‘Continued mostly cloudy and rather cold with intermittent snow flurries. | (Detalis Page 2) THE PONTIAC } PRESS Home Edition 116th YEAR xk MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958—28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 1 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, Navy's Vanguard Hurls 2nd U. S. Satellite nto Orbit Around the World From Florida. a x * * Wearing the Green GREEN HEADS — Shown are three of the Archie Noon children who dipped into the green food coloring last night and came out green- haired in preparation for today’s observance of on Top Pentiac Press Phote {| St. Patrick’s day. Susan brushes Ned's hair as Deidre watches. Bridget and Erin, also green- topped were in high school. 120,000 Marching in St. at Parade NEW YORK (INS)—Sure and the weather man says there might be a few nippy little clouds over the 120,000 St. Patrick’s Day marchers on New York’s Fifth Avenue today, but not enough to put the Irish in the shade. Not, of course, as if anything really could on the day of days for the Shamrock. In Boston, the first of an anticipated 200,000 viewers today braved snow flurries to gain choice viewing spots for the annual parade,+ highlight of the dual ob-! ‘servance of St. Patrick’s Recession Nearing End? Day and Evacuation Day. CLEVELAND (INS) — Steel New York's grand parade in hon-| Magazine said today five busi- or of Ireland's patron saint is ex-| ness barometers indicate that the pected to be the biggest ever. recession may be nearing its It was scheduled to start mov- | end. The metalworking publica- Ing at noon, sharp, and proceed | tion noted that some favorable ap Fitth Avnue a distance of 2% ~pigns have appeared in the field of construction, machine tool or- miles with the jast marcher pass- - ing the finish line about supper ders, car sales, coal and freight carloadings. time, Ex-Dublin Lord Mayor Robert Green Topknots Distinguish Five in Milford Family \ovp | Celebrating St. Patrick's Day in itrue Irish fashion, five of the six ‘Noon children in Milford dyed itheir hair green last night, as their junsuspecting parents watched tel- House Speeding ¥ to Freeze Farm Price Supports Brush Off Veto Threat, Push for Early Vote. on Senate-Passed Bill WASHINGTON (#—The House Agriculture Commit- tee, operating under speed- up orders, was expected to approve today a Senate- passed resolution which would freeze farm price supports at last year’s level. House leaders brushed off the threat of a presi- dential veto to push for completion of preliminaries lin time for a final House vote on the resolution be- fore the end of the week. Despite farm bloc differences over the proposal, the resolution was expected to pass the House by a substantial margin and go to President Eisenhower by Thurs- day or Friday. Its fate at the White House was uncertain. Secretary of Agriculture Benson recommend the veto of any price support change. His assertion was backed up by some GOP House members who the proposal as undesibabie “stop gap” legislation. * * * By holding the level of govern- ment farm aid at 1957 figures, the bill would cancel out Benson's plans to drop dairy price supports April 1 to the legal minimum and evision. Archie Noon’s children, whose ages range from 15 months to 15 years, live in a big house at 405 Hickory St., along with their grandma, Mrs. Bridget Noon, who was born in Dublin, Ireland. The children are not “green’’ at this stunt, as they did the very jsame thing last year. Their moth- er had warned them not to get into |the food coloring again this year, ibut because ‘their gramdma came from Ireland,” the fun-loving in- herited characteristics won over parental discipline. * * * All but 15-month-old Brian are topped with green. There is Ned, 8, Deidre, 9, Susan, 11, Erin, 13, and Bridget, 15, all attending school in Milford. Their father owns and operates an insurance agency on Main street. jto move in the direction of furth- ier lowering of basic crop sup- |ports. | But the resolution was viewed ‘as a symbol of defiance to Ben- ‘son by Democrats and a bloc of rebellious Midwestern Republicans who have been gunning unsuccess- fully for Benson's ouster. DSR Transfer Costs 5¢ DETROIT (INS) — Detroiters | start paying five cents for DSR bus transfers today but they had better not drop their nickels in the fare box. The DSR points out bus drivers will have to pay for every transfer they give out so patrons must give their nickels to the operators. Riders who mis- takenly put their nickels in the box can get a refund slip they can use to get their money back. Briscoe will be on the official re- viewing stand, along with the pres- ent incumbent, James Carrol. Also on hand will be a couple of Irish- ‘for-a-day, New York Mayor Robert F. Wagner and Gov. Averell Har- -riman, * * * And they won't be the only ones. Some 800,000 were expected to be out in spring-like fortyish tempera- ‘tures to watch the 54-battalion col- ‘umn of marchers stride up the avenue. On the steps of St. Patrick’s | Cathedral, Francis Cardinal [ - Speliman and other Roman Cath- - olie prelates will review the event. - Fifth avenue itself has @ green strip painted down the middle in honor of the day. | * * & But the marchers may find one -plock where the green stripe has been freshly painted over a dif- ferent color. That’s the spot where police officers last night found four ‘college youths redoing the stripe with orange paint. Police details worked all night’ setting out wooden barriers to hold back the predicted crowd of spec- tators. 40 Beaten Irishmen to Eat German Fare DETROIT (INS) — Forty Jrish- ‘men were scheduled to eat a St. Patrick's Day meal of pig's knuc- kles and sauerkraut with liver- wurst pudding today. ‘The 40 compose the University of Detroit's tug-of-war team which Ae fi No Diet Involved in Slimming 2 OER eS eR TE eZ “© ‘was defeated in a record 48 sec-| _ SPACE_SAVER — How do you reduce ithe Mrs. Julia Curry, clerk in thé Oakland County ‘onds Saturday by the German| ‘book’ of records at left’ to the thin packet at . Register of Deeds office, is found on page 15 right? The secret of the change shown here-by today. / team, : # told newsmen last week he would! Vanguard Beep Reported From LA to New York LOS ANGELES w— A tracking) station here heard the Vanguard statellite’s radio signal for five minutes starting 2 hours and 21) minutes after the blastoff at Cape Canaveral, Fla. FT. MONMOUTH, N.J. uw — The| U.S. Army Signal Corps labora-| tories here picked up a steady beep| from the Vanguard satellite three | minutes after it was launched to-| day at Cape Canaveral, Fla. Re-| ception was on the 108.30 mega- cycle band. RIVERHEAD, N.Y. i — A high- pitched tone believed from the Navy’s satellite was broadcast to- day by the Radio Corp. of America over a national radio network. Ask Judge Rule Against Himself Outside Jurist Urged to Try Sullenberger Suit Next Month Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams| will decide Monday whether to dis- bar himself as presiding judge ‘over trial next month of the $250,- 000 damage suit by Dr, Neil H. Sullenberger against Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital. * *® * Judge Adams will act on a mo- tion to be made in behalf of the lousted staff surgeon, to.the effect that “no member of the Oakland County Circuit Court could be en- tirely free from an attempt on behalf of one or more of the in- volved parties to influence his | thinking.” This position was taken by Dr. Sullenberger’s atterney, Harry N. Dell, in filing notice today of | the latest development in the case, scheduled to be tried be- ginning April 8. If Judge Adams eliminates him- self from the case, it will fall into the lap of Circuit Judge Charles O. Arch, of Hillsdale, scheduled to visit the Oakland County circuit be- ginning April 8. * * * Dell listed several reasons why the case should be tried by a) stranger to the Pontiac area, “A considerable number, if not a ma-| jority of all practicing. physicians in and about Pontiac are directly or indirectly involved in the litiga- tion,” he pointed out. The case involves a Pontiac- owned hospital and includes ‘“num- erous”’ public officers and appoint- ees, he said. “The suit has received an ‘‘ex- traordinary’’ amount of publicity so far and will ‘“‘undoubtedly” re- ceive more as it gets tried, he added. Winter Won't Ease Grip on Pontiac Area x * * _ Finally é Winter certainly is being per- sistent. The U. S. Weather Bureau pre- dicts continued mostly cloudy and rather cold, with intermittent snow flurries tonight and tomorrow in the Pontiac area. * * * The low tonight will be near 30 degrees and the high tomorrow 36-40 Vanguard The Weather Bureau's five-day forecast predicts temperatures will average slightly below the normal high of 45 and normal low of 28. Temperatures are not expected to vary much from day to day. Daily highs will be mostly in the 30s and daily-lows near 30. Light snow flurries are expected through the week. * * * The lowest recorded temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 2. The reading at 2 p-m.- was 38. Freighters Ply Lakes DETROIT # — Two small lake freighters steamed upbound to- day for Alpena, fending off ice cakes with their bows, in open- ing the 1958 shipping season. Jerome “Bright Spot” needs sherp cars. '54 to '58’s. Top §, FE 8-0408. Shetwelle Shee Store New Leested in Auburn Shopping Center, 656 Auburn. | x ke * New Moon Expected ~ to Stay Up 5-10 Years Rocket Blasts Off Easily to Launch 3-Pound Globe Into Outer Space CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (P—The Navy’s Vanguard rocket hurled the second U:S. satellite into orbit around the earth today. With its back to the wall failures, the Navy launched after two highly publicized the Vanguard on one of the most perfect flights ever seen at the nation’s missile test center. In Washington, Dr. John Vanguard project, said the P. Hagen, director of the new earth-circling satellite probably will be in orbit 5 to 10 years. Hagen told a news conference that on the basis of provisional figures the satellite is traveling between 18,000 and 19,000 miles an hour, is going out as far as 2,500 miles and coming as miles. This means, he said, it satellite.” close to the earth as 400 will be a “very long-lived - Very soon, Hagen said, the Navy is prepared to at- tempt a launching of a fully instrumented, larger sci- x * * Predicts Moon as Next Step Vanguard Project Chief Sees Future Orbit as 240,000 Miles Out WASHINGTON (INS)—Dr. John P,. Hagen said today that ‘“‘the next logical step” after the suc- cessful launching. of the Vanguard satellite would be to put another satellite into orbit as far out in space as the moon—240,000 miles from the earth. * * * The Vanguard project chief said that much of the scientific data to be recorded from Vanguard I which is orbiting as far out as 2,500 miles, could “‘be used in more ways than one.” He added: “I believe ‘there will be at- tempts to do more -spectacular things. We have a vehicle now that could be used as part of a satellite to do more advanced jobs, for example to place a sat- ellite in orbi¢ as far out as the moon, That's the next logical step.” * * * But Hagen added that it certain- ly would be “a year or so” before such an experiment could be made. He wag asked whether such a satellite would orbit the earth or orbit the moon. Hagen replied that it would orbit the earth al- though there is a chance it ‘‘could be captured by the moon.” x & * How Navy Expects to Operate CAPE CANAVERAL (#i—This is the way the Vanguard launched today is programed to operate: The first stage, 44 feet long, was to burn for about two minutes. Designed to provide about 65 per cent of the energy needed to raise the satellite to orbital altitude and 15 per cent of the required orbital velocity, the first-stage engine would push the missile to an altitude of 38 miles some 28 miles down the* missile test range extend-|ond stages of powered flight and ing southeastward across the Atlantic. ‘Six explosive bolts would sepa- rate the first stage from the sec- ond, and the spent first stage would fall away and drop into the Atlantic / about Cape Canaveral. The second stage contained the guidance “brain” of the Vanguard rocket, a basketball- sized device containing three ultra-accurate “floated” gyro- scopes and a maze of electronic devices. z : This system was to guide the vehicle through the first and sec- t ’ 230 miles from’ the third coasting phase of the flight. Just before the third stage and its satellite were nudged ahead into an orbit, the guidance heading control to assure a suc- ‘cessful orbiting. * * and 32 inches in diameter, also had in its nose—within what ac- tually was the nose of the com- posite vehicle—the rocket and the satellite. Shortly after the second-stage engine was to take over, an ex- Plosive bolt would release a (Continued on Phge 2, Col. 2) {. system would provide a_final® The second stage, 31 feet long; third - stage entific satellite of about basketball size. The Vanguard satellite itself weighs only a little more than 3 pounds and is something like 6 inches in diameter. It is not expected to be visible even with binoculars. Belching fire and smoke, the slender gray-green rocket left its launching pad at 7:16 a.m. Two hours and 23 minutes la- ter, President Eisenhower told the world the trouble-plagued Vanguard had succeeded in the the space mission for which it was created, His announcement that the Van- guard’s tiny ‘“‘moon” was circling the earth with the Army’s Explor- er I and the Soviet Sputnik II touched off a celebration in Navy circles here and among personnel of une Martin Co., which built the rocket. * * * The Army launched Explorer I with the Jupiter-C missile here Jan. 31. PERFECT PRECISION In sharp contrast to previous Vanguard countdowns, today’s preparation of the rocket went off with perfect precision. * * * So smoothly did the rocket make its way into space, observers here were certain long before the Presi- dent made it official that the Van- guard had done its job. Test-range instruments indicaf- ed that the rocket’s three stages and the small “moon” in its nese separated successfully, Cmdr. Vincent Thomas told reporters in Washington. John P, Hagen, director of the ‘Vanguard project, flashed a broad grin and sighed, after hearing a telephoned description of the Van- guard’s smooth flight. * *« * The Vanguard thundered off its launching stand to the cheers of watchers who had seen two pre- vious firings end in flames and discouragement. The launching was primarily an experiment in the capability of the three-stage rocket to climb 200 or more miles and then angle into a horizontal course. SHEER PROFIT If it succeeded also in deposit- \ing the 6.4-inch sphere in its nose ‘into an 18,000-m.p.h. orbit, this ;would be sheer profit with the Van- | guard satellite joining with Explor- | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) a ee es In SE Today's Pre sone ss ee eeeeeeeereee 21 Comics County News er 16 sennee Editorials .........+.0+ cocae | Markets ..0..:ccccescas evoee ae Obituaries ...... secsecceeses & Sports ..... Selelctislcscctes seas Theaters ........... welsenie . 20 TV & Radio Programs ..27 | Wilson, Earl ....0.00....5 - Women’s Pages ebeces li te i Income Tat Retarns Prepared Angus Campbell—Tax Accountant a /i 005 W. Huron St, Open Byes.. ee 4 . (Saee a hi Five Burglaries\ ~ Occur in City ~* phere begins | ends? What is the difference be- | would have an inclination to about|/not know who was driving the car. ithe latitude of about 35 degrees. | The ionisphere begins, theoret-/ This meant it would swing as pleted his initial cruise aboard his far south as the southern tip of first ship, the aireraft carrier Mid- €' Africa and about as far north as way. He joined the Navy in Pon- 2a: 6 62 = oe yt: ? t 4 { j % Weekend Robberies Net Little or Nothing Here for Most Part “Five burglaries occurred in Pon- tiac over the weekend with little, or no loot taken in most of them. ; * * * A grocery store at 48 Putnam St. wag entered Saturday through a rear door. Nothing is reported missing. Taylor’s Grocery, 373 S. Pad- dock St., also was burglarized Saturday by breaking out a glass pane in the front door. Nothing is reported missing. The home of Mable Sage, 309, Prospect St., was entered Saturday | but nothing reported missing. * & gt Bethune School was hit by bur-, giars over the weekend through a. furnace room window. The main) office and supply room were ran-| sacked, but it is not known what! is missing. | x * * Tiny's Service Station, 984 chard Lake Ave., was entered Sa urday and Earl's Market, Orchard Lake, was burglarized Sunday. The gas station lost $1 in pennies and $13 in Canadian coins, The grocery reported its safe forced open, but an inventory of loss has not been made as yet. Income Tax-Fax Information on preparing your income taz_ return, issued by the Internal Reve- _ nue Depcrtment. MORE THAN ONE-HALF SUPPORT In order to claim children as dependents you must provide more than one-half the support of each child claimed. In the event the child was under 19 at the end of 1956, and earned any amount of money, you can still | claim him as a dependent if you furnished over one-half of his support. For each child under 19 that over one-half support is furn- nished you can claim a $600 exemption deduction. If a child earned $600 or more and provided one-half or more of his support, he is nobody's dependent. If a dependent was born or died during the year an exemption deduction of $600 can be claimed if the above tests are met for that part of the year in which the dependent was alive | the full $600 should be claimed. | Tt is not necessary that a de- | pendent’s income be added to yours—even though you are en- titled to the exemption deduction. Or- t- By E. H. SIMS | Do you know where the ionis-| | and the stratosphere | tween these two regions? ically, at about 250,000 fect, or 50 miles, from the surface of th earth. The stratosphere begins| very near the surface of the earth, only about eight miles out, or at -tliptical course ranging between (Ill.) Training Center. ‘the altitudes of 300 and 1,500 Born July 19, 1938. Eugene was about 40,000 feet. There is really no good reason for saying that the ionisphere be-| gins at 50 miles out and the strat-| osphere extends out to that point. | In fact, the air is so thin out that) far (50 miles) little difference is! noticed over a distance of several iwould UNITED | grates. ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 Tocond Stoge Burnout | 140 Mi. From Ground > | Third Stage Satedtite Separat a 18,000 Berely 10 Alter Tol: Minutes VANGUARD TRIP — This drawing illustrates the major chapters in the trip of the Vanguard rocket today. It went up vertically for only 10 How Navy Expects ««- Vanguard to Operate (Continued From Page One) spring which would split the nose cone. The cone, shielding the fragile satellite from air-friction heat of 1,500 degrees, would no longer be needed in the thin at- mesphere more than 35 miles above the earth and would fall away. The second-stage engine was de-! signed to burn for 2 minutes, boosting the rocket speed to 9,000 miles an hour, and would sputter out at an altitude of about 130 miles, After its burnout, the second stage would continue to coast up- ward until it reached orbital alti- tude of about 300 miles. This 34%- minute coasting period was a cru- cial one because it was here that ithe electronic guidance must make sure that the Vanguard was on its proper course. During this ipowerless glide the vehicle's sta- bility would be controlled by small jet motors fired by propane gas. ~ tt * The final stage of a Vanguard rocket must spin in order to have directional stability. The third stage was scheduled to start spin- ning when it was 877 miles east off Cape Canaveral, by means of ismall rockets along the rim of a spin table. Reverse thrust rockets would slow the second stage so that the final stage could coast clear. The “dead” second stage tumble into the about 1.550 miles from Florida. By this time the rocket speed would have slowed to about 8,500 miles an hour. Al this point the third-stage rocket, ignited by a delayed-action fuse, would in 30 seconds double the rocket's speed to the 18,000 miles an hour necessary to maintain an orbit, This would occur 410 min- utes after the launching. A spring mechanism was timed to separate the satellite from the spent third stage and nudge ahead. * * * With a launching to the east on an equatorial orbit, the satellite Raleigh, N. C. It was expected to follow an miles, and to circle the earth ev- ery 90 to 100 minutes. Pontiac Motors Man = Seeks Hudson's Pos In time one of the terms might He moved diagonall seconds, to a distance of less than 500 feet, then Fina, AP Facsimile y southeasterly and upward. | EUGENE H. PEARCE ' Pontiac Sailor's. | Rite Tomorrow Fatally Injured While Hitchhicking Home Last Thursday Night Last rites for a young Pontiac \sailor, fatally injured in a hit-run |accident while hitchhiking home on Mamie 's Kin Denies Fix Colonel Moore Swears He Had Nothing to Do With TV License — WASHINGTON uw — Col. George Gordon Moore swore today he “‘in no way, directly or indirectly,” sought to influence the award of a television station license in Miami. Moore, a brother-in-law of Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, testified be- fore the House committee looking into alleged influence in independ- ent federal regulatory agencies, x * * The hearirig room was only half- filled with spectators when Moore, a white-haired retired Army colo- nel, took the witness chair. some testimony—later contradict- ed—that Moore was supposed to have ‘engineered’ the Federal Communications Commission award of Miami's TV Channel 10 to a sub- sidiary of Nationa) Airlines. * * * “I am appearing voluntarily, in order to be sure that the commit- tee understands I have in no way, directly or indirectly, influenced or sought to influence the decision | the _conversation abeut ai de- The committee previously heard | The Day in Birmingham Blow to Hopes for Car Tax Cut Reduction Firmly Tied to General Levy Slash Proposal in Washington WASHINGTON « — Hopes for a reduction in the auto excise tax appeared firmly tied today to pros- pects for a general tax cut de- spite efforts of Michigan congress- men. Futile Michigan attempts for quick and separate action on the auto tax last week left in their wake: 1. General belief here that all crease in auto prices through tax reduction will further dis- courage buying at a time that it is needed most. 2. A serious strain in the pre- viously cordial relationg between Sen. Potter (R-Mich) and the White House, Michigan congressmen of both parties have contended that the longtime unemployment situation in Michigan and the automotive industry’s key position in the econ- omy makes emergency action im- perative. x * But they have been faced by a formidable bipartisan coalition of congressional and administration leaders who don’t think the auto tax should be treated any differ- ently than any other tax. ONLY CHANCE : Potter conceded today that the only chance for auto tax relief is general tax relief, He voiced hope the auto tax matter would be discussed at tomorrow's White House policy conference between President Eisenhower and GOP congressiona! leaders. x .f * The Michigan proposal for scal- ing down the 10 per cent auto excise tax to 5 per cent would bring an average reduction of $100 ‘for a low-priced car if the tax 'relief is passed along by manu- \facturers and dealers. The 10 per ‘cent tax produced $1,144,000,000 in revenue last year. Potter, a staunch administra- Elm Street Assessments tor Paving Slated Tonight BIRMINGHAM — Confirmation of the special assessment district for the paving of Elm street from Hunter boulevard to Bower street is scheduled to be made at to- night's City Commission meeting. The project will include proper sewer and drainage construction to be connected with the existing sew- er on the West side of Woodward. Commissioners also will con- sider the proposal of the Troy Fire Department to permit the use of Birmingham fire hydrants located near the Watt’s Electric Co, on east Maple road, The request was made by the firm so that it might obtain more favorable fire insurance rates, Three classes for j|rospective members of the Congregational Church of Birmingham will begin at 8 p.m. today in the church. Subsequent classes will be held March 25 and April 1. Seventh and eighth grade pu- pils will meet Saturday morn- ings at 9:30 with the pastor. New members from these groups will be received into the church at a special service April 3, Frank X. Gross Service for Frank X. Gross, 6- month-old son of Mr. and . Mrs. Franz X. Gross, will be held at 11:30 tomorrow morning at Man- ley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery, with the Rev, Harold DeWindt of Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian Church officiating. The baby died Sunday at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George A, Gross, 1304 W. Long Lake Rd., four days after his arrival here from Ger- many, Other survivors are his mater- nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. |Adam Voelker in Germany. Byron, L. MeNellis Service for Byron L, McNellis, 69, a former Birmingham jeweler, now of Milford, will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of the William R., Hamilton Co. |brother. fer, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. Burial will be in Evergreen Cem- etery, Mr. McNellis died Saturday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital aft- er a long illness. A native of Ontario, he operated a jewelry store in Birmingham for 22 years. Surviving are his wife, Mary F.; a daughter, Mrs, Charles Williams of Milford; a son, Philip J. of Birmingham; two sisters and a Pamela Diane Peifer Service for Pamela Diane Pei- and Mrs: Albert G. Peifer, 594 Roanoke St. Bloomfield Township. | will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Bell Chapel of William R. Ham- ilton Co. : The body will be taken to De- catur, Ill., for burial. Besides her parents, she leaves two sisters, Cynthia and Alicia Ann, and grandparents Mr, and Mrs. H, A. Peifer of Decatur and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fraser of Colorado City, Tex. Vanguard Launches 2nd U.S. Satellite (Continued From Page One) er I and with the Soviet Sputnik IT in looping the earth. * * * The 72-foot Vanguard started up from its launching stand, belching flame and smoke at 6:16 a.m. The missile climbed vertically for more than 10 seconds, a beau- tiful sight in the morning gun- light. The giant rocket put out a trail- er of white smoke and part of the rocket could be seen to break away. This may have been the first stage falling away from the main part of the rocket. The missile then put out a pink trail of vapor. SHAMROCK FUEL Observing that it was St. Pat- rick’s Day, one newsman said, tion supporter who faces a tough re-election fight this year, came out with a sharp anti-administra- tion line last week as a result of the auto tax battle. He accused the Eisenhower ad- ministration of ‘‘foot dragging’’ on the issue after last Tuesday's GOP policy meeting failed to mention | |leave Thursday, will be conducted yfoore said under oath. |here tomorrow. “Since I have voluntarily made |_Service for Seaman Apprentice). gies and records available to | Eugene H. Pearce, 19, will begin the committee's investigating staff at 1 p.m. at Donelson-Johns Fun- ‘eral Home with Dr. Milton H.| Bank, pastor of Central Methodist, I trust that the members of this ‘committee are now aware that I ‘have had no connection whatever, |Church, officiating. Burial will be directly or indirectly with Chan- in White Chapel Memorial Ceme- jtery. Ht. Pearce, 61 Vinewood St., Eu- | gene was on 30-day leave from _ his ship in San Francisco when | the aceident occured on U.S, 40 | near Collinsville, Ill. east of St. | | Relatives said troopers found his uniformed body lying along the’ roadside Thursday night. They did The Pontiac youth had just com- ltiae Dec. 31, 1956 and underwent recruit training at the Great Lakes ‘graduated from Webster and Wash- jington Junior High schools and | before enlisting attended Pontiac |Central High School through the ‘eleventh grade. Besides his father and mother, ‘Iva, he is survived by four ‘brothers, a half-brother and two ‘sisters. They are Robert, William, | Son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas | Louis, be dropped and everything beyond) L. D. McLauchlin, a supervisor Russell and Diana Pearce, all at the 40,000-foot altitude might be at Pontiac Motors Division, today home: Leonard G. Barker, 987 known as the stratosphere or the announced his candidacy for state Berwick Blvd. and Mrs. Alice | nel 10. | * * * “Furthermore, I have never dis- cussed any matter with any mem- ber of the Federal Communica- — Commission at any time.”’ Shell Plays Dead for 38 Risky Years MIDDLETOWN, Ohio WH — The ‘doorstop in Mrs. Blanche Thomp- amount of raps and bangs in the last 38 years of use — but never the big one. * + Mrs, Thompson said she found that the doorstop, a World War I German artillery shell given her husband by a brother, contained the equivalent of five pounds of TNT. * * * ‘A painter working at her house suggested she have it inspected. The National Guard found the shell very much alive. They de- the FCC in award of a television | auto tax reduction. Potter said license for Channel 10 in Miami,” Eisenhower had promised him the son's home had taken the usual| ‘matter would be discussed. Doesn‘t Deserve It HOLYOKE, Mass. (iP— Sen. John F. Kennedy D-Mass. had to borrow a necktie so he'd have the proper attire to receive a plaque as the ‘Outstanding American of Irish-Catholic De- scent’ iin connection with a St. Patricks Day celebration. He ar- rived for the local honor wearing City Hospital Head Faces Drunk Charge Carl I. Flath, 49, director of Pontiac General Hospital, was ar- rested by Orchard Lake Police early Sunday on a drunk and disor- derly charge. Flath was held for three hours at the Oakland County Jail before being released on a persona] bond. His arraignment before West Bloomfield Justice Elmer C. Die- terle is scheduled for Wednesday morning. Flath’'s car had left Orchard Lake road and smashed through a wooden fence which surrounds the Pontiac Yacht Club property at Wards Point drive on the outskirts a blue necktie. of Keego Harbor officers said. rik ey By ROBERT L. DIE ings. Failure makes us want patient. us. He is ever present to give euten Meditations # FFENBACHER, D.D. Our failures are very discouraging. They are even more serlous when others criticize us and ridicule what we have tried to accomplish. Sneers seem to devastate our whole be- Men are so hard on each other. They look down con- | descendingly on their fellow men. to go up or surrender our ambitions. It makes us want to hide. God is so much more magnanimous than are men. He is more sympathetic. He is completely understanding and God never gives up. He never recognizes defeat. Regardless of how badly we fail, God does not forsake us another chance. “They must have fueled it with! distilled shamrocks.”’ Knight Likely to Win "SAN. JOSE, Calif. (INS) — California Gov. Goodwin J. Knight seemed assured today of winning the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate in the June pri- mary election. AUTHORS WANTED BY N. Y. PUBLISHER New York, N. Y.—One of the nation’s largest book publishers is seeking manu- scripts of all types—fiction, non-fiction, poetry. Special attention to new writers, If your work is ready for publication, send for booklet N-68—it’s free. Van- tage Press, 220 8. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 4, Ill. (Main Office, New York) Simms Has Everything ’ YOU NEED for— BASEBALL Ted Williams Model COWHIDE lea! ’ ee style. FIELDER’S GLOVE} Big Selection—FULL SIZE Baseball Gloves Del Cran dell model. Cowhide, Deep pocket. Ist Basemans’ «Mite $8 Value 3.88 Gll Hodges model. Proles- , Baseballs C to $2.39 + *& * The count-down proceeded with amazing smoothness, even more rapidly than had been the case, with the Army's much simpler Ju- ‘piter-C rocket that put Explorer I ‘into the skies. For an hour before the launch- ing the tall gantry crane, or working tower, was rolled away leaving the Vanguard rocket ful- ly exposed to view. Fifteen minutes later the rising sun highlighted the missile and the frost accumulating on its mid- section, icy cold from its liquid’ oxygen content. The rising sun pinpointed a huge weather balloon 72 feet tall, the same length as the Vanguard rock- 40,000 feet. et, floating at an altitude of about! Baseball Bats 1%» 2" seccewes models to choose Softhall Bats 12» 9! Official sizes Compare Simms Prices Shop Around Before You Buy A 4 » \ ; “_ Big Values on He forgives sins which men hold against their friends through life. God never sees man as worthless. He always holds out a helping hand and offers salva- tion. We must be doubly aware of God's love during Lent, | and treat others as God treats us. ionisphere. These names were giv- representative from Pontiac. ‘Johnson, 2253 H ed it Ps f 5 on Rd., White |stroyed it. en the outer spaces before much’ McLauchlin, 40, of 715 Melrose ae Township ampt , was known about conditions in Ave. is seeking the Democratic) - these distant altitudes. ‘nomination for the seat now held hy Leslie Hudson The Weather Hits Pay Dirt in Candy A resident of Pontiac for 34, y Y U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast years, MeLauchlin is a long-time! LYONS, Kan. @ — Biting into |Democrat and served as campaign her first piece of home-made . _Dytette Fe ae) ao manager for George Hicks when taffy. Mrs. Robert V. Mathews struck something hard. z Vanguard News Stirs Reporters to Near-Riot Full : PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Contineed he ran for sheriff. Be | WASHINGTON (® — Presiden- tly clouds n@ rather cold with a on ~~ fic i > ‘ ~ J intermittent snow ferries Senipueiecd arr d, ne < the fa r io ‘ur ie meet ie cgi from nen tial press ‘retary James C. aallasgile temerrow, te ar Lj vy Ss . as “er miiac ring, whie e On WM as | ‘ Gatcce Meas Westy wade tele ee an ee ; | Hagerty strode into a big room S elles ou bear’ @lminishing tonight Motors for 23 years. missed as she pulled the taffy. at the Naval Research Labore- —_— ——— ee —— a tory at 9:29 o'clock this morn- ing where newsmen had gathered for word of the Vanguard satel- lite launching. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 ® m ‘In Festivities June 26-28 To Dedicate Straits Span At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity I mph. Direction: West. Sun sets Monday at 64! pm Sun rises Tuesday at 6:29 am Moon sets Monday at 4:24 pm. Moon ries Tuesday at 5.54 am. Dewntown ‘Temperatures ST. IGNACE (AP)—Michigan will dedicate its new 100 = DAY TUESDAY = Lounge Chair @e 30 : sri OS Lseoeoooe 30 12m. ... 39 come ne o x3 million dollar Mackinac Bridge during three days of tes it the effort was success- with Old Fashioned Comfort a — | pageantry and fanfare June 26-28. The span was opened ° to wa altndey, in Pontiac Nov. 1. “Okay, boys, here it is,” Hag- ' FOAM $ Exactly as eichect | camporccarel ce 38 AN erty called out, extending per- _ RUBBER : haps 200 copies of the announce- CUSHION Pictured Lewest temperature .. a 29 Mean temperature . : ; . 335) Trace of snow. on semper The three-day celebration will include three parades, an air show by the Navy and Air National Guard, a beauty | ment. | contest, a parachute drop by the 101st Airborne Division and Hagerty was immediately sur- ‘4” Foam, Rubber Reversible Seat Cushion One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature ....... .. rounded and almost bowled over. “Attractive Gold or Rose Leet ere covcceve.vs.e 38, @ Major historical pageant. His efforts to pass out the state- for ost ' Rose Nubby Tweed Cover ba Pate —— | . Eighty-three girls, one from each Michigan county ments did not get very far. 75 Other Chairs and Rockers to Choose ae “~ ete mt will vie for the title of Mackinae Bridge queen. A musical = ae what seoked ene from at Reduced Prices! “2 in 1877) concert will be presented by a 200-piece orchestra from Fri ~ Sone , . .. riday Eveni ma nn | the Interlochen National Music Camp. Sila pds said “On oe ee ape? : y nes Bismerch 2 it itis 0% Other attractions will be power boat, sailboat and canoe So poe en a — | races, fly and balt casting exhibitions, and a sports show. of announcements, beating a |. \ : p iiiton at Rew" Oheate Hh a aaa ports show. | tast retreat back to his office, | MMi | Vv ew 30 2f = Labor leaders will participate in dedicating a plaque ol a C 4. —_ [e ‘—~<—_— —. »@ ¥ Denver 30 13 Phoenix #52 honoring five men who lost their lives in building the bridge | “One reporter slipped and fell. | 4 - ine ora . BBB aL Bittebargh§— 33 26 He kept clutching f aaa, | “ re Pabuth 37 38 Loule 40 29. across the Straits of Mackinac. \ je kept clutching for a copy as | “oy 1 \ a hee $33 Sec Marie 35 1 Dedication ceremoniés in the center of\the bridge Jun be toppled. He reached the paper savings sensation 7 ee 3 ener SH Gece. 30 ii 8 and the floor at the same time | MMMMUMNMI. »1ton iinitated, never matohed! AMNNMARI Where You Honestly Savel - | 28 will be telecast through a closed circuit to screens at | but already was scrambling for § ” E: 2 | . | : either end for viewing by spectators. \ Ave. — Careful Free Delivery ee /* 2 | ’ there were what appeared to. be|Steals. Untimely Kiss; Youth Admits strangulation marks on her neck-/ Bay. $109 in Fines (1490-1588), the most famous of Turkish architects. above his to tell her the time, he evidently expected a reward, for he put his arm around her and Stamps Show Mosque ANKARA — The Turkish Post THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 kissed her, He was charged with disorderly conduct. Justice of Peace R. Hardin Mc- Coy fined him $100 and $9 costs: American Indians used petgole- nap for medicinal purposes early Office has issued two new stamps| to mark the 400th anniversary of the 16th Century Suleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul. The 20-kurus green stamp portrays the mosque/& itself, while the 100-kurus brown/E shows its designer, Koca Sinan 2 ® A student at Cathedral High) MONMOUTH, Ill. @. — Ray ; School for Girls, Miss Nonan had |Schenour, 50, paid heavily for a dying If i, attended a play and dance last/kiss he stole from a 16-year-old night at the Notre Dame Roman jgirl. Catholic church, . She told police that she tried to Quoted a Saying, ‘She| Murphy said he asked her tolfind out the time; when Schenour E WEDNESDAY—2 to 3:30 P.v He sent a friend, Michael Petra- So Killed Her’ kis, to go in and summon the girl. |(SY/j7= These Failed to Pass jaapection of Famous Maker | lu S ... That's why SIMMS can offer such big savings! j S| . q 3-Foot F olding Tables me Xu NEW YORK — A 16-year-old|'© @Ppartment, where she told him high school girl was found dead aay she did mot Waste See Bian Murphy convinced her to go to)ji i | today, apparently strangled, in the * * * apartment of her 18- year-old boy-| Murphy then grabbed a clothes- friend. line and allegedly choked the ; . girl. Pred pon Aiacg a Michael |® After he left the apartment he urphy, into a station toig two friends, Carl Schonacher, seal tl himself up and de- 20. and Robert De Luise, 17, “I clared: was going to quit); ’, 1; ie,” " wal me so'I killed her.”’ must eles Bathe, am) wemee . away. sf * The friends went to the apart- Police gave this account: . |ment and tried to revive the girl. The girl; red-haired Katherine | Failing, they called police. fieres, was found dead on a bed = in t ground-floor apartment, ; which Murphy shared with his a yoo re rte. brother Brendan, 34. cheese atl ach be There were marks on her face Negative fora as if she had been struck, ard 5x7 INCH route» Tusoay secs] Enlargement Pre-Assembled—VHF Conical Why Pay 39 to 6Sc? Ia WHITE and COLORS LOW LUSTRE LATEX Wall Paints » NEW SERVICE—Remington factory representative will be in our store every WEDNESDAY of every week. All Metal—Sturdy Braced 13 -—— top, 30-in. Double reg cop i ee Factory Representative Here OPEN TONITE | REMINGTON Electric Shaver Shop for These Speci RECONDITIONED : E —While You Pm | $a 50 : TONIGHT and TUESDAY : Right to Limit Quantities E Electric Shavers —Main Floor S Fully washable, famous latex base = paint for all walls. Now is the time for indoor painting. U HOUSEWARES Dept. —2nd Floor BS Outdoor TV Antenna $10.95 Value ¥ at Simms— ha ‘ oka ux Ties eee. ' igh gloss, fe print from any ®, guy wire and ae complete fittings. x Ee. — —- — el you pay ONLY gg ike lantt-—oreer sada seseneease ‘| as many as you wis 1 § CHIMNEY ter TV Automat AIM x PERT PHOTO FINISHING i wfuitart . 2991] SUPER-SIZE [Semen Oy Black and White Snapshots TV Lead-in Wire | = vecxten tases 4 5- foot _ mast, 50 feet lead-in. wire, PYYTYTITI LIT PER FOOT * Lifetime Quality Replace old, brittle Cc x even bongs worn-out wire. 300 ohm * SHARP Contrast ] stle weather resistant P New ‘Electric Eye’ process GUARAN- ulation, Se value. TEES best possible prints... Onl y genuine EASTMAN papers & chemi- cals used im our studio. SIMM). CR imme $8 N. Saginaw —ind Floor | CAMERA DEPT. —Main Floor ws seeee00003000060686 Ladies! SAVE Tonight and TUESDAY on Famous COSMETICS at SIMMS! SAVE ON COSMETICS : Dress Up for Easter — SHOP SSMATER | i : 6 Complete EASTER OUTFITS Given Away ‘LATEX Floor Enamel beta or Exterior sad eecece —- *& $100 MAN’S Outfit * $75 YOUTH’S Outfit * $50 Small BOY’S Outfit * $50 Little GIRL’S Outfit * $75 TEENAGE Outfit * $100 LADY'S Outfit Drawing to Be Held April 1st —You Need Not Be Present 3 Noreen oe to dry— walk kool Ty a an hour. Highly scrub No odor. Choice of colors. }. 98 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor SAVE MORE MONEY on CAMERAS, ACCESSORIES Tonite & Tuesday | MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Folding Pocket Size SELF-ILLUMINATING something - for - nothing - everybody has equal 4 FREE every time you are down- . t bs |@ offer . Get TICKETS, Now —No Purchase Necessary SIMMS) Pontiac’s ONE-STOP Wonder S 98 North Saginaw St. Dd dadadadadadadaddadedadadaddadadadedadadedadededdadedadadadadedadadadadededadded 000000000009 OCCOESOOOOOOCOOOOS 0000000000008 8 $2 Hazel Bishop t $1 Hazel Bishop Hoir Spray 99° § Skin Cleanser 49° $2 Hazel Bishop 49° $1 Lenolin Plus 49° Twin Vanity Baby Oil $1.75 Lucien Lelons Ege 60e Lanolin Plus Sit OE Vrumore Liguid 29°! Somes” «9° Breathless Mist TY 4 $2:22 Garer’* Comet QRe Loken 6g RP ag ee ee ee ee ee ee ARGUS C-3 Oamert! WIDE-ANGLE or TELEPHOTO More Proof Showing How Much More YOU SAVE at SIMMS T+ BOY'S WEAR SPECIALS Close-Out Sale Priced! Boys’ Flannel Shirts 66°, 3 Sanforized washable better flannel shirts with long sleeves, variety of solids and &" plaid colors, Broken sizes 3 to 18. 60c Hezel Bishop 29° $1.25 Hazel Bishop 29° Nail Polish Complexion Glo $1 Woodbury $1 Woodbury After- Shampoo | 49° Sheve Lotion 39° 10¢ Jergen’s Lotion e | $1.98 Plastic Mild Soap, 5 Bors 21 Shopping Bag 59° Assorted Group & Materials BOYS’ PANTS Sizes 2- , self-belt flannels and cor- Broken sizes include color or black &| white, Pull guar-| antee & instruc- tion book. TONITE & MONDAY ONLY bd | — in Layaway til Summer Air. Pillow 21x72-in. AIR MATTRESS Top quolity air mattress with built- _ in ait pillow is comfortable, du» able, easy to inflate and handle, . 2 Has many uses os illustrated, c= AE | GELANESE RAYON Fabric Boys’ Sport Shirts LONG SLEEVE — ADJUSTABLE CUFFS 99: Sizes Small & Large Only Starflex Camera Reg. $10.75 Value Wonderful celanese rayon fabric shirts with long sleeves, yoke lining. Solids of blue or maroon colors, NO IRON ‘Dan River’ Wrinkle Shed |E - Boys’ Dress Shirts| with MATCHING NECKTIE |E 144) 8mm Cartoons White dress shirt with button down collar: and: matching brown necktie. Chokes ot weeteta : bf waa in 50-foot =a JIMM J: ROTH t ie) Basement TONITE and TUESDAY BABY SPECIALS MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS for Porches. Stairways. etc. E-X-P-A-N-D-I-N-G BABY GATES “a 1.49 5-FOOT SIZE . . * cle eee .$1.95 7-FOOT SIZE .........$2.79 9-FOOT SIZE ......... $2.95 | Polding style gate is easy to install — —locks securely for baby’s safety. "CLIPS TO ANY STAND. ARO TOILET StaT HINGE — OR CAN KIDDIES TOILET SEAT PATS INSIDE REGULAR TOMET SEAN $1.00 | ¢ Value - Not a training seat but for use after training age by kids 2 years & over. palm Aon Fert and eliminates strain. Infants’ Convertible Style AUTO BED SEAT colors, d0xt0-In.. 2 2-Ft. High.: FOLDING PLAY PEN $12.95 Val. aot ers. Polds, Blond Finish Hardwood NURSERY CHAIR Reg. $4 239 Protective Sun Canopy BABY STROLLER $8.95 Quality Famous “TAYLOR TOT" WALKER-STROLLER Reg. $11.95 88 gat - lubrigating bearings. Detachable handle, foot tray. 98.N. Saginaw “—Main Floor \ WEST BEND $5.95 Val. |E Steel frame. 2 E H a rdw ood pen, masonite floors. Cast-| EB TERRY CLOTH Smooth sand- ed chair with pot & strap. Steel frame, can- vas back 4 seat. Poids, large wire wheels. Not as * 98 N. Saginaw $3.95 Seller Regular $9.95 List Price All metal table with tubular frame, steel shelves. Finished in triple baked enamel. Jumbo 3-inch casters, Large 24x16-inch shelves, 30-inches high.. Many uses. in MYYTITTiriiii iii iii For Every HOME - OFFICE - SHOP to Quickly Heat Liquids for TEA - INSTANT COFFEE - SOUP, etc. Electric Hot Cups AUTO ACCESSORIES AUTO SEAT COVER $5.95 Value Sturdy, Natural Corn | HOUSE BROOM $1.19 Seller Sturdy 5-sewn natural corn broom, Wire bound at top of straw. Long painted wood handle. Limit 1. Covcccccecocoseeeoseseeses Wax ’n’ Shine in Half the Time! ‘WAX-O-MATIC: Floor Waxer A Trigger in the handle fets you feed wax as you need it! Just wax as you walk—no ‘Bending, no stooping. Polished head buffs surfaces to brilliant gloss in one effortless operation. Limit 1, » mm BROTHERS 17 Exactly as Pictured _ Famous brand, deluxe table in choice of red, or. pink colors, c The Top Shelf is a Removable , Serving Tray — FIRST QUALITY 6-in-1 Serv-a-Tray TABLE 3°? @ for 2-Door @ for 4-Door Fits all 2 or 4 door model cars, Front seat only. Washable in colors of rose, blue, charcoal or green. Cecccccvccvcvccvccvecccccccccooooooooeoooees Zo ZZ AWARE Fits All Makes of Cars Matching ALL RUSBER REAR SEAT Auto Floor Mats | Radio Speakers TWO-PIECE SETS $5.95 99 ret os seam reg aS anes | Value | or merece tans eee ety re mogel cars. Assorted porn Sx?" speaker, 6 or 12 volt — after 8 p.m., smashed the front Pit ‘Terrorists Threaten Judge - , Blow Up Jewish Centers in Miami and Nashville MIAMI, Fla. @ — Dynamite NASHVILLE, Tenn, Vandals explosions damaged .Jewish cen- dynamited the Jewish community ters here and at Nashville, Tenn., yesterday, Police for clues to the identity of the terrorists. center here last night and the blast was linked to school inte- gration in an anonymous threat were examining the|,, a federal judge's life. * * * Aman identifying himself as a An anonymous telephone caller). ber of the “Confederate un- linked the Tennessee incident to school integration and threatened fhat a federal judge “would be shot down in cold blood.” : x * * The Miami blast came at 2:20 a.m., doing at least $30,000 worth of damage to the school-recreation derground”’ made the telephone threat against Dist. Judge Wil- liam E. Miller, whose orders brought “‘first step’ desegregation in Nashville schools last fall. A dozen Negro first-graders were admitted to six white schools last September amid violent crowd annex of Temple Beth El, located | protests climaxed by the midnight in the southwest section of the dynamiting of Hattie Cotton city, Doors were blown out, a hole torn in a concrete wall and a kitchen ceiling, the roof lifted and walls shifted on the foundation. School. ; * * * q Last night's blast came only a few hours after a similar explo- The Nashville explosion, shortly! sign caused $30,000 worth of dam- doors of the Jewish community center. It ripped down the ceiling of the reception hall and broke panes of glass, Damage was esti- mated at $6,000. There were no injuries in either dynamiting. * * * Almost as soon as the roar of the explosion died at Nashville, Rabbi William B, Silverman of the Jewish temple there got a tele- phone call warning, ‘'The temple js going to be next.” The caller also told the rabbi Federal Judge William E. Miller ‘‘would be shot down in cold blood.” Miller last fall ordered Negro first-graders admitted to some Nashville schools, Their admis- sion was followed by a blast which wrecked Hattie Cotton School there. ; Police are guarding the judge's home and the temple. - : x * * the It was a Methodist, of Miller called the FBI. age to a Jewish center in Miami, Fla. Although the Nashville center was crowded with children a few hours before the blast, there was nobody in the modern half-million- dollar building at the time of the explosion at 8:07 p.m. x * * The dynamite was set off just outside the plate glass entrance doors, It blew in the doors, smashed the entrance hall ceiling. and shattered windows in the building and in houses for blocks around, Damage to the center was estimated at $6,000. * * * Rabbi William B, Silverman of the Jewish temple said his first report of the blast came from the anonymous telephone caller. He quoted the caller as saying: ‘We have just dynamited the Jewish community center. Next will be the temple, and next will be any other nigger-loving place or nig- ger-loving person And we're going to shoot down Judge Miller in cold blood.” in Nashville. * * * Silverman notified Judge Miller, the call, and Deputy THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 * PREPARING FOR TOURS — With National Library Week in session, three members of the Waterford Library Committee help place posters on the walls of the library in anticipation of tours Seventeen Acres Provides Site Library Committee, have offe to present the library situat: brief talks whenever requested. At the present time, Water. ford Township's free - lending library with some 6,500 books, is located in- the Community Ac- tivities Center on Williams Lake National Library Week, cele- brated this week for the first time, coincides with a concentrated ef- fort on the part of the Waterford] Library Committee, to realize Frank Steere’s dream of a li- brary and ‘park in the center of Waterford Township. Last October, the Waterford of school children, Teeuwissen assists Mrs. Walter Forbes and li- brarian Mrs. Kenneth Valentine. * |Highway Builders {Told to Preserve Relics of Indians state of New Mexico has an un- emonia] kivas already gained. usua] phase of highway construc- important finds was a giant kiva tion work stemming from the fact/ about 60 feet in diameter which there are rich archeological finds! was discovered while right of way in the state. for a new divided section of U. S.| cysTEx usually gives quic *.* *« Highway 66 was being examined. let by combating frating germs in acid hgh ere falp eben bisa Wayne County Police we successful it wos annter inolTuned to South America new federal aid highway legisla-/ DETROIT ® — Freak radio (advertisement) tion. waves are enlivening the bill of Worry of = x * fare on the Wayne County Sher- Some 16 other states are begin-|iff's road patrol network these F. ALSE TEETH ning to-follow New Mexico's lead,|days. ~ Policemen report hearing men Slipping of Irritating? cover and preserve any Indianjcomplaining about overtime and ruins that may be found along a a te Poss of a Caracas, Le — Tht nt powde gives 8 us, enever zers go outjarguing vioient im & Panis rom| fremar ‘O! to cut a swathe for a new road,|Argentina and a bus dispatcher Se ee date meek pais wane an archeologist goes along with|checking up on his drivers in Sac- * Bo t's (non-acid), them to make certain any. undis- coveted Indian relics are not lost forever. : Chief Salvage Archeologist Stew- art Peckham of the Museum of New Mexico says more than 66) suc women DOW escape f t yo orate about mm sleep an bow “Bladder akness” too pad nt, ting, Getting p Nights—or Strong Urine, due to clomen or Bladder Irritations, which often result in secondary Bac . and Nervousness. In such cases New Improved ik, calming re- scientific la! sands of men an SANTA FE, N. M: (INS) — Theltion of pit houses, hearths and cer- Peckham says one of the most It is the Highway Salvage Pro- bors’ Tested and u . Lal ified CYSTEX at eruges feaeg. See how much better you fi row. Money back guarantee, The program is designed to dis- Deas he ens isp inaee see i teeth slipping, dro or wobb! fighting fires in the oil fields of; when eat, tale of laugh. Jus sprinkle a little F. on your plates. This pleasant powder s ramento, Calif. : Waterford Plans Library, Park | road, There are more than 2,000 | borrower cards on file. : | All help in operating and sup- plying books to the library is volunteer, and Mrs. Kenneth Val-| entine, who devotes most of her time to being head librarian, was one of the charter members when it was organized in 1943. Township Board accepted an offer from Steere of approximately 17 acres on Pontiac Lake and High- land roads, to be used-as a library and cultural center. Since that time, an 11-member Library Committee has been or- ganized to assist the township Are You Worried About We're clearing our warehouse to make room for new arrivals, and we've lined up some truly remarkable buys — Some still in crates, some floor models, all fully guaranteed. SAVE $121.95! RCA Whirlpool 40” auto- matic electric range with center griddle. 1 only. 228” SAVE $27.99! RCA Hi-Fi 3-Speaker. 2 only. Mahogany. ‘11 sheriffs and FBI agents were post- ' Silverman, who quoted his anon-|¢d at his home. Nashville police | caller as threat- stationed —s be comer: board with the project. Three sub-committees have been gathering facts and ideas relating to building-construc- tien, costs, and services of li- braries in other communities SAVE $40.00! RCA Console Hi-Fi, 3 speak- ers, 4-speed auotmatic. 1 Today, nearly every office position requires a knowledge of shorthand, typewriting, English, accounting, or office machines, There are many opportunities for those who are i SAVE $180.00! Frigidaire 40° Wonder Oven imperial Electric Range. 1 only, The Nashville school desegrega- tion case is still pending before Miller, who recently disapproved person in Nash- 199" JOB SECURITY ? 319" Evidence Is Measured DANVILLE, Va. — The state die Brandon -— who poured a jar|: the-kitehen—sink- the school board’s proposal for a it happened in voluntary desegregation plan _in- . volving three school systems — white, Negro and mixed. Democrats scheduled a bull roast in a downtown hotel, they forgot it was the day of the St. Patrick's Day parade. The doors opened at 1 p.m. yes- terday to the party faithful, with the menu including roast beef, slaw,. potato salad and beer. When the parade ended at 3 p.m., the sons of Ireland swarmed into the hall, dawn by the advance biting, “Alt you can eat.” similar to Waterford. Township. ELYRIA, Ohio ® — Pfc. Larry Waldo LeVeck, 18, was killed last night on the Ohio Turnpike when his car struck a guard rail in a snowstorm. The Ohio highway patrol said LeVeck apparently was traveling from his home at Adrian, Mich., to his post at Ft. Eustis, Va., when turned over on him. well trained in the basic fundamentals. If your future is uncertain, you are invited to call at the Institute office any weekday or on The Business Institute 7 West Lawrence Street | Phone FE 2-3551 Call in Person or Return This Ad for Bulletin - cece ery eee Pee eee Peewee ene eee ee ee Sere ernvenee ooveeeee Name Address Approved for Veteran’s Training ... 9 ee | It does the Doctors heart good! | “Automobiles were just automobiles,” the doctor told us yesterday between calls, “until I walked into the showroom and saw that Imperial. I knew I'd have to have it. I went home and car—I even dreamed about it. one up to my door and said, ‘Try it out today, © doctor. Give it a run for its money.’ “I remember every minute of that trial run. We thought about that Then you’ people climbed some hills and took some tight, fast turns together, and spent a half hour on a muddy, rutty backwoods trail. I never remotely imagined a car could act like this one did. It was beautiful driving every minute. Easy. Restful. Quiet . . . but some- how very exciting. I had a feeling of really great THE TRIUMPHANT IMPERIAL . . . FINEST EXPRESSION OF THE FORWARD LOOK ~Sy | _R & R-MOTORS, INC. 724 Oakland Ave. © 3 ' Box 280 power under the .most control—made feel like a better driver than I'd ever been. Join the‘doctor—and the thousands of other fine- -car buyers who are switching to the triumphant. Imperial this year. ; Iupentat .. . Fivest Propuct or Cunyster Corp, _- Pontiac, Miche : ae : -* 51 WEST HURON STREET SAVE $35.00! . G.E. 17” Portable Television. 3 only. SAVE $71.95! RCA 30” Gas Range with 74" 128” The Miami Herald said it} The board has until April 7 to) ) O° | i a Monday or Thursday evenings. Day, Half-Day full width oven. 1 only. learned confidentially a myster.|Submit another plan. Sich ae ren Pe high and Evening classes continue throughout the me ous telephone call was received school, as well as members of the] Year. SAVE $30.00! | by police just before the blast|<. p . : $ : there. However, no details were|St. Pat's Day Marchers Prepare now for the future. SAVE $51.95! Deluxe Maytag Aluminum ‘ * Miami rabbis could think of no Swarm Dem Bull Roast [Michigan Soldier Killed raced, bade NT *198” ee ame comes ee | yeason for the dynamiting. BALTIMORE ® — When city|jn Ohio Turnpike Crash » and griddle. 1 only. | SAVE $31.95! Speed Queen Wringer- Washer. 98” 198" 1 38” SAVE $51.95! 00 state's “198 menecttowne QB "68" 248" SAVE $51.95! GC. £ 30” Electric Range. 4 burners. 1 only. ] 43” 59" - "188° "48" 118" SAVE $71.95! : General Electric Deluxe SAVE $37.55! Dryer with automatic od- Hoover Constellation Clean- @r With attachments. SAVE $91.95! Frigidaire full size Auto- matic Washer 1957. 1 only. SAVE $36.95! 30-Gal. Automatic Cas Water Heater SAVE $111.95! RCA Whirlpool Top Deluxe 30” Automatic Electric Range. Full width oven. SAVE $147.00! RCA Blond Console Hi-Fi and FM-AM Radio. 1 only. 4-Speed. : SAVE $81.95! Hamilton Automatic Wash- er. Full size. SAVE $51.95! Motorola 4 ~- Speed Hi - Fi. 1 only. SAVE $111.95! RCA Whirlpool 12 Cu, Fr. Upright Freezer, SAVE $50.00! | , 21" 6. pees TV. *199” SAVE $81.95! Wood cabinet, “58 Medel ) RCA, Whirpael_ Automatic i | 68” hocrraay '° =| ca- SAVE $61.95! | 68” | aes 21-inch Television. SAVE $80.00! 199" 298" 188” . Frigidaire 10 Cu. Fe. 1957 Refrigerator, SAVE $272.95! _ 1957 12 Cu. Ft. Kelvinator 97/1" Refrigerator, Auto. Defrost. 102-ib. bottom freezer. SAVE $41.95! Easy Spinner Washer, 2 tubs. Rinse in 1 tub, while washing in the other, SAVE $131.95! G.E, 11 Cu. Ft. Automatic Defrost Refrigerator. _ Re-~ volving shelves. SAVE $91.95! Kelvinator 11 Cu. Fe. Refrigerator * * fhe GOOD HOUSEKEEPING .> of PONTIAC ¢ Pee See é ae at eee Oy ee ca E L eS eee eee ea | ‘ { y THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17; 1958 FIVE Deaths j in Pontiac and Nearby Areas IRA L. BUFORD Ira L. Buford; 47, of 443 Harvey St., died Friday after a’ shoft ill- ness, He is survived by his children John’ W., of Louisville, Ky.; and Theophilus of Pittsburgh, Pa. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at New. Hope Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. The Rev. F. B. Reed will officiate. His body is at Frank’ Carruthers Funeral Home. , LEVI BUCK Levi Buck, 85, of 58 Norton Ave., died of a heart attack Saturday at his home. A city resident for 50 years, Mr. Buck had been in the real estate business in Pontiac, and was for- merly a member of the Pontiac Rea] Estate Board. He was a member of Roosevelt Lodge 510, F&AM. Surviving are his wife Adah, his son Albert E., of Grand Rapids and two daughters, Mrs. Albert W.. Kleino, of Pontiac and Geraldine, of Detroit. Five sisters also sur- vive. Service will be at 3 p.m. Tues- day at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Dr. Milton H. Bank of Central Methodist Church will of- ficiate. LESTER G, CARPENTER Former Pontiac resident Lester G. Carpenter, 67, of Delray Beach, Fla., died suddenly Satur- day at his residence there. He was a Grand Trunk engineer for 44 years. He was a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Veterans Associa- tion of G.T.R., Detroit Division No. 3. Surviving are his wife Grace and a son Allister, of Auburn Heights. Two brothers and two sisters also survive. Service will be at 11 a.m. Tues-, day from Dudley H. Moore Fu- neral Home with the Rev. Theo- dore R. Alleback officiating. Graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. at Elkland Cemetery, Cass City. . OTIS COLE Otis Cole, 73, of 12 Downing Ct., Waterford Township died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a brief illness. He was a retired Pontiac Motor Div., employe. Surviving are his wife Edith, his sons and daughters Mrs. Ronald Dubay, of Leslie; Mrs. Marvin Du- bay, of Saginaw; Donald and Jack, of Walled Lake; Mrs. Harry Allen,|body is at Sparks-Griffin Funeral| of Rochester; Mrs. Wendell Stacey of Pontiac, a sister and a brother) and 17 grandchildren. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with the Rev. L. A. Parent officiating. Burial will be in Sagi- naw. MRS. WILLIAM W. COCHRAN Former. Pontiac -resident Mrs. William W. (Mary Jane) Cochran, 82, of Royal Oak died’ Saturday after a long illness. She is survived by her daugh- ters, Mrs. Dorothy Batt, of Bloom- field Hills and Mrs. Margaret By- ford, of Holt-Norfelk, England. One sister, of South Wales, also sur- |vives. Tuesday from St. John’s Episcopal Church, Royal Oak, with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. The Rev. Charles C. Jatho will officiate. Her body is et the William Sullivan and Son Funeral Home, Royal Oak. EBER HAGADONE Eber Hagadone, 76, of 1490 N. Opdyke Rd., died Saturday in Clearwater, Fla. He was a retired Grand Trunk employe and a member of Masonic Lodge of Caseville and Brotherhood of Maintenance Employes. Surviving are his daughters, Mrs. James Shelton, of Clearwater, Fla.; bee, of Dunedin, Fla., also sur- vive. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday from _ Sparks - Griffin Chapel, with burial at Perry Mt. Parker, of St. Paul’s Methodist Church will officiate. MRS. ADOLPH HEBENTON Former Pontiac resident Mrs. Adolph (Ethel M.) Hebenton, 66, of 3454 Springle St., Detroit died Sat- urday at Detroit Receiving Hos- pital after a sudden illness. Besides her husband she is sur- vived by her daughter, Mrs. Rich- ard Day, of Detroit, and a son Glenn E. Newman, “ot Lansing. A ‘brother, Charles Lake, of Pontiac also survives. Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Tues- day at Voorhees Siple Chapel with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. The Rev. James H. Luther of Silver Crest Baptist Church will officiate. BABY GIRL HOWARD Graveside services for Baby Girl Howard, infant daughter of Mr. jand Mrs. Homer Howard, of 455 W. Walton Blvd., who died Saturday will be held at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday with burial-in Babyland of Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. The Rev. Ralph Claus, of St. Trinity Luth- eran Church will officiate. Her Home. ALFRED E“PORTER E. Porter, 56, of Phoenix, Ariz., died suddenly Saturday in Phoenix. Service will be held at 2 p.m.|5 Mrs. Donald Harris, of Rochester, and a son Clare, of Pon- 5 : tiac. His brother John, of Imlay|CoUrch of Lewiston with the Rev. \City and. sister Mrs. Harry .Em- Park Cemetery. The Rev. Douglas Surviving are his wife, Donna, and children, Margaret Ann, Nancy mother, Margaret A. Porter of Pontiac, and a sister, Mrs. Nancy Vance of Loon Lake, and one brother also survive. Service will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Mercer ‘Mortuary, Phoenix. JAY W. WELLINGTON Former Pontiac resident, Jay W. Wellington, 51, of Lewiston, died unday morning -at Grayling Mer- cy Hospital after a brief illness. While in Pontiac, he was em- He was, a former member of the Pontiac Elks, BPOE No. 810, a charter member of No. 581, F&AM, Lewiston; past high priest of Gaylord Chapter No. 119 RAM, and president of the Lions Club, International of Lewiston. Surviving. are his wife Vivian, a son, Robert, of Mt. Morris, Flint, a brother James of Pon- and sisters a! survive. Service will be at 2 p.m. Tues- be conducted by No. 581 F&AM. His body is at Masonic Temple, ‘Lewiston. MRS. MABLE BROWN MILFORD — Service for Mrs. Mable Brown, 63, of 3835 Highland Blvd., will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday from the Richardson- Bird Funeral Home with burial in Highland Cemetery. The Rev. Wayne Ritchie will officiate. Surviving are a daughter, Mar- garet of Milford, and a son, Allan of Detroit. A sister and a brother also suevive. _MRS. MADY 8. ENGLAND MILFORD — Service for Mrs. Mady Skarritt England, 73, of 7476 Hitchcock Rd., will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Jane and Robert, all at home. His! ployed at Pontiac Motor Div. | althe isburg Me daughter, Mrs. Donna Smith, of arid . tiac and a sister Mrs. Alice Eve- land, of Caro. Nine half brothers day at the First Congregational O. Weber officiating. Graveside Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oxford Cemetery. Mrs, England died yesterday, MRS. CHARLES MORGAN OXBOW LAKE — Mrs, Charles (Helen) Morgan 76, of 471 Joanna K, St., died today at Pontiac Osteo- illness. A county resident for 50 years, she was a member of the Gold Star Mothers and St. Mary’s Guild, Surviving are her daughters, Mrs. Freeman Wood of Flint, ‘|Mrs. Ben D’Arcy, Mrs. Allen Mix’ and Mrs. Edwin Miller, all of Pon- tiac; and a son, Edwin of Oxbow Lake. Three sisters also survive, Service will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Lakes Church. The Rosary will be recited Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. MRS.- BELLA SCHOOLEY DAVISBURG — Service for Mrs. Bella Schooley, 88, of 371 Broad- way St., who died Saturday, will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Church. Officiating will be the Rev. Mar- shall Saunders with burial in Da- visburg Cemetery. The body will be at the Bendle Funeral until noon Wednesday. ene: Mr. and Mrs. James} Apsey, of Lincoln, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Lake of Birmingham. She is also survived by her broth- ers, Robert Lake Jr. and Warren G. Lake, anda sister, Manette neral Home until 1 p.m. tomorrow, Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery with Rev. George Widdi-| field officiating. Six of every ten gasoline serv-| Nu-Vision Optical Studio 109 N. Saginaw. pathic Hospital after a four-week Marie Lake, all at home. ice station operators lease their Her body is at Sparks-Griffin Fu-!stations. Pontiac, Michigan | JUDITH ANN LAKE Service for Judith Ann Lake, 17,) of 228 Florence Ave., will be held’ Wednesday at 2 p.m. from ail Saints Episcopal Church. Miss Lake, daughter of Mr. and, Mrs. Robert Lake, died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of several weeks. An 12th grade student at Pontiac Central High School, Miss Lake is survived by her parents and her, Heart Attack Takes service, at Lewiston Cemetery, will One of the Pontiac area's most prominent dog show men and the breeder of a national champion (Frejax Royal Salute) springer spaniel. (Madison Square Garden) at the famed New York Westmin- sters show, is dead. Fred Jackson, who lived in Oak Park, died in the show ring at Flint’s IMA,‘Sun- day at 1:30 p.m. while showing his latest Frejax strain springer. For more than 20 years, Jackson had bred and shown springers. Jackson had apparently been in fine spirits just before the seizure, although he had suf- fered several heart attacks in recent years, according to his friend, Dr. Bud Buttram of De- Jackson Expires in Ring OCKC Veep troit. Dr, Buttram was first to reach the stricken Oakland Coun- ty Kennel club's vice president, but he apparently had expired immediately. Many other OCKC members,’ who were showing their dogs were, shocked at the incident, said Mrs. Fred (Julia) Gasow of Birming- ham. Fred's dog was the one that recently won the breed honor at. New York. “Mr. Jackson was doing the thing he loved more than any other, when he suddenly col- lapsed and expired,” Mrs. Gasow said today. 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Second Floor \ rN LS - \ a all $20.00 a . of es zee GAROLD A, FITZOEKALD President and Publisher _ MONDAY, MARCH 17, ‘1958 “THE PONTIAC PRESS Editorial Page MEMBER OF THE: ASSOCIATED PRESS “We Shall Not Sleep in Flanders Fields” Pontiac City Commission has-voted -to cancel Veterans’ day, Nov. 11, as a paid holiday for employes and substitute Washington’s Birthday instead. . ; . The move was taken at request of the Pontiac Municipal Employes Assn. Their reason: Too many paid holidays of their seven fall in the last half of the year and too few in the first half. x « * Thousands of American young men, and many our former fellow townsmen, sleep forever in graves far from home on foreign soil. They had no choice of when holidays should occur . . . or when they should die on some far battlefield. It was in their memory that Armistice Day was decreed after their weary comrade climbed out of the trenches on November 11, 1918. wk «*« * Who can deny that their sacrifices helped make it possible for any of us to have any holidays to shift around the calendar today? Is it our holiday to bargain over or does it be- long to the men who never came back? It is regrettable that the day dedi- cated to their memory should be tossed about with so little regard. Is sordid commercialism claiming Everything? * * * Maybe we should have the Fourth of July in October so it won’t happen between Memorial Day and Labor Day. : But then, eternal gratitude is such a fragile thing. Red China Adopts “Our Latin Alphabet -The Chinese Communists finally have adopted the 26 letter Latin alphabet to replace the Chinese char- acters whieh form the nation’s writ- ' ten language. These characters can be read by all literate Chinese and represent ideas rather than sounds. As a re- sult each Chinese uses his own dia- lect in interpreting the characters. * x * By using the Latin alphabet it will be possible to give the char- acters uniform sounds making the Peiping dialect the national language replacing al] local dia- lects. The armed forces are using the new system and it will be taught,in .the schools and in adult language classes. Copies are being distributed all over . China and phonograph records carry the pronunciation to the - people. In a nation seeking unification and progress the language barrier is a serious oné. Premier CHou EN-LAI foresees an age in which all the world will speak one language and “it’s not a bad idea” he says. English is fast becoming an inter- national language and adoption of the Latin alphabet in China is one step in that direction. Reuther Gets Chance to Show. Intentions Along with several others, WALTER REUTHER has suggested that certain THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by Tut Pontiac Prese Compeny 48 W Huron Bt Pontiae 12, Michigan Trade Mark Daily Except Surmiay Resertt Basarrr, Joun A. REF Executive Vice President Assistant Advertising ang Advertising Director Manager Howssp H. Pirecenstp [1, Eant M. Treavwrtt, Vice President and Circulation Manager Business Manager Joun W. Prrecenatn, Secretary and Editor Rosrrr B. T Managing Eaitor Entered at Post Office Pontiac, as second class matter G. Marsmat. Jotpan, Local Advertising Manager Gronce C. Inman, Classified Manager , The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for tion of all local news printed tn this newspaper as wel] as all AP news dispatches. fur Powric Pease is Geliv*-ed by carrier for 4 cents & week; where carrier service is not available by mai! in Oakland, : , Macomb, Lapeer and % te $12.00 @ year; elsewhere in in the United States Au subscriptions payable in Pontiac PR 2-8181. : income taxes be skipped for a month or even a full quarter. Several phases of this idea have been advanced for study and consideration. Now a union member proposes that Reuther himself confer a financial boon on his membership without waiting for Governmental action. : Why not cancel union dues? This could take effect today. * * * Thus the union leader would make a quick and definite contribution to- wards better economic conditions. He would assist the several million mem- bers of his union who have been paying taxes and dues until they’re dizzy. A three months moratorium would probably be acclaimed with cheers. * * * Any Governmental action re- quires agreement between the House, the Senate and their financial associates. This takes time. The union matter could be handled promptly by Mr. Reuther who is practically supreme. Even a membership vote would be received so joyously it could be taken in jig time. * * * It would be interesting if all CIO unions expressed themselves on this point. Here’s the quickest relief we know of in Pontiac, Michigan. The Man About Town . St. Patrick’s Day Has More than Ordinary Meaning in Our Fair City Green: What some of us are with envy. But the color has a greater significance on this day. This« anniversary of the death of St. Patrick is celebrated by millions of peo- ple. Here in Pontiac we have special reasons for its observance. Thousands of our best people have good Irish blood coursing through their system. You'll find them in top places in the business, industrial, civic and _ political life in our community. For instance, Finnegan and McCallum have a monopoly on our municipal judge- ships, and they’re doing a good job. This also is the 14lst anniversary of the arrival of the first permanent white residents in what is now Oakland Coun- ty. It was on Mareh 17, 1817, that Graham and Hartsough (they might have been Irish) arrived at Rochester, and started things that .ed to—well, look around you now. A Waterford Township man is making vodka out of old news- papers and rotten apples. After using a sample, I suggest that he start a dynamite factory. Some of the lakes in the Pontiac area got their names in an odd manner — Maceday LA&ke was named for Mason Day, a pioneer in that section, generally known as “Mace Day.” Coming to the Pontiac area to raise onions on the low ground around some of our lakes is Byron Sleeseman, who has considerable acreage in that crop near Jackson. He says onions will yield one thousand bushels to the acre on good muck land, and that this lowly vegetable is having a bigger growth in our family menus than any other food. All doctors say they’re good for us. Oakland County Health Director, . Dr. John D. Monroe, remarks that the principal thing the matter with our health is what is brought in from outside. At what its participants thought was an exclusive: Miami party the menu included pickled ants’ eggs, cockroach-locust stew, hornet nests stuffed with bee larvae, golden beetle surprise and cricket pie. Verbal Orchids to— John Bagley of Lake Orion; eighty-third birthday. Mrs. Burt F. Cobb of Clarktson; eighty-first birthday. Eben McGillivray of Metamora; eighty-first birthday. Mrs. Nettie M. Montross of Leonard; nineétieth birthday. Charles Gillium of Clifford; ninety-first birthday. Mrs. Hattie Reat of 15 Susan St.; eighty-first birthday. ‘ Mrs. Dora E. Jones | at 17 Elizabeth Lake Rd.; eightieth birth- y. 5 . WORMS» whew t a a ee ee David Lawrence Says: 1 Isn’t ‘Right to Work’ Important? * WASHINGTON — Is coercion by force or threat of force necessary to maintain trade unionism in America? Can't it sueceed by proc- esses of reason and voluntar- ism? Why should violence be in- cited? Why are millions of dol- tars of the work- ers’ dues used for campaign contributions to _ help elect mem. bers of Congress * when there is a LAWRENCE federal law for- bidding it? Why are citizens in free America compelled to pay tribute as the price of getting or keeping a job? Isn't the “right to work” as important to preserve as any other civil right protected by the Constitution? ek «+ These questions arise when one reads the testimony currently be- ing given before the Senate Com- mittee on “rackets’’ ahd the speech just put into the ‘Congres- sional Record’’ by Representative Ralph W. Gwynn of New York, Republican, who says that approxi- mately $725,000 was spent recently by a single union to elect a United States senator. Mr. Gwynn says: “In the 1956 elections, organ- nized labor was active in 300 of the 435 congressional distric elections and were successful— that means that their man got elected—in more than 175. And vier I say the unions were active, I mean just that! “In addition to direct money con- tributions, labor-supported candi- dates received incalculable num- bers of free campaign workers, union treasuries paid for untold hours of radio and TV time, ‘friends’ of the candidate inserted expensive full-page ads in the local newspapers...’ * * * To what extent have union sahbor confributions to political cam- paigns had their influence on the local level—in handling strikes? The United Press the other day reported from Washington this item from the hearings of the Senate Committee on “rackets’’: “Police Chief Steem W. Heimke of Sheboygan, Wis., tes- tified today that a sheriff who seemed to be ‘obligated’ to the union did nothing gfo control a waterfront ‘mob’ during the Kohler strike. He also told the Senate Rackets Committee that officials of the United Automo- * bile Workers’ Union ‘refused to assist me in any way’ although a’ majority of those involved were strikers... * “Heimke, then a police captain, testified that when he arrived on the scene, he overheard Mayor Rudolph Ploetz ask Sheriff Theo- dore Mosch ‘How much are you obligated to the union for?’ He said Mosch ‘stuttered and stam- mered’ on noticing that Heimke was within earshot. ‘Then, he. said, the mayor and sheriff, neither now The Country Parson in .office, withdrew to continue their talk in private. “*Mosch testified previously that he received a campaign contribu- tion from the United Auto Workers Union.” * * * Intimidation can be as effective as actual violence in attaining union objectives. That's why strong arm methods are used in strikes nowadays. For every em- ployer who takes a strike rather than submit to extortion, there are thousands of employefs who are afraid to do so. Likewise, most employes are afraid to cross picket lines. Coercion—not free speech— is, therefore, the bisis of ‘picket- ing’ today. The “right to work’ is de- nounced by so-called ‘‘liberals” and others as “the right to scab." Coercion is used to en- force the epithet. — All this happens in free America where the Communist system of election is ridiculed as undemo- cratic, but yet where the improper use of money and muscle to keep citizens from working who want to work is tolerated and acquiesced in by the Congress and many of the state legislatures. (Copyright, 1958) THOUGHT FOR TODAY . How beautiful upon the moun- tains are the feet of him that bringth good tidings, that pub- lisheth peace; that h~inveth good tidings of good, thag publisheth salvation; that saith unte Zion, Thy God reigneth! — Isaltah LS Bria & * * * The serene, silent beauty of a holy life is the most powerful influence in the world, next to the might of God. — Blaise Pascal. Dr. William Brady Says: Learn Emergency Steps to Relieve | Heart Attack As we learn more about coronary occlusion, thrombosis gr, as doc- tors talking shop call it, acute my- ocardial infarction, | am more and a few inflations of the bellows as an emergency remedy to prevent pecially pectoris. It matters not whether the dis- tress is actually 3 ar only seemingly DR. BRADY so serious—more than once J have feared a bellyache or a sMitch of intercostal neuralgia betokened coronary occlusion, but I resorted to BB immediately and in three of four inflations forgot it. . One man asked how I expected a man to breathe when his chest is squeezed in a vise. The an- swer is that if a man can’t breathe, he can’t breathe; but even a man in a vise may still breathe with his bellows, if he knows how... Some persons subject to speels of tachycardia — rapid heart beat, runaway heart — with or without palpitation, have obtained great re- lief by taking four or five bellows inflations. Of course, they have to know how to breathe. The immediate cause of an ‘‘at- tack” of angina or coronary occul- sion is oxygen deficiency—that is, coronary arteries that deliver blood to the heart muscle deliver insuffi- cient blood or the blood they de- liver is deficient in oxygen. BEST TREATMENT Probably the best emergency remedy is oxygen administered by inhalation. ~ Next best is nitroglycerin (glyc- eryl trinitrate), a tablet placed under the tongue — every person subject to such attacks should al- ways carry a few such tablets and take one at the slightest threat of an attack. Some physicians prefer amyl ni- trate—the patient carries a capsule of the liquid to crush in handker- chief and inhale—this acts even more rapidly than nitroglycerin (which is not slow, taking only one or two minutés to produce flushing ofthe face, pounding of _@ X p eri mental ject to angina of coronary trou- ble should do the BB exercise two or three times every day. New edition of the booklet “Belly Breathing’’ published last week. For a copy,- send me a stamped envelope bearing your ad- dress. If you give it any other title, I won't know what you want. * * * Signed letters, bot more than one page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hyeiene, not disease, diag- nosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. William Brady, {f a stamped self- addressed envelope ts sent to The Pon- tise Press. Pontiac,’ Michigan. Voice of the People Readers Resent Decision to Disregard the War Dead Civil service should be abolished entisely. Is it civil service that gets City empleyes to decide the nation’s holidays don’t suit them so they'll rewrite the calendar personally? How stuck on itself can a group get? . _ A great war ended November 11th and dead heroes are honored — that day. But a gang of City workers decide that doesn’t suit, them and so they’ll ignore the dead men that saved them. Yes, they'll cele- brate Washington’s birthday because it pleases them more. Does civil service end common decency? American boys buried in graves all over the world can be particularly proud that they died to defend the Pontiac City employes. I propose a national ‘‘boo”’ m coast to coast for Pontiac City workers and for the commission that “backs the attack.” ~ Everyone can be happy that City employes and the City Commission have decided to celebrate Christ- mas as usual. Jill Now that the City Commission has. decided to skip November 11 and ignore the nation’s honored dead, maybe they can arrange a civic celebration for Nathan Leo- pold.- The Municipal employes would be glad to form the cheering reception committee. Pretty Mad Wants Foreclosure Situation Eased In looking over the unemploy- ment situation, jt seems something should be done to ease the fore- closure situation. It sure would give millions of people a morale lifter-upper if they felt the billions of dollars they have on paper were secure from foreclosures during this so-called recession. Would like to see some of our Congressmen work on one of the most vital situ- ations at the present time. 0. Hook Orchard Lake . ‘How Do You Explain This?’ Why is it so hard to put a murderer or a crooked union of- ficial in jail? How do you explain this to your children? Paw Parent of Wounded Answers Letter In answer to- Mr. Connor's letter, if he had said anything about impeaching Roosevelt, he would have been taken out of his home and never heard of again, which happened in Detroit during World War II, 1944. Mgybe you were too busy making a lot of money or spending it to know about that. Thirteen years ago my son lost both his legs on the Rhine River. Last March he entered the hospital for the umpteenth operation and you want those times backs I'm* praying for you, Mr. Connor, that if we ever have Democrat wars again you'll get sent to the hottest part of it. eo . A. Rohr Romeo = Another Wants Women Off Jobs Avaricious women who desire the extra luxuries our moms didn't en- joy are responsible for the huge unemployment figure, If women stayed home where they rightfully belong and tended their children, we would have less juvenile de- linquency and jobs for everyone. Proud Home Wife Manhattan Sister of One That Didn’t Come Back Has Different Idea on Help for Jobless The first four years Republicans were in office they raised cost of interest one half cent on the dollar and then did the same thing again before the first term was out. They raised down payments on new homes and anything working men had to buy and made money harder to get for the man who needed it. * * ® Then they were going to cut income taxes. That's fine for the man with high income, but in the $2,000-to-$5,000 bracket, you don’t save enough to buy cigarettes. Auto builders spend more than a billion dollars remodeling and retooling each year and then raise the price of cars to make a bigger profit. They blame it on cost of labor. They have men making from $50,000 to $200,000 with bonuses up to half a million, and then if we ask for a few cents raise they think we're Communists. * * + With millions out of work, it’s time to start using the surplus food _____we have stored in this counts. Children are going hungry. Feed them. That isn’t socialism, it’s just good common sense. Greedy poli- ticians will complain, but we can't let them go hungry and expect them to B® good, law-abiding citi- zens when they grow up. Thomas Thrower 114 E. New York Ave. Praises Press for True Facts Congratulations are in order to our editor, and to David Lawrence, for giving us some true facts and figures on the present unemploy- ment situation. I don’t know about the rest of you, but I’m beginning to feel insulted when I read a quo- tation by Democrats or union of- ficers. I know they would gain more respect and confidence on my part if they would give some truth instead of all this glorified hot air which is an insult to the average American's intelligence. * * * Truth always prevails, and the sooner more people call their bluff and demand it, the sooner your minds will be at ease. Mrs. B. With Two T's Would Like to Vote for Harry Truman With all the yapping against Tru- man, I wish he'd run again so I could vote for him, I didn’t when he was a candidate before, but he speaks out in meeting and I like his honesty, Mid (Copyright 1958) Case Records of a Psychologist: Professor Uses ‘Compliment Club’ Dean Sweetiand rates a gold | star for his proficiency as a college educator. He motivates his students by showing how his psychology courses help them solve their daily prob- lems in real life. That is proved by the 126 “Compliment Club” diplomas I signed for his students just last year. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case X-355. Dean Sweetland, of Cecil's College at Spartanburg, South Carolina, teaches a very enthusiastic class in Applied Psy- chology. And I am not exaggerating. For during his course he assigns his students many projects in the field of Human Relations. ’ One of these is the ‘Compliment Club.”’ I employed it, too, with my students at Northwestern Univer- sity and scores of other teaching CRANE “ A good teacher “sells” his sub- lege students completed the 30-day task, so Tf have personally signed their officialsdiplomas. MAKE STUDY FUN Dean Sweetland is the type of modern educator who needs to be emulated all over our land. For he himself spends many long hours figuring out’ ways by, which to make his courses more useful to the students. et & fe And the interest in a course is_ generally in direct ratio to the practical. tie-ins which students obtain for solving their daily ‘ problems. A dull, boring college course means that the students are co- erced into taking stuff that seems useless and ,jimpractical to them. A topnotch teacher should be an orator who can command atten- tion and keep his class both wide awake and interested. Teachers and clergymen both need to realize that they should “pull” their followers along from in front, instead of coerc- ing them by threats of hell fire ~ or flunk notices! Coercive feaching and preaching “SELL” YOUR STUDENTS For the students quickly saw that the mathematics they were taking would save their lives by permitting a navigator to’ plot the course of his plane success- fully, or by enabling an artil- leryman to lob a shell over a mountain and make a direct hit on a given target. “Motivation” is the keynote of an interesting class meeting, but motivation depends largely on showing the connection between the classroom lectures and the everyday practical problems fac- ing those students. ‘ We need more by teachers and clergymen, for they have a golden opportunity to zoom civilization if they can keep their listeners eager and enthusiastic, k * * : For further hints on successful classroom techniques, send for my “Test for a Good Teacher,” en- closing a stamped :return envel- en search official said today that space medicine pioneers are _ “working toward” development of “t a substance that will make breath- Ri ing, eating and drinking unneces-| Cae ANY _ sary on space flights or for sur- hyo - _ viving on Other planets. i, oo + * * Cee James B. Edson, assistant tothe, [See Army's director of research and) [A '¢——sai-S) _ development, forecast that the x “normal rate of engineering de- a velopment progress’ will make) [Poa—<" = _ possible landings on the moon and —_ _ Mars and flights to faraway stars) [ within 10 to 15 years. Any unpredictable creative a | pee breakthroughs, he said, would ses {ae hi ule. _ Atomic Scientists, he said the first — probably will ' base a hole in the ground. _ trient which could be injected into the bloodstream, ‘making breath- tions in deciding the outcome of any terrestrial power. contest. our technological effort," he said. | _ hot sun, cold nights, cosrhic rays THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958. — Junior Editors Quiz on ST. PATRICK'S DAY pie May End Need for Food, Air Space Doctors Work} on Synthetic Nutrient for Moon Pioneers 4 CHICAGO — An Army re- tend to shorten the time sched- Questions Why do we wear green on Saint Patrick’s Day? * * * ANSWER: Every loyal son or Erie — meaning almost every k * * Writing in the Bulletin of the manned expe@ition to the moon make their first shamrock (white clover) in his lapel on March 17, St. Patrick’s day, if he can possibly get one. If not, he will blossom out with a green tie and his lady will find some way to work a bit of green into her costume. Green 1s the national color of “the uld emerald isle.” There are several reasons for this. ace Wit be Hinde ee One is connected with St. Patrick himself. ‘This famous high enough to keep the blood) Saint was called by a vision in the year 432 to Christianize from boiling. ‘Ireland, which he did very effectively, founding 300 churches * *« * ‘and baptizing 120,000 people. He is said to have used the three “But the moon pioneers may|leaf shamrock as a symbol in explaining the Three Persons of not need oxygen. The space medi- The Holy Trinity. cine people are working toward) nother reason is the unusually brilliant green of the Irish ape laa i len pantign ld grass, due to the moist climate. Still another is that England, at one time, tried to prevent “the wearing of the green,” and this attempt helped to make the custom a symbol of Irish unity. “It may be a natural cave or fissure, providing protection from and meteors,’’ he said. “It should ing as well as eating and drinking unnecessary.”’ He said a moon base would have important military implica- _— * * * FOR YOU TO DO: See how fine an Irish green you can use iin coloring the picture of Saint Patrick, after cutting it out and pasting it on cardboard. Put the green on the shamrock ‘leaves and wherever you see the grass. occupation by another power may * * * someday become a major objec-| (Joan Brill of Champaign, Ill., gets $10 for this question. tive of U.S. foreign policy and of Send yours on a postcard to Violet Moore Higgins, AP News- * * * “Prevention of exclusive lunar | Within the next two or three! pirds on electric wires electrocuted?) vears suitably selected and trained men can confidently em- - Edson said establishment of self-) ‘Meal to Make Hair Curl ‘|, ATLANTA — Pulp yield from ised DENVER (#—Charles Coak, 34, inatign’s forests could be increase) mixed up a salad in a bowl used bark on space trips of several’ days duration, he said. \Could Raise Pulp Output Looking farther into the future, sufficient bases or colonies on the, Irishman or person of Irish extraction—wears a sprig of} features, in care of this newspaper. Tomorrow: Why aren’? | Nasser Levels Blast at Rival Federation CAIRO W — President Nasser returned to his Cairo headquarters | today after his first visit to the Syrian province of his new United Arab Republic. . * * * -Nasser during his three-week tour broke publicly with King Saud, charging that Saudi Ara- air oll, revenues were being used finance plots to assassinate hia and break up the UAR. He also attacked the rival Jordanian federation as an im-| THE In just Convenient Lv. New York 7:45 PM, Ar. Flint 10:25 PM perialist device which would not last. - ~*~ *«* * Sptaking. yesterday at Aleppo, near the Turkish border, Nasser promised he would give complete support to “Arab liberationists in|” levery part of the Arab fatherland ' & Spain’s Pretender New York-Bound in Sailboat LISBON, Portugal W Don Juan of Bourbon, pretender to the in their struggle to free all Arab, throne of Spain, headed for New countries from imperialism, for- eign intervention or dominationa.” This. presumably was an appeal to the Saudis, Iraqis and Jordan- jiang to overthrow their Western- oriented monarchs. The ‘United States has more than 454,00,0,000 acres under cultivation, Iraqi- llargest area of any country in the w orld. ‘York today, aboard a 66-foot sail- boat. He said the -trip with eight other men is “purely a_ sporting adventure” with no political over- tones. The pretender, son of the late King Alphonso XIII, served as a naval officer in the British navy. The party hopes to reach New York in 45 days. | The Saltillo has’ a_ six-cylinder “MICHIGAN SPECIAL” NON-STOP NEW YORK 2 his., 15 min. Lv. Flint9AM, Ar. NewYork 11:15AM return service La apital AIRLINES auxiliary engine. She will call ai Madeira Island, the West Indies SEVEN HOUSE PLANS] Florida and New York. ee ' : Custom Drawn ie African Bushmen tribes use a clicking and clucking sounds when OL '1-8200 a they talk. - ‘ | howe a ce Solid Sterling Silver _ 33h SAVING} Wish. “Service- SAVE 33% on each piece. Use our “Club Plan” with only "hey weekly payments. It's mise of a lifetime . . . don’t miss iff settings or ACT AT ONCE! This offer is for a limited time only! EA aa Only 10% Down 10% a Month JEWELERS. by 30 to 40 per cent through whole-|earlier by his wife Lillian, 31, for le j -? moon and Mars may set a trend.|1., harvesting, ~according to a|mixing a hair waving lotion, Both = — = i a ahceee + * * study by forest-products research-|became ill after eating the salad Also 45 Walnut St., Mt. Clemens He put it ghis way: “The ex-lers. land required hospital treatment. . - panding range of human habitat + 4 may forever be wider than the area that can be depopulated in a - - imagine a time when the destruc- earlier times, of a city or a cul- ture — a tragedy but not the end of everything.” p Jaycee Starts | -2,000-Mile Ride Astride Mule -bassador to the national conven- violent power contest. We can tion of mankind on any single planet will be like the loss, in MEMPHIS, Tenn. #— A reck- less young Jaycee, bitten by his own scheme, sets out today on a 2,000-mile ride to Los Angeles astride a mule named Kate. * * * Robert Bradley, 24, a restaura- teur and president of the suburb- an Raleigh-Bartlett Jaycees, will be the state Jaycees’ official .am- tion June 16-19. He dreamed up the gimmick as a joke after hearing that the state Jaycees' theme would be the ‘“frontiersman.”’ Fellow Jaycees pushed the project and elected Bradley as the rider. * * ¥ The trek will take 87 — days, Bradley figures. Since the state Jaycee convention neglected to set aside any money for the venture, food and lodging for Bradley and : ce Kate will depend on local Jaycee ‘ chapters en route. @ corn flakes 12 oz. pkg. @ special “K” 612 oz. pkg. @ frosted flakes 10 oz. pkg. @- rice krispies 92 oz. pkg. One-third of all the gasoline serv- ice stations in the United States have no full-time employes. DRY CLEAN 4.99: LAST YEAR’S SPRING OUTFIT . « » Made to look like NEW again by GENEY’S BORDEN’S FRESH NUTRITIOUS HOMOGENIZED Milk Call Today le Pick-Up arid Delivery on 5-6107 ~~ Start Saving Now at — | . Kroger's Low, Low Price DRY. CLEANERS 12 West Pike Pork Near Our Door as i Sel | yo? I eat a better breakfast BREAKFAST. CEREALS f Cream Corn Packer's Label i Pork &. Beans | Clover Valley brand ! Butter Beans American Beauty 1 Tomato Soup t American Beauty = I INDIAN RIVER SEEDLESS 'Grapefruit we reserve the right so limit fuentes, Prices effective tb rough — Mareb) 22, : 958, unless otherwise indicated. > For this Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday : happy dimes are here again = 10° & 10° Sweet = 10° =! 10° ae Packer's’ Label Spaghetti American Beauty .... 4 6 Vegetables wx American Beauty .. oa o Cut Red Beets ‘Avondale brand Regular $1.19 value. 24” x 44” colorful-cotton. A real saving at this low price. 303 Peas OU * * * * . * 10° 10° 10° 10° 300 Cen Each = oe ee ow ae 4% SAUSAGE SALES * Your Cc hoice KLEIN’S OLIVE LOAF SKINLESS HOT DOGS KLEIN’S COOKED SALAMI HYGRADE CHILI STICKS : POLISH SAUSAGE SPICED LUNCH MEAT LIVER SAUSAGE | KLEIN’S SLICED BOLOGNA KLEIN’S DUTCH. LOAF SS ae ee a ee Pe / } 2 == = » & . — RIGHT 7 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 17, 1958 ” THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert| E= : 3 OKAY I GAN TAKE A NTI pe | FOR THE LAST TIME... L Rx : DINNERS READY! G Pris | B | B a ¢ C Nag | de ARE YOURS —, CLOSED EARLY IN THE WEEK i Security for You YWCA Demands Law : ‘ to Back Disarmament S U N D A ‘ Quiz: Can | Retire at 60 and Draw Pay?.z vs =<: ] J , 1 : # Women's Christian Assn, has de- S U S U L AT & manded adoption of a multilateral, @ ee @ | By RAY HENRY | “Several months ago, you had a would be eligible for payments for enforceable disarmament pro- From B. L. of San Bernardino,| column telling about veterans’ herself and the youngest child gram supported by international Calif.: “I’m 60 years old and) pensions. I wasn’t interested at |until he reaches 18, then for herself |jaw, : would like to retire. Would I have) the time, but I am now. What jagain at age 62, If her husband - £« * to wait until I am 65 to draw are the pension rights of a |did work under Social Security she = Social Security, and if so, how, World War I veteran?” should contact her Social Security Among other things, the pro- | much would I draw? My salary) 1¢ a World War I veteran meets “!{ce at once. gram would require an end to pro- | or ee an e on y ® has been around $6,000 since 1950." |) A requirements, he may be en-| ducing and testing nuclear weap- ‘ A man must be 65 to draw Social) | a | From M. T. of Lansing, Mich.: ons. Security retirement payments. titled to monthly pension payments “I'm a widoW 43 years old with x * * The amount of your payments will/from the VA. They are: | a child 16 years old. I have | The YWCA's 21st national tri-| . CUT FROM TENDER, YOUNG FRYERS : depend on when you retire, but 1. Be considered by the VA to- never worked except as a house- jennial convention made the de- ; will probably be in the $100 a tally and permanently disabled Wife. Will I be completely out in mand yesterday in approving a | LB month range. ifrom a disability having no con- the cold, as far as Social Secur- peace statement. The statement ic en e S —— ‘nection with his military service, ty Is concerned, when my child |will be sent to the World Council ®seseeeaeesea From A. T. P. of New York | and , | reaches 18? He is not disabled.” |of the YWCA to implement a sim- : City: “My husband was 65 im | 9 Served at least 90 days mili-, Yes. When your child reaches|!!@r statement by the internation- » February. He doesn't plan to ‘tary service, some part of it during 18, you will lose your Social Se- al organization. DELICIOUS WHITE MEAT! RIBS-ON stop working. Should he regis- |the World War I period, and curity status and the payments,to : u ter = local Social Security | 3 pave an income of less than You and your child will be stopped. 14 KARAT GOLD LB C office?” man : ./You will regain Social Security) : ; /$1,400 a year if he has no depend-| ‘ Matched seceese As long as he's making morejents or $2,700 a year if he has | Status when you reach 62. e than $2,080 a year, it’s not neces- | dependents. | hee WEDDING RINGS . sary for him to get in touch with, The monthly pension rate for|~- (Questions on Social urity |f Our rT] : 1 gthe Social Security people. veterans under 65 is $66.15. For) problems may be addressed to | Reg. SUPER-RIGHT’ LEAN, MEATY veterans 65 or over, or who've| “Social Security,’ care of The [| $17.95 B % From Mrs. E. V. of Washing- been drawing a pension for 10) Pontiac Press. Questions will be : i 2 TO 3-LB. C ton, D. C.: “I worked for the years, the rate is $78.75. answered by mail from the Pon- RIBS sé LB federal government for four , | tine office of the Social Security ee es years during World War Il. From H. L, of Albany, N. Y.: | Administration. There is no | During that time deductions.| ‘My mother-in-law has been a charge for this service, You may a 7) 1 Were taken from my pay for | widow for 14 years. She has six | obtain Ray Henry’s new social SUPER-RIGHT"—IN PLIO-FILM BAG retirement. Is there any way I | children, the youngest age 16 | security handbook by sending 35 || BOTH can recover the money that was and still in school. She received | cents in coin to this newspaper || FOR LB. C deducted? I don’t plan to ever | aid for dependent children for | and requesting “Security for $ 95 ee esseseeeeeae work for the government again.” | three or four of them, but she | You” booklet.) ‘Easy Your money will be refunded to was cut off because she owned Tacs you if you'll file an application) ¢T ow" heme. She is now 57 | Sierra Leone, a British colony’ with the Civil Service Commission,| Y°@"S old. Can she cue Se- on the west coast of Africa, was} Georges-Newporis pues Washington 25, D. C. cial Security payments? lfounded in 1787 as a home for} “SUPER-RIGHT” QUALITY —_—— - If her late husband worked long destitute ex-slaves who were! - eropertd Vena From A. A. of Towa City: ‘enough under Social Security she shipped from London. - Saginaw St. B f Li CHOICE OF —<—<—————— eef Liver © FINE » 4% AC SUPER.p . -RIGHT” BIG, BEAUTIFUL ALLGOop—° A&P SPECIALLY SELECTED a2 . Halibut Steaks : Cm 55 PKG. € FOR BAKING OR BROILING LB. 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CAN eg. $249.95 Tomato Paste | Sweet Peas Here’s What You Get... ® Distinctive Sofa or Sofa Bed 3 @ Matching Chair — Choice SAVE 10c SAVE ON PAPER PRODUCTS, TOO! of Colors : . HUDSON'S WHITE OR COLORED @ 2 Decorator's Table Lamps FAMOUS JANE PARKER F ial Ti 3 PKGS. 49 © Coffee Table and Two ac SSUC. . .« « Dora F970 Step End Tables © 2 Throw Pillows oe Northern Tissue . . 4 rus 33¢ Foam Rubber Pillows 8-INCH . | Phone FE 58114-5 aes SIZE C. MACARONI AND CHEESE : ‘% — 7%-O2. 9 @) "4 C ; a\ R FURNITURE Kraft’s Dinner . . . 37487 4 ¢C » ee + : . WISCONSIN SHARP ; 5 COMPANY Ch | | Ck ms a. 59 Prices effective thru Tuesday, March 18th | ar se eeee = C 2 ; e TEA & CO. THE GREAT Atta DEPENDABLE Nal; SINCE FOR COOKING. OR SALADS , dexola Oil =: WHILE THEY LAST. 2™s% Reg. $7.95 NTIC & ATLERS 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE + PONTIAC | 1859 9 ! ‘ ‘ 3 BLOCKS WEST OF SAGINAW STREET | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 NINE | Buffalo Brews Own Blizzards - Lake. Erie Readymade “Stewing Vat for Big Snowstorms By DICK WHALEN BUFFALO, N.Y. @ — Take a mass of cold air out of northern Canada and pour it across the -Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. Give one chunk of it e spinning motion as it flows down Lake Erie toward Buffalo and Niagara Falls, soaking up moisture frém_ the lake. * * * Then duck. Because if you're one of 1,089,- 230 people living in’ metropolitan Buffalo, you're in for snow—huge quantities of it—from one of Buf- falo’s homemade snowstorms. The storms are peculiar. They are brewed right in the city’s backyard, Lake Erie, and they strike in a narrow belt, some- times only five miles wide. When they hit hard, everything stops. The railroad yards, second largest in the country, are para- lyzed. Industry is crippled. Traf- fice grinds to a halt. The storm everybody here re- members as THE storm is the St. Patrick’s Day blizzard of 1936. It started March 17, just three days before spring, and poured 27.4 inches of snow. The city had exhausted its snow removal mon- ey, and emergency funds were appropriated ‘to cart: the stuff away. Troops were called in to help. The lake storms deliver about half Buffalo's snow, and Buffalo averages 6 feet of snow a year, nearly twice as much as any oth- er major American city. * * * This is how U.S. weatherman - rnard Wiggin describes the ef- fect of a typical Lake Erie snow- storm: “It's like a garden hose spray- ing snow over western New York, Sometimes“ the hose points a ward Jamestown, down near Pennsylvania; sometimes toward Buffalo; most of the time it swings - Back and forth, spraying snow in a belt about 10 miles wide and 30 miles in from the lake.” Snow removal is a major prob- lem. Buffalo spends about $600,- 000 a year on it. The private citi- zen, confronted with snow-plugged driveway, sidewalk and doorway, hag to combine a resourceful na- ' ture and a strong back to get to work or to the store. * * * One man hemmed in by tow- ering snowbanks found he had no place to put the snow he was shoveling from his driveway. So) Cauesien| scientific sedvances have sharp attention American weakness and By DRS. HOLLIS | L, CASWELL and ERIC A. WALKER College Presidents . (Written for. INS) Brainpower is today our most precious resource; and its conser- vation and development must be our No. 1 goal. What can we do to improve our performance in this area’? (1) To conserve anything, you have first to find it. Yet the methods we use to discover our potential leaders early enough to direct their energies into useful, challenging pursuits approach pure ichance. Our testing methods: are adequate for the job, but, with rare exceptions, we simply don’t use them early enough or intelli- gently enough to do much good, I suggest, therefore, that we establish a nation-wide system of qualifying examinations for testing all students twice during auc mm nes abt tae ck at the twelfth. (2) We must find means of making studying and learning. at se“ least as attractive as winning foot- ball letters and playing in the band. ‘There is solid evidence that boys in genera] do not find it par- ticularly important to make good scholastic records in high school. (3) We must apply the results of our research studies in education much more widely and generally than we have in the past. ‘‘Lim- ited-area”’ studies at Yale and Harvard show that! performance improvements of up to 25 per cent * ©¢ * “can be achieved in the classrooms through the use of techniques al- ready develoned through educa- tional research. (4) We must increase the amount of educational research conducted in this country. Today every large business expects to spend at least one per cent of its gross income for research to improve its products, its manu- facturing processes, its distribu- tion and marketing techniques— in fact, te improve every phase of its operations. (5) We must change the direc- tion or airn of our education. We’ coneetitrate our efforts and our energy on producing ‘‘social ad- justment"” to the exclusion of pro- ductive discontent, on producing craftsmen and technicians to the exclusion of creativity, on produc- ing caretakers rather than inno- vators, We must attempt to teach by asking questions rather than iby giving answers. (6) We must make it financially possible for every gifted boy and girl to attend college. About half of the qualified high school gradu- ates who fail to go to college are kept out by financial reasons. (7) We must make it possible to educate each student te the highest level at which he is eapab‘e of profiting. This means that we shall have to junk the traditional one-tier, cast-in-con- crete educational mold into which we have forced all stu- dents in the past. (8) We must make teaching more attractive as a profession. [Although such: imponderables as social prestige are involved, a drastic adjustment of the salaries we pay our teachers will go a long way toward correcting what I firmly believe to be the most serioug problem we're facing—a critical shortage of good teachers. - x * Since our success in meeting Russia's challenge and in reaping the rich harvest promised by the scientific age depends squarely on our supply of trained and educated brainpower, we have no more es- sential profession than than of teaching. We must provide a pay scale that makes it possible for us to recruit into the profession the emt) mebeds. fy the cowry. To do less is suicidal. TOO FEW TEACHERS To get more and better teachers. it ig necessary to recognize cer-| tain fundamental facts, to act on the basis of these facts, and to remove some of the roadblocks to such action. First, it is imperative that we realize that there is a calami- tous shortage of qualified teach- ers today. Second, it is essential to realize that many of the shortcomings of the schools today are primarily a result of a shortage of teachers. Third, it is essential to under- stand that the teacher shortage, as well as other educational short- ages is due in large part to nearly come into the situation. One of the more important of these is the competition for trained persons by pared for teaching do not enter teaching, or after a few years leave it for better paid callings. hit by the rising demand for wom- en in a growing range of desirable, well paid callings. Fourth, certain new factors have Many young people who pre- Also, the schools have been hard Experts Explain How Education Must Be Improved thirty years of educational neglect., tures are but 3.4 per cent of the gross national product, (It has been estimated that the UBER experets peaeewnees becwens 5 and 10 per -cent of its income our technological society, for education.) < Our schools are almost wholly MONEY CALLS financed. from. state and local taxes. This situation accounts in considerable degree for the fact that schools arid colleges have been half-starved financially in recent decades. There are increasing signs that the limits are being approached, in all states and in many localities, in practical ability to finance schools, Federal support, to supplement . that which the states and locali- ties can raise, must come into the picture. (Tomorrow: ‘A top scientist warns we're in danger of losing the science race with Russia.) The loss of a tree killed by in- sects or disease cannot be deduct- ible on your incomé tax return, says the Internal Revenue Service. But, if it is destroyed by a storm, unexpected lightning or some other happening, it can be deducted. It is essential that a funda- | mental revision of the economic base of. teaching be made if the chronic teacher shortage is to be corrected. ‘ The ecénomic feasibility of put- | ting enough money into teaching | to eliminate the teacher shontage must be understood. * * * Economists agree that we have the economic capacity to finance education adequately. They point out that we have a gross national production of more than $430 in lion a year, and a per capita in- come twice that of any other nation, Total public school expendi- ¥ When Buying INSURANCE Buy from Displaying This Emblem See or Call MAYNARD JOHNSON GENERAL INSURANCE tional 807 Community Na Phone FE an Agent he shoveled it through a window into his basement and then flushed it down a drain with warm water. Soap Operas Incendiary 1 BARCELONA, Spain (INS) —_ Statistics compiled by the Fire Department blame radio soap operas for 40 per cent of the fires in Barcelona's apartment houses. Authorities say house- wives light their stoves and put on electrica] appliances and then get all wrapped up listening to serials, Texas-Sized Excuse TUCSON, Ariz. (INS) — A pro- spective juror asked to be ex- cused on the grounds he hadn't been “in the country too long” and felt his English wasn’t up to par, “Where are you from?” asked the judge. ‘‘Texas,”’ the man replied. He was not ex- cused, About 150,000,000 people through- out the world have beeh vaccinated with BCG, antituberculosis vac- cine, 0) 4 COMPANY PERMIT ?1 THEN THIS 15 For YOU! et . * GAS HEAT aft its best-with Mueller Climatrol There is a size and type to meef your) needs and budget Sa), —— LOU JANKA Heating & Air Conditioning Sales 177; Edison, Pontiee ont Cah ies FE 40443 & Service =o Wak ne ‘ There’s nothing about the looks of this new Chevrolet that even gives you a hint of its low price. And when you drive it, you'll know you couldn’t be sitting prettier no matter how much you paid! Every model rug 4 PRON yh tt ac ae a ye Nagy ua >» we , AP is Bie as~3 oe? The Delray 2-door sedan with Body by Fisher. Every window of every Chevrolet is Safety Plate Gloss. offers a- complete choice of engines—five vigorous V8’s and a gas-stretching six. All are longer, lower and wider, with a new Safety-Girder frame design. And Chevy’s ride is smooth and level with Full Coil sus- real air hy i al N HN ride as an extra-cost option. ‘, Ny Mit ne ba gh aN BN at See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer pension at all four wheels. You can have a All that—yet many Chevrolet models are the lowest priced of the low-priced three! Your Chevrolet dealer’s the man to see. 1 LY aN iaeah a =a OH Only the ’58 Chevrolet offers you such a beautiful way to be thrifty. It’s the only low-priced car so advanced in style and size—NINE LOVELY, LIVELY INCHES LONGER! And it’s new right down to the safer, ‘more rigid SAFETY-GIRDER FRAME. NOTHING SO WELL DRESSED WEARS SUCH A LOW PRICE TAG! You'll get the best buy har fat i) i Hn i ni er) Try air conditioning for all-weather comfort. cd] i ? -MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, : 3M mill St. and 631 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, Leia ee 4 INC. FE 5-4161 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH. 17, 1958 Says Dems Slow Aid fo Jobless GOP Speaks to Women. at Conference WASHINGTON « — Republican National. Chairman. Meade Acorn today accused Democrats in Con- gress of dragging their feet on a three-year-old Eisenhower propos- al for special aid to areas of, chronic unemployment. ‘Their amazing lack of con crete action stands in sharp con trast with their pious words abou! the plight of jobless workers.” Al corn said in a speech preparec: for a Republican women’s nation- al conference. Alcorn said the Democrats, who | control Congress, should stop try-| ing to “sow the seeds of panic” ever the recession and get to work on President Eisenhower's pro- posals aimed at economic recov- ‘ * * * Eisenhower will discuss the eco- nomic situation ‘tomorrow in a speech to the roughly 1,700 wom- en gathered for the two-day con- ference. Vice President Nixon and, - women at a reception last night. Alcorn, listing steps Eisenhow- er has taken to reverse the re- cession, predicted the “‘effects of! these actions will be felt strongly in our economy during the weeks/Speakers in Australia and months ahead.” 7 x *« * The President's antirecession| proposals will have ‘‘strong Re- publican support,’ Alcorn said, adding: “The Democrat leader- ship in Congress could make a) real contribution to quick econom-| ie recovery by taking immediate yaction on Sand by permitting immediate ac- tion upon several additional im- portant administration recommen- dations which have been pending that: made a dollar. one-tenth of a dollar. be one-tenth of a shilling. * * * He said Eisenhower's recom- SETTING UP A SECTION — Workmen install equipment in tail section of Redstone niissile in oa oa Mise 8 iene tt into Dn area mendations for tax relief and oth- ( ‘ollect Data for Giant Missiles ‘Tiny Rockets er help to small business have been either ignored or enacted in part. Condemn Own Money PERTH, Australia W — Speakers at the Australian Teachers’ Fed- They supported a motion to in- ‘on target. eration here condemned Australia’s | - currency system. troduce a system of decimal coin- | these proposalsjage’in place of the present 12 pennies to a shilling and 20 shill- ings to a pound. The conference recommended The present 10 shillings be) The shilling be The penny | by Ousted Priest _‘ebrated Mass Mass Celebrated BUDAPEST, Hungary i® — A in Hungary's Red Parliament cel- | “here yesterday, claiming he has not been informed. officially of the Vatican’s action. * * * newsmen, after officiating in one wr Sedapanty tint seembin a Ontario Town Aids by two other e priests — the Revs, Miklos Ber: grind and Janos Mate. He ‘add- Roman Catholic priest who has quit _|been excommunicated for serving bel ment, declaring that people came dren of Mrs. Carmela Pasut, 35, who arrived from Italy last week the same position wag being taken and been killed, and the news was. kept from the family until they OAKVILLE, Ont. (This Lake/teached Oakville. Ontario community of 10,000 peo-| — * *« © ple has donated nearly $2,000 a| The fund campaign to aid 9 day for an immigrant Italian fam-| year-old Allisandro and 17-year-old ily who arrived to learn that the/miano was started: on a local father had been killed a week/radio station's Italian language earlier. program. The Knights of Colum- <‘'Fatherless Italians rliament and did not be- the others had either, * * * He defended his work in Parlia- WB siamen "tnd dia"rt be to him to get help for relatives in internment to join her husband, He had fallen ville working on a railway bridge The Rev. Richard Horvath told qs ta. work as Biitafe. creftamies, More than. $10,000 has been put|bus are sponsoring a benefit con- MAE dhe aK wile albert arb anole ae Z j in complete assembly. Modified Redstone was — first stage of Jupiter C missile in launching U. S. Sea into or mt FT, MONMOU TH, N.J. we Small Army rockets that can leap| 54 miles into space are probing ahead of giant missiles for infor- mation to help the monsters and * * * The diminutive Loki II rockets carry a packet of aluminum con- fetti which is released and then tracked by radar on the ground, as swift air currents carry it) away. The device has a 40-inch| shaft propelled by five-foot rocket ‘engines. It provides a quick, accurate ‘map of wind speed and_ direction, lac cording to the Army Signal En- ‘have velocities of up to 200 m.p.h. Map Space gineering Laboratories, which Pre veloped ,the technique in experi- ments at White Sands Proving |Grounds, N.M., and Cape Canav- eral, Fla. | a no Information on winds which is needed to deliver an intercon- iinental ballistic missile on tar- get. The high-altitude winds buffet the rockets and significantly alter titheir courses over long trajector-| ies. The Army sajd the wind chart-) ing is also helping develop new Fresh Dressed DPe-PEPT FRYERS Lean, Meaty FRESH PICNICS Bazley's Gigantic Spring Festival of Values! 29: 7 Lean, Meaty PORK HOCKS Tender Sliced PORK LIVER Tender, Juicy, ‘ALL THESE ARTICLES ARE THE SAME LOW PRICE SIRLOIN - ROUND J IN “None Bazley Better Trim Steaks Higher’’ C3 Lean, Meaty PORK STEAKS bb. = Lean Beef - SHORT RIBS OQ" ”: Mild Cured 5 9" Lb. SLICED seer 39: mt aaa AQ, HAM lb. : “jy Guaranteed Fresh ? LARGE «s OO: Doz. fete Kee eee ew ee wee eee Se ee ee ee ee 1 This valuable coupon entities the 1 bearer to a 1-lb. limit fresh ‘REMUS Good | 9 Cc = = | lb. 'B UTT E With Meat Purchase ; Weather _ forecasting theories. et ALWAYS yours, this Easter an opportunity to Penney’s. Wise Paris are for you. Romantic? Choose a bouffant dress. Urbane? A slim necked sheath, or dress is your cup 0 Mature? A lovely dress makes you greater variety i 5 to | g» Whichever personality is you have to the best advantage at respects the individuality of -the American woman. Sophisticated? Slim? new chemises inspired by sheath with a pretty bow will do wonders for you. Modern Young Lady? A scoop delightfully feminine. This Spring, there is fashions than ever before. shopped the leading fashion centers of the nation to: bring you all that’s new. FIRST QUATT dress it Penney’s The flowered jacketed a flared f tea. bowed feel so n dress experts TY! SHOP PENNEY’S . . . you'll live better, you'll save! 2 Shown jeft to right: cupioni rayon chemise, 8.95 * printed crepe rayon bouffant, 12.95 © cotton and cupieni rayon jacket sheath, 12.95-* arnel and etton sheath, 10.95 * leno weave coton and cupioni rayon, 5.95 °* printed rayons and acetate, 5.95. # This Easter, dress your own personality ¢ Bey MIRACLE MILE STORE 10:00 A.M. F \ NOW! Open et HOURS .. Weekday : :00 P. oe , to re n Monday Sel 9:3 sme ide y GARE cola heh Rael lial zeottet Press Phote |. “The top of the morning to you,” says Darwin -* Beach, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Beach of Bellevue avenue. Sure, and he’s well qualified to call that greeting since St. Patrick’s Day is Darwin’s birthday —he’s 2 today. Another Shower Set March 25 Party in Lackie Home — Fetes Jo Ann Robertoy ° _ Bride-elect Jo Ann Robertoy _ was honored Saturday evening with a miscellaneous bridal shower given by Mrs. Clar- ence Lackie and Mary Lou Lackie in their Middlebelt - road home. | x* * * | A sprinkling can trimmed _ with white streamers centered the gift table. Decorations - were in orchid and white, the color theme of the April 4 wedding. Among the guests were Mrs. . Lester Lingle, Carolyn Lingle, Mrs. Carl Hester, Mrs. Nel _ son Robertoy, Mrs. Meda .. Lawrence, Mrs, Eamer Bigs- _ by, Mrs. Enos Welch, Mrs. James White, Carolyn White,~ .. Marjorie Richards, Mrs. Rob- _ ert Pickett and Mrs. Thomas . Lawrence, x *&* *& Included on the guest list were Mrs. H. H. Compton, . Mrs. Edwin M. Ver Lee, Mrs. » Lee LaLone, Mrs. Floyd Tim- _ Merman, Mrs. George Mac- | Arthur, Mrs, Clyde Harmon, Mrs. Elton ‘Thomas, Mrs. Bruce Srigley and Mrs. Wil- liam Brown. - | Mrs. Arthur Ewald, Mrs. * Orton Armstrong, Elizabeth Oliver, Mrs. Levi Crivea, Mrs. * Levi Crivea Jr., Mrs. Donald « Ray Hudgins and Mrs. Rob- ; ert Lawrence completed the * guest list, . 2 «> * | Indianwood Country Club is ~ the setting for Miss -Rober- toy’s next. shower. Hostess f Dear Abby.... 9 What's DEAR ABBY: When I hear , these young housewives com- plain about cooking, I have to ‘smile. They “don’t know - what cooking is, Everything . they put on the table has come out of a can, or has already been | * prepared (sea- Tsoning and “oe or ee 4 for the March 25 event will be maid of honor Marjorie Rich- ards. Slate Elected at Longfellow President of Longfellow School PTA is Mrs. Thomas Bartle. Other officers serving with her are Mrs. Darwin Mc- Inally, vice president; Robert Dohner, father vice president, and Arbelia Burney, teacher vice president. Concluding the list are Mrs. Clifford Hickmott, recording secretary; Mrs. Lee Baker, . Corresponding secretary: Mrs. Robert Dohner, treasurer, and Mrs. Olin Simonds, historian. ____THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 Professor Keynotes Gathering | ‘Growing on Job’ Is Mairi Topic of Discussion Madison Junior High School was the scene of a Saturday * * * A welcome was extended to NSA members and guests by John Riley, president of the Chamber of Commerce. Key- noting the program with an address on the subject ‘‘Grow- ing on the Job” was Dr. El- eanor Maliche of the Univer- sity of Michigan School of Bus- iness Administration. Dr. Maliche spoke on the importance of human relations and pleasant daily contacts with fellow employes and bus- iness contacts. * * * Director of a training pro- gram for employes, Dr, Ma- iche is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Michigan. Prior to teaching for several years, she © was a secretary to Albert Idel, Robert Ripley and David O. Selznick. ANOTHER ADDRESS “It's the Law" was the sub- ject covered by Dr. Raymond J. Murphy, professor of busi- ness law at Wayne State Uni- versity. The afternoon session on filing and explanation of simplified methods and new tools available for greater ef- ficiency in filing was presided over by Seany Siders of Wa- bash, Ind. * * * Speaker for the luncheon was Mrs. Alta Evans Ede, division- al secretary of the National Secretaries Association. ‘‘Serv- ice at the Division Level’ was her topic. Mrs. Ede is a mem- ber of the Detroit Transcript Chapter. Chairman of the workshop was Lou Helen Eggleston, a graduate of Western Michigan University, who currently is working as a secretary in the sales department of Pontiac Motor Division, General Mo- tors Corp. Shower Fetes Jean McLeod Jean McLeod, bride-elect of Charlies Binder, was honored with a miscellaneous shower given in the Old Orchard drive home of Mrs. Grant Helwig. Mrs. Ralph Ensworth was co- hostess. Twenty-five guests were in- vited to the Friday event from Detroit, Utica, Drayton Plains and Pontiac. Chapter Meets Tota Eta chapter of Pi Omi- cron sorority met in the State street home of Mrs. Gabriel Flessland with Mrs. Nettie Col- lins as cohostess. Plans were discussed for a May brunch and June banquet. A dessert luncheon carried out the St. Patrick’s Day theme at the Thursday meeting. Business Women Hold Hand of Friendship Tea Tipacon Chapter of Ameri- can Business Women's Associa- tion entertained at a spring “Hand of Friendship" tea Sun- day afternoon in Hotel Wal- dron. * * a Juli¢ O’Brien and Betty Brandrup presided at a table covered with a green cloth and centered with an arrangement of green and white flowers in a St. Patrick’s Day motif. A. discussion of aims and purposes of ABWA, conducted by Lillian Laska, assisted by Mrs. Rose Franklin and Mrs. Charles Irish, stressed the so- cial activities both local and national, the educational activi- ties and beriefits to be derived from membership in ABWA. * x 9 Mrs, Michael. Siano, accom- panied by Mrs; Ted Panaretos, sang several selections. -Among the guests were Peg- gy Jones,. Eleanore Larson, ‘Clara Cutright, Joyce Hohm, Mrs. Grace: Colebrook, Mau- reen Peterson, Mrs. William Essery and Mrs. Eva Beaupre. Mrs. Edward Wynn was chairman of the event. Pontioak Cha pter Presents Workshop tor Secretaries The Pontioak Chapter of the Na- tional Secretaries Association spon- sored a workshop Saturday at Madison Junior High School. Sharing a hearty laugh during the day’s luncheon were (left to right) Dr. Eleanor Maliche of . Receiving her tag for the day in this photo is Victoria Thomas (left) of Mrs. Kay Rector of Owego drive. Year. Cooley Lake road apparently enjoyed Yoga Exercises Refresh Actress Geiss: BPI Pontiac Press Photes the University of Michigan School of Business Administration, Seany E. Siders of Wabash, Ind., Eleanor Lockman, toastmistress and Oakland County's Secretary of the and Mary her job of presenting the identification ribbons to those on their way to the workshop area. Nervous? Olivia Advises Headstands By NORA W. MARTIN PARIS (INS) — Any time you feel nervous, depressed or un- happy —try standing on your ° head. * * * That's the advice of movie actress Olivia de Havilland, who stands on her head a few minutes each day and says it works marvels for her. Miss de Havilland, wife. of Cooking? It’s Wonderful! ' DEAR ABBY: I am a man 72 years old. I retired from my business (which is a very good one) 10 years ago and gave it to my sons. They live very well from. it, Here is my complaint: They seem to forget what I did for them very quickly and do not ag? i t rad $5 Was shown every sweater in her size in stock and then de- cided. she ‘wanted the one in the window, I tried to explain that the one in the window was sun- i: i Hh of sits j i 3 j R22 2283 FS iz 3 i Bie i vi has five kids, but I can’t help it. Believe me, Abby, I have tried, but I still have it just as bad for him as.I did two years ago, In every letter you tell me, “He's taken. Forget him.” Can't you give me some REAL .GOOD ADVICE this time? SHARON K, DEAR SHARON. The advice I gave you is the best. He is taken. Forget him! - 2. * AONFIDENTIAL TO TONY AT HOWARD JOHNSON’S: It- would be much better if someone else were in the, kitchen with Dinah! * * * If you have a problém, write to Abigail Van Buren in care of The Pontiac Press. She will be to answer your letter. = French magazine executive Pierre Galante, explained: “My husband introduced me to yoga and it has helped me tremendously during the five years I've been practicing it.” Twice a week she works with ‘ a woman teacher for three- quarters of an hour before breakfast. The other days she does her yoga positions alone for 15 minutes. - * * * The “positions” include - standing on the head with hands crossed at the back of the head and the elbows touch- the floor. “Yoga,” Migs de Havilland said, “is an ancient science. Actually it combines a philoso- phy with physical exercises. For my part I only practice the physical side and I wish I »knew more about the rest. x *« “But I have found that the exercises affect you psycho- logically as well as physically. I'm less nervous and have -more energy.” MORE COMPLETE Yoga, she explained, is more complete than other exercises. * «x * “You can do it.the year ‘round and meee. All you. on, oe oe feet by 6 eet,” ' To demonstrate her point, she ‘sat down in the “lotus “You hold this position for a minute or so and, of course 5, you do special breathing.” ‘The next minute she was lying flat on the floor demonstrating yoga breathing: . “It's done in three parts,” she breathed. “‘First you fill the upper chest, then the mid- riff and finally the lower part of the lungs with air, breathing in deeply. And you empty the air in reverse order.” * *« * “Right now,” she said in getting up, “I already feel re» freshed by these two minutes of exercises.” - Lou Helen Eggleston (left), workshop chairman, and Mrs. John Duncan, president of the local associa- tion, smiled for the photographer as they prepared to make an announcement to SA members and guests attending the affair. Eighty-five secretaries attended the workshop. Will Be Held at MSU annual Clinic to Be Led by Mrs. Neldrett Mrs. Charles W. Neldrett of Mariva avenue, president of Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers, will preside at spring Michigan PTA Problem Clinic in Michigan State the the University’s Brody Hall on March 27. x * * Several Pontiac residents have been selected for major assign- ments at the event, which will draw more than 700 officers and leaders of the many local PTA organizations across the state. WORKSHOP CONSULTANT Pontiac School Superintendent Dana P. Whitmer will be con- sultant for the afternoon workshop on “The PTA and School-Public Relations.” Mrs. Wifliam Wright of Chippewa road will be con- sultant for the workshop on “Planning PTA Programs.” Mrs, Wright is chairman of the Michigan PTA program planning x * * At the clinic’s general session Dr. Clifford E. Erickson, dean ag the MSU College of Education, will talk on “The Board of Educa- tion Works for Better School Opportunities.” Dr.-Samuel A. Brownell, superintendent of Detroit Schools, will cover ‘‘The Board of Education Works With the PTA.” Twenty workshops are scheduled for the afternoon program, with a@joqts committee. ment about 3:30, (R=: “* On April 21-23 Mrs. Neldrett will preside at the annual conven- tion of the ‘Michigan Congress of PTA at Muskegon. Scouts, Brownies Will Be Invested Two Brownie troops and the Girl Scout troop sponsored by Herrington School PTA will be invested Friday at 7:30 p.m¢ Mrs. Jay Bendall will invest leaders at that time. A movie about day camp is to be shown. Mrs. Joseph Napier is neighborhood leader. Films to Be Seen Mrs. Harold A. Fitzgerald will show pictures of her trip through Africa to members and guests of Zonta Club of Pontiac March 27 at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building. The films will be shown at 8 p.m. Hold Luncheon Meetings Church Groups Gather Afternoon groups of the First Congregational Church met Friday. Standish and Pilgrim Groups met for a cooperative lunch- eon at the church. Mrs. Ray Falk reviewed the book, ‘‘How to Find the Will of God” by Kirby Page. Members of Standish Group sewed on cancer pads. Their next meeting on April 11 will be at the home of Mrs. S. J. Dunseith of North Perry street. Pilgrim Group will meet at the church on April 11. x *« * ._ Mrs. Dale Moats opened her home on West Iroquois road to members of Colonial Group. “The luncheon committee under the chairmanship of Mrs. James C. Clarke included Mrs. John Niggeman, Mrs. Hixon Cites, Mrs. Adolph Magnus and Mrs. Henry P.. Beehler. _ was assisted by Mrs. Lewis Mrs. Harry Ault showed travel pictures to members of Saybrook Group when they gathered at the home of Grady Smith on Colrain drive. Mrs. William Hurlburt and Mrs. Raymond Swaney assist- ed Mrs. Smith with the lunch- eon. Plans were made for a moth- er and daughter luncheon to be held at the church May 3. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Carmi J. Odell of Oxbow Lake road. _* * * Mayflower Group:| gathered at the home of Mrs. Malcolm Burton on Mary Day avenue for a luncheon meeting. She Henry Junior Girls) Ensemble of Pontiac Central High School gave a musical program. Mrs. George Gaches spoke on ‘The Golden Years.” Garden Club Makes Plans for Workshop Members are completing plans for a May flower work- shop to be given by Pontiac Branch of Women’s National Farm and Garden Association. *--k The local branch will be host- ess to Waterford, : Lake, chair men, respectively, of Michigan Division of the asso- ciation. All Saints Church Sets Antique Show Plans for an antique show to be held at All Saints Epis- copal Church April 8, 9 and 10, are being made by members of Guild Six. When members met Thurs- day in Stevens Hall, Mrs, Roy Lewis and Mrs. Harry Griffith were cohostesses. Mrs, Robert Tricker, general chairman of the April show, and Mrs. Wil- Accountant to Talk Gerald C. Schroeder; presi- dent of Michigan Association of Certified Public _ Account- ants, will speak on “Financial meet at 7 p.m. in Women’s — (City Club, CA, . -awetve HE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 LUNCHEONS Honored at Shower B h K | d Saatestbe Gram | ar tom em » sa-brother Knows Claire Needs Stirring Up Popular Prices street entertained 22 guests at a pink and blue shower Friday eve-| By MURIEL LAWRENCE © | then ran to the kitchen door |Chip what he wanted — a ill be rother RIKER FOUNTAIN ning honoring Mrs. DeBere Lawr- One evening Claire's homework where he waited eagerly, his /banging about. aaa brings Prd Foe ha ther whe 3 a | Saw sfvent. Chip is a better friend to his| Yee! Berra?” - Si Ss 5 : ; ; . In the living room Claire’s moth-| sister than her parent Let Sally get all moon Another. | * * er said to her, husband, “Chip is|’ 5 S are wuanb wane Poa She was warthaiy tracing a riv-|teasing his sister again, Stop him, ue at ae gomething vee brothers saa cae belg Bs ‘er in green when her-little brother grabbed her other crayons. As she needed them to define the map’s towns, mountains and other fea- tures, her face tightened in anger. But after a moment, she went back to work on her river. Whereupon her little brother rushed back, gave her:a sharp poke in the ribs, and yelled, -WIGGS Special! Lf, Y Jim. He's got to leave her alone “Ge ee ee” little boy, it makes him uncomtfort-| z= 8 -_ : wes . able. So he teases Clair constantly; Where we are blind to Bill's ex- in the hope of wringing a genuine|@@gerated pride and Sally’s dream- been allowed to bait his sister again, happened in her, Her’ anger would have overwhelmed her impression that she must always be “kind” to her little brother. She'd have ‘irigid self-control. As a healthy at her wasteful infatuation. I wish he hadn't been. If he'd iness, our children will instantly register them as undesirable, and by their spirited behavior’ demand correction. While Claire's parents ignore her over-controlled shyness, her little brother is waging good battle response from her. * * * We blind adults can learn much from the way brothers and sisters treat each other. If Bill gets ali puffed up over a fine thing would have “Tve got your crayons!” He ‘jumped from her chair and given) making the school ball team, it ‘against it. ‘Apple Layer Mom Dies | {& in Batter Just Before fe mth a Surprise Celebration ||-OQ=¢,... ; Mrs. Wolte Serves Should Dad Keep|{/{, \ SIZES Imported — Guaranteed Accurate Fruit Filled Cake Anniversary Gifts or WI ~ 14-48 Return Them? & Warm or Cold By JANET ODELL WALL BAROMETER Regular Price $5.95 Pontiac Press Home Ecitor An Importer’s Over-Stock Brings You In the past, we have given you “Thi in lue! irecipes for apple cake, but always. “Jat Cerone wales ithe apples have been on top of the cake. This time they are sand- $ wiched in between layers of cake batter. - ° | Mrs. Richard Wolfe, a rather new resident of the city, belongs ito the Pontiac General Hospital | Auxiliary and the Zonta club. She ienjoys a good game of Bridge. APPLE CAKE By Mrs. Richard Wolfe 4 egas 1 cup sugar 14 cup cooking oil to cups st flour teaspoon baking powder } apples, sliced Be your own cweatharman—predica tomorrow’s weather today! This attractive Wall Barometer is made by one of Germany's most makers of fine weather instruments . . . and is fitted with a simplified, genuine Aneroid movement. Cased in a highly polished, mahogany finished wood frame, with enameled metal face having open center to show inner construction. Beveled glass front and polished brass fittings. 5'/2-inch diameter. Cinnamon us back in dresses with shape,| in the notes? Please tell ue what js Opi 2 " to ” Beat eggs well. Add sugar gradu- Semi-fit is for the robust figure. ally and beat well; add oil and Answer: If any of the presents ibeat again. Add sifted flour and ibaking powder and beat well. | Pour half of batter into greased '7%4x12 inch pan. Cover with sliced apples, sugar, cinnamon and chopped nuts. Add remaining bat- {jter. Sprinkle with more sugar, cin- 24 WEST HURON STREET Open Monday and Friday ’til 9 P.M. ®eeeee eevees- ee ee can women have worked for a figure and shouldn't hide it under a sack-look. In fact the first reports from Italy say Rome wants Members Greeted by Figure Group Bowers, Mrs. Clifford Douglas, Mrs. Gene Ellis, Mrs. Harry Wal-/¢ By EMILY POST “Dear Mrs. Post: I had planned a 50th wedding anniversary cele- bration for my parents. Invitations were sent out two weeks prior to the party. Several days after the invitations were sent my. mother was stricken with a heart attack and died. “The affair was, of course, can- celed. However, several of my parents’ friends sent presents be- fore the invitations were recalled. Semishaped coat-dress suits the stocky figure better than f thet byrpones the rotting ae I would like to know what should gethes, be done about these presents. “Should they be returned or dees my Dad keep them and write thank-you notes for them? If the latter ts correct, does he make any mention of my mother Some designers believe Ameri- ‘ ‘ Sew two pretty versions of this Mrs, Clyde Arvis, Mrs. Edward CARRY-OUT SUNDAE $ Sle NONE HIGHER! You Get All This: You'll Find No Finer Food or More Accommodating Service Than oat... . Our Guarantee .. . A Complete Wave for $3. 15. Nene Higher! Ld e e * » ° * * e @ ee ee oe | * = ° 8 a = « Sd * * ® ¢ e ® e a > é ¢ ® ° e 7 * .* No Appointment Necessary ponent Woodward at Square Lake Road | HOLLYWOOD 782 North Saginaw St. Over Baszley’s for namon and nuts, lace and Mrs. Richard Wallace |and . He would add that his graceful dress. Choose a low-neck-, | Bake 30 minutes at 350 Cegrees.|were received as new members of |great regret is that his beldved|line for summer; the high neck * Serve warm or cold. Fashion Your Figure Club. Mary will not be able to, share|with sleeves for year ‘round. Sew-' e : Mariam Lawrence and Mrs. Carl|his appreciation of it. r ing is so very easy with our Printed | e The average American housewife|H. Rehm received gold club pins Pattern. e° spends 15 hours 41 minutes each|at the Thursday meeting in Adah| “Dear Mrs. Post: Is there any| Printed Pattern 4620: Misses’ i? week cleaning her home, outside|Shelly Library. Trophy winner of|/Way to hasten the departure of/sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 32, 44, 46, * of dishwashing. the week was Mrs. Ralpk Patnode.|Someone who stands on and on in|48. Size 16 requires 3% yards of *. Whether You Want | the hallway talking? She insists|39inch fabric. e,' she has to go but doesn’t.” Printed directions on each pat- | °.' a tern part. Easier, accurate. °., . ALL PE or9 50c in coins for are pattern a —add five cents for each pattern Pied COMPLETE Di N N ER > - jfor 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne °° ; : Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, e - {137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th) ; ora St, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and style number. Emerson PTA Has Election of Officers -| Mrs, Lawrence Curtis is pres- ident of Emerson School PTA. Serving with her are Mrs, John be entirely! Flanagan, vice president; Law-| rence Curtis, father vice president; Mrs. Gerald Livington, teacher vice presirent; Mrs. L. D. Mc- Lauchlin, secretary, and -Mrs. Keith Mortimore, treasurer. Other are Mrs. Peter Larsen, It_ will historian; Mrs. Chester Welch, | parliamentarian; Mrs. Donald| Mrs. P. F. Hoops of Chicago was/Sweet, Mrs. Thomas “McKeever and Mrs, Albert Stevens, council | delegates, and Mrs. Donald Agar, alternate. la guest of June Group of First Church Friday in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Nel- lie Orr and Mrs. E. G. Winn. They iwere assisted by Mrs. R. C. Cum- BEAUTY J|imings and Mrs. C. M. Saunders.|\ Church Unit Meets SHOP Aud 2 Pramywriel tecting at|With Mrs, Redmond] FE 8-3560 [First Presbyterian Church. Mrs.) y4-¢ william Van Jaarsveld and A. L. Drury participated in the program and Mrs. Cummings mod- ! ruary-December Group of First erated a current events discussion. Presbyterian Church Friday in the Ella Reitz were guests of Feb Specialized Coat Cleaning PLUS AGAINST Your precious coat’s safe in the skilled hands of our careful craftsmen. They know just how to treat each fabric to bring back its original color and texture. They're experts, too, in restoring every fashion detail, give special attention to sleeves, shoulders and trims, make sure hemlines are even and full sweep of smart coat lines is restored. And remember, no more mothballs — we. mothproof all dry cleaning and give you a year’s insurance against moth damage ~ FREE! Be sure Care- ful Dan cleans them, tho’, because other methods remove this protection. DRIVE-INS W. 12 Mile Rd., Berkley a Birmingham * MOTH DAMAGE! : Motorway drive home of Mrs. Marvin Redmond. Mrs. vo Cousins and Mrs. George Redd were cohostesses. Participating in the program were Mrs. James Covert, Mrs. Randall Spurgeon and Mrs, Wil- liam H. Marbach. Pastor Addresses Missionary Society The Rev. Albert Wiedlich of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, Red- jj ford, spoke to members of Wom en’s Missionary Society of St. John Lutheran Church. Guests were Mrs, Edith Lonn, Mrs, Arthur Haglund and Mrs. William Park, Hostesses for the | group were Mrs, Oscar Bloomquist and Mrs, John Berglund, Sorority Gathers Mrs. Donald DeVoe spoke on “The Qualities of Friendship” when Alpha Omega Chapter of Beta) Sigma Phi sorority met at the De- Voes’ Center street home. . Complete Beauty Service Serving Union Lake Area HAIR STYLING PERMANENTS HAIR CUTTING Mary Lu Pears, Owner ‘LU PEARS Beaut Shop Beauty Sh s ; wet aa " COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE ee be smart-look smart; A new coat? WHY ? HAVE Yours) CLEANED ! Quality Soars Since 1929 719 W. Huron . FE 4-1536 I be smart-look smart PRE-EASTER SPECIAL! Have Your Furniture Re-Upholsteded Now | Save25s.tod00 Dress up your home for Spring — with lovely re-upholstered furniture . . . and at wonderful savings, too, during our Pre-Easter Special. RELIABLE WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIALS Our expert work- manship assures a top-quality job and “like new” appearance. EASY BUDGET TERMS or 99 DAYS CASH William Wright 270 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0558 Choose from our complete line of latest materials: Mattelesse, and Nylon, Frieze, many more, ' Furniture Makers . and Upholsterers Serving Pontice Over 24 Years SPECIAL! 14 Cu. Ft. Norge Refrigerator Fully Automatic Defrosting 81 Lb. SEPARATELY — CONTROLLED . NO DOWN PAYMENT 2 YEARS 10 PAY 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH NO PAYMENTS UNTIL MAY Wayne Gabert Your Electrical Appliance Specialist Friday & Mendsy 121M. Saginaw St, Rare Bottom Freeser Medel Avaliable Same Price oP. M. \ Le aid FE 3.6189 Ae SS Ve Oa ss bel oe Ee ees ee ae ae ee ' THIRTEEN THE PONTIAC:PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 ‘Spring Forecast in Hair Fashion Your hair style will be your secret weapon. Fresh, vivid, and a. de-awake sparkle will be yours with any one of our adaptations of the “Siren Lift” for Spring '58. BETTY LE CORNU STUDIO : Air Conditioned 2062 W. Huron —S FE 2-522] Home Organization Provides Leisure Time} By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Some years ago while my) broth. er-in-law was paying us a visit he had a serious accident. In fact, he was the man who came to dinner and remained for several months! * * * As soon as he could navigate again he insisted on doing the housework, This was a most wel- icome idea to me since I had no It’s Near Easter Parade Time! SEND YOUR GARMENTS IN EARLY » We'll make last year’s wardrobe look like new! Easter is almost here! Send us your =|maid and was pregnant. His urge was partly noble, but sprung in a large part from that masculine idea that housework is a breeze if women will just use a little organization. This was his one chance for a real test. I was delighted to turn the whole thing over to him no matter what he proved! It was interesting to watch him ‘make. a game of doing efficiently. Ours was an uncom- plicated houshold and after the first few days he wag able to finish all of the cleaning and mar- keting, fix lunch and lay the ~|\foundation for the evening meal | by noon. * * * I must admit that he organized i the work well and did it well and ithat all of us could use a bit .more of such efficiency in our housework. However, I amused |myself with the speculation of how iganization would have fared had he been confronted with a few of the following situations: }| A son’s broken arm, plumbing trouble, unexpected guests, mea- sles, a daughter’s problems about ‘her love affairs, a husband re- turning home with the flu, trouble jwith the washing machine, and iso forth, -he would react and how his or-| Allows Housewife to Indulge in Interests, Hobbies oe %, FO ER Not only must a wo is a nurse and tutor, too. She is dietician and health officer. The woman in the home is nurse and tutor. She does the work her- self or manages whatever help she may have. She plans the meals. She is purchasing agent and as such buys most of the food and other goods used by the family. man do housework but she She’s responsible for the well being |: of all of the members of her family and for their pets. When iliness strikes, she is on 24-hour duty. OTHER REQUIREMENTS In order to create a pleasant Woman Earns Admiration With Thoughtful Behavior be an- que decorator, She also wants to a_real companion to her husband and this means some interests. To top it off she must be gracious and lovely, dress well on a small budget and be an ex- home atmosphere she must also leisure and keeping up with his| I am very much interested in household organization, not so much from the standpoint of spotiess and speckless housekeep- ing as for the purpose of pro- viding the woman in the home with time for some indulgence in personal interests and hob- bies. A woman's happiness and that of her family depend on a gay and serene home atmosphere. This is practically impossible to main- tain if her life is hectic or if she is pushed down by life, one weary or frustrated day after another. x * * How can you keep your sense of humor and your poise if your nerves are screaming, your back aches, your head is splitting or your face is drawn with fatigue? These can come from too much work and too little rest and also from the boredom which has its roots in never changing routine. _|FEW SUGGESTIONS Here are a few suggestions which will help you: 1. Have a bulletin board on the kitchen wall. This is a splendid place to leave notes for your fam- ily and haye them leave notes for you. Here you, can keep a master list of things you need as they occur to you or when you see that some staple is getting low. menus for the next day and to put down what would be called “Orders for the Day’’ in the Army. In the home it lists the activities on the day’s agenda. * * * 2. It is a great help to plan menus for several days at one time. With modern refrigeration you can shop for several days during one trip to market. getting the children off to school and your husband off to -work is over, sit down with a second cup of coffee or tea and organize your day’s activities, they may visit with you while you prepare dinner. 6. Sit when preparing vegetables or ironing. Be sure that your kitch- en sink and kitchen tables and ironing boards and so forth are the correct height for you. If you would like to have my leaflet about household organiza- tion, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 62 ‘The Married Wo- man." Address Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press. * * * Tomorrow: Achieving Popularity.” “Here Are Tips for Flora Shelly Group Conducts Meeting | Mrs. Joyce Jones, Mrs. Olive Lord, Mrs. Hazel Hubbard and Mrs, Preston Parks were hos- tesses to members of Flora Shelly Group of First Presbyterian Church at a dinner meeting in the church. . Plans were made to assiet sf an April 2 luncheon for Presby- terial, Grace Clark, Mrs. Allan Monroe and Edith Bandeen took part in the program. - WILLIAM K. COWIE Custom Upholstery 25 Years of Practical Experience = be aoe Seuth ef (lrg! * Offer Good by Appointment Simply cut coupon below, bring coupon with you. With a purchase of a styled setting you will receive Styled Hair Cut Free! eee ——— 1 This coupon entitles bearer to la free Styled Hair Cut when | she purchases a Styled Setting , 1 for herself. Ce It's a convenient spot to jot down Free HAIRCUT Coy» eS Qa 8. As soon as the turmoil of | FEderal 8-9639 17 and TEENAGERS ,17.0r2_ Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday HAIRCUTS $100 donnell sa) . Michigaw: MIRACLE MILE With or Without Appointment. Hours: 10 to 9 pert hostess, * * * It is essential to organize our housework in order to hold the time required for routine duties to a minimum. An executive once told me, “If I didn’t organize myjcake is baking or the soup sim- work so that I have some leisure,|mering. Then, too, when your fam- I would never get anything done. * ily comes home in the afternoon family’s wardrobe for “good-grooming” care! Every garment will be cleaned to a sparkling-like newness, all spots will me removed, minor repairs made, and our pressing is immaculate! FATHER & SON DRY CLEANERS 4. Take advantage of as many of the modern appliances as you can afford. 5, Keep at least one comfortable chair in the kitchen. This will give you little rest periods while the She Does Favors So Graciously That You Feel You Are Helping Her Custom Drapery DEPARTMENT Tailored for your room, with an added touch - of elegance because they come from Spencer's. New, smart and exciting materials await you. Our Color Stylists and Home Comments will be glad to bring samples to your home. (Ne # course). Choose from Fortisan, Fiberglas, Cotton, oe Cornice Boards, Traverse Rods and Bamboo. By RUTH MILLETT You have to admire a woman— Who, when other women are being catty about one who isn’t present, says, “I LIKE her.” Who, though she looks far too young to be a grand- mother, is so much prouder of her grandchildren than lof her own youthful looks that you hear about the grandchildren as soon as+ | Easter Special! ee from an operation or a long Office and Plant Hours: ou meet her. Who keeps quiet about the - Be ready to join the oat Jostyn Ave. «=» FE 26424 pamtccpm |” ae Easter Parade ... with - VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES Who is just recovering) ' whe can do you a favor in such a lovel y Annaliese $ , , — - a gracious way that it seems as SPECIAL illness and doesn't want tolthough you are doing HER one. PERMANENT ........ talk about it. Who can let her husband tell | Who can watch calvries without: talking about it. Who can hear her husband say another woman is beautiful, with- out finding ‘some flaw in her or making any kind of catty remark. Who mentions her age as cas- ually as she mentions any other fact about herself. Who can bring an unexpected caller into a room that is not in apple pie order, and not apologize for the’ way. it looks. Who has the knack of introducing two persons so that each feels just as important as the other. about an experience she shared with him, without interrupting once to make a correction or an addition or to say, ‘You are leav- ing out the most important part.” Who can know a juicy bit of scandal and keep it to herself. Who, when she says, ‘I really| must be going,” gets up and goes. | Who can be an excellent house- keeper herself, without being criti- ‘cal of other women's housekeeping. | Who looks as neat and well-; groomed when you see her at the | supermarket as when you see her at a party. OTHER MACHINE, MACHINELESS, $5 AND COLD WAVES ......................., from Styled Hair Cutting — from $1.50 Annaliese Beauty Shop (Over Tasty Bakery) Open Friday Evening ANNUAL SPRING 20% to 40% DISCOUNT on the PURCHASE of YOUR CEMETERY MEMORIAL! One of Pontiac’s Leading Memorial Componies Offer This Opportunity Until May 30th. Prices Include Lettering, Floral Carving and Delivery to Your Cemetery Lot. Add Foundation Cost Only. Ss FLOOR COVERINGS 3511 Elizabeth Leke Rd. FE 4.7775 80', N. Saginaw St. St. Patrick's Discount Day Visit Our Unfinished Furniture Dept. © CHESTS @ TABLES @ And 115 e e © VANITIES STOOLS DES Monuments MARK EVERY GRAVE MAGI-LUX PAINT | 250 Req. $695 Gel $995 Gal. Grave Markers SPECIAL ONLY Your Satisfaction Guaranteed by Over 25 Years 24” long, 12” wide, 4” high. LATEX PAINT Regular $55 value. Now is the time to bu t $995 _ Experience SALE PRICED ot.. +39” ~ | Reg. $5.95 ° NOW ONLY CAL. Sale Priced at $2950 - ; ° uit Cu Cotton it . MONUMENTS LOW AS $165.00 ACT Oo 24" long, 12” wide, 6” high. Quilt Cup Cotton Longline WALL TILE COVERING ) NONE Secucivs ea teas . Make your selection SALE PRICED at 49 54” High, Special Price € Run, while display is complete - Bali’s longline is the finest undercover agent you can ONLY Ft. and Memorial Day erec- select. You'd never believe that a cotton bra could look ‘a0 beautiful . . . so fashionable. That’s because you've never seen such fabulous fabrics developed exclusively for Bali and magnifi used by Bali. It is lightly boned for comfort-i 1; su tion is assured. All our finest granite ° memorials in Barre ) ROX MASONRY PAINT for WET BASEMENTS Lj rb with two extra $5 65 cal ROBERT #, HESTHER P ice et OE er end WALLS Sane mos ee tare eae e with qu undercups, embroide . : , ‘Da , marquisette cup tops. it in our fitting room: feel Easy to Apply, ONLY what we mean. Cotton broadcloth in white. A cup, $2 to 38; B cup. 32 to 40: C cup. 32 to 42. 5%. D Cups, 32 to 42... 5.95 Northern Granite. All stock completely sound and flawless. Guaranteed everlasting and weather resistant. 9x12 FELT BASE RUG *4” NOW ONLY 3DO IT YOURSELF Ratt MART and Sat.—! Monday & Friday—9 - 9 Plenty of Free Parking — 256 So. SAGINAW Federal 2-1026 a i i i i = SS See Se ae > ; j plus a brilliant pet 36” LONG, 10” WIDE, 16” HIGH _ Regularly Priced at $160.00 a REDUCED TO $128.00 OFFICE AND PLANT OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M—SUN. 1-TO 3 P.M. PONTIAC GRANITE & MARBLE CO. GEO, E, SLONAKER & SONS 269 Oakland Avenue Pontiac 17, Mich. | Reg. $5.95 Visit Our Downstairs Corset Department Our expert corsetiers will assist you to a proper fit. Charge Accounts Invited — BOBETTE SHOP | 14 N. Saginaw : (Next to Strand Theater) EES SE - _— . ' " Phone FE 2-4800 <0 FOURTEEN Crash Ordeal Kills Airman Second Flier Survives Accident, 4-Day Trek Through Wilderness CASTLE AIR FORCE BASE, Calif, @—One of two airmen who struggled through a snowy wild- erness for four days after a High Sierra plane crash died last night. Kenneth Riggs, Merced County coroner, said he believed pneu- monia brought on by the 15-mile trek: caused the death of Joel Parker Blair, 19, Lewisburg, Mo. He scheduled an autopsy for later today. * x * Blair and Gail Robert Stiles, 20, | an airman from Long Beach, | Calif., were flying to visit Stiles’ father and stepmother at China Lake, Calif., when they crashed late. last Monday on 10,000-foot Slate Mountain 35 miles éast of Porterville, Calif. The two Castle Air Force Base airmen hiked through waist - deep gnow down the mountainside un- when they met a her- mit Indian at the Tule Indian feservation. They had shared/set up by Congress recently gave)juts into space. ’ I d sugar! th ahead—over loud and bitter| In addition, chunks of the east. ee eee day bemare 18 anloppest front’s sandstone walls have been, Predicts a Life of Clover for You Smart Shoppers they found the day before if an @bandoned trailer. ~“For a while it didn't look like We were gonna make it,” the two, | pen} in: good physical condi- said after reaching civiliza- fion. “We were a little beat and a le mang * * * Stiles was 2 pe siete rented ingle-engine light plane when oa took off for China Lake. He gaid the plane tore into a tree gn the peak after bad weather forced them to a low altitude. County Births {Hal Boyle Says: umnist might never know if‘ he didn't open his mail: That since Ireland lost its great! oak forests, most shillelaghs now come from Germany. * * * That there are more than-1% United States, which probably ex NEW YORK ®—Things a col- million people named Smith in the -'are called ‘‘pasteboards” is: plains why your neighbor may ‘prefer to be known as Sthythe. That a poll recently showed the javerage corporation president is) . (50 years old, a college graduate, earned $68,000 a year, and his fa- vorite card game is bridge. Hope ithey never poll us poker players! That the reason playing cards They | WASHINGTON \h — The U-S. Capitol is bursting at the seams, but lots of people don't want to let out the waist line. For more than two decades there have been proposals to ex- tend the center section of the 165- year-old Capitol’s east front. under way to advance the east front by 32.6 feet. A commission opposition. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright said it would be ‘‘absolutely pro- fane’’ to tamper with the Capitol. * * * Mrs. Frederick Groves, presi- dent-general of the Daughters of “vandalism.” Historical societies adopted pro- test resolutions and sent them to Washington. But thus far the stand-patters have been repulsed at every turn. The Senate last Tuesday beat back a move to hold up the remodel- ing plans temporarily. Foes of the project haven't given up. They're still hopeful of win- Following is a list of children born to Oakland County couples Alexander Smith _RNI ) that! Littte did he know. as recorded in the County Clerk's — ——_—— a ae office. Only the father’s name is 9occcccces Ceecececccccce, Eski Used. _ imo + eotiac Alvis U. Cramer. 134 W. Ruteers Electric Fans Joseph A, Allen, 3138 Briges Stanley C. Allen, 304 eer 77 Frank M. Anderson Jr.. 36 Maple Fred J. Bafley, 2373 Oakway Keith A, Baker, 2064 Kohler as 95 ] rt L. Ronald R. Black, 467 Moore Herbert Black. 325 fewerd MeNeill Ralph M powers. 683 W. Cornell i C. Brooks, 2300 Shimmons . Short, 117 Center Fs orene. 900 Arayle Delwyn W. Saiter, 4032 Wenonah bert A. wis aot = A, Hamiey a hari 223 EF. Wilson aDeser iy So tines Vista Charies W. ye etibner. iit Cusnonoeque Clarksten Marvin FE. Puller, $153 Frankwill Charlies P. — 4401 Elmdale ‘Theodore ning passage for a bill by Sen. H. U.S. Capitol Building Bursting at Seams Now, there is a concerted drive; the American Revolution, called it) would permit consideration of oth- er plans to add working space to the Capitol. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 are made by pasting together two paper. he: * * * That -women's hosiery they call him a show-off? That smoking at one time was|locks. prohibited in New England tav- * erns. Today it’s all you can do ing up in church. lieve?—there are more than 1,000/ing. islands in the Thousand Islands. in Ecuador. * * * clusion: spinster is a woman. who knows|Mor.” all the answers, but nobody asks her the questions.” thin sheets of specially ‘reated|gious sect in the country is the iety of Primitive Friends. It a family. fewer than a dozen members. now That King Henry II of France was a real key executive. comes in 450 tints and shades.|yiaced three locks on ‘the door of Ysn’t that odd, considering that|one of his mistresses, And his key if a man buys a black car today|_one of the first known master That: if you want to become to keep some people from light-jrich and famous, here’s a way: simply invent a household ‘paint That — what can a man _ be-|that will smell pleasant while dry- | That Irwin H. Kramer of the And most Panama hats are made|Hotel Edison, after talking to 10,- 000 guests, has reached this con-' “People will believe any- That Robert Q. Lewis says: “A|thing if you tell them it's a ru- That spring gardeners might Most Shillelaghs Coming From Germany|" That probably the smallest reli- weeds cost the national economy | five billion dollars a year, ‘or $100, He| That you’re an oldtime movie fan if you can remember the name of the first actor to win an Oscar. It was Emil Jannings of keys—alone would open all three|Germany. | That Utah has the highest birth rate and the lowest death rate. py payments, de UNSELLO nS and attord, cMIOAN CuEDIT et hew mech or hew many yeu owe. - NO SECURITY OR pepoesans REQUIRED Member American Assoctation ae ple Coursellors ONE PLACE T “Let 9 Years of Credit Counseling Experience Assist You” Hours: Daily 9 to S. Wed. & Sat. 9 to | Evenings by App't. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS = 41%) 6. Saginaw Above Uskiand T bulging spoons. Stole Jailhouse Spoons DALLAS, Tex. (INS) — A pris- oner who had served a sentence for theft in city jail was being | transferred to county jail on an- other charge when a jailer no- ticed the man’s clothing was in strange places. A frisking revealed he was trying to leave with 18 city - owned Pontiac — TODD'S SHOE STORE footwear for qite Entire Family 20 West Huron St. FE 2-3821 * * * Backers of the extension say it is needed to (1) provide more) room for Congress, (2) bring the center section in line with the | House and Senate wings and (3); provide a full base for the great dome whose eastern curvature: dropping away. Thus, say the ad-, vocates, now would be the best; time to undertake one big expan-| sion project. The sandstone would be replaced with marble. All of this would cost about $10,100,000, or so it’s figured. However, Sen. Robertson (D- Va) argued it might cost much more—upwards of 110 millions. * * * Capitol architects have long ad- vocated extending the east front. In 1863, Thomas U. Walter report- ed to Congress: “The eastern portico of the old building. will certainly be taken down at no very distant day, and the front be extended eastward."’ | | | | ! | L. Base Visenta Franco, sie Drayton Charles §. Simpson, 6256 Andersonville ‘William Domin Jr., 4625 Pinedale Draytes Plains Edward D. Allen, 3605 Hatfield Eugene L. Daniel, 2245 Fortress TOO SMALL? PAY 1 CHECK the Wrought Iron SMOKERS hoe even harder if they realized a Brand New 1958 Maytag Wringer Washer Reales $129.95 = $8 NO MONEY DOWN! Who Snap Up Our Crop of St. Patrick Day Values! You'll Find impressive Markdowns in Every Dept. /” Open Tonight ‘til 9 Buy Now for the Only % to Ge — - oe Ce Our t rformer with full fami! ove 1 hee ee if time ments and other bills eat away your fied live y Ve otis ‘Pioseana papchack G Seaboard “Package Loan" oar help With removable ash tray, Only aed A and exclusive gyra- _ o Beat prem i agers you KEEP more of it Oe e! Donald J tin, 3452 Norris " N - All: Stee! gemes 7 Syeden, 1606, Wolten Bivé With our “Package Loan" you may tie your bills Brand New 1958 Pl apr TRAINS Train ae o nn ws Ge together and have the advantage of one account at one place and one convenient, sensible monthly payment instead of the many you may have now. fagner, “4618 Meigs Lioyd A. Winegarner, 4211 Dixie Hey. Wilbert C. Glidden. 3842 Dill James M. —- —_ Roseberry . 4700 Sylvester Lanco Maytag Fully Automatic “TT' fae Seen yin De ees So why magnify your paycheck shortage? Ask DRYER aus, & Ete. Be oe Seaboard about EXTRA CASH NOW! Fans. Sit Coserosra oy = $ Siew |! SEMBOARD co 177 Tuict Me.” Alona 18 Br pasos COMPANY Only Get $25 to $500 in Record Time! 1185 North Perry Street 2 Miles Northeast of Downtown Pontiac Next to the New A & P Supermarket Phone FE 8-9661 “Parking No Problem” COCCCCCOCCO COC COO COLO EO A gentle circle-of-heat dries safely When marriage as last makes a man happy, It's probably his daughter's . . . By the time a woman says to her phone-pal, “Now, I don't want to mention any names... .,"’ they both under- stand who she’s gonna talk about. ~—Earl Wilson. “The Warmth, the Comfort, the Cleanliness— ‘Twas Like a Breath of Spring!”- - - clothes minutes, in only 26 Imported From Germany BAVARIAN Reg. $2.50 FRUIT PLATES 87 ¢ 45 te Ge Versatile Hardwood CAMP CHAIR Hardwood frames, durable water- repellent striped canvas. ce 7 7 15 te Ge Brand New 1958 Maytag Fully Automatic WASHER Now $ Only All fabric, wash speeds! 2 spin ccdst Suds saver, Imported From Italy Venetian IDY Reg. $2.00 DISHES 87 ¢ 50 te Ge With = || Trade ] New MOBILHEAT 7 wee Er-v8 MAPLE Bunk Beds Regular $34.50 19 Imported 7-Piece LIQUOR Be $150 SETS 87* Plastic Full Size LAWN RAKES “Shure and it was more than ‘The Luck sof the Irish’ that brought about the better qualities of New Mobilheat Furnace Oil with additive RT-98. 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FLASH- Reg. $1.95 came and box ng. hat zt All-Purpose Utility TROUBLE. *ee. $1.95 LIGHTS Incl cord, Only 14 _ | Attention... — . § COAL USERS Order Your Coal in Lots of Two Ton or More and SAVE 50° .4,, ce * @ + _ THE PON TIAC PRESS" MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FIFTEEN County Register of Deeds — Microfilming All Records ment is mailed back to the owner the next day. By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Soon Daniel T. Murphy Jr., Oak- land County Register of Deeds, will have so much empty office space he won't know what to do with it. This unusual situation for a coun- ty which is growing by leaps and bounds, is made possible by a new process of microfilmign the tens of thousands of records stored by Murphy’s office * * * “If we hadn't undertaken this process,’ explains Murphy, ‘‘we would have been forced out of our office in the next two years be- cause of lack of space." Oakland County is the second Michigan county -to put its real es- ~ tate records on film. Wayne County was the first. Both counties are the leaders in the country of using this modern space-saving process. It is a relatively simple sys- tem of taking g picture of an 8 by 13-inch real estate document, such as a mortgage, and coming out with a negative one-half inch by five-sixteenths. * * * When this is done of the 5,500 books now on hand, and the doc- uments that pour in daily, Murphy says all records will be stored in a 20-foot row of filing cabinets, five _feet high and four feet wide. This compares to two floors of cumbersome shelves packed solid- ly with huge binder after binder of documents, ° . Many ask what good is a mini- ature negative of one of. these documents if it must be referred to? You won't be ruining your eyesight because viewers blow them up to 30 and 40 times this size. “Without a doubt,’’ Murphy ex- claimed, ‘‘the greatest asset of this system is the space it will save.” * * * Not to be overlooked is that Oakland County stands to save $20,000 since doing away with its old photostating system. This had been used for copying records since 1938, photostating,”” Murphy said. * x * It was when the county's huge and complicated photostat machine started to show signs of breaking down, that Murphy looked to mi- crofilming. “It would have cost $8,500 for a new photostater,” the register re- marked, ‘“‘but al] our new micro- filming equipment cost only about $7,600." It cost the county 11 cents per ‘page for photostating, Murphy suid. Microfilming costs run a half cent per page. When the 400 documents that cross the office counter daily are run through the dual film-a-record, itwo exposures are taken simulta- MICRO-FILMING MACHINE — Every real estate document which passes over the Oakland County Register of Deeds office counter will eventually be run through this dual film-a-record ma- chine. It takes but a split second for micro-filming supervisor Marvin D. Bandlow (seated) to run each of the documents through. Each document will have two pictures taken during this split sec- ond. Register of Deeds Daniel T. Murphy Jr. looks on. oe rds “Included in the saving will be” $12,000 in paper used under the old _ neously of . each document by means of two cameras. This provides one picture for fil-| ing in the register’s office, and a second, a “security roll,” in case! the first is lost, stolen or destroyed by fire. * * * It takes microfilming supervisor Marvin D. Bandlow, of 49 E. Col- gate St., but 40 minutes to film an average day’s receipt of 400) docyments, F The rest of his time is devoted) | to filming the backlog of thousands of photostats. When all are on film, a furnace will claim the old rec- . CLERKS CHECKING FILMS film is stored in ‘‘jackets” or rolls after process- ing, clerks check them to see if they are true and clear copies of the original ~*~ ee Ap ev Music Man Success on Broadway Meredith Wi Wholesomen By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (®#—Music man Meredith Willson, who proved that wholesomeness can pay off on Broadway, is a cleancut Iowa boy (356) who doesn't gloat over his success. Although well he might. Wasn't his show, ‘‘Music Man,” once dropped by the hit-making production team of Feuer and Martin? Didn’t CBS bigwigs de- cline to back the show and predict jt would be a flop? Didn't Victor, Columbia and Decca turn down chances to buy the record album rights? The answer to all three is yes. It is also true that ‘Music Man” is a solid smash, that the backers will get back their investment ten- fold and the Capitol album is sell- ing like crazy. Smug? Not our boy Willson, the pride of Mason City. “I’m not sure I could have done ‘Music Man’ one day sooner than 1 did,” said Willson, a one-man gang who wrote music, lyrics and book for the show. {‘I wouldn't be surprised if it didn’t take % years of living." Willson took his show, which he called “The Silver Triangle,”, to Feuer and Martin in 1953: * fli over it,” the author re- éalls, “and Cy Feuer renamed it The Music Man.'” - Ernie Martin came to Hollywood to aid Willson in. the rewrite. But "the seript) worsened initead oflwa \ ‘ \ Ison Proves ess Can Pay getting better. The deal was called off. Wilson went baci: to the piano. Still obsessed by the story of a con man who sells musical in- struments to citizens of a small town, he continued working on his own. It was hard work, and he turned out 38 songs, of which 17 ended up in the show. _ Martin offered to hire him to write the score for a new musical. Willson was tempted, but he couldn’t part with the ‘Music Man.” Exactly one year later, ‘‘Music Man” and star Robert - Preston were the hits of Broadway. He called producer Kermit Bloomgarden in New York. The producer hadn't heard of Willson, ‘but the Feuer and Martin connec- tion made him listen. Willson ahd his wife flew to New York for a midnight audition. They sold it. Motor-Vehicle Deaths Top Million Since ‘99 WASHINGTON — Between 1899, -!when the first motor-vehicle traffic datality occurred in New York see: killed in traffic acci- This death toll is nearly three |times the population of Denver and is more than the fatalities suffered wars. to|City, and 1957 there were 1,168,-| CUTTING THE FILM — In basic step in micro-filming county real estate records, Mrs. Ruby Brown, of cuts the 2,400 images off the 16 mm. ron ot “People have a kick out of burning one mortgage,” Murphy remarked, “but what a bonfire this one will be.” After the 2,400 images on a 100 feet of 16 mm. film are developed by Bandlow, the images are cut and placed in five by eight-inch “jackets” or cards. Each one of these cards contain 100 documents. The jackets are kept in the office \for reference, while the second roll of film becomes the ‘“‘security roll.” : * * * This new process is so fast, Mur-' — Before each are cut. document. Here this the third film and places 29 Going St., As Bob in Moscow Will Testify There’s Hope for Russia (Comedian Bob Hope is in Moscow to premiere his latest movie, ‘Paris "He is writing his light- cee ereegs te Sere | ie 8 4 or an Pontiac Press. ! By sos HOPE MOSCOW (INS) — Well, we're here on the road 40 Moscow. That's a wonderful title for a picture and. I hope it has a happy ending. I'm here with the blessings of the State Department. I'm not sure whether I’m. the first. step in the cultural exchange | or the last “so there” in the Cold bythe Uned San inal fa hata weteck. is a note in a foreign language jwhich roughly translated means “welcome dollars.”’ x * * Cary Grant got his visa from the Soviets in five days. Mine took| 21. They always did favor the peasant. But even so I can’t under- jstand why mine took so long. I gave the name of two czars who |would vouch for me. . * * * But all things come to those who wait, as Bing can testify. So with my visa clutched in one jhand I was on my way. i_ flew from Copenhagen to Moscow in a TU104. This was my first flight in a Russian jet. We were here before I could get ander my seat. |. They served a drink I’ve never ‘had before, aquavit. I don’t know eration, certain records of County Clerk Lynn D, Allen are now being microfilmed. clerk’s records and those of the Probate Court to be done in this most efficient operation,’’ Murphy phy said, that the original docu-' said, clerk Mrs. Nancy Felix, of 5560 Crescent St., Waterford Township, examines films before they One hundred documents on film can be placed in one = Lee cards. Most of the documents are deeds, mortgages, or land con- tracts—any papers pertaining to real estate transactions in Oak- land County, Because of the success of the op- “Plans are now for all of the Pontiac Press Photes them in this ‘‘jacket’’ or card. tire being balanced will change justments needed to balance the ELECTRONIC BALANCER—This device now being used by Pontiac Motor Division is so sensi- tive that a burnt match placed on a wheel and In the insert at the weight ad- two, The pre- _ and relays. cise ) Spot wtere the weight is e be located is marked in paint by the machine, and indicates the exact amount needed for perfect balancing. left is the heart of the machine, an intricate system of electronic instruments City’s Juvenile Officers Agree By HAROLD 8S. COHEN | The only generalization you can) make about juvenile delinquents is' that you can't generalize. This is! the conclusion of Pontiac Police Dept.’s juvenile officers. Last year, 407 boys and 251 girls! were picked up by the officers for questioning. Of these 215 boys and 89 girls went to juvenile court. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE Sgt. Henry Hoye, head of the juvenile department, has had near- ly 30 years of police experience, | of which the last seven have been with juveniles. He confesses he still doesn't have the answers. children, three are wonderful and one is a little stinker who is constantly in trouble,” he mused, “and you wonder why the one is | so bad." Experience has not been able to| place blame for juveniles who get! in trouble with the law at any one doorstep, the sergeant said. “They come from good homes as} well as bad, from comfortable! neighborhoods as well as poor and| from strict parents as well as easy-| . }going.”" * * * Of the 407 boys he saw last year, Sgt. Hoye said, 239 were first of- fenders and 168 were repeaters. “In the long run about 5 or 6 | per cent remain criminals in adult life. The Fest raightcs | auditor said today Mackinac Bridge traffic is running behind raised from $3.25 to $7.74 per auto- mobile, John J. Mitchell, auditor for an Escanaba industrial firm, told a |Kiwanis Club luncheon that traffic crossing the Straits of Mackinac in 1956 was 89,000 vehicles off the volume forecast when bonds to finance the bridge were issued in 1954. He said 1957 traffic was 88,000 off estimates. Mitchell questioned whether bridge tolls should not be raised | immediately to $7.74 per car as an indication of “good faith” in support of what he said was a promise that the bridge will not become an obligation of the tax- payer. Under its bonding, the bridge will cost a total of $212,000,000— principal and interest—within the what it’s made of but they sure ‘could’ ve used it at Cape Canaveral. | Sad * * Anyway, here we are in Moscow. I tried harder to get here than Napolegh. I hope I don’t have as much trouble getting out. Stewart Clan Strong in W. Virginia Schools CHARLESTON, W. Va. » — If ithere’s a mite of confusion over. thames in West Virginia's system! of higher education now and then, | it's understandable. Dr. Virgil H. Stewart is presi- dent of Concord College, Dr. Stewart H. Smith is president of Marshall, and Dr. Irvin Stewart is president of West Virginia Uni- versity. |next 40 years, Mitchell said. “This is the total to be paid| “You see a family of four | Mackinac Bridge Trattic Drops; Increase in Tolls Being Sought ESCANABA \# — An Escanaba' predictions and said tolls should be! out although it sometimes takes a jail sentence to do it.”’ Hoye believes a lot of crime is| |imitative. ‘'You see a story in the) \paper about a kid somewhere tor- jturing an animal and in a couple jof days we have a rash of them here in Pontiac,’’ he said. SEEKING NOTORIETY “We often find kids with news- paper clippings of the crimes they commit in their wallets. They seem jto be seeking notoriety,” The crimes that girls commit, according to Policewomen Pat Sweeny and Bernice Berger, dif- fer vastly from those that boys try. Girls are almost invariably picked up for sex crimes or run- ning away, while boys generally are in trouble for theft, burglary and robbery. © An explanation for this difference | jin crimes is given by Dr. L. |Jerome Fink, Pontiac psychiatrist. | |‘DUE TO CULTURE’ “It’s largely due to our culture ‘in America,” he said. “We con- stantly stress the man’s role as jaggressive, dominant and mascu- line. The girl ideally should be bas: ‘sive and dependent.'” The result is that boys are seeking to gain power and status in an agressive way, hence they turn to such crimes as auto theft, | burglary and larceny.” “The girls,” he continued, Each Youth Differs ‘seeking a passive role, generally turn to sex acts.” * * * who has stolen does with the money. He never has a practical use for it. He spends it on loud clothes, a shiny car or alcoholic drinks which he thinks will add to his stature in the eyes: of his frien Dr. Fink believes more boys than girls get in trouble each year be-- cause society gives more freedom to boys. ‘‘We watch our daughters much more closely than our sons.” Causes of delinquency vary with the individual, the doctor believes. ‘‘No parent is the same to each of his children. The con- ditions that prevail economical- ly ’ emotionally and otherwise with the parents can alter —_ year to year. A child that is wanted, can be ‘subconsciously not wanted months later if business is bad and money scarce, he stated. “The parents don't realize the change in themselves but the child senses it,’ he added. x * * “What we should do, if we had unlimited funds in this area, is give each juvenile offender a thor- ough psychiatric examination," Dr. Fink said. “For some treatment is the an- swer, for some probation, for some prison, but only a trained person can determine which.” said, jattempting to find some other way to finance the bridge—including a proposal that the original bonds be called and that the state issue in their stead ‘‘full faith and credit bonds."” Such bonds would be fully guaranteed by the state. that the bridge authority is) “If the original bond issue is called before Jan. 1, 1964, it will cost the state $8,000,000 just to get the bonds back,” Mitchell added: ‘Let us be on guard against any proposal to take over the bond issue or any other scheme that will place the burden of the bridge on the Michigan taxpayer.” Proposes Auto Price Labeling Senator Sees Benefit to Unscrupulous Dealer in Present Method WASHINGTON (%—Sen. Mon- roney (D-Okla) today proposed an automobile price labeling bill he described as designed to do away ‘from tolls if the bond issue runs with the advantage now held by jits full 40 years,” he added. ‘‘It|a few unscrupulous dealers. jis not $80,000,000, the cost of the| x &® * jstructure, or $100,000,000, the total | He said in a statement that the of the bond issue.” |measure he was introducing would x *« * [require new cars to have labels Annual interest bond sinking Showing, among other things, the fund, maintenance and other costs Tetail price suggested to dealers and expenses will total about $7,- 740,000 and call for a toll of $7.74 mistic increases ia traffic over the bridge, Mitchell said. . “To pay even the annual in- terest charges of $4,240,000 it | would take more than 1,300,000 vehicle crossings per year at the present toll of $3.25," he said. “This would require a traffic volume of almost 400,000 more cars than\ have crossed the Straits in ¢ven. the best year in the past,” i There are several indications, he per car, based on moderately opti-| ‘by manufacturers. is honest about the so-called “‘list price’’ cannot compete with the one who “‘packs’’ ‘several hundred dollars extra into it so he can pre- tend to give you more on your trade-in. * * * Monroney, chairman of a Sen- ate subcommittee on automobile imarketing practices, said his bill would not prevent dealers and buyers from bargaining. , But he said it would arm the presently_‘bewildered car buyer with some necessary facts. Monroney said, the dealer whol. ‘Dine on Snakes,’ RAF Pilots Told in Survival Test PORTSMOUTH, Eng. — Eight Royal Air Force pilots were ad- judged members of an elite “hard to kill” club after an 18-day sur- vival test at Thorney Island, near Portsmouth. They know how to walk back to civilization after a crash anywhere in the world, according to Squad- ron Leader Ronald Charlton, a jun- gle survival expert. One lesson: Don't run from a snake; turn it into soup. Here's their recipe: Required, about 18 inches of snake (or steaks from belly of a reptile). ‘Bamboo shoots; fern tops. Meat from one coconut. Handful tapioca. Method, take snake meat and chop into steaks. Put all ingredients into a hol- lowed-out bamboo. with a clay base, add coconut milk to. cover and simmer gently for several hours over a canip fire. Serve hot with coconut shells as spoons, Cattle Loose in Town ELK CITY, Okla, ® — It was like the old cattle days when 54 head of calves broke loose from a ‘sales barn here. The calves ran through town for hours until ‘they were all rounded up. “You watch and see what a boy. { URE aS my THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 pe ae Sa ae ee a re GOES UP IN FLAMES — Tw o Romeo volunteer firemen battle to contain fire to barn on Washington Township farm owned by Owen W. Kirkwood. Half filled wi th hay, the structure was a mass Spectacular Blaze Costs $12,000 of flames before firemen could ge on saving adjacent and nearby buildings. A neighborhood boy ad- mitted accidentally dropping a match, which set off the blaze. Poutise Press Phote t to the scene. They concentrated ys > Romeo Area Barn Destroyed by Fire ROMEO — A large barn, valued} at about $12,000, was destroyed in a spectacular fire in Washington Township Saturday afternoon. The barn belonged to Owen W. Kirk- wood of 11220 30-Mile Rd., two fore it was reported, so Romeo volunteer firemen concentrated their efforts on saving adjacent out buildings, house. The barn was partially covered by insurance. Fanned by high winds, the flames Sylvan Manor Group Will Meet Tonight WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- SHIP — A special meeting on sewers and roadg har been called for 8 p.m. today at the West Bloom- field Township Hall by Stanley Poag, president of the Sylvan Man- or Civic Association. the garage andjwere visible for miles, drawing hundreds of spectators to the scene. miles south of Romeo. * * * A young boy from a_ neighbor- ing subdivision admitted setting the fire accidentally when he dropped a match in the hay which half filled the barn, Mrs. Kirk- wood said. The youngster summoned Mrs. Kirkwood when the blaze broke out, then returned to the burning building to lead a riding horse and a pony to safety. In addition to the barn and hay, a garden tractor and saddles were consumed in the blaze. The fire was out of control be- Son of Madison Heights Mayor MADISON HEIGHTS — Ken- neth Ferguson, 19-year-old son of suburban Madison Heights Mayor Lloyd H. Ferguson, is in the city's jail on a burglary charge. * * * Madison Heights police arrested the youth and Larry Morgan, 22, of 23213 Dequindre, Haze] Park. after the A & M Market, 25402 John R, was robbed of about $200' Senator Uraes Reviving RFC Must Prevent Any Big Business From Folding, Bridges Specifies WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Bridges (R-NH) said today he will lay be. fore President Eisenhower tomor- row a proposal for revival of the Reconstruction Finance Corp, on a standby basis. e Bridges, who heads the Senate Republican Policy Committee, ex-| pressed confidence the economy will turn upwards soon. But he| added in an interview that the up-) turn might be threatened if sone| big business enterprise were to crash financially. He mentioned railroads specifically. * * * “We have: established almost every kind of setup needed to step in and help the economy except one to take care of a threatened crash of a big business, which could bave a terrific psychological | impact,” Bridges said. -“We have provided for small) business, we are stepping up pub- lic works to help provide jobs and we are providing for the econo- mies of other nations through mutual security. * * * “I think we should revive the RFC on a standby basis and have it ready for action if it is needed. It saved many situations in the past and it could do so again if it became necessarv.”’ * * The RFC officially went -out of business June 30 last year, al- though its lending activities were halted Sept. 28, 1953. It was es- tablished in January 1932 during the major depression. From then until it died, it loaned more than 50 billion dollars to banks, rail- roads, factories and most other kinds of American business. * * * Bridges’ proposal topped a series of weekend moves designed to bolster an economy which many members of Congress were saying was fundamentally strong but which needed a stimulus. Sen. Lyndon B. Sohnson (D-Tex), who has been active in pushing through the Senate a series of antirecession measures, told re- porters he thinks things are look- ing up somewhat. * * * “I have a great deal more con- | fidence in the economic outlook) now simply because the wheetil have been set in motion and the government is actively at work to combat unemployment,” the} Senate Democratic a said. * * “The immediate eae is 5,200,000 men and women who need jobs. We are roving rapid- 4 in cooperation with the exec- "tive agencies — to po = of U.S:-owned Caltex Oil Co. to re-| sume operations in the Central Sumatran oil fields around Pakan-, baru. The company suspended op- erations when the Jakarta forces invaded. Explorer, Sputnik Greet Vanguard Fellow Traveler WASHINGTON (INS) — As the Navy fired its Vanguard satellite at Cape Canaveral] this morning, \the Army’s Explorer ] was on its 558th trip around the world. The Army’s satellite was fired late on the night of Jan. 31, and announcement that it had uchieved orbit was made shortly after mid- night on Feb. 1. Russia's Sputnik I disintegrated upon falling back into the atmo- sphere early in January after mak- ing about 1,400 revolutions. Sputnik HI, its radio transmitters dead, is still circling the earth, and is approaching its 1,900th trip. Sukarno s Army Rising in Revolt Fall of Sumatra’s Port of Medan May Spread Rebellion in Islands } SINGAPORE wW — Thev fall of| Held for Market Robbery worth of cigarettes, beer and gro- ceries Saturday night. Kenneth is the youngest of seven children. His father was elected /mayor when Madison Heights was ‘incorporated as a city in 1955, It has a population of about 30,000. “I don’t know why he did it,” Mayor Ferguson said yesterday. “He didn’t need the money, He | had been living at home and | there was no reason for it.” The youth has been employed in an auto body shop since his recent discharge from the Army. * * * Morgan is unemployed and the father of four children. | Machine Not So Old GAFFNEY, S.C. — The ma- chine itself is not really that old, ‘Mrs. I. B. Kendrick says of a used sewing machine she recently bought. She found an 1821 dime in the bottom of the case. At the meeting, open to all resi- dents of the subdivision, the ques- tion of which should come first, sewer projects or the black-topping of roads, will be discussed. Arrest Clears Up Church Burglaries Arrest of an area man, arraigned Friday on charges of breaking into an Auburn Heights church, has cleared up seven recent church! break-ins in Pontiac, according to Pontiac Police. x & * Arrested last Friday morning was Frank R. Davis, 21, of 2530 Collidge St., Troy, who told Oak- land County sherriff's deputies he had been staying at 144 State Ave. * * * Davis waived examination before | Pontiac Township Justice Robert W. Hodge and was bound over to Oakland County Circuit Court for, arraignment today. . * * * His bond was set at $2,500. He admitted to having burglarized several Pontiac churches recently and was found with church keys! in his possession, according to police. PANMUNJOM, Korea (?) handed back a USS. jet pilot of the Korean truce line. Reds Free U. Downed in North Korea Capt. Leon Pfeiffer of Kenosha, Wis. appeared nervous and tense but in good health as he spoke at a , S. Jet Pilot jart. He was employed for a time) Eioecs Youth, 20, ‘Charged With Arson in Six Fires + Confession Ends Long Mystery LeRoy Roberts to Be Arraigned in Justice Court Today LAPEER — The mystery sur- rounding the origin of a series of Lapeer fires was lifted today with the issuing of a warrant today for the arrest of a 20-year-old Lapeer youth. LeRoy Roberts Jr., of 1432 N. Saginaw St. was charged with arson. He has confessed setting six fires, Lapeer Police Chief Mat- thew Dougherty said . * * * Insurance paid off for five of the fires amounted to $17,383, accord- ing to Dougherty. The sixth blaze destroyed a barn on the farm of C. W. Weiblen, 3355 Newark Rd., in 1957, The insurance amount at that barn could not be learned be- eause the owner is away. Roberts, who lives with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Roberts, made a full confession Saturday when arrested by Dougherty. He became a prime suspect when it wag learned he had been in the —e, vicinity of most of the ‘Dougherty had asked the assist- ance of State Police Arson Detec- tive Donald Hynes of the Flint Post. Saturday, Hynes examined all the data gathered by local po- licé and stated it was sufficient to make the arrest. Roberts i. in custody in Lapeer| County Jai ae to Dougherty, the youth confessed setting fires to: 1, His own home, when the fam- ily lived at 3376 Newark Rd., on April 9, 1957. 2. The home of his grandparents, tena,” she is being donated to the local TO AUCTION CALF IN OXFORD — ‘“‘Beau- a registered Holstein heifer calf, will go on the block Friday at a public auction to be held by Oxford High School Future Farmers of America. Scientifically fed for five months at the M. A. Kamm Feed and Granary, Oxford, Pontiac Press Phote her owner, Lionel J. Kamm. Ralph Hickmott Jr. has volunteered his services as auctioneer in the bidding scheduled for 3:30 p. m. at Kamm Mill. Kamm (left), is shown handing the registration certificate to Richard Daly, faculty adviser, while Wayne Moshier (center), Oxford FFA FFA group by president, admires calf. Mr. and Mrs. James Bird, 1432 N. Saginaw St., on Jan. 30, 1957. 3. An empty house owned by John Weir, 1420 N. Saginaw St., AF ‘Space-Men’ majority of voters in countries As a gneral rule, it has been which grant equal suffrage. found that women constitute the on Jan, 16, 1958, 4. A barn on the Weir farm, 1410 N. Saginaw St., March 4. 5. An eight-room house, 1564 N. Saginaw St., belonging to Arthur Lynch. The house was formerly occupied by Lynch's grandmother, Mrs. Nicholas Stone, until her death, 6. The Weiblen barn, also last year. The warrant specifically charges |Roberts with burning the Lynch home, Prosecutor George D. Lutz! said. The youth will be arraigned in sumice court this afternoon, he eq said. Complete Orbit Crew of Five Return From Simulated 5-Day Satellite Flight | DAYTON, Ohio (—Five Air , Force officers returned from “‘out- er space’’ at 9 a.m., today after “orbiting’’ the earth at a simulat-' ed speed of 17,650 miles for five| days. About all the Air Force would say for the time being is that, cumulatively, the men lost one. pound. | The five = be available for in- | terviews after they’ve polished off | a steak dinner, the Air Force said. First, though, they must undergo a series of tests to determine what effects the “flight” had on them. The men are Maj. Russell D.| Brewington, 33, of Houston, “flight commander,” Capt. James. V. * *® * Roberts denied any connection with the two. barns which burned recently in Elba Township. Since he doesn’t know how to drive a car, this eliminates any possibility of him being implicated, the dis- jtance being too great, Dougherty| said. LeRoy is a graduate of Lapeer High Schoo], 1956, with a major in’ * at night in a local grocery mar-| ket. He was a good student, particu- — The Communists today) shot down over the Red side brief news conference. ' “Tam happy to be back,” he said, smiling weakly. “It. is a wonderful feeling. I am very tired.” Pfeiffer parachuted March 6 aft- hit by ier his F-86 Sabre Jet was North Sumatra’s key port, Medan, Red ground fire to a rebellious army garrison touched off speculation today that He was not hurt and was re- North Celebes and other island) ‘ned to U.N. control at a meet- sectors soon would join the spreading war against President Sukarno’s regime: The central government con- firmed rebel reports that some 2,000 troops under U.S.-trained Maj. Boyke Nainn Golan had seized the city of 300,000 — Su- ing of the Military Armistice Commission. Air Force security officers took r him to Seoul to question him about Kennedy, 36, of Chicago; Capt. Lawrence J, McEachern, 37, of Millinocket, Me.; Capt. William D. Johnson Jr., 33, of Chattanoo- ga, Tenn.; and Capt. Dan D. Fulgham, 30, of Pasadena, Tex. *» *§ & All volunteered for the test, conducted by the Wright Air De- larly interested in art, his teachers | gai * * * Roberts at first gave what ap- peared to be an ironclad alibi re- garding his whereabouts when the fires were investigated. The fact that all the places burned were underinsured freed his experiences. | Pfeiffer's plane veered over the! jtruce line during maneuvers with) Ithe South Korean army on the, U.N. side of the demilitarized zone. A Sabre Jet flying with Pfeiffer's escaped. The U. N, Command acknowl- edged that both planes had. vio- lated North Korean air uninten- tionally, but it accused the Reds of making ‘‘an unnecessary armed attack.” ‘Unmatched Value . Rock-Bottom Price! |3-T SUPER CUSHIONS: + GOODFYEAR PRICES LOW SAVINGS HIGH 35 - velopment Center near here. eth mou any suspicion, Col. J. H. Rothrock vies com- “T feel the boy may need psychi- Mander of WADC said the men atric treatment,"’ Dougherty said. red no apparent ill effects. “He said he loved his mother oe Johnson's wife was there dearly and was sorry to cause her, greet her husband, but she, like this unhappiness.” other spectators, was not allowed, * * to speak to him until the tests. are completed. Purpose’ ofthe test, similar to one conducted last August, was to * Dougherty also said the boy ap- parently had no close friends. © Police Sgt. Edward Flynn arrest- | fonts, - Trade now and save! Now is your opportunity to save on brand- new tires. Goodyear’s famous Triple- Tempered 3-T Super-Cushions are priced ed Roberts at the time of the Lynch'determine how well a crew can fire, but he said there wasn’t suf- ficient evidence to hold him. Area Students Receive Awards at Fair matra’s largest — yesterday in the second major development since the rebellion in the Outer | Islands turned into a civil war | nearly two weeks ago. Obviously alarmed over the turn of events, Sukarno ordered rein- forcements dispatched to the Me-| dan area. In North Celebes, in east Indo-| nesia, the rebel commander, a0: Col. Ventje Sumal, was expected S¢ to launch an offensive soon. There| also were indications the strongly! anti-Communist garrison in West Java might join the spreading re- volt. Neutral South Sumatra also showed signs of swinging over to the rebels. Sukarno announced that his forces had captured the town of Siak Sri Indrapura in Central Sumatra. He claimed the seizure consolidated the centraj govern- ment’s contro) of the east coast of Central Sumatra. The rebels still pold the west coast and its bis t, Padang. Sukarno‘ also. authorized the | / \ fin i Four Pontiac students, one from| Waterford Township and one from Clarkston each received grand prizes for the science project they ‘entered in the fourth annual Sci./n ence Fair held Friday and Satur- day at Pontiac Central High hool. * * * The fair was sponsored by the Linnean Society, PCH biology club. Special awards were given to three PCH boys for their thor- oughness, accuracy and scientific contributions, instead of present- ing one grand prize in the biology | classification, Ronald Hoekman, 1740 Hamilton] Dr. was awarded a grand prize in zoology for his project, “‘The Evo- lution of the Vertebrate Hart.’’ * * * The grand prize in botany, an- other new award, was given to Richard Serwin, 189 Oneida, Rd., who entered a project called ‘The Effects of Hormone’ on Plant Growth.” TO BE DISPLAYED Both projects will be displayed iat the Roan Science Fair Sat- ' Six Get Science Grand Prizes utday at Bowling Green State Uni-| versity in Ohio along with more than 1,200 other projects, Both projects also were displayed at a national sctence meeting in Indi- ana in December. * * * “The Classification of the Animal Kingdom,"" a project entered by John Roush, 326 W. Iroquois Rd., was also granted a special award in the biology division. * * * Reference books were also awarded to the following students for their first-place rating in spe- F TRUSSES SACROILIAC and SUPPORTS fitted ence division, as did W illiam Bank, 38 Franklin Blvd., of Pontiac Cen- tral, for his project in the chemis- try division. Superior ratings In the biology division also were awarded to Bruce Berg 1030 James K Bivd.; John Blamy, 358 W. Iroquois Rd.; James Chamberlain, 557 Montcalm St., and Tony Jerome, 114 Ottawa Dr, They are all Pontiac Central High School students. Manfred Husacher of Waterford Township High School also re- ceived superior rating in the phys- ics division. prope ake ® Surgical Belts ® Post Operative Belts @ Elastic ® Women’ Girdles ® Male Stockings € 55 po ai Supports cific divisions: Linda Ross, 304 8S, Draper Ave., of Webster School, for the project on rock and minerals in the elementary science division; Frank Spraker of Isaac Crary Junior High School, rocket in the general science division; and Paul Bennett of Clarkston, for the top award in the physics division, Bennett dis- played a telsa coil project. Jon William Gary, 17 Prall St., of Crofoot School, alsp received su- Waterford | Township, for his model of a | THRIFTY DRUGS 2 SHOWS DAILY and SUN. Matine 2:30 — Eve, 7:30. perior rating in thie elementary sci- Woe | _ way down. Trade now for safer, easier- riding 3-T Super-Cushions. Extra strength, longer wear, better traction . . . at an unbeatable low price. Come in today. Pay as Little as $1.25 a Week! # a ed ON IEE EOE: BRAKE RELINE SPECIAL! ] 2? FOR MOST CHEVROLETS FORDS and PLYMOUTHS Comparable Low Prices for Other Model Cars Use Our as Pay Pian SERVICE ‘SPECIAL | Here’s What We Do: Se eer * ADJUST BRAKES | ler $ ‘Reg. $20.70 .............. NOW. 9 95 * P. FRONT WHEE (Reguine’ $3.00) PAY AS LOW AS $1.25 A WEEK! GOODFYEAR. | * COMPLETE FRONT END ALIGNMENT (Regular §10-95) * BALANCE TWO FRONT WHEELS (Regular $5.00 * INSPECT BRAKE DRUMS * INSPECT WHEEL CYLINDERS , SERVICE STORE 30 ‘. ie j oe SEVENTEEN © at Rate of One Per Day—Number on Increase American GIs Marrying Korean Girls SEOUL (INS) — American GIs are marrying Korean girls at the ‘rate of one a day — and the num- ber is on the increase. | According to statistics released by the American embassy in Seoul, an average of 25 to 40 American ‘servicemen are taking Korean brides every month. *’ * * _ It is expected that the total of American-Korean marriages will top the 400 mark in 1958 for the first time. _ Last year 377 Gis, according to embassy figures, slashed through ae of red tape to marry Korean girls. In 1956 the number was 256. A U.S. Army major explained the increase in marriages to Kor- ean girls this way: “Serving 16 ‘months in Korea | can get'pretty lonely and when the boys meet these charming, deli- cate Oriental women, Cupid is sure hard to resist.” * * * A 2t-year-old Georgia GI who is planning to marry a Korean girl said: “I’ve knocked around for 10 years without finding a woman as 9-3077 JO 4-6847 MICHIGAN FIRST AID Invalid Needs—Sickreem Supplies 1621 S. Weedward, Reyal Oak 3 Deors North of 10 Mile a compatible as Jung Ja Yoon, the (Advertisement) People 60 to 80 YOu 4 STILL APPLY . for a regular $1,000 old line legal reserve life insurance policy to help take care of final expenses without burdening your family. _ Yeu handle the entire trans- ‘action by mail with OLD ‘AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. ‘No obligation. No one will call on you! Tear out this ad and mail it today with your name, address ‘and year of birth to Old Amer- ‘ican Insurance Co., 1 West 9th, Dept. L6321A, Kansas City, ‘Missouri. girl I'm going to marry. I think the greatest thing about Korean gals — and all Oriéntal women — is that they've been taught since they were knee high that their primary purpose is to serve a man and I think they make a pretty good job of it.’’. Comparing Korean women to American girls, the Georgia sol- dier—SP2 Carlton Baugus of Ten- nille—said: “My gal is typical of Korean women — she’s more content to take a guy as he is, not what he might be and she doesn’t try to change me like so many American giris I've known.” ’ Baugus’ sentiments were typical of other Americans married to Korean girls. Daniel Rivers, 24, of Winona, Minn., an Army civilian worker married to a Korean girl, | said: “We've been married just a short time but we are very happy. Most of the guys I know married to Korean girls feel the same way.” * * * Most GIs who marry Korean girls ‘go into it with their eyes | open,” American officials said. Chaplains and commanding offi- cers usually explain the problems involved and frankly point out the special difficulties connected with mixed marriages, including the fact that some U.S. states do not recognize them. When asked if he had any fears about bringing home an Oriental bride to Georgia, Baugus said: “None whatsoever. I don't ex- pect to have a bit of trouble.” ithe State of California”’ lof his campaign contributions to He added: | : “A lot of people told me I am making a mistake by marrying Jung but it’s my happiness in- volved and I'm happy with this gal.” ‘Boss of California’ Released on Parole SAN FRANCISCO # — Artie Samish, who once boasted he was the “secret boss of California,” came home on parole last’ night but he no longer was his once | garrulous self. * * * Still weighing nearly 300 pounds, the former lobbyist said only “It’s god.to be out.” He had served 26 months of a three-year sentence in McNeil Island Federal Prison in Washington. He was convicted of income tax evasion. * * * Several years ago Samish erat ed to a magazine reporter “I am| the governor of the Legislature of | because | candidates of both parties. That led to an investigation of his lob- | bying activities and income. He was reputed to have paid | the government nearly $750,000 in | settlement of income tax claims, and penalties. U. of M. Man Named WASHINGTON ( — Dr. Eugene; R. Jolly, a graduate of the Uni-| versity of Michigan School of} Medicine, has been named assist-| ant director of the new drug branch | of the Food and Drug Administra-| tion's Bureau of Medicine. Jolly,| a native of Oconto, Wis., taught! pharmacology at the University of | Michigan before receiving his med-| ical degree last June. | | | { | Pastor Down for Count GRANNIS, Ark. (INS) — The Rev. Elza J. Sitze reached for the bellrope to summon _ wor- the shipers to First Baptist | Church for services. One tug and the services were canceled. The bell conked the pastor on the head. No sooner said than done ...by telephone A fine party! What's the occasion...fund raising, PTA, a school reunion? In any event, the hard-working committee that made the party a success deserves a round of applause. And don’t forget, the telephone helped; too. It was the telephone that helped settle hundreds of details—“Alice, will you take charge .of the decorations?... Mary, will you arrange for the food?...dane, will you get the extra tables and chairs?” Let your telephone run your day-to-day errands, plan good times, keep you in touch with friends and loved ones. There’s just no end to its useful- ness. 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SWEET PEAS 19° 29° GREEN GIANT Great Big Tender Tall No. 303 Can '@ VANILLA © BUTTER © FUDGE ronMOND CLOVER LEAF WHITE MEAT GRATED TUNA 15° YA ~ NEOPOLITAN : _ReopTony maketh ney “7580 HIGHLAND ‘2iertty : 7 ~ One ‘Mile W: BOTH MARKETS OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY ont 9 ay bay’ re - REE da cecren 40 Vedritio-Picking tot Wiles sn:teabdl anywhere higher than 5th place, would be to admit that the trades with Kansas City and Cleveland were good enough to strengthen Detroit to win 15 or 18 more games this sea- son. _ At least this is what it would take to go as high as sec- on place ahead of the White Sox and the Red Sox behind the New York Yankees. * * * Making a comparison of the batting averages of the traded players doesn't actually support the Tigers’ jump from fourth place to a contender. Kansas City got Bill Tuttle (.251), Jim Small (210), Frank House (.259), Kent Hadley (.279 at Augusta) along with pitcher Duke Maas (10-14), Detroit got Gus Zernial (236), Low Skizas (.245), Billy Martin (.257), Tim Thomp- son (204) along with pitchers Mickey McDermott (1-4) and Tom Morgan (9-7). Cleveland got J. W. Porter (.250) and Hal Woodeshick (0-0), while the Tigers got Jim Hegan (.216) and lefthander Hank Aguirre (0-1). . x * - Cleveland, Kansas City and Baltimore. * One thing is almost certain, Kansas City will do well as a result of the trade. There are no lusty bats anywhere among the new names, yet, neti can it be figured that the Tigers will do better in the victory column? , Another question being asked is—will Jim Bunning re- peat as a 20-game winner this year? Most likely answer is NO. * * This answer again does not support an upward move by the Tigers. Then how can the Tigers hope to move up? We see Detroit making its move on the basis of two factors: 1. Recovery of form of players like Al Kaline, Harvey Kuenn, Frank Lary and Paul Foytack; a stronger fist for manager Jack Tighe and a bet- ter bench at the plate. ' 2, Better balance in the American League with Kansas City and Cleveland winning a few more from the Yanks and White Sox, with pitching their only asset. The Tigers have always been rough with the Yanks, This year, unlike last season, it appears that. Detroit may be able to scrape up a few more wins with the long ball in Boston, * x * “Potential” is the key word in the 1958 season. The Tig- ers proved their potential on the team in 1956 with Kaline, Kuenn, Maxwell and Boone all hitting over 300, Last year the same potential was there, but it failed. It could fail again, jib dour sheet ba eae to cons beak ont bit 200 00 close to it. All four are capable of hitting over 20 homers, Frank Bolling can add 20, Zernial if he gets the chance oon ON snetien 0 and Miifas js capable of 20. Several are capable of more. . The big flaw statistically last year was in the RBI column, The Tigers failed in the clutch, they were 6th in the league in runs-batted-in. , x *« * Zernial, Jim Greengrass, John Groth and Gail Harris P should give Detroit better plate strength as pinch hitters in comparison to Porter, Finigan or Dave Philley or Jack Dittmer. Bunning surprised even himself in winning 20 games, while Lary was having more tough luck than a black cat on 13th street. I doubt that Bunning will repeat with 20 because Lary and Foytack should be able to win more. Tom Morgan should be able to win 10 in relief and as an occasional starter, and rookie Bob Shaw could do like-. wise. ’ Billy Hoeft should not be expected to get more than 10 or 12 wins. The big lefthander will have to get more serious to do better or equal his 1956 record of 20-14. The “gopher ball” has always been Hoeft’s fault, Even Tiger rookies in training camp have thrived with Hoeft on the arns Goes Outo on n Limb. © yo Tigers in 2nd of 54 wins among them. Morgan, Hoeft, Shaw, McDermott, wins should be good enough for second place, Of course as was mentioned, help must and should come from teams like Kansas City, Cleveland and Balti- more. The White Sox claim one of the best balanced pitching staffs in the league, yet not good enough to handle the Yanks. Big key on the Chisox staff besides Billy Pierce is Dick Donovan whose 16-6 record last year was instrumental to Chicago's position. Wynn and Kalamazoo’s Ron Jackson at first base this year. will compensate for the loss of Minnie Minoso’s bat in the trade with Cleveland. x * * The Athletics appear headed for the first division and the Indians are capable of taking a few more games from Chicago and New York this year. ‘* If Ted Williams has a bad year (which appears unlikely) Boston could fall from third place to rock bottom, and as for the Yankees—let’s say it’s just habit. The Yankees will win again. Here’s how we see the 1958 American League race: | 1. NEW YORK—Anotber year and another rookie find for the Yanks. Add Norm Siebern to rookie- Aguirre and Sleater should be able to add 36 and these 90 ’ _The White Sox expect big things from pitcher Early There is,great doubt in this corner that 38-year-old Wynn but this is where we feel the success lies. mound. x *« * In supposition, Lary, Foytack and Bunning are capable Senators Hin oe ~ *e & er for Reno Bertoia Local Regional Champs Play Flint Tech Wednesday x * * x * * “wen a Neil Chrisley i Leads Nats to | 6106 Victory ee neared Washington at Orlando, “Ay vs. Pittsburgh at Ft. tiyers: Griffith Wants Detroit to Make Trade ORLANDO, Fla. — Saturday the Washington Senators were talking .;about the possibility of obtaining an outfielder from the Detroit Tig- ers By CHUCK ABAIR Strong threat to keep right on The unbeaten Troy Colts‘ were| Felling, Troy Gains Quarter-Finals over his pay cut), Gi 2. and 20 game winners Tiger “kids.” of-the-year, Tony Kubek, along with Mickey Mantle (going after $100,000), Yogi Berra (mad 1 MeDougald, Bill Showron, Hank Bauer, along with seven pitchers in double figures of victories, and it looks like the pennant is safe on Yankee Stadium’s flag pole, DETROIT—This is the time for the .300 hitters of 1956 to join hands with Jim Bunning of 1957 and. some plate help for 1958. Hegan needs only to hit .250 but his experi- ence in catching such greats as Bob Feller, Bob Lemon and Early Wynn may brush off on the CHICAGO—Disappointment is in store for Al Lopez and the Chisox. Billy Pierce still hasn't found the formula to beat the Yanks and there just aren’t enough .300 hitters on the club to move up, in fact there are 4, less without Minoso. KANSAS CITY—Thanks to Detroit, the A’s will probably surprise a lot of people, House will prob- fense did the rest. The Colts had Brighton acoring ace Brian comfortable edge from late in the period until the final whistle. Foytak Rapped Hard; ithree victories away from becom- ing Oakland County's 1st state champion since 1933 today as they began preparations for Wednes- day's rugged quarter-final tussle against Flint Tech. A win in that one would advance the Colts into the semifinals for the 2nd time in four years. Troy was eliminated by Buchanan in Watson and his mates bottled up Figley’s 17 gave him 36 in two . ably hit better than any Tiger catcher, Jim Small will have his best year and Bill Tuttle will save a lot of games with his ball hawking. Coach Peyton Goodwin has com- bined his high-scoring pair and close - guarding style successfully all season and did so in gaining Class B regional honors at the Pon- tiac Central gym Saturday night. * * * The Colts led all the way, despite some anxious moments in the 3rd everywhere they turned allow- ing few good shots. Brighton made its only real bid early in that 3rd session with eight straight points to decrease the Troy edge to four at 25-21 but the dependable Mr. Figley took over from there just as he has all year for the Oakland-B power in crucial regional starts, Booth added 12. Russ Hudson made only one of 15 floor shots but converted 9 of 10 fouls to match teammate Don Appleten with 11 for the losers. A 14-for-18 free throw record, including seven straight in the 3rd period when Troy started cold, 5. BOSTON—Still no infield in Beantown. Pitching only fair, but the Sox always manage to stay high up in the batting statistics of the league. As Williams goes so go the Sox, and that appears to be slightly downward. 6. CLEVELAND—Herb Score and Bob Lemon aren't ' enough. The Indians will help the situation by having these two beat the White Sox and Yankees poate Bah» Bt: Bonaventure 74, Joweph's, Pa 75 cena oa Mlineis 73 Texas Southern Int Osergetown, Ky. 100 iN i th rbi r heb!) j ; Veal,es § 1 2 6 Yost,3b 2 2 1 jinx and took a 63 victory over Red Wings during the 1950-51 sea- e [Beis m3 it 0 Fews ms 3 8 I the Boston Bruins last night. It was} Alex Delvecchio and Norm UII-|son. . . feos 3 | 1 2 Lemon,rf3 1 1 0| | the first time since March of 1957|man wielded the big sticks in the * o* * ' ruib¢ 1 1 3 Coley 4 2 8 6 Detroit attack, each for | e iond Gr'g's. rf 4 0 1 i Whin, ib 4 0 0 each connecting In yesterday's other NHL game, Groth, cf 3 1 1 © Berb’t.c 4 0 0 0 5 two goals, Gordie Howe and John. a rene $ os mesa § 8S Wr Wilson’ added the other two,” [or cmc, nuack Hawk staved McD'oi.p? 8 1 3 ‘Korck 1 1 8 Union Ch Wi ~ off a 3rd period rally by Toronto cores SO I amp wins to * * nelly Porredgeondly Dgrare Totats 33 610 6 Totals 32 10 9°19 H , = Tua 2 A, tae 2in ClO Tourney — ss, _slgnment (REGIONAL FINALS) Deira nee ONT Sos oe 10: . ; which ) Bos- S St. F y ' -—s NWashington “17222. REGIONAL CHAMPS —-The Troy Colts won Pentise Press Photo ed’ class Washington |... sitaiie 10 ton bids for breakaways. Delvec-|.)I12 Region 3 st Kelamasee z ae amen cigs va vot Oe their 3rd trophy of the season by walloping (11) are shown holding the tourney award. Oth- Defending champion Local 594 i8\chio and Forbes Kéiinedy alter- ae ee “4 s Beaten Horbor 70 GP, Christian Washington 27-13. DP—Btidges, Brighton 51-36 in the Class B regional final at ers shown who had a hand in the title clincher |i" the driver’s seat after the first! nated in Winnin | and Zauchin (2), Plews and Za weekend of Playing behind the Detroit I ea Inkster Soi ¢ Fite Veal oa rris, LOB—Detroit 4, Wash-| Pontiac Central Saturday to move into Wednes- are Dave Roat (16), Gary Littleson (10), Don ye , Rane ay the VAW-C10/ defensemen in the Wings’ zone, in- Punt tral 65, Sag. pacha 87 ag ta BR HR—Chrisiey 3. Plows ews, day’s state quarter-finals against Flint Tech. Harned (3), Sandy Morgan (13) and Rod Har- ie denice High ening’ wg tercepting Bruin passes and play-| ‘‘There’s always an end to all Muskegon Heights 73. Muskegon 70 CLASS B —— 2 at Kalamanceo Holland Christian 49, Allegan 45 4 at Albion an outfielder. The Tigers have made it known they would like to get either Clint Courtney or Lou Berberet of the Nat catching corps. WASHINGTO! and Taylo Troy stars Dick Booth (14) and Wayne Figley ris (17). Wings stand alone today in third - [place in the National Hockey League but they must win two of their four remaining games to clinch the position, The Wings overcame a year-old cagers posted two weekend vic- tories in the double elimination Bruins in Boston. ers. Tho trtmnaph broke a Boston- Detroit deadlock for third place in the NHL. The Wings can clinch the position by winning two of their remaining four games. Detroit bunched its first thiee Yesterday the Nats turned their|1955, Orchard Lake St. Mary took|quarter, in bursting Brighton's bub-| situations, helped meep, Brighton in the game. once in a while, but there’s nothing in the bat- trading thoughts with Detroit to/Class C honors in '33. ble 51-36 to make &% 20 straight * * * ter’s box to frighten the rest of the league. the infield after outfielder Neil] 4 couple of guys named Wayne |‘¥™phs for the season. The hard-working guard hit three gts wee Ge Oa8y Tus 7. BALTIMORE—The Orioles will hurt at key times, Chrisley, who was with Indianap-| Figtey and Dick Booth and a Figley and Booth totaled 29 |goals in four shots in 4% minutes but Kell is gone and Tiger-killer Ray Moore is olis last year, blasted out three) tight defense makes Troy a | points for the night and the de- land Troy was able to maintain a wage = 70Y - now in Chicago. Deby won't make a big differ- homers to drive in six runs as Hudson 1 9-10 11 Morgan 1 1-1 3 ence, =y Senators whipped the Tigers, eee % th Bereee 6 te 8 8. WASHINGTON — Cookie Lavagetto still has Roy Wright © 2-2 2 Figley 7 3-3 17 Sievers but what else? Tough luck pitcher Char- | One of the two round trippers Vue fet tee teag ley Ste*“s will have another year of woes. he hit off Paul Feytack came ——— — —_-— — with the bases loaded. His third 11 14-18 36 20 11-21 51 TIONAL LEAGUE RACE blest was hit op Dickey Me- veut cinars iares Milwaukee looks stronger as does Cincinnati and St. : , : Brighten 922.2206 8 13 lene Louis while the other teams show no great improvement. | Manager Jack Tighe left most we an aS pitching staff the Redlegs should be able of his hitters-back in Lakeland for NB A Pla offs o win a few more games from the Braves, but possibly not reve of injury on the poor playing , y enough to.push Milwaukee out of the top spot. fie Orlando, where three pen last ‘year fell down eos TS SCURBULE 1. MILWAUKEE a aaa No games scheduled. 2. CINCINNATI because — rer fie SUNDAY'S 3. ST. LOUIS rit, 124, Cincinna at 10a wins . y Harvey Kuenn, Billy Martin, Al Re I 4. PHILADELPHIA Kaline, Frank Bolling and Gus | les tied 1-1. 5. LOS ANGELES Zernial missed the trip oe RESULTS 6. PITTSBURGH ma nto Pace had 10 ol by short Syracuse ts Fiteteete : ee pa , ‘op Inman a homer von Maryland 0, by Bill Taylor, cesses ; ~ Meanwhile amid front-office : Kentucky : talk, president Calvin Griffith of =, Indiana 9, the Senators says his club would 6-3 Triumph Gives Redshirts 3rd Place like to trade “if the Tigers real- . Eenens State ize they have to give up some- e : Cincinnatt "sy thing to get something.” Beattie 08, His aim is to get third baseman * ; . Reno Bertoia. Saturday he thought! | : tan Prencieco $7, Jaaho tate 81 there might be a chance of getting| } BOSTON rus : _ wergpe tar bane Siew a ee ce apd tmmeaneel ype oop leh Se Rangers, 3-2, Sunday night and tied an NHL scoring record in the proc- ess. Jean Beliveau's winning goal in the 3rd period was Montreal's 236th goal of the season, matching the number of goals fired by the things,” says St. Frederick . girls basketball coach, Joan Mazza, to- day after her club dropped a heart- Region tournament. g°als in a 4!,-minute stretch late Bast Lansing 68. Greenville $4 Berra, Mantle Start Hitting tok & im the first period and the score |"reaker, Sunday fo Detroit Immac- ey ve ean Ia.at Pontise _— both triumphs. Sunday] #4. Fleming Mackell, Johnn ’ the lone went a SoG the or pumped in 33 points as the| Pierson and Bone scored == =-. Yankee Bombers Find Range==282 28 Alpens Catbolie Cent, 69, Cadillac 61 | oa gentey ed 21 points! The injury-riddled Montreal Ca-'West Side titlists, Marquette 54, Ishpeming 52 ~ : = a win c over Local 596 No. 1. . $ at Portage By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Mantle stroked two doubles,|nings, and Chicago's White Sox highlighting a five run etathth, * * * . Bronson vet 68 A Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra, |scoring twice and accounting for|clubbed Kansas City 8-2. Chicago’s|brought the Cardinals their victo-| The ‘653 No. 1 team chalked Ci ty C ham Ss in aT Hudson $8, aden 36 the big bombers of the Bronx/one run driven in. Berra slashed a|Cubs and Baltimore were rainedjry, Veteran Hal Jeffcoat was the|up a 62-47 victory over the ‘653’ p our neys Highland st, Bes 3. = tchmond 43 Bombers, have started to get the scrap ee, a single and picked| out. a. : victim of the Redbird blasting. Ne — pao behind Chuck Holt 84, Lakeview $8 _ {bat squarely against the ball and/UP 8. = ranklin's ts, In yesterday's y Mariette th Prot Hel feces! er 70 today the word went out: “Be- » * * * | A crowd of 7.872 watched the oe other game, Local 653 No. 2 was Rist ee see ied oan Ee at Shoat) ee t Pleasant [ware the Yankees.” Cleveland's Indians also got a| Yankee sluggers go to work early. New Champs Assured eliminated by Local 596 No. 1 asicrites Grill in Class & and Av : | * & & boost when ace pitcher Herb Score|Berra doubled Mantle home in the oo Jim Pembroke tallied 19 points tolbum 5 & 10 in Class D—will rep-|o, Griff's enters the Class B Inter- harvor Serine 83 at Petoskey The New York sluggers snapped|finally made his exhibition debut.|first and the Yanks added a run/e Cj K pend a OFS Win. resent this city in state recreation|—'Y tournament at Detroit's Lasky ie) Piste, ” their slumps: and unleashed their |Sidelined last year when a batted|in the second on hits by Tony in ity eg ourney cage tournaments starting tonight. Recreation Center, 13200 Fenclon, omma lethal power yesterday, leading/ball struck him in the eye, Score|Kubek and Jerry Lumpe. Doubles a ‘ Pontiac Central ffich’ tonight through Thursday, Eleven the Ameican Leaguers to a 41|suffered an ankle sprain early in NHL Standings High’s gymnasi-lteams make up the field with exhibition victory over the World um will be the host for the Michi-|Gritt’s facing the Livonia-Dearborn Champion Milwaukee Braves, It was the first meeting between the two teams since the World Series. spring training, A_20-game winner in 1956, the young’ Cleveland fast- baller gave up two rung and four hits in a three-inning stint as the entire Yank cast from its letharg-|6-5 Mantle and Berra aroused the ballets bowed to San Francisco/eight for their fourth consecutive district earns a trip to, the state finals at Ypsilanti. ; «let Recreation Association Class GA/A district tourney tonight and Tues- day. The winner of the four-team les soe eer eR OR RCE NINN RS le play and lifted New. York’s|logs to: the Giants. » Roseville, Mt. Eight teams are in the “D” Grapefruit League record to 45. Clemens and the Royals com: (field with Auburn meeting “High. The Yanks got some solid pitch! wanes sia the Grapefruit prise the “A” field at PCH. The |land Park at 8:30 tonight. Finals ing from veteran Art Ditmarjand Cactus trail, St. Louis de- Royals wil) meet Birmingham are slated Thursday: night 7:30. and youngsters Ryne Duren andjfeated Cincinati 63; Los Angeles this evening at 7 o'clock, followed | Playoffs in ah Chawe-aek teat Al Cicotte, wig combined for an limocked Boston 5-1; ges by an $:30 clash between Rose- elimination. There is no tourney eight hitter: sac Pain 3 €5 in 10 in-| Ville and Mt. Clemens, Winners |oftered for Class C teé oe a 4 \ \s mn i : : \ Lo. : r\ hed i 4 4 a x eyes “See ey ee } ‘> = ee é FY . e ele bgp ad* = ce ee ee es = ee ‘ls - s ’ ra J fh St : ; a, ‘ cp fay po i ee we Op eh ee aw peel 4 ~ ** % 7 : ce * ae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 17, 3938 SEN eS ONS ate ga TO : Ae 8 OG NINETEEN Alignment— Steering Check FREE BRAKES Most Cars $14.95 inc. labor & parts MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 121-123 E. Montcalm FE 4-8230 DON’T SAY Muffler SAY MIDAS ~ ifire in the last third of the Na- == Victorious Pistons. Head | Or st Louis Yardley, Dukes Star in 124-104 Win Over Cincy Detroit Opens Best-of-7 Playoff Against Hawks on Wednesday _ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Detroit Pistons, who caught tional Basketball Assn.’s regular jseason, today looked forward to their meeting with the St. Louis Hawks in the Western Division playoff finals. The Pistons defeated the Cin- cinnati Royals twice over the weekend, winning 124-104 yester- , day and 100-83 Saturday.—They | will meet the Hawks in St. Louis in the first game of a best-of. seven competition Wednesday night. The Syracuse Nationals and Phil- adelphia Warriors are still scrap- ping in the Eastern Division semi- INSTALLATION AWHILE YOU WAIT ; New Anti-Rust Design “GET HERCULES MUFFLER — A They last lenger—and they'll un- conditionally writing. National “Muffler Ford-Chev's Sale Priced ‘49 to ‘53 care gUarantee them in [finale The Warriors edged the Nats 95-93 last night after dropping an 8-82 decision Saturday. The -. > ° Cincy Ace Lies in Coma AP Facsimile TITLEHOLDER — Beverly Hanson of Indio, Calif., is all smiles as she holds the winner’s cup for winning the Women’s Titleholders Golf Tourney in Augusta, Ga. with a 72-hole total of 299. It was the first time she had won the tournament. 'third and deciding game will be played in Syracuse Tuesday night. Troy at Lansing Wednesday _ * * The Royals were hampered by the loss of star forward Maurice Stokes in yesterday's game. Stokes lapsed into unconsciousness on the Royals’ plane returning from De- troit after Saturday’s game. Detroit rushed to an early nine- Dthers Proportionately Low ~~ DON R. MacDONALD, Inc. Plenty e Free oe” 370 S. Saginow St. point lead and stretched it to 20 in the final quarter of yesterday's game. George Yardley and Walter, Dukes each had 24 points for the Pistons. Jack Twyman was high for Cincinnati, also with 24. |Totals 44 36-49 124 Totals 36 32-46 104 Score by Quarters 2 28 98 39-124 20 27 27 | DETRO! ws jCineinnati . 30—104 WANTED! West Side Yun & Storage (Formerly Smith Moving Co.) 461 W. Muren &t. FE 4-4064 Your Moving Job Elficient, Low Cost, Sate Moving. Local or Long. Distance Agent Red Ball Transit Co. 'U.S. Skaters Seek ‘Revenge at Moscow MOSCOW \#—Smarting from a |2-1 defeat in its first game in the ‘Soviet Union, the United States _Amateur hockey team hoped for tater luck tonight in the second of its 2-game series here. But the hopes were faint. The first loss was against the Soviet “B” club, and the Ameri- cans had to play strictly on the idefensivé. The second game will be against the European cham- pion Russian team, the same one Installation $ 8 15 glass packec MOTOR MART AUTO PARTS 121-123 E. Montcalm FE 4.8230 12 Years of Dependable Service at the Same Location that finished second to Canada in School Athletic Assn. nounced pairings and first round locations for the 1958 state highjat Traverse City-St. Francis, 7:30 schoel basketball tournaments. p.m. The first cound, March 19, draw- CLASS D quette Graveraet, at Graylang High SING CIVIC CENTER, 7 P.M. Marlette at Port Huron High List Quarterfinal Sites LANSING — The State High today an- Holt vs. Muskegon-Christian at Grand Rapids Civic Auditorium. Harbor Springs vs. Crystal Falls Maple City-Glen Lake vs. Chassell at Petoskey High School, 7:30 p.m. Dimondale vs. aveadhie Horton Jackson-St. John, 7:30 p.m. Fowler vs. mthsccrett at Hastings ings by class: CLASS A at Stokes, the big do-everything pro basketball standout for the Cin- cinnati Royals, has been hit hard |Gets Top Spot CINCINNATI ® — Maurice by what looks like encephalitis. The 24-year-old athlete, key to the Royals’ fortunes this season, is still in a coma today at St. Elizabeth Hospital in nearby Cov- ington, Ky., his condition critical and virtually unchanged. ‘His physician, Dr. Corwood R. Hunter, said after tests yesterday that the illness may be encephali- tis, or a brain inflammation Pontiac Dog for Obedience John Eicher’s Mitzi, a golden retriever, yesterday afternoon walked off with top honors in the obedience division of the Genesee | County Kennel club's show at IMA in Flint. Eicher is vice-president and director of training for the Southern Michigan Obedience Training club. Mitzi was rated 197')-200 as tops in utility, and 197', in epen B class. She led the field of 45 in the obedience division. Karen Lavery, also from Pontiac, had- top nevice B dog, with her cocker spaniel, at 193. In the regular dog show division. | Mrs. Reg (Barbara) Armstrong of Pontiac had a reserve breed win- ner with her German short-hair pointer; Mrs. Louise McaAllister’s Newfoundland went reserve also in his breed; Joyce Coughill had a Maurice Stokes Stays in Critical ‘Condition caused by a virus transmitted by insect bites. several days to several weeks be- fore we can confirm this.” opened his eyes once but ‘‘his lev- el of consciousness isn't real deep. It’s just as if he were in a deep sleep.” day night after his team lost the first game in the National Basket- ball Assn, Western Division play- offs. He had complained of illness on|. an airport-bound bus from Detroit Cincinnati, by a stewardess and teammates | was pro basketball's rookie of the But the doctor said, “It may be Panel truck by day..é | Station Wagon by night! . 2055 F.0.B. South Bend, Ind. 4 © Lowest-priced, full- j ~~ Studebaker” | | PANEL WAGON © Twin Traction available, © Guest-test it today! . Another doctor said Stokes * * * Stokes was stricken last Satur- after the game. On the flight to he lapsed into uncon-! sciousness and an ambulance met the plane. * * * Doctors said oxygen fed Stokes may have saved his life. The 6-foot-7 inch former star at| St. Francis, Pa., college said he had been treated for a boil last Friday, but told a reporter it did: not bother him during Saturday’s: game. | After his 1955 graduation, Stokes’ year the following season. In 1956-; 1957 he set a league record with 1,256 rebounds, but this was sub- sequently broken by Bill Russell of Boston's Celtics. | Denver Hockey Champ MINNEAPOLIS # — Denver, a patsy for North Dakota during the regular season, changed style overnight and ambushed the Sioux / 6-2 for the NCAA hockey cham-. pionship. Detroit Austin Catholic vs. High- land Park at University of Detroit Memorial Building, 8:30 p.m. CLASS B Holland Christian vs. East Lan- sing at Grand Rapids Civic Audi- torium, 8:30 p.m. Alpena-Catholic Central vs. Mar- Taking three first places and setting one national prep record, equalling another and breaking three Michigan High School meet marks, didn’t win a title Saturday, for Birmingham's fine swimmifig team, But Maples finished 3rd in the School, 7:30 p.m. FLINT TECH vs. TROY AT LAN- 3442 points, behind the champion Battle Creek (58) and Ann Arbor (46). Saginaw Arthur Hill was 4th with 28, for the Class A schools. BC Central also had three firsts, but more support elsewhere. Maples’ Pete Sintz was the top star. Pete set a national mark of 50.4 seconds in the 100-yard free- River Rouge vs. Hamtranick-St. Florian at U. of D. Memorial Build- ing, 7 p.m. CLASS C Bronson vs. Hudson at Jackson High School, 7:30 p.m. Highland Park-St. Benedict vs. (Sixth of a series) By BEN OLAN Many baseball experts feel that Freddie Hutchinson of the St. Louis Cards was not given enough credit for his managerial show- ing last season, He kept his team on the heels of Milwaukee almost throughout although the Braves were rated a much stronger club. What is your Managerial IQ? Here’s a chance to find out. The following situation could have been handled several ways. Hutchinson called for the right move, Would you have done the same thing? The Cards and Dodgers are, deadlocked 0-0 in the last of the ‘sixth at St, Louis. Danny Me- | Devitt (L) is the Brooklyn pitcher. | |Don Blasingame -starts off the the recent world championships. iSchool, 7:30 p.m. style and equelled a U.S. .récord of 22.9 seconds for the 50-yard =< event, Pete edged Fred Rounds Enter the hot stove league and play ot Battle Creek by a stroke in YOU’RE THE MANAGER the final, after the event produced several better-than-record fin- ishes. Tom Bechtel set a new Pontiac Matmen 22nd in State Score 5 Points in Meet; Lansing Easterns Win Title, Hazel Park 6th e A four-man Pontiac Central wrestling team turned in an im- pressive showing, but could only total five points to finish 22nd _ in FRED HUTCHINSON state meet at U. of M. pool, with) Me rt re CINCINNAT! | “Muskegon Heights vs. Flint Cen-|gn Scheal 4 20,Pm "1 (0 yi reserve winner with her cocker Yatdity 6 12-12 24 Twy'n 9 6-8 2/|tral at Lansing Civic Center, 8:30)|Pieasant High School, 7:30 p.m. spaniel, ams Sg Bsa 3 Et em Gain 3 2-5 8 Lovelte @ 69 18] Benton Harbor vs. Inkster at Al- . . . ; Sree, cea EE | OE! Sibion College, 7:30 pm. Sintz Sets U. S. Swim Mark, Ties Another | Shee : ob 18 Regan § 6-1 13 Livonis-Bentley vs. Dearborn- Noble 1 0-0 2 Marst 2 33 7(|Fordson at Eastern Michigan Col- Kenv'le2 0-0 4 lege (Ypsilanti), 7:30 p.m. PETE SINTZ state mark, on Friday, winning the 400-yard_ freestyle. Other records were set by Owen 200-yard freestyle 1:57.8, old 2:- 02.0) and by Arthur Hill's Ron Gage in the 100-yard backstroke (58.5 seconds, old 58.8). * * * Class B winner was East Grand Rapids with 127 points, followed by Ecorse with 37; Ypsi Roosevelt 31; East Lansing 25; River Rouge 23; Dearborn Lowry 19; Van Dyke Fitzgerald 9; Visitation 6; Det. CC 4, and AA Univ. 2. Other Class A scores: * Maples 3rd in State as Creekites Win Rapids South 13, Royal Oak Kimball 13, Dearborn Pordsen 11, Lansing Eastern 8's, Flint Centrais 8, Bay City Handy 5. Lansing Sexton 5, Plymouth 3, Saginaw 3, Ypsilanti! 3, Dearborn 2, Bay City Central 1, Monroe 1, Kalamazoo Central 9, Lincoln Park 0, Pontiac 0, and Wyan- dotte pens 1-Pete Sintz, Birmingham. 2-Mike Wood, Jack- son. 3-Dan Convis, Battle Creek Central 4-Don Carney, Plymouth, # . 6John Hariey, Dearborn Fordson, set by Kenneth Gest, 1954). 100-YARD BU 1-Terry Leberdie, Battle Creek Central. _— Griffith, Ann Arbor, 3-Barry Johnso: Royal Oak Kimball. 4-Mike Kelly, Bay City Handy. 5-Jim Kwasny, Dearborn Fordson. Time 58.4. 200-YARD FREE STYLE — 1-Owen Kleinschmidt, Ann Arbor, 2-Alec Bor- den, Battle Creek Central. 3-Tom Bechtel, Birmingham 4-William Darnton, Flint Central. §-Dave Slezak, Ann Arbor. 6- Al Ri k Kimball, Time (Broke record of 2:00 htel of Birmingham in Gage, Maginaw Arthur Milt, 9-Les ae aw Mow, Grosse Potn' Howard Lee, -Grand Rapids South, 4-(Tie) Dave Smith, Bir- taingham end Terry Smith, Lansing East- ern. 6-Dave Tal Bay City Central Time 58.5 (reco ~~ record of hot Kleinschmidt of Ann Arbor in the|1557, Sintz, Birmingham Rounds Battle Creek Central. aa Gees Wood, Jackson. 4-Dick Blaze. naw. 5- Mike Atwood, Bay ~~. ‘oa 6-Den- nis Hoffman, Monroe. Time 50.4 (Broke old state and national record of 50.7 set by Fred Rounds, Battle Creek Cenk: tral, last Saturday). 100-YARD BREAST STROKE — 1-Dick Neilson, Grand Rapids South. 2-Leo Cor- nelius, Jackson. 3-John Baker, Battle Creek Central. 4-Jim Wood, Jackson. 5- Mike Lea, arborn Fordson, 6-Roger Simmons, Lansing Sexton. Time 1:08.1. DIVING — 1-Peter Cox, Saginaw Arthur Hill. 2-Bill Williams, ginaw Arthur Hill. 3-T nw Norris, Ann Arbor. —_ Sorrell; Y; - §-Bill Mont- aven, Dearborn Dg apes Bale, Would you: a, Let Musial swing away? b. Gamble on a double steal? ¢. Order Musial to sacrifice? (Other data: Musial is batting, a field of 43 schools in state high school wrestling championships at| |Ann/Arbor Saturday. Lansing East- erh won the crown with 88. Grosse Pointe 23, Jackson 19, Grand Pint ‘Central, 246.55 peint Big Values on ay er 131 On Leading Name Brand Tires. All Sizes But Not ALL MAKES 9O9?> 6.70x15 Black PLUS TAX SALE These are brand new tires, some in rayon, some in nylon construc- tion. Factory rejects, fully guar- anteed against defects in work- manship and material. ALL PRICES PLUS TAX and EXCHANGE. Add $3 IF NOT RECAPPABLE 7.60x15 Tire $1395 Oldsmobile Chrysler Buick 7.10x15 Tire 8.00x15 Tire $4195 Dodge, Mercury, Pontiac Available in Whites and Tubeless at Small Additional Charge! 10% Bonded Brakes | Wheel Alignment ! Labor and Material | INCLUDES: ® FORD ® CHEV. On Any Muffler $1295 « Installed Free MARKET TIRE CO. 77 W. Huron St. FE 8-0424 | ioe BRAKE RECONDITIONING REG. 3.50 VALUE © Remeve Sanh “tine tnd ti spect brake drums & lining. @ Inspect grease seals. @ Check and add brake finid if needed. ALL 3 SERVICES ONE LOW PRICE REG. 17.00 VALUE HERE’S WHAT WE DO: @ Adjust brake shees te secure full contact with drums. @ Carefully test brakes. WHEEL BALANCE Both Front Wheels Reg. 4.00 Value @ Precision Dynamic Balance @ Precision Static Balance @ install Necessary Weights Call FRASER To BUY or SELL . REAL ESTATE Representing inning with a base on balls. On a' pickoff attempt, McDevitt throws! :°65, but is zero-for-one against wild to first and Blasingame| McDevitt in this game; Blasing- (moves to second. Al Dark walks, |2™e¢ has seven steals in 60 games putting runners on first and sec- | for the year.) ond with none out.* Stan Musial! (L) is the next batter with Del iEnnis (R), Ken Boye (R) and Wally Moon (L) to follow. | * x Dave Payne, 127, and Mel Nos-/ anchuk, 133, each scored two points] and Erasmo Trevino added one in 138 for the PCH points. Jim Marsh] of Farmington won the 120-pound consolation. title. A total of 144 boys from every part of the state took part in the two-day event with Hazel Park’s| 6th place finish tops for Oakland] County’s = = oe 15 MINUTE SERVICE _ While you relax in our com- fortable waiting room to your favorite Hi-Fi Music! (t oune) O-§ Wa pue wo 1a)8] ae aaqjoun dn yoyd spivg ayy ‘ours -Supseg Fer09% yeT) a preryur ue UA SMolfoy sruug -j30! shed yf PUB S2o1Z}1908 [eTENFY — 9 :4;nsey WE INSTALL AUTO MUFFLERS AT THESE LOW PRICES — | aaraeee thru ‘56 _ $g% Mackay Shares in Win CAIRO, (” — Barry Mac- kay, former University of Michi-',, gan tennis star, teamed with Dor- 53 othy Knode of Forest Hills, N.Y., and won the mixed doubles title The other team scores were: J] BEATTY’S TRANSMISSION (Except ‘54). 0... ccc eee eee in the International Tennis Cham- ioe | een SERVICE Thre ‘56. $ %5 They defeated Italy's Giuseppe|2. - ‘ Thru ‘56 Merlo and Egypt's Marine Men- 4 ‘fast ao All Models... 0.0... cc ccc ccc ccccweee : | ache, ta two each; Aga Arbor St "thor | EASY PLYMOUTH $ 95 : TERMS fy 13 PR Wintley 0 veces ccccncccdevs cesce< ™ MEN WANTED To Train for High Salary Position in Electronics, NO MONEY DON’T TAKE DOWN CHANCES! per en ee ghee Radio. & Television. Day and Evening Closses Allow 8 en You to Remain Fully Employed While Training. Complete Service on information’ We Ootgrens”" WO 2-5660 All Types Transmission ! Electronics Institute 2a Rare See - All Work, Guaranteed ox ctu a ee ee Ventas evbcccaceulebuse =A Ynstifate brings you “Relence Fiction” | a1 1K. Parke St. ‘sel sBBaso _ Sanday on CKLW-TV—19:30 P.M. Eh | cs wenry THE PONTIAC PRESS, “MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1958 a aa. a: we ogee ~ Won't Give Up Texas Areage to Fight for Land WALLER, Tex. today with a not belong to her. * * *® in some household goods. fight beside her. Scott, owned, * Mrs, Cliett disagreed. * ® clerk of the U.S. marshal's the court, -, Gun - Toting Woman Pitches Tent, Prepares w — Mrs. Irene Cliett, 59, remained in her tent loaded shotgun, ready to shoo away anyone who tried to move her from 350 acres. She has said she will not give up the 350 acres which the federal court in Houston has ruled does She pitched a tent and moved Some neighbors have said they would Mrs. Cliett said she provided for an old family friend, George from 1920.until he died in 1933. She said Scott was just a family friend but the courts have ruled he was a partner and his heirs, who sued, were entitled to half of the 703 acres Mrs. Cliett Mrs. Kathryn Matthews, chief office, said the ‘marshal could take no action until requested to do so by By JAMES MARLOW ' Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON ® — This is an ABC on jobless pay — unemploy- ‘ment compensation (UC) — and how it started and where it is. There'll be plenty of talk about it in the next few weeks, government puts no money into it. Neither do the states. The money comes entirely from a tax on em- ployers, based on their payrolls, and in a few states a tax on em- ployes too. The money goes into a fund ad- ministered by the bearing bonds, Each state has its own account in this fund and draws from it as it needs to. The fund now has about 84 bil- lion dollars. In bad years — re- cession years — more money is taken out than is put in. In the 1954 recession year the fund col- lected $1,136,000, and put out just over two billion dollars. NOW OVER $1 BILLION ' In the present recession, with unemployment climbing, the fund has put out over a billion dollars since September. When unemploy- ment forces a state to exhaust its part of the fund, the govern- ment can lend it money. Right now there are 5,200,000 unemployed, Over three million Cockroaches One Full Year Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- main out only one hour. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Ponting St. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-9462 are drawing UC. But many work- ers have used up already all the UC payments for which they were eligible and now are entitled to nothing. — oem 'NO HELP TO SOME About 43 million workers are covered by UC. But millions of working people are not. And, if they lose their jobs, these people cannet turn to UC for help. For example: excluded are farm UC is not a dole. The federal) federal] govern-! ment which invests it in interest-| workers, self-employed, domestics and employes of nonprofit organ- izations. * z .*¢ The UC system was created by Congress in 1935 as part of the Social Security program, with the understanding all states would take part in it. All now do. But each state is allowed to make its own laws for handling UC. Therefore, there’s a wide varia- tion among states on how much a jobless man can get and for how long. pendents. Benefit payments range from aj, minimum of $3 a week in Missis- sippi to a maximum of $41 in Wyoming and $45 in Alaska. The average UC payment is $30 a week. A few states give additional amounts to jobless men with de- The ae of time a. jobless) man can draw UC varies too. Thirty-one states have a maxi- mum of 26 weeks, Pennsylvania is the highest with 30. Florida has 16 weeks. Organized labor and some members of Congress call for 39 weeks for all states, Jinxed Home of Detroiters Finally Struck DETROIT uw — Michael Payne, 63, and his wife Evelyn, 60, don't have to wait any longer. What they feared for many years would happen has happened. * * “ The Paynes live on a jog in a busy street. Between their house, and the street is an mpty lot. Four years ago, a car ran across the lot and hung itself on a fence. Then a car tipped over and landed four feet from the house. A year ago, a car rammed into the Payne garage. Saturday night, a car smashed into the home. * * * exploding,’’ Payne said. No one was injured. No tickets were issued. The driver of the car said she swerved to avoid an. cleaning up. Company Tools Used ROANOKE, Va. (®—Thieves who! cracked the safe of the Southern Refrigeration Corp. here used the company's own tools to do the job. However, they didn’t take the tools “I thought it was the furnace oncoming truck. The Paynes are| away with them. 1 Dies as Bus, Car. Collide in California SAN DIEGO, Calif. uw — A bus and a car collided in a_ rain storm a few miles north of San Diego yesterday, throwing the bus to the edge of a 40-foot embank-|. ment. WHAT’S INSTRUCTIONS: Each word * * * The bus’ 30 passengers escaped while the vehicle teetered on the edge of the embankment. MY LINE? is related to See enc tw aA wo * * * On person riding in the car was 1 GACE killed and four others were in- 2 BLAWRE jured in the collision on Highway 3 GONS 101 north of Solana Beach. Two of 4 RATTHO the injured were aboard the bus. 5 LITRE Dead is Stanley B. Rossi, 31, A denn Long Beach, Calif. ~ 8 STORO Ohio Air Squadron 79 eerie © Has Outclassed Itself fcoweaays answer: nalve, fuNny, Whats My Line. Ine. chAtter. quiz, mAster, uNique, tam Herb Shriner. COLUMBUS, Ohio wW—The 166th fighter squadron will not join other Ohio Air National Guard units for; training at Phelps Collins Field near Alpena, Mich., next summer. | Squadron leaders say the Alpena base's runway is not long enough Hollywood Headlines tion, Lockbourne Air Force Base near Columbus. By LOUELLA 0. PARSONS | PEOPLE'S _ SUPER MARKETS — g ae 4 * / ~, 7 ag Y, am ’ pA ~ a Se) YY "MANES YX 9 > CLIP teresting bit of news. i King Vidor, whose “War and| takes over “Joseph and and it will go be- last year, His Brethren” fore ‘with Tony Curtis as Joseph. Frank Capra, who was originally set as director, couldn't get together with! Columbia and left the studio a few, days ago. | This brings out i in the open that! 1 Frank's Sickness Cancels 3 Shows MIAMI BEACH, Fla. «®—Singer. Frank Sinatra, who said he is suf- fering from a sore throat, failed to make three scheduled appear- ances at a hotel night club last night, leading tO a noisy demon- stration by disappointed patrons. * * * | A spokesman for the hotel said ‘it’s hoped Sinatra will be able to ,appear today. If he can, his per- 'formances will be staged in a ball- room to provide room for last ‘night's customers as well as for Name King Vidor Director {oat will remain at its tome st OL JOS@DH and Brethren’ | HOLLYWOOD (INS) — The top Number One”’ for George Sidney's of the morning to you, and I have'own company with a Columbia re- this St. Patrick’s day a most in- the cameras next summer! Saag TS —_SXPIRES MaRcH 15 os \ f, Nee VIG today's audience. _§ the news lately, {King Vidor will also direct ‘The lease and George is negotiating ‘with Tony to be his star. | This emphasizes stronger than Peace’’ was one of the big pictures ever there will be no letup of, varying ideas of their -own. motion picture production at/ Columbia. | | Vie Mature, who has been more | | or less well groomed in recent | | roles, is getting ready to flex his | | muscles again playing Messala in “Ben Hur.” Without a werd | leaking out, Vie made a test on a closed sound stage at MGM pa now comes up with the second-best part next to Chariton Heston’s in the chariot classic. c is a boy who likes to travel ~~ ie should be delighted that he igets a long location trip to Rome ito film the classic. * * The most perfect St. Patrick's movie set currently is Walt Dis- ney's ‘Darby O’Gill and the Little: People."’ This is an Irish special | and to add to the gaiety Estelle |Winwood, one of Broadway's greats | and famed far and wide for her: playing of eccentric characters, ' checked in to play an Irish trouble- maker. Estelle recently finished a film at U-I called ‘‘This Happy Feeling’ and I hear tell she all but stole the show. “The Madwoman of a * * * Rywmors he and Lauren Bacall | plan marriage have kept Sinatra in| DOORS OPEN 10:45 © ROYALTY PINEAPPLE :15¢| = Lea PORK Only plue cn n and Meaty STEAK pebone Lippe. Special Low Price! TUES., WED., THURS. CARINE WAR 49° Dole PINEAPPLE JUICE. “THE UNHOLY WIFE” | “KISS BEFORE DYING” | Chaillot’ was Estelle’'s latest suc- | cess on the stage. * * + | After being in town exactly two. — days Tommy Sands returned to of a UC system. Organized labor jing Congress to pass a bill forcing ABCs on Jobless Pay: Where It Stands Currently ‘The tax on an employer started! out to be 3.per cent on the first| $3,000 of each employe’s pay. But the government lets states lower that tax for various reasons. Now the tax is running: at a natiohal average of about 1.2 per cent on the first $3,000 of payroll, though in some states and on some in- dustries the tax going into the states’ funds ranges as high as 2.7 per cent. Another three tenths of 1 per cent goes to the federal govern- ment to cover the cost of admin- istering the fund. * * | Comal COLOR by De Lams = Pool Ta ani —BRING the FAMILY —FOR LAFFS OF A LIFETIME. _—EVERY WONDERFUL MOMENT ‘ EXCITING PLEASURE —IN GLORIOUS COLOR 8 Linvcille Bele So a jobless man who may have earned $5,000 or more a year does not get UC which is a percentage of $5,000 or more, His UC will be a percentage of no more than the first $3,000 of his pay. And the percentage varies, by states. A few states pay a per- centage on the first $3,600 of in- |} x come, . WHAT HAPPENS? With a time limit on weekly payments, many thousands in this recession already: have exhausted all the UC benefits they're enti- tled to. What happens to them? They’re out of luck. President Eisenhower has proposed—in such| cases—that the federal govern- ment out of its own funds con- tinue giving them jobless pay. He, did not say for how long. He may spell it out this week. * * * But this would be a dole, the first of its kind in American his-. tory, Congress, of course, will have to pass on it. There'll be a: fight—and for many reasons. | + we ® | Some business groups don’t: want the dole or any enlargement shies away from the dole, want- states to make permanent im-| provements in their UC systems. And members of Congress have) DOORS OPEN 6:45 TUES., WED., THURS. “SAD SACK” “HIRED GUN” RESERVE RiGhT NOW FOR THE PERFECT o \ RODGERS & HAMMERSTEINS MArket 4-2151 LAST 2 DAYS!! IECHNIRAME PATRICIA OWERS - RED SUTTONS - RICARDO WOUTAL BAR peopecie ar nrerre ae WALLAM GOETZ - * SOSH LOGAN - I AND AN EXQUISITE NEW JAPANESE STAR. TECHMICOLOR presented by WARNER BROS Oeste 06 Tet egw OF Searee PUar ey * AMES LWCHENER PAUL OSBORN be ek Re : a - WARTHA SCOTT - WITOSH! COMER! - Aaa wiIKO TA TAKA = New York today to enter Lee Stras- _berg’s drama school until a picture now being planned by 20th is ready| for him. Snapshots of Hollywood collect- ed at random:. With the birth of | a bey te Princess Grace and Prince Rainier the talk has been renewed that Rainier will become king and Grace queen of Monaco. Vera Newton, widow of the late Robert Newton, is asking for an ‘accounting of Bob's percentage ,earnings on the picture “‘Long John ‘Silver’’ and the TV series based on it. Frank Sinatra collected $35,000 for his week's engagement in | | Miami Beach. The broken left ankle which. gives writer-director Philip Dunne | a limp resulted from a fall he had| when he was chasing a filly—the' four-footed variety—on his ranch. * * * You can understand Dean Martin, being thrilled over his reviews in “The Young Lions.” He’s even better than they say he is. Home looks very good to Greg ‘Peck after those weeks in Mexico 'shooting “The Bravados.”’ That's all today. See you to- morrow! — | A PICTURE FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY ~ at REGULAR PRICES , Go Out to the Movies ) heceld = ten oe Theaters Winner of Academy Award Nomination— ELIZABETH TAYLOR—Best Actress! M-G-M’s TREMENDOUS PRODUCTION OF THE PRIZE-WINNING NOVEL! In the great tradition of Civil War romance! M-G-M presents ia M MONTGOMERY CLIFT - ELIZABETH TAYLOR - EVA MARIE SAINT RAINTREE COUNTY | reestarring NIGEL PATRICK + LEE MARVIN» Print by TécHnicocon® GM CAMERA 65 Df Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik, North of Tedegraph Rd. | FE 5-4500 FOR YOUR IN-A-CAR py ALE NEA APPLE JUICE COMFORT LD ie ad Uk TUESDAY 17 BIG STARS 21 BIG HITS! F Extra: Features at 12:00 -- 3:02 --6:04--9:06 PRICES FOR THIS “MUCHO MOUSE” in CinemaScope ATTRACTION ph Young & Asso MATINEE 90¢ © EVES. and SUN. $1.25 © CHILDREN 25¢ AGAINST AFRICA'S Vooboo TERROR.. VEETRA oe Y 11:30 = 1:35 3:35 = 7:35 and 9:35 Ok Ee BE EE AT Wee EE Be rhe a eNO EEE MY "on pepe tafe ta A OS eh PROG LTD ANA I LOC Sa RIALS OA rr Gar AN EST A'S on ener meetin at BOF ie EN eeeraas ‘ A 3 : . ’ = : = : ‘ SiS age ; fae : ‘ s . é 5 ee z : : E F - - f es : ; | é | * F F ‘ “ : ; 1 | , - eG, i ae = __ _ ____ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 i TWENTY-ONE |THE GIRLS by Franklin Folger, pap | ' : East German Wolf ae iia ma "70 THE JACKSON TWINS Forgot Socialist Duty l 7 ty | Lo —— | SIXTEEN- ia _zausrion un ernay} ) ROE YA I<: ESSERE SN tw, : 3 Piieaabee-punclhed sa | \ ee A NEW PERSON BETWEEN NOW , , . nounced she would sue her hus- band for divorce because he for- got. his “‘socialist duties.’’ Before they wed, she wrote a - Communist newspaper, he talked of raising a ‘‘socialist family,” etc. Now, she complained, all he wants to do is ‘‘cuddle.”’ As an afterthought, she said her hus- band wants to cuddle with other women, not her. Book Helps Immigrants WINNIPEG (® — A new booklet published by the provincial gov- ernment is designed to give pros- pective immigrants from Britain a clear idea of the type of em- ployment open, salary scales and cost of living, as well as climate | and culture. ..HERE'S THE FINEST J LITTLE EXPEDITER “Ab-h-h, SPRING!” BOARDING HOUSE: — WV MWZ@CH@UEBUS E6AD 60YS/TVE HATCHED) THINK IS) BG FINANCIAL | Peceent ron Wun | @OMEENS ¢ \ , A FEW WEEKS le UM! THE WORLD {TO BUY A HAM- 7 I'M PLOTTING A “4 4 SS SHV ERIENDS INON IT SUB. / \TOeibe In 4 (TOMOREOW! ROSA «UP TO THE MOON AMOUNT OF #500 «(T'S ~~ HUSH - HUSH ROCKET aa AND QUICK / By Ernie Bushmiller Seal 2 SORRY---I I'VE GOT PINK; I WANT TO eS hae NY | I WANT A CAKE HAVEN'T ANY WHITE, YELLOW BLOW y | aS ey N OF GREEN GREEN SOAP AND BLUE | BUBBLES SOAP i FOR SAINT . olololo PATRICK'S a * z Pearce : DAY a VES Z = Be —EFRANINE Sere Te. Bog. U. &. Pet Off. — Al rights reserved AO BUSHANL LER SS eee 7 — PTO THE IN FS CAPTAIN EASY | | By aeaie Turner / \ SPLENDID, { BY DAY HE WAS UNKNOWN EXCEPT TO DAVE SAID IT APPEARS 10 | - OF OPPORTUNITY= B NOW MOST OF THE || KFEW WHO RECALLED HS MURDER TRIAL! DAVE CRONYN, SAYS AN INDONESIAN TRACKING STATION REPORTS SHANDY STILL OKAY ON HIS FIFTH WORLD IS PULLING FOR HIM TO GET DOWN SAFELY! TODAY THE PRESS AND NEWSCASTS HAVE TURNED THE EYES OF THE 7 AND WO ONE WORLD ON HIM CRITICIZED YOU OUT OUR WAY ” FOR STAYING =i( racuseks wnave ot Pencmaage yee] | NS oto ee GOOD, PAW/ NUMBER? I'LL STOP —¢&% w, I'LL stop os THIS Bi xi HIS GETTIN’ -: LICKIN'S IN aa A” SCHOOL! AvA\ K . ~ ‘ / : A A! fis ze fm \ i" \hS Alaa. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ma a IF...DH, GMORNING! fy [WELL, YOU SEE, THIS Guy I ‘ nf DIDN'T NOTICE YOO =] KNOW WANTS ME TO FIND we aes Z FINDING A WOMAN || STAODING THERE! AIHIM A WOMAN SO HOMELY “12 JURE MR. LORD]/CAN"T SEEM TO REEP EIANY CHANGE TO HER t_lé | A I |] (anne WANTS AIN'T ” pee Se Pe beet fond} \¥ N | aS ==") EASY. on - ‘e cil mak Wd Val ok, | . passes : = ' CONTESTANT... = oil Weeaes! ‘ ‘ | | dean = H ~ ————— ‘ 4 a ee Z ' |! =f fe. 4 YY ] ei / hy, . ‘i ; Vest = \\ 7 “Ua, A , TRwitir | ° , 2) : BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON \Fe ae ee ee MORTY MEEKLE | . : / HA! I OON'T DIXIE DUGAN } By McEvoy and Strieber ier SS ARGUMENT WITH GET mm) ' : = , WHAT HAPPENED 7 . A Y RIO! HEN YOU'LL KNOW THAT a. poe A HORSE ae sop Ream (a // I 4.13 ( TIME ENOUGH TO DO THAT WHEN NOW WILL YOU il « if MARCH UP TO THE ALTAR f » I RELAX ??P f yh Pil ° ‘er Y <> [Ly ee: aN - : WZ : Pg B/S ee (RIT) iA : =. 4 *¢ ie : ee . © 1998 by NEA Bervies, Ino. T.M. Reg. US Pet OM.” Vy == | By Charles Kuhn . AN’ THOSE TOUGH] | BUTI SURE DID GET I SOLO A LOT O’ BATH ; KIOS BEAT ME UP/ | EVEN WITH 'EM...7” SOAP T’ THEIR MOMS: HALF ACRE CASTLE as =~] » Yiffll"U"/Ut You'll Find Y". Ae PROFITABLE Spearmint Gam G| “OPPORTUNITIES | helps to keep J Every Day in the Pontiac Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way.) *o solve all vour buying and sell- ing problems, To Place Your WANT AD | DIAL FE 2-8181 | Perverts see te ee eee By Walt Disney OKAY IF IT'S NOBOOYS TABLE, JOEY ULL GIVE IT CARI ¥ P- AITER,) (NOT My TABLE) [ OOGGONE 17, SORRY, NOT “Sa SIR] | WAITER, 1... /\ My TABLE! Hi rT SHOULO HAVE BEEN , a i, ONE-~TO-FIVE YEARS / iy 4 i gia Act Firmer . CXBCACO Tie eee to whee phage ti | Vand THE PON'TTAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 1. 1958 - showed signs of weakness while the bread grains and soybeans were a bit firmer in early dealings on the Board of Trade today. Heavy receipts of corn on the cash market over the weekend had a decided bearish effect on that grain traders said. Arrivals to taled 645 ears. Old crop wheat was firm on con- | tinued word of a tightening supply ; Sy Rei iE Saath The foliowing are top prices cov- ering sales of locally grown pro- duce brought to -the Farmer's Markets by growers and sold by Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of * Produce Fruits Apples, Delicious, bu. .....cs.00++.$4 7 Apples, Jonathan, bu, scececccee 3.00 NEW Apples, McIntosh, BU. ....cce0-+00 ss Apples Steele Red. DU. ....ccere. 6.00 Leading Stocks Slip Wee Bit NEW YORK wW — The stock declined unevenly with a scattering of issues making ad- vances early this afternoon. Leading issues were down frac- tions to about a point. Martin Co., prime contractor for the Vanguard project, gained on news that the space satellite was! successful. Steels were ower on reports that .|things are happening in this small| , Grading was moderately active,’ had broken into’ his garage and stolen three auto batteries wort an estimated $30. A two-car collision on Elizabeth Lake Rd. near Lockhaven Rd., Waterford Township, Saturday, slightly injured Shirley Bitler, 8, daughter of Mrs. Maxine Bitler, 28, of 7145 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Waterford Township. West Side Van & Storage. F 4-4864. Formerly Smith Moving Co, —Adv. Robert Keller Retiring as Chrysler Executive DETROIT \ — Robert T. Keller, vice president of Chrysler Corp., announced today he is discontin- uing active participation in the corporation's affairs after April 1. He said his decision is based on a desire to devote his full time to other business interests. Keller, 46, has been with Chrys- Ir in various capacities since 1934. Solves Many Space-Trip Problems Plan Railroad DALLAS (AP)—A little railroad is part of a new sys- tem to parachute pilots safely The pilot stays inside a closed capsule. The whole cap- sule is shot out of the plane dong a short set of rails. Then it parachutes to earth. * ‘aany miles high, this escape which would facé future space voyagers. Some such system might be used to bring men safely off a manned satellite circling the earth. The bail-out capsule was ference sponsored by the American Rocket Society and American Society of Mechanical Engineers by C. W. Russell, assistant project engineer of mapubltc Aviation Corp., Farm- ingdale, N.Y. * when it hits the airstream. The pilot has to be securely harnessed, so he doesn’t hit his head on the top when the capsule shoots downward, or get thrown forward when it hits the airstream. He has to be saved from ‘too-vicious jolts when parachutes open and the capsule lands. * Designed for planes flying far faster than sound and * Shooting the capsule downward out of the bottom of the plane along. guide rails gets it free safely, Russell said. But it has te be strongly engineered to stand up to Chute Pilot home from the edges of space. * system solves many problems described to an aviation con- x. jmale resident to work a day- and iC, J. Nephier Co} lpneures after decimal peinis are eighths, lien Elec. & Equip Co. 0 Baidwin Rubber Co. * 13.0 140 Ross Gear Co © 252 260 OL. Oil & Chem Co... °* 13 14 Howell Elec. Mo Co * 64 61 Peninsular Metab Pd. Co. * 94¢ OT The Prophet €o. * 75 76 Rudy Manufact Co. et 84 Toledo Edison Co... 13.2 13.2 132 Wayne Screw Pd: Co * 17 2.46 “No sale; bid and asked 10-20 Year Sentence for Blasting Home Terrance McGowan, 58. was sen- tenced today to 10 to 20 years in prison for the dynamiting of the home of his estranged wife. McGowan made a motion for a new trial after Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty pronounced sen- tence. The motion was promptly denied and the judge said, “If it wasn't for your age you would have got a straight 20 years." McGowan threw dynamite into the basement of the modest frame home of his wife, Mae, at 370 8, Edith St., on Nov. 15. She narrowly escaped injury. McGowan’s comment after sen-| tencing was that the trial was un- fair. “IT only had 25 minutes to con- sult with my attorney before the trial began,”’ he said. ‘‘They didn’t take into consideration that I had]: mixed drinking with the taking of barbiturates.”’ Ancient lem Found LOVELAND, Colo. uw — An old city ordinance here requires every a half every year on city streets, provide a substitute if he doesn’t work or pay a fee of $1.50. Police Judge Ernest Hartwell discovered High Low Noon; 2.7 #3 Basketball Colors Life in Harbor Springs HARBOR SPRINGS (—Strange community at the tip of Michi- gan's Lower Per‘nsula. ¥ x .* Four senior girls at Springs High School had their hair Harbor, dyed orange and black, women 4 a fiery red and five men teach- ers had .new brush cuts. a favorite town dance hall has lsettled four inches. Strange Things Happen in State Town four teachers had their's dyed And that’s not all—the floor of Hitt Calls Wife ‘Sick Woman’ 1 American life. Among them are “Blue Tango,” ‘Indian Lave Call,”’| “In the Still of the Night,” “Elijah Rock"’ and “America the Beauti- ful.” The Falconnaires, the Twelve Tomes, the choir and glee club will all sing in the program, The concert, under the direction of Mrs. Dorothy Feucht, will begin at 8 p.m. in the high school gym- nasium, |Weather Gloomy in Most Sections of United States ‘The event that touched off this bizarre course of events is the school’s basketbal] team which advanced to the state quarter- finals in the Class C Tournament Saturday night after a so-so 12-5 season’s re The excitément reached fever pitch when the ‘team defeated Traverse City St. Francis 63-47 at nearby Petoskey. * * & Two Harbor Springs fire trucks picked the team up and brought it back to town where sirens Senate Relaves After Big Push Starts on Minor Bills Following Rush to Act on Booster Measures WASHINGTON —The Senate set a slower pace for itself this week after a series of overtime sessions to handle antirecession and other legislation. Last week's activities included a special money bill, major hous- Paul Williams is tied up on an- other case and to avoid recesses during the pre-Faster period. * * * Hoffa, Owen Bernard Brennan, president of Detroit Teamsters Local 337; and Bernard Spindel, wiretap expert, are charged with conspiring to telephones in the union’s Detroit offices. Their first trial ended in a hung jury Dec. 20. property. No zoning changes have been islated for action, Seeterlin said. All families should have at least | three children, so that if one them turns out to be a genius, him. . . holds the door open so his wife can carry in the packages without trouble.—Earl Wilson. - 70-85% Other Than Defense $95-$121 Billion (est.) Per Capita Share of Gross National Product the ancient taw while récodifying the: ajty's¥statutes . { tional Pend spends mayniory GUNS AND BUTTER — The current Ameri- can problem of financing defense and also maib- ~ taining a high living standard has its in the Soviet, Union. Newsmap, above, be estimates by General Electric, shows that Russia, . with a larger population and smaller gross na- Other Thon Defense $390 Billion $725 (est.) trom half as as) } ‘Shunned’ Host Weeps for Joy | at Surprise Party DETROIT —’Two weeks ago Korean War veteran . Eugene Dougherty wept when none of 40 invited guests showed. up at his first birthday party. Yester- day Dougherty wept tears of joy. * * * Some 25 women from the sub- urban Hamtramck Blue Star Mothers staged a surprise — day party for Dougherty, 23 The party all but swept Dough- erty, his wife Grace, 19, and his son Richard from their small flat, licity. William J. Kronner, Detroit at- ‘torney, confessed taking the money \while he was president of the or- 'ganization’s Michigan chapter. Koscinski defended his a ¢ tion/toa by saying it is police policy not to prosecute if restitution is made. Kronner returned the money plus $250 of his own. in commercial positions. Rye the ’ Wexets tes industry was finishing its worst vail horns blared and fire ing legislation, two -resolutions other bread grain, moved along [Beets tenped. ou bu Jct 3% quarter, in years. Auto* shares By THE ASSOCIATED per _ ° went ol as most of the Calling for more civil and mili-! pougherty, who says he nev- with wheat, care ect 3 eased as news came of reduced Stan ding By Her After Skies were clear in the oA "| own’s 1,412 residents turned out|tary Public works spending, and) er had a birthday party be- Near the end of the first hour} moreredih ok basket paren 2 50) production schedules for 1958. Cop- g Y east today but gloomy weather to cheer in subfreezing weather. 2 insurance tax bill through) fore, called newspapers March wheat was unchanged to % higher, cos a doe ceeee ee - 118 bers and most chemicals were) She Admits Slaying with cloudiness, snow or rain, al Thal (deleiwation | wan climaxed which some senators tried unsuc-| » when invited guests failed to March $2.25%s; corn unchanged fo Parsley ‘Root (behs ) dos. vs... ae down while major oils were un- Thesrintant (Son vailed in mot veer festa x by a dance at a vacant restau- cessfully to cut personal income| show up for his party. Resul- ‘ lower, March $1.15; oats 1a potatoes, fancy. 50-Ib bag... -,. 2.50. changed to a shade lower. the country oni aia rant. But, unaccustomed to the 29d excise taxes tant stories aroused sympathy wer to te Beaer March © 8 Rocbare moshouss (vehe.) doa. | nee ry te erate Was cessered in) the! eee in some aren weight of some 200 persons, a x * * throughout the nation. % higher to % lower, March/ Sil? guppard "11 23s industrials. Utilities and rails just] NAHA. Okinawa @ — A young ek ®t cedar post bracin ; der Lyn- ‘oh Y aie : ' g the floor be-' Senate Democratic Leader Lyn r Mothers, headed $1.36%; soybeans % to % pes Turnips, topped, bu. .....-..-+...+ 2S about held their own on average. | American father stood by his wife} More snow fell in much of the gan to crumble. The celebrants,don B. Johnson pushed the Senate EO eee Skopowski, oat go oe an : en \ New York Stocks today after she ecnitted rsp rca and central Rocirs a8 evacuated the place.. to act on them sé the House will ae pee en Sh kat ce a_ hundred : ~ Livestoc ing their infant son, burying his|late winter storms dumpe avy| + have time to act before qa 10-day i . different March $12.62. body in the garden and trying to|snow in Colorado and Wyoming + asier vereas A Sunday’s party was d i DETROIT LIVESTOCK = oP oe ernns oncotsens; make it appear the child had been|The snow increased in Kansas) The floor had sunk four inches brought overtime sessions for five When hee ne sali flat, the ‘ x DETROIT, March 17 (AP) — Cattle.| aqmiral . 84 Eelsey Riad . 314) kidnaped d the ht. while flurries fell. by the time the last of the merry- n Se, poured in e Grain Prices salable, 2200. Bulk early supply slaughier/air Reduce ... $47 Kenne 85 6 uring nig consecutive nights. Dougherty kitchen overflowed steers, limited showing of heifers: in-\ained Ch | | 784 Eeancess :) $24) “My wife is a sick woman, Ijin a belt eastward across southern | ‘makers got out and moved to the The Senate begins this week y CHICAGO GRAIN Ce Org ot ote nee ona |Allied Strs "456 Kresge 88. 284lwant everyone to know I don't|Missouri and into the Ohio Valley. |high school gymnasium where the| vii, zee { minor bills un-| Wi Polish sausage, sauer kraut, a i IS per coat tess pis; early trade steers rons oe : s Lin Mena . ay nt an landers ainst her,”’ e celebration continued. wih passege Of tin cheese cakes and a big birthday CHICAGO. March 13 'AP) — Opening, \and celta moderately active steady to ajc : Ligg & My e696 ¥@ yi again ' * * * der a unanimous consent routine. cake Rik td &; cows opening strong to mostly|am Atrlin’ ” Ge lockh Aire .. 413 Terrence D, Hitt, a civilian tech- | The four girls who dyed their An objection by one senator : A Wheat— May ........ 64% Ps conta bi her: full advance on high cut-/am Can "425 Lone 8 Cem . 341 i f Plymouth, Mich., told Showers spread eastward from. ihair the school colors yow they bill, b > * * Sa RS 62) | rand utility cows: few early sales: bulis/Am Gyan” 42g Lorillard Jao De co tthe southern Rockies into Texas. blocks approval of any bill, but; |. 1, wonderful,” May .... 2 22' Lor 4 64¥4 “pout steady. most early sales choice fedjam Gas & Ey 43 ack Trk ... 241 newsmen, His "26-year-old wife is won't change it until the team others are disposed of rapidly. This is wonderful, wonderful, Bay coset: THRE saar'o7. 1 36ae teers. 980-1150 Ibs 2800-2900; two loadsiam Mardy . 386 Manning 25 lunder observation in the U.S. the southern Plains produced has won or lost the championship. aa i to handle the! Said Dougherty, who maintained Bee cs. BER May <..,5.. 2a Sverege emotes 1100 We: ond 180 iam Metal 206 Martin Co. .. 323) freezing drizzle through western) The team meets Crystal Falls 0 sO" “OPES '0 he did not know of the surprise Cora— July --2 L0% steers 30.00 Most good to le Am Motors 83 Mead Cp 347 Army hospital here. first of the regular annual appro-| De Mar ...... gre BLY o+--7+ LRG steers 34.80-37-50: mixed loads good and/Am N Gas 587 Merck . ..... ia «) « and central Oklahoma. Rain was) Wednesday night. oa bill a $4.108,.| Party. “It’s a perfect surprise.” May 117% Dec : 1.96% ean nee sheers Bi —_ ao eer aerd| Am News 275 Merr Cha 8 . 182 indicated thrqugh the lower Mis- priation bills, providing 108, al ae 120% Lard= grade steers tte & }Am Rad 142 Minn M&M. 77 | Hitt, 28, made radio and televi- Vall nd int rth 108,000 for the Treasury and Post The Blue Stars Mothers first D. esseesss L21M% May .. 12.07 |19.50-2200 Smalls lot choi 50 Am Tel&Tel (1715 Minn P&L ... 20.6) : sissippi alley a o northern, ‘ Offi de durin he he Dec. -issee-- 118 July ........12.00 [heifers 27.00: good to low choice heifers) am Tob 796 Monsan Ch .. 233 sion appeals for the return of his|cections of the Gulf. states. ice departments, during learned of Dougherty when ee soy OC 3¢ 6-20 00; lity reeisse; ‘canners|aanacoee, a Mont rd 332. 80n Brady Dean after his wife + *« * 0 Ing en week. advertised he was lonely in the A acdan y * ; 5 see otorola : ar vellare palanie var Vealers steady rpc acs : 1a wena a 3834 jreported Ls acne paby me Viol ind nd h snow eel . Arey and wanted semmedy bad ‘ te strong: early sales choice and primelArmst Ck 36.4 Wat Bisc. jing Wednesday. She was visiting jolent winds a eavy ; Johnson also pressed a Senate-| write. They wrote enclosing ; : 8 00-3400: standard and good 22.00-/ Atchison _ 184 wat Caan BR ats wling |Struck New England over the . A andl 3800; cull and utility 11 00-22 00 AU Refin’ 1368 Ne 3° neighbor, (end Hitt was Powiing |= - = l tuoisanis lef te House conference gommittee to} small gifts, food packages ld IC | § 2520S, salable. 1.000. Butchers opening |Avce Mig Qo i mee ae = aa A screen on the window of the week eng ha sands. ° Sane Or rea @ 1S reach a compromise on a $2,869,-) checks. er; sows not es ee | | : mixed lots US No 2 and 3 butehers|Benquet 2 1 Nat Gentral #0 jchild’s room had been ripped off, na ae winds up to 70 406,403 supplemental appropria-| The mothers kept up corre- 500-200 “ibe (31 00-31:28; mized No. | Beth Steel... 0t Pw .. 321 and muddy footprints were found Poles snap ; a tion bill carrying funds for use , and 2. 21 50-2160, one let most No 1 Boeipg Air ... 364 Les Pe re jon the window sill and bedcloth- m.p.h. Hardest hit were areas in : -. ‘ J 0 5 includ spondence with Dougherty ver e en orga 720 toe Ty. tmeig gheed Noy Bond Bre 18 Ror Pace eet a cnthes, jewelry. and|Maine, southeastern New Hamp- Waterford Police Waive Pee tae ot bank nacmente "| though the Korean War and al- ‘ ‘ cy fi : —“ Nor Sta Pw * ; * ° « bank ; 5 ards sh he ¢ t two grades 160-18) lbs 1980-9025.” Brigg ‘Mig. as Nwest Alrlin . f tales papers were missing. [Shire and Massachusetts. Snow in| Exqmination in Court) Johnson said the Senate will be- = 7 i ital inane ; Sheep, salable, 2,000. Maughter lambs'Brus Balke 386 Qhio Ol is some sections measured 15 inches. | . Aeredi = x of a} C2kS in a hospital a ; Overcast Weather ond uitgedi ui carae Sae Engen”. tt Sec Gn Gt rmas oF para + + on List of Charges ceonedap federal highway pro| Cit Mich. recovering from Le ; e : C arr : 2 2 Show Elucries) Make) sees es ase oeteca erie | aicree wt 0 ren) swear H34| “After attending a party at a) Local foding hit many sections Fad EN shorn lambs No. 1 pelts 93 Ibs oe Can Dry 1132 Seeding “ 303 eperl Page ae an of southern California after five) Three men, two from Pontiac, * * * Roads Hazardous ey pees 31 00. 00.2 26/00; load “choice Capitol Aisi : Te Parke Da... 12 nightmare in which ie aeained straight days of heavy rains. j/arrested by Waterford . Township ‘ Many of the mothers were on and prime No. 2 Delta wild, ig, 24:00:/Case, st 18 eee ite ad kill hil an police and the Oakland County Fire Razes Stores the invitation list for Dougherty’s By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ee Cater Arac os $01 Peps Cola... 225 she had killed the child. She li pe sheriff's deputies waived examina- party March 2. . aus ed in Michi ‘ Chrraier 1 64 Bileer wn. scribed the burial spot, and mi Envoy Says Nikita tion in justice court on charges of|* a Mrs. Skopowski said she was ee = = Gaea! Com “a6 Phico . ...., 15.3|tary police subsequently dug up vurglary. unable to attend because of two traffic over winter's last weekend ou try Philip M 52.2\the body rg ° ; : er Ss *h Cities Bre... a8 Fninp, Mor -. SF aithe Waterford Justice Donald Adams ’ prior commitments. np overcast, weather, sometimes| | ernory roviray _,_, [edtatiea HE phim = #3 soe oe ould Come to U. hem over to cl | eee es oe si from wet w flurries, DETROIT. March 17 (AP) — Prices Col Brd A - 37 Pit Plate © 164 bound them over to circuit court CLEARWATER Fi Pr A & bd ug go sloppy = [paid per pound for mee 1 top quality ae oy os Ae Proct & G ...894 Hitt said his son was healthy| where ‘they will be arraigned : et, a. = ernment disability pension with made driving hazardoys at times. jive poaltey up to 10 gion Edis, vy Pure O . 323] jand “I had gotten him to smile, WASHINGTON (INS Soviet March 29, spectacular fire raged through a window washing | business. Spring arrives officially on', Ceponettes. 9 Is. average, 3% S%6iConN Gas 1442 RCA... just before [ went bowling that 2 5) ee poet most of a city block of stores’ Thursday. Ibs. average, 31-32. _ Consum rw , “s Rapesisty ieee ie nicht” ‘The couple hes a $year: mbassador Mikhail Menshikov Charged with breaking into a here today, causing damage esti- State Bank | No. 807 oe a oo pips oe Gout Gan "7. 41" evn Met 000 a2 « ld daughter, Terllya jhas put out another feeler to get gas station at 3925 Elizabeth Lake mated at at least 1'2 million Pontiac State Ban! k The DETROIT, March 17 (AP) — Eggs,'Cont Mot... 43 Rey Tod B 104 = Russia's Nikita Khrushchev invited Rd, March 12, were Alvin |dollars Pontiac State Ban Associated Press weekend F.O.B. Detroit, cases included, tederai- .;Cont Ol - 47 Rock Spg .... 25.5 * 4. h s. - : aa of Pontiag in the State of Michigan traffic death count begins at 6 p.m. /**ate grades: [Gers Pus, 93 movell Det <<. tee nas Piamed Bs wite's oom (0 the U.S for a eurimit Paricy.| Sinsber, 3%, 60 Virginia St; It was brought under control |at the close of business on March Frid 4 end idnight Si Whites, Grade A, jumbo, 8@: extra; Denys 14 292 Safeway St . 28% tion on frequent separations kt * * Charles Short, 23, of 413 John- Keak 4, 1958. Published in accordance with = sates Mediums 40-49, wid ave 41s: smell Bet ots OF Bt Res Pap... 301| Caused by his job and the fact | Menshikov, in his first appear-| son St., and Kenneth Evans, 30, three after Ms discovery et bp il fis AD egumemsvard e ai UC < U -as~ ** '. I day. 31; rede B. large, 49; Browns, ‘Grade Doug Aire... 51. Scovill Mf .. 226/ that his wife’s mother was mot jance on a live American television t. ets am. the pravisisns cat) mection’ 3 vet the A. extra sg gy ers 50-52, wid avg|East Air L .. 377 Beab Al RR . 226 =n ae ee Three stores, a stock brokerage | micni financial institutions act. Roosevelt Dillard, 46, of De- |56: Grace B, large. a Grade C large, |East 104 Sears Roed.. 271| Present when the baby was born. |program, yesterday said Khrush- , ffi : ee —- ASSETS troit was injured fatally Sunday /|39:, checks, 32-39, wtd ‘ave, E5ton Mfg .. 434 shell Ol .... 682 chev “certainly” would come t Slusher has admitted also burg-|office and a supermarket were Genki kaltexen ri ko ether when his car and a panel truck |, Sumne 00-53: fen’ Writes Grade mer pea | *5 4 Sinclair =. 802] “Ever since the baby was born © © : e © larizing a collision shop at 4602|destroyed. banks, including reserve jumbo, 80-52; extra large. 48-49: large. E 2 @ Socony - 416 she hasn't been herself,” he said. Washington for a summit meeting i - balances, and cash items i owns, Grade RR € - Elizabeth Lake Rd., and Gulfview| A fire wall in the office of the . collided at a Detroit intersec- [47%-49) medium, 43-45; Br are Exell | 39'§ Southern Co . if he were invited by the U. S z ' , in process of collection $ 3,888,096 73 tion. ro CE Ge a oer. Feira Mor gy Bt RY a6 “I don't blame my wife a bit. y ** \Bakery, 4550 Elizabeth Lake Rd., brokerage firm prevented the fire|united States Government Pires +: Sperry Ra. 455 1 realize we don't have the boy The Soviet ambassador added the same night, police said. |from spreading to other stores and aap yr Gisct| S24 ais Das W. deamon Redes Gon B :~ : 107 oe ¢ byhls ae any petits right now my wile| that Russia would like to have a | He further admitted to Pontiac a four-story department store, one Oviesners panei and 290.191 88 he aes | 'Passen ers Esca c as “egal ae HE Sate TE Le I dl | summit conference “as soon as detectives that he entered gas of the largest stores in this area. |o 0) bonds notes, and de- , when his pickup truck hit a tree g ; p ca e3 3 rimel hoe 31 Hitt said when their daughter) possible.” ‘stations in Pontiac. They are Mayor Lewis Homer, who made Peete LLL. 286,00000 near Taylor Township. . es Jen Motors “#35 Suiner Pap .. 34.1 Was born, his wife stayed with her Menshikoy however opposed any Nightingale Service Station, 59) the damage estimate. said the fire|“cjuding $1,17194 ove r- Elmer E. Woizeschke, 59, of Gen Tire |.. 263 Swift & Co... fou parents at Bryne, was the worst in the history of|_ drafts) . ... 10,310,787 63 ; : Ge a2 Sy) El Fe. di \Baldwin, twice; Baldwin Service r n y oO Reese and Loretta Sharon, 55, of ' See erat Sa) tenes Oe a3 * acussion at & summit conference Station, 128 Bald and Mill Clearwater, a west Florida Gulf) Swner * ..5351.182.39 Bay City were killed Saturday in Goebel Br aH Ue tS Bul’. 3) “Ina eaing like this you have of German ‘rewnification. He ‘said e ice. 380 S sia St ee Coast city of 40,000 Purniture and a two-car collision on M15; eight| MELBOURNE, Fla. W — An Goosvesr pil thes aS 3$2 to have your mother around,” he . a ey . oo Equipment from five neighbor-| ek eres: a weit 54 miles east of Saginaw. Eastern Air Lines plane en route Ge No Ry 338 Tran OW ft - 375 Said. “It helps a great deal.” Hitt eorcce y 0 settle: them ing cities, including Tampa and |!vestments and other as- . ~ i represent - © an sag Fremont ee Teenie, (@ Melbourne Might at Euamgc padded be had received messages!" gg Waterford Board |, Petersbuz. rused to aid whe] fig FEET oa : H oe , tn. rag» Arte * tod yf dogene ae apni hitting a pile ny ph Hersh Ghee. 34 Un Carbide". nt ae tal haces ho pag At the same time, U. S. officials : rere Fire aia Other anseta 2) 122,384 62 was Sunday 8 : { ia ua! said t side: : Fe . ere were no ‘injuries. ————— collided with another on M82 in el and rupturing a fuel line. All|Hpoxer,E 33 Oni Air. Lin. 38 (Present to bring his wife's people an pat phen m Eiserntower, B Cause of the fire was no: imme- ee Ree nies Se eee ee Newaygo County. the passengers left the craft safe- —_— = 534) Reese 33/0 Okinawa. leaeeite noc a |diately determined. LIABILITIES ly. nterlak Ir 21.3 Us lanes ooo 057 ‘I tried to give her my love,” he sof | Demand deposits of in- Elsie Cisco, 20, of Ypsilanti r . = ‘ ~ Bus Mach 3g US Rub .... 327 stuttered, “I thought everything! jdence of settlement of one or more) When the Waterford Township | ane corporations 510,096,133 81 a was aorgrey noe wane Fired gare ypligpre hit = o) er 4p} US Tob .... 25 vas all richt but when a woman _ board meets at 7:30 p.m. tonight, ‘ACCUSE 0 a in Tiparinevshipa, and corpers: stie was. stru yy a car while int. Silver 6 Van Real ..... 242 hag a baby without her mother’ the board will discuss the township | g tions "10,164,642 53 walking on M153 in Washtenaw pall ppiieeme * airtel a saa nt Tel eet! Hi Wenge ot sd rf around, she feels everything is on . operation budget. due at the Oak-', Deposits of Pisasee er tee Cont »m™ Fat wap ahh Poune’Sdw 1% ber own shoulders. Delay Hoffa Tria) st comy ortces e's) in Embezzlement — ozs! =a steels George T. Purdy, 88, of Green- a ones & L | wl ‘ ii Oitieal subdivisions” 5.204.619.36 ‘ ate The plane coasted in for an ; | 3° . eal su sions 224, ville was injured fatally Sunday in ; ° > The Waterford Township recre- posits of ban 000.00 therwise normal landing and then STOCK AVERAGES |Fatmin ton Hich Gi or i : DETROIT (INS) — The Wayne Other deposits (cértified a two-car collision on M57 near|” q fe] ives ation budget will also be discussed. = and officers’ checks. etc) 342,223.48 began to burn as the seven pas-|, Compiled by The Associated Pres County Prosecutor's office has bee Greenville. March 11: “Vo : The Recreation department has ap- § office has been|Total Deposits $26,990, 48: sengers filed out. », nds i, ssc: cal Concert Tuesday NEW YORK w — Retrial of proved the budget, but firial ap- accused of stalling in the handling Other liabilities ........... 433,469 11 : Mw Leable Sl Goes pl leh ELD ;{|_ FARMINGTON — “This Is My| James H. Hoffa, president of | PTVal is up to the Board of Educa-|of the $15,000 Nephrosis Founda-| Total, Lisbitities, (not tn- News in Brief ami, said the gravel blended in| Pron Dey Sue te ok ieee Country,” the annual sp ring con-| the International Brotherhood of tion and the township board. tion embezzlement. ligations shown below) $27 423,981.13 with the runway and he did not|Week ago ... 243.7 85.6 762 182.9! cert, will be given by the F ‘Toausae | we ah : x &* * Officials of the charit . CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 5 |see it. He said the fire probably|Vann feo tS uss ie ind ington High Sch I Vo eli wicttas ane : stponed Township clerk James Seeterlin| ization charged that Ls. : 1. ae oe os cosinesies Wallace Trego, of 1927 Grand-|started in the brakes about half 1957-58 High ..2800 1347 77.5 1888 lt ; oe ee ett: P "5 was pos said that he will recommend that s a Undivided profits. ‘Soz'sar.72 - 1947-68 Low 2260 782 662 1509 ment tomorrow. today antil April 8. Koscinski, chief assistant pros- Resets fand retirement ac- view Rd., Orion Township, report-/way down the runway. It blazed | 56 High 2763 1831 989 1915) This American heritage theme’ * * & ithe township accpet the lowest bid} eeuter who investigated the case, count for preferred cap- 0 228 00 ed to Oakland County Sheriff's up as the passengers got out. (1956 Low 2440 1262 696 1716 Will feature Negro spirititals. show! The retrial, set to start today, 0" comprehensive general insur-| refused to prosecute and‘advised ss Deputies Saturday that someone | DETROIT STOCKS tunes and folk songs that typify’ Was put over because U.S, Atty. ‘ance covering township-owned against a release of any pub- Total Capita) Accounts $ 1.011, 853 72 Total Liabilities and Cap- ital Accounts $28.835,804 85 *This bank's capital consists of: Comman stock with total par value of 500,000 00 $ MEMORANDA Assets pledged or assigned « to secure liabilities and : 900,000 00 for other purposes . .. $. ns as own above are after en of re- serves of Be 246,574 13 ts of the State of Michigan included in De- its of States and politi- cab subdivisions . ........ 277,186.77 wm, bank, cashier of the Eu above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement {s true, and hat ft fully and correctly represents the Death Notice true tat and set everal the best of ROLLA L. BROWN HOLLY — Service for Rolla L. Brown, 79, of 1820 Rose Center Rd., who died Friday at his home, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow |s at the Bendle Funeral Home. Of- |tnis 12th by certify that I ficiating will be the Rev. Lewis Sutton of Holly Methodist Church my knowledge and Correct—aAttest: rue state of the several matters herein belief. WM. A. EUBANK T E. WHITFIELD SMITH PALCONER H. RUSSEL HOLLAND Directors. State of Michigan, County of Oakland, Sworn to and subscribed before me @ay of March, 1958, and I here- not an officer or director of this ba VIRGINIA E. STARK, with burial in Rose Center Ceme-| (8t*” tery. Surviving is his wife, Dora. pe Public, Oakland County, Micht- My commission expires March 3. Moet Mon,, Mar. "BB. pee eae i 2EeE ios aE r “OAKLAND COUNTY *S newest, most | beautiful cocktail lounge s Miracle Lounge Henry’ (Formerly Henry's 2S SS eee Bloomfield Inn) | 3 The ¢ specialt of the house is an atm ra of com- | way you like — ‘and | Hi eS encheon an dinner menu to please the | 1. criminating palate. . one if |) Businessman’s Luncheons 11 a.m.-2 p.m, | : Open (11 a.m. to 2 a.m. fi heentat Se re Ceerting Concer ~ oe Ay he ade te ie, Aha Wiad 2 ete Sk cies Peet ey art : ak iat +o i€ iy ri THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 sae = ee 7 - ae = a . ee ee eee dae * ae , , =e sie Bob: Considine Says: Mists of Time Veil Erin’s Beloved St. Pat NEW YORK (INS) years and nhs * Of Only a misty picture emerges, historically, though in millions of hearts the enslaved swineherd boy who became a saint is as real as the -musie and the marches in the — The origin, activities, personality and even the name of Patrick — Patron Saint of Ireland — have commanded the research of scholars for a thousand day’s parades that honor him. Padraic Colum, Columbia Uni- versity professor, discounts such hallowed legends as Patrick’s use of the shamrock to teach the mystery of the Trinity: “Irish people wore the shamrock because it had a resemblance to a ‘its association with the Trinity is through an afterthought.” The Irish poet scholar continues, in his “Treasury of Irish Foke- cross; lore,” published by Crown: “There were never any snakes Now the Norse word for ‘paud’; ‘toad-expeller,’ and out toads but snakes.” ful, and in the estimation a es beloved through the ages, Christianity to Ireland; he bishop who made it work. ia Sealand. and) Go| cur salet (wed under no necessity to banish them. coming to Ireland they noticed there were no, such crea- tures there, They heard of a man whose name was ‘Paudrig,’ they thought that his name meant misunderstanding came the legend of Patrick’s banishing not only Patrick spoke of himself as “I, Patrick, a sinner, the most rus- tic, and least of all the faith- many deemed contemptible.” But few saints were ever more aggressively efficient during their lifetimes. Patrick did not bring have been a very brave as well as a devout and learned man (though x. * As for his courage, ‘toad’ is and of that/plains: of very land had been extingui or more “Yet suddenly the was the He must| te Paschal fire light rick."” On Easter morning he ccomaiiliad that his Latin had suffered sorely as a youth.) * Digest this month speaks of one of Patrick's acts as ‘‘one of the furning points in the religious his- tory of the Western World.”’ It ex- “On Easter Eve (of his “first year of missionary work in Ire- land,) accompanied by Benen, the youthful son of an Irish chieftain, Patrick arrived in the vicinity of Tara, At the royal mansion, the chieftain and Druids were gathered to await the lighting of the royal fire. By decree, all fires in the fire was to be lighted until the Druids had ignited the royal one. was pierced by flames. It was “ the Catholic side with a dark the strange old sembled ‘chieftains of the power of his cloud. ; * * As he began to shreds. shed and no Shes the rulers.” dark night od by Pal: olic Church, eral and Patrick i Patrick ap- the March issue of peared vat Tara in full episcopal robes, preceded by Benen — brand- ishing a copy of the gospels. “The Druids, by their incanta- tions, had the devil cover the hill- “Patrick then turned to the as- he said he would disperse the came forth and cut the cloud to By the time his prayer wag finished, the whole area was bathed in bright sunlight. Thus the Druids Were defeated before all Irwin St. Jehn Tucker, 50 years an Episcopalian minister before his conversion to the Roman Cath- writes an astonishly erudite article on the Irish in gen- the legends; black cloud,” tale continues. get indignent. and told them God. As proof, light cruise,” He finds fault with many ef. firms up others. And, if you run inte this bril- liant Chicagoan, don’t ask him to join you in the singing of the more familiar Irish songs. He'd ‘‘Whenever 2 merry crowd starts singing around a bonfire or moon- ‘When Irish Eyes Are Smiling’ or some similar bits Marietta. kings?" Regan! for cedures agreement is) corporation. Herbert from Hileen and Naughty What has become of the strong tury of the Irish singers who died for their right to rebuke their own Take it from there, Downey and! ., tember ist. of each year the person or agency charged with the management of said systems, charges which have been delinquent six (6) months or more, to the Supervisor ‘of the Township of Waterford who shall enter the same upon the next tax against the premises to which such serv- fees shall have been rendered, and such charges shail be collected and said lein all be enforced in the same manner The crayfish is a freshwater cou- sin of the lobster. 4 sanitary with any Whereas, the Township of Waterford, Odkland County, Michigan TOWNSHIP OF WATERFORD Orginance No 33 An Ordinance to provid~ for the ad- ministration, accounting, and billing pro-) sh: sewer owned by the Township of Waterford, Oakland County, Michigan and sanitary sewer systems operated and maintained by the aforesaid ore —— to 1 he m tified in ewe lease of the a then no such roharee shall b systems February 1, May 1, August 1, op amend char shall become due shall tertify any —_ so no- operates and lein| p classes of users provided however all aoe an shall be req said systems, exce 1. Such ges such times, not exceeding fifteen as) shail nue cag days after the care, billin: dates, oe and if such not on} for dent or before such due dete, “chen a penalty system and is hereby of. ten (10) per cent shall be added | establish separate and . thereto. and for Secti 2—Charges for services fur- system. all users of a tion 2. supra, to insure the pa: of any sewer char the res aser. sewer deposits now in the. 5—This ¢ etfective, immediately ager ey pers of * of Tin-Pan-Alley tripe are always maintains aria sanitary , atemis) against such promines | from ms efter wees, this 10th day of March ; ; w m its boundar ursuant to agree-|the da ’ bd pray, the . sun/included. ment (s) with eying wfunicipal connate ee, the filing of said notice, shall not}; Ayes: Johnson, Seeterlin, Olson, Cole- But St. Patrick’s own hymn,/|onis); and be effective notice to the Township until|man, Pappas. . ‘ *| Whereas, the said Township of Water-|and unless a cash deposit equal to two) Nayes: None. “m known as the ‘‘Breastplate,’ which/ford owns and operates other indepen~ times the iarereny quarterly charge 1 wie FE a = > ; i ; i t ( thin its}such premises shall have been made : converted Druid assasins lying injfent ganiary, sawer system(s) within is/#uer ction 3—The rates to be charged to Mareh 17, ‘58. wait for him on the road from! whereas. the said Township of Wa-jcontinually maintained as security for music, n particular initrifles from Extension. Connaught to the hall of Tara, is sung only bv Epis~opal choits. * * “Once music of the Harp of Tara was a world wonder. But when one speaks today of Irish best samples quoted are Bohemian Girl or tuneful little whimsies of Victor ip. * County, Sec said sanitary benefit of its citizens; The Township of Waterford, Oakland Michigan, tion 1—No free service shall be fur- terford is desirous of establishing @ uni- form system of administration, account- ing, and billing pracedures on the afore- systems et the therefo: sewer nished by the system to the Township or to any person, firm or corporation, public or private, agency or instrumentality. Charges services furnished by the system shall said system in good repair and working billed quarterly (3 months), to wit:'order; and to provide for a reserve fund or to any public the payment of charges thereto. the users of said systems shall be estab- Ushed from time to time var Board. by the Town- In determining the rates’ un meiqeed = will pu = highest bidder for ¢; NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice is hereby given that on the 26th at 10:00 a.m.. to be charged to the users of a - ticular merie the Township Board shall) Merc 4 Dr.. motor No.S5WA68460M, ascertain that the particular rate willlat 77 E. Huron St., Pontiac, Michigan. be adequate to provide for the payment/Said motor vehicle is stored and mey of expenses of administration and opera-|be inspected at said address. tion of each aforesaid system and such ASSOCIA DIs- expénses for the maintenance thereof as cou CORPORATION for)may be necessary to preserve each afore- By: hale pilav ch March 15, “I Death Notices seb aia tee , [IN LOVING. MEMORY OF ED- ward = earrgere ry who passed: BROWN, MARCH 15, 3958, MABLE, | y*¥*y, Marc 3835 Highland mae Milford: age| von vasa cosets tn aces N and Blanch Catte; two grandchil- dren also survive. Puneral service Bird Funeral Home, Milford, Rev. wey’ Interment in H Mrs. Brown will Richardson-Bird Funeral H _ Milford. ne oe officiating. land Cemetery. in state at the with ome, FORD, MARCH 14. 1958, TRA Gates |To beat before we knew you were | gone. God saw that you were suffering, And the hills were hard to climb; eam 80 jhe closed your weary eyes Whispe a peace be Sealy aieeee by Sa pa a, Son-in-le Grbacuiace ren. THE FAMILY OF MARY LOU Baynes wish to thank the friends — neighbors and nurses at the Anna, and Harve ospital, during her recent illness Nuskena 0 Mea atte bctores dear; and death Sons Henry Baynes ‘father of John Wesley Buford and ii Chari Baynes. Daughters Theophilus Buford. ner rv- rs. Eva Harris, Mrs. Reba Ma- ice will be held Tuesday, March Mrs. Irene Lindsey, and 18, at 2 p.m. from the New Ho Hoste Aste dren. Baptist Church with Rev. P. Reed officiating. Interment in Oak were © Mr. Buford will lie in state at the Prank Carruthers Puneral Home and may be Hill Ce after 7 p.m. today. BUCK. ARCH “15, 1958, §. LEVI, 58 The memory of our little Mike, by day, | bert A. Kleino end Miss aisine Buck; ry mre Lillian Carter, Gilbert and Mrs. Rena Ba ing. Interment in Oak Hill CARPENTER, MARCH 15, 1958, LES- ter G., Delray Beach, Fla. (for-|—— Roselawn, Pon- mery ‘of lil N. aeeee Carpenter; of Osear and hel Moser © March e am. from t Puneral Home with Rev. Theo- dore R. Allebach officiating. In- terment in Elkland Cemetery, Cass City, et 2 p.m. where grave- side service will be held. Mr. nter | lie in udley Moore Mrs. Marvin Dubay, Donald Mrs. Harry Allen, Mrs. bdauaie | Mrs. Harry Wiltsie Ernest Cole: 17 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren also vive. Puneral service will be held Tuesday, March 18 at 11° from the ne Apc ent Home with Rev officiating. Interment tn ‘anne Mr. Cole will lie in state a _ Sparks-Griffin ee tes MARCH Skarritt, of Richard an dear sister of Mrs. Lillian four & grandchildren also survive. Richardson-Bird Funeral Ho with Rev. Dorr Pockler off ing. Interment in Lakeside Ceme- tery, Oxbow Lake. Graveside ice under auspices t] 301. Mrs. England will He in the Richerdson-Bird Puneral at Home, Milford GROSS, FRANK XAVIER, _ son of Mr Gross: grandson of Mr. and George A. Gross and at Adam Voe _in White dear brother of Mrs. rown, Mrs. Etta Sormee- ton H. Bank officiat-| Ceme- tery. Mr. Buck will Me in state at Donelson-Johns Funera! Home. penter; dear father of dear brother W. A. Carpenter, Mrs. Eifie Mullen and Miss Orie cor penal” Puneral Serre will be state at the Wesaeii and Jack Cole, dear broth-|¢ ome. 6, MRS nie! tehicheenk Rd. Milford; age 73. dear motber Howard Skarritt; andchildren and five great- 3 pm from haope Mr. an lker. Service will be held Tuesday at 11:30 a.m. Manley Bailey Funeral Home, 183 Oakland, a Interment a pel. 85; beloved hus-_ B Ger- Car- and sur- am t the Wilcox; telat — : sta te 1340 W.| Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Twp; and Mrs. Frank X. Leda at \GADIONE, MARCH you, er, 1490 Opdyke Rd.: father of Mrs. Mrs. Donald tris and Fagadone; dear brother of Hagadone, and Mrs. Harry Embree Puneral service will be March 2 offictating. Toreroeene me Park Cemetery. Mr. Hacadorte | “Ill Me tm state at the Snark:s- Griffin Funeral Home and be seen after noon Wednesday. 1958, LYDTA. age 92; dear mother of Mrs George Ww. HATLEY, MARCH 14, 829 Orchard Lake Ave. Lampman: dear sister of Jane James; 5 13. great-grandchildren also. Funeral service will be Monday, March 17, at 7:30 p.m from the Sparks-Griffin Puneral randchildren and survive Clare John gig may Mrs. held Home with Dr. Wm. H. Marbach : officiating. | Following services . = = ere Mrs. Ha A to Hamilton, Ontario for inter- CASH WANT AD RATES ment. HEBENTON wancn is, tssa,|} Tipes }:Day 3Days on Ethel 2084 Sort ingle, Detroit; H 150 2.70 age 66; ved Goa wet Adolph 4 1.80 3.48 es Hehenton: dear mother of Mrs. 4 235 405 600 Richard Day and OG ward 6 2.70 4.86 71.20 Newman; dear sister of Charles 7° 315 5.67 40 ke. Funeral service will be _ 8 3 60 648 9.60 Pilea i Apobe cage at 1:30°p ° 4.05 71.29, 10.80 Home with Rev. James H. L' officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Mrs. Hebenton will le in state at the Voorhees-Siple Fu- Cemetery. neral Home. ~Biple Purerai uther HOWARD, MARCH 15. BABY Girl, be beloved infant Saeebuer of viand, _gfftcating Funeral arran Spares Onittin Funeral ames A’ terment in White tery. Judith Ann will He in wate at Sparks-Griffin eral Home until 1 p.m, Wednesday —— of In Memoriam 2 passed away 5 years ago today. Grows more precious sy him in A “aelbing hand to all he knew; Larticvs was kind, so generous | rue On earth he nobly did his best, Grant him, Jesus, heavenly rest. Sadly missed by Daddy, Momma, brother a and sisters 4 “Funeral _ Directors — A HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE COA FUNERA —— Drayton Plains OR 3-T157 Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME “Designed for Funerals” SPARKS-GRIFFIN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service FE 2-584 Voorheés-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance service—Piane or Motor|* tr) PE 23-8378 Ronald Dubay, Cemetery Lots 5 Stoo # ED SPACES IN GAR den = Messiah. Fe ca, Chapel |. $500 FE ee HAPE) | CEMETERY. 3) E 5-8064 afier & graves. Call _ p.m. BOX REPLIFS-~. At 10 a.m. today there ae eee me the following — oe 3, 4, 9, 28, 32, 35, 42, 56, 58, ‘70, 74, 76, 88, 108, 112, 118, 115, - 116. é The Pontiac Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. All _e | ve immediately, The ress assumes no res sibility for errors er dnsertion of the advertise. ment which has been ren- dered valueless through the error. Whe eancellations are made get your ‘‘kill No adjustments will given without it. be Closirig time for advertise- ments containing type sizes larger than reguler agate type is 12 o'clock noon the day previous to publication. Transient Want Ads may be cancelled up te 9:30 a.m. the day of publication after th rtion, Help Wanted Male 6 AD BOOK MATCHES R FULL TIME Easy tose line . Book hes yemes mmissions! .M 1 Glamour | ee Sac ol {tustre . Ad, Hill- les dozens others; 10's, 30's, | M lor quick dally sales, Cus- ee ad everywhere, Master Out- it. FREE. FAST action we - , selling ex: een sUP’ oe MaATGn, Bia S ” Greenwood, icrvat 3 ic OPEN IN Am., Europe. To $15,000 nis aly, Enserees 2 Info. a Us.. 000. Write Center. Boston ATTENTION Real Estate Salesmen hee is Bl grow | some help. ‘WHITE B BROS. REAL TATE IN -LOVING MEMORY OF MI- David Overbaugh, who - heed up at our) _“rayron fia ;|\WOMAN FOR SHORT ORDER merce n Commerce 4 ___Help Wanted Male 6 MECHANICS WANTED FIRST CLASS ONLY meet have experience on GM. DIESEL BUSES | Excellent working conditions Ben- Sas talization, Life Insur- days, Sick Benefits and Disability Insurance, Fifty-two week work year, Start- ing pay $2.17 ~~ hour. Time- snd-bell after an 8 hour day. ” write full details Orange & Black Bus Lines | 419 Anderson Ave. Fairview, N. J Soret _— WANTED TO DO >| fees epee for room | st. Salesman giving BiG Is wove PAYCHECK ow Since Jesus is arms.| ARE YOU PEDDLER OF t sad St. Patrick's Da: DOOM? YOU HAVE Sadly missed by Mommy & Baa idy.| COURAGE, DETERMINATION, IN LOVING MEMORY OF How-| SELF TANCE AND SELF arduiNewteakalrye DISCIPLINE? IF YOU HAVE — Suny Maren 10. 1803: WE CAN EELP! PHONE FE He = a cheery smile, a pleasant) 3:7256 PR: Ld 5 _FOR_ APPOINTMENT __ SHQE SALESMAN. TOP EARN- eels Must be exnerienced Avply _81_N. Saginaw. Mr. Hayward _ | Help Wanted 8) ALL MEN OR spol DESIROUS of making $2 to a hour, full or part time Sarr Smith, 150 Perry 8 to ‘2 ee COUPLE AS Cihiraken FOR, American Legion Nelson Post Apartment furnished. Ph FE! 2-5832 after 6 p.m. for detalls | CANVASSERS | EARNINGS UNLIMITED. FULL or ee ed Chance to advance. Age no handicap. Box 117, Pon- _tec Press. MEN — WOMEN, $20. DAILY - Sei] Luminous nameplates Write _Reeves Co., Attleboro, Mass. a ae I en — REAL ESTATE SALESMEN OR saleswomen in new home project. In Pontiac Waterford and Utica area. Exp referred. Rose Hill Realty Co. pawood 2-0060. Enmpiay meet! Agencies 8A Attendant Man experienced tn hospital work, age 26-45 to work for private in- dividual. Good soph peces- sary. $400 per west Employment. 406 ‘Pontiac Btate Bank Bldg, FE_5-9227. BUMP & METAL FINISH. 4 YRS experience in epeet metal and | | Will tram three neat appearing ag- gressive young men for outside | sellin — Pontiac and | The. following “qualifications 218 Wy ‘ust enjoy meeting aby aiking meagre are celocuiare will offer. . Better than average income. roe. advancement on proof of | a 3. Thorough trainin All company benetke as) you “qualify. ae en, to build a future in rowing pesiness . Call for teran 10 a.m. p.m. arch 18 and 19. ‘Tues and Wed Mr. Turner, Waldron Hotel, Poatiac SALESMAN TO ee ue REPRESENT A leading brand of water softener. Must have car & be over 25 yrs. of age. We will train you. For ap- __ poi t call PE 43573. SALESMAN Man. Capeble Real Estate Man, = ie cial and LAWRENCE mW SOAYLORD 13 E. Pike &. FE 4-0584 Sales Career Sepa One of the reese 8 lead — ufacturers of Advertising ideas ‘ot ov and unusual sales career oe man. es cpomtvees 1 but not Ge tae & Es- taptshed. accounts. : you to earn — $15, 000 per year. Com missions ‘advanced weekly. rent conn for Mr. Ludden, ‘Sears Roebuck) 8" & Co. aluminum Midwest | 4 ” pontiac State | FE 27. . Al “— Fei ick with good experi- enre Starting ate ad 27 =ee a) ent. wae Pontiac _Ban lidg. FE 5-0227. “EVELYN EDWARDS | VOCATIONS COUNSELING R NEW _ LOCATION (UNITY BANK BLDQ. SATURDAYS Srate si coM ‘OPE | 9 TWIRLING TAUGHT IN Walled Lake vicinity. Instructions BATON my home. _-FE_ 1-93 FINISH HIGH SCHOOL Study at home, are Dipioma awarded Write for free catalog. Wayne School, | _Box_ 10, Pontiac _ Press _ LEARN WELDING _ Now! BIG. demand in well - paid industries | Spars time training in Heliarc, | Gas, Arc Welding prepares ulckly. Write Utilities _Box 15, Pontiac Press. PIANO LESSONS. BEGINNERS OR elementary students. Exc. preee rations for advanced studies. FE wee! you ng. Inst., FOR MASS8O - THERO- a eee physicians’ supervi- sion, now progress at N. Was oR 8] Oak Michigan, 1 mile east off Woodward. Call Lincoln 474 ELECTROLYSIS & SWEDISH, PHYSIO-THERAPY CLINIC i eed SCHOOL 500, Park Shelton Ho- Michigan on Mon- day, March 17th after 6 p.m. or all day Tuesday March i8th for | an_ interview. TOP CHECKER PLAYER WANT- ed Also able to — FE 5-9381. WE NEE 7 neat, ambitious and hard work- ing men, who want to sell Ford cars Best pay fn the area, Come ox and tale it over, 147 8. Saginaw Pontiac WANTED EXP. SALESMEN. Kurth Rea! Estate and Insurance. ward. Birmingham. Mi 4-1676. Evenings. MI 4-3816. Help Wanted Female 7 2—SALESLADIFS—2 THREE BABY ESSENTIALS AL TEXTILE, , — MANUFACTURING | CORP. PH, FE 37256 FRO AM. 5 _P.M,_FOR arpborruese BUSINESSWOMA i over 25 to sell O cavattining space | in rO- = a to travel. week guarantee, ver bonuses, rte! 5. Bamisn, faa ba9 tas oy tee Kansas Chg G: Missouri Work Wanted Male 10: — A-1 CARPENTEK WORK. Repair FE 4-4210. eereeeeny || ae AVAILABLE NOW! CARPENTER &¢ cabinet work New & repair. | _D. B. Murdock FE 2-7861. CABINET. MAKER AND reeds er itchens @ 4 alty. 4-5000 — CARPENTER WORK, ALL TYPES. Cabinet work and finish trim ape- clalty. FE 6-5632. CARPENTER, NEW OR REM elin, No job too large or smali, Winter rates. OR 3-8 CARPENTER WORK WANTED. Homes & garages built Attics & basements finished a} sate mates FE 3-7204. Ext. a core with ae RS exp mn cu & rocessing Write to P.O. “Box wt “Pontiac | ‘EXTERIOR AND me 3afs2 Free estimates | 37152. ° | ODD JOB SERVICE | ANY HOUR FE 2-6057 | NEW -| ‘OD- too 977. |/ROOFING — SIDING REPAIR work New or old. FE 5-571. | REMODELING. DRYWALL PLAS- tic tile and floor tile, Small jobs _included, FE -4-0447. RELIABLD CARPENTER NEEDS _ work. 25 yrs. exp, FE mien ROOFING. EAVEST GHS, lumbing. Inside & outside ee ing. Recreation rooms. Plaster re- aoa Carpenter work. Floor til- FE 5-8371. CURB AND COUNTER GIRLS. Phone FE 8-3711, 1 to 5 p.m. IF YOU HAVE A CAR AND CAN WORK 3-4 DAYS os EARLY EVENINGS, C x LL FE #-6864, _FE 46-8807, 9 ‘TIL NOON. HOUSEKEEPER, aes CHILDREN. es 2‘ & 4. Must be clean, in- fet ligent eereen: Capable of man- aging home, business eople. Sundays off. Live in. Must have feferences. Vic. of Pine Lake. ee peters < 4 p.m. only. Lincola OBES ED LADY, GOOD REF. for Dabysitting. PE 44284. Need Money? We have te for girls who can drive ean evenings. _Part t time. Pr 4 SILK S53 Vil th oe DRY | — plant. Must be exp., Write Pontiac _ Press ess Box 56. START T EARNING D IMMEDIATELY. a. cae wks DIXIE Diner, 255 8. Merrill. Birming- ham, ‘Across from Detroit Edison. , Nights. Bett: m- Ee sed oe For Home Remodeling. Good Commissions, Box 13, Pontiac | — Press. Work Wanted Female WT wae AND IRONINGS, 286 N Cass. FE 45-1579. ‘WTD - Sages GR DAYS PE 86-6924 ‘WIDOW LADY WANTs DAY work re transportation, $1 hr. FE 4-334 WALL. yan Reas. Other work. FE 5 NEATLY DONE. 6398. _ Income Tax Service 17 an INCOME TAX "WASHING AND IR IRONINGS - CALL | RETURN PRE. pared in your home by qualified ert Nab ie degree. EMPIRE TAX SERVICE. Cc. J. ODELL YOUR HOME OR MINE 1343 Oxbow Lake Rd. EM 3-3125 MBURION E STEVENS “3 MELROSE FE 86-3500 OME CALLS BY APPOINTMENT Building Sert Service 12 ~— AAA Floor Sanding Floor ated — Finishing Cc. BUD BILLS si (‘é$C&F'EE E 8-2050 ~ A-A . TRENCHING _ Footings § Septic F Field OR A & B TRENCHING voces. water lines, field tile. = 5-9961. mr TYPE OF HOUSE SOPLANS custom drawn CL 1-8300 _3-4031 _ A-1 GARAGE DOOR AND HOUSE- held doors. Prompt service and repairs. “It's more prac repair than replace, wt “a | or CMT C4096 RPENTER CREW AVAIL- * cele heaghing and finish. Also alterations Free est. FE 5-3608 ALTERATIONS. ADDITIONS AND repair work Licensed builder. FHA terms. 86-1198. ALUM: [_ SIDING. PRE-CASt STON NE EM "3-0482 Gordon Fiattiey by experts FHA terms. ALL TYPES OF MASONRY WORK. Fireplaces a specie FE 45-6929. BRICK, 076 a . &lso sslenevee No job too Residential) and commer- ees work, Ph MY | BLOCK. BRICK. CEMENT, WORK and fireplaces MA 5-037 ab UBED |< D Gas “DRYER Wtd. Miscellaneous _Pay_eash. PE 2-4 Wtd. Household Goods 2 27 Get the outright or 2 GOOD TAPE RECORDER, WILL WANTED: PROXIMATE LIKE POOL TAB $90.00 LE. PE 5-383 CHRISTIAN older Jay. home. FE. CHRISTIAN room apt. PROP PPP poled p BUILDING a HOUSE 1 HORSE WILL TRADE NEW BUMPER Share Livi ing Q Quarters 30 WIDOW WILL ert _ Close in. FE ; 5-3475 afte GIRL To ane — _Vie Cooley. Ww td. _Con a ee _after_ 3:30, FE 4-3862. WILL SHARE MY 3 BEDROOM modern home with elderly lady. Lake, EM 3-4478 tracts, Mtgs. 32 tne TRACTS WANTED Estate 1362 W. Hu- r FE Mr Clark C For land Jonnson fe lea oo 1704 8 ASH IN A FLASH Gogo = Augie Tom sa fied” friends A. Johnson REALTOR Tele — Rd. FE 4-253. for CASH UNLIMITED For good land contracts, new or seasoned, Reasonable discount, no obligation. Call FE 4-3844 & ask ‘R RRO low, O REALTY __ 1a K RO At RD. CASH | FO FOR For noned FE 4-3844 or TED MCCU ee LAND CONTRACTS. siae Dixie Hwy. ~ CASH — UNLIMITED land contracts, new or $, any hour. Ask for Ted 1716 A LLOUGH, = LTOR $143 Cass Eliz, EQUITABLE ANS on acre or more with 100 ft. Feat, ie ARM good properties age, . D.. les 1717 8, Tel “Hobbies & Supplies plies 24A |B, 0,,,cheriee 17178. Telegrape PAINT B NUMBER PICTURES. OVER $1,000,000 .- cre games Backenstose| avaiable to purchase land ¢on- _Book x Store, 15_E. Lawrence 8t. tracts immediate action Cait ealtor Pa ge, uron Notices & Personals 25) S(*re 4st. . ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NBED- M E in, friendly adviser, ph omnugs woman vee. [MMEDIAT K. L. Tem 2339 cemere ACTION "\@n any good land contract. New Oe se cassned. Your cash upon sat- wy Tekplewee, ton. leton, Realtor, e Rd. FE 44563 4-4813. Ask | sea- Lowest possible discount, let an expert contract man con-_| sult with you. No obligation. Call % ront- CHRISTIAN LADY TO SHARE iY 4 Contact Donna Bice at 52 Williams or call FE 2-7360. ELDERLY COUPLE WILL SHARE mod room WIDOW WA’ D RE- fined eouple share her lake home. MAple_ 5-3738 WILL SHARE MY HOME WITH working woman, Close in. Call | Wanted Real Estate 32A ATTENTION! wea remreeas a group of inyes- tors who will pay Joa cash for your eanity sane us for an ap- pointm. W HITE BROS. REAL ESTATE OR 3-1205 Dixie Hwy. ti 6—Sun. 10 CASH 48 HOURS FOR YOUR HOME EQUITY JIM WRIGHT REALTOR 345 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-0441 MOLTIPLI EVENINGS ocak 8:30 * Open Eves "til § TIPLE _LISTIN Listings Wanted We Buy Equities R. D. RILEY, Broker 509 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE FE 41157 ‘LISTINGS WANTED nye ou GET CASH FOR Y PROPERTY. _. BUY SMALL EQUIT Leslie R. Middleton BROKER _ FE 5-721 LAKE PROPERTY LISTINGS needed in t Oakland NAtional wE HAVE QUALIFIED BUYERS waiting for commercia) Tr ties, farms & acreage. sda phons | _0 con will give you im m: ac- ROY KNAUF 26% W. Huron 8t. WANTED TO lot, We Will Buy Your Equity Don't lose = = wait Iiings Giroux Pranks, 4308 aw Mi ek. Re wi BUY R io LAKE ropert urchase iting. 4 M NEY Office 8800 Commerce Rd. Ph. a PON Lisnbe EM 33311 | WANTED TED BY ‘PRIVATE PARTY, 3 bedroom hame with Loony patersaa on large lot or acre aan te ig niel Appresimaielyy South or east of nor toi Write full details, Box 3, Pontiac Press. Rent Apts. Furnished 33| rm. 0 1 RM. KITCHENETTE, CLOSE IN, "$10, 230 8S. Parke, FE 2-7198, i LARGE ROOM. REFRIGERA- FE 5-552. tor cee BEDRM., SIDE. pvt. ent. rE zal : Rent Apts. Furnished z 3 RM, APT. 4-4878 3. ROOMS ty HANDY TO store and bus. oe 50 per week. PE 5-0142, 231 Osm 3 RM, APT. EVERYTHING FURN. Pvt. Entr Good 3 room apt., ae furn [ese bath and entr. 285 Whittemore. HEAT, 313 $s. J LARGE CHEERY RMS. PLUS “bath, Util. $100. Mi 40268 TR RM FURN, APT. AND GARAGE. For _For couple’ onl SOME Tk and Bair. 24 8. Ppatke FE J ROOM APT. ON MAIN FLOOR. ream. __ OOMS. PVT. BATH. GARAGE. * si¥.0 per —_ No 42 wel 6460 Williams Lk. Rd. ROO! AND BATH Spee flat at gas heat, Pvt. $8. , mpewly decorated. MY 44821 | 5 RMS PRIVATE “BATH AND _Yery Bice a and clean. ae Sot, J RMS AND B gt ‘clean, #1431. Inquire at 40 B 3 BATH Noor. With utility. 34 N. Midland i r pom & ‘BATH CLEAN ist T ROOMS AN aD D Biri FURN. OR unfurn, FE 2-4300 R 3-3766, A a lights and Far ihre er A _Entr, Auburn Hg _Rpply after 8 .m. Only, PE 2-360 SACHRON APE Se BATH re Entr. Very aice. Main 5 2-4376 picneton: _ Beat, N SVL 2 RM. CLEAN bam’ or with baby. "Nee LaSalle, cane oo ie seeny, "woman, Vers 2 ee COUPLE, BABY FIRST FLOOR APT, FOR RENT. : FE 41044 For Cokaed Southeast 1 WOMAN. | SEER: $10 WE., FE i - ra TEDROURT. PARTLY FURN. Ratton apts. 9615 Pontiac Lk. i i BEDRM DEL. PVT. ENTR. =< ladies, Close to new High _Behoo FE 5-2706. _ $. ite. ist. FLOOR. NR. MIRACLE & y 300 IF. N. Paddock. Clean 3 rms. & pen 1 ROOM bath, Adults Alberta Clo ~~ Evan Aéutts ly. se jowntown Adults only. 29-2300. FE 2 RM. &@ BATH, ER State St. | Reasonable. UPP: Orr ees FE 8-1804. EAN ROOMS. UPPER, ee 143 B. Howard. CL nicel FE 2 RMB. On 1ST FLOOR. EVERY. thing furn Pvt. bath & ent, FE Ban we fora is E. E’ Howard. FE EITCHENETTE APT _ HEAT AND Heat and hot water. EMpire sags ished, hedieee or eou- pie. $12 week. 342 Orchard Lk LOWER a aa 3 ROOMS, UTIL. furn, Adults 3 Orchard Lake. NICE AP ICE APT. LARGE ROOMS, WITH al) utilities. tera beastie Cabins. 468 8. Srecabar Lake Orion, | 2 _ AND BATH, UTILITIES. FE 40122, 61 Pine St. 2. RMS & BATH MODERN KITCH- _en facilities. 756 Young 8t, 2 Rooms, pvt. bath, clean, close in. FE 4-2579. 2 RMS, MODERN, LAKEFRONT, _main ‘Noor, _ pvt ent. OR 3-1375. ern caving, MY _5-8339_--139 Raeburn. Pvt. bath and Entr. 2 BEDROOM, BATH i. HAS "TV. TV, Ground floor, Utila. Adults. FE washer Arkin, aby welcome, _37 Park Place FE 4-8612. ORTONVILLE. 4 RMS. AND BATH. 2 ROOMS, NICE _ AND CLEAN, __$45_monthly. MA_5-0687. Sie being ty ata | PARE aetna, foe pet nelu ng all utilities. ot ne, Run Pe 7. OR 3 RMB. 7 OR 3 RMB. URN. GROUND) sonig apr INCLUDES HEAT. 3 AND @) cous APT. UTIL. FURN. x. lights, separate Rs onan, ae renee, 15 per week. PAUL A. 2 ROOMS BTS 2: “pe cet Sn “pea. ished, close ta 2 Ro drinking, must ¢ in, vr ‘ol ection Chris- STRICTIL PVT an) mes, Bfaee faa ae ‘ GEAR, 2 BM. ALL i pear REAS.| With garese. Reasonable rent to 70 8. Paddock, FE 2-5336, reliable ry, No drinkers, Cres- 2 LARGE RMS. NR.. FISHERS, 95.| _cent Lake. §-2566, _Util, Pvt. E Entr. _OR_ 3 3-7206. SHIRLEY APTS. 180 B. HURON 2 & 3 RMS. 18ST. FLOOR, PVT. | St. 244 rms., furn ; _bath, auto heat. FE 4-0808 poted eee -atton Ri side. |2 RMS. PVT. SHOWER BATH.| &_ ba ern ranch-type bidg. Hide-e-bed. Nice and clean. Ul Adults. Parking. EM 3-4285. hy rm ellable #® . & week. \3 pie East of Au-| Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 urn Heights. FE 40080. 2 & 3 RM. INDIVIDUAL MOD-|1 BEDRM. APT. FOR RENT. FE Barber, 3110 Grove Ave. Keego V0 - , BEDROOM PARTLY Ft Lidl ront septs. 8615 Pon' bath, He t, a & se tare: eat, stov r : Adults only, al Paddock. Al- berta Apts. 2 br oa ref od Pgs Pe AR tat Appiy yp as rap “tas bet men Ter- 2 ROOMS, CHRISTIAN COUPLE. _private entrance. 116 E Howard. 2 ROOMS AND BATH. MURPHY beg. 49 biock ome bus, Adults 218 No ocminkirs 25 Monroe St. _FE_ 5-21 2 2 RMS. es ENT. AND UTIL, $12 weekly, FE Clean ‘single man rae ATH PWT ENT OO ATH, PVT. ENT. COM- * psig fare! ‘TV, Util, 74 Dwight. 4-508 naka evenings. 2 ROOM KITCHE. ; 5 PRI vate path & entrance, 80 8 St. PE 4-0393, 23 RM. FURN. APT. 2 ViCAwCrS IN THE “WATER- ford Apts."’ These apts. are only 3 years old and have spacious a. ee combina = kitch- = | rooms. Bedroom, Full Geen and large utility room. ead Dag mo. Close to all convent- “WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATE OR Hwy. Dixie no wre ih 9; Sun, 10 "tt § 3 ROOMS &® BATH, ALL UTIL ties ferpished. Near Pontiac Gen- eral Hospital, FE 4-4526. J ROOM UNFURN. APT. PON- tine Apts, 115 State St, PVT, ENT, Close to downtown, Call after 4 FE 2-385}. ENT, & BATH. p.m, PE 2-385 PVT. Gatden space. welcome, Gingeliville. FE Re ——————E—ee — 3 LARGE RMS. NEW NICELY furn. Hot water, $12 wkly. _Big_ Lake. MA_ 5-9687. '3 RM. FURNISHED APT. PRi- . Children welcome. RMS ay bath, 8. Parke ‘GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell things you're not using through Classified Patt: eas Thad ite ¥ BATH. NICELY urn, 203 §. Mar- ROOMS AND decorated Heat f shall. 4 ROOMS. 2% ORCHARD LAKE. HOLLYWOOD APTS. | { | ai si oe segue i pi il lo RNR = THE PO NTIAC. PRESS, “MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 H }| Rent Houses ‘ - Unfurn. 36 F oy Es Ee. USE, IN LAKE OR or Sale H Led = Cael ow 2 noom. ces i rere" rave, jocated |3-Bedrm. R; ~~ 43) ‘For Sal lower, ny HEAT AND| fp : data Uke Kempe, n-| Loon L. akc ancho Heutes 43 ais oer week. bi, Peneley re sti cos ti Kemp Dea pigpacotal Shores MULTIPLE . CARNIVAL heme Pee Daa Anacted 3 cersgarace LISTING SERVICE le TOVE & REFRIG ER al lneteenns PI : : "GLO y, vores spoon g a Aubin at eat Swimming. fis ee b NEER ‘Dick T ; ot RA APTS. aS KEnwood iz STOWELL role ving shi and boa omes ly : f urner For Jt. oor. $60. AND _ “& BATH ome. perimatbe ul ‘aid, a nenvie bed IGHL . : House $60 BATH, nic. & GA downto eat, urnac s 43) Pr’ FE 7. On, _to le Fp es RAGE. ntown. mi e. ; sly ms “AND i owe s Room ee opot ‘oa ennai! Death in iti * gown 3 First tim LOVELY # - For Sale Ho ge eng middle LOWER, k BRICK ON room. PE $-8221. eathin F eer = eb present ow offered di , ay eee ouses 43 : Be catea Ha a Mone Br pope BOE Ck ua a 1 Family seater ete SW EViteee ates 3, For Sale Houses 43 7 ROOMS, K yrile Dr..|, bath—$#0 per oe heat, ponies for Selling dition Uhroughout an "coo- | darage aluminum tie : AY TT owe water and ITCHENETTE, room small ere down bs fie eee a oe s 4 ‘ee gas heat fu HoT rw’ eck, On residence. st, cleane ys the cute seed story ° wung this fi ; a $21,000" barn, ¢ car ; a. HOT PE 42621 MeDona $10 ve repay Sercaeiany, peer wutest, neat- on alow ne (U + 000 with » excell ‘ ROOM Hi id Cour tT) tu many galow we Scre situ . - AnBA : > RM. HOUSE FOR RE rquolse™ and "wh act ened — = MARSHA : e decorated. a APT. NEW o RM HOU PE i ‘aira| tached oe) ane secon pees patio. “drum lot $1000 DOWN, > LL : Pm, FE pate! side, ‘Atte LY Bald e ~6coupl R RENT. Me 150 ft, 1 car garage with at- eautiful ed mer | porch 2 Dedrooms pome ool . | Rae STEAM i Fig Bellen Soe "eae ise ID tery ataclive tina rece walking distance a "end eee ean os re oe he * aan a pene & owntow: EAT BA b_8-8452 . ot e kit n, Bt - , $8,950. gara : rms. '. a = pwin’ the ant T CLOSE TO) oS ee %y OF 5D SORE bedrooms, furnace. 2 oe etal Webster, Schools ake Tel. a 0 ee ee ae MACEDAY LAK Here se FOREMAN . PTR ett aes ae ae! Sale ncar Chiet and Squaw’ wil fore’ wns Sint 2 blocks trom city bus Ssaeal M, BASEMENT HOME brick contruction heme. frame & dining si apaciola" urine, foom, aves, —. Filsabeth pesement besa home: with ( wntown. 8. oor. As piace ore OME} tho mo a wath peciens- ive ag icy full lr . $11, r chicke e wer at entre stoo @, Tec- b the kitc! 1 fall in ROOMS, per mo. FE 2 ws pores road, sch ochester. O Oux F : terme, OR 3-6001, : re. ¥ a. lav edrooms w-d tchen. Three 4 * dren, nie eke) Sop Gece ° “~ rank uo Down, i 3-6081 EERE? werkt ayo | Urea je closets in each per ,_CHIL- onthly. the GENERA S bedroom AND : Term: Siar room use each | ore, week. 57 Whi _E : 4305 Di L REA : \ - Jake 5, *. 5 POSSIB 5. "Myarage. ),_ tiled as 8 tte- “dw Le xe H L EST M 00, LE LR., th, Ca. 7 Roos 5 & BA™ .M Stout, Re: 3 wy. OR 3. Y yaa, Pvieses. aa SE ie | WHITE LAE eo nak ven ; _ Baldwin. FE_ ATH | UPPER, Seas Ph. Pes Saginaw ee ealior ako RA R 3-9701 31 now . coral Utility. 2 bedroom mod w-recre included; Full Joo and § RM. APT. 632.0 5-81 t., Pontiac tra om built, fe NCH HOME _ Here's a 000 DOW! with . sho , oak ern| heat, room @ asement TEs APT REWLY, DECOMAT* Roo Ue) || Sar MP Here's a0 eight room om came, mae mug BER lin shower olf funace.| S18 eine ee ian fa! 32-4250 FE 6-0630 T- MS, AUTO plac ving r r money This and easy easy to n- 10 . garage ALOW * OLA = e e. er New screens, water alum. ty elas tached OMATIC H wa e, ceramic oom, natural his close in to own. Lo buy at 4 . Call EM RESTON drive, f 1% car “gar r soften- @ BATH Ph rE hae L EAT. AT- y, attach tile bath fire- mod , it's cated f} ii/- $1000 wall-to-w: AREA. janta enced ‘age, pay rat : fag ee a ake in ehed , b erm com came mA. 2ee DOW 3 be Pp i ed rau _Steat!forn FE Sree 7 F ROOMS & BATH OR” privlsees solace "Einte “Tot aig automatic ba eaect ees ae home, MN, LOVELY RANCH Tho x"200. $18,400, term ‘garages Lot cated in Peautitul ipbancape "Loe close BLE | B80. e_3-8376 ON M56 8-0; erms s Must 600 — eat, Pull —— a nese, = Cree Se rringten Fe si BAAR YE TGP S| Mex, eto, a Me at NK cea ore ee , 7 Sia sal one J.C HAYDEN Real ere de wage RMS. AN orl masts bedroo va M | vileges ia 1008: in: | Open 1 alton ca for ; rina Pe own by Fl ga gy ot San | yment: Qption m brick, Full NE | - Only $8950. 0, lake mrss PE 8-044 102 EB. ec She rere Et sere oe a SS Pe seter. RICHARD ‘42065. Sun._10 Eve. FE “ri 2 Ri rit e pref 14 g Co. 5-6767 | 22 D STEEL B ’ to ; TP Os1e FE > a uberne Bat Chueh Hwy, LES, Te cawaatenn N TALKS | Mu 4204 a. he REALTOR uild N O TRADE oA FE or ; Y oinetmy at a, Wa oa |" 2 bedrm. "home, deposit are altancel : ¥ wine ae Ont 3-0061 On our lot or yours, Ou WwW rage. Rochester AG a SRICK HOME iM DECORA eat. MA $12 =eeh wes Gea coe ee Ancoln Hei oul get = * Ie Causa ¢ Gulla yes plan iB 25-mil Apoary pag eg 298 SE TED TERRAC 44 ) per mo. JU per wk., or 3 eights ayin all that . HO T asic or id you Call’ alter. radius arm with- SE Bivd. TERRA Iniper 8-1 or Bedroo ; u or in thi you're MES IN our model complete: as bd 4. OL of Roch 5 “ROOMS, FE 2-6782 CE Ne $95 PER M 427. basem m bric ngalow clo 8 2 bedroo LAKE IN Hills Es hore in home. See 29-3896. ester. Lak NEWLY New 3 peace ONTH Liao, Fire k with =f rad UW Seats te “a WOO ma' tates Fo: Waterfo 9 : une aetna with have lots or infor- ne pets wien full te | BRICK ee ee a rogarave and oak floors CSCHU o> damian 0 with 4800 Down JC. HAYDEN, — tr Near OMT. FE : DUPLE Se = DO UETT R nae et rere 86 &. R BIRMINGHA! r GMT. FE wa-|__Tage. Clos x. 6 PMS cott Lak aN DON’T at of Walton Bivd. ealtor tet care ot wa | DESIRABLE in. FE 2 AND GA) $ ake Privile 10 sai. "we ey TY P. res of growsd. Open FE Cc ear Br BEDROOM ABLE Nice eges ts ow ‘ i, We W. 7 Eves. 8-0441 bites a transportation. & sep gerare. ba HeenTON wEar| on me ad'Y adlitiont rooms suburbia sce to buy tht What I actually said, Hi a wardweed 6 DO ave _ 2 ON ow 0, inelu oce __Hospit sement, gas heat, family loor, FY. onal roo edrooms e with f : a li ° , Higgin hardwood bath +2577 NE and. off. ding heat, ney. $110 DESIRA al FE 4-5707 near Genera wit Also ne for } 7s furnace, _ new T our ittle abilit Ss, was th i . plastered MUL’ LE VACANT f + R Bencens. pier. San tinge gas TRABLE M initiepiece Pocste on oom | wt hike corde see ity could cl at a man wj : pre . a-car walls, PLE LISTING 8ER fentragiel pl hag racinaery pares Bldr rH ort decor. base ODERN. NE : room garage e garden ge lot ean up here!” wjth fe Asse garage. AUBURN VICE bedrooms, ewly decorat pee fee “uncre. ia| bere: a OS ae WLY WM. H. KN siege) sod. emit ~ space. | For Sa KES Call is, R Laree 3 vr Retreoms ee cae el MA Stevens ber! (29 M R : KNUDSEN great) en coo} le ‘ ae eal ‘amil — ichan® anal living sumone 3 Bidg., Pe eres lle Rd} tee PES 44518 ar a x quick sale. Is ae re Houses 43 3 WBEDRM. Orton pea Aare a gee bath income. mes < zoom: a reas and pul iy Newly decorated. Ne ROOM dana 7. #0. — LO owe [a al TD 19 Op ee Re) BE ’ “ For Sale Hous rm. verge pwaslow 2 ae | tend = Basement, idaeeaa nee rms jand screens, Seeipaner ¥ine perln oo AGE_HOUS rontise DUN RO : ale Nouses 43 ra, water, softener Peted livin Hoists p) © in| ee Ot Ae acca, conte fre eat bi $100 per memedintel | Seana © 8B BABY W eh nel td INLAP | OCS aah yoke , Saoty 4 OFF J ment, $85 per m sic costs nd month in Judah E 49953, ¥, WEL- $i. UILDE! - Ss ae eges, $9, and scre pine OSLYN 7 taxe onth Includ- Fatitadigs Sa Se ee a ie wear, vow 91500 DOW 9-4-2 iy ee ets | Re aes Ba, Reva tite ve 225 & ba: ALL 1 pric N ~ M Arty condits ieee : rm Chen ae 5 Maple. MI! Gock Bt. coup i eat BATA eaesnoe . , Where can y ) oe Cor. Mansfi ULTIPLE LISTING SERV ore Pan ail modern Mecltities | 8 rooms, 2 baths: 250 DOW ot SAM a- |. wo orth ou bi Tr . alanstit T r do e de : bi N “Hi { Coo books TOWER PLAT | brick’ tn Sylva poate!) ewe pedroome cee scicel oauapeicg Soe to R NEW LOC cls D SERVICE wntown, Priced at oes) ee baths, insulated =e ; ng, adults. TO —- 8 cxme 2 BEDR file, Tue bath, “oll fF ortoe iS perfect ng aun bus ! one CATION | Rk RIS at $9,950.| tac Gen to Fisher bal ag "Bald. For ¢ | ing > ati a Both e. Gas ten ' ; . vee amily ior va) le: us 3 INCOME ° EALTORS eo : M rs., Full pri te & Pon- Apert olored gach priv. § rd oer Lanai as Orb Tuts peice) 48 ie coon 3 famtly 8 If you wish BUILDE! rge R | i TDOCH REALTY ¢ $5,850. See cea oc Cal PE UNION tSteo. Psi Aaland 7 arco is noe Only $7 "sted “TALKS mot | * apartments ide. location, 2 reer aa! ne ud oe home seanro® 10 8 TW 101 hs Pe edins or OA bo0it ) 9 st. c 0 close to ; BEDROO! ac , alum end 300. = ‘ edroo on Ist fi 2 ob, home in t i FE aldwin 25 NEWLY ail PE) _3-4285 shoppin M HOM reens. B storms and est Meer Davies te oor; 3 wel have over! set rading | OWNER 5-0101 Ave.| and pos DECORA g area. $75 E asement and u floor, Divided ent on 2n a Ntoae frGar cea. w buildin F 9 BED! you wil apartment TED. WILL CO " EM/ $700, DOW Ys ly $6,000 di ed baseme a thet rom, and 700 plans. te ‘enced back ROOM H lord ‘in l be your tilities — nee aoe 00M| for th NSIDER 3 bed N elm for 3 bed own. or ai On- sen feel is a trade s to| sell my yard, la OME. with b this 3 bed own land- _fren. re 4! fu ear town,| > is 1 floo! APPLICAT ert et bri Qa } } T d leestee hom 1 trade 2° more thi plan| Cc@F fre equity or rge lot, wili| %24 asement, room ho wR M30, WI phy eltan shed, No chil- pets ot iF bedroom Pie pela ae tile bath sr full base- O ay i tion. e in good . ‘an Tween mall fair Setsica & clear tn db pa-rary 1957 screens. ent, oll heat storms bedroom ee ed LE RD Ml o care oe ape cs car. $600 screens. , um. storms Ka 3 TARACTIVE LONG LOW A =e +8126 tate pos- Jered DOWN ICE, $6,875. = ted, gas st DO edr RA ND bed spre: ioumees arta “° pall mM P! in SS Oak E NCH HOME etter” room ran _OR 37 ro ten LOVELAND 3. bedroom Se ARADISE F in 758, Oak ngalow bull eANCh HOME 911. L Clarkst = EAT Te chin good OVER 60 Miser war eaten ND a tins toca peanuts EVEOR . ce kitchen SanaNery ga foasdetien one tt Spacious 3 ston ea, 1 yes west : UNFUR —<—“_ Lak. ae Ae see ih Perry ot tatand T\VO |) oil heat. Pull b er heat, ation, ty, *eexee corne bedroo $1,500 DOW r oid. | Dept Be Ada e Rd . beat m, tile : REAL hot ing 5 and a asement, 2 massiv gas fire x54) di lot, 1 m briek he i , ro NISHED APTS. FE cluded Appll bath, TORS = me located room ran screen um sto large th e ledge hot wate yobostay ~ year on large rd to be & Co. R 4-1661 . Vacant ances in- 377 8 FE c scaped on lovel ch scaped lot. Weill rms bath ermopan. — Hreclece Tomodints nc hea old. Ne od, basem cat, 8 roo: | —— Fo ; _Telegr 4.0528 Ce eee reine vy land- Only ters done. seat ary pager od uihd ar op | | le ate t, paved 4 uitcoe Neat ic: 2 bath | ____For Rent f R WE B CEDA aph OE } ees and sh: . Plent RANCH 075 do e cedar bath, 8 |. lows, ful _ must sell session. etree’ paved stre eat 2 ca 8, 0 UY & R ISLA ves & 8 arge ga shrubbe Le . wo. Bx 2 lined, arge c “ 0 do Own et. SEE r garag ORCHARD Choa 1 ROOM & tooms = 37 rang ConTRacts pews SLAND. VACANT. a oped ose! ine aS nia five bedroo rontiagl asses ‘cute se cieewte wo takes a $2,000 DOWN IT Topay.. : 19 8. ache te . APTS 4-0122, BATH, PVT. Ree rons ee oors, oil h Many sus e moment ire foces © ms. Beautif timer lk Risosicn nggro oil I 3 bedroom : est an ST cg el ; aco WI st ear, Fe priv? $800. do plenty of tr windows. fon ‘ sap taciatege 14 amie Kitchen 12% 10. bboy LA Bloomfield townsh Ju 5 Clarkston Vill MOR = ‘ oe bath, living roo ; — . : tree asphalt rage, le b 10. Cer. KE EY st a mi ula *a't cl m ment. Seiee 8) Fr deeemreahe new- oie Ps) TH KITCHE down, E s, lake fired b drivew 220 ment, ath. Fu re FRONT >. sec nute aw: ge osets AN EB? trances. aap indi develop-|—— _ 58114. ‘olored on! N_ PRIVI- ROCH eee $4,000 ot water h ay, oil $12,650 gas heat. — base- 3 bed $10,650 HOME a tion, church: ay from bus: D : kitchens air-condition vidual a SL y. Call F Two E oTE RR : down. ¢at. Only with te pric x room | m TERMS — f uiet black es & schools. iness : 8 ed en-| 4 SLE E & bedr . rms. ° ttache odern il gre top 8 ‘ nished. A —_ & or one ew Pvt. EPING ROOM HARGER C to artiatcnes home with HO heat, d garage, pryngalow a rane =a eims. wet Maad ean aus accatia ae fur-| __Hu ent. Li ~— stAN. Chane O. tg Setinished se stairway ME-ING peed agp ement comely per 2% sto toa hot water” fara som, aper:| CLEAN, Wal fons x | Oren Evenings. Fe tahoe don. s Ruloasement. | one & room phnee neon 8 or aaige, vias | etek are eae - rnish@t, J ve ’ ARM. : ‘| B NCOM 5-818: URRY ots. roo! e large e. we ctu: x ce in front : . Adults FE 45641. SLEEP! rings E FO 3 IRRY! : gara m ang b lot, que, suburean room. ki living nder C DESI 330 W. fo RM. with in $60 R COLOR This 2Y! HURRY i ge. plus 3 ath and <1 ban = floor, 3 — & room ] TAKING onstructi ee ae $2,000 down, FE 8 ED. | corese lot. oe RRY! Hooland shower for rents FE 5-94 OTTAW th on paseo Shona eman _APPLICA ction line. Rad ROOM, NEAR BUi wn, FE 8-1 See: orner lot. com home 2 unit, idea wer for d > 71 SA A HILLS above f serond floo rge full TIONS tel 10, el TEAR BU 1431 ket long. won't be on large dead 1 location rental OPEN E REAI A LE OR HOME Sand vone stora gr. with Real, E ber? ai m apartment for 1 and Hon ectrie clock, 8 tod g. Only on the m wi end street on quiet _MU VENINGS "ALTOR il pretentious TRADE b ‘ood floo: ge. Lots of ¢ ae FE 445: state — ts for _meals, FE 5-87 at privil fan, ay for a $700 dow ar- th terms . Only $8,851 LTIPLE | AND 8 y hom 71 room asement roots hot al Open Eve N om fe lst occu-| LAR’ eges and L} Sn ppointment n, call : 850 BY LISTING UNDAY bath e, full b brick f for a And it’s r heat, ee en 412 Ww. 8. =N D 1 So GE. CLE | rn rith-Craw SURPRIS OWNER G SERVICE _ pam, eas Saeed ath (and) batt $12'600 eet eet oe sets ARK. 2 _Huron 0) E 1 NDAY For gentle AN FROWN __ a aw ford, ] oe RP RISE room brick GI RES. — s garage steam hi half mal Sie: sy me ri BEDRMS ~ son. FE eas man, P T ROOM 3390 TWO OFFI nc. Fi SE PACKAGE Hill. rick. bas ALE, 3 B ewly decor new -ca. eat, 2% terms. price cond., w floors, clean and ;, CLO- Up ; 8 vt. ent. 245 8. Roch CES panish st ACKAGE _Hills Sub., 4 ement, H. Ep.| Proud to oceied, rpeting trays. ater soft and good per Fla acne Nel- 1598 E nececyit Rd, bath style 4 } 36 Kuhn, 1 erringto: show a home and ” storm ener, la 3005 ae : m OL 1-000 hom room FE 2- nm we ehure 8, 8 undr 08 Aun ae “Heated side iiitchea ROOMS F FOR GIRLS. a Established tn 19 “Lakefront. aes OL $1226 large living “teatures. extra off N $I 000 . DOWN ington | DORRIS & SON R “re u Maceday lake Fr _ Reronal wriores, “4025 ‘do petctoel * N HTS. waees — privs, FE DESIR 16 Take pec l - kitehe paneling in- baths, ginaw lar; WE EALTOR. mer at “veal ont e McLarty, B Listings. reed . room,| 1 Y DECOR RaeLe ce muh, leg pick of th lals ete pedaling ae (recone rental arranged ge 7 room. Vaasiwe hace 3 pia home — 3 deal on tat UNI roker, FE 2 ewe Seale eehren Hor | ently locate a ATED. CO i. cods, 6 TION in D ae log homes: eseltuo wv Lae oma rendrutil ares. 2 section, $8730. 2 apts. G 2; -—— Berea WE 5s pate: spacious bedrooms. sum- wee ON LAKE 0 2162. $15.00 ve four f. ces, Gara and cooking downtown NVEN-| r 5 years room bri ray- 3 bedroo one on C ell- } ge level A ty space $730, 750 ood = PHONS a4 rch, m kitchen fire- OPERTY SFI OFFICE per emily bul ge. |__ 32-3083, 150 gas hb ‘ooms | old. 3 Sp ck ise) ce with ms, 2 } ‘qaley ot. A nehor f down Sta SPLIT +155 extra odern bath. | acreened ki ECIA quired month, Ref ding. “a0 J N. rr eat; comf arge kitch acious en firepla evel livi with Teal bu enced Mewiy A rter ho: LEVEL 7) $12, guests. 2c Roo: PON LISTS ; erences re NEWLY. DEC y FE F Srlabis Avungiecuen fi bed: ai" ratmsts ona sites ng 2, ton fel phan ed roe cs ecorated Seon cert epee oe tee win ees Coon m for = = . Dd ull ba: ving © ng rm, rage. Th e and kitch- e term rescen rnace, 2 bed- ent cre sq. ae. On! FE 7-8892 amt Heuekegpne Poem, ‘POUR. sie setting” on 12 some Trepiece | permite ‘a Kast Peatiee, = LAKE PRIVIL . Awe S Lk “pection. eleewy lots. Atha Lew = —— ‘oni _ 300° down y Tro 5c] ‘3 Eg —4/ ~ aT rove : om, Close 960, terms. ft. lot pte as room, ert Pine, lar . With a LEG =e Th pos- tails. ttley. ment. Gor- e 2 emi ge “Bees seer Rg aOWER a Fan| sul te 4 es mee | cone mice? | qooe AC REALTY | Your eauty “2” a Se arks a ST sID ren EEPINO R 7 wm N 3B rage. 3 sttached 3 car ors, ful shin FE ur equit CIAL F Bri ze. IN : ROO! off H Beaum EDROO! winte lots in 2 car and 2 lots 1 Wath, of ¥ ae 5-a275.| mov y 0 ' M 3.467 jig toma oo VILLAGE. wan SLEEP So kent, FOR Gini. ; fe ee SeBec! peer sonable ere at tire pres $525 Pleas All this oe ore WEST SUBURBAN 3) bedroom into” a "new. bee will REAL ESBATE nf $700 Down : loor; 3 im Cpe aot _man, 4 EEPING RM. G grove.| ki Regs Abebeha tool naa ate “SMBREE . ° . AN He LS aectgie kentee ee 58. M ; NC “3 bed on 56¢ rooms aay on first Norton ENTLI tchen, oak ating space nearly ‘E & GR . 5 6 ROOM * 7167 lance. B me. E-Z (ACR ain, Clark: NL, > room bri petri id ala eam tile bath Ave. FE ¥-| colored fi Moe race ue eee 1565 U iREG( 5 ACRES FUL HOME uilder. oes” PROM BAMA asement. H ck with fu ; , automatic ment, laun a0771,| slumin Stas Pan beeen eo nak Lak 2 large 6 “SD ee on WITH FE MApI M BANK) — auto. heat, eidwos fecrt Tr. Ser heat ary Rooms La um sto! ll bas ith | EM 3-4 nion Ie Vil Ra. hom bedroom FT ACHED EMENT ple $-5821 ) street. tile bath, Oors nice yard eens, stor ang hot With B Tee 250 f rms and sement,| — 4393 is lage a e, located farm : atl Motte J . Northeast pared = m windows oard . 38 cette ail chee cour, screens vo oO EM = ra ramp eg eas eee PETED LOE CAR e $600 at location _binder rs $90 per = ‘Avail- EXTRA CLEA | ful buy oe show you a Call us BUIL -3314 Seeds a ee House TIAN D FLOORS cecan. . Dow * = 4 co é i 5 ENE- His fi o* n WEST ea ous fa Vas- mestnii4 Wy HOME $9.200. Te wonder- DINC , rior sound ng. inside, ex- AND ame ND8, 8 amily ti 3b ith STYL ANOTHE rms. 7 A NEW at only . Priced x w EENS TORMS of fiv n mind . F edroom _Gas wg ROGhEE LD BATE LOVELY SOOKE. ews, FE | zl tf ER ‘ NEW $8,800 ¢ to sell ITH Earel of five. des tht IRST > oil h home. Ti t. PE S AND _fleg 5-0377. ractive MPTIN HOM E > ash. ABLE REA 2,950 e little esigned thi s father | 2 OFF eat. Car le bath, (sada ——— ROME wun) Maseuseae o Buy ws Tee r Soneeann 8.0 N lato Ghd enn | Bopodi ell ae i ERIN Nec suecien ; ~ We MOT meals if desir E PRIV- basem ‘oom =mod At- A can hel W ALT , MS. : h and sti keeps it e€ so ranch G burba: rge lot. - = Sid HER NEE sired. FE cated on ent. C ern hom re plan p you if ‘ ON BLV ION QUICK ands to ll has immac with full home. E $600 8 rooms. ide Brick boarder NEEDS CHRI: 86-3338; in east eavgulentist lo Hav ning to bi you = Larg BLVD > : lik entertat time a fresies dining xtra le D ’ . Wet CHR: excell side. Th ly lo- e a hom mle e level . R , e their n, Thi on her e. lar room. rge. own newly "4 bedroom. Box 44 te Pontia TIAN| Dace. ent cond is hom Want to e to deep, mo parcel, 100x 7.N ALUE blosso homes. e neighbo sink Pi ge titchen . natural heat, wa aecortied. s and — - ic ress, shade work shop ition. Ne e is hom TRADE ell Exc stly rich bi 628 345 Of ‘ AU E T > or ming law! too, si rs board enty of with 3 bedr : - in w fur- e AN ellent loc black so OAKLA eT, Real amic v nhs aly a their is. Bea closets extra a oom hom party. a Delehe Pe sedis wet kee Ge rear, sev Bee wu your old gehen gated th ND AVE tor eat us leceic 4 e you a ie etc gr hel and cup- uto, heat ¢. Tile b _hings. ‘Dwight PE 45002 right Convale men hee Gas fer || TR seemed ctor on Gulp gacee wits cor home wae eae FE _ 5-068 ee fall eae Ebel Glare | oe oT eee enti ee erecas “Aoetnoce a FE 465082 eve- scent Home ing os eee ise as part eader Aol chaser tor ootadnes TRADE- 000 with ‘Cee PLE LIS oe 8-30 3. ar full rely brick ranc 2 an leely — 1 ee cluded. zo) nm siencec e ya thi pay built iD. . 8 a e| Sho M a tre nt Houses CONVALESCE s 38A t $7,950 5 outsta home aa new < ERVICE one thet ie Ext nt — eee ped lot. et. orth =P 3 Furnished 35 Home cate, NT & NUR j Boca cc terms: a John K. I For $5 DON LA iataaene mand oe ete = z. K. L. Teme alg cay. Low D ae EDROOM. F siaad woos Peamuasio praiiele eentent wevavent Ore _Irwin & S cst E FE our ap- | 3338 Or pleton, R own Pay WALLED Cone call. state. aE SS ceeek etwesa orchard’ take sin Sons <7 eat va “4 acre N chard Lak ealtor |) ~ Drayto: ayment 4-2293 Th, close cit LAKE. _ Baldwin, Rurein licensed. ranch h ake Lovel chard Lake Member ce 1925 nm school ere in Clarks. KE (niet an Aner ‘ +74 FE ride! n Plains « a Titaney pons « Home, 1365 place. adieu double 2 bedroom and rhe a Realtors Henares arcu good soil, FOR THE I RO eqult “ heat Alumin “floors, ot FULL poop FOR | 7 Lert laps eorpeteld aie faced fire- | Ph_ a19 sweat rs Exchange ul bomesites Call beauti- ing buyer. _DISCRIMINAT- 3 bedroo! T eon ATH, $200 a oe Soors, 0) porch ches old. Toes ENT. 2 eee “May OR MAN mi noyillclpeiries mages | FE 5-044 as Btreet cae toosy: Lebilivend ehomcmerts own papel gli pat a7 — Lepaticls seroma, Brent ee aaa ee, ° Fee Adam. = \ a Tent. OL _ £5, ca. e home with t# m and fi with (rect bath | 2 AT. aa ve. FE 5-4846 2-1 iful Elizabe t home on x Tete 1 LLENT nen Qcar _ PE 47743, ue ur trade. va- 1a ot fe,“ and reas pened earuke replace. arecreation Scns and 7 Te E LAKE | E d ta nbben home — i = fireplace First Sdarage 60 ib BUY & > REDUM MODERN OIL HEAT 00d 8s ° at gara anch d . d oor t slop- war ama’ a coe On, ND SEL * Pend ts Barely’. Ui Hotel Roo ees ces ee a hie hice ogiaa Brook: war ir idee ore hore exposed Pog git and i can be yours fr artridge cgimtan L. 1-0250. Barclay AT. ms F D COUNTY ; 2 ifully reeze e' or Bt. 3 lo E 2610 U RE i landsc s. Beau- 18 . ROOM NOTRE WTA B Utica. HOTEL RkGe 9) 2 Kent Ine Resttee ee (union Lk Ra. ras _ tout, ealtor trom jae tee arta one 4 THE “BIRD” TO SEE | I RO oon ATH, FE] Al ooms by N 20123 wy, at Tel _ house. t VMERT 1 ROO] $ Oi Satoh i Ph, om Seneve p Fin kef MOD so 1 o Day o AMPLE abbas oi) furna ROO . Open ‘ti , FE 5-8 UPPER . FE il 4 ront 3-B & HA Waterford. Senn He Cook r 3 roo t Week CUSTOMER rey ce, cal M 16 163 d level h 2-04 ders lakefront ed AR os ROOMS 4 ND vais aber = e peed ee celaeeraties teats. ARKING a PE 57188 p.m. r9be fs with large” a = ‘Teles — FE “S cory, whit reser ee. pit 3 pwns nono oe ed OTE units.|2 th over- - ulti 14 1 mn NIN REET is ort a aeat Fi Taal? red pal ioe aa oe caer “Punt in 22- See griue| Ronit near, Pont’ mot_loxe Os. FE s4it . FURN ay or ne ie re ee oe i oe PLAS- ab. Living-dint r and bath- BRI dining, room. ‘Baceme oot NO tiac No . HOUSE , Per: or $10 th TV Lake Ori cheap. 626 . rquet floo ing area h Lov $2500 CK ‘erage m. Basem aths. Ful , ORM TV. Call OF nau es ashe “Rent St _ Sr eien | YOU WAVETA natural celles “witn” tudle soe oe 1 vote dine rm. kr den pt ving fe IN KEBGO, } 4 aft tore with ‘EA DA ee re ige eat, 2 ca ment, athe, 2) Ju ator in jus Tan ; _children, EEGO, er 6./> s 40 us today IATE 2 BEDR and en, .a elec- ices ts r ara as ate st $21,900 cluded in ge and $40 & $50 NEWLY DEC. 7000 6Q real livin to see h = fi M BRICK a screen at attic fan down! Fahd 2 lar am outstandin, on ter P ce FE_8-3405 ee Se enn ek wees ow much| ment Fenced, 422 EM porehraineriaint. £146 d WIX ee lots, Value toda: nis BEAUTIF . good stores of 1000 RE SPAC “ns 2 years ranch hom in ownin sek Meas axteas Os at t ANS- e 12 ft. x 40 ft OM AR 5 today. . UL corn 8 E.| (¢ Bat Ba Pe « r ago. Th e. Buil € mo. y extras n base- LOW 0 ft. E \ 5 AY a fat crate Parkine™ tot [ EEERD a ee oe ed Soe 2 mee ee sas ge 1 story .2, bedrm oak = met ta ai rn ’ MENT nh "4 h _ com- Br es er ni s livi | ——— st, ', Es is : onl 5 ree tartare’ iocgin. wie [03 DORIS & SON REALTORS hargain $8,800 Sy aiee y moth Cot - ig oe Ee Bice) ena, 3 les ra fun] Bam ie Huet Bunguiow "on the Win fu Sasement ‘and rough Gr lesselto respo will Goop L eee i] ORS riced to gee entre intee woe n cab- | LORE sane er, panell c es to Lincoln Has a ee | your lot rough wir. pie s res pontibie (peo: OOD LOCA F10 4-1557 | Fie ee ee pel ont Boa ao Se ay y room 3 BE D ait a phe ae an os larenc cin} 8 er lleresop [Soy De stn chan wenn ctr . peo- basem iN. AR ext ‘oom home w Joslyn lake lot in W me on an- proom H and a phono a with e C. Rid coul fe aa ext: s., of] b e| ment. - c. small 4 id on Spt lic wap A HEAT. esi Gal Rent Gates: eee pated aterford with ONLY OMES en com nd TV, idgew you oon’ te what oes = WOOD CO. "en Will fires, is wi ee | ener, al neat, W any ke A on Va with | $10 LEFT . with plete k REA ay today! ask fo: at mo 3-123 8 Lek co. ye 1075 W. _— Mil ces, fa ould ely 60) = aluminu ateg soft- $12,500 real op a Norm cranes Love an isl itch: 975 d LTO y r— 6 re ar e Rd. & M50. corner |. Huro er, Real 461 etory b fo pees aaa ten : with rtunity an 264 DEAL red low and b 75 Baldwi + R ee this] - fter 7 DU tor 3. 8 raneh r of- sto lose ms and per m $1,125 y at onl Beh BONDA outsic er ar. n AV : . 3 OR = E FURN_ FE 2-0263 For Rae Mic FE 5.9298 store. month Quick possession ea er guee aR A =) WE ST Ow Hovpial Lower jdtinking’ fountain, 4 room ad OWNER $-6203 sees PARTRID Hs ACRES 86085 edecora asement. 4 RM. scell nsurance es taxe uU ot FE RE A r etely e o contains Excell ouse at 43581 GE = hone. -FE 2-794 ted. Clos: Gas b janeou = asad 86041 at oom sto quipped la ne ay ent William 1050 1, Will a : 0 @ to sto! eat. is” x 8 42 $/0 2 _ pac tore. roo undry each. D ivess s Lake. OPEN w. HU fer part pa ccept ca FOR L res, $120. a” BLE 70 M $30 PE _ FE e room H m, and f _lLow ¢ an associ PEN TIL 9 RON arce yment. A ? or EASE DG. FOR onth ~ ER M — 8-2763 ura: fi uge sto! ur w down lot. Onl ation HOPKI a e's. Iso hav 7273 Third 2 BEDRM prey Cass, Close STORAG Her This ide + MONTH room replace in ne nat- low down payment FE 4-25 $4,750 $495 Dn NS, 280 LER e er unfurn St. Union Lak HOME. Boz d. write in, ean = oats is a hom up ts i home and 1: : rumpus 48 W. PAIRM( E. 4-25 “4 New 3 bedroo: or Trade 236 RE: ALT ming, pee privs aoe Furn. 102. iontiae «= Pre Laden growin e ice thet | onde chaoui, excell income set- HOME RMONT style home roves face brick, N. Sagin ve LAKEFRC n Sat & ae swim- Ferlsn 88 eae come dowe nents. 2 church opping ee location and is only 2 ' A en, range estibule, - ranch. | Eve*_ FE FE 4 aw > ith étal and tran: r, seh comp] years ' tor. bas hood rge kitch- 2-7520 Lake. oat HOME _ For Sale Houses 43 floo 0 large finis stair- airs it sport. ools : draped pletely old V em th fan, or (e) se or, La shed r has ation. Down- . and ca num ent, fs gasina- FE ¢ ae Fore worn UNION) s 43 ful bsmt family bitchen, Gert ia ee tee Neing | oh WILL SACRIF iueror 6 exquisitely far 1Vvlilans FE S60 arte ot phim: rh Beth £300 MODERN eposit. EM Multi-I xtGrme mrmece Al matic ven carpetin with new ‘ortable ree Sedacoms ICE: seen to 2h re Mu: ing “BR er lacs cost to 8 f SMA! a cakes R Reas and scree uminum n and 24 g. Conve: all-to-| Pontia m, 2-sto someon apprec st be uildin ranch vailabie Gl FH sonabie. 29 LL HOUBE REA | s Realty sonable ns Gara Plaste th. All nient kiteh-| ' c, on bu ry home. Gatitork ee neetesieres App g Sites” wearer A 3 »b A NEAT LITt 4 Ferry BE. REA- 2 BE y © ; down pa ge atairs red walls: - newly paint in 1 schools and s line and in for luxur ants the f y ' O ele, mort s hoo obe closet edroom DRO IS Jessie S yment. —it nd ceiling ed.| living shoppi close y livin in- ane fovely k tile bath a sel Bee LITTLE HOME)" iiaca! eects, 50M HOM Jessi St kitchen bar Jia s. Up- beat com, full ing. Carpete YEA c. NO a loans nett tek bi ath & Y¥ ect wulit: ne, fen 1 BEDR: car ger hard woo ne | > homes. orated cht eal Git neely dec: | 2 car ga sesement . 000 R'S best OTHER tod Foe $100 e, immedi irch pa anity. . _Phooe re La cect encase. Mj 8.700 al ean Ne ‘ homes Main house “h | Basement = Included acme) dee. | wie LAREERONT “me ae foot Ueda Two bedrooms, Taint os LADD’S eee payments until # ostession. a. ALL HO 5-68: clean. |3060_ s to mort a dining re s living as n storm garage full * room c " rnishi. ap- ment, almost Dixie Hw. : rades UB) §.Cc gage : | toom g fToom, | now § and sc _ ahimi- | and ottage, boat, ings, Ch wate utom ew, Dre i ac- Rent | "ORemea! esoone’ commerce F = nacre dttomeue groaetn auch Soh ore yore srouni home, “uitdble: ‘Tor year shed dork, (Be: ning | Ruy insulated, nate newt et | oe sat Pras | On STRATHMORE at Houses Un 03 F praia erp toe with | a gieso d uy for $1 mo; neat new oil year any f insp ap- ~ » Daved str : tate cou nto this lovely 5 ro uses U + Or $13 fiel uakt wit 6. Mos- | venth. shown Dy ao $i3.es0, ant Patrick’ furnace urther inf ect vasa for eet, 4 ra 3 be Y¥ Ne lovely ill mov nfurn ol or d 5300 downs Om la: nd $100 pe = She See s church, va- : jormation call zasen i New | carpetin § room ibang you 2 BEDRMS are e i Indi | y "appointment LAKE Ok _ ve) J. SINGE as WSotat als 2 aren nay baths, fireplace, full basement. aut fen __Water. FE aoe Gas Cor $500 DOWN ae Villa | Five roo RION i . Ms -R DI alk OPEN pnt Los mahog . pha we men: tauto, 0 oy . sED -2051. AND ¥ whi ‘ ge ¢ ro m bun or E 1-024 in & py rate Bo recr pan- ediate um 8 at, new 4 BEDRM 2-20 HoT| 3 pie te fram story | HERE oms. ‘iled galow with cL 6-3108, 1 vescdyy look at Lots of ac ei fa possession. wnings 1 DUPLEX 2 en mg Bemssiow Fe! a oe Gone iM RE IT IS igen peep pegnar 3 bed. 8, Detroi ducer oe = disposal morte caren opty ery = __1 floor °8 E LIKE } . minum _ st i heat C Full a aths, in m home odernisti 2 1s? A good situated on polar and | roit DA Me . Wate: area. Ga r LORED 2? BEDRMS Rutgers. LI NEew,| “creens. 8 storm wi ompiete nd drapes pesuder carpets bedroom. lakefr : buy at $ 60x200 ft. | | List you E ys — W prodeaeed ——— rhage . auto LAK RECS) eRe Ncineell cana cucoaees -ing and peel vehhaded|| he Ee en Sateen FOU _$10,300 t. lot.| _— W R PROPE _EVES 8 OOopWA 200 tt. ot. ed . Drapes.| pt § room Ey neat Mane oe Home beck ie has “a lovely a pated race. 611 screens 2 soe) mi separate dining room, vind | Ths, eae BEDROOMS or a Rone. PE peer. vi 7. as ee RP pe |G reli es landscaped. 10% ace, We ving "room: lovely with rket 43444 et 42318 eeeni Modiv ice this) brid) the lum ediacels ectenieay| bulging recrea sue fae aby gone fy h , 0657. ET OM HOUSE NEW SIDING nic sised din alis, oak floors. > BED 44. After §| m y $6950 ue the full iately ‘48 A building age. Extra tion room. full base e No “ide is lo- BARG . ON new furnac v NEW a basemen ing room floors, 7 peoncom ‘WALL | cludin are only & tmonthiy |p is eres 241 | zemed on acs Pep ly garage hinted cid ee) tee : AIN! PEC oak tes Hatem of son: for’ “fae Lovely cats sree _ 42293, Close to LEED LAKE | a teen “ane per mc pay- 2 ome < | raced y lot, outside asement or ling for only 1% car 7 ROO! A fos 3217 N ‘eoet heate ‘oll con- fos | pao ibe ft. 2 car ‘ mP pet month in: | miles n | Bost ana ¢ Aut patio Te ccuLL oon $10,000 Heriot TE bat u heal eau apne on. P sca corn 2 BEDRM Reas, MA. 208 Phin ert Holes Miter ark of M-5 trae) and dock omatic oil Mer. McCULLOU ALT tr Y VIEW OF THE LOVE. $950 . Mr rehaser.. Ph. be remo Payment. ved st 4 to per- | § ‘ os hy 8 . Ww reet. L per- ae Once INDIAN PE_4-1157 higabeth Tey | egies Giel. cxe snl greece u Many, m eee Ms) eee GH, REALT LOT THE LA DOWN — ier. . FE pe tiog vt ectaey Rich ly 3h) ow a woo ake R m the property Lover wood p any ex- FE 5-12 lisabeth OR’ SCAPE FULLY KE East Loe 1,| FE rome. Call Rane own 2 Reba Lis D Rp. BY OWNER ¢ A See fae) ele y furnt if oe panetae Open 84 R 1! D_& TE LAND- R hy Sn pe yep lictts : 4-8645 D Ree. Gees M NER FE «4 livin _farm oh y fe- shed w orld g from Evenin FE ¢ % CAR RRACED d., 5 roo ac off A st for d ev. gh to near sch oben = 500 down 4 ae “MO 821 a 1g room. d ome with niture aaa tent completel: 2 BED gs Su 3844 AUTO GARA Ex basem ms and uburn etails. ankle FE 5-91 ols, ba Toc B= $50 mo DERN $ Ga lutee ENcheee 7 n, dared is is nach tS ROUM Hi inday 1 to fUB SS GE a bath pi : , —- bi sement. < . —~ 3748 Wisne i rooms e kitch oom to b the h fur- asem OME = 1 to § RIVILEG AT — m that o mod Us A 3 : $65 r Scho ome and } en. 3 b | toda e diff house th: ent Lot BATH = ES. LAKE m rents ern lm BEDROOM. GAS HEAT lg -BY OWN - ° mate in enone aL room | rouides iene with terme ct ths 9 Be bite Si ee warn: $b 008 jIM W month Call on. this = per New 6 Roo 1 iam 5 aabaoo a yagTeE| actotona harniehed ER ment oul furnace a baie. | r will 3 BEDROOM M pesiece aianee 82: WRIGHT $609 DOWN vs pate eaae and Bath REAL ESTATE & Insy S v_avaliabie, ‘March ist. #75 oe POU ee rete Eicon, ome, bag, 3 one | We need lak Goo dna) Feverey i. Fer sath 2 OAKLAND, AYE room homes West of Poo “ebtiA TERMS DREAM H PE a I BEDR Cal Ist, $75 SMAL’ ‘ _ or call ins nace, ex omatic o ns | ake proper : 254i. | MULTL NING: FE 5-044 : Pon- el a HO) +1559. ALL l FE ach cellent i) fur- pert PLE UNTIL 1} ¢ ie 510 ME _Ra. Oe OL HOME pee SALL HOUSE n, garai condition | iy LISTING Age | al Bette O Neb E. 1 _Fishers. 1 FOR 8 : | buildin ge, and ion SERVI N pen Dai raska ran Cu 3 AND 4 ME ON E. WALTON! A ©. By owner. FES NEA Speers meer other out W i cE 10 room ze aly 2 ; a tateevereen a 4 Sone. A SN er. FE 8-177 AR caping, 0 active la HITE IOLD YOU Lake homes on nice to 8 PM. Ledgeroc ge carpeted it 6 D4 decorat M. HOUSES. NEW. {AL ct 1774. | Pul utdoor fi nd > BROS Th . OUR SE le Ave. Wil Ofchard M. dow ik fire livin, room ‘ohd ed. 1895 sks. New-| Ie , BUNG TNL pris $0) 208 replace. REAL E . is will SEAT are ae i make as poh lA places Picture ce oe Whit : a} ttl Al. O own con ESTATE are come a month: e pro excel- in clos y_bedroot cture —— e Lake) $Fony epemencs W payment. pr sre store As a shock 7 ee — is Puttecnen ns ms with walk. _heat, Dray" BATH. H peddle ah ageupie Lo: 80 Acres 7) | Cees evit™ pie Be IRWIN eee ee etaes . We I ~ Nc. | tea ulippine arge den th walk- The bats wine oe end bath ky theater | - —Rochester _ th 8: Sun” 4 room and dinin carpeted ving Leslie R. Mi po" bem one mahogany. Ce eled & BATH. s. OR 3-8127. and tree ost 50x200 mmeaculate! he perfect er : 10 "til 58. The So : port 8x18 K foom, f ing | BROKER . Middlet aa rch cabin nen With ramic 3284% BMA $4250. Ea: Fence Nice |! try liv place ! Sons of th , 2 car d por amily | FE 5- on Pte . Marb] ets. La ai Hon 4 Jos! LL UTI Ueto awn n ing just or coun- D € of be garage h, ca oon pum ser ete ea ie ree util ” en eer ily anh. L MI erms omplete Se eects ertant aughter = So nee ee Te ae % OR 3-392. OHNSON on eee ow sifis. ‘Store g hou lorma- MR. FINXN-T fy this estes! itaaicd 3 s of St. Patri r school cape res ; FE 8-6003 Fav mites ceooes B Stone 3 ou se at the So yo . NGI? new b seenic rollin tuated would f St. Patrick sho! poo trans . Located ot estrough: m storms aseboard HOUSE Wee ireg eerien | let ee ranch ese couk Sa ieee etincher Pal hooper rg and |- Ing Sues to och Keen B screce f° requires (8 et good ho e in all ome com- lots house in this — Call . rice $13.2 W 900 school, od ‘saraec. "Bases Bw woven SRL nen oe sien] combed’ Gd Brad Pinas a Th fate ea Pe Sisee os Sent cece Rater shopping Ges «at A BSA ee eges, Rooms, x "Rod acho ith 6 er garage doo! radio - : r, Fe; © ™ your sta) r m. own i - Sioe pers gone cee cine a cat invest and ca Covent Faes home’ ‘rege Om. West of CG Ita Bit of . Eleni giielt Se site ‘ro rooms hogy og Si ad and Doroth vig sea is buy : a & BATH AT a nee 88280 pes al Gy pongo. oe ‘stone house § jfoom 2 of City The Old Sod BUY I ees ome pee) page i trae 08 ee 400 nice mn REALton ber es er ‘Lavender | mils LI Ar ao eek rge Fu = . O' NEA Market a Rea cE B Ss ; An excep jonal * landscaped. Only $5,480 ving room. - Attractive 8 room home $7,250 $250 DOWN V ela 1d north «ee “EM ones a YEARS farsa 2 ENE omer FE IE 500, terms value at $49,- ; Close I ment, 2 car pony Full ee this new, PULL PRICE oan = vat Goer room hopped nt pail AL, al toni? ‘42 R R roo: n " lovely lot a FH wo 5 ° with s and \ Le OR lake. (53-55 N, Hg Retsz, A oy Anne é t t pet eon er ngalow on an jae Isle . pee bet HA. Bveryihing’com- Goo 4, mn room, 6 and ft carpe : ving \ €. rot es ] auto. . Nl base wel of ' j st one! esi; —A pt. Full base: | Mi - VES. FE 0823 siti 28 wm. wURS ne. 456 ‘down, oll heat. ‘Only parses. full a se.~2 bed- BETTER see DEAL samily "or ment, oa heat aa \ Rvenin TO eder GILES R : S me te Gone a “ER HURRY baci fey ae amy poets J 8 FAMIL oe os 4 alae Teas na $6175 REALTY ™ oat & cama R tony atl ee reper un aey-eentnis eh RANCH: Locatel | ; Alter “6: a aR BALD CO. J ohn K. Irwin n & So WM. A. if ee ga - mg “with ve, tom: te own ee. 4 Tenants pay ; Poe rh okie Lake. in ‘ pow t FE Fens Ph 3 wot test ng ENNED ns. new ato. weber 3 aye, Fe] Se 8. This is a beau- home ayia . wis , jaa 'e wa | Waiting and . area oat oe , Cemen "ituron Strget | 2101 Y fontage & more. CALL i, Tietine’” have area "nearby. © Lake capent \ 15 Huron . Some enn @. pri _°? en OPEN ’ Wi con cent m * ee : : altor ered, Show will be . ie im oo 2. re x 107s W. FE 2-0263 eee a by ap ———— Leslie R Tripp Rest : \ ' j : E hy LJ or ‘ : S , or Street i’. ‘ 1s ; "FE 60338 { ; \ ; = P36 Gk ee ae ae " be Soait arigtt THE | - PONT x) —— IAC PRE | Property $8 BON 9 SLICE = | Sale Business aha , MARCH | am H 17, 1 ' , 1958 Sale Ho ousehold Goods 57 Sa | . | le Househo' ca ant anes ENTY ae ee 57 | For Sale ave _Miscellancous o F In Donelson “ ERVICE Assut Pa MUL ed Ex rk en beau tas' nce @ SER “ ity a ie nome oS cs vICE oe ; UL" phick Ra &. 1 V/ that you pina ANCE pe _ . ar : re oe Ov écgames 1 7 * or: Es : NEW Loo res vo, Fou po oa pe Cross Th cl 7 with d = commercial om py 2 and ¢ that Off ese M Li quarters rooms 9f PLANT. % . lose a ne 1 Geen cus &., es Safe four Wo tters acoln Heigl Hag Pd gee ed @. Buttabs lorely ving pp, Tom GPened seer!” — “Rlgh Heating try Li ig. Rh Sage nis 5.000" down ail Business, sev" : Bh tate nnd "draperies Soneae we “i st | ilenet ag m erick. Flovd K chur." Say si. "3 ‘ e' . an , Ve vafion eve tax beaskconing os Pull basement, 1g r09m oyd Ke if , } trends, “h you wo duties. These Rosemont. th down. 22007 nt I jer Jlaund: en- won ew of 5. ca ga WR. Dix nc., R | ase Sened*: room Pn td veut reel the ese por as! ar AF auaar heat, A FE rope oi ealtor | 3 PRS garace. a4 plaster A olhg inl J edvicag NS ay to. worry ot, Priced rosa MPLE CUSTOMS open ig | }? gen “ANTIQUE mrt and lake iopsgeaped r| ed walls, walt 's Redroon It W at 913,700: A OCHESTE: “ re | Shes ena sar ter come in vee’ th ped lot | poughen! —— ‘ ill Pay Yo ~ bus RM PARKING | _Mica cotfee “Custom made twin A Go vee’ this ene Bet- tt Cents wa oak’ floor pol feos ~ epee Ain” BY. ZONED Emote ci tab! Bee ga i eee = : m: ba’ se nd @ | Ms e db . sep een ro es ge Ik 2S) Gee cia eat joa ee ca ae ae Tae iat ene r lak . Val rage & wate ent, e with 2 nel) abl a hg sibor. FoR maiia. co — = Laat = plus wen 2 i cludes 2 tar heat all OL_ tt Real 6 e FE EEZERS, 126 mmerce R Appi tome this noo’ for js at $17, roped ——- ti car oy ty hot 105 - wn’ Sain Estate ha a 21309. Aft R ie Leese e Rd. pli. . . ASO ER EM wate cor le Repo pipe mer ts St vine Rrtgcr = ay ise Busine Sy | bets me | monet ao C cal ean tae ge tepping On raaade tin sO a bat oe ee “oo EuncTaic| mae, Sepia Doo: on , : ’ Gresser. —— ere Best ae tuat wit s Lot? $2.5) ag len at “411.960 down, = 5,000 SO. F s 5) | carson Hdl aly 3 tpeakers beds. oon. aris teen ends, ail el overhead A ce: othe 1 front ones stor fine be un sh EN i =v Commerc) Ue 7 Fie ure 420 week a.| complet excell gas st “Fi with moder from od, oriest - ear syive nalse:| 180 a. et chow you Bud” Ni ie crice Located |? PIBCE Liv SSE | plete map! oat counties eel Ae un door ony and lake oar Lak 160 ft e on room you : Nicholi super ta uitable at 068 pope new. ING R R see Atbesseasipact oa. you s RB you ous 4 vilages ard = lot, Fe: a nice 1 1% 46 «Mt one, Re of per acho for car M15 | fae fee ern ste RG ROOM su i EFRIGER m sui 2 13 P free ¢ ink rage Cos , . ee eel AT te add stima t ug bed ea eene Upsets ex FE 5- Call iaeaee altor 8 e oerte & ——. ar sales | |- for table. tables rt & ch E, | aa ORS. GEN ock te. or livin, wall c ear ack 1201 r. Me s St. vatlable Sma! ost aD ling, | P. $99 decor: matehi air, 2 best models. . Wermse rs NY CO . Full and arpeting in the or iser or will le Price 1 ear v kind preety RY erates a cat: asieed akean ? 5 TT YEAR Ee OMBINATION 3 oa ipegatement room 1 = tor 1330 BY « oe Terms | .oe_Avs Furniture $: we an |. veers for 6 erfect, ne merica's | H ts, ola. FE i radi ar STEAM 670 W. R all for ms ~~ ncome fonal 17-3871, erkle A erms PCM e orca a freer sion aj years B w. Gua 5 OUSsE- Serio “ Huron LET only Prope BARBE *Ortonivili Arna- | fit, $4 APLE | rehard _esce A ein a little uy @ co _ wrecked TO Bi flusher, UN aed poh y rt See a e. NA- Pea 950 P ae RE poniine ne. Michigan. 2 w | KITCH PE aso 1 sere, baat, ee eee C SS see F Rate dt Eromspsan an igen Pier | Em CAMINET ey a __ $1,500 ful bun LEGES vitie vd. Ha me on © . OWNE i} for waiting 2 RU 3 P wee dy. All Ate hine, 1 ONL aa 1, $169.95 Youngsto : m.. Sewn: : we piel ceiling. room with 19 indust: ER 225 FT ting Reve as. W hurd | eee near pd cot Lends marred; value. wo 3 BEDRMS. ement. $11,500 just righ Commer tot 80, fio Bate over PT a4 oe ee Sos Pega ream et | Rede of te neers 4-2801. $11. t r lot studio 12 ve ov roo in We Or oe $16.50 PACE. | EBUL E 2-3 Mich, — $13.11 els at several 38 ing rm. 4 rm. BA dow: or 80 x 250 ROOM aall equicy Ta hed LIGHT Axmin Im j03.| 2 LT Ww 337. _ Sew Poke vas i, & nati, LIV : m will mor gard 5 sabre 5-3004 quity $2,000 inv ord Tw ay “O $5.95. ee mn ports mi LT WASHIN — ng rese Knot en IN Oo mo en. or este reh ea 49 8 d, loctrie! G Pa a cent — eg bps ey area, 3 bedroot ee ee - i, Be ee Parone ia ean COXA CORTYRE OBR : ' : B 2 v I ALN 4 oh: th x ie at Sion a esse nice tien eee opty Near seat i eae ue: IMMEDIATE enny tu ei Sg on: { mien FBINING os nson zie ii ta thermostat aiEN houses. ADE n on} 2 rds with am ing ell AIN Ay Sg SPA . > _ 5B. W eee = Walnut bed Gard ai ee soo sa area = bedrm. of 4a Ly UIT and, tpt aad large sist u le cup- FE 2-3 NBOW 8 RE RUBBER B all Til LE. te 2 piece | pies fat TS AO on mone. co paESSO = cleat ori com Y IN 2 da 4% 7, at PE 2-2614 RE AL IM i oe Bate PAL ue 25c i Se ie ent desi gorm. s — $12 MED! or bump uitable fo Ae for be oth: e. Pa per 480 SALTY OPPORT yers, USEP NT Sectional k A a CIN p_ sh aged A - : Tiel ee ae is mae Will Sa . >aDooce On . \ i RELUENAT Huron: Mio Ki 3,38, | tui lesa 8 feperte chrome ETS WiTH 7 : me and t : — MAN ees asonab! OR DEI é2060 | Ee See a: pre value aaveas 170 WASH insur $5,800 crifi OR W : : 19 Cc FT. e FE 3 EP PR EVER IY. SE 20 ees plete, $14, $19.45. ent light Love. INGTON — { with aque in ce ‘R OMAN = at | used AMAN 1384 EEZE | RY THING ah : $3 ven ate oo pend a porely ti bets PARK Sas gow oil sees AL oe Ne nies arly xe “DEEP F | 106 8. GARLAND OR EXCHANGE chard eon Bhi mencide meres, closet room bea hom = “trade pabrpainb ac _ ecragar hs IN > nt ce — ee PREEZE. | SIMMC aginaw FOR ann COME Anar NEW G e Ave. escent, he ro chen. aa ce incom os schoo or wi ME : phone TV OR paynien aon - URE 3 soe aos ALVAN =_ 30. 3 Nr. Washi rooms. aint wing i Mod taller omesye ai scart wit) Tor “ROU | : : AP Nowentres™ phone. Vere 5 ea Bog = ME ee Ce do | eee” Te H tc tiled Petynd od sined bed- Tere § so have Sner « OY ROUTE BUSI. | Who was the 1 ° ures = 20 OAL. ~aAK cond oe (stoves ae ‘peop picedy M. aT. om “ ve PLUM Deo I3tse y. : USIN | s the las ——= tne ¢ HO" ic | cas UGH ANO, UPPLY one of hence for tt igh G ae ea tree, _ R cn. are high E88 /B . - ast on c3et4 trip ced $35 T WAT | ens. ged T ears fe a LY ket bes best We a hat righ { I Terms. 5 Ted \ ; ealt at rated ly respe usines . — e to use Ce ae FE Co, 106 B ER HEA FE- urner's aL pD~ ; ae ti SHER, FE 2100 Lag eetedday br values ob offering tmately MeCull ve oor dna os Fog od Gee s Opport se the tub?” i saan ures Bost t| TR zoe ea ontiac OR 354 BATHINETT tiled “bath *yox13 tie story mar os ae cit tbo Gove re FE 5143 C ough, R | nding io nationally 4 toy brok- | PHOTOG unities © oe G “SENT = Pontiac, | a RADE-IN- ewss R ape to throughout ‘waltio- wall story ith sion attic, oak fh wn rea. | sie or . Realte ; Ou your ares Now oe | ial eocgid edi! mtioe 51) ae 00d con INEL Sci eeniease -IN DEPT. _ _tion. $ ‘PUMP _ per tr 6 preeetewt = a onnae oe tered wall oak 1th ex ea- en Ev i abeth R or r distri rea ex.) of ler. da Y BUS M ee ‘57, =+24N id 030 F CONSO lies ble-top Se Oe 2pPpT : $35. OR! eee : r ba Sis uttlen oe Lape aes s d | pourt butors’ | office. hh Re at a a OR E 5 ee Gee gas her . | ando CO yard water sof ll base carpatins sement tiled Ts pia a FE nol ing in be s’ toy and Pully ‘oom, | 3 wt | ‘ ney t Reaso GE 5-784) Vv. Oc Livin, Tauge ; Pp A 3-6321 NDI- 335 with 4p tener. Pence s| taxes tind oll heat, i For S. aed tansy We have, Arey Cry aed hee sean B I payers = ___isiatelbicensea en Lo _Renonable. REFRIG Occasions room ws) @ INT. ith ms & enced gas tax of 1 hea full _For Sale Lake Pro 1 to 5) eh age e our s are eddir ng. Nu ped f ry & icen an 2878 W ERA | Sofa b a met erie Ber SA sirance, ee at ffl Rayo "io'y Maciutng | Bot. Op e Lake Prop. 44 e7 Beet ote igen ae eee es ND to Loan 83. “on Hur wQERATON, (Eis 2 me BR WulaimsBerry Bron pam Web a taxes e | AY O'N Nols, Only 13 tote ; nae, best pagkag % ic equipment oer latest auke, INA an POUND AT ING YOU Apt. se chair i 0. $19 Bg OAREAN erty) Bee eet erwin Pmcog ster S and in| PE “2-710 NEIL, R trom "$8.00" Chi “RON cae packag- | ike vate tow os Meatece month. | 202 N NCE Cc es AT eB wwAnt rete aps Sake buanmne one re D FUE ex dis- bun choot Di legraph Rd. Real FE ae wee ¢ availetle, Priced Piories avails Ne inichtoc eee hiner | RO N. MA QO. DT rie ner, Ny MAN tine ke cave pit d_ Lk. Lm Pa part ba: galow. t Dist. E_3-7103 Rd tor ba hapin R le. Pric are ies avail re some ine ndebted overhea over ROCHEST + IN Wane to pa of the wa Kies Y ot sto 12.95 | Pl 4a AINT water sement, built in TRADE ol oe ee ealtor ed as re ilable in chaice | “6 ruction nesal 4a) d. Rent $1- STE} . ances a nal oe Pia 6 ER ites cae ! yw “ood oe wituated on 1 cee BS SORE pew YOUR Pe 3028 LAKE O ET OR ser nequir sincer this ge a SSeS ee or tem 500. in $25. LOANS $25. X. MIC Maer kinds oe & a lot | 18 WYN ‘\ xen $30.95 | 6°. s Spec 156" on eerege ot & fox) ee Year ro ~ ORION... service re a © air tiee : sh to be rtner if porary cludes aor To II argains trade! de EW & U appli WwW Pik Lani ae Vee CASH Se ie $1. on ecicag. ‘ad is ho ot oid t+ hom Nina ae cota Ni i srocery. an OY § profitable dua’s ear vou shown you Seer on UTOS 8500 f 24 M pt. for SED VACUU e, E-Z oe Hee por ‘sO° Fir ARRY dow: gf iy lot, me e. Le drye . Bute Fr W g sto Pr self- aud’ Hved. hor Can b it or PE HOU VESTO We buy ONTH real M CL erms 7 Fir 10 28 4 x8" Em = lor 98.468 op Lies ist, Real oi ie outboa matic. complet | You ILL Tes, route sire cae or travels seep 1 Ro SEHO! CK hehe WS se) 8 TO _ ae P LEAN a n “cal SO 18 4 28 S$ E ty | ch * eat etc., W in do r tray r anyw ated cheste LN G look 1 or PAY arts & ERS y 41122 | lu — — 4.00 3 roo erson Sch awith 500 urmace, a moto! wesber aad ly bein neap toy ABLISH HICH Lot 19 wher Te aveled eae 1 r OL 6 ODS park arou trade ser GU 122 Hus an ; leee — 5 ' cs rei =aF OT Ss ing nd, Com Used vice rit ARAN- | 1488 NTIA other “ees Pere can chool Di R H a id boat of ae Ten se See vapid: corner 3308, Elisabet ees | HEN 11 OL reiel) Siptl es rege (cone w 4P 6M ue ae lyw 97.95 t basement se: _ M.S ad beat | clays, res, by the. — ae murea VE fel H N YOU . 1979 Men ait sot f asner rade-| yrtle, | PO ee ood. they sores = os ” M. SE $12,- SH by n thous pid: SEA uron n Lak ale. ! F . SA 5-241 ree Ga n De RTA ve D Cc Selling a screens. jueity nome: ELIZABETH L igaaibaicabe? -ELDON co aden lr aotinie . FACE, FOR ne 8-237 13. Ra. NE Ep * miles a at 9r0 ¥ Tole Davenport . an eae ke new re bes iv" $800: down, m.| A genuine K. ESTATES apo OL tent M a ay sonal | STAT «a4 W Hure ae | ka wee ntiac Risctr dais Pisa so | 20886. ime nag © = PORTE! ® room Inco dow: rage.| m en TA co! OR RENT 2 1 r, Mich NO’ tiffs money ist 10N FO Huron SHOP. | You in 9 eights or 1 mile aa bot range r a es 34 atatn Set _ Complete R s wi me acul: barg me on ut 3 PAWL Vo IT ¢ . reet RL . can PPLI ca Aub Set of war as O8T ‘ tate Sth ae a eee ; —— srek nest 3 $11,300. $1,500" oxen Gn a OU A GET-RIC ; age A et EASE ON signature. get it qu pe ener DISC LS) Autelceaia vet negter S $390 $18.90 LIGHTS, $65. MA , Seat ew allt ee eG ooee a cal eel en wesroe: S00’ down, OR” hese | UICK SCI RICH - | acter” ue ea, Sitejasod eae | sedge. 8 Seq Me een sie. sRorge Cl like OUNT SALE ag 28 dons s complete Feogiog ess pal age roped . FOR ~OnTsi | $0,500. Will c furnace, Is rental ce of $1080. Terms and cute as F Ro 36013. | ot 1EME na’ eligocat wa ta reas ym ontelte tare Ne oe = Seeesacecs) Drv $4 THOMAS rogm $49.95 nanan ‘60S. P coils; G OuTaipe. | ,_ = do i Coasts real large lot ms ie lowciew For Sale Lo Sa | is pee b MET. a ar UMA RaTade th your be bey eae “ee Norge Seoul Wasnt .. 9 {AS $58 50 aan ery. comen ie , TED vial "iE ele Base: sanePnowt ™ Ea GR fe pete 46 | was ‘of otlable year-arou to | Ce — S eal dt ely Diseduats on 1 refrig sa 361 8 Ee ‘S"ECONOMY™ ba Iria eee 9 INCLUE ~ | eCUL. L = ce onl $5 ee | ee Ca own “around get Call & A statio ~ s Up t lave aah aac I cabinets wik Abe sins 514) Case Blea TK fil bait ete . str ee pow | ect. sour mone wore busi- aL que auters to 2 ¥ rs LP | USED inaw 1D collet sets rent git ens Ope: : hebath situa Pr] city. Close to 1 «weit! ue Sarr iy itepts =. 5311 ee ; (121 THE) Es TV ee aan 357 98. Pear mE vk F feabet Ra sh eretllCenees Sifects, | electr ele Ale) e and nply Teplace . wor JU e-li74 8 | FIN :, ee ad ae to Pay BED TV. $10.06, FE they last, $8 eee weniei re os Ri) gd a mata cee ai pea. churehe ee iene y adjoin- | ee capenes niet —— 81174 vay | a BU ginaw BERTS | _anc 50. Sw UP: R 29151 | —Zbe =e adie eS tebe ri ith on dee dona ce, and oce hes. sch etricit na Bea : xpancion ave roo 2-sta! STA a bay CF Cc s y= 6 ances, 422 eet's R ca CO _Thompso horizon ‘ater s ile MULTIP pd ey ly 87 Can be 1S ft. wont’ and one de phon ch. AY m for ful stall statio NOARDp low) FE . CO 10. FE MALL R FE 5-61 . 422 W. Hu adio & Pisoreea mpson, 80 8. P tal oe: LE Lis y ito § dow porchacel oe ves Jo ing. Ni es, AVAII tom Hon for pon. __102 es © 4-1574 : BI OND *9-8755, ADIOS. $5 89 Fo Vv. Huron. FE a Hf 8. Perry Ga Ice Sk TING SER ¥ $500 DO! Box + photos fishing! x Neat | Ovr rf PABLEIAS rage Perr weedecma: Exc AW “State 1 6 pay “SINGER” 3 TO! ~ r Sale M nen L : REO Skati 826. I writ er.| i spresectative | SOON 65311 © tv & M = ellent Ban naa eos “CONB a isc = AWN ati => VICE Aes will WN FOR Ora: I oH e tor; pointme ntative DON \1_or FE aalze ores M k Bid Gente rsh 16 Ste le Miscellaneous 60 |" NM and Swi g, Fishi orsted ay ibedses hes FexeY acu’ i arenes Mast” prasiecwes will a = sea ces Hi ort oo SS ee ee Sree |g eth eous 60 | 4&7, OWE Swimmi sung i nae ‘bua bedroom. bet Fr som Y ACRES” y_ Florida | ob be esent c in year vicar Shell € —e sul 2 {5 age L late AUTO n Sew- 2 marches cine TR HORIZI PONTIAC'S O “RS All tht. ming pd ac aealee Gate ae buy, OT FO = ES, INC, LOTS CA asi Loy s, avy cot Rison Sg "4 vicin- Has fo € ] Oil € ripm 4 es oans— Pric model, peas ears ee ula’ AILER 3" IN RIZED SALI i ONLY room s and ni Trees. Pull of sow altuated 08 dec. a R SALE. 80 x 160 FE fe \° Write nb ys alr ee $49; c etails au oe ei Oo. A Mort 54 A Se ron agree a Sp fda bowlin Ig RAILER—$38 5341 oe a a fami), cn kee recre price with 35-4928 In Eda 8 x 10 2953 | address. lly abo store ash for one 3 m mu odiate ioe ; ay oN gage P pm Apie oa shot gun. ‘al lands os eG -ORATED. fae ving” happy ep the ation 50 E BROKE sat — & NEAR RC —— PAVED | phone " vecriail, give | Telegraph station L mod- your ane mort, roblem ? = 5-4000. atte | paula ne & ne . er gauge tracto! a ureet FE long room {i caeny pes FE yp . sod ter ROCHESTE! EM aun ME number If, give emeed in So Rd. & Located any @ ecudremente loan mn. B e tabie “MA er | pia heavy fixtures i heen: k ore 4 w 45139 is four. Nest over Phere STAR 1157 or Tak ke Sta than an TER. LITTI ‘Lone RCHAND to. eateries cliew uthweat Golf Dr buy Seount ae res citoimeet |) = upboard & 4 TTRESS_ Apert Ra rt aa! chain see tar. — Loar i ALERO 6 es 3 fARTER HO FE si pede ener acre, ITTLE B | peace ISING_ CO} tton call, citieen: Por Pontiac Si copkacta bad ¥ propert con re pet Ma-|2 FU be seen electric ue bees os wer mowers, 1957 i $10, 200 ms. W all 3481 sah ME O = nt. Bul se has som ET- nc City Jeu RP. nalee te M ired. F ow initi CHE We Bu eis anc vice Fale “ a ane EL om, = a ae T ae ae . ‘ain a = 0 pith ‘$3000 ewe) Cu far jer on 7 oa! oe “LOT. roads, te a a ylaree 7 “LET? 1, ates io anare ene Tntorms PE ¥ FF MTGE Equities peel citae { BARGAIN | 7 TM gnc “son fares Wet “0 reo to oul: & must 0." Nor on = ON rae oll preteen overlooking | S XD Tole 0 pm. Midwest esse en TAPP NODAZI War: IL PIP DE eit“ on Scheme : -NOF th ¢ Labo SAV ermatio good oor ic tm, > 4p AL UILD' est aii O- PON FI AN G ry pum ES SiSes ra Rp ore Fos, of P. : f r cos i PAR nm ¢ and | BUS Iv e 40x65 INGS. ase ANS Eves. NTIAC | RIGIDA jas R to Vv » a. See . ype - mene & Better ontiac = base tel ents TICUL ail — a. For ! SINESS” Rental De Jerry ONE 36X65. | 1 — $606 _EM 3-09 MA AYTAG TeeUm rin 728. Sa f UMBIN site peel eon tS oe Bt. ily is living large a pertam LAs Cherok AR PEOP in- | : “SS WE dept. TPE i rene 20X65 Ek For « d to $ 4g MOTO G Washe cinivater $09 +0 s Cun ginaw a. vee?” afin a. =o - i. this ~ wnat ee t We ‘can in. Wate Nene On ee Hil LE sais Plumbi BUY M iaeree aloe | homes, ny parr: 1.500 , ei nee beled Sect cuBIC Foot ce LY cae ee snes, heatet, bec of the Take the « seein men ears these ¢ Township. | eetibetd ills | * I greschia ing SI Ww sete al MeNichols. 1 oakiend Concur i ca 10Ns. Ay NP thou $34 50 tion reeteoeaton Peel aie | | ook Seen bedr the city os child in chine Ww and $450 two waoshi planned f 100 ft. Ree ee en = lop E ove aNichole. De HAI - For —_ aot) in Goop an oranda Sy Ty) Bre $73. OL: r woe eee. oars. aon a SVE cea aelighatel aaa Cares cele pet arts cere) cee modeis protect. or, and sites Fear oe and ttle ER Detroit R11) 3 pravements eddit HOUSEK sTOm ese! —* aon on 2-21586 Se overs. = oo 9 a} aa fireplaces in oe, ou ons \ series a reipomcinle and mul today's eterna | ont une Becca a HE STA hi To rou a fons oF (31 Wow be Satregilens | _ GE OPANE GAS i; gas xtreordinar rites comps 1, Ome walla Wo HITE ina nice beme, Etevel bones! tied se cat ence | TAVERN 7: | go"te tat in or BLUE unca 9 SHOP | 1-AAA- Sasher 818, TAN Ave. Fluorescent. “values, living “Foon. pling ie lake end vt CARE on one ie wel | = home ee Postar. Gees sos at ts pala a SLA Wrst | _xood LIVING F | 4 washer oN fel SMAL * 393 Orehard ess Mich . 4 : , z reat: Two ct “e e and suit be | be “beset ut Elisabet ; £ Dress *} wt mene se fcbarptaaeny pages garage a ceeraea or GH cond. 2 “RM. 8U E 4-1555 cperue cate NUM SIDINC 3657 | fhal L GE REFR rage Firepiace in Te ste. | enleat stun be onfy i block be Seow "take. h Lake Ro. Exclusive | s Shop (nets 93500" ¢ Good painter My: “eo ee | HP OM Pa SPRING RUSH SIDING mas or EPRIGE: is priccal ad in re ga- papa pgaa’ ater and. 1 block del une aoe want oe Ra estas e ladies } 5 dows stead es liv-| adr = hatisnal avenport TABLE 4. FE@1 y | AO PRICES at Le Seat es 1 pump. RATOR family who” This home aon Chill = cues ss —_ “SEE FOR | aan — oo shop | UNOCO . y busi- | 1 phore r Buildin | ssttege:_ suitab . 4 CH ‘O51 | cham mS. Revae N THE han ie : liv y who sell and ome ent. Ch ome, nice 2 from | iC R YO | you th owne ing ‘Cer a. high STATI © 4-472 «. 330 t le fo Fee, _ igen i sds Fao aa — | wea eh ke ‘us. tho ot city By Sar aoa pase: eee W. BIRD, chet ean” Siar ing 64.000, purts Rorloecelgr De tebs. | AN — oy ane 12 Riaceel cago h flea Every tine suintD ARMY 9-2821. Call Pacaee | can ch beet €, ea won FE wa R MIC ulres HIGH siness ain, 1% waps SS | cent OUT | oF = _ is D. f . scasauahien -| LOT v Nation ealt MICHIG cL grow- IN T ss oes Se for 4 dolls rey __ lib » Mest four .. Lc or IF. per moi sonabi al B or « WAN Hurc ASS L. tool M. vite ount, a . tecll w aon & uD "WEST gr weds, F LOLs C. e. 6. "ao ee 753X187 _ Eve. —y Bid SALES No BU A on | (COW 1QUOR | 5. guna Tv. F , salar soles Ss gaa slats A x ee | ng. Some REA 51362 4 JES- . SIN quipme: red 7 BAR 37 . oF ? on OR P | 2182 NDERSON. s ing r AWNI ALSO vines Pay a T_LAWRENCE : We W od Ne ‘ADY FO! S-COR Ics refri mt Le y Po CHR _OR| OwER * 8 T NOH uiries| © NGS KIT of pain s he Rea! ar W = He SPR erat athe ears rt. oin Y8tE ando R | Acros elegra AR ALL: AL pri O L coca Bee ee tie te ner Wil ° Co. lenoe chute Lake stores cu [okey ea ORITOX rat ‘ont ae cane ceacian aoa fami: ai ecle MEE ; Pioneers — SFoR cars Ene Ae cong umber yell and allable al After ¢ oe 5 W. i I_WI : schoo! 8 MESS : STAT 8 oF trad t R- | SINATION Bb le Sho c L 1 urn Rell ware rock Seumelt lad wes caliber 6 RM 6, tts Roane i : hpie tae thate . Is _ PARK TELEGRAPH BROKEI TEW 34 FT Po Postac equity for | Fi BINATION. ae pping | Bua Cuow 4. ae Roche ane Be Saat b tath, reek we show them a RM. HOU ; —- 3 SEVERAL MAYFAIR 6-6250 = OUR FR RD” oot IDE $350. 40% NTIAC CHIEF, a fh OR Rees TV & H ux mM ORO eS me izes of 1-933. | U USED 61 3s Oakiana elec 1 oF pote tion GARAG rendel LAR! = ONT DOO: , 2717 D Servic B down Trac TRAI 3-5417. Must 1; Oniy— LUMINU ates.| and re aS LAWRENCE : . Must be . reaees cult e. LOTS on R | Bree aes CHARLES. REALTOR ENDIX aaee 27407 tor aren ad = : er . UM STORM SASH. Thome 80 South ACE HEA YLO | ee ‘BT ayolf cL aan ot FE Ea “eae age eo 8 REET oSSSTAIRRATS | ewslZ® erat — aw ne , | Sei Migatthe ° =) | Ss. oe as | pe GRAND FE date DIN OR 3313 oon E RCH 8 IN ape sail eager oe “5 ba ae: : bing toot, 220 E a “ fu egcelies ‘onteRLL gated : a ost I" 2-0233 — tle os. ase tees Open FR ag Foca ——S Co S| Spunk ee ginal PIANO ray F WRO | 30 EL as sewe: ry «. es FF "ee DO sy term ¥ % PE a Contents 82. pin rr be conaits cost $ No | h ‘orm! UGH | GAL EC x ewer Te bee i = : 5 it $l. ols ce T c : HE = LA pi is $700 . Ol =| Spee miQQanD aE tier warn n wre ooh, mao pias oe eae, Pes chairs, tke oe erate ie S86 soles aie Sin clumin furn states ungalow MU 4 te LE, R 3 You, to uy. ry pa NT mode? T ATION : 8-0156 eines p- | rave Bheroed % woo poy é F um 22° Oak tn 2065 rt St. EALT Qo" yo erc yable AL- --2¢ and rade WAGO coustE— : 935.) dant t Php D AND ns, B&F : on WN ull price ss Brine a Fe EM 3-62 Highian Ji! unre Busi modern $5,480 Aisicel able at “to eauret i FE pay pots x le = DUBLE ac | Aye ae eucets. nation ND ALt Tier. either $10,250 y $8900 d seree sa r Sale OR 3-698 RSEL NESS Ask ft rE. preeres by 6 r ost | car in Ss 1647. ence. awe = e new ity wGGE GE ' South LOMBING $23 95 B . ALOMINYM oun Body. at 38 Parke at hes on bungale OR TR ~ for se crn 8 NO — eit Vor FE Real | IPese a = LL HOUSE | ° = LCs ah me e151 BED | Saees ATTENTION, St. = ENSON ona 1 Body, 6 A A i olens a Bad > | ae Foie re eae storms. a ee oe stoa.| MES, ye ie POULT Mr ot O- Mo cre cai pede fae “TATE he ror “DOUBLE BED, een One Rees choice of 5. wert horse WRECKIN MBER CO Sas re pa] HA a acerca oars 4 Money to Loan ae. ue lies, rE ce ee bie nt a URECKING BARGAINS ' — os As ‘ ies st ow Pontise P be re ow oppo censed Fi DA co HEA -] Basse 18 sons s, moto- be iS = RO r 3: setrailer, ake. ade 100x-| BY a el and pd heap ea Le $3 35 ae contra \VENPO! nditio ‘p-| tt mbied mode! or = win. ‘Oakls: newly. CHES 39.) “ears rade. for } leas Brest Bor ¢l: eee: earn $6,000.89, mone c eee) eee TT Pa. ct. | —feon RT EAD | ener post is. All Toro nd & on job a be tol 5 rm TER r home. $ minutes | COUNTR x: y | $1 af inv $8,000- 0 a est: NE -H sl H 730.00 an? — DELU and "AND. | where x 90 d erviced machine . & 25-27 B t ae ile Seoer s. & ba $13,500 contract. from 8 from able | 000. estmen LO \ of & Trad change M WIT ELUX nd gray. F CHAIR. able arts ay we Not 8 Wol — ald- af pat, Clean) ge ay or} tee trom downto | Berry near. td los i ts to $3 NS “aineroers Ae apet vow a | romeo 6its, See able Eva Hg te Le fi sold | 320 Lamy (poten $8,250 8 lots. ean a Helgh OR TR x. 4 n1 3, Ea ry nea ately: ations hte o $X AKE lue. EM car a ed st | EAS ge. $175. POIN y. MA ae Beet vical as 8 e Lu ; f good terms. gelow with full sce on Foad. 620° Sehoet st Biv ated ovat $300 | 3 ba OFFER FOF 3-2422 eee | ent 5 FE_ nT ELECT ~ | 200 G "37878 Oi “07 ‘ovale _ Paddock mber C terms.| walls ei fall ge ty tor deep id eres (lass rs | boating Mt FOR chin SPIND} 3200 TRIC ALLON R Dixie ° full ib mod nel- a round, Au & aS Cem Pontia rrac EQU i ev RY W wun. $32. | OIL 0M. xie re i, An walls. heat. Oak Appice bun. _500_ down lake +4 a ee rs dams | FE tac Mir. eo ity 1 ae ery wieuine rae a Fane M ee i ingelt west aluminu floors ent Oil . a wi furth John ——— Cash eat. N N FRE old eT a ae Na MA. GRADE C dson c AND Ol a achi - us food contracts mm ctding, oncetle d an 82 er informs PA Wok LE) Seats pion pndition GRADE Cast IRO iL | 7 inery M trad Fie DE gro | cueatiocs meee : Fx SUN OIL CC | of AINTISAL we, | values 814 —SrRiont FAR | Erade._ Complete N BATH PIECE WOOD 60 _ Meadows 0 et on, Secaiesel Sale Ferme zo fe tar Financ vn SALE mee: pet rae irate’ Spe a Be Bens ah a . 4 with Hereg 4k brie ps hardier oO = 20 48 MILK D! es. e polis ors Rent | __Fluoresce ers cas they terrific erry. oa k celea eturer’s * 8 tied Lk 4 4 a baths. k, full al ling 3 R TRA ACR | quire 4 EPOT . VE 17-2586 O. BARN a £ our | a5 nt, 303 0 ase. Be No AGAR’ : Rloedcnhtd ~~ ner Wie ia “sat 4 This. 4 wer wee ee uein beseue DE Bea ES Moni 446 M With’ Po NES H omplete | spri TTAGE rchard_ iohiga g, BUT . 80 os : also ar b ent, rame ba: mor Larg utifu! SPEC a ERN (15, 0 “STOR mtia : A ngs Ee hard Lk, 2 TBE 8 oq ay t = Neda’ eae ga- aes (Brick me) tac ee 10 mde PY) ment. “PEAUTY SHOP Ei BE. In Dravt ¢ | ey ees ROW ARE oie Porceiain, bichon ee | Tate, st, gt fal ve ‘ais ey Extra ‘« ut te Rn. a a ewer recres-| cep ent_neighborho ached ee alles Hof Po ein ene Be Lenk oi ayton Plai DIO PHONOGRAPH COMBINA aa All goed ¢ percoel ree uominte 6.95 elect D y b nd ent t drea Tod pa f 2- adsl loame yoo at Ban air, ¥ and chair. UIP. lains FE 8- 0x12 APH CO 5. Ae tenle | MINU 10.98, Sump Se a o It room, "Barbecue avery nest cept ‘cheaper h nd Here ‘Is MLE ad wil tax oe entty win 1 co . ns on NE OF MB. ACT eulesei ax M TR pum _Youkself fpr . Ba carpeted i chea e and “He + A\ free ill take afte with r. sha n- \\ SWAP : sell INA- 7s Baw OT toot ae Hy Situa esatenia at per w re is 80.4 10 and c! e r_ 6 mi m poo alled HAY tor eaner REI oe41 | foot. MA 4 ER —. andsca| ted the liv- I home e can | eres, RA clear. _call F rror ed Lak what bh FOR $20. ante a; ail BUILT AN 2 aWwRina. F 61 4 See, sass ae me anac| Sete & ar Part Bae sake Mehn ive fot Hin oo sheet hut Sipe + Wace ontMa ssn peels : Serena’ $29.1 lot. Pre = 1362 ROWN: - renees uctive = r tim : he A, OR” u? MA 5-0666 TOCK. o1 —502_N. ean up. +! veer uM R FEN man ALLP ENT ’ . 900 eepirol [poled Huron N.R at with re oat e W Utics and ‘50 “TRADE R son. gg = Uden FREE CES WALLPAPER p : ~ Reason LTIPLE ealto = ned peel cate ra O a sw Chevy. 30° _FE + etn, | BATH oneeTiNs S B e 3 . ate 2 BE erasers G lating: ‘milk fod cat hern | ie ae HO FE 5-8 “PONTL ok $169. THROOM wise oe PHA «@ are 2 Willi able DRM 2B FE_ 2-4810 a a = X : ar mover 721, Ac GAS ST leg | tow M roved. | FZ ptt | Comey Wins ath esti aoe et ee cae ol aces ceptional - “" 7 aver Bre, yh AS STOVE te ieee ee ll .e bed: Lat a _ Bhi util, E . 1 €AS LS 6548 ser 58) cae A seeene ° Aig PO wend 8 : ye with wil this rley. FE Clarence c * nicely lana: arnings ASH QUICKLY st : 00 agsinst at asiadie “old : “tes mod si Aaa bolt = eae RE i ate _ ee pan- id U LY Sle iroligra nine. raern and Lise en pot aol eed . polishe: steam 2 jay = ‘Bs fe xe Sl Pp $o $5050 LAND. OR TR _) on is caltep 2 ors =o Lady Reon or Nihge atmos) ot | See 8 — = ie bor Ge “take sce 0 heres ALTOR ay OF Adde O 00 sso papell as See | yee "not Et jours =st ot us and ort ae black lan cram, & ‘ea Lo wdhy p Ca awa and be: € bu: 3. HOUSE, BAR? d droom month — Pa on C in our but 685 LAPEE 3 8 tone. roe. 18 peise Gan i 5 - ll today ¥. $6050, ‘Sone ; putldings, $138 3B PE 4-6203 Inco a an ae eases waribe - _ MI ur present | BASSINET a RD Surry, var rehard d D $1,500 CITY perty 7 need ige Q a Manufa: ry le L reasonad: home down ee of E Gl. DR BEE 2-9636 BATHINE E 45431 paint. agets Ae Thi rayton | arate’ oi carpet bed 33 ACRES your ‘ters empty aiviguais. in. ie ar oan C $4950 - Man be priced oid: een ne RYER Ay PORK TTE: $12 + fathey conplion: eoery mae 8 te eted ed sien iter tio fel 8M ed ing cond rs = s ee bing rial, Brevteas 2 be eatin dining pric shee 1% buildings, 7 : %| and rad padi ahs ara Hable tn. om | stool. alumina HO! GUARANT OR PIS, About 5 BASEBOA Opdyke Mk “HALF A to 4 . i pat 7 doe cleo Sr om i Sten tor eeutpes i BORR yee ousetrail "Contre ORE ELE FE 43571 for | Swat 2x 4 -. $108 oods ern | a7 OWKER joom. i, atit-in va bi with . et OO ae + at ry. Attu r equi ail- IRROW er or sad zine THC 33. ey type, ‘4 : apt AC : a ; , , 7 oe floors, ‘Es vanity io ress | ae pment : ASK ae ste DR = = $12.98 ACCOR . 134, ent. § rm NER.| > He op Nad y in re SELL | mimedi able ERC FOR bi N 28 YER. | oa rmo ras DION 3. mod- cture sed b Soest 87 . OR You ediat to OM ’ I. MR B ae bowl, ar | acerto door paint, 2.93 | Brand M FACTO: NS 9 | darot daz ad * Samy mere TR: we Fr ineo e Ince H S HEC H. = ROWN ntransi 48 in SINK: _ joe Mor aout jamb BLS new. AY D throu with view. leads out ment w Modern farm ADE ‘ velit me start come _ HFC off 1362 W BROW | these an eae eon 8. DOU. | EMP Hom: 6 shifts To Y 2 OW a! “ailare property. ~ a and Morr ang ot two su eb ro solic immedia enc backed moter sw W Huron __ WN. Ree Michigan DN cope aie: marred | 2600 IF IRE < “ 233 okt colnet Es nner fie tod me tace bri | ldren. School reed em running — hia other pO, oe stpervise pasiness — diately. sore Housel “40 ra money se VAP ae Pn a : “chard a otstanding tw fix = ie U PPT. fn GCOR — ze 40.50 ns, oe I = oeation Pontiac, W akon d-| Pie paate vere ea and | ee te old provid toma. mogern) EQUITY 2-48 NMO juerescest: $69 e_Rd ee ceordions 1520 king streets lu ch ho {OY s at d home tiac, Will . All yment. yo on. W and pans up mon vides xperi- 4 to 1ome Try 10. wi RE . CAS eM acoenee J xu) me. F Oor. Real nea: 18 ig ill ly, to 8300 ey m frie: : h r pic on IN th &: AUT r. M_ 34148 . : et on 7 REA Repior bea W mu ie Yog‘nood | fay on, Win ‘not | eieet” vist oF ee sae ne age car or se eae de WATIC WasiER {St aCe is | BABY GRAD os te mee & Te : uron, rown te’ y qual or pho term apr | eo « CHE r what bere square washe : . = plaster 7 ‘Sire Pa ( | A %4200 wane Sa : eon Ra 2-0000|Sale Busin - Ph. FE Pet nn in Tee For or persont are De HPC today. eee DUILP TRUCK, = uA Ria 468-00 | Bip be el ote ot 30 - i ae Ba a st 8 : E er nm cit a) in- | ousel to Th OR S. , FE 6-8 aire gerator 95 | x8'x joint ots of git et ; sania ¢ it nosy HOME ess Pr SST ny and wri Se: inclu 1 € 10ld | _ den p out AXOPHO 264. refrig | axa? ‘e oe eeene 30 19 COMP’ pe oodles $1,500. = FE se dow! pel 1 e 140 FOOT ropert R oO ae Cc Fin: Ww den tractor board ONE FO “MILKS. ral 850 9 3 8°x spl ore nt $ 09 ar LETE. OR wap 2 nines cat re ou) Se i e's ¥# MiLW pb 3 Ww N - orpo ance ILL TAI oe motor 6 Ro ‘APL good use $5 5 | She clea ywood $2.10 t. MY Sat PO aT with $2, K 2 ent req Sub- m FE NTAGE __MILWAU! TH 3 CO. S. Sagi { ratio traile AKE 1708, r gar- ARGE ANCEx a TVs 30 00 | hoe m r WP. sales CONS VT? , ™m 000 Uired 2-0432. ON WAUKEE 1 _ STR: naw n de t_ for CAR mi DINI M | Ext ouldin ca 3 3 NSTEL. Dru jeparata See ar aa er 5790 = na WABCONSIN vette Kar Bice iy ieee “etre ee | Fiat oe 2 BARLY EATON, CORR + and & bat “up, D — LOANS | | ite iz. | Canoe _— chai son, Ge Re os) ind ae NGRGPH oe T r room own, O , LOA aS W Cha B CR ee rs, $35 nside Ts in Al 2. $8.95 er R PHO 4-68 . room up, STO i oo NS ee iE Il. cL pel rand 1p A _ "| 314: door Sige 95 MA popes NOGR 19 in b pes es ‘ RE AN l [ awe Coane mei 6 TO $5 quity fn TR A] -niture ; new $15. ee MATTRES Rg oor eae oe. $12.95 aeons 53-2430, Best tare: CY D ideal’ Painile ee panclosed ND L 18 THE Ge = LaviNdsx | Bedtroo coe RADE wai "G2 Oren S Peat Ake Ppa Harel es vole ee es re, ut ment,| 7° QUA IVIN “B ONE Full aseme jouse 0 ORSE POR ars Lake A ESS. | Feaket age cats a NS D spn es OSPIT alias = Settee ison RTE RG : al + —— paereeatiats ort te ine. lik TABLE ke Ave. =| bar 2. § J. ty NET A nas at eaatee babel md hottest. spots., RS Groc c= E tise FE ‘sein ot tusure home thor sir oe SEWING 2x4, 2x insulat! oo $180 [ORRIS- iD CON A-l AL, 8 NEA COUNTR HOMES value spots of Drayton Trade ery — 2 — | WA 767 Buildin ury enraa: ion, sas," years 5. GE w “MA- Deor 8 per on 100 ft 1 i S “wU ne B ideal ition, m R CITY You ¢ Y sec is ., This eee, Par oth your Trad NT TO BU a Co. ras. | MATTR OL 1-0 oid. ceca ringer bse la cket Me $3. “3. T Js IC < Fa: ode th’ an ‘ r er hom de $ j _ sof SEeUruus w masks 7 0139. es ae a ieee CO. are ae cena foe OBA | fox nae tata tt Bigg Sos vo bomtirs: 2 “ont TRabe oy, ga WATER tmatc eget. ‘Matees fe RE oP Ts a | See om s * . L ee ~ : ‘ : : . & “119 ees ettroom of iey tand ei tac sion Pal aod hows pevment, r alone ine take LAU ENE UOAN wo i. tare PE cash for FORD & _ | Hotta aaewes Stare ses Ro ale ‘Bright pee PIAN 25008 OO COND - $13, ‘ gos’ scnp en OL. $ ate as do ir SE FE . | WIL: 2 5-3 clean CASH Srand ‘amou» © abs color nd d s und Be oT 2 s heat, 2 chai Pear P LME 10,960, Old wn “— RVICE 8-0421 | . SEL 53 o ae fer adv olutel ed MEISTE re er " Schmidt, | UNIN i ith $2,886? oon lot . Pu 2 ac ed ks. $05; This Fa hi NEE | eterv L OR r ‘54 e them rifle v ertised y per-} k's Pia’ t. FE o - ELIZABETH . e. Only! bo ae s Stra res -B snt “ED $25 ° wu) lots, TRA 393 M AEBS oS ' T Ave gh af LAKE ee : ct Latee storage, or. rae eget! ories ‘ot xu | toned Bar $25 TO $100? Ree! Sig meters ected In a ry “MODERN SF hehigan reat | wos ERN ese Mees nS CAR and . SEE M f nd | te E = ” UM Saeeee Seer er ears Sar Ga i et Si as rx ee ett Anon + Spe Cerne of 8 to | oe ain 000 r tebsece SEABOAR i 5 MOVIN ee cee Ox LES. | a TO =M Music anc vabet 2 - ¥h of eo v ver, Or gros. tr acco PH ARD ie Cloth eh a = juicer rmey it 8 AD Fy soe |e sical I e of iss Rocheser. ened just LARGE — a ay re. Over $36. FE “gobo %4 thing : | See HEYW "OR 3-0644_ LDS ADSUSTA! pia Day |S actice nstrt Cc $2.00 ote gees 3 ast “ e. : “E . 4 LENGTH g | sense rstuffed 00D OW: le, Cost $83. U BLE P aly | Gren: pianos . iment oo REAL. ES lleal ott Saas See Gan mae, BTS REALTOR P sh Seta ena Finance “giggiele aacrice im 88 Sond! se tinadls fuga, eee be coin ay or ced rms iy § a Busi AR 185 ance C 1 teat oe 8b88. AT re rel “pe $35 ROOM nos. $30 sense acearal gp ne ‘uron ae A, reasonable Cai od Re] ly sd = ae TRIDG NOR No Pre e C ©. 06 BET “8 7) OVER 6-2260 bce cod $35 o ROOM an 120 “bars “acc oh se ruout : . ss a R “co on ordi . up Ret wrk sive goes ae "see pa Pet a ‘oven "it Bono Quic. ee wnt, st2 PER EN. Pa a Eiecineibh na |eeices om age shat : ea ree 10. ‘ URO LL see - antenn FR s i AK Goo AD tso ecord ; & e ele tor eal Sitics 9 iN FIN SIZES eae AL T as OM : E AN D 6 A ukele! * pinyer pany up | ; \ F rapl M } for ialorm commer G ' AL C PROM. 7 =$23 ON $0.95. MAKES aU OFFE Coxpt. | A strum ae benjen & a $60.95 { ” E \ ¥ E + s Rd. : u. 4.2045 or ation. on MA. , E T S | aay ANOU 3 OT i. va E TV RACK INTO DIO R: G a H gua ents, s, & oth 8 u 3 A , re) w cy WI BE col AS awe er m up i ‘ 3 RI sia “S. th I T ! $25 7 LD FO SALE T OF 465 _ PART FE 3 ‘alton e CYCLE TH D: D, $45: U 18 ed & te isc. : Ve ARD 3-6210, - rough — U On you oO $500 ALTERA R UP TO FORM OUR ma 8 DEP 2257 NEW_ $1 RAWER, +GUN EH ALLA rms to f ' : mv ve ‘Denier Bt? y Cla IC, other r own si ee TIONS $85.00 ERLY,) 7 chines — FO 2 Doo $12 8, ROCKING HO bi, ur we, Murep GHER's wala yon. ‘hos ALTO | es, wi ssift ted to re security natu « OS FREE! — CUFF | nie mes vacate t WAS ORS. PLU $14 ORSES, Jpen_Mon. re ye R FE. hateve Ads! frien Yo Our pt auto . SMUN’S ic. H & ser m swe HING ginss fu ‘MBING SSPE 42880. & Pri Er e a f- ‘ : r it s $8 - and t Sevio 4 m or Tow NS 45169 oward vice, sweepers rent rnishi Edvien 7380 |" U € ee : / é Dnt es | ‘2- 8181 is — J 121 © hel ice is onths S yn & © . ; : & 3 yle El of | _ fro s and ngs fro IPMEN : ED 1 hwrit fo ial pimetae olen en Ore Cour obnson. FE poet mite: rom 7 8 T. HAN : \ F, an ran .* ne FE only san Mitty DION al —— = LECTRIC |S oe 24 Oak nei Mahogan {MON or \ = “es a “e ens & A at CH Shoppin Tel-Huron NT PASS oe sat? Riek HOWE FORT. poet ie! one : ‘ % ~ : | O uto | HILDREN" g Center _ ; MONEY “8 U P; __bag, 1 oN ins machine, PORT- er used Pest ue’ $300 } : 1 LOAN ants 8 ¢ f NEY! S Free gins golf Tadie ee nthe d organs. ed _ ON eS aE ie SPIE aol Deol enneerea eae al iF Oe eared = j e . ee \ ae 1 (Cofher Pike) \ onnbact'ae (0 a IN. velonging seeded | para mean Toners wars ay ,_Pri “re . : | man’s Ot rts & F gs f c ee cant .... $19.89 erfect CONBOLE s Outlet, 65 ft wo si SAPOKRD a or cash’ eee San trim 0.05, MORRIS. ition. LE Pi- i 5 ES ve iri Classified A Factors me sei with $380 93 R RIS| MU ee Complete- ‘ 9) 172 Ps Wi n r . ” 2.8181 ds 11888 VE PLO MbsiN 's ulars 8) eae i. Tel a co. : S| AS WATER HEA Fr Sale Sto ae - Bantu oR HEATER 2100 ere Equipment ‘a = Aes heaters .... $549 GAS —— : aeeee ees gas ~ Ebi d ATION t L 4 oY » $40: _items_ OR 3-36 EQUI we a Secce ¥ 8 eoaiee Feesy ETTO} 33007, _ | . Good ONA Lé ‘ ls 3 “"teasonable bal f : | s i le yi WANT ADs! job, place to live or a) “Ask for Bob Taylor Service Mer through Classified Ads. To} FD EASON, LIKE, ~~ 6558 Andersoovite Re Ra. Pontiac Farm & or ts Tractor Co, . $25 —— ; "PE 41442, TRACTOR wire TERRAC- used. _just_porth os Ox EE 7 a & Repairs 1890 Crooks R hn 68-0446 JOHNSON wi? "ST model. 3220° i 1 he | 83. < PAIR $2.98. $10.95 Roller y akctereeis as 3 Lesthe Pita covers) | : r | : vat 98 $12.05 Zebco spin reels—s7 98 SALE—Ladies, men's lugg oe eure 7 N. SAGINA’ st! ae a oe fil! Earl aoe w1 TOP SOIL. BLACK DIRT. sand, gravel and fill. Fugene , FE §-4758 A-l TOP SOIL CRUSHED 7 RTONE. | ot oon fill Ly'e Conklin _FPE 61112 or FE 2 Av cant. immediately Crushed ee ee — and repair. ~ BLACK “DIR T | , $7.56 Be Fe ono.” order now | VEWAY GRAVEL. DEL A: ps MO NG or FE zi | fii, Gravel. ee Snow removal. | eee ave emen ply. Sat yamravel. 8 ‘OR 3-1534, Wood, Coal & Fuel 67. e & 24 INCH WOOD. DE- Wiweel G bu FE ruG. Me Ole ee MAPLE FIR ood. ony sive, MY 31196 AC E CANNEL COAL furnace, ling wood: od ie © 438 Orchere Lk. Ave | WOOD, 7 CORDS FOR FE. 6568. .|Rochester 118 ME ay TILLER. #280 W- Walton, OR 3-9784. SPECIAL Used Farmall Cub Tractor S605 CREDIT TERMS YOUR TH DEALER KING BRO = Rd. at ore “ei TARPAULINS — ALL SIZES \JOE’S A & LING PLUS FE : 2-0022 | WE CARRY A COMPLETE | LINE, { parts and service Fords, pore Ferguson Ferguson and tractors anq implements call us! and we will pick up your equip- ment and repair it for you so that vou will have it ready for your spring work. We can arrange fi-' n end re- Up to 18 mas. to pay. Pontiac Farm & | Industrial Tractor Co. 825 Voodward pairs |\FACTORY TRAINED SERVICE ON Bolens garden tractors, Jacobsen mowers, Simplicity equip. John Bean sprayers, Wisconsin engines.’ Briggs & Stratton engines, Clin- ton engines, J 1! Case equip, Ferguson equip. Fox Harvesters New Ides machines, Wagner load- ers. McCulloch chain saws, misc & other lines Houghten & Sons J. 1. Case & Ferguson Dealer OL 9761: oats 250 bu. spelts 2 large jewe!- Ty Wagons, plus smal) quantity of household goods Metamora Bank | clerk; Mrs F. Eliza Inman, pro-' prieter. Bud Hic amet: auctioneer | Oxford. OA 8-21 * For Sale Pets a, o-P Oar at ALL -. 2 AKC BEAGLES MONTHS OLD. 13 INCH. 4 COCKER PUPs_ BLONDS. reds, 2 months, 6515 Graham - off Airway, 6. of M50, by city air- UPP AIREDALE males, $25; females, a5. E 30 T TERRIERS | sTUDS breeding stock Curtiss. —“poxkk PUPS Ha FE +i” SEAUTIFUL | BLO: BLOND )_ PEDIGREE cocker spanie). 6 wk old. 2 } Alen 3 “FE. 48556. PUPS AKC. $30. MA — pasty : BLACK GOCKER SPANIEL | old. FE 5-3350. male. 4 mos, CANARIES, g CAGES: Since 1927, 584 Oakland A 1955 CHAMPION 38 FT. 2 BEDRM | | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19 | . begins our ‘| 20th YEAR OF SALES | We have been commissioned by & large storage company to liqu!- prs a large quantity of house- hold goods -It is estimated it will) take weeks to accomplish this | These sales are always interest- ing’ because you never know what you will find, There is always something for everyone increased facilities we will : be able to handle all other con- sigaments be paar f one we) of a household, We also ac [poh fessional eoqreieere in coumes jon with liquidation of estates, Lunch room will again be operated under capable management of Millie Muckenhirn. Come to where the big crowds are. We get top prices for usable merchandise. Sale starts 7 p.m_ All storage items on display every Tuesday. Pau) Hill- man, Auctioneer. L, EF. Smart. Sale Farm OL 11-5631 | t, mile west of North Hill |- ee __ Shopping _ Center WILL SELL COMPLETE HOMES, _or_ odd lots. MY 32-1521. ee For Sale “Housetrailers Hers 78| mada - 30 FT. Oe ORiando 3 HO! SETRAILER: mene a. tee = ate ~ BLEEPS C ‘$5 MICHIGAN ARROW. 42 | Champion Take over payments. MaAytair 5 . as 1 ae 50 FT 10 WIDE EWOOD ‘ Sandersun. FE 2-7727. |" custom bul! All ejectric kitchen. a ey KITTENS. _10x8 bath. FE ; 8-3674. 7 Modern. Completely § furn 4-5330. Parakeets Guar. to Talk ae male babies, cae = La! Fraiged irda, #8 We tat St FE aay ~ SIAMESE cat, OR AN SHEP . 7 weeks old, ree : 4-2650. ED GERMAN SHEP- nace. gags. Seas Snpere sf_Mone 2 x PUP- og ee sete i family. 20 per cent iJ Sire Hatchery 89 Auburn Ra. Dogs Trained, “Boarded 70 CATS BOARDED — FE| . Burr-Shell, 375 &. _ Tele-; | Hay, Grain & Feed 71 a & 2D. HAY. $15 & UP, wea S ininber Prove MA S-0066 | CUTTING HAY FOR SALE al OL 60756 A DETROITER PONTIAC CHIEF A 4 acre lot full of new and used mobile homes. We cannot —_ deck them. so we' ve got sell them regardiess of price acinorea and set up, ready to move into and carry the Usual! Hutchinson guarantee. Yes you save hundreds of dollars at \ Hutchinson Mobile Homes, SALEs INC | 4301 Dixie Highway ! 4 Miles N of Pontiac 1202 ___ Open 7 days a week : FURNISHED MORIL HOMES | aveteeis on rental payment ba-| TRAILER EXCHANGE. oo 8. Telegraph E 23-3200, OXFORD TRA AILE R | SALES Zimmer - General Great Lakes Gardner - Holly BRAND NEW ene tee tech na. ML r ® jee . ml ges , = ford * 45’ F.K., 2-BDRM., 10 W. ¥) 1ST & ; 2ND * ? a ErPes oF Lng rain. wit de- ONLY $3. 995 liver. OA 8-2179 Fireplace wood COTTING ) BROME & Ce falta py: 1840 we e 1 Ra. Broomfield} Hills | HAY FOR SALE. | 30 CENTS PER! 4470 Squirrel Rd HA AND STRAW, IN LOAD LOTS: MY 3-1182 For Sale Livestock ANGORA RABBITS, BREEDING and show stock. and coops. FE 24147. _ SALE RABBITS. GEORGE ef. 2837 Marlington Rd. OR 72 ¥ RNGEY COW TO FRESHEN 70 Squirrel. | REO. HEREFORD. FOUND ) Ae, tien herd, 44 bead, now calfing | PE 2-4638. 8-3 785. SADDLES. BRIDLE BLANKETS fod wetern supplies, Chet's Bad-| dle Shop M1 _4-6562 | WANT TO SELL YOUR HORSE? _MU_4-0525, iso selling. Wanted Livestock 73 “MomILHOME ESTATES MODERN 1950 CHEVY ake RAR P| WTD: Mella Cs Sl FORREST |~> Jones. MApie 5-08 Sale e Farm Prodace 7 75, POP LL APL AL APPLES. EATING AND COOKING Of our pls, Farms 1900 Silverbel ‘Sale Farm Equipment 76 76 2 GARDEN TRACTORS. 3% AND de Meee on pa nts. FE 5-6644 days R 3-236 evenings. | inne” FARMALL. CUB TRACTOR. | Toa ‘DEERE AND NEW IDEA - Febull "Davis Me Machi: ort es hed Ty On Na 13 ry € SCULLOGH CHAR, cA Ws one ed. 4 er ard ‘and Lawn i t. | : Westesra. Nov rth of 1° M vee aL _minghem. 34-6053 * SAVE ENERGY, USE Bir- To. find ¢ good used car, see Classi- fied. NOW |, 38 others to pick from. We trade. sell or rent. Bottle gas & trailer supplies. 1 mile south of Lake Orion, on M-24 MY 2-0721. TRAILER EXCHANGE MOBILE HOMES Anderson - Regal Silver Dome - Palace 33° 19 WIDE LOW Ag 33. OTHERS IN COMPARISON 109 models available tm 1. 2. or 3 bedrooms. & and 10 wide Bottle Gas Parts and Supplies 60 8 Telegraph ___Open _Eves _& Sun WE ARE SOLD OUT OF USED trailers We need your trailer.’ We wil] sell it for 19 per cent.’ on our jot, Holly Marine Coach! Sales, 15210 N. Holly Rd Holly _MElrose 4-671, : _ 79 Rent Trailer Space Fy front and playground) EM 3-2661 \OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR those Who want the est. Base. rate only $612 weekly 2? miles east of Oxtord or Lakeville Rd. _OA 8-3022._ ‘PARK AT ~ PARKHURST Where living 's a vacation—72, lovely Habana includes a private) lake with swimming, good schools Clu wee and tornado | shelter Only 15 minutes Pon-| tiac Also trailer sales. Lease rate 20. Phone MYrtle 2-4611.__ | TRAILER § Pac FOR RENT, | large lots, new laundry rooms, | very pleasant place to live ins Mobile ke 3300 Elizabeth | Lk. ren ‘Accessories PRD a ‘6 1 oar P. WERGLIDE tk for sale good motor. & Olds for parts 1961 Ford to. 197 Bouth Johnson ~ BONDED: BRAKES _ ga 95 for most Litag: ae and: lymouths Con GOODY EAR “SE "RV iCE | S. Cass FE 5-6123 INSTALLED FPEE Mufflers, tail pipes —, gen.) pumps carbureters’ and fuel, onl ERBACKS AUTO PARTS wis—FE 6-1431-—-FE 3-9477! LLOCH gc, SAWS \ —— | PE 4.16421 PT set 96074 'See M&M Motor Sales ‘WTD.: $10.95 plus tax excsange; New yinie Sails. 670 x 15 $13.95 pilus ax. Exchange New tire guaran- | tee State Tire Sales £03 Sag w, FE 4068. STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES ; traded in on Genera; Catcty Tires ie te 50 ae cent off. Black or ___451 8. Saginaw et Raeburn st Auto Service | CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear. Cylinders rebored, Zuck Ma- ers Shop, 23 Hood Phone FE 2 _ Sale Motor Scooters 82 usauie acoorE ANDERSON SALE & SERVICE jlz s PADDOCK fat Pikes | FE 4-4246 For Sale Motorcycles 83 ~ SN FOR PARTS & SERVICE ON your Harley Davidson, see Harley Davidson Sales Cco,, 172 § Sagi- naw, Boats & Accessories 85— ‘oT NEW 18 HP ELECTRIC s‘arting Evinrude Mtrs. Only $ Also boats, paint and supplies TONY S MARINE 2695 Orchard Lk Rd Keero Harbor. FE 8-0112 rom_| “FT- MOLDED 5 ELY. ~WIND- shield, convertible top, many ex- tras & trailer, OL 2-802, after 4 CENTURY BOATS Ue Quality Also In -Aluminum MERC URY MOTORS Specia: Price on Spring Tune-Ups OPEN 9-4 & BUNDAY INLAND LAKES SALES 2 15 Fiberg OF 47191 3127 W Huron FE. 2-6122 ‘*7T LARK 35 HP. FEATHER- eraft aluminum boat. All con-. trols 12 Firat v eee $800 takes it FE ¢ _ MFG FInERGCAg SROET Ts ALUM BOATS. $19050 & UP. LAY-AWAY OR BANK TERMS Tlarrington Boat Works 1 oN er. = YOUR EVINRUDE, DEALER i . 13909 8S. TELEGRAPI D | Auction Sales a4 FE 272-8033 | OPEN SUNDAYS 2 CHEROKEE RUNABOUT 25 | a ANN re ae Johnson and trauer, Like new. = r to 793 3. Saginaw, All tools Cail before 2 pm. or after 5 pm. er lecd shane Minneapolis Bolen _ OF _ +-1850__ _ ‘ UTS tractor. MMR tractor with DESIGNER “BUILT 15° FIBER-; cultivator. Ford 8-N tractor 2 row| gias boat, windshield, steering | mounted corn planter Interna-| wheel 3 yre gid. $175. MAple, tiona] 45 baler. International 10) 5-1450 ee ft steel cultivator. Oliver 3 bot-' IT’S HERE tom plow, en rubber Drags plus| “ “IN Lo many more farm tools 250 bu A new Evinrude 50 hp. V-4 Star- 1 fitte | Come in and see the new | and enter the Evinrude dream | boat contest Wir he boat of your | choice and a new motor | \We have a limited oumrer of 1957 | motors at r ices, | Crestiiner boats and Gato, trailers. | Kelly's Hardware 3994 Auburn et _Adams, Auburn Hgts FE 2-6811 “JOHNSON MOTORS Boats Trailers & Accessories Everything for the boat OWENS MARINE SUPPL is 306 Orchard Lk Ave FE 2-8620 NEW ) HP 1 motors 10 H.P WIZARD MOTOR, $150 cash. FE 35-7329. WILL SWAP BEAUTIFUL HOME- site lot on paved roads, 300 feet from private beach at Williams ake. Also privileges on Maceday -k. For late model inboard or | comparable fully equipped out- agp rd. Phone. OR 3-5192 after Cie iraneperiatlenl Offered 87| ° CARS FOR PHILADELPHIA, $25 gas allowance to Hartford Conn. _FE 2-321). FE 2-5823 after 6 p.m. PLY «4 ENGINE AIRLINER | =| California $80; Hawaii, $99.10; Ferry Service Inc O. 3-1254 TRUCK .GOING: NORTH P - R1 _load, Either _way FE _ 5-6806 Wanted L Used Cars Oe ARE high? - PAYMENTS re you like to trade down smalicr car payments orf hone at all? We buy nice cars Bob Frost 280 Hunter Bivd, (US By-Pass around B'ham ry I Open ‘til 8 A-l 1 PRICES F FOR SCRAP & OLD! cars. /OR_3-60: AS MUCH AS aa 0 FUR JUNK AND | cheap cars. FE 2-2666 days or _eves. ARE YOU TIRED oF BIG PAYMENTS" How would You like a nice trans- ortation ppecte) for your equity ; * or ‘36 odel YOUR Would 10) 6-2202 | Orchard Lake at Cass _CASH ° AVERILL'S NEED CARS i Shop it. Then bring it here for | top dollars. | {a DIXTE HWY FE 5 2088 aa _ 4£-6896 Wanted 2-181, w ED. WILLIA Abs ' 1957 FOR 91958 by NEA Service tom < “If no one WANTED to date ‘her, you'd lose a lot * more sleep!” For Sale” ‘Trucks 90: PICKUP. $465. nr ‘64 FORD 2, TON _ OP 3 1576 Pri vate 'd1 FORD THREE (QUARTER TON | pickup. Good condition. Also 28 ft. moving van and Chevy trac- | tor with new motor. FE 5-7101 1955. ‘2 TON FORD PICKUP Ford Dump, '49 Ford Dum an with trailer, priva 3-6373 31 fra te. co For Sale Cars 1 LE OL PAP LAL Pl eS eral” | 66 BUICK CENTURY. EXC CON-, diten By owner. 415 W. Iro- quais < | FOR SAL E: “$5 BUICK | cRrTury _ Hardtop $925 _FE_ 5-685. HASKINS VALUES 1954 Ford V-8 club coupe, Cus- tomline series. Very nice $505 1954 Olds super 68 Holiday coupe. | Ower steering -. power. rakes $ 995 1956 Ford Customline 4-Door wag- on, V-8. Fordomatic, power steer- ing . A 495 , Haskins Chev. | oe re Highway at M-} { MAple 5-5071 ___ Open _ Nites _ un . ‘32 BUICK CLUB COUPE. EXC | condition MY_ 2-6703 ®yT. OWNER WILL | SACRIFICE 1958 Buick Special Conv. Full power Large radio. dyna-flow. white with dark blue top. 2,000 actual m! Call LI 2-9750 arte 6 pm. 4 BUICK SPECIAL, 4 DR.. RAH. Dyna Th king you like ‘te buy | and drive. Ay $495 | H MOTORS ae Oakianc” COP 46-3520 FACTORY ' » BRAN CH 5 BUICK SUPER HARDTOP Radio & Heater. Dynallow. W- Walls. Powe steering Power brakes. 2 Tone Grey. A sharp low mileage car $1495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE whitewalls, | Auto. blue. radio power seats and windows. _ trans $795 Lincoln 1-9564 ____ For Sale Cars PPP 65 FINE CARS | AT THE “Bright Spot” ve Will Deal BRING YOUR TITL(: OPEN TILL 10 P.M. LIBERAL APPRAISALS JEROME | Bright Spot Olds - Cadillac Dealer Orchard Lake at Cass FE 80488 912 or | YEe! | AS PART PAYMENT. OWNER ‘33 CHEVY. 210, 4 DR. R & H. | 724_Oakland Chevrolet, 1935 Look no further! Weve ¢ about the sharpest little 2 dr. in town! Completely equipped with powerglide, radio, feater ang white tires An older car of value will handle. 8705. Don't be late, keep your date with “SCHUTZ" - Woodward, Birmingham | vY DR., GOOD COND. ste OR 3s Will Sac eee My ya 57 Chevrolet Bel Nir Convertible $1975 fhie car has had tender care by present owner, the spare tire ha» hevet been on the car Like new inside ang out. Mom-Dad-Brother or sister would cherish the smart | lines of this beautiful convert. Must be sold this week-end. See it a oo. cope fag Lake Cal’! MA I WIL TAKE OLDER CAR Nice car Only $395 R & R MOTORS FE 43590, PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS 56 Ford Fairlane, FOM, R&H $1295 63 MT CLEMENS sT. ‘$3 Ford Wagon Lad FOM $ 845 FE 3-7117 | 134 Chevy Ba 2d PG, R&H $ 745 an | 34 4 Pont. Deluxe 2dr, aS 3 745 | BEHIND THE POST OFFICE $4 Che vy Ciean _. $ 595 —— —_— — —— "6. ¥ ‘48 BUICK, HEATER, TIRES IN ‘33 Mere, nae Auto. |... 3 8 _good cond. $65 ere. 2) ae shied areceges Wagon .... $ 395 1955 BUICK 2-DR HARDTOP. EX.| 33 Ford Maininer 8. # 305 cellent condition, 8mali down pay- As Sop Come te soeeee § 398 ment. Priced to sell. Lucky Auto| $9 pits 2dr. Nice toes weep, oe er Chery Nice 0 $ iss 214, .260,N Perry-Madison FE 4.0100 = CADILLAC. HARDTOP, LIGHT | ELLIBEE ___ CLASSIFIED "Ss CHEVY STATION WAGON. _Good cond, |. FE 3-0446 Schutz Motor 912 8. Woodward. Birmingham 58 DESOTO FIREDOME SPORTSMAN aren ‘NEW CAR aU ARAN TEE! = ae BRAID ‘34 eats. 3) PAIR. DEALING CASS A w PIKE 8T. - Dodge, 1956 Solid Black with Red and White interior WOW! what a combination? Completely equipped with radio, heater, white tires and automatic transmission and the very hot 00 motor An older car of value will handle. $1105 Schutz Motors 912 8. Woodward, Birmingham | SWEPT-WING DODGE j i] { | so_M24__} | 1958 EDSEL. ars i bcp oad ‘38 Doge 2-dr, sedan. DODGE CARS & TRUCKS . STATT'S MOTOR SALES M24 MY 3-2750 Lk. Orion “FULLY EQ EQUIPPED. take over leg Barkey, Afraid will lose. ments. Call Mr. _3-0979 after 6. FOR QUALITY CADIL!ACS * a fine selection of other | It's Al leas used cars. Wilson Pontiac-Cadillue 1350 N. Woodward B’ham MII 4- 1930 | 1948 FORD 4 DR V-8 POSITIVE- iy no money dn. Eddie Steele | 5-9204. ‘96 FORD CUSTOM 8 2 DR. Fordp WW. 2 tone. 1 owner Low milease gee new, Only $1,185. 724 Oakland FE +9528 1955 FORD 9 PASS. WAGON. V-8. Overdrive. white wall tires. A one-owner ‘eaity. Reduced to 2! 094 Bank rates ie Hunter at 3. Woodward, birmingham ‘MI 4-2735 187 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, all extras. $200 for my equity _OAkland 8-2326 ECONOMICAL UP TO 209 MILES A GALLON Studebaker Scotsman 16 pestanese full size, full powered 8s, from defroster, service | sedans and station wagon $1.795 including heater. turn signals, spare die policy and guarantee. Mazurek Motor Sales Corner 8 Bivd & 8. Saeinae. 8am. to 8 pm. FE leet FORD V-8. R&H. A aes MONEY DOWN. Assume Savmcets of $8.65 mo. Cali cree Mer. Mr. Parks at MI Harold Turner Ford ___— | ‘38 T BIRD, NEW. $3,782.58 ASK | for George Million Harold Tur- ne, Ford. MI 4-75n0 | °S5 FORD 8 CYL a nas A BEAU- t ‘MUST SELL tiful little car Only R& MOTORS 724 Oakland FED 4.3520 ‘Today Only ! 1956 Studebaker Champion. 4dr 6, with overdrive. Spotless through- | out. 1 owner Low mileage. 95 MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM | HOUGHTEN & SON Tour FRIENDLY OLDSMOBILE | ND GMC Austin, Ly FORD Vic. EX- tras Best offer FE 4-78 aT) FORD, “GOOD _ saaPe Tt sane FE _8-0972.__ 955 FORD 2 DR V-8 FOM. POS- “tively no ae dn. Eddie Steele BUD SHELTON OFFERS | $7 Cadillac C "35 | "56 ‘ony $4005 °57 Ford Fairlane Vict. 2 ar, $1895 ‘56 Buick Spec. Hardtop $1506 Buick Hardtop : 395 _—— wag. % pass, fal = fc "55 Pontiac Cotaline : | 3 Lae ararataeyace *65 For 124 .. $1 'S4 Buick mareien ‘Century +. . $905 "54 Olds 88 . . $905 ‘54 Pontiac Starchief ‘84 Ford custom line 4 dr, $645 "33 Chévrolet $505 ‘32 Pontiac Auto. $305 ‘51 Pontiac Shar $195 50 Buick dynafiow good trans. $145 ‘51 Chevrolet... $125 Bud Shelton Motor Sales }- ‘36 CADILLAC 4 DR. SEDAN. DF-| “1, CHEV. HARDTOP GARNERS | ville, like new. Call OR 3-4323,; Used Cars "E 50606 0 1953 FORD V8 2 DR SEDAN. Fordomatic Radio & heater Ex- | anne pelts oe oer Coen Geo. $48 TRADED IN ON THE ALL NEW 1948 Pontiac 4 dr 8 cy! Hydra-| CHEVROLET. Creag, hatte @ nesier | ence? 1068 CHEVS o..c.:.; .... $683 & up 1956 CHEVS |... .. $095 & up 1985 Ford Country sedan station | 1957 CHEVS “$1305 & up wagon, V8 Fordomatic. Radio, | heater Whitewalls Like N new $1345 ort 1950 Pontiac Y dr deluxe, Hydra- | matic. Radio & heater $ 85 HOMER HIGHT MTRS. Chevrolet “15 Minutes From Pontiac’ On the Bargain Blvd BIRMINGH, AT 8 WOODWARD OXFORD, MICHIGAN OA _8-2528 ah ee IES) 7755 ; ' SALE OR TRADE, "37 MG-A CPE 0955 Ramer abaedte cl v-8 ENGINE. = FE 8-0981. atic shift, ortgihal green paint. | aes Low down payment, bank rates.) (G ie ORG ES MILLION Priced -t onlv 8999. North Chev- = toe, Co, Hunter at 8 Wood- SPEGIATI ward, Birmingham. MI 4-2735. New ‘58 Fords, all equipped with a ee — x Radio & heater. Safety package 195° CHEVY 2 OR V-8. STD POSs- A. Peart mirror, windshield, white bef 4 res, “itively no money dn. Eddie Steele Ford. 59204, i .952 CHEVY CARRY ALL ‘STATION | SOLUTELY NO MON-/| DOWN Assume payments of | $24.80 mo Cal!) Credit Mgr. Mr. | aes at MI 4-7500 Harold Turner for 50 CHEV, 2 DR. NICE. $175. _FE | 5-0604 4 Garner Used Cars. 1956 CHEVROLET HARDTOP, RA- dio, heater, Powerglide. Origigal black paint. white side hiss tires. A real nice car Reduced to $1296 North Chevrolet Co. Hunter at 8. | ere Birmingham. MI CHEV Yau apr. 6 STD ECO- nomica! ear fer ech _Eddie ‘seete, " word FE 5-9204 DON'T MISS THIs!! ‘34 PONTIAC Chieftain, 4 Dr., acess R&Ey Hydra., w-w Eghna sages $ 495 54 BUICK super. Be Dr., Sedan, R&H, W-W. P-Steerin ng aon eared $ 745 55 BUICK 2 Dr Riviera. R&H, Dyna. w-w, | tone $ i Sa CHEVROLE 1 4 = Sedan. R&H, P- 2 bone 695 | ‘51 CADILLAC. 4 Dr. Sedan, R&H, Hydra Many extras... $ “| ' Community | Used Cars - | 108 NOCHE 2, mace, | customs 300 Fairlane Club. Seda Fairlane 500 Club Smedae $67.93 mo. ta opie, Sele PECIAL Bar ¥ Est eae dr. 45.90 $52.85 mo. $58. mo. R OLD CAR DOWN ALL DOWN PAYME GEORGE $ MIL LION CREDIT MANAGER Harold Turner Ford MI 47500 REAL BARGAINS AT Oxford Mtrs. 419 S. Lapeer “OA #2821 i i |- mo. Save Your CASH Use Your _CREDIT ARE yours” WITH ABSOLUTED LY NO MONEY DOWN, ua "33 Dodge 2-Dr. ‘49 Mercury 4-Dr. *34 DeSoto +-Dr. ’53 Hudson Hornet “33 Ford 4-Dr. 50 Ford 2-Dr. ‘32 Ford Coupe "31 Plymouth Convert. "53 DeSoto 4-Dr. *51 Plymouth 4-Rr. a Schutz) Motors. 912 3, Woodward, Birmingham \ 7 pspeale at East Blvd, FE 8-0683 FORD. RETRACTABLE HARD- le Just like new. Trade for ster. car Call MAple 5-1706 "3a FORD ¢ CROWN ~~ VICTORIA. Dechromed bood, trunk, door hai dies feita ok "Perlecs condi- 1,350 35 Madison 8t., ° *ctariston MA 54-5871 HAUPT Pontiac Sales pt. alter 3 tae rapt Supercnief 4 dr. wag- R&H | Hydra, power rakes, cae com 55 Pontiac wagon R&H, pawer steering & oower brakes, Hydra, low mileage - Fentiac: 4dr. sedan, R&H, Hy- sf ‘Pontiac 4 dr.. sedan, Hydra. Aue transporta:ion 5 ecials, Ca aon e 5-5566 or Leapie $1141 SHARP CARS A ACIS 56 MERCURY This hardtop is a beautiful car Spotless in 5 out. So c you could eat only get one car like thousand Low Brakes, R&H seat. A swell spot rou youngsters. You can't afford to Ran gas miser. ; NOW....$ 527 . i ; "st Ford Pairiane 200° D-dr. #164? i Buick Riviera 2dr. .... 81527 iymou' b Coupe .... $ 797 "9% Buick fal 4dr° $ 847 ‘S4 Ford V- Custome 2dr $ 647 33 Chevy Bel t aan toe $ 627 “53 Firedom $ 467 ‘83 Pivmouth Ser. X-bell” a af Bitmout cx moaned Pia Sg ga “® Pontlice Sar. Hydra’. 8 8 We trade up and down RIEMENSCHNEIDER- a nie SAGIN 3 2323 8. AW PE 20131 om 4) wes . os Ze. Be ae ee ges Pedi cytes pti 8S 2S eye : ny ' ’ 4 : ? . ~ : < ag ; : re je te ae ; oF i a i a = fl } ae : i . | : & ; e F a a A : i i ‘ = a ‘ = ce o r 2 s * iD D : : : : * it ; f ; ‘te ; * . fe ore) : " . : ‘ « 3 = . THE PON'TIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1958 , Sale Farm Equipment 76 For Sale Tires 80A | TIZZY by Kate Osann For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 1 OpRr ~ TODAY (6 — 122 X § TUBELESS TRUCK ‘ ‘OL CHRYSLER IMPERIAL. $235. ‘4 PLYMOUTH, WILL SELL OR SPECIALS TODAY * Gree wheels for Ford. EM nne = “= As Easy to gharp. Ne ag Ma « || “eae to later model bar. oe |e $212.50 digcoujt on Oliver °55 eas, &é COOD TIRES. TUBES. CHEVY | . ch . > rysler, 1956 Get Wise, E ize ‘S1 PLYMOUT Naa an as 5 discount on Oliver "55 deisel Too 190x20. $25 each. FE “1 ms eae os Care For as iE cconom =a ¢ ready whee) trac-|A-1_ USED TIRES $150 UP. We even close : "62 =e 8UB : MEN'S ene, SKIS, bap | cra. ora “tenders, Seekheas buy-Sell. Also whitewalls. rae Lay ynotal Lanta They Are on Good rabher. > No on Runs very bane BW) Sou. ‘Dp ‘vo 30 mos. a =e 1 500 8 Gexinaw Bt. BAL - 4-068 i | self!) Pte end wok at 8 : cle THe BARGAIN LOT SEW TIRES 67 x 15 aLice. Underpriced or sites The : | Hunter “Blvd at Haynes. Birm 1957 PLYMOUTH V-8. CLUB on push-button automatic, Ra, NEW & USED CARS BILL SPENCE . Pocketbook iil 8. Saginaw SALES & PE 30201 W-W tires, washera wheel cov- SALE sraRts “= | ers. sport tone paint. etc. like 8:30 TUESDAY 1955 NABH SUPER RAMBLER ¢| new, E-Z terms, Will trade. eae; _feabimsios heater, | Automatic Clarkston Motor Sales ONLY one ye. of Riemeuschneldet $068, North ‘Chevrolet | CHRYSLER Cr x beta. Englehart are not e eheible to pur- 70. unter wt $ Woodward, Bir- | Clarkston, Mich. Phone | chase the listed units mingham Ml 4-2735 ‘953 PONTIAC CATALINA. REAL ENGLEHART ‘WIL ~ octets Wwnite sail Gres, R&H, 5 : 5 | 1952 ume 30 Dodge 2-Dr. ..$ 89.25 | 1952 LDA O02 DR RAH HYDRA.| itchy Aulo Sales. 163 8.-Saginaw 51 Henry J 2-Dr. $ 18.46 MON} ¥ De jeoeme me Ptere er FE 4-2214. '53 Plymouth ....$257. 20, Parks ay M “41500. Harold ee eet Bact see rine ‘51 Pontiac ......$ 89.57 | “l= "" eee 3 tight, & rear speaker. Dir. "51 Plymouth ....$101.50. Vor top quality uew car trade-ins sua "Ss? Ply NTIAC CHIEFTAIN 2-DR.. ‘52 J ly mouth see -$179.80' = b t oe geal Neaes paint. A one owner 53 DeSoto ..... . $367 u urban M rs: ee sonoward ie . < =~ wee “LIKED 65 8 Woodie aa ingh Birmingham. MI 4-27. RIEMENSCHN EIDER- : aro = an SACRIF! 1952 2 PONTIAC R&H. HYDRA, AB- MONEY DOWN 1.0354 Y NO _ trans. Green $225. OL reed payments of $14.27 mo. matic, Exe cond. $730, MY *$44 FORD CUSTOM 2 DR. 6 ae inder. Overdrive, R & H. Econ- omy plus. at oe old os down. Tom _Bohr, Inc. MU_4-5135. HURON MOTOR SALES ALWAYS A GOOD Tred or 952 W. HUROK 232 8. Saginaw __ Pontiac, Michigan a “eivustts TOO BURDEN- cae Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks at = = SS some? Let us help vou adjust I 4-7500, Hareid Turner Ford. Loe apd & De Ae ee : Pisa to some less exoensive model, | ~~ ‘Ford, PE ‘8-030 : Lake Orion Motor Sales TOR Y ‘55 FORD CUSTOMLINE. FORDO- rom 2. oe MY RO 2611 BRANCH USED CAR FE 2-264) ‘30, FORD V-8, 2 DR. 3-0081, H. Riggins Tome QUALITY USED CAR. AL HANOUTE CHEV BUICK LAKE QRION, MICH. MY 2-2411 “CY” OWENS FORD "37 FORD : OWNER, Han 57 FORD ¢ DOOR SEDAN. cevs- North Chevro- | ane. “ i ~ OWENS ‘urs SAGINAW _s F-54108 | .8€ FORD CONV V-8. FOM. R&H. | oA auty. Your car tor Aas _Eddie Steele Ford. FE 5 . HARDTOP RACE CAR AND. trailer Same at Frenchy’s Larid- | _ing, PE 4-1250 "92. FORD. HARDTOP. NICE. _Garners Used Cars. FE E_5-0604. tomline. R. & h., windshield wash- ers, standard shift, V-8. Take over payments $65.59 per mo 72 Putoam. 1954 FORD CONVERTIBLE ce Pe i LARRY JEROME ROCHESTER FORD DEALER LT Lineoln, 1956 We have a premier Coupe | | | that is in like new condi- tion. Car: {is equipped with full power plus alr condi- tioning and full leather trim. An older = - value will handle, $1.095 | Schutz Motors le 8 Woodward, ___ Birmingham FACTORY 55 PONG IAG Sie cians COUPE Radio & Heater, Hydramatic Power brakes, W-Walls. Red and Black paint Low. mileage. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 MT CLEMENS ST. PE Sli? Plymouths 1958 : $149 DOWN OR TRADE IN TAXES AND 'S8 PLATES INCLUDED ALL MODELS AVAILABLE $47.50 PER MONTH SPECIAL PAYMENT. PLAN CALL OR ASK FOR cunt MIGHoE BEHIND THE POST OFFICE NICHOLAS 1950 PONTIAC 2 DOOR. BLACK. AT Midwest! 6-5300 Standard shift. good condition, SCHUTZ MOTORS $125. FE 41498 : ae 3952 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN, 4 DR, Plymouth, 1955 Hydra.. good tires and motor. _ Cail OL _1-0681 Work hofse or pleasure car, this dual purpose wagon can fill the iit on either coynt. 1956 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARD- It has radio, heater, auto- top, power steering, power brakes matic transmission, white ana Hydramatic 1: ao WIR, Music CKLW. News, M. Labbit WXYZ, Mery Griffin oe | Snyder and S. C. Wasman, say ae seer Date WJBK, U. of D. Mag. oe. Neen Deri By BOB CUNNIFE | the soothing pills result in heftier | ; 10:60—WJR, aArthyr Godfre ews. Rei “Ey - 7 hi S| Cele Wee cues — WW). News. Tra fiery NEW YORK (NEA) — While| cattle, aoe etgs and dog ate od bet) WXYZ, Jim Backus _ watching exuberant conductor) that smile at mailmen. — - WPON, Music with Mason 7:06—WJR, Guest WXYZ, Morgan WWJ, News, H. Roberts CKLW, Lewis Jr. WXYZ, Fred Wolf wean! News, Bellboy ayes poveatrl Club 1¢;30—WWJ, Don Ameche News, Patrick om George WCAR. News, Sheridan care, news. Daries 71:30—WWJ, 3 Star Extra WXYZ, M. Shorr CKLW. Album Time WJBK, Income Tax TUESDAY MORNING 6:00—WJIR, News, Roundup WPON Country Roundup 6:30—WJR, Voice of Agricit. WPON America CKLW, News, Mary Morgan WJBK. News, Reid WPON, PIii Workshop 11:00—WWJ, News, Wood | 2:30—WJR, Cpl. Next Door WWJ, One Man's Pamily CKLW. Shiftbreak. Davies to Knees WPON. Don Zee Show 3:00—WJR, Helen Trent WWJ. Jews, Matinee WXYZ, Ed McKenzie CKLW, Shiftbreak, Davies WJBK, News, McLeod WCAR, News, Page Glamor to Serious GLAMOR BOY OF MUSIC — Leonard Bernstein's career has Varied Career Music + { Leonard Bernstein put the Boston Symphony through a riotous Stra- vinsky piece, a well-known society girl gasped: “Oh! those divine back muscles!” and forthwith ex-; tended an invitation to young) Bernstein to visit her Manhattan * * * Cattle who normally fret away Valuable pounds while being shipped to market stay fat and happy with the drug, the veterinarians said at a symposium. Nervous chickens Blind Receiving Aid NEW YORK—Some $73,000,000 is spent each year on aid to the blind in this country, according to the \Better Vision Institute. mber of Electronics A FE 4-1515 C & V ELECTRO MART 158 Oakland Open Mon., Thurs, Fri. & Sat. ti) 9:00 | Complete Component Hi-Fi (net just a label) WXYZ, Paul Winter ; -Fi WCAR, Patrick gt of fows seen avid! "CKLW News. Ernie Ford $:30— WIR, House Party climbed to new heights in the past year. “West Side Story,” for apartment. | calm down and lay eggs with Custom Sa Hi sa), Systems $:00—WJR, Amos ‘n*’ Andy | WCAR. News WJBK, News, Reid oman in House which he composed the score, is a hit on Broadway, and Bernstein - | rful ity. All Work Guaranteed WCAR, News, B. Martyn WXYZ, News, McKenzie * * chee regularity e WWJ, Bet Your Life WPON 8pta.. Mackinnon : 7 CKLW. Ni Cha. has bee inted conductor of the New York Phil ; ye @ Free Estimates =o M = Shorr WPON Don MacKinnon | WEYZ. wenn Sotcensie as = appointed permanent uctor 0! e New 10) : ll- Such extra-musical appreciation x * * Bl mii id Electroni - a Theta oy Tae WIR News 11:90—WJR, Time for Music| g-on_woR. Parade of Bands harmonic-Symphony. He frequently lectures on television's j,3; made Bernstein the unques- Wasman, of Miami Beach, | ae = sane : 8: Bacar Answer Please WXYZ, News, Wolf CKLW, News, Davies AVWJ, News, Deland Omnibus. tioned glamor boy of American Fia., and Snyder, of Haddon- | WYRM Shorr Wink, baw Gentle wo ea *inusic, though he is rapidly be- field, N. J., also reported that | = CKLW., Barry Lime WCAR, News stra Cub WJBK, News, McLeod , coming a middle-aged boy won- deer, tranquilized by being shot RCA COLOR TV Wik Wanther . TUESDAY AFTERNOON WCAR, News, Page Brings Own Cure | ® der — he’s 39. ‘with darts, can be herded to 45 . 7:30—WJR, Music Hall 4:30—WJR, , 3 wi i : les an rvice Ec sien Time | ARE ewe! Yongecaren, wage wen | Gi Sovie COPIE —|_ x wortty succeantal eater Po a ene das can | 5 "KLW, Sports. Dav WJ, 8, Ma: CKLW. S aye - carta . s : SSIV S$ Ce ’ ree News aed WJBK. News, George shad Grene Livestock Newa. Chass for nakebite: reached a peak i" sorts Bd | made to keep their teeth out of SWEET S RADIO-TV . ws. Thomas $:00—WJR, Philip Lenhart when “West Side Story,” for | F ; : 9:30_WJR, Music 8:00_WJR, News, B. Guest ) WJBK. News. Reid ww, N : ‘as | tbe mailman, the doctors said hog mightiing 7 aa eke as WPON, News. MacKinnon WXYZ, Waitrick. “tcenne Cl Lively Rattler 0 10 0 S | which he wrote el was | SB eiiilar injections, . Open Mon. & Fri. Night E re » Spts,, extravagantly acclaim on " 422 W. Huron FE 4.1133 WJBK, Sound Oft WJBK, News, George 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Music) WJBK, Ni M WPON, News, MacKinnon WXYZ, News, Wintes | WCAR, Arthur Mcleod MOREHEAD CITY, N. C. wH — Broadway. “WW. News’ Masie” 8:30_WJR, Music Hall CREW Bees, Davies WON, Music With Masoa’ ' Morehead City Hospital recently| One-Party Ticket Voting} Shortly after that the New York Wins Music Fellowship (Ravertenmens) WXYZ, H. Anderson CKLW, News, David 1:00—WJ", Peter L. F 5:30—WJR. Music Hall - | ' WJBK. News, Stero founds}; WJBK, News, George WwWu., Meee Meiceh WXYZ, News, McKenzie had to deal with both the emer-| Vv ll Philharmonic-Symphony appointed | ry B. Wil- to § eart as rose Ws. Guest Star | con News, Mra. page| GEE Nowa Davies CKLW. News, Chase gency and the cause of the emer-| Very Well Organized,’ inim as its permanent conductor, NEW YORK “—George h i 100 : 8, : } s As erv Griffixc : Arbo! WCAR, News Ace WWJ, News, F. Elizabeth | WJBK, News, Reid ON Sears igency. Says U.S. Observer proof, if any was needed, that he $0n Jr., of Ann =; ice hae 3 Times Faster WPON, Sports Slants -- Today's Television Programs - - * * * Attendants treated an inebriated patient for snakebit. A few hours |turned, clutching snake, its coils wrapped around his) . Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WW4J-TV Channel 7—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV arm. * * * 6:00 (7) Mr. Danger, TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS | | | 10:30 (7) San Francisco. 11:00 (7) songs On. 11:15 (9) Weather. yer Joseph Cotten after Cot- ten falsifies documents. (2) Studio One. Drama: Mar- garet O’Brien, James Mac- Arthur in “Tongues of - Angels.”’ Because he stutters so badly, young boy (Mac- Arthur) poses as deaf-mute who gets a job on stranger's farm. The daughter (Miss O'Brien) helps him with his problems, . (9) City Detective. (9) Nationa] News. (4) News: Westerkamp. (2) News: LeGoff. 3:30 4:06 ~ (4) Weather: Eliot. (2) Weather. (9) Popeye. 11:20 (9) Theater. Keith Andes, (4) News: Williams. “Project X.” (49). (2) Racket Squad. (4) Sports: Parker. : (2) Sports. 6:15 (4) Weather. Eliot. | . 11:25 (2) Nightwatch Th. Ida Lu- 6:20 (4) Box Four. pino, “Fight for Your Lady.” | (31). 6:30 (7) Three Musketeers. Ad. venture. : a FG . Sant | (9) Foreign Legion. = (7) Night Court. Re nact | . (@ Front Western: M ment of court cases. rontier. Western: Moun- | (4) Jack Paar) bans Conned taineer returns from wars to find his girl in love with another, exe (2) News: LeGoft. ae e Sy eNtNG - 6:40 (2) Weather: Phelps. (6:50 (2) Meditations, 6:55 (2) On The Farm Front. 6:45 (2) News: Edwards. 7:00 (2) TV Collere. 7:00 (7) Sports Parade. (4) Today. (9) Gangbusters. (4) Death Valley. Adventure: 3:39 (2) Cartuon Frolic. Story of famed stagecoach driver. 8.00 (2) Captain Xangaroo (2) Badge 714 (7) Cartoon Carniva: 7:10 (7) Weather. 8:0 (7) Big Show. 115 (7) News: Daly. 8:45 (2) Cartoon Classroom. 7:30 (7) O.S.S. Adventure: Agent! 9:00 (4) Romper Room, tries to rescue workers we) Nazi Gestapo. lowe (9) Million $ Movie. Greer |*" 728 (2) News. an “Mra. Parkington. P w (2) Ladies Day. (4) Amos ‘n’ Andy. (4) Price Is Right. (color). ; (2) Robin Hood. Adventure:| (7) Our Friend Harry. Farmers think land is haunted. . |" (9) Billboard. 8:00 (7) Love that Jill. Comedy: '9: 45 (9) Nursery Schoo] Time. Business is her motive when) ‘0:00 (2) Garry Moore. Jill asks Jack for golf les- i pee heel. son. . (4) Restless Gun, Western: Vint duels with pupil he| 10:30 (2) Arthur Godfrey. taught the art of gunslinging. (4) Treasure Hunt. (2) Burns, Allen. Comedy: |11:00 (4) Price Is Right. Gracie helps Ronnie's girl get acting job. 11:25 (7) News. ‘ 8:30 (7) Bold Journey. Adventure: 11:30 (2) Dotto. Brazilian jungles. (4) Truth or Consequences. (4) Wells Fargo. Western: (7) Robin and Ricky. Outlaw Johnny Ringo makes (9) Howay Doody. strange request when Agent Hardie captures him. 11:43 (7) Noontime Comics. (2) Talent Scouts. 9:00 Voice. Met. Opera tenor TUESDAY AFTERNOON Thomas Hayward. (9) If Had a Million. 12:00 (2) Hotel Cosmopolitan. (4) Twenty One. Elfrieda (4) Tie Tae Dough, Van Nardoff returns. (9) Meet Mr. X. (2) Danny Thomas, Comedy: Danny discovers country-|19:15 (2) Love of Life. style singer (Judy Canova) on mountain trip. 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow. ; (4) It Could Be You. 9:30 , ee elk. (7) The Erwins. J) Fron : (9) M : (4) Turn of Fate. Drama: ary Morgan Policeman's wife is murder 19.4; suspect. Robert Ryan stars. #45 (2) Guiding Light. (2) December Bride.}j., 9 Comedy:When Lily tries to|""" (2) an get ex-wrestler a night club = singing job, he's hired as a a - a - ttle Margie. bouncer. . 10:00 (9) Fed. Elections. hos C as The World Turns. (4) Suspicion. Mystery: pper. i orments law- oS iS 2:00 (2) Our Miss Brooks. (7) Movie. (4) Faye Flizabeth. (2) House Party. (4) Kitty Foyle. (9) News. (2) My Hero. (4) Matinee. Theater. (7) American Bandstand (9) Favorite Story. (2) Verdict Is Yours. (7) Do You Trust Your Wife?! (9) Movie. (2) Brighter Day. (4) Queen for a Day. (2) ——— t {#15 (2) Secret Storm. | He explained that he had been 4:30 (2) Edge of Night’ (9) Laff Time. l “get better right off.’’ Gently and firmly, the attendants | jteatinent he needed and cautiously | escorted the patient and singing rattlesnake to the nearest exit. Librarians Attend 4:45 (4) Modern Romances. 5:00 (2) Band Stand. (4) I Married Joan. (7) Sir Lancelot. (9) Looney Tunes. 5:30 (2) Beat the Clock. ‘told that with an injection of the! blood of the rattlesnake he would! explained he had received all the} | MOSCOW WwW — The Soviet peo- later the still inebriated patient re-| 'Ple gave their usual rousing vote a live rattle-| lof support to their leaders in na- jtionwide elections for Parliament visiting American observer said the one-ticket vot- ing was The only question was the per- centage-of the Soviet Unien's—13¢ million eligible voters who furned out. ithat 99 jcligible polls six hours before they closed lyesterday. A “very well organiz Sizable returns were not expect- ed until tonight. * * * Before the polls opened, officials estimated that 99.98 per cent of the voters would The Tass news agency reported 7 per cent of Moscow's voters had visited thelharking back do their duty. (4) Files of Jeffrey Jones (7) Mickey Mouse Club. (9) Serial Theater. She Battles Hay Fever —All in the Cause of Art. ‘be held at the University of Mich- seats in the Supreme Soviet, the| CARBONDALE, IU. art. * * * Her project utilizes Indian grass Library Service, Rutgers Univer- The Americans visited Leningrad, | beta e mope working and he never and broomsedge as part of a re- search study leading to a Masters of Fine Arts degree. She gathers the grasses and weeds in southern uw — Mrs. 'Rita Bretscher, a graduate student battles hay fever in the cause of Spring Conference nix Five Pontiac and four Waterford) Martial music and _ get-out-the- ‘Township school librarians will at-;Vote slogans blaring from loud- ‘tend the spring conference of the Speakers spurred the citizens over \Michigan Association of School 18. There were 1,378 candidates! Librarians Friday and Saturday. The theme of the conference, to leaders for the same number of iigan, is “Developing Schoo] Soviet Union's two-house Parlia- Library Services,” with emphasis ment. jnominated by Communist party| sriusie: