@ i 7 : AS "a E_PONTIAC PRESWd HNO U. &. Weather Bureau Forecas. Partly cloudy, cooler, ‘Motoils Page %) 116th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958—64 PAGES UNITED PREAS INTERNATIONAL Te > + Bonneville Highlights Pontiac Display Decision Due, Lawyers Waive Kierdorf on Trial for Possession Magician, Singer Top Fund Show “ype or np mentee taut s Vocalist Fred Kendall and magician Miss Paddy Beach’ of Gun Silencer Oral Arguments will help kick off this year’s tenth anniversary Pontiac : Area United Fund Drive Monday evening. Uscle-of "Tarch’-Vicses League Contends Funds The pele VM teadime:the gala kick-off show to be : ay for Disputed Buildi # £ag held at Pontiac Central} Will Seek Dismissal r Uispute viding High auditorium. From Judge Adams Collected, Illegally Kendall is best known to Pontiac By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL J area residents for his appearances) Herman Kierdorf, ex-aide y GEORGE T. MBULL JR. on the Bud Guest show on WJR. of Teamster boss James R. LANSING — The fate of Miss Beach is billed as the |Hoffa, today faced trial be-|. ithe disputed Oakland world’s greatest female magician ‘County courthouse was laid and creatress of comedy. Wer {Ore Circuit Judge Clark J. lin the hands of the Michi- acts of magic reach a high point Adams on, a charge of in comedy when she selects | nossessing a pistol silencer, Ca Serene Coun today. members of the audience as im- oe Oral ar ts th Beginning of the trial SHUTS 1a promptu assistants. g g : f hee t t Warney Ruhl's 10-piece orches-/ W@S delayed for a while this pee ecient cour tra, and his vocalist Patti Brown;/morning as authorities necision pad Sout thous will accompany the two headliners. | awsult were waived this Ruhl's orchestra was featured at | Waited eee ‘morning by Charles A this year’s Michigan State Fair tO Conclude in Judge lev. ae ; ° The Kick Off Show, sponsored Adams’ courtroom. The. (Davis, assistant County by Community National Bank as a . | corporation counsel, and j t. , ae ; public service, is expected to at- Rierdors Cane wat Dex iGlenn C. Gillespie for the : tract a capacity crowd of close to| Herman Kierdorf. 67, is the Oakland County Taxpay- 1,000 to the high school auditorium. |uncle of Frank Kierdor{, the Flint lers’ League : . _Tickets are limited to volunteer|Teamster business agent whose The aan jurists of the court | sl ee rele tee aieae death this summer resulted in a accepted the case on the briefs ee “lrequest for grand jury action in filed by both sides : — a sind eens Oakland County. Davis and Gillespie agreed just , a ; . * prior to opening the arguments ) . . ; yeas that there were no new points not First Commercial Jet Rist ibe argon! included in the briefs, and that the ets Committee in Washington Both i oral argumenis: would (waste the " . 5 ; : . court's time. 1 ( h ed b M had served me in prison after | The case is before the high i risten yY amie felony convictions. | lcourt on the county’s appeal of a ; While the silencer apparently _ “ORBITING” — An “orbiting” Pontiac Bonneville convertible _ Blimpse of the car's stylish appearance as well as a mechanic's |@¢cision of visiting Harrisville | From Our Wire Services _ nad eters — peat | highlights Pontiac Motor Division displays in General Motors’ fifth eve-view of the rugged frame and underside construction as the Circuit Judge Herman C. Dehnke. N — Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower will! came to lig ug. *, Y | Motorama at New York. Motorama visitors will get an intimate automobile revolves CoE TSI from spindles. dudge Dehnke ruled a year ago WASHING M 4 . ; " Frank staggered inte St. Joseph _______| that the county had created a christen today the nation’s first commercial jet trans-) Merey Hespital with burns cov- $1,392,427 building fund for the ering most of his body. He died seecvames Glittering Array of have never been satisfactorily ay O eW or S explained. Authorities say thal after Frank's identity became known, Madison| Heights Police Chief Robert C. Richardson went to Herman Kier-| dort’s home. According to Richard- son, Herman wasn't home but ay ‘neighbor girl, Judy Tyler, 15, was’! home next door. * courthouse by padding annual badgets and transferring the sur- pluses so as to accrue this sum. This, the judge said, was illegal, ‘especially since the county acted ‘after taxpayers twice in 1954 voted against increased taxes to pay off port, the Pan American World Airways clipper America, in colorful pre-inaugural flight ceremonies at Washing- ton National Airport. The first lady will smash a bettle of water, collected from the seven seas, across the nose of Pan Am’s giant Boeing 707-121 jet shortly after 4 p.m. Three hours later the America will leave Baltimore’s Friendship International Airport for a flight to the Brus-, sels World’s Fair that will ® open the jet age under the j, wij! return to the United States| te dal the Bs ee 9 : American flag. About 50, Oct. 1: briefcase and a paper bag. saying mile- ho Boeing 707- government officials and! Oo nea ill fly trom New fork|Herman had given them to her ‘for safekeeping.'’ In the briefcase. | | The show, opening press executives will be to Paris in seven hours, to Rome! Clamps Down GM Prepares Presented in GM’s Motoramaty Move Cars Siistis tor dals, no steering wheel and A i tew vot the pir accel sembly Linés Ready, i a Wetss BRRECY ed tat yea to Start Up as 43 Plants | t was the League's contention, accessories, f | and the judge agreed, that the Settle Grievances - By DAVID WILKIE General Motors has disclosed aa a that the entirely new Chevrolet,’ ne ee ene ar | Cadillac, Buick, Oldsmobile and y of new automobles and & Pontiac cars represent an invest- jdazzling stage spectacle mark the| ‘ment of more than 500 million dol-| General age oe ena, lars for designing and tooling. The| ballroo od e wa “Astoria Motorama presentation probably room today. cost several million more. today, will {continue for a week as an admis-| | sion- free spectacle. In many re- | spec ts this year’s Motorama repre- lsents the bold approach General In addition to the individual county was bound to a constitu- tional limit of raising yearly not P — General Motors’, ™re than .1 mill on money bor- : ; “| rowed or taxed for building pur- jshowings in the main ballrooms, leach of the five car divisions had product showings of their own in adjoining rooms. * DETROIT first production of new cars in two | ses. weeks neared today in the wake! aid of strike settlements. | The League, an_ independent With its nationwide employment 8toup formed expressly to fight approaching 100,000. the industry's the county's building plans, said higgest car maker was preparing the county had violated this law. The county has said that the law Richardson said, were the silencer board. iin eight hours and 50 minutes, and| — d to London in six and a half hours|—described as a homemade affair increase in current Pan CoMtrived out of ordinary plumb- They will have er's pipe—a German pisto! which Warm and Dry Weather Fare * * * The airline's first commercial jet 2° ° | American fares. i flight with paying passengers is, two classes, economy and deluxe, authorities say fits the silencer Motors’ top executives have urged. in iene recenbiy ares sen! : scheduled for Oct. 26 when daily; ‘The round trip fares to Paris. jand some dynamite caps. In . |to further stimulate a reviving for 30 Days again does not limit the amount that j service between New York, Paris! will be $489.60 and $909, to Rome Pag. Pichardson ae hes a: 0 l QL i ‘consumer confidence. Two of the plants that settled|can be raised for building pur- : jcaliber pistol an o teleph 2 ‘ is i | and Rome will be inaugurated. =| $591.50 and $1,041.50. and to Lon-| eee 7” nee | They have said returning con- WASHINGTON (UPI) — The local issues with the United Auto a if the “ ee : derived / Jet clippers wil] start serving (don $453.60 and $873. Ponti Safety Director ‘idence assures a substantial in. | Weather Bureau's 30-day forecast Workers were the Lansing and from sources 0 net | Gian ekenera { Judy told Richard hat H onnac oare y virector ; A Jel ambly Property taxes or borrowing. Lendon on a daily basis Nov. 16 | udy tol chardson that Her- | crease in car sales in 1959. Most | from mow until mid-November Wilmington. Del.. car assembly Donald Winters. clerk of the and jets will be assign'd to |[NCOMeS Soar | man bad brought the bag to her Orders Straley to Stop of them agree with other indus- | calls for warm, dry weather for factories, the first such to settle. Coie bue e 2) | other PAA routes at later dates. house that morning and the brief- | 4 )-,- | try forecasters that 5'; million | much of the nation, The forecast The two employ a total of 10,000 (Continued on Page 1-, Col. « ; A | Hitting PAS Report j 7 2 million | Juan T. Trippe. president of Pan|/fO Record H igh | (Continued _ 7: ee | care ‘will be seld tm the U_ 8. | fellows: “me : mantel : i ominiaed onpnage ic Col) market next year x *& American since 1927, will preside! . 3 : _ GM said new settlements 1n Se tember ; Police Chief Herbert W. Straley! If forecasts of GM's division Temperatures to average | broughts its work force to 92,600 | H : iwas ordered yesterday to refrain above seasonal normals over a¢ 43 of its 126 plants in the Press Publisher on Jet a| Managers are realized. GM will a of its 'p i 7 - = eserv (from any further attacks on th most of the nation, except for WASHINGTON ® — Personal a . : |account for more than 55 ent ’ nation. The full normal emplovy- 7 : ublic Administration Service re- o> per Cent) near to below normal east of : ioctl kere is ® Harold A. Fitzgerald, pub- | in-ome climbed t ord . jof that total. The GM total cur- ‘ ; ment of production workers is lisher of The Pontiac Press will come clim oa hew rec M port on’the police department. main (So i abs the Appalachians, along the Gulf | 275 990. An ont lac ras be one of a group of 4@ news. | !@8t month. Much of the increase argin on foc! 5 |_In a memorandum to Straley, “"" dis esi a about 49 per! Coast, and also in the Pacific... . apermen participating in the | was in the durable goods indus- |Public Safety Director George D ee mauatey fatal. Northwest. There are some indi. | Local issue’ strikes have been first commercial jet flight to | tries that had been hard hit in| WASHINGTON —The, Federal ©@stman said: | fd pi ae gna last night| cations of a sharp break in the (5° as aI “ ake ares ine on 2 - Missouri Resident Dies . “Inasmueh as the PAS report attracte severa thousand New prevailin ly warm regime, per- "ational contract settlement. 1e curepe. 4 v recessi Reserve Board acted yesterday t Bly. gime, | . . . caiaesave ‘hats ee athcraseal tae = “~ check stock ae na by direction of (City Manager) W.| York civic, business and society} haps during the first half of No- ai AW has! permitted’ Incals 10 star Vac 74 Vehicles Collide at Brussels. The party will d | * *_* iraising margins — or minimum)§- Willman has been established | leaders and newsmen from} vember, but it is too early to Ol wntil seftlement of their own chose Mead Lar ded —_— The Commerce Department re- . =n (a8 ide for the reorganization| throughout the nation. Packing th y ve . new | issues - Cass-Oakland Corner - tomorrow at the fair. down payments—on stocks from 70/28 2 8ulde for the reorganization & ng the| sp@cify the nature ‘of the new ues : ported that the income total in ||, go per cent. The hike is effec- and improvement of the police de-;main ballroom, they saw huge me-| weather pattern. pGhunsien today Vsocei! io ice H, at the ceremonies which will mark| September reached an annual tive today. ‘partment, it should not be a sub-|chanical ~ ‘arm lift cars from the kt ok two Detroit strikes that upset 4s A Case Gre We. eamar the first christening of, a PAA rate of 37512 billion dollars — (Read story on page 49) ject of controversy in or out of Platform and swing them forward “Precipitation is predicted to hours of labor ipagce at that Con was killed vesterday afternoon in clipper by a member of the White; "P 1'2 billions from August and | It was the second time in three’ the department.’ jto the front of the stage, where) be subnormal over mrost areas, Pats. About 2.400 workers were i fourvehicle collision at the inter- House family since Margaret Tru-| 4P 8bout 11 billions from the re- | | Qin. the board had boosted the’ Straley declared that the PAS ithe cars rotate to present a view! except for near to above normal !9¥olved : section of Cass. and Oakland man christened the Boeing 377, cession low last February. _margin requirements. The New. report unfairly attacked him and |{™ all angles. | im the western quarter of the At fhe same time Ameren onus _ double-deck Stratocruiser in 1949. It was the seventh straight | York stock market has hit four | the department, in a: speech | Another interest-catching feature | country and also along the gulf !oters and the UA\ RENEE in + * * month in which personal income | pocord peaks in the past week fol-- Monday night before the Wash- |Was a motion picture showing of) coast.” a contract negohation for 15.000) gape dais Funk. 67. died The America will be flown to) had risen and the third straight |iowing a period of general upward ington Park Civic Assn. 'GM's Firebird III experimental car | ———____—— /Motkerssan the exe (of the present] sock and head injuries at 45 Baltimore for a reception by; Month in which it set a new acernand | lin action. The car, upon which ‘Catts, Ratts Separated agtecttent 5 pes Pieation pm. at Pontiae Mayor Thomas D'Alessandro and; mark. | A board member said the action’ He € called the report the work of GM reportedly expended several | P OO Oakland | (orera! Hospual. to pick up the inaugural flight; The figures given out by the was taken with the intention of pre- a ‘28-year-old man with four/hundred thousand dollars, incor-- GOLDSBORO. N.C. (UPD — They All Stoyed Home les: Injured was party there for a’7 p.m. takeoff} Commerce Department were. ad- venting future excessive specula-| years’ experience out west as a/porates almost fantastic electronic The Catts have moved from | Highway Gertrude Shryock, for more ceremonies in Brussels. justed for seasonal factors, tion. oe hia trors) iia copa | adaptations. It is powered with aj Center street—and the Ratts are | MANILA (UPI) — There wet Toll 7h of St. Louis, igas turbine engine and is con-| sorry to see them go. Until the | no winners last night at the Na- 6 Coe Mo She was re- Straley aft di t In Ss to Straley after reading reports of trolled by a eile four- inch stick. | move, Mr. and Mrs. ae R. Ratts | tional Press Club's Bites Night” ™ perted in fair con- Newest Space Ship Unveiled the chet stalk nue! G. Chap. With the sick it is accelerated) and Col, and Mrs, Harold J. Catt | whem a 82s pre was offered to | | AMPED | ssrun this mom: Eastman calle Ae G. oo ‘steered and stopped | (along with nine litle Cats) any man who had a ate of ite ing at Pontiac a an oueonding Ueelecionl = There are no brake or accelera-| were next-door neighbors here. | his mother-in-law with him General. She suf- : al!- —— ——< — fered multiple student of police administration. | erempetiones auell a. nese ee -;He said that Chapman had been) if ° \ She was a passenger in Miss trained in PAS work before coming State WCTU Disagrees — un S . a Peesenger ess - jto Pontiac. eal t+ * * * * wsses ftoid police tha P Ce mavminse« Scores Repor rea fa ithe two women rode in ran a red onmended a thors avert ing gi, seine south on Gakland and and reorganization of the depart-) | hit — ven by Sh aton thes Dean, ESR eee. peel BOYNE CITY Uh— An Epis- ences from Genesis to St. Paul's, The Epissonalian report preed 19, of 446 Lowell St., which was low ‘espirt de corps’ and little /©OPalian report which says mod- EO up its sane y |that moderation be observed in| Moving east on Cass » public prestige.” jerate social drinking is in full Amo aaia . ial the weru arinking, noting that “a Christian, It then crossed the center line a Be accord with Biblical teaching isn't a ; , . who drinks moderately with due’ and ran into a city garbage truck very definitely disagrees with its conclusions.” The WCTU opened its “84th an- ‘nual convention here yesterday. driven by Claude David Seay, 36, of 2% Crawford St. The truck was traveling north on Oakland. | Fe getting any support from the Mich- Breezes Will Ease, an a Christian Temper- jAlong With Mercury Mrs. C. W. Van Arsdalen of | Hillsdale, vice president of Mich. | igan’s WCTU, says “We have no Partly cloudy and turning a lit- tle cooler tonight and Friday is the forecast by the weatherman for regard for the feelings and needs of his brothers and with a con- scientious care for the claims of God can drink with thanksgiving “a¢|to Him for these blessings.” In Today's Press | The car driven by Sharon Lea ;Dean struck broadside an auto But, it added, that if drinking |driven by James A. Rousseau, 31, becomes the primary motive of of 417 E. Tennyson Ave. He was any occasion, rather than a sec- [moving east on Cass. : ondary asset to sociability, then | ———————————— sympathy with moderation - — we believe in total abstinence. The report on drinking was de- ay the Pontiac area. The low tonight|livered this week at the Episco-, Comies . : - 48 what is good has been prevented. : will drop to near 57. : |palian General Convention = Mi-| County News ........ bones 26 Mrs. Van Aredalen said there © oege Losses High Today’s southwesterly winds at/ami Beach, Fla..It was drawn up| Falitoriats ...........\---- 6 |are 612 references in the Bible’ ANN ARBOR (UPI) — More 18 miles an hour will decrease to-/by a commission on alcoholism| Food Section .........- 30-34 warning of the dangers of alcoholic) than one-third of college students al Q : — night, becoming northwesterly by|headed by Delaware's Bishop J. Markets |. peseesereenes s 49 beverages. Alcohol may properly! across the country “fail the first First To ) CARRY PILOT — The X-15 lose , AP Wirephete |morning. The high tomorrow will Brooke Mosley, of Wilmington, Obituaries ...............- : : be used outside the body, as an} year and nearly two-thirds drop ship, a sleek black. beauty designed to take man the craft, said “we have moved into first place |"e@ch around 78. la! Lyaattad eaessanooros dana $3- 47 Jantiseptic, but inside the bddy it} out before getting a degree,” - to the fringes of space, is shown publicly for the in the race to enter outer space,” First. test The rts temperature in down-} It said in part that ‘there is no Wan dg Progeane. tee * impairs judgment and self con- George D. Stoddard, dean of New first time at the North American Aviation plant flights are expected by next February, (See story town Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. scriptural command requiring §to- adio Programs .... - trol. One out of nine who take York University School of Edu- ip Los Angeles, Vice President Nixon, inspecting on — .) 1 A was 58 degrees, The mercury rose|tal abstinence for the God-fearing| Wilson, Earl ...........:.. their first drink hecome aicohol-| cation, said at the University of ' : M >. t to 76 at 1 p.m, mary’ and cited scriptural -refer-| Women's Pages ........ 35-39 Jics.”” “ 4 Michigan yesterday, a #4: “Two ve GIAQ YW «» THE PONTIAC PRESS, | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958. Williams Roasts GOP, Bagwell Gain PORT HURON iF — Confidence | swelled today in the camp of Re-( publican Paul D. Bagwell. The GOP gubernatorial candidate jumped his fast-moving campaign! into west Michigan for a day after. telling newsmen he felt Gov. Wil- hams was “‘concerned,” and: * * ¥ “Personally, I believe he's run- ning scared.” A few hours before some 1,400 ie s Confidence KALAMAZOO W — A delighted Gov. Williams looked out last night over the biggest Democratic audi- ence he'd ever seen in this part of the state and declared: “We are serving notice that isouthwest Michigan is no longer going to be a Republican reserve.” Roused by more than 650 hand- clapping Democrats from 11 coun- tties. Williams roasted Republicans with one of the more furious talks lof the campaign. to 1,500 persons were feq [ast | night at a Bagwell barbecue on the farm of State Rep. Raymond C, Wurtze} (R-Port Huron) and 500 more were turfied away, Two years ago, a Wurzel barbe- cue for the late Mayor Albert E. Cobo, then GOP governor nominee, | attracted less than 600 at a dollar]. a throw. Three weeks of hard os motion preceded the Cobo affai; Bagwell voiced his rising eth mism after a reporter noted re- ports Williams was campaigning 16 to 18 hours a day. * * * “When he’s going around like aicial in two decades, they haven’ t! distributing an/controlled county government for | whirling dervish, enormous amount of literature and) taken—as I understand—500 _bill- boards, I don’t believe he's trying. to pile up a margin. I think he's: concerned about wjnning.”’ * * * More than 100 members of six! service clubs who attended a joint) luncheon organized by the Lions| Club yesterday heard Bagwell liken, himself to a doctor diagnosing Michigan government ills. * * * In reply to criticisms from the Williams camp, he said: “To be acctsed@d of running down Michigan because We Re- publicans draw attention to one of its critical problems is com- parable to blaming a doctor for cancer because he diagnoses the disease.” He said the Williams administra- tion sat idle while factory jobs| failed to keep pace with a Michi- gan population spurt of 1,541, between 1949 and 1957. * * * | He told his audience this may | be the year to oust some of ‘‘the persnickity, pickle-faced” Repub. licans who control every office . | in 66 ef Michigan's 83 county courthouses. |} “We Democrats have to build our | j future on the grass roots,”’ he said, | lin this area.’ * * * The crowd which filled the big ballroom at Western Michigan Uni- versity’s Student Union took heart but wondered. Democrats haven't elected a Kalamazoo county offi- many years more. Most other southwestern counties show similar | records. Speaking without notes, Wil- liams said, “There is no reason we can’t elect a U.S. senator this fall, and there is no reason we ean’t add seven or a dozen representatives to give us con- trol of the House. “Oh, what a happy day,” he jexclaimed. ‘Then Democrats jwould have an opportunity to do the things they want to do.” Williams lit into Paul D. Bagwell, |Bagwell’s attempt to show the | Democratic governor’s policies are driving business out of the state’ are “‘an outrage,’’ he said. Sports Cars Hold ‘and we can make a great sweep |- Saginaw street. NEW SHOE STORE — Today is the grand | opening of the new Gillies Shoe Store at 49 N. The store features a self-service department in the front section. A fitting depart- | ment is in the rear of the building. The store is Pontiac Press Photo operated by Irving Gillies, who has another shoe store at 26 W. Huron St. He has been. in business in the city 25 years. The store offers nationally- known brands. | Only Outlet Is on Gulf of Red Sea the sea—the port of ‘Aqaba at the head of a gulf of the Red Sea. Jordan’s port hasg been excep- tionally busy lately ahi debarka- |tion point for British troops and” n- Gymkhana on Sunda | The newly registered Pontiac) isupplies, ranging ‘from armor, trucks, and barbed wire to food In the settled west, with any Arab Landlocked Jordan Seeks: to Improve Port of Aqaba his Republican rival, with a will.) WASHINGTON — Like the one-' Iraq and Syria—Egypt's partner in| taking to the shoulder of the high- jeyed giant Cyclops, the Kingdom the young and dynamic United! way But the truck ran over Kin- of Jordan has but one outlook on/ Arab Republic. Jordan faces Israel across a bulging 350- | mile front, the longest shared by Israel Though fighting incidents have erupted along this border in re- state. jand technical equipment. ’~ &* * Its harbor has recently been im cent years, it is there that pros- pects for econamic development are brightest. ‘South Haven Man Dies | three parking violations, Fenton The Day in Birminighsin * ) 7 BIRMINGHAM — Charged with R. Mathews of 5900 N. .Adams Rd., stood mute yesterday in Bir- mingham Municipal Court. * * * | A plea of not guilty was entered for him on each count by Judge John J. Emery, who set jury trial dates for Nov. 19, 24 and 26. Mathews was ticketed Sept. 8 by Birmingham police for over- time parking, leaving keys in the ignition of his automobile and fer improper parking. The defendant was not repre- sented by an attorney. Monday, Dec. 8, has béen set “ Birmingham's fifth annual Men's | Night when all stores in the city) will cater to the man of the house | as he does his Christmas shopping. | The retail merchants committee of the Birmingham Chamber of | Commeree is completing plans for the event, according to Fost Toothacher, chairman. | Five members of the Birming- tham Chamber of Commerce, in- cluding Pa Paul ul Kyrth, , President, and | | ‘After Being Hit by Truck | | SOUTH HAVEN uw — Karl Kin- ichen, about 60, of South Haven, was killed yesterday when he was | struck by a semi-truck while cross- ing U.S. 31 near here. * * * The driver of the track, Nicky” |Go sodin, 26, of Grand Haven, told ‘police he tried to avoid Kinchen by {chen’ s leg, which waw amputated at a hospita] in a futile effort to lsave his life. Goodin was not held. In ancient times in England, no | Subject could possess a swan | without a license from the Crown. Trick or Treat BAG Given FREE with Any Simms Costume Sturdy handles, ample size to carry all your treats. FREE with any costume this week only. | Dress up for Halloween * j Jury Trial Will Decide Parking Violations Case Charles Mortensen, manager, at- tended. yesterday's meeting of the United States Chamber of Com- merce at Ann Arbor. The meeting was for the edyca- tion and instruction of directors, chairmen and key personnel in chamber policies and duties, Mor- tensen said. ——— Area members of the Detroit Panhellenic Assn, will be hos- tesses Tuesday at the annual President’s Tea at the South boulevard home of Mrs. J. D. Eldon. Honored will be Mrs. Dodson of Oak Park, who cur = my oi The formal affair will take place om 2 A Rebekah Lodge 445 of Birming- ham will hold a rummage sale tomorrow from 8 a.m, to 6 p.m, at 1360 S$, Woodward Ave. Dr. Horace McMullen, president of Aleppo College in Syria, will speak on “Rifts and Reconcilia- tions in the Middle East at 8 ‘p.m, Saturday at the Congrega- tional Church of Birmingham. Program chairman Robert Ker- ley said; x * * “I think Dr. McMullen will let go and tell us just. what is going on in the Middle East. I think, too, he will have something to say on Nasser’s proposal that all the Rebert Arabic peoples be bound together as one unit.” BRACH Ghevies palette reall Soft 41" Miniatures, po . 85 Center, pound...... BRACH 20 Varieties € warren’ foment Seppo Full pound........ ae 89 Pound bex....:..... 2 WHITMAN'S Fairhill $4 75 WHITMAN'S Messin- $4 50 Full pound ........... 1 cer. l4-oz, box......., CANDY 98 North Main Seoinew Floor Ta pee Delicious = eee what a treat Ser caoty sweet! FULL Cc 13-Oz. BOX © swimming jal posed oot = MONDAY, PHEASANT SEASON OPENS OCT. 20th Sports Car Club will conduct its: 1° Dr ae A tik mae To maintain the 1949 propor- Be fall gymkhdna, Sunday, at \proved, and a constiuction pro- pel aie of ™ pieclecalecs tion of factory jobs to population, lthe Miracle Mile parking lot, and. gram is under way to provide loath feecthe, ce > Se es “ 240,000 would have to have been/aj) sports car drivers of the area|¢xtensive handling and_ storage he wat — Pel an nS an FRIDAY & > Hunting COMPARE added. Only 76,000 actually were, | The work, -however, is R!cr Valley and the Dead Sea, SIMMS ; are invited to take part. An-entry the world’s deepest inland depres- SATURDAY F LOWER he said, ltee of $2 per driver is 1 lexpected to take another year. EA : . : icenses | requied | sion SPECIALS PRICES —$—_— ito this event that emphasizes | Meantime, United States experts ~ Giveving eng 7 ian ISSUED HERE 100 P] R di safety, precision driving and tests | 2Fe reported to be aiding the hard- a GY ng eneinee* nave ong , -rius ned Ing af eicill. pressed Arab nation with problems Pointed out ee is be wool ve , ; ’ *& & of unloading and transporting oi! d¢v¢loped for irrigation and power. All Famous Brands—New Fresh Stock—All Sizes if the neighboring countries could Trophies will be awarded in all, A lve) Te, classes. Event starts. at 10 a.m. |HOLDS STRATEGIC SPOT Cars should have a navigator, or| Jordan occupies a strategic spot, co-polit in addition to driver, as in the northwest corner of the vast jsome of the tests require use of desert wastes of the Arabian Pen- Forecast Again for Los Angeles By United Press International © REMINGTON and WESTERN Shotgun SHELLS | agree to cooperate. CHEMICAL TREASURE The Dead Sea holds a chemical treasure in potash and phosphates | All Popular Brands— Heat! One hundred and one de-| oi FRESHEST J .,. that already supply growing indus- grees of the stuff yesterday in| both. ‘insula, says the National Geo- : : > 7 downtown Los Angeles and 100-plus| + * * graphic Society. About the size of tTies on both sides. Jordan's chief CIGARE T | ES a SS pe temperatures predicted for today., Club, which numbers 25 mem- Indiana, it has landlocked fron- export is now high-grade phos- . bers, seeks to interest other. sports ‘tiers 1.000 miles long, compared Phate fertilizer, shipped through 218 Regular Size Its with its 5-mile window on the blue} ‘Aqaba. Per Carton * * * : 4 icar drivers of the community. Not long ago, most of Jordan’s Yesterday's record high came on} Pe officers are: President, Richard| wat ars of the Gulf of 'Aqab hoc ir favorite brand and seve : Gp CoO lee wave eoctens Johnson; secretary - treasurer, | . ‘ * ° * we exports and imports traveled to © Lucktes, PiOamiela, a Philip 3 Southern California Monday and land from the Mediterranean by | Mo"? Chesterfields, etc. This low 3 has been increasing its grip daily. Juanita Brooks and the following | To the south. east and north, @¢ ‘rom te alee nae 2 price plus 7c tax. | No letap was in sight before the directors: Richard Bell, Carl Jordan's rocky and arid expanses overland routes across Syria anc King and Filter 228 ee the U s Weather Bu- Bronkowski, Norm Heinbecker. ‘merge with those of Saudi Arabia. Lebanon. Per Carton . id —— . ef e Choice of entire stock ineluding beau $a. T Tog vy, the main rate lanes are |) © esos eeeat Cee Sh eee eroy. a . etc us x. - Fair, summery weatner ore \(Galoshes Gang’ Alumni tn st sis theta | SS “! |F GOOD COSTUMES. longed its stay across most of | that it may eventuall y iene an Ronsonal . Sizes 3-4-5-6 I A the nation Thursday with the an a : e O ice important distribution point for Lighter Fluid CLOWN Your Choice 7 @ i only major rain area occurring | b Pp li Near East trade. Modern high- 4-02. C KITTEN . in flood-stricken Texas. vA iways are planned to replace the r on WITCH Cc HEAVY LOADS ° FI ELD LOADS : tae i spl 6 ae eg. PIRATE e f rsons have been ; winding desert trails and rails that . 12-16-20 Gauw psi ene hols homes on the| BIG RAPIDS (UPI)—Two form- Rockford Post came to Bié Rap- li nk the port with Dead Sea indus- Vie RED RIDING 12- 16 - 20 Gouges ° ga ler members of the notorious ‘‘Ga- ids to question the men about try, and with Jordan's capital, ; HOOD Values > Values Texas and Mexican sides of the, | Ronson Fluid 49c Your choice of any of the above e lower Rio Grande Valley as the loshes Gone and a aa Sas pie recent burglaries in the area. ‘Amman, to the north, | Value (8-o. Can) costumes oe ee price plus tree to $3.40 ~ ° to $2.95 rain-swollen river surged above | a —— - | . e “ |bonds today of charges of carry-! ER COSTUMES | ° flood stage ag seal eranere DIS ie AU PER BOX OF 25 SHELLS $ PER BOX OF 25 SHELLS * * * \ i er BLACK CAT Unseasonably ms he night The three men, all from Grand PE A : ecorariia Your Choice MAGNUM LOAD SHELLS readings were reported throughoul Rapids) were arrested by State DEVIL the Midwest. At sec ee Police yesterday headed north. SKELETON 49 12 Gauge 16 Gauge 20 Gauge Crosse, Wis., recorded a balmy Rapids yesterday headed north. eae GIRL 29 98 89 73 degrees while Trav ampere and | Troopers Edward Seath and Fr ed) T0 ALL | Ow - = aie ach each ha egree Wadell of ue Reed City post said! so : SCARECROW or 25 or 25 or” 25 emperatures they stopped their car because A cool air invasion in the its license plate was unlighted. FISHER BODY EMPLOYES BEST COSTUMES Sizes 4-6-8-10-12-14 12-16-20 Ga. Tie Ends, Suede Northern Plains dropped tem- peratures to near 40 in Northern Checking over the car, the. of- _ ficers found a bag containing | BUGS BUNNY SH ELL ‘FACTORY SMOKERS’ VG SHES | Fresh! | SATELLITE JOE Montana. ib ‘ c 5 fee : : i onsa | ee, foots under ithe ood Bt There will be a ratification meeting of the ¢ FAIRY PRINCESS BELTS CASES Forecasters said the cooling tween the grill and radiator jet PILOT . $1.29 Value $1.29 Value trend will extend acrogs the North-| and a loaded 9 millimeter auto. | national agreement at the Lincoln Junior $2.00 BOX of 50 ROBIN HOOD. ¢ ern Plains today and into most of matic pistol. | . =e. 7 ¢ the Upper Mississippi Valley. Jackets found in the car had High School, Fine tobacco . OTHERS leaves, smooth JUNIOR SIZE 16 $ : Adjustable belts rubber gloves, black navy stock- ll and aromatic ci- Costumes,..... oe 40) be ing caps and handkerchiefs sewed : ‘| gars. Limit 1 box. : ADULT SIZE $415 . and shotguns. The Weather * Btinto the left sleeves. Saturday, October 18, 1958 * Costumes.......... oe 4 -16-20 Ga. Cleans Rust = Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report Paige were Aexanaer Gerald 1] 00 A ta ue SHOTGUN ul a ernis ormer leader of the, ° i PONTIAC AND VICINITY — \Fal"-/“Galoshes Gang:"* Carl E, Herr. at ° ° M. DIMM ssciitss SEM M DD sci CLEANING oppes warm and windy today. High 82 n senor: ‘ z . 4ERS Solvent vouthwest increasing to 20 to 30 mites’ mann, 32, also a former member | 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor | RODS im afternoon. Partly cleudy and turning It Is Important That You Attend This Meeting = Floor tn alleen eon er tonight. and Friday.(0f the gang and now a Grand 98 N. ——— Winds decreasing eee See ee ei ‘Rapids used car dealer and Don- Ow Gab rdesy ald A. LaLonde, 22 * Teday in Pontiac $1.00 Value >< — SEES FRIDAY and SATURDAY L AWAY SALE! GERALD KEHOE, President Fisher Local #596. U.A.W. =~ * 5O@O8OSOSSOGOHCES 0000808080888 88 8: Lowest temperature preceaing 8 am | The “‘Galoshes Gang” commit- Hardwood rod For all guns, Ss Gane’ Wind wele 1 mph (ted more than 200 burglaries and | Seeeren ene : Ser nevrante rant Wea eae ——e [aera ee a ae ele : = Ae OS, Caree oot oon ft lana an io before its members| 3” as. , PS s RS ff A So Stcon et 5 ahuretes at 903 of, |were sent to prison in 1947. z . ao. ded “nN MIRACLE FIBRES. INSULATION Coleman GUN BLUE KIT Moon rises Friday at 1203 pu Ameri , Restle! their burglaries were ca’s Most Popular Shoes Cost Less at Simms § Lanterns A $1.00 ¢ @am onan Tea “9 committed in northern Michigan. | LADI ES—-MI SSES—Gi RLS N 21 95 SLEEP BA Single Burner Value 8 em -§ m 76 They got the name “Galoshes | sam 08 lpm 76 y . G D & Pp | Regular $14.95 Choice of 2 famous 9am 63 * Gang” because they wore ga- P yo 3] *, brands, Keep your gun gipocrg cana" becauee ter worn ex “Gum Drops & Penny Loafers § 74:36 inch Cur Size 88 SS Wednesday in Pontiac SU eresteseoesecseesee : stown : ‘ Full Length Hick een downtown + Gernis and an were eit ‘ vipeen a” RECOIL PAD iiswest emperatore se under $10.000 bond while LaLonde Double Burner Mepeather = Bunny Stiwas held under $5.00 bond. Jer.| | 4 Te & Bottom Regular $16.95 3195 B49 a nis demanded preliminary exam- i’ G4. Sips Ere j 88 Value P i { ; , of % nlgheer tomcoratere: ooo . 60 ination when he appeared before aq c Slip on all rubber Lowest temperature ©. .-..+5 56' Justice Marvin A. West and date \) Sanopy A0P reooil pad. For most See aes wale “for his examination was set for : — \Nov, 12. Herrmann stood mute e y NP $! Holds in Layaway . apap High 4. T t This) E iE r fet MbateTint Por" 10" and West ordered him held for nre-WN IE wsee repens tp ane Complete ¢ JON-E 85 in 1938 @ in 1937 liminary examination. LaLonde Brienal enone. if ubperis Cleaning 4 Hand Warmer ” weanesday’s Tocperatere Chart (Waived examination and was| riginal to ; Q fe ipper open Kits ° ‘FLUID : - Pee cementing Tempecolers t 63 50 bound over to the December term $3.00 Values tog: Mit 8s) $3 Value $ ney 3 ss Salant beech a ay of circuit court. erent styles 18 e this bag warm 69 ° & ¢ Brownsville ” 9 Milwaukee @ #2 State Police detectives from the \ eevee Vaaca Nard ‘i | and comfy. r4 Oss. puttale Nd edt leks tt Be soles. Assorted * YOU Can Afford F ROLLS UP e ; 77 pans 79 70 e ee ‘ With our hisses oe iG a mee Sore n ¢ 5s n \ Seat: loey tatty Ve lee ees = - INTO CANOPY pe be todas ° fed an ms all Cinet ti 78 $4 Omah 4 55 . r | : b v re. 4 Cleveland 0 Priision 6} 83 Install Poles by ‘Copter 4 for tien ames % » Deluxe Sleeping Bags (2° elew freezing) .. $19. 88 : Denver 8 oenix 16 | and girls Detroit 40 €) Pittsburgh 78 54 ~ AAT Duluth ¢o M1 Btlous v4 sa SANTA BARBARA, Cal. — Heli . SPORT — Fort Werth 77 #4 8 Francisco 73. $4 copters are dropping utility poles 99 N. Saginaw | 98 North s Saginaw } d a = ie fopete BL BESSA 8 loredur bales, gn aid t power |W pop a DLV Fi = © Tal MD secrices fia rable p €¢ Washington # 55 line builders in #ugh or heavily tree BROTAERS oat ROTAERS | a @neae City attic §2 : Loe Angeles 101 76 Tampa iS 66 forested country. Ve eseNesasTET eee ew? ee LOE : me 6 a , __ of ae * j : FG x 5 x 5 a " a eee ‘ eae SB SE OLE EP PD LS IE EE NGO LLG AE OT r ~~ ee ee ee eS ee ee 4 4 ie | i . : $ : i 4 4 4 q bi b + « * f i THE PONTIAC maRSS THURSDAY, aerc ore 16. 1958 ORL ONY an go ea ak ° } ot ga Ms a. “dO ind © 48 — L& Bs ater), mh " Ty Lowest PRICES! pI\HIGHEST QUALITY IGREAT FALL SA Buy today and save! For the home family. .hundreds of sale-priced Christmas gifts! © 3-Pc. ALL BRASS SET BRASS SET $3750 —§29.97 $2495 | 9.97 All solid brass pull chain screen with hanging *brush and poker, two solid cast brass andirons. Save during Waite’s Great Fall Sale! 7-Pc. ALL Extra heavy gauge solid brass 38° by 31” pull chain screen, cast brass andirons and deluxe fire set with brush, shovel, poker and stand. FIREPLACE ACCESSORIES Grates—20” $4.98 24” $5.49 27” 5.98 Brass Wood Basket .—s«—a=—ai_i.. $9.98 Realistic Electric Firelogs . $4.98 to $19.98 Fitth Floor Waite's Housewares... Good coffee every time! AUTOMATIC COFFEE MAKER e Drip proof spout e Safety grip handle e Brew selector e Brews 3 to 10 cups e@ Peek-a-Brew” indicator lets you see water or coffee level Deep dows steam penetration! STEAM and = DRY IRON Open Stock Price $68.95 List $ @ Even-Flew steam precess . @ Changes from steam to dry instantly e @ Hand fabric dial—lightweight, enly licen pattems ... 35 pe. service for 6 . . . Guaranteed! Brookpark Melamine DINNERWARE $19.95 & pounds : \ “ @ Cord lift allows left er right hand ; Set includes: 6 each—10 ironing Waite’s Housewares ... Filth Floor patterned dinner plates, matching cups. saucers, #3 fs BE ps oread-and-butter plates and extra large coupe soups: | each — creamer, covered sugar bow! vegetable and patterned platter Add Sparkle and color to your rooms! BIG 9x12 REVERSIBLE imported . . Colorfast ... Washable ‘ARBOR ROSE’ DAMASK SETS walter i . Filth Floor Naki WOOL BRAI D RUGS ee eae ee : i mee AE $69.95 Pre-shrunk... reversible... wrinkle resistant $3, 97 Value Bates “Belmont” Heirloom Spreads 64 x 84—8 $ Down! ee 4 8 Pay '3 Monthly $4.97 64 x 104—12 6 Ft. by 9 Ft. $29.95 Res. 8.98 4 Ft. by 6 ft. $15.99 $7, 97 27" by 48” $ 5.99 24” by 36” $ 3.99 Beautiful arbor rose hand hemmed damask seis " woven of twoply yarns. Choose pink, aqua, gold e Black G white or green. @ Red eer Waite's ... Fourth Floor Waites... Downstairs Supanaiee 80" by 90”... Washo ble SES BLEND BLANKETS Reg. $5.99 Save '/2 and More! WASHABLE FLORAL tls CENTERPIECES 5" , 3.5 7 - Reg.soa ST 47 >a orlon blend plaid blankets in blue, rose, charcoal, pink or brown. Washable, moth- proof, Save now' Waite’s ... Fourth Floor You get this lovely Bates “Belmont” heirloom spread in twin or full sizes at one tiny sale price! Choose white or antique white. Save now! Reg. $5.98 Size $2.97 : 3, 10.57 Many. Arrangements! » Fifth Floor " SALE! Hoover Does 4 Jobs! mw Cleans! Waxes! Polishes! Scrubs Come in Tomorrow and See ? [ d o ss the Hoover Demonstrated! $ 3 gs $58.96 ( ¢ ot ap i ° f ; Waite's ... Fourth Floor - Waite's .. 5 ae ee oe FAMOUS WHITE ROUND BOBBIN FULL SIZE SEWING MACHINE | in a walnut or mahogany cabinet Reg. $118.95 77 No Money Down, Pay Menthly or Small Down Payment, Many Months to Pay! . Value Revolutionizes «floor cleaning! It scrubs, plies wax, and polishes to a mirrer finish all in one simple operation without changing brushes. You can even clean your Tugs with the carpet attachments included in this amaz- ing sale price! @ Fully Guaranteed by White @ New 1958 Model @ Round Bobbin @ Full Size Sewing Unit @ Automatic Bobbin Winder @ Multi-Range Speed Control © Stitch Selector - =, @ Automatic Tension & nie sn ope ue aoe one oat « » Downstairs ’ White Sewing Center... Waite’s Fourth Floor e: | : ' : Waite's . F 3 "THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16,1958 ii Training for Missile Age trenches,” -aai6 LA: om, WRBNON Army Stresses Self-Sufficiency | Sera sto, aioe an | | DOWNTOWN and WERACLE Wine (This ts the second of two dis- (ghaplain and he was temporarily|in America the group exists main-| ™@Y he by no more patches reporting on what training ike tor faductees in our peacetime |preoccupied with a bidck poodlejly to serve the individual. Then are of ——— in his rong lor UPI correspondent whe ‘he promised a captain he'd take/we have to tell them that in an hel Lt Gen. William H (Hsp) obnees on care of for the afternoon. Army an individual must work| What's it like, this peacetime ee ot eee _ America's sarees ‘| “We get about eight weeks in| primarily for the group.” Army, ‘where a recruit's chief By FRA LURVEY — which to reverse a man’s life,| He said this was a problem| worry is whether he'll get stuck | FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. —/he said. ‘‘They come to us after/unique to a democracy. with weekend K.P.? 4 (UPL) — He was a colonel and a/18, 19, 20 years of teaching that “It’s a milk Army, that’s what — ——- it is,’ a captain said, “It used to} | be a coffee Army, Now we have to put milk dispensing machines outside the barracks.” “Did you ever hear of calling time out in a war because it was}? The infantry colonel — the one|raining too hard?” a captain|® with the combat badge of merit/asked. ‘‘That’s what we do here. — said the same thing, only dif-|Can't let the boys get their feet ferently. wet, you known." “We don't train them to die| Maj. Gen. Thomas A. Lane, for their country.” he said. ‘‘We|Leonard Wood post commander, try to teach them how to live —| said these were nothing more and we want them to think. They| than cases of men letting - off may be stuck off someplace by/| personal steam. themselves. They've got to be} “We can be proud of our youths,” able to decide on their own what|Lane said. “‘They’re an inspira- “We never fully change them,” Z . cee See | he said. ‘It’s probably just as gis : — 4 well. But I do like to feel we re- turn them better citizens, with more tolerance and understand: ‘ing of one another.” to do.” tion. to watch. All they need is : : s 9 Patt tata ts or Years, Our en’s Wear--- The one that’s supposed to fight ; : = 9 ‘| . the war no one wants or can The key to a well-trained Army, : describe. it is emphasized at Ft. Leonard ’* * & Wood, is military discipline. Gone is the old “KD” _{known| * ~ * distance) range, where one learned| “No army in the history of to shoot by popping bullseyes|™4" ever was worth a hang if from 200, 300 and 500 yards out.|it wasn’t good on the drill field,” They call it “Trainfire’ now Col. Franklin R. Sibert said. and the recruit learns by walk-| We're teaching a man a sense); ing through a woods, firing at of duty, honor and a love of coun- man-shaped targets which sud-|'Y: That's going to make him * Ss denly pop up before him. He| 800d citizen, too.” lait doesn’t even use a sling. E | “In combat, how many men|No Toys Down Drain took time to get into their slings : _when the enemy was running down| GARDINER, Ore.—If you have |: From Underwear Through Outerwear Has Been the | % BULKY SPACE TRAVELER — Russian space dogs have be- |0n them?” a captain asked. Fae Te Cot en eel | *come familiar, but here’s one of the first looks at a Russian space The difference, though, is deeper athe ie cron ee aged . man. As Russia further plans for conquering outer space, bulky than riflery. thing for you. It’s a asaee’ Guat j suits like this have been developed for the future Soviet space “The soldier no longer is a |locks the toilet cover when it’s not explorers. cog, something to move along in |jn use. 10% DOWN BUYS ANYTHING AT NIE Tia) nana qj j ~ Plastic “Hunting License Holders No Purchase Necessary Easily attachable te your jacket fer seasen-f beng pretection. is YOURS FREE FOR THE ASKING SAVE *20” on THE FAMOUS é GEOR LITRE LE PEELE, TE AGE 8mm MOVIE CAMERA Reg. 49° $89.50 CONVERSE Chest High HIP BOOTS Waders | _..10% Down Buys Anything at Value 710" v0 16" % ! 4 CAMERA MART “siege Save °20.00 on t j Waters Repellent — 88° aaa the Famous Se Sarit sett 98" 4 HUNTING SOx . * iid Jags PROJECTOR LP Reg. $169.50 > f $ 50 s FOR THE FINEST IN 149 4 ARCHERY EQUIPMENT | REMEMBER gai Reg. $15.00 10% DOWN BUYS ANYTHING AT The finer brand names of better quality children‘s clothing and shoes are all Glass Recurve Bow CAMERA MART eaxional new combination: fo.) psa! ion? ARCHERY QUIVERS $ 5 77 ¥ att 00 gure PS PROLIANT RD aE recording and listening P!e# 5 at the Lion Store. ARROW c NOCS, per doz... 48 . ; : : Rev ere . CINDERELLA YOUNGLAND KATE GREENAWAY 4 LeXue LONG-PLAY GIRL TOWN LORTOGS HEALTH TEX ———S t | ‘NEWPORT FISCHER COATS — PEGGY ‘N SUE MATCHED TARGET ©, $795 ‘ Tape Recorder NITEY NITES NANNETTE STYLE ‘UNDIES ge ARROWS 510150 Value F Radio Combination HER MAJESTY TOM SAWYER ROB ROY Be eevows Sits tase Oo $44" ; Ehiov “twa (houra of, tes ROBERT BRUCE = NIAGARA TRIMFIT can, cording PLUS the glorious. BILLY-THE-KID E-Z COOPERS Fore radio: : ACECRAFT FARAH MINIKIN A 00 HI LINE MORTON KARTEN KWIKIS > or —~ Regular $234.00 WONDERALLS LEVIS CLASS MATE a POLL PARROT CHILD LIFE — SIMPLEX SWEAT SHIRT RELY ON MARK DAVIS TO BRING YOU SCAMPEROOS BOY SCOUT FORTUNE ee QUALITY PHOTO SUPPLIES AT THE : | LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES MARK DAVIS AMERA Ist Quality, Fell Lace ee CONVERSE pee |e HUNTING BOOTS piece Reg. 4 Keeps warmth in, tn- im slates to nee? cold = Open a Lion Charge With Option Terms ENJOY SHOPPER PLATE CONVENIENCE MIRACLE MILE—Daily 10 to 9 DOWNTOWN—Doily. 9:30 to 5:30—-Mon. & Fri. ‘til 9 83 N. Saginaw St. FE 4-4343 fF IT'S PHOTOGRAPHIC WE HAVE ITT FOR LESS Pe ae ee ee ee ee eee ee ee ee ee ee ae CEO EOE EOD ED EE CE BF OPPO EE OE FEO , | ‘ a . ‘ i“ Oe ee er gr OP Gr: Qe ar Re po a ge BF a Br ee a gn Ft & Epo — — THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 ‘Hal Cooper Writes for Hal Boyle: | Frank’s No Politician, He’s a a Rich Bookie|_ “It may be illegal, but it ain’tjags you have. That's where Frank immoral,’ snapped Sears. “‘Have/comes in.’ It was recalled that Frank usu- ally shaxes hands like mad on the day of a big race, such as. the LONDON (AP) — The strange)That’s the local street book- case of the man who is not run-/maker.” ning for Parliament has been nag hy tall, red-faced fellow|4 flutter par grado gi and then nr in is a genial sort, but it yourself, . ha. will cease shaking ” hands|%0s sugested that this > kg e+. t he will cease shaking hands) j,ined his compulsion to shake|, The reply was made that any|Epsom Derby. But on the follow-|ter months you never see Frank’ axound the end of November. hands. It was noted that he had/such bets are telephoned to ajing morning he seems to shake|Shaking hands. . * * * even eae en ee ee 8 ee ee ee oe < with some people twice within an/|tlements—usually in favor o 4, e day o race,” Sears - Tis man, who Prank Babe, (boar 20. | bookie — are made weekly bylexplained patiently, “He is taking always standing around street cor-| ‘You are a green one, aincha?”|check through the mails. This is)bets. On the following morning he nets shaking hands with various|said Sears. “Whenever Frank|100 per cent legal under British|is paying off the winners.” residents of the suburb. He works|shakes hands he puts his hand/Statutes. It was remarked that Frank hard at it, and the conclusion was|back into his pocket with a piece * *« & never shakes hands during the réached that he must be seekingiof paper and some money in it.| “Certainly,” said Sears. ‘But to|Winter months. “He stops eile flat racing season ends in Novem- ber,” said Sears. “Says too many) favorites win over the jumps dur- ing the winter. So during the win- “In fact,” said Sears, “you sel-| dom see Frank at all because,’ Sears concluded, “it takes him. most of the winter months to count up the money he wins froth horse players like me during they summer months.’’ to’ win friends for political ends.|The paper has the name of a/open a credit account you have to Sears the janitor was asked tojhorse written on it. The money is|give a banking reference. A work- confirm this, a bet on the horse.” - ling type like me can’t give GI a - — * The American ébectver re-lbanking ref be h orch Drive Wins Pr S; be. tei” ‘queried Soars. “Thalmesind. in shoclesd tence thatlheat't sewer bed nothing in the! rescr tption pecta t5t4 only thing he’s running for is tojsuch cash betting is against the|bank. But illegal or not, I got just be the richest man in Hampstead. |law. as much right to bet the horses in Dispute Over Ring DETROIT (UPI) — The Torch Drive will be the only real winner in the case of the $1,100 engage- ment ring. A Common Pleas Court jury of four women and- two men ruled fiance, Loretta Schneider, 22, could keep the engagement ring he gave her last February. Handieman had gone to court to get the ring back. to keep the ring, even though the court jury ruled it is hers. : She said she will sell it and donate the proceeds to the Torch Drive. that Seymour Hanaelman’s ex-|Tecnica Cubana, predicts produc-| Cuban Industry | | Uses Sugar Cane | to Make Paper HAVANA, Cuba (AP) — The. making of paper out of bagasse, sugar cane waste, is developing # into big business in Cuba. i Cristobal Diaz, president of | tion will hit two million tons an nually. The paper mill of Tecnica Cu-; | bana near Cardenas in Matanzas Province is the first devoted ex- | But Miss Schneider isn’t going|clusively to making newsprint and | the|other paper from 100 per cent) sugar, cane bagasse. *® * * Some of Havana's newspapers | already are being printed on ba-. TGS SAE VIA Be! 7 rs Bx > ix aS) eX Product of the Science of Nutritional Research gasse paper. Diaz is vice presi- dent of the company publishing! Member at 88 Helps the newspaper El Pais. “By the first of December we, ‘Start Fourth Church A a Kink ohn caged PEORIA, Ill. uy» — Spry 88-year-|all newspaper publishing firms in| \old Mrs. Elizabeth Vinz, a mem-jthe country with a permanent ber of the State Park Baptist}Stock of 3,000 tons in our Havana, c Church for 75 years, has outlived warehouse,”’ Diaz said. | three church buildings and helped ~«~ * * break ground for the fourth. Cuban ‘newsprint for all the is- : ~ OLAFSEN OLA BASIC VITAMIN & Ter e))) MINERAL SUPPLEMENT : Mrs. Vinz went to Sunday schooljland’s papers would save the Denture at the original church site, a litthe;country about six million dollars ¢ Powder ¢ wtth . wooden building. a year in foreign exchanges, | ore | Joaquin de la Roza, a Cuban-| Alfalfa, Watercress ine . se American engineer, developed the | and Parsle Night Patrol in Painting current process of converting ba- ¢ 14 oz. c — bic A gasse into newsprint. He noted Bottle New wide-scope auiritional aid thot | STUTTGART, a aa The that the price of newsprint pro- ces ret end nan * mulos . : first “police dog’’ celebrated as|duced from wood pulp jumped| ‘ cone eat n * HISTORIC SPOT — The turnstiles at historic. chairman of the Mackinac Park Commission, re- |such in art was a schnauzer por-|from $136 per ton in Havana in. c for Aches, Cc “ace jovrishment for old Fort Mackinac on Mackinac Island have ported 118,246 visitors — about five times the trayed with a night patrolman in|1936 to the current figure of $158 = Pains - been spinning this season with tourists flocked normal number — viewed the fort from June 15 a picture painted in 1620 in Stutt-|per ton. Bagasse paper is ma : (4-.Vitamins 95 to the Straits of Mackinac. W. Stuart Woodfill, to Sept. 30. gart. cheaper. 11-Minerals 10° MURINE is. 43®|>9 26" surr Drops 3RD GREAT WEEK OF FRAYER’S ANNUAL For Temporary Relief elle J From the Symptoms of Bronchial ASTHMA Or Nasal Irritations Caused by HAY FEVER USE Selrodo | Nebulizer and inhalant Solution Caution: Use Only as Directed “1” Charles Antell ‘7: 89° 100 UNIGAPS §=—wries» 5° *1’° ANACIN 81° 52 “ex Nite Cream = *1 3” Tussy ‘2° Dorothy Gray » Tablets 100’s Moisture Cream ] 50 Hormone $425 and Cream SAY GOODBYE TO THE (ITCHING « THE SCALES - THE SORES OF PSORIASIS! aS lesions of skin and scalp? '} Aes SS START HEALING— CLEAR YOUR SKIN CIDER AND DONUTS GIFTS FOR THE LADIES BALLOONS for the KIDS WEEKLY DOOR PRIZE BEAUTIFUL TABLE LAMP $21.95 Value SUPER DOOR PRIZE BEAUTIFUL AM-FM RADIO MONEY BACK GUARANTEE | ... cleanse —» th Tes. C8” PinT B2E daily with ae The All-New “| Electresteem Bowe B > isiekoocice Hurry! Limited time oniy? 10°O*+6 LOTION — It heals as it cleanses Regular $209.95 OPEN«eves. T 9:00 sar. 71.6:00| BEAUTIFUL FAMILY SIZED coast Ses rer TESS ea SIG) Ue iy VAPORIZER ay SK (NOTHING TO BUY) | $69.95 Value | | | KICK-OFF SPECIAL sic FREE REG. $198 SIZE GEN E RAL FF ar} ae INETTe : “5 Ain f SUY A 25-DAY SUPPLY up 10 16 hour + ELECTRIC || SALE PRICED Semele Mrs | caste tames| mattress RYBUTOL blessed comfort on = SALE PRICED FROM SALE PRICED FROM THE NIGH POTENCY ¥ just one fillin 357 Pound From qj ||| $35.00 | 56.66 | $59.50 | OO en elena POD sees nuiontom st : HURR . Get the Box Spring ire 2 reerton colds end FREEZER 00 LIVING com si — er $1.98 a FRE jo MER Ses ' vim, cope litt eas ae ae “tess ° sles x SALE PRICE wT SUITES | CONSOLE HIFI| "Sitres” DW nvsuton | ua" Suite, St pee ee ah OF owe Reg. $259.95 Reg. $169.95 \VIM-PAK kk 895 erty =a) bends; 16 hours. Automatic shut-off, tee, $ 00 ° SALE PRICE SALE PRICE Priced coves me ee ES . 4 BUY NOW! Real Low PAY S595 ana A : — — $189°0 | $83.00 Ze] omy *5 WP ® Over 1,000,000 Groteful Users! a (price of the 100 sire) Pouble | EVERYTHING NO CASH = FRAYER'S FURNITURE and APPLIANCES 589 Orchard Lake Ave. Park Free CALL FE 4-0526. at Our Door in: Our Store | SALE PRICED DOWN BUY NOW! : Up to 36 Months a TO PAY * 148 N. Saginaw Near Sears * 4895 Dixie Hwy. . An SOD Store Next te Netienal Store ? “ae * Huron, Cor, Telegraph “| | : : | “THE: PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER. 16, 1958 _ a ow SVG : or es 5 Officers, 10 Men Start |°f five officers and 10 men. is said to cut Heat-Panel Idea New —_[2%d_ motels, and is said to, ost Study Milk Preference. Congress further stated, “The : West Point Academy align WALTHAM, Mass. — A’ new}29 per cent. It has a low sghadres | corps, when so organized, shall t. : nd r concept in wall design, a com-/©0S' lok * aati 3 WEST POINT, N, Y. — When be established at West Point, in bined curtain wall panel ad Nat ibe ae il veepeanners authorized by an act of Congress) the State of New York, and shalliejectric radiant heating, has been Six US. P id "ona a “daily eink af ese, = take. : March 16, 1802, the corps of constitute q military academy.” |developed by a Waltham firm. It!Irish ancestry: Jackson, Sate ats Treecrd their on 36M then cadets at the United States Mili-| Today the authorized strength of|is applicable for office buildings,|/Buchanan, Arthur, McKinley on The milk: is given’ them: aa par pared can in’ 1956, a 122 of 6 aly riper gent incsease: tary Academy was set at a strengthithe corps of cadets is 2,496 men.}apartment houses, schools, hotels, al cone a a eg ROBERT HALL CELEBRATES THE OPENING OF 4 GIANT NEW CLOTHING CENTERS ALL-WOOL WORSTED SUITS at an unheard of low price! ‘25 Regularly 37.95 A special group or luxurious worsted suits! And, who ever heard of genuine, luxurious worsted suits at such a fantastic low price! You have THREE value-packed days to cash in on our greatest suit value of the last ten years! Hurry —they/ll sell fast! Alterations included! LUXURY FALL COATS OF 100% WOOL TWEED LUXURY COATS NEVER BEFORE TAGGED THIS LOW! george Luscious all-wool Mertiniques! Rich weol with costly cashmere! Unbelievable 16.95 Values! GIRLS’ FABULOUS “‘Tweeds reverse to Alpaca pile! FALL COATS 11 88 Coats with warm zip-in liners! Tremendous @ Lush wool fancies! ® Seme with matching hats! Many Junior Petites, sizes 5-11! Big selection in misses’ sizes! selection...just look! © Rich splash weaves! © Some with scarves! @ Toasty warm meltons! « Warm interlinings! ® Many with fur collars! e Gay colors! mae Many withheoeds! ¢ Sizes 7-14! $30 Values Rich 100% wool fancy tweeds —or 100% wool Donegal- type tweeds! Fully lined single-breasted model with button-through, set-in sleeves, Bal collar, slash pockets. Newest Fall shades. Alterations included! ® 6e60ee808 8@® ®@ Unbeatable $11 Values! BOYS’ QUILT-LINED SUBURBAN COATS & HOODED CAR COATS | 99 Wool-orlon-nylon fleece suburban coats .. . trimly styled. Or cotton sateen car coats with detachable hoods. Both quilt lined. 4-12. Robert Hall Is headquarters for husky boys ' Va au’: ‘ OPEN IN MICHIGAN! TRY TO BEAT TH LOW OVERHEAD CLOTHING VALUES! FABULOUS VALUES FOR MEN! FINE ALL WOOL SPORT COATS 3-button medels in dark-tone 17 88. Ivy stripes, blazers, boucles and silk effects. Sizes 35-46. Terrific price! LUXURY WOOL FLANNEL SLACKS Finely tailored in regular pleated 6 8 8 front and Ivy styles. Charcoal ak grays and browns. 28-42. $13 Valves! RICH MELTON SUBURBAN COATS Quilt lined! Ivy stripes, tick 3 8 8 weaves, spider-weave plaids in newest Fall shades. 34-46. Sellout pricel LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS Washable! Ivy button-down and convertible collars. Wanted plaids, stripes, checks. S-M-L, 1” $3 Vaives! AMAZING SPECIALS for WOMEN! SKIRTS OF ITALIAN FABRICS Italian-I mported tweeds and wool flannels! New-look styles= even flapper pleats. 22-30. cw Terrific buys! GORGEOUS JERSEY BLOUSES Overblouses, tuck-ins, slipovers, 2 8 9 button-fronts! Exquisite trims! - — Bargein priced! Thrilling colors! $2-38. SUPER SAVINGS FOR BOYS! FLANNEL & GABARDINE SLACKS Washable rayén flannels and 2 8 8 gabardines. Ivy styles. $5 Valves! Newest Fall shades. 4-18. Alteration included on men’s and boys’ sport. coats & ‘slacks EVERY NIG sageesae fitreett tatoes than any other vegetables, about a hundred pounds a year for each of us, Serve Canned Chili on Brown French Fries erate heat, salt to taste and serve with 2 (No. 303) cans chili con carni, either ‘Scout work, in church work and in There are just a few simple rules to follow, no matter what recipe you use te make dough- auts: 1. Use as little flour as possible in rolling out the dough. 2. Roll and cut only a few doughnuts at a time. Excessive them. 5 : ing 3. Keep fat at 265-370 de- grees. 4. Fry only a few doughnuts at a time, turning them fre- quently after. they rise to the surface. + ‘ got a recipe from her for “Dough-Nos,” a with mashed pota' ; -When we decided to do a whole story on doughnuts, we asked her and her daughters to pose for a picture. Our photographer sampled the doughnuts and gave them seal of approval. * * * Mrs. Shafer is active in Giri county Extension work. She is secretary of the Home Demonstra- tion Council. DOUGH-NOS By Mrs. Gerald Shafer 2 cups sugar 2 cups mashed 2 cups milk f vanilla +, beaten lightly ee’ a cup —_ = teaspoons g powder 1 teaspoon soda potatoes inch of salt cups sifted flour , a8 side dish or with chili poured over potatoes. Serves 4. { Mix all ingredients together. If necessary to make a dough that is Feed Hungry Teenagers With Sloppy Suddenly it’s Fall — time for the young crowd to whirl enthusiasti- cally into an exciting parade of hayrides, bowling parties, back-to- school get-togethers and other en- ergetic activities. It's time, too, for you, Mother, to make certain your active young charges are, well fortified for their vigorow schedule, Maybe you'll want to provide a hearty welcoming table at the end of g stirring hayride. Or maybe you'll be asked to provide an imaginative treat for the bowling gang, or a do-it-yourself snack for after-school refrigerator raiders. * * * Whatever the occasion, it's an) Sponge Cake Takes on Glamorous Coat Sandwich these sponge layers with custard filling, cover with chocolate frosting and refrigerate until serving time. Sponge Layers 4 large eggs ‘they should almost fill a i-cup measure; 1 cup sugar % teaspoon ealt 1 teaspoon -vanilla 1% cups sifted cake fiour Grease bottoms of two 8 by 1%- inch layer-cake pans; line bottoms with waxed paper. Beat eggs in jder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. ‘ Aa Cy ES Py: .» MOTHER'S HELPERS—The best way to find out if the dough- nuts are good is to try them. Anyone knows that. Mrs. Gerald Shafer says that the Dough-Nos appearing pretty fast. Could her degrees). Makes about 5 dozen. * * * A different recipe for doughnuts uses whole wheat flour and Butter-| milk or sour milk. This dough is' spiced. Whole Wheat Doughnuts’ 2‘ cups sifted enriched flour %t einnamon | eas im i 1% ae what wheat flour } 2 eggs ‘4 cup granulated tugar j \% cup brown — ' 3 tablespoons meited shortening 2 tablespoons grated lemon rind i teaspoon vanilia extract 1 cup buttermilk or sour milk Sift tégether flour, baking. pow. Joes Opportunity to show the gang you're a real champion in the special snack department. It's also an Opportunity to make sure everyone gets an ample supply of energy-building milk, the perfect) beverage for any active crowd. When the gang comes troop- ing back from a hayride — or any other strenuous activity, for that matter — try welcoming them with “Sloppy dee” sand- wiches. | floured doughnut cutter. Add whole wheat flour. Beat eggs. | Add sugars and beat until light. Add shortening, lemon rind and vanilla extract. Mix well. Add flour mixtupe to mixture alternately with buttermilk or sour milk. Mix lightly to make a soft dough. Turn out on lightly floured board or pastry cloth. Roll about 14 inch thick. Cut with lightly Fry in deep hot fat (365 degrees) turning frequently until browned. Drain thoroughly on absorbent paper. Dust with cinnamon sugar, if desired. Makes 2 dozen 2')-inch doughnuts. . : * x. ® They're offered in a serve-your-, self kettle to make less work for you and to give plenty of latitude to ravenous or whimsical appe-, tites. | Sloppy Joe Sandwich ‘ cup (1 stick) butter onions, chopped 2 teaspoons garlic salt 2 ooocess salt aspoon black pepper 3 tablespoons dry mustard 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 Bounce cans ato sauce 1% tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1% cups grated Parmesan cheese o. 303 cans whole kernel corn, drained. or 2 packages frozen corn Meit butter in large kettle. Add megt, onions, garlic salt, salt, pepper and dry mustard. Saute until meat is brown. Add vinegar, tomato sauce, Worcestershire sauce, Parmesan cheese and corn. Simmer 15-30 minutes. Serve on buttered buns over a slice of to- mato. Serves 30. Pott tok kk tlk te te te ke kk * x * If you want doughnuts in a hurry, } here's a quickie idea. Buy a carton! of refrigerator biscuits. Cut a whole in the center of each and fry like. doughnuts. Fry the holes, too. This is a good idea for the person who ‘wants only a few doughnuts. |RAISED DOUGHNUTS This last recipe is for raised doughnuts. They are unusual in that graham cracker crumbs are’ called for as an ingredient. §pecial Doughnuts 1 package active dry yeast % cup warm water Ke kk kk ke tk l cup milk, scalded 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 12 teaspoon salt 20 graham crackers, roller fine OR 1% cup ¢erambs 3% cups sifted flour 1% cups sugar — 1% tesapoons cinnamon 4 teaspoon nutmeg 1, teaspoon mace eggs + Additional flour as necessary ~ Dissolve yeast in water. Combine | spices. kes | * |x rerararars she makes have a habit of dis- three daughters, Faye, aged 12 Add eneugh liquid te make a soft batter; beat thoroughly. Stir in eggs and remalping flour mix- ‘minutes. _. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 his soft but easy to handle, add more milk, butter or margarine and salt, ture. f necessary, add more flour | flour: Roll out a few at a time, |in large mixing bowl. Cool to luke- to make dough easy to handle. cut and fry in deep hot fat (365 warm. Stir in yeast and cracker | Knead until smooth. | crumbs. Sift flour, sugar — Place in greased bowl, cover and ilet rise in warm place until double lin bulk. Turn out on lightly floured ipeard cover and let stand 10 | { Pontiac Press Photo Roll 44 inch thick: cut (left), Penny, aged 16 (center) and Jeanne, aged 10, (right), have anything to do with it? Oh, that’s Mrs. Shafer in the background frying the doughnuts. The Shafers live on RattaleegLake road. with! doughnut cutter. Let rise until | double in bulk. Fry in deep fat 360-370 degrees until lightly brown on each side. Drain on absorbent paper. Dust with powdered sugar. | Rich Grape Pie Made of Juice There are no grapes in this grape pie, but you'd never know it from the flavor. Rich bottled grape juice teams up with pineapple tid- bits to present an attractive, tooth- some dessert which will grace any table, Grape Juice Pineapple Pie 2 13% oz. cans pineapple tidbits 1% cups bottled grape juice (about) % cup sugar 43 cup cornstarch % tap salt 1 89-inch baked pie shell l cup whipping cream, tional: whipped top- Filled Avocados Served as Salad If you are planning a luncheon for your club group bere is a salad that is easy to prepare and delicious to serve. With this, serve 'assorted sandwiches and eoffee and you have the perfect luncheon. Fruit-Filled Avocado 3 avocados 2 teaspoons anti-darkening agent . 4 cup water Salt and pepper 2 apples, diced 2 bananas, sliced ‘2 cup Swiss cheese, cut in strips 3 tablespoons French dressing Greens * * * In advance: Cut avocados in half lengthwise; lift out seed. Drain pineapple well and POUr Combine anti -darkening agent and juice into measuring cup. ‘Measure! ‘and add grape juice as needed to ‘pineapple syrup to make 3 cups liquid. Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt in liquids 2-quart saucepan. Stir in} gradually. Cook. stirring ang toss well. Set in refrigerator ,over moderate heat until] mixture| ‘is thick, smooth and clear. Cool; | ‘fold in pineapple and pour into baked shell. Cool until “‘set.’’ Serve plain or top with whipped cream and garnish with pineapple tidbits. Yield, 6 generous servings. A cup of unsifted ing. cake flour often measures 143 cups after sift- water. Brush inside of avocados with anti-darkening solution. Sprin- kle with salt and pepper. Com- bine diced apples and bananas and pour remaining solution over- them until ready to serve. * © * Just before serving, combine ifruit, Swiss cheese strips and French Dressing and toss well. Fill centers of avocado with fruit and serve on greens. Makes 6 servings. Although buttermilk is low in calories—it rates high in protein. Makes about 2%: dozen large doughnuts. RIGHT 4 HIS WAV 10... « a4 * * * ed 3 SISTERS’ 608 W. HURON AAA LA FOOD SAVINGS MEI KK RK KK large bowl with electric mixer at high speed until thick and lemon- colored. Gradually beat in sugar; continue to beat until ivory colored. Tender Sliced Beat in salt and vanilla. Fold in flour gradually, j oven until cake tester comes out! clean — 25 minutes, Cool in pans on cake racks, Ease cakes out of pans and strip off paper. Spread hot buttered toast with | rounds of ripe banana. Serve to the youngsters after school, ¢ why pay more? Bake in moderate (350 degrees) | BEEF LIVER 39: 2 af ‘LEAN MEATY SPARE RIBS Lb. 39° TENDER JUICY Sirloin Steaks Lb. 69° eee we PAN-REDI FRYERS Lb. ay: MI SLICED BACON 3 Lbs. a | 00 te CURED EXTRA LEAN PORK BUTTS Lb. A9: SNO-WHITE VEA | Lb. 9° LEG ROAST L CENTER CUT Pork Chops BAZLEY’S BIG LITTLE PORKER SALE! BLADE CUT Pork Chops TENDERLOIN PORK ROAST Lb. 69° ob 49: Lb. 49< SNO-WHITE “29 VEAL BREAST JUNEDALE BRAND REDI-EAT PICNICS 39: QUEEN COLBY MILD CHEESE 49 =o FULL SHANK HALF HAM’ c 49: CLUB STEAKS TENDER Beer - | “65' 3 GRADE “A” 7 HH HH | | Z Ss SS | and delicious Come... Join in the fun as another new and beautiful Sudo sop FORMALLY OPENS Friday & Saturday October 17 and 18 FREE FREE! — HATS and BALLOONS for the KIDDIES! Cy neil FINEST FOOD CONFECTION SN ae F and COFFEE Noon to Closing You're invited to be our guest as another new and beautiful Spudnut Shop opens—and it's Free Spud- nuts and Coffee “on the house” from noon to clos- ing! You'll see how those delicious Spudnuts are ma +++ you'll taste their tantalizing goodness, and then, you'll understand why Spudnuts and Spudnut Varieties are truly Amierica’s Finest Food Confec- tions! A tummy-tempting eating experience for every member of the family, made of finest ingredients to the exclusive Spudnut formula—every Spudnut pro- duced is fluffy as the softest cloud, energy-packed, digestible! Come and see—and join the fun! A nie re Fresh? Indeed they watering geedness! SOO gg ape the famous Spada” | are——made several times daily! Delicious? _ You've never tasted such meuth- 65¢ DOZ. THE And Now in’ Waterford 5437 Dixie Highway SPUDDIE A new and different fry cake . that seys “Geed!" Choice of icings —~ each delicious bite will melt in your mouth! “ 60c DOZ. Trade mark SPUDNUT SHOP eS 9d HAO DAV Sal # Hold Fall Institute in Pontiac Oakland Educational Secretaries Meet} The annual fall institute of Be wocuned the group and invited Oakland Association of Educational members to tour the new school. Secretaries was held Monday at) Officers presiding at the affair the new Pontiac Northern High! were Mrs, M. L. Calandri, presi- School. ' dent; Mrs, Wittkepf, vice presi- Mrs. Marjorie Wittkopf greeted’ gent; Mrs, Allen Mather, record- secretaries, and Victor Lindquist, | ing secretary; Saundra Clifford, assistant principa] at Northern, | corresponding secretary; Mrs. Gordon Bryce, treasurer; Mr 5s. Stanley Baker and Mrs. Gerald Lampson, board members. Pontiac Educational Secretaries Association members were host- esses for the institute. Mrs. Walter Schlie was commentator for the fashion show. Secretaries of the Huron Valley If signs of these ailments* show up in your little boy or girl, see your doctor immediately. More than likely he'll find the deficiency can be overcome with “special purpose” shoes. If so, let our expert fitter: carry out his recommendations with the finest-of-all “special purpose” shoes — CHILD LIFE ARCH FEATURES, $548 to $1998 r According fo r) size and style. Shoes for Young Folks Fitted by experienced personnel SHOES 26 W. Huron Schools at Milford invited the as- sociation to attend the spring in- stitute, The Educational Secretaries As- sociation is comprised of a na- tional, state, and county unit. The annual convention of the national unit will be held at St. Louis in July 1959, and the state meet will be held at Battle Creek in April | 1959. * * * ; Speaker at the Monday gather- ing was Mrs. Marion Wood of Schenectady, N. Y. Dr. Guy Hill to Address Alcott PTA Dr. Guy Hill of Michigan State University will be guest H speaker when members of the Louisa May Alcott School PTA holds a dinner meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday. Dr. Hill, who spent his child- hood in North Carolina in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, began teaching in- advertently but came to like the profession so well he has devoted his entire life to the vocation. . j * * * Having spent 15 years as a | high school principal, superin- tendent and public school teacher in the South, Dr. Hill has devoted the past 22 years to educational work at Michi- gan State University. Through various professional organizations of stte and na- tional] scope Dr. Hill has served education in many capacities. He is currently director of the Office of High School Coopera- tion at MSU. The executive board of Alcott PTA is in charge of arrange- S ments for the meeting. * MALING SHOES we do still have open toes.) You'll feel like—well, movie starlet? You'll look like her, too! It’s worth a only for the feeling! lake a Trimming and Love it! Take a bow, take a touch of gold, take any of a dozen stunning trims. You'll find them all on Maling’s-new tapered or open toe shoes. (Yes, A99,, 699 Black suede, nr Black caif, with high heels B. Black suede, or Black, OF Brown calf, with high or mid heels Red calf, with high heels C. Black, Brown, Blue, or Red, with mid heels. D. Black, or Brown calf, with high heels. Maling Shoes 20 N. SAGINAW ST. Open Monday ond Friday Evenings who’s your favorite trip to Maling’s—if d | sociation. |PTA's first meeting were Robert | president; THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1958 Educational Secretaries. > v Follies Director Is Introduced to Auxilary | Folliés director, Norman Leger of New York was introduced to imembers of the Women’s Auxiliary ‘to Pontiac General Hospital when ithe group met: at Hotel Waldron |Wednesday afternoon. * * * Hostesses were the members of the auxmobile project under the chairmanship of Mrs. Richard Har- ‘roun, Mrs. Lloyd Tinder, Mrs. Er- inest Beerstecher, Mrs. Ralph Hin- iga and Mrs. O. L. Tuley, | * * * Changes in the by-laws set the ‘number of auxiliary meetings at four a year. The next general meet- ing will be in March. Simmons President of Jefferson PTA David Simmons has been elected president of the Jefferson Junior| High School Parent-Teachers As-| Other officers named at the Bowens, father vice president; The new Pontiac Northern High School was the scene of the annual fall institute of the Oakland Association of Vice presi- dent Mrs. Marjorie Wittkopf (left) eres Pontise Press Phetes was photographed with board member © Mrs. Gerald Lampson (center) and treasurer Mrs. Gordon Bryce at the Monday affair. : @ Fall fashions by the J. C. Penney and Larry Company were modeled at the insti- tute. Among models showing fashions for all ages were (left to right) Jack “My mother is always worrying Members of the Pontiac Educational Secretaries Association were hostesses at the gathering. RUTH MILLEIT about what people might think,” writes a teenager. “Sometimes she can't give me any good reason for not letting me do something. She just says, ‘It rr look right,’ or ‘It just isn’t “So long as I know I’m not. do- It matters a great deal what other people think and say about Wiukopf and Pati Govenis. ) Girl's Reputation Is |Made by P eople person who cares too much about what other people think. Any mother of a daughter has to care what people think, and she ting into situations where people who don't know her well could raise their eyebrows. YOU WILL SEE You probably won't completely understand your mother’s concern for your reputation until you have a daughter of your own. But it isn’t really necessary that you un- derstand if you will just trust your mother’s judgment. She has lived long enough to know that a girl or woman can’t afford to leave herself open to criticism, but must always consider what other people might say. . For after all, what is a girl's reputation, but what other people think and say about her? And how do outsiders judge, except by ap- pearances? Check Child’s Vision Often Mothers. should be alert to signs of eye trouble in chil- distance vision, or he may Duplicate Bridge Winners Announced Twelve tables were in play when Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Club met Monday evening at Elks Temple. Winners were Mrs. Melvin Smail, Mrs. David Utley, Donald Stephenson, Foster Gibson, Joseph Nouse, Al Wallace and Mr. and Mrs, Ericson Lewis. Mrs. Robert Stasiuk, teacher vice Mrs. Frances Wiley, secretary; and Jim Jones, treasurer. : for the coat, suit or dréss in a dark, solid color, Great big handbags in floral tapestry are a pretty contrast [Th ree to Attend GETTING MARRIED? Ill] —ee epectatiets tm Forms) Wear Rentals, yeu are sesered that the Greom ané tis men will be correctly dressed and cus- tom fitted im the finest quality rarments. ‘Legion Conference PIANO TRADE-IN SPECIAL! YOUR OLD PIANO [ IS WORTH *150 ON THIS NEW GRINNELL SPINET! (or your choice of two other styles!) regardless of condition perry Bi The GRINNELL “Rhapsody” in mahogany. Regular price $725. only $875 and your old piano! _Oh happy day! . . . when Grinnell's picks up your old piano. . . and leaves a streamlined Grinnell in its place! For a limited time only, we'll allow you $150 trade-in for your present piano on the new “Rhapsody” (shown above)®. . or on the "Allegro" console in choice of fin'shes . . . or the “Americana” console in mahogany. FULLY GUARANTEED. alle? ——— GRINNELL’S, 27 S. Saginaw St. EXTENDED ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE Grinnell Pianos are made in our own piano factory at Holly, Mich., where - we have manufactured fine pianos since 1902, FE 3-7168 Attending the fall conference of American: Legion Posts and Aux-| iliaries to be held Friday through Sunday in Lansing will be Mrs. | HARWOOD CUSTOM TAILORS oes W SURON AT TELEGRAPS {Robert Conant, president of the Cook Nelsom Unit No. 20, Mrs. | William Thomas, secretary, and Mrs. Eldon Showen, Child Wel- fare Chairman. Mrs. Showen js the plaque-win- ning Child Welfare Chairman for Michigan. ‘Dorcas Class Plans Harvest Dinner Mrs. Richard Kelly was ap- pointed chairman for a harvest dinner to be held in November by the Dorcas Class of Oakland \Avenue United Presbyterian Church at its meeting Tuesday evening at the Summit street home of Mrs. Ernal Lloyd Participating in the affair were Mrs. Edgar Schultz, Mrs. Walter Messner and Mrs. Kelley. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Magic Beauty “Nu-Face.” No discomfort! Face lifting and peel Cosmetic and beauty adviser to Hollywood stars for 40 years Stockholm Grad. Specialist CAROLYN NILSON Salon 772 E. Maple, B’ham has to help her daughter avoid get- . MI 6-7373, Mail Orders. Contact Lenses VISION - = DR. B. R. BERMAN Optometrist Guy Gaswell and Mrs. Ella Davis. Capture the Magic of Fall with New Fragrance by crisp and refreshing as Autumn itself... presented in vivid, leaf-emblazoned packages. CLOONAN’S | | “Where Qua | < 72 N. Saginaw PRINCE MATCHABELLI Destined to become a Fall classic, vibrant new Golden Autumn is as Cologne Spray Mist, 3% oz. $256 Dusting Powder with lambswool puff, 6 oz.- $2 lity Counts” FE 2-0161 — 17 N Saginaw FE 4.7071 = ¢° REMEMBER SWEETEST DAY Saturday, October 18th Toddler Boys’ 3 | Snow Suits: trimmest look for your boys! Stands rugged wear and machine washes .. . dries quickly! Warm quilted or orlon pile linings. Select ‘helmet or hood head-warmers, sizes 2 to 4 In the neatest. . Grey, toast, navy, or brown. $19.95 esx $19.95 - $25 The MARGARET ANN SHOP. /Teeners Dist Ino one will remain living,” said a P oii even if Russia’doesn’t jump us, TRUST JAPAN This distrust of Germany con- trasted surprisingly with the will- ingness teeners showed to trust Japan. In fact, three per cent rated Japan as the most trust- worthy nation in the world. “With thetr experiences of US. strength, I'd trust them before any other nation,” said Mildred Trio of St. Louis. “Japan has learned its lesson.” The teeners were not so well Ly EUGENE GILEBRT Gilbert Youth Research Co. Most American teenagers dis- trust Russia, but do not think there will be another world war. “Not in our time, please God,” said 16-year-old Daria Krevitz of Brooklyn, N.Y, “We humans want to continue to exist.” : Two-thirds of the teeners ques- tioned — in a survey taken just before Red Chinese guns began pounding Quemoy — agreed with Daria. e * * Most of them pinned their hopes on the United Nations and Es 4 agreed on who to trust as they Were on who should not be trust- ed, biggest vote — 51 per cent — went to Great Britain and her dominions, Pro-British teeners felt a com- mon background and common language made a real bond with the United States. The second most popular nation is France. The opinion of 14 per cent of interviewed teenagers ap- peared to be that France is a little odd, but okay. ITALY THIRD | Italy ranked third on the teen- ers’ “trust list.’ Ten per cent of |word isn’t worth a plugged —e HE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 ~~ the teenagers ranked Italy as the; want to jum all,” ‘said 11-year-old den of Eugene, Ore. Other war- fearing teeners agreed. most trustworthy nation. Replies indicated that teenagers view Italy ust Russia but Look for Peace A Misconception = - An egg shell does not bring out the flavor of coffee, says a coffee brewing institute. *Egg white may clear the beverage, but the yolk gives an undesirable flavor. Best coffee is made without any part of the egg. | as a sunny-tempered, easy-going, freedom-loving land which learned to hate dictators under Mussolini. Switzerland and Scandinavian cent of the “most trustworthy votes.”’ But however the teenagers split on other questions, nearly all of them are agreed that Russia's * * * | “The Russians have been stuffed) so full of propaganda that they the desire of people in other | mations fer peace, The war-born teenagers appear to have a deeper horror of war than their parents -who lived through one. * * * Descriptions of a world deso- ‘lated by new atomic weapons have made a deep impression on young minds. “War means a world in which Mrs. Shain to Conduct Course | Mrs. Charles Shain will be- gin her International Relations Class at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning at the Birmingham Community House. This will be the 39th year Mrs. Shain has conducted this class which is sponsored by the Birmingham branch of AAUW. Everyone is welcome. ° For her first class, Mrs. 16-year-old Mary Brooke of New jvork City. Teeners across the coun- ‘try echoed. her. FEAR RUSSIA The three out of every ten teen- agers who do believe war is coming are nearly unanimous in believing the battle will be with 4 ‘Just sey: Playtex “LIVING” nylon bras that really fit... coe at Federal’s Heavenly comfort all day long for every activity .. . A. Longline living bra in comfortable white or black nylon with elastic magic midriff to control the “roll”. It breathes with you, just never binds. White. 32-44 A-B-C........... oor 95 i : B. Bandeau living bra. Bias cut elastic front dips low, divides you perfectly. White or black nylon in sizes 32-42 A-B-C. ..............0-5 3.95 D-cup.....:......:05 4.95 Playtex girdles.................. Let our expert corsetieres fit you correctly for comfort, figure flattery Riker Bldg. 37 W. Huron Russia. Shain will report on-what she P , has read and heard about our —— Even youngsters who don’t | foreign policy in the Near and think a third world war is in Far East. - , prospect indicated a deep dis- She spent the summer i OP EN EVERY trust of Russia and her satel- Europe. traveling by ot NIGHT TO 9 lites. Three-fourths put the si- | through Englandy Ireland, Bel- Mon. through Sat. gantic Soviet Union right at the | gium, Germany, Austria and top of the least trustworthy "- | [Italy and by bus through Yugo- Cept. stores P tions in the world. slavia. ontiec ond Twelve per cent of the teenagers Drayton Plains |found Egypt the least trustworthy When the upper part of your shoe bulges over the sole line, it's an indication your shoes . are too narrow, SayS an ex- tension clothing specialist. ination. | “Remember Suez when you think lof dirty deals,” commented Sally iBenson of Newton, Mass. . | * *&« * Teenagers can't remember) World War II — but plenty of| Stair posts make beautiful lamp bases. Debbie's Is Being {This is the third and final dis- ES on how the Liz Taylor-Eddie her-Debbie Reynolds triangle is affecting the careers and personal lives of the trio involved.) By RICK DU BROW United Press International HOLLYWOOD — Barely two weeks after Eddie Fisher told Deb- bie Reynolds their marriage was finished, the actress met Maurice Chevalier on the set of an MGM movie. ; “I’m a great fan of yours,” she told the French entertainer. “So is my husband.” Suddenly realizing she had men- tioned the unmentionable, she blushed. An embarrassed silence ifell over the few people within hearing distance. Chevalier tact- fully switched to another subject. To friends of the petite little actress, her reference to “my | take—but a natural one. She still thinks of herself as “Mrs. Fisher.'’ She is still stunned | —— iby Eddie’s dating of Liz Taylor land the sudden breakup of her | RAPPY’S Men's and Women’s Store FE 2-6811 Wants 9 S. Saginaw. Open Mon. and Fri. ’til 9 to Open a Charge Account! You CAN enjoy the convenience of shopping for clothing as you need it, yet be kind to your budget at the same time. Rappy’s unique Budget Plan lets you set up your own plan, elect weekly or monthly payments as you choose. three-year marriage. And it js this ability to be stunned, this quality of unsophisti- cated naturalness, which has en- abled her to emerge from the distasteful triangle purer than the driven snow. * * * Why was there so much immedi- ate reaction against Eddie when he left Debbie and started dating Liz? Said Huntz Hall, former movie Dead End Kid who is friendly with the Fishers: “‘Part of it, of course, was because everybody thought he and Liz’ husband, Mike Todd, were such good friends when Mike was alive. “But the main reason, in my | opinion, is they thought Eddie _ was walking out on the American | dream girl—the girl next door.” 2-pe. 1847 Children’ SILVER $] 9 Special : lewelers FE 2-5812 "STOP IN TODAY! ss Sound t surrounds you! hat SF | i ips INGDS Ni MAGNAVOX _ Storsephome HI-FI /\\ Thrill to stereophonic sound with the new "Stereorama”.. . 20-watt amplifier, diamond needle. ! Grinnell’s, 27 S. Saginaw St. — Extended 6 speakers, 4-speed record changer and lays stereo records with exciting realism; plays reqular LP's with a richer tone. Oak, cherry or walnut, 299.50. In Mahogany ? 8 9 50 ~- Accounts Available | husband” was a strategic mis- | | 88 N. sia) j labout the relation of nerves and But if a person — child or adult * no doubt that an emotional up- Talk on Advertising levening at Adah Shelly Branch) from initial layout to the finished | form. | Appeal Herself Born in El Paso, Tex., 26 years) ago, Debbie moved to Burbank, | Calif., at the age-of eight when her) father, a carpenter for the South- | ern Pacific Railroad, was trans- ferred. A LEADER In high school, she was a leader in Girl Scout activities and twirled a baton. She was tops at sports and gave the neighborhood boys a run for their money as a base- ball player. | She showed great musical promise—and wound up playing an instrument that no future glamor girl would be caught dead with— a French horn. | She:was voted “Miss Burbank | of 1948," was seen by a talent | scout and soon signed a movie | contract. Highly talented as a singer, dancer, actress and co- | medienne, she fast became one | of Hollywood’s top stars. The voluptuous Liz, on the other hand, was brought up among the royalty of England and Hollywood and is a sex symbol throughout the world. In the Eddie-Liz affair, Debbie has never stopped defending her, es t Keutllou Prettiest Shoes Anywhere Special Selling Taper Joe Pumps Suedes! Calfs! Alligators! Regularly $7.95 59.90 @ Black Sugde @ Black C @ Brown Calf @ Alligator Wonderful! Your newest pump, with delicately tapered toe . . Unbreakable heels in high medium heels. A real value in this popular type shoe. or husband. ‘‘Eddie is a great guy.” she says. “Don't blame him for what has happened.” * * * Under extreme marital fire, she hurled no accusations. “In fact,” ishe said, “I’ve tried to telephone ‘Liz to talk over the whole situa- \tion. But I've been unable to reach her.” When Liz told a columnist that Eddie was sot in leve with | Debbie ‘‘and never has been,” | Debbie retorted: “We were never happier than we have been in | the past year.” A homebody who loves to cook and sew, she said she was even iconsidering giving up her brilliant career to devote herself entirely ‘to Eddie and their two children. | When Eddie issued a statement ‘calling off America’s “ideal” mar- ‘riage, he said: ‘‘Debbie, especially, has done everything possible to make our marriage succeed.” There are many people here who feel it still can—if Eddie wants it to. Allergenic Tendencies Inherited There is much talk these days emotions to allergies. Doubtless there is a connection. 1 “Steady Date’ DIAMOND RING in Solid 14K Gold Any Person of High School Age Can Open An Account at Park Jewelers ‘ a? of a ’, . .. senti- enuine that trek!’ However, you have to start with| sss— a person who has an allergic con- stitution. No matter how upset some people become they never have allergies. has inherited the type of body tissue that reacts to allergens there set can reduce his resistance to the point where he shows symp- toms. This is as true of babies as of older people. Babies with aller- gies — eczema or colic — always seem to get worse if they cry a lot. Pontiac Artists Hear Nicolo Gagne, a commercial artist from Midland, was guest speaker at the first of a series of |educational meetings of the Pon- tiae Artists’ society held Friday Library. His topic was “The Development of an Advertisement .”’ He illus- trated his talk by showing the dif- ferent stages in creating an ad Nine new members were wel- comed into the society. DISTINCTIVE UNIFORMS for omen in White! Sizes for Juniors, Misses, Petite, Tall Girls and Women’s Half Sizes. ' * Register for Our FREE Uniform pf the Month | OXFORD SHOP | 89 W. Huron St. & CUTLERY 3 Pe. Carvii of Fine Sheff STAINLESS FLATWARE Set & 6 Steak Knives teel- 24 Pc. Set of Stainless Flatware (service for 6) omen CUSTOMERS! 6 CAKE FORKS IN MATCHING DESIGN TO ae FIRST 50° 1 a f e BIG DISCOUNTS ON CLOTHES for the FAMILY! ag 5 ©) 2 QUALITY CLOTHES - EASY CREDIT 8 N. Saginaw St. ‘FOR CREDIT! FE 2-6448 Open Monday and Friday Nighta ‘til 9 P. M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER ie 4--DIVISION “PIONEER LAKEWOOD SATURDAY BOYS Former Cranbrook Gridder Pride of West. Point two or three plays later on West WL Wwe Wh WL Pleet cone < : Dawe pots 7 3 Alley Dog's 16 0 Tigers q Cass A ake neste w Al’s Br. Store 18 9 #1 8 Perea Suey bases : Oxford Shop 11 12 nan A-Matic 7 1}/ 20's 8 8 10 Pins Individual (1 game) R. Greenlee 201; | 3900's 1 9 3 Strikes 61 Er ere ot | individual (1 game) 8. Foster 173 ndividua games : Team (3 games} Fleet Carrier 2316. Team (1 game) 200's 707: Team (3 WESTSIDE MERCHANTS jgemes) 200's & 300's 2018. WEST POINT, N.Y. (NEA) — WoL Wi B—DIVISION PIONEER It was late in the afternoon and ewe iit S Romane 1k 13| wi w uCol. Earl H. Blaik was in a hurry/scored W. Eagles #2 1607 Airp't Tavern 10 13 The Trophies 18 ¢ Lion Btore 19 14 to get home for dinner, so he Budweiser 14 rewrys m's ‘ont un 6 Sond) - landO1k 1213 W. Eagles #3 2 sa aes een. 13 10 Commerce D-1 8 1¢/FaPidly dictated the last few letters Point’s sweep to the weak side. ae = of the day in his blackboard-lined a. ee Don’t rectly. neck, just so.. stick your neck out According to the experts, mister, your neck is your tailor’s worst enemy. If you've had trouble get- ting a suit collar to fit across your .make your next suit a Kuppenheimer. It'll be styled cor- Hand-tailored of finer fab- rics. And authorities say that the Kuppenheimer collar is the best in the business. KUPPENHEIMER An investment in good appearance apicletly* Open Friday Nights ‘til 9 T= += .— 106 N. Saginaw St. DRESS RIGHT — when you look your best you do your best. office in the United States Military Academy gymnasium. One of them was to Fred Camp- bell, who knew Red Blaik at Dart- mouth and now was coaching the swank Cranbrook School at Bloom- ifield Hills, Mich. “My advice to Peter Dawkins,” Coach Biaik said, ‘‘is te put in another. year at a preparatory school. He’s only 16 now and as I'm certain you'll agree 160 pounds is rather light. Perhaps he’ll grow.” This was in 1954 and Blaik was going by the book. A young, light iboy who had done his football playing in a league unfrequented ‘by rough and able sons of mill hands and coal miners just doesn’t |make it as a member of an Army ivarsity. * * * “But you will have to take Pete |Dawkins now or not at all,” ad- ivised Coach Campbell of Cran- |brook. So, rather than lose the lad iBlaik reluctantly arranged for his |appointment. | In his plebe year, Blaik and his staff found out that Dawkins was | the kind of a kid you can’t classify and now, with the most | fabulous record ever compiled | by a cadet, he stands out, along with the quick and imaginative varsity he captains, as the col- lege football story of the year. * * * In addition to giving the football team a peerless leader, Dawkins lis the first captain of cadets, class President and a star student. Not in the 156-year history of the | Academy, has a cadet held all four | distinctions. “I have seen cadets for many | years,” Biaik tells you, “but | never a natural leader among Martini. . other mixed The moder drinker prefers a light drink ... and Arrow is bubble light... ite drink taste more delicious. For a smoother . Screwdriver . . makes your favor- . Bloody Mary... drinks or straight... ask for Arrow Vodka today! them like Dawkins. He has changed the entire life of the Academy .. . and its football, too.” You can see that in any number of Army football maneuvers this \fall, but the best illustration came late in the final period of the smashing victory over Notre Dame. A play before, Joe Caldwell had tossed a flat pass meant for Daw- kins and Bob Williams of the Irish barely missed intercepting with a clear field in front of him. * * * | On game you don’t take chances. But the thinking in the huddle was different, and Captain Daw- kins was in command. “Throw it again, Joe,” Daw- kins ordered. ‘“‘Williams will float | out with me too far to the right. I'll cut back and across and lose him.”’ * * * Blaik clutched his face as Cald- well dropped -back to pass again, but Dawkins cut into the clear and took the pass easily for a 23-yard Do Re ROR AR RON LE: EERE LINEALLLLN SILLA S CLEARANCE Every. Tire’ Unconditionally. Guaranteed BARGAIN SPARES Thousands of safe miles in every one of these carefully inspected and reconditioned tires. Great for extra spares and mileage to tide you SALE over until you get your new car. * WHITEWALLS * BLACKWALLS & TUBELESS * TUBE TYPE All Sizes from $3°> YOU DON'T NEED CASH the bench, Blaik and his| jaides winced as they saw the play.| When you are ahead late in a tough) Later, he told Blaik, “We would have caught Wiltems had he inter- cepted the pass.” Dawkins said it flatly, ‘without any doubt in his voice. He is that kind of a kid. When you tell the story of the remarkable rejuvenation of Army football this autumn, with its lone- scme end, its halfbacks throwing and its lively imagination, you have gain that got Army out of a hole and sealed Notre Dame's fate. He Army’s second touchdown to start with Dawkins and his inseparable running mate, Bob Anderson . ie EO’ Dawkins is left-handed in every- thing but thinking. He keeps or pitches on option plays while run- ning to his left. Anderson, a right- hander, does the same thing the other way. They are exceptionally fast for big men, the most formidable one- two punch in the college game. They hit for short-gainers, too, and don’t get hurt, and this is some- thing hard to believe. * * * QUADRUPLE THREAT — There have been many triple threats in college football but Pete Dawkins of Royal Oak is Army's “quadruple” “Dawkins was timid,’ Blaik re- Except when he's , Who wasn't posed to be much either. threat. He’s strong down the middle, fast around end, a good passer and a fine pass receiver. He's captain and honor student at West Point. ro) = a = <3 | Cc?) —— ra) oy { Com -€D | re | > eg. . 3 ~—— a = F r= 3) —s. a =. Other Irish Setter Boots from .. .$19.95 Boss Boots $1495 wp 24 €. LAWRENCE ST. Hot Spray Undercoating “Guaranteed for the life of $ 1 4% your cor.” Protects your car from rust-out. Quiets your car-ride. Plus Tox Pontiac Undercoating 136 S. Seginew FE 4-5453 entry form. *.0.A.F. ED WILLIAMS TIRE CO. 451 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-8303 You may win the NEW ’59 FORD TO BE GIVEN AWAY! ‘| All you have to do is register at your FORD DEALER’S Friday, Oct. 17 or Saturday, Oct. 18 Here’s how the new Ford will be given away. ° @ To be eligible to win the new ’59 Ford. V-8 Custom 300 Tudor car, all you have to do is visit your neighborhood Ford Dealer on October 17th or 18th and fill in and sign an © The entry form is made up of two stubs. Be sure to fill in both stubs. Then drop these stubs into the boxes you'll find on the Dealer’s YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN Winner will be announced in this paper after he or she has been determined. If winner has already purchased a 1959 Ford, full purchase price will be refunded. Car to be given away is a brand-new 1959 Ford V-8 Custom 300 e Tudor, equipped with radio and heater. The world’s most beautifully proportioned cars. See them now! ~~ CY OWENS 147. South Saginaw Street neighborhood showroom floor. Drop the “Dealer’s stub” into the “Dealer’s box” and the —_ stub” =e. the “Judges’ box.” @ Everyone 18 years of age or older is eligible to participate except Ford Dealers’ employees and their families—Ford Motor Company sales department personnel and their families—and the members of the Ford - Dealers’ and Ford Motor Company’s advertis- ~ ing agencies and their families. In the event of questioned eligibility, the decision of the judges will be final. Phone FE 5-4101 PPE EE FS Ee ee PO ee pe oe eg ey. 3 : ae . 4 ‘ _ i i . | f , | ‘ | . = 5 ‘ i : ane . fe | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 “MAKE I VER p aR Chrysler Announces List Prices for 59 DETROIT w — Chrysler Cons has announced its suggested fac- tory list prices for its new 1959 Plymouth, Chrysler and De Soto in a - ere ee bee Stiffest Stock. Market Restraint in 12 Years Margin Payments Go Higher --Up fo 90 Per Cent WASHINGTON (AP)—~The Fed-) ment credit in the rest of the ea ee Sk ek cee eral Reserve Board today put into|stock market. If too much bor-jsaid credit on that exchange totalsjeconomy. =~ cs Maan" nary" ase Demi te oth oe at ae tal mata|one Tae Saree + (ora' | = res "se/1.3 per cent o ers Ch G tlal St ks Ad Chrysler : said last night its years, The board’s purpose: to in purchasing stocks totaled $4,300,- ange in rain MARKETS 0C vance Chrysler models are an average 000,000 at the end of September. of 1.96 per cent higher in price and the De Soto models 1.97 per He said this was the largest tow * egg ogee : | Sli h | The following are H ] id i wines umare ue wap, caesar tm TICES 1S SHIQMIT fers rast it in heavy trade sigue on te Pye car x *& * Brokers’ loans had increased 20 per cent this year and bank loans for stock purchases are up 8 per cent, he said. The suggested factory list price is the factory level price, not that of the dealer. The factory list price does not include distribution : ‘and delivery charges, taxes, or optional equipment or accessories. CHICAGO ™ — Grain futures moved within a very narrow trad- ing range in light transactions on the Board of Trade today. Prices generally held around previous Quotations are furnished by NEW YORK (#—Steels and cop- Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of| Pers rose moderately and the stock L market was higher early today. Trading was heavy The ticker tape ran late for eight | minimum margin had been 70 per cent since Aug. 5, when it was raised from: Detroit Produce 50 per cent. aren ne est NEAL pine AG a ies SIS a AEA a il SB a ate he ie The latest action means invest- r) closes. minutes ors henceforth must put up at Union avor xk +e * FRUITS SR : The Chrysler model factory cash Apples. McIntosh, ¢ bu .... $2.75 least $80 in for every. $100 There was a little demand for) a5bie cider (case) ¢ gals ce ae 250| Key stocks rose fractions to al list price range is from $2,909 of stock they buy. It does not! . : wheat at the o with - | Cantelou bu. = : pening, with com ~ int. Losers went to about the fer the Windser six- r have any retroactive effect on a 8 mission houses the best buyers.| ots? concord (oskt.d CS. en0555 : 138 po 8 passenge stocks bought when margins ware ( 1 was ‘ub indication ay any = mercer. ; ie same range. sedan to $5,570 for the Imperial er. : in . ons ruc lon export busin - Watermelon, bu. .. > 2.001 x * * Le Baron sedans and hardtops. cae once before have margins ths’ catty demtand tiered ie veastines | The market appeared to be ia prices were been this high—when they were Industry Wants Only have come from flour mills. Bests, topped, bu. 1so| steadying after two days of | $%849 fo $5,468. 100 per cent in the first year after : : A Most buying of corn futures was poe odes - i heavy selling. The opening was | De Soto ranges from $2,636 for World War II. Organized Workers iMion resting: orders. Commission Cauliflower, doz. ..- ” 225| mixed. A string of big blocks the four-door Firesweep sedan to ~ we ® ; Spite of Ruling houses were on both sides of the Gat” c%, % i jo, Was.traded and prices rose grad- {$4,331 for the Adventurer convert- Wail Street had beenexpect ing P market. Demand for soybeans also|Cucumbers. Slicera ‘bu. on te : ible coupe. The 1958 range was an increase and some stock ana-| WASHINGTON {AP)The was thin with local traders the Hadilaonggl 2 nae vaeeeeeee iene * *« * from $2,577 to $4,271. lysts said they believed the action f = con- | best purchesers. rseradish, No aes The new Plymouth ranges from had been discounted in advance. struction industry is facing a ma- x * \Leeks. soy Py ee nge eas HE om ria i i carreras. to $2,027 for the * Savoy two-door The ‘market reached an all-time jor problem. It wants to continue) Near the end of the first hour, sperm ary, 2 "aS Ibs ssocersee 268) gy per cent from 70 per cent, ef-/Sedan to $2,568 for the Belvedere high Monday but prices fell in hiring only union members despite wheat was % higher to % lower, Parenipa bo III 148i fective today. This restrictive convertible coupe. The 1958 com- heavy trading Tuesday and) iF ae law which says that is Dec. $1.95; corn % to % lower, Deppers. as ba. = oe measure of a type feared by Wall parable range was from $2,053 to Wednesday. lillegal. old style Dec. $1.11%; oats % to|Pumpkina 1.25 cy $2,525. seeees 199 Street for some time came after + 0e When the reserve board raises “ * * % lower, Dec. 63%; rye unchanged |Reeiehen. Red tbcha) 408 “LUND 100l yesterday's market close. margins, the aim .is to prevent The ban against the closed shop to % higher, Dec. $1.28%; and soy-|Squash. Delicious, bu. .........- ea ! 40) se « be = crores has eoegoo M% higher to % lower, Nov.|Tursime“wepped DU lle aa Anaconda rose abouts point and ‘lone Kept Free of Ice ect for more than a 14%. — | 5 B - , the industry hadn’t been too dis- . GREENS lother storks in this Deals showed | by Warm Air Bubbles teel turbed about it until last year. Cabbage, DU. .......-sccossccceces: 1.00 gains igher prices for copper | ee » uyers pec Then the National Labor Relations Grain Prices jaieree Le Samoan sae Ned and reports ofa good sales volume) STOCKHOLM — The technica Board announced a tough new pol- \Mustard bu. ... 1.25'at the new prices backgrounded Problems in connection with keep- CHICAGO GRAIN Peart par eres 190 the rise. ing shipping lanes free of ice b: tarpon ed ‘means of warm compressed-ai icy of money penalties against) Kichgo. oc 18 AP) — in violating grain (a7) — Opening Demand in Market | Swies enard. ou | Magma Copper added more j,nbles seem to have been solve employers and unions * auto industry,” Iron Age said. ‘said to measure maturity or spot . ned, Wheat Oats NEW YORK W — Inventory re- : the ban. Several times postpo Dec 1.96. Dec | € SALAD GREENS | than a point and Phelps Dodge) cweden building is giving the steel market zs ae: it ha al to become effective Mer veaseee. ee ase ‘Celery, cabbage. dos. -20--0+- 2+ 130 a sizable fraction. Cant - ast winter a 4amile an added push, Iron Age Magazine STARS ON HIS FILM — U.S. Army Pfc. Ralph Kirste aims Sena ck the vant industry's ma:iss wy. Late Rye 1's lmeawteie. Eisachet ke. | 225| Bethlehem rose fractionally as |, agin nneatal nes ph fee said today. the astronomical camera he built in his spare time while serving feel they ,Co™ (old) Mar .s.--., pipes, Ds aes Db stapsencoonece: - 150 els were traded actively. U.S. oe © Uns ne ational metalworki - : : ; jor employers and unions feel they pec 11% May ....... 190A, | Romaine. Bao noe eee : - \- ©: wide was in operation in Lake Ma =, — a —— at Fort Dix, N. J. Kirste, a native of Danzig, Poland, shoots the Rave a solution that will pass le-|Mar Lisa diy 116%! |Steel, Jones & Laughlin and laren near the port of Vasteras page rebuild their stocks in view| 9 Cs De Ce) oe a EE Ge \gal muster, yet continue their’ loec ae 181% Dec. lass 70a | Youngstown Sheet were firm. ‘The aim now is to keep a 60-mil of gathering strength of the of the planet Jupiter, top photo, is an example of his work. Photo (practice of keeping only union |Mey an Oe CAS Ge nictire. Livestock | x & & ‘Jane ice-free from Vasteras to th market. These buyers are hedging was made with Tri-X film, exposed for 20 minutes. members, or substantially so, on [ay sects atv May eae 10 oeB-124| | Boeing, Raytheon, General Elec- Baltic. against a possible supply pinch |the payroll. ee | NEE yes laa DEROID ee ts oe \tric, AMerican Can and New Yor later in the year, the magazine Le a (AP) ut $ loads Central advanced moderately. seat ed t, aid Beam of Light Detects | . ® Their solution: Junk the tradi-| | cette tein setts eepety. Lelones| Pfizer and Union Carbide were| Hawaii asked to be annexed t we 'g i ews in rie tional but illegal closed shop and) of steer and heifer run sood grade and down about a point each. Other the United States and was vote. H re ; t t er Spots in Fresh Fruits substitute a sort of combined hir-| - roves cada: eee cigeay= other alacaes "ocak ‘losers included International Nick- permission in 1838. “Steel milis report business a 5 ing hall-union shop arrangement! unchanged; about § loads average | el, General Motors, Ford, Air Re-)—— jot bette? than they had expected | WASHINGTON — Federal’ re- Pare : pe Pie of 80 uch as has been in effect in the! iow igh go0d Dna pan akan | lau ae Texas Co. | ener OE OS aeg an despite scattered strikes im the (searchers have developed a device “- Anderson pleaded guilty | |maritime industry and in some “| no nn Mee ee pee eon Bein ts ue tsa 16 $0 kan, Gctoue to reckless driving before Munici- | 39 5- 25 50: load choice 850 Ib hetfers 24. 1958 at 601 Pontiac State Bank Bldg the nation’s factories. |26.50; utility and standard heifers 20 00- |Peatiac, Mich. . Oct. 15, 16, “October business is better than defects in farm produce by use of pal Judge Maurice rs fee al * * * j24 25: utility some 19.50; canners N Yo k Stocks | ; lyesterday a was fi 25 or d cutt 14.50- 18.00. | _ : September’s, and November |a beam of light. ie ae faye. ned | The end result would be we St kh Id “) ‘ aoe vers, 1450-18-08 Butener senay — r aetna a nands uO. um | te 25 cents higher; s’ws 25 cents hig (Late Morning 0 ’ Adopted Octob 14, 1958 work force remains union. Under) Stockholders Vote for ‘0 25 cents Digher! syns oo No a and! pigures fier decimal point are eighths! Etfective October 24, 1958 | orders are coming in at a good | 7, e detector is expected to help) 3 180-240 Ibs. 1925-1950 several lots) Ordinance to amend the Fire Limit Jacobs 87 Ordinance being the Ordinance adopte Thieves walked into the Cavalier the closed shop only union men) pace.” n } igrade fruit and vegetables more! Lona-Term Not The magazine said market an-|accurately through detection of Gas Station office at 4960 Dixie Can be hired. Under the union) 9 otes and Tirta Cy Ny pee Haredl| Air Reduc 10.6 Johns Man ... 442 septemper 20, 1807. By adding sectio alysts estimated steel users will|blood spots in eggs, maturity of Hwy. sometime yesterday and ShOP anyone can be hired but he Preferred Shares |19108, mixed grades 160-160) We 18.90:| Allied CO el Kauey Hay | 003 tote Sha 1G to seid Ordinance, * bw im of 200,000 | must then join the union. Under |18.78: mixed grades sows 300-400 ibs ,Allied Btrs .... Kelsey Hay - . amending Section 13 y a minimum tons |tomatoes, plurns, and peaches, and | stole $30 from the cash resister eek hialll only the ualified| 17.2$-18.00, No. 2 and 3 400-600 Ibs jae oe. tee aS Lara sees ne The City of Pontiac Ordains: more i i al] o E : m ves Sect 1 fourth roa eunees ass sternal SSE SIE | while the attendant was servicing man shag te hired “oe a quali- | SOUTH BEND, Ind. ww — A pro- i yeciore:-Oalabie 75 Steady, choice) ‘Alcoa ee = Kresge. ss... 4 “| That Section 1A be added to the Fire s i a -cord. § Ww and ime vealers 33.00-39.00. standard a roger Limits Ordinance. said added = an maximum of one million tons. wou ce h Me Sg a fications usually fit the union gram aimed at “‘vitalizing” Stude- and pany 26.00-33.00, cull and utility ne en % aH Lenn & F ... 4 amended Section 1A to read as follows Iron Age said more steel com-| Although they are air- bresthing| /M2"¥ Smit ~— | baker-Packard Corp. has been vot- 17 00-26 00 Am mMa Pay |. 473 Foe tae, bection 1A. The Fire Limits provide . Sheep—Salable 500. All classes steady: Mot 26 © and describe Se ’ panies report. a growing backlog ;Mmammals, the National Geograph-| Rummage Sale. Fri Oct. 17th| Construction industry hiring pol-| d overwhelming approval by com-',,29°°Picice’ wooled slaughter lambs\amN Gas, so os koewa es ye Genesee of orders for some products, par-\ic Society says that porpoises can|9am. to Spm. Our Lady Queenjicy is important because it af pany stockholders. Vamte “S300: cull to. choice siaugh-| Am Tel & Tel 181 Lone 8 Cem - 36 na aaa ticularly sheets and strip, galva-joutswim most fish — despite: of Martyrs” Church, 3260 te fects over three million workmen] x & ‘ter ewes §.00-1050: most good and Anaconda. $0.2 pany ae ep beckon RU Taysauilicayte ines tale nized sheets and bars. This reflects the fact they can remain under between Séuthfield and Green- 4§ well as the labor supply ar- Studebaker announced yesterday ‘Doi* 60-7 1b. feeder lambe 21.00-22.50 | Are A tg Mack Tx... 304 presently or hereinafter rezoned desig: increasing demand from the appli- water no longer than three min-| | field. adv,'rangements for thousands of con-| that 98 per cent of its 6, 400,000 | peor Be 33 Mav D Strs 45 Pri agecormiov deme panttactirins ance, farm equipment and auto- utes and usually come up for air Special communication, Pontiac tractors, big and little. _shares of stock were voted in favor | Bek & Ohio .. 422 Meat Co “3 1 Pire Limits shall be known as Pire s cation, t . } Ais ‘ i motive industries. jevery 30 to 45 seconds. Lodge No. 21, F&AM. Friday, Oct.| * * * of the refinancing. About 130 of Loss by Evaporation ce see Moreen Lino. 44 Eilts Me, 2 ef ie: City’ of! Beate ——— ee Nth. 7:30 pm. Work in FC De- The bulk of the contractors on the company’s 120,000 stockholders Equals Need of Cities [peel res) 22 A Minn MAM 92 Bee aatas cidinance eA noe gree. Gerald L. Moors, WM large-scale projects — such es actually attended the meeting in q Borden ... 734 Minn P&! toe octtecc aulcide cof Fire Limite (Nov 1 ACETATE eee: ds, brid ffi buildings Studebaker’s general offices. Borg Warn. 343 Mansan GMa! ©) sal aishalll be) des ignated as Outside Fire 7 VFW Ladies Auxiliary Having/and industrial plants—seem to| WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Briges Mt... 81 MoM proq |. §7. Limits The restrictions and provisions Auxiliary. Havin an m to st My ..... 725 ° a ae ; s S . a) wunitage lentes Oct) (1.1 (ror 5 ee in a a 2 ee The new program is to take Geological Survey estimates that Brun Balke ... 62 Moran! SS Be ibnle (ordinence (and) ih eee Bale: . SHEET lio 8 Oct) 18. from 9 to 5. At V 1 pre er to deal wi — ause effect when agreements are enough water is lost every year sola a iS Muellee Br .. 292 opted by the City of Pontiac shall be Hall. 4680 Walton Blvd. Drayton they want an assu bor sup-| signed with various finance by evaporation in the 17 western Cal Pack S16 MUITEY (CD 1.783 (ne nae eee etoile Liniae : PROTECTORS a ady.jply. There are major exceptions, | groups, including 20 banks and states to supply all the towns and Canpb Sony. : re Nat Carn R 14.3 specified in this ordinance covering ail ° (oR e Sale — League ¢ mainly in Southern states. And) insurance companies. It provides’ cifé8 of the country. |Can D Dry - 181 a pale : ass tapes and kinds of construction in said ) ' weet te icon its Cathole Women. 281 S. Parke St. home- building is only part union-| for converting Studebaker’s $54,. The Survey said more than 21) \Goenea Atel 162 Nat Lead 1096 Section 4 Mag iy sect! ‘J 1 ' eae Oct. ei 11 to 2. Sat., oe "ized. | 700,000 in debts into $16,500,00 million acre-feet of water evapo-| \Gase or Coes eee ee at hereby Se enacd tar ceed a ee siesta. Ac Bay | in long-term notes and 165,00 rates annually from fresh-water Cater Trac ... a4 Nor Pac 424 “That any violation of this 0 r - z eee 2 «ON: 20 ll b nishe ne not Reg. $1.10 Rummage Sale. Rebekah’s. 1360 Marriage License | shares of convertible preferred streams, lakes, canals, ponds and|Ggaee 544 Ohio ‘O11 ner eid $100°00. or by both auch fit Doz. Spl. S. Woodward. Birmingham., stock. reservoirs in the West. jCin Mil M 42.4 Owens Cng §2 4 imprisonment ae the Oakl and Couns ° Box of 2%S—Reg. $2.29. 8 Pr 5 Bale Fri. Oct. 17, : a ‘Applications [cities on a osen Gl 3 pail ae exceeding saldeye in the descre ree parking. | [cae 25 a rare x one 4 ae } _ Specie! ..... ..$1.77 | ° ICtuett Pea 416 Pan A W Air 21 of Pontia have ee | ' iCo ol 3 Pan Eb! 532 i by injunction ac - Mammage and bake sale 453 Robert R_ Egros. 232 W. Fairmount Berlin $ Industry Huge |What Can Be Simpler Gene eit an Param Pic 436 s ae eared Oy fai proton: of t South Saginaw. Sat., Ort. 18th. 8) Mary J. Hess, 616, W. Huron Than Voting Yes or No? (col Bra A . 361 Parke Da 102 2 Limits Ordinance jam. to 1 pm. Baldwin EUB. - BERLIN — West Berlin's indus * jColum Gas 901 Penney, JC .. 982 Section § | Church. adv.| Warne Chenoweth, Milford Gea 2 ; * | icon N Gas 47 F8 RR... 152 All ordinances or parts of ordinances | Carolyn J. Joerin. Milford trial sales in 1957 totaled about) PHOENIX, Ariz. — What can ieonsum os as ree a in contiiet Hecewi:h are hereby repealed. ” Con 4 ae Sect i Large Capacity | willtam's rat ane Sone ware Tener sal Hostend) Meduon | Heights $1,558,500,000 and exports amount- be simpler than ‘‘yes’’ or ‘‘no? cont gS AG Enelpe De. 301 This ordinance shall take effect in 10 Rana sae Oct’ sth and sstn,| Helene M. Hansen, Birmingnam ed to $1,314,000,000. Production| “For” and “against.” says Ari-\Cont Con 5: 028 pill pet ©: Aas Go tne Clty sComeniaclonmeestnel cilyiet nt P& 2.6 . ¥ e City mmission TWO-DRAWER 10 am. to 8 pm. adv.| Robert L. Reid, Birmingham ranged from dynamos to fashions zona Secretary of State Wesleyjcont Mot. 93 prot Su” 7: $93 Pontiac and shall be published in ace, j Sandra 8. Kosten. Berkiey and included enough cosmetics to ‘Bolin. From now on, said Bolin,|Cont Oil .... 574 RCA - 37 cordance with the City Charter | Rummage Sale. Orchard Lake! suppl h [Copper Rng 311 Repub Sti 811 Made and passed by the. City Com- | ‘Community Church. 5171 Com-! Robert G. Quavie. Oxford (Sines Ueaine than half the entire Arizona voters will designate their co orn Pd 452 Rex Drue . 232 Mission of the City of Pontiac this 14 : Oct 13th Imerce Rd. Oct. 17th, 3 to 8 adv) 2°7 = Schumaker. Oxford |German demand. West Berlin's preferences on proposed constitu-jCurtis Pub .. 146 Reyn Met 4 cay of OT eetILIP E” ROWSTON ° For Home or Office John E. Stark. Allen Park | film industry, Germany's largest, tional amendments by using ‘‘for” een ‘34 Royal Dut 48 5 favoe 7 Reinforced. heavy geuge | Rummage Sale, Saturday, Oct. Beverly £. Harris, Birmingham |produced 47 motion pictures last. | emeee 335 Safeway St BL ADA R EVANS ’ eoastruction yee sy 19 tide 18th. Congregational Church, 8 P ast or “against.” = Gis eee + 5g) St Ree Pan = 42 City Clack 9 drawers, spring tock, off ! greg Richard J Robichaud 89 8S Francis year. daar Doug Airc 58 Scovill Mf 744 t i6 “3a i to 12. adv. a : “That seems a lot clearer than pow Chem 673 seats Ro ; Oct. 16. “58. the-floor desiqn. finithed Julie A. Gardner, 927 Peach ; : ae Sears Roeb j | handle end name olate ~ _ yes or ‘no, said Bolin. Duly Font 200 See Shei nou BI NOTICE OF INTENTION TO CON-; Ge. pales co) losggerr-tiae tin Rummage Sale. Friday, Oct. Ear! E English. 57 N_ Sanford ‘East Air L 361 Simmons AOIGNT ied Miiden sik onl ise (side| ot) fast | Oct 25th ee ti snep ie iaiée 17th, 7 p.m. Stevens Hall, Guild Marte E LaLone 810 Waldon Research Levy Voted ee Lal ae WAG Darieanes : ee Me Ce as SU DS |No. 10. adv. Robert C Muirhead, Plate Center 111 eeu ueecar Timber Harvest Down Ey Auto L 356 ne Fae aoe Ganre ore tee ot ee age x $84-6102. Re. $24.58. Rummage Sale. 128 W. Pike. Susanne J Runde. Farming'on . SYDNEY, Australia — A mect- “ ae : “a Sperry Rd 203 the City of Pontiac. Michigan held \Fri. 4 p.m. to 8:30 pm. Sat. 9 a.m_| Roy J. Hamer. Walled Lake ing of cattle-industry organizations. “AUGUSTA, Mc. — The Maine gx-cen.o 409 BLOW Ce | basen y behets a $] 7 | (till noon adv.| Janice M Stanford. Northville in Sydney adopted a proposal for harvest of sawlogs and rough pulp- eo aon es ne on Ina Comlssten| (0) conetractl idem elk Gnd . 1) Or AS os 2 related work on the west sid f Eash Spl. Rummage Sale. 67 Seminole. Ree nen se pide ee 2 shillings (22 cents) aj wood declined slightly during 1957. Erecpt Sub oss ie aie cel Sd Boulevaraulcom) North! lineilat Citkx nb Le sand coe 10 to 4 p.m. adv. 2 2 ead on all beef cattle in Australia) according to the Maine Forest? pea” in Stud Pack |. t14 Development Company Addition to the, Sale—New Toys and Paul J, Schauman, Milford to provide an estimated 300,000; Service. The sawlog harvest to-|Gen Bak ..... OG Hesie le Sera an Or oad ne at Giistax ¢ Misc. Oc Oct 1 15, 16, & 17. 20 N. ores ecyt Me Matrertisid, “Milford pound sterling ($675,000) a year for| taled 535,598,297 board feet com-|Gee Dynam .. 32 Syiv El Pd -- 43 ¢/and that the plan. profile and estimate , : the establishment of a special) pared with 550,183,967 in 1956 and Gen Pde... 67) Tex @ Sul. 22 inspection se OF Me for euvile Save $26.12! Gray Steel | Rummage Sale.’ Boys Club, 530| The number of orphans in the|meat-research institute by Aus-| Olen late Gee? ge ad It is further intended to construct : <7a3 bd . i 1 t 1 J Genuine Naugahyde Covered = Pike. October 17th, 9 til ce ie U.S. has declined from 6.4 million |tralian universities and research! 158,972 rough cords from 2,657,890 Gen Shoe 244 Timk R Bear 424 the pumeromement in sccordance with | V./to 1920 to 2.7 million in 1958. organizations. l the year before. pea zal tenes a os W Air. ne the cost thereof shall be defrayed by. | u Co ansamer ;special assessment according to frorte | SECRETARY GHAIR Winter and S Slits 4] GRaeeea ec stam eRe Oat eta Bae? inter an ummer Goebel Be... 3 Ge Ge onI Jjof land frontihg upon the west side ¢ WHAT THE STATES WILL BE Weraltle FOR ACROSS THE NATI N Goodrich 614 On Carbide 1122/East Boulevard from the northerly line ° ° : Un Pac 305 of Citizens Develop: t c ay Addt= $ 88 ‘He Wears His Woolies O [goony ent oan Unit Air Lin 308 nines ae Ane eee oar Tet eal 5 : ee ET Aire 62 (Assessor's Plat No 14 shall constitute $E3-C2 . : MAINE ELECTIONS WERE HELD IN SEPT. jGt No Rv $54 tnit Fruit 47.7, the special assessment district to defray Req $65 CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)—Ted auipeeia ae Un Gas Cp. 337 $729.98 of Ciel (eatiti sted} cost lanai ey = |Tarezanyn plays it cool when he gee raip ity US Lines. 30 |penses thereo? and that $401 65 of tre id fi k t shat lrementk sede 38 4 US Rub 41 4/estimated cost and expenses thereof | resses for work, no matter wha t 3 US Steel 80 4!shall be paid from the Capital Improve- } fell ith fealty height; no-sag foam season of the year it is cee Fl... ay "3 Tob 245|ment Fund | tu cushion; double ball bearing casters. : Tiduatinay onal an) Real 201) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ¢ o Gray frame with qreen or gra uphoiste * * * | Me oY ees Walgreen _ 404° That the Commission of the City of ry? P Ing Rand ... 91 wWara Bk Pf 88 P : : an } tan frame with tan upholstery, eolor. Whether temperatures are in the ‘Inland él - 116 West Un_ Tel 252 Conaiaslon: (Clinber von October re no 7 90s or in the 20s, Ted slips on a [eee ol Westg A Bk 28 ' 1958 at 8 o'clock pm to hear suggestions $ 2 Interlak Ir ... 25 Weste El 37 and objections that b heavy winter underwear, two flan- pint Bus Mch 434 White Mot... $2 (Darttes ‘ateveaes at may be made by ‘ ‘ : nt arv ‘ilson 70. } = nel shirts, two sweaters, a pair THe Nick 891 Woolworth. 476; W. 0. 733 Re BUY Now AND SAVE $6.37 | of heavy woolen trousers, boots, a) jInt Paper 112 ysc riled ae Dated ice 15 968. a ae ji. . jInt Ste ..... 334 ¥ S 1 ON THIS STEEL [woolen cap, a heavy jacket and] Int Silver. 362 Xoett SHAT 11h | City Clerk : ‘two pairs of gloves. / lInt Tel & Tel 493 2? Rad 1204 _ 7 a Oct 16. ‘86. } STORAGE CABINET The 54-year-old Ukrainian works eS STOCK, AVERAGES Kany gf REINANCE (NO 1270 r % t ted Oc er By h in an ice cream storage ware- . N Uh = i \yortated ‘Presse by the AS- Ertec:ive October #4 1958 . My ° | Ordinance to Amend Sect Ing of Shelves quickly adjustable without tools. Preci- house. y incest Rove UI sites Atticle TI of Ordinance No. 1186. the 1! sion locks with grooved keys separate from | Yj | moon Ch ESOS ean Building Code of the City of Pontiac r handle. Satin chrome finish hardware. Perfext Host Aids Pals [Week ago ....2924 1251 886 1979 Section 1. of Pontiac Ordains had \ wo" wide, 18" deen Shipping. woigle os he 5 ils TEXAS Y Wear ago occia08 3 O88 OOS. 8a gta, Section 2040 of Article It of —bpy onaring me ATrest | fo fase, «| Bee Oe A ELA\ 0UCi“( ae ee Moré than 300 varie- | City Commission of the City of Pont TAS : fees les 0 ction i join his friends. He was charged) ; t th sh eh ae To pro-| All ordinances or parts of ordimanc*s w w with public intoxication. A BIG OFF-YEAR ELECTION — Newsmap _ states will elect senators; and 33 will also choose (‘ect their brightly colored ra eee re Rerehy tepesiee . i : “ . ¥ y Commis- 17 - LAWRENCE FE 2-0135 above shows what type of election each gate in _ governors. Alaska's election of two senators and aun Keer them = fishermen | won of the City of Pontiac the 14th cay PONTI AC . Eight signers of the Declara- the United States will hold in November. Citi- one representative is a necessary prelude to its Pr the bal 2 of hut “hls Geshe Gee October, A cnt = aowaron t , tion of Independence were born| Zens of every state will be called on to vote for becoming officially the 49th state. Maine has al- j|to ‘see’ their way through haz- 2 abe Rt Mayer in Great Britain. — members to the House of Representatives; 33 ready elected a senator and governor. ardous waters and shallow reefs. my em ROME—When in Rome, live as the librarians do... Peter, who led off, reigned over the church the longest of any pope —from the year 33 AD to 67 AD. It took eighteen centuries to pro- duce the next longest-lived Pontiff. * * & He was Pius IX, who endured from 1846 to 1878. Leo XIII, one of the great ones, was in office 24 years, six months and 14 days. The fourth most durable pontiff was Adrian I, who sat on the throne of Peter from T?2 to 795. But then there was Stefano I. He ruled for exactly three days Fi ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 — Peter Reigned Longer Than any Other Pope where from eight bucks te $96. in March of 742, Marcello I last- ed 13 days in April of 1555, just as did Urbano VII in September of 1590. Teodoro II had a reign of 20 days in 897 and Leo XI spent just short of the month of April, 1605, in the post. CHOSEN IN 20 HOURS ; Pius XII was chosen pope in 20 hours in 1939. That was four hours quicker than the coholders of the runner-up title—Benedict XI in 1303 and Boniface VIII in 1294. The conclave of the sacred col- lege of cardinals which chose Ce- lestine V, on the other hands, de- bated for two years and three months in the closing years of the 13th century. But the all-time record in papal deliberation concerns Gregory X whose elevation was achieved at a conclave in Viterbo, ancient papal residence 50 miles north of Rome, after two years, nine months and two days of voting—ending Sept. 1, 1271. * * * This decision was brought to an abrupt head when the people of Viterbo, plainly an impulsive group, cut off food supplies to the clois- tered cardinals until such time as they made up their collective mind, P.S.—They did, If you hire an Italian maid fn Italy and fire her at the end of a year, for some incomprehensible charge such as utter incompet ' the law requires that you pay her a month’s salary. ¥ * * Custom also requires that. you give her a bonus or present called a “buon uscita’—a good exit, so to speak. = A buon uscita must range from 5,000 to 60,000 lira, which is any- Executive Looks 20 Years Ahead Atomic Industry Will Change World prepared for a meeting of the East Michigan Tourist Assn., BAY CITY (AP)—Man’s use of atomic energy will bring about within 20 years a world system of “interlocking in- dustrial economies” regardless fornia executive sald today. of political differences, a Cali- The prediction, based on what he called a forthcoming worldwide industrial revolution of “incredible magniture,” was made by B. F. Coggan, vice president and San Diego manager of Convair Division of General Dynamics Corp. He said all nations will be involved and there will be a universal demand for a living standard the equal of America’s. Coggan, in a speech titled “Moon, Mars and Michigan” §-P Stockholders Get Bid fo Recoup SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD—, Stockholders of the Studebaker. | Packard Corp. were expected to, approve today a comprehensive re-| financing plan on the strength of, management's belief the plan is’ the way for shareholders to sal-' vage their investment. A meeting was scheduled for this afternoon at the corporation’s gen- eral offices. | Approval of the proposal was ex- pected on the basis of the fact that management has controlled a ma-} jority of the stockholders when, issues have been voted on pre- viously. | In addition to refinancing, the! stockholders also will be asked to endorse a diversification program by which Studebaker - Packard hopes to merge some profitable in- dustries into its corporate struc- ture. The Oregon Trail, used by pio- City, Mo., and Omaha, Neb., to, Portland, Ore. ; ' lope Ann Coelen, 18, smiles re- | bargaining election. eS political differences, will be Coggan also touched on in the future. he said. surface. : “Maybe some day, as we out of basic power.” said this new industrial economy for the world will follow the atom’s expanding use in the creation of power, “All nations, whether democracies or dictatorships, -economic goal — the completely industrialized society. “In about 20 years all men and nations, regradless of driven into interlocking in- dustrial economies demanding living standards equivalent to those we now enjoy in America.” possible interplanetary travel He spoke of future space colonization in which ,the “early colonists” would be adventurous, scientific men “seek- ing answers to physical laws of the universe.” “Never in the history of the world has man been getting ready for a mass colonization so far in advance,” Ce) Coggan predicted untold advantages for mankind from knowledge to be gained from space travel, particularly with | respect to the causes of temperature changes on the earth’s get out into space and look back on this earth of ours, we will be able better to under- stand this great thermodynamic machine,” he sald. He added there may be “great blessings” as a result. Coggan said man discovered use of the atom for nu- clear power “just in time to keep our world from running fo Join Teamsters members among Hudson's esti- Hudson Drivers Vote 2. ssos"ze Thomas Roumell, regional NLRB director, said that barring a protest, Local 299 will be certified as bargaining agent within five | DETROIT w — J. L. Hudson! gays, Co. truck drivers yesterday voted) | Local 299 is headed by Team- sters President James R. Hoffa. Ito join Teamsters Local 299 in a |National Labor Relations Board } } * * * * * * Hudson drivers struck for three days earlier this month but re- The Teamster victory climaxed/turned to work when the store ; gally in London after being | four years of efforts to organize petitioned the NLRB for an elec- neers in the early 1800's, stretched crowned Miss World. The honey | the department store’s 321 drivers. | tion. about 2.000 miles from Kansas Blonde queen hails from the priyers voted 184 to 110 for local real deep south—Durban, Union | 299. Americans took about two billion The drivers are the first union| photographs last year. ‘|more or less a federal case. If ’ |first night of occupancy you can There is always a chance, of course, that she is not fired; that she is a perfect helpmeet, In that case it is unlawful if the employer fails to give her one day week plus a total of 18 purchase such refuge finds himself contronted for extended periods by the owner’s lawyer. Every Roman family seems to have a lawyer, usually fierce. Most of them,are prepared te sue. on sight, The lease, once signed, is regis- tered at the city hall, making it the roof falls in on you during your be held for the remainder of the year’s rent unless you have been cad enough to have demanded a legal out, pertaining to this, before signing. Handcuffs—Minus Keys— No Joke to Secretary HAZARD, Ky, (AP)-—As a joke, a fellow employe put a pair of handcuffs on Miss Janet Stout, a secretary at the Hazard Credit Bureau. Then it was discovered keys to the handcuffs were with the office manager in another county. _ Hazard police tried to unlock the cuffs — no luck. The State Police were called. They couldn't free Miss Stout's hands. Then Detective Orlester Mahoney took a file to keys of his own handcuffs. Within minutes, Miss Stout was free. Vermont Maples Lead MONTPELIER, Vt.—More than & third of the 5,734,000 trees tapped in the United States in 1957 by maple-suger farmers were in Ver- mont, which dominates the market for fancy and grade-A . Ca- nadians tapped at least 10,000,000 trees and produced nearly twice as much maple syrup and sugar as Americans, but their product was mostly of lower-grade types for use in blending syrup and maple fla- voring. How Many Shots Per? FRANKFORT, Ky. Kentucky Department of Fi Wildlife Resources said the legal way to catch fish in Ken- tucky was by hook and line—or The aaa only Scientist Asks ‘How, “Why Must Have Curiosity, Energy, the Will to Do Hard Work in Study Fat 2bF : s é ue | ed man — a man to a point.”’ For high school students pre- Dr. Gilfillan says parents can help arouse an interest in science within their children in these ways: —By taking time to “really answer” some of the questions children ask. ‘Stimulate, don’t kill curiosity,’’ he says. ‘‘Help young- sters look below the surface of things.’ —By reading and talking to chil- dren about science and providing reading material in the home that is “food for thought"’ on the child's level. Hospital I LANSING @ — Conflicting medi- eal evidence has been A legislative committee investi- gating the death of Joseph L. Ki- the surprise evidence at a hearing here yesterday. , of contributing to his death.” had to go up and down stairs. He also quizzed Rennell on the scope of his own investigation into the death and on how carefully he checked the patient's condition be- fore his death. * * * It was established that Kibiloski had three broken ribs and numer- ous contusions and ebrasions. “It seemed reasonable that he had fallen a number of times,” Rennel] said. Rennell said he examined the patient before he left on his hunt: | ing trip vacation and did not think his condition was serious | at the time. on a hunting trip while the patient“ ta@was ill. : mployes Say Patient ‘Tossed Around’ that he was no a pra psy- that he hed been an administrator for 14 years and a state employe for 26 years. Lake Victoria Lies on Equator It Provides East Africa Power, Irrigation, Trade — and Crocodiles Explorer Henry M. Stanley first circumnavigated the 27,000-square- mile lake in 1874, proving its en- tity. It was a remarkable feat, for Stanley’s steamer had to be borne in pieces from the coast. The voyage took 57 days. PORTS OF CALL Today steamers regularly cir- cult the lake in about a week. Places of call include Port Bell in Uganda; Kisumu in Kenya; Mu- —By encouraging them with “experiments. and projects. is now Iraq, a ta which was identified as being old. On it was inscribed: ‘You can have a lord, you can have a king, but the man to fear is the bow and arrow. tax collector.’’” “You've proven you know very little about the practice of medi- ‘cine and very little about edmini-| ‘the conclusion of the hearing. ‘lips shut him off, declaring: “I'm tired of your excuses.”* soma, which serves T: gold-mining areas; Mwanza and Bukoba, a coffee port. Coming A clay tablet was found in what/|stration,” Phillips said tartly at)back into Uganda territory, ships at Bukakata and Uganda's stop centuries| Rennell tried to reply but Phil-| capital, Entebbe, an Elysian town set in green gardens above the lake. The trip involves two cross- | Rennell said if allowed to get on/ings of the Equator in the lake's the record he would have explained/north sector. Funcral Directors 4) ere __Help Wanted Male 6) Help Wanted Female 7 i | Death Notices of South Africa. = SPA : soRiryim CHAPEL GIRL. LIVE, IN. CHILD CARE. Thou. v 2-634) . = cleaning, ndry, pvt. quarters = = | Have Opening for One in Bloomfield area. per week. HALE OCT. 18. 8H FPRRIAM VT Oh as Sinla| Sin tied it te SRE | itl dear father of Mrs. Irene Clev- Dp SAD leense Very ood opports | HOSTESSES FOR BEAUTY CLIN- Mrs. J. H. h and FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Gervies—Pilane or Motor PE 2ay7" See Rudy LoPatin CADY TO CARE FOR CHILDREN , , while m wo! ghia, Wm. A. Kennedy FE “s-0788 gives 4 eS LADY FOR GENERAL #oOUsm by s grandchildren and 11 greet-grand- rvice will be Sosa Seareany Oct 407stl8 not W, Hurog 43540 ur ' ~ 16, wi p.m. 6 , Aw rE . trom the Oonelsan Johns Punerai Cemetery Lots 5 Open Evenings ‘til 9 Sor 1 sigh for pabyetting, Bi jon, officiating. Pollowing service | @ GRAVE LOT, NO. 228 IN § OPPORTUNITY OPEN FOR MAN foe ERB BOTRE ITER at Donelson-Johns Funera] Home,| tion M., at Acacia Park, 1}-Mile interested in earning over $100) ROOM AWN AR Mr. Hale will be taken to the & Southfield clusively Ma- = week. Apply W. Huron. change for oa housekeeping *% Inca iter serves Toe carer cea ot. Ts ons seela sc desisen: —— = nd., for service a ‘m. Satur- .. Indianapolis 5, ane. day. Interment in Tomaisen Cem- BEAUTIFUL © Gave LOT PER. REAL ESTATE MGR. eee! & ry Mt Park Cemetery Will db = man with proven past ree- PIERCE, OCT. 15, 1968, IVAN, 84) vide Reas 4-0882, ord. If you are able to organize ECRETARY N.-Anderson; age 37; beloved hus- | S-————— — . = and are a true leader then you will enjoy a prominent position with every remuneration. Our company maintains two offices tn Detroit and two in Oakiand Coun- ty FE 2-791] for appointment for band of Mrs. Marguerite Pierce; beloved son of Mrs. Erma Pierce: dear father of Michael, Peter, Margaret Ann, Patricia, John and Ivan Jr.; dear brother of Ivyo Manager of retail store re- quires capable person with general duties to inchide shorthand and The Pontiac Press ing. P Pierce. Mr. Pierce will lie in state FOR WANT ADS personal interview pany benefits. after 7 p.m. today at the Brace- Cc. SCHUETT, Realtor @requirement an ck Smith Punera]l Home. Puneral ar- : 2 round Write bez $7, rangements will be announced DIAL FE 2-8181 REAL ESTATE SALESMEN OR ac Press : cre the Brace-Smith Puneral wid train person living vic . lome. % From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ¥ wille, Clarkston, Ox- , OCT. 16, 1958, DAISY, . = q 256 8B. bar gt adie, Yh Gene fitted fne Saou. PG.” Pangus, w SALESLADIES ia mother of Floyd an r w to . . for tim Mrs. Zellma Thomas and Mrs. im Realtor, Ortonville. KA Test furenre apf pag = ociee REGISTERED PHARMACIST Hours can be arranged in various Rattle Rousan: ar sister of -Troy. Smith. Mrs. Russell was stbitit : - Fully qualified. References. taken from the Sparks-Griffin than to cance) the charges Top s a: Good hours, Sam's Belling experience preferred. Puneral Home to the Erbie, 62 for that portion of the first Drugs. Auburn Heights, FE 8-1422. Write eiving ase. qzperience and . . a @ advertise uts of work preferred. ——— will be held Sunday, Oct ment which har been ren Bee Ann te ceanare Soe, Pontiac Press Box 27. Woaghes (Oematery. meceer Ar: dered’ vsineless’ through the tails call EM 3-467], _ TYPIST - STATISTICAL. EXPERT Panis: Comer? t shes ae error When cancellations : : encea in. typing financial state- WW caintiat bonerel memes mierl |(Euece, mre, eeusure ute) (eet eniiCurees” ments Janz & Knight CPA's. ariffin Puseral Home. rour “kill nonmber™ We HAVE YOU EVER 80LD 1100 N Woodward. Birmingham, WALTON, OCT. 18 1958 FRANK | J Sdfustmente wii" be eran || SOND Oe pur. | Mies nn, firginia; age 43: be- withon ij ; Ky . loved husband of Mrs. Lucille ther. A 2 Billion Dollar Interna-| WOMAN FOR CLEANING RES- taurant. Days, 5171 Dixie Hwy. WANTED WOMAN EXPERI- enced with ref. General, light laundry assist with cooking, live tional financial institution has im- mediate i apt in the Pontiac $4,800.00, $6,000.09 and $7.- startin Walton; beloved son of Mr. and Closing time for sdvertis Mrs. Frank Walton: dear father : 7 2 [aioe containing type sizes than regular agate area: .of Jerrold, Jeffrey and Jill Marie alton; dear brother of Mrs. type is 12 o'clock noon the 200.00 yea salaries to Alice Eiwgn Hall. Funeral service da fous i qualified applicants, No overnight in Beautiful pvt. quarters. $35. will be — id py de as “ 7 prev Sr gore: book ea, — Ae: 6-5647 P p.m. from Hun ere. Transient Want it sales nOwWs s ad. | Wi ome with Rav. George Widdl- | | persansciiog we te ea0 Gm Kephpuiites a comacenal ag pias | oe ee one field’ officiating. Interment in| ¥ the day. of cublication after {| qualifications and background in| wages References FE 2.0023 . Mr. first insertion. r ication care Pontiac : 2 te ‘ will lie in state at the Huntoon| § “* Press Box Wo. 10. WHITE GIRL, LIVE IN, HOUSE- Puneral Home. CASH WANT AD RATES WANTED: EXP MAN OVER 30 work and child care. 4-4317. ALKENS, , 18, 1968, D a : for dry cleaning route. Apply| YOUNG WOMAN, -EXP. WITH i oe Seeey Dr. Lake Orion, age Lines 1-Day 3-Days ¢-De Main Cleaners, 4480 Eliz tx. Rd.| children and also general house- 8; deloved wife of Ernest A. a” Sse aise ae ELL KNOWN SALES ORGaNIzA-| Marsan emits eecrg lh viet a ype of Elders 3 50 8623.70) 3.96 tion can use 2 men in Pontiac : ie g E. and Harold L. 4 20 3.48 oo area. 1 m Walled Lake. Estab- YOUNG. ATTRACTIVE SECRE- Calkens and Dr. E Arthur Calk-| § § $35 403 9.60 lished routes. $0750 per week| {4r7., high school, graduate with ee eect mecha (ona 6 270. 488 920 aranteed to start Car essential. | training in typing dnd shorthand i 7 eece! rm. m area mo- Abe Zielstia: also survived by 11 . pe Hoe bes Tike Eon i Pek Reatison rest: tion aicters producer, Previous . . randchildren, Funeral service ® 4.08 720 «= 10 RO job experience desirable but not ® e will be held Saturday, Oct. 18, at Help Wanted Female 7| oecessary, Chance to advance if in e an is worth two in the bush 1 72 ne Fiumerfelt Puneral ee ee ee ee eae wity growing firm in pleasent sur its C. V. Ketser officiating. After ATTENTION: A ad on Box’ 10 iving < anaace Bee he service on urday, Ts. Coikens will be taken to Seventh rea. , | ALL AROUND BUMP AND PAINT Help Wanted Male * 6 housewives get your s free. toys and gift starting salary requ re 5-8459 Help Wanted Call Irene at A BEAUTICIAN A N qT A sti D Ss E fi A Monday, Jets, “re "Calon man to work on percentage. AD- | _ FE 5.4020 — Between 7 & 8 eves. n understatement if you've ever heard one! possession. Protect it. Other towns would like to Funeral Home, taxe Orion. | $081 Orchard Lake Rd. ego | AYO" COSMETICS NEEDS QU | “ocktna. ming yon dows tea St Comparing the industry which is located in your get it and some may even now be trying. Don't Card of Thanks 1; Christmas’ business seans more Gan. make above ‘arernge” waxe town with industry located somewhere else which __t@ke the industry in your town for granted. Show wa wun so wnnuelocelanae A M AN Wing’ Lakes ere ‘tndependece, COST OF THINGS ,OOING UF your town might like to get, the bird in hand is Your pride in it. Help it expand. friends, and neighbors, for ,telt | wanted tor outside employment | G od ‘opportunity for mothers of can make more, fuller part ; ; r ote today me as a Ra ealer in worth a hundred in the bush, and more. There's no better payroll than the homegrown — feiney' Theodore Allebech for ccrnen 0 cea eee. | PO” set S36" * Drevion Plaine Bowling write for Tl particulars ; é ; : AUTO. MECHANIC, SERVIC Freeport, fi : It’s a hundred to one that th@jybest opportunity variety and it is, by all odds, the easiest to grow. Fereeteld pogel sod te ihe |” station work. ay Steady Tsober. | We potese Pou Gererrs — HoabAND AND WIFE OVER 35, your town has for more industrial payroll lies in : enc aaeen on | SENSNRT WARTS de | cena et Perry oftheir’ own starting part, tithes * 2 Fs -_ At EXFITEN ee. Ol * expansion of its present industry Join hands with your local industrial development LA seat shoo ANTED, ~ OR WILL | CAPABLE GIRL FOR HOUSE- Gail Pe Saiol, Thursday € Pt 7 organization and the Michigan Economic Develop- SaSEMING TRAINERS ZALES | eacellemt references g210° Mas AL: : The industrial payroll of your town is a priceless ment Department to help your community prosper. ‘ — Replies masinists) He aap. soe. Mas be CHRT WAS M NI 7 Is This for You? ‘ t 10 a.m. today there town Phone p.m, only, KE HRIST S E Nationally advertised food product, = “pgeat mals Part time or full tt ; , th, 1st were replies af the Press i Oe i w ambition parila oeare Led hea pp anlar plan in office -in the following erence Batacs Coenssee poise. Flexible aBouz®, Cr pee to’ 5 yrs. Men or women, full : nesses er Rochester. Ol | SENTAL nr Be | - tube" wor personal: interview, 5, 10, 27, 28, 31, 32, 62, enced preferred. Bui will train | _cail Fit 6-406 tor PE 44400.” £ itl ig to rk fi } 104, 100, 110, 16 Da ae hw Bint stele, eine coments de | Employment Agencies 8A : , se mily in @ fiel . og, , iin 1 ay MA chs LOT This od is published os o public service by this newspaper in cooperation with the high bres wane aoabhiat prom. panded es ad suburban ‘ DOCTOR'S ASST. ie — unera f portan' 6. Typing dietap' Michigon Press Association and the Michigan Economie Development Department. F | Directors 4 a honesty beppeck?’ EXPER 4 TENCED GREE E $00 ix. “Syn train in medical rocedure “A —— West oy, Owens. ine ‘Track Fx Gap WAITRRSS wrD.| ett ‘Employment, ” 406 fontiae = s | ‘Gwn . transportation, Bloomfi $0227. . FUNERAL HOME ir Restaurant ‘Telegrapli snd Maple . ERA Ras. EVELYN EDWARDS THE PONTIAC PRESS | ie Srl ea re | remy : at D ] J home and some Wages. 23 Bliss,| "ICE “ | nego Ty agate 2 8G S| gore Set Eee BOO ’ 2. : 7 ‘ & a te Fone 86472, . , m . ee f/f. panene P a ear ah LEDC II Re ce eg RE TERE URE NS a Oy tak item ag eo aati eI Sat pn RAE AAO GEE leita Regt ppt a ‘Araentine GaliessRim (tas made it, one of the world’s ‘ out more than 40- billion . cans Fel pd ee a “ greatest granaries. 40 Billion Cans Used last year — about 900 for each ertile | Ip F About two thirds of Argentina's) NEW YORK ~— The amount of/United States family. BUENOS AIRES — The heart ofPopwation is concentrated in the/steel used in a single year in Man Blames Bruises . on Four Thirsty Thugs ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Ww — Antonio Elwell of Albuquerque told police he received. his many cuts and bruises when four men pulled _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958 him out of a local bar and: . Dragged him to the rear of the establishment, beat him up, threw him into a car, roared down a street and threw him out while the car was in motion. The reason? Elwell said he re- fused to buy the four a drink. Mail for’ Santa Claus | The letters, a pair of them, are re ithe earliest “Santa mail” ever Already Starts to Come ceived at the post office. WOOD RIVER, Ill. @ — Santa Claus mail is arriving early, but fraachiaed nae cab beggt the kids will have to wait it out,/3s Pennsylvania ponaeedh says Postmaster E. V. Giehl.- There are more than 40,000 |—2,654—and Nevada the least 87. an 0)4:1014@@-1n 19) CO. / | Carpet Rayon Broadloom H PRICED for REAL SAVINGS! 4 Popular Colors © Green © Gray Even at this low, low sale price, you get Harmony House quality and styling! Low loop pile is tufted of tightly twisted yams. Vatdyed colors. 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