself, whe con- siders the security arrangements @ form of “house arrest,”’ is not an easy man to guard. He sent chills down the spines of ‘the State Department segurity offi-¢ jcers when he charged unexpectedly 4rom his train into an unrestrained |crowd of generally friendly greet. lers at San Luis Obispo. | It took Herculean efforts to press back the crowd and the ebullient lorders went out to cordon off the icrowd one block from the station * * * A crowd of 10,000 was on hand jwhen Khrushchev arrived at the |Mark Hopkins Hotel here. The lene ‘rgetic premier spent five min jutes returning greetings before he entered the hotel i" The security (momentarily men relaxed | § Fi TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1959 HU MBLE HOMES OF WORLD LEADERS _ Pictured, at top, is the house in Dentson, Tex., born Oct the Russian Ukraine, said to have 14, Community Backing Fifty named community leaders were as the Michigan State Uni- where President Eisenhower was 1890. At bottom is shown the dwelling in Stalino, where Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is lived during his early years in versity Foundation® to draw outlines of the new institution—to make it a_ university with real working community support \ Mr. Garst Is Busy Planning for Nikita. - COON RAPIDS, Iowa fen — ‘Premier Nikita’ mavemechay ar- [rived for a visit, ‘ + * * | A steady stream of cars moved ‘through the farm on the outskirts of town here as lowans, and some ‘people from out of state, stopped ‘by to see just what Khrushchev ‘was coming to see. They were not disappointed. | $ Garst'’s. huge farming opera- | last Sunday. Employes went | about their regular work and also, helped a host of newsmen get | ready. for the visit. A 100-foot television tower has been constructed on a hill over- -jlooking the farmhouse. It will be uséd to transmit’ live television broadcasts from the farm during Khrushchev's visit Wednesday. A complete communications es bureau in a cattle shed near the farmhouse. visitor, a farmer from the S Rapids area, said “I re- member when we shipped cattle from this barn." tion was in full operation even | MSUO Emphasizing Liberal Arts Studies No matter what his major, each Student at Michigan State Uni- versity Oakland must devote half his time to liberal arts studies. The emphasis in these courses will be on intensive analysis rather than broad coverage. micanoah WORRIED OVER DEBTS? t Gueore chun aay ments, debts or or bilis when due, see and arrange y*, payments you ¢aa w many you ewe. NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED ONE PLACE Member American Association of Credit Counsellors TO PAY | “Let 14 Years of Credit C ling Experi 1; Maslet You” the Hours: Daily 9 to 5..- Wed. and Sat. 9 to 12 Noon. MICHIGAN CREDIT COU NSELLORS 714 Peatiar State Bank Bldg, Smart bu! Standards built-in gas-savers give you BONUS MILES y wa If you shop for value, the smart buy is Standard Gasolines with built-in gas-savers that deliver Bonus Miles, You get high octane to stop gas- wasting knock ...cleaner combustion ... and-a corrosion inhibitor to help keep carburetors at high- mileage efficiency. Most fouled spark plugs, ’ whitH squander fuel, are brought back to full performance by GOLD ‘CROWN. Get thrifty, trouble-free performance — —get GOLD. CROWN, Super-Premium or RED CROWN, the higher, octane King-Size Regular . .. today! YOU EXPECT MORE FROM STANDARD... AND YOU GET IT! es * r al KK “weot a = Dees € Pat ters ee a ap Z eat e oe ee veut ats eae tae ed i Pa + = eS aes THE PONTIAC PRESS ret PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FE enact seyt EMBER s}) TT) 1959 - Annual Peanut Sale Set by Rochester Kiwanians ROCHESTER—Local Kiwanians group to help provide expert ca-) will be on Rochester street cor-|reer counseling, ners Friday and Saturday with) Another committee. now is check- their? peanut ‘bags and cannisters|ing into setting up a Kiwanis Key taking part in the fifth annual, Club at the high school for eligible Kiwanis Peanut Sale, according!/students who share in Kiwanis! to Milton Weaver, club president.'ideals of community building and The amateur peanut salesmen 00d citizenship. will be volunteers from among the Serving with Martin in arrang- membership * !Arthur Mitchell, Cyril Borst, Henry) ‘Rochester citizens have sup- | Mitzerfeld, Howard MacMillan and ported. the sales generously (w illlam Fletc her through the years, knowing that | ali the money above the small amount for the peanuts stays in the community and is used by the local service club fer worthy | projects,’ Sale Chairng Kaye Martin said. 3 . | Income~ ‘from the poncist sale} i } generally goes to the youth pro- grams, according to Weaver. These include Halloween parties, Student Honors Night, Kids Day, Junior! Olympics, and the winter “éce pre-| gram. x «© * The -Underprivileged Childrén’s | Committee gives personalized as- siftance to many children and) OFS will stage ifs annual bazaar , U.S, Navy Band. Development Station at Albany, “¢ bouquet, of white roses —S R h Sled stalled for safety, in the radiology apd turkey dinner to pm In the fall of 1925. the band Calif , Frances Siegal of Chester, Ces oug e INQ |= gi epindine marianne Thursday in the O] Temple eft Washington on the first of its . ¥ ny - will be fully equipped for imme- here aniial tours In the vent 1 ' The department said the process -, Was maid of honor. ae | F diate service to patients : ars lit re . | tall ; ; may be expected to expand Malds were Kathleen Dunn of in uropean ar e S ( / . followed, under Presidents Cool Westacre nd the bride’ : me central air . conditioning é ‘ . Pb 7 markets for foods that can be sa e bride s sis. + ; f idge. Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman ae ter. Carel dram. Catherine % : system will take care of all of- adapted to it ” an. Catherine } owng WAS HING Ge ON ‘UPD—T oe . . ‘ and kisenhower, the band has . a niece of the BEAarE Toor Was ; ne! fices as will the latest desigued *=- “ptayed for vast audiences through * * * flower girl. ; American farmer may have rough heating system. Indirect lighting, El oT The Cnited States as well ae) So far, de ‘partment CNEINCETS! lee of ini” mien wane Ge isledding in the European market eee a pp agian a ‘in Canada, Alaska, Puerto Rico, have made powders of good color . idu nex erior colors will’ a part o f g ring the t few yez Cuba, Jamaica, Hajtiand the Vir-;and flavor from the jwee of formed by the bride grosm « broth-| = f abe: Se the building's individuality. gin Island: tomatoes, apricots, pineapples, CT. Jonh of Milford. Seating the |'n8 to a foreign agriculture expert Clarkston druggist Keith Hall- In 1948 after Wotld War Tf, the apples, grapes and oranges, from, gurst< were Robert Beckman of! There will be rough eompetition man hae leased the entice AER i. band reSimed its national tours. whole and no-fat- milk and fecm ‘Orchard Lake. James Lowery of from Russia as well as the coun It-ariso performs once a week { Hanon ~ w n d were KEEGO Stringham ~ Gerald 7 O Shapefiesss martried Sat ber. Leanah: fhescen, both also of Keego Har- on coffee, prine whip, beef apd chick- mu int Ta coast to-coast radio program. ten broth and seston Oregon Girl Marries | Gerald O' ‘Shaugnessy A reception wax held in the VIA) NEARING COMPLETION — With a target completion date of the first Sunday in November, work is being speeded on constfuction of the new $350,000 St. Paul's Methedist Church, on Romeo “now jis being done ont at the eastern end of the v ilage. The glas< doors are being installed and chapel ma stor work usdsy in a candlelight ceremorty jail here immediately after the “at Trinity Methodist Charch here. jceremony The double-ring wedding was, perfarmed before an altar banked) in yellow and white giadioli and) The newlyweds are honeymoon iside in Birmingham upon their; Union Lake and Mike Taneway/tries in the comton market in the and Roger Wooden, both of Walled epinion of George Dietz. director diake of the Rotterdam office of the A reception was held in the VFW/American Farm Bureau Federa- Hall at Keego Harbor following | tion i the wedding ceremony. | Dietz for many years represent- o ed the Agriculture Department in |E uropean countries. Dietz said the} jpeople in several areas of Europe! « jare “‘moving off their bicycles and linto little automobiles” in describ- Indict Teamster Chief for Paper Shakedown | PITTSBURGH (Teddy) Cozza, who appeared be- taking place there. ifore the Senate Rackets Commit. | A rising standard of hving in tee last June, was indicted by a' Europe is opening up new con-| federal grand jury yesterday on sumer markets. Dietz told a lunch! charges of accepting money from} igroup during a visit to the Wash-| ing at Niagara Falls and will re pittsburgh newspaper in return! factor office of the farm bureau. | building management is- be ifor labor péace _— ~ (UPT)—Theodore ing the economic changes that are a sss which is open to the pathic. Church is na a starts, \ ea = > . ie Supper. Set for Friday © GOODISON—A smorgasbord stin- - Costing $350,000 “per will be served Friday in the! ri “New St. Paul’ Methodist Church here beginning, at 5:30 p.m. The Ladies’ Society, of the. chutch will | \sponsor. t 7 Sark Wee on the new 000 St. ul's . Methodist completion, church officials report- Ais toda TB Association Meets ‘ “i * The new ons doors ‘are being EAST- LANSING o-— ‘the a installed this week, and the chapel igan Tuberculosis Assn. is meeting piastering is being finished, ac- ft Kellogg Cetter this ~week with, to contenctye tl Rewold attention centered on miethods of * : developing a robust public whose! Work. on the Ftd and park- general health{ will stop TB before’ ing tot ‘construction is now moving (forward, and the carilion and or- rapidly toward | _chrysanthemums | The bride is the daughter of | i and Mrs. Widred L. String- rn of Portland, Ore. The bride. in the’son of Laurel Davis. s Rising Fast =a chose a cocktailiength gown fash- pc instalation ip scheduled to be-| lioned, of brocaded nylon-with a v- gin in about 10 day’, Rewoid) said. heekline, elbow-length sleeves, # Chureh officiats oni they. are fitted: bodice and moderately ” optimistic about an carly, (skirt. date for the few tncilities, | A -pearl- héadpicce decered her! Barring unpredicted delays, the, short vell atid she carried white!’ charch he open fer wwor- ‘gladioli with a touch of salmon.) ship the first Sunday of Novem. (colored carnations ' ber. | Mrs. Wayne W. O'Shaugnessy of) The structufe is being erected) ‘Birmingham atteagied the bride. | : én an eight-acre site on Romeo! William Berry ‘of Keego Har- | tra SE OS SUINEN Gud Oh ayy UE aneeke an Neat Sine, Waters | village. retain A were Oliver ‘Golding and James MRS. GERALD O'SHAT GENSSY; got madecrty for ~ fall term, Cozza, president of Tearnstees| Loc ‘al 21 here was charged with Lebaron | Cubs Display laccepting money from the Pitts- Pets at First Meeting |burgh Sun Telegraph. He was in-| dicted on 11 ‘counts for alleged) LeBaron-School Cub Pack 66 held ‘violation of the Taft-Hartley Act. its first meeting of the season last | In addition to being president of night at the school. All cubs dis-| ‘Local 211, Cozza also served as!played their pets and hobbies. steward for delivery truck drivers A skit entitled. “Our Pets": was | at the newspaper and was em- presented by den 3. ' ployed as a truck driver. He was! Cubs earning awards were Garg, charged with doing little or no Cotter, Daniel: Stiff, Michael (work for the Sun-Telegraph Thompson, Dale _ Orient MSU Students , EAST LANSING — The van- » Studied Under O'Neill bad of an estimated 20,000 st [dents has Moved onto the coiceell Fannie Brice, famous American lat Michigan State University as comedienne, studied for the stage | ‘orientation and enrollment woek under Jaines O'Neill, father of) ‘playwright Eugene, O'Neill ‘Longstaff_ and David Marsh. f ‘Borders, Lyndon Corniuk, Michael section of the building facing Dixie highway and will establish a com- plete, modern pharmacy there. Blacktopped parking space .on the one-acre site for more than ‘900 cars will be set up in front and | back of the new professional build- ing. A boulevard- type walk will be constructed between the present Medical Center and the ‘Profes- sional Building,.and all office doors will open on the Yandseaped walk. Plans for the new building. were | Prepared’ by architect. W. B, Ed- wards of Pleasant Ridge, General .¥ contractor for the project ig Nor- ‘¢ man Namark of Royal Oak and handled by Rolfe Smith; realtor, \ io Pontiac, - Participating .in today's certemo- inies were Springfield Township Su |pervisor John Carey, two village councilmen, Robert Jones and Her bert Beach, the doctors and their i wives. } ‘Avon Photo Club to See. Printing Demonstration se ROCHESTER — Ralph : ‘will demonstrate “Print Making” jat Thursday's meeting of the cub Mewsartat CRONIN ‘Memorial Library here. ae used. Anyone - ‘come to attend, This Trip of His Can't Be Real By ARTHUR enion | wy \Vacationland (Can Can Dancer Seas mere ez i gna 1 é : 1 a ; : Mr. K...He’s Fast With a Quibble 6 Sail Again 'mmoral Charge ensnatceee {0 il gain PARIS (AP) — “Oh, that’ not} me on his American tour and It seems like a dream, a night-; Is am en fast man with a Will Carry Avtomotiles shee,” ind y ‘—— came away ay sce es quibble. But possibly all these disputes look more formidable than they ireally are. watches Khrushchev the more one suspects that he takes to argu- SAN FRANCISCO (# — Every/mare. once insa while you stop. aad-pinch prs A NIGHTMARE yourself. This trip of Nikita Peel off from the tour for a Khrushchev can't be réal. moment, maybe no longer than It's a road show playing one- and to write your story, and when you debate Teturn some reporter, his eyes ments in the wholehearted way blows | eine) Si aay ‘that other men take .to women or "You should have been here.| to liquor. ‘You simply wouldn't have believed, t- 5 s 6 So you keep reminding your. | | self, because in all this turmoil Hermi | § | it’s easy to forget, that here is | Ti Soe Visitor, Self | on earth. And the impression | we make on him, and the jm- Fires Wilderness Cabin After Holding Maine pression he makes on us, could all is the indis- | Khrushchev gets| POSS® Off for 6 Hours two-night stands, a floating society, a whirlwind that from morning until late at night.! NOW! te THURS. | HURON THEATER at 7:15 and 9:20 affect the course of history. Under the conditions, it's a scary thought Strangest of criminate way into arguments | = ~*~ *« * | CHESUNCOOK LANE, Maine It's almost like the old days when! (AP)—A 75-year-old hermit killed strong men toured the county fairs,|a@ lumber operator, held a sher- offering prizes to anyone who could) jiff's posse at bay for six hours For the more -one} 4 | Atlantic stay with them for three rounds. Mr. K has argued with a movie| magnate, with business men, with| a mayor, with newsmen, with labor | leaders Abeut all that is left for him is to wrife a letter to a music critic, complaining about a review of his! daughter's singing “TOHN FORD'S THUNDERING SPECTACLE! Even the arguments have sur realist touches YOU ARE POLITE Normally if you have a guést around, even one who has habits you deplore, you don't begin by saying how wonderful your habits are and how absurd or evil you consider his But Khrushchev has usually been introduced by politicians of sort of another, And politicians THE HORSE SOLDIERS COLOR by Delune reser poo UMNTEO (IZ) ARTISTS one —Starts FRIDAY— bless their practical hearts, have “THUNDER IN SUN” one primary goal) Jo get them a selves re-elected BLACK ORCHID cited —COMING SOON— So that no one can think they Pr wo Ehave been taken in my commu TEN COMMANDMENTS nistie guile, they usually begin ‘ eh their introduction with a few NORTH BY NORTHWEST kindly references to capitalism “THE NUN STORY” , eee re off to the idevlogical Most of us, when we're guests, don't) quibble with our hosts, however ungracious we may think them. But not Mr, K. He “THE BIG CIRCUS” “THIS EARTH IS MINE” TONIGHT and TUESDAY :20 OPEN 6 P.M. — START 4AOe SEE AN EARLY SHOW! REDUCED ADMISSION TO 7:00 P.M. PARAMOUN PRESENTS & Wai Oc LAURENTIIS PROQUC ION TEMPEST TECHNICOLOR® TECHNIRAMA® Feqente JERRY LEWIS SONG * LAUGHS + TECHNICOLOR RocK:A-BYE BABY WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor. Williams Lake-Mirport Roads—Box Office Opens 6:30 P.M. LAST TIMES TONIGHT WAYNE. WILLIAM HOLDEN » RIDES WHERE ONLY THE GREAT ONES GO! JOWM FORD'S THUNDERING SPECTACLE! - ogugm bry Do Lune + tatesses owe UNITED (IE) ARTISTS PLUS >» an ef Heiennnd thew amen Aare The in the CAROLYN JONES DAE BREWSTER ees him) eae TONITE @ DRIVE-IN THEATER BOX OFFICE ‘ 2150 Opdyke Rd. FE 4-461) OPEN 6:30 ,. > ‘> and her bosom companions AUAS — JESSE 3E_ JAMES ball I TT ey -f! news operations land finally committed — suicide! |'Monday night in his flaming wil-| i\derness cabin. | queline Lecorditr, dark - French can can dancer told that Nikita Khrushchev had called the dance immoral. “He’s exaggerating,” sniffed and flounched. her Pore trimmed skirt. : “The way we do it, it’s really Between Detroit and Cleveland Soon LANSING #—The ice breaker- ferry Vacationland, former queen of the Straits ferry fleet idled for \nearly two. years, soon will be ‘sailing the Great Lakes again. mous by the of Toulouse-Lautrec. It was derived she | a popular 19th A membership in the New York Stock Exchange brought a record sel to the Detrojt Atlantic Naviga- tion Corp. for $1,500,000. Troy Browning of Detroit, head of the navigation firm, offered to pay the sum plus six per cent interest over a period of seven years, Mackie said, The navigation company plans to use the Vacationland to carry automobiles ‘‘fishyback’’ between Detroit and Cleveland. Detroit- started auto transport operation with two ships between Duluth, Detroit and Cleveland tast this more complete medication. Wednesday. In doctors’ tests, patients had No Surgery ~“To stop nagging discomfort of swollen piles in minutes, thou- sands use Stainless Pazo®. Not just act to “shrink” piles can't offer complete symptomatic relief. For real comfort, fast, you need | The hermit identified as| was |Hiram Johnson, who for 40 years AP Wirephote jlived alone in the cabin, subsist- ON WAY TO YACHT — ‘Maria Callas waves from a launch ing off the land, trapping ani-| off Athens, Greece, as she speeds toward the yacht “Christina,” me a cutting, wood. — anchored a few-miles away. The opera'singer has been linked ae e Ct men -d ane romantically with the owner of the yacht, Greek shipping magnate Spear, 49, as he tried to get the Aristotle Onassis lotd man to discuss a complaint| |that Spear owed him $889 for work and. for lumber ‘Hollywood Headlines: * * * Holt. said he and deputy Ernest Harrington fired fiye or six shots Movies Draw Moral Line «x « * immediate relief. That's. because without surgery! prepsniuens that . State Highway Commissioner|**a, tall, green-eyed and red-/$625,000 in 1929. The lowest re- John C. Mackie seated he has| haired. ; corded price ever paid for a mem- recommended State Administrative) J@cqueline and Nicole arejbership was $2,750 in 1871. Board approval of sale of the ves- (Advertisement) (Aavertisementy DOES MORE THAN JUST “SHRINK” PILE TISSUES! Needed To Stop Pain Of Swolien Pile Tissues While They Heal! Stainless Pazo combines the most effective ingredients known for piles. Thus works 3 ways at once: (1) stops pain, itching in minutes; (2) shrinks tissue swe’ gestion; (3) promotes ww tissues. You get healing magic Don't suffer needlessly. Get Stainless Pazo Supposi Ointment at druggists. Get relief without surgery or money back! It is estimated the Vacationland, a double-ended, 10,000-horsepower | vessel, could carry 60 truck-trailers| loaded with cars. Mackie said Browning planned | to put the Vacationland in opera- tion ‘‘as soon as written agree- ment was approved.”’ About 35 | persons will be employed in the operation, he said, The Vacationland, built at a cost |of $4,700,000, was put into operation to carry cars and passengers be-| tween Mackinaw City and St. Ignace in the winter of 1952. It. also was used to free other vessels through the doorway as Johnson! jumped behind a pile of wood t St & ti Holt ran about a mile to ihe rl pers yIa 10NS lake, where he radioed for help — his plane He had flown in By BOB THOMAS or grinds. But she said Miss Barr wt hour later, a ale H AP Movie-TV Writer doesn't, either MiCKerson a county medica ex . ; Th . * * * ‘aminer, flew in from Greenville OTe Phe Glin “She's a dancer and a_ good jand joined about 20 deputies and | Industry may be loosening its one,” Miss Collins said “Her act volunteers who surrounded the/ moral code, but it will still brook is so good she coiild ain Las cabin 50 miles north of Green , OF vr no bumps and grinds. V F ville in ene of the most remote nt 5 egas or any place fully clothed. wilderness reas of central No, sir, the gyrations of strip- She does it without clothes merely crern ‘ a pers still find no to suit the current public taste. ——* * place in) the ‘Bumps and grinds are old hat. Tislers 5, Later Johnson's cabin burst into! Hollywood — film Vulgar. foo, Mast of thelstrippers) flames Tt was quickly leveled | art 1 dis-,don't do them any more. They're | When the embers cooled Dr covered that mer efi aR) Nickerson found Johnson's body some academic! Miss Collins admitted that in-the ruins. He said the old man| research on a/W@S hot an appreciator of the| shot himself with a deer rifle dance per peeling art ; formed by Jean, |, . . ~ = Colling in “Sev I don't think it is really ex- Ashmore Leaves en Thieves.” citing,” she commented. ‘‘What is ‘ She plays a/More innocent than nudity? It is jake it. off What is hidden that is seductive f ansas azette THOMAS girl, and her [0t what is revealed. The stock- coach is Candy Barr, the accomp a leg = aaa mate appeal. | LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)— lished and sometimes law pur ae = ash SUAS Harry S. Ashmore has resigned) sued dancer now appearing aptly. | te “i hala ied that this might be, as executive editor of the Arkan-|on the Sunset Strip aie & lene: Viewpoint. win Gazette and will become a) Miss Collins wag about to go in-: coneltant with a study group iNite per number when I asked her _ British Producer on eh nation ix ellecti ie hae the aesthetics of her coach | jean " Schedules Film October * * * Ashmore A3, t ) aang eh, “Tt has been very interesting- on Ruth of Moab j Pulitzer Prize in 1958 for dis- inf a ; tinguished editorial writing on the!” ormative, too,”’ the English ac school integration situation, will "ess remarked woe with he Study of Democrat-| Miss Collins added that she is film producer Sir Michael Balcon ‘ic Institutions at Santa Barbara, considerably more constrained in “!!! make a movie about Ruth the Calif ‘her interpretation than is Miss Moabite in Israel next March and | A. Ro Nelson, managing editor, Barr. In fact, the movie censors is hoping to get Elizabeth Taylor will assume direction of Gazette decreed that her dance cannot be to Play the lead, it was announced referred to as a strip tease, The Mere — . fact that she doffs her clothes! The screen play is being written | Glass can insulate against heat, | is incidental by Christopher Fry. cold mr atomic ragliation Nor can she perform any bumps | “We won't try a Cecil B. De- | Mille spectacle,” said director | | Leslie Norman, “but an authen- tic human drama and ilove | story.” JERUSALEM (UPI) — British} Norman said most of the filming Seaway Plan May Link Detroit, East would be done in the village of Ship Carries Trailer Vans Suhmatta in Galilee. | DETROIT op A hew freight form of package freight service | * * * plan, which may Ihnx Detroit with will help solve cost problems. in It was learned Twentieth Cen- eastern markets Cn the St. transportation. Browning Lines fury-Fox also is planning to do a owns the ‘Foy, recently coverted film on Ruth in Israel, for the new operation starring the 17-year-old, Fov A A A iactress Ilana Cooper. arrived at Detroit, bringing 22) Browning said if the service is | trailer vans of Minnesota-made expanded to other Great Lakes! products to Detroit markets vessels it could eventually link all of lake ports with eastern markets. jLawrence Seaway, Ws given a try- out here over the weekend | The freighter Norman W In North America only one-third | the land receives adeqMate. The vans were lifted from their ‘rainfall possibly | Israeli | ‘|treatment. trapped by Great Lakes ice. « * * The Vacationland made its final \trip in State Highway Department service, a nostalgic voyage, when the Mackinac Bridge was opened in November 1957. -It has been! lying idle a drydock for nearly | jtwo ih since. PLUS! THE BIG JOLT “THE REBEL SET" SEATO Conference STARTING TWO ALL-NEW EXCITEMENT Will Discuss Laos “TORPEDO ZONE”. THURSDAY e PACKED UNDERWATER HITS! “THE FROG WOMAN” | | BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) —!/ = rwvvuvuwvvwvweTvYTYTVTVvTVT"e Military leaders of the Southeast’) wvevvVvVvVVVYWwYVeVVeVeeYT } @ STARTS © s TOMORROW Asia Treaty Organization opened! a conference here today less than! an hour away by jet from revolt-| torn Laos. | ‘| ‘Fhe pro-Communist rebellion in, jLaos is not officially on the agen-| wwerwvrevew* wv ~wwrrrryrs v PPPPPPPPPPPPAPPPPP DS PONTIAC DRIVE-IN THEATER 2435 Din Hw y |da for the 11th SEATO military; PIPPPPPPPPIPPPIAAS jadvisers conference but delegates left no doubt the situation in the, strategic Buddhist kingdom will be. a key point of discussion. Even though not a member of SEATO, Laos comes under the| protective wing of the eight-na-| EXCLUSIVE PREMIERE SHOWING * “DIRECT FROM IT’S RECORD BREAKING ENGAGEMENT IN THE CITY OF DETROIT”. tion anti-Communist alliance. Without mentioning Laos, American delegate Adm. Harry iD. Felt said ‘‘U. S. armed forces | in the Pacific are powerful mani-) festations of the alliance which | my country has made with na- tions in Asia.” ‘Red Skelton Is Taking a Rest After Strain HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Red Skel- |ton went home from a weekend lof rest in a hospital and went to bed for more rest. | “He's taking’ a -siesta,” said a spokesman at the comedian's home. = * * * Skelton, 46, was reported fa- tigued by a summer tour of night clubs, a two-week trip to Japan and a return stand at a Las Vegas, Nev., hotel. He returns to television Sept. 29. Three persons out of every five |admitted to hospitals in the, United States receive surgical trailer beds at Duluth by crane and hoisted aboard ship. The | trailer bodies then rode on long | Steel rails to their destination. | At Detroit, they were lifted over “NOW SHOWING thru THURSDAY! FEATURES AT 1:30--3:30--5:30--7: 30--9:30 ithe side, put on trailer beds again and driven off L. D. Browning, lat Browning Lines, vice president | Inc., says this| 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. 50c Nites & Sun. 60c Children . rollicking, romancing WALT DISNEY DOES IT AGAINI... bringing new wenders, new happiness, new laughter « . for folks of all ages. It's Disney magic when you eS meet THE LITTLE PEOPLE singing, dancing, whimsical world of color end music. in @ wonderful \ TS barn cincult Now! thru WED. WALT DISNEY’S ALL-LIVE FULL LENGTH FEATURE MIRACLE : DARBY ‘ O'GILL WANE - ROUEN fon | . F | ae THE LITTLE PEOPLE’ THE HORSE RABE shane JANET MUNRO Scone Pim. ft «ee AE CN ee A PND BR ges ym ty Oe me | Co —wBprecs; SOLDIERS | ) * 20-MIN. FEATURETTE “NATURE'S STRANGEST Ss CREATURES” | “DONALD'S DOG LAUNDRY” - STARTS ,SAb Minto —cneistive canene | ‘FRIDAY! "A" PRIVATES AFFAIR” AWide Sunny Smile...A Great Big Hug.. And Zing GoThe Strings of Your Heart ! HERE COME THE STARS...THE STORY... THE SUNSHINE... THE SURPRISES OF FRANK CAPRA’S COMEDY THAT GLOWS WITH NOTHING BUT. LOVE...LOVE... LOVE... -—* FRANK CAPRAS———, | Alou wi tae Henao’ =) tm ak Rett Cee ee ee eee eee —— LAST TIMES TONIGHT——— COLOR wy nase EDGR s ‘FIRST _ MAN INTO SPACE” QE EA EE oe eg a RM ap pa eT bal z Ni eran : PONE BS ea NG 9g ee a aS SE er — Phe a iy ener + arr aS Sas ‘ ’ ; ~ & nance Bye Ser + au * * gmoney ; rd . } ¥ >») s 1959 ~ i SEVENTEEN , aie Many Bargains caf Flea Market ~ But You Never Quite * Know What You Obtain From Rome’s Bazaar «4 ROME (UPI) — Want a car cheap? If you've got the time, a little money and don't ask silly questions, you can buy it—piece by piece—in Rome’s fabulous Flea Market. The Flea Market takes over the Porta Portese every Sunday morn- ing. Some 500 stalls are set up on the road running along the Tiber river. ;° A haven for tourists and Ital- lans alike, the market offers anything from American-made blue jeans to ‘an old wedding dress; from genuine (maybe) silver candalabra te a chair with only three legs. And you really can buy that car, provided you want to go on a number of Sundays, buy it piece by piece and carry the parts home to put together, and not ask just where the man selling the parts got them. Over the years a number of persons have bought for a few dollars antiques that turned out to be worth many thousands. But in this day and age the inex- perienced buyer is taking a chance. ‘ETRUSCAN’ VASE That) lovely-Struscan vase that lay buried for a few thousand years that you managed to buy for $15 may be two weeks old and worth half the price. Actually, the expert antique dealers of Rome comb the Porta Portese as soon as it opens early Sunday morning, buying any val- uable goods that may come to light among the stacks and stacks of junk. Every. Sunday thousands upon thousands of persons swarm the street, picking and choosing, look- ing .or haggling. Only the very, very uninitiated pays the original price asked by the stall-keeper. He says 10,000 lire, the buyer says five. Usually the compromise is reached somewhere in between, possibly in favor of the buyer if he or she knows the proper mo- ment to say ‘‘that’s tog much” and walks away. Travelling musicians and beer and cold drink vendors mix with the beggars and pickpockets along the mile-long route. But whether the intention is to buy or not, the Flea Market of Rome is a worthwhile stop for any visitor to the Eternal City. Farm and Garden Pine Lake Unit Hears Tree Talk Merrill Ray of Michigan Depart- ment of Conservation spoke on pine trees and civic improvemen at the meeting of Pine Lake Branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden ° Association. The meeting was held Thursday at the Scotch Pine drive home of Mrs. Carl Giese. Mrs. A. J. Lind- man was cohostess. Mrs. Harold Schneider, horti- cultural chairman, reported on the fall flower show, ‘‘What So Proud- ly We Hail,” being given by the north suburbia branches of the as- sociation Sept. 30 from 2:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at. Birmingham Com- munity House. Conducting the Oct. 13 work- shop will be Mrs. R. D. Autgh- maugher. Guests attending were Mrs. Cecil R. Davis, Mrs. Arnold Wine and Mis: Milton Muhlfelder. It’s GOOD Fire Story WASHINGTON (UPI) — Forest fires last year burned a total of 3,280,000 acres, the lowest on rec- _ ord, according to the U. S. Forest Service. Total number of fires to- taled 97,910 as agaifist 83,392 fires in 1957. jgreat country are all doomed to! from left, Lynne E. Anderson, 1 FRESHMEN AT MSUO — Two scholarship students who are members of the first freshman class at Michigan State University Oakland are, Rd., and Gary Acker, 18, of 2260 Oaknoll Rd.,’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER for admission to 8, of 35 Oneida 1958. Gary was co-valedictorian and president of the graduating class at Avondale High School last June and also was a star athlete:? * About 94 per cent of the total area of Indiana is farmland and|the world’s goods and use one-third largest producer of cheese—629,000 80 per cent Gf it is improved. Americans consume one-third The United States is the world’s} “Landen’s Old Vie "Theatee, ded Spee icated to Shakespeare, . ee, its services. (metric tons in 1958. -, Inaitied Royal Victoria Hall. Pentiac Press Phete Pontiac Township. Lynne was the first applicant the new university back in July, Children’s Programs Expanded A fall and winter recreation pro- gram- for Waterford Township residents has been scheduled and is ready for operation, recreation| director: Tom Belton announced to- day. An expansion of the children’s programs and two new adult pro-| jects is the beginning of a long- | range plan for additional leisure activities to keep pace with the rapid population growth in the township, Belton, said. Already organized and getting set for their first production, the Lakeland Players will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday and make arrangements for try-outs for the $-act comedy “Our Town.” Any adult residents in the town- ship may attend. Girls from 4 to 16 years of age p.m. Monday through Saturdays For boys in grades 5 through 8 get underway at the high school! football field from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. | Saturdays. * * * From 10 a.m. to noon Satiirdays, will have ballet instruction at 3:30) Waterford Recreation Schedule Sef games, arts and crafts will be offered to boys and girls from 7! \to 13 years of age attending Donel. | son and Isaac Crary schools. The cake decorating classes for| ladies are now beginning at 1: 30 | [P- m. Mondays through Fridays for | ‘beginners. Those wishing aa vanced instfuction will ‘meet from | 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. week nights. The ladies exercise and gym classes will begin Friday from 7 te 9 p.m. and the Fashion Your Figure Club meeting each Wednesday takes place from 7 to 9 p.m. Square dance instruction for adult couples is being held from} 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Mondays,. and popular dance instruction for boys, girls and adults will begin Mon- day, Sept. 28, from 7 to 9 p.m. and will be held Mondays and : «| Wednesdays thereafter. Dog obedience training will be- touch football game program will] gin from 8 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and the newest adult*project, the \Golden Age Club; will have its first social get-together from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Oct. 15. With the exception of football, Negotiations Useless DETROIT — A onetime Hun- garian minister of finance says expansion of American free enter- prise — not negotiation — is the only rebuttal to Russia's plans for world domination. “You, your families and this death, starvation and slavery un- less you méet Russia with in- creasing strength,” said Dr. Nicholas Nyaradi last night. A_ member of the Hungarian coalition government from 1945 to 1948, Nyaradi spoke at a meet- ing of the Employers Assn. of Detroit. He now is director of international studies at Bradley University. “In spite of -Mr. Khrushchev's smiles and clowning, this master plan of destruction still stands to- day as I learned it more than 10 years ago,’’ Nyaradi said. Nyaradi was a leader of a mis- sion to discuss Hungarian repara- tions with Russia —in—1947. * * * ‘Hungarian Warns U. S. keep his round héad on his shoulders,"’ he said. The Russian economy is not strong enough to support both moon rockets and consumer goods. “Someday the Russian people will stop looking for their hole in the moon and start to look at the holes in their shoes. If that hap- pens, Mr. Khrushchev will fall-” House Phone Leeway all of the programs will be con-| ducted at the Community Activi- ities Center on Williams Lake | ‘road and for any further informa- | | jtion, residents have been asked | ito call the recreation department. Ike Signs Bill Giving | WASHINGTON (UPI) — A bill giving House members more leeway in the use of their free telephone and telegreph allow- ances has been signed into law by President Eisenhower. The old law allowed each house member a telephone allow- ance of 6,000 free minutes and 40,000 free telegraph words each | Congress. Members paid for long distance telephone calis | and telegrams in excess of the allowance. | The new law sets up a system under which the allowance will | be changed to 80,000 communi- | cation units per Congress. One | minute on the long distance | phone equals five units, and | each telegraph word, one unit. On-the-Job Training BURLINGTON, Vt. (UPI) —| Chief warrant officer Frank Mon-, ty, who wag in charge of a Navy school for electricians, retired from service after 20 years to. earn a degree in electrical engi-| neering at the University of Ver-. mont. Four-fifths of the world supply of corn is grown in the United) States. _* & * tee eee ee — . e STAMDS EVERY Wednesday | at WRIGLEY a3 Get Finer Gifts pea: Faster swith (2) i Gold Bell Gift Stamps \©\PLUS GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS * Tel Huron Shopping Center 45 S$. Telegraph e ey = he. *536 North *398 ’ Perry Auburn * 59 South Saginaw * 5060 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains ial “Mr, Khrushchev is fighting to/| 6or More... Less than 6... We Also Specialize in ALL ALUMINUM L. W SALES W.. Huron. #t. PR 3.%006 10% ... $21.95 ea. & ‘ST ORM WINDOW DOW SALES wed. Might Tat 0 1228. Taegan PR 6-1123 Only the finest ranges from the world’s great Gas Range makers qualify for this coveted GOLD STAR AWARD “Its GOLD SPAR Sell-a-bration Time RY) hae 49, . AT YOUR . i. GAS RANGE <é: DEALER © The Gold Star is on award of ~FR FE merit, not a brand nome! You will find it only on the finest, most modern Gas Ranges. I FRY-PAN ules. sine pada Given with Gas Ranges ; standards—Gold Star standards that feature the —for performance, automation | BURNER-WITH-A-BRAIN — and design. No wonder now, Reculer more people than ever ore Big, deep aluminum pan becomes guia cooking with Gas! automatic when used on the / $9.95 VALUE |. |. ‘ " Burner-With-A-Brain...eliminates , 2 : : “ e guesswor ke ne E BUY NOW AND SAVE! mm. ” pepareree ‘ 7 oe "RIF AWwee . * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1959- « EIGHTEEN A HAPPY TRIO — Pitchers Don McMahon, left, and Warren Spahn, center, and 3rd base- man Eddie Mathews smile happily in the dress- ing room at Pittsburgh's Forbes Field last night after their team — the Milwaukee Braves — whipped the Pittsburgh Pirates, 86. The big Angeles in the ble. Spahn won P7 AP Wirepheote trio was most instrumental in the victory which moved the Braves into a Ist place tie with Los National League pennant scram- No. 20, McMahon relieved Spahn in the 9th inning to save the game and Mathews clubbed two home runs, =~ k & * o * #2. White Sox Try to Clin¢ a Up No. 20 Mathews Belts 2 Homers, Spahn Chalks Braves Share | Warren Spahn has won 20 againjgame winner for the 10th time in land Milwaukee has barrelled into|4 15-year re = - The Braves, winning three in a The row and 12 of their last 15, jumped Braves’ big guy is Ed Mathews. into a tie with Los Angeles for a. | Jt was Mathews, belting five | one-game edge over the San Fran- home runs in the past four games cisco Giants, who like the Dodgers for a sare of the major league were idle yesterday. Each of the lead with #3, who got the job done.| contenders has five games to play. 'The left-handed slugger dréve in| The Braves are at Pittsburgh ifive runs last night with a pair of again tonight with lefty Juan Pi- |homers for an 86 decision ove? arro facing Harvey Haddix, ~ the | ithe Pirates at Pittsburgh that slim southpaw who pitched 12 per- 'made Warren the wonder a 20-|tect innings against Milwaukee . ; oO last May only to lose ¥ * * The Dodgers open a two-game) series at St. Louis tonight with either Sandy Koufax or Danny, la tie for the National League lead.4 ‘But don’t kid yourself right-hander Jack Sanford going against the Cubs’ Art Ceccarelli, a lefty. The Cubs clobbered St. Louis 12-3 last night in the only other game scheduled in the NL. * * * Spahn, at 38 already tops among all-time left-handers for 20-victory seasons in the majors, made it or the fourth year in a row and tied Eppa Rixey as the winningest southpaw in NL history with his 266th. And unti) the ninth inning, it looked as though he had it in a breeze. * * * Mathews tied the Cubs’ Ernie With LA Ff Cleveland; Stil * sons sues me, wsaaafF Crucial Test Early Wynn Will Hurl for Chicago; Victory a “Must’ for Tribe Mathews with 13 RBI in four games, cracked a 2-all tie in. the fifth with a three-run homer off loser. Bob Friend (819), It bounced off the right field roof at Forbes Field—a target 90 feet high and 300 feet from the plate down Breathing, Girds McDevitt, both left-handers, ‘going Banks, who hit his 43rd at St. Rehired Dyk . . _. eee _ Dykes, rehired as manager of the 3 lit up one of his trademark cigars ~ ened by the contract signing yes- Stinday. He winced while shaking Predicts 1960 Tigers Will Be Title Contender Repeats Past Words of Norman and Tighe After Signing DETROIT (UPI) — Jimmie Detroit Tigers for 1960, promptly and from behind the cloud of smoke predicted his club will be a pennant contender next year. Dykes, his 62 years — 42 of them in baseball — considerably light- terday, saw things in the smoke clouds that weren't so discernable ot his audience. “I think we have the stuff to go all the way,” sald the newly signed little manager. ‘We'll have to pick up a shortstop and a first baseman.” Preseed a bit, Dykes added that he wants to strengthen the bench and he'll need more consistent relief pitching. It,was Dykes’ turn to be confi- dent, although Detroit in the past two years heard almost the same words from departed managers Jack Tighe and Bill Norman The signing of Dykes yesterday ended several weeks of specula- tion about whether the veteran of the Connie Mack era would be rehired or if the Tigers would bid for another “name” manager. This speculation grew last week after Joe Gordon announced he was quitting the Cleveland Indians. Rut general manager Rick Fer- 05 | Very Optimistic against the Cards’ Larry Jackson, Angeles on two-hits the last time they met. And the Giants start a two-game |set at Chicago this afternoon with Louis, for the home run lead with ‘Bennie Daniels, the Cubs’ fourth | pitcher. But Spahn, 5-0 against the Pirates, suddenly was in trouble ‘and the Cubs had three run in | ‘Hot Time Was Had by All’ rell said yesterday that no one | except Dykes. had been considerd | for the 1960 field job Dykes took over the Tigers May 3 after they lost 15 and won only two under Norman. Under Dykes, the club won 72 and lost 60 for a 43 percentage. rounded by autograph hounds appearing as honored guests at | Junior League baseball banquet. The affair was ees TIGERS IN PONTIAC—Detroit Tiger players . Gail Harris, left, and Paul Foytack were sur held at building the 1 last night affer It alse the Boys Club and league player aw Fists, Bitter PITTSBURGH (AP)—Fists flew ‘and bitter words were exchanged j\last night when the Milwaukee |'Braves moved into a tie for the National League lead by beating |Pittsburgh, 8-6. ‘ | It all started after a grounder |hopped over the head of Felix |Mantilla, Milwaukee shortstop, for ja base hit in the fourth inning. |Dick Stuart, who was on first at lthe time, ran in Mantilla as he rounded second * * *® The two men started jawing away while Manager Danny Mur- taugh of the Pirates ran out to claim interference.-- Soon they were swinging “I was in his way but I couldn't ‘help it,” Mantilla explained later. [He said ‘The next time I'll run lyou over.’ So I threw One, The inext thing I knew we were scuf- | fling.” | Mantilla was inclined to shrug jit off as ‘‘one of those things.” Stuart gave his version of the altercation | “IT couldn't put: on the brakes Tigers Nursing Hopes for 3rd | Face A’s in, 2-Game Series; Tangle Chisox in Last 3 7 Pontiac Press Phote Loan » featitred a presentation of team The bank the ontiae Federal Savings & DETROIT (UPI) — The Detroit |Tigers, still nursing faint hopes ifor a third place finish, meet the | Kansas City Athletics today in the ‘opener of a two-game series. With only five games remaining irds Sponsors York by two full games. P E The ups and downy of the Tigers Y | on their schedule—all at home— have failed to ruffle Dykes as they 0) ms jthe Tigers trail third place New did Tighe and Norman. Dykes J i And 2 has seen plenty of changing for- tunes since starting his baseball career with Gettysburg, Pa, in 1917 After playing on Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics from 1918 to 1933, Dykes managed the Chi- cago White Sox, the Athletics, Baltimore Orioles and Hollywood of the Pacific Coast League. Famed All-America gridder Pete Dawkins worked out with the Red Wings yesterday. The former ho¢key defenseman at Cranbrook and West Point leaves for England today where he Will be a Rhodes scholar at Oxford. x *« * The Detroit Tigers will wait several weeks before deciding what to do with their top farm club, Charleston. Detroit may switch to a working agreement with one of the American As- sociation teams that has oper- ated independently. —~ We oe ow Fleet centerfielder Jim Landis may be available for pinch-hitting duties for the White Sox tonight. He-is recovering from a thigh in- fection. Catcher Sherm Loller will play, déspite a bruised hand suf- fered when he was hit by a pitch hands last night. | O@ & A-“‘better position in the pen- nant” ‘race has caused the Dodgers to start selling World Series tickets Earlier sales ended last DETROIT Biggest disap pointments? Ray Narleski and Gail Harris, . Most pleasant surprise? Eddie Yost Other than that, the Detroit Tigers have been just about as indimmie Dykes expected them “to be, But Dykes expects to plish a comeback with Narleski He's not so optimistie about the club's first base situation. General Manager Rick Ferrell has been try- ing to land a first baseman since July. * * * At one timesor another, the club thought it had its hooks on George Crowe of St. Louis, R. C, Stevens of Pittsburgh, Vic Wertz of Bos- ton and Dale Long of thé Chicago Cubs. None of the deals came through, but Wertz is apt to be in Detroit uniform come the spring of 1960 As for Narleski, who was ex- pected to be the ace stopper of the bullpen, Dykes figures it’s | just a matter of confidence, “He was confused when I got here,” the manager explained. “he had been starting and re- lieving, and he just didn't know ; where |he was, But hg’s gonna be a good pitcher. again. He figures every break has gone against him. He became convinced that this is just a.bad season for him. He's got his pitching mofion all fouled up. ; * * * We'll just start over. with Nar. | Chi leski, and I'm betting he comes back and pitches great ball for we” ' . The failures of Harris, rookie Larry Osborne and aging Gus Zer- ‘|nial At first base have Dykes con- vinced that the club must have a new first baseman, Catching? Okay, but could be improved, said Dykes, Pitching? Maybe some shaking up and a different. bullpen, Shortstop: accom , Rocky Bridges doesn't cover enough ground and Coot Veal | ean't hit, Trades? Dykes vhave the Yankees’ would a major deal with the New York club, t * & . “They'll give us Hank Bauer for AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Chicago ? Ch Cleveland onia. OT 62 oa 3M ew York ona 00 73 S10 14ty Detroit wa TS 7 497) Vi'y Baltimore : 72 17 483 My Boston 70 7 470 OM Kansas City 63 85 “4 OT Washington a ro 429 «77% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at Detroit, 1% pm —K Johnaon (0-0) ve Pumaing cie1)) Lary (17-10 Chicago at Cleveland, {opm 10) vs Perry (ta) New York at Ratington, Ditmar (12-0) ve Warws 1131) Baltiniore at Boston.” 7 15 pm 15-11) ve. Sullivan (8-11) TOMORROW'S SCHEDULE Baltimore at Boston. 1 pm Kansas City at Detroit, 120 pm New York at Washington, 7 is pm Only games echeculed MATSON’, LEAGUE loa Angeles Milwaukee a3 bh SAT Ban Francisco 82 67 sso } Pittaburgh : ki "3 513 6% Cineinnali 7” 7a wo lity ‘hicago 71 7 v7 2 Bt. Loule 6A fi Homme 6 61 on y YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 8. Pittsburgh 6, night Chicago 12, St. Loula 3, night Only mamea. scheduled DAY'S GAMES ‘ San Franeisoo at Chicano, 2 pm ford (15-12) va. Ceecarelli (5-3) Los Angeles at &t. Louls. @ pm (®6) ve. Jackson (12-13) Pittaburgh, 7.8 Pisarre (5-2) we Maddie (i24)) Cineinnat! at Philadelphia (2). 5:06 pm —Purkey (12:17) atid O'toele (54) ve Robinson (1-4) and Owen yt. TOMORROW'S SCHENUL San Franciseh at Cricage, ¢ pm Milwaukee al Pittsburgh, 715 pam m= Los Angeles al St. Louis, Only games schertuied, ‘ike to Norn Stebern i but sees little hope of swinving Lost Pet, Behind bs] 706 or Wynn (20. | 7% pm — Wilhelm on Lest Pet. Behihd titi ' BAT “es 721 ~Pa- “Koufax | apm. \ | three of Detroit's remaining games Harvey Kuenn or something simf-/@re with the league leading Chi- Dykes “that's the “88° White Sox on Friday, Satur- lar, : iday and Sunday. cracked wiv those New York guys want! Meanwhile, the Yankees wind up fo trade We don't want it that against second division clubs in the Mal East * * * | Manager Jimmie Dykes called Dykes” carefully dodged ques. |'UPON Jes Bunning to oppose the lions about his coaching staff Some | Athletic @ today. | Bunning has won 16 games and months ngo there were indications ost 13, John Tsitouris, a Detrait that lykes favored a wholesale castoff, will oppose Bunning. shakeup in that department. Fer-| The teams close out the series. (/rell says it’s up to Dykes to name/tomorrow and Detroit enjoys an his coaches and there are indica-|off-day Thursday before putting the ijfions that the Tigers of 1960 will finishing touches on the 1959 sea- have at least. one, and possibly. son with the weekend series against | more ( Chicago. 1 new coaches, as Braves Trip Giants | | | old as some people say and they | i | With |T*° weeks later, they inaugurate jjust as he planned. Words Fly and I bumped into him. We ex-|4 \changed a few words and then |\started trading punches. He didn’t) ‘hit me and I don't think I hit jhim. Anyway, I[ lost a sweat shirt in the scuffle. A few second after the other players had broken up the fight, ‘it broke out all over again. This itime Coach Sam Narron of the Pirates was escorted to the bull- lA Bch'd'st 2b the line. Only five other hitters, Babe Ruth, Ted Beard, Wally a right-handed who blanked Los/a. two-run shot in the ninth~off| Moon, Skiner and Mickey Mantle, had done it previously. MILWAUKEE Bruton ef aSpangler cf PITTSBURGH a 3 se - .- C4e4¥eNs euuUnne @rno-eceeceoene* 4 Se GS r= be OS Crandall ¢ Mantilla ss oe Sceucoune nn” ecoceowoo-ucol 5 MOK Oe Ses eavvuva’s 2 peocecenscoonown” We Seococ-&S s : 200 631 902—8 061 101 603—<¢ E—Avila, Mejias, Stuart. PO-A—Milwau- kee 27-11, Pittsburgh 27-14. LOB—Milwau- kee 7. Pitts h 9 2B—Crandal!, Friend. Mazeroski, Groat. 3B—Aaron. HR—Mathew S—Avila, Spangler. sP—B 2. SB—Bruton. urgess H R ER BB SO pen by his mates. xSpahn (W, 20-15) 8 2 6 6 «(1 McM 1 1 6 0 % 1 Friend (L, 8-19) 4436 $ 5 @? Porterfield 236606006 «060 «1 Gross 2 i j @oi1 Daniels ! 4 161 x-Paced three batters in 9h HBP—By Gross (Crendall. U—sec Jackowski, Gorman, Donatelli. T—2:55 Lions Warned Against Underrating the Colts | | DETROIT W—Don't be misled by the Baltimore Colts’ defeats in their last two exhibition gamés. * * * That is the word from scout Bob |Dove, who looked over the National | Football League champions for he! Detroit Lions. “They're still said Dove, “they're not getting pretty solid,” have six tep rookies who fit right in.” The Lions open their season with) the Colts Sunday at Baltimore. their home campaign with the same Colts at Briggs Stadium. * * * Making matters worse for the Lions is the Colts’ history of near invincibility in openers on their jhome gridiron. They've dropped lbut one opener in the last six years. The Lions remember. They were whipped in the last two. Part of the Colts’ recent troubles stems from their in- firmary list. End Ray Berry, one of quarterback Johnny Unitas’ favorite pass targets, has been hurt most of the pre-season. Husky Art Donovan, an anchor of Baltimore's grudging defen- sive line, missed last Sunday's game with the Chicage Cardinals but is expected back Thursday. Baltimore coach Weeb Ewbank {has dismissed his team's two losses saying the exhibition season went “We wanted to beat the Chicago All-Stars, play our rookies in the next three and polish the first team the last two. The Lions’ casualty list, mean- while, gets smaller. 7 Linebacker Joe Schmidt, who missed last week’s Washington exhibition, is ready to go, his shoulder better, End Jim Doran and guard Har- ley Sewell are should be at peak condition, Only safetyman Yale Lary is counted out of Sunday’s game with a pulled muscle. Dave Whitsell |will play in Lary’s place. The Lions were to make their final squad cut today. One play- er must be dropped to bring the squad to the regulation 36. Clubs around the league have been cutting and losing boys by injuries. New York middle guard Sam Huff isa doubtful starter in the official loop opener Saturday because of a concussion. Defensive specialist Jack Butler of the Steel- ers may miss the opener. Offensive end Jack McClairen is definitely out. ~ Green Bay trimmed its roster by placing tackle Ed Buckingham of Minnesota and linebacker Tom Braatz of Marquette on waivers. San Francisco did the same with halfback Paul Lowe. The Browns cut -rookies Farrell Funston, an end, and defensive back Dick Lebeau. = eSoocscoococosnonenE & 2 improving and!” five times this, year—the White Sox will be in deep trouble. ‘nounced his resignation effective at the end of the season. Gordon faces immediate dismissal when and if Chicago's magic number — 3/now at two — reaches zero. But, the crowd of 50,000 ex- pected for tonight’s encounter is readying its cheers for Gordon and its boos for Lane. Gordon, who. will pitch rookie Jim Perry (12-7) against Wynn, ys: “We'll bust a gut to beat the White Sox. We’ll throw everything we've got at them because if we win it, we'll have a darn good chance for the pennant.” * * * A Cleveland victory would trim Chicago's lead to 24% games and the fat may be in the fire for the White Sox, who must finish with three games at Detroit starting Friday, Last weekend, the Tigers — battling the dethroned Yankees for third place—swept two 5-4 de- cisions from the stumbling White Sox. ' After the Pale Hose, the In- dians have four more games at home with the lowly Kansas City Athletics from whom they just A Chicago triumph tonight would clinch the pennant for the White Sox and set off a champagne cele- bration. in the dressing room of this club which hag been thirsting for a pennant for 40 long years. Manager Al Lopez, arriving here last hight with his Chicagoans, said: : “If anyone’s nervous, it’s me.” He added that everything we've done this year has been the hard way. I guess that's the way it will be with us right down to the fin- ish."’ Forest Lake Champion Blaine Eynon is the club cham- pion at Forest Lake Country Club. Eynon wrapped up the title over the weekend with a 6-4 conquest of Sandy Siecel in the match play final. And we did,’ he asserted. ‘‘I think we can be ready for De- troit,”’ Ewbank added. | QUEENS OF GOLF AT | These three ladies. capturéd m | this year in the Women’s Silver League. Mrs. Elbert Looney, overall championship for the ‘By ED LUBANSKI portant as the pushaway. You can be crazy about the OH Bg All-Star Pin Points | BALL MOVES WITH GLIDE game and practice for hours. You can have strong hands, natural Nothing else in bowling is as im. ability — everything. But you'll never bowl well, ex- by accident, if your push- away is wrong. Hie ia bi see z E Fs fry os 4 ELS #232 z tf j £ z 2 g F i #8 zg a 4 SF H ie > iz Eee Fz bg EH * a z! atk ‘ seamen rensmchineitttinea , . THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 22, 1959 Pace Mart Rise NEW YORK Steels and mo-|em tn wholesale package tors paced a lively recove today after three straight of sharp stock market eee Key stocks advanced from frac- tions to about a point. ' A number of the stocks” taken wide losses lately rebounded proportionately. Du Pont regained its half- dozen-point loss of yesterday. Zenith won back 3 points of yes- | terday’s drop of 55%. Polaroid and | Litton Industries won back around 3 apiece. | pony “glamour Advances were more moderate among the pacemaking steels and iat teieivinietbbie 3.50 motors where the heaviest trading Beans, ("wonder ba. 002" 5s was in progress. ee] and|Beans, Lima,* bu. ....,.....--..+> | Bean ye . scspee 0-90 Chrysler rose about a point each.’ Beans. Roma, Se 330 Fractional gains were scored by Betts. a cape i Ford, American Motors, General} groecou 8 0} dos. behs. 2 18 Cabbage, DU. ... 2.00. -scceeess sooo ik Motors, Bethlehem and Jones & Coopage Curly, bu. 1.02.0. UY ase Laughlin. Cabbage. ae. bu. gesegeecea ss os 1m j |Ca ge Sprouts, bu. .. on ‘ Brokers saw the market in a Garret, taseed, ba 300 technical recovery as the steel’ \Garrecs doz. I ceaee 3 ul wer, CE oooosos coo cd strike moved into its 70th day and CIN Sical au don weeecce. 330 | the tight money situation and un-/Celery, dog. stks. certainties regarding international F162. "po" otha - affairs remained the same. The opening was active the ticker tape“tate for a sie 41 minute period. International Paper and USS. Gypsum, heavy losers recently, were up about 2. | lied Chemical, Union Chesapeake & Ohio and United Air Lines. The tone was higher among non- Pe ferrous metals, electronics, chemi-| pep cals, oils, drugs, rails and utilities. Ls Tobaccos were mixed. New York Stocks and others which have Appies, The following are Steels, Motors MARKETS [Grain Steady sat cat, sree arly Today Market by growers |Quotatiuns are furnished by Detroit Produce FRUITS ; ee-seccccese 61.75 Apples, Applies . Jonathon, bu. . McIntosh, bu. .... , Wolf River, oe , Cider, 4-gal. Case .....00e00s | pideeersies No. 1 13 pt pts. ... 'Cantaloupes, ba. Grapes, Concord, pk. ......++. Peaches, Elberta, ~ ae nocnod |Peaches J. H. Hale, bu. .......065 “$3 Pears, Bartlett, a wees 3.50) * fated vene eee One eeeee Plums, Damson, ‘# bu. . 2.00 |Plums, Prune. bu. . pooscoce tt 'Watermelon, bu. ..........s066 oe.» 3.00 VEGETABLES . 1.38) Celery, ao oz. : Corn, sweet, 5 doz 6s 00 4 Cucumbers, dill, fancy, DU. cecene 4.50" with nen pickle, bu. ..... ese sel: 5.5¢ ‘ucumbers, plvcere. | pu ervey cece: 3.50 Dili, — _ awe 1.50 \Eeeplant ee caieswiewen 1.50 Eggplant ene type, = Cad Seieew sie 80 |Gourds, pk ae 1.235 Kohirab! dos. behs. . 1-80) ese dos. behs . 2.00 Okra, pk ... Nein 2.25 /Onions, green, “dos. aicesise eeeiis se 1.10 Onions Pickling, Ib. .,......s00+ 15 fons, dry, 50-lb. bag |. 50) \eaceme curly, dos. behs. . Parsley, root, dos. ee Carbide, Parsnips. Celio Pak. ‘dos. 00 lack Eye, bu. ... wi... ecu 00 Peppers, Cayenne, DE. ...ceee--eeee 1.26) Pe: hot, » 50 715 | 50) 30. 25 50 6o Squash, Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttercup, (Late Morning Quotations) Squash, Butternut, Squash; Delicious, 1 -. & 1 2 3 1. 1. 1 » 1 2. 1 1 1 1. 1 1 1 1 » 1 mie no 2 :. PULLED the CHICAGO #—The grain futures market showed no reaction today ons | Detroit Bureau of Markets, as Of/1, the government report on the Me amounts held in the price support loan. Prices were mostly steady with rye easy and soybeans fimr in early transactions on the Board of Trade. “The Department of Agriculture report that 174 million bushels of | 1989 crop wheat had gone into the oH oan ae oA 31 had been de- .. 2.00} scribed as bullish since it was a +++ 138) substantial increase over a month earlier. However, prices moved on- | oo|ly minimum fractions, 00 Commission house buying and short covering added major frac- | tlons to soybeans during the first several minutes. Wheat was unchanged to % |hour, December $1.96; higher to % lower, er, December 69 ; = to % highre, November $2.085. CHICAGO GRAIN cent a bushel higher after about an corn %& December $1.0938; oats unchanged to % high- rye % to ‘Ss lower, December $1. 314%; soybeans . 22 (AP) — Opening Stronger Police fo Aid Fraser Williams Studies Cross Strike; Sends Extra Manpower to Area MOUNT CLEMENS @® — Gov. Williams has ordered State Police Cross Co. plant. The governor ordered the rein- forcements last night after Mayor Edgar Beck of Fraser appealed for aid to maintain order. Beck yester- day declared a state of emergency in the area, 49 days after the strike started. ; Williams, in a telegram to Beck, said he wants to study the situa- tion, quiet Saturday and yesterday, before taking final action. He asked State Police Commis- sioner Joseph A. Childs to make a full report on the strike. “Meanwhile I have ordered the State Police to strengthen their ferces at nearby points and to stand by te render any nec@ssary ald to city potice and sheriff's deputies in the event of any emergency, the governor told the-mayor. | “If you need help, please con- tact State Police headquarters in East Lansing or the commander of the Center Line Post.” Paul Weber, Williams’ press secretary said the additional jtroopers were moved into Center manpower reinforced in the Fraser} Beene owrrene * large for his age — he'H be 11 on as he walks through London’s Peebles. Standard practice at m¢ boys to wear shorts until they big they get. OFF TO BOARDING SCHOOL — The Prince of Wales who is AP Wirephote jrocal Heating Council are rrecessary and can lke Nixes Surplus Food Stamp Plan WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi- dent Eisenhower has indicated he won't put into operation a test food stamp ‘plan under which needy Americans could get surplus foods. The President said it would not make additional surplus foods available. ‘ He said it simply would replace an existing state and local system | for distributing surplus foods to the impoverished and further in- icrease “‘the already disproportion- | ate federal share of welfare ex-. penses.”” PUBLIC SALE at 23500 Woodward Ave. Ferndale, Mich., that address being where the vehicle ts stored and may be inspected } Sept 22. 23. "$9 RECIPROCAL HEATING NOTICE Notice is hereby given that on Sep- tember 10th, 1959, Pontiac Township Was accepted as a member of the Recip- Heating permits be obtained at the Township Office GRETA V. BLOCK Township Clerk , Sept. 21, 22, we 3408311-17 - PUBLIC SALE At 900 am on_September (& 1054 Chevrolet 4 dr BS4TC42100, sold sale, at 22500 Woodward, Ferndale Mich. that address being where the ve- hicle is stored and may be inspected _ Sent 71, 33, "30 28th, 1959, Serial No at public Nov. 14 — wears schoolboy shorts King’s Cross Station yesterday on his way to boarding school. Behind him is his governess, Katherine »st British boarding schools is for are 13 years old — no matter how in terms of variety. and num. ber,” the Hlinois senator said. Dee... 1.96 yy rsreee Tine last night. But Weber de- ee se oe ++. 131% \clined to disclose the number. orn— _ May “"'. 132% | Beck's urgent plea for help said eee ine. “Card idrume2® [city police and Macomb County Made $8 Million P robe ere se eeaisn in” oe oon des sheriff's men no longer can main- | Oats Dee cca 847 jtain law and order at the plant. Mer. jiitrss GOs Jan’ s-+ss.-. 842 iCross manufactures automation dy S ems | n in May 69% machinery. Police Seek Escapee News in Brel Corruption in kes Reign From lonia Prison theft of storage batter valued at $20 from a power shovel WASHINGTON (UPI) cont ; Walton boulevard east of Bald- é 2 — Senate| SPARTA uf — State Police and °°. venue was reported to Pon.|Republican leader Everett. M_ a mile northeast of Sparta | | 1 point cighths | gquash. Hubbard. bu. | pursuit of an armed escaper from! Admiral . . 112 Kennecott 94 Squash, Ital., % bu \lonia Reformatory. Air Reduc +... 7124 Kimb Cik . 60 lequash: Summer, % bu. | Off ; bid ic: Allied Ch ..... 106.2 Kresge, SS .. 324 Tomatoes. bu icers said the fugitive, Ever- Allied Strs .... 56.1 Kroger ee ee a ea ba he lett Ruck, 19, was surprised at a Allis Chal... 334 LoP Glass —. 63.2 Turnips coseedibe. cscs 6 ee ae P es Alum Lidy-.. Me Lib McN&L .., a Saeena waa ak reak-in. e proprietor Alcoa . & My... § i i Na atriin 28.2 bp as 1 {Celery Cabbage, ge ree told of scuffling with the youth Am Can 42.1 one 8 Cem | 38.1\S. a » is ne ‘ bu.” sreoecceesecoe- Ot Mand wresting away a gun obtained Am Cyan... $4 Lone 8 Gas . 382/Kale bu $0|in the break-in. The youth then Am M & Pdy .. $04 Lorillard ... 40.6) Mustard, No. 1. bu. .00 wi Am Motors $41 Lou & Nash . 79 Sorrel. bu. ....... ‘gg reportedly fled with a butcher Am N Gas a Meet ce =i leew chara wa ‘$8 knife into a nearby woods, officers it ‘ 4 . ee. oe eee 2 2d + Am Tel& Tel . 152 May D Str ‘. Turnips, bu. DTTITNUITY, 2.00) were told. Am Tob dll cry orl SALAD GREENS State Police said Ruck was naco Anac wWAC $3 ore cn a8 ia Lesa = sehEGbaiSiaaiecddn See wale 38| sentenced last May 26 on a break- Armco 8ti - 71 Mpls : A Armour & CO. 265 Minn M & M 132 |Lettuce. Bibb, pk wae ; ing and entering charge from St. Atchison _ Minn P & L ae lattes, hace va. bu oac * $3 Clair County. They said he ap- Bin & On 2. 06 NOS % 5 |Lettuce, Weat DU. veeeeeeeeeeesnesees 3.90 parently stole an auto at Ionia and Beth Steel .... $8.3 met Prod .... 544 REDRESS evscivessie SEI SS another at Edmore after escaping Boeing Air ... 36 «Motorola . 974| the fi t pong aim ty Monier pr 383 semua Borden ois 164 MTB) 808 Livestock Calls Jimmy Stewart a 5 1 Briggs Mfg... 113 Nat Cash R 57 5 Brit My... 341 Nat Dairy .. 51,| DETROIT LIVESTOCK Promotion Unwarranted Brun Balke ... 902 Nat Gyps .. 542 1 p' (AP) ‘attle—Sa- | Budd Co 34.6 Nat Lead’ .. 101.2 able 4,000; recipts largest for a Mon-| Burroughs .... 294 NY Central a4 ed since August 1957 bulk early supply) WASHINGTON (UPI) — A Cal Pack ‘286 Norf & West fed steers with only limited showing ate mittee sa that a Calum & H .. 216 No Am AV 3| fed heifers; good and choice grades pre-| Sem com ; ys Camp>d Soup .. 465 wor Pac 46.4) |dominating: increased showing utility! more qualified man was ousted Can Dry . .. 207 Nor Sta Pw 23 (and standard garde offerings; cows Cdn Pac 261 Ohio Ot 37.4 | comprise areund * par oom = = | to make way for the promotion Capital Alirl 1 14.4 Slaughter steers an eifers slow | Carrier Cp ... 43 Orens an Gi 923/t9 mostly 50c lower; cows steady to of movie star Jimmy Stewart in Case. Jos 185 PloG & El 60.6 | week: 23 head high ebates to mowtly | the Air Force Reserve. Cater Trac . jprime steers 20.25, these fe Ches & Oh; 662 Pan AW Alr 25 ¢/iot mates of 29.50 cattle last week: about The committee revived the Chrysler ...... 2 param Pict .. 424/3, loads miged high choice and prime’ Stewart controversy yesterday in Cities Svc ..-, 74 Param CTict -. 0) ¢\970-1110 Ibs. 28.75; most choice steers Clark Equip . 744 Parke se 5950-1180 Ibs, 2780-2850: good to low ® report demanding that the pro- cos — Bootes es ae “~ "153 choice steers 25.50-27.50; most choice) motion system be overhauled. cotei| Cae 20. Pepsi Cola .. a ett 26.25-27.00; ten head-high chotce It said A Na and Air Con Edis 60.5 pfizer 32 * fetter me ee good to low — Army, vy - = : ~ . heifers utility cows 17.50- " Con N Gas. 456 Phelps D mea G66: few ep to 1800" canncrs ana © Oe Meeerve promotions to > Philco lcutters 14.00-17.50 Phill Pet ..., 432 c t we. K| 5.7 Pure Oil ;most mixed lots U.S. No. 2 and 3 190- ce ee ise , 53.1/240 Ie butchers 13.50 to mostly 13.75: Cont Cop & 8 tl 152 M4 Cont Mot . 104 Republic § as jmixed No. 1 and 2 190-230 Ibs. ‘14 00 to! Cont Otl ** s94 Revion ...-- ; |mostly 14.25; two lots No, 1 195-220 Ibs.| Copper Rag .. 21) Rex Oe hs Hy No. 2 and 2 240-200 Ibs. | 13.8 50-| er Sass e sims mixed grades sows 300- Ths. ne 65 Reyn Tob oe ,11.00-12.50; No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ibs. Deere wees SS Royal Dut \9.75- 10.50. Det Edis 43.1 gafeway St... 36.2 Vealers—Salable 200; steady: choice Doug Aire .... 43.5 gt Reg Pap .. 486/ and prime 36.00-41.00: standard and good Heep Se ele fet one aly Me 33 |28. .00- 36.00: = and utility 16 00- 26 00. Pic ate G 343 — edd 2 io le 1800; market not estab- East Kod 85.4 Simmons 50 8! Eaton Mig ... 76 : £33) HivAutolta., .. 77.4) Sinclett , Ente tty gt Boe bee 4 Pach A Erie RR ' 134 Sou Ry ....- 0.8) ac stronaut Eiraseos ort Serge ol cet restone ran . Fisi'Witen “ta Bed Guten «att to Have Trial Ford Me ha Std Oil Ind rue ra Gardner Ben. #84 814 Gul On... He : 100- Mile Flight Gen Bak 12, Stevens JP . Gen Qysem -- 2 madre... iat . € Gen Fds ' g36 Suther Pap .. 36 DETROIT (UPI)—An official of Gen Mills |..1036 Swift & Co .. 43 | ad . . Gen Motors 325 — Gas .... 39.2\the National ‘Aeronautics and e€ exaco oe | sg * . Gen Time . 634 Tex G Sul. 18.5/Space Simninketration confirmed Gen Tire 587 Textron 5 z = Genesco p28 Timk R_ Bear 2 reports today that all ‘seven Mer- Goebel Br 38 arise vs 23 cury Astronauts will be shot 100 cedyear 1714 iret ce : 38.1) miles into space as part of their A ie 87 Un Carbide “138 ,|training for the world-orbiting Gt No Ry¥ . 4 S Greyhound 194 Unit Air Lin 37.4/SPace flight set for 1961. Gulf Oil 106 «Unit Atre att * * * Holland F 12.1 Unit Fruit ... 36 ; a Homentk iis Un Gas Cp 33 According to Wilson H. Hunte ndust hay 86 we mee 190 | assistant to the director of NASA's n any i j y as pant a els nocen = Lewis Research Center in Cleve- nspir Ir 04 oo. wasl 24, |land, each one of the prospective nt Bus Mch .401 Ww . “aa os nt Harv $3 wot oe tei 3e2 | Spacemen will make the 100- nt me 1236 Weste A Bk _. 774;mile flight in a capsule. The hu- 7 este Arie + + t Stive ao white Mot... a9.¢/m4n compartment will be rocketed Int gee & Tel 23 Wilson & Co a from Cape Canaveral sometime a < ww Ao ohne Man. 4 Yale & Tow Fy next — oe Guygersante Red- Jones & op Yne'st Sh&T 134.6) stone j ile. Kelsey Hay 466 Zenith Rad ... 88 ~ nec . “ STOCK AVERAGES : P NEW YORK, Sept. 22 — (Compiled by{|- Hunter said the Astronauts will “the, Amoootawe Pree! ss be fired into space and then be Indust. Rails vul stocks icked wi the Atlantic Ocean. Net Change .... 4.1 —5 ~1 P: P in Noon Tuesday . $21.6 71 924 ses] Week Sat es DLS bet fies eek ago ; Montn"ago :: e 1aat oe iz» s| Double Turncoat Back tar ce w« : i* * 4 * 1968 igh «14... 3886 147.6 26 :338:1n U.S. Praising Russia ise Nan case ies wo ad) ; hae APG j 1958 low ......2347 809 T29 1866 . NEW YORK (UPI) —Nicholas Jackson Parolee Admits’ Passing 35 Bad Checks Circuit Judge William J. Beer. Marvin D. Wilson, — Hogs—Salable 1,000 barrows and gilts to 25c higher; sows 25¢ higher: Petrulli, the New York metal Be z 7 eos’ ek tibet Hie a | general and admiral ranks have been granted ‘without reference to the nation's needs, to any known military requirement, or te the capability of the indi- vidual.” Kent County Sheriff's men con- verged today on a wooded area in| tiac police yesterday by Arthur Hilliker, office manager of the |Oakland County Dept. of Public | Works. Dirksen said today the Democr atic! Congress, which spent $8,787,000) on investigations this year, “failed | |notably to turn up corruption and scandal” in the Eisenhower ad- Scrap copper valued at $100 was ministration. stolen by burglars who broke into! the Pontiac Waste Material Co. ‘al record a tabulation of the funds it WAS authorized reported to Pontiac police yester- day. building at 135 Branch St., Dr, Franz Bauer of 89 Bloom. field Terrace reported to Pontiac police yesterday that someone en- s home through an un-| Congress appears to have brok- oor and stole $82 from a’ en all records for investigations | | jects that Congress investigated, | tered locked kitchen drawer. Dirksen put into the congression- for investigations by various committees, The outlays |totaled $5,195,000 in the Senate and |$3,592,000 in the House, according 'to his*breakdown. - “The first session of the 86th |! = only nad = of nase? but The theft of $300 worth of_ radio! equipment from a supply room at the Bagley School was-reported to Pontiac police yesterday, Harold Fuchs, of 6659 Windiate Waterford Township, reported a 12 h.p. outboard motor valued. at $229 stolen from his home Mon-) Dr., day, and a neighbor, V.D. Dailey 6629 Windiaté, reported his 30 h_p. motor stolen, according to Pontiac! State ,Paliee* Kicked in Khrush Crush SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—Lee McGrail, 54, of Denver, Colo., got a kick out of Premier Nikita ‘Khrushchev’s visit here. McGrail said he was kiicked on the left | shin by a policeman’s horse as the mounted officer was trying to push back the crowd that awaited Khrushchev's arrival. ‘(Nuclear Experts Meet SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The Soviet Union’s and the United States’ top atomic scientists got together here and said they would like to cooperate in de- veloping peaceful uses of atomic energy. The nuclear experts are the So- viet’s V. S. Yemelyanov and Dr. Edward Tell, father of the H- bomb and associated director of the University of California's Ra- r,|diatiow Laboratory “We are both doing the same kind of work, If we had closer contacts we would all go further,” Yemelyanov said Monday. ~*~ * * He was shown t the Stan- ford Research stitute, which originally was on Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's itinerary, but was crowded off his schedule. * * He and Teller met Sunday night, along with Prof. A. M. Markov, member of the agate U.S., Russian Scientists Want to Work Together wine and the talk was, in turn, serious and amiable,’ he ported. viet-American medical to help underprivileged nations. re idising career with the J. L. Dr, Markov proposed a joint So- 'son Co., joined the agency in — program |as & copywriter, and will now su- Promotes Four | MacManus, John - Adams Names New. Account Supervisors Ernest A. Jones, president of MacManus, John & Adams, Inc., /Bloomfield Hills advertising agen- icy. has announced the promotion of four men from their positions as account executives to the post of account supervisors The new supervisors are Charles. H. Howson, William B. Everson, William G. Winchester and Donald, F. Mahlimeister, all of Birming- ham. 4 Howson, who lives at 2839 Lanergan Dr., joined the agency in 1952 and has been manager of the agency's Baltimore of- of the Bendix Aviation Corp. ac- count, merchan. ; Hud. | Everson started his pervise the Minnesota Mining & He said such a proposal had been Manufacturing and the Fairmont made to the U.S, State Depart- ment ‘‘and we're still waiting for an answer.” Mark Hopkins Hotel ‘Railway Motors, Inc. accounts ‘He lives at 6420 Sheringham Dr * * * Winchester of 1824 Yosemite \Ave., joined the agency in 1954 after newspaper work and cxper- jence with smaller agencies. He ‘ducts Group. * * t MahIimeister, who joined the ag- ency jn 1948 as a copy trainee, will now supervise all Detroit and ARetail accounts, which include S. | 8S. Kresge & Co., Michigan Con-! Publishing Co. He lives at 2621 Bretby Dr. Charlie Maxwell Named to Head ITB Seal Sale LANSING (UPI — Charlie | out- Area Ad Agency fice. He will now be supervisor | will be supervisor of more thar’ a half-dozen accounts in the agen. cy’s Industrial and Building Pro-| solidated Gas Co. and Bramson| Edison Lists Dividend | DETROIT w* Detroit Edison | He noted that spe nding for in- es ations in this session alone ‘is already more than two-thirds of the $12,109.090 which was thorized during the entire 85th Con- | gress.”’ | “Notwithstanding the obvious fact of overwhelming Democrat control of Congress and, there-} fore, of the subjects under inves- tigation by congressional commit- tees, the administration stood up) remarkably well under the sc | ‘tiny of such investigations,” Dirk- sen said He listed some of the sub. | including such diverse mat as the problems of small saw. mill owners,’ lamb and meat grading, management of the ra- dio spectrum and the Navy's | porte to supply gun factory re- ports to Rep, Richidrd FE. | ford (D-Md.). 3619046-15 PUBLIC SALE & CO. At 900 am. on Se tem ber 28th. 1959. R ja 1959 Ford Cust. 300. 2 dr. Serial No |COPG275048 will be sold at public sale jat 22500 Woodward Ave. Ferndale, Mich , Think ll of the . At 9:00 am. om September 25, 1959 , well of future a 1957 Pord Suniiner Conv. Serial No.4 You'll live in it and you'll | DT7PC151550 will be sold at public sale that address being where the vehicle ther lead: henge jis stored and may be tnspected ond o mg enc . Sept, 21, 22, “Se Cc C HEARING The Zoning Board of Independence t Names, Lerehee @ Oo: Bidg 1 |Townhip, Oakland County, Michigan. will | U Pontiac, Mi higa z Seer $.50t Hearing on October 13 1 = = = | Oo pm. eat the Township H |Clarkston. Michigan, to consider the bee plea send me mere information | oir changes in Township Zoning | g *°°** Diversified investments. i Istricts fe Hesne: from Subarsan farms 16 ESE cecpecswens.co-.ce seeseseee | eridenee 1 the following described pr \) nf 4 Prop 1D a aeress sisiselsiviaie cress Tewseeeesee § 1, of SE \, Sec 25. TAN ROE ' | tee of SW \& of NE‘, E 'y of NE E J City ees ees re | nine and NE ‘, of SE ‘«. Bec. 36, TAN cso aw Ge cos as a's en os es cw “YOU ALWAYS * INVEST IN THE FUTURE always invest in it, too. Let us show you how easy it is to build for the future by in- vesting wisely — out of in-, come, monthly, if you wish. Drop in, write, or phone us for full particulars on in- vestments in the future of our country. 4 WATLING, LERCHEN Member New York Stock Exchange - eee Sample Little Brown Jug and find out what’s good! | Made with home-grown grain harvested an AU- | Lank- | Dirksen said 391 committee staff) “members were involved in inves-| tigations in the . Senate The Ju- diciary. Committee alone had 142 staff employes on its investigative | | subcommittees, | * * * | “The cost of these investigations, is not confined to governme nt per- sonnel but necessarily includes the cost to the countless private in- dividuals and organizations who must prepare testimony and make personal + appearances,” he said, “In many instances these ap- pearances at hearings are mere, duplications of previous investi- ‘gations and the new testimony is ino different from that previously \ 7” igiven | County OKs DrainLevies © Southfield Objects to Tax on | With Southfield supervisors ob- | _jecting $15.000 levy for a drain that wort be built, the Oak- land Courty Board of Supe rvisors to a yestefday approved a total of $221,-| © in drain assessments to be) s= 363 levied this year. Donald L. Swanson, city supervisor, failed in his move | | Project That.. | Won't Be Built | 3 Southfield | ee a ito delete the city’s $8,823 share: ® of the $15,000 Rouge Drain No. 1% hour’s drive from our distillery. And pure, sweet limestone water from our own under- ground springs. Slowly distilled, then trick- led through fresh charcoal for extra clarity and mellowness. Then we age six years, and ind up with the smoothest, softest bour- bon that ever touched your glass. Sample Little Brown Jug and find out what’s good ! $ A “* ‘ 75 Qt rt. Cede Ne. 814 Code Ne. 013 Lit? BROWN 306 BOURBON, 2 —Tote - BROWN Jf RAM Ne “PF ROURBOR». ‘ Little Brown Jug 6 Year Old + Straight Bourbon Whiskey STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY + 6 YEARS OLD « 86 PROOF HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC., PEORIA, ILLINOIS — . " 2 - FOR INVESTMENT SECURITIES and ACCURATE QUOTATIONS CALL C. J. NEPHLER CO. FE 2-9117 818 Community National Bank Bidg. LISTED & UNLISTED SECUR MUTUAL ae “OUR FACILITIES EXTEND PROM COAST TO COAST i Nap i ty ‘ { ‘from the total, saying, “The drain has been killed and we've ‘been told by our attotneys we cannot be legally assessed for it.” However, Daniel W. Barry said * the $15,000 can be collected from Southfield city and township, plus the city of Lathrup Vilage, as reimbursement for money _— TAXPAYERS spent for creation of the Rouge’. drainage district and provers: | tion of plans. The sewer will not be built as al board of determination declared it readied. Approval of the $221,363 repre: sents the total throughout the coun- ity for the locating, ‘establishing, ; constructing, maintaitiing, clean- ling out, deepening and extending | | drains previously completed. Co. Monday declared a quarterly dividend of 50 cents a share. The dividend is payable Oct. 15 to steckhokiers of record Oct. 1. It! paid a similar dividend for the Beginning October 1, 1959 a $1.50 edditionel penalty will be added to each 1957 and prior years delinquent tax that appears unpaid on the records. This amount is added according to the provisions of Section 211.59 Compiled Loews of Michigan for 1948 to cover the Expense of Sale on those taxes end descriptions subject'to sale at the next Mey Tox Sale. PAY NOW — Keep your property from appearing in the published list of lands to be offered ot Tox Sele. CHARLES A. SPARKS, Oakland County Treasurer, 1 Lafayette Street, Pontiac, Michigan isame quarter in 1958. ; i TAKE NOTICE - _ Dr] P it é Ys oe to. > i’ Le et \ | ' sai ( ee { 1950, ER 22, PTEMB SE Y,, ESS; CPR TIA PON THE “TWO_ TY EN TW A ave Oakiand a 9-068) 6 non a Ste BARGAIN $ mee gs Houses ne ie For ei os ? — ealtor | oo an IM WRIGHT, rE Hot ma IM W Aveo 9. Sale WN Alan : e a By Jay : Kam Starter” homes 4 LOVE : ~#s :e ISTING “$90 WILL IN at : : ‘TIPLE * : YOU IN ae ouee ENS 5 , | MUL ‘ * : os ts lot, ee : ONEER se aroriin pact MaDe fatal ele “id cree| pom be T SID 6; MO nea ma oats a ea co , Za Ideal Benedicis.” 3 — ade jouses to Saas in ‘- oab sp uy Sits 3-10 mont. us im oa Gas A — nee | I T arge. landseap My ectults ‘Cake NE AG oh cnanine ese sno oe UO Yonned yard. . ND 2 po sale H EA ive i vn a) apne Asset dated D : livt: HTS, sar asieoe i e- a4 RA down, ROO 29 ft. h as ” T ED nd lace. wit UBURN 2 for M ; tad B he rep! it ith s|. BUY as ne oe P| ee "NEWINGHAM a Lots. LL ar room as furnace. I ll HC. NEW oo emetery Lot LOVE, SE TT So of oe — os auburn & C Cemete ed ~— ss ae need fe masses Cone Se VES. 1 . ne Does) = AL HIG “ will evar ny’ $12,900. Se : Everyone poe NEAR CENTR ree schools. Only $12, ; . Ss 4 ALE 2 ly 7 devn * EA re, heat. riot JT .* — tic ane F = (Near! & din N vin, gO as wn, , BU . th 0 ——— FOR D HL 1-4559. Nothin ge wre mn a House: Basement. gs do as. FANCY roomy. 2 ; ~ ca oa ' i * ° L : we ‘ARGERY a a ATER, we : gn Ba ——_ heme 10.800 also end ‘OT F: a on rr Dea “ ; beloved eae ad A ses ak a an —. ms NO rtabh ron tego . in Jr. nae uae Ga: dea’ bloc Ja mo ogy pee, $15 Only poms a : mio; bre oo ‘ shed re alee 23, age ae, oe ae room, Alui ry le. buy 3 comferta m Hn — ‘aise ne a Td : if 5 t, : sa! to i. closed porch, at. bedr ar a Es is aioe | CAVIRS, SPT vi erbert ves How Dantint ing men : os time eal OR i pe ve ig COMMER. nl rol * OV a peeteone c jbreexs ire nat lt. La: odell. Re will be el Home rtd gh Wi M 4- th Meet ap we ceee 6 & age oo jus' VO gresntll i 50 D ge isa- “es ft r Pieig: 4 d ew 30 ral wriele $500 ts, ea z! ¥ OW ba dj Ww rly roo iso somo iy ce’ Seaeisen: ; he NED ta. Ha prop ke Ge 50 ; ao 8 El ao | RAN er iire gers arriba ‘Punets Pails Fate ar buy . B ‘amic an nee 6. § living ment. S torae ound ft. 5. - Ly Zs 20) Th ke oly H 4 cle e ars ‘ atiraciive. 4, fend a to_ ILLs. r ay use j ly 00d loc rm Onl: ad ime a . . ; Soa ~ ‘vane | ain brie —- sie ia ee a) is n - immediate ia a =e “ibe Zits ‘Se seas Mearty new 3 ir rvi to -Biple D p : it rai] PO! Ve n 6 us D ean Lake: _ ade les “See rment mas sane lecdrpem, nd ——— pl fire ia tee eer M ter ecennernanas J its i e h h. only hom paar wit Sarees a a 34 car ge fre trem ety tare, water _— o- 600 down Large en at UBURBAN — Bite, mics wien ial Gardens ERINE a= ke a 3% homes Oe aout oe sare. is comin, et awe 500 wT sana. ¥ / per ae a eeacie ama fe. areronee eee Both vyeu tbe T Bes TD er vuillows, ‘lo a rad 22 is co le House: FRONT fat asten- / - WEST SUBU kite ae this le in 8 ad maces - N 15" min aie . May: ne atirectiy tea |° Wi Sele Hi a ae ee ha bedrm. a atare ete on He ral 20, Bivd Seay m NSO} et 1 give iller 3 y ARY tahoe. Au spince le a . a s For Sale CA 2 be ed Stas Price 7 “< bath, cous peel —— Err. ar of C. Butler. e DH} Sia veeey. Mille -026 om so wir bath, “Une ! “~ roa oy 1 tea rms. Kegs at th 31800 “an tied wether a Cee hi { Jc poms Se oe toda am Mul 2 oat mics, ith m & : 6 firepla te this be ith te ards o with 8 ae —> Loonian Ciiten grandebil RTI this aan vasiag Villa “E cue com 'w udlo, room = his m : 8 ~— f 10 ie w : ORS ee furnace w 5 this 20 A. on Gears Lill ive g ande be NO! ring r be m three \ : on e — _—_ ily feos | all use nr fates $17, 18 - LAB PEN t gil rocoesd — tile i ert d a t at- ea 3 . e offe Fou oot at ance ipa a Hoe ‘oor 6x25. bedrm ch Ho ote RICK hole with te EAL H: O ll a LAKE trees ene 2 dhe ceed great 3 3 ear > Liwien own eneeece ltor ; sn to be ef —_ i bath, por ar Sale —s eat, ly B Pull at me fh baa —R RAP ue wering ——_ gad Pioo surv ia ners te r hyp an Dian ied cn ee Rea 67 can vedvbed hen, genes | a¢ 2 For ae Sasa er Lave i og ho E LEO WALL te brick te Ar Moo Pui Gren ‘ang aac ra tabert ie | beun u with se at ges an, | oe Biren kite sora teres: | ful} y tea: a ee Hes R ckAKE, Poe, acaped 8_TE tractive ce ea replace Soo dren Srohee Interien pet & " a $16 hea reens ri - pete - ter . iia oom. uefa 1 re po ‘ 4 $265 MEAS rie Livin, ne z Mpavileges 311 spective 3 Pi ieotey ban held wed orrith Re oval Pthe| Fo ranks ces i ce ieee ee aut 2 sae 00, | 3 bedr aan at Sava HING a hes tl Boe pe eed. 136 9 Ae rice “® bein ore a ares musecrone patio, held seein ificlating ext en th ee asement, ge ded aesgara M . Ld ner HW €. ick sees ge term. NOT: lex. Prleenea co u oD eS ae sf Le r be Vi . bat! tiled 2 lar; num tside Lak i tu re no ow rag Z br “a will A a. Dup! ant. t fon yo Pp ce e. can rm ty ith ith ou aa the pm } Bom oft ale iets Hor Paul eee J Inc with O pper Weis ge All car er PH are burn sem duct all cere pend lak : ELS 3 payin 1 tw rw e, { le rth Hermanson Frente L wloeg ie he garage. bn TP IN LY. U — rae One 3 ores Hills Au hrs = fei ses is ore acre rivate Term ICHARLS kite led. bem’ 2 far caren ot =e in Oakview att one eee ee NN E yen wo FAM! Saas mom pine sonable offer home in double below re Sort ; eas - i reer EAR ST. trom "ach = Scores ple 2 Ca 1 pare foc Speen Rd. st. be ary down P E vine ted me bs ior m be Ne eet rig tall Ge gr sear "eed ai i droom eablnets, pasy c = —Large ne & moe © arren, "Ss > 5 94 N bloc rm agers : t 96,288, privileane. Rea sho Wb Niey RA Leod wna} 40 NE. mee wn debedrucine Ler come cada! 910,800, f * srice ger Se 3 aren. - wo, @ “ ir cas 1 W. FE AY living goal toed @ pedeas Inc., raph ‘ SE rry 1 Me = meal J: wh atte. m2 ith 7) be oH béco t ee oy $10, AKE ~~. ; Lasers New ights { bir ‘ ‘ee DO eeds for "Gee ood ‘AN 3U IELD iu tiny furn t. Pr “a1 mal Cent, Teleg EOD, Me Mabe Thom ryan of| ania he roo ath bpd e- wil . eeetas a ools. L e sett ha Py rr diaie He ty o e lo $1009 ke “— eral “Only of Hip lV: TOR & Nop ut. ofl ice jo 45 | Ker y. at o ING Me MMs lire F eosier y Ow we ints ‘t2 fioo: Soe eed 100 — ly ke ranch, has soosrate plen ot atte ta eee 4 ily. i bones it, -ALT INGS wer Garees i a art ‘loyd fe Hw t PARE E and e mre an bro ed “y ir « t Sat fi Fu heate oad ncoln down bed or m on Ww epar sink, act abet r en air fam =o it b EA bel a Leon G gER Garag IDE SPECIAL ith p d- F oy 0 Dix 123 MER husb. 0 Lev ino survived U i aor ree rooms. ater ar or oo Lip 000 ne Pena an kitchen 1d Vhesd contr in a ling on rege —_ T 32 r gar only R EN e TIN 1,000 IDE oa ne aah nee: 250 “Usto — Mrs" givin, Lew oe a eel 2 zit rear mC ues hres ‘pus iy price $3, S 4 Amorlesa ene ne = vg serms home scious Bel getline yee 2 ull’ price PPOs LE 118 tst . are ae . kafred Legs PLE C SORRY o Mrs y Ms Leod Iv pervicew a) used tor nat aecorsted > et ee A ponte ache " *reture repies vg a rrivileges. * | $800 oe attached Pul Mt | 943 ULTIP w ell eer be cae ka le. ete AM 3E SOR here oars Me ere mi wervice Paryier-| used oll wi" decor “Motors 0 Stor ae coe pei pie k . dina pod eae a babs Pr “ Lex jan e. At eae te ait M w ond and luding coup. On “BE § oy — eee m the in ‘he | slormes Remi Laheeaye oe ee 0 ALE Mn MUS fins wi a ite ols sched | 3 sar Tame ta eel carvan Servis oh tr ferme Sie basement or elgerty coup ON’T | ois ys as Canads atom Grave. owe. ns to Por "2 000" de $ / yovecant pth omen divide me Attached PHA term eet dinin $1450.) Wil cert wee cape ae faue BRO hela Tr Lo fo i ree RA ve amon tw " ee & ; M _ t 500 ne ve hen > B 2 an no seeering wh a are Picante t SareN t bun- pected ht yelow | bedroom on Eves” ae SERVICE 4 HOD ae Me . : Cod ne living oacacs » 4 ig. WHITE a AI onic, a ae ue ea #8 SUB ATL. (om and 63 erie a eeean ! p Ms h Le ING 8M nahi HESTER ilage pe ht a rer bb in- = with ted OR Sun Donelson Jon Tire 1950 rigina K seat An TR bed elit isceaiog boar¢ 2 aa wit LIST arse oe "OL ! Wi Ca 1 rig eg Dre ut. ae : rary ostre ily ‘til 9; ae Rv Datiataee jrayvon f ouls 3 werca th eye ap "pase. fer ith cen aes lie IPLE $2,200 ss te. NE at oe — e DE na uitonan, femity es. Dix / rn pp ee omes : res! oie ena bath Mer" creation MuLT - fob Mm ERGO. 8 zyini yeu ai rine to nice aitachee feb ere 5 ete oe Th At TERR rs. austen of is held kaiee Le ears. a ane a ’ retrees 4 On eee ris —_ , 9 ss ; BED ty Ate Carpeting plo 7 roo le and fore th nee. ds 8 TIP} e€ _o b ‘droom fe A will seen ' & ; or e a ‘ u et star The an he ao the lo she lake s a thir living shad s ree stab r ga -y a ineuoe: hlan story aah olor R ow & ‘oom |. price = be { good with dels "Carte >MORY — ] pra tin bath Gereee i bad tet ee land i rine ele ta sessio M La ate So ex from nd i Hig 2 rC OU 8 cae, Do ely ieee chee 12 x Maso ae a ca ema Seat a ‘erms 4 dpsed a be oh ih allel “Gs at a Per FAR all a) ig Po at a er 4 Dieting Puli Fo OP_Y MILY gg et 2 Mon e level ac ing m. 122 eee aoe Ga M bie ri rosa Ue he eres VE} only 08. ie ee te ula ke use 18 ao i CRE Pbultdi 15 ye Jie -ione _— ok ar ME PA ft. 8 & 4s. No = ft. liv droo fore is = ae 34 na Aobes Autorme ike rr? oes; ic REV oe n “aye per ard cauta Tee arpet age 40 A apes! nd. n my ¢ ~~ I ms. En) fast ar . d A Arey gis hen, is situated 18 ter be Ol th hoe neers? ei, Ser ador young to oe Kb “thin Monthly Mea nto tha teom, rth ar gar “states other Good Is cept tree SOS break peor out. pearoome ae. pe file me a “e is eee a igeemell, ring TEN Ente Pos bee M. ‘voek® Mon ct wie tk int aes ell be L sta on oth Go 4.000 ece pt ent, e 3 @. La it fire di hou -$§ ar ace will and = jell . ae e nee yt aby te ere nutte me ale tae Y VILL. IS EIsz. tne chec inent. i jot ke I ston r asad ia foht a aym ” Clos Kitchen ‘ Den nt oa] as ite “heat. Got Oke ap- din) i Bet away dua iby roe oe ee M jum NAR . {I R € ve tter A aS La ly a m fo Pont Mi wn p 180: ining Kite xcelle ted $18 b antl an hs sat ap re se. 1 hess. — bid ae a ey A TIONAI \W HH hee I Br He 5 ite “th on roo: x 22 20.790 oO 9. a aobyeg ex core Be . be bly For ‘a1 : ah You aint thai y te har ee OLU LAR de P tog / find diay Here ei { zabe ach o rt) tall eed as R, as ry “i de ntment men of the dow! rms. os 670 alr now drog feors ou we mur Th and gv cu Ineid oe ven e to 2 b in “lhza dy ag oh tee as, hom "oo ont Last fc. ppoti ANC he 0} mil te : Tecate, one : . i 3 be x tehen fod oa + closed. yc ite Bde mee Jan 6 ase wD lie Jo y san “le ta car nutans wline Bs pot bones car pecet for a AL the fa all Mrs Re red Oni kil v Go tiie clos Pear fe EB | e Pi u've ' TH rtab with ase- Nice away th bed car aa OOM tine room, nate t 3 000 ‘all RE the 10, eal iller | Cole on men vel ghee Rosh ith red wi NY Fioo e Yo ORT omtor iat try b vd see che vost 3 L * 6 RO penne Lea pod $2. c T only ent M | For Do ‘i R pacer Lo he And a e d by lM A te mone t In NO” gE" / N € ngel m, a an th plan too heat, te 3 rhea re t. HOY inte Wm. ful be rds. y ' wae oun rot | The crt “LIF ‘| very bu roo arage 975 the eit aa sil, TOR oe aL se iH i 8t _ . pare 4 aS We mone Nadi cnborn -ee = a ted dining ot “for $0 th. basemenl. for BALT hardw “nice "eer as Huron. Bt VN "HES eta or heme We = aie Se ince THA hbore wit var 8 Rea OUR ' ed al iy ee for ron h sem Hing HR Rd 3844 Lie bas nice W. Hure OW} ROC cma. P th igt iy ‘i Mt ea a TO nelg nae ny ! D mn 10Es als tot ¢ lot & Pa vise Ane we UG beth soe ful AS ace. Mere Com He —_— ? DP LE. neha wi ve 8 sade ana ! ot smi ne, Abene b vila ule ut ees nee. An Llp ph 7 er ious Ga i : ero in, a ia oral a We ta fiere ts baiiaty ou Ene te “An a00 a ure McCt ak 8u P le INESS ~ 300 as nN 8 eh bo oo. bea pression ver eaprene | neal | New lenges s nop. peaee ana ioe meats naire niet, saa See acs oh ve ae GER CO. ieee it ae PE" 6-0588. nde re ncn el 1 ‘ | Like ? rile ld ¢ van ta ane y- i > pa Ma — g ak H hp a a taal ‘ ae Te ‘dow ard mily ; N | | lk Ir 1V ttre om tinab Lae po Dra : eS am 1 nly 1 HO: om 1 le busin fee Dis AR r ‘ab’ tn) . 950 ie coud | xe Fa 4 OW: ke lly wee a) ipa Sh Ine ediate T of Aet r en 9 “Wik ‘month ae ain "— 200 inaae see ' Hi as i floor. slumts \ hag Bey Aoree is G D la lpn im i bo Fi Plas Imm MEARS ot on a Op ym $45 $500 ow & vere one. & YN up & 2 areal “We nee oe. 4813. | ce £ i OC nd ow $3, n Lot pod this JOSL (2 a tien rr Du! Cc - ity “os Direc : HIN sae fe sche “living * THE \e ent BEDR 500 8 #-3002 BY ce. home red. f @ on rP ome ait ga- peer lot, own. rE & © meu The ral Oy] — s0« » ard atur ted r atalr IN ‘laine ne se Ex our } ily § Pa ADE. Hithes, een. refer rt ° wait : . TH—O! be basem a. sere large d Res. eR : EAL BSTATE . 3 ‘ lake “Pe ate “dining” Fro de hen to have your neue tone a ir gd OE 481 OR Pu t2:b90 “dos et pt od E bun S i $8 ® ke ce d ° il ba 4 ton m lo hay to e 5 R th, ple atp- n Don . 4 i TE Ni Bed : tion. or 3- ST of . La lor tate bath fu an roo ial to noes te, men} EO ba 4 ap r e oe! FE 4 A ade Lots. $2,590 FE E qoe ot ’ IAI Eg 3-770% ‘OR TR | ter epa a cher, eat ds, 6 Ore you salt fur SAL ma. . rties, Larg tri ~ ES ST ‘> ing te, ] H one pr q “ C¢ a" a ¢ ‘Tet: large SAE Ai e nonce lee Meenas ull pile areas ee Ng Ghee it no R ES DE rogues bt wn. gate. ROC at m wo "BALDWE Tail AL Vv i 8IN th jar om 6 van mat t gt ulat c nace ne at 1.200 ed FP i F a) ot astra aer A qu mi 088 — F AL Sun | a. te “i aN Teom, FUNBH HAPE 2-504 CLO Mon be en of ute ke mac 500, eh hom w $i. stal ‘all to e eo les Qh en. 1 R 3-7 es RE & TR ok 7 ra N ke fer hea’ : I fir ing 3 eas arace, (ul © rd a enn te $16, ether Ne toes Sackbarr bout aden hool. FE K a ire < hn gh Srksten tone Vv a ee car e. Pialos IPPIN a 72 Per od oka tr. well ai seeker been 406 lack A uct A se “LAR eer vice heb. t, Clar t, 8 ft, Pes ne see- 8. kal ue = $78 ht) wate ere teed n! ue nes by $9 on b rries sem my 8 from —'| CE, UY. ng ‘Ber 28 | scoan ick, men A 38 f in on us breeeeway Juans Term Orey nttul wervice ; ns s hot it Pe ca Gene ans atl " ea me Sas tome | TO ‘Listing aTY. Wate it Decen nace Cans gee ls . = | ay breeze ab | Be J ved out vou tee form Jealte 9 lawn, pea 40 ROOM aes N t. | nd, roo type. hea 4 ie stunt be tus it trees. ‘ate aie “JO IN inrenughe hile added tt Res no fear ilons BEDROOM a4 Sie Year-round romgbreny ch Me be it Bleest ne eS ation room. 360, hn Thoug lson A WN ar thre il w : add NEE, open 88 1 peek —— mee can 1 vable ye yore too Ras Near we ME... home 7, and elm ecaeees wit eC re) OME yo = H DO a.¢ buy Nea . O NX : OR ! Ne 5-5 Tr #4 le ety A Aecesa’ to 7-0R80 ute. room Dp. ths. Rochester's gu hickory. and rine undance ital tage. n La verale F 10 O81N TH 14 } fA\ ph 81.700 TE LEN iy dogg ped — r 8 Tw ba re 3 oak tifully Thiel: | Ab Sopra Fo moon : O NERA | Pu le ¢. cl N at R Telegrar _ « ent XCEL Se ter front cottage Age rford 1 : th au sading base _— beside Siple SE TO Tied Down maarane | Re 03" crams Bet |= re bah) EAL) Mgt eraraee ae chooit. 8 ea ere: “| oes oe te rth Bedre x wear ge m. as wipes pe | DON 16 nace, ion Kes. “ne = « s- rier Ripe iy” pos- powee 3 e No 3 1X Silat yan | oa — 2014” le 2PT furnag Un romans me oe t a tures, 4 Y e M ie . $82 ier on . § . ast a \ intn bat ELY ua € KE 8- EXE oll a. war event 0 Cla. wo |g red nares 2 ‘coded E Or HO Moto ee x LABS, ort Only aly eee le dl tu reh, LOV a pl WF room. poneida. nN t- 1 ro t ; LY ut possk, water TATE Vo AL ne of 7 eTIO wai vt A los teal can Saar rn _Ca 4 bed Near to sell, 1Es < For ¥ please nN thing, ment. ain bee. oe Brick Famed NER ice Pia => Pi aed eart Wate < eee oom losed hot iepeke __mige. rage. ioe Rea Bee J ts fine and HA ; th SREAL E FU: * PE 1 8si8 = ot the id PAN can iwense fomatic or une te t' tPris oe #137) C. tion, =o old. Pri MIT si Aa R mee OO 7.— Joslyn Kid Sign, cOM one easement = Ving M. . wre a “INC. Vvions. cn ore. session iC. ¢ Ambu ames amass IES. a INO bial story ener $0 5 ul} TE; x DIAN ert: dining 23 7 IN Rochester “ aoe rT oan i ss a [cian ae si | ce ~ or ——- BOX KR Today oa LORMAN ® 10 oe | or total HURRY ean DOWN, see . 4.0350" ona REAL 2 se, to 8 rooms i LILL 1-814] so Dee rs m. ie 4) 0 iE wiser nek a dan ichohie. ‘ nat nog en rr_t D ae © lace, Lanna 1% Main, ive 1-8 prone | mn ie 8 at lowin ttona . icho na 8 2m Parced ait Seen pa Cc hs a. on town, te * OL 230 At ies fol Na "ONG “eme leer 5.8004 al ooh bil a an fenced i vn and x tACR AG pond oy a8 , . 24212 = the dor o “Bud “an ue rE pel lgerboes! ing, Fy n costes oa ik bath tuto. G4 | e Bt a | M Mr lo ® ap on, O 3 men xtra cote le : wer in 7 rt) all er — ings, ndse pled tld base e OR Open —. at bones - " S 108 = Sea (1 ee “eppoarte ie ent gu porch : Vie t- — o nm r : : meres mas, ny on, = veut. bee Loge prive TAOE oe bathe. then and % teen | 7 —, : down dk ae oe ae =e Aum TRADE-—OR nin desta blg AL ate Inte uit = : ton , , 4, 5, 66, 78, 106, ; : TRA a lot ‘th 0 treet. CAN ounte a im fea- NIE F on wai 7 ‘ 5, a re in low, = VN at 63, 4. 105 S ALR option arge bert id oreble eae . th nga Br y OV 61, 3, 104, B y 3 ve ots. ayaene tor 8 ee "feman : sY C of Ave es 118; emmy st Bu en ation n paved 2 equit ° 7" hedto0 = “ving. roo inva aero ‘ Gal 1, 11%, oa > e Ontles nil trade eg ss rt vale in h dou oes 1 age _ hts, Cali [VENING N 11, = = Today teal ter P henet _ =e hteplace ty marble err oe with ic arr. the OPEN T HURO} ity, h a al ~ erms Pers tile ven hen wit mic ~ eon . = Press . LAKE b Ris 1 Pe rend ra apace aes fan. tb eee WEST FE "7 a ntiac SUBIN ‘som ene Attention a) if crifice rupboara doo ete Walks day Tw K. Ks bedrm ae. S3% re > Po DS edroo al ene 1, WhEs e. Pnarme. phd ges tops. inets, ecrea- uICh —W > 8 e ewe “ Ib ean Mytr A 0 aa) ut may ing er cab ar TO R wea ws Pann cag cots | Bi et reiete 9 ran a 1 Est. FOR Ww . 2-818] oan cup- o aay akon "ules be TE Se caotiee & es: s, Rea IAL FE m. room, Bath Ly crating Hest ne anew sete RRL, AT iT . ee 1M. Jon TI, te D to 5 p. teens d for res re me te W Ts Wr 8 AD bun i, i UET é ere an terle lor clea Utual a TR m hea Sw with : lini ceri bonds runes per ———— veer er nt 7 DN. oe privt. jes k) VA Eres diately. mn wit ae are conniia de ' atyle cua lero A oles J ‘bas = § ALL me shopping J. (Dick rrors edia O Fea her: mare he rearo h ow low, “ a eye ¢. ity eee ites R. : All_¢ es nan pe olecir with Full basemen 14 ¢ in etna BF N: 3 am 2 eae .. Pea She he ent month REA is ps areal pia Py omy 2" otter. reck le pt the tine. pa ym A A this iid 3 * er lote-0" i PUR _ fe ieee na t i tee a eon — dine my" prick remem qie ___Art_Mey Rh ee _— oust gem Verme' th 00 = fe ' 2 insertion Pot se throu ations iret une 3 near bem boards Lined own FOR) ne Daan tor @ J. Ll) ' _ mane Tauri shat rete erie ‘em nee = ing ing Dc on your Z mon John Le ae parment core be mber.’ si re at pacers ear hi bem P st Le iE OPEN .. SS rET erro made wil be Pie ie 2 GL tecn - O Larter ur plans r “a ‘Comm Lane re are ent ¥ ee Paes m Id bd Donald, ae 5 ue 4526 id | gong te e : at on bull ht nie BURO 4-452 Co sate : a esesteies verthae: fe & are recre rms at- wit : mol Bon 4 w. cE nen TR t Mouse Oro endlich 870 af ae without for ad “ here ament ete cavian aig nl oo e oA ‘OY OWNER men hous and 7 : : : ~ son pas rR wn age wits < time type seni Net semen three ‘eying , ment r med ta. "ae. 5 ball a f te A NT brie ing tainin egular th b bes and a Nf x: ° ' ¢. Foor, 8 tn ¢ i) ells 1,909 ee, bay | ae Clos eon re Sitcdtion 1 in ns rage my gis e re bed reer, FOR SAL ama pay iy wood room : on lock Ikea aimed be as 6 RK P wanes thy ba soggy ty Ris . fo ae _ larcar “te o'c pub phe if down Fic wi vaatatruet m ry] anth ® rhe a maker a large 12 BGs ta rv 000 -BACR tages adres attac Pa 1 con bus. m . 15 Sut ae ep Aesiel Ths ure _ “er oe econ gen email ie, yt bene oea os “ey DVERTISE fancee cellen RRY BT: excel 4 = itn lg es Lad worms. Brive ng oe ke ant { PE a au ’ ! te AD line fo wens of P m4 Lae rs fie vane z 1 al eters e } ransient : are der ho aa Sucre ‘ot, 8, ba saa _ Aer the if is ol ag mgr ae a Nor et ity ms : OR 4-883 ‘after U ony u m che seit he ATES | rn Eee ‘ive . Pa Hes Bad = on i be eas wlie DR co i a4 hace ae sto ge von b ertion TA ays tne clo Th or ae ; er ‘etar AN &D ern very ome. 4 ¢ ¢reen ned Mort 0. CARH W Daye rh Sher vrinndscaped a ncartns reens ea Ese Line 1-4 ne be te d 18 Rit bi sgh : < a . fre witb, root *. cent. ; | * ra jar ' J to Fa a . 3 NS 3 8:20 nai Ita 169 ‘ ; it ‘. 9.66 yard! t 6-6 .) 5.40 y * out, rE $ ite peg ed Warren St 5 ae $ ‘oe oie 13.80 jal Buginew u 8 ¢ : ot. 71 : 5.00 arge of: as , 8 al = ny 2 \ ———— numbe An ll be 8 box wi Pres Pontiac , tae |