RUSSIAN LINEUP — Czech ambassador Jiri Nosek, front, 
speaks his piece on a Soviet proposal on space problems, assured 
of plenty of backing. He is not the low man on the totem pole, as 
it might appear, the men behind him are his U. N. assistants. Te 
  
    battamMAY SMILE — Sporting a grin almost as wide as her 
husband's famous smile, Mamie Eisenhower marked her 62nd 
birthday today, with a private.party with her grandchildren. 
  
  UNIONIST SLAIN — Malcolm White, (left) president of a 
small manufacturing plant in Chester, N. Y. yesterday shot and 
killed Alfred Dugan, right, who was leading a strike against the 
plant. White said Dugan rushed him with his hand in his pocket, 
and he thought he had a gun. 
  — William G, Gates, right, who says he’s 
trying to get background for a novel, talks with Seattle police de- 3 tective T. Sy after his arrest in connection with writing : AP Wirephetos 
THE HARD WAY 
_@ worthless: Gates told newsmen he wanted to find out how 
convicts feel, to help’ him write his book, and wits trying to get sent 
to prison. 
”   \C PRE 
    
ATED cmenl BOSS" Rrtenationat   
  
[Reds Promised 
Top Standard 
of Living by '70 
Calls for 80 Pct. Hike 
in Production 
MOSCOW (?)—The Soviet 
government today promised 
its people the highest living 
standards in the world by 
1970, 
The promise was made in 
a report on Premier 
Khrushchev’s. seven - year 
economic plan which was 
approved Wednesday by the 
Communist party Central 
Committee. 
The plan for the years 
1959-1965 calls for an 80 
per cent increase in Russian 
industrial production. 
This will enable the Communist 
bloc to produce more than half   wily 4 
  Dedication Set 
for Osteopathic 
|Hospital Sunday 
Ceremonies dedicating the Pon-, 
tiac Osteopathic Hospital have! 
been scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Sun- 
day, : 
After the brief ceremony, — in 
which representatives from various 
religious faiths will take part, there| 
will be open house for the general 
public, announced Harry H. Whit-! 
low, hospital director. . 
* * * 
The 121-bed hospital will be dedi- 
cated “to the people of Oakland 
County,” Whitlow said. 
Open house will last until 5 
p-m, and most of the hospital 
will open for general inspection, 
Whitlow announced. There will 
be a buffet dinner served in the 
hospita] dining room. 
The open house. marks the com- 
pletion of a $200,000 remodeling 
project at the hospital's new 1lo- 
cation, 50 N. Perry St. The seven- 
istory building there was formerly 
the. Pontiac Hotel. 
* x * 
uary, 1956 and moved in two) 
months later. - It had formerly! 
been located in a converted clinic | 
at 32 Auburn Ave. The hospital purchased the hotel! 
for an undisclosed sum in Jan-) va DAY, oe. 14, 1958 —46 PAGES . 
  University of Michigan coach Ben 
indicated today.     
   
   U. OF M. SHUFFLE — Chalmers (B ‘Oosterbaan Quits Jot ball Coach at U. 0 Elliott to Move Up © 
Bump Elliott 
Top Wolve 
  | seasons. 
| Chalmers (Bump) Elliott, 
backfield coach, will replace 
| Both are former Michigan 
| 
” 
own wishes... 
* 
AP Wirephoto 
p) Elliott will replace 
nie Oost baan January 1, it was “As is generally known I 
\ ‘head coaching position . . .   * 
Gusterbaast said in a statement: ~ Leaves Gridiron’ Post 
ter 11 Years at Helm Will Step Into 
rine Position 
From Assistant’s Spot 
ANN ARBOR (# — Bennie Oosterbaan resigned today _ 
as football coach at the University of Michigan after 11 
Oosterbaan’s top aide and 
Oosterbaan on Jan. 1. 
football stars. 
~*~ *«* * 
The regents met this noon and approved the switch. - 
President Harlan Hatcher said the action was taken 
- with “the deepest regret” and would not have been ap- 
| proved had it not been ‘in accordance with Bennie’s 
* 
have for the past three or 
four years been seriously considering retiring from the 
“Last spring at my request this intention was made 
the world’s industrial goods in| 
1965, compared with about one- 
third now, the report claimed.   
Hunters to Dominate known to the Athletic Board, which subsequently offered 
me a fine opportunity to serve the university in another 
This “will provide a real 
foundation for overtaking and 
outstripping per capita produc- 
tion in the United States" 
1970, according to. the report. 
By 1970 or possibly earlier, the 
report adds, “the U.S.S.R. will 
take first place in the world both 
for absolute volume of produc- 
tion and for per capita production, 
which will insure the — liv- 
ing standards in the wor! 
economic success " would 
prove the absolute superiority of 
communism over capitalism, the 
report declared. 
The report will be delivered at 
the 2ist party congress, scheduled 
for next January. At a date not 
yet announced it will be presented 
to the Supreme Soviet, Russia's 
parliament, for certain approval. 
The seven-year plan was pre- 
sented as part of a 15-year de- | 
velopment program which Twin Babies Die 
> of Suffocation 
‘to.a hospital with twin baby girls   to Save 2-Month-Olds 
at Mount Clemens 
MOUNT CLEMENS ® — Police- 
man Edward Morisette lost out in 
a race with death Thursday. 
On an errand of mercy he sped 
    as passengers in his car. 
Morisette drove with one hand. | 
With his free arm, he clasped 2-| 
month-old Wanda Cooper. 
Alternately he squeezed his | 
grip and relaxed it, trying to | 
give Wanda artificial respira- 
  provides the necessary condi- 
tions to be created for complet- 
nism.” 
lenium of pure communism in| 
according to need. 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4)               The report refrains from prom-| * 
ising a date for the Soviet mil*/ and Rhonda. were dead. 
The report touches on almost all| tion. She had shown signs of life. | 
The other twin in the car was 
|from their home. 
But at the hospital both W anda 
The twins, children of Earl | 
124, had suffocated in their crib. | 
The Coopers have another 
suaeteer Kim, 18 months.   
Lewis died Wednesday 
‘years. He was 108 years old. + 
The centenarian was born 
into slavery March 6, 1850 
on a cotton plantation at 
Carterville, Ga. a cross- 
roads hamlet: near Rome. 
War, Lewis stayed on near Rome! | 
farmer himself, 
In 1900 he married another for- 
mer slave, Bettie Daniels, who 
died in Pontiac in 1938 at the 
Lewis raised them on his farm. 
He had been a county patient at 
Pontiac General ‘Hospital for a few|~ 
weeks before, 
Mentally alert to the end, Lewis 
had. many memories of his slav- 
ery days. 
He always maintained that id, 
owner had given him fine treat- 
ment, As a youth, Lewis helped | 
harvest cotton on the plantation. Oakland’ s Oldest Man, 
Ex-Slave Dies at 108 Martin Lewis, a former slave who lived to become 
Oakland County’s oldest man, will be buried Monday 
in the Oakland County Cemetery. 
Freed at the end of the Civ || 
and eventually became a cotton — 
age of 95. Mrs, Letws had eleven ] 
children by a prior marriage and (© 
He and Mrs. Lewis sold their — 
farm in 1936 and came here to/) 
live with one of the sons, Sydney|~ 
Daniels, of 99 Jackson St. The only|> 
other surviving child is Freq Dan-|© 
jels, of 834 Longfellow St., Detroit. |= 
In his retirement, Lewis made|® 
many friends here, many of whom|® 
gathered together to give him a|~ 
party at the infirmary when he|~ 
first entered it in September, 1956. |= 
    in the Oakland County In- 
joemary. where he had been an inmate the past two 
  + 
  exodus from cities this 
_ signed by State Police, but a 
ing the transition to commu- | Rhonda, Morisette had taken both maximum patrol pattern used for 
‘cent factory layoffs might cause 
‘might work up to the quitting time 
Sanat a aN! el Spenser ee a State Trattic Today From Our News Wires 
Race With Death Fats? LANSING — Michigan traffic this weekend will be 
dominated by an estimated 
moving to their favorite spots, most of them ' \ 
ready for the 6 a.m. season 
The Conservation Department estimated the capacity. 
the head coaching position 
and so informed Fritz 
Crisler. 
“There was not 
pressure on Bennie,’ 
300,000-plus deer \hunters director of athletics 
etting ‘ | 
opening tomorrow. | cecartaumer ibe slightest | 
’ said Crisler, 
at Michigan, 
‘It was up to him entirely. This is     
day opening would mean’ — 
hunters would start their’! 
afternoon and evening. 
* * * 
Actual hunting pressure wasn't 
‘expected to be much heavier’ Sat- 
‘urday than it was during Saturday, 
the second day of the season, last 
jyea 
No extra troopers were as- 
| all heavy traffic periods was .to 
_ be in force,   The main routes bearing the 
The annual invitation by state po- 
lice to hunters to register camp 
post was extended also. 
* * * 
One conservation expert said re- 
traffic to be heavier this evening 
and tonight. He said many people 
instead of cutting off work a day 
or so early. 
* * * 
The pheasant season opened on 
‘a day when a large Lansing fac-! 
‘tory resumed operations after a) 
strike. Pressure in the Lansing.   area, he said, was considerably, 
| below expectations, largely because Appropriations Committee, 
Abraham Lincoln delivered, at Get- lof the work resumption, Similar}Ways and Means Committee, and 1959, at a salary 
tysburg. 
Lewis remained physically actve| 
(Coiitinued on Page 2, Col. |thoughts might keep people right; the chairmen of the House Mental! year.” 
on their jobs today instead of their, 
quitting a day or so early. ~ | State University Union Bldg. in | 
PEE APE 
  ‘depart 
| “I think it was four years ago| 
jwhen Ben first suggested that he 
\ some day would like to be relieved 
Mental Health jsaid then he was looking forward 
: the day he could get out. 
Meeting Called 's not. a factor, There Was no 
rganized alumni faction against | 
n and there Was no campaign. 
Moore Sets Parley. S Heap leone paciey 
Nov. 25 to Draw Up Qosterbaan told newsmen: 
] | “K considered making the an- 
Emergency Plans inouncement at the opening of the! 
seasoh, but decided to withhold it “It was an independent deci- 
sion by him. This losing season 
a - een 
See Other Stories Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore 
has called upon state mental health! 
officials to meet and plan emerg- 
ency measures to be placed before, ak 
which each contributes according Cooper, 26, a Selfridge Air Force brunt of the load of hunters were, sa proposed special session of the anti the season wae over. In view 
to his ability and is rewarded only, Base cook, and his wifé, Cornellia, 66, U.S. 27 and U:S. 23. ~ lof the recikring rumors, however, 
‘['m making’ the statement now. . 
> Elliott reportedly will receive 
an annual salary of $16,000, Oos- 
terbaan’s new job is expected to 
be as assistant\ athletic director 
under Crisler, hix predecessor as 
football coach. | Legislature. 
Judge Moore, chairman of the | 
Probate Judges Committee ©n | 
Mental Hospitalization, 
announced the meeting is sched- 
uled for Nov. 25 at the Michigan 
East--Lansing. = 
Invited are Gov. Williams and 
the state administrative board, the 
Mental Health Commission, Michi- 
gan Society for Mental Health rep- 
resentatives, plus key members of, 
the Legieintre, | Athletic Board stating: “The Board 
* * of Control of Fitercolleginte Ath- 
The teiter include House Speaker! iletices recommends that Chalmers, 
George Van Peursem, the Senate) |W. Elliott assume the duties of 
House head football coach as of Jan. 
of $16, 00 a 000 a year as coach, but it was 
understood he would {ake a slight 
cut in his new job. 
  a resolution was passa by the 
The board presented this rec om Hospital Committee and the Sen-| 5 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 
* 
iE SONI CNIS AES ip 
  
NEW YORK (AP 
enough to frighten 
ployes. 
denly turns 65, is cut 
SIMPLE ANSWER rd 
    He recalled that at the age of © 
            , a. 13, he heard of the words that 4% 
Eoeeromrerente 
sa SS 
ES 
; .- e of articles on the evils of retirement. 
ee eee ae By HAL BOYLE 
)—Magazines today are full 
They're 
a man out of the desire 
to grow old. They make retirement sound more 
dangerous than Sunday driving. 
_ §ome’ people are always knocking a good 
thing, but we doubt that they'll ever make 
retirement really unpopular with the working 
classes. Or, for that sactltons government em- 
The dig peril seéins ‘to be that a fellow sud- 
off the payroll, and doesn’t 
- know what to do with himself. He finds it hard to 
adjust to a new way of life. 
Fy 
The answer, of course, is simple. Start get- 
ting ready for rétirement early in life, so when 
it does come it will find you ready. ° 
Here are a few down-to-earth tips—the kind 
the magazines don’t dare give you: 
ais pea NRO A: % eee: A ascutes At 25 start borrowing money from your 
rejatives and friends. If they are like most- 
relatives and friends, it will take you at least 
40 years of steady borrowing to build you up 
a really decent retirement fund. 
Begin loafing on the job at 35, and loaf more 
each year. By the time you're 65 you'll be used to 
not working, and there’ll be no, sudden shock 
when you have to hang up the harness forever. 
If the boss objects, explain your program to him 
fully and honestly. He'll understand. He’s prob- 
ably doing the s&me thing himself. 
Since most people spend most of their. time 
making mountains out of molehills, be sure to lay 
ih a good supply of molehills while you ate young. 
You don’t want to be sanens short. in your old - 
age. a 
START NIPPING 
Doctors often advise retired people to take a 
nip before each meal to help their circulation. 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) reassignment within the athletic | 
Oosterbaan reportedly made $19,-| 
Last night in a closed session. | 
  “At that time I decided this would be my last year in 
{, x k * 
\'98 Grid Season 
Just 2nd Loser 
for Big Bennie 
Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, who 
resigned this morning, is complet- 
ing his llth season as head coach 
lof the coaching assignment. He\®! the University.of Michigan. 
* * * 
Since 1948 when he replaced Fritz 
Crisler, who assumed the athletic 
director's duties for the Wolver- 
ines, Oosterbaan's record shows 63 
jwins against. 31 losses and four 
' ties. 
He will finish the season which 
has (we more games against In- 
diana Saturday and Olfia Siate 
next week, 
In his first year the Wolverines 
won the Big Ten championship 
with .a perfect season. In 1949 
Michigan tied for first with Ohio 
State, and in 1950 the Wolverines 
took the title and also won the 
Rose Bow! game against Califor- 
nia, 14-6. 
This is Oosterbaan's 11-year Tet. 
a at Michigan: 
    
  YEAR WLT 
1948 900. - 
1949 621 
1950 631 
1951 450 
1952 540 
| 1953 630 
1954 630 
1955 720 
1956 720 
| 1957 531 
1958 2 41° 
| Total @ 24 
*Two Games to Play 
° Occasional Rain,   
Cooler Tonight I ‘Occasional showers and cooler is. 
the weatherman’s forecast for the 
‘Pontiac area tonight and tomor- 
: _lrow. Yonight's low will be near 48 
‘degrees. 
|| Saturday and Sunday will be cool. 
_jer with the high averaging around 
; oA, the lov, 42. Monday and Tues- 
jay will be\ \warmer, Showers are 
“ipredicted fok the weekend and 
_jagain Tuesday or Wednesday. 
, The lowest temperature in down. 
<\town Pontiac preceding $ a.m, | 
s\was 53 degrees. \The reading at 
© \2 p.m, was 63. \ 
Comics * sip beaeuseusetare 
County News O08 CAREER ES 
Editorials ......++ssesees: 
High School ...<...:-0ce0e+ 
Markets . Pee ee 
Obituaries .......... teers 
eee es neh ede eng Sports . « 
Theaters ee eer ele 
          i ett ter “vent 
i Convenient loca’ 
FE 4-T101, 
     
4 
      
            
a 
7 H, Smith O11 Co. 
(Management employes) toe 3 Tacerotate ae uD 75.00 ore ked. oes € ve 
Pontios Central High School L. H. Cole O11 Co employes ty og MY practice? he aske 
sonal pets inank eee Ne iia & P Tea Co. (W. Huron store) | Dr, McNeely, whom some rec- 
employes .. | employes pd Or Truckaway Corporation Aric 1,000.00; 'Loca!l No 653 UAW employes: 7 1.00 ognize as the oldest active d ctor 
ert ee ae oe ed iMr. and Mrs. John C. Rapley Predma bs Internal Revenue Service empis 65.50) 
Truckarey Corporation empls. 605 #0 Pursley Punéral Home cmgloges $3.09| the United States, practices mod-| 
Wrigiey's . $00.00) Household Finance Co. employes 62.0/eration and regularity. — Junior High Schoo! A 5o| Hawkins oe Co. 60.00! th he k 
oo < cei 90-58iyMCA emplo 5a.so them the keys 
Eastern Junior igh “Schoo Sparks - ‘Grittin Puneral Home seas! a long life. 
ey so ngton Ju , Beattie M Y i : 54 ** «mak 
u's. owt Olfice site| (Pure Ou teats a cin $2.00) Dr. MeNeely doesn’t smoke or 
Cat ie Bocial Bervices empls $1 “= 
(B Huron—Main) ........... 416 jg jOaklana county C10 Counc jdrink, but admits he has pre- 
<. H. Cole ou Co nes viel employ: . s1.00|seribed a bit of whisky at times. | 
A& ea Company ' Bouitabie 1 Life Ins. employes ... $1.00, + | Northern Senior High School (Goodyear Service agmpley $0.00 | I can't say whisky will cure 
a tert Bc. Huthwaite | $0.08 | janyone,”’ he chuckles, ‘‘but neither ré. ¥ ac tt 
Neiener's, oughozes EE Fao #8 clinton f] Mumbs MD 30 09/CaN I id) it won't do a patient 
ary a ord Nosanchuk MD... ... Tei-Huron Shopping Center, Inc. 250.00 Den R. ainoDeuale thc. rope te good. 
Crofoct School empleyes . 248.50\tr_ and Mrs. David E. Edstrom 50.00) . 
Jefferson Jr, High School cmpls, 393.90 Charles Patrick. MD 50.00 . og: N nae’ . _M. PY 
Whitfield School employes... 338-0810. 4. Ro MP $0.0 Rise in Simca Sales. \ dson ool empmoyes .. Detroit Creamery employee cawe 56.00/ 
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. | Ipreg N. Paull co... $0.00, Reported by Chrysler 
oia Mil T Tavern Hotel employes 217.00 —— souetr? paps . . bd i Tram: ug Sto we 56. 
Secty aches spire vos ASO Prank E. Dotye nsec ece: 3009, DETROIT «» — Chrysler Corp. ag ley be ony vreevess C. Bryan Kinney... ..... 2. 80.09! 
Metes & = 200.9014 Mill Tavern | 3... 30.00;88¥8 sales of the French built a Child Guidance Cunle ma Hoyt Realty ... 50.00| Simea passenger car in this 
yess. .... \H. R. Nichol 50.00 Longfellow School employes 193.00| p Co oe. Agency 50.99 (coumtry for the: first nine months 
Hubert Distributors employes ..  181-80/R. A. Landry, MD - sa.  50.00/0f 1958 totaled 12,031 units. In the WKC employes ... 188.00' Rey Richard W. Thomas .,.. 50.00 h Kroger corporation ~ Drayton Rev. Thompson L. Marcero .... 50.09 | SANE” period last year saies were 
Piains employes ..... -  W890lCenirel Bar 50.00/3,374 units. Mark Twain School employes 182.00/ Howard V. Heldenbrand ...... 50.00 
Moats Metre prove hese =——_ edie Charies H. Harmon .. sooo! Chrysler purchased a substan-| | Wisner School e se ‘S9IA. J. Zujko. MD .. 50.00 
Boice Builders Supply 188.90 | Austr Carings a4 og tial interest in the French auto, 
Metes & Powers, Inc. emplo es 145.00 Firestone Store (146 W_ “Huron; 30.0¢'firm earlier this year, It said! 
——. Discount Corporation ey Horn & Dixon Supply Co. .. 50 00 | 
@miployes .. 6. eet e eee j Electri f 
In terstate Motor Tr ethsel ia Oojeerces mocks Supply pg 
Centra ementary B. F. Hubbard, DDS . ; $0.00 
employes s +» 131.00 purgiey Puneral Home employes 50.00 throughout the United States, Region I-B UAW ompley ea — 126.00 
Ferdinand Geensbaue 2 “s 126.00 
Pure Ol! eaergd ick seek ints 
Franklin ool employes ..... . eo. one 
Mulia Bakery ‘employes... 12) Month-Long Detroit Trial Ends ¥ employ : E 
Home & Auto Loan Co. “empls. 108.20 . 
Whittier ee entary eh ; 107.78 2 W M i] 
Herrington ementary 00 t 
ee 108.00 omen, an ul Ann Arbor Construction ¢...... 100.00 
nop hg et . Everett ustaisom, MD ...-.-«s B 
wily hn’ Woe we Photo studio Frau Michigan & Ohie Freight Lines 100.00 
Sauer & Girard 100.00 John Stageman, MD oc .c- cess i 
Standard OU Company: -: W090} DETROIT u — The co-owners} The trio operates another por 
Standard Printing employes : fe ms and general manager of a Detroit |trait studio (Deville Photo Studios) 
Mousebold Finance Co... 39-0 Photographic studio were convict-|in Columbus, Ohio. The Columbus | Loca! No. | over Funeral Home oo ed of fraud in customer dealings | | studio has a $37,000,000 libel and) 
Deve Gleb eax ".. ~~ 4.40 Yesterday after a month-long trial slander suit pending against the | 
Oliver Motor ico. em employes . i: £  oe|in Recorder's (criminal) Court. {Columbus Citizen, the American   
  
  Pontiac Area United Fund head tree te Life Ins. Ce. empls 
quarters today announced the fol- 
lowing gifts of $50.00 and over: 
Metehigan Beli Tekpbem is. 
pong covered by CWA- 
(Management employes) .... 1 T0420) 
  Glenn C. Giliespie   
Mental Health Meet 
Called for Nov. 25 
{Continued From Page One) 
ate Health and Welfare Commit.| 
tee. 
Such a meeting could lay plans 
to whittle down the long list of 
mental patients waiting to get 
into the state's crowded have 
institutions, Judge Moore said. | 
Gov. Williams has not yet indi- 
cated whether he would call a spe- 
cial December session of the Leg- 
islature to consider the problem. 
“Prompt emergency action is 
vital,” Judge Moore believed. 
* * * 
“Only combined legislative ac- 
tion and administrative planning 
can solve the problem. It should be 
faced immediately,” he told Gov.) 
Williams in a letter. 
“In fairness to everyone, It 
must be recognized that the ma- 
jer diftienlty is unquestionably 
the shorfage of state funds.” 
The judges’ committee has a two) 
point plan to open up bed space in 
state hospitals, It recommends: 
(1) The release back to local 
counties of ps ceed igus | 
tal patients whose prim. 
custodial care rather than ‘cane   
psychiatric treatment, 
      
         “In exchange, ‘an equal ened 
of beds would thereby be m 
available for waiting list commit | 
ments,’ Judge Moore said. 
(2) The use of approximately 1,- 
000 vacant tuberculosis sanitoria. 
beds for mentally ill patients, be-| 
ginning with the transfer to sani-} 
toria of mental patients with tu- 
berculosis. 
The Weather | }   
  Full U.S. Weather irtod R 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY a reatiy’ cloudy and warmer TL eager showers or thundershowers teday, 66. Mostly cloudy and turning eocke with occasional showers or thuander- showers tonight and temorrow. Low te-| night 48. High tomorrow 34. Sonthwest-| erly winds 16-2" miles today shifting to westerly tonight and inheatol northwesterly te- 
  Teday “in Ponilac woe temperature preceding & a.m 
At @ am: Wind ve 
Direction, southwest 
Sun sets Friday at 5 
Sun rises Saturday at 7 23am 
Moon sets Friday at 8 9 pm | Moon rises Saturday at 1122 am \ locity 20 mph. 
  Downtown berg oat 
TM ones 
laine weal $8 ™ 
m... 
M..... m +» 60 Porn ecawes 
; iiygotonr in Pontiac 
as recorded downtown) 
Highest temperature ... 
Lowest temperature ............. 
Mean temperature ...... 
Weather—Rain. 
One Year Age | in Pontiac . 58 
23.30 
: > 
34) teehee. sesereees 
amon | 
Lewest Temperatares | Years | 
11 tm 1873 
    
  
  
  
  » $3,860.05! Gariock Drugs Donati tions of $50 or More / 
Fund Retire? 1 Can't, — 
pocligheierd on, 
Seth Birthday 
WAYNESBURG, Pa. (AP)—Dr. 
we S. McNeely, a doctor for 
\68 years in the nearby village of 
  40,000 ‘Workers ' Won't 
200 Kirby, celebrates his 98th birth-; Get Checks in Absence 
Tea Co.. N, Perry store $2.00) ‘day today without ‘‘fuss and : , He.was an inveterate 
mployes ...... 76.00 feathers.” , of Office Staff er and always ‘used the 
Bh Truck Lines employes ; 16.00 * + + until — year ago, 
Pirestone Stores ....... an 23.001 plete indness overcame 
Garlock Drugs i. | ‘Just another day,” he called| DETROIT \#-—-A payless pay day (ay he had to stop smoking. a Cc, Hampton 15.00 jt, then shrugged off all thoughts} 
14.00' of retiring. “Who would take over Corp. workers today in the fourth 
          ‘arrived for some 40,000- Chrysler 
‘day of a strike by 8,000 white 
collar workers, 
The company said it would be 
70.00, in Pennsylvania and possibly in unable to get out the pay checks 
ion schedule because of the absence 
He calls from work of its payroll clerks 
to contentment and|and timekeepers. 
| A strike of office workers and 
iengineers has all but paralyzed the 
‘automobile manufacturing firm's 
‘entire operation, idling nearly 50,-| 
000 of the 70,000 production force. 
Federal and state mediation 
services, meanwhile, made an at- 
tempt to get the three striking | 
union locals of the United Auto 
Workers and management together 
in negotiations. 
Both agencies set up a concilia-| 
tion meeting for 10 a.m. today in- 
viting Chrysler and the union to 
attend. There have been no nego- 
tiations since the strike began 
Tuesday. 
A company source said that 5) 
million dollars in pay coming due 
today would be held up because, 
checks could not be drawn in the 
absence of payroll personnel. 
Chrysler closed.,down all its * 
‘sembly plants yesterday, sa 
\was impossible to continue bec   that by the end of 1958 it expects | production workers have refused 
to have 700 dealers selling Simcas cross striker picket lines. 
|   
  
  
A of five men and seven 
women deliberated over six hours 
before returning its verdict 
against Mrs. Joyce Holt, 30, her 
sister Miss Helen Stock, 37, the 
owners, and Cymon neem, 4, 
the manager. 
Judge Paul E. Krause set sen- 
tencing for Dec. 4.. The three | 
\delentants face a maximum of 
ifive years in prison on each. of 
|two counts. 
* * 
The trio were onvieted of con-   spiracy to commit gross frauds 
and cheats and conspiracy to! 
obtain signatures under false 
pretenses. 
Attorney for the three said they, 
will seek a new trial. 
Police raided the studio operated 
by the women (Holt Studios) Oct. 
17, 1957 in’ response to complaints 
from customers. 
More than 65 witnesses testi- 
fied at the trial. Witnesses told 
of being sued for failure to pay 
for pieture contracts they did 
not realize they had _ signed. 
Some said they signed papers 
which they believed authorized 
  Tobacco Co., the National Broad- 
casting Co., and the Better Busi- 
ness Bureau of Columbus.- ~ 
a radio program sponsored by. the; 
| tobacco company in connection’ 
|with activities of the Ohio studio. | 
The suit followed. 
  
Oosterbaan Quits 
as U. of M. Coach 
| (Continued From Page One) 
‘of Regents which has its meeting 
scheduled for today. 
The Regents usually follow the 
course of action recommended by 
the Athletic Board, and the ap- 
pointment of Elliott was expect- 
ed to come out of today’s meet- 
ing. 
Opsterbaan was appointed head! 
}coach in 1948 and has been on the 
athletic staff since he was grad-' 
‘uated from Michigan in 1928.   ‘phases of Russian life, 
mendation to the University Board! Reds Promised Top 
Living Standards | (Continued From Page One) 
from | 
|Khrushchev's new work-plus-study | 
“educational system to expansion) 
lof airlines, But primary emphasis, 
is placed on heavy industry. 
The volume of state capital in- 
ivestments during the next seven 
years will almost equal capital in- 
jvestments in the 41 years of Com-| 
‘munist rule, Khrushchev said. 
| At the same time he promised | 
| better life to the more than 
incomes of factory and office 
workers will increase an aver- 
| age of 40 per cent and of col- 
| lective farmers by no less than 
40 per cent, the report said. 
  Improvements in pensions and 
‘health services plus alleviation of 
ithe housing shortage also were | 
| promised. 
| The report says, 
iwill have the world’ s shortest) 
working day and working week.” 
The official news agency Tass 
issued three versions of how this 
will be accomplished. 
Avoiding flat commitment, two 
versions said a five-day work 
week ‘‘is suggested’ for factory 
and office workers, who wil] num- 
ber 66 million in 1965. A third ver- 
sion said that for those working 
six or seven hours a day, ‘‘a five- 
day working week, with two days 
off a week, is to be introduced”’ 
‘at an unspecified time, but pre-   Despite his blindness, Lewis was 
still active in his final year and 
imanaged to navigate around his 
room at the infirmary. 
Hospital attendants said he was 
here interested in the southern 
integration-segrega tion squabble 
from the time it broke last year 
until his death, 
Funeral service for Lewis will 
be Monday at 2 pan, at the 
Trinity Baptist Church, Rev, Ric 
ard H, Dixon Jr. will conduct the 
service. Burial will follow in the 
‘Oakland County Cemetery, 
Oakland County’s oldest resident 
jis Mrs. Elizabeth Beaumont Tay- 
‘lor, of Highland, who will be 109 
pee 16, 
Cranbrook. Artist 
°F redenthal Dies 
"in Rome at 44 
A former Pontiac area yesident 
and art graduate and Bomfel 
of Cranbrook Academy, field 
he ap- Hills, was found dead in 
|apartment yesterday a 
|parently had taken an overdose 
lof barbiturates, according to po- 
‘lice. 
| He was David Fredenthal, 44, 
|a Detroit-born sketcher and water 
colors artist. 
Following graduation from the 
Cranbreok Academy, he attended 
the Colorade Springs Fine Arts 
Center, He hag exhibited his 
works in Flint, New York, Wash- 
ington and San Francisco. 
As a war correspondent for Life 
| Magazine from 1944 to 1946, he   1 
  
| 
A Citizen reporter appeared on 200 million Russians.< The real |became famed for taking his sketch 
pad into places where photog-jham Country Club following the 
raphers were forbidden and then dedication of the Eight Mile road 
coming out with drawings which|widening project, announced that 
ibrought wide acclaim. 
  | in collections at the Milwaukee 
| Art Institute and the Museum 
of Modern Art and the Metropoli- 
_ tam Museum of Art in New York. 
“The U.S.S.R. | Fredenthal’s combat sketches of 
World War II in the Pacific and 
drawings of the late conductor 
Arturo Toscanini were also famous, 
said- he had been ill for some 
time. 
Derailed Car of Train 
Holds Up City Traffic 
Traffic was blocked for more 
than an hour yesterday afternoon 
when one car of a 14car Grand 
Trunk freight train was derailed   
  His works have been included | 
Friends of Fredenthal in Rome 
‘ iat the Columbia avenue crossing. 
sverye "| No one was injured in the derail- 
iment, which occurred at 5 p.m. sumably within the 
plan. 
‘has $7,700,000 in cash at hand at 
.|being hurt by loose talk about the’ 
-\probable state deficit by the end] | the ‘studio to display their pic- 
| tures and later learned they had | 
| Signed contratts te pay for 
| pictures. | Oosterbaan will finish out the 
1958 season as head coach. Michi- 
igan has two games remaining, 
\with” Indiana tomorrow and Ohio 
{State the following Saturday. 
  
‘Finance Officials. Agree: 
Stale fo Struggle Through: LANSING  — Although Michi-|of the fiscal year. Some predictions | 
‘gan is in the red financially, the have held the state will be a 2 
state will be able to struggle along 65 million dollars in the red by 
until the next meeting of the Leg-'end of the fiscal year. 
jislature, top state officials have|   
“It's impossible f° tell what | 
our position will be ‘until we know 
what our revenue is,”’ Brown 
said. ‘The conclusion was reached at! 
a meeting of state fiscal experts, 
called by Gov. Williams yesterday 
to review the current financial stat-- The Democratic tréasurer 
us. iclaimed Republicans are guilty of; 
Sanford A. Brown, state treas- taking the most pessimistic view. 
urer, said Michigan will be able ‘Meanwhile.’ he said, ‘these 
to meet its payrolls and welfare statements are hurting our position 
payments from incoming revenues. jon the bond market.” 
  * *« 
“The transition of factory and} 
office workers to a six or seven-| 
‘hour working day is to be com- 
pleted by 1960,"" Tass said, and) 
those with a seven-hour day will! 
‘have a 40-hour week—meaning "| 
  oe six work days—by 1962. 
e report emphasized that the’ 
Isoviet Union was engaged 
peaceful competition with the cap- 
| talist world. 
  
tina Charles 10 Today 
LONDON (UPI) Prince 
Charles celebrated his 10th birth- 
day today by sharing a large 
cake with his classmates at tea. 
The rest of the day was spent 
in class as usual. Charles, who 
someday will be crowned King 
of Britain, attended all his 
classes at the exclusive Cheam 
School in Berkshire. The tea-time 
cake was the only note given 
| of his birthday.     
He said ‘“‘a day of reckoning” | 
is coming somewhere in the fu- Even If You’re Just 25 ~   
ture, however. 
  
tetra we soo Start Retirement Practice ithe Legislature meets in Janu-| 
ary to determine where we go from! 
here,’ Williams said. 
kk 
Brown reported that the state! Why not start this form 
the present moment. But around) After 65 a man’s c 
12 million dollars is owed to the 
three major state universities—the | 
University of Michigan, Michigan: 
State University and Wayne State 
University. \ 
* * * 
The universities are able to get 
along temporarily, Brown said, by! 
idipping into student fees. : 
Lynn M. Bartlett, state super- 
intendent of public instruction, | as well get in a few 
what's ‘wrong with her, 
reported that the state now owes pine trees—they’re too st 
ers Tempereture Chart ,| about 18 million dollars in state and watch it become an oak. Brownsville $5 74 Miami = 80 77| school aid. He said the figure eS Uinatnvete on 3 will jump to around 28 million 
g 80 te gues $8 dollars by next month. 
&.- Omaha € 1 ‘| “The islature just did not th foods, redheads and polities. 
ay Ebegais @ Hi -ae_ Vide money to take care of | | At 65 the only thing 
73 9 Bt. 1 78 a;| the school aid formula, — Williams | away is advice. But if you can, get rid of it be- 
8 8 & Francteco 06 S6\said. - fore you retire—and save 5 B8. Traverse C. 50 89 In addition, Bartlett said, schoo] energy. 
Ho eae” & Si\districts have borrawed about 35 ace 961 85| million dollars since July 1 to meet hen current operating expenses. | Anybody who adopts 
Brown said state bond sales are) 
and live forever. 
  your system can get.used to it? After 40 start the 
morning off with a bracing martini 
criticizing his wife. But why wait? You might 
girl in advance. At 45 you can start telling her 
| to perfect herself before you retire and begin 
your full-time criticism. 
After retirement a man needs less strenuous 
hobbies. Why not give up girl watching around 50, 
and take up tree watching? It is not only more 
restful. It is less expensive. Hint: Avoid watching 
At 55 give up things that excite or over- 
loal the circulatory system—such as fried | 
find it easy to adjust to retirement, when it comes, 
Well, anyway it will seem like forever. (Continued From Page One) 
of medication earlier, so 
hief form of exercise is 
workouts with the old 
thus giving her 20 years 
imulating. Pick an acorn 
a man can-afford to give 
this later drain on your in|} 
a   
An agreement has been signed | 
by the United Arab Republic and) 
Morocco under which the Egyptian 
region will send Morocco sugar, 
cotton, and. books in return for. 
canned sardines, minerals, and 
cardboard.   
Mackie Warns 
“=r Against Hassle Tells Birmingham Club 
Xways in Detroit Area 
Tied Up by Wrangling 
Michigan Highway Commissioner 
John C. Mackie continued his warn- 
ing to governing bodies in the De- 
troit metropolitan area that their 
wrangling over expressway routes 
is putting a snag in highway con- 
struction in their area. 
  Mackie, speaking at the Birming- 
outstate highway construction is on 
schedule. 
But, he added, construction in | 
the Detroit metropolitan area | 
will Jag until agreements on 
route locations are obtained from 
affected communities. 
“The time has come,” , Mackie 
said, “for local governing bodies 
and officials to face up to local 
pressure groups armed with an un- 
derstanding that the communities 
they represent are vitally depend- 
ent on the vastly improved stand- 
ards of mobility which can only 
be provided by the rapid develop- 
ment of new expressways.” 
. * * * 
He was apparently aiming his 
criticism at past squabbling over   the James Couzens expressway, 
| which resulted in the Detroit Com- 
mon Council voting against Mack- 
ie’s plans to make it an elevated 
superhighway.     \ The commissioner also an- 
nounced that his department put 
some $64 million of new construc- 
tion under ‘contract in the second) 
quarter of this year—almost twice |E 
as much as for any previos three- 
month period.   
TOY DEPT. SPECIALS    
  FRIDAY & 
SATURAY 
    
    
      
    —             
lt Walks—Talks—Lights Up  § Complete With Accessories — ; 
e 
; ROBERT ROBOT = Construction Camp 
a BBB: 3.49) ] $5.98 
; Value 3 = Value e 
Reward pogo Unbreak: s By MARX set includes: figures, ; ; . pole plas act . rag akes mg, Fe € fo eng lone nee tools,     
  
$1 HOLDS IN 
LAYAWAY 
    
' TOY and 
STORAGE 
many purpose chest! 
  these simple steps will 
  : Big and roomy for toys, 
clothing, etc. sheets, 
Housewares 
—~Znd Floor 
  Buy Now for Christmas Gifts! \ 
      
    
       
     
   4% ~=Many Uses! For storace 
Steel Frame — Padded Top — Fwo Sizes 
CHESTS , SPECIAL PURCHASE-®Save half on this 
w rugged, 
hinged fop, washable vinyl! fabric covered. 
   
     
     
     
  A two-day display of architectur-' 
al designs by O'Dell, Hewlett and|   
4 & 
a li F z Hi rt 
Royal Oak, following a long iil ness. 
* * * 
Surviving are his wife, Bonita; 
G. Knight, of Birmingham; 
  children. 
  
‘Santa Clous Shortage 
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. edge ok 
There may be a 
Santa Clauses hos ‘no oo Christ- 
mas season. Local a perce 
gave up plans to hold 
for Santas after only fi 
cants showed up, prec 
b E if 
A member of the Oakland Hills 
County Club, he was. a sales rep- 
resentative for the Sutherland Pa- 
per Co. of Kalamazoo for 25 years. 
a daughter, Mrs. G. William Oster- 
mann of Bloomfield Hills; a son, 
his 
mother, Mrs. Maude R. Houghton) 
jof Evanston, I, and two grand- 4 
of   
  
  
  
    
       
   
  <4 
    Regular $31.50 Value 
With Without 
Trade-in Trade-in 
14° 16* you s faster, cleaner, 
one’ ieare in jess than min- PAA 
eee 
EY 
2 LD 
LLM: 
La 
  Lady SCHICK Electric SHAVER Regular $14.95 Value 
With Without 
Trade-in Trade-in 
6% §8% 
different shaving edges, one for 
tender underarms,.one for legs. 
“Standard Brand Men's Electric 
Razors Accepted as Trades,   
Elec. Shavers —Main Floor 
MAILS 2 it 
  
STOP! 
( ee eee see > Cdl eee | i AK, ae 
    ee ae se some <a 
  ail            
     
     
     
                
    
      
       = STOP TOP PAYING YING High Prices: 
"HARDWARE DEP T. 
4-Shelf Unit 
All Steel 
Shelving Exactly as Pictured 
Regular $9.95 Value 
6*8 
@ Four 12x36” Shelves. 
| @ Full 5-Feet Tall 4 
      
              
      
   
  
at 
CS SE Se cee Ne 
ma - ore - ,. 
Retedeal | 
ii ay: 3. 4 
4 a 
AEE EE ATT rap ett 
atk ee ey 
oS 2 ee a ee ee a>. 
eR __ 
\ 
> 
$4.95 ae Value 
With Cover 
    
   
                
         
  
  $10.95 Value 
15x27x15-Inch 
shee $12.95 i Adee sg** Padded, 
blankets, 
  Safety style rubbish burner with 
perforated sides, covers, bot- 
toms. > 
$10.95 Value 6-FOOT UNIT = a @ Ready to Assemble 
Everything in easy - to - carry 
carton—ready to assemble with 
J just a screwdriver. Each shelf 
holds up to 300 pounds. 
$7. 88 Simms tow price ee eee 
NO-RUST ALUMINUM 
RURAL MAIL BOXES 
Value 
Post Office Approved 
Ever - lasting aluminum = rural 3 
mail box with signal arm Save § 
now.     
  Coco eeessocccccccccccccccccececesecooeceoes : 
  
  : 3” PIPE—2 Foot .. .65¢ 4” PIPE—2 Foot ___75c 
E. Save installation costs by doing 
98 North 
lan STM 3. vents. from any make dryer, through. wall or window, Do-It-Yourself and Save. 
_ Costly Installation Charges 
CLOTHES DRYER 
Vent Needs : 3 or 4-Inch Size 
Antomatie Closing au » | 
1.88 a a 
bie ses. eee ‘auows 
4" ELBOWS .......89¢ 
it. yourself. Easy ‘to install exhaust :   
      TONITE & | TURDAY Ke : yT 
ett ves ET OOO 
e. Ee. MOM: Sil 
jh 
Se 
ee         
      
              
9 WS 
      
    
  
     SS ee ae ET ane mee een 
  
      
  
         
    
     
* Withstands 
110 to 120 
Volts AC 
All.New RECHARGEABLE. 
        
Reg. 
37.58 
mz Ae lam he preg pish =, oN Seah 
  cmap ofr 
to 120 volt AC 
oe oF ee ee oe oe ee ee ee ee ee 
    For All Electric Besar 
Remington Speedak 
$5.95 Value 3 99 : Converts AC to DC— 
makes shaver run up 
to — faster. Limit 
  98 N. Saginaw 
       
  : Pocket Flashlight | 
en te 
   Main Floor 
  
     Famous Brand 
COSMETICS ot LOWEST PRICES 
= One of the best known beaut -. in the world, Soft, smooth 
~ are yours. 
Reg. $1.00 
39° — Save more 
@ than half. A 
limit of 2. 
        
  LANOLIN | 
LOTION | 
3S 
          wagul 
     Made by ‘TONT’ 
“Hush’ Cream 
Deodorant 
  Sagindw —Main Floor 
     
   
       
     
   
           
    
    
    
     
    
       
         
                LADIES! Here Are FE 
  
  OODBURY | 
Reg. $1.00 e 
& 
7 
MOVIE and SLIDE SCREENS = Giant 15-02. : 
                        mes ema. A 
peeveees 
ROTITITIVIT erie eeeee: 
You Buy Any PHOTO NEEDS ~ PLEASE READ AN a aes    
advertised specials . yriven. - but ve poe ef ee is ratandiee | 
; ? ‘FREE pd cated i) A you" eet "8 maser 
charges wil’ be — then a “9 a on ne 
    
FRIDAY and SATURDAY SALE VALUES! 
~ Pegs or Black & White Photographs 
BROWNIE Snap Cameras BROWNIE STARLET 
\. . Regular $5.95 Value 
BROWNIE HAWKEYE   
  See atte 
  "100 CARDS for only. .   
  
25 CARDS for only... $2.00 
50 CARDS for only. ..$3.94 
-$7,77 
Finest Quelity Productions 
NOW at weet PRICES! .. 
a cards made Ben 
favorite photo . . , 4 
penveenes <i designs your 
diftere: 
ee 
    
    
   
wy 
0000000 00000000000000009000 0800000 CCC OCS CO OS ECCEEES 
  
Regular $7.95 Value.....;. 
  
BROWNIE STARFLASH 
Regular $8.95 Value , 
BROWNIE STARFLEX 
Regular $10.95 Value ...... 687 
8287 ot eete 
       KODAK PONY 11 87 
Regular $26.75 Value ..... 19 
T 
zie aides kk “Dew STAR mo models Drints ang 
COOP Co esecccocccccceceseccceeesenooccccese 
F. amous Kodak — Revere — Wollensak — Others 
8mm Movie Cameras KODAK BROWNIE F2,3 1987) Regular $32.50 Value ....., 
KODAK BROWNIE FI.9 = 9 O87 
1. 3987) Regular $39.95 Value , 
KODAK TURRET F2.3 
14.9 987 | 
10787 Regular $59.50 Value ... 
->KODAK TURRET F1.9 
Regular $74.50 Value . 
7787 
  Kedak Electric Eye 
Terret Petenoek Elec.-Eye 
Reg. $99.50 . Reg. $139.50 .,......... 
Revere Eiee.- -Eye Revere Ele Turret-Roll, 12787 Turret-M. cure _ 14987 Reg. $169.50 ........., Reg. $9050 
a aol —— belts” any’ movie camera tm layaw by Just few of many, many movie cameras SIMM his aaa. Bere are 
Layaway for Christmas at These LOW PRICES! | | 
omm MOVIE PROJECTORS — $64. 95 Kodak Brownie 
300 Watt projector ...... 
$79.50 Kodak Brownie 
500 Watt projector ..;, 
$123.50 Kodak Showtime 
500 Watt projector ...... 
$127.50 Revere No. 777 
750 Watt projector ....., 
$89.95 Argus ‘M’ 500 
Movie Projector 
$162.50 Wollensak 715 
750 Watt projector 7287 
12987, ee | 
     SIMMS NOSSEWARE SALE , - Tr STORE      
  “Hampden” 5-PIECE 
Bridge Sets 
_ TABLE and 4 CHAIRS 
$28.95 
Value 1 6” 
Folding table and folding chairs. 
Padded seats and backs on 
chairs. Enameled frames. Gifts 
for home 
ALL NYLON 
Cake & 
Pastry 
~ Decorator 
$1.50 Value 
“OF 
dec- 
orator tips & 3 
cookie makers. HERE TOUR inl WORTH MORE TONITE & 
SATURDAY. 
       
  Meay Uses—Tie-On : 
- Chair Cushions | 
Regular $1.95 Value 
2 For 1” 
15 x 14-inch embossed plastic 
chair cushion, use on house 
chairs, car, beach, stadium 
seats, etc. 
Flexible PLASTIC—3-PIECE 
Mixing Bowl Set 
$2.98 Value 
1“ 
@i'> Quart 
@21, Quart 
@4 Quart 
» Nest of three 
bowls. Molded 
handle fits 
hand, pouring lip and graduated 
for mensuring. Better than shown. 
    Choice of 4 colors. « 
          
         
     
  
      
    $174.50 Kodak Showtime 
750 Watt projector ...... 13987 | pa stato 
poe pre ger fT pret'ts wreteors to fit your needs and =| 
OCC ceccccccccccccccscccccoccececceococcees. 
Prices Slashed! Layaway a Gift T. oday! FAMOUS SI] P teeta etait telat tL LLY x a) BRAND DE PROJECTORS SPECIAL opcmaoe! Save On # $22.50 Realist Projector : ‘Z Lf for 35mm or 127 slides ... 1487 : ¥> ALL LEATHER - $29.95 Realist Automatic for 35mmor 127 siaer,, 2287/8 MEN'S 8 and 10 Inch © $39.95 Anseo Deslet a7 8 _ - 2eistome, ete, 2987/8 Laced Pacs : $62.50 Argus 300 paris . Cy 35mm slide projector ...., 4987 | Styles for Hunters and Outdoor Workers H 
$69.95 Argus 500 Auto: s 35mm slide projector ... 5587 4 barry 7 + $64.50 Kodak 300-Watt $31.50 Kodak see att to $18 a carer Mee 4987 Eee ae! 5987/5 cHoice : $00.80 Argus Electro. RR Kodak, Caval- YOUR | leas pene yee mammal 7487 p earbellben peae ala’ [ners alelacece 10987 ALL siz 12 Hf &S—6 + on Small deposit’ holds is Free ee aeuce Prolectors you'll find here st SIMMS.| but not in coy style. | -PCCCOCCCO OOOO OOOO SOLO CEEODOLEOCO ESE oOCCC CLES Plain moccasin or ap “7 
Only $1 Holds Your Choice ’til Christmas paw oa aod | 
FAMOUS 5 BRAND KPO UR METERS Genuine LEATHER — Double Thickness 
    = -2 $5.95 Walz Meter 
Direct Reading . & Spies 6 os 
$9.95 Alpex Meter, 
With Case... cee en 
? $10.95 GE Mascot 11 
* Save $2.08 now .......... 
$18.50 Weston Dr. 
Case included for .......-.. 
$16.50 Argus L3 ave nearly $5 1187 
$17.50 Argus 144 
Attach to camera 
$34.50 GE Meter 
With case for ...... 0.0045 
Check the famous name brands and the famous SIMMS CUT PRICES before you buy. Only $1 holds your choice of meters in lay away 'til Christmas. 
SHHSHCHSHHSHSHHHHSOHSSSHSESHECOHHEEEOEEEOEEEE 
Save Now on Genuine RADIANT Made os 
a ey 
GOOD Meteor Model 
      Street $12.95 Value 
30x40 Inch .............. 787 
$14.95 Value 
40x40 Inch 2.0... ccc ee 987) 
$20.95 Value ' SUsS0 lath w.0k ice bce 1487 
| BETTER {8 BEST Uniglow 
See” 1387 See: ale a 
TaN See 18 wo 2687 e a ferseina 19.87 Pen 29.078 Sew "Onision taro - dave, bend vail base. BEST moieis ig 
\ i I 
98 North : 
Saginaw rj 
%           
  ~ \ : ~~ 
           
   
      
   ® 
ae 
Boys’ Combat All Leather With Buckle 
biter 98 gran 
% to 3 
All Jeathér uppers, composition 
soles and rubber heels, 
quality. and unconditionally guar- 
anteed. 
Shoe Dept. ~Basement . INSULATED (Using Thermos-Bottle Principle) 
Thermo Boots ALL WATERPROOF Treated 
$15.95 
* Quality 
Sizes 
6 to 11 
6to li, + 
Styled As Pictured 
Boots 
All first * For HUNTERS 
* For FARMERS 
* For WORKERS 
Warmest footwear ever made! 
* Keeps in heat, keeps out cold. 
Sizes Paracord soles and heels. 
     
   
  Tops 
4% 
shabalalalalalalelelat tla lalalalalelsialalabaatatlal hd ‘enuenntttthenana ta Sececcasenerensrsnssasinsereseess 
               
       
     
   
     
IE 8'%-ounce twill. 
‘Car Brake Fluid 
  After-shave lotion. completely masculine. Save now.   
Toc Contruction ON THE OUTSIDE 
     . « « BARGAINS AS. USUAL on The Inside! 
The MAUL McCOTTA Company is giving our storefront- a ‘beauty 
treatment’ and when the scaffolding went up our prices went DOWN. 
Pardon any inconvenience you may have getting into our store. ... and 
we are saying—‘excuse us’ by giving even greater-than-usual bargains 
to make shopping now doubly worthwhile. 
  
Super-Special - PRICE REDUCTIONS Effective TONIGHT 7 AND ae   
Regular $1.00 Value—2 Styles—Sizes 81/2 to 1] 
Ladies’ Nylons -- Pr. 400 needle seamless or micro-mesh and 60/15. fashioned. 59°   
Regular $1.00 Value—for Men 
Mennen’s Skin Bracer 
  
E Regular $2.49 Value—Warm Flannelette 
E Ladies’ Flannel Gowns Full length style. Long sleeve. Colors in sizes 34 to 40, 1" 
  
Regular 69c Value—Fast Relief 
Coldene Chest Rub For fast, effective relief-of chest colds and aches. 46°   
IE Genuine ‘HANES’ Cotton Knits 
Child’s 2-Pc. Sleepers Long sleeve, feet on pants. Gripper snaps. 6 mo. to 4 years. 
  
Regular 67¢ Values—You Save 21c¢ 
Fasteeth for Dentures Holds dental plates firmly without irritating. 
  
Regular $3.49 Value—’BLUE BELL’ 
Men’s Work Pants Sanforized. Khaki or grey. Sizes 29 to 42   
  70x80-Inch Size 
COTTON SHEET 
Blankets 2 For 3° 
Plaids and solids. As- 
sorted colors. Stitched 
edges. 
  
  
  70x90-Inch Size 
STRIPE SHEET 
Blankets 1? 
Blue or green stripes. 
4-inch acetate binding. $2.98 
Value 
  
  
  
Regular $1.00—‘Johnson & Johnson’ 
Baby Oil or Lotion Your choice of either of these famous products. 
  
Regular $1.98 Value—POLYETHYLENE 
EPlastic Dish Pan 15-inch diameter. Cushion soft, rolled edges. 
  
Regular 59c Value—Johnson G Johnson 
Baby Talcum Powder Soothing, non-irritating for baby’s soft skin. 
  
Regular $24.95—-SPEEDWAY 2.5 Amps 
¥Y%-In. Electric Drill Geared chuck, universal metor, 2400 RPM's. 
  
Regular 89c Value—COLGATES 
Room : Deodorant ‘Florient’ spray bomb to kill odors in house. 
  
Regular $1.95 Value—100%% Pure 
Motor Ojil--2-Gal. Can 10-20-30-40 grades in sealed 2-gallon can. 
  
$3.95 Value—Sheffield Steel 
Steak Knife Sets Serrated blades, ‘Lustrex’ handles. Set of 6 for 
  « Ej 
Regular $1.00 Volue—Premax 
12 
Heavy duty fluid meets all SAE specifications. 12 ozs 
  
Regular $2.95 Value—Tin Container 
2-Lb. Fruit Cakes Chock-full of fruit—rum and brandy flavored. 
© 
  
Regular $6.95 Value—Gift Boxed 
4-Pc. Dresser Sets Set has brush, comb, mirror and powder jar. 
  
Regular $2.49: Value—PLAID FLANNEL 
Men’s Sport Shirts ‘King Kole’ Sanforized, 3 colors. Sizes $~M-L-XL. 
  
Irregulars of up to $5.95—-LADIES’ 
‘Playtex’ Girdles Fabricon lined. Figure control, All sizes S to XL. 
  
Regular 59c Value—’HERSHEYS’ 
Instant Cocoa Mix For hot or cold drinks. Mixes instantly. POUND box. 
  
Regular $2.50 Value—6 of 12 Volt 
Auto Head Lamps Sealed beam. Easy to install yourself. Limit 2 lamps, 
Rights Reserved i 
to Limit Quantities 
  72x84-Inch Size 
WARM BLENDS 
Blankets 
$4.98 2°9 
Choice of pastel colors. 
Satin bound. Full size. 
  
  
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$2.49 14 - 
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High count — in 
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fitted styles. 
  
     
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1958 
  
~ Overland Mail Began in 1858 Paid i = Passengers $400. \India Made by FDR ‘Calif. (UPD—The leader of the ally “dangling. in. space by. thelr 
for Hazardous Stage; 
stages of the Butterfield Overiand' 
operation made the nation glow | 
with pride. 
The mail and passenger route 
ran 2.795 miles from St. Louis to 
San Francisco over mountains, 
plains, deserts, creeks, and riv- 
ers through a frontier made haz- 
ardous by brigands and Indians, 
the National Geographic Society 
says. 
. Despite obstacles, the stages 
set forth twice a week, from 
lowed 4 pounds of luggage. The 
postal rate was 10 cents a letter. 
The need for better communica- 
tion with the Far West was so 
great that in 1857 Congress au- 
thorized an overland mail route. 
The Government agreed to pay 
$600,000 yearly for a semiweekly 
service ‘in good four-horse coaches 
or spring wagons,” each journey 
not to exceed 25 days. 
The Post Office Department 
awarded the contract to John 
Butterfield of Albany, New York. 
On September 15, 1858, the 
first westbound mail left St. 
Louis. It went by rail to Tipton, 
' Missouri, then was transferred 
te a shiny mew coach for the 
long trek, Cutting across Arkan- 
sas and Indian Territory (Okia- 
homa), the wheels spun dustily 
over an almost uninhabited re- 
gion of north-central Texas, 
crossed a barren plain drained 
by the Pecos River, and climbed 
through Guadalupe Pass to reach 
El Paso. 
The coach joggled over 350 miles 
of rough, unbroken country to Tuc- 
son, veered northward to Pima 
Indian villages on the Gila River, 
and continued to Fort Yuma. The 
route followed the San Diego trail 
for a way, then turned toward a 
sleepy old Spanish town called Los 
Angeles. The coach rolled into San 
Francisco on the morning of Oc- field line was merged with other)3 Seale 3,604 Foot Yosemite Wall companies, But even today, time 
ES====Clmb sheer Face of Cit of the Overland Mail’s tracks 
Suggestion to Partition YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, ificult-climb. The three worked 23% 
NEW DELHI (AP). — President face of E) Capitan, the 3,604-foot)’ 
Trip to West Coast Franklin” 'D.. Roosevelt suggested |monolith at the entrance to Yosem- 
| partition of India as early as 1942\ite Valley, said he was “pretty|above sea level. It has been ap- granite added to the hazard as 
WASHINGTON — It was just a)@% @ way out of the impasse over jclose to cracking” when he got. to 
century ago that horse-drawn| freedom from British rule, a col ithe top. relatively easy seven-mile — 
lection of letters to Prime Min- | “I’m sort of wobbly after hang-jbut the face has never been coi 
"He'll Get Time to Study 
  tober 10. 
Civil War ended the service. The 
Federal Government moved the 
route northward out of the Con- 
federacy's reach, and the Butter- 
  
  
are you 
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this fascinating fieid—thowsends of men 
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United Electronics Laberetories offers 
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W you measure vp in these essentials, 
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ELECTRONICS. We want te show you 
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  jours in the final push, occasion- 
nylon ropes, into the granite for footholds and 
El Capitan's peak is 7.649 teet ao scene 9 their nylon ropes. sa first party ever to climb the sheer 
proached from the rear by ®lthey neared the top, 
    
  
   
    
      
    Mail made their first nonstop] ister Nehru disclosed today. ‘ing in slings for 13 days,” said/quered up to now. : 
dashes to and from the West Coast.| Nehri celebrated his 69th birth-| (Warren Harding. 34, of West ‘Sac- With Harding were George Whit-| ; | ee ee : 
Scheduled time: 25 days. iday with publication of a new ramento, “‘but I feel great.” more, 27, Fresno, and Wayne, HUNTINGTON, W. Va. ® —\Her pencil skefch was a perfect) a | Mile East of Auburn Heights 
: : book, “A Bunch of Old Letters’’| “ry clwe tty close (Merry, 27. San Jose |Arrested for drunkefiness, a pedes-|likeness. He was taken ~ FURNITURE SALES 
Since then, Peony Express .overing correspondence ov er| admi Pes ‘150 Y the Asked why. he did it, Merry said: ‘trian persuaded police not to/giri’s apartment where she made} 
_ tiders, trains, automobiles, and ipree decades before Indian inde- fad ~— when | got fe charge him with jaywalking by/a positive identification. i 3345 Auburn Rd. « (M- 
airplanes have respectively whit. pendence in 1947. ei wes pest =e” ‘ “‘jome people play golf, some s, (explaining: “I don’t understand * * * | You Always Buy for Less at L & 
tled the distance from days to a | Harding and two companions ridge, some tiddiywinks. 1 clim ithe new traffic signals when I'm) Booked on a charge of attempt- 9-¢ MON. thra SAT—FRI. ‘ti! oe 5-02) 
hours, But in the fall of 1858 The 1950 census showed more reached the top of the granite cliff| reeks.’ ‘sober, and they’re even worseied rape was Theodore Greenbrg, | 
the Overiand Mail's timetable women than men for the first time. \Wednesday after an incredibly dif-| Harding and his two companions when I'm drunk.” 3. 
    
* 
Wete putting the pyramids 
right back where they were ! 
“-, ™ 
Recently we have been testing a slightly different label on. 
the Camel package. The experimental design changed the il- 
lustration and the wording a little. That’s all. No change what- : 
ever was made in the famous Camel blend of choice Turkish 
and domestic tobaccos. 
What we learned in the test is that Camel smokers prefer 
the original package, so we’re putting the pyramids right back - 
where they were, as quickly as we can do it. The test package 
is being discontinued, so you will soon be getting your Camels 
in the package you know so well. 
We have always been proud of the loyalty of Camel smokers, 
and we thank you for helping us decide not to change the looks 
of the package that brings you the best-liked cigarette of them 
all! (Yes, we are happy to say that again this year, for the 10th 
straight year, Camel outsells all others!) 
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company 
' Winston-Salem, North Carolina 
  
  
     
     
    
            
    
ee 
     
    | TH PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER. 14, 1958 
      
   f 
rote. 
Little Mel is Melvin Leroy Drig- 
gers Jr., 411 Locust St., Manteca, 
  
Deep Mystery in Well 
DENTON, Tex. (R — Roy M. 
Smith has an old-fashioned well at 
his home, but it pumps nothing 
but hot water. Neither Smith or 
city water officials can explain 
the phenomenon.; Wells in the 
same area give cool water.   § dren have few prejudices,” he saidjcan be accomplished without 3/se- make it difficult to choke off 
; a Jackson, re-elected to a new six- 
so that set social patterns can bei...» term in the election landslide 
that boosted Democrats to 64 Sen- 
Commenting that “small chil-|cans, said he believes ‘all of this 
the best approach might be t0lrious split in Democratic party 
schools. : ‘ ” es * * 2 f f 
: , Jackson has supported éfforts to 
“ft am confident that men of|loosen the Senate rule Which now 
honest intelligence and good willirequires the affirmative vote of 
believe that integration is right|64 senators to ‘off debate 
and legal,” Jackson said. He ¢x-|: and force a vote controversial 
pressed hope that Congress ¢an issues. 
consider this and other civil rights ¥ * 
Sens, a2 H. Douglas (D-Ill) 
emotionalism that has caused con-|and Clifford P/ Case (R-NJ) have 
troversy in some areas ’in the|said. they will force ‘a test on re- 
past year.” vision of Seplate rules early in the   iy tan and letters. to. her dying “a en ta meget for a revision of Senate rules that} 
* ate seats against 32 for Republi/ fos 
ing up between water ski-shows.   _ SPRING CHICKEN — Summery tall weather in Florida has evidently put some spring into"Edra Furlong, as she cuts capers 
at Cypress Gardens, Beneath a sheltering palm = she’s limber-   
    
  Election of 16 “new / ’ senators, new session which begins Jan. 7. 
  
YW SALE 
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on ALL ODDS 
and ENDS LEFT AFTER 
OUR GREAT SALE to 
CLOSE-    
  BEFORE MOVING OUT STOCKS 
  
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style cover, seat and 
    
HUNDREDS oF PIECES NOT. ADVERTISED GO ON SALE—COME SEE! 
  
129.50 Lounge chair ........ 
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/ $4.50 Occasions! chale ..... 
69.50 Blond mhg. corner desk 
289.50 Double dresser & panel 
19.95 Unfinished twin beds . 
36.50 Seafoam nite stand ... 
22.50 Maple nite stands 
59.50 Blond mhg. coffee table oeee TONIGHT and SATURDAY 
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BARGAINS /Out They Go! 
149,50 Lounge Chair oe eo oe 
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| 194.50 Blond ext. table and 4 chairs. 
144.50 Silver fox ext. table & 4 cahirs 68.00 
419.50 6-pc. blond mhg. din. rm. suite 199.50 
CASH or TERMS TONIGHT and SATURDAY 
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BARGAINS| ‘Out They Go! 
4 
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ceeeee 64.50 29.95 Mhg, end table ............ 19.50 
... 69.50 49.50 Mhg. step table ......... .-. 24,50 
coe. O50 99.50 Fruitwood room dividers ..... 49.50 
27.00 13.95 Nest of stools ...... cocseee §$.50 
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59.00 24.50 Mbg. tea carts .......... vee 12,00 
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a STEY 
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a) Mc -8 rat |! 
Coca x | at, } pictats af . OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9:00 
Artist's Drawing of Modern Furniture Home Nearing Completion 
eas 
tered   
~ After 41 years on Sout 
  and expense of moving. 
  h Saginaw St. opposite Auburn Ave., Stewart-Glenn 
Co. will move to the New Store pictured above. An extreme effort is being 
made to close-out all odds and ends of present stock in order to vacate our ; 
present building in the shortest possible time to save the: incorivenience    Influence Path _jout to lunch to try to see how a 
‘important eases before them,” 
Cutoff Proposed 
  Federal Regulators Is, | Ban on Contacts With 
: Congressman’s Aim 
| WASHINGTON {AP) — Rep. 
|Charles A, Wolverton (R-NJ) said! 
today Congress should ban can- leoatmniitee’ 
itacts between members of feder-| 
‘al regulatory commissions and | was George O. Sutton, Washington | 
pending | attorney, 
| corpor ation seeking FCC approv-; 
| “Contact with members of such | al to operate TV. channel 4 in’ 
‘commissions should be dn the same | Pittsburgh. | | Persons interested in 
cases. 
| 
| basis as with the courts,” Wol- 
‘ verton said in an interview. 
“No one would ever take a judge} 7 
court case is coming along, yet 
many persons contact agency and | 
commission members to pry- into} 
* * * 
Wolverton voiced his opinion as) |Prospect Still ‘Trying’ 
Car’s Radiator, Hoses 
DETROIT (AP). — Used car 
salesman H, A. McFarland saw-a 
model 
     
  the House Legislative Oversight | 
subcommittee prepared to con-| 
tinue questioning an _ attorney! 
{about vague rumors of a $50,000 
| payoft solicitation in a television | 
case before the Federal Communi- 
|cations Commission. 
The New Jersey congressman | 
jis senior Republican on the sub- 
Recalled to the witness stand 
who had represented a 
Earth's tota) land area is about | 
36,840 million acres. ,% md   
  
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    man closely examining a late ine. 
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car keys and nave an the 
vehicle for a trial spin. 
Hours later, 
the car parked several blocks 
away, steam ‘pouring out of -its    
       
McFarland found} 
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   4 "ne of the most interesting politi- 
al figures of the day is Premier 
_ CHARLES pr GAULLE. When the French 
, government was wallowing in one 
crisis after another, De GauLLE came 
- to the fore and gave France the lead- 
: : ership sorely needed. 
; x * * 
i Had the general chosen to remain 
: in quiet retirement he would have 
> been remembered as austere, h - 
> less and seemingly ‘acaseeied’ with 
: delusions of personal grandeur. In a 
: few short months he has changed 
_? this impression. 
Today France -has leadership 
that it has not seen for genera- 
tions. It could even be said that 
, iv some instances he is showing 
more leadership than leaders of 
- the countries ‘which have been 
= eritieal of French weaknesses in - 
the past. 
x * * 
Possibly the general's path is not 
always correct, but at least he is 
positive, productive and aggressive. 
He is a man with a set plan and he is 
attempting to carry out his ideas. 
The French people are viewing a 
leader that obviously has confidence 
- in himself and the nerve to face up 
| - to the problems of the day. His views 
| are clear-cut and not wishy-washy. 
x * * 
An example of this is De GauLLr’s 
proposal to meet with Algerian rebel 
leaders in Paris. The meeting may not   
cole omen eae rr SS ame 
af 
come off, but at least it shows his 
willingness to-take a step to seek a 
solution to an urgent problem. 
The Premier is surprising many 
of his followers by not treading 
a narrow path. Instead he is 
taking a wide outlook and dem- 
onstrating a readiness to explore 
all viewpoints. 
x * * 
To the people of France he is now 
more than a symbol they called upon 
when in desperate need. They see him 
as a human being they can trust, 
. with whom they find remarkable per- 
- = gsonal dignity, for all that he still 
, stands an aloof figure. 
i 
  
  
-US.-Japanese Treaty 
Coming Up for Revision 
The moderate government of Pre- 
. = Mier Kisxr of Japan is under fire 
_ ; from Socialists and unions who' would 
; like to weaken ties with the United 
States. 
To curb a flareup in crime and 
labor violence, a bill to strengthen > 
the working powers of the police had 
‘ been introduced by the government. 
: In angry opposition the Socialists 
: boycotted the Diet and attempted to 
close it by. force, their leader crying 
“violent revolution is the only road 
to power.” Communist infiltrated 
: unions denounced Kis for wanting 
= to return to harsh police rule and 
= Many workers went out on strike. 
i 2 a 
3 Proponents of the bill point out 
: that the police, who have little or 
: no authority now, must have 
greater powers in order to stop 
: demonstrations which have par- 
: alyzed communities from time to 
: time. They insist there is no in- 
tention of returning the police - 
to their pfewar status under the 
Japanese militarists. 
x * x 
The underlying cause of the fracas, 
: however, seems to be U.S. support of 
ims moderate and co-operative 
THE PONTIAC PRESS Publishea by Tut Ponriuc Press Company 
: a W. Huron st. Pontiac, Michigan 
‘Trade Mark Daily Extept Sunday SOOO SEREHE OA ED OO HO & iE 4s ee 
    
iii kee, eo 
  
  
Jow Riuey Arsitant Advertising 
. Prrvcreary ty, mise M. Teespwet: ice ee reylation panager 
SG nrg JoRDan, 
a vertising : Peet Bassr17, 
Executive Vice President - and Advertising Diréctor       
          Groscs C, Inman, — 
Classified Manage?      sistence that modification of the 
treaty will not mean any change in 
the close association between Japan 
and the United States in the matter 
of security, but should give Japan a 
more equitable and stable operating 
basis. 
x * * 
For its part the United States 
has indicated a willingness to 
undertake treaty revisions, to 
Japan’s advantage, provided 
mutual security is not weakened. 
The Japanese can expect more con- 
sideration if they continue in office a 
moderate government. Treaty re- 
visions should not’ be made the work 
of either rightists or leftists. 
  
Tue coming winter will be severe, , 
mild or somewhere in between. This 
prediction is based upon the fact that 
bark is on the outside of trees this 
fall. 
  
  
“My poctor says my condition is 
satisfactory,” a hospital patient said, 
“but he’s much easjer to satisfy about 
my condition than I am.” 
The Man About Town 
That Fire of 1881 
It Raged in Thumb District 
and Affected Pontiac Area 
Weather: What appears to have 
gone nuts—and is driving us.   
  
  
  Several readers have written of their 
recollections of the forest fire that swept 
Michigan’s Thumb Area in 1881, taking 
dozens of lives and doing millions in prop- 
erty damage. 
Its effect was felfin the Pontiac area, 
the smoke darkening the skies for several 
days. The oil burning lamps on our down- 
town corners were run on a.24-hour basis, 
and business generally was suspended. 
Among its survivors was . 
Mrs, Emery Andrus, 
now of Rochester, whose father, the late 
Melvin Decker, 
then owned the mills at Deckerville, which 
were destroyed, together with most of the 
village. 
Now living at North Branch, 
G. A. Hood 
- then was located near Goderich, Ont., and 
writes that the smoke blew across the lake 
in such volume that it was necessary to 
close the schools and it was like night for 
Several days. 
  Some cotton plants brought back from 
Georgia last spring by 
Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Whitman 
of Lake Orion, and set out in their garden, 
now: have bolls almost ready to burst into 
maturity. 
  Always raising a few peanuts in his gar- 
den, 
Burnham Rodgers 
of Oxford has a problem. The squirrels are 
digging them up. 
An iris plant with blossoms is reported 
by 
. Mrs. Glen Ferrell 
of 240 West Longfellow Ave., after bloom- 
ing at the regular time. 
  Those are pretty fine new front 
doors on our neighbor, the First 
Presbyterian Church. 
  A plant that grew up from the stump 
of a sunflower that had been cut down 
several weeks ago by 
Jeff Gruenwald 
of Birmingham, now is ready to bloom 
  Some wild ducks that stop over near the 
home of 
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Sery 
at Pontiac Lake are getting too choosy. 
They refuse to eat potato peelings, but 
just dote on peeled potatoes that have 
been chopped up. 
  When the family dog in the home of 
Arnold Mullerman 
of Drayton Plains, brought up a live cock 
pleasant the other day, he was crestfallen 
and since has gone around with the mopes 
because his master released it. 
Verbal Orchids to- 
Thomas J. Smith 
of 223 Elm St.; 92nd birthday. 
W. A..(Gus) Nienstedt 
of 85 South Johnson Ave.; 91st birthday. 
D. Preston Miller 
of Birmingham; 87th birthday. 
Mr. and Mrs, Fay Wendell 
of Milford; 62nd wedding anniversary.     
  
4 e 
  policies, Discussion on revision of the 
mutual security pact between Japan 
~-and the U8. is now going on, Premier — 
Kisat has been outspoken in his in-- 
. effect, 
     
    
      Easy to Hit but It Won’t Go Far   
David Lawrence Asks:   
Are Capital Schools Segregated? 
WASHINGTON — Right here in 
the District of Columbia, the latest 
official figures show, there are 20 
schools which are all-Negro and 
five schools that 
are all-white, 
Does this mean 
that the “law of 
the land’ is being 
ignored,. or, to 
borrow a phrase 
from some of the 
critics, that the 
law is being ‘‘de- 
fied’? 
The Supreme 
Court of the Unit- 
ed States in its LAWRENCE 
historic 1954 decision quoted with 
approval a statement that “‘segre- 
gation of white and colored chil- 
dren in public schools has a detri- 
mental effect upon the colored 
children.” 
It cited as one of the “‘intangi- 
ble” factors to be considered in 
providing the Negro student 
“equality” In education, “his abil- 
ity to study, to engage in dis- 
cussions and exchange views 
with other students.” The court 
said “such considerations apply 
with added force to children in 
grade and high schools.” 
The argument, of course, is'made 
that the existence of all-white or 
all-Negro schools here is due -not 
to a deliberate policy of segrega- 
tion but to the accident of resi- 
dence in a particular school dis- 
trict. 
a 7 * * 
But this can be readily over. 
come by providing bus transporta- 
tion so that children can be taken 
from one part of the city to an- 
other in order to enjoy the benefits 
of integration as the Supreme 
Court has described them. 
Today the district still main- 
tains to some extent the “sepa- 
rate but equal’ idea. Not only 
are there 25 schools that are, in 
completely segregated, 
but there are 74 other schools in 
which 90 to 99 per cent are 
Negro. 
In 20 additional schools, the en- 
rollment is 90 to 99 per cent white. 
This means that, out of 170 schools 
in Washington, 119 are entirely or 
almost entirely of one race or the 
other, 
  * * * 
How long tan such virtual segre- 
gation be maintained in the nation- 
al capital? The whole country is 
being told a segregation must   
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCALFE 
The office is no place to nap 
- Not even when you're through 
. With each and every duty which . Has been assigned to you. . . For you agreed upon a length . Of service day to day 
And cae employer promised 
you _.. A stipulated pay . .. And 
the refore if your work is done 
Before it’s time to quit , You 
should approach him instantly - ara 
And you should tell him it , . . The 
obligation of your job. 1s just. 
as much vour own . . When your 
employer is at hand... As when 
you are alone... And. you will be 
much better off . . Without that “stolen” rest , . As every boss 
appreciates . |. The one who serves 
him best. . 
(Copyright, 1958)   
The Country Parson 
      
  “A fellow can't be happy if he has everything he wants. ~ for then he lacks the joy of antici- 
pation,” 
‘ 
  be abolished altogether and that 
there - must be no “evasive” 
schemes, 
The accident of residence is 
largely due to discrimination in 
respect to housing. There are 
_ areas of Washington, for in- 
stance, where “restrictive cove- 
nants”—contracts made between 
private citizens not to sell to cer- 
tain races — opePate even though 
the Supreme Court has ruled that 
these are not enforceable by le- 
gal proceedings. 
Apparently many people in the 
District of Columbia are objecting 
even to such desegregation as has 
eccurred. In the last four years 
there has been a gradual exodus 
of white children to private schools 
or to the suburbs in nearby Vir- 
ginia and Maryland. 
The latest official figures show 
that, in all public schools in the 
district, the enrollment now is . 
74.1 per cent Negro — which 
means 2,434 fewer whites and 
5,539 more Negroes than a year 
ago, 
If the theory expounded by the 
Supreme Court of the United 
States is accepted, education will 
not be equal until every Negro 
child has°a chance to attend a white ‘school and “‘to study, to en- 
gage in discussions and. exchange 
views with other students.” ° 
* ® * : 
In New York City, several Negro 
parents are boycotting certain 
schools which they consider in- 
ferior in quality, although ‘“‘inte- 
grated,” and are demanding bet- 
ter education through assignment 
of their children to white schools 
in other parts of the city irrespec- 
tive of residence. They are willing 
to provide transportation, They are 
quoting the Supreme Court deseg- 
regation decision of 1954 in sup- 
port of their demands; but thus 
far New York City has refused to 
redistrict the Negro pupils, 
(Copyright 1958)   
THOUGHTS FOR TODAY 
and 
—Isaiah 35:10. 
* * * 
There are no songs comparable 
to the. songs of Zion, no orations 
equal to those of the prophets, and 
no politics like which the 
Scriptures teach.—John Milton. 
  
Dr. William Brady Says:   
Overheated Air Causes’ 
False Sense of Chilliness 
“Is there any scientific proof 
that night air is at any time harm- 
ful to one having a cough, pre- 
sumably allergic or due to bron- 
thial trouble?” 
This query bears’ 
a Michigan post- 
mark but no sig- 
m™ nature — just 
neaningless _ini- 
tials. 
Let's simplify 
the query to sev- 
°n words: 
Is night air at 
any time harm- 
? ful 
DR. BRADY The answer is a 
matter of, opinion, and in my opin- 
ion the answer is no.» The air at 
night is generally cooler and con- 
tains more water vapor than in 
the daytime and less dust. The 
open air, that is. 
  The air in the house, office, 
shop, sickroom, schoolroom, hos- 
pital, theater, train, subway or 
bus is ‘usually overheated in 
the winter time and excessively 
dried out. 
Both factors, excessive heating 
and excessive drying, must be con- 
trolled, preferably by thermostat 
and efficient humidification, to 
maintain hygienic air condition 
during the season of artificial 
heating. no matter what methods, 
of heating may be used. 
The outdoor air in winter con- 
tains enough ‘water vapor, hu- 
midity, when heated up to comfort 
zone temperature (not more than 
one or two degrees above. 68 F.) 
to be balmy, like an ideal autumn 
day. When the winter air ig heated 
up to 73 or higher, it becomes as _ 
dry as the driest desert air and its 
drying effect is as hard on skin 
and mucous membranes of occu- 
pants of the overheated room as it 
is on musical instfuments, furni- 
ture, book bindihgs, growing plants. 
and tempers, , 
The ideal temperature of the ar- 
tificially heated living room, school 
room or office is approximately 
68 degrees F.,-and-the ideal rela- 
tive humidity is somewhere — be- 
tween 40 and 60 per cent. When the 
air is heated to 75 degreés F. the 
relative humidity .may be as low 
as 10 to 15 per cent, nearly as dry 
as the desert. 
The overheated, and very thirsty 
air causes excessive evaporation 
from the skin and mucous mem- 
branes of nose, sinuses, throat, 
larynx (voice-box) trachea (wind- 
pipe), broncial tubes and lungs. 
This -gives rise to a feeling of 
chilliness, and that causes the 
poor souls to wear too much cloth- 
a the 
J mons and getting 
‘worse. Besides, I DR, CRANE ing and turn on more heat. Warm 
dry air does not give the same 
sense of comfort afforded by cool- 
er, moister air, 
* * * 
Signed letters. not more than one 
page or 100 words long pert: 
personal health and fhiyglene, mot dis- 
ease, diagnosis or treatment, will be 
answered by Dr, William Brady if a 
stamped rer addressed envelope is sent 
to The tiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. 
(Copyright 1958) to   
United Community 
Mr. Savage writes in error. His 
attack on the Catholic Church is 
based on a false premise — that 
is, the untrue assumption that 
Catholics ‘“‘say’’ Pope Pius XII is 
in purgatory. No Catholic would 
dare to judge the saintly pope to be 
having reached perfection are puri- 
fied before being taken into 
Heaven). To do so would be to 
abrogate the judging power of God, 
and Mr. Savage should know this to 
be against tenets of the Catholic 
faith. 
God will take him swiftly 
self, % 
* bd * 
One who calls himself a minister 
of God would do better to attack 
the evils of materialism and athe- 
ism which press on every side, 
rather than to undermine those who 
werk for Christ, Let Mr. Savage 
take a s course of instruction 
in Catholicism (available free, 
without obligation, from any 
priest.) Then he will know what 
Catholics believe. 
Catholic Convert 
  
All letters for Voice of the Peopie 
must contain the name and address he] the writer. This information wilt 
withhell upon request if the letter = 
not of a critical nature. Letters must 
be under 200 The Pontiac 
Press reserves the right to edit all 
letters. reaectly say tht, in regard to purgatory, one can igo tured see «eo ray toe lo Bel 
What We Want’ 
Maybe we'll have some im- 
Wants to Get Rid 
of All Loose Dogs 
The dog catcher ought to visit 
the west side and round up all 
those lodse dogs that bark forever 
and do no earthly good. If a dog 
is man’s best friend, man’s in a 
pretty bad way. 
They’re nuisances any way you 
look at them. Those that aren’t 
chained up ought to be destroyed. 
Mailmen, delivery men, newsboys 
and all kinds of people making calls 
are bothered to death by the use- 
less brutes. Let's rid Pontiac of 
all dogs and have a wonderful city. 
Lisa 
  
Appreciates Lack 
of Morbid Pictures . 
The Pontiac Press doesn't print 
photographs of people who are ly- 
ing dead in the streets and in bad 
accidents. Your readers thank you 
for this.“ Why do some papers be- 
come so morbid and ‘sensational? 
Esta 
  
Smiles 
      
When an optimist acts his true 
self it's a pleasure to be in his 
company. 
* * * 
Maybe it’s because figures don’ 4 
lie that a lot of women ‘stick fo . 
  
Case Records of a Paychologist:   
Jesus’ Teaching Method Is Best 
Morpheus is the only sure 
member of Clarence’s Sunday 
audience! For Clarence fails to 
use Christ’s public speaking 
formula. It takes a livewire in 
the pulpit to electrify an audi- 
ence, but a livewire speaker 
must use the methods outlined 
below. They are so simple that 
many educational snobs dis- 
dain them. But they work! 
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 
Case Z-371: Clarence D., aged 
37, is a brilliant clergyman who is 
not holding any better parish than 
student pastors apes! nowadays. 
* 
“Dr. Crane, what holds . me 
back?” he complained, miserably, 
“for I have my 
B.D, degree from 
seminary and 
read avidly. 
“I spend every 
morning shut 
      
   
       
    following Sunday. 
. “But attendance 
is poor at my ser- 
must move after a year or two, for 
the —— don’t want’ me back 
aga 
“Yet I pray and strain and study till T can hardly read the print!” — 
RELAX, PARSON ; 
Remember yesterday's case 
about the wife who had strained 
for six years in her hope for a 
baby. 
When she relaxed, after adoptin: 
a little boy, she soon beca 
pregnant, 
t * * * * 
“Well, many people strain too 
much, And they fail to employ 
the proper formula. Jesus gave’ it 
to us in his “narrative” or “anec- 
dotal”’ method, 
' He used a moral principle as 
a text but then documented it 
with cases drawn from the every- 
day experiences of the audience. 
Yet many seminary graduates 
still fail to comprehend this 
simple formula that ts such a 
surefire method for filling a 
church. 
In fact, I have seen many young 
preachers who. were poorer speak- 
ers after three years in the semi- 
nary than when they first entered! 
| kk oe . 
The more -education a preacher 
gets, the greater is his tendency to 
be a “‘book”’ preacher instead of a 
Human Relations expert. 
Bishop Richard C. Raines, of In- 
diana, asked me to make three spe- 
cial trips into the Hoosier state a. 
few years ago primarily to explain 
“to his clergymen the simple - for- 
mula which he himself has used so 
‘perfectly and which is the same 
formula other talented clergymen | 
and orators also employ, 
SERMON MECHANICS 
In geometry, if you have three 
points or dots on a sheet of paper, 
you can always draw a circle 
which will include them. 
So, clerics, change your outlook 
and quit straining. Go out on Mon- 
day morning and call on three 
parishioners, : 
: Rae FEU Ye SOF S888 ee. 
After your three interviews, then 
head back to your study and 
draw a sermon, like the geo- 
metrical circle, that will include 
For you should have gleaned. 
\ Something instructive and illustra- 
} tive from each of those three pas- 
toral calls, 
Now figure out a sermon text 
which will include all of them. 
Then weave into the sermon a nar- 
rative account of your pastoral 
calls and also name those parish- 
ioners in a rp seamen way, Fade out in your peroration with 
some fitting poem /or quotation 
which will uplift the audience, and 
you have followed’ Christ's own for- 
mula, i 
“It is so ‘delete that many cler- 
ics, imbued with the “ivory 
tower” professor's indirectness 
and tendency to live up in the 
clouds, can’t grasp it. That's 
why we see so many sleepers in 
church pews, 
It takes a livewire in the pulpit 
to electrify a congregation! And 
  
  members of his audience, sini a ‘few rich cultural quotations, and lifts his group with a eens 
inspiring peroration. 
x *&* & 
For more specific advice, send ~~ for my booklet, “'Surefire “Public 
Platform Strategy,” enclosing a 
, Stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents, 
It will show you. how to make a 
dandy speech or sermon without 
so much strain. And you'll banish 
Morpheus from the pews, too, for 
an “electrified’’ audience simply 
- cannot go © sleep! 
Mic enve 20c to cover typing saat printing © costs when y ou send for == ps 1 charts rot te pam~ 
(Copyright, 1958) . a good speaker uses cases, names   
       _THE P PONTIAC PRESS, ‘FRIDAY, NOVEMBER M4, 1958   
    
   
         
“DICKIE: LUMEE BER co. | : 495 ‘ORCHARD LAKE AVE,    
Try ‘Our Keep-Full Program 
Phone FE 4-3538 
‘End Winter. Fuel Oil Worries 
] With our fast, courteous service, and auto- | 
matic refill planning, you can assure yourself |         
  © City Hospital ‘and later released. 
    . cuts and sent from the hospital to 
© |jail. Besides. 
   is bringing - property into the state and Solty 
: sali the car was believed stolen 
‘| in Florida, 
‘\Homer J, Sterling’ of Flint, is a 
‘tered Navy ho training June 28. zk we *& 
Sterling was treated for facial 
larceny. 
Police Chief Forrest Williams 
Digiinn) wie Ok the and Mrs. 
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§ “No oil” on cold nights ahead, Phone us now, 
and arrange to join our Keep-Fill Program.   = 
       The air. estan ‘at poceesla said 
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    Prosecutor § 
  * * * 
reported a bullet was :| Tierney 
-|fired at him, Police found a .22 
caliber bullet hole at head height 
in the. rear wall of the mayor's 
garage. 
Several: residents report hav. 
ing heard a shot, but no one 
has reported seeing a car or 
ee sign of the sniper. Garden 
City councilmen voted a $10,000 
reward for Information leading 
‘to afrest of the sniper. 
Louis B. Davis, defeated by a 
Tierney candidate in last week's 
city council election, said “‘A great 
many Garden City residents feel 
th shooting incident was a put-up 
job, designed to diseredit and ef- 
fect the removal of our very cap- 
* * *.- 
Police have given lie datactey 
have been 
MSU Receives Grant   
Sees fet Zea in} P 
plant nutrition and soil fertility.|]) 
boats, |The grant came from International |} 
  Minerals and Chemical Corp. Esplori 
Jable police chief (Arthur Nagle), [meen eee 
tests to two men in connection |}, 
with the reported shéoting. Both || Seeks. Clue to Life.   
  
- By JOHN BARBOUR 
"Associated Press Sclence Writer 
mt gee 
So reported Dr. Torbjorn Cas-| 
persson of the University of Stock- 
holm today. He is a member of] 
the committee that awarded the 
1958 Nobel prize in medicine and 
physiology to three Americans. | 
* * * { 
Caspersson said his primary in- 
terest was in the chemistry of 
cells, and in the chemical events | 
concerned with the genes, which 
transmit cell heregity. 
If you took 100 formal cells, oil 
might find them*very much alike, 
he said, but if you took 100 cells’ 
from a tumor, these cancer cells. 
resi vary greatly from eagh oth- 
“Scientific progress in learning, | | 
the secrets of cell lifeand growth’ 
is moving extremely fast, he said. 
Great progress has been made in, 
the past 10 scene i 
“We ity oe so much more of} 
what is going on in normal cells; 
and the differences in behaviour 
between normal and cancerous   
       
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    for Carl Riseman: By PHYLLIS BATTELLE ‘son yy, a modern legend sits down, Junior's » project is “Smell-0- odsiiee be is an emotional 
f 1 r him. He ess for presenting’ smélils along man of Detroit, one of seven Uni-igentle folk everywhere he goes, you feel vaguely sorry for 6 
ity Michig ., Michael Todd Jr. bears no resem- jg 0 grave, so seemingly awk. with ‘sights in a-movie theater. He aa is a while.” 
“g me ee blance, emotional, or physical, to ward He's taken over presidency is building a mystery melodrama one 
He is. shy, soft of heart and enterprises (Michael Todd Produc-|Calls it) around aromas, and will ering bc gg million. voice, slow with a quip, and not tions), and he looks so young and begin shooting it in Spain next . nh. ar 
secially inclined. He has had vulnerable. January. 
with another expected for 'strigtly what dad would call a red 
  ¥j ” i : ae 
they were busy with pre- would neyer last.” Junior's mouth four or five big ideas in the back) #94 1 think this'll do it. grossed $40 million. “And 
six Michigan students, customed, into smiling positioi. -ouid've made a success of them, will happen to his burgeoning con. a sv ar wie 
first string fullback Tony “I've known Sara since 1946 and byt I'm not sure of myself enough: fidence if Smell-O-Vision, his first seen a driv .           : ys ; : as. : re ear New York City. Charge and were fined. At first, as the slight 25-year-old some of dad's ideas The late Mr. Todd's successor Ferry, near Vil Set Dec. 18. Mike Todd's Son Doesn’t Resem opposite te have a son, Cyrus Clagett, collet ‘Skyscraper eral skyscraper. buildings are sg x : r Pr . “ 
. : 4 ANN ARBOR (UPD-—Carl Rise NEW YORK — To the delight of opposite you at a hincheon table, Vision.”’ It’s a Swiss-invented proc- * oe. tag gs, eh planned. 
plained. “I'm afraid not to take 
fin a ee creshtown of), late. father. of his father’s vast entertainment ("a sort of amusing murder,” he) “I had @ sensational father, you 
' Besides ‘a respect that amounts exactly one wife—a stay-at-home | «x * *#, “The way I feel, 1 think you've 2 a : 
twe children, yoy eines | gotta have something unique in jalmost to fevererice, the fabulous “ St. Bernard but Municipal) pamed Sara—and two ¢ Yeah." he «says, “well I'm. ocien ten dan | abwaye P uc Jet his (and Liz fal, sound 
: : atv id the best thing you can de |Taylot) the movie “Around the! 44 tick the baby and knocks her until next month at the) Thanksgiving, ‘board player. I'll develop confi-, ™ , ” y ’ of the student's attorney’) “Dad used to Say our marriage dence as I go along. Dad had is te arouse people’s curiosities, World-in 80 Days.” So far it has 
s. moves slowly, as though unac-'of his mind when he died. He Mike shrugged-when asked what Just beginning to show it in the _ RIGHT soe ta! : | * THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958. 
we're La Senewber, tor ton fest i - BRE 
time, they acquired a maid. see, are. iting rs gaa aco conn ™ Mes. Allen wen , 
More come to -work for Mike Jr. ‘So helt ster Shell Petroleum Co., will be)... ______ 
  
    They million persons a year.   
St. Paul’s Cathedral, whose dome township treasurer. 
reaches 365 ‘feet. * * 
            Until recently, London. construc-' ‘tion ‘as. county clerk expires, who g98 1 <ndon't tallest landmark, historic/clerk. Mrs. Allen is running for 
Temperamentally. he is the only} The building is scheduled for! Mrs, Allen, 61, of 4025 South 
York,)member of the household who'completion by some time in 1961, Shore Dr., has started circulating bears any resemblance to the late But a rash of strikes — called with-| nominating petitions for ie posi- 
OF i : op. “TL + * * Mike Todd. out union sanction but with Com: tion of treasurer. basket ‘ we've never had a fight, Dad said ye: so I've got a project that I solo production, should flop. “I'll caaaidee <., Sede mide oe aot oie aed - that’s unnatural — unhealthy. But think't! go well. And if it goes, be ese pei — To for t ae "a big bea, be seach geod Geargé- Washington's © ebinte. le reetin'g that the target date’ Petitions are due Dec. 29, two ie arra ignm ; we've learned to adjust to this ang I get feeling confident and-Mr, Dulles’ phrase, in for house— ngto: Pigg ale tab ae ae Oe * a unhealthy situation.” ~ aici enctgh. Ill take care of:an agonizing reappraisal.” ‘expect a big family”—in Dobbs Mt. Vernon, Va., is visited by one Will be met. idays before h porary 
  
  
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        make your rooms dance 
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2 
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        Id t 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1958   
  \ ein a AZ Ly Open Friday, th l-“a> : re) Saturday, Mondoy 
      
          
     
       
                 
       
       
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Bize e Ds * » 8.99 TINY aa colors, Sizes for all, . s 8% to 11. I fe Dolly Bed and Mattress........ 3.00 |i ? hreans:...... 6 Dynel Conte ese... 39.99 DIAMOND SPECIAL 
54%, 349°   
    Ladies’ Anklets ....19¢ 
EXCITING VALUES LOOK! BIG SAVINGS on Girls’-Boys’-Infants’ Wear!   
  
    
  ’ 
- LADIES §.99 Boys’ Jackets, 6-16 ....,..... 2.88 21.99 Coats & Coat Sets, 3-14 .... 16.88 
Beautifully styled mountings of 14k = ' BLOUSES 3.99 Boys’ Corduroy Pants, 3-12... 2.98 6.99 Girls’ or Boys’ Snow Suits .. 5.00 
gold. Truly remarkable volue for 3.99 Boys’ Raincoats & Caps, 3-14 2.88 399 Nylon Dresses, 3:12 .......: 1.99 tre ot pinoy Don't miss this oppor- 39c Plaid Socks, 51-7 ........ 5/1.00 6.99 Nylon Pram Suits, 12-24 Mos. 5.00 
1.98 Girls’ Smart Blouses, 3-14 .. 1.00 4.989 Crib Blankets ...........5... 299 
1.49 Her Majesty Slips, 3-14...... 1.00 2.69 Birdseye Diapers ..........: - 1.89 
aS 2.89 Orion Sweaters, 3-14 ...... . 199 19¢ Infants’ Training Pants .,.... 10¢ 
Regularly 3.99 
S The feature group of USE OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN Si our sale. Long, short 
= and roll-up sleeves. All 
, colors. 32 te 38. 
Ladies’ Skirts. . .1.88 Exciting new styles, 
rich, silky brown, 
HSizes 8 to 18. 
Dyed Muskrat Coats $199 
SALE! HIGHER PRICED 
HOLIDAY an 
DRESSES ba} 
43°° 
Regularly 10.99 
Pick from crepes, wools, 
novelties in beautiful J 
styles. Junior, Misses’, 
: Half Sizes, 
Kait: Dresses ........       
  rn 
TN con. enstuns 
RWS Ry $2Q°5 Pace $1.25 
Wisi =~ @e ale 69 3 precious diamonds in each f f | rt , “ / a ' 
os OUR 2 wa? WE ae avon rtul genie 
me = RUDGE      
    
        
       
WHAT A VALUE! | WHAT A VALUE! 
GIRLS’ . BOYS’ 
CAR COATS PARKAS 
4.99 | 8.883 Extra warm flannel Extra heavy boys’ 
im lined coats. Sizes 4 to jackets, detachable 
14, hood, knit collar.   
     
       LADIES’ 
SKIRTS 
         
     Regularly 4.99 
Choose from part wools, 
novelties in the season‘s 
newest patterns. Sizes 
22 to 30. 
woot Cover ....51.00] BARGAINS GALORE IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORE 
THE GO-TOGETHER VALUE Plaid Blankets, 60x76, Reg. 1.69 .... 1.00 Polyethylene Ldy. Basket, Reg. 1.99 1.00 “<a s Holiday Dresses. 2.99 
    
  
  
ORLON Nylen Blankets, 70x84, Reg. 5.99 .. 388 3 Pe, Luggage Set, Reg. 29.99 .... 18.99 
c ARDIG ANS Cannon Sheets, 72x108, Reg. 2.89... 1.69 Bryson Printed Drapes, Reg. 5.99... 3.99 
Cannon Pillow Cases, Reg. 69c .. 49¢ Leop Rugs, 24x36, Reg. 1.99 ...... 99¢ 
Bates Print Percale, Reg. 49c ..... 29c = Sofa Pillows. Round, Square ...... 1.00 
Cones Sanforized Flannel, Reg. 49c 33¢ DuPont Nylon Curtains, Reg. 1.99 .. 99c 
Chenille Spreads, Twin or Double 2.88 Imported Cup & Saucers, Reg. 1.99 1.00 
LOOK AT THESE ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS  11-DIAMOND TWOSOME 
conc *] 3 5" 
Diamonds of unsurpassed color end bril- 
Hence se? in superbly tailored mountings 
of 14K geld. See this lovely creation. 
                 
   7-DIAMOND COMBINATION 
su, *39” Brilfient diamonds highlight the dainty 
modern 14K gold mountings. Beauty she 
will cherish @ lifetime. Regularly 2.99 
Sanforived stripes, sol-   
    Regularly 4.99 
Long or short sleeve slip- + 
over. White, aed and 
colors, 34 to 40.     
   
  | ae Bis ; 8-M- 
MEN’S ~MEN’S SAVE ON ALL WOOL 
PAJAMAS SWEATERS SURDERANS         
    
         
      
                  
     SAVE MORE ON THESE       
         LADIES’ SLIPS ae Og x a. z / ‘ALA i 6 ' : ; } f 
} % « 8 home - 
_ Regularly 3.49 Value ‘ ; - 
=4 t Regular 5.99 | ‘ . Ganforized stripes, ' larly 
. checks and novelties. \ Wook. Rag e Perfect for gifts. ‘Tall- Orlon styles in crew necks me Ge : 
ored and middy styles. ~ and Perry Como sweater. descents, — stripes vests, all colors and sites. and meltons. 36 to 
  SAGINAW            
        LADIES’ PANTIES ......-. 00.05: 25¢ , A Neo 39° | aoe stows toe... 25° sont Societe iz" ; : 7 AM Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Henle. MaaEaes ‘axe Senet a an 
monica ances? ees: faallalaads WH NOW ISTHE TIME TO BUY! NOW ISTHETIME TO SAVE 
  f, ¢ \ 4 78 : < : : 3 ' 
   
—teearets   2 
  
  
  
      
Thomas-Economy Is Growing Again! 
We are nearing completion of an additional 4,885 square feet of display 
space to our present vast store. This will enable us to serve you even better 
than before with Pontiac’s largest selection of quality furniture. In the 
take adv’ 
Up to 50% Off 
Ea Si LIVING ROOM Reg. $199.50 dovenport and chair by National in your 4 49° 
  choice of frieze covers. Has reversible, innerspring 
cushions and coil spring base construction for comfort. 
‘ Reg. $249.50 davenport and chair in heavy duty red §9°° 
    
metallic tweed cover. Quality construction by Artistic. 
Nicely detailed back and arm design............+- 
  
Reg. $189.95 2-pc. sectional. Red metallic frieze with | 49° 
black background. Seats four people comfortably. ... 
Reg. $179.50 Heywood-Wakefield davenport and chair $449°°   
in the casual “Ashcraft” design. Ideal for family room 
Or ClOOOG- Wi DONC 5 cio ccs cece sc eee eee eres 
Reg. $239.50 modern 80” davenport with foam rubber ] 79”   
cushions in slimline design, has turquoise metallic tweed 
cover. Slightly soiled floor sample.............0.5 
Reg. $279.50 2-pc. sectional in gorgeous coral DuPont + 9Q°°   
acetate cover. Deluxe styling and construction, Re- 
versible, innerspring cushions. Tufted back......... 
Reg. $249.50 davenport and chair in metallic beige $919”   
frieze. Medium size with paneled arms. Brass ferruled 
  
cushions has handsome coral metallic frieze cover. 
Cushions are reversible . oc... cc ccs cece sr cesssvens ) Reg. $269.50 davenport and thair with foam rubber $919” 
KK KKK IK KH KKK KAKKKKKKK KKH KH 
HOLLYWOOD BED SALE Twin size Hollywood bed by Serta includes mattress, box ¢: 95 
springs, handsome headboard *      
    
   
     tik 
we 
i 
we 
    
  and legs — An outstanding 
Serta-Restokraft value — you 
SAVE as never before...... 
Only $6 Down      Hama 
KKK 
KK 
  KK HHI HI HK HHH HK KI KIKI KKKKIKKKK 
  of chrome, ebony or bronzetone legs with yellow, turquoise 
and white table tops with matching chairs............ 
Reg. $99.50 Grey formica breakfast set has 30’’x48” $ 
table which extends to 60” and 6 matching chairs in easy 
| $6 CIGD CHONG oso ie sos cece re estes eevess Reg. $69.95 Queen City 5-pe. breakfast set in your choice '$QQo0 
  
    
| 3 | Reg. $109.50 round dinette set. 36” table extends to 52” $ 00 
| = ond has handsome top with bronzetone legs. 4 comfort- 
| able, matching Chiles. .... 6.6 s0sa6 css ese cases 
  
   
    
       
      
   ebony. 36x48” table extends to 60” and 6 matching Reg. $139.50 dinette sets in your choice of bronzetone or $gg0° 
chairs. Choice of several colors and designs.......... 
  
pine top and bronze ploted legs. Matching chairs hove Reg. $139.50 deluxe dinette set with mar-proof, knotty $98” 
curved backs and heavy padded seats. .. jewseeas ceva 
  
nut table top and ploted bronzetone legs. Table measures Reg. $99.50 Howell 7-pc. breakfast set with Pongee wal- $79°° 
s@ -30’x40” extends to 48”. Hos six matching chairs...... 
  
Reg. $179.50 Chromcroft 5-pc. set with walnut table 
top and matching edge. Table measures 36'’x48” and $ 95 
+ extends to 60", Includes 4 well padded, heavy duty 
Chairs. Floor Somple ........... 0. ccc cece eee eee     
    meantime we must clear out all odds and ends, one-of-a-kind floor sam- 
ples at orice! So please excuse our dust for the time being and RUSH in to 
Atare of the tremendous savings during our Expansion Sale! 
r Regular List Prices! All One-Of-A-Kinds! 
A Small Deposit Holds Your Purchase! 7 
at 
DINING ROOM 
Reg. $89.95 solid cherry 42” round table, new brown tone 599” 
finigh—Sdye $20.00 . 2... ciccnces cars ees ees ase 0% 
  
Reg. $95.00 solid maple corner china cobinet, discon- +93” 
tinued floor sample. Vs Off ........... 0. cee cccee 
Reg. $129.50 — 58’ mahogony buffet has 5 drawers ] 09*°   
and compartments providing ample storage space. Save 
270) ¢ ¢ 0ie en O IeONN nc encod omm ceane 
Reg. $209.50 modern wolnut drop leaf extension table 
with 4 matching chairs by Bassett. Table measures 
42''x70" extends to 100’. Floor Sample. Ys Off....   
  
Reg. $119.95 table and 4 chairs in modern Danish design. “9” 
Hand rubbed walnut finish ............0 05000 eee   
Reg. $119.95 mahogany drop leaf extension table with 4 +9” 
matching chairs .. , oe ee eee eer eer ae ewe hee eee ooetne® 
CHAIRS Reg. $39.95 swivel rockers in your choice of tweed or $99” 
plastic covers in black, turquoise or saddle tan........,       
Reg. $39.50 modern decorator chair in choice of 3 colors. 99” 
Has low barrel back, brass ferrules on legs............ 
Reg. $49.95 smart occasional chairs with solid walnut legs $30°   
and brass trim. Your choice of green, black or red frieze 
COVES cera we Hi eet TRG ae Dien wep ess qed veeeee Sua 
  
Reg. $99.50 lounge chair in turquoise supported plastic. *hQ” 
Has solid foam rubber seat cushion......... 00.6500 0e 
  
onial print cover. Hand rubbed maple arm rests, Floor 
Sample Lr 2 | Reg. $99.50 high back Cape Cod Rocker in authentic col- $hQ* 
  
tone or ebony frames with grey, brown or turquoise plastic Reg. $7.95 breokfast chairs in your choice of chrome, bronze- $4°° 
COVOTS Bee ee ees eee ee : 
APPLIANCES 
  matic with giant size oven. Has electric clock ond flu- 
orescent light. Push-button switches. With trade-in. . Reg. $249.95 Genera! Electric 30” range. Fully auto- ] 9 9” 
  
‘Reg. $279.95 GE refrigerator, 11 cu. ft. with oorogs- $ 95 the-top freezer compartment, 2 vegetable crispers and 219 : 
butter keeper. New 1959 model. With trade-in “eee 
  
Reg. $409.95 General Electric 2-door, dual temperature 
refrigerator - freezer combination. 12 cu. ft., square $ 95 
corner design for flush installation if you desire. With 
trade-in S30 S608 sae 6 ow ee le 
  
Reg. $29.95 Sunbeam automatic sauce pan with cover. $ 97 
Has thermostat in handle. Floor sample. V2 OFF oe _* mw eo oeve . 
  
Hoover Canister Vacuum Cleoner with complete set of “49” 
cleaning tools. While they last Ss ee ee ee os Ces 6 ee ew THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 
  BEDROOM     Reg. $49.95 double door wardrobe, solid cedar, natural $39” 
finish. Provides safe, ample storage................ 
  
Reg. $22.50 twin bed size bookcase headboard covered in | 6” 
grey plastic with attached bed light................. 
  
Reg. $99.50—4 poster solid maple bed in full double bed 4g” 
size—floor sample. Vo Off ......... 0... cee eee 
Reg. $149.95 child’s room outfit—includes desk, 3-draweér 
chest and bunk bed with ladder and. guord rail. Limed 
oak finish, reduced $50—exclusive of spring G mattress. 
Reg. $169.50 double dresser and bookcase bed‘in star- 
fire mahogany. Dresser has center drawer guides and 139°   
  
‘dustproof construction. Mirror is of plote glass and 
Cr re 4 ee ee a ee 
  
Reg. $179.50 triple dresser, chest and bookcase bed—~ $ 50 
dresser and chest have curved drower fronts and center ] 
guides—wadlnut£ini / a 
Reg. $289.95 Kroehler double dresser, chest and book- 
case bed—dresser has plate glass:tilting mirror, case $949” 
pieces have dust-proofing and center drawer guides 
throughout—floor sample 
Reg. $299.50 Bassett triple dresser, chest and bookcase. $959” 
bed, walnut finish Danish modern styling. Floor sample. 
CARPET Lynpayite a ee a re 
  
ee ee ee 
  
      
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  _ size | DESCRIPTION | WAS| NOW 
Gx 12 = in choice of beige, gold | 49.50) 29.95 
9x12 | Rue vars of blended carpet vars “| 69 59) 49.95 12x 7°6" | Bignded Serpe, yarns of back and whitey 74 50) 84.90 
11'8x8'6"" |Ad wool, heary rope tope yarns in plain] 181 95! 79.80 
12'x8'2" |sort beige and brown, ™ | 120,45]. 84.50 
8°10"'x11'] "jan woot twist in plain soft green color! J43.50| 99.95. 
9x12 [GPrccior” Wool blend tapos” "| ~69.95| 49.95 
V2 x 64” | Rack nee, ete cee ees ee | 62.10] 40.98 
      *      
       HMMM KIKI HKKKKKKKKKKKK KKK KH 
# FLOOR SAMPLE LAMPS We bought the “showroom 
samples of a famous Chicago 
lamp manufacturer. These are $ 88 
brand new 1958 modern ;    
    
      
      decorator lamps valued from 
$19.95 to $29.95 — Your 
choice, while they fast...... eer) 
Only $1 Down 
KKK HHH IK IK HKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK 
  
  
  
    
  
        
    
  
    - 961 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET + PONTIAC   
- ® Shop Early for Best Selection * No Phone or Mail Orders, Please * All Sole Items Fully Guaranteed _* Items Listed Subject to Prior Sale 
      
                           
      
  
  
  
  
  
     
  Prom Decorated 
Like Old: Sout Walled Lake Juniors to Dance to Collegiates’ 
Musi¢ Tonight 
  2 
By SALLY COLLINS 
The old south will be the theme 
of tonight’s junior prom at Walled 
Lake High School, / 
Bob Garrels’ “Collegiates will 
play music for the dance from 
9 p.m. until midnight in the 
school gymnasium, 
Kathy Lundquist is general chair- 
man. She is being assisted by 
committee chairmen: Karen East- 
ty,. refreshments; Peggy Cragel 
and Sue Hebestreit, decorations; 
Judy Neukman, music; Bob Brown, 
clean-up, and Linga Doyle, invita- 
tions, tickets and programs. 
  i Twelve candidates ran for 
the four offices. .- 
The seniors were the first to 
_ The editoria) staffs ‘of the North- 
ern and Central journalism classes 
high. schools Printing 
week. 
  
Football Farewell 
Title of St.-Mike’s 
Dance Tonight 
  All senior high school ‘students, 
their friends, alumni and parents! 
are invited to the affair. 
ATOMIC ASSEMBLY 
“This Atomic World’ was the, 
name of the special assembly held | 
at the school Tuesday and spon-| 
sored by the U. S, Atomic Eenergy 
Commission. 
* * * 
The exhibit and speaker came 
from the Museum Division of the 
Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear 
Studies and the American Museum 
at Atomic Energy in Oak Ridge, 
Tenn, 
Lake Orion Seniors 
fo Stage ‘State Fair’ 
By BONNIE CAMPBELL 
_ “State Fair’’ is the name of the 
play which the Lake Orion Com- 
munity High School senior class 
will present Nov. 20 and 21.   
Wiltse, sound effects. 
* * * 
The cast includes Bob Bridges, 
Kent Winship, Catherine Sheldon, 
Paul Pensul, Karen Miller, Sandra 
Wells, Jim Schick, Elaine Urban, 
Richard Mach, Pat Litke and Bob 
Hazelton.   .By SHELAGH O'ROURKE 
“Football Farewell’ will be the’ 
name of tonight’s 9 to midnight 
at St. Micheel’s High School spon- 
sored by the cheerleaders. 
Admission to the dance held in| 
honor of St. Michael's share in) 
the Suburban Catholic League's 
title is 50 cents. The Pontiac Opti- 
mist Club will provide a dise joc- 
key. 
Dance committee chairmen in- 
clude Gloria Barnowsky, and Jane 
Rindfusz, decorations; Diana 
Adams and Kathleen Dougherty, 
tickets; Marie Cronan and Ber- 
nadette Amman, refreshments; Sh 
lagh O’Rourke and Sue Kinney, 
publicity and Marilyn en- . GIRLS CAPTURE OFFICES — 
council at Pontiac Northern High School elected this week are all 
girls. The three other victors watch Joah Humphrey, of 86 E. Long- 
fellow, the. president, take down one of her campaign posters. Next The officers of the first student 
  to Joan, left to right are: Carol ‘Campbell, 635 First St., treasurer; 
Mary Hughes, 1009 Northfield St., 
erington, 515 Omar St., secretary.   | 
Pentiae Preas Photo 
vice president and Dottie Heth- 
    
Announce Cast 
of Senior Play. W. Bloomfield Practices 
for ‘Onions in the Stew’ 
Presentation Dec. 5 
By SUE PIERCE 
  MacDonald, will be the senior 
iplay of West Bloomfield Township 
High School. 
Casting for the production to 
| be presented Dec. 5 in the gym- 
nasium was done this week by 
Louise Thomas, teacher direc- 
tor. Kathy Olmstead will be 
student diréctor of the three act 
comedy. 
Shirley Miller, Otis Walton, Con- 
nie Meredith and Judy Harbaugh. “Onions in the Stew’ by Betty’ 
Lead parts have been. given te 
Other cast members inclade| 
\Mike Marsh, Monty Alkire, Lee tertainment, 
This week freshmen room offi- 
cers elected include; Robert Flan- 
bn et katate dee Roback, 
rene naetie tahoe 7 on, Arlene Dreyer, Sue P 
Robert Phylis Gdley, Wayne Wunche, 
Sposita and Don McNally. 
x * * 
A cabinet member from each Peters, Ellen Fergusén, Judy Gar- 
litz, Sue Thompson, Sandra Lem-| 4 JEAN REXFORD 
Waterford Township High School 
debaters will be hosts Monday to 
Walled Lake and Farmington de- 
bate club members. 
The groups will discuss vari- 
ous educational systems, 
Six WTHS debaters attended the 
first discussion .of the season at 
'Walled Lake High School this week. Waterford to Host Debaters | They were: Mike Mansour, Peggy 
Ballard, Jean Rexford, John Teeu- 
wissen, Royce Bunce and Clark 
Lefurgy. They also discussed what 
education system would serve the. 
interest of the United States the 
best. 
APPOINT COMMITTEE 
Six students were appointed) 
members of the Student Affairs   
  Committee, the advisory commit- 
  
Robert Russell will be 
council representative. 
Eleven students representing St. 
Michael’s attended the organiza- 
tional meeting of the ‘Teens 
Against Polio” yesterday. 
They were: Delores Ardelan, 
Ronald Call, Chuck Clevering, Pat- 
rick Donahue, Jane Bentham, Rus- 
seit Greenless, Fred Lauinger, 
Judy. Stickney, Michael Wyzgoski, | 
Robert. Russell and Pamela | 
Wooliver, 
  
Oxford Singers Win Honor By DIANE_CHENEY 
Four Oxford High School senior 
choir members have been selected 
to participate in the European 
Choir, sponsored by the Michigan 
Council of Churches. ’ 
* * * 
The students, who auditioned in Jim Casey, Nancy Grey and Paul 
Koerner, - 
They will be included in the 75- 
voice choir which will leave the 
United States in June to fly to 
England. After touring and pre- 
senting concerts in several Euro- 
pean countries, the group will re- 
  Ann Arbor, are Marilyn Unger, alia NOMINATED FOR AWARD 
Seventeen senior girls have been 
nominated to receive the General 
the American Revolution D.A.R. 
citizenship award. 
* * * : 
The girls. nominated by their 
iclassmates for their dependability, 
service, leadership and patriotism 
lare: Connie Meridith, Donna Bas- 
isel, Diane Dewberry, Janice Peter- 
isen, Donna Smith, Judy Garlitz, 
Connie Franklin and Geney 
Weimer.   * * * 
Others are Jo Lobby, Shelly 
Simmons, Shirley Miller, Pat Gen- 
dron, Sue Pierce, Harriet May, 
Arlene Dryer, Mary Rose Donigan 
and Sandra Lemon. 
- * * 
Arlene Dreyer, Karen Farley and 
Alice McCord recently joined the 
Torch staff, the school’s yearbook. 
Orders for the 1959 edition were 
taken last week.     
  ROCHESTER PLAYERS nse 
Rochester High School will present the play, 
‘The Happiest Millionaire,” a 
scene comedy next Thursday and Friday in the Seniors of the 
two-Act, seven Howard Miller 
  junior high “school gymnasium. Left to right re- 
hearsing for the production are; ance Jones, 
and Robert Milne. 
= junior homeroom has been elected 
Richardson Chapter Daughters of 
their roles in the play are: (left 
Pine Knob St., 
10190 M15. 
‘Dear Ruth’ 
By JOAN PAYNE 
A romantic correspondence of a 
teenager with an overseas soldier 
which eventually backfires is the 
theme of the play, ‘‘Dear Ruth” by 
Norman Krasna to be presented at 
Clarkston High School next Friday. 
The cast, composed of seniors, 
includes: Rathann Carmean, Vic- 
tor Ison, Judy Whitlock , Jim 
Miner, Carol O’Nell, Joe Jen- 
_nings, Sharon Evans, Chuck     | Sue Elliott and Mike 
| sophomores. tee to the student council, this | 
week. 
* * * 
They were: Barbara March and| 
Bruce Cobb, seniors; Sharon Mc- | 
Kenna and Bud Cook, juniors, and) 
Kaines, | 
* * * 
The junior class is planning a’ 
Sadie Hawkins dance and a pep|rv, 
assembly for the future. 
*« * * when the Chiefs meet the Fiint 
The pep club will sponsor 
tonight at 6:30 in front of Wisne Dance Before, Ai Ga By JOANNE WOOD 
    8 
Pontiac Central High School students have been on thé 
war path several times today and they will continue tonight 
Central Indians in football, 
a giant powwow and benfiré 
r Stadium. Chief Don Mann and 
  
Princess Jeanne Johnson will light+ 
‘ Ithe fire. They will be assisted by! 
their court, Barbara Strang’ and! day. 
Ernest Rojas. 
The quartet then will do a war 
‘dance to help the Chiefs scalp | 
the Indians. The cheerleaders | 
will lead the warriors in some | 
group chant songs and spirited | 
cheers, 
This: afternoon the cheerleaders: 
ecasnesd a pep assembly. 
Even the PCH band will get into | 
ithe Indian mood when they do| 
‘cheers arid also play their instru-| 
| ments during the halftime cere-| 
imony. 
DANCE TONIGHT 
“The Boju Bounce” is the title 
— lof the stydent council's dance to-| 
iInight in the gymnasium following 
the game. Boju is an Indian word 
meaning farewell. PCH students) 
toh say farewell to football sea- 
n'and the students from North- 
om who participated in sports with 
, |Central this fall. 
~ * * 
Northern will no longer take part 
in Central's sports because both 
schools. will have separate teams. 
iTherefore, all Northern and Cen- 
‘traf students are invited to the 
idance from 10 p. m. until midnight. 
* *« * 
Emil Sutt and his 10 piece band 
will provide music and tickets are 
50 cents stage and 75 cents drag. 
Dance committee chairmen are: 
\Judy Dearing, decorations; | Cox, 
Char} began at Central yesters / 
* * * 
The Y-Teens held @ hayride 
| cently and then. went to the 
to dance and receive re 
Five students have been : 
' ated inte the Virginia MeDer-{ 
mit Future Teachers Club - 
recently. They were: Martha | 
Sandra Brivee, Sharon 
and inaments 
    
     
lene Wilkenson, 
Twenty-eight new members. heed 
also been accepted in the Plays 
jerafters. They include: Clark Da- 
| vis, Albert Padar, Norman O'Neil, 
\Marcey Agree, Peggy Warren, 
Billie Jean Cox, Sue Croney, Janet 
|Vought, Jim McIntosh, Carol Fers 
|uson, Wanda Carter, Willie Prene” 
itise, Bonnie Marlowe and Sue Ann 
\Hathaw ay.~ « : 
* * ; 
Others are Ron Boyce, Warren 
Norlund, Stan> Walker, James 
(Bank, Pearlie Bunnell, Muriel 
(White, Carl ‘Pappas, Delbert 
‘Gibbs, Diana Butler, Chuck Dee 
|Hart, Jeanne, Looney, Donna Sows | 
jels and Karen Oliver. 
Central's radio workshop pro 
duced the exploration story of 
America last week entitled “The 
i\Big Three.”’ 
* 
  * . * 
The characters were: Evelyn 
‘Kerr, Mike O'Brian, Don Hunt, Al 
Padar, Bill Crawford, Gregg Uli- 
Wednesday, members of the Bus- \Osmun, music; and Fred Staley, _— Art Hany and Judy Brooks, 
iness Law classes attended a court |' 
session. 
sembly at Pontiac Central High) 
School the same day. 
  
Avondale to. Organize 
Snow Ski Club Soon 
By CAROL MAZUREK 
Avondale High School is expected 
to organize a ski club this week. 
They already are in full swing on 
another sport—bpwling, 
* * * 
The adult committee of the 
American Field Service is plan- 
ning a series of breakfasts to be 
held in their homes in order to 
raise money for the organization. 
It is responsible fer thé exchang- 
ing of students between different 
  
Pontiae Press Phote 
ROMANTIC MIX UP — Clarkston High School seniors will 
present the comedy “Dear Ruth” next Friday. Practicing for 
to right) Ruthann Carmean, 6340 
Joe Jennings, 6475 Waldon St. and Victor Ison, 
Rehearsals 
Continue at Clarkston. Hancock, Pat Young and Ronnie 
Armstrong 
Student director for the produc- 
Jerilynn Minton. Dan Campbell is 
scenery chairman and Viola Mur- 
ray is in charge of properties. 
Loran Wildon is the director. 
Clarkston Hi-Y Club will sponsor) 
gymnasium following the Clarks- 
ton vs. Ortonville game.     
Disc Data and Chatter   
With all the mu- 
sic that is becom- 
ing popular today, 
it’s good to have 
had at least one 
GOOD disc at the 
top for awhile. 
“Tom Dooley” 
Was a rarity of 
sorts. It was lis- 
inant (which is more than one 
can say for most rock 'n’ roll). 
  ~| Now that it is sliding back to ob- 
security, let's hope that more top 
sellers (and there are a few nice 
ones around) become of a_ higher 
listening caliber. , 
ALBUM DEPT.: A hot seller at 
| several area disc déalers is 'Law-| 
irence Welk Presents Dick Kes- 
ner” (Brunswick BL-54044), For 
jthose Who are Unsquare, Kesner 
lie this géneration’s counterpart of 
Evelyn and her magic violin.   Music in the Round a dance jonight in the aa 
by Dick Saunders; 
For tonghalrs, RCA Victor has 
announced it will release a com- 
plete recording of Gian - Carlo | 
Menotti’s new opera, “Maria | 
Golovin,” shortly, It will be a 
3-disc set on Red Seal. 
FIVE ACES: Conway Twitty! 
must be happy that the title of| 
his top seller, ‘‘It's Only Make Be- | 
lieve’’ isn't for real. The disc is| 
way out on top in sales this week. 
Barreling into second place are) 
the Teddy Bears with ‘‘To a 
Him Is To Love Him.” Third “te | | | 
| | 
will have fo be called a tie be- 
tween “Topsy” by Cozy Col and) 
“Tom Dooley” by the Kingston, 
Trio (both are still doing well 
jaround Pontiac but dying in| 
Birmingham). 
Ricky Nelson's “Lo nesome 
Town" ranks fourth on the sales| 
chart and Elvis sounds as bad as’! 
usual on “I Got Stung” which is| 
in fifth place and climbing. '   tion which begins at 8:15 p. m. is) ‘ countries for several months, Ninety choir “aber SEED 0. K. 
also participated in a talent as-| The O. K. signa tickets. 
I has been given 
to go ahead with rehearsals for the 
school’s winter dramatic produc- 
ition which was selected and cast 
last week. Rehearsals for ‘‘Bad 
Seed” began Tuesday. 
* * * 
Thirteen debaters won superior 
ratings in the conference discus- 
sion rome held at ——-   
1910 Actin Drama 
at Brandon High | 
  Doug 
Becky Bomsta, 
Rodger Olsen, Dick Bailey, Pat 
DeKay, Nadine Morris, 
discussed what features of British 
education would best. serve the in- 
terest of the United States people, 
* * * 
  Nancy 
Shaw and Cynthia Williams. They 
The Saginaw Valley debate tour-     
       ‘ 
ie oe 
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     THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, eee Ca eee 
Invades Virginia Home With Gun 
coo mMan Holds 8 at Bay, Kills 2 Women 
| OPEN TONIGHT til 9 ts | BOWLING GREEN, Va. (AP) “About 4:30 pan, the intruderywas sending him home in a taxi- Van 
a [<A Necro cusmot, after guining|imacked at the, Sack doce. ecco een hl ea ee 
‘}then   
         
      
        
     
       
      
           WORRIED OVER   
entrance to a home by asking for|Jean 
    
night, then shot and killed two! room. 
white women, He was still at, 
large today. iMrs, EB 
Killed while they sat tied in the Brooks’ twin sons, Lynn and 
dining room were Mrs. James S. is, 
Brooks, 33, wife of James S. (Cap) | adults, 
'|Brooks and the mother of four : 
smal} children, and her mother-|downstairs and was tied with the 
'lin-law, Mrs. Kate Lewis Brooks, rest. 
14 
Frederick Van Allen,   
      
    
“Let $ Years of Credit Counseling | Tee f 
Hours: Daily 9 to S. Wed, and Sat. 9 fo I. Evenings by App’t. 
| ‘MICHIGAN oem cou NSELLORS - 
i '   
gunman then retumed to\Detroit Striker Held 
DETROIT  e- John Walker, 40, 
a strike picket at the R. P. Scherer M16 Pontise State Gank Bldg 
    
      
in the 
Brooks’ home. to give a music|the younger she 
ijlesson, was injured during a scuf-/had $15 or $20 in her purse up- 
sen aft- 
in-     
       Robbins 
Robinette—Rubber 
TILE EXTRA Special 
FIRST TIME 
Spetter tnlaid Reg. 10c 
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WILEG Yi 18 CORK-TONE ASPHALT 
eer e rere eer ee fle with the gunman and was hos-/stairs. The gunman 
||pitalized at Fredericksburg. 
More than 150 state and local 
police sought the slayer with)truder had Jean answer it. It was 
bloodhounds near this central Vir-/her brother, Mason, 7, asking why 
i/@inia town of 700, some 20 miles|his mother had not come to art! 
south of Fredericksburg. school for him. The intruder had 
Edna Mae Parker, 18, a Negro! Jean tell him his mother was tak- 
hired as a maid by the Brooksiing a bath. 
earlier this week, gave this ac-| Mason called back a few min-; 
count; utes later and said the art teaches        
  
     
         
          
        e 
3,000 West Berliners 
Lay Siege to Red Rally | 
By REINHOLD ENSZ die-aged cab driver,. watched the 
BERLIN (AP) — Communists! demonstration. 
staged a big get-out-the vote rally! “This reminds me of the old| 
pntondimee: in ne nets) jdays,” he said, “but actually it is! 
Sportspa. scene of some of|nothing compared to the old 
Adolf Hitler’s greatest rabble| Then we had ping, ping. . . “aa Reduced 
rousing efforts. | He demonstrated how the bullets to 
ae we Berliners laid|whizzed past. 
e to t historio building, Insii e, - 
sien with Com ie ts.” § jis sien, me eee we “down munists.” Stones!  «« ” 
sailed through the air. pase eee paprcoegetl 
windows were broken. Berliners control their own af- x we Of fairs.” 
Only the work of 250 riot police| Outside, the West Berlin police 
prevented a street battle reminis-|charged the hooting demonstra- 
cent of those fought when Hitler|tors. Since the demonstrators 
were fellow West Berliners—and 
anger was anti-Communists—the police had | 
roused when the 7,000 Reds began|orders not to use their clubs. 
turning the rally into an anti-West-| The charging got the! 
ern ‘‘get out of Berlin” demon-/streets fairly well cleared by the 
stration. time the Communists left the 
Albert Norden, a member of the | Sportspalast. 
Politburo of East Germany stirred 
up his followers with a passionate 
speech recalling Soviet Premier | new city parliament. The Commu- 
Khrushchev's demand that the| nists billed the rally as the kick- 
Western allies clear out of West/off of a drive to get out the vote. 
Berlin and turn it over to the East|But their chances of getting out 
Germans, ».4 the vote appeared slim. 
* 
“The Berlin occupation statute |den’s audience went directly to an 
ow foreign troops must go,” elevated railway station        
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           and 
Norden declared. boarded trains to Communist East | 
Outside the Sportspalast, a mid-' Berlin. 
THIS IS FrTt 
The carpenters and painters aré breathing down 
our necks, and we must clear out! While stocks 
are limited, you'll find fantastic values and          
    
  
  
   
        
       
    
       
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1S E. PIKE / of PONTIAC loo : a block off Saginaw / 51 West Huron Street © OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY FE 4. see 
\ . . ‘ 
ro | { 
      
         
                
     
        
. | 
‘He said his proposal for a 100- 
piece orchestra of high school mu- 
sieians to perform in’ Eurgpe—with 
concerts planned in at least three 
Iron Curtain countries—still is be- |. 
ing considered by the State Depart- 
* *& *& 
Dr, Maddy was in Grand Rap- 
ids yesterday for a lecture at the 
Women's City Club, 
He said he also is looking toward 
the opening of the National Arts) 
Academy in the fall of 1960 at 
* * * 
~ “The University of Michigan 
music professor’ says university |, 
Regent Roscoe OQ, Bo usteel is en- 
on incorporation of _ the gaged academy which is visualized as a’ 
prep school with special 
on, the arts, 
On Parole for ‘Burglary, 
Man Gets Job in Bank . 
NEW YORK (UPI) — Officials 
of the Richmond- Hill branch -of 
the Chase Manhattan Bank gasped 
yesterday when they heard of the 
background of a man they had   
- employed as a pexten: net summer. 
a. ; 
Police said Leon Scott; 35, er-| 
rested yesterday for entéting the 
bank with a key he had kept and 
stealing a gun, had a record of 14 
arrests and was on parole fromitor of a press agency in Stock- 
Sing Sing Prison on a 
conviction. . burglary   
newspaper 
assigned him to cover the Span- 
tah Civil War in 1937. 
When World” War II started,’ 
in Norway, .an 
ing for the Norwegian Relief Corps.’ 
This work ended when the Nazis) 
occupied’ Norway and Brandt fled, 
to Sweden, where he became direc-   jholm. 3 
| Brandt retufned-to Germany in   ~ 
“ORDINARY 
  MATTRESS 
         
        i He was a member of the German various war. “I am in office,” he 
          
  rliament during its first and sec- 
tatives in 1950 and, in 1955, presi-| whether 
ident of the house, 
* * * 
A political protege of Dr, Ernst    
     
     
    
         to the 
said, 
“only because a generation of lead- 
ers died in concentration camps 
and in the war and in the plots 
against Hitler.” 
Police Asked to Speck     > 
  |Gently to Bad Puppy 
“ELMIRA, N.Y. (AP)—“My lit- 
tle puppy just bit me,” said the 
girl who telephoned police head- 
quarters. 
away or punish it. 
“Oh no,” the youngster an- 
swered. “But will you come down 
and talk to him?” 
  
Many of the mission churches 
  Thomas McCormack, the police 
switchboard operator, asked her 
he should take the dog   
  $ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 
$200 Reward Amounts 
to .008 Pct. of Check _ 
NEWARK, N.J(UPD — wil 
fain’ Shiel, a Rider College senior, 
yesterday got .008 per cent of the 
face value of a check he found as 
fa reward for returning it. . 
That came to a $200 share of 
the. $2,500,000 check which was a 
transfer of money from the ‘Chase 
Manhattan Bank of New York 
and the Philadelphia National 
Bank.     
       48-Hour Servieo PONTIAC STAMP & STENCIL C0 
    ay it's Smart To 
Save Money 
        witch to ” hee | 
Scehmi = a 
and &3ve 
EST PRICED 
    
    
  
  
    
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  ‘ a ta ein wr et 
   
ey THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958     
   [Aeernemehananinenet= bw = : i 
  
ee ee t-te Seti te U.S. and maternal ‘dentin Probe in Royal Oak   the antibiotic era —|wert down T7-per cent, the Health | 
|News Institute reports.   
  
A Wonderful Christmas Gift t 
& Put your old diamonds 
into a new selting    
    
  to your li fe 
   
    velopment in Rayal Oak Township| 
are engaging in an alleged fraud they are wrongfully receiving 
terday. 
      Welfare F; raud | ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—Many) ‘payler stances” 
liquor and beer with the cash families in a low-rent housing de- 
, by diverting soecial welfare grocery| from these orders, : “which has Ss 
and add new sparkle and milk ordets. for other than! He wamed engaging in going on for sometime,” is not} said 
2 designated purchases, Chief Assis-| ' responsible for the near 
tant Oaki 
George F. County Prosecutor, 
te 
  this practice that they are defraud-\.jtare load plaguing Oakland 
ylor “disclosed yes- ing the county and are liable for|County this: year. 
           
     
    
      
  said “in ‘serne ta: imdacite dap el tlh $10 fine, the 1.00 tamies receiving! wet 
families are © buying or or both, if convicted. _ 
  He estimated 
riminal prosecution, which could'that only about one “gh cent .of/. 
  
__ ithis full quota, said, they Slain in Holdup seme, 5 ¢ wa mule Te i he T8i00 30h, Ope Ft set gan flier parachuted to safety|ask the milkman to either give — : to 9. Mon. - Thurs, 9 to 6 
Customer Shot in Leg, yesterday in a collision of two Air them cash or credit for the other ® Tools Open Sunday’ During Grand 
1 en Fee was Killed. finn Gis ah out anh ane 
on sian olau money for a number of things] ' 
fete P Major Allen B. Voorhees of Nash-other than what the order defi ¢ Paint CHRISTMAS TOYS ond EW TORK (APJ—A = a 77 ville, Mich., bailed out safely from|nitely states it is for,” Taylor said. | GIFTS—Low Down Payment lold’ bank maneger was shot an mia 133 jet frainer that crashed e - killed. today as three robbers took near here after colliding ry an = wt - he re aaa Plywood No Comying Cherge ~ 
a Queens bank. A customer in the 
  which had been stolen in Nassau,     BS 
  Michigan Flier Safe~ ee ps 
After Jets Collide               toi iy Son a le ole: Nov. 
                      Force jet planes. One crewman     Opening Only, 12 to 6.        
      
          
          
   |The-latter plane made it back to      
              
        
     
        
           
            
        a tres. a ‘place clsewhere. |         County. The auto later was found) Mr. and Mrs. M. Bryce Dables | ae 
abandoned half a mile from the = 132. Park Ave., Holly, have nounced the engagement of 
thelr daughter, Dianne, to Amos 
Joel Bradsher,; son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Harry L. Bradsher of 705 
E, Maple St., Holly. A spring 
wedding is being planned. 
  ar 
    
   
                
       
      
    
         
        
   
   
   
     
    
   
       
    
    
   
   
   
      in these il bank received a leg wound. ir Fo ith only a es engnaine oe Police identified the manager as pea pong dogg wv nen oem. INDEPENDENCE ERE James F, Duggan. Capt. Raymond P. Hamilton 36. “The orders spell out, without} eee 
betore holdup was staged shortly of Sumter, S. C.. aboard thie jet . — they, must be used | : BUILDING = Work ore 11 a.m. at the United Na.|” killed. trainer .’ Burt : 
; 'tional Bank of, Long Island, lo- cheeregg < ue pares it crashed Taylor said so far his investi-| SUPPLY CO. NO: MONEY 
‘cated at a busy shopping intersec- gation shows this milk-food order) - DOWN 
| tion in the Richmond Hil] section fraud is centered only in this sec-} 7183..N. Main Clarkston ~ 36 MONTHS 
: of Queens. fp? . Lake Baikal, in southern Siberia, tion of the county, He said they] : \ 2400 TO PAY 
| | The bandits fled in a sedan. DIANNE DABLER. has inland amnls and fresh water|were continuing to investigate re- MAple 5- 
bank. 
| One of the bandits reportedly re- 
ceived a severe cut on his left leg 
‘from broken glass at the bank. 
One of the trio apparently re- 
mained at the wheel of the get- 
away car, for there were descrip- 
‘tions of only two who entered the! 
bank. 
' One was~ described as male, 
white and weighing about 145 
pounds. The second was described 
as male, white, 45 years old and 
weighing 190 pounds. He was 
wearing a dark coat and hat and 
sunglasses and was armed. 
Edward Wason, 56, South Ozone 
\Park, Queens, an automobile me- 
'chanic, was shot and wounded in with ber hand t ling 
‘the left leg while standing at a 
teller’s window making a deposit. _— 28-year-old James Doug- 
| Wason told police that one took 
1a station at the door while a sec- 
,ond leaped over a rail and jumped 
Fon a bank officer's desk. 
“Then I heard the shots,” he 
‘said. “I. felt ——s hit me in     Outmoded diamond .rings 
that spend their days in a 
vault have no value what- 
ever. Enjoy the beauty of 
your diamonds now! Let 
us tell you how little it will 
cost’ to remount them in 
a modern, safe setting... 
a new ring you will wear 
with pleasure and pride.   
Barbara Hutton, | 
46 Today, Sees 
7th Romance   
  
TERMS OF COURSE 
Connolly's “Miss ‘Hutton’s secretary said: 
‘This will be just like any other’ 
day for her. No particular cele-| 
bration or wy. is epee _ 
Douglas, na a sect hair and   We would be 
pleased 
    
  
  
  to do this , work now and JEWELERS bedi F oe. yn on the floor... aquiline face, told newsmen, 
mg in Layaway. First alarm came from Dep. |however “there will be plenty of 
\ , 16 W. Huron St. Fire Chief Paul Rusch who was celebrating.” He gave ne deine. ‘NO DEPOSIT But he say 5 
REQUIRED FE 2-0294 joruiaing _" area in his official Huttod and a emall iy oe fy 
“= A clerk rushed from the bank) i"é Se tae reagpen ar and hailed Rusch, reporting that ‘The Woolworth heiress, now living! 
husband— | ithe manager had been shot in a 
robbery. Rusch called the fire/*Paft from her sixth 
communications headquarters in former German tennis star 
Queens, which notified police. —— Nights palais” he Patrol cars were sent to the, “ ’s Cauah i scene. FBI agents also headed for |?’ * « #£ 
‘te ae Douglas, son of U.S. Air Secre-| 
= ; itary James H. Douglas, arrived. 
New-Books Received | quietly in London last weekend) 
by Library at Keego lromance between Barbara and 
imysif but I will say I am not lwith Miss Hutton on the boat train, tae 
‘West Bloomfield Township Li- ‘yet. contemplating marriage, THE BUSINESS INSTITUTE Is Approved for 
VETERANS’ TRAINING Take sdvpistage of P.L. 550 to improve your 
education and prepare for a better position. 
Veterans eligible for G. I. Training have three     
from Paris. 
“1 would not say there is no’ 
USE THE-CONVENIENT GRANT'S “CHARGE IT” PLAN—NO MONEY DOWN—$1.25 WEEK COLORS | a ‘ : 
  brary, 3201 Orchard Lake Rd., e Gold vears from the date of their discharge or sepa- Keego Harbor, has announced re- ‘Douglas re * * Sensational at 35.95 2 a. 
ration to enter training. Do not allow your ceiving the following books: Douglas, sae to a breakfast ‘ . Turquoise 
eligibility to elapse. | wens Pave Cn Liew the cereal fortune, said he and Miss’ Check these. features, smart textured 100% ace- Black 
: «3g 3s ! : “hav tual tate frieze with gold thread tubul ooden | : Courses are offered in Business Administration Dae: “Altec tue Glory” seniors [H atton “have many = go read tubular wooden legs, Beige " ’ * . : x , same * * ; , 
Professional Accounting, Higher Accounting, Ber co cue” Geaen eee 8 the friends; for we = oe no-sag springs, heavy duty swivel, solid oak frame. $ Use Grant's ‘Charge’ We Plan ‘Enemy, Spicer; “Once There Was a interests in ere ’ Red No. ‘Money Down, Months to Pay: War,* Steinbeck. aia * * x Nen ion “art of Drying Plants and Plowers,” “She has led a ner unusual and 
j Squares: “Enamel Art on Metals.” Win-jextraordinary life,” he said; “aj 
®: {life in which she has experienced |   and Junior Accounting. Other subjects are 
available. 
ENROLL NOW! | us “Day, Half-Day, BALL BEARING SWIVEL—FERRULED WOODEN LEGS 
  La 
and Evening Classes ever been before. 
“She sometimes reads poetry to) 
me, and I play the piano for her, | mostly Chopin. »   
MSU Troupe in Rhine 
MUNICH, Germany (UPI) — 
The Michigan State University 
drama’ troupe touring parts of ' 
| Europe and the Middle East, 
| will broaden its audience to in- 
| clude German civilians and mem 
' bers of the U.S. diplomatic corps. 
ET oe ey pea a Call or Phone Today for Information 
       “Arvin” 
FULLY ADJUSTABLE 
| IRONING BOARDS ,   
The Business Institute 
7 W. Lawrence Street Phone FE 2-3551 
       
          
  
  mare. 
        
Ne-mar wheels roll with. J 
     
     
   
       be washed under water thanks to the   = Just in Time for r Melidays =| 
: (INGTON | a ==) = Pittsburgh |Z= 
= . “HAS IT”? Paint |=) a 
. = i Enamel =! 
= Cds Semi-Gloss [== 
= House = 
= Flat = N - * . is = = Never again... this top = Values to $3 == quality famous name iron- = g C Qt. = ing board at a fantastic : = N = a e* discount price. Find it at = : fel = * ee == , half-price only at Grants, 
= = a 
= |_ —=| '2" Avromanic sxitier ARS = | Binarelars $988 connie “a Now . .. an electric skillet that can 9.95 features 
= ase = 
   REMINGTON | 
      
  
      88 
: i es ingenious plug-in thermostat. 8 ease, never lift er carry 
’ Imported French Glass ® REMINGTON TINIEST RADIO = Complete with self-basting cover. f° «2-position adjustment... ROLLECTRIC:’ PRINCESS . N No Batteries [= = _ from 25° t0 36° : TABLE LAMPS 0 Tubes—No =| : « X-leg for sit-down coms FOR HIM FOR HER Wits Personal > 6 QU ART COOKER FRYER fort 9 Way Lights $ 95 ‘The revolutionary man-sized Rollec- The only laie’s 9 shaver with eight — 50 >= s 2 trie with exclusive BuiltIm Roller shaving edges and protective Guard = fs al! : ; : ‘ opt, pechoreind top bas 
ee Time at Sim idden Beard... the greatest shav- shaving ever with never a chance Kitachment = ‘ ? ~ —_ the jumbo sige 30 x a vert > ~ - 
fevtre acces. annem Semen Sf evsy-clean aluminum lining, basket. 66 g + Pall sive 15" « 5 top : Cas 3 1500 Complete = side” as alee g = —_o = Fire Kigg glass cover. Contraited 2 °* Non-slip rubber fees 
88 jake $] 495 With Approved Trade i740 $695 Baby Jumper = heat with Westinghouse thermostat, F comdtines Sense 
Only $2 More Without Trade _ * i     
    
HI-FI CLEARANCE {   & = ie 
“ & = *   
a =| Super BARGAIN Center|   : 
4 
  Ph h 3 Models, Many with AMM. 4 Miracle Mile Ww. T. GRANT co. Open Monday : d78.N. SAGINAW sf. open eam Webcor. Huge Discounte, [ze] Shopping \ thru Seturdey = - Center You Really, Get: Your Money’ s Worth atG rant ‘s  10-9PM, ? | z 
| il “iano “ce ~ 
s¢   
    
        
    
     
  f 
  
   who is president of the Michigan 
State School Food Service, to at- 
tend next week’s food service con: 
vention in Philadelphia. 
  
- The Kingdom of Jordan has a 
population of about 400,000 - living 
on about 5 per cent of the nation's 
total geographical area. iF thf Fe 
Ee 
{named president-elect . of 3 £2 Hf s 
    |_| _THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1958 
Hes Resmmendaton for Stas ae   
    Another task force recommended hunting class. 
shifting warrant writing activity of 
“| the auditor general’s office to the 
state treasurer, 
If the full committee of business, 
*jaber and agriculture leaders, for- 
mer legislators and state~ officials 
approves, they'll be submitted soon ports expected next month prob- 
ably would recommend consolida- 
tion of state health agencies and 
consolidation of -various revenue- 
collecting agencies. 
Other ideas slated for early con- 
sideration inelude transfer of the 
Great Lakes Tidewater Commis- two 
season opens Saturday. 
  
    y 7 ay i ’ t | » ' & R SPRIN ce 
v2 I v OH 4 , 1 tive” Harbor oe be School 
a ee * : students edgerly are awaiting thelf 
for i ly Relief Agency, then was shifted to —— of ‘an examination in al 
mate goverment when the Mental Health Department and : special &day course. . 
the 1050 legislature ‘convenes. liater to the Department of Admin-| A spokesman for the advisory| TH students took the exam in| , advisory commit-|; stration. "| gommittee said two task force re-|the school’s fourth annual de¢r 
A passing grade entitles them to 
_ off from classes for a) 
deer hunting trip. Michigan's deer) 
Gridder Critically Hurt | 4 
| 
| 
      
   
   
  | 
    
      
  
  
.|U. of M. Dean Elected 
DALLAS #® — Dr, Paul H. Jes- 
erick, dean of the University of 
Michigan School of Dentistry, was 
the 
American Dental ‘Assn. yesterday. 
Dr. Jeserick takes office a year 
  from now. The Association has 
been in convention here. 
    ‘tions. This means the farmer must have a hand in every jditorium in their second of the c 
“milking. This really pulls down his morale. 
But a cow-sitter could allow him to squeeze fn a few 
days off now and then. 
Murray says, “like parents looking for a baby-sitter, it’s 1958 series of concerts. The pro- 
gram begins at 8 p.m. 
The dynamic young: artist was 
featured on Broadway in ‘‘Masque 
and Gown," ‘‘New Faces of 1956” en Re, “i, in, UR 
" ee 
    ” “The Ziegfeld Follies’ with a: SS hard to get someone to do the job as well as the herd owner.” |2"4. : “However,” he adgs, “an experienced cow man could do |Bestrice Lillie. He wil | present | Oakland Fuel & Pa a satisfactory job and soon develop a sizable clientele.” accompaniment) ranging in style FE 5-6159 
How now brown cow-sitter?   from the classics: to modern jazz. 430 Orchard Lake   
       
  OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY ‘til 9:00 
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH   
    This Is Just an Example of the Bedroom Specials Available 10-Pc. MODERN 
LIVING ROOM 
' ONLY 
413 DOWN ] 2 §*8 
Here’s What You Get... 
1 Distinctive Sofa or Sofa Bed 
_Matching Chair — Choice of 
Colors . . 
2 Decorator's Table Lamps 
Coffee Table and Two Step 
Tables 
2 Throw Pillows 
Wrought Iron Smoker — ED FOR CLEARANCE 
    
  * | NE, a “N, Rt, a 
int     their first recommendations yes- | to Gov. s. sion to the Department of Foonore- P ppinvsad w Sea tenets, terday. One proposed distribu. cnstiel - Development, shifting the State/16, a junior at Coo School, 
tion of surplus food commodities Fhcge so gdhons eovtongs gai Tenure Commission to the Depart-|was injured critically Thursday 
be transferred from the Depart- organization plans to the legis- ment of Public Instruction and|when he was tackled in an intra-|f. 
ment of Administration to the Se- | jo:ure within 30 days after it con. |‘Tensfer of the Veterans Vocational mural football game. The boy was 
: cial Welfare Department. venes. If they're not vetoed by eee ee a ee eo ys ggee par! i niversi . a as policies for all forms of li- “Grea ‘Ciub"" Hear 'G. Surplus food distribution was be-! either house in the next 60 days, atte gare +, Bc ng agers Saaue ts cceaheined of 
bility on school-owned equipment. natitshington ” Secretary,” “Allee. e Long-range studies are scheduled|feeling dizzy and collapsed. 
for Dee. 4, at which time a com ettince aimee Nears, amen Let's Get Away From It All for proposed Abolition of the State 5 ' “Walk Under Trees,” dean Niel- -_ Board of Control for Vocational Sere cece OY lete survey will be submitted for sen: rc lack Tiger at, LeMans, x Patrick S os Education and transfer of vocation- fa Vite i) 
action. ha we Bing Bovey BB i ge Mo F arm N eed S Cow- litter al rehabilitation programs from th) 4 =" } A request for a special teach |Sitives fee Wwontnn. m OMnee 1 nee: the |Department of Public Instruction WAY Ths Ser. training aan ae i EAST LANSING (AP)—You can add a new item to the [to the State Welfare Department.|\ 7 ** 
“mentary Supervisor Arthur | p,,Disti2s nto Yesterday.” stelie| list of modern professions: The cow-sitter. FUEL OU er 
= was approved by the Doane, “Remember, the Alamo. ‘Robert Parents like to get away from the Kids once in a while. | \Auci- Group Presents j a ACA Victor Delton with Deluxe nerell Lenton’ ite -,| They hire baby-sitters. ; alton w' yxe Stand, oe school Carroll L. Penton: “Knights and Castles y baby: Dancer at Rochester aliagnliiamail: i Looks like console TV! 262 sq. in. viewable ores. eens aaa et 008 | Houses.” Bernard Case Farmers would like to take an occasional break from Peweril WW An Oskland “Wonders of the Antarctic,” Jacquelyn 2 ; . Improved Balanced Fidelity FM Sound. Power Wednesday. aos ieee Berrill: “Pavorite Poems, Old and New.” the twice-daily milking chore. Why not cow-sitters? _ ROCHESTER — The Rochester] (Tama Wwil BT new Super chassis. Ebony finish (others avail- 
<the meeting regarding lap. | Atle: “Story of the Paratroops,” George The idea is proposed by Donald L. Murray, extension |ClVic Music Association will pre-) [) INTER | IVING able). Complete. 217820. guages, grammar, spelling and |, “Albert Schweitzer, Man of Merci” | dairy specialist at Michigan State University. sent dancer Rod Strong Monday | $ 95 
Story,” Milton J. Shapiro. He point out that most farms are one-man .opera- |in. the Avondale High School Au- ; aP ne BASE EXTRA ] 89 
é , f 
  422 W. Huro           | Sweet’s Radio and TV Shop 
Open Monday and Fridey ‘ti 9     
  
WITH TRADE 
  
n St. Free Parking FE 4-1133 
    
    
ALL SUITES REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE     
       
   ¥ 
    
| 5-Pc DINETTE 
“ 
Formica Table Top 
4 Matching Chairs 
Extension Table 
ALL SETS REDUCED ~    ‘3 fs 
Only $4 Down   
  New Sectional Group 
Sin a Sweeping Curve! 
Nylon Covers 
All 3 Sections 
      
       
  
WHILE | os THEY ) 88 
ALL SECTIONALS REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE   
FREE PARKING FREE DELIVERY, Foam Rubber | RECLINING CHAIRS   
Furniture Pictured Typifies Similar Selections 
ORCH 
“164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC ) : : , 
| BLOCKS WEST OF SOUTH SAGINAW ARD 
    FURNITURE 
COMPANY While They Last 
‘38° ONLY $4 DOWN | Phone FE 58114-5 
  
   Adjusts to several posi- 
tions. Full spring con- 
struction. 87... . Reg. $1.99 All Stratoloungers 
Reduced for Clearance       
      
| 
{ —— a 
THE BIGGEST... 
4 MOST FUN-FILLED 
| CHRISTMAS | STOCKINGS ARE IN TOWN AGA 
  FPUN-FILLE 
with 
" @ TOYS... GAMES 
@ CRAYONS 
@ BOOKS... PUZZLES 
@ NOVELTIES 
@ SURPRISES 
LIMITED 
SUPPLY 
     satiiieainee 
20 Unbreakable 
Christmas 
Tree 
Ornaments 10 BALLS 
5 BELLS 
5 STARS 
Renown 
Christmas 
Tree Lights Multiple Wiring 
    All . 
for 
     
      oe a Se 
  ee 
a 
          
SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER, 14, 1958 ~~ 
* 4 
  
  
  
  WHat TO GIVE? . 
a 
TOBOGGAN. $16.50 | 
ae! 
ICE SKATES 
$8.95 
Come in Ea rly 
for a Fine 
Selection of 
Christmas Tree 
Lights 
BOW and ARROW SETS    
   _ANSWER... & 
GOODS 
Basketball with $7* 
Goal & Net 
FROM $3.95 
are. 
Cae... 
B.B. GUN     
&: 
SLEDS 
$6.95 
© @ ee eo $5.95   
  LAY AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS 
—A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL HOLD—     
  
  Keego Hardware No. | 3041 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor 
Hours: 
Friday ‘til 9 P.M. Monday thru Thursday and Saturday 7:00 ‘til 6 P.M. 
Sunday 9 ‘til 2 P.M. 
Free Parking in Rear of Store FE 2-3766 
  Enjoy This Winter More 
with a New TV from ELECTRO MART 
* Big Trade-in 
* No Money Down 
* 1 Year CRT 
Warranty 
* 90 Day Small Parts 
Warranty 
* Free Delivery 
* Free Home Trial hq, Vent quem © Vaeuken CASES 
*SYLVANIA “HOTPOINT *PHILCO 
) 17” Portables 
ELECTRO MART 158 Oakland dy FE 4-1515 
Open Till 9:00 Monday and Friday. Free Parking in Rear     wator of elementary education 
| and Dr. Russell W. Curtis, co- (Egitor's Note: b ] following is te 
piste Pas ste last of & series of th 
ten by members of the. Pontiac Tau. 
estion Association about the Pontiac 
school system in observance of Na- 
tional Education Week which on 
Monday. This article usses 
tiac’s coneal science program .} 
By Gerald E. White, coordi- 
ordinator of secondary education, 
In 2,000 A.D., most of the chil- 
dren now attending our elementary . lies in their senior year. 
  schools will be enjoying middle 
age. Not all of them will be scien- 
tists, but all of them will be cen- 
sumers of science and science will 
have a powerful influence in their 
daily living. 
It seems, therefore, that this 
places responsibility upon elmen- 
tary schools to help children de- 
velop “an interest in science and 
an appreciation of its importance. 
We must teach children that 
science is a way of thinking. 
Boys and girls should have prac- 
tice in recognizing problems for 
themselves, searching for infer- 
mation, working experiments, 
drawing conclusions and testing 
| their conclusions, 
Currently, while hearing so many 
demands to emphasize science and 
mathematics,. one must keep in 
‘mind, also, that it is important to 
teach children to ‘live and work 
in harmony with other people, to 
express themselves well, orally 
and in writing, and to read and 
listen with skill and understanding. 
TO STRESS QUALITY 
It is the general feeling of the 
members of the Pontiac junior 
and senior high school staffs that 
the needs of our national security 
require a continuing and expand- 
ing emphasis on quality in the 
secondary school program. 
| * * * 
The proportion of students who 
,can profit from education in ad- 
vanced science and mathematics 
is relatively small. Many youth 
should be given courses less. theo- 
‘retical and more functional in na- | 
ture. 
A semester of general science 
is required of all seventh and 
eighth grade pupils. Ninth grade 
science is a one-year elective 
course. College preparatory pu- 
pils are encouraged to take this 
course, since most will enrol] in 
biology at the terith grade level. 
One year of science is required 
of all senior high school pupils. 
|Courses from which they can   
Attends Convention 
on Cerebral Palsy 
Howard Palmer, president of the 
[United Cerebral Palsy Assn. of =~     
week, 
Palmer, of Southfield Township, 
cuss and learn about neurological 
diseases, blindness, hemiplegia, 
and cerebral palsy. 
  
Bermuda's economy is 
principally on the tourist trade, 
  
    lion dollars a year.   
      
      
  
more efficient and economical. 
Here’s the convenient, modern way to GET IT HOT... GET A LOT 
for an operating cost as low as $3.88 per month. 
Only electric water heaters give you all these Important advantages: 
ence Be heat goes into the 
fx} Install anywhere—need not be 
near a chimney 
[] Long life—meet Edison's rigid standards 
Automatic—all the time without charge 
[X] Safe—clean—quiet—modern- he new electrie water heater Way GET IT HOT... GET A LOT every time. A new electric water heater 
provides plenty of hot, hot water for showers and all the family’s needs, 
Detroit Edison has a new Super Supply Plan which makes heaters even 
Fast—new. more efficient heating 
units 
Outer shell—coo! to the touch all 
over 
[x] Edison maintains electrical parts 
Sr per ape DETROIT EDISON SERVES SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN 
  Pontiac, is attending the National, a 
United Cerebral Palsy Assn. con- bre 
vention in Washington, D. C. this, pea 
will be among the leaders of the 
association which will meet. to dis-|; — 
  based). 
* \which brings in-about 25 to 30 mil-| — choose are: biology, general sci- 
ence, chemistry, and physics. 
Those in the trade and industrial 
curriculum enroll in applied phys- 
TRAIN TEACHER 
The task of providing in-service 
education for teachers is accom- 
plished through workshops, con- 
sultant services and by providing 
opportunities for teachers to work 
on materials which they can im- 
mediately use in the classroom.   
  
  FUN WITH SCIENCE — Madison Junior High 
School seventh graders have been studying or- 
ganic compounds. Here, (left to right) Sandra Pontiac. Stock Gear for Age of Science f 
  
Langford, 474°E. 
910 Northfield St., 
St.,   
  
   
      
      pruced fe 
to give precious imperial 
magnificent collection of 
sapphires and diamonds 
  20 .N. erry St. Pear! jewelry. Come in and see this 
bracelets, rings, pins, charms and 
earrings —and all at this unusual epecial 
purchase price. Many of the pieces are 
eombined with genuine rubies, 
ean they be yours at a price formerly 
paid for costume jewelry. 
only a few from our tremendous selection. 
Use. Our Convenient Layaway Plan Terms Can Be Arranged for Your Convenience 
LEONARD'S | 
  Necklaces and 14 K. Gold Jewelry 
special purchase from the world’s largest importer 
    
   
    r unusual savings 
$ from What a wonderful opportunity to own or 
Cultured 
necklaces, 
and only now 
Iiftustrated are 
Downtown , Pontiac program 
ways of improving the entire ed- 
construct models of three of them. 
16°   ‘ Pontiae Press Phete 
Mansfield St.; Larry Cheeks. 
‘and Andy Kives, 764 Cdmeron ie   
FE 4.4503 : went through the county register 
of deeds’ office. 
ufacturers National Bank. 
      
     
       
   
         
      
    Bank Obligingly Leases 
6- by 12-Inch Plot 
LEWISTON, Maine (AP) — A 
transaction transfer of a 
plot of land 6 1-8 by 12 58 inches 
« The-T. J. Murphy Fur Co, leased 
it for a year for $1 from the Man- 
The fur firm is refacing its 
building and a column of brick) 
protruded onto the bank’s prop- 
erty, The bank said that was OK 
but went through the legal motions 
to protect future interests.     
STRIP PAINT! ror Se fine wood, we 
recommend 
Brush peewee wool 
metal or solid wood, use 
Savogran’s new Strypeeze . For 
Water-rinsable paint 
Good Special 
remover. Both have the 
cogeeseeping 
Soe At 
oa 
padi 
  
    
       
     
   
          
FURNAGE 
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10x10x1  16x20x1 
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14x20x1  20x20x1 
15x20x1 
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FILTERS 
20x25x!1      of Buy Them by the 
Case of 6 
    
20 Gallon 
Reg. 3.49 
“Limit 2 GARBAGE CAN 
$7 97 FINAL WEEK! 
               
     
     
     
      NOW! 
Recessed 
Nationally 
Advertised 
at $39.95 NO TOOLS NEEDED — NO HOLES To 
DRILL SELF-INSTALLS IN 10 SECONDS: 
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. Up to 50 inches wide, any height — any combination of finishes— material & work- manship unconditionally guaranteed. 
ALL AT ONE PRICE 
$ 29-95 
DELIVERED FREE 
      
   
          
   
      
  
25-INCH ‘LAWN SWEEPER 
Reg. 39.95 $91" COMPLETE 
2 ONLY 
FINAL CLOSE-OUT! - 
  
We Have Hunting Licenses   
eee 
sam 
for        
HARDWARE STORE 
      
    
  
   
  Church, White Shrine No, 22, Or- 
der of Eastern Star No. 228, Ama- 
ranth Esther Court No, 13, and 
Mrs. Crew was also an active 
member of the Keego Harbor Busi- 
ness & Professional Woman’s Club. 
Surviving 
of Howell; 
three sisters, Mrs, Clara Cronk 
of Pontiac, Mrs. Molly Moren of 
Flint and Mrs. Elizabeth Allen of 
Columbus Grove, Ohio, and a 
brother, 
Service will be at 2 p.m. Satur- 
day from the Sparks-Griffin Chapel 
with burial following in Grand 
Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. 
OTIS C.. FIELDS 
dings Rd., an employe of Oakland 
County, died suddenly yesterday 
on the grounds at: the: Oakland 
County Service Center. 
Surviving besides fis wife, Car- 
man, are 13 children, Mrs. Veron- 
ica Green of Auburn Heights, Mrs: 
Shirley Clark of Germany, Mrs: 
Janice Ewer, Mrs. Mary Lou Sut- 
ton, Basil, Harold, Larry, Gary, 
Jimmy, Valley, Gregory, Gail and 
Charlotte Fields, all of Pontiac; 
two brothers, Everett of Pontiac 
and Verner of Chicago; and a sis- 
ter. 
Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Mon- 
day from the Vorhees-Siple Chapel 
with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. 
MRS, JOSEPH M. HANGGEE 
Mrs. Joseph M. (Mary) Hanggee, 
74, of 3314 Meinrad Rd., Drayton 
Plains, died this morning in her 
home. 
Surviving are her husband; two 
sons, John of Pontiac and George 
of Drayton Plains; four grandchil- 
dren; two sisters and a brother, 
Mrs. Rosa Pennington—of Pontiac, 
Mrs, Henry Setter and An Negus of 
Marlette. 
_ Service will be at 1 p.m. Monday 
from the Coats Funeral Home in 
Drayton Plains with burial in the! 
Drayton Plains Cemetery. Her 
body will be at the funeral home 
at 2 p.m, Saturday. 
WILSON K. PEACOCK 
Wilson K. Peacock, 61, of 1005 
Myrtle St., Waterford Township, 
died at his home yesterday after 
an illness of two years. 
A former gas station owner, he 
was a member of the Congrega- 
tion Church. 
“Surviving are his wife, Anna; 
two sons, Max of Waterford and 
Lynn of North Branch; a daughter, 
Mrs. June Walls of Holly; and two 
grandchildren. 
_ Service will be at 2 p.m. Mon- 
day from the DeWitt €. Davis) 
Funeral Home with burial in. Perry +| Detroit, 
; | Berkley, ‘ CLAREN - ' CE G. SMITH : 
21690 W.McNichols Rd., Detroit, 
father of Pontiac patrolman Clar- 
ence G. Smith Jr. He He died yes- 
terday in Henry Ford “ Hospital 
from injuries received when hit 
by a bus. 
He was an inspector at Ford 
Motor Corp. 
Surviving besides his wife 
Mable, are five children, Donald 
of Little Rock, Ark., James of 
rs. Marjorie 
rs. Patricia ll of) 
LaPorte, ‘Ind. and Clarence; 13) 
grandchildren; and two sisters. 
Service will be at 10 a.m. Mon- 
day from the Virgo E. Kinsey 
Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with 
burial in the Elmlawn Cemetery. 
MRS, DANIEL W. HOUSER 
MILFORD — Service for Mrs. 
‘Daniel W. (Anne G, Dildine) Hous-' 
: ‘ - ., er, Tl, of 8900 E. Jefferson Ave..| 
Otis C.’ Fields, 55, of 1790 Gid- | netroit, a former Milford resident, 
will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at; 
the Gordan C. Crabb Funeral 
|Home, Detroit. Burial will be in 
Forest Lawn Cemetery. 
the home of her daughter in De- 
troit following a long illness. She 
was a charter member of St. 
Mark’s Methodist Church, De- 
troit, and a member of the Wom- 
Surviving are her husband; two) 
sons, William J. Dildine and Rob-! 
a daughter, 
Schroeder of Detroit; a sister, four 
AUTO F. MONTROSS 
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Service 
for Auto F, Montross, 55, of 2555 
Pontiac Rd., will be held at 2 p. m. 
Saturday at 
Church, Rochester. Burial will be 
in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy. 
The body is at the Pixley Funeral 
‘Home, Rochester. 
Mr. Montross died unexpectedly 
heart attack. 
LAIRD J. MOW 
J. Mow, 53, of 155 E. Oakridge 
St., will be held at 3:30 p.m. Satur- 
day at Wessells Funeral Home, 
Pleasant Ridge. Burial will be x 
Mt. Avon Cemetery. 
Mr. Laird died nenpecsihy 
Wednesday night in Wyandotte fol- 
lowing a heart attack. He was 
Co. plant in Trenton. 
Surviving are his wife, 
irietta; his father. William of 
Rochester: two brothers, William, 
of Rochester, and Jack of Pontiac, | 
both of Pontiac. 
MRS. AARON PEARCE 
ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. 
      Mt. Park Cemetery. Aaron (Louise) Pearce; 75, of est 
  ith of 
Mrs. Houser died Thursday at) 
en’s Society of Christian Service. | 
   
        
  brothers, and four grandchildren. 
the First Baptist) 
FERNDALE—Service for Laird 
supervisor at the Detroit Edison | 
| 
Hen-' 
| ANS VISE WITH 4” JAWS 
and two sisters, Mrs. William’ 
Peterson and Mrs. Spencer Rowe,) : biak a aus 
: atari pas ben recnived ot the 
of Clarence G. Smith of|"¢ral Home a.m. Saturday ‘at the Pixley Fu." 
ter, following ® a heart attack. 
She was a resident of Royal Mak 
until two months ago. 
Surviving are four sons, Albert 
Furze of California, Raymond 
Furze of Florida, James and Wil- 
liam Furze, both of Detroit; a 
‘daughter, Mrs.’ Margaret Bell of 
‘Anchorage, Alaska; a sister and 
12 grandchildren: 
JAMES P. SHUTT 
HOLLY — Service for James P. 
Shutt, 43, of Detroit, .a former 
Holly resident, will be held at 
10 a.m. tomorrow at Dryer Fu- 
neral Home with burial in Oakhill 
Cemetery. 
Mr, Shutt died unexpectedly 
Wednesday in Receiving Hospital. 
Detroit. 
Surviving are his wife, Victoria; 
a son, David; a daughter, Wendy 
Jo; his mother, Mrs. Grace Shutt 
,of Holly; three sisters, Mrs. Kath- 
erine Nortman of Santa Barbara, 
Calif., Mrs. Gaye Elligt of Holly 
and Mrs. Josephine H of De- 
troit; and three brother's. 
DAVID L. PHILLIPS 
LAPEER — Service for David   
  Church. postage ih vu be ‘in I 
The =< at Mule Brothers Fu- 
  
Deals Chevtiore DUBLIN, Ireland # — Mi- 
chael MacWhite, 76, formerly Ire- 
land's minister to the United 
States and to Italy, died Thurs- 
day. In 1921 he became Ireland's 
first resident representative to the 
League of Nations in Geneva. He 
was minister to the United States | 
from 1929°to 1938 and to Italy from 
1938 to 1950. He was born in Cork. 
* * * 
PARIS (AP) —. Mrs. Henri Ma- 
tisse, .86, widow of the famed 
painter, . died Wednesday, Her 
husband died in 1954. 
: *~ * * 
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)-—-Dr, 
Harold Mowry, 64,former consult- 
ing director to, the minister of|7, was killed Thursday when she). 
agriculture and chief of the Uni-|was struck by a car while crossing|> 
          versity of Florida's cooperative|a street near her suburban Detroit 
Rica, died'home. mission to Costa ee He was born in Valley} 
   
56, personnel 
{supervisor of the Pacific ~Tele- ee * Pal 
NORTH BERGEN, N.J, (AP) — 
retired | 
| 
eee 8 
” MAZARLAN. Mendon. (AP) me Victor Gunderson, 
Phone Company at Los Angeles, 
died Wednesday of a heart attack. 
* * *& * 
MILFORD, Mass. (AP) — Ed. 
ward J, Suilivan,’67, retired mem- 
ber of the ‘Four Sullivan Broth- 
ers’ song and dance team, died 
Thursday after a long illness. 
  Jail Impatient Hunters 
   ing a buck and hynting at night)” 
with lights. Sente were Ken- 
Neth McLeod, Harlow Clairmont, 
Gerald Platzer and Robert Darling. | © 
     
  
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  THE PONTIAC PRESS, FEpe®: NOVEMBER i, 1958   
Mrs. Milo J. Cross serves (from left) Mrs. 
Mrs. Lester A. Snell and Mrs. William Porter during the coffee hour 
at the 46th annual Needlework Guild Ingathering held in First 
Ex-Fiance 
Can Help 
on Gitts By EMILY Post 
“Dear Mrs, Post: I was eri- 
gaged six months ago and at 
that time received many love- 
ly presents, Last week my en- 
gagement was broken and I 
know that the presents should 
be returned, However, quite a 
few of these presents were 
  
Four pages foday 
in Women’s Section 
  
’ gent by my fiance’s relatives 
‘whom I had just met and I 
can't for the life of me remem- 
ber who gave what. 
“Considering this fact, and 
also the length of time that 
has elapsed, would it be prop- 
er to keep them? If not, will 
you please tell me how I can 
return them?” 
Answer: I think in this case 
you will have to send your ex- 
fiance a list of the things 
sent by his relatives, and ask 
him to please find out who sent 
what so that you can return 
the presents. If he writes back 
and says they do not want 
them .returned, then of course 
you keep them. 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: Is it ‘af- 
fected to sit in a restaurant 
wearing one’s fur piece? When 
I wear a coat I usually slip it 
off and throw it over the back 
of the chair; but when I wear 
my furs I keep them on, My 
husband thinks it looks silly 
and gives the appearance that 
I am showing off. Your opin- 
jon on this will be much appre- 
ciated.”’ 
  Answer: Keeping your furs 
on if you are sitting in a draft, 
as for instance under a too ac- 
tive air conditioner, would be 
logical and entirely correct; 
otherwise you should put them 
on the back of your: chair. 
  “Dear Mrs. Post: At a buf- 
fet supper is it expected that 
the men wait until all the worh- 
en have helped themselves first 
before filling their own plates, 
or should the men. take filled 
plates to the women?” 
  
Answer: At a buffet meal peo- 
ple all usually file around the 
table and help themselves to 
whatever they want. Should 
the men notice that some of the 
women have remained seat- 
ed in the living room, they 
naturally go up to them and 
ask, ‘‘May J get you something 
to eat?" 
  “Dear Mrs. Post: I have a 
problem with which I would 
like your-help. When I am 
with. friends in a restaurant 
and friends of theirs come to 
our table and speak to them 
and I am not introduced, what 
ought I do? It is most embar- 
  W. A. Lewis, 
Joining Pontiac Chapter of Needlework Guild 
as a new section is the Galloway Lake Group. Shown 
looking over layettes and garments at the Ingathering 
After an extensive European 
trip covering eight countries, 
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar M. Brede 
and Mrs. Carl F. Uhiman, 
formerly of Birmingham and 
now of Los Altos, Calif., and 
Clearwater, Fla., are visiting 
relatives Mr. and Mrs. Fred 
W. Brede of Dover road and 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sanft 
of LaFay drive. 
The trio left San Francisco 
Aug. 12 on a Holland-Ameri- 
can cargo liner and traveled 
via the Panama Canal to Ant- 
werp. In Europe they visited 
Belgium, Holland, Denmark, 
Germany, Switzerland; Austria, 
Italy and France. 
* * * 
Ten Pontiac area residents 
are among 150 Michigan appli- 
ance dealers and their wives 
vacationing in Acapulco, Mexi- 
co, this. week as winners of a 
sales contest. 
They are Mr. and Mrs. 
Duane A. Decker of Lake Or- 
ion, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. 
Frayer of Middlebelt road, Mr, 
and Mrs, James H. Hampton 
of Sylvan Shores drive, Mr 
and Mrs. Eldon E. Huff of 
Club Welcomes 2   
Mrs. John Marble and Mrs. 
Joe Hiltz were welcomed as 
new members at the Wednes- 
day evening meeting of Pon- 
tiac Newcomers Club held at 
the Sylvan Shores home of Mrs. 
Hugh Hales. 
Cohostesses were Mrs. Peter 
Aldo, Mrs. Gordon > Bennett, 
Mrs. Richard D. Dobat and 
Mrs. Lawrence McCann. 
A review of the book, ‘‘These 
Lovers Fled Away,” by How- - 
ard Spring was given by Personal News of 
Highland and Mr. and Mrs. 
Donald C. Shaw of Rochester. 
‘The group flew non-stop from 
Chicago to Mexico City and 
from there to Acapulco. 
* * * 
Attending the Frances Clark 
workshop for music teachers 
at Michigan Union Building, 
Ann Arbor, Wednesday were 
Amy Hogle of Seneca street, 
Marion Stone of Birmingham, 
Mrs. Lester Snell of Auburn 
road, Mrs. George Lunberger 
of Clarkston and Mrs. Carl 
Clifford of North Telegrapl: 
road. 
* * * 
Carolyn Campbell, daughter 
of: Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. 
Campbell of Airport road, is 
on the central planning com- 
mittee for the Association of 
Women Students Conference to 
be held Saturday at Eastern 
Michigan College. 
a 3 * * 
Mr. and Mrs. John Veneman 
have just returned to their 
homé on Dwight avenue after 
spending a month's vacation 
in the east. While there, they 
were the guests of Mr. 
Greet Newcomers 
Mrs. Bernard Waessner. 
Plans. were made for the 
Christmas dinner to be held at 
the West Iroquois road home 
of Mrs. W. J. Emerson. 
* * * 
Guests attending the meet- 
ing were Mrs. J. D. Crawford, 
Mrs..Z. T. Kucharézyk, Mrs. 
Wilfred Duff, Mrs. Mary K. 
Schmidt, Mrs. Dale Cole, Mrs. 
Frank J. McKendrick, Mrs. 
~Gerald Berry and Mrs. Roy E. 
Boyer. Presbyterian Church Thursday. 
and     Pontine Press Phetes 
Mrs. Cross is @ section president. 
Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Snell and Mrs. Porter are members of the Grace 
Section in Auburn Heights. 
A an OS 
Thursday are Mrs. Earl F, Kaul if left to right), Mrs. 
Howard W. Barnes and Mrs. . L. Ralph. Mrs. 
Barnes is the section cvexident. 
Interest in Area 
Mrs. Harold ‘Vandenberg of. 
Hawthorne, N. z 
* * 
Appearing in he Wayne State 
University Theater production, 
“The Adding Machine,” is 
Julia Anne Hickman, daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Don L. Hick- 
man. of La Forest street. A 
sophomore at Wayne, Miss 
Hickman has played in sev- 
eral other productions at the 
University. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs.-Howard Brian 
of Scott Lake road attended 
the annual homecoming at Oli- 
vet Nazarene College, Kan- 
kakee, Ill. last weekend. 
* * * 
Mr. and Mrs. James Dicker- 
son (nee Rosemary Wilcox) of 
Birmingham are the proud par- 
ents of a son, Daniel Hill Dick- 
erson, born Nov.’13 at Wil- 
‘liam Beaumont Hospital, 
Grandparents are Mrs. -S. P. 
Wilcox of Grand Rapids and 
Mr. and Mrs, C. L. Dickerson 
of Des Moines, Iowa. 
* * * 
At Albion College, Gail L. 
Sedrick, daughter of Mr. and 
Mrs. William Sedrick of Mans- 
field Avenue has been pledged 
to Kappa Delta Sorority, ~ 
Also at Albion, Sandra L. 
Walls has been pledged to Zeta 
Tau Alpha Sorority. She is the 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. 
S. Walls of Kitig road. Both 
girls are freshmen. 
* * * 
Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Jacob- 
son (nee Bernice Silverstein) 
of Canterbury road announce 
the birth of a son, Richard 
Barry, born Novy. 7 at Pontigg 
General ' Hospital. 
Grandparents are Joseph Ja- 
cobson of West Iroquois road 
and Mr, and Mrs. Max Silver- 
stein of Detroit. 
* * * ea 
A daughter, Sheryl Lynn, was < 
born Nov. 12 to Mr. and Mrs. 
Gerald Frederiksen, who are now living in Medford, Mass., 
where Mr. Frederiksen is at- 
tending Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology, — 
Grandparents are Mr, and 
Mrs, Harry Geyer of ‘Bennett 
street and Mr. and Mrs. Wal- 
ter Fredériksen of Baldwin 
avenue. 
Banishes 
Hot Foot 
in Boots Somebody has at last done 
something about rubber boots. 
Ordinarily, when the snows are 
deep, you put on a pair of rub- 
ber boots and get a-hot sl 
, built in. 
They're so air-free that your 
“Meet feel like they’re walking 
independently across the Sa- 
hara. 
A. rubber corporation using 
synthetic rubber, has devised 
a boot it likes to call: ‘‘air-con- 
ditioned.” . 
The. device works so that, 
i 
with every step, air is virtual-® 
ly pumped into the boot and 
keeps the feet well ventilated. 
It operates something like a 
bellows, 
It may make winters alittle 
bit more bearable, 
Sing Soap Song 
One group of second graders 
learning to wash their. dolls 
and toy dishes, sing this little 
soap-song: 
If I want, to be happy 
And healthy and. clean, 
Then surely the soap bar 
Must be on the scene! ' Section. _Pontiae aes.   
  More than 6,000 new gar- 
ments and articles of household 
linen were collected for distri- 
bution at the 46th anne! In- 
British since Bi were members 
of the Queen Mary Section. 
Mrs. Walter Galbraith was 
chairman assisted by Mrs. 
George Bickley and Mrs. Nel- 
son Hill, 
* —* * 
NEW CONTRIBUTORS 
At the business session, Mrs. 
A. J; Michal, secretary, -report-- 
ed The Pontiac Osteopathic So- 
ciety had become a new con- 
tributing group, Also joining is 
a section known as the Opdyke 
Hills Group, whose president 
_is Mrs, Earl E. Jones, and the 
& 
Coming to the Ingathering Thurs-. 
day morning were members of a new 
group known as the Opdyke Hills 
All neighbors, the group 
will sew throughout the year. Admir- 
. Mrs. Arthur H. Hart inguon 
(right) is showing Dr. Anne W. 
Becker dresses contributed to the 
Famed Sculptor Mrs. 
to Show Works 
to City Artists 
Marshall Fredericks, well 
“known sculptor, has invited 
Pontiac Artists’ Society to vis- 
it his studio at 8:30 this eve- 
ning. 
He-will conduct a tour~ of: 
his studio and trace the devel- 
opment of a sculpture from the 
idea to the final casting, 
_Mr. Frederick. has created 
sculptures. for the Detroit Civic 
Centér in the open courts of 
Northland and. Eastland shop- 
ping centers, and in many 
cities here and abroad. 
Club 21 Fetes Mrs. Eva Dyer wt 
Members of the Club 21 met 
at Elks Temple. Thursday for 
a luncheon honoring Mrs. Eva 
Dyer, who is retiring\after 43 
years of service at the ae 
igan Bell Telephone Co. - 
The name of the chub is de- 
rived from, the fact that all 
members aré - Bell Telephone 
employes of the Pontiac Dis 
trict who have been with the - company for 21 years or over. 
“About | ©, ee eel 
event. & 
.    athering Tabs — 
6800 Gallowey Lake Group headed 
by Mrs. Howard W. Barnes. 
H. 
Phelps and Mrs. Neil Ricketts, 
new directors, 
 toreen penton wile to 
completely outfit a family for 
praises 
Cremations piosivine vg 
thering . in- ‘ ing from the inga 
jum, Camp Oakland and Boys’ 
Ranch, St, Joseply Mercy Hos- 
pital, Michigan Children’s Aid 
Society, Oakland County Juve- 
nile Court boarding homes, and - 
the Salvation Army. 
Others are Pontiac General 
Hospital, Oakland wong | Chil- 
dren’s Home, Visiting Nurses, 
American. Red Cross, Oakland 
County Health Department and 
Post 
Honored 
at Shower 
Mrs. Albert H. Post Jr. -(nee 
Mary Leach) was honored at 
a» miscellaneous shower 
Wednesday evening at the West 
Strathmore street home of Mrs. 
Earl-Leach. Mrs. John Black- 
erby Was hostess. 
Guests were Mrs. Edwin 
Leach, Mrs. Willard Crosby, 
Mrs. Edwin Crosby, Mrs. Sol- 
ley Greer, Jean, Leach, Carol 
Leach, Frances Greer, Mrs. 
David Jones and Mrs. William 
Freer. 
Others were Mrs. Chester 
Langford, Mrs. Matthew Foth- 
eringham, Mrs. Dewey Dean, 
Mrs. Herman Bozung, Mrs. Sid- 
ney Baker, Mrs. Claud Clay, 
Mrs. Ear] Beach and Mrs. Al- 
bert Post. 
Patricia Farmer 
Has Wedding Plans 
"Mr. and Mrs. James Farmer, 
former Pontiac residents now 
in Grand Haven, an- 
nounce the engagement of their 
daughter, Patricia, to i] 
Chaffee, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Earl Chaffee of Grand Haven. 
No. wedding date lias been set.’ annual Ingathering. 
is ‘president of the organization and 
Dr. Becker is a new member, 
  Mrs. Charles Clarke 
ed 506 garments were made by 
the Queen Mary Section 
Mrs, H. H.. Thatcher and the 
late Mrs, Harry Y. Fitzgerald. 
Mrs, Lester Snell is president 
of the section and Mrs, Ernest 
Howell, vice president, 
* * * 
The local chapter of. Nee- 
‘dlework Guild was. organized 
through the efforts of Miss Ella 
Green who was the first presi- 
dent and is now honorary pres- . 
ident. 
The group was formed on 
May 21, 1912, at the home of 
Mrs, W, T, Barbour in Bloom- 
. field Hills, 
  ing the pastel blankets and knitting, 
are (left to right) Mrs. Arthur H. 
Yarger, Mrs. Russell J. Williams 
and Mrs. Earl E. Jones. 
  “Mrs. Harrington 
Plastic Coated 
Window Shade 
Window shades become more 
practical as new coatings are 
applied, Highly washable ones 
have a vinyl plastic coating. 
To clean, spread a roller’ 
shade flat and brush away 
dust. Scrub with well-sudsed 
sponge and rinse. Leave shade 
= drawn while it hangs to 
rY: 
Nancy Maloney 
Celebrates Birthday 
Nancy Maloney was enter- 
tained at a surprise party for 
her 17th birthday Thursday 
evening, given by her parents 
Mr, and Mrs, Irving Maloney 
at their Chippewa road home. 
Guests were her friends from 
the senior class at St. Fred- 
erick’s High School, 
Plastic Tumblers 
in Print Design 
Decorated plastic “glass. 
ware” is becoming gayer, more 
popular, Good plastic tumblers 
have print patterns that won't 
wash off — that will be sate 
in soap or detergent guds and 
rinses at up to 180 bs, 
They are shatterproof, too! 
    
           
       
      
    Fi   
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, . FRIDAY, NOVEMBER AN Wig Se hood oe : ays 
~ him in my home, but it psychology on him! When 
to be a decision be- he send him to his 
would a child and 
  room as 
tell him he is not to return until 
  Have You Tried This? 
} Hearty Oatmeal Cookies | 
Sure to Please Any Man | am By , as p sen Baling ponder , 
aot BR mew 
1 are ti, ; 
Creanfshortening, add © 
Sugars gradually and cream © 
well. Beat in egg. Add sifted = dry ingredients, then rest of © 
ingredients, Ee 
Drop on a greased cookie © 
* work, ‘Sheet and flatten a little. © 
| hobby is boating andcamping. Cookies will spread so don't 7 put them too dlose together. 
Bake 15- minutes in a 350-   
“Wock FUR LININGS 
        
     
USE OUR CONVENIED “ LAYAWAY PL     
    
/-. SPECIALY 
. Entire Stock of 1. 
BLOUSES — 
Sar omy ae ple   s 
    
  14, 1958 
  
  
discipline, but he also needs 
attention. Make him feel want- 
ed and a part of:the family, 
but let him kmow he will be 
punished if he doesn't behave. 
 ‘'* * ‘ 
“DEAR ABBY: I notice you 
came running in defense of the 
women (as usual) when a mail 
carrier's wife complained about 
the indecent way some women 
answered their doors in the 
morning. Well, I am a post-. 
man and-I can tell you from 
my own experience that ‘I've. 
had plenty, of invitations from 
married women to come in for 
coffee ‘and’. One woman on 
my route even asked me if I 
had time to come in and tell 
her 8-year-old son the facts of 
life.” A POSTMAN 
bg * * 
“DEAR ABBY: My wile and 
I have been married for eight 
years. and I won't go into de- 
tails, but. we are splitting up. 
My problem is about our dog. 
I got him when he was five 
weeks old and I paid $100 cash 
for him, but my wife is the one 
who trained him. We were 
offered $600 for him and turned 
it down, The wife says she is 
entitled to the dog. I say he 
is mine, What do you say?” 
RALPH | 
    
   shag “euta |Gene Tierney’s Story   
driver is single or married. 
“2. * * 
“DEAR ABBY: My widowed 
father is driving me and my 
family crazy, He's lived with 
us since Mama died four years Is Now Located at 
103 N. SAGINAW ST. (Across from SIMMS—Next to By CYNTHIA LOWRY and dark-haired girl now 10. But 
WESTPORT, Conn. (#—‘‘Where despite Gene's stubborn determina- 
there is no hope, there is no de- sion to make a go of her marriage, 
    
JACOBSEN'S Flowers 
        te “a spair,” says beautiful Gene. Tier-| : ago and every year he is get- “r . =| DR. A. MILES ney. “But it took me a long time swichaamiss PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER | ng harder to tive with. Dur 200, (OM 4 ie et, FE 2-029) Open Monday & Priday Evenings - FE 2-2912 ; oe - ae ed know - this.” 
SSS: SSE = SSS Sa | Fae Ree th ono Boe ste Soc Daria, first child of actress’Tier- |                   iney and her dress-designer hus- | 
|band, Oleg Cassini, was born in| 
1/1943. It was soon evident that the | 
curly-haired child, who resembled | 
‘her moth@, was mentally retard-| 
led. The tragedy was one of. the) 
jemotional blows which later con- | 
tributed to Miss Tierney’s collapse | 
and a long period of treatment in | 
| sanitariums., 
| “I kept hoping and hoping that 
| something could be done, - that 
           
        
           
        
      
        
            
        
            
     
    
     
       
   UNPAINTED FURNITURE Now is the time to paint ond make ready a perfect Christmas 
- Gift for any member of the family.    
   Children’s Boston Rocker ...... eS 6 ee ene, Ont om 
Children’s Table and Chair Set ....... 4.95 J acon. Tt was only interme 
Children’s Toy Chest .............. 12.95 Bf was nothing to be done. When I 
Study Desk... 0.2.0.0... 12.95 to 31.95 Bf totcave mie” Adjustable Bookcase .............. 16.95 Early in her pregnancy, Gene 
All Style Chests .............. 9.95 to 33.95 Bicced Camcen, and two weeks Inter 
~ Bar Stools... 2... eee 3.95 up Bas coos maspene eoder mah ce ’ Captain’s Chairs ............... ... 9.95 pr pap paleriar aie 
  | tally her lifetime must be spent in 
‘an institution. | 
| In addition to this abiding sor- | 
‘row, her marri to Cassini was | 
i Corner Table ................ .... 14.95 
End Tables ...... wee © wewie wa cece eee 99S 
Dressing Table ................. .. 10.49 
A complete line of natural wood finishes or paints 
to complete your unpainted furniture. inot working oyt well. There were 
'estrangements and reconciliations, 
@ but at base there was a clash of 
|temperaments. One of the roots of 
|Gene’s problems has been her own 
| inability to let off emotiona] steam. ; ; 
| On the surface, she always — . 
6, iperfectly poised, calm-manne 
Register Today and Saturday joe disciplined, ‘Cassini is an ex- by Lenn Holos 
Wate ‘for Our FREE Paint Offer!  plosive European, and pyrotechnics , 
0 O | | R ¢ ais were frequent in the Cassini house-| printed Pattern 4731: Girls’ sizes 
—— < . hold. 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 takes 3% 
2 . P= : After one separation and recon-|yards 35-inch fabric; % yard con- 
ciliation their second child, Chris-jtrast fabric. } 
tina, was born, a healthy, bright; Printed directions on each pat- 
= tern part. Easiér, accurate. 
THE PLAYHOUSE   If you wart to keep it a secret from the family, or are pressed for room, you AST 
may use our store to complete your project. 
  
  noe 
  
    
  
Send 35 cents in coins for this 
pattern — add 10 cents for each 
pattern for Ist-class mailing. 
Send to’ Anne Adams, care of The 
Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept.,   
    
    
wonton I 243 West 17th St., New York 11. N.Y. Print plainly name, address | EM 3-024 
    NEW I € FEATURE-PACKED 
- CALIFORNIA CARPORT HOME gt oe x ; ‘ Ben Ss, ft: : ‘ DEAR RALPH: You've gota | 
Eaton's 36 North Soginaw St. | <o. hap eepetentng deren Manes Sbout SB] Legal problem. Better find | oon ons : jpagingw || “DEAR ABBY: Should a |p ee © eee Sk ae | i) we foe ff single woman ride in the front a de 
seen eaeisianlagannanaaNenaeEanae i Seat of a taxi if she knows the 
taxi driver is married? 
Lan ry mavcika paom) . . | ~ 
eeacess=": Retarded Child Is Crucial Blow ithe problems céntinued. Finally in 
'1952, she divorced Cassini, 
Later came her celebrated ro- 
mance with Aly Khan. But its |f 
crackup had little to do with her 
| collapse, 
“It may have sped things up a 
little, but it certainly didn’t bring 
lit on. I was due for a collapse.” 4 
They’ talked of marriage, Gene 
says, “but I didn't marry Aly 
Khan because I knew—even though Danish 
Modern 
‘Danea’ . 
Chair 
4479 Dixie Hwy.   
      
Beautiful walnut finish, 
Polyfoam cushions, all in Zipper covers, 
+ reversible cushions. One side plain, 
other side colored—turquoise, brown striped. 
Only $39” 
GENTRY’S 
se co eruoeao Drayton Home Furnishings ~ | when I met him," the actress says. 
OR 3-2300 
OPEN FRIDAY NITES 'til 9 P. M.       
Drayton Plains 
i   
    
I was quite sick—that I wanted a| ee   
  
more prosaic life. He is a com-} 
plete cosmopolitan—charming and 
delightful. But I am basically a! 
Connecticut girl who wants and, 
needs the usual kind of Connecti- | 
cut life.’*   
        
  (Tomorrow: Return fromthe; PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL 11% §. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. 
Enroliments Available In Day or iyenieg 
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER its 108      
     
    
  
    
    
ee | 
2. brabers | 
Honored 
by Sorority | 
Mrs..Ralph Marriott and Mrs. | 
Milton Ott were honored at 
a Ritual of Jewels conducted 
    
  3127? W. Huren FE 4-7121 | by president of Alpha Omega | 
Daily and Sunday, 9 to 6 Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi | Fridey Nights ‘til $ Sorority Mrs C. M. Beevers, 
; | “Wednesday at Old Mill Tavern. | 
For the beater and foemily. a select In charge of selecting a | 
line of Christmas greetings in Thanksgiving basket to be 
nautical themes. «1 given to a needy family is Mrs. | 
: Donald Devoe 
* * * 
The next meeting of the 
group will be held at the home 
: of Mrs. Vincett 
Kennett road. on Dec. 3. Zeta 
Lambda Chapter will meet with 
Alpha Omega Chapter to plan 
for the forthcoming “Sno Ball’’ 
dance. 
McCarroll PTA | 
Features Panel 
| A panel discussion presented by) 
the special services department of| 
the Pontiac Public Schools was) 
\featured on the program when| 
McCarroll School PTA met) 
'Wednesday at the school. 
| Miss Ferne Perrin, visiting) 
jteacher, was moderator of the} 
|panel. Participanst included Patri-| 
icia Flanders, speech teacher; Jose-| 
\phine Buella, school nurse; and} 
logis Schneider. of | 
} 
  
See our new selections of 
Shirts & Pants and 
Beoutiful Dresses 
“H Its Western We Have I" 
  
        
  
  — Robertson, school psychol- 
7 | 
PERMANENTS 50) | Complete with Haircut and Set r 
UIS “BEAUTY 
ot W. Faron 00 as No App’t Us. FE 5-8000 
Sad Fleor Next te Buckner Finance AIB CONDITIONED 
    
  
    
              
A ‘testimonial dinaer in the form of a “This is Your Life” pro- 
Sarah ‘Van Hoosen Jones: 
Zonta Club of Pontiac, the program was held Thursday at Kingsley gram honored Dr. Inn. 
Sponsored by the 
  
FEATURING THE LATEST 
FASHIONS IN EYEWEAR 
ae 
Dr. B. R. Berman 
—Optometrist— 
Still N° Same Location 
: inew St. 
FE 4-7071 We Also 
Feature 
  
  
’ THELMA CROW ... formerly with Edwards in the 
Sheraton Cadillac is now on our staff as HAIR STYLIST. 
RANDALL'S BEAUTY 88 Wayne St. 
SHOP FE 2-1424 
  
ST Se a eee sninemenvertnemeend neetierantmemnnnspanade A 
  
  
    
     
   
     
     
  WASHINGTON wp — A .fami 
Joining the P 
Army Maj. John Eise 
his wife and 
nearly 
a a’ 
Nursery Fabrics 
New printed fabrics for deco 
rating the nursery are good 
for a smile. Their amusing 
designs are very gay and 
colorful, And, of course, they 
are all made of sturdy wash- 
able cotton. 
  ‘Family Gathers Boptist Pastor | 
to Fete Mamie 
on 62nd Birthday Dixie Baptist Church will be speak-, 
lv? 
observance today marks the 62nd vat 
lbirthday of Mrs. Dwight D Eisen-| 
jhower. 
i resident and first 908 and_ eleventh and twelfth | 
jlady at the White House will be 
ithetr gon, 
7 |hower, 
IF isenhower grandchildren n 
the four Pj Omicron Chapter 
Mrs. Eisenhower got a head start Plans Dec. 1 ] Party 
on the celebration Thursday, 
she entertained 
publican women at a White House 
tea, aS) 
1,000 Re- , { Photographed at the event are (left to right) Joe Haas, toast- 
master, Dr. Jones, Dr. John A. Hannah, president of Michigan State 
University, and Alice Serrell. 
- Commends Dr. Jones on Achievements   
PTA Speaker 
The Rey. Paul: Vanaman, of 
‘Two hundred friends of Sarah 
Van Hoosen Jones of Roches- 
ter attended a “This Is Your 
Life’ testimonal dirfner in 
her honor Thursday evening at 
Kingsley Inn. Zonta Club of 
Pontiac sponsored the event, 
graders will present a quiz using | Dr. John A. Hannah, presi- 
pantomine. dent of Michigan State Univer- 
sity, was keynote speaker, and 
Joe Haas of the Pontiac Press 
editoria] staff was toastmas- 
ter, Alice D. Serrell conducted | 
the “This Is Your Life’ portion | 
of the program. | er at the Parent-Teacher’s Fellow-| 
ship of Emmanual Christian School | 
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 
Pai of the second and third | 
grades will sing a Thanksgiving | 
  Plans for a Christmas party to, 
be held Dec. 11 at Hotel Waldron| 
were discussed at the Thursday | 
evening meeting of Iota Eta Chap-| 
‘ter of Pi Omicron, ‘eld at the 
East Kennett. road home of Mrs. 
Elva Haines. 
The group decided to give Christ- 
mas gifts to Oakland County Crip- 
pled Children’s Society. Dr, Hannah told of the high   
Parents Attend 
Open House 
‘at Wever School 
Some cooks like to add chili 
sauce er catchup to mayonnaise to M 
serve with seafood.   
Opinionaires covering study in 
ichigan schools were distributed | 
‘at the Wever School Open Fs     
  are as wp-to-the-minute as these famed watches. The man’s model with wraparound crystal gives 
unbroken vision of a handsome two-tone dial. On 
the women's watch, the diamond-like sparkle of the 
starlight crystal emphasizes the eight diamonds. 
Ten karat goid-fitled with — Diamond | 4k gold with 
wraparound crystal $100 starlight crystal $250 
‘Prices inchade Federal tax Charge or budget 
Pontiac’s Oldest Jewelry Store 
Fred N. Pauli Co. 28 W. Huron FE 2-7257 | ~ 
"The Store Where Quality Counts” 
    Traditional 
BLUE winew DINNERWARE     
       
        
          
        
      
            
        Specially 
Priced 
40 PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 
Also Available in Open Stock 
Bright and bold in traditional good taste... the 
underglazed for everlasting beauty. 
and detergent proof, pattern is 
Completely dish washer held -Thursday. evening. 
Parents visited their children’s 
rooms and had the opportunity of | 
becoming better acquainted with | 
teachers, Parents were invited to’! 
join Wever PTA. 
Refreshments were served by the | MSU President Is Keynote Speaker 
esteem with which Dr, Jones 
has been regarded by fellow 
board members of the State 
Board of Agriculture at Michi- 
gan State University, and by 
the university as a whole, 
Michigan's only master farm- 
er, Dr, Jones was, commended 
for her interest in humanity. 
In the interest of higher educa- 
tion. she. has given her prop- 
erty to the university, 
It had long been the intention 
of the family to give the prop- 
erty ‘to Michigan. State Univer- 
sity at some future time, In 
1956 Dr. Jones thought the time 
had come and presented the 
deed to the university. 
Welcoming the guests was 
Mrs. Chadd Mellinger, presi- 
dent of the Zonta Club. Co- 
chairmen were Mrs. Fotis N. 
Takis and Mrs. L. Harvey 
Lodge. 
SPECIAL GUESTS 
Among the special guests 
participating in the story of 
Dr. Jones’ life were Mr. and 
Mrs, Erwin Taylor of Detroit, 
Mrs, Neil Pearson of Tecum- 
seh, Mrs. Louis Dunten of Ft. 
Wayne, Ind.; State Sen. L. Har- 
vey Lodge, Dr. Marie Dye, 
dean emeritus of the School of   
  
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Twin $11 Kitchenettes $12 4 
Low MONTHLY ‘Rates 4 
tor Semi-Permanent Guests > 
FE 5-0224 
120 S. Telegraph Rd. 
    
     LADIES’ 
and GENTS’. 
WATCHES © Pontiac Preis Photo 
  
Representing Zonta, Interna- | 
tional as governor of District 
Five was Dr, Nan Wolcott of 
Flint, 3 Luelte 
Chairman of invitations was “tek or 
Maude Chambers, : and table Bi 
decorations were from Michi- | Duy at Pegtery Showroom 
  
“imperial ball" at the Waldorf-As- Es 
‘\toria Dec. 4, it was announced to- MERLE NORMAN 
“| day. ' 
A palace announcement said) COSMETIC STUDIO gan State University. 
Jolly Ten Club Plans Gift, Yule Party | 
Mrs:>~Easl Johnson was hostess! 
ito the Jolly Ten Club at her Pin. 
igree street home Wednesday. eves 
ining. 
|. The money chest was opened si 
iplans were made for the Christmas ; 
\ gift for crippled children. A Christ-! 
;mas party and exchange of gifts 
iwill be held Dec. 10 at Hotel Wal-| 
dron.   
SAVE $ Come In—See All Items 
Nu-Brite Manutacturine Se. 
T crook: outh ¢ Orchard sorb one . 1 Block ar: be oe 
      
  
    Band Instrument 
REPAIR 
e Factory > 
* Trained Expert 
e The Right 
Parts   
Prince, Grace to Fly |] ° saarsneet 
to New York Nov. 22 
MONTE CARLO (UPD — Prince 
Rainier and Princess Grace will) 
\leave by air Nov. 22 for New York 
City, where they plan to attend an AT: 
CALBI Music Co. 119 N, Saginaw FE 5-8222 
  
  
Come in for a Free 
      
  
  
    
  
    
  Choice of Over 
60 Other Patterns 20% DISCOUNT 
    
All Sales Final. 
DIXIE Porrery | For Your Convenience 
9 P.M. Sunday to 9 P. M. 
(Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 Open Daily 10 A. M. - 
5281 Dixie Hwy.     
              
    PTA executive board, On the hos-} Home Economics, Michigan Rainier and Grace plan to spend! 
pitality committee were Mrs. Wil-| State University; Mrs. Lelia |some time at her home in Phila- | Demonstration! 
liam Lawrence, Mrs. J. P, Wallace! Wilkins of Peterboro, Va.; and |delphia while they are in the United] 12 W. Huron” FE. 2-4010 
and Mrs. Robert Burton. | Harry Taylor of Mt. Clemens. States. A 
FOR YOUR WEEKEND DRIVES Come Out to 
Diehl’s Orchard Cider Mill 
and Salesroom 
SEE FRESH, FILTERED CIDER 
MADE ON OUR OWN PRESS SPECIAL—SUNDAY, NOV. 16 ONLY 
- 10¢ Buys Your Paper Cup and 
All the Cider That You Can Drink 
75° See Our New Salesroom 
Chock-Full of Choice Apples. Mcintosh, Red Delicious, Golden Delicious, 
Jonathon, Grimes Golden, Spy, Winesop 
Look for Our Sign’ ot 
Corner of Milford and Rose Center 
Roads. Turn East 600 Yards on 
Ranch Road, Stop in at 
Dichl’s Orchard Cider Mill and SALESROOM 
1478 RANCH ROAD 
Follow the Arrow   
GALLON 
  
   
OPEN DAILY — 9 A. M. to 7 P.M, 
         
    FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 14. 1958 
    PONTIAC PRESS,   
    : ‘not tell me I am fat, Shall I try 
to lose some weight and risk look- 
jing older just to please myself or 
| 
» = be 158 to 160. 
A pair of towels is always a. 
welcome gift. Get out odds and, 
ends of embroidery floss. 
The motifs in this pattern are 
done in a jiffy. Fewest of stitches) 
Pattern) 
685: Transfer six motifs about 6%x| 
| 
Send 35 cents (coins) for this) 
pattern — add five cents for each! 
pattern for Ist-class mailing, Send) 
to The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle- | 
P.O. Box 164, Old’ 
Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y.! 
Print plainly pattern number, —so colorful, effective. 
814 inches. 
craft Dept., 
name, address and zone. 
A new 1959 Laura Wheeler! 
Needlecraft Book — just out — has| 
lovely designs to order: Embroi- 
weaving, | 
In the book, a spe- 
cial surprise to make a little girl 
happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to 
color. Send 25 cents for this book. dery, crochet, 
quilting, toys. knitting, 
  
Honor 14 
Volunteers 
From Area 
Thirteen Birmingham wom- 
en and one Rochester -woman 
are among 34 volunteers who 
have been honored for service 
by William Beaumont Hospital. 
* * * 
Mrs. George W. Akers of 
Rochester has received a sil- 
ver pin for 500 hours of serv- 
ice, Additional recipients of 
silver pins for volunteer work 
are Mrs. Donald Boyd, Eliza- 
beth Carter, Margaret . Car- 
ter, Mrs. Lyman Craig Jr., 
Mrs. William G. Meese, Mrs. 
William T,. Menewisch and 
Mrs. S. E. Milne, all of Bir- 
mingham, 
Other Birmingham  volun- 
teers honored are Mrs. Harry 
J, Pitcher, Mrs. H. D. Seel- 
inger, Mrs, James H. Tracy, 
Mrs, June Vinton, 
* * * 
Mrs, Howard S. Christie of 
Birmingham has been present- 
ed a gold pin for 1,000 hours 
of service to the hospital. be happy as I am? I have a me- 
jdium. large frame.” ; 
A. It is difficult to say just what 
your weight should be. If you have 
‘a medium frame, you should weigh 
‘about 142. If your frame. is actually 
\vety large your ideal weight:        Remember that your, older ap- 
pearance may have comé from an 
incerrect reducing diet and by try- 
ing to lose a lot of weight too fast. 
It is important to health as well 
as to your own happiness to lose 
some. Every woman has her ideal 
weight when her figure is good, 
‘her health unimpaired and her face 
imost youthful looking. # 
i Ideal Weight 
A. That seems -pushing it a lit- 
(tle. However, if you mean the low 
lbut shaped heel it seems to me 
‘that this would be appropriate for 
special occasions. 
Q. “Tl have some dark hairs om 
a my face, What is causing that? | — 
' | 
       a 
re a 
ae 
5" Anniversary 
Nale! OPEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT ’TIL 9 Please answer as fast as possi-~ 
ble. What can 1 do about it? 
Please hurry,’”’ 
A. Tweeze them or have them 
removed by electrolysis. 
Q. “Please tell me what to do for 
i ithe dark spots on my face which 
» joceurred during my last preg- 
'nancy."* 
4 A. I do not know of anything 
‘one can do for these except give 
ithem time. They usually fade out, 
‘at least to ‘a great extent. You 
;ean use a make-up base to hide 
‘them if you wish, . 
* * *   
  Qur Famous Blouses 
We had to remove the labels because we cannot mention 
      
    “Miss Israel Star Guest 
at Meeting of Hadassah 
Featured guest 
gram of Pontiac Chapter of 
Hadassah's annual Honor Roll 
Meeting, held Thursday eve- 
ning at Congregation B'nai Is- 
Israel of 1958 and a runner- 
  MIRIAM HADAR 
Israel of 1958. and a runner- 
up in the Miss Universe con- 
test, 
An Israeli law student, born 
in 1937, she was a sergeant in 
the Flight Control and Radio 
Division of the Israeli. Air 
Force and is a veteran of the 
Sinai campaign. She was a 
scholarship student at New 
York University and is now 
studying at Hebrew University, 
Israel. 
» EDITOR SPEAKS 
Also on the program was 
Phillip Slomovitz, editor and 
publisher of the Detroit Jew- 
ish News. He spoke on “The 
Jew in the World Today.” He 
paid tribute to the work of Ha- on the pro- 
  lwells are 2% 
inches deep. — and stated that Hadas- 
ah .has been a dynamic in- 
Bacace in stimulating creative 
and intelligent Jewish living 
and that it has done much to 
preserve de cy and_bol- 
ster the United Nations. 
* * * 
For the musical portion of 
the program, Mrs. Herman 
Stenbuck introduced Mrs, Mor- 
ris Serwin of Detroit, past 
president of the Pontiac chap- 
ter, and Mrs. Sol Slomovitz of 
Detroit. They sang several Is- 
raeli and American song clas- 
sies, accompanied by Mrs. 
James Rosenthal] at the piano. 
* * * 
Mrs, Thomas Horwitz, Honor 
Roll chairman, reported the 
functions and°goals of her com- 
mittee and its progress to date. 
$he pointed out how volun- 
tary contributions from Hadas- 
sah members together with 
the work of each of the com- 
mittees, makes the Honor Roll 
Drive a success and provides 
funds for rehabilitation and re- 
lief in Israel. 
Refreshment committee 
heads were Mrs. John Roths- 
child and Mrs. Sam Chafets. 
75 Attend Meeting 
of OES Chapter   
Seventy five visitors and guests Guests included the Bere 
attended the meeting of Pontiac; he Berea Class | 
Chapter No. 228 of OES held Mon- 
day at Masonic Temple. 
Mrs. Rudy Wren, of Kindness! 
chapter, Detroit, brought mredtings: 
from the grand chapter. 
Refreshments were served by. 
Mrs. Harry Lumsden. Flag bearers: 
were Mrs. Fred Cleland and Mrs. 
Earl Bronson with Mrs. Richard, 
Roberts. marshall. 
  
Medium-sized muffins are usual- | 
ily. made in muffin. pans whose 
inches wide by 1% 
  Tomorrow: ‘We All Have Hair— 
‘a the name. Long sleeves and roll up styles in whites 
‘What We Do” With It Is What & p styles in whites, 
solids, prints and stripes. 
[ 90 : | 4 
LOW PRICE! | : 4a 
ee oe ee Full Fashioned Sweaters students under super 
vision of instructor. 
‘Bulky Knit Cardigans and Pullovers plus mohairs, fine 
gauge wools, and fur blends, in novelties and classics.     
  
were 6.50 
and 7.95 
    
i 
  
  Every woman has her | 
ideal weight when her | 
figure is good, her health 
unimpaired and her face | 
most youthful looking. Phone FE 4-1854 
Closed All Day   
  . 
Hairdressers W ednesday | were to 90 and 90 | Give Methods Colt Stas Wiioey Today + 14.95 ee 
A anent wave de nstra-| : 
A mmant sve mons! BONTIAC | day meeting of Pontiac Hairdress- BEAUTY COLLEGE   
ie held on Wayne street. 161% East Huron 
Mrs. John. Reither will replace} Behind K. “s. Qnd Fl 
\Mrs. Russell Wright as rtcording} ~* * "ees? ® — 
| secretary. | 
The next meeting will be a! 
Christmas party to be held Dee. | 
2 at Hotel Waldron. 
Dorcas Class Holds 
‘Fellowship Dinner     Imported Skirts 
Also domestic, tweeds and solids in darks and pastels. ] 
5 tee and 4 90 
Dresses and Separates 
A wonderful selection of one and two piece styles that 
are perfect for the winter season.   
  
        
  DIAMONDS 
From 
HOLLAND 
Group singing and of lewelers 
'slide pictures hichlighted the Mon-} 
day meeting. _ FE 2-5812 88 N. Saginaw   
were 8.95 
to 14.95 
     ‘a fellowship dinner at the church.   
and others. 
      
  
For Building Supplies See 
BURKE LUMBER CO. Planning a Contemporary 
Home? Use . were to 49.95 
os 6 99% | 6   
PRICED FROM 
$199” 40 WATTS of PEAK sca 
Hear recorded sound come to life as 
never before om the new Zenith in- 
strument. __3 
  
PLAYS ALL YOUR PRESENT 
RECORDS PLUS NEW 
STEREOPHONIC RECORDS! 
: Speaker System 
  
Has 40-Watt 
Matching 
Amplifier 
  
  “TWIN ENSEMBLE")     
  
4 SPEEDS! ZENITH PORTABLE HIGH FIDELITY PLAYER 
3 SPEAKERS! SPECIALLY | 
PRICED AT 
» ONLY ‘09   
    BUY NOW or LAY AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION 
2 Years WAYNE GABER Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 P.M. 
Saginaw ~ to Pay 121 N. FE 5.6189 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 
      
  
    
  =1| Winter Coats. 
Imported and domestic tweeds and solids in the seasons 
most wanted styles.   
  
were to 99.95 
“Ded DO O 
Cashmere Sweaters 
        
  FOR BEAUTIFUL INTERIOR 
  
    
    
  
  . —ma 
PANELING, SPECIFY... — we ~ Our famous brand in discontinued ‘novelty styles. Per- 
a le fect for Christmas giving. 
= | Ir — | = eee | | a 
SSI | ii were 25.95 | 90 
Sih 1 ie tl ALY to 32.95 A | ee ~ if an —— hh i - << tay 
ho s Pad pK] 
yy 
All Weather Coats 
Our Famous Coats Imported from West Germany, 
Were $29.95. 
4° Saturday 8-3 | 
BURKE LUMBER C0. A Ce/éz “Where the Home Begins”’ sees Se at * Park Free 
4495 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-1211 HURON at TELEGHOY mene eee Mon., Thurs. and Fri. 10-S-—Tues, Wed. and Sat, 10-¢~Sunday Sts... 
  Complete Stock of Structural, 
Interior and Finish Pieces _ 
Including Beams, Pillars and Paneling | 
    
            
     
  
    1 | Newspaper Editors Tell Préféision:   
    
  ~ Ingham: Judge Rules 
Entrance Off Limits 
to Livery. Owner PRENCH LICK, Ind. (AP)—Two news- 
paper editors accused their profession today 
of falling down on the job of giving their 
reader* significant news from abroad. 
x *« * 
  Norman E, Dennison might have 
drop his riding horses onto the 
  Park Recreation Area. 
Township stable owner, yesterday 
was restrained from trespassing 
across state property in the park 
by Ingham County Circuit Judge 
Louis E, Coash, 
* * * 
for Dennison to use the bridal ie a Cae a | to find himself a helicopter. to’ ateq Press Managing Editors Assn.: 
bridie paths of the Highland State 
Dennison, 36-year-old Highland, 
Judge Cooash said it was okay| 
  Sn OG, MM Ren Mae re 
paths in the parks, but said he'd 
have to find a way to get to the, 
paths without stepping on state 
property, | 
' ‘The determined Dennison says 
he will find a way, “even it I: 
have to get a helicopter 
The Michigan Conservation Dept 
Yast month sought the court order 
to keep Dennison’s 60 horses out| 
of the park. The state ‘contends | 
Pe this riding horse concession be-| 
7 “longs to Grant W. Ireland, hired! 
by the ape.   iL 
ee Pe UE 
Re 
OR 
tie 
a 
a Pees 
ie 
* * 
Dennison, gra defended himself 
in the court hearing in Lansing, 
hopes the state will ‘still consent to 
letting him enter the park legally. 
If riot, Dennison promises court 
action, maybe as high as the Su- 
preme Court, will be started. 
“1 think this is very unjust,” he 
_gaid.. “Every Michigan taxpayer 
should have the right to use state 
property.” 
4 Injured as Train ~~ 
  
BLAIR, Mont, (AP) — Seven 
sleeper cars of the Great Northern 
Railway Western Star passenger 
train spilled off the tracks near 
this northeastern Montana prairie 
community today. 
Four persons were injured, but! 
not believed seriously, There were 
100 passengers aboard the Seattle- 
to-Chicago train. 
The engineer said he thought a 
broken rail caused the wreck, 
Most of the passenger's were stil! 
abed when the train derailed at 
6:rt a.m, 
‘The wreck occurred in rolling 
prairie country near the Montana- 
North Dakota line. Blair is only a 
whistle stop in the midst of Mon- 
tana sagebrush country, 
  
In the 1880's about 200 hours 
were required to make a section 
  City Girl, Hit by Car, 
Derailed in Montana | E. T. Stone, managing editor of the 
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, told the Associ- 
“World news is becoming local news. 
Unless we wake up te the fact, we're liv- 
ing in a dream world of the past.” 
Norman Isaacs, managing editor of the 
Louisville Times, said, “I would suggest that 
all of us look at our newspaper when we 
get home and reflect as to whether we are 
giving our readers an intelligent and im- 
aginative picture of today’s world,” 
‘BETTER THAN DESERVED’ 
Speaking on a panel discussion for the 
foreign news provided by AP, Isaacs said: peshinPak Ue of Foreign News Lax, “The AP's” world news coverage per- 
formance strikes me as better than most 
American newspapers deserve.” 
He contended only a small minority 
of papers are doing outstanding jobs 
of informing readers about world news 
or even making full use of AP's foreign 
news. 
Stone contended both the newspapers 
and wire services turn out “dull and sterile” 
foreign news “because we aren't reporting 
about people in the lands beyond our 
shores.” 
* - ¢ * 
The so-called “hard news” from foreign 
capitals, Stone said, is “news that is hard 
to digest, hard to understand.” 
“We need to put some human flesh on 
*t,” said Stone, who did some reporting him- | 
self last year on a tour of byroads and vil- 
lages in Europe. 
  
in Critical Condition A nine-year-old Ppntiac girl was * 
,reported in critical condition today 
‘at Pontiac General Hospital after 
being hit by an automobile yes- 
terday afternoon.   Delores Harris, 385 Branch St., 
jwas struck by a car driven by! 
John L, Waldo, 2219 Crane St., 
Waterford Township. She suffered 
‘chest and internal injuries. 
The accident occurred on Branch 
street north of Clovese street. 
Waldo told .Pontiae Police he 
was traveling south on Branch when the girl darted out from be- 
tween parked cars into the path 
but was-unable to avoid hitting) 
the girl. 
  
  art Vice Sued Go to Uniform Patroly|. 
of his car. He said that he braked D Evans Is Named New 
Head of Detail   
Marilyn hese: 
Plans Checkup - 
Three Pontiac, police of otter After Collapse transferred from have been 
Vice Squad to the Uniform rite 
Bureau, it was mmaqencet yee 
day. 
They ate Sgt. John Depauw, 
assistant to Capt, Oliver Lemeaux, 
commander of the Uniform Patrol 
Bureau. 
* * & 
Public Safety Director George 
. Eastman said yesterday that 
the vice squad will no longer han- 
dle applications for liquor licenses 
* . _ or investigate thé applicants and 
Bermuda ,is the oldest _ self- 
governing colony in the British 
Commonwealth. Bermuda was       claimed by the British in 1609. their premises, 
Applications will be processed 
through the administration of- 
fices and investigations carried Marilyn Monroe, preparing to 
i ag ne ag gg 
* 4 * 
Miss Monroe and Miller had 
child which is expected next spring. 
since her collapse. 
* .*% * 
  her friends, | hoped to return to their New York 
home Monday but the star ex- 
pressed fear she would lose the 
She has been confined to her room dollars, 
The actress, who lost-a_ ciild: 
through miscarriage last year, has 
repeatedly denied to the press that 
she is pregnant, although her con- 
dition is common knowledge to! ine: Economic Future (COMEF) to in- 
clude among its studies the whole 
range of foreign trade factors 
which might affect Michigan. 
The 100-member group is headed 
ife| by ‘William Day, president of the ' 
-| Michigan ‘Bell Telephone Co. ™ 
* *.,% 
the importance of for- 
eign trade to Michigan's economy,         HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Actress rs gy et tags he'll cael A cadlacad 
  
Williams noted: the market for 
state-manufactured goods and An ai 
services marked for export is big- 
ger than the dollar for its second of milk each year.      
and third largest industries — ag- 
riculture and tourism. Total ex- 
ports were worth nearly a billion 
he said: - 
“Yet the average citizen of 
seen ore Coe Nay 
scious of ee ae 
played Howrey, onl he said. 
ree has se to make the 
‘need nM te says Jeading to 
reased foreign trade seem re- 
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PONTIAC; MICH. 
           
      
Although the hospital is listed as 
‘a 121-bed institution, it has been 
operating recently with an average 
135 beds, ere aya, 
This is pate pie for a hos- 
At 1:30 p.m, Sunday in the hes- 
pital lobby there will be simple 
the 
remodeling job that has been going 
on since the hospital moved into 
its new quarters, the former Pon- 
tiac Hotel, S mare, pes 
ames og Pie part in the 
dedication. There will be a contin- 
uous buffet for the general public 
from 1-5 p.m. 
The hospital first operated in a 
former clinic at 32 Auburn Ave. 
with 25 beds and a medical staff 
that eventually reached 25 doctors. 
It now lists 99 medical and 
surgical beds, 22 pediatric beds, 
16 bassinets, fgur labor beds, 
three operating rooms, and com- 
plete dietary, laboratory, physi- 
cal therapy, radiology, emer- 
gency, nursery and pharmacer 
tical facilities. ; 
The medical staff now numbers 
about 70, and the hospital employs 
241 persons, including 35 registered 
nurses. | 
Remodeling consisted mostly of 
redecorating and installing new 
lighting fixtures throughout the 
seven-story building. Some large 
items, such as a new boiler, were 
and the second floor was 
completely tiled. 
* * * 
The hospital has handled thou- 
sands of patients in the past two 
years and would accommodate 
more if it could expand, said Whit- 
low. . ‘nancially-stricken Wyandotte Gen- 
  : 7 
  HE Pt misc PRESS _   
    4 
  
  Another possibility is expansion. 
within the present hospital. = ing inner walls on patient floors 
‘jand turning two single-bed private 
three-bed rooms into semi-private 
rooms. 
- “We might be able to pick up 
county board'of super-|20 or 25 beds this way,” Whitlow 
figured. 
The third plan is for the hospital 
to make another building purchase, 
similar to the 1956 hotel move. 
This would provide the hospital 
with an annex in which more beds 
;could be located. 
At present, the hospital has no 
“ct plans, Whitlow indi- 
‘cat Pa   
Busy Harry H. Whitlow. 
Heads Pontiac Osteopathic | 
Behind the rapid expansion of 
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital is a 
hard businessman, 
Harry H, Whitlow, the hospital's 
administrator, is the first to admit 
that he’s a layman when it comes 
to medicine, 
Modestly, he gives credit for, 
the success to others. 
“Qur accomplishments here are 
due to the fine efforts of our medi- 
eal staff and employes,” Whitlow | the 
said, 
* & 
“Patients like our hospital be- 
cause of the good and thorough 
practice of,.our medical staff and 
the desire of our nurses and other 
employes to serve the patient in 
every way possible.” 
Whitlow, 54, arrived in the hos- 
pital field through the business 
world. 
Born in Peterboro, Ont., Whit- 
low first came to the United 
States in 1926. For 25 years he 
was in the credit business in the 
Detroit area. . 
Then in 1951 he joined the fi- 
eral Hospital as a business con- 
sultant, Two years. later, the hos- 
pital was back on its feet, with 
Whitlow gaining much of the 
credit, 
* x * 
It was Whitlow’s business acumen 
that attracted a group of Pontiac 
osteopaths who were planning to 
open a hospital here. 
“We were extremely fortunate 
  There are three possibilities in 
sight at present. Johnson, one of the original plan- 
ners of the hospital. 
Whitlow took over in June, 1953, 
when the doctors opened their hos- 
pital in a converted clinic at 32 
—— Ave, The hospital had 25 
s, 
Y -&.-® 
Within two years, expansion 
plans were being made and on 
Jan. 1, 195, the hospital bought 
as 
a 121-patient facility in March, 
1955. 
Blue-Cross approved, the hospi- 
tal has prospered since then. 
Now, after a $200,000 remodeling 
job has been completed, Whitlow 
has more expansion plans in 
mind, 
other institution has ever success- 
was a natural, 
* * * 
“Where else could you find a set- 
up where built-in hospital rooms 
were ready for you the day you 
move in,’ he points out. “It would 
have cost hundreds of thousands of 
dollars-more to build such a build- 
ing from scratch.” © 
children and five grandchildren. 
His son Jack is credit manager at 
Pontiac Osteopathic, 
  in securing his services as ad- 
ministrator,” said Dr, Leroy C. andotte. 
  
Device Cuts Tissue Testing Time A device that cuts time needed 
in diagnosing cancer in a surgical 
patient plays a big role in the new 
laboratory at Pontiac Osteopathic 
Hospital. 
Thanks to what the hospital de- 
-scribes as a “frozen section ma- 
chine,” the testing period has been 
trimmed to about ten minutes. 
Routine tissue processing gen- 
erally takes a whole day, accord- 
ing to Dr. Joseph Maxwell, who 
operates the machine. = . 
The time-saving means a lot to 
the patient lergoing an opera- 
tion, said Dr."Maxwell, the hospi- 
tal’s pathologist, 
‘We can give a rapid diagnosis 
while the patient is still on the 
operating table,” he explained. 
Without the machine, the pa- 
‘tient would have to go back to bed 
to await the results of the routine 
processing. With the machine, the 
operation. can continue uninter- The machine itself resembles 
a complicated | tool. 
It’s about a foot high and a foot 
wide and performs its main fanc- 
‘ tion — freezing — by means of 
freon gas. 
Dr. Maxwell explained how the 
whole process works: 
Doctors operating decide they 
must know whether tissue is malig- 
nant (cancerous) or not before 
they can determine the full scope 
of the operation. ° 
Ke R -* 
They remove’ a tiny sample of 
the suspect tissue and rush it from 
surgery to the laboratory. 
In the laboratory, technicians 
have been previously alerted and 
already have the frozen section 
machine warmed up. 
The tissue to be processed is 
placed on a small, hollow metal 
block through which the freon— erators—is circulated, chilling {t to 
below zero temperatures in a mat- 
ter of minutes. The tissue oo 
frozen solid. 
* * * 
Then with a flick of the wrist. 
Dr. “Maxwell brings forward the 
cutting arm of the machine and a 
ifilm of tissue is sliced off. Less 
than razor-thin, it is of the re- 
quired thickness to be viewed 
through a microscope. 
Under the microscope, the tis- 
sue tells Dr. Maxwell whether it 
is malignant or not. 
“We only give a diagnosis of 
malignancy when we are really 
definite,’ said Dr. Maxwell} 
“Otherwise, we turn to the routine 
machine for certainty."’ processing 
-The frozen section machine is 
one of several up-to-date mechan- 
ical devices that the hospital has 
installed in. its recently-completed 
basement laboratories, said: Harry     rupted, similar to cooling gases in refrig- H. Whitlow, hospita] administrator. 
  QUICK DIAGNOSIS-— Dr. Joseph Maxwell, 
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital pathologist, is 
shown ‘performing a quick diagnosis of tissue on 
ar apes aaron section machine, With the 
a ae 4 Pontiac Press Phote 
aid of the machine, Dr. Maxwell can give a di- agnosis of cancer in about ten minutes, while 
the conventional method takes about~a day. The . hospital administrator is|7~ 
proud of the record of the past | © 
244 years, As far as he knows, no|i 
fully run a hospital in a converted |’ 
hotel. Whitlow feels that his idea 5 
Whitlow is married and has three | 
Whitlow’s family lives in River-} 
view, a small community near Wy- ordinary telephones, are one of   
France Stands Fourth 
PARIS - — A French chemist, 
aluminum in 1854, ‘tees France 
ranks as the fourth largest alumi- 
num producer in the world, with 
reserves of about 30,000,000. _tons 
  after the French village of Les 
Baux where it was first found. 1 i 
of prime-quality ore, called bauxite /listen to the dictation by means of There are six of them ailto-' 
gether, located in the places 
where doctors are apt to be com- 
piling records. 
It's simple for an osteopathic: 
doctor to keep his reports up to. 
date. He merely picks up one of 
the Phones, announces. the name 
number of the patient, 
and then dictates his report. 
The dictaphones are .connected 
by wire to receiver sets in the 
basement record offices. 
*.* * 
There a crew of three secretaries 
  earphones ahd type up the re- 
ports. <n ew Dae 
back arrangement, so that doc-   
Natural for Sergeants 
TWIN FALLS, Idaho W—Maybe 
it comes natural to sergeants. 
Army M. Sgt. Robert Richards 
won a regional Toastmasters Club 
ispeech contest, beating a cavey of 
civilians, 
  
Stole Empty Meters 
HUDSON, N. Y. (UPI)—Police 
reported a thief stole seven park- 
ing meters from the city streets in 
less than a week, but the only tors can cain what they’ve 
dictated. 
“Keeping medical records up to 
date is the bookkeeping part of a 
doctor's life," observed Harry H. 
hospital administrator. 
“This system helps make it easier’ Whitlow, 
and more efficient.” 
nets. 
* * 
  advantage, gained was by motor- 
ists, Each\meter was empty. * 
  starting with the 
  
CAIRO — A campaign 
ibeggars has been launched in. 
The size of the job is indicated United Arab Republic by the 3 
by the huge number of raaemcel | atey of Social Affairs. Special 
records that the hospital has ac- 
cumulated during the past 
years in its new location. 
line one wall of a basement of- 
fice, filling 96 separate filing cabi-; 2M 
They 
  for a living. | |   
At the end of 1957, the steel ine 
The task of preserving these dustry owed a total of $4 billion 
récords has become so burden- in long-term and short-term indebt+ 
some that the hospital has decided edness—an increase of $2.2. billion: 
to microfilm them, Whitlow said.'over 1950. ba 
|records from 1953 to 1955, 
‘Cairo to Oust Beggars 
|squads of police were ordered 
clean up the big cities after it was 
found that more than 85 per cent 
of the beggars were able to worle: 
  
   
     
7 
' 
Pontiac 
COMPANY 
Pontiac 
  Drayton Piaitis * SUTHERLAND STUDIOS 
Portrait and Commercial Photographers 
: L 
                
DEDICATION 1:30 P.M. 
PUBLIC TOURS of the HOSPITAL 
Beginning at 2 P.M. 
PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED 
wires ICE CREAM -. ait 
3038 First Street 
Wyandotte . 
H. H. STANTON 
Plumbing & Heating Co.’ 
Pontiac 
15 East Lawrence 
Pontiae a ed 
—, ~ .. 
a — ~ —~— 
~~ 
eee = —_ 
— 
ee — 
ee come 
=    
     
         
    
  AND DEDICATION 
day, November 16, 1958 
      
HARRY’S FURNITURE CO. 
ELEVATOR 
| ces BACKENSTOSE BOOK STORE. KRUGER INSURANCE AGENCY STOSE . STO 
    
  Invited to bring your family and friends 
to the dedication services of 
this wonderful, new, hospital 
facility. It is almost a miracle 
the way an old, hotel building 
has been turend into a clean, 
bright, pleasant, friendly. hos- 
pital. Visit the many depart-— 
ments, surgical, nursery, 
kitchen and other rooms... 
see what really wonderful, 
modern hospital facilities are 
available here for the sick 
and injured. 
Best Wishes to the Administraton and Staff of. Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital: 
CLARKE OIL COMPANY. 
Marathon Fuel Ot] and Petroleum, Progncte 
eg 
       
       
     
     
  
      
   
   
       
  
  
     
   
     
      eee 
ieee a 
      
     
total boas he    
   Sapen ‘Member Board Goverté | Hoot deeb 
seven-mem! board of di-|. The hospital's oduclntetretec. siertan G. Worstig.onl Saban is waenies of fn dicta Oe, lives at $85 Oakridge Rd.,| ry 
“a mpontn, ee Osteo-|Harry H. Whitlow, is -also ap-| F. Dickinson; David ©. Pence, lege of Osteopathic Surgeons. Ferndale, pee * F. pathic Hospital. pointed by the board of incorpora-| R. Verne Todd and Harold W. In 1954 he joined the hospital’s.| Todd has. served ow the beard (TO. 
Headed by a Detroit Seeman: tors. The medical direcior, Dr. Le-| Kruger, Kruger is vice rotten beard Dick —— Gatenienioa.” Ht 
man, Harry B. Park, the directors/foy C. Johnson, is a member he of the board. inson, tly wile and these chal cs Todd's St onset 
are appointed by another board/the board of incorporators board Park, a graduate of Wayne State dren live at 2108 Vinsetta Bivd., | W. Huron St, and the Todd In. | which incorporated the hospital as np » his job by the University Law School, has been| Royal Oak. surance Agency ai the same ad- community a non-pretit tnatitation fe 195%. — * * * president of the Harmo Interna-| Pence, a Pontiac attorney, has| dress. tal einige! wt mal 
= * Fegeae Serving with Park on the boarditional Corp, in Detroit 15 years.|served on the board since 1953 and| Vice president Pool, the erg syrup. pattie Sorters, (a me of directors are three osteopathic/The corporation runs the Harmoladvises it in legal matters. a|S0e Retail oo   
   
    
  . : *s 903 maple trees will be SS aacuagu = fr vev. (Coctors and three other lavmen. Inire and Rubber Corp. and thelgraduate of University of Michigan|** 1% a is 3 eset can eat eral are members of the board | Beside Park, the board con- |Allied Rubber Products Corp. both|Law School, Pence has been prac] Kruger 47, a Waterford Town| PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC of directors. sists of Drs. Donald E. Fraser, |netroit concerns. ticing in Oakland County 35 years |ship insurance agent, has been on| India’s privately owned Tata , ~~ * * « * * the board since it wag formed. A|tron and Steel. Works in Jamshed-| ; HOSPITAL Also connected with several other; A former president of the Oak-(|native of Ohio, Kruger was once|pur is Asia's largest. The firm is businesses, Park. 43, lives with hiSijand County Bar Assn., Pence was|a salesman and has ‘been in the|expanding in order to double » family at 18224 Oak St., Detroit. {president of the state bar in 1952.|insurance business 17 years, current annual 
Dr, Fraser. 43, a native of Trav-iQnce Oakland County Prosecutor,| A past member of the Commu-! pacity of 800,000 tons, \ erse City, came to Pontiac at an 
early age and was graduated from : é 
la * Pontiac Central High School in : So much has been done with- 
Congratulations es eae eee Bo sh ha hope! dane ? jand was graduated from the Kirks- 7 : 
— ae, One A Cece . to: provide the modern hos- and Surgery in 1940. pital it houses we urge your A member of the board almost ; . : 2 * * ! 
of the Pontiac Osteopathic a Loe ayia Usually there are ‘Before’ and ‘After’ ‘pictures Visit e. 
Hospital. peed lagdowoyg av'p-eeage ions of a re-modeling job but one such as accom- — . ; | with his wife and four children . ; BS cas 
- , | at 55 Niagara 81 plished by Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital is best : Con gratulations! 
anu Chee prac conveyed in sincere congratulations .... to | , eo a ! lowa, he was graduated] ~ . : from the Des Moines Stl College everyone ‘of Osteopathy and Surgery in 1942 We cre proud to be the supplier of and was president of the Oakland 
paper products used in this complete Sek ween ae oak 3 GENESEE WELDING SUPP LY 
| 585 S. Telegraph Rd. hospital facility. > ISB and was president, in 1556 EPPERT’S CAMERA     
  
  
  to the administration and staff 
    
        
      
ed chief of th tal’ FE 2-8316 ease statt Dr. eestor tee at SHOP 
          
  '99 Wenona Dr. with his wife and 57 West Huron Street 
HAROLD PAPER Company {+   
  
i i ifrom the Philadelphia College of 
zoe wis ahs Acie Osteopathy in 1997 and interned at 
FE 4.3244 ‘Detroit Osteopathic Hospital. He 
took postgraduate courses in sur- 
‘gery at several other hospitals and 
  
    Congratulations to 
The Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 
on its Grand Opening. Here is a truly “up-to-date” Hospital 
that will serve its area with conscience. 
BEFORE | > | NOT A MEAL WAS LOST 
The Impossible was Accomplished when Harry 
Altman & Sons of Detroit, Michigan, com- 
pleted the renovation of the entire kitchen 
without causing an interruption to existin 
services or the delay or loss of a single meal. 
was done the constant attention and 
perserverance of the staff of Harry Altman & beh Sons directed by Mr. Ted Schallman, food con- in eg in conjunction with Mr. Allan Rosen- MR. TED SCHALLMAN 
      The main kitchen 30’x36’ total size overall services an avera of 110 : oo with centralized service plus a cafeteria for the full hospital staff. he kitchen reminiscent of a resort hotel in the roaring 20’s was trans- formed into the modern and efficient centralized hospital kitchen of today, with unlimited years of useability. 
    
AFTER > 
and Not a Meal | on 
X-RAY CONTROL AND READING ROOM, PONTIAC OSTEOPATHIC HOSPITAL i Was Lost! 
we Sept. 17, 1968, with the tion of the 
age the kitchen personnel on all three : ‘ ae | ant ts reported at one time for a demonstration 
4 by factory sentatives. Each representative : genre in — = ow = for yee — 
pment meer | manufacture = . This enabled the ital to utilize each piece * 
| to thé full efficiency that the manufacturer had 
built into it. 
i: tate the consultant in conjunction 
with   : . . ’ ; . owner of the Auto-City Soap d Ch ded for thei 
oT put many applications off selence’s discovery it and use of the X-Ray its use in hospitals and clinics hard water and other conditions which existed . : in sax dish-washing department. 
is still the greater. For here it serves the doctor in 
diagnosis, the patient in treatment of deep disease, \ : 
ee research. But many, many other xX BEFORE 
uses are being made of the X-Ray today, too, in a 
industry. May we help if X-Ray equinment is 
needed or planned?   Vulcan heavy duty ieee was selected to fill the needs of the hospital . cellent reputation for producing quality merchandise as well as having a factory trained service organization available at all times. It was thro the use of Vulcan electric coo king equipment oe it was possible to reduce the average kitchen temperature better than 3   
  Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital : 
Is Ray Equipped . - A completely ready for every type of hospital and clinical 
work. The new X-Ray Department will thoroughly | 
satisfy the doctor’s request for diagnostic plates or | 
      
When X-Ray i is praseribed Pontiac Osteopathic | | and Not a Meal 
Hospital is equipped and stoffed to handle Was Lost! 
the case. —_ with all the planning the goal of un- \ 
in service could not have been reached . x 
without the wonderful cooperation of Mr. Harry a ; -\ . ; _ Whitlow, Hospital Administrator, his staff and Furnishing t inst lation of this equipment was our privilege i Mr. Witiiam ternfels of Medical Supply Corp. é \ 
\ : ' Harry Altman and Sons offers its consultin \ 
i cla services te hotels, clubs onl 
. @ STERLING METAL WEAR CORP—A Masterf Po DETROIT X-RAY “ COMP ANY | @ KINGSTON PRODUCTS CORP—The Finest. u Job of Sinan Stet ee _51T Bo: ‘ Detroit, Michigan @ VULCAN-HART — The Best in Electric Cookin 9 | Finest in on he : @ VULCAN AUTO SAND—The Most Mode iid 
= : + Sp le .1-61 40. , Electric Contractor—ZARATE ELECTRIC C CO mab py Sanitary piers cei , X Soap Compounds—AUTO CITY SOAP co. 
              
       
a ' mon } . eee Ge F f 
‘bes PON TLAG PROD, KKIDA 1, NUYEMBEN 14, wos ? ” \ 
  
       Congratulations to Administrative and 
.. Staff of Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. . f       é a 
     % *, 
It is indeed a pleasure to have been the supplier of most of the 
specialized medical and surgical equipment which has gone into 
this new, modern hospital. Most certainly those who planned and 
developed the modernization and equipping of this hospital can be 
well pleased with their accomplishments. 
To every member of the board and staff of this friendly modern 
hospital, we, at the Medical Supply Corporation of Detroit, extend 
heartiest congratulations and best wishes for continued success.   
THE MEDICAL SUPPLY CORPORATION OF DETROIT 3502 WOODWARD AVE.   
       Board of 
Directors 
         
    - WHITLOW ntiac Osteopathic 
Porof the Board “HARRY H. ’ f The 
Administrator a secretary 
Hospital 
MR, HARVEY PARK MR. HAROLD KRUGER DR. BEN J. 
President Vice President DICKENSON, D; 0. 
Staff of 
Pontiac Osteopathic Py 
Hospital ie i | 
  IRENE McCORMICK, RN. 
Nursing Director 
           DR. M. C. WOOSTER, MR. R. V. TODD DR. DONALD FRASER, _MR. DAVID C, PENCE 
    ee a = a ae ar : = >: ' ee * i sae ae » . os 
REY LINTZ, RN. JOSEPHINE POSTLE, RN. ELEANOR TWEEDALE LOUISE SIMPSON, RN. hada Seperviser Ass’t Nursing Director RN., Ass’t Nursing Director At Bpeng Direster 
    
MARGARET ZAHARA, DOLORES DULZO, RN. RN., Anaesthesist . . Central Supply 
  
            MARY AN} SPINELLI MATILDA KAREN DR. JACK C, LEVE, DANNY EVERTT. BS., 
Dietitian . Supervisor, Housekeeping MPH., SCD., FACMT. R.Ph., Pharmacist 
: Ass’t Laboratory Director 
       
  JACK WHITLOW 
Accounts Loneiese Mer. 
  GENSHAW Ww, Meee” depart 
     Red Badges Are X-Ray Satety Devices     
he 
  
Poentise Press Phote 
unit. The ‘powerful machine is used to treat both external and 
internal malignancies. GIANT X-RAY — Here's what the patient sees as Dr. H. R. 
Bridenstine, Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Radiologist, maneuvers 
into position the hospital's $17,000, high-voltage x-ray therapy 
Measure Exposure to Radioactivity   
At Pontiac Osteopathic, Hospital, Dr. Bridengtine and his five € as prets it and spells out the results A minor source of radiation 
| to the hospital. 
=e oka k Men sche tual votees me ya pes tee el “If the-film shows too much ra-| aNd his staff take with conven- are indications of the big role that badges on the lapels o ir wo e-film | temnl Keny. inact er 
radiological techndlogy plans in ing oo \diation, then we have to keep away] seeres weeld be considered in 
modern medical institutions. * 2 ‘from radioactivity for awhile,” Dr.) significant except when supple- 
Called dosimeters, the badges. 
  are the usual X-rays Bridenstine | fill the many stomachs of pa- 
has been a large part of the ex- 
pansion plans of Pontiac Osteo- 
pathic Hospital. oe 
* *. *&. 
With overall renovating of the 
hospital has come a rebuilding and |]   
after nearly three months work. 
The new “dream” kitchen is | 
one of the few all electric hos- | 
pital kitchens in Michigan, ac- | 
cording to hospital administrator | 
Harry Whitlow. 
mean it,’ Whitlow says with pride. | 
‘Absolutely’ pe trom ' 
floor up is 
kitchen is completaty tx run 
tricity.” 
* * * 
A trained and capable staff of 
persons from cooks to dishw: 
keep the shiny stainless 
kitchen purring efficiently 
Naturally, “dishwashers” 
staff members who wash | 
plates and silverware all 
They, instead, are trained 
nel who know how to operate the 
huge electrically operated dish-| 
washers which keep everything 
therapeutically clean, 
* x * 
Even the food warmers, 
ly consisting of —s 
electrically heated” as are 
plate-warming racks, 
The kitchen staff had a hard 
time turning out 150 meals at one | 
serving several months ago. N 
the new kitchen can handle w 
over 300 meals at a serving with 
ease. ne 
The hospital makes all its own 
pastries. Nothing other than bulk! 
meat and raw. materials needed to 
create food is “‘imported.” 
* * * 
Shining new meat grindérs and 
mixers and bread slicers make the/| 
job an easy one. The staff is well | 
schooled in the preparation of any 
type of meal, especially those de-, 
signed to fill the requirements of! 
special diets. |   
Man Hurls Waitress | 
Through Bar Window 
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 
  Each ae contajfs an ordinary Bridenstine explained. mented by other, larger sources. 
measure how much radioactivity dental film, of the kind dentists’ Im technical language, the-max-! The most spectacular source will 
hospital employes who work with it/use when X-raying teeth. 
have been exposed to. 
tee much radieactivity within a ray s emitted by radioactive ma-|,oriog (A roentgen is the unit by,0n Using in diagnosis of cancer 
given period of time. That's why iterials. Ley, |which qcientiots measure. radi: |and other malignancies. 
* * * 
ation.) 
One source of radiation at the) The particles, radioactive iso- 
hospital is the big, $17,000 X-ray topes, emit the beta and gamma 
machine used for therapy. rays. 
Located within a leaded room, | Equipment to set this program, 
the therapy unit has a stepped |licensed by the Atomic Energy 
up voltage of 250,009 volts. Commission: into action is on or-   
  
  ternal or internal malignancies for|hospital administrator. 
periods running frem a few sec-| It\is expected that in a year or 
X-rays kill the growth of the use radioactive isotopes in treat-| 
|ment also. For this purchase, a) The 3 
malignant tissue. 
   
   strike the therapist, too. That’ S| 
lwhy he needs a dosimeter to indi- 
tion he’s absorbed. exposure. onds in time to-several minutes. | ‘so, the hospital will be ready to Big Yule Tree Wanted 
“But bouncing X-rays are apt to ‘much larger amount of materials Lansing is looking for a big 
is used and for that reason, Brid-|Christmas tree to put up in front 
enstine and his staff will have to of the State Capitol. 
cate how much accidental radia-|be even more alert to accidental pay $25 for a tree between 35 waitress, Mrs, Mildred Swisher, 46, 
|imum permissible dose of radiation be introduced into the hospital was taken to a hospital Thursday) 
Besides ordinary X-rays, the tlm at Pontiac Osteopathic is set at 300! shortly. These will be radioactive/night for treatment of cuts on the! 
It’s dangerous to be.exposed to |is sensitive to the beta and gamma mijliroentgens within a two-week particles which the hospital plans back and ne. 
* * 9 g A i 
James, 31, was taken to police| 
headquarters and charged with 
disturbing the peace, destroying! 
private property and carrying al 
knife. 
* * * 
Police said James became an- 
gry because Mrs. Swisher refused 
    to serve him a beer. So, he picked| 
It is used to spot X-rays on ex-| eda said Harry H. Whitlow, her up and hurled her through the | ioe ok nl oa Tol b   
  
  
Pediatrics Department, Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 
‘To Provide Excellent Care 
for Children 
. Today’s modern hospital includes a special de- 
partment’ for the care of children. The Pontiac 
. Osteopathic Hospital has an outstanding one. 
Children’s murals, soft relaxing music, special 
beds . . . everything to make children at home 
. and happy. 
Our congratulations to the administrator and 
Staff. 
Todd’s are one of Pontiac’s Oldest Shoe stores 
caring for everyone from baby to grandfather. 
Todd's Shoe Store , 20 West Huron Street   
        
  front window of the tavern. | 
LANSING (UPI) — The City of} 
  The city will 
and 40 feet high. 
  
  
  
a 
  “The food is excellent” is no idle talk at Pontiae Osteopathic 
Hospital. Each tray is a “special order’ to the chef. When it 
arrives it is attractive, steaming hot and deliciously tasty. 
Miller Brothers quality poultry is served daily 
on menus throughout hospitals in this area. 
It is our privilege to serve Pontiac Osteopathic 
Hospital and count it among the institutions 
using our products. = ; 
    
MILLER BROTHERS | | Wholesale Poultry 
“We Talk Turkey” 
1957 Brewster, FLOWERS 
Detroit       TE 3-4800 | - f |   
    Jacobsen’s 
Congratulates 
PONTIAC 
OSTEOPATHIC ! 
HOSPITAL 
on their . 
Accomplishments 
Flowers deliver 
message to the Shut - In 
exactly as you intended 
.». With beauty and 
understanding. 
JACOBSEN’S 
101 N. Saginaw St. 
Greenhouse and Flower Shop — S. Broadway — Lake Orion . > The s 
your, 
FE 3-7165 5 Vi 
Pontiac Guadpatiae Hospital has 150 bright, cheery patient rooms. Every room ‘has tele- Phone, radio or television and comfortable furnishings. Patients find them quiet and pleasant, so compatible to speedy recovery. 
Today’s modern hospital uses 
thousands of pieces of fresh 
clean linen daily. Pontiac 
Osteopathic is one of the 
many we are provid- 
Visit your hospitalized 
friends. It is so good 
for you both. 
~ HOSPITAL LINEN SERVICE 14026 Lesure ! Detroit, —o 
gf ANS | VE 74741       ing with service. |      
  fy 
  
  oh 5   
       _THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Td, 1058. 
    
      
   10, go to St. Michael’s elementary © 
school and already are talking of 
following in their father's foot- 
“— eo? 
“Of course it’s too-early to know - 
haw 0 ee eae 
Johnson, “But the medical world 
seems fo be the direction they're 
headed in.” 
Dr. Johnson, 59, was one of the     ‘ eae Heads Hospital. Medical Staff: 
elected in the past to chiet of the 
hospital's medical staff, 
  A native of Syracuse, New York, 
he attended Syracuse University! Mitnels Ave. with their four chil- the state and national osteopathic|American Osteopathic College of 
and was graduated in 1925 from) dren. road tank trucks, trailers, and 
int, ek ae ee    
  There are neatly 42,000 wver-the: 
  
  
‘the American School of Osteopathy). ‘The osteopath holds one of the 
and Surgery in Kirksville, Mo.  |iongest tenures of service in the|pathic Bulletin and the journal, 
Bo ie? oe Michigan Osteopathic Assn. He'Proctology, for many years. 
Fg Layee in ty Gables,|was president in 1941-42, and has ~~ s « 
until when moved to/served as state statistician, assist- : F 
Pontiac and yet up offices here.lant statistician and speaker of the|.r'the Oakland County Obresnathie Five years ago, Dr. Johnson moved house of delegates. Assn. and’ the Michigan Sten | 
a ee ee va | *t ok pathic Proctological Society. He is | Highway, Drayton . Dr. Johnson has served as aja member of the American Society! 
Dr, and Mrs. Johnson live at 43 delegate to many conventions ofjof Proctology and a fellow of the | He “has edited the State Osteo- 
        associations, Proctology. 
  
First Quemoy, Now Berlin   
By JAMES MARLOW 
Associated Press News Analyst 
and sock ‘em. 
    
  That may be the new Commu “WASHINGTON (AP)—Rock ‘em/|Would leave all Berlin to the Com- es « Reds Create Crisis Deliberately Germany, Now Khrushchev says;fear that tension over the occupa-|for months or years, just as they) 
Russians, Americans, British,/tion of Berlin might in the end|please. 
French should all clear~out. This|jead to shooting. They'll hardly stop there. They, 
can think of other places, other) 
crises, The world may be. enter-| 
The Russians should be able to} ing @ nerve-jangling period, with| munists. The West says no. 
The West doesn’t at this minute - 
            
   
      
       
     
        
    
   
     
  To Pontiac Osteopathic 
Hospital 
The development of soaps and cleansers 
for specific uses and conditions has 
been our work. We are pleased to have 
helped your institution and to continue 
to serve you. 
Auto City Soap & Chemical Co. 
2592 Fenkel Detroit 
DI 1-3787 
    
    
nist. technique, just as it was Jo- 
seph Stalin’s, to create crisis after 
crisis to keep the West jittery, 
gain a little yardage where the 
West could be forced into conces- 
sions, and make propaganda. 
- | Examples: What’s happened at 
| Quemoy and now at Berlin. 
Stalin knew the method well, as This Is the New Nursery at 
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 
while after his death. 
* * * 
A tew months ago — after the 
Iraq revolution — the Eisenhower 
administration itself  jittered 
| American allies by sending troops 
| into Lebanon avowedly to save the 
government there. 
So long as they remained, there 
|was a chance of a Middle East 
shooting war that could become 
hower administration was anxiars 
to withdraw the troops as soon as 
|gracefully possible. 
Before this could be done — and 
  Nye Dairy is extremely proud that it 
was chosen to serve this Ultra-Modern 
| Quemoy. Nursery as well as the rest of the jets Sieck tor Jocions jmunist-made crisis. The Red Chi- 
|nese began shelling Chiang Kai- 
jshek’s troops on the island of big war with Russia, The Eisen-|# know what to expect next but does! turn. the heat on and off at Bart Russia doing the jangling at will, 
    Hospital with its GRADE A Vitamin ‘lies, The United States, under 
Fortified Milt, 
HAND IN HAND rr Not to yield under such pres-/! 
\suré, said the administration, was 
a matter of principle, Neverthe- 
less, the Reds gained: some psy- 
chological yardage at least from 
their efforts, 
gown of State Dulles flew 
to Formosa, conferred with Chi- 
ang, . flew back, 
After he left came the disclo- 
\der the West, created new tension 
|in another place, - this time in | 
| Berlin. 
  * * * 
Berlin is 110 miles within East     
  Staff Dining Room in the Pontiac Osteopathic tisepindl. Refurnished throughout with wide picture windows, fresh colorful drages,: soft music and new riodern furnishings. 
An atmosphere in which to relax and enjoy the fellowship accompanying a deliciously prepared and served. snack or dinner. 
Food is such an important part of our daily 
lives we forget the extra importance placed 
upon it in a patient's recovery program. i 
It is indeed a tribute to we at Farmer’s Mar- 
ket to supply many of the extra-quality foods 
served at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital.    
                 
           
             
         
       
     
        
    
  
  ongratulations to the New 
Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital 
  
  Jorwin’s are proud to have furnished the 
fine wood paneling throughout the building 
  
You can modernize your home with wonderful | 
prefinished paneling . . . visit Corwin’s to see 
the many new woods -and finishes available. 4 
We'll be glad to help you plan your project. 
      ~ ; 
  Corwin Lumper Co... | FE 2- 8385 | 1 17 South Cass 
  Meals such as you would expect in the finest inn or hotel are a 
‘regular’ menu. Selection of Premier Canned Vegetables for 
quality, flavor and the special appetite satisfying goodness are 
always on the tray. Freshness captured in Frosty Acres frozen 
foods enhance every meal, too. Once you've seen a dinner tray 
being served the patients at Pontiac’s Osteopathic Hospital you 
know finer foods are used. We are pleased to be the supplier. 
    
Service fo ! 
  
        
      
          
FARM 484 Auburn Avenue aes 
    
  
       
   
          
   
  
——- 
  eS 
a 
ee ee 
        
         at ~ he : THE P    Vo oe 
    NTY-EIGHT 
ily known as Bessie’s Be- 4. a reminder of the old cus- : peaicites at 9 cross. nd intersection in Cornwall 
  
‘ewrrrertrerererTTTTTe. _ for - 
Pheasant 
Mloments 
and | 
NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO., 
NEW YORK. BLENDED WHISKEY. 86 ; 
PROOF. 65x GRAIN NEUTRAL. SPIRITS | 
  
  
  BRENDEL'S 244) Auburn Rd, (M-59) 8 Mi. West ef Utics RE 2-614 4 4 r 
P 4 : 4 . 
c 4 4 
. 
4 4 ‘ 4 E 4 
Frozen Brine Shrimp in Stock > 
‘ 'York and a 1960 Republican presi-|in the Grand Tetons and donating 
|the best known of the Rockefellers: The brothers are considerably   Consult ‘Each Other About Major Steps 
+ NEW YORK (UPI) — On the/But this is a close-knit family ang 
56th floor of the central skyscrap- seldom does one take a major 
er in the towers of Rockefeller step without consulting the others. 
Center is a door with the letter-| Neon tor example, asked his 
ing: : | father and brothers to meet with ‘Rockefeller, office of the si in suite 5600 last winter 
messrs. ce « before making the final decision 
_ | to put a Rockefeller in the po- 
Behind that door are the offices) jjticg) arena, 
of the world's wealthiest clan —) Each of the whi é grandchildren of the 
John D. Jr., 84, and four of his'jate John D, has a fortune of more |five sons: John D. HI, 32; Nel- yo, $100 million, The father’s 
son, 50; Laurance, 48; and David, wonith is estimated at more than 
43. ($500 million” The family is esti- 
If necessary, space can be found! mated to have given away $2 bil- 
for Winthrop, 46, and for the one'jion altogether ranging from the 
sister, Mrs. Abbe Mauze, 51. — dimes John D. passed out to such 
Nelson, governor-elect of NeW projects as buying up a vast tract 
dential] possibility, js now by far'y as a national park. 
  |different in temperament and am- 
| bition, 
dohn D, TI calls himself ‘The Rockefellers Remain 2 
ve 
He also is interested in 
‘ang hopes to create in New York 
a Lincoln center for the perform- 
ing arts, making it the focal point 
for the finest talent in music, 
dancing and drama, 
Mrs. Matize, wife of a banker, 
is the ‘‘silent partner’ in the Rock- 
efeller enterprises: and also a re- 
served woman who has devoted 
her time to her family. 
Neilson is the one with the great- 
est drive for public recognition. 
He is the only one of the brothers 
not to see service in World War 
Il but that was because he was 
ordered by the White House to 
stay’on in Washington ag special 
assistant on Latin American af- 
  Use and Sales Tax Shy One.’ His main occupation fairs. } pe, Sate 
x * 
Mrs. Jeanette Edris. . 
Winthrop is the only one of 
boys ever to do hard work wii 
his hands. A youth of 
three and weighing 225 
  dropped out of Yale and went   ONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 _ 
gives away $7 million a year ex-) 
iy tie Rockeleler“Fourt They are active in about bud: rice! The new Mae D30 is 
ar ea — ae il rt but powerful—ideal 
As a result, he for clearing land, pruning, limbing 
are improved and — even behind) : 
the bamboo curtain — the Peking$ - Come in for 2391 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. 
Union Medical College operates in|] -@ demonstration: FE 4-1112 FE 4-0734 
buildings put up years ago with 
Rockefeller money, - as   
     A professional-quality saw at a 
    
    y Dulpwood and cordwood. 
          
   + ~for cutting fenceposts, sawlogs, 
| KING BROS.           
  
  
Drops in Michigan. 
LANSING (UPI) — Although) 
more used cars were sold in Mich- | 
igan this year than in 1957, use | 
and sales taxes dropped by $10,- | 
303,000, Secretary of State James | 
M. Hare said today. 
Sales tax collections of $26,511,-) 
609 accounted for the greatest. 
percentage of the drop, being | 
about_$110,580,000 below -the $37,- | 
092,08\jotal for the same period 
last year, The average collection 
per sale compared to last year was 
more. than $4 less. 
Hare said older and less expen- 
sive cars. were bought during the 
year but there were more older 
cars on the roads and relatively 
few newer qnes.       
    
    
   
    
One Impulse Always 
Leads to Another 
NEWARK, N.J. (AP)—It was an’ 
‘impulse, said Clifford Cook, that! 
caused him to turn a false fire! 
alarm. f 
“T have an impulse to send you 
to jail for 60 days,” replied Chief 
Magistrate Nicholas Castellano. | 
And he did. | 
Makes Bite-Proof Hand | 
WESTFIELD, N.J. w — Peter) 
Lanza has patented a bite-proof 
hand he hopes will earn enough. 
to feed him. Tired of being nipped 
while training his pet parakeets, | 
he .invented a plastic imitation 
hand, which can be placed in the | 
      wwwvwrvvwveTreYTeYTYYrYeYeYTYYeYeYTY at All Times 
wre T'T't'T"TT*.*     bird's cage to accustom it to) 
handling. mY]   
  
waited on last ni 
better our service. 
WE WORKED 
IN ORDER .. 
—PANTS MUST 
i BELIEVE 1 
    
    
  Igy 
3 Ways 
a o 
Sam Benson 
  2 OPM oa 
  Sam Benson Says: 
“Thank You Pontiac 
and Oakland County. . I’m sorry if you didn’t 
Crowds! Crowds! Jammed my store yesterday 
« «+ More help added to” 
- NIGHT TO GET OUR STOCK 
BIGGER BARGAINS! 
SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 P. M. 
NOTHING HELD BACK 
ALL SUITS—TOPCOATS—JACKETS 
CASH! LAYAWAY! 
CHARGE! 
FAT) SAVING CERTIFICATE All Deposits Insured To $10,000 By F.D.LC. 
nson Says: WOMEN IN WHITE 
UNIFORMS eit To J 4° 
Give Uniforms for Christmes Slips—Shoes—Bras—Panties     
  et 
ght!’ 
  ALMOST ALL 
. AND NOW 
BE SOLD NOW! 
HAVE THE | nant 
theses A 
in R ONTIAG 
Dap a 
to Buy 
       
           Paying a        Higher Rate of Interest ‘Effective December 1, 1958 
  
  Member 
F.D.LC,      
National | Bank o Ff Pp ° nT 8 A ¢ 
Offices at W. Huron at Tilden ...N. Perry at Glen- 
wood.,.Keego Horbor.,. Walled Leke...Union 
Lake. +. Milford... Lake - Orion . - » Waterford end 
i: a Bloomfield Hills - 
           
     
            
        
        
     
         4 3 E> 
     
    
mi   f) 
  sit BsEre 
    
  midnight in response to a 
¢ call that a church was on   
  
  
  
        
  
   
      
  
    
  Post. * a et In a further demonstration. of 
Hutcheson power, delegates, 
Thurstlay re-elected J. F, Cam- 
biano of San Mateo, Calif., ‘to the 
General Executive. Board: Cam- 
biano, the only administration 
candidate. with opposition, defeat- 
ed E, A. wn of Petaluma, 
Calif, 1,183 16 584 in a secret vote. 
Aerial Photos 
Help Engineers 
to Plan.Roads 
SYOSSET, N. Y. (UPI) — Re-| 
member when civil engineers had 
to slog across field and stream by 
foot to map néw highway routes? 
Today, mountains and rivers 
are measured in the twinkling of 
a camera lens, thanks to photo- 
the technique of 
  hotographs. ett used to take a month to 
only 500 feet wide,” said Ford| 
Bartlett, president ‘of the consult 
ing engineer firm: of Lockwood, ) 
Kessler and Bartlett, Inc, 
“Today, with electronics and| 
optics, map can be produced 
in a Ae showing a .strip_ 1,000 
feet wide,” he added. . =. -=. 
A major part of the photo- 
grammetry technique involves the 
stereoplotter, After aerial evan” 
graphs are taken of a proposed 
highway route, the photos are fed 
into stereoplotters, which produce 
a three-dimensional image on & 
plotting board. A skilled technician 
then traces over ‘the image and] 
comes up with contour lines. 
* * * 
From “such calibrations, engi- 
neers can obtain statistical infor- 
mation by feeding the data into 
electric _ computers, Of course, 
when double-checking is required, 
engineers still must do some 
ground work. But they can make 
this job easier with the aid of a 
tellurometer, a compact radar-like 
instrument that measures distance 
by the length of time it takes to 
sent out and receive a’ microwave 
signal. This instrument, said Bart- 
lett, can measure 40 miles in -40 drawing contour maps from aerial| 
  minutes with a possibility of error 
of only 11 inches.   ,™ AH, WALDO, IT'S GOOD 10 SEE 
ae EO ee | \ ELP TO 4 
“7S AMAN INA CRUEL DILEMMA? 4Q GEN'RALLY FOUND THAT | | THAT OWLS CLUB AFFAIR LAST NIGHT DIDN'T Sit WELLWITH | MARTHA AND L AM COMPLETE- am LY PERSONA NON tour.| PAA  GRATA AT HOME! COME IN HANDY pf 
  *. 
IN 
5 
Stgg us 
ae eF 
Wavnos QUITE A 
COM   EAs? H&)\ HOSPITALS , 
FORT = hn see © re ty 00s Servis, na TM Reg, U.S. Par, OF. BOARDING HOUSE   
ANY HARM IF SHE 
WIND UP IN TH , wit 
  
  
      
      
      = eres rs 
  
OUT OUR. WAY FLOWERS HELP WHEN T'M 
HANING TRODBLE WITH TH 
TORNKEY / THEY CAN'T DO 
Y; DOESN'T GO FOR THEM THEY 
        
        
    
     
   A NOW RE STANDING RIGHT IN “Sepa FRONT OF A FLORIST’S SHOP (esas 
MAJOR ~~ MAYBE THAT'S AN OMEN OR SOMETHING! LINE 
  
  
  
          
       
TR. WALLAMS 
© 1988 by MEA Service, ne. A-1§ 
    THE SISSY BREEDERS =o 
  
        
  
    
  
  -- You'l Find 
PROFITABLE - OPPORTUNITIES 
Every Day in the Pontiac 
Press Wont Ad Section 
Take edvantage of ‘this easy way 
| to solve all your buying and selling oroblems, 
To Place Your 
WANT AD 
DIAL FE 2-818!   
    
  
  
*y John Morris 
. 
  
  
  
     
  
  
ALLEY OOP   
  JAM eee eR 
HUE ee Ss | Adlai d 
          
    
    
    
  
TO WAVE YOU, BUD’. DO 
WHAT THEATRE SHES 
  
  
AUNT FRITZi--- 
CAN I- HAVE A 
BEDTIME SNACK? 
    
            
       
         
    
        
    
  
    
I WON'T 
MAKE A 
  te fee 0.1 Pe OF ~ AB nghe mmerend 
Came 958 ey tamed Petes tratiname lat 
      
            
    
          
    
“Tf the fine won't be rhore than a couple of dollars, I'll just leave 
it this way.” Ns   
      BUY HIM THREE, 
MISTER... HELL FLOAT 
AWAY ANO NEVER 
YOU AGAIN 
    
LET'S GOT’ TH’ SHACK 
AN’ HEAR GRANDMA, 
GIVE HER LECTURE 
ON SPACE TRAV 
    
    
DONALD’ DUCK   
  
  
I COOKED THE DINNER ANDI THINK IT'S ou     
  
      ABOUT TRAVELIN’ 
IN SPACE P 
        WELL, SHE SHOL 
MORE OR LESS 
EXPERT/ 
  LOBE 
OF AN 
    
  
ee   
      
  
  
        
          
  By Lestie Turner 
ITS OUR FIRST CHANCE TO 
AGES. MOM 
  
      
     
      mee ; : 
© 1990 by NEA Service, ine, TM. Reg. UE Pat, Det, 
By Charles Kuhn       
VEL. COMIC BO 
THAN ANY KIO IN   
  
        
         
  
    
     
SERVING BREAKFAST from 7 am. 
PITTA     
‘or * Real | ‘Taylor's 16.moath-old’ daughter, Elizabeth Taylor's Baby 
Falls Ill, Hospitalized © 
HOLLYWOOD ® — Elizabeth 
‘Elizabeth Frances Todd, is in a 
hospital with what is described   The child's father was the late 
Mike Todd,       Aiding Boycott Police Commissioner in)     
  TREAT 
and Try Our 4 oy Barbequed Chicken 
E TAKE-OUT SERVICE PH, FE 4-7882 
ARK’S DRIVE-IN and 
| RESTAURANT Open 7:00 A.M. to 12:30 Midnight 2 of Baldwin Ave.     
   
    
       
        
2 W. Menicalm 
    
    
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAY 
A. M. FROM 9 A M. TO 2 
come out and join your 
friends for our popular 
SUNDAY Bob’s Chicken House Presents... 
BETTY RIDLE THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY—9 P.M. TO 2 A.M: . et the Piano 
and Organ 
"SERVED IN OUR CHICKEN — FISH 
STEAK — SHRIMP BEAUTIFUL 
SCALLOPS DINING ROOM 
Meet Your Friends in Our Beautiful Cocktail Bar 
TAKE OUT SERVICE “yimrt cate fate Will Be Ready iw You 
BOB'S CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Lake Road 
      
MATINEE 
DANCING 
to the music of the 
WARREN WOOD TRIO- from 4 P. M. 
          
        
     
  Dance to 
BOB BAILEY and His ORCHESTRA 
on SUNDAY EVENING 
and every 
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday Night 
  
    SCRIB'S S33 RESTAURANT 
130 S. Telegraph FE 4-6981 FEderal 3-9821   
   
  See College Football 
Saturday Afternoon 
The Detroit Lions on 
Sunday Afternoon at 
Th ‘Green Parrot.. ° “Repeat by Popular se 
SUNDAY SPECIAL 
BARBECUED RIBS $50 with choice of. dressings, vegetable, 
hot roll and butter 
(Plan today to have Thanksgiving Dinter with us   
A la carte . . . potatoes, chef's salad 
a a 
      
    
  
‘TONIGHT — FISH FRY $425 
and Chicken Smorgasbord 
All You Can Eat—5:30 to 10:30 
  
— ' Now Appearing At 
SIRLOIN STEAK ore Tune 
  “SULLY” Nightly, Except Mon. 
250 Pounds of Rhythm 
“Make up @ party and 
come out for an 
evening of fun!” i 
    
  FAMILY NIGHT—Monday. and Wednesday. eae > 
    
  
  | 
| BRS SS eT eaten 75° |  LMANNY’S cruz omer | 4 . , ané Elisabeth Lake Rds. 
zs : Open Daily 9.A.-M. to 2 A. M. + Sunday 2 P. M. to 2 A. M. 
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 
1650 N, Perry at Pontiac Rd. FE 3-9732 
    
ORCHESTRA 
MUSIC 6 NIGHTS A WEEK 
CLOSED SUNDAYS 
teaturing 
“THE 3 LITTLE WORDS" 
JOE POLZIN at the ORGAN 
Dine & Dance ¢: 
LADIES’ NiGHTS EVERY WEDNESDAY   
    
    
       
  FINE aS SE 
TAHOE FOODS and 
LIQUORS 3412 DIXIE HIGHWAY Phone OR 3-9754 
“WE INVITE BANQUETS AND PRIVATE PARTIES”     
    
    
    Birminghari, Ala., Tries i. thours a day, five days a week é , ae 7 
_ to ‘Prevent Rioting \netng TV's Posry Mason, hes duand 
H : jtime to look out for his movie 
BIRMINGHAM, Ala, (AP) —'future, He has purchased for his 
}Anyone attempting to aid efforts|\own company a novel called “How 
‘to boycott buses in Birmingham Daddy Became A Beachcomber.” 
‘will be jailed, Police Commission- This is based on the true story 
er Eugene Connor says. iby Marion Hadley about her fa-' Connor's statement came after ther, Eli, who right now runs the: 
US. Atty. William Rogers an-| [sland Trading Store at Disney-! . 
‘nounced in Washington Thursday | land, Papa Hadley, back in ‘his    
      
  
| see what they could do 
[and to get his views on possible that a federal grand jury will in-| 
ivestigate the arrest of three Ne- 
gro ministers: in a | 
* * * 
The ministers were arrested| 
Oct/ 27 at the home of the Rev. | 
'F. L. Shuttlesworth Jr. They were! 
‘held briefly and then released. | | Rogers said @ grand jury would) . 
‘investigate to determine if any oft 
‘the ministers’ civil rights were 
‘ violated. 
| “If Mr. Rogers thinks he can 
jsearé Me of thé police department | ji, in 
‘into permitting this city to become) 
la scene of rioting which would fol- be | 
‘low stich. a boycott merely to 
| please the Negro voters of: the! 
north he is mistaken in his man,’ J 
Connor said. 
; a 
The Rev, Martin Luther. King, 
'who sparked a boycott movement) 
.in Montgomery, said the three’ 
ministers came to ae to 
to = 
such a move here. 
Rumors that such a paycott is 
in the offing have circulated, but 
there has been no evidence. Ne- 
groes are continuing. to ride the 
buses, and Birmingham Transit 
Co. says operations are normal. 
Connor said he ordered the three! 
ministers arrested and he added) 
he would arrest any others at- 
tempting to push ae” boycott. 
They'll Discuss 
Dem Candidates | 
for Presidency 
INDEPENDENCE, Mo, (AP) — 
‘Paul Butler, Demécratic national. 
chairman, and former | 
Harry S, Truman are to discuss | 
possible 1960 presidential candi- | 
‘dates today. 
*   
      * * 
' Butler, who arrived in Kansas | 
\City Thursday, said: 
“Mr. Truman campaigned for | 
our party in every part of the na-' 
tion except the South and made | 
a substantial contribution to ‘the | 
,success of the Democratic party. | 
* * * 
“IT want to express my apprecia- 
\tion to him on behalf of the party. 
| Then I want to talk to him about 
the coming session of Congress 
peemiiential cantidaias) tot candidates for 1960.” 
Prison Will Try ( Try Out 
Family Counseling | didn’t have the price of a ticket 
| Laine’s girl friend in “Ask Any 
\food poisoning. 
| who is very. il in New York. jnative Oklahoma, was fed up with 
conventional living and yearned to 
be a beachcomber. But. since he}, 
to a far-off beach, he could only 
get his family as far.as Malibu, 
so he became a beachcomber there 
‘and made a career of it. 
* * * Mark O. Hatfield, from her home 
state, Oregon. — 
      
Th private wow on the MGM 
ilot is Carmen Phillips. She's the 
‘girl who got sick while: appearing 
‘with Frank Sinatra and / Dean Mar- 
“Some Came Running” and, 
although a newcomer, director Vin- 
cente Minnelli held.up the picture 
| waiting for her to recover. 
Now, Carmen has been given 
the important part of Shirley Mac- 
Girl," Joe Pasternak’s new com- 
edy starring Shirley and David 
Wayne. The picture starts in De- 
cember. 
x * * 
There are so many laughs in 
“The Perfect Furlough" and Tony 
Curtis arid Janet Leigh are so good 
in their comedy roles in the U-I. 
picture that everyone was in a 
happy, gay mood for the party 
the Curtis’ hosted later at La 
Rue. 
Anna Kashfi, replete with sari, 
with John Drew Barrymore in @ 
quiet corner at the Kowloon res- 
taurant. 
* * 
Mrs. Abe Schneider, wife of the 
president of Columbia Studio, is in 
Cedars of Lebanon suffering from 
' 
Dan Dailey has canceled all 
present engagements to be at 
the bedside of father, Dan, Sr.,     Debbie Reynolds finished ‘‘The 
Mating Game"’ and is off for 20: 
idays in Palm Springs with the) 
jchildren, 
  * * 
Jill St. John and her parents) 
have moved into Beverly Hills | 
ifrom the valley, just a stone’s! 
throw away from Lance Reventlow, | 
| Jill goes to New York with Lance 
  
‘Court Reminds Actress 
of Forgotten Accident 
LOS ANGELES (AP) — English | 
actress Patricia Cutts has a court) 
date Dec. 11 regarding an auto; 
accident she says she can’t re- 
member. 
The tall blonde, 28, was ar-   
    
Featuring Italian Pizza . 4. 
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= ORIENTAL VENTS = ever . Contest 
2 KEBAB taken at Show, cog 
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  raigned in municipal court ‘on a 
hit-run driving charge and freed’ 
  SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)—Aj 
family counseling program for} 
‘prisoners and their wives may} 
spread from Chino, Calif., to San) 
Quentin, according to Associate | 
|Warden Walter D. Achuff. ‘ 
| He announced Thursday seven,   
DANCING THURS. @ FRI. @ SAT. @ SUN. 
Rock With the Hound Dogs 
OLD DUTCH MILL AUBURN HEIGHTS @ Auburn at Churchill Rd. 
‘ LIQUOR 
& 
An at ere of complete relaxation, 
cocktails way you like them, and a 
luncheon and dinner menu to please the 
most discriminating palate 
.,. COCKTAILS 
"_) LUNCHEONS 
DINNERS 
® Businessmen’s Lunches Served Daily ® 
Open 11 A. M. to 2 A. M. 
| Henry’ s Miracle Lounge Wecuuity Henry's Bloomtield Inn) 
Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. he eee te ee, 
    
      
Enjoy Yourself 
in 
Oakland County’s Newest Most 
    
      
  
WAY LUNCHES ARE OUR SPECIALTY . 
‘STYLE DINNERS NIGHTS AND SUNDAYS 
OR 3-7161. 
  ‘Beautiful Cocktail Lounge — - 
{ 
ae 
i | Recommend?d ti¥ 
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  MODERN. and SQUARE DANCING 
Music by 
On, ° ‘\ LEE SLOAN’S ROCKET 
PIN oy GLENN EASTMAN calling , 
SQUARE DANCE 
CLUBS INVITED 
PLAN YOUR 
“=? Banquets - meetings - club parties 
fg- receptions, etc, at beautiful 
Oxbow Pavilion 
ONE OF MICHIGAN'S 
Nar | MOST RUSTIC SETTINGS @ Beautiful Cocktail Lounge 
“ae @ Choice Liquor, Wine, Beer, Refresh- 
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““" @ Coarteous, Friendly Service 
| 9451 Ekzabeth eae ih    
       
    
    
    
  
  
Sits SS 
  IN WATERFORD 
Duncan Hines — Gourmet — Southeastern 
Tourist Association—and by our many satisfied guests from 
all over the world, whom We have served for 3 generations! 
rr Qe 
Separate Dining Rooms;with Dance Music 
for Your Parties — “Special Rates” 
ren ee 
Fer Your Birthday or Anniversary ... 
Cake Furnished Free of Charge @ ‘ 
We Have Planned a Wonderful 
THANKSGIVING FEAST DINNER 
HE - Please Make Your Reservations 
Now is the time to make reservations for your 
Christmas Parties 
ee — 
In Our Grille — 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. 
IRENE BADER at the Piano 
Tuesday through Saturday Inclusive 
' TELEPHONE OR 3-1907 
Old Mil Tavern on osae Clete aateidme aioe     i} him--to, appear in a felevision 
‘series starring his father. 
  for the prisoners to hit it off with prisoners in this maximum secur- 
ity state prison would begin ice 
4g weekly meetings with their wives. | 
1. The Chino institution for men, 8 
minimum security institution, fol-| 
‘lows a similar program. 
| Achuff said’ the counselling ae | 
‘sions would be held in a “living, 
‘room atmosphere.” 
He said the discussion of prob- 
lems faced by’ the convicts and 
their wives would ‘‘make it easier 
their wives when they get out on! 
parole.” 
  Dinah Shore’s Son, 4 
ito Work on Dad’s Show 
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—There’s a 
new actor in the George Montgom- 
-ery-Dinah Shore family. 
| Their son John David, 4, re- 
me ceived a work permit from the | 
Board of Education, It will enable 
  on $500 bond pending the prelimi- 
nary hearing. 
Miss Cutts was arrested last 
Saturday after an accident in 
Hollywood. Police said she left the’ 
scene without reporting to them. | 
Her attorneys said the actress | 
had been hospitalized. 
There were 15 million Negores in| 
the U.S. in 1950. 
SQUARE and ROUND 
DANCING GARDEN CENTER 
BALLROOM 
Woodward, Detroit 
Dancing Every 
Thursday, Saturday, Sunday     
2957 
    TWA WO 
FABULOUS 
FLOOR SHOWS EVERY 
FRIDAY and 
SATURDAY WITH DEL L°S INN resents 
The. Royal Jokers Sensctional Rock and Roll 
  Recording Gr ‘oup 
ARDIS MAY Lovely Dancing Star 
FRED 
FEW 
Comedy M. C. 
      
See Detroit 
Lions’ 
Football 
Game at Dell’s 
    
_AND 7 NIGHTS OPEN 7 DAYS 
  
    
  pnd ae | campus GettRoom | PENKEN. and tIVERNOIS 
DETROIT 
Mod. and sence Dancin: ng 
Every TUES. FRE, SA FINEST ORCHESTRAS 
  
  
Fine 
= ™ Beve 
Saturday 
Romantic Music 
Arthur Murray 
: ”. Direct From Kingsley 
‘Bingsl 
    AMS, | 
Food and ; 
  Inn Gypsies 
FRIDAY, 10:30 P.M 
_ STEREOPHONIC BROADCASTS 
Monday through 
“FM. 93 MC wisK 
+ Continuing Its Traditional Supremacy 
ep Inn | ‘ Woodward, South ofiLong Lake Road 
Midwest 4-1400   
st of 
rages 
DANCING ; : Friday and 
Evenings 
by the Kingsley 
Dance Interlude 
nas oa Noonday 
iday 
ku 1500 KC... 
        JAM pa TUESDAY 
FRANK "PERRY and HIS SWINGMASTERS     
Del I's Inn‘ ‘tikes ond Cae Late Lake 
sisamedions ay 2-2981 1 Shert "Stock West 
eof Huren     
  
  
      
Pee Dont Take It for Granted! 
   LL OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 
DECIOED TO ADVERTISE IN NEWSPAPERS To FILL THIS JOB IN 1802, ROBERT SMITH, WHO APPLIEO AND WAS APPOINTED SERVED UNTIL. (805, 
      
      
      Thar Te NUMBER PUBLISHED 
nen rene aa 
ROUGHLY TWO 
ede ard Pa THE PLES BELGF 
UN THE POWER OF NEWSPAPER AUS 
        = 
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INTER-SPACE -1#     
          
  DEATH RAYS! 
© OUR NEXT ATTRACTION -© ARTING SUNDAY e 
-A LAND LIKE NO OTHER .. AN ADVENTURE L LIKE NO OTHER    
      
    
    a £ ae 
4 
  _THE PONTIAC PRESS 3, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1958 
  
egn's get into. her things Jn less than four hours. 
zipper and forgot the material. 
~. ‘Laya, “the German Brigitte Bardot,” 
and wife of handsome Australian-born 
_ geter Ben Randell who's in “Suzie Wong,” 
goes around town almost every night with 
- Ren showing that Germany's surely out 
in front in some things, 
WILSON the other day, at their hotel, 
Laya was getting into something comfortable—a bikinl. 
went on for hours? We mised it,” Ron said, wagging his head. 
Just then Laya slithered out in the bikint. 
“{ guess girls like Laya, Brigitte Bardot and Marilyn 
Monroe do have # lot to do when they get dressed,” he said. 
as she kissed him. “They have to put cream on their eye- 
lashes.. That takes a lot of time. 
_ - “Laya’s an unknown German celebrity in New York,” he 
explained. “Terribly well-known there as an actress unable to 
work here until she gets working papers. 
“The only trouble is,” he added, “she only owns decollete 
gowns, You,” he told her, “should have some dresses you can 
wear to an office.” 
“I am not going to any attice!” she said. (She wasn't in that, anyway.) 
Ce 
THE MIDNIGHT EARL... 
Barry Sullivan and Gita Hall reconciled, leased a Malibu 
home ...-Paramount turned down Mickey Hargitay for a dyrele 
series, said they didn’t want “a bar-bell Targan” 
Eddie Fisher’s taking his daughter 
med | Catrie Frances and son Todd (named      ee 
    
      “for Mike Todd) to Philadelphia Nov. 21   
    to visit his mother, step-father and fath-   
  
  TAO Te PDYKE RD 
+-461] yay!) 
FE 4 
  THE FiEND - WHO WALKED 
THE WEST 
H O’BRIAN- wert es No. 3 , 
“SO THIS IS PARIS” With 
TONY CURTIS 
GLORIA DeHAVEN 
ONLY ‘the Very sist IN-A-CAR HEATERS 
EARLY, EARLY SHOW SUNDAY 
IN BY 6:00 —- AT HOME BY 10:00   
        
  
     
       
     
        
      
        
     
      
   
    
    4idrawn wagon. He may have aban- er who have never seen the son. Debbie 
is flying to N.Y. with the children that 
‘day. Eddie, who'll be here to do two TV 
shows, then takes over. His mother, Mrs. 
Max Stupp, a grocer “is the kind of a 
woman who could effect a reconciliation | if anybody could,” the neighbors say— 
not very hopefully. 4    
                        
    
   
      ' | Top recording stars are stockpiling reera ,antietpating a 
strike by technicians. 
WISH I'D SAID THAT: Taffy Tuttle was asked what she'd ‘want if she were cast away on an island, and she sald, “Just lone thing—a telephone”... That’s earl, brother, 
| (Copyright, 1958) | 
Gypsies Wander 
Now at Before Estimate 5-6 Million 
Scattered Through All 
Countries‘ of World 
    
lblack hair and flashing eyes, the 
Gypsies do not lose themselves in 
local populations. For many years 
no one knew who they were, or 
where they came from, 
It is now believed that the 
Gypsies left their Indian homeland 
\before the Christian era and mi- 
grated to Persia, where they were 
welcomed as musicians — a: talent 
they still exploit. They also were 
expert gold workers and horse 
trainers. By EARL 
, NEW YORK — Well, men, things are ‘pling worse. The 
on woman champion of Taking-a-Long-Time-to-Get-Dressed| 
And you should see Laya Raki when she 
gets “dressed”—it looks like she’s wearing the 
“We miss practically every party because 
Laya takes so long,” Ron grumbled tolerantly 
“Remember that party Mike Todd gave in London, that 
   
    Delcaoiie. Head Home 
With New Idea to Fight 
Asian Hunger, Unrest 
SEATTLE {AP)—Colombo con- 
ference delegates scattered to 
their homes around the world to- 
day, a fresh new blueprint for vic- 
tory over-”Asian hunger and un- 
rest tucked under their arms. 
The conference ended late 
of 12 needy countries and three 
colonies in Asia have been con- 
ferring here with those: of six 
donor nations on how to lift restive 
Asian populations up to a livable 
{standard soon enough to prevent 
their dissolution into chaos, Com- 
munism or both, 
* * * 
This is the business of the’Co- 
lombo Plan, started in Ceylon in 
1950, Its members meet Annually 
to check progress and’ plan for 
iadliey They meet next year in In- 
donesia, one of the neediest and 
most unstable of the recipient 
member nations; 
Secretary of State Dulles pre- 
sided over the final week of talks. 
Asian delegates ‘appeared im- 
pressed by this, and by the fact 
that President Eisenhower flew 
out from Washington. to open the 
final week of high level negotia- 
tions. Monday with an address 
spelling out a five-point ‘program 
for seca - XK * 
nstinneas by this declaration 
that America will use the Colom- 
for channeling funds to anderde- 
veloped Asian nations, the confer- 
ence issued a final eommunique 
which expressed fresh determina- 
tion to meet “the major challenge 
Jot our time.” 
|Friends Give Blood   
fo Save Butchie, 7 Thursday, Since Oct, 20, delegates|~ Atter 18 Years,. 
Sisters Meet © 
in Dime Store 
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) . 
reunited today because one hap- 
dime store on Market Street, 
* * * 
They are Mrs. Mary Berger 
lory, whose former husband also 
was a Marine officer. 
The sisters are from Homestead, 
Pa, 
“I’m buying this ballpoint pen," 
said Mrs, Bealer Thursday night, 
“and she looks at me for a while 
and 1 said: ‘Why Alice!" 
* * * 
Both have been living in the bay 
area, and shopping in the same 
abouts of the other. 
“In the Marines, you lose 
track,” said Mrs, | Gullory. 
    
       
        
   
                    
    
       
    Two | 
Pennsylvania sisters who “hadn't 
seen each other in 18 years were 
pened into a large and crowded) 
Bealer, wife of a retired Marine | 
major, and Mrs, Alice Berger Gil- 
and says’ ‘Why, you're Mary!'} 
/Adowntown area, for nearly four! 
years without knowing the where- 
  
  
iF:   
bo Plan as a “major instrament” | 
  
    
      LTURE ON NS 
S ADVENTURE 
Cramascoms RICHARD TODD: JULIETTE GRECO 
THE FiEND WHO WALKED git  — = 
THE WEST NEE Me 
    "SATURDAY ONLY. EXTRA—3rd BIG FEATURE! 
    
  
  
atin a di   
  
ST,’ LOUIS (AP) — Herbert 
(Butchie) Gibbons, 7, of Herrin, | 
Ill., survived a dangerous heart | 
operation Thursday with theaid of 
blood from 40 donors in his — 
area. 
* * * | 
Several hours after the four-hour | 
operation to correct a central 
heart defect, the boy was report-' 
ed in a satisfactory condition, | 
The blood donors came here in. 
a caravan, chosen from hundreds | 
who responded to an appeal by 
Teamsters Local 347 of Herrin. 
Noble Gibbons, the child's father, 
is a member of the union. 
* * * ’ 
Butchie was given several blood MICHIGAN PREMIERE 
An Extraordinary New Film 
“THE WHITE REINDEER” (Pinland—1955) 
Prise arineer fannce Fim Film Ppa   
also 
“VENOM and ETERNITY” | (France—1963) 
“a film designed lod shock you, & ; 
insult you, to outrag rr a. The m 
revolting film in 5 istory ot the 
Cinema.” 
with Jean Cocteau—Andre 
Marios and Jean— 
Louis Berrault.       "eerrervreveeereerere. 
  SHOW STARTS 700 P.M. P.M 
ARLY! 
{ TONIGHT § COME EARLY: 
A uNIT sHow4 HUGH HERBERT   
  
  
      
CLAWSON PLAYHOUSE | GREAT FILM SERIES 
    transfusions in preparation for the 
surgery at Barnes Hospital. Doc- 
tors said his heart defect would 
have been fatal without the opera- 
tion. 
    JU 8-3977 14 Mile Rd, | 2 Miles EB. of Woodward Ave. 
Smoking Section—Free Parking   
Sun. 3 4 ‘OEDIBUS REX” 
Color with ns Mentlord Onteric Plas 
  
    x * * WASHINGTON — Today’s dark. irate gradually spread eyed Gypsy may live in an auto- Europe and reached 
mobil¢ trailer rather than a horse-| Fe" Easton’. North America felt the 
wheels of Gypsy carts in the 
early 19th century. Curiously, 
scholars say that the purest form | 
of the Gypsy language now is 
spoken in Pennsylvania. doned his horse-trading ways for 
|mechanics, 
But despite the efforts of many 
governments to settle him down, 
| he cannot resist the open road, 
| The number of Gypsies in the 
t fi peters hae 7 ee some|ten treated with suspicion. Repres- 
|Sive laws have been applied to} 
pay cn ates tate ssl them over three centuries.   
        
    ake + 
  
  Dy WALLED LAKE MA 4-2151 
» Tonight 
   6:45 
Sat. re Matinee 
Adults 400 "til 4:00 P, a. 
omreo i arnsts eee TONTO     
  
Americas, Asia, and Australia, the | 
\National Geographic Society says. | 
Often ‘they halt for the win- | 
fer, but after the festival of St, | 
    | George on April 23, when spring 
ff greens the roadside, they travel, 
as their kind has traveled for 
2,000 years. | 
Swarthy of complexion, with      
           
      
  
    
name 
     
        
  €« 
jHotTin ROC 
- ELIZABETH TAYLOR | “PAUL NEWMAN: BURL IVES Ri    TM: ‘MAGGIE THE CAT 
Pata han owe in 
husband will Boe ee 
PM ‘BIG DADDY’ ond 
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NEXT:nostnr WAGNER ‘@ DANA WYNTER in” LOVE «and WAR” | 
       FEATURES AT 
1:11 = 3:1§ - 
5:15 = 7:20.    
  
   “WHEN THE WIFE'S AWAY” 
Also COLOR CARTOON 
PRIMITIVE PASSIONS UNLEASHED!   
   
     
      
feomereg IRENE RYAR 
ELLEN Compy * VIRGINIA FIELD .. DOUGLAS. KENNEDY ’ ALSO 
IT RIPS OPEN THE HELL 
BEHIND THE GLORY | This is @ picture that grabs you by the throat and shoves 
you into the shell-ripping, biood-dreached, screaming heat 
of war, 
Here is the hell behind the glory... the real guts and smell 
of battle! This is the story they didn’t tell~of the heroes whe 
stood up under fire, and the few who belly-crawled out! 
The ASSOCIATES and ALDRICH Co. presents 
JACK PALANCE 4» & EDDIE ALBERT Me tye    
        
Said 
a 
yee 
ae 
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ta 
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2300, community Growers Are Complaining 
maDeclare Cigarettes Have | * eo a »More Tip, Less Tobacco § @ , Aa eo 
WASHINGTON @® — Tobacco in that direction has Increased he 
that filter|number of cigarettes be ng) oe are complaining,   
  
q Open Til 9P. a 
A(t ton suNDAY] 
| TOYTOWN | tm | ren 907     
         
       
            
   
         
    
     
tip cigarettes have too much tip om 
eae ame ce meet, then any, acelin ote ronal Mam) 
Wonly ones to profit, they say, are arelis that more tobacco be put into} 
S cigarette manufacturers. them. i 
C “The amount of tobacco has 
syidropped from 3.1 pounds to 2.8 
U rears cere oe vost Europe Postal il Lioyd, executive secretary of the       
  
Prong | Ay ny a eR NE | ae FREE. Q periilter’ cigarettes’ tus been | FOr Behind Post Office| , aS oe FAMOUS. MOHAWK 
{ y g| reduced since they were first | Efficiency Abroad =f 9) Pe PADDING | 
‘They (the manufacturers) made BONN, Germany (AP) — An 
the filter longer and reduced the| American senator said today -he/} 
Sc idiameter of the cigarette,” he/was amazed at-the efficiency of] yj said. “There has not been any/Puropean ffices. 
winew reduction this year.” ‘ pe ¢ the Pontiac’s Discount Wonderland osne ; = 
of Toys... Toys... Toys! pre ! : , 
3 Phage a coradhead a states,”’ said Sen. Olin D. Johnston | 100% NYLON ‘ee bela 
i )\ tobacco content — ‘was the new sa Pier cig Nima of "| t 5 Year Guarantee Rees olution Dye 
| “flip top” cardboard box used for a - os . ‘Regular $8.95 . . _ Regular $6.95 y 2 > NORTH 
SAGINAW — Utne" etn = _— egal ot > ° ston told an interviewer ; v & *. * * came to Europe to study the $= 9 Sq. . Yd. r pes Ne $ Sq. Yd. 
pREXT to CUMAMNGHAM'S and Wace eee eee ecg VO ie ae i’ EN .)) ’ 
the boxes made the reduction in| American soldiers overseas. 
$1 oom wal Item Up to $19 “We're ‘way behind in 
filter tip size necessary for two * * * 
i} | Peasons:- i He said he found out a lot. 
1. Boxes big enough to hold the} “Why, they ‘haye several. mail | ALL WOOL WILTON | : HEAVY WOOL 
  
      Bf LL I III I LI = ! Ji \first filter were too bulky for|deliveries a day in Europe,” he : : 
pase — cuabineey Gai in most states to|said, “We only have one and I BARK PATTERN tpt: Multi-Level Abstract 
. ‘stamp conveniently with the cig-|think it's because our post offices ‘ f 
| jarette tax. aren't sufficiently mechanized. Tweed and Plains , . 8 Co, 
PREMIERE SHOWING 2. Most vending machines would| “They even sort the mail over Regular $10.95 _ Regular $12. 
‘not hold the big cigarette boxes. |here with machines.” $ Sq. Yd 3 Sq: Ya 
| * * Mead mechanical nes in Now 6.9 5 qe . : ‘ Now $.95 ° : 
1 [ i uropean post offices. : 
Niagara Cyclo Massage | etuaty, De, Hendrickson tla Farapean poet of Sin ton ee | 
, Living Furniture iularly termed regular cigarettes |5#ve Money. 
‘ | (non-filter) have been reduced 5 * = . a 
| will noe you rest and relax . . . Ease nervous tension and ‘slightly in diameter, too. Johnston's uiries turn up 
: fatigue . . . Soothe sore, aching muscles . , . Give You a Lift! On the other hand, he noted/evidence that it takes five or six 
Hi-Pile Plush Cotton TWEED ACRILAN 'the king size cigarettes contain|weeks for mail to reach American 
* YOU'VE SEEN IT ON Tv ‘more tobacco than the old style |soldier$ stationed abroad. | ! * YOU'VE HEARD ABQUT IT ON RADIO lyeguiars. Johnston singled out the Ger-| f » ‘Wonderful. Bedroom Carpet Aan Special. Purchase 
Lo a ee kl 18 Coes ee | arettes, Krowers concede there larly efficient, Regular $8.20 : Regular $10.95 is another’ vide to the story in + &« & | 
that this type of smoking quieted l tea certain extent the lung A European post office is quite | Now 4. 95 Sq. Yd. | | Now 87 55 Sq. Yd. 
different from an American one. 
p Semeae, erate: Over here you can pay your rent 
| zs * and many other bills at the post| 
“No doubt but that public accept- office. Handling of mai] seems a 
ance of filter tips and the trend'small part of the business. COME IN FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION 
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  * * * 
“T have no comment,”’ said Oos- 
terbaan jast night, when informed 
of the athletic board’s move at a 
gecret meeting. 
Some statement was éxpected 
from the likeable coach later today. 
Athletic Director Fritz Crisler, Oos- 
and several. other 
declined comment. 
* * * 
It is known Oosterbaan has been 
considering his retirement for: some 
time. He was appointed head coach 
in 1948 and has been on the ath- 
letic staff since he was graduated FAMOUS WOLVERINES — Two of the most 
outstanding pliiyers” in ‘University of Michigan 
football are in the headlines again today in re- 
gard to the Wolverine coaching picture: Coach 
Benny Oosterbaan (right) was last night removed (Bump). Elliott from the head coaching job and Chalmers 
cessor. This was a picture of the two during the 
recent rumors otans about the change: AP Wirephete 
was recommended as his suc- 
  junbeaten Big Ten champions of a 2 aoe 
| Task Ahead for Bump Elliott   
'M’ Has to Rebuild| ANN ARBOR @®—Bump Elliott 
of Odsterbaan’s resignation as head . 
‘coach, The 33-year-old coach didn't 
look much different than when he 
was a star halfback on Michigan's 
1947. Elliott wore white buckskin 
shoés, khaki pants and a sweat- 
shirt, the uniform of a student at 
home. 
His youngsters, Bill, 7, Bob 5, 
and Betsy, 3, and his wite Bar- 
bara scampered excitedly around 
the house. 
“It's certainly something you 
  
= ThirdMajorLeagueBeing ought   
ES   
from Michigan in 1928. 
Oosterbaan is 52, second oldest 
Big Ten coach, He was ranked 
as one of Michigan’s greatest all- 
around athletes in his own foot- 
Elliott, 33, has been Oosterbaan’s} - 5 
backfield coach for two seasons. 
He left a similar post at Iowa to 
return to Michigan, where he im- 
mediately was dubbed Ooster- 
baan’s heir-apparent. ; 
* * * 
He was a star back on Michi- 
gan’s unbeaten Big Ten and Rose 
Bow! champions of 1947, Crisler’s| _ final season as coach. 
Ooesterbaan duplicated Crisler’s 
unbeaten record in 1948 winning 
the Big Ten title. He coached the 
Wolverines to a conference co- 
championship in 1949 and won it 
outright along with another Rose 
Bow! title in 1950. 
Over one stretch, Crisler and 
Oosterbaan combined to coach 
Michigan to 24 straight victories.| < 
The streak was ended by Army in 
1950. 
; k* *& * 
Since 1950 Michigan has been un- 
able to win another Big Ten cham- 
pionship. 
This season is Michigan’s worst 
since 1936 When Harry Kipke was 
coach. 
The Wolverines, who have 
games left tomorrow with In- 
diana and Nov. 22 with Oh16) State, have won only twice, Each 
victory was by a single point as 
the Wolverines slumped to eighth | 
place in the Big Ten. They’ve | 
lost four times and tied =—e 
State. Saturday, ending Nov. 30.   aie 
Fesites Press Phote 
HEADING NORTH — Two Pontiac devotees of the hunt, Ralph 
Norvell (left), and Jim Jenkins, neighbors on Wenonah Drive, 
were caught by The Press cameraman stowing deer hunting gear 
at the Norvell home, 46 Wenonah. They left Thursday afternoon 
for Camp 24, at Curran. The scene was typical of hundreds of area 
homes where hunters prepared for the annual deer season, starting 15 PCH Seniors 
in Grid Farewell 
Fifteen Pontiac Central grid- 
ders will be playing fheir final 
high school football game tonight 
when the Chiefs close out their 
1958 season against Flint Central 
in a Saginaw Valley Conference 
tussle at Wisner Stadium. 
- The San seniors making — 
farewell . appearance here 
this pas oag are/dim rare d 
Howard Ba 
dohn Wibley,: Jerry Sigier, ssa a 
Green, Harrison Munson, Bill Da- 
vis, Duke Relyea, Herman Spi- 
cer, Tom Nichols, Jim Gardner, 
Willie Duncan, Harold Ledsinger 
and Gary, Rose. 
EMC Runners Rated 
Tops for NCAA Race 
WHEATON, Ill. w — A field of 
21 teams and 152 runners from 
11 states will compete in the first 
NCAA college division cross coun- 
try. meet tomorrow. 
*~ * * 
' A four-mile course is mapped) 
out on the Chicago Golf Club. 
* * * 
Eastern Michigan College has 
been installed the favorite with! 
top contenders being Roanoke Col- 
lege of Salem, Va., Northern Il- 
linois University, Wabash College 
of Crawfordsville, Ind., South Da- 
kota State, Wheaton, and Kansas   
4 
  State of Emporia. 
  
* * * 
After Northwestern trotinced 
Michigan 55-24, its worst 20th cen- 
tury beating, Oosterbaan was 
hanged in effigy on campus. This) 
was the first outward sign of ag- 
gression against the coach who is 
a legendary campus figure, There 
were some elumni grumblings 
about a need for a younger man. 
e * * 
Oosterbaan’s players vowed to 
win the next game for him and 
they did, edging Minnesota 20-19. 
The Wolverines haven't won since, 
losing to Iowa and Illinois, 
_ The Miinois defeat ignited an. 
nual speculation that Oosterbaan 
would retire at the ‘end of this 
season. 
He is expected to announce his 
resignation after the Ohio State 
game next week. He'll probably 
remain ‘in Michigan's athletic ad- 
ministration as Crisler’s assistant, 
taking a slight cut from his esti- 
mated $19, 000-a-year salary, 
* * * 
Elitott, it was learned, was the 
only man ever considered as Oos- 
terbaan’s successor. Thtre had Conference Championships Also on Line   
By United Press International 
Conference championships and 
bow! berths dominate Saturday’s 
college football program with top- 
ranked Louisiana State and Okla- 
homa heavy favorites to land the 
lucrative New Year’s day assign- 
ments in the Sugar and Orange 
Bowls. 
LSU, one of only two major per- 
fect record teams in the country, 
Mississippi State in a night game 
at Jackson, Miss., while Oklahoma, 
ranked sixth is a 16-point favorite 
to whip Missouri at Norman, Okla. is a solid 15-point favorite to whip: either out of the running or about 
to be. Auburn is ineligible for 
bow! competition and Mississippi 
already has lost to LSU, 
Oklahoma and Missouri are tied 
(40) for first place in the Big 
Eight and: Saturday’s meeting will 
resolve that race, The Sooners, 6-1 
70th straight conference -victory in 
this one. Missouri is 53 overall. 
* * * 
Clemson, another team with an 
eye on a bow! berth, is in a strong 
position to land the assignment 
alongside of Oklahoma if it beats 
North Carolina State, while Cali- 
fornia, which has the inside track 
to the Rose Bowl berth against 
Towa, can. begin getting ready for 
  the New Year’s day festivities if it 
defeats Washington, overall, will be shooting for their|. May Complete Bowl! List Saturday Coach Frank Howard’s Clem- 
California (4-1) is favored over 
Washington in their Pacific Coast 
game at Seattle, but Washington 
State (5-2) and Oregon State (4-2)) 
are in contending positions if the 
Golden Bears falter, State plays 
outside opponent College of Pacific, 
while Oregon State meets Stanford. 
* * *   
been repeated reports that the next 
éoach was to be Iowa coach Forest 
The blond Elliott coached back- 
field at Oregon State before mov- 
ing to Iowa in 1952 to serve under 
Evashevksi. : 
Elliott is an excellent recruiter. 
Inefficient recruiting has been EAST LANSING (UPI) — Michi- gan State’s freshman football] team 
holds the second of a three-game 
series of intra-squad Contests. to- 
day. 
Out of the series is expected to 
blathed for Michigan's decline in}come the prospects to get the Spar- 
recent seasons. tan varsity back on a way’s 
next Year.   
aROEUEC™ Mas age 
Deleon. 110%. tpointed. ge Villa, 110, Los pam a ‘Already there are. indications 
  the freshman squad holds the 
solution to MSU’s primary. weak.     ee MSU Eyes Its Freshmen 
“We have so much power in the 
freshman backfield we may make 
linemen out of some of them,” said 
varsity coach, Duffy Daugherty, 
¢ * * * 
Among the top prospects: 
Gary Ballman, 197-pound all- 
stater from East Detroit; all-state 
Larry Hudas, 195 pounds, Detroit; 
Tony Kumiega, 205, pounds, Chico- 
pee, Mass., and Ed aRyan,. 200 
pounds, Chicago. 
A - eS The situation in the Southwest 
Southwest race involves a_ bowl 
berth. 
Texas Christian and Rice are 
tied for first place with 3-0 records 
and more than likely will still be 
tied when they meet next Saturday. 
Tomorrow TCU_ plays Texas and 
Rice meets Texas A&M,’ 
In the Ivy, where they play for 
kicks rather than post-season 
berths, Dartmouth (4-1) and Cor- 
nell (4-1) meet in the day’s top 
game. However, Princeton (also 
4-1) meets a soft ‘touch in Yale, 
so. it may. be another week before 
  this championship is resolved, 
: 4 
‘ e J Wheels Turning 
to Add Loop \ \ 
New York Starts 
To Diamond Officials 
Skeptical Due to Present 
Problems 
at 
‘NEW YORK ® — For the first 
time since the Federal League era 
aor d half a century ago organ- 
ized baseball was confronted today 
with the threat of gs pat BP oc 
third ‘major | 
New York City, ‘irtually aban- 
doning hopes of obtaining a Na- 
tional League franchise, set in mo- 
tion the drive - the Poca league. 
* dream about," said Elliott, “T'm 
especially happy about two things. 
This wili be my first head coach- 
ing job and I'll be coaching at 
the schoo] I graduateg from.” 
“When I went to bed last night 
I knew nothing about the appoint-| sic 
ment. I heard about it on televi- 
sion this morning,” Elliott said. 
Elliott was asked if Michigan's 
football fans could expect any 
changes in the Wolverine style of 
play 
“I'm inclined toward the wing:   
  To START — pa Wilson 
sophomore from Lapeer, was 
named by coach Duffy Daugherty 
to start at quarterback for Mich- 
igan State Saturday when the 
Spartans play Minnesota in the 
final Big Ten game.   ployed the single wing as its ba- 
staff until this season is over. 
even terms with the rest of the, 
icoach, x * * 
* 
ed T, but a wending of the | 
various formations. has proved 
“successful in this day of modern 
football,” Elliott said. 
Michigan traditionally has em- 
formation under Oosterbaan, 
Fritz Crisler, Harry Kipke and 
Fielding Yost. Michigan, however, 
has sprinkled its attack with wing- 
t ed T plays since Elliott arrived bumped into a player on the i 
playing for the Pamona 
It was Sanderson, here before the 1957 season as 
backfield coach. . 
x '* * 
Elliott said he won't.discuss his 
One of his first problems will be 
recruiting to. get Michigan back on_ 
Big Ten. 
“] like recruiting,” said Ettiott. 
“In the last two years, since I've 
been here, I felt our recruiting 
has been aggressive.” 
“T can't see where you can 
change it much from what we've 
done. We have to work a little bit 
harder to get good boys who can 
qualify academically.” 
Elliott's brother Pete, also a for- 
mer Michigan back, is completing 
hig second year as head coach at 
the University. of California. 
His father, Dr. J. Norman Elliott, 
was -a line coach at Northwestern 
and head coach at Illinois Wesley- 
an. 
Elliott went to Oregon State in 
1948 as backfield coach and served 
under Kip Taylor. In 1952 he joined 
coach Forrest Evashevski's staff at| 
Iowa and stayed there until he | ny 
returned to Michigan. Both Taylor 
atid Evashevski are former Michi- 
gan players. 
Elliott said he did not leave Iowa 
with a promise that he eventually 
would become Michigan's head     
Wings’ Big 
Scoring in 
how to halt Detroit's Norm Ull- 
man-Gordie ‘ Howe-Alex Delvecchio 
line. 
The big dorwarts continued to) 
haunt the Bruins_and prevented   Baseball ifn coun faced | 
with such problems .as controlling | 
television, antitrust inquiries and 
collapsing minor leagues, met the, 
tical comments. Even baseball 
minded people in major-hungry 
minor league cities viewed the 
proposal warily. 
Baseball Commissioner Ford 
“Frick said, “Baseball is not go- | 
ing to be sledge-hammered.” 
Frank’ Lane, general manager 
of the Cleveland Indians, quipped, 
“First I think they have to catch 
one team before they’ can catch 
eight.”’ 
But it was this inability of the 
ination’s largest city to catch a 
team to replace the Giants and 
Dodgers that touched off the latest 
bomb in baseball's already sim- 
mering hot stove. 
Yesterday, William Shea, 
chairman of Mayor Robert Wag- 
ner’s committee on baseball, an- 
nounced at a press conference 
that the committee, convinced 
that it is getting nowhere in its 
bid to land a National League 
franchise, would start negotia- 
tions for a third major league 
with an unnamed National 
League executive. 
Shea insisted that the committee surprise move with generally skep-| ~ 
: Rules on Pros them from moving ‘into the Na-! 
tional Hockey League's top berth 
last night in a 3-1 Red Wing verdict 
at the Garden. 
Each of the three scored a 
PGA Changes   
Apprenticeship Period 
Reduced, Add Training 
Course 
CLEARWATER, Fla. i» — The 
Professional Golfers’ Assn. of 
America Thursday changed the ap- 
prenticeship period of a pro golfer 
from five playing years to four 
playing years plus a year at a 
training school, 
* * * 
The new ruling, adopted at the 
PGA’s annual meeting; applies 
to both tournament_and teaching 
pros., The one-year training will 
be taken at one of two PGA as- 
sistant training schools. — - 
  would like to see the league formed 
with the cooperation of the cur-| 
- lrent majors, but added that he | 
felt New York had run into a blind} 
alley in efforts to acquire an exist- 
ing National League franchise or 
gain one through NL expansion. 
He accused NL President Warren 
Giles of evasive action in New 
York’s bid. 
* * * 
The concept of a third major 
league is not new, Frick is for ‘it. 
Most of the club owners favor it. 
But the general feeling is that the 
time is not ripe and there are not 
sufficient players or adequate 
playing sites available. 
Giles said last night, “I fully 
appreciate the desire of New 
York for a National League fran- 
chise and have felt that would 
come sont in aes foreecenbie: 
by threats .. . forming a third 
major league in or out of the pres- 
ent baseball structure is easier to: 
accomplish . through a press re- 
lease than actually getting the cit- 
iés, parks and players.” 
&. .& ERLE 
Yet Shea said the impetus for} 
the third league movement came 
from within the. National League, 
Shea said these groups of in- 
terested persons were in Houston, 
Dallas-Fort Worth, A To- 
ronto, Denver, Miami, 
lis-St. Paul, Detroit and     But it wil not be accomplished ABC- One school ‘alteady: is oper ating 
in Clearwater, The other will open 
in January at Alameda, Calif. 
The PGA members also voted to 
have the tournament committee 
composed of the, PGA president, 
secretary and treasurer and four 
itournament players. This new set- 
up, effective next August, elimi- 
nates a member-at-large. 
on oe a 
The meeting also approved a res- 
olution, effective immediately, to 
seek to arrange & sponsor and a 
site for a match play tournament 
for all PGA ‘members. This resolu- 
tion in no way affects the annual 
PGA championship tourney. 
Sports on TV 
  Re ae weed New York, 
WLING 
one . eBilly Welu vs. Norman 
“TV, 4:30 p.m 
FOOTBALL 
— at Northwestern, channel 4, 2:60 Satu Shove Dame at “Iowa, 
and §6ABC « Nov. 
TV, Mutual radio 
radio, 2:15 p.m. 
idl ibe te 5 Sat. Noy. 15 
other’ cities on the West Satta oR «ol BOSTON (p—One of the major | 
problems the Boston Bruins face is| 
contested by goalie Terry Sawchuk 
ithat he’ drew a 10 minute miscon- 
Japolis Lakers in New York last 
.| treit a 5-5 season. Line Does:   3-1 Victory goal. Uliman had twe assists 
while his mates contributed one 
each. 
Detroit leads the séries between 
ithe clubs two games to one. In         
e x. 2 
will hold its annual league meet- 
ing Monday night at the La- 
Hunda on M5®@ toward Utica 
near Mound road. The All- 
night. 
x * 
Oakland-B football * 
Avondale's 
champions were feted to dinner by 
Auburn Heights businessman a 
Pike this week. 
* * 
Next Tuesday night at the 
Inter-Lakes Conference meeting 
at Southfield a basketball exhi- 
‘bition will be held with three 
officials being used in the game, 
The Inter-Lakes may try the 
setup of using three officials: in 
their games this season. 
&°.% ® 
Bob Mineweaser, ex-St. Mike 
football and basketball coach, is 
iback ‘in the coaching ranks. He 
will coach a team of Pontiac 
Northern students in the Class D 
city recreation league. 
* * * 
Walt Beach of Pontiac needs 
144 yards in the final game 
against Western Illinois Satur 
day te. set an unprecedented 
mark at Central Michigan of 
going two straight seasons with 
more than 1,000 yards gained 
rushing. 
* * * 
Two Central Michigan baseball 
players signed pro contracts 
recently. Freshman pitcher Jack 
Erwin of Ann Arbor with 
a Redleg farm, and infielder Jack 
Hoffman with a Giants’ farm. 
¢ hig. # 
spent on golfing equipment this 
past season, but because the pro 
Shops get only $48,000,000 of the 
total, Bob Toski has started a   jthose contests the Ullman-Howe- 
|Delvecchio combine has accounted | 
j\for five of the seven Red Wing) 
|goals and 12 of the 17 points. 
* * * 
Oddly enough the score of each) 
game was 3-1. 
The outcome left the Bruins 
with 17 points behind idle Mon- 
treal’s 18. Detroit tied Chicago 
for third place at 14 points each. 
‘Boston’s only score was so hotly | 
duct and narrewly missed a game 
misconduct. 
Ve @ & @ 
Don McKenney crossed in front 
of the goal and fired in a pass 
from Johnny Buyck. The puck 
came out a8 fast as it had gone in 
and Sawehuk\made no effort on it. 
He apparently thought the shot had 
hit the inside “of the post and 
Sawchuk twice charged referee 
Dalton McArthur—the first time he 
slammed hig stick on\the ice and 
drew a misconduct. The second 
time, when the penalty \was an- 
nounced, he bumped into the ref- | movement to promote pro-shop 
sales, 
a * * * 
Jerry Taylor of Walled Lake 
and Doug Hales of Waterford were 
among the 12 Hillsdale players 
dropped from the football team 
yesterday by coach Muddy Waters 
as disciplinary measures, 
Three Table Tennis 
Teams Post Shutouts 
Newberry, A & W Root Beer 
and Pankey'’s scored 6-0. shutouts 
and league-leading Nutrilite won 
5-1 to feature play in the Pontiac 
Table Tennis Association loop last. 
night. L. H. Cole Oil took the 
other match. 
Bill Wettlaufer edged John Willis 
21-19, 17-21, and 21-19. in . the 
outstanding men’s division battle 
of the program. 
The standings: fn   
. A Pts. 
Nutrilite 1 Arpold Sign 
  eree hard but no added penaity was 
called. - 3 
yereert Mkt. 30 Pankeys 
W Root Br. 29 Dorris & 
Capital Barber 23 
18 > 
: L. H. Cole Oil Poole Hardware 3 
  
Detroit Won Last Night, 119-110   
Pistons Host DETROIT (UPI) — The Detroit} 
Pistons, riding a two-game win 
streak and only a game out of 
first place in the NBA’S Western 
Division, meet the Syracuse Nats 
tonight in the University of De-, 
troit Memorial Building. 
The Pistons moved up to the 
500 mark — exactly where they 
were this time last season. — with 
a 119-110 victory over the Minne- 
night. 
The game was a battle for 
vision and the victory gave De- 
record, The 
leading St. Louis Hawks are 4-3. 
32 points in the fourth “— to 
lead the — 
* * 
tenant trailing all the way, 
came within four points, at the 
  second place in the Western Di- 
Se Gene Shue scored half of his/® Nats Tonight The Nowe York Knicks defeated 
the Hawks, 119-102 in the second 
half of the doubleheader at Madi- 
son Square Garden. 
The Nats are one up on the 
Pistons this season with a victory 
jin the NBA season onener, 103-94, 
at Syracuse. 
The Nats currently are doasting 
along in second place behind the 
  NEW YORK ST. be : 
GrFrRtrt F 
rs 10. 7 27 : Pettit te 8 
Naulls 260 4 Hagan 74 
Parmer 3.0 6 Lov'lette 8 2 sparrow 5 010 rtin 3 ; 
Pelix 167 2 
Tyra 6 113 Ferrari 1s 
Guerin 451 Dawe & Braun 2 0 4 Wilfong 0 
Bobie 6 615 Park 3 
Ivy 7°316 Reed 3 
Brennan «3260 4 «4 «(Macauley 1 
itd 60 0 = 
Totals 4529 119 Totals 37 
be MS ob 
    The Oakland B Conference 
League team will be selected that ~ 
Pt 15. 
    
   
   Knicks in the Eastern Divisign. -         
  
  
  
       
     
     : ee ‘ 
     
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRID   
  
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Unbeaten Fint 
Central 11 Has 
_ Indians Would Clinch 
| State ‘A’ Championship 
| With Strong Showing 
_ By BILL CORNWELL 
Pontiac Central rings down the 
curtain on its 1958 football season 
here tonight against mighty Flint 
Central in a Saginaw Valley Con- 
ference game at Wisner Stadium. 
Kickoff time is 8 o'clock. 
Making a respectable showing 
and holding down the final score 
would seem to be the only attain- 
able goals for the Chiefs who are 
i given little or no chance of winning 
this contest. 
| * * * 
| Barring a gridiron miracle, 
PCH will once more wind up the 
| year on the losing side of the 
| won-and-lest column. The Chiefs 
missed thelr chance to clinch a 
winning campaign by bowing to 
_ Melvindale two weeks ago and 
| they enter tonight’s outing with 
| a 44 record, 
As was the case last Friday when 
the Chiefs met undefeated Bay 
City, the Flint marauders are con- 
ceded the ability to name their own! 
x *® ®     
  \te happened that PCH did make 
a standout showing against Bay       
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  ! attack has netted ‘the Indians 41 
\16 of them, runs the 100-yard dask| 
lin 99 and sports a fabulous 10%- |City\and the 34-6 setback was much 
imore ‘respectable than anticipated. 
iw or not the Chiefs can do 
jas well \against Central remains 
ito be-seeh, 
Coach Bik Doolittie’s Flint Cen- 
tral team ia unbeaten in seven 
games and a \43-13 tle with Bay 
City is the lone, blot on the rec- 
ord. A powerful\and diversified 
touchdowns and 265\ points. 
| The Indians have speed to burn 
jand their offense is built around 
the flashy halfback tandem of Ron 
Watkins and Art Thrash, whg boast 
ia total of 2 5 TDs. \ *® * \ 
Watkins, i has accounted Yor 
  
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_worst lickings in their Saginaw Val-| 
ley history. 
| | Jesse MacLeay, who this evening] 
love to avenge that drubbing, -but ball carrying average. 
‘Thrash, not quite so fast but never 
‘one to let grass grow under his 
ifeet, owns an average of nearly 
Jerry Jellis, who hag passed for League's outstanding pitcher for the past season.   
; ss Wirephote 
HEARS CONGRATULATIONS — Righthander Bob Turley of 
the New York Yankees, takes congratulations over the phone after 
he was named winner of the Cy Young Award as the Major 
fil 
e 
CJ | Key Game in ‘Saginaw. 
Valley Listed Tonight 
collide tonight in Flint’s) | 
Stadium. 
  
: th g 
bthtate R 
Northern remaining. 
ley record is 2-0-1. 
  A Northern upset of Bay City   
Spartan Spirit High for Gophers MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. ® — If 
spirit and intestinal fortitude — 
commonly called guts — will do 
it, Michigan State should mop up 
Minnesota on the football field here 
tomorrow, 
As a symbo! of Spartan spirit 
and will to win this one, coach 
Duffy Daugherty is starting little 
Hendricks M. 
right half against the big Nordic- 
type Badger bruisers. 
* * (Henny) Young at 
® 
Young, 24-year-old junior from 
Detroit, only weighs 143. pounds 
with shoes on and meastres five 
AS feet four. He'll be shooting into 
a Minnesota line averaging out at 
better than 210 pounds on the hoof 
and featuring such solid citizens 
as Tom Brown, 224-pound guard 
a Wright, 221-pound tackle. 
g, brother of Buddy Young 
of IiKpois and pro football fame, 
‘seven yards carry. wasn't listed when the three 
. pereasy deep probable lineup was put out Central’s No. 1 quarterback is (ine first t the 
He pete = fullback vand left half before being shifted to right 
half. So far this season he has 
eight yards in three carries. 
But Young has earned his own 
cheering section among MSU fans 
by his willingness to charge into 
any player, even if he’s giving 
away a 50 or 100 pound weight 
advantage. 
The Henry Young Marching and 
Chowder Society which whoops it 
up whenever he gets on the field 
have dubbed him, among other 
nicknames ‘Mighty Mouse’ and 
“The People’s Choice." 
~*~ * * 
How about Young's 5-4 height 
“He does things on defense as 
well or better than some of the 
taller and heavier players,” 
Daugherty said. — 
Other starting choices that would 
fiave been startling the- first of 
the season, before State started 
neevy losing, include os 
mimy Wilson at quarterback 
Pat Baker at fullback. ~       . $58 yards and five touchdowns, 
| Backing him up is Cart Jackson, 
| who has tossed six TD aerials. 
| The Chiefs hold nothing but bitter | 
‘memories of last year’s meeting 
with Central at Flint’s Atwood Sta- 
‘dium. That was also q season clos- 
er and the Chiefs were run into 
the ground, 48-6, for one of the               x * 
will end his 2nd season as Pon- 
tiac’s head coach, would dearly 
      ‘the situation looks almost hopeless. ! Players Promise Win Over Northern   
Crippled. Dales Underdogs 
HILLSDALE (UP) — ‘ine ro 
mainder of Hillsdale College’s\foot- 
ball team promised today to 
favored Northern Michigan aft 
12 players were cut from the squa 
for drinking. Three were first 
stringers. at 
“The boys promised to win,” 
  
  
Excitingly 
Stylishly ©. 
Fabulously 
Startlingly 
_ Thrillingly . 
  _oxron 
    
        _ Everyone Says They Have It, But The 
Really BIG NEW is.... 
_ CHEVROLET--PONTIAC--BUICK — 
~~ We Can Show You All 3 
Take the Speedy New Super 
Bargain Boulevard Route to 
Homer Hight Motors Only 15 Minutes from Pontiac coach Frank (Muddy) Waters 
said, “but I honestly don’t know 
how we'll do it.” 
The Dales were an eight-point' 
ich has blanked its last four op- 
ponents 
* * * 
j Wattcs said he didn’t think the 
ischool Would take action against reach to Northern Michigan 
  ithe 12 who are mostly freshmen 
and sophomores, Freshmen are el- 
igible for the ‘varsity in the MIAA 
   fess voluntarily, I think they should 
ibe allowed to play 
|Waters who last year 
ismall college coach of the year. 
  
Finish Unbeaten Season 
The Center. Line Jayvees pak 
a pair of last half aerial touch- 
downs into a 16-0 victory over 
Fraser yesterday to finish unbeat- 
en in seven games. Clyde Barn- 
hardt scored both TDs on passes 
from Pat Zaremba and Dick Ryasf| 
Russell Sims coached the Jayvees. on defense, Daugherty was asked: 
-|another big night in the 
layed two 1st period safeties and}. began the season at first string is) 
left half Dean Look, the junior 
who has been carrying most of 
Big Keg Duel 
at Huron Tonight Two of Pontiac’s bowling jugger- 
nauts will square off against each 
other tonight at 9:30 in the Huron 
Bowl Classic; as; league-leading 
West Side Mobil’ crosses alleys 
with the Humphries Real Estate 
five. Each team boasts an aver- 
age of approximately 1035. 
Humphries, after a 2884 effort 
jopening night, 
straight sets over 3000, while the 
and’ Mobil five has dropped under this 
figure only twice. 
In ten weeks of bowling these 
two teams have piled up a total 
of 66 individua] totals better than 
600, and 6 series of more than 700.7. 
Averages for 30 games:   
        HUMPHRIES MO 
_ Nickell 2271 Jay Lovett 205 
M. Samardzija 102 Clark Balch 196 
Don rtell 217 Les Rothbarth 217 
Curtis Neal 202 ep Carmichael 209) 
Bin Leigh 204 J. Bonfiglio 205 
1038 , 
Strohs Team, Leigh 
Star at West Side. 
Such scores a a 3086 team total 
for Strohs and a 256 game ang,699 
series for Bill Leigh hi 1031 
  
at 
Classic recently. | 
Strohs hit a high of 1056 in its/, The only backfield starter who) 
the- offensive load this year as) 
has shot nine! y,   
Bowling Results IMPERIAL LEAGUE 
wth 
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J. Paddy m8 Paday Tue McKnigh 
714, McKnight’s 2105. 
OAKLAND — EMPLOYES- L wh Social Kate 2 27 9 Sad Sacks 19 16 
Social Kate 1.2214 County Jets 17 19 SUPPLI ES ttes 22 14 We Miss "Em 12 23) Atomic Four 22 14 Guttersnipes 11 25 at 15 ttes «19 27/ fo 
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Union Lake D 25 11 Altes Beer 11°26 
Pont, Lk. L, 23 13 Sor! 5 10 26 
‘Art’s Viriety 22 14 Cooley Lage. ills 
  
PONTIAC BOWLING LEAGUE Pts Pt   
  
Sam's Electric — ¥ 
Guy Jentter ity, Ja 
Team #10 
‘Team #13 
Hotshots 
Top Notches 
To 
Helicats 1021; sve . e He : | hi¢h rt. D Sor: high = my 211; Men Seay 
Women hieh game %, Twitty 190; 
Women high series %, Twitty 473. pencicon:~"E | 
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hot series. The llth Frame Bar 
had a 1059 game and 3050 total. 
‘John Nickell and Bob Gormong 
matched 650 series and Wally 
Johnson rolled 648. There were 61 
games over 200 and 16 series top- 
ping 600 for the night, 
  
-NBA AT A GLANCE 
ager ear Be | poe 
\New York 119, 8t. 102 
troit 116. Binnneapolis 110 
Friday's Se s Schedule 
—_ > ay’s Schedule 
cement oston 
Minneapolis. oy fear mrrgama 
New York yrs _     Detroit at St)   Philadelphia at St Louis | 
Syracuse at Detrott Come Out and Watch the HURON BOWL 
CLASSIC in Action Friday at 9:30. Here Are 
Same of the Past Scores: 
Team Team * Singles Singles Series Games Series Games 
"3386 1178 763 299 
3323 1171 761 279 
3259 1148 756 279 
3247 1123 752 278 
3216 1121 750 278 
Last Week 23 of 60 Bowlers Over 600 
5 cso of - Over 2000 
    ~* —   
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     2 Pontiac Press Phote 
‘Falcons in fine years of trying. 
  
| 
| Army; Air Force 
Still ‘Mile’ Apart 
in Scheduling « COLORADO: SPRINGS, Cole. 
(AP) — The-Army and-the Air 
Force academies are one mile 
apart on the scheduling of future. 
football games.   
  
x .h% @ 
That's the approximate differ- 
ence in elevation of the two serv- 
ice academies, And because of) 
that difference, the West Pointers 
don't want to meet the Air Force 
on the gridiron anywhere in Colo- 
rado, The thin air here would give 
rivalry.   
  
  
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   4 -Kimball-Dondero Others 
  FALCON — Hard-running Ted 
Knapp will be dne of the Rochester 
'backs Avondale will have to stop 
if it: hopes. to upset the Falcons} is fearing 9 tetdown by his ag- 
| jackets have never beaten the 
the Air Force the advantage, says * 
-|Army’s Earl Red Blaik, ‘ 
-1* Coach Blaik- now has suggested|- 
“}Chicago’s 100,000-seat Soldier Field 
‘}as the permanent site for the grid 
4 tin the other loop 
Tractors Are Being | 
Sold at Terrific 
| Reductions! 
| have some good 
you can 
arrangé terms to 
suit you at Lee’s! 
| Afr) 
921 MT. CLEMENS   
  
cote Packed | Prep Front 
Final Schedule |} ° _ Southfield - Rirseindghioen, 
  By BILL CORNWELL 
  “Congratulations are in order to Frank Crowell and his 
(Avondale High Schoo! football team for making one of 
‘the greatest grid comebacks in recent years in Oakland 
_|County prep circles. 
The Yellow Jackets, mired in the Oakland B League 
cella:-a year ago, put the finishing touch on their amaz- 
and, the Auburn Heights areas as ing climb last Friday by conquering Troy, 14-7, to win 
“the prep grid teams from those the conference championship, 
“communities meet in their 6th: e wat tecat Kaltes at the:néw F at | Thus did the Jackets complete a one-year rise from 
con field. 
‘Avondale has yet to win in the. 
series and is figured the slight Skippers at ecu 
‘By cHUcK ABAIR . 
Traffic will likely be peetty 2 m 
at a standstill between § and 
p.m. tonight around the Rochester 
    
  any team at any competi-* 
tive level — high school, ¢ 1-| bee the 4th quarter, the Jackets underdog this timé despite being aire f 8 1 -It’ . for a dramatic 14-12. tri- the Oakland B champion in com- 8 Or professiona S$ a ates with the winning touch- parison to a 34 season for RHS tribute to Crowell and: his down coming in the final 90 sec. thus far. ‘coaching staff as well as the 04s. Crowell called their come- 
Avondale coach Frank Crowell back win at Clawson “the great. 
-boys who: took the knocks 
| when the two teams meet if| pregation atier some hard-earned | ON the field. ; Regardless of the outcome of to-. their traditional battle royal at “pressure” victories. Starting | Avondale failed to win a, single night's Rochester-Avondale game, |Rochester tonight. -The Yellow- guard Fred Krupp is a doubtful game last fall. The only success at Rochester, this season has been! 
was a a, surprising 7-7 tie with Troy a blue- ribbon success for the Jack- 
‘on the final day of the seasoniets. They have an. overall record, 
and the Jackets ‘ended the 1957 of 62 and they were ubeaten in| 
‘campaign in the Oakland B base-'fivé league games and Rochester 
ment, ean do little to dampen the luster’ Je| In 1958 pre-season: crystal_ball of these ac hievements, prt ney wom the asian gazing, the Auburn Heights’ Tgrid- So it's ee ot to Avon"’ 
es y ache Bill Jennings. a ders were ‘again expected to finish ("Wy remarkable year 
Plin-or near last place. On paper, the ODDS AND ENDS 
Daye ‘telhd shes. the “top| Jackets did not deserve to be rated) South Lyon has applied for ad- Rochester ‘scorer. With 36. points. ye ee | mission to. both the -Wayne-Oak- |: Russ Dixon (38p..ahd Ted Knapp, - returning material looked | 'a™i Conference and a new 19)" follow. Ebersole, vet) aye fe at best and changes that league being formed in the An ‘eran -240-pounder, heads the line.| offen harmful were under. | Arbor area. The Lions now be- 
Each team has beet) consistent on;. in an effort to | long to the League of the Laked offense but had . defensive. probe hee at least fur- | and won the football crown this nish improvement, Crowell him- 
self . -was skeptical of Avon's | lems most of the season, season. me Dave Theobald of Bloomfield 
Pru yl and figured they’d be 
$5 to- win one or twe operator due to an ankle injury 
suffered in a fall at school while |. 
others have been —. bruises 
and ilinesses. 
i Dick Smith, Dennis. cua Larry 
‘Douglas,’ Denis Shaw and Ken|™   
for a 
Hills earned a startirfg position on 
ithe Denison University soccer team 
ithis fall, A Sophomore-at the Ohio 
          eee oh ‘school, Dave is the son of Mr. 
rae a eer co nnBS. and Mrs, Carl J. Theobiild, H> way 
back Tom Ridley @ue to amankle paid handsome dividends | aduated <4 " sai t e. backfire, 
the efitire |for the Jackets, their coaches and|~ ; 
& ‘their loyal fans, ‘ 
rival ‘ a fal} Diminutive Dick Smith, who had 
gph 34 ‘begining ~* been a-halfback, moved to quarter- dy start 
ine sas Ba in the will and back and became the team’s spark- ad 
    Royal Oak Dondero and Royal Oak/P!g and driving force. Gary Ack- 
xiebed Each has. won € hist 7/er, previously. a quartethack, y 
switched to fydbatk and turned 4 and tied 1. Dondero tied East De- ° : : 
ah bowed to Wyandotte and up-/'"to a high-poWered balt carrier. 
set highly-rated Grosse Pointe., Dennis Shaw, a junior who nev- 
Kimball tied Southfield and lost! er played prep football until this 
jonly to eres Ree South. fall, gave the squad an unex- 
* pected breakaway -threat at 
walaitings will ile its work weal halfback, The transfer of Bill 
lout as host to Wayne in another Jennings, a rugged and mobil 
lof the many rivalry contests on tackle, from Troy to Avon further 
tonight's final big football slate.) aided the cause. 
"The Skippers have lost five straight) 4)) those wonderful intangibles | ‘since their only victory. ‘that help provide victory — spirit, | 
| Some of the other interesting desire, courage, guts and just plain| 
| duels will have Holly at Lake (“‘jelling” — ignited a superb team 
| Orion, Ortonville visiting Clark- leffort and the result is already, 
ston, Utica at Romeo and Bloom. (history. 
| field Hills at Oak Park. | Those pocctom vent Ls ten 
; ,, ents received their acid test two 
tetinch, the ” pastern Michigan c= eed es es 
{erown outright by tripping Hazel! 
‘Park. East Detroit meets Ferndale | Pes eggs crossroads of their ti- 
game. Losses by, 
‘both Port Hitron and East Detrdit; Traiting | by & 12-0 score fing | 
would enable Birmingham to back jaa aaaneaneen a 
‘into a Ist io tie. 
i * * 
Lapeer is eek assured a Tri- 
County League title share and. 
‘should have no trouble clinching | 
all the marbles against L’Anse, 
‘Creuse. Country Day met Detroit! 
Lutheran East this afternoon for, 
the Central Suburban crown. 
Imlay City closes at home. 
against Swartz Creek, Northville is: 
host to Howell, Roseville plays at” 
Fitzgerald and Center Line at Van, 
‘Dyke in other games. }    
       
          The modern drin 
and Arrow is bub 
Martini 
      SRROW LIQUEURS CORP. DETROIT 7, MICH. 
# 
  
|Settle Aussie Net Title 4 
ADELAIDE, (AP) — Mal An-. 
derson and Rod Laver won the 
South Australian doubles ies 
Ychampionship today. 
They came from behind to beat / 
Ashley Cooper and Neale Fraser 
after losing the first two sets 4-6, | 
/6-8, 11-9, 9-7, 6-3 in an all-Austral. | 
‘ian final. trict and 
  that giv 
break. ene asin Ff 
    — 
      We've Got ‘em! Yes, 
New 1959 
Buick: and Pontiac’s 
_are available and 
“The Price Is Right”    and Small 
Our Riding 
    
    
         
   
        
      
     
  223 S. Main St, Rochester’ Practice Dates 
Set for Cagers 
at Waterford 
the bottom to the top, a feat seldom accomplished by, 
est thrift of my coaching career.” © 
Yig lit ag 
ite drink taste more delicious. For a smoother 
. Screwdriver . 
other mixed drinks or straight . 
Arrow Vodka today! 
Naturally 
You Get a Better 
We're out of the high rent’ dis- 
we can offer you cars ef a price © 
SHELTON PONTIAC- BUICK, Inc. . (Formerly Community Motors) Practice dates have 
‘for the eight teams registered to! 
.date in the Waterford Township 
Recreation Department men’s bas-| 
iketball program for the 1958. 39 | 
season. All practices are scheduled | 
at Isaac Crary Junior High gym.' 
There is an opening for one more: 
team in’ both the advanced and 
the intermediate leagues, recrea- 
tion director Tom Belton reports. 
For more information, call. the 
reereation office at OR 3-9152. 
Practices begin next Monday, 
night. The practice .schedule! 
follows: 
    Monday, Nov. 17, ~~ Lotus! Lakers and Lakelana Pianeta; 
Monday, Nov, 17, 8:30 p.m. Ryeson’s | 
Super Market and oeeeaee Team’ 
miantans by John Hard : 
Tuesday, Nov 18. 7 , m. — Drayton! 
Drug and White Swan 
Tuesday, Nov 18. 8:36 pm. — Rocco's = Johnson é& Anderson 
Bierman Opposes - 
Any Shakeup Move 
“MINNEAPOLIS (AP). — Bernie: 
Bierman, former Minnesota foot- 
ball coach, made it clear today he 
wants no part in any moves 
aimed at a shakeup in the 
|shool’s athletic department. 
Bierman was put forward as ai 
logical “new athletic director by | 
an alumni group seeking the oust-/   heen set) 
  er of Ike Armstrong, who has held |        NEW LOCATION — 146 . iia, Just East 
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  the positign for eight years, But! 
Bernje gave the idea an emphatic 
‘no,”’ 
A questionnaire prepared by a) 
number of dissatisfied: former 
lettermen was distri®uted yester- 
day to the more than 2,300 mem-’ 
bers of the Minnesota “'M” club... 
It urged them. fo approve 
a more active role for the club’ 
in Gopher athletic policy and 
said; “An injustice of long stand-} 
ing ex'sts in the ‘case of Bernie! 
Biermi> ” and asked for “every 
sinc: ‘t nossible” to get him 
appoin’« | o Stletie director. — eee ! | 
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   THIRTY. SIX y) 
       
    
  
“Tigers Sign Five Rookies? DETROIT (UPD — The Detroit; The only catcher is Bob Koebl) 
Tigers signed five players to Minor of Fort Wayne, Ind., a right hand 
Lenina ataivsetl for te ID sey Niner HES ONGA 190 pd sands 
son ope. (5-10. 
* * ‘:   
  “2. 8 _ By 4, GUY MOATS 
The other two acquired by the’ Hundreds of Pontiac and Oakland 
nro angantae engage mama wom ty! ur yh army of een 300. and 400, 
angling from 00 Michigan devotees of the hunt, as the 1958 state season opens Sat- 
urday morning. Many others will 
.do their deer-stalking in legal areas 
_of this and nearby counties, where 
‘numbers of bucks have been seen 
i this summer and fall. Season ends 
Nov. 30. 
|. Yesterday morning and late 
' evening, and this morning, fond | Two saieides on the list are: 
Bob Correllas, of Fall River, Mass., 
signed to a Class B Durham, N.C., 
contract, and Bob Fenech of De- 
-treit, signed to the. Decatur team/Richmond, Va., and Paul Doyle, 
Huron, Ohio.   in the Class D Midwest League. 
    
  
   
       
    Mon. it The Thurs. 
  'north.and north-centra! areas of the 
=e state was expected to reach its 
many peak tonight. 
Probable cooler weather, with 149 W. Huren Across from Firestone 
    Richard D. Kuhn 
  
  
  
“TWO EXECUTIVE DRIVEN 1958 OLDSMOBILE 
Station Wagons 
sas 
Strikes and Spares   
  
    some rain, 
opening weekend, ,conditions that 
will meet the approval of the deer 
hunters, There may be. snow flur-| at- 
ries in the Upper Peninsula, 
season, the Pontiac Press annual 
“big buck derby” gets under way. 
Only full-time Oakland County res- 
‘idents are eligible and weight 
(dressed out) only wil] figure in 
the contest. Winner will reeeive 
$150 in U.S. Savings Bonds. 
to register at the State Police Post 
‘nearest their camps, so they may 
‘be ‘reached easily and quickly in 
case of emergency. 
| ~Midforest-_lodge, 
mon County near Prudenville, will 
house a sizeable contingent of Pon-, 
tiac area hunters, Ten-Buck, Camp 
24 at Curran in Alcona county, 
Oakland Hunt, 
Ranch near Gaylord 810-club near 
Lewiston and Mio, are other area With the start of the gun-deer’       
  
Others at Midforest include Bur- 9 
ton P. Daugherty Jr., Delbert_Mo 
  
Area hunters have been advised _ highways leading into the north rN 
| Sean seaiay GaN fecused crit averages of past years hold UP. Bud Nicholie, Ray Newman, 
| hopeful parties and their gear,j| Permeen 18 tn oe eee eenld be (Foster and’ Lloyd Anderson of | in automobiles, The traffic, a? “wpsatagy 33 in [Orion are at Wrangell; 
Tata ad te around Pontiac on ‘Telegraph | (0 oe hen 9p sats , ; 
_ road, and for 15 miles north, on the one in eight in the vensky at Norway club 
$1.50 Peninsula, It is expected that | Krause in the same area: Dixie, was almost endless’ ob- 
| epevtbe reported, The turnout ae See ee Adass at Ten-Buck; Charles Sparks | “A Cleon Car Rides Better. Losts | may be one of the biggest on ai rgedingrings d spe- iat Oakland Hunt; Fred Cohassey, 
| oneal cial seasons wil] be taken. Buck (Herb Swann and Bob Evans, a K) i take, alone, is expected to total (ay Train in the UP: Dr. P 
, | The stream of ‘cars into the 65,000 or more. 
i 
Coleman 5th in Rushing 
By The Associated Press. 
Lovell Coleman of Western Mich-: 
*ligan is fifth. in rushing among in Roseom-'the nation’s small colleges. 4 
Figures compiled by the Nation- 
al Collegiate Athletic Bureau show | 
Coleman with 965 yards in 146 
carries in eight games. 
The leading individua] rusher is 
Brad Hustad of Luther with 1,242, 
yards in 181 carries in ¢ight.games? * 2 8% 
    
    Club, Wrangell 
+|   
  Dynaflow Tra 
Buick Authorized Service _ FE-2-9101     
           
  
    
  “Genuine Factory Rebuilt 
insmissions— 
With Factory ‘ Guarantee ' | 4 
Dor’ t Settle’ for Less ‘Than : the Best! ve 
_ — : fa J    
  
  
  
210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 29101 
    
  SAVE 1150.00 
Jerome Olds-Cadillae 280 South Saginaw 
     
           
  
    TREMENDOUS SAVINGS 
ON ALL OUR 1958 MODELS 
      
      
        
     
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Aa 
| 
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          _ Stock # Make Model Sevings for You 
3009 De Sote Hard-top ......... $1,025.69 
3139 De Seto Hard-Top Faseceen $ 850.56 By JOE WILMAN 
3054 _ Plymouth Club Sedan ..... $ 685.37 Ever know what happens to = 
° ; ipin on a. perfect strike? I'll 3134 Plymouth 4-Dr. Sedan ..... $ 697.67 ee ae wen Waoning ion, Goal 
3441 Plymouth 4-Dr. Sedan see es § 741.81 |help you understand how a 5-pin) 
jor a 10-pin or a 4-pin can be left! 
ee jon a hit that looked pretty good | 
ee enews ‘from 60 feet away. Check today’s | 
idrawing as I describe what hap- 
ipens on a perfect 1-3 pocket hit. 
First, the bal strikes the 1-pin! 
              
     
     ° aeews | 
ymou -Dr, seas ji jand the 3-pin solidly, knocking | 
sa he oo +e. Solan . 5 591.24 them over. The ball continues on, | 
3440 Plymouth 4-Dr. Sedan es enee $ at istriking the 5-pin.on the right side! 
B Plymo Pass. i jand then deflecting off to the right | 
— = — ores... .5 0 13 land into the 9pin. The 5-pin is| 
3000 Plymouth 4-Dr. Sedan oe eee 3 771. 90 knocked ‘into the 8-pin, and this | 
Factory Executive De Soto Hard-top ... $1,586.00 BRM clears out the middle of the alley. | 
    | When the ball rolls into the 1. 3| 
i picket, it starts a reaction, The 1-/ 
jpin is knocked into the 2, and the, 
2 goes into the 4 which goes back | 
linto the 7-pin. Likewise, the 3-pin | 
lis knocked into the 6 which is, 
iknocked into the 10- -pin, completing 
ithe cycle, 
So you can easily see why a 
iweak hit in the 1-3 pocket will! 
loften deflect to the right, leaving, 
ithe 5-pin untouched. Alsdé, a heavy | 
hit on the nose will not set up the | 
‘proper pin action, And pin action) 
lis necessary because ‘the ball it.| 
| self only knocks over four of the | 
| pins. It must depend upon pin ac- 
}tion to take care of the other six. | 
| (Copyright 1958, John F. Dille ran 
    All cars are V8s with automatic tranamisions, heaters, radios. 
Some have power steering and brakes, many are loaded. Save the 
above amounts over and above the new price. increases, 
Credit OK'd On the Spot — Immediate Delivery PLEASE ASK FOR CARS BY STOCK NUMBERS! 
Schutz Motors, Inc. 
DeSotd — Plymouth 
. 912 $. WOODWARD “wy 67540: 10 6-1545 BIRMINGHAM Ml C500 
Call for Free Home Demonstration on New 59s              
    
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‘sas Ford Victoria 1105 Ford-O-Matic, Radio & Heater 
1956 FORD apavEnTiOUe 
+5895 vere-0- Matic, Redio & peater 
Club Coupe “595 
495, 1955 Ford Station Wagon 
450 Ford-O-Matic, Radio & Heater 
| White-Woll Tires _ 
1955 Plymouth V-8, Radio & Hester 
1952 Ford Victoria V8. Overdrive, Radio & Heater 
1954 Ford Club ee Radio & Heater, White-Wall Tires 
464 S. WOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM 
  1953 Chevrolet. 2- Door Powerglide, Radio & Heater 395 1954 Nash 2-Door + Radio & Heater 5375 7 
1954 Pontiac Sedan 5350 Radio & Heater 
1953. Pockard. ‘Sedan $4195. Radio & Heater   1951 Oldsmobile 88 $195 | Hydramatic, Radio & Heater 
1950 Pontiac Club ope.   Harold ‘urner - IN BIRMINGHAM 
* Turn to ‘Turner’ . Heater 
   AL 
  : "PHONE MI 4-7500   
   
    
    
Pej 
ESS i 
5 
    
at Harvester U.S. ~ Mediators Sesk 
End to UAW Strike 
pil Began Thursday 
= CHICAGO w—Federal mediators 
will try again Monday to settle a 
strike of 36,500 United Auto Work- 
ers at 15 International Harvester 
Co. plants in. ]2 cities. 
= Brown: ‘said the union and Harv- 
@ter still were far apart in an 
= up at 
@he gates of the Harvest- 
ser plants, ‘no disorders were 
‘today for their work last -week. 
+ Duane Greathouse, UAW vice 
ident and director of its im- 
plement division, and William Reil- 
ly, Harvester's labor relation man- 
ager, said the union and the com- 
have agreed on only three 
Eege items. They are the cost-of- 
living allowance, an 8-cent-an-hour 
pay boost for skilled workers and 
annual improvement factor of 
2 cents hourly or 2% per cent, 
ichever is greater. 
-—   
S8TATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Pro- 
te Court for the County of Oakland, 
venile Division, 
the matier of the petition concern- 
iy, Janet a minor. Cause No. 14875. 
ar. William F. Mortz, father of said 
<Peiation having been filed in this 
t alleging that the present where- 
juts of the father of said minor child 
@re unknown and said child has violated 
@- law of the State, and that said child 
siiould ple placed under the Jurisdiction 
this 
the samme. of the people of the State 
pee. you are hereby’ notified 
the hear! said petition will 
held” at the OU da County Se 
ter, Court — Annex, 1260B West 
of tiac im said 
at one o'clock in the afters, 
ppear -pe 5 
te 5 <n impractical ba make personal 
Ervice hereof, this summons and notice 
Stall be served by Lermponripr e of a peng 
= week previous to said hearing in 
e Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed 
  itness, the Honorable Arthur &. 
ae. _ e of said Court, in the City 
= said County, this 10th day 
Seana Bey AD, 1958, 
@eal) ARTHUR E. MOORE, A true copy) Judge of Probate 
“eo ELSIE J. VASCASSENN 
= Probate Rerane: 
- Juvenile Division 
= Nov. 14, ‘58. 
* a OF SALE 
$15 000 
“4Valled Lake Consolidated School Dis- 
taict, Township of Commerce, County of 
Gbkland, Michigan. 
NOT 
-Bealed bids for the purchase of notes! 
d school district of the par value 
$150,000.00 will be received by the 
——— S at an Walled Lake Junior 
i, 615 N. Pontiac Trail, Walled 
a Seino. until 8:00 o'clock, p.m 
orn Standard Time, on the 24th day 
November, 1958, at which time and 
jace they will be publicly opened and 
“The notes will be dated Noveinber 15, 
1968, will mature June 15, 1959, and will 
bear moan po pend 
. Both interest 
  
e oa “aeliv very. 
aid. notes will be subject to redemp- 
tién prior to maturity in inverse numer- 
1 ‘caged at par and accrued interest 
a. he Ist day of any month prior to 
furlty thereof, upon 15 days’ notice 
upon the holder or holders there- 
~Or published in & nhewapaper or pubil- 
cation circulated in the State of Mich- 
igan-which= carries as a part of its 
2S service notices of the sale of 
bonds. 
‘For ne urpose < awarding the notes 
BF interest. cost each bid will be 
cémputed by Oates at the rate 
of. rates specified therein, the total dol- 
value of all interest on the notes 
from December }, 1958 to their maturity 
etd dedu therefrom any premium. 
A notes’ will be awarded to the bidder 
bid on the above computation 
ces the lowest interest cost to the 
ol ai district. No proposal — the pur- 
¢ of less than all of the notes or 
ata price less than their see ” value will 
» considered, 
a e loan ts in hectasn antsona ho = 
a state appropriations for the 
958-"59, and ee faith 
pe eupany “a pa 
of the treasurer ‘yee school 
vy each sia as a 
rantee of good faith on the part of 
tt@ bidder. Checks HE unsuocess fit bid- 
wil velopes “edatataing. the the bids should 
* git marked Proposals for 
a ds conditioned upon the 
wetified pinion of the purchaser's 
fT oereced at the purehaner’s Ba ® 
ar on th ~ his pose eoution a 
 tyaey “ig antes will be Seiveres . Execu 
of "Edu ation: gg 
the oard ‘Trail, ‘Walled Lake, 
ne fight 1s reserved to reject, any 
all -bids © iis DWIGHT L, WISEMAN, = oo Board of a + 4       
   
  c— or rates not) Guard to 
The Auburn Heights Nike 
for the 28th AAA Group, 
Battery of the 4th Battalion? 
is part of an eventual na- 
National Guard units will 
man many Nike sites. 
that this does not mean that the 
control over all Nike units. 
Presently some 16 men of “C’”’ 
Battety, 979th Missile Battalion 
of the Michigan National. Guard, 
which some time around August: 
next year will take over opera- tionwide change whereby Local Nike Battery 
anti-aircraft missile battery 
has been designated as one of the first units in the 
metropolitan Detroit area preparing to be ee over by 
the Michigan National Guard. 
Ist Lt. Isabelle J. Swartz, public shtbeina tion officer 
said the conversion of “" Se   
tional control of the Auburn 
Heights site, are in Fort Bliss, 
Texas, training for the conver- 
Slated to become commander of 
the Auburn Heights site is the 
present commander of the National 
regular army will relinquish “its|Guard er, Capt. Frederick E. 
Tucker, 35, of Farmington Town- 
ship. 
Capt. Tucker is working with 
  readiness for the change. 
  
For. Volkswagon Sales in U.S.   
NEW YORK ™® — Dr. Heinz 
many’ s Volkswagen Company, ex- 
try and abroad. 
terview. 
650,000 mext year and 750,000 in 
1960."’ 
; * * * 
Here 1 
Award of the Society of Automo- 
tive Engineers (SAE), Dr. Nord- 
hoff fixed a goal of 90,000 cars for 
icans bought 79,000 Volkswagens 
in 1957. 
he is particularly proud that the 
Volkswagen “served to popular- 
ing.| ze the small car concept” in 
America. Other manufacturers 
of small foreign cars are bene- 
fitting from it, he asserted. 
What about style changes? None 
are planned, said Nordhoff, add- 
~~ only changes are inter- 
* * * 
Later, in a speech prepared for 
the Society of Automotive Engi- 
neers, Nordhoff hen : Le oe 
“Offering ‘an? t 
value, a olla yar of highest qual- 
ity, with low original cost and 
incomparable re-sale value, ap- 
pealed more to me than being 
driven araund by a bunch of 
hysterical stylists trying to sell 
people something they really do 
not want to have.” , 
* * * 
Nordhoff was. no newcomer to. 
the auto ‘manufacturing business 
-|When he took over the bombed out 
:| Volkswagen plant at Wolfsburg, 
Germany, in 1947. He had cut his 
eyeteeth with the Opel Company, 
German affiliate of General Mo- 
tors. The first year. under Nord- 
built an average of 50 vehicles a 
day. Now the company is rolling 
out 1,500 a day, he said, and sel)" 
ing them - Le 
k * 
Some 53 a cent of Volkswag- 
en's output is sold abroad. Many 
  
His $3,500 Savings 
Only Hole in the Ground 
VAN ORMY, Tex. (AP)—Farm- 
er A, J. Vogt lost all his savings 
in the crash of 1929 and was left 
penniless at the age of 37. 
Thursday, ‘Vogt, who hadn't 
sak trusted banks for’ 29 years, was 
broke again, Somebody dug up his 
$3.500 in savings and Vogt ‘had 
only the empty hole when he went 
ito check. 
  
lonia Fair Loses aos: 
fonia Free Fair said Thursday the 
1958 fair finished with a deficit 
“of $4,445 compared to a profit of 
  cession. “We're turning out 550,000 ve- 
hicleg a year,’’ he said in an in- 
The German industrialist said 
hoff's management, Volkswagen/to : 
: Manager 
Allan M. Williarns blamed thisjand may, with. 
year’s deficit on the -business ‘re-|get under way in 1960, said Stier- Continued Boom Expected of the little cars are assembled in 
Nordhoff, soft-spoken boss of Ger-| Australia, Brazil,and South Africa. 
Nine specially equipped freighters, 
‘pects a continuing boom for his|each capable of carrying 1,000+ve- 
beetle-shaped cars — in this coun-|hicles, transport the Volkewagens 
to this country. 
Nordhoff is the first automaker 
and the first foreigner to receive 
“We expect to produce|thé SAE Sperry Award. 
“It was a big surprise,”’ he said. 
“T had no inkling I was going to 
get it.” 
to receive the Sperry xk « & 
The award is also being made 
posthumously to the late Dr. Fer- 
dinand Porsche who designed . the 
‘ 
  
Lodge Calendar _ 
Lodge No communication. Pontiac 
No. 21, F&AM Friday, Nov. 
14th, 7:30 = Work in EA f 
Gerald L. Moors, ‘W.M. adv. 
News in Brief 
Thieves broke into the King’s 
Mufflers Shop at 256 S. Saginaw 
St. and took some change from a 
soft drink.machine, it was reported 
to Pontiac police “today. 
An old cash register was stolen 
by burglars from a garage behind 
the home of Julius Stargiala, 792 
Young St., it was reported to Pon- 
tiae police today. . 
omar ob bong 
Parents i cher b of the’ lees 
Vens Dal Time: 9 a.m., 
Date, Pd gs November 15, 1958. 
Place, V.F.W. Hall Post 1370, 398 S. Saginaw St. Pontiac, Michigan. 
Fried Chicken Dinner. St. Vin- 
pals boty ru & cre eee 8S. Parke. 
Sund .m, 
Adulte. ‘130. ‘Kids 5-1 , Te, a Us. 
der 5 years Free! adv. 
Rummage Sale. Newman Church, 
14 Auburn Ave., Sat., Nov. oe 
8 a.m. to 12 noon. 
sale, corner of a lee 
stand Auburn Fri 10 8 bare iV. 
tional 
Chure cae ene M 1 St. - 
Nov. a 8am. . 
Rummage Sale. First Presby- 
terfan Church. Sat. 9 a.m. adv. 
FHA Officials Study 
City’s Renewal Area 
obser as foci   
urban renewal area. 
They weré determining the ex- 
tent to which the FHA would back 
private purchase of used homes in 
the renewal area in connection with 
the proposed. project, said Robert 
; manager. 
FHA office, Bugene Nosar, Joseph 
«Van Dyke and Theodore Lada, 
IONIA =P Directors of the|toured the renewal area with Er- 
nest Ethier, of the city’s planning 
department. 
Pontiac’s renewal program is 
nearing the final planning stage 
federal approval, 
  er, studying homes in the proposed} 
      y, NovENIBIER 14, 1958.   
A uae: 
=s 
  
on 750,000 ‘bushels of oats, It was IRBMs The grain U-lQuotations are erat 
sidered i ‘Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
ities a ty in early trans-|thursday. 
2 ¢ & Agee Detroit Produce 
While the apparently imminent eS + wRurs - 
change in the plan may have been Apples, Delicious, BU, ....+s0ee+.++ 83-18 influenced by Russian warnings,| Soybeans had the best support Re ak 
it was not believed significant| on word that Japan ts buying |Quines, bu seoeoan ooo ie changes in American and allied} about 3,500 tons and the United 
will result. The} Kingdom 1,000 tons but price ad- VEGETABLES 
United States has 200-mile range| vances were mostly within small | 2! eee iu 
in West Ger-| fractions of a cent Gorrens, et g. be. eageen + 18 
It will have nuclear-powered sub aah ot ok, a crn a nuc. of a aeee oe ee 
minshand wite Polgns baliotic wrie| set Semestnet, of Aprictare Ronit he jan es .cteceesecs 8 
siles starting in 1960. corn business through the export|Onlons, dry (bag) 50 & oseaneyas- Sa 
nia KF Said bis a 6 cont Barents ou sete "8 , a bushel had been accepted on | Peppers, Ca penne, pk. bekt. ...., + 1.95 
3 100,000 bushels. Bids of 13 to 15|Pumpeine be sestevenneoes 110 
ad =) ver cents a bushel also were accepted | Radishes, wed tbehs.) Gos. s....0.. 00 
  the first acceptance of corn | bide Tu 
in more than a week, 
* * * 
Near the end of the first hour 
wheat was 5% cent a bushel higher 
to % lower, December $1.96%; |g 
corn % higher to 4s lower, Decem- /5¥ 
ber old type contract $1.12%; oats 
unchanged to 4 higher, December 
65%; rye % to 1 cent higher, De- 
cember $1.3244; soybeans \% to % 
higher, November $2.13. 
Grain Prices 
CHICAGO WHEAT 
CHICAGO, Nov. 14. (AP) — Opening 
grains: 
WHEAT ; OA’ 
Dec, aseeee + 196% Dec. ...eess, 65% 
Mar, ..ec... 1.90% Mar. a.. 67% 
May os--e¢. 107% May ......., 66 
Sly. ..00.-5 187% = Jly 62 
Sep. .... 1.80% 
CORN (OLD) M06. caccce. 12 
Dee, ..veces 1.12% Mar. ....... 1.32% 
Mar. ...... 1.16% May ....» 1.28% 
(NEW) sy i -.«, 123% 
Dec. coos 2.19% (LOOBE) 
4 Mar. as-.0e. 1.16 R eemenice 10.655 
May oe... LUD Jan +e. 10.403 
JTF. see nee 1.20% Mar ry 6.208 
May ...0++ 10.30B 
diy. 0.258 | 35 
  
Lapeer Father 
Dies of Polio First Victim Reported 
in City This Year Leaves 
4 Children, Widow 
LAPEER —-A father of four 
became Lapeer’s first polio fatality |"sus™ 
of the year, it was reported today 
‘by Lapeer County Health eel | 
authoritjes.. 
* x 
The victim, David L. Phillips, | hig 
of 2549 Peppermill Rd., died 
Wednesday night on his 28th 
birthday at Hurley Hospital, 
Flint, An autopsy was performed |loads high choice 
yesterday, 
Phillips’ 2%4-year-old daughter, 
Melissa Jo, also was stricken with 
polio, Her condition is not critical, 
however, according to doctors at 
|the Flint hospital, 
* « * 
The father had no polio shots 
and the girl had two, widely|‘? 
spaced, according to health au- 
thorities. 
Phillips leaves his wife, twojm 
other small daughters and a son. 
Hospital Insurance 
Rates fo Increase   
  * 11-12; heav af | tbe. whites” 112105 2;   Ra ite ibehs.) doz. ...... 00 
Squash, Helous DU. ..5-.eeenenee 125 
Tomatoes, Hothse., No, 1 8-Ib. * bake. 2.50 
roips, topped, WS os icc as 2.00 
beesse 
SALAD GREENS 
Celery cabba; e doz. 
Endive, bleached, BU. ....ccsevere iB 
ro Bleached. BU. ....00.++- 
Lettuce, leaf, bu, 
Romaine. bu. .. 
  
Poultry and Eggs 
DETROIT POULTRY 
DETROIT, Nov. 13 (AP)—Prices 
und, f.0.b, Detroit, for Ne. 1 quality 
ve poultry: 
Heavy type hens 16-17; light type hens 
broilers 
Caponettes 4-7 Ibs., 19-21; light ducks 20. 
  
  DETROIT w — Blue Cross and je 
Blue Shield insurance rate in- 
creases ranging up to $2.67 a month 
will become effective Jan. 1. 
This was announced jointly by 
e the two organizations today on ap- 
proval of State Insurance Com- 
missiqner Joseph A. Navarre. Blue 
Cross is operated by hospitals; 
Blue Shield by doctors. 
Blue Shield recently announced 
it was liberalizing payments to 
hospital members to cover an an- 
nual increase of 8 per cent in 
‘ieosts of hospital care. 
Increased charges for single per- 
sons will range from 98 cents to 
‘"1$1.30 a month; those for full fam- 
ilies from $1.92 to $2.67. The or- 
ganizations said they were neces- 
sary to give them an 18.5 per cent 
increase in overall income. ~ 
Simultaneously with the new 
‘lyate increases, Blue Cross said it 
would offer two new insurance 
contracts, a $50 deductible one and 
a eocatiod: economy package, both 
* rates below comprehensive cov- 
erage. Under the economy plan 
$14 a day is paid for 30 days. 
  
Picket Struck by Car 
of Chrysler Executive 
DETROIT (UPI) — A picket 
was struck today by a car driven 
by a Chrysler sales executive as 
she walked the picket line at Chry- 
ler’s MoPar Plant at Center Line. 
£.8 «°*". | 
Constance Tallent, who works in 
the data processing section of the 
parts plant, was taken to Memor- 
ial Hospital at Center Liye for 
examination and released, She was 
uninjured. She was struck by a 
car driven by Ray Ayers as the 
Chrysler éxecutive was — into 
the plant. 
ol & &- 
a, was ticketed for failing to   
ried 11 years. 
  
Approve School Bonds 
JACKSON w — Northwest and 
Brooklyn school district voters | 
have approved two bond issues 
totaling $690,000 for schoo] con- 
struction and repairs. Northwest 
voters appsoved a $620,000 issue 
to cover construction of a new 
elementary school. Brooklyn voters 
approved a $70,000 bond issue to 
finance repairs and remodeling. : 
  
School Aid Requested 
MOUNT CLEMENS #® — The 
Mount Clemens community school 
district: has applied for a federal 
grant of $470,000 to finance a new 
elementary school and an addition 
to an existing school. 
Fatally Injured by Truck 
DETROIT m — William Morgan, 
%, of Ecorse, was killed Thursday   
    yield the 
| 
i | |     right of wer fo a Siceuaecoee 
if 
& ¥ } bi é v4 F Piloting Cas 
of looting three cars parked in 
jtront of the Sidney Chapoton home, 
8220 Hahn St.; between 9 and 10;30 UTICA—Juveniles are suspected|* 
{Stock Prices 
‘|Goodyear and Goodrich were ahead 
‘\in' the rubber section. Among oils 
‘ulcer, The couple had been mar-}, ev Mixed Today NEW YORK i — Stock prices 
si mixed in ‘active early deal- last night, 
police. 
The thieves took boxes of church | 
stationary valued at $25 a wallet 
and a pair of $20 sunglasses. according to Utica 
  x * * 
  ngs today. Price changes in most   
~ were limited to less than a 
point, 
Steels and rubber issues general-' 
ly were ahead, and so were most 
aircraft manufacturers, Electronics 
were mixed and most rails and rub- 
bers tilted lower. 
* * * 
. American Motors fell around 2 
points on news of the closing of 
its auto plants because of a strike 
at a supplier plant. Chrysler, also 
undergoing strike difficulty, lost 
about -4; point. 
Pfizer fell more than 3 points in 
reaction to a gain of more than 
8 points late yesterday. After the 
market closed the company said 
idirectors had not positively decid- | 
ed to discuss a stock split at their’, 
next meeting. 
* * * | 
Aircrafts attempted to adjust to! 
a contemplated revision in the de- 
fense program, publicized late yes-| 
terday by Defense Secretary Me- 
Elroy. It.will place more empha- 
sig on intercontinental and less on, 
intermediate range missiles. 
General Dynamics made the best) 
early gain, running up more than 
a point. Chance Vought was ahead | 
nearly a point and Douglas a small | 
fraction. Boeing was up a fraction. 
* * * 
U.S. Steel, Bethlehem and Re- 
public registered fractional gains. |   
  Royal Dutch and Standard Oil 
  
      
        
  
  
  
    DETROIT EGGS (New Jersey) scored small ad- DETROIT, Nov. 13 (AP)—Bggs, f ces 
Detroit, in case lots, federal ‘tn vances. 
grades: 
Whites—Grade A jumbo 51-54, wid. 
avg. 52%; extra e 48-53, wid. av 
ee bee oe ¥ . ave. pe melon New York Stocks | 
a wv avg. 36: small 27-28, wtd. (Late Morning Quotations) j 
ry ‘26; grade B large 43-45, wid. avg. Pigures after decima! point are elghths 
Browns—Grade A Bae +4 nop §2; large! Admiral acess 30 Jntetzas z. < + 23.2 4%; medium 36; small 28 Grade B large, Air Reduc .. 77.6 Int “43 
46; grade C large 33 Checks—31-33, wtd.|Allied Ch .... 934 Int py on. avg. 32. Allied Stra. as - 8 Int wick vor Oe Allis 4 tn aper 
Commercially graded A seipo 81-82; extra| Alum Ltd ...° 32 Int Shoe.) 34.4 
large 48; large 43-45; medium 32-34; Peer Hi Ss pony Rd cal dew : bas small 26. Browns—Grade A jumbo 80:/4™ can...) 508 eee ~ as 
large 43-45; medium 32%4-H4 a; small)am Cyan .... $2.1 Johns Man .. 50 
Am M&Fdy .. 59.2 Jones & L .. 57 
Am Motors .. 32.2 Kelsey Hay .. 40.2) . 
. Am N +» 62 Kennecott . .. 90.4 
livestock |Am News .... 30.4 Kimb Clk 68.4 Am = = Te 199.6 Kresge 8S 31.6 
DETROIT LIVESTOCK Am - 913 LOP Glass 08.4 
DETROIT, Nov. 13 (AP)—Cattle Sal- Anaconda. Sl ye eee UT able 280, Bulk early supply cows; enly| Armee, Gt) 0: Oh 4 idee & My. OS scattering utility and standard steers| Atchison i tore sc et and heifers in less than load lots; cows fe ... 8 ‘¢ : 36. fully steady; other classes if 4-9 Pag. OX a pone 5 om oe 
utility cows 18.00-19.50; canners and | oe Nee Btecl” |. 0.5 rode ge A errr ae 
cutters 14.50-18.00. Compared last week) Boeing Air .. 51.6 Manning ..... 26.6) 
Seg oe ele eee 1,100 ibs. steady; st S0c|Borg Warn .. 36.8 Mead Cp ..... 448 > bulls and feeders steady; few Briggs Mt woes O05 Merek ....... 116 
loads — to prime 1,050-1,117 Ib.| Brist My .... 74 Merr Ch&B ... 19.1 
steers 25-28.50; most — to h| Brun Balke +. 70.3 Mpls Hon . 103.6 
choice 1,1 28, Budd Co ..., 174 mn M&M ... 99.2 
small jot —_- choice to mod ‘1,216 Ib,| Burroughs .. 38.2 -Monsan Ch .., 38.7 
steers 28. aver to|Calum & H .. 18.7 Mont Ward... 42.1 
‘h chotee 1 te0-1 nares - , eens 7.00-|Can Dry .... 18.6 Mot Prod ..... 63.2 
27.50; good choiee|Cdn Pac +. 20.3 ueller Br ... 30.7 
apeors 1100" Ibs. down 95 Scat + stand-| Capital Airl . 16.3 Murray Cp .,. 29.2 
to low good steers 23.25-25.25; utility|Cafrier Cp .. 40.5 Nat Bisc - $0.3) pr dotling 21.00-23.25; most Case. JI ..... 22 Nat Cash R .. 72.5 
choice 750-900 ib. heifers 2.00-27.00; two| Geter Trac . 924 Nat Dairy .... $63 to prime around goojcrrvsiet .--.- Sh3 Net Goad 22.1074 Ib. hetfers 27.25-27:50; utility and stand-|cin Mil M .. 365 Not see +965 ard heifers 20.50-24.75; utility cows 18.00-|cies Bre... 59.3 No Ap OY °°: 576 19.50; load 1.340 ib. utility cows 19.25/CIFE Bauip .. 9.2 Neo ec, --. 38 canners and cutters 14.50-18.00; utility — Fee ... $28 Gite Ot 40.1 bulls | 39.50-24.50: few commercial bulls/COC® Cola ...1206 Ooo mn Gi.. 826 up to 25.00; cutter bulls 20.00-27.50: 44{cO® Pam ... $83 Biviieg,  "* 69 head good 414 Ib. stock steer calves|q°). . Pan A W Air.. 22.6 
33.00; few small lots mostly good to peace Mic — Pan pi ..... 89.4. choice 700-800 Ib. yearling feeders 25.80-|Go, w Gas | 47.4 Param Pict ... 46 28.00. Consum Pw - 56 Parke Da .. .103 
Vealers—Salable 25. Nominally steady|Cont Can . 4 Pa RR... +00. at 
today, Compared last week vealersiCont COP&S 12.5 Pfizer | .-.++- BD. steady; choice and prime yeaters 33,00-|Cont Mot . 104 Bones 2: 92.5 
41.00; standard and 26.00-33.00;/Cont Oi! ..-.. 56.7 Bhi Pet. 46 cull and utility 16.00- Copper Rng .. 29.1 proct & G... 73.6! Hogs—Salable 200. Butchers and sows/Corn -» 54.6 Live oll 40.6 
steady: mixed lots U.S. 2 and 3|/Deere ...... 52.4 RCA ot 40.7 
190-240 1b, butchers 10. 00°18 25: load|Det Edis | 416 Repub sti .'.. 683 mixed grades No. & to 3 225 Ib. weights|/Dis C . 4 x Drtig-.+s. 20.1 
19.40; few mixed No, 1 and 2 19.80-|Doug Airc . 58 Met wees OTA 
Losec any straight lots No. 1 in early|Dow Che: ..,141 y Tob B’... 88.7 
2 and 3 240-300 Ib. butchers Du Pont ..204.6 Royal Dut .... 51.5 
Te.00-18% 75: load 267- Ib. weights 18.50:\ast Air L 35.6 Safeway Bt... 36.3 
these mostiv No. 2 and 3 mixed a East Kod 140 =6gt Reg Pap .. 43.7) 
sows 300-600 . 1$.$0-17.50. Compared|El Auto L 37 Scovil! Lon oe 24 Cf 
week ago butchers fully 25 cents higher; €l & Mus + 7.7. Bears Roeb’.., 36.1 
sows steady. rom Lome : He pee wast see a 
Sheep and lambs—Compared last week [ETC + 12:5 Binelair ssoove slaughter lambs and Poves gph feeder |EX-Cell-O : ae Socony ..++++ 49.2) 
lambs also steady; most choice to prime|Fairh Mor ... 20 Sou Pac Pe: $3! wooled slaughter lambs 22.50-23 50: few|Firestone . as Sperry R a3 
ads choice and prime slaughter Msch .. 17.2 “OH “at lambs 23.75-24.00: most holier Ford — oss. 49.7 Std Oil Ind eet 
wooled [inmbs 31-80-22 50: utility to good |Freept Bul . “106-3 oe Of xs .. OS 
lambs 19.00-21.50: culls down to 16.00:\Frueb Tra .. 17.8 Stud Pack ... gee cull to choice slauehter ewes §.00-9 80: Garten eS ina co 66) - good amd choice feeder lambs/Gt Bak 13.2. Swift & Co .. $62. 
71.00-22.50. Salable now. 300, Ail classe (G2 Dynam QS syle El Pe .. 563 steady today; few lote chotce wooled|Gen Rive .... M4 Texas Ce as slaughter lambs 23.00-23.98: ‘oad choice) Mils | 49.4 ‘Textron * 193 and prime wooled lambs 27.78: few rab oe BS tk Bh er 8 | ood lambs 22.09-92.50 load choice 77 Ib. Meters = ES Peenty Con. 308) 
feeder nuke Oe Gen Time . | 244 erwd ... 18.2! ‘Jen Tire .. 32.5 .Un Carbide ..119.4) 
i i aber Prod $3) Unit Air Lin .. 30.2 Testimony Gets Divorce (Sccber sir 20: {2 Unit Aires. 643) ey Goodrich . .., 73.6 Un THEE 4s IES. 
for Stabile’s Wife \Soodyear ". .'1036 Un Oas Co .. 38.2) Gran, Paige +. 23 os — ped : 4 Cdl | 
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Singer om we ‘. ‘pt 136.4 US Tob 74 
Trudy Stabile won a divorce from |Sts7guné «387 West Un tel 20.3) . ' g 6) orchestra leader Dick Stabile on Hersh Choe .. % Wester El 83) } ‘ e Mo’ ei 
testimony that he was irecapona ee ue Wileon & Co .. 31 | s wor es > S| 
ble about money. tor mene’ a Yate & Tow. 32-4 
She testified that worry over un-|Inland Stl -.-134 Tam ae.. 1 
expected debts and excessive inept (Cop: i 
spending caused her to develop an AVERAGES   | Nov. 14, 
15 60 | Indust, Rats Util, Stacks 
    Prev. oy 302.0 1.6 893 wns 
| Week 78 ies 
|Month a 294.6 125.8 ; 
[xs Aga 235.5 86.7 . 
1988. Log 302.9 132.8 Ay 
|1988 Lo 234.7 80.9 ; 
|1957 High 286.0 134.7 
\1967 Low 226.0 78.2 | 
desde spate asocne 
..J. Nephier 
Figures one decimal pointe 3 tre rs otanthis oon 
Allen Elect. & Bquip: Co. * 21 2.2) 
Baldwin Rubber Co. Bowes 16 816.6 
Ross Os Seececs 27 «3 
G. L. OU & Chem Co. © 14 16 
Howell Elect. M. Co. *... 61 66 
Peninsular M. Prod. Co. * 84 92 
The Prophet Co.* ...... 102 i 
Rudy Mfg. Co. ° ....%... 94 
Toledo Bdison Co, ...... 145 45 
Warne Screw Prod. Co. * 70 
*No ‘sale: bid and asked. 
  
Chrysler Tieup Drops : 
Car oe to 121 ~~ 
      L 70 S. ENJOY the Warmth of Wood Paneling 
SPECIAL! 
SHEET, Plain SHEET, V-Grooved . 
Knotty Pine Paneling 
” 
Cut to Length Free of Charge 
School Desks °"““,," 
Oak Flooring . tn. 
Acoustical — 
Ceiling Tile—Celotex... 
ubur _ Live with. the Luxury of 
Beautiful Wood Walls 
Budget Prices! Budget Terms 
. $6 Months to Pay 
  
African Somarro—Va" 
36x96 Panels. Warm, Rich Tones 
ee ee 
  
Kiln Dried — “Satin Smooth Finish” 
8 — 10” Widths Sq. Ft. 
  
Squirrel Rd. 
Open Sat. ‘til 5:00 P.M FREE DELIVERY 
  14125 
$4.88 
$99.00 M 
15° s+ F- 
  umber(_o. 
Auburn H                
    FE 5-9293 
  
  appointment, For your convenience oa 
WE'RE OPEN 
SATURDAY MORNINGS from 9 to 12 
We hope you'll find it convenient-to take advantage 
of these Saturday morning hours, to discuss your 
investment plans and problems. 
Drop in soon. We'll look forward to seeing you. 
We'll be glad to arrange an evening 
if you wish. Just call 
FEderal 2-9276 
Watling, Lerchen & Co. Member New York Stock Exchange 
402-403 Pontiac State Bank Building 
Michigan ‘Pontiac, 
    
  
   
     
   
    
    
          
               
     
     
      
            Street, 
dung = receive sealed 
Successful bidders. will be 
and performance bonds written by re 
rovide satisfactory Workingmen’s 
insurance. 
Copies of the documents may be obtai 
the Architects for each set of 
will be returned 
documents are then re 
The North pene ‘Christian College Founda’ 
right to reject any or all bids or to waive any 
A certified check in an amount 
value of _ 
Rochester. 
factory Gr dt 
the hig for First Unit of 
NORTH CENTRAL CHRISTIAN COLLEGE Rochester, Michigan 
The North Central Christian College Foundation, Inc., will 
labor and material at 7:30 P. M., Debeoragpe 
day, November 26th, 1958, at 820 West Avon og 
Rochester, — at which time same " 
opened ed and read aloud, on the following work 
1. Excavation, Grading and Foundations Bids may be delivered to the office of the Architects, 1602 Military” 
6:00 P.M.,, Wednesday, November on 
Port Huron, Michigan -before & 
26th, 1968. 
The contract documents, Pecteting pians and specifications are on 
file for = at the offices 
F. W. Dodge Corp., Detroit, Michigan 
Builders’ & Traders’ Exchange, Detroit, M and may be secured at the office of the Architects: 
Wyeth and Harman, Inc. 
1602 Street, 
Port Huron, Michigan BIDS WANTED | 
EXCAVATION, GRADING & FOUNDATIONS 
to furnish ‘onttatasteey material 
recognized surety: com 
cape and Public Liability 
           
      
    
      
       
                    
        
          
             
         
      Fagen <2 
ichigan 
anies, also to 
06 with   
yable to woae Bo Central So 
Michigan” or a bid bond executed 
company, a oe woe equal 
be submitted with each bid. 
= may be b loage gov env! three weeks atter the scheduled bt 
time for receipt of bi 
NORTH CENTRAL CHRISTIAN COLLEG Ee sir ite, Contras 
" November 10, 1958 — ents, The am it 
wit thin, ten im gare after the opening ¢ of b bids, joke depoat 
Meonalcattles 
ual to five per cent 1a%) ef the 
. Oo Penn. 
bidder wi 
“five per cent (5%) of reserves the 
tion, 
th a satis- 
  
    
              
    Business of All Kinds 
Throughout ‘Michigan 
Investments, Rpeernelt 
INTRODUCING AN FOR YOU W   
                    
      
     
        
        
        
              
            
      
            
                 THE PONTIAC PRESS. raibyaty: NOVE 
    
    
  n Help Wanted Female 7/MODEST MAIDENS =. bv Jay Alaa). 
OUR MANY * Bae a Gone WAITRESS | ' ees <i Bee Lx 
  
  
| rs. Ada Elling-/ GIRLS 22 & OVER FOR PLEAS. 
Jor soon enans No Oe ee << ae, were. S nenee 
| bats eee One a   
  
  
    
    
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
     
    
    
  
      
      
  
  
  
      
  
    
    
    
  
  
  
       
  
  
    
    
    
      
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
        
    
      
  
  
  Charies ay, 
i iween” 2 and § pm. See Mr. 
| Bigelow. i 
2 HOUSEKEEPER - LIVE IN - ae Puneral rvice | egos home, $15. OL 3-0402. 
be held Saturday, Nov. tt ar Y OF ALBER- 
Fp: try the Waterford, Com. [a Sadler “who passed sway i MAKE BIO MON EY SELLING munit ¥ ¥ yea: i sone 
D. Winne ificts tine. Interment | ood phe of in acs I miss ser,| Full or part time. All popular 
Raw gece a ey ite etnaS® wits “Soe Ber ie 3 ° t ts sh Wat r 
Funeral Home. 3141 Sashavaw.” 4-4 coat Aa shell ever, wonder weer Lincoin 1-2520 Oak Park. 
yy paved mye oy Bh cictoo he - ai sminsed by her husband and = 
> He ini state from noon until time Fen \MIDDLEAGED LADY TO CARE of service. IN LOVING MEMORY OF ALBER-|  [° <meta esas ——§ | te Sad) wh ssed awe ‘; : | 
CREW. NOV. 13, 1958, MARGA ARET yeet age today “a , —Cell_after 4 pmo | | . M.. 42 — gars ge 3; |4 ‘Ugh i 7 ee gone, | MEDICAL TECHNICIAN WANTED. 
: & i 
gist ater ot ar Care Gok A. pace, vacant ‘nour home, | E05 ‘tage pagehis: Canasta & G ver ed i g ars Allen and William Ham : also} Some think you are forgotten | rector of laboratory, FE 5-4192 ¥ survived by 2 grandchildren. Pu-| Th oueh. on earth you are no eee 'MIDDLEAGED WOMAN TO BA- : 
: neral service will be held Sovur- | Sut memory you are with bysit more for home than pay. 23 Gay, Nov. 15, at 2 p.m. —_ the | As you always were before. FE 68-2447. : * “sy Sago gg nage Sadly i eet & by Dad, Mom, Sister, | Ginn WOMAN TO CARE Fou 3 ev 0. edach offi- 
cating, Interment ip Grand Laws re Sate A a Sameters ete. Gan tae fore. 2:30, OR 3-8439 
Panerai Wome. | wa buneral Directors . 4 quiat, CAPABLE WOMAN FOR A i sf av work rene. " 
FIELDS, NOV. 13, 1958 OT “a BOMBCOATS Use back gate. Call before 4. yon 
de, 1759 Giddings Rd. age 58: : : beloved husband of Sacer FUNERAL HOME dear father ce | = Ace 
be Mrs. Veronica Green. Mrs. OR_3-1784 | PERSONNEL Mary Lou Sutton, Mrs. dl er me Tarren CHAPEL 2 TRAINEE 
| Gar = yale Bae. o ify Service ut Excellent op ortunity for ry, dimmy, Valley Mougntty ; ry, Gail, and Charlotte ried | ‘De ] ] h college tral young wom- wit tnwnesce 
dear ‘orother of Mrs. Glen Mitch-| one son- Oo ns an invereated in beginning 
eli, Verner bagel ten wt Moran etl FUNFRAL foun . — ans rene. 
2 nday, , w rge organiza- : 
sa i t 130 pam. ‘trom the Designed for ned for eraie™ ee Duties will ane . 
Voorhees-6i Chapel ases 0! rsonne] Wor baa tt ' eee Puneet: Voorhees-Siple Fyping ceeunee. Gages: What if you DO. break a leg, you'll have something to sae); J. JOLL, Realtor 
terment in Oak Hill Cemetery. | , ity uniimited Please send talk about all winter! = PAINT BY NUMBER PICTURES ES. Mr. Pields will lie in state at oil * FUNERAL HOME ofa & salary fequire- P Scrabble games. kenstose ~~ rr ~ Voorhees-Siple Funeral’ Home | eaceeox Puaae ae skater mente to Pontiac Press Box [se ae y a meee Hm 
FE ayn Work Wanted Female 11| Building Supplies 12A : HANGOES, NOV. 14, 1958, gael eed 0 e uliding Su Notices & Personals 25 ALL CASH Beechum, 3314 Meinrad. Drayton | ~ a : 
: Plains, age. 74: beloved wife of weer Lots 5 RESPONSIBLE LADY. CARE OF ARE YOU INTERESTED IN MAK-| CRUSHED STONE 100 PER CE For houses, fiats, farms or scre- 2 dees M. >» ee; je anger. nnn ce™ POTS L AMM | baby. it. It. hswk. 3-9 pm. OR 3-1897. ing money? If so, call OR 3-3201 10-A washed, $1.75 yd. { ooPoaphy . baie rng Na eect ey iRacsis tf under foreclosure. 
o an ve con ee er a AVE LOT. PER | SALESLADY WTD. FOR CURTAIN for ee Call between 1 $1 yard. Sand, any kind, $1 yard. ge ‘siyle Rie, 0 On 33 yg oe Wil deat, slater of Mrs. Ross Pen’! ry Mt Park Stay wi @b | ind. drapery” shop’ Some vselling | _and American Stone Product. 6335| M& #8 KERSHAM An Wegus: also survived. by. 4 Vlas. Ress - Gtperienee ” preferred” Pontiee | Xt TROMING,PICRUP a DE sea Se Certs. MA | COMPLETE WAVE WG on - ‘gna ”MAytair 6-4250 BaP te cramgenes, rumored evict WAUEe Gees fibe LY Stier et | pancttehaat Mirecle Mus Shop| ver PE $i Business Services 13| sumers 8 Perr. ALL CASH we PE sais, ae bag beld Monday, Nov, 17, at Li in ’ ‘ fete he BABY, [s) DA OR NIGHT. usitess nces 2-1264. a from the Coats, Puneral a WAITRESS NTED FOR EVE- : ~— Paid for GI and vA equities. | j-@ at P Sas - tener “with Rev “Walter ‘Teeuwis- : | olng work. hu Dixie Hwy. Apply BAY WORK uhor< RANS. Immediate cash . Agent. - jake Rd. PE 4-2411. . | ced Se officisting Intermen’ in| Help Wanted Male 6. _sfier 3:30 riation. Baby sitting evenings. | “repaired ey factory. trained was | 2, KNAPP SHOES | FE 4-4 7 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE. ; feetee caainy emai sh LE LS CLL OS Feta d roms GRIEL COOK. Pe 8-2088 at our gttice | General, Printing & med Herman 3.1008 
Pun : = P. EXPERIENCED DENTAL Assis Ottice Su Soy GINL: ON WORN WEEOING |. crue Wotan Pioee: one too. ge ea out = yrebeel 2 Wi ie Bt Bivd. E : . "heal a4 Have ows rence St. g hy FE 3-0135. a sriegals adviser — re, AT TENTION J 3 
turday. our ne es . Huren : trans eetaie On 3-8027. "| 2-8734. Confidential, The Salvation good. If 
saunas st. 1 Hy p.m. Mon.| in. F ermanent job. Recent ref- ; ii iNG. . all end” windows. Reasonsble. Army. cal peur home ist with tg “as fer ‘HOUSER, NOV. 13. 1988, ANNE, G. thy Pri Bee Mr. Chenowith _ Kaden required, Ph. Brighton, | “Own transportation. OR 3-621. PE 2.1631 BEA I quick reeulié. We hove buyers (Diidine), $000 6, Jefferson, De- shaban expamiencen, | _ACodehy'® SIRE GEaTRES BOBYOTEHING | COMPLETE” HEATING SERVICE. Foie, tlokmeriy ‘ot Milford: be-| for extra. work. Call FE #710), | WTD. EXPERIENCED SHORT OR- OM time ONTO | Licensed, 4 br. service. install,| EVERYONE'S DUTY ; = loved Wife of Daniel W Houser: | SqnBER WANTED OR WiLL| der cook. Apply in person. 067 W. | oe HoUsEW ANp| fepair or service. Guaranteed | Pace ufting, tace wioek ling & swe-| A. JOHNSON, Realtor 
Sear other of Win, 3 Rovers “rent shop a0T0 Bus, Lake. Ra, | Huron EADY FO LIVE IN-CARE | ebysliting m your home. 3 or 4| Rese ML CTO | fish masse he iasaty ta 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. : - . CARETAKER MARRIED. SMALL babar day” MOTOR SERVI : Gehrocder® deer sister of Mrs |CARBTARER panties Evenings of 2 children, 1 school age. More | P= WORK” MONDAYS aH fominding. 218 E. Pike. win. 72 By FE 4-25: ae pontey. r therrick,, Walter Tiiner| SU 8782 or write Zeif 2518 Cad.| {T home than wages. Call after and Wednesdays, references. FE Kroner) Bismin sham 8 a Ne oleae ore bay aa for colored Reese; also survived by 4 grand-| iNac Tower, Detroit wintees, ; 8-8206. FURNACES. “CLEARED BD! CHARLES CHESTER Want to lease 4 p.m. Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 I service will be ‘VERS — WANTED: SALESWOMEN FOR serviced. C. L. Nelson, FE 5-178. peg lag tied CAB’ DRIVERS — "BIRMINGHAM GRADUATE RE ASSISTANT AIR CUSHIONED SHOES 7 AND 3 ; trom tae Guten, C. Crate ‘by. |— Ate Se Ott have personality appearance, and | Trained in office & laboratory EM MILLER On Sam Replies "So Pontes Press” Bo Bot | pee 31 Movell, FE E210 | 8T FLOOR. ¢, ROOM, APART: ay Week cub interment persererence, bi is. the job tor ‘De ——— Excelent character’ FURNACE CLEANING |~* CHURCH NEEDS PIANO. He. we SS Pe eee Baldwin hol is Ellwood. unlim : ; 3 
Gee cit la Goon a cm pointment cal) PE +0671 between | HIGH SCH IRL D atte Gomes eooiros CALL ELECTROLYSIS CENTER ; m, and 1 p.m, or contact; werk after school & Sat. FE 1 a OR i £m 3 OOM ie Gordan C. Crabb Funeral Home, a ra Will Do @ Complete Job os a ‘ow of - i : __ Gratiot at Outer Drive, Detroit. Drayton Pieins at 4713 Dixie Hwy., ie Siz BOILERS | < z ALL FURNACES 3.2805 20 ; : 4 pts. Pa furnished ty at ——— . | PROMI, "LAKE AREA. | RESIDENT - COMMERCIAL | dine ee beak wk, We, —SEDROON CORNER IPT 
1958. MARTIN. 90 WID- ALTERATION LADY. ONE PE 49701 Sie Gale or Raper rye C A pg BR gy ~ Oe CORNER iPr. 
“aecaaen 8 r, Fred Daniels, Pu.| For est eee pe ‘Trane clothing. Part time. Baruett-s. 150 Te Ta zim re TEW oe ns poses DAINTY SOP PL ROOM Te FLAGR ALE OF ,. tree , Bewly | dace : ro Ma er Trans PLASTERING, : see. Mra. Thece,. ‘ ying | Contact . Hollenbde 
N poral ete wa me Sg Renee. Company representative will in- | Won O-S ARE FOR CHIL. | IRONINGS PER B Work guaranteed 5-0394. 5-7808. : = hoger ~eotbrghd of og pare ttles : Sanderson. 86 St.. FE 32-0007. Nov. Boaren. with Rev.| terview men selected in this area dren. Live — plus onl PE 671 E. n. Mansfield. PE 8-0761. SAWS MA buyers wa income prope: T ROOM APT. NR ELIZABETH | T Richard H Disen Sr. officiating.| Li you are over 25 years old, | 4 1934 . | LADY WISHES CLEANING. $1 Manie Leach 19 Bagiey St. In Debt? ——. Lake, $16 wk ‘Adults. 130 sem Interment in Oakland County; call: WAGHING WAGHING hs A © RePAIR fe, Wataie Mambr, Manor, FE ¢ste     and references, FE 2 ' 3 : : Cemetery. Mr. Lewis will lle tn : oS ee SERVICE ROCHESTER AREA. you ha trouble meeting h Mille , state rf the Freak Satrather Help Wanted . 8 Se 7 day Automatics and wringers. pb pare a see us eter. Hump ries Lf . : . a , OR, Heat, FE 5-1625. “i 
inicen ij   
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
  
    
    
  
    
  
  
  
      
      
        
  
    ae Puneral Home after 3 p.m. Sat- R ~ Prompt service-—Pactory \rained. N CREDIT COU h ent, Adults.| 8. Jessie. : All work guaran NC. = 716 Pontiac N. es, * {. AUTO. HEAT REPRIO. : — rsa M : “Weatne yon ey ) WORK OR “5 cuanto: ned” Bon rE Ss. bad rete 2.9236 Open Ev ; ocean Fe $0038. am TBEDRM 7 TO. HEAT REPRIG. 
TEN Lesc Ba Aven Tere: J ACK AD AMS ao gal ve @ pros oe) 5-7490. oln 8-380 pas Gi AND FHA A and entr, very nice. adults. m e001 Dixie Hwy. MA 61163. 
Mig: ogy; dear mother of Mrs. ‘we woul ent (recalled or om v4, ‘tulomatie rey rite Bey-A-Diet vableta - cents at “CASH FOR 3CUR Home | spores =. Guildren’ ‘Unilities fora’ 4 Edi - w . ; Arthur; also survived Dy four bet : cam we DIETICIAN invalid, FE 9.3783 rs peers ashers. TADS Yea, we = sell your e nd 1 ve. OR son. FE san — grandchildren and seven )great- ween am. an Dp o Pontiac Os thic Hos — iG q AP’ i N he NEW — bs | 7 a a ROOMS. ROOM z si fill be ete Saturday. Noy “Ter at| personable interview Many fruge per ~P Contac retan . ROY'S, ig Oakland ERE 2-4021 mare 208 ccceph dbpotnt beauty tion do. not ico. ob oe ° Priv. Nath bent. AC Its only. | __sllo on beat, FE +5067, minis’ none a = | uv. : ROO: ans i 2 p.m. from the Moore Chi apel of | . Sees Day rs Night - seseree ees Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 pater? Por, free “samples. all ww A og yg My“ A 3 ee f . pvt., utilities rm, small Daan Woe us emt NOV. 12 THRU NOV. 14) one pccacios BA PE sce FE $4958 between 10 am. and 7| <u RM Art. Wor fy Weigome, ‘Bast of Breyten Pisins. “in White Cha 1 Cemetery. Rev. ployment Agenc Auburn Avenue Nurses Exchange | ALL Lote or Gedo shbg = p.m. coe aT HOMES BoRAIS TRADE WE SOLD BUILD 7 ROOM APT NICELY FURN. oF 34504. “ Ted Mosi fictating. Mrs. Mc-| CT: 3 " : Ez 2 GE 30. SHORTHAND, | Ladies’ dresses specia’ REDU « 2 “ : : Ho Dangaeert Sie in state iM te CE 2-5131 FLINT Sey tase ree lPBx ab ebusty. Would like | - 56286. : - : 5 | Mitestae giemeee ERO, tet: 752 oe ron Phone PE eiss? Pvt. bath, & entrances, Gas best. a part neat Where 
pel of Sparks- av N E ‘ Pontiac a NG A F ; 3 EDROOMS. WEST SIDE —Pumerel Home, _Avbore Beige] : VOCATIONAL COUNSELING | _Prest Bot lol sugratious rs, Bodell. “FE| tne, ROACH Meatta inert | HAV WILL TRAVEL | hoo hest, no children. Mi esise.” WRERVICE | WOMAN. iT DESIRES HOUSE: : - 62 PE §-0760 eat, no children MEW, NOV. 12. 1958. LAIRD J.. 188, EXPERIENCED AUTO, MECHAN- -ov TION ~ Keeping m motherjess with schoo SRESSMAKING, TAILORING, AL- pote srelagauens type gym for e wif travel’ to ace fou cat | weed ee ATH. 7 BLOCKS FROM CENTRAL HIGH. , E Oskridge St., age 53 gj « Boas to, Sala: a Fool commission. Bird's ate Past“ RUROW e omy | rs, Lives. terations, drapes & formals, done me use It reduces w lines, Ste you how to fo 38 Green St 4 room lower. Gas heat and 1 j husband of Mrs. Henrieita Mew: Milford. SUITE 4 FB 4-0884 eekends in my home. FE 88455. | stomach, hips, arms bagk. Ti | your home land contract or acre- an | fase. $80 per mo. Paul A. Kem, Gene con of Wimam Sey: fear SALESMAN TO WOMAN 30 YEARS OLD Wishes DRESSMARING & ALTERATIONS. ones & tightens Tiabhy muscles | se¢., Cal for a Mminuie)3 & 1 F Ee Pvt, bath | —™°. -  byother of William, Jack, Mra.|"Son' ‘new Imperiais. Curysiers, € work of dish washing or house-| EM 3-0350. 1331 Williams Lk Rd. improves . It’s the per- . No e. rm. Ne Pvt. ip FLOOR. 3-ROOM APART William ee, and Mrs. bere Dodges Renault automobiles SECRETARY work, FE 40234. ect ——— { Place your} RD, RILEY, Broker & om. 20 M. Fodéork, ment, newly decorated, 19 Elk cor Raw. Pence Noe te’ at 3:3} Also used cars Highest pay plan| Age 1932 with good skills. At-| Wag E sere Agenties 17A order ae: or today. 300 Sttesbeth Lake Ra. } ROOMS PRIVATE BATH & EN-| "ood Phone 
m. from the Wessels Puneral| {2 Metropolitan eres. Many fringe} tractive and poised for reception | “delivery, OR 31088 .or 10, an Ba complete! FE 41157 FE ocens| pareg, Uiliies & secher fern. 7 BEDROOM HOU 5 es ome, with interment in Mt. gn"390'8 Woodward Ave. Bam | Smployment, 406, peniiae. state WasNGs OR ANCE CALL tears to Dance—¥4 Price = Oe a FRR aiats | Harbor. 47.200, Sen eee. eet M1_6-0029 or JOrdon 64738. | Bank Bidg. FE 5-0327. rE an ep waT 1] 1! your home-leara the cha-cha, HI $$$ DOLLAR weekly. 28° Chamberlain, PE | —S: Cass LE. fi s 8 ui \ Ry ag onl ~~ 2 FULLER BRUSH CO, aU ip Baendisbamt oe Service 18| mambo, fox trot, ete, Taught by FOR ot x ROOM UPPER eee ox Will train and finance industrious Instructions 9 | work oF & WANTED. | ~~ $ip, teacher, FOR FREE Leg) HOME EQUITIES wele, 90 Cottage. PE 4si2.| Cael ne et trance. Heal mareed min with coy, for PvT TUTORING, FE_ 2-827! PAMILY LAUNDRY SERV. "Sama "7 i PEACOCK, NOV. 13. 1958, WILSON work PVT TUTORING, GRADES «| FE 24271. — t. ‘ -| LAND CONTRACTS _ | SCA&RG RMS GROUND FLOOR. hot water furnished, $50. FE K. 1008, Myrtle St. Waterford lished “customers, 800, per ‘weex | through 12. OR 3-4303. lee phone Pontiae Laundry, PE bet. 8 & 13 oo ane te A par ship, age v - 
  
  if M Wr MAY HAVE A CABH BUYER .. Util. .__ FE §-6502. oe] expenses uaranteed if PIANO Building Ser\ Serves. 12 CASE CURFATEE FLAW OR RUF Wea ie Br a, Bates Wright & Valuet Fg Rs ; aE Stevie 
wight, : . 84446, 
    
  
    
  
    
  
    
    
    
    
      
  
    
    
  
    father of Max and Lynn Peacock, Popular — Classical — Harmony | a. ASEMENTS | ullv finished tine REA Mrs. Donald (June) Walls; iso, "sore ee aug perts rele ae PS waterford Township Area gf homes, house sete eager} Laundry. Phone FE 28101 pahew ar 4, 466 car bat 1. 7. OAKLAND AVENUE. var] i — grandchildren. Pu-| 9 least PONCE. |e rete eee And OUUlts. cate | mOviNE Ord com se of me- Landscaping 184 | ao FE 5-044 FE 5-003 | | eee etened. to. bent couple with full bath & utility. room. day. Nov. 1%, at 2 pm. from the Big Mie' Auto’ paris, Phone FE ser eer sen FE hee oak ce cee Wtd. Children to Board 26 I edi t Mt, Clemens. 8 1071. ithe BROS. . ome, - \. . ny . ; with Rey. Malcolm K Burton of: | MEDICAL TEp.| ENCED, COMPETENT TEACH. AA Floor Sanding moval and trimming, Get our bid. | “‘pontis, ‘Motors. PE 25031. nm 1ate |} No drinkers 12 Washington. ficlating. Interment ip Perry Mt.| Boot i e ag ae Hospital ER. CALL PE ¢-04 4 Sd o Wintehing og | E210, FB Wed Howse ido a 77 ’ 3” ROOMS, 2ND R, $13. 3 5660 wy Park Cemetery r jacecs Ww any fr ~ nefits. Contact noe SoTL DOEENG. YARD & ouseho! oods i floor, 16. 1 Wil- Open Eves. ‘til 8: “10 ‘tH & ie tH state at the DeWitt C. Davis! _reoter ratory. PE S418, __.Work Wanted Male 10 A-A TRENCHING driveway grading. Back filling. SALI ( tiOl } tee i al 3 RMS. (AND BATH. —< FLOOR Puneral Home. MIDDLE Le AGED SINGLE MAN Foatings co Lines. OR 3-6696 Roto-til ing. Terms, EM 3-303. —_ Smee Fe Lose? TV'S, FURNI- 7m furn. Infant welcome, 108 | V. 13, 1988, CLA pols MUlverry Bid, Liver | &4 } CARPENTER WORK MEW | i Lang | XPERT TREE TRIMMING AND | {ure 8m : We can sell your house. - te Chea, Ee, meni Center Bt. Fis. 3.2300, SMITH, NOV. 13, 1958, CLARENCE U 'y 0-1 removal, Ph. FE 45-6593 CASH FOR ie PE nee AND AP. Py 
: eee ea caleea een Pe PAINTING 5 irentOn 6 EX. a ano ee ee. : pee oO ee or house ys : ne a Heal "FE 22914 i im om SS ee etroit, age ov" us- ? an cou service. : . i band of Mrs. Mable Smith: dear PARTS MAN series. Tres ccsimate. Rees. OF A ER TRENCHING INTER-LAKES TREE SERVICE. i ARGAIN. sae ron. fath f Clarence Gerald Jr, RIE } or OR 3-8117. A & TR I Trim, poor cabling, surgery. = < ! tive. s woman or 
Do paid L. james ¥. Smith, Mrs: |" preducta, “malar? ee 4VAILA wow ¢ Footings, water lines field tile. #2} Land clearing. Insured. MA 4-2903. FORNT UR NEEDE sioner re 2.6002 Sunday, i SHIRLEY APTS. 
Ollie (Marjorie) Smith. and Mrs = mission. Group insurance. and cabinet work New re 5 LAWN BUILDING Entire home ot odd lots. Get the | © day and after 5.30 p.m. _ 3 UPPER FLATS: 2 i SSEDEME ; seeepe Sr trrete! enol: _ ats __ Write Pentter Press, Box 1) pe Fe es eer | = SAND & FINISH FE 6.3722. Leave taking. OR 3.064 or M1|~ ‘OP dollar Wil buy outright or ~ |tR L BATH, CLEAN, | $00: & I-bedrm. 955. Desirable 4 prother o PY = é ET M E a > la. ‘ 4, i i Mrs, ‘Edward Corbett: also sur | Real Estate te Kicbas t Scceke” Oe a ed Ee eray oi om 7 Set ren, Fe 2 omeeeny BROS wave’ entrance, deposit and’ ot School » on Euclid street. Ye peralisttrics ott be held Stenday. | Bloomfield District CARPENTER WORK WANTED. tee lity. work, licensed. Bow- ERAN e- delivered age Crees WANTED TO BUY — ALL TYPES REAL ESTATE Ce eee CORATED. 3-280. rk < OTILivinG Nov. Iu: at 10 am. from the) We have 7 attractive new sub-| “no job too large ©: bilo re | kez. MA 42253 or FE_5-3608._ porth of Aubara. re hunt of f rt Ph. 32-5523. on 3 a 3 MS. x ATED, BOOMs AND Call wae § FIL Srp Virgo E Kinsey Funeral Home,! divisions developing and new | jroo, te of em BRICK. BLOCK AND CEMENT rw sr te Hwy. Bt ent. 4145 vile Rd.. +3238. with Rex. Herbert Myer offieiat- homes for sale from $26,000 «2 | CaRPEReR % SExp- | OTK Also chimneys No job too| Hew aN uN BULLT tique “leave. Antique furniture. | Open Eves. ure 8; ay 1 “tl 5 5 ROOM APT’ CLEAN WELT J ROOM MODERN HEATED APT. n termen nlwn e-| an ave an ming for RY. YR L : . tery Bay City. at 2 pm. Mr| ove experienced. full time. and| kitchen cabinets & formics, 8 a ome ene. So nit grading Backfield top soll PE My >is. Sell Us Your Equity bs ten 4192 Dixie over Keego Hardware.   
        
        
  
  
  
    
    
  
  
    
    
    
  
    
  
  
          
  
  
      
      
  
  
          
      
    
    
      
          
       
   
    
       
        
   
    
     
  
        
      
  
  
  
      
    
    
    
  
      
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
    
    
  
         
  
    
    
      
      
                           Smith wit ile in state ai the high grade salesman. Very’ good | _ specialty. Reasonable, On 3-t29 Gm _2-0603__ Wid. Miscellaneous 28 Don't lose your bome—cash wai eee ODEN a eee r month, FE ne rgo nse uneral Home, arnings 68 r man. BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK NLL : Y - 4208. Lafayette St. Royal Oak ‘ual Pranels Ho Phelps Jr. at | atten: ALL KINDS. WORE 5 aNd TwoRE| Moving & Trucking 19 WED FOLDING "WHEELCHAIR listings, & Pranks 4385 Disie | closets, adults, PE" 5.2386. . A heat furnished. ro baby | MI 47422 or WO 34816. Bloom: 5.2841. in good cond. OR #3062. Rwy welcome seen appointment, | field office at W. Long Lake Ti OCK AN CEMENT | A-] HAULING RAKE LEAVES. WANT SEVERAL GOOD 7160 x 15 2.2688 Rd. & Telegraph. CARPENTER WORK OF ANY work. Fireplaces and chimneys Nome your price, FE 5-9824. tires. FE 4-7253, or FE 9-641. TO TRADE—TO SELL - ee ee tins S : S ae. Reasonable. Call after 6) PE casts, ¥ CLEAN ROOMS The Pontiac Press Houseman-Spitley FE 8-040. A-l MOVING — HAULING WANTED turn. 40 Marive. OR 3-1328, = Developer, of over 300 subdivisions mee CARPENTER WANTS | BLOCK, BRICE CEMENT WORE EXCELLENT sERVICE “ J ROOMS EVERYTHING PRI- : since and fireplaces, MA 5-0378. Reasonable, FE 458-FE  2-2000/ Hi-Fi Amplifier 10 to 35 - watts. 
< FOR WANT ADS SSP VoRM WAND WANTS WORK SUE Roe AA-I Reduced Rates | —Fsas OR 27080, after 5:20 7 ROOMS CLOSE TR REWLY = N 5.9003 : M Wanted 28A ARTMENT x decorated. Heat and Utilities. $12 : _ OR 3-9013. LDING REPAIR, PLASTER- Smith Moving. E sag tine van or oney ant REAL ESTATE FE 5-7605 co strance $80 per mo . and ties. § 
DIAL FE 2.8181 Reliable Man. | ssesceee We open. | °Y, _Pickup__FE - "| yet eet eT yee . A ide Sao “De whim." “en CLEANUP AND 11 LIGHT HAULING. | YOR SALE — FIRST MORTOAGE. Sail 7 See A to-assist in f b Pp otk. FE $2200. LISTINGS WA ; toveesist tn factory Branch opers | Sondable & steady, FED - : Cau Bill, FE By private pre, MY sae ALL Adults ‘only, FE 96899. 454 Au- From § a.m. te 5 p.m. ton f helpful. Opportunity for 'UILD AND 8AVE" TAULING KER BORE WATE ANTED §3:000°AT 6 BUY WAITING twin Lg lovely ott adults burn Ave, Palm Ville abové average earnings Apply, HAVE OWN EQUIPMENT wil Our volume purchases & direct LING & BBISH FE w PER CE UI HOw ¥ HOW only. rove. after 4:30 Ad eves eueuka bd te 1064 W Huron, 10:00 to 11 30, paint interior and exterior. FE | to you sales will help you. our price Any time @E 8-0095 | Write Pontiec ‘Press Box a a Fon" OU, workdays noah ‘war eoney AV AILS rted immediately The am, | _ 46462 pi We have 800 plang or estimate | LIG iT HAULING “aNd M MOVING WTD. $10,000 LOAN, GOOD IN- PROPERI Y¥ 3 RMs. aD BA TH. SMALL CHILD. ° LF, FOR IMMEDIATE OCCU- $c. scenes vee ressoo SALESMEN — NO EXPERIENCE HANDY MAN WOULD LIKE | yours. We'll secure mortgage  , any i Real Cheap. FE| terest, good security. FE 4-0208 Equities __welcome FE 8-6104 , sie REASONABLE, CHILD sibility far errors other neceasary We will train you to) small teb of carpentry, cement. Builders’ Exchange | _—&:2#04_snytim ye 3 RMS. AND PVT. BATE. CLEAN.| WELCOME ORiando 3-6224 or than to cance! the charges | call = [feet secewtte ie te Fas r a = repair as 5 5-3349. FE 37210 oF rE 30531 | LIGHT TRUCKING, REASONABLE ____ Wanted to Rent 29 Leslie R. Middleton N, Saginaw ORIiando 3-1131. 4 ita. _______-319_N. Sagina Cie Le ces enrerce, || Neve oar. Sea tir. Mon Gt13 o | oa Ni. WHO WISHES JANITOR CEMENT WORK WANTED REA: | GauT AND HEAV? TRUGEING. BROKER FE_5-7721 | 3 FINE MODN RMS WIT BATH. 3 RM UNFURN. A il ment stich tat been ren §| le Bey. Drayton Plains. Between! {9334 sonable rates, FE 8.3687. Rupbien Pull airt eae Gan ores. GARAGE. 112 CAR. FOR BMALL OWNERS a eee on FE _§-4032 qe | Cn ieee : Gereé vaelseio 2 ruck use n usiness esire 4 RMS = pmo Piootcor clined WEDS IGHTFION “SvETEW ea | MAN PAST MIDDLE AGE. EX- CARPENTER WORK, GARAGES, | ej & front ena soading PE 20603} Donelson School locale. Call FE| We need listings on houses all . fo Sates child reicgme per| home in Union Lake Village, Call rer. me i | perienced, A-l references, care| additions & recreation rooms. O'D 9-220; sizes, farms, ncereae. we buy. and mai et ze are Mate be sore to get 7 | ers. Motor analysis also all kinds | for disabled or convalescent man. Complete remodeling. Call OR ELL CARTAGE | sell ‘tana Cal on | week. FE 6 EM 3-2387_or_ EM 3-4671. pl Binns nag SS oe oon of garage tools. PE 8-600 | More for home than wages. Mau- -+Local aS tone distance moving at antl 2 rau eg ‘wish we Inquire 340 Saldwin TRMEAND-BaTh 8. AND ATH. 145 MONTH, & ined a ‘WANTED RETIRED Seat MAN) rice PE 44329. COMPLETE LINE OF REMOD- One KE 6-6806 Vicinity, 2 bedrooms & gare *PONTI +t on REAT ty [ROOM FURNISHED _In Oxford, OR 3-1301. = for desk clerk in motel. Write VETERAN WORLD WAR It & fen carpentry, plasterin ma- nee + od util. ~ phy | nents Anes Ane 4 ROOMS. & BATH HEATED. 
Cloving thme for advertise Box 114 Pontiac Press, Korean War would | Ike work as anes and_heatii 1 a FE ss Trucks to Rent we _oere over 30. restal co Hie Bald wee mae ARMS ; “ROOMS & SATHORN ’ Stove and garage. FE 2-9974. mente comtaiping type siz ese) mechanic. m supply ex- ook ETE WOR LICE 1 . . larger tac regular agate Help Wanted Female 7 | _ctllent_ref. MUiberry_9-4225. and insured Residential, commer. TRUCKS. TRACTORS eo ee os Soe Wake properties 3 esleomen State St FE 40308. ‘i eee “ trope te 12 ofcleex noon the 9. | Foun N Re | ctal, Raymond W. Commins, OL AN EQUIPMENT + at ‘areas Burn, or unfurn. serve you. Buyers wait fi NICE AND r ; ; I EI ECO UNG MAN. 24 WANTS WORK ' RLTY 3R PVT BATH, AND | TR & BA HEAT Gav previous to. publication i Attention. Hou . < eit’ Hind. FE 44126 after 4 1-072, fee Pic oe ang Sunes 5143 Cass-Elizadeth Rd, _ FE 5-3030 panneet Rea’ state se arate clean, FE 65-2495, 40 Edison. Call |” water turn. Vicinity aoe Hats, - ntion, Housewives cusTpM HOMES BY LICENSED Traers | NTED: IMME T EL afte re 46041. ahead = 76 may Earn $15 to $20 in free jewelry. TouRO WARD DESIRES WORK OF tee Free estimates. OL ‘Pontiac Farm and Share Living Quarters 30 a ee cores ~ Mag. \, + Wy 7 RMS. I A E the “Gay of publication if, Invite friends and neighbors in| anv kind, feasonable wages. FE . Industrial Tractor Co. P M. Fst. | cose Deus, side tt et the first insertion to see our lovely star crest jew. {| 40234. CARPENTER WORK HOUSE. Ga. 42s 8 ADY HAS HOME TO sHARE| Paul Tones, Real as 4 ROOMS UPPER PRIVA rt Rah ‘iit ys FE 2-3307 elty. procetve.. highest premium. | YOUNG MAN WANTS WORK OF | Tage, or repair. PE 40470. on Gait wooDw ano Sunday | —With_working girl, EM 333%. | 432 W Buren and entrance, clean. Near bus. a rei CASE WANT AES TIME ORT | Sie ing, Has chauffeurs license CEMENT & BILOCK | ox SAFC ie | bhare home. privileges. PE ose, | WANTED: LOTS WITH St WER $00 pm eee Dats = a en aT Plat “Lines 1Day 3-Days 6-Days ive es - show ih ~, eur CEMENT wore OUR SPECAITY | ree_of ee of charse FE Sane ” Wanted Transportation 3 | =e ater 6 : ‘ ‘shad. Phe ay cats 4 bai. Avaliable Nov uM 3437 of J s is ance an 2 81.80 $1.98 $2.78 home, FE l_after 6. Work Wanted Female 11/ Floors. basements. ©M Painting & Decorating 20 Rent Apts. Furnished 33) 6n‘Baiawin bus line, Adults 4 ise (se CBee CHRISTMAS MONEY MAY mont. eer a0 se CERAMIC LE Wl CLASS PAINTING ck Dios | VADY, WANTS DAILY RIDE FROM ~ 104 Poplar St. 7 ROOMS AND BATH. a RN 5 2/25 405 6.00 Part t full xf : : . AND DEC. elton as 1 AND 3 ROOM APTS PVT.|¢ROOM UPPER. OUTSIDE EN- * vented Decorated. 22 Cadillac, 6 270 486 7230 wens oie or full time work for FREE ESTIMATES — TER orating Cash or terme PE/| tlac. a mir y pm OR 3-0112.|  entr. & util, FE 40122. trance. 2 children welcome, FE | FE 8-1063. 
¢ 3m bie. bap E| Bolte Flexible re, Car neces: |? RL DRY WALL TAPING AND POUR. | BT CLASS T Ripe TO, Pontiac MOTOR FHDM | T LARGE FUR - , 24 9 405 729° 1080 ety. Call FE 46900. 9“til ¢ p.m. ATTENTION ing. Free eetinates. FE 61463 of | decorating FE g000_ OL 131M, | 103 p.m shift OR 3-3984 Fo ee ener st pe Nant | ORME. LAND BATH. 5 ayees eine FoR 
DCE ROOM Resterrea Lan tec. 8 ELECTR STRICAL SERVICES— FREE i aor remerea. 5 E ee0te. FooR Pontise, to “Hittiond “Park |! LAROE RO ¢ N, ALSO 4 , ° . . m ‘ontiac A 
Barge ete" Giocs Leckereuna | Sagelet: Partner Elecite. FE| Ty PATHTING AND PaPRRING | fiom J moving te8 eves. Call| Suitable fof tar Y mon.” FE 7 RMS tao MO COUPLE ONLY. WAITRESSES | Retina Sener, feneians © | FRE ESTIMATES ON WIRING, ciapeatte oe Wtd. Contracts, Mtge. 32|i aie : Box Ted's has a limfted number tine Press ars) for water heaters, ranges & dry rior 10 per cent a a] ¥ a . pie Replies ese Box No. 21. ora’ 2 children welcome. At 10 openings for dining room edt! ADDRESSING & MAILING ers. FE ow ae B eo Elec. ranteed Free FE 49205 erated ta a.m, today there £ | resses'on the night snift. Must | "gay work wide OR 36481, | tre OO 1000 ThA. PAINTING “&- DECORATING C ASH 7 ROO; 7" | Were réplies at the Press be alte or over. agin person GUARANTEED oy - ALL  - vrs ex, rience Reasonable. , . : office in thi kinds. Est 1918 Hugus Marsh, 353 Tee estima FE sae following N. Cass, FE 2-3021, FE 65-7775. NTERIOR EXTERION ear WE NEED boxes: HOUSEMOVING FULLY PE_ 23-4315 LAND CONTRACTS 63, 74, 76, 90, 91, 96, FOR CASH IN A| fone aanaae- CABiNe-Spoy er or TREN amie aie: 13, 1% 28, 31, 32, 58, Woodward at ware Lr. Rd tions’ Pieaneed % rts ADDI oy ae CLOSING vot SoH Y.3 R ia RIENCED IN MEETING | oo re oe ulider PAINTING 7 FAPERRANGING. HIDDEN FEES beat and entrance, public, some ce, Work. Assist ' : . — _3_y +4 and electricit, St t—— - | sales. ‘Real Estate Clarkston-mi- 11 URRY, sell things | MASON Work. S ROURE RATERS. Physio-Th 2iA |. Nicholie & Harger Co. ier FLaGE | Obie ae ford area, $900 9 miouth pine cnn. joapections® basements etc, D & | ys erapy ent. ut n newly dec. 968 A ite ROOM APT, NEWLY euesieus cae fon jot ichael M Building Service FE 2-7004 or Wer nn~ | 33_W, HURON 3. 100 wil TE eons devoreted, ‘private bath and. ev- PL ” 7 Phone Lincoln 877 through Classified AG _eves, OR V27]6 8 Se MASSEUSE AVAILABLE, IN| CASH. FOR LAND CO Peace ~~} trance. Tititities ed. Rea- _ PLACE A “LOST” AD. ELDERLY. LADY iG TED_ ae = + a wu | fae wale | Geld ven“OR 31308 mae Ber: ae trom Sag. Bverzthing fur fur: | sonable rent. ‘Fae & ‘ ork & care for 2 children : ni Linen se’ : Call FE 2-8181 for an adi. More Yor home than wages. FE wiz | Anvthing goes! Dial FE ‘— STERING | a cy REPAIR REAS| “Television Service | _22 C ASH $10 meet. Ph. PE ¢sie Fri, Sat, 
rs Dial <3 aeYSEK. SCOR LATING, ALL TV SERVICE posts GET IT QUICK, _ tO recover a loss. FE “sanding and finishing. Phone FE |. wered Ak eb mnie or, night. ey BS CON. through Classified. Ads! ees : » 2-8181. TIES. NO OBLIGATION. Yes, whatever it is — dial 2-8181 for an ad-writer,|* ; ; ROOF REPAIRS DAY-OR MIGHT TV SERVICE NAA FE 2-8181 f d a weg : EAVESTROUGHING FE 4.0444 FE §-1296 or FE S600 O son 1 for an ad- TRENCHING EXCAVATING FOR | FERRETS T¥-APTERNOOR AND o JM writer and aid it! room heated - with 3 septic tanks. Field tile, flootin §. | JENSEN'S TV, AFTERNOON AND | REALTOR FE 4-2533 Ditches & boat wells OL 1 evening service. FE . 1704 8. Telegraph Rd. $55 6 ora | sabelaper. 
       
       
  
  
  
      
  
Rent Houses Purnished 35 
BED: DLX., GROUND, rR ‘ Foy agent jcome or bachelors. 
41per. : 
1 5 
vipa upptied. ‘Automatic gas : gToc Fe heat. Bus   
EG salt Mita Bay pie Lavender REAL 
  
  
  
  
  
     
    
  ‘ RED. 5 RMS. & BATH 
—_Northville with basement. Large back yard 2 Ci East side location +6136. RENT E, IDEAL R BEAU- 2 4 
s center. Adults. EM Ty “Aup . @ RM.| ty SI or ret have you? Lib- 
3-03 modern house. net small | _ erty 2 s fan child, $50 mo. Must have ref. f . 
7-BEDRM RENT OPTION TO TAKE ORION ¥- BEDROOW MOD. USED CAR LOI buy_until 1959. OR 3-0087.| “ern take front. Drapes, carpets | Choice , live neat ne «te HI +s} BAS NT H and stove. On Heres attached building. $65 month. Lease 
newly dec, $12.60 week, FE 5-3842 a arene ae A & i available 
— AROUND, OIL * 
neat, Pubnished. MY. 92008. cpmect, Pout Lake vR_+A¥.| Edward M. Stout, Realtor HOO] 3 BED! ANCH. FAR-|MODERN 2-BEDRM. : 77 N. Saginaw St. Phone PE 5-8165 
Mae iatSies Thy | SSE Ste a WITT oe 27 mm e : ‘ . 
heat. 2 “Runge mo, Lake, month, FE 2-7403 3 NEW RANCH HOMES 
E. HOD” $-RM.& SUN For Sale Houses 43 LARGE LIVING ROOM. YOUNGS. Oe Naga IO aTTnT| Close to town and schools. Util MBq KITCHEN WITH. DINING ROOM HOME, ¥ ©. INQUIRE| furn’ Children Welcome, Inquire | SMALL icine DOWN PA AREA, BEDROOMS, 69 W. 10 Perkins St, ment tor oan a &| TILED. FLOO DE | 4 ROOM FU OUSE MODERN, 90D, LOCATION. 3 Jose = STORAGE, 50 FT. LOT. y, 
bedrooms, : or ry FE 4-7706. “hal pre core. ae naerdon OPEN ] TO ey 
Ben Seer Nis | PEAR, ME, COREE OND EAT | Tee % | val m ranch Fu as tur. Fein $18 18° to Saturday and Sunda 4 BMS. MODERN, UR Se & UP.) eee. get wtie, tier oe Liberal seta sleig Drive out Perfy. turn right ight on Me 2) NOVI, GAN. 
a gas ORR LODE, MY| bath, ne decorated. 960 mo. Roger B. imate Inc. ORICED ATO! ONLY : MY ; ae a 51) Main 8t 111 / FREE RENT OF 3-ROOM HOUSE M 
in exchange ee lady's part time; Long Lake, Phone FE 5-1998 BY OWNER: aa LAROE $8250 
services Child welcome or re-\NEWLY DECORATED 6-ROOM kitchen full hessmscat, aluminum fon 
tired couple. Rear ent. 1146 W.| house. 77 Prall. Call after 6.| storms, gas heat, $12.700 with EASY FHA TERMS 
oe on S10. : :)} 22 a, RRETER Ed 348 Total Dows wh Payment FULLY EQUIPPED FOR THE| NEW 28x22 HOME CAR- obo Total Payment Sener. (Calton, weeete. C8) pert ant part basemees. O06 ms. 1s acres i  GOLON re ak eh del 
one - Of arr sane ie wanes wie with 7 bearoom <2 studio veiling. ir 6 - . 
Peet, ge. vi ites, rend” cor| pure fae. 500. Owner, OL 1.0797, FE 9.9122 
a ae oa |~ NEAR TEI-HURON welcome 159, water, ges heat heat, A apply 204 eae gies [oe —— RILEY 
LEASE — BY SEASON OR . =e nt driveway. $10, casb | 
2 bedroom, Oi) heat. 8316 Cas-/NEAR HIGH BcHOOL L. 6 RMS.| or $11,000 terms. FE 5-416 | 3650 DO’ cade. Sosies Lake, 8003. and garage, $85 MaAyfair) Soi; %1975 — 2 Auburn Heights area on St. ON LA ORION. 5 . 2 ranch tue -§ wears old. | Clair street, 4 ne hong tag ‘ bedrooms & sleeping porch. Base- NEAR MC CARROLL SCHOOL, © Living room, 12x90 wall-to-wall. lus large util — is 
ment Recreation room opening; bus line, 7 rooms, baths, fail ¢ a pes, e ledge | —— yard, ly $i U 
sg tio, Must have references.| basement, 2 car gatas, nice trepiage, 4 \1-3 acres. Balance. ret 
¥ £1300, or MY. 3-9693. Se hee ne SR | SN ee vege Be boee- | Oe TOUT greem and bath with oWaLL HOME, 1 BED Sat, Nov. 15. . lot 
fenced grounds, ‘ee Bus line. sli NEW ROOM MODERR. BUILT | BRICK RANCHS TYLE tn West sidevof town. Paved a | pues “_* tnctading at "301 sy bai Excellent jocation in Oxford. Near |’ street, close to one Ry 
Et 7 REDRM WOU EAR Pel ciel, ect eig We’| ced gh abe i oe Fae wee aes pe R “Pontiac. $20 week y in 8 carpeted 3 bedrm 20 year = aly ga eax 208 _lizabetn Lake Re aan 
awAEL HOUSES IN. ar yh Benedicts. 2-0449, a ge | Fe 
wire at 1676 Taylor ong ask RENT OR SELL 615: RaENaTON. “WEBSTER REALTOR for Lonnie Weaver, FE 42031. Clarkston 3 bedren. Iv baths: | o outers “OA $-3122 Orion MY 2.2991 
Rent Houses Unturn. 3% rode es gute hot water softener, A ad ul side 
also 30 Glass St. ints a ‘Paved street and drive’ Garage. + sane MODERN 13 MILES| bed garage. 9058 fenced back i Saie New Lux 
Dixie $40 month a 5-7006.| 1 ot mM = % urnaee, = becement So owes 
LL | ROM n rapes. ' 
wn basement, auto. gas hest, adults So m 
ate aS eerie. referred, $79 imonth, FE 2.3022. | 5 a, ae | Nothing Down ao BATH . ft. ‘aon rested ea riv. $14,- 
3 us OMS A pot bed aa i ties lease December 2 Sie with large 10xlt aul rm, rm 
big neat Reasonable. are ge, fas e. 3 Bedroom: Colonel | ing. Oraywe oa 4380 Monroe] Te ee ou whl a@round, Inquire at camber fi FE sore 8t. / hav, wrpeee e unlimited. 
‘bat ‘irick ranch v ou OWNER: Soe let sa wz, Gualiieg ve Mae Will sell of GI or terms. 2 bedrm. 2 pret ’ 8: 4 =o. fernace mo. FE A on 2 w heated garage pay 
ioe Cee yh idehOONG |, worane al ado _ me. & May 1 m tofers, tm 9 down, you will eciate Pag vai: 
Russel x Nott, Realtor beat Pr bates. Ue.2 bedrooms. ice 18 ft 
45008 one Brick For COL 1'4-car garage with work- 
oi heat tees’ bebeue Droverty, e “Gren vs acre ot ‘bath ig § ber rE FE $8115. Between 9 a.m. Gen te alee - 
ene ad, i meet 
+. i en "cs Sn Owner; 7 THB EAST SIDE 2-bed ar pan aio € 
H ts) land. Garage. Call FE a 
5 ROOM HOUSE. 
bor. $40 mo. 4-3136. 
    
partreots furnished 
or ney, al) areas & urice 
ARRO RLTY : 
$143 Case Eliseo Rad isa 
beat oouly 4 a ay 
ete i Bad est, | ge 131 UNG jinn ale Bel EF oe et ci, W'ford. FE 8-141 
Oe ad LA 2 Modets. . $80. 
ig ba Drepinee sare e, tensed 
yard te block school. EM 
SLARKSTON —y BED RM. RANCH. 1% tha ) furnace. Childr 
-achool, okay. t- blk from 
month FR 19 
  8-€ 
poh ee a 2020 RAT- corner all. 5 ine. "Ro al Oak Lincoln 1-4728. 
  
     
      oz SOR 
      
  
WEST SIDE BRICK DUPLEX 
* VASBINDER. INC. . FE 5-8875   
  
the West aide, FR, paundry & kitchen 
for man. priv. N. side. Rees, Fm 4-000, 
     vate aR GEN te 
e. Sauk ens . FE 44026. 
  
   itl. = Se | mye 
Rooms With Board 38 
sitchenette, 
Le 
A CLEA 
- meals TV N 
14 Matthews ¥ 
i 
igh HARE RAMS Bee clean modern hom 12-0318.   
  
18ST FLOOR, 2. RMS. & } 
e, adults, 261 
  
G005" HO! OME COOKE MEALS. home, elder) — work: nae and cnie. to Now 
Wixom, etc. Call 7 cas Bley 4-6631.     MAN = os AND BOARD. 9¢ 
  Poplar 
ERSON SENIOR 20 
velderty. Sol pvt, Sant, 
2.9056 
ROOW FOR TWO MEN TWIN 
nied PuChsus weet * & 8 ‘ 
ROOM & BOARD FOR BUDDIES. 
home cooking, FE 43048, 1028 
Lakeview, 
Convalescent Homes 38A     
     
       Moves You In! 
3 SO WHY PAY RENT? 
BUILT IN RANGES & OVENS — 
LOADS OF MODERN FEATURES 
MODEL “OPEN | vant To 7) 
2 iS: * a 
WESTOWN REALTY PE 6.2763 u 
LAWRENCE , * 
= Gaylord DRAYTON WwoOoDs 
3 Bedroom. brick & alum- 
inum ranch on — onady 
room 
at only. $22, 
3 BEDROOMS ‘with terms. 
of city, Reason- 
ie “dows payment, 
LeBARON SCHOOL AREA 
4b . Oak floors, Seared oebe: large 
kitche: rate ing 
SUBURBAN ON SMALL. LAEB 
Colonial nome consisting of 
4 — 8. 29 x lé living 
x64 gon & 
Remodeled, — auD 
30 10. Glass 
porch zeway to 2 car ree 
1 of land 
36 ©. PIKE 8T. OPEN EVES. 
‘ FE. 4-9584 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
Off Middlebelt Rd. diakefront   
  
CARE FOR } OR 3 ELDERLY ee Pp private Christian home. 
~~OPENING SOON Glen-Acres Nursing Home Now 
secutng: appealing, er te Hotel Rooms 39 
HOTEL AUBURIN 
Al Mes I= 
"| Coghion, ‘goa, ret ____Rent Office Space 41 
M39 IN WATERFORD BUILDING 
for rent or deace, 11,000 sq. ft. 
Buss du Office 2 
ocres a By obner: Fa] 
7-087.   
  
  
  
Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 414 |   
soley ded OFFICE BPACE 
approximately 5,000 _lyare 
feet ware ing ares. 6 t 
month 1663 South Tele- 
apo. FE 42597. 
By a0 . ft Suitable ‘or 
a ate ioe ie 
  
  
  
  
  
    
  . MD A FINANCE- FIXER? Order Classified 
Ads to ‘sell, sént, find a 
aw |good job. FE 2-8181 is 
    -'the Want Ad number! 
        
  3 
room home fi « 9 bed- 
SucSete gate on or cigs | seers 
    . iene ae businessman or execu- 
tion room. 
heat, 3 car garage, owner _leav- 
Six- Family tm location need for 
car or bus, voicing ‘dnanee to 
“a & oo 1 omagry 4 fet ourself a rea] incom be, seen to be gis tee Re- 
WwW Vitis “M. M. BREW ER . REISZ,   a 
  Clarkston RE. ail Eile. INC. Mich. 
BANK) 
  
lramediate Possession 
~NEAR 
  
  
ment, a feat” "cer, ares 
te” atores oy 
be wha e ont saibo0, With no down ment vyment, ‘you 
cant ater’ to" 
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 7” Rd. Open 
lana ons: ’ 
      i 
“4 
  Diced 
  
      
        Zz   
    
by Dick ‘Turner _—~ 
  “I did everything wrong! I didn’t keep my head Ay I 
didn’t watch the ball, and I beat him!"   
  For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 
Nothing Down) “hitsce! = te heatsiuminus 
    wi eoarte denn. permucty e. Gunr Glee oOwn.. ig wW * 
qt gy) A Rp eee ir acce| * 
, "Bee our " ey i I B 7 ene. 
: win : “split ‘ever itisrter_ home $9 SOO agi eve arier ome ee ‘ Pa ~y ta.200 o Low down pay- 
Phy Bhan Ryan are toh, Complete eth ty BUILDING with tile bath, “haraw oots EM _ 3-4'%4 EM }-2411 ahs 6 Seyi heat, noel y $150 DOWN 
32031 nots MORTOGAG SYLVAN LAKE 9 bedr: riee Frame & (-1- 
Dedrm. brick. By owner. Lake eben. | eel gee geek priv ‘A Low interest mort : ; ee pole Ww. 0 wuthton REALTOR   
  
‘NO DOWN 
PAYMENT 
  3 or 4 bed homes 
with full basement rough wit- 
. Om your los or wil! build an 
our lot, with small down fas: 
ment F C Wood Co 3 : 
Corner William, Lake & M50. 
After OR 3-7038 
$200 DOWN 2 bedrm jecere 
oar earee 
"S "PANGUS, Realtor wis M15 oreo ie NA 1-3816 
withdos 3 R. R., NEARLY 
Consists be ae wivins room, 
Kitchen  ¢ 2 bed- 
closet space en 
$1500 down take over GI 
monthly payments, $76 tactodes 
‘a oat ee 
3-BEDROOM PANELED | ED WALLS. 
Drayton Piains. 
: WHITE 
More Space for Living Located between Maceday & Wil- 
Hams Lakes ‘This 44 ranch 
home was built to fit . wit neers ig ft, 
separa ni on. 
bedrooms, lip baths 
kitchen with natural birch cabi- 
nets, Heh on Attached 2 
pod tomatic heat. 
ge artery & complete 
with fair jot has taf J pee 
rr ontage ay a paved Lake Ldiory pes 
on both ee $16,900, cash 
menesse. Don't perpen “ = 
day   
- $7,950, Is the full cash price for this 3- 
bedroom full basemént home. 
Aluminum siding exterior. Auto- 
matic oi] heat. 2'¢-car 
a. =. 32 = 
ted y with HE coc elle pene ‘Geneva. 
Call for — 
WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATE 
OR 3-1 8660 Dixie Hwy. 
Open Eve, ‘th 9; Sunday 1 ‘tll 5.   
READY TO. RETIRE? 
North of Rochester — 17 acres 
d with excel- 
lent 2 bedroom home featuring large living room with 2 picture 
- windews, stone fireplace, full 
‘basement, enclosed porch with 
flagstone ‘floor. Base-Ray hot wa- 
ter heat. 1% baths, 2 car 
rage. Paved drive. Several 
thousand Abd aby oa Me 
tiv, 1 P priced 
H., Pp: HOLMES, INC. 
2531 8. Lapeer Rd. FE 5-2953   
  
STOUT'S Best Buys 
" Today 
MOM PLEASER From the indestructible 
paneling to the bi 
area in the 4n- > 
cluding the brigh* efticient 
kitchen, and handsome fire- 
lace’ this home is designed 
‘or easy living Nice cor- 
ner lot with — Kael 
yard, jug 
den Lake $11,000 ar 
rms 
3 BEDROOMS For $8,956, located. In 
the heart of Drayees. Chofce 
corner lot of! heat, full 
yeroment. fenced yard and 
1% @arage. 6 rooms 
= ai “wien tiled bath Good 
HEATS ON House is 
immectately: 
$500 DOWN Suburban r ot” Ro Bes tpi 
“HOME SITE 
One ‘of the finest Water- 
pei Township. 1 x et with 
wn already in — 
of "Rae homes $1,500 term 
available. 
Edw. M: Stout, Realtor TT Nw oy. St. FE 5-8165 
‘Open “tilt 6:00 p.m. | 
  NFW HOME vy. construction. Seautiful 
living room picture window 
» 2 tge bedrooms, clothes closets 
sliding doors, Kitchen with 
baile 6 boards. Coved celling. tile throughout Pull bath---cram- 
le =e tility space, Automatic 
urn 
$2,600 son balance. oon Ban ‘™: 
MUTART REALTY 2419 Commerce MA 4-2391     
forced sir heat ~~ now $12,500 and #1. aches ove 
1060 8. Commerce Ra. MA 41578 Multi-Laxes Realty: 
. On pea sane ty ‘Ane 
  
$69 Mo. FE 40218 OR_3-1950   = treet and give pay drive. 
Sea sine oh 
HOLMES-BARTRAM 4302 Dixie Hwy, 
Eve 5 OR   $190 DOWN . room, basemen 
50 near “5 Bivd. 
WE 43-4200 Builder 
WE 3-1260   
WILL TRADE Sew 3 bedreom brick, basement, 
storms & sereens. ceramic bath 
Walton-Baidwin area, FE 4-921 
E 3-4200. Builder,   or   
NO. DOWN PAYMENT 
North off Sashabaw road— 
- “enone 3 bedroom, Auto. no DOWER PAYMENT 
-east side—paved 
large lot—3 per sen inter- vest — wick popeessic® See 
OLIN & 
W. Huron &t., nee Pash 
Eves. Call ‘on 
+o0e4 
‘A A 
terms %bedrm ‘round 
modern. Clean, mrwinbrook 53017? 
Wew HOME IN DRAYTON, SELL oT r small down payment, PE 
von a :   
R 3 uron 
or call Bob Alton FE 
  
  
  
  NO DOWN PAYMENT 
Excellent three (3) bedroom 
St. r t h if 
4-5236, eves. ps RE ad read rent oak 
. Lay ve — aad Car 
, ? pyre _ po '@ .at, “ 
NEW RANCH HOME teeatbn 4 ver cen inter. 000 EASY TERMS. est NICHOLIE & HARGER 
RAH BLDG. C , baits eves. ‘Call ® b Ca 10) Lo Bildor 1, Dette} Bees tell, FE 2-137 
y BEDE B RICK. YRE OLD. | aa Lge ‘bitchen IPA heat. Ne wi Bayt Pubaiy isan iow wiih laue 
Pate i, storme & screens. ¢12,800. eee 2830 'P eae 
tached garage. 1'y tha, re fe § 
VETERANS rooms, ining room, ‘living. reom -NO MONEY DOWN ered outside e pe _ corms 2 OF ult, 
283 bedrm used homes tn oye Ake area Tr ames, ea 
Bstate, 8081 Commerce Rd. EM BY & R Wilson Realty _ 36311, 36556 ~—\ODERN & BATH ON AUBURN ONTS — 0 ROOMS. Vaught st. Ow leaving town 250 
Must sell. $7000. $1800" dawn. | path & san hig Saat = Om. Worth “Gt least 86800 . a AF FAKE 
W. DINNAN 30 yrs, to y for, when you 
66 W. Huron FE 4-2877 oath for one tn 10? 4 rooms, 
“~~ $500 DOWN otesBE Tags bet # So   
Vacant 3 bedrm. Full basement, 
— yard E. side. FE 2-677 
  
Crescent Lake—$500 Dn. 
West Side Brick 
Sylvan Lake MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICH 
Newer, large 2-bedroom binga- 
low in nicg wood area and 
close to sand beach. Ideal for 
retirement or small family. 4| WEST BLOOMFIELD 7. 
near Pleasant Lek 
pied nice 2 bedroom beans, 
fcc A ee ok -hetivities 
Hu } 58183. 
call” "Don  wicholie. FE 46044. 
  
5 epecia! rooms and tiled bath 
= rst floor, plus large attic 
Dandy basement. Oi) 
: bee “To include carpeting and 
extrag.-Landsgaped jot 110x400-+™ 
$12,500 Approx. $1500 down on > 
FHA terms, 
Wonderful view of lake 4 extra 
and all oicely dec- 
basement and of! 
furnece. 9 shaded lots. A buy 
at $14,600 on easy FHA terms. 
  
    ARRO 25 ACRES | Senay 
> wee room 
2, bi ‘urnace, school 
will on equity 
for land contract some ca&sh, 
WILL SACRIFICE Equity in 9 room house. Could 
family or in- be used for large 
come, 2 full basements, ofl fur- 
on 
  ae. esos. — ~ 
street, close us & schools 
CO dtl SB ‘ Wil) take land contract for equity 
room "Deiet ranch home, Full LOTUS LAKE 
basement, 2 fireplaces, slate en- 4 room furnished cotta full 
trance, baths, ceramic tile: bath, part basement, ol! my. 
with vai Plastered walls, oak screened porch cveriodking 
- _ lastered sarege All : of frontage on canal 
it f on you: : 2 ei: Sas r ee w. tures at Ph. FE lived .. ear aft sround., 
Custom Builder FE 6-198 OPEN EVENINGS | TED AMcCULLovat REALTOR Cass-Elizabeth Rd. 
~ $300 DOWN I l pe ian rE, +2044 . MI ER Open 9 am.-8:30 p.m, Sunday 1-5 
New 3 bedroom starter home 
with basement, large lot west of | BY OWNER 
Pontiac. Don MeDonaid. OR fooms & bath, Attached garage. 3-2837. RETIREMENT HOME tame privileges to Willia: i. 
acres on Watkins Lake road. ue bd nearby Fenced in yard. @room, one-floor heme. 3 large Can be Fc from 12 to 8 daily, 
‘/ 1 bedrooms, 25 ft. living room, plas- | OR 3-9523. ; tered walls, oak floors, Timken | NEW ae OM HOUSE ON 
oi] furnace. House fully insulated, Woodruff Lake 2% miles 
sium storms and screens, 2-car from Highland, lot ; car 
garage Over 1\% acres of good port. Enjoy country living in 
garden soi]—just a couple of min- year ‘emma home. $7,700. No 
Near Webster School Ideal family home, — 
schoolg; bus and 
featuring 3 bedrooms, )a: 
roomy or den, full separate din- 
ing room, fireplace. automatic S 
heat and hot water, yarege 
Priced for quick sale at $12,500, 
wi 1 908 down. Imme- 
diate 8088: ony. fam- 
fly a favor, look v 
The Real Low Down On this 3 bedroom home !s 
only $500. Located within easy 
fet distanre to Fisher utes from downtown Pontiac. Full 
Price, $11,950. 
MR. GI — If = have $400 
cover mortgage 
we can move you gir this 2 trences, full ‘hasemen furnace, 
laundry trays, garage. Corner lot, paved street near high school. 
Only $10,975 — jfust closing costs 
Income from other apt. will make 
your payments 
ZONED FOR BUSINESS —- Main 
street — corner lovdfion with «# 
¢room modern home, Full 
furnace, ga-     immediate p 
Features one bedroom down, 2 
edrooms and bath up, separate 
dining room, full basement with 
—- ‘gar meee and hot wa- | 
Total price | 
gg a B hurry on this one. 
ped Nicholie, Realtor ; 49 Mt. Clemens St. 
Vorhes 
FE 4-2088 Call Mr. 
FE 5-1201 or 
  
Hempstead Elizabeth Lake Estates. 
edroo! 
Attic finished inte two lovely bed- 
rooms. Full basement, gas heat, 
gas water heater, fenced yard 
alum, storms and screens. This 
ome is newly decorated. Lake 
privileges on ‘beautiful an 
  
ig vacant roy ‘we have, the key. 
Call us today. 
roduction cost. an this for aly 
12,500 Better bh 
G.I. Resale 
Lovely five rooms & bath bunga- 
low. Living room, ayaa Coo ell kiteh- 
two bedrooms 
oors, full a 
gas water heater, alum 
storms & screens & : beautifully 
fenced backyard for the children. 
to stores, schools .and b 
line. Good north location. 
Full price $11,145 with $1,400 
down & $74 per month inc. ins. & 
taxes. 4% per cent int. 
Michigan Avenue 
Beautiful Cape Cod styled home 
Two spacious bedrooms & 6x12 ft 
tiled bath with built in vanity up. 
13x23 ft carpeted Hv room 
with natura! stoners, 
Full basement with fireplace in| 
feageation room, ofl heat, 
ter heater, alum. storms and. 
screens, shower & stool. in base- 
ment. New 1%4-car garage. Addi- 
tional vacant lot available. Nice 
East side location. Full price $14,- 
500. cash to new mortgage. 
3-Bedroom—Vacant 
Owner has just reduced price & 
down payment for quick sale. 
Three iarge bedrooms & tiled 
bath up, living room, separate 
dining room & remodeied kitchen 
down. Plastered walls, hardw 
full basement with 
cluded is a 10 i 
- kitchen cabinets and venetian 
blinds. Close to Lincoln Jr. Le iol 
New low price of $9.900 with 
$1,500 down. We have the key. 
$650 Down 
ull basement, elec. 
& coal heat. Full 
price sy, 950 
HEMPSTEAD 
102 BE. Huron 8 
Eve. FE $0510-FE 2-3971   
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
HEY LOOK! 
3850 DOWN ‘for this neat = 
home. Only 3 rooms but it’s 
culie. Has 1% car garage 
an extra large lot. 
SUBURBAN TRADE 
Where else can you find a nicé 3 
bedroom bog We with Ae knotty on 
kitchen and tiled 
with privileges, pdt KH 
paved. -<l -_ atid contract or 
smal} : 
é 3 Md 
George R. Irwin REALTOR 200 BALDY". 
FE 54-0101 
Fe aaa) oF Pe 5-360 | 
|   aas Wa-- 
  Realtor 
NICE NEIGHBORS 
ure RIGHT IN 
Evenings after 6 call 
J, 
= DIXIE HWY new gas 
rage. Just the spot for plumber, 
electrician or anyone Who would 
like to have their home and busi- 
ness where it will advertise it- 
self Reasonable price and terms. 
Or owner ynight trade. 
William Miller 
FE 2-0263 
1075 W Huron 
___ Open 9 to 9 
~JOLL DOWN PAYMENT 
oo this 4bedreom house in Pon- 
tac. ; full mare Se igearmrtion with 
ott urnace incinerator, 
jJassed in fret Ot cee garage. 
an .be used for income. Better 
hurry! 
  With this aL bedroom home near 
sher as all nice sized 
rooms, full Veiement front porch, 
3-car garage on nice lat. is 
home is priced to sell. 
Only $450 moves you Into this 2- 
bedroom ho Oil heat, fully 
insulsted, latge lot, close to 
8. Payments only $30 per 
month. = 
  OR 3-8597 | 
JOLL, REALTOR 
FE 4-456!   
Lake area. {BEDROOMS FULL BASEMENT. | 
with 3 lots §800 down. Oxbow, 
iustic Circle.   
Fr 
  WARD W. down payment for qualified GL 
HAVE phew A home with no 
down p ents, nr. Union Lake, 
East ae *hentine, Independence 
Twp., ae ile & Waterford 
Tep. be purchased on 6 
per cent "land contract, 
particulars & LTY CO. call 
oy ENTZ REAI 
1246 N. Milford Rd.. Milford 
Phone—MUtual 47652 
VALUES GENERAL HOSPITAL—On West 
Huron 8&t.,   
FHA TERMS-~West side 6 room 
home. 2 landscaped lots, 3 bed- 
— tile bath, living room. fire- 
SS sun roo! ing room, 
ftehen ‘with breakfast bar. Base- 
ment, FA oi] heat. 2-car garage. 
$18,000. 
LOOK -1If you don’t take a time 
to inspect this inside 
you cannot 
METAMORA rola north of the village, 45 acres, 4 bedroom re- 
LAKE FRONT-Nearly an acre, 
4 bedrooms, livin 
place, full size 
room, kitchen with. Davektoot rm., 
den, tile bath and lavatories. 
Basement with’ ofl —— 2 car 
garage. $26,600, term 
Roy Annett Inc. : Realtors since ood 
26 FE. Huron deral 8-0466 
Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 
  
UR HOMES, INC. 
Suburban 
Living at its $4560 DOWN-—Coz BROWN bungelow right 
on canal at Williams Lake. Clean 
condition, Needs some finishing. 
Priced at only $4,950. 
NOTHING DOWN = —_ 3-bedroom 
brick with full basement, ofl fur- 
t nace, pay street, oak floors, 
es a storms, “Only 5 per cent 
CONVERTIBLE 
24's ALL BRICK CONSTRUCTION WITH 2-FT OVERHANG GAS PERIMETER HEAT AND HOT WATER CERAMIC TILED 1% BATHS WITH TUB ENCLOSURE 
BUILT 
FORMICA COUNTER TOPS 
BIRCH, MAHOGANY OR 
O. cu ARDS 
PANELED DINING SPACE 
BI-FOLD CLOSET DOORS 
RUSCO SLIDING WINDOWS 
CAR: GAR 
BA T 
CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES 
$15,950 MODEL HOME WATKINS LAKE RD. aust hw SOUTH OF DIXIE 
OPE? SAT. AND SUN. 10-8 | 
W, W, NV, ROSS 
a ah Sl Ee #01 
: “ ‘4 
  / : f i $7. Pha FULL PRICE — Located {pn 
Michael's School district. 6 
Teen! bungalow with basement. 
Excellent condition. Paved street. 
“Only $1,509 down." 
$1,509 DOWN — — special. Over 
—— and your own 
furniture in- 
street. Good, clean bry 
apt. for tre aladed: Perea, 
condition, 
SELL OR TRADE-Lovely 3-bed- 
toom bungalow ones to the 
minute, Plaster oe firs. 
Formica kitchen, Tile bi Lake 
Petifres toa ful] basement em of} 
furnace. “Only 2 years old,” 
wilt accept housetratier, land con- 
tract, late model, car or — 
have you. Ask for Mr. Brown. 
$23,000 RAMBLING RANCH-Brick 
ery with full bath and bun; : 
two baths. Attached tw: ul 
garage. Two fireplaces. Love 
game room bedrooms, ne 
ing. ment. Excel- 
lent location, “A home for real living 
pote! H. BROWN. 1 Realtor 
        
      
-- ASSOCIATE ~ 
tees, i | asd co. 
East Boulevard 
heat ns car piece, email 
__$43 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. 
079 MEIGS ~ % nine. N OF WAL 
ton, 1 bik. of Sashabew) 
3 F.A. Heat 
wr enced corner iot 
VET 
ZERO DOWN (i PF wal rae 8 oon ttle work) 
OPEN sonBay 33   
2-063 
Plan On 
Building» 
WHY WAIT? 
Building material prices are go- roker 
oe up er you put off 
ding the more your home 
will cost, 
Wwe erect a nice 2 or will roo 
the rior with no down pay- 
men! 
so build completed home 
eae tae -or caren Give us r 
call for details e 
NORTHWESTERN HOME ee 
Office located at F C, Wood 
F. ©. Wood Co. Office Open 8 
Corner Williams Lay fa” & Mb 
j OR 31238 
ZONED. a5   
made * 
ts. owner rvoecupied ‘igen oe 
uty parior. 
$16,000. Terms to ay Sescnget 
a MAN'S HOME 
RELAXING MAN'S FLA 
utiful BRICK 
both levels. Don't miss 
m 
terms. 
Humphries 6 ON; veer 2-9236 Open Eves. 
MULTIPLE LISTING ny 
Dorris & Son 
TWO) FIREPLACES. TWO BATHE   
ti 
acoustic cellings, lake priv. 
~ WEST jm 4 BUNGALOW 
HURON 8ST. 
eatin and very livable 
screened terrace, dandy 
rage other selling » 
8, car oF trailer 
DORIS & SON REALTORS 
182_W, Huron Ph, FE 4-1557 
3-Bedrm., Full Basem’t 
Elizabeth Lake Estates   
ol rnace. 
— $1,500 down 
Only $500 Down 
Move Right In 
2 bedrooms, full basement home, 
Oll furnace full bath, oak 
om plastered walls. Near schoo 
stores. Shaded rear yard. 
ty eee No red tape 
No mortgage charges, 
CHORE: eal GENERAL REAL bag ee 
4305 Dixie ivy. 
GILES California Bungalow Vacant, 7-room, 3-hedroom 
home, pare ok # aap and 
OF puirlieges gy SR, hs 
$600 down—No | Socios ance ~ eo 
and ¢ 
  
Gein Lake Estates 
2-bedroom home with 
basement 
Lake Privileges room, 2-bedroom with full 
pasonias. auto. SO ee cer garage. 
in takefront oat Tot. st ‘st 
GILES REALTY co. FE 45-6175 221 a 
WEST SIDE 
        
   
    
         ywigher Tuy pON'tIAC PRESS, FI 
SLICES OF HAM |     
   
    For Sale Houses 43) For Sale Houses 4? 
qanerroe, PBAvEnG SEAe: 3 ; 
oF. ne COLORED G.l's rn © NO DOWN PAYMENT 
Gaylord) vasse       
  
heater, scre and 
storms paved _ CON 
>a ‘artves. See them now 
a   
       Sand beach 
z,Redtaams Sang beach, pa replace. Patio ai 490 NEBRASKA ST. 
  
     
  ~B-Q. baths. rmé- 
tea “wood construe” | o, phone PE E4870 tor appoisiment 
J ‘oi TWO LEVEL : .- 
6 Room lakefront with cut ~ WALLED LAKE 
"EASE orate’ of'room | roomy, 2 ame ek rane CLM, Bid, Rea tie ford Nextra bedroome. | Owner transferred. Sucrifice. 616, e Community ae 
i LAKEFRONT INCOME UN ION LAKE   
  
  : Only $12,500 with good terms Owner transferred out of state 
on Lake Orion, Nice view. — will sacrifice this neat little Ee gas furnace, Garage | Lots of trees. Could be used home. Just across road from lake. 
€ ; $0100 Low FHA. Terms. i . oe R, family without any Ideal for retired couple. Large 
wer . Of heat. # ©. CHICAGO. New 2 Bedroom! S- ee, — seen ee 
& —_ p} ee teu | : 102 &§ Broadway frigermaee | included for only $7850. 
, ; AY . , 4 4 
j VEN ROAD. 2 bedroom Lake Orion MY 2.2821] "EXIBREE & GREGG = BEG. tdemg room Isle. Bots. 1319 Rochester Rd. 1565 “tae Vi Ra 
tertor ready for plaster and trim Takeville - OA 82543 | gy PIO" | A 33316 Large lot. $6960 with low dows 
payment . AS§ STEAL.        J. © HAYDEN, Realtor BE Walton PE 8-0441 Open Eves | 
MIDDLETON   West a }-bedroom brick. 
In good neighborhood. Only 3 
ears old. All newly . decorated 
e side and out. Has large living 
Ceramic tile bath. Cupboards 
        
          
  
      
  
    
  
                   
       
    
      
    
    
  
  
  
  
        
        
    
  
      
    
    
      
          
    
  
               
               
  
      
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
  
      
  
        
  
  
  
    
      
      
  
            
  
  
  
    
    
      
  
  
    
  
  
  
    
      
           
          
    
        
     
    
         
    
    
              
      
        
  = IN ~-l aplenty m the kitchen, with a 
SPECIALS! IRWIN full basement Large fenced rear STATEWIDE pao mB igs ea 
‘WILLIAMS LAKE — GJ ae Pag brows Teitelinn Coase | Re “1 at - | FOR COLORED ~ $800 Down- Closing costs only. Attractive! Shao cirnee ¥ or swap for size. FE 8-0743. 34 Excellent 4bedroom home 5 room bungalow. 2 bedrootns ’ seit s of 
: ef on Ferry. street. Wail-to- and large living reom, Utility LADD Ss. . F : envenai: 
Le wall carpeting. Full bath. 13 x 10. Partial Basement. At- For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 sg ; 4 ; Basement with gas furnace tached garage. $8,750. 4284 Dixie Hwy. OR 31231 ~ 4 
+ - Sosa Oot ic | (ew — CHEROREE mms 3885 Lapeer Rd. FE 5-0292/7 ROOMS. % ACRE LOT. $200|3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, srtri og 4 : LACOTA STREET down. Owner, P.O. Box 3535. knotty pine living room & carpet- : - FOR COLORED — $760 Down - Beautiful new custom brick @ RM. MODERN YEAR ROUND ing, gas heat, water softener, * 18 THE “BIRD TO SEE = Located on Osmun street ranch home in Carl Bird's new ‘ or iO ore home. Watkins Lake, areal buy storms & screens, = with : : 
. ie qo bath. Base- Seger ey be etd he Here is the best value ever. Va- a co : EE VILLAGE INN, 
2: * ideier ater earafe. Os Feeds cach Tene TOE | pant and redecorated like new. 2) rm “medere house im city.| “Large & small parce! TAVERN : ° fireplace doll kitchen, 2 ce-| bedrooms and bath down and 2 . CUCKLE é + lenges lot. This home is rame ‘tie, bathe, alum! Br $1,500 “do R REALTY The only hotel in. this vil- r peat and cleai — Must be Sout susl- eatin eat oer | et Le Poe ote _— $11,- rm. renob type home. 236 N. Saginaw lage in the rich Thumb of 
£ J ios we appreciated. Bie ails eaaen MT high ass ant = Real mA pies a homes, UNION ix Ar Co 4 rE ido ive te male, < onrpery. Altres, & ‘ : sement f t ea — Cozy 4-room 
Leslie R. Middleton pied Not ee UPAR Sate Posie | PW. DINNAN | Pangan. Siac fan “ie RNIZATIONS | ase Be cesta Saeulen Ss ‘ gorse arge corner lot, stree JRORER 188 N. JOHNSON oe biatk é Etope toca” Prone down To settle estate. os Wo Wuita_Pal-canct_er Fe 40e ni, on Mae tome mORGAN oN sion | sme BOF, ils big, commer: and < =) Saar mae - €. 2 a creation - 
Thanksgivi Special =a pon Fe 36412 Ms on na - ‘ ROCHESTER Area — Modern 2) Srea, 60 acres with small lake. 600 down, Get the details now. anksg ng Bac a SYLVAN SHORES Pi e 2-€412. John Kingler, ' bedroom ranch. This home has an % hour from Pontiac Will be z ‘Built in 1064, ms, nee Seoutital Sench tpe seme | poe Huron a i all new Youngstown. Kitchen, 9e8| shown by appointment, Phode FEL BAR. LA fiving ‘room, ‘kitchen with in complete. ‘with 3. bedrooms, "3 | © ROOM SHELL HOME WITH #3600 ft. of living space ‘for only | $0453 days and PE 5-6283 after ; KE, HOME — 
ar ee heat tone rei fall “baths “kitchen ‘ult-ins,” 10 Slerec, a betspen, mies ota! 0. Terme, : =P. AND COTTAGES De ANTIOUF IDAIRE, lake. privileges. Pull price, only| fu {amily room Greplsces. _washing, bow], PE 17-8786. , LINCOLN HEIGHTS — | 4 bed- For Sale Farms = 48 | Th's is & very attractive and well, Gas range ........ 7,290 with E-Z terms. We belp| rec. room 2 car attached pias- | SOUTHFIELD TWP. IMMEDIATE| 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Daily | rooms, living rm., dining rm., a os ne ay bip_Ave FE 25008. ¢ down payments. tered garage 24 x 30. Call for session 4 bedroom frame on aneen Full basement. GAS heat.|3 | ACRES 2 ear: at meena OO buroer ........ Are You Looking.. information acres, 132’ by 640’. Large attic, EXCELLENT buy at $13,000. Only moo Pon oy For Sale Clothing fo couch |... are 
Bro tees ae ete coetey) ohn K Irwin-& S stun, storms ond sereens, Sear | MODEL HOME} # Ng Ma on ng 2 ag Jit | pon cours, omar sruexnar, | VS BOY, ante = - Vv a "eee . . is . 2 ie és 
what at you're ooking tot Give bes pedis ons freen Inkster and Northwestern. . NO DOWN PAYMENT GI homes. is close to Lake Orion. ae aatG Black Sealine. FE 8-8727. roite resgpeny a. Price $13,000, Open Sunday 1 to 5. $9600 sro “tn side si Xbedroom at re ft d at onl se 
CRAWFORD AGENCY |, 02 West iron street | 2 OR 3 é Bedroom '#a.3000 Nt > ove, Saree sieve * The ‘resi | Pants Phone FE 5-0447 or FE 2-403) PERSONALIZED HOMES VA only $72 Down é i tate alone is worth than | a MY 31143 609 E. Flint st. Eve, Dt 6.370 . . ll. Call Child pric 
Joslyn Road & miles north of CLARK RE AL ESTATE Ponilac. TO BUY, TO SELL, TO TRADE 
, emp eto} | DLORAR, BUILDING co. 1362 4 Fi “Open 0: 9-9 ; i . EB 23-9122 ; MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE apps vs cn oe J —— . FREEZERS ALL bes ; 
Sashabaw Road BY OWNER 5 BEDRM pObERe Gt, BO: NOTHING eg ttt MONT: NTH. ideal hunting. Own- OPEN "TIL 9° 
sae: $6,300 vere commercial, ane home, ome _« acres MY Meaty ey en” kM on a ‘oe 2STALL SERVICE sTA- 
& vd. terrace. 2 extra lar, » Very nea 7 . BY OWNER EAST SIDE MOD. : bedrooms. Pull beth. Living room,| ®2¢ clean Would be ideat for | “CRGR" HEIGHTS BUNGALOW SYLVAN LAKE BY OWNER EAST SIDE MOD- | iiucCK FARM — In ideal location. dining room & kitchen” Base.| office or small business. Only! 4 pedroom % § Sam Warrwick has new 3-bedroom | ¢rp 2 famiw or 4 bedrm.. 2 tiled| west suburban area. Selling b ment, Forced air oil furnace. New 8750 dow upstairs "ideal for Trpaaslon Cre betes, Wesevel vanes Some, Bre roa and sitcnens. Garage. FE) dirt, peat, and marie. About 100. pe  e é water heater. Newly deco-/ K. [.. Templeton, Realtor rge living room piace. peer garage, 3 Ooo yards left. 11 acres with 2 LBASE. Zz ; rated and insulated throughout. 20 Orchar a a Lk Ra. rE | eee picture window. ror. t. seeded lot, exclusive commu- bedroom bow penes, large Ii | bedroom modern _raneh—home—¢}- red egy ae Good investment st this price. r 6 FE 23-9502 #4963) dining room, also carpeted. En.| ity. sewer, water, ved streets, coy a room, lovely kitchen | car garage and other outbuild- f pm. FE poe after 5 ‘ bee bad tr tor = per — aicasd front porch wonderful for | '#**¢ vaseeges. me ge Sun- £ to. al] iarg zooms, —_ < below Owner retiring, call PE 8-1448. 
Rae _—- ~ AVON TWP. perce he fe fan A ful pink’ bichea rE 2-2105 flowers galore 86 Peach St. Bar- Phone ie 7 STANDARD OIL CO. ™CE RGE BLAIR 746 bed ary ae St.- Livernois - Aw with-Navely view of flower gar- 6 MOb. OLD, Ld OLD. LARGE @ROOM. Bi- Lng — 3 Fd payment, TAYLOR Realtor. Two stall stations for lease Fi- 
REAL gurms. 3 igo brma. vain & wi | fenced In atin veorsey “eretG | simost un note of task if "eptts - % Sale Business Property 49| sraiiabie Lane Orion and Lapect “ “? rhe. Ot * 8 Diste BUY pramgt >it] ke at pa, Pullgas, deep well.| REAL BEAUTY in Immacuiaie | orchard. 2" fireplaces, 2. livin ra edar Island Shores ~~~ | areas. Call ae ays or — Eves. OR 31708 car tr gar solid 6D Wot Sinise | “ee baat unite “owner. transferred. modern mia Deacasent dar w perr?. “perry. “Liversy, ba14e ON NontH | A £06 te 2 all bidgs. newly painted, vacant. [ALMERS DRI i contract. 2590 a: large IL DINGT30-3 S m 1 "1 a $12, low dn, paymt. 418 486- the home e with DIGNITY ithe tr tai pa Lake,. Mich. ict. “a i my. ey $23,000, VACANT ® fae tm hc Sony ah & isk Hes eC l- atir ed 
ad cl ren w e proud ag hs k . 
: M to call home. Those extra fea- ’ Whit Lak fronts e. Brick front. Ample grav- = 4 K cLAIN MORTG : ite Lake el parking. Springfield ‘Twp. M 3 poe es AGE = found only tm well-cared for] MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Lovely moder 3 bedroom home.| 900 85.08 down "OR 391f3 unt a an 3s EA iving room with fireplace and - ™ . HP ba ol Sunes Satin. Paid Established tm 1916 pe cn ee ese tee SHINS ROOM | bis / | Sandow Priced attractively $2.00 | For Sale or Exchange 50 vosmenp. Ms, experience niger: IMMACULATE — Little home tn ' holiday time, Kitchen with eat- pe owe. | terme sary For information call . — ¥ me ing space. 2 very lovely bed- Dorothy Snyder r Lave a i MR as geen eS . the country. App. % mile N. of y NGEr | “sale "| 2-81 alm Pontiac. Lot Be 3 Ue fenced. Lee ee exe large closets, REALTOR EST. 29 YEARS ole _ot_tote. PR 3008 | Fae Zeccieen, coll Oe r. Bridges Nice trees garden ar ga- 7001 Highland Rd. (M659) usiness : 
fe ome tear “tarage, Just| 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE nef lot fom nicely fa yg gy oa LOOKING for & good invest- Po. EM 34303 or MUtual 4-6417 os Opportunities 51) wet est : ID WAKEFIELD DROP- home for only 41.500 — . full Sessment, Plastered ae ment? Large family home 8 FURNISHED APTS. BLDG. IN- snout’ € mien’ tram by, evga bd ce $390 $350. ‘OR 3-487 iN er oat et. EXPANDABLE BUNG oak floors of course. Real iwvine Pee 4 bedrooms, living Income Property 43A cutis refrigerators & stoves. — terms, for" sale or iene. IRONER AND NEW SOTISSERTE NORTH END — Well putt 3{ This pleasant 5 room west side| MA” area that has gienty room, | family dining room Old furnishings, several antiques, P. W. DINNAN , | MOSER AND KEW & | pedrm home on nice quist streei:| Bome cen grow as your femily m for growing children. caraat Pries -teaenna ie “wR weds good ¢ but _s ber| ow wonon . sprin cheap. OR 3-2204. Lovely uitchen, hardwood floors, ws. It now nice sized H . Quick sale to. settle crtate, . INCOME gain at $10,000 with’ $2,000 down. HURON PE +1577 : rid > YOU HAVE #0) AND WEED A HAVE $25 AND ae j ceramic bath, completely Fooms, onthe first floor—the OYT REALTY ~ $6,500, 4 apartments on N. Saginaw St. Lake Orion Realt West Side Locati TE ea nt 5S? , Oreretulied a3 sulated, alum storm sash. Good. large upstairs can be made into 254 8. Telegraph d Oil fired hot water heat. $2,000 | sq2 s. y avon, ii dining suite. Sunda hewn the one mm our tiving 
conditicn. $11,800 — 41,000 da, | 3, Pedroome when the peed arises: | PE 20040 PE 200| SPOTLESS SROOM home. | own. ee | ARE VOU TOONS FOR ae | so" wen eine’ nee tome | omy, Fave pm. hol B.Cohambia | Wo", See eh ot : : tiful living room, kitch- 30 some rent beate A - e corner 7 PidcE LOGERN BEDRGSU chair very m t USUAL ~ attract! Recreation room in basement, 1 J ‘ On Orchard La Mi Mi we o 
Te thie Poem blian tawee weve | car garage. Only 3 blocks’ to, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE = cam supe cupboard and CUCKLER REALTY eninge Cette” hecen gt! | Doctors clinic, endeouben ‘or suite Exe condition. $40, PE | after Spm ihe soece. Pa Om 3-083 
Ae a Pisce of on ien'cn” terme!’ What a home : average, bedrooms. Plastic OE en Huron “Sont vcesatig, 100 sot ae ee cme 5 RM. CORONADO SP. ‘AT- io: ition, " . bar, eup- ; LOP! tile bath Utility room, oil H Sn Ace Fe er. Excellent cond: : 
egeras & work space. Lovely gen| “alms! : F | | | heat, Oak floors, acar gh F & GOOD MAN Se ND Paul M. M. Jones, Real Est, | 2B. OR <frTER M. | _ $806 = 20 2 is panes vit 8 marl! 3 DEDRM . That, oi _ pike a Lake Privileges, Full or Sale Lake Prop. 44) 20 1s '& good opportunity, if on HURON SET, STUDIO | LARGE CRIB & pode: and jalousie win- - M. RANCH eine you heard was — Approximate- are over 30 & havea sma t| PE mee = 8-1275 — OA 8-9653 couch, 740 sq i “tile. FE 5-8500.| brand new $15.95 connecting e Dcar ga- ORCHARD LK = the m dropping out of i i. 600 down — $80 per ATTENTION TRAILER OW to invest, yeu can Bave &@ good | PIECE Si oiture. 42 Orchard rage. Barbecue end: lamp LK. AREA the PRICE of this 5 bed- Duck Lake lote Elecrricity wen. | mcome. Please state age, quaifi- _ Sale Land Contracts 52| ovfit Double dresser. beskoass iEAVING #1 VING STATE — 5 Owner trans.) Fronting on Commerce Rd. room @! : catio: on Wilt sacrifice. 416600 geen | rant ou can buy this delight. side of the city convenient LAKEFRONT you can Hicgiie pamp & septic tank to-| isc Press Fplerences—write Pon- Sire Per Fa 4 j ful 3 bedroom ranch home for | - everything. You will be| afford’ “with 3 large bed- Room for 2 . SALE LAND CONTRACT. BaL-| Pearson Parsiture, a Oscheen tk, | tothe thai Decks home. you “Baye been] faa pomamnen,cout af reproguc: | ome" otiere for, oniy Suseb| Sema eatuullt,eerpeted | Dorothy Snyder Lavender | ph ORCED TO SELL | sace due soot ot, per cont. 5] Ave O ore | Coat a closets hel; 950 g rooms é ear old contrac Sse Te Se 
( Phedfaa FP aetna ‘ire "cap| Battastatomey sia, bame | onl te fer deg and modern ichen. ‘Bat. | REALTOR HT. 29 TEARS | control ‘“<"Tnam forced’ to_oel|| fiee0™, Tzoom frame hous ge: |7 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE, | sabine. Small ” ats, on eas ’ extra  stoo 7001 oe an r, 
rent Mann ahchee cathe | terms: Make your inspection ~~ ! THROW A Lotds of closeis. uulty: eM 3au03 "or MU eealt| i'm well established = mache Gits-aoos oo colle table “3 Gecorstor ta - patio ea ——| » . r lamps, 
sills, ge ey Ful ote al ghee yard. Lake Lots aed Lake P riv, lease win’ be slow, ‘re oer a = Money to Loan_ 53 Pearsoo’ Penk, ture. «2 Orchard 
beautiful rec. rm. with picture REALTOR PARTRIDGE PART ay! Call 1-3 to acre. Clarkston. Schools, entory of merchandise and (State L d Lendéfs) Lk Ave. a v rE 6.2008, windows and brick bs FE churches, shopping at door. Wind- equipment, Call Mr. Best, FE rte - 1 Chick: ic replace bs 4-358) 1050 mp HURON eee ved street. $1. 2-0181. * LOANS $25 § xX '2 RUGS Wi ACE, $15.95 ing Lane corner of Hickory Gro’ open front bam't. Yes -- it has a OPEN "TIL or spend « restful evening ELIZABETH LAKE ES- a nee 995 full price, DERN 7BAY pAXTE Reversible Me Imported,| _% mile east of Teleg ve - poops Laces thor ae gereee. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE alone. This-3 bedroom brick a ann reduced for ard. hy ee Peration “avers “averag . i, | (C1 AXTER 8 vin NE seg | $34.95 Axminster $40 98 Rug | Lon SNACK BAR, 2 ry $ib 4% PER CENT MORTGAGE— ranch home will eater 10/ ome Beautiful tities roca, | BEAUTIFUL GLOPING LOT—ON| plus per month fou vent, eeuces 42 Orchard Lake Ave Purattare, | FE _2-3286. : WEST HicH. VACA your every mieod. Boasting 3/ = wiih. enteanes eheesl and © Gammon La Or, We tron | lessen dor pies df vatenent ans ; : Ave TINOLEOM @ + AINT SALE Hi Eanbg —rocaeiiely iandicaped| ck ansh, 2, bedrooms pins) foszimeey,cueeramig bats, | fatal irepace""Duiog | Sify Mice eek, sod” veach | _Intenory daly” Pe LAID-OFF — |" Ef SinPWon ure, manecy | ites vette X Sapee surroundings fe. aad living ‘Tome’ both see own, 00. | HARDWARE BUSINESS s6-YRE- GNAVOR COMMINAS -S-bedrms., an e itv. kitchen with vent fan. birch’ | nice recreation room, it. of- CEDAR ISLAND LAKE LARGE NESS 50. YRS. : bed & mattress. OR 3-4834. INATION RA- 
place, Pl aden player, “Te boards, basement with rec. ares, | fers living at its best. The A aos vafodern with doable eer "usd" Sears ee aces tan sauiteat mock ee, pe mise WOR 9x12 Felt Base Rugs $3.95 $00. ay eg onameiean: dio & TV. Carpeting throughout,| S88 heat —are but a few fes-| 2car attached garage belps| closets. Plastered walkin et Oxbow Lake Rd. Milord”” "| for quick sale” Write ‘Poutieg aes nee $ $3.93 ost ¢rapes Kitchen bas breakfast) Soytt CALL as FULL INFOR- | to shield the private fenced floors. Open patio with at- a ee Press’ be: sale Write Pontiac wear MAIT) MOTOROLA 31 INCH (TABLE MO! b dishwasher, "disposal a| MATION yard. The location—Drayton tached, car arage Me DUCK LAKE AREA, 6 RMS. it; _Press Box $8 ALCOHOL. Ht. TEST” el TV. tienilent ondition, $50, charmin home offered at $18, i Woods. The full price —$23,- lots, all fenced. F baths natural fireplace, oi! best. I'VE GOT 2 VACANT COMMER. — CASH LOANS — 1 OLive_2-4021, 750 £2,500 dn. HOLIDAY PARMS | 500. The time to call—now! $18.950. e ull price, Auto. not water, 1 car garag cials in A-1 shape, priced right, RUBBER SASm PALAT GAL. $3 75 iON. EACHED HOG 
- 2 pescoom reneh. Jest 3 years | ae down’ payment or wii and don't know wiwbal tb de with| No ma vob Payment at 4 SA pe eee 2c | desk, 2 limed oak (oe 
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor | por, ‘arge'et ¢i'per'cearnct’, OWNER Cr Pte ttyce | Sie aher'Saee te OF) Smite seen, Pi sucae | ESTE gTOU ane page | rpg tt aren Pm Cane | fea thie Reprana ble mapper simres | Eee See oa | brick Sous, dea! fy ena LAP™ ORTON |Site eal i oy | apatites aos: S| wit reeptay ow nae id Fj amily. Beautiful 1 ivi 4 CUSTOMER PARKING LE AVING room with, natural ‘bric bedroom takefront, vear around LETS” TALK LOANS TO $500 18 other oF sets a Lee me DISPOSE OF  LARG |LONG LAKE FRONT fireplace, Modern-to-the-min- Sing enclosed porch, newly dec- BUSIN ” MADE QUICKLY aranteed. 30 days, at Obel a in pine furni- Attractive 3 bedroom home, large | ute Kitchen with | builtin -orated ol) heat, gmail down pay: USINESS - Q | _S$30' Bitsabetiy take Ra, Pieces Hractive discount living room with fireplace. cove i\CITY oven and r Formica ment Owner MY 33 . 20 GAL. BOTTLE Gas 1, e Store, Com- ceilings basement. auto. ot] heat countertop. Birch cupboards. CAKEWDOD ae — NEW ae mean GEOL GAS WATER _metee. Ba a eget Sere. Comm son. Breezewas ss otec "CA Liecar fe | Here ts a loyely home on 2 ide bedrooms. large clos- _ lakefront, 3-bedtoom brick. Ex. $300,000 Value : BUCKN ER oe 2 BD -Muniro Electric NEW | PORTABLE SEWING MA- 
| Bis [= ieee wel aroneea and large vanity. Utility Car garage $22,800 He tecides,| Tf vou are familiar with the FIN ANCE GOM PANY | “neste “at oe is Several used Ty amaiic wash 20 YEARS OP SERVICE ‘DINTE LAKE FRONT room face brick, full insule- walls, Oak feor rete] FE See, . elated is upsiodate ere ie ¥ Bieciric oo. * od: Munro! gov Y's REPLAC CeMnny ines . 8. AC] stor “ 5 
FIRST OFFERING | Sens Pun’ price errant? cond Noniiving room. with den. | ea #80 ity gb00 dew at ROS ‘eee bee ae | Step, modern building. The Pian i RCA R TY saa Uae | % Oakland Aten ee pe Tae 
besten, Sergey bet, ts — nog hee ganseetng | ABBSteTmtame Oe wld | ethiue ate ern, Sns| pear ene ata aes RAYTON PLAINS dnt nation ete Meta a | a fo! ' s io 
basement,“ ot! aber’ room. fal screened porch. Immacujate 5 M50 Priced from $3 to s8.100 'y appointment. gle & & Appliances 422 W 3 Boog NOVEMBER DAZE room, 1! baths. garage con, mi | newly painted basement} RAY O'NEIL, Realtor Owned-developed-sola bv as & EUREKA Sweepers, 
ner lot, carpeting gid Graper with new gas. furnace, 2) 262 8 Tgeere Rd. Oven.98 TY COOK INC. <3 Age ee {De BRIGE TWEED CARPET CARPET cw. all attachments ... $ 38.00 This lovely bone Socend car garage and large well | FE 3-11 2028 | &M_26532) Over 10-8 Datiy Rest This Winter & pad. Like new. FE 5-6673, | *SA Whtripoo} | Retrigerators.     
    canal 1 ' landscaped lot. See this a | $50, To $500- 36" OE RANGE, GOOD CONDI. New Guaranteed ......... 
Priced for gunk ss oe W at $14,950—cash or terms. For Sale Lots 46| But in the spring be set for a COMMUNITY LOAN Cor GE RANGE D CONDI-| RANGES, Gas, New, Deiiveran te je with : Ie busy season in this Drive-In res-| 39 © LAWR EN FE ae 44-6831. Guarante: 
is: taurant. Separate home included RIENELY SERVIC“ — - BOTTLE TOVE. WASHERS ree D Delivered. . 8 ft, d ForTUc Lice REAL ESTTAE | OPEN EVES STRIKE IT Sy AND SUN 14-ACRE SITE Pte, tet cf, blehway Quick Cash Excellent co condition. PE ¢6717 te: | Guaranteed From sy" $ 88.00   
  
  Lovely. 3 bedroom brick bun The ee 8 4 YDS” oF ED Goop HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
   
   
    
                 
             
         
  
        
  
            
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hing for only $10,009 down Selows Wasemnent a fit OT 9 LOOMFIELD H ‘ 0 EAR Fra ara at oe -,7 RICH... oOo eae Sina e - : SS PBbebife gt artes | 51 w, noncy Pe 41038 piles sine with small’ dooe with this 3 famity tmeome 6 CHICAGO beautiful 1% acre parcel MICHIGAN BUSINESS $25 TO $500 dit os PEED rey eee | wit J ord. | NOW Is THE FE 
Eo yment or will rent with op- close to Auburn Heights,| Model Home. 5. pete: Base- located at the corner of PEE On your own signature, auto or QUEEN WASHER, | ‘away that sewin chit Sour payment or close to Auburn Heights, | Model Home. Dunstan, Road ‘and Marien | SALES CORPORATION | other seourty. “Up to” ‘month orgs wife has wanted for so” fong. Sylvan Vilt turning the owner $180 per Drea a pemmeees see, SOK LANDMESSER, BROKER | {9 ‘repay. OUr’ service is Quick, | $250.98 Nees alts iasner -- 118] A small deposit wil hon {enki NOTHING DOWN — GI's 7 ven yiage | mo. In addition it has a) WILL DUPLICATE ed and overlooks of ~ 1510 8, Telegraph, Rd friendly and helpful. Phone PE | $319.95 Isomtite Gomme”. $148! Christmas ‘at your Singer “Bene ben's odern home at)  Likenew 4 bedroom ané 1'2 | __ 2 story heated workshop. ibe “finest Bloomfield His - | PaRK aT our - Boor | 58121 or vistt us at_our office. |” Many Others to Choose From | ig Centers. 102 N. Saginaw or wt ner fot nye ares gyi weal make hechetearoom Hult price $12,066 ey terme $8,900 “Piatainfag elect parcels to ae H wayne Gal . re Notions apt, © Pe Featporenthaftateneer i! Carpet itatace'aute’; | we auy tau cowreacre | LOW FHA TERMS |  beimactrdead at"sidess _ ome & Auto jin x enter dint | ont inde enem Deyments only $8850. Monthiy Toms have s ledgerock fire- ASK FOR TOM BATEMAN Located North of Walton off Baid- tor, immediate. eons ie LOAN CO. 215, GALLO ae ee springs and ‘ manin a on Mding taxer ond insurance,” lin also recreation room, j "CHA YDEN Rea (ATERPRONT LOTS NEAR ge 1_N. Perry st. (Comer Pike) t9. Gen be een Sead youth bed with mattress, | jalousted window porch and N, Realtor | 7-WATERFRONT Lots: “ : a : zbalinius snes pin “Fe son evue after 5 p.m. PE 2-0084. 518, PE S400 a Pare stiiet © call Fm t2033, 7, CO garage, Yard is nice- ‘Bate nan 86. Walton PE e041 | Sylvan Lake. Pull price * $3,500. Is THE “BIRD’ TO sEE | Borrow With. Confidence NER DUST HER M OIL OR GAS . ! 500 oil burner used. 3 mos Sell $100.| ” 
A. : ’ cromad oan for cation WEST SIDE INCOME § LOTS AVAILABLE TO BUIL WORMS, BAIT — “A =e oo HEATERS 
WBS SEG, AMPSEN, ees SEM oo oe |" seh etr ne | SPORTING GOODS | Household Finance | 7RRgF REG Fou wigs are sear” ames Say ° : i 1704 srg i Rd. Near Downtown REALTORS GE 4008 3-room apartments Up “auto privileges. Contact Mr. Fish. | This ts the tops in any bait and 3% 8 Corgurstion of Pontiac | FOUND aT Fuk 8. SALES BE cost cee MY 
. ; * rge story brick house LAG PURO PIS 4-US sem en: a “ritel % edible eS | hn we ec ovER ZED BUN goee (LA teres een ase | Bee gach |Folte Rae uR aera) Het 'gitan wat aby af] CET CASH QUICKLY | | bavi aie ot uae ea aaa : “| minnows Prope 2 aa DRIVE BY Sisams beat. foo fired om EN . Srenees: pire SO conditioned Ls de Hosen "Fishing Up to $500 Vint our dept. for 
345 Exmoore — tn Elizabeth Lake enclosed and mang OPEN WEST SIDE - a eaine= Regret al OWNER. tackle and equipment. ‘55 Chev, > ’ 24 MO TO PAY Hr : ‘Iv antennas, $9.95, Estates. then call FE S6i8i tor| features Priced with terme SATURDAY 2-6 2 bedroom bungalow, Living | aaa pote | fuck with tanks. Modern 7 room n ie, bay, sell of trade. Come WALTON TV ‘us to gre ertek a thru. It's a 4 Call us for # showing. SUNDAY 1 Sede in he, Teme | ares tar Wnderiend nie arena | Mey, Neco er eptnet Fours a a barking’ Phone Pm S495 oe tree alton Bedroom brick home, FHA terms The home of your dreams can be| 8nd dryer in utility room. Saree oe peered call ettee 4) ey Oa” scat — Seek he "OPEN MON SAT, *Y rE agus $16,500". ees : WM H. KNUDSEN © found at exclusive Pleasant Lake oa s farere. Corner lot. _P.m. OR 3-4228 too yon —— plus stock. o MON..SAT. 6 z= 2 
Pox menuton ah aN ne | fait ocee tacoma” canes GOING ...GOING | "rns Loan Company)’ nies x2 Bonne! REPOSSES 5 egra = ic ranc ww a J eee ™ . . 
E renee ate Povves : FE 16° garages and basements, These | LONGFELLOW SCHOOL Beautiful 100x160 ft. bullding sites “C” BAR—TRADE TLY | * aot stburn Beiamts ou Auburs = Privileges, 60 homes with the most wonderful} 3. bedrooms with 12x18 itv. in & good borhood On paved! gi0.909 4 : TV Specials 7 fen wor her j tises, features can be duplicated or we ing 12x13 dining rm. streets Slightly rolling. Excellent ties gob St we home in 14” (1950 Models) $117.95 & $128.95 Tsaeaapeace heat, BUY. OF THF MONTH will build to your plans on a and oxi? kitchen. Full base- reolation tent Only 3 left at the t at hee’ o Full ran gaa : I lake frost or lake privileged lot met Fis oll heat. Priced 1.500 each A real buy with only oy ee Nore. 5 . Juke z = s DOWN ( DELIVERS 43 : See this neat as & in sl rorm | -of your choice. DIR 'S: Out at $11,500 on term $150 down broctlbapeagr ar. Ha om No as City. | 202 PONTIAC ‘STATE. BANK BLDG. good S bungalow with ‘oak 2 bed-| Elizabem Lake road to open 1 herang trestles Tne ee TF Tao om hae ear Service Store : -Hiltz yooma, and | basement, in Water. | signs at “Pleasant Lake IVAN W L ADD S SS ance. oer, TEAGUE FINANCE ASE FOR AL OR BOB 
2: ie $8350. Price onl} BUDGET HOME SC HR a 4286 Dixie Hwy or 3.1331] becity sof 200, Tens fond, (Pheonnte 202 N. MAIN Attachments, 0, late ‘ iw. FE 5-6181 . : | sel 2 bedroom ranch located on | 3685 Lapeer Ra. FE 5-9262 orn, aie S10 000 b 4 Bi tag ROCHE ESTER, M ICH. a a caer erly near Northern SAKWOOD MANOR AN AT: RAN ATTRA % 000, LOA ose tachment ; Plastered walls, oak Prosi | < AC WS os TO ste : * gas heat. Just $400 down with | REAT. TOR FE FE Spread _peieiioges iat wa TT naan take REALTOR PARTRIDGE v1 : ] Lean go ‘moot payments “OPEN EVENINGS. & 8 SUNDAY re wwe by G aves HOUSEHOLD s00 = LISTING SERVICE Sullivan Lakefront OPEN Tih § ON | Eh. Rochester OL 6o7l, OL 1 Located on Second bona off Jos- » Why Pay Rent? = bore ABL irae ot v WHEN U NE D lyn. New 3 bedroo fall base- down. Compiotety furntshed. pis J SITE FOR rage tN store. pendent, Se the |~ a, TO $500 
ag a Fai UT Reh | A ettge™ neue Taeg rene | BEACH, Gases DOWN , ruly' nice home on ~ : 
So. good” bathing Geach, sehoal’ pus w| R. J. VALUET, Realtor State TEINANCE ¢ cog pater. : PE 44607 by door. Complete price. 81.800. | 945 KLAND AVE. i. __ FE: §-0603 FE 4.1574 ‘ _.. | Win METAL BEDS 5 aPaina JIM WILLIAMS Dorotiiy y Snyder Lavender | _MuummsLe Listiho SEnvice FOR CASH IN A|~TO CLOSE ESTATE REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE Ret toe Highland “Rd. (M50) a tan Oss FO, Box| Fark HURRY,-seill things furnishings, vy hall 1483" Pn cele | Ph, EM Mutual 4647 . saben Classified Ads, | ERsed, (gr tmmediate ‘aie. 6s : x, ie ball St. : 
           
         
   
  
      
           
  
  
  
    
          
            
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  | uetion. Sales 5089 Dixie way 
Drayton pias 
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Every Saturday ...7 p.m, 
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Olen Rlando 
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Bait Minnows, Etc. 65B   
  
    
  
    
  
  
  
  
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    GALLAGHER’S 14 5. Huron PE +0886 1 “MORE LOADS in, 4 
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pincins 3 burr att Menger | | * ct APSENenly any Lote of wire fencing, small farm thing — Want Ads give 
i, Syrian sao Bs dishes & nice m Bud you ACTION. Dil ae ee mot’ wilt amu Aueton bn a 
Just just Root “Ok ‘Oxi TH, ~ if you're ‘or henter, 
want what we offer at atic: 
‘i Loads.       brakes. sf gteherrgeny eee 
ev eM EM 39838 or OR ; METOR® nTWi 
  
  
    
  
  
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         PEER a 431 oti eal , igtee! merant uipm cour B ee sist = rh So hee ' #13 00 ty" eine $1.00 r ma, un, Pi Gia Sal Saas We gee 
— : frye pened » Sweet cider : 
ao CASH AY. WOLVERINE cect of Milford Welween Buras | sect pare aly aeven' oans aTOR, ORE fe: atin ProMORIL ES, WMELS on : “| W 4 LUMBER a. Le Duc : — HOUSETRATL ILER, EL a NEW) FE 23915. FE 2. 16 p.m. PROVAL Me GES AA. 2 ‘ 4 320 FE 2.0784 © 19EE by MEA Berrios, ina. : ; 0 bu: 0 over eaymente EM 3-5 ? ame DRIVI ARIZO A a“ be "8B SURE 
3 LUMBER SSAV  fiaweemean tele gf Meshevge at es | Bo, P Sashes ik Room or a. OR — hath A OR a . BS UNT (G TRAILER FOR SALE. 5 uate. medel get IDR HONEY RIN ¥ +EN TO : PRICES © Sa Xe) cy : ig a uurorain aue Rawal ay To Ss Hl STZ oe Banté weatier howe TOME E - ye try Co, B16 Commer KING set “It you look’at it dena, let side, it looks like you weigh | spas 2m gore.) #..0,2° ie oa me "gous TROGE GONG "N ORTH Pant 
— 4x 8x 34” te | two pounds lighter " _334 NL Pontiac ‘Chief, ever ya | toed. etther_ wa: J Bo ike: pe. 41 ( Foo on a. eee y like new, . aie | 919 8. - me ‘ ham 
oo RITCHEY | PLASTERBOARD |——GDECTATS : : SP ay ae aaa ie "Se apee aA ekar |, 36 CADILLAC z ITS, @. i 4404 ; i * Se 8 rooms, ” SOE MERAEPANT GES 05 WOT. $1.25 Sale Musical Goods 62; Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 | sssics wate 965. Complete line” of Feavellng WwW es pi conn "EROS “TNC. ai point cabinet sink with ‘dishwash- ‘ ; Mahogany Plywood : farms, 4870 ‘Middiebe 140 Lapeer Rd. Lake anted’ Used Cars 88 
go ek WIEGAND | #22 Sh Mone Uoube 70” 29H tacts vamiae ave wie | SuTs,cr"ea| gin ehee oo NEE wt : $35. 4 ; . 
Sa ave. "gah out | bike — PLYSCORE Bp ¥ stbeied fe Ee MUSIC CENTER ‘Set -qeigye ottice Mirae "Fa Seis or verbell Rd. Canning apples. OL tween Lake Orion & Oxford, MY ATTENTION! 
THIS WFEK ONLY 1x3 iin Hammond Chord Organ FOR SALE: FRESH HOGS. FE : ee ~ Bee Clean complete bed.$i8. FE) ** Se age. we oA EE: | Like new ear cnn mee 1 OR M A Bad BS Agi Ue: FRESE “BOGS. FE | Pontiac Chiet Detroiter WE NEED CLEAN CARS 10 ic ay 
| SE MILE BAXAAR Sie Lochaven, FE S1i3.. "| MICHEL : oF Bar ains — Bar ins 40 ape ele “STA Giear w 7 er wae iin ft. AN RT Organ Repair Bashabew re " A D 
caanenn Antlgues | “ROCKLATH |G Se ar & HB: ore re Ha wot ihe op bite i Golden’ Delicious, aoies. Bal | 1 Wie se Us ~ Clean Up - a AND SOLD BUNDLE 95¢ ANY’ OTHER BARGAINS wa re ARB Gnav.| “2.* Reel Re By atl | Highest trate: allowance ever were Berne 
220 TO PRIOR SAL - rl Ho’ , ree see “ot all va es. member, 7 ti und TOP $88. ‘58 PLYMOUT 1 : SMALL soHan “SENG 176 a ward. BM 30531, you will save busdreds LLAR } <___Chetsrmas Gitta BH) et rere ane. 4 3 H aggert ACALLACHER'S. cee eek GRAVEL, wt ana eee ars ret | andthe dn aes |. 4 608 may i ailes jet black ENGLiga & RACER, 3:0x6:8 Plush Dr. with: nis $14 85 ‘ 18. Huron _—___PE Pe cet] _cavaling becomant, ee a Bob: ‘Hutchinson Glenn’s Motor Sales Beauty. Only Sipe. ** DAC 26 IN. BOY'S Alum. Comb, Dr Comp... $21.95 [ | SUITABLE PIANO FOR SECHEEA- SAND | tes shook’ wow’ S258’ Ohdiines AT OUR NEW LOCATION “e with’ wrth extras, $20. Hi LUMBER CO tion room. ‘Thoroughly recondi- | “"& gravel, re ssi oe A or ‘61066.| Ra’ re S600 . M bil H RON ‘58 DODGE MATT THICK 1\ . tioned inside .& ous. New trarles reg SHED STONE, | ~Coj- Ferm ODME NOME | rs evn PE 41797| 2 DOOR, radio beater and auto 
rape, ease BoE eats INSULATION Meee h ulin wee Beate | | “CAT TAGHER’ S fend. Gravel, Fi Lyle Gonna’ | Sale Farm Equipment 76 Sales Inc CA Wt) ~ me ~ = cheap cars } days or 
Fie —_ W- MANURE ~~ | 1996 CASE 300 TRACTOR, PLOW. |: . eves. 5 oun Cte rt pare it = 18 E. IEGARD RQAD GRAVEL 60-40 : _ Bie” corn planter, seeder MA 4301 Disle Righyay ‘ CASH werteo .YMOUTH URB- 
ie Poi SAS Relrig. $00, Pizenide chairs N . FILL, 6A VEL, DELIV: | CHIAN “SAWS 3 HP BAWa “ATL | oes On aaa TB MODEL steering saa treme cusemene, ‘ ; a, each. 2 boo bar, es tad ws, CENTER og FA eS ta kaket, tions. Ree. price ‘Our Open 7 Days a Week ; poe Ba ge Only ei ow rf + 
Burmeister's | #2 vinings Ja to th ar |» econ sum oe | 908” RORD -GRAVET, oe | bron, ntinds! Al fatima? «2 'd) “Oxford “Trailer Sales | Community Motor Sales | “© PLYMOUTH 
Northern | sts set atta sti "HERSEY [near ova eget) cg Sale, Service| MA | eee ee | agro gpg a : . am ster “- 921 Mt. Cl GREAT LARES & ZIMMER ASH OR S cer, Only sss engagement jatinum set- eg , : 
; _ ting, “paid e008. Lady's. antique USED LOWREY TOP SOIL BLace DIRT . rms, oer WHEEL HORSE bi ena Cuore. betite pe gts ‘& accesiores, | HARDENBURG MOTOR SALES : camep ring, lapel watch. 1 strap _PE_8-0st1. mee Soe tee © Heng ee For variety, ‘size, price & best | Cass at Pike FE 5.7398 : Lumber Co. of pearis. Leake lot. call ELECT RIC ORGAN YARD & DRIVEWA ‘¥ se ge Reduced pepoest terms, cannot beaten. 1) ° 
for ment Excellent condition. Save pient soil, gravel, fill, ete. EVANS S coue OF DIXIE BWY.| Sie best sige. late ne ou jom| erase ouvewr citvear—| Saker heme] : Pee eee — | ae ed member | C e: aes 8 am. to 8pm. daily | i> sili a 45 ft. ~ Wood, Coat & Fuel ee “CHAIN SAWS 7) Sundays ype —eome—tn—and—nex ert 67 ae . Ly RS — 18 SHAD Fo 1969 mde "Coan p . n = McCUL LOU GH se rt pertomen A y too “—y ENO TO) Stee UTO 8U ; AR P3 - 6 SHA’ reer FIREPLACE CANNEL COAL —ALL EW & USED ta Eeokeneae. FoR" gogp EP Ee AUSO EA Man ae obi oo Flue Lining ...... #38 Ee eetOR IS MUSIC aes ed FUR ace 2 gry Guaranteed gece enka Motto. |—- a ; it Used pow Bs, AND Pre LYMOU! TH" ‘ 
‘enttion aes Bereriy - "x8" Cleanout doors |. $1.72 Ea. 3% 9. teegam sizes OF FIREPLACE & FUR- HOUC HTEN & S 0 i bas new Sem. Wan tee |° Sie wART Satine ‘On w ROE CUR YELER | 
ven doors : Ww A G as N : ‘ tor and Oven Across from Tel-Huron ACE WOOD, SPEEDWAY FUEL ssembly. 15 $495. Pontine W: lle d i ak MA. 4. 431 nO, pOAaR: @ Binge, Covers and grates. | Ole AND FUEL & PAINT.| J. I. Case & New Idea Dealer he 41306. Wow Moon 90 10 os i alled La Pn il extras. Sacrifice. PE LOCK GOAT iY USED MAHOGANY SPINET PI-| 436 ORCHARD LAKE. FE 6-6109. | Rochester _ OL 14161) $1,175, Buddy, 27 ft, $905. Lasalle, Dixie OK Lot a Lionel Tra Lake Ave. FE 3-110! exc. cond. FIREPL. @ FUR WOOD. APPLE. | DAVID BRADLEY CORN SHELL-| 3) ft 1856" Continental, “30 ft 1950 CADILLAC ionel Train. & SCREENS ™ GALLAGHER’ S oak, mapie, . kind)’g. FE| er used @ hours. 125 bu. per hr.| $1,875, Pontiac Chief 36 ft, like Digo # Sesdabew $315 
ee oe ge eg a 7 cs0ee| Se aren GORTS | FL AT Warns | Hoe Tae seers, ‘bots | —wops SIGN Pega BOB FROST, on * : . wi oS ry a TED: Pay | GOOD DRY SLABWOOD FARM MA ERY — vb g by 
sussanesien Heavy uty cable} . B vaiter alee ¢ omg gr) wean, PE 40008, aida Boge Cox Savuinee a ee Ce) Saad. Rates a rer Sales on M56. from Holly arin cou Muirose PE 4 4876 me 280 Hunter, oe ve 7 - fi- ee ey = 7 48711 5 (By.P ‘ound 
(ONEL TRAIN. "RED SHISLD STORE mee cre ore Erica wooo, pug | HEADOUARTERS FOR |-tRaiCER EXCHANGE | oie aca, Motor, sales | Sere. sunt Band — r, Many accessories rything to meet your deeds. MUSIC CENTER owes OY OF evenings.) WieCulloch Chain Saws - Nig Aa 3 | ort Dhue He ‘Om 3.3605 T8603 FOR QUALITY 
mei gard : =, 3 Pa LAWRE A-l seeps ee Foca ~¥a OE Seas | “Oe “wEw. ibe MODEL McCOL: W be 1 cad trad on AHE CADILLACS ~ : Rl GROMO 2... on eer ecs, fi 5 ton i y - 
Dees ot Shee uckoring Lane: git CVERS Complete Piauo Tuni fag or oe Boats an Orel ard Lake pee SM et tas AND <— Used Pa Oo Wiles ~ wed your 9 Hae bts be Also + Ea selection of other © 
fea Be rere Pi : Berar UMBER | sare a FR 2404 SHOP LOADS ¥6.18-% LOAD. LOW: WE, ALSO HAVE A a0 SKE, | USED TRAILERS ON RENTAL ea wqrade weed cate serie fog| siete ines"eare iv —_ combined, FE ; a . USED w ' . 1938. wes to 8, } : 
easel ti ie Storm doors and windows wood Office Equipment 63 | 57s woo D BORE NE DRY. 3|OUR SERVICE AND PARTS DE- Bottle Gas "Hd. VanWelt Wilson Pontiac-Cadillac 
blazer. Phone chs. O8 Fah) i cat haucicet'at | fighiies ont “'ave. FE? ,UNPERWOOD, ToPewnirens.| ton WE Eid Sn 'e™| RARBY To sitvice out ue| , Parts and Supplies | 0 TGh sumone Tem 1350 N.. 1. ; % le * i 2 - 
: moderns, — balloons, tion, “ers ener, ‘of: | SLAB WOOD FOR MEL Awe. 2 5. Feleqmoe i Ma np stars, Territic values, bedroom Bef ink oa after . FE| tose 44801 of Maple. Bib SAWS Open 8 to 8: Closed Sunday | — model ig % down: “W d a | $4. : 10. 30" i range. 1 year STRAW DELIVERED 85°C WE DEMONSTRATE TRAVEL TRAILERS, NEW AND | ECONOMY CA AUBURN ooawar 
SOT HAD THING. SNORE | inpe. AU orioe Goll only foc | $0 Yu 6504. 0 Bai age ER Oy Od rg niger Races HAVE CREDIT TERMS bed Dae eeee tae be WE NE D Bham MI £1930. 
ape S a2 Siteg. got Six price, ce etl _eacent, tea" Orchard, “at irene Beclpavent og SR 4 —Soudiiton. “FE ree WOOD OF ALL KINDS, KINDLING ve KING OS ae at ieee aur OME REPAIR : Carq be CADIL AC 4 BR... RISTMAS TREES WHOLESALE.|_!* MA 5-7878 or OR 3-7024 Sale Stor: Store Equipment 64) 24 “easanea “maple. poo price encom DAT OF cinta | “Hitches installed ‘care wired Ph | 9 °°" AVERILT” e° seaecale I~ agepiad padindinn covandliciccnan 6-8 ft red pine. FH 6-2180. ie amieeay wih in WELDING AND CU" CUTTING aE aS again fe on_5 cord loads, Pip | SOHN DEERE AND” NEW ID IDEA VACATION SRAILRRG FOR SALE 2090 Dizte Bey TRANSPORTAT 
trees wasecae” y oe or will Moe for = +7167, _Ask_for Bud. ier = or i eer: “model —s reat Shrubs 68 = Be boxe’ aio fers is ton’ ‘mf |g a oem Williams Le. OR | ONE = : pecials : GgED EVANS OIC FURNAPRS.| 6-12 : 2 = i hr Secale cine tr sen ‘pln “Balsam, dents Kiso 8 -quminum windows “*e eae ae able May be Sent, at a W, | SPRUCE, PINE, yJUNIPERS. A aan Oreanvllie __ | ~ Rent 7 iler S 39 UD service, FE 56-2000 | Excellent ‘60 Plymouth 900, ‘80 ’ Bank Or ca ae j = spruce, , i Valso diterent Eads of PHA terms Your neighbor ~ Wood Closet "Doors pm ' oe eerie aoe Seen, ee Mesos Pans Repaes | ane ene _Wanted Used Trucks 89 TOM BOHR INC pine ‘more information call” Pe| —Tecommend us. Phone OR $138, Closing and Sale Ss ing Good 65 own. Bring tools & burlap. 2922 | 1890 Crooks Rd MI 6-046 AUBURN HOTS MOBILE viL-| ~ seer MO_¢1716 
KCOTCH PINE TREES inet of nn. eke rered bytold type doors. At our san nw ~ - Seree Videos, tte. salees “cast of SPECIAL lage. The finest. 's mile SE Pon- CASH PAID : coupe + R- ks Ss OTCH PIN “TREES 2 Pin Radi ation -. $2.00 per ft. S$ 18 MM ND 1 30-06 SPRING- intersection of Duck Rd. & FARMA CUB TRACTOR WITH 190 k rE 1 for all model equ pped “complet. age 
“Wooten, op 8 8 Pea G A  yocnmt 18,0 Ee] BERRY DOOR SALES | siidtmutary aad vrs eat | Wien magne cally ot € TAMU SUOMAULC APTS |ineibe cr —UMey sisers| Used Trucks es eer lection Specie! consideration, for ong stock of used and new | WOOD AND: Ai 5a COM. It GAUGE REMIRGTON AUTO | —Tleny GROWN EPROGE OR | COubriowa. Hest | ane hin | eee 30 Chevrolet 210, Ve a wag. Pa se RS ee ean a aeudowe. 3.30 STEVENS BOLT ACTION | $1'36 each Less than 10 $3 exch. CREDIT TERMS OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR | on 5.2 a Diate Buy pas ——, vat 
Ortonvill B'ham, MI 4.9133 ; BENSON LUMBER. CO.| Bese Bavese Seemade. si ou dig. We specialize in sles KING BROS. e who want the best. 40xeq | 2% 3-2106 _.OR_3-0311 Witte tires. terns. rtonville or ph. B’ham SURPLUS” TU MBER & Both like new. OR 3-6402. to estates & country homes for i “foot lots, “16x40 cement patio Used Truck Parts 89A Clarkston Motor Sales 
For Sale Miscellaneous 60) material sALuS co, | WOOD _& COAL HEATERS ae ib, CALIBER | MARLIN  uPLE soreene & Lerdere Sc OOF | ya Se Pe silt cack apt. 0  onecee oem | CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH n° - es Fone nee Wor On 31 tes APPLIARLE MA = esis. Farm. 8010 Dixie Hwy, US 10, | WHEELHORSE RIDING TRACTOR eras mile east of Oxtord on ALL ort et M iiss 3 ae 
AUCTION — down nFament Free" cotsiaiss Yr hal ese Savane HD with 2s 3 SARLARD TREO SERVICE FRINE | _ plow, $30 300, OR "3-0638. one 008 | ik CWOME  RaTATER MODERN HIG ee aN MONEY Me yon , 4 4 = vage Ww 
“3 ALE 26 SE FRDE FE ie to se 8 ‘ou = Weaver « Ph. FE 8-0056, ming & removal, FE 82275. | WTD.: ronS “BELT PULLEY FE ee and playground. EM 20 Auburn Avs Fe i007 us’ es $14.26 mo, 3, Gall at : r+ : ETE SELECTION OF |" Grark B N §-5871. _ +a For Sale Trucks 90 x @ cottages, a Machiner 60A tar ros. Nursery YOU'VE. SEEN THE REST: NOW Harold siding “te be moreé or y sii makes. Bee the new Browning Auction Sale 7 \8 Turner 
NAME BRANDS 200 glass» blocks, plate 18 gente F mtg. Colt pistols nbs wanech OP — ace the. ares pyeare Lake Trailer 1951 HEAVY, Y DOTY CHEV. SG ake LL TYPE MERCHANDISE cement = os a I D DESK ERGINES. «© and rifles also scopes ‘nd mounts} — Land - . Lo aS : y egndition choice | dio, manual shift, Pm 44277. 
‘Everything Must Go! | isetom, mise "s roping for tracks, enw mills, &| - We, 60 ail our OWN FD work | sae ater 4PM, [AUCTION BALE — SAT. NOV. 15 Auto Accessories 80 $3 nd at foal aaah 1957 CHEVROLET — ry & . : ae re trrigations on engines ‘tor 3 fore you bay (on, our es For Evening Appointment la HS nog Po wong we oe att CHEV: waa : e . or i : 
oe! © M. nDaY Double bow! ain oes. $8.08 = st Yieraall 6 pirte, ting P a py 2 enti For Sale Pets G9} pre joaded, with oe of good oma: A yon a Fowrn. _than avers $350, FE E 8-4206. BOB FROS ST, "INC. 4 tree $ | olly ; e . RO 
' NOVEMBER Tou & 16th . — 1! ens a ” t Vo Ra. ee sere - oO AKC pacuarord PUPPIES. fran ee: nie one << Scie fee sis 0A E, Monteals eels ax MBy Bong: pitt, 0004 Bae INOCU : ea) jeer a 5. r id CHEVROLET Pick. |’ : 6673 DIXTE HWY. Fac thé ¢ =U FOR RENT Practically new. $20. re ers, é BEAUTIFUL PEKINGESE PUP- Storm windows Elec- ee Al ee. aoe 5a 5 EADY cond. Pvt. pheno 
Gee EAR 2 |i AVE RaMhONG SORELY, | pen gua mame tow one |" SEER HUNTERS | "tte btsen Brot Pau | (ccaeity Cay ve Masa | gels Times. snag wey | EEb Bara Tornr ford wil PBPEdis Just N i Hill : dal r cent o AKC DACHSHUND t its. Brodie & U complete Will sel] separate- 
MA. 5-1 FOR : THAIN SAW. Poel nt oe rd Lake; On eee Down coats. pants, yee aad = bo aa ——— Tyler, Mgr. er i z= bots in “DOGG FICE OF. 8 a “1954 a * 
HARVEY PARKER, > ae 3_man. MYrtle_3-5821. Ave. FE $8180 hoods, Open 7 days wk. Ph. MYr-| Glement Ra. W. ot Waterford off _ 2.1521. ar A ialeg So UP\ We PE s.2108" oe BOR. FROST NC. — “PLASTIC WALL TILE tle 24611. : ’ -— % ON 
$60, 3059 resthaven, FE 5.3003, aes om _ters, Lake Orion,” = AKC REGISTERED BEAGLE, (- STATE TIRE SALES — | i986 FORD -(By-Pa 
AUCTION | ‘Garage Doors |ssii fivatane Stten SPLINE camara mm | eee te AUCTION |Site, weit | iced bt aa | oncaatet Se ery c a re. New never din or Genera afety Tires. | FORD DELIVER 1953, wagon, ssume ba its 
COMMUNITY Auction Sale Tonight. | P FA F F SEWING Ts | _ teed. 415 Ww" Irog oo et, ot, Mae TE Oe te 60 Ger aout otf Beek or A $33.50 month. Call Mr Saurphy, : Frigay, Nov. 14; Se STEEL OVERHEAD: is dra material. | ALE AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD cater $180 $-6740, MI 6-3900. B’Ham-Rambier. 
couaigieg ew and used mer mesa girteas ma Sesteet| Fale omen, sesas, © se | zeta, we Ree | pee Pane © edt Sh) Ae es Ce ri "ED WILLIAMS — | &inner wath» FE I rig Ry | i ic s * . 
“Eoviimns gave pave, |Soetandel fates coe ere | Sars SR ie Em ary eB rata OO sigue nace peo FE) SPT] [NG OUT | ts senate at rasnere_ | YER R iatle "Riser rord| in’ dot gages" Ped Across from St. Jude’ Motel Steel outside Findow shutters, ply. 156 ontcalm, FE 5-4712, HUNTING SALE BosTON BUTL PUPPY, SWAP ae . - Auto Service 81 ines FOR CKUP. Like anit Oulte Le. ory 3 MA 5-1341 ectr' arage door operstors. S [23 per cent off on all bunting bred. PE 2-6012 TO THE BARE WALLS new, Rak” 715 bons, ma off Mt. Mode ‘i a+ Garage e front remode! SURPLUS PLA: PLASTICS ough op nana Come ‘qut coats & pants, CRANKABAFT GRINDING iN THE Clemens Broadw took them overt ‘ Harvey Parker, Auctioneer a ee for free —— ets. rods, cylinders and blocks. BOSTON TERRIER PUPPIES 
ig IN GALVANIZED PIPE, 3% ey and colered. Pibergies and | .'Tradein hk terme on guns stud, Champ. stock. Curtiss. OR a - reporse Zuck Me: | i987 FORD % TON PICKUP CUS A b cents per ft. in 2) ft lengths % Rr ERRY ? POOR'S SALES. solvents All Kinds ‘of lucite en: Evinrude Motors.» —_. EVERYTHING Bo “Bur ie sent cal uourmn Motor gays - feat 3 fo. ot “4 m8. Paddock - tien aia ments aeTIOS. DIVISION Bia discounts on 1958 boats COCKER Sure FOR SALE. Cail Cali MUST GO! NST A ALLED FREE rena Bit eta ave e-news Sales 
$3.39 per. length. 4 in. soll pi °s 3945 AUBURN RD. FE 5-9241 | xetiy’s ardware, i004 Asher. 00 Gidinr as FOR SALE $25 PR | Mufflers & tai! pipes. : N. 14 FT. FLAT: tos per leneth Fnompeon, wes skates, ‘site 8, almost new. FE Cameras, Equipment 61A ~ Adams. 5 Aubara Hate PE FE 28811. |“ Good breedk ng stock, 176 Norton.| ALL TYP MERCHANDIBE— | fy Heehack. Auto Parts rh, 2 tre rca, Ped wii| CORNER PIKE & EB BL! 
SAKA | BIG SA SEeARe piDEAL FOR HEC ee. z ON ALL HUNTING EQUIPMENT, SS aoe show Caren, $40 Boldin. FE F161 ot PE LAT | ss FORD Fab) DUMP TARE | ible, Powerglide, WW tire: heater . > a he ges Pe stot ‘ be Fh gy pins Fecotders a sal nae M. wed ‘i CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. AKC REG- Pots & Pans Sale Motor Scooters 82! over balance ob 1-0032, & radio. FE 2-8960. : 
tainence BY ans igowiiers TRONER, LIKE NEW. rts Camerk Shop Hu | || PHILIPS SPORTING Goons iolered. Tay, edarenee.. 00 sere. vba sare x | ‘8 4 TON PICK UMINUM SIDIN RstALaNG ma fal art | Ae St FE 5-615. 70 N. Sa 5-1401| ice. Females to lease Reas, Ff pboosctith Serre ‘50, CUSHMAN WITH TRANSMIS-| — conditions OR, 3-2628. OTEX. INSULATION BEFORE ae cit Wilt bold ‘Temivle 15400. vartanib—Drape te Fae Ki GUNS — B sede. be Curtains—Drapes . ‘49 GMC PANEL % TON $100. w We are doubling the ae neve 42” ywedel Sale Musical Goods 62) SNS o> uescn’ 10 Sagies, Vo gP aahOkG , Railway D MA ERS of beauti- __Maniey Leach. 10 Bagiey ey. | ee oan y Damaged “CUB __,_ FE 5-510 a : : value of many homes by bea scratched 4 trim. ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIEL. Dishes—Silverware ANDERSON SALES. & SERVICE 7 : tyi em 7 colors for CARGE SELECTION USED SHOT- 8 DONT BUY A NEW 
HERE coh ties ‘ge, AO) cult nay ries tee | oqponaion eau As, ans. |edit fee toes Or | pre E Dmg SEE g| §— teereAminst | WE FADDOOE Atle FRlcAu) TOR bak oh BEA. MONEY, DOWN ~ FIRST PAY- an Pruorescent 495 Orchard Lk. | .nere with lessons, EW Winch ree DEL ae Biankets—Bedspreads "For ‘Sale A Motorcycles 83) Cy" OwaNs Gat Eber ss ot - ‘ om By SPLAT ccARINET. WhOD, VERY | * . ae PE sae A e : 2 
ment Auto stock tor” do Be ae sei Serna Made in may “peotias pampér pool tase’ ra Senne” ALL NAME BRANDS roour Hatley rt aay FOR SALE: DODOF * KUP. we Also é * is > ¥e = avai ebyel iron. CALL| ht ened, Pe cae re sth 7 SAVE YOUR DEER : Sid 5 ee . = me Oe. wf Hranuale oad — BEFORE you BUY & faucelg : NEW CONDITION PR 40819. omen. z oer hy Secon at = or Sale Bicycl les 84 : JOR, VALLELY, CO tae ave. =a. ae vpn "oe r storage space aot cycles ua be-sure to eliab’ Pioneers” CORNET, A-1 CONDITION, $75, . avey's 8 ‘ker Tv< RAKEETS GUARA 
Meas enter “JELLED MAGIC aoe ic Bee Bain’ Roch Rochester. OL. | PA Oe Caneries ugager food. 6673 2 OIRL'S BICYCLES, 24 AND 26 TRUCK CENTER COMPARE This no stirring. will RENT - crane s Bird “Hate hery. 2489 Au- DIXIE HIGHWAY inch, like new. 
: not m7 see #, run, Runber re GALLAGHER’ s” —~PARAKEETS SUPPLIES U8. 10 NEAR M15 Boats & "iccamacies Wi base. is of 18 %. Huron FE 40566 our deer rifles tor the season 
choose from. FUEL & GTBSO A a0 ped Mp. Fentine Lenn and | $2 Senders Ee orrat | Jest Nora ot Meterneré Hil || BP, OBTMOARD, MOTOR, OG0D W. PERFECT CHRISTMAS PRES- E495 Oakland take Ave. PE see tar with oh ite and : coon GIOADING “COMPANENTS — |) cute, Getnne steko pee |) «=6SALETIME7P. M. Sie Wate ood, “#38. 1105 RETAIL BRANCH | 
| JEWELL, =] x WORTH sT., - USED GUNS imported | stock, exe. peer: DEALERS & PUBLIC weLcoms | ~“Aple. Walled Lake Oakland at Cass ae Cgc a. on| girese, ee on Glenbroke, SLAYBAUGH'S wormed _b_iness, 2El +oms. Saturd d Sund: ” guabeut GEA AK & ; awson eee eee Ps de to eee ae | 698 OAKLAND. FE 9-0453 | Pak AKEETS, ou aR, % TALK. atur 7 and Sunday runabout with 1056 Scott Atwater | WALK-IN VA To 
re ooo: semBtEl E SALE  _—(| , Cases. s#1_ath 8 sovsaiiee iets & a8 OR 37896 PI Ste ee) ees, Sal’ BOM BOTEER | Hard - at. & * } 
makes New & used. PA ARERTS CANA B CAG This I it FOOT METAL iG BOAT Tumer Ford, sd Stig MI La wane MEANS "VALU E” en: LLAGHER’ 3 repel ope inountin Since 1927. 584 Oskiand Ave. islga B ae. General epee ounting. : GneShot Deal with eabin. -traiter, 16 horstpower | WTD ‘8 Plymouth +-Dr. Wag. 18 E. He FE 4.0066 “PRLEGRA oie 4 ne-snot Dea motor st eel: Leaving clty,| rive ten pickup W Ke ‘ 
, oe Ee au Le Baty ie 'T } e ference Ee is.) H. RE. was my Bee, bank ROPICAL ti SHOP DON T MISS IT! rr) ERC TRE rence ‘on #3141 oF 
GALLAGHER’ S = a Bee LB INSPECTION ; ote models 2, dispia ee és 
cee YOUR DEER. BUTCHERED AND npaoe & SEROUS SEYTER'| one HOUR BEFORE BALE eho ali es 
OnE NT | Pontiac, : : re xe, De ei HARVEY. PARKER, Auctioneer INT. aro pS AT. Rs a ‘* * id f a 
LL_APA aN Hunting Accommmo. 65A unting | Bo incing M A o-1 34] eB a cee nw ™ PE 2-612 “Ties i GALLAGHER'S ALL METAL, r TAST     
     
      ater Biva. at § Wootweit ave. 
aE a 
DESOTO-PL 
* pia 8 Woodward, 
om 2 } CHEVROLET 4   
" 
For Sale Cars ‘ 91   
  North Chev. 
14 
= BT. Vi. stick wi overdrive, 10,000 miles Big radio 
a WW tires. Take over pay- 
ie afier 6 
RDTOR. © EXCEL 
_ME +4031 
sacemmeeetea Ti 3455 FULL ~ down Lucky 
Sales. “0 8 dk. Saginaw FE 
4-2214 or PE 4-1006. 
‘8 CHEVY. EXCEL COND “No rust. Tires Uke new $239 
5-2 766. 
isk? CHEVY CONVER TIBLE ais 
_Eadie Steele Ford FE > 
CHEVROLET. 1038 Snow Shoe White is 
of this “IMPALA COUPE” 
that is almost new Power 
equipped with power pack¥ « 
You save <i day ate 
Schuts. Only 
~ SCHUTZ YMOUTH 
Birmingham 
DR E BADIO.! 
Powergiide. 
omer Ry My Servis. Mes “a |   
  
| Rambler 1958 RENAULT DOLPHIN Like 
                new ; $3935 Mo 1957 METROPOLITAN $1205 
1957 MG $1790 1987 FORD 6 automatic . $1305 
964 HU iN Jet $ 505 195 RAMBLER ry 195 
1986 RAMBLERS $905 & Up 
aren _ LER =o he 
wee RAMBLER Ee Wa 
brakes 
1957 PLYMOUTH Belvedere herd. 
top. (2) to choose from 
Don't Be A Gambler 
BUY A 
__ Birmingham 
RA MBLER . $7 CHEVY GOOD THROUGHOUT Woe & 
Bargain EM 3-0061 H Riggins.| 
      "Fer Sale Cord ms... 
1937 FORD 
HASKINS | ss, paar ose * SR EROST, INC. ~~ 1987 Deas  Agy ewer 7 Coupe: - ED aia B'ham) 
gener MY i TOR So i Ren     
GUARANTEED ie 7 nen 'W age SN 
    
  . FE 
1853 Chevrojet Bel Air convertible orn 
V8 engine powergiide. power! ‘33 PORD FORDOMATIC. | AUTO.   
  
  SALES ( ack. power brakes, radiq, heat- transmission $296. y an, 
Meee Fe Pale =e tr. Like new $1581, as is Edule steele Ford” FE 
- pesoTOPLY MCT DEALER i é #24 | 
WT GHEMROLET 2% a RADIO! O. K. | vec im FORD jt 
and heater Nice Assume 4966 Chevyrplet 210 hardtop. Re reatline, Fordoma! i 
ponte of 8630 Tuonik Gat heste: One owner a1: 201 BOB FROST, INC \ 
. : i 280 Hunter Bivd 1 66034. a tase r @DOOR. HARD USED ‘__ (By-Pass around B'h wane) ; 
top, a engice ra cantar en 1833 HUDSON JET SEDAN naw. | powergiide. Our siock No 4242. 4 i935 Chevrolet 210 nardiop V4 oe LUTELY NO MON 
ree buy for $1398 engine powerglide.’ radio, heater N Assume wee of ht “J One oW3 $1027 Be Call Credit t. Mr Parks, ‘ 
sed Tacha : at MT 4-7500 Harold Turner Ford. Pirin oe   
1956 TL INCOLN 
CARS |. 4-door, Like ne $1895. 
$108 Chevrolet Bel Air hardtop BOB FROST. INC demonstrator. Powerglide radio. 9 Hu ter "i 6-69. 
heater Beautiful «silver blue ead o me Bivd na ba 
ivory fintsn Save $$ 
ins Chev. 
MAple 5-507) Open nites ‘til ©) 280 a! Bivd «MI —_ 
By-Pas? around Bham 
~ 1951 MERCURY _ ~~ 1958 LINCOLN | 
F 4-door hardtop. 
| 
  
  SSENGE OUNTRY SE- 1084 Passe GER ios. 0 rE! ‘door No money dewn $195 
(29770 : ; ROB FROST, INC. 
1937 FORD FAIRLANE 500 4DR 280 Hunter Bivd MI 64-6934 
$i.550. Radio anc heater, 
Walls MAyfair 6-6318 : 
1950 FORD GOOD FOR RUNING | white i (By-Pass around B’ ham) 
1956 MERCU TRY 
errands FE 66710 After 6 pm, oor Sharp 
_ exe ept Tues & Wed ROB FROST, TNC. 
r FORD. GOOD BODY AND 299 Hunter Blvd MI 6-6934 Ce motor, $30 EM: 30123 (By-Pass around B’ham) — 
‘1982 FORD CLB CPE FORDO- 3) ERCURY 2 DR. WITH NEW "matic R&H OR 34018 tires. good Rll ocintad $575. FE 
‘32 FORD 2 DOOR. GOOD TIRES. | _ 5-s101. 
a FORD PICRUP With a | Ml MERCURY SEDAN. VERY | _clean 8. Johnson 
ee Tee tem ootine. 7™ ai MaecURS (MONTEREY HITOP Behn Very clean. R&H, new white- | 
8 FOR. a VE. MATIC _walls, Mu Must “elk OL 1-6620 | 
petal te Oh | 56 MERCURY MONTEREY HARD ae Uakiane PE 43529 | . Exc, cond, Pvt. owner. EM 
“56 PORD. CUSTOM, 6 CYL. STAND. 
| 
} + 
| By-Pass wround Bham) | 
Air-conditioned. |   
  
    N. Main St. @iarksten = Nights "th ® 
5566 or Maple 6-1141   
  | ae Ap Bowne iota oy ® # I 15 ues 68 2-DR. HYDRA. R&A tires. ABSOLUTELY NO| mo vel ks veait “gr reid Puree ie MONEY “DOP R Assume pay-| _8t MI er 
rt "biteetts Ge Saat | BPO, Seaaeinae gr ¥; arks . ie “~ 
Harold Turner Ford. cond. Tires like new. PE 
. ‘1 ON” 
OLDS, 1956 
Sedan. eb equi 
ease of handling and a fresh 
look mside and out. This 
car will suit the most dis- 
criminating buyer. $1505. | Used Cars 62 Oak aoe FE 
‘3 PONTIAC $ dow Eddle Stele. Ford. Premium Royal Masters are - ‘62 PONTIACS - 24 Di 
only one of the many extra +. —_ baled a Mi ing features op this Super 83 ydramatics. R&H, wi tor Tip top condition. Don 
  
‘PONTIAC, 1955 starchiet 4 door. Just bring 
2 = older car to handle.   SCHUTZ DESO" ror YMOUTH 
e12 8 Wood _ Birmingham 2 
1950 OLDS 2 = - H¥DRAMATIC. 
R Ri Btcelient transportation. . . 
  
good running order, R&H One | — 
_owner, 30 McKinler _ Get Wise, Economize 
R&C | 
RAMBLER | RAMBLER } a * . . 
Rambler trade-ins must go- SILL Br NCE $® Cadtiiac, 7 passenger limousine 
5 |RAMBLER BALE® & SERVICE| new tires, perfect cond 211 8. Saginaw PE 8-4541- 
s Lepregare tess, pa anarp. ‘06 MERCURY MONTEREY 3 DR. auto traomission, real nice, 
_Seaee Eddie Steele Ford. FE) 
1987 MERCURY, 8LOGA N 4door hardtop. Po al steering 
we eet ent ANY DEAL power brakes. $1.8 
COMPLETE SERVICE EM 3. *ya198 | BOB FROST. INC. 
‘$5 FORD RANCH WAGON. RADIO 280 Hunter Biva MI #6-4934 
w heater S875. Eddie Steele ___ ‘By-Pass around B'ham) 
Ford PE 5-0204 Nash. 5 ¥ 
3 Chrysler, 6 =e ea! trans | 
‘83 Rambler, hardtop, | 
 Sevenal sPECIA MONEY DOWN | 
CIAL 
RAMBLER | 
|   1 
&c. 
  
    
~ 1957 MERCURY Commuter Wagon. 9 passenger 
BOB FROST, INC” ard shift, R&H. WSW tires. Very 
clean. Customized, MArket 4-106. 
33 FORD V-6 RADIO & HEATER, | sox cf el Rager’s,, oe so88s.. Serv 
05 A 
= FORD 1 —gew. One “owner 3152 Orchard |       
  | 1953 | eae eee Plymouth 4-Door | 1955 PONTIAC 4DOOR HYD | $250 R&H. sgneomner at ae 
fart ose y small ieee, ore 
1953 | Wont furs cass 
| Nash 4-Door nn PH ee ENASTY Ne OUI 1955 PONTIAC STARCHIEF ©D $195 | R&H, Hydramatic, exc. = 
| wails. must sell FE 2-3183   
1934 PONTIAC 
BOB ‘FROST... INC. 280 Hunter Blvd. _ Larry Jerome ROCHESTER wire DEALER 
OL 1-9711   | tase CHEVROL. ET v0 ¢ DR V8. 
  | & white. Radio+& heat-, (By-Pass around B'ham) 
tae sil9s | ipa ar PONTIAC GE ceateail COND | 
j 1851 Pontiac 2 dy‘ sedan $15 | a io4@ PONTIAC. TIAC. EXCH LENT ME- 
  1954 4 dr 210 Chevrolet. Radio &.| nd 8 643 CHANICAL 
| eater Exc con ‘TIO N, OR 3   
1953 Chevrolet 4 dr. sedan. Radio | New tires, motor overhauled. 
& beater, Good cond. $ 445 - PE 4-9712.   
1956 Pontiac Ltarchief Catalina Hy- MI 6-6934 
| jose 4DR. PONTIAC STARCHIEY, 
CLEAN ‘33. ¢ DR. PONTIAC, EM 
3-0846.   
| dramatic R&H, steering and rax $1305 BEST BUYS "86 Olds Holiday, 4-Dr., | Also new ‘58 Chevrolets, Buicks and | 
tock demos still m s 
HOMER HIG HT MTRS. | | *§5, Chevy 4Dr. PG 
"53 Ford custom 2-Dr. V8. 
    haa ee © Harbor. 
rat =e — CMON i | 
wea RE or I ae | | 
darn bap ag Cal] Mr, 
B’Ham-Rambler 
&H. CUSTOM 6 AUTO * 
Tieton Min real nice, $1,196. Ed- 
5-8204.   | 1088 RAMBLER CROSS COONTRY | 
xc. | 
  
  
  
  
  50, CHEVROLET | EXCELLENT _ ‘ie Sieele Ford. PE | ond. PE foes) Ot PLYMOUTH, 1957 mension in motoring - here. . body, good motor tires, R&H. ig2 FORD CUSTOM 7 DR. V-4 NASH. $90 SEE FOR YOURSELF. | Superb commie Logreiren now! Cost little to buy - runs Good dependable transportation for little money. . 
best offer over $150 OL 1078 PUM Ro fang NO | S15." Mount: Clemens is What you'll find im this miles on @ hatful of gus. MY 2 ey 
, 5 Mi. ally om y hae es Seo | en i mo. n cre ie Mgr, Tosa Loa AMBASSADOR 6 4¢DR i stom a tie yr subarben | Te . , : , engme $300. FE $-6923 r Parks gt MI Runs fine Good tires, nna | wer steering, radio & \°37 SUPER CHIEF PONTIAC 4 4 4 M 24 t Shadbolt 
cs a ed ee ea | “43 at H rdenbura | varive, omereelient cond. PE. ‘42321 1053 NASH AMBASSADOR. OVER: | I. 1498 Vetweon 6 ‘ioe pa. ie MY od 461 peo | 1054 Ford 4<Dr. |S Bt. tan sae eTe om "SL WILYS # DR "RADIO. wear: : B i ! F ‘H Rambler HT. R&H, over. | mhis is a nice clean 8 cyl sedan | 36 NASH RAMBLER DR- BARD. | “hoe eh 695 tobere” vr PONTIAC- UICK ied Radio Heater. Straight stick Exe | to cylinder — $1,005. Raat | - : ‘0 Pest. ¢ Dr oe ea v9, rubber. ‘The The price ls right. will | Steele Ford. PE §-0208- nesores Sera: | WILLY TUSOW SEDAN BEST ACROSS FROM NEW CAR SALES, | = BIG SAVINGS = Many others to c! m= . 6 ‘S53 OLDS SUPER HOLIDAY $1.250. 912 | ‘ Wood ward, _Birmingham offer. FE | f | ; 
: CORNER CASS & PE 5-7: 1308, PEOPLES AUTO SALES Very clean 6-9752 \ s6 vee = rene ~ a j H aa: | = 
| CAN CAN You t BRERA Bown tS TO, fos pomriet FAIRLARE a on 82 See CT 2 eat ac “ri ad ha A a WILLS © «WHEEL FE. ROCHESTER OL l 8133 LOW OVERHEA Los 
~~ aah | “guto, transmission. $1,405. Edale | _ ee ee a lek Decne ~ —_—_—_—— ee Fo | ay y 
i ereen — 
|g gre | MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES _ [= wnernes irs é Power brakes steering =| ba Aad Hddie Steele Ford, = a 
- excellent condition. full prise i \ 
$14 per mo. Bell, Great; 1952 FORD 0-8 a 
| gtiarenS camer! _ REPOSSESSION | | — = ver us 1 ie power. Exe. cond | $1005. Pe, See see eee 
eat a aia Taal A n = [. C S Iva 1950 Through the Woods ¢€ i 
DE SOTOS \" au cunning condition No “reason: | ; : 
: We are be te announce i le cffer_refused. MArket Li P] | YOU’ LL NEV ER-MAKE IT . 
tay oor stamens a r a | N S license Plates | TO GRANDMOTHER'S HOUSE . neve arrived All the powsr J ME IN THAT UNSAFE, UNRELIABLE OLD CAR 
Rel at sre ‘ng fam |), + WITH EACH = ENJOY A t ‘ . 
: ul give you. many poy \ Bright Spot YOU' VE ASKED FOR SAVINGS aa aa SAFE HOLIDAY 
: years. Up to 36 m CY OWENS : af tere | $9395 AND WE' VE GOT EM | . , ' ? IN ONE OF THESE 
SCHUTZ eaur sinete pel grits : Quality Used Car 'B utiful Like New 
ns yw het here Dirmingher | poy once radio heater one-own- 2 o' =a ' 7 . 
198i E SEDAN CLEAN. 97 id . | bee GOODWILL” SPECIALS 
ce $1995 Not SECONDS — NOT MRREGULARS, BUT —RBRUY NOW i SAVE— | oe cond., $65, MAple §-2340. ' ; ' fn ' - 1 | | ‘8? Dodge 4Dr Hardtop. power i F L ( i 1d ; i 57 MERCUR aye) ices $1995 FORD. 1956 . | snetes riage ragio Beer irst Hille tie . year S o MONTEREY 3 4 OOOR BAN aes — Radio & Heater, 
rae | | F On All '54-'57 Model SSS. ER’? SPECIAL vortn, with | ree—Un = )/ oaels—tr ree LISTED BY STOCK NUMBERS i 
Petite ae | | 2 ? | |'57 PONTIAC $1995 y gear ALL CARS WINTERIZED WITH PERMANENT ANTI-FREEZE ; : Be : 520 = @page | sen eta s end is what you'll get out } "ST Chevrolet Be] Air Convertible . . 57 FORD WiGtGia <n g ..c08 See see sree n ess $1845 |, CATALINA COUPE — 4 Door. Hydramatic * : 
fan 6 ar bree eet i Meg powerglide desert sand fin-' 1958 1958 1957 ! — = ’ 
i ish, ; : : id 2 me z : . in ‘ older ear. 4108 | | | CHEVY CHEVY \CHEVY 57 CHEVROLET Stati, Wagon «........81793{]57 PONTIAC ..... $2195 | ] 495 : | F 4 DOOR HARDTOP — Radio & Meater, SCHUTZ i Nomedn ae Bee ON od lle Mio and : STATION WAGON STATION WAGON tee GAD ; ew Seer Beenie ing & Power Brakes 
‘S1 Ford 2-Dr V8. 2-tone finish Heater Ivory and Cream paint Siver. Bue v8 Y netne Btand- ¢ SEnaine \Poweralice’ trans: 36 FORD Convertible .............-.. +++ SH195 do ; 012.8. Woodward, Birmingham | Radio, heater. standard shift. Mad age iecring © Bower pirane . ard trans Ra Heater Radio and en + 5 HORNED ea «100 S7 FORD mic betec nti $1695 
CAR PAYMENTS TOO BURDEN. $2695 Tee ¢ ‘50 F SDOOf Farce ccs vee oon ws .« $1095 FAIRLANE “600-2 Door, Radio & Mester. some us hel = asen to $1295 or” BS : S * 7 
; tome less expensive mode! 1957 1957 z 1956 . 562 ' 
Lake Orion money Sales “38 Volkswagen 2-Door one-owner a CHEVY E So PONTIAC Convertible Ce ee ? .$1395 56 PONTIAC oe 6 6 ee we -. $1395 
FORD — MERCURY MY. 2-261; “20 ‘ike new FORD en CHEVY : eP-1033 _ .# DOOR HARDTOP. 
ea! D TODOR V4 LIGHT oon ee aera > Do a. Siahd STATION WAGON Sh PORT) Station Wagon o.<6c.60s06.05: ..8 9954 7 
me doh ° Ser deck ue ase Daly $1045 Even. PordsO-Matic “Phaser fae iar ands eer neae Beers es “Poweralige x a an i 56 PLYMOUTH eis © ws ow « $1295 ge wer § ring anc ower : a Si = ~ a j : ; 
N h Ch M4 Ford 2-Dr. Sedan. sha: :B iow a) nad | Heater, $1575 $1495 "02 NASH Station Wagon ......-.......-.- $ 695 |! yon eeeexmne leage ty: See . ites 
ort ev. | , $1975 1958 1058 | ‘56 PONTIAC ....... ..$1495 Bunter Bivd. at 8 Woodward Ave 1295 1982 - FORD 2-Door ........ Se Ge ea Donaodan $ 625 |: 6 PON 860 COUPE—Radio and Heater abl: Birmingham MI 2735 2é CHEVY CHEVY \ _ . : 3 
1951" ORD heater F.tone peiot ne ta hee: PONTIAC ya MPATA CONVERTIBIF = gIMPALA HARDTOP. a ‘RORD Convertible 0. cee cncn ce sic een $ 595 |! 56 CHEVROLET os teem we $1495 BOB ‘FROST, INC | len fons ion | pea Pte standard! sora penea Wiite’ Walls Radio and ~ Steering set a 8. . ae : | BEL AIR +DOPR—Radio and Heater, Powerglidg. 
; wy Reais + oo $895 adie & ees Tone Green $2675 "53 PONT Tt. AC 4. Roar reese eee receen sete .$ 295 if SS CADILLAC ; ; $1995 
"FORD, TWO DOOR R & H a 1956 = oe be FE 2.7068, + pe 52 1957 495 COUPE, DEVILLE. - Radio & Heater Automatic SEPP GTR | CHEVY MERCURY || CHEVROLET 26 screenees 051] BERR ae ( 553 a 2 
$ Q5 aback aAeoTOr yaPEt ATR CONVERTIBIE =v. Pi egg le ct 52 PACKAR b +Door be eiele ere ulecaeaceenle $ 295 |; os PONTIAC a Seas S Ne $1095 
BUICK a V-A& Engine POWSreiide trans Dust Peart Paint. Radio end Cont aaa Beige Payihe wane ‘ | , 2DOOR-\Radlo and Heater, Hydramatic. 
(BS cpg, Bepr. ontowner | Som*N REE Joey: wale Heater, Woe Walls - $1495 * 1°51 CADILLAE 4-Door oS M5 TP one BUICK $1195 i and Jy equip = i . Y a ora eget rasner vives se _, 
Better Buy Used Cars | 6 1958 ee Qs > \s80 ene ones oak eas ces 3 “4 1955 1955 ‘31D . . ARDTOP.-Radio and Heater Dynafiow, -: 51 DeSOTO 4Door o. oes <cusssscaseesh 198 Ferrey ARy rt 
1957 PLYMOUTH $ 95 : ESCORT CHEVY CHEVY . wer Braker, eae reen paint. | 
4 DR HARDTOP BELVEDERE.) °34.GMC ‘é-ton pickup excellent ; “Te cae ee 567. ‘54 PONTIAC 5 raMilesse, one owner car| condition ‘hydramatic and heal station RNGLISR Forp Seals Ws 2 DOOR 210 2 DOOR 210 47 PLYMOUTH Z2-Door .<<Nescecvccess--@ 75 IS hogoesusos 95 
ie go bat oat bere. For fies aad _ Heater, Metallic Green and tage Oe fate oodiand ‘Green td ~ “} DOOR—Radio and Heater, Hydramatic, _the : eate e s . ; 
wea = 395 $1375 = ee ‘54 CHEVROLET $ 695 
  
    
     
    
    
  
  
    
    
    
pre PLYMOUTH SPORT 
R GOLDEN PAINLESS TERMS ANYBODY'S POCK:   full power 
‘65 Olds Super 88. 4 dr. full power 
    
Hunter Blvd. at 
MI   
‘69 Studebaker. 
  
  Bt   } 
: 
i 
    | $4 FPorg 4-Dr._¢—eylinder— 
_Bivd,—____ Mt +——_“t5— Minutes tom Pontiac.“ S ’ 
(By-Pass around B'ham) | Daterd. enigen ba ae ree en SON, | 1983 MERCURY MONTEREY 4-DR PLYMOUTA 192 CLUB COUPE POREIGN CAR SALES Radio and heater Power brakes,| Radio. Heater. —_ good. Good AND 6 E 
automatic transmission No rust.| tires. $135 full pri 528 N. Main, Rochest OL 1-9761 Assume poy ments of $3350 a mo. | THE BARGAIN LOT + Murphy MI! 6-3900 | {t Haynes, Birm. MAZUREK 
STUDEBAKER SALES |   
ia AVAILABLE. _ON ALL '54-'58.CA 
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t 
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1957 RAMBLER, ....:....$1795 cate gion sar dud be 
1956 PONTIAC 2 cass $1395, nite wal tre “fed and ometaiey Tadio, ere appeal 
Geary aration. Dynafiow. radio. heater. white wal) —~ 
1955. FORD .............$1295]}. edan, +d : # paseenser Country sedan oor Fordomatic. radio, 
1955.PONTIAC 2... 0.2. - gto pl af a Fo ea. Bi py. aks New. he 
1955. 5 PONTIAC. SECESEEEL CU gym ay bog yefie ont heater. 
pon tt white = 
Star Chief Ma: . Lea oft” upholstering. Hydramatic, 
i i rad 4 heater e wa and tires. Piregold nd white, 
re a with t radio, bea pow oni Ls saaiatad white. wall tires. 
| SLEQNTRG. wo 495 
1953 FORD Pee an. Fordomatic, v8 en —. rad 
beater. rer ehives we tires. Don’ 
1953 PLYMOUTH .......$ 445 Hardton with radio. heater and rea! nice ‘nreakhowt. : 
}1952 CHEVROLET ......$ 395, atdtop with Powerglide. radio and heater. 
1951 DODGE ........... $45 Lubricated winterized cof ready to go. 
1949 BUICK .............8 95 2,5 3 @ oe $1095 
1954 PONTIAC ..........$ 895 1955 BUICK es 81298 
1953 BUICK. ............$ 595       para ean e     
1957 BUICK ae 
}- 
= |      VINGS ~ OVERHEAD 
-WEINVITE YOU Ce | TO TAKE A 
ss ress. _ Demonstration Ride 
hte f 
ig BONTIACS — WHY) WASTE TIME” cad SBE US FIRST aaa 
“Goodwill!” Used Car Specials 
"57. PLYMOUTH Station WwW avon :..%,. +... $1995 Automatic transmission, Power steering... Observation seat. 
  3 
‘36 PONTIAC ¢ 4- ‘Door Hardtop. aoe n own rns 1395 os brakes. Automatic 
35 aaa aia Cou eee Starchief — A beauty — See thi ong! ~. 
‘55 PONTIAC Convertible ...., ee » $1095 New tires and brakes. Automatic, transmiasion, 
‘54 NASH ‘Statesman Sedan ....++se e+ +01 0$ 593 A-1 Condition. 
'53- PONTIAC Biddy 35 sk. LU Automatic transmission, 
‘53 LINCOLN Hardtop - es ee See this one! . 
53 PACKARD Club Coupe dou ee acy ey e F Automatic trafismission ~— Top condition. 
53 PONTIAC Catalina ee verved 645 
A beauty! 
52 JAGU AR 4Door Sedan ....5..5... wre y ‘TopaY 'S SPECIAL . ieee ye 495 
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$ 495 
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North Broadway at Shadbolt 
  
  
  
  
  
  
‘34 Hudson Wasp Dr. radio and | 
heater. 
$095 "64 Mercury ¢Dr., radio. heater 
~ Mercomatic. 
10° Ris ago i ‘ E fou SPECI 
‘FROM staal 
JEROME “Bright Spot” Orchard Lake at Cass OAKLAND COU 
631 Oakland       MATTHEWS-— 
HARGREA\ 
  ES NTY’s LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER . 
The BIG-BIG Lot 
PE 4-4547 ©   "Cy" Owens Your Friendly FORD Dealer 
» 147 S. Saginaw St. 
FE 5-410] — | FE 5-3588 
Open 8 A.M. to 9PM. 
  rE a ESTES SSP) CORES de   
  a 
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FACTORY BRANCH 
ONTIAC P - RETAIL STORE .. 
“GOODWILL USED CARS" 65 MT. CLEMENS § FE 3.7117 (BEHIND ThE Post OFFICE)     PE 80488 Open 10 
  a 
      sara al 
     
       
  
  
  
      
  
    
  
  
   
  9:15 (2) suettdciey at Work, 
Window Shopping. 
  "Wynn, “The (4) Window 
" (9) Popeye. Comedy. ~~ 9:30 (2) Capt. ae Weakatin Detective ** 
(4) News: Williams. searches for doctor who once cS conan Eaeen, 
. (2) Racket Squad. performed surgery without Betty Boop. 
: — _ 10:00 (4) Howdy Doody, 6:10 (4) Weather: Eliot. (2) Hit Parade. “My Fair pe ' Lady” composers Lerner and) . © Jungle Jim, 
6:15 (4 Box Four, — : Loewe. ‘ 10:30 (2) Mighty Mouse, 
<< (4) Ruff and Reddy, :30 (7) Comedy (cont.) 8:00 (7) Walt’ Disney.. Frontier-) 
(9) Wild Bin Tand: “Ambush at Laredo.) (7) Cowboy G-Men. 
(4) Life of Riley, 2 , 11:00 (2) Heckle (2) News: LeGoft. series. *? & Jeckle. 
(9) Movie (cont. (D Uncle Al 6:40 (2) Weather. ® Ellery Queen. (color) ge 
. - Ellery investigates 11:30 (2) Robin Hood, 6:45 (2) News: Edwards. deaths. (4) Circus Boy. 
ae 2) Trackdown, Corpse is : 
7:00 (7) 26 Men. ’ deadly decoy. 11:58 (9) Billboards. 
ae 8:30 (7) Disney (cont.) ; 3 : SATURD. 14) Deivee’s Appel. (9) Movie (cont.) #¥ AFTERNOON (2) Medic. What happens in} ~~ (4) Queen (cont.) a tee 
H-bomp attack. " (2) Jackie Gleason. Comedy.) - en Bl True Story. 
9:00 (7) Man with Camera. (9) Caney Calendar “Close Up on Violence. ” 
(9) Man Without Gun. 12:30 (2) Movie. 
RCA COLOR TV (0 Mi Sepat. Weman's sue| (© Detective’s Diary. pected killing awyer. Movie. 
(2) Phil Silvers. Cros- (9) Kiddies Carnival s four ae " Bi * 
— NKO'S 12:85 (9) Pro Football 
|#:30 (7) 77. Sunset Strip. Five|1*00 (4) Quiz Em, 
San et a lath to Port Poge. 
(9) Hoedown, : 
(4) Thin Man, Nick searches| 1°45 (4 Lions Preview. for mystery novel author. |, ; 
“(@ Playhouse, Kathryn" “ Sports Page. 
Grayson in “A Game of (1) Ramar. te.” hotic killer (Tom! ,. 
rayson) when. he',, 
hides out in her rural school- —- pd roa a 
TONIGHT ee 10:00 (7) Sunset (cont.) me Oh) Move. (9) State Trooper, Adventure “ 
CHANNEL 2 (4) Boxing. Light-heavy-|“° {7 Wrestling, .--~ 4 weights Tony Anthony, Sonny) 4. 
ce Ray in 10-round bout. #3 2) Mily's Movie Party. e . (2) Lineup. Vagabond leads , 
F police to narcotics peddlers. 'g:99 (7) All Star Golf. 
. | : 10:30 (7) News. | (2) Cartoon Party. 
RACK | Ps (9) Person to Person. Choreo-|5:39 (2) Lone Ranger, 
     Texas Rangers “ 
in action! 
SOCONY MOBIL OlL CO,, INC. 
  
  
         
       
      
       
     
              
15 Minute Service 
While You Wait 11:20 (9) Theater. 
11:30 (7) Shock Theater. 
19:00 (2) Michigan Conservation. grapher Agnes de Mille and 
11:00 (7) Soupy’s On, 
(9) News, : 
(4) News: W’kamp. 
- (2) News. : 
11:15 (9) Weather. 
(4) Weather: Eliot. 
(2) Miss Fairweather. 
Dane 
“Deep Valley.” (’47.)- 
(4)Sports: Parker. 
(2) Sports Final, 
11:25 (2) N’watch ‘Th. Kathrine 
Hepburn, ‘Quality Street.” 
('37.) Marie Windsor, “Dou-'! 
ble Deal.” ('50.) 
Monster.”’ (’42.) 
(93) Theater (cont.) 
(4) Jack Paar. Marie Wison. 
(2) N’watch (cont.) 
55 (4) (color) News. 
(4) Farm 
(7) Crusade for Christ. 
  “Mad,   
husband, playwright Russel . . 
ome ooo Disabled Vets Install (2) Target. N Off H 
(10:45 (7) Sports. ew icers ere 
a Newly-elected adjutant of Pontiac '10:55 (7) Weather. sak 16 ecm ong hee 
tiac. Charles Brewin, also of Pon- 
tiac, was elected junior vice com- 
Mander. 
The election and installation of 
the new officers was held this week 
at the post’s hall, 199 Auburn Ave. 
John Tuseon, past post command- 
er from Pontiac, installed the new 
officers. 
The women’s auxiliary. of Post 16 
Auburn avenue hall. 
‘Bendix Aviation, UAW 
|Negotiate for Contract - 
DETROIT (#—Negotiations have | 
resumed between Bendix Aviation 
Corp. and the United Auto Workers 
for a contract covering 12,000 work- 
ers, 
The present extended: contract 
expires Monday, The UAW has vot- 
      reached. 
* * * 
Bendix has plants in Detroit and 
Benton Harbor, Mich., and in South 
Bend, Ind.; Teterboro, N. J:;. North 
.|Hollywood, Calif., and. Elmira 
Heights, N. Y. 
The UAW has said it wants pay 
increases, insurance and pension 
improvements and other conces- 
sions which it says have been 
‘\“commonplace in the industry.” announced at the same time a card) party and bazaar it will hold for 
the genera] public tomorrow eve-| !3 Auburn avenue all | 
od to strike ‘if a contract is not/ 4 WE LIKE IT HERE FINE — Well, ania 
Genevieve, Parisian.chanteuse on “The Jack 
, Paar Show,” misses New York a little bit since 
* the late-night ‘PV-merry-makers located in Holty- 
wood recently, But, Jack assures all that the’ 
switch is just temporary — “getting the show   
     
    
    out of a rut, so to speak.” Judging from that 
grin, it looks like pianist-orchestra leader Jose 
Melis (right) wouldn't mind staying on’ the west 
coast, though. Jack Paar is currently in his séc- 
ond year ef light-hearted television comedy. A 
* 
  \, Pe   
| lActrods Siciaily Wed 
{to Business Executive 
“Miss. New Hampshire in the Miss 
      
     HOLLYWOOD (AP)—The secret} 
of actress Kathleen Gal- 
and businessman ae Ly-{| 
man Stuart took place Oct, 27, the 
bride said Thursday. 
: Miss Gallant, 22,              
      
       is a former} TIME 
T¥v 
         America contest. Stuart, 34, is an v) Ad 
executive of Carnation Milk Co., 
ot which his father, Elbridge H. 
Stuart, is president. 
      
      
        
  
     
  
To Get Hackground: for Novel   
Forges Way 
SEATTLE (AP)—“Art is a liv- 
ing thing,” the intense young man 
said, “For anyone to create any- 
thing artistic, he must have lived it. ” 
* * * 
The words came slowly from 
William G. Gates ag he explained 
that his artistic goal is a novel 
with prison life as its background. 
Gates was sitting in the Seattle 
City jail. He literally had asked 
to go to prison, choosing forgery 
as his passport. 
x * * 
Det. T. C. Jorgensen of the Seat- 
tle police check detail arrested 
Gates, 27, Wednesday, afternoon. 
Gates quickly admitted in a signed 
statement he’was the forger of 
about $100 in bum checks. 
HOPES FOR YEAR. 
Talking with reporters, Gates 
said’ he calculated the amount he 
obtained through the worthless 
checks would get him about a year 
in the penitentiary, That's the time 
he says he needs to complete his 
education and get the necessary 
background for his novel. 
Gates said he felt that forgery 
to prison. ‘ 
x *« * 
“Tt doesn't cause anyone physi- 
cal pain,” he said, “and those to 
whom I dropped the checks could. 
well afford it.”. 
Gates graduated from Yakima 
(Wash.) Valley Junior College and was the least harmful way to get) ff Into Prison 
He said he had been planning his 
move for years, 
STUDIED DELINQUENCY 
“{. first became interested in 
juvenile delinquency when I was 
about 16,” he said. 
study of it until about two years 
ago when I began to try and un- 
derstandthe emotions 
ers and the reactions of convicts 
who are paroled. 
“They have about the hardest 
deal of anyone when they leave 
prison and again try to find a job. 
I want to write about them, and 
T want to know how they eel.” 
When Jorgensen got up to leave 
a broad smile came to Gate's face. 
“Tt was sure nice seeing you,” 
he said. 
  Catches Fish in Bucket 
MARLBOROUGH, Conn. (UPTI)— 
George Cronstedt reported that he 
scooped out a buckeet of water 
from a brook for his horse and 
caught an eight-inch trout, 
  
| 
i-)[=Jind 
BAP ii i Te 
SICIAIRIE ID! 
      spent a year studying psychology 
at the University of Washington. 
  14 es sel riers 
  
    V Star Denies 
“I made a 
of—prison-| Stay Permanent West Coast Is Lifting   
  Cate Blach sl White 
ALL WORK GUARANTEED 
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    Program Out of Rut, 
By JOE FINNIGAN 
the nation's TV viewers have had a 
look at what the ‘‘Jack Paar Show”? | 
good chance that more of the gen-| 
jal comedian's appearances may 
TV industry figured that Paar may 
age from here. 
have Béen on a scouting expedi- 
tion, with Hollywood in mind for 
a permanent location, when he 
brought his NBC group here from 
New York, 
Paar denies it, although he 
does not rule out the possibility 
that he and his crew may spend 
more time here than they have 
in the past, 
Paar, entering the second week 
of his three week stay, is not 
sure just what the frequency of 
be, 
“Tt don't know, but it's crossed 
my mind since I came here,’ he 
said, ‘‘The best. way would be to 
come back and forth.” 
* * * 
Admitting that Hollywood pos- sesses stars for guest shots, Paar 
does not feel that’s a compelling 
here for good, 
“There would be more well =   
  
    
      
‘wor 
i Lever of.arts 20 Opera worker   
  
21 Medical 
specialty 
= Cicatrix 
noe ‘ 
138 Printing term     
  
  
27 Variety of 
lettuce 
30 Tangle 
32 Ridicule 
Ks hers 
se fi 
35 Newspaper     
        
  
    
    
    
    
  
            rs 
54 ee word 
55 Beverages 
56 Golfers use 
57 Watch 
DO 
1 —— hay 
    n-grade 
politician                 
# Supreme 
happiness 
41 —— -maker 
42 Cooks use it 
43 In this place 
44 Region 
46 Fencer’s 
sword - 
47 Cry of 
bacchanals 
48 Grade 
$0 Citizen (ab.) 23 Grants 
24 Microbe 
25 Arrow poison 
Scra Dp 
27 Honorable 
mentions 
28 Scent 
20 Indian weights 
31 Baseball 
players have it 
Severit: y 
38 Put back 
  
    
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      -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed tn this column are subject to change without notice. 
  
  
  
    | * WPON, -Newa, Lewis WPON, Sports,   Wie, 18) = ORL, (800 ww; «v50) wean, (1190). WETZ, (97%) =—WPUN, (1400) WK, (1499) 
TONIGHT hy atid News, Sports oxLW pan anvie t2:30—WaR, Time for Music 
Geemeiges News. Reynolds WRYR. News Surrel CAR. News Woodling ews WJBK. Stereo WPON News Bob La 00-—-WIR. Footbal 
Wee “News McLeod WPOn Sees Mute Mees aeae Pokal R, News 11:30. CREW B SKtest Cie WZ races Siagie WON News Quis gee | eres oie = WPON Doo MacKin.on 
| #:30—WJR, Dinner Oate ‘ . 
eee, ane wa ag a SEN Reenter meres | SRE ee eine ar | Stes afent Lod J WPON Sena ettent & giver 0e— Wik, News, Melody WJBR. News C. Reid CKLW. Footbal 
ews * 
rad gavel es “pred wolt WPON Chuck Lewis WPON MacKinnon 
WEY2 Morgan . 
At & Lowi iy “Tt] WOAR ee News con. (0:30--WWJ. News, Melody | 2:30—CKLW. Pootbal 
wear, Bante Wein Newt Woedlise” ae Agriculture _— $:00. WIR, Pootball 129 WW ~ pan of Saddle Sec loa ree wes, Football = News George (1:00— WIR, News, Lewis Pr WCAR News Benne wes fF. wron fariv Bird Bote, WWJ, News, Melod 
160— WIK, Dan Kitby Sew hoon: Davies 4:00— WIR, Football Plashes ~ W News. Goodmorn . News, C, Reid WWJ, Scores. Maxwell few Montes” aay" WJBE News George WPON Chuck Lewis WCAR News Sennett wean “noc WPON Reb Lark 
#:30—WJIR, Answer Please | 3 , : a WBE. Basketball 330 ¢? ng «roc 11:38 WWI. Sports sae ee fiat 
} ee wan, Worle Tonight | Wane Kews ade WEAR News, Woosling WCAR News Bennett ; > | OCKLW, 
nase 06.WIR, News, Muste 
*WKYE Nee Quest » WWJ, News, Maxwell 9:30—WJIR, Special hey | SKLw w. “gers CKLW Ne “aood Morning WXYZ News Pun-»-Reama 
| orle .eday WCAR News, SATURDAY AFTERNOON | CKLW. News 
| 10:00. sympn WPON ‘Bob tare = WCAR News Bennett [ ony 12:00. WIR. Mews farm WPON Don MacKinnon 
¢ darren 8: Le as “hg Eg! ; WW) News, Mute : 
a SRE ROE Sen a teas | state ‘WIBRy News. Reid - | WXYZ Sports Pun-s.fteme 00. mats News "ww ta Gitabeth WCAR. News, Purse CAR. News, Page WJBK, warn, 3 ‘acKinnon ‘talking with network executives! wn people on the show from | 
here,” he said, “but that wouldn’t | 
keep the show going, 
“Names didn’t make this show,” 
he pointed out. ‘We developed our 
own star's.”’ 
* 
As for his guest stars, Paar gets 
them to appear for much less than) * * 
else, 
“We pay everybody $320. The big, 
stars come on because they want. 
to,” he revealed, 
“Bob Hope wants to come back 
on and Jack Benny would like to 
appear.” 
Paar’s appearance in Hollywood| 
is not the first time he has been| 
in town. 
When he worked here in the past, 
‘Paar was not the top star he is, 
\today. But, his return does not 
have the “I told you so” attitude. | 
“I was never important here, 
ever,” he said. “‘] was under con- 
‘tures until the ont — 
Lounging a a ca hotel res-| 
taurant in bright red sweater 
and sports slacks, Paar said his. 
show could benefit by spending, 
imore time in Hollywood, | 
“For the good of the show, I 
came back to get new people,” | 
he said. “We get into a rut in 
New York.” 
Paar recently injured his beck 
falling off a break-away stunt chair | 
on his show and he now sits on 
a Tubber tube which he calls a) 
“fanny life saver.” 
The quick-witted Paar bes been |    jabout cutting down the length of | 
his shows but no satisfactory for-| 
mula has been worked out as yet. 
“They want to work it out,” he; Says Genial Comedian 
HOLLYWOOD (UPD—Now that}. 
can do from Hollywood, there's Py 
Some people acquainted with the; SS SSeS SSS SSSCeUSSSeSseeseeaseeeeavcea 
his Hollywoéd appearances should : 
enough reason for him to locate 
| 
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remarked, “I know I can’t go on) 
nine hours a week.” | 
: * & & 
Even though the present situa-. 
tion is not to Paar’s ‘liking, he! 
squelches any rumors that a 
might jump to another network. | 
“NBC has been good to me,"’ he 
said;“‘I’m not talking to other net- | 
works,.J don’t deal. that way.” | 
      News! House Hits Car 
SEYMOUR, Ind, (UPI)—Ralph |}. Pardieck, 29, escaped uninjured § - 
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“Open 
    
    
    
       
   
   
     
     
       
          
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
        
    
     
      
    
        
      
      
    
    
    
   
   
   
        
               
           
         
   
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| fired from a space platform 
any ih’ Goad ae aia 
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Because the field of missiles and 
rockets is so new there aren't any 
textbooks, the Cocoa chapter of the 
‘American Rocket Society’s Florida 
division offered to instruct Brevard 
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and Honeysuckle dresses 
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Brother and Sister Topper Sets .. . Made of cotton wash ‘n 
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nitewear 
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Pink or blue solid color 
trousers, matching print 
tips. 34-40 
     
    
   
     
     
   
   
       
   
   
     
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Main Floor 
  
    Brother and sister topper sets   
Just Say, “Charge It” (een aa 
Use Sears Revolving 
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   Red Vinyl Covered ° 
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Acrilan 
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Children's and Infants’ Dépt., Main Floor ‘Only by making a huge pur- = 
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But don’t delay, it won't last 
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Honeysuckle Gauze 
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Plenty of big, long-lasting fun for the junior engineer 2 F L re) Oo R 
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154 North Saginaw St. 
*; _ Phone FE 5-4171 | 
    3511 Elizabeth. Lake. Highwa 
4994 Dixie Highway .. 
Both Stores Ove Monday, sian and Saturday “19°   Here is’a fascinating hobby for young | 
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