a: . re Ls ek The Weather US. Weather Berean Forecast : : Fair, Cool, - : \ : metas. * & ia YEAR” xe Telephone Calls Nearing Through State DETROIT (INS) Telephone calls throughout the state were nearly back to normal today as supervisory employes at the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. took over duties of operators. A company spokesman said about 70 per cent of work- ers in non-striking departments refused to cross picket lines of the Western Electric Co. in the _ two-tay-old strike. In most Michigan exchanges, only ‘emergency long | Normal a Trumpet Soloist Dies at Party - Member of Les Brown Band Believed to Have Taken Narcotics NEW YORK @® — Bobby Stiles, 28, trumpet soloist with the Les Brown band, collapsed: and died yesterday during what police de- scribed as a vodka and heroin party in a fellow musician's hotel 1 a¢ 3 fe FES i aL ; i ed -~ on the musician's arm indicated he started using heroin recently. Ike Discusses Budget . eral budget problems for 45 min- utes today then went off .to a “distance calls were acce a ed. for about 14 hours af Strikers picketed 18 Bell offices in Michigan late yesterday until they were withdrawn from Roseville exchange. ; long tance callers td dia] 311, “if you have an urgent call.” The line was reported busy in many cases. Negotiations get under way in New York today between the Western Electric Co, and the Communication Workers of Little Rock Waits for Next Move by Gov. Faubus Rep. Hays Urges Action; pa, Saad 200 Subpoenaes Being Prepared by U. Ss. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. @ maker’s role, is set to see Gov. Orval Faubus agaii today, but the governor gave no sign, publicly, of his next move in the highly charged dispute over in- tegrating Central nets Doorbell Chimes — Startle Burglar to Dropping Loot The tinkling chimes of the front half of his prizes after he had looted the Green’s Men's Apparel ame S at 4516 Dixie Highway, Dray- Waterford Township police, mak ubsidiary of the ‘telephone|~-Rep. Brook Hays, appar-|today. : company began. ently playing the peace-|.soo “Fred Green, the thief. was ne iia wml Count Dealers | aah i ev ae (Cut Gas Prices doorbell as he’ was leaving, last} = = ‘|night caused a burglar to drop}... leader. of | |Union, is in the limelight jon thyee labor fronts to- Top Teamsters in Chicago Set . Delegates Free Kennedy Visits Detroit, . to Collect More Data for Senate Probe By THE asnocatTED PRESS James R. Hoffa, Midwest the Teamsters day.. Chi decided last night to let The action was hailed ped Thomas J. - Haggerty as outstanding victory for nis candidacy against Hoffa. At the same time, the Chicago Joint Teamsters Council reaf- firmed an earlier endorsement of _* | |James-R. Hoffa, the leading can- didate for the job being: relin- quished by Dave Beck. The council said there was no proper way to withdraw endorse- ment of Hoffa. the Senate Rackets Committee re- - Will Probe Hit 614? It was still a question today ‘asly Gasccmesiees ead coast bers of an insurgent group seek- ing to end Hoffa's control over 614 still refused to say whether the controversial affairs of the | local would be brought up. . : hear Ws be longer, The Western Electric is the manu- ' facturing arm of American Tele-| hopes of the people of the country.) Gallon Costs One Cent rots the Bell Telephone : ply cannot be frustrated.” “Less at Many Stations Western Electric workers install| Somebody has to give in to dis) Dye to Wholesale Drop members of the Communications | Hays , posing question, Workers ‘of America, as are the| ‘But how to give in without sur-| Many Oakland County gasoline opera renderirig?”’ : .-|dealers today dropped prices one Thirteen of the 2% exchanges| Who will surrender? “I don't) cent a gallon on all grades follow- picketed are in Detroit; the| new.’ fi Bape sevens re added:| ing’ an announcement yesterday others outstate. Michigan, Bell : from four major oil companies that pickets policemen were| ism simply because we have not aad : 2 ; se nw tier at. the exchanges. |tied up this package.” Nags orn ag ace ~MAJOR CLEANING JOB—Take a bucket of Katherine Johnson ohnson. Whew what happened, this The federal government was pre- amour roofing tar, two small children, mix well and this did. Here Mrs. Johnson starts a long clean-up * « eeininc tien elie is not @i-|Pating about’200 subpoenaes today; A check of service stations) is the result. Walter Johnson, 5, and his sister, job at a hospital where she took them. They rectly evdived ta Os etre qaid|(C. Witnesses in its case against/showed many had already posted Yvonne, 4, found the bucket on the porch of their were not burned by the roofing compound, but employes failing to report are do-|Cov- Orval — fitervention|the new | lower Price on ineit| home in Miami. Before their mother, Mrs. mother is burning slowly. ing so illegally. It said its con). ‘ until they either lowered their pres- tract wt OA oa ee snal| A court source said the sub-lent stock of gasoline or received ! voage ornp (Continued on. Page 2, Col. 5) | word that the oll companies would Judge, Chief, City Attorney Confer es On the national gide, federal a ir weimarecagan ) ais oe eee en Claim Standard ted the field with « that led to 0 strike of 23.300 tele- yne _ | guletty fllowed by Shel, Speed | yee Oo in 1ass. e es —“« — H | f i suit. ie ” Peace overtures and signs ofjasked to declare a moratorium on| by both sides as “extremely of Columbia e S nnocen . compromise in the hassle betweenjeniorcement of the controversial amiable.” ~ —_—— The new price today will be 30.5 the municipal court and the Pon- pending a circuit court “I just wanted to read my opin-| Long distance service out of | Place Lion Quarterback ‘ens for regular and 345 for pre-|i.° “police Dept. over the city's|%*C!80"- jlom to the chief,” said McCallum, Pontiac ts still being slowed due on $150 Bond Followi See ee. sae Nes ome ae dian * *« “because I had heard he had never Saeptpes oh Sei aoe H fe ine Si ton soe hele oe A softening of attitudes set in| Yesterday, Ewart said he would note aod ‘hat he listened to Michigan | manager) Drunk Driving Charge -\gladly bring a test case to circuit), “EUSY $2 said today. ; ; : a little Heeb ene On Aug, i [yesterday when Judge Cecil B./e ot to determine if McCallum’ aoe Judge’ ers oii eee in law and being | Standard a reduction McCallu nief n said that elt duty-bound acted the ek of handling calle pee reort, ©, — Bobby Layut.jcents 1 gallon, and the others fol-), oy Prose parma Ce ee the towing! +5 continue to enforce ‘the ordin- pe Detroit Lions’ quarterback, pleaded iowed suit within 24 hours ; ° y ance as long as it is on the assistance of operators.| innocent today in traffic court to aj The lower prices are aimed at/Attorney William Ewart indicated) qne pariey between the judge | books. Meanwhile, installation of the|drunk dri . meeting the competition of inde-ithe city =. would be! and the. chief was described | Both men denied that there was phone and inter - communication} Judge John D. Watts set the|pendents and small chains. which ia “feud” between them, saying systems at the nearly-completed|trial date for Oct. 17 after Layne's|have consistently undersold the it was just a difference of duties. $875,000 Public gre mara an attorney asked for an adjournmen . t./major firms, persons close to the Something to Comment On a ee er — ig’ a= fal a of West the| Arrested at 2:10 a.m., Layne | industry maintain. "| An investigation of the parking Bietre inte ier er bane (Troy Tot Dg Hagerty Now Grand Da [eit other’ trathe wisiatons It is not immediately known how! y.cx Christiansen, a professional oy 0 rowns . [brought comments from alf par- long the opening of the building! toothait teammate who posted a Iti would be delayed because of this.| $159 eash bond, NEWPORT, R. I. (INS) — White House news secretary | in Bac yard rioie c t dfather tod zee Drocsemes. 0 Be Ee Layne’s attorney, William B. James C. Hagerty became a grandfather today. lice Violations Bureau, showed Giles, said: “Mr. Layne denies emphatical- “eezily that he is or was guilty of drunk yard at 5721 Livernois Rd., Troy. _|driving. He admits that when Michaet Bell was found in a deep A 2-year-old boy drowned yester- day afternoon in his family’s back- Marine first lieutenant, gave golf course still soggy from, an overnight rain, ; County News .............-- 17 |River he unfortunately did not! vere his mother, Mrs. a Editorials .......ccccceseece 6 notice that the lights of his car Bell, io oe 3:30 p.m. Markets .........sce00. ..e. 2% | Were not on. She called olice ws “He ake ts that his’ Micht. Troy ° >| news conference in Newport, Obituaries ... soon hh! admi worked on the boy with a resuscita-| sooxesman declared: Sports ...... vesceee %@ thru 2g {84 river's license was not’ onitor, but he was dead on arrival Po - . pean +. his person but was in his room,|at St. Joseph Mércy Hospital. esse ae owe: ae which, unfortunately precipitated) Mrs. Bell said her husband, Carl, TV & Radio Programs - 3 ‘his arrest. Mr.Layne wishes the had recently dug the hole for Wilson, Earl ............... 31 |fans of Detroit to know that he|burying trash and that Sunday’s| ®+ Quant Women’s Pages 13 thru 15 {regrets the incident.’ rain fill it up. conte “doing fine.” — * * Mrs. Roger Hagerty, wife of the secretary's oldest son, a * birth to an eight-pound five- ounce. boy early today at the naval hospital in Quantico, Va. wk & OK Beaniing proudly as he made the announcement at a the 48-year-old White House “I'm going to teach the kid fast to say ‘No Comment.’” The youngster’s father, who is 25, is an infantry officer Marine base. Both mother and child were Te- 39th Annual Convention Draws 3,113 Delegates Legion Considers. Policy in Widely Varied Problems ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (INS)— mander W, C.. (Dan) Daniel with|* 3,113 delegates ready to consider legion policies on a wide — of problems. distinguished service mbdal and|mésee's baqunt iietiaguishéd tired after yesterday’s day-long|from all over the country as. jet Robert W. Sarnoff, president of the|guests, Gen, Mark Clark will be|parade .along Atlantic City’s|Planes swept low over the pro- National Broadcasting Company,|presented ‘with the Legion’s dis-|boatdwalk. cession. Nearly 6,000 legionnaires bad receive an Asaericinlen tentene eves ene. They paraded in military forma-|'0ok part in the parade. The~ legionnaires Went into to-\tions to the tunes of marching} Many of the marchers, veter- "Tonight, Be reeel coe: So7's. einen seein haan dat toah So. Sip 94, aie oliny ans of World Wars I and IU el anf the Kerese eimapeign, ave along in years and it was a strenuous. experience for some of them.- But they all loved it. One of the most enthusiastic of the marchers was Ralph Yar- borough, Junior U. S. Senator from Texas, and a member of Legion Post 76 of Austin, Tex. He paraded for more than two hours and enjoyed every minute of it. x * *' The legionnaires, quartered in a dozen different Atlantic City ho- tels, are behaving themselves. with much more decorum than at pre- ‘vious conventions. PAG ap. tenanguhinskit, Ween’ st unig gan Sided watching the al-Qay purade atthe American Legon convention ee er ee et ae eee } ‘ AP Wirephete Fj . \ i \ i ~ F ! \ : i j r “ . ‘ . b . * e : Se ’ _| and earlier. + “But,” he added, there were 5,800 warrants on file against moving violators which have mever been served and “several thousand” parking tick- ets, some dating back to 1953 Chief Straley said that consid- ering the manpower shortage in his department and the fact that many violators move out of town, he is surprised there is not more of a backlog. Straley added he felt the tow- ing ordinance was the best way to cut down the number of unpaid tickets. He said, however, he would check with other chiefs of police this month, to see how their cities handle their ticket problem. * * * Under the city ordinance which Judge McCallum ruled illegal, Police were towing away legally parked cars if the owners had unpaid tickets. Judge McCallum stated there is no legal way to enforce any ordinance except by complaint and warrant, “T still think if the police start- ed arresting people for back tick- ets, there would be a flood of vio- lators in here to pay up,” he said. Asked how Detroit handles’ this brought in they can quickly tell from court records if he has any parking tags outstanding.” “4. 2 _ “this system turned to Detroit last night to con- tinue the investigation of Hoffa. *® * * only that he ‘wanted to “‘see some people here in Detroit,” where ‘Hoffa heads a Teamsters tocal-He refused to say specifically what he was investigating or how long he ‘would be here. ‘HIS SECOND VISIT Kennedy’s appearance here was his second in two weeks. He was here Sept. 4 in connection ‘wie Hoffa's affairs. In Washington yesterday Chair. man McClellan (D-Ark) of the Senate Rackets Committee said his group plans to resume its in- vestigation of Hoffa. MgClellan said Hoffa will. be in- vited but not required to be pres- ent at the new hearings, tentative- ly set to begin Sept. 24.- x* *« * The 44-year-old Hoffa is the front- a-yeat job being vacated by Team- sters President Beck ALSO INVESTIGATED Beck .also has been investigated by it to have misused some $300,- 000 in union funds. - *x* *« ® McClellan said that when the committee resumes its study of Hoffa there will be questions brought up about alleged misuse of union money and conflicts of interest. Hoffa has said he is undecided whether he will sereer at the new hearings. Another Cool Dip Expected Tonight Fair and cool is the weather outlook for Pontiac and - vicinity will be near -50. are tonight. The. North to northeast winds at 5 to 10 miles an hour will become light and variable this evening and south to southwest at 8 to 14 miles an hour tomorrow. Tomorrow's forecast is partly cloudy and warmer. The mercury will climb to a high near 75 Ss, Downtown Pontiac’s lowest tem- perature preceding 8 a.m., was 48. The mercury stood at 69 at 2 p.m. * Leaves Rome for Berlin ROME (INS) — Clare Boothe Luce, former U.S. ambassador to Italy, ended a week's vacation in | Rome today and left by plane for Frankfurt on her way to Ber- lin, Boat enclose Seteans, ma. Morey's Golf Club ts . Foster's Hdwe. @ Spig. Goods me poem @ ve o Teamsters chiefs _|their delegates to the Inter- national Teamsters Union convention vote as they please for president. Meanwhile the chief “comnee] *be Robert F. Kennedy would say — running candidate for the $50,000- . by the committee and is alleged - Sa a et OUI 1 i |: Pay $9.30 Fines “ Registra sconces tuhs fie as ae ; < » + = te ~ Loe { “ * = Fi z=: | ie - 4 f aX \ “ee onan gare oT win + : i Only t 4 . re - = Si i ij bet es have unti} Sept. 30 to tion Ends Sept. 30 All unregistered voters. owning the Oct. 28 $950,000 band issue election to equip and furnish Pontiac General Hospital. * @ity Clerk Ada R. Evans emphasized that only prop- erty owners will be eligible to cast votes then, as the state law says only such ‘persons can decide whether a munici- Registration may be made in the clerk’s office in city Hall each weekday from $0 the office will remain open the 8 am. until 5 p.m. On Sept. until 8 p.m. Mrs, Evans warned that persons with a new address from the one on the rolls should report same by Sept. 30. 3 Dog Owners Police Officers | Elect Johnson. Plan New By-Laws elected president of the Pontiac Police Officers Assn., defeating his nearest rival, Raymond Meggitt, 42 to, 20. ‘Handren, Lofacor Win;| ‘Ff Also Newman, Nique;| Det, Orville Johnson has been! | Johnson, the former vice presi-| dent, succeeds Det. Herbert C./ “THE PONTIAC, PRESS; ‘PUI Pontiac-State ‘branch of Others ae : Det. Eu sal opi] e were Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph’ and 400 safety deposit boxes. gene Hendren, vice president; i. : : rs Rds. it is + Bank Opens County Retidents Pleod]sat"reamt Sl fe ny sd get Ste nae ee iracle- Mile Guilty to Not Obtaining |Setuniay. embers who wil!| Commission tomorrow — night, Valid Licenses , nil he es ot tare ee ee > Mir. ; 7 ing to top the $5,000 mark this| 7,2 each had identical vote to- Three Oakland County dog own-|year. All proceeds go to help Sup-| 1.1, of 7 ers, accused of refusing to pur-/POrt local children’s g:oups and). nat into summer camp scholarships, | Of 9 construction, : | ‘There is no price set for the ledgerock an each Saturday after ‘they pleaded) |, ‘ ‘All sales afe on 9 |00" Which rn “by William land Township Justice Roy J. Carl. year’s average donation being |™!2"tice é mae : * ££ oe) ee ee eye a on Dr. Frank Bates, Oakland | ty Animal Shelter director, reports| 5 sn, Swe/® chairmen, are, Stilt consider erations the three were the first to be taken! winiam ‘Traynor, of the west side|**7t4. Bained mana- “A great percentage of these |C! a 0 ee people wery coopera- | All four clubs raised approxi-/T pain) winfows inside or en taeda eae mately $14,500 for cuidren's neavt| | FAINING 400 safety * Hcenses, We've had 19 men work- |ties last year through various), », ing on the cases.and we are now |charitable programs, More than| Hits ae to find those persons who Se ota Ls to we eT oes “eae m- A T-year-old Lake Orion boy suf. open fered a he was bank student o Mrs. x '990 Sunset, <= saat to 1 when ‘Kenneth set, dashed deputies. Heights, ‘Her husband, Thomas, was: 1305 Baldwin beside her and teaching to the main drive. The accident z | in eyieei The Weather Fall U.S. Weather Bareau . Nerth 1¢@ miles an heeur acer ps | light variable this evening and might } ae south to seuthwest at § te J4 miles an Today in Pentiac — temperature preceding § &.m. At 8 a.m.: Wind—Calm, ednesday at ¢ Moon sets Tuesday at 2:11 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday st 12:07 a.m. Monday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature ..,...csssees:: Lowest temperature ..cosces Mean temperature , Weather—Pair. One Year Ago in Pontiac Fighest temperature Lewest te Mean temperature ...,..0¢ Weather—Fair, Cool, Highest and Lowest Temperateres This Date in & Years weeeeeeees eeners De a ert ooeen BF te nd) 32-year-old Schuylkill in a multimillion ff man dollar gambling conspiracy.: Three gambling operators also were named in the conspiracy. ; Beach; a brother, John; a daugh- ter, Mrs. Mary Webster, and a son, William A. McKeighan Jr., be held today. Farmer to Bed With the Cows, Hr" Judge Orders POTTSVILLE, Pa. (INS). — A County farmer with wife trouble will live in his barn with his cattle for = the next year — by court order. f * * * Walter C. Bennett pleaded no defense to charges that he mar- ried his second wife, Wilma, a Pennsylvania girl, while _ still bound by wedlock to his first mate, Madelon, whom he mar- ried in Germany while in the service. Bennett has three children by his first wife, one by the second. After being told that the sec- ond Mrs. Bennett had a heart ailment which might prove fa- tal if her bigamous husband were sent to jail, Judge Cyrus Palmer separated him from both wives by court order. He ruled that for the year it will take to complete the first Mrs. Bennett's divorce action, the farmer will support and care 93 im 1956 40 in 1937 Monday's Tempersture Chart 6T 45 Lansing 72 «4 4 €5 Marquette 60 46 #4 Memphis 80 «& 8 73 Milwaukee 68 43 7 8 1 “ao a6 New Orleans 74 74) 71 85 New York 86 68) 77 66 Omaha 69 55) ih ittebure n oT Sal * ZB ot. is 675 «(53 6. Pranciseo 73 63 fs oe 8S : 3” hingion fF oT ‘ 7s 1 ry bd 37 ef A x ‘ ines oa oe for his second wife, but sleep in his barn. * x * An officer will make sure Ben- nett obeys the court and, after the divorce is final, the ‘court may permit him to go through a | second, and legal, marriage to wife number two, Thailand Army Man all of Flint. Funeral service will, The ousted pro-Western Premier P. Pibulsonggram, ‘Takes Control Over zee" Government Tothay. 2% BANGKOK, Thailand (#—The army's strong man, Sarit Thanarat, surrounded Bangkok with tanks and seized control of the government today “in the name of ‘| the people.” who has led the govern- ment since 1947, was re- ported fleeing to Malaya. Not a shot was fired as the army commander in chief. took power, with the reported consent of young King .Phumiphon Adul det, two days before a scheduled meeting in Bangkok of the rhili- tary advisers of the anti-Commu- nist Southeast Asia Treaty Organ ization. 1 Sarif said he‘acted in the in- ferest of: the people who, he claimed, were dissatisfied with the government’s handling of last February’s elections in which Pibulsonggram retained his premiership by a slim ma- jority. Sarit insisted at a news confer- ence: “I have nothing to do with politics but took the action I did to force the government of Pibul- songgram to resign. It was nec- essary for me to do this.” It is believed Sarit acted quickly to save his own position as com- mander of the army. * * * Sarit told newsmen he wanted a new ent as soon as pos- sible but did not know yet what form it would take. He consulted with his lawyers to determine whether to dissolve the National himself of Bangkok, rather than premier, In that capacity he cabled Prince Wan bake ecibagton Thailand’s for- minister and retiring presi- rt of the U. N. General Assem- bly, that he is still the Thai rep- resentative at the U. N. Waterford Man's Body Recovered The body of a Waterford Town- ship man, missing since Sept. 4, has been recovered and funeral arrangements are being- made. The Waterford Township man, Arthur McHenry, 39, of 6547 Saline Rd., was found not far from a Sépt. 5. The body of his father-in-law, Earl Bishop, 58, of Iron Mountain, was recovered earlier. Both men drowned while on a fishing trip on Little Bay De Noc, near Ish- peming. Although the weather was bad, two planes were chartered by the Assembly. Asked i: he would be-i come the new Premier Sarit re- State Police to assist searching Township fo Fill “nao no ged] WO Vacancies School Board to Name Recreation Members at}. Lon jfor Te | sutamforaae — he § i 2 F BE I The Day ay in Birmingham |Commission OK Traffic sig, ein rae Ei nagé * eltel 5 * ety” [ed hin ran lie ; hae [ F 3 | i i Ras . STEVE DEMO Or Will he sit tight until Friday, | sive Demo Lake then respond to the summons 19 |aied yesterday mortine cin st appear in U.S. District Court, and jijnoss. of three years. ‘ ee Surviving besides his wife, Stella, fprongraveers . ordering with | 2,2 900, Chris G. Demo, of the? ieteare tien oe teeter wits | His body is at the Pursley Fu integra neral Home. Others believe this is Faubus’_ strategy MRS, CLYDE 2 Officials Knit Well NASHVILLE, Tenn. # — Among the prize-winning displays_ in the women’s building at the Tennessee State Fair are a nee- dle point picture by Andrew Doyle and the hooked rugs and needlepoint pocketbook of Sidney Ritter. Doyle is a city judge and crews. By HAROLD 8. COHEN Everyone was at the wedding last night but the preacher. Or so it seemed to the overflow crowd which attended the public hearing Service the police department on grounds of derelection of duty. FAIL TO SHOW The crowd of some hundred per- sons, many of them police officers, plus the 15 witnesses subpenaed by the defense, discovered that only one commissioner, Chairman Theo to even call the meeting to would appear Wednesday. As the Riter is chief of detectives. Failure to Get Quorum : Delays* Police~ Hearing’ Merideth later said his clients dore Carlson, was present. * * * Lacking a quorum, the meeting could not be held. Attorney for the two officers, aie Merideth pointed out he had not heard any mention of a force to 1,136, just 20 short strength, as Ks Room Court Former Mayor Leader of Birmingham Served in Many Ways; Funeral to Be Thursday nip TH 5 it Ff hv £3 : i i i | i i 3 : Travel : rsonally conducted, the kind that a ty houses in the largest cities. R get your season ti available. ~1 and HIGH SCHOOL 8P o KIWANIS Ze Adventure Series AUDITORIUM M. | Delightful and Thrilling Entertainment The Kiwanis Club of Pontiac presents seven of the top travelogues in the Country. These are all SEASON TICKET ROBERT TRiARE Tuesday, Februar y ‘STAN MIDGLEY, = Get Your Season Ticket Now! No Single Admission Tickets Will Be Sold. Tickets available Tuesday, December “KARL ROBINSON, nae March 25, to capac- this list then cket now. Only limited number TOP TRAVELOGUES $00 Tuesday, October 29, 1957 . _ JULIAN GROMER, “Atlantic Coast Wonderland” 12, 1957 “Morocco 16, 1957 . “Madeira and the Azores” Toesdey, Janene 16 108 sana il, 1958 NICOL SMITH, “Europe’s Toy Countries” iss » “Seuth frem Zanzibar” from any Kiwanian or Mail Coupon belew STATE. Er tub that teat Soh rar ar ca wh mos I fi e Harry Allen Dies bee I ee ale Oe Se a eee So . cn - - - ww smn e spihata eit n ahead iene eth 4 Oe ~ poe kK ; < uty eee, fy { {/ Af ys f . | . one pa a wR ek Pa et *% & , ee DEMONSTRATE RESCUE TRUCK—The Pon. | tiac office of Civil Defense this week began displaying this panel rescue truck ,which is similar to the one expected to be ordered shortly by the city.. The display of the vehicle, donated by the factory retail branch of the GMC Truck and Coach, is in conjunction with National Civil Defense Week, Sept. 15-21, It will be located ae at Tel-Huron Shopping Center. rest of the week it will appear from 12 until 3 p.m. in the downtown area. The truck will also be available for inspection Friday night from 6 until 8 in front of Kresge’s, Huron at Saginaw. Shown demonstrating it is Mrs. Iris Parker of 234 S. East Blvd. {—. a rite PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1 17. 1957. permis Murder ils. | (Slated for Fall Prosecutor Ziem ‘Says... Harris — Trial Awaits Scheduling _ Prosecutor Frederick C.Ziem to James D. Shepherd, 36, -of Bir- [Company i in Bay City ) Seeking Radio Station | munications commission hag re- — an application for a new radio station from Water Won- iderland Broadcasting Co. of Bay City, Mich. The Bay. City fitm asked for a new station at Caro, Mich., on WASHINGTON » — The com-! Grows Own Tébndie NORFOLK, Va. @—Jobn ¥. tobacco , f@'so far.as quantity is concerned. But his “farm” attracts attention in downtown Norfolk — “all two square yards of it, And, says Sherwood; a retired naval em- ploye, it keeps him in chewing tobacco, | 71369 ‘ kilocycles,’ 500 watts, ‘day- = “Pounds Taken On, Lost Wins Prizes s-imingham will go on trial next = |Tuesday on a first-degree murder -|charge involving the fatal stabbing’ home, 1509 Pierce St., last May 27. to be tried by Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams, Ziem said. A Pontiac man, Elmer F. Martin, 33, of 264 N. Saginaw St., charged with the second-degree murder of Joseph Compeau, 27, of West Bloomfield Township, is up for trial Oct. 3, Compeau was stabbed to death Jyne 1 at Waterford Township's Pentice Press Phete — For” the Deaths i in Pontiac and Nearby Areas MES. WALTER JACKSON . FRANK. BLUMERICK Mrs. Walter (Mary) Jackson, 77, of 379 Central Ave. died Satur- ROMEO — ‘Service for Frank Blumerick, 66, of 217 Chambier day after an illness of several St., will be held at 2 p.m. Thurs- Cooley Lake road dump. No trial date has been scheduled yet for Lee Harris Jr., 25, of. Pon- tiae Township, charged with the murder of Eddie Hicks, 28, of Wye Mills, Pa. Aug. 2% in the Glenview Trailer Park, ~,day Irom Wilbur’s Funeral Home, | 999 Shimmons Rd:, where Harris} with burial in Romeo Cemetery.| iio He died” Monday. Mrs. Rose Sarduk, 48, of 2435 « Surviving are his wife, Martha; |Texter Rd., Addison Township will weeks. Surviving are a son.-L, B. At-| ae se Pin «ei 5 al in Russia sister. Poca will be at 2 p.m. Wednes-| - in the Provide Missi Baptist Church of wich she wan REAUINS £0 Israel a member. The Rev. T. Walter ; Harris, her pastor, will officiate with burial following in Oak a TEL AVIV, MRS. JESSIE woop Mrs. Jessie (Maude) .Wood, 75, ing in Pontiac General Hospital daughter. after a prolonged illness. * * * She is survived by her husband. Her body is at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Deaths Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HONG’ KONG (®—Chi Pai-chin, |. 97, China's best known painter, died yesterday in Peiping, the Red “isafely back home.”’ * * * try official, . Zanesville Times - Record since|.g to Moscow. lAkes Work on Teeth Israel (#—An 4s-| Wednesday from Flumerfelt Fu- aes oricaal of the embassy in) was -kid- caserey: He died suddenly Mon-) Funeral Home after .7 p.m. today. Inaped and teresicesd by Soviet | | security police arrived here by aix| a Glaspie, the founder ‘of | today. The official, Elyahu Hazan’ ‘leaves his wife, Agnes May; a son, | of 159-Edison St., died this morn-|*"as accompanied by his wife and Farrell of Royal Oak; two daugh-|E Foreign ministry officials hur-| | Tucson, Ariz.; ‘ried- him from the airport. He had| and one great-grandchild. jtime only to tell reporters, “I am! Walter Eytan, a Foreign Minis- charged yesterday) . that Hazan was kidnaped and held for a night by security police|o¢ Saginaw, walked away from a) while on a vacation at Odessa! work detail yesterday at the Ionia} Eytan quoted Hazan as saying the ae y Russians threatened to kill him eee Be erent eet Se = Iraeli government ‘Protest- t Parsee CITY, N. J. sede town section. But the the Les Brown band, died yester- rothers, Adolphus turned out to be a city jail trusty “ Charles, are Atlantie City dentists. rrand, q ia daughter, Mrs. Ila Marchivitz | be sentenced Oct. 8 on a man- of Detroit; a son, Russell of Utica; |slaughter charge involving the fa- and a brother, Paul, of Almont.|tal shooting March 28 of her lodg- er, Martin J. Wojcinski, 48. LEWS PARKER GLASHIE She recently. pleaded guilty to OXFORD —_ Service for Lewis the charge, avoiding trial on a Parker Glaspie, 78, of 23 W. Bur- higher charge of second-degree dick St., will be held at 2 p.m.!/ murder. neral Home, with burial in Oxford: pees LUC KY 1, BUY \Glaspie Cement Products here,| ters, Mrs. Gordon Ashley of Royal | |Oak, Mrs. Max Elisworth of; four grandchildren Youth, 19, Walks Away From State Reformatory | IONIA ® — Jackie Kelly, 19, LAMINATED PLASTIC. Ladies’ Fall ‘PURSES Choice: of Colertul Plaids State Reformatory. He had been serving a 3 to 15- All $ 00 § year term for breaking and en- $1.98 tering and car theft. Values * x * : A telephone tip that Kelly had been sighted riding a bicycle led Deputy Sheriff Ralph Johnson to make a hurried trip to the down- bicyclist Clutch, boxy, pouch and shou!- der strap styles. Easy to clean, wipe with damp cloth. TWO DOOR SEDAN 4776" 7 Today's lowest-pr Full-sized Station ‘Wagon ! Save hundreds of dollars on thie Full-sized jedan! *Includes Heater/defroster, as well ab ciel signals, spare tire and wheel, dual windshield wipers, mirror, Only eee ea ee .Studebaker-Packard CORPORATION Wheee pride of Workmanship coma fast / Koss) & Printz Motor Sales 7675 Highland Road. OR 3-5200 ‘For the best value ever. . ae Studebaker | SS SCOTSMAN [ ) Enjoy its economy, convenience—power-packed utility PPYYTTTTTTIIIN Tr rrr reer It's been many a year since you've seen so much Value packed into an American car. You'll like the crisp, clean lines and the style-wise functional inte- tiors of these new Scotsman cars . . . you'll enjoy their easy handling, and you'll revel in the up to 29 mile-per-gallon performance of their powerful 6- cylinder engines. There's full comfort for six ... and full luggage space too (93 cubic feet in the Station Wagon). For an only car... for an extra car... . for the business man on the road ... fora family taxi... these new Studebaker Scotsman cars are today’s greatest values. See the new Scotsman today .. . test drive the mode! you like best. See all the other fine Studebaker-Packard cars too! © Mazurek Motor Sales. 245 S, Blvd. E. FE 4-9587 { of his wife, Elizabeth, 42, in their school. Shepherd is tentatively scheduled|),.¢ week was awarded to Mrs.| Louis Rogers. time. panna Bees see rescetenesiTeutesbeeTsteseees Representative Mere WEDNESDAY oc? te 3:30 P.M. REMINGTON The Fashion Your Figure club jwill meet. 7 p.m. Wednesday, at) the Waterford Township =e —While Yor Trophy for losing the most weigh! Those who (unwillingly) took | home the pig trophies for the most weight gained were Mrs. Harvey Leinenger, Mrs, Joe. Grace, Mrs. Mary Morey and Mrs. Barbara Patnode. ‘New officers for the coming year include Mrs, Alfred Keith, president; Mrs. Henry Allen; vice president; Mrs. Dario DeMasselis: will be secretary and Mrs. Edwin Broome, treasurer. Mrs. Harold Hunt will be.the new recording secretary assisted by Mrs. hb Srvey Leinenger. ' RECONDITIONED 7 ANOTHER BIG SHIPMENT — Some Low Price! COPPER-CLAD STAINLESS-STEEL Nenmety Advertised $5.50 VALUE - All Other items in REVERE WARE 25% Off Pontiac's Most Complete Sejection — DEMUIMD score: Ceccccccvcvcccocccoccccosocosooocosoccooosoes "REVERE" Tea Kettles _ [MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS iE first quality in pastel solid colors ' " You Read Leading National Magazines. You've Seen These ADVERTISED AT 56.95 and More . °* « oeaeeve ee * Decorated Rural Mail-Box Exactly As Pictured $388 @U. &. Post Office Approved @ Standard Size—19x8%x6%-In. @ Bleck Wrought Iron Finish Distinctive decorated top, brass finished door orna- ment. Complete with flag. Regular 56.95 * Value LIMITED ee : SUPPLY 98 North —2nd Buy Now Saginaw Floor rrr eed ;F 10-Quart PAIL 4th Big Shipment—Some Low Prices! CARPET-ON-RUBBER MATS ‘ Exactly as Pictured wi “ Big Sizes Under-Priced —because these are imperiects ond 2nds of pictured in leading magazines... we must withold maker's name. $5.00 Values 26x19 $6 Val—34x19%4-inch Sizes $1.99 Protect precious rugs, save cleaning home, Pine carpeting permanently bonded on rubber mat. Has many uses nationally advertized brands you've seen- Imperfects of $ 48 Inch floors, wipes shoes clean inside the in every home. SUS . tA acdicdiaacdlAecdiaxdandarddacdeadeaeartardn ncdhcdactindhdeadhadindtee deeded dee adaedadie dec dndtadaedandindndied 2800800000600 088 8898000800080 Be Here Early _ TOMORROW | -. for a “BONUS BUYS” 9 a.m. to 6 p.m, - We Reserve the Right to Limit All Quantities Sale of BOYS ‘ MATCHE SHIRTS or PANTS Flannel Shirt 29 Cozy cotton print flannel shirt trimmed’ with poplin. Sanforized, colortast. sizes 4-6-8- 10. Cgtton poplin pants with elasticized waist back. Adjustable front belt. © Lined and trimmed with flannel to "match shirt, Sizes 4-6-8-10. $2.59 Value ESTRON Water Repellent Boys JACKETS oy’ $2.95 Value Zipper front, ‘slash pockets, water repellent ESTRON in blue or green. Sizes 12 to 16. NYLON Indian Blankets é $2.49 54x72 s 1 1 Inches r) 3” Value—70x80" Lt ge Autoentie tm ‘faa nove rey “declan. ‘= rrr n Value "2" Value—G4x76" . a i Sturdy hemmed DARK & SELF SEAMS Ladies’ NYLONS Shirt Style — FRENCH Cutt GIRLS’ LONG SLEEVE a0 Sizes 7 to 14 Sizes 9 to 11 Shirt: style with French cuffs— First quality nylons in self of dark seams in choice of 3 popular shades. Limit 4 pairs. and printed broadcloths. forized, washfast San- as 2 PECIALS For Fall Leave Raking Bamboo Rake . - 79¢ Value Sturdy tines won't harm finest os: Long handle, Limit: 1. OC SSCS SSC SO ODO OOO COO OCS COE OESEODOCCOES Hot Dip GALVANIZED Stee! A pprox. §-Fi, Lengths cooly shina Feige Value all + eam | is, p ysicians appea satis- whe. r i r is called RECTORAL. A Portugal’s ‘maj hold- Fe rm neg mattress, guaranteed for a full year. , fo com after meals and at nattints m . hope tor ‘fied with results of the second op-* * x * sperms are attracted toward "| Daint | col lat i Value fe be zr not you do. He ing off-complete Red control— | | ws eT -naj| atively charged points, cathodes. ' ainty pastel colors, regulation size. Bocters are senased. 5 treeps : eration, Programing” is one of the final A _ . : peice amg is now ae t 5 * | we pasa, Sete: a - some 5,088 troo isteps before contracts. are adver- Soldiers stand guard-at the Ma-|* Mayor Erik von Frenchkell of | tised. A state will notify the Bureau) Dr. Gordon separated the two: cao-Red China border, at the edge|Helsinki, said tourism has risen 40)of Public Roads that it wants to|sets of sperm in the chamber of! of the city proper. You are close to| per cent in Finland since it held|build a 15-mile four-lane highway an apparatus containing positively communism here. All you need do the Olympics several years ago. lbetween Punkin Center and East and Regatively charged poles. } || CRIB | BLANKETS | - te 2 8g (It Perfeet) $1.57 Each Save on these Baby Day Specials! These cuddly-soft cotton crib blankets have tiny / irregularities, but these do not impair the wearing qualities. 6° satin binding, 36" ‘by 50” in size! Choose yours in white and dainty pastels, ; seith's; Cole's; Lou's; py ead Slank- eter & Jones: Keego Drug. Keego Harbor; Horst's, Auburn Heights; Aris, Drayton Plains and most drug stores _sveryehere. aeons Save on soft cotton, 6” satin bound Hurry to Waile's... Second Floor (Osmun’ Ss introduces the fine Italian hand to the best-dressed men in town ‘Sturdy. Metal Frame BATHINETTE complete with utility tray Reg. $19.98: "14.99 Save tomorrow on this sturdy bathinette with heavy ‘metal frames and heavy canvas top. Dainty nursery print trim, in white with blue—pink trim. Soft. Absorbent | Soft Washable Cotton National brand slight irregu- lar. Soft, absorbent, regulation $ _] size. Save on this Baby Day : e Special! A Carter's checked sleeping bag keeps baby covered on cool nights. Knit neckband and cuffs. Sizes 12 to 18 months, paste! colors. Reg. 3.75 ‘2.49 _ KNIT SLEEPERS 2-Pc. Gripper Style Soft knit cotton sleepers with nylon reinforced meck and waistband. Full cut bootie feet, 2-pc. style. Sizes 1 to 6, pink, blue, maize, mint. 1.98 Value “1.17 Short Sleeve...Cotton Knit Pullover Shirts Reg. 59¢ ol Infants’ and toddlers’ shirts in short sleeve pullover style. Sizes 6 mos. to 3 yrs. Save to- morrow! Soft Cotton Receiving Blankets Double Crotch ... Cotton Knit Training Pants Reg. 19¢ cotton knit 7 pants with double crotch (Hf Perfect) : for longer wear. Slight ir- for ¢ : regulars, Sizes 1 to 6 years. : White and pastels. 1 Infants’ Knitwear Values to 2.98 1.99 Your baby is even more . cuddly in a Soft Terry, 3- pe. A LOUNGEE SET $2.98 Value Solid pastel with stripe wor training Reg. 59c Soft soft cotton blankets. finished edges. Sizes 26” mee for ¢ 34”, pastels- and white. Special Savings on Values to 1.98 99° Fine Cotton Pastel Stripe FITTED CRIB SHEETS Bootie and sweater sets, sweaters, shawls and af- ghans in orlons and weols at savings. White and pas- tels, infants’, toddlers’ sizes, Save on cotton ee: knit bonnets, booties, and sacques. Infants’ and tod- dlers’ sizes, dainty pastels and white. etrocelll . CLOTHES To every man who cares about his appearance and comfort, we extend a cordial invitation to inspect our new Petrocelli collection. In fabric, tailoring and inherent elegance, these suits have few equals. One try-on brings you a rich im SF Q° The Store That Never Compromises on Quality new experience-the pleasure of wearing a Petrocelli. Sturdy cotton contour fitted crib sheets at a special Baby Day only price! Keeps baby’s bed smooth and ‘comfortable. - ig - Soft terry shirt, pant and bootie set, perfect TEL H R ON STORE for sleep or play. Soft and absorbent with - | ; oben circulation. ‘Washable, no ironing fad nee No pins, snaps of,.buttons. Sizes 6 1n dainty pastel Stripes. to 12 mos., in dainty rosebuds on white. Save! Open Monday, ‘Thursday, © ‘Friday, Saturday Evenings DOWNTOWN STORE « Open ‘Monday and Friday Evenings * = f ‘ ‘ x CHARGE ALL YOUR INFANTS’ NEEDS AT WAITE’S . . . SECOND FLOOR ft THE PONTIAC PRESS — ae 2) 2+ iditorial Page | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER MY, 1867 A triumph for the United states : and a defeat for the Soviet Union is the result of Chancellor KoNRAD ADENAUER’s re-election in West = many. — , k* *& * This was a hard blow for the Com- * munists in East Germany who had pulled all possible strings in their ef-. forts to defeat the 81-year-old chan- * cellor. Since the West German Repub- lic was created in 1949, this was the third straight victory for Adenauer. It was by no means a close race. His margin of victory was an overwhelming 31 million votes. xk «*>* If the Russians had any idea that they were gaining strength in West Germany, Sunday's election should ' change their minds. For the coun- * tries seeking world peace this is most * heartening news. This is another clear picture which - shows the potency of the Commies is - only as strong as their gestapo. x * * Which all goes to prove that in. the rest of the free world where people speak and vote as they see fit, the power of Communists is U.S. Army Withdrawal a Problem for Japan The withdrawal of American troops from Japan at the end of this year is presenting that country with more economic problems. . While the Japanese always have said they would welcome the departure of the occupying army, when the time draws near they are somewhat apprehensive. Many Japanese frankly say they are sorry to see our troops leave: @ *., : x. * Our military establishment em- ployed more than 100,000 Japanese in addition to labor contracts award- ed from time to time. Some 200,000 have worked in service businesses . which have been dependent on American patronage. The Uverjnood _ Seriously. Besides this here is i ee: yor Ag Hs nial of these Japanese spending of our soldiers themselves. _ Japanese authorities place the grand total at $100 million annually. x * * Japan is cutting back overseas buying, including American cotton, in an effort to balance adverse trade which last year amounted to $500 ‘million. In that period we sold Japan $1.6 billion dollars worth: of goods while importing only $540 mil- lion worth of its products. Lifting of the embargo on trade with China. is not expected to yield Japan much for the time being, at least, as the Communists appear to have little to barter and no money to pay for im- ports. x * * ‘Both the United States and Japan agree that the time has come for troop withdrawals but Japan will have a difficult, economic and defense adjustment to make without the income provided directly and indirectly THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiae 13, Michigan Datly Except Sunday Trede Mart Harotp A. Prrecraae President and Publisher 3 Jomn A. Riu peony rp rtising Manager Ear. M. Treapwett, Circulttion Manager TserL. Bassett. Bxecuttve Vice President and Advertising Director Howse A. Prrzcrsat in. Vice “resident and Business Manager G. Masswatt Jorsan, jouw W, Frreereats, Local Advertising Secretary and Editor Manager Rovest B. Tara, Grornce C. Inman, Managing Editor Classified Manager ————_—_—_ Rntered at Post Office, Pontiac. as second class matter. | Sooner MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Presa ie entitled -xeiusivell to the of ei news srinted in this pewspaper as wel! as all AP news dispatches ‘Powrtat Prrss is delivered by carrier for 40 cents ce is not available by p= | Macomb. La 12.00 a year, elsewhere tn in the Dnited Sta tn advance. ———— MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS —S Be : fy Adenauer Victory Good: ~ News for World Peace — roe our + wltery occupation. How- ever, like the child learning to walk, the Japs have to do it. © Maine Goes Modern - In a referendum last week the citizens of Maine abandoned their _ 137 year old tradition of going to the polls on the second Monday of September to elect a Governor, Sen- ators and Representatives to Con- gress. Back in 1845 Congress fixed the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November as the time for choos- ing state presidential electors. Many states had been in the habit of hold- ing state and congressional elections in September or October but by 1880 most of them decided to conform to — the later date. x «* * . Maine alone held out over the years partly because of bad weather and road conditions likely to occur in that part of the country in November and partly because of a distrust of change. However, neither weather nor _roads are handicaps any longer - and starting in 1960 Maine will | save about $60,000 every four years by eliminating the extra election. x «kk * “As Maine goes, so goes the,Na- tion,” a political adage coined during the first Cleveland-Hartison cam- paign in 1888, never did make much sense. In 1936, for instance, Maine went Republican as did Vermont in the ensuing Democratic presidential landslide. For a more recent exam- ple, in 1956 Maine re-elected a Democratic Governor, Epmunp S. ‘Musxrz, while going Republican in the presidential election of that year. x *« * Besides retreating from its non- conformist stand, Maine’s referen- dum._has put an end to that slogan from which many political writers projected results of a November elec- tion. The Man About Town Paving Finished New Cross-County Route Is Now Ready for Traffic taut sis baad pus ack Of 5100 tn our football contest. The last link in Oakland County’s only east-west cross-county pavement north’ of Pontiac has just been opened for - travel. The completion of nearly three miles of blacktop paving on Grange Hall Road, leading. west from Ortonville, fin- ishes the job awaited anxiously for many years. This, highway, entering the county from the east on Romeo Road, goes through Lakeville, Oxford, Oakwood and Ortonville, passing one mile north of Holly, where it merges into State Trunk Highway M-87, on which it leaves the county at the Fenton village limits. It enters our county on the line be- tween Oakland and Addison Townships, and also traverses Oxford, Brandon, Groveland and Holly Townships. It picks up much of the through traffic that has been going through Lake Orion Village, Clarkston, Davisburg and Holly. Its total length is close to 40 miles, and its completion marks a new era in mod- ern transportation in Oakland County and Eastern Michigan. Now retired after serving on the Oak- land County Board of Supervisors for 30 years as the representative of Pontiac Township, my good friend, Frank Shimmons, puts ft this way: “Our republic’s greatest bulwark is an honest free press, but its greatest menace is a crooked free press.” Every mail is bringing entries from the early birds in our foot- ball contest. A list of the games — will be repeated in Wednesday's paper. Now the tall corn has outdistanceu both hollyhocks and sunflowers in the sky-going marathon, as Merton Hanchett of Oxford has a stalk 17 feet high. It might have grown still higher, had it not _been necessary to cut it down in order to measure it. Verbal Orchids to— Rutherford Barringer of Bloomfield Hills; eighty-second birth- day. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Greene of Hadley; sixty-fifth wedding anniver- sary. yi ey \ y 5 ; Sey ye oe ee eS Seed © Saye ee e I : i z . 2 oe bgt ? a8 it ahs et ee ee ei ie oe See ee Se ee Oh i ee ee tL A Class in Lawlessness © David Lawrence Says: U.S. Court Can’t Legislate Morals WASHINGTON — Words of wis- dom born of a sad experience by the American people a generation ago | Sadie President Eisen- hower to say at N ewpo r t the nection with the controversy over - “integration” in the public schools. But back of the comment was the | which so few Ameri- cans have today but which is evidently vivid in Eisenhower's own recollection—of the way al- _most the entire nation ‘ae with the. prohibition question. — Former President Truman, who violated the Constitution when he seized the steel industry in the spring of 1952, talked glibly. the other.day of the importance . of obeying the Constitution ad he reprimanded Eisenhower for not - taking more forceful measures in Arkansas. Yet almost everyone forgets that “nullification” is a proced- ure adopted by a people who resent any arbitrary of a law or rule of law by a minority or by an oligarchy. Today it is a Supreme’ Court decision, and neither a constitu- tional amendment nor a law of Congress dealing solely with de- segregation, which is specifically at issue. LIQUOR OUTLAWED In the 1920s, on the other hand, there actually was in the Constitu- tion itself an unequivocally phrased amendment which forbade the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxfcating liquors anywhere in the United States. This amendment raised no conflict between the states and the.Federal government, for it gave “concurrent power’ to_ both the states and the Congress to enforce it ‘by appropriate legis- lation.” Congress passed the Vol- stead Act spelling out in detail . “the law of the land” on prohibi- tion. While the controversy about enforcement lasted 13 years, the actual process of putting through a repeal amendment took less than 10 months in the year 1933. The Country Parson The widely expressed ‘reaction at the time was epitomized in the oft-heard remark of those days: “You cannot legislate morals." * * * : How many people are alive today who are familiar with what happened during the , prohibition x8 : a dead The jails were full of violators— the “bootleggers’” in prison who ° had sold liquor illegally averaged — 53,000 a year. * * * Worst of all was the birth of gangsterism in the big cities. This evil—a legacy from prohibition—is - still with us in many localities. Local option—to let each state or community handle moral questions —is the only way that has proved successful in dealing with social problems in America. *The “‘inte- gration” controversy is today in its infancy. ‘It may take years to solve it. (Copyright, 1957) Dr. William Brady Says: Foolish Waste to Strain Citrus Fruits, Vegetables “Two or three carrots, a hand- * Well, nar 2 “Voice of the Phacke ny ” Critical. Anonymous Letter _ I Answered by Press I thought our one and only ‘pontiac paper used the ‘slogan “Freedom of the Press,” but I guess not, because tf it were true, it would get Chief Straley’ 3 side of the story. But all you print — is what you want to print.’ x *k * . You should give Chief Straley a chance to back up the stories that your paper so readily prints, which are all knock- ing him down. Just like the Chief issuing an order to pick up cars because they haven't paid tickets. The Chief tries to a eS . * * Seeing The Pontiac Press prints only one fide of these’ vicious stories and rumors, maybe it wants dirty, crooked poli- ticians to run our city..As a taxpayer, I am getting pretty tired of reading about everybody knocking the Chief. Come on, men, let’s be men and not a bunch of bullies. Let’s give the Chief a chance to state his side of his story or is The Pontina Press afraid to let Chief — talk? PS ‘West Ender (Editor's Note: The Press runs letters under anonymous signatures if the true name 1s attached for our files as evidence of good faith. We have noAnterest in letters from citizens who are afraid or ashamed to sign their names, even for the refer~ ence files. The letter above had no name and we are under no obligation to print it whatsoever. Also, we insist the true name . be printed in the paper if the letter is a personal attack. However, this one is running to snow “West Ender's” sev- eral friends we play considerably fairer than West Ender who hides shamelessly in the bushes. In the letter above, personal criticisms of other people are omitted because of no signature. West Ender’s other two letters in the same mail will appear if _West Ender sends his name and address.) ‘Try Governor _ Who Will Work’ now if Governor Williams can quit leading parades, cam- paigning in Wisconsin, crowning beauty queens, calling square. dances at the State Fair, conduct- ing auction sales, rushing like a mad man from crowd to crowd to shake more hands, perhaps he can ‘find enough time to go back to Lansing, sit down and go to work. I know this is expecting too much from politics’ greatest playboy, but those jobs he has driven out of " Michigan are still driven out. Let's try -a governor that's Republican, Democrat, Socialist, Bolshevik, Labor Capital, clean, dirty or 15, years old that. wants to work for the people instead of wanting to spend his entire time campaign- ing for the next election. ' ~ Rumpled Hair Offers Suggestion for Next Year There are so few days when it gets to 90 in the summer, I sug- gest next year The Press lower the “no necktie” rule to 85. We tried to observe your limit, but too many days are close but not actually up to 90. Can't you make i] + Be “THEE Ft VITAMINS WASTED tains valuable nutritional factors such as bio-flavonoide, protopec- tine, vitamin A and vitamin C. Orange peel, for instance, contains about 3 times as much vitamin C as orange juice. Recognized nutrition authorities discarded, for they contain valu- able nutritional materials. It is necessary, of course, that all such fruits or vegetables should be carefully. washed with soap and water and brush or sponge or with one of the modern detergents (soap is the best, I think), and then rinsed with running water. This not only removes possible residue of poisonous insecticide and microscopic eggs of parasites but also disease germs with which fruit or vegetable has been con- taminated by human handler or by flies. HAVE IT FRESH When you feed baby his daily ration of fruit or vegetable ‘juice, don’t cheat that little guy. Feed him freshly squeezed, unstrained juice — not tired stuff that has stood over night losing- vitamin _ strength by” oxidation. ~ ‘You Can’t Deny. Execution Here’ Some ‘of these sob sisters that oppose capital punishment must. get a little red in the face whep they read about dope peddlers. When someone passes out seve eral -million dollars worth of dope to destroy men, women and — children, can the most craven and chicken-hearted want them to be fined in court or “sent to prison for 11 years?” (Minus time off for ‘“‘good behavior.” ) - The only way dope peddlers can live is through teaching people to start using it, knowing the victims can never quit. I think this is worse than murder and worse than rape, A murderer might charitably con- fine himself to one or two cases, but the dope peddlers kill hundreds : apiece and it is a slow, torturous, lingering death. . Up in Arms Letters will be condensed when necese sary pecouse of lack of space. Pull name, number of the writer an accompany letters but these will not tbe published if the writer so ree — unless the letter is critical in its nature Portraits * it 857 Six Sufferers : (Editor’s Note: Good idea. Bring _ 5% %AMES J. METCALFE it up next June.) 5 No other document on earth... No other resolution . . . Could serve Vy, , let him eat : f ° a higher purpose than... Our < pa ca handdin a Take Opposing U.S. Constitution . . . It guaran ° Sides of Question 2 -tees the freedom of . . . The body mentioned, skins and all. : : and the mind . . . With true equal- At breakfast don’t be a molly- _ Oldster says expectant mothers ity to all . .. Of every class and e. Insist on having your trait should drop their jobs early. I kind . . . It's just a piece of coddle. thought in this enlightened age parchment but .. . It represents served whole. At dinner grab for everyone knew that the story about a nation... The greatest in the the skin of baked potato and leave the stork wasn’ y f the contents for the poor soul With that established, why should pire - . . Today is Consti- who's lost his molars. anyone hide? | tution Day . . Revered in history Tt) a & 1957. . . As it established and or- “Bigned letter, not more than one page dained . - Our true democracy < 109 words eae. —— ate —— In the old days, expectant moth- .. . God ‘bless the fathers of our nolsis or retary will be answered by TS didn’t parade around the land . . . Whose brilliant contri- Dr. Witham Brady. if a stamped. self- streets. True feminine modesty as- bution ., . Made possible our. way addressed is sent to Pon- tiac’ Press, pg Brod Michigan. serted itself. ef life «.. The U.S. Constitution, (Copyright, 1957) LI. (Copyright, 1957) Case Records of a Psychologist: Study Habits Important i in College Charley is like thousands of bright young men who haven't learned how to. study efficient- ly. So he now is afraid he will flunk out of college. While you ‘are in high school, better learn the art of fast reading and good study habits, for you jump from the minor leagues to the big time when you reach col- lege. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case V-392: Charley G., aged 19, has entered the state univer- sity, “Dr: Grune Charley wants @ to be a dentist | and join me in | my office,” his ; dentist father told me. eS “But he never #3 was ‘Ynuch of a student in high school. Mother and I told him we didn’t re- quire him to DR. CRANE make ‘A’ grades, but we wished he’d rate at least a ‘B’. average. “However, he didn’t quite make that ‘B’ average, And now he is gloomy because he says the .courses are very hard and his classmates are smarter than they were in high school. -“So-he is discouraged. He is afraid he may flunk out. What can I do to help him?” Mental competition is usually much keener in college than in high school. And you can easily see why, - * * * For the dullards in high school seldom go on to the university. No, it is more likely to be the am- bitious, bright students that head college, aS. : That means your classmates re big leaguers. To appreciae As s00n as a child gets all b this, consider grade school as simi- his temporary teeth (20) at the lar to sandlot baseball, by “Yankees” or “Dod- gers” and —— world._cham-— pions. . Your high LQ. no longer is enough to get you by with a pass<. ing grade, though it might have . sufficed in high. school. For in college you need both a high 1.Q., plus efficient habits of study that should have been ac- quired years earlie?’, Smart kids who don’t know how to bear down and study efficiently, soon flunk out. Nowadays it ‘usually doesn’t mean your I.Q. is low if you fail - in college. No, it is more likely to indicate you either didn’t learn how to study or else’ are squan- dering too much time in social life and “‘bull sessions.” COLLEGE . SCREENING Another serious problem con- fronts freshmen students at our state universities. Since state col- leges are compelled to admit the graduates of their state high schools, they are usually flooded with far more pupils than they can handle. So they deliberately try to flunk out a sizable percentage in order to shrink the enrollment down to a size which matches the college facilities, who can rapidly glean the als from a text book and thelr knowledge on final examina- tions, If youare a slow reader or have not been better than a “C’’ student in high school, then you better learn, the art of swift reading. Consulting Psychologists are usually available in most cities, who can test your reading speed and give you helpful drill. In a few weeks, you may double your reading rate. ing their students a splendid train ing in —_ Den * Furthersnore, - is well to make a running true-false or ‘‘multiple choice” quiz over your textbook as you study, Thus, whenever you find a definition or factual statement, list it as a quiz item on your personal test that you are com- return envelope, plus Q non-profit), it while you are still in high. school 80 you will be all set for the keener competition of college, Pig may of Tne Pontios Prove,“ Pst 4 3 * long 3e stamped is FEE, =a. ep [TARE he ee ii, tidren ¢ on W-CAR RADIO'S MR. BIG | a : deadly if infected with rabies.. repressible redhead and his talented gang on the | DALCAS, Tex, ANS) — Dogs ap may be = man's’best friend and a "s best pal but they can also be Rabies ie hivehating rabies is ins “Infection cannot. be made through normal skin surface, but can only enter the body through a fresh scratch or wound, and since the virus is usually present in the saliva of an infected animal the disease is most commonly] . in any animal, fatal,” the rabid animal.” EYE SYMPTOMS | Symptoms -of rabies in dogs, the most common source of human in- fection, takes two different forms: furious rabies and dumb rabies. posts, and any person who makes * ae oe er eee ee will be attacked. In “dumb rabies,” the ine be- unable to bite but owners have . |been known to expose themselves by sticking their fingers in the FORD ROAD SHOW Dallas County Veterinary Medical/dog’s mouth to: find out what was ; Asgociation and the Dallas City|/wrong, . -}}Health Department, explains that W.CAR rabies is a virus disease that in-/ON? KUL fects all warm-blooded animals —|, “D0 not = a dog aaa of ‘ : having ral S, " the pamp! et 113 Dat na flon pln les |warns, “because if the animal is 79 Oakland Avenue FE 2.0189 ... Member of National Selected Moriticians fai trey skipped if the dog shows rabies symptoms. PONTIAC PRESS, transmitted through the bite of a| - the jaw to hang down and give the} . dog a “stupid” jJook. This dog is TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1997 3 “True Life Adventures ae > ‘MOTHER Bacy OTTER’S TRANSPORTATION TO THE WATER FOR HIS FIRST BEACH PARTY IS UPON MOTHER'S BACK, IS LETS THE ALERT Distributed by King Features Syndicate, 9-17 MuNior’s FIRST TASTE - OF THE WATER MOTHERS BACK--- SHE SUBMERGES OUT FOR HIMSELF. . BUT SHE'S ALWAYS ON ALSO FROM HIM STRIKE FOR TROUBLE. a Gary Cooper Plans to Move |to Montana Ranch BUTTE, Mont. w—Actor Gary Cooper, who made ‘a’ fortune play- ing cowboy, says he is going to move from the movie studio bunk- house to a real Montana ranch house. Cooper announced yesterday he had purchased a substantial inter- est in the 2,000-acre T-Bar-3 Ranch, owned by W, T. Studdert. The price wasn't disclosed. Cooper is a native of Montana. “I've always had a hankering to come back to Montana when my movie career is’ over and | couldn't think of a better life in Montana than being a cattleman,”’ he said. . About 80 per cent, of an auto-| mobile’s weight is steel. Fire One Rocket, ‘Iregular work. Move toUnite é |Germans ct 15 “Western Parliament to Go to Berlin to Elect Adenaver for 3rd: Term | Curtain, on Oct. 15 to elect Chan- celior- Konrad Adenauer to his third term. * * * ‘The dramatic move will "under-| score the official commitment by all political parties to reunite the 52 million Germans of the West/ with the 17 million of Communist- dominated East Germany, * *. * The date of the session was set yesterday after smashing Sunday election victory. | After the short session, the Par- liament will return to Bonn for its| ee Adenauer said recently that the uncertainty of the election was Adenauer’s Christian Democrats, | the Russians apparently were un- x *« * Now the Christian Democrats strong pto-Western policies have| ing them 14,998,754 votes to 9,490,-/ 726 for the ee | * * tactics is expected immediately,| some believe the Russians even-/ Halley’s Comet was the first] comet whose —_— was pre- dicted. | Other Doesn't Work MISSILE TEST CENTER, Capel streaked aloft and another didn't! in tests yesterday at-this security- locked experimental base. _—. + Spokesman at Patrick Air Force; Canaveral, Fla. @ — One rocket} Double Stamp Specials! Us Our ’ |ington said the missile was one of |. \the smaller variety. * * * Nothing official was learned on a spectacular pyrotechnic show for distant viewers while it stood ‘intermediate-range firing area. * * ¥ I. Observers reported that vapor |shot out of the white-hulled mis- 'sile for more than an hour, then |smoke and flame bloomed from }around the rocket’s base, and va- por clouds obscured the missile. Later, according to John Morton, reporter for the Miami Herald, icharging liquid oxygen from its fuel tanks. about the other rocket, which put | . jupright on a launching pad in the | the rocket appeared to be dis-|| CREDIT TERMS Fer College! mony, Mek ‘Wear! el RES Stock up et this low price on Orton nae s swesters and Fall skirts. “4 : ’ Adenauer’s | # willing to make any concessions to/ 5 the Chancellor. a betn endorsed in an election giv-ii a Although no a in’ Soviet | WEDNESDAY iS DOUBLE STAMP DAY. ‘Repeat of a Sellout! CAR COATS Yes! They went like “hot cakes” | last week, + It’s no secret... .that smart housewives do all their shopping in one easy stop! Meat! vegetables, daify products—all in _ a ~~ = Ow nee wee : > "Te = > - "fen, 2 ®, 2 * 2 *.’ * one place. It's the modern way to shop because it saves es lots of time and unnecessary running around. These same smart housewives do all. their - “easy stop at Pontiac State Bank. All the financial . services are there—not only savings, home loans, deposit boxes, but checking, money orders, personal loans and travelers checks as well,’ You too will find it convenient and time-saving to oy your banking in one quick stop at Pontiac State Bank. There is an office near your neighborhood! Check the list below—perhaps you're not using } services that you really need. New Drive-In _ Branch-Now Open _ at Miracle Mile! ¢ % AAR RARCOATTR RR RRA banking in one yr 2 ee mw ne, ~ ~ CA or The president appoints the di- rectors of the Tennessee Valley Authority and they must be con- firmed by the-Senate. — COTTON na NYLON HOSE . SPORT BLOUSES DOUBLE STAMP BARGAINS WEDNESDAY |. For Your Home! Bates Yard Goods Big eee of 48¢ — id eolors. deal 25° Seve on Giant 22x44 Cannon Bath Towels 49° _ + Certified and Cashiers oe Checks ~ A Peoeeek ond teal Business Loans . ere ee DRAYTON apes $ snayces AUBURN HEIGHTS; 1305 BALDWIN, PONTIAC; Poy MIRACLE MILE BRANCH el 7 F DLC. 1] Si print $6 Chenille Spreads Fine baby chenille, y bg ginale double sizes Better Jacquard Patterns 24x36 LOOP RUGS | 59 PLUMP FEATHER PILLOWS _ worth more! a at BQ° Fine Rayon 54”, 63”, 72” $1.29 Panel Curtains 88' | CANNO IN SHEETS ted twin rises im 1" aie white and colors | = | Eiaiaxesvus Tit Conte B38 7-10 Sets 29.99 Sale! Girls’ Reg. 775 | CURITY DIAPERS _ 2 297) 4 First quality | gauze. Limit 2 = dozen, « Arcti E 3 detachable Watch le e heavy ¢ coats in tweed, solids ‘and flecks. Sizes 8 to 20. Act now! Ex CHARMER “ Fruit of the Loom Lavish Schiffli embroidery trims | square neck and pockets. Self covered belt and cuffed sleeves complete a perfect dream of a vaste Pink, aqua on black rounds. Sizes 12 to. 20— Tevs- 24. Mail orders filled, ae ; / * 1B} = Ap port 3 Ae ft] tN fk ‘ \ bal = her “ ~~ | ay fi © S: é te bind te . “ SF meee iS) t- ~ ‘ po¥ Cat jae 5) : Fund in Red-Faces Tool| t officials pictured above fl. tor.) City Manager A. C. Wager, Donald 1), Janda; mayest poo bein Whe alee bo 0 Standard O8 dealer, and R. J. Hilderbrant, city clerk. : $e The mayor leads a double life! Donald D. Jardine of Harbor Springs, Michigan, has led a con- structive “double life” for years. He has served as a Boy Scout leader, as a special policeman for civil defense or other emer- gency, as an officer of a improvement and as a member of the Harbor Springs City Council. Today,. ‘Donald Jardine is one of many Standard dealers throughout Mid-America who lead “double lives,” lives of service to the motoring public and to their communities. We’re proud of the fact that thousands of Standard’s own employees, too, give freely of their time and talent to civic and as. mayor pro tem., he devotes every hour that can be spared - human welfare activities. All over this part of the country from his family and his business to conscientious conduct of Harbor Springs’ affairs. ‘ " And, during the same years, Donald Jardine has been build- ing a successful ‘business. Five years.ago he borrowed the money to acquire his own independent business, - Oil service station. Now; his debt repaid, he has one of the © Clayton A. Subsinate, ceceead treme toll, ta slaotwa pabsidlng obs school board in Bancroft, a Standard meeting Michigan. President of the board, he also is active _in other community affairs: He believes it is his duty as a citizen to serve in ‘y community projects. Mr. Johnson i a Standard Oil agent. | STANDARD OIL COMPA} "you'll find our agents, chemists, salesmen, engineers, account- ° * ants, refinery people and others active in church; school, 4-H, FFA, Boy Scout, and other jobs done by good citizens. 3% What makes a company a good citizen? an ) people, contribute to ; ae -* Z A A | Pe > fA co £ AAley ~ rE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER A 17, 1957 “Aiea ta : = j. = eg eee = °yclinae al 4 . = , ie ie eee ee ri te Pe, Rae et) eK ES a eee Eee fF AT aa ee Et se } £ & ba eee ae tae | ee es Se ee oe ¥ : : re } F é pees yr Poe aN : fo ee See ee P\ A Be ee i" , teeta gk * aoe es % { * % 4 So a * a or Y . ! Ae ‘ } ‘ / + i , : Ne 3 ey . : ae: 2 Fee. \ fi 4 s | F : iat 4 oe ‘ : ; : j i f | b, Mei eee af \ fae Bie} foi et Be i ' , ee | a \ = ot Eee 5 Sa j 5 r J \ s Mk hee | a i227 i } s * ~~ 4 é eo + x Ma bag B : * Ad dade 1 wanda be ten Ce a Steverino, vo eon m wl na ee ee —s ag | eee Sek Re ene |telephone, ‘Are youse all going?’|Steve Allen show, writes . Dr. James L, Wilson, chairmen s — 2 sesh gyal I said, ‘Please, say are all of you Speaking for every canine in|°t, the Pediatrics © GLASS Mirepolx, ‘author because the plural of you is youseloiher, has felt he or she was ¢/¢mt®, should “explain ge From Canninbals, writes /and she should know because she's|numan being before becoming a/!" their’ going 1-@ HEAVY 1/32 . ph gg Tnach Rcmigsag Rraremith oe hdres ah dog, we want to earnestly thank|® Simple Way | . : : * * * (ah, ah 0, Dr. i. - * ae ; £ with Sabena world airlines, and 3 ’ e And, he adds, “parents | “” Miss Ellen '* of Seattle, Ev: is it ! for - F can take along a few other “dowilyinay senda.me a copy. ot ering your lite Jessy” tient paaic|€*t cleat in their own minds as} © 20 YEAR GUARANTEE ¢ trodden. trendinias torn a Une islletter to the FBI in which she|Sullivan’s plea about wanting to|' exactly why the operation is} 3 a protests against publication recent-| know what it was like when he was|"¢Cessary before trying to | sa! New York's San Rated Hota /'y_ of several of my pieces, in-/a dog. es aad af: Aamrrsstn | PHONE FE 4-5395 . . cluding a series on Cardinal Spell-| ‘Although I am only six months}. a : | 3 ee ae os 22 a hives wv, ima 84 some information on theo I have otten remarked to my Siamese Twin Gupp | | wes Cohoes, t Queen zabeth IT. that I’ve had ments: “"Yeor plete ax the exllegs “If you let that visit (of the stant -feeling I was on this earth) PONCA CITY, Okla, uh | PONTIAC MIRROR & GLASS |fredeman who spelled ‘collich’ of rags! before. I ge Ae pling a iy oe gg « Rigne 732W.H St FE 4-5395 strolling around the French build-(ture had two heads, two tails and] : = v Recreation Unit Slates Activities 15 Different Events Planned 2 Waterford Le come - Twice as many filter traps as the. 3 ates other two largest-selling filter brands! These simplified _—— Compare! Only Viceroy gives Plus — finest-quality leaf to’ fier edb so . —— the _ you 20,000 filter traps—twice as bacco, Deep-Cured for extra Heel tgs rinsed many as the other two largest- smoothness! ) as man or smoother taste! selling filter brands—for the Get Viceroy! smoothest taste of all! =~ _ @1967, Brown & Wittemeen Tetecce Core, \4 i, 4 wy ‘ | pt 7" 7 HM \ \ “« b = i i A \ ‘ F . * 4 * : i i a > + * : iS Se 4 : ‘ : : 7 . = ea & u : ‘ * t : : bout $ i senile etek te . ean Oe Osa oe ‘ Ge eae og ae ee) ea 2 ; i : 2 ie St see fe Pate : y i i ee a Se LS ee eee ce te AI ae sien Sahn SE EES es | Fos Sunes Asked of County Cities on 10-Mile Road (Can't Beat the Weather! STATESVILLE, N.C. un—tIredell |County. Fair officials decided: to open this year's fair a week earlier because of rainy conditions. during fair week of -recerit years. But when it opened rain fell in | NATO Wass | in Atlantic Prowl! fi Maneuvers Are Aimed ‘tunier = at Guarding Against Seek Investigation Into |e _ rainage Problems Enemy Submarines Dra age Fromven ‘ FREE Delivery y GEOFFREY MILLER . S| Hazel Park wants a survey by - “| "LontbON eo—Wesebion of enven ‘|the Oakland County Department of RESCRIPTIONS Western allies slipped‘ out of Brit- Public Works aimed at solving =. ish ports in the predawn darkness its flooding problem. At the Board of teieivhdabs meeting yesterday, Madison Heights asked for another. investi- gation into flooding of its southern boundaries by waters flowing pacross Ten Mile road from Hazel Park. . * Both requests were seat to the Drain Committee for study, The DPW, created last June to ex- * pedite inter-community sewage and water projects, has not yet been assigned any storm water _| Project. _ : The new department so far has under consideration two proposed sanitary sewer systems, the s0-| today for huge NATO exercises to protect the Atlantic lifeline. One by one and in apirs more than 200 fighting ships left for rendezvous. points in NATO's first full-scale Atlantic maneuvers: in four years.. pop PERRY DRUGS East Bivd., Corner of Perry FE 2-0259 * * * The 58 U.S. warships were led by the giant carrier Forrestal and the submarine Nautilus, the worlds _jeraft. © The exercise has. been dubbed “Strikeback.” One of -its prime -labjects- js—to—werk—-out ways to} —- at pie es Nai ALR EEE NG ae x : keep the Atlantic highway open QUESTION: What throne was saved bya spider? ) against marauding submarines. ANSWER: In 1306 the armies of Robert Bruce of Scotland The Soviet Union is known to! were soundly beaten by the English. , be -building up the greatest under-| - He fied to Ireland and went into hiding-tir’a hut. On the water fleet the world has ever interceptor sewers, . known. ceiling he spotted a spider swinging by one of its threads, try- ‘ * *% *% > |ing-to get from one/beam to another. The spider tried six times ee sere ee oe and failed. Bruce realized he had fought and lost the same number of battles against the En He decided that if the spider tried a seventh time and he also would try again. The spider’s nextattempt was successful, so King Bruce reorganized his armies and scored a stunning victory over the British at Carrick in 1307. England finally recognized Scotland’ 's independence and Bruce’ 3 right to the throne, x * 2 : FOR YOU To DO: The story of Robert Bruce is as fascinat- carrying|ing as any you'll find in history. You can learn more about this man and his determination to “ Scotland. by coin to | Besides the United States, other _|mations taking part are Britain, Canada, France, the Netherlands, Portugal and Norway. The exercises start officially ursday pating catnniumities to help pay for advance engineering. * * * Supervisor Frank H. Stephenson, of Farmington Township, had maintained the county itself should advance the money, -- -*- Board Chairman, Delos Ham- lin, of Farmington, argued that communities should pay some Asian flu: attacked British sail- All Types and Sizes Phone FE 5-5530 For Information and Rates ees tree the library, money in advance as‘ evidence of ’ oe A striking fleet of 100 ships com- ee bk Gee “get ole” NATIONAL CITY : Bes aes eee B el ce ae ein ond Te tN the state law ‘authorizing the , a Untied Prope. Phete a imaginary enemy force in the|m care of The Pontiac Press. Tomorrow: Where was the “lost/DPW “had any real teeth in it, 200 N. Paddock St. CONCESSION TO PROGRESS Steading. ‘up —srants, he's ched from grinding out tunes on North Atlantic and the North Sea. continent” of Atlantis located?) the county wouldn't have to ask - with the times this blind organ grinder in Frank- the organ to more modern musical methods. His These areas would be most vulner- _ for a show of good faith.” : fort, Sotanay, now uses his organ only as a sup- _ pre-war radio is fed by a battery, as is the up-to- [able to attack by Russia's. sub- si, __It was Oakland County that drew| pow port for his radio and built-in record player. Con- date record player which works when a record a 1 ~ «(not adequately supported by legis-|up and lobbied for passage of the} oq ~ T fronted by. serious competition in the form of is simply pushed into the slot. is directing operations Gover nor Blames lature.” law by the legislature this spring.) FIGHT i | music boxes set up in most cafes and restau- m re: So far, Oakland is the only Michi- Bae cette A sovete These. 2 bs or “ee Tour ist Impasse a: a ontasaged sa _ , a pad gan county to set up a DPW. brsathing du‘tag teeurting ot ~ ae tomes. Mt is beeen oe sre™ion Legislature | mates tew more tourists visited 3 working %; forces. It is backed up by jet|/* the state this year the dollar | A hand ride in horse racing is) allergy, velex bread fal aber remove bombers of the Royal Air Force.| 11+ crry us — Gov. Williams| Volume of business remained at |a ride in which a jockey does not| ¢2oti8s phlegm. Thus aids freer breathing Lt ce. oc Ol ut ce ten 5 ee nae. Pie Michigan's 600 million dollar} the 600 million made last year. [use the whip. sists. Money back guarantee. + |Soviet sybmarines could ‘slip Mtourist industry stood still this year The governor said the Legislature they set about cutting. off the life- because the Legislature failed to cut, the tourist council budget $136,- line to Europe. . adequately support it through park 999 below his recommendation. : money. . He said he votoed a bill for cas e ‘0e ing park The apple is Tasmania's second| Williams, addressing the Michi-|state park fees and auto stickers |most important export crop. Cap-|gan Hotel and Resort Assn. here |“‘because the Legislature was try- : tain William “Bligh, of. H.M.S.\over the te yron Pong ‘the un-|ing to dace ne (Tite te the second of six artic) ; aditione i . et freedom Bounty, brought the first few)|fortunate truth is that Michigan's tions, and ause would aeheere an cen ie, reece yp yreqwrand omy inealt - Now look what apple ‘trees to. this island off|600-million dollar, tourist industry|have meant less money, not more, 2 bl : = i have found im the South today.). “All the boys will definitely re-| (Next: A talk with Frank’G Australia. stood still this year because it was for the parks.in the future. By BOB CONSIDINE —_sist any integration,” he said sol-| Clement, governor of Tennessee, LITTLE ROCK (INS) — A mobjemnly. “We're ready to. fight.| anq how he differs from Gov. We' — to fight any white who takes their side, too. My parents) feel very strong about this, very strong. What I can’t understand is the teachers. They act indifferent, like “it wouldn’t matter if afew . The|niggers came in.” “They'd do the same thing to us if we tried to get into their schools,” another boy added. wees LA | t is Good Housekeeping Shop wd one WKC, Inc. - 393 3 ‘ORCHARD LAKE AVE. 51 7 KURON ’ 108 N. SAGINAW PONTIA ore : Dupler & Pageau saetaa! Gilliam Appliance PLUMBING & HEATING Oberg Electric Don's Plumbing & Heatit & "l, waulto LAKE DR. 741 S. LAPEER RD. 435 MAIN ST. on |WALLED . LAKE LAKE ORION. ~ ROCHESTER owes : Published in qeaparatten with GAS RANGE DEALERS by Consumers Power Compeony Luns2.s74 re0. 571884 sic pies tetpindisiaimiicitich ey . ‘ i ’ : 4 4 \ | é > ORS * Ree sii 4 12 wean rea rs Silerindaw * Former : Postmaster Over Wife's Death SAUGATUCK W — The sister-in- law of a former Saugatuck post- master.was shot to death last night in the home where her brother-in- law was found fatally wounded. State Police termed their deaths . + James Boyce,’ a Saugatuck po- liceman, said he was passing he home of Archie G, O'Neal when he heard two shots. Investigating " Saugatuck ‘Despondent| - Eastern and. Gulf states today but = heavy rainfall in some areas were police found the 67-year-old O’Neal | « | dying on the porch. His sister-in-law, Mrs. Hilda ( Witcheock, 58, of Ionia, was found Jersey to New Orleans was eG at 7 as Postmaster of Saugatuck in 1949, to New Orleans - REGAL SPLENDOR — The Buckingham Palace, London, is. forthcoming visit to Canada and. queen wears a Sree aile! this official photograph of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, issued in connection with their music room at embroidered in, the setting for the U. S. The “OF white tulle,” ~ Wears the uniform of an Admiral of the Fleet. | - United Press Phote silver and gold, with the blue ribbon of the Most Noble Order of the, Garter over her lelt shoulder. Her jewels include a dia- mond and pearl diadem, earrings and necklace, and a diamond bracelet and watch. Prince Philip “THR PONTIAC Ac PRESS, ‘TuEspay. SEPTEMBER 17, ee Ike Not Butting In Expected to By ED CREAGH - ~ Associated Press News Analyst > WASHINGTON @ — The Eisen- jhower administration expects the feuding and fussing over school integration to die down before long for two main reasons: 1. Public opinion, President Ei- senhower has said this on the record. * * * 2. Dollars and cents, Eisenhow- er hasn't said this publicly, but itsecan be stated that he thinks business and industrial pressure will squelch violence, and that it will, in the not too distant future, force compliance with federal court antisegregation orders. One man close to the President Z ble or in a state where peace seems assured? This can't help influencing gov- ernors, and other key officials of * Arkansas, the state where Na- posted to keep some Negro pupils out of a high school in Little Rock, is a good example. {It's a poor_state, measured by such things as industrial resources. It wants more industry. It has paid for @ national advertising campaign to attract investment by outsiders. * * * | Whatever the local sentiment may be on the integration ques- tion, administration officials don’t see how Goy, Orval E. Faubus can resist pressure to calm things down if he wants to raise living standards in his state. Nobody SE uF Suené Say They’ re Indian Trail Markers © i | att s 3 ey F H i LANSING ing landmarks of our pioneer past in many Michigan communities. Wet Weather Dampens Gulf, Eastern States | followed. ‘deformed these trees for trail imarkers by bending young sap- A tree on the Post Office lawn at Ironwood is one of those identi- Tradition has it that the: Indians,fied as a trail marker. Four. such trees are found in the vicinity of Traverse City. They lings to point out the route to be|are along the route of the old Indian trail markers nearly all are of a venerable age now. There's. always a stir of. local sentiment when one has to be cut down because of the ailments of acute old age or in the name of progress. But there are those sha Mepete the entire theory. behind the identi- Mackinaw Trail running north and are near former Indian encamp- The gnarled trees identified as os. Similar ‘trees have been re- Rapids, Acme, Glen Lake, North- port, St. Johns, Rose City, Muske- gon, Munising, Whitehall and Au _Train,. Mich, A letter received by the His- ission from~George More wet weather dampened it was' generally fair and pleasant) ee ot oe try. - : . : * «© * It also looked like more warm and humid weather for the Gulf States and the Atlantic Seaboard. There was considerable shower| and thunderstorm activity yester- day and during the night. * z & Scattered thunderstorms with reporteti “fn the mid-Atlantic States. LaGyardia field in New York City was hit by more than 2 inches of rain. Fairly heavy falls also were reported in Gordonsville, Va., Washington, D. C., and Tetor- ‘boro, N.J. Scattered thundershow- ers in New England brought mostly light amounts. rs City in Texas Fears Spread of Asian Flu JASPER; Tex. — An illness doctors say may be Asian flu has hit 400 pupils and forced closing of schools here. At Foft Worth, Texas Christian University were treated for an “irritation of the upper respiratory. system; but a _|theory but now was a believer. The jaccounted for by natural deformity, 274 ~co-eds at: ation of marker trees. One expert snorts “‘ridiculoys.” Another says “nothing but’ un- authenticated folklore.” Victor F. Lemmer of Jronwood, a formet president of thé Michigan Historical Society, has \conducted some extensive £ on the subject. Lemmer is a fier betiover in the authenticity of the trail mark- ers. But he’s fair enough to in- clude in his voluminous file the seoffing of the skeptics. Just One smal] news item, car- ried by the Associated Press, say- ing “that the Michigan Historical Commission. was’ interested in col- lecting material on marker trees attracted scores of answers. Donald E. Roberts of Holland reported he had located some 70 such trees along the Lake Michi- gan‘shoreline in southern Ottawa and northern Allegan counties. Roberts, an engineer, said he had at first discounted the entire resea. odd appearance of the trees he found, Roberts said, could not be such as by wind. Roberts also advanced the theory that early settlers -might have trees from the Indians. He cited TCU spokesman said the sickness was not Asian flu. cases of such trees being found talong section lines and one _lo- BANK Pays on SAVING C Deposit your surplus savings or investment Savings at any. one banking offices. Community National Bank OF FONTIAG Dio, /@ a Year ERTIFICATES of our 8 convenient picked up the trick of bending the}. Gnarled Trees Evoke Controversy — Indian trail'cated on a known early stage the Pennsylvania Historical and marker trees are revered as liv-|coach route. Museum Commission, said he had no reason for believing the Indians) marked their trails this way. “I consider the .whole_ thing ridiculous,”” Witthoft declared. “At least some of the examples I have seen are in completely preposter- ous places for any trail marker and others are by no means old enough to have served as such.” That's what some of the doubters have to say: But the communities with such treasured trees would much rather believe their own wealth of local tradition, as handed down from “an old man, now dead.” “This sort of pressure is by no| means confined. to Arkansas. * Reporter William Hines told in last Sunday’s Washington Star of a talk he had some months with a business leader in Winston- Salem, N.C. * * * “Among us,” Hines quoted the Man as saying, “‘we represent probably 95 per cent of the finan- cial resources of Forsyth County. We quietly passed the word that puts it this way: “Suppose youl/i at | |Mixed | Schools’ Feuiing Die Down trouble here ‘would ‘be. bad. for business and we weren't going to have any, We have this thing so well locked up that a cab driver couldn't get a gasoline credit card without our say-so. - “No, there isn't going to be any trouble.” : ’ * * * There wasn't. And the Eisen- hower people think similar pres- sure — maybe you could call it public opinion engineered from above — will prevail elsewhere jn the South, allowing for different local situations and expecting no overnight miracles, Some of Eisenhower's critics say he should take a firmer stand The White House .showed itself -jirked at this*and a number of] confident that, in the long run, t American peoplé will prove them-| selves law-abiding without any uncalled-for mixing in a difficult _ * & fo If Eisenhower is right, his policy will go down in history.as one o wisdom. - in Nashville, Tenn.—may be laid at his door. Intelligence Agents Call 10 ‘Plotters’ in Cuba The outbreak was to take place at the time of the recent uprising of rebels and sailors at the -Cien-) &Z0 fuegos naval base in south central Cuba, the agents said. Most of The office of state general is an elective one in all ‘Service most competent. Com petent and Gracious Every detail of our sefvices must be This is assured by careful professiona! standards and our high: businces ethics. Experience is That Is situation by people from Washing-| tional Guard troops have been|‘°" — attorney | 4 Spanish was reported today to be quietly expanding trade with Soviet satel- lite countries. DPA, the West German news agency, said in a dispatch .from Madrid that. Francisco Franco's governnient is even preparing cultural and sports exchanges with Moscow itself. ‘¢ * * Well informed quarters in the capital were quoted as saying that panish minister of commerce, Alberto Ullastres,- spoke with Pol- ish officials during his recent visit to-Vienna on a “major” expansion of trade links between the two in on Trading sat With Soviet Satellites) “BONN (INS) — Starved. for | is Spanish agricultural produce ned raw materials, Spain, DPA ‘said, is anxious to swap wine for trucks with Hun- gary. A similar deal was said to be under discussion with Czecho- slovakia. : Herter Visits Rhee SEOUL «—U.S, Undersecretary Christian A. Herter visited Presi- dent Syngman Rhee today and later visited the quiet Korean front, Government.’ sources said Korean officials stressed a need . for an administrative agreement governing, among other things, the countries. Since last July, Madrid reached | jurisdiction over offenses commit- ted by.U.S. forces in — -@ UNDERWOOD © REMINGTON TO CHOOSE FROM— ALL MAKES ® ROYAL © CORONA AT GALLAGHER’S THE COMPLETE ‘RENTAL LESSON PLAN $495 © Per Week This Plan_Includes: @ A brand new orgon. | Your choice of woods, @ Cartage to and from your home. @ A free lesson each week. . J-Johnson of Lewell, telling. about a tree on his property, was typical. He reported that arrowheads had been found in the vicinity and said that “years ago, an old man now dead” told him the tree was an Indian marker. Supporting evidence has come from other states. The U.S. Department of palais ture publication, ‘‘Famous says the Indian practice of Heel ing trees as signposts was common in the Mississippi Valley region and the eastern and southern United States. It notes such surviv- ing trees are most common in Cook and Lake Counties in Illinois. x ©. * Among the disbelievets, some are gently cynical. Other are down- right bitter: John Witthoft, chief curator of Says Husband Hurled Two Knives at Her -LOS ANGELES # — Jacqueline Thomas, a red-haired singer who has sued for divorce, charges that her husband flew off the handle and hurled two knives at: her, missing with both shots. _ * x ‘* The knives were thrown they flew off their handles too, she told Superior Court in asking} that Richard H, Thomas, 38, a |television traffic operator, be or- dered to move from their home. * * * He agreed to go, and the court ordered him to pay $150 monthly for support of Miss Thomas, 24, and their child Jeffrey, 15 months old, along with $200 monthly for upkeep of the home. hard| use irr WaT frre: occur, | Phone : The fine Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, the fine personnel of our stafl, and the dignity of every act assures you of gracious service. lohns Funeral Home first, from where- ever and whenever the need may & Call the Donelson- ALL STYLES IN’ LIGHT AND DARK WOODS Easy to Play—Easy to Pay Up to 36 Menths Gallagher 18 E. Huron, Pontiac, Mich. 1 J ] 1 1 1 ~ 1 . 1 | 1 ie Address ... 5 Open Monday--Friday Nights ‘til 9 GALLAGHER MUSIC COMPANY Please send me full information on Rental Lesson Plan: : * hd ee ee ee ee a ee es © You pley or don’t pay. @ All money paid as ren- tal will be applied to- ward purchase price. Music Co. i 1 t t i .sasee Telephone... ee eeee “My bedside telephone costs only *1.21 a month” | (including tax) Surprisingly little for all the convenience it brings. Especially for calls at night or when you're Cleaning or making beds. You won’t have to race downstairs, or to another part of the house when the phone rings. In addition to the monthly cost there is a small one- time installation charge for extension phones. . Your choice of colors, including ee loud-soft bell, for extra one-time charge. To order step-saving telephone convenience for your - home, ¢ call the Business Office. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY [ } 2 i roy oa "Miinoaliils. << =< cae ee - ® +! - « visited friends in southern Ill- inois,. They also toured the - Smoky and the Blue Ridge Mountains, ra * * Mrs. R. A. Carter of Orchard Fans Are —Nuisance _ to Smokey ersonal: ‘ter, Lake and her daughter, Laurie, recently visited Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands. It was the second visit. there for Mrs. Car- *- * ot ' Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Cloonan of Summit avenue observed their 55th wedding | anniver- sary Monday, Following Mass at St. Michael Church, mem- bers of the family gathered at the Cloonan home for break- fast. Attending were their daugh- ters, Mrs. Mary Lynch of East Tawas and Mrs, Eugene ‘Ma- her of Greenville, and their son arid. daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Stephen Cloonan of Watkins Lake. Also attending were the senior Mrs. Cloon- an's | brother and sister-in-law, . Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Omans of _ Pine ‘Grove avenue. ~ * ww * Mrs. William L. Edwards has . returned to Cocoa Beach, Fla., after spending three weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Riecks of tine ave- nue. & > *. * Mr, and Mrs. Roy Hallen- beck of Cheboygan, formerly of Pontiac, will celebrate their golden- wedding anniversary with an open house Sept. 22 in Cheboygan. * *& Mr, and Mrs, Charles Simp- son, who were married 58 years ago in Scotland, will cel- ebrate their wedding anniver- | Many Students Bound | for Western Michigan sary on Saturday with a fam- ily dinner, The —— live = Home street.. | x * Barbara Lane, daughter. of Mr, ard Mrs. Dale Lane of State avenue, was graduated from Grace Hospital School of Nursing at commencement ex- - ercises held Sept. 6 * * * Mr, and Mrs. John Knoblock of Nurenburg, Germany, an- nounce the birth of a daugh- ter Sept. 4. Mrs. Knoblock is the former Berle Wilson. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. A. Glenn Wilson of Alice avenue and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Knoblock of Bloomfield Hills. * * * * Announcing the birth of a_ daughter, Tina, are Mr. and . Mrs, Harry L. Pace (nee Pa- tricia LaBarge) of Putnam . avenue. Grandparents of the infant, born in Pontiac General Hos- ~ pital, are Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond J: LaBarge of Gage street and Mrs. Lorene Patter- Tetay we will conclude our list 6f college students. We will. 50n of Allison street. | finish telling you about those students who are going to * * * - Western Michigan University and add a few out-of-state students for good measure. a a af Over on Kalamazoo at Western Michigan Cebversiay we will find seniors Karen Jo Anderson of Wenonah drive and Marcia Ballagh of Rochester. Both coeds are studying ele- phy averiue and Mrs. Henry . mentary education and Marcia is a Sigma Sigma Sigma Freer of Brooklyn, N. Y. Residents sorority member. : x *« * : with his public. Sometimes Another senior is Martha Varney of Nelson street, who. Lt. and Mrs: Gerald R. he's downright rude. is in speech correction. Stocks (nee Goldie Stamas) of Enjoy Last | . * * SOPHOMORE STUDENTS 2 = —+— SS —— noted. among : hi han- Fai r Da S an pi a pleasant dinpest- Nancy ‘Ann Day of Rochester, who is on a secretarial pro- Sept. 11. ° y gram, returns to Western as a sophomore, as does Herbert tion, Smokey often has lum- bered into his house and Butler of South Anderson street who 1s studying physical \ But Bear Remains ( Pomrer Symbol ire Prevention By JANE EADS - WASHINGTON—Smokey the Bear, popular living symbol of forest fire prevention and one of the capital's most ogled celebrities, is more than bored head to hae detdoss jun such as the Hales are. enjoying. About to ‘charcoal broil « steak in their Mohawk: road home backyard dre Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hale. . Even though the weather is brisk, there is still time Grandparents of the infant are Mrs. Henry Merz of Mur- Well, the weatherman tells. gjammed the door when he education. Jer Mr. and ee ry Young of Wolfe street is a sophomore as Saginaw street and Mr. a us it won't be long now before tired of the public gaze. well as a member of Army ROTC and Sigma Tau Gamma Mrs. John C. Stacks of Mil- Old Man Winter comes roaring LOCKED OUTSIDE waukee in complete with snow, ice and Fs @istante tae the te fraternity. - e & . howling winds. spot But before all this unpleas- — cee point Paves Among the freshmen on Western's campus will be Linda : ° antness overtakes us, there = 0 alee ot eee, Duff of Lois street, Carole DuFord of DeSoto street, Marlene Cal 1 fo rnia should be some nice days ahead. And, as you can detect from these pictures, there are some families in-Pontiac-who are taking advantage of these few remaining warm days. OUTDOOR COOKERY Backyard barbecuing has be- come increasingly popular and some of us are taking every opportunity available to get in a few more outdoor cook-outs. * * * Smokey, now 6, was found in New Mexico's Lincoln National Forest, all four feet scorched by a devas- tating fire. He was flown to Santa .Fe, treated, and even- tually brought to the zoo. ; Pictured in dungarees and equipped with fire - fighting shovel, millions of young and oid. He has been the most popu- Smokey is known fo Lazenby of Exmoore road, Gail Mitchell of West Walton boulevard, Marlene Noe of Chapman street, Anne Pontz of Clarkston, David Struble of Woodbine drive and Terry Tol- lefson of Stanley avenue. Terry is a second semester freshman and. the WMU News Service informs us that she is not only active in campus activities but was on the high scholarship list for the spring semester. - David Duman of Oakdale drive will be a junior at Western as will Marcia Smith of Elizabeth Lake road. Marcia is studying secondary education and is affiliated this fall, Ils Setting for Nuptials Edna M. Pinkston Becomes Bride in Palo Atlo Rite Edna M. Pinkston and Dr. ~ * * Clinten M. Petty were married ares a¢naaietetaretacid = Peay L balepaser oat with Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority. Business administration in the First Seeiact Church barbecuers will impatiently cepacia. cadaatrion. ocivels sophomore Gail Greenless of Lake Orion will also be on the of Palo Alto, Calif. The Rev. wait out the winter. months 6 -Panizations ~ Kalamazoo campus. Robert J. Hawthorne per- until it is time once again to x « & OUT OF STATE formed the Sept. 8 ceremony. take to the backyard with its flies, ants and the wonderful aroma of charcoaling meat. # Fashion Show Set At the final luncheon of the season Thursday, women of Pine Lake Country Club will have a bridge party and fashion show, A local shop will put on the fashion show. | William F. Huber, director of Cooperative Forest Fire Prevention, says the theme of the 1957 Smokey program, “Thanks, folks, for preventing forest fires,” is in order be- cause fires have been. reduced from 210,000 in 1942 to less than 145,000 in 1956 and an- nual acreage losses have dropped from 32 million to less than 9 million. SMOKEY SOUVENIRS | Improvements noted in the Completing his senior year at the University of Pennsyl- vania in. Philadelphia is Robert T. Lewis of Chippewa road. He leaves for school the 20th of September. Returning to Wheaton College, Wheaton, Il, for his senior year in busiriess administration is Kirk Holbolth of North Johnson street. © get to have fun! x *& * That winds up our college section for this year. We wish _ you all the best of luck at school—study hard—but don’t for- * * *. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Aneta F. Pinkston of Mohawk road, and Mrs. June M. Petty of Hollywood, Calif., is the bridegroom's mother. For. her wedding the bride wore a Mira Mist silk gown with imported Chantilly lace. The bodice and straight front were accented with seed pearls and sequins. The train of the gown, was designed like large, Ce eet nes Mother Honors Bridge Winners _“<"gping petals. —__ ‘ * * * Pontiac Duplicate Bridge outlined with pearls and “Can't you almost smell the charcoal burning and hear the meat sizzling as Robert. Hughes of Oakwood drive puts a steak on the . outdoor barbecue? With him are his daughter, Regina (left), and Mrs. Hughes. Collection Has Soft, Classic Look This fal) designer Ruth Saves shows a collection which might be termed “elegantly simple.” There's softness and the un- cluttered look of the classic. * * * Throughout the golection North Oakland Scout Directors . Hold Gathering The directors of Northern black is favored for late day! and daytime wear, and herh- lines remain at mid-calf fe- gardiess of Paris dictates. Miss Joyce believes in a hem ’ length which is etter to Niblick Group Holds Golf Day Thirty - four members and husbands attended the annual Niblick Golf Club day at Pon- the woman, not set according to style whims. The designer uses soft sheer wools, and the garments fall loosely from shoulder to hem. , One daytime dress of - wool | with slim lines has a dramatic stole made of two long tri- angles joined at the long points for a slim center section. One triangle is larger than the other, hanging longer and fuller when knotted or draped over the shouder. The gray wool fabric is lined with red. * x * VIRGENIA MARIE DEMSKI The engagement &f Virginia Marie Demski, of Raeburn street, daughter of the late Mrr Smokey headquarters at the U. S. Forest Service, or the state forester’s offices, have been distributing such things as Smokey. bumper strips, bookmarks, stamps and post- ers. Radio and TV spot sare also made available. The Smokey Bear “Story_of the Forest’’ has been distrib- uted to more than four million children and is used as a text in many schools. Commercial items out this year include a.Smokey badge, and new Sniokey Bear doll, and a Smokey newspaper comic . strip. There’s even a Smokey maple crunch ice cream. * * * Huber and other officials would like to see Smokey get a new moat-type setup in the zoo with a miniature ranger station and dwelling. Class Entertained Miss Ostrander at Bridal Tea Mrs. John E. Ostrander held a tea Sunday honoring her daughter, Dorothy, at their home on Sylvan Lake. The honoree, bride-elect of Gerald Klein, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Ostrander. Mr. and Mrs. Al- bert Klein of Ludington are Gerald’s parents. The couple wil] exchange vows Sept. 28 _ Members of the wedding party will be Mrs. Aldred E. Ostrander as matron of honor — and Donald Ostrander as best man. Guests attending were Sally Smith and Judy Evans of Bir- mingham, Mrs, Don Turick of Clarkston, Bonnie Allen, Ruth Ann Bandy, Mrs. Melvin Camp- bell, Jackie Dubay, Mrs, Aldred Ostrander, Mrs. John H. Ostrander and Mrs. Donald Club announces Monday win- ners. First-place winners were Mrs. Waid Hood and Mfrs. Margaret McGuire. Second- place winners were Mrs. Ern- est Guy and Mrs. Melvin Smail. The group met at Elks * Temple. Ane ars touched with sequins, held a fingertip veil of silk illusion. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses, gardenias and stephanotis. Iva R. Pinkston of Palo Alto was her sister’s only attendant. She wore a full harem-skirted ballerina-length dress of sun- glo taffeta. Her velvet scal- loped crown and silk illusion half-veil were in a matching shade, and she carried a show- er arrangement of yellow car- nations. * * * Dr. T. R. Jenkins of Palo Alto was. the best man, while Dr. W. A. Gustafson of Palo -Alto and W. R. Davis of Menlo Park, Calif., seated the guests. _ CHOOSES BLUE For a reception in the Patio room of the First Methodist Church the bride’s mother wore a lace over taffeta dress of heavenly blue with navy acces- Oakland County Council of Girl , Lace is the “big” fabric for = and Mrs. James M. Demski, nirander.< et Scouts met. Monday in CAI — vo Sunday. After evening and pink is a favored - to Charles Edward Potts, son Osan ; sories ant 's mnie caroation a ow rd. M Cae Mey Hesy P feuffer color for evening wear. Very of Mr. and Mrs. T. Russel + Mr. and Mrs. Omar John- ‘ . Sale Be fae s wa a Building, Waterford. Mrs. and Oscar’ Eckman received few jackets are used in the ~ Potts of Howell, has been an- son opened their Walbridge Book Is Reviewed ae navy lier ars Claude Kingsley was named ‘new troop camp chairman. * * ® New program chairman is Mrs. Bobbie Dale Pickford. Mrs. Watson Stringer was named a new. member of the . ‘resident camp committee and Mrs. James A. Glennie was Yuletide in October first prize for winning the after- noon's . mixed two-ball four- some, / it * * Second prize was awarded to Mrs, Donald Bos and Lynn Al- len, while Mrs. Aarow Fox and Donald Bos took third prize. * * * Social committee for the man will attend her as maid Ehrman of Kokomo, Ind., and Ruth ‘Joyce collection, with capelets and stoles in their place. , ‘Shoulders are natural and most of the sleeves are set in. Waistlines are natural. Project. \ to her loss. They hadn’t any ~ nounced. The bride-elect was graduated from*Eastern Michi- gan College. Her fiance will attend Bay City Junior College this fall. A November wedding is planned. road home Saturday for the meeting of Fellowship Class of Baldwin Avenue Evangelical United Brethren Church. As- sisting them were the Kenneth McQueens. . Mrs. O. L. Siegman reviewed — “The Fruit Tramp” Monday evening when Waterford Book Club’met in the Dorothy lane home of Mrs. A. C. Kirby. Banishes Twilight Blues “gightseeing and shopping,” she “One evening when I was were delighted. If I say so my- self, I'm a good cook, They ‘GEORGE R. SCOTT Pontiac Chorus — Today Begins graduation he spent two years corsage of white carnations. * x * Before leaving ona two-week trip to the Hawaiian Islands the new Mrs. Petty changed to a red sheath dress with white accessories. The couple will live in Mountain View, Calif. - ek oe ot The bridegroom was gradu- made a member of the finance = event was composed of Mrs. ated with bachelor’s, master’s committee. , * Albert Gaines and Mrs. Arthur ; Its 26th Sea son and doctor’s degrees in mathe- * Compton. N . ie led ” she and homemaking and it's all I came to call and, asked if I matics from the University of ves new camp savings plan By —— told me y Scan: know, could prepare dinner for them Today will mark the begin. Southern California in Los and adopted. Twilight is the happiest . Mrs. "It would be impossible for every Friday night. They both ning of the 26th year of Pon. Angeles. Girl Scouts may buy stamps Dorothy Joan time of day if you're happy, _ But lke many people, me to go to school and learn —_ worked hard and loved to have — tiac. Women’s Chorus. This from their neighborhood leader + but it's the saddest time if Y- found that you can be —_g._ new skill—couldn't keep my _a little celebration on Friday. year the chorus will be under . and use them toward camp Reveals Plans you're sad. lonelier in the midst = ” mind on it. So the doctor said, I agreed, and I must say it the direction of George R. Maurice Thome > fees. ON AO ein than you can all by ‘well then, cook or keep was pcre bi eeddy tex ‘Scott with Mrs. Norman . Det, Joa, wie mars For rn et wan a ad PMS gg Ire rome, teeing toy Sth as accomeania. "to. Direct Club : riage to Lt. Michael Hackett time. Mrs. Y. had just recently ‘ ' a : Moose Unit Plans will be an event of Sept. 28, ost her husband aad was find I used _ enby “At first I was shocked, but oe aay fein hg They Mr, Scott is a University of Maurice Thome. is the new anfiounced that Ardath Cassel- ing it difficult to adjust herself ays, Pl ne then I began to think about it. ; : Michigan graduate. After president of Temple Beth Jacob Men's Club. Other offi- t on, ‘and then by evening h Mrs. Richard Dawson has of honor. Donna Goddraw of children, but theirs was one of Td be in the apartment look- crying and thinking how muc' pay me well, too, which doesn’t in the Army, for which cers are Jerome Peters, vice been named by Moose + Grosse Pointe, Mary Ellen’ the happiest marriages. tech. 1 hated. the twilight, I got an ; ee time he directed’ a 40-voice president; Melvin Eller, secre- 4 ing out at the skyline, watc idea. The building I was in | burt’ male chorus, ' tary, and Hal Fersht, treas- ject for children at Moose- Judith Kline will be brides: maids, MOVED TO APARTMENT | For a few months, Mrs. Y. ing the sun set—and wishing I could diet Finally the doctor was full of business: couples. I would eook dinner for some “Now, I have three couples to cook for so that I'm busy Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs- He then became minister of music at Commerce Methodist urer. Marvin Barnett, I. E. Gor- Elaine Zian is oe be UY some- . y h said I'd. have to get ‘heart, | the flower girl. = ee yess Tee thing to do Of be wouldn't an- of them, — day and Friday evenings. 1 Church, a position he now don, H. Malcolm Kahn and Dr. : * * r * * “*. ~ house she had’ spent so marty ewer . for my sanity or my just love it- and I'm almost holds. J. E. Berk have been named “When I told the s:perintend- ’ Mrs, Smith is organist and as members of the board of di- uM 2 ‘“ 4 peany. open ars, ‘Wiliam sbaapp rcp fig turday happy a a. a ciieaincti ent of my plan, he thousht eouie mother to those young choir director of Orchard Lake _rectors. Varidruska, it was announced — rose ag me se Kibo a oy -% : ard ‘a Ghia” | CU good one and said he'd “T Jook forward to the eve. ™ Presbyterian Church. _. These officers will be in- owe sie ty porate. Bienseirgunind : tell some of the tenants. , Women’s Chorus is affiliated stalled tonight at a dinner ‘when the group met Monday evening. Mrs. Clark Cavalier, was appointed chairman of a a Ee and Pat Wisner in the Lenox avenue home of Mrs. Harald _ _ “I thought I ‘could Jose my- self and find it easier to forget ‘in the lity where I.would be: she continued, “at my age and with no experience, is easier said than done, I love i" Xe LITTLE CELEBRATION “Right away, a young couple nings, now. Twilight is no long- er crying-time for me!” (Copyright 1957) with the Department of Parks , and Recreation. meeting to be held = Rotunda Inn, . : PN st sen i re | ne er [> ais]: ig ul » if ogni = tH OBL THE PONTIAC. PRE at: “TUESDAY. saPrE NEN in, 1057 aa from around ee world pa Men god By OLGA CURTIS INS Women's Editor A woman's attitude toward sex, the experts man's attitude toward her. So psychiatrists blame the Amer- - fean man for the fact that many “un- | American women find sex pleasant and a great source of tension." * *« * “In this puritanical country man ‘has never been taught to make love,” one doctor explains bluntly. say, depends on aj, . {stability and freedom from strain.” | master Says: ' “Italian men concentrate ~~ attention on women: They show their, best in the difficult problems’. of sentimental and sexual relations, So Italian women enjoy the ad- ~~ > of a full womanliness .-. which provides a sense of ZSA ZSA COMMENTS The contrast between European and American men also was noted ‘by. Hungarian actress Zsa Zsa ‘frém both sides of the Atlantic. | She said: ports that demands for hysterec- tomies are increasing among step child bearing. The increase in drinking by women, also an attempt to escape their |Gabor, who has had four husbands, |role as ae can cause . Karl poor younger women who want to side- he says, is * * * *g ifles of family ~whefe tone in went. os found in the . The Family Service Associ- A young mother who quarreled incessantly with her husband ex- plained she knew he didn't really love her. Why? “Because the only time he ‘shows affection is when we have sex relations,” - SHE WAS BORED Another young wife admitted she “was doing a little drinking’ be- cause she was bored with her husband. She knew she was bored, she said, ‘‘because she simply couldn't get interested in sex."’ She; finally admitted she had never, been satisfied in sex, and could -‘knowledge: “the sexual inade-| quacy of the male.” Mamoru Michizoku, professor of clinical psychology at. Tokyo's Chiba Uni- versity, used —_— that phrase in explaining the tensions of Jap- anese: women. He said: “Japanese men are simply not expressive, and lack tenderness in their love-making. There is no émbracing, no kiss- ing.” As a result, Professor, Michizoku ‘says “some Japanese women turn ito tranquilizers; some—especially younger ante | sicabel. “ Tomorrow: poo aa Tension. “An inadequate lover or husband | naturally causes tension in a} woman. x * * “American husbands~ are . too busy to give all kinds of promises to their wivés, so American women though the promises are not always While European women happily | admire a “Don Juan,” the basic Lemonade Plum Jelly The pattern ef sexual frustia- ls Different -Mrs. Worden Tries! Frozen Concentrate male-female relationship in the to Add Tartness — ATTENTION, DANCE STUDENTS! Enrollment Still Open JACKIE RAE DANCE STUDIO ‘Tap — Ballet — — Modern — Baton Twirl Introducing Xavier Galindo ’ Director of Choreography at the University. of Chicago and Monterey Classes ‘itt Classical Ballet — Women’s — Beginners’ — Intermediate Advance Class — Semi-Private — Private . By JANET ODELL When you go off the beaten track of the recipe and experiment with food, then you become a creative cook. Mrs. H. T. Worden did just that when she made her green gage plum jelly this year. Making a home for her husband, three school age children and a baby less than a year old kéeps Mrs, Worden pretty’ well occupied. She likes to sew and hopes some A most jolly fellow to have around—a catch-all for soiled! clothes; or a hiding place for pajamas! Whether used on door or bed, this jolly jester will not only add a touch of gaiety but also delight the youngsters. Pattern No. 2223 contains tissue; hot-iron transfer for face; sewing and embroidery directions. Send 25c in coins, your name, address ea the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Pontiac Press, 372 W. Quincy St., Chicago 6, III. Have you a copy of our 1957 Needlework Album? It contains 56 three crochet items and a quilt, Only 25c a copy! Delta Kappa Gamma Opens Fall Season Xi Chapter of Delta Kappa Gam- .|ma Society opened the fall season jwith a dinner meeting Thursday evening at Davisburg Elementary School. Mrs. Everett Hathaway and Mrs. Frank Tucker served Reducing through Exercise day to have time to paint. FE 2-2128 944 Veorheis Rd. FE ¢-7318; GREEN GAGE PLUM JELLY j By Mrs. H. T. Worden i : 1 ean (6 Ty rod Sauaae © con- A New e e ° 'y . “Tes pondered pectin - . , Crush thoroughly ripe plums. It Flattering ou . isn't necessary to peel or pit them. Add 1% water and simmer, PERMANENTS | pn eT ae bes in lly — eee 2 bag and: out ’ $750 te S2Q ee ee i" : centrates to juice. You should | Hair Cutting and Styling cane 4 ways eles Samar : ROWENA’S BEAUTY SHOP spcene’ mad oe wegen Ge Goel Lon 4831: Dixie Hwy. 1216 Baldwin Pour prepared juice into large OR 3-3541 FE 5-3735 . saucepan. If necessary add water to make correct amount of juice Mix powdered pectin with juice in pan. Place over high heat and Dr. Stanley W. Black (kes. ' y . hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove jelly from heat, skim z= OPTOMETRIST — off foam with metal spoon and Located |pour at once into glasses, leaving mee = 44 inch space at top of each. Par- 3513 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. ron at once.. Makes about 12 me- ~ 1 Block West of M-59 glasses. . ’ Corner of Cass Lake Road, Pontiac OVER MAC’S DRUG STORE ety Artists Meet _—umn Friday evening t Adah they 1 y evening y EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT \brary. For the October meeting : . [Beaver Edwards, sculptor and Phone FE 2-2362 Closed Wednesday | painter trom Scarab Club in De- " jitrojt, will speak on features of art. % a ieee ae A sparkling array of new car Alvin's Hair, Alpaca, Quilt and Synthetic and the star of the fashion parade. Other Car *22.95 * $39.95 Alu coats awaits you at In Tweed, Camel Loden Cloth, Poplin and Flannel; linings include fur. You'll be warm as toast Coats TELEGRAPH aot HURON © wy Mon., Thurs., Fri., 10'to 9; Tues, Wed., Sat. 10 to 6; Sun REAR OF STORE PARK FREE jcusing officer to identify the child as the committee on arrangements. Personal’ Letters Irk Secretary — + in This Manner By EMILY POST the propriety of sending letters to a man at his office with envelopes marked ‘personal’? I rather resent the implication when a letter like this arrives for my boss, but an- other secretary here thinks there is nothing rude about it and, in A fact, she even thinks it eliminates all possibility of embarrassment ; |to herself. What is your opinion?” Answer: It is proper to mark the envelope this way when the letter inexcusable to do this, however, “Dear Mrs. Post: The sltonteg incident occurred some time ago but I have been puzzled about it ever since and would like your | opinion on the matter. “My daughter graduated from junior high school in June. She was the president of her class. The school gave the graduating class a farewell dinner and dance. At this dance, my daughter asked her teacher, a man, to dance with her. He did, but she was the only one he danced with and that was the only time he danced all evening. “As I was chaperon there, I thought it was nice of him to ask her, but when I mentioned it to my daughter, she said she had asked him to dance. Do you think it was proper for her to ask him to dance?” Answer: She should have waited for him, to ask her. “Dear Mrs. Post: When mak- ing out a check, should it be written to Mary Smith or Mrs. John Smith? What if a person doesn’t know the woman's given — “poe. oo report on the northwest regional meet-/name ing held this summer in Washing- ton, D. C. Mrs. Hathaway showed pictures taken on a European trip. which is her signature. She -Resents Mail) Addressed to Boss) “Dear Mrs. Post: What about’ is a really personal one sent to: the person's office. It would be/ © when sent to anyone’s home ad- | dress. Oval shaped paark bib tg fill in con vertible collars and low necklines will wo news here is the matte-finish, natural looking simulated pearls with a deep, satiny lustre. Onions are not only health- ful, they’re indispensable to a salad and to many. other dishes. But no one ever labeled them a beauty aid. The hostess who comes from the kitchen to greet her guests - with an outstretched hand that her favorite perfume, it's safe to say that the onion scent will come out on top. every time. * * * Best way to solve the prob- . lem is to peel the onion with cold water running. Either peel - _it directly under the stream of water or frequently let the be seen often this season. The big Onion Scent No Way to Social Acceptance tale in the palms. The cold Teachers Club Sees Slides of Isle Royale Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Thorpe showed slides of their trip to Isle Royal National Park when Teach- ers Exchange Club met Thursday evening in the Oneida road home. of Mr, and Mrs. Merill Stephens. Among the guests were the fami- a Golf Tourney Held by Amvets Leagues Crel- ley. Other ate were Elmer Thorpe, John Borsvold, Linn Ken- name?” the peeling. This will tw Sa > i then you would have to . x *& & make it out .to ag otherwise it When the job is over, wash should be written to Mary Smith,| your hands, dry them careful- ly and use a little scented Wilson Roback, Floyd Walker and Ralph Gardner. By MURIEL LAWRENCE The other day in my city’s Chil- dren's Court, the presiding judge called the case of an ll-year-old ing meter. However, when he asked the ac- as the culprit, the man admitted he couldn't do it. Then the judge, boy charged with smashing a park-| reminding the youngster that he was on oath, asked him, “Did you smash this parking meter, son?” “No,” said the bey. “What “They bunched up. together at > 2 to 5 —_ Elliott's Give Your Home Luxurious Charm Your home can have a wonderful look of luxury ( by having your upholstered pieces recovered by | Elliott’s master craftsmen. Choose the newest (7 nylon patterns, or any fine fabric from the largest |; selection of materials in Oakland County.:-Visit Elliott’s modern showrooms or call for a repre- sentative to call at your home. Open Evenings by Appointment! 5390-5400 Dixie Hwy. Waterford OR 3-1225 . | | just can’t assemble convincing evi- q |ing T'd busted busted the meter.” and one that parents could prof- Give Child Benefit of Reasonable Doubt the curb, I heard glass breaking— and then that cop’s squad car turned the corner. Next thing I knew, the big kids had run down the alley—and everybody was yell- * * * To this claim of innocence, in- vestigators. added reports of good behavior at home and school. Dis- missing the case for lack of evi- dence, the judge tu to me and said, “It is my policy to give chil- dren the benefit of any reasonable doubt of their guilt. This right is granted to adults—and I try to see that children get it, too.” EXCELLENT POLICY It's an excellent policy, I think— itably adopt. : ~*~ * * Like the Children’s Court, we are sometimes unable to prove a child's. guilt of some misdeed. We actions, dence that our lost thimble was taken by Ellen or the hall closet light left burning all night by Bill. |’ We have no facts with which to challenge their denials of these Under these circumstances, the wise thing to do is dismiss the case—and do it as the judge did, clearly, definitely and decisively. Sometimes, unlike him, we re- fuse Ellen or Bill the benefit of the “reasonable doubt’'—and_keep on nagging at them.with hints that} ; we think they did take our thimble and forget to turn out the hall closet light. This suspiciousness is not caicu- lated to get us truthfulness, even if we have been told a lie. I wish you could have seen the face of the boy whose innocence had been deemed reasonable by; the judge. First, relief flooded it. Then gratitude filled it. Then he began to cry. — a. “the sheath dress for winter” the smug, figure-revealing style that does so much for the slender, feminine figure » prepare your figure’ for this style at once... with Relax-A-Tron ... the wonder slenderizer. {t re- laxes as it slenderizes. No drugs or tiring exercises. Ss ee | Sri | ‘ f) mY iba A t i. if. . ¥ ‘ij lec, . Here’s a delightfully young jumper-blouse combination that is regenera Just four pattern pieces: . to make the simple jumper. No. 8136 with Patt-O-Rama is in 8136 10.20 || |sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 12, 1 |32 bust, jumper, 4% yards of 35- | |inch;” biouse, 1% yards. For this pattern, send 35c .in I coins, your name, address, size : desired and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Pontiac Press, ']\372 W. Quincy St., Chicago 6, I), The Fall & Winter ’57 edition of ‘| )our pattern book, Basic Fashion, is filled with smart, new styles I jfor all sizes; special ‘features. It's ){{colorful, stimulating and so useful ZOmaI >I x>rms Wednesday Night Is FAMILY NIGHT Howard Johnson’ s 3650 as aie Drayton Plaine 1 ; oes i i Le ' eels 3 Ke i Bey i Ete a es phe ‘ Ean : 2 = Se f se A a ae a tt i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1957, |. FIFTEEN — - ” 7 ie ; . 7 _— i ce om : os es | side Bios fra eee NN ek ope ‘ney tow [Don't Expect Appreciation ent -Happiness Worman and'For, All: the Work You Do. 4$eU A AOAV IY AWW | Ernest Lowell; oe ae ee er ee Good were | Get Happiness From “the Knowledge © you realize that the|would be much ‘less self-conscious. ited i That You're. Handling Job Wel | ‘el Vicex’ st. gation yong: ef united in a ng b Well escent oon aeemas fhe Ute of thy party or wae Nisa teal Za . By RUTH MILLETT: , . Sanath corte aoe Saturday in | “~¢ doesn’t appreciate how hard I work,” wives are It is really ppd seatioss be she : : Oakland ere sritin me about Soar testes. aca sopra og Folks often are | _Maybe it’s e somebody came right out and said, while’ aad. teow, $l contol then tay tee oat Avenue «took, ladies, nobody ever 3 this. of shyness, This is especi- United Fh sannta how hard#. a tele fen the ee ee Presbyterian |another person works.” JUST ARRIVED that Giese we meet | i you would like to have my Church. Mrs, cept that fact there would be fewer imported Direct! _ oe leaflet “‘How to ' Lone- June E. making themselves unhappy. por Y —- a stamped, self-addressed envelope - Wortman is _— a Pat So apd |with your request for leaflet No. the Bride's receive, But the only sure way emmneives appene 59 to Josephine Lowman in care of oo hms haves Sak yee } . The Pontiac Press. : mother, have to do is te get pleasure ‘out thed shyne | In other words, if we would take| Tamorrow: “First Aid for Gir-| | |e Another trick has its humorous‘ourselves much less seriously we'vles, Puffs, Lines about Eyes.” and If your whole pleasure in a job) — “Revel” = No. 551, Reinforced side Formfs Bras is these 2. handy pick-up } nae ns me oe Se Wey | atu Ga Redes GED WSS? THE -PONTY AC PRESS, TUESDAY, Ss PTEMBER 17, 1957 THREE Cf LORS. AN TI- MAGNE Tic Fi mul jg STAINLESS STEEL ELECTRIC REFLECTOR LIFETIME ELECTRIC 'DO-ALL’ PUMP] 50 WATT HEATER and THERMOSTAT _ UNDERWATER FILTER #"ci'hsseroux 5 FOOT of PLASTIC TUBING THERMOMETER NET © 24;:: BOOK ~ eri (OAL Lid Ul) UV MA. C now iv (, ; Fish Ht an | ily LUA ITLAST-N Neritl S'NO Muss! LEAK PROOF RUST PROOF | Nae Oo ENGINFERED {foro ETIME of f Pl EA i=» . i Cy — ' eo * = + i “ * ; a ¢ * Li * “ * . a 4 * * e} - \ HEAVY D Ta , CRYSTAL CLEAR . ” LEAK-PROOF.. 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Mariy ett with genuine diamonds. \ * NO MONEY DOWN 50c WEEKLY SPECIAL at SHAWS = STAINLESS STEEL. SERVICE FOR 6 Scendinevian Detign — Reg. 5.95 | Solid extra less steel, , Stays bright withaek geet ry ings sat = fied ARCO | . e Ay . Org EN ed } # { : te ioe sulin, | f fi 5 5 ot 5 oll is z hear ae : Se ee oy a ry ae a, 4. TH. HE PON TIAC PRESS’. ‘< “PONTIAC, MICH IGAN . hay ee i a Cy ¢ _ MAN TO MAN—Keeping things moving in the ° recent 3%h annual Hip Sing Chinese Merchants Convention Parade, at Washington, D.C., _hckien M. J. Culltane pays some attention to Allen Weaver, about something. Little Allan's daddy, serving with the an ma is Stationed in Japan. ‘ithe children. Approximately 50 families are | a Policy on Buses | bh Waterford Board Told) Children Must Walk on Dangerous Rodds Parents in 11 different school areas in Waterford Township - are circulating petitions protesting against the current school bus lserviee—for—their—ehildren,—it—was+ reported last night. Te 5 aes was present at last night’s Water- thing about -walking —_. for keeping ,their children from school until a solution can be reached for student safety in getting to and from school, Blair says. Ralph Blair, representing the|’ William Beaumont School area,| 4 7+ Southfield Township residents went to the polls yesterday and voted, in two separate elections, to break p= Vitae 7 Flections Held to Decide Issue Charter Commissions — Were Chosen for Both New Communities SOUTHFIELD - TOWNSHIP He pointed out that children are visor Eugene Swem led by a nar- compelled to walk on narrow South ‘em |fow margin over Donald L. Swan- Hospital road, as there are prac- , , . json, 1,978 to 1,964. The seven tically no shoulders on either side} FOOD FOR THOUGHT—Thést king-sized “hot ‘ AP Wirephete /others oa the commission are , & * dogs” are giving pooch something to think about modern ship ‘hulls for spage-saving at sea, |"0™maS M. Costello, Philip A. Blair said, “‘It is not so bad now,| in the U.S. Steel Corp. plant at McKeesport, Pa., Actually, they contain highly-compressed oxygen, |M@loney, Patrick G. Flannery, but when it snows and the plows) where, the frankfurter-shaped cylinders. were of vital importance in long undersea cruises of and ioe mie on Ga ) S, built. The es Ol ubmarines ee - Hugh vid aii Sedines > > > bi et > WATERFORD Corner WILLIAMS LAKE and AIRPORT ROADS Phone OR 3-2683 A A de A te IT'S WAYNE'S (0 WOTTEST HIT! “Officers Turning to Past + for Clue in Strangling| ‘he body was found in a tiny of One-Time Star ~ _| Malovien TD. Whale,’ tate de - a Sy nes respeees totny partment of public instruction of- e- yg [After a long weekend holiday. ficial, said he the move SS —__ oa ment Would spread ur Sar ean Toncbod Red Chinese Admitting WITH THE / TEM-T AUTOMATIC TOP Bk or 12343 Sere, as" Topcoats, Dresses - plain, Suits... .. | lack of confidence” in the legis- lative group, headed by Rep. io. near his car yesterday and, | Retle G. Conlin (R-Tipton). heard strange noises when he | McCurry observed that Conlin kicked it. He stopped looking when |’ had named five officials of MMA/he found inside the handless face | member companies to the Citizens’ /ang works of an alarm clock, two ‘Coyle, 32, saw a strange looking , “1- HOUR" sua | SRACH: 1; 131 : SEW AVE. He valled police. But a Ft. Knox detonation ex-) pert, after investigation, said it, takes more than putty, soot, wires, and an old alarm clock to cause, an explosion. ” ; said there wag. tittle |doubt that ithe state’s tax struc- ture needed rewriting, and that — action is “imperative.” SUN NY BROOK Kentucky Blended Whiskey byte cof FREDERIC REMINGTON fee the Nigh Leader” t 6 ee ae The great whiskey of the Old West -is winning new friends everywhere! The smoothest of fine Kentucky whiskies has the taste, the mildness, the quality that will win you too! The brave men who conquered the West were choosy about whiskey~and many of them! chose Sunny Brook. Wise whiskey drinkers ‘today still demand Sunny Brook's fine Kentucky character. Jay) _' i v4 16-PIECE BAKING SET WILL BE GIVEN FREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF A “MATCHLESS” AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE DURING THIS SALE [ THIS SPECIAL ROPER GAS RANGE IS PACKED WITH FEATURES | © “Tem-Trol” Automatic Top Burner @ “Insta-lite’ Automatic Light- ing @ Divided Cooking Top @ 4-Hour Electric Timer Alorm-Time Clock © Large “Bake-Master” Oven @ Automatic Oven Heat Control And You Get FREE INSTALLATION Too! . me-8782-91 THE OLD SUNKY BROOK COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY, DISTRIBUTED Gy WATIONAL OISTILLERS PRODUCTS COMPANY «6 PROOF © OSs, GUAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS \ é t ' oe ‘4 OU hed ey \ “4 i ‘s sith Bill Kelly, ever-optimistic - gan College Chippewas, .saw his 1957 grid bubble burst -in a hurry last Saturday night in Saginaw. . ‘The Chips lost to Bradley, 14-7, and ended a winning streak which started 15 games when Central still had the nickname of “Podoley U. Most everyone, especia | * thought this team would win its victories in a cake walk. . In fact the game with Hillsdale in two weeks .was fig- ured to be the battle between two unbeaten little giants. x &, . The vaunted Chip running attack headed by Pontiac’s Walt Beach gained most of of _the rear. ' Phil. Officer, another Pontiac player, saw a couple minutes of action and wen “What happened to your asked Kelly after the game. here I think,” he answered. DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX Michigan’s sportswriting clan was eineies at Ann Arbor today to hear coach Benny Oosterbaan present his 1957 outlook .. , next Tuesday it will Duffy's turn in a ‘coach of the Central Michi- t ry lly around Mt. Pleasant, be better balanced, would its is yardage ae and to t out with an injured leg. best of the trio of ex-Chiefs, running attack?” someone “It ran out of = getting Sil Ravi. qot Sato tha gems at follheck tp the Sine! Alabama Nine - quarter and actually did the but the cause was already lost. Pontiac Press Photo POTSY’S KIN — Relation to Potsy Clark, former Detroit Lions’ coach is Stuart Clark, now a member of the Cranbrook football squad. Young Clark transferred from Champaign, Ill., to the school where his. uncle, Potsy, onee—trained—the Lions. He is a senior halfback. Wins 2 Tilts, — National Title BATTLE CREEK i — Birming- ham, Ala., posted a pair of up- hill victories yesterday in winning the national championship of the American Amateur Baseball. Con- gress, It edged Knoxville, Tenn., 54, and defeated Aberdeen, S.D. 31, _ total. The Braves as a team hit was undefeated in : National Loow’s s| Leaders Boost [Edge to 3 Tilts Rattle 14 Hits in 5-1 Win Over. Phils; Buhl Winning Hurler MILWAUKEE #—Base hits and Bob Buhl returned to the Milwau- kee Braves’ fold last night in time to silence, for the time being at least, talk of another September foldup, The National League leaders pumped out 14 hits—one less than in their previous three games, losses—in sinking the Philadelphia Phillies 5-1. } xr” * The eihy Weswed Deb eciced his first victory since Aug. 14 after one false start following a three- week bout with a sore pitching shoulder. all! and quarterbacks lineup to call CREW OF FIELD GENERALS— A trio of Pontiac High centers the signals for Friday's game against Wyandotte in Wisner Stadium. Left to right. are sopho- more center Jerry Rush and junior — Bill Davis; junior center Duke Relyea and senior ten Dick Whitmer; senior center Carl Holstein and junior quarterback Harrison Munson. Relyea and Whitmer may get the starting nod for the opener. The victory added a half-game | to the Braves’ lead over the. sec- ond plaice St. Louis Cards, who were idle. Their edge is three Ovenes at Wisner Friday Night games, * * * Manager Fred Haney refused to read anything-into the base hit 368 last night compared with a Dots Shrug at'56 PHS Win meeting with the scribes at East Lansing . . . Incident-|the four-team round robin national|team average of .215 during their in that setback are now seniors on as bad as the score indicated. previous 11 games, in which they By BRUNO L. KEARNS ally, both Oosterbaan and Daugherty will be guest writ-| finals. ers for the Press football special ening ot this Thurs- day. x *« * Pontiac High is planning a homecoming celebra- tion with float parade for the Saginaw game October 18... Alums are invited to get together with their -}gan team the eastern division title Knoxville finished the eastern play- S * -* * , Wyandotte, Mich., was runner-up with a 14-7 triumph over Knox- ville. The victory gave the Michi- in the tournament. Wyandotte and ent,” he said, won three times. * * * “The two big factors for us were, of course, the hits which have been practically non-exist- “and the return of Buhl. He gives us another starting pitcher when we need one the Sports Editor, Pontiac >ress “We won't fumble away the game like we did last year.”’ That) was the comment Coach Dick Hoft-| looked back on the 39-7: score at the hands of Pontiac in his own iback yard a year ago. Most of the names which figured “heins of Wyandotte made when he, the Wyandotte eleven and are bit- terly looking forward to avenging that humiliating defeat. | The Bears were not actually They proved this by going on to finish with a 6-3 season mark including victories over Lincoln Park, Highland Park, Monroe and Royal Oak, a conquerer of Pontiac. “We fumbled eight times in that | game, losing the ball five times, }every one of which led to a Pon- © off last week in a tie and had ‘ ” ~ former classmates at the game... Season tickets for agreed last night's final round|"™ . | cond lgpecrangelal an ~ Pontiac’s five home games can still be purchased at |£#™e. would determine the division period,” he added. the high school, and individual game ducats are now. championship. “With the exception of Warren i ua heen -|Two of the leading linemen in i ibeal-Cancl ieee — 5 = Return D good. Sure, we weren't getting the| 3 ihe Border Cities conformer. Steve ; hits, but t : i - z t nd cker * * * ugges e urn ate too. Buhl. pra inp, Pike ¥ Hoeft Faces Yanks Today Joe Carlo « 215-pound" tackle, - Cranbrook football coach Fred Campbell is hoping the '. Fecent stay of the Detroit Lions will bear some fruit a few years from now. The last visit of the Lions about 20 years ago did. George “Potsy” Clark who was then coach, was quite impressed with Cranbrook. “This is where I probably will clash again Oct. 28. for Cotton and Hart | Haney laughed off a suggestion that what he described as ‘‘a wee, bit of a pep talk’ before the NEW YORK ®—One good thril]-|84me might have helped. er deserves another so sharpshoot- ing Sugar Hart of Philadelphia “Tt wasn't what I said, it's what they did,’ he said. * * * NEW YORK — The Detroit Tigers today have the same won- lost record they had a year ago Tigers Set Sights on 31d nant, they might rest their reg- ulars in the Boston games and that would impair our chances,” are back to bolster the veteran # | Dot line. Quarterback Gerry Nebie, who engineered the lene touchdown on a pass play last year, has another year’s experience to go with his veteran backfield which At least that was the dat Both Haney and Buhl agreed includes two s halfbacks, would like to send my boy,” he said after a stay of the return suggested son sre foe that Del Rice, 34, former Redbird,| this date but they have a better-| pointed out Detroit manager dack John Winn ES Lay “at ‘several years, matchmaker Teddy Brenner after| “led the Braves out of the wilder- —— cae Gee kare — a big fullback, Dan Galeski. Hart and Cotton fought to an ac-|€ss-” 8 places “But right now, we are in a good : It now seems that Potsy’s nephew, Stuart Clark is|tion- "d- 10round draw at St. te ot League standings. _ positiori to make up that one finish |S" _ ‘500 A tee escembegs lea boron ont a member of the Crane team. He is a senior transfer|Nicholas Arena . - The veteran catcher drove in} With a 75-68 won-lost mark on)we need and a third-place finish Boston, $31 M's the results sare cil bie frena oat Il,, * ~ * two of the Braves’ first three|Sept. 17 of last year, the Tigers would be great after our slow ‘Detroit = Coach Jette Moclsey expected. from Champaign, end Campbell is really high on Brenner, promoter as well as|Tuns with his eighth home run/were in fifth place where they: re-start,” he added. ‘Cleveland Seo 3s | ii oe the lad. 4 4 4,% matehmaker at St. Nicks, said he|and a double. " [mained until the end of the season.| ‘Tighe picked Billy Hoeft to start Kansas 'cuy <8 des ary) Guat Wille © mesa canner! rt ‘ork’ ; RESULTS a poke . Transfer rules will not permit him to play Friday _ ees 2 arbi og ar “7 ppl cel ay ‘teas esi — — oe. Bobb casage at, Washington, Postponed rain jtimes to block a pair of punts. ; night at Birmingham, but he will play in the remainder |;Padelphia we galvlrinest, Me Milwaukee Can [ap behind place ‘aly and the—play—of fullback Archie | of the schedule =_— other pre arato schools ray ssh, N. ae wee pesoes Red Sox “= qvernablog | TUESDAY'S GAMES ‘Brooks, end Mike Hardiman and p ry ‘ aterson, N.J. Peat va hasta Gib, pm. — Hoel George Palaian at tackle were the NEW YORK W—Now that kh Top 2 Million Again Tonight ent positions. He has become, per-jcatch it. But he gets to it just jor leagues since ‘they moved to Milwaukee from Boston in 1953, need 27,655 paid admissions in to- nights game with New York to go points in Detroit's favor. riding the crest of 12 victories in them at Briggs Stadium this year and trail by only one game, 5-4, as they open a two-game set against re act eters == [Ulane-Army Tilt =22 NEW ORLEANS (INS) — Army (1-8) vs. Btobbe (6-19). Lege 7 p.m.—Gereis outstanding points. The defensive backfield made shuffle the unit on defense. Transfer Bob Manning. displayed the speed which won him the De- Yanks Back Kubek for Rookie Title 2322S) Moedit Gee Sees New York Yankees privately haps, the handiest Yank of them|like DiMag.” the first-place Bombers here today. ilu: ker’ Won Lost Pet. Behind /troit“dash title in track } ~ : over the two million mark for the é Secretary Wilbur M. Brucker’s an- — e in track last spring figure they have the Américan/all, and his .294 batting average! The only infield spot Kubek has|fourth straight season. In a aneer a oe eS have neuncament that the Tulane-Army|s. "Lous. a 3 when he scooted 45 yards for a League pennant safely ‘tucked doesn’t tend to belittle him, either.! not played is first base. He hasn't + + + several games with the tanks w football game would be transferred |ememnati vise HB 3g «touchdown, but did not flash..the away, OO cae ee their at- xk * * played right field simply because! 1, they dent en i aid to clinch the pen- ae’ Oren Wak Pam re etph wR B 4 a form of peg oy blockers as was tentions ae In addition to his versatility—a|the situation where he would be total tonight, they are sure to do} On the debit side, however, is ihe fell became Of Lense’ cn em etted * « « One of the most ‘important is' the race for the AL rookie of the year. Their man, of course, is prerequisite to stay in Stengel’s favor—Kubek can: - 1. Hit to all fields. needed there has not come up. * * ® “I wouldn't worry about putting so tomorrow night when Giants also will provide the oppo- sition. the the possibility of New York wrap- ping up the race sooner than ex- pected. segregation laws drew the wrath today of Rep. F. Edward Hebert MONDAY'’S. RESULTS Cincinnati 3, Brooklyn 2, 10 innwgs, night {Only games scheduled Little Jim Kellar, a 145-pounder, and junior Larry Douglas alter- nated at right half and were im- ; 2. Bunt. him first,”’ : * * - ee =, York linches pen- (D-La.). 7 ig Tony Kubek, 20,’ infielder-outfield-| 3. Run. gel. “T think areas rs og amtina last night's turnout of ——- “ Hebert said he was “shocked” epg Sgr oe prsentve,: fot lacking potiat: 7 er, jack-of-all-trades. To a man,| 4. Throw. job.”” 20,929 for their game with the ‘by Brucker’s telegram to him ford (17-2) vs Drabowsny. a 14). A surprising job was turned in they'll be mighty disappointed if Kubek doesn’t get the award. “You might say his long-range|heed. The professor simply looks! much power, Big and strong He claints his best position is. shortstop, but Stengel pays no As for his hitting, his one draw- back is that he has not shown} Phillis, the Braves have drawn tener Gets Hopeful 972,345 paid admissions for 65 tome dates. in 1954, when they © Report on Sore Arm | " prospects for continual employ- over his lineup each day, decides | though he is, Tony has hit three |g record ssociation vancement son (14-8). _—Priene| *#te in the scrimmage. —— ment around here appear to me ‘who is crippled at the moment ‘home runs. y 5 131. bie cuea ora ad pee WASHINGTON (#—A doctor. has - Colored Pergo - Pursdargn fe aoe a ome The Wyandott | at present to be highly favorable,” and inserts “Kubek. +’ - yy, Grew ene’\told Bob Lemon his pitching arm) ° ~ see bee be Manager Casey Stengel said to-| a |through 65 dates. ‘| should be okay by spring, and that: Tulane officials, disappointed that pyneceitZONPAPAY'® GAMES [come a traditional opener for Pon- day, emphasizing his perfect . * * * Stengel even has an explana- — —— ihe should be able to_pitch base-| the game would not be played at Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 8 p.m, itiac” since 1952. The Chiets hav e grammar with a wink The kid starts after the ball|tion for that. | Park ‘ball for four or five more years./Tulane Stadium, issued a state-/Bfooxyn ac st Lous, 8 = |won four of five in the series, and ; ° ilike Joe DiMaggio used to,” said| “He's just learning to pull the Heat at Hazel Par | Han Greenberg, general man-|ment similar to Brucker’s telegram . all were high scoring affairs. = * * * Stengel in admiration, “He starts|ball,”’ pointed out the Bomber | Hazel Park ‘Weinens Raceway of- » Se to Hebert. Game time at Wisner Stadium ~ Young Kubek, in the past five|when the ball is his and some-|pilot. ‘He'll hit a lot more honi- ficials are taking steps to insure the comfort of their racing fans ‘ games, has started in four differ- times you think he’s not going tojers next year. 4 during the remainder of the cur- rent season by installing special heaters to warm the main area of the grand stand. Racing continues at the park through Oct. 5. ~ ager of the Cleveland Indians, said he got that report in a phone call Beach, Calif. The veteran right- hander, who will be 37 next Sun- ee ee elbow. yesterday and accused the army of “becoming part of the vicious propaganda drive of the National Brucker said the change has to Lemon at his home in Long|been agreed upon by both schools “after further study of Louisiana’s segregation laws showed that seg- day, went home last month afterjregated seating arrangements would have to be observed by West Point.” ° New York at Milwaukee, 8 tg ¥s. Conley (6-9) “a Trowsetdge| ) |Brooki “at st, 8 p.m.—MeDevitt | >) ve. Le MeDentel a+) | or Jack- Woman Hits 300 on Grand Rapids Alley GRAND. RAPIDS — Mrs. Laverne E. (Marge) Dévieon held DALLAS t# — Sam Snead, who says he wants to win a tourna- ment a year until he’s 50 then re- tire, took the one for 1957 yester- day with the widest margin any- where since :1955—10 strokes in the $40,000 Dallas Open. x . * And the colorful old slammer ~; lalso said he was going ‘to win the _- {National Open—the only tourna- ment that has eluded him in his [21 years of campaigning—before he’s 50. Admitting to 45 yesterday after he had wound up with a three- under-par 68 for a 264 total over '|72 holes and had grabbed the $8,000 first money, Snead said he figured he still had enough good golf to finally snare the National Open. “Putting like I have in this tournament I could win it every '/time,” he said. Snead was winning his 96th tournament according to the PGA record book when he took the! “I have won over a hundred each winning $3,066.67. They were (the Fan Majors team. “The Billy Maxwell of Odessa, Tex. + as the second game of a series tournaments, he disputed. a Grand Rapids sports record to- day as the city’s first woman to Ol Sammy Grabs Dallas Title, $8,000 ===" | while competing as a member of| PGA. isn’t counting a flock of who'had a closing 66; Cary Mid:/in which also scored 159 and 174 tournaments I have won over the! years.” * * * Anyway, Snead is the greatest tournament winner in golf history. But he won't be trying for any| more this year although there are two tournaments still ahead for'| the tour. Snead is going to Japan) with Jimmie Demaret to play in} the international matches in Oc- tober. Snead went into fourth place among the money-winners. He has participated in .12 of the 32 tour- naments this year and has earned $28,260.83, * * * Sneads victory by 10 strokes was the longest lead of the year— the best previous was Ken Ven- turis five-stroke triumph at Mil- waukee. The widest margin of ‘THE WINNERS ALL SMILE—No wonder three Milwaukee Brave players smiled ’ fended off bats poked at them In breaking a losing streak with a 5-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies, the Braves broke last night—and by teammates. got two, and Bob was the winning out of a ‘patting slump with 14 hits. Johnny Logan, left, got three hits; Ed Matthews, center, 5 AP. Wieephete Buhl left nine _ on base and isn't counted in the PGA stand- pitcher. " ings. ¢ } \ ‘ | Dallas Open with a couple of} world record ties on the way. He|13 strokes Gene Littlet won by at previously had | Las Vegas in 1955, Robin at Wykagyl, N. Y., but this won the Round which the PGA has a record is the pack into a tie for second place, “ * * Three fellows charged out of the| dent at \goals. Tom Pares of Spain, study- dlecoff of Hollywood, Fla., who: ‘had a 69, and Bob Inman of De- troit, wound up at 274. who had a 67, All three. \for a 633 total. Mrs, Davison, mother of four children, the past 20 years. \Cranes Lose Exhibition Foreign Booters Win, 5-3 Cranbrook’s soccer team took an interhational setback Sunday after- noon whén a squad of foreign stu- dents attending area high schools whipped the Cranes 5-3 in an ex- hibition before an interested crowd. crowd. The Cranes, who open the sea- son Friday in Sarnia, Canada, got all of their scoring from captain John Studebacker, but it was a trio of foreign lads put on a classy exhibition of who Pete Jensen of Denmark, a. stu- Milford, scored three ing at Wyandotte Roosevelt. got one and Redford student Pelite other. “They are tremendous soccer players,” said Crane coach Ben Snyder, “and they did well con- sidering they had never played together.” Attempting to stimulate soccer activity in the area and to give foreign students a chance’ to play their national pastime, Snyder said the game would become an an- nual affair, Eleven foregin students played in the game. It came) has been bowling for Mayer from Portugal got the by quarterback Harrison Mun- son, 160-pound junior who re- placed the ailing Dick Whitmer Friday night is 8 o'clock. Advance game tickets are on sale at the school. Japanese Head for Global Title Turn UL S. 9s Mistakes Into Victory in Last Night's Contest | DETROIT (” — Before the other teams in thé Global World Series ' The United States team did last night what two other teams have done previously, make mistakes. And just as they have done in two previous contests, the Jap- anése turned the mistake into Or saad + This time the score was +2: bs it was the third straight one-run victory for Japan and left the con- ed with eight nations competing. Four are left. Mexico and Hawail joined Colombia and Holland on the sidelines in the double-elimina- tion affair. : * nk « & Mexico suffered its second loss, \3-2 \to Venezuela, and Hawaii bowed 11-6 to ofce-beaten Canada. oe oan SS = t “is a? dee te Hoty ¥ os i v yf f ys ms vrt= rent te i ~~ i i i — ie v'¥ oe wl : erry nah wr Fo oll its si its ¢ % | tonight behind the no-hit pitching/in another three-set stunner, “5-1, | noldover regulars $8.15 glass packed MOTOR MART AUTO PARTS a FE rou fectly, beget tone see ee. “iy # ei é. . ~~ a = = be by eee tT <<. 2 Noe | WITH THE SELF. ee SUS ANCHORING ee | . Allenuts set up flush with only one internal socket : : . ||. Wrench. Less space and weight, easier starting, handi eee §=6PIKES PEAK CLIMB SHOWS WHY YOUR CHEVY ep egy a , mile after mile! , | one the many Savana you gt by replacing standard WILL KEEP ON GOING...KEEP ON SAVING! pag ol with p Allenuts, Write for Reo - Saige panera the Leber gto It takes a totally rugged truck to Starting low on the mountain, a pro- Every truck part took the worst the 0 grades showed Ow ? ’ . ‘ 2 : rugged the Chevrolet frame, springs, trans- climb Pikes Peak to the top with- ‘duction Chevrolet pickup with 4-wheel Canc =e to. offer. 5 ne pare d mission and rear axle really are. he road. Yet that's what ‘tive bulled its way upward through hevrolet Thriftmaster 6 gave" flawless out using ¢ Ve 8 f + performance despite thin air. The evergreen forests, over logs and stumps, h ae ee ol ioe ten a Chevrolet pickup did... kept to high, rocky terraia above timbediine chassis withstood miles of jarring ; isimacta eiades aid » FOCKY re eunoerin’. pacts. 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Redlegs Rice Braves, — {satile player on the Lions squad. ea . ee oe _ Petar 3, Tulse Ba ogee series 42/3; Chicago 3. : * tou — .2, Houston wing) Bovaive ():; Away (5)—at Philadel. |i. eee ci ae Sede Pens rae eae eer ey ee ae y tenes i i i‘ | bd Ses a on ee : 3 qi bee ~ ; aah ears ; : ee Oe tice Pl EM kt ae ¥ + : hid i : D sar OA vena ge, # Sat “ pee pays lk lah ik iD AM 4 if ’ epee sed oc al | i acieated geet Aa te Sh ; ch i Petr. vt ors ices ¥ a ae o ot ge "te Fiat A sc tA a pct ic ics Nii iii oe f ia pos Pw " 3 as bekiey Hie f . ; a 2 \eeo fi as j j é Oe rete eh Ss ae Sopel : -: i ’ H : Ben ty Salty Sees | el ag j i i a es sn fee Ga) af y - = —t + I eT, sas WHA CU Me on REE é ee Pai ie. ; . ‘ j efi. E: ' 4 ; i \: = aay nat ath Be a3 | = | a Pes \4 2 ap pa besieging lia eee Pe eas ad = : 2 oe i! - 4 \ ‘. 5 ‘ j eee) ; Pak : | Ls. hae PONTIAC. PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1957 °° jo TWENTY-THREE ( 3 t ‘ T t . ; : ; ~~ . i . a i 4 5 is : : F \ gj * * ‘ fi 7 } 4 & : - Mester’ rors TENARATONAL LEAGUE = ange es att poy of sry Deine ns : _ INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ~ = : 0 (13). Away plays ensive a tackle, ‘ Outtnle 12, 4, Buffalo wins se- Milwaukee von on spied | ees Baltimore et Masviiena fensive tackle and — ‘and pias, "Torente «, Miami lesds series,|Brookiyn "°° '. go 65 S52 7 “1; Cleveland'a” © 2” PH handles Kickolf ‘and o* 32 : Milwaukee (11): Aw EeMSU Player Among 4 Signed by Steeler Club | Buddy Also Gets Carl|'™ ‘ at St. Louis Home (4)—~Phila- Nashville 2, Memphis 0, Nashville wins Teton : é Aulanta vs. ot postponed rain, ee nes an LEAGUE" New York ..... hae ie Chicago... 84ST 5068 MOB New York’ (is): Away (3)—et Boston 3. at . The Business Institute Is APPROVED For the Training of wih docu meals zl sss cas tmp tis] toe wncasy oxen ee) OFean Veterans . Courses are offered in Executive Secretarial, Business e Administration, Higher Accounting, Junior Accounting, _ J ae ig, Typewriting, Comptometer, i | _ : Three seasons ago, 270-pouna| {ot & rap with the first string] Take advantage of Public Law 550 to improve your education | ROCK WOOL CASH a Maurice Bassett was the prize ' ° briefly for a while last season. He and to prepare for advancement. 1 30-Ib. BAG Cc CARRY | a4 ; Speedwriting, Calculator, and many other subjects. We Also Have a Complete Stock of | \, Bassett, 26, detent ion of a| mt : four letter men competing at the . Day, Half Day, and Evening Sessions 8 ce store of players cut from NFL ! ! hh mh, belkin bet oben ns : ; . @ BALSAM WOOL = GLASS WOOL as" clubs. sought to Teach] fat team. 7 ; hurt this fall because Don|] : jo. |} @ROCK WOOL =e ALUMINUM FOIL he Sap ai eh rede wand | The Business Institute fe — fee ke : ae ion 7 West Lawrence St., Pontiac Phone: FE: 2-3551 Combination Door {icim= Storm Seshes | Bassett, \who replaced : Curley Zysk also was a two-time letter! woe Me Morrison’ at fullback for the — DP xpesoncdisoranstcoonvacronelentenencnaces ee DONALDSON LUMBER rowns, W; rebuilding , . | Cleveland along. with twp Tooke, ee tk noua guamronees tea at MSU. ‘oF the fall season) Michigan State sophomore guard vat a School or Retu pps Informati 3 _ | > Ns may A Russ Kelly, is the father of @ School or Return lormation " leading trader as new coach fon |bave speeded up Van Pelt’s recov-! 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Ai Tf,¥ Py Jogi MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP Sees. slo | Anti Freeze now! : ‘BE SURE |||WITHPURE LNaL ie iy peer Sh sae 4 | Oe f Se ge A be p cles tac 8 rset , ha ad 3 oat: | Ee | ae & obey a et ! j oe : i ~ : = ~ = —— 4 5 eae Raa we we ee | Pe NHR PONTIAC PRESS, “TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1957 WES SY ae ANE Es She ec — T T “ge y aes 2 . ’ Pet : , ’ ” — } Pr, 2 | vs ee + ee | i | THE J CK So? TWINS ° [ , es > ees Re ee a Fang Ayn yr o@ FOHOS [ow 2gour THe @ pivoting bar that; . pqtmgt ad ALLEY OOP OH, BUT I'VE COME — One of the! ”, 4 gorse, \ 50. BUN WOU in Des Moines was addressed to a WE'VE CLOSED ee : dog. And the Western Union girl THE iE LABORATORY who did the warbling says she felt} | FOR "THE DAY! 4 BOARDING HOUSE. VIM, NTS ETAT IRD HAS THE V/ EGAD, MARTHAIGLADSTONE'S Yf API 1 A FEATHERS SEEM SHABBY / TITE OF DER )) Latety/—Ler's ope. ( HE GUMS UP EVERy- /// tage" ates OA x A THING HE CAN REACH fae *TANGERINES AND NUTS —~ /7 faa iNoatra mre Pao ee Bee tiric\ IS HORSEHAIR SOFA 9.17 & : ‘SKIT L'M WRITING FOR. . 7 anil 3 : A cag! Ree SPOT cae NANCY °° ‘ . By Ernie Bushmiller — ‘ ote Ey: ty . y VMLLLLLLLLLLL LLL — a: HM---I USED TO THE COST Ne . ' pe I'LL GIVE you A | parr GET A CRACKER LIVING al GONI | CRACKER IF You.”| |F || FOR yusT up FOR ME, Too ONE —o zane Oo BARK TWICE — U a maT, _— y Y/Y 4 > / A if 4 yA - Ti By Edgar Martin — TEvER: . pepsin ™ WON'T BE Over THE. | EASIEST OF MORTY MEEKLE BRUTUS/ | \ fr AND . fo i? . . FIT} Ig 1987 by WEA Service, ine. T.M. Reg, U.S. Pat. OM. aS all Pea eaING . RIGHT NOW../ MONEY... THE GIRIS by Franklin Folger 4 [nd : ZA <. | ; ; ‘ ob ol gt 5 ‘ 8 cae | : sts iy cy eae ee | t A : AAs . * ds aS - t : _- WHE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTHMBER 17,1957 = ta e S ; fee “eP = | : ‘ eae vee . cog oe » ae cack. ; : s 4 : as ENTY-FIVE j " : Theoretically, it is possible for Car Inventory Above | tne’ sun to be hidden, for.as long Ss. ny __|as seven minutes 40 seconds tha: -|Month and Year Ago! sit ecinse. 1: must occur whea- : }the sun is farthest from the earth: DETROIT — Dealer new cat)and when the moon is closest to inventories on Sept. 1 amounted to} the earth. ees - 728,595 units, Automotive News re- : ; - lports. The total compares with 704,-|~ —, 745 cars on hand Aug. 1, and with — held by retailers Sept. 1, ies af : : ——— Commenting on the. inventory ‘Isituation, the tradé paper said: ~ “Almost all of the new cars in inventory were 1957 models. However, there was a sprinkling of °S8s — Edsel, Rambler, Nash, Hudson and Studebaker.” - The paper adds that “indications are stocks will be cut down sharply this month as more makers go down for changeover operations.” says, “‘are holding relatively high, according to field reports, although dealers say they are selling in a no profit market and have had to resort to a certain amount of fore- Hing.’ — Se t 4,095 Buy Edsel Cars ‘lin Six Days of Sales 4 i : il af ef t if fi dase be 3 OU cee cesessines Ties, (erate) 13 Pibns casas 1% pon ne ge bask. oeeeee i Steel: i Elberta, bu. ,...-...-.-- 400/headed downward. Utilities were was ee gg yy Pea pcg bi ae 5 d. . z epaad but not eres Surtens. ‘erou. srevensenses 2B mixe Some radio - television ‘atermelons, Po ee shares scored modest gains ae 38 . Among opening blocks were Se OPO eee eee eee 00 se eenee aeeeeeeet : i elk iH Hl | | I $§ ri zl ai if Fa uf | F dsadeeeewoasegue> Be Ed 23 +e eee Cee ee doa, 4-6 eeeee I i efi f H i eees oe IB ncareeeens os $00 fencewenes 200 ! é | é = E . a se * * 3 A nF uy a B® i : i : A aa° if 2H Lit aiei Oh sre as #28 ig &s * 2 a S 1 unchanged. " . ‘ . . = : ay diese | . “EY! LET'S TALK THIS OVER” — It’s with a needle as big-as he is. The one-year-old |sales manager said yesterday. New York Stocks time for a shot and judging from his expression Chihuahua is owned by Clarence R. McNaughton ‘Sales averaged just over 682 a Tick doesn’t appear too about being “‘shot” of McKinley Heights, Ohio. day for the six selling days from (Late Morning Quotations) — meey : — ; ——|Sept. 4, when the Ford Motor 2 Attacks ‘Pirating’ From Competitors _ ar ome Mitchell Talks on Lack of Skilled Labor=""=" == NEW YORK (Secretary ofjcreasing need for skilled workers an increase, Mitchell said, and|_ LEGAL NOTICE | Csserill Thie fe | Labor James P. Mitchell said to-jin private industry. they must be able to handle spe- rad fara te be. ta: the —- This Is ne . iets: z day that if industry spent half the} the demand for skilled workers/Ci@lized and complex jobs. ’ a ingtield ‘Township 200. change in dividend - #1 {money on manpower managementinas been “‘out-running” the sup-| Mitchell said young persons|ing Board to consider changes in andi] nolicy, but has con- oes “ 2 : the seid fon- ’ oy have = Gers = ply in recent years, Mitchell ‘said. |have lately shown a lack of inter- ing) Ordinance 004 Map. ‘Tentative’ text tinued for the past 7 “ through Friday of any 4 : and machinists, tool m, and at the would be much less acute. preamp Mi Cogent pe feel, and topflight production|siert's ettice, ‘tas Broadway sireet, a ices grows in billion-dollar gulps,”|4ne workers. . _ |[Deviwere, BNE 2. VAN NATTA, , : declared > Between 1951 and last year, he cut tet. said, there was a drop of .28 per a es Commerce Industry Assn.| | cent in the number of skilled NOTICE OF PUBLIC rE” pe as Bae = "|. He criticized employers for pol-\ ratismen under 25 years of age. | ,votee \* DORs "the “White Lake _ Be Zoning | vein Brot (ee Stam cite raisins! Mark Anniversary He News in Brief cial grounds as age, — race, of 1B San atorium Thieves stole a heavy safe from) By 1965, Mitchell said, the gross 4|Matthews & Hargraves {national product must increase by | being of 211 S. Saginaw St.; last Thight,|40 per cpnt to 560 billion dollars. |.Drevisrs were entertained at alter ot . _ he said, will bel juncheon at the Oakland County feet “\the safe outside the- building and|needed to provide for a population Tuberculosis Sanatorium - Monday, the occasion being the thirtieth) 100.00 or were} Ten million additional workers! anniversary of the opening of the|3!*.1¢ | sanatorium. ; t CHICAGO GRAIX 4g CHICAGO, Sept, 17 (AP)—“Opening) Kale. ayenaperea spin Aas 3.90 ou Pee eee eeeee eee * os eee bi] rein: . Wheat (old) Bee ..cccce $008 Eaten ae? * SPR ee Fee er eee eee 2 80 eens a eesses cece Tt Perry eT aa) = ae ; a: :: : * . ae E E 5 2 z SS bs Babee <929 4 ese * ase - ede: etree ie a “9 EEE: BF ss8se?: SS ee ube el oew 2 i i i : : id EP . . . “~ ~~ > EF] SEES FS i i 3 BBES HE ase F 4 DEROIT EGGS . '.. DETROIF POULTRY B fi geiuser poultry up 18 a.m.: ! Ey | | = i 3 ® 3 r ¥ oe — rade 'B’ large Livestock : Grade} -. ef 3 8: FH FF =é i Ho a eeseee eeeceetae %. BE 3 s * > » ; i i iz s ; i] $ sf f , a # gfe z sesusse se ge at : E ; fel Ez i apt i ; : ey erg . : : : in E me 4 2 : Hf ; «@-. Ww. Huron, FE 4-0561 23 E z 3 a : | ? j ; = = f = wiTE Hie , an En i388 i bit th , RMS. : F Ei H 2 Ft - 2 a | S&S a : ie | * ; s ii i si2 iy = if . i sed stes Hoe Hie f : WISE INVESTMENTS CAN BE YOUR Best Friends Ao sapeen ey , et, pre e New York Stock Ex-' -- yours for - ng. It covers some -the center of in- vestment and is particu- larly helpful to people whoaren’t rs of stocks. Stop in, write, or phone for your copy. © ase eee g ; 3 : i : 2 * : asusreze ne 2. iF ir lk fy g2g222 ey a : J 5 it Fy f iy &, ! Lo : pst i ef ses a ‘t it 1! f t of : fF Injured in Crash School Opening {sive i wri rear es : ss ge |Mittee of the board of supervisors, ™ 8: Reg Pa Kennett Road Building |and Joe Haas, secretary of the gether with Sead Al RR .. 29. : a s1;sanatorium board of trustees. oe ‘Bears Roed ... 31 helicopter instructor _—= Navy| Cannot Be Used Until Weber, Haas and George. Scott, ("2 clerk and may be : eee os d sso ‘ash! Water Is Checked the three members of the sana- were teen power ereeere 7 bl * . ~ t i £2 * “ = EH $ i z j F 1 2 tag i z nee Corn Pd beg Wr .. Es 1 ts ‘The first session will be devoted 1°20; few lareely No. 1 19.75 No. ‘mainly to election Of a new As- 00-180 Toe 16-76-1800, mlked. gra sembly president to succeed Thai-|}¥'28 no's : and’s Prince Wan Waithayakon| and approval. of Malaya’s. admis-' = , f J i ie 4 s PEpeeery? torilum board, were presented with DON CAVIN, plaques by the board of super- CHARLES R, HARRIS, Students waiting to enter the — than [new Kennett road elementary See ee eee sept. 11 28 87 they] School will have to sit tight for sev- NOTICE OF HEARING ON PUBLIC landings at an|°T@! more days while tests of the improvements tm the Village of Wel- ‘jauxiliary field near Pensacola. |'er are made, according to Dr.| Tak notice that the Village Mari Otto Hufziger, assistant superin- omp efe ppr OaC verine Lake, Oakland County, Michigan Ist Lt. H. R. Seelye a Stanton, of $e . : following deserved. ree Improverents Mich., and Ensign A. H. Gamble!" 4 fo Mackinac Bridge |"sixtmtse"a"*tscite Sets x10 Lin. Feet. Bb. Veeenwwis We 22 g RBdEsyxx} reetaeal wee "ee Bes 3 Beey fe f / F Z sion as the U. N.’s 82nd member. | Both the United States and “nat Gaace-o/DINNGL SPArKS Bice oo gaa apse art Member Drive ‘4S-minute policy speech Thursday. Andrei Gremio.” Pontiog YMCA Goll! Diphenats. leshed. ts, ysie wl 200 Volunteers clarify its. position in the Soviet| by September 26 ie 4 g§ . * **. = ww 22 seeae babel 4 : - ad ~~” EEE ae — a sect: Bs-RS4S¥szecarssscs ~ 883 it F eke see 4 s i | 2? fe a: ar 3; - . e* ee . 339833392 : tiae School Superintendent The Special Assessment District to be a Rat P. Whitmer was scheduled) LANSING uw — Highway Com- BiG tenance of the following’ lots : Ws AT Li Re G = to meet with City Manager Wal-|missioner. John C. Mackie late yes-|Parcels of land: | y terday announced completion. of Park. Subaivision ‘iets Tor to "a. L E- Fe Cc Hi | a “i ously injured. ’ la speed-up plan for the series of|the south approach to the Mackinac specifications, cad estimates to be pie: re concerning * three tests which a 4g-|Straits Bridge, and expected com-|pa said improvement and of Mrs. Bernice|hour wait for. ao pletion of the north approach in|Cien' "ung "are” available for. publie Heh. Gamble is) sistsiger sald the main ety wa- |*° — * "Take further wotice thet the Vitlage . * * Council of the Village of Wolverine Lake line leading to the school Cambie, Templeton. | oun be Samed today and chlor. | Mackie said the new pavements) {emper si, “ist, at 8:80 pm, for the crash was not ' ae will not be opened to the public ela of nearing aay person affected The first test is to be taken Wtil traffic is admitted to the eS eee Village Cletk omorrow ibridge, on : ath Secretary of State’s - or near Nov. 1 Sept. 13, 17, ‘87 _ frun until Sept. 26. . : Laud Gas Dealer | tve oat is to tt 200 more fi Ollie 40 Shut Dov - lem'as ceos'ts teteed as eel ta ie tae es ie Liable school ta ty INSURANCE adult members to ‘the Y's totalj1s Crk Coal . 3 nists ce rdner Den L , ft structu on 28-Year Service [2% membership. stn’ aan' "Mt Me $84) tye Secretary of State's ote! gg pesip Eph woncgpebr nar) © a2 ® __ STOCK AVERAGES . in Pontiac will be closed from Hufziger explained that the sew-| $1,428,000. It will carry U.S. 23, Principal speaker was Probate) ,etea pac, Commled by the US. 27 and U.S. The Pure Oil Co. last night paid sociated Press): ni “ willis/*T, 294 water lines of the new| ©-5. 27 5S. 31. bute to its oldest dealer at the|Judge Arthur E. Moore, who said wet change ang Bale Thursday, branch manager $439,000 school have been com-| The north approach will connect injucies te others antes same location on the occasion of/that YMCA members don’t show) noon “toasy 3572 1106 property... can cost you plenty. Let Liability Insurance protect you against this financial loss. Cost is wees = dow. See us soon, s his retirement. up in juvenile court, which, points|Prev. day. ......2878 1111. tonal and will be aueanl as rwines, eseoweee moti ~ glee beeggeeer "Ito the value of the Y in the com-|Month “see's... i208 sessionsoon as the city lines reach them.| Mackie called the bridge “one of nd friends of : muni en | ee oma = H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Hattenlocher Max E, Kerns 306-20 Riker Bidg. FE-4-1551 ae a : z : aes 5 § 7 i E i Ss f wtesessurecs East! The Pontiac YMCA kicked off Mersn chs ";. 428 Un Ges Cp There was considerable peck re ore FS eho Hooker Bi “1 313 Oe lation in U.N. corridors as to how|™eeting for volunteers yesterday.) Macc Ray’. the Communists’ perennial de-| James R. Jenkins, of 62 We- - Be “ mand for seating Ref China would: nonah Dr., is campaign chairman Inspir Cop = come up this year. ~ lfor this year’s drive which will Jus Beas Meh Tnt 716 Pontise State Bank Bidg. FE 4.2895 mavens eee d 2 SuSugsaySeesase y 4 esiesss=au-sesss #2) £5 et iv ih i z < F #33 ated 5 ee oe are now at. the mercy of/the great’ highway achievements] - half an/those tests. If everything goes asf the decade, and sid i will pro than usual Thurs-| planned, school should begin by the|vide Michigan with a vital econom- -added. Jt regularly latter part of the week", according/ic link as well as a nationwide m. to Hufziger. ’ : tourist attraction. ] fe ? $223332 HEB aeo z z 8 i $ ¥ i 2 3 q 7 2 z z : 8 Bg , g a i i : : ino ) 3 sre ot dt it|Drain AssesgmentsSet 85 ee | district manager; and Richard|ratio, “There should be 25 per|@ ols Chem Go: 5 'Bi ore | a 1 MT Villiams, Pontiac branch ? _ adults in membership,” | Peninsular 1. * 103 104 BP ——— - nn a im Pan tageken ese ares: 7 4 County to Levy $224,044 for ‘58 => Du continue \ 4 1° 13.1 ‘ : 2 . 7 nani H i | gee 714 Community Nat'l : Bank Bldg. Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen | Res, FE 5-3793 > Res. FE 2-5513 i ij : ‘ : : : : Oakland County this year will|Barry believed the project will be, out of the Garfield drain, The levy $224,044 in drain assessments.|completed in time to prevent the} total this year is $6,927. | . LJ The total was approved yester-|threat of flooding this spring. Another fi coena.| our Schools to PresentiHolders Penalized _ jcsmmusione Danct W." Bary) gscmer tveyear sacenment |Chotelt Tete Pong * : Wil be levied for the first time |Troy City, The tothi this year is Library Book Displays — cmc, Users Seo a a Ca ipa Peete Sirgen“ spe lata ee gga ND Consult Us for First Hand Information ‘in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to 4 member of all Principal exchanges with up-to-the - minute quotation service available at all times. ) C.J. Nephler Co. - | l]|| $18 Community Nations! Bank Bldg. FE 2-9119 | ‘Heurs $:30- vasa i A | Fi 3 + v | | ! i : Homeowners’ Policies Accident Insurarice Fire Insurance aN Automobile Insurance . Life Insurance Liability Insurance Plate. Glass Insurance 4 Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types, oe a Tenants’ Policies - [cs a : Z Be 3 J : fi Ha j i rf FE f : 4 : ex : sk | : ii F: z : EB 3 : z ¥2 i <5 if zg iW] i i te iy ; ? i i! Bar if i i! Ha ; i | i HH] i rf ai . j i : é - : ut eck : a gas ~ $ad Es \aalt ie wt a me i iZ Me ee E : ae 4 ee 4 ter ke ; | 4 ae FSS i 4" aie i i +4 7 PRO Py ; eta 7 ate i f i ; 2 f ee ey ae Se Ea ee ee ee Ete ye a oe = 2 = res, 7 ¥ eS 2 ‘ hed i . : AN uy s Ne i j ae ee ns : ; eens a : Ag P fo ’ E : c — olen : j > : ; Wentysrme 004 HE PONTIAC PRESS; TUESDAY. SEPTEMBERIAy, 7} , oe oi a os : lee . ~~. ' make designs of delicate ee : [the $1,387,000 allocated by the|fy.4° \ 3 » fl , 3 d ‘ ‘ . aie eee ae ‘ " 2 * iy . 4 A ‘ ; oe 4 ; \ pervisors Vote Loan fo Finance Dam| BUILDING. Calle, 9 to 4. be rig tn ) fob. Typ- | - wii eed re : x t-28ii, | References required. Apply ia pet- | EXPERIENCED STENOORAPHER HE $64,000 QUESTON | ine snd general office duties ine | finance, PE 83803. "& FE 8.2517, Sarees SSS ES Sr erat] Gegakaee Soke] Bey ST Seiedy Gee | “ase staee tree | Rieesiciyar ees | aeeim oF aver ries “HEAVY EQUIP. OPERATORS r ; ir dosers mde EH E I Carruthers Puneral : : : : R4. & GTRR YOUR : . Riker. rE 6. may be seen alter 7 Equip. TORS Mie POR Bloomfield” Hitis. MI 17-0400 GR RAVE, Tou MIF A” | — Riker Bids. PE tote eral 3.2340. large . Exp. 6 | aos > new Mirac ait TYPC*’ REMODELING Ga- ; The Pontiac Press t'| on '3Sise® 70, ‘ott SP; coi | “farming. steady sive W. 10 Mile | EXP. WAITRESS. | Mis Biote. No tipentteeicnet| RUT THAT. LOOks LIER Jr. Secretary [“tet“heacmcaine oe i : FOR WANT ADS MAN “WANTED — FOR McNESS oon8. & Must be! TT ot Must be out ot peek} IF 80, CALL EVELYN 2. pity rooms, porch snelosures, : , Stetaman | ~2DWARS-NOW! $275 to Start mest wrk o brik or ened, ol ; downtown ‘Kinds House raising & basement re ~ ver 20 know; Ai. materia & workmanship guar- i oe on “ . Licensed builders. EM bid young to be his private sec ! A| ATTICS. TO 32 x 10, COM. one - in - 8 + million . fimished for $875. For fur- Graebner’s, gt 3 = information call MUlberry m. Bank _Bidg. FE . 90-0018, after 6 RECEPTONIST FOR BRICK LAYER SEER, pIOCE & ade ples, Write Pontes COUNTRY CLUB -__ | sisemmnt picciva, UNDER . No / & 2 to $80 studio, Exclusive. club meeds/ houses, bioek, ond cement work. er a Re] switchboard jonist at once) Get our bid. FE 23796 or FE service i ror see : Seg ete oad of Prefer ne PSX expert. 5-0084. syent. F _ 3 vin : ‘ vena’ : Settee ence BULL AND GRADING. tee Shs || Lares SS en CAREER ee ee ate tee on eee es | aBisle" nash" Bitg. Pe sern. srinth techy ae Serna TENCuIn oifitiating, Interment in’ Winee|( wie | WID METAL BUMPER isT. Ugh’ Bouseketping. ‘Write Pontiac point | MR EXEC 1400 Instructions = 9 ts tion and repairs. fal service Weaneeday st 3pm. elie ee Soca. : YOUNG MAN WITH LATE MODEL Gin WANTED —FOR—House:|" work, children, stay in. that “thrives on respoasiBl, CAKE DECORATING COURSE. BRICK, BLOCK AND CEMENT ‘ a the Sipe Pus larger than regular agate : Work, ‘Write Pontiac Prese Box Itt #1 ehfid. PE 44317. WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSE. shy tee ca to show what - 3-1210, -} Ie ‘Restdential” es gee Sorel. ‘Wome ust ia 12 o'clock noon the Sales : Exp. | WOMAN LIGRrT ou can dol We have ® SANE-| cial Guaranteed work Pu MY : ‘ ype WARTED: PULL TIME. Man with | GENERAL to 4s.| Work & help with 3 smal chir| wih $13 morning at which he previous to publication. car, honest background, to ire a peewees ages AY. dren. Live ia. OR girl office a boss wry AT AY” DRIVER; 3.1128. for ‘ser 14 rranstent Want Ads mey fers the Raat Rnale basinece.| Owe! teem, TV. weces. | WAITRESS “MUST Ber mxPERE| 32, oa typing ad cere Bus. PE Res. Peeing | BLOCK BRICK. CEMENT WORK. - 14, be cancelled up to 9:30 a.m.. WO amene MI 6-5406 enced Scribe bar & reeteaurant bend te ¢ MA $-0378 Detal’ service "will be Suid Weas| f the frst ‘certian. RK se FE OPERA fe Pr rm beth eV. | Watrpinas. NO “OFS FOL RQORRwEren 100) Stieate sured, Heensed.” houdea ‘snd te- FE 23504 or FE 46218. ; 24 . . fe are for s mature S and re- at. shoe’ Chureh|} CASH WANT AD Rares | Must be pleasant & live in. ONE oe ghey SB Foman with © BOOKKEEP- ANO & Hable. Don't Interment tn Mt. Hope Cemetery Join ou: company, Buy your soft | 3-496. Reverse : Foera, 12 "le pm . ING experience to start ae gone civea in your home. best, Phone Ot, 1-0712. Raymond Recitation of the Rosary be] § Ltwes 1-Day 3-Days 6Days | reap mre mes business & | HOU from 0 way to a ; ; held Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the $1.50 «$1.86 «= $2.76 ite Gane a | leas ie. Boy 3 yrs, Pvt. rm., ‘ iT “corte.” aL : SR. : Voorhees - Hom : Protected territory in Oakland Co. pals, Spartan | ed 7 tes Asin thor, MAS: ——— cludes Glamour and Flore and finished. where ME. Levene will he hal | ; i ta te jan’ paleanan who wane a oaks ;_Ll_ 33147 ket sziee or wormady : fe at hee ene te Ee\. —1... a = RS a evelopment. Women needed to| evs sie0. PE 2.2090. : A... 6 225 4.05 6.00 opportunity, oF for 8 man who| Help Wanted Female 7|#0USEKEEPER FOR MOTHER-| p.m" No. Sun. or polldays. 30 ; office Pays well, No nursing ex:| CUSTOM PLI PLUMBING MOVER. SEPT. 14 1087 MARY C./$ 6 370 <38 4.30 tod who feels ne te qualified. | ~~~ | foe pomne, Der fre Tet, re Warne si, ‘next fo consumers Tre A OUR aPnERs psa” Barence ree red te, leatn. Write eae s aol loved wife of Curtis Moyer: “dear : be} he y-4 . — pid SS, See os rmany $7330 or NOrmandy a” capeen v4 ayy Ag tion in ultra ofiamorous School . Box 35, Pontiac oom FISZQGERALD & SON Mrs. Max Treser? dear sister of|§ © ©% 1.20. 10.0 “Medi Coffee Shop: ‘ward. ) S9i3. Hight ceaveutent Rowse work andj offlows where youu meet - WOULD LIKE TO HEAR PROM TRICK WORE: FIREPLACES ae : Ridley and Donald This ts a solid career opportunity | ASSISTANT MANAGER a EXPE |IMMEDIATE OPENING] $e! children. Doctors resideme.| You ‘munt tnoe yours Felable men, 18 to 36, we cao | styles. Phone FE 3000. MeKenzie. Puneral service will be { Which includes: rienced sales girls for Miracle | ampiti oman of executive| full’ tim “umployed. Own | and. shorthand to quality. © po HC, se iad “nates. CEMRNT WORK ; held Wednesday, Sept. 18. at 2). Help Wanted Male 6 Mile store opening Sep ability for Pontiac & surrounding | priva‘e room — bath — TV : ereting oeul ee meek: RNT WORK | 4 from the Donelson -J0bins| ewww leew een |g sccuate Gienchig sats aurenc' | ten ne ee grees, Car Necessary. Write Pon-| Wilt | furnish offi worting poses. Gentlemen Prefer chanically OE Wilting 10) Aare erwaits, basen: freeware] = 10 BOYS | Seer seem Sut) “Ay easy Jon re aes —| Ge Pg ye ciemt| CAREERS! | Se ieiarcmeaeic| Gees teak ne “gt the th . 6% hour day, Be-| necessitates placing 3 women im- . es. THE KIND WITH A REAL : sf Denelson-Johns Funeral’ Home $7,000 to $12,000 the first | gioners, 834 Come ready to wort, motietey . Heal" Sopertanity for ge UTURE! SD, is ot Inst, Box 36, Poutise Prove CEMENT & BLOCK | Floors, basements. EM 3.4879. year Wite of Clyde O'Rourke; dear] 28. from i216 to 4:18 p.m. [_— Te eee CAT BOm Sawin BEEF COVER. | “at Se tommy. Chrebor a) Gi : — BS — PG - learnt lel BOOKKEEPER AND | -Sewtmsa 7a sit | pitt utc ane eee | | ea meerons, & ee «| é 44210. ‘e a x who enjoys Pune: Home. ‘ Income ga ren need call, r 6.3479. : $yze GROURKE, SEPT. 16. 1957, MARY| We need 10 boys to work one| year, plus automatic tncreases| Room 6, 20% East Lawrence. | {hose who, qualify. Bh Drayton REERS GO TO MEN WITH Work Wanted Male 10 WORK FE 5.0782 a | age Tl: beloved, afte Thursday, September| each en) Me rete A WANTED 0. : OP PAPEL ALPS CEMENT Is OUR SPECIALTY. L., 162 Edison st age 1: be BARBER . P.O. Box 536 ‘& would like s home as one A oan” eae ane 2 MEN WANT JOBS AND 18 Funeral service. wil secs | nee aed eed oI ps eg CASHIER ivork, Salary & commissions, 16| clefieal help, 4 nights a week.| att 30 r som where, ‘re, O'Rourke. ‘will BERT FALKNER _ Full time. Permanent . ope rs one as N = ; 7o.00n 8 pate cere te war mmmmeee| Row Ttaccp Ree 1 | Remences Liberal etrtmca:"os:| SLPS Samora “stetetoaty. | ramos oma howe in eet ei ge aie ‘Pecseh: A] MECHANIC. MUST HAVE reaeiamalai CASHIER. ron SOHOOL . ORAD - ee GENERAL HOUSEWORK. dear father of Guy 8. Poosch;| tools and references. Good pay ate. Able to slice & a Live in, FE 4-5015, Gene Drather of Bawerd, Frent| _& stesdy wert, 90 Agburn To qualify you must be between ae oe stoma om lization. - and William Poosch. Puneral = = HT, G E E % L . service will be held Wednesday, ACCOUNT ADJUSTER gnd 50, present @ nice appear-| Anpiy’ Manager, E. G. Shinner,| steam table cook. s& AND , WwW ance and enjoy working with . meals, Insurance avaliable. Ap- ‘ CREDIT ADJUSTER “ Tree By job or hour. ellow es. PE 3-7647 Sept. 18, at 3:30 p.m. from the v 2.N. Saginaw. Ta Johasons | 17680 25 Mile Rd. % mile east . $300 rE ee Sane Excellent opportunity for advance- . I ie ry i . REP. ¥ ment with 9 na poopie CREDIT MANAGER NEEDED| 45\q'x."woodward’ Near 13 Mile brick work, cement, Diastering, FE automobile with cremation at White Chapel) Finance Company. Man be-| .. for new retail ready-to-wear : Oak, BOOK NOW, HAVE FUN & BARN| - Cemetery. Graveside service Un-| tween 20.26 years of age. Must : New shopping ‘cotter’ ot Miracte Fe ee or BALES | beautiful eitts and toys, Save few rm Fi ae ys EY LguOW SGA repely: Yormica be high ac ate. Good] Company representative wilt be in| Mile. Hours 12 to 8, No expert. oR Gee he ae aoe ghoice dates eft, Call Maple 7 ape : : : costar wl salary with company car/ Sontiac Tuesday and Wednesday, | ence needed, will train. Lab wi as vs Mr. e w state at the Doneison-Johns ed. Liberal plan of com- Pontiac Press Box 115 nights, Apply: seen . tor confidential | Pontise Press Box_| She eft, cae) Ge Pag cpeiee eel) py pen a, Maman Cone mR wanteg aR] SNADON'S | gee Soon ioe tae *|_Corp.. 128 N. Saginaw st, __ | fi, FE SOA. Anytime Before 8) Ott APP ss & Pontiac Lake Rd. 2199 S. Telegraph ~ of Women ‘ WOOD. SEPT. 17, 1987, MAUDE,|“ STEADY SALES POSITION THE Michigan Miracle Mile P. W. DINNAN 159 Edison Bt; age 76: beloved) Tiitiion ‘with trans? furs, Seles Thurs., Sept. 19, at 2 p.m, | Sere ort i ‘ wite of Jessie Wood. Funeral ar-| Mission with trans. furn. Sales AS A DOYOUWANT RID CLERK . rangements will be announced! itr Must be neat appearing | - PART-TIME GIRL. PART-TH ‘our rent and food worries? Mid- _ later by Huntoon Funeral Home.) 314 willing to work Apoy Me waitress. XXX Hamburger, 135 qeagea couple — woman for Smal nave ceecheateel apts. * ui) rE i. Brown, 102 N, Saginaw, . DO YOU PREFER ° West Huron. Stel housework, — man to help tude, * work after school ead weekends, 5 unYees ALY Card of Thanks 1 ; OUTSIDE WORK? .__ AND port rmanient Openings | | delery’ ‘Beautiful private ait-eon,| MNC’T. TRAINEE or et” a ar Suen $24 finishing. Phone ¢ r full. time fountain sales women. room bath. al College graduate ex- steady work. 8-0489. _ WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY ASS T MGR. pl geek grr OP tone ges PA Perfer ages ‘6 to 45 yrs. must be| references required. Must like grutive training program — . | ¥ouNG MAN te WOULD Likz NEW. NEW friends and relatives for their =8 lished territory Earnings $75 per permanentlf out of school, Ap-| children. Wonderful chance to Must have high i “any kind, Call time, | Ur'vews: . ffl kind expressions of sympathy and week-to start. No exp. necessary. licants 18 or younger — bring/ live’ weil and save money. Lin- with business personally. a4 ¥ 6 SOF ee. | porches” (ote Gtives, sidows! acts of kindness during our re- SHOE We will train man selected. Year egal proof of age. Tel-Huron| coln 3-7748. i : struction . fe time con- cent bereavement of Mrs, Jo- round work no lay off. FE 22811.) Greenfield Restaurant | Center, s Apply in person | DRUG CLERK, EXPERIENCED a T | QUNG | MAN DESIRES PART | oO “Concrete 4, Wray because all sephine Reaume. Special thanks Mr. Haggerty. at above store, 8:30 @.m. to 4 D.m./| “tr you dre 23 to 45 yrs. Old, seek: E N Une work, mornings til’ toon.) 5, “Ovtre Pood tee reinforced, i; Sanerl Mone Paeae SALESMAN MAN WANTED, AGE 2 TO 40.| NOW HIRING COOKs AND BAK- FRED SANDERS ing full time position that otters Won wos : #1907 afters om Pee WE Wisk TO EXPRESS OUR SIN.) ARE NOW A coun Acero? letelligeast oes Must NeW siruinonam | PELIABLE” WOMAN FOR GEN- hours, security, wie 8 taht EDW D ¥ fork | anted emale ll aah: r friends bd ‘ . ‘ ' . 5 % neighbors for ‘heir personal” ex- ocerrt and be, able to perform physical] a oRANT MUST Mave ex-| 00m. ond bath, 35, MA 0-49. muacy.0 1740" W is, alae ’ ates led FS Lee, PE Swe MEAD. ressions of sympathy & acts of) PLICATIONS FOR EMPLOY:/| heeded. Excellent opportunity for , ‘ SHORT hs ten Law oak DaY pa +Eindness: during the oss ‘of cur exceptional earnings with old es-| PERIENCE. KITCHENS EN-| shift. Call in person. ¢| FULL CHARGE ACCOUNTANT TO In ROYAL Ts 1 oi Mod Fe shies beloved husband and father. We; MENT AT OUR MIRACLE MILE| {ibiitned Co Pontiac Press Box Hwy. and 305 Bidg. A TB ER aa ; Ag gay ga Ong Blass 13 TIRELY AIR CONDITIONED RA pare financial statements. Salary | 44 TRONINGS. T DAY SERVIC RSONALIZED HOMES ton the Pursley Punerai! STORE. FULL AND PART TIME ‘| Branch national auto, fi-| open and on ability to take; * ‘ =. ——ZE $220 or PE $2019 ome. Mrs. y Barnes & Fam- MAN TC BELL INTRODUCTORY CHOICE OF HOURS. MEALS &| nance company experienced | . full of “record. keeping. oe In Irs 471, R 00 ; | WORK. WONDERFUL OPPOR-| offer. Harn $10 to $20 daily. Ken- Lede schlor clerical work. |W 72. Bids. | 4) IONINGS REF. PIG t REPAIRS . 4 8. Saginaw, v : experience. YL & del. PE 23-5433, EAVESTROUGHING FE 4004 TUNITY FOR MEN WHO ARE suk shea c cescmcaaae = ie Tvrists tame Slates. ree sampen Di ereraaee ABY -GFETING 1 MY wou asi iS , . - in “~ ; | . nig ¥ ey ; SAVE ENERGY. USE| ™TERESTED IN 4 Gop FU-} MANAGER WANTED | * APPLICATIONS | eal tad, customer ortacte sonata Vial 10nds see Sree roe re ati | yy SEPTIC TANKS. : TURE AND SECURITY. fvst FOR ‘TAKEN AT CENTRAL OFFICE. | COUSSEM, “tala? splendid | tect Dt Laboratories. / _censed home. FE 2.6275, ' VACUUM CLEANED r ° ‘ . p rie, ¥, : : ‘ : ram Contac A Osteopathic * z LONINGS DONE IN OME Low WANT ADS! To finda) gave experimiven ann Pur- et eae Keer ste 2931 WOODWARD AVE. DE) Potosi. "Cook “Agsonlate Dis: oe 193. S k le s_ PE & 908 "| Mileage charge, araing Thighea > . | = | ant in 1ac M. count Sd ' yy SA. : free, : job, place to live or a, NISH REFERENCES WRITE! exp. not necessary, Must be ag-| ete AM. $PM. ew th , this Wake ATES, gressive & alert ‘Write PO Box 29, Flint |. GUIDE TO GOLD: Sell TO MR, L. A, KRONIN, good used car, see Classi- Co A_§ BECK SHOE STORE vere iy camaes Meech im gow. S TRENCHING AND ie fied NOW, \ ROvaL. ‘OAR MOMIGAN - | —o things you're Ss using . J ‘4 ‘ aa mE through Classified Ads! R. pao EDOZING our Se wed : ‘ : ‘ I \s let Eadie) ANTIQUES — SPECIALTY, VAR- Garden Plowing 168 BA; Rating of Co.'s | Austin-Norvell ct A Afte: Le 26 BY PHONE Nichole x Harger Co. 33_W. Huron FE 56-8183 __Laundry Service 18 FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERY- | C i Pontiac Laundry. FE LAWN & GARDEN PE 2.6020. 315 E. HAULING & R A our ie, ‘time. 88-0085. A Rupbish | fi soil, sand O’DELL “‘RTAGE tom ong ie gets, Sree ‘all R™=DUCED RATES van to serve you, Smith “wee i at charge. FE 56-4638. af iO sarap up free Trucks to Rent TRACTORS 1% ton stakes i-tratiers AND Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. n Servic . aharo Tv wy Puget core |. x Ses |LANDLORDS WHO PREFER cine tenants are ore i Drayien Pl od Sa Humphries Realtor FE 47114 2-044 iy . 9.2000, Eves. 12 oe OR SELL red will persona vour property See iat ee ww a bs i and let us prove ‘ Je 17, i will not be BR ib) r € bes contracted genes yy ony any age 9 rty. Pontiac GOOD RA able. OR WANTED ee nee condition. Must reasonabie. Ph. OR 3-4042. Wanted to Rent 29 Why don’t I age! Re, meee a co. OR ome Ls gepod RE MY i MODERN } HOME oe le fon 3 Ahad eg oWrite. crnee Box ». ideciy dy remh, tree tor elder. om- Fe 3008. WORKING TO SHARE 5 . furs. _ EM Wid. Transportation 31 GIRL ON PONTIAC TRAIL IN Walled Lake re ride to __tiac, hrs. 8 to RIDE WANTED FROM PONTIAC agen md to 12 Mi. & Van Dyke Wid, Contracts, Megs. 32 32 CASH IN A FLASH TED | ; 6-5091 - IF NO ANSWER CALL FF 5-0975 IVAN W. SCHRAM - 1111 Joslyn REALTOR — oF CASH PRICE BEFORE NICHOLIE & HARGER co SOT GEEVIEEE, 01 Chapin Real Estate ms a wr Bae tone 1 wy. a ae BROKER rE oe ae "$1,000 DOWN Pon-4. 5. Call MA 41109. Contracts Rave clients po Interested in either se he Kt Toate Realtor | 9239 Orchard +4563)9 ROOM WE HAYE Cagemets. for - land cou for Mr. Brown, Bring four with you. We RD. RILEY. BROKER rm ¢i1s? 400 mils, Lake Ra. $ CASH $—48 HOURS HOMES—EQUITIES Wright & Valuet re wou? es AVENUE 5-9441 FE _ 5-063 “LIST INGS WANTED 34 SMALL EQ Leslie R. Middleton $2,000 DOWN “$3,000 DOWN AND MORE DOWN Our ers good homes of the city. wel: M. Stout, Realtor TM coca evenings “tl 6:30 have money for and out side & Acreage. A = give vou immediate _ ROY KNAUF 4% W Huron st THINK OF SELLING YOUR HOME? YOUR BUSINESS? THAT VACANT LOT? A wy call Us “ia the tpn eur- WM. A. */ KEN NEDY }: REALTOR r* 3oeT W. Open Evenings till WANTED. $1,000 REWARD ian ool — get i dg oe st with us. NEEDED FOR | IMMEDIATE SALE: 6 = basement. ‘$12,000 to $14,-. Brick ranch home, gis. 000 to = — Gun. with 1 acre. $9,000 3 bedroom, 1% baths. $11,300 to 15,500 CALL NOW Aa 3B! IMMEDIATE |CARNIVAL - © 1967 by NEA Serviced, tne. “You mean that guy has ion records? only sold a Seems like I've bought twice that many myse Rent Apts. Furnished 33 wee ew 2 & 4 RMS. PVT. BATH. FE 4-0808. 2 & 3 ROOM APT. _Ciark St. ROOMS, PVT. ENTR. & BATH. 53-8466, 16 1#4 Mt. Clemens 8t. 2-& 3 ROOM CABINS, ALL CON- APPLY 19 z veniences Ulllities ak Winter _ tates. MY Broad- way, Lake 2 ROOMS WITH PVT, BATH AND entr. Newly po gy hear et Coupie - No pets, 36 Cente 2 RMS, NEWLY SeCCRATED. ner l furn. $13. 266 8. Parke. FE Rent Apts, Furnished 33 NEWLY DECORATED 2 RMS. & _bath, Util. furn. FE 2-8924, NICE CLEAN APT. EVERYTHING furn. $15 per wk. Adults only: 15 Gingell Court. PLEASANT, CLEAN. W. SIDE 4 rms. & bath. Gas heat, garage. PE 56-4074 or FE 68-0602. a hae sis “tie we ™ g re — : caine Pes ig vapid “ wade hirer eimai! wet ead =~ ot he cath Facresigver 4. ana wombat 6 = aa . : i Be j ots a \ * ie y | 2 \ . / ce a: ! e. “Bs a~ a - VJ ais. : eo at Tt ann ea eee eee ee a eae eee THE PONTIAC PRESS,” _ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1957 | Rent Houses Furnished 38 2 HOUSETRA Modern, ~ on bus line. OR | 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. EAs F SIDE. ‘ FE +6223 = 7 BD! DRM. NICELY FURN. FULLY P| asil Ww . ‘alters ate. $55 mo. FE 2 28417, WALLED Siodern close to city. Reas. 4-2293. ee LAKE. -MA 3 ROOM HOUSE PE 40373 3 RM. Ont WATER HEAT. All vilites $20° Wk, 1555 Wii- ‘Hams Lk come ot M59. all ch enti. PS agama mm T pia a bill. saeae es _Haiche atchery , Dra + RM. iM. COTTAGE. PAR - “FORW. _ OR Petad $35 mo. 2883 Sunderland. ished. Garage and all conveni- ences, $125 per month. Located on Williams Lk. Rd aear CAI Bidg. __Ret _Tequires. OR - 3-4859. {ROOMS & BATH, NEWLY DEC- erated. Furn. or unfurn. Owner on prem. Tues. Wed., 46 128 _ Rutgers.” AVAILABLE 1 IN 2 room lakefront at Woes w Lk. modern, call Chioe Niehois. real- tor. OR 3-3831, Or EM 366. FOR RENT. .FURN. YEAR around lakefront smal] ve tis Couple. a y= ag Be Lake 4 230 Bluebir Northville acne oni RENT, | aR mal @ month. Located near Pontiac. Phone SLocum -8-7571. heat, shower, auto. hot water. pton, WE 43011. Write 5520 Detroit 4. yaaa Spent 8 NEW YR. AROUND Pontiac. Cedar Is- on — 5 a Strictly modern, close to schools, stores & churches. Avail. "til, next June. $73 mo. LI 17-5145 EM_ 3-6237, < 1-2-4 BEDROOM . Strictly modern. Lovely grounds 10 miles Pontiac. miles New Lincoln a Lease _ Sef. te ue v. EMpire 3-0134. MODERN 5 RM&S., YEAR ROUND. Pontiac rare OR +9138. = pag St epice na SCHOOLS. 4 bath, modern. Auto. wash- er or Seer: $80 a mo: . a oo —— WALLED LAKE. _EM 3-402 utili woe heat, $18 week. joo Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 v3 BDRM. PARTLY FURNISHED lakefront apts OR 3-9105. 1 RM. KITCHENETTE. PVT, BATH - = gtove & refrig. furn. Adults ey. 200 N. Paddock, Alberta 2 RMS. PVT. BATH & ENTR. " Newly ‘decoraled. Couple. 100 Nor- 2 LARGE UNFURN. RM. IN armhouse, modern. Garden space. Large lawn. MA 5-1244. baby weleome. $22.50 week. In- 0 Baldwin quire at Ave. FE 68-1431, A NICE, IN -*PVT. _home. rE after §:30. 3 & § ROOM APTS. BOTH ‘Fighta! oY res furn. but t. ent, bath. Coeplo (ale Pr 2 oes. “ba Matthews 3 MODEX ita. No drinkers or pete. Jp wes 1 child welcome. Call aft- _e 3 p.m, 248 Auburn Ave. 3 ROOMS AND. stall Basar = IN, Nicely & for teachers. FE “Sone after 4 m, 3 RMS. & BATH VERY boty Me FOR oiien couple, Pvt. ent. he furn. 2470 Dixie Hwy, I b XN, = Pontiac Drive-In eater, _FE 2 73. 3 3 RMS. . NICELY FURN. bey eos | laenliotnmialent ROOM AND BATH, , CHILD a. Kenneth School. 3 ROOM’ APT. FURNISHED. ON lake, for 2 people till May 1. $17 week. De- weekly first and last posit, near bus line. FE 4-5382. 1 RM.‘ EPFICIENCY. KITCHEN pvt. bath. Adults, 402 W. ‘oe PE a 3 ROOMS UTIL. PE 201s3 81 Pine Bt 1 ROOM EFFICIENCY, PVT. bath & ent. Available at Park Inn Motel for winter season, For en call after 5:30. FE . bath Wash nd d Central- 5 er @ ryer, ty located. Adulte only. a N Apts. ” pee, greed’ Beer. Pe. ot. . en lors paradise, $18 tr wk for renters. FE 2-7528. 13 RM, & i-2 RM. APT. dren welcome. 291 Central 1 BE E 3 & bath. util. Soft water. Call ed |7 RMS. & BATH. CLOSE IN. FE _2-4366. 3 ROOMS & BATH, CLEAN, 103 Meehan, Clinton Apts. 2 RMS. . UTIL. PURN, GA- Tage . Orchard Lk °, near Waterford. $50 per. mo REA }-4376.. : 75000 Digie Hey. : soil a Repetto = fia per w me, Oper Eves be” a or 10 to8| wk. FE 8-131. 3 ROOMs PRIVATE BATH, ALSO e' Wisner school: _ Rent Apts. Furnished 33 |" 2 rooms near Sir “St _after 4. 4 ROOMS — AUBURN HEIGHTS area. $65 is aie = res welcome. arpa GROUND ion a ° on jake. Util, furn. ‘MApie 3 RMS. PVT BATH & ENT. W. _Side. FE 8-6523 4 ROOM BATH & erences.. FE 2-6332 between 8-5: After $, FE 23-5788. 4 ROOMS on SASHABAW RD. 4 ROOMS aT GARAGE, yee Pig West Side, adults only. 4 RMS, A 4 RMS, FURN ; xe. 738 W. HURON = ROOMS, PRI- by iy Utilities jor, FE 4-2544. WITH . HEAT & “water 7SEDRs On Lower Lake. EM 3374. TERRACE. 5 RMS, & bath. Furn. Just off Baldwin. OR 3-2673 or FE 40606 ASEMENT APT. PVT. © at, wl furn. Inquire at 550 N. —_— a “heat ‘ens Guiidren and gas 818 “OH on =f 7 ai or, workin Ligh acaas e : beta rit utilities See, on OR CLOSE. TO FISHERS. “ Southecemen. thes ita oF pio Rs AND BATH, utilities tr FE 3-9626. “HOLLYWOOD APTS, furn. - PVT. TH ent. Child welcome. Wife to time. Bee Mrs, New- Orchard 7 ROOM “APT, PVT. BATH F —, 4 ‘| ton 8. x 3 BEDRM, HEAT. LARGE J lg PNay Beicome 310| Adams Co_ OR 38111. 7“ * y fereised, baby 7 ROOM APT, TIL, FURN. ves T a Th — vi” ENT. month. Villa. Apts Murphy. FE 4-7272, “ Adults. 41 Moreland, Pare ee -_ J VERY ATTRACTIVE ROOMS. . RN. APT. 6256 puteble ior married crepe 3| Seen = Se rmex wr er | tetera Hat oan 3 ROOM _ble fireplace, fir u es > & as Very Clean. xe an is refrig., beat, gas Couple coly Ke pets. % Nortos. | Sasement lawn Private park- 3 LARGE Ri 'A- - be Po tela Ee z er, apt. - 3 VERY ERY NICE i Fase RMS. COU-| land. 3} ROOMS & BATH NR. OXBOW en ~ FURNIEED OR Lk. 1 ¢ welcome, $50, mo. ; wake, ter May 3. _EM 3-2544 or EM 3-3800. dollars” wv 3 ROOMS, BATH. GLASSED IN is rch. Retrig. & stove furn, PE 1975. 7 ROOMS & BATH. ALL UTILI- 2 ee furn. wer at 509 Eliza- OUSE, FURN. . Ph. MU. 9.1806. bas FY sss RM, HOUSE, FURN. Rd., Rochester. Ph. _Mu ‘Siees, NEW. 2 BEDRM. LAKE FRONT home. Middle a Lk, Sept. til | _ June, $70. EL SMALL H¢ ROUSE =% SOR BEE bus line. ve poy Cozy, _clean and we SMALL HOUSE COZY, NEATLY furn. Auto. heat, Utilities sup lied. yon bustine Near meeety- WALLED “LAKEFRONT, YR. Te Al modn, brick. 2 BEDRM. MOD. BRICK SOREL. 1007 Mt. Clemens 8t. Inquire 65 E. Bivd. = After 6 week-days. | 32 BEDRM., LAKE. OD. j Close to tir Very reas. | 4-2293. | ROOMS, BATH, GLASSED IN ety refrig. & stove furn, FE vk RM. MOD. HOT WATER HEAT. utilities. $20 wk. 1555 Wil- Sacas Lk. Rd. Corner of M59. 3 PMs. AND BATH, PARTLY furn, Outside omy Iimtts. FE __2-2965. 3 BEDRM HOUSE FOR RENT, FE 4-068: 2 RM, FORTHSIDE, CLOSE us, : JERRY E. ADAMS __OR 38111. ROOMS AND BATH, WILLIAMS 9 Canal. Proa 3-643. 3 — BATH, UPPER. HEAT _furn, Garage. Adults. FE 2-2900. 3 ROOM PFeie FURN. HOUSE. FE on RGE RM! GAS : Ray All wintites “Newly rated. deco Nice for adult cou- e. 64 Moreland Ave. FE_5-8051. J-BEDROOM NEW HOME, FURN- |" KEEGO HARBOR. 3 ROOMS. OIL _ Market | 42433. ~ WIL: RENT STIL TONE FOR $1,500 DOWN —— a a seiiame | Large 9 rm. income. Basement, ake front home a gas heat. garage, furnished, ing couple. 3023. : price, $10, Aw a. Tote! DAMS Rent Houses Unfurn. 3 36 PE 4303 1 BEDEM HOME WITH LAGOON ROCHESTER ——= Willems Lak take, Yura. seams Mae ot Peden eed ——— Large lots 140x175 ft. | * For Rent sheieed 37 N ROOM FOR RENT, NEAR “tt Mile, we, locasiggs. PE COMFORTAB HOU. NO ‘thing furn., $35 pie ga- :| GIRLS ~~ Ni : i _ 547 re aren . MIRACLE IL EMPLOYES yee com rable & quiet, Come M FOR one “ethan . ent, ab Nelson. OL 1-1345 ONE cE SLEEPING ROOM. _ after frase SLEEPING ROOM for business woman. Near Senior FE 3-6443.~° High. R FOR CLEAN Ppt Sa man. $7 week. Close in. Shower & garage. rE ROOMS FOR PENT 511 4th SLEEPING RMS An & a UP. l¢ & 16 N, Cass. 146 E. _ : 43 _ For * Sale Houses 4: 3 Fionty of tomer eood = ea. easy P. W. DINNAN a. 66 _W. Huron ARNOLD FOR BETTER BUYS Webster School Dist. 3 bedroom on beautiful lot with full basement and Ene. on bus line. $950 down. Quick occupancy, Arnold Real Estate 210 8. semerer® Rd. FE 5-0676 FE 32-7520 : 2 BEDROOM MODERN., FULL basement, Wall to i “carpet- ing in living room and dining room. By owner. $500 down, 486 First Bt: FE 2-7523. Buy thru Partridge Rooms With Euan _ 38 EXTRA CLEAN — HOME STYLE meals. 14 Matthews. FE 5-0377. FLOOR VACANCY FOR FIRST eee if ladies. Nursing care or board. FE 5-8371. MA’. TO SHARE .wARGE COM- fortabe ri. with or without meals. FF 2-3429 c : ROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT board Home privileges. FE 5-4572, WILL CARE FOR ELDERLY PER- son in private home, MA 17-3367. Ortonville. _ Hotel Rooms 30 HOTEL AUBURIN OTEL T, CLEA neat rms. & apts, Some with Tv. STORE SPACE 20x50. FE 2-8281. 20v Voorheis Rd. WEST HURON, NEAR WATER- Aen SHIP HALL, ID INQUIRE NEXT DRU! HURON, ‘DOOR OR PHONE OR +414, EVEN- 5.7088. INGS. Rent Office Space 41 MODERN OFFICES. KEEGO HAR- bor. Main floor, private blacktop eates tosealion a bide. call FE office rating $-0880-or PE 8-141. * For Rent Miscellaneous 42 GARAGE FOR RENT. 67 HENRY Clay. LARGE BARN, 2% X 30. 46 OR- chard Lake Ave. Available imme- diately. Ph. FR 43837. 43 For Sale Houses Septic tank yee” with each lot. & ots only at $2,000. FRANK SHEPARD ol 31-7511 OL 1-11 "RM. RANCH TYPE HOUSE. eon state. Will sacrifice. At $8900. $800 dowr. Will accept good ¢_ 3-6490. used car & cash. O CUTE 2 BEDRM. YR. ROUND home — sores fenced lot with dock & privileges on Bunny Run Lk dn. Full price $6800. MY 3-7364 DENS ‘ull price, $500 HURON GA 3 bedroom. $7,500 By day or week, $22.50. 125 N.j- Laat HO a 5-8126. a Rent Stores 40 a 2 rg Ee Dail 86 W. "Brooklyn n Brand new homes are = bewaifa Hornig Hho laid = and d List thru Partridge ten Neos as enh, @ nicer eee ee ru fs artrids somnct > be found, for cian -with Upper. Straits Lake eoey LOVELY NEW 3, BEDROOM HOME , hin? situate on f acres © Beautiful Buse use a — Jim Williams @ very cesira e*nelg rl REAL ESTATE & INSURAN cg ee bath Mod ond | sole Baldwin: Ave. FE asa itchen car garage very good aaveme oa i. WE TRADE NEAR EMMANUEL BAPTIST “EM BREE-& aac a this 3 room - —- —_ 1 ohtor Lak vi so one on Lake -, o: cupboards & Tal ul Seen ___EM_3-4393__ or 33314 ment. Gas heat, New wall to wall “HAYDEN | # AUBURN HEIGHTS AREA. 5 . 2 bedrooms with 26° shed in kno’! pine. 20’ living room, and shower, Gleaming oak floors, plastered walls, coved ceilin new oi! furnace ——— vane $12,500 with §2,500 down LEBARON FARMS, 2. bedroom modern with stairway to part) finished attic. .Wall-to-wall ca. in living room, dinin, — and hall. Breakfast nook, Kitchen has ’ Youngstowr cabinets. Ceramic tile bath, oak floors, plastered walls. Basement, of! furnace, 1‘a-car ga- rage. Landscaped yard. $10,900, terms, APPROX, 3 ACRES. Country liv- ing neat duaresen: Excellent 3 bedroom modern home. en- closed sun porch, separate dining room. ful! basement, 2-car garage and ri et —— 14” x 3 & caped lawn, — trees and fruit $15, 700. , C, HAYDEN, Realtor’ 86 oo Walton ait Opén Eves.: 0 i a Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES THE BUBBLING WATER will lull you to sleep im this 4 bed "3g" 1 front iy ear attached ga- sed to sell fast. At only with excellent terms. with basement, 1% car garage, beautiful lot im town near school — stores. Imm posses- sion. FRANKLIN ROAD Nice home for colored fami! 3 bedroom modern with shady lot 550x150 1% car garage. Priced to sell for $6450 with only $600 down and per month. Hurry as this won't Peat. Evenings after 6, call Mr. Joll, FE 4-0855. A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. Voorheis ALL plastered walls, . Grocke & Auburn. PE 4-0992, eves. | $9,800 Wilt ‘build on your lot 3 bed FE 42533 +14 BEDROOMS $2,450 DOWN — St. Mike's & Baidwin School area. 715x150 lot, well landscaped. New J.M. sid- ing, aluminum storms & od included. screens Water softener. for electric dryer. Large Terms, “ELWOOD REALTY 5143 Cass Elizabeth Rd. FE $126 or FE +3846 HO RIONEER HIGHLANDS $3,000 D: POSS. — 32 bed- rooms down and 1 large one part- ly finished upstairs, room v bene automatic in storms, screens doors. BEAUTIFUL BEACH RANCH $3000 DN. — Newly built 3 .bed- room, Liv’ room 12x23, modern kitchen ga- rage, Completely fu . A real =. ne hopes ranch home oe ar garage, 100x250 Beautifull ae v FULL DRY basement, in- cinerator, gas heat, LOW TAXES. HOYT REALTY 2-9840 3 Toons carpeted den with b room home with full basem tile bath, auto. ee extra large kitchen, model Don McD McDonald, R327. 2% DOWN. TO GIs beth Lake . $6§ monthly, Call ec Be 8 J BEDRM. HOME. BATH. BASE- ROOMS & BATH ON WEST) ment. 3060 Seebaldt. OR 3-0728. * side. FE en J ROOMS. FURN. OR UNFURN. 4 ROOMS & BATH. IND FPLOOR.| with stool. Auburn Hts. $50 mo. 204 8. lestehenl 1 EM 3-671. _FE_ ‘7-6483. 4 & BATH, LOWER, WELL HEAT- uf 3 BEDRM. Let Y¥ D ed, newly deco: way ent./ “house 7 mis of Pontiac, off | No pets. Bus stop. 111 Prospect. pital Rad. oa OR_3-4085. 7 ROOMS MODERN. ALL PVT.. 4 RM. HOUSE. __ AT 180) month, 0. b Raeburn. FE UPPER ALL MODERN. aoe decorated, Gas heat furn. Center of Keego Harbor, Adults. Must be seen. Pn 3068 ROOMS & B. NEWLY 1D ag orated, BD arb ares livt — room, kitchen & erry 3 RM, HEAT & UTIL- $13. My wk. 51 Fenely. LOSE ities’ furn Garage. 8. Marshall, FE 3. 5 ROOM UPPER BRICK FLAT; very nice tile oath, heat, basement, adults. $65. 5 5 pe a & By FULL BASE- . Call FE 3-0243, is Socal BRICK APA RTMENT — town. Separate base- Close to down ment and heating. $65 f mo. Call Realtor Partridge. 43581. 90 Oakland Near Huron Under new prrecon-ae -Newly decorated 4 bath apts $60 per month. yoy CARETAKER: _FE_ 8-3330. 5 RM. _ Fiat WEST SIDE. | FURN. furn. Hot soft water. Garage. ‘Adulte. FE 4-6764. 3 ROOMS, PVT. BATH & ENT decorated Close to Willis Behooi, exc; for teachers. 3-0957. $ ROOM APT. $35 MO. PE 2-9173, _8 a.m. to 5 p.m, 6 ROOMS, 394 ORCHARD LAKE. Clean, suitable for renting a rooms. Children allowed. APT., « RMS., SECOND FLOOR. Call FE 41091 secu es aoe APTS. & bath, in good condi- ton. Tneludes cuehe heat, hot & cold wate ren ees. z Hemp- 48284, ‘or FE 3220 or apply "$35 ag hes GLEAN aaa TL 3 ROOMS & beret ‘tor couple, 69 Poplar, FE CHOICE NEWLY DECORATED 3 rooms end Lae all pg ad rms., located close wn, daha Stout, Realtor * — 9 — ti) 8:30 Del-Rio Apts. 281 CAKLAND 2 Rms. bath. Stove. Refrig. Utilities m_ Adults only. FOR RENT 3 — nice modern rooms, Will Oct. ist. Present ten- Cou- es. 2511 wne, near Williams Lake. LIVING ROOM Sa ae ROOM, 1 bedroom, sitchen & Heated. 26 Stout St. Tir oases. APT., GARAGE. aan only JERRY E. ADAMS OR 3-811. sat, | BEDRM WOME 3 : MT. 3%) MONEY! 5 ROOMS. MODERN. § MINUTE drive from any plant. i 5-9845 after 5. v ORMS. JA PER FE 8-6027 AND BATH, _730 Cederiawn. | water, gas. 110 Washington. 5 noes t_ House. § ROOM SS $80 ©6=PER _ month. ._ Inquire p 851 "LEX & OK: 6 aaa 3 Ese ey MOD- _em, OW fired. 456 West Huron. 6 RMS. CLOSE IN, VERY NICE, must have references. Inquire 22 Auburn. Office in ies $ aoa a AND BATH. HEAT, HOT | 3 —— ranch ee: a chance use your GI VAN REAL ESTATE OR 3-603) LI 86219 | NEW 2 BEDRM ean ON E. aE _Chicago 8t. FE BY < OWNER, 2 aeDaa FULL | basement, of] heat, paved street. N. Side of Ponttac. down, $70 per month Including taxes and insurance. Call FE 8-6691 COMPARE THIS Custom butla 1200 ae ft. 3 bed- room brick ranch néme, full base- ment 2 firepiaces slate entrance, 1% baths ceramic tile with van- ity Piastere:! walls oak floors, 22x24 plastered garage All this | for $17.60. on your : E. J. DUNLAP | Custom builder * FE 8-1198 ar INCOME This attractive 10 rm. house is srranged with small apts & sleeping rms. Completely furn. Present me tr owk. cen heat. Close down town. 2 lots, 4car eoreee Ali in good cond. Priced to sell = J.R. Hiltz - REALTOR j 1011 Ww Huron Fe. 5-6181 mken oil conversion. The reat of the house is in very good dition. CALL ~ : tt. with wall-to-wall carpe dini- ing L, builtin c ds. Birch kitchen with vent fan & yamie tiled oak floor: plas: ‘8, s- garage. d lot with MIDDLETON SPECIALS LOCATED OFF West eees Rd, cozy § room home. cken for 300 chickens with tool sh All kinds of a and fruit. On 1 acre of land, ¥ $1,500 down and $55 per — $550 DOWN — a cemet off Mt. Clemens. 4 and bath, streamlined nice new 1% car garage. Only $5,500. $750 DOWN — Near Elizabeth Lake, Lake Rd. @ large enclosed | sun porch plus utility. Lot 715x150. | $600 DOWN — Located off Sasha- baw Rd. near Oakland Lake. Cute 3 bedroom shel] home. Com- pletely finished on the outside, artly finished on the inside with ull basement, fully completed. Ww th — septic i in. Large lot. Now 150. and livable., * immediate session. Leslie R. Middleton. BROKER 188 N. JOHNSON ro RUSSELL A. NOTT 70 W. Pike 45905 AVAILABLE IMMED) 3 bdrm, ee —_ bea vquaiitied GI, who has his GI loan. Call OR 33031 ier 2 Pm OTTAGE, GA HEA HARD- ek floors, Acestnes Tned bath & shower, lake front, farege: suitable for couple. tiff Bt, _ Waterford, $75. OR_3-7586. DIXxI£ & ‘M81 AREA, MODERN 7 vms., bah garage. Horse box | stall. References Roya] Oak, Lin- | colr 11-4728. FOR REFINED COUPLE IN. WA- terford. Newly decor Stove. re- frigerator. Youngstown kitchen odd window. No pets, $65. R 3-4330. WookaW HOME WITH 2 ACRES of land. Main floor 6 rms., bath and fireplace. Also basement and upstairs. Oil furnace. Close schools. West of Pontiac, FE 2-3619 before 7:30 pm, LAKEVILLE, PARTIALLY FURN 3 bdrms. 6 rm and hot water: ‘OA & MODERN 6 ROOMS. FE_ 2-1061. NEW DUPLEX, X, REFR RIG. & stove, $78 month, on yr. lease. OR 39272. RENT - OPTION 2 dedrm. & 3 geen. with pose. ment. Phone WE 3-4200 and FE 5-6767. RENTAL UNITS Attractive new dupiex type units. Reasonable rent. ated in Pon- tiac on can sy — fees &t. 5AM WARWICK : 3 $125. 2 in Syl- arage, $70. Immed sion. cares FE. 42090 T2105. Large car eee ns ‘OL Tiss caer 4. SMALL 3 RM. HOUSE FOR 1 OR _2_pedple. FE 44228. house. Auto. heat 6 R 2759. 7 MODERN 2 FAMILY mee rooms each. Near St Tinceat gd | Church. A real Bargain. vm P. W. DINNAN 66 W. Huron FE 4-2577 | iST “$2,000 DOWN ° TAKES 4 PAM- ily plus owners ap furn city, Southeast side. P3380 monthiy _income. OR 3-3685. or FE 5-1449 _for or appointment PVT. OWNER PARTLY FURN. 2 Full base- ment, gas heat $6,500, $4,500 cash and 63,000 mortgage. EM 3-0526. MS. & 2 FULL oo IN city. Full basement Go heat. $2,000. or less dn. FURN.. $700 oe Big 7 rm. house. Bath & %. Gas heat. Could be used as 2 family, $65 a mo Now vacant, Vicinity of Howard & Baldwin in Pontiac. Call Mr. Motdoch, OA 8-2918. Priced to Sell IMMEDIATE POSSESSION oom modern, 142 «tory bunga- low. A-1 condition, oak floors, full basement, plasteret walls, gas heat, auto. gas weter. heater. 3 : NIGHOLIE $1500.00 DOWN % THREE BEDROOM BUNGALOW SHOULD SEE THIS NEAT TODAY AND CLEAN AND ONLY $8950, WASHINGTO THREE BEDROOM TWO STORY HOUSE MENT WITH AUTO. nonae Est OF TERMS, SEE IT GI. RES. ALES WE HAVE § AL TWO AND THREE BEDROOM HOMES IN AND NEAR INTIAC. CALL POINTMENT TO 8E NICHOLIE} & HARGER CO. 33 W, Huron 8t FE 53-8183 Open Evenings car garace. large 1 tial down payment. No reason- able offer refused. See owner at 953. Boston S8t., Huron“ Gardens. GOOD BUY - 6 ROOMS & BATH, 1% car garage, gas heat, storms and screens, Ox. $2000 cash, take over contract. $65 Mo te Rent Lake Cottages 36A AARARARAR RAL WALLED LAKE,. MODERN CONV. Pyt. beacon, 2 bedrm, Reas. Market 42293. For Rent Rooms 37 PPPLPL ALL LLIB LBL LLL LL 2 RMS & PVT. BATH. BE. SIDE. ist floor. FE 2- undry aan Bae . FOR 1 gentleman. FE 26771. 14 Norton. EPING RM FOR 1 BLE man, FE 32-8771. 24 Norton. AN SLEEPING Saat AND arage. FE 4-5641. 350 W. Huron. DON’T PASS uP Sell unneeded belongings for cash anette Ads! | Bus § stor, 1 PVT. “ENTE , COOK: Ww. Hens er 3023 Auburn Hgts. FE 54-6241 2689 LAKESIDE WHITE LAKE area, 3 bedrm. and open balcony, for the large teas built in elec. stove. $10,300 with terms to suit. 625 Island Dr. 3 bdrm Water Softn traverse rods & drapes. THERMO. PANE throughout, Exc. beach and 2 car garage. sort Middle Rd. approx, 20 acres. bedrm. full ement, modern investigate at 7. 350, 1 ACRE Modern, y and clean. Excel- ec Tile lent ts word! , gas hevt. 1% car attached garage This first ety pod have $10,500 sale price . $2,000 5 B. ONLY 5 MILES OUT. = Humphries} eam! 150 and a on front park gg finest beach LAKE TY HURON REALTY 7766 M30 at Pontiac Lake 36681 MU, Multi-Lakes Realty I HOMES Biack <5 street & drive. _trall Walled Lk. screens Large lot on river. $00 total. Oakland County Realty inion Lake Rd, EM_3-2411 ‘after 7 GILES | Sylvan are Three Bedroom Brick, truction. One m red Ceramic tile bath. Lake ek wit many natural shade trees. KENNEDY PE + ott "Even a til 9 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Forest Lake Hills If, you Reve been ane for and the built BRICK RANCH foot living room with gn tes Income or case eet “a of Commeres. a fe jae , plan ‘Schoal condition, ing 18 See etait KINZLER a = “PAE, PONTIAC. PRESS. PURSDAY SEPTEMBER 1, ‘1957 Bes. Set Heowee 43 _ Foe Se Howe 43 1B Ses eit E* i McLARTY Broker | a wey toom, Well sapdncsped Jot. bg ttt Joslyn, i. saney oe ORFDETIPLEY List tee no" suvice WALDO STREET. 4 RMS. B eg aut. heat & hot oe ton call FE sees Por Lake Year ones 3 ‘bedroom home. BROS. West Side Waterford Township For $1980 dn. & taxes & insurance. You can. mens into this O Masctay Lakefront by ee zr. pound located ve .. home built in 1965 located x 150 ft. lot Being o8 with dining ares. hed ouenene fersace mh Uk r: 2 yrs. old. & aq. ft Be aluminum storms & screens. lawn, Witte BROS. - 8660 Hey. Open Eves. "til $; Sunday 10 to 8 Walled Lake—By, Owner Welch. Modern ranch. 3 bed- ta S |S le z Buy Thru Partridge - List Thru. Partridge - RMS. &- = bar. It nh went. last you'll have to hurry. $850 oowe @ rm. 3 bedrm. modern home. Located Pranklin Rd. bare and oi] heat, you can move tomorrow Rr D. RILEY, Broker Buy Thru Partridge __List Thru Partridge LEAVING CITY. 4 ROOMS & bath, basement, house _ Pear. wr Blue Sky. $1,000 down. PE’ 2.5965. _ $395 Moves You In a 3 fodel “380” West ins Phone 3-4200 or FE , one or WILL TRADE A Kitchen That could come into a Mey «2 still fue and tone 00 of a 2500, Why Build? When you can buy this three bedroom a. Gruso same as new shoe? $14,500 with te the per'd rooms are ‘r large with as large lot. 1% car garage, cement drive, Why not look for yourself y. Lazy Man’s House ~ Because the yard is in with this home. Attached garage cement ~~ There is a looks like a qoil house, can used GRYTORD nanan 7 Open Eves. PE 2.0474 t FE 47114) 670 W. Hu MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Open rae 7 ome E 4-9584 Gwrtac SALTY. : seme. a eae a or a hing. "room rm closé- in. PE 8-0512 p.m 4 BDRM., Fi86 DN. NORTH eS faa IMMEDIATE POSSESSION “zoom house. } block ted down. § ROOMs IN oS “93000 CASH, mer loca- $1,800 dowa & #15 6 Small “Bungalow: Only $500 Down of & frame — Well —_ stone al heat, Lotaied near Clarkston, $50 Giroux-Franks ORNERAL REAL BOTATS. ee oe nice west —— wi car P —3+- a 3 ROOM take over amaiene FE 25206 after 3. A + ne 2 bedrm rdwood floors, — Ha hot wal acre. Corner e clair between Livernois & oe Open 2 to 6. Or Call Hempstead MACEDAY LAKE RD. home - beautiful BLOOMFIELD SCHOOL DISTRICT ON ie Finance--We Finance one Ste .M-16, St. For Sale Lots 46 $50 DOWN Cnty 9 fom jolt as Wie Meer to Ban your rows (and for fwiure acre aoe with : late pevdees only 3 miles from develo ent. Spacious homesites ‘on balanc Vast down will handle. "LAKE real buy a with terms. Edw. M. Stout. Realtor Ph. FE Tt N. Saginaw ~ 1. Ti) 6:30 140 x \ =| 100 6. dirrel Rd. PE 2-0233 bs 1 _N. Johnson E4510. 95 8q 2-02 nN ays MIDNIGHT BLUE TUX- | FULD Tan | ‘ ' BLE TOP GAS PREE HOME TRIAL CUSTOM DRAPERIES. LINED. h k L d | DAIRY QUEEN | a | Sd. Sse 44. Price $35. FE 6009. |“ 55°" Bac cond Bi L.A. WAGNER CO. |" Live new. Reas. PE 4-2326. eetroc oaaing & North of L Cc Care ries CAR boat Te, has _Rochester __ Phone FE 5-922) | DON'T LET PAINY WEATHER. cau ueve lapbaaiucient yor oan ompany Gints. COAT 16 | GAS STOVE Wi PRIG. OPE. 1S, Weta ee tant us| 4x8 Sheet $1.35 Clay Fill you e ne ore, you 202 AC STA BOYS COAT, ize 6 __ 46223 _ For Sale Miscellaneous 60 . Warwicks 2678 Orchard Lake * will appreciate Soe value PONTIAC TE, BANK BLDG> ure Rd 9.000 will handle BOYS ae navee PANTS, ODD | GE_ cE REPRIO. a5; 2B ses BROWN Beene a | Pir Plyscord, ¢x8x% sheet . . $4.95 $ wi NEVER aes USED. beige club chair, Boy | | DENTAL OFFICE EQUIP. VERY | planket ee be ae La eps at YMCA Y mIremec CLOTHING — PRIVATE cpair with teal sit eat eek le SALE | reasonably priced for quick re-| Twinsulation, 100 9q $7 60 MICHIGAN BUSINESS Psat REASONABLE. FE 40. eile Bee new. Brown | ~ : | _Teem. MI 4 _ nee oo M “ JOHN A. LAN! BROKE | “EXTRA GALLON PES. ha Bulldozing and front in load Was. TELEGRAPH RD. = CASH LOANS Sr my oy Sake ete Cert Rae ee aT PAIR | seal’ RITE OR WALL BOND <2 Paty cas ‘ed 02m Mes’ stever: | tata" while Yin e boards, ft... ibe | CLIN pONARD EM 301. PARK AT OUR PRONT DOOR |. Sh BLE 5 a | BEXWOOD, - WA WAKEFIELD WOO: TIEIOR FLAT OM Glas co.) oe See OO: leave tee | Mette Caer Jars BY eles tor ext, CteneD Sree Foe 7 MOUTON FOR : = = : MOTEI 19 $500 sa Ee aa ; ae aaa a PLASTER TONE (PLASTER wi ae eth AER a croc ae Pro pssoo.Ow MATER. | pes ee or FE 2-8572. piB. WOMAN'S RED DRESS, SIZE OTPOI UTOMATIC WASHER, | PAINT z THER | TALS FOR MPLETE Hi ants peat humus and black dirt Owner says sell, % sleeve, used’ only once, clean Apes only edn 14, | EXTRA GA LLON arr [Suan alnbonilea lowe gama oh EASY CREDIT T 81° per re = uties —s ot eer with $5,850 down. i's a buy at and in very good condition. Too Teal buy at $125. Milk's CINDER SEAL BASEMENT Nghe hemmed bagel aa) MAKE aT Pont WEIMARANERS, PULL GROWN, wne Appl. M PAINT 08.50) Short 8t. FE 5-1638 wees |. male and female, leaving town this pri ee BUCKNER large for = ee one Call re Aoots M e sre EXTRA GALLON | | PUO-THERM Om HEATER DOU- | BU RMEISTE R E. off Sashabew Re. MApie* 54475 Must sell, ‘a Linda Viale, see push button Like new. FE )-000d | cope Menard enea plot | oie pats eee is ST. tee bee Norttiern Lumber Co Attention = Se ee REALTOR Scrap & Iron SEAL or OR 3-vias 32-0048 | SUPER NE .. $3.05 GAL.!| ers, excellent condition, EM 3-6555 : = F ° Loading top soil. biack dirt’ &| Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 icin one “Bere. tu 8 Fj C = | HOTPOINT ELECTRIC” MANGE, 6 iar arian $129 QT. | ESTATE HEATROLA OIL BURN-| pontise EM 34171 & EM 3370) {ill send or clay. We deliver - vs EPOT. RM. Inance @: Al PRICES FOR SCRAP CARS a) burners, 2 ovens, ‘condition. A. C. Com pton & Sons er, call MAyfair 6-5551 after 7 Telegraph) & 8 Mile Rd FE 5-155) 00 _____| pos. CATS BOARDED. poos home on highway. $3,000 wid ban- | tron, FE _8-8797 only $60.85, Mlk’: Appl. 3 MI 6-1300. | 000 W. Huron St OR 3-7414 _ Pm j Detroit CEL 4184 4) BLACK DIRT. TOP SOIL! trained. Burr-Shell. 318 8. Tele- die NA os nagaves. 6 G | Eon eee. STOVE. $751 TON ae aaa, 's TON | FREE STaw STANDING ) TOILETS ne D It y. it 61 field sand & gravel FE 5-021¢| graph. Si Ave Good con. A_4-2567 rollaway jack. em. grease | Dow Ne ; r Gg eg es SE Sele Household Deeds 87 | erscns ewan iincaine” | Selmer FE bese. eer 8 | ee bei ents with trim 2. G00 8s 0 wan ABS Al. ee ane a and | Hay, Grain & Feed 71 bidg. with lovely 4 rm. apt. : | Forward & reverse. all mod wiht ban ™ ’ eat. rill sand, clay and|-~w=-"~-“"~“~.’.-ewrereeeeeewrn a above. 96.000 dowa, i price fn Drayton Plains [essence teat tear 1 age | features, $1.50. 'ws. PE "bald | PBAG SEAERT MIXER Por | >Re, it te = cian tt | apy HSE Aa OR 37849. IST_AND ND CUT. HAY ALSO cluding real estate D . mahogany drum tablet with lea! . puance. sale. 2460. Y Inds & | STEA’ raw. eve, § 5-1723_ for Walled Lak | er 1 mahogany coffee table KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR, | \-l-l-A REYNOLDS ALUMINUM | SAVE FLUMBINO § Peuy, 00 | HAND SANDERS DRILLS | act JOP SOIL CR USHED STONE. | iST AND 2ND CUT NEW PARTY STORE - SDM LICENSE. a ake | With leather top. 1 mahogany sec-| 1% du. ft, motst exe cond..| SIDING. Sell yourself by seeing | 172 ir _ Saginaw HAND SANDERS—DRILLS—GAWS | eval. ooh. Ta acs eae: 7. : aad retary breakfront. ahogany | oni $70.93. ine MI 6-1300 our oungs- FR A TOILET Gonivtate. OW NIE, pn i an. var ie 3-051, complete service, ry os al pe perk Bloomfield” Utica | expandaway tabie. Used. twice | Ce NEW a FIRE.| ‘tows birch end ritebens, |" gph ay tool chest. misc Bee aNPORD | S&B SAND. GRAVEL, TOP O0IL. Usk plenty Sh, De = ic N FIRE-| | : = (‘FE 302% et $8. SANFORD | 500 WINTER FE boot ete Auer ee tons ee | Reta nase Sets AES, P| Biceps aon Pane ts Hak comes FE) FORRENT | _ Saas pittyaandscepine: P| beri, 1 rete eva pera, a res. Reas. MAyfair : B; 13 or $2.50 ‘per 1. 56. : _ be no a & j jes No m down, $5— rere " sera, TARE ci ae or aay pert Loans $25 to $300 c pithioete Pe Seam | TABLE Nien Pe Se: BOOOY AND | per ‘month end. tp VALLELY'S | poet Om. TAMER —~ TTGAL | ittlce Mattia Ra nettMtgrt; | A TOP SOIL, RICH BLACK DIRT. | ALL TYPES O> WAY, rain, wil _725 Aubura cnamaie ety 7 BEDROOM Sires. was fs MAYTAG WRINGR WAGER. | _ OL rast tor torn erties. | New. O28 Gelivered including sale | aper steamers. Oakland Fuel & gene Bennett, PE 5-470, ee ae mn SU NOCO HOUSEHOLD Soe eee living rm. & bedrm. suite. 50 Ply. |? PC. KROHLER LIVING ROOM Tir cove, ‘Thewe A conner ‘tiling | PE Seite, Crenard Lake Ave. | Stack 6 PILL DIRT. YARD & | GENESEE SEED WHEAT 1 YR. _Chippewa _ Girls ice skates sizes i3 & 2. | suite, $25. 2 exterior doors. fill cape, filters & copper tubing FE _$-6150. load, Delivered. FE $-3282. from seehtfies este tesesé.. 00.58 LEADER IN THE mean erties | pSIMANCE CORP. or pede 7 Pc. BEDROOM SUITE, » WATER. _sleds, cheap OR 3-8628 "| Side" asor. cost uneaes a = a Sse ras Schaeffer | BOAT AND FLOOK GANDER, POL-| giGck-DEnt qos LOAD PILL | (rom gitttifies, sate tested. 90.2 station in the Pontiag area. We § = fall’ ty pace @t Sashe-| MOVING — SELLING Misc. Gps ___$65_ MI 17-0675. ___ FURNACE EXC” COND | ee oe FE ss 240, dirt, top soil, mason sand and | cleaneao & treated plus bags are seeking the sales type in- pees cheap. Electric Qouble oven stove. | 2 WHEEL TRAILER | *LOOR FURNAC Gan D Beldvin Ave, a gravel. Also crushed stone.| Order now. Ralph Hickmott ar dividual who is @ to meet the: | a | baby buggy, troner. bet ro- FE -3-7686 i 33804 pod fo 2 ight tractor work. FE 2- ~~ t 2S OA t $-2158, Oxford ee ee Se ee oe (© RMS" OF PURNITORE, CHEAP. | tary’ mower & ete. _MI = i. eae ete Fn astas | PATS SEWING MACHINES DRY | Sor iDOgING. PROMPT SERV. | F Sale Li k 72 i l FE &- } Vat ; GAS WATER HEAT s. drapery ma pain - 2 lected will be trained at = Sun 959 7. m2 TO wee | ipo LVI ROS Sure, i MUST E HAVE E ROOM ‘SAVE PLUMING SUPPLY. | “Electric water heaters, $79.95. formica, plumbing & electrical ice. MAple 58-5207, Clarkston or ale Livestock Co.'s expense. ancia = Sit ouree Lo. OOM | 172_8. Saginaw FE_5-2100 supplies 7 days. Weekdays EE. FILL DIRT TO ANYONE tabaaea ll BreaTasHil a Caibabe! AN CO. Brand new, de & chair De. breakfast set ........... $15 et. a | Bath tubs, first Gn $40.98. G.| supple y yS FREE, FILL DIR 2 REG. Gounneay cows. 10 iy to Mr. O'Dell, TRinity 2-810, 2¢ = LAWRENCE PE 6001 | modern’ ciep tables, matching | Bens complete ............... $i5 | 8 + STORM WINDOWS, 7. sale x 4 x 544) _ a. Thompson, 80 6-30 to 6:00. Sunday 10:00 to 4:08; WITH EQUIPMENT TO RE- rade Holstein cows. 1. Hoistei Goce Mara See. Wireeen ¥ 1603.| FRIENDLY SERVICE coffee tabla 2 decorator lamps. | Hide-a-way $20 & 1, 34% x 38%. Good cond. §2.50| Montcalm Builders Supply, 156 W | MOVE IT. CALL FE 5-3808. “| ea eee pate rds Se All for $99, (caly $3. weekly. | Ping pong table $19 | each. 680 Joslya, corner Seale & ( Tara e Deo! eo _FE $-4712. 8. ; _ Py ' earson's Purn 42 Orchard | Walnut CT ene rer $15} _Montcaim. g Pike’ ID |FILL DIRT, FILL SAND, MA-| ve - Standar . PONTIAC S Laine NS Oe | Dresser... 7-418 DINING ROOM SUITE. $75. Berry Steel overhead factory -sec- | ‘ike’s Renta £ son sand, top sofl & pea gravel. HORSE = ee: DON AI mie “™ i 7 CU. PT G£. REFRIG. GOoD Oi burners $25 & up! Over 100 gts. home canned fruits| onds All sizes and prices. Lares Ries & EQUIPT. RE TAL, Crushed stone. Black dirt. $9 del. _Lacy, Ortonville. NAtional 71-3014 Oil Co N rong nina aa FOU mom.| ee BUY. SELL. 5 aaonaioe & vopetabios, FE 6200.___| selectior from $38. and up. A| for sanders. polishers, carpet | £23 22001. quarian conve (seston Oere. ota) i GAg REFRIG FOUR COR- 10 IN. JONEs & LAMSON BENCH | modern door on your garage rons | : nese: -GOOD FARM TOP sot 3 YDS. - old. . | ewest ao seat bale Lapect Rd. FE. EVERYTHING iG FOR HOME lathe, 2 pl Hy Ye bp. motor.| less then you think. Let us give, ‘SD&mpooer. weed mowers, tillers, to ue Date ones. air red sorre] mules. 3 sorrei Is now accepting lease applica-, “ a E $150. OR 3-7713 you a free estimate, , Jawn mowers. chain saws. plumb- | eet ——- | saddle horses. 2 colts. Will trade wat Gates ‘Sansone Loan Office | ray irxuc sorrow weave Sta TERY “Goon | 2X WIRED BOTCDING. soem. | 71 8. "Pus FE 20000 | fj,, “upon * mediates | 6905 RGAD ORAYEY, Ys Grange nan Suton. Oa 7ese8 e es is. ie . | Brown dav 71_ Whittemore. MI 4-8688. | GAS Ficon PURWACE AND GAS_ 7 ‘you don’t see it-call us | i a quires mvestment of 61.200. Call THE CASH YOU ren a devenpert. | Shea sisa: | -, tend. Large size. $130. OR 3-9178, Pa FRAME STORM wikt| Tall furnace, double unit Good saa Dinie Waterford “OR 1781 HAUT & DELIVER. SAND, GRAV- PUREBRED HOLSTEIN’ COW “RESTAURANT FOR SALE — VAN? | Reversible. $16.50. Imported SORGE Ot, BURNER. REASON: | “dows. Phone FE 5-8063. enaition. EM 2-9007. | Opp. Our Lady uf the Lakes Gurch.| % 61, ‘Phone PE 3400, phony wee WANT . . . $25 TO $500) 83495 Axminster 249.00. Rus | 2 SEWING WAGHINETT ii wooD *RAME STORM GLASS CANNING JARB,_PINTS, | “Sale Musical G 9) = : : TRUCKING coy wits) IN RECORD TIME... | 285,889 Lake Ave "| pew Sig sag attachments. | Thou Te beth set. FE 27068 quaris. Fea wee See Loading For Sale Poultry 74 trucks Will take property, on TATU DIX $01 2 men $6.50 month : é s ; ~ ~ _ Rotel or farm in trade. Bald- ‘AUTO OR FURNITURE v couttoan at om See or tae j. Coronet A) es. | 40" =anD) —— tat HARNESS EQUIPMENT | 2 BASS ACCORDIAN 900. Baa e sal Cla Fill | oo) reid DeaMonD lets Don? HONE: FE 68-0661 : == Som oh || . + oc ying pulle ns : i] IN RCA TABLE MODEL TV. ae ssenicr ae 33711 ‘wed aiid 360 OAL. FARM STORAGE GAS. Used off furnaces, oil parner | eres Leer meee ee y | Poultry Farm, Romeo, Mich. P Sewing rocker. rch rocker, 2-4150, Westside Van & Storag Mil Ra. tan a 1 a studio couch 4 Blonde dinette vSED TV sETS FROM | _oline tank on legs. OLive 6-1001. floor furnaces, Pests — spac i 130 BABS CHILD'S ACCORDION. t YMCA __2-2279. 16026 28 Mile Rd EABOARD en cabinetie Sucre. a canaal a a a TV . 3 Galnhees Oss gear setts ester. OL 20011. _a White & a Mother of itary, | | a _ Sale Farm | Produce 75 “i en cabinette A ha HOT WA. Brand new rted from Italy LPAI Co FINANCE COMPANY |-> Cab. sinks & fittings | $59.50 up| IVS CAPITAL NO B-@ HOT WA-| Make—Enrico Roselli, OR 32014, PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS — ° = <= 175 YARDS USED 018 B. Wales Laendry trays, stant faucets 23.40 | ter furnace and. stoker, perfect —_ SUPPLY ALBERTA PEACHES AT ROss- 1185 'N PERRY 87. 75 ue pai rama FE_ 2-225 x dition. Very cheap if iaken out ACCORDIONS, LOWEST PRICE ON man Smith 3356 Bald | a ee eed oe ae |Next to New A & P Super Market TAUPE VELVET -PHILGAS 30 GAL> WATER HEAT- 1728 ahve. Fi, aoe soon. Changing to gas. Call FE | all sizes, accordions loaned free trucking. ‘Cement and eter (on yicentals Rd. “ott M4, Bring bas- pestle | lagen lac. Bx. —LPARKING NO PROBLEM” CARPET “tr. Used. good cond. R. B. Mun- super AnD. PANS ON BALE AT | _ 2-730. ei emeets “umn lesoome: FE | 31636 in ORCHARD AT wT N coptionat low investment re- ro Elec uron. cost below cos uss's New | KITCHE UILDERS, CONTRAC- OM DEL. ON 2% YDS. OF : red. Free & company; \VHEN Y N And padding. $3 per xara for car | SORTABLE SEWING MACHINE. | - and Used Merchandise 4280 Ditie | to-s and architects. Our construc: | BALDWIN ACRONSONIC ea Ano. PROuPE D ON Gn Pema | Sauirre!, 1m north of Auburn Ft i t & padding or will sell whoi | $500 will ad} Heigh' nancial assistance available to a Da Good cond. $37, FE 2-6860. Hwy. Drayton Plains, Mich. tion department will design, in- Will finance, OL ska E DDED PEAT. HUMUS. _Ave. Auburn Heights. ualified applicants. Call today. § $ A et eee 7 “FES stall and finance vour kitchens. oa RGuaiOemcnnl "FoR | ARE YOU PLANNING A CORN PE ise 7 wre 2 SiN ROCKER: acess: PRARGAIN. bi ANCHOR FENCES ether metal or wood. compiete | © sale. Phone MA 5-6631. O18 6 corer ed DAD. | oust this weekend? we have 1 + ANTIQUES — , With all cabinets, bu appli a _ | STATE E s “ o INVESTMENT av icteria straight chair, blue needle RED DAVENPORT VERT GOOD | Seek mirntatEes Peto | @nces, custom tops. plumbing and CORONET LIKE NEW REASON: |" 24) or delivered. MY 2-6004 ee cs somasen, prong Ob aon Ouaer mye sell! Were Raeatane (car ok fees ne) tae tele Sae> | pay Ooh eteee Mr cet | IRC WELDER 30 AMP fO-| “iris, Ne sob ico smell. oo | ste FE cy SHREDDED BLACK DIRT AND _ FE 5-3938. 2 large income homes, on one signature car or furniture. No) .sou¢ ANYTHING YOU WANT) y pen brass fireplace set sRC ane | project too arge, no distance too GRAND PIANO BROMBOX x. SHREDDED BLACK DIRT ANT : Pontiae’s busier east side cor-| endorsers. Payments to suit your | Pon rye HOME CAN BE FOUND! ‘Window fan ete All very rea-| bart. Portable OR 31751 | great. Michigan Fluorescent, 383 cellent condition, $205. EM 3-032¢ FE 2.5833 CORN ners. R marvelous _ very, budget. We will be giad to help! AT LES son, FE 43798. 40 Rosshire _ ct. | AL I GOOD BARG: AINS | _Orchara Lk. Ave Eves. : OIL 6 EYARDel 69 no FE For Deep Freeze, 1584 N. Perry. valuable Auburn | Ave, | pro you with your money problems. 4 inte our of the was, but-a°lot REFRIGERATOR. GAS RANOF Gear 72 ee LUMBER NATIONAL GUITAR CALL AFT. eat aca gestincar | Pie with lot roximateiy 100 x 150 less to pay. Gas and elec vetrig: | & automatic gas hot water neat! | ear Y-Pine 1-4. .04 {t. ‘ er 5 pm. \_ 5-5 | peace — APPLES ~HOME- WILLE vi BREWER cratora, ranges & water heaters | er FE 24760 West Van & Stor S38" traignt ‘and sound | 284.3 FIN STUDDING, © FT. 3c 8 OOo owing PLAYER RE | as (ev Ne ee caaee stead’ Orehard. 3460 Orchard Lk. i S M. BWER se. | 13 Ib. or 50 Ib. felt, $3.63 rol! airing Quitmeyer. OL. 60571 — eEservice REAL ESTATE FINANCE CO. Bathroom furares., Peds, _cherty REFRIG., $35: GAS STOVE. $25. | _ 90 ib. roofing. tar & nails, $6.70 | FIGERGLAS, 100 FT Ths _ OL 2-008" | YARD & DRIVEWAY GRADING | | peaGeD APPLES Pits S88 tay rE “wo F E 415 74 mattresses aaron tabion feeaney bh eae ts y tne mages con ie | Pineue Doreriee jan aes St lee HE PEARELINGY BO: A PLAYER PIANO L y= COMPLETELY | f $3882 qeavel 10 ee | for gale et Sutton's ¢ Orchard. 324 vee a7 occasional chairs, Ming room | _vedrm. suite $85. FE 5- edimix concrete & mortar, $1.20. ~~ ; 9 | _teconditioned. OL _ 6: __“. Lake Angelus | 702 Pontiac State Bank Bidg _ y sete, radios, rugs. dining room © carry 8 col ‘of new TURE. WINDOWS, REAL BAR- = ATTENTIO | ___ Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 SEVERAL VARIETIES OF APPLES ' TEAGUE FINANCE CO.| otter mise. tems NEW & USED Reconditioned Appliances | énd*aste"oilaiog materia, "| Gutta Used Violins, 439 and up New | ontivenn | fats Orchant’ Song Ro Ra's re Mayta, ih agp be ased our = se ns | Partrid eC 202 N. “MAIN Visit, our trade dept. for ‘real | 8a seats Jesel enimens oa tell pln [agg en Lido bl aaa CLOSET COMBINATION, LESS Violing equipped with super sensi DRY SLAB WOOD, DELIVERED.) ini’. of Auburn. OLive 2-0607 ROCHESTER, MICH. |" "ouR EASY TERMS * tretrig: 90, aoe Lea LUMBER & | “Soo °rr SCOTHES LINE. 4 $15 ang ep ee merplece. | eIREPLACE ~ FURNACE, =n FouaTord, 1 eBring stets le eS Se LOANS #25 TO $500 We by ve buy eho gy a aa MP ELECT RIC | MATERIAL SALES CO. | Atk gPISHING TACKLE—2 pcr EN aH "aERVICE. ON ALL ro tel “ei, Oukiand ale 38t0" ane aoee. , AUTOS aba : : . Se ; aint, 4 char ve TOM TOES THE PECK BOWLING—TRADE 4 look sround. 2 acres of free INC. 5349 Highland Ra. (50) A C Com ton “& Sona INSTRUMENTS 158. bu. FE. 46742, 4100 Bald Mout Fight Brunswick alleys in mod- HOUSEHOLD GOODS bar ONE FE 9241 3465 Auburn ___ FE ¢-3573 8 | ee Wire OR 3-414! 107_S8. Saginaw FE 2-0667.| sonED SLAB WOOD AND | —ai2 *Ra. ern deluxe Drick & block bullding Pb. Rochester, OL 60711, OL 1-979 OPEN MON. SAT, 9 TO @ | REBUILT WASHING MACHINES. BULLDOZING AND GRADING. : aes = |RENT BEFORE YOU BUY. Kindling delivered. OR 3-8400. “Sale Farm E t 76 - Macomb Count; Wil : FRI, Paes 9 All Stes is le | Free estimate. FE 4-5950, J F TRNACES | lect your musical instrument from de for ein Detrott, or ee 4 miles E. of Pontiac or 1 mile EI 602 N Johnaon. UN nee Grinnelils. Free lessons included| Plants Tri Shrubs 68 68 1 FOR: ODE con. ae, ca cney terme. ___Mortgage Loans 54 t of, Aubarn fer Ss Le tne. BATH SOM Pint il FOU rhea =. ver Se Ses ‘endl with each ie aoa _Plants, Trees, soru oe rc D eon, ee MODEL ROSE, FRIEZ FRIEZE ae FE| Hot water and steam boilers, Or t USED | =o e 10 A BLUP SPRUCE FOR YOU. Al —&_oth $183. i J — $600 500 | AUTOMATIC WASHER AND MAY-| 2.3564 after 3 automatic whter heater harc.| LARGE SELECTION chase. We will give your child an i Ag A rn EQUIPMENT tecateg ear Ue Bp ft toravel| Fer aay oureces om | tag siete ener, Rapmuned.| ROGR GREY TU MEAYY AHAG| Sec _cntaent wopioy Crm | GOS, re, oem Lone OF icy int alco Lhe There geet a HESnGRe | arm agupnon gureey erin Bay City. um, , heres on a pemesy — or not, in Tipecetee isreek. Kelvinator te: sie. one 12 x 15 Deltox. R | ad. ule ealvanises copper bia black | MEDICINE CABINETS. PARGE 3-7168 . pe he a Ceecies tie ne Fe rate eer ete ae way. xcellen' haga A " ‘ Lt co betes and er Kentone. | 20 mirror, slightly marred, $3 95 COND ‘CLARINET “LIKE NEW oa apt., $20,000 down 2. Yet beme ” sdiiaes or oeeace Sac valued a Bg ond See | BEIONTS suri LY 2685 Lapeer | nue — ipeeeee of med- = FE 5-700 a 2822 Bieeth RA. | “re Gane re _ SERVICE DGE \ SHICK’S. MY 3-371) __ Scat oe Mites Land Mai Ed hand ee, cesiness : SPECIAL ee ‘ON BRAND NEW: 1}, miles & of Wixom Rd. and Terms to suit ‘til 8 pm W ARD E, PARTRIL ak oe Se _ Senucee ANTIQUES — FURNITURE. SOME =~ mate. O8 a ATES $5.95 rors uc) eabeifio marines Missin band instruments - trombones,) Duck Lake Rd. oe Open | | FE _3-0830__! ou. Mt. Clemens St REALTOR FE 4.3581, 4 To Dulig « garage or on marble tops, chairs, ‘mtrrors, case | SAVE, JP 10 40 PER CENT ON , 192 8 Saginaw __FE 6.3706 GOT Neccent 303 Orchard Lk | clarinets. cornets and trumpets. _exery day 7 to 7. MU 48038 | CORN THREADER. GOOD COND. REAL ESTATE & BUSINESSES a garage home. a 16 mounter birds. Dishes, ‘misc. | all Norge floor sample sutometic | BERRY METAL OVERHEAD GA five _ | Large discounts leurs, TE | EVERGREEN, vw 8 SALE. $2. UP. | _MA_5-1968. _ TRRUOUT MICH, poly So. Ration Bede ex Pag OO oe caremame | Be cab ict tase i Rae be | tee | Rite "eet fidde aero CALIF. HERE WE - es aVE Tis Foties_ 2. FE_t ~ ANTIQUES “ valne GABER her hf SHOP a et FE (3, in) 21-f ten Tike ft. | SPECIAL AEs ig Mate RI _Crescent Lake Rd, FE 58-6406. COME WE ij i pole “PE sais a 1, SAVE PLUMBING SUP PLY | RENTAL OR PAYMENT PLaR | SUSRt TREE TRIMMING AND we ate going al! out to win a WE COVER Swaps 55 Ice cream chaits, outside dinner SELLING Ont a SMALL PIANO. | seer AND PO! - HALF AND | 172 8. eeginaw FES -2100 EDWARD'* ‘OUTLE moval, Free estimates. FE) vacation ath, tn California Sep- . THE STATE'~ PAP LAA PE LA bell. china, silver and furniture. 5. 2 CHAIRS & davenport, $25/| quarters eeika Mkt. FE 5-7041.| Oil. - FIRED 606 GALLON PER 18 8. Sa aitaw FE 2-2108 | 1008s. tembe @ month to act the 1 1,000 CAPACITY 4DECK ELEC- n evenings and Sundays aytag washer, $15. a dres- hour hot water heater, circulating SANG IEH acon | lst berry Plants 2c past Gesllever ours mow Parmat trie Jamesway brooder, 4 200 ca- | 22_Pine_St, Behind Pontiac Press.| ser Ghost, Ovvasional coffee BUY DIRE pump, Fedders circulating blow- UPRIGHT PIANO. $35, © D rawber tractor. Come in or call us to- HM Lal oct Pho gr * ob ach Breve fishing batteries. ANTIQUES — ALSO 2 ORIENTAL table. 100 cinder wnineks at ite gT,,0l1 tank, & controls. comp em a — naPrist Plant no. _JAkland 8-2038__ day: We take tradeing and give ‘ miles oO t Oh, 9 ir, @ each. s. nove ™ e e @ s&ys A . cr erms ere lath We tein Whi _oubourd olor OR. SiB, "| ined, Goap he wes” S| es Bates Sue, t'Eet | pusept MANUPACTURE giypo) foripmal coppers pane ie Gousha EE KING BROS. z ; on. FF 23965. | | Baseboard... s.... 60s. E i go a gar Maple orway Mapie.— taken st ile sos ee en cre De ee coat: Ee ar vom Eh ghee dey. fhorter? A ‘Are SINGER ELECTRIC PORTABLE. | pose ee cae Pera ONE 17 7 P. & STEEL BOILE ER. | Sale Office e Equipment 63 | nee ee mee Byrn oe, sas and | FE eas aele oe 4-112 . . E i 5 Michi, . vee i equipped with or without sto er | ee ~~ i iac_ Rd. at Opdyke. bee C. 18 BUSTLING SMALL) _3 yrs. Good cond. 90. FE CIT.) Teh, Sern olum fixarest Seema: Caahet? any Gasere be | ene tree ace | & controls. ‘Two. other commer. | | ail sises, see them before you| FARM MACHINERY. WEW-AND in SAGINAW AREA. Gross| Trp Move CAR AND CasH gion ‘GA son 23337" — ceree from + ot | cin sised stokers. 3°, 4° & 6° | POTAL FP 0090 Soro | buy, and save money. 833 South| used. Proulx Oliver Sales on M24, beni TS. ~ can be FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT. day about their pew Au-O-Matic STOVES 7 BOUGHT SOLD, one | Comb. ‘toors sw $1795) usec pipe black & ‘eaiva nized, CALL vee oa AFTER q ae E Across from GMC. a north of Oxford Stas n tet) GRABER S°U RED] gece Meat | "tees Tater ww RE Oe wate tne gyms HS Ato cit RST 9 Ris rr att, onal hee-| TL EaROOna RAC TOR ® sone ‘ «2h. SUPPLIES ee = i ‘ equipment. MA 5-7356. n FURTHER INFORMATION | aD = ILLNESS Wilt SELL Frasier oa atens welt ~ Siegler Oil Heaters ‘frauen \- PL. YWOOD SPECIALS” ‘Sale St Store Equipment 64 a P mr ~ McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS on e % = q Sale business opportunities. coh est | or trade large ¢ bedroom ems See Veer oes iy 8300 30 Twice the heat at half the cost. Complete nousecorders we do better, ce ee Canny Pair |i cose 1 CUBE STEAK MACHINE, LIKE | vas = ~> | 1890 Crooks Rd. “ih eos ice| on 3 acres With some fru or M birch 4x8. Good $ . aon dha —— _Smaller_bome. 3164 Auburn or low aionthly ps secur ns * aa fir 4x8 good 1 bide : S95 | new, 1 National eash fegister, 2 BEAGLE HOUNDS, ABOUT 13/ McCULLOCH OH AWS, NEW res. —< 23930 : CHICKS MY (99711 8 ace “neater with Semterion .........cc es 14| has 4 totals, recently overhauled.| inches high. MY . and used. W. F. Mill -ONE STOP SERVICE i6 PT. ROY NEEDS SOME SLIP COVERED LOUNGE CHAIR 2 erie wie compaction berunes, Tor ao poner Loo, FE 2-7260. & REG ENG sBTITER and Lawa iquinment, "1803. S- ye ae enna SS : ee R : 8 ‘g ibe oS for car im fair cond., or & ottoman, Clean & in good cond. ly $189.05, now be $5, Mone- Call us on other ply woods, Interior | @FT. OPEN DAIRY CASES 6 weeks One male Eng. Setter, /* Woodward. (North of 14 Mi.), Bir- EM 3-5802. 9x12 Felt Base R 398 n ,000 8 ST ATEWIDE ee SOWER ORIGINAT, se “r, $38. rE. 2019, Li oh into room ont a ene and exterior doors ‘tompresser. 1 7-ft. frozen food] 18 mo. ‘Reg. female ooek. mingham. MI un” POWER MOWER pagel porns, 7 i es. > case, unit contained, all Hussh-| Setter, 8 yrs. Reg. FE 1-006 E @ DIs¢ FORD ORA ost, $158 For sale or USED TRA } Regularliy $210 ontiac Plyw O. : cod 9 wheel traher. j Anderson Ciwenie 1488 Baldwin Ave. FE 22543, ™an's equ'p. 1 meat grinder &| AKC BOXER PUPS, FAWN. FE| 4fill, im good working cond. $125; AS. CHARLES. ‘niautOn er. ; mi Ft. Wall tie Sc DEPT. sits S$ Te Rd. PORCH LIGHTS r. LAN. |. slicer Mason's Market: 1isaie w. | —21037. 3290 Crooks Rd, ‘only nese te : 17 _ 8. CLONE 233 | Youlty with woirror ........ 60.48 OPEN SUNDAYS 2 bh lamps, overhang| Fourti ochester, Mich. Mov- ARC DAGHEEURD FUFS. seks nee er ow 8 th 8t., R ‘Mich. Mov ‘Phone 82\'s o 3%. high. BW tet git- sires GUAR. i aN en cath 95 | Gas range vesceeeses $24.50) COLEMA AN FORNA FURWA CE, POT TYPE team, gnedon. pave ana: terrae | ing, must'be sold by Oct. 1. OL FE #-8426 ute ie hovibueer aes Te _ Sale Land Contracts 5. Ws: Uo Sewer. ‘On 3-427 _Syers, 141 ¥, Huron. Pr Davenport & chair ......., 50 7 tion. $100 Laundry tabs, lights, Buy air direct and save. Mich- in. ENT HAS 3 es BENDIX. #1 FLECTRIC ar Ex ay i he nn gan of a P ceraton ees - $50 by Sigs. igen Fluorescent 303 Orchard Lk. @ FT. BLOND SHOWCASES ALL sy & is Doing sold te 2% PER CENT DISCOUNT trade good ear, MA| } sph Alse Whirlpost vast |§ De, ms | $30.95 es ne en SAVE ENERGY, USE Backhoe served Cree bane new 1's] _ 51704. : rg arver Layee | ass Shgen Hy = heater, 28 gal. $49.50 “TARROCE RINGS & COVERS small safe, 4 8 Saginaw. FE)... Sma = Henry ry Wrond leodee car garage. Sold. for th| GARDEN TRACTOR TRAILER, | Wal a: Dining rm. table. Haywood-Wake- Lo Tc lS WANT ADS! To find a an nett’ * area epee $650 ance at ston : SO MAHOGANY | [feld. cham solid NATIONAL © ¢ CASH REGISTER. | ; : e new see down Bale UO ee ‘or 2 oes seAuTiPgL + § 9- PC. MA AU) Oey clber bekea quuvaniem, eres: Catch basin or drain covers a cond, ‘Reas. MArket. 43075, job, place to live or a| We specialize leat ue Cost to you. 4775 | table ss ay MA Cee, Complete i gay ge THOMAS ECONOMY damaged steel fold door Sdashole. nape ‘ang angle iron ge GE ‘sy ReorsreRs | good used car, see Giese quae ON. GOOD GON- ental j he . cr \ A up evo ed : * n suEY. DAVIDS wer saw, a 10x13 kerk a be x = Py ty "TTT nie i from & wu "pce wea bee : AYI the Nationa! Cash Lege tied NPW. HOUG GHTEN “- "SON eslie R. Middleto «| Peni ar week baye yes. Pe ragne Beet ster—“must tet FURNITURE CO. c Paddock. Postise PE |COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY CO fer 8 Co, Cal FE 20285. Aner I, Case & Ferguson Dealer PORE, 188 8, FA yA MI a 31. 8. Saginaw 81. +208. ve i Orehard Lake Aye, FE 37101 | sheabisee ne sine iy f 4 . Lc) : | | f : i \ 4 | , ra\ a \ . vs. rs . | ee ne 4] P| swap for é.! a '] BUY eg RADI _valee FE 34325. — _Will swap. FE .D10, dade cos TIMKEN CONVERSION BUR CHAIRS | CHROME. IDEAL FOR | & con phan, oe blower for rosy re kithen chair. - aging ravity furnace, Thor ble of odd sets in v col- vr gas conversion os. Terrific values iehigan _cburner. 81 Swap or cash. PE 43232. | Fluorescent, 303 ‘Orehard Lk. Ave. FRADE 4 \ +5. OLD, REG. MALE OF ‘ Beagle nouse for shot semble these yourself and’ save. _gun’ Phoue “Pt 48580. Uuet sheize and table, $69.95 val- TRADE DROP LEAF TABLE FOR bow wi Te new 1957 __larger table, MI 6-2013 fectens. famous makes, Formica FRADE wa PS. popular colors. on a a. ole es oD or hand Mie ose terrific | values. | mower. 20 per off e ard” Lk cha o ‘following lawn mowers, leaf a aaa overs, eeoggronaa "entteee| au naG@“ODING OUT |. peop ba ; ic fads gises. Se and rollins esse t' ott | ackiv, cal sets, brea boxes picnic baskets & ice chests BARNES HARDW. ARE | Camp cook stoves, outdoor srills, Huron tats" vot 12 Parking | COMPLETE! BU BUNK BED OUTFIT. | 1263 _take Ba vo ice Court (ott Cass | “RE Sate Sale _Household Goods 57 MODEST MAIDENS _*® | ig - Pt ‘ ” Wiens “Now there's a friendly greeting if | ever saw Lesa a by Jay ‘Alen For r Sale » Miscztlaneous 60! we JET WATER PUMPs sca G. A. Thom 80 S_ Perry PENNY PAINT: SALE . 1 gal. $3.08 $01 Outside White . REBUILT ROYAL TYPEWRITE! _& table. A-l cond. $115, PE 2-6511. SPARTAN AUTOMATIC WATER softener. ine new. Call Liberty SEARS STOKER & CONTROLS. Take out p02. Lowe EGIL F FALL SALE gage, Backers. tg tis re Jew mBliverware, "ifs Gifts away ‘or arene an i Bawara's Out 18 8. Sa, ginaw 7 ‘SPECIAL and cent — en discontin- | ue olors of Berry Bros. house | t. Most colors Super Kem: white. Alsq Rev.-satin. —— and Kem-glo. Po ae & Paint, 436 Grohard) sees ave: _FE_5-6150 STALL SHOWERS, faucets and curtain, $69.56 vain: $34.45 Lavatories, complete | with gleaming ‘chrome faucets, , $14.95; toilets, $24.50 values at 50. ese afe factory seconds. en 7 maarocent. 383 OOr- aateacoe prentlnc: ‘NEVER | | used, sacrifice. Tape recorder | flash camera, ehilds. Grinnell] pi- l‘g HP motor, Crossman pellet gun, 22 cal er. SAE: Cot, 1 3 1b 7 Talbott ae For Sale Miscellane Mi , s 60. Plasterboard, rock lath. Paint, Hardware, So wm i poet | cal # COMPLETE | Sale Sporting Goods 65 12. GAUGE aotgun $35, Stevens 111 Automatic ghot Gun - padd ~« Rifle > Huntin; BRUN ball, ‘$15, FE 2-370. A pata SELECTION OF U: i uns & a Ben's Loan "FOR | f: ON ‘AKC COLLIE webibna, t's | AE Akc Reo & M0. OLD, SPRING- _er_spaniel py 6120 Dixie H |i, BEAGLE HUNTING shot Oftice’ ah Patter > NORTRILL ones lung Alon eee: _FE ¢0791. ‘GUNS. AND | lore the hunter. . used. Sonne tn We trade guna, 4 Auburn at ‘A ams, Auburn _ Heights. FE 2 5 GUNS — ALL | aR cas size, Authorized Browning 4 & Sot | cesiee: saperey or finance. High on trade-ins. Try before you "s Hardware, Se | GOOD HU. 5 c BRITTANY SPANIEL®S, xc. hunting. Oxford, OA #360. BOSTON TERRIER PUPPIES, AKC -reg., 7 Wall, PE 2-4628. BOSTON Lt sg BA! “pees AKG teg. 19 Wal | bus on our rifle range or trap BOSTON TERRIERS AT STUD, _AKC reg. Cw | field, We - = - Seite Ss = i ade aoe ves, 7 ans wean “Cll Dreyer ee & Sport Center. 15210 Holly _ Holly ME 4-6771. loca, - Buy 8 . _Maniley Leach, 10 _Bagie Hunting Coats & Pants Korean ois, insulated boots, In- sulated find thermal ar. R& H PB. WILL ACCEPT ‘ : _ . ANDERSON, CADILLAC, PALACE wheel base. . - Zs : 1953 Ford Convertible | PR ga Seems Reve | Seen te ai | et, Announce Annual noida ase gn tepee te nS Migs Auto Brokers mea oad seat, Low mileage. Bait payment on a good used'ear.| | cose Chev. Bel “Air, 3 dr. pee ee on —e 1&3 CHEVROLET A SS BI ae g P PEN MOST MAES AND MODELS TO! TR Geert me ger, | tte Crees se cherie |e ats, at pre, we. 0 Sry C08 ME OF ENOL LL SPENCE | FOO TRO iitle down, immediate possession, | Wallea Lake -MA 41561). Bo S eee wv dpecial et #008 SP ECIAL 7 ORnIB Ma. AUeT* @2 Oskland Ave. FE 5.0207 | 112 w. eeene PE 49151 || , 8 CHEVY. "|" Fairlane FOM nice... 1s VI " B TTLE GAS ike new, 9686, PE sae tet sete 3 r¢ ie woes $908 'S5 FORD HOUGHTEN & SON 4 FoRp, wh. AAR 1 Blo pst rood tires. ot Ww PART.& SUPPLIES |“ arse See ASG tmnUr. | (6s Mercury 9 x. tou s+ 988 STATION WAGON & Snow shoe white. Seren PE CUM, Be $2 Ramble, hardiop R&H |... 9495 Rochester’s Friend! PONTIAC 19s HYDRAMATIC. oS TeeTTORD Sg FE, %32| i062 CHEV. 2 TON CAB & CHAG.| 52 Packard 300 Ulramatic ... 3495 $1195 lds D y AUBURN MOTORS Very clean. Will take your old Serv, 1 $—Ciosed Sun, _ | ,te-_Fiat_ bed OR 33iee. —__| 31 ontiecs RAH ec. gues 528 ue il ter | 5 SOR es ee a: | tae ee PE ONO Be HUNTERS +TON DODG CTOR ° “ar. csenaastie ain, Rochester CLUB SED. z en ceaoeTH ‘2 DR RELVE. | aes Besics tester nease| ek eee gaat teenie Bn | che, ey gg” CENTRAL OL 1:9761 | Tape SS, Suen eta te Er Gok Sekt El | ALMOST-NEW CARS PRICED AT A LOW ations, come wom, teliete Sat SUMP BODY AND HOUT s 76 | PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS LINCOLN - MERCURY eae How ome oer e|_S seater “ers, OF NEARLY 74 THE ORIGINAL COST— pletely CA88 AT PIKE STs : , Unite, For your vacation bunt-| 7745, ca ccmnineaa pea EE FE 485 co — 00 — eee easter | Sie. Bee Bia Mer | “BR ht _ . NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY ble dea! d. Can be f-\"i; DODGE PICKUP, MOTOR | & “treme? et us help vou 0 Oe nae eee CON| Compas 4 Boors All with poeet ~Tumer Ford 0 rig ‘Mm: SMTRADER EX ee | Ble, Oto Woodward FE SS | [ee eA tce eales | f,omeist dual exhaust. no'rass| er."whfle: tres All tow muleage | “Station Wagon. Spring sist green. " -New Goodyear Tires ha indie Sie 7 oa ROP OPE) we AE CLARaaTON AD...) AUEUM MOTOR sane | Hie iced wea “| “SS BURN MOTORS Spot Available on all 'S5-'57 models . Rent . praller Space | 79\191 620 GMC TRACTOR. ALSO | +99 cHEV. DELUXE. Ral” 9125, | 06 CHEV, DELRAY 2 DR. RED Corner Pike & E. Bivd, ayBuny mi % mile Ef Pon Set aie Sas, cond, Fe bait Se CRENY— SI WORDED OL | —£8%. wr OR ; Soe Wee (98 older anal one S a Mtrs. a abe PS rae ee ree GMINA ZS Oa IS Car Guarantee tiac. 170_W. ke. 6-6519.|——— ae : condition, Clean: 1 owner. $775.| 1084 CHEVROGET | = LDS HEALER = : $360 where living” PARERURT_ n suer sacursce | cuRVACERT ED amo] Sas Beets hoe 5 De Ta oe rn ik 56 Cadillac Sedan DeVille One| apcndlieg song 28 - | oad ain avet ty La |) "87 Fos 1-ton Speer wheels. is WHITE ina ware COUPE. a - Huron, 1 ae: We West vot tel i = | ioney ‘down Atgume payinents, T ee $1395 : nas , weimming” £00¢ condition. $-0046 |. POWER 24 & month, it Man- . ; . See cet | RSS SRE SSN | pocmmary Rego] fey Pe Sola ‘55 DodgeRoyal Sedan || SOuth Side - 211 S. Saginaw GORILAGMEN ESTATES OOERR gy | iat CURVECLIET wacon. a web | cm Fe Sant CoD. Met | 3 FORD. 3 DR NO. HONE di ht $1695 '37 CHEVROLET —°56 OLDSMOBILE SOUR STAT een |For Sale Cars 91 itt SHEVROLET WA0ON-KTED|i*Camrvaten “GOOD-RURNTEG | bail Gite, feet $5 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe || sim «DOOR, 8 H/TOP 2908. BUICK wee SPECIAL. con or-| 20% gta. jAn oruinal “ane | cand. #15. Call’ momings. FE Seuag—g7 "FORD CONVERTIBLE | ” OEE ONPE 156 CHEVROLET eee OnE ot Oniord ai tee Latevite| 2%, Radio; heater, Loeded. with | Stim ute ur no down payment |— waCTORY OFFICIALS cans | Ret & white, F.O.M power steer. $1295 B/AIR HARDTOP _ 96 FORD a Semmede Ghaner ~ dente B > (Cail MAple 51141. Haupt) 795. SCHUTZ MOTORS 8. Wood-| 195; DeSoto 7 Dr. Deluxe Hard | i¢: save $1,000, mks 155 Doe OTe Ced- oo eee _ . ee lots, sidewalks — 1sht0 tl cot ta CONVERTIBLE Pe ee Birmingham 1p grey gave radio & hester:| scx’ tor ‘Ray. 29786, | 55 Pontiac 2-Dr. Sedan 56 CHEVROLET 56 CHEVROLET noes fan Pig ogy Sy er pine, os windows. Pow- | #2 _caey — apa: m0 DN. rere wsews: What a beyi oF ‘ORD 2 DR. NO MONEY : ae : $2595 : tsa war some _MY 20771 3s brakes, top. A beautiful! payments. Lucky Auto Sales, 193| $2404. down. Assume p Mller hope ma $17.08 Priced 2 _. : 28 : ss _ - C18 TRAILER SPACE TO RENT.| Ruy., Haupt ‘Pontiac. “clarkaton | 8 pe Saginaw. FE 4-22 Saee ten, Goss Manager. PE riced to Go "35 Cadillac 62 Sedan 55 CHEVROLET ‘55 CHEVROLET Large clean lot Modern Robin's), ope $101 CENTURY VDE. aS CHEVROLET HARDIOP_— Schutz Motors i FORD NEW Sea rie ' ; $1195 ; DEL REY Ra. top, Will consiaer “trade. von | Staen heater," Wiltes, We. acts 8. Woodward at Hunter Clutch. $125. FE $8707. 5/7 Wag n 2545 . $1095 55 CHEVROLET .- 155 PONTIAC AC 5 Aue A CCEIOTIRS _ 80 "53 BUICK 4 De Be SEDAN, DYNA- prices Got an elder cat to Trae’ i963 [DESOTO 4 DR. NO MONEY I F wage 4 Dr, Bel Air @ cht. station 55 Plymouth Sedan rane WAGON Gol *s5-'S6 CHEVY PUSH ol RA-) turn’ signals, 2-tone paint. Excel- et as finest trades.| a month. Call Credit Manager. t S $1395 54 FORD 54 CHEVROLET dio, ee PE 8-6 lent eond ange, a out. Only FE 5-9204, Eddie Steele Ford, Sy Ply. HT '55 Olds 88 2-Door $605 DEL REY Auto Glass S ciatists ; > 1950 DESOTO CLUB COUPE. NO : "34 FORD "se WV guy ue tera ear nts |Pelaere Ean tg pe Schutz Motors | "fut? eer rece| (settin: On! Su, Ju, Betroters FT, hes $1695 ° sangror ciatms honored. Mrs. Jack Prasil,| fiarentec el specials. 4 ears. Sc aracghes one no ee sportstone, Loaded with extras.| ; - ED : 53 PACKARD pm ST equipped. All cars must » 8 Fall ts fust sround mer 55 Buick Riv. Spec. 4-Dr. . Safety Auto Giass Co., 122 Oak-| | ae at once—Save more, BUY | Gimy 46.2 DR. — FINE MOTOR, and winter will be bere before Less than 3,000 miles. 53 P ONTIAC land. FE 4-7066. NOW, No phone calls. Come pre- | radio, Transportation special, you know it. Better check your ‘57 F d € 53 CHEVROLET For Sale Tires S0A|. pared 10, deal. Livingston Motor! priced ito go 968. PE oils \/ 5/ car and them check these OLIVER atid, ne _ Lie Sper 88 Spee BEL, AIR 53 FORD “Tfraded te log weed ge Ld CADILLAC \ie@ CHEVROLET «¢ DR EXC gold and black. ROH. overctive,| > - Up's 60 per cent off Blacker, Eldorado Convertible {2%d._Full price suo. SPORT Demonstrators L sp meio Coes ar. Saar J beauty. 80 hurry! $75, North Side 64] Oakland Ave —aeene 1955 dream ser full power. $3.- Coupe. Extra clean. OR 23-4914 Choose from the finest se-| t2dio & heater, Dynaflow. tinted Syl Chev. 54 Pl h Sed : wie: WILLIAMS 750. OR 3-4315 ecti , ot model d ¥ glass, custom trim, low mileage. wu, ea ae Ya Sie ee o4. Plymouth sedan 137 CHEVROLET 56 BUICK WE BY a SELL 00D, OsED go man Vic renaAae BS A PRE- ors. ° "You will be Rappy $1795 | Come. "ae eee ww, te $795 : ae ee ee ee te i larg MN ay ag MONTH | wit one/of these fie carr mek see Moreton} ‘SG Buick |. Ford Sedan = |] SE oro 56 PONTIAC Auto Service 81| of 'pirmingham's ‘inest trades, Tltetas °° $1395 Dyne-Pio. Ram one. blue S| °54 Mf oc bC 56 Le oe ott : ¢ e Se . e *54 Mercury Club Coupe ; ’ CRANKSHAPT GRINDING IN THE] | ; ; ; 1 white, W-W. Wheel covers. 56 PONTIAC _ Seseevtee see Schutz Motors) END QIROL | amb aul "56 Dodge, HT $795 sir a al | -Sale Motor Scooters 82 . wr Birmingham | d Sy — $1695 al ic te te Lancer 2-Dr. thats a jet "53 Cadillac 62:Sedan 56 FORD 56 FORD CUSHMAN EAQLE SCOOTER | power « beauty” in & out, 82 a2003, oS de Dr. fed $795 55 CHEVROLET re oe grat, cont Call ener €. FE) Prt ace. day or, eres at 2046 8 | Pl th | 3s ore Drnafiow. radio" & healer, a i ‘55. Tunderbird 53 Olds 88 2-Door aipaniie 6 CHEVROLET For Sale Motorcycles 83) ficven~ ** 1? ™™ alah oe S | $195 on _ rans NAM, WLW dust a beaut. $495 ARTF * _'54 CHEVROLET ni a aks | Hurry—Only 23 Left! $798 ful car, $1975. 1 xx nS "46 HARLEY DAV ; ree : $795 ‘ S3C s 0 . $708 po ee eee ee | Eel ante vege as, Pune, Guetar, 2.2 te'SS Roadmaster| ~ nt Ss) Coure et ‘533 CHEVROLET FOR PARTS AND SERVICE ON $1195 prices ‘start at 808. te Sei sneecrea tar 2 are: $1605, This rondmaster te loaded. $495 53 FORD PB hecae Bari Harley Davidson see Harley |» Up to 36 mos. oo balance. : ta. 90. Power wineus. Power 52 Ford 4-Door 53 HUDSON eng Sales Co. 372 . Se ; 2 | Our Discounted Price | 2.25 sovanrson ov coal “os : | agate tinted ‘glass, shiny ‘bieck 56 FORD ° nog Bee BAecewoe ss «= HAUPT = g]6 77, UBF ARRAN TacTiat™™) eS oe oss Olds | sacnetSe sean || orem SS CHEYROLET NTAC SALES | Four 1 ; : new spare. . ' 52 Chevrole ; . 2 pei attt i Beth canis PONTAC SALES | ea a aoe ego saree sms me ots ont 2Dr, xe $603 MANY TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS / bea” an ar eae” En Secor MAple s-s5e8 ee Maple b1161| si, per week. wien | SETTER ‘$4 Chevrolet Bet ut revere tt 55 Chev. "51 Cadillac 62 Sedan From $95 to $245—YOUR TERMS / iar. Ponte Lake. Se ASKINS. another 2 tone beauty ox “| A Phone Call Brings a Courtesy Car to Your Door / ee bd Oo) / Bri iome SEE TYE | REEBEGE EE) |11:45—(2) Guiding Light! } |12:00—(2) (Color), been created as a novelty item/. 11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. (9) Million Dollar Mystery. Warner Baxter -“Crime Doctof’s Strangest Case.” (4) News: W’Kamip. (2) Color News: LeGoff. Yesterday's Pawnshop. (4) To night. WEDNESDAY MORNING . ‘le: S%—(2) Meditations. , 6:58—(2) On the Farm Front. 7:00—(2) Jimmy Dean. (4) Today. 7:45—(2) News. 8:00—(2) Captain Kangaroo. (7) Cartoon Carnival. . 8:45—(2). Cartoon Classroom. 8:55—(4) Faye Elizabeth. 9:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. (4) Treasure Hunt. (7) Qur Friend 10:00—(4) The Price Is Right. 10:30—(2) Strike It Rich. (4) Truth or Consequences. - Tic Tac 11:15—(2) Love of Life. 11:30—(2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You. (7) Robin & Rickey. 11:00—(2) Hotel Cosmopolitan. (4) Dough. 11:58—(9) Billboard. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Ladies Day. (4) Tex & Jinx. (7) 12 o'clock Comics. (9) Swing Your Partner. 12:26—(4) Window Shopping. 12:30~(2) As ‘the World Turns. ()\5 (Color) Club 60. (f) Erwins, (9) |" Corliss Archer. 1:00—(2) My Hero. (4) Romper Room. (7) Lady of Charm. (9) Bill Kennedy Showtime. 1:30—(2) House Party. (4) Bride lest Big Payoff. (® (Color) Matinee Theater. (7) My Little Margie. 2:30—(2) Verdict Is Yours. (7) Topper. : '2:40—(9) Myrtle Labbitt. 2:65—(9) News. stand. (9) Fun With Food. 3:15—(2) The Secret storm. | Sane sass Davies! gi 9:00—(2) Garry Moore. (4) Arlene Francis, - 3:30—(2) The Edge of Night. (9)/13 Bugle Theater, 1 | Maternal Role Appeals to Star. Happy to Break Away From Zany Character of Miss Brooks By CHARLES DENTON HOLLYWOOD ‘(INS) — Eve Ar- - lew ain. Series’ Tonight A \ ‘ : as 5 es - wind up comfortably “typed” BTANBUL, Turkey @ : actor than “Our Miss Brooks” Physician Who Found/® sift of diamonds and emeralds ever could hope to be. How Blood Circulates wat pon Brn con tear S wade te The new “Eve Arden Show,” . trothal. . an cen at emit iim. WASHINGTON (~The Public| 4 oe brough’s tickling Soil thet ens ae seat — % Health Service is sponsoring a| Princess Fazilet,- 16-year-old de- Her lecture tours and the problems RETURNS TO REALITY — Eve Arden is happy to’ her |memorial tribute today\to the 17th| scendant of Egyptian and Otto- — of & gareer woman with moppets Portrayal of the wacky schoolteacher, “Our Miss Brooks,"\to play a |century English doctor \who dis-|™2" monarchs, was given the dangling from the ribbons of her more dignified, natural character in “It Gives Me Great ." leovered that the blood ckculates| sme” Jee gens uy ie = *« -cockipestoge A Lagareytoper oo 6 eek ty Enly Ee in a continuing stream powered)/Bakir, chief of the royal palace. * on : by the heart. . They flew to Istanbul for the pre- en 5 eee coer ee AN a. ss ‘ an =< Seats va a few more heiresses e.- *\ sn \ porus. than the original. But the ditter-) 34 Citizens Confer in Lansing | Ne ee kok ft her than the similarities between H to Slash Accid ; et tha death of Wiltiom Har-| oementsd with e* chamend ned her eg Br gong: husband ope O as CCl en ts, vey\ whose tombstone in Hemp-jemerald ring and a flower-shaped and the character she is playing. Essen, bears the tion tht he health to the mobi sun Deaths on State's Waters bought health to th x * mains to be seen, of course."’ ever tried it on TV. Our Heir Aid Shelter CULVER CITY, Calif. #—Sign on a youth center under construc- on: “Our Heir Aid Shelter." ‘Ss hel | JOINS [ AILS | EXNCAME 2 TRIS) lmIA Ie |) ant aa ERE Jaa MCTAL Tie pea i isl TiAl BIL A "103 +P ; Rize LANSING # — Thirty-four citt- » be-lto conservationists set out today to anais eataceiie. SOME HEADWAY i more mirage Se Stichigant| Keith Wilson, acting director of] | Pager _ |waters, the State Waterways ion, told the group that the Legislature made some headway this year in promoting water safety. * * * A law enacted this year, he said, registration of all * * . * Meeting for the first time yester- day, they learned that big loop, holes must be plugged in Michi- gan’s water safety program before their goal can be met. They in.Will require cluded problems of law enforce-|Powerboats and all boats 16 feet ee oe longer operating on inland flicting sta’ waters. This law, he said, will aid The 34 are members of Gov. ons ot boat operators “But there are still plenty of law enforcement problems that re- main,” said Sheriff Harley Ensign of Macomb County, representing the Michigan Sheriffs’ Assn. * * * = A sia toy voles Grouuings. which totaled 146 in the first eight months of the year. 3. Greater uniformity in appli- ‘cation of state and federal water to Noted Doctor - Moinniy, Daddy Don’t Want Me’ - today at a hospital where he her husband, was arrested on fered while attempting to fend Youth, 5, Stabbed in Back NEW YORK (AP)—"My daddy don’t want mé. My mom- my don’t want me,” a 5-year-old lad was quoted by detectives . was being treated for a stab. wound in the back allegedly inflicted by his mother. x * * The mother, Mrs. Catherine Maida, 28, estranged from charges of felonious aenanlt, x Ok CO®: . Her son, Michael, stabbed with a kitchen nite, | was re ported at Bellevue Hospital not to be in serious condition, The boy also had a slash on his right hand, apparently suf- off a knife thrust. Police said the mother had been under treatment for a For cen aes concept, food was’ the intestines and | nary essence, its.” = McMillan's Party Names Chairman - These ‘‘vital spirits’’ were sup laws and regulations. “We might consider requiring : * x ® 4. A plan to stir up greater public interest in water safety. operator’s license,"’ he said. ‘Also, we ought to have a law limiting the number of people who can ride in a boat. Often we warn people on Lake St. Clair about overloading | a boat. But we can’t enforce the warning.” OTHER PROPOSALS Stiffer regulations on lifesaving and fire-fighting equipment, a study of conflicts between boaters and swimmers, extension of life- saving and water safety instruction to public schools, and a study of non-resident liability in boat acci- ,|dents also were proposed for con- sideration. Engine Explodes, Burning Man Fatally DOVER, N.J. @—An_ experi- mental rocket engine, that was not running suddenly exploded yester- day, burning one man to death and injuring six others. . a “routine test’’ at the rocket test station at Clay set the commission's next meeting for Sept. 26 in Lansing. every boat operator to have an|tt Asks Strong Policy Toward Russians DETROIT @® — Antoni Pajack, prime minister of the Polish government in exile in London, yesterday said a continued United States policy toward Russia was the best hope for a free Po- land. In an interview, Pajack said: “If the United States stops com- munism whenever it springs up, it will put pressure. on Russia and posed to be responsible for move-|i ment and muscular activity, and we | Service ville, Tenn. She died in MUNTZ TV\ On prong aos Electronics Association FE 4-1515 ~ C & V ELECTRO MART use Open “ta ® Denmark. . The test staged by Reaction ., makers of the engine. * * of four representa- Chance-Vought Air- Jackson Hospital Asks Federal Aid for Addition LANSING # — Request for Dallas who had come formal approval of a $350,000 fed-, ‘watch the test. His com-|eral grant to assist in construction: three eral men suf-|of an addition to Mercy Hospital the bla in Jackson has gone to the U.S. * * 7. Public Health Service, the office condition at Dover Gen-|°f hospital survey and construction spital were William|S4id today. Dellecker, Hackettstown; Hjalmar| Jotdan J. ‘Popkin, director of Lagerquist, Ramsey; and R. L. the state agency, said approval is} Johnson and R, D. Tweedy of Practically assured since the public Chance-Vought, Repp, D: health serivce already has en- and Elmer Dated, Staskeasus ay dorsed construction plans. were treated for ‘burns and re- * x * leased. The $2,300,000 project, already Cause of the blast wss not|Under construction, will be built id idig : 3 ‘98 a ou” determined. to through local donations and borrowed funds. Jurdan said $:45—(4) Modern Romances. 4:00—(2) Susie. (4) I Married Joan. (9) Circle 9 Theater. 4:30—(2) Our Miss. Brooks, (4) cn hee (1) Mickey's Rec- hs eh heed lel ics Milland, (7) Mickey ‘Mouse Club, (9) Dance Party. |. &:30—(4) Patti Page. &: 5—(4) News. At the end of the 18th cen- tury, candlesticks superseded household neces- , |Russia. That. will help the. sub- | He said it would be impossible there will have to be changes in |jugated countries free themselves.” for Poland to win freedom by a revolution, “It would be downed in a’ sea of blood as it was in Hungary,’’ Pajack said. % Pajack, 64, has been prime min- RCA COLOR TV Sales and Service SWEET s RADIO. TV Fri. Night FE 4.1133 ister in exile since , September, 1955. British Test New Jet “LONDON W—A new mode! of the British Comet jet, corrected for a fault which apparently COLOR TV Sales and Service CONDON’S Radio and TV Sales and Service 191 S. Parke, Cor, Auburn caused two crashes in 1954, was a step closer today to a return to commercial passenger service. The Comet Mark 2E made a 4,600- mile round trip test flight yester- day between London and Beirut ou egret SPECIALS PD one yao Jectric, RCA or, Syivania, cr: GOOD T.V. SERVICE MEN in 12% hours. Japan’s Red Leader Held TOKYO @® — Japanese police Omura, 52, director of the Japan Communist party’s secret finance department and member of the Central Exeeutive Committee, He} was charged with violating Japans| foreign exchange regulations. DO-IT-YOURSELF Tube Tester, with expert advice. RCA COLOR TV Call Us=-Free Home Trial. PORTABLE TELEVISION 6 Makes—$89.95 Up OPEN ‘TIL 9:00 825 W. Huron FE 4.2528 oo eree, wo De oe 4 the federal grant should enable the work to be completed and pro-| j vide funds for equipment as well. 8 She has ap- H d C al : Harold Craig Raises | Total fo $119,500 is NEW YORK (® — Dairy farmer : Harold Craig, of Granville, N.Y., Puff has upped his televsion quiz show ped winnings to $119,500. | 22 Enclosures . Craig, 26, won $15,500 last night, M Guiaing during -his 13th appearance on the’ Chairs a NBC “Twenty-One” show. ig ~* pee f If he decides to continue next, Born Ms week he will have a chance to top! —— the revord of $129,000 set on the #3 Beeay : i show by Charles Van Doren, . oleoresin sgh Ege | A Columbia University instructor. | 38 teal : enceeetenseed : i : 35 Ours name tt Feline nina r city Paradonym of 32 Storehouse Former Slave Dies, 103 ae Breniteet 1Paue 3t Onc ane! has | NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C joreee ||| Hstefal on @®—Mrs. Jane Denny, a former S -seronrend ' ) pOWN 10 31 Gastropoda slave, died here at the age of 103.) aoe. 1 Feminnie ee 90 Prianten Her Mother, Dilcey Cowles, also] ee 9 ae g teria 49 Bxpange died at the age of 103, and had! stan owen ; Qpresed to 44 Get. up belonged to. Capt. Andrew Carson/ Eaqetre 1 Poe tess nme 48 Writing fuide lot Iredell County, N.C., an uncle| -, § Mound 33 baulors ‘Before : 3 oe} % of frontier scout Kit Carson, PRE-SEAS ON SALE © Buy Now, Save $ $ $ @ Extruded Alcoa Aluminum 8 Windows — Self Storing (Ae ciias cudeen 2 Doors, Heavy Aluminum No Money Down — 36 Mos. to Mohawk Home Improvement Co. Lincoln 2-9387 “169” Pay Ock Park nervous disorder. | ; } “ra King Gives Plans Tbe ficeigivee to Seal Betrothal ; \ « = i | eo ‘ : Ee a. | ° 4 $a Lt } fe