7 The Weather | qe PONTIAC PR U. 8. Weather B east Showers, : (Detelts Page %)- 116th YEAR *#*&%***& PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 —36 PAGES _ Into Arena ’ = . a | 7 WHERE NEXT, *MR. HART? — Before he spoke to the Pontiac Rotary Club yesterday noon, Lt. Gov. Philip A. Hart (right) pointed out on a map to Edward L. Williams, club president, his ator. Rotary Club Hears Senate Candidate’ Hart Alarmed by Soviet Salesmanship By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. | spread of freedom slip from their ® The Soviet Union is being more |8"iP. successful in. selling communism to “nations United States is in selling its free-, dom product, Lt. Gov. Philip A.) Hart warned yesterday. Hart, speaking before the Pon- tiac Rotary Club, said the Amer-' ican people have nobody to blame | but themselves for letting the! The Democratic candidate for, 13 Killed as Typhoon Hits North Formosa TAIPEI, Formosa «® — Police said today Typhoon Grace killed 13 persons, injured at least 17, * * * He was introduced by Harold A. Fitzgerald, publisher of The Pot ee Press. self,” Rotarians were told. “Once | you have won it, it’s the use we put it to that really counts.” | “Freedom isn’t an end in it- | | 3 Wee Tales About Formosa and Moscow WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Defense Department announced it has suspended travel of mili- past and next stops .during his campaign tour as Democratic nominee for: United States Sen- iRed China and people at home will Red China, U.S. Slugging It Out in Tough Talk | Many Ifs in President's Warning; Reaction Is Favorable at Capital: WASHINGTON (?) — Red the prospect of having its mainland bases blasted by U.S. bombers if it starts a war in the Formosa Strait. If things came to that pass, what Red China ‘prush-fire could ignite a =. ~ jraging to engulf the whole world— conceivably even a univer- sally dreaded all-out atomic conflict. This tough new U.S. attitude to- ward Red China's militarism was officially disclosed at Newport, R. I., yesterday by a top Us. au- thority. This official briefed, some 70 newsmen at the summer White House. after_Secretary of State _ Dulles flew there for a lengthy conference with President Eisen- hower on the China crisis. The briefing expanded on a strongly worded U.S. policy state- ment authorized by Eisenhower and read to reporters by Dulles. The combination provided the strongest U.S. warning yet to Red Pontiac Press Photo of attack against Nationalist-held islands in the Formosa Strait. - * * * The statement said: * 1, Eisenhower “timely and effective” Sen. Charles E. Potter’s seat in Congress illustrated how independ-| ent nations—‘‘who were tused_ to! going ast bed at bay a HUNETY | ned eaatbate the © a ye year bigecsi er ee Eisenhower has reached no Hart said this country's freedom | pea decision yet, but would not product was not selling as well on hesitate to make it if circum- the international market because stances warranted. ithe current administration has | faited-to“head-off- the recession." Hart. urged the administration | to announce a decisive policy on i fend. ‘the whole free world, and China was faced today with} -|might~ start as-a- limited ‘combat threatening; China not to carry out its threat would order action if ‘he decided any Red Chinese af- itack on the offshore islands threat~ ie "pene * States is pledged by treaty to de- 3. Any Red Chinese extension of lits territory by force endangers “ac- quiescence therein would threaten = Begin Union _TEAMSTER INVESTIGATORS — Teamster President James R. Hoffa's three-man commis- . sion begins its investigation of allegéd racketeer- ing in the big transportation union. The Hoffa ad appointees are: retired Detroit J WASHINGTON ‘could free his union from a court- appointed monitoring board. itors to discuss the proposed_ con- vention, (AP) — Team-| sters chief James R. Hoffa has by U.S: Dist. Judge F. Dickenson postponed a decision on whether 'Letts, which set up the monitor- to call a union convention which Objections to the plan by atl pega and electing .officers monitors themselves led Hoffa yess lal ee Board ‘ind is mon- Under terms of the court order ‘ing beard, the union can get the /monitorship ‘dissolved by holding ia convention any time after next cee The election would be su- rangement as part of a compro- mise settlement of a lawsuit challenging Hoffa’s right to be- ‘Hits Racket Committee State Bar the current Formosa crisis. peace evetywhere.”’ The former Birmingham resi- dent said: “If the administration is committed to shooting in de- fense of Quemoy, this should be ' made unequivocally clear so that, certain the Communists will at-: Nationalists would need U.S. mili- tary men’s families to Formosa because of the present crisis there, .- and left 8 missing in northern Formosa. : * * * The 115-mile-an-hour winds and torrential rains of the year's worst’ Pacific ‘storm made~2;500 persons homeless, knocked out communications and electrical power, and caused damage to crops estimated at several mil- lion dollars. *, * Grace moved up the East China Sea yesterday in the di- rection Of Shanghai. Chrysler.’59 Lines Stress | MOSCOW (UPI) — The Com- munist organ Pravda accused the United States today of plan- ning aggression against the- Chin- -ese mainland and said Russia “cannot remain. inactive." WASHINGTON (UPI) — U.S. officials said today the United States is trying to build world pressure on Red China to stop using force in the Formosa Straits and start acting like a peaceful world citizen. * Safety, Passenger Comtort| By ROBERT B. TARR Managing Editor, Pontiac Press MIAMI BEACH — Chrysler Corp. enters the 1959 automotive market early next month with its five lines of cars extensively restyled, and carrying engineering developments designed for greater safety, better. per- formance and increased passenger comfort. Chrysler President L. L. Colbert pr esented the '59 cars to newsmen here yesterday afternoon. DeSoto Division will show its cars to thet public. Sept...23, Imperials, sheet pe ie a —_ Plymouths, Dogger: £00 oa see aire seats is a smaller Chryslers will be shown, in} fhira seat which turns down as that order, from Oct. 6 iknow exactly where we stand.” 'dom -at home and stopping, the ‘clared, is to keep the free world jwhere we stand with our compe- munist attackers. * x * * * * An essential to maintaining free- flow of communism, Hart de- informed, _‘‘chapter - and verse, | tition.’ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) “This Dulles brand of spur-of- the-moment diplomacy is unduly | risky and reflects the adminis- 4. Despite Red China's threats, and. military buildup, it is not yet! The statement called on Red China once more to renounce the use of force except in self-defense. “The United States” intends to follow that course, so far as it is tack, nor is it apparent that the| tary help to throw back any Com.| Sharp criticism has been Committee for its handling of testimony involving an alleged deal between the 1 Judge George B. Hartrick (Kim Sigler. Will Defend Hartrick aimed at the Senate Rackets ate Oakland County Circuit and state special prosecutor State Bar President James E. Haggerty told the third concerned, the statement said,,annual state- judicial conference in Detroit yesterday, |” ps a New Trouble Line tration’s lack of any long-range policies to counter sporadic Communist flare-ups, any one of which might explode into the world struggle we all dread.” Lack of a firm policy on the | Quemony situation has placed ‘us again on. the brink of war,” he said, Se HELPS BROADEN ECONOMY - Communist China, Hart stated.) _ is-an example_of Russia’s endless attempts to give such an impov- erished. nation. “a place in the sun” by helping broaden its indus- trial and economic base. “The race isn’t going to be won by the fellow that is first to the moon,” Hart said. “Arms are great, but ideas of freedom are more powerful.” ~ It's a question of what this coun- try chooses between — butter. or) guns, Hart told the noonday gath- ering at the Waldron Hotel, He said he believed the country could’ trim its. 40 billion dollar de- fense . budget without seriously jeopardizing national defense. He urged a sincere effort in showing the rest of the world we ‘are ” East China Sea an arm rest when desired. through 10th. In continuing the dart-line styl- ing which’ has characterized Chrysler cars ir recent years, the cars appear with new front. fen- ders and hoods; new rear fin and fender panels, new roof and floor panels, new front and rear bump- ers and: grilles. More head and leg room and additional seating com-| fort is claimed by the designers. ee Re : An innovation sure to get plenty of - atténtion is swivel front seats which turn at the release of a button to permit easy entrance or exit. . The swivel seats are standard on Other Chrysler features for 59 include: V-8 engines of increased displacement for all lines, with two new 383 and 413 cubic-inch engines; a new rear axle with a 2.95 ratio (the same as overdrive) with which a —10 percent fuel economy is claimed; torsion-aire suspension standard on all cars with new automatic rear air units available for cars carrying. extra heavy loads, An electronic rear view: mirror (optional) which automatically dims reflection from_, following cars, a new headlight dimmer, and push-button controls for heat- ing and air conditioning systems are other innovations. serious” about wanting aaaead and world disarmament. Towards this goal, Hart. cited a poll which showed natives of India believing Russians _ more serious than Americans, —_. One ean toward peace in the world is! for Americans to solve their racial problems home; Hart insisted, ‘COLOSSALLY IGNORANT’. Our convincing satellite nations (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) in| Little Rock and other places at. AP Wiressin ‘KEEP our’ AREA — The. broken line indicates where Red China Thursday announced: extension of its territorial waters to Use Our SUPER ETHYL Gasolines [Get—1bs gene Miles from Each Gallon. 8. MER -GAS & OIL CO. 22 Seetare lone Ave,, just off Sag. St. 12 miles beyond the offshére islands along the mainland. The no - trespassing edict includes the islands of Matsu and Quemoy, as well as Formosa: and the Pescadores. ~ +“No one in this state has iyet come to the ‘aid of Judge Hartrick. The state Bar and I personally . will see to it that it is done.” Last. Aug. 13, Robert P. Scott, former Local 614 officer and sec- retary-treasurer of the. Michigan Federation of Labor, testified be- fore the Senate Committee that he refused a request by James R. Hoffa, Teamsters Union President, to intercede with Judge Hartrick | in an attempt to win a new trial for Harry Fleisher, a member of | the old Purple Gang. Fleisher had received a 20-40 | year term for armed robbery. Scott said he refused to inter- cede because of what he said was an .understanding between Hart-; rick and the late Kim Sigler. * *« * Seott said that Fleisher and sev- ‘eral other defendants before Hart- rick were to be given stiff sen- had promised to give Hartrick a seat on the State Supreme Court if he were elected governor. “This was a vile defamation + through the instrumentality of hearsay testimony,” Haggerty said. “I am going to procure the testimony which TF personally will deliver to the committee to cor- ate the highly ethical and dis- tinguished jurist." Judge Hartrick died in San! tified before the committee. Stay Alive on Suds BERWICK, . England ( PI) — Crewmen from the German tim- | ber freighter Erich Haslinger ‘staggered ashore yesterday and water but managed to. last 24 hours on beer. Racketeering Probe hue, Washington attorney; former H. Bender of Ohio, chairman of the group; and- Hoffa Delays Decision on Calling Convention gig gene ag at tences in return for which Sigler, UAW President at Big 3 Talks in Final Effort Strike Date Selection Slated for Wednesday if Negotiations Fail DETROIT (? — United Auto Workers president Walter. P, Reuther plays a personal role in negotia- tions with General Motors today for the first time since auto indusfry. con- tracts expired 14 weeks ago. Reuther wit™#ftend all- he may drop in on contract _lsessions with Ford and \day talks at GM, Aides said Chrysler next week. The union leader is €x- illin situation which is ap- |proaching a showdown : _ models get (left to right) F. = w S i Sen, rt udge Ira W. Jayne. come. Teamsters president last year. Martin F. O'Donoghue, chair-|, man of the monitor board, earlier |tign had protested Hoffa's announced plan to outline his convention plans to the union's Executive Public Board yesterday. O° a leaders from VICTORY NOT DOUBTED No observer doubted that could win re-election at a convention. Reportedly, his plan is| forge to call a convention in February, get himself re-elected, and then ask ‘the court to end. the jop of —tthe monitors— O'Donoghue consulted with Judge Letts on moniter powers and complaints that Hoffa is not following. through on monitor cleanup recomme mendations. After the two-hour session, also attended by Hoffa’s attorneys, O'Donoghue told newsmen, “We! a pan in are much satisfied.’’ O'Donoghue said Judge Letts had not given a formal opinion on the status of a rival cleanup group ap-|t —_ by Hoffa himself and head-|i by former Republican Sen. Guieee Bender of Ohio. ‘O'Donoghue indicated—he--would take any conflict. with Bender's group into open court and seek a ruling from the judge, Lawyer Wants fo Explain Loan Teamster Fitzgerald ts , Angry He Has to Wait Until Tuesday - Cleveland, — The strikes were touched off for a number of reasons, ranging from — disputes over grievance procedure to complaints that overtime was et ee ee have been laid off. 'Raingear Needs: a Shaking Out; Moisture in Store Mostly cloudy and warmer with | WASHINGTON (AP) — Team-|Mortow: is the weatherman’s fore- 'sters lawyer George S. Fitzgerald) ©@st for the Pontiac area. Tonight's ‘said today he can explain fully his !W will be near 65, role in-a million-dollar union -wel- BR Bae &, jfare fund loan- under ‘fire in the Temperatures for the -next- five 'Senate rackets hearings. days will average near the nor- He expressed resentment that|mal maximum of 77 and normal the hearings were adjourned until) iminimum. of 57. Cooler weather next Tuesday before he+had a/spreading over Upper Michigan chance to reply as a witness to! Saturday will reach Lower Michi- ‘testimony involving him. gan Sunday. Monday will be warm- The special investigating com- ¢r with Tuesday and Wednesday mittee headed. by Sen. John L, | cool again. : McClellan (D-Ark) heard testi- * * .2 mony yesterday about a 1955-56 loan fo. a Detroit real estate pro- motion firm which allegedly has repaid none of the debt and not. all of the interest due. Precipitation will average one- or Saturday and again around Tuesday. Sixty was the lowest recorded rect the record and to exoner- | ‘Francisce the same day Scott tes-| reported they ran out ét drinking | The loan was made from. the Michigan Conference “Of Teamsters iwelfare fund. * * * ’ A staff accountant testified that the Winchester Village Land De. firm wheéfe it could get the loan. | Fitzgerald, a former Democratic inational, committeeman from | Michigan, told newsmen the pay- iment was made for legal services jand not as a loan- finding feé. | The accountant, Walter H. Hen | son, testified that money from the loaf was used improperly for vatious purposes. He esti- ' (Continued on Page\2, Col. 2) i velopment Co. paid Fitzgerald and |, others a. $35,000 fee for telling the!” temperature in ‘downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m, The miskeane was In Today Ss Press Comics .4..6.c ane County N@ws ....05.6ceeen DD Editorials: nentyeyecetpeense Me Farm and Garden ....<..4: os » Maarket@ odes sec cvescaivene Obituaries "sca. doe Sports ...cccccceees 20: thirm 28 Theaters ....<.)..- 18 thru 19 TV & Radio we BD Wilson, Earl aes cent } wears rae soreteny ey scattered showers and thunder. “= showers developing tonight and to- . half to.one-inch in-showers tonight -—- Bors ASABE RDP agi ET OH sun aetna ij? a The Weather “DAYTON, Ohio — American ec- onomie progress in the next ten “may well increase our pro- duction of goods and services by “The: growing potential of the United States economy is almost " Mr. Kyes in charge y ie _tue Ponrrac PRESS, FRIDAY, SAPTEMBER 5, Cae ae 4 / hbol foals” All Confused Racial Rulings in South ¢ MOVES UP—Ben D. Mills has: been appointed head of Ford Motor. Co.’s Mercury - Edsel- Lincoln Division succeeding ‘| James J. Nance who. resigned Dayton,| yesterday. Mills had been Nance’s assistant. ‘Teamster Fitzgerald Wants fo Explain (Continued From Page One) Pow! ‘It’s My Husband!’ RALEIGH, N. C. (UPI)—Tol- , bert S.Wall came. home the Full U.S, Weather Bureau Re © AND VICINITY arty ogg) pe age oa eloudy and cooler erly winds ois ——. warmer basis for drawing money years. Cause Effigy and Cross Burnings Last Night By United Press International The nation’s school integration controversy raged in Virginia and Arkansas today. Manifestations of the racial troubles included the ‘burning of a Negro in effigy in Arkansas and a fiery cross in North Carolina. Virginia’s integration spotlight was on Charlottesville where the city school board met to weigh Almond to make no assignments, white or Negro, to any school in the face of a federal court in- tegration order. Also in Virginia, federal Judge Albert V. Bryan ordered Arlington County schools, near the nation’s regated basis pending the U.S. ‘Supreme Court’s decision on the Little Rock crisis. He ordered the Arlington schools to hold up ad- mittance of 30 Negro -children to the study the petition of the ap- plicants. Almond informed alj Virginia school boards yesterday that they — t $20,-(Prince Edward counties and Nor- t Henge ( verdnng Bpana, "3 the state’s sensitive integra- of 19 cows and a tr make any assignments. tegration and-.some—violence.— Fire Kills Four Children While Parents Are Away NYACK, N. ¥. (UPI) — Four husband had left the apartment earlier. month over July. The Federal Reserve index for July was 148 per cent of the 1947-49 average, w€| a record level. The previous, | high was 144 in August, 1957, the month regarded by many economists as the start of the recession, Brewing Off Coast with tered shewers and th ‘ers ight an tmorrew. Low ‘ight 65, high temerrow 83, low tomorrow Seuth- easterly winds 16-15 es tonight and southwest 15-2 15-20 miles tomorrow. Teday in “in Pontiac fewest temperature preceding 8 a.m. $ a.m.: oo velocity 2 m ¥ h Direction-—Northeast Bun -rises Saturday at 6:0 Moon sets Saturday at 1:50 . oy Moon* ‘rises Friday at 11 p.m. ~ ; Downtown Temperatures... en II g.m...... Seen er ehes Py bag cece in Pontiac reeorded downtown) ee eed id onic age Ago in mpatine Lowest, temperature vapeengtenns ‘| An eatlier advisory said the Me ean femperature BUTE nooo tence 61.5)storm was headed toward the cen- eure | caebdy. tral Texas coast and warned of and T ] Highest aie aod ete rm hisirising tides. 94 im 1881. 45 in. 1880 x * * Thereday's A spokesman for the Weather 2 Fis Chart barimore Browne 2 seste Sot 4 . a a 2 a ee os ch posit ests sronetrtngcenae Bureau said coastal roads. between Galveston and Port Arthur and in Louisiana’s By Associated Press Tropical storm Ella increased in size during the night and. very likely in intensity, the Weather| Bureau ‘said today. . This. probably would make Ella,| veeeTMla sgeg ee mass for the gest few| A morning bulletin from the Weather Bureau in New Orleans ‘said gale warnings and a hurri- cane watch are in effect from south of Corpus Christi to Galves- ton, Tex. .Cameron Parish ail- ready were closed by water. The Weather Bureau said winds and ‘ides will increase today and to- right. Brief but violent ° thunderstorms iit the Detroit area yesterday afternoon, warnings are up from Brownsville, Tex., is moving in a west-northwesterly course. / AP Wirephote THERE'S ELLA — Tropical storm Ella is /idling across the Gulf of Mexico about 450 miles south of Biloxi/ Miss. Small craft to Pensacola, Fla. Ella = Texas in Hurricane Path The Weather Bureau at De- | troit said there were two storms, one early in the afternoon, an- | other an hour laters Tree limbs and wires were felled in some out-county districts, Earlier yesterday, the Thumb area of the state was hit by an electrical] storm that knocked out power and caused property dam- age over a wide section. A narrow belt of showers and thunderstorms extended from Kansas and Nebraska eastward across southern Iowa, northern Missouri and central part of Ii- nois into the lower Great Lakes region and Pennsylvania. About 2 inches of rain fell in Pittsburgh during the night while fairly heavy amounts were re- ported in parts of Kansas Illinois, Ohio and Nebraska. a Biggest rainfall in the last 24 hours was in the Central. Plains, with more than 5 inches reported in parts of Kansas. Heavy rain also drenched sections of | Okla- the advice of Gov. J, Lindsay [ capital, to open Monday on a seg} ‘seven white schools and took under tion suits against Arlington and der state law are forbidden to | Elsewhere in the South there was a faltering start toward school in- _| American’’series is this four-_ [Red China and U.S. = Slug It Out in Talk ., Soviet readiness -to give. ‘‘moral| + and material support’? to the Pei-| . ' it becomes em-|' — 4 TIMELY of the many safety posters tha REMINDER — Sgt. Lawrence E. * LeBair, of the police traffie bureau, puts up one tributed to remind motorists that children are . back in school. Sgt. LeBair emphasized that ex- treme caution school areas. “ t are being dis- up to the drive of schools and The Day in Birmingham Pontiac Press Photo and low speeds are’ required in Youngsters are often more enthu- siastic than careful,” the sergeant said, “‘so it is r to be extra alert in the vicinity playgrounds.” HONORS WEBSTER — The newest stamp in the ‘Famous cent bicentennial stamp honor- ing Noah Webster and featuring a likeness of him, Stamp will be - placed on sale in Hartford, Conn., Webster’s birthplace, on Oct, 16. (Continued From Page One) . “unless and until the Chinese Communists, by their acts, leave us no choice but to react in de- fense of the principles to which all peace-loving goverpments are “mostly was favorable. “IT am in full accord with the position taken by the President,” said Sen. Irving M. Ives (R-NY). “Sooner or later we are going to nave to face the Communist-men- ace head on — probably the sooner the better.” A similar comment came from Rep, Carl Albert (D-Okla), ma- jority whip in the House. “My theory is you might as well meet them whenever they step across the line, else there’s no end to it,’ Albert said. * ok The official U.S. statement made no specific mention of possible bombing of the China mainland. But-when asked whether this might be done in defense of For- |mosa, the official who helped draft the statement said solemnly: “It might become so, if Formosa was jattacked ar. imminently threatened from mainland airfields.” ~~ Other officials conjectured that, if the Communists launch an invasion, the first step would be a Nationalist defense backed ; up by U.S. logistical support but no U.S, warships, aircraft .or } troops. If the Nationalists suc- eeeded in throwing back the at- ‘tack, that would be that. But the officials said Nationalist aircraft probably would be per- mitted to bomb airfields on the China mainland if the Red Chinese sent aircraft into the battle. If Eisenhower decided the Na- tionalists needed U.S, help and if the Red Chinese continued to launch air attacks, the officials ably then be ordered to wreck the Communist airfields on the China mainland. * * * The big question then would be whether the Soviet Union would honor its mutual security pact with Red China. Moscow propa- gandists already have proclaimed ping regime if broiled in war. . Nationalist China today reject- ed Peiping’s unilateral extension of its territorial waters, asserting Chiang. Kai-shek’s regime is the only government that lawfully can speak for China, _ Communist shelling of the Na- tionalist offshore islands, mean- while, dwindled td nearly nothing. In a Shooting Mood? ¢ LANSING 7 — Guns for sale. Forty-tive of them, _ including eight shotguns ‘and 37 rifles of highest bidder Sept. 19 at the Conservation Department's an- nual fall» sale of confiscated added, U.S. bombers would prob-|— various calibers, will go to the | Free Press Dispute Idles N ews, Times Detroit in Its Second Day _|mingham’s traffic safety program | State Police Sgt. he reviewed: a National. Safety - Jeity officia -|time police have reason to believe BIRMINGHAM -— Recommenda- tions for’ the improvement of Bir- were made yesterday afternoon by Michael Sibal as} Council analysis of the city’s 1957 traffic record, * x* * Municipal Court handling of traf- fic cases was greatly improved, according : the study, Sibal told eT aac ade as: court and persons handling vio- lations has been suggested to make disposition of the cases more uniform, he told city of- ficials. The importance of more convic- tions with penalty on specifie-driv- er intoxication charges was urged in the report. It also was suggested that chemical tests be used every a driver is intoxicated. AOCIDENTs INCREASE An upswing in traffic accidents was noted in that the Municipal Court handled 1,708 cases last year, compared to 777 in 1956, according to the report, The Viola- tions Bureau had 15,815 cases last year, of which 4,284 were for mov- ing violations. The balance were for overtime or improper parking. * * * program in the schools, it has been. suggested traffic safety films be shown in local theaters. To further the excellent safety| | \City Receives Proposals for Boosting Traftic Safety Mr. Bensinger died Aug. 16 fol- lowing_a heart attack. Barbara McMullen Service for Barbara Lynn Mc-. Mullen, 15, of 3988 Lakewood Lane, ° Bloomfield Township, was held at 2 p.m. today at the William Vasu. Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Burial was in Acacia ‘Park Cemetery. The daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Barclay McMallen, she died “Wednesday at ker home. Bar- bara was a 10th grade pupil at Bloomfieht Hills High School. Surviving beside her parents are a sister, Sharon; a brother, John, both at home; and her grandmoth- ers, Mrs. E, T. Marion and Mrs. P. V. McMullen, both of Detroit. Soviet Salesmanship Alarming to Hart (Continued From Page One) that they should align themselves with the free world, is handicapped because “‘our nation is colossally ignorant about other people, their culture, their ways of life.” Hart illustrated this point by jobs at the Detroit Free Press. to roll off = presses. * * the firing of a union chapel ¢hair- man at the Free Press. Robert C. Butz, executive sec- retary of the Detroit Newpaper Publishers Assn., said the News and Times were not published be- cause the pressmen's work stop- page was a.“‘violation of the joint contract with the Mites news- papers.” The striking pressmén were or- dered to return to work by offi- cers of the local and international unions but the union members voted to stay off the job. Another meeting of the pressmen was Scheduled for 8 P. m. Friday. * * Butz said Pe publishers were contacted 26 hours after4the start of the walkout by A. J. Dean- Drade, vice president-of the Inter- national Printing Pressmen’s Un- ion. The publishers told DeanDrade, Butz said, that they woul dsched- ule a meeting “‘as soon as possi- ble” Friday seeking to end the work- stoppage. ’ x * & Butz said the Free Press chapel an who was fired had coun- spite an earlier warning against such a move. in the dispute. Detroit's three dailies were shut down for 46 days in late 1955 and early 1956 when stereo- typers walked out when their contract expired. Other unions took similar action. * * * In 1957, all three newspapers were closed for a week in a mail- ers strike against the News. that time, the publishers associa- tion said a strike against one was a strike against all. DETROIT—This the the back- DETROIT (PB — Detroit faced its second day without newspa- pers today because of a dispute in which pressmen walked off their Publication of the two afternoon newspapers, the Detroit News and the Detroit Times, was suspended after the morning Free Press failed ~“The™ oe ‘was touched- off by termanded a foreman’s order de- The union declined to comment on Butz’ claim that the members should have taken grievance action At |Without Any Newspapers ground of the labor dispute that has resulted in shutting down all three of Detroit's daily newspapers, the News, Times and Free Press: x * * Early Wednesday morning, at the end of its press run, the chair- man of the Free Press Chapel of Detroit Newspaper Printing Press- men’s Union No, 13 countermand- ed an order given by a.Free Press The union had been warned re- peatedly by newspaper manage- ments in the past few months and had agreed that such ebuntermanding of orders would not be tolerated. The chapel chairman was dis- charged, At 6 p.m. Wednesday the press- men reported to the press room. There they were reportedly advised to work .\by their own executive board. But at a subsequent chapel meeting, the members decided not to work. * * * . Efforts were made at the Free Press until 11:15 p.m. to get the men- to.work and submit discharge: to grievance procedure as is pro- vided in the contract between the Detroit Newspaper Publishers Assn., representing the Free Press, the Times and the News, and the At that time management de- cided it was too late to get out the” regular Thursday _ editions of the Free Press, and publica- tion was suspended, The News and the Times, under the provisions of the joint contract, delayed printing Thursday editions, * * * An international representative of the pressmen arrived in Detroit | Thursday morning and the oress- men met with him to consider what action to take. The position of the publishers is that the strike at the Free Press is a work stoppage in violation of | the joint contract with the three | newspapers. ‘Robbers Take $4,000 DETROIT (®—Bandits robbed a northwest. side S. S. Kresge Co. supermarket of $1,000 Thursday. gunmen held up the supermarket. parently likes to “horse” around, - —_™ weapons. All were taken from ¢ law violators. Bids will be pened at Gaylord, where the Steel, near Provo, Utah, JUST “HORSING’ AROUND — A Shetland pony colt, who ap- his mother even inside a long length of 36-inch pipe. The pipe, which ‘will be ‘used for a natural gas pipeline extending from Texas ‘to Illinois, is the largest ever produced at the Utah Pipemill of US. finds out that he can’t hide from store of $3,000 and an east side/f Police said a lone gunman staged) the Kresge Co. robbery and twoik trian laws should be made, ‘|}said, and consideration given to increasing the strength of the Po- lice Department. Better lighting in areas of frequent night mishaps also was wee te Go Toeert At the conclusion of his report, given at the Municipal Building, Sibal presented the city with the National Safety Council’s Certifi- eate of Achievement plaque. A few weeks ago a similar award Chiefs of Police was received here. —— Birmingham Police are investi- gating the robbery last night of a safe at the Quarton Market, 1744 W. Maple Ave. Ed Coleman of Detroit, owner of the market, had not yet deter- mined this morning how much money was missing. The store Was broken Into through a hole drilled in the roof, just large enough to enable a person to slip through, police said. The entire back of the double- door safe had been pried off, and records kept in it were found scat- tered about the floorof the store's Greater enforcement ‘of peded- from the International Assn. of; before peared in 1954 when he was cam- paigning for lieutenant governor. His oe job yesterday ‘centered almost entirely on what he called “today’s generation of international crisis." x « * State politics emerged only when he refuted claims of Michigan Re- publicans that state Democrats are “the tools of labor.” NO WAIT FOR UAW “T’ve never waited for Solidarity House (Detroit headquarters of the UAW) to tell me what suit to wear,” he said. “Besides, I was a Democrat a long time before I heard these (labor)‘fellows.” — Returning to the subject of in- ternational peace, Hart warned. what he said was the “basic, office. In preparation for its-Oct, 5 re- ception of new members, the Con- gregational Church of Birmingham has scheduled three Tuesday in- struction meetings. The first will be held Sept. 16 at 8 p.m. in the church. The church also has announced establishment of a Robert. Ben- singer Memorial Fund for the church school. A teacher in the hard truth all must know.”’ That. is: e will know noe peace,” he said. : x * * This is the result, Hart added, of the, eternal struggle now going on between the free and Commu- nistic worlds for the smaller na- itions looking toward one of the two to help narrow the gap between their T7th century living and the present, “The Soviets are pressing our system with a large measure of success in this direction,’ Hart junior department of the school, remarked, AT SIMMS LOW, SCHOOL SUPPLY LOW BACK-TO- PRICE SPECIALS tu N Wy | i} o FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SUPER SPECIALS — = = ib 2or 3-Ring — ny Filler Paper | Heavy Binder (C a | bd rs J it North Saginaw Street =/ a }, f= QU siINDERs 3 5-Hole Ruled Swi Ring Filler Paper Regular 50c Value 69c Value 230 Sheets 5¢ Lead Pencils ° Reg. WU 49* | % 69° 10" 1? ATT Angrovet by ‘Papermate’ achers f Pen ‘Papermate’ | | Refills Ball Point Reg. 49¢ Pens . } Value i i 98c ¢ 33° : Seller’ ‘The cenuine pon “pena sey ltt we mf pont pen at this sohoot “at this fase pe etc. Th al low, low price. oy ba from tip SIMMS... VIL) f= Tt. Sundries U PAINE Floor TU l EY EVE a SS for the Advancement ot Colored His Noggin Broke Pistol, People. Mrs, Mattie Dickson, 83, who So Victim Must Pay LONG BEACH, Calif, had invested earnings made in 26 years as a servant, said she turned the money over to NAACP Executive Secretary Roy Wilkins to help fight the ‘disgraceful ab- uses in American democracy.” Gives Her Life Savings of $10,000 to NAACP OAKLAND, Calif, (AP) — A re- tired Oakland .domestic servant has given most of her life savings ~~$10,000—to the National Assn. dered to pay for the damages caused to a policeman’s revolver that broke on his head. Bunting, his head swathed in : ' Pf ’ "| bandages, pleaded guilty to drunk F SIMMS SPECIALS for: a oh & SATURDAY SUPER SPECIALS E Tonite & Saturday Only! : : 2-Cell All-Metal : FLASH. ‘ LIGHT : 79¢ Value For Quick ASTHMA site Dy) ASTHMANEFRIN Simms. ja N. Saginaw © —Main Floor For All 1 Electric Razors makes shaver run up : seclishec Speedak: to 35% taster. Limit one, and resisting arrest * |terday. He was fined $125. court said he'd have to pay for) THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 charges yes-| j The| Chiewes Rob Church of Crucifix, Cash the broken ejector on officer J.S. (AP)—| Folk’s pistol because it was Bunt- Howard R, Bunting has been or- ing’s fault Folk. had to hit him. Sundays. Most of the gasoline sold to from an unlocked safe. American drivers is conveyed be-|of the St. Nicholas Greek Ortho- tween 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on week-/dox church, set the value of the days or before the noon hour on| crucifix at about $130. He said the NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Thieves broke into a church here yester- day and stole a silver crucifix ‘The Rev. James Aloupis, pastor church. burglars also took $208 in caster: from his office desk. “gee » | In addition, they made off with} — $160 taken from poor boxes at the America's handmade glass in-\— dustry is centered near Wheeling, W. Va., close to deposits of fine |— © silica sands, a principal ingredient of ‘first class glassware products.|E TOOLS On Sale for Fri. & Sat. 3 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS 9-Pc. DRILL SETS “In PLASTIC Case $0c Seller = Converts AC to DC— 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor 3 Fixed focus, throws 5800 foot beam. All metal 2-cell with belt loop. Batteries extra. FRIDAY and SATURDAY $5.95 Value 3” ; | pfStngp b | | | > Throws 1500- Ft, Beam 5-CELL Flashlight $1.95 Value i SS = 6t i mit cS yo Protects Rugs and Floors rc a ws pt vm 4] RiBBED Plastic |p '2!NCH AY 7 eres plape =6 All metal flashlight with fixed focus. Throws powerful 1500 Protector Mats * — pei a4 Clear It’s the ptrfect ag og te floor damage and wear. Made of heavy, Polished clear ribbed plastic, ep beauty Heads of rugs and floors to show through, yet protects against rains, snow and stain damage. Limit 2. _3-PIECE 7 - pe “ se Heavy duty leakproof batter USALITE. Limit 3 per customer. SIMM). UE RS j 98 N. ouoe —Main Floor | soma SEIS SS Lea TERS Sah hie Mas Buy Now for Christmas Gifts! \ $1 HOLDS IN LAYAWAY 98 N. Saginaw —<2nd Floor Set $1.95 Value 97° * Claw Hammer * Household Hammer * Upholstery “Hammer Exactly as motared ~—I-piece ha this lo ads, poe red end SOSesesoeseroeosoeees 5-Piece FILE SETS | $1.95 Value 97° a Res ee eS Steel Frame — Padded Top — Two Sizes 4 TOY and CH ESTS $10.95 Value : -= STORAGE a ; SBalf-round,, tn ths <3 = a ‘ | SPECIAL PURCHASE — Save half ‘on this HET. | setM"neariy Cone for 5 tugged, “many purpose chest! Padded, ‘ aCe oecieee = hinged top, washable vinyl fabric covered. 3 Electriciens’ Leather 3 Big and roomy for toys, sheets, blankets, | clothing, ete. f TOOL POUCH © HOUSEWARES ’ e— Val | —2nd Floor terete 6.88 ¥ 97 | acini wees eo “FRIDAY ord SATURDAY | To sacl gee } screwdrivers, cut- ters, etc. s shown. All leath- er with chain. ©0090000000000008 ” wa ‘Pay More Than SIMMS Low Prices? j : ii wist drills in sizes from | 1/16th -in { Li £ Combination Square _ beam joe $2.00 ¢ ena. nay ey ; + 6-Feot Seller Length C Polished, tempered and harden- EF ed steel blade, machine cut * 27-inch graduations. With level and) (Width See anny yeceesteceee| SPECIAL SAVINGS on This Weekend Offer! (Frida ood meme? Only) JUST. ARRIVED! Alarm vi $3.98 % Tax Famous G E Telechron 2.66 “DORM” model exactly as pictured. Silent electric accurate timekeeper, buzzer alarm, sweep-second hand, Clock eae a $8 North Saginaw \ In Time for School Wear! Orig VOM ODED OEE OT LADIES’ — MISSES’ — GIRLS’ NEW FALL STYLES ‘GUM-DROPS'-FLATS- Newest trie and Colors 49/ Big selection at | quality workmanship. sizes. Bargain Basement "OA hdd hekrhetabchbdhehd tenn ; N ott peeene | 13-Ox. hat Tasty milk chocola cherries in the middle 1 FULL POUND Orange or Pineapple Sones Slices 12° iM sHiaped rang flavored ' ilies Tas y sugar ‘coated Bex BRACH Milk Chocolete. CHERRIES 65° middie. uy some now, at KING-SIZE- Trays Serve-Carts Original $7.95 Sellers es Folds When Not in Use candy with Fresh handle. 98 North Saginaw Tubular steel frames, 22'%2x16'/2 inch trays, 2’’ swivel casters, push Beautifully nee Easy to carry RBODr simeec FRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIAL PRICES | Stull a ALL nics, “Best Buy” METAL \ / Tray Tables = eo Fate ;: Use for TV snacks, pic- barbeques, taining, bedside uses, etc. © Scalloped clip-on trays, = tubular folding 4 enter- 4) # then Hurry Regular $1.25 Press 25 or #5 ~ Famous ‘WEN! ELECTRIC! Sol dering Gun | 100-Wett Meant Heat 99 $5.95 Value write r i< electrical eo Past du rable realtime work. .~ NO LIMIT—Buy all you want. Choose from three UNDER- PRICED groups at GUARANTEED SAVINGS. No restrictions—buy single items or assorted . the more you buy the more you save! GROUP NO. 1—Regular 75c and $1 Values az, 4 for 5700 75¢_CHARBET Breathless Dusting Powder $1 TINJETTE Color Set Pomade. eee tees ~ 75c. WRISLEY’S SUPERBE Bubble. Bath (Single geoga' ie é Items—29¢c AOOLOLB y te eee soe res ener ee ee nan GROUP NO. 2—Regular 59c to $1.29 Values Your for $ 00 (Single DRILL & STAND SET Choice Items—39c) 1/16th to Y2 by 64ths a $19.95 Value ba zi LANOLIN PLUS Hair Spray Woes wera © wale Wares 3 for $1.00 1 © $1.25 LANOLIN PLUS Medicated Lotion ....... 3 for $1.00 en 59c CHARLES ANTEL #9 Liquid Formula... -..3 for $1.00 ~ $1 ROYAL CASTILE Shampoo, 16 ounces....... 3 for $1.00 “© $1.25 ROBERTA OWENS Skin Freshener ....... 3 for $1.00 $1.25 ROBERTA OWENS Foundation Lotion ....3 for $1.00 GROUP NO. 3—Regular Values to $2.00 Your for $ 00 (Single Choice z Items—59c} 73c BAN DEODORANT Roll-on Type ....... «+2 for $1.00 | 79¢ HAZEL BISHOP Swivel Stick Deodorant ..... 2 for $1.00 : 3}. io mae phi World of Beauty Lotion....2 for $1.00 4 A Happee Feet Medication ....2 for $1:00 $2.00 SHAMPAIR SHAMPOO by Tintair ....... for. $7. iene can 44” Electric Drill Many Un-Advertised Cosmetics at Cut-Prices! With Geared Chuck 4 awry shop and compare prices at SIMMS before you buy any cosmetic eas femember, COMPLETE SATISFACTION is guaranteed re~ $24.95 99 : gardieas of how ‘much you save! Va lue Precistoh acmatare ball thrust bear-| ings. Universal. motor. Lar weigmt housing, yet dese roughest work. POPUP U VV Tw" os tas! wD srorites ieee 98 N. Saginaw 2nd: Floor’ ' 98 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Sane as Press 25 or #5 PE 4 Flash Bulbs 10 for 49° Outstanding em — same as ase. but none sold to dealers. Tee eee ee ee pied 106 Auto-Slide Projector. 88” {fetime ——— — lens. clutie: ing, $1 holds in layaway. CHECK the ITEM, CHECK the LOW PRICE... to SIMMS for What We Believe Are the LOWEST PRICES in PONTIAC! Choice of 620—]20—127 Size Reguler $1.50 Value - 3 ROLLS Pes Carton’ condition me limit — Steere ens e eee een ee eres For 35mm Slides 3g" ) Bic * brates” ht Sma jector sia changer t fast Pine vohanaer tor, includes ov $5 hold: CL vit tdt tht tthe ee eee ee eee Tt = REVERE MODEL ‘777° 4 Mansfield ‘Fold-a-way’. 8mm MOVIE PROJECTOR ‘t Movie Baitor & Splicer e J, with for- oar a reverse. fi. 400-foot capacity reels, edit and = tI $10 splice 8mm movies the easy Way. $3 hold : $16.50 Seller - 1° 4 Includes : 4 ' Case 4 ‘holds this meter in Whee statis for you! Easy to 4 for color. Black and and movies. 4 With case. ; For Argus C3 or Argus C4 ELEVATOR TRIPOD TELEPHOTO or 8-Section ] WIDE-ANGLE LENS 7, ns q_ ae: dt 2Le Only 1 adapter $1 holds SIMM. ANSCO FILMS . film. fo on apace 7 inches when ac tion and new auto- matic camera mount. Sweenseeeses eens SOS SEER EEE ER EEE ESET SEES ESSE EERSTE REE ER ESE ES ESE TET ER TE HT EE SES ’ 7-Inch Spool—Hi-Fi’ Recording Tape 1200 FEET For ~ OSMOCECE Ce HH COLE HRS Oe Dé eewedeoesus For Indoor or Outdoor Use “WALZ MOVIE METERS. See es ena Pees eeahaa No Guessing! Lens Adjust : to Light Automatically REVERE ‘Electric Eye’ ‘Movie Camera i’ 3-lehs turret en camera, for "a To me adjust mutomaticaly. a any light jens. $7 ‘hol “4 4 ce 3-Lens Turret 8mm away. eee nnsewee ! “EDNA-LITE 2-In-1 Style : Telephoto & Wide-Angle y ayawayv ROTHERS Famous AL $9.95 _ Val ue iar dat 00 Pits Kodak, Belt & Howell, Revere. stone movie cameras. $1 holds $3.95 rol be $5.95 Value A head 1800-F t. Tove 2 Movies or Stills © Gives direct read- ings ~ eliminates holds z layaway. Case r $1.35. Movie LENS 15.87 CAMERAS ~—Main Floor * | | lili ll clit li, sl lin li lin, ln li sll li, Ml Mi i il, ile ee aS fis F i i Pen tintin dindindindindindindindindindindndind di hh bill cll lal lin clin linn Ml ll, lly, iil Alli lll Mls ln Min Mn, hl li dil i Mn in x: ae ee yw Save: More “Mon SHOP AT SIMMS OPEN | TONITE ond SATURDAY ‘ty 10 PL M. _& Time! Every Pair GUARANTEED Ist Quality — Perfect! Priced at 79¢ to $1 in Many Stores + ALL SIZES—8 2 * FULL FASHIONED—60 Gauge, 1§ ier Now in most wanted* fall shades — beigetone, tantones, etc. Famous for to lf extra wear. Sizes 82 to 11. eae “eee ef * & * a0 0% ** * en. ee Paes g #4 * To $7 Sellers sizes @ to 12, ‘ficaes nd apuk abdtea. Dressy hows or Black Mew s Oxfords | = ae bine les include Ante = moc-toes, V-t ie “er” | Pr, For Figure Slimming Control Girls’ Flannel Lined © Shirt $4.98 Value y Sizes 7 to 14 goalies poguler 4138 Siler — Wow Ory oe Washable and colorfast conduepscreepers. ‘Playtex’ Gi * Pics POAT cow *.* = ; s Ladies’ Famous oo 2 jackets in onet Zipper front, and in a in to Hi or Lo Cut Styles | Men’s Work Shoes Hi shoes with = Faas wa & a Sizes - 7 to 12 Buy ry Now-$5 ¢ to > $10 eat for FARMERS—HUNTERS—WORKERS Values to 24.95 INSULATED BOOTS Water repellent, all leather uppers, neoprene soles, Deluxe quality in sizes 7 to 12, E 98 N, Saginaw Cheice of 9 and 10-Inch Heights ‘99 Full lace moc and plain toe styles. All leather uppers, cork vl im mM 2 BROTHERS —Pontiac’s DEEP-CUT Discount Store Regular $13.95 to $18. 95 soles, storm welts. Included in this price are black yeh boots. Sizes 6 to 12, 1? & LD A. FITZGERALD 4) ie President end Publisher = Owned and Published Locally ASSQCIATED PRESS a eee FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1958 as en: : . offer would not apply to Algeria at the present time. . x « * _ As a matter of fact Algerian ter- rorists have been losing ground both militarily and politically. Gen. vz Gauttz has promised Algerians equality and equal suffrage with a view to eventual independence. The Canada’s Doukhobors to Go Back to Russia _ ‘The Doukhobors of Western Can- ada are on the move again. About _ one-quarter of them, known as the _ Sons of Freedom, are disenchanted ' with Canada and want to return to their ancestral home in Russia de- spite having fled that country be- cause of bitter persécuition. This religious sect was founded in 1740 at Kharkov, Russia, Its mem- | —___ bers are pacifists and. vegetarians a. a and against secular education. In 1898 they settled in Manitoba, Sas- katchewan and British Columbia. A \ I Pl Come In for a. Saturday — , | Free Demonstration | 4 P th 12.W. Huron FE 2-4010 porary % S ph e ‘Mr. and Mrs. Perry Koon of Mt. Morris, Fingernail Biters wae t Mrs. Herbert ) F.B.T.G.NLF. 3B. ‘e Curtis and i | \ Watch ras e ea ve the late “Wittiam & Mary” : | rpg gant a - Howard S “AmERIcAN VicToRIAN’’- A pt. 9th, —- : ; eebe. L x START your service..,Now! % FLL. your service... Now! UR. and MRS. RICHARD H. BEEBE | Magic Beauty! | Married in All Saints Rite “NU- FACE” All Saints Episcopal Stairchs was|of honor. She wore a ballerina- , t the scene of the Saturday wedding length dress of blue mist over blue No 4 ache: ufting and tl ie Beatrice Joyce Winterlee andjtaffeta and carried a bouquet of i eal seal etn | A Limited Time Offer | ; SEPTEMBER 2~ OCTOBER 15 > We must advance these special sole prices to their regular normal levels peel. Cosmetic and beauty ad- jf” . : : viser to Hollywood stars for 40 Richard Howard Beebe. -The Rev.) white and pink carnations. Brides- on October 16. Both ore corried years. George Widdifield officiated at the|maids were Marie Koon, the - @s active open stock patferns, . . ceremony. bride’s aunt, of Mt. Morris, and | Parents of the couple are Mr.|Stephanie Winterlee, the bride's and Mrs. Perry Koon of Mt.| cousin. Morris, Mrs. Herbert Curtis of * * * Cottage street and the late Howard; Miss Koon wore 4 flamingo S. Beebe. . colored ballerina dress with a:bou- ‘The bride wore a white balle- |quet of white and yellow carna- rina-length Chantilly lace gown. |tions, and Miss Winterlee wore a|- Stockholm Graduate Specialist You m ay use our “CLUB PL. AN’ CAROLYN NILSON Fine Cosmetics Salon 771 E, Maple, B’ham Pontiac’s Oldest Phone MI 6-7373 Her fingertip veil of white nylon |, : mesh was held by a white heart pink nylon dress with a pink and . J eweler Mail Orders on Request shaped tiara. On 2 white Bible, |VHite carnation bouquet. acd Aa el PONE | she. carried two white orchids. The bridegroom's steptather, Mrs. Walier D. Appel of Com- Will-O-Way Playhouse. The fair will FE; d N. P i Co Mrs. Herbert Curtis was matron Se gpg does come merce road, shown with her German benefit the Michigan ‘Animal Rescue re al of. Mt, Morris was usher. Shepherd dog, Lance, is a patroness of League, with proceeds scheduled to- 23. W. Huron FE edecr | : The couple will live in Germany where the bridegroom is stationed with the U.S. Army. this year’s Sixth Annual Antique Fair to be held Sept. 11, 12 and 13 at » Antique Fair to Benefit Spiedel Watchbands ward fencing the outside runs for the animals, : To Host. League “The Store Wheré Quality Counts” ‘Leal Emes CLIP ME OUT ft Treasures from the finest homes | AUCTION SALE Household Furnishings, Antiques Smart's Auction Barn cohostess at a party for par- ticipants of the eighth annual Presidents Council meeting of the Association of the Junior Leagues of America. : * * * 5 * The 18 presidents of Region Four will meet Sept. 12 under the direction of Mrs. H. Ed- mund Lunkin of Cincinnati to discuss the future of the league and the association, O-Way Playhouse on. West Long Lake road from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sept. 11, 12 and 13. The shelter has been built is less than five years, and in the few months it has been open, has cared for, placed, an in- vestigated hundreds of animals. The building is located on Featherstone road, and is the first shelter in Oakland County owned and operated ex-. L. Beaudette, Mable Craft, Mrs. Harry Garrett, Mrs. Dorothy Gould, Mrs. Ezra Mason, Mrs. C. K. Patterson, Mrs. Ford Paddock, Mrs. Arthur M. Robertson, Mrs. Aaron Riker, -MrsS. Clare Scriven, Mrs. Arthur Schutt, . -Mrs. Harland Smith and Mrs. Cramer: Smith. Also patrons are Lelah Thorpe, Virginia Ward, Mrs. J meeting of the season Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Law- rence Shelton on Upper Pettibone Lake. Cohostesses. were Mrs, Paul Blystone, Eleanore . Kellogg and Anna Marie Predmore, Participating in the program were Ethel Graham, chairman; Mrs, Lawrence MeDowell, and Miss Kellogg who spoke on the Middle East, lewelers Part | | A ° . ge 7 “LOCA nimal Shelter Group Holds |t “SEND FOR FREE [| ; Mrs, John K, Bagby, presi- . ‘ ° - ; ‘ gest (J ot nih harap — The sixth | Annual Antique. will be served and a bake sale NM leeti Ng ie - 2 troit Junior League's _ presi- Fair to benefit the local shelter will be held. _ ; . Kitchen Planning Folder dent Mrs. William C, Loud as of the Michigan Animal Rescue Patrons for the fair include The Leal Emes Group of First ‘ FE 2-5812 88 N. Saginaw League will be held at Will- Mrs. C. O. Anderson, Mrs. O. Presbyterian Church held its first Netter Address oeoveee ee ne eee eewaeee City ee ee ee ee er ee ee MAIL TODAY PONTIAC PRESS, BOX 5, PONTIAC, MICH. | rrr er ee oe Oo ee ee ee ee eee sone eeevreaetea rene 330 W, Tienken Rd.—Rochester —— MRS, ELMER 0. JOHNSON clusively by a humane society. L. Wood, Mrs. Arthur Warwick, St. Mary’s-in-the-Hil . “ 2 2 and Mrs. L. D. Young. Mrs, Paul Salter was elected Pent bay 8 “Contact Lenses Sorority Furniture from the primitive Ss we treasurer of the group to . : to the more elegant will be dis- From ‘the Birmingham- the unexpired term of Harriet SAT., SEPT. 6 : & d P played at the fair along with | -pjoomfield area are Mrs. W. Gates. i, : V ISION eaders glassware, dishes, brass, Cop- | 1 Appel, Mrs. Dexter Craig, | Helen Anderson of Oxford was a 1 to 6 P.M, j per and early American items. | Mrs, Max Colter, Mrs. Graham _|suest. | This year a booth will feature ~ Staffordshire dishes. Tea will Miss Kellogg and Esther Voor- hees -will represent the group at ; the Waldenwoods Conference- Oct. ae 11-122, J. Graham, Jeanette Hubbard, Mrs. S. L. Goss, Mrs. J. J. Nance, Mrs. _D. S. Patterson, Mrs. Graham Shinnic::, Mrs. Duane Upton, Auctioneer Baked Goods Sale Are Named Elected president of Alpha DR. B. R. BERMAN Soft Drinks Served 17 fo Sapna JE 4-701} Alpha Chapter | of Epsilon Sig- WSCS H ears H. R. Turrell, Mrs. Clifford The group will sponsor a Stanley avant =| ma Alpha Sorority is Mrs. El- West and Mrs. Abner A. Wolfe. |demonstration on Oct, 21 at the From Rochester are patrons | church, mer O. Johnson. She announced the commit- tee heads for the coming year when the group met Thursday evening at the YMCA. * * * They are Mrs. Fred Baum- gartner, vice president; Mrs. | Fred Mueller, recording sec- |. retary; Mrs. Gordon Carlson, corresponding secretary; Ste- phanie Linabury, treasurer’; Parley Report at Luncheon The General Women’s Society of Christian Service of Central Meth- odist Church met at the church |§ Thursday for a luncheon. : The Marian Shaw Circle served) the luncheon. Mrs. J. Harry Baker | © headed the committee. : Mrs, Percy Latirher and Mrs.|7 Russell Vessells presented the pro-| © Mrs.’ Frances Covert, Mrs. x * * Alex Duffield, Mrs, Charles The October meeting. will be held Dillman and Mrs. Frank Lam- jat the Miami road home of Alice Jackson. Miss Voorhees will assist. PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 114 S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enroliments Available in Day or Evening Classes, Write, phone or call in person for Free Parphiet PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 a ey NEW for FALL . . . the CHIMICURL. Let us adapt this new peel to your features be? EVERYTHING FOR THE HORSE ond RIDER ... and SQUARE DANCERS “It-it's Western. we have it” B-Bar-B Western Ay yy . 88 Wayne St. Mrs. Jack Andress, contact; é Mrs. Jack Holler, custodian; j8T@m of the fifth national assem- es } : ND SHOP FE 2-1424 Mra. Edmund Smith, historian; - bly of WSCS given at St. Louis,|j 315-17 Ms os “ | 3 Mrs, Harry Rhodes, member- Mo. MEIC A ship; Mrs. Ben Sweeney, par- liamentarian; Mrs. Bert Ans- elmy, program; Mrs. Ralph O. Allen, publicity; Mrs. Ed- ward Humniel Jr., project, and Mrs. Rex Parker, audi- tor. Cochairmen announced are Mrs. Robert Hasse and Mrs. Keith Clauser, social; Mrs. Donald Stone and Mrs. Win- ston Hopp, ways and means; Mrs. Frank Jalosky Jr., and Betty Lou DeGroot, chapter | kok Choose from 14 luxu- rious weight patterns and save from $25.50 to $36.75. You pay only regular nation- ally advertised price for 3 place settings... we give you an extra one free! Buy now for assurance you have. ’ the ‘best... /nof MAC-O-LAC | MeB|cSi=— ii Over 12 Off Sale! Fiat paint Mrs. Jalosky reported on the F international convention held featur ing . By in Denver, Colo. She was in- ; ternational workshop chairman i. fog the past year. . LATEX msors® fér the coming Mi year will be Mrs. Melvin Brim iracle $ | and Mrs. Burtha Lampkin. Plastic 5 3 9 Gal. I ; . Flat Paint ® ‘ ; e oretuet of The -i . : Regularly priced at $6.39, — thi: English Earthenware oc [ee ae soe Permanents ~ AT-A EOW; LOW PRICE! Clear Varnish pr. $E.10 | White Shellac [Varnish Stain | Pt $1.00] Lacquer Nu-Wood Stain Pt: “BS. Oil Stain HAND DECORATED AND UNDERGLAZED FOR EVERLASTING BEAUTY. oe 316° Gay-Day Pattern in a corn-flower ed all over. pattern. Completely dish ri 1 $39.95. Se Se Sergent oon. ee All work icsse by senior 35 $3.10 85 ¢ | : ¢ | Pt. Pt. ¢ students under super = \\ _ _ §3-PIECE SET ‘maven tak 8 vision of instructor. Phone FE 4-1854 Choice of Over 60 Patterns at % PRICE : . Closed All Day : All Sales-Final ‘ W ednesday i Call Miss Wilson Today ‘ DIXIE Porrery ama j For Your Convenience, “PONTIAC ‘ Open Daily 10 A. M.-9 P. M, Sunday to 9 P. M. BEAUTY COLLEGE , JEWELERS 16h toe Boren ” 256 South Saginaw Street, Pontiac, Michigan 16 West Haron Street (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 Behind Kresge’s. 2nd Floor, 5281 Dixie-Hwy. * _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, /SEPTEMBE ER 5, 1958 a #1230 Prepare to Combat Sut Season May Top Last Year’s | 289 W. Montcalm | FISH OR CHICKEN FRIDAY | 5:30 TO 7:30 — Banguet Hall for Rent DANCE SAT. NIGHT MEMBERS and GUESTS SP cw sap doe il ‘i alin ih D market here has built a.miniature| He told the State Firemen’s . theater inside the store to keep the|Assn, annual convention yesterday| John L. Sullivan was heavy-) Phillipi: was driving an M- me kids occupied with cartoons while! fire fighters may have to develop|weight boxing champion from 1882/Army tank, The tank holds 233) ANN ARBOR University of | (This is the sceond in a series of replies of Michigan ical center officials key state officials to a question asked by United |have Announced standby plans to) Press International — How's business? ‘Phe series |meet any major infantile paralysis outbreak in the Detroit area, By ROBERT J. FURLONG where the number of cases has increased over last yéar. - Ys intended ,to give an indication of how: Michigan's economy is” recovering from the recession) Secretary, Michigan Tourist Council While announcing their precau- LANSING (UPI) — Michigan's 1958 tionary plans, authorities empha-| Summer travel season has been a good one. sized at the same time that the) and may well show an increase over last jnumber of polio cases is not ex-| year’s 600-million-dollar season. Leow increase to serious pro- The number of tourists in Michigan is Eight eee ae ee the rise—but per capita spending ap- ported this year in. the Detroit] Pears to be down slightly. area, compared: with two last The concensus of resort people I talked year. Total cases have increased| to on a fact-finding tour recently is that about 50 per cent over the same their summer season has been successful. period a year ago. Dr. David G. Dickinson, head Business was up in many places, of the University hospital polio notably the Straits area and the Upper respirator center, said yesterday Peninsula generally. Increases even. ran be had made arrangements to ac-| as high as 30 per cent over last year at | cept overflow respirator cases in| Sault Ste. Marie. ithe university center if the need eS | arises. . ¥ . For the whole, Michigan’s tourist in- Dr. Paul T. Salchow, director) dustry has held up well in spite of ad-. of Herman Kiefer Hospital report-| verse weather early in the season and a ed that the polio situation ‘seems generally recessed economy. to be. well under control at pres- etroit’s Polio Rise Tourist Business Ropes In fact, the recession has turned to our advantage in that many Michigan resi- dents as well as visitors from nearby states vacationed close to home this year as an economy measure. Also, soMe wage earn- ers on. a shortened work week have taken it as an opportunity to travel. There are some rough spots in the travel picture. Scattered reports of a temporary drop in tourist patronage of some localities and American-plan re- sorts formed the other side of the re- cession coin. These are the factors: I would list as ‘ contributing to the season’s success: —The almost magnetic attraction of the Mackinac Bridge. —Good vacation weather caring July and August. —A steady increase in vacation: trave] _. throughout the nation. —The combined effect of Michigan's . continued local, regional and state promo- tion of our vacation attractions, ent.” He. added: . "Even though polio is a highly tle as five years. COLUMBUS, Ohio (#—A super- thinking about unearthly blazes. [outer space.’ lunpredictable disease, it looks like|Fire Chief Concerned —_{“itfons on the moon within as 't|Service Station Makes the peak is over." About Unearthly Blazes | «today’s fire fighters," he said, ‘Surprising Gas Sale ASHLAND, Ky, (AP) —Lexing-|“must soon have extinguisher de-) SOMERSET, Ky. —Sfc. Orville Store Entertains Kids ton Fire Chief Earl McDaniel is | vices designed to fight fires in Phillipi wheeled his vehicle into a ‘Iservice station here, and aid: “Give me 100 gallons.” gallons, i Mom shops for the groceries, a fire department suitable for con-juntil 1892. * a Remnants sal’ # een seers f! +.” ‘ /? ¢. Ray “<4 y4, fy \e®es : A tremendous buy enables us to offer this nylon carpet for so little. A wonder- ful textured pattern Regular $10.95 wel Here is your opportunity to really save dollars on first quality carpeting. All * itéms are ends of rolls, short piéces, one- of-kind. items, etc.,.but all in perfect condition . . . so before you buy any- where, be sure to see this collection. Roll Balances seiiiiaaiainiamemainaa | tae 76" Beige All Wool Was NOW | ~12'x 9° WhiteandGold.......... © 90.20 * 65.00 Heavy Rayon : 2'x 19” Grey Serot ............. > 97.00 © 65.00 Wilton .... *109.50 : 15.00 12'x18' Green Tweed............ "191.80 $110.00 conse © Eyeve 12’x12'2” Beige Bark Tweed ........ °100.00 °110.00 , | 12's 48" Brown All Woot Tweed... °174.95 $115.00 All Wool Beige + | 42%x13°9" AN Wool Bark Tweed Green 198.95 5140.00 12°x14’7" Acrilan Aqua Tweed ...... *207.30 $145.00 All Wool Green or $]] 50 8 95 12'x187" Beige and Aqua Atl Wool . °324.25 °225.00 | Grey Wilton .......... eM baieccints Tweed Carpet ........ £195 5.95. Nee Tweed ........ * 7.99 5.95 Bark Tweed ...........0 0 6.95 as SALE INLAID PLASTIC WALL TILE ——_—4 — fer your new home or re D2 decorating ... be sure that you~ visit Spencer's Drapery Department be- fore you decide. New pat- erns gdiore will . intrigue you with the wonderful possibilities for beautify- ine your home. Also Spencer's home decorators will be glad to assist you in your planning. | Custom Installation COUNTER TOPS LINOLEUM & TILE : FLOOR. COVERINGS 3511 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-7775 Open. Monday, F rons and Saturday Evenings ithe ndme of the father. Births : Recent births in the Pontiac area recorded in the Oakland County Clerk's office are listed below by UTICA: James A. Chadwick, 47303 Roland = = Robert G. Cheney, 2552 Howe Howard H. Cochell, 44265 Merrill William Gritzinger,. 8835 71 Mile James W. Henderson, 45925 Cum- * berland i ‘ Allen J. Glaspie, “$862 Shannon - James W. King. 44083 Doniey John J. Kolaski Jr.. 7005 Ryburn William R. Jenereaux, 2591 Lee Donald J. Holland, 8406 Millis Ralph Hastings, 47070 Zipeorest oray oudon, Claude H. Logan, 48680 Van Dyke James Bechtel Willtam F. Nightingale, 48038 Remer PONTIAC: Richard F. Martus, 21 O'RIl Edward F. Osborne, 285 S. Boulevard est J. Ovl 231 Osm Baste w “Orr 407 = Beverly Ponale J Pursiey, 151 Oreherd Lake Elia V. Petrovich, 2425 Williams Harley L. Powell, 2154 Sliver Bell Walter L. Parsons, 1147 Jay Norman T. Pyke, 372 Hillfield Richard L. Prue. 2380 Cheltingham Tester © Pitts tr. #89 *%. Columbia Herbert.J. Prange, 436 Moore George §. Payne, 194 G: Charles a Benefield, wf "Robin wood Arthur H. Binkowski B44 Henbert mda ‘ Buick ats R. meister * = Johnsog onald C. a 130: F — Bustillow. 58 S. Parke .e Wis r tutto: Robert E. St. Clair. 171 Rosetta Donald P. Stone, 45 W. Chicago Lester Soldan, 992 Cameron Tee W. Saincome, 1544 Moccassin Kenneth F. Simmons, 1326 Hendricks Fugene St. John, 2081 Rosedale Charles J, Adair. 1199 Dover Alfred R. Adkins, 183 Aurcusta Warren W. Adier, 444 Auburn Charles E. Alle, 65 Le Grande gate C. Anthony, 2143 8. Ham mond_| Adam C. Anzures, 3075 Newberrv - Herminio A. Armovit, 447 Orchard Lake! Sarkis P, Baytarian, 4127 Motorway Orvel L, Beckley, 670 E. Tennyson Billie C. Beegie. 173 Clifford Francisco Salagar Jr.. &@ N, Eastway | James D. Stroud Jr.. 736 W. Huron Richard T. Snencer 5111 Pine Knob | Ex-Minnesota Flower state flower. Some years later jt 1, . was discovered that this type of Not Found in State | power does not grow in Minnesota. ” ST, PAUL--Minnesota's legisla-/So in 1902 the state flower was tute in 1893 selected the wild lady-ichanged to the pink- an white lady- slipper or moccasin Hower as the slipper, ” " + BLUE SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD. FE 4.4611 "ACTION TONIGHT "ACTION WARNER BROS. present the big “Battle Cry” story of the American Commandos! | himself in hie firet starring big-screen role! Eines Scone DON MURRAY DIANE VARS] Rell * OWL SHOW SATURDAY *« emmenmanmnencen.) { COMMERCE Ni O DRIVE-IN THEATER : SOUTH END OF UNION LAKE ROAD HURRY! HURRY! COME OUT EARLY! HURRY! HURRY! One of the Worlds Most Amazing Attractions NEVER ANYTHING LIKE IT BEFORE! NEVER! IT’S BREAKING RECORDS FROM COAST TO COAST! es PEOPLE SAW IT IN ONE WEEK IN ST. LOUIS! BROKE ALL .RECORDS IN NEW ORLEANS LAST WEEK! CROWDS! GROWDS! CROWDS EVERYWHERE! IT’S AMAZING! Filling Drive-in Theaters Everywhere! Many See It Standing! 60,000 WE FACE of LIFE p sorv-vivio- ne See This in the Privacy of Your Car! SOME OF ITS SCENES ARE SO POWERFUL MANY ACTUALLY FAINT AT EACH SHOWING! IF YOU CAN‘T TAKE IT — DON’T COME ALONE — MAKE UP A CAR LOAD! “Chile ade 16 must -be one Clean and Moral! FOR ADULTS | iar Mes OF Natures | Miracies. EDUCATIONAL PICTURE ie a TAKES A TIP — Canadian middleweight champion Wilf Greaves takes a tip from an old but great champ Jack Dempsey, who was once the American heavyweight champion, Greaves will make an appearance in Pontiac Monday night at Wisner Stadium when he faces Mike O'Hara, rising young newcomer from Milwau- kee in one of three 8-round features on the six-bout program. Li it bat LH . Ave oe ALACE THE, PONTIAC C PRESS. aad s SEPTEMBER s 1958. i ih oe ye Z and line backer Wayne W he has a lot to learn before he can _ |bolster the title chances of the defending NFL champion Detroit the rangy 215-pound former Idaho itroit defensive star. | Another Schmidt? Rookie Wayne Walker Is Held High by Lions | DALLAS, Texas -~ e center r Says oa * + But the Lion coaching staff says university player has the makings of another Joe Schmidt, top De- Walker, who averaged more than 60 minutes per game for three seasons in college, frankly admits he “doesn’t know much about football,” at least pro foot- ball. “I thought I knew my way From the. Press Box BY BRUNO L. Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Nothing kills a young fighter’s confidence more than being thrown to the Wolves faster than his nosing ex- perience warrants. This was the case of young heavyweight named Joe Modzele who was matched by the late Jake Mintz in 1949 to fight the more experinced Bob Baker. Baker beat Modzele to a pulp and kayoed him in the 4th round. This was the end of Modzele’s fight - career. Such antics were typical of Mintz especially where the dollar was concerned. x * * - When Mintz died his widow took over as manager of the fighters he had under contract. “¢ of Wilf Greaves. One of these fighters was a Canadian si the name Greaves had a few short-round-pro matches etviet his belt, but then was made easy prey for the big boys of the middleweight division in typical Mintz fashion. a ae _ Here was a 20} not enough experience in The Smith enterpr ar old_kid showing enough guts but losing decisions to Tiger Jones, Gene Fullmer, Joey Giardello and Spider Webb. ) ‘ises of Detroit saw a kid with courage and great potential if trained and brought up in the ranks properly, so they bought his contract. Tony Ross is now his manager, and since whipping Duke Harris in ‘Detroit a year ago, Greaves has won seven straight fights. x He is now the Canadian middleweight champion, hailing from Edmonton, Alberta, and he will defend ‘his Canadian title, October 8rd against that country’s ‘top challenger, Yvonne Turrene. Before that fight, however, he has two engage- ments, one here in Pontiac Monday night at Wieser stadium when he goes against light heavyweight . Mike O’Hara of Milwaukee. ‘ -He also has a-television date scheduled for September) “29th against Paddy Young ; -arena. from New York’s St. Nick x * * 4 Detroit promoter Julius Piazza says, “Greaves is ready now to start moving up. The experience against the big dogs even though he got beat, will help him.” Of course Piazza would like to see Greaves win Mori- .'@ay night and then successfully defend his Canadian title next month. “This would give us a topnotch card for a Chuck Spieser bout. in Detroit,” Piazza added. mie ger ® If all this should come to pass, the handsome Greaves could overcome that Mintz era of his life and make his climb up the ladder with confidence. ==— climb into the ring at Wrigley Basilio Fights Aragon Tonight inLos Angeles TV Winner Is Offered Chicago Title Bout With Akins LOS ANGELES ® — Battle-test- ed Carmen’ Basilio of New York and California's unpredictable Art (Golden Boy) Aragon fight for 12|tans rounds or less tonight, with the winner hoping to get a title shot at middleweight champion Sugar Ray Robinson. , Weighing-in ceremonies were set for 10 a.m,, PDT, at the Olympic pected to scale 152 pounds or so. * & &. Tonight at 7 o’clock, PDT, they Field before an expected turnout of 20,000 or more, plus thousands more across the ‘nation who can watch the fight on (NBC) tele- vision. Basilio, a rugged, little gent from Chittenange in upper New York State, will. be at least a 3-1 fav- orite, Promoter Cal Eaton and match- ica promoter Jack Begun said Thursday night he would offer ee ae en See If Art Aragon beats Basilio. in Los Angeles Friday night, he will be incladed in the offer made to Akins, Begun said, Pontiac Golfers Eye State Title Pontiac's five-man golf team will Pentiac won the state MRA title two years ago at Grosbeck in Lan- sing, but did not send a team last Few Changes Made to Date in Pro Hockey League NHL Teams Shy of Big Trades. TORONTO . = You won't nedessarily need a program to cons hr woe when. the Na- oekey Le starts its ees next month. Af least that) is the impression eae during the off-season. five of last season's players in the league draft but they are nage on young men from their farm —_ to fill the gaps. ~ Wie Tei ae ee ste hope to grab at least one good defenseman before the season esata 8. : Agee the Leafs, said a few days ago the team had: the worst defense oe + He is sehier the returning .las a sophomore fullback at Auditorium, with the battlers ex-| fa million dollars for a welter-|~ ; weight title fight in Chicago. so much playing time during three seasons at Idaho,"’ Walker says, “but the first couple of days in camp Buster Ramsey, defensive coach, threw things at me that I had never heard of.” xk .*& _* Walker will team with Schmidt as Detroit. plays an _ exhibition game with the Chicago Bears to- night in the Cotton Bowl here. tt: * 8 Ramsey describes the youngster as “one of the top prospects in camp. He really loves to hit when he’s backing up the line and has plenty of speed to work into our pass defense alignment.” seventh draft choice in 1953, im- pressed Ramsey so much that a veteran was traded away to make room for the rookie. Since then, Schmidt has been team captain three .times and rated the top linebacker in NFL play. He has made almost every honor accorded linemen and has been a virtually unanimous choice for the all-pro game four straight seasons. LIONS NOTES: — Line backer Joe Schmidt says his darkest hour in football came Pitts- burgh in a. game with Michigan State. The all-pro defensive star seys he was held to a minus 30 oa? in nine times by the Spar- around pretty well, after having) ‘PAW PAW’S HOME — Charley Maxwell, Tiger outfielder, scores from first after Billy Martin bunted. Catcher Sherm Lollar overthrew first base and then had a second error as he drops the relay throw at home plate. Martin con- tinued to third on the two errors. tee Meet grip on Lollar’s arm. AP Wirephote Bunning Still Unable foGo - Full Distance 9th Straight Time but ls Winner DETROIT. (UPI) — Jim Bunning still hasn't pitched a .complete, nine-inning game. since his no- hitter early two months ago. He times. _ *« * *& But the slim Tiger right mendes ait safeties but he was lifted for a punch hitter in the seventh ‘and Hank Aguirre finished up, allow-! ing the final Chicago run in the ninth. ig started out like Herb Moford and Frank Lary in the pre- sixth but a doubleplay ended the threat and with one run in and two men-on base via walks ‘in the seventh, Harvey Kuenr - saved couver jail on a-charge of assault. The conviction is to be appealed early this month. Meanwhile, Olm- CRICAGO DETROIT ert ae ier ee Sar Hee an these teaenen, condedl cera 21 f Ene tt ~ |less picked up Danny Lewicki and use Hate et Dave Creighton from the Rangers|Smin tote ee a2 ae in the draft. They also sold de-|moorep 0000 2112 fenseman Dollard St. Laurent Pecomonet 1900 Bunsingp 3018 Chicago. : Iters,p sooe sited dads Barton and Chicago wi rey Ber, 2288 's team plus Lown,p 8 H 8 4 ser fam seems Beh clubs re peels with the strongest farm systems. That is not, including the Cana- diens, of course, who are favored to run away with the league coccedige th galbvone he cated oat wn et BS ie tate odo Y otal the minor-league |c—Walked for Shaw in 1th; n Tih; d-—Bingled for Bunnin, in th: e—Called strikes for y in Pipes Bo the aeaae: clubs in the 1 Sem . 159 season will probably be those —Chieago ag sDetrst a PO—A DP--Fox “and Tor- - ag Harris. LOB eon, Maxwell, Wil- and T = eo artin, cago §, Detroit , Torge s0N, Harris. SF—Smith, echt i ap championship and Stanley .Cup|M again. A. » i Fails to Go 9 Innings! has failed to go the route 9 straight|; OUT YOU GO! — zin Today's Mar | arket by a as oe by _ CHICAGO—When Mrs. A. re-|ticed, she lay down. Ap sous. gajenal” poritne thay have ashancopte them in wholesale package lots. turned home in late afternoon from }she closed her eyes, she lost sight/experiences, especially in CHICAGO (~The grain futures|Quotations are furnished by the) NEW YORK WA few ‘issues|her husband’s funeral, she ‘saw alof her apparition. Almost at once|ments of stress, he said. market was steady to firm today|netroit Bureau of Markets, as of/™@de progress in an irregular| strange woman in front of her, she felt stronger, as if the “‘life of|author believes them to be ae : stocks seacint conte: Sore. HN to at the women eave alteck io er toey. (cs * | pec -Aacmare Board of Trade. was fairly active. noticed that woman wore a/back body, cinations “are merely activi * « * Produce Most key stock showed fractional |re 2 of her own coat, hat ya (DAILY VISITS > the brain’s area of recall. oa Dealers said the trade appeared gains or losses. veil., Without bothering abou occurs, to be restticted on one side by|sppies, Duchess, feo bu.,.......92.80/, The Market was mixed in sn] intruder, Mrs, A. began to undress. Rag tery pte Magny, “double” usuatly appears suddenly prospects for large yields of the|tiuckberrien serater se sree We dg'active opening. Prices continued/The other woman did the same, , and without warning. Most fre- major crops and reports of mount- | ay ocr = gape dleg ce Peles ee uneven as trading some-| Only looking into the stran- | When she was alone. She quently the patient ‘‘sees” only the ing tension in the Chinese Commu-|Pesches, Red Haven,’ bu. “...../.°" 3.50 |what. "I ger's face, did Mrs. A, realize that|see it only when she looked /face or the face and bust; less nist-Nationalist situation, Fear Berni Ute coe HH x ke she was staring at herself, as if in| Straight ahead, trequently he sees the whole fig- Most price changes were limited veorran.es American Telephone, selling ex-|a mirror, e. & 2% ure. The specter is seen clearly classes today to minor fractions. Bean, Wax, bY. ..c.ccosscecoccae 2.76 /UVidend, was up a point at the Mrs, A, was experiencing an Whenever it happened, Mrs, A. jand with details. It generally has any Negro elses bad waehuned Beets on bo va eaasde i 4 $9| Opening » but virtually erased this} Josue) yet long known, medi- |‘ ‘elt mildly amazed bewil-|no color and is frequently trans- building. what near the end of ‘the first ceaiors, doz. * sees saene nee ceane 3.00 gain later. eal phenomenon—an al dered” and had “8 parent, It usually — ee ae hour, with most contracts on |€*ery. ee sees seneneasaes: ~. 149] Kroger, still affected by ru- | hallucination, in which one’s own wien = 4 hl got 8 pancarorvaag ert : opie Ley b ea ny of pannel boys > es — % |Qucuinbers, “ait size dL", er) pvc putas, rg. raagper ist body image is projected into tual way 1am fully aware that my tee ; ; staged boycott a a bushel lower 4 higher, oeeee eee eeenaree vidend, sumed ance, visual space, Bi most emotional _ terday boasted that the aera e, Lymegron Sricubes LINN cure He te eee Sibel oa SE A) gdataiag well: over a pelt AT a ee or autnscopy eee eee ee ene eteat i¢| Tenctien to seeing one’s double ts - ‘were behind the group the 1958 Advisory | lower, September $1.26; oats um- |Onions. dr , 00 ees 3 loom, which tripped more than 2 cia ah as ee Yet I see it; I t; sadness, often amazement or be- _ given them permission to Committee for the 12 Oakland | changed to % lower, September |Peas. gh Re “IIIT 300] peimts yesterday, recouped about a eee eae eee ee wilderment, and sometimes satis- Parents of most of the | County participating | 1%; ry ‘ ONIN, Mb WI arose cceseconceas: 1.78| half that loss. aw see I feel it as a living, integral part) gaction, the author sald. The : %; rye ¥, higher, | nose thebs.} GOB. .osecueree 1.00 coming toward him) is attributed terialized form : held a meeting last night. in the Metropolitan Detroit Unit- | September $1.26%; soybeans un- [Estes (beg) 50 Ibs. +++... 118) 1 § ‘Tobacco was more than alto ae al Po pe enipeTat cirg rt is me | Bablective sensory tootag. ot : a i ed, hd ae CESSES + ie eh se ee ae ia | ment yi eee (et a atts Smt hd, er ent he eae pe” — 4 ; Motors Proving Grounds, Mil- ts a hundred pounds higher, ae, ae Goat.) i “ibs.” e “+ 199 ware sareet rly irregular. Oils were peared aplarsrinieren, Pood The cause of Mrs, A.’s difficul- | 7.6 phantom usually appears in ee Reet teard & September $12.62, ee about unchanged and chemicals|edical literature only toward the| tY 1 not known. It seems to be line visual space in front of the dison, Commerce "F Export business through the gov- Sohenas. tt toa displayed a slightly lower trend-|end of the last century. somewhat related to other hallu- | patient, The whole experience Groveland, Highland, - Holly, |@mmment subsidy program broad. |gaverds, Ot geese Western eae eal Even yet, little has been written on tenets coment oil ec ae . : ened slightly overnight. Sresterd” eesctianerstnscecsees e rose in lish about the phenomenon, : ‘ x Lyon, | Milford, | Novi, | Rose, |*ithe Department of Agriculture|S2iiti, "jg c--ccvovvs~-'re $88lin a spurt of heavy trading. according to. Dr. N. Lakianowicz,| Mood Phantom limbs, and cielt- ltime to a continuous presence of ships, Clarence 0. Bales of 8210 |Said it included 900,000 bushels of /S¥iss chard, bu. 20°000°000000055 180] a pit on the minus side were| Barrow Hospital, Bristol, England. vaynnes, BY. ~|the double Commerce Rd., Walled Lake, |corn, mostly for September and|_ SALAD GREENS Jones & Laughlin, Goodyear,|/He reported seven cases of auto-| There are two main theories x * * ‘. was renamed the region’s rep- |October shipment, 771,000 bushels oe ae eres 18! Woolworth, United Aircraft, South-|scopy in a copy of Archives of|about the cause: The organic,| No treatment for autoscopy resentative on the UF's Board of |0f barley, 140,000 bushels of oats, ecesese. bends (crate) ‘ti és’ sees 235 ern Railway and American Cyana-|Neurology and Psychiatry, pub-|which regards autoscopy as the re-|known, the author said, although the Directors, and Harold 0, |and 36,000 bushels of rye. JROMBING, DU. ....seecceesereececee 128) Mid. . lished by the American Medical|sult of some irritating process in|treatment of oe co-existing dis- Hansen, Huron Valley School . “ _ Association. the brain, and the psychologie,|order, such as depression or & District superintendent, was Grain Prices | Poultry and Eggs New York Stocks ee 2 a acim elected to the committee. CHICAGO GRAIN . | As Mrs. A. looked at her “dou- |Jection of “‘memory pictures, 2 aie CHICAGO, Sept. 4 (AP) —. Opening eee: wee Agmiral ...... 132 80088 s+" hS| ble” she felt that it was more alive|Said. In addition, he suggests that Peder Men Ba ; : 2 jee en SATS xl aDERROLE a. uct Ae es: Hy Eke aty hylan warm than she was, Dr, Las OS Petes or wish fling Pe ers. ae | eee 61% | Per . : $62 Kennecott .... 92.5 extremely | Compensa zi Business Notes ome eoaeee es — oo ant. “ pal y hens 17-20; light type «| ate ery ee a1 imp Ch oo. B Senovin wa, FO wy mechanism, illustrated by one pa- 18 Duck Shooter s 113; hea fryers (3-3%| Alcoa ..... -. 16.4 Kresge, 6S ... May coos Le RTE YY aves, aertiase, See Sezeee ose See a's! tg Kroger ess tient who saw himself conducting at Harsen’s Island t seeene: » @eae06 bw 20-21: bs). 24: eer i aeee . stra, | Sep ne LR Mar, 227211 13t "| ducklings 2 itr ay ial ise Am Cran is: in fe Mea, Ri inage Calendar =" to Ree eos PER ee ie Am Motors .. 17, Lock aire ‘:. 89 communication of Pon-| Sex, intelligence, education, age,| DETROIT (UPD — Federal a a ‘on sa. pDETROMT, Sept. set oF hae f. 0. b. b.| Am Tel de Tel 196-4 fone & in 3 tise + Atay F. a A MP Fri,|and heredity eid play, no agents eo nacaarigruae Gh owe Hilo: : «on ‘, Lorillard ..... 68. * P Gerald Moors,/role in aw . Neither Departm agents swoo down Dee: 22050 11.0) Whites: Grade, A jumbo ste, wtd.| Armen Stl 1... 814 Mack THe =. 301 wie. there seem to be a particular type |on Harsen’s Island in a dawn raid ST, ig he Si oe te eee Ae My re gs] Brief serneaelly sectemey ee eet ie aig onl aoling wid. | Truman Staff Goes Hea Gita beg ve syle eos gt eae Bo) NewS in Briel lene. Among Ds lake ia one line : wid ave. 64: fe ee. BS SE eee Air 1.443 Mert Oh & 6. 163 se + = medion: = aoe, 3 27-| Bohn Alum ., 19.6 Mpls Hon .... 988) Tom Croskey Jr., 39, of 43|4>, Showed. some per: : on Federal P ayroll “oomme St atted strated: d: ae = extra| Borden... BY ion ich ‘<: 3¢_|Jacokes St., was found guilty yes-| ectionist, tralts; one had 80m) The 18 were scheduled to be Es j nade Se $4-58; extra| Borden. tl328 Mont Ward’.. 382lterday of drunk driving s; Federal Judge KANSAS CITY (AP) — Former|sztr= = Silanes Gade ume 3 Cs Brice x aa ‘Bee maee os nicipal Judge Cecil B. Siecatlum. = bo ah ~and three “were /Ratph “M. ati 1am) | President Harry 8. Truman's cler-|** captions Burroughs": 36. Murrey p aie eS on There ae to be no signifi- US. marshals ae federal payroll. Livestock Campb Soup 424 Net Orel ..84| Bauman’s Restaurant, 600 E.| ievehiatric disorders and auto- |sen’s Island before going ov- Thomas G. Jay, regional com- saree tive Can Pac i... 283 Nat Lead ....10%.8/ South Bivd., was burglarized last cca, be ell. However, there |er to the island in Lake St. Clair missioner of the General Services Sept, 4 LAP cattle: Sale| Gapltal Airl +. 181 Nor “Pac... a8.1(night and $32 in change taken! goog ‘seem to be “more than |off Algonac. The had Administration, said that agree-/Sp/¢, 300, Slaughter, classes in actup Case, Jt... 213 Nor SSPw *: 17 |from a cash box. chance affinity” between |their van and hustled the 18 back In Lake } f Sh ment wag Tac ee. Eaten e at Som My ey) | sutescopy and epllepey (two of |t0 Detrolt after, getting many ol In Lake Michigan Off Sheboygan mieaise, atuly cows ia0ese; can See ts Bt Pe kw ar tt |DOg A lec] __| Ws Patients were epileptics) and jthem out of bed. pension bill passed b Sere aad cutters Ince see ne A] Clark Mguip'.. $0 Pen AW Ar og mnewarae migraine, although its character * *« &t Disco R t Ship) meses Fe fo weet, in a |e ‘e B4ifor Rescuinc ws set Keowee coterie sat | tap Felice, wo ait't hare 0 ver emains Oo TD iia o's2s000 annual pension. [sess beer ae is tovtow ehoice| SOL, B°4, A << 343 " ; ig migrainoss patients, an este |part in the rad, sald the federal | In the past ex-presidents re- sigere "Meso; fg four, oads Gon Wt Ges “ 461 Couple Twice fore, instead of, or after an a — ad sliev un in ceived no pension and paid for|!®. "steers 28.00: “ullity” and standard sda rd] Cont Bek) Sat er attack, = Shooting and selling of the ducks aay ot Oe ied ee 34 Sons 0-36.59; , meiuieg ont a inee eT ae Pal | Some authors believe that “nor-!is a federal violation. _ SHEBOYGAN, Wis, (UPD)—Two| the passengers ee Truman will keep a personal]ie3,1#60, atitiy Sulle'S3.0634.08" eci-| Seat OW: i 2 ee et cet a. ve : idl specialists have discovered/ stricken. There were secretary, an adrhinistrative as- lable, 24. Com- Res wees ar? hp . Then we * at the of Lake Michigan| small Wfebosts, Most of the | he ae fore a — 211 . UL takes over in the kitchen can out-cook Ertle said. 5 yo : | 23 yy } his wife.” “Then it was discovered food could be f i in ifty 5 | z Yy an ae ses ae an, pee gel a vpenind made by grinding meal. That was a tedious @ ] r ri uye rs 2 ty a student o e soulft e of cook- job, so the man turned it over to his wom- x , , ibe. an. WE MUST close OUT : = Gy “It’s an urge a Re heart,” said igre od : e heart,” sa “Gradually she took ove | yyy Ertle, president of the American Culinary job of food vecatalioet over the whole ALL seet uic Ss e : zy, Federation, as the group opened its con- : : vention Wednesday with 150 top U.S. chefs And, said Ertle sadly, too many 4 a gz. id attendance women still regard cooking as just an- gs for You a 7 pode “@ se gery. ; “Men have more of the creative vm urge,” he said. “They have a great . . “The average American family is bet- ed Su Ppl) _ g c J natural talent, and they’ take the cre-. — ee a ge: those in pec al prow fl * Limit PPIY So — fom L. twice #7 Mountains icc meal Prendhermad "porderiand., “But pirate | te : 33 Penge $0 Branches What's more, they've been at it longer. — times American women are a little care- | aa underline i What some | CAVEMAN THE CHEF less in the preparation of the food.” he . 40 Having handles government : . a eee ee “When the caveman hunted and made Ertle is chief of the United Air Lines | 210 Orchard Lake Ave. _ Phone FE 2-9101 . yA rt ss nelper (or) | his kill, he cooked it over an open fire and flight kitchen in Chicago. ss Bedrooms yey 'y aoe yy ~"ARRO- T Drayton Woods — of this wonderfwt feature aa to tag ca) | “3 FP rtm*tome Ww 1 * it € rms av iat yt e your contract as down pay ull price ottage on around, Nice lakefront jot on ranches & ® $16,265, * tlbers EIS He beautiful are e. $16, Near ree m within 10 mile radius Trade Now For this beand new 2 bedroom floors bg tt heat. 3 heat, Nice Tot Lakefront m “‘Dodog an Lake, all modern, can year excellent area. E-Z te: 12 ft. lake only $1200 down, revels B. Henry, I Ine. é trade. for a , We Face il or -— $12,500 Silver Lake, sisi ke . Terms On oe “Ga abd + 3 ie y interest A mortgage idles ranch type home on As- Clark moves ui call MA 51201 or &L LOW DOWN PAYM'T | hee te 4 ‘ean ait aids on 3) tee iesshon ar ood __ buy at oh ae ree Bye Wide'33 2 ie. 32 Monty vag hy Ave. soca seta ce als sh ‘C* PAN ad S Realtor a) $,20°m, poe dscorate * ‘|7 BEDROOM BRICK ton Plains $2500 down and 864 a) a me. eneed yard, Keego Harbor, FE 2 24001, $1,125 DOWN” oom brick terrace. Hardwood _npaewem. Gas fur- =e SUBURBAN | NEAR ‘MSUO™ CUCKLER REALTY adh W'S. WH $1,350 Wwipow : "red asem automatic dismat ke tgs OR ___ ree. L.. large lot ett. $450 0. DOWN 3 3 pede. DEE ome ¥ tri-level. Waterford 1 re oe ron, wae Seti SYLVAN LAKE new 3 hodem. *: ranch carpet. Ww. 6 ee ee FE Basis. $11.950 3625 DOWN, a RICK, be pari income, 2 bathe. Fes. rm 5 taxes low Pinay = Te approved, PE 00s BY NER. Re eronY RICK. ew fan beg = HOM ¥ bath. * ia Kitchen wi ee, exhaust gas ‘heat and hot water, water, and screen Ssriee s eiaire A Ly down. lake 2 ay 4 EO dscaped. es heat, alum. arte Rochester just south of Clin-|. _ton River Bridge, Rocheste FE? Sue Bas Seal a eee Sr gr We room. walls, 6 large = trees, if you b+ a it is, Very PHA terme “tgs rs ah achool district. bedrooms, 15 x ‘s te dining roo & saireet et $8,500 a Realtor \ ret focated = " forth nda ta temily| J ry attrac ve nyo down payment for William M F 075 W. Huron Open 9 to R ered red_drive. ood, here y priced. MICHAELS ome — 3 room, bas separa’ =. e- —— we — = Bony a | - ame down, iller E 2-0263 oe Hees. Gordon Flattley, Bidr. ‘LIT-LEVEL sransee fem 0082 — WEST SUBURBAN of closets, Tile is a real -dream oo hy 2 fenced. Just costs down, fo city, An leads to {00 Land. a w Upstairs cee bedrooms, 2 of beds answer. bet > 3 ry ¢ room |} story large bedrooms, - kitchen, Ceramic Hardw floors : all ae basement. Move in for mortgage costs only. »* 4 BEDROOM family home gore Baldwin school. Has a ‘plus a. of 3 (ie “«-SPoperty we hear Howtows $10 ,000 — About $450 should. cover mortgage costs with fs ro ga — upon osing, ‘2 buildin ag “An RAY O’NEIL, 262 8S. Tele Rd, FE! 3-1103 — Nothing Down A BEAUTIFUL big Guana eee ar ¥% lovely amount of BE TO JOSLYN bungalow. S _ Ogee , 2 the me, Op mortgage 4 2 5% ft. tile bath, and best - other Reslior open 2 Ret 2-6936) Sun. mod-|7 = basement, lovely yard with — Multi-Lakes Realty At Highinna 7 Immediate Se New furnace. Large lot, payed “street. This is a good buy price, $8,900. 3060 S. COmmerce Rd. MA #1578 a hDpret. 30 miles but. Guty $5 rere W. DINNAN 66 W. Huron FE 4-251? WHITTEMORE ST. = > 6 room mode mn, full basement, “oll heat. Total ‘price ‘Clarence C. Ridgeway *REALTOR 975 Baldwin Ave. FOR SALE. BY 7 BED- En bome. storms and ‘and Sapaens. Ti eye HOME. ar “OWNER. 1600 d at monthly r reasonable offer, b pea | CUSTOM BRICK RANCH 153 of livin , on. in this “oul randin 7 be it - s, select.oak Ts, mu Ti dy attached ga- street to beau am home for only $19,500 with 10 per cent down. $500 DOWN Ideal for couple, This small home furnished nog M ready for you to move right in. plete Pith garage and total price = $4,600 with immediate possession. BEDROOM - TRADE Custom built ranch with full base- ment, automatic heat, select oak alls, wardrobe 3 equity > —< car ~ are home eur unload ETS — NO MONEY DOWN ing 3 bedroom — Th a Large Sur rbot from — Possession «JIM WILLIAMS TATE & INSURANCE 1483 _ Bs i) BALD PE 4-0547 a Past aie nao “GARAGE & breezeway, 1 acre ground, nea | a with chicken coop, O: BARGAIN—BARGAIN $400 DOWN. LOG HOME ODERN [EDIATE 1, sEnaoow * BEDROOM HOME. GARAGE, PERRY PER MONTH BAYS” YTHI R. J. VALUET, Realtor Established in 1916 WOODHULL LAKE — Front. bedroom pnorgel Spoon we Boa’ oe a Hig $13,500, 3 home with Youngstown garage. large k, ity gy: beach, All for ‘erms. LAKE FRONT RANCH — home, 3 Bedrms., attractive nite trees. Now WEST SIDE — Hardy to &r. h and webster Schoo "i = ceptionally ge eng it over: downs lake, $14,500 with $4,500 rther details. Now at $15,500 with $4,000 dawn Good investment. Floyd. Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 ° Dixi re Sain? Hwy, at Tele " AMPLE CUSTOMER PARKING (| Holly - Clarkston Area” “a Keres, Tegeh-tspe home on Partly wooded with — o bern . eautifully land. | tote neh wg th 500 00, ts. Mery 1c north of Pontiac, tu right x t Y-)) aeburn Ht. real buy. For astaced , PB. W. SINAN 66 FE 4-2577 3B J bn arni | 1, 6 room and bath frame home, fill bsm't, gas heat. Pay ome Meas? fs the Pina ie Ss no Bit —_ see ofits now LAKE FRONT —/ --Home on. wore “Lake, Now ae used as Senet Pe cone round home. - bach wi meee on roe fire: *\ q 2 e fi ang Wa “ Close 1 to St. Fred's ‘completely | gt ‘aces - team he y Oe eee ea tetebton and, | oar Howse. - 43 ne te vith Boe: KEN NEDY w. meres: ae PE _ Evenings till 9 RN, FE 4-6280 P= 3 weir a. vs. 6,800. A Reecteinis Dorothy Snyd Snyder Lavender | - 001 Hig! ‘na. (St) E! : panda 4-6417 TAYE a ae 2 podreom atthe today o eaemanee: 9 we have lots avail- able also. Love! Atti 10. LAKE, 60’ Ranch home. Living room has picture window. Large family room wil er son windowalls. Tile bath, furnace a. nage ‘L ood down Yor Gt fii 850° Pull Pull pri OFF JOSLYN. 2 Lots, Clean | ~ blinds. Nice | softener, 1% Car garage, $1250. iA c “HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E, Walton Open niet EER HIGHLANDS. BY OWN- se 3 bedrm. brick, 1%-car ie. bster * St. Benedict's Schools. lake priv. 304 Pioneer. Open Sat.-Sun., 2 ‘wo 5, 5 3 bed Aad i bath, aneiied floors. ilichen with veni| , Water HE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 4958 oe Mf For Sale Houses 43 2 i cl Y OWNERS» ‘ Leaving State Bloomfield Twp, /— Older Home : room, Tiled Bath ete. Incl. ; ee ein Binds ae Storms oe f” pereans, j js St. Hugo’s School Bist ts Menem Down ayment Fequired $3,500, ' ,Some Furnijure, it desired, FEderal 2-040] ree 1% Acres 6 Mies home offers 2. bedrm, with ~ 2 car ere * * basement » be pee at heat 2 oar arage, fireplace, fine place for dren. place to keep horse as there are several hun- dred acres of undeveloped land He | nearby, $13,500. § ROOM BUNGALOW WITH GA- Ease, ngs Sicoreted in and out. dy Phone FE ar HOME. % wens, $1,000 down. A REAL VALUE wae type EQUITY : model car on 7 room ie west side, near Pontiac General Hospital Cali for more informa ( $450 ig Bp how bz SUBURBAN Smith- Wideman REAL ESTATE aha ns EV=S. PE 4-4526 . HURON UNION LAKE, oa aad DOWN. 5 rooms, BS Sard arage, Nicel, — finished. ate, : BATHS, WALL- 3 BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASE- ~ GEORGE BLAIR Eves. “OR 3-1 108° WILL BUILD Nice 3 bedroom ranch style home with full basement, = ated. Cash to Mortgage. F..C. Wood Co. OFFICE OPEN 9 TO) 8 Corner Williams Lake Rd. & M58 CHOICE WATERFORD ‘AREA “BUILT, brick front living yon all to wall carpet- Full basement with forced air oil —— Situated on large, wooded .Re 3101 W, Huron Open meesiine ' til 9 LAKE FRONT HOM: LAKE FRONT L N AND FINEST CREM DES * the yo a for «a growte family with a iget--It has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths YAGNAOJ Ww e want to appear cekenre <9 but this home on frre’ fey at- » oll yeh png ‘and po Neat = @ button and can be you convenient “OI Resale ye on Tere x ‘with Lake Privileges. 3 bed- rooms, attached por jal- vision flowers $18,500 Teens and L. in the su chundreds of . and shrubs. Only with easy terms, SPACEMEN - and women would be yery the. space d in this + homey and cheerful 3 bed- room ranch It has a Banca fast nook junior sized din- ing room with oe” — eting ane ® re frat Se a flatter p- per of Peta — ina a “There is with dishwa asher and posal, 1% aths, completely w finished recreation. recom in bas ment, and lake. privileges on Watkins Lake. Terms. = _tile 4 bath, rdwood FA = heat, awe 3 relates e lot, close pated ‘a Pull price i a high . MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE —{|-———__— late ree “thihen | Soiees $2,000. "No down payment.) meat large living room, corner Moria Roots © ~~? bedrooms Lak Ra. 14300" .. Off Crescent vith hardwood ‘floors. Tiled bath Rest palate oe seems. Lauingor car po 150, . down payment, Mort- : STOUTS Today JUST PAINTED And ready for immediate oc- This 3 bed cupancy. room charmer features 11x26 liv- :% — m, large basement reation area, oil ook, ona pe. storms and screens. Close to Lin- coln Jr, High. $509 down. WALK TO WORK If you a here a at ¥ M. e ang —< e. Fe- windows, asbestos beautiful basement, nsulated, $950 down, CUSTOM LIVING j only $2,350 ‘down, $500 DOWN Moves you into this little country estat and part basement. 715x290 i Romeo oehoet dis- trict, close to Lakeville lake. $50 per month ACREAGE? Planning to buy in tire coun- try? We hate 6 large se- of paresia from 1 ' in the areas of the county. Consult us before you buy. ‘ Edw. M. Stott; Realtor TTX, Saginaw EE Sti6s @ PERSONALIZED HOMES FE _8-2200 | BROWN $10,500 G.I. SPECTAL — Little farm. Modern 3 bedroom bungalow with full basement. Oil turn, Excellent condition . ly 3 years ol —— an acre of land, 800 G.I. SPECIAL — 3 bedroom ‘ood A <3 2 me of land. ipeving bate New ite car gar. Nathing down canal — Lovel pert ng bun- full “pases: Oil ‘Best of $400 DOWN —- 3 rh “ bungalow only tte. "penta. eh . a 5 real value" L. I BROWN, Realtor 1362 Huroi Ph. FE 2-4810 MULTIPLE, LISTING SERVICE 3 13-FT. BEDROOMS 11% Baths $12,500 ted — & colored fixtures. = birch..cab: * o asement — coer um Build on your lot, 4 = r We are @ group of builders who through combining. our volume buying and direct-to-you sales, can pass on a very large ar we 4 6 roo 3 bedroom ra: lnnggoaped. lot 100 00x264 fh 2 vie room hall carpeted. Nsenctes ‘ = doors, -windews-and- ecreens. ~ Best Buys 1 peered walls ~— completely dec- |. tiled bath SLICES OF pam - ‘ For r Sale Lots 46 7 ¥. al ok COMMERCE TOWNSHIP. CORNER = . lot. mM hael Sar ites $500. ance CLASS Cc ne aa wit no down panes, +0135, orking man’s bar, located in LOT 130Xis0 Fr. Chane. | Pontiac. 317.009 dove. ton, “S122, cash. MA’ “sie Clarence €. Ridgeway ak le | os tata en ca 90X158 LOT. IN IZ. . ES ’ wn tates. Ideal for geuccawid beans, FOR LEASE MODERN NEW 2 FE 5-7477, py servic* station, Exc, potential, : pe th investment required. Fi Fi- ° ret qualified Way not build Sour ae Ss siness @ void~ are we Por CHOICE BLOOMFIELD riculars and’ details. tp Walled HILLS PROPERTY STAND. ONE TH RE- Station for lease Auburn at Adams, | maining well-loca lots in financial assistance available. Bloomfield Hill is’ one Call JOrdan ee) or JUniper and one-half acre lot is on 8-1174 after 7 p ; iN - For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses ss 483 SEARCH! T 2 BED- OPF OAKLAND AVE. “New 2 bedroom. Nicely furnished. Incl ashe P THE sloset oe aren peng 3; aeons and pg DR om Te Ty room, a ising com “ birch ; ag ie “— sere ig roe Tar ton. every-| ~ din tte, Bu in re ets e! e * Tile bath and oi) heat, on paved thing tenants | PHA er GI road, terms. : A LOT MORE TO CHOOSE FROM NEAR WISNER SCHOOL . + room Hh ogee 3. rooms apt. 2 Paes a heat. 2 car : 'o. qerage. Newirigham |Paul M. berg Real Est. 832 W. Huron FE 4-8550 ‘1925 Auburn at Crooks Rd. : : FE 8-3002 R Pp «Hones eoreiy Seare, bome.| eghgeiest Webait® Scheel 50” fr Lovely 2-bdrm, home. mn © hg mn gy Large living rm. sae and Hi a os gy 5-rm. with fireplace, wey new kitch-| nil ve _: , o.en, glassed-in and heated See r ey ree porch, Oil furnace, cag & 4.000 ea car ga- | drapes included ll. price Tage. § of only $17,000 . Will accept smail-} Teslie R. Tripp, Realtor ped — or land .c as Kk L Templeton, Realtor ‘2339 Orchard keke. yes FE 4-4563 HAYDEN WILL 3 Bedroom home. Full Promo >». 900, Stop in and inspect our plans, CLARKSTON AREA. 5 acres with 2 bedroom home. Large kitchen. Oi} furnace. 4 days possession. $10,650, Term IMMEDIATE POSSESSI — yment, Pag Pull rooms. furnace, bath with aeenee: $495 DOWN, 2 Bedroom home on eal lot, Outside complete, In- terior ready for decorating. WEST SUBURBAN. Approx. 1- one-third acres. 3 bedroom home. Basement with divided gerry ay ‘pri ce. Tile room. furnace A under, ‘ moe. nced back con herit} Term J. c HAYDEN, Realtor FE 8-0441 basement, Lehp priv. on improved lake lot % block fro soy a, nemns. Cierod by owner, $15,500. OR LAKE ORION CHEAPIES 6 rooms and bath lake priv. school wt a door, fenc in back e * a ‘offer; TO § AN TATE cual 2 Gay ale a EES lake, good neighborhood, immediate possession, Full price OWNER H. 1% ik. priv. on oye ig ll. food. candy ‘shallow peach. LAKE iON REALTY 562.5. Lapeér Rd. MY 2-2311 IF THERE WERE — sELL- Bleomfield Hills Area You would buy this ei month, rend bi-level brick East $31, erms. Lo. cated at oe Colonial Way, West of W rd between Grove Roads. Open id ickory * lor yo inspection by calling: - HEUGH REAL ESTATE 2300 N. Woodward LI 8-0400 Royal Oak, Michigan « Bong ‘eerste, Sen. alue. "eh" | 7 BEDROOM HOME, BY OWNER. Ba acted Patel gees “site 3 bedroome and large family | Yat. Vacant. 379 First St. PHA| ac rm, Two full baths a } one i N ‘@ bath, Two fireplaces, Excellent| neighborhood. 311 "Foes, location. Easy terms. Here is a 4-4156. = ; ‘wonderful f @ built for real a MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE NORTH END ; Large 3 betiroom home with sn carpeted living room, dinin Kitchen. Has. tile beth, full basement with automatic heat, 2 tuated be used as family income or large single home. Excellent location, se dd 3 bedroom ranch type brick bun- galow with attached 2 car ga- rage.-Has carpeted living room, bailt in stove and oven, cup- boards galore. Fireplace in bave- ment and glass doors to patio in rear. Located in, eclarkston area. GeorgeR. Irwin REALTOR 269 BALDWIN FE 5-0101 | MODEL HOME _ eer FE 8-04414 Sun, 0 to 2). 4 22M. _3-4531 7 W. — Street FE. 5-8161 FE 72-1306 Something Different If you like surprises — you must see this! of course, it h see as 3 essentials. ‘ts a a = gas t, let us the Spusual extras. Sook as Tel- ioe aan 1 F; rms. og 4 Bedrooms and Basement, too!’ = Plus a large well landscaped lot, This home is lected in- Watkins-Pontiac Estat and priced to sell! $13,900, PHA terms. pact og need ? —_ bome as trade-in FLwoop, SRMAT eee 344 LARKSTON aaTeE: 3. BED- S i. — ranch home, at- Income aeeane ABA See For Yourself CHEROKEE HILLS! Bas reer a es a. “deine nna ; 4 —— and Martell Driv woate a, hill Ra everioaking ome finest Bloom- field mre ees. Price 8.$90° Phone evenings MI i tieo f You'll like living tn this new con- trolled community of better homes Select — from 76 wooded or rolling 100 ft loss to satisfy your exact needs. Drive out Bieabes Lake Rd mile west of. Telegraph Rd. hear ge Lake Rd. Tune right’ % aie to Lacota Rd 28 E. Huron ae eer & MEATS. -- Near Pon- being built in vicinity. approximately By a health’ foredog owoer § Call for. mare details - Grossing : Roy Annett Inc. WORKE Realtors since es ral 8-0466 Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” To SEE Ah — Money! ibe pi ee gal stay is in ee si e mon: CARL W. BIRD, Realtor | sharp short order gr i Beto $03 Communit: ela Bank Bldg. on arking. Average §700 per | week gross & 6 days. Will ac- LOTS FOR SALE BY OW cept trade. y $2800 down plus poe! pg eiuls a0 Log rote Brive stock, on Roa rescen! iJ 2 ¥ pons = 5-6406, ier OH REALTOR PARTRIDGE $350 on time. a Cee P.O, Box i visa 1080 W. HURON 3535. OPEN TIL 9 For Sale Acreage 47; Exclusive Gift Bis 1 tO 5 ACRE PARCELS. BEA ‘itul P sites: 100 sown, ‘20 | c “PANGUS, Reales 1919 M15, Ortonvile NA 17-2815 *. ACRES oly yi AREA. MElrose 7. 10 SOLER 6 Roos Fine HOME. Bath ‘& basement, $1,500 down. 8 acres. 1% stor: nF ds home. Stairway to upstairs. down, Paul M. Jones, Real Est. 37° W. Huron - # FE ACREAGE PERG GBTOR ness cigs hens aeens & acres ...... eveces DEF Sere, 10 acres. +» per acre, per acre, | ae eee BAe te eeeees TODAY | Crawford Agency MY 3-1143 60) FE. Flint St. LAKE © ORION. MICHIGAN MIDDLETON 20 Aare located 4 miles from East Tawas. Nice building site, and excelient hunting, Priced only $1,400, Leslie R. Middleton- PE 5-721 - 188 N. JOHNSON ROKER. 15 ACRES, EAST OF CLARKSTON. MAple 4 *, ANDING FARM + raspberry patch, 2 omy “hucklebe: marsh, ba: centhione. sad srebeiht S, ee. ve "WE TRA a : 3 son REALTORS 5660 (Open eres “til 9; ‘oundas 10 "aS SACRIFICE, $9,900 900 YEAR AROUND e hom down pay- Garage. Heated Fema ate occupancy. t, 4-1001. Lake Front ac ee edi- ian ‘ket Furnished home on. beautiful sand’ beach, ly 40 00 fenced, outdoor Eta. Only $10, — terms..OR 5 foom 1t story ? bedroom home with waikout basement. 100 ft. lake sae, all cyseee fenced. Bein it price $10, terms. Call OR 3-1349. J. Rae Taylor] & L ESTATE & THBURANCE . a ig hiand Rd at Pontiac laa cana LAKE LOTS (FOR YEAR und homes) Paved streets, township water system; 8 miles west = Pontiac on Highland Ra. M-59. iced from $3.200 to $8,100. Owned-deve So es by. KELL nang ODED 10-8 Dally | MACEDAY LK. FRONT. 100 PT. OF exc. . Beautiful landscaped lot. Paved road. 5 rm, modern home, $15,500. OR 3-9414. ORCHARD LAKE VIC. BRICK ranch, Built, in 1057, custom fea- ee Lake priv. $18,700. FE 1 ‘mile Ove: MBtrose 4-425 In m : Tey (Bateman | BERR RAPS) Now ror SaLz i © e | FHA TERMS os ot EY ee Thinking. of trading? ‘There are| ter “heat, "3 bediwns "9 “Galhe Seymour Lake Front tractive Sunesiow i with extve rm.| WESTSIDE.— Lovely family home Kam sen “OBL GATION °° ‘Ger ouR wall ce ating GE appliances, structed 24x31 shell home, You (unfin.) siete tape asernent gs|with vestibule one rance ti ‘to. cars : 182 well re-| can og it yourself and have heat, ‘ue bs fenced peted 24 ft, 4 aiictes subdivision win consider; ® lake home the way you | Sipe Gao, Patera wae Se |e mm eateee | “W, H. BASS Sots aan cittpenyngae Be Sean A, et" Petar woe | . - j sR ty ~ Eves. & Sun. F Patsy . Private road, For quiet living, | room, kitchen nent, | Scree med terre Paved gS ec ereee io SATE 6-080 formation call Herbert C. Davis, eens Tae “for a | : \ $1 ow own pay er. lar : Thing er donk. | GI TERMS: on PHA’ terms, ‘aosel ie fen anes ASSOCIATE. opens OCR seonea ~ | Geaties Sersouat ser eh pre Oil ij NOTHING DOWN — Immediate! 4350 ates 5 rotimis BROKERS INV T Ov, I basement. safe sand beach, |. _ WHI 2e BROS. ssion large 7 room | bath wiiitay seem tacaiea ‘heat wit ‘salisty your needs. 20083 $11,088, low down payment R105 ro wn nearly cont good fam-| inside.¢ insite, a to schools, \ OAKLAND COUNTY REALTY ity Idea ar Baldwin & St.| bus & stores. A LOT MORE TO, CHOOSE FROM | bp bit S 4 2610 Lk. edt ere Mik de Sears.” $4,080. \ aeburn Street Pr 2 4A ee pie. wre i be Ban 10 “th 5. Total’ ONL ies in- - $450 DOWN 9 |: nee 2 BEDROOM A home with tuh = SKIDWAY LAKEFRONT MODERN cluding tases insurance. LL). & tie small, Dungelow with over “N xh basement, Prices meet: tear| Take over -lowanterest —, lot. ze Brsiet*in th oni Sako ew ing am = mortgage seco ee or tel", J. R. ‘Hiltz region, Quick ssion, 2 bedrm. ftame Fanen home Oftando 3-6100. Lae Realtor 00 mise Lake Ra = re a ROOM ran ay ep bom, oe Fy For ~telormation onl val Mie $1201 i “tine ake. 2 be droumna, 0003 buch, 1011 W, Huron FE 66181) PE 1187 rp t-itai ae, es ’ th He ee Se Pa é : pre : panied cc ay apeert ly. furnished includ- Re tdi For Sale Farms_ _ 481 Union nad ae ~—= heart big. lst * eaati . ea gliente country. ford, pace sora toute 0) J an o Imlay City, 7 RA 4-4245, m. ay ; $45 271 Baldwin wav. FE Se r_ mo, division of new homes 2 ee neery pes , one of the main fished ‘eqlaurant e Excellent opportu | nity. himatle: of eq . Re cae HAYDEN. ~ 86 Wi E. Wallon” wen “PE 80441 Is this for you ba eS food prod- | door rsonal interview, call ~~ RESTAURANT a8 with $4,000 town, Good terms can be arranged, 4 UNITS, B $65 WK, NEAR | Phone FE Pees or we e187 sociated offices * Piamer Body. ORIando. 3-720,” HER ‘ST EWIDE For Sale Lake Prop. 44) 6 room farm home, garage. and |. ee RO ger ey Y REDMON, AREPROWT. Sm | Sef hu hee fl | Deval Olee twice 38 ; . ‘Cla Rid, Yee Bee EN. | | CO AtTOR MIDDLETON * : | = op Sehide Ave. eee GROCERY {STORE & Meat sell all, or divide, seadeaged es tas tome barns. Owner, 70110 community 12, miles” Nor suger Now doings ee WALDON ROAD | ~2gitt® ott" 9 4 rent 3 tveom neme-al) gnte| fone APponimain 48. _. ine Fooin. “Recreation "room. in io ns ee a valle es ment, breezeway garage. 5) * re a = MRachet warare, =. $15,500 with ee wie ~_|_.. Leslie R: Middleton og ye NAUP, Realtor is N. JOHNSON ce ce “etic terms 4610 4.2. sae PE 2.7421 pt |» seat | Coos STEADY : e Betier water “oes one hua ed earage. bar a ae Nee ee ireer Bargain a esutiful | = — Farm. $25,000 © with —“SpakATE PROM tion, JT 5 {REALTY,| ‘rms. . We place site at our ass tay BALDWIN, : LAKE pane = a , ae te sag ang rok or |G ait none se ta Cae egy . i cones. - — of ede a8 — W ALTH AM. COMP. NT arms Sere feted is wit LP. HOLMES, INC. WATCH ee Riche we Lake. itp fe Es. aE AEs A raneet Rd. 52953 SPARE E OR’ FULL TIME | gy usiness Properly 49 Walthe Aaya 10,000 ing Waitham Counter Cab- Hit EAR 268. inet, Pl retail 7 F ee HOUSE ga qommercial foniage 3car commercial NETr ed sae mercial ‘toquire at 340 ‘Bald- 5, PE 8-1431 FT. ON C 1% aa > between Cooley pid a spot for most any business. eectiont 191 ft. on Cooley Lake Rd., zoned commercial with 5 room home. 19 age ~ — — ae re ad commerce | ARRo REA LTY FE 4-3844 Downtown. Waterford What more Here's a fin FE 43581, 1060 W. HURON DIRE ‘PRON A0 AY 4302 ‘Dixie Hwy, OR 3-1950 ~Srepings OR 3-3230 Business Opportunities 51 BARBER a EQUIPMENT. ; 1 = Wp “No junk. Make. it Mp re 3-3090. BY OWNER: M INCOME R brick higg en OOM dowtown, renee FE 4-8593. FUR “aot SHOP. RENT cao: 434 W, Huron. OR 3-1741. Cleaning Concern Are, you looxin ve good In- vestulent? mr al real . live wire operation — etl. established ; located main street — Pon- tiac area, Good gross able down pariett Drive-In Restaurant Situated main street — next to a g.c r in ones grow- es tt oe om near yo BH é setup — Small — reason- To GET IN — NEW service or M Se 1 REA LTOR} PARTRIDGE outlets in .. Must have car,. teterence. Pive hours - We bank refer ces Dun & igreties an for a interview” ave excellent well — in ving phone Treat bibs a rea or “foeurance broker. ‘oe cated Union. &. cia pine eg pitied Will Pas 4 _EM 5.23 “4.2357. oe te, list now enltor sean a TASTEE FR EZ Pontiac's most popular and- Gred tec ahi ‘owner be- use of iiness. Good prot rent season. Get the. necessary experience now cash = interview (or information) PE 5-4007. ly ranch-type home. tion. center, Phone Payments $30, Interest 6 per cent Liberal discount. Call Edward Handzisk.. EM 23-4679. ‘Money to Loan (State Licensed Lenders) ‘WOE YOU_NEED | $20- $100 53 You can, get it quickly on rr siguatent, ved P ferznane He endorsers, payments to suit wer budget Wes wil be glad elp” you with your money problems. ~ STATE. : FINANCE CO. FE 4-1574 102 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, ASA Pts matic ‘AN BUSINESS LES COR RATION Se BROKER 4 TELEGR ARH Re PARK ar OR, FRONT OR THE rs N SWE R TO Want Ads! To sell, rent, hire, it’s FE 2-8181; YOUR PROBLEM:| “| Easy PARKING — TEAGUE FINANCE CO 202 N. MAIN ~ ROCHESTER, ‘MICH, LOANS ie TO $500 on ee ‘ « -. HOUSEHOLD GOO! Ph. eae _OL ea $25-$500. L SEABOARD FIN: “ANCE, 1185 N, PERR eee botela. Pa ei i ia | ratt | SMALL BEAGTY SHOP IN LOVE- FRADE 30 G Will accept car of, ‘Lyre | to have a su next ein iM reqemty apprex. 87,.-/ p. in down oayment. ter heater for a Doge barrel Sale Land Contracts 52| "ADE, °F | | LAND CONTRACT. BALANCE $3000 late are Thousetrailer of near > Nashy Suburban bungalow. . Hard wood fo floors. ‘pile bath oe or vacant Tot as. —— payment, Immediate pos: ~ “GEORGE BLAIR 4536 Dixie Hw DRA / ha st # AUTO, GAS WA- elec. unt tank Pai vio cleaner