The Weather
0.8. Weather Bureau Ferqeest
Cloudy and cool
(Details on Page 2)
116th YEAR keke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, Son 27, 1958 —30 PAGES lowered B*PRas HFTEANATIONAL ‘
Toll in Japanese Typhoon ‘May Reach 1,600 *
‘Hurricane Helene Flogs a
+
-160-Mile Gales,
Rains Lash
Tokyo Area Raging River Carries
1,200 Away in Worst
Storm in 24 Years
From Our News Wires
TOKYO — The worst ty-
phoon in 24 years lashed
the Tokyo area with 160-
mile winds and the heavi-
est rains in the city’s his-
tory early today, taking a
toll that authorities feared
may amount to as many as
1,600 dead.
At latest reports, 303
persons were known dead,
1,286 were officially ‘“miss-
ing”—with little hope that
more than a few would
ever be seen alive again—
and 1,943 were injured.
Record 16- to 20-inch rains.
left nearly 400,000 persons
homeless.
The howling storm struck its
most devastating blow at the Izu
Peninsula, 75 miles southwest of
Tokyo, where the rain-swollen
Kano River roared through 10
cities and villages, killing at least
148 persons and carrying some
1,200 away.
Rescuers near the mouth of the
raging river snatched about 100
persons from its dirty brown
waters, but there was little doubt
that most of the 3,121 still miss-
ing were cartighifar out to sea.
Almost a half million houses
were flooded and 30,000 acres of
rice paddies ruined.
The known casualty toll was ex-
to rise as communications
with the disaster areas were fully
restored
A half dozen villages on the
scenic Izu Peninsula 70 miles be-
low Tokyo were struck by 100-
‘mile-an-hour winds and raging
floods. Newspaper reports said 80
bodies were recovered from the
swollen Kano River and 600 were
missing. Police confirmed at least
38 killed in that area.
Entire families were reported
buried alive in landslides.
ine Tokyo, drenched by a record
51-inch rainfall, police said 23
scans were killed and 14 miss-
ing. Four were electrocuted by
broken power lines.
rescue crews were dispatched
from Mishima and Numazu to the
Izu Peninsula. Tokyo’s police and
firemen worked around the clock
and troops were mobilized to mop
up damage. U. S. military crews
worked with them,
Medical teams were organized
in seven major hospitals and 13
health centers, and tetanus vac-
cine. was prepared for 180,000
shots. The Water Bureau issued
a warning that .city reservoirs
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1)
5-Cent Postage Penalty
Deferred Until Feb. 1
The 5-cent postage due penalty
. on unpaid or insufficiently prepaid
mail has been deferred again until
Feb. 1, Postmaster General Arthur’
E. Summerfield announced yester-
da
This action was “taker to permit
further study by the Post Office
Department and to avoid possible
confusion during the holiday mail
season.
The penalty, previously had been
susxended to Oct. 31 following the
new pssta? rates. which. went into!
effect Aug. 1, Extensive Study
on Baby Babbling
|Bursts Bubble.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (#—Two col-
lege professors who did research
on baby babbling say sounds that
resemble ‘“‘Ma Ma” mean discom-
fort.
* * *
“It's an unhappy utterance,
said Dr, Ray Bixler.
“A cry of distress,’ added Dr.
Harold Yeager.
* * *
It means mother should come
running. A change may be in
order, or. it’s dinnertime.
The University of Louisville psy-
chologists did extensive research
on the subject, even inquiring of
foreigners,
In any language, “Ma Ma”
means the same, they wrote in
the current issue of, Psychological
Reports.
x *
“Baba, Dada, Gaga, Dididid
and Glub-Glub are happy sounds,”
they added,
They believe “‘Ma Ma” was the
first spoken word—probably short-
ened from the natural crying
sound ‘Mamamamamama.”
Mental Health
Plans Rejected State Agency Refuses
to Act on Proposals of
Probate Judges |
The State Mental Health Com-
mission yesterday turned thumbs
down on proposals made by a com-
mittee of Michigan probate judges
seeking to find beds for some 500
persons waiting admission-to men-
tal institutions.
* *
Oakland County Probate Judge
Arthur E. Moore, chairman of the
committee, said members were
“uniformly disgusted” after the
five-member commission an-
nounced no steps will be taken until
January when the State Legisla-
ture convenes.
* * *
At that time, the commission told
Judge Moore, the State Depart-
for an additional $18,600,000 so that
1,080 vacant beds could be put in|
use. Judge Moore said the present
department appropriation for 1958-
59 is alreAdy 62 million dollars.
He said he would now appeal
directly to Gov, Williams and
legislators “so that steps be
span nisl nel elo mame,
ed a survey showing 960 vacant
beds in the state, and urging an
appeal to the State Administrative
Board to appropriate money so
that these beds could be filled by
those on the waiting list.
ote * *
If this wotildn’t work, Judge
Moore said, the committee would
have requested the current Legis-
lature to be called back in session
to provide the needed money.
“But they refused to do any-
thing about this pressing emer-
gency matter,” the judge said in
teturning to Pontiac, The meet-
ing before the commission was
held in Lansing Friday after-
noon, :
* * *
“They said there always has
been a waiting list and always
President Taps
Retired General |
for Adams’ Job Wilton Persons to Take
Post as Chief Assistant
in White House
WASHINGTON (A—
President Eisenhower to-
day appointed retired Maj.
Gen. Wilton B. Persons as
his chief assistant to suc-
ceed Sherman Adams.
Persons, 62, has been
serving as deputy assistant
to the President.
* * *
The White House said Eisen-
hower also intends later to appoint
a deputy to Persons. The title will
be chosen later,
Eisenhower also named Bryce
N, Harlow as deputy assistant to
the President for congressional
affairs, a new title. Harlow is
now a special assistant to Per-
sons for congressional affairs,
Rounding out the new White
House top command is the already
announced selection of Robert
Merriam, former assistant budget
director, as deputy assistant to
the President for interdepart-
mental affairs,
x & *&-
Persons’ appointment came six
days after Adams announced he
would resign.
Adams, Eisenhower's right-
hand man during most of his
time in office, quit under fire,
announcing his decision in a dra-
matic TV-radio broadcast,
x « *
Adams’ relations with his good
friend, Boston industrialist Ber-
nard Goldfine, had been investi-
gated by a House committee and
there were demands from Repub-
licans that Adams get out,
Vanguard Fails
to Orbit, Burns
ment of Mental Health would ask’ Coming Back
‘WASHINGTON (?—The De-
fense Department said today the
Navy Vanguard satellite fired
yesterdaysdid not go into orbit
and burned up flying in the
earth's atmosphere.
* * *
A brief announcement said:
The vanguard: 1GY-. satellite
vehicle lanuched yesterday |
failed to achieve an altitude or
velocity adequate to place it in
its projected orbit.
“After one or at most a limited
number of passes around the
earth at very low altitude, the
vehicle reentered the earth’s at-
mosphere and was consumed by
friction.
* * *
“As further data is deducted
the results will be made avail-
able.” j
Great Day for Gunman
SPARKS, Nev. (UPI)—A gun-
man escaped with $760 from the
local branch of the First Na-
tional Bank of Nevada yester-
day while the annual convention
of the State Peace Officers As-
- sociation was in progress. from the Myrtle Beach sanitary HELENE HITS MYRTLE BEACH — Trucks
placed in front of plate glass windows in down-
town shopping
department are
and other parts x *&
Trucks Protect Window Glass
U
AP Wirephote
center this morning. Hurricane
force winds from Helene were lashing the area
of the South Carolina coast today. 0.Mile an
Threatening. orth Carolina Coast Hour Giant
‘Towering Tides Smash Into
Evacuated Resort Area
Near Wilmington
_ WILMINGTON, N. C. (UPI) — Hurricane Helene.
flogged the North Carolina lowlands with winds close
knocking. out communicati ‘to 125 miles an hour today, flooding beaches and
ons. But the’storm center
stubbornly stayed offshore and swung to the northeast.
Rolling up ominously from the southeast was an-
even mightier tempest, Ilsa, which had generated into
a 140-mile an hour giant in the open Atlantic north-
east of Puerto Rico.
Raging surf and towering tides ushered Helene
into the playground coast
south of Wilmington where
almost all exposed areas
had been evacuated during
the night.
Gusts up to 120 miles an hour
were clocked by the Frying Pan
Shoals Lightship off Cape Fear
40 miles south of the port of Wil-
mington. The main Atlantic Coast
Another memorable event in Pon-;Thom
tiac’s 97 years as a city was writ-
ten intohistory this afternoon with
the dedication of the city’s new
post office on West Huron street.
Sunny skies welcomed citizens
and guests as Postmaster General
Arthur E. Summerfield delivered
the dedication address outside the
$850,000 building.
* * *
Giving the invocation from the
speaker’s platform was Dr, Milton
H. Bank, pastor of the Central
Methodist Church, At the conclu-
sion of the ceremonies the Rev. Thompson Marcero, ‘pastor of St.
emia ee
band, Open house was held in the
pest office after the cerémony.
The Pontiac Area Chamber of
Commerce sponsored today’s dedi-
cation program.
Official acceptance of the new
building marks the start of postal
service here from a building de-
voted exclusively to the service.
if UAW Won See we eee GM Sees Stri
--- =" PP Automotive Editer~— ike Inevitable
| Back Down By JACK VANDENBERG See aes — 5s nee
-DETROIT—General Motors Corp., pacutring by
local strikes throughout the nation, appeared ready
today to settle for a nationwide alike by the United
Auto Workers Union.
GM Vice President Louis G. Seaton, chief negotia-
tor for the world’s largest
auto company, said his
firm “will not go beyond
the Ford settlement in any
agreement with the union.”
It was perhaps the strongest
stand taken by any company in
talks with the union to date and
came in the wake of repeated
statements by UAW President Wal-
ter P. Reuther that GM and
Chrysler would have to give more
than Ford to reach an agreemnt.
“If the union refuses to trim
its demands tn line with the Ford
agreemnt, we may have trou-
ble,” Seaton at. “But we al-
ready have ible from wide-
spread local strikes so the threat
of a national strike is an empty
thing to us.”
The UAW is scheduled to strike
GM plants throughout the nation
if an agreement is not reached be-|
fore 10 a.m, (EST) Tuesday.
Reuther said the union wes not
asking for more economic gains
from GM but “there are certain
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) _| Highway, U.S. 17, was flooded and
New City Post Office
Is Dedicated Today Since 1929, postal facilities were
Seon after Summerfield’s ad-
dress, the new post office was
the scene of an open house.
Robert C. Miller, acting Pontiac
postmaster, and Stuart E. Whit-
field, co-chairmen of the committee
which arranged the ceremonies,
said 40,000 invitations were mailed.
On the invitation list were many
officials from the Chicago regional
office of the U.S. Post Office Dept.
under which the new Pontiac office
will function,
Also invited were Ralph T. Wills,
Summertield’s deputy executive
assistant, Earl A, Barnhart, re-
gional installation manager for this
region, and Arnie Betts, assistant
regional operations director,
Summerfield and his party were
escorted to the new office at 735
W Huren--St-~by-
merfield car at the Oakland-Gen-
esee County line on Dixie Highway.
A caravan of about 20 cars,
including ‘‘mailsters’’ and mail
trucks, joined with the deputies
in leading the Summerfield party
to the building.
Master of ceremonies for the
day was John A, Riley, president
of the chamber.
In addition to lecal citizens,
postal employes from many parts
of the state were here for today’s
ceremony. The state division of the
National Association of Letter Car-
riers has scheduled a dinner this
evening at First Congregational
Church. The event was sponsored
by the Pontiac Branch of the as-
sociation. Earl A. Barnhart, re-
gional] installation manager for the
Post Office Department will speak
lat this evening's banquet. housed in the Federal Building at
ee Oakland County
“Shariff deputies who met the Sum-| one drawbridge was blown open
and jammed.
* x« *
Miami Weather Bureau placed the
Wilmington. It was now moving to
the northeast, a decided shift from
its steady. northwest bearing 24
hours earlier.
“The expected course and
speed of Hurricane Helene will
move the center along the south-
east coast of North Carolina pass-
ing near Cape Hatteras at we |
night,” the advisory said,
Gordon Dunn, chief forecaster,
said the eye or calm‘ center. of the
storm was about 10 miles off Cape
Fear, a sharply jutting ee naae
tory below Wilmington.
* * *
He said the center might stay
offshore or that if it did move
inland it would cross only the Hat-
teras area because the North Car-
olina coast falls back northwest-| f
ward from that point.
Whatever its course, the teeming
Norfolk shipping area and Chesa-
peake Bay some 100 miles north
a appeared in for a _
-dewn in..many -areas,-
= at)
Carolina Beach, fishing “ plers |
Beach area.
The hurricane was accompanied
by driving rain, whipped to froth
by the winds, -Georgetown south
of Myrtle Beach had 2.5 inches.
The Weather Bureau warned
that tides would continue to rise
7 to 10 feet above norma] and
probably higher. in some spots
between Myrtle Beach and Hat-
teras during the day.
Civil Defense authorities said the
evacuation of danger zones on the
beaches was orderly in most cases,
but in some instances they had to
threaten forcible evacuation. No
arrests were reported,
ADVANCE WARNING
Plenty of advance warning had
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) will,” Judge Moore commented.
History Compiled by .Postal Worker
“(Bditor’s *Wole: George ©. Stetisan
the finance section beer employed in the local office
Never Failed Yet!
“T have never failed yet to
get quick results from Pon-
tiac Press Want Ads,” said
the advertiser when she
called to cancel this ad.
HOOVER SWEEPER &
Oe a enente. $35. Good as new.
FE 68-0666.
You, too, can join the hun-
dreds of satisfied Want Ad
users by placing your ad
today! . |
To Place Your Want Ad —
DIAL FE. 2-8181
Just ask for the
"WANT AD DEPT.
since Jan, 1, 1929, He is president
of the Pontiac Metropolitan Club.
As a hobby he has compiled a his- -
tory of the Post Office in Pontiac,
devoting many hours in research.
The Press prints herewith a con-
densed version of this history.) .
By GEORGE C. STENSON
On the 12th day’ of January in
1819, Gov. Lewis Cass issued a
proclamation fixing the tentative
boundaries of Oakland County.
The old Indian Trail from De-
troit to Saginaw crossed the Clin-
ton River midway between Water
‘Street, and Orchard ‘Lake -Avenue,
and as this point was the logical
location for a settlement, this be-
came the site of the future city of
Pontiac.
As might be expected, the first
post offices established in Oakland
County were located in the two
Itownships into which Oakland being Oakland and Bloomfield; the
Pontiac office in Oakland Town-
ship-and the Bloomfield office in
Bloomfield Tofvnship.
For many years it ‘was believed
that the first post office to be es-
tablished in Oakland County was
that of Bloomfield, now Birming-
ham. Such was the record ob-
tained from the Post, Office Dept.
by the Michigan Historical Society.
In the fall of 1950, however, it
was discovered from material in
the National Archives in Washing-
ton, that the post office. at Pontiac,
and not at Bloomfield, was the
first to be established in. Oakland
County.
Filed away in the archives is
the record showing the establish-
ment of the post office in Pon-
tiac on May 1, 1820, almest one
year prior to the establishment
~
of the Bloomfield (now Birming-
ham) post office.
‘The first postmaster at Pontiac
was George Throop. Very little is
known about him while he held
the post.
None of the records of the Pon-
tiac post office even include his
name, and many history books
even list Dr. Olmstead Chamber-
lain as the first postmaster ot| »
Pontiac.
x *& *
succeeded Throop as the post-
been given as the daté’ of the
establishment of the Pontiac post
tional information referred to hére.
Chamberlain, who came here in
1821, was a prominent businessman
in Pontiac for many years.
By 1836 mail was being car-
‘ Certain it is that Dr. Chamberlain] ”
master on Nov, 30, 1822, which had),
office until the discovery of addi-|_. between Detroit and Pontiac.
When Pontiac was finally incor-
porated as a village in 1837, the
population had increased only
slightly over the 330 persons
shown in the 1320 census,
In Aye of 1840 the great fire
In Ti n Today's s 5 Press
Editorials ..... do ciebnntes y« 6
Home Section .. c6s. 664: 15-21
Obituaries ....cceeeceeseeess 5
SGperth .sccsecswswetens 12, 13
Theaters 2.0... ccc ceceevees 19
TV & Radio Programs ;-...
Wilson, Earl ee ee ee of x
| Women’s Pages <.....+5.5-8) 4
3 \ 7 \
jr f
trict of Pontiac. No mention is)
made in history books of the loss|
of the post office, so evidently it,
was located on some side street
not reached by the flames.
* * *
In 1841 it required 12 days to
get news from Washington, and in
,|that year the first stage line
“| between Pontiac..and Flint was
established.
By 1877, five mails were being
“| received in Pontiac daily, only one
mail being transported by ‘stage,
the. rest coming by railroad.
It is afso recorded that the post
* loffice was then conveniently ‘‘fitted|.
up,’ there being 189 lock boxes
and 660 call boxes available.
Early in the morning of March
_|20, 1877, burglars broke into the
post office, blew open the safe,
and carried away about $125 in Pontiac Post Office Was First in Oakland County. County was first. divided; these} ried on horseback twice a week. wiped out. the_ entire, business dis-| currency and change-as weil. as}
fall the private papers. The ex-
plosion in cracking the safe set
ifire to books and papers and mail
in the office, destroying a greai
deal of it.
* * *
Available records mention the
post office as being on the present
site of the Strand theatér but it
is believed that prior to that time
it was located on the north side
of East Lawrence Street near,
Perry, and prior to that about
where Central Fire Station still
stands. 1
* * *
When the office moved to Sag-
inaw and Pike, the force grew from
three to seven; in 1895 the office
moved to 69 N. Saginaw St. and
two more employes were added.
By 1899-the wandering post office
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
t ad At 11 a.m. (Pontiac time) the
storm center 50 miles south of|
badly damaged is the Myrtle |e, kk ok
Old Couple
Won't Leave
Goat Island
CHARLESTON, S. C, .#—Hur-
ricané or no hurricane, Henry
and Blanche Holloway prefer to
stay with their 40 mee on Goat
NBC fo Probe
Tf Charges 2nd Contestant Claims
in Advance
. NEW YORK wm The National
Artist James Snodgrass, 35, said
in advance and was told when to
miss after a series of matches with
Hank Bloomgarden, a $92,500 win-
ner, Snodgrass took home $4,000.
NBC sald, "This comes as &
complete surprise to us, We had
absolutely no knowledge of it.”
The network \added it would un-
dertake a “prompt and thorough
investigation of the charges.”
Jack Barry and Dan Enright, co’
producers of the , declined —
comment.
Snodgras stold reporters he made
the charges to Dist, Atty. Frank
Hogan’s office and. to a grand jury
investigating quiz shows. He added
he would have let the matter lie if
he had not beegr subpoenaed.
Bloomgarden also appeared be-
fore the grand jury, but refused
te comment publicly.
Herbert Stempel, another former
‘212 contestant, charged recently
ihe was coached on answers and
‘told when to miss questions as he.
‘compiled. winnings. of $49,000 on the -
| show.
Cooler but Pleasant
ls Weekend Outlook
Partly cloudy and continued cool
is the weather outlook for the Pon-
tiac area tonight with the low near
48. Today's northwest. winds. will
decrease tonight increasing tomor-
row at 10-16 miles an -hour,
Cooler temperatures will contin-
ue Sunday with the high reaching*
around #0. The. U.S Weather
Bureau. predicts Monday will be
fair and a little warmer.
Fifty-four was the lowest record:
ing in downtown, Pontiac before
if a.m, The. mercury rose to n
at 1 p.m.
He Received Answers
yesterday he had received answers .
to Follow
‘
| Rockies into New England,
| grees occurred in the Northeast.
~ teasing to
Cs
*
'
_THE Fou TIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER $7, 1958 rae
of Adventure _ Tales,
- Pictures on Nov.
ter is made today.
* * *
Seven programs of lectures and
pictures. on travel and adventure
have been scheduled, starting Nov.
4 and concluding March 31.
All will be on Tuesday even-
ings, at 8 p.m. in Central High
School Auditorium. Course tickets
sell for $5, and club officials
stress that no single admission
tiekets will be available. No
seats are reserved.
Ralph Norvell is general chair-
man of the project with Ralph
-~ -Wigent as co-chairman. — Profits’ —
from the course are used by the
club in support of youth activities
‘dn and: around Pontiac.
x * *
“The seven ouhare scheduled
are:
Nov. 4—.Curtis Nagel, “Song of First af 7 af a
4 ri
_. Announcement of nambers en’ -
-_ the Pontiac Kiwanis entertainment
series for the coming fall and win-| |
THEY STOPPED ... TOO
which sent two persons to St. failed to prevent a crash last night.
was this collision between a city bus,and a car
LATE —. This
The result
Joseph Mercy se
bei
ey
Mrs. Heath was treated and released, while
_‘stop” sign at Pike street and Shirley avenue David Kershner,.23,. of.56.Michigan-Ave,,2-pag- po
senger with Griffith, was listed in good condi-* |
tion at the hospital after suffering head lacera-
tions and multiple abrasions. Griffith told police |.
_ Hospital., Mrs. Virginia Heath, 38, of 86 8, Perry — he: stopped at sign, Jet another .car go through,. .
St.,.the driver of the bus, told Pontiac police the and proceeded through himself when his car was
ear, driven by Roy W. Griffith, 28, of Aven Town- scape deen ee a .
ship, darted in front of her bus at the intentoction, Fi
ad. \Tightens uP.
}'dents enrolled in off-campus ex-
| the figures slightly, MSU Vice .
Switzerland.”
"Dec. 9 — Nicol Smith, ‘Island of
the Caribbean.”
dan. 13 — Irving M. Johnson,
_ “Trade Wind Island.”
dan. 27 — Julian Gromer, “‘The
‘Await Decision
—_ communities ask a federal Virainia Schools
Federal Court to Hear
Appeals for Delay of
Integration potey
BALTIMORE (AP) — Two Vir-
caurt today for a year’s delay in
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
‘An early autumn chill crept
The mercury shriveled to an icy
20 degrees at Fraser, Colo., and
drops of 20 to 30 de-
The Weather eon ‘ s nelighaconed Report
VICINITY — sie
— e+ a continued evel, high
) & few scattered showers possib
this, morning. Northwesteriy winds tn- 0 to 14 miles teder. Partly
peomed and continued cool tonigh . Leow tonight near 48, ao
aunts a near 70, Diminishing ner hwest
winds tenight end 10-11 10-14 miles tomerrow.
Today in Pe im Pontiac
Lowest temperature. preceding 8 am.
At ®am-: bide velocity 10-18 mp.
Ditection: Nortaw
sets Baturday et 6.21 pm.
Sun rises Sunday et 6:25 0
Moon set Sundey a! 804 0 =
Moon rises Saturday « arélipm
*Pawatewa Tem Temperatures — veweeer ji a.m......- Scenes tee 2-10)
Friday in Pe in Pontiae
fas recorded ansimedata
Pe os ee peratur *e
Weetner—Partiy cioud cloudy
One Fear “Age ii in —_ \ nest temperature .... 1. 89 est temperature ..... pisscusaes 26 eednscecsens. +. 0sGF.
a | em ne |
#8 ie 1801 34 om 1200)
~ Peliag’s | Tomperatere Chart I Marquette 70 46
f bs % Mem ~ al 90 70.
62 35 Miam » 1°90 ‘8 "4 aeopekes a rd
5 ‘Minneapolis 68
$5 73 New Orleans 383
# 65 New York a6
60 Omaha bs
74 B87. Peliston 6 a3] 4 HH Sriskoreh 3 66)
tiabur:
a 36 Bt. Louls 72 a
88 71 8 Francisco 95
pt ee 4 ft : Satie 65 3 if 63 4 | Trav. City 69 44
ville 89 Ti Washington 90 a
Ciy 76 66 Beattie 69
fee 488 65 Tempe , with the clashing cool and warm
r southern Rockies.-across. the. low-
Valley and into the Northeast.
‘Southwest and extended into the
-, humid Southeast
" TV Studio Hot Place...
| radiator blew up and filled the A warming oe over the Pa-
cific Northwest was expected to
extend eastward into the northern
Plains during the day. Except for
the ‘band of thundershowers and
the squall area along the East
Coast, fair skies were much in
evidence,
Early morning temperatures in
the 40s and 50s across the North-
east compared with readings in
the 70s early Friday. Tempera-
tures in the 30s and 40s were com-
mon in north central sections,
Heavy rains were associated
air in parts of the South. White
Settlement, a suburb of Fort Chief |Ster” a three-wheeled motor pow-
x * *
Worth, Tex., was soaked with a)
314-inch downpour in a 90 minute!
period Friday.
Although rainfall amounts were.
on the light side in most other
thindershower areas, Malden, Mo. |
measured over one inch and Co-|
lJumbus, Ind., over one-half inch |
The rain area extended from .the Post Office in Pontiac |
First in Oakland County],
northern part of the city, at
Walton and Baldwin, °
.. Herodotus, known as the “‘Father
of History,” was the author of
several books of history dealing
principally with the Greek-Persian
Wars, and in writing of the
mounted couriers of Xerxes, com-
posed the following: ~
“Neither snew, nor rain, nor
heat, nor gloom of night stays
these couriers from the swift
.| completion of their appointed
rounds.’’
This sentence has been very
'| fittingly inscribed on the facade of
the New York post office. A
great many people believe that
attices!thig is the motto of the Post:
etts sii thet, "The Mail decision.”
motto?
Following is the list of the Pontiac postmasters from
the date of the establishment of the post office in Pontiac
(May 1, 1820) until the present, together with the date of
their appointments:
George B. Throop
Dr. Olmstead Chamberlain — *
Schyler Hodges
Frederick A. Williams .
Samuel Sherwood one eveeae
eon e tee er eens
eeeee
etoeeeeree
a Alfred Treadway —.<.ve 0. eevee seessvevarss DOC, HA pees
‘Chill Preening Southward ee ee ar)
wise Siesie eereie’s oe « Nov. 30,
eee eee enene Sept. 15, 1820
1822
ee
(eeeies basis. Enrollments
Cut as MSU
Face Bp aie
blamed ae ie holding Michi.
gan State University’s fall term
enrollment to 20,549, down 181
from fall term last year.
The figure includes 952 stu-
tension courses for credit,-
ae * * &
Late. enrollments may increase
with our
- Hamilton
said. “Being usable to take
more students (because of a
one-million-dollar budget cut),
our selective admissions polici-
cies were continued and higher
academic standards were de-
jobs, loans and other ways in
which they. can assume at least
5S tes con of thelr eee
Vote Is Today
in Little Rock » ‘Expect Heavy, Turn¢ F
for Crucial Referendi
gn integratie
their own segregated schools,
* * *
There are about 42,000 eligible
voters, including 8,000 Negroes.
Tension over the election has
been rising during the past few
days.
Last night Gov. Orval E, Fau-
bus, who closed the city’s four
high schools two weeks ago in
a move to avoid immediate inte-
gration, appealed for a heavy
turnout at the polls.
He assailed Little Rock factions
that have been promoting a vote
.|take into consideration the un-|yours,” he declared in a locally
oli devotion to. duty of alllitelevised speech. “As your pub- ‘\for integrated schools. But Faubus
he was not trying to influence
election. “The decision is
servant, Pe ete ee
opened if voters approve integra-
tion.
Faubus has proposed a private
school plan. He said last night that
private institutions would not be
subject to cofirt rulings and. there-
fore could be operated on a seg-
Trying to Solve
Chinese would promise not to at-
during”
jthe barg
Discover Dynamite, | LITTLE ROCK, ta ‘Elec. equip-|tion officials predict a heavy vote
referendum on x'n(Question Students The Day i in n Birmingham
China Question India. Is Sounding Out
Envoys of Both Sides/open
on Formosa Crisis *
. ¥. (AP)
r V..K, UNITED. NATION
—India’s veteran
Kirshna Menon*has been
out delegates from both sides of
the Iron Curtain’ with a ‘plan
aimed at breaking the Formosa
lock,
ts said -Menon, who
had played ‘a middle role in help-|
ing solve past East-West dis-
agreements at the U. N., wants to
make the offshore islands of Que-
moy and Matsu a no-man’s land
while a . political sotement is
sought for Formosa,
would pull their armed forces
from the islands, while the Red
pr a oy nee nego-
bern indtene are understood to
feel that next Tuesday—when the
talks between U. S. and Red Chi-
nese ambasSadors resume in War-
saw—will be the critical stage in
‘aining eye nylons,
the. United States and Red
The United States’ has ag it
pretty clear that if the Warsaw
{talks break down it will toss the
issue before the~General Assem-
bly or the Security Council.
Many delegates feel, however, |..
that the East-West bitterness
stirred up by such a debate
hamper any settlement.
They would prefer to see a good
offices commission created to try
m |to work out the problem.
Students at the Adelphian Acad-
mite beneath a Grand Trunk West-
ern Railway water tower.
Oakland County sheriff's A,
ties said a railroad maintenance
man, Robert Avery, of Davison,
found three sticks of dynamite
under the water tower located 1000
feet north of Academy Rd.,
Holly Township, Friday morning.
Investigators found that about a
third of a box of dynamite, ~or
approximately 20 sticks, was miss-
ing from the academy's farm of-
fice where they were being stored.
Deputies said thatwanyone at the
academy could have taken the
dynamite. The sticks seemed to
have been “thrown” under the
tower rather than placed there for
any specific purpose, authorities
said.
Gospelaires Celebrating |.22.,,
Ist Anniversary Sunday The Gospelaires, a group of
S|singers from the Macedonia and
Messiah Baptist Churches, will cel-
ebrate their first anniversary with
a special program at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday in the Messiah Church at
Paddock and Prospect streets,
Coming from Flint to participate
will be singing groups ,‘‘Wilson &
Turners,” “The Norvnetts” and
“The Evangles.’’ The Rev. Roy C.
Cummings is pastor of the host
church, and Walter Moore, presi-
dent of The Gospelaires,
eseeegs . Feb. 16,
eveeoee ee ear enee May 22,
Samuel Sherwood (2nd term) ............ March 7, 1843
~| “‘Soldition W- Denton 200. vesaeee .. July 34; 1645
denn M. Gmih ... 6 cccces viseeecevecssee Feb, 20, 1849
Lavi BACON, Jf: oes si cece sicew le’ eae a .»+ Feb. 21, 1850
¥* * *
Solomon W. Denton (2nd term) .......... April 14, 1853
Pen Carioca Buckland <. 26 ceic cen ccxw es March 25, 1861
Soloman S. Matthews ............0cceeeees - April 11, 1865
Charles F. Kimball ...... aie oe se we wwe es March 25, 1875
Thomas F Gers. oo cies cc sccscn vecceoeees Jan. 13, 1880.
James G. BuchOnan 2.2.26... <25.00020005 Jan. 31, 1881
Edward F. H. Pearson ..............0e000 Feb. 16, 1892
Ferris S. Fitch 2.0... ccc ccc cece cence eee March 10, 1896"
* * * s
Herman A> Wickot! 2....-..---- 0.0.54. . June 29, 1900
George A. BOW «. cc cscsiess cc cscssa us «.... Feb. 7, 1910
Eimer KE. Hye? ........s0.0005% Zags eerste March 9, 1914
Floyd B. Babcock (acting) ..............5. Oct. 16, 1922
Floyd B. Babcock (confirmed) ............. Dec. 4, 1922
Chauncey A. Harris ............0cc0ceeeee March 3, 1927
Joseph W. Greenhalgh ..............0008. April 18, 1932
Thomas W. Jackson ................... .. June 10, 1936
William J. Collins (acting) ................ July 1, 1948
George L. Stockwell (acting) .............. April 2, 1949
George L. Stockwell (confirmed) ,......... Oct. 19, 1949
Leslie H. Dean, Sr. (acting) ............. June 30, 1953
Robert. C. Miller (acting) .......2-..5.0:05 Feb. 28, 1958
eeling Lousy?
er Mississippi Valley, the Ohio.
Warm weather persisted in the
LONDON (UPi)~Singer Nev-
ile Taylor was rehearsing for a
TV show yesterday when a gas
room with smoke. The song be-
|.ing sung was “I Don't Want to
Set the World on Fire.”
i Pills for Seasick Gobs
LONDON (UPD—What hath
| science wrought? Sailars on at
least two British warships now
can buy seasick pills on board,
the Naval, Army and Air Force
| [stitute discleded today.
| You Can
rotten? The way you feel might
acceptable day's work.
*
their vim and vigor there. Succeed Anyway ANN ARBOR (#—Aches and pains, hung over, or. just feeling
* *
That is the report of Lawrence C. Morehouse director of -the
human performance: laboratory at UCLA.
Morehouse, president of the Human Factors Society. of
America, told yesterday at the University of Michigan about
tests on UCLA. athletes taken just before the “big game.”
He said those who felt subpar physically often ended up run-
nihg for a long touchdown or catching a game-winning pass while
the men who were raring to go in the locker_room often left all
: x *
He explained that some symptoms of sickness and a few types
of actual phy sical illness result from changes in the adrenal system
as an individual prepares for tense, competitive activity. not stop you from turning in an
*
- As flood waters brought by Ty-
phoon Ida receded from Japan's
windlashed Izu Peninsula, Associated
Press Correspondent Pred Saito flew -
over that disaster area in a char-
tered plane. This is his report.
@y FRED SAITO
MISHIMA, Japan (AP) — The
beautiful Kano Valley is churned
to a sea of mud. Police reported
38 dead and some 600 missing.
* * *
The quietly meandering Kano
River exploded into a wild, miles-
across torrent, smashing against
12 villages. Two were swept away.
“Police in the area said Typhoon
Ida had brought 2314 inches of
rain on the Izu Peninsula, 70
| |
\torrent, The fate of the 600 has
| not been established. The vilage
jitselt has disappeared.
) imiles below Tokyo. The rain
turned the. river. into a giant
scythe.
Six hundred persons sought
shelter in a high school in Ka-'
-musaka village. It was smashed
‘to splinters and vanished in the|?
* & &
Five miles down the rivér, Mik-
ado village was swept away, Stone
bases of about 10 houses could be
seen from the plane.
Hundreds of acres of rice land
around the valley have turned
into a lake. Farther down the val-
ley, debris and logs cling around
those telephone poles left stand-
~
Marjne Boss in Formosa
TAIPEI ® — Brig. Gen. Ralph
K. Rotet, assistant commanding
general of the. U.S, Ist Marine
Aircraft Wing stationed: in Ja-
pan, is in Formosa on an §in-
spection tour of air wing facil-
ities.
Population of Canberra, Auis- |
tralia capital, is 35,000, |
. 4
Typhoon Disaster
| China. The Kano Valley is one of Ja-
pan’s most noted vacation re-
sorts. Resort hotels, most of them
solidly built on elevated positions,
appear intact.
* * *
Enormous amounts of muddy
water are still gushing into the
Pacific. The ocean was dyed
brownish-green for at least 30 in|Were turned back by the Highway
. ana did not get adequate warning BIRMINGHAM — An outing, an
house and a will high-
light activities of t the Young Adults
group of the Birmingham YMCA
during October,”
The group will meet at 1 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 5, at the “Y” from
where they will leave for Kensing-
ton Metropolitan Park and an aft-
ernoon of hiking. Supper will be
had at a nearby restaurant, Lead-
ers of the event will be Lestor
Johnson and George Lyon,
The following Sunday, the club .
will participate in the dedication
and open house from 3 to 6 p.m.
at the YMCA, Members will take
care of the guest book.
A “Jamaican Party” Friday;} ,
Oct. 17, at 8 p.m. at the “Y” will
‘wind up the month’s activities.
W. F. Newell, assistant program
director at the Metropolitan YMCA]
will show slides-depicting Jamai-
Hurricane Helene
Heads for Coast
(Continued From Page One)
practically cleared the beaches.
National Guardsmen were on pa-
trol to prevent looting of vacated
stores and homes.
Helene chose almost exactly the
“port of entry’’ as her older sister,
Hazel, a storm that caused heavy
damage three years ago in the
same area. Marks of Hazel’s wrath
still were apparent.
Long fishing piers here that
were washed away by Hazel and
later rebuilt jvere
again, The biggest swayed in the
winds that were up to 50 miles
an hour in gusts by 8 a.m. EST.
“The surf was running six feet
high here but 12-foot waves were
reported further up the coast near
Wilmington. The area where the storm ap-
peared headed was mostly vacant
beach and small fishing camps.
. * *& &
About 100 National Guardsmen
and local authorities were keeping
an eye on waterfront property and
another 60 were standing by if
needed. All non-official vehicles
Patrol 15 miles from Myrtle Beach.
Gov. George Bell Timmerman or-
dered all highways leading into
Myrtle Beach. sealed off in a 15-
20 mile radius,
Local Civil Defense Chairman
E. A. Anthony said the order was
to prevent “people from coming
in and looting and other people
we can’t control.”
About 100 men, mostly National
Guard and local police, patrolled
the Myrtle Beach area.
A few persons remained in the
front row of dwellings along the
beach despite a mandatory evacu-
ation order from the civil defense.
High water was regarded as more
of a menace than the winds. y))
BAROMETER LOWER
The Weather Bureau said the
barometer reading in the eye of
the hurricane was 27.55, well below
the 28.70 recorded in 1955's Hur-
ricane Hazel, the worst in this
area in recent years.
A huge stretch of waterfront
from Savannah to lonely Cape Hat-
teras,‘N.C., was warned to evac-
uate to avoid being cut off from
floods.
The hurricane couldn’t have
arrived at a more critical hour
for flooding conditions. With a
tides to be higher than at any
time since 1993 when a huge
tidal wave raked the area with
heavy loss of life. .
The Weather Bureau employed
perhaps its most urgent tone yet
in advance warnings of Helene's
doings.
* *
| Recalling criticism that Louist-
of a hurricane that left more than
500 dead at Cameron in 1957, the
forecasters repeatedly warned a _jturn_out only about 140,000.
ae ‘'Y’ Young Adults Group
Slates October Activities -
can life and ‘tell about teture * “y°
trips.
Refreshments will be served by
Jackie Bergey, Arlene Phelps
and Adele Youel, Dancing will
All single men and women be-
tween the ages of 20 and 40 are
invited:.to join in the group's ac-
Cannon, sie Seine a
Cranbrook Acatienty. of Art-Gal-
Neries has announced two evening
classes for adults in drawing and
painting will begin Oct. 7 and 9.
An yeeresesl class will be
— * j
10 w eeks, according te Wallace
= Academy.—
Instructor again will be Fred
Mitchell, Classes will be held in
the library building adjoining the
art galleries,
The aim is not to produce pro-
fessional artists, Mitchell said, but
to develop the student’s creative
potentialities and to enrich his un-
derstanding of both contemporary
art and art of the past.
Robert McKee
Service for Robert McKee, 67,
of 1066 Chapin St., Birmingham,
[will be held at 1 p.m, Monday at
Manley Bailey Funeral Home with
buria] in White Chapel Cemetery.
Mr. McKee died yesterday at
William Beaumont Hospital in
Royal Oak following a short illness.
He was a partner in the McKee
mingham for the past 15 years.
Surviving are his wife, Elsie,
three sisters and two brothers.
UAW Back Down
or It’s Strike - GM
(Continued From Page One)
contract matters peculiar to GM
which demand a solution at Gen-
eral Motors.”
He said these matters included
inequities in wages paid to work-
ers doing the same jobs in differ-
ent parts of the country, failure of
the «company to provide a full
week’s employment for some of its
workers, and a means of providing
supplemental unemployment bene-
fits to workers in Ohio and In-
diana, where SUB payments are
now illegal.
The UAW Chief said GM was the
worst offender in the matters of
wage inequities and short work
weeks and it was the most involved
in the SUB payments in Indiana
and Ohio because it had more
plants in those states.
— repeatedly referred to
“emptiness” of the UAW's
suis Gaal Maveces of ie Leal
strikes,
empty thing because we have
ap do little to change the situa-
Production statistics appeared to
bear him out.
. x * *
Ward's Automotive Reports, the
industry's recognized _ statistical
agency, reported the strikes held
production 30 per cent below an-
ticipations in September, It said
the industry scheduled production
of 195,500 cars but was able to
“With “moat aseeinbly “plants:
‘end weekend anyway, a total of
85,345 workers were idled by
strikes in the United States and
Canada at the end of the work
shift last night.
Ford, which already has reached
an agreement with the union, said
all Ford Division assembly plants
will close “‘for at least the next
few working days, beginning Mon-
day,"’ because of parts and ma-
terials shortages caused by strikes.
The company said the shutdown
would idle about 25,000 in addition
full day in advance that Helene
miles off the coast. to the 10,250 workers already idled
was a highly potent storm,
See British Attempt
By JOHN M.. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON (AP) — British)
officials are reported advocating
a long range, compromise settle-
ment. of the Formosa dispute un-
der which Nationalist-held coastal
islands iil would £* to Red.
* ek
The British government also
was reported today to be advising
the United States against bring-
‘ing the Formosa crisis before the
United Nations ir. the immediate
future. London officials were said
to believe the best hope for a
peaceful settlement lies in diplo-
matic negotiations rather than
U. N. debate.
According to information cur-
rent in U. S. official quarters,
British leaders think the first re-
quirement in any successful ne-
gotiation is agreement on a ‘cease
fire. On this point British policy
supports the stand taken by the
United States in talks with the
Red Chinese at Warsaw during
the past two weeks. .
t ww *t
The British were pictured, as)
i believing an eventual settlement
should _brovide for yielding the “| Nationalist-held offshore
GM Worker Struck islands
of Quemoy and Matsu to the Com.
munists, Formosa itself, they feel,
wo by Carat Center —
DETROIT (UPI) — A General
Motors worker was seriously in-
jured today when struck by a
car operated by another GM
worker near the GM Technical
Center in Warren Township.
- * *
Elvin Bomaster, of Berkley,
was, taken to Saratoga General
Hospital in critical * condition
from a possible skull fracture
and other injuries, after being
struck by a car driven by Rob-
ert Hensley, 29, as he tried to
make a left turn into the Tech-
tical Center.
At first, it was believed Bow
master was a United Auto.
Workers union member picket-
ing at the struck Fisher Body
division plant at the Technical
Center, _ by strikes over local grievances.
FJ
‘Formosa Compromise? could be put under the mantle of
the United Nations through some
device such as a U. N. trustee-
ship.
* * *
The result of this kind of settle. ment could be a line down the
tmiddle—of--the~ Formosa’ Strait: -to and Larsen service station in Bir- tivities, according to Miss Marion ,
a Pa
“The strike deadline is a rather
aos a
separate U. S.-backed Nationalist
power and the forces of Commu-
nist China.
Such a solution would run con-
trary to the. presently strong po-
sitions of both the Chinese Com-
munists. and the Chinese Nation-
alist regime on Formosa.
* © &
In the Warsaw .talks between
U. S- Ambassador Jacob Beam
and Red Chinese Envoy Wang ~
Ping-nan, -the Communists have
demanded ,not only that National-
ist China get out of the offshore .
islands but that the United States’
abandon the Formosa regime.
The Nationalists have. demon-
strated every intention of holdin ~
on to the Quemoy and Matsu Is-
jlands at all costs. In the present
crisis they have the support of.
‘the United States in this determi-
nation,
* 7 cs f
A i i 3
‘ae -
——
Bi: rt. n, $2739; |e
S264;-Holiday_sbort. acco, $7 iP -xcamne tll Wal OTHE Job WE -jday and Press Secretary James C. _ state and local taxes,
Two Family-Sized Models |
in 59 Oldsmobi Details of the new 1959 Olds-,
mobile cars, which include twa
new family-sized body styles, are
being announced this weekend by
Jack F, Wolfram, general manager
of Oldsmobile Division.
Wolfram stated that the 1959
Olds will feature increased passen-
ger and luggage space, two com-)
pletely new Rocket engines, more
responsive power steering, new
air-scoop brakes on all four wheels
and other engineering and acces-
sory improvements.
* * *
-The Holiday sport sedan is a
four-door family-size car. The two-
door Holiday scenicoupe has an
entirely new silhouette, with ex-
ceptional visibility in all directions.
The two new styles will be avail-
able — the Oldsmobile
line.
An ae large, heat-resistant
rear window on the Holiday sceni-
coupe curves high into the roofline
for visibility.
Total glass area in all models |
has been increased up to 36 per
cent to give increased visibility
im all directions.
For 1959* Oldsmobile is offering
15 body styles in its “gg"’, Super
“gg and “98” series. In each
series are the Holiday scenicoupe
and Holiday sport sedan, a four-
door sedan and a convertible. In
the ‘88 series, in addition, there
is a two-door sedan and a Fiesta)
station wagon. The Fiesta is alap
built in the Super ‘'88’’ series. .
* * *
Oldsmobile has developed two
new Rocket engines. Both are re-
ported to be smoother and quieter
‘operating with a new cylinder
block, longer cylinder bores and
new aluminum pistons and more
rigid crankshafts,
Equipped with a two-barrel car-
buretor, the new engine powering
‘the “88” series is rated at 270
horsepower with 390 Ib-foot. of
torque. The Super “88” and “98”
series are powered Ba a new
Rocket with four-barrel carbure-
tion which develops 315-horsepower
with 435 Ib.-ft. torque.
x *. *
Wolfram this. week announced
the following factory list prices
for 59 models, excluding federal,
destination
and dealer delivery and handling
charges:
Series-=Celebrity— sedan, |
Holiday scenicoupe, $
65 --
LUCKY FOR YOU?
ay Pd
im ia pee are hguring that age e Lines sedan, re. convertible coupe,
|$2991; Fiesta. (sedan), $3065.
Super “88”’ Series—Celebrity se-
day, $2881; Holiday sport sedan,
$3092; Holiday scenicoupe, $3020; |
convertible coupe, $5268; Fiesta
(sedan), $3336,
“98” Series—Celebrity sedan,
$3533; Holiday sport sedan, $3786;
Holiday scenicoupe, $3715; con-
'vertible coupe, $3975.
Economic Aide A,
ms THE,
OLDSMOBILE FOR ’59 — Thin roofline and more glass both
in front and rear marks Oldsmobile models for 1959. Top picture
is the “88” Holiday Sports Sedan. PONWIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER’ 27, 1958.
Sn ee
coupe, one of Oldsmobile’s two entirely mew body styles in the
Holiday models. The new models are being shown here by Jerome
Below is the ‘88’ Holiday Sceni- Motor Sales, 280 S. Saginaw St.
Chosen by Ike Spare the Rod, more commonly as
U.S. Agrees fo Send You Can Blame Lincoln
4
“Michigan-|
ders’ since the days of Abraham |
ldent Eisenhower reached into the Assistant in Agriculture
Department to Replace
Hauge as Adviser
By ROBERT BARKDOLL
WASHINGTON (UPI. —: Presi-
Agriculture Department Friday for
a new personal economic adviser.
He chose Don Paarlberg, an assis-
tant secretary and one of the chief
architects of administration farm
policy.
succeeds Gabriel Hauge in the
post, promptly told a news, con-
ference he would advise Eisen-
hoewer, on economic affairs “in
the broad sense” and would not
be a special pleader for agri-
culture,
He alsd said the threat of in-
flation, was considerable and that
it was’ very important to try to
check the danger. In that connec-
tion, he said he subscribed to the
Lincoln philosophy that govern-
ment should do for the people only
what they could not do themselves.
Hauge leaves next Tuesday to
become a vice president of the
Manufacturers’ Trust Company of
New York. Paarlberg, a former’
Purdue University professor, was
expected to take over then.
His appointment was the lafest
in a series of White House staff |
changes which may have
stemmed af least. in part from
the resignation ‘of Sherman Ad-
ams as the President’s chief of
+ -etaft ~as-a-result—ef-the--Adams--
Goldfine case. ~
Hagerty said he had no word as
to when Adams would leave or
when a successor would be named.
Political experts believe thaf who-
ever is ch may have Adams’
title but not Ais sweeping authority.
Paarlberg, who was born in West
Lafayette, Ind., now heads the
Agriculture Department's market-
ing and foreign agriculture branch.
Although this was not spelled out,
he was expected to play a some-
what more restricted role than did
Hauge.
Marygrove Record Set
DETROIT ® — Enrollment for
the fall semester at Marygrove
Women’s College in Detroit totaled
926, a record high: for the sian The 47-year-old Paarlberg, who | chi
= Advises Mother :
of 19 Children
PENGILLY, Minn, (AP)—Have
you considered applying the old-
teabioned hair brush remedy to
where it will do the most good to
discipline your children?
Anna la Doux of Pengilly says
“Don’t.”
Mrs, la Doux, 89, owns no de-
grees in child psychology. She has
not read those hundreds of books
and pamphlets on how to rear
Idren,
x * * :
She can stand on the record of
her experience as the mother of
19 children, grandmother of 65,
great-grandmother of 167, and
great-great-grandmother of 2, to-
taling 243 direct descendants.
Nine of Mrs. la Doux’s 19 chil-
dren are living.
She never took any of her chil-
dren to the woodshed to teach
them right from wrong,
x * *
“If you treat them good and
trust them," Mrs, la Doux con-
tends, ‘‘they will do right by you.”
She says her own children re-
turned kindness with kindness
when they were young and they
haven't changed, .
Mrs, la Doux was born in Long
Prairie, Minn., April 14, 1869, Her
husband,. George, died 13 years
ago. .
Average Person Eats
19 Pounds of Lettuce .
‘EAST LANSING (Here's Ss a
statistic _for_.you--the . average.
American - consumes about 19
pounds of lettuce a year. j
Diet-consciousness has helped
raise per person lettuce. con-
sumption by nearly one half
ports John Carew,
Michigan State University.
Carew said lettucé accounts
and 20 per cent of farm value
among 24 major fresh vegetable
crops,
No Postage Required
DETROIT (# — Frank Grentz
had trouble stuffing his ‘letter
into the mail box. He wag still
trying when firemen arrived and.
told the 70-year-old man the
mailbox was across the street.
old school. from the’ fire alarm box.
F.
65 will be lucky for them. No more
. —_ duties, time to relax, travel
do a hundred other things.
And with enough. money to do
them. How? First, fhey have Social
Security. Second, they haveaneasy,
sensible plan of saving over the
years. This way they need not for-
feit their Social Security after 65
by having to work. Life of Virginia
has a modern plan to make 65
hacky for you. The cost is less than
you would guess. Let me tell you
ebout it. ,
THOMAS KNOX FE 2.0219
1080 W. Huron St.
io
INSURANCE COMPANY
_THELIFE -
OF VIRGINIA
much unhappiness. “Face Your
ban wise and sane.
may
honest with
is tell . like stars at M, 8. SIPLE
206 Ni, Perry. Street
-FACE. THE.TRAFFIC.... -..-
“Pace the Traffic’ is an admonition for
all pedestrians; it has saved many lives and
ficulties are like shadows: the faster we
run the faster our shadow follows us:
cult les dodge, vanish for a minute but |
building up to
: can't‘run away
8 solution to. difficulties.
Face | Your Troubles!
from the other person's
yourself and you'll-be honorable *
with your opponent. He may be right. if he
him so. Your trouble will vanish ~
VOORHEES-SIPLE wh shacale HOME.
Troubles” 1s
diffi-
from snanows nor avoid
‘them
Be. trv <3
point of
sunrisé. since before World War II, re- |
extension |
vegetable crops specialist at’ |
for 16 per cent of the acreage |
ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Officially, |
Representatives. Lincoln, who coined that word in
poareltors of Michigan are =e 1848 address to the House of}f.
ganites.” But they've been known ‘ India Surplus Wheat.
WASHINGTON (# — The United |
States has agreed to provide India |
with $238,800,000 worth of =
wheat and other grains to meet an!
acute food shortage,
* * *
The agreement providing for re-
payment in Indian rupees was
signed by Acting Secretary of|
State. Christian Herter and Hari-
shwar Dayal, India’s charge d’af-
faires, at the State Department.
It was the third surplus com-
modities agreement between the)
two countries.. It brought the
total value of U. S. surplus farm}
products for India to $664,200,000 |
since August 1956.
* * *
States will ship 2,800,000 tons of}
wheat worth 182 million dollars,
100,000 tons of corn at $5,100,000
and 200,000 tons of grain sorghums
at 8 million dollars. In addition}
the U. S. is paying shipping costs
of $43,700,000,
Parade Magazine Sold
‘for More Than $10 Million
CHICAGO (UPIY — Marshall
Field Jr., president of Field Enter:
prises, Inc., has announced com-
pletion of the sale of Parade
Magazine for more’ than 10 mil-
lion dollars.
The Sunday supplement maga-
zine was purchased by Plymouth
Rock Publications, owned by John
“Hay” Whitney; New-York financjer
fand U.S. cccmannctentel to ‘& at
Britain ici 2
Under the agreement the hit
10-4 for your shopping convenience
GOODMAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE 1 Block North of Wilson 520 S. Saginaw
OPEN SUNDAY
10 to 2
Open Every Night
‘til 9 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY
Spacious Free Paved Parking Lot
“Owned and Operated by Local People”
Aub im ® and 10 ». «= YF Block East of East Blvd. tie ". =
=
orcas
Phone FE nes
inal,
\
- tom J SINCE 18Tls HeHMOND HOTeNnnN®
* : oe NOTICE Fisher Body Employees |
All employees on the active pay-
roll of the Fisher Body Plant in
Pontiac, unless otherwise notified,
are to report to work on their
regular shift starting time on
Monday, September 29, 1958
Signed
_ Fisher Body Division {
Soc eesttnnh Ps _ Pontiac Plant
900 Baldwin Avenue
Pontiac, Michigan Se eee
NORTHWOOD MARKETS &
888 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD | Open Daily ‘til 9 P.M.
Open Sunday ‘til 5 P. |
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Save 30¢—Pet or C aination
MILK SAVE 30c! 8 = TALL $
Northern White or Colored
TOILET TISSUE
12. ROLLS 8 o
SAVE 16!
M ott’s
APPLE SAUCE
2 “is 25° SAVE 12c!
Libby's
Tomato Juice |
Betty Crocker Buttermilk
Pancake Mix
1402,
PKGS.
ervey,
gle
Chase & Sanborn or Beech Nut
"CO 5c OFF
LABEL FFEE
67:
Popp‘s Mich. Grade 1
HOT DOGS *
Popp ‘s —. Grade 1
| LARGE BOLOGNA ' LB. PKG.
3 9°
U.S.D.A.
- ROUND or
SWISS STEAKS...
SIRLOIN CHOICE
"69" Lb. 79°
Land O’ Lakes — Medium
All White
EGGS C
=F ~ Doz.
KEYKO OLEO
| 5 ot 4:
Borden's Plai
BISCUITS
T 0: Can PRICES EXPIRE—OCT. 4 e ed n or Buttermilk —
nme
ee
one i ee
United States owes a tremendous debt
of gratitude to Frep C. MATTHAEI.
_ If the. Olympic games are held in
Detroit in 1964, the credit goes to
him. Almost unaided and alone, Frep
has fought this battle for a wa
of a century.
a. & & :
Very, very few people have
_ ever undertaken a personal move
in behalf of an entire nation of
this magnitude and scrapped it
a8 _ out tenaciously until victory ulti-
s - mately seemed in sight. The dis-
{ a ee
couragements that have been —
dropped in Fred’s lap would have
‘ discouraged a regiment. He has
: been rebuffed, sidetracked and
a thrown for a loss, times without
: BUT HE NEVER QUIT.
_ wT x = 6
- The Michigan athletic teams that
he has admired so greatly over the -
years never staged a more
battle in all their glorious history,
or hung on with as great tenacity
and singleness of purpose.
id Each four years his bid has faced
"tremendous and spirited opposition
from other cities — and then from
other nations.
x«<* *
He has lost to both.
Now Detroit is’ awarded the
i call as the. U.S. town but this
} ___ nation still must get the Olympic
| nod for 1964. If it does, the
: _ Olympics will be held at Pon-
s _ tiac’s back door.
} We.wote Faep C. Marruart a
- Varsity “M” one inch larger than
_ any official campus letter. No .
_ on any athletic team against
stouter competition or more in-
4 surmountable odds. Here’s a
t fighter-that can well serve as
Pie an inspiration and symbol to the
4 halfbacks, the pole vaulters, the
' , + €foss-country mén, the left field-
xXx
“Matthaei Is-Responaible if 1964
Olympics Are Held in Detroit
Bveryone in this section of ther heads stashed away in convenient
“hideouts.
x * *
And probably most importantly,
the greatest clamor. comes from —
the great bulk of the population
that doesn’t belong to unions at
all. This largest and most im-
portant segment of the population
doesn’t want dishonesty in govern-
ment or corruption ‘anyw,
We all need protection against
corrupt officials who are supposed to.
"be spokesmen and pathfinders, ‘The .
Kenwepy-Ives bill was basically de-
signed to do this. But it was watered
down to a feeble copy of the original.
Hence, the Legislators could vote in
favor of that on the theory that half
a loaf’s better than none; or they
could vote a disgusted “no” with the
idea an effective. measure would
develop in the next session. Our own
Representative, Wituiam S. Broom-
Fietp voted for it although he said
on the House floor it was far from
satisfactory. Thus it’s a political foot-
ball which is easy to kick in either
direction.
ctr <
Don’t be fooled. -.
It’s a sitting duck.
‘And in Conclusion ........
Jottings from the well thumbed
“notebook of your peripatetic re-
porter:
Unsubstantiated rumors in news-
paper circles in Moscow suggest
three highly placed gentlemen in the
Russian hierarchy have the Big
Finger squarely on them. Watch for
“news.” .......+..We seem to have
had a goodly share of distance auto
plates this summer. Just recently I
noted Idaho, Washington, Vermont,
Florida (3) , Texas, Arizona and North
Carolina..........Golfers, have
hope. This summer one of the great-
est of all the gal players, Martens
Haaas, had five (5) putts on one hole
in a medal stroke match, It cost her
beaucoup bucks for she was only three
strokes behind the winner..........
THELMA McKenna, of Queens (NY),
just had her sixth child. Remarkable?
Frep, if they don’t let you light It suttinly is. She's twenty years old , that Olympic torch, I'm going to blow (and has been married seven years).
‘tt out.
-Kennedy-Ives Bill Feeble...
This’ controversial Keywzpy-Ives
Bo ccc xthn.: Mee stenatl dro iba
Both “Welles wil Demo-
: crates can embrace it for personal
reasons as it twists to suit all
purposes. Following the revela-
ion in Congressional investiga-
tions into the management of
labor unions, a demand arose for
a curative measure to help the,
situation.
kok ok. Some of this came from labor lead-
ers who are just as anxious to weed
out the corrupt and the crooked as
anyone else. Another part of the de-
sire came from the union members
who want to make sure that elections
are honest and the funds of the or- a5 ae — = x & * .
In Hamburg (Germany) they’ve
introduced a system of lights
which automatically flash red
wh r excedds eee ae
ularity’
58. After Sherman Adams, it
dove to 51 and now it’s back to 57
++eeees++Harry G. Kipke, for-
-mer Michigan All-American half-
back and later ceach, was elected
, Chairman of The Board for Coca
“Cola in. Chicago. He-has been
very successful in business. I’ve
played a lot of golf with him over
the years and he had more 77’s
than anyone that ever lived....
.-P’'m always intrigued by
those cartoons showing two peo-
ple on a desert island. Apparently
the possibilities are endless for
they’re always funny.
* * *
Great Britain’s economy is getting ooee
ganizations are put to use for “the a bit jittery for the first time since good of the order” instead of the the war. Pessimists foresee a “signifi-
good of the individual, including the cant recession.”.......... This board and keep of race horses, sum- knocks me fo a loop: Georgia farm-
mer homes and cuddly little red- ers total more dough from chickens
oo
THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by THs Ponriso Parse Company
48 W. Huron st. Pontiac, Michigan
Trade Mark Dally Except Sunday
Reser: Basses, dou~ A. Rim
Executive Vice dent Assistant Advertistag
and Advertising ector Manager
Ecet M. Taeapwerit, Bows H, Prreoreate n,
Vice + and
Business ager Circulation Maneger
G. —— JoxDaw,
foun W. Preeermaue Local Advertising
Secretary and Editor Wena
Rosrer B. Grorag ©. Tiewew, Geacaiee Batter Classified Manager
OO
The Associated Press ts entitle exclusively to the
use for —— of ail local news printed in this
eld f es-well as all AP news dispatches.
The a0 Paces ts elivered by cerrier for 40 cents
| @® Week; where carrier service i, not avrAflabie by mii
Oak Geneste, ~~ Macomb, r end
ashtenaw Counties {% is 2.00 - rors ‘elsewhere jo
cates shod «)) other stabay the United Sta
year, All mefi poe A Hh payable
- Eiee » Paige ee om a "Potts
4
an ae : if
‘. as second clas
: Phone — a . than from cotton....... ... It’s al-
“ways” the unexpécted. Now air 0
cials fear the new high powered jets
may be barred from some airports
because of their noise..........
Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s
~—Indiana’s football team which isn’t
too stout or rugged and yet which
plays Michigan, Michigan State, Min-
nesota, Iowa, Notre Dame, Ohio
State, Navy and others; the J’s—
. Eppre Fisuer and ELizaBety Taytor.
—HAaro.p A. FItzGERALD
Ea :
Ir THE “guilt - by - association”
theory is sound, anyone who associ-
ates with people is more or less guilty
of many things.
The POWER of FAITH my Howard rote
A well read Bible went to Moscow with Van Cliburn, the young pianist from Texas who,
in winning the international Tchaikowsky contest, also won the hearts of thousands of
Russians and Americans.
Van received not only technical training from his mother. ‘‘He was reared with faith
from the cradle up,” bis father tells me.
The Van Cliburns have daily family devotionals. Before a performance in Buffalo, Van |
prayed with the conductor that God give them the power to make good music together. _
“Without God, what could he do?” his father says. ‘‘Van never enters into anything
without his faith.”
Days of All Faiths
Happy Festival Follows Solemnity
s the eee nine-day
long peanane festival. called Suk-
koth. There was a time, long ago,
when this was the main festival of
the year. When anyone said simply
“the festival," he meant Sukkoth.
It was the big holiday, the first.
ever celebrated “in Solomon's
Sukkoth celebrates the time
of year when the ancient Israel-
ites, mostly farmers in those
days, gathered in their fruit
harvest and then gave thanks
to Almighty God. There are
scholars who think the Massa-
chusetts. Puritans drew their
inspiration for our American
Thanksgiving from reading about
this festival in the Old Testa-
ment,
Sukkoth means booths or taber-
nacles, It refers to the fact that
during these nine days it used
. Sat Gk ee ee
City people nowadays, of course,
cannot follow this old tradition.
Instead, the usual thing now is
for the members of a synagogue
to build one large booth for the
whole congregation. Qf course
they cannot all live in it, but it
stands as a symbol of the family.
booths they would like to build.
The booth is a fragile frame-
work decorated with, vegetables
and fruits appropriate to the
season. Everyone in the family
takes part in the decoration,
and a great deal of imagination
and artistic talent sometimes
goes into it.
The roof is made of leaves
_and branches, easily seen through.
The lesson drawn from the fraility
of the structure js that all material
things are weak and transient. The
roof is left partly open so a man -
may look up and direct his
thoughts toward heaven,
It is not really known how
these booths became connected
with the festival of harvest
thanksgiving, The usual state-
“tment about them is that they
“Fepresent the.crude_shelters..in..-
which ‘the Jews lived during
their 40-year migration from
Egypt to Palestine. This ts
somewhat fllogical, however, be- -
cause the flight from Egypt is
associated with Passover and not
with Sukkoth.
A good guess is that Sukkoth
pilgrims in Jerusalem, having no
need .to worry about bad weather
at this time of year, did~ not
bother to find lodgings but lived
outdoors in hastily erected shacks
of this kind.
“St. Jerome, translator of the
Vulgate Bible, came to his most
important work in a roundabout
way. When he started his religious
life as a member of an informal
community he -had no thought of
translating the Scriptures.
The community soon broke up,
and the chances are Jerome had
\ > _ was always hard something to do with that. He
went then to Palestine to live as
a hermit, so he had no problems
of relationships with other people. But he did have other pro-
blems. He kept seeing beautiful «
ce
aah: <: Sambi l= te
along ~ fantasy. To control his imagina-
Dr, William Brady’s Mailbag:
Run Around in Circles?
Not for This ‘Square’
“When people ask me what T do
. for my skin and I tell them all my
beauty aids are
applied . internally
they think I’m a
‘sqyare.”’ The
ninny hammers
nibble all day on
sweet rolls, soda
_some magic:
oe (El- DR BRADY sa oe
Answer — Apparently a
“square” is someone with too
much sense to keep running
around in circles,
. - In fact, I believe, as do
“ many of the honest men in the
profession, that the toothbrush is
the initial cause of most gum dis-
ease of today... (——-- D.D.S.)”
- Answer—Thank you, Doctor. 1
regard use of toothbrush and
dentrifice as a silly business
which encourages the user to
think he or she can keep the
teeth free from decay without
regular inspection, cleaning and
treatment by the dentist. Ex-
perts estimate there are 30 mil-
lion morons in this country. I
estimate 30 million people seri-
ously believe that ‘“‘a clean tooth
never decays,”’
“Would thank you fo recommend
a psychiatrist in—and tell me what
price he charges for consultation.
- (SVW.? —
_Angwer—I regret I have. mo in-
“formation ‘concerning fees or
costs,
“Ts vitamin B-complex fatten-
ing? I gained some weight while
taking it, and I want to lose
weight. (S.B.)”
Answer—No,
“According to this clipping, a
certain doctor says the American
habit of sleeping with .window
open is an important cause of
‘grippe and respiratory infections
by chilling the body when asleep.’
As for sleeping in a stuffy bed-
«room with windows ese!
(Mrs, H.L.M.)”
Answer—If the night air really
chills, wear warmer. Sleeping
clothes or use warmer covers.
Exclude cold wind by using a
window screen of tnbleached
muslin. There is no scientific
evidence that chilling causes or
4 contributes to the development
of any respiratory infection.
* * *
Signed letters. not more than one
page or 100 words long pertaining to
personal health and hygiene, not dis-
diagnosis, .
self-addressed envelope is sent
to The Pontiac Press, Pontiac Michigan.
(Copyright 1958) Ee of the pases
Factory Wife Is No Slave; She Feels Grateful to
GM
After
feel we are slaves. He could 5 the letter’ protesting being a slave to General some,
se Ae aA
der Ie thd wether ot thal fitter could), bet wo have ak Ws <0 8
Ee ae oe
*
That writer forgets
ard of living of atty country, We'd be lucky to own a.cow in Russia, ;
~~ ‘Let’s start counting our blessings, and stop playing into the hands
of the Communists. As for Walter Reuther, where do you think he would
Se ee ee
for you? ‘
Tells Police Gritis ;
to Change Topic
I witnessed a conversation the
. other day concerning an automo-
bile accident, It seems two men
went into a swampy gulley in their
car. Luckily, the State Police were
a few cars behind.
2
One officer was probably re-
sponsible for saving the life of
one of the men in the car. Ap-
parently the man’s head was
almost covered with swamp wa-
ter when the officers lifted the
uto on one end of it, thus saving
pweghedpemneptater ng, The of-
ficer was treated for a back
x *« &* . ocd
How about praising the ce
de instead of. consistent-
ly running them en aes Tee anak
age citizen doesn’t know about
, such above emergency procedures
and probably wouldn't endanger
Geir eon. enity Gen.t0- 0, peter:
man does every day. :
* * *
Why don’t some of the big,
brave men who run down the
Why not let people involved settle
their own problemis instead of let-
ting a few armchair kibitzers stir
up a stew when they don't even
know al] the ingredients?
‘Integration Doesn’t
End in Marriage’
How can we reason that we're
Marry them? No, justice or desire
doesn’t demand that. We must
treat them. as equals in schools,
churches and community. We, who
are white on the outside must
prove we're all white. What's if-
side counts now and ‘finally.
720 Robinwood A, Miller - x *
Factory Wite
Says Layoff Hurts
Hospital Function
This is in regards to treatment
of patients at Pontiac General Hos-
pital. Until the; layoff’ there of
" Sept. 20, the service was excellent.
After that until I left Sept. 23 it
was very poor. The nurses and
orderlies are very nice and help-
ful, doing all they can, but the,
layoff made them do double duty.
x*-* *
The Commission claims the
census is so low they have to
cut down on help. If this is so,
_ why are patients on beds in the
halls, I’ve seen seven beds in the
hall on fourth floor many times.
This is a disgrace to the City
and sure is a -hardship on the
patients,
Walter G. Eggers
3300 Elizabeth Lake Rd.
Portraits
By JAMES J. METCALFE
I never like to drive at night
- It always frightens me...
Unless I have no choice because
. . - Of some emergency... The
shadows flicker all around... The
passing headlights glare .
I thank Ged for journey’s end...
When I am safely there . . . In
younger days behind the wheel
. I did not mind the night... .
I thought it was adventure and
..» It gave me much delight...
But I have learned that driving is
. « More dangerous in the dark
.., And there are greater hazards
when ... We take the time to park
. « In daylight it is easier ..
For anyone to drive . ne rT)
much better are the odds . . For
us to stay alive.
(Copyright, 1958)
“The Colette Parson
“God has little chance to help
a fellow unless he is willing to
do something for God.”
.. Case. Records ofa Psychologist:
“Love Needn’t Stop at Middle Age” Martha's case used to be far
commoner than it is today, for
50,000,000 Americans now read
this column and have learned
the true facts. Love has no
deadline. So physical charm ts
not linked to your 45th birth-
day nor to the presence or ab-
sence of a uterus (womb).
‘By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
CASE Z-330: Martha K., aged 47,
is a neurotic wife who has made
life miserable for her entire fam-
ily for several years.
“Dr. Crane, my
mother is abnor-
mally jealous and
suspicious of my
father,’ Martha's
25-year-old daugh-
ter. informed me.
“"Mother ac-
cuses him of out-
landish affairs
which are abso-
DR, CRANE §lutely untrue.
“4 “Last Sunday we went to din-
ner at a restenrant: Mother had
a tantram there in public,
for when smiled and
spoke to the waitress, Mother
denounced the’ girl and then
stamped out of the restaurant.
“Dr. Crane; she never used to
. be jealous and neurotic. Is this the
effect of the menopause?”
MENOPAUSE MALARKY
No, it isn’t thé menopause but
notions concerning
‘Woman's ‘change of life” would
cause scarcely a ripple of shock
if women just knew the true med-
ical facts. a ? |
That: very phrase “change of
life,’’\ however, helps convince
them that they are “‘changed’’
‘women,
y And most of them ~ ever since
Eve, have erroneously . imagined the change was for the worse.
“I can’t possibly be attractive
to my husband,” is the usual wail
of the old- fashioned menopausal
wife.
“I have lost all my physical ap-
Peal. IT am nothing but a nothing
and not a thing at all!”
This melancholy notion pro-
duces a whole flock of so-called
and nag-
ging of the long-suffering. hus-
band,
“You don't love me any more, "
she charges him far into the night.
.? * * *
Other classical symptoms are ex-
cessive jealousy, hypersensitive-.
ness to imagined affronts and inat-
tention, plus law suits for separa-
tion, as well as vindictive alimony
demands,
* *
N@wadays, too, these wives often
flee from their fears via alcohol
and become chronic drunks, dur-
ing which times they may have - affairs, wow ak
LOVE ‘HAS NO DEADLINE
What really disturbs these neu-
rotic menopausal wives is the ter-
ror that they can no longer have
physical appeal because their
womb is not functioning. :
This is a silly notion, for the
womb is not
be only three oF cm times . in
30 years of functioning. ;
— It contributes [fftle more to a woman's sex life than the vermi-
form appendix contributes to her
enjoyment of dinner parties!
* *&
The female uterus (womb) can |
ved be- typing and prin thus be surgic
cause of fibroids and such a ‘wom- an’s husband would not even know
.tged may: | the difference in their marriage,
unless he were told.
Lack of her womb thus does
mot disturb her husband, nor
would its stoppage of function at
the age of 45 have any significant
effect on the average wife if she .
got wise to these medical facts.
Furthermore, it isn’t the womb
but the sensitive nerve endings in
the genitalia that produce erotic
Saree ae and these nerves are
sto the brain — NOT to the
womb!
' Your brain and nervous system
thus last aS“long as’ you live, so
never fret any longer about the
presence or absence of a uterus.
Millions of wives enjoy mar-
riage far more after the meno- |
and function as thrilling pause
_ and thrillable mates till they are
70, 80 and even 90 years of age.
To get further facts, send for the
booklet: “Menopausal Complexes,’
enclosing a stamped four enve-
lope, plus 20. cents (non-profit).
* 8 *
Give it’ to every wife who
is growing jittery or fearful of the
45-mark.
ey re of 1 Aig oat! ogee Crane
® when
i. his psychological chatts and D '
" “Copyright, 1958) THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER | 27, 1958
Deaths i in Pontiac and Nearby res MRS, WILLIAM ©. BENJAMIN |Hamilton of 161 State St. died at, Angel
Word has been received of the
death of Mrs. William: C. Benjd- min, 74, a former Pontiac resi-
dent, in Sheldon Memorial Hos- pital, Albion, following @ year’s!of the First Christian Church. illness,
Mrs, Benjamin had been -em-
ployed in several Pontiac stores
and at Pontiac General Hospital
until she retired in 1952.
Surviving besides her husband|¢T#! Home. Her body will be taken are two daughters, Mrs. Thresia
E. Dunn of Pontiac and Mrs, Nah|° W. Shellenberger of Albion; five
. grandchildren; nine great-grand-
children; one brother and six sis- Church, Manistee, with bur-
her home Thursday afternoon aft-|ial in the Mt. Carmel Cemetery.
er an illness of four months. She Mrs, Grady was a member of
97 - St. Benedict's Church and the Holy
*& & Family Society, :
Mis. Hamilton was a member} She died early yesterday morn- ing at her home after an illness
Surviving area son, William J./of three years.
of Williamston and a grandson.
Service will be at 11 a.m. Mon-
day from the Donelson-Johns Fun-| LAKE ORION — Service for
Carl Hemingway, 71, of 346 E.
othe New Hudon Cemetery for Jaioon St» wit Be held a 2 al. eral Home, Lake Orion, with burial
= in Eastlawn Cemetery, MRS. EDWARD J. GRADY Mr. Hemingway died yesterday
The Rosary will be recited at) st Pontiac General Hospital follow- ters, 9 tonight in the Brace-Smith Fu- ing an illness of two years.
Service will be at 2 p.m. Mon-
day from the King and Helrigel
Funeral Home
burial in Albion Memorial Garden.
4
MRS. ARTHUR B, HAMILTON
neral Home for Mrs, Edward J.
(Constance) Grady, 72, of 4131 Mo- a A retired carpenter, he had been
in. Albion with|trway Dr. Her body will then be), ‘ite member and past master
taken to the Joseph Janicki Ful) Orion Lodge 4, F & AM; & aa aa life member of Oxford Chapter 94,
Requiem Mass will be sung at| all, and aoe of Orion
Mrs, Arthur B. (Harriett A.)|10 a.m, Tuesday in the Guardian|d8e 340,
Stout Anti-Red
Controls RANGOON, and two sisters, Mrs. William Sut-
ton of Ortonville and Mrs, Frank
Howes of Swartz Creek.
Butta Farrell ,76, of 5435 Cedar Island
Burma (AP)—Gen. vesieeday, a swiftly. io con-/ial in St, Mary’s Cemetery.
Ne Win, staunchly anti-Commu-|trol key points after two days of| The Rosary will be recited at 8
nist head of the armed forces,/rumors that a coup was impend-|p.m, Monday at Richardson-Bird
controlled Burma _ today, He/ing, An army communique said|Funeral Home in Milford.
stepped in to halt political feuding|the seizure was to preserve law,
that threatened to give Commu-|order and democracy.
nists the balance of power.
* x * Mr, Farrell died early this morn-
ing at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital,
Premier U Nu announced last/his invitation to become premier A retired farmer, he had been a
night that he will resign Oct, 28)at a.meeting of Parliament in|member of St. Patrick's Church at
so Win can be named premier to|one month. Oxbow,
arrange free. elections.
Win said he will continue Bur- * * * Surviving are one sister, Mrs.
Win, 48, was deputy premier in|Mary Cleary of Battle Creek, and ajsician for 50 years, died at his
; | chief for the State Health and Cor-}
‘rections Departments and was a
-|former Lansing city physician, He Deaths. Elsewhere
LAUREL, Md, (AP)—Breckin-
71, assistant . secre-
Italy, died Friday, He held the
State Department post during
President Woodrow Wilson’s ad-
ministration and again 20 years
later, He was ambassador to Italy
1933-36. Long, who had been ill fop| ©
some time, practiced international
law and had taken part in several
special diplomatic missions,
BALTIMORE (AP)—Dr, Emil
G, Schmidt, 63, member of the
medical school faculty of the Uni-
versity of Maryland since 1925 and
head of the university’s biochem-
istry department, was found dead].
ris Baltimore apartment Thurs-
LANSING — Dr. Claude V.
Russell, prominent Lansing phy-
home Thursday night of a neaxt ail-
ment. He was 77.
Dr, Russel] was former surgery
also served as chief of staff for the
St. Lawrence and Edward W, Spar-
row Hospitals. He retired from ac-
tive practice in 1941.
Prepare: Conference
on Teenage Safety
Plans are under way for a Pon-
tiae area teenage safety confer-
ence under the supervision of the
Chamber of Commerce Safety
Committee and GMC Truck and
Coach: Division.
Teenagers on the Conference
Steering Committee are Carol
Fitch, Clarkston High; Larry Ed-
mann, Bloomfield High; Alfred Mo-
netta, Milford High; Mike Flynn,
, : three brothers, the Rev, John Gar- ma's neutral policy in foreign af-|1950 and earlier served as defense |rell of Emmett, William of De-|terford High; and fairs. This little Southeast Asian
republic of 19 million persons be-|chief of the armed forces, which |‘Tolt and Ernest of Milford. tween Thailand: and India has a|consist primarily of the army of|-—"
1,500-mile border with Red China. |60,000 to 80,000 men.
The army seized power early
trate and subvert his army, Win
has said. “We must fight the
Reds tooth and nail.”
Defense Education
Funds Considered — |"*"%ie intended to hold general elections in November this year,
LANSING (UPI) —. Michigan’ but we came to realize that (they)
could receive nearly $3,720,000 un-|could not be free and fair. I in-
der provisions of the National De-|vited Gen. Win to make arrange- In a nationwide broadcast ask-/
ing support for the general, U Nu/
son, Pontiac Central. St. Michael — Tony Hiller; Wa-
Harrison ‘Mun-
FUNERAL HOME
“Thoughtful Service
46 Williams St.
24-Hour Ambulance Service Sparks- Griffin
Phone FE 2-5841
fense Education Act if state plans|ments essential for holding such
were made to qualify under the free elections within six months.”
act, Superintendent of Public In-
struction Lynn M. Bartlett said
today.
Bartlett said the act was ‘‘the|ing his government after a split
first time in our history that Con-|last June in his political party,
gress has given financial aid to;which has ruled Burma since it
great segments of our educational| won independence from Britain in
system in a single measure.” 1948, :
He said the act covered elemen-
nln for sbcotast mast ined Circuit-Court Bound
ia, aid to needy students, aid to
ie Sate Depermen of Eoxe/0N Murder Charge Bartlett, just returned from a
Washington conference with U.S.
Commissioner of Education Law-|Dach, 52, bachelor fartuer changes rence G. Derthick, said no funds tepmother, has been ordered held
would be available until the Leg- rig Cir uit Court arraignment on
islature set up. authority to re- urder
ceive the money. an open charge of m =e * * *
F The Jus Court limina:
Gas Station Cooperates _ Sea oetee Oe gle days and.
F was attended by a throng of farm |
a Wayne Cameras Turn neighbors. The crowd of spectators |
DETROIT (AP) — Wayne State|was such that the examination was)
University’s movie studio is lo-|moved from Justice Court to Cir-
cated next to a service station. j|cuit Court chambers.
Whenever the movie makers x &e &
plan to shoot a film they send| Justice Alba Wert found probable’
someone next door to ask the peo-;cause and ordered Hengesbach held
ple in the gas station not to use/without bond for Circuit Court °
their hydraulic lift. It seems that|/raigmment Oct. 8.
the extra electricity needed to op-| Hengesbach has steadfastly ée-
erate the lift fouls up the current!nied that he killed his stepmother, |}
.and the technicians can’t run their/Mrs. Anna. Hengesbach,. aryene:
cameras. old widow.
DOUBLE-YOUR-MONEY-BACK if this Paint Pels or ~—ag
| American-Marietta modern research
. brings big sgh in house painting
[on s aba aaah ahnhhed he | z Ps ea Jon Use Oe... Z DOUBLE-YOUR-MONEY-BACK 3
@ & *American-Marietta Peel-Preef Moune &
SIDING J Point. te qvarantoed not to blister Z
on previewly unpainted pers
e TRIM @ on the label of the container. f @
-l@ kh manner or Ps @ CLAPBOARD $ fone =, a — ine
Does Outstanding > Company twice ¢
dob When Used far | srainel pershon prea of the paint Repaint Work $ ; Age werd ‘ - tginal $
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ee If you need any type of home repair to
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Union Lake’... Milford . . . Lake Orion and
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p* : . =
‘ «
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958 a ©
Mrs. M. A. hte helped pour tea at the annual
Association for Childhood Education Fall Tea held
Thursday at Willis School. Mrs. H. J. Muldowney,
Dear Abby...
Carelessly Clad Women Rush Pentise Press Photos
president, chats with Perry Ninotti who helped with
arrangements.
ea
to Pick Up Mail—or, Mailman? By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN
“DEAR ABBY: What's wrong
with so page women nowa-
Don't they have any
MAIL CARRIER’S WIFE
DEAR WIFE: Don’t worry,
attempt to carry the mail car-
rier away. She’s interested in
MAIL — not MALE!
* * * :
“DEAR. ABBY: Ive a Fs
her Syear-old daughter.
Should the kids be punished or
what? TWO LOST MOTHERS
DEAR MOTHERS: Punished -
for a curiosity that is as na-
tural as breathing?
not! Let the children know that
you are willing to answer all
their questions — and don’t
act embarrassed or they'll
come to regard the subject of
“sex” as something wrong
and shameful.
x* * *
DEAR ABBY: I was Uncle
Tony to 16 nieces and 24
nephews, but now I am a
dirty dog. I have a little
grocery store and always let
my nieces and nephews have a
stick of gum or a piece of
licorice, but about a year ago
they got to sticking their
hands in the cash register
and helping themselves to
packaged cookies and potato
‘chips and it started to get -
~ expensive.
“I warned them in a nice
Citizens’ League, -
Class to Gather
Foods from around the world
~ will be offered when the an-
nual picnic honoririg the draft-
ing of the US. Constitution
sponsored jointly by the New
Citizens’ League of Pontiac and
Janice Antona's Citizenship
Class is held at 1 p.m: Sunday.
The picnic Will be held at the
American Legion Home at
Lake Oakland. Each family
has been requested to bring a
lunch with coffee and lemon-
ade to be served. by the spon-
sors, Former members of the
new citizens’ group have been
invited.
4 4 * _ Robins and
Russell Seiber
this afternoon
Parents of the
Mr. and Mrs.—
_ Russell Robins
Lake and Mr.
Russell Seiber I sent them each an itemized
statement. The total
DEAR ABBY: A letter in your column caused me to
Denise
* Beatrice
Ronald
were married
at Christ
Church
Cranbrook.
couple are
of Orchard
and Mrs.
of Kansas
City, Mo. write what I am about to say.
I am 51 years old. I love house-
work and keep myself busy.
_I have three married children,
and they have children of
their own. I used to drop
everything and run to baby-sit
for them. I didn’t realize I
was neglecting my husband.
“A few things happened
around Christmas time that
made me realize my children
didn’t care as much for my
happiness as I cared for theirs.
I have made up my mind that
I have ONE baby to tend, and
MRS. RONALD R. SEIBER
Seiber-Robins N uptials
Solemnized at Cranbrook
Christ Church Cranbrook was
the scene this afternoon of the
wedding of Denise Beatrice
Robins and Ronald Russell
Seiber.
The Rev. William C. Norvell
officiated at the ceremony
before 150 guests.
Parents of the couple are
Mr. ‘and’ Mrs. Russell Robins.
of Orchard Lake and Mr. atid
Mrs. Russell Seiber of Kansas
Citv, Mo.
The bride wore a white silk-
“mist taffeta gown with appli-
qued re-embroidered Alencon
lace on the bodice extending
down the back of the chapel
train. Her silk illusion net vet
was held by a pearl coroget
and she carried a bouquet of
white orchids and lilies of the
valley.
ATTEND BRIDE
Sally Blanchard of Bloom- *
field Hills was maid of honor,
and bridesmaids were Mrs.
John Rogers of Bloomfield Hiils
and Mrs. Arthur Robins of
Sioux City, Iowa. ~
The attendants wore rose-red
velveteen dresses with draped
satin skirt bands accented by
bows at the front and back. They wore matching velvet
bands with circular veils and
carried bouquets of pale pink
roses.
* * *
Arthur H. Robins of Sioux
City, Towa, was best man.
Ushers were John Rogers and
Theodore Watson; both of
~Bioomfieid Hills: -*
DINNER RECEPTION
A dinner recepfton was held
at Bloomfield Hills Country
Club following the ceremony.
The bride selected a green
wool suit with brown acces-
‘sories for her going-away out-
fit. The newlyweds plan to
honeymoon in Santa Barbara,
Calif. They will make their
home in Pasadena, Calif.
* * *
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Robins wore a pale pink
dress of-imported bre :ade with
a bell-shaped skirt and a
matching velvet hat. Her cor-
sage was of white orchids.
The bride attended Skidmore
College, Saratoga Springs,
N. Y. The bridegroom at-
tended Northwestern Univer-
sity. AO
- him?” that is my husband. After 33
years I just woke up.”
“DEAR ABBY: This boy
was supposed to be my boy
friend. He went to the hospi-
tal to have his appendix out.
He also had his tonsils out He
told me he couldn’t have any
company, so I sent him a 25
cent + get-well card. I just
found qut he had a bunch of
kids come and visit him.
Should I have it out with
MAD
DEAR MAD: This boy has
had enough “out”... Wait
till he gets his strength back
and then discuss it with him.
His visitors probably came on
their own.
* * *
CONFIDENTIAL TO
BENNY: If you can’t get her
legally...don't take her
literally.
x e * .
For personal reply, write to
ABBY in care of this paper.
Enclose a_ self-addressed,
stamped envelope. .
* * *
If you want a collection of
Abby's best letters and an-
swers in one book, ask your
bookdealer to get “DEAR
ABBY"’ for you.
* A ; .
Home from a European tour
are Mr. and Mrs, Hans Hoff-
mann of Auburn avenue.
They visited relatives in
Hamburg and Bavaria and oth-
er parts of Germany, They
also toured through Austria,
Italy and France. Included in
their itinerary was the Brus-
sel's World Fair and stops in
Amsterdam and London.
* * *
Mr, and Mrs, Leo L, Crivea
(nee Barbara Dare) of West-
brook street announce the birth
of a daughter, Twila Rae, born
Sept. 15 at St, Joseph Mercy
Hospital,
Grandparents are Mrs, .Myr-
tle Dare of Putnam -avenue;
Mrs, Wanda Crivea of West-
brook street and Arthur Crivea
of Lexington Place.
* * *
Mr, and Mrs, Frank H. Wil-
liamson of Bielby road _ will
hold open house Sunday in hon-
or of his mother, Mrs. William
H. Williamson, who will cele-
brate her 91st birthday, She
will leave for her Florida home
soon.
* * *
Former Pontiac residents
Mr. and Mrs, Robert E. Mey-
ers (nee Ruth A. Harworth) of
_ Clawson announced the birth of
a daughter, Amy. Sue, born
| Sept. 22 at.St. Joseph Mercy
Hospital.
Grandparents are Mr. and,
Mrs, Edward J. Harworth of
Lake Orion and Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin B. Meyers of Dettoit.
hildhood Ed Association Tea The sxnaal fall tea sponsored
by the Association for Child-
hood Education was held Thurs-
day at the Willis School.
Mrs. Harold Muldowney,
president, welcomed guests
and presented a gift on behalf
of the association, to Dorothy
Virtues, ‘last year’s president
and advisor to the 1958-59 ex-
ecutive board.
Program chairman Margaret
Wilmot and Nancy Gieger were
introduced by Mrs. Muldowney.
DRAMATIZATION GIVEN
A dramatization of the his-
tory and philosophy of the or-
ganization was given . It also
Enjoying a cup of tea while renew-
ing old acquaintances are (left to
explained the 1957-59 “Plan of
Action for Children.”
The Association is made up
of more than 80,000 ‘persons
concerned with the well-being
a eee
years of age,
* *« *
Participating in the dram-
atization were Katharine
Campbell, Tim Hassock, Mrs.
Ronald Chandler and Mrs. Rob-
ert Boyce.
* ez *
Announcement wes made ot
the annual ACE-sponsored Chil-
dren’s Theater play, ‘Simple
Simon,” to be produced by stu-
&
. Mrs. Lawrence Coolman (left) poses with Jean
. Rouse, a Michigan State University student teacher in
the Pontiac system. The student teachers were honored
as new members of the association.
\
Area square dance club members have been
invited to ‘attend the Hoedowners third annual Fall
Round-Up Square Dance at the Waterford CAI Build-
ing this evening. Last minute details were arranged
4 dents of Central High School
Drama Workshop, Oct. 20-25.
The play, to be given for =
mentary school children, wi
be directed, by Garth sts
ton. i
* * *
‘Mrs. Marvin Andrews, chair-
man of the annual membership
drive discussed plans _ and
named the following -to her
committee; Mrs. H. Erwin
Gottschalk, Olive Hurst, Mrs.
* Cyril Davis and Mrs. William
Perrin.
STUDENTS HONORED
Michigan State University
ee es Ri
right) Dick Stallard, Mary Miayette
and Mrs. Winnie Furr. 4 i
5
ucation
eld student teachers in the Pontiae
system, headed by Jean Rouse,
were honored as new members
at the tea,
_~ Mrs. Carroll Porritt —
“background music during the
tea hour.
xk *« *
In charge of floral arrange-
- ments were Mrs. Joseph Fouts,
Mrs. Stuart Galbraith and Mrs.
John Vackaro.
Longfellow and Willis PTA
mothers served refreshments.
Mrs. Frederick Holmes was in
charge of publicity.
New Look—
Moth Eyes
for Depth
The new look of allure for
a season of exciting new looks
is “moth eyes,” launched this
fall in several fashion capitals
of the world by an internation-
al beauty expert. =
* * *
This fluttery look of lashes,
like the wings of a moth, has
as one-third inspiration a
Marie Laurencin painting, one-
third a fey creature from
a Vertes drawing, and one-
third a Graham Green woman
of mystery.
x * *
Having interpreted this look,
like .a painter improvising in
front of his canvas, the ex-
pert tells you how to achieve
it:
x *« *
For the shadowy, fluttery
look of ‘‘moth eyes,’’ make-up
lids with three light applica-
tions of iridescent eye shadow:
all neutral: (1) brown, (2)
blue and (3) lavender, layered
one over the other like over-
lapping waves. To insure the
overlap look, don’t rub one
color with the other; merely
stroke them on, The effect is
one of depth and mystery,
more than color.
Fringe in Style
Fringe is a favorite
among California des
They show it at the hems of
overblouses, on empire bows,
and from neck-to-hemline open-
ings on coat dresses,
Announcement Tea
Honors Ann Oliver
Mrs. E. R. Pettengill, Mrs. Dorothy Gould and Mrs. H.
Wayne Longair were hostesses at an announcement tea
honoring Ann Oliver, bride-elect of Gary Spees.
The tea was held from two until four o’clock today at
the Pettengill home in Clarkston.
Ann is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Oliver
of West Iroquois road and Gary’s parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Lynneer M. Spees of Watkins Lake.
Attendants for the Dec. 27 wedding were revealed at
the tea. Barbara Blackwood will be maid of honor and
bridesmaids will be Mary Dando, Carolyn Hawn and Mrs.
y William McHattie, Ann Spees will be junior bridesmaid.
A miniature Itallan garden arrangement of white
chrysanthemums and sweetheart roses centered the tea
table. The wedding date was revealed in the centerpiece
which also held a miniature bride and groom.
Tea at LeBaron
by PTA Mothers
LeBaron PTA home room
mothers held a get-acquainted
tea Friday afternoon in the
school’s multipurpose room.
It was announced that Mrs.
Robert . Adsit will be home
room representative chairman
for the coming year.
Mrs. Adsit and Mrs. Golda
Holecheck, principal, presided
at the refreshment table. Towell Anchors
Slipping Baby
Bathing a new baby is like
washing. the neighbor’s finest
crystal — you're afraid it will
break.
Protect baby, and your
nerves, by placing a towel in
the bottom of the tub. This
keeps him from slipping so
much and makes the bath more
relaxing.
Pontiae Press Photo
by ( lef to right) Lars} Bova él Riviera street, Fred — Froede of Summit avenue and DeWitt Hart of Scott
Lake ‘road, , |THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958.
cha wn ie i & CARPET CLEANERS:
42 Wisner
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~~ and'¥6 eotortul Lots of bright designs for >
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Nellie’s | “HOURS: Sunday to Thursday 10 A. M. to 9 P.M.
Friday and Saturday 10 A, M. to 10 P. M,
* M.
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i i
i
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 1958" | mcr Sia 3 ee ane Me ee
Man Discovering How to Center ‘His Life on God +
Confident Living.
“WATERFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH Anderson ville Road < Near Dixie Highwa
Sunday School ....cconsecsvecsesconvers aesens - A.M.
- ene an Pog eevecvccseesces 8:30 A.M. and 11:00.A.M,
weenveevee eee eCeeeeeeeeeeeneeeee P.M.
Fam Bible Hour Wednesday conse tse cs 7:30 P.M
Failure . Finds Success —
by Getting Organized
"By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH CAI Building—5460 Williams Lake Rd.
Sunday School .......se0+eccee++ 10:00
Workhip ......ccsssseeceseeecees 11:00
Evening Worship ....ssseesseesee 7490 at Masten, most impressive. And I was even more im- I was recently invited to another city to m&ke a speech at a
banquet and was advised I would be met at my hotel by the
head of this particular organization, who would drive me to
ii to the function. ,
He called me from downstairs at the
exact moment I had been told he would call.
it went down to meet him and found him
pressed by the way he ran the meeting that
CHRISTIAN TEMPLE Phe | Aubyen Rvenes |
ee REV. t it
6:30 P. M—Young People’s Service. Rev, Matthews, Saeiinead,
7:45 P. M—Wednesday—Bible Study and ‘Choir Rehearsal.
7:00P. M.—Thursday—Sky - Pilots. :
Aa rina. Church evening.
As he drove me back to the hotel, I told
him, “You had me come here to make an
inspirational speech to your group, but, be-:
eve me, you're inspirational enough without
importing anyone from outside.”
“Well,” he said, “if you think I’m inspirational, you
should have known me five years ago! When I got out-of
college, I was going to make myself a million dollars right
off and I went out to do it. I found out I couldn’t. So I
got disgusted. I thought that the only way to get ahead .
was to do what everybody else was doing.”
So, under the mistaken impression fhat everyone: who
achieved success “lived it up,” he started down a number of
CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Hall—82 Perkins St. (Off Auburn)
Affiliated with Federation of Spiritual Churches
SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE 7:30 P. M
The Rev. Kay Cation of Detroit, Speaker
. No Services Thursday, October 2nd
dead end roads—liquor, marital difficulties, all sorts of things.
“Finally one night,” he told me, “I wrapped my car around a
telepohne pole atfd was soon lying on my back in a hospital
| where I spent six weeks.
“When you haven't anything to do but to look up at the
ceiling,” he continued, “you start to think. And I thought to
myself, I've certainly messed everything up. I started well
enough. I got some good grades at school. I had brains and I
Columbia Avenue
BAPTIST
CHURCH Cee |
~ cvdgend Ce mae en WAN, 55 << WE hs OWN s Waco eves G0 P.M,
Evening Worship ............++-+++ 7:30 P.M.
< greeiee “rice. eck sree
Rev. M. P. Boyd Irs Pastor
_ Cooperating with Southern Baptist Convention
== 9,000,000 Members —
.. 7:30 P.M. . had connections. I have a good mind and a good body. Yet,
here I am—a failure.”
xk kk x
When he was able to sit up, his mother came to see him
one day and brought him a Bible to read. And he started to
read it. Eventually he came to the fourth chapter of Proverbs,
where it says in the twenty-third verse, “Keep thy heart with
all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” And for some
reason this gripped him.
But, what did the Bible mean when it told you to keep your
heart with all diligence? He sent for his pastor to find out.
The pastor, obviously a wise minister, told him that what is
imeant by “your heart” is the deep subconscious, the inner-
most self out of which the personality develops. If you get.in-
wardly organized around God, he said, keeping Him as the
center and diligently holding to that, then the issues of life,
|instead of flowing away from you, will flow to you.
“So,” my host continued, “I got organized.” Then he
—
_ FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Oakland and Saginaw
| Pontiac, Michigan
- Reo. H. H. Savage, Pastor: if.
Ren. W. B, Hkes, Ast, Poste
_ 9:45 AM—SUNDAY SCHOOL : e Classes for All Ages
- - 10:45 AM—MORNING WORSHIP - “ZEPHANIAH’S FOREVIEWS OF THE TRIBULATION”
7:00 P.M.—EVENING SERVICES “UNEXCELLED LOVE”
Dr. H. H. Savage, preaching at both services
used a glorious sentence. “God and I took authority over
my life.” And I knew what he meant as he said: “I be-
gan to stand up to things. I began to control things. Now
I am having the time of my life.”
His boast. was not bravado. It was awareness of one’s true
i nature, based upon humble faith. And, as I go from city to
city and place to place, I find that there is nothing more
thrilling than meeting and talking with people who have
| found this to be true.
& «. £
Out of your heart, out of the depths of the best in you, you
too can control the issues of life.
(Copyright, 1958) +
Promotion Day
af 9-30 Service Luther League
to Eastern Michigan
District Youth
Following the supper hour, Dr.
Wilton E, Bergstrand, executive di-
rector of the Luther League will
no world-wide
Rey. Ralph C. Claus
fo Address School
St. Trinity Lutheran Church will
celebrate Rally Day tomorrow with
the Rev. Ralph C.. Claus, pastor,
the entire Sunday addressing
School at the 9:45 morning service.
The pastor’s talk will be fol-
lowed by the showing of a Bible
story film. ©
At the 8:30 a.m, worship hour,
the lower grades of the Sunday
School will sing “I Am Jesus’
Little Lamb,’’ The upper classes
will sing ‘“‘Stand Up, Stand Up
For Jesus” at the 11 a.m. service.
the teachers of the school con-
secrated during a service. .
Pennsylvania Pastor
to Be Guest Preacher
The Rev. Joseph McCoy ot
Morning Star Baptist Church,
Clairton, Pa. will be guest preach-
er Sunday morning in the Mace-
donia Baptist Church, 420 Bloom-
field Ave,
He will also be speaking at the
special services being held at 8
p.m.,. Sunday through Thursday.
The Rev, L, R, Miner, pastor,
stated the public has been invited.
Children’s Meetings
Slated at Scott Lake
The Rev. Orville J. Windell, pas-
tor, announces a series of chil-
|dren’s meetings will be held Mon-) 4 ten-year dream progressed to-
| Church
Y¥. M. C. A, 191 Mt. Clemens Street Rev. R. Garner, Paster — FE 4-740?
Sunday School **ee spsecestéicas 10:00 A. M.
Worship eee ee ee heat aerate 1:00 A.M.
Dine Stage eeeee ee eeeeve eet enee 6:00 P, M.
Evening Service ..:........ covcece 7100 P, M.
Wednesday Prayer Service ...... 7:30 P.M.
“Where Priends Meet Friends and Ged Meets All” day through Saturday at the As-
sembly of God Church, 1092 Scott
|Lake Rd. Sessions will be con-
Sat, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. ward reality this week when the
Pontiac, Birmingham and Royal
Oak members of the Unitarian
Church held a_ groundbreaking
ceremony on land surrounding the
Cranbrook Foundation corner at
Woodward and Lone Pine roads.
. * * *
The Rev. Walter B. Pedersen,
pastor, was assisted by Thomas
Mrs. Nellie Whiteside and Bar-
bara Fellows of the Assembly of
God Church on Melbourne street
will be in charge.
S. Edwards, president of the board
280 N. Cass Lake Rd. -
‘Sunday September 28th Through October 5th CHRISTIAN and MISSIONARY ALLIANCE Rev. G. J. Bersche, Pastor | jot trustees. a
‘members began with discussion
meetings organized by Albert M.
MacCleery and Eugene Hesz in the
| Spring of 1948.
Annual Missionary. Convention = | tz-2703" | ham Unitarian Fellowship, hold- ae
The dant with now over + 200 Unitarians Break Ground
for Area Church Building
ing services once a month in the
Birmingham Community House.
In the fall of 1951, the church
school was started in the Apple
Orchard School and early in 1952
a part time minister was obtained
with services held in the Birming-
ham YMCA.
In December of ” a constitu-
tion was adopted and the group
became a church. The next month
the group moved to..the ios
__.| School in Royal Qak.-
An active discussion group wa
formed in Pontiac two years ego
for members living in the northern
part of the parish. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Salley of Drayton Plains
have been members sinee the early
fellowship days. .
Audio Visual
| CHRISTIAN PSYCHIC
pers
Rev. David N. Clark Rev. D. I. Jeffrey Rev. L. L. King
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45. WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00
EVENING SERVICE 7:00 ,
MISSIONARIES OF THE WEEK.
Rev. D. C. Ward, Rev. D. I. Jeffrey, Rev. L. L. King,
NIGHTLY 7:30 P. M. Except Saturday |
it
District Superintendent D. N. Clark Preaching at All Three Sunday Services -} ‘SCIENCE CHURCH 30 Whiitemore Street |
Guest Speaker Sunday Conference at
1 P.M. Tuesday
Christian Literature Sales is
planning a special Audio Visual
Conference for all pastors, youth Wednesday, Silver Tea
|
directors and ‘audio visual direc-
National Lutheran Council Churches
ASCENSION
PONTIAC
. _ , 96 Williams St.
Wm. LaFountain, Pastor _
| SUNDAY SCHOOL .. 9:45 A.M.
CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M.
CH RIST ==
WATERFORD TWP.
Airport at Williams Lake Rd,
| Arvid E, Anderson, Pastor
| SUNDAY SCHOOL .. 9:30 A.M.
| CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M.
| ST. JOHN’S PONTIAC
87 Hill St. at Cherry Ct.
Carl W. Nelson, Pastor
WALLED LAKE
W. Maple Near Ladd Rd/
__M. Frederick Foutz, Pastor oe ace eee
| CHURCH SERVICE .11 200 AM. tors at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the
multi-purpose room of the store,
at 39 Oakland Ave.
bd * *
| The Rev. Don Bauter, a special-
list in the audio visual field, will
ibe leading the discussion, present-
‘ing ideas and answering questions.
| According to Floyd P, Miles,
‘manager of the store, emphasis
‘has been on the use of audio
visuals in the church in conven-
tions and trade shows this summer
as well as denominational and in-
dependent -apstitne stan and confer-
éficés,
* * *
‘We have planned this confer-
ence ta help churches in this area
and surrounding counties to know
what is available in audio visuals
and how to use them Eoeer ”
said Miles. Host! Missionaries
Nights at Alliance Church]
roe OPEN
to Sp eak _— CHURCH
Me walten Biv. .
Piganpenste _ ,1000A.M
p amally mate Oe 11:00 A.M
trem Viet Nam, will begin their || Youth Service ..... 6:30 P.M
ministry hero Monday nigh. | SrepSpveyer Mocing 7452.0 The Rev. Mi. Ward has been|] Wed Praves polling
serving among the Arabs, particu- %
larly the tribes living in goats-hair Your Search
tents on the deserts. During world for a Friendly
War I, the Wards kept “open Cherch
house” for men of the Allied Forc
at mission headquarters in Jeru-
salem
Rev. Jeffrey has completed six
terms of service in Indo-China,
ginning his work in 1918, as First Christian Church
Through the critical years after Disciples of Christ Rev. T. H. Staton FE 2-8497
World War II Mr. Jeffrey has led|] Sunday School ..10 A. M.
missionaries and national workers|] Church Service ..11 A. M.
in rehabilitation and relief. Recent- 858 W. Huron
ly his work has been with pris-
oners. Rev. D. D. McColl.
REV, D. 0, WARD
The annual Missionary Conven-
tion of the Christian and Mission-
ary Alliance Church, 220 N. Cass
Lake Rd. at M59 will be held at
— FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HURON AT WAYNE
Paster... REV, WHLIAM H. MARBACM, 8.0.
Asseciote Pastor. REV. GALEN E. HERSHEY, B.D.
WORSHIP SERVICES . . . 9:30-11:00
CHURCH SCHOOL... . 9:30-11:00
7:30 each night Sunday through
Oct. 5 except Saturday,
x 2 -&
the Alliance churehes in all aarts
of the world in 138 languages with
3,052 trained native workers be-
sides the 822 members of the mis-
sionary force,
* * *
Voluntary offerings from)
churches in the United States and
Canada amount to $3,000,000, The
local church has given $14,000 to
the program the last four years.
The Rev. D. 0. Ward, ggg
missionary from Jordan,
Rev, D, I. Jeffrey, msisonary
== 1,000 Balloons |
fo Be Released |
Missionary work is carried on by| ATTEND CHURCH and SUNDAY SCHOOL At
Pontiac Holiness Tabernacle 2800 Watkins Lake Bd., % Mile N.W, of County Mkt.
Sunday School 10 A. M. Preaching 11 and 7:30
Marv. Morse. Supt. Classes for Everyone
Prayer Meetings Wed. and Fri. at 7:30 P. M.
On the Air—CKLW, 7:30 A. M. Sun.
FIRST CHURCH oO THE BRETHREN rth Roselawn “There are Still Many = — and Thirst After Righteousness”
|
Church School Children | School, Bogard A.M, Message, 11:00 A. M.
et teenie ng the at 7:00 P. M. by Rev. John Hurst
MBpecial Music by the Choir at Both Services
Bpectal Fe -—_ > at = —— Saturday, 5:30
REY. LEROY SHAFER, Pastor
FIRST SPIRITUALIST a 576 Orchard Lake Avenue
Sunday Services—?:30 & 7:30 P.M.
Rev. Robert Macdonald ef Niagara Falls, N. Y., Speaking
Circlese—4;00 P. M. Dinner—5:00 P.M.
Wed., Oct. 1st—Open Foerum—7:30 FP. M.
HARRY NICHOLS, President PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
to Be Promoted Sunday
at Marimont Baptist
will participate in the release of
mont: Baptist Church at 11 a.m.
on Oct. 11.
* * *
The balloons are a part of the
preliminary plans for announcing
the ninth International Sunday
School Contest which begins on
Oct. 12 and continues through
Nov. 16.
Leslie Hudson, state represen-
tative, will take part in the re-
lease of another 500 balloons at
3 in the afternoon.
Children in the beginners, pri-
mary, and junior departments
will see a film, “The Red Sea”
during the Sunday School hour
tomorrow, They will also be pro-
moted.
Nov. 16. Points will be given for
punctuality, following up .on ab-
sent children, and calling on new
— te 4 ——
Each department will have a!
“Teacher of the Week Award."
Holy Communion cee
lat Ist Free Methodist Holy Communion will be cele-
brated at the 11 a.m. service Sun-
day in the First Free Methodist
Church, 501 Mt. Clemens St.
The Rev. Lyal H. Howison will
dedicate more than 50 teachers
and officers of the Sunday School
during the service.
At 7:30 p.m, Tuesday, evangelis-
church with the Rev. O. R, Tes-
er. Services to be held each eve-
ning will continue through Oct. 12.
New Bethel Baptists
to Observe Youth Day
Youth Day will be observed to-
morrow in New Bethel Baptist
Church beginning at the 9:30 serv-
ice, The Rev. Clarence L. Crew
will speak at the 11 a.m, worship
hour.
Young people will conduct their
own service at 6 p.m,‘and at the
7 p.m. service two religious films
will be shown, “The Boy, Jesus
jand the Baptism’’ and ‘‘The Temp-
tation of Jesus.’" The Rev. Amos
G. Johnson stated the public is
invited, Floyd Miles and Keith Baldwin!
500 helium-filled balloons at —
‘Teachers and officers of the
church school are having a con-|
test of their own from Oct, 12 to,
Marimont Baptist Church
Invites You:
aden Worship, 11 A. M. Sunday School, 10 A. M.
Youth Hour, 6:30 P. M. Evening Service, 7:30 P. M.
Join Marimont Sunday School
--.in “ORBIT AROUND the SON”
Rev. Philip Somers, Pastor Walton Bivd., 1 Block off Baldwin
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH 351 Prospect St. Rev. Gerald H. Rapelje
Sunday School....10 A.M. Morning Worship....11:15 A.M.
Young Peoples........ 6:15 P.M.
Eve Worship....7:30 Wednesday Eve. Service....7:30 P.M,
BRANCH SUNDAY SCHOOL Held at
LONGFELLOW PUBLIC SCHOOL 10 A.M.
Your _Last Chance!! ‘to Hear Gen. "Supt. Rev. Melvin S. Snyder and -
the “Singing Brecheisens” in the Special Services at
The Pilgrim Holiness Church Baldwin—Fairmount
Tonight 7:30. Tomorrow—11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Sunday School (all ages)..............10:00 A. M.
E. C, SWANSON, Minister ROY OVERBAUGH, S. 8. Supt,
$
saro of Pittsburgh, Pa., the preach-|
s are,
| The Salvation Army | 29 W. LAWRENCE STREET
Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Young People’s Legion 6 p.m.
Morning Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer and Praise Meeting 7:30~p.m.
CAPTAIN AND MRS. J. WILLIAM HEAVER
Good Music — Singing — True to the Word Preaching tic meetings ‘will begin at the
God Meets With Us — &
You Too, Are Invited
stares Services and
Sunday School
11:00 A. M
Wednesday pe
_ Service 8 P. M.
SUNDAY SCHOOL ..9:45 A.M. |
| CHURCH SERVICE .11:00 A.M.
SHEPHERD of the LAKES |
Meeting at Walled Lake Elem. School |
SUNDAY SCHOOL ..9:30A.M. |
10:00 A. M. oh arp SCHOOL
Classes for A ges
i 11:00 A.M, WORSHIP
il a Rev, J. E. Tucke:
Brown City
We cordially welcome
In EASTERN JUNIOR HIGH
©. P, Eastman, Pastor—632. Benson
¥ 6 45 P. M. Junior =
outh Fellowship
Pit 30:P M. Evening Worship
Theme: “Seeking the Lost
you fo worship with us
FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH SCHOOL, Sanford at EB. Pike
FE 5-692 .
Jordan Viet Nam Foreign Secg India
MISSION ARY PICTURES—CURIOS—COSTUMES FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams Streets az) rigetine SCIENCEz2/o.
~ SUBJECT. ror ‘SUNDAY
“REALITY” f Reading Room ny
2 oan Lawrence Street: W
11 A. ivi to 5 3 M. wu
Friday to 9 P, M.
RADIO STATION CKLW U sxc. it | Sunday 45 AM. HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS
TV
EVERY SUNDAY |
CHANNEL 7 [ll
-9:30 A. M.
L{Iff {If Aff ff-
IO
"Bones Temple ]Silvercrest Baptist
| Sd ~+
365 East Wi ‘Interdenomin mingtional
PA eg Wercip—itiod Py M. ! Wi
mene Saivina’'? rm mM.
GEOFFREY DAY, 6.A,, B.Th., Pastor fo Start Meetings _ The Rev, William Goodwin, pas-
tor of Junaita Baptist Church in
| Junaita, will be speaking at the
special meetings Monday through Oct. 10 in Silvercrest Baptist
| Church, Dixie Highway at Rose-
mary near Silver Lake road.
|. The guest preacher is a graduate
at Midwestern ‘Seminary of Pon- |
i
tiae.
. fi . Coming here with the Rev. Mr.
SUNDAY 11 A.M. Ea will be Walter Morrow
Be a Part of Sentheis’s
Great Sunday School
Rally oe» 9:45 A, M,
service each evening and special
musical numbers, WORSHIP ‘who will be in charge of the song
EDUCATIONAL UNIT — Members of the Memorial Baptist Church, 351 Prospect
St., announce plans of the new educational unit to be Built on property purchased
at Michigan and Midland streets. If construction can be started by Oct. 1, the arch- ©
itects, John E. Roth & Sons of Birmingham, stated the congregation may worship
inst ‘Christmas. The unit will be built of tan brick with wood ite te The THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,
of brick with Bess cee Gn Wil tae asl Gre A ale ak The
partition walls will be of exposed masonty and painted sheetrock and chancel area
large fireplace is planned for the youth room where inforfnal gatherings will be held. ! ee
-Bible School voeee J TQOA M
Youth Fellowship .. 5:45 P. M..
Evening Service ., 7:00P.M
. Wednesday
Braver Meeting 7:30 P.M
JOSLYN AVENUE
Joslyn at Thira ~
Cdmend . Watkins, Pasier
Worship ...ss0004- -10:45 A. M,
Evening Service... 6:30 P.M
Wednesday er
baie ret hte
AUBURN HEIGHTS natural finish. Asphalt tile will cover the floors throughout. A
INSTALLATION OF _ The Rev. James H. Luther, pas-
TEACHERS AND tor, extends an invitation to ihe
OFFICERS | public.
————————————
Evening Rally, 7:45 | : os
ated Bole | CENTRAL Midweek Services i CHRISTIAN
on Tuesday and i) 36 CHURCH.
besa | a tan “Visit the Church of the Bible School ....... 945A.M.
Old Fashioned Gospel” a 1100 A.
. 210N. Perry at * Srp Becvto co... 7:00 P.M.
Milbourne | "Study Wedneedey aoa0 P.M.
Wesley C. Wibley. Pastor ——S—S—————— :
r
els =, COD The Episcopal Church Vc p |
TF soi of GOD | i of the Advent oung COP eC ee MB / i=3| W. Long Lake Rd. at Middlebelt ASSL ly THE REV, JOUN W. WIGLE, Vicar
ané Church School
215 A.M, and 11:15 A. M.
Boly Communion First Sunday Slate Program
Rally - Promotion Day
to Be Observed at Both
9:30 and 11 A.M..
The Junior High and Senior High | Young people of First Presbyterian DON ELSON BAPTIST CHURCH | Elizabeth Lake Ra, eae
Sunday School . Merelag Wershlp eves “nt a.m, Soon and Be uroh
Youth Service Aeeeee PURPORT ET wert ee ae Pere er .6:30. p.m.
Evening Church Service “OOS CHEERS HEHEHE DH bee wag 00280 p.m.
Midweek ote eee eegeee ee a Wednesda Pastor—REV, LEE LaLONE want Dm We CWwALD
oa os
at 5:30 p.m, Sunday. “Let's Get
Acquainted’’. will be the theme of
the Pioneers’ group.
* * * ;
At the Senior High meeting, a
skit will be presented by Jerry
Powers, Mary Wood, Roger Riley,
| Jeannette Ohanesian, Ronald New-
* [man and Sally Huntoon.
Karen Burnworth, Jill Miller and
Richard Schrach will also take part
in the evening activities. Mr. and
Mrs. William Olmstead are the
| sponsors.
Rally-Promotion Day will be All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pike
The Rev. C. George Widdifield, Rector
The Rev, David K. Mills, Curate
SUNDAY SERVICES
8:00 A.M.—Holy Communion
9:30 A.M.—Morning Prayer and
Sermon by the Rector
Church School La
11:00. A.M..—Morning Prayer -and ork
: tl
Sermon by the Rector
Church School observed at both the 9:39 and 11
a.m. Sunday Schools.
f ST. ANDREW'S | Mrs. Allan H. Monroe will open
ger. EPISCOPAL CHURCH i her home on Cherokee road to the
8301 Hatchery R4., Drayton: | |} Women’s Prayer Group at 9 a.m.
suet, ee 8:00 A, M.—Holy Communion | Tuesday. At 1:30 p.m. the WCTU
will hold a meeting in the church 8:00 A. M.—Holy Communion 9:30 & 12:18 A, M.—Morning
: M.—Family Se né _- Prayer and Sermon parlor. oe tna sae . Pull Schedule of Church The Women's Association will be-
11:00 A. M.—Morning Prayer . Schoo! Classes at gin the Friday meeting at 10 a.m.
and Sermon Both Services
with Bible study. A luncheen and
afternoon program will fallow.
At the early worship service to- The Rev. Bertram T. White, Vicar |] The Rev. Waldo R. Hunt, Vicar
morrow, Rev, Galen E. Hershey
will preach on “An Effective Chris-
tian Education” ‘and at 11 a.m.
Dr, William H. Marbach will speak
on “The Bitterness of the Cup.”
{
|
Central Methodist | REY, MILTON 3. Minister
ary ai Todt SOE B. MN
_ MORNING SERVICES, 8:30 and 10:45 A. M.
“THE FREEST MAN”
The Rev. Mr. Wallace, Preaching
ite fanaa Over hada 11: :00 A. M.) Christian Education
Day to Be Observed
Christian Education Sunday will
be observed at Orchard Lake Com-
jmunity Church, Presbyterian to-
‘morrow. Mrs. Eva Geisler is super-
intendent of the church school and
mae Mrs, Betty Brown, her assistant.
Elders Eric Westerberg, Howard
Bethany Baptist Church Scharfenberg, Charles M. Wright West H at Mark St and Mior White will assist the
DR, JOSEPH IRVINS CHAPMAN, Paster
PERCY M. WALLEY wR., Minister of Séucation
and Shirley re Thy Dvelli sing
* “H Are 3 : ow onl “A deen nol
Sermon! “WHAT TO DO WITH HYPOCRITES”
9:45 A.M.—Church School Classes for All
6:00 P, M.—Fellowship
1:00 F M—Adult Forum, 4 B. Y. F. Groups
:
1:90 P. Mic Wednesday, Midweek Prayer and Bible Study.
“An American Baptist Convention Church” ’ The J
ee Thelin See mrsee pete
for a supper pro- High Westminster
wich th Mrs. Erie Lundquist,
lcrorttind
The Mariners will be guests of
pana College at the Homecoming
me when Alma plays Hillsdale "WESLEYAN METHODIST 67 NORTH LYNN STREET
Sunday School 10 A.M. Worship 11. A.M. Colleges Evening Sevice 7:30 P.M, | W. Y. P. §. 6:45 PAM. - ed. Prayer and Bible Service 7:30 P.M. Highland
REV, Hl. L. JOHNSON, Pastor - }* Congregational Church |. Milford Rd. at M59
PONTIAC CHURCH — ee Worship 11 A. M. REV. MAURICE OIBETTE, Paster
OF CHRIST Church will begin the fall program.
pastor at the two morning services| V@"Y President of
Dr. Addison H. Leitch, president
of Pittsburgh-Xenia Theological
Seminary, will be speaking at the
10 a. m, and 7 p. m. services to-
morrow in the Oakland Avenue
United Presbyterian Church.
A leader in youth work and
training programs, he has spent
19 summers in boys’ camp work
and youth conferences.
Dr. Leitch earned his Doctor of
Pieexty Degree at Cambridge,
Education Day Slated
at Auburn Heights
The Auburn Heights United Pres-
byterian Church will observe an-
nual Christian Education Day Sun-
day with Sunday School pupils pro-
moted to new classes.
A class for young adults will be-
gin tomorrow. Anyone past high
schoo] age and through the age
of 30, married or single, may join.
Grant Graham, a local attorney,
will be the teacher.
During the present building pro-
gram, this new class will meet in
the Auburn Heights Community
Club on Squirrel road.
The sermon by the Rev. F. Wil-
liam Palmer, pastor, at both wor-
ship services will be ‘Assignment:
Educate.” At the Youth Fellowship
‘Take Up Thy Cross,’
Play by Church School
Under the direction of Mrs, Claude Cook, the church school
department will present a play,
“Take Up Thy Cross’’ at the Rally
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints, 19 Front St.
be the speaker at the morning
service at 11.
Rev. Henry Wrobbel ©
to Baptize Class Sundoy The Rev, Henry Wrobbel of Cal-| Church, Banquet Speaker
Day service at 9:45 a.m, in the] ©
Elder Roland Curtis. pastor, will | Gane
England. He -has been awarded
honorary degrees by Muskingum
College | and Grove City College
where he served as dean of men
and college pastor for six years.
The annual Kick-off -Banquet
of the Bible School is scheduled
for Monday night in Fellowship
Hall with Dr. Leitch, the speak-
er. The theme is “Building With
Christ.”
William, Coffing will direct com-
munity singing with Mrs. Ronald
Parsons, the accompanist, Special
music will include selections by
the Builders’ Octet and a solo by
R. G. Crites.
In charge of the dinner will be
Mr. and Mrs, William Cox with
Mrs. Noble Meredith supervising
decorations.
The pastor, the Rev. Theodore
R. Allebach, announces the new
Christian Education Unit is nearly
completed. Some classes are now
occupying their new rooms.
Oakland Youth
Fellowship Rally
Tonight at 7:30
The Rev. Oscar Van Impe, found-
er and director of the Belgium
Baptist Mission in Detroit, will be
tian Temple, 505 Aulurn Ave.
The trumpet trio,’ composed of| $456 Primary Street
Fr. Wm. Palmer, Paster
A fall and winter program filled
with religious activity for youth
and adults, has been scheduled at Youth Groups ..... 6:30.P.M.
St. Andrew Episcopal Church in ‘ oe i) Wed Prayer and
Waterford Township, according toll Brethren Church |} sey Hou ..... 730 P.M Rev. Waldo R. Hunt. 316 Baldwin. FE 2-0884
x«~ * ee Wi ,
Increased secretarial service will eg Service et dee G4 tl CHURCH OF THE
allow the church offices to remain|} ¢agsy _— ATONEMENT
open ren 2 a ee Worship. «.+++11:00 AM. penpaien | daily. Young People ..-+» 6:15 PIM. | Ualied Prestyiete A Teacher Training program is | as vayer
under way, with eight husband- | . Lovely 4 svseees 7:30 BP Z| 3527 Clintonville Rd.
and-wife teams among the many
volunteers taking the course in Worship ....++. 7:30 P.M.
‘instruction of adujt and chil- | REV, TOMMY GUEST, Pastor
dren’s classes. |
From 1:30 to 9:30 p.m. Sunday, | : i
i
Sept. 28, a conference will be held UNITY
relating to religious’ programs in H
the: church. Diocesan director of} 7114 N. Saginaw St, FE 2-4609
Christian Education, Burton Hodg- Sunday Service 11:00 A. M. }
son, will speak on “The Redemp- Tuesday 8 P. M. i
tive Task of the Cifurch.”’
~A new director of ministry of
music, Ivan Rouse Jr., will become |
a member of St. Andrew’s staff, |i
assuming duties as choir director-}
organist, Oct. 5, He has a Bache-}
lor of Music from the Conservatory
LAKELAND.
Rev. Rey F. Lambert, Paster
Sunday School
Apostolic Church of Ohrist | | 459 CENTRAL
’ Young People Saturday ....-scee 7:30 p.m.
nip Poets ghey — employed at Shrodt Conservatory ofl Sunday School and Worship . . 10:004.m. —
ship Rally at 7:30 tonight in Chris-}Music in during thej[ Sunday Evening Service........+ 7:30P.M.
Tuesday Bible +9 0ee oe ees 7:30 pam.
Thursday Evangelistic er 7:30 p.m,
om Phone FE 24751
young
people of First Church of God and
Memorial Baptist.
An attendance award will be
given the church with the highest
average attendance of young peo-
invited.
-.
ple present. All -_ people ere ere)
wr First Pentecost.€
$8 16 am. Worship 11 am | South Siginaw at
Fane Serie, 0,2 | ————— 10:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP
“HOW TO WIN RESPECT” —
Rev. Paul T, Hart, Preaching —
| United | Gospel Singing Oonvention im] ‘Sept. 28th, 2:30 to 4:30. ~~
TOLD cich School daring the
construction of the new church at
Pontiac Lake and Merry roads,
Ist CONGREGATIONAL
- CHURCH
Mill, E, Huron and Mt. Clemens. r
Rev. Malcolm K. Burton. Pastor. «
Rev. Karl W. Ostberg. Asso. Pastor
MORNING SERVICE °
—.1080-4.M. .
“THEN SHALL
THE END COME”
The Rev. Mr. Burton, Preaching
Welcomes All Visitors
Bible Study PPP ee ee 9:50 a.m,
Morning Worship ............-..- 10:50 a.m,
\
‘ J a
ae
“Pp “ 2 Cor. 1:18 Sunday Grening Worship 2 —_ ‘a9 METHODIST CHURCH
Wednesday mates Service .....0+2.7:30 Dum.’
WXY2 Detroit F:30 to 6:00 P.M. Sunday anit
| eS .M. W. 7, Mall, Minister Pee wer hee .. Sunday School
Speman = Ae.
» FIRST Dedication of Teachers
CHU RCH NAZARENE | “on . 60 STATE STREET. Service
Bible School ...... 9:45 A.M.” Light ond Life H i e S «6 ee 0 © Hi * ie : Our
Worship ......... 1100 A.M. Anniversary Service |
WORSHIP HOURS : Revival bi 1:00 A. M, Dr. We, McGuire ° Sept. 30 to Oct. 12
: ve ume Tonle: oHEAVEN” tea Rev. a “oeneen:
? s ratory. here vengelist — Dy eh BN Te aes a | EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:30 P.M ee Sundays 11 A. M.
sail Wien and how ‘wt will He 6 ‘ee Mag and 7:30 P. M.
— Jordan ane ot ala fee tinoulation? is the antis: Publi¢ Invited! Shuren wow iiving? .
"Youth: Service vy ecyeersegess + 6:30 P.M. : - ' Special Broadcast
ae Richard er : REV. ©. R. TESSARO == “Light and Life Hour”
eet am ~~ |iMintter of SMusie ~ Piha. Peinarivenie. §— — gundey 69: CELW
This is Your Sing ., . come
__ - Afternoon ‘of Good
“First | Social Brethren ent : ss ; 316 Baldwin Avenue
Featuring QUARTETS, DUETS, SOLOS. Plus Congregational Singing 11:15 CHURCH SCHOOL |
‘Wed. 7:30 P. M. Bible Smndy.and
rie tebe oie A
put Cos SINcING: Enioy an
_ EULAS HOUSTON, Pres. \ ELSIE , Sec.-Treas.
God evidenced His Love oe é Cee Ree
Son = Christ proved His Love by His sxe wundatheh ts Weed wo tied in Vite wo fla sad be sad tectonn rificial death for you se iby Christ speaks of Himself as the Bridegroom and of His Church as His demdeutrete your love by woruhip and Bride. ils Cacramam He gives pean und tgsie of Hn love your service to Him. : and , . . more marvelous still! , . . here Body and Blood sustain
LOVE our love and keep us. His forever.
i took bread ©
TH F U cod wins sod at Me goes to Grom suid “Tae © bay Bedi, 3 EGODO NVITESYO me cad oo Ho oe 3 mk ite y Body, My
tn a What is the of it. all? Christians show their trust in His
‘Wiapectaly ° 3 Announcing death tor chet 0b thay tallow Bie, Gccctien, Tht do tn dampabeenne
Sunday } of Me.” They take as their own the forgiveness which His brokea
the Body and shed Blood earned for men when they do this act in faith.
™srvics | Tt tes tte on we ee cee ae PEE eke ea Le "Dr. Malone Speaking at” night —. See Saas bate eh i tenes ok ond aot Wan
10 A. M.- 11 A. M. subjects The pastor a your neighborhood Lutheran Church is ready to
Rev. Herbert Noe Spedking at REV, HERBERT NOE & |
| 7:30. P. M. } September 28th , Chols and Special Music ae ; : ,
Seabee Sth LUTHERAN CHURCHES aah ae :-'"How to Be Free From Worry” | siete: Byned
} DR. B. BR. LAKIN ;
fonker "dace fre hese October 12th = 19th 2% ST. STEPHENS ST. TRINITY
Modezn Supervised Nursery Draytori Plains ~ Pontiac, East Side .
ST. PAUL GRACE
RADIO REVIVAL WPON 845.A. M. EACH WEEK DAY _ 10:15 A. M. SUNDAY Pontiac, North Side Pontiac, West Side
Sunday School Attendance Last Week 1404. _ CEDAR CREST Bloomfield Twp. _ : Union Lake—Oxbow Lake , > Square Lake and Tehran
ST. MARK’S * Commerce Rd., West Acres ve i
Revival Campaign '
i
Worship ssesssee 10:00AM |
Bible School :..... S30A.M |
He that is slow to anger is better Worship 8:45 ond 11:15 AM.
eW rogram Hein a ne aenkcc gi| "ASSIGNMENT: EDUCATE” ees Oey . #1 Bible School .,... 10:00 A.M. § , A ( city. Youth Fellowship .. 6:00 P, M.-
at M. ANarew ~ First United || COMMUNITY UxTTED
Eight Husband - Wife to — cn | CHURCH
Teams Take Course} sunaay ae fervienl., Jeni, ic, EE Drayton Paine, SOMME
to Teach Religion igen sorte 190 A. W. J, Teeuwissen, Jr, Pastor «|.
ll Bible School ..... 945A.M |
«Morning Worship .11:00 A.M. —
¢ Evening Worship .. 70P.M_
Sunday School .... &:30A.M. Morning Worship 10:45 AM -
vee 9:90.A.M: ‘Morning Worship .MW45A°M. |
ei Sanaa iahosk: aha ts
FIRST METODET Nate oe ent: bone TREE ee:
¥ ye
vie iajpatibaclagiate
ii mip onan
SoU = A a StS ge
ik re a iw a
j
THE PONTIAC PRESS; SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958 4
i
“SUN. Mar. 1:45
UN.—MON.—TUES
“TAKE MA 4-2151
st NT RICHARD WIOMARK
Will Tour Nation for Wear Security for You
Rroackway Is
| By WILLIAM GLOVE R
NEW YORK ‘—Stage star Julie
Harris — is pulling: a switch en
Broadway
She is “showing the rest of the
country her new play first—Broad-
way .must wait exactly one year.
Usually it’s the other way around.
The reverse theatrical venture is
a season-long series of stands in 19
cities coast to coast of the drama, “The Warm Peninsula,” by Joseph
COMMERCE DRIVE-IN THEATER
South End of Union Lake Rd.
TONITE—3—FEATURES—3 Open 6:00
EM 3-066!
LOOK FOR THE FINEST PICTURE
YOU EVER HOPE TO SEE! &
CSF PCRS CSREES ¥ Liab teh LTE SCTE RETR eee Tee eee, Peas fe aie
‘TrrTC CTT eT eT ee eee Oe OPO OC TE ee Oe OO TU OOO UTC CCC CCC CT OCU COC RT Ce CUCCOUVE CCC TTC CCC CC TCC
Pi ll littl ii ttt li tn Ai tii SM Aint tintin bl Ai a le tt ia ln clin ltl la lal i lila lnc An ill Al na li ntl ltt ll dl hile drt ie
Masteroff.
It's a family project. Jullie’s
husband, Manning Gurian, a show
business veteran, is the producer.
Their 3-year-old son, Peter, will
go with them on the tour.
Gurian sais this is why Julie is
ing forth: F a
_ “We feel that audiences all over
are eager for the stage, but there
is a paradox.
‘People won't go to see a show if
the New York critics turn it down.
But with a show of any merit you
ean. first play for a long time on
the road.”
He cites a number of plays
7 New Polio Cases
Reported in Detroit
DETROIT (AP) — Seven new
cases of polio were reported in
Detroit yéstetday bringing the Mo-
tor City’s epidemic case load thus
far this year to 469. There have
been 12 deaths.
Health Department officials said
the new cases represented the
lowest daily case load since Sept:
15.
City-County Health Commission-
er Joseph G. Molner made no pre-
diction on the end of the current
polio outbreak, But the U. S. Pub-
lic Health Service said .the 1958
polio season probably will have
reached its.peak by the end of
th week.
New Yorkers Swelter
in 86.3 Degree Heat
NEW YORK (AP) — Summer,
which departed officially just last
Tuesday, staged a hot comeback
yesterday,
The temperature hit a muggy
‘high of 96.3 degrees. It wasn't a
record, it just felt like one. The
high for ‘the date is 90 degrees,
‘set in 1881.
em
(§ THEATRE
i
COLOR by DE LUXE ve
QinamaScore eo
EXCLUSIVE
DRIVE-IN
SHOWING
| ; pine Op
ANTHONY LOREN
»+.with @ cast of thundering thousands inTECHNICOLOR’ =
MA 4-3135
LAST COMPLETE SHOW
STARTS AT 9:30
EXTRA- LATE SHOW -EXTRA
| SPACE-SHATTERING!
TERRIFYING—
KIERON MOORE in
“Satellite in the Sky”
In Technicolor for Julie Harris Play
Last Stop
tryout did well, but which were
barred by a lack of rave. reviews
from post-Broadway travels. :
_ Miss Harris adds.to the explana-
4 a
“I like to work — any. actress
wants to do almost any ‘part she
can, But unless you are in reper-
tory, you have to take what you
can get on Broadway.”
Besides, she says, she has grown
style touring which players did be-
fore the days of films and jet
planes. .- «
“Anyone who performs for the ©
dedication, a complete concentra-
tion on what he’s doing, The road is conducive to that,
“It takes away from all the ad-
vantages and distractions of being
in one: place for a long time.”
Governor Lashes
Out at GOP Says Party Is Hurting
State Efforts to Bring
Business to Michigan
CADILLAC ‘”% — Gov. Williams
last night accused the Republican
Party leadership of hurting state
efforts to bring more business to
Michigan,
The Democratic governor told a
television audience the GOP did
this in two ways: Damaging the
reputation of the state as a good
place to do business, and cutting
state appropriations for business
promotion,
The Republican legislature, he
said, reduced money allotments to
the economic development depart-
ment for use in attracting new in-
dustry and to the state tourist
council for building up the tourist
trade,
“The Republicans have lost con-
fidence in Michigan,” he said.
Williams shared the television
show with five other Democratic
candidates for statewide office.
It was the first major Demo-
cratic TV campaign effort on a
skimpy TV schedule calling for 17
telecasts, most of them of five or
15 minutes, and including only
three programmed statewide,
Two week ago the Governor ap-
peared to a local audience over a Wife Must Be 62 f Cole
which on a brief Broadway .
increasingly enamored of the old-'-
public must have a complete |. By RAY HENRY : Associated Press Writer - us
From JH. of Pittsburgh: “You said in a recent
column that some dependents of a person getting Social Horse Is Losing
in Last Domain
— Pack Trips” * game awrden patrol station from
an area west of Meeteetse to a
new site high in the hills on Jack
The ago estimated it
would take pack horses ed
CODY, Wyo..(AP)—The horse|days to move the eabin, board by
is losing in its last domain—pack|board, its stove and gnee euie-
trips into ~ —— iments 2% y
ee ek
A helicopter made 27 aerial
The aden Game and Fish;
Department wanted - to move alsweeps and moved it in one day.
Security disability payments could now start drawing.
Social Security too, My wife is 46. We have no ehildren
and she doesn’t work. How much will she be able to, pete”
Your wife can’t draw Social Security, The wife of a
man getting Social Security disability payments can colléct
Social Security only if she’s 62 or over, of caring for de-
pendent children. Since you have' no children and your wife
is under 62, she can’t: get Social Security.
© * \ From ¢.L.H, of Colton, Calif.: “I'm a retired. barber,
74 years old. I stood behind a barber's chair 47 years. I
had to quit in 1953 and take Social Security because my
‘legs wouldn't hold me up any longer. Someone has just
told me I can also draw Social Security for ne dis-
abled. Is this right?”
No. Disability payments from Social Security are only |
paid to persons between 50 and 65. And, a person can’t
draw both Social Security disability payments and Social
Security retirement payments.
LO xk .*® ‘*
From E.S.T. of Columbia, Mo.: “As a 70-year-old
World War I veteran, I'm getting seme compensation
from the Veterans Administration for a disabiilty from
my service. I now have a heart ailment which has noth-
‘ing to de with my service. Would it be possible for me |
‘ to get a VA pension for my heart ailment and also draw
the’ compensation for my service disability?”
No. You can draw one or the other, but not both. If your
compensation is less than $78.75 a month — the monthly
pension payment for war veterans over 65—I suggest you
talk with the nearest VA office about whether you can draw
a pension rather than compensation.
sk 6Uuk.!hCOCU
From E.P. of Fontana, Calif.: “Are eiceunel women
eligible to collect unemployment compensation?”
Since the individual states set the qualifications for |
‘unemployment compensation, the rules for collecting the
compensation very greatly. In general, if you’re unemployed,
but are unable or work due to pregnacy, you’re not entitled
to unemployment compensation. This is true in California.
You will be eligible to the compensation, however, within a
reasonable time after childbirth. Your nearest Employment
Security office can give you the exact details.
x *« * .
From Miss M.S.J. of Annapolis, Md.: “I’m crippled
and have been taking in sewing to make a little money.
Is there any way I can earn eligibility to Social Security —
payments by this work? I’m 64.” TONITE—Last Complete Show Starts 10 7 M, ,
“REVENGE of FRANKENSTEIN” Also “BLONDE BLACKMAILER
SU NDAY — MONDAY — TUESDAY
Yes, if you have a profit of $400 a year from the sew-
ing, you’re considered self-employed. If you've had a profit
of $400 in any of the last three years, you can claim back
credit for those years. In any case, you'll have to pay the
self-employment tax on your profit. Call your local Internal |
Revenue or Social Security office about the forms and in- |
structions on how to pay the tax.
Marquette station.
Michigan Republicans still. are |
struggling with television plans. |
The top GOP candidates have yet
to make a TV appearance,
Spokesmen in both parties chfef-
ly blame lack of funds, although
some Democratic candidates re-
are not as enthusiastic
about the medium for campaign
purposes as they were two and
four years ago.
A footnote to the program sched-
ule prepared for Democratic state
candidetes by Sidney H. Woolner,
party campaign director, reads:
“Above programs subject to’
availability of funds.”
SEE THIS DOUBLE SHOCK SHOW... AND THEN WARN YOUR DAUGHTERS
Last Day! —. Late Show Tonite!
“How to Make] ‘Teenage
a Monster” Cevemen” |
—STARTING SUNDAY! “Exclusive First-Run- Double Feature
Her First New Film Sensation
Since “And God Created Woman!”
La
BRIGITTE
“The Night Heaven Feil” is
the night Brigitte Bardot shook
the earth! i
BRIGITTE BARDOT
Stephen Boyd
Alida Valli —
I High Adventure in the South Seas!
Sunday Doors Open 12:45
“The Night Heaven Feil’
Shown at 2:0§ - 4:50 - 7:25 -.10:10
*"Heliship” at 1:05, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10
Oakland; -———— LAST TIMES TODAY a
2 @ First-Ryn Action Features © 2
Rock Hudson @ Cyd Charisse
in “TWILIGHT FOR THE GO
Also
Sikoun im “The SAGA of HEMP BROWN” Both Features in Color
Starts: SUNDAY A New High in Hilarity!
'| The riotous romance of two teenage
= and a couple of chaperones
, who needed chap-
eroning themselves.
Not Since
M-G-M's
“Father of
the Bride”
such warm
wonderful
screen
funl
= —
Pelucta nt
ANGELA LANSBURY
Shown at 1:00 - 4:00 - 7:00 - 10:00
CO-FEATURE
A MAN IS MISSING!
wf
__ TE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER
Judge. Convicts
Man of Assault —
With Perfume
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)—Clyde
S. Lee was convicted of assault
with perfume.
The perfume” salesman was
spraying free samples on persons
who came into a Pensacola store.
One woman didn’t like it, and
filed charges. jsonnel policies in selected
er persons unless they want it on
them,’ Municipal Judge William
D. Richbourg said yesterday in
convicting Lge. He fined him $22 Pontiac Theaters |
Eagle
“Blonde, Blackmailer,” | From College to Cook
court costs. Sat.: ( wb H
Richard Arlen; “Revenge of to O O Y f Or Or ton
Frankenstein” Pa | Joins Ford Foundation rae, “heed Came By EARL WILSON
Bowery Boys; ‘“Bravados,” Greg-
ory Peck
Wed.-Sat.: “Cattle Empire,” Joel
McCrea; ‘East of Eden," James
Dean ANN ARBOR (®— Dr. H. K.
Newburn, former president of the
educational television and radio
center here, has joined the Ford
Foundation as a consultant, He
will make a study of faculty per-
state NEW YORK -— When you see Robert Horton doing the
western bit in “Wagon Train,” you might find it hard to think |
he was ever a 5 moeway cook.
rm “But I was,” the handsome lad with all)
the hair said with a nod and a laugh,
“I used to work at a well-known chain
restaurant around B’way and 52d St. It Huron :
Sat.: ‘Too Much Too Soon,”
universities, Dorothy Malone; “Court Martial of A “You can’t put anything on oth-
LUNCHEONIS: Served
Phone MI 4.4800
E—_ erences Fox & Hounds Inn
Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills
LUNCHEONS and DINNERS
DINNERS: Monday thru Saturday 5:30 to 11 P.M.
SUNDAY DINNERS: from 1:30 P. M. to 9 P. M. Tony Perkins | ”
Sun.-Mon.: “Kings God Forth,” | “Re custoners:
Daily 12 Noon to 2:30 Frank Sinatra, Tony Curtis; “Tall| “How did you master it so \T,”” Randolph. Scott fast?” I asked.
yf peserections Tues.-Thurs.: “Darby's Ran-| «When the hamburger or
Sa _ gers,” James Garner; “Lady| whatever it was looked right Billy Mitchell,"”” Gary Cooper
Sun.-Sat.: “Kings Go Forth,” 3
Frank Sinatra, Tony Curtis; ‘Paris
Holiday,"’ Bob Hope, Anita Ekberg
Oakland
Sat.: “Twilight of the Gods,”
Rock Hudson, Cyd Charisse, Arthur
aiiKennedy; “The Saga of Hemp
iH}; Brown,’”’ Rory Calhoun
? } Sun.-Thurs.: ‘‘The Reluctant De-!
butante,”” Rex Harrison, Kay Ken-,
dall, color; “Strange Case a Dr. Oh, was he drunk! So I was promoted from assistant cook to.
| Manning,” Greta Gynt, Ron Ran-| chef.
dell x * | Fri-Sat: “Cat on a Hot Tin! |
Roof,” Elizabeth Taylor | “Tt could hear the waiters
Strand ‘muttering. ‘Saturday night and
Sat.: ‘‘How to Make a Monster’”’ | Bey get) 8 Terk ike this cook and “Teenage Caveraan’” jing! Everything’ ll be sent back
Sun.-Sat.: “The Night Heaven tonight!
Fell,” Brigitte Bardot Horton smiled with satisfac.
Waterford Drive-In tion.
Sat.: “Cow boy,” Glenn Ford! «not one thing came back—
Jack Lemmon; “This Angry Age,” | including (probably) some of was while I was studying with Lee Stras-
berg. I was the host and cashier, sort of
an usher. One Saturday night I came in’
as usual.
assistant cook tonight? He’s sick.’
WILSON
While I was getting on my white hat, the chef came in blind. °f Wire connections,
Takes a Flyer,”’ Lana Turner, Jeff
to me, when it looked done
Keeco)
SUNDA 145
oy
ie TREVOR HOWARD
ROBERT TAYLOR RICHARD WIDMARK Chandler
Fri.-Sat.:
Phil Carey, Anita Ekberg;
Man,”’ Guy Madison
Community Theaters
Civic ~ Tngeeingt
.. “No Rigg Sergeants.”
" Jame econ. tee Rod atel
Set: “Chase a ‘Crooked Shadow,” Richard Todd Aune Baxter *
Sat.: “High School Confidential,” Russ "Day of Tambiyn, Jan Sterling; the Bad-
man,” Fred MacMurray, Jean Weldon, to me, I took it out. I guess
that’s all there is to it, any-
way. I cooked from 9 p.m. fe
6 a.m. and then they offered
me a job as assistant man-
ager.
“No,” he admitted, “they
never asked me to cook again.”
Horton, a Californian, 34 in
July, who went to college there
and the University of Miami, HORTON .
is not a western fan despite his own success as a western star.
net Le x *«& *
drews ¥ 5 Dee Cole Younger, | western outfits while touring and doing interviews.
Gunfighter,” Prank Lovejoy, Abby Delton/ = as he was in a business suit, I asked whether he wears Bat.: “Imitation General,” Glenn Ford, “Never!” he said emphatically. Y
Bis Pella "lat ation Most, Koreen Rest wee “I’ve had my arguments with NBC about that. They
said I could do the ‘Today’ show if I’d wear it and other-
wise I couldn’t. “I didn’t do it. I'd feel ridiculous. I don’t TONIGHT ONLY
“Imitation General” “Screaming M im {,”
“Hard
and “Lone. “‘Renger’” IN COLOR
« = ‘WILLIAM SOPHIA
4 HOLDEN LOREN
“The Vikings,” color, Kirk
“Law —_. Robert Taylor, Patricia Owens;
"The Key,” William Holden, Sophia
BLUE SKY 2150 OPDYKE RD.
FE 4-4611
ren
| Mi -xcathy or" ‘cotor, Petty McCormick; Den| Want to get hung up on westerns.
AW AN D JAKE WADE — Walled L “Westerns have been good to me,” Horton said, with feel- Sat.: Pega nome Baby, color, Jerry ‘a
Lewis, a axwel ue ctaet of the ing. “Even my mother and father, who didn’t want me to be
ar 's.. “Kathy-O,” color, Patty an actor, are kind of proud now when people ask for auto-
MeCormick; Dan, Darres pala end Jake) oranhs or when you walk into a new restaurant and the joint Owens a if 8 Thurs.-Sat.: “Jumping Jacks,” Martin 1S yours.
Jungle,” Gienn | : * *
“But my conclusion is... I tend to think .. . that the
Semedpage oD J ‘nel ‘year after this year will be the last for the westerns. And my
‘ews plan is to come back to New York and do musical comedy. 7a “Lone Ranger —_ the -Bat
Lost city ot Gold,” Clayton man * ‘and Lewis; “Biackboar
| Ford |
color; “The |
color by Walt | Milferd
“Horror of Dracula,”
‘Thing “That Couldn't ee”
“Chasing the Sun.” color
nay rittien “No Thee for Sergeants,”
.t “AR Mine te Give,”’! TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Walter Slezak, who visited Monte
| Carlo, says he had a grand and glorious time. The view was |
| glorious and the trip cos}him a grand ... That’s earl, brother.
vchell Fri.-Sat.: “Peter Pan,” Walt Diswey, | (Copyright, 1958)
BRIVEIN a, 3 DR TOA €
Open at 6:30 P. M. © TONIGHT e
2 A Real Fun Fest for All!
BIG FEATURES
Plus Contest
Show Starts at 7 P. M. o
Come Early, Bring Your Hoop
PRIZES - FUN GALORE! ALL CONTESTANTS WIN! . CALLING ALL KIDS!
Hula Hoop Contest
IN THE GOLDEN HELL.
OF THE HIGH SIERRAS!
ALSO
“Spooks! - == Ghouls!
— It's Crazy!
AND
THE INDIAN FIGHTER
AND THE INDIAN GIRL...
FRANK Sects To Cosas ei W000
Kings 6o
~»LEORA DANA
CHALLENGING
adieteaeaatinaibeia
, All Out
LOVE STORY Adventure!
* “ Relays Heart Signal i
\vice that transmits. heart sounds
|
overcome most of the problems |
that have interfered with telephone!
‘consultations between heart ‘spe-! }
'cialists. Eating dir crawling
| The device, a 5-pound transistor- po! ri ot te ized unit, is attached directly to) . when they both fell
“The manager said, ‘Do you mind being the patient by standard lead wires pbysbepe ott Pi
nd placed adjacent to the t le-| rench :
inning _ anes soft, white skin. . . and “That wouldn’t be so hard because the phone, which picks up the electro-|
assistant cook just handed stuff to the chef.|°2*diograph signal without the use
~
27, 1958 { eo : % af New York City’s first subway was opened in October 1904.”
SAT, New Transistor Unit
| -"T90 MUCH TOO SOON’ “COURT MARSHALL BILLY MITCHELL”
LAWRENCE, Kan.—A new de-
and electrocardiograph readings|
over the telephone has been de-
veloped at the University of Kan-
'sas Medical Center.
The new apparatus is said to!
the white-hot secret!
NATALIE 2
Woon
ilvy Dance Decorations
Add Certain Something
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)—Cash
palms to decorate for a South
Seas dance.
The six-man committee combed
the University of Louisville cam-
pus, They found their ivy. It
looked lovely twined into garlands)
for the dance. The affair Satur-
cay night was a roaring success,
Today the whole decoration
committee was wearing decora-
tions of its own—Lotion.
They’d collected armloads of
poison -ivy,
The heart
GIVES WINGS
TO THE
BELOVED
“BUTTERFLY”
WZMADAME
RUTTERE LY GLORIOUSLY TOLD fie
COLOR By TEC
@ MAZZOL! TOHO GALLONE
PRODUC TOM
eticasee feeg sajres aeresee |
Clawson Playhouse | ju ng Fl tg ie SECTION
j
| | |
|
|
- )), ‘(-yard pass)
iplay started by Ted Follis. Fellis' nullified by a penalty.
Dick Kolaja’s passing kept Mil-'
‘lington in its contest. His flips to}
Mike Zink and Bryce McGinnis
jaccoumed for the scores.
Rochester Easy.
for Farmington
Prepping for their big league
opener against defending cham-
pion Southfield mext week, the
Farmington Falcons walloped
Rochester to the tune of 38-13 at
home yesterday afternoon. -
Al LeSage, Mike Agee and
Harvey Chapman each scored,
twe touchdowns with the latter
adding an extra point to lead
the scoring. His 2nd TD was
on a .72-yard punt refurn — the
2nd in as many tilts.
Rochester never entered the
point column until the scoreboard
read 32-0. Ron Robbins crossed
fora TD and*added a PAT while
Dave Hecht made the other. |
yards in only 3 plays with Ratcliff!
sprinting the final 38 on a slant off |
tackle.
* * *
The Chiefs drove 68 yards for
their 3rd TD to start the 2nd half.
A 31-yard pass from Munson to
Frank Ellison put the ball on the
Wyandotte five and Douglas piled
over from the one-yard line to
make it 21-7,
The first of two pass intercep-
tions by Munson set up Pontiac’s
4th touchdown. On the first play by local football fans in a long |
And the Chiefs accomplished all|
x * * COE oe Me ee
x k *
By 34-0 Count; Walled Lake Triumphs
By CHUCK ABAIR
It looks like another long season
ifor the Waterford Skippers unless
ithings take a sudden change for
the better very soon.
The locals finished 1-6-1 in 1957
better finish this term after last
night's listless performance in a
34-0 battering by Lapeer.
Coach Dave Freeman's contin.
gent has been held scoreless
while allowing 60 points in two
starts—both on home soil. And
| the tough Inter-Lakes wars are
still ahead.
Waterford finished with a total and even their staunchest follow-)
ers were hard put to predict a) of 24 yards gained for the contest,
13 on two pass completions, as
compared to 402 by Lapeer.
_ x &« *
The score could have gone even
higher but for numerous penalties
which set the visiting Panthers
back a total of 100 yards. One of
the Skippers’ five first downs was
‘a “gift”? on a penalty,
A 62-yard ground marth in
the 3rd quarter was the only time
the losers showed anything of
fensively, Fullback Wendy Meyer
bore the brunt of that load. The
threat halted at the 18, Cena tapes 3h ‘Cake: RO ead Mee WI “Bloomfield 3 "DibegB. Walled Lake -.1 E
ite... 13 Waterford 0, Millord .......13 Birmingham ...13 Avondale .....12 Clarenceville ..1 Bloomfield Kills 0 Howe... 0
e 40-13
GRC i SE
PCH Gridders Bomb Wyand x & *
¥
flatfooted over and over by the
passing of Butch McKillen, the dut-
standing player on the field. He
threw three TD aerials and caught
one himself.
* * *
Five other Panthers took part
in the scoring. Rich Coulter snared
two McKillen scoring passes and
Ed Marshall one. Bob Stevens
rompd 21 yards for the other six-
pointer, Stevens, McKillen, Don
LeDuc and Gary Kalar all ran ex-
tra points.
‘It was Lapeer’s 2nd straight
win by a one-sided margin giv-
The Skipper defense was caught
WHOA, BLUEJAY — Southfield end Leland
Barringer (28) is headed downward after being
hit by Ferndale’s Luther Graham and another Dale itowing
showed class in
afternoon game yesterday. ing the northrners a 60-0 edge
Photo
a pass reception. Southfield
whipping Ferndale, 22-7, in their Pontiae Press
he 9
xk ke &
Lapeer Crushes Waterford over ‘ieoniints — exactly the
opposite of Waterford's record.
The outstanding overall back-
field work and strong line play dis-
played by the Panthers stamp
them as the Tri-County League fa-
vorites.
Losing coach Freeman had very
little to say following the wallop-
ing except to agree the situation
looks gloomy at WTHS.
\- “| eould only name a few boys
there,” he said indicating a defi-
nite lack of the all-important
“desire.’ “We don’t seem to
want that football bad enough,”
was the comment of an assist-
ant.
Meanwhile, Waterford’s major
foe, Walled Lake, was piling up
its 2nd triumph.
x * *
The Vikings defeated Howell 19-
0 with ace back Frank Fink com-
piling 13 of the total.
in the 3rd quarter‘ on an ll-yard
run. The TD was set up by a 37-
yard pass play iwth Bill Havel hit-
ting Kirk Evans,
Howell was never inside the
Walled Lake 20.
Waterford tries against next Fri-
day at home against Van Dyke as
the Vikings host Berkley in 1-L
play.
The statistics:
w L
First downs ....., eseoes 15 15
Rushing yardage ........ 11 260
ing yardage ........ 13 14
oe adler ee rere Font 8-15
Passes intercepted by . 1
RR ioisciceenasetwres «: 1-31. r 2-22.85
Amar taee lost ....caseovns 1 can
ards penal ons0g 1
Waterford tes aaa 6 o— 60
_— scRaccectobveses sexs 0 20 0 14—34
apeer: TD, Coulter 2 (18 pass from
McKillen, 33 pass from McKillen), Mare
shall (6 pass from McKillen), Stevens
(21 run}, McKillen (13 pass from Le
Duc). PAT. MecKillen (run), Stevens
(run), LeDue (run) and Kalar (run).
‘Northville — the Yankees
of the W: Léague in
2S eehven a
fense last by roaring from
feature game of a full opening
night loop program.
Two touchdowns by Larry Nitzel|
paced the Mustangs to their 2nd
straight victory while Holly has
the same number of setbacks.
‘West Bloomfield, looming larg-
er all the time as a team to be
reckoned with this season, wal-
loped Clarenceville 33-14, Clark-
“ston and Milford battled to a
43-13 -tle- and— Brighton. blanked. top contender Holly 26-6 in the |; Bloomfield Hilla 13-9 to round
out W-O play.
in the thick of things until the
(ot period.
George Coggins garnered the
Holly tally from 12 yards out com-
pleting an 85-yard march. :
Northville, which had been
halted on the way to paydirt
prior to the Holly score, was
not to ke denieq from {hen on.
Nitzel deadlocked the issue on
a 17-yard dash in the 2nd quarter
and a Bob Starnes-to-Bill . Walker
Lucadam Paces Keego, Wolves-’Skins Tie
Holly. Bows at Northville — pass good for 33 is put North-
ville ahead to s at halftime.
Nitzel went in from-the 38 in the
final minute of play following a
pass interception and a 23-yard
touchdown return by Gary Morgan.
West Bloomfield raced to a 14-0
‘ist quarter advantage and coasted
‘along from then on as quarter-
jback star John Lucadam had an-'
| other big night.
The stellar senior passed for
three touchdowns, scored one and
kicked three extra points. He
accounted for 293 yards, 192 rush-
ing, and was described by Clar-
encevillg coach Bill Waters: Lod
_“terrifie-on-defenme.’2
Southfield Wins, 22-7 Birmingham and Ferndale, two
kingpins in the Eastern Michigan
League, ran into trouble against
non-league foes last night.
*The Map ran out of gas in
the second in losing a 25-13
decision to rival Royal Oak Don-
dero, while Southfield outclassed
following the interception, Ratcliff
galloped 42 yards for the counter,
and the margin reached 27-7,
PCH recovered a fumble on its | own 10 and marched the remain-
| ing 90 yards to open the 4th quar-
ter scoring, Munson rambled the
last seven yards. Munson's 2nd |
interception set up the Chiefs’ fi- |
nal TD with McCauley doing the
| scoring honors from one yard.
| .There was just.1:19 of game time
remaining when halfback Tom Gul-
yas slashed five yards to pay
dirt for Wyandotte’s consolation
TD,
~*~ &* *
Charley Brown, star guard and
linebacker, tallied all four PCH
conversions, three from placement
and. the last one on a run around
end when a bad pass from center
ruined his chance to kick,
The statistics: °
‘ PCH w
First downs wecseewee 26 17
Rushing yardage .+.+... 205 224
Passing yardage ....006. 111 224
asses 8-13} | 9-11 anses ‘intercepted by «s 2 6
ul [aga saesiicels sees oe 1-28 4-112
Fumbles fost .,..ssacsee 1 1 Yards penalized Cicrecue 40
Pontiac Central ....02....7 ; 13 13—~40
Wyandotte ..n.ckse. eeeusy
Touchdowns: PCH Do 6,
kickoff return, f plunge): hateutt 2
(38, 42, runs), Munson run),
Wyendatte | taaliens Cauley (1, plunge);:-
Gulyas (6, run?.| (15, pass from Nagy). =13 Tom Morey ip the, end Ferndale 22-7 on the Bluejay grid-
iron.
: * * *
‘Dondero had a 13-0 lead in the
first quarter when John Meadows
|ran back an interception 46 yards.
'Meadows then scored again’on a
10 yard pass from Dean Filippo.
Gary Sonnenberg converted.:
Birmingham tied it 13-13 at in-
fermission when Ed Busch went
10 and six yards for both scores.
The first TD came after a 55
“yard march, atid the second aft-
er a fumbled punt was recov-
ered on the 18. Phil Isbell kicked
the point.
In the third quarter LeZotte went
two yards and in the fourth quarter
Meadows scored his third of the
evening after a 66 yard pass play
\from Filippo. Meadows raced 40
yards after catching the ball.
Southfield geared for its big
showdown with Farmington next
week with its win over a good
Ferndale squad. The Jays scored
in the) first’ quarter when Cliff
Solberg went 58 yards, and in the
-2\ second period they added a safety
when Jerry Odom hit quarterback
zone. Jt
was 80 at the half.
After a march of 70 yards Bill
Johnson went three’ yards and
Filar converted to make it 15-0
Conversions: PCH~—Brown 4 (3 place-
kicks, 1 rump; Wyandotte—Grundy
(placekick). ‘
‘
n ‘ig the 4th quarter,
Morey scored Ferndale’s lone TD
after the Dales recovered a fumble
on the 30. The final tally by South-
field was a one-yard plunge by
Jim McDonald as Filar converted.
East Detroit whipped neighbor
Roseville 25-18 after trailing 18-13
in final minute, and Royal Oak
Kimball clobbered Berkley, 25-0.
Kimball's scores came on 83
and 60 runs by John Holbrook,
a 3 yard dash by Dale Sparrow
and 10 yards by Jim Shield. Spar-
row kicked the point. It was
13-6 at halftime for Kimball.
East Detroit scores came on an
interception return of 15 yards by
Carl Richter, an 8-yard plunge by
Bill Pozzi, a five yard pass from
|Harper.
Country Day School
Wins, Camphere Loses
Country Day School dedicated a
new football field in grarld style
by blanking Clintondale 12-0 to join
Oakland County's top early start-
ers with a 2-0 record, Jim Martin
and Jim Kramer scored in the Cen-
tral Suburban Conference victory.
League rival Madison Lamphere
stepped out of loop competition to
bow to Grosse Pointe University
School 346. -
Parkers Win, 12-6
Qak Park-High outlasted a stub- born Lutheran Western club yes- as Gridders Sleep
Bill- MacGillviay “fo “Dick “Tekes} &
and a plunge of one e yard by George! §
terday to emerge with a 126 foot-
ball victory,
Ss —
Hammers Halted
EAST LANSING (UPIY’— A con-
laruction project was delayed on
the Michigan State University cam-,
pus today so two football teams
could sleep.
Air hammers used in construc-
tion of an addition to MSU Kellogg
Center brought protests from Cali-
fornia coach Pete Elliott, whose
37-man squad was routed out of
bed at 7 a.m. yesterday,
Construction crews premised
MSU coach Duffy Daugherty work
would net start until 8:30 a.m.
today. ~
Both teams stayed at the Kellogg
Center last night.
a b
‘BIG NIGHT — West Bloom-
field ‘quarterback John Lucadam
put on a one-man offensive show
at Clarenceville last night as the
Lakers romped 33-14, The senior
star passed ° for three touch-
downs, Scored one and kicked
three extra points. He piled up
293 offensive yards and excelled Dennis Alix, Tom Bell and i >
Johnson were the boys on the re-
ceiving end of Lucadam's big aer-
ials. Bell scored the other TD on
a 13-yard scamper. Jon Nelson
|tallied all 14 points for the losers,
e ete
| Clarkston dominated the statis-
tics but had to be satisifed with
a tie. As a matter of fact, Milford
‘might have pulled it out but for
ia fumbled pass from center on
‘an extra point try. Terry Ander-
ison had booted one earlier but
didn't get a chance to repeat.
The see-saw affair. saw the
host Redskins come from behind
| Zeeman and Jim. Scheibner, the ©
' latter climaxing a 90-yard drive.
Jim Morgan went five and Ron
Morgan two for the Clarkston tal-
lies. Don Marsh kicked one point
but was short the next time.
Bloomfield Hills gained well
through the air but could do little
against the huge Brighton defen-
sive unit. The Barons reached the
one with a first down late in the
contest but two penalties ruined
a chance to ruin. the shutout.
Jim Paddock caught a TD pass
and Sean Lavan scooted 20 on a
reverse for the winners’ touch-
downs.
Almont Winner,
Dryden Blanked Defending champion Almont,
Brown City and Armada got off
to winning starts Friday in the
Southern Thumb League football
“Almont _ran_ its unbeaten, string...
to. 18 games with a 21-0 rout of
Memphis, Brown City utilized the
extra point for a 20-19 triumph
over Capac and Armada defeat-
ed Dryden, 6-0.
Doug Graham ‘scored twice and
Ron Irish tallied the other TD for
Brown City while Larry’ Kalb.
fleisch, John Kersten and John
Zwiernik accounted for Capac’s
. |touchdowns,, Brown City came
4 from behind to win with conver-
sions by Jerry Snyder and Hawk
making mae eventual > seainige
*
New Heven broke sate. the win-
ning column outside ‘og the league
with a 19-14 victory “ver New
Baltimore Anchor Bay: Nate Petty
scored two New Haven touch.
downs on runs of 99 ind 2 yards
and he passed to Fred Denizer for
the other TD, a. \ May covering
on defense. 7% yards. +
twies-“on- six-pointers by -John- -
race. New Haven was victorious in
-jnon4oop action. ~~ “a
ad
/ , |
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
When Wyandotte’ s grid team be-
came lost trying to find Eastern
Junior High. School, where it
dressed for last night's game with
Chiefs, the visitors were delayed
getting to Wisner field. Game start-
ed 15 minutes late.
* * &
Ted Meister, Ferndale high’s
football mentor, was busy look-
ing over the Chiefs last night,
scouting for the encounter be-
tween the clubs next week, at
Ferndale, Ted’s team took a lick-
ing in the afternoon from South-
field’s Bluejays.
* *& *
_ For the second time in their
illustrious careers Sam Snead and
Ben Hogan will team up in com-
petition when they represent the
United States in the Canada Cup
golf matches in Mexico City, Nov.
x* * *
The New York Knicks of the
National! Basketball Assn.
Hutchins, former Brigham Young
star on whom they had been
counting this season, because of
a recurrence of a knee injury.
* * *
The Chicago Cardinals have filed
suit in a Chicago Court to break
a 1931 agreement with the Chicago
Bears which has. stymied an at-
tempt by the Cardinals to move
from Comiskey Park to Dyche
Stadium in Evanston, Ill.
* * * *
The only woman who ever be-
is dead at age of 76, Mrs. Bessie
Largent of McKinney, Texas, died
yesterday, She and her late hun-
band, Roy, scouted for the Chicago
White Sox for more than 20 years.
* «
_ Because of the advance of hur-
_ ricane Helene, along the Atlantic
- coast area of South Carolina, the
scheduled grid game between The
Citadel and George Washington,
last night, was cancelled.
SPURTS
RESULTS MIC moss 2 rae | weg weed 1 aces
Ann Arbor jag slversity Hig! D 7
Silanti Rooseve 1 Te ,
Almont 21, ae ag 6
Armada 6, Dryd:
ona oe)
Redford 69, Wilbur right, :
Southwestern Western t
Eastern 13, Den nu 13
Northern 32, Central 0
Northeastern 24, Southeastern 13
Pershing 27, Cass Tech 0
Dearborn Lowrey 38, Riverview 27
Detroit Austin 7, Detroit Notre Dame 6
Det. St. Elizabeth 18, Det. St. Bernard 0
Detroit St’ Catherine “
Detroit St. Ladisiaus 6 \
Oet. St. Hedwig 6 } Det. Visitation 20, a
sel Ford 13 op ji
12, Clintondale 6
Roseville 18
6
n, tae Shore, 1 &
Lapeer 34, Wa
Melvindale 12, se 7
Mt. Clemens 33, Van Dyke 6
Mt. Pleasant 45, Manistee 20 Muskegon Heights 14, sy ena 0
Mar iy sville 26, St. Cla Midland 14 i‘. naw a ther Hill 0
Northville i¢ i v6 New Haven ! r Bay 14
Oak Park 12, Att oun hop We 6
Oxford 24, gy = vo
| deen 35, Tren
tiac 40,
Port Huron 2
Richmond 25. Algon
toyal Dondero ‘3s, ‘sirmiaghen 13
Royal Oak Kimball 25, Berkley 0
saeet "3
. Bi hand Park 0
- Me Marine City 0
3
Southfield Fernda le 7
jouth Lake 6 a 0
t. Charles 19, iiitington 12
Troy 19, L’Anse Creuse 7
Vassar 19. Marlette 7
Walled ev 19, Howell 0 wit ow Ran 12, Sout h Lyo
West ¢ Bloomfield 33, Me rencevitie 14 r 0
Yount y Pi "A, Galine 7
Ypsilanti 27. Dearborn 2
COLLEGE GE RESUL’ TS
raw in 20, a. (Fia.) 0
Texas 21, Tulan ‘ech 1, Poride State 3
roe 37, Detroit 6
or-20, Utah State 6 Chatté: 72, A tiene Chitettan 12 ~—
Sewanee 21. Howare ‘tAla.) 0
Superior (Wis. St, 32, Lacross wt. 29 TER Mariette 6°
Occidental 80, Cal Western a
San } 8 20,
3 DU. of Gan Prancisco 18, .
Treasure Island Navy 18
New Mexico A&M 28, U. of Mexico 14
Ca ae é) a7, m ne (N.C.) 27,
Fort Lee (Va.) 6
UNDAY'S NFL SCHEDULE
eland at pity: ma
trol at Baltimore
hington at P: jadetphie
oO
ork Giants
f
South‘ Lake 6, Utica 0
Utica matched\ defending cham.
pion South Lake in everything but
poiits and penalty yardage in a
6-0 loss in the Bi-County loop’s
first game last night. A 3rd quar-
ter pass play decided the clash.
Utiea,\which threatened twice, was
-. penalized 120. yards, 90 in thé 3rd
period, rds J New
at uffalo, N-Y¥
& learned Friday they had lost Mel |
came a professional baseball] scout! - xk kk ec
PRESS BOX Homers, Walks Enable Tribe to. Beat Moford, 5-4 x k *
Tigers’ CLEVELAND # — The Detroit
Tigers need to win under pressure
—something they have not done in
years—and they need a lot of
Senators if they expect to finish
higher than fifth place in the
American League standings.
The Tigers blew a three-run lead
and lost a 5-4 decision last night
to the Cleveland Indians.
cooperation from the Washington] .
Two things for which there is
no -defense—the home run and
the base on balls—wrecked Tiger
hopes.
x *®
Rocky Colavito hit his 40th home
run with a man aboard in the fifth
imniing against Bill Hoeft. Larry
Doby cracked a home run in the
eighth tq tie the contest. In the
ninth, Hoeft’s successor, Herb Mo- od walked the leadoff batter.
That cost the Tigers the ball game.
Bob Avila opened the ninth with
a walk. He went to third when Vic
Power doubled to left. Manager
Bill Norman ordered an intentional
pass for dangerous Minnie Minoso
—and Colavito promptly singled to
right, scoring the deciding run.
The loss dum pe d-the once-
hopeful Tigers into fifth place—
@ues
halfback Sid Williams (22) dri
Miami left end, in the fourth pe BADGER GETS FIRST DOWN — Wisconsin
down before being hauled down by Walter Carey, ves fora first Sprawled on th
halfback, The
riod of their in- setback. tersectional game last night at Miami, Fla. ek *t
opes for 3rd Fade one-half game behind Cleveland
and a full game behind the third-
place Boston Red Sox. To cap-
ture undisputed third place, the
Tigers need to sweep their two
remaining games in Cleveland—
andthe lowly Washington Sén-
ators must do the same thing
against Boston.
* * *
Anything but a sweep against
Cleveland will leave the Tigers in
fifth place for the season—unless
the sixth-place Baltimore Orioles
can creep up with a couple of
victories over New York. The
Orioles currently are 142 games
behind the Tigers.
* * *
The Indians took the lead with a
run in the fifth on Minoso’s triple
and Randy Jackson’s single.
Harvey Kuenn put Detroit ahead
with a two-run double in the third
and the Tigers went into a 41
lead after five innings. In the
fifth, Frank Bolling hit his 14th
home run and three: singles pro-
duced another tally.
* * *
Colavito’s home ran narrowed
the margin to 4-3 in the fifth and
routed Hoeft in favor of Moford.
It stood that way until Doby’s
13th home run that opened the
Indians’ eighth.
Moford walked himself right out
of the ball game in the ninth.
Paul Foytack sought his 15th
victory for the Tigers today and
was opposed by Cal McLish. The
two teams wind up the season
Sunday witha single game.
AP Wirephote
e ground is Miami's Joe Plevel,
Badgers handed Miami a 20-0 DETROIT CLEVELAND
abrbh bi abrbbdi
Bolling, %> 6221 Avila, 3b 3100
wuenn,cf 4122 Power,ib 8910
Zernial, lf 3020 Minoso,if 3220
eaxwen, | Wf 1000 Colavito,rf 4123
Harris, 1 4011 Jackson, 3b 4021
Martin, 3 4000 Held, cf 1000
Groth, 4000 A-Doby,cf 2111
Wilson, c 4010 Brown,c 3020
Veal, ss 3000 B-Raines 0000
io? 2110 WNixon,c 1000
Moford,p 1000 Hunter,ss 30206 ———aeme «= D-NY. 16 0 9
Totals 35494 Moran, 0000
A totems) p 3000
_C-Vern 0000
B dowski, p 1000
Totals 35512 6
A—Fitea out for Held in 5th; B—Ran
for Brown in 6th; C—Missed third strike
D—Flied out for for Ferrarese in 6th;
ter in 8th,
pleas cise’s .. 002 020 06 06—4
.100 620 01 15
E—Jackson, ‘Harris. PO-A—Detroit 24-7,
Cleveland 27-6. DP—Hunter and Power.
LOB—Detroit 6, Cleveland 11 (none out
when winning run scored).
28—Kuenn, Hunter, Power. 3B—
oso, HR—Bolling, Colavito, Doby.
Moford. f bor erbbs
eee i Gcsien ese 445 73 3
5
9 Hoeft
Moford (L, 4-9)
Brodowski «w. {-0) °7/3 HBP—Moford (Minoso). 22
44
6001
U—Rommel,
| McKinley
A—6,623 , Stevens, Fiaherty. T—2:28.
Wisconsing, Georgia Tech, Teras Win Last Night
By ED CORRIGAN
Associated Press Sports Writer
This is the year, according to
the timetable of the U.S. Air. Force
Academy, that the school goes
“almost” big time in college foot-
ball.
x * *
The Academy would Iike to
~->-|move in the-same-_circles as Army|
and Navy, the other two service
teams. Since its first class doesn't
graduate until next year, the AFA
has all its lettermen of last year
back.
. Under Buck shaw, the 57 club
could do no better than 3-6--1.
This year, the schedule has
been toughened considerably, but
new coach Ben Martin, a Navy
graduate, has high hopes for a
better season. —
x * &
His team started operations last
night before 20,000 with a smoothly
contrived 37-6 triumph over De-
troit, another team that hopes to
make the step ‘as a major power.
* * *
Four other major games were on
feated Tulane, 21-20, Georgia Tech
rebounded against Florida State,
13-3, Wisconsin whipped Miami 20-0
2 Changes Effected
in Harrier Dates
| Two” Cross-country “Meet datest"
‘for Dean Wilson’s Pontiac Central
| \
after a misunderstanding over this
week’s Wyandotte test, which was
not run. The Dots will come here
on Oct, 20.. They were originally
scheduled for Sept, 24.
* * *
Other. dates for Chief harriers
are: Oct. 1, ‘at Royal Oak Don-
dero; Oct, 10 at Flint Northern:
Oct, 13 at/ Waterford; Oct. 16, Val-
last right's schedule. Texas de-| 555
Fizh squad Wére anfiotinced today, Herve i= Denver turned back Utah
State, 20-8.
One thing is certain—if anyone
is going to stop the Air Force,
John Kuenzel and Rich Mayo, a
pair of passing fools, will have to
be stymied.
touchdown, set up another with a
pass and scored once himself on @
quarterback “sneak
x rr
for two touchdowns in the rout.
WwW oL Pet. GB
New York as..sesseees 90 62 592 —
Chicago .ssecsveeevse.81 T1 533 8
ton eeccccoeceeedt WG 067 13
Cleveland ..ssees goes 78 1 503 13%
trot ..ereeceen o.0e78 76 500 14
Baltimore 74 TT 400 15%
Kansas City
Washington . :
Yesterday's Resul
aw 3, New York 2, a innings,
Ente cago 1, Kansas o 0, night. -
Cleveland 5, Detroit 4, night.
Boston 6, Washington 4, tw light.
Boston 3, Washington«1, night,
TODAY'S GAMES
Baltimore at New York, 1 p.m.—Pap-
pas, 10-9 vs. Larsen 8-6.
Detroit at Cleveland, 1 p.m.—Foytack
13 wh Melien , 16-7. ion, 1 p.m—Brewer!
Pars ey Sap A ic SAS. oa a
pert 60 Vi a Big * PY SUNDAY’s SCHEDULE
Baltimore at New York, 1 p.m.
Boston at Washington, | p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Chicago, 1:30 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE wte *
‘et.
Milwaukee c.s0..sese0s $1 61 508 — {trouble most of last month, also
Because a Saginaw Valley meet. ee rucs cis 3 sao 12 [issued no walks, struck out six ing is set for Oct, 7, which Wilson|Cincinnati.............75 77 493 16 |and yieldled only one hit during a)
will attend, the scheduled rinsed ee wcegceeeese BL Hed Be Su six-inning turn on the mound,
neti of. the das Central as Loe Angeles s:..-. a $2 464. 20% e *&€ t as been mov up one day eeeaeee H wee ®
Oct. 6, at Beaudette Park. Indians aeuiiie 2, “Cincinnati 1, ight. The one hit off Ford was a first~
San Francisco 4, St. Louis 3, night. -/inning inside-the-park homer by
are rated the big threat for Valley | Philadelb —. 3, cPitisbu h 2, night. Joe Taylor. Baltimore won the
and state crowns this fall, Los Angeles 6 ‘twilight.
- & oe Cone Ane les \1, night. game with two runs in the 12th off
TODAY'S GAMES reliever "Virgil Trucks and the vic
Ciiesge at Los Angeles
«1,
St. Louis at San Francisco,
ley meet at Flint Central; Oct, 20)>-™ m—Jackson 13-13 vs. MeCarmick 11-8.
Wyandotte. herag Oct. 122. Ease —Gardwelh 28 8, Law Tet ye
Ford. here; . 25, MHSAA re-|. pnusgetpnia s' Sateoeryh. 11:30 p.m.
gional; Oct. 27 at Allen Park; Cineinnstt at gittinautes, i: m0 pm
Nov, 1, MHSAA state meet, Ss Se crete 9 oe. Por Mi 5 c : <
Ss Southpaw Kuenzel passed for one}
“third +
Burdette and Whitey Ford are as
“a'ready as they'll ever be,
yati at Milwaukee, 1:30. p.m.—
ahn 21-11.
geles, 6 p.m.—Hill-
man 4-8 vs. Williams 9- 4 or Mauriello
2:30 Both were spectacular plays—one
covering 43 yards and the other
spanning 31.
Fitting in beautifully with the
passing was the running of half-
backs Steve Galios and speedy
Mike Quinlan.
Both Texas and Tulane made
two points after their final touch-
downs in the final period, but it
was a li'l ol’ kick in the first pe-
riod that provided the winning mar-
gin for Texas. Bob Lackey, who Air Force Zooms by Titans version rule gives a team two
points if it elects to pass or run
after a touchdown and one point
for a kichee.
Georgia Tech, beaten last
week, had a hard time against
underdog Florida State. It ap-
pears that the Ramblin’ Wrecks
r won't be in contention for the
Southeastern Cunference tite
“this year. ~~
Miami couldn't do much against
the big Wisconsin line. Dale Hack-
bart was the big man for Wiscon-
sin. He passed and ran for one
touchdown in the first quarter and
repeated at the end of the second
stanza. That was more than enough
for the Big 10 outfit. A crowd of
directed the Texas offensive, pro-
vided the sure-foot. The new. con- 60,000 saw the game, played in
the Orange Bowl. ————| lead in pass interceptions last year re Now. the Horses’ in NFL Baltimore Has
Edge in Youth
Over Lions’ 11° Ameche, Unitas, Moore
Give Colts a Potent
Backfield
By BRUNO L. KEARNS
Sports Editor, Pontiac Press
BALTIMORE — This is the year
the Baltimore Colts are supposed
to have not only “‘The Horse” —
Alan Ameche, but also the horses
to win their first National Football
League title.
With a capacity crowd bettering
40,000 expected, these Baltimore
“horses” will get the acid test
and ere favored in the season op-
ener against the defending cham-
pions from Detroit in a TV con-
test tomorrow.
The Lions, who could readily
be called a team of “‘old pros,”
will have to concede youth to
the Colts who, are the youngest
team in the league.
Detroit’s starting offensive -unit
averages 6 years experience in the
NFL per player, with an average
age of 28.
q * * *
Baltimore’s average age on the
starting offensive team is 25 with
an average of 4 years experience
in the NFL.
Led by quarterback Johnny
Unitas, fullback Ameche and
halfbacks L. G. Dupre, Lenny
Moore and reokie Len Lyles,
coach Weeb Ewbank’s running
attack is strong inside and on
the outside.
Lyles, called the “fastest man
in football,”’ is a product. of Louis-
ville University, also the alma
mater of Unitas.
* * *
Defensively, a Lion reject, Milt
Davis of UCLA, is Baltimore’s pass
thief. Davis tied for the league
with Detroit’s Jack Christiansen
and Pittsburgh's Jack Butler, each
grabbing 10.
In his 10 interceptions, . how-
ever, Davis returned the - ball
Ae 285 yards compared to Chris-
tiansen’s 137 and Butler's $5.
The Lions will have nine rookies) .
making their debut, but only one,
Ken Webb of Presbyterian College
*
Bobby Layne will probably get
nod. at quarterback with John
Henry Johnson at fullback.
The thin, end positions will
have only Jim Doran and Dave
Middleton with experience,
backed up by rookies Tom =.
chiec and newly ae
Gibbons.
It was announced aatendea that
end Steve Junker has joined Jer-
ry Reichow on the injured reserve
list and will be out for the season.
‘. & * *
The Lions took a 34-14 drubbing
in Baltimore last year, but hold
a wide edge of nine wins and two
losses over Colts in their all-time
Game ‘time via television on
channel-2°
South Lyon Drops 2nd
A. fumble and a blocked kick
one|paved the way for South Lyon’s
second defeat in as many starts
as the Lions blew a 6-0 lead in
losing so ha Willow Run Friday
night. Obrenovich and
Paul ae teamed on a 36-
aa pass play for the SLHS tally.
By United Press International
Bring on the World Series! Lew
The surest tip-off on any pitcher
is his control and both Burdette
and Ford were letter-perfect in
that department last night.
Burdette, posting his 20th vic-
tory for the first time in his
career, didn’t walk a man and
struck out éight in pitching Mil-
-waukee's- National League.cham--
pions to a. el 5 | ——— over Cin-”
eimnath~
Ford was every bit as impressive
even though Baltimore beat the
American League champion Yank-
lees, 3-2, in 12 innings. The Yankee
southpaw, on the shelf with arm eG
tory stretched an Oriole wirining
streak to seven games,
Hoyt Withelm, making his first
on Sept: 20, added two hitless
frames last night before Ford
gave up six hits and struck out.
nine in nine innings before win-
ning pitcher Billy Loes took over.
* * *
Burdette’s closest approach to. a,
20-game season previously was’
1956 when he won 19 and lost 10.
He also has lost 10 this year. He
scattered nine hits last night and
gave up his only run in the fifth
when the Redlegs pooled three of
their hits,
tering-the- decisive: run-in-the see-/:
ond inning with the aid of ‘an
error by third baseman Frank
Robinsen.
In other National League
games, Robin Roberts. of the
Phillies recorded his 17th vic-
tory with a 3-2 decision over the
Pirates; the Giants clinched
third place with a 4-3 win over
the Cardinals, and the Oubs
gained a split by winning the
nightcap, 2-1, after the Dodgers
took the opener, 6-3...
Ted Williams climbed into a tie
for the American League batting
lead as the Red Sox swept ‘a twi-
night twin-bill from the Senators,
6-4 and 3-1; the Indians edged the
Tigers, 5-4, and rookie Barry Lat-
man of the White Sox blanked the
Athletics, 1-0,
* * *
a
singled: in the third. “Witheln The Brawes scored both of thelr.
Tuns off rooki¢ Jim O'Toole, regis-|
Roberts, salvaging a decent sea- AP Wirephote
BATTLE’S OVER — mar, Graham Mann of Britian's defeat-
ed America’s Cup challenger Sceptre congratuates Rod Stephens, '
sail and rigging expert of victorious Columbia in the harbor at
Newport, R. I., late yesterday. Columbia won four straight races
to retain the 107-year-old America’s Cup in this country.
Trojans Seek 2nd Upset ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Southern California aimed te make it two
straight upsets in meeting favored Michigan today.
The Wolverines were the question mark of the Big Ten after
losing the entire: starting line from tackle to tackle from the 1957
club and speedy halfback Jim Pace. Southern Cal pulled one of
the season’s biggest upsets in whipping Pacific Coast conference
favorite Oregon State last week.
A crowd of 72,000 was expected with 12,500 high school musicians
taking part in band day highlighted by Meredith Wilson leading 1,075
trombones in the hit song ‘‘Seventy-Six Trombones” from his Broad-
way musical.
EAST LANSING \® — Michigan State, like a crap shooter looking
for a lucky roll, is trying for No. 11 today.
If the Spartan footballers can beat California, it will be the 1th
time in a row MSU has outpointed West Coast opponents.
The last time State was beaten by a coast team was in 1949, when
Oregon State pulled a 25-20 upset. .
Michigan State will field a backfield that never started before.
The outfit directed by quarterback Mike Panitch worked as the
second team last year.
' he foursome of Panitch, sat tanec: Deis Lael eat Den done
me ee
The line is manned ‘by burly, Well-seasoned veterans and is one
of the heaviest iy recent years. State will outweigh California 218.
pounds to 201 in the forward wall, and have an edge in depth.
California will show off some classy and proven backs. Quarter-
back Joe Kapp is the expert engineer of the split T attack. Hank
Olguin and Jack Hart are sprinter halfbacks and sophomore fullback
Bill Patton has been tagged as a natural at the position.
TV Plan Still ‘Alive’ “DETROIT (UPI) — Preanters of the planned pay-as-you-cheer
television broadcast of the Michigan-Michigan State sell-out football
game were still hopeful today a closed circuit telecast will be
permitted.
C. W. Smith and Associates, said they will try to get an earlier
- in his suit.
Jatge Theodore Bull dof Wate Anette Sor 3 ii Oct. .
the day’ before the game and issued a temporary restraining order
against the sale of tickets or the promotion of of the closed-circuit
telecast.
Burdette, Ford Ready for Series son after a poor start, shut out
the Pirates until the ninth when
they scored both their runs. Boh
Friend was tagged for 11 hits in
absorbing his 14th loss. Richie
Ashburn took over the N.L. batting
lead by collecting two hits and
raising his average to .345—one
point higher than Willie Mays.
Williams, now batting .323,
moved into a tie with teammate
Pete Runnels when he collected |
two—-hits;--ineluding his 2th
homer, during the Boston-Wash-
“ington opeher. “Ted Leptio’s two-
run homer in the sixth inning
proved the margin for Ike De-
lock’s 14th victory. Roy Sievers
hit his 39th homer for the Sena-
. tors,
* * *
In the nightcap, Bill Renna, fill-
ing in for Williams, snapped a 1-1
tie with an eighth inning homer
that brought. Frank Sullivan his
13th triumph. The two losses
stretched Washington's losing!
streak to 11 games.
The White Sox got a three-hit
pitching effort from’ Latman | in’
their game with the A’s. Latman,
struck- out nine and walked only |
two in gaining his third victory
without.a defeat. Chicago scored
the only run of the game in the
sixth off Bob Grim on singles by
John Romano and Ron Jackson
and John Callison’s sacrifice fly.
End of Shain
ALUMINUM BOATS and CANOES __ There 2 is plenty of boat- ~ = _s
ing ahead, but we must 35° ~ %o
clear our stock, so buy
WATER BIKE...
USED MOTORS Make Us an Offer
SLAYBAUGH'S 630 Oakland Ave. FE 8-0453 eee ee eee
HUNTERS! Get Your Ouck Stamps Here! i
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‘Sunday witt-be 1:09 p.m.(court date,-but regardless. ofthat. Sag sind om in. a. ne
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}
Your Dry —
: Cleaner Is
No Magician! |
When you take clothes to your Dry Cleaner, don’t expect him
to work miracles! He is only human, and may accasionally make
a mistake, which he will be glad to rectify.
But many cases of unsatisfactory dry cleaning are not his fault.
Before you expect too much, be sure that—
* The garments are of sufficiently good quality that they
can be dry cleaned without shrinking and without colors _
fading or running.
* That cloth-covered buttons and stiffening materials do
not contain substances that will stain. ~
* That you have not attempted to remove stains with fluids
that will injure the fabric, set the stain or cause fading.
x That your Dry Cleaner is a well-established dependable
local businessman, . ;
Your Dry Cleaner -will tell you, when he accepts your clothing,
just what to expect— but he cannot promise to work miracles. WASHINGTON (UPI) — Russia
beat the United States to the com-
mercial jet age by a full two
year's.
But the Reds achieved their vic-
tory with an easy short-cut: they
merely. modified a medium jet
bomber revamped*its nose,
stretched the fuselage and put in
seats, . i
The result was the TU104, a
plane that Russia’s state airline,
Aeroflot, has been flying all over
Europe for two years, The TU104
(Aeroflot has an estimated 40 in
service) also has made three trips
to the United States.
Bat American aviation experts
who have closely examined and
flown in the TU104 reported it
would never be accepted by U.S.
airlines, or even U.S, passengers.
’ It is under-powered, shortranged
and gorges fuel in such mammoth
amounts that it would bankrupt
an American carrier. Swiss Airline
officials who inspected the TU104,
with a view to buying a few, said
even if the Russians gave the plane
away free, no private airline could
afford to operate it,
LANDS TOO FAST
The TU104 also lands at 150
miles an hour, too fast for Ameri-
can safety standards, Its brakes THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958.
Reds Use Easy Short-:Cut! :
to Lead Commercial Jets |
were grounded following several
crashes, and Russia introduced jet
service in 1956 while most Ameri-
can manufacturers were still in
the blueprint stage.
turbo-prop airliners in the testing)
stage. These are real transports,
not modified bombers, And with
Aeroflot threatening serious com-
petition in world commercial] avia-
tion, experts agree the United
States is launching its own jet age
none too soon.
Art Museum Sells
Surplus Flints, Jars: NEW YORK (UPD—The Metro-
politan Museum of Art held a
clearance sale this summer and
did a thriving business in such
‘articles as neolithic flints, scarabs,
jars found in tombs and fragments
of stone and pottery.
The purchasers were adults and)
children who visited the Museum |
during its second annual sale of!
surplus materials that other-mu-
seums in the country did not want.
The sales have netted the mu-
seum about $230,000, with which it
bought a painting, an Egyptian cat |
Russia has several turbo-jet and) 2
|
TA
PAN GAS RANGE A new 30-inch with huge 24-inch oven...
full width: light, clock and appliance outlet.
Clean-Quick smokeless broiler.
‘Reg. 229.95 § i
SPECIAL Y TRADE
NO MONEY DOWN.
jos
FES } ON EASY CREDIT. TERMS
VE ra
4 < cr
causing ‘several TU104s to over-jimportant objects,
shoot runways, Its pressurization) -~
system is weak; fountain pen leak-
age is common,
| No Western expert has been
| able to judge the Russian jet-
| liner’s safety. record, Aeroflot
crashes are seldom reported un-
less foreigners are involved.
BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD
| Pontiac Area Cheba, of Commerce
FE 5-6148 Waldron Hotel Bldg. a eS a Se
emma gee ee to the jetliner age, starting Comet
“Saturday & Sunday Splut Peabh No Fires’ Last Week
LANSING t® — In a compara-
tively rare occurence for this
time of year, Michigan recorded
a perfect week last week in fire
prevention on state and private
forests and grasslands. So far
this year, 1,125 fires have burned
over 9,900 acres..
TAPPAN
36" GAS Four center burners—full width
clock, large storage compartment,
Reg. 199" § |
SPECIAL ae
p
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New G-E
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alsa are reported to be inadequate,|sculpture and a couple of
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ALTERATIONS
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*
| 7ecoOd HOUSEKEEPING’ Open Fri. and Mon,.
by vl tg , ; | P 51 West Huron St. it ae FE 4-1555
i a” ; La) *. “ ’ F % " « . » i”LOOKS LIKE A RANCH HOME — The Edward Beaupre home on Westwind
drive at Reed Lake looks like a one story ranch house from the road. What can’t
be seen is the two-story lake side of the home. Before they moved in, the Beaupres
SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM.+- Mr. and Mrs. Edward A, Beaupre have enjoyed THE PONTI
Brick and siding form the exterior.
a added the carport and the entryway. Th large initial beside the door is effective.
Walls and draperies are light green. The furniture is colonial style with colorful TO REFLECT THE VIEW —
over the sofa in the family room reflects the
picture windows and the lake outside. It adds
to the brightness and cheerfulness of the room, © nt ob eo A
A mirror hung Draperies are made from a green leafy print.
The floor is an interesting marbleized linoleum,
By JANET ODELL
Pontiac Press Home Editor
A great big “B” beside the
door tells you you are at the
right house. The Beaupres live
here arid everyone's initials are
the same! Edward, Ethel, Eric Your Neighbor’s House
Beaupres Added on fo ‘New’ Home _tranceway, a top floor recrea-
tion room with a large storage
room below, Then they redec-
orated all the rooms. By: moving
in the end of June they have
had en entire summer in their
new house. Walls are knotty pine, The furniture is maple.
This room was added “on when the Beaupres
bought the house.
house. . j
You step into a long narrow
kitchen. Right in front of you
are the stairs to the ground
level, Just around the. stairway
corner is the door to the living
room.
Pebble linoleum covers the
relaxing like this in their new home since late June. Carpeting is beige tweed. upholstery. The brick fireplace is a simple.one with a white mantel and a tile hearth. and Emilie. The address is West-
. wind drive at Reed Lake. Beaupres. They are former
: , x *« * residents of Commerce Lake, .
To the Beaupres the house {fg . moving out there from Detroit.
new, It has has one former own- Mrs. Beaupre’s still drives to
er, but the subdivision is only a teaching job in Detroit every
about four years old. When the
Beaupres bought the brick house,
they added a carport, an en- Lake living is not new to the
Pontiac Press Photos
by Ed Vanderworp
(
COLONIAL BEDROOM — From the hooked rug on the floor . Chintz was used in the dld days so the rose printed spreads. with
to the pineapple: posts on the twin beds, this room is colonial. their ruffled ti are in keeping with the style.
>
~ > FHA TERMS
COMPLETE BUILDING
SERVICE
&
2 on 4 Hour ean Service
, Ae ea fom THE YOUTH ROOM — Emilou and Rick have their own living _ their friends. The corduroy cover-on the studio couch is bright
room of the grourid level: of the hotise.. A tile floor and sturdy, but red. Musical notes and instruments decorate the plywood wall.
_Setite Sacloacy ace Sloman place tw Rar ta 15 eatertate Rick'e bedroom te 6b Sole SE OO:
92 W.Huron St. Pontiac, Mich
*
© 4 Bedroom Ranch e3
@ Full Basement eP
HUMPHRIES
FE 2-0474 REALTOR "Houses of the Week
" OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 7
2 Denby Drive 4241 Ledgestone |
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Both Lovely Homes —
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83 North Telegraph Rd.
\ >
Bedroom Ranch
lus Activities Room
REALTY ‘ . OUTDOOR WELCOME — A broad covered patio provides a
FE 4-7114
welcoming area at the front entrance. The garage and a man’s
4 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958 =
Less Work With cee’ g>throu = te wood tse. _ Sawing and driving screws tn|larly,
Oe eee caaier with With soap will prevent the wood
ordinary soap. If you coat both] from gripping them, and they'll go ;
workshop are at the left. The bedroom wing is at the right. Liv-
ing and dining areas are in between and at the rear.
NOW AVAILABLE! Portable Dog Runs
Phone .
‘FE 5-7471 should be clear and dry. and drier in winter. Yoe “cm point tay time it|- Wormer and Drie! Rebioved ° -
certain common sense rules are|floors possess substantial tea File OF Whee
followed. The ‘most important|ing value and, therefore, aid ma-
consideration is that the weather] terially in keeping a home warmer I es. ape
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even cleans your fuel filter as it burns, *Pplications.’Courteous drivers leave
Yet it costs no more than ordinary —% metered receipt showing every gal-
. fon delivered. You are comfortable—
ond carefree—when we setve you. Our
Brings Sunshine §— = »der bestiog ac it very ben.
DON'T FORGET OUR LOW SUMMERFILL RATES!
HLH. SMITH O 590 South Paddock IL COMPANY . / Street . Phone Fe 2-8343
Basements Need
‘for different basement installations i . - bens =
Proper Lighting | CHICAGO (INS) — - Good lighting
is as important. in your basement
as in the living room, particularly
if the basement houses a recrea-
tion room, laundry, storage space
and other separate areas, -
Here is what you should have
according to the. American Home
Lighting Institute:
A basement workbench should
have a single fluorescent light fix-
ture four. feet above the work-
bench so the do-it-yourselfer can
see what he is doing, particularly |
when power .tools are involved,
Many women like to set up a
laundry in the basement, and
proper lighting helps measuring
starch and detergents, prevents
accidents and make troning easi-
er, Choose a 12 to 41-inch wide
incandescent fixture or a fluores-
cent fixture with two 33-inch 25-
watt tubes.. Mount the fixture
four feet above the surface “
laundry equipment,
Heating plants require an inex-|
pensive fixture located high enough
above furnace. or boiler so it
doesn't glare in your eyes or graze
your head, but does cast light on
dials or controls.
A game area with just a table
requires only a shielded fixture
over the center of the table, but a
complete game room should be lit
like a standard room in the home.
A‘ storage area, even if seldom
used, should have an overhead fix-
ture to make searching easier. |-
Stairs should be lit, with switches
at both head and foot, The fuse
box should he in a well-lighted spot
easily accessible and near an over-
head fixture.
Connect Mane hemes with massive brick
wall fireplaces lack the conven-
ience and decorativeness of qa man-
Ue. The monotoneof a. brick wall
can be offset by the lines of a
mantle, thus providing additional
charm to the fireplace,
The project is made of 1% by 10-
inch lumber for the mantle proper;
1% by 6-inch lumber for the sup-
port, and 1 by 6-inch lumber for
- tthe uprights. Lengths for the pieces
will vary with the size of the fire-
place unit and the height from
floor to ceiling,
* * *
The support, however, will be 4
inches shorter than the mantle at
its curved end. The ,uprights can
either &xtend from floor to eeiling
or be shorter as suggested in the
diagram, i
compass set with a radius of 5',
inches for the support. and 9%2
inches for the mantle can be
uged to inscribe the pattern for
the ends. Use a coping saw when
éutting the curved ends. Notch
the mantle 4 inches arid 20 inches
from one end, 542 inches deep, to
receive the uprights,
To make the pattern for the up-
right measure and mark ag point
8 inches from the bottom along
the leading edge of each upright
land a second_point along the end,
2 inches from the trailing edge.
these points with a
curved line, and use a coping saw
to cut out the piece,
taching the support to the wall with
cut nails. Be sure the nails are
driven into the mortar and not
into the brick, Next, with a %-inch
star drill bore holes in the mortar
for expansion anchors in at least Break Wall Monatony
With F ireplace Mantle .
support and uprights with 8-penny
- Set all exposed nails and fill the
Shape the pieceg as shown, A
Assemble the unit by first .at- |
Metal Ventilators OK
for Existing Homes
It is now possible for you to|
have metal ventilators’ installed!
in existing homes. The Metal Ven-|
tilator Institute advises that a va-
riety of shapes and sizes are avail-
able to fit any architectural need
and may be used with any type of
residential. construction.
The ‘“‘do-it-yourselfer” will find)
these units easy to install and will
receive year-in and year-out divi- ALUMINUM
STORM DOORS)
24°" ALWINDO COMPANY Division of Northern Alum. Co.
1700-102.
1 8, Telegraph FE 8-0495 |
dends by the use of the proper
size ventilators.
Metal ventilators not only help
reduce the heat built up in an attic
area during the hot summ@?
months, but also are effective in
controlling condensation such as
can occur in an unventilated attic
during the cold winter months.
A booklet describing the various
types of metal ventilators avail-
able can be secured without
charge from the Metal Ventilator |
Institute, 22 West Monroe St., Chi-
cago 3, Illinois.
Use Brush Three Ways
in Varnishing Floors
When varnishing a floor, brush
with the grain of the wood, cover- |
three places where the uprights
will be located,
Position the uprights marking
the location of the anchors on
the boards, and drill holes 3'%
inches deep with a No. 6 auger
bit, Fasten the uprights to the
wall, Use a.piece of doweling %
inch in diameter to - Pltig the
serew holes.
Finally attach the mantle to the:
finishing nails. Hooks or pegs can
be attached to the support for the
fireplace tools. _|Take Plaster Off Paint
~ | With Citric ‘Acid, Water: +
If you get plaster \droppings on bristles of your paint brushes from
paint, here's an easy way to do a curling. Clean them thoroughly aft-
re-|er pointing, wrap a piece of paper
around the bristles and secure it;
hang them up to dry, .A. small good cleaning job. First, gently
move as much of the plaster as then
possible by lightly scraping, oF| hole drilled in the’ top of the brush
with steel wool, being .careful not| handle will make it easier for you
to injure the paint or other sur-| to suspend the brush from a nail,
a wire hanger or oh a piece of
Next soak the area to be cleaned) string. The brush bristles will dry
in a solution prepared of one part/ straight,
'eitric acid and nine parts water,
When the stain is loosened, use faces.
both the stain and the citric act
placed around the base of chim-
neys and other roof spenangs to
‘prevent leakage, - Pa
SEE US FIRST rinsed out damp cloths to remove}
Flashing means strips of sisted
8. 5. eae ig Hugh A, Watson
Saginaw 6.
Phone ve. *p-si20 for Land Contracts — Rea) Estate |). insurance — Investments — Trust |
Service.
DAWSON & WATSON
Pontiac - . a ‘ ee ee ee
RS M MccamRMRS S aera cg PIERO RES ARR On SRB MS a
holes with wood putty, Round all
edges sanding the unit
smooth, Finish to harmonize *
blend with the surroundings,
WHEN YOU HEAT-“ | |
|
|
¢ |
you're really living! The best |
in modern fuels deserves the |
best in modern equipment
Play safe, Be sure.
ACCEPT NOTHING BUT
itrol HEATING
EQUIPMENT
- THERE'S NOTHING FINER BUILT! |
Otto A. Trzos 3101 Orchard Lake Rd.
‘CONCRETE STEPS _THE UNIT STEP
For-a Step in eat
CHECK THESE FEATURES:
@ No Sections to Be Forced Apart by Frost or Settling
@ Permanent Beauty—Rugged Dependability
@ FHA Specifications
@ Strong Reinforced Casting
@ Avoid Messy Installation ’
UP TO 42 SQ. FT. OF PORCH SPACE Satety Tread
Reduces Slipping
Free Estimates — We Deliver Anywhere!
CONCRETE STEP’ CO. 6497 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 3-7715
@ FULL PRICE .
-@ FULL BASEMENT .
e FULL BRICK
$175 Moves You into ‘These Wonderful
VERY LOW FHA TERMS: ALSO AVAILABLE | Features... °& parson lot © Attached car port a a :
© Formica counter i Oy some —— :
© Huge kitchen © Gas heat
;
Watch for Manor Drive -
Off Commerce Road in Milford
SALES BY —. 7.
MU 4-1851—EM 3-6556 a
'M. R. WILSON *
ing about four or five boards for a
distance of about 4 feet, Then. with-
out refilling the brush, cross off |
the surface to catch any places
you may have missed. After that,
scrape the brush over the edge of
the can and lightly straighten out |
the surface, brushing lengthwise |
again.
This brushing in three directions |
spreads the varnish to,a uniform |
full film without danger of runs.
The best brush to use is one two
inches wide. Keep your brush full”
to prevent running or sagging.
About 125 different procésses aré
involved in--making a ‘wooden
lead pencil. i
ELLIS, INC. SINCE 1945
COMPLETELY BUILT
1, CAR GARAGE.
ted Comewt $5.95
ORDER NOW. BEFORE
WINTER SETS IN!
WE BELIEVE PRICES WILL GO UP SHORTLY , .. NOW
IS THE TIME TO BUY.
Ideal Alum.
Storm and
n Comb. one tatiana
Nationally Advertised
Alum. Comb. Door
$94”
@ Rec. Rooms @ Attics
@ Additions @ Porches
@ Basements @ Garages
Low Prices, on tniterior Work”
NO MONEY DOWN | . § Years to Pay « Complete
» (Most Sizes)
2690 Woodward ae
$. of Day ‘vd
Lake Road “Night
FE 2-2671 CASH and CARRY}
FREE ESTIMATES |
~”
Qa
© 7 re J
=
—
S =
ae is overlooks the children’s play area. - BRICK DUPLEX
A. Murray White
We can give you a terrific bargain
on a gas furnace now but hurry!
“SPECIALS”
i ENGLUSIVE PLEASANT TH the The perimeter é :
“LAKE WOODS 2 raed Wat acon bel, COR Tage ton 8]. $580 Down reached directly from interior cabinets are built into the range 484 — at |
= — Delco 70,000 BTU ow
[ee the large, lake-privilege sites in this new country develop-. jiiiii The result is a traffic patters) The island range, the architect | anche teatrees ober with an efficiency seldom achieved) ays, “expands the. athount of water system (already in-, ii i Sere
in residential designs. ; counter top work space and mini-
The is formed by the living |mizes the housewife’s kitchen. rou-
area
Gas Forced Air Furnace
rea — dining, living and rec- |tine because it separates the areas ad o
iil|| reation rooms. Radiating from |for preparation, cooking and clean, Reg. $268.95
. lili]; the hub are traffic routes lead- | ing.”
je 3 a4 Bedrooms @ re Lots Siooum of temnen H. York, ferrace, aad an tetoer brick wal for Only
-@ Built-in Cooking Units and Oven in
3 Complete Models Open
New for Inspection
Se ts bal Cit ot Geo aes) terrace the full widt Se.| The kitchen is en
|| (3). a corner dining terrace, (4)| ppcezeway alias pepe a
ja side atea for a children’s supe-|i.. hall which contains a lavatory, vised play terrace, (5) a “buffer”|, mud closet and the basement
lbreezeway, and (6) a partially! stairway. The laundry room and
|| covered front entrance. the heating plant are below in the
The “buffer” breezeway SeP-/ful) basement.
arates the more formal living areas; Y, addition ‘to the outdoor ter- of the house from:the garage a@nd/ paces and porches, there is the
its adjoining man’s hideaway room. oe ee oe ee Oe ee ee oe oe oe ow oe oe Oe ny
The latter is an 11 by 19 footy
Delco
Gas Conversion Burner
Reg. $239.95
/ si99% ©
/WEEKDAYS 2 to 7
}fp SUNDAY 10 to 7
CGN) DELO
" Contin
e ° ]
: Jim Williams space providing full privacy for. gim@y Plan Order Coupon 1 ‘ the man of the house in his pursuit aoe i é hen Webi eb ete *
4 ‘Realty Co of hobbies or crafts. The hide} Enclosed cents in coin. 4 with © selection of ~~
' ™ away room is an important in-/! Please send me a copy of the { 1000’ of living colers. C etel Ir st lled Sat
i 1483. Baldwin Ave, 8-4-0547 |i terior detail. 5 CORY law ef The Hose of 1 Tl sss aecheet’s sow nn cnt All é Complete details of the plan); ae Week, Design X-25 ; lecmunls Outing moehd
: : iiifollow, area by area: 1 0 stamps accepted. Please , -
: This area includes the living|}'do not use sticky tape on | a eo x The Only Heating Desler That Giyes Holden Red Stamps
: pome. eet se ee 1 MY ) . es fl
4 inches, and the g room, 12/1 t : \ a : , ee iby 13 feet 4 inches, geal are at a t | Pike
; fie Ra ta Sen agen PONTIAC rN NO MONEY DOWN-36 MONTHS TO PAY | stoi ” terrace and gardens. t: F \ , 4 A wall ace, i t f ~_— eeeees srateseeee ne eeee i Varnish Store Pe ‘
ts an extension of an indoor | omer eemer seneceseoec TATE, oc geen t Cass at Huron 9
S a oy ad pyr doce TS Oa. é Home of Reckcote | oe a a } 3 living aud dining rooms, assuring |Te¢Teation room, 11 feet 4 inches Paints , .
+... . ware wm | sabes to each. Lace gs ~Pavin os ae Hours: 8 to 5:30 Daily _ Authorized Oakland County Distributor ee
mee CONTRACTS Stporeos arg ll 2 Nm & A | are the sleeping rooms and two|t aaicins the kite nate teas oaSenmied 371 Voorheis Weortaie Ba. After Btore Hours ~~ BE 2-2919
nn sr St er we,
FE! E 4- -0528 | IT PLEASES US Roe \F TO PLEASE YOU shower, four sliding door closets,
and a separate exit to a rear
covered porch.
Laide siineiici rice cahedi ndiandacnattinessnnnaateaneans CNRS Ree ee mIRC Sew
FORCED AIR FURNACES
INCLUDES... | COMPLETELY
New 85,000 8.7.0. wih 10- INSTALLED basement warm cir pipe and
cold airduct connected to pres-
ent ara iia ond =
(iad an . %
1 NO MONEY: $ DOWN!
CONVERSIONS AND BOILERS
FE 8-4132
MI 6-9292
7 CALLS TAKEN UNTIL 9 P.M.
_ TEMP-HEAT, INC. Formerly the Temprite Co.
1025 E. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM pent 7 aacsecsesesasoamaiall
“Colonial Ranch Homes: ~ With Private take” Privileges” on Exctusive Hammond take ~~
i : 8 50 Price Includes © LOW FHA’ : | 120’x150’ Lot! down: payment
plus these outstanding features , rf
Two full tiled baths including deluxe vanity and extia large mirror. Built-
_in disposal, oven, range, dishwasher. Double drain stainless steel sink. Two- —n
speed vent fan and hood. Birch cupboards plus two built-in china cabinets. - Open Daily 1 te 8 P.M.
Two linen closets. Extra high basement. All copper plumbing, city water § 8 ;
. and gas heat. a undays 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
MIDOLEBELT
RO:
MODEL PHONE MAyfair
8-1331 “ SLOOMFIELD HILLS OFFICE: Long Lake Road at Telegtaph ~ Opposite Devon Gabler—PHONE MI 4-7422
i
|
Fl ‘4! PER PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
a Per Gallon
TALBOTT LUMBER CO,
FE 4-4595 1025 Ockland Ave.
} FO > @ =
ANGE bm OF — LEO VIEW Est aA TES
Wood ed and shore lots for sale!
For People With
Vision
So. Leok Ahead NOW .
Take Your Place
in the Sun
Us GOLF VIEW ideal
LAKE ANGELUS
Golfview ESTATES oy
You may be able to build a
family room without enlarging
your present home, And you won't
have to go to the basement, al-
though some mighty fine recrea-
tion rooms have been made from
waste basement space.
Newest idea for recreation room
space is to take over the garage.
A dould car garage makes an ideal
size family play room, It also has
most of the basic ingredients:
sound room, studded walls, floor,
If you move the car outdoors, all
that’s needed in most climates is ‘a
gar port or roof, and this can be
added to the existing garage.
To convert garage into a warm
and hospitalb family gathering
expensive
s fir or western
red cedar. To keep heat in, bet-
ter put an. isulating board or
heavy paper against the studs
before the panels are put in
place.
You may have to put some
2 x 4s in between the studs horizon-
tally so ynou have a solid nailing
surface for the panel boards. You
may also want to use a wood deck-
ing for the ceiling to carry out the
rusticity and hospitality idea. Any
of seven ceiling patterns will work
just. right. ©
If your concreate floor is cold
' lunderfoot, you may wish to install
a‘wood floor directly over the con- Take Over the Garage
for New Family Room makes this rebuilt garage a thing
of charm and beauty. Whether .
you have a fireplace wall or not,
you .will most certainly want to
‘build in some shelves or even a
buffet for storage and service to
guests,
If the fireplace doesn’t provide
enough heat you can _ install
several different kinds of perime-
ter heating, gr if the garage is
close énough to the house, you
might even extend a heat line from
the main furnace.
To carry out the idea of relax-
ing charm, if you use wood panel-
ing, you will probably want to
finish the wood so that its lovely
matural coloring, grain and tex-
ture is retained as a decorative
motif for the room. In that event,
you need only apply a coat of
sealer and, after it has dried
thoroughly, you can put on coats
of lacquer, varnish or plastic. Only
be sure that you rub down the
wood after each application .of
sealer or varnish,
Some people may wish to hire
a cabinetmaker or finish carpenter
to do the woodwork in the re-
modelled garage, but they cer-
‘tainly could do the finishing them-
selves if they want to cut costs.
Most of the finishing is a combina-
telligent handling of the various
varnishes and sealers,
Widely recognized as the strong-
est of structural woods, Southern
Pine is used principally for fram- “ < 306 " |Peg- Board Toys
Give Hours of
|Playtime Fun
Homemade ‘toys, put together
while the youngster watches, often!
are more welcome and give a child
chased in a store.
* x *
An excellent example is @ nest
of cubes madeof Masonite %”
Panels laced to-
gether’ with plastic clothesline or
strings The largest cube should
be 12’’. square, and others should
be 11”, 10° and 9”.
The bottoms should be left open,
except for the smallest cube, so
that toys may be stored inside.
* * *
Yn cutting the “Peg-Board”’
ADDING ON more enjoyment than those pur- storage boxes or sifterg in ;
boxes.
Other lecediipeieer projects
“Peg-Board” panels for handy
home use include a mending bas-
iket, laundry hamper, and wast
et.
light in using the cubes as chairs,
Complete Basement en
All Work Guaranteed — Free’ Estimates! -
24 Whitfield Phone FE Reliable Waterproving.
eee |
Just a a Word
create.
‘Some people have built a fire-
Place into one wall which really important. ing .and siding—those house parts
where physical endurance is all-
te aan
A ROOM? iy * : % 4 A
; 4 e
smo jwannen Don't Be. Caught 3 * '
nether ‘
“a This ad ‘eppeared In this paper
se oy 6 neat ie July 26 and the warning contained
e « Sealed vents + Ne 2° 4 is even more important now. Cold 4
. _ o Ne — < weather is closing in fast. Vf there A Z
. ° is any question in your mind about
Gleam - Stent | 5 : the ettichdstg of vor trsiake i,
Enjoy safe gas heat and 2 life of ease * DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT NOW.
To be sure of your furnace for ¢ and com fort—eomplete freedom
years to come purchase a furnace from carrying.
PRIVATE BEACH PRIVILEGES - ALL LOTS e TOTAL COST PER LOT
from 54900 Mean
CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE.
COMPLETE |
MODERNIZATION
CONSTRUCTION | Add ona room ... it costs so
e little for the convenience
ADDITIONS | FHA-to 5 Yrs. fo Pay!
serach vien. Free Estimates!
e Aluminum Siding &, Stone, Additions,
: Jalousie Porches, Family and Recreation
Rooms, Garages atid Breeseways, Cement
‘Work and all other jobs, large or small.
FE 5-8405_
~ Ambassador Insulation 2110 Dixie Hwy. Corner Telegraph
stoves end -relief | - economy. e recom
from toilsome, ex- mend the only furnace
pensive redecorst- ‘ that has eamed this | ~—
ing: of cleaning seal... a
year efter year. ‘
Compare installed . b Completely Housekeeping
Lehyorm oe I Automatic S&S
os Callens the GAS or OIL
ante | MOR-SUN « FREE. te,
DOUG HALLET, Licensed Contractor
WEST BLOOMFIELD|
HEATING CO. 5725 W. Maple—Orchard Lake
FE 8-3953 _ Nights FE 8.3465
On FHA—No Money Down
5 Years to Pay
» See the MOR-SUN Now
~ *
AN. WATERFORD.
MICH.
Ec: oo
® fs, Tile
“@ All Brick
e 80 ft. Lots —
Sales by:
MULTI- ,@ Full Basement
'@ Paved Streets
e 4 Elevations
@ Storm Sewers
@ Large Recreation Area e Garbage Disposal
e Birch Cupboards :
_ @ Lerge Storage Space.
e Over 1000 sq. ft. of Living Area
-LAKES REALTY co. eee,
@ Oak Floors SACRIFICING
REMAINING HOMES
's: No Money NT
FHA: From °410 Down
model, THE: BRAND-NEW “MIGHTY mac rete ma anemic «A Saree tert
Traveling north on Telegraph Rd.
(US 24), turn left at Tel-Huron Shop- @
ping Center and follow M-59 to
Other models available*
with 1 or. 1% baths
fot only $13, 500 *
meric ae ——
Model Phone: OR 3-491 _ INCREDIBLE VALUE
BASEMENT
¢BRICK ©
- 3 BEDROOMS
© BUILTIN
° a» LARGE LOTS
All-new in
Highland Estates
Soles by
3. W. MURPHY OVEN and RANGE | < a . ‘
‘ i 2 ee 4
uf
(THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,058 0.
"7 Your Material List Maint Home Has 6S Specie Geltoge tare | ntventoet en wae nt GU SSCL ama: ~ Then. Compare! no need of a shower curtain. | el. His bed is built“into the ‘ Ca “ana ert an ,
Two Living Rooms © | imsssd mts. Beawores ost m8 | comer. Next to Wt is «small
| enclosure to match the nar (Contnued Page cavtaine’ and gray pillows, The bedspread
“TASH & CARRY OR DELIVERED | ule bes ue tae aed oviey a , striped im | i, red with a gold thread.
| FHA TERMS No Money Years | garage doors, the Tinoleum and eer a | Walls are surtwood. Furnl- Down, to Poy jp Rhee: ay for the — Tiles are sandalwood in color. | ture is limed oak, Rick has a ‘ -
i "| Walls. "are gree. ‘The vanity Saesh etehaay-oasic > sais ae ont
a. -| counter t sandal- curtains are ' meta x top io hits wl Carpeting and carts ore f° Custom Built
wavy coral lines, The ceiling is Wotuicen ‘the Witches ant te sized closets in this room,
white. Curtains are striped in | bhearoom hallway is the tele- Mr. Beaupre has a good Alum. Awnings ~ rd
bat |. \
Counter tops are gray with wood and green lines;
carpeted | workshop in the basement, In gray, pink and white. All cup- vision room. This.
: boards are birch. in beige, Walls are beige, the’ laundry room the Beaupres |i Porches S /REED LAKE the ceiling is blue. Furniture te to pa a stove = that
‘ The living-dining room is large | #s blond with brown upholstery. | meals can be prepared for par- 4 t . | The b have a™~/| ties in the children’s living room, with big picture windows over yown draperies negprll ia genged tof : an atios
| when the subdivision went in. brown, ?
. Downstairs is the children’s (== y , - :
UMBER CO. | bess, 25 an att | tear fom, Here they can ek | GT NO § DOWN SAVE 50% NOW
i
a is one continuous stretch of green | al! without interfering : “34
: Circle Drive for Easy Loading. Jawn. ona, tperatit This Aalag hs LOW BLA. TERMS on All Wrought
2 Open ‘til 5 P. M. Saturday } Matte ‘aro ett grees. The | Us cle, S SME yatiy _. CALL TODAY: Our Friend- 7 ly representative will call on
you at your cohvenience
with no obligation, to Lm
OPEN: SUNDAY 12-4
G&M CONSTRUCTION CO, 2260 Dixie Highwens
2941
Utilize Odd Places
in Bath for Storage Dwarflype storage counts. up to
big utilization of dibs and dabs of
space. With modern building ma-
terials, it’s an easy matter to oc-
cupy wasted i with 8
Ceviere. re seid
p Z
‘
THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
~
*
"Under the lavatory in the bath-
room is an ideal, though small,
storage space, Frame it with 1x2-
inch lumber: and cover’ it with
tough, wear-resistant, easy-to-paint
hardboard. Add’a shelf and a door
and you've made a neat storage
place for cleansing powder, extra soap bars, cleaning brushes and
possibly: some linen, as well.
nd 8 aes, a ae toe
matching: your-capacity, "Get
from the lumber yard and hang on
thom See nt othr eine bare to
Line the inside with Peg-Board,
hooks
type stotage -unit that will be a
joy to the family. Use glass shelves
afid close the cabinet with Peg-
Board or hardboard sliding doors.
Maintenance costs on a_ jet
engine: $120 per hour. On a piston
engine: $75 per hour, . .
greater
re. hye]
Pau
¢C.
FE 4.2598 Series 400-A.
ALUMINUM —— WINDOWS ©
| greater Vey inside
Smart modern styling, smart modern living . . .
with modern Truscon® Series 400-A Aluminum
Awning Windows featuring tilt-out ventilators.
Easy to open, easy to close for controlled fresh
asic fow—even when it rains! And easy to clean,
tatt HT pe pias eo Dam on sgtback tag is on
see us. We have Truscon Series 400-A Aluminum
Awning Windows in a wide range of sizes.
STOP IN TODAY!
HOME EQUIPMENT CO. 1661 South Telegraph Rd.
outside
WEEDON
774 Woodward, Pontiac DO IT YOURSELF’! Now that the heating season is
at hand, make sure your heating
tab Pade Suet nla Setalenstiea: nareenionee
OAKLAND CHEMICAL COMPANY
- SOOT
ELIMINATOR
FE 5-8416
All Forms
of . *
4 surance
1545 S. Telegraph FE'5-8186
Build Bench
on Spare Door A full-fledged work bench usu-
ally is a luxury reserved for the
homeowner, Yet you can impro-
vise one in an apartment if you
“|have a spare, solid closet door—
leading ~~. a? meee closet.
Using plywood, hinges and a
piece of 2 by 6 as a base, the
latter secured against the back of
the door, make your apartment
work bench in much the same way
_|you ‘would make a drop leaf table
mounted on a wall.
The top edge of the 2 by 6
base should be placed about 36
inches off the floor and mouat-
ed horizontally on the inside of
the door with the 6-inch-wide
face against the door. The base
should be trimmed enough at the
sides to permit the door to close.
The plywood bench should be cut
the same width»of the trimmed
base and about 30 inches in
a. ae = base. *
A lightweight, collapsible
“*horse”’ completes the apartment
work bench, Simply open the closet
I.door, raise the plywood on its
hinges and-rest it on the horse.
The part of the door above the
drop-leaf work bench can be used
to hang tools and materials just
as if it were the back of a base-
ment work bench,
ony BOIC
USES
Auto-Clave .
The Best Method
of Curing Blocks
Known Today!
and apt = an AUTOCLAVED
block!
Builders’
Supply
Li
W. MOOTE INC.
Slectrical CONTRACTOR State and City Licensed =
“Over 25 ‘Years In Pontiae
845 West Huron St.
FE 2-3924 & FE 2-4008 -
A house that looks like a dream
home in summer can be a night-
mare of discomfort in winter un-
less it has @ good heating system.
- Fortunately, the selection of a
good heating system is rt particu-
larly difficult, but it requires care
and. thought.
The first rule is don’t buy on
a of the bid that
looks Tike a bargain. It may in-
clude inferior oumoment and short
cuts in the instal
Remember, too, that a heating
system is a long-time investment.
Buy with the idea that you will
be living with your heating sys-
tem for ..t least 10 years and
longer.
The second rule is to know the
reputation of your heating contrac-
tor. He should be willing to, give
you names and addresses of cus-
tomers for whom he has installed
heating. The general appearance
of his shop and his employes
should instill confidence. Your lo-
cal gas utility or fuel oil supplier
can often help you.
Check on the reputation of the
manufacturer, too. Alarmed by the
number of sub-standard heating
systems installed since the war,
most manufacturers now issue
strong, plainly-worded warranties
covering. their equipment.
A good heating contractor 1s
always willing to explain why he
Excellent in Kitchen
| This
|
recommends a particular make
of furnace in terms of the way
it is built, efficiency, safety and
durability,
Finally, remember that no mat-
ter how good the furnace, it is no
more efficient than the way it is
installed. A competent and experi-
spect the house and talk to the
Hard Maple Floor
A new attitude in kitchen floors.
Interior decorators ‘‘discov-
er’ Northern hard maple for kitch-
\en floors every three or four years.
year is one of them. .The
maple wood blends beautifully with
ithe new. type of wood kitchen cabi-
nets built of maple and birch,
Maple floors are easy on the
building budget and never require
require no scrubbing. Soft brush-
ing will do the trick. And floors
of Northern maple are handsome.
Another reminder! The top or
finish hardwood floor should not
be laid until plastering and cement
work are thoroughly dried and
woodwork and trim installed, As Good H eating S ystem Fits
House, Comfort Needs
owner about his comfort require-
ments before.making recommenda-
tions.
One he knows how a_ house is
constructed — the number, size
enced heating contractor will in-|
replacing, Properly finished, they| and position of doors and windows, | he
the amount of insulation, and other
factors involved in a_ scientific
study of heat loss — he. can tell
what equipment is needed and how
Has Its Ups and Downs
The expression “raising the
-|roof” dates from the Old West.
The roof was built separately from r.
the rest of the house and a man’s] &@
omplet
FREALT Corvieg ROY ANNETT; | ny gee
28 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 8-04
Realtors
neighbors would help him lift it
onto the house’s framework, Then
all would join in a party celebrat-
ing the event. Today, a roof can
be “lowered” by applying “*Ranch-
line” shingles whose wider tabs
blend with a horie’s long, low look.
The party is optional, - GAS and OIL -. EXCEL —— MUELLER ° ‘s
FURNACES VACUUMED
MOERY'S OIL BURNER SALES - SERVICE "3216 Rycroft St: FE 2-4970
$i EEL a SER
v . =
it should be installed.
Installation har been greatly
simplified by the development of
the factory-engineered heating
systems. All parts and fittings
are standardized and the furnace
is designed to work in harmony
with the air distribution system.
This takes the guesswork out of |
installation.
Other points to remember:
1. The furnace and air distribu-
tion system should be installed in
such a way that summer air con-
ditioning can be added simply and
economically. Such planning ahead
can save costly alterations in the
future and it adds to the re-sale
value of your house.
2. Make sure the installer is will-
ing and able to service what he
sells.
3. Do your heating shopping
early, Breakdowns usually occur
during sub-freezing weather.
l,, o my As
ALOWMG Ht
OFTENER Fake Y
WATER ¢
Vv
See This Amazing
Softener Today at
H. H. STANTON Heating & Plumbing
Contractor
(03 State FE 5-1683 Indian Woods Manor Year "Round Home on the Lake
This Bi-Level Home on the Lake |
Ready to Occupy qo
e 3 Bedrooms @ Large Family Recreation Room @ Fireplace
A home for an executive who likes to entertain!
v ; Priced at ee a ks
29.900 — . °Staneine™ ASK ABOUT OUR TRADE-IN PLAN
See This Home Any Day from 5 to 9 P. M.
Saturday and Sunday 1 to 9 P. M, s
Drive out Walton Boulevard to Schoolhouse Lake.
First House on Left on Schoolhouse Drive
Bisomfield
Telegraph Rd. at Maple
Real Estate Bempany
MI 6-6500—JO 4-6400
*
a final reminder, turn the heat on
for at least ten days before you
lay hardwood flooring, This pre-
caution applies for either summer
or winter.
Match Boards Up First
for Beautiful Walls
Do you want a beautiful wood.
paneled wall with an exquisite pat-
tern of contrasting grain and tex-
ture? Then, here’s an idea, Cut
your panel boards to exactly fit|
the wall. Then, lay them out on
the floor and carefully select each
board so that you have the ideal
combination of contrasting boards
next to each other,
For best results, you may wish
to finish the panel boards. before!
installing. If you use such lovely, |
Only | Two Thirds
Loss than two-thirds of the test}
of a new home today is spent on
the home itself, a recent. study re-
veals, The rest is spent for land,
fees and other builder’s expenses.
Living
Fe'R 22!
we orien e-099-8
“venous. yden A
oes LAME ae
cs
For further information about these Jecigins
Write, Call in person
. _ 7374
_ Highland Road .
19 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM! You get an Elevation Drawing, Floor Plan
and Outstanding Features absolutely FREE.
Just come in and ask for the model of your ~
choice. We will give you an approximate
_. material estimate FREE. No obligation. °~
Lumber, 7374 Highland Road, OR 4-0317,
Whether you’re building . . . remodeling |
or repairing . . . remember Colonial Lumber
has vine you need. |
“OR 4.0317,
or phone: Colonial
LUMBER
den
GARAGE and NOW'S THE TIME TO THINK ABOUT THAT
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@ CUSTOM OR
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Beat old man winter.to the draw with a
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D&M BUILD 2286 E. Walton Blvd., corner Opdyke
POR AMER re ae ATL rte ESE RR ORR A AANA WNC pedis etme ME
re es
“* 5 ore" tite sete: oa
© COMPLETE MODERNIZATION
© ADDITIONS - ROOFING
© SIDING-KITCHENS-SEA WALLS
@ ALL MASONRY-WORK
e 5 YEARS TO PAY
For Free Estimates Call
= 2- 7004 |
ING SERVICE Open Sunday 12. ‘
faite hi didinies
&
ae aM , é; | | / oo | se ponies 8 :
TWO ee Wg { = THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,1958 | : Z , an
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES —- | | ana we . ““][Mow you cea Staso |[ WZ BODD, I’ 7 ) pie GENTIN' CAD : 45 Million of Diverse Race, Background to Cast Ballots —
French Set to Vote on Constitution By TOM HENSHAW of the most important votes of our ments, one condominium shared two-thirds of the trade of the over-
AE Gostery Vetier | _-|tianen, with Britain, two autonomous/seas territories is with France,
An estimated 45 million people) They wil! be voting “‘oui”|states held in trust—and Algeria.|which in turn carries on about| ~ of widely diverse race and back-|or “non” on a new constitution|/All are voting except the condo-jone-fourth of its own trade with] -
ground are expected to go to the proposed -by Premier Charles de|minium (New Hebrides) and the|the overseas territories. Official
polls Sunday in what could be one/Gaulle as the basic document to/trust states (Togo and Came-|prance also invests some half a
: govern France's Fifth Republic and/roons). ge a Wear Sn Govekex:
its overseas community. It’s} an put two of the billion dollars a y op
France's ‘13th constitution since) ana qepartments. are tee ment of the Union, 2, . sim } : Hei Dist ites
1791. approve the constitution. Senegal Some of the territories and de- mt, , ‘ rf Hata aL wea tne. Sf
White Parisians, black Senegal-| in West Africa and Algeria, scene |P2"tments are in America (Mar-
ese, brown Tahitians all -will vote! of the bloody nationalist revoit |“7/que, Guadaloupe, Guiana and
on the same Constitution but the} since November, 1954, are listed St. Pierre & Miquelon); some are
basic point at issue is vastly dif-|as doubtful. But De Gaulle has |" the Pacific (New Caledonia and
ferent overseas than it is in France! net committed himself as to oe but the most important)
un. —_——— whether a “non” vote will mean po eal ae pees ix 4 0 the voter in Metropolitan) independence for Algeria, then a Gited ot ie cota s
France, a “oui” vote will mean 8} the chiet bait held out for anjly 11% million square miles. It is ‘Strong president; a “non” will] overseas “oui” vote is continuation|nearly 20 times the size of Metro-
mean probable return to thejof the customs union or tariff-free/politan France but its population is
strong but chaotic National Assem-|trade system with France, Aboutislightly less.
bly that has plagued France withh {HE GIRLS By Franklin Folger
25 different governments since
‘World War ‘Il, Y PB, me. oes
To the voter overseas, adop-
tion of the constitution will mean
more autonomy within the French
Community of nations; a rejec- -
tion will mean outright independ. -
ence with none of the advantages
of economic ties with France,
' In revolt-torn Algeria, which the
French insist is an integral part of
Metropolitan France, the issues
‘are so clouded that no one is quite
sure what a vote either way will
‘By Carl Grubert
YOU THINK
PETER, DO
more TV."
‘4
The French Union, as the over-
seas community is called, is made
Up of 18 territories, four depart-
Urges U.S. Bar Koreans
- REXBURG, Idahe (® — Ko-
rean diplomat Yung Han Choo
says the United States should
adopt a policy barring Korean
students from becoming perman-
ent residents of this country.
“‘We are losing ‘too many of our tC **eneme A
‘
we
ae
land,” he said. Han Choo was. [4 B92 _
sters, Carolyn, 11, and Marsha, il eee bags — eon “And do you know I had to complain for over a year before the - t f .
8, daughters of Mr. and =. : = 4/andlord finally installed a new hot water heater!” :
i + 271 Starr, : :
va he enna cw eg Podh BOARDING HOUSE
Z IT'S LIKE THIS, AMOS/I GOT
i if of
A g z
\ N \ \N \ \ \ \ \
seneruity led Silom Pine & TO THINKIN’ THAT IF THAT Y Says the gis mabe “Were Garth Go oe YpOIL WELL TURNS OuT TOY |
teil, ery fur rs” Tre | 17) YOU ASSURED ME IT WAS A me PE ee ee ore
St Benedict School at nom © | (| Wave envoy NETS i TH ALL AGIN YOUsNousi, ZZ ST ot ee | GOT A GREAT BARGAIN, DIDN'T [7 LOSE YOUR #75 AND < ~ CAPTAIN EASY
COPE Derid THIS SUDDEN CONCERN FOR _/(ME,AND MY CONSCIENCE
nd THINK OF MY HM
fe FINANCIAL ACUMEN Z ce fa LM SATISFIED/ :
Union Committee Says aD ry
Lower Income Groups} A)
Would Carry Burden ?
WASHINGTON (AP)—The po- YY "YZ, litical arm of the AFL-CIO says ) f L7- Y
Vice President Nixon's ‘ proposal ° = ZZ Jy -
ge at a aoe transfer of , NANCY . . nation’ burden to lower - , , income groupe. AUNT FRiITzI--- || HAVE A PEAR
The big an canal y : S MAY I HAVE INSTEAD
on Political Education, meal WA | ag A COOKIE ?
known as COPE, § NG Pe. ‘ aoe,
~ Bgl ae ai ages @ oh YY ae me
news- denouncing a by ONSCIENCE | YY ANY /
A A SINS
ness School Assn. in Boston on| fe (5 WHAT HE MY Td TIAA IRR | SRAUCHERY SS SAID= 4-27 © 195005 MAA Servon, ne. TM. Reg. US. Pin ¢ Y Feeyse
Sept. 6. -
COPE called the talk bold and
brazen.
~.In_his speech, Nixon calld-for|: ¢
a 114 per cent general manufac-
turers excise tax, or sales tax, to
Fy replace what he termed the na-
4 ~ tion's present hodgepodge of ex- i
- cise taxes. He also proposed a cut; Hi)
TPAC
Te fog Ub Per 08 ~ as gh ceewet
Cage 998 iy mend Seaman tremdaatn, tae LRA BUSA ILA BI yet.
_ By Dick Cavaili ’
‘*
4]
aim, he said, of stimulating pro-
duction.
* *« *
. “ COPE’s newsletter; made public
lt
y “STARA ‘. >” Tt added: — ‘ “That means that Nixon be-
lieves the rich, bribed with lower
taxes for high income individ-
i uals and corporations, can be per-
suaded to build more plants, buy
more machinery and ‘give jobs,’
© 1960 by NEA Service, ino. T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat: OFF
’ Ff
~
AF a
regardless of whether wage earn-/ = 4-27 —_ Bs ers and farmers have enough « - — . , money to buy the products “of:
American factories and farms op- Sana - - By Charles Kuhn erating at full capacity.’ . MY, I SHOULDN'T O° Fx WELL, AS LONGAS I wi MIGHTAS WELL PUT IT) | GONE ‘TO SEE THAT @ HAVE TH’ JITTERS... T’ GOOO USE TO STIR UP j ‘HORROR MOVIE 2 . ANOTHER CAKE. But They're Bigger SS 4 8 e ad ‘ een « 0) c= ‘ % ALBUQUERQUE, NM. 1p — : Five-year-old Jakie Garcia was
crossing a street near his home. Ai Ms %y | A ear knocked him down. Jakie : 4 ——- -- got-up,-and-another- ear-knocked—+ > 4 = = <_ 3
a poo we ed own Ageinte got Phisce ot
| time he ran into the side of a
“ *
i
| | parked car and fell. Jakie is in ROS WY / +l tet A ‘a hospital, recovering from-minor THE WORRY WART : Ns cuts and bruises. | a net ne 9-27 inn | = eae
HALF ACRE CASTLE : Johns Morris ONAL es - me
oe 4
»):{ OFFICER, WE DID
NOT PICK 4
}
— pa
I
ioe
ay e j 2 : .
7 ‘ . 7 } ‘ «
’ > . Z f : ‘ a; } j fa be . & 4
s i , . ,
aa f
“THE PONTIAC BESS: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
ATop Officials
res Part of Reorganization
Plans for Company
DAYTON, Ohio (UPD) — The
Chrysler Airtemp Corp., a subsidi-
ary of Chrysler: +» announced
the resignation yesterday of four
top officials at its plant here. ~
The four are Carl E. Buch.
holzer, president; John F. Knoff,
vice president in charge of sales;
M. T. Bard, director of branch
operations, and R. L. Forsberg,
director of marketing.
Company officials did not com-
ment on ‘the resignations, but
Bard's resignation was announced
“for personal reasons.” - -
x * *
It was understood the action is
/part of a reorganization program
and that the company is mapping
‘a vigorous new sales and product
campaign.”
It was learned that Paul M.
Augenstein of the General Elec-
tric in Louisville, Ky., would be-
come president and Joseph B.
Ogden. of RCA Whilrpool at St.
Joseph, Mich., will be named
vice president in charge of sales.
The firm, which employes 1,700
persons here, manufactures heat-
ing and air conditioning equipment
_ gunnery and fire control for
Expect Record Vote
on School Bond Issue
UTICA — Voters in the Utica
Community Schoo! District are ex-
pected to turn out in record num-
bers Monday to decide a proposed
$5%-million school bond issue, Fred
Atkinson, schools superintendent,
said today.
x * *
Atkinson and other schoo! offi-
cials have been making numerous
personal appearances before clubs
and organizations in recent weeks
to explain the proposed school ex-
pansion —. *.
*
The bond issue is designed to
meet future school needs, resulting
from anticipated population growth
in the Utica area, the superintend-
ent said. It will cover cost of addi-
tional classrooms, schools, sites
equipment, and an administration
building to house special teachers
and administrators.
The alternative, Atkinson s aid,
would be half-day sessions.
REGISTRATION NOTICE FOR = - Tuesday. the Sos.
ri: ied electors
of Brandon, Precinct WN.
that
urch Street, Orton-
a.m,
Here IS a
Credit Union :
for YOU! CORINNE E. LUCAS
The enegagement of Corrine
E. Lucas to Pvt, Robert L, Fur-
man has been announced by her
mother, Mrs. Essie Lucas of 38
FE. Washington St:, Clarkston.
The prospective. bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs, Santley
Furman of 8682 Clarridge Rd.,
Clarkston. He is stationed with
the Army at Fort Ord, Calif.
The couple is planning a Dec. 6
wedding at Christ Lutheran
Church in Waterford.
Jewish Festival
of Tabernacles
Opens Sunday
nacles begins at sundown, Sunday.
Known in Hébrew as ‘ ‘Sukkot,”’ the
holiday commemorates the manner
in which the ancient Israelites
lived in the desert during their
travels from Egyptian bondage to-
wards the Land of Promise. Tra-
nine days; liberal Jews, for eight.
Sukkot Services will: be held at
Temple Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth
Lake road, Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
with a special children’s service.
Sukkot morning services will also
be~held on Monday at 10 a.m.
Traditional Sukkot services will
be held at Congregation B'nai Is-
rael, 143 Oneida road on. Sunday,
Monday and Tuesday at 6 p.m.,
and on Monday and Tuesday morn-
ing at 7:30. The Junior Congrega-
tion will hold a apactal service at
10 a.m.
News in Brief
‘A breakin at the Leonard Gas
Station, 4177 Cass-Elizabeth Lake
Rd., Waterford Township, ~ last
night netted thieves only an un-)
determined amount:-of change from
several vending machines, accord-
ing té° State Troopers, «
Sleeping Sickness
‘Death Toll Climbs TOKYO (UPI) — the unofficial
death toll rose to 2,484 today in the
violent sleeping sickness epidemic
which has been sweeping Japan
and the Republic of Korea.
Japanese health officials _list-
ed the dead in Japan at 812.- Au-
thorities in Seoul, Korea said at
least 1,672 had died of the sickness
in that country. Thousands more
Anyone may SAVE in this Credit
Union, Savers for the past 3
years were PAID
4% DIVIDEND - Get the Details
Pontiac Co-op Federal
Credit Union
40 €, PIKE ST. |
have been stricken, they said.
Foreign Aid to Lebanon
BEIRUT — Lebanon received
$8,200,000 in foreiign aid during
1957. Eight million came from the
United States, the remainder from
the International Bank for Recon-
struction and Development.
147 W. “Danaldgon-Paller Agency, Inc.
“Reliable INSURANCE Protection”
Phone FE 4-4565
Lawrence Street
properly, and a secure
eigen: home loans.
Capital Savings Bis
- BUY-A HOME
FIRST! It’s your own! The home of your dreams! You
have privacy, a place to entertain your friends
Let us help you purchase and finance a home
of your own——with one of our low-cost, inaiget-
Established 1890
1 w. Huron Sty Pontiae The Jewish Festival. of Taber-|
ditional Jews observe Sukkot for Lake ech Pilot
in Crash-Landing
Escapes Unhurt
No amount of good luck charms
could have brought a Lake Orion
pilot more good. fortune than he
experienced yesterday when forced
to crash-land his plane.
* * * ;
State Police reported that Jared
Voorhees, 27, of 3280 Kern Rd.,
had motor trouble while flying his
one-engine plane over Bald Moun-
{ MARKETS. The following are top. pri
covering sales of cally grown
produce brought to the Farmer's
Market by growers and sold by
them in wholesale package a
Quotations are furnished by
Thursday.
: Produce
Apples, Mehisenb, £ UITS
ge Can! -eeeeeee 3.
Grapes, Concord bat pk..seces 1,25
MRS, EARL L, GRUBER JR,
Making their home in Tempe,
Ariz., are newlywed Mr, and.
Mrs, Earl L, Gruber Jr. The
bride is the. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald B. McdAlpin of
Yuma, Ariz. Parents of the
bridegroom are the Earl L. Gru-
bers of Sweetbriar road, West-
acres. He is a graduate of Gen-
eral Motors Institute of Tech-
nology and ‘a former student at
the University of Michigan. The
bride was graduated from the
University of Arizona. They
wete married in a Nuptial High
Mass at St. Francis Catholic
Church in Yuma.
Unwanted Eggs }
Refuse to Stay
Buried in Yard
paring an eight-pound female
turtle for soup, Floyd H. Hessel-
tine buried the unused portions,
including 34 eggs, in his back
yard. .
* * *
Mrs, Hesseltine yesterday
found 31 young turtles, three
inchs long crawling around her
garden.
* * * ;
The eggs had incubated: in the
earth and the turtles had clawed
their way to the surface.
Bishop of Lansing
FLINT (UPI) — Circuit Judge
‘Stephen J. Roth refused yesterday
ito dismiss a $200,000 damage suit
against Bishop Joseph H. Albers
of the Roman Catholic Diocese of
Lansing.
x *
A Mount Morris woman, Mrs.
Mary Downum, was injured in a
#ifall.at St. John Viannui Church in
i |
financial investment!
& Loan sen.
" meow ‘fprivate charitable
Flint. Counsel for Bishop Albers,
statutory trustee of the church,
‘urged the suit be dismissed be-
cause Mrs. Downum was in a
charitable organization, the church,
when she was injured.
* * *
However, Judge Roth ruled that
organizations
are not immune to lawsuits. Many
lof the charitable organizations are
now big businesses, he said.
* * *
“Tf they are to be relieved from
negligence, it gives them an oppor-
tunity to be careless without re-
dress and in effect put a prémium
on the neglect of duty,”’ he added.
Wintergreen Oil. Drink...
Fatal to tnkster Child 4
DETROIT wW— A 2-year-old su-
burban Inkster girl died in Re-
ceiving Hospital yesterday of what
doctors said was an undetermined
dose of wintergreen oil.
* * & ‘
Police said the girl, Queen Rob-
inson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Robinson, apparently drank
vend oil without her parents knowl-
ge.
_])15°Russians Ready
to Tour America
MOSCOW (UPI) — The U.S. Em- | bassy said today it has issuedwisas
'to 15 more Soviet tourists who wish
to visit the United States..An ear-
lier -group of Russian visitors to
| America waS reported to have|says GRAND RAPIDS (— In pre- |!
lslaughter sheep $.00-10.00 most good and
Lets Woman Sue _ |
-|whenever they want in an emer- tain Golf Course, in Orion Town- p Hale Haven, bu. .....+..08 $2 x ship, -| pr steneeae é
e+ «© ¢€ Fumes, Domace, He bea sesh cscs BB
Voorhees told police he tried to VEGETABLES . make an emergency landing on Beane, Wax bu. .... ssaceeees 3.00
the golf course. Completely with-| Brocco. ’behs eigen oe : 20 out power, he misjudged the course rons vba 7 satoncssnre sees Fe
and overshot it, police related. Celery doz. stalks sosenseaneasreses 1% orn, sweet, § dow. ....;.sccs sosees 1,00 A wing of the plane hit a tree. |Cucumbers, pickle size, bu. ......0» 5.50
The aircraft spun around in mid- E —. GOB. wcscnccccececess -18
ride nt, a eonnsecucesceneses 8:00
air and came down on its land- | Horse seradish. sn. No. “ye Geeece 8.09
ing gear. Locka, deena.) dos ossteeeet Phe * * * tons, dry ( ~# 50 ‘th. eeeeeeee 3.50 ; ; Parsley woge, | +m - aveee seente 12
Police said the landing gear was | Pesh™Ai,, © Bib ---reesseesrens 38 broken off, windshield broken ‘out, |Peppers, red, sweet, bu. ....... ss 3.25
propeller broken off, and the body |Borstee... 8a? 60 Is, ssvcessreney 1:39
damaged in several places. ren red (bebe. I), dot dos. Pen 96
Voorhees stepped from the plane Rhubarb Seite tet. 6am. ss, *y i
without a scratch. Tomatoes, NO. 2, DU. ..0s.-....0sccee LS ‘Turnips, aod. suv eeneneses 2.40
Cabbage bu. OnEENS 2 Col. oe eoakac ensues: seas roe ‘
ve b Meee 18 =
Sorrel, eae Sees sestatens seescaees 1-50
Swiss chard. bu... csrascosee 1.50 SALAD’ ‘GnEENs bape “leach dos. Sea eeeerdeoeoe 2s
— were dos.” eas -
Komen SOHC PERAK ER EE ED 195
Poultry Sind Eggs
DETROIT POULTRY
pDETROIT, Sept, 26 (AP) —Prices paid ax o.b. Detroit for No.
dat live soci
pe bens "11-18; light type hens |
caponetios (over § ibs} 20-22; ducklings
DETROIT EGGS
26 (AP)—Eggs, f. 0: b.
lots, federal-state
“ F aggre large 52; large Sept
cae —— abe
ee,
the} a
Detroit Secete of. Mechats:. pe Oh
a ot ae *
ae
sas THOUGH SORRY TO SEE ‘THE SUN DEPART, THEY TROOP FORTH TO CHANT A SORT OF FAREWELL.
9-27 _ Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
ay Wren THE ~ x SUN. RISES IN MADAGASCAR, A . GROUP OF GHOSTLY } CREATURES STANDS AT ATTENTION TO _CEREMONIOUSLY MOVE THEIR ARMS IN A WELCOMING SALUTE THEY ARE THE RUFFED eines
es, 4 dy © 1958
Ltd Sabie Pf rte Productions
Dodges Red Shellfire
graded eggs:
Commercially graded:
Whites: Grade A jumbo 47: aS 4314-
47; medium 37; small 28. rowns:
Grade A Jumbo 47; large 45; medium
34-37; small 26-28, ‘Checks 29.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCK
DETROIT, Sept. 25 (AP) — Cattle —
Salable 300 bulk supply slaughter cows
only a scattering of slaughter steers and
heifers prices unchanged utility cows
18.50-20.50 ae and cutters 15.00-
peed compared it week; —,
00
moderate showing aver-
to high ‘choice 900-1145 tb. Ts
27,50-27.15 few loads mixed high choice
and prime 1000-1156 Ib, steers 28.00 few
loads prime show club calves 28.25 small
lot prime 1500 Ib. ‘steers 28.75 head prime
1153 Ib. show club =i 30.00 utility
and —e steers geet ~—
bull to: ae load mostly
-» Sy Mheowryg e 880 Ib. Peso
rained sheice lightweight stock
calves 36-00.
Bulk early sup- Hogs — Salable 100. pites 182-224 1b. butchers, other weights
absent, these around 26 to
lower! few lots mixed U.S. No. oP hes
224 21.00-21.25; Two lots —oe ;
205-216 Ib. 1. 40-21.50 wor
a8 i "2.60: Small lot ia | No, 1 ‘@2
82 Ib. 20.90.
‘Compared last week: Butchers 220 Ib.
an. cown steady to 5 cents higher;
weights sage 220 _bb. steady . - Do full
over ;
mostly ened, instances 25 poll ag ony
Vealers—Salable 60 no early sales com-
pared with last week; strong demand
for choice and primes kocher vealers
forced these grades 2.00 higher than last
week .with lower grade strong to 1.00
—— most choice and prime vealers
3.00-40.00 standard and good 26.00-33.00
a and utility 16.00-26.00 sheep and
jambs salable 600 bulk supply Benpaped
week:
slaughter lambs hoop & aeaety slaughter
sheep steady feeder lambs strong to 25
cents higher most choice to prime spring
slaughter lambs 24.00-25.00 small lot
prime show lambs up to 25,25 most good
and choice lots 22.00-24.00 cull to choice
choice 60-75 Ib. feeder lambs 20.50-22.50.
Expert Says
Space Tests
Are Failure ANN ARBOR ( — A Navy re-
searcher said today Air Force
space chamber tests ‘‘aren’t worth
a damn.”
Max W. Lund of the Office of
Naval Research said the chambers
designed to test human reactions
in space travel failed to stimulate
the psychological stress man will
feel in space.
The men. inside the test space
chambers know they can get out
gency, he said.
“We just don’t know how to re-
construct the situation on the
ground,’’ Lund said.
Lund is chairman of a human
engineering conference at the Uni-
versity of Michigan and made his
statéments before a conference
meeting.
Because the tests are staged in
a laboratory, they lose their value,
he said, citing Navy experience
with radar scope operators.
Lund~said - redar--ebservers-can-
+ meintain a high level of perform-
ance for six hours when constantly
watched in a laboratory. But he
said operators aboard ships, who
have less supervision aboard ship
must be changed every half hour
to obtain maximum efficiency.
The Navy researcher said he
knows of no way the stress of
space travel can be simulated
realistically on earth.
‘Gant Stand Each Other’
So They Drink, He Says
DENVER (AP)—Dr. Marvin A.
Block, chairman of the American):
Medical Assn, committee on_al-
coholism, says people are drink-
ing more as a necessary adjunct
to conversation.
Among . the reasons, Dr. Block
er People can’t stand each other
brought back favorable impres-
sions, , \
\
T EDWARDS
QUEMOY (AP) — The biggest
_ {and most .successful Chinese Na-
tionalist convoy of the offshore is-
lands war reached Quemoy today
with supplies for the besieged is-
x & *
The Nationalists did not imme-
diately-anhounce the extent of the
latest supply mission to push
through Communist shellfire. But
from a vantage point overlooking
Liaolo Beach, at least three or
four times as many landing craft
as came ashore yesterday could
be seen. ~
* * *
A Nationalist military spokes-
siman said 18 amphibious vehicles
clambered onto the beach -= Big Convoy Reaches Quemoy Today’s imiaston might have de-
livered 150 or 200 tons, That still
is less than the Quemoy islands
need daily to survive under Com-
munist bombardment. But the Na-
tionalists seem to be gradually
building up a capacity to keep the
offshore islands supplied,
* * *
Alligators and other landing
jeraft cast off from U.S.-escorted|ly
Nationalist supply ships standing
outside Red artillery range and
swarmed to four separate landing
areas. —
all around them and" hit the
tor gee ger yg ay Sipe
miss which caused a craft to stop
for a few seconds,
wandetor tor craft, their total load
could have been up to 54 tons. As they came in shells splashed | reaching Officials said today the latest
the landing yesterday of cargo
from a blockade-running convoy.
The intensity of Red firing in
yester-| the
day. Judgng from the capacity of
Gov. G. Mennen Williams and
his campaign caravan will be kept
90\ busy tomorrow during a junket
through Oakland County.
The Oakland County Democratic
in| Committee, directed by Carlos G.
Richardson, has arranged an itin-
erary for the governer and his
party starting at 8:30 and conelud-
ing in the evening with stops in
Novi, Wixom, Commerce and Far-
mington, a e * «© *
At noon, the group’ will enjoy:
coffee and donuts following an ad-
dress before a gathering at the
Gingellville Community Center,
3575 Baldwin Ave. :
Richardson will greet the gov-
ernor at 8:30 and move to the
Villa Inn in Lake Orion for a
breakfast. From there the party
will journey over to Gingellville..
The remainder of the itinerary
includes:
1:30 p.m, — Reception at the
home of Mr. and Mrs.. Emil F.
Jaworski, 691 Stanley Ave., Pon-
tiac.
3-5 P.M, — Guest of Richardson
at a lawn party at the Richardson
Waterford Women Offered Exercises
Waterford Township women from
16 to 60 may participate in a week-
ly exercising class schedtiled to be-
gin September at the- Commu-
nity Activities Center on Williams
Lake road.
Each Tuesday night session from
two periods, During the first part
of the evening; group practice of
basic exercises and mat work will
be taught.
Gymnastic games will take up
the second part of the class, ac-
cording to the recreation depart-
ment’s instructor, Mrs. . Carol
Wolfe.
— of the limited number
of registrations accepted, those in-
sensed in the course have been
urged to call the recreation de-
partment for immediate enroll-
ment.
Church Sets Social Hour
ROCHESTER=The First Congre-
gational Church of Rochester will
hold its first fall coffee hour in
the church hall following the Sun-
day morning worship _ service,
chairman Mrs. Purdom an-
nounced. Members of the Board of
as people any more. ie 1_to..9 p.m.,..will be divided. into) Dem Campaign Grae
iB usy in Area Tomorrow
home, 2326 Carlos Dr., Waterford
Township.
6-7 p.m. — Guest of the Novi
Democratic Club at the Novi Com-
m House.
7:45 — Guest of Wixom Mayor
Joseph T. Stadnik at his house.
8-9 — At the Commerce Demo-
‘9:30 — Public invited to the
Farmington Democratic Club for a
reception for the governor.
2-Wheelers
Beat Cars —
in Stuttgart
STUTTGART, Germany ) —
Two-wheeled vehicles have
proved faster than cars in a
novel race through Stuttgart’s
A motorcycle, a motor bike,
a motor scooter, a small Euro.
pean car and a big American
car competed in the event, staged
yesterday by a German manu-:
facturing firm. cae
* * * —
Théy- were turned loose at 5
p.m. to drive 814 miles through
the center of town at the rush
hour. A motorcycle cop was ag: |
signed to each contéstant to make
sure he obeyed all traffic regu-
lations. -
First to reach the finish was
the moter bike, It took 24 min-
“utes to make the trip.
* * *
dust a few seconds later the
motorcycle cleared the finish
line... A minute Aater. came. the.
motor scooter.
The small car made it in 38.
minutes, The American car, dead
last, took 49 minutes.
2 Area Men Injured
as Their Cars Collide
Two area men were injured last
night when the cars they were
Highway and Orchard Lake Rd.,
West Bloomfield Township. .
According to Redford "State
|Troopers, the injured men were
Robert G. Blackinton, 43, of 1706
Ashtan St., Walled Lake, and Jo-
seph A. Riley, 47, of 3524 Elwood
St., Berkley. ——
Both Were taken to William Beau-
mont. Hospital, Riley suffered a
possible concussion, fractured jaw,
and cuts, and is: reported in ‘‘fair’’
condition.: Blackinton was treated
Deaconesses will serve. ° for minok injuries and released. cratic Club for rally. |
Grand history were solved
jtoday,-a year-te-the—dey-—after:
they ha ed, =
Se
{glaries and a break-in in the city
— collided at Northwestern| door shells hurled at the Quemoys since
ame
to more than 370,000
~*~ *« *
The Nationalists say the shelling
has not seriously affected their
deeply dug military positions. on
Quemoy.
Youth Admits Setting
Grand Rapids Fires
GRAND RAPIDS (UPD — ‘Two
Kent County Sheriff Arnold 0,
Pigorsh said an 18-year-old youth
lsigned a 10-page mE ad-
mitting that he and a 26-9¢
companion used dynamite:
off fires at” two oil co
ee
Pigorsh na. ‘Thomas W. Keht
said he, and the older man set
fire tothe Cornell Oil Co. to divert
police? while they burglarized a
}bigti. schoot about two miles away
jand started a fire at the Ver
| Brugge Oil Co. for vengeance. ©
Police Probing
Two Burglaries |
and Break-In
Pontiac Police detectives are in-
vestigating reports of two bur-
yesterday.
The first report came from Ed-
ward Bugbee, of 39 McKinley Dr.,
Thome through a window and made.
off with a $100 16-gauge shotgun,
and then went to his garage and
an outboard motor valued at
$50.
* * *
Police investigated a second re-
port but found nothing missing ‘at
40 Clarence St. The complainant,
Mrs. Edna Scriber, said the thief
entered by kicking ‘in the back
x * *
Earl Mustonen, of Oak Park,
foreman at the Cy Owens auto
agency, 147 S. Saginaw St., told
police someone entered the agency
garage through an unlocked win-
dow. Mustonemmsaid an undeter-
mined amount of change was taken
from a cigarette vending machine
and two soft.drink ‘machines.
The country’s first state depart-|ma‘
ment of agriculture was estab-’ DWaNTY THRE |
(Stirton Given
U.of M. Post Named Vice President,
Director of Dearborn
Center by Regents
ANN ARBOR # — The Univere
sity of Michigan has named Dr.
William E. Stirton vice president
and director of its Dearborn Center.
The center, made possible by a
$6,500,000 grant from the Ford
Motor Co., is scheduled to open
its doors to students next Septem-
ber.
* * *
Stirton has been a U. of M,
administrator for two years after
serving as a Wayne State Univers
sity administrator for five years,
His new appointment was made
yesterday by U. of M. regents
who held their first regular
meeting of the school year.
The regents authorized the uni-
versity to seek $250,000 in. federal
funds for student loans.
* * *
Vice President Wilbur K. Pier-
pont told the regents the funds
said, Is to, dalend. freedom.
lo. of M. ‘aaoed
by\ Willow Run Drop
Hatcher ‘says U. of M, is not con-
cerned with the transfer of air-
lines from university-owned Willow
Run Airport to Detroit Metropoli-
tan Airport.
“We're in the education and. re-
search business,” Hatcher said yese
terday.
Several airlines have announced
a switch to the terminal closer
to Detroit.
2 « *« *
U. of M. Vice President Wilber
K. Pierpont said the university
who told police a thief entered hisirealizes between $70,000 and $80.<
000 annually for ‘renting Willow
Run.
The university also had its Wil-
low Run research laboratories
there, Hatcher said the classified:
research would continue at its
present location even if all the. aire
lines desert to Detroit Metropoll>
tan.
Methodists Will Have
Dramatics Workshop
ROCHESTER — The Methodist —
Conference Workshop on church
dramatics will be held Oct, 3, 4
and 5 at St. Paul's Methodist
Church in Rochester.
The first of Broce - the ne Coe
ference, the
all young people interested in ‘a
religious
lished in Georgia in 1874, me ‘and informal Grae
ayo out-of-town attendance if :
a \ : A ee
aE OY probably would be made available .
a
ne ee
EE
ee
eT Weiingee ay ae
__' TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER. of, 1958 a ey ee
aa herent oe E . |Ho | Headlines
- Ginger Rogers, Astaire | Folsom Hears: Fonagina Gets Laug hs
~ to Waltz Apart on TV Clemency Plea \by Eying Human Foibles
Miss Rogers, lookiig blondes Governor Ponders Fate fire lay with his Gordon
than ever and relaxed and s | Hathaway other guises.
burned, is pleasantly frank shea tia Doomed re pir is; Where does he
ie Oct. why this sudden burst of interest go from here?
“I’m under contract to the Allen’
By BOB THOMAS |
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — What
makes a funnyman funny?
Take the case of Louis Nye, the
St. Gnas i ond Ried Anion glevhies, 6
taire will each have a big show—| . F hep comic who helps brighten : - .
two | i ee ee | MONTGOMERY, Ais. (AP) —|steve Allen hour, He is one of|show,” he remarked, *‘but it's a
Why didn't the networks have}. Wt And Eve yee A SS-yearold Negro handymanlinose rare comedians who can|strange kind of a contract. They
them ? what| Sled gh for a while, And I who says he never learned the éan break it or I can. bréak it
do one together? That's what believe there’s nothing healthier evoke laughter with the simplest
everybody's asking. “fi ‘ABC's or held a steady job, awaits of lines or even his mere appear- any time. I like working with
ctniile and than hard work. ; word from Gov. James E. Folsom | ance on the screen, Steve and I hope to continue. I'll
Giages's qnewer e Her October show, she says, wi!l that may save his life. be happy. to come out ta Holly-
to the point: “We would have * * *
Joved. to do it, but nobody has probably be more in the intimate Jimmy Wilson, whose death) y+ he is no life-of-the-party wood when Steve brings the show
“ever suggested that we do a TV }“"2 than most of. these big, brassy sentence for robbing a white wom-| | ¢ Y ge here next year—if they ask me,
' show together—not a soul.” specials. That's because she feels, an brought thousands of appeals ‘ype, fi ew rea lo of H fywood ‘’ * *
when she watches shows herself, for mercy from throughout the|Here tore aoe en ae he| But Nye realizes he can't be
This incredible lack of initiative|that intimate TV is better than big world, had his clemency hearing ee ae ody with the serious second banana, forever, One of his
mee Bart of SV producers . —— ” neers te pera yee. articulation of a Madison Avenue at friend Art Carney, ‘who
ee rere af the bert On some of those big. ones, ‘Folsom has strongly indicated] 4 man such as he has has broken his own sound barrier
a Statement from Ginger: __, (she says, “the performer looks like he will commute the sentence to as No, 2 comic to Jackie Gleason.
“And, you know else?/a matchsti A life imprisonment. He gave no|% TV- Carney scored as a dramatic ac-
pi aya * Le caangy Since it nana be a pity for a hint, however, when he will an-| Ta Nye, sting eae 5 tor on Broadway last season with
ng geen se woman of her beauty be re nounce his decision. ter of serious analysis‘of human). Rope Dancers.” This week
love another musical with/quced to matchstick proportions, Wilson himself didn’t ask the|{ibles. He began early, playing |ne did a superb job as the star of
Fred, but - idea op aay been! most viewers hope her ideas are |governor for mercy. He left that|!" summer stock and on radio.|«tarvey” on TV.
Gbrious idea at all the ae oe up to Fred Gray, a Montgomery|More often than not, he played an} Louis figures it Art can do it,
Soxe or a eid * Negro attorney who répresented| intense juvenile. But the Army tnore’s hope for himself,
: some singing al i dancing, 5 Lemon. strong H
* * ® eadh-ite bem't dine io mich Cadets the governor ‘plerwenns: c+ * Auditor to Have Part
Ginger Rogers, still one of Holly-jof either—save for occasional Wilson is scheduled to be put to) “I was stationed at a camp near in Conference at MSU
‘wood's reigning beauties, will be|guest shots—for the past three or death Oct. 24, a wild town in Missouri,” he re-
making her debut as the proprie- years, Following yesterday's. hearing, called. “I was in charge of the) Herman Stephens, auditor with
tress of her own TV show when| “I'm not concerned, though,” she the governor said: recreation hall, and I had to make the Oakland County Equalization
the full-hour special comes along/says. “I figure I'm still oiled up.” “I can assure the people of the|the entertainment good enough to Dept., will take part in a panel
on Oct. 15, over CBS-TV. She's world of my compassion for bu-\keep the young soldiers trom go-|Program as part of the annual Su-
ae ey ee eee nell + Goat Find man life. T've always reprieved|ing into town. It was a challenge |Pervisors and Tax Assessors Con-
but this will be the fiter Ginger igeren? Goar Finds more than I allowed to go to the|and I worked hard at it, For the|ference to be held at _Muchigan
17, will be on NBC-TV.) | . : Ee that only the criminally inclined| ability to make people la Rep. Rollo G, Conlin, chairman
aie dikd 6 las fone ct init lpceead te ath Sovca rote ent gat ‘stayed tho Michie Tapia tints. Boe tation”; the reas rai ae Spt he) He got more valuable ecprt(t,Houte of Coke the
his mi es Rev. Marion F. Boyd, pastor of | wiison ook ence in the Army by touring with ’
for Ginger. Inthe works—al-white goat. As a remult, be landed| day School Conference Thursday at Columbia Culaseble Clee; end Robert A. Dotedy of Matl-- |tas vation than ete eae | went Victory” and entertain-|Prineipall speaker at a Monday
though contracts are yetibehind bars, = Avenue Baptist Church. Shown discussing future ville, a director of the Sunday School board of the | 82 ;|ing in hospitals. At war's end, he :
signed—is a deal with NBC-TV,| The animal chatged into a man : » at her home in Marion lesi vedio
en ee a Sea Sm Sex| Rie are Crom letD John Sinemiono of Neshvilla, Southern Baptist Convention. The Rev. Mr. Sis year. He took $1.95 in the robbery.| "or" ac, o and night clubs | Butter use in the U.S. fell from
ries, live, beginning either in/day. The victim picked himself u Tenn., author of the book “The Ministry of Visi- more and Mr. Dowdy were conference speakers. had served -two previous ony SUCCESS. 1148.2 pounds per person in 1932 to
January or next fall. (And oneland called police. _ Z ; sentences for grand larceny, pe ee ee 8.7 pounds in 1953. At the same
eee cake on cent det The goat was hauled off to the bogeys ye consumes 40 per| Marg will be nearest to the| The Erie canal, when first built on ee iid Feoknsger onenged gy Mayon Base — ot ne a cs
get Fred Astaire as star.) \Grant Park Zoo. cent of the world’s tea. . eres mage along pounds
sate : guest | earth again in 1971. was four feet deep, and threatened her life. from merely reliable to a sure-|pounds in 1953.
: — . Funeral Directors _4| Help Wanted Female iv : p tices eR ees elp ae 2 Instructions 9| Building Services 12] | Garden Plowing _16B Upholstering _23| Wtd. Children to Board 26| Wanted Real Estate 32A
pate me] COATS. | SPEAR AERUGPRARE | CATE TAO MOY 4 GREP ESM ah | ER ESTED Sa S.A" | Ron agus | “a MRCP, PO | HCE NCA TA
° Conetanen “Gate Baie RS aetna Seis wine ONLY Work Wanted Male 10|,, 4 &B TRENCHING | Insurance Agencies 17A ie et moiee Fi LICENSED HOME, MOTHER = tie a in
Ba ie, ee me GRE Pa Saw | exretretcel Gt rok S| * pam avn ong owe, Guee| gee et oe acon —wome | PO" SRRRARN TBR Ome tha Coder tate a SM | ootonee Dar GREER EE| GEORGE BLAIR dea. ter of it Prancts eral & cooking. Stay nighis ot basements tod alte. 3 job too TYPES OF MASON WORK. ee pe Agee i ie) FE 4538 Dizte Hey OR 3-1231
“Catherine Sonlomahe and. Dongison-lohns Fe ee. Se ot . “Fieepinces are. our specialty. “ron. FE }7111 | 191 N, Perry 8t. _FE 50886 | Wtd. Household Goods 27 DRAYTON PLAINS
y, Sept. eis ate ro os|? APLARAT ABS” © | ane ree o> GOUSE PLANS ny = =i Lost & Found 24| Donation OF BABY CRIBS GI AND FHA
Se ight shit. at $193 Cooley | A-l PAINTING. INTERIOR. EXTE- drown, OL 1-620 EM/ ror FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV.| FOUND: Y as t oaquivoiae CASH FOR YOUR HOME
h s-Si ] Ra. Tr Reas Free .cstimates, OR ice Pontise Laundry, E| "GUND, xR, OLD, BEAGUE. _churehy nursery. Yes, we can sell your home tor
oormes IDLC | amr ry 3.3182 or OR 811i, SS 2-81 tere ha, Boomned | FTIR seat Sal ve pay-
i EeAL HOME Seth. eabe, one Fre, westng Hi CARPENTER WORE NEW- | sorntne NEBAIR- PLA TAce Hills. MY 308), FURNITURE = NEEDED Gall up for ta ator
rience Apply 412 N. r, PE 44210 BUILDING REPAIR, PLASTER-| fied. Beautifully finished. Pontiac | [OstT: SMALL MALE BEAGLE.| Pxtire home “say, tote, Ort ei.
Main Rochester Martin In-| 4M JUST OUT US A an img, brick, blocks, cement work, Phone 32-8101 Vicinity of Joslyn and : «Fy -y outri appraise your “property and
surance house . FE 42290. . yn Perry. | it for you 1 cae oll te ou — ue cash you can receive
— — = any Kind Have | CK. BLOCK AND NT Land Z 18A Please call FE 41666. Reward. Sate Phone ob Sem i om
Hable woman for light housework | man with survey party. Can also| pork, Rireplates and chimneys. sf Je. High. FE 20683. a Bot ALLY @ BON REALTORS
in suburban home, No washing.| Go Yard work & repair. I will 8 Aa ACE TREE SERV! RE-| (og eo Vie EE of furniture, Ph, PE 36833, | rap W Bute pneme FE e887
WB Me Ae : ee a al G moval and tri ceming Oo oi Bi abeth Lk. Rd. Reward, PE 2-120 =A , WANTED:
: IF WWA(CABLE-N OW CARPENTER | BRICK UO.CK AND CEMENT | UrrmitrioNTRUCKERE—TOIB | POU%Z, "ROWS. «ine Gaye, fae Antu erature | og saith: ge Wiliams.” Fa
Bh Bh, ae ts te make hours a and envinst 2. New ont ir yer. Also chimneys. No job too|° ing black sandy loam lie pap. Cail FE 4-8720 after 6. a a atte i LTE
e st sr iste week. cail FE 16064 for = pelt DB Murdock eres | flat’ Guaranteed work ‘Ph. MY | sevenson Hwy. and Rochester Re ~GOLD GROSS AND CHAIN.| Wd. Miscellaneous 28) “Homes. tarms
2 _ Car neces sa od had EXP.| Sis ; iNTER-LAKES TREE SERVICE. ok See cou, Dart lees land. contreets. Buyers eo
a cise baton ag| Ritchen cabinets & formica | —— ce AND CEMENT | TEM. Temove. cabling, surgery.| Eiberal ‘reward. PE 29009. ~~ | 2¢,INCH, TOOL ROOM a Paul M. M. J R Est.
for telephone selling. Ress. Oe ORE ee Re tins | . we ist Clean & *
Lunch, 2287 Dixie Hwy. UNUSUALLY. STRONG. ee, Be OS Ser re sane “WEED SPRAYING — canosseen 3 FLOOK o-3i78
Pisancial WOMEN Gait FE ieee BETWEEN ©] roy EE MOVING &- POLLY | ..WEED SPRA KNADE SHOES . | Wtd Contracts, Mtgs. 32] “& ent. Utuites fun. Baby wer
Bee two s this area for PART TIME YOUNG BOY "i YEARS OLD | soy FE ¢0460. A. Young. | OEP Doene DU S100 MI Glatt | Fred Herman OR 3-1592 Se a nore.
men ite Bonuaneping, cro or| Several women 10, wor, fro ll Coullger. “FHA| Mov: S| Fret aera ae ee | Vane Nasas Dine Wey. | pice. Tv, Ou Joulya b
ness and eesional men. Un; | Monday through Friday aie, Good. clean Catholic boy. FH | fions, Licensed builder. _Moving & Trucking 19) #20 cold wave, complete for gio wr] Fran we
erat | spperes a - .. iLL TYPEs OF CEMENT WORK, | 2-1244. Read Willing ; n AND 2 BEDRM. LAKEFRONT
wae Seared eT nae | Seay: rene OS) Work Waited Female 11 | 5s ftenes since ravras | it pe wee re cate) ERY OP RL On RoMTy SE Caan vere wating tr fone ee . Write Box c.o Pontiac Press.| WOMAN NEEDING- HOME. CARE - sanding and finishing Phone FE A-l aNe HAULIN piione FE contract real r Partridge, Sian 3 fae *
WASHER TO| of 3 children, small salary, EM|1 DAY IRONING SERV, $3 BU.| 56-0592 Z “EXCELLENT SERVICE afiza Confidentin: The Salvation | FE “bain FE #1390
take over automatic ash rack.| _3-3276 after 7. Ref, Pick up & del. FE siet, Reasonable, FE 5-458-FE 2-2000 UE AND PvT.
take ¥ PLASTERING & REPAIR REAS. Subset HAM _TYLEBaOP—— CA$H employed ls oF, couple.
A Help Wanted 8) oe Pick ONG, Se Gm beets | eee REPAIRS AA-1 Reduced Rates permanent waves, $6.0 up, Hair. - Adults! only
OS ae ae ee T Women w vast” Wit Whee ROOF REPAIR a eee Te Ear wll'w futon Bt af Johnson, WE NEED Pay D BA PT.
teed wi excellent, oppor- — You bag Fg Fy = x C3 nourecieantng piel Land AR FE tots LING & RUB i estan ek ° FO R CA S H IN = 2 years ear ing experience ‘ 4 SAWS MACHINE Day or Night Service A EM SONR RL. cur’ tate eves n | . py
CASE WAN? AD RATES Ais toe. Pontine Midwest Bas ig FE Footings, Septic Field OR 3-606 Manley Leach 310 Bagley st..| FE ae ee MS. Clemens wow, ROTO RAY OR | Bamon HAYDEN. NO OBL wire, 23 Auburn, office gear.
Bey ey ey FAURR Y, ‘sell things) “pe. a ry ant reser Talloring 16 oe ktm Srna re. a at J.C. HAYDEN, Realtor * entra net and” washing ‘facies,
; 2 “SALES MANAGER : Me : mut « 150 + 3: } 2 KINDS Wo roan gername On D rE. Newly decorated. Adu Adu afr
0 Bo 3.48808 Cla | ‘Territory of Oakiang Cossty. | floors art Reason. KINDS TER ERVICE Sept. I will not be re- 2} _8t
oe is 3 8 § ry through ssified -Ads. | Must have experience se in building ‘teers au en. PR S24 au, 7 Hing 5 AL re pense Radio and TV. PE 5-570. ih tS ureeteg | “Wanted, Real Evtate 32A 3 weer 7 RFH_AND ENT.
. : _ rniza! * a
is tf $i Anything goes! Dial FE) business and be be techs tgs LIKE A REAL CAR| bag on EES i. “PE | 4 Ts iene Service =~ Gores. me AY! Sell Us Your Equity aa ses erga
+ ‘ > stat of aloes $0003 -YPEWRITERS
* er 26s, Pont tae Mylrest sre $04 |] BARGAIN? Lots of ’em| dresemx i | "MaCMING. REPATRL oe e Maen’e 5 en's ch ming fed ts seams: oem Toes "Bint fea Bh METIS
‘ont - State Ban in the Want Ads! terations. Gonos, * forsake Fe work General Printing and. Of- , Sat. & ‘sun, wrk to % p.m. 719 - “ad Des pine Dixie | 3 :
TN ee in my home, Call_FE #8455, =. fice SNe C05: 5t W. Lawrenee.” © “Maple, Birmingham, wy OR SA. Ge tence a OARAGE, ‘Dien %
: *
cd } Me 1 2 ‘
. od ® s , > . Hi i j
z o~ : . vy A : td = ‘ * | . .
, : a : - > ,
; ; . : : ; &- is
a a - : Fens — .
Pere aM ee gre Ae ie ye a GER ae ee gy Ph eh tee i eR PST ME pM org Stn ey egt Altw anny weasel | x : + A 5 =t ft —¥
Wi Ay a 7 fu SE PON TIAC. PRESS, SATURDAY, sEPTENBER 27, 1958
Rent Apts, Furnished 39 Rent Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 | MODEST MAIDENS . By Jay Alan "For Sal Houses 43) For Sale Houses 43
| < ’ com i : te 1 Br ‘ ‘ : ‘ if 1 +3 : - ; ae
| ees ome! Open Sunday |. 1 KD | SUNDAY 26PM. ©
on. Cg eS Sept. 28th. 1-5 P.M. z Hummingbird Lane rose: Bulg” 5 ogee 5 "2 Momsen ‘ _ Huron Gardens | seca Ate
Macéde Lake in Watertord Two.
WATERFRONT. — - it | > Sharp 5 room on Sirah,” Waal AnderseD: Pa ul 4. jones, | Real Est. | 3 ee pare oon es well landscaped fet. pal a BURON e. Very modern’ kitchen, ex- basement, a oll heat. 2 :
“< WON NEW. FE 4.350" Oa £3653| fieTarge ‘bedrooms, with plenty |. SSF garage, Gall for i =| Lake front bome Sept.— cep Be, pase ene a pointmen
une, EM a Bi L many other features $650 Down :
‘ie 138 after 6 p.m. igo mameran 70 INDIANWOOD RD. fruron “anopping | © “ys Ye Tae |
i 20 ry FURY CEPT TO 705, owner tans | Monthly paymesis onl? #60 4 ‘welcome: 1408 BIELBY aed Call for ner information, ; |
_Paquire, only, 300° ba: BEAUTIFU KEF « 4
wee . Staked pers CK RANCH with a ae ioe tae eee Giscqneern” Auburn Heights 7 |a ROOM APT. A N5 BER scente Tot Large carpeted living | {ng burer,"3 bedroom ‘brick "with | 3 pedroom Ranch wiih base- George R trois 4 bem Le ot sms! welcome. @olored 2 . room in EPCACE extra large living room overlook- ment. Auto, oi] furnace. :
18. Per we, 32 3 Belawin CONS Ai BA TOWie ae | SED Rams, Nice and clean. Schoo! DINING” R g gitke. Desuliful stone fire] ocated ona wall landscaped =| REALTOR |. |, 200 Baldwin | ulre at Baldwin. Ph. =|° SCO AMD BATH DOWN, GA-| pup by doer. Lovely she eS two large 0 oO ag saipetes. piace: large moder kitchen with Breeseway and garage. FE 5-0101 4
a a a oi Toa Fo Pe voanl Fouad Pen Mento | See Gh Sanh | SS apt _ i r “iN: eoun is home, you must 2 ; ye ates, | Me. quire Taylor Rd.” ack feed pane tgp eave ergs eect. Silvan ObT mm To| GILES-REALTY CO. : NOW OPEN i “UPPER FE ir fon’ jeaver. FE 4.2031 MENT, Large lot w trees. INDIANWOOD RD., TURN LEFT | FE 53-6175 221 BALDWIN | AVE. $ NEW #BEDROOM HOMES '
: SMALL” SUGDEN — CAKEFRONT +8 Mr. Blanchard in| TO ABSEGUAMI TRAIL, RIGHT OPEN 9 AM. — 9 P.M s. :
AND BA 7") é: hom faruls y Easy fae Direc Mone : Ria Fos. 3 a>, Seca TRAIL. Price —| MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE a= le Sk Mene-as s .
‘ ing. iiford. Detroit and Mont ire RIGHT to |, $33 Heart of Pontias — -
newly decorated. Paved! Rent c nt aha Fontes elby to 1408, ATTENTION . $201 Jack: street, gas a will turn. stove Hg ® WE_HAVE MANY MORE LAKE- if =
Mas SSisn or Liane eatin | tnd taller tom, | ware ri : Feoenyowes ~ ask THE] LARGE FAMILIES ATE. FIRST : : furn. trilevel is the. : ¢
see tar fe) Stage eer ae | ye To te HOYT PAW FORD, AGENCY | Bist i hg : uple’oniy, PE $.4032 I ra CED ‘ AKE ORION, MICHIGAN 1% baths, Large carpeted living | (290 DOWN o PER MONTE PO ace ard. 3 baths. $110 sion emo! |. 7 Poel oar —Joungstown Kitchens Serene artes eae a FElo : iene > a West, 8 BURBAN 4 tin S large tamily that eS ey. Adults real, eats ont a By pated large Diving Toom ond os pond we sated <= very woman's dream, Complete ae oe That, UEPER GGA RAGE OAs ‘arg room, ‘freple ace, kitchen with ban coe type home — basement ye ledge’ sacergek ‘Eicken, % Mite trom Sigh 4
steain heat ome Responsible “Isn't he handsome? He has his father’s eyes, blonde hair bs tie nok, 3 bedrooms and | combination storm sash, oil apd qpespisiely, furnished, And Grede Schools ; 3 ROOMS, ATE BATH AND); es SRT choot, Cass mein —and car keys!” are two @ bedrooms with stor- BS ae Ee San sere car garage, Large well, wioated Perry’ shopping Center : a tilities UPPER. a ' “Ce A : 4
flaked “tis) weekly, One . elite ar side, Newly decorated. Ci! after| Rent Houses Unturn, 36] — paren Ft a tee aes ment, Monthly payments to egg Kar transferred. Wl ©
von F $ces} 1 : . Chats. 5 a AN > Ml ot 2 BEDE: RMS NEW. Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 For Sale Houses 43 |. . Call for « ce = DO yVOU “LIKE TREES Seine Mone rare Clemens et,
oer. entrance. tion. > is. AND per ors ~ PRP LLL PA Pe LOON LAKEFRONT THREE BEDROOM BR Ick ,
* on ie ~ hag a OF Northeast side — Full base- Y IVACY? ‘
ent, h_beth,_96 §._Ardmore. Sy ROCHE ARS BF — _Sr sat tts down 7B ae en sees onan $00—BRICK COLONIAL — 117} . Northea combina ste" AND PR | wesex'ev 3
7 ROOMS. PYF = est & ENT. Sa20 7 BEDROOM TERRACE, 076 4 MO.) foome oo Puy, age. ne of, jabato gherming Tiving| men ination. sto 7 wm <2 a ee N BY APPOINTMEN a te to buy. *iakewood oi age. 40
v RM. APT. ‘ONFURE RN. ALE UTIL. DRM Ere. bg wood floors Priced $13,250 acres with new modern 3 bed- |. EM 3-3163, izel?, has carpetin place; ¥ ' livin; fu a an RM A ith paral men room rauch home Large living
© tseer rent at 250 B Blvd -8 fu iil ard & trees "RENT WI TH OPTION recetien an eches Monthl (ota. m, dining room, sunny kitch- CALLs
Pe
3 aie roo po or? er an wale, i428 a pal rid $60 mo ri 10 - — po meng Wy oe dreom an wi Fa fall “by b + with os = lude Pag Tearanes. and te closets. Screened
2- 5 rales sel 58510 | 991° bedrm, ... $75 mo. au “furnac bate: : bedroom| © ads {| DLORAH BLDG. CO. PE 20129 or tS 8 idl LOVELY, HEATED | ; RY PARK, 065 | $71 Enalowood..2 vedrai, #0250 me:| ids. Fenced yard. Ribbon diive y two other a] 9 Per cont Sntecent. ersemna woe ag cg Ao =D newly decorated apartment, Cou-}° no 8-0566 HY } hed .$75 mo.| North ‘side, Meo | Sareea ement S 7 BEDROOMS LARGE REO, RM. —re eerie. Gorey Vai. Broter — $11,320, Low down payment. F, $350 DOWN PAYMENT celeaes vol. 1442 "ALHI ST. dren 75 per oH Os heat. 431 Hickory | “R ON 0 Rome with. fll bagoment, Lov bale Rete. 3 Ree = comb, storm 8 oll heat. Lovely caste Ss Tied ee
s
at ee 918. ; 4 Near Union Lake Village. Nice| OF JOSLYN, quick possession
| ye ss008 or Fm eno {Jooms & bath. Partial basement. | Oo GeoeM. WALLED TE MOD. oa dtp. We have plans to choose 4 ea & HARGER CO.
; sone aac wie Tt LAKE bea 30 Pontit?. cing’ available. 6 Teer pans. Bae Foom aot Sa air 33 W. HURON 5-8183
from 7 ms. Mes rooms," eas go am Pull basement & Ss . $18. OR Sikes, ‘teferences re * ne =. uthity: room a i rain ree : wo| _Ferace, FE s.0108_ after $_pm.|¥ BEDAM. 3 NG, | __quired. y. C "HAYDEN, Realtor bath make this a. very mere Hem stead nace mites oar elites ur. B FUBARAST Pon Cour car gatage, On Ra ‘seer| Rent Lake Cotta 36A moons} Rome,“ 8 very sencenable price. creent, nished a8 ra at 288.N| No drinkers. FF. 2-4160. fis eee, Snel cae ges SF to gun 10 to, ia" bex180, $650 DOWN ¥, MODE 2 GAS | BEDROOM. WN Q. y ROME. it MS large LcHELOy APT. A N-| heat, ORiando 3-1650, . soda | 8 Gor AGS, PARTLY Fone. | 8 BEDROOM MODERN HOMS, SRTONVILL EOL TER) ..
trance et man, 50 "Cottage. ane F FLOOR 3 "BEDE 00M aE ‘Noward. Phane FE ; en ee Se Rd, ew Gong ee Re | Se Temes on 1 acre of omer a iy pine bn 03 S w nie: LAKE
FE childret? welcome tidy 466 TR At 3453 Devista Dr. MUtual 40541. oral "starter ome WILLOW TREES. The 3 bed- plus, a wits lovely home for » een. CHELOR A R ATE. ‘| per month F ne isal or Age mo. 10 B Clarkston, AGEs A MACEDAY Thiowd rooms, |v lar e put ving =e yoo il —— Full ry Dedroonhs, ‘and + 437 FOR RENT SMALL APARTMENT. a 5 a. thin room, tractive itchen coal - if , * 4
GLEAN 3 ROOMS. PVT ENT 2| unturnisned ot, osttially Turaished, |? BEDROOM. S Mca | Las. 960 per “mo. On 38007. OAKLAND. COUNTY eaalry with “lots of, room for seating | Price only #6800. fot Soxies, lots of trees, ‘Gzclon bath, 37 ©, Strathmore, PE 43220] Commerce and Union Lake area.| £05, Dermitted. Adams Rity, “For Rent R 37 3614 Union Le, Ra. and 3 pe. FUL G.I. RESALE fenced, Large vulty Teoma CAS Reasonable rent. Write Box 115. | —*:8! or Kent Kooms EM sais iat after 6 p.m. make eal for “Lovely five roomie & bath bunga-| at ‘Tris rms tO S- ELIZ. APTS. Pontiac Press, BET RICE r 1 | SLEEPING ROOM FOR LADY. Take over low interest 6 eel, von. kiddies. be Living room, = ell, ,
bas mod ¢ tn. completely HOLLYWOOD APTS. ; 103 Thorpe. PE 39-5619. t Kitchen, "two "> begreouss fi fies | CUMPR Ese Be veteeem
i ‘nae ew “Garege, FE) Furnished or unfurnished, 2 & 3 1a th * beara: ‘tame gaach ABC SPIOMTTELD MIORLANDS ment, oll best, gas water beater, fpodera home, with lake privi-
iis" Howse’ st iran “ BL a ry on Glass Ortonville, Mich. ped grounds with NEW BRICK fenced ‘backyard tor esession, call now, we have the CLEA * cles ROOMS. PVT. ENT Single. 35 Bliss ét. *| For “information call MA §-1201| RANCH home, circle drive, in ae ar mare |. ker, nis iuties couple. @ or A indies. . GA- : or SL 17-1443, mens [ermal oe vision. Bpa-| schools & bis line, Good north- Fail ‘rage. Near airport. Adults. OR MODERN 6 RM BA living room re-|. Side location. Full ‘price $11,145 | Evenings after € call OR 3-5507. SS a" al down, 399 Midwa: m with} \ Sith 91.400 dn, & $7t per month one renee J LARGE MODERN «¢ RMS, HEATED, 403 5 on FE , ae i — ; a sche @ closet, mod-| inc: insurance & taxes. 4% per REAL
= child ‘nan ta pts w Drayton "Piatns. ¥ heat, rece igeaae A be mt foonane. 2 bate reé, rm., 7a cee hia — cent interest. : > 2536_ pixtz 5 wy, Ye 4561
fnotidin ramen ia Newman! soe esis, Fe Tate. : low taxes, exe schools, PHA Hint He sete i, Bygxt all ri nes} MICHIGAN y AVENUE : 33
. ood . meet, OIL HEAT, Call for vrais
PURE ontt "hed IN LAKE OntON. ored. FE after 4.
WASH-
mers 4 385. Pace 4) ORCHARD CT. APTS.
OF s "&| 352 East Beverly on} nee Lk, Rd Ro. entidren.
\ EL . e naar aeaTE a
ent,
) Sous & BATH.
Utilities famnished. MY 32-1961, vr 1. pad i, a fe
NICE 4 ROOMS AND BATH AT ‘ WS semis oy Utilities poy A A , elther two or iy bedrooms.
ea Seminole or phone. tra Pe . . oy id
oer TMAY 1 ~ EXCLUSIVE. GAS 8 CARGE FRONT ROOM, ALSO 1 i ] PE $8-3804. “HOYT REALTY
ee ke FE 8-6918 Ponta Seton of | FOURTH STREET, ¢ nop ARS | FE_2es_B4 2. Telegram nd 3 ‘APT. Ro E-| cept clean car etc, as down | NEAR JR. HI Pyt, ent. Heat fr, men, Private home. Kitchen priv- ment 6-b643,, 2 f ge ge Ret
AND Heges. Garage, FE FOR SALE'N MARSHATL. fecemees tictehe seme D-
heat and hot water. PE 4270.| room, “recreation” room,” i cinemas R. J. VALUET, Realtor 345 OAELA AVE.
2 bedroom apt. ana ROOMS FOR RENT. COLORED. serage. $18,006, Ter Terms. boas tole with -
eal befors 3, Wa east or after 6. TRE | HORT ROOk i ReRRING—— ane oS Baty Wnchent 2st utie an er FE $11 Have four nice 1-room eebins} er § H % gg iy : Hm ‘ia,s00 ‘vis LE-Ls px a beat *pewiy clean apartment with a heme y pals intl oe g = ae) ot with 4800 or $7,400} * $850 down. MULTIPLE“LISTIN OSERVICE ‘are Tar i PVT. aT. ARB snd ore? Bere, seis gerstor, Soaing oy Py FBO, ty FORO SCOTT LAKE = a OPEN Cy N |
a single ady only, eed '. payment, iiving room, 10 ‘i 18 hath en. . —
FE Fe. sead t FE 5-207 WATERFORD == FE 5.8875 Fase: oo * PERG, ROME 3% car rarare, Os ned . SUNDAY 10-7 " ddd | 19ST
7 WEST HURON WHITE BROS. ROME PIsieewe—ya. | -R0Oms With Board 38 ona 5 ee ar DAILY 2-7 ; 3 * wer 8 exclusive 7 ; FLOOR i hy WRENCE W. ’ be ae
eye vse. Open Even tii #* Sues 10 0 8 co) derly persone. ta "nurews bome. S¥LYToom prick bungalow, 11 ' Bac ehh ool peal 8 BO 7 EAyER : = un = or. me 1. Se = l ~ x19. a : = = ; wae re
on alee & & week. oo a Rent Houses urnt ed 35 6 Peart’ optional Like heitte. Fe : ay OF m hea 8 x iL. oe i ae ley
seman Jena | Led Bontiac. G } ‘ _ = _ ent age ot = Pan SUNDAY 2:5 ro
WATERFORD APTS. Adie FE Ms ik aay we = ert On eee DOF BARGAIN HUNTERS ONLY si by ap- setae 4280 Barnard ‘
WHITE'® sero ished. 1 child welcome, FE ag ele pome we, = $8,900. KITCHEN WITH eS Br VERY ATTRACTIVE 3
. 7 BEDRM. ‘Gas 8S HEAT. NEAR Hwy, _Wittage. 139 Hillcroft, Walled Lk.
eA ae Bae SCHRAM ts ac cee
$660. Dixie Oven_Bres ti} 9: Sun. “10 tt! &.|23 ROOMS, TOWN, 36 ed Mata Bleatcemmialead 241200 ; v err “ $11,000. -home cen » ATT D 2 Tiled bath Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 7, BEDROOM, — NORTH — HOTEL AUBURIN pisghased for. Saltag wig |REALTOR FE 5-9471| CAR, GARAGE. THESE on “ibe. anager : 1 BEDROOM APT, FOR LEASE, Rooms by Day or Week mortgage at 4 per cent, — | 943 saa Se 2 St You} love the pink motai $100 per mo, Adults. 130 Sems|2 Avaliable Oct, 15th. Yr round ter re ond jet = oe... OF , ios & UILD PROM _ YOUR. = cupboards, The 22r
7 Rae gmat Manet B 1800. | ice Cal Woy Mek Tash eles |e a ae Cooking ‘and? refrigeration
Daal : 860 Diniee
3 Open. ‘Eves. th 9; Sungay | 10 "ti 5 included. 2-car garage. Large gar:
‘ den space. Flowers.
Rose McClarty. Broker
F 2-2162 it W. FAIRMOUNT
Civilians
$190 Down cee Bullt
if " mterested. * call
NAGEMENT CO. DAYS WO 3-3350 EVES., SAT & SUN. TO 8-0851
WATKINS HILL Or Baybrook Dr. Pull basement.
Face brick ranch home. 3 bedrm.
1% ceramic tile baths. Also many poe ere features plus side-
= $,. ae? winding rg! $i7,-
down. OR 3-6915
COLORED G.I.’s
ROG Sor Woke SR HEAT ~GOO: Bano.
MORTGAGE COSTs ONLY
JIM WRIGHT , REA open PEN EVENIN ALA wn sat @ uNTIE 8: G SERVI
around, 2 bedroom oll le 8
privileges. only $8, Low down payment, | wee owner. EM 3-3077.
$250 DOWN
1012 Holbrook
Huron Gardens 6 ROOM _ UNFINISHED
Bote We eda tibet OVER
STOUT'S Best Buys.
Today
Se HUNTING? Do ee 2 bee and preter. a city location? Let you this at-
tractive 5 room
the West
rec, room, num ll x
media
ficed at
DRAYTON AREA Nearly new custom Pov 5
room ing
CONDEMNED !! hall a8 ate bal coal gar tielnivon
janeuch geod” luuber te frame in a new home. 8695
full price with €195 down.
1117 feet blacktop road front-
age. Scenic Shenley with
eutiful oak t: Close to
ville recreation area.
down,
ELIZABETH LAKEFRONT Chotce lot with 60 feet lake
frontag
home, §3,. down,
Edward M. Stout, Realtor 71_+=N, Saginaw st, FE 56-8165
Qpen till 6:00 p.m,
WHITE Lakefront Brick Owner is leaving the state nd
must sell — ho — a a 5 x a1 ft bed-
fooms, tiled bath, satraative. kitch- en, full basement, oil heat, 2
= attached garage, Situated on
150 x 480 ft, lot. Priced at £22000, $3,500 down and $125 per
40 Acres ‘Located “ eng oro Twp. Al
tiftable. 6 room Bate end and
Ss'tue food pulling. “514.500 with
Immediate Possession
fair ce, This an home has
1% baths, Gommtortante kitchen.
“Gas heat, and a car a port
nice lot, with es", Paved sire
$15,900 i term ad
WHITE BROS. REAL E ESTATE ,
eT
BUD" ~
Some Wise Buyer thi m, new! Sonordies: fous brick: cider
car
Bike ro Lee
zany ett al tae ws ner Schoo: .
hout,,
150 w&
nash why not ste it
“Bud” Nicholie, Realtor
ai7 8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. WOODED HOME SITE}:
oe ch, ee ctuachea 3 paemgerm - f “toot at
gum inum win fireplace, ca. ee
fireplace. oor bae Call owner 58 a
BY OWNER. J BEDRM. BRICE 3 beach. @car garage Exc
3
wally moter, lake-tront ec og
ms.
ee gas Nase ost Tes-
i "500: si500 down. 3
a e livin
re low $60 per ook payment.
» Peved streets, pean, qeent 8 a
ora tee a eM 3651 1 ox : Ow FaRRrAONE Pa a fur,
For Sale Resort Prop, 44A townsht;
ef
erry Morrow, o
un Arden 6
TROU Aarwood st “Cx
eee ee Mich. Betty "stewart, Rapid au,
For Sale Lots
3- To 5-Acre Lots FOR COLORED
WoopEp roy HOMESLTES
iolta DOW™
“JIM WRIGHT “
10 x 230 FT. LOT IN YPO Woods Ideal for ¢: cad
ment, OR
WATERFORD HILL A beautiful 100° lot idea) for
ame Bh —- home =
toes. Ben Grea REALTOR PARTRIDGE PE 4-3581
Visit
Waterford
* Hill
Manor
this
Sunday
SHOW PLACE
OF
OAKLAND CO.
Homesites Offering:
% TO 2 ACRES
LAKE FRONTAGE
ACCESS TO § LAKES
MINIMUM OF 100 FRONTAGE
WINDING PAVED STREETS
TOWERING EVERGREENS
UNSURPASSED VIDW
COMMUNITY PARK & BEACH
SUMMER & WINTER SPORTS
HIGHLY \RESTRICTED FOR
FROM
$3500.
Drive Soni + Disie”
mile” pe ma Waterford Village
Entrance on left at base of hill,
WHITE BROS.
OR 3-125
5660 Dixie Hwy,
Open Eves, ‘til 9; Sunday 10 "th 6
1s
RENT: IT FAST
throug Rent Ads! Room
house, apartment, any-
thing — Want Ads give
you - ACTION. Dial- “TE
2-8181,
mont
Hoyt Realty MY sot
LARGE LAKE AR
round homes
NEW CABIN,
rge lot. sie ares, ad-
ig state Good hunting,
$1,005, dn., Sens
= 10) Yor one aan i
_THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
963186. Ri BY oO
i, terms to Maple road or will
ee Marta $680 ou
8, ¥ 1 ie sen ths paved iret, i180,
pe ‘En, Wiad OTe
=| Flempstead CHURCH BUILDING
1
Hilisid.
LA . Wonderful wa-
ter af 50 ft. Joins sta vey pet ned
bantieg, fishing. swimming, riding
eR REN on no septic tank
ee ies Beawtifal views ip every
CONVENIENTLY located on la eer Ee. 5 miles north of Pon-
prici rom $1,200 with 10 per
eent down or 10 per cent discount
STOP at the PERRY ACRES office
wis P, HOLMES, INC. Lapeer Rd., “sane? Orion
24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE
PAVED ROAD
107 x 160 —, $1,500
LADD’S INC. 4286 Hwy. Drayton 3 Fiains : erry rl Lapeer
1231 rE $9203
WILLIAMS LAKE
gohi aria is, fas with eas
’MACEDAY LAKE i privileged lot, 50 x 150 ft
er cent down
mSCOTC H LAKE ft, lot with 1 car garage.
Union Lake village, $200
down
OFFICE OPEN 8 TO 8
F. C. Wood Co. Corner Williams Lake Rd, & Mss OR 3-12
For Sale Acreage 47
ACRE PARCELS, BEA
e we nade $20
SO ARCUS Recitor 1919 ‘M-15, Ortonvile NA 17-2815
SA JUST OF PON-
C. 650 on deep. TIA Toad
$3,500 with 500 do own. Balance
monthly Ses. Be Estate,
: 4-6492 or FE 4-461
r) , NEAR SAT ONVILLE,
rane sag 72 ae ert doyn sand
$15
Bite Righway, ‘SR Perot, PERRY ACRES
we
1 TO a
area
For pfice terme cs call
HEM PETEAD 102 E. Huron St.
Eve FE 5-0510 4
LAWRENCE W.
wayiord SELL OR TRADE
Be your own boss. Ver
tractive mote] locate
OPEN EVES.
584 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
“LET'S TALK
BUSINESS”
Dsere-In Restaurant 5, pears s the full price for this
oe Y restaurant business, Ex-
cellent lenae Closed Sunda: .
Needs —_ gar baleen pode
super vis: Terms of eae
Floor Sanding Business
Unusua} opportunity to step into a — establish business In-
cluded are truck, san pol-
isher, and all necensary ‘tools.
Only requires $3,000 down —
balance out of profits.
MICHIGAN BUSINESS
SALES CORPORATION JOHN, 2B LANDMESSER BROKER 3.8 TELEGRAPH Ri: PARE AT QUR toon Boor
Liquor, Beer and Wine Qiness in family forces sale. 9
ith license Always # money-
, Sea! ge 32 foot bar,
cooler ibe maker well
equipped. Excellent , huevos setup.
qua con — Opportunities 51
r Plenty ae .
property: jocated at peeoqos Sete | 4-8284 FE 2-3071 | | a arate WORKERS
We make. loans to laid
ee ae Gatton work for 30 days
Our Requirements Are: My Tuet you own furniture or a
Hy 2 Toes, you are @ permanent
= you & good work rs record be-
ad 2, soos, paring fecon
If you owe bills and are being
pressed for pass to
see us at once
of worry We cave confidence
ae and in vour commu-
Loans to $500
Made Quickly
- Pi always receive oleasant
. apo senuiderate and friend],
at any one of our
ee one directory for
BUCKNER
Finance Co, PO) Deaton yam INS
Suick k Cash $25 TO $500 On your own si; es
other security Up
to Our service maulck,
Eendly” ang belo as x our Strice.
Home & Auto LOAN CO. "iN Perry St (Corner Pike}
GET CASH QUICKLY
Up to $500
Oakland
Loan Company
FE 2-9206 es a e!
flees. (
_— Pod
| 203 PONTIAC STATE BANE BLDG.
G
Franks. 4305 Dixie “Highway. FOR
35-8701, 6s
A
iH
4305
20 ACRES Well located level land. West bs
Crooks Rd. South of Auburn. ie
unfinished ouse on pro!
eee value, $3,000 down. as
“PON TIAC REALTY 5-8275 New Service Station el lease by Sinclair Refining
Company jecated on Dizie Hwy
near Lady Lakes Chur rob. Nominal favestmens required, fin-
| Sas nop oe evallane for oe
a7 Baldwin Ave.
ith frontage on CRES
jake, Excellent loca-
‘or subdivision, 1% mi.
rom oote lord =
ae ie Rd., 6 mi, from
Pontiee ty Limite. ‘Bxcer
lent am at o5.088
Leslie | R. Tripp, Realtor Huron Street
rE sai
or FH 2-1306
0. PARKING " FS
Mortgage Loans _
ti 7 * oh own am rn Sincla on on 0 our own franchii =e Fr ¢isil tor an| Want A Good Mortgage? ment. If your home needs an approve- ment, and your debts consolidated
' call or gee us at once. Don't wait.
Pp t qd Sia or gent interest
arirlage DEROFF 18 THE “BIRD” TO 8EE ee o2 W. Huron
AAA Motel Swaps 55
us T™ Highway at = —a
et tas amb site of | WANT A 3 OR 4 RM. USE,
=a, washer < bey or trade, P.O. Box 1026, Pon-
Pag ES = = TRAN -
mer operation b be tre- an 78 mj Motor just over-
ers, apt, aid os. 5 you are or wha bare. you. a. 11a a bel Seeking’ the finest,’ this’ is it.| 9%, What, have y
eee on terme ve Holly.
TIZZY }
4
by Kate Ones Sale Household Goods 57 For Sale Miscellaneous 60
: SIMMONS ERED & LOUNG
of slip
Pe Peete “TRADE-IN DEPT.
Shee “slo ast seeeee fen
Avot. size elec. range .....
3 living rm a - ese i.
y a dinette 002. = ae eeeeee
“BUILDING? Then make cure i's
Burmeister’s
Open $ a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 18 to 2.
‘odern bumper sofm ..... eh Waln i ity dencb Cash Way
MA ora fi ree AvAnLABLE Pri
18 W Pike E-Z Terms FB ¢1122 | rices
TWO 0x12 MATCHING RUGS. COM. plete full size bed. 112 Judson. = +) F.Grooved Bhs meg | Re |
TRADE GAs RANGE FOR ELEC-| 4xg Douglas fir ply. ........ He fis range R. B Munro Blec- | Cer top carrier + ra : 4)
_tris Co., 1060 W. Hi x10 premiu iplap, per M $115.00 TV, EXCELLENT COND. GUAR., | 126.810 knotty pan. M 130.00 cheap 816) Commerce | 4x: Rede fe pe 26
Rd. at Onion Lake Ra 2:8" 6:8 doo 9-98
GSED TV REBUILT & OUARAN: | 3[n6:8 fluan b door with i lighta $ 14.95 teed, a4 Olan Lake sre. Cabinet a hardware ap to 80 Union Vil EMpir oon al D>
USED RIGERATORS. $34.50 & ate b a ae $ 25.95
tp Bb. Monroe Mies: Co tne | ive: Soo Sakae be: oes 13 Used Trade-In Dept. ag vine, oe. eee tet oS ie vsicnimesenenes seccecaes § 7.95] 19 tnch power mower ...... $ 39.95 size. maple bed......s00. § 8.95 | 100 Ib. oride .. ou... eee 2.95
] breakfast ececeness $10.05 | 8x7 grade A sine! ger. Goer 54.50
eaehar srecccckoness-Q20.08 sat, si —ge ae: ry
ice Gane dei 20 Be Steel clothes pos atl
rm, suite iret lum. 6 ee fea ea
*FHOMAS ECONOMY _ | #24" sigunout goors : FE 3-9151 | Cement, 5 endian * or more, 13
viet 50 . | Mortar, 5 bags
W000, & COAL RANGES TH COW. Mair tick =e a Matt & with AL as electri. Ba: Alum. iiuty Be side, roll sees
mere apptents. Se0 tha Sse eal Pe ee Inddar © jack post § H BE et $30. tye , ,- gulls negclopedin Me bn ts spine. Hi
_of knowledge, $ nines eee 38.
fen Christmas Gifts 59! fen eo é. Q-27 © 088 by MEA Garvica, tne. VM, fing, U8. Pat Ort Se eee | Sprome bali ovea visabe $ 9.
Lr ASS ia me : point shovel ........ $ 2.95 “Where are my antihistamine tablets? We're going on a| ‘ff, S8°¥ yf"! ener Toader pl laaie room rakes ana ee tar 149
hay ride.” . — Season, Windows. alt ane ‘from: _ $105 Christmas Trees 59A a ae ee
: bad ol oe BE = = @ line
Sale Household Goods 57; Sale Household Goods 57; ORGANIZATIONS of berdware palm. =
= contact me before ordering Christ- plies s — = yO uilting pre PIECE EXCELLENT CONDITION. HOT-| mas Trees Price as right. a or help on
aes got tables, en, matching a Faas pag = be atigr R Se Fi Epo. — m rm &
sete 'h aecerster i pm, for ‘ppointment. TONVILE NA't47| | BURMEISTER’S cor ee na Os aa = go 12. a 7 — —
ue Ave. rere On Sas alanis = For Sale Miscellaneous 60 Nort hern | DINING SET. BEDRM.| FRIGIDAIRE, SMALL , bas. ” faratture desks aiso peatiee rugs.| FE 5-0290._ mo 3. %- INCH SHEETROCE. CHEAP. LUMBER CO.
FE 0455) or EM 5: Let evenings. | FACTORY REBUILT VACUUM A_ 8-2918. 9948 Cosie » ge Bat ox1 7) UGS WOOL PACE, si6.95.| sweepers, guar, 1 pe bagel 2 kaa 7 hageee Open 8 a.m. to § p.m. datiy Relarsible $16.50, I mp sttss i ® | toes sg ae 9-10 ti 2
$34.05 Axminster, $48.98 snd’ Ho inraere of +5160. LIC & (get finest quality a 5 — "* | FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC & expert warkmanship at lowest pos: 42 in. double oven, Exc, cond. ae, x Comp! stock for
9x12 Felt Base Ruge 3 $3.95 FE 26822 8 | Aue ‘alum Setiber- BONNY MAID VIN CT ag bl ng Paine AND RE-| gias AWNINGS $0.90 . OF
414-Ft. Wail, Tile fe 250 a namental tron,. m 1s,
— FREEZERS — JOE Vall co
Guan BOUs AIN'T oar 3 — ri ® sem uel’ Pg Fe i
ers, 141 W, Huron FE 43066 | Silance Davisburg. MA 5-601 ak Pe
. CHEST-TY SISTOR SSaTAETS answ: 6623
yfiet ta bene es ieees me red radio_tah PE 5.8755 L TABLE Saxe i NS-
16 cu, ft. upright ......s0.... $319 UFR! HT FA * wis :
1 cu ff. u sess ratched, terrific)? WHEEL TR : These floor ipodeia — hurry, values brands. "Be gihtle ad No} been used, 95 8S, Roselawn,
= 3 at st orders 220) 4 WHEEL TRAILER. ‘AL >
‘Ss —— PARTS juorescent, | Orehara Lk, Ave. |“ 94 in. coal furnace 99 gal, oii
06. Oakiand A : GAS STOVE $25 weter hevtes, Om eH,
21” RCA A ogtOR TV. $325, USED FE _5-8053 2 FUEL OIL . TVs $19.05 * ates, Used Philco GRAY NYLON FRIEZE UPHOL-| dition. Will deliver. FE 6-0120. console radio Sweet's stered open-arm e chair. ORs FF PLYWOOD x 5 FT %" PL
ge Ee s, 422 W, Maron. Excelent condition. $35. OR 3-7753 carton. ¢ carrier emopete with oak
GAS STOVE IN GOOD COND.| rails & form fitting tarp. $25. OR $320.08 RORGE AUTO Shaw, 3-2626
ie Terre st = oa “ibasihanamchonast ig WN me * 296 Norge auto auto wae oes —— 4-IN 80.
Thyle InN earn ‘OAbERT ee & Howard = " AUTOMAT! Se HEATER 4 OTPOINT DRYER, USED, $50. R. At room, £68. sdelrese Bt, B. Electric oo | > on tank, 8-1580. | -
AAA SPECIALS HAVE “TUST seit |° fank “Rxcelient cond, rie
sOL. all furniture Call FE 84438 OR 3-2279.
Mas inet, Sa eae tot chalrs Westinghouse refrigerator. yep, = Power lawn mower, MA-
a
scioe at Leos 6 FAR N. Saginaw.
ag as So GOOD CONn-
ABC ironer, . old cB 2 yrs.
Trop wate rT, used 9
aubave A 43573
MAWOGANY DONC CAN PHYFE TA- 4 chairs, $50. one =
- ee oe reseee rr | 2 b » $35; ite drop leaf table, $15; FE
‘| MAGIC CHEF RANGE. LIKE NEW $50 FE 41310
APLE , TWIN & _ertb. Call after 4. FE 5-7298.
MOVING: HOLLYWOOD mates
winatte amo —eooH
i MOVED a4 a ow Gas Dove to sell deluxe Apex gas
er a7 xcellent . Ee ee "for ‘sts, eis Mi haze
wats W.
mahogany Groce . ” Noritak
soup bowls, pedistal table, Table
—, low chest, 3 chairs, sh
sure r
$5. Power mower, sib. oogtaeh end misc, EM 3-2556, Lake
Ronce gg ooo INCH GAS *
go sioner #8, Phone PE
NORGE ¢ good condition. "p. MP3 1201,
OIL OR GAS
HEATERS Siegler gives you furnece heat
=amnt" % fis iil Schick's MY
e ze
ae Is. RIGHT —" electric
Mj Davisburg. M
PAINTED VOR CHERY AND
_aresser, FE 23-2067, after 4 p.m.
6 rs with blower, al: ‘a 127” Le Suaveee $12.95
WALTON BLVD. Liquor, $10,000 Dn. ih gas space fo gas a or seul, A VS noes $10.99 & up Only $10,000 down buys this well | 98-8424 20 sets. to choose from all rebui
100 ft, frontage on paved Tod cn| located yeer. ‘round on| i? F T win and guarantee? at oBEL TV.
= so eo | OS i Be ba amet Ane Daal garam Mamela “all accessories. Tis Hp. 3050 Biles beth Ex "he PE 44048.
NR. “WALTON BLVD. | bieoty of income possibilities ine | Zobpson, Bem, alien tluer, aM DMR a _yte. old 2,50 ce Lovely 136 x 150 lot with lively meet. A aos, has Bi. rates 3-3073. Custom Deluxe 30° ; nge
— stream, Priced terrific bey for only $45,000 3 GAUGE BROWNING “AUTOMA- ~ ‘ a be .
ce wad Bee right, just sia! tic deluxe, like new condition ay pe, ‘Studio Fame Ted &
R. D. RILEY, Broker Ge acon for 20 to 28 horsepower outboard | ray. keround +e es a
509 Elizabeth Lake Ra. ;motor. OR away =) 10, 1656 Admira) 21”
FE 41157 FE 44821 REALTOR PARTRIDGE | #0, ACRES. G wee 45 5. .
Businesses Mich. Mente” oa8 on a ee) Ae ee ce eee For Sale Farms 48 FE 43581 ufo WW. BURON | _40160._620 Auburn Ave. . : cha ore Treadle Sewing machine
. _— corer i” FRIGIDAIRE RANGE, Cc table, SMALL GAS STATION & LIVING table _ All in exe, cond, OR
15 ACRES quarters, Lot 100x180. $11, “rajue (8 for deep, Boe, wets ii, * terms or part trade. For sinali | i55,-ponTIAG &DR B Detaactadiont iD MAY-
ga => see raeal 8080" ‘Mis : ap i Hydrematic. low e, Wi tag — aye. — — $2
i hel tea Se swap or pay difference for land per o- Therm ter,
cope. “ana al rooms, are. is 18 Real Estate Office contract or equity of equal or gts, pester, vane washer, $29.
acres of fertile soil newly con | Wond ‘opportunity
structed barn. 631 38600 cask, | eaten eel nsonortuntty for real | 7 GMC i TON STAKE, sWAP ABOUT ANYTHING YOU WANT
Ha & Athy REPRREALTOR Will sell office all, furniehed.| gquity, for pick-up or small ¢ar.| FOUND At L & § SALES . : se a. a .
M1b_Ortonvitie__NA_1-3877/ party Located wr Gee take Gao Saat INS FEDROOW. Eq COM, | A, little oulyot he war. but 0 tot
ae LAREFFONT 15 MILES lage. Has income property on| 1 acre, will t ae for home in} ances of kinds NEW & usED. mae — Only 6150 an acre; rear. Dae terms to right party. city or anything of equal value. Visit our dept. or reai buy. Cal! EM 3-2357 FE 5-2073 b
if AKC WEIMARANER, SWAP OR TO PAY
2 W. DINNAN Shell Oil Co sell. OR | 3-0268. We buy, sel] or trade. Com 66 W, Huron FE 4-2577 . S-SANY SPANIEL PUPS FOR ‘around ‘acres of free
BRITTANY fant FOR nae ve ress9
Attention Mr. Handyman "Station “seated fn be ater Yee Pier equal value or sell.| Darking Fhone Fe bei).
Here's your chance to pare at| information Gerard, 9| = FRI. ay Ul farm of 11 acres with c m dart BOY'S BIKE. tle 3 bedroom hous nea , completed State 4a . after ad ae bedroom mite” ‘fixe new, $115; fb "ot*Aubers slate on o Le
on nr 3 of road frontage suo. $1,008 coed cons ove, OO chest, iio tn. Ra fo sel sel in come bcoueabal build- price tneludes everything 59 s eet Washer. 4 at ran cae STOVE, a
sites. Owner says sell for roadway Orion & chair, $25, Chain ee never ames a 4. Dooney i, 7”
$9. are $1,009 down or will < 0 been used, $100. or §-2766. pee So retrig "Ail ‘cond
sco oF ce CASH FOR USED TV'S. WORK-| Fre | . ‘
Dorothy Snyder Lavender ae -_ OTEL SITE ing or not, FE 20967. sot £55,000 with flex- ie mad magne. bd for car
terms. Ne, WiLL TRAD $4,300 tN
STATEWIDE. | "sea yagre ues Orion area, 100x70 foot lot
Real 3 ett oe at Pontine i paps Balance owing $6,200
im? 3 "raiegrs |-0521 LEY, Broker Detroit PD wind rook 3-3286 a " plizabeth Lake Rd. PE 4-1157 FE
: For Sale Clothing 56
> “COATS SIZE 18, GOOD CON-
_dition $20 on Fog FE 8-2292.
2 SNOW W SUITS, SIZE 3, 2 PATR
of boots, Also “dresses, FE 2-5836
BLACK ALASKAN SEAL JACKET.
Spence style with hat to match.
FE
GRAY MOUTON LAMB COA
bs new—$250, now —$140.
Witp By _cond., | size 16. 4200
Sale “Sale Household ‘Goods 5: 57
" cS Su § moses a eat
HEAD- * loeed o,f st metal twin bed and mattress $15. 2 dressers, $5 ¢
2.6236 * each Blectric stove, , FE
BARBY ans PLASTIC MAT-|
tte, 88 few; playpen $7;
batbinet st feeding play table,
$10. indele Drive off Pon-
in rly
BRAND NEW ‘A BEDS. oe
-Folivwosd comp 19
ttresses, $17.98 oreo art Pearson's
BRAND NEW eons
aes me springs
Ave bunk beds. co
N5 R SPACE HEAT- & mattress. '$
Lake
2 months oid. Cost $149 sale -”
3
canoe BREAKFAST SET MA- _ ple poster bed. 2 pe. living foom
COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR FE}
4-6556.
— CARPETS — ALL TYPES — INSTALLED.
Advance Carpet Co,
3700 Sashabaw irate OR 3-7407
COUCH, ae TABLES, LAMPS
Good cond, Gi Gatew a ees cal)
FE 4-9815
SAVENPORT — ANE AND
enhair,
Pe old. ts"
2185
ae se aknce be. = 3 Renter, xn elec, stove,
, $45 eee, “Ui: ee rug °s pad, $10.
Ri ECT c
with trade.
‘y $188_ with
ances. Davis-
state range. new Saly 9
a samuel
Mapie_ on
PUBLIC SALE |= Not an Auction — All items priced
Household Furnishings
BROWNIE - SACHS
ae : MESS Ma
(W. off Woodwerd on orchard
a! Ave, to Franklin Bivd
. t Mary Day.)
SATURDAY, DEPT. 27 _From 10 ae _& ig
Rhema SS oe rag aa SA Same
Sale CONDUCTED BY
H. O. MecNierney-
Appraiser 424 Book Building
WOodward 1-9085
ve ROCKER & STRAIGHT | CHAIR, very good cond, $25 ea. or
fo f° bean. im " portable ironer.
R 30243
~ BOUGHT, SOLD, EX- Taare. 602 Mt. ‘Clem-
ens. 2-0801
ag oe . each, on abe and 8 r, 3.6362. — Li , RANGE } og oy
R. —— too W. | a =
SPRED iN - smeasieen? 1 YR,
told. OR 33547,
— SPECIALS — New,
pee e eee eee ere
STOVES.
change
KEEPING SHOP
FE 61558 GOOD Hi
61 W, HURON e
| TRGNSR A 5 ROOM SPACE HEATER. 250
gallon of] tank. Both for $50.
3-4825,
122 GAUGE GUN
auto, Com: lete at By SDniversal
a. 1
auto. mas heater, $49.95
ry trays, stand’ faucets
ash and carry.
AVAILABLE NOV fl Bsa PEE
stoma T 5 io a Miers ‘sdh 2... b50 en.
Good ¢ exterioy paiut......° 62.3 eat, Saw & a 00
We ca ® complete line of nails
insulat amiga rooting — doors —
SURPLUS. LUMBER 8 & MATERIAL SALES £9, 5340 Highland R4, (M50) OR 3-7092
ANCHOR FENCES No money ¢@ FHA approved.
FREE EsriMares, 53-1471,
A NGS-
= itchen ol and fur-
. Hot water and
eee t mrs oP esat| i
BOILER. ft NEW WOR’
water bonis. COM- FE
BEEF AND — HA AND
quarters Opdyke Mkt, FE §-7941.
ME & SEE UB. ag st airport
Special
Empire Supplies Co. 2600 Union Lk. Rd, EM 3-4148
CLOSE OUT
1958 style birch cabinets,
50 if cent off
cH bee
FE 2-0233 :
ato Ce) BURNER, COM.
. like new make offer.
inundry fe faucets, =
Five
er heh ke ob tor ear, Sel -. Gee trailer
le $1.50. bails for riser ah bay 3080 Green
burn Heights. slr
|’ PLACE A “LOST” AD, Call FE 2-8181 for an ad
to recover 4 loss. Dial FE
2-8181 for an ad-writer.
Say “charge it.” -
m_ boll- iutomatic water heater hard- <
mile east ot Auf =i
bag rages CA
SsseesesesSeususss:
Soot frees ae bet pmete p.m. noon A ~ ag
R SALES hie: gas, Taee Consumer bene tan ed, 50 $49 ona 50. oe iy Ry
after
. mirror, si
Iso tremendous
cine cabinets
ite, oe
wetesene
ote e ee yt
NEW
ste. as He 300 for > one
engines ation Agation sleet gariccharel i. a oe ‘i
Woodward Fe. Bhan needa MI_4-6053
= | iN es
Petey Bros, house patnt,
"Fk s Sater Lake Ave, FE 5-6150
PORTIA & eal whe, boiler, Ph, MAyiair 6-3822.. Hearn 6 OAEAN:
> . Tor
| evans Bane Te. 50 inh MA_5-7878 "or OR , 3-702
PLYWOOD
18 TN, BIRCH Davee mc £2. FT.
%4-IN BIRCH...) Fr 8Q. FT. "IN| MAHOGANY. 500 8@. FT. %-IN. KNOTTY PINE 69C FT.
PONTIAC PLYWOOD, 1488 oa BR ger
Mires, hes & wD, oes
mA meter. rE ale Gas ?
Elec. water bea hea
New Morrison
SPECIALS
y" grooved é4x8x%".....
Fir Plyscore - eee coe ber earheae ~ b- | 4xOxe” .....
ig! as a ytond he
as
SEPTEMBER
es Mahogany y Plywood e
Knott ty White Pine
i ePR =
Sar rrr
ATTENTION
HOME OWNERS OF BUSINESS
BALDW plano or ¢ A
MU +2004.
Gj
call fae
BAN & ORCHEST
NSTRUMENTS
defen. Sent mn ae coped’ towards pur-
“His MUSIC, play: * flat Rec oe gee ul ha i a See
1 owner FE 2-062
SURSCHER 6 FLAT TENOR SA%- o| srson 199m tiberty, Milford,
ar ailae STATURE SERINE PENG, ers, YF oes d
cat Sale Office Equipment 63
“Sale Store Equipment bed
a) 10 BURNER DOUBLE ‘OVEN
gh iia Sp mt ore a 8 "eel steam kettle. 40
ays sa niger | a
edb eee
(2) Taylor
Beverage
AR 4 be
: cond, FE | Sie"S bh a :
Sele Sporting, Sood 65
PUMP
shot
Fuel &
_ % mile west of Airport. G. PAF as A,_Thomp: 4 p ee : ° good : ” matert : fo ie
IL TANKS, D Palot rmice, ae and clee:| £7 PEAT, BLACK DIRT and _ tubing. = $35. trical supplies. Open 7 Rags | 4. beach ; grav if. desired. Heavy compressor, | | Days. 8; Sundays 1 — EM s407 paint t agitator, Bod mattress. 100, Mi m Sulldery Sup tow hE ie
f= O 16534. ii ons
f STE TESST ae Foam rubber with Naugahyde cov- GOOD DAIRY COWE FOR GATE | Hunters Attention | "tr Assorted sizes te colors. $5 nei teaiiel eee neler fich.| 16 ft, eyes wagon ‘$175. See!) to $7.50 HORSE BOARDED, 2284 ck i at Venice Ct. (off Cass _ WwW LDS
nois, Rochester. OL €-1407, Lake Rd.) or phone FE 32-5459. | 56in. & pit to $20.
jORSE - BEAUTIFUL 2 YEAR E i SALES. 51-27 ft Be rege n- Staion
eee hn nee Nethen $1 208. 520 fe 2 hedeenn | Used motors trom 10 ‘hp. to G, \HAMPSHIRE, RAM. 8781) gravels ¢1 795: 5-93 ft Cre ne ee eee mene | Slab. st" Pontiac Trail sioss | DTS * uile & save @ tot at pORRE! GELDING, OTs OF The price is right ne 58 Seager les Lie ated Lake. Take
pitt, qliet to handies#E. 47047 New Moons, also see the fabu- °. to W, Highiand. | right. oo Troon | lous 1956 "Venture, “Homes, Kew | le. 08 a ee a aes < 8TOOK (‘Moon d | i ow
mall. Baap, SOLER Soevien | | PARKNURST PRATER SALES | —82.
: ee ee ew. OS, Oxford Trailer Sales .
ART, GENERAL GET IT QUICK. Bk ZIMA R | through Classified Ads!
cs as & al Yes, whesever it is — dial
be in
\
| writer’ and get it!
1g as
eek Ay *
| FE 2-0878
‘See M & Mt Motor Shles
i
“Certainly I know children brighten up a home! I’m re-
wee cnyime FE rE 1008 oF or
LUCKY eae SALES
v
Community Motor Sales AUBURN AT EAST BLVD.
AS AS $60 FOR JUNK AND
cheap cars FE days or 3.
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR U8SED CARS & iS TRUCKS
. Matthews-
Hargreaves 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547
CASH FOR CARS HARDENBURG wore gue
Cass at Pike
Remember TELL EVERYONE YOU
KNOW TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR USED oe
AND PICK-UPS. CA
JOHN L. LIBER JIM HARTLEY, OR 3-6111.
Dixie “OK” C
Trade up or
7. Re 22 AUBURN
WE NEED
Cars *B5 to * VER Must be clean.
VERILL’S pu Dixie Bw
FE 4-6896 model
ECO
For top dollar, om late mode! cars.
2527 Dixie Rey, OR 3-1603
W e Pay
Russ Dawson 232 8. SAGINAW PE 20131
Used Truck Parts 89A
For Sale Tracks — 90
ogn’s., BUY 4 Tew
we You Snort “Orr w Prices
wee sue % .saginaw
~PONTIAC'S TRUCK CENTER
GMC RETAIL BRANCH
Oakfand at Cass
DIXIE. pays the minded of it every time I pay the light bill!”
Boats & Accessories 85 For Sale Trucks 90
Se cesses soe 48 5 CHEVROLET 44 TON STAKE. ition throughout. Call
Bab Ft er, Harold Turner Ford,
MI 4-7500.
your ca
ON MONDAY
CARS LINED
ON
CONVENIENT
PING.
Haskins
MAple Come out and select
Come out and make
your deal!
ALL NEW AND USED
DISPLAY FOR
ECK THE REST,
THEN DRIVE OUT
AND GET THE BEST.
. 6751 Dixie bway at Mi6 6-5071 me Open ites : Wo es
UP AND
SHOP-
Chev.
"ti 9
Also a fins
clean used cars, FOR QUALITY, CADILLACS
selection of other
Tt's
Wilson-Pontiae Cadillac
1350 N.
Woodward ~
B'ham MI 4-1930
1957 BUICK, 4 8.
ae Se sei Snarp. “Badie Steele, 4
| fam *. dr, BR : bier hardtop, Clea “Boo * one Cate Rae :
"bt Packard, 4 dr. Sedan. Auto.
lonterey hardtop.
i , Clean. se ‘Piymoute 4dr. Sedan R&H,
auto trans
‘83 Plymouth, 2 par. = Rambler, station eo runs
MOTO! SALES a $7 8 con AM
1958 aon einer 4
dr. Like new. V8 engine, Radio,
heater, 2 tone. 8500 mi. $1,875.
1956 Chevy 2i0 2-Dr. solid red.
A one-owner car thet is really sharp, H, J. Van Welt, OR 3-1355.
eT
power glide. i ake older ‘car
steering. DE a RA ” Power New Aig "irene Very Geen Pull ain price
THE AIN LOT
Hunter B! Mar" Hi . Birm.
1956 FORD, cus 8 YE:
ier, overdrive BER. sha ale Stee re Pay
57 FORD 7 SEDAN, RAR wer brakes power
‘OM, low mileage.” Like. ——
FE , 4-6437. oe
D CUSTOM DR edt OR SOLETELY -NO MON- EY DOWN Govame ry ments | =i
$8.65 -~, iy ae SMe. SS
aig LY
ni SED BTATIONWAGOF 6
; Country Se: FOM, Ral, whites, like es Eddie
Steele Ford. 5-0204.
@ FORD. $88
1957 Ford br. )
4606. miles. — CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE.
po poner, E-Z ey: Lo. Alamo
Prange 1088. 62 COUPE. FULLY
Phone re Sei00. than 10,000 miles yfair_6-3707.
TON DUMP, aS 5 py ogee a aia OX. and 56
JEROME |:
“Bright Spot”
OP FOR INSPECTION
SUNDAY
PRICES—
DISPLAYED’ ON WINDSHIELD
JEROME Olds - > Cadillac = Dealer
Orchard Lake at Cass
|
bom
FE 8-0488
1953 BUICK, 4-DR., > a CAR. No money down t] opmeee
smal) monthly pa: yore —"
oe Saies 193 8 " FE
1952 B ECIAL, 2-DR.
Straight trans. Perfect car. $375.
FE 4-8434.
For Good. w ut Used Cars
HAUPT
Pontiac Sales 1953 Pontiac 4 dr. growl Loaded
with extras. “eS
1957 Chevrolet v8 ” Bel-Air
Hardtop. Powergiide Waals. Heat.
er Power brakes, White & tur-
— $195 dn, 30 mos. on
1957 Ford convertible, White & blue.
v8 ‘ordomatic “ret Heater.
White walls , $195 dn
1955 ‘Buic< 2 dr Radio Heater.
Whitewalis $99 do
_ Lene hgers ‘Specials!
. Main St.. Clarkston
"Sen Nights ‘til 9
35-3566 or MAple 5-114]
‘31 BUICK sU PER
REPOSSESSION ean car extra running sondi-
at See ful ee Paynients
9 - mon regia eash needed.
Mr. Bek,
all BUICK — Pen. VERY - CLEAN
__ throughout, EM. 3-0081, H. Riggins. |
“SHOP
Sunday
BUY. Monday |
OLIVER
BUICK -210: Orchard Lake Ave. MAple
FE 2-9101 Open Eves. ee eae | ©€P’
HOUSE You Ane BS gaa TO
SUNDAY 1955 CADILLAC CONVERTIBL uae power. brag glass, ut Je Er.
tires h Cail, Bop fia” Harold Turner fires: a ld ene hob
ma aan ge a votes | Clarkston Motor Sales
be round. . CHRYSLER _DLYMOUTH DEALER
oe ; " @ DODGE lia TON RS Set We TF E A 5-5141
eaaate Lake i G Bob Butler, Harold Turner Ford, ee conomize ee INLAND LAKES SALES a Pn a
poe ent |e eee | RAMBLER Auto Accessories 80 2 CANOE. tra sharp Call Bob Har
OLDs NIF., . 1964 GMC. 380, ‘SERIES TRA :
Sn aedbatie e Bmcla 2 : ‘OT OR ALES & SERVICE
1941 TAYLORCRAFT, VERY GOOD | tractor. 983, tn good tion, | RAMBLER 5. J
condition. Reasonable, MArket| Huemes iespread 27 ft, fiat | 211_S. Saginaw _FE 54-0297
For Sale Tires 8O0A| _ 42854. top trailer. F ade“ ie 1065, CHEV. STATIONWAGON. 8, 8,
Transportation Offered 87 el cat. 1120” Hubbel Di Fora. FE sea.
GREENBORO. N, c.| NEEDAU RU - peg Rg RS” ag 5 /. 5. f } ”
“Gas alewanee te Herdord Conn. PICEUPS tram ‘SR to ‘St Crescent Lake.
Banels from “4 to ‘3 1958 Chevy Station Wgn.
Bob “Butler at Turner's | ould piscx 'W. Walls, radio, heat: ; NORTH PART MI 4-7500 ef. 7,000 miles. If you are Cane
either way. FE $6806 | 83 FORD 600 82520 TIRES. 2! thi oie evan Welt, OR AE. -» rn! : an Welt, OR
Wanted Used Cars 88! Harola Turner ford, Mi 41000. | qi eae nee pay ~ -
v 1s FORD DUMP Foon. 900 | ments. Se rhe cgi A} PRICES JUNE, CARS AND} tires, New motor. 61.500. OR "iy CHEVIE BEL, Ale Scat GSIRTE.
lig a Muibery bodal x5
ATTENTION! | 238 tos recar—va | » _Hardenburg "$5 Ford F. Lane Vict, ...... $1045 s * he da * 1 ;
WE NEED pon.” Call” Bop” sullen. "Harold | 33 Rumah td, sedan <3 ote : _Tureer Ford, MI 4-7500 See Ss cs wa de
CLEAN CARS GMC % TON PICKUP 7 SPEED | CORNER CASS & PIKE FE 5-1308 transmission. Exc. cond, “OR 3.1947 1956 CHEV. V8, 4 DR. lg nro
ic TRANSIT MIX 4 YD. NOW radio. ter,
All Makes — All Models working. or weir te unis eel ee one
SHOP AROUND 4 CHEVY. CONVERT
THEN SEE US feibie. uss Et ‘international Silcige, sis MA eof
WE'RE PAYING Call Bob Butler at Harold — *s code some pote si. Fa aes ot i986 BTATIONW
Top $$$ Dollar sy eta STUDEBAKER. | %s-| auto. ¢ dr. RAH, whites, “ine
ee eis STOP, LOOK, BUY rc NN’'S Foreign & Sports Cars 90B | .5 nev convert........-:...- 1905
GLE ior vay wagponoa | 7 Safe BP Be, hi | en MOTOR SALES MERCEDES BENZ, 190 AW | '56 Buick, 4 dr....... aces: QHO08
anon nen tocimion | He wiiintee™ | peace Fae SE TAS gun fo W. HURON _— Mazurek’ Motor Sales” | +s ont 8 eae cn Os . Blvd. & 8. Saginaw I ma e
A BETTER PRICE | FE 49568 ‘ $ Pontiac, oa er $ 805
Qut of state desi re on the lot. a AN MINX. $1,295. OR | «54 Chevy, 2 dr...........--:; 605 on "5) thru * : Pow e, radio and heater
For Sale Cars Q1 | "83. Buick hardtop............
eate "62 Buick
Saare a "$3 Buick hardtop
> red =
"53 Pontiac Deluxe...
2 Soong Hydramaiic, radio
eee eetes
SHELTON Pontiac - Buick
Ot La ween tee
and |
+ § 206
we ennneee
Rochester
CAR PAYMENTS some? Let ue help”
FORD — MERC TOO vou go te
some tess expens've mod
Lake Orion Motor Sales M24 AT CLARESTON RD.
Hardtop ioaded with extras.
cellent condition. Owner ight for
Army and will sacrifice.
seen at 1704 8, Telegraph between
and 6 p.m. See John-
42533. After MY ams
BEL AIR
In-ex-
6 call FE
D
STATION ¥ WA 2 DOORS IMPALA
ALL COLORS
rs
And up 23
EMOS
$1694 NORTH
CHEVROLET - = acta at 5. Woodward an
Birmingham MI 4 ON 4° Doors
MODELS
FACTORY BRANCH
‘ Your
PONTI
BEHIND THE POS AND MAKE
Deal
RETAIL |
STORE METS AC
T OFFICE
Mod Ta 550° re ets 1957 y pera i in s e 6
2 Ppl cad Oakland County. BJ, Van Welt. OR 3-1355,
Auburn Mctor ear GRAY Sedans BO POM: | 3 ‘uit, whites” Read: Ed: | Sales die Steele Ford. FE 56-0206.
eC GHEY, con EF PP. Demonstrator
mules ye no wee al 06 Less than 1.000 miles. Also 2 ‘58
rl vi :
er 4 p.m. SM BOHR, INC” MU 41715 | gag
Or Va, Paige OGRA SY ros enh apawsth Lake e 11 t } e FE +o WAGON | Ra. PE. 6-281. ap CH STATION WA 4 1982 FORD V-8
dr. aoe cond All access. OR REPOSSESSION
VR js] BEL AIR. HT. tig full price Fl. ——— only
Very clean. 197 8, Johnson. ee ae — ede ~ pond
OTE tek price sot Popa COND. Beater Mr Bell. Sievah Cakes.
1957 Chev. 2-Dr. 1056 FORD STATIONWAGON, 9
This is a black, 6 cylinder with! Pow. R Rai Dower siserins: power 12,000 actual ie. ot a mark| jrakes The family ce Tne Padi = Med pon is Bn ag Mig Steele | aS
sliowan 8 wr LES . 1854 FORD, Tike SEDAN,
68 Oakland FE 2-235) | auto. ——- “power. stee mee Re-
$50 DOWN s Johason ‘Motor Teche. uy
"49 thru ‘53 Meds is "bi 31 FORD. i* 2 DR. ot $95, No Finance Co, — No Co-signers. H. Ri
No wit Check ~ § Deliver:
TIONAL soneee . ALES Py Gbere Ave 8-4551
1954 210, WAGON,
Bat ecto Sere 5 Sade ote sar . md
wals. EM
1 quity Seay DEL-
. neyo P. ta de “Radio & heater.
for ‘55 or *
. Wil at ae |
1952 CHEVY 2 DR. ‘% ton item, pice
~ Phosere ere a Call
Credit” Aker Parks at MI 47500. Herold ‘Tumer Ford
‘41 CHEVROLET, EVROLET, $60. 0. OR 3.8746,
1958
Chrysler
odge
, Plymouth
RUNNI xIxG
To ‘DRIVE
AUTO SUPER MART
PLYMOUTH sore aes i. | dos eee
En ere Pi "36 v8, 4 DR. R&H. 2
Rak
rE
1954 a 4 DR,
Exc, cond Sree eo 43529
Pree ee eer eee ees)
ee ee
er Yer eel Del. 3 dr. a
Seen etree ew eeee
1954 Pontiac Starchief Catalina, 1
owner. Hydramatic, Power br
Power seats ........-+ ove
1950 Buick Exe. cond, ....,..9195
1953 Pontiac 4 dr. Hydramatic $495
HOMER HIGHT MTRS.
a agg power stee
— hes ww tires. other
Like new, must sel)
Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH DEALER M-15, Clarksto 5-5141
.7 DE BUY MY gs
demonstrator, Auto trans. radio
heater, sw, new car guarantee
$317.25 cash or your trade of
equal value. Take over m
for. Bob. gg bore fe _
gy we “Woodward vor
Bim in
Edsel CITATION, 4 DOOR HARDTOP —
power windows, power — $2750
Lincoln Premier coupe ....
Chrysler NEW YORKER 4 DR. F ‘OP
— power steering, power brakes,
power windows, power
seats $3450. $4250 RHEE HO OHH.
ene ee ee
Pontiac STARCHIEF 4 DR. HARDTOP
radio, mover bydramatic, $2756.
eee
Plymouth BELVEDERE 4 DR. HARDTOP —
radio heater. automatic trans-
mission .... . rion ee eveteaee te
DeSoto PIREFLYTE. 4 sh ws HARDTOP — radio, aonter. power steer 4
brakes vesavess Que 1 A AR SMa
* ee
“Rochester: Ford Dealer
OL: 1-9711 — , ae hardtop, © bly uipped
a ie __ 32843. 6844 ony tere Rd.
ii FORE gration 0 Country
Sean
r
Eddie Steele S peek
8 FORD Vic, FORDOMATIC.
ss FORD Bargain. 6048 Pheasant
i958 wet % ee
FE
SU Crescent Lake.
4 DR. ‘AGON,
6 cylinder, std. tra 8. Like ne
FE 5-0204
RADIO, HEAT-
FORD RAN
‘ans., R&H.
white Eddie Steele
Ford,
FORD, ‘58
$3. e
Megr., Parks. “at 4-7500.
_ Harold _ Be Ford =
i9s6 NASH CUSTOM 4 _ ar. herd PE A
19832 NASH 'ATESMAN SEDAN
Automatic UT:
NO MONEY Assume pay ments. of $19.76 mo. Call C
Mfr., Mr ‘arks, at
Harold Turner Ford
‘60 0! . CL .
customized, rebuilt motor, new
. mii Good 3, $250.
good dey OL {ees i208
as nd _— ter,
¥Mo on trade, 1119 Rewedin, FE 8-2627,__
VERT, RA top,
.
on an take fover pai WiG- $425 e ments,
FE 5.3002. 395 Linda Vista. ‘33 MO!
REPOSSESSION
sot rat pe toe, Payments 15.39 month _Mr_Bell. Great Lakes, FE #0402
CLASSIC
QUALITY
= (CADDY'S
$495 1? CADILLAC 4 dr,
th Hydramatic, power yo
il brak Pull Rich look i iy” 908 uth on ¥
‘no down payment required.
$1895 1954 CADILLAC 69 4
Beautiful sky-blue finish win a en
eyo tires. ulpped with ae
matic, — te ne
brakes and all o her fine
features that ukes CADILLAC
America’s. No. 1 prestige car.
pool down with 24 months on bal-
S225
be. $306
and 24 months on balance.
“$2595. 1956 CADILLAC @ dr. 62 sedan
with wer, premium tires,
seleetfomal = radio, custom —
vot’ mat °Or Shere La L ke i: rcehar
at Cass. dow hs
on balance
down
n and 30 months
te CADILLAC } ata = pean
2 TOME. “Bright Spot”
Olds - Cadillac Dealer
Orchard Lake at Cass
— “Soma till 101: ks etd Jes |
|For Sale Housetraillers’ 78 CARNIVAL 3 imcucaan| For Sale Cars 91, For SaleCars | 91, For SaleCars 91, For Sale Cars 91
Detroi T , “Tad, DESOTO 0 RTATION
: oe ve Rarene | |__|" HASKINS |R:&C. Rombler| *e#PO8E8i0"" | “Cher cate
‘HS crates “Invites You [ged§dt i 2 Be sao|- Reema aPaehaet| 8 Baers Bae
foe : ES reg a ed = ee
ok Bob Hutchinson ON SUNDAY ‘4 Chevy, 210° ar. rogers 3a Sales & Service PE 2-0658
"59 amekas. ‘Wagon on Display
53 PLYMOUTH
CLUB COUPE
R PAYMFENTS
A TAME PER MONTH —
BRAID DegoTg rie UTH RALER
Years Fair Dealing
" Ge at W. Pik ig St.
FE 2-0186
1958 PONTIAC STARCHIEF 4 DR.
and steer
ing, 4,000 miles.
trade mg OR 3-7571
ROCH ESTER'S
Best Buys - Oles weeliday, epe., extra
., $1298
ae Mose w $1050
sa 4 iss. 4dr, seden, low ’
iy Poids ae eer $ 595 ord, custom 2 dr., real $¢
sana a State ‘4 a
ae REE Ip
HOUGHTEN & SON
TOON, READE Dame 528 N. Main, Rochester. OL 1-9761
951 Borris 4 DR. SEDAN.
, Coos Gre Dan Ss. new battery. $200, 809
. Bay,
$33. PONTIAC, 4 DR.. DELUXE,
gm d very good cond. No
FE 4-5641. rust,
7 DR. CATALINA.
2-2004.
1958 PON'TIAC
eee eee ee
power
m . Lucky Ai
Sales. 193 S, Saginaw 4-2214.
‘ia PONTIAC cis OUPE. R&H,
PONTIAC T,
wer. Straight stick, Has every-
eo A paareen hevews Assume
SHARP— 33 PONTI ible, $575, FE 2-1652.
a w 893. W. Troquol W, Troquoil; _ne s ‘
is68 PONTIAC, 8 PASSENGER, ES
miles, Pow br
Tents Ith & tequels.
matic heater,
tionally = mene ee
— hone OR_3-8853 after 6 p.m. __ A-1 condition, FE
Ri
balance, FE
PONTIAC CONVERT-
"85 CATALINA,
satenwasen than 4,066
PONTIAC. 1948 4 DOOR, HY
radio and
Phene OR
PO iD.
Mechanlealip FE
43434,
1955 PONTIAC. 4 DR. STOM
sedan, Antenna. Foner’ brakes
extras, Privately owned, A-
cond. $1,100. Can be seen at 681
Williams tare he
1950 STUDEBAKER CPE. GOOD
transportation, $125, FE 4-5382.
1952 STUDEBAKER ee 2-
¢. pace co pire 3-0081 Specleot. $125,
1962 WILLYS, STATION IN WAC
pate ‘Rao Soot
O MONEY Assume ih
ments of $14 iM Call Cr rt. Parks at MI £1800.
Harold Turner Ford
“CY” OWENS FORD
55 WILLYS 2 DOOR HARDTOP
=
cy”
OWENS 147 8. SAGINAW FE 5-4101
‘33. JEEP [Agta WAGON.
a = Dare 3 85 Oskland, Eves.,
FINAL Clearance
\LL.
1958
OLDS
Cadillacs:
Must Go!
DEMOS
1958 Olds Power Steering & Brakes
Air Conditionirig
_ Power Windows & Seat
Reg. Retail $5277
For You $3,295
| 1958 Olds 88 4 DOOR HARDTOP
$2295
08 4 DOOR HARDTOP Loaded with Equipment
$3250
1958 Olds 98 4 DOOR SEDAN
Air Conditioning
Power Steering & Brakes
Power Windows & Seat
Reg. Retail $5,000
oT For You $3300.
JEROME. -Olds- Cadillac
we Ss 8. Sime FE 4-3566
a*
1958 Olds. — Ne re Meek Sener Wee teen amen crear | Cine
j te.
4
. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER. 27, be
*
be . Today’ S Televiaiin Programs - - Programis furnished by stations listed tm thie column are subject to change without notice.
Channel 2—-WJBK-TV Channel @—WWJ-TV_ Channel. I-WASZ-TV__ Channel 9 CRLW-TV Eydie Adams, Dorothy Sir. 3s 7 sten, Stan Freberg on last
show of summer,
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS (2) Miss "Fatrweather. $:30 (9) Movie, , _ Cra — ses at}. : traws,”’ al
:00 (7) Bowling. 11:20 (4) Movie. ‘Trudy i s
Marshall,/3:46 (2) Football Scoreboard.
e ~~ an “Ladies of Washington.” (7) Count Your Blessings; [9:30 (2) Alfred Hitchcock. “Lamb).
(2) Showease tcont.) 44.) to Slaughter,” Barbara Bel
4:00 (2) Sea Around Us. ee ce Pend
6:30 (7) Bowling. (cont.) 11:25 «iat Th. Vittor (7) Star Showcase. (7) Open Hearing. Panel.
(9) Holiday Ranch. — ure, “Gambling House.”| (4) Playhouse 30.
(4) Soldiers of Fortune. Ad-| 30? Boris Karlotf,, “Isle. of Mer EE ee a venture. the Dead.” ('45.) 4:18 (2) Business in Focus (4) Decision. Man on al
cachet Sand . Or ie ert 11:30 (7) Shock Theater. -Boris| 4: Colle : oe
7:00 (7) Explorers. Exploring} Karloff, “Black Cat.” MD cae Mere cee Eeyeicien, documentary oe
Yellowstone. e Heap (cont.) (4) Willy, . , ey g day a Fadio-
(9) Gilead Baptist. ’ (cont.) alee
(4) Casey Jones. (2) N'watch (cont:) Ay Deteott, Byes. (9) News, Weather.
oe a 6:00 (2) Great Game of Politics./19:15 (9) Little Theater.
< (7) Film Feature. ,
2:30 (1) Dick Clark Show, Valerie) SUNDA MORNING [g:99 (2) Family Doctor. ae De oe
| Carr, Freeman, ~ (4) ants to Know. Gordon
| ‘c a 255 (2) Meditations. . _ Ranger. ee J. Swans co
People Funn ‘élescope.
(2) Perry. Mason, “Case .of|800 (2) Religion for Shut-Ins. carey Some Dee Ee
the Lucky Loser.” rr
| 8:30 (2) Christophers, sunpay wiour mcmucurs| Gen” "iumpnrey Bogart,
| g:00 (7) Billy Graham. Religious Katherine Hepburn.
in Charlotte, N.C. 8:45 (2) Accent. 6:00 (4) Movie. “The Babe Ruth : .
(9) Corliss Archer. Story,” William Bendix,/33:99 (2) News, Weather.
(4) (color) Perry Como. Ann|8:58 (4) (color). News. Claire Trevor, Charles Bick- (4) Movie. ‘“‘Women in Dis-
Sheridan, Everly Brothers, (9) Billboard. ford, tress,” Dean Jagger, Irene
actor Ray Walston. (D Annie Oakley, Hervey.
(2) P, Mason (cont.) 9:00 (2) Court of Health. (9) Popeye. 7) Movie. “The Great Fla-
| (4) Church at the Cross caren” Erich von Stroheim,
8:30 (7) Graham (cont.) roads. 6:30 (2) Twentieth Century. Mary Beth Hughes.
(9) Temple Baptist. _ (1) Joe Palooka, “October Classic,” highlights
(4) Como (cont.) (9) Oral Roberts. of past world series. 11:20 (2) Sports.
(2) Western. Randall hunts (7) White Hunter. “Voodoo =
robbery suspect. . 9:30 ” pap deb Pulpit. Wedding.” 11:25 (2) Dowie. rate Fs =
‘ row,’ ohn Garfield,
9:00 (7) Lawrence Welk. (D Understanding Our World 7:00 (2) Lassie. Maureen O'Hara.
(9) Boston Blackie. (9) Film feature, (1) You Asked For It. Visit *
(4) Steve Canyon. Canyon with TV repairmen to repair
aids.test pilot friend in proj-/t0:00 (2) This Is the Life. antennas atop Empire State MONDAY MORNING
ect to launch jet fighters (4) U. of M. Hour. Building, school for show
with rocket booster. — (7) Faith for Today. business animals, champion|g-s9 (2) Meditations.
(2) Gale Storm, Susanna (9) Sacred Heart. —_— —_ » dupli-
stages a wn. cate Houdini’s sack escape 'g, The Front.
10:35 (9) Modern Science. minwar tien te Fem Pee
9:30 (7) Welk (cont.) entire ship during 12-hour|y.99 (2) TV College.
(9) Here’s Duffy. Variety. | 10:80 (2) Cartoon Frolics stay in Hawait-before return- (4) Today.
ni 7 “Com Chetnaghers, (9) Movie. “6,000 Enemi * flict.” (9) . “6, nemies,”’|..09 (0) Ca @ Have Gm, Travel. Pale Paul Kelly. 7:30 (2) Cartoon Frolics.
, plays for hbor-/ {1:00 (2) Sagebrush Shorty. 8:00 (7) Cartoon Carnival.
ing ranchers, : (color) George Pierrot, {7:30 (2) Bachelor Father. 7s
F Seems. Co (color) Northwest Pass @) Captain Kangatoo.
10:00 (7) Sammy Kaye. Kaye and S Six-Gun J :
orchestra with musical va- male ry Maverick. "The Lone: 6:99 ) Big Show.
riety. u1:30 (4) TV Reader’s Digest. some Reuition” ~ * | g-45° (2) Cartoon Classroo
© Aone 8 SL lari 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan. Si aie = (4) Amateur Hour. 9 : an. Singer-|.
(2) Gunsmoke. Army major More. guitarist Sacha Distel, Brig-|9:% (4) I Married Juan.
thinks Pawnees are getting itte Bardot’s fiance; Mickey|9.95 (2) News.
smuggled rifles. SUNDAY AFTERNOON Mantel, Yogi Berri, Gil Mc-
: Dougald, Hank Bauer,/9:30 (2) Jimmy Dean.
10:10 (9) Weather. 8:00 (2) (color) Little Lulu. Whitey. Ford, Bob Turley; (4) Romper Room.
(4) (color) Colorland. Comics Wayne and Shuster; (7) Our Friend Harry.
10:15 (9) Theater. { (7) Bowliug. on Spanish dancers; comic ac-|10:00 (2) For Love or Money.
— oop Gingold; (4) Dough Re Mi—Quiz.
10:30 (7) Target. Michael Wild- Inside Football. singer son, come- ,
eee Cla ER” Pe cee Comcervetien: dian Alan King; dancer Bob-|10:80 (2) Play Your Hunch.
(9) Theater. John Agar. Scien by Van; singing group and).
“The Golden Mistress.” ~ idee ei winners of Harvest Moon| 0:80 pe Star ee
(4) :45 (2) Pro Press Box. Ball Dance Contest, guests. (4) Treasute Hun
(4) Brains, Brawn. Bob (4) Industry on Parade. (4) (color) Steve Allen. Ten-|_ (9) Movie.
Cousy of Boston Celtics, Bob ese : nessee Ernie Ford, Joan|!1'% (2) Arthur Godfrey
Pettit of St. Louis Hawks in|1:00 (2) Pro Football. Davis, Jimmie Rodgers, Ray (4) Price Is Right.
quiz with musicians Alec Gr Dees Saepinte See. Anthony, guests. 11:25 (7) News.
Templeton, Deems Taylor. (9) Movie. ; (9) Movie... ““Madame Curie,” q
(2) Honeymooners. (4) News. James Hilton, Greer Gar-/11:30 (2) Top Dollar.
son. ; (4) Concentration.
11:00 (7) Federal Men. 1:30 ) Jonata She 0 can Pla out (7) Ricky the Clown.
Theater . “ . Z. $
——. =_— ¥- Quiz. 14:45 (1) Noontime Comics.
(2) News. 2:00 (7) My Little Margie. 8:55 (2, 4, 7) President Eisen-
hower. Address on annual MONDAY AFTERNOON
11:15 (4) Weather. 2:30 = Movie. United Community . Fund. cus i coe ot Li
-- Today's Radio Programs
WIR, (16%
CKLW, (see ww, se WOAR, (1132) WXIZ, 8) WON, (1460) WIBK, (1490)
" *
: Christisn, itness WXYZ, Pau) Harv :30—WIR. Music Hall
— Sous Viewpoin a pt St News pat *ORLw. News, David
arpa N Wow Armenia ous Gos, Hr. WPON. Bob Wesley esas News, Tom George
Wx. ews, 110:00— an + atl ll Nee Page
W; Musical Aire mee TO—WIR, Tndictment, | Yirwa. F.” Eitzabeth
WJBK, Don McLeod val news, aN eee WxyY2, Mereakfast Club
, World News . ee JBE, WJBK, WN ae
, fi WOAR News vation WPOK, News, torte k
6: IR, 3 8 * * ‘WOAR, News, Martyn
Ww, Monitor ’ ;
e
WPON, Handy'’s Houseparty
WJBEK, Stero Arthur
CKLW. Bible Class | ww, N Monttor
sergin yen emir |S Bee en a caLW. mar] Theater WETD Ker ae gy cos a WPON, Pontiac Notes . WIEBE, News, aA
WJBK, Jack, Bellboy WJBK, Lenaay tea News
WCAR, News Logan WPON. Central Methodist wi fey age hoy . Chuck Lewis
’ 11:30—WJR, Tabernacle WXYZ, College Choir 1
Te etter Meeting |" Ww3, Rival World CKLW News, Album —
CKLW, Sec, of State WJBK, Pdtn. for Blind WJBK, News, Stereo 11:00 JR, Whispering Sts. , WCAR, News. Thomas ww,
8:0 rag Album Time — _WPON, ¢ Show wai cals
ews eed 2
WJR, B GUNDAY AFTERNOON ee ok Quiet Br. WaBK Reid Reid” e
§:20—CKLW, | Quiet Sanctry. |12:00—W. Guest “es —
WJR, Jam 8 WWJ, News, Deland bi ore Leong gr 11:30—-NJR, Time For Music
= CKLW. Lavor News _ A age Bs Baptist | CELW, News, Davies
9:00--WIR, Sports ee 1 s ceieiaaetmensial
Cate. Seow WCAR. News. Weeding WPON. Liberty Baptist Wy,
(2:30 WIR, [ Bt Ghape) Hour | wa, en, seouts CKELW. i Prophecy
ws Town fan Weon, . Riomanue) Baptist WXYZ, |
2:30—WJR, Ses Who
WWJ News, Monitor 9:30—WJR, Jack Harris
CKLW. News, Myrtle
10;:00—WJR, 9:00
; (9) Movie. (2) GE Theater. “One Isa
Wanderer,” Fred MacMur.
ray, -
(4) (color) Variety Show.
/ John Raitt, Janet Blair,|s
in Rifle Slaying
(4) Tie Tae Dough.
(9) Man From Tomorrow.
12:15 (9) Children’s Newsreel.
12:30 (2) Search for Tommorrow.
(4) (color) It Could Be You.
(7) The Erwins.
(9) Mary Morgan.
12:45 (2) Guiding Light.
1:00 (2) Ladies Day.
(4) Amos ‘n’ Andy.
(7) My Lit*te Margie. ‘Sentences Pair
Murder in lonia
MecNinch, -
Detroit House of Correction, - Judge Orders Terms
of 71% to 25 Years for|
IONIA (# — A Belding mother
and her teenage boy friend have
been sentenced to 734-25 year pri-
son terms for second degree mur-_
der in the rifle slaying of the wom-
an’s husband, 52-year-old Robert
Circuit Judge Morris K. Davis
imposed the sentences yesterday
on Mrs. Marian McNinch, 27, and
Larry Fisher, 17. He recommended
a minimum term for Mrs. McNinch
who was ordered confined at the
dudge Davis also recommend-
ed that the Fisher youth, sen- State ] obless
Cut by Auto
DETROIT (@®-— Auto industry
recalls were an important fact-
or in a drop of 83,896 in Michi- gan unemployment from early
in July to September 18,
The Michigan Employment Se-
curity Commission said yester-
day the state jobless totaled 282,-
647 on Sept. 18. Unemployment
stood at 366,570 early in July.
000 to 30,000 idle auto workers
were -recalled in the period.
MESC spokesmen said part of
the decrease represented the ex-
fits for many claimants.
Grand Rapids MESC office
manager Frank Christensen said
Kent County unemployment now
totals less than 8,000. There were
19,800 unemployed in the county
in June, Plant Recalls
The commission said some 25,- |
haustion of unemployment beng. Arrested for Taking |
$40 From Home
a building.
Have a Gas Permit? | 1F YOU HAVE YOU WILL BE WISE TO
Answer te Previous Pussie
tenced to Southern Michigan Pri-
son, be released “at any time
after the minimum that the. pa-
role board is of the opinion that
you are a good risk.”
dren, admitted she swod by.
* &«
MeNinch's
the outskirts of Belding.
Jimmy. Stewart Takes
His First Jet Flight
while pilot Maj. ‘Tom Hart mon- Fisher admitted fatally shooting
McNinch last April 12 as the victim
slept on a couch in his living room.
Mrs, McNinch, mother of six chil-
body was found
_ |buried in a shallow, rubble-piled
/\grave near the McNinch home on
PALMDALE, Calif, (UPD —
Actor Jimmy Stewart, a colonel in
the Air Force Reserve, made his
first supersonic jet flight yester-
da¥ in a Convair TF-102A Delta
Dagger. :
Stewart, who handled the con-
trols briefly over the Mojave desert
itored, termed’ the 32-minute, .38,-
000-foot flight ‘‘the most amazing uj ba | AN
qj AL Iulolcio!
LIN) AICHT IR Ortistris!
SIrerRIn| 43% PiAlTIFiY,
et ZAEIATIS|
ACs FIALAS Hie
+22 Stet had
ii- REIT EE
SiEIEVAeit cit ty ZA
INIT Ld | ct
MITIAALL LAP IAINI THIET es
TLINIVIBICITILIVIET TEIRiA
aeam Stetet 4 INVESTIGATE THE MARVELOUS NEW
BURDETT
RADI-HEAT
GAS
flight I've ever made.”
1:30 (2) As The World Turns.
(4) TV Readers Digest. 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth.
2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks.
(7) Movie.
2:30 (2) House Party.
(9) News.
(2) Big Payoff.
(4) Today Is Ours. 2:50
3:00 (4) Truth or Consequences.
(4) (color) Haggis Baggis. GOOD HEARING! Others have tried — now
Sonotone has hidden its
else to wear. Choice of smart
styles for both men and
women. Look your best
(7) American
(9) Movie.
(2) Verdict Is Yours.
(4) From. These Roots.
(7) Who Do You Trust?
(2). Brighter Day.
(4) Queen ‘for a Day.
(7) American
(2) Secret Storm.
(2) Edge of Night.
(4) County Fair.
(9) Laff Time.
(2) Susie.
(4) It’s Great Life.
(9) Looney Tunes.
(2) Detroit Bandstand. 3:50
4:00
4:15
4.30
5:00
5:30 3
Presents.
(T* Mickey Mouse Club. while hearing your best.
gil a
OF PONT 1AC
va pee PONTING |
Call for FREE Home Demonstration.
Phone FEderal 2-1225 BURNER
e The only gas. bared that iil. 40%
more useable heat from your gas. ~
© The only new gas burner in 20 years.
® The only burner (including oil) that gives
you a constant even heat: Similar to a coal
fire with a bed of coals. No more cold rooms
or cold shoulders.
© The only burner that pays for itself. why
not own it?” Gas users are paying for it
anyway with Higher Gas Bills. A Burdette |
will pay you dividends in comfort and fuel |
savings for the rest of your life. 1
ASK the MAN WHO OWNS a BURDETT | Names of Users on Request |
rus wousanre, suum Avasiinis tn? © NEW FURNACES, BOILERS and CONVERSIONS — ONLY AT MICHIGAN HEATING =
Free Estimates S Years to Pay —
| MICHIGAN HEATING 88 Newsenny
FE 8-621 FE B-6651 © _ FE 2.2254 if
You 24-Hour S ae arte An toe Sie a a |
(4) (color) George Perrot E
GAS or ELECTRIC
DRYERS func’
$159.95 si: tno"
HAMPTON’S ELECTRIC |, $28 W. Baron _. > BR 42525
:30—WWd, Oprey Supplement 930- W Pace the Nation
OaRiW. howe Kuowies WEE. Mews, Gon. Byet: pA. SR petdy 12:00— WIR, Bowe
10:00—WW4J, Dick French WBE. Tiger Salute wean Pele GRLW:; Grant. Livestork
3" Fg 1:00--WJR, Best of Music Rit § | hoops
vs ° WXYZ, News, Sun, Best 16:00—WJR, Symphony WB!
CKLW Prant ané Greet | CKLW, Billy Granam WAR Reqs s. Purse
11:00—WJR, News WPON, Cranbrook % Christian = Action} WPON. s, Lewis
Wick oes WJBK, Baseball was a te: sy Time for Music
CKLW, News, Knowles 1:30—CKLW. Lutheran Gr. be vibe ys
SEAR Fes, pects WEON. Bob. Wesl oman verre! pee ‘3, “i ey ew n 1:00—-WJR, Peter Lind Hayes’
11:30—WWJ, Pan. Amer. Mel.| WBE Baseball wave a, an WWJ, News, Maxwell
cKLW, news ‘Knowles ‘wae fews,"gon, Best 11:00—WJR, News, Sports Pon Bob Lark mn a
WXYZ, Melodies W, Morton WW, News. Monitor WoBK.
come WiBE Baseball WXYZ. News, Israel 1:30-W i Malone CKLW, News, Religion WXYZ, News, Shorr _
SUNDAY MORNING 2:30—-CKLW. Bible inst. WJBK, News. Concert Mall), 4. won pt to WJBK, Baseball dR, appiness €:00—WJIR, Farm Review 11:30—W. News, Symphony wo. News, Stories
WJBK, Blessings ~ $206 WIR, News, Muste — | S Ee Z, - | Senge cures SBR iene Reid Davies
-¢i-WIR, “Cayitien Hour Wes, Moat WBE, Adolescents 220 =
WJBK; Another Chance CKLW. 4 va Waa hae {ft Couple Next Door
ety Rigen Hymns; WCAR. News Cogan — CKLW, News, Shift dreak
oxuw. Album Time $30 WCAR. N Logan MONDAY MORNING WXYZ. News, Shorr
Crucified Hour Hour of $:00-—WJR, Helen Trent
WAR. ae ore Sif or
wee Sunday Bounds
‘SONDAY EVENING “war te ims News, “‘Gugst
ee Som
¢:30_wws, re enue Meet te Press \ 0—WIR, News, =as elt.
10 wws News, Robert JBK, N
one a el | — a, News Revival Bour | Wxe2, Pred Wolf WXYR, McKensie
WW), Mariner’s Church Cai “News, Crosby Club CKLW. Shift Break, Davies
WXYZ, Music ‘WJBK, News, Tom George | WCAR, News. Bennett
CKLW, Baughey ‘abern 4:30 W, .. Seer eoesse even ascenss Lin. Fe. 3c
%&nz1% T. BD. STOP cerseecveceedeceoe eve ‘Lid. Pe. -4%e
% x % COVE MOULD ..........0¢, peccefecns bin, Ft. 3¥2e AN/16 x 1% COVE MOU ee ereerorcen coors Lin, Ft, Te.
11/16 x 2% COVE MOULD ........ Peeeecseres Lin. Fe. Se
11/16 = 2% COVE MOULD .............-... Lin. Ft. 106
4 = 8 V Groove Paneling $495
E MAHOGANY _... = #7" Now °4
MFG.. by NATIONAL GYPSUM
. Not Discontinued Colors
_* Large Selection
Special With Any Purchase
GOLD BOND CEMENT PAINT $: 95
Large 5-Gallon Pail
UP TO 50% OFF ON CLOSE-OUT PAINT
All Good Colors—Boydell, Gold Bond, Kem-Tone
5-FT. STEP LADDER $3
First Quality, Present Stock
‘2” STEEL AREA WALLS
Acoustamatic
For Basement Windows 37” Wide
CEILING TILE
“Mente | CEILING
135%.
OUTSIDE
FLUSH DOORS With Lights 11x11 8° -—
Gold Bond PAL Paint |
52%
OUTSIDE WHITE...$4.45 Gal.
26 x 68x 1% “A”....$9.9528 x 68 x 1% oA
Also Louvered Doors and Fold-a-Side Hardware
“E52 PANELING BRIGHT, CLEAN a | =e PerM KILN DRIED Regular $220.00
We Have Lower Grades also for $125.00
SLIDING DOOR POCKETS AD Pines Werdeieee 6 acon ci encase ens scccsscecceewsess $9.95
_ ALUMINUM LOUVERS |
Adjustable Louvers ....$3.75 Flush 12 x 12 Louvers. .$1.49
Fluash 8x x Louvers.... .98 Flush 12 x 18 Louvers. .$1.98 1%
Gacvonteed ‘7 4’
Grade A
Grade A
” INTERIOR FLUSA DOORS Waaenis AE ee $5.25 26x68 x1%......,. $6.95
22 x 68 x 18e..c000-.$5.95 28x 68 x Te..cceeee, $7.45
24% 68 x VM... c08e. $6.45 3068 x 1%......4. $7.95
SASH DOORS $10.95
~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1958
“ors PUT YOUR HOME in the COMFORT ZONE ALUMINUM
COMBINATION DOORS Includes: Full 1’ Frame, Door Closer, Stop,
Latch, Hinges, all Screws. All Standard Sizes.
DOOR GRILLS $988
$4.95 Value 3
19” POWER MOWER Reg.
$34.95 2 3 9 5
All Sixes
Aluminum Initial Type
STORM DOORS & WINDOWS
AVAILABLE
ou bat _39 7
A increase Living Area |
me with folding stairs |
: FAST
= SELLING
fa ROYAL fold.
ing steirs are
og safel Guaren-
ma teed by Public
Bad Liability Insurance.
95 Ne weights er pul
Ray loys * Easy epere-
Ray tion © Convenient
ky «metal handrail » Treads
Ba securely igined and tie
tod reinforced, _
-
=
-
ad
We are now stocking 22 Cu. Ft. Built-
In Type, MANITOWOC REFRIGER-
ATOR & FREEZER COMBINATIONS
- in Stainless Steel, White and Bronze.
Also we have MODERN MAID OVENS
and RANGE: TOPS on Display.
oe —
GALVANIZED GUTTER
TD sun
SLIDING DOOR HARDWARE
13% Bypass 4’ (Reg. $5.50)......... Eb e-b 4. 8.8 b aaerees $3.50
1¥% Bypass 5’ (Reg. $6.45)......... rrr rere $3.95 All Sizes of Aluminum Self Facing in Stock
CABINET HARDWARE
OVER 100,000 PIECES IN STOCK — ALL FINISHES |
Friction Catch (Reg. 15e) senccecces Se Rubber Roller Catch (Reg. 25c)...... Se
Chrome Handles (Reg. 45¢).......-. 25¢ % Offset Chrome Hinge (Reg. 75¢).. .45¢
Black Wrought Iron Hinge (Reg, 65c) .40c Black Knobs, 1%" (Reg. 40e) ...... 25¢
BRAND NAMES INCLUDE: Washington, National Hyer, Penn and Forgecraft.
We have a terrific stock on hand and it's all quality stock.
+ » SEE US! Over 20,000 pieces in stock. you're building . If it’s cabinets
CAR TOP CARRIERS
Reg. $8.95, 9
rd “s Price. . $4 :
We Also Have LUGGAGE RACKS
Over 20 Sizes and Styles in Stock
‘HUNTERS: Come in and layaway your car top
carries now to assure you of the type you want
at this extra low price. —
50 Ft. Garden Hose
5-Yr. Guarantee. .Com- ‘] 89
plete with Brass Fittings. -
Chrome Nozzle FREE
With the purchase of 3 lengths at this low
price, Reg. price $2.95—Our Best Buy Now
$295
- Vv Garden Hose
Reg. $5.95 #eeeneeeeve
Wd € °3"W "WV OL SAVANNS—'W ‘d 8 8 ‘WV 8 ATIVG NidO—S,¥dLSIZWUN GNOS A109
For hard to best prices on all types of Garage Doors,
make sure you check with Burmeister's before buying.
BRASS PASSAGE SETS For Interior Doors
Reg. $2.95 i | 39
Top Brand, Basement, Adjustable
JACK POSTS. = 56° Adjustable, Reg. $9.95
eveee
Duplex Cover Plates. 8c
Switch Plate Covers. 8c
14-2 Romex, 250
Cel 2 i0sccee ft. 3c
6,000 CEDAR POSTS
7’ from 39°
SHELVING } — 599
12” x 36” Shelves.
Extra Shelves Available
Window-Shopping?
OF (nnks »# “ é
at LOW cost!
iH i =|
=
STANLEY ES a
JALOUSIE —
"Wd € "WV OL SAVGNNS—"W ‘d 8% "WV 8 AllVa HS Sih aNos a1095
a" “a Flush 8 x 12 Louvers...$1.29 8x 16 Eve. Vent W.S.... 55¢
ee $ QI ris 8 : 16 Louvers...$1.56 8 x 16 Foundation Vent.$1.29 AWNING WINDOWS WINDOWS. —
SHIPLAP SPECIAL ¥ | Root VenteI8 Sq.......e00 evevenuess $1.98 Serta Heda 38 Adtiower Ole. ioe wind nore
:, Per = in you imag ou" onine
1x12” or 1x6” Roof Boards. .°89.50 per M POLYETHYLENE ROLLS — | viscometer feonwest ” Me orovide iclowe
2x8 12’ and 14’ Fi Now $92.00 36” 100’ Clear Roll....$3.99 48” 100° Clear Roll: .. .$4.99 .,., merdhongeable vreen ond Beauty, controled vention
x and 14’ Fir...... re ow : 6’ 100° Clear Roll...... $6.97 8.100’ Clear Roll... $9.96 oa “tion, better visibility, all- weather
Per M | 10%" 100° Clear Roll. $13.95 12° 100° Clear Roll... .$16.95 oo ee oe weather sealed” protection? Maes ie ee
Wood Miter Box and Hack Saw...... $2.49 20’ 100’ Clear Roll... ccc. secccecscoees: $24.95 | rahe re Fomor fps ae pomcbants screen ~ intere Pe — » in cost, = "sto
8’ Steel Tape ........... ‘ : eT cen’ ans tekst ngeable storm sash. © Fer free domonstrotion smooth, easy operation is @
26 Hand Born 22.2 ee oe ers aE “ALUMINUM i BY_x 3Vz- * fenove seen, amply aide ops agree see end entinate, calle _erery heneownen,
lass Cutters .................0.. $ 15 @ Model 44 with integrol nailing width clear or obscure glass lowvers
25 Ft. Trouble Light, Reg. $1.89... ... $1.19| THRESHOLD { BRASS BUTTS | oe ne cas eam fe pon ond de STANLEY |
Pipe Wrenches 8”, 10”, 14”, 3’——3 V2’ $2? NAME 3 9s Pr, | ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOM. Call for visit from our sales Large 9x4 Picture Window, $ 95
Reg. $7.95 ................. $3.95 Set} $3.95 Value BRAND rele NO ato estimates. advice and sid wherever Weatherstripped, Ready to Install....... 69
BUSINESS IS BETTER THAN EVER AT BURMEISTER’S
BUR GoLo BOND SURMEISTER'S OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.—SUNDAYS 10-A. M; to 3.P. M.
_ * 7940 COOLEY LAKE ROAD mers gums 3 GOLD BOND BURMEISTER'S—OPEN DAILY 8 A, M, to 8 P. M.—SUNDAYS 10 A. M. to JP. M. GOLD BOND ‘BURMEISTER’S—OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to 8 P. ic snes 10 A. M. to 3 P. M,
QUOTED — DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE AT REASONABLE RATES
Open Daily 8 to, 8—Sunday 10 to 3. -NORTHERN
LUMBER CO. PHONE EMpire 3-417]
* "48% 'W'V8AlIVa esotguaisaarie aNO@ a109
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