on, The setting: a theater jammed
»
sto
° * (Continued oa, ‘Page 2, Col
: "ce soo fares = :
Gat ce Sage © ee ; A a 1 | '
ey YEAR * xk * Pontiac. MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1959 —28 PAGES
‘The Odds it Too Great
fire. This stalwart pair fought their Pontiae Press Phete
BRAVING FLAMES — Closeup photo shows way into the
how firemen pitted themselves against deadly building to play their hose on the heart of the
smoke and flames at the peak of the Huron Bowl _ blaze. ‘
Lenten Guideposts
Faith Brought Gospel Singer
From Poverty to World Famé By JOHN LEWELLEN
The place: Chicago. The time:
the 1930s—the depression is still
with _job-hunters
—a.WPA dramat
She is not worgld about her
singing ability, she is worried
about being in a tKeater at all.
Since early childhood she has >een
taught to believe that singing in a
theater or ‘night club is wrong.
But an elemental force has driven
her here, against her’ principles,
against her moral judgment. She
is hungry.
For months her only income uas
been from singing gospel songs to
church audiences at 10 cents ad-
mission, or ‘pass the plate,’
« * *
Mahalia is the last to be called
and she sings magnificently, her
great silver voice full of f and
yearning. “y
Smashups Kill 2
in Lapeer Area Accident Near Davison
Claims Life of Woman
From Ortonville
Two area men were killed Sun-
day in accidents about two hours
apart on highways near Lapeer.
* * *
a third weekend traffic victim
was an Ortonville woman who was
fatally. injured in a two-car crash
Saturday on M15, five miles south
of Davison,
Dead are George Wood, 31, of
ord; Alvin R. J 43, of
Lapeer; and Mrs. Joseph (Ilene)
French, 38, of Ortonville,
The Oxford father was killed and
six other persons, including four
children, were injured in a two-car
crash ‘Sunday afternoon on M21,
five miles of Lapeer.
we o* *
Wood, who lived at 24 Glaspie
St,; was dead on’‘arrival at Lapeer
County General Hospital. His wife
Joyce, 30, suffered*facial cuts, and
their daughters, Kay, 9, and Susan,
5,-had cuts and bruises.
Other ers 5 in Wood's car
were Mrs. Wood’s brother, Her-
bert Shaw, 11, ,of the same 9d- dress, who was slightly injured,
and a neighbor, 10-year-old Kath-
leen Brooks, daughter of Oxford
patrolman and Mrs. Chauncey
Brooks, She had a broken nose
and possible arm injury. -
All of the injured were admitted
to Lapeer County Gener'al Hospital,
where they were reported in fair
condition today.
The driver of the other car was
Russell E, Summers, 29, fog Cor- ics ynetens is Mahalia walks home, She feels
sure she has won, but there Is
no gladness in her heart, She
needs the money. Her husband
and her friends need the food it
But she knows, also, that if she
accepts the part she will be vio-
lating her own principles, “Oh, Lord. " she prays, “help me.
‘lit You don't want me to do this
thing, give me a sign, I beg of
Vow: ca” \
{SIGN FROM LORD
When she gets home, her hus-
band runs out te meet her, to give
her’ the ‘good news. -He has landed 1a job selling 20-cents-a-week in-
surance policies from door to door. |
But to Mahalia it is more than a
job—it is a sign from the Lord,
proof that He will take care of
those who keep the faith.
When the WPA people call to
tell her she has won the audition,
she astounds them by turning down
the part.
That was a quarter-of a cen-
tury ago, and although numerous
offers have since run as high as
$10,000 a week, Mahalia never
yet has sung in a nightclub or in
any place not appropiate for her
(Continued on Page 22; Cal.)
| Wet, Heavy
More Misery A heavy, wet snowstorm accompanied by rain and
rising temperatures hit the
of slippery spots on state Snow Brings
for Motorists
Pontiac area this morning,
creating perilous driving conditions for local motorists.
The Oakland County Sheriff's Dept, warned drivers
trunklines, although most
major trunklines have been
sanded and salted.
field Township were blocked when
hill there,
A second jam was reported on
M59 between Crescent Lake and
Airport roads, East-bound M5@
and south-bound Crescent Lake
traffic moved at a snail's pace
for three-quarters of an hour.
of the state, Manistee and Luding-
ton were cut off from long distance
telephone service.
Two and a half inches of snow
-|pelted this area overnight.
Temperatures were expected to
climb into the 40s today in Pon-;
tiac, bringing an end to freezing
rain.
However, the Weather Bureau
said the warming trend weuld
be short-lived with much cold-
er temperatures and increasing
winds forecast for tonight. The
colder temperatures were ¢x-
pected to turn the snow-rain into
snow flurries.
18-23
MOSCOW (#—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and
the country.
Pravda used the occasion
lof Khrushchev yesterday at Macmillan
With Khrushchev
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev got down to formal talks
in the Kremlin today after a get-acquainted weekend in
The opening of the little summit talks in the Kremlin
coincided with the 41st anniversary of the Soviet army
and nayy. The official Communist Party newspaper
to warn the West against
starting a war. It also criticized the agreement reached
on Cyprus last week by Britain, Turkey and Greece.
Macmillan, who arrived here Saturday, was the guest
the latter’s dacha, or coun-
try villa, 50 miles so
of Moscow, The villa .was
built for the late Josef Sta-
lin and is one of several
maintained by the govern-
ment,
The British and Soviet premiers
spent more than three hours in
informal talks at the dacha in
snew - covered Semonovskaya vil-
lage. Details of the talks or the
subjects covered ware’ not dis-
closed.
A British cputeittias said: the
two “covered all subjects of mu-
tual interesf.” The Tass News
Agency said “questions of mutual
interest were touched on” dur“
ing talks before and after lunch.
It was assumed that the topics
included the qléstions of Berlin
and Germany.
Sitting in with Khrushctiev ‘at
the informal talks weré Deputy
Premier Anastas Mikoyan, Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko and Am-
bassador to London Jacob Malik.
2 WITH MACMILLAN
Macmillan was accompanied by
Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd
and Ambassador to Moscow Sir
Patrick Reilly, Except for inter-
preters,; no one else. was present.
baritone, who sang a Russian
folk séng and an English-lan-
guage ballad entitled: “TI Love
You.”
} They y watched ice skaters on a
nearby lake and went for a sleigh
ride. At lunch. the chiefs of gov-
Emment iedifioe: toasts aay, ac-
./eording to a British +, ca
“traded jokes back and forth.
“The two great men got‘on well,”
he said. “They were very relaxed.
5 ae pei Tare) all laughed a I 9. 34 <
Sofhe. 49 pertoné attended the east?
Snow Hampers
Search for Two
Missing Doctors
~* BERLIN, N.H. w—Scores of vol-
unteers early today ploughed
through deep snow on the White
Mountains while spotters flew
overhead in a search for two
doctors missing since last Satur-
day on a 70-mile mercy flight.
However, snow began ‘alling
heavily at noon and the air search
|was suspended. The search pilots
stood by in the eyent the weather
cleared befote dark) but there was
little likelihood precipitation would
stop.
* * *
Authorities expressed fear for
the safety of Dr. Ralph E. Miller,
60, an experienced pilot, and Dr.
Robert E. Quinn, 32, both mem-
bers of “me Dartmouth Medical
School faculty,
Guards posted en Sunday night
said they saw no sign of any out-
door fires’in the mountainous re-
gion, Authorities said it would be
more than 24 hours,
Call “Rocket Raiph” at Jerome Oids-
Cadillac, FE 43566. sf
Angies’ Campbell Tox Acconotant, tw.
2 ‘Stina et ol. D iW come Tax. Open Eves. FE 32-3615. 994
. Hutoa, -
difficult to survive outdoors for} degree range tonight.
[erty winds ot 1% fo ea.ph. = —
to. west-northwest at 18 to 4 noo: ve Shey ang Bn Ahapod
ie toe mand W/ + lands or construction of public
Tomorrow will be partly cloudy|>Uildings and colder with a few flurries.
high of 22 to 28 is expected,
For the next five days, tempera-
tures Will average near the normal
36 high and 21 low. A warming
trend is expected Wednesday and
Thursday, with temperatures
ping again Friday and Sa
Rain or snow is likely Thursday
and Friday.
The lowest temperature recorded
in downtown Pontiac preceding 8
a. m. was 32. At.2 p.m. the ther-
mometer registered 37. A
Put Safe ‘to the Torch’
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (UPI) —
Burglars. with a talent for im-
provisation, came upon an acety-
lene torch left by workmen in a
supermarket. They promptly
burned open the safe and took
.| $2,000.
Senator Learns Fast
WASHINGTON # — Sen. Har-
rison A, Williams (D-NJ) has
figured out the difference be-
tween the two houses of Con-
gress. A former representative,
the freshman senator says: “‘I've
got a larger office, more help
and 10 times as much work," Two major traffic snarles were
reported this morning. North-
bound lanes on Telegraph road
south of Long Lake road in Bloom-
14 trucks failed to. negotiate a
The storm dumped up to four
inches of new snow in some parts
| be to revise the cost of the pro- Go-Ahead Due
on Courthouse County Supervisors Are
Expected to OK Start
of Planning
Authorization is expected to be
given tomorrow by the Oakland
County Board of Supervisors for
the county to proceed with plans
to build a new courthouse.
Plans and money IMid aside for
the $4,500,000 building, to be lo-
cated at Telegraph road, northwest
of Pontiac, had been held up pend-
ing a decision by the Michigan
Supreme Court,
This decision came last Thurs-
day when the court ruled a
$1,606,407 fand to finance the
building had heen collected legal-
ly from non-tax or miscellaneous
receipts.
With the freeing of the funds,
supervisors tomorrow are expected
to give a Special Courthouse Com-
mittee the go ahead to sit down
with architects to put plans back
into action.
Another order of business will
at the January meeting, an in-
correct estimate was given, ac-
cording to Norman R. Barnard,
corporation counsel.
Latest developments on a request
for a second probate judge for the
county will be aired, too.
A recommendation that the va-
cant Contagious Hospital not be
used entirely for the mentally ill
will be given by a special commit-
tee looking into futture uses of the
80-bed hospital on Telegraph road.
Intruders Leave Clues
LONDON (UPI) — A squad
of policemen arrived too late at
a London store to nab some after-
hours intruders, but there were
definite clues to their age group
— empty ice cream containers,
empty ginger pop bottles and
sticky little handprints every- The Oakland County Taxpayers
League, which filed suit in 1956 to
The mercury will hqver in the stron : = ee engraar ee d Hatchet Sale
\Big Boost
for Business
Local merchants teday reported
a large increase in Saturday bus!-
ness as droves of customers turned
out to take advantage of . their
second- annual
sales.
Sponsored by the Downtown
Merchants Assn., the sales are the
to Washington's birthday.
Assistant manager of Kreage's
downtown store, Bernard ¥.
Marlow, reported a “marked in-.
crease in sales, with more peo-
ple in the store Friday and Sat-
urday than for some time."
Waite's Department Store re-
ported its sales at a high for ‘his
year and crowds were waiting in
front of WKC, Inc.,’ before it
opened,
Archie Barnett, owner of Bar-
nett’s Clothes Shop, reported his
store had one of its * ‘biggest Sat-
urdays of the year."
Miracle Mile Businessmen’s Assp.,
reported the shopping center's
Washington Birthday Sales Day a
huge success, exceeding last year's
and all prior expectations,
News Flashes CALLAHAN, Fia. (P—Five per-
lives‘in the flam-
z =
Wonder Why These Taxes
Wouldn't Pass
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
City Council tackles suggestions
about new taxes on hotel rooms,
cigarettes and liquor Tuesday.
Here are some taxes,
by constituents, which they won't
discuss:
A $3 tax on each child,
A weight tax on everyone weigh-
ing more than 200 pounds on
March 1.
A bathing suit tax—with a col-
ored tag, to be worn around the
bather’s neck, to prove the tax
has been paid.
A bridge-crossing tax, collected
by making every bridge in the city
a toll bridge.
A $1,000 tax levied each year
where. against all bachelors. “Hatchet” Days"):
merchants’ way of paying tribute
William MacDonald, president of was gutted.
About 55 firemen from
Pontiac fought the blaze
in vain.
“By the time we arrived the fire
had gotten too big a start on us,’
said Waterford Township Fire
Chief Edward Smith. It had
spread throughout the front of the
building, he said.
Pontiac Assistant Chief James
R. White, who arrived with three
clty trucks and 15 men about
6:20 a.m., sald the fire seemed
te be centered in the middle of
the building toward the front,
‘The roof had collapsed in front
and smoke was billowing from the
structure,”’
Township firefighters were ham-
pered by a frozen hydrant directly
in front of the blazing structure.
After their arrival shortly after
6 a.m, it took about 20 minutes to
begin pumping water.
* * *
the basement
the 24lane bowling alley.
“Once. they hit those laquered
and varnished alleys, the flames
spread rapidly to the rear of the
building,” observed a soot black-
ened fireman,
' Besides the lounge, restaurant
and bowling alley, the building
housed a snack bar, a barber
Traftic was blocked off at Tele-
graph road and Voorheis road. The
west wall of the structure
crumbled, while other walls of the
exterior were buckled by the in-
tense heat but remained standing.
Every window in the building
‘Iwas broken out, Twisted steel gir-
ders around which rubble was piled
high on the: interior attested to
he heat a the eae
viecman were also hampered by
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)
proposed, Pontiac Area's Larges
Bowling Alley Razed Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the $700,000
Huron Bowl building at 1124 W. Huron 8t., Waterford
Township, early this morning.
‘Thie one-story steel and eement block structure, which
housed the area’s largest bowling alley, the 300 Lounge
Bar, a restaurant, and four other business concerns,
Witnesses said the first sign of
tire came from the 300 Lounge in
the front ceriter of the building.
Firemen believe the blaze may
have started in the restaurant in
ahd ‘then spread to : : ae j , | s
: L84 5 © 3 :
* : 4 ee Pk 3 = ; ; ae = Z
§ 4 j 4 4 4
2 4 fe e
“ : : : : a fe £ to
sf ’ : * ’ x 4s
. ° ; rs -
| ; ‘lee
ee
OW da [ ad r = 2
. b =
. . ne ¥
: - +S
a
Waterford Township and
x * *
Snow Welcome
Close fo Blaze Houses Get Protection
as Downfall Puts Out
Falling Sparks
For the umpteenth time this win
ter, most people were complaining
about the weather this morning
But for some folks in Weonted
Township, the newest snowfall was
a godsend.
Anxiously householders near
the Huron Bowl fire watched the
black, billowing clouds gushing
up from this morning’s fire,
sending a shower of angry sparks
over the neighborhood
The sparks. descended like rain
on the roofs of the nearest homes,
But fresh snow blanketing the
gave them protection. The
flared out harmlessly.
“The snow.came at just the
time, as far as we're
said Mrs. Andrew Peekie, 1130 Lae
Salle Ave., a block north of the
It settled so thickly in the home:
of Ivan E, Herr, 1125 LaSalle,
that he thought the fire centered
in his own house,
Herr aroused his family, sending
Salle, was awakened when the: Herr
| Start Driving Series
Trattic accidents killed 37,000
in the U. 8. last year.
Why? Heedless driving prac-
tices were at the root of almost
all hi mishaps.
A =e of 12 concise “Driving
Lessons,” each illustrating «@
common traffic hazard and its
remedies begins on Page Two of
today’s Pontiac Press,
ae g
aren ieahile iuisens
inferno. ‘Billowing, acrid smoke
¥ Bowl is toppled as tons of water are hosed into the crackling ‘Top weet Wall (let) ef the'Haron’
worried — nearby home Flames Consume W. Huron Building — eqenneneeen iP pga no
Paihia Yeess Pete
Gvetlery and attracted hundreds of early morning motorists.
_ Despite firemen’s efforts, the fire
ing ' was gutted, continued to rage until the build A small blaze was discovered in
thé basement of the home of Mr,
and Mrs, Glenn Auten, 1146 W, Hu-
ron St, shortly after 7 a.m.
Firemen didn't know what
caused the fire, but said it wasn’t
due to sparks, "The Auten’s are in
Florida on vacation, neighbors
said,
Water Flowing
Into Wabash After
Dike Dynamited —
LAWRENCEVILLE, Il, (AP) —
Water which coverd some 33,000
acres of Illinois farm land is
draining back into the Wabash
Wednesday ‘when the swollen Wa-
bash burst through the levee near
stream.
Farmers blasted a 100-foot long
hole in the dike Saturday,
pee sie ch Oe om teen
river, across the Wabash from
Vincennes, Ind. Farmers said the
flow from’ the fields did not raise
the river level, —
In Today's Press
: ; vida Seay Oeeeuess
eeeeeee oe ee
see eeeewe
eee neue
his five children next door for ref- .
River through a dynamited breach -
Russellville, about 10 miles wp
<
‘ance to pac two local sons on
- vote tallied, Radom had only 125)
Pyccte —7
name aot be used was bitter
whea he saw Radom’s campaign |
fizele to nothing, “This slate has
alt been hand-picked,” he said.
Oakland's only: other chance for.
a nominee, Albert W. Marble, 50-
veut dn director of the Michigan.
Credit- Union League, also from |
West never got his)
campaign as far as the conventioti
floor of the Civic Auditorium.
* * *
_ The lova) delegation of 125 urged
Marble to pull out of the race for
a. seat Gn the new Wayne State
University Board of Governors ‘eel-
Oakland County had little.
the six-member board, So Radom
was singled out as having the best
chance,
However, after a parliamentary
mixup was straightened: out and
votes from his fellow Oakland
Democrats and another 23 votes
from Washtenaw County to show
for, his efforts.
Winners for this first of two
* * *
Oakland, State Democrats
Pick Slate for April Vote
Oakland County and other state
Democrats Sa y picked this
slate of nominees to oppose Re-
British-Soviet Talks
Get Down fo Issues
(Continued From Page One)
a long, ornate ta-
ble fa the ducha’s big dining roém.
Khrushchey sat on one side,
flanked by Reilly and the amba»
sador’s wife, Mrs, Khrushchev sat
— him with Macmillan on
side and Lloyd on the other.
When lunch was over, Khrush-
chevy proposed a champagne toast to the British royal family, Mac-
ie responded with a toast for
ing Soviet President Klimenti E.
Voroshilov.
The Soviet newspapers gave
considerable space to Macmil-
lan’s visit, They carried the full
text of-his speech at @ Kremlin
G@inner Saturday night in which
Some observers noted that it was
the first time in years that the
Soviet picture of “the aggressive
West” had been contradicted so ef-
mer feces in papers reaching mil-
ar * *
Macmillan also scored a big hit
by wearing a foot-tall hat of white
fur he had bought in Russia in 1929
when he stepped frony hisplane
at the Moscow A Saturday. It
‘stood out like a over the
squat felt hats sported by Khrush-|
chey -and other members of the
cover Macmillan’s visit said it was
glorious outrageous
piece of showmanship.”
But Macmillan put, aside the
white hat yesterday in favor of a
more conventional, smaller dark-
colored model.
the Weather — ~ Pell U. &. Weather Burean eg
djate, Uae tot mon, colder night ‘ as Ae 3 sae ory 12+ Ie ies, aa to west nile tale “thts
eaare ae rir a 6 snow fat Pitan.
m wesday
Today | in Pon Lowest température sreveatng 8 afm.
pitt 4 a.m: Wind velocity 14 m.p.h.
He ay at Mee a
“08
Pett ee
i avsniseas eRe awe 4
ie
hice AOR | |
Pee ed ‘have had another = votes had,
etter trict reported the eons tally off
A Radom.
| SHtip, and Maurice F. Cole,
‘omy of a Murder”
ARadom, of 3019 Cone Lane rnight
his delegation. A Wurried huddle
later produced hot a single ‘ote for
* * *
There wil] be two county names:
on the April 6 ballot. They will be
Republican nominees for two 8u-
preme Court justice posts, “William |
‘H. Baldwin, of* Bloomfield Town-
Cire uit!
{rem Fern,
'Coeurt commissioner
dale.
They will be up against incum-
bents: Justices’ George Edwards
ahd John D. Voelker, both re-
inominated without opposition. Sat-
urday.
Former Birmingham resident
and now U8, Senator Philip A,’
Hart nominated. Edwards, whose
pate has been mentioned in.
some circles as a possible suc-
cessor to Gov, Willlams,
Justice Edwards, in the process
of writing, a book. on criminal
corrections , — “It won't compete
with John’s for the best-seller list’
~. sald in accepting the nomina-
tion, “I will continue to hold -ju-
dicial office with complete dedica-
tion to that task alone:"
* * ¥
A seconder to Voelker's re-nom-|
ination alluded to Voelker's “Anat:
novel being aT) tbe sd for 56 seeks
as a qualifies :
Prior to thig, the’ naforiiy of; «
Oakland delegates
‘about the
to stir up
were wane el ‘Gov. Witligms|.
had been overwhelmingly endorsed
as 1960 presidential timber. 5
batch of resolutions. Few,
they had endorsed.
od
presidency, although his name has were scurrying
nergy oth, on
They were no different from
the rest of the delegations who
hatdly gave a apattering of dp
platixe when this plank of the |.
| party’s 1959 plaform was read, |.
Delegates, 1,605 in number, were}:
too busy rallying support for their
ifavered candidates to pay much! .
‘attention to a rubber-stamped
if any,
delegates realized what resolutions
* *
But they were sure Where the
party siood on the question of Wil-
liams’ proposed. staté
They endorsed. the plan with no
discussion from the floor. mcome tax,
When told by a reporter of Wil-
liams' endorsement, Carles > G,
Richardson, Oakland County
Democratic Committee chair‘
man, remarked, “It will go over
Se with Oakland Democrats,
ut, Ade
Willis M. Brewer, who modestly
shys away from the title of Mr.
Democrat in the county, pledged
hig support should the six-term
Michigan governor go for the nom-
ination,
This was the first actual backing
given Willlams: by the party for the
been mentioned numerous times.
-Former Waterford Township res- pate og es trying |
|
Early Morning Fire Razes,
$700,000 Huron Bow!
x * *
“Wintry and Wet
‘\Much of Nation
New “York
| Heavy
| strong. winds also..were posted for
publican choices in the April 6
election:
Supreme Court nominees — In-
cumbent Justices George Edwards
and John D. Voelker.
* * &
Superintendent of Public Instruc-
tion — Incumbent Lynn. M. Bart-
lett.
Mtate Board ‘ot Education —
Mrs. Cornea A. Robinson, @.-
year-old Kalamazoo civic jeader,
. State Board of Agriculture (gov-
¢rns Michigan State University)—
Warren M. Huff, 49, Plymouth area!
farmer, former Kaiser-Fraiser ¢x-|
ecutive, and one-time protege of
the late Gov. Frank Murphy; Earl
J. Bjornseth, 55, of Perry, an in-
dustrial chemist for E. L. Du Pont
de Nemours and Co,, and former
school teacher and administratar.
* * *
University of Michigan. regents
~~ Ellis A, Wunsch, 40, Traverse
City school teacher and adminis-
trator; and William K, Mclnally,
53, board chairman of the National
Bank of Jackson.
Wayne State University Board
of. Governors — Dr, DeWitt T.
Burton, 66, Negro surgeon from
Detroit; and Clair White, 43, Bay
City Junior College instructor
(two-year terms),
Leonard Woodcock, 48, of De-
troit, a vice president of the United |
Auto Workers: Union; and Dr. Mi-
chael Ference Jr., 47, of Dear-
born, director of Ford Motor Co's,
scientific laboratory (four-year
terms). ay
Melvin, FE. Bleich, 38; Detroit
advertising executive and incum-
pointive board; and Mrs. Jean|
\McKee, 33, Grand Rapids attorney
and mothér of two (six-year
terms).
Pontiac Division
Tonight Honors’
Top Salesmen
Pontiac Motor Division will pay
special tribute to members of the!
Pontiac Master Salesmen's Guild
at a banquet tomorrow at Wind-
sor’s Elmwood -Casino.
Presiding over the. affai r
| Which 61 Guild members .in the
Pontiac zone have been invited,
will bé ,}. E. Milliken, Pontiac
zone manager. '
; * * *
In addition to honoring Pontiac’s
outstanding salesmen for 1958 there
will be announcement of officers
for the coming year, presentation
of membership awards and enter-
tainment.
Weather Hits
By The Associated Press
‘Wintry and wet weather pre-
vailed across broad areas of the
country today.
.A storm which hammered secs |
tions of the Rockies and plains
spread into the middle Mississippi
Valley, dumping rain, sleet and
snow ¢ the central part of the
Northeast: Colder wo headed into
northern areas from Montana into
“snow -warnings and
some ‘Midwest sections, a iception,
| state when they favored Williams
ling of about 50 defegates still in
| Spurlock, of 146 Franklin Bivd.,
bent on the present Wayne 4p-|.
_ delegates from each of the state's
‘have a 22-12 margin in the Sen-
| ate.
pet be allowed freedom of ident Billie S. Farnum, deputy to
Secretary of State James M, Hare,
said support of Williams for the
president had came about as coun-
ties flooded the resolutions com-
imittee with similiar endorsements.
lOakland Democrats were the ex- However, the local Democrats
had the Jump on the rest of the
for the presidency in a resolu-
tion adopted last August.
Interest among the Oakland dele-
gation appeared to dwindle after
Radom's setback. During the nom-
inations there were but a scatter-
their séats, ,
* * *
Some had made an early exit,
weary from the four-hour-long cau-
cus they had at the Pantlind Hotel
Friday night. Farnum led the cau-
cus,
Major interest during this cau-
cus was the election of Mrs.
Robert (Harriett) Phillips, a
Huntington Woods housewife and
supervisor, Jolin Archanthault, of
Madison Heights, Everett ©,
and Mrs. Louis H, Golden, of
2036 N. Lake Angelus Rd., Wa-
terford Township, to represent
the county on the 7@-meniber
State Central Committee, Mrs.
Phillips ts the only incumbent.
Another setback for the Oakland
Democrats developed when the)
resolutions committee refused a
suggestion from county delegate-
at-large, Mrs. Irene FE. Murphy,
University of Michigan regent from
Birmingham, to have the party
support ‘another constitutional re-
vision,
Mrs, Murphy's plan, faypred by
the local Democrats at their coun-
ty convention in Pontiac, called for
an initiative petition action for a
constitutional convention based on
party strength in the House of
Representatives; ao die
®
Michigan Democrats opposed a
similar recommendation last fall,
which voters later. killed at the
polls in November, which would
have selected three convention
34- senatorial districts.
‘Democrats said they would have
given Republicans an unfair ma-
jority in the convention sincé they
Mrs, Murphy said she was told
iby the committee her proposal of-
fered “nothing new” and was
therefore rejected as part of the
narty’s platform,
SAFE DRIVING TIP
va alermane wilde id .
vee iaren ta tee trent ont. Gdn prove extreme i ueiaee
can prove extremely bene ty eecte Gre recommended
for here to meke sure
Mhey do not interfere with
the areer's concentration.
Commén bense dictates
fhet young children should
In the. front seat
Lwinile the-ear le in motion,
points gut fhe Chicago Motor
Club. At no time should a-
L-child se permitted. within [*
‘GGsy reach of the cor's driv- se jon the building,” from seven
second floor of. the home of Mr.
C. Edwards a. at 2470 Baldwin OXFORD. ARBA aoa BURNS — Viva
and County departments battled
a blaze Saturday, morning which destroyed the
and Mrs. John |
Rd., four miles _—_ close to: $15,000. north of town. Cause of the fire, discovered by
& passing motorist, was still unknown. Damage
to the two-story frame home was estimated at
are
Ponttée Press Photos
(Continued From Page One)
several barrels of varnish and la-
quer, stored at the rear of the
bowling alley, which ‘ignited,
Dominic Masta and Joseph
Bonfiglio, owners of the build-
ing, estimated its value at §700,-
000 including the contents and
equipment, Automatic pin setters
jn the bowling alley were valued
at $300,000, .
“We only have $250,000 insurance
said Bonfiglio,
“There's nothing left of it,” he
said quietly."‘We've lost $500,000
just like that.”
Car Accidents Claim
Lives of 3 in Area (Continued From Page One)
nelia St., Flint. He suffered a brok-
en neck and was transferred to
Hurley Hospital, Flint, His wife,
a passenger in the car, was uf-
hurt.
‘Lapeer County sheriff's deputies
said Wood's car hit Summers’ auto
broadside as Summers turned into
a driveway weat of . Elm .Grove
road in Elba Township.
The other Jirea -man killed in
an accident near Lapeer was 43-
year-old Alvin R. Johnson of the
Barrett Hotel, Lapeer. Sit —
persons were hurt in the ftwo-
car collision at M24 and Mayfield
road in Mayfield Township at
8:17 p.m. Sunday,
Jolmson was a passenger in @
ear driven by Harold D. Noonan,
48, 448 N. Court St., Lapeet. Noon-
an estaped injury in the mishap.
Driver ‘of the other car was Lee
Sioliver, 34, of Sandusky, who suf-
fered chest injuries,
jurtes, cuts and bruisés, One sai,
Paul, 8. suffered facial cuts and
bruises, and another son, David, 4,
also was slightly injured,
Stoliker was reported in fair
condition at Lapeer County
General Hospital. where his wife
and sons were treated and re-
Other passengers in the Stoliker
ear were his father Cyrus, 58, who
was taken to Lapeer County Gen-
eral Hospital with head injuries,
and his mother Myrtle, 54, who had
facia) lacerations and an injured
left leg.
Sheriff's, deputies saiq the Stoli-
ker car hit Noonan's broadside at
the interséction. Cauise of the ac-
cident has not beén determined,
police said.
Mrs, French, of 18 Church St.
in Ortonville, was a passenger in
the car
sé¢ph, who was critically injured in
the accident.
The third nfemiber of the family,
daughter Sandra, 4, was also in
critical. condition in Flint's St. Jo-
seph Hospital.
Witnesses told Flint State Po-
lice that French's car came over
the crest of @ hill and that he at
tempted to stop When he saw a
one tereing ohne © His wife Perrie, 32, had leg in-|
riven by her husband Jo-; He and Joe Puertas, who leased
the-bar, were the last to leave the
structure, .
* *
“We closed up the place atid:
left at about 3 a.m. this morn-
ing,” sald Puertas. “Everything
was all pal then, There was no
sign of fire.”
Firemen were not sure who
turned in the first alarm.
Ivan Herr of 1125 LaSalle St., di-
rectly behind the building, reported
the fire at about 6 a.m. and said
the rator told him the alarm
alre had been turned in.
Mrs. Caroling Gormen, owner
of the Personality Beauty Shop,
directly across the street at 1123
W. Huron, said she heard some-
one banging on her door at 6 a.m.
“A Man Wag standing there and
shouted to me that there was @
fire across the street and I'd bet-
ter call the fire department.
“I looked out and could see
smoke and flamés leaping from the
door to the lounge and bowling
alley,” she sald.
No fitemen were reported hurt.
One man suffered a slight cut on
his chin when struck by flying
glass, but no one was overcome by
Repairmen from Consumers
Power Company -worked in. knee-
deep mud to reach a gas line in
order to cut off the flow of gas into
Fire inspectors will search the
rubble this afternoon to find if they
can what caused the blaze.
walls Any left standing within the
The bowling alley was considered one of the st in sow
Michigan, bd
for many area tournaments and
championships in recent years,
| Township firemen estimated that
itheir two 500-gallon pumpers and
one 300-gallon tanker pumped
about 270,000 gallons of water on
the flaming structure.
There were few openings
wert limited almost exclusively
to the front of the long building.
11:15, City firemen reported they
‘had used 1,650 feet of fire hose
battling the blaad.
At a rate of 750 gallons per
minute, the total estimated amount.
of water pumped by city trucks,
during their four hours of fire-
Lassie, Soh in TV Mixup
HOLLYWOOD (UPI): — The
“gifhultaneous: showitig of a 1945
ee oe
ing-mechanisms.
| ' “with @ every Pack |
of Black and White
or KODACOLOR
Pontiac tricks left the scene at,
_
MBS. 0. LEO BEAUDETTE
Dies at Home Prominent in Hospital,
Church Activities; Life
Member of YWCA
Mrs. Oliver Leo (Virena Palmer)
Beaudette of 269 W. Huron St.,
first president of Pontiac Gerieral
Hospital Auxillary, afd a director,
of the Oakland. County Historical terday morning after a brief ilk
nena,
Born in Pontiac, she .was the
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Palmer and granddaugh-
ter of Charles H. Palmer who came
here in 1853.
A member of All Saints Episco-
pal Church, Mrs. Beaudette had
been active in the Altar Guild of
her church since girlhood.
Besides her work with the hos-
pital auxiliary, Mrs. ners
had served as a section
dent of the Pontiac Chapter af
Needlework Guild of America,
Inc., and was a life member of
the YWCA,
Surviving are her husband; a
daughter, Mrs. Thomas H. Wilson
of Clarkston; two sons, Palmer T.
of Santa Yenx, Calif., Bruce
L. of Santa Barbara, Calif.; and 13
grandchildren. |
ed at 2 p.m. Wednesday at All
Saints Episcopal Church with bur-
fal in White Chapel Memorial Cem-
etery. :
Memorials to All Saints Church
will be preferred by the family. |
Francis
of the Declaration of Independence
‘in an unmatked grave in Trinity
ee at Wall St. and Broad-
way,
rITITITITIIII ILL
Bring All Your a
BLACK & WHITE
FILMS to Simms
Finer = Faster Phote Finishing
Wig er we Soe fl
PHOTO PRINTS | SDENGUEEWeRSHeDeeseEEESeeens 5S
MY
at Pontiac Woman}
Foundation, died at her home yes-|&
Funeral service will be conduct-|B
Lewis is the only signer :
to be buried in Manhattan. He lies /E
‘fie Day in Birmingham To Present S pecifications
for Ambulance Service
Arno Hulet, township supervisor
“t}said current plans call for a large
turn-around at the Square Lake
and Adams roads intersection. The
-jexpressway will parallel Square
Lake road to about one half mile
from Opdyke road where it will
swing north into Pontiac Township.
Se ae ~
Walter Wood, 49, of Detroit and
Geneva Miller of Ferndale suffered
bruises this when Wood
lost control of his car on
Woodward avenue near -Chester-
station | field road. The vehicle jumped a
Commissioners will review
Gare’s sample bid tonight to de-
cide whether or not they approve
its present wording.
ki *® &
Commissioners also will consider
a request from Municipal Judge
John C. Emery Jr. for a salary ad-
justment,
his assoc
In a survey of seven commu-
nities in the immediate area, City
Clerk drene Hanley reveals that
judges have the low-
est salaries of ‘any. te.
Members of the Uniformed Fire-
men’s Assn. are asking permission
for a street sale of tickets for a
benefit show April 2.
Scheduled at the Birmingham r his office and that of snowbank and slammed against
Sue, Ween, The viitine wire trast
ed at eer Mercy Hospital,
Mrs. Ethel M. Pollock
Servicé for Mrs. Ethel M. Pol-
lock, 69, of 587 Woodland Rd., will
be held at $-a.m. tomorrow from
Holy Name Church. Burial will be
in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.
The will ‘be récited at
8:30 tonight in the Bell Chapel of
the William R. Hamilton Co.
. Mrs, Pollock, who owned and op-
erated a children’s wear shop here
for 25 years, died Saturday morn-
ing at her home after a brief ill-
hess.
She is survived by two sons, Rob-
ert and Philip both of Birmingham,
‘a sister and a brother,
SPECIAL SAVINGS on FAMOUS BRANDS
Full 5-Graia
Hs Tablets.
295 E ae x
Noxzema Skin.
SS . nN 99°
3 go Bits purpose be
i 55 Ledy lether Liquid Face Cream .....
Drugs and Cos smetics
6 6 eee eee wee
eve eee | Be Souter: Deodorant
y Powder ...
Reg. $1.00
a 39° 116 ounce bdottte. Good tor hair.
ee
ee
98¢ Toni Hush
Creme Deodoront ..
$2.00 Shompale
E Shompoo—12-ounce ....
oldetiee a 49¢;
38¢ Dure Gloss
Neil Polish Remover ... ey <3 |
_BARBASOL Presto Lather
iek
FS aia
ak ca Simm),
! Tablets
2 Nag. Pkg, 1400.
j |S) 27° |
Y4-Grain. Setcherin
‘oath and ¢
THERS
i ' \
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1959 —
at OLive aka
AFTER COLDS, tl,
SORE THROAT Representative
You? to 3:30 P.M, wipntsoa REMINGTON:
P “ROCHESTER Members of |’
~ the Women's Fellowship of. the
First Chirch here
have completed plans for their
regular monthly luncheon to be
RECONDITIONED
aon ly apr ai If you feel run-down
tet ropes mets ae: | | steaien ee ales . ): ADVERTISEMENT TIRED BLOOD
DO YOU HAVE | | Take GERITOL
ARTHRITIS ?. Here is a message you will
; want to read.
Your decter can tell you there is abse-
they will
‘ul, but ‘vail that time we
must be centent te get the best Feltet
ight new there is a fast, safe and
effective relieving agent avaliable called ‘TE SET S| eday every
ry
ee!
4\ 98 N. . Saginaw St. —Maiz Floor
pe hang aerate
\ LOOK What YOU Can Buy In SIMMS
BARGAIN BASEMENT Tonite and Tuesday
refunded by the eo
ree, economy sises also ‘tor sontinnsd
SIMMS — 098 N. Saginaw
SYA SGTAN ID BASEMENT
FOR. THE HOME:
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a
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>
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>
>
» 4 Ey
eo ee Q Heavy WIRE Core
>
. Battery >
| BOOSTER >
>
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OROSEAL PLASTIC
Cc bi KOR FR CANNON First Quality
neste ts Slip Covers -| Muslin She Reg. $349 Reg. $5.49 ‘ Reg. $2.38 wg. 5259 Oigina 48 for “HAIRS tor SOF a 72x108 m, 06
Selle 1.29 1 99 4 SD 59s 1.69 chairs and sofas against weartng muslin with over
Deo Heavy Duty es ra teat Gries of chairs Gleaming Sait pe ye | and sofas, sizes.
+ Soleo Cleme reed
Use on — s or 12 volt batteries.
Polyethylene stor-
Cable, 12-Ft... .$3.29
Pee OE POV CP UU COU TCC CUCU TCC CCC CVC CVCCCCCCCCCC CCC?
vwyvvvwveVvvVVVYYYYYYYYY
ids Boxt Waist Longies
Boxer Longies
: f r cotton
farce Some Sin’ ana ¥ poarts cut. ed turn-up and toreador ee
—, corre colors, prints, ete.
Bizes to
oon eet Ge Ce oe ee ee oe oe ee oe om ee
Boys’ and Girls’ WASHABLE
careers Slacks annie
ee
ss
ie
ROTOR
GR
NBER eS
rey
st
ary
Sittee
sce
icized
che nder
— corduroy with Seek sts. Not
shown. pS
Sanforized Stripe. F Flennels
: SPECIAL BUYS m . ; :
ski Style Men’s Sport Shirts AE
; Regulg? $1.98 Value ‘ :
Pajamas Sal a a cl Re 9. $2.95 / —= and medium, coos of 3 A
Pr 14 FLANNELS or CHAL Lis
Heavyweight knit
cotton, nylon re«
inforced seams.,
Long sleeve pull- io Shirts.
over tops, elastic Reg. $2.59 Reg. $1.59
waist on pants. ‘
Machine wash- 66
e able, no ironing.» mS
2 Styles 2 is Piannels in -
13% oz. denim © sizes 6 to 16
or faded denims. | or solid chal-
Sanforized, zip- = Ms in sizes 6
per fly, Sizes 6 ©
to 16,- a
Famous ‘BEACON’ Estron
Crib Blankets
198
with 5” E285) too! |
$2.98
Value
36x50 Nile green blankets
s satin borders. Estron i
E germ resistant. Washebdie,
ate ne te
E 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor
| ___|. S \wirg PonTrAc PRESS,
er am | by calling Mrs. Hanersos Carey supine rn 7 ws Cotton-Nylon Blend Bath Tov el \
Blankets | 74 cows’ .
Reg. 029 t velwe y 9 \
wa ® 2 for $1.50 :
{Matching Hand Towel . .39¢ iE
cassie catenins wich aasse ee : satin binding. Assorted pastels. quality.
: Focuneunesdsecneenenseunnune’ Uuawheunssssueonecensenennl
— : N rity | Bigs Clip This Couponim
fonusasnnsusnusgenasasnanvivt TONITE 6 to 10 TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY 9A. M, 106 P.M:
23 SUPER-SPECIALS FOR COUPON, GIRDERS AT. weed &
Bring These Coupons With You for EXTRA Savings
SIMMS whole store joins in bringing worthwhile savings to thrifty
customers. Prices slashed on’ wanted, needed items for home and
family. Sale starts at 6 P.M. tonight and lasts until Wednesday
at 6 P.M, Get your share of the savings.
‘EVERY ITEM IN THIS ADV. GUARANTEED deiaa'dd REGULAR PRICE! Scan every item listed in this advertisement... note how big the
savings really are. You'll learn why more folks are now shopping
and saving at Simms than ever before in Pontiac’s history, 1
Bihar
title
See Clip This Coupon) aa Clip This Coupor fale What Clip This Coupor pllalal lm
: . New, Fresh Shipment | . S Sucetepen Snaps Shut Automatically af os Only 144—Fi irst Come, First Served :
cs 1. BD an r) a
i: HERSHEY Candy Bars 35 Purse & Key-Chain § = Bag & 5 Doz. Clothes Pins 5 4 Regular ‘Sec Size - a All Colors — As Pictured ~ W ith This Coupon :
H a 7 . : Regpies ¢€ ~ a ¢ :
- HERSHEY 10 for vai oe a : 100 58 .
a a a Fr coin ff 2 ? a
. HNERSHEYS eee ey a ee arg ee pockens, tog henge ete beeches rm] meee? with this coupon). 5 a (Limit 1 with coupon), a | pins handy. (Limit 1).
a CANDY—Maia Fleer @ SY = SUNDRIES—Mein Floor @ @ HOUSEWARES—2nd
Sy oncnasauusduccuaccsatangnel Pounusnensuaneneuaseoneneel § sprceneaneuenne
gucne . . Sageg pause wey aus Suan
= Clip This Coupon Hy Clip This Coupor E Clip This Coupon . = an ; ae s _ Popular, ROLL-ON Dispenser ~~ Nationally Advertised—Best Seller a Our “Best-Selling” Brand S
a 4 “i 66 ” wé a
H BAN Deodorant !: KLEENEX Tissues 5 wad Sanitary Napkins § ~ Regular 73e, Size — : anes 0x0) 20) 4 Box of 12 : a an ¢ 4 e
: 2 * 100: T ae as € 3dr. 8 |
r +s | . 8%
: Soleo piteeperar Tove somone bor EG New th teh, sti: - ing. (Limit 2) — J 6 with coupon). - finer. (Limit 6). a
; a COSMETICS—Main Floor © DRUGS—Main Floor my DRUGS—Main Floor
: Tittitittiitiiii titi otiiiei Taasease PTrTTT Titi titi PTIUIIIIIIITt Le
ang pees mang gesen r]
: 1 : : m_ Famous “ROYLFOYL” by Royaledge : -s§ Rubber Insulated : a PLASTIC a a if Plastic Shelf Paper 5. OW ect R : Trouble Lights = “ii e : hes ; 4 a (1 pas s unners a UL Approved Cords |
a: { 98c 10-Ft. Lengths -4 Clear—Heavy Ribbed -- ¢ =
ES od a m5 8° a $1.49 88 a = a m1 r} a T a a Value a
a: a 30 Inch ide, 6 ft. a On-off switch, swing open ~
HH Toi paper ath meee 7 ww fong. Non-skid., rib: 4 metal cage. protection, Full ~
a) signs. eee eS pr bed. Limit 3 with 15 feet, bulb extra, (Limit c
a : . | HOUSEWARES—tad Floor “HOUSEWARES—2nd Floor ELECTRICAL—2nd Floor
foun Gccaciechawuabauguuacact fafa lalallala Fancoeeeeendeeeseenseenesneel
| EBeug. geen ale, ee ‘hip ; it Eee Clip This Coupons = . a8 ; ' H _- Mate” d a = American Made 1s QUALITY um Filler Paper for 2 and 3 Rings an Genuine “Paper-Mate” Bran "
4 a8. . . r 7] on 4 : CURITY’ Pieper He Notebook Paper :: Ball Point Pens = : 69 : H 230 Sheets = - In Two-Tone Colors s
a H : H +] ¢is Regular ‘2 a Value r H Regular an 3169 a
~ s | 9c Value & .® Value - = Absorbent and soft dia. @ @ = 4 a
- pers in 21x40 inch fold : + Ruled filler paper for 2 and jy z As advertised on TV—pen ap-
= une stue: (Let 2 Oe- 4]f 3 ring notebooks. Full 230 gy ig proved by educators, etc. gy . en per coupon). a8 Mees }/f sheets. (Limit | pack). © (Limit 2 pens per coupon).
7 MNPANTS—Main Floor @ & WESUNDRY DEPT.—Main Floor & @ SUNDRY DEPT—Main Floor @
fensuescsusasseadacccensnseat
an a ong poses anne |
oo me & sie Clip This Couporl Hi : |
# Heavy Duty—AU Purpose . + “Relief Is Just a Swallow Away” : : “Tip Toni” or “Lilt” Refreshner . Ce |
a i | -
: ya-lnigh Sisal Rope :: ALKA SELTZER § 5 In-Between Permanents 5 - " 100-Foot Coil , et : =" YOUR CHOICE . H |
if $1.85 87' ae my, fs Values to 97' . | a Value HH, Bottle of 25 tab- HH $1.35 =
- a Less. than te pet feet—tdeal for a - lk. =S = fective elet vot H+ Your aan preg brand vi
. generat fut oa 7 ase tn ‘s -4 Me fe: 2 bottles). : H+ 4 Easy to use. (Limit 2), “
cm wie MANDWAEE—tn Floor @ “Qt gk) DRUGS—Main Floor & m COSMETICS—Main Flor @ -
MorrerrettitiitLet Ssuusssteennsensnnenenesnal Tw TlHitittttlllt
. :; uueny pees asm pees eueng. | — Clip This Coupor Ete Clit) This Coupon H Lf ‘ 4 |
~ Hand Polished Hardwood . All Metal Pan’ with Roller af Smoothly,Sanded Hardwood | _&, : a '
4 Fold ° n Carry Stool 3: Paint Pan & Roller Set: = o- Ft. banca oo . Has 1,001 Uses rl Both for ae “ah o
4 uo. a yea ues OE : $1.49 2 ; =. Value s ] Value . y alue i -) ‘
- Compact folding stools for use @ Receive the metal pan & - I Reinforced steel! rod onesie "pall a
g as snack table, foot stool, flow- and 7-inch paint roller ‘ a. -splatterm. (Limit Lae per cous @ ¢
s os stand, a TV view- " J) as price. (Limit 1} S . pon). 2
. HOUSEWARES—2nd Floor - PAINT DEPT. —2nd Floor @ @ HARDWARE—2ad Fioor 1 TITIIIITitiiir irri Fassunanenwensuansaesuaseseal a
mae Clip This. Coupor omy ee wer El
12 for
Small and compact for easy carrying.
Fully guaranteed. (Limit 2). - SZ fF Preston German and. Italian ; Choice of 5 to 8 inch ry (Limit 2 per coupon).
+ apap pond 6 sti‘ ‘baked ertam
rounded Sa
Ox. Popular M2 Size Midget Bulbs 17x19-Inch Heavy Steel. ~— [ - = Finest anon Steel’
| ‘SYLVANIA’ — Stove Mats 55 . Sewing. Shears FLASH BULBS = \ ‘Regular $1.98 nas ~. Choice ‘of 4 Sizes Famous Blue-Dots for Shur-Shots Pe 4 7 _— 9. ¢
~ $1.20 List : ae. 4
IV iiwm@m 68 i: ia ad |
oe ra ae ;
- it po ond backing.: : ay
| HOUSEWARES —tad Floor Som :
2 ca aba oc 9a Fesnaeuennns an i uuicnaenenuanani Seaee
CAMERAS—Main Floor ~
D depentenceeneas
BURNERS $2 Value
OTHERS te, ist
Only Few Steps from 3 Big . Eraser
SUNDRIES " Ady er ei sere, mis~
Zip Yop, voleane draft We Cash Pay Checks— ps HARDWARE —tnd Floor No Purchase Necessary © 98 North SAGINAW a
és oes * os ‘ , , : : ‘ *} Municipal Se Parking Lots
Fae
(EAN PORK
‘WECK 08
BONES CASH
7 Sedu
light-bombing attacks cone? Reed
a | ARKE, 1
Next te Cosege's Newport 5
‘A Morte logical conclusion, how-
ever, is that the poor slobs just floors and restaurants.
didn’t know what was going on. Excavation of the site was ate
The Europeans and Americans complished by thousands of gowned
, : laborers earrying earth
in buckets and other containers.
\Genent was carried in arms from
‘story to story,
A village of 2,500 persons was ae worst of the stroll, Sak
ep
GRADE NO. 1
Sir an 39" the most luxurious carpeting ever
used in a publie
oS war
FRESH DRESSED
Pan-Redi Fryers Lb. 39°
19: BLADE CUT
pon CHOPS . 39°
Tender Sliced
PORK
LIVER .
THIS VALUABLE COUPON ENTITLES
THE BEARER TOA 1 LB. LIMIT FRESH
REMUS Reus... Bi
to make the furniture the de
ers ordered especially bultt for
he hotel, - 7
These two thriving‘ little places
will be retained, and sell their
resultant products elsewhere in
| Egypt and through the are
world,
The Nile Hilton is the fourth on
the Texan's international list, the
other's being the Havana Hilton,
which has a Liberty Bell crack in
it, from an hgrinnggs a year or
\80 ARO; the Queen Elizabeth in
Montreal and the Bérlin Hilton, a
lremarkable reminder that the West
plans to stay in Berlin.
On this the chartered TWA
Jetstream po Baw a stop at Ath
ens, so that Hilton could lay the
cofnerstone of the coming i
Hilton, American ‘ingenuity’ s
swer to the Acropolis. TENDER SEEF
‘RIB STEAKS
‘ 69° Ae
MEAT PURCHASE ans alne 4B wae ot
100,000 pourids.
If in doubt about the
quirement, call the Internal
enue Service.
Check Driver's License,’ |
Hare Urges Motorists _
LANSING .® — Secretary of
State James M.. Hare has ap
pealed to every motorist in Michi
gan to look at his driver's license
to double check if it still is valid”
“We estimate that about one out
of every five drivers is blissfully
afd unknowifigly operating a car
oh an expired license,” Hare said,
The eight jet engines of the B52
af-ican develop a ‘‘thrust’’ of nearly
eerie seins nets
Liles -hrey yr-twide i MOT SS | 4
a
and head POO?! aple)
‘BULLT FOR PEOPLE!... i
_,.. Just one standard was used: by. Ford in designing its
* 1090 car—people! First, Ford @reated benutiful Thun- derbird styling that
they made the door opéningé wider, sO it’s easier to
not fust four or fivescould stretdh out on seats that
are padded their full width, Rest? Mote room for
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to the 296,955,160 sireedy stored.
, The Government. now.cwns 786,101,-
*-§60 bushels which, cost $2,205,872,246
in support payments. In addition to
wheat, 1958 crop storage included 98
million bushels of soybeans, nearly
100 million of grain sorghums “and
108.5 ure, of corn.
* * ® «=<
President Eisenhower has
stated that support payments of
more than $5 billion in the fiscal
year were about 40 per cent of
the net income of all farmers in
the United States. By the end of’
the fiscal year the Government
will have on hand surplus crops
which have cost taxpayers. $9 bil-
: lion; Storage, interest and other
| expenses will add another billion.
:
EES
¢ ie
SARI
ei
RE
aE t
None of this contributes to a
sound ny:
. _* * roe
One ‘idea again being advanced by
farm lobbies and backed by Sen.
Arcen, ranking Republican on the
agricultural committee, is the food
stamp plan. Its purpose is to move
surplus food through regular chan-
- nels into grocery stores where low in-
~ come families could buy it at a dis-
count. This would tend to improve
diets and Yarm markets as well. It’s a
subsidy for both city dweller and
farmer but it could save taxpayers
money by cutting some costs of the
present program.
x * *
Credits to low income families
for foods such as milk and meat,
says the Senator, ‘will help mare
farmers than just the livestock
man. It will improve the grain
market because you use up 5 or
6 bushels of grain in producing
@ livestock product for every one
that goes into a cereal.”
Congressional farm leaders hope
that major farm organizations can
get together on a program or at least
reach. substantial agreement in some
areas. So far that has not happened.
Pres. Rhee Protests
Repatriation Proposal g
There aré two sides to the ur~
fortunate flareup between South
Korea and Japan with regard to re-
patriation of Koreans in Japan to
North Korea. Nevertheless the Re- .
public of Korea has broken off trade
relations and undertaken other re-
prisals against Japan.
= £ ®
A cold war between these
ancient enemies has been going on
for years over fishing rights and
Korean economic claims. The s0-
called Rhee line extends out 160-
miles off the coast and the gov-
| ¢@ttiment has been extremely arbi-
e trary in arresting Japanese
: — who stray over that
At Ohe. time Pres. Ragx wanted
crimes in Japanese jails but didn’t
want them sent to ‘South Korea.
Koreans in Japan are an economically
ae group. and naturally 40me
ie Re Re
ae “On the other. hand pro-Com-
i - alle organizations in Japan
THE PONTIAC PRESS Frege mark - empontinn Sunday ti Mi a by ta: ac, Plone
Romets Meteors,
Eee St “pnistant Ae Advertising
Japan to release all Koreans held for
There are sald to be 800,000
Koreans in Japan an@..anywhere — from 43,000 to 117,000 are supposed
to want to go to North Korea. The
Japanese government has suggested
that the International Red Cross
by force if necessary. _,
x «6 *
Unfortunately-the free world can’t ‘supervise repatriation but Pres. Russ
says that repatriation will be resisted
let them, fight it out. Unilateral ac-
tion by either side could lead to dis-
aster and both have challenged the:
other's interests. It’s time for a third
party, the United Nations preferably,
to step in and settle the dispute be-
fore it endangers the peace of the
’ Far East.
The Manlitont Town
Steal Our Credit
Outsiders Try to Grab Off
What Belongs to This Area
_ Million dollars: What a woman
liked to be told she looked like—
before inflation.
On account of being the highway that’
leads from Michigan's biggest city to its
state capital, Grand River Road is known
to the rest of us as a “political road,” as
the political powers constitute a good part
of its traffic.
But the Detroit and Lansing papers
often refer to it as “Michigan’s Main
Street.” That makes me mad.
The actual count shows that our Dixie
Highway, over a good part of its length in
our state, carries over twice the traffic
of that road 'twixt Detroit and Lansing.
-So the plain facts-show what really IS
Michigan's Main Street.
This is along the same ling as the cov-
erage of the Detroit papers when a top.
golfer comés from Oakland County, (and
we produce a lot of them), or any other .
prominent personage grows up out_here
in God's country, (and we turn out a lot
of them, too),
mad,
Little realizing the magnitude to which
it would grow, the late
William O.. Smith the big city papers, and
some national magazines, refer to them
as “of Detroit.” And that also makes me
started the first gravel business at Ox-
ford—only a few shovelfuls.
On our travels we're frequently razzed
about having Michigan towns with such
names as Kalamazoo, Dowagiac, Wahja-
mega, etc., but in Georgia we find
Yoknapatawapa
while Pennsylvania has a
Punxsutawnty
and other states some almost as bad.
“It is none too early,” opines Sheriff
Frank W. Irons,
“to begin warning your children about
the dangers in the ice on our lakes when
the thawing days take place.”
- Reminiscences of that forest fire in the
thumb area in 1881, whose smoke black-
ened out the Pontiac area, come to
Mrs, W. J, Stuart
of Rochester. A new home which her par-_
ents had just built in Sanilac County was
destroyed. Ten members of her family
saved their lives by keeping underground
in an old well, as the flames swept over-
head.
Wishing ‘to join that great fraternity of.
“Neck Stickers Out,”
here’s my peeetion for next year’s nom-
t
Stevenson and Kennedy ,
on the Democratic ticket, and
Rockefeller and Nixon
gestions?
Several Pontiac area flower growers * on the Republican ticket. Any other sug-
again have the marigold seeds to go after
that standing offer of a nationally known
nursery of $10,000 for the first white
marigold. Among the 100 who last summer
came the closest was
Mrs. Margaret Garwoldson ©
of” “Auburn Heights. Her entry had only
a slight tinge of yellow, which she hopes
to eliminate this time.
A Orchids to-
Mr, and Mrs. Gordon C. Lennex
of 3453 Sashabaw Road; 61st wedding an-
; Frank D. Brigham
of ‘Ortonville; 80th birthday.
‘J. ©. Jacckel »
of 301 Osmun 8 80th birthday.
Bverybady s Buddy
—
David Lawrence Says:
Congress Scaring U.S.
WASHINGTON—Lots of members
of Congress are making speeches
these days to the audience.
Many of the De ts, and even
some Republicans, are deriding a
balanced budget
and talking
about ‘‘growth"’
through bigger
and biggee
spending by gov-
ernment.
But this time
the politicians
are barking up
the wrong tree—
they may be con-
vincing those
of their constitu- LAWRENCE
ents who think they are going to
be the beneficiaries of the bigger spending, but it is the investors —
who remain unconvinced and are
scared. :
x * *
For the treasury is up against
a crisis in refunding its maturing
bonds. Investors are seeking refige
in the stock market, which is re--
cording new high marks. *
growing increasingly worried
about what the Democratic
Also, many industrial leaders
have held up their expansion plans.
Unemployment has not been ma-
terially reduced, largely because
of the failure -of the heavy-goods
industries to come back.
x* * *
This is in part due to the un
certainty about interest rates on
borrowings and to the threatening
rise in labor costs.
For, while there is a good deal
be booming. Psychologi
are holding up the fulfillment of
many plans for plant exparision
that were completed months ago.
This is the “growth” that should
be encouraged instead of discour-
aged,
* * x
Congress has failed to come to
grips with the crisis. Many of its
so-called’ ‘liberals’ think the an-
swer lies in bigger and bigger
deficits and that it doesn't -matter.
whether the budget is balanced.
But the speeches along that line
. from Capitol Hill are scaring the
investors away from bonds and
fixed-interest securities.
While some of the speeches in
Congress. make headlines that
~ can mislead ‘nuillions of voters—
nomics and solid facts.
Here, for example, is an extract
trom the Feb. 14 newsletter of
The Country Parson
- maturities. “The Whaley-Eaton Service,” a
nonpdlitical weekly published in
- Washington for many years and
read regularly by the very men
who handle funds in-the financial
and business institutions of the
country:
“The flight from government
bonds is more ominous than most
Washington officials care to admit
publicly. Several recent treasury
financing operations have failed
badly. * * *
“As a result, the treasury is
being forced to run faster and
faster merely to keep up with its
The fact is that the
richest nation in the world is now
operating on a th
basis.
“The effect of all this seems
utterly lost on advocates of. dy- Investors
namic new spending programs
to speed business: expansion,
eliminate unemployment. The
treasury cannot spend more
money than it gets through taxes
and government-security issues.
“Yet professional and naive in-
vestors both. mow distrust. the lat-
ter. This means recourse to fi-
nancing through the banks, which
increases money supply and . is
directly inflationary.... |
* * x
“As Fedéral Reserve Chairman
Martin puts it: ‘Investors cannot
be induced to purchase fixed
income securities if they fear a
steady eresion in the purchasing
power of the dollar.’ Yet this is
precisely what they do fear,
(Copyright 1968) ©
Dr. William Brady Says:
Americans ‘Often Misled
on Right Way to Breathe
It is amusing to watch a wise-
acre going through the motions of
what he thinks is deep breathing,
but laughable to hear the instruc-
tions charlatans
give customers or
can educ ators
shrug off the idea
that refined peo-
ple need know
rs anything about
DR. BRADY “jin'ards.” The
snobs take it from there, —
Shining examples: The fashion-
able “salesiady” explaining to the
Dumb Dora the importapce of sup-
porting, restraining or molding the
“diaphragm.” Or the TV huckster
showing how his pills get right to
work on pain without upsetting the
stomach or “lower tract.'’
This peculiar American .snob-
bery makes it difficult to teach
people how to breathe. One chap-
ter in nry booklet How to Breathe’
(35 cents and stamped, self-ad-
dressed envelope) deals with nat-
ural physiological, normal breath: .
ing, belly are ng that is, as.
listed in: the index.
The instructions for such breath-
ing, on pages 13 and 14, are given
under the heading “Directions for
Bellows Breathing,” naeng with
this:
‘Pretend your chest ie paralyzed.
I have @ pamphiet (tree
‘you provide stamped, st i
dressed envelope) on Belly th-
ing Which tells how to use your
bellows and what for. If you want
the pamphlet, ask for it by
It-is hot avallanie ce any other
title, a
WEBSTER cooteay - ne
I like to think T ive ‘aught
Webster changing his
He defines belly as a word de
bag or bellows, without a hint of impropriety. But then Webster ©
chickens and calls bellysache
An animal breathes |
the bellowg (belly). elroy
who has not been m
vent inflation of the’ bellows. a
an -in any small
* rived from the Anglo-Saxon © bole : cava). The chest is the front wall
of the thorax.
* * *®
So far we have referred to the
breathing muscle, the diaphragm,
only ‘in a (sales) ladylike way.
Most Americahs, if asked ‘‘What is
the diaphragm? Where is it? And
how does it work?" would flunk.
Watch this column for the answers.
» & -& Signed letters, not more ‘than one
page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and — -
ease, diagnos! or treatment, will be
ansWered by ..Dr. Labo good Brady, if a stamped ssed eel is: sent
to The Pontiac Press. ichigan. “Pontiac,
opr 1988) Voice of the People
1: ‘Foree Tax ¢ Aaahiaes
— Stop Pat Deductions
(leaded hes eae aes sw sande vague
potential indiumnoe we Seagmiing sisap solght have with tho Geve-qpenters
":%& ae
1 « Vaaen ‘dhl natin, Kar). Savoo titeihny til Snalaten
to to deduct withholding from our paychecks. This way we
make painfully clear to every wage earner just how futich he tosses
in the kitty for bureaucrats to spend. in Washington.
Wok
America suffers ftom “‘take-homedtis.”” Ask a man on the street ¢
how much he earns and he quotes take home pay. The poor taxpayer
doesn’t miss tax money Decuine he’s never had it. He doesn't —
x i what he’s earned.
*
Let the wage earner handie his own finances. Pay him what he
earns and when tax tinte comes, let him pay with rea} money. Let
him knew how much he pays and force his interest and participation
in government.
Screams of irate taxpayers would shake the foundations of Wash-
ington. Free spenders would light out for the hills and overseas giveaway
programs would die instantly. Jails couldn't hold the defiant and delin,
quent taxpayers. Wouldn't it be wonderful?
‘Many Would Take
Job Full Time’
The statement that Brewer rec-
ommended Straley was interesting
and might ‘explain why Brewer
rates two helpings from the public
* trough.
Not only does he get .the Sec- retary of State branch office for
There must be many unemployed - maen in Pontiac who would be glad
to devote full time to a job paying
$8,500, and maybe even some of
the employed would be willing to
trade for it. By the way, just what
in heck is a ‘Road Coordinator?”
Not on the Gravy Train
‘Do We Really Need Bird-Watching?’
Accurate surveys show we're
going to need 50 per cent more
school room capacity for the next
generation than we have presently.
It's time we cut out fly-casting, -
bird-watching and the nonsense
courses to make room for the
pupils. Where's the money coming
trom?
B.R.C.
Seconds Letter
on Tax Collector
The ‘etter regarding the Inter-
nal Revenue Department's injustice
toward little men should be com-
mended. The “public pie
which! it refers is well to
rien. ba taxpayers. Thréats,
insulting manner, non-cooperative
attitude have been used with many,
even outright refusal to send a
duplicate bill for verification of tax
owed,
x *® *
1 work In public accounting and
can certainly qualify the letter,
as many of my clients have com-
plained of this attitude on the
part of gollectors. A Civil Service
_job carries a responsibility to-
ward the public and giving a
«man a little authority sometimes
results in his setting himself up
as a little dictator.
It's time more voices were raised
{in protest and houge cleaning is
done in the Pontiac Branch.
Justice for All W. RK. S.
Death by Beating
Stirs Readers
Others besides the mother have
somé blame in the death of the
7 le girl. Were teachers and adults
at’the school so blind they couldn't
see what was happening? If I sent
a child to school showing repeated
evidence of violence, someone
would have investigated. The
school wouldn't shut its eyes to
*” . such a condition,
The father, too, says he plead-
ed with the mother. Why didn’t
he act? If he couldn’t make the
mother treat her humanly, he
could have removed the child to
a place where she would be treat.
ed decently.
What about neighbors and rela-
tives? Everyone was too indiffer-
ent and too full of admiration for
the mother to lift a hand to save
the child. - a
Mother
It's time law abiding citizens
wake up ard do something to pro-
tect small innocent ones.
“We should give the guilty a
dose of their own medicine. Why
put them where they’ll be given
a dry, warm bed, food and shel-
ter at the expense of the tax:
payers? How many children
have died because of lame brain
neurotics taking advantage of
them?.
They'd be first to cry our if
- someone their strength got hold of
them. They need a rod in the.
hands of some strong adult used
on them.
27 Oak Hill ‘Elsie Franklin
‘Don’t Think Crime
Is All on Bagley’
<.. Why do You ‘think Bagley and
‘Wessen need.so much cleaning out?
Let's start on the Saginaw skid
row. Then we'll start around the
Courthouse, Auburn Avenue and
the Heights area, where all the
gambling and corruption was going
so strong in the summer.
* * *
Mr. Eastman comes te Pontiac
and makes a couple of raids in
the Bagley area and now you
want everyone to believe all the
corruption is in this area. Let's
not close our eyes to things
going on all over town and look
only in this one section. —
. * «* *
Hurrah for Mr. Spurlock and his
Rema club for their stand.
Mrs. C. L. C.
Case Records of a Psychologist: «
Hypnosis Can Have Medical Value Flora’s case is very interest-
"ing since it shows how a
can complicate the life of oth-
erwise smart adults. Hypnosis
is often used in this situation,
but 1 didn’t resort to hynosis
with Flora- for I knew her
claustr could be elimi-
nated without it. Scrapbook
this case and inder it under
“Abnormal Psychology.”
* * *
CASE A-461: Flora G., aged 28,
fs an office secretary.
“Dr. Crane, I am handicapped,”
she began with
a rueful smile,
. “for T have claus-
trophobia.
“It terrifies me
to ride in an ele-
vator or be shut
“ting my job, for DR. CRANE
it meant I had to climb 10 flights
« of stairs.
nd I hed to catty my lunch
ties aun ates mach
walk downstairs to the lunch
back up those
“But I couldn't locate ‘any aoe
position as as Ohe I-ha
And I would miss my many friends i
~ of elevators. ‘
VWiliaf“nseilioa tis Bese used “there is another method for ‘r,s Deven
te this very {700 of case on me merous occasions, and it really
works. © -
For hypnosis is an effective tool
of medicine and psychology. And in
many cases it is a quick solution.
* * * ‘
«< For example, psychologists for
many years have uséd it, as for
amnesia cases. When I was sta-
tioned at Smith College talented
Dr. W. S. Taylor employed hyps ~
en ee:
fied.
At Concordia College in Moor-
head, Minn., Dr. Thomas 0. Bur-
- physicians to-use hypnosis to
prove the guilt or innocene of
suspects and to relievé abnormal
dread of surgery,
Today there are many medical
and dental groups that have organ-
ized to study and employ hypnosis
in their practice.
xe 'k
You readers are probably aware
of the fact that many mothers now*
bear their babies under hypnosis
and. surgical operations can be
performed under its influence.
WAKING HYPNOSIS
Indeed, talented orators and
doctor?:does all the work,
® *
solving. such problems as_ this
b, phobia which Flora now hag re
garding closed spaces (claustro-
phobia).
In psychiatry, we thus usually
prefer to have the patient co-
operate in the cure. One of the
first steps in psychiatry is to
face the problem and name it.
That means the patient con-
sciously confronts it.
“The next step is to try to date its
onset.
“Flora, when did you first notice
your. terror for closed ‘places?’ I
thus asked.
xt &* *
“Well, I had it in high scHool,”
she replied,
' “How about grade school?” I
“It was present: when I was
im-the seventh grade,” she added,
_ a8 she recalled being afraid of
entering an elevator when she
Was supposed to see a dentist.
mn Mth eve started
a I said, See
aiwaya write ie ‘bots Dr, Gegr e W.
= =A wenelos 88, fs," Bonin,
a) charts ase pam-
- (Copyright 1959) ae A.A cover and
- e “ od “ We
U.S. Supreme Court, Beware WASHINGTON (UPI)Chief Jus-
tice Earl Warren will not like some
of this week’s news from Chicago.
Neither will most of his Supreme
Court colleagues care for what is
in the works, es .
In the works is a plan which very
likely will put the American Bar
Assn. on record with a carefully.
worded complaint against the U, §. Supreme’
the United States and the several |
states against the subversive ac-
tivities ef communism and Com.
munists.
There will be no suggestion, of
course, that the court has done this
deliberately. A speeial Bar Assn,
committee has prepared for sub-
mission today or Tuesday to the
ABA House of Delegates a report
on Cortimunist tactics, strategy and
objectives in the United States.
The House of Delegates meets in
Chicago today and Tuesday.
The ABA Board of Directors
screens reports to the House of
Delegates and might prevent sub-
mission of this one. The special
committee, however, has voted to
submit the report.
Bar Assn. spokesmen believe it
will survive the screening process
and go before the House of Dele-
gates. This latter organization
‘is the ABA policy-making body.
The House of. Delegates. can >
the association hope to prevent, _ Odds, however, favor adoption of
the- report. A report on the same
subject was drawn a year ago but
was not submitted for’ ra-|:
tion by the House of Delegates.
It was published in. the Aug. 22,
1958, Congression 5 ¢ al :
“The 1959 report will contain pro-
posals for corrective measures
against a series of Supreme Court
decisions which began about three!
years ago. There are 23 such di
cisions, so far,
The 1958 report contained 16
Proposed corrective measures in-
tended, in effect, to reverse the
Supreme Court by legislation.
The House Judiciary Committee
approved last weck a bill to coun-
teract the court's decision or the
anti-Communist Smith Act. In
Yates vs. the United States, the
Supreme Court:
Reversed two federal courts and
ruled that the teaching and advo-
cacy or forcible overthrow of the
U. S, government, even with evil
intent, was not punishable under
the Smith Act so long as the ad-|
vocacy was divorced from any
effort actually to. start a revolu-
tion,
The Bar Assn, special committee
STUNUMUOD T “ON 9Y) SCET UT pres
tactic at that time was nullifica-
tion of the Smith Act. The Su-
preme Court has nilllified it in con-
siderable degree.
under the Smith Act of subver-
sive activities, 49 by then had
been set free by Supreme Court
rulings. ee ”
Sale! Women’s and childr
‘ ens
washable duck tennis shoes
Washable uppers, white rubber
soles. Reinforced at strain
A '
f
__\ TIME PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, ho
FBI Director J. Edgar-Moover pointe Red,- blue or white. Maik) SR hs WR
adopt or reject the special com-| testified-in January, 1958, that of fomen’s 410, child's 814-3. .
mittee report. Adoption would' 109 top Communists _ _ { 18 it ! Infants’ toddlers’ girls
a ore d ’ ‘slim ’ . ; : Seamfree nylons _— practical playtogs © Tots’ spring pajamas Smart slim |
| er | y Crystal - clear, streak - free! Reg. 1.69-1.98, Infants’ — me 1. Cute Butcher Boy Reg. 1.98. Fine ¢ ager
ee . Plain stitch, newest spring crotch crawlers; Tots’ bib styles for boys,’ girls’. Stripes gab, side-zip or Ivy styles, 1: . | 7 shades. 844-11. Slight irregs. o'alls; boxer longies 2-4, 3-6x. ‘and prints. 46. Save 9c now! — leg, ranch pockets. Sizes ie
ene 2 ws. 8f 2m 83 2m 83 283
SLICED
Tender, Choice
87: a Lb.
Banquet
1.00
' “ |
Armour's Girls’ new spring Shirtwaists, others! Monday Only! Glamour lingerie in =~
} J bi SIRLOIN | skirts at savings Tots’, girls’ dresses Spring Toot spring '69 styles Co umbia Reg. 2.98. New spring fabrics, Reg. 2.98. All easy-care spring Reg. 1.98, Crew necks, boat th « 1,98. Slips, Lana eres
E AK styles, colors. Pleated, full. cottons! Solids, exciting necks, novelty collars. Cotton shift gowns, waltz gowns, ba '
prints. Many styles. 3-6x, 7-14, jersey or ribbed knit. S-M-L. dolls, pj's, full gowns. All new
2 83
LPI girls’ 6-plece POT PIES
@ CHICKEN |
@ TURKEY ‘Pkgs $ 00 Easter fashion suite at 3 sa
@ BEEF —_ Reg. 5.98," Arnel and cotton Reg. 2.98. Collared for @ Outfit includes skirt & jacket, Reg. 3 pes. 1.15. Fine Swiss
: . blends in checks, plaids and casual look! Meshes, TT and purse. Rayon rib athletic shirts, knit briefs.
Long wearing. Sizes 6-16, ple weaves, interlocks, S-M- 3 my 1
2 = 85 : hat, gloves pastels. W/petticoats! 10-20, disguised ad linen! 3-6x.
Dw S44 6.00
“TIDE raat REGULAR Ec “ 25 | arena FARM FRESH » Cand
-«
MEDIUM EGGS
ema se tee,
C Reg. 99c each. Nylon rein. Strong steel bronzetone frame, Reg. 5.98. Red, green, mocha, Reg. 2.98. aa Fetal | Dozen neck holds its shape! White, no-sag seat springs. White or grey, turq, or rose, Pre- wide for extra tuck-in le a f | It. blue, maize, navy. S-M-L, tanplastic upholstery. Terrific! . shrunk, washable, no-ironing! nap. Choose white, paste Bs
‘Cypress Gardens 2 tor 48 7.99 ~ - §,00 (2.000 Frozen
ORANGE
2 JUICE
» 15: _ MUELLER’S _ Oven-Glo White
|BREAD
FRESH OR SMOKED - a 39° Lb. aoe Cc pn eonees Dron shoe locos Soap Fatnen Q ; ; oz. ; . e-up mirr ea d
LIVER SAUSAGE ; Lo AVES rida beadene Sorina cot cio aon od per ’ |
FRESH, LEAN — 49° Lb. ae Salas: ” rst bows , Coates’, Clark's thread ee — — t * ; ] " izes , PORK STEAKS ) carl coho 122hy
} + ’ Ls : Pod
es . ae £ Se
Profile of Future Soldier
To Wear Rocket on Hak ~ EDGEWOOD, Ma. (AP)—Profile. of the
. soldier of the future:
He wears headgear much like a toot=
ball helmet, His«special clothing protects
him from any form of enemy attack. He
casually. climbs obstacles and crosses wot Pl THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1959
etvitian workers at the Army chemical cen- |.
ter here Friday.
Most of what he said is. classified ~but
the Army did disclose a few things. ©
x * * .
The space-age soldier probably will trav-
Rain Kennedy Confident: Ousie 4
a Billy OK (Media II Dies
of Labor ils OK iy South Affe TZANDEAN, South Africa F, Kennedy (D-Mass) is confident :
that Congress will pass two labor|—Quéen Modjaji TI, id
bills—hig own union reform meas- of primitive Africa's .
ure and another to change pro- is dead, “ho
visions of the Taft-Hartley Law. & & me
ow wee "The Queen, who was, 96, ruled
Kennedy, chairman of the Senate ithe Babubedus in Transvaal for
labor subcommittee, sald yester-|neany 60 years: Her village; ans day-in a TV program he wag sure
two separate bills would be ap- \achaebeds (Devitt SO gy i proved despite the administration’ 8 iwhich also hide the royal pete 7
request for qa one-package measure. | b 1
He sald the reform bill, designed ta nciseerestie rites so to stop crooked unions and their) a * *
leaders, - is needed because the) In these forests, too, are the ve AFL-CIO ‘weapon: of expulsion” maing of past rain queens, buried
had failed t solve the corruption upright with their heads above problem. ground.
| * of | so * | Kennedy said that, like the ad. The rain queens in former times
ministration, he favored controls drank from # poison cup when
on “blackmail picketing” and sec- they cmp uelest too old to rule. But
ondary boycotts" but felt such Modjaji abolished this rite after changes should be made in a Taft-'ghe became a Christian, Reports
Hartley. amendment bill to -follow/from her forest sonaie said she
‘ Idied peacefully of old age. ditches with the aid of a ket belt. ¢! in an airjeep, @ saucer-like vehicle
strapped-on his back. ae belt. Which cai move in any direction or hover
Me: adescat ebtects a motionless in one place, Gen Johnson said,
the. ‘help of sero Pasar eners When he has time, he will eat a tasty
boost.” And he carries a meal of irradiated food which he will
light, all-purpose supergun with. 150 carry in a aie flat pack similar to to-
rounds of ammunition. — day's frozen food.
* * * He will carry a tiny radio with an ‘efec-
This isn't the product of a science fiction tive range of well over 1,000 yards, The —" radio will be contained in a helmet which
writer. It comes from the Army's chief of — will protect him against chemical, biolog-
‘combat developments, ical and radiological attack.
. x *« * x *« * e
And these things will begin to take shape A small pencil-shaped‘detonator which
about 1970, Maj, Gen. Harry E. Johnson can quickly blast foxholes will be standard
told @ closed-door meeting of Army and equipment.
of Paul Bunyan being erected to mark 125th an-
niversary of Bangor, Maine. the union reform measure.
Monday Night and Tuesday Downtown
_ Shop Downtown Pontiac Where There’ s ; More of Everything Plus Parking for 6, 000 Cc ars!
PARK FREE 4) DOWNTOWN "Sy
Drive your car into any of the convenient downtown
parking lots. Patronize your favorite store identified
by the Park and Shop emblem shown in this ad. Free
parking with minimum purchase of 2.00 or more!
Med, Look for This PARK ond Seam
ey SHOP. Seal at Your Favorite
Store Downtown!
FASHION FEATURE! GIRLS’
BETTER DRESSES
166 2.66 3 to 6x 7 to 14
Imported Cashmere
COATS Values to 99.00
Pure, luxurious cashmere in elegantly styled
coats at Arthur's special two-day price!
Softly styled with the added feature of
t season - to - season milium linings. Black,
grey, nude, blue, bamboo, in sizes 8 to 18
and petite sizes 6 to 16,
Here. is special Arthur value . . . our
regular $129 Bernard Altman Cash-
meres specially priced for only...... Coats
89 Second Floor
ARTHUR'S 34 North eer’ ae
“New For Easter! Boys’ Fashions - Low Priced |
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN! |
_ Crease and Spot Resistant.
BOYS’ SUITS Get Ready for Spring and Easter
Sizes ay Up To 12 Sires
A budget buy! Just $12.00 for this suit that’s erat designed. A trim,
flannel-finished rayon jacket, fully a two pairs of slacks, one solid-tone
—one tweed—textured, and a vest... all four pieces — $12.00,
‘8. s. KRESGE’S: Downtown Store Only
Wash ‘n wear! Little or no ironing! Dari Rivers,
Stevens, other top fabrics in darling styles. Spring
designs and colors. Hurry to Downtown -Penney’s jf
for these. ©
DENNEY’S TOW TOWNE — 17-19 fortis SAGINAW 1
Two-Pair
Trousers Lined Jacket
"fae . 7 s Fa aida,
But You‘’re Snug and Warm
Under Your Nylon Bound
RAYON and ORLON| "GUARANTEED HOTEL TYPE
lonerspring Mattress OUR FINAL OFFER!
x ST 88 > gi ‘a
ad 339.95 "ANDES" BLANKET | . : $39.95 - end q
. erry
1) *e @ Also available such brands as Sealy, Serta, Simmons, Rest- ? $ TONIGHT AND
i- oF 4 onic, Restokraft, Grenadier, Wolverine, etc. ° $73 99 “ ‘TUESDAY ONLY!
se ) : : Washable . . - brett @ Turquoise
Pomc 3eT ) MODERN AGE areeee tee and 4 fu y winch e
| U B. k size. A truly wonderful buy @ Blue
tt ili ity: as et in a top grat bial @ Pink @ Gold
! Unbreakable polyethylene. R FF U |B) | | Fr Waite’s . - Fourth Floor ce
Won't rust, won't iT oy eg. C
!
lating! Today ond Tuesday $2.49 J 15 East Pike St. — % Block Off Sasinan
4 a k > e
nounce the marriage of their
daughter, Judith Ann, to Don-
ald M. Lee, son of Mr. and
Mrs. R. W. Lee of Dick street.
The two were married Fri-.
day in Monroe. They are liv-
* on Dick sive.
by Rowena Wilson
Although hairdos are important
to every female personality, so
& malibben, the shantrons ty
is not necessarily
ne the one whe
Ms adopts certain
,vogues because
they are current
| fashion. Famous
ie beauties have
“been. known. to
make use of
make-up as ~Faerytar
@efects, Avoid the *
look.” ar eckiore u wateret | look and you'll find that make-
up, properly applied, js in the
best of taste,
All women who take pride in
their appearance appreciate the
‘value of professional assistance.
We are always happy to assist |
with your every beauty problem
at Rowena's Beauty Salons,
4831 Dixie Highway, Drayten
Plains, OR 3-3541. 14 S. Main,
Clarkston, MA 65-1000. 1216
Baldwin, Pontiac, FE 5-3735.
DEAF?
or-do you really
suffer from
hearing strain?
FREE BOOKLET
Whether or not “ou now
wear a hearing aid, you may
suffer from hearing strain.
In conversation do you feel .
yourself straining to hear?
Do you feel nervous, tense,
and even irritable and
finally wanting to give up
"and withdraw from family
and friends? These are
common symotoms of hear-
ing strain. Yet many like
you are finding clear, com-
fortable hearing every day.
‘A new, FREE booklet ex-
plains hearing strain and
what you can do about it.
It will be mailed in a plain
envelope. Write for it te Box
35, Pontiac Press, Pontiac.
er’ Mix >
Business,
‘Weddings
Even Charity
Takes Back Seat
at Receptions ©
By EMILY POST ~
“Dear Mrs, Post: This past
Saturday I was invited to the
wedding of a cousin's son, And
where but at a wedding do you
get to see all your. relations at
- one time? Being an ardent
worker in the cause of mentally
retarded children I get. several
raffle books to dispose of
each year,
-“] thought it would be a good
idea to take the books with
me and ask ry relatives to
take a raffle ticket for 25 cents,
As I saw these different rela-
tives INasked them if ,they
would a chance and they
did so—gla
“While I was doing this, the
mother of-the groom came
over- and asked me what I
was doing. I explained and she |
“Please don't ‘do it.” I said,
was very embarrassed and
quite upset over it.
“This was all done very quiet-
ly and unobtrusively and. I
onty approached my relatives.
Was I wrong in doing this de-
spite the fact that it was for a
very worthwhile cause?"
—
Answer: I am sorry*to say
that you were wrong, A wed-
ding reception is not a proper
place to sell chances even for,
a very worthy charity,
“Dear Mrs. Post: My son
_ thinks it wrong to mix the first
and second marriage by his
giving. me away at my wed-
ding. I've been a widow for
years and my son js in
rede is tountion: He is very
thonghtfut and usually right.
Maybe I am wrong about this,
but I would go much like to
have him do this service for
_ me.”
Answer: | think he must ‘be
confused by some of the bad
taste too often shown in di-
vorce situations, In your:case,
your son is the most. proper
person imaginable to walk in
with you and to give you
away. In fact, not to do so
would proclaim his disapprov-
al of your marriage.
“Dear Mrs. Post: Will you
please tell me the correct way
to address a letter to a Fed-
eral Judge?"
Answer: “The Honorable.
| John J. Jones."'
Rinse Sweater Well
To keep sweaters soft rinse
them well after washing. Add
A special soap which may be
used in cold water will help
prevent ‘shrinkage — keep fib-
ers soft and pliable. \ ¥ ®
Mrs. Jerry McKay, left, Mrs.
E. E. Russell pose in the spring finery
they will wear for the sorority’s Thurs-
- Fashions are by the DeCor day event. meicber. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1950
Pontiac Press Photes
and Marsares Ann Shops. Tickets may
be purchased at the door or from any
4 >
é,
Sa-Shay Club Has Presidents Ball Sa-Shay Quadrille Club held
a Presidents Ball Friday eve-
ning at Elks Temple. Howard
Upton was master of ceremo-
nies,
Presidents and their wives
who were honored were Mr.
and Mrs. Russell
of Square Set, Mr, and Mrs. Williams Harold Hawkins of Style Step-
pers, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Newill of Do-C-Do Club.
New members introduced
were Mr, and Mrs, Ernest Fa- .
ter and Mr. and Mrs, Homer
Richmond,
Other fuests included
But Strong on Comfort, Too Mr. and Mrs, Robert: Schnei-
der, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Ol-
- son, Mr, and Mrs, Donald Mc-
Leod and Mr. and Mrs, Gil-
bert Schrock, j
Still others were Mr, and ,
Mrs. Paul Witzel, Mr. and Mrs.
Arlie Becker and Mr. and. Mrs.
Donald Cotcher,
ad
Men’s Clothes Accent Fashion Men's topcoats for spring are
distinguished by innovations in
both comfort and style. Short-
er lengths and lighter-weight
fabrics provide sufficient
warmth for a blustery March
day. Yet, they are light enough
to wear in the-April sun.
In short, topcoat comfort has
been made fashionable and top-
coat fashion comfortable.
* * x-
While the rugged tweed bal-
macaan is still among the
most popular topcoats, a new
and dressier model is being
rapidly accepted by many men
for wear with business clothes
_ and for general town wear,
NEW RAINWEAR
Pattern has been added to
male ‘rainwear, Checks, her-
ringbones and glen. plaids are
but a few of the interesting
effects now decorating these
extremely popular coats,
More subtle, are sharkskin
=
~
The “Different” Look
for you...
PERMANENTS
$1.50 Complete
Styled Hair eatee
from........
ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHOP “~ (Over. Tasty Bakery)
80% N. Saginaw St. FE 2-5600 |
| ‘DeW itt, son of
‘Mr. and Mrs.
Noble DeW itt
~ lengths,
. McLean of
‘engagement of ae their daughter,
‘Bernice Marie,
ae
ADJUSTS
TO FIT YOUR
CONTOUR
long line
ST A’JUST weaves, reverse twist self-
checks, Bedford cords, tic
weaves and the iridescent ef-
fects that have established
their popularity over the past
several] seasons.
* *«
The trend is toward shorter
ranging from finger-
tip-length carcoats to others
that extend just below the
knee, Even the regular length
coats have been shortened
about an inch.
Blazers are more popular
now than when they were first
Mr. and Mrs,
Clifford E.
_ Elfabeth
Lake avenue
announce the
to Lt. (j.g.)
Michael T.
of Harbor
Springs.
a
introduced . during the Gay
Nineties. There are blazers in
flannel, wool, cotton and linen.
Colors run from solids to
stripes, plaids, checks and
piped treatments. There are
even some in foulard batik and
challis-type prints.
* * *
Wash-wear jackets range
from crinkly seersuckers and
slick cords through a wide
range of clothes that would
appear to be too luxurious to
dip in suds, but are washable
nonetheless.
BER NICE M. McLEAN Psi Chapter of Sigma Beta Sorority
will sponsor a combination card party
dnd fashion show Thursday at Pontiac
“Federal Savings and Loan Building.
The program will get under way at 8
GM Girls See
Tour Pictures
Dr. Sarah Van-Hoosen Jones
and Alice Serrell showed pic-,
tures of their world tour taken
in 1956, at the meeting of Gen-
eral Motors Girls Club of Pon-
tiac held Friday evening at
Rotunda Inn
Miss Serrell, who was pho-
tographer on the trip, showed
the pictures While Dr. Jones
gave a commentary.
Also taking part in the pro-
gram were .Mrs. Margaret
Francis and Mrs, Florence
Johnson. Eighty members at-
tended,
Wever PTA
Nominees
Introduced
The nominating committee of '
Wever School PTA presented
the new slate of officers at
its meeting Thursday afternoon
in the schoo] gymnasium.
In honor of Founder's Day,
the PTA alphabet was present-
ed by students whose birth-
days were in February.
Mrs. Rexford Hagood read a.
child’s version of PTA objects
and the glee club, directed by
Mrs. Melvin Boersma, sang
“Hail, Oh Faithful Founders.”’
Mrs. Keith Pawley was pro-
gram chairman, On the social
committee were Mrs, Loren
Kay, Mrs, Melvin Norberg,
Mrs. Robert Norberg, Mrs.
Carl Pearson, Mrs.. Samuel
- Ritchie, Mrs. Barton Schmuck-
er and Mrs, Wowsrory Whit-
tington, '
Mrs. Esther Bowick's third grade had the highest percent-
age of parents at the meeting.
FEDERAL
dept. stores
7 bo , Rudfarreeg cr
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Safurday
Downtown AND Drayton Ploins
MAGIC TAB PULLS DOWN for more sepo-
ration, more fullness.
MAGIC TAB PULLS for less separation,
Jess fullness.
Changes Its Size, To ‘Custom Fit’.
Changes -its size to fit and flatter your
contour as,though it were. made for you
alone! And. for added comfort, Just A’
Just has. all.elastic back and sides. White
embrodiered cotton, Sizes 34-44 B, C.
Let Federal’s expert corsetieres fit you
palled ide for comfort and ig kaoeid
' principal, PTA Sees
Slides of
Camp Life
Slides of the Camp Fire Girls
program were shown and ex-
plained by Jean Strom, field
director of Camp Fire Girls,
at the Mark Twain School PTA
meeting held Thursday eve-
ning.
Camp Fire Girls would like
to: organize more groups and
get more adults interested in
becoming Camp Fire leaders.
* * *
William G. Wright, school
showed slides and
discussed the history of Mark
Twain: School, He alsdé showed
- slides of Mark Twain cam-
ing activities last June at
Dodge Park.
John Witherup introduced
past PTA presidents Mrs. Owen
Armstrong and Mrs, Arnold
Thomas. _
* * *
Fourth grade mothers served
refreshments, Mrs. Julius Mid-
dledorf's morning kindergarten
won the banner for having the
largest percentage of parents
present,
Business Club Has
Birthday Party
. The Business Institute © Wo-
men’s Club celebrated its sixth
anniversary Saturday afternoon
at Pontiac Business , Institute.
Mrs. Edward Minard served.
refréshments. Past presidents
who poured were Mrs. Donald
Beutler, -Mrs. Sol Lomerson
and Betty Whitson.
Cross Trailers See
Movies of Dance
Moyies taken at their New
Year's Eve square dance
were shown at the meeting of
Cross Trailers Square Dance
Club, held Friday evening at
Willis School.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Bingham of Oak Park,
Mr, and Mrs. Fred.Layton of
Ferndale and Mr, and Mrs.
Walter Lewis.
* Edith p.m. Among models for the style show
are, left to right, Mrs.
Thornberry,
Winters and Suzette Meggitt who will
show children’s spring apparel. Thomas L.
Denise’ Deuman , Mike
Navy Mothers
Meet at Home
of Mrs. Riley
Pontiac Navy Mothers Club
355 met Thursday evening at
the home of Mrs. Frank Riley.
x * *
Guests for the evening were
Weiler Keebaugh and Mark
Kenney who accompanied their
wives.
Mrs. Riley and Mrs. Kenney
will represent the club at the
Michigan Women's Security
Conference, to be held in Feb-
ruary in Detroit.
: * bd *
The next meeting of the
group will be held at the South
street home of Mrs.
Alvin Hill, March 19.
Mrs. Rowley Slated
at WCTU Program —
Mrs. L. G, Rowley, national
vice president and state presi-
dent of WCTU, will be guest
speaker at the workshop to be
sponsored by the 18th District
Federation of WCTU, —
x &® kk.
At the workshop, which will
begin at Tl a.m. Tuesday at
Central Methodist Church, Mrs.
Rowley will discuss Christian
citizenship and _ legislation.
Presidents and, department
chairmen will take = in the
meeting. a
xk *
Members of Emor L. Calkins
Chapter will be hostesses,
There will be a box luncheon
at noon,
Mrs. Phillips
Hosts WSCS
Mary Martha Circle of Wom-
en’s Society of Christian Serv-
ice of Oakland Park Methodist
Church _ met at the home of
Mrs, A. R, Phillips of Oxley
drive Wednesday. Eleven mem-
bers and one guest attended.
Mrs. Leo Mineweaser was in
charge of the program.
The next meeting of the
group will be held at the Pin-
gree street home of Mrs, Em-
erson co.
Pythian Sisters Observe
Birthday With Program
The 95th anniversary of Pyth-
janism in the United States
and the seventh birthday of
You're always
On TIME
WATCH REPAIRS
We ta All Types of
- WASTEPAPER NEWSPAPERS T5¢ 100#
CORRUGATED 80¢ 1004
Pontiac Waste Material Co.
135 ‘Branch * “FE 2-0209
Hai “ron; Mizpah Temple 7 Pythian Sis-
ters were celebrated Thursday
~ evening at Fellowship Hall,
* * *
Mr, and Mrs, Milton Probert
were program .chairmen, and
Mrs. Probert _ a history
of the Pythian Sisters:
Group singing was, accom-
panied by Mrs, Harry Harrihg--
ton and peems for the occasion
were written by Mrs, Clifford
Neville, Russell Bingley ‘of Plymouth was speaker,
A baton twirling demonstra-
tion was given by Jackie Rae
Voorhees.
* * *
On the refreshment commit-
tee were Mrs. Lewis. Ellis, Mrs.
Reino Perkio, Mrs. Edward
Kerr and Mrs, Harold Davis. .
Guests included Mrs. Caro-
line Kaufman, -grand district
deputy from Port Huron; Mrs.
Charlotte Budinger ‘of Port Hu-
Mrs. Glenn Davis of
Plymouth and. Mrs, Bingley.
of‘Breakfast . | {
eg $F shed
Sai m
Mts. Harvey Biddéup,
Friday from McCartt
she has been for t
Mrs. R..M. William School where
past 16 years.
hool secretary, left, retired
afternoon
honor, gave her a corsage at a tea Friday ? ‘|< gerous, The
given in Mrs. Bidstrup’s
After more than 30 years !
Pontiac School system, M
her children desperately,
time .for rétirement
everyone.”
Mrs. Bidstrup was at
x * *
Mrs. Harvey Bidstrup, re
teacher at McCarroll
honored at a breakfast Sé
morning at the West Iroquois he
of Mrs, Everett M. Peterson’ Mrs.
Harold Brown and Eva Wath
were Gcohostesses,
Guests included McCarroll school
staff members Marietta ig,
Richard Devinbaugh, Mrs, old
sixth grades
x k *
: tes Educator Northon, Mrs. oa Grubb. and
Mrs. Douglas Lov
Williams, Mr. Peterson, Mr.
John Dugan and
Smith, School for more than 15 years
-'where she served as a teaching
rol] School for 16 years where she
has been teaching ‘cee and now at McCar-
According to Mrs, Ralph Wil-
Others included Tae Margaret
D. Morse, Wilma Pomeroy, Fred:
erick Smith, John House, Mrs.
Howard Woolley, Mrs, Ralph M.
Bid-
strup, Mrs, Frank Crandall, Mrs.
Mrs. Daniel as Teacher liams, secretary at McCarroll
School, Mrs. Bidstrup is “typical
of a good teacher. Her children
are very dear to her, and she is
the kind of teacher youngsters
come back to see.”
A truly dedicated educator, she
_|gave more than her share of time
to her children, by taking on many
she taught the Junior American
Citizenship Club sponsored by the
Daughters of the American Revo-
lution. Shé also sponsored the Safe-
ty Patrol and served as librarian
at McCarroll.
ACTIVE IN COMMUNITY
Outside of school, Mrs. Bidstrup
takes an active part in many com-
munity organizations such as Del-
ta Kappa Gamma Society, Michi-
Women Singers
Invited to Join |
Pontiac Chorus
Pontiae Women’s Chorus, affil-
iated With the Department of Parks
and Recreation, invites any Miter-
ested girl in the Pontiac aréa to
become an active member G2 the
organization. :
* * 3
The group does all types of
sic, from sacred to folk msi
and it gives several progras
——— ehurdnes.
oe are cng every
day from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at Mai
Twain School. Interested girls mi
call Mrs. James M. Absher, mem
bership chairman. AK
Huron Gardens ch
Holds Box Social
son on “House Plants” at’ tl entine Box Social meeting @
on Gardens. Extension Clug.
event was held Wednesda}
ning at the home of Mrs. ?
home of Mrs. Gerald wri rt.
| by Sasa Wheeler
single and double-bed quilt.
Pattern 712: Charts, directions,
pattern of four patches. Yardages, gan Education Association, Pontiac
sociation of Childhood Education.
She also is noted for her lovely
flower garden and for her expert
homemaking skills.
favorite hobby—traveling. She al-
ready has traveled extensively
— the United States and
la and last winter went to
South America. She has also been
to Alaska, Panama and Cuba.
nt © &® .
She and her husband, who live
at Shoreview, drive, ‘ate now plan-
ning to go to Tucson, Arizona, for
several months,
MEET for LUNCH RIKER FOUNTAIN Sealtest ice Cream
Populer Prices
Riker Building Lobby
extra-class activities. For instance, |
Education Association and the As-'
Now that she is retiring, Mrs.| rane Mor Understands Too Well Abby
/ tleular boy friend or girl
friend?...Maybe you can ex-
plain it better, Abby?"
WANTING TO GO STEADY
: “Going
to be-
long to one person) at age 13
(when one’s. ; it is not
mature an intelli-
gent a is foolish and dan- “steady” can be-
come a habit..Too much fa-
-miliarity breeds trouble. It’s
far healthier (and more fun)
to play the field and make
comparisons,
*® * *
“DEAR ABBY: This is for
any girl who thinks she should
marry the father of her baby
to give ita name. I lived in
one- of those families for 30
years, My father had to marry
my mother, They despised
each other every minute of
those years. My family never
did anything together. No church, no recreation, no noth-
ing.
“At iho preseet time my
brother is in a mental insti-.
tution because his childhood
was so warped, My sister mar.
rieq the first man who asked
her (just to get out of the
house.) She was 17 and a real
beauty and he was 33 and a
drunken bum, Now, would any
woman wish that kind of life
on her unborn child? No reply
necessary,» — “A VICTIM"
* * *
“DEAR ABBY: I lost my
dear mother eight months ago
and everyone:.4. my. re
knows I am in mourning. My
relatives keep right on sending
me - invitations for confirma-
tions, “raduations and weddings
where théy dance, They know
perfectly wel] I am in mourn-
ing and will not attend any
of these affairs, Yet they send
me invitations because they
want me to send a gift, but
I will not do so at this time.
De you think it’ is proper for
people to send invitations they
know will not be accepted?"
IN MOURNING
DEAR “IN MOURNING": I
see nothing improper in .send-
ing relatives who are in mourn-
ing invitations to graduations,
confirmations and weddings,
+ * &
“DEAR ABBY: We are a
young married couple with a
two-year-old son and we want
to buy a house trailer. It seems
that everyone we talk to is
against it. We have looked at
some beautiful house trailers
and it seems like an ideal way
for us to live. We don’t want Going ae at 13 Silly’ to make a mistake, Maybe
give us the benefit of their
experience? We. would: certain-
ly appreciate it, Thank ae
DEAR L.S.: I have no per-
sonal experience regarding
some beautiful trailer court
communities. Why not ask a
are preséntly living in one?
4 * .®&
CONFIDENTIAL TO _ JIM:
Beware of INCOMPATIBIL-
TTY. When you lose your IN-
COME, your wife will lose her
PAT-IBILITY.
*® * *
For a personal reply, write
to ABBY in care of this paper,
' Enclose a_ self-addressed,
stamped envelope,
Malcolm Chesworth, an ex-
_ Change teather from Australia,
will be guest speaker at the
meeting of the League of Wom-
en Voters of Pontiac to be
held at 7:45 p.m. Wednesday
«in the Fireplace room. of the
YWCA. ~
Mr. Chesworth's topic will be some of your readers could.
house trailers, but I have seen.
dealer to take you oat and let ¢
you meet a few families who |
League to Hear
Australian Talk. U.S. Foreign Polley.”
Chesworth is teaching
Hazel Park schools."
2. re
Husbands of League mem-. | :
_bers and guests are welcome. Li.
oO ce: .-
HAM PTON'S TRADE-IN: POST
“Let’s Trade
Sonatina for Flute, Piano
to Highlight Area Concert
A sonatina for flute and piano
will highlight the first concert of
the newly organized Birmingham
Chamber Music Group to be held
at 1:30 p.m, Wednesday at Grin-
nell auditorium in Birmingham.
The sonatina was composed by
Mark Wessel, Orchard Lake, com-
poser and piano instructor. Mrs.
Ronald M. Kasperzak is flutist
with Minovu Yamasaki, pianist.
Also scheduled on the program,
open to the public, are three
songs by samuel- Barber, per-
formed by soprano Mrs, Robert
F. Killen contaar cma by Mrs.
Bidstrup plans to go on with her| R, 8. Clifton, ~ Robert E. Kutscher, clarinetist.
Three songs by American com-
posers will be sung by the Bir ment.
mingham Junior League Chorus,
= Leagaires, under the direction |
0 Mrs, Killen,
Performing Arthur Foote’, “A
Night Piece,” will be members
of the ensemble from South Oak-
land Symphony, Mrs. William
Hi. Hohmeyer, Mra. Walter F.
Conrad and Marianne: Albert,
violins; Mra. James 8, Hansen, |
viola; Linda Talli, violoncello;
and Mrs, Kasperzak, flute,
Mrs. Kasperzak, founder of the
group, said local musicans inter: |
Aaron Copeland’s “As It Fell) ested ‘jn joining such a group are
Upon A Day,” will be sung by|particularly invited,
Mrs. Killen, accompanied by Mrs.'for future plans and programs are Suggestions CLEANING
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Kasperzak on the flute and Mrs.'welcome, she added,
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| Child Safe Doors. Frozen juice dispenser. Store - and - serve
units go to table or counter. Tilt- om ab ae | at
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F
4
” py JANET ODELL |
Pontiac Press Home Editor
| ‘Toady’s cook is a seventeen
is year old senior at St, Fred-
erick High School. Dianne
'@ Needle is the school's winner
} of the Betty Crécker Home-
'@ making Contest. We called her
|[) for her favorite recipe. * * *
) has not decided what her fu- | * ture plans are but is consider-
ig
ming and other sports. She
Dianne is interested in swim-
* ing practical nursing.
THE NAME TELLS THE STORY: 3 Ceyeet Clear Stan wee
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OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT |Criticisr 436 Orchard Loke Ave. © FE 5-6150_
By RUTH MILLETT
Is. the average wife too critical
of her husband?
. A male reader claims that if
men went around talking about
their wives’ faults as much as
women do about their husbands’
| shortcomings the men would be
| considered cads.
* * *
There's at least some truth in
what he says. Even a columnist
gets far more letters from wives
complaining about their husbands
than praising them.
: Maybe it would be a good idea
'i| for every wife to make a list
now and then under the head.
| While a mn : thinking about
4 what's right with her husband she
isn't brooding about the ways in
which she would like to change
him,
And if she thinks about his
good qualities now and then, she
might even be tempted to let
him know that she appreciates
Dropleaf Table
and Upholstered’ Chairs
Whether the list is long or short,
just acknowledging his good quali-
ties ought to start a wife thinking
a the rem ro
*
COMPLETE AT
Top quality wood
tep, dropleaf ‘table,
box seats.
SAVE $20 THIS WK. AT METRO FURNITURE
EASY TO PAY TERMS NO FINANCE CO.
| METRO Furniture Co. New Address: 88 South Saginaw_at Auburn
Open Friday end Monday ‘til 9 P. M.
FE 2-0179 39° bronzetone, marproof
o upholstered chairs with ing “What I like best about my
husband.” Never mind what he
does wrong, What\loes he do
right?
them,
Then instead of telling him “I
wish you wouldn't...” or “You
never do .. .”’ she might sur-
prise him with an occasional sen-
tence beginning, ‘‘You're so good
about ,. ."’ or ‘I'm glad you. . .”
* * *
And once his wife begins to
praise instead of to criticize, even
a far-from-perfect husband might The bra that does more for you Teenage Cook’ Chatiess:
Red. Devils. Food Cake
Praise Get
oeee
& eH
é * -
-Beat 2 mieten Add 1/3 cup
milk, eggs and vanilla. Beat
another 2 minutes.
Pour into two 8-inch greased
layer pans. Bake 35 to 40 min-
utes at 350 degrees. Frost and
fill as desired.
BESS Og FAT
Results,
oesn't try a little harder to please his
wife and even to comment on the
things she does well, instead of
the things she neglects to do.
Sylvan Shores
Club Meets
Mrs. Fran Salents showed films
on alcoholism, sponsored by the
Alcoholism Information Center at
the meeting of Sylvan Shores
Women's Club. The meeting was
held Wednesday evening at ‘the
Woodbine drive home of Mrs, Clare
Graham.
Cohostesses “were Mrs.
Paddock, Mrs. Gordon
Mrs. Russell Grover and
Ronel White.
Plans were made for a money
making project. At the next meet-
ing, members will sew cancer pads
for the American Cancer Society.
All Saints Guild 6
Plans March Dinner
Seventeen members of Guild
6 of All Saints Episcopal John Hayter,
Mrs.
More women are exercising and looking trim
while they're at it because they've been on the Eight-
Week Marathon. There still is time if you'd like one
of the 10-cent booklets.
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN
This is the eighth week since
publishing my 8-Week Self-Im-
iprovement Marathon in January. lup and down on a see-saw but it's
Thousands and thousands of you;
have joined to see how much you)
can improve your appearance dur-
ing eight weeks. I already am re-
ceiving letters from some of you)
telling me the happy news!
| Many of you have a few more)
weeks to go before YOUR eight’
weeks is over because you had to)
walt for your Marathon beckiel, (Co ONCe Ov A WHELE — bet This could
a ’ echane | a. mand on a boy play
ce NO PAYMENT ‘TIL Bina. pit Sunday’ and buried hit] | esse
S| AY orches him out alive but he died soon
om ; after in a hospital. Baths Path The boy, Randolph L. Ford, 11,
Attics of Washington, had been playing TICS boys with a friend, Doctors $00 | For a Free Estimate aid Randolph apparently dled ot GAS DR ER dea Ryka |sutfocation. ae er
The Army has developed a cam- BI N COOPERATION WITH GA‘
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_ ‘Tum PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, PUBEUARY 2,10 sucess aliieidlaliaiis peciguiainaian
a: ceases Siem
| J ALD n'pjq:|hower. When the President. fin ian | Ole. Walters stepped to a oe, phone standing in the center ‘of
hé willing to so hee i way, beyond these things, He may red-carpeted ‘platform,
nd that the Al-idown with the West—even if it|be using Berlin as an excuse fo! Lt. ~Col.. Walters. Wins Without » note‘or so much
* . meee. et 7A torte the Alles. inte, myuch. besed- Praise for Mexico; Job) even clearing ble tron did’ he «do vit _pick- 3 to tile he only etn Me ie cag War Garmaey. , Heatenant colonel forcetully,
0 dooesel ee ee cared Shea Belin Gating , > | Hight. places, repeated FOR ONE WEEK West Berlin, 110 miles — - By MERRIMAN SMITH in Communist East Germany, repre-| the Allies out of there is not some- y ea ania thanenias iy: ce maga :
prea Term
Monday, March 9
‘Check the courses below which interest you ‘ind sents. many things which, added
up, must provide a big headache
munist world, although its resi-
dents give their allegiance to West
Germany.
It*is a harbor for refuges from
| communism. ‘Its glitter ig a re-
‘minder to East Germans and East
Europeans that living standards | rope
are higher in the West thing which has just ‘occurred to
the Soviets.
President Truman broke that with
that day to this —
as if they had decided to subsidg
until they were a lot stronger—the
Soviets had not precipitated a
frontal crisis with the West in Eu-
WASHINGTON (UPI) — One’ of
non. Walters, U.S.A.
One of the more accomplished
linguists in federal employ, Wal-
ters went along as the President's
interpreter,
He performed a feat during
the arrival ceremonies at the
Acapulce Airport that had hard- translation of at least six languages
and he is relatively fuent in half’
i
ENDING FEBRUARY 28th
10% DRY CLEANING
Coll ‘ond Deliver
au Om “ Pegherr ad if Stalin: tried to force the Allies|the shining but tmsung heroes of! just try listening to aker
‘for the ea ca ena econ call out in 1948 by blockading (he Cao [President Eisenhower's visit Scone pune: sam: omens OFF ALL
0 tening post deep within the Com- week to Mexico was Lt. Col, Ver-|then ‘attempt to repeat even
W. Huron -
advert » tod We will mail And the 10,000 seeps the Allies ugh ana a i. Re French, Portuguese andj CLEANING we =
| ey 1959 Bulletin immediately. << paee, Mast Bech, “Gewnes Tou Drive in South —iewe RSENS vine eouets Deck gnice: wee ae, : p FE 4-1536 | Soviets, a symbol of Western Eisenhower, in response to , 2
{2 Higher Accounting [) Speedwriting Pee oe Cisne samy ae Forecast by Hoffa | cece, Sitar Pee | tn Mee ene meat | ‘ € Business +... © Shorthand (Gregg) iron Curtain, ident Adolfo Lopez Mateos, spoke! foreign trip for an American . SAVE 10%
| Administration () Shorthand (Machine) | nn are all ie. Teasons MAME BEACH, Dee . - some = and without a trace | ident. ; ,
0 Executive Secretarial | (] Typewriting wt ti, mek the Allied troops out|Hotta says his union's etforts tol” intend a aaian Giese Pee ex manapecrear ae _ SEND hard b ous GARMENTS
| C) Comptometer and Calculator lof the city’s Western zone. [organize in the South “will be @/phrases to translate, as most in-|by shop
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|trom two strokes and a bout with Allies agreed to that
‘their grip dn West Ber
crumble.
peeancher's thinking may go
pneumonia, but Army doctors here
were still cautious in their prog-
nosis. - |union’s progress in the cement in- hard and costly campaign.”
“But
gains,”
Teamsters executive board began
a four-day strategy conference
here today. sie ; |
Hotta told a news conference the
dustry ‘was especially encourag-
ing.
"4 think we'll organize the whole
lumber yards, supply yards, ce-
ment block shops and vending ma-
chine firms also will be on the
pital, said Marshal! spent a restful
day yesterday but his condition
remained serious. ite
He reported the 78-year-old
soldier-statesman was still being
fed through a seein tube ap- |
left paratys. only “half” a ham's Powell said Marshall was “hold-, 22 Die in Kashmir Slides | |
. yon eee ing -his own” after his second | SRINAGAR, Kashmir (AP) —
again Avalanches have killed 22 people| stroke, a week ago today, which
came about a month after a milder,
one, Jan. 15, at his winter home
tin Pinehurst, N.C., near here. Blood «to Fesore arent Col. George Powell, chief of/osanizing aeons:
aie icine at Womack General Hos-
ro aye ipale | More pay, not stat hours, |
was Hoffa's idea of what his
teamsters want.
“The average worker would,
rather have a raise in pay ae
a 35-hour week,” he paid.
in snowbound northern Kashmir in.
ithe past few, weeks. There also
‘have been heavy livestock losses. Lae RS cee one Os = em
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 3959 PONTIAC,
By REBA HEIN It's the Outdoor Educational/more than 16,000 school children, |Lake Center is the.tirst one of
One of the nation's most. exten-|Center in the Proud Lake State|according to Park Manager Alfred
sive and — —_ educa- pacaeration Dent, Area off Wix-|Masini, ~
tional... camps ing operated|om road, near Milford, Although Michigan has always
right in the heart of Oakland] Since it was started four years|been a leader in the field of out-
County, - ago, the Center has accommodated |door camp education, the
“¢
ENTRANCE TO CENTER — The road leading
to the main buildings of Proud Lake Outdoor Edu-
cational Center near Milford is lined with hun-
dreds’ of huge pine trees. Covering more than
44a - * tpt ng : fete ‘<
TREE TRIMMING TIME — Not only do chil-
dren learn important conservation practices, but
do a service as well at the Center. Here a group
ee ee et
_ 3,000 acres, the Center has attracted school edu-
catorg and scientifie educational promoters from
all parts of the country, according to park man-
ager Alfred Masini. :
By # sateen A eat et:
MICHIGAN, p
Iron bunk beds with plastic cov- making an ideal inside reorea: ;that outdoor teaching “takes the cance that ‘ied Conier has sequived:
than the world in to the|to park officials from the office ne et in the country, Masini|ereg mattresses are arranged for| onal area, child .into the world—rather/is a recent letter of commendation
a easy cleaning, and this work is all| The cooks , responsible for _ id
done by squads of children learn-| cleaning after the group has Fe ing Maeda ined por yt en Bes, President .. of" the: United
= to live together away from pleted’ its stay. Two days of pro-jed conservation officers are avail-; Recently a crew of Life maga-
— fessional cleaning work are sched- able to help youth become more zine reporters and gray a photographers
Correct eating habits are |uled between each group, however,|aware of Michigan's natural re-|flew in from Chicago and lived in
taught at meal time in the plate- |Masini sald, Every week for the/sources, More officers are avail-/the camp to make a first hand re-
glassed dining hall, and after the jnext 18 months has been reserved.| able on request at Lansing for spe-| port on how one section of Michi-
— ET at ot he _ children have helped with ‘mess | Another theory, which has|cialized training of groups. gan helps develop character in
| duty,” the tables are folded up, [worked out innumerable times, is} Emphasizing the national signifi-' their youth. ; . =
Cehter, Several thousand 50-year
old Jack pine line each side of the
road, and everywhere there is an
atmosphere of northern Michigan's
wilderness beauty in the approach
to the camp, which includes 3,500
scenic acres,
* *
A saving. of more than 50 per
cent for taxpayers was made. pos-
sible by the use of. Jackson State
prison labor and Conservation
Dept. personnel in the construc-
tion of three ultra-modern build-
ings, Masini said. |
“It would have cost the state
about $165,000: for these units. The
only expense incurred however,
was $78,000 for materials,"’ he said, .
School children ‘are usually en-
roups furnish their ewn cooks ~
“tenance of the camp.
The first day is devoted to an
orientation program, acquainting
the children with the safety fac-
tors. The area is closed to all
motor vehicles,
Water safety, biology, plant life
and the correct use of firearms,
along with natural history, science
and geology are included in the
outdoor class sessions.
The Center also gives the chil-
dren opportunities to plan, organize
and provide them with first-hand
experience with conservation of
outdoor natural resources, Masini
explained. ¢
Learning about healthful liv-
ing, citizenship, purposeful work
activities, recreational skills is
‘all part of the unique training
program designed for serious out-
door education.
Although the picturesque wilder-
ness surrounding the two dormi-
tories and main hall have been
preserved in the natural: element,
inside the buildings there is a com- a.
apletely different story.
Every effort to make a child i
STUDY NATURE INDOORS — When the weather is too bad examined by (from left) Kathy Moran, Miss Dorothy Madison,
to be outdoors, nature stidies can be conducted inside at the Out- __ principal of Lakeview School in St. Clair,.and Linda Geer. Garry
door Educational Center in the Proud Lake Recreation Center near § Parker holds the big bird. The children are pupils at Lakeview
Milford. Here, at the main hall of the Center, a stuffed eagle is School. ™ ‘
*
comfortable and at home has been , Ji
initiated in the dormitories. A
large entrance lounge, complete
with a fireplace for hotdog roasts,
separates two. wings, accomodating
66 boys and girls, ”
* * *
Sleeping quarters for. counselors
are also included in these build-
ings, along with ‘an up-to-date _
kitchen for snacks.
Tito Pledges Support
@ for Nasser Peace Try DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)—Yugo-
slav President Tito pledged all-|
-|out support Sunday night for ef-
of children from the Lakeview School in St. Clair
are busy trimming out underbrush, helping to
make the site even more attractive. forts by President Gamel Abdul
Nasser of the United Arab Repub-
lic to pull the Middle East out of
the East-West cold war. <
* * *
At a banquet given in his honor
by Nasser, Tito said “You can
rest assured that Yugoslavia will}
continuously support your efforts
to pull this area out of the cold
war and to ensure the right of its
peoples to self-determination and
to settle their problems through
peaceful means and in conformity
with their private circumstances
and aspiration.”
* * *
Nasser and Tito arrived from
Cairo Sunday for celebrations of
the first anniversary of the merg-
ing of Egypt and Syria into the
United Arab Republic.
& Williams F amily
Presented New
Dog at Confab
GRAND RAPIDS «® — Michi-
}gan’s first family has a new dog.
* ww *
A pedigreed, miniature French
Poodle named ‘‘Jody’’ was_pre-
sented to Gov. Williams’ wife Nan-
ey Saturday at the Democratic
State Convention here. | ‘
}- The. six-month-old female will
take the place of Torchy, the Wil
liam? family 11-year-old Cocker
.|Spaniel who died last Wednesday.
ss *¢+
The new dog was the gift of
Matt Urka of Scottville. Urka is
Mason County Democratic chair-
man,
Lawmaker Wants Cut
jin Federal Employes
WASHINGTON, (AP) Too.
many workers on the payrolls of
federal agencies? Rep, Clarence
E.. Cannon (D-Mo) thinks so.
Cannon, chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee, says
“untold millions of dollars can be
saved by getting rid of some of
the _ thousands of ‘unnecessary
He suggests an over-all payroll
“Tout ‘of 20 per’ cent, s o .|% . . 4 \
LEARNING ARCHERY — Instructor we Duggan is getting | Lake camp. Ice fishing is another of the favorite sports included
plastic bows set for target practice in the rifle range at the Proud = in the outdoor education for school children. ‘
4
YOUNG ARTISTS — Even-in winter weather youngsters sketch Monomony gives hee pupils inetrebtion in the |
outdoor scenes with charcoal crayons. Art teacher Mrs. Emma circle, situated in the heart of the big outdoor ca .
; f __THE *
5 PONTIAC rans MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1959
cep Ayeondn bg nated gam in the
papers. that are tore signifi-
: doings.|
.jand on every street corner there
are people who are prettier than
we, or bigger or funhier or richer.
Byt on & vacation its’ differ:
ent. We live alone, and the sun
shines only on us. When it rains,
it is a personal affront by nature.
Every meal is a big déal, and
jall- important; and by George, that
Ne what we become.
| Our chief, if not only, thought;
'world, Who got sick? Did the
geraniums die? Anybody lose his
. -°us, mayke? And what
of Comrade Khrushchev?
: * * *®
It begins as a mild porider, flow-
ers into a hot curiosity, finally
flames into obsessive worry,
By the time the wing flaps go scion (ine tenet besa
down, The Empire State Building ner
‘has not‘ blown away. Our friends
and ‘creditors, judging from the
mail, still iy aot fen os
the office?
* * ®
Quick, call the office. Get the
bad news,
ab, your chronicler of tife and
death and hirings and firings.
much DID ‘happen during the long
vacation. Broadway shows opened
———
. Jacatic on, Everyone Is: a ‘King [Queen]
POLITICS—Mrs. Robert B. Mey-
“wife of the New Jersey goy-
ernor; was elected “The Nation’
Ideal Wife of 1958” by the Hom™e-
maker's ‘Forum. The incumbent) ,
was Mrs, Richard Nixon. aS
NATIONAL AFPAIRS — June
Gutterman, Brooklyn, shed
EDUCATION — Lentheric -an- nounced that women do not buy
workers now have two coffee
breaks a day. It has been found to
jaid output. In Colombia.
* *« * : .
SPORTS—Better Business Bu-
’ |reau announced that ‘hot tips’’! ay
being circulated by professional),
touts on horse races are fallible. Chas tas 6 a
Expect Landslide
“for. 775,000 Votes
Tomorrow's Primary
| the hotel room is a private castle. ts | George Hammet Jones, Bronx, at.) C1;CAGO (AP) — Mayor Rich- ; - ( — Mayor
We have workéd, for 11 months,| , owall ists see wien dos at | "eed a aie on toes (ft 2 Das Demo- tor this right to consider ourselves best fiend, your tat ccumiad” @ + kept cratic organization flexes its mus-
that appears certain to Itave Re-
publicans aching.
“Mayor ‘Daley Hoping |
lof the home town: Will they ever| “January 8th." perfume simply to be sexy. Sur-| Daley, seeking a second four-
be impressed with this tan! “They painted the ladies’ room. |Vey shows she buys “to give hefiyear term in a city that hasn't , 1 $495
On the plane, heading back from! Pink, Outalde ofthat, Tcan’t think [own spirits «lit had a GOP mayor since 1931, 9n12. $] 95 - 9x2
[me era of egotism, we wonder jof anything.” BUSINESS—National Office Man.|waits to roll up 175,000 Demo- soil ‘ 3 suddenly what has happened to the} ‘The mail, of course, reveals that/agement Assn. reported most |cratic to demonstrate his uhal ‘While It Lasts!
MICA
4 «oF
¥ THE FL FLOOR SHOP
“The touts invariably pick a fewjloging races for every important
down, the tranquilizing effects ofjnews magazines, we sorted’ the |losers,” so be wary of betting wi 5
the sun are worn away and the/developments of the vacation pe-|their selections, “~ dent He iat tien oe aie aged "eh Segine onus PARKING in REAR ae aaa
beauty of wood . ... jus of frantic city living TOE A oii see int cn:|_BOOKS—And don't bet with them| Voters also will elect aldermen ,
“the lite of aluminum ‘We rush home, and are vaguely|month 0 eee bo
enti you pas ovt °
ce ee * : om i, ue | Outlines Journey in Lecture | meria ~ -|
fn sewer | VON Braun Sees Trip vailedle in five 6 smoe eel ae |
a mist green, .
va" Ito Mars in 10-15 Years ae a ee | WINTER PARK, Fla, (AP). —|would carry the two spaceships to
|The first U.S, manned space ex-|the station for assembly.
\pedition will land on the planet] The spaceships, ‘we 1,870 |
Mars in 10 to 15 years, scientistsitons each, would be powered by
predict. a cluster of 12 rocket engines to “In the not too distant future | provid
such a trip can be made and has
to be made,” the Army's topiity, One of the vehicles would car-| space experts said Sunday.
_ MIDWEST SUPPLY FROZEN FOOD SALE!
Over 20 Years Building Ex ry passengers and the other cargo
Homes and Businesses in Ockiand Comntr. Dr. Wernher von Braun, techni-|t9 an t around Mars. EXTRA
. @ ADDITIONS @ REMODELING @ ATTICS Mine Age cd ms nd three — ee, cargo ship, to be abandoned | ‘GOLD BELL EXTRA
’ would transport al
nine-man crew from the orbit to/|
a lecture at Rolling College.
ee * the gurface of Mars.
Von Braun described the ex-
— as “the crowning achieve-
rogram of the man-in-space p Huntington Wood Mayor |
"For a BETTER DEAL on '59 Dodge : J
Pane BAZ)
fir . *T
iF) SAME) with the Purchase of ANY
6 Packages of Frozen Foods
at Regular Price = ‘fms courox THIS COUPON with the purchase of ANY
6 Packages-of FROZEN FOODS
} at regular price and this
|
na ‘/ rogress.”’ ; |
The scientists said the roung|t Head Exchange Group’
ROCHESTER . Dodge, Plymouth, Chrysler, imperial, Dodge Truck
1001 MAIN $7. OL 2-911! |
“WORRIED OVER DEBTS?
NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS REQUIRED
ONE PLACE TO PAY
; Member American Association of Creat Counsellors
trip, using two giant spaceships,
would be completed in 32 months.
The best opportunity will come
next on Aug. 6, 1971 when the two
planeta are in closest relation—
lrector Eberhard F, M. Rees;
|Arthur Rudolph, project director
of the solid fuel Pershing missile
program and Fritz Mueller, dep-
uty director of the ABMA Guid- David R. Calhoun, now serving,
his fourth term as mayor of Hunt-'
ington Woods, will serve as chair- |
man of the 1959 Michigan Week|
Exchange of Mayors committee.|
the annual state observance. |
A date will be set soon for the
annual drawing to determine the
pairings of communities for the ex-
change which will take place on coupon. Mix or match.
with Coupon and the Purchase ~ a8 ae + Hig appointment was announced | EXTRA
Von Braun, German-born mis-|ttai’may of the Great Lakes Stee GOLD BELL ente, debts « bie When dee. see —sile pioneer, shared the rostrum Corp., and general chairman for STAMPS
Stet RR GRD cRAUWAREL Based” ama an paresis You st with ABMA\Deputy Technical Di- [they | ( , , ES FEB, 25h
EXTRA
GOLD BELL
STAMPS
II with This Coupon and the Purchase f
Monday of Michigan Week to be
“Let 9¥. i] seling Experien asist Y ance and Control Laboratory.
Hours: Wours: Daily 9 Sie a aan Sat, Ay 1. mae hel by ‘Appt The — melesietsen sald the | beerved front aod 17 to 23. Salar : | eee 39¢ seas §
| flights jaune! m a °
"MICHIGAN CRED IT COUNSELLORS \space station orbi some 1,000! Average U.S. corn crop is wai FAMILY . C fy Family Sise Carton With Coupen
: _ miles above earth, Ferry rockets|three billion bushels. SIZE ' COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 25th
» CARTON : WSS SS SS a3 Pd & i
i
» Mie ) . | :
aan X LISEWHEREY " af | EXTRA .
a = . a | FRE GOLD BELL EXTRA
then National). 7
Schoo) Swimm:
sous’ 3 at acer Northern
DAY
High School Basketball °
Rochester | at Pontiac Northern
MC 8t. Mary vs. St. Michael at PCH
OL &t. Mary at Detroit St. Hedwig
Birmingham at Mt, Ci omens
Hazel Park at yt Dott Detroi
RO Kimball at. wn ia’s the first inning at-Kansas City and
Don Buddin of the Boston Red Sox
is the game’s opening batter, The
count goes to one ball and two
strikes. On the next pitch, Terry
lands heavily on his left leg after
following through with his delivery.
The pitch is wide. Terry apparently
has pulled a muscle ant cannot). title ‘tie will be eliminated.
No less than six clubs have a
mathematical chance of sharing
the crown with the Spartans and
five of them will be in action to
night. .
Indiana, Purdue, Mlinols and
Iowa ‘are locked in second place
with identical 6-5 records, MSU
work without pain.
Do you think that:
a. Terry cannot be relieved |
until he has finished pitch- Wayne at tice
Wi
Cranbrook at Bloomfield Hills
Avondale at Ro.
L'Anse Creuse xt Madison
Fitzgerald at Roseville
Mayville &¢ bs y City ing te Buddin?
ron a ngton Almont at d4emphis b. He can be relieved immedi-
Dryden’at Arma: ately? Capae at New Have:
Brown City at Anchor Bay c. He must make at least one Hoo | et Lake 8
Lyon at Howell more pitch? South
Clintondale at — Day
Lamphere at Oak
iy High
Mt. Clemens at pir eins
High Scheel
Walled Lake at Livonia Bi ‘Bentiey
= RO Baar ea at Parmington
‘ity League Basketball
CLASS co winne vs. Pontiac Police,
mnbe'e ¢ and Town & Country vs. Wingle-
mire’s, 8:3¢ p.m., at Jefferson
CLASS D—Lakeside Royals vs.
en's (American), 7 =: and Lee's Bales
vs. Eastside Shopp ng (National), 6:15
p-m., at Lincoln
Waterford League Basketball
A—Rocco's aun arent vs. Lake-
land Pharmacy, 7:15 p.m
& Anderson vs. Lytell &
pm., at Crary Junior High. J
olegrove, 8:30
“aured oy O7Uy WyYBNOIG eq 07 Jeqoid
qo wued dew e1jdwn
*saaamoQ ‘It} setmoosq so Aanfuy ue
eae—y Ohio State 91-79 and rules the roost with a 9-2 mark
and three games to play. Minne-
sota and Michigan, both. 5-5, also
have a chance,
Northwestern (5-6), Ohio State
(46) and Wisconsin (1-9) are out
lof the running but both Northwest-
erm and Ohio State have hopes of
finishing in the first division,
* * *
While Michigan State continues
to enjoy its 94-87 triumph over
of at least a title tie, eight teams
swing into action tonight, North-
western plays at Minnesota, O hio
State at Indiana, Purdue at Iowa
‘}and Wisconsin at Michigan,
The actual clinching of the
crown could come Saturday when
MSU invades Indiana in a re-
gionally televised matinee. If the
Spartans fall in Bloomington,
‘ You’re alwe suyeyens oy UUM “OF SetD"e! JO be then they certainly should wrap
¥ Smut sound SuRINe Y aon ft up Monday when they meet
0 N T | M E peseqes Oq Use Oe — E ‘sensu last-place Wisconsin in East Lan-
a — sing. MSU finishes out the sea
AN when the work Sectoon yr oees son at home against Iowa, March
is d done ey Sears! _ Won Lost Pet. Behind) 7, .
[New York... .-38 28 88612) Michigan State needed, and re-
Philedelphis Snowe 3 3 ‘i 4 ceived, help elsewhere in assuring
S ret Behind itself of a piece of the crown. Illi-
St. Louis .........43 18 105 5 nois defeated Indiana® 100-98 on
Minneapolis ......28 34 .453° I5\Capt. Roger Taylor's basket with
cucmeed Gat scales ts ~ 15 seconds to play and Northwest-
|New York 111, Philadelphia 99 ern whipped Michigan 87-84.
ATGN REPAIRS | Boston 129, Cincinnati 112 * A *
St. Louis 120. Minneapolis 106
Syracuse 139, Detroit 108 In other games, Iowa defeated
MEN: WANTED To Train for High Salary Position in Electronies,
Radio & Television. Day and Evening Classes Allow
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Electronics Institute : ad ot Woodward (Denevan Bidg.)
Theater. Nerth of Fox
Korean San Venman Approved. 2-23
Name poceccececctecencescsdcuscescseecuecccpccs PROMO. scccerseccscceecese
Address ......cccceeeee wececocaceonsece oe CU. cccrcsecevseecceees Minnesota
drove Wisconsin deeper into the
cellar 69-50, Wisconsin was the only
home team to lose.
All ten teams will play Satur-
day, Aside from the Michigan
State-Indiana encounter, Illinois
plays at Iowa, Michigan at Ohio
‘State, Minnesota at Purcdue and
Northwestern at Wisconsin.
NHL Standings NH LSTANDINGS
w Pts. GF GA
32 14 12 76 204 122
vess. 24 22 13 61 170 169
: % 8 169 1
an ALL NEW
RAYON CORD ) TIRE)
6.70-15.
nt rest atk
gunne® at om
~ LOOK at THESE FEATURES
@ RAYON ELECTRONI-CORD BODY © COLD RUBBER TREAD
_@ SKID ARRESTOR TREAD DESIGN Prices Plus Tax
And Recappable Exchange
Artis A+ | Ride New | Sorat erytueetn tal Oo $] per, Pay Loter Sis wad befencing by tire
al MARKET TIRE co. ©
$1 4°
» Toronto 1
AMERICAN LEAGUE
— 3, Buffalo 0
| widence 3, Hershey 2
‘Rochester 3, Clevel 1
STERN LEAGUE
Charlotte 5, New Haven 2
wn 12, Was
tre gt ate ap
Loulsviile «Toledo 2 cae
SATURDAY’S RESULTS NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 4
+ 2
L LEAGUE
Montreal o.
Detroit 5, 2
New = 1, Toronto -1, t ICAN beaGur
Cleveland #
Hershey .6, 8 = nea 0
~— LEAGUE
Indianapolis 6, a)
Fort Wayne. 5, Toledo 1
ASTERN LEAGUE
Washington * Philadelphia 2
New Haven 4, Clinton 1
| Johnstown 4, Charlotte 6
MONDAY'S ‘8. SCHEDULE
No games scheduied
TUESDAY’S:SCHEDULE
EASTERN LEAGUE
— at a
New Haven at W
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Troy at Fort Wayne .
3 UP Counties Lead
List for Most Lakes.
Three Upper Peninsula counties
lead the list of counties containing
.the most lakes. Marquette, with
ithe largest land area, also con-
tains the most lakes, 835. Next is
Luce with 571, and Iron with 528.
Oakland County is’ near the top,
with more than 300.
Purdue which insured the Spartans)
ment’s junior basketball program:
WIN CAPTAIN-SPONSOR
Bowling-on their home alleys,
sponsor Ji Wozniak and captain
Fran W .
Sons team of Highland won the an-
nual Captain-Sponsor championship
with a 1199 total at East Highland won the 1055 title, Jumped for
jJonger distance, but lost polnts
with a bad landing on his first
leap. He had jumps of 278 and
276 feet for 217 points. . State Skier U. Se Champ:
{with Jumps of 244 and 224 tet for}
pion from Eau Claire, Wis., fin-
ished third, Billy Olson, the defending. cham- “jot 0 and 25 fet foe 18th ple
with 196.4 points,
Ralph Bietila, also of Ishpeming, |
jumped 237 and 233 feet and fin-|
ished 15th with 190.3 points.
Dave Stork of Cadillac, was 19¢h|
186.3 points.
Ellis Captures
Texas Tourney | SAN ANTONIO, Tex. u—Wes |
Ellis Jr. slogged through the mud |
to a 4-under-par 67 for a 276 total
to win first money in the $20,000
x
. Three other M
placed in the top 20. Allen Chap- *
ichigan skiers
t of the Wozniak &|
Recreation Saturday.
Bill’ Kuklinski took high man
sponsor honors with 565.- Frances
Spencer was the high lady sponsor
at 445, Tom Mayes rolled the high
score for captains with 602 while
Lorraine Cloutier led the women
captains at 594 and hit the best
game among the women with 242.
A big reason for the Wozniak
team title was a sparkling 275
game turned in by Wright as one
of the features of the event.
All received awards at a ban-
quet following the action at Water-
ford’s Old Mill Tavern. Emily
Fives was presented the big spon-
sor of the year trophy. She spon-
sors Woodfill Market. Bert Wed-
die and Bill Gohl, each 64, and
Adeline Lehnan, 52, were honored
as the oldest participants.
* * *
Highland ‘Township supervisor
Louis Oldenberg and Clark Balch,
organizer of the new Pontiac 700
Chapter, were guest speakers,
Another highlight of the banquet
was the awarding of savings bonds
for five high games in area league
play in recent months. Jim Czis-
madia and Bob Gormong each re-
ceived $50 bonds for 300s, Jim
Kirkpatrick and Ron Rothbarth at
299 and Lyle Hook who had 298,
earned $25 bonds,
PONTIAC PAIR LEAD STATE
Pontiac keg stars Ron Roth-
barth and George Chicovsky put
together a 1261 to take over the
doubles actual lead in the Michi-
gan State Men's event being held
at Detroit, The best previous to-
tal had been 1239.
* * *
| There were no other ist place
changes, The meet runs through
May 10.
ELKS FALTER AT ANN ARBOR
Pontiac's big bid to take over at
least one lst place in the Elks
State at Ann Arbor fell far short
in every division but there were
some impressive showings.
Barnett’s No, 1 team took #4th
at 2044 and Barnett’s No. 2.
grabbed 15th with 2936 in team
standings. Club 99 hit an even
2900,
Gerald Fredericks led the singles
entries with 676 for 10th followed
by Harold Gamester’s 671 for 13th.
Bill Campbell had 665 for 20th.
Best showing in doubles was by
_|the combination of local Exalted
-|Ruler Don Wilson and Chuck ‘La-
lone with 1242 for 24th place. Jack
Crawford-Jim Jackson and -Bill
Campbell-Wendy .Wilkinson e*a ch
had 1230.
Junior Cage Results
Weekend scores in the Pontiac
Parks and Recreation Depart-
4AT LINCOLN
Dead Eyes 16, Panthers 11
Pharows -14, Steelers 10
Speedba'ls 11, Comets 8
Sherwood's Five 38, Spartans 15
Globetrotters 28, Celtics 17
Globetrotters 11,
Raiders 7, Half Tracks 2
Stompers 19, Champs 3
Hot Rods 2, Globetrotters 6 Htortelt)
Shooting Stars 24, Flying Fidgets 6
Beach Bombers 22, All-Stars 17
Little Beggars 30, Eight Balls 1
Spartans 2, Speedsters © (forfeit)
AT EASTERN .
Panthers 27, Trotters 10 iN
Rough Riders 7
Dragons 52, Jokers.12
Falcons 48, Aces 19
Stars 23. Angels 20
“Shamrocks 84, Millers 25
HP
© 1959. BENEFICIAL ewiaiten CO.
Just say
the word!
You're always SG scnins
BENEFICIAL The home of BILE CLEAN-UP LOANS
Pay off your piled-up bills now with a BENEFICIAL
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Abani’s $25 te $600 on Signature, Furnitueé or Car:
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OPEN EVENINGS 6Y APPOINTMENT pobre For EVENING HOURS
Coons, made te residents of Me Sl ll * ee ee ee af seal
NM “ \
alae
By SAM DAWSON: AP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK (AP)—George and
‘Martha Washington didn’t have a
government consumer price index
to tell them if their living tosts
were rising.
* « *
They never even heard of that
sort of government activity. A lot
- of the things you buy cost them fms in the water they pebanty items iter they
were out of the root cellar — if
they were frozen, it would have
been a Cotaptropin, te RG
If Martha Washington wanted
food delivered she didn’t phone —
she hadn't even met Mr, Bell.
They didn't pay é¢lectricity bills,
g8
e > { é fe 58 arena | as . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,
~ Cost of Living Not Only
_- Lower in Washingt: {tons’ diet of fresh fruit, vegetables Thing ’s Time
force?
own house, How much their meat cost =
toe ® "At Mount Vernon they had their|
slaughter house and smoke}
BOUTS AND HER BUDDIES —s
“tt
much less, A lot of things you. use|nor those for fuel oil or natural * © & ~ 4} And how can a modern young ROGERS WONS WALL PICK
they never heard of. gas. If their fireplaces weren’t| Cleaning the family's clothes|couple compare the ot of_ the Lf hegre Sane Waa bide eas ead \E
The government has just told us| enough, could try their friend|and household linen was done at/servants who watched over the ALBERT HAS ALBERT THAVE ALL. TRERE'S PRR COPS
that it cost a bit more to live in|Mr. Franklin’s new fangled stove.|home by labor whose «costs. are}Custis children for Mrs. Washing- BEEN OFFICIALLY THe ‘ rs
January than it did in December.| Gen. Washi didn't fret/hard to pinpoint, You know what| ton with their own outlay for baby AALAR W\ PRIZES HE
Mrs, Washington doubtless had|@bout rail commutation fares go-|an automatic washer and drier| sitters GORDA LAN DELIVERS! \¥)
her own means of figuring that|iMg up periodically, or bus rides|costs you, But do you | “Maybe there's no government TO WS MOTHER'S
out. And maybe you do, too. costing more. But if he wanted to|that the general may have index that really tells you, how
The classic. way of comparing go from Mount Vernon to Boston,| Mrs, Washington once in awhile good the: good old days were, : \
today’s high prices with the past , . re : @ “ \
is to ask: How much did a dozen BOARDING HOUSE . aa
ret a quart of =. a loaf of ne : ae eermnenms PLA 7
read cost in President Washing- See ae You -MASAH HOOPLA €
ton’s day? The answers are count- NSS payee BEFO YOU aves
ed upon to floor you. N a ayes Argel ~ — aN
* * * WS SEE; E { f Be
But look at it for a moment. N I'VE BROUGHT You SOME SHIRTS, TM. Reg U8. Pat. OFF,
Mrs, Washington had bread); KS '
baked in her own kitchen, The WHICH T WANT GENEROUSLY bert .
STARCHED, AND SOME COLLARS!
| AND DON'T L OWE YOUA SMALL ‘NS
BILL 2 T'D LIKE TO GET MY AFFAIRS
IN ORDER~I MAY BE LEANING é
SHORTLY FOR A MEDITERRANEAN |
CRUISE!
TT rhea cost — involving free or slave la-
bor — is hard to compute, If she
had bought a loaf in the store,
it wouldn't have been sliced, nor
stuffed with vitamins (about|:
which she knew only instinctive-
ly), nor wrapped in waxed paper.
LIFE BECOMES SIMPLE ALE. YOU HAVE %' AFTER YOURE MARRIED! Cu? |: ah
Mrs, Washington probably did gx Te TAA not buy milk in the store or from % 3 ‘ (a
a delivery man.’If she had, it 5
wouldn't have been in either bot- $, a ef Yj Witt
tles or cartons, and certainly not % I YA a
pasteurized or homogenized. Se: ye -
If she ever bought eggs in a ei Sha
store they wouldn’t have been tip- 1 __ toe in a carton, and candied and
dated to guarantee they wouldn't
hatch before she used them.
The vagaries of the winter
weather didn't affect the Washing-
‘Ford Sales Hit
A) Pct. Rise Over-All Auto Industry] | “ Wa tevin, eT
Gain for First Quarter
15 Pct. Over ‘58 Period
DETROIT #—The 1959 Ford out-
ane
ea
4 iy
{
sold its 1958 counterpart by nearly H
40 per cent during the = half of ALLEY OOP By T. V. Hamlin '
the first production quarter, the ;
Ford Motor Co., reperts. . Pacer HUMANS oon ‘
* ,* *
This represents a rise more than
twice as great as the over-all in-
crease for the whole automobile
industry, said Walter J. Cooper,
Ford Division’s general sales man-
ager.
Copper quoted Ward’s Auto-
motive Reports as saying auto-
mobile industry sales are up 15
per cent over the same period
last year, ;
While industry sales in the first
10 days of February rose 23 per
cent over the same period last
year, Cooper said, Ford's sales for
the same period went up 55 per
cent, .
. * *® *
He said that with the 1959 model
. year one-third over Ford sales
total 416,000 units, or 54,000 more
than for the same period a year
ago. The new Fords were intro-
duced in mid-October.
‘Re
+ | / {239 ue
CAPTAIN EASY
°
“Of all the millions of Commu-
find that the worst ones are the
live ones” . . . The only thing
more amusing than some of our
statues is some of our statutes.
-—Earl Wilson. STRWLLIAMS 2-23
PARLOR ATHLETES © 1900 by WEA Service, re. TM Rg US. Pat OF +
DUNALD DUCK By Walt Disney
=> AL: : Da ree | oa Z TUNCA DONALD WAKE UP’ ° ! UR ALLOWANCE! ; Z A |
YOU'RE LATE FOR WORK! wali TI ua | g
We ! ~ —er-*
VA AC Qs BUM STs “I BOMB | somm |
~ 5 SHELTER -|SHELTER {
oy 3 7 > Te 1
~ FRAN
BUSHMILL MF. 4h-13-
By Dick Cavalli
MORTY MEEKLE ‘
THE GIRLS ‘Frankl e = | ue Bree renkiie Rolee COL MTS Y Heys THERE'S A LIKELY Be & 35 Peps he hey WS
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| PROFITABLE Ge |
a OPPORTUNITIES | af ens Every Day in the Pontiac ae x
Fres cs ‘Press Want Ad Section as aaa eal:
. wit Take edvantage of this easy way =
' to suive all your buving and eee
ae Yous iho selling oroblems. : if
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greens WANT AD’ - wag Genicious DIAL FE 2-8181 GRANDMA _. chee st hengeenesnt | “ GOLLY, ANOTHER | [I'VE JUST GOTTA 0O)| | Now, LET'S 6EG WHERE as. NIGHT WITHOUT | | SOMETHIN’ ABOUT,” | [DIDI PUT THOSE...
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le 2-23°
“What I hate about jury duty is it’s all listening.”
aA
5 : > i ! * pe - ¥ Pe
large
#0. Checks 30,
receipts of Total week
ied eggs, » 14-30, were
Commercially graded:
Whites: Grade A extra large 37%: large
large 37-)7%4; lange 9% 97%, a - A e “ ; 33%-6. Grade B large %: 3
e
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK
. Feb, 19 (AP) (USDA) —
No sales to-
it week very limited
. yearlings 1060
¢ ateers uver tr
a
overnment
285 cases,
36-37%; -medium 39-35.
extra
» Gown
tha
HA we 3. 60; ‘eng
210; wu j
standard ‘heifers 90 00-94 28: utility onws
ib.be: utahity bulie 920824000: tow come” f. ~ 24,50;" tor ¢ a
a A, and
26.00
Vealers—saia Nominall
week vealers 1
full 4ecline on cholce and
rime vealers: ‘ower grades around 1.00 steady
‘
4.00 lowr:,
er; closing trade on choice and prime vealers 33.00. individua: pape up to
po ‘acuity 86 ¢ arty on a
panreeyy ake Sree ae * v y. Com st wee ‘ slaughter bs cents lower, from Republicans whose backing nate 50 cents. Tower: sheughter =
is needed to put it on the spring wooie Hatighier lambs 110" Ibs. ‘down
— —— * * ry fae lamba 3h 0: lin
With March 2 the deadline for|{ horn Mei10.50; tee lots cp te 78; ull to ug! eyes 5. getting constitutional amendments {fj}: se! + sinuighler ae
on the ballot, the decision dead-| Hogs—Sslabie 300. mo cen mostly 25)
= Teeiag weld obbdbs iad wo. and " 2 18 40-15 50; load — o 1 around
\ne ba RY Pay . (+ 3 230-300 Ibs.
'$00-600 Ihe. 11.7.1 Sipared ‘Jost week bar %*-15 cents low-
Big Fish Story
Told by Soviets But Tilapia Proved to Be
Good Food in Viet Nam;
Propaganda Failed
SAIGON (UPID—A fish that mul- tiplies almost as fast as rabbits
found itself caught in thé midst of
a cold war propaganda battle by
the Communists recently,
Like many other members of the
aquatic world, the tilapia fish is
when properly prepared. * * *
short of demand because of the
war in Indochina, 200 tilapia fish
were brought into South Viet Nam
from Thialand under an American
aid project.
Ten fishery stations were es-
tablished and the tilapia, which
¥
The fish proved to bean excel-
lent source of food for the hungry
populace,
Tilapia also turned into a good
source of extra income for the
farmers, who sold their extra fish
in and towns,
Suctess of the project caught the
attention of, Communist propagan-
da agents and a cam-
paign, designed to make people be-
lieve’ tilapia caused illness and
disease, spread over bras country. -
Sick persons were given tilapia to
eat, then were persuaded by Com-
munist sympathizers to tell their
neighbors that the fish had caused
their iliness,
By the middle of 1964, a ma-
jority of South Viet Nam’s popu-
lation was refusing to eat tilapia
er to allow
‘rjother food available, failed to be-
come ill as the Communists had
t claimed they would,
‘Workers Picket + Union Employes Off Job
\jsubstantial wage increase and im-
proved
"benefits and union security provi-
sions.
:# Indiana Mayor
Slashed in Office
R:\lice officers said today they were
In 1953, when rice crops fell far)
dria, Va.
Michigan Phone
at Saginaw, Bay City
as Contract Expires
DETROIT ( — Supervisory per.
sonnel manned switchboards for
Michigan Bell Telephone Co. at
Saginaw and Bay City today after
the Communications Workers Un-
ion began picketing the company’s
central office buildings.
The company said a few pickets
showed up in both cities. The com-
pany’s garage also was picketed at
Bay Ci
The company’s contract with
thé unten expired at midnight. Negotiations on .a new contract
were scheduled to resume in De-
troit today. Bargaining sessions
ran until 1:30 a.m,
No strike vote has been taken
among the some 17,000 union em-
ployes represented by the~ CWA.
One union spokesman said:
“We are hopeful, but we aren't
‘moving very fast. There are a
whole lot of problems.”
The company said it has made
two offers to the union, both of
which were rejected as “‘inade-
quate.” Terms of the offers were
not disclosed.
The union said it is seeking a
pensions, vacation, sickness
Police Lack Motive in
Attack by 3 Thugs on
Respected Official
GREENSBURG, Ind, - (AP)—Po-
at a loss for the motive of three
thugs who Mayor Sheldon Smith
said lured him to his private of-
fice and slashed his face, hands
and body.
*® * *®
The mayor, 39, was in fair con-
dition at Greensburg Memorial
Hospital with ‘‘intumerable super-
ficia] cuts and a strained neck and back.”
Officers said the mayor's spot-
less reputation weakened any per-
sonal revenge motive.
Smith, who also serves as judge
of the Greensburg city court, said
t
up my buddy and you're going to
pay for it.”
* * *
“We can’t come up with any
leads until we get some reason
for the attack,”’ said Police Chief
Warren Melick. “We're up against
a blank wall.”
Smith, mayor for 10 years, said
three men were strangers, but
he had seen the razor blade
«
tracks at St. Ignace. Trainmen tONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1950
LOOSE CABOOSE — Perfect balance was
achieved by a loose caboose when it left the
oft track when the freight moyed out. At the de
believe it was . AP Wipephote
right, two railroaders appear to hold it off the
ground with little effort, although it balanced
there without their assistance. -
(Continued From Page One)
sacred rousic. And she has never
The career of the world's great-
est gospel singer, as the critics
call her, began obscurely enough |
47 years ago on a Mississippi levee
near New Orleans.
*~ *
Her father was a dock worker
and a barber who served as -a
minister on Sunday. Mahalia's
mother died when she was four
and from then on she was raised
by her uncle and aunt, who were
childless.
x &
‘ Economic necessity made Maha-
lia leave school after the eighth
grade and go to work. When she
was 16 she moved to the South
Side of Chicago, joined the Greater
Salem Baptist Church, and profmpt-
ly became the featured singer in
a quintet which toured various
churches throughout the Baptist
convention.
Mahalia says, “Even when I
was just a little kid you could
hear my voice up and down the
levee!" ;
KNEW HARD TIMES
She knew hard times in Chicago,
working as a hotel maid, and later
packing dates in a factory for $7.50
@ week. ,
* * *
Slowly, her reputation grew.
There began to be times when she
made as much as $25 on a Sunday.
Accustomed to little, she saved
much, and soon owned her own
beauty and flower shops,
She was asked to make record-
ings, and one of her first discs,
& gospel song she wrote herself,
called “I Will Move On Up A’
Little Higher,"’ sold over two
million records, Another, “Even
Me,” sold over a million.
Critics recognized instantly that
she had the greatest jazz. voice
since the incomparable Bessie
Smith, but Mahalia stuck resolutely
to her gospel songs. She refused,
and a hatchet,
* * *
The mayor told pol'ce on of
the men enticed him to his private
tax accountant's office by tele-
phone, saying he wanted help in
preparing an income tax return.
Burglars Get $8,000
in Roof-Entry Theft
Burglars who believe in working
their way from the top down were
being sought today by Ferndale
Police following an $8,000 theft
froin a market safe over the week-
end.
Thieves used a sledge-hammer
to pound their y through the
roof of the State Fair Market, 726
Hilton St., Ferndale, owned by
Sam Wolfe of 15341 ‘Park St., Oak
Park. Police recovered the sledge-
hammer which was left at the
scene, ,
About $8,000 in cash, bills and
checks was removed from the
safe, The escaping thieves drop-
péa a bundle containing $140 in
bills in the alley ae they fled.
The same method of operation
was used ir the burglarizing of
a westside Detroit market over
the weekend when an estimated
$18,000 was removed from a safe.
John L. Lewis Goes Home;
Condition Said Excellent
WASHINGTON (#—John L. Lew-
is is in excellent condition after
three weeks in Georgetown Univer-
at
physician said today, ; Lewis, president of the United
Mine Workers, entered the hospital
Jan, 30 and checked out Friday.
He now is at his home in Alexan-
Bertrand Russell
sity Héspital recuperating from a_
and pneumonia, his’ Predicts Death,
Writes Obituary
LONDON (AP)—Bertrand Rus-,
sell said today he expects to die,
on June 1, 1962.
Lord Russell, who will be 87 on
May a will read his own obituary
on a television in program
next month. — . x *
The aged Nobel Prize winner,
who has been married four times,
wrote the obituary in 1937.
“Why June 1, 1962? Well, I will
be just past 90 then and it seems
a suitable age to die,’’ he said.|
“I must confess I am becoming
a‘ little nervous as the time ap.
proaches."
Lodge Calendar.
Pontiac White Shrine No. 22
annual memorial and ceremonial,
Wednesday, February 25 at 8
o'clock. Roosevelt Temple, 22 State;
St. Bernice Cover, Scrib adv,
News in Brief Burgiars took an undetermifed
amount of money from three
amusement machines in the- W.
Walton Dairy Bar, 228 W. Walton
Bivd., it was reported to police
——
| The theft ofa
her home at 18. Lull St.
ported to Pontiac Police over
weekend by ep ans
Thieves took $200 in §1_ bills
from the Northside Auto. Supply
offices, 739 N. Perry St., it was
ee Faith Brought Singer
From Poverty to Fame
literally and figuratively, to sing
the blues. *
‘SANG GOD'S MUSIC’
“When I was a girl,” she said to
one interviewer, ‘I washed dishes,
scrubbed floots, bent over a wash-
tub to keep my family alive. I
knew the blues, but there's de-
spair in the blues.
I sang God's music because
it gave me hope. I still need
the hope and happiness Ged's
music brings. I find it a per-
sonal triumph ever every handi-
a solution to every problem, ”
It was in my capacity as'a radio
and television producer that |
came to know Mahalia, and from
the start I was impressed not only
by her wonderful musical gift,
but by the warmth and depth of
her religious faith.
* * &
T saw that faith in action when
Mahalia was hospitalized and was
told that she must undergo major
surgery within a matter of hours.
She was extremely frightened,
as almost anyone would have been,
and asked to be left alone for a
little while. Then she took her
Bible, and re-read the 27th Psalm: |
The Lord is the strength of my
salvation; whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the strenght of my
life; of whom shall I be afraid?”
until she regained her falth.
She recovered quickly, believing
sincerely that God had given her a
better and stronger body with
which to carry on her mission of
singing the gospel.
(Copyright 1959 by Guideposts)
Brazil Approves.
Mrs. Luce as Envoy -
RIO de JANEIRO w — It’s
practically official now: Mrs. Clare
Boothe Luce is the new U. S. Am-
bassador to Brazil.
A foreign office spokesman)
announced today the Brazilian|
government, responding to an in-
quiry from Washington, cabled its’
agreement over the weekend to
appointment of the petite author-
dipinmat.- 2
The White House customarily
awaits such a response before an-
nouncing the appointment of a new,
ambassador.
Mrs, Luce is to succeed Ellis
©. Briggs, a career diplomat
who has been ambassador to
Brazil since. July 1956. There
was no indication where he might
be reassigned,
Mrs. Luce is the wife of maga-
zine publisher Henry R. Luce.
She was ambassador to Italy from
April 1953 to November - 1956, She
has since represented President
Eisenhower at two Vatican. cere-
monies, the funeral of Pope Pius
XII and the. coronation of Pope
John XXIII,
Williams Trails in Poll
of Presidential Likelies
WASHINGTON @ — A magazine
survey of political leaders rates
Vice President Nixon far out in
front for the Republican presiden-
tial nomination, Among Democrats,
it says sentiment now favors Sen.
Stuart Symington of Missouri or
Adlai E, Stevenson.
A copyrighted article in U. S.
News & World Report also lists
Trailing Hamohrey of Minnesota and Govs.
G. Mennen Williams of Michigan
and Robert B. Meyner of New Jer-
sey.
Remember the man who could
sell refrigerators to Eskimos?
Well, a recent “job wanted” ad
boasted the writer could ‘‘sell
rockets to the Russians’... A
Manhattan hosiery company says/ Traffic Weekend
Worst of Year 9 Die as Unseasonably
Warm Weather Draws
Crowds to Highways
By The Associated Press
Four persons died in accidents
Sunday on crowded state high-
ways, boosting. Michigan’s week-
end traffic fatality toll to nine —
highest of any weekend this year.
x * ®
State Police said unseasonably
warm weather in the southern part
of the state brought heavy traffic
to most trunklines Sunday for the
first time this year. ;
The state’s highway death toll,
however, still remains far below
the count at this time last year.
Revised State Police figures
show 114 persons have died in
traffic accidents thus far this
year compared to 167 traffic
deaths reported at this time last
year,
The Associated Press weekend
fatality count started at 6 p.m.
Friday and ended at midnight
Sunday.
* * *&
Eddy Liquia, 8, Otisville, died
Saturday when his sled was struck
by a car near his home.
Mrs, Ilene French, 38, Orton-
ville, was killed Saturday in a
collision east of Flint.
Merlin F. Hopkins, 45, Stock-
bridge, died Saturday when his
struck by a train south-
with a tractor-trailer near Monroe.
George E. Wood, 31, Oxford, was
of Lapeer.
Mrs. Rose M. Polly, 28, Wick-
liffe, Ohio, died Sunday when the
car in which she was riding struck
a tractor-trailer at Devils Lake.
Willie H. Griffin, 44, Inkster, was
killed Sunday when his car and
another anto collided head-on in
Dearborn Township.
Former Detroit Paper
Ad Manager Dies
DETROIT w — Funeral serv-
fces for Ralph Horton, former
classified advertising manager of
the Detroit News, will be held here
Wednesday, Horton died Saturday
at the age of 71.
Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Horton
came to Detroit in 1932 to take
an advertising job with the De-
troit Free Press. He moved to the
News display advertising depart-
ment the following year. He had
been classified advertising man-
ager-for 15 years when he retired
in 1953,
Horton formerly wags with Curtis
Publishing Co., hia; the
Cleveland Plain Dealer; the New
York Herald Tribune; the Cincin-
nati Enquirer-and the Columbus, =
y Be Heard — | Hoffman Would Get
House Group. to Hear
Yankus’ Complaints
DOWAGIAC (UPD—Cass County
poultry farmer Stanley Yankus Jr.,
may have his day before the House
Agriculture Comfnittee, but there is no telling whether his appear-
ance will prompt him to change his
mind about leaving the country.
Rep. Clare E. Hoffman (R-Mich)
said he would try to arrange a
hearing for Yankus, but the Alle-
gan lawmaker said he didn’t think
it would do much good because
“the law is. the law.”
proved ‘‘this country is not the
citadel of freedom we thought it
was,” and showed how a “good
citizen can be driven out of the-
Hoffman said Yankus was “just
old fashioned—he wants to run his
own business,” -
New: Radio Item
Enables Constant
Tracking of Moon
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) —
Collins Radio Co, said today that
for the ‘first time in history the
moon has been tracked continu-
ously through the use of a new
precision radio sextant.
* * *
Since the moon gives off ex-
tremely weak radio waves, the
company said in a statement, the
feat of developing a sextant to
track the moon accurately is a
“major breakthrough in naviga-
tional systems.”
* * *®
The company said the.radio sex-
tant functions as a precise com-
pass, with more than 10 times the
accuracy of present marine com-
Wallets Holding $125
Stolen From Home.
Waterford Township police this
morning recovered two wallets
stolen from Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
var Gregory of 1026 Premont St., but
$125 was missing from the wallets.
Thieves entered the unlocked
house sometime after the couple
went to bed at 11 last night and
‘|took Mrs. Gregory’s purse and
her husband’s trousers containing
the wallet.
The theft was discovered when
the Gregory’s daughter Sharon
came home and found the front
door wide open.
The trousers.and purse were
stolen from a chair beside. the
Gregory's bed.
Police are investigating the case.
430 Orchard Loke
Ohio, Dispatch. FE S-6159
=
(Clip and. sell totey)
Leave Them a Homie, Not a Mortage!
4
’ Suppose something
soa. as : — . “Wouldn't you like to
DANIELS INS. AGENCY _ = leave your home Medern Woodmen of America . mortgage free? For 563'W, Huron Street, Pontiac, _ 3 as little as 1 per cent
1 am interested ta your Merigege Cancellation Pion. > you can buy Modern Pek ; _ Woodmen's Mort-
City Sete __5 Meme Otten 2? mock Toland, Tih
its stockings are for , “contented
calves.” —Earl Wilson. *
THE, PONTIAC: PRESS, _sonnay, FEBRUARY | 23, 1950 Es :
“4
D.C. Stores eens
Wacky
With Sales WASHINGTON (UPI)—Bargain-
hunters stormed the capital's fam-
ous George Washington Birthday
sales today like the British charg-
“ing Bunker Hill.
To the hardy ahd the patient
went the spoils — 3 cent sun-
glasses, 99 cent auto tires, $3 wash-
ing machines and 22 cent power
mowers,
An extra alice: detail was as-
of offering incredibly low prices} *
on George Washington's Birthday,
and the riot scenes have been
growing ever since,
* * *
Actually, the limited number of
99 cent autos and 7 cent razors
are just come-ons. They all are
snapped up within minutes after
the doors open. But the business-
men know the shoppers will stick
around to buy other items.
Pasternak Dodges
Western Newsmen
the mobs to nab shoplifters, The
crowd was swelled by govern-
ment, bank and school employes,.
whese offices were shut.
auf MOSCOW (UPI) — Russian poet- Shoppers came from as far
as 100 miles to buy 1 cent (you had to purchase a new Ford. author Boris Pasternak has left ‘his
first, of course), 69 cent” auto ra-|Villa in the writers’ colony outside
— and 99 - ee For Moscow for a Black Sea resort to.
t who weakened in the face ayoid Western mnalists who.
of the stampeding hordes, there fiocked here Sanne) Prime’ was $2.22 gin and 11 cent aspirin. | ‘Minister Harold Macmillan, it was.
WAITED ALL NIGHT , learned yesterday. |
_ Many of the bargain-hunters be- x“ *« *
“gan lining up in front of the stores) Pasternak’s decision to shun
last night with blankets and ther-| publicity was precipitated by
mos bottles of hot coffee to ward’ what he said was the unauthor-
: off the 40 degree chill 7 ized publication of his poem
* “Nobel Prize” by a London news-
oe champion inewaiter was paper. ;
-year-0 wnse ry sa i ane i front naee The poem, which reflected bitter-
ly on the events which followed his , store Friday night, the sale ells aes nae re me rejection of the 1958 Nobel Prize yndicate, wi “Distributed
by
King
Features
a»
writer.
' Raplee had waited all night in’
front of the same store for the blankets and other comforts of for Literature, caused further .
home. He wanted a 99 cent ty widespread resentment here.
ne t * |
Pasternak, author. of the con-|
troversial novel ‘Dr. Zhivago,”
‘True Life Adventures
Walt on
World Rights Reserved
Nlo BELLOWING..NO CRAGHING TOGETHER OF
MASSIVE HEADS AND HORNS --JUST A
UNRELENTING PUSH : THATS THE BATTLE OF
TWO BUFFALO BULLS,
BUT ITS DEADLIER THAN \T LOOKS / , EVENTUALLY ONE WEAKENG.. ANP 1S CRUSHED TO THE GROUND. Recbavinn r
PARIS W—Italian film director
Roberto Rossellini said today he
often..sees his Indian girl friend,
Sonali Das Gupta. But he de-
clined to talk to a reporter about.
any marriage plans,
Asked if a marriage was in the
offing, Rossellini replied “IT gan't
answer that. It's much too eafty.
sy are very good friends, that's a une at the
are her
Paris 1
“T see
* * *
Me eonfir med that Miss Das Gup- bg — a+ pe renentat arn
|His Cussing Costs Cut
to About 10 Cents a Day
- WASHINGTON (AP) Rep.
John F. Saylor (R-Pa) had a prob-
lem: choice bits of profanity crept
into his speech. This year he start-
ed fining himself a dime when-
ever he swore, handing the mon-
ey to anyone who beard.
“Tt used to cost me an average
of 50 cents a day,"’ Saylor said.
“That's pretty expensive for a guy
like me, so IT used more control.
Now I sometimes get by with a
dime.” a
see his
Paris
bed the
LANSING (UPT) — Reports that-
the big three will enter the small!
car field haven't slowed sale of i
small foreign cars in Michigan,,
‘Secretary of State James M. iga.Po ce
said today.
The German Volkswagen led)
Michigan registrations the pe
month with 465, Hare said. The ment at
lish Ford 139 and ine Simca 137.
ee hyneee-sr
(sees aft
The Armour Research Founda-| “Our
first accepted the award but re-
Stine Poo Ea SS te jected it after he came under does not know how to type.
| The store took pity this year from the Soviet Writers Union. area causes crop damage of $5,000.- Te.
heavy criticism. He was ae Air pollution in the Los Angeles a year, and the soon in the Sanjaccording to a University of Cali-
Francisco area is $1,100,000 yearly,|fornia study. tion estimates that air pollution
costs the United States about four|~
billion dollars a year in cleaning! White
bills, corrosion, and other costs. ‘April @ a . Rossellini Won't Discuss’ \
any Plans About Marriage
ta was living with friends in @ Par-|~ beer
is suburb. ,
She has been living bag
of Rossellini at Longpoint about |;
15 miles south of Paris, With her
$ and a girl, Raffaella, born in
in a telephone interview,
“My affairs are very complieat-
ed,"’ he added,-'"I would really like
to get them all straightened out. we
cannot really say more now,”
Rossellini: normally comes to
Paris weekends from Rome to
mer wife, Ingrid Bergman, now
living outside Paris in a comfort-.
able farmhouse with her present
husband, Lars Schmidt,
Rossellini and Miss Bergman are
presently fighting in Rome and
three children.
*
sonal affairs and refused to com-
‘Who Set Practice Blaze
at BAYREUTH, Germany, (AP)—
Police in Upper Franconia today
French Renault had 140, the Eng-/arrested a 19year-old member of
Ithe volunteer fire company at Ge-
the fireman told them.
hours for the Biennial Spring 7 7
home of wealthy friends
two children, a boy Hari,
4 months ago.
her often,” Rossellini said
we ik. ®
three chijdren by his for- mon Februaty 17,
City Clerk
Feb. %, "68,
past three days with bron-
Ni
The City of Birmin
peated bids at the Cf
9:00 R nr. Priday,
Lo oes inclusive of Indian Village OTICE OF ane | SALE
will receive
5 Office up
arch 6, 1960, for
riage lots care ‘Jocated on Fourteen °
@ Bond east of Pletce Btrest in, the city ot Bi and congist of « courts for custody of the) totai fromtine ot it ft. ob. Pourteen *lMile Road and a depth of 110 ft
on eae and atorm sewer, water main,
* a as main, sidewalks, and paved street
Rossellini said he had been in fnstalie. Area soned Multiple Family
Details on the comanien of sale may
be obtained at the Ch y Clerk's Offic ty
ee He said he would be inj *,ne'enintnum asceptable bid will be
. aris several more days. $100 per. front foot. Bids must ace
Foreign Ca r Sales Steady In the past Rossellini bas one a “. cersified check “aul r
Despite Big 3 Reports —_brushed off questions about his per- CITY OF BIRMINGHAM By IRENE E. HANLEY, y Chris
all to. newsmen, Feb. 20, a a "9,
\| NOTICE OF MEETING Q OF T THE PON-
Lacie ta hareee spon, thot eee Bebrd Othe ae he ts a
Arrest Fireman { Review for tiac ee will
meet
; Road,
to 4;
rolls,
er a barn burned down.
team needed practice,”
REGISTRATION NOTI CR
Lake Township, Registration
Election
t the Town Hall,. 7826 Highland 3rd and 4th an
Kaper dn Hall, 2060 yke
Wednesday, March
again on Monday and
arch 6th and 16th, from 6:00
noon and from 1.00 p.m.
00 pm, to review the assessment
and for the pur of hearing al the Townshi pose
on Tuesda:
complaints and to discuss assessments
ane make such adjustments as the Board
eems
further, that all requests by Veterans,
widows and blind — for special tax
exemptions must be
Bupervisor before the date of the meet
ing of the Board of Review. to be just. Please take notice
in the hands of the
OY DAVIS,
Pontiac Township Buock
GRETA V.
Feb, 31, 23, 34, ‘ne,
macnn
Death Notices -)__ In Memoriam 2 __Help Wanted Male _6 ~ a
an LOVING MEMORY OF FRED AMAZING DISCOVERY. ¥. MASTER
ee Gon » Who passed away Feb. Glaze, puts brilliant glasa-like sur- SLL
| BALL, PEB. 323, 1959, ALPHA V., face on cars. Free Sample, tnfor-
i 106 Navajo; age 68; beloved wife Loving memories never die mation, Big vem mlectene beste:
i of John ll; dear mother of re years roll ote Glaze, Dept. 913, 1720 H
J N. Ball Jr. and Mrs. Fern / And days pess by: Milwsukee, Wisc.
dear sister of Mrs, In my heart a mcinery ts kept
AWNING SALESMAN for sprin: Of one I loved Ruth BBall hee t oa Mrs. ‘eres | never will forget.
We are preparing
MeGcd’ wearin cod Chester Sol,| Sadly missed by ie wife Nellie, © rush. berg: also survived by three! 50Ms and grandchildren. “ey oom —. ’ a Binet
grandehildren. Funeral arrange-
ts will be announced later by
the “Yoorhees-Biple Home where |
Mrs. Ball will Me in state. IN MEMORY OF EDNA VOGLER,
who passed away one i bowed
today. Gone but ae for —
Sadly" missed by train apply from O° 10:30 a.m.
& from 3 to 5 p-m.. 163 W. Mon
calm asx for Mr. Cutri ght.
— BOYS -- 14 TO 1T TO WORK } 3
AGDETTE, ep TARA) Funeral Directors 4) "dir gon wt "eo loved wife of O. NBeaudette ie a m. ichi Unemployment dear mother of Mrs. Thomas SPARKS-GRIFFIN CHAPEL cmpensaiion cm $42 Oakland , Palmer T. and Bruce L.| Thoughtful Service PE 2-58.) p ne cist a
erandenitdren. SE cia V h Si ] aa = — OVER. se ce
Le wennae ee | ¥V OOrnees-piple PE 2-0205 the All Saints E a
al > ree ee ee! 6FUNERAL HOME te Chapel Cemetery. __ | Ambulance Service - Plane or Motor
FE 24-6378 , RELIABLE FIRM
office in Pon-
tas Tec me Sakiand coe area.
Has an opening for a few sha Episcop
— PEB. 22, 1959, OLIVE M. 1S. a 024 ‘Argyle; age 18; dear mother|“A HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE’ | Sferessive salesmen rth cars:
Reaford Maite, love t cur xis: COATS themselves j1 or part time
tissues by'nrerersaand:| | FUNERAL HOME | S00) li! att haclag Pat ra and two ) -erect-grendehil Drayton Plains Sarcl mays a pear
1d06 3" Telegraph Rad n* Pontiac.
= Denemonicnns _Help Wanted Female 7 7 wee ree
7
ATTENTION Women over Se neat In appeer-
able to meet
Seople. Available im-
to contact familles,
parishes and churches
with a Bie designed to over-
juvenile deiimauency. “ee
us bonus "Aver-
‘or interview op-
Huron St. 8:30 a.m
FE 84-3116 for personal
NEW
cosmetics. Money-back guarantee.
saliaiec territory in earnings.
1 FE 8-3298
Pre Days | AND LIGHT house wo: __ $15 at PE 2-2003.
COUPLE WANTED, TO Do general housework, bbe may
work Gooveere. we will supply
living mo. Vie. Waterford
wer Apply Pontiac io eos
COLORED WOMAN For GEN- era! housework & cablsete: 5
days, Babysit 2 nights. Must drive
own car. MAyfair 6-6846.
EXP. REMINOTON RAN RAND ) BOOK.
s . tor Milfore area Write
Ort ff_in Puneral EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR
PRENCH, PED. 21, 1989, TLENE, i8 advancement with a au- Ponting Press Box 68 Church, Ortonvil age 38; be- ” FUNERAL HOME * tomobile finance Company, Pre. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. ee
loved wife of Joseph French; dear Designed for Funerals fer @ man around ears of y ght seo Restaurant, 377
mother of Randy. Gary and Gan,| Cemetery Lots = S| une ‘;. Geed sarting cian Ci bora He eg ar sister Of | mew eee ral plan of | PULL on “PART TIME, REGULAR ‘Mrs. Sawyer and —_ Dor- ideas company ear, A if an of
Noa eee ae ee eet 4 CHOICE LOTS (6 GRAVES TO| com tits, Apply Box 110 cso Oey lll geteg og snd? mou
geughler of irs. Jeanie Mcoon,| lot) im section 6, Perry-Mt. Pury | —enne Press. et,_pe_investment, 7 he
‘Wednesday wah ¢ pon] 4 ouaies lot at Ouklond Silly Goer | occ eee ee ae eee toe BAR YEPETING
rom the C. P. Funerail etery near Walled Lake and Nov! Se ee | housework. Call after
fone, Orenviig ri Rent | Pinte On ‘puget | Brea Bog iter Se Fete | enor ee ating. Interment in| SeaGHIFUL @ GRAVE LOT PER- eva HAVE ROOM FOR 1 SALES WON-
me Cemeter Mrs. Pd a an interested in & permanent
will lie te P.Gher-| "YM, Park b Cemetery wit dt | "for-man with car, living tn Holly position. Must have cor. No ex
man teers "joo, orientate: | Vide Rees. PE ¢-0003 _ or Milford area. For D ry, we will tr
GRUVER, FEB. 23, 1959, AMANDA, ware ake eae | se between 1) Apply from oo we i & — from 3 » 163 W. Mont-
. =~ pene ok Walled, —_ nee ee Coepet Sacrifice for oe HIGH BCHOOL BOYS, JUNIORS | calm. A: Ask for. ™ Mr. Cutright.
Miller, EB. O. Graver and William ana seniors, If you are free to| MAID 35-46. GENERAL HOUSE-
H. Gruver. Prayer service will be| © work from 4 to 7 pm. weekdays | work Must cook and serve. Care
ld Ped. 23 a1 Richardson-Bird Box Reolies and ® to 2 pm. Saturdays, 15) of baby Pvt room and bath
Puners] Home, Walled Lake, with ; conte 00 Sous” asrenteed ee eat and reliable Excel. refer-
; Pastor M. Prederick Foutz offici- At 10 a.m. today there o hire you after 2 days train-| ences required. Prefer women
* Miss Gruver will be sent i Press ~~ Come ready for work. Apply | with trans., $35. wk.
‘ —— Cit t = were replies at the 2:30 Pm 15% 8. Saginaw. Tues- ae 7
oO 8 y, or service oll _day, Wednesday and Thursday. NEED MONEY FO NEW
case: } en agsiments by ime office in the f owing I Easter Joven for Ie family?
Walled Lake. é boxes. IMMED ATE Avon representative Ph Phe aid a heand
FEB. 1959, JESSIE I. 5, 7, 14, 17, 19, 21, 25, OPENIN 44508 or write tea Plains
420. aoe : : ~ iG for h ‘2 Box 536.
peony iy Ey oe =i) | ic be cad ae sia Bey weet eee Meenasteal PECIALTY SALES WOMEN é " experience an appearance
Mre. Ed Heidt. Funeral service 81, 84, 91, 92, 94, 95, 102, Bercansthered apele Davee Bessel nis 8 ALL OPPORTUNITY !
3:30 p.m. trom the ornese-siple | 4 108, 104, 106, 111. bad g. Telegran 10 am. Tues- SELL COSMETICS. COMPLETELY
= v. Theodore - ~ = = w line. Mone: = guarantee.
Elmwood Cemetery’ Detroit. Mrs. NO EXPERIENCE NEC. | . Balimiieg wr seats. Mead will le au state at the en for wholesale service work. ee
Must be 21. Hard work, good oR NTLY NEEDED KIND WOM-
Noorhete-Bipie Funeral Home, The Pontiac Press Apply il s.m. 128 W. Ruron’ St. to stay with old lady days.
PRT 2s anthro nerd es OVER 21 PREREQUISITES. ONE gi wm. Use bork pete eee ie ee :_ beloved ‘hus- -FOR WANT ADS yeer college, intelligence, person- P. | poke AES
father of Mrs. a z Olson = ay Berra! 2 Ippon Me marty poo bps
aes occas tat: ace DIAL FE 2-8181. § | faNo PLAYER sTeapy_ 6) —MA 56°.
brother of Dr. Paul Paris and Che ix eee WOMEN
— red Rountree: 0 © F c a.m. to 6 p.m. _ ——— : Part time work. Be your own boss
vived by 10 grandchildren. Pu-;$ From ~ a.m. pour cen boss
Seek cecvies oer ac 3 pe PART TIME an information. call MI
Ld e Voorhees-Siple All errors snould be re If you are free 7-10 p.m., yeson —
Funeral Home with ; vod net Ri caiovggrotd wenn sah moon rag gs ra ey ite eal rs wire paint, OR eee ate isBel - s ¥
= 200 oe office ine re sibility for errors er that will enable Sou to corn igs 3-6164,
ange SE ree than to cance! the charges per week and still retein your é
PA Ponte Te uh 1969, ALICE B, for that portion of the first regular 9b. For {nformation call Help W Wanted 8
Pontiac Trail, Orc ; insertion r, Tay r) | rrr ane
ih d wile of Pus —_ wate mace — neon and 7 p.m.-9 p.m, = BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN
Pa ; ered valueless
H. Pattloon; dear sist Phens ‘tnd error. When, cancelfetions REAL ESTATE get Rs i Ma ie sary
Mrs. — Tee. will be fs pela rout ‘ Dery — _ " ginee SALESMAN: assy
service e adjustments Ww
ee oe send Ban saeageae.t at | beh gaegat uae Church with Rev. John W. Mulder Closing time fer advertise pA gy se aring ba fea Estate & interested
- men con in yoe sizes :
officiating. Interment in Richard: fret, ‘tan renin arate SAUESMEN WAN ii aT Ti | _ Box 1 peels iniatart
a 1 Home ype is o’clock noon the WTD FIR A88 COOK RE- the Bensees N-Johns Funeral Home day previous to publication P. W. DINN aN , re al aaralencent home | Ex-
‘ednesd: a or r
at 1 pm, Wednesday to He in Transient Want Ads may % W._ Byron #2577| Son” write ful ” gperioace ea
state until time of service. be canceled up to 9:30 @
PENOS, FEB. 21, 1959, MARY JANE. te Naps abd day of publication after
SALESMAN
Full time, experienced Real £&s-
al; + tneerti
ether of Mrs * william Eckert, — tate Salesman. Will train one in
Mrs. Frances te, Mrs. Archie WANT AD RATES Real Estate Selling if experienced
Mrs Gilbert TT yonn, ‘Gert 3 eee AYLORD'S Ts. . * * Jay 3-Days €Days
Em ; dear 136 E. Pike Bt. Pontiac
sister of inde Hiltey; also sur , 8 eae F100 8. Broadway Lake Orion
‘ 7 9 i BAL N 6, 5,000. A
great grandeniidren and five 38 is 38 career in sales offered with ex great-great-grandchildren. a 6 300 540. 8.20 . banding majo: firm. A complete
al sery will be held Tucsday, 7 3 50 6.30 0.66 and thorough training aaies es)
Feb. 24, at 1:30 p.m. from the a 400 «7:20—Ss«1.04 gram ‘Hours 9: 5
Voorhees-Siple Chapel with Rev. 9 450 810 1242 _Dixtle_Hwy,! Dra:
Fry Gchiesser (oc ret 100800800: 13:80 | SALESMAN WANTED. MUST terment Oak Bill Cemetery. § ree cs sicesten Ke
_ Mrs. Pence will lie in state at the ave high bee ie 4
Voorhees-Siple so Panarel Home. — =. : unity, Call
r call at 562 W. ay ge
' SUTTON, PEB. 21, 1959, MRS. ORAH _ Help Wanted Male 6/ The National Cash Rerister Co
rege N aa a rare ween r eee TROCK Tuoi ae @ ROUTE
»|. MEN N ED ON PERMANENT | _ for “
ihe gp Se coe is por basis No layoft Pome nec an. Twe a NEW CAR SALESMEN *
ny — Tuesday, Des mat 3; Sais t seciee tome fnto th WANTED Prin bed y ~ a hime chance
Ww
‘acon her tacome bracket, Phone FE
Rev. C. Georee| fst, for appointmest for per WAW? "YOU! ‘The best commission th cbite itati pen is sonal taterview Fastest movi» car in town, 1969
thon-Johns Funeral Automobile Salesmen ee ies ee ke nek oe
. me, ' t ine. Sales
WINTERS. WW Manager, Pontiac Melon Division
971 Osmun’ i; 1 2 KATIE, Cy O ens Retai 65 Mt. Clemens, Pon-
Wife of John Winters; cea. es F d tac 37.
ipovce ant Mrs. Virgie or TW AL N
aker. Funeral service will be Is Jooking tor 2 experienced “‘suto- | ‘TO sell Imperial, Chrysier, Dodge.
held W: atv bap Og gaieamen who to * ars. y
a.m from 86t. ineent de a — money. Fines ea 0 YF ben ry e
Church with pormer’ = Mtl the city, Demo, furnished, A re + il wr jodges
ation 0! i opportun' ni with 6 volume deat iy : 3s. oodward ri)
Rosary will be day econ er Contact Pete Aus at mm am Mt S078 a1 Ji
Homer where Mires winters wi] ATS S W| Waban te” areataton or c wor!
Ye in state, agina wun’ Periedies gircutation Berv- aE ice Bureau. tbe neat and
PA Ss UP lea Fg Bo ben ag ag 10 ae
DON'T
' 5
WISH TO 5 EETERO OUR 8IN- ‘uron et Pontiac.
friends. | MONEY! Sell unneede TRAIN FOR
cory grade Madves for the 10 1 Sell unneeded heating hn iad ee he
kindness, eards and Card of © of Thanks ee 1
flo offerings. during. the loss of belongings for cash chanieal. A 5 Beene on # to 10
_ mother . . =
tree - & ‘
A specials thanks io Rev. T2™8s|+heough Classified ' Ads! WANTED INDEPENpENT DRY
Guest, oo and Farmer- eatablighed pay up to
er fas James L.) OE 2.8181. “ 4 per cont. OF 20011, bet 8 Em.
eumb Family.’ —
A ~~ background . Ponting Press Box
foun OWN BUSINESS! YOUR
own hours! Selling nationally
known cushion shoes is easy. 135
styles for entire family.
pet . Experience un-
NERS, ton, Mass.
Employment Agencles 8A C. E. Graduate civil e:
ly locete to fates : Bmp month
wes m ployment.
406 Ponti FE 8 ~~ State Bank Bidg.
EVELYN EDWARDS VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVIC. -OUR NEW LOCATION— 24% EAST HU: SUITE 4 ROBE 40864
PALES Man bet ages of 24-30 with
college. background t ‘rain for
executive ‘ust be qilling to
= & eventually re-locate Ag-
er to fe-
gressive with some noe
Ao eel aol 6 to Midwest
_Bank Bide. FE 5-0227 —
"Tastractions 9 nadine
PIANO N
Gospel Matic ies "s regular an
Sinners Students, FE 5-006)
AaPAL PLL PDP
A-l a) PAINTING LIN INTERIOR & FX- 4 ot, SN oat OR
a a eae wo ew and repair. FE 5 CARPENTER
Ee tats Noort, Regan hg ‘ Li ".
_pait. as Piet
al. “ty
exterio:
NEW, RE RE- ARPE: wont
model, “repair, OR 3-1617.. Write TAN- |.
rock
_.Work Wanted Male 10) TIZZY
PO
Work. Wanted Male 10 WAR
CARPENTER & CABINET WORK
ap es tepairs, Work guar. OR
CABINET MAKER AND CARPEN- a geme & specialty, FE
able. Call after 6
Pm,
MAN 27 bee gels WORK OF ANY
kind, FE_2-2879
MARRIED MAN “WITH 2 2 ~CHIL-
dren wants full time employment.
Exp, in sales. giectzienl S music.
Ronald Moves ess Dr,
| VETERAN 20 DESIRES Worx OF
_any_ kind ere car, FE 5-
Work Wanted Female 11
2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASH- ¢ and he house cleaning. FE 3-1581.
canons N HEIGHTS, EXC. CHILD
scare by day or week. UL 24013.
BABYSITTING | BY THE HR, ALSO washing ~s pont Drayton
Plains area
BABYaITEING,. “ques CARL.
CLEANING. peste. ran WHITE WOM-
ae OO earl
oY 3 WORE WTD., § DAYS. WILL
_live_in. 1. _Reterences. FE, 5-9750,
DAY WORK, OR BABYSITTING.
_jin your home, FE 2-6775.
xP. L WITH REFERENCES
would like day work or restau-
ran’ work, FE 4-5364.
GIRL DESIRES DAY WORK OR
week work, references, transpor-
tation, FE 8-6513.
GIRL WANTS DAY WORK. MON.
tet.” Fri. Call after 8, FE
HOUSEWORK BY DAY. REFER-
Own transportation, FE
IRONINGS og Ba MY HOME.
iRONIN G8 DONE IN MY HOME.
tek say & deliver, FE 40061.
TRONINGS. 82.50 BU. 611 BAST Mansfield. FE_8-0751
LADY WITH | EXP.
resser wante rE” 2-4444.
LICENSED HOME FOR
dren. Day or 24 hr. care,
57490.
LADY DESIRES DAY WORK.
— reference. Own transporta-
on,
MIMBOGRAPHING G TYPING, on:
woaee. service. EM Le
can Ades “Go. Nurse ‘SED PRAC.
Nijeal — Le
Lice eaiy
- aaa avn ia ~
Auburn Avenue Nurses Exchange
Day & Witte tone & Bonded.
A A A A OR 3
SUND UNDAY WORK W.
ref. Areliadie BY AE $8418.
Sh LIGHT B inG
& filing Done in my_ home.
Pick-up & delivery. OR
WASHINGS AF | AND TRONINGS.
WRERENOT AND TRONTROR PICK | OO, up and deliver, FE 5-4657.
WIDOW - _ WANTS | 5 WASHINGS ; AND
ironings FE
WOMAN a \ ouaE TORE from 8 to 4 Good ref. FE S000 after 6:18 Pm.
___ Building | Service 12
" gd aah FE td vag
4-1 BLOCK A work, also hospice, OR 3-0402.
FE
~
——.
Pe er ee eee ee eS eee eee ee OE Oe OT by
@ 1069 by NEA Borviee tne a)
TM. feg, US Pot OFF,
“Father's beginning to like you. Did you notice how
politely be) = a it’s too late to come a
CARPENTER ER WORK OF _ ANY
a BASEMENTS
ae | Pamagiote Building Service ;
neath home, also house raising & Kate Osann| Business Services 13
° te HIMNEY WORK We clean, repair, build and re-
bulld engage Ve are chimney
specialists. Also clean, repair fur-
naces, fireplaces, water heaters
and incinerators. Pipes replaced.
Gas flues installed. Baskebs made
to order. Emergency service, Es-
ee registered company. Fi EL ECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-
obs re rewinding. 2is EF
Pike 43081,
AND
6-1788. FURNACES CTEA Ww ¥ D
_serviced C. L. Nelson, FE 6
FURNACE SICK) Call Doctor for appointment
Quick service for emergency
cases, also furnace sales. OR
3-6634 KENYON HEATING SERVICE _
PLASTERING, NEW oF ame REPAIR _ Work quaranteed. FI
PROFEBSIONAL ie OFFICE | Ya balis, County Reg
SAWS MACHINE FIED Manley | Léach 10 Bagley § Bt,
THOMAS ELECTRIC Licensed Electric Contractor, Res-
idential, Commercial and Indus-
trial wiring
‘MYrtle 26661
We CARRY PARTS FOR t ALL
auto. and wrin we washers. Whole-
sale and retail
PPLIANCE SERVICE
ROY'S§, 96 Oakland PE 32-4021
WALL, WASH INSIDE WINDOWS
cleaned,
Free Estimates FE 2-4225
Dressmaking, T T ailoring | 16
ALTERATIONS, SUITS & COATS.
ftw Dressmaking & repaira, drapes
} < made. Expert fitting. Guar, Ref.
2-2.| Mrs. Louis Moore, FE 8-009.
PRESSMAKING TAILORING AND
ret eee Mra Bodell, FE
DRESSMAKINO } TAILORING AL-
terations, drapes & formals done.
in’ my home i) FE B-H455,
Wn ERWIN'S CUSTOM TAILORING & alterations Ladies & men. FE
pur unper-| 2?
te line of mason- _Income Tax Service — 17 Se
BO ta gg ath gl San ews SER.
ie. 3
Al par ‘WALLS & PAINT
OR 3-9764 $3.00 TO $5.00 AVERAGE FEF.
peeneee bo Hes s —— a bebo
CTT 5 ervice, corner ry
erage e373 ese. Por icriauon OR
AN INCOME TAX RETURN PRE-
ANY TYPE “*
custom drawn,
_3-4031, red in your, home by qualified.
nguee Ea accountant with master's degree
OL 1-6200 EM| Appointment | $34, —
BLDG. REPAIR,
BRICK, BLOCK
large.
sities Masonry, Carpentry FE 4-2290
work also chimneys No job
Residentiay and commer:
Guaranteed work. MY PLASTERING, ote ee PRATENCED —
Loc At fair rates Evenings & Bat.
eS eon Reps dl Wonk Office hrs. Home cails by aprt
BASEMENTS, “WATERPROOFED. BOLIN TAX SERVICE
free estimates, FE 8-6642 2 E. Pike; PE 61192 or FE 6-8716 |
BURTON 5. EVENS a) MEL- rose FE 8-3500 Home cxiis by
_Sppeintment,
EMPIRE TAX “SERVICH
Your Home bd Mine AND ~ CEMENT
too
Ph
~CEMEN -
aed
CEMENT is Floors.
MPLETE kitchens
CALL OR 30179. WORK ____sS WORK FE sn ee
er. Oe eer ts: _UL | iie 5
OUR SPECIALTY.
basements | 34870, nar
Reu ° Dd EL iT I Le xo
rooms, ree 4 poral FHA t corms & BLOCK 1343 Oxbow w Lake RS. EM 3-3125 INCOME TAX SERVICE ITEMIZED FOR
OR 3-5597
INCOME TAX PREPARE: In
our home, Long ‘orm eonised
_te'00 Phone FE 4-6706.
a
Partney Electric
dry CERAMIC TILE FREE ESTIMATES TERMS
Advance Floor ( Co
ELECTRICAL SERV. FREE EST. SERVI
FE 5-8430
DRY WAL TAPING AND PINTSH-
Fi 46 if bo estimates FE 8-678 or
FR ms = A
for ote tn esas heaters npr
ficetrie Co, ry Ww INCOME TAX SERVICE FORMERLY SEVEN YEARS WITH INTERNAL | REVENUE Y APPOINTMENT FEE. NO FE OR_3-8701
B
ONLY CREABON ABLE
TARY PUBLIC. PHONE
_2-6806,
Fax ‘RETURNS PREPARED p BY
"t ee pate — fee.
1 8-16. aves rR. Oo
Reynolds aan. fae eae ee TNOOME TAX SERVICH ON WIRING, and
‘unro
GUARANTEED Rf —. = oe a
3071. (NCOME TAX RETURNS PRE- _Rarvor Pe Cage Lake Rd. Keego
Laundry Service 18 rr.
?LASTE. M OR Ss Servis FE 2-7004 or
Vern Ke’ ae UE 2 Font ges, addi rms All work
une *. COMPLETD FAMILY LAUNDRY service — shirt service. Pontiac
rt he 649 8. Telegraph FE
a as ARAGE, CARINE. *DD -
Hons i, ¥ Licensed ____ Landscaping 18A
od Sette
MASON WO oO ees RAISING, A-l TREE TRIMMING & RE-
feapaation a, ments etc. T & movyael. Free portato: OR
__5-6826 or OR 3-239 M1 ACE TREE SERVICE ~RE-
moval and 18 PE bOn36. Get our bic
FE 2-7168 FE 8 AND REPAIR
Pm 2-102 PLASTERING Pat Lee, FE
: 8 sand and
sosea
wake
Di _Dikcbes’ iy ‘boat ri05 rR SKATING, ING,
R 4
WAVESTROUGHING aEran mae __Moving & Trucking 19
1-A Reduced Rates atta or ow one — FE elie
FURNITURE “MOVE! ING We know how. Price's right. Al * FP 40444
A
ele thie foot! rg
wel! 7".
___ Business Services .13 AME
ir_ price. * any. time PE 4.0005
13) oer AND HEAVY NO. | mad get fi) dirt OF pw S-0008. and
end loading 4-6221
HAULING &
Pe ote
delivery,
vad e: a ia ‘wedows, LEANERE
By | TRUE Mrastoente nue’ peoert Dat sand asonable FE ¢2037. ~~ PE tote ” ALL MAK PoUNTALN . PEMs front
seer, Sha clan at o ee
Siler Soop Eee rar tae Trucks to Rent
rvs oS Sinetixa INTERIOR AND YS equ cent exterior ret a” a. - Pree enti- ‘ton Fiokype Vpton stakes
seo MEL Dump t jemi-trailers
Pontiac Fatm and
Industrial Tractor Co.
eid t
/ ¥ _ Moving & Trucking 19
O'DELL CARTAGE Local -@ tong distance movin
a) eTBhone PE. $6008 aii UNWANTED | ARTICLES B pga 4 _up free of charge, FE
Painting & & " Decerating 8
sT CLASS DECORATING po 3%
ing and wall papering PE
18T CLASS reAINTIN
| eae prices. |
T CLASS PRieTtNG AND 1D Be. he “orating Cash or terms, UL
_ Notices & Personals 25
SPECIAL
ise to slenderise the ¢ Bue
, oate way.
“tir quest tor
appoint,
Wi HAVE -ExTENbED oi OUR WIN- ter discount arice through pie
1. Op Kvol Vent Awnings.
Awning. & Window Co.
PB 5-2102,
Wed. ¢ Children t to Board ; 26
2940
& LADY INTERIOR Di DECORATOR. aia ring. PE 6-03
AT PA AIWEING PAPYR “HENS iING, Pape removed
a Laat ell. AND. Fi SeERING, © 4-8364 ason Thom
* palierina pee TER OR, BX. | ~~~ terior 10 per cent disc, for cash. _ Guaran! Free est, FE 4-0205.
AAA PAINTING & DECORATING.
2 years experience bee ages
Free estimates, Phone UL 21308.
PAINTING & DECORATING . IM- mediate service -600
PAINTIN SFAPERING’ & Wau _ing Guar. _Reasonable. fe 2.
___Television Service 22
~ DAY OR NTONT tv SERVICE
FE 58-1296 or FE 56-6300
M. P, STRAKA
JENSEN'S TV SERVICR APTER- noon & evening call
23 PL LLL EE
Upholstering ee
AL'S UPHOLSTERING
rr +8719
ARLE: 5 CosroM | LUPHOLATER:
4 Cooley Lake
WE DO 5 ALL TYPES Or CHAIR
_caning | Call FE +
24 PPP
female biack & *
_ 39-5606.
FOUND: CORNER 6. KGiRAW & Huron, small noes Lig’ Biack
with white ) markings. OL 1-187.
4
iar “LADY 8 BLACK LEATHER handbag Fri. night, Vic. Ma:
Day, Ave. Reward, FE 24008,
LOST: “ENGAGEMENT PA RING. Vi- cinity of National Food Store,
Wiitams Lake oh 3-0078. pas Dixie
Hwy, Reward, 0
| Lost = MALE sis “BOLT tk with white collar & feet, Vic
8. : “a Ro. Reward. EM
34)
LOST. BRITTANY SPANIEL, 3, VIC.
Davisburg. Robert A, Thomas.
ME 4-3504,
LOST: FEMALE BEAGLE PUP.
Vie, Batavia & Maybee Rd, FE
LOST _ BOXER | FAWN BROWN,
LOST SMALL nooeD DOG, white with black markings. Vic.
of Commerce. Answers to name
“King.” Reward, 4861.
1° BEAGLE, MALE, , TRI LOST, reward. coler, ~, Waterford Rd.
OR 3-595
“Hobbies & & Supplies 24A
PAINT BY NUMBER PICTURES Scrabble gamea Backenstore
__Book Store, 15 E. Lev :
Lawr'nce . +
__ Notices & Personals. 25
KNAPP SHOES Fred Herman _ OR_3-1802
A COMPLETE COLD WAVE, $5.00
_Dorothy’s, FE 92-1244. _
ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a agapswe advisor e
28734. anfidential ™ Salvation
rmy,
A Wartihas AVE $6.50 M & B Style fie 23431. Wil-
liats Lake Rd,
“CHARLES ( CHESTER AIR CUSHIONED ree
E. H_ MIL LLER R 3-494:
DAIN" TY MAID SUP PPLIES Mrs.
A. Taylor, r, 56 ¢ Gillespie. FE : 3
DAINTY MAID, SUPPLIES — pe
ia Mrs Wal lace
in mya
econ th neuer mae: * ta tepiets, conte
MMS
war 3 to, Tein, bot be sponsid! debts
POUND LAKE one VICINITY, | ¥
hound my DAY CARE, LICENSED HOME.
J66D LICENSED Hou SY BAY, nour _or weer
Wed. Household Gor ‘Goods 2 27
CASH FOR 8 MALL RADIOS
workine w_not. _FE 54-8765
ORNT GasH FOP USED TVs ture and misc, FP ?
FOR_ FURNITURE. © AND AP- es Odd I eng or of nae full,
FURNITURE } NETH b)
top gollar” “wih os sib 1-~ Mie ‘or Communs'y
eee Roch:
28 ester Michigan, OL
Wtd. Miscellaneous 2
wtvbae SELL IT? 88 — foens 4 sun o! SALES CO
~~ Money Wanted 28 PPLPPPAP LLB A AM
“$3,000 bet o4 ba k bad Bae | —_
Share Living Quarters ~30
sACHELOR OR COUPLE WISH- ing. to share house, newly fur- bedroom, conn
Mos “Brivete oe a rivate inves-
Pontiac =e
th working widow. ion. Onl after 6 p.m. FB
Wtd. Contracts, Mtgs..32
ABSOLUTELY - The fastest actign = your —
Hage. PE 6-350,
contract. Cash
Call Realtor Partridge
ATTENTION (|!!!
we NEED a BUYERS. WAIT: ING, REASONABLE DISCOUNTS. ASK FOR MR. OBLIGATION.
4, Fo ed bag’ JOP
CASH LAND CON
FSlce KavrrS Bras abe |
J. J. JOLL REALTOR 22.8 DIXIE } nwy
CASH Wor eour land ounereste &
seenele
5143 fhe aa Rd.
CA 3. J. van welt R:} ry:
CASH |
~ QUICK -NO nem chong
Nicholie & & _ Harger. Coa, 33_WEST_HURO: PE 58169
CASH AVAILABLE
hier et ate a
peers
Johnson.
#
‘ x
3
:
|
‘6h TEM. se
— n ee PEC
- oa ae oe re
No “THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ¥EBRUARY 23, tees -
4 Summit =
rooms bath, clean Heat ture,
ee te can a APT. M CLE
Pe .
, Action We Can fey —— House,
WHITE
MMEDIATEL “Homes, farms, ‘farms, lake «property, 80 and
Paul a. Mi Jones, Real Est. Est.
Rent Apta. = 33
MOTEL
* Moa maar new wih School
t
fie.
or couple.
. 990 N Paddock, Ab
al
furnished. 93
rion, FE .
T ROOM BACHELOR APT. 00 WE. State Bt
t APTS. OR :
Fee: 2
(AND ] BEDROOM LAKEFRONT
3 OR
ep Lal cy poet. ‘Auto. — water mont
on c “ee i er MY
_2-3882
ry sing ron, ‘wehbe sad turn, Prt. ent “4 Ee 29-7145,
hs #13
Pes a Sana at
so c a TOF. tages gas ‘Deal all utilities, Win-| _*
rates, Tru abCins.
MY. 3-0058
\TH AND
Eg ey ad Re
é
vork.| 7S
2 bath, ‘Boft hot SE wel-
come 3 Park Place. Corner Ho-
ve
~ Pvt, ent. dosiyn. per mo.
re 4-019.
3 a, A
yt Adon! or past
Ta a 7, “APTS. CHILDREN
RMS, ENT.
aM 326 Mt. Clemens.
Te ee
oes near, Ge entrance, rear ce her, rs, Heat furnished, $65 FE 7-0667.
i ROOMS, ryt es tg eS ae bath ae
3 LARG rea
Children weleome. 2 5-7000.
ATE BATH & EN-
down- heated, nea
town, only. 87 8. Parke.
RMS. AND BATH. HEATED. PVT
9 On hesnester: ly. “area. Adults on 206.
ILITTES ; E ' RN.,
: nas ED.
rE e KITCHEN-
in. BUS
station. | oe 2 ‘adieages “peeple. 7
APT. 1 LA 1 LADY ¢
der) penole preferred, 169 Mill,
FURNISHED 2 AM APT” PVT. bath & ent. $12.50 wk. All utilities.
“LOVELY «a ve COE. : rv Adulte. OR +1043, . NR,
ries went = town ri es
eriahere For app't rE
r FE §-2968
HOT WATER.
aHALL A Bes gp wk. Couple
__ preferred. Fe 44
WEST SIDE 4 pee “&@ BATH — Front & rear entrance, garage,
no children or pets 694- Monre.
Rent Apts. Unt Unturnished 34
18T FLOOR, 4 R
_heated, newl
Ria. M KITCHENETTE, PVT BATH
if water fu: Adults only.
eel Re Faddock Alberta Apts. TW EDROOM UNFUR NISHED:
dryer -—_ automatic washer. $12
eek, W. Columbia Refer-
= es.
‘SB 66M APT FOR LEASE, bene I & ae: many
__ ture, te 4100, on weit
T aus 2 SBEDROOM | LAKEFRONT OR 3-0106
4-8550 3 oy ee obID APARTMENT.
fara Privat rator, heat, and ligh
rivate bath and entrance.
$85 pe seh AUL A. KERN,
NC. FE
ry a asnool mn ra NEWLY DEE.
vie, Baldw: an
re schools. OR 3-6580.
© CLEAN, i8T FE ¢1841 or
LARGO
floor, home-like.
FE 4-0090,
OR|} RMS HEAT om LONTs URN. uP -- Pontiac Trail. W Lk
_MA at atc
| RMS STO f RS UTIL-
; itl “3 furn of
} RMS, PVT. BATH. 8TO
nate 8 furnished, FE ins. not
Opdyke Rd. 3 RMB 610 WK. 62 GLAD.
__Stone ear her ans Pontiac.
GE ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH J FLARG entrance, heat furnished. OR
E Se RT
T ROOM UNFURNISHED APAR _—_ 5, ‘bate Pontiac Feet,
men 35308.
vi Ty "rove REFRIG. UTIL
_furn., M60 Pontia OR 3-458, 3 y Ree. BATH U “Opti, FURN.,
of heat, very
clean, ine 300 N. ¥,
inquire Hote fe 3 rear door.
4 Booms. ATH AND BASEMENT
in, $36.00 month 4 child
weleome, rE 33.
RMS AND BA gh MODN, HEAT and het, water furn. éfamily west ue hetos 875 mo Adults only.
4 in ry BATH. PRIV. ENTR.
Garden. aoe Knob Ri. OR 3-7887.
4 RM. N APT.
4103 Disie over Pm, Mara-
ware. $56 per mo, «ROOM APT. wees UTIL FURN.. i)
WEL «RM pay ot FLAT. 338 | 335 7 CRE.
_ty 8t. PE 2-86
eR AND naa
5-27 PE 4-5426. PHONE FE
i Oa 4684 RMB. Rg teal 30 PUT- pam, F
«RM. UPPER IN PONTIAC, 1
bedroom, stove, heat furnished,
garage, es on bus line, 30714.
4 AND 5 aoa APARTMENTS.
Sop caretener. © Washington.
4 ROOM ALL race, garage,
FE
MODERN TER- ‘eanene Villa. Call
TAM. APT. ON WOLVERINE LK., A. 41365
BATH. wast BIDE.
or FE 34
5 RMS & BATH. MEATED"S STATE
5 a ATH, ae BASH.
went FE $0243 :
6 ROOMS, 2 GMC, $90
per mo. Heat and hot water fur-
nished. FE §-4558 or FE 5-0265.
983 DEL RIO APTS.
3 rms. and beth,
stove = furn. couple with
ek 4 ROOMS & BATH, Sighee, over Oakland
irniture.
HOLLYWOOD APTS.
or unfurnished, 2 & 3
rms., bath & “oe Pee alas furnished,
_11¢ 8. Howard 8t LOE 3 =e APT. NEWLY SEs.
ex t. Ent. 29 First. St, Ox-
LARGE 3 RM. DUPLEX APT.
Also 3 ym apt. nor. Union &
Cooley Lk. Rds, EM_ 3-4881.
MODERN 6 RM. BRICK avr.
Stove & refrig. furn. $80 mo,
_children welcome. FE 65-0737
NEWLY DECORATED 3 ROOM
apartment on Oakland Ave
Private bath and entrance
soe heat, hot water stove and
refrigerator furnished. Rent $50.
FE 4-4807.
ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS
BRAND NEW
AIR CONDITIONED
ONE & TWO BEDROOMS
—REASONABLE RENT—
Pontiac's most exclusive, modern
West side apartment development,
Balcony type building with Individ-
ual entrances.
Beautiful kitchens with metal cabt-
nets in decorator colors with plas-
tic tops. Stove and refrigerator
furnished.
| Automatic heat and hot waver (soft)
furnish en ‘an, master
aerial and many othe: fine fea-
i
For a limited time, no teases or
« ri A quired.
"SS LTe OMe:
Bee or Call the Manager,
19°BALMER 3T.
FE 8-6918 OPEN DAILY & SUNDAY 19 AM —8 PM
|SLATER APTS. ARCADIA NO. 1
FRANKLIN
; WOLVERINE -|COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL
ree blocks ea Courthouse
We i eave several ery qocorated
—— meme ive ents from | eal
Benoa % block ai All Tare one
Rosreem, some more.
ares > SLAT ER.
ERWIN SLATER ~
53-55 North Parke St. PE 43546 +) Open ene _WEST SIDE INDIAN VILLAGE ™ DUPLEX *
. VASBINDER, INC,
FE 5-BB5.
for complete detatix.
“WATERFORD VILLAGE bron NEWLY REDECORA
on “Wate E BROS, seicon 3. 1208 Dixie Mw
"ti! Hi Bun. 3 “10 yet 5
Rent Houses Furnished 33 35
1 SMALL GARAGE MOUSE. CLOSE to Pontiaé Plant. $12. Baby .wel-
_ceme or bec chelors, | i
a ne eon MODERN ver Pontiac, §20 wk. Snsloaes
hoot} EM_ 3-4322__
4 | BEDROOMS NEWLY DECORAT- PE 220016 ga heat & hot water,
2 BEDROOM HOUSE EURNIBHED __or unfurnished. UL
LG } dé. RMS. SS APPOMA TIC heat and am water, also 2 rms
bath t. Ch welcome En’ tid 372 "prospect PE 24289.
3 ROOMS. NEWLY
nr. Waterford,
_gno pets. $15, OR
3 ROOMS AND
FE 3-1313
7 ROOMS AND BATH | PORNSEED
ire close in,
) BATH, ¢ GAS HEAT,
clean, ate for’ er small
ome. $60 mo. plus as
is Siptchary Rd. Dr ray’
OOMS, BASEMENT, FUR- esmned Apply 285 N. Hospital Rd,
FURN, OR UNFURN. 3 RMB. bath, util rm. FE 4-8797. .
MODERN 31 3 ROOM Hops HOUSE, PART-
MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOUSE. ee _welcome. OR 3-4163. -
IMA ES FOR RENT IN-
MALL HOUSES FOR RE
= — 1676 Taylor kd. Ask for
_t Weaver, PE 4-2031.
OMION CARE CLEAN FURN. | On
nfurn. ELgin 17-0388,
_Rent Houses Unfurn, 36
1 BEDRM, ee CHERRIES,
arapes, and ‘den spot 1 mile
elty limits 1 wend welcome, 600
_Scott Lk. Rd
2 BEORMS NiCH | LOCATION. M%
_bik, to city bus FE crates = amma
2 BEDRM. FENCED Bony. YARD
Attached carport. Gas heat. UL
} BEDRMS.
heat and
ment, $76,
4-7833, TILE BATH AUTO. hot water, full base-
Choice of several, FE
2 BEDRMS. $16.50 WK. Cueeee to buy like rent. ~ rectal eae
FE 5.0885. .
area. Large jot.
2 SMALL 6 ROOMS AND BATH. Cor. 1160 & 1166 Lakeview and Lyn, Huron Couple” with
1 or 2 children ‘pe ous 4-4423—12-6
—?*
3 BEDROOMS. CAR & %
sage. ¢ ee mooth. 17 E. Ypotient!.
3 te aan CH, ALMOST garage, storms. teres jot ere
2131 James off Walton LI 3-4820,
_after 7 pm
2 BEDROOM, FULL BASEMENT,
automatic heat, nice location, very
_clean. UL 21064, evenings. 2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW. NEAR
Elizabeth Lake, $65 month.
Available — : oo et ease, Call
__Realtor Part , FE ¢35H.
3 FAMILY, i
_ close in, FE
7 BEDROOW AMORA? TERRACE
or will sel) with small — pay-
__ment, $75 month FE 4-
iT ROONS, “NEWLY RESORATED.
nr. Waterford, electric ran e,
refrig., Youngstown kitchen,
_ture window, no _pets. OR
J] BEDRM. BRICK. ALMOST NEW.
Pull basement. Reo $100
_per month. OR
J ROOM HOUSE, REFRIG., STOVE stove furn, "Garage. and heatin
red cee Jr. High School,
J ROOMS AND % BATH, REFRIG- erator, stove, oil circulator, $40
__month, / Adults, FE 47457.
3 ROOM wOUSE we MONTH. 64
_Edison, FE 5-2
in BEDRMS. — $92.50 — Ralf of rent applied on low down
Biden : Cae E our own home.
J ROOMS ~ water “HOME WITH
_part basement, $45 mo, FE 4-0683.
ROOMS & BATH,
3 ROOM STONE HOUSE LOCATED
west cf Rochester on blacktop
pet Suitab:e for couple. Edw.
a — tr tor TT N. Saginaw
3 egg of I men OR Le SASHA-
OR_3-3014
T Room aN NDB BATH, Gas 8 HEAT, 315 hels Rd. after 6 p.m
5S ROOMS & BATH. COUP t or Meet ehildren, ful
ITH
basement, oll heat. 3252 Wanamakers, Scott
Lake, FE 4-4423—12-6 p.m.
RMS. REC RM j«_pet month, PE 46772
a us. AND BATH. ~Olb HEAT.
62 Washington Bt.
ix est CALL FE CLEAN, §$°5
5 aa
4-0153 afte -|$ RMB., YEAR. ROUND 116 WOLV-
_erine Dr. __ Walled Lk.°MA 4-1353.
MS an ‘BATH, FULL BASE-
ment, gas heat Children welcome
$85 month. 56-9804 evenings
__and_ weekends
6 LG. . ROOMS, NEAR | TOWN, 1 11)
_Perkina, $15 Mo, _ FE 54-6006
6 ROOM HOUSE, GAs ‘HEAT,
945 Mt. Clemens, chil-
_drem + allowed. _ FE 45067.
¢ RM. HoUsE ¢ ous HEAT. CALL
after 4. FE
ry — AND ae BASEMENT,
_on N. Saginaw. FE ¢- st.
a hie & BATH, DUPLE WEST
aide. 1 Mo. Call Realter Part-
_tid FE 4-3581. ee
6 Je§ 3 BEDRMS, 204 WALL. FE o|
€ RMS MODERN. GAS HEAT.
ear General Hospital, Furn. or
‘unfurn FE 2-0923, Call after
m
_ General Hospital. Call OR 3-1926.
7 RMS. 3 BEDRMS., STOKER
heat, $6 N. Roselawn, FE 2-6005.
COUNTRY ESTATE NEAR ROCH-
ester. With two modern houses,
beautiful _grounds Rent as 1 unit.
Vacant, Feb. lst, FE 4-5000.
GOOD AND CLEAN. 6 ROOMS,
5-6928 after 5 p.m.
ae ao oes BRICK
on 20 Mile Rd. Basement.
Lt. ard. $104 includes lights
and water, OL 1-9761 or OL 1-1038
after 6 p.m.
MODERN 6 RM. COUNTRY HOME Oil furnace. Children welcome.
Clarkston schools $75 NA 17-3651
3 bedroom ranch bunga-
ave, ving room, fully car-
baths, storm sash,
‘ore ate oil heat, “th = ed =
will a for 1 ER
“AWICK RSHAM 7195 os "Maple _ MAyfair 6-6250
MODERN 2 BEDRM. HOME, EX-
cellent cond, Ol! Heat, Lovely lo-
_cation, FE 7.0499.
8YI VAN" LK A RM. HOME FOR
lease. 3 bedrms, gas heat. Car-
peted. Newly a
quiet dead end reet, bik.
re tarch Ist. trom beach, ‘Avail,
If 32-8612
UNIO! T Are ee eS sigee 8h
az £2 8AM WARWICK IN SYLVAN LAKE
3 bedroo' brick carport. Lake
See $125 lease, also, 2 bed-
rm, with s farase $110. FE 4-5090, or FE 2
___ For Rent Rooms _ 37
ATTRACTIVE yee, ‘gms, PVT.
__$6_and up. § ron.
aT Bus nla room a ae
cease NG ve 3.0100
SS Rd § rooms and, tile bath, $90 month, | |
Seiont 9 se & eon bery. venien or & Ly} -
see ba seas or FE asad
with fail _ and utility |
1 ROOM HOUSE POR RENT, BY 7 fost Ap Unfurnished 3 ‘SLICES OF HAM \
‘After leaving the ship, he headed for Mulligan's
and I haven't seen him since!"’
a
CLEAN, QUIET
home. Near Lincoln For Rent Rooms E
wees ROOM, PVT.
Je, High, Ff
LG. UPPER ROOM side, Pvt. Bath &° <1-001 5, if ans. c
MEN 141% Oakland A
PRIVA’ arf. ROWER Oi. rage. j Rwy 48 E, Iroquots, — nk Est-
“after 0:30.
ame Gs ery
PLEASANT FRONT ip ge in pvt.
PE 2-0614. RM.
home, close
ENTRANCE CE.
RMS ree
shui, ‘s pee men, At
rb.
SLEEPING KITCHEN, 499 W. Huron.
iN PRIVI.
bus stop.
_ 16. ye Bt. $5 per wk.
ROOM 3 'BLOCK
from downtown, PIE 4-5843
EXTRA CLEAN
meals, TV
ere
Ww
Gentlemen
ord, PE ,. HOME 8TYL
14 Matthews,
MEN — WORKERS — Jot) Christian home.
eemerree Rooms With Board 38
Ez FE
PENSION.
OR iM.
123° «Bec-
Bwwote Rosse. Oxford. _Convalescent H Homes 38A wr
HAVE VACANCY POR | MAN OR wom or ambula'
ground” oor. 24 hour care, rea-
onable rates, Glen Acres Nursing
_ Home. | 4-225.
VACANCY FOR | 2 WOMEN
atienie reas. Oak Haven
‘OA 8-3062 or
Alse 1 or 2 room
465 Auburn — Hotel Rooms
HOTEL AUBURIN
Rooms by Day or Week 39
apartments.
Cooking and oaks (= tony Eh units.
STORE BLDG 20 a
from Pisher body. H
fices
urposes. $150 mo.
ne., Realtors, 28 E.
8-0466.
STORE FOR RENT
shopping
2100 »
ood
Pontiac Press. Rent ‘ Stores 4 70 ACROSS
eat, hot wa-
ter furn. Finished basement off-
Ideal for retail or office
Roy Annett,
Huron. PE
"IN ACTIVE
roximate| center. Appr
-: ft. or will djfvide. Avail-
arch Ist. Write owner, Box
OLtRAaEW st “ORES, WEST
tiple units.
service includ
Test fide, PE 2-2144
~~ Rent Office ‘Space 41
HUBBARD BUILDING 18-24 BOUTH PERRY
Stores and offices, single or mul-
Heat ligh
ied in
rentals, Will re-model to sult. Ap-
ply caretaker on premises or it.
6-0600. ghts, janitor
reasonable
NEW | OP PICES— WEST GIDE. FE
Rent Lease Bus. s. Prop. 41A
DOWNTOWN, CAR WASH
A CTIVE oO
and approximately |
rehousing Can used for cor . body
shop, Oeheee: real te etc.
Larne parking area. New used as
t wash, Inquire 22 Auburn Ave.
a Yi, GAS HEAT, AIR con ; 252 3. Tele- _gtaph, Pon-Tel Centre, FE 4-4516.
‘CE SPACE
6.000 square
feet wa: area per
month vie | 663 Tele-
graph, Fm 42597,
For Rent Miscellaneous 42
car (tr fom
&._237_ Baldw
Cement floor, FE GARAGES FOR RENT. yee 2% 5-1051. juire
GARAGE, ONE ar meted kal
i¢ RMS. 8 & S.
rage, 4 fenced lots.
Ties, grapes, beau
flowers.
erator, crushed stone
dog-trot, playhouse. For Sale eases 43 —~
ATT*CHED GA-
Large shade
trees, fruit trees, evergreens, ber-
lawn, many
Outdoor vd aon inein-
rive, fenced
Crescent Lk.
S Magee Reasonable terms. FE
LRAVINO CIT x. for 2 yr. old
Drayt Rep EQUITY bedrm. home.
Plains, ‘OR 3-8018,
3 bedroom has 1!
basement. Oj! furn
OR $1 SUMMIT
Attractive 5 room
Basement. Gas heat
yard.
TRI-LEVEL &
: “te model.
3-0482 ;
TRADE YOUR SMALL HOME
IN ON ONE OF THESE
ELIZABETH LAKEFRONT
80 ft. of perfect ‘Thy bath beach. This
aths He
old
home, but in good apoio nel, $19.-
900.
8T.
.. carpeting,
Fenced back
10,500, __FE 45203, BROKER
» BI-LEVELS
down, your lot. Smell down—our
. Fiatiley, EM
ne foMES FE. 8-220
PRice REDUCED, state. § rms, th,
x 130, lake mt. Rogge bee
close to Comm School.
LE A VING
4 ERN 0 U 8,
forcea to sell, $700 down, bal. on
contrac . FE
HAMMOND LAKE 3
Wind Drive. FE 2- EDROOM B
brick colonial ranch “2142 Lake
2024.
8-6785. OWNER WANTS TO SELL 3 BED-
room house Leaving state. FE
3. BEDRMS.
8-2918. LIVABLE. SWAP,
re or sell, 7620 Clintonville Rd.
A RENT near grade school,
New! annuus 2
heat, ‘Owner. M WITH OPTION TO a8 $ —
bedroo
and poral Ohi
3-3711,
soe titte room,
near new h :
after Car agi LOT 2 wgongone | piel
8
school.
— Lato of tow Sell for
FE
RENT IT
FAST
through Rent Ads! Room,
house, apartment, any-
thing — Want Ads give
you ACTION. Dial FE
28181.
b= FOR |- For Sale Houses 43
262 8. Telegraph Rd.
FE 3-7103 — $250 DOWN __For Sale Houses * 4“! ~ For Sale Houses 4
i!
COLORED Gis: 3:
No DOWN PAYMENT
PE ere VASBINDER, INC. <
FE $8875. or FE, 4.0823] N
$un, maser 1
Hatfield. Seagien Plains -
eq paymente Cc
Nothing Down wit gene: starier poms por BO oo
Baseient Tin Minele
ra & cae oa
WANT A gow? pace
ON A NEW
Custom. Built Home?
FE, J. DUNLAP
CUSTOM BUILDER _—FE 8-1198
‘4-Family Brick
Vacant 2 bewiroom home. Full rise, $6,208. ioathiy peyments —e 4 gemiy be brick .
om gurposboory 3, i ver agg OE for BUSINESS OF ran Located a56- DOCTOR’ (CE, 2 nice apart-
ee e Park Nee tte 4, OR 3-0639. ments sok hagesient. gas heat.
LisTING matic
JOLL “MUL
DON’T HESTIT. Take cvasans va this 3 bedroom
heane in Drs: sar tegen 26 ft.
th fire-| p4-96 E. ) as space, convenient
location.
West ‘Rundell Just off. Baldwin, § room modern prtek nesvane in excellent condi-
sgh heat, garage.
WIL , is M. "BRE WER
JOSEPH F, REISZ, SALES aoe
Huron FE 4-518
plas, ed J-ear garage. Own. Eves, PE 8-003)
er will sacrifice for only $1, BY OWNER
aoue sm meeete vor’ . Birmingham, 3 bedroom, 2‘ bath
FAMILY INCOME ‘| 1961 built Colonial on Olenburat
$750 will move you inte this, it-| sround corner from ee sres
tle money maker in Drayton School. Entrance hall. den w
. Has one pbedieom ee bookshelves. Year-round 18 foot
ern apartment ay one 2-bedroom jalousied
Pull basement modern apartment
Gl's Nothing Down
JOSLYN-KENNETT AREA
— 2 bed
Li $9,800 first—not posed
you HA
basement
in
h
all this pias e ares
tivities room on the
Wall-to-wall erpetns. *,
260 ft. lot, Near the new
William pagtumont for a
includin
arce.
one.
VETERANS!
dandy 2 bedroom bungalow
located in the edged fenarah
ban area close to town.
rooms are family sized with
oak floorin
walls, and low month-
ly payments. ;
NORTH SIDE — 2 bedroo
wth basement, nice 16 i.
pena Goramie tiled bath.
Plen of closets, 9400
down should handle,
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor en 9-0
C &-8775 wait on this
— Here's a
Fear ar 2 "BUD"
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
On this 2 bedroom, 6 —
old modern home. Wal
ee to Fisher Bo = 7,
ith automatic of] heat, wa-
softener, self-storin
sereena and storms, Fenc
lot 225 ft. deep with straw-
am-
r mon
possession, Bee it TO-
PRICE REDUCED 3 bedroom, west suburban
home with lake privileges.
Features cedar shake exte-
rior, automatic heat and
hot water, aluminum storms
and screens, fenced rear
yard School bus at. cor-
ner, Price reduced to Wee 500
2 Aerms,
“Bud” Nicholie, Realtor
49 Mt. Clemens &t.
Call = a Verney
FE 5-1201 ¢-2088
IRWIN GEORGE R.
ORATOR AREA
3 bed room ranch type bungalow
with al Mi :
scree!
soy minum storms and
arpeted living room, tile
automatic oil heat and
Other extras on a good
marge lot. A-l condition,
EAST SID
2 beavanus bungeion with full
basement fenced yard, glassed
= front porch, neat and clean.
A very good home for couple or
email family. Full price $7,950
with terms
oe
$18,300."
GEORGE R. IRWIN, REALTOR ALDWI FE 5-0101
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
a
1483 $850 DOW N
babe other cost meves you in this
2-bedroom ranch featuring plas-
tered walls, oak floors forced air
a Payments only $44.24 per
$700 DO WN
§ room bungalow located on East
Sheffield. Neat and clean. Pay-
ments only $50 per month.
one will sell fast, call now.
NO MONEY DOWN GI
air heat, attached garage, 2
Hurry on this one.” .
HERRINGTON iN HILLS
Bewutifu) 3-bedroom brick ranch
nicely decorated throughout, full
basement, forced air heat, storms
and screens. Only $2,000 down
aod take over 4% per cent mort-
gage.
PLANNING TO BUILD? «
down on your
build to your
JIM WILIAMS REAL ESTATE & ne
BALDWIN lot or we vm
plans, rch, Separate dinin
room, dichwasher and disposal.
Gas heat. Tiled, basement with zene areas: Be first instead of Cee eate store teem. Alsminem
a storms and screens. need eh
Eveninee after 6 call MA 6-2880 rg Nearest garage. MI 4
JOLL, REALTOR GI RESALE
2636 | DIXiE HWY. oF FE 4-456! 2 Bedroom modern Suburben. On
~ paved road. Fenced lot, A real,
ood buy at only $9,000 with
F050 down and $56 per Mo.
including — rnpegas ~h =
4 wy cent mo
on q J A, Tay ore Cncomen
HAYDEN OFF WILLIAMS LK. RD. 3 Bed-
room home. Alum. siding. 2 baths.
Basement, Lot 75 = 200. $11,500,
terms.
PIRST to Pontiac
Northern, w eesiiont 3B, R. home with wall to wall igs in LR.
Drapes & V. blind lee kitch-
en with natural “finished cup- boards. Tile bath Basement has
divided recreation room. Gas
furnace & water heater. $13,200.
- to existing 44 per cent
rigage.
OFF AUBURN. $500 Down Im-
mediate Possession. 2 B.R. home
Newly decorated. Tile bath. Oi!
furnace.
OFF BALDWIN. 2 Bedroom home.
1% car garage O11 furnace. 1
blk to = School. $9,200. Low
F.HA. Terms.
ON SHEFFIELD. Large lot 10
x 130 with 2 BR. home. Oi)
furnace. Drapes & rug included.
$0, Terms
ee DOWN 2 BR. home with
car Garage. tet "Lot 75 x3 134.
ban’ ra sear Wired for elec.
stove New 750 gal.
septic ee Peace yard.
fly or couple. _—
nt.
, Realtor is E, ‘Watton FE 8-0441
Open’ Eves Bun .10 to 2
RANCH STYLE
3-BEDROOM BRICK
LAKE PRIVILEGES
nie Lay tree ¢
gree ig lat nee ee ee taxes.
iene sepa:
big "bedroom Zul wane ms; a8
finish, with beau tiled tiled floor and ceiling, a a
large recreation 2 car
gerage with 16 ft. ‘comand drive
road; aluminum storms and
acre out-lot onte lake.
Price $22,500 *
For additional information and
Sppcenta ents call FE 8-1784.
Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE
FASY TO BUY It's sm wonderful opportunity to
, buy a clean, modern 2 bedroom suburban home with es fenced
back yard. Available for low down
payment, Payments drop to only
$45 per month after first 2 years.
6 UNIT BRICK Modern 6 unit brick motel type
apartments located west of Pon-
tiac, New in 1953 it has income
of over $300 per mo. Lake privi-
_ ile oe = tenants. Full price =
terms, See {t today
REALTOR PARTRIDGE FE 43581 1050 W. HURON
; ie) ‘TIL 9
KENT Established in 1916
A HILLTOP—Nearly one acre.
Breathtaking view of large lake
and scenic countryside. 2 bedrm.
modern ranch home, built in ‘54,
arage, breeseway. ultry house
lack Poy Wen idsis Sy, 15. minutes’
drive to first to see
13. ar being seranaterred,
WATERFORD AREA—Here is a
Neatectania 2 bedrm hem
Dra:
we. ae shower, full bs:
oil heat, 2-car girage this
value at only “a 950, me
SACRIFICE--Owner jebving state
= sell this ——- 3-bedrm.
& den with attached 2car ga-
" rage, all in excellent condition.
|
ae Kent, Inc., Realtor
ee aia se
420g Dixie Hwy. OR 31231 conleaceat heen ne oa per cent. interes) Payments nee a Tes —— FRANK MMA eae ABSOC oe a GE, Neclark eaten ‘ u : at 4
peer E 5-9292! leges. Scenic area. Orly $16 - NC, taxes @ ns ES ———— nae —~ : oe bees bs HP. Your choice ., $4.00-$7.00
eT al serena eatived) eouple 28x42, RANCH HOM U For Sale Acreage 47) Business ee 51 Swaps’ 85 MAYTAG” WASHER | Rebuilt. De: | it SE Piiaind a:
emp ClO) = This eve Come inte $600 DOWN — Going street near) YOUR OWN Boss! | Oe eee anette ca ance ee eel, auto: ess te] tes
Syl . Steele Realty. 135 Highland (Msg) | WAS built for the owner for Whittemore, now used gs 2 fam-| 49 YRAUTIPUL ACRES, FARM OR eerie Rue bccn wis |? PIECE MATSRNITICS 16 TO) COCO BODIENED TING SHOP Cope sinks and fit J ant.06 up.
ylvan Village MU 40045. Highland, Michigan. comfortable living with nu- ofl and bath each. Basement. | “subdivide on black top road ad- Visan Food Supplement Plan 18. $25. Bendis dial-e-matic werk | 5, w MURON on 1585 | Laundry traya. ut
Truly & lovely home, 3 bedrooms, merous hopes a selling Reet, Full price $6600, $%5 per jacen to Holly. Only §400 per Minimum $50 investment required. er, $75, All Acl, swap 277? FE at _ V_ HURON PD 41555 ces Le ae
deol bd v4 all carpeting in pliving i mire. Also eresnawnt Fane's 2- acre. Terms. | A ae Ponta: Sf Sokol ye sri peta | FREEZERS ¢ : HAE rian,
ch cabinets ' a0 car garage. Full basement, 8T. MICHAEL AREA + Older _ Apply Pontiac Press Box $300 FOR EQUITY IN SMALL we}
; tle ‘bath =e. we divided THIMK! fncoinee’ thetacaeven ko d home in good condition, inst floor Tyee ali rela inenver oo = EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY TO) home on 1 acre” Balance $3, Eek 20 — ae fees pay ane ALUM. PORTABLI Thea! ri
bassheosd beat Back yard to Pega ‘ grill. Must be inspected to Spook aah dining im Kitchen, private lake ond gauss wonda: lease @ Gulf Ot, Bervice station Or trade for car of furniture, 1s cu. ft. Upright |... Oat y ee wide. a = i i
e 8 ated e - ‘ with oin usiness in e i
ren aar "garage, Privileges WHERE ELSE CAN YOU il ment, FA oll heal. Garage, $100| highways 4080 per acte. Terms. Clarkston jatertord area. PE | - - EE torme_ Samuels MA E#01.| Eisen :
beautiful give ae eh Ca BUY A HOME Fi I SPECIAL down, $76 per month. Pk ADMIRAL eerie RANOK, | FREEZERS - NORGE - FARESERS AIR C Rr. HEH:
ably $7.500-NO DOWN PMT Steele Realty 135 Highland Rd. DELUXE MODEL, COMPLETE- Chest and upright fe ‘phe se, 60 gallon tank, Worth-
K. ae Ter ] $82 NOWN Modern newly decorated WISNER SCHOOL ARBA — Oak- (M59) Highland, Michigan. MU LY AUTOMATIC 30°" OVEN New models, Slightly scratched or S stan compressor, $226, FW
emp eton, Realtor aL. five room bungsloy Gleam: ae frye. brag epg Se Pog oe 4-204. Pp aha e Two OLD. ORIGINAL ares mprred models at big dis- 6.
2 ~TOTAL— ng oak floors, new force m : 8, es fur- count prices
339 cee a Bees FE 4-4563 _ AND . air of] heat, lot 652317 “ort niahed rm. apt. Oll heat. Cornet | —————— g PCE 00 ‘On yer EVES rs "3 years to pay ANC HOR rE ENCES
$69 PER MONTH Walon Blvd. and Pontiac lot 50x500. $1000 down. Attention, Sportsmen 189 THE “BIRD TO 8ED 60 9.8% 4.3"" se -pamad A : Dody A pooreres
MB : oad.
MILLER _ WE TRADE Roy Annett, Inc Slings yioeMdowe FROGS) ARD\VARES | Ethrdon TaN |oe Soucy PRM On, PF. egg tl Milas 3 DORRIS & "BON REALTORS _ 7 vee -| DE LUXE MARDWARE & MA. | _ Working or not. PE 90% FREEZER, 15 FT. nick aul alses olare,
BEDROOM COLONI: 152. W HURON PH. FE 41557 Rewltors since 1923 RINE sales on main US highway | HOUSETRAILER, FT PON. | NoMa rofri fo iu gu. * 5 onl ean Aer end at neem )_ baer.
Move, eBET G8 tw Gi Sane ae ZONIAL 28 ah Bl aings & a a] 0.0406 For Sale Farms 48 to the a. dear 80.000 gros tiac Chiet toe ied car or cheap aeakeoes aapie | Sam a metro wane & crock
o a very n AH LAKE Estates nm Evenings & Sunlay 1-4 0 | wx~~~v en eee own plus approx or cas and tile. galvanized o rt, black ‘
Sere =. bedroom home. 2 _. , WITH A Income Propert 43A $17, si7.bo0's stock. MODERN PHA APPROVED LOT | HAMILTON AUTO ~ cori ipe and fittings Lowe.’ Bros.
gies ving room, large Lifetime Aluminum pe y 42 ACRE ESTATE ~ Fronting on Cash or terme or will swap dryer, electric, good condi $50 aint and 8u Kemtone,
room, Sar siitee Sera ROOF & SIDING main county road. @ nicely re- pociiedn Malate: tee {his ‘Thump Price 0000. FD ee, ie a bai oe 2n85 LAPEER UL corre 45491
| etc. Excellent residential street : COLONIAL F Deeg furnished, Car Me Nene | modeled farm house, landscaped | greg hardware. Includes 4 bed- MODERN § ROOM HOME IN IRON RITE. 965 B. #5, 00D CONDITION .
in Wisner Lincon Jr. area. Here s ARM HOME C ng i grounds. LR. picture window, pan-| room home. Approx. $40,000 gross | ‘©W®. full basement, gas heat, M 3-0416 after 3
is qi foal homes fore latpeitamiis FHA This is tt ~ 10 acres of land,| out. Gas heat & garage. OD) cled den with nat. firepiece,’ mod- hed will ‘trade equity, for small aub- —
or Onl { } $390 MOVES YOU IN level as the floor with frontage | Marshall St, EM ern kitchen, 2 bed, 1% baths, hot urban deme eed not be finished ee orn TERLING. PO-
coea at, leone Potter Be 374 PearuoNTE on 2 roads. With that 5 bedroom water ol) heat. Carpeting. Horse | $00.000 GROSS eee TR | ee — __\aroid camera. EM_}-2863
vacest end we have the key moders beme that has dining barn with box stalls, feed storage| foraware in the Detroit area. | SWAP a BY2H GAs STOVE FOR RONRE: mm NRETR IRC ONEN, 1 YR. OLD
Let us show it to you now. DLORAH BUILDING CO, tsa lo Dilated ple ar dug Sere ah arae. ynusuel| $5,000 plus stock, Will trade. apt. sine electric. PE 2-048 ri A
Bildor of National Homes =|. cP ACG, & DOrIOe. one eet tonal Toe teres “edjeining availasie. TROY HOME, «RMS. PLUS BATH owen “goss? softener .
bungalow. OT iee Getttne al. FE 2-9122 basement with hot alr furnace, ‘ i iateatte bay) tuicabeny village 10 180. Trees. ah toe. 6s raat] "enor ie orice = ~ —— . Trees rubs, garden ECTRI
pite diniig Lo ihe’ tovel\ aslenen ~ 2 FIREPLACES new’ heatolator. brick fireplace, BROS. ~— |Roy Annett, Inc.| iMieiss ost se mie 410,060, "Frade equity on acreage. | | | Saab auburn Ra:
fea = een een meters Eee ‘tr ag et : x a scltniice tocar Wiss” wares ° Realtors since 1923 ° WILL EXCHANGE 1055 tee
asem t 8 - =
Beet le came Oe Heat Masetae irs oMin| Sa, snade (rate win, nt, few nae mele He ggg REALTOR PARTRIDGE | "Batne Caine ep © eset od | EL USP Ronda: Pe SUH $129. ora yard. Quick pos-| in oven. tiled counter Tiled oa bat th.| white picket fence. 2 car garage ; ae Open Evenings & Sunday 1 - 4 Businesses throughout Mich. _contract, FE 4-4663
session. only $1,250 down-bal. $70| Full basement with gas heat 3) with root celler. 30x40 barn for 7 APARTMENTS & ACRES. 6 RM. HOUSE & BATH | FE +3881 - 160 W. HURON | WILL SWAP « MONTH OLD ENG-|LANE CEDAR Climst, suoxp, an
tae me wer cent interest | "CA WEBSTER REALTOR those riding -pooles | —_ for thous | “This 2 story — 7 apt. didg. ts! Only 05.000, 91.009 dwe Le 2! lish Pointer pup for % b.p. elec- | _Ike_ new, teascnabie, = °
nce cen o who an ‘ou et : : . seas
wusamert take esvares oxford OA $3122 Orion MY 2u21/ ork '~/the income trom we 10/ PF gira wiih garage” and Mice Tberm other buildings, Bome | Tiong yi "win, 448.000" pros tee See ott atta | LIVING RM. gary copCCm MARES
D acres of good i includes 4 lots, are fur-| other equipment. Malf cash, ~! jast year, corner Benstein & Glen- | —_°'_& P-™. Living ROOM FURNITURE, END =
foor home, wits & Beautifel F richly wre ok OER ED portunity to pa panera niahed Bnd «pay helt ok Laat poe iscrec ees & bath. Lee. n Rds, MA ¢08?) or MA WesTINONGUEE FOMP PUM Fi bles, “lam De cn ealen the STEP IAL ey oy
carpe vin, & all, . wees. © you can't affor oO : a ce # [
ar are inctuded: The “inias| be Beat 4d ogo. aap pass up : Only 2 miles rom, Ox- pogo et leah ees Price $14,900 with, 200" acres Wis a 4 rm. house. oToRe Bi, “AT 0 i) BLVD. i yaa elec. cement mixer. imeitrese cha ayia ringer
en as Pp. vy ing ord’ an close to hew schoo ‘ P. Ww. DINNAN 2-6820 < é .
space, oak floors, painted walls, ; Price $16,000 — terms, : SMALL INVESTMENT CAN MAKE WATER SOFTEN TO RENT. weeping mecbine ee. 48 ast ee ©
= = furnace, city | water. p: “CCHAYDEN, Rea 7 WE BUY - SELL -— TRADE 66 W. Huron _42577 | you an Ty Bell or swap. OR 3-236.
s garage. ying | § ACRES : Sal Business Pro er 49 route owner. Inquiries — write . cs RoE Cn " ane MATTREOBS, | 2x6, all lengths ............. 76 ft.
Be eee conten 207.88:| BUILD and SAVE | Srr“q2,tedvvam, me, 0 | : Property 49) _Feniat Preu Bes fh For Sale Clothing 86] Sind ar ck Feet | au at neue tn = - n , ee . ran eee Sa aS er E niture, reha sake Ave . ceceereeeere ‘
trade on income property. through our volume purchases and| land that will grow most any-| WHITE BROS. COMMERCIAL , BUILDING AT 424 SERVICE STATION ii “Goren “eg : .
nage direct to you saies. thing O-siney breezeway and) OR 3-1295 Osmun 8t., of Modern 2 stall station for lease, | 2 GIRLS, EMTE COATS, SIZES ARLE. with lamps, 610. Le ns 2x10, all lengths .......... 10 ft,
William Miller | Wevpavg fim plane or equate | garage, Priced W120 wi came mune) 10 ur | POEEN Mate Seeue“BhaOe ato] ESvewipent"nseneial stance | ALL aOR Biot Se ae Maid, all lenge ie 7 - 5. en ves. a vacant store . . arenaees cial assistance weave wi . . diel Rech I Ds ~
Realtce FE 20263 |, 2° suypuns ‘eitmarah R For Sele Lake Prop, 44| -20u2_cel Ou Sot available io qualified party. Call| EAN, ORES WORE | igen Laneous Ese vane :
1075 W. Huron FE 37210 Biel] “Sable sah ey or ake rrop. * _FE ¢1511 for information Boon ea days T a.m. to 11 pm.| On sie06 Bring Your Trailers;
Open 9 to 9 VES’ y 282 i ee ‘i : SUNOCO BERVICE STATION FOR osed Sun. 4 a t the balt ?
sence iT SIDE lo- Y¥_2-2821 Lake Frontage ICO Ie PLUS at peck «| | aus. Modern, well located, can | _store, "300 Orchard i ave a ee ella STOVE, 625 PIPE — BRICK — STEEL
cated near shopping area On Pleasant Lake with its beau- and relax and still have ereske oh oreush “training Lapizs S CHILDRENS Ct Ns CLOTHt geod NORGE G ser at SE OPEN 8-6:30 Mon, thru Sat. ,
and schools. Featuring: tiful sandy beach safe for chil- $180 per week income with |. Course available with full most_new. Cheap. PE : |" gas dryer, "i Whiripool wring:
O tai baleen Pang bait both ! eae ipl) estas on only 8 moderate chins salary, While learning period rs er washer, vo d ry 3 SURPLUS LUMBER © ;
So ge ste ant ise | te pcromne | | Hah etme mir a | MEW Amt yg www | ai re (ad . carpeting—Venetian blinds Elizabeth sory ae. " ar Wil- lease and this is the — Pht aol write "EN ae Flint, _ . — weancy NEW GENERAL ELEC 4
' ES ecreencl isompaens Lee reome | weg for mags | iioritersher. aca, “GILES Rilchigan, Evenings ‘Mr. Manley, | WOOL KNAT DREAD, BiH 1OR| “inte aryer. $90. Gas range | — BETT R Uys
dcar garage—gas heat Best Bu S ¢ Houseman-Spitzley REALTY CO FE 56-6175 _8Unset_6-7708, __ 3-006) after $:30 p.m Like new $60, Refrig. PE ‘MULE HIDE INSU: |
TWwlt ) were paved st ‘ pwninee Y 406 Washington Bivé. Bide. Detrott $6178 mmr ee | We're Going to Press Oi, EATERS Wi pyaiiatie areal ce pile sub- R Dixie peda Pontiac, Gross S fade 408s, Garrels, EM 3-2511 Se ester = Oe eee INGER pode ad “ve ATTACH. :
7 ‘ : s ake pr ! x Vac :
and GAS furnace, Dear ea: jent ving. Full beseaent.| Warren Stout, Realtor | Terms that will please yo ‘you, Con: TAVERE Kr Mt Clemens, Money- | OLD FOR $460, BALANCE 43,200| All for 900. Pay only ¢2 emmy Terms Curis Appl OR 3.9102,
2 ac c ach, 1 P _ Pearson's rniture roha! OTT 1°
. Tage-—cement drive. | storms rane screens, case TT N. seus Ot ne a 5-165) Ww Mapie Rd. Walled te MA UirMcaeal pe perma Lease 41 28. “Wills! contrast for'4,900. _Lake Ave. SELLING OUT!
| popes ee oe 313 100 He 4-1552 TAVERN Tet; Ueaiel tant 1 Several others to choose from, 9x12 RU WOOL FACE, 616.95. |e vinyl tniaid hosed Roapeocdsnt =
Gl Resale This may be the one, better estate with lv. qtrs. $9,500 dn C. PANGUS, Realtor Reversible, 01690. 1m er tee Ae ee ee $3.98
check! AUBURN Avenue froatage. 330 ft.,| C BAR nr, Tawas incl. real estate fe M M15, Ortonvill $34.05. Axminster, 98. Rug ay, -Ft. Wall "Tile ee Bsc
NO DOWN PMT a2 GIVALIENS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICD Daateos enna mas wean” qtrs. Gross $34, 372, ~~ Mone 2 t *. L mA — ra a ye Furniture, a BBER nage pant oe * Accs 6
OOM ome. . y to Loan B ers i141 W \
Utility room, gas heat; 1 bath’ GI- : ner wooded lot, pen $2,500.| SOM WILL ACCEPT TRADES (Ste 6x19 Axminister rug ......... $15 CHERO: Réa. ming 64. (State Licensed Lenders) bd STOP IN A D Fe
riches YeaStneta with fersicel f bes Franklin Reed. (Se (Sout of nage. Si ATEWIDE China ” Kelvinator « Hlanees. Let
tops. Others to choose from. GOOD BUY Bird.) 91-100 sy 100. Che 15] Site yeu pricse on these 1980
e x pe Rea] Estate Service of Z t MICH GAN AVE 130 x 225. B.D. CHARLES, TOR, $20 “TIARTL AND AREA
4 8 room bungalow built '50. Ter 117 8. Tei REALTOR
S 12x14 liviag room 2. bed- NOR ER slegraph FE 4.0521
cre rooms, kitehen. and dining SYLVAN VILLAGE — If ORTH M Rt REIRSC Brest 67") she foo LOOKING FOR a BUSI-| |-IN ANCE M ' Bane oee ‘ UL 2-4000
Retaiaisl nad SA 40| combination, 8x12 waty posal See a were nese? + oul he free “Michigan CO! PANY H Meads Mic 4 ELECTRI nig Ww WATER HEATERS,
br WA 2-car move to yivan age, siness uide” ar nd,
Black sandy loam. 3-car a. - tage and t% scre lot. Priced here is a 3-bedroom, mod- Nichotie & Harger Co. Partridge re Ssosiaies, 1080 W. BORROW. UP. #6 $500 see aw —_ he — UGH OLD, ER bles a Sar ial aa if ye
_ Tage. Ideal building site. hee $8.500 with just mortgage erately priced home for you. 133 W. HURON FE 5-8183 Huron, Hh Abs Sg Wr : 10 : RIGERATOR. STOVES, BOUGH SOLD, EX- eh fits west, —
eects, terme: sex fox) 40) costs down and approxi Has large birch paneled FOR PERRY ACRE LOTR CA CALL: Pontiac — ‘Orv Legs ai Ut Goed _e@aditon FE 27130), | eanned) Dua wal cial oni All an G) e
mately $65 per mo Lttoast ye eee. — P, HOLMES INC, 5-2983 GENERAL STORE Walled Lk, Year am Pirmenn | oe REPRIG. WITH ring set, “dlammonde, ress.
aon we wy CAND Commnacre nette. living ‘room: 2 bed. Yop oon oo PF a ENERAL §S R f : igham, Plymou lge freeser compartment, $189.95 TRADE. “IN DEPT. | | _ 4-64.
ASK FOR TOM BATEMAN basement with bath and OR_3-2907 R34041| One of the f orrow With Confidence your trade. Apt. aime gas stove ........5 - $38.98 FU A
: early finished recreation | LARGE Ghotce LOT incre erations of “hi tye leh bas $25 to $500 os Dablane eA ce we son BEbiet SHE) sngnted Atha oi] MApiv 5-60
room. Gas auto furnace man's Havens No. 2,7Lot No.| complete line of groceries and =: vi iN TV — GOOD COND. 1 Lesher ade Avoy kK. RE.
IZ er Bateman only 5 years old. Pull Pace lear oklahoma ct Gey Coe ware caan neny serene bere Household Finance HH sie Saathers anarver ce 3 to nving =a. oR Sher Hee aot
; $13,900 ae terms can be FE boo AKALND FE 32-0615 es mecca 48x petlabe souso stor, 3% 8. Saanaeiet. = Poor 4538 i "“Sraser’ ar “Oxi 3 - hye a “ a we ee
Realtor BIT ADEE n age bullding, modern'6 room and eve Se . rm, of] heater ......- ‘ 4
K bat x 15 Many other items available peeyey ee NEr
tne. Muawer call FE CIT : ampsen pala lea dale re AS ie: Plan Now e Terrife polantia fot hare eo ae LOANS $25 > Riv $500 | gs oF lee #800 $35 tudie ” WYMAN’S pene ith mn bb
Open Eve. . area, All. brick 3 bedroom, FOR SPRING BUILDING IN sas viewed to seu uickly at $27,000 curity ¥. 24 months to repay, Our| couch with end tables, 5 poual 18 BE. Pike, BZ terms. FE 41122 so colored bath set with
on REALTORS FE 4-0528 full basement home. At- HEROK ' By y appointm mat eat, easonable terms: service is fast, friendly and heip-|__9-2766.__ TRADE GAS RA ts PURER od
4 bedroom Peveber with ix | 377.8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. tached Sen eet oa4 < HEN S28 a ft.) Seis — eur office or phone 40 4 INCH OB GE STOVE. $35. MAtket trie range RB. Mu Munro Blec-| ga’ na aUpruy
com n st selection : ‘ : 0
ving rm. 8xi2 kitchen doors included in the low sites for better homes — com- Watrren Stout Realtor - J 2 1738. 14 sen I
with ay oxge and _counter- MUTIPLE LISTING SERVICE selling price. Plenty of leg- pare the living hdvantages of | 17 N. Saginaw &. ‘Ph. FE 5-6165 HOME & AUTO a oues ieee > Y pee ee Ei ne a -
ul] basement he kids: almost §-61 LOAN CO » sig-sag equipped eee = range. R. B. Munro Elec, Co,
* who oll. Ya, heat, Lot 100% an RereiLeok. compare and elect” Now “to suit YOUR BUSINESS he TN. Perry at (0 r ©. Pike) Baetitice reg es ul t st. Bye
( : Y E jorner e ce F will scce
é Toi Seek sh lenly Lh aa A LORD you'll be more than pleased. exact needs! lished cab busin bs in Ae he = 75 $8 56 per month for 8 onthe, sed Trade-In Dept.
HUNTOON L. SEE what $1,500 down will tp Lake, Serving Walle Lake, Com- ~~ GET $25 TO $500 | Cail creat Manager. Capitol. FE ROCKER oo eseseeeseeeeieens BB
” 3 bedroo m rane with 11x17 Say Perma-Sione beme of- Carl W. Bird, Realtor merce, Novi & Wizom for on your. 5-0407 =. | Ventty :
iving 10x18 family | gr fering 2 bedrooms down and 803 Community Bank Bldg x 456. Walled Lake, Mic A-1 SPECIALS
lichen rfl (sohlragennpirp 2. bedrogm bungalow. Itving room| room for 3 upstairs. Knotty =| FE 44211 Eves. PE 35-1392 GLET’S TALK) 2 1 ! att Ire 25 CHOICE SELECTIONS ear ar garage. oi} nee ene i HERE ee _briviieges Pine CE rece! On an : CTED SI ES: BUSINESS” ¢ 17 TVs, 5 at $29.06 each
attac “€ ' attached ar garage - i )
in'on FHA ter arm, nore rs | S600 faker Full price). corner lot, only, one bioek Beautiful rolling bullding sites ee ! ee as 6206” All sete guaranteed unecedition ; ,500, ambert ee with some trees in a protected Sub H fog for 30 days at Obel TV
Grice only: 618: neighborhood assuring the future uburban ardware Elis ‘
ae GOOD BUY AT $6,100 value of your home. Winding| Complete ‘stock and pott O AKL abeth Lake Rd, FE 44946.
2 bedrooms with 12x24 liv- A clean home with besement,|. wrest SUBURBAN — This aved streets. Some parcels wi ajor lines, fine 5 a i: Sai rn
Fit room; 10x16 kitchen. Completely fenced 250 ft, lot, auto attractive 3 bedroom frame 60 ft, of frontage, Low as $150 doe tiksaves tnd Inte ng. Only ADMIRAL DEL A-
me Racal ons with olf no oil furnace, dinette space and bungalow has been recently down. delivery treek rAd ae Loan Com any tors, lge. deep freeze, . de
erage. Op 2 100 good kitchen. Act quick on this| fedecorated. throughout. 2 bey preverty ah Baty ‘hes on $08 Pontiac bes Yona Loy frost, § year warranty. Frigidaire
a ies, feed at fenuine bargain. bedrooms | down: eat: L ADD’ S ors ca your own. Urml err awe 3 “<0 : giectria Tange, helance 62 per vk,
nership split. Nets over $13,000 > ‘
N'T MISS THIS Attractive kitchen and wes yy & L
WAN W agate in splendid location, west reste esement, pas 4286 Dixie en pd aby per year. 44 W. Lawrence st C1808 A Lov GER x ;
: Lapeer E D T will teke ATA
of noeaes a ee, Land | cat ‘Penced rear yard. rive-In ments of $5, per mont,
geaped very, # attrectively 6 se is real» a te $2. 300 For Sale Acreage 47 Chotee eorner on, pel thorougt A months er discount fe ensh. Sal
this. ie a value you should see Ez FHA terms siatcelate apenas gia Sea saasy| WP Evervihing” a. 4906 gear. _ Capit b
REALTOR FE 5-9471 4 ACRE LOT ON WILLIAMS LAKE) Stor wants’ and’ in ihe condi. : eels 0 AR Ts) A
GOOD LAST SIDE location. Ra. 2-6373 th : a0 7 $25 $500 THE pn
~ OPEN EVENINGS & sueOAty, p IDEAL HOME Here is @ lovely 3 bedroom - ness apt oe, lay pour’ cunek 30 2 °OMMUNE EY LOAN SD e-0071
For a retired couple or newly- ric me for yo p book because one will be
ccna LISTING SERVICE weds. Cnaliary veil built one. Rene hn benpeces, Oe 40 ACRES Jove at first ‘sl as TY aise ERIE FOS SERYICS sorek. Parniture man a
Entrance. closet, basement com- knotty piné kitchen and a includes nice Tpartinent good _}— tices 0 kinds. NEW &U D.
letely finished off. Nice size din- full basement with ideal Vacant property near village of| ease. or terms on posts f-4 our trade dept. for real
NEED A FINANCE- fog room. arese. ey ela nacre necees ee room, ores ee no eer ict desired. FO R CA S$ H IN vA beryaing’ MONTHS To PAY
oe 950 with terms s home Is on a paved stree the country ) .
BE FIXER? Order Classified) uae ot it bomee inat‘are| ih city water ond 00 Buy at ‘only $6350 with 42,9004. | WICHIGAN BUSINESS |HURRY, sell things) te tax iat de com ep
| Ads to sell, rent, find a) today. storm: Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor | SALES CORRORATION through Classified Ads arnipg- Phone Pe a
| Siti Wont FE 2-8181 is soe EABRENCE W. GAvLOMP | R AY O'NEIL, Realtor 200 Digle Hr is bpen Telegraph | JOHN 4, LANDMEASER BRORER Anything goes! Dial FE 6 mmiton Bree Bee or 1 mite | ede ee
nt Ad number ! . KE 4.9584 28 s. Fda oe Rd, , gs AMPLE CUSTOMER PARKING PARK AT me yo ze 8181. x of hae Heights on Auburs Seuthg Center,
* ; : w r.
Scan, 7 . | . x »
“ , a : : i “ ; ts
¥ ; =, e m
° z \ A
a ’ ° “ ; # ‘é 1
PAROS May Fh = ae oh a a a a a ee ek Peal ee Foe Ge. 74 ee SO ee, Cay O4..¥ SS: anc ee A : an ee Ag by > eg A .# net ay Reh ee
Fa
E =
Ae
STANDARD TYPEWRITER. $25
a an “ 12 SHADES. — 18 SHADES.
6 SHADES.
S500 $1.25 ea.
Fa Geamus dears.” OL 98 on: {actnerator and Dutch Oven Doors v anhole Covers and Grates
BLAYLOCK & BUPPLY CO
a «,%4-F Pomel Spe f
949 eres, yer
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1030
a - ¥ See AA
\ i .
Penn ear
LUMBER €O.
PANELING bono i naga Aa
“aly, at
cligres INC. .
4x8, Par ——
CHURCH'S, INC.
SPECIALS Gas — = oy
sng sores rrison Bande sor. FE 7121
-| PA ARAKEETS GUAR, TO T TALE.
"4th St. FE 2-4
sik CANARIES. } Ate
pr Bappiles. Crane’s Bird Hatch-
ery. Auburn, UL 2-2200. Sisee
Mobil
Sales 430) Bins bp ay
open?
~ OXFORD ©
TRAILER
SALES STEWA
HOLL . Y VAG
GREAT LAKES
to.! le to 53 Cl ry .
get trom, We trade, po oy rent. |
have some wonderful buys
right now, See us
souk of Lace Orion on M24. mil:
MY selection of 6 and 10
Alro a targe selection of
late mode! trade-ins We top them
al, on trade-') allowance — at
Bob Hutchinson iief "& Detroiter
e Homes
ers & @eok
i A pict det le
rete
ay. One
PAR
Trailer Sales
1540 Lapeer Rad.
MY epotering ne
Mobile hom
Orion
New
Used 8-10 Wides USED TRAI PAYM
Bottle Gas
Parts and Suppli 08 vacant NPR ee
Open 8 to f
VACATION TRAILERS FOR SALE
er rent. Jacobson Trailer Sales
» Lake Rd. Drayton
3-2838. 6485 William
Plains OR
Wrb UskbD TRAILERS. ME
or our lot fo’ Wem
Holly «ell
cert
_tuse 4-677! and Oxtora on
TRAILER EXCHANGE
Marine and bales 15210 Hol'y Rd. Holly, ME! KHURST
Lage Orion
1959 New Moori Between Lake
Andersons
LER ON RENTAL ENT PLAN
FE 2-3200
_Closed Sunday
: WILE 10 Jp
~ Rent Trailer Space 79
AUBURN nats” MOBILE VIL-
iage Tie finest % mile SE Pon-
thas
‘10_N._ Opdyke
LiMiT 2 BLOCK ‘NSIDE CITY
tror
Coaeh Park
JXFORD MCBILE 1 MANOR FOR
thosé who want tne newt. oe
tlos lots 16'x40
~ One mile Ba:
OA ville Rea bus sto FE seen
Pontiac Trailer
5-9002,
cement pa
st of 1 Quors on Lakes
PARKHURST
court
les
wonice EHOME =
FE 3-7117 63 MT CLEMENS ST |
_ BEHIND THE POST OFFICE |
FEBRUARY eat
"65 Plymouth ¢ d 0.D .. $605
53 Chevy Bel Ait hardtop.
sharp .. $495
$2 DeSoto, 4 dr, clea $205
Roger's Sales & eerie
695 Aubur:: Ave FE _2-9555 |
SALE OR TRADE ‘55 CHEVIE|
stationwagon for jater modern sta |
_tionwagon. OR 3- 3456 | or OR 3-7111.
$5 DOWN
‘63 Chevy : cones ls SOUS
‘83 Chevy. R&H . $3465 |
| eeecuees | transportation. |
| TOM BOHR, MU 4-1716
NO MONEY DOWN We nese * very good selection =
4
» *S3. & 55 evys, Fords,
tlacs, Ole, ® Buicks no nears
| down Luck ae cales, 193 8.
_Saginew FE ¢1006 or FE 4-2214 |
FACTORY BRANCH
‘96 CHEVY eter. WAGO
jo’ and leat:
Focernuee
$1495
Pontiac
Retail
Store FE 3-7117 5 MT. CLEMENS ST. BEHIND THE POST OFFICE
CHRYSLER «DR. POWER "210°"
ter,
steering, Rett brakes. Auto.
trans, . $275. 101s ‘Durrant
_ St. FE 4-0785 31 DESOTO feo GOOD COND.
"Fett 91) (For Sole Cars - a
‘3 FORD LW goon
- 1953 F ‘ORDS Standard-Automatic
. TAKE YOUR. PICK - ROM
$395 BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward
MI 6-3900
"$S2- FORD 2 PR V-8 NEW MOTOR.
$260, OR 3-1110.
5 FORD R RADIO & HEAT- = A gy ery NO “Money |
Bre ner Fo
1953 FORD CUSTOM, V-8, 2 DOOR,
radio and heater see aarp. No
money down. $22 m
Eddie Steele FORD
KEEGO HARBOR
FE 2-2529
1958 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. V8,
std. shift Take over pmts, Bal
$1, 675. EM 3-3038,
CLEARANCE SALE
Rot dene 4 dr, 6 cylinder.
‘83 Press: 210, 4 dr. PG. Oly $395 ‘34 Peper? J, 6 cylinder. om \-
ea
62 Desoto. a” er., R&H. Clean.
Rogers Sales & Service
695 Auburn Ave. FE 23-9655
Home of the Rugged Jeep _
1958 MERCRY_
4-Dr Parkiane H-top. Full
er q
195T OLDSMOBILE
r . $1995
1955 OLDSMOBILF “ _ 2-Dr. H-top Power
power brake ‘
"TAYLOR'S CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE
WALLED LAKE
MA AlS6L OPEN EVENINGS.
€ ~“Top-Value”
USED CARS |
"52 STUDEBAKER Coupe ...
GLENN’ S. MOTOR SALES
000 actual miles, fully equipped.
$195 down. Finance $1,895.
Eddie Steele FORD
. Harold Turner Ford.
R&C RAM BLER SALES We have been snowed in. Now
we have to sel! 30 new Ramblers
in 15 days. Buy now & save.
Sonn rices ur higher.
SLOGAN
WE BELIEVE
WE CAN BEAT
ANY DEAL! EM _ 3-4155
i980 FORD STATION WAGON. RA
Credit
gr. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7
_Harold Turner Ford *
1955 FORD CROWN VICTORIA.
rele and heater, white wall. $195
dwn. Finance $795
Eddie Steele FORD
KEEGO | ORD ae 2-2529
= Sais Y
REPOSSESSION $287 full price. $1650 month
Good engine, and Mir bei” crea mo rust.
No cash needed eli, Gromt
_Lakes._ 86-0402 FACTORY BRANCII
96 OLDS 2 DOOR H-TOP
Super ‘88'' —.-Radio and
Heater, Hydramatic,
$1395
Pontiac
“CY" OWENS FORD
$1295
CV
OWENS 147 8. SAGINAW _ FE 5-410!
‘094 FORDS | 4 to Choose From
STANDARD OVERDRIVE AUTOMATIC
FROM $395
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward
. MI 6-3900
| 1988 LLOYD BUS, “GERMAN, MUST
sacrifice Take over payments of
$54 or $1147 cash. 206 Auburn
Call FE 2-5832_
| 1953 HUQSON WASP, GOOD CON-
dition, R&H $200. MAple 5-6181.
~ "54 LINCOLN CPE. $795.
FE 5-8413
i957 BMW ISETTA—A REAL GAS aver ; 72 miles per gallon. |
Sale FE 8-4530, Community Motor |
ales
MERCURY MONTEREY WAG-
on 8 passenger, $1,450 FE 5-0395, |
_ After p.m
Mercurys 3 to choose From
MONTEREY H-TOPS
VERY, oa
vty,
FROM
$695
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward
' MI 6-3900 £
CAK PAYMENTS TOO BURDEN- Retail
Store WE 3-7117
CLEMENS ST BEHIND THE Post OFFICE 1953 pQLDSMOBILE 98 SEDAN HY-
DRA. RADIO «
Mer. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500.
_ Harold Turner Ford
Hardenburg — GUARANTEED UseD cans
‘85 Buick Spi. 4-Dr. $895
"48 Pontiac $ 76
CORNER _CASS & PIKE FE 5- +398
‘86 OLDS 2? DR BT, EXC. COND.
FE 8-3133.
“Ramblers 15 tc Choose From
H-Tops, Wagons, Sedans |
FROM
$395
BIRMINGHAM
RAMBLER
666 S. Woodward
MI 6-3900
i967 PLYMOUTH ~ CONVERTIBLE.
R&H, Powerflight, $1,595. MI
4-9233
Plymouths (6 to Choose From) (1) SHARP CLUB CPE. ‘54 (2) EXCEL. 2-DOORS. °55 (2) BELVEDERE V8 H-Tops.
some? Let us help you sstises to
some less expensive model.
Lake Orion Motor Sales 7 M*%4 AT CLARKSTON
FORD — MERCURY - My Py26n1
MUST mars tel MERCURY HARD-
by 3 R H. Real clean, OL
2.0266
1951 MERCURY CLUB COUPE. |
eens & HEATER. ABSOLUTE. |
LY NO MONEY DOWN Assume
armen: of $11.46 mo Call Cred.
t Mgr. Mr Parks at MI 4-7500,
Harold Turner Ford
USED SPECIALS _
‘55 Buick super 4 or
'54 Qids 88 with er
- on super convertible with
38 Chevrolet station wagon.
HOUGHTEN & SON
YOUR FRIENDLY OLDS DEALER FOREIGN SA
CAR LES
$3. DESOTO CONV. ESS “OND. | AND SERVICE tee offer takes, OR 3-432) COND. | $28 N. Main, Rochester, OL 1-976}
|_5 » p.m
NEW
REPOSSESSION wl } l tl $254 full price, $14.97 month. Clean
car, no Ldap No cash Eo erry Ram eT
Mr. Bell, Great Lakes. FE 8-04 ==
Trade-ins HASKINS Joo cccocce coor. tam MONEY ‘38 RENAULT Dauphine .... $1375 | | 57 METROPOLITAN H-Top-, $1295
SAVING ‘57 PLYMOUTH 2-Door $1185
SPECI ALS 57 "RAMBLER" Wagon 6 cy! $1633
37 “RAMBLER” Wag. 8 Cyl, $1688
1953 Plymouth 4-door, radio, heater, , cee
like Aes tires. Above average BP ORD 3 Dor ® eee bias
condition No money down . $399 | +53 FORD Fairlane 2 Door ... $1111
1953 Ford hardtup, V-8 engine, Ford-
omatic, radi: a as Since av- 56 PLYMOUTH Sta. Wag. .. $1290
Sours: Come) Sey Jott) ces |e FORD S01: ©0222 -- $777
1955 Chevrolet 210 hwrdtop, V-8 en. | ‘55 CHEVROLET H.Top 8 cyl. $1185
Rist, peweretids. radio and heat | -s5 “RAMBLER” 4 Door ... ¢ 708
1955 rere, ‘mae tudor, V-8 35 PLYMOUTH 2 Door 8 . $ 666
- ordomatic, radio, heat: | +54 PONTIAC 4 Door & ...... $ 499
1955 Olds att, Holiday Coupe, v-g|'54 METROPOLITAN H.Top § 765
engine, Tram a r eat.
~ Beautitul light green and ‘64 FORD 2 Door 8 .......... $ 678
WOCF TSG Book 6 cece . f
SALE’ CA CARS oie "83 NASH Amb. 4 Door ...... $ 495
1857 Chevrole! 210 2-door ‘53 FORD 4 Door 8 .....+... $ 495
‘Powerglide, heater, beautiful ‘ur.
auoia at! tory finish . $140 "53 CHRYSLER 2 Door ......$ 345
1998 Chevrolet Bis¢ayne 2-door, V-8|'53 NASH 4-Door ....... vos. 8 245 |
engine, radio. neater. Beautifu!| . 4 - |
2-tone turquoie $1699 | °53 PONTIAC 2 Door 8 ..... » $445,
195@ Morr!. Minor 1000 9-door, eave 4 "62 NASH Ambassador 4Dr, . $ 295 black nae nee of gas
rage 31299 ‘$1 “FORD 2 eo ee $ 122
Hacking Chev. | 657) Dixie Highway ee rg! :
Open. nites "til 0)
: MAple 5-501
a
id [ 211 8. aaoinaw BILL SPENCE
OE FE 8-4541 B’ham GLENN'S.
solid red with black leather, 14,-
rks at
EM_ 3-4156 Time-Place ;
To Buy
HAUPT Pontiac Sales - ‘$8 BUICK 2Door H-Top . $1094
‘$6 OLDS Holiday 4-Dr. ...... #104 Sell-sational Values
g ceesee $1274 | 1954 Pontiac, 2-Dr. sedan. Radio.
en i a Heater. 7 tone Scar You jeg
"56 CHEVROLET 2-Door .... $1004): ety tax. We'll finance
-Dr. $117 rolet 4-Dr. sedan, V8 55 FORD Station Wagon 4-Dr. $1174 erelide, Hac Ad as.
‘35 CHEVROLET B-Air 4-Dr. $ 094 pala 5 @, te or 31 will make
‘ss FORY 2-npor *) ssosee $44 | 1096 Ponting 4Dr. ‘Starchiet hard C—/ White and blue. Bydremate,
55 Be 4Door Becin .... $ 894 Reason Heater. Whitew $195 down, monthly vpayments
‘34 BUICK 2 Door H-top . § 4 ~~ 4 A 8 . Hydra-
ic, ’
‘96 CHEVROLET Sta, Wag. $1394| 2 tone finish. Low down payment.
24 mos. on ance,
‘34 PONTIAC @Door ......... $ 494 | 1953 Pontiac Chieftain 2 dr. Hydra-
d matic. Radio, Weotere 3s “down.
53 PLYMOUTH 4-Door ..,... $ 304 N. Main ris : Cla we
nm nights ' MAple 3.3008 or Apts 5.1141
‘67 PLYMOUTH, TAKE OLD CAR
bc equity & take over payments.
| condition, PE after
4 p.m. a
~ I tesfatcg nae va,
HW. good condition,
952, Ww “ST HURON sites. 214 v ca Mbweaa
FOR “TOP VALUE USED CARS 2:30_8nd a ie SEDAN. HYDRA. FE 4-737 i FE 4-1797 RADIO & HEATER ABSOLUTE.
‘$5 MERCURY ee 4 ayments o1: $5.83 mo, Call Credit Di. sharp, OR 32713, gr. Mr. Parke at MI 4-7500, 1958 MGA FIXED CSOPE. SIX,| Harold Turner Ford
1958 PONTIAC 4DR, SUPERCHIEF Radio, Leora Hydramatic, Power
steerin. brakes, white side
welts so new for only $2,150.
140 Exmoor or call FE 5-9770.
1951 PONTIAC. GOOD COND.
Snow tires. OR 3-3330.
KEEGO HARBOR FE 2-2529 SGGRAG GREER Teitae ~ | 4953 : RIVE RADIO: NEVIER ae.|. 4 dr Hydra 30,000 miles. Very SQLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN.}_clesn $505. FE 4-0248.
1957 4 DOOR STARCHIEFP CATA-
lina, power steering and brakes.
$1, roe or will consider trade. FB .
- pty bla! 4 DR. SEDAN. HY-
Pwr. brakes & pret:
ww tires. Decor. foe of hee R&H.
Low mileage. Sharp 04,
SIX LAKES SERVICE STATION,
9241 Cooley Lake Road, '56 Ford,
2 door ne Buick.
2 door har ev.
_ door Delain A few cnoager cars,
56 PONTIAC 4-DR. HT Real clean, ivory ee red body,
Hydra., exe Walls, ove
this one, you will
PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES
Oakland FE 2-235!
G
"56 Pontiac ........$1295 WAGON, 870 4-Dr. Power steer-
ing and brakes. Tu-Tone ang one-
owner.
JACK COLE, Inc.
“Ply mouth-Dodge-Chr sler
1000 W. Maple at Pontiac Trail
Walled Lake M
'87 PONTIAC ST, WAGON
4, 4 door 8uperchief, Hydramatic,
R&H.4 ae carb, coral & bg
uip.. curta nett!
_i Wm. ¥m. Pascher. F rE 5-857.
ie PONTIAC 4 DR. STARCHIEF.
excellent condition, bargain, by
owner. a eon a ot Grande.
REPOSSESSION $298 full price, $17.08 month. Per.
pa A epee — _e: no rust.
peel ed . Bell, Great
Lakes | FE 80402
* PONTIAC SUPER CHIEF, 2?
.. H-top, coral & white, 4 barrel
Sachoreuere. R&H, white side-
walls, ae Clean, exc. cond., low
mileage, 1 owner. FE 2-4490.
1958 STUDEBAKER OeANOED.
FOUR DOOR, R&H, W-WALLS.
CLEAN. EXCELLENT RUNNING
aoe PVT. OWNER. OR
ODAY'S SPECIAL
“50 Willys jeep station wagon, 4
cylinder. 2 wheel drive. OD. Only
ROGERS SALES & SERVICE
695 Auburn Ave. FE 2-9558
___Home of th Rugged Jeep
1957 VOLKSW GEN, FULLY
samipps ped, 12,000 actual miles. ex-
oni lea sites nice. $105 down. Fi-
| Eddie Steele FORD
| KEEGO HARBOR FE 2-2520
SCHUTZ SPECIALS
ACT NOW!
$7 1953 BUICK
ay APR, 7CUSTOM SUBURBAN | HARDTOP — Dynaflow 4.... $ 448
, " FROM Finn) FOMTIAG
$495 V-8, stick ves & 405
NCLIAN 1957 PLYMOUTH BIRMINGHAM | AUTOMATIC... 1298
RAMBLER 1956 OLDS -
666 S. Woodward ROLIDAY 0 66 aise, S108
MI 6-3900 1958 FORD _ "$00" HARDTOP ........... $1998 ae. Ely mouth Savoy
ree $65| HARDTOP = ia $ 895
RU SS JOHNSON ine PLY MOU sek
MOTOR SALES STATION WAGON UTR _. $1698
MY 2-2871 Lake onee | 1935 FORD
| FAIRLANE-—Stick ses. $ 895
“ Ih [ 1954 WI C) STATION WAGON OP? egeBE $ 595
1954 FORD
PONTIAC-CADILLAC | STATION WAGON”? 50s : 1954 FORD
All Low-Mileage Cars. “suromanid . +. $598
1956 PLYMOUT 1958 PONTIAC 2- STARCHIEF 4, DR. Earauina | DR. AUTOMATION ...;... - $795 ull power, radio, heater, hydra 1958 DESOTO mati i . =a BS beet Bit | SPORTEMAN DEMO. .... 260s 2595 1956 PLYMO 2 | SPORT WAGON” ian $1205
1958 PONTIAC SAFARI 4 DR. WAGON with | 4 DESOTOS radio neater, nedrenane. power; = your fovics Poseaee vee $1295
goer 4 & brakes Dime. blue | 1959 MG
in color W actua mile i 40 S| COMP. SPORT ..___..., vee. $2498
OS | 1957 DESOTO 1956 CADILI.A | DR. 7000 Mi .. sae C1908 “62 SEDAN. Beautiful blue with | white top, radio, heater, white | 1955 CHEVROLET —
tires, full power & sharp. | CONVERTIBLE—Black - $1005
2 JID : 1956 ADVENTU RER REAL nice |
vex HOE oepIugnaEE | TEMS oa“ “98"" u-tone | 1957
Myo with interior to match.| HARDTOP SREVROLET . $1895
‘all ccc equipment and oriy
19,000 m 1954 DODGE “$1696 DR. automatic -—s....,., $405
1958 FURY 1957 MERCURY H _ SPORT COUPE. Buckskin beige | ARDTOP — Pad 2... soees $2105 so ee pe tlogd radic, 1957 FORD
eater, W © Wa Tes merco-/ ‘ ee
aie power oles bee | . ite — Barton - $1698
us -w only "1956 roADy miles. $1695 FAIRLANE 4 door -.__ . $1105
a 1958 CHEVROLET
1951 RAMBLER WAGON—Power 2195 CUSTOM A V-8 with radio, Beare paraeadue: tack 1957 FoR
Tetniccaa hee, oo WAGON ee “+++ $1095 miles & e new, 1956 PACKAR 1695 "400" HARDTOP > . $1498
955 PLYMOUTH "eh cies 1957 OLDS 4 DR. WAGON with radio heater,| 98" Holiday... ....., $2195 werflite or uipment. =
is car ‘ mmaculate. Only SH 1958 IMPALA : —_ miles but ‘seeing is ARP ok . $2205
eving, aa
“1954 CHEVR $1095 4-DOOR DE nOLET pms
1954 CHKYSLER - 1957 OLDS NEW YORKER 4 DR. SEDAN, | CONVERTIBLE coves $2108 , beautiful green with matching in-
. One in a thousand for 1956 BUICK
conditioh! 30,000 miles. HARDTOP toes $1005
Wilson Pontiac Cadillac -
1350 N.
Woodward. 2 YEAR WARRANTY
SCHUTZ * DeSoto-Piymouth abealer
MI 4-1930
17d hg gy. 912 § Wood — 6-5303 .
kbs \ THE. FORTIAG TRESS. MONDAY. FEBRU ARY_ 23. ree?
FIRES
3 Television Programs - lle
6:40 (2) Weather.
, ege
a ig w° Drama Pat. OBrien Br itish Release A new model ot the C120 trans-|*tuctive’=that Is, overlook 1:00 (D Burns, Allen. ake eg port, due for delivery within the|®°dden texture. (9) African Patrol. 11:30 (7) Night Court. next few months, will have a non-| After all, it isn’t a western and romises if
(4 Death Valley. Beautiful, (9) Theater (cont.) . stop range up to 4,000 miles, com-| it means well—shouldn’t we pre-
woman mixes romance, rob-) (4) Jack Paar. f risoners pared with about 2,300 miles for| tend, therefore, that ts ts
bery. (2) Nightwatch (cont.) the present C130s, “stimulating” or “absorbing” or Substandard Building,
(2) Unoin Pacific. The Air Force chrrently has; “valuable?” Segregation Charged
1:30 Orc mat ob ri TUESDAY MORNING 900 Suspected EOKA transports capable of the longer) won no t Willow R p ject
che ‘kes 6:30 (4) Continental Clas : fare range, the Cl24s, They can carry) ©. * a w KUN Fro
beautiful ‘‘Nightingale’’ from 6:80 (2) Meditations “son Cypriots Turned Loose tremendous loads for considerable * , * * \
pig tnaagee sen 6:55 (2) On The Farm Front as Celebration Rages distances. But they lack several Ridscetoed ; ae Creat eel WASHINGTON (UPI)—Top ted
( i ar Movie.ia:99 (2) TV Cotlege , critical features, nge’ tried to tackle the quest °
Drama: Lew Ayres, “Dr. Kil. a ) ° * * * | ‘Where is sclence taking us?" eral housing officials have prom-
dare’s Wedding Day.” (°42). By Ul NICOSIA (AP)—Greek Cypriots without ever getting close to the ised a full-scale tion of (7) Big Show. Powered by conventional piston) ih tha housi
(4) Buckskin. Judy goes rab-|7,39 (2) Cartoon - Frolics piety wildy eee aad Gaile engines, they are slower than the |Mut of its topic, ia eres as are gern paral bit hunting, ends up with pa (7) Breakin turned loose more | C130s driven by jet turbines linked nihe fi t poose. st “ime. cal prisoners Sunday. Only two in- _ _ AP Wirephote 5 LE eid varry.| anit im s0 many of these Sunday ‘ted in the federal housing project (2) Name That Tune. nd (2) Captain Kangaroo. ces fharred the jubilation. SAILING ALONG—The boys with the “Tom Sawyer” looks ing propellers. Thelr troop pela things, there was teo much wan- |at Willow
8:00 (7) Polka-Go-Round. co ene Friend Harry. The detainees had been held) are brothers Terry and Bobby Primm of Abilene, Tex. The fun |gurized to make possible carrying on too Hitle purpesivences, *
(9) Movie (cont.) 500) Mean Classroom. without trial under emergency) they are having would have thrilled the real Tom Sawyer with the passengers at high altitudes which! tern Lg ricer So The marae were registered cav- : re ons 48 Sus | honiemade sailear they devised to take advantage of the West jare safer in combat and often (4) Restless Gun.. Union m cpt gulati pected mem 4 a nities expressed by \by ¢ three-man delegation from
Iry “si ° : 0} tl Tovas hi Anda 8 _ alry “surrenders” to confed- 9. 59 o ; aca) Raenr Cenk. bers of EOKA, the Greek Cypriot) texas high, dusty winds. make possible higher speeds.) PADOD™* [Was htenaw County which conferred
evene. |10:00 (4) Dough-Re-Mi underground which haa been wag- |Moreover, the giant Cl24s are not; On the other side of the coin,|With congressmen from Michigan $:90 (1) Bold Joumey. South, (2) dean's Neteboet ing @ terrorist campaign against jintended for use by paratroopers,|Leonard Bernstein on CBS-TV,4"d housing authorities here last
American alligators. 1: 18 (7) Lay | { Charm, the British since 1955. }for jumps into combat, as are the yesterday gave a demonstration of Saturday.
(9) Movie (cont.) 10:25 (9) Bill S axm, * *. 2 E L ° H ] C1%s. |what Sunday daytime could be “If you are right, we will take
(4) Wells Fargo. Assignment 10:30 (2) A Spee. The govétnment announced al) oe A eEwlSs e DS | The Army would like to test out. like—if, indeed, it must be an the hide of somebody,” Norman
leads to ae wh feb (4) Amal Sead detention camps on the island ’ t ‘its ability to fly a wel battle ‘intellectual ghetto.” | P. Mason, housing and home
Hardie widow. ( ~ group of paratroopers (about 1,400) * * * | financing agency administrator,
(9) Special Agent. were heing cleed aad emergency J d H R I *
Te) owe Ben OH Reve ee” (raiaont ites The act tad] JUCY S FLAPPY ACTULTL [ova "rape and rnc) ues miner to exe] Mt fe denn "/11:00 (2) I Love ‘uucy. been assured by the agreement y musical invention, Berstein tanned) The delegation, composed of Su- Keay wants to be oe owe (4) Price Is Right. last Thursday in London to give By EARL WILSON ibattle, oxyyen into the afternoon. Hts perior Township Treasurer Richard
maaan ; (7) Cleo. ea the prisoner eae | | NEW YORK — Judy Garland was such a triumph when she’ ‘hour had a sense of structure— Wagner, — Run Ge =
9:00 (7) Voice Program. Music (9) Leon Errol elthen Seiad = returned to the night clubs at Miami Beach that Comedian: |Bernstein built solid block Ge ation att osha Hame from ‘Oklahoma!’ to “Music|11:15 (9) Nursery School Time. 5p ee in US [ l e block, did it tersely and with some |A#so orney n Man” with Patrice Munsel {11:30 (2) Top Dollar *% * ‘Joe E. Lewis rushed over and helped her sing her last song, wit, and moved steadily toward ton, listed these complaints:
Dorothy Collins, eal i es, (4) Concentration. Hundreds of other Cypriots im-|. which happened to be something entitled ‘a meaningful climax, —Willow Woods Development Co.
Alfred Drake. y (7) Peter Lind Hayes. prisoned after conviction of vio- “Happiness Is Just a Thing Called Joe.” sole developer of the 1,650-acre
(9) Marry a Million. Comedy. (9) Friendlv Giant. lating the qisebargs ll eager ‘ spectator asked Joe E. if he'd been el n 5; act THE CHANNEL SWIM: “‘Adven- Ae - — a allows , nd the Rd
(4) Peter Gunn. Eddie’s tem- 14:45 (9) Science All Around Us. pr ee ee *oatty at alee arel O “I don’t drink anything stronger than pop,” , tures in Paradise,” a one hour, “J Beates and is
porary apartment comes TUESDAY AFTERNOON cxpocted to get reduced terms or|f retorted Joe E. proudly. “And Pop'll drink | adventure series based on stories flaunting FHA minimum stand- equipped with corpse. erie nee ar anything” Continued Peace Hinges - -—.
(4) Danny Thomas. Danny| % Se oe * * & ie _ Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller’ve been on Financial Relief Due : * * ao into Ls egeed trying to (9) Whistle Town. The barbed wire gates of the|j” invited by the new CBS Person-to-Person TV | From City Commiss pee Hayden —The company ~refuses to con-
ren Sli etl le acre 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. |Mammari and . Kokkinotrimithia setup to be interviewed for the whole half: ty Commission struct more than the 108 homes
9:30 (1) Play of Week “"Weahing-| (4 It Could Be You. detention camps swung open hour—first time it's been done to one tam-| ‘Defies Court already built in Superior Township . ton Lady Aue ‘ % (7) Play Your Hutich. shortly after 3 p.m. Sunday, A ‘ ily since for the Harry Trumans. | FLINT «®—Flint's ‘stranded 20,-- because of favored treatment ac-
o : Page (ee (9) Mary -|stream of buses, jammed with de- 's eaenan ee ae lewes 000 daily bus passengers could stop iD Ta hiti Tr ip corded by the Ypsilanti Township
Front (22:48 (2) Guiding Light. tainees and with some riding on| WILSON c y, everydedy asus, hitching rides today, Board (4) Theater. Old soldier (Lew
Ayres) reminisces about his
1:90
12:50 (9) News. (4) Sports.
(2) Our Miss Brooks.
‘ITV News and Reviews|
AF Is Awaiting
rope,
the roofs, headed for Nicosia.
\Greek flags and EOKA banners
_ Pregame fered 7 sition fated tm thn cata are wuhjnt to ehange itieet ue Most Intellectual | \
Chganel S=WIBK-TY Channel (—WWI-TV Channel 1=WRYE-TV Channel § URLW-TV New Tre ansports on Sunday . | noon Sag
‘geo (1) Curtain ‘Time, Comdey. {10: .3 (7) News: Gordon ah ii!
abide : (4) Queen for a Day. me aes ys Be ee
Ropes ie (7) Weather () Bendetand, C130 Jet-Props Could) yy wuuaM EWALD Michener looks lke (3) neiaat feund. 11:00 (7)*Soupy's On. 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. Speed Paratroopers to NeW YORK (UPI) — Sunday, . ; night aw Siaer. (9) News. 4:30 12) Edge of Night. Europe Drop From U.S. | siternoon has been called the ABC-TV all.
6: eather: (4) News: W. (4) County Fair. e ‘9+ “intellectual Ghetto” of TV, but|ABC-TV Lawrence Welk loses his: 6:15 (4) Box Four. (2) News: LeGoff. (9) Sherwood Forest. I wonder ff anyone has ever renily|4uto. sponsor for bis Wednesday | yone apo 6:25 (4). Sports. — |L:15 (9) Weather. 6.00 (2) Jimmy Dean. PANAMA, (AP)—The Air Force felt any intellectual ferment yeast- hight ‘TV’ and radio shows in May
¢:30 (7) Comedy (cont) (4) Weather: Eliot. (4) (Color) George Pierrot... exptcis to begin receiving soon 8 ing up within hint after =the ‘TV entry will be continued, - (9) Wiieter Alfalfa. Cartoons. (2) Weather, | (9) Looney Tunes. new model of its C130 transport gunday with the tube. | the: radii show bea be crepe ds oe Bs 11:20 (9) Theater. Musical. “Frea)5:30 (2) Bandstand, plane which conceivably could) Yesterday, CBS-TV brought yn (4) of Riley. Comedy. Astaire, “Yolanda and the (7) Adventure Time. speed paratroopers direct from its “Great Challenge” series and (2) News: LeGolf. Thief.” (45). U.S. bases to a battle drop in EW-|1 know with a show like this &
reviewer is supposed to be Housing Official
dubbed Marilyn's voice for those songs in
‘Some Like It Hot’?” Composer Matty Malneck, musical di-
A strike that left the city without) HOLLYWOOD (AP) Actor
bus transportation for four days|Sterling Hayden and his four chil-
~The company insists on segre-
gated housing in the subdivisions.
16:80—WJR, aymphony 9:00— WIR, News, Mre. Page
1
~eenee oa decades after (4) It’s Great Life. were unfurled. The detainees) rector of the picture, swore to me on a stack of ASCAP | ended yesterday. Members of strik-\dren are 2,600 miles on their voy-| The FHA has certified 100
(8) Ann Sothern. Hard-to-get (7) Liberace. banged on the sides of the buses. checks that Marilyn's voice is so improved she did her own _ ing transport workers union localiage to Tahiti. They still have| more Ypsttanti Township units
tickets for Broadway hit (9) Movie. shouting ‘‘Long live _Makarios songs—in fact, she may be dubbing for other stars! Her 170 voted 76-11 to accept a new!1,000 miles to go for FHA in ad-
cause problems. 1:30 a be The World Turns, and “lane Ie BORA “8 voice has an eloquent crack which is premeditated, re- ach egilie by Flint City| re * ¥ tases! with dition ho 600 units already built
10:00 (7) Patti Pafge. . st mos 'n’ Andy. : rsed ecords. | orneya for Hayden's ex- there by the company. MU > Rachie (7) Margie. visti) treeps | Iiving im tents hea and calculated to sell zillions of r ds The new agreement hinges on fi-\Mrs, Betty de ee Hayden, say a a tas. ‘Bese
: , 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. along the routes to the capital) The Jack Paar-Vs.-Peter Lind nancial relief the bus firm hopes|they have been advised that Hay. adequate Inapection has been in- (9) Boston Blackie. 2:00 (2) Susie. waved and hurled mild ribeldries Hayes TV strife continues. Pete fy , | to apie ia the egerigd ae — goers has orn Aiees ‘ j
(4) - house. (4) (Color) Truth or Conse-|at those in fhe busues. The de- he mission, The company not dis-|hae in the Marquesas Islands ~ .
(Dean Stockwetl) ralels quences, tainees shouted and waved back. &"swered Jack's challenge to [ei close the. specific kind of relief it} Hayden, who sailed from Saus- RCA COLOR TY against stern old-fashioned (7) Day in Court. Weeping relatives embraced the 'meet him in the ring by com- Me : anticipates, but it reportedly may /|alito near San Francisco Jan. 18, io. ”
father. 2:30 (2) House Party. detainees at Nicogia's Phanerone- ing on camera on ABC wearing | be a charge for transfers. peer been “ ond nf oe Jaies at
| i | ‘children in a ega ew e ’
——— -_Departinent oe Ceres wae held, Treetigg an eye pateh, then Inviting 1 ere Commission was expected ox wife, But the court had forbid. SWEET’S RADIO-TV
ting job, building boat, sail-|3:00 (2) Star Showcase. packed the streets. ‘spectator Rocky Graziano on 6 isosting Sentbecon. — F oe to ag Gia children to
ing with his family. Tony (4) Young Dr. Malone. . . Stage and saying, “Next time said its members would strike. ea og tp jute consid-
Randall, Carl Reiner. (7) Beat the Clock. Mock § ace Ca | I'm going to send him.” Hayes again Friday if the relief ix not. 4 - ay 10:30 (7) News: Daly. (9) Movie, p psu eS dded, “I didn’t b granted. Drivers and other union . , (9) City Detective. Search for|$:38 (2) Verdict Is Yours. added, pe avril iced members were scheduled to re- |, "8. Hayden's attorneys said lovers’ lane bandit. 14) Seeen Ghees Beets. fo Pave Wa for Man impersonation to be offensive turn te their jobs this morning. ("CY Would confer with Maria
(4) Play (cont.) (7) Who Do You Trust? y —it just turned out that way.” County authorities to see what
(2) Drama (cont.) 4:00 (2) Brighter Day. P id. “H The new contract runs stepa can be taker to retutm the i WASHINGTON. (AP) — Dummy aar sald, “Hayes means Feb, 22, 1961. It calls for a five-/children. aac space capsules — some of them nothing to me—he's just ( cent hourly pay increase the first ;
Heart — pa carrying small animals — will be; small talent as far as TV's year and a four-cent hourly or cost (| ° R ° 1 ti
Popes launched with a series of different; concerned. ‘Variety’ said of living boost, whichever is high- aims: egis la on
eae missiles to make as certain as pos-| his show Was an imitation er, the second year. é‘ 8 ob Ea sible the first American spaceman| of the Jack Paar show. Ap- The company sald & aki met Is Ke to Int ration 14 Mineral reek Yy will return safely to earth. parently he needs the ne! de have sufficient funds to pay the y eg
it Among” wie — 7 * * * publicity. I seek no pub- MARILYN oraa ean Casale would BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) —
ingredie The National Aeronautics and| jicity, yet I guess I get more than anybody in Show Busi- permission to raiee|Voter registration is the
; Wedd 4 Space Administration wants to be ness.” Life has been taking pictures at his home for — * kay te — Z sure it can keep tab on the cap-| ooo 4 P additional money, ; the whole problem of
23 ] |sules when hey come back. a The. strike affected 123 rivers mys Engelhardt, Alabama
34 Pace part . * * — and maintenance men who walkedjstate highway director and state
34 Car home = The curt ott Cape Canaveral Henry Morgan’s TV show’ll be trimmed to an hour to make|™t last ‘Thursday, roresae ¢ Commitee] SAME DAY TV Avers Fla., would be the ideal point for | 4 - = ) out room for Mike Wallace ... After six years Mickey Spillane’s|,,,, ,. * * * i a safe recovery of the capsules, But (N $ RVICE os uous NASA wants to get ready for the writing another Mike Hammer beat-'em-up ... Barbara Bel inols ane [ as If Negroes are gre to regis-
41 Female rabbit possibility some of them may end! Geddes took over Mary Martin’s mid-Manhattan town house ter en masse, he said during &lf if called in by 2:30 P. M. ‘ Sunday television interview, “that | ‘ Fees up far inland. , or bring it in yourself and ; ig + ++ Vanessa Brown's ex, plastic surgeon Dr. Robert Franklin, a a 0 0} an will settle it in so far as integra. : Most éasily The agency wants to fill a big ] save the difference.
ony ‘gap, in Texas, in the tracking sta- is writing a book about the H'wood beauties he’s overhauled . ; Ne one Ripe diren: — ney a
34 Changes ihe pai will help recover | Gertrude Ederle says her autobiography has a very happy Pag ispigsoce = Bar gheared baitat bor. 8 ee See the DOL
4 Meleras 0 = i | _*« *« e _fnaing—two movie companies are bidding for it. : “Naturally we are greatly con-' ~WHIRLPOO
cance. SS ey ee ee ee | ; . “injured seriously yesterday when a) ai attempts at integra- Mark-12 Automatic
So abstract Seng ¢ Bitte gto cord 3 watenea million Beisel ailing the gap? ° = *” ___ (plane crashed into a ditch ‘while! ion “not only in Birmingham but! Washer with. Push-button #8 Seen § Barrier og tudents —- NARA WAG eraser cr teri EARL’S PEARLS: Myron Cohen heard of a really small rere to land at Kankakee various other schools in the, Control
amount 7 hese 38 Moves pf qeegen Glennan has told the Senate Space |town. All it had was a general store, a gas station and a speed)" | "Dempnock Jr., 39, of 15636 state next September.” — ig re ed
DOWN by bio ass tienes shee Committee that amount will be|trap ... That’s earl, brother. Park Grove,- Detroit, was killed. « & & ._ Just Arriv
8 voice 10 Great Lake 31 Italian city ( ) needed to plug the gap with a Arthur Smith. 40. of 16400 Carlisle,|._=neelhardt appeared on WAPI- MEW 19859 GE Australian ll married royerty 61 's son rad (Cc yri ht 1959) ur i. . e, TV’ Alabam fi
ost: 16 —— bidssotns Most (Bib.) lar, tracking and communica- opyrignt, Detroit, was taken to a hospital 6 a press conference. REFRIGERATORS
—s pute bed inro pons i gemectionses HY Yaderiing tions station at a location in south- here with feed and leg injuries He said Southern members of
instanee Swite erm Texas. not yet selected. : and a broken left arm. = oa ptr Na Ww. it HOUSE ak RE fiaenarons,
: |) Airport. officials- said the plane Z ’
| Murrow Leave to Mean | site te atc ater txt tis Fk a part of « move} ERS : | | attempted to land it downwind in-|.n, cht the left wing in the Dem. | ~ NG DRYERS.
(7-7 L000YSsS MNaQio Frograms Loss of a Top Journalist | es ose te wind, they sia st wine $e | ocratic party. DO-IT-YOUR LF . | futile attempts were made to warn TUBE TESTER
“T — the pilot by radio, . ’ w w | F
38, 1) = URW, cao Wh, ser = WOAR, (AID «—«WETR, (127) WRUN, (1680) IRR, (Hive) By CHARLES MERCER Financial worries: none for the, The plané was a Beechcraft Bo-| Chemical Investment eed $e ' NEW YORK (AP) — When Ed- test of his life. Principal in-/nanaa en route to Kansas City/ Planned for Michigan Open ‘tl ; TONIGHT WJBK, Sound Off Wye, ws, F Elizabeth 1:90—WJR, Ma Perkins : ¢|from Detroit, It ran into @ rain- WOAR, News Acé fast Club WXYZ, News, Shorr ward R. Murrow leaves CBS July terests: -the communication o . HAMPTON ELECTRIC. 00—W 11:00—WJR, News teva, pane CKLW. Heatier, Davies. ~ ideas to le. his craft as a|Storm and teversed its course to| WASHINGTON @®The Chem ¢:00—WIR. News Pea bohdeans hoy tastes 1 on a year’s leave of absence, people, O edl at Kankakee’ 4 civ tn Nott wen Ww. Mares st:
CKLW, ows, e W. #2, News, ba Ww wean News. Martyn 2:00—WIR, Rt. to Happiness television and radio will lose its reporter. Principal concern: “I at Bh » @ city ical industry will spend $34, .
wane ews, Don McLeod ORL nee Seen Nee? Sar, “Ete, Speriet, foremost journalist. believe this country is in grave) €rn Illinois. 350,000 on new facilities in Mich- ee
WPOW ewe. Sports WON | Music $:30WIR, Jack Har , Red perhaps mortal danger.” . igan during the next two years, WJBK, Stereo CKLW, News M. Lanpitt Bob Lark ~ ek *® | achieveniaed mployed by| Some Nights a Burg! Manufacturing 6; 80 WIR, inner Date ~ Under the terms of his ¢ontract, cue ore e ig a rgiar
ine [Cwm Wms Mendtes Star” | Wea" See MMCE HEay | which has. several years. fo run, CPS for 25, years, principally #8 @in/e Even Make a Dime! eyeat on sie projects now wnder RLW: Ne News, Chase WXYZ, Peter & Ware. rea herr Murrow says he is obligat legal-|@ reporter, Did.a hitch as a net- n n spent on nine projects now under
CAR, Page's Party TUESDAY MORNING | wiek Neve pe alas ieee News, iy and ily t AS ed | work executive, didn't like it, His KANSAS CITY (AP)—Burglars! “8Y and $75,000 for a project
N 5 ¢ v of Agric. Chueh “te $:90— WIR, Dear @hirley y ee ee “See It Now’ series an outstand- - Pineda scheduled to sta.t soon,
7:00—WJR, Guest House " foe Rate . We, “You're talking to a tired 50-| ling: (conteibutentito av aournalisen’ entered a paint store and knocked) . The lation said more than
WxvzZ. Morgan Wz. ered wo 10:30—CKLW, News, Davies wae Races year-old who wants a rest,” he '"® } the combination off a safe, prey RL. Lew Jr. «Roo WXYZ. News, Winter cxLW & told me. “It's an age td ‘enjoy|* classic in its field, the recipient That released tear gas which $147,230,000 has been spent te
an Newp, ce gon: jan Pi1:00—-WJR, House Party WCAR, News, tae mens some travel and contemplation if of innumerable awards, ‘Person Chased iithemilout ion alwhile: build chémical plants in Michi-
CAR. News. tet tery Bird xLW, ee y ride t you have the time. That's ail there to oo yore ark long Returning, they dynamited the| 5 daring the past five
WJK, Music Hall 8 aed , |& popular and commercially suc- od e oe oy epare | “Cenw. T. David Bee Ca, ews Pisztya wig, Woman is to my requesting @ leave.” | cessftil series, “Small World” con- gts ney Ped elgg SD mana Wd, News, George © Fat dors ws, Since Murrow did not téfl me
WPON Vo] Sry WAR. Ne oe news, ‘more, it would be presumptuous S spaticoal series ed popular, ger Harold Swatoes, it wasn’t i ‘ ee ’ ns t cont mu ‘ some ™ —_
a ane Andy Twa ate n "Roberta, gman ent, ieee hee WR, Par a. Bt4s/to try to read his mind. Yet) from while on leave. ° . focees: Tas! ape =A our ta WXY2, News, Wolf A ‘Wastion, Met a variety of sources other) than * * , ; HIGH SCHOOL f aT PTC C - wR, eves S CRLW. News, Toby Dar “7 , News. Mel ahaed \Murrow, one can gather facts that! Pesemecher’s comments: Moscow Radio Invites SCHOO! You ARE 16 on
ee Gounds elapse 12190 Wa Wells PON, ‘Don Méctinnon contemplations While traveling, . .| modern ‘corporate world of togeth- ane PPOMmaers .
yy vy ’ _At Pee | 1G Wen, Mase Ben % wi Tevet of 7 fel Wentay. p Murrow, Edward R., fiftyish,|erness, a loner, It leads one to] LONDON (AP) — Moscow radio| AT UOAAT o ranma
Wear. news TOK. § Peachen WPON Sports, MacKinnon |feporter. Health: excellent. Per-ibe viewed with suspicion, alarm today invited the: American and) PAL rile "
$i90—WIR, Orchestra —_—_ ” ais cptley 8 Biereo 6:00 WIR, News fonal life: happy: a wife, @ son,!and jealousy. One finds numerous] Soviet people to suggest what!
LW, World Today 8: Laid! ola News, B. cruest R. Wews, a7, Nera, 8 ean’ wentie @ farm in Pawting, N.Y., that’s|instances of men Murrow. has|should be done to stimulate Soviet- ’
Del ‘Jace Bellboy ORL W, News, David . | 12:30—WJR, Time Out Muste] CREW. Sports, Chase - & pleasant home, Temperathent: muietly helped in their careers.|U.S. contacts in science, culture, baa ‘atin’ . on Gobet Br.,
UR. sympeony Bsee, ewe eone one News ors Woe: TMowy Mcleod |, teserved, some say “shy,” eX-|One cannot find an- instance of| trade and student exchanges. | a :
},, Cone de - heen tin © Ww Don Mackinnon | tremely ‘slow to anger, cool anid Murrow aa another in the} The broadcast asked for pro- Freee ebassensinbicenoeresterseny aba | s "Ba P| ; ngs, i fey J News, “Maxwell 8:06 WS Music Hall * lucid when the going’s rough, Ad, back. | posals to be sént’ to the Soviet: pre seedeeneeds Hbeerevercevss eewene AGG, +.
JSBK, Jack, Bellboy WJBK, News, George : f pokey “ cay f we peezenme quaintances: innumerable. Intid! His enemies only charge is that|radio by letter, cable or tape rel Ony ta shy sepeneseesiesseceenyeneiiey
, Chuck : Sports mate friends: extremely few. |he grew too big. . cording before March 10. -
than rere,” for ait instrumental-
ists, for example, to get started.
‘There must be some Artie Shaws
being "y concert artists, but why don’t they
turn out more entertainers in. the
field of popular music?"
* * *
1945 at the age of 18 to take a
$1,150-a-week job singing on a San
Francisco radio station.
“IT figured that with that kind
of money I could buy the univer-
sity in-a couple of years, and!
your’ |issue myself any diplomas I need- ed,” he recalled, smiling, Three’
years later he quit to tour with
Freddie Martin's band at =
“e Isi59 9 week. pypend my tile as 8 onetown per
Merv himself quit college in) ‘tavecyoody thought 1. wei 'eraay|
to take a $1,000 weekly pay cut,’’|own
he said. “But I wanted to see the
country, and I didn’t want to
former,"
* * *
Griffin spent four years on the
road, made a top-hit record, three
“'Atfempt to Liberalize|”
Billboard Limits Due GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) — An
attempt will be made in Congress
this year to liberalize regulation
of billboards along the 41,000 mile
interstate highway system, Sen,
Patrigk V. McNamara (D-Mich) me
said.
* * *
McNamara, chairman of the
Senate subcommittee on interstate
highways, said outdoor advertis-
‘ing interests want to allow some
lareds, such as municipalities, to
lérect billboards and still be eligi-
ble for full federal highway aid.
ot * * :
MeNamara said he had an pcre in Holywood, had
ai
“But suppose they. do it ‘out
and it becomes: an iy hit.
The kid usually dies overnight,
too. Very few ‘last. They don't get
the training.”
«x - t *
Merv also feels too many show
world folk today bare their pri-
vate souls along with their vocal
“open” mind in the proposal, cords,
Maj. Camilo de Cienfuegos,
chief of the Cuban army staff,
climbed down from the bus to join
them, but was told that the air-
port was 18 miles from Manhat-
tan.
* * * Billy's Crusade
He weighed the matter a mo-
ment, then climbed back.
The bus left for Manhattan with-
out any marchers.
There are more than 21 million
“The performer's job is to en-
miaoa
C5 i. oy
+:
— So
0.0 -
Big rero-degree freezer
2.1 cu. ft capacity, with its
om: door stores up to 89
packages of frozen foods!
wo ice-ejector trays
with nave storage container
on freezer don. Just slide
tray into slotted container
and pull handle to release new GE
|| swing-out shelves - pring all the food
right out front!
No more fumbling for foods you can’t reach!
No more messy spilling of hidden foods!
These remarkable new G-E shelves
practically hand you
the food you want
when you want it.
bicycles in the U.S,
Melbourne Heads Say
Graham Drive Giving
Big Boost to Religion —
Since Friday night more than
125,000 people have heard Graham
preach at three meetings -in Mel-
bourne's .open air Music Bowl.
Seventy thousand turned out Sun-
day. Nearly 400 required first aid
for effects of the 93-degree heat.
The president of the Methodist
Church of Australia, Dr, A. H.
Wood, said his church is heartily
supporting Graham.
“We ary extremely grateful for
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rebuild and service all makes. .
CURT'S APPLIANCES | 6183 Jameson
ice cubes.
oe ey
1959 combination
y retrigerator-freezer
Shelves slide up or down at ae ak
of a button to give you the exact shelf-” -
spacing you need when you need it. And
shelves lift right out for easy cleaning.
re steal shelves are tested to hold
more than 150 pounds! And that's far
more than you'll ever have to put on
them. They'll take a whole shelf full of
milk bottles without a strain!
Ceramic Floor Tile.
with
door ..
HUFF REFRIGERATION CO. SHAW'S APPLIANCE INC.
$15 N. Center St. 4ll Main St.
oma he ster, Michigan Phone: OL 2-4061
LAKE ORION FURNITURE
188 S. Broadway - TOM’'S ELECTRIC ~
Lake, Orion, higan a 92430 Northwestern Phone: MY 2- i Phone: Farmi MA 6-2561
PEER Sivainnes co. . - 1142 E. West Maple 7
8161 Commerce at Union Lake Rd. Phone: Walled Lake MA 4-1559°
e: UL 2.9000 Phone::EM 3-414 . Model BH-
ONE YEAR FREE SERVICE 1S
; withican DISTRICT, 6501 £ b iavasa DETROIT 34, MICHIGAN, TW 2.7600
e Family-size
o. 4cu. ft. capacity,
. automatic defrosting.
Two aluminum
. door shelves
removable and adjustable,
let you store “tall-as-you-
like” bottles right in the
storage | lexibility.
PLUS Twin Ve etable
Drawers. Handy Egg Rack ,
and Bitter Keeper. Foot-
Pedal Door Opener. Large
Meat Pan. Straight-Line
Design (no coils on the back).
ONLY
, $3 99 A WEEK erator section
completely
ive you plenty of
After small down payment.
Based on distributor suggested
retail price $379.95 with trade
on parts and labor
by our own highly
trained experts.
Additional 4 years
warranty on sealed-in
refrigeration system
Ceiling
Tile
= 11.52 ota. . «65. 8Q. FT.
-— Sound dead-
; ening acousti-
cal tiles. Easy
fo install, just
staple in
— place. Do
your rooms
now. ,
Roller Set Helps
You Paint Foster
regs = GE
Cut your pee time! In-
cudes l-qt. baked enamel
» 7-in, So roller coater
ae ‘tremovable cover.
Chip, Mar Resistant Sero-Glo Enamel
2.19 Odorless semi-gloss silicon-
ized for extra beauty, and
wear. Dries to smooth, easy
to — surface. Colors.
ob yous money bach Quart Ceramic Wall Tile in 3 Colors EASY to INSTALL YOURSELF for , BATHROOM Beauty! TR
Best because, it won’t rust, chip or peel, comes
in a wide selection of moderri colors to fit any
decor, is fully guaranteed by Sears, is easy to .
itstall yourself. Aqua, yellow and pink.
Sq. Ft.
Nielels «es .95¢. Sq. Ft. A. Department
Ae t, Basement
Attic
Stairway
21.95. .
Safe, compact. =
oar © —: “Wall Moe sek em
$ down and tt. 8.95 6.88
bene ey pater hee, eee oe c. ‘
© Finest Flat Well Oil Finish.
® Regularly Sells at 5.49
Soft luxury-like room decors can be yours with this finish:
Leaves no musty “painty” smells in your homie. lttakes
little effort to get smoothly painted suriaces. Now avail
able ready-mixed in 14 style shades. ee : i 3
7 : e - a 4
-
SHOP TONIGHT ‘til 9
ase Med Odorless Flat Wall Finish
Paint poate Main Basement
crack SEARS. 154 North sogloei St.
Phone FE 5-4171