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IAC PRESS | ‘Lath YEAR
50: |, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN | TUE *
Hi Inion Men Back SDAY, MARCH 26, 1957-26 PAGES: ‘ i, rd y
de we eeceteem ce mer (aleeneme remem ten aE ali
offa a
Vote Confidence
During Airing
“Stay Loyal to Leader!
members of Pontiac Team-
’s trusteeship..
' The vote came during a
meeting with members of sters Local 614 shortly after
HIGHWAY BLOCKED — Mountainous mounds
of snow dwarf a snow plow as it moves down a
road east of Raton, N. M., in the wake of a bliz-
gard which snarled traffic and buried homes.
All of northeastern New Mexico was blotted out
by the winter's worst storm.
‘Station Troops on Both Sides of Line’
Louis W. Snyder, Detroit attor-
ney representing “a majority of
members,” asked
Nations troops out of
mission is completed.
Dulles also told a news conference he thinks the U.N. Eme Force should be stationed on both sides of Dulles Says Egypt
Can't Expel UNEF
Probable Drizzle
ifor Pontiac; Light
Snow Tonight
Obituaries ..... 6.6 .cee ieee &
Sheth: i cchcvcissceaatee et
Sports ...ccecveeeee ances MNT?
y
Wilson, Bart... .:-- tee % 4
, 13°
d ‘Women’s Pages oeneeeee 12,
; 4
j 4 ; \ \ }
SE, ia
ret Special eoaegerpennecedders es BE] ‘
oo : re i; ‘
BAN Ne ag 2 Ve Qa §
% j,*
lke Reshuffles
Defense Posts Names Gen. Twining to
Chiefs of Staff
WASHINGTON ( — President
Eisenhower, in a major reshuffle
of a defense jobs, today nom-
inated . Nathan F, Twining to
‘be chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. He wil] succed Adm. Ar-
thur W, Radford on Aug. 15.
1.-Accepted the -resignation of
State Candidates
Eek? 2ceZes s Be Chairman of Joint re a World War I debt installment
Reuben B. Robertson Jr. as dep-
on Ballot Monday sss
to the United States at the ed time.
in 1953 because of his maith,
To Open Road in Fall
LANSING — The 35-mile mul- Blizard Tol 33: Six Trains Still.
se Road and Rails . : Buried Under Huge Drifts coe Buried in Dritts
leross-country trains still
“Teanster Chief Evasive
Won't Give Up
Fear More Casualties;
‘Copters Drop Supplies
to Midwest Victims
GARDEN CITY, Kan. i?
— At least half a dozen
were stalled in the western
Kansas blizzard belt today
but rescue workers re-
moved almost 450 passen-
gers late yesterday from
the two stalled trains. ~
The two were isolated
and almost covered by snow
drifts.
Other trairs — on the
Pacit)
{Financial Data.
Challenges the Right of
Solons to Inquire into ~~
His or Union's Affairs
. WASHINGTON (#—Dave
-Beck today invoked the
Fifth Amendment and re-
fused to give Senate rack-
ets investigators his fi-
nancial records,
In an uproarious session,
«Beck also challenged the
jurisdiction of the senators
to investigate either his af-
County Woman |r‘ sic ot tne giant Teamsters Union which he.
heads. .
DAVE BECK
i
|
, have misappropriated Stations rather : |$320,000” of union funds, 3 Beck said any union mem-
night ber who felt “aggrieved”
City of could take it up through
Louis to elestablished union pro-
20) In pleading the Constitution's i
ship, was freed on $7,500 bond and .protection under the first three
Articles.and under the Fourth and
Meany Calls Meeting
-_ WASHINGTON ® — George -: weal. petal of Ge AFL.
% ® meeting of
blizzard the AFL-CIO Executive Council
- ett) SoS Btreas ea 3,| _ Mrs. Sarduk, separated from | ing did not elaborate beyond say- and| her husband for five years, still | ing it would deal “with this Beck has two children living with her. | thing of course.”
. * @# °F “I'm not hiding behind anything.”
“ee ther Tt meibded eoven iead| Fourot Mrs. Sarduk’s daughters, He was, he shoufed, just exer ot exposure, six who were over-/00W married, appeared at the ar-| cising his rights as a citizen.
of accepting bribes from firms do-| ‘The senators have
: (Continued on Page 19, Col. 5)
A history of the Pontiac police
idepartment, dating back to an
of the new $875,000 Public Safety
Police Chief. Herbert W. Straley said some 109 persons, including city, county, and police. officials,
4:30 ceremony at the East Pike
tilane highway from Fenton to|street entrance of the_building. | tire of fire department at the county jail,
"iClio in southeastern Michigan will * * officials.
be opened to traffic this fall, the} Straley said a 10 by 15 by & *
State Highway Department reports. inch copper box, to be placed in have been invited to attend the! Stone to Preserve City Police History
contain Pontiac's civic center. It is being
Neo rested, uty cbediled, puter financed entirely from the city's graphs of officers and modern. |C@Pital improvement program.
Spent bitter (yates tah a ¢. bad n,
Sonateslon presesdings (neighboring City Hall, it will con- which started the building, an- tain the city’s first jail. For years,
nual_reports, and numerous pic. |“ity prisoners have been quartered
Straley said the public was in- :
When completed this July, the|vited to attend the brief ceremony ——_—
building will house the police de-|Wednesday.
‘Area Landmark Boosted Many Candidates:
‘Barnyard Politics Fal neath belied the ramshackled
right before the election Monday,| appearance.
High school students and civic too.
The ancient barn at Airport and groups also took advantage of the
many political careers, has fallen through the years, the political sit-
uation has covered most of the
available space.
Both the Republican and the
top-billings on the barn, free of
. Only once has a candi- charge ted on Williams Lake road a
the 80-year-old barn has’ loom i date offered to pay for the privi-
lege, according to King.
Airport Road through] “George Higgins brought my wife a box of candy and me a box
of cigars when I refused to accept
, and not the re-) ‘Through the years, some of the zg
t
3 i
EI
Democratic parties have shared g
from him for barn l to Crowbar
SS . eo ae ¥ 5 4
Jpeg i ee \ \ As, : F; a Poy i \ iy ‘
j ned 4 i } \
End of Waterford ‘Political Barn \ Yate | a pas
\ peewee fe
i. é \ 4 wey | A . ‘| ee
eae CoA Go Geers orc re ves ge eee Perec a saosin saaeliteals wie ais te
__ent refineries to Pontiac area serv- j eS ee PONTIAC PRESS. mt UESDAY,*MARCH, 26, 1957, 78 ery ae
Local Gasoline | |
May Be Cut Off Union Warns Suppliers|
to Stop Fuel Deliveries.
or Face Strike |
Gasoline supplies from indepe nd-| \
<_—ee
a ice stations were in danger of be-!
ing eut off today, when the sup-
pliers were warned to halt: deliv-|
eries or “face a strike” |
.___ Joseph Hénson, international fep-|
resentative of the Oi, Chemical, |
and Atomic Workers Union, also:
threatened similar strike action,
against outslate gasoline deliv-|
eries, ” Se}
The majority of local area sta- |
tions have been relying en inde-
pendent and. upstate deliveries |
since OCAW Local 11-389 struck
eight majer gasoline and fuel oil |
suppliers in southeastern Michi-
gan. The strike began Feb. 28 at
Seceny Mobil Oil Co.
Other companies struck include |
Texaco, Standard, Gulf, Sinclair, |
Pure, Shell, and independent Auro-|
ra Oi Co, Aurora was struck by
. Local 456 of the OCAW. |
WILL CONTACT : |
Henson said he will contact small |
independents where the OCAW has|
contracts. “We'll discuss this with
“If not, we will strike every
where our contracts are
open, We have been trying to
ec oat something wth thes 0 2
A Walled Lake man, appealing
Frank Kincaid, 346 Central Ave..
= 3 \
‘(the Day in Biriningham )
a a Special School Election | :
[Passe 2.5. Millage Boost
- Clarkston Zone’ Board Paani ell were
Rejects Application for for commissioners oy t
) Caribou Inn ° Site
BIRMINGHAM—An almost twoslopments of
to-one vote in yesterday's special)*°V'
school district election approved
the 2.5 millage increase for opera-
tional This includes also
the restoration of the 3.5 levy which| Ways for children, a climber and “a sand box. Considered but not Phe ~-vote-was~ 2;264-te-1,:280,- | tecoramended for immediate in-
Mrs. Irene B. Stevens Board Of] + snation are two shuffleboard Education clerk, noted that while courts, four horge-shoe courts and
-| Village ‘Atoraey Milton Clooney |only a comparative few of thé two tennis courts. presented a map showing the board nina pln big, ——
that owner Ernie Felice had notjing district cast ballots it was
still a large turnout for Birming- Lawyer to Test
Speeding Ticket
wa rosed on Radar y tham.
“While a speeding-ticket contro. application for the construction of
Ha-gas--station—on the -old--Caribou,
a on OS Spent meaning teat
night.
* * *
Samuel Frankell has received
commission appreval for the rezon-
arrived in Oakland County Circuit
Court yesterday.
A Fling attorney is appealing a
so-called Waterford - Township
“‘speed-trap.””
Attorney Charles R. Cole, 370
W. Pierson. Rd. says, however,
Detective Describes
Doctor as ‘Shaken’ LONDON # — Scotland Yard's
dapper ace, Detective Supt. Her-)
bert Hannam, testified today that |
Dr. John Bodkin Adams was
“very, very shaken indeed” when
informed he was being charged
with the drug murder of one of his
patients.
* * *
veteran sleuth. who was wearing)
the formal attire that!
has won him the nickname ot)
“The Duke.”
But as the examination proceed.
ed the two clashed repeatedly and|
stood mute before Cir- the jury of 10 men and 2 women’! | 37 Governors
‘| Bow to Wish
of Jr. Politicker
BIRMINGHAM (# — When Tom-
my Fagg, an eight-year-old Cub
‘Scout, gets his wolf badge for his
multi-state dirt collection, he,
‘should get another award for plain
old-fashioned politicking. | Tommy wrote the governors of)
| Geoffrey Lawrence, the ie 48 states, asking each of}
defense attorney, almost purred
as_he began: cross-examining the from their respective sovereign, | would permit conversion of em for a tablespoon full of soil)
ties.
Last night he got his 27th af-
firmative reply—this one from
| West Virginia’s Gov. Cecil Un- |
derwood, The governor said he |
woulg get a sample of the soll |
from West Virginia's Capitol
cuit Judge Frank L. Doty on/“ho had been looking a little| jown in Charleston. ;
The esa
sane pol oe hich 38 found? and a warmer,
e East te nertheast winds tecdeneing |
te 15 to 28 miles an hour this afterneen,
peer wo te 10 te 15 mites an
ton inte © Segtens one
y in Pontine
Lowest senporibure Preceding 8 a.m
ats om: Wind velecity 3 mph
bon oF ‘uesday at €:51 p.m
on Foss eGneeeey at @'Ma
Favs ope Tyeeday at 2:39 om Moon rises W ednesday ¢ at 4:20 a.m. ™
jbored, sat up and leaned forward)
| with rapt attention, |
* * *
Dn. Adams, 58-year-old society
physician, is charged with drug-)
ging an 8l-year-old widow, Mrs.|
Edith Morrell, to death in 1950 in:
order to benefit trom her will. She, left him an oaken chest of silver’
and jer son gave the doctor her!
freteRares automobile,
i dye to Rule Soon
‘on Consumers Suits
DETROIT @m — Circuit Totes
Victor J. Baum says he will mie}
in “about two weeks” on a motion
by the Consumers Power Co. to)
idismiss 11 suits asking $1,430,000)
in damages for the collapse of the|
utility company’s building in Jack. |
son last Oct. 3.
Judge Baym took the motion
under advisement yesterday and!
instructed attorneys to submit their | payne’
_ president.” Tommy had written the gover-
inors, explaining he needed the
‘tablespoon of soil for a collection |
‘he’s making to get his wolf badge. |
\The last paragraph of the letter!
| pleaded:
“Please, str, if you are in a-
bad mood or if you don’t have
time today, please lay this let-
ter where you may see it tomor-
row morning so that my request
may be granted. I will ‘cam-
for you when you run for
Underwood let it be known that
he was in a good mood and the
soil and a requested autograph
would be forthcoming—but the gov-
jernor declined comment on presi-
| dential ambitions.
No Juice—No Milk
ELMWOOD. Okla. uw» —An cai
dentified farmer snowbound near}
JLegislature Asked ssf siower car and the oie
fo Tighten 1B Rules
LANSING #® — The Legislature
was asked last night to tighten pro-|
cedures governing commitment |
‘and retention in sanatoria of per-'
sons with communicable tubercu-
losis.
* * *
Among other things, a bill filed
by Reps. Frederick Yates and
\Charline White, Detroit Democrats,
Northern Michigan Tuberculosis
poset at Gaylord into a ‘‘spe-
cialized care facility.”
The institution's chief medica! of-
\ficer would be authorized to take
necessary measures to ‘
‘continued presence”’ of as en-
trusted to his care:
* * *
Some probate judges, hospital
|Superintendents and public health
officers have called for a security
facility in the TB field to restrain
patients who want to leave against
{medical advice.
House Rejects Bill
on Probation Reports
LANSING — By the margin).
+of-a single vote, the house iast
‘night rejected a bill to give de-
fendants in criminal cases access
to records on which their proba-
tion reports are based,
With 56 votes needed for passage,
the lower chamber voted 55-39 for
the measure after Rep. Clarence
B, Meggison (R-Charlevoix) de-
clared:
“I have had 18 years of experi-
ence with cases of this sort and
igiving a man the right to look
lover all the information in his pro-
i bation report can be a dangerous! .
(Auto Crash Victim
Rd. ene
~, Deed 1s Rides Giibert Ginthd
the (tink with skating and refresh-
‘insure the} that strictly a legal ———
involving radar is involved.
appealing after conviction before
‘Pick Detroit Woman
‘Mother of the Year’
DETROIT (INS) — Mrs. Ger-
polio since the age of: two, has; i
say,
hip rf brogerlonpaa Michigan Mother of “ahen attorney oo at ar-
under construction at} Mrs. Miller, the mother of two) Sorte PH use it to keep oo B aregg ny sprig 24 S. Lake Angelus Rd., and re-|grown sons, cares for her widowed) | oun4 the house.” ey , moved a $75 stainless-steel kitchen — haar a oe « %
sink, . : S active in relig |
|" Lowell is wondering whether civic circles, in addition to taking} Birmingham commission City Man Asphyxiated
there will be anything left to his|care of her home, - ers have been invited by the city; —
house, which he is building him-| Her one son, Sheldon David, 23, of Clawson to attend a group meet-) Lafayette West, 57, of 212 Oliver
ago a thief stole a $140 blower dent. The other, Gordon, 20, i ote-/ Eee ON to nwetve Town i bly oar teat eight whee. bis
: tioned in Germany with the problem Twel drain found parked
ott bie Surmnee, will be discussed, with the possi-'in the garage of his home. Police Army.
Mrs. Miller will go to New York| bility of praeating further delays. | said
in May when the national Mother: * land
of the Year is chosen, ics and "bemaciiots devel- the
MEMO TO CAESAR ——
Livia Asks for Report
‘mother. The governor recdved Ita his place in
Caesarea. It read:
wa The son, Kay Dennis, was hos- sce | New ten ac au « aes
pitalized for observation. Police “or throw up a fortification, but I could not tell the.
fine points of one creed from another.
I live by action; hence, your assignment is
most difficult. But, I shall ask Junius te compile
as best as he can from memory the actual points
which the Nazarene teacher makes — stripped of
some of the credulous things the populace is say-
ing about him.
This may take a little time, for Jesus teaches
often by parable, The people understand
stories but I am sure the Roman
laugh at them, their erudition and
almost as long as the robes I have
* * * = “Sin the temple of Castor and Pottux, To me, the important thing is the " phllosoptiy *
which this Nazarene propounds, Tell me the basic Fila
theories of his teaching. h er Jesus of Nazareth.
As you should know, strange and even incredi-
ble legends may grow up about any figure in the
public eye. But in this instance I think we should
not be too quick to dismiss them as fantastic. Re-
| member, Junius has been one of our trusted
agents for a long time. His reports have always
Besides, just because a thing has not happened
to us or within our sight or hearing does that mean
it, could not happen? If the founders of Rome could
have looked forward in time to what we now have
on the banks of the Tiber, would they have believed
it? ot course, not. ditch efter the collision.
Jaycees Sponsor Skate
for Area Children Home
Some 70 children from the Oak-
land County Children’s Home
had a night of foller skating last
night thanks to the Pontiac Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
Seven Jaycees and their wives)!
entertained the children at a local =
ments, according to Norman
Ky Brien, co-chairman of the event.
Your suits expertly cleaned and
MOTHPROOFED FREE for a full year!
The best moth insurance
you could buy — and it's
FREE! No more moth damage,
no costly preventatives — Careful
Dan's new X-moth gives you
speeding ticket issued by State -
Cole. took the unusual step of - mice’ | make tot Gear as
a
4a Mecccs PY dae ok briefs for study. this Oaklahoma Panhandle city) cout ! . .
Mpemwaiediine | 1 pin Ten persons yea and ‘a faced a crisis today. He milks+P™ sacl guaranteed protection. Your'suit now
9 OM. ceegere aT Pm. s:---+-39 were injured in the collapse of the 100 cows with electric miikers, but) mothprooled as it goes through our 10 OSes cnrisss 32 ‘building which was under con- ieee was out. He sent out a ‘plea. 38 Search Planes Fail ie cleaning peste Vea PE dry
struction, ifor experienced hands to hel : :
canrecorded dewntew) se : —es ee’? _ to Find C97 Transport cleaned exclusively by Careful Dan will Michest température .. 0.060... .e00: 33 ; ,
Lowest temperature 6.0. \sese.p00: 0 BB a TOKYO & —Thirty-eight U. always be mothproof ~ and beautifully
Weather—trace of Snow” | To Set Up Telecommunications scarch planes tiday failed to find cleaned as well. : " any trace of a missing trans- One Year Ago in Pontiac disappeared 4% oe
Gorter cca NATO Will Be Wa in © Clear the Japanese pong a . Your suits returned in ane Pa ee ee Americans aboard, soilproof plastic bags FREE,
Weary Air Force and Navy = .
Wilghen and Date 7 Sof pt rela PARIS « — NATO disclosed plans today te build its own tele- [pilots f stormy, turbulent
1s os 2 11 tn 1837 communications system, including an early warning radar. network weather t tthe fifth day
as 9's Temporapure Chart - to alert ite force’ to enemy attack. \of the bigs air-sea ‘hunt in the
4 see, 8 iedene oe t ok |For Sant. =F Bismarck §7° 28 Me 5 42 At guaient early whining ig a responsibility of aye NATO ~ :
os oo 2 S Sigma Be nations. , y Egg Back i in ts Nest
: cnpecnen * nnsapolis 2) «~~ CA statement issued here sdid NATO had ‘decided to put the | HAMILTON, N.Y. 7A 70-mil-
N “crap ork 3 ; equivalent of 630 million dollars more into additional airfields, and‘ lion-year-old dinosaur
| > Rear +. the telecpmmunications system. Highest military priority was given |sured tor $10,000, is back at Col Net 4 lgate University today after a alae 3 Louis 43 32. the telecornntunications project. j Poet Wreaer , ee ot 1 - * * joeharpee disappearance, The pet-
oe Bie Marie S zi ..\ rified ¢gg Was stolen from a dis- Sckeonvinte | i % 4 4 \ tie U. 8 portion of the new figure is — Lis than “40 iplay tase Friday night and found
cs Ce hw a mi) je _per-cent, or shay #0F pllich Sollars. \ “Hast on-the lawn of-2 church.
\ ‘ : - 7 \ 5 lee | . . y , t \
| \ \ i. \ \ i 2 = | : \ . \ ee i iN i \ \
Ry SAN ede, 1 ey VA ae Boe ee ; ¢ #
j ' *y t j ’ it
y os PAR PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MaRcH 26, 1987
*
- Sparks-Griffin : FUNERAL HOME _
_ “THOUGHTFUL SERVICE” 46 WILLIAMS S¥. - PHONE FE 2-5841 “Can Swimmer Win
-* Without His Trunks? 15 Eye Operations for Keuny
_.LONDON ye Can-a awimmer|t
be declared the winner of a race
if he loses his trunks and finishes
in the nude?
The Amateur Swimming Assn.
-|will consider the weighty question
at a meeting Saturday.
The Northumberland and Dur-
ham branch of the association can
ly wait to get official de-
ae
*The youngster finished first but
some people maintained ‘that de-
spite the embarrassment, losing
your trunks has-its advantages —
you can swim faster without them.
Coffee Consumption Up,
ee Prices Dip Slightly
ASHINGTON’ UA — Americans
about a pound of coffee
more per person last year than
they did in 1955 and-paid just a
_jlitle ‘bit less per cup. .
*The commerce department said
a@ survey indicated 1956 per capita
censumption of green coffee was
116.2 pounds at an average price
of 51.3 cents per pound. In the pre-
ceding year it was 15.4 pounds at
an average price of 52.6 cents.
Swee-. hopes to supply the
world with wooden sucker and lil-
DETROIT w ~~ Little Kenneth
Bennett has had 15 eye operations
in his 6 years in the dim hope
that he will be able to see clearly
and--without-- pain. - me .
Born with glaucoma, a disease
which causes pressure within the
eyes and makes the eyeballs
harden, Kenny has spent most of
Mhis young life in hospitals, linger-
ing between darkness and light.
Home -now after his latest operation, Kenny can distinguish
between light and darkness,
Kenny was only nine weeks. 6ld|
when surgeons performed their
first operation on his eyes. Oper-
ation followed operation, His right
a was removed two years ago.
A—corneal..transplant—in his left
eye last August improved his vis-
ion for a while: When clouding set.
in and the -presure increased. An-
other cornea was grafted in
March 5,. his most recent opera-
tion,
* * *
The gradual improvement after)
an operation, and then slow fail-
ure of his eyes are an old story
for Kenny.
And doctors say theme is little
chance of improvement,
“We'll stick with him and do
lipop sticks, everything possible,” said Dr. isay he is a good boy. Boy, 6, Fights So. Patiently! ie
in Battle to See His World
A. D. Ruedemann of Wayne
State Univetsity Medical ‘Col-
lege and Kresge Eye Institute,
“but it isn't very promising.” -
The people in Kenny's life —
the knowing doctors, the sympa-
thetic nurses, his parents who
have watched their boy fight a
man's battle — teli-a story of
valor about Kenny.
““Kenny is a happy bay,” said
his mother, Mrs. Alfred P. Ben-
nett. “He doesn’t mind going to
the’ hospital.
He doesn’t
mind taking pills.‘He chews them,
even the bitter ones.”
* * *
Mrs.
hours at his hospital bedside,
“Hé’s so good,” she said.
Kenny’s eyesight is not the only
tragedy in the Bennett home.
Since their son underwent his first
operation six years ago, the fa-
ther has been struck down by/—
polio, been operated on for acute
appendicitis, suffered a collapsed
lung, and the mother underwent
an operation for acute appendi-
citis and was laid up two weeks
with a brain concussion after an
iron bolt fell from a. sign and
struck her head.
“Alfred Jr, — he's 10 and an
altar bey at St. Elizabeth The nurses always
Bennett has spend long}
we can,"’ she said.
in good health.
fruit packing plant in its
Province. “We've * bese paying ‘hospital
bills from. years ago as fast as
Except for his eyes, Kenny is
“We still hope," said his mother.
Eaypt will set up a vegetable.
Liberation "You +: does Get py BIGGEST BARGAINS
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|
~~
Ford is the best dollar-value of all the cars on the market .. . for, the following
reasons that are of vital importance to every-
body who is planning to buy anew car. -
Ford is worth more when you buy it! sound |
“Everywhere you look in the new Ford, you _ —-
see plus-value features. And these advanced
features that ‘make the Ford car your
buy today ... also make it your best buy for
the years
There are many. plus-values in the
all-new “Inner Ford!”
You can see the plus-value in the Mark of
| Biireeereepeesss eta me =o featutes that are builf down into the - ‘Ford i more when you sell it!
all-new “Itiner Ford.” For example, such fea-
J # best
the terrific ORD is the id of the
w-price three! | .tures as the new, sturdier, contoured frame
that lets the car ride lower with full road
clearance . . . new sus
“year, that are integrated and balanced to
a you smoother, big-car comfort and rest-
handling ease.
_ There’s a big plus-value in
Ford power for '57!
This year, you can pick a Ford engine to
suit your power needs from a whole new
family of mightier Ford V-8's—ranging up to
300-hp Thunderbird 312 Super-
charged V3. Or you may choose the new
Mileage Maker Six—the largest and most
“The years-ahead styling and rugged “Inner
COME,N TODAY...t a groat deal onthe NEW KIND of FORD! Lm a
at} \/ nsions, front and up.
| rack to save space and shoes.
- _| Rubber Ground Tip Holds 9 pairs of ote see = ee = arene iaewwires cunts Songs (edees a? ne ee
. The Fairlane Club Victoria is a brilliant
example of the Mark of Tomorrow styling and
built-in plus-values that have made Ford
. the best-selling car in the nation.
SS
trade it in. ~ Ferd” features that make Ford worth more
now are the features that will make it worth
more when you are finally ready to sell it or
Ford is priced right!
With all of its plus-values, Ford still wears
the lowest price-tag. A
ei i
| YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER Action Test a Ford .
for yourself! comparison of manu-
facturers’ suggested retail delfvered prices
proves that model for model, Ford is the
lowest-priced, full-size car in America.
.. and see
The only way to get fully acquainted with
a car is to get behind the wheel and drive it.
And we will be happy to have you Action
Test a 57 Ford at any time. Why not call us,
or better still; stop in and see us. - RG
ond FLOOR SPECIALS [i
ROUND WOVEN
Cc
$2.00
Value
_ Ideal as clothes basket, for yard work,
kids’ toys, picnics, waste paper, etc.
’ ‘Sturdy handles. As pictured
SOHOSHSHHSSHSSHOHHHSSHHHSSHOSSHSHHHSSOSSHSOEOSE
7'2-Foot Lengths
STEEL TUBING
1-PIECE STYLE
Clothes Prop .
$1.19 Value
87°“ Solid i-pe. tubular steel with
baked aluminum finish, rubber -
lineholder and rubber ground rw
Holds $3 Pairs Shoes
ALL METAL
Shoe. Rack $1.98 97°
Value .
Chrome - plated alt metal shoe
te rat nccantaendasedorabacetaanataaiennt
Perfect for Water-Less Cooking — ALUMINUM _
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High-dome cover dutch oven ©
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BARGAIN BASEMENT
WASHABLE Cotton Loop and Cotton Plush
selection of colors, some Hi-Lo desigris. Ensemble .
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lid cover and rug at this low price. Big ,
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3-Pc. Cannon Towel Set BATH TOWEL--HAND TOWEL--WASH CLOTH |
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Decorator yellow or white colors. All 1 66
43-towel pieces at this low, low price. . e 3016" Hand Towel
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|
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pecial Brings ra: BIG SAVINGS |
Boys’ i i Shi ts , SLEEVE I
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@ DAN RIVER FABRICS
E @ WRINKLE-SHEDS
— @ COTTON LINENS
: @ SANFORIZED
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tinkle~Sheds, ‘Cotton e patterns, etc. in famous Dan retiree wi
Sanforized, color-fast. eae
a 7
acess
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1057
tion's synod, estimates fa has
preached 7,000 sermons during
career, He is a member of a
planning committee for the inter-
national celebration’ of the .Chris-
tian Reformed Centénnial in Grand}
Rapids in June,
ree | Bob Considine Says: |
Select Your
@ Lumber
®@ Ceiling Tile
®@ Insulation
é =
| Modernize Your Home — - Now
Monthly. Payment Plan _UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY!
© Acoustical Tile
27 Orchard Lake Ave. |
Repairs
Repainting
All Available
on
Needs Now —
@ Wall Boards
, @ Paints
-@ Plywoods
of All Types
LUMBER C0. FE 2-8381
a INSURE— BE SURE”
Thin i] nn TIME oo oe
HE
Displaying This
) Frank A. Anderson Danieis
Get our rates on extended cove
surance — which .not only incl
explosion, smoke damage and other coverages.
© Call Us on Any Insurance Problem!
102 E. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-8284
Insure With Agencies
A tkase in-
windstorm but
Kenncth G.
MPSTEAD
INSURANCE
Emblem.
Agency J. Clifford Metty
ak las sai Se
Given in Strange 1951 Prophecy
. & strange man in Los Angeles
Page Boe Mi
Worlds,” is offering, free of
“The Voice of Two Worlds,”
rapher, tells of a remarkable
system that often leads to almost
unbelievable improvement in
power of mind, achievement of
brilliant business and professional
success and new happiness. Others
These strange methods were
found in far-off and mysterious
Tibet, often called the land of
miracies by the few travelers per-
mitted to -visit it. He discloses we'methods for using them are now
ties, mentous days ahead. It gives de-
a /Days!”
well known explorer and geog- | how he learned rare wisdom and
long hidden practices, closely
guarded for three thousand years
by the sages, which enabled many
to perform amazing feats. He main.
tains that these inimense powers
are latent in all of us, and that
simplified so that they can be
used by almost any person with
‘ordinary intelligence.
The 64-page booklet he is now
offering free to the public gives
guidance for those who wish to
prepare themselves for the mo- jtails of what to expect, and when.
\Its title is “Beware of These
The book formerly sold for a
jdollar, but as long as the pres.
ent supply lasts, it is oftered
free to readers of this notice.
For your free copy of the.
astonishing prophecies covering
these momentous times,
vealed
itress the —Institute of -Mental
ysics, 213 South Hobart Bivd.,
pt. Los Angeles 4, Calif
urged to write |
| “Well, first I'd pay some of my
~ Jan 1 abandoned lawnmower motor.
, Pence pe Richard M. Nixon on
} communicate America's
to those he is visiting. Nixon)
| speaks no foreign tongue with flu-
ujiency and few of his listeners in 23 miles from Umtali,
—| most lands would understand Eng- ALLENHURST, _N.J. (INS). —
Things were much more to the
jpoint here than at the Big Two
italks. I arrived home from the
\Bermuda conference to find the
‘Small Two in plenary session. As
in the Eisenhower-Macmillan talks,
largé sums were being discussed
* * «*
“If President Eisenhower
iyou a million dollar bill alls six |
months vacation from school
‘what would you do?’’ a boy named
Dennis asked his sister, who is
\8 going on 9.
- Debbie's brow furrowed ser-
| fousty for a time, then she began, i
| bills...” \ )
“Tve been away too beg.
This isthe first of a series of
. years.
The builder, a child we know,
ve|is constructing it under a denser
lcloud of secrecy ——
‘the creation of the
bomb.
LAWNMOWER MOTOR
i It is a plywood board 6 or 8
ifeet long and when completed will |
ibe powered, at speeds ranging up
‘almost seven miles an hour, by
INSTRUCTIONS: Each word
o*# @ee#ee* 'AMA, WHATS MY “LINE? scromble os few as possible to guess ™ ens a
epped’s under arrow, reading downwerd. is related
eo @¢ @ bd
1 RAPEP
.2 LUMCON
3 OOKS
4 VONLE
S$ ITEORO
pa SQRG nS
. 7 HETME ee Tice” ~B-F PVE —
The wheels are by courtesy of a) him until his bilnkin’ “highship
arrived at the hotel 3 minutes an England but a Bermuda. Which
late for his press conference. Small Two Hold Very Vital Parley There will always be not only
suits me just fine. Roy Scout Camp Grows
WHITEHALL @® — Camp Wol-
verine, a private sportsmen's club |
and hunting range northeast of
Whitehall, has been’ sold to the
Chicago Council of Boy Scouts as
the first step in an expansion pro-
gram for Camp Owassippee which
already is the world’s largest coun-
cil-owned Boy Scout camp.
eo wi”
The doolebug is stripped to the
\bare bones at the moment, but
iplans for the future are pretty ‘il
ut ticles;
fi:
FATE
shield these great plans from
Allenhurst’s crack young Police
department.
“Building one of those iba at Fe Be, cE Te
9 SREPS
3-26
© 1957 Whet's My Line, dnc.
Cord, diaper, bAby, iNfent.
\
Breaches Barrier of Words
(William Theis, oe Socomesneet Vice
of Africa and on
why be ae a)
By WILLIAM THEIS
WASHINGTON (INS)—In Africa
||—as in Asia, Latin America and) || Europe — Vice President Richard
||M. Nixon pumped hands with a
| Specific purpose.
He regards his meet-the-people,
}\\hand- shaking approach as the ‘
most effective way to make a “‘dis-|"eturned from exile to hammer out
i: | tinctly American impression” upon “
H\\the masses of people in foreign!
Near the end of his an,
| mine country tour of Africa and
| Italy Nixon explained it this
way:
First, he feels he must overcome
the language barrier in trying to
ndship
lish.
CAN'T READ
Second, the high rate of illiter-
acy in many countries kills the
use of the — word for his
purpose.
And third, sticking to cohven-
tional diplomatic approaches
would make his visits no differ-
ent from those of other govern-
ments’ representatives,
This reporter, who has traveled
more than 100,000 miles and visit-
ed more than 35 countries or colo-
inies with Nixon, can testify that
the Vice President's technique
works.
FRIENDLY REACTION
People newly freed or still under
some form of colonial control in
countries where European whites
have avoided social contact with
darker skinned nationals react
spontaneously to Nixon's friendly
manner,
Some few display their sur
prise at this switch in ethictal
approach with Te. oones shy-
ness. But most
tradesmen, housewives and wan
dren reach out with gladness to
shake this offered. American
hand.
In Africa, Nixon's. best crowds
“| were recorded in countries which
had tasted independence but re-
.|cently: Ghana, Morocco, Tunisia.
LINK NIXON
In Tunis, his last stop, Nixon's
personality was linked with that of ted. : ' |Tunisia’s popular prime minister
and president, Habib Bourguiba,
STORE TRADING co. a)
STAMPS
~ WEDNESDAY STS Charge | LESS .
‘ for Filling LW
ESCRIPTIONS|
&-F
4 Log
te Og Africans Speak Language of Nixon’‘s Handshake
t|who led the campaign which won
on's fresh approach startled diplo-
mats and even the crown prince,
* * *
But the friendly Sultan Moham-
Rhodesia, a great fiber-growing
center, It is a good jute substitute. found themselves involved in what
a British friend identified as a
sticky situation.
RUSHING TO PLANE
There wasn't too much time left
NOW ONLY £27925 WITM ALL THESE QUALITY FRIGIDAIRE FEATURES
@ Real Zere Lone Preeser — holds 44 Iba.
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© Exclusive Satety-Seal Door Letch — opens trom inside or ovt.
© Big, Coop Storage Deer, § removobie shelves, ond special Butter Comportment.
i Sunny Brook whiskey, | that is!’*
mellow as a
moonlit night!
4
\b \ ‘ . z “It’s the boys...better bring
out the cheer-
\
smoothest of fine Kentucky whiskies...
cheerful as a spring morning...
Sunny Brook W Cheerful as its Name! ?
ri en
i
1H Shox coy Rk setahialaes api aor pesieignsiahsdaieocn sak hiskey eotucr
|
a
~ and: William Duns’
if ud ee ; ii | Pie Be é ¥ I : i fi
ry fe THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957- |
. Le’ Roy - Peter Addl
CLARKSTON — Le“Roy” Peter
Addis, 80, of 44.E. Washington St.
died at 3:58 a.m.- yesterday at
Detroit Osteopathic Hospital. He
officiating. Burial be at Lakeview Cemetery,
Surviving besides .his widow are |
sons and daughters, Daniel Addis’
Dunston of Clarkston,
and Mrs. Ruth Liebler of Romeo:
two sisters, Mrs. Blanche Walter!
of Clarkston and Mrs. Myra Wie-
land of Lake Orion.
ters of Bay City.
Service and burial will be held in
Bay City.
Mrs. Lotta M. Corpron
anette : Yeni y
‘Call at the forerat:
to the funeral. Burial will he atl
Pine Lake Cemetery.
She is survived by five sons,
Theodore of Detroit, William M. of!
Bloomfield Hills, Edward of Salt!
Lake City, and Victor and Donald
of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs.
William Mount-ef Pontiac and Mrs
Robert McKenzie of Lombard, Il;
18 graridchildren and five sisters.
Octavia DeBoes —
CLARKSTON—Service for Octa-|
- via DeBoes, 50, of 5932 North Bay)
Dr. who died Wednesday was to,
. be held today from the William,
F. Davis Funeral Home at 10 a.m. |
Burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme-
tery.
Miss DeBoes is survived by one
sister, Ethel, of Clarkston and two!
--prothers, James and Willie Sr.,
both of Pontiac.
Ernest Erkkila
Ernest Erkkila, 52, of 776-E.
Third Ave. was dead on arrival at
12:40 a.m. today at St. Joseph ian who went to prison in 1940, Mercy Hospital.
_He was — in the service
=.
Ps
Pa
—LENTEN—
Services (Missouri Synod) a |
‘=
7:30 P.M.
+. at the following churches *
114 South Genesee
Rev. Richard C. Stuckmeyer
Cedar Crest Parnsworth, Off Union Lake Road ~
(Next to Dublin School)
Rev. Howard E. Claycombe
St. Paul 2 Joslyn at Third
a Rev. George |. M@rhder
> St. Trinity < Auburn at Jestie
‘ Rey. Ralph C. Ciaus SEES ert Se re hee 6
./0f 2756 Voorheis Rd., who died
: Wellington Sischo
jwith burial in Mt. Vernon ee
: — of Romeo; _— i exw]
| © since March 12.
Lutheran | | © broke with Tammany to support]
© Franklin D. Roosevelt for the
- presidential nomination at
EVERY WEDNESDAY - §| "| Hines later became dispenser
_\of federal patronage for Manhat-
Grace 5
© on charges of conspiring to pro-
. tect policy rackets in the city. He
“i served 3 years and 11 months in
Sing Sing Prison.
iE. Dewey, then Manhattan’ Dis-’
_ trict attorney, prosecuted the case.
~ In Manhattan, Politics was in his
© blood. His grandfather had been a
{Tammany worker in the time of
Bon Mey under Boss Croker.
On May 25, 1938, Hines was ar-|
oN ‘He was indicted on 13 counts. Funeral Home.
‘Mrs. G. Vincent Kinch :
Mrs. G. Vincent ~ (Dorothy)
(Kinch, 46, of Otsego, formerly of
‘Pontiac, yesterday following |”
Surviving :
Dr, G. Vincent Kinch, and mother,
'|two sisters and four brothers, all of
Service will be held at 2° p.m. |
tomorrow at the Otsego First Con-|
|sronntione, Church,
John Paul Niles |
Service for John Paul Niles, 45, |
eaths in Pontiac and Nearby
Areas! _ Surviving are his widow, Evelyn; Martindale of Cincinnati, Ohio, and| MSY Has Labor Book daughter, Delores, at Michigan| Mrs. Glenford Woodward of Flint.
spate a brother, Orville Service will be held at 3-p.m. second printing. Titled. “The Unione: ‘pike and alleen
G ance Vrocodure,” the booldetigrowpe hove ondeced the Mpeg | EAST EANSING . — The first|has| sold’ some 3,000 Copies. It isitext. —
FIVE - < ay
4
Mrs, Max Kruger of Otsego, are}
Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hos-|
pital, will be held at 2 p.m. to-
Dr. William H. Marbath of First)
*{Presbyterian Church will officiate,
with burial at Roseland Park Cem-
etery.
a |
|
ROMEO — Funeral service for)
Wellington (William) Sischo, 63, |
of 60265 Mt. Vernon Rd., Mt. Ver-;
non whe died Saturday night, will)
be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at |
Roth's: Home for Funerals here,
ery
Mr. Sischo is survived by his)
wife Emma; mother, Mrs. Martha |
Cm asa eRe
Mrs. ‘Dorothy ‘Jacobs. vand Mrs.)
aabare Mrs. ‘Frank Boyd ond Fa
Sarah Corbin both of Romeo, Mrs. | Gertrude Wagoner of Richmond |
and Mrs. Laura Quinkert of Wis-)
‘consin and six oe also’
i survive, |
ee | |
| LaFayette West |
[ LaFayette West, 57, of 212 Oliver
Political Leader
Dies at Age 80 J. Jimmy Hines Rose|
to Power in New York's
Tammany Hall |
LONG BEACH, N.Y. &®—James '
J. (Jimmy) Hines, -80, onetime
power in Manhattan's Tammany
'died in Long Beach Memorial Hos-.
pital today of a kidney ailment.
| Hines had been in the hospital
The veteran political leader
the
‘ Derhocratic National Convention
in Chicago in 1932. Tammany had
been solid for Al Smith.
x ® &
‘tan.
* * *
'¢ But in 1939 Hines was_convicted
Former New York Gov. Chain!
Hines was born Dec. 18, 1876,
‘Boss Tweed, His . father =|
irested and charged with conspir- |
; ing to protect the policy rackets.
But Ab
~ Our God...
God's mercy, always present, is fre-
quently associated with the passing
of a loved one. This knowledge sub-
dues the pain and brings our lives
back to orderly usefulness on this
earth.
Our services and
thus inspired. The great care and
interest is there because we know it
is a part of our duty to our God.
Phone
FEDERAL
4-4511
ove All
duties to you are
Parking
On Our Premises =
Friday at Voorhees-Siple Funeral) Publication of the labor and -in-|, compilation of speeches and 're- eens
at General. Motors)St, died suddenly yesterday. lest, and sisters, Mrs. Judson| Home with burial at Perry Mt.|dustrial relations center at Michi-/marks by labor and management Norway prodiced” about 400,000
Track and Catch Divison, PS amon dhe es Menter of Pontiac; Mrs. Russell| Park Cemetery. gan State University 1s now in its'leaders at at--an-~-MSU -eonference.'mink furs in 1955, Oslo reports. 74
y at s i - - Be .
‘Sale Starts Today — Ends at 5 :30 °. M Tomorrow! Sorry, No Mail or Phone Orders.
MENS WEAR FASHION APPAREL
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Dresses, .. 10-20, iad 5.88, 8.88, 12.88
et B Unlined Car Coats ............ ~ 3.88
Reg, 25.00 Imported Knit D me 5 ba Tess
Reg. to 17.98 Finest Wool Skirts, 8-18" 0 °-<"'7.88"
Reg. to 14.98 Wool and Fiocco Skirts, 8-18 .. 5.88
Reg. to 11.95 Jantzen Knit Skirts ......... 4.58
Reg. to 6.50 Long SI. Shirts, White, Solids
and Prints, 10-18 ..........000...... 2.44
Reg. to 35.00 100% Wool Tweed and Suede
Coats 8-18 2.2... 10.00
Reg. to 49.88 Chinchilla, Tweed and Zibelin
Coats, 8-18 eee ee 18.00
Reg. to 110.00 Cashmere Coats, 8-18 ....:. 58.00
Reg. to.17.98 2-Pe. Flannel Suits, 8-18 ..... 12.88
Reg. to 6.98 Spring Hats ................. 3.88
Reg. to 16.98 Dresses—Rayon Crepe, Silk
Shantung, Taffeta, Linen, Gabardine
and Wool Jersey Sizes 7-15, 144,
CE eee ene Fe tne es ersiele 1,88, 3.88, 5.88 ©
Street Floor
Reg. 2.98 Orlon Sweaters, 34-40 ........ gone SN.
Reg. 3.98 100% Orlon Sweaters, Cardigans and
Reg. . to 29.98 Crepe, Taffeta and Novelty : Third Floor
35.00 Borgana Stoles, Grey and Breath
of Spring
59.95 Mink Scarf, Nat. Silver Blue,
3 Skin ee ee ey
119.00 Mouton Lamb Coat, Dyed
Breath of Spring .............. a..2 7F&88
10.98 Beaded Sweaters ......... 4.88, 5.88
8.95 Jantzen Slip Over Sweaters .... 3.88
12.95 Jantzen Cardigan Sweaters ..... 4.88
10.98 Pandora Lambs Wool Cardigans 7.88
7.98 Pandora Lambs Wool Slip Overs 4.88
5.98 Long Sl. V-Neck Slip Overs .... 2.88
Slip Overs, Ass’t Colors, 34-40 ........ 2.44
to 3.98 Cotton and Dacron Blouses, Many
Styles, 30-40, Some sl. Soiled - 1.88
| FASHION ACC ESSORIES
Reg..
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg. Street Floor
1.15 Knee High Nylons, 84-11 .. - 66¢
to 1.35 Nylons, Some Snags, Bro. Sizes - 22c
2.98 Felt Lounging Slippers, S,M,L .... 1.44
1,00 Ass’t Earrings, Bracelets, Necklaces 1ic
1.00 Ladies’ Plastic Wallets lle
to 7.98 Ass’t Leather and Fabric Purses 3.88 ey
59c “Fancy Knit” Jean Socks, Elastic Top,
White, 84-11 2... 26. cscs ccccscece 44c
89c Ladies’ Print Hankies ........... - 22¢
to 1.00 Ass’t Art. Costume Flowers .... 4c
1.00 Cordurey Cilp Hats ..........-... 22¢
to 3.50 Cotton Gloves, Ass’t colors,
CUA CE eo aeons 2.44
2.98 Velvet and Nylon Gloves, 6-74. .... 88¢
Tove GlCGee
Second: Floor
Reg. to 5.00 Girdles and Panty Girdles .... 2.88
Reg. to 5.00 Bras, Famous Brands ....... . 1.88
Reg. to 2.00 Bras, 32-38, White and Pink ... 88c
Reg. 5.98 Flannel Dusters .......-......%. 2.88
Reg. 8.98: Long Flannel Robes ............ 2.88
Reg. 8.98 Terry Cloth Robes .............. 2.88
Reg. 8.98 Chenille Robes ........5......... 2.88
Reg. 5.98 Corduroy Jump Suits ........... 2.88
Reg. 8.98 Nylon Tricot Negligee Set ....... 5.88
Reg. to-6.98- Flannel Sleepwear ............ 2.88
Reg. 3.98 Flannel Sleepwear .............. 1.88
Reg. 5.99 Nylon Tricot Gowns ............ 3.88
Reg. 3.00 Stripe Gowns .................. 1.88
Reg. 8.95 Bouffant Petticoats .......-..... 5.88.
Reg. 5.98 Bouffant Petticoats ............. 3.88
Reg. 3.95 Slips and Half Slips ............. 1.88
CHILDREN’ 5 WEAR
=i ’ Second Floor
Reg. 1.00 Boys and Girls “Pinky Lee” Polo —
Birla, 6:12 oe eee eee ie, Reg. 5.98 Girls Dresses, Cottons and Nylons
Sl. Soiled 1-14, Sub. 8-14 ............ 2.88
Reg. to 4.00 Girls Can Can Slips, Nylon, White,
4-14, SL Soiled .................... 1.8
Reg. to 2.98 Girls Cotton Blouses, SI. Soiled, 7-14,
Sa0: 6-14 .::.....:.....:..----- 88e, 1.88
Reg. to 14.98 Girls Hooded Car Coats, Lined, Red,
7-14, Girls and Sub. ...........6..... 4.88
Reg. to 3.98 Girls Orlon Sweaters, Short SI.
eS ee eee ee eee 1.88
Reg. to 5.98 Girls one Cardigans, .
SL. Soiled, 7-14 ..............22.005. 2.88
Reg. to 8.98 Boys Lined Jackets, 6-12 ..... — 3.38
Reg. to 2.98 Boys Long Sl. _.Sportshirts, 6-16 88¢
Reg. to 2.98 Ass’t ’t Boys Caps Dees dew wai ue = S80"
Reg. 3.98 Boys Dress Slacks, 6-12""--~1. 88, - “P39
HOME FURNISHINGS
Fourth Floor
Reg. to 4.98 54” Woolen Fabric ..:........ 1.88
Reg. to 69c Ass’t Cotton Print Fabric ..... 44e
Reg. to 1.69 Ass’t Fancy Cotton Fabric ..:. 88c
Reg. 6.99 Nylon Ruffled Curtains,
72, 83, or 9B” home .....-.. 22-5255: pr. 3.88
Reg. 1.39 Nylon Tailored Panels, . 72, 81, or 90” long ............ panel 88c
Reg. 9.98 80x84 Patchwork Quilts ......... 5.88
Reg. 12.95 Printed Orlon Comforters, 72x84 7.88
1.Lot Ass’t Soiled Sample Mdse ......... ¥, OFF
Reg. 9.98 Duck Down Pillows ..-........... 5.88
Reg. 5.95 Easter Bunny Nov. Rugs ......... 3.88
Reg. 39c Ass’t Place Mats .....-......... 22¢
4Reg. to 5.99 Fiberglas Table Pads ......... 1.88
Reg. to 89c Printed Kitchen Towels ....... 66c
Reg. 59c Linen Filet Napkins ............. 22¢
Fifth Floor
Reg. 1.00 Ass’t Ovenproof Pottery .... 2 for 88 +
Reg. 24.95 Serv.-8 English Dinnerware ..... 18.00 -
Reg. 1.39. Angel Food Cake Pans .......... 88e
Reg. to 180.00 Crystal Chandeliers .. 19.99, 89.95
Reg. 14.95 Table Lamps Silk Shades ....... 8.88
Reg. 7.98 Ass’t Colors Interior Paint ...... 4.88
Downstairs
2—Reg. 279.95 Easy Auto. Washers ..... 138.00
1—Reg. 149.95 Automatic Dryer ......... 88.00
2—Reg. 479.95 Comb. Washer and Dryer
Floor Sample. .................... 378.00
1—Portable Electric Ironer ............... 66.00
2—Reg. 249.95 % T-Air Conditioners, Auto. 188.00
1—Reg. 249.95 10.5 ft. Kelvinator Refrig. . 188.00
2—Reg. 159.95 21” Table Mod. TV, Fl. Samp. 99.00
2—Reg. 199.95 21” Console TV, Fl. Samp. .. 148.00
Reg. 149.95 Gas Ranges 36” .............. 88.00
Reg. 199.95 Deluxe Gas Ranges 30” ...... 148.00
Reg. 49.95 Westinghouse Porta-Vac “ Vacuum Cleaners ................. 28.00
Reg. 99.95 Hoover Deluxe Upright
Vacuum Cleaners ................. 58.00
Reg. 39.95 9’x12’ Non Skid Rugs ........ 26.00
Reg. 29.95 9’x12’ Cotton Rugs, Soiled .... 18.00
Reg. 99.95 5 Pe. Chrome Dinette Sets .... 55.00
Reg. 10.98-Plastic Occasional Chairs ...... 4.88
Reg. 39.95 Twin Size Mattress .......... 18.00
Reg. 29.95 Full Size Box Spring .......... 18.00
Reg. 59c Ass’t Bathroom Stool Covers ... Ile CLEARANCE &
Street Floor
Reg. to 250 Mon’s Tieb ...:-...- sees 54s. Ade
Reg. to 4.00 Orlon-Wool Scarves ..... 88e to 1.88
Reg. 1.00 Broadcloth Boxer Shorts ......... 22¢
Reg. to 5.95 Leather Gores, Wool and
Fer [ied ociciivececdess 1.88, 2.88, 3.88
Reg. to 250 Belts, Taniber and Braid ....... 66e |.
Reg. 3.98 Flannel Pajamas, A-D ............ 2.88
Reg. 4.00 Long Sleeve Sweaters, Orlons, Wools 1.88 _ =
Reg. 4.98 Long Sleeve Sweaters, Cashmere — ‘
PONG oes des ere 55 8 i ee eerione a8 2.88 \
Reg. 8.98 Long Sleeve Sweaters, Orlons, Wools 4.88
Reg. 6.98.Long SL. Orlon Sweaters .......... 3.88
Reg. to 5.98 Long Sleeve Sportshirte, Solids, fo
Fancies, Checks
MISCELLANEOUS
Street Floor
Reg. 49c Children’s Books ................ - 29¢
Reg. 49.50 Men’s Benrus Calendar Watch . . 22.50
Reg. 9.95 Ladies Watch Bands, -
Spiedel Expansion ............. % PRICE
Reg. 2.98 Simulated Leather Earring Chests,
__ Slight Irrs, velvet lined .-........... 1.44
Reg. 1.98 Gift Wrap Bow Sets ..:......... 88e
Reg. to 1.50 Leather Pencil Cases .......... 44e
Reg. 1.00 Wrought Iron Magazine Racks... 44c
Reg: 2.96 Candelabras ... 2.2.06 cccceess 1.44
Reg. 1.39 Napkin, letter, matches holders 66¢
Reg. 9:98 Record Tables ................. 4.88
Reg. 2.99 Orange Poplin Jackets, 14-16... 1.44
Reg. 1.98 Linen and Cord. Covered Pillows 88c
Reg. 3.98 I Shelf Wood Chests...... Baseos 10
Reg. 1.59 Chair Seat Cushions ............ 88e
Reg. 2.98 Linen and Cord. Covered Pillows 1.88
Reg. 1.00 Terry Foam Dolls ....... moister 44c -
Reg. 29c Silverplate Flatware ............. lle -
Reg. 59c Serving Piece, Silverplate ....... 22¢
“Reg. 3.00 Wafex Reducing Wafers ........ 88e
Reg. 1.29 Bubble Bath ..:..............6% 88e
Reg. 1.00 Bathofoam Soap, 4 Frag......... 44¢
Reg. 12.95 Electric Heating Bandage ...... 4.88
Reg. 5.98 Electric Vaporizer ............. 3.88
Reg. 14.95 Dual Foot Vibrator ............ 9.88
Reg. 3.00 Lucien Lelong Perfume ......... 1.88
Reg. 1.50 Lucien Lelong Powder .......... 88e
Reg. 1.50 Lucien Lelong Foundation....... 88e
Reg. 85c Lucien Lelong Lipstick ............ 44e
Reg. 2.00 Lucien Lelong Stick Cologne...... 1.44
Reg. 1.50 Lucien Lelong Perfume .......... 88e
Reg. 1.50 Hand Mirrors .............-... 88e
Reg. 1.50 Nylon Hair Brushes ............ 88e
Reg. 2.98 Kiddie Kabinets ............... 1.88
Reg. 12.95 Single Head Electric Razor ...... 6.66
Reg. 23.50 Remington Multi-head Razor ..... 8.88
Downstairs
Reg. 99.95 21%, H.P. 19” Rotary Mower..... 58.00
Reg. 21.95 Electric Lawn Trimmer ........ 12.88
Reg. 3.98 Plastic Car Seat Covers ........ 88e
Reg. 39.95 Boys 26” Ball. Tire Bike ........ 28.00
Reg. 34.98 Boys 26” Lt. Wt. Bike .......... 26.00
Reg. 29.95 Canvas Pullman Case .......... 18.00
Reg. 12.98 28” Bride Doll ................ 8.88
Reg. 19.95 Adjustable Aluminum Grill ..... 14.88
Reg. 10.98 Large Tricycle ................ . 5.88
CHILDREN’S CHROMSPUN
SHOES FABRICS
Reg. 3 77 Reg. 66°"
$7.95 $1.98
to
Black and white saddles,
straps and ties in black,
brown, ~ 800 yards of ass't chrome-
spun fabrics, plaids, solids,
red and tan. 81/2 [ stripes and novelties. Get
3, N and M widths. yours at unbelievable
savings!
Second Floor Fourth Floor
a SPECIAL PURCHASE
made this value possible
at this low, low price Punched
Pigskin
5 88 A $9.95 Value!
o™ CLEARANCE!
Reconditioned
. 88 ONLY While They
All Fully Guaranteed!
Other Portables Available; Save Up to Half!
Sizes 5 to 10 MORE TERRIFIC BUYS:
ELECTRIC PORTABLES
Last!
2 mM, Ww 1—Reg 90.00 Round Bobbin Console, Walnut
Sandal Tan Finish, Forward § Reverse, w/lite 49,88
or Desert Sand | 1 Reg. 79.00 Round Bobbin, Table Desk ; ¥ : i = Style, Walnut Frinish wee apesltabewenn es Oe . \
wees sd . \ 1—Reg. 19:88 White Treadle, et Convenient Terms! \
_ Street Floor , Head, Cable Lift , ... 10.88 White Sewing Center — Waites... Fourth Floor.
MG i i om f i ae i
\ A } \ ' i \f } N.
° iN | ‘ : ( \
ee A red Neh “Usih yela baa \ Vy i | ae \ ‘
| » | | b rele wae Tele of.
oN ee Ne A | Py ¢,. < ie ATG eee ae ee oe ee ee ea eee |
h
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957 _
Pontise 12,
Publisher -
Pr. Howens H. Prrecesace o,
Executive Vice t Vice President and Ad usiness anager
ee, oe ge Genera) _ Circulation Manager
Advertising Manager 90% A mee 7 a
Joun W. Frrecenatp, Promotion Manager yowedis Tal and Editor W. Cuaates Prexins.
BT. even advertising
Rosser BORGE MAN,
Managing ‘Editor Classified Manager -
Entered at Post Office. Pontiac, as second class matter _____ ememanniaonaeen on
ae
The Associa ted Press ts entitled exclusively to the
use for republication of all loca! news printed in this
Rewspaper as well as a.) AP news dispatches.
Tur Powrtac Press is delivered Dy carrier for 40 certs
8 week: where “fe mot available by matt
tu Macomb. Laneer and
“Washtenaw Counties It is. $19.00 a year: elsewhere in
Michigan @# other places Po the Unted States
“$20.00 @ wear An meft pebecrtet fons paveble in @dvance
Phone Pontiac 2-8161
ATIONS MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF “CIRC an.
TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957
_. Area Weatherman Oak
Receives Top Honor
Recent honors were bestowed upon
the man who many times during the
year is made the butt of such re-
marks as “the weatherman is always Mar.
_ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 4
‘nature and the impossibility of mak-
ing flood insurance self supporting,
the companies could not alone under-
write this type of insurance.
—=
Dam for East Pakistan
Although the development con-
tract recently signed under the aus-
pices of the International Co-opera-
tion-Administration isfor.acompara- 4 tive small dam and power plant in
East Pakistan, its location is impor-
tant.
The 80,000 kilowatt project ‘is
the Karnafali dam at Chittan-
gong near the bead of the Bay
of Bengal. It will affect the tives
of 12 million persons ‘in this
jute and rice producing land.
Lack of sufficient power has held
back economic prostate in that
seaport area.
a ee
East Pakistanis have beer com-
plaining that too large a part of rev- |
enues was going to the development
of West Pakistan despite the needs
‘of the overcrowded and poverty
wrong anyway.” = =
* * *
Congratulations are in order
for Weatherman W. W. Oak of
Detroit, on receiving the United
States Weather Bureau's highest
award, | Ct
ae competent performance
of official duties as meteorologist in
charge, and particularly for note-
worthy public service during the
1956 tornado season.”
| an a 2 :
Forecasting weather has been Mr.
‘ Oax’s business for 28 years, during
which time he has made a particular
study of tornadoes. Studying torna:do
habits and developing a warning
system have been one of Oax’s chief
objectives over the years. -
It is undoubtedly true that
through his efforts lives have
been saved, and in the years to
come we will have a more effec-
; : tive warning system to guard
Bs against the devastating tornadoes.
Much of the time this type of work .
"goes unheralded by many of us. But
when a disaster strikes, and we re-
ceive-warning;sthe credit should go
to Mr. Oak and his efficiently oper-
ated Detroit Weather Bureau.
~ * *
We are indeed fortunate ix, this
a "area to have the elements of weather
entrusted to Mr. W. W. Oak.
Flood Insurance Voted
In a few months time flood insur-
i ance will be available to home owners
and businessmen for the first time
in our history.
Following disastrous floods in many
'. areas in 1955, with $995.5 million in
property damage, Congress passed
legislation setting up a Government-
private company insurance plan. No
insurance has been available at: rea-
sonable rates because private com-
panies could not afford the heavy
risk.
* * *
__ After July 1, 1958 in order to
remain eligible for the insurance,
| communities must enact and en-
force special zoning laws. States
also must prepare to take over
much of the Government’s role
by July 1, 1959.
About 5,000 private casualty and
insurance companies are expected to
sell Federal flood insurance. Contracts
with the Flood Indemnity Admin-
istration will set farth the company’s
commissiorr and allowable expenses.
x «*« *
In signing the measure President
- Ersennower said that this new pro-
gram is a venture into an untested
field of risk protection and is ad-
mittedly experimental. It does not
| propose putting the Federe] Govern-
: ment permanently into the flood
insurance business. But it*does pro-
vide for the Government to lead the
way so that this field of responsibility
can be absorbed into our private
system in the shortest possible time.
Be eke
_ Insurance companies welcome this
_. “development. Individually they. have
vos a sess found such insyranee not ecohomi- ye : 3 REA cers oR
FOF Commence: Weeks £05 Bis eee one: stricken eastern part of the country. |
_ The new dam, to be built by the
Utah Construction Company of San
Francisco should help tg answer this
criticism and in time raise the stand-
ard of living in this-depressed Asian
Visitor to = Returns With Souvenirs
MEY
UNCLE Saat’ gives his nieces and
nephews the right to say what they
‘please, but nature has given only a
— of them the guts to do so.
penne
ANOTHER thing that is “Here today
and gone tomorrow” is springltike
weather in early spring.
The. Man “About Town
Needs Support Oakland County Historical
Shrine Is Being Restored
Bridge Party: Where they
surely let the chat out of the-
bag. :
In its restoration program on the
Moses Wisner Home
on Oakland Ave., the plan being to make
it affocal historical shrine, the
Oakiand County Historical Foundation
is working on a two-year program.
Practically all of the funds for the
project must come from dues from mein-
‘pers, starting at one dollar per year, but
usually supplemented by larger sums
when each member pays them. Two years
ago
The Pontiac Women's Club
gave $1,000 to restore the dining room.
Previously
General Richardson Chapter
of the. D.A.R. had restored a sitting room.
The foundation also receives $365 per
year for rent for part of its grounds to
the adjacent Wisner School for play-
ground purposes.
More funds are urgently needed to
complete the work. Anyone wishing to
contribute, through membership or oth-
erwise, can make their checks payable to
Mrs, Donald E. Adams,
Treasurer of the Foundation, and mail
them to her at Box 248, Drayton Plains.
Michigan.
The actual figures show that
wages in our nation have gone up
$2.67 for every dollar in the cost of
living since the Korean war.
Perhaps there really isn't anything new
under the sun, as
The Office Fact Finder °
has just shown me absolute proof that
Noah used asphalt to waterprovf his ark
Under the eye catching headline of
“What Ladies’ Legs Will Show ,
the mercantile boosters who figure out
these things,
The Color Association of America,
announces that the new spring shades in
stockings will be sundress, cocotone, day-
taupe, sugar biege, solar glow and frosted
caramel. MAT will look ‘em all over—in
the flesh.
Many millions attend major
league baseball games every year,
but the attendance at our na-
tion's agricultural fairs is over
six times as great. The Texas
State Fair alone drew 2,380,000 in
the 16 days that it ran in 1956.
A crude sign in front of a farm house
on the Dixie Highway says:
‘“For Sale: 24 sheep; one buck,”
which, at the present price of mutton,
‘looks to be like a rather low Heute | on ,
_ two dosen aneey
Verbal Orthids to-
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan P. Warrener
cally sound. Because_ of the Virtual | of Ti Foster St.; fifty-first wedding an-
fertdinty id the lost, “its sageeope “nl versary. ; |
te ED Ses eter SFO CSE: Se eras
Senat tor
WASHINGTON — The end seems
to justify the means—and if the
Constitution stands in the way, it
must be circumvented.
- This is a dangerous doctrine in a
democracy and one that the
American people will resent to the
utmost. But it comes, in effect,
, from the chair-
-man of the Sen-
ate subcommit-
tee on constitu-
tional rights,
Senator Thomas
nying any inten-
tion to’ abandon
jury trial in
America, says
frankly that, be-
LAWRENCE
cause southern juries will not con-
vict in “civil rights” cases, some
way has to be found to get around
them.
In a formal memorandum to the
members of the Senate Committee
on the Judiciary, Mr. Hennings
. says:
“We knew that, regardless of
the facts, juries in some such
cases are not likely to convict.
An alternative is the of
injunctive relief to the United
States."
This means ‘‘government by in-
junction."’ It is something that the
labor unions successfully fought
until they got relief from Congress
in the Norris - La Guardia ant i-
injunction law. But this is a special
privilege granted only to individ-
uals involved in labor disputes.
Now it is intended to punish with-
out jury trial any citizens who
become involved in any way in
disputes over ‘civil rights."
U.S. NAMED
This, of course, would result
because the suits in ‘‘civil rights’
cases would be prosecuted in the -
name of the ‘United States,’’ and
such a device automatically bars
any jury trial.
The Missouri senator frankly
admits this. In fact, his candor
is to be commended, for he takes
issue with Assistant Attorney
Justice, who on March 15 issued
' @ statement arguing that the
defendants in the Clinton, Tenn.,
ease had not been deprived of a
jury trial.
Mr. Olney contended that, be-
cause in the middle of the pro-
ceedings the ‘United States’ had
been made a party to the suit,
this was a ‘‘technical’’ matter and
it didn’t mean jury trial had been
forfeited. Here is what the assist-
ant attorney general said:
NOT DISCRETION
“The right to a jury trial is
not a matter of discretion to be
granted or withheld by the Depart-
ment of Justice or -by the court
and could not in any case be
defeated by the substitution, for
technical reasons, of the name of
the United States on the contempt
citation."
But the memorandum by Sen-
ator Hennings, which he says is
supported by an exhaustive
analysis made by the chief
counsel of the Senate subcom-
mittee on constitutional rights,
takes the opposite view. Mr.
Hennings, after giving a list of
LIL ONES
+
: =
“1 | told you that kid was
tough, Pop.”
rould Deny
- exception 28 federal statutes in which in-
junctions may be issued, says:
“As outlined above, with one
(labor disputes cases
under the Norris-La Guardia Act),
there is no right to trial by jury
in cases for criminal contempt of
court for violations of injunctions.
under these statutes. where the
United States is a party to thé -
case."
BEFORE COURT
The history of this type of case
under federal injunctions shows
that, where contempt is committed
in the presence of the court or
where the principal who is ordered
to obey an injunction disregards it.
he may be hauled into court and
tried and punished without a jury
trial.
_ In the Clinten, Tenn., case,
however, the complainants were
private individuals who said that
mitted outside the court room.
The defendants were not princi-
pals in the dispute. The school
board itself had complied with
the federal injunction ordering
the end of segregation.
* Then, all of a sudden, the De-
partment of Justice on Feb. 25
last asked the court to change the
name of the case and insert the
name “United States’’ as the
complaining party. This automat-
ically bars a jury trial because
the law specifically says so.
ENTITLED TO KNOW
Surely the American people are
entitled to know what's going on
here and what subterfuges are be-
ing used at Clinton.
(Copyright, 1957)
Dr. William Brady Says:
Can’t Wait to Hear More
‘Facts’ on Osteoarthritis!
According to an associate profes-
sor of medicine in a university
medical college “‘more than 80 per
cent of people in the United States
past &, and 90
per Gent past 60
has osteoarth-
ritis.”
Osteoarthritis,
the professor ex-
plains, is ‘‘de-
generative. joint
disease which
comes from gen-
eral wear and
tear—if we live
long enough.”
' But this, I
pftapy
gather, is only a preliminary view,
for the professor promises to dis-
cuss this and related diseases in
future columns.
learn more!
The Arthritis and Rheumatism
Foundation tells us that the
- cause of osteoarthritis is un-
known—but maybe the Founda-
tion failed to consult the profes-
sor before issuing the Fact
Sheet. Fm afraid they didn’t
even clear it with me — unless
the man called when I was in
conference on the howling green.
Osteo, is the combining form of
os, Meaning bone. Arthr-itis
means joint inflammation. So os-
teoarthritis is a $10 term for in-
flammation of jeint and bone. :
I'M NO ‘AUTHORITY’
Now, I'm no professor. I have
only one degree, Medicine Doctor,
although I'm available, as the poli-
ticians say, for the additional. de-
gree I invented, P,H.D.—Doctor of
Personal Health—if some 20th cen-
tury institution should offer to
bestow it while I am here to thumb
my nose at the Trick Specialists.
Maybe I could understand these
things better if I had loafed from
two to four years in college be-
4ween high school and medical
school.
In a minuscule work on Chron-
fe Jolt Disability published last
September, the conductor of this
column states that most chronic
joint disability is physical degen-
eration of joint tissues.
In such cases, there is no in-
flammation (arthr-itis) except
from injury or strain of the affect-
ed joint or joints, and the cause of
the trouble is nutritional deficiency
through the years from childhood I can’t wait to
hap cs 6 present time, and it is
likely 16 go from bad to worse if
you don't correct your faulty nutri-
‘. tion and ve good lot» dans
frdm-now-on, Sj
Now then, if | are = with /
ed miracle and still
y more costly talk, it will do you no
harm to send me 35c and stamped.
self-addressed envelope for a copy
of Chronic Joint Disability.
* * *
Stqned letters, mot more than one pege
or 100 words long pertaining to persona!
health and hygiene, not to disease, diag-
nosis of treatment, wil) be answered by
Dr. William Brady, if a stam self-
addressed envelope is sent to The Pon-
tlac Press, Pontiac, Michigan.
(Copyright 1957) -~paise_them.
Votes of the People »
Wants Ban or Time. Limit 3
Letters will. be condensed when neces-
sary. because of lack of space. Pull name,
address and number of the
writer must accompany letters but these
will not be evthe Iet if the writer so re-
quests unless the letter is critical in its
_hature,
Michigan Conservation is talking
about raising fishing permits. Why
There are so
public sites in. Oakland ~
fleges and the guy that pays for a-
license can't use it, —
Last summer every time I went
out I got washed back in. How
. about putting a ban on speed boats
or at least put a time limit on
them, so a person who -wants to
fish knows when he can go’ out
without being washed back.
Ed Baker
Drayton Plains
‘Colossal’ Figure
Is Questioned
I'm calling your bluff, (Colossal)
Carlotta. I don't doubt that you
have 40 inches in a certain area,
but this 16-inch waist you claim
is just too much to expect of any-
one’s imagination. Either have a
picture of yourself published or
__we'll all just accept the fact that
you were having. fun with those —Germany.
unbelievable measurements. I'm
- sure Ga-Ga would appreciate. the
photo.
J. B.
‘May Cut Budget
= Post Office’
cnn x doctors mat lawyers eit
afin aniseed f Weinert “They -
Trial by . _ are professions, The Post Office is
a public service. —
Right now my three children
are out canvassing the nacighbor-
hood fer copies of the article.
I'm sending one to every con-
gressman and representative as
1 think they will be interested.
If the mail is dwindling. why do
we need a new post office? Maybe
it will be possible to shave that
budget. even closer than Broom-
field suggested.
batere rated Taxpayer
‘Trade-In Houses
‘May Hike Sales’
T understand that real estate men
are now taking old houses in trade
like automobile dealers do used
cars. Is that true? That might be
a peculiarity Hh one locality, but
if it spread clear across the coun-
try I think it would stimulate the
entire real estate activity of a
nation.
Lon
Another Tells
of Dog Killing.
Skeeter was a young fox hound,
whose purpose in life was to run
a fox. She knew nothing of laws
and men were her friends. One
day she and some other hounds
were taken hunting and they trot-
ted around a small lake and saw
a man raising a gun to his
shoulder.
Skeeter and her mate were
killed, their master arriving too
late to save them, The killer will
ne doubt explain it by saying —
they were trespassing. But Skeet-
er couldn't read signs and didn't * objector? on Speed Boats on Lakes”
know she was trespassing. She
wouldn’t know or understand why
she should suffer for man's
quarrel with man, ~~
Someday the rps Judge
will hold court and all accounts
willbe paid. _
Wanted to Pay. Toll.
to Owner of Road
The other day an intelligent and
courteous young lady was passing
all cars on West Huron street, and
in her rush she yelled “Why don't
you hurry up?” at me as I.was
* crossing the street. If she had been
half as smart ag she thought she
wi
~T've always wanted to meet the
person who owned that road.
Hellen Riggins
191 S. Winding Dr.
Sees German
Point of View
A very definite wave of anti-
militarism is springing up in West
draft age are claiming to be con-
scientious objectors and are avoid- —
ing army service. may
have to disallow this claim.
Well. if you were a German and
your leaderg had set out to “con-
quer all’ twice within the last half ~
century and each time they'd had: -
the everlasting daylights kicked out
First World War Vet Siieaedidaiitineneee eee
Portraits
By JAMES Z METCALFE :
Each morning when the sun
comes up .. . It means. that I
love you. .. Because the sunshine
represents .. . My promise to be
true... And if the sky is gray,
it means . .. Whatever is to blame
. For anything that may be
wrong . . . I love you just the
same... For I will always cherish
you... Regardless of the weather
: . And | will go fo any length
... To keep us two together. . .
And when the day is ending, and
. .. The sky‘is red and gold .
Or drizzly clouds are drifting, and
. » » The world is dark and cold
. . And whether wandering wind
and wave ... Are threatening or
tame . . . You may be sure, my
darling, that . . . I love you just
the same.
(Copyright, 1957)
. ;
Looking Back
15 Years .go
MacARTHUR VOICES faith in
Allied victory.
CHURCHILL SAYS Atlantic war
has taken turn for worse.
2% Years Ago
S. TO PROBE air tragedy in
which 13 die. :
STRIKE CLOSES Bay City Chev-
rolet unit, ~ «
.
Smiles A Chicago dentist says children's
teeth should be taken care of dur-
ing school hours, not play time.
Just another school drill.
Case Records of a Psychologist:
Advises Teens to Weigh Decisions
Here is the follow-up on
Arlene’s case.. She refused to
become a modern Esau and sell
out for temporary social gain.
Scrapbook this case record to
show the difference between
sexual infatuation vs. true love.
-For both may make you giddy
and put butterflies in .-your
stomach,
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
Case U-338: Arlene A., aged 19,
_is now a college sophomore.
“Dr. Crane, maybe you will not
remember me,” she began as we
talked for a few
moments after
I had addressed
her-coblege—
Chapel Program.
“But I came
you page
Blea cenact
wrong.
mpany. After
on ‘the — Hy]
g
‘and invited
with him. wanted to talk to me, so I finally
agreed to have a soda with him
at the corner drug store.
“When we met, he apologized
and said he was very sorry for
the way he had treated me.
* * ..
“He also admitted that he ad-
mired me for doing the right thing
and was glad I had refused to
give in to him. Then he said he'd
like to continue going with me
under my own terms,’ try te coM@ce a girl into submit.
ting to their demands, For q lot
of American teenagers have the
mistaken notion that sexual in-
dulgence, along with whisky and
tobacce, make you a he-man,
That is so silly as to be laugh-
able, but thousands of young men
are ‘addicted to that stupid view-
point.
Girls are not naturally very pas-
sionaté but they are inclined to.
take their ideas from their escort,
- “Well, we enjoyed” the—finat __for women are usually more docile
months of school and we parted
as good friends. But here in
college I have found the man
I truly love and we plan to get
married next summer.
“So I feel grateful for the sound
advice you gave me in my crisis,
for at that time I might easily
have been stampeded into the
wrong decision.”
LOVE VS. SEX
During the teens, you.can easily
confuse sexual infatuation with
true love.
So be very careful. True love is
unselfish. When a boy really loves
a girl, he wants het’ to be happy _both now and in the future.
Any every intelligent teenager /
krows that. pre-marital sexual re-
lations jeopardize the happiness of
~ the girl, swell as the boy. +. fe
Some selfish youths, however, than men.
_* * *
M oy girls who know better,
will meekly submit to the selfish
- demands of their male
in order to buy a few extra dates
with a popular high school hero.
Remember foolish Esau, who
ae his sobre for a mess of
age: "t be so shortsighted.
Look far ahead.
Girls now are about 22 when
they marry. If you go to college
or plan to work for a couple of years after high school (and
you should), you will very likely meet other men who will sur.
pass you — * school
Romeo, -
So weed out the boys who self-
ishly think of themselves by unfair
demands, since that means they do not love you. Bide your time.
* * *
} : ire a = cof
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957
_ Secretary of foreign affairs:
"Eis aided vue Gacoes Wish. “What's going of in the World?” | ga
“All I know," the secretary re-
Pag, Fn WaT one in the news, completely. :
* * *
Are we wise in assuming so !
‘much of the world’s burden? if\
administered? jae y are qronasons
are , wer convincingly. The Sen-
~ ate Fi Relations _ pein
is conducting an inquiry
will go thoroughly into the whole
matter in the light of commit-
ments abroad.
Why, after 150 years, did our)
'poligy change so drastically?
‘Proponents. say it. is because
“For a ‘centu: ington. The secretary was Robert up to World
. Livingstone, who headed the For-) ipolicy was to avoid foreign en-
eign Affairs Department of the. itanglements. In the years since World War Yl demonstrated rather Ak and a half, right)
ar Il, basic US.
Security for You:
Help Ease Burden of Busy §$ Offices By RAY HENRY
Associated Press Writer
The Social Security Administra-
tion is_busier than a one-legged
bicycle rider,
Many of its offices are working
overtime, including Saturdays and
- Sundays. It's hired. 3,000 more
permanent employes in the past
rary help wherever possible,
Some of the offices. have re-
sorted to asking its visitors to
return at a later date or merely
listing the visitors’ names and
promising to contact them later,
Most of the activity is due to \provide it. Take along any neces-
sary affidavits or certificates to
prove your marriage, birth date,
divorce, etc., etc,
~ After you apply for payments,
don’t bother the Social Security
office with questions about the
progress of your application. Not
| only will you slow up the Social
| security people, but you iiay Tur
ther delay your claim for pay-
ments, The offices are on a
“Don't - call- as. We'll-call-you”
basis: If the offices need more - Although most Sovial Security
offices are feeling the crush’ of
business, the load isn’t evenly
spread. So, you may not run into)
the emergency moves mentioned
above in your local office. ‘The
the offices are still in order.
Zz
“(Questions on Social —Security~;
problems may be addressed to
“Social Security,” in care of The
jor mi
we are, is our foreign policy well)”
suggestions for easing the work of
. lincluding 10,000 aliens.
* * de
m can Beets shrunk by a fast bomber’
ssile; ¢hat no nation can ex-
an island.
—s a basis of a briefing session. for
Dulles and his assistant secre-
taries for the four major regions
jot the reg ata cee
Yet there are important seg-, America, the Far East and Africa-
‘ments of the Senate, which must|Ne@r East-South Asia.
not | approve all treaties, and of the) Out of these meetings come ma-
population which hold that George jor policy-making recommenda-
Washington’s advise to ‘‘Steer tions. These are not yet final, how- clear of permanent alliances. with |ever. They have to be hammered
lany portion of the foreign world.” jout further within the National
Pane: Sunt Come #NSCIe— Beginning in 1940, the United! s we
States has moved steadily toward! The NSC is composed of the
alliances.
leame the foundation of U.S. for-| ~
| This policy. peop iettgi Florida Developer
to Visit Dearborn
oO!
nown as “containment.” Its ma- tions.
~~ | jor premise is that by battling up
communism within Russia and her,
grasp all the world’s complexities,| Harold A. Keats of Fort Lauder- and that is where-the Department | dale, Fia., has offered to donate of State fits into the picture. The/1.000 acres as a start. It is part
department develops recommen-/°f 10 square miles of land Keats dations and offers them to the|°WS 57 miles north of West Palm
President through the secretary, ac ‘Fla. The land is located
currently John Foster Dulles. 29 miles inland.
Information flows into State’s| Mayor Orville L., Hubbard of
tan concrete building here _ 24 Dearborn said the idea “might not)
hours a day from the 79 nations in| be as good as it sounds but it
hwhich-the-United-States—
embassies and legations. | Hubbard sana tt as a vaca-
To get this information, the de-'tion spot and a place where elderly
partment spends 75 million dollars|residents of the Michigan Dear-
a year, employs a staff of 22,039, \'o can retire.
Dearborn residents will vote in
*
Every day at 8:45 a.m, this mass they want the project pursued. ; *
| Dulles travels so widely that he i
disarmament adviser.
In addition, the director of the .
Central Intelligence Agency, our
spy outfit, and the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff sit with
the NSC in an advisory capacity.
*
Sere
applications for monthly payments
resulting from the changes =
LOWERS ‘AGE
Congress lowered the petiremenl
age for women to 62 and made it
possible for hundreds of thousands
between 62 and 65 to start drawing
payments after Nov. 1. And, it set
Up a program under which hun-
dreds of thousands of severely dis-
abled persons over 50 could start) -
drawing payments after July 1
1957, ;
Some one million on,
have flooded in since the begin-
ning of the year and about 900,-
000 have been approved or furyed
down,
Because of the flood and despite
the emergency measures, it's now
taking about 10 to 12 weeks from
the time an application is filed
unti] monthly payments are ap-
proved or disapproved. Normally.
it takes from six to eight weeks
for an application to go through
many months before things get
back to normal] in all its offices,
In_ the ae they've got
some suggestions for the public
Gath make it eestor to get beck
to normal,
If you've got an urgent in-
ry which can be answered by
a8 ad x peli
sia lt
GbE aif
ments, be as brief as possi
weil
;
projects. r
Historic Poli icy of Isolation? “The|the war. tt has” switched almost!conclustvely. -that time and space of world information forms pad pion of"
astemneera to a given nation.
In 1946, alliances be- President vi ident, th If action is required, the FSO residen and vice’ presiden e| passes the int sta ‘upd
lward through’ an intricate chain
f command with recommenda-
*
Hold Furniture Parley
GRAND RAPIDS ® — About 100
salesmen, design coordinators and
\management executives represent-
ing the Executive Furniture Guild
of America have gathered in the
laborative, which continues for five’
satellites, communism ultimately, is. more intimately familiar with
will collapse or moderate — and| the world and its problems than
the odds are on the side of the) DETROIT @ — A Florida land|®9¥ 9f his predecessors. He has to
free world. \developer will come to Dearborn in| Pe , Since the United States has
x * * Michigan Wednesday to talk about involved in the eco
No man, however, is qualified to establishing a Dearborn in Florida, 2"4 military life of 60 —— Tare to
said the clinic will show new trends
in executive furniture design and
ithe April 1. election on = members on guild plans and
cable Sosial Security law ES Sas
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957
Elect Ennis President
Clerk (0 Years,
Councilman, 5 f. _RIGHT
Feud Hits New High i in Bitterness
Williams Lashes Ziegler;
Land Deal Probe Goes On
Appoints |
Village en for Posts LANSING W — Gov. Williams) * a blistering exchange of letters
Monday Night with Charles M. Ziegler, all but ithreatened to fire the Republican!
- LANSING & — An Auditor Gen-|~
eral’s investigation of a proposed
iGrand Rapids land transaction
PLANNING PLAY — Members
the junior play “Bernadine” to be given in
Ortonville this weekend are here rehearsing a
ee Left to of the cast for
play is Lee M.
right, a are Ken Reinker, Wayne Dichason, Wayne Davison,
Diana Weil and Dan Svetéos. The director of the
Moore,
~ UN. Secretary Summons
McCloy to’ Ask Advice village councilman for past five|
1932 through 1942. was elected pres-
lident of the village of Rochester, monies.
at last -night’s meeting.
Mrs. Elizabeth Maitrott, only
councilwoman on the village
council was elected president pro-
tem. :
Village Attorney Roscoe Martin
presided at the organizational
meeting prior to the regular meet-
ing. First appointment made by
the council was that of Robert A.
Slone, for village manager and
treasurer.
Other appointments were: Vil-
lage clerk, Lillian Easterle; vil-
lage assessor, Mrs. Grace Criss-
man; village _ ROCHESTER—Sydney Q. Ennis, ‘State Highway Commissioner.
The Democratic governor ac-|
years, and a village clerk from cused Ziegler yesterday of: “ignor-|the deal for the sere — De-
ance.”’ imprudent use of public’
power and ‘confused and contra-
dictory” statements in a pending
inquiry.
Williams exploded his criti-
cisms a few hours after Ziegler
wrote him that the taxpayers
will “undoubtedly have to ‘pay
threugh the nese’ to satiate your
carnivorous desire to prey upon
me. ”
“Apparently no cost is too high
for you to continue your grab for
complete control of the government
of our state,’ Ziegler wrote in
rebuking Williams for ordering an
investigation of a Grand Rapids attorney, Roscoe
Martin; and Robert Siene, James
Hill and Edward Alward to the
area planning commission.
Hill was appointed to be council | ‘representative for Avon Youth Rec-,
— Assn. and “Stowell Collins |
is to be the alternate. L, L. Whims' land case:
_At the Governor's direction, Aud.
* * *
Gen. Frank S. Szymanski is trying
to find out why the state recently
was on the point of paying $90,000 unwise delegation of his. turned for the second time today
to the two land buyers who made
partment.
Aud, Gen. Frank ‘S. "Szymanski
summoned Francis T. Kennedy
and Everett A. Wells to tell how
ithey made a tenative agreement
for purchase of 24% acres of iand
needed for an expressway project.
department's right of way divi-
sion, and Kennedy, assistant to
the chief right of way buyer,
testified 12 days ago they agreed
Feb. 19 to buy the property from
Darling Freight Lines, Inc., of
Grand Rapids for $90.000. The
day before, Wells said, he had
hired Harry J. Fuller, Grand
Rapids appraiser, to estimate
ing that Fuller had been re- Wells, assistant director of the |
Pontiae Press Phote
_ GRAND CELEBRATION — Practically the entire Dublin settle-
ment, some 200 residents, turned out to help celebrate the 92nd birth
anniversary of Mrs. Minnie Hackney, White Lake Township pioneer,
last night. Dublin’s oldest colleen lives alone and likes it, and up
until two years ago, she walked a ‘mile-and-a-half to St. Patrick
Church every Sunday. Above, Mrs. Hackney is driven from her
_+-home_on.Mandon drive in_an_ancient_ buggy, | ‘the Ivory Victoria,”
by Mike Wacker, to a party at Dublin Community Center, where
among other gifts, a portable TV set was given her. White Lake
tained to do the same fer Dar-
ling
ifor a 2%g-acre tract that was ap-
CAIRO (INS) — Reports Dag problems has been summoned to!was scheduled to arrive tonight or|was appointed the third member |Praised late in 1954 at $11,800.
_ bie noma a and Gamal Abdel
canes teal ol Sarna to wive the!
. Suez Canal issue gained strength’ Egypt.
ee learl y tomorrow.
; — =
“Catted ins
itary general was pin J. McCloy,
president of Chase Manhattan
the U. N. would play a | ——
| role in the formula which Ham- of the Board of Review.
Village Manager Sione read the |
aes Of
[ments including superintendent of boring The parcel is sought by the State
Preariroed cnepice: from Deriine
stag tat tae maine account, asserting they were “con-*
fused’* when they. were summoned
on a half hour's notice to testity |
‘before Szymanski.
eatted
Szymanski on orders of Gov, Wil- aaa te |. Police escorted the carriage. ——
Now both men have denied their |
is ummer. Superintendent Lyle
Set 4th i in Farm Series |Ambs said it was decided to tear
| 200 structures down after the death Thursday’ in Highland Thu sdi y g ilast fall of Susie, the big kodiak
The last of four Oakland County, bear. Other animals in the zoo.
pub oo meetings: on: What's: Newiwere put.in.& —
lin Agriculture’ Wilf beheld at) Sonnac
today with disclosure that the chiefBank and former U. S. high) marskjoid and the Egyptian
U, N. financial adviser on Suez commissioner in Germany, who) President appear to be working
out. It was noted that the U, N. public works, Edwin Kage; su-/sumers Power Co. The Consumers |
perintendent of sewage plant,|land is needed for extension of
James Salyer; superintendent of|the Grand Rapids _ expressway
water workers department, R. D./project. liams, The Governor ordered the (8 p.m. Thursday in the Highland|
investigation to learn why the high-
way department appeared ready to Township Hall.
Speakers will include three coun-|
Hold? Youths
vin Troy Thefts ‘Stole Our Way East,’
Co nfe ss Californians
After Area Arrest Doctors Reveal
How to Avoid
Morning After ST. LOUIS hak _ Drinkers:
Want to avoid those ' “‘morning
after’ blues? Then stick to a
blended whisky,
That is the opinion reached by.
independent chemical consultants)
“jafter an extensive analytical study:
of the effects of alcoholic bev- TROY — Arrested last week in|
Detroit, Richard E. Moore, 21,and)
Edward Dila, 22, were returned!
to Troy to face charges of stealing.
a safe from the Torpey pe
em
Their apprehension came after| acetate, acetaldehyde and tan- ‘reached.
_ 4 suspicious cab driver reported)
‘to Troy police that the pair had|
had him stop at a car parked in’
Livernois, while they picked up|
some of their belongings, and then |?’
Witte arrestéd ‘both were car. erages. ;
It seems. that while mest bar-
tenders don’t know furfural |ports that some progress WAS ined by the Village Attorney
oil they are serving made in the Hammarskjold-Nasser decided that all signers were not.
jcanal talks although U.N. sources property owners. By order of the from fusel
both daily. And im the process,
also sel] acetic acid, ethyt |
nin, Stark; police chief, Samuel How- Consumers wants the Darling ‘pay $90,000 for the property when ty agricultural agents—Lyle Abel, is the only agency Nasser seems
to trust in such matters as hold-
ing part of the canal tolls and
ple operational disputes.
| A U. N. spokesman said Mc-
|Cloy’ s rush visit was an outgrowth
‘of Hammarskjold’s talks with
.|President Gamal Abde] N a'’sser
about the canal which is expected
‘to be reopened to giant 20,000-ton
‘ships this weekend,
* ¥* *
| The U. N. chief had planned to
ileave Cairo tomorrow, but his de-
jparture may be delayed by the,
| McCloy visit. There had been re-|
denied any agreement had been)
* * lett; fire chief, George Ross: su-
perintendent of central garage,
Ray Zoliner.
Tom Turkette was appinted dep-
uty building inspector.
Permission was granted to the
auxiliary to the American Legion
to hold a Poppy Day Sale in the
Village on May 24-25. Couneil
also granted Councilman John
Dahimann an extension of two
weeks to file his oath of office.
Three petitions for rezoning of
‘Walnut Bivd. from multiple fam-
lily to commercial were presented
jto the council. After being exam- it was appraised two years ago at\Jay .Poffenberger and Wayne
$11,800. \Seifert. |
* * * | The meeting is held by the Oak-
land County Extension Service in| Fuller, appearing yesterday on| j
the seventh day of the neering. \vator Co. with the Highland Ele-
‘strongly denied he had been
tained by the highway department. |
“I don’t make appraisals for both | land for relocation of some elec-
-tric lines traversing the intended
right-of-way.
The Williams - Ziegler feud,
progress intermittently for salle}
years, seldom if ever before pro-|
duced » bitterness of their langu- | ‘Jackson Closes Zoo age y' esterday. +
Willitms said that but for Zeig- a are said. “That is highly JACKSON Wf — The first time!
ler's impending retirement June 30, lin its 40-year history, Sharp Park} certain conduct -he enumerated) fuller appraised the property.
“would warrant me in considering for Darling at $141,650. In De-
your removal from office.” cember, 1954, William T. Broers-
* * * ma, had ‘estimated its worth at
He said in the Grand Rapids) $11,800 and las¢ January at $16,- in Jackson will have no zoo this |
(Aévertisement)
Lost 27 Lbs.
it Was
counci] the petitioners were told
’ fthat the petitions be returned to! shown himself to be irresponsible | ithe circulators to be corrected.
Physicians attending the = But apparently there had been) In the Mayors Exchange Week| mone day American acedemy of genersi/n0 change in the basic Egyptian program, May 20, Village President |
practice scientifie session in St.|Position regarding the Canal, the Sydney Ennis is to exchange places
ious ingrrdients—called congeners,
are what give take them to Detroit. iocareiocs: these var-
rying large sums of cash and had
purchased tickets for Buffalo,
N. ¥.
They were arraigned before Troy |
Justice Charles Kosey Friday
entered pleas of guiity. Sentence |
will be passed by circuit court!
April 1.
Troy police said the young men!
left California about two weeks ago)
and had “‘stolen their way east,”
including robberies in that state
and Missouri, as well as attempted
burglaries in Illinois and several in
Detroit and Mt, Clemens.
Police added that ‘“‘hold” orders
have been issued, asking that
‘when released from Michigan the
-pair be turned over to authorities
in other states. i
aes bourbon, ages their - distinctive meee oad and
bouquet. Analysts also believe that
the congener content is a factor,
in the cause and extent of “hang-.
and | overs.”
The exhibit’s conclusion: drink|
whisky, and !ay off!
bourbon
Britons ns Meet
on Dock Strike Union Leaders to Talk.
About Possible Solution |
to 10-Day Walkout Round Table
Talk in Troy
to Aid Public
TROY — In the interest of a!
completely informed public, Troy
round-table . discussion
Ben Jones will serve as moderator.
City Commission candidates,
Donald Lance, George T, Yeok-
wm, Clifford Sutermeister, Allen
K. Parrish, Wesley Smith and |
dohn Davis with Justice of the
Peace candidates, Sevile Mason |
and Charles Losey will speak. j
They will present their qualifica- | |
tions and background and what
they hope to achieve as officers
of one of Oakland County's new-
est and largest cities.
Following brief remarks the
meeting will be opened for a ques-
tion and answer period. LONDON (INS) — Leaders of
Britain's 200,000-member Shipyard
Workers Union met today to de-
10-day
walkout while a government court cide whether to end a
‘of inquiry studies the wage dis-|
pute. |Gaza Strip and Gulf of Aqaba.. ‘with the Mayor of Clinton.
Your PTA Is Planning:
Glengary to Hear Talks
of Specialized Teachers
COMMERCE TOWNSHIP —Four!
speak at the regular monthly meet-
ing of the Glengary Elementary
Schoo] PTA slated for 8 p.m. to-
night.
Taking part in the program will
be Jack Simonton, a specialist in
child psychology; Mrs. Marilyn
Strissler, speech correctionist; Mrs.
‘(Problem Posed
by Single Home
iin Two Counties
EAST JORDAN ‘ — It’s not so!
much bother traveling from their!
Minister of Labor Iain Macleod | sleeping quarters in Charlevoix
led to the unionists to go County to their dining facilities in
candidates will take part in a cae to work after announcing | Antrim County, but the tax prob-
tomorrow that members of the court would
night-at 8 p.m. in the high school. be named and the inquiry begun without delay.
| Macleod decided to appoint
| the court yesterday after a new
| breakdown in negotiations be-
| tween the union and employers,
who offered a five per cent wage
| increase. The union came down
from its 16 per cent demand to
7\, but refused to go lower.
The findings of government: | lem is a plague to Mr. and Mrs.
Maxwell Arnold.
Laws of Charlevoix County ap-
Antrim County laws govern the
rest of the house. The Arnolds pay
taxes in both counties,
The situation evolved some years ago, when their small cottage was!
jdiscovered to be resting on the
jcounty line,
Township clerks and assessors specialized teachers from thejtally handicapped division;
Walled Lake school district will Don Milligan, attendance officer. Ur Heights departments were |
ply to the Arnold home's bedroom. | Myrtle Wierenga, head of the men-!
and ¢
A member of the Commerce
Township Road Study Commit-
tee, Claude Garvey, will explain |
the read improvement program
which wil] appear as a pro-
posal on the April 1 ballot at
al] township precincts,
Refreshments will be provided
by George Tweed's fifth grade
room.
Parents are invited to visit
teachers in their’respective school-
rooms from 7:30 until 8 p.m.
* * *
Keego Harbor
Executive board of the
velt PTA will meet at the
|this evening, The meeting will
at 7:30, a
Roose-
school
be
Drayton Plains .
Parents of Pine Knob pupi
® @
‘Pine Knob School.
will be elected and by-laws
adopted. Mrs. Mark Goddard,
| director of district No. 7 will be
present to install officers.
Refreshments will be served. \*delegation of one-man authority | the highway department
| ibs. and I want to tell jin i , disposition at texpeyets iright of way division, told Szymar.-| py I feel wo erful. Before losing
ee a
| Tings capitol detervers il yesterday that the wide varia-| TE" 1. "Short of breath.
Officers for the coming year | case Ziegler showed ‘ignorance of) 590 in two appraisals for te |
ithe facts,”’ ‘‘failure to make pro-| state. Ward 8S, Van Deusen of
\dent use of public funds” and| Detroit appraised it at $31 “EASILY WITH RENNEL { 200 for | DETROIT, MICH. “I want to tell you fast | what a fine reducing aid Renne! Con-
centrate really is, shor Patricia
Mabie, 4872 T-ernes. t weeks ago jto a non-elective deputy who has’ May. i
weighed 210 ‘Ths. wit the help of
nel I loet 27 Ibs. L. E. Brillhart. director of the) ———————s
could not recall when a tion in the appraisals promptrd)
lexercised his constitutional power) |him to write a letter of complaint | last August to the American In-| | another wide elective bres state electi (caaaa te eal Bima foprase
Priced in Chicago.
Credit Firefighters
at Phil's Inn Blaze
AVON TOWNSHIP — Firemen of}
the Rochester, Avondale and Au
aX ¢
r
credited today with saving nearby |
\buildings from a raging blaze
jwhich destroyed Phil's Inn, 3982
'W. Auburn at Adams road Sunday
at 4 am. ;
Owner of the building, Mrs. Olga
Moore, has some insurance but the
amount at present is unknown.
Phillip Yuille, who owns the con-
tents of the building has about
$20,000 insurance coverage on it.
The estimated damage was $70,000.
Benefit Building Fund
LAKE ORION — The Women's
Dept. of the Reorganized Church
lof Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints will hold a family style
baked ham. dinner at the church
on Thursday from 5 to 7 p.m. Pro-
ceeds to go to the building fund.
EK Am
"et ‘Tt
7)
IE -
.a- °.
Your Natural Gas
It even tiad fins like a fish. Parking
it was like trying to squeeze @
_ Sohe bought Rambler, only car with
room for six 6-footers, plus European
car economy, handling ease.
appointed inquiry courts are not make certain that the couple ob-
binding to either side. The findings serve the regulations of each coun-
\carry considerable weight withity. Clerk Lawrence Addis says
ithe British public, however, and they must comply with state elec-
such courts have proved useful in|tion laws and vote in the territory
jtackling many stubkorn labor dis-|where they sleep—South Arm town-
| putes. ship of Charlevoix County.
Would Set Minimum Milk Price Tax assessors of both counties
meet once a year to determine
the valuation of the Arnold prop-
erty, split thé amount and bill the
Dairy Farmer Groups
to Convene &
DETROIT @ — A nationwide;
program to set a minimum price,
for milk, “no lower than the cost;
of production,” is attracting Mich-)
igan. dairy farmer groups to a
Chicago meeting, April 5-6.
. This was the report yesterday!
“from-Sam_Balo of Sotith Lyon.
He is secretary of the Michigan:
Dairy Farmers Cooperative Assn.,
a group critical of recent cuts jin
the wholesale‘ price of milk in
Michigan i
Bale said the Chicago meet-
‘eg Was set after/a conference
@f dsiry farmers Albany, N.
| Be test week, He said a Rational |
Meco sta be sought |
Arnolds for each township’s share.
They say the only way to remove
the heAdache would be to drag the
house across the county line. Mean-
while, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold plan
to vote in South Arm township on
April 1 in Chicago
among farmers to set the minl-
mum price.
| Balo, whose group is a rival! ‘Body of Berkley Man |of the Michigan Milk Producers, \Discovered i in His Car
| Assn., which accepted the cuts,
iin Michigan price because of out-' The body of Clyde Rowland, 48,
state competition, said: {1992 Royal, Berkley, was found ly-
i “Dairy farmers i set UPling in front of his car parked on
fa national Cooperative to assume the shoulder’ of Evergreen rad,
“responsibility for the cost of sur- north’ of West ‘Eleven Mile road |*
pluses without financial aid from at 9:30 am. yesterday. ?
Ahe government. Southfield Township Police’ said)
“The only permanent and s&tis- 4 38 caliber pistol, found next to
| factory solution of the dairy farm- nis body, had fired the shot that.
fers problems is--a—fational pro-!struck Rowland in the right tem-
gram administered by and con- pie. Paraffin and ballistic tests
trolled by the dairy farmers them- [showed tht . the wound was self-
selves.” jinflicted, "poetgnr said.
| oN hOB.
{snd of kideey tu
|and the same Oak Park Man Given
Suspended Sentence
An Oak Park man yesterday fy
received an indefinitely suspended||~9 ~ 4
sentence for the break-in March
10 of a grocery store at 8550 W.
Nine-Mile Rd.
Richard W, Loveday, 1505 W.
Nine-Mile Rd., who pleaded guilty,
was sentenced by Circuit Judge
Clark J. Adams.
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See Disneyland—Oveg » ABC-TV Network I é q 4 wf /
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i
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/ ; |
é fear PONTIAC PR ‘ss, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957
WHISKEY” Two Pontiae men are complet-
ing basic training at Lackland Air
Force Base, Texas,
THE ONLY THING YOU'LL - LIKE SETTER THAN
PMs QUALITY
is Irs PRICE!
are, Herman L. Nichols Jr.,
ot Mrs. Karl Rhinevault, 4900 Es-
tes Dr.; and Richard L. Lipka,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lip-
ka of 20 E. New York Ave. -
egeinst ‘the . “,
“leaned ae | Protect Yourself and Your Relatives 4
— IN: YOUR HOUSEHOLD — — ee seecoe e
¢ While in any
automobile, or
d as a pedestrian, - 80n | : \Nei ews of Service Personnel for specialized technical training |
and will be assigned to Frances’
E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo,
oe ot.
Army Specialist 3C. Phillip J.
Toth, son of Mr. and Mrs, Louis
S. Toth of 273 Bramble Dr., re-|~
cently played basketball in the 47th} -
* |Antiaireraft Artillery Brigade tour-
f jnament at Fort. MacArthur, Calif.
Toth is assigned regularly as a
driver in the brigade's Headquar-
ters Battery. He entered the. Army
fin March, 1955, and completed -ba-
sic training at Fort Bliss, Tex.
He attended Waterford High
School,
Resolution Calls
for Toughening~
of Censor Code
TRAVERSE -CITY » — The
Michigan Congress of Parents and
Teachers will be asked next month
to. go on record as demanding | sion
“decency and good taste’ in
The resolution, which deplores
what it describes as the ‘‘alarming
relaxation of standards’’ in the
1956 code of the Motion Picture
F | Association of America, will be of-
fered at the state PTA convention
ere April sti
* *
standards of the American home,
promote spiritual, ‘patriotic and
s” democratic values, encourage de-
; icent human relations and respect
bicycling, or for law, provide whdélesome humor,
oge P fantasy and adventure and accur-
d if injured by a hit- “ca ately depict the institutions of our
_ond-run driver | rb, son sec and the record of historic
from: Loss Due to Bodily Injuries,
or Death for Which an Uninsured
Motorist is Legally Liable
THIS PROTECTION available with the Family
Automobile Policy at limits of liability provided
by the Financial Responsibility Low of your Ameo —_ SS ike a ape: ee ‘wr
Khother-resotution scheduled for
introduction views the U.S. =
*sipreme Court's recent decision
“lagainst Michigan's law—on-obscene
~~ jliterature as possible ‘‘nullifica-
. ttion. of the good work’ accom-
_Iplished in banning sale ‘of some
» |books.
Mrs. Chaties W. Neldrett of Pon-
tiac, vice president of the state
is unopposed for president.
be Pope Sees Adenauer
VATICAN CITY (#®—Pope Piur
XII received Chancellor Konrad!
pony |Adenauer of West Germany in
504 Pontiec Stote Bonk Bidg., Peatioe. \private audience today. Adenauer
Dr.; and Stephen R. Bloe, son'came to Rome for the signing of
FE 5-8172
||ssue Contract
for Dump Fill Bulidozing to Begin at
Hospital-Crescent Area
‘in’ Waterford
Bight sealed bids for dump site
fill were opened last night at the
Waterford Township board meet-
ing. ~
Low bidders were Edward and
Homer King, 4202 Dixie Highway.
| “They were awarded a contract
for supplying 440 five-yard loads
Pepe cate tpg
It will be spread on dump sites jat Hospital and Crescent Lake
roads, and bulldozing wilt begin
. |immediately.
APPROVE REQUEST ;
Board members approved a re-
quest from tbe township Recrea-
tion Department for a $485 appro-
priation for improvements at the
Drayton Ball Park.
Board members agreed to pay
the installation charge of $86 to
Elizabeth Lake Shores and Elliza-
‘beth Dale Subdivision owners,
for 2 “Neo Parking At Any
Time” signs, and 20 ten foot steel
posts. The property owners pay
a draft |. the cost of having the signs made
: lsupports films which wear the
pay the installation charge.
Oscar Loomis, board member,
presented a new traffic count re-
|port for the year. Ten major roads
were included in the survey. The
board tabled the report for further
consideration.
om a was gern by the
Motorola Company for two 2-way
installations, and was accepted
by the board. .
x * *
week of April 1 shall be Waterford
Township Civic Music Week.
A plumber’s license was granted
to H. H. Stanton, along with two
|workers. Carl Waara's license was
jrenewed,
granted 0 new Uoenes.
radios. The bid was $1,082, includ-| ~
licenses for sewer . construction}.
and Forrest Nixon was
: Mrs. E. C. Bloe of 137/Europe’s common market and) Russia is producing a full length
— - Whittemore ‘St. Bloe has qualified ed | Euratom t treaties. _t heed he Pakistan, Decea reposts.
.
} : “BONUS! | ; = - . . #5 Se em ao =
} TWO ADVANCED NEW GASOLINES! -
| i
pp
|
} ) | WEW MARATHON SUPER-W : Highest octane in Marathon history :
for full power performance in. Ahigh- ;
est compression engines! —F
* (Up te end including 10 te 1 compression ratios.).
Specially refined for quicker starting,
fester pickup and power, power, power!
IT’S TOMORROW'S GASOLINE TODAY! :
NEW MARATHON MILE-maker
—— txtre power for sxtre miles at regular price! Gives premium performance in all cars with
® standard-compression engines.
; "Drive jn te your Marathon decler G f 1 MAD | spb hskeaseh a AND'ON WITH MARATHON © “*eesT InN THE LONG RUN’?
‘ i YA - THE OHIO OIL COMPANY
“A ! ea f or 187 — he hie OF Compnr
he / \ sat \ = e |
: \ f
2
Why di:
! }
ee Se Nahe ea | a er | for doctor care Another reason —
youre better off with
Blue Cross, Blue Shield,
Hospitalized 4 times in 3 yea
with no worries about costs.
No fear of losing
her protection
No Blue Cross » Blue Shield member has ever had to forfeit his
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Only exceptions are admission primarily for tuberculosis, nervous
or mental diseases which are limited to 30 days of care, with
another 30 days each time you have been discharged from a
hospital at least six months.
To Blue Crosse Blue Shield, you are not merely a statistical
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How dependable, how desirable is Blue Cross « Blue Shield? Just
ask someone who has it... and who's used it!
Blue Cross. Sor hospital care
Blue Shield.
le | TEN”
India ‘is ‘anda some $40,
000 to her ‘neighbor, Burma, = Slowaway Charged
aid in rehabilitation Rangoon } if fe
; A
j | i ; ‘
|
THE PONTIAC: PRESS, , TUESDAY, MARCH. 26, 1957 !
| /
000, oe
‘in Widow's Death
Wat Disneys True Life Adventures: if 10 pas Se ert,
Fak al pl wa —
fee ar eee Ge
Called Worst Film
mili -NEW YORK i» — A Bowery ihandyman who stowed away on
iia transatlantic liner is back here
in jail, charged with strangling a
46-year-old widow,
John Benjamin, 27, a Negro)
drifter, arrived -in the brig of the
if liner Constitution yesterday. Po- ACCIDENTS
WILL HAPPEN.
WHEN AN OSPREY 6INKS HIS TALONS _; INTO A FIGH THAT . 7
Golden
- Drumstick
Sex Dinners New ro | lice booked him on a homicide DO ty
charge in the death of Mrs. Anna IS “Te STRONG é
4 Orlovsky. ANY HEAVY.. eee /
* * * if The woman's body was found ©1957 ; fs
"iin her lower East Side apartment, Wak Disney Productions s }
‘March 6, the day the Constitution! World Rights Reserved {/
‘sailed for Europe. ; ff
f +c OF oe 1
| Five days later sailors caught
3 stowaway when hunger forced
‘him to raid the ship's galley. His
oe was sent here.
the
For a limited time..
+50” DANC
COURSE
eee,
Arthar M
. sete int Saya erte
beowieei a — oon
Learning is fun
° Open 16 rete M. daily.
ARTHUR MURRAY
25 E. Lewrence St.
FE 2-0244 hih-and tieds Gee lainans which
may be used-in Pakisan's Consti-
*fatinalASsembly, in Karach!
‘(e ;
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (INS) —}-
Pa A The Harvard. Lampoon has -an-
‘a its “‘movie worsts of
ff i
Gregory Peck was the worst act-
or of the year, Lampoon decreed, |
for his pM neil in “Moby Dick.”
Jennifer Jones in “The Man in)
the Gray Flannel Suit’. was the
| worst actress. |
| Worst supporting actor ‘of the
year was Elvis Presley in ‘ ‘Love!
Me Tender,’’ and Anne Baxter inf
'“The Ten Commandments" weal
the. worst supporting actress,
| Seats will face the rear of civil
jaircraft.in Australia, under a -new|
,
cd
| 1c
rh
i}
2,
|x *
| HOW! nn THURS. { z oes - -conccccoce
a
“ovenpuls samrag Bory bq prrrqung
E okiauoma! J a iiNe mAS ct E <3 . P
BAe r ¢
Be.
ey
~ . 4 peed lied ‘ fF abs
|] CHARLOTTE GREENWOOD - EDDIE ALBERT - JAMES WHITMORE - ROO STEIGER -
totaling. $49,000 were issued in
Waterford Township last week, ac-|
cording to a report from Emil By BOB THOMAS |
‘ Robert WAGNER - Additions and remodeling totaled Magazines?
Nbeen lifted and truck traffic load . e« *
' ADULTS "til 5 P.M. 50¢
NITES and SUNDAYS 60¢
Children 20c Anytime is back to normal, making it pos-.
Grischow added.
Savings Accounts
Checking Accounts
Travelers Checks
Money Orders
Safe Bees Boxes
Check Cashing
Savings Certificates
Ce ok ts sa er
Complete, Modern, Banking Services
at the
NEW BALDWIN AVE. BRANCH
Mortgage Loans ©
Home Improvement Loans 24 Hour Depository
You get the
Lite ironee teoms bonk-ty.en + |: Me efficient
Appliance Loans Oriveinwedows | attention at all U.S. Savings Bonds Car Loans Ponti ac State
offices Christmas Clubs
Land Contract Collections Personal Loans
Foreign Remittances Business Loans
FREE at Baldwin Branch
Until March 30th
Receive FREE a beautiful Calendar Bank
with the opening of a new savings account
of $5 or more. These unique banks will be
available during the celebration at the
Baldwin Branch only
PONTIAC STATE BANK
COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE
MAIN OFFICE: In Downtown Pontiac’ 5 Tallest Building Saginaw at Lewraiid
‘ : Bra ch Offices: Auburn Heights Drayton Plans Baldwin Avene
na —— mi LF. ‘3 Building Permits Hollywood Headlines
pn in Waterford OCandal Magazines H ere Se SONTIOG GE
oy treetone wane emi: tO Stay, Brando Believes |
HOLLYWOOD (® — What. can Brando jf he thought the publicity”
|Grischow, chief building inspéctor. Hollywood do about the scandal methods would help Hollywood's
Nothing, says Marion Brando, a '$5,500, and rmits reached -
‘Terry MOORE $7,600. eT 74 favorite target for the so-called
wre Broderick CRAWFORD f The road load restrictions have “*P°S*S-
The scanda] mags have been &)jike this.” He pantomimed a read-
}sible to move heavy equipment to worry for the film industry ever er voicing disapproval but licking
‘the various ‘building projects, since their appearance. The prob- pis lips.
‘lem \ was is pointed up at the recent
Y, | { 1) * | | | { e's , 4 \ ry i
‘ a \ ‘ A F \
S . \ + ” |
« \ * y i “oy les f |
ADULTS | CHILDREN
70¢ 20¢
~Susan —— jp Hayward
———
DRIVEIN THEATRES TONIGHT—WED.—THURS. <
state legislative hearings. I asked.
ibattle against them.
ee ee ee:
“No,” he replied tartly. “The
publicity only adds to the maga-
zine's allure. People read the news
* * *
“The: answer won't come with
legislation.” he said. “You can
crack down on the detective agen-
cies, which supply 75 per cent of’
the material to the magazines. But’
they still find other sources of
information.
“These magazines are read by 5
or 10 million people—maybe more
by the time the issues are passed
aound. The popularity of the mag-
azines shows that there is a de-
mand for this kind of material.
There are people who derive a vi-
carious thrill] from preying on the
private lives of famous people.
“The only solutiory would come
if those readers could be persuad-
ed not to read such cheap smut.’
* * *
Brando will talk to énly a hand-,
ful of Hollywood correspondents. | —ALSO—
“IT have made it a rule that I
will answer no questions about my SAVAGE JUNGLE THRILLS!
persona! life,’ he explained. ‘This
morbid curiosity about how a per- i ~~ “ga a ta \
son lives and eats and sleeps is’
revolting to me and I will not_con-—
tribute to it.
* * * |
“When I first came to Holly. fs
wood, I made mistakes. .1. didn’t HP
know the ropes, and I found people *
taking advantage of me. But I His
kept a list of just who did what, |
and I got to know who could be
trusted.” NOTE: There will be 2 brief “catch-your breath” intermission each showing! -~—
THURSDAY
and
are having a
eyo
ea rwervwv’
vey
ee
ee
ee
hw
eee
€
ROBERT WAGNER
‘JEFFREY HUNTER
HOPE LANGE ADDED:
Bugs Bunny Cartoon
a
2150 Opdyke Ra.
DRIVE- Phone FE 4-4611
BLUE SKY THEATER om «=
— STARTS TONIGHT rw
oe eal “IS THE BIG
SHOCKER!
LAND OF A THOUSAND MYSTERIES
\ and UNTOLD TERRORS!
ob 1WINGS
- §TARTS FRIDAY
se =
__ WA’ \YNEI~_ T_
He's wonderful in th wonderful in the 4
Cammander “Sig”
nls: a ae ee fe ee oe
Mee”
THE
OF (EAGLES
nti Viey i: : . Ei tee } pee Pr: i < ff se | Bey , / .” ; | ; | | [ Se: ee ee
: ‘ j [ ; b / j ; f A Vi | j | ees y
La } i | Pt i 1 f . } : f F he \ J j é | j |
4 é a 1 f Z
i . | (Sree ete (uJ ie. \ fi se4 “ray P PONTIAC PRESS, TURSDAY,. MARCH 26, 1957 var ; ere af | _ELEYEN. a
LE 4 : : £ 4 i ‘ : \ ee _ ' : r f P
é eager a Sis Po Wage " ;*seameaee*t coccecsecccesoscgcoooooosoccose | \ =
‘The Ship’s on F PR alls Morro Castle Tragedy’ laws ta fine snips on ir ec s Morro Castile rage yi barat is i : ey . b . e ; ae e ; :
— hse ee ru Ciel a oc can Se om “I turned to m nd and left the ship about 4/$ : me disasters of the jaat}: : : . y husba figure we pa ° FUNERAL HOME 4 |
Tate bake oy enema hors > pa comelagell ren Sar pend een Caliah alates Eo eg ae, | 160 W. Huron sé 2-917 By James L. Kilgalien ‘Belen upright in{had left New York in gala tcod|propeliers had stopped and mem.("S2r” of Bermuda. T said to my husband: |8 : $ y dames L. Mrs. a
. INS Staff Writer [ner berth. She pow fe her Hg a Caribbean cruise, The tino Thers of the crew were shouting] “Steve said: ‘You go, and I'll |'We may be saved. I read that - PARKING ON PREMISES :
Meets voice erying “The ship's rege Meda ng oe ee priende ~ on ~ garded “Bon _ wed Save: te ome OF mith ara nn ee me Op a eaiilas cal CooSeoeoeoooocooorossocosonossosoeooseseseeeeS
on. fire}. was Mrs, Stephen J.|“Steve, something’s wrong!” eee ee oem Mery) the ship was anchored and) yaig ‘You have to go.’ : ns Panel allyson oe
os pulled + |flames were shooting closer to : ity of Savannah Almost immediately there was where we were huddled. A man “So 1 grabbed a rope, slid down|a ‘cargo. ship. They spotted us, A : jj RE
on, — ears On the way to —_ to jump.’ He was praying.” rept pared ~ the — = owner — towed us to shore at Pt. Serving Southeast tein
Suddenly sparks of fire burst empl va *« * * e , 1 reached Pleasant, N.J. It was now about. ee '
through the porthole of their friendly, according to Mrs. Bodmer.| 45° poner said she and her/8TesPed my husband’s handas ali9 a.m. We had been in the ocean 493 S. SANFORD corner of EAST WILSON
cabin — "No. 242 on © deck — |At Havana, a revolutionary out-| 4004 sinally realized that if they/™® Wave swirled over our heads./tive or six hours.” I 2 Blocks East of — ef
and Mr. Bodner jumped up and |break had occurred and ight: didnt go over the side they'd be * * * (Next: On stage at the Iroquois'§ 5 Sesinaw. page
closed it, ae . , burned.” She continued: _| “It was a long, hard ordeal. ‘1 eeeater, Dec, 30, ted | jave Your ¥ | On the return frip to New i Specials for the Week! Shaciihen ofc. The Bodners dressed hurriedly. , ysician ph = “York; a tropical storm whipped :
‘omg seized their iife jackets/yp the Atlantic. The night before BEM Big WATCH SALE | <2
the fire broke out the skipper of Students Re ier From 38 Foreign Nations - _
op hee A TI F = £ G SENTINEL "sz: tnsos7ss | PEEHOS mott, died, presumably of a
gether, praying. It is remarkable|attack: mM U. S. E mM a ; 88
= ee phone Study in Last Ger many; | wrist watones: > e 't 2
Bic wasn’t our time to die.” |,7H* captain's death stopped] enti (INS)—East, Germany| “They might go back if they| Scholarships have been offered Mf Ziverusce ert wctsan atts * ek the ship was due to|Teported today that it spends $395,-|do not find any difficulties. Other-|each country for the study of # °°" ” __Ples Tex : . ner, knowing the ship was HB Stainless Steel Back Leather Bands
But 134 other persons died in|dock next day, went to her cabin|90 a year to finance the studies) wise, they- will stay here. “higher technology and medicine," sheck-prost - Metal ‘Stretch Bands io Mare Castle cn r on that/and packed. About 11 o'clock she|of foreign — tn Conpuanist .- 4.4 "| the official said. Each foreign] 120 "tan ty she INGMAM O00. enid Mpacanierd
TOO Te es cee ot Cop cree tee het heasband retired. lene walvaatiion, ‘The official-said the ministry's student receives a scholarship of, , < = oe -|_A friend of theirs: — Miss Doris budget: for ‘foreign. students was|260 east marks monthly. ST. REGIS ' Wacker — did not retire early, ee ae ee of me mente’ Si mare . thas seven million east + © Al Cl ks i , however. The young girl was mak-/0f higher education marks. official | ex- PRI -ES thi t ill ing the voyage with her parents.|dents came from a total i oes cet one Cas From the Communist world there arm OCKS
=. qg Wi Some time after midnight, Mrs.|"ations. -|muiltion, but at. the free rate offare 100 students from North Viet- , $198 :
Bodner heard Doris pounding on} One of the Americans is study: |exchangé, it is about $395,000. | nam, 250 from Red China, 400 from Reg. 3.00 the door of a nearby cabin, cry-| ing at Leipzig, the other is a te tax . + e a . mg at taipae, the cther Me 2 | In addition to the Americans |North Korea, 65 from the. Soviet ws eunsi*a ecuants’ shins Ce ? Pg ! at there are students from India, | Union, 35 from Poland, 30 from eer “Women’s Jobelry” | Rete, Moen, OSES <0 pro gyn oe Indonesia, Egypt, Syria, Sudan, Coedorcke. Wipe Abia. ' :
@ identities grounds ‘Lebanon, Liberia, Belgian Congo, | 44 from Bulgaria, from Outer, Prescriptions, Hospital Needs,
Watch Wednesday's Paper Tl ot was. confused,” ‘said Mrs.| MSM, affect thelr future ‘ca | Frech North Africa, British |Mongolia and 30 from Rumania. Complete Loe of Comat, Toys, * Suda,
[ Reteen, SF Gta St SD 8) 1, ue snacviow, the ‘niall GNOMES Oe Dromore wnt a (eee wall eee come tee y to an . a wil
SAM. BENSON [Sc c ters ose! ti Seen Meera sarin Ser (muty we beeen wef SDD Retail Package Liquor Dealer Sens nee oownalQaN, Petry Stic: spew a | Stare Shere ; jects and medicine.
iii ee eet
: - | “The whob { the ’ hip es : eee ame cs — 2 - ~ _ z para : ve a ~. : ‘ és co : sais cil : aaa 2 a ‘ensue —— Shee A
$11,100 FULL PRICE osm eee : | , —aane le GPS 3300 DOWN 8 ene |
: rolling. s aoe eet
3 Bedroom, full basement, monthly payments cheaper + . -
than rent. Many deluxe features: Forced AC heat, We couldn't get negr the life Close to schools, churches, boats due to the fire. I think only
Park Suburb. ltwo lifeboats had gotten away.
\I wouldn’t say there was a panic Model st Perry and Rebinwood, north of East Bivd, le .geress from Shopping Cen’ mong us but people were nervous
ae —*** c and excited and they were praying.
Open Daily and Sunday 12 to 9 ‘My husband was calm. | tried
ito do as he told me.
_Rose Hill Pecan A KE 2-9060 Jover rar swe “The fire kept getting worse.
Buy fire-brewed Stroh’s beer
the easy way...by the case!
You'll ‘like the convenience of having a good supply of
America’s only fire-brewed beer on hand to enjoy whenever |
it’s time for refreshment. Stroh’s beer is lighter, smoother,
more refreshing because it’s America’s only fire-brewed
beer; . . fire-brewed at 2000 degrees. Ask for Stroh’s by the
case ... in bottles and cans at your neighborhood store.
for just pennies a day “You'll like
Choose from eight smart decorative colors—Egyptian Blue,
Bermuda Beige, Persian Brown, French Ivory, a Gray, r
pees Red, Aztec Yellow, Venetian Green. --
There is a : one-time-only charge for installation and color. it’s lighter!
nite Te order ‘your bedside phone’ jyst ‘call our business — ria oe a \ 3 : . The Stroh Brewery Co, Detroit 26, Michigan,
eae Michigan Bell Bei No othe Ameren ber tastes ike Stro’s, because no other American beer is iewe ite Sts!»
o | ; aa ‘ te ! Bh Loe * [en tin mp WING your (On TV & Rado, Jack London's CAPTAIN GRIEF (we, P.M., Channel 2), CODE» 3. 1. Caaa 4
ye ae a, , " = a \
ire
[| ve a ieee
a PHS A Cappella Choir
The Pontiac High School A The organ, played by Marilyn
Cappella Choir will sing in Ann Mason Brown, and a harpsichord
Arbor Wednesday evening when will provide additional color and
_the Uhiversity of Michigan assist in the accompaniments.
School of Music again presents ts «¢ &
the oratorio, “The Passion of — Faculty members along with
Our Lord According to St. Mat- ‘graduate voice students will ap- thew" by Johann Sebastian Bach. pear as soloists.
x f * Included are Harold Haugh,
. The presentation of this mag- tenor, nationally known oratorio
nificent choral work will be di- artist; Philip Duey, bass, direc-
rected by Maynard Klein begin- tor of the University of Michigan |
ming at 8 o'clock in Hill Auditor- Men's Glee Club, and Frafices |
jum. ~ Greer, soprano, formerly of the |.
University musical organiza- Metropolitan Opera Company. lens that are combining fer Miss Greer appeared with the |
jthis occasion are the Michigan Pontiac Symphony last season.
Singers, the Bach Choir and Fermer Pontiac High stu-. | siuk.
is invited to attend,
two orchestras. dents whe are now attending |
QUAL
| : ITY \eopnve Puro on | wes -QUANTITY
xv 12 Photos in Album
~ xy Free Counseling
xy A Wedding Guset Book
xy Picture for Newspapers
vx A Miniature Marriage
Certificate *
wy A Large ‘Just Married”
Sign = ie
— Will Sing in Ann Arbor the university and who are
singing in the Bach Choir are
Frances Sekles, Greta Phipps,
derry Libbey and Rebert Sta-
ayer nent ‘Sorority. Chapter
Elects Officers 4
Audrey Tinkis was elected presi-
| dent of Phi Alpha lota Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi sorority at the
\Thursday evening meeting of the
| group. :
| . Others
{Dempsey, vice president; - Lora
|Lynn Sparks, recording secretary;
\Joan Wilson, treasurer;
representative.
Tickets are not required for the) Miss. Enbody was hostess for Roosevelt.
sacred concert, and the public | the eventing meeting in her home
ton East Huron street.
Phone FE 4-0553
C. R. HASKILL STUDIO t- Mt. Clemens St. Pontiac
. * Meant Just for You
__. Soft — Lustrous — Neat
Mrs. Everett L. Reese (seated) of
. Watkins Lake road checks one of the a ie
P
we hn Se
at & p.m.
: Fashion Hint
Hair Cutting and Styling Crowding your clothes in a closet!
OR 3-354
; Rowena’s Beauty Shop 1216 Baldwin FE 5-3735 is as hard on ‘them as hanging
‘them away without airing them.
| Give them plenty of air and space
land make sure that your hangers
are neither bent nor rusty.
serving are Joalma
Arlene
Swanson, corresponding secretary,
land Doris Enbody, city council|Monday meeting of Pontiac Dupli- Couple Engaged
| Mps. Stella Slavin of Clarence) .-istreet announces the engagement
lof her daughter, Maxine Alice, to
‘Noel C. Hayward, son of Mr. and
iMrs. Charles E.-Hayward of East
iset for the wedding. |
Bridge Winners
Ernest Guy and George Reutter
jwere first place winners in the
cate. Bridge Club held at Hotel
Ronald Fiscus and
een Hagyard were second place
winners,
show presented by the Waterford Re-
publican Women’s Club Wednesday at
the CAI building. The affair will begin
+
i j
|
{
*
a *
Your Spring.
Pendletons x.
Fresh new jackets and skirts
in pastel plaids and solids plus
some new ond exciting, items.
49’er Jacket
17% ana 19%
Matching Skirt
] ae
New. Pendleton Dress
39”
New Pendleton Shirt
7
TELEGRAPH ot HURON
See Our Style Show
ae |
Welster Schoo! .
Sponsored by Zante |
\
; t “4 a {
\ , : ‘N\ : ; f j i
the season, April 12, will
The Rev. Arvid Anderson of Christ Lutheran
Church and Mrs. Thad Carr are campaign .workers
for the Waterford Township Civic Music Association.
Headquarters for the campaign has been established +
in the Waterford CAl Building. The last concert of
be free to the first 200 new
members joining during the campaign. |Howard street. No date has been) © THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957).
Models for the Wednesday fashion
show include (left to right) Mrs. Robert
0)
Pontiac Presse Photeg
Lefurgy of Colrain drive and Mrs. Done
Sorority Gathers
Peggy Jo Engle, Peggy
and Elaine Moore. * ‘was hostess to Phi Alpha Kappa)
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi. A’
decorations committee was chosen'Pontiac- met Saturday evening at
for the annual Founders’ Day diri-|the home of Mr. and Mrs. Her-
ner sponsored by Beta Sigma Phi. ‘bert Langton on‘ Cherry a
Serving on the committee will be 1.;; |Plans Neil, Citizens to Meet I
Barbara Jean Schauer of Milford) Members of the executive board) —
of the New Citizen's League of
held at Pontiac High School. were completed for the
Sandra Johnson, Maureen Clark Thursday evening meeting being
. Pontiac Press Photes
rent season will be April 12. The
Continentaleers will perform at -lsaac
E. Crary Junior High School. Pictured
“are (left to right) Margaret Beattie,
Vrs. William Schunck and Mrs. Naz, all
campaign workers. \ The annual membership campaign
for the Waterford Civic Music Associa-
tion will begin Monday with Mrs. John
| Naz as campaign director. Campaign
Monday. The final concert of the cur-
will restyle your old
and have one of our
you with the modest pr
O pen Evenings
Plant and Showroom
5390-5400 Dixie Hwy.
Waterford, Mich. -
Yes, like magic . .-. Elliott’s. master craftsmen
davenport and chairs
into a modern piece of furniture ... . covered
with one of the thousand. sparkling new mo-
terials that are available ot*Elliott’s. Call now
representatives come to
your home with samples . . ..and he,will amoze
ice, é wed
by Appointment ,
COMPLETE CARPET SELECTION - ee — ——— nie a -
| workers will attend the kick-off dinner
| | | | }
Twain PTA Headed ‘Completing School ‘Shower Given
by John Witherup Dorothy Spann Redmond, diree- for Sheila Loper
in Butler Home John Wintherup was elected tor of the teenage program for!,
president of Mark Twain PTA at the Pontiac YWCA, who-has been JI
Mrs. Dwayne Butler and Penny
iedenbeck were Cohostesses Man- the Thursday meeting held at thelattending the YWCA School for school. Elected to serve with him! Professional Workers for the past Ww
were Mrs. John Fournier, mother month, wili return home this com-|day evening at a miscellaneous
vice president; Ray Glenn, father ing week. The monthdong school|shower for bride-elect Sheila Lo- vice orédéeat:. thx. slie Seay, |session, given twice yearly by the | Per. = surprise shower was held teacher vice president; Mrs. Jo National Board, YWCA, on various the Butler home on Whitte-
sengh uate, enter: and = Mrs. college campuses, was held at the * * * “We Leara to Reed” wad the| Continuing Education Center of the Miss Leper, daughter a Mr. and lprogram topic presented by first, | University of Connecticut, Storrs, why Matthew Loper of Milford, S tee "lO. “ jwill marry Robert Jacobson May ‘second and third grade teachers +4. in Our Lady of the Lakes \Church. His parents are Mx.-and
2 Elmer Jacobson of Silver cir
| cle | cle, more street.
x *
Guests were Janet Guoin, Shelby
Hahn, Jackie Kroeplin, Mrs, Al-
|bert Koop, Mrs. Frances McCu
Nancy . Lewellen, Mary Samsdh,
Nancy Body, Doris Manuel, Mrs.
Clyde Cronover, Barbara- Johnson
and Mrs. James Rowland.
|Fellowship Holds
Meeting at Church
‘Mrs. George Putnam presented
_|Several solos at the Friday meet-
ing of the Women’s Fellowship of First .. Congregational Ch urch,
Charles Wilson accompanied her, Also taking part in the program
{were Mrs. Sidney Olson and Mrs,
/ |\George Gaches. Mrs. Elwood Big.
ler conducted the meeting. Giving!
ORIENTAL BEAN SPROUTS
That's the secret of real, + Chop
Suey, Chow Mein and other Oriental
dishes . .. with their extra flavor, taste
and snappy crispness that make Orien-
j | tal Foods s0 tempting end out-of-the-
: otdinary in appetizing goodness. |
Send for FREE Recipe Book!
messages for the day were Mrs.
Edgar Thomas and ‘Mrs. Herbert,
| | Hotchkiss. \
5
_ declared today.
pcletied ad bd “THE B PONTIAC PRESS) "TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957 Ei l THIRTEEN
Offers Spiritual, Mental Stimulation Fak + Camp Chaffee in Arkansas, where
Home Business Can
Perhaps boredom and financial
stress are two of the most potent
keep us youthful ‘or cause us to.
feel and look older than ouf years.
This means that interested ac-
tivity and {mancial security are of
the utmost importance if we wish
to prolong the youthful portion of-
our lives and be vital-in old age.
_ Many women have fouiid inter.
ests and financial security
through businesses of their own
which they carry on in or from
their own homes, The spiritual
and mental stimulation and satis-
faction of creating your own job
has q revitalizing effect on a
You-would be surprised to know
how many women do have sic-
cessful businesses at home, and
what great variety they vepresent.
These activities range from serv-
ing lunch for those who work in
the neighborhood, to walking dogs
and caring for children.
Many of these home careers are
the outgrowth of a wish for self-
expression, or the result of a nat-
ural interest in some activity
which surprisingly proved to be including this young mother who cares for children.
Doctor Hits Personal News of InterestBonana Loaf
Mrs. Richard Esser)daughter, Debra Jo Anne, stares Wil | Please LS to their home or. U. S. Attitude |
ie laims sae
Are Disturbed by
‘Insane’ Emphasis
By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
ST. LOUIS #—The “almost in-
sane sex preoccupation’ in Amer-
ica is confusing and disturbing’
children, Dr. Goodrich C, Schauf-)
fler, Portland, Ore., gynecologist,
~*~ * * |
He called on parents, doctors)
and other citizens to change ‘‘our!
distorted all-American sex per-
ive.”
Speaking about sex education to
the American Academy of Gener-'
al Practice, Dr. Schauffler said: |
“Our young girls today, at the |
age of the first perception, are
confronted with the whole tree in-
stead of the tips of the roots. |
“It wag not like this in our child-
hood, This is not entirely due to)
the delinquency of parents or edu-
cators, but is the direct result of
our present-day insane sex)
P ] | in Boynton Beach, Fia., Mr.
* * *
“Our children climb the tree of |
bruised,
“It is our particular job as phy- |
-siclang to attempt to patch them
up — but eee that, as parents
and citizens, it is also up to us
to do something about our distort-|
ed all-American sex perspective. |
“Young girls today are, e a
group, deeply confused and dis-
turbed.” |
* * *
Children develop bizarre ideas!
about sex because of- so ‘much
stress sex and sex symbols,
he
“Many know more about sex
than their but they are!
mixed up on it,” he declared.
Camp Pictures
Seen at Meeting
of Soroptimists
William Matus of Camp Oakland
presented films of the summer
camp and the permanent boys’
home at the Monday evening meet-
ing of Soroptimist International of
Pontiac held at Hotel Waldron.
* * *
Mrs. Arnold Hillerman, presi-|
dent, and Mrs. Raymond Swack-|
Mamer, delegate, gave reports of|
the- Midwestern Regional Conter-| ence held in Cincinnati over the
past weekend.
Taimee Surola, Mrs. Frank!
Anderson and Mrs. Hillerman are
serving as judges of a color book
contest being conducted in a local
business place,
aes a a
-} Otsego drive and Mr. ‘and Mrs. * Many women do have a successful business at home, Retard Aging *
commercial,
‘Reduce—You Lose Water, Not 88
ieee Elles of Bt
Faa*
would be foolish to | S in devel- i 3. 7 it bz
Tomorrow: “Steam Baths Don’t.
Fat. ”
ie:
: dicaage SP Six:
fishing on the Florida Keys and
visited several of the baseball
spring trajping camps, i
* * *
Mr.- and Mrs. Harold Rood of
Herbert Lake of Wenonah drive
returned to their homes from a
itwo-week vacation in Florida.
While in St. Petersburg they vis-
ited Olive ow of pmo:
ert a is ae vacation
and Mrs. Thomas Bartle have
returned to their home on North
Ardmore avenue. They visited
Mrs. Bartle’s father, Frank
Cove of South Tasmania avenue,
and a sister, Mrs. Jean Biley, |
who are epending the winter |
there. | Accompanying the ‘Bartles on|
the trip were Mr. and Mrs, Paul
Lehigh, also of North Ardmore
avenue.
* *
When the Albion College A Cap-, *
'pella Choir and the college Cham- | *
ber Ensemble go on tour April 7. }
>| Kathleen J. Eliott, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Allen R. Elliott of
| Chippewa road, and Harvey V.!
ranian, son of Mr. and Mrs.!
_Pranian of meoennel
Miss Elliott, a freshman, will!
ging alto, and Harvey, also a
freshman, will sing tenor in the|
choir.
* .& *
Mr. and Mrs. Charles 0..Lan- |
ning of Clarkston and Mr. and
Mrs, Archie Gillies
were among the guests at a
dinner party hosted by Mrs.
Anna Johnston and her brother,
dames Crooks, of Pontiac, who
are vacationing in Tampa, Fia.
The dinner party was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs, Joe
Hanggee of Tampa, former Pon-
tiac residents.
* * * : t
Mr. and Mrs, Robert C. Gifford vidual of Holly | bal at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gifford of
Lexington place are the maternal
————
* *
‘The — Fray Arlo Little and
family recently moved into their
new home in Reeve City, Wis.
The Rev. Mr. Fray is pastor of
the United Brethren Church in
that city.
Mr. and--Mrs. Harvie Little of
Wall street are his parents and!
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Shelton of
West Huron street are Mrs. Lit-|
tle’s parents. (Paul's Lutheran Church. Her fa-
~ * * ivorite pastime at present is tak-
The Rev. and Mrs. James P.|
McAlpine of Birmingham are re-
ceiving congratulations on the birth
of a daughter, Julia Bonney, March
19 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
The Rev. Mr. McAlpine is serv-
‘ing at Christ Church Cranbrook!
on a Marcus Fellowship.
t
le |
-«-wetheKids-— Da a, AR ME AD MME Ft ling ee vacation ‘they aor Mis. “Gardner Puts Plain White Icing
_ on. Golden Cake |
By JANET ODELL |
We have given you several)
recipes for bread -made with ba-|
nanas; today we're printing one!
for Banana Cake. It is good cov-
ered with a plain white frosting.
Mrs. Robert Gardner is today’s
‘cook. She works in the Ladies
Guild and sings in the choir of St.
ing pictures of a young grand-
daughter.
‘BANANA CAKE
By Mrs. Robert Gardner
% cup shortening 1% cups sugar
2 eggs
1 cup mashed bananas
2M cups sifted flour
BS cup sour milk
~ teaspoon soda
- teaspoon be powder
1 teaspoon va
Cream shortening and sugar, add)
eggs and beat well. Add soda and)
bananas to milk. Add alternately |
nilia.
oF nim gropeed Sui pen. Bake,
30 minutes in a 350-degree ‘oven.|
(nee Betty J. Ryan) of North
Johnson avenue are . receiving
congratulations on the birth of al 1 che to ane
Jomen u 9 Demand
_ New “Spring Hair Styles SHORT a
Cutting, Sty! ‘I
NS nd SMART
ing by Experts
Choice
no appointment
7 a
Two Parties)
Being Held —
Same Night May. Cut Ask)
Hosts to Postpone
Gathering?
By EMILY POST
A reader writes as follows: “‘My
husband and I and three other
couples were “invited to a gather:
ing: at ahother couple’s house. We
were the only guests invited for)
that night. We were. invited about
three weeks ahead of time. and
all accepted with pleasure.
“The following week an organiza-
. |tion to which we all belong, with)
. |the exception of the host and hos-)
tess, announced its annual dinner-).
dance to take place on the same
night, While not. obligatory that we
go, it is the most important: func-
tion ‘of the year and we always
,|laok forward to going to it.
“Two of the couples think we
should explain the situation to
our hosts and ask that the gath-
ering be put. off for some other
night, Will you please tell us
Se
| Answer: I'm ‘sort sorry to have to|
say that having accepted the cou-
iple’s invitation you will have to!
go to this party and regret the
dinner-dance.
“Dear Mrs. Post: The other) night my sister had several friends
of hers in to spend the evening. | Barbara Jean
Wilson , and
Don L. Bailey
were married
Sunday at
First
Presbyterian
Church. Her
parents are
_ Elmer R.
Wilson of
Mary Day
avenue and
his parents, are
Mr. and Mrs.
~~ Snowden L.
Bailey of East
Mansfield
avenue.
MRS.
Barbara Wilson Speaks DON L. BAILEY
Mr. and Mrs.
N uptial Vows. Before 400 |
MARY KING |
SALON |
ORA OBRECHT
Specializing
in ;
Hair Styling Ss a
and Permanents —
Complete »Beauty Service
152 N. Perry FE 2-3053
GROVECREST Barbara Jean Wilson became!
ithe bride of Don L. Bailey Sunday
\in a 3:30 o'clock ceremony at First
| Presbyterian Church. Dr. William
+H. Marbach officiated. |
* * *. and white accessories. Her flow-
ers were pink rosebuds and hya-
cinths,
Mrs. Bailey chose a dusty blue
silk dress with navy and white
accessories, Her corsage was of; ‘MANOR
| Modern Facilities for the
care of Medical-and Sur-
gical Convalescents and the
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer R. Wilson of
__[Feally friends of mine. My sister) I had to work late that night and. Mary Day avente are parents. of
ved home about 11 o'clock. the bride and Mr, and Mrs, Snow-
waciouy eat ead oo an eae) Bailey of East Mansfield
rectly to my room, avenue are Don's parents, yellow rosebuds and hyacinths.
The bride changed to a navy
wool suit with navy blue and white!
accessories. an wore © eorenge ot
gardenias, -
“While I knew most of the peo-
chose a
with late “bodice "These
tended into the bouffant skirt of |
net, A pearl-trimmed ‘thought I was very rude for not
‘going in to greet her guests, Will) headpiece
|you please tell me if I Dilancos apn | | wrong?” | of lace.
Answer: You were not at all |, She carried a white fan, a gift of| rude—unless you had to walk |€r grandmother, White rosebuds,
through the room in which your ‘and hyacinths covered the fan. Her |
sister's friends were seated. In only * jewelry, a single strand of,
which case, you would have Pearls and pearl earrings, was a)
greeted them briefly and ex. Sift of the bridegroom.
plained that you were so tired x *« «© -
that you were going straight te = Mrs. William H. Boose Jr. of
bed. |Birmingham was her sister’s ma-.
ltron of honor. Janet Wilson,. an-
“Dear Mrs. Post: During a re- other sister; Alice Bouford and
cent discussion the question arose Mrs. George Pentiuk of Birming-
as to whether it is proper to say;/ham, were bridesmaids. Ae peg sown ya ae a honeymoon in north-
Gee cate OD met
mere eae
ports. to | Aged.
161 STATE STREET
FE 5-6096
Complete detailed brochure
on request.
sn eS TEI = Fk SD UTR RE I
Suddenly
it’s Spring?
So all the tots are coming
to Arthur’s for their new
Spring G Easter Fashions
These Fashions Are ‘God bless you’ when Person GOWNED IN WHITE sneezes, or do you just ignore it?”
Answer: Some people always say!
it after a person sneezes and
| others never do. It is entirely prop-|
er to say it, but it is not im-'
| Proper not to.
Take Registrations
to creamed mixture with sitted| Registrations are being taken at
flour and baking powder. Add va- the Northern:Oakland County Girl
|Scout office for the second pussy-|
foot tfaining program, to be held| evelt Temple Mrs. Wilson wore
‘in the 1 near future. They wore ballerina - length
jgowns of white nylon dotted Swiss The Choice of Mother's Who Want
if
lerystalette trim. Their flowers)
were rosebuds and shredded car-'
nations of — -_ white. | over white taffeta with a ‘turquoise Arthur's Quality
Ken wikieien’ served as best
jman. Seating the guests were W.
Gerald Hall, William H. Boose |
Jr. and James Curd.
For the reception held at Roos-
| a navy blue silk dress with navy
12x15
-to-wall Carpets
You owe it to
yourself to see these
Beauvais textured broadiocom
dense virgin wool pile mokes
thrill when only
and sales tax, BIGELOW BEAUVAIS BROADLOOM
1 1 23
a month
stunning textured carpets—then
imagine how they'll up-date your home.
Smartly styled . .. keenly imaginative in
design, in the mood of today’s living . . .
the homes of today and tomorrow!
Family traffic is no problem, either. For Beauvais’
traffic, hides footprints and soil.
Don't deny yourself this decorating
$11.23 a month will carpet your 12’ x 15’
toom complete with 40 oz. All Hair Ozite
or %" sponge rubber padding, tackless in-
stallation
NO MONEY DOWN, 36 MONTHS TO PAY
These are only « few of our enormous selection ef Beauvois patterns. SEE THEM TODAY.
has everything for
light of heavy
Oo "Open FLOOR Mon. & Fri.
COVERINGS or]
DRAPERIES |
BEDSPREADS 9:00 Little Gents’
Eton Suits
t
@#ee 3.98
¢
washable little boy suits.
Wool and nylon, rayon, a tl
! linen, in wrinkle and spot-
resistant fabrics. Sizes 2-
Many styles with their own can can slips.
Wonderful, wearable and
Princess with ballerina skirts in
solids, tiny tweed, and
and pastels. Sizes 12-18 months,
at Sensible Prices!
Pretty Bouffant ,
Spring
Dresses
c e e 4.98
to 7.98 | |
Embroidered nylon and
ribbon trimmed dresses
in pastels, lilac and white,
Sizes 1 to 3.
4 *
Toddler
Coats
10.98: 17.98 é
basket weave. in Pearl grey
1-3,
‘FOURTEEN ; ,
Give fen Constructive Work, Training Useful After Release — THE’ PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957 __ Ma a
PUZZLES
CASH
PRIZES
EVERY ¥ WEEK
It's twe for the money!
member Teamsters Union, Beck
has kept his twin goal of expand-
ing cash and influence well in
mind.
* * *
But now quizzica] senators want
need alavishhomeandswim-f ina
{to a about his sn figure money
te
My
- — —-<—
t = = - —
ee me =
“wast ~~ = ‘a if
‘
a prmeyen em Remy Ea
union, and how he allegedly got
the union to pay for a beer tavern
for his son’s college classmate.
Add to that the continuing inter-
est of federal income tax collec-
tors in his affairs and it’s easy
to see that Beck’s life these days
is a fairly busy one.
Beck is a product of the brawl-
jing bare-knuckle, head-knocking
days of labor organizing on the
West Coast. He came up the hard
way.
a speech or press conference he;
gets wound up and excited. He
eaves sentenes dancing i Fall Under 3 Million A
He reddens, at such times, as if
about ready to burst a blood ves-
sel, and his pale blue eyes wrinkle
in mins. Peering from his,
aa resident in 1952 newsmen
—— i Ons 0 Rend Sper:
Beck. boasted he was going to War I, with about 131,000 dying igave him a private, get-acquaint- benaonq 2,995,000. by the ~ end of
It said 4,744,000 served in World! ft -
ace %
- Brifain Rejecls: Rao ae first hydrogen bomb, They have
rec era risons to 10W TO it. earir fe tern smoxnce fo any tne a apan’s Protests sires Stat til Aug. 1 : ; :
w ASHINGTON (INS)—Nearly a,whose employes are jnmates of, “Idleness,"” he told an interview- | cause they thought they could Sorel pes customer is pr “government eee 7s = a Sa Atomic Tests to Defend
*4§ the bi t probl f ‘corners,’ and we want them to even there a lian per fifth of the federal prison inmates| penitentaries and reformatories,|er, “is the biggest problem facing know that we don't believe in that|set up té pass on any labor or/prison population of 19,824. The| Free World; Area Far SWEET PEAS. are paying for their keep, so to will show a profit of nearly four) any prison administration, And’ : it aa difficult to keep the | 50Tt of thing.” business complaints, average monthly wage paid to em Inhabited: Lands and speak, by working in full-scale! million dollars in the fiscal year Saeapanag ds is difficult to keep t <« * ployed inmates was $27.05. This From 1 .
factories behind bars. ending June 30, eee Tg Creative work is emphasized,| _Tuere wae s time when pris: Ingure has been climbing steadily) GARDEN PEAS.
Federal Prison Industries, Inc.) 4 the profit reaches the four | In the federal prison system —|Miniature desk models are made, companies, Labor unions charged _ = Ae nes of ALES) LONDON: Britain auc ‘sn ie million dollar mark, it will bring |from the correctional institutions|for example, and then changed to) wot this was unfair to workers ae today she has rejected a fre Tuberous Begonias to 36 million dollars the total |for young lawbreakers to dreaded| meet specific needs of government) wn, nag t6 eam thelr living. Bennett adds that many gradu-|seties of Japanese wddegpadrg _ 2° Bulbs ~ 8 Colors.
return to the treasury over the-|Alcatraz—there is @ wide range of/ agencies. When a is finally Creation of the federal ‘corpora. |*'°* go on to find responsible/against her plan to stage H- oy geal
industries which turn out every: | “some samples are: Furniture butt. Some are ordered on.a cus- in prison, In many cases, he adds.) tm 9 note handed to Ambassa
F dsM $ thing from furniture te‘ cows: mation end pate shi tom basis; others mass produced. Last year there were 3,595 pris-|they got into trouble largely be-| dor Haruhike Nishi Saturday, the : : :
unanad*mon? | hea nea ‘‘tap from in-
5 |igives prisoners something con- better than specifications. Many : be esl al structive to do. lot these men got in. trouble be- chased! w— pat lee oe greatest in thé United RR. nS a habited wayge ole ef cary ang
Two-F ors TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: fortune and big labor union, is a} rile nome fellow Teamaters he we He ‘goto $5000, annual bg hee yecpin, to obo Ie ff ie : with big trouble. officials, Beck has no interest in , gets "bong *
— __|Wiorse racing. Neither does he|Slary as Teamsters president,| miles front Japan.
Tantalizing ||[ JUNIOR EDITORS | o22:2 52 seca see Sie eas moe g the Senate Rackets Investigating been preoecteled with his ambi- abroad. He paid $91,000 income! —
Committee caps a lifelong quest tions tax in- 1956, or nearly twice his|ff ee
Crossword ae case ae driving a Beck, at 63, is a portly, well-/Ution salary. i HENRY A. MILLER , tailored, voluble, cherubic-looking DR Seattle laundry truck, ultimately : °
to become boss of the 1'-million- individual. When he oe ting on Wor ld War | Vets . . - Optometrist
7 North Saginaw Street
Phone FE 4-6842
“Better Things in .Sight”
double the union's membership in i? service during, the-_ conflict. five years — a goal as yet aia: jAbout 1,613,000 have died since
filled, although he has, certainty the end of the war.
swelled its member rolls — and * *
spent the rest of the evening talk- The average age of the living
ing of his business deals. World War I veterans is slightly|
* x: * under 63. About 90,000 of them are ;
Baek wend) tie te Tears Be SE eee |
impression he was worth a million
WORRIED OVER DEBTS?
i SRS dollars. Now he minimizes any usinesmmen, grew > “dudiclfeuss tut aden he's made “a Rock Fall Kills Miner
IRON RIVER — Joseph W. him. A prominent Seattle civic) helluva lot of money,” much of |
leader told-a well-attended testi-/it in Seattle real estate. He says Benishek, 49, of Iron River was!
monial dinner held for Beck in| his investment -policies have fatally injured Monday in a dirt’
the city’s leading hotel in 1952 that | earned the national union some and rock fall at the Mt A. Hanna! MuGmioas Umenry sSfacas Tascam Set os qupesdions of how wueeb og tow Gnag pen one. yes can
NO secuntty OR mroonsens REQUIRED & PLACE TO P a eat counnners | oon ain tt: Member A
“Let 9 Yours of Credit Counselling Experience Assist Y¥
Hours: Daily 9 to §. Wed. & Set. $ to L Evenings by App't.
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS .
“‘we respect you as a labor leader | nine million dollars. ‘Hiawatha Iron ore mine. { 41\%% 8. Saginaw Above Oskiend Theater Now i “Cock-a-Doodle-Doo..... . ™
1 A crowing rooster is mentioned in several Mother Goose rhymes,
Every SUNDAY usually in his capacity as a “herald of the dawn.” and WEDNESDAY According to an old legend, the cock-a-doodle-doo of a rooster at
la the : | sunrise is supposed to chase away all the ghosts, goblins, witches and
,evil spirits which roam in the night. If a cock crows in the daytime,
D | \it is supposed to mean the visit of a friend.
ETRO T A-cock is a vain-appearing fellow as he struts proudly in a barn-
| ‘yard. This appearance has produced the word ‘“‘cocky’”’ to describe a
. Here is a big, bold rooster you can have some fun with. You can
a
make him lift his head to look for the sun.
Paste the picture on cardboard and color with crayons. Use plenty
; » Meeligra en) Aso of bright red and green in the rooster’s plumage. Cut out the parts
‘Agency, 25 North Cass, Pon- | ©27efully and fasten the rooster’s head to his body with a brass
tise. . fastener through the indicated holes. Fold back on the dotted line at
“ 3 ithe left and the rooster will stand. Cut the slit so the sun can rise.
THE TIMES. By holding the tab, you can poke the sun up through the slot. As!
is SO ‘the sun rises, push the rooster’s head back so he is ready to crow.
| (Carol Kleman of Wittenberg, Wis., won $10 with this suggestion.
INTERESTING! \Send your ideas in care of this newspaper. Violet Moore Higgins, AP
| Newsfeatures.)
| Tomorrow: Mary il qin Contrary
[eee ee a SS
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‘if you read THE NEWS. you knowl
‘ What's this week’s complete story of the Senate
investigation of the Teamsters Union? What's
the complete story of Michigan’s spring elec-
tion issues? What's the complete story of the
Middle East situation as it is today? What's the
complete story of everything that. happened
every day this week in the world of sports?
To get the complete story of everything that
happens — the day it happens — read THE
DETROIT NEWS! No other newspaper gives
you such complete, clear and colorful coverage
day after day. Keep yourself informed. Be a
bright conversationalist. Know what’s going on
in-the world by having The Detroit News home-
delivered 7 days a week!
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‘THE PONTIAC PRESS —
_ToESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957, Te
_PONTIAC, MICHIGAN
GEORGE M. | «) JOHN G. MACKIE (D)
Highway Commissioner
In State's
eine 40: ake
Chief Deputy ‘ahiney Com-
missioner the past five years,
George M. Foster; of East Lansing,
has been with the Highway De-
- he was engaged in private business.
Foster again joined the depart-
tment in 1945 under the admistra-
tion of Charles M. Ziegler, retir-
ing commissioner,
The. Republican candidate is
past president and an executive
committee member of the Michi-
gan Good Roads Federations, a
member of the Board of Directors
of the American Road- Builders
Assn., and secretary of the Michi-
gan Engineering Society. versity. of Michigan as a_ civil
engineer in 1922. From 1935-1945 Top Battle!
John M. Mackie
Democratic candidate John G.
‘surveying and engineering com-
of Genesee County Surveyor.
A native of Detroit, Mackie is
years,
A charge Mackie was -not
qualified to. run because he is
not a registered engineer has
been overruled by the Supreme
Court,
He stipervised the laydut, con-
struction and design of the General
Motors test track at Grand Blanc,
where tanks for use in Korea were
tested.
Criticizing the Republican high-
way program of the last 14 years
as “bits arid snatches” affair, 4 Before Monday
Mackie, of Flint, is proprietor of a
pany and holds the elective position
and served in the Air Force three * *
For the first time in many years,’
bent, Charles M.° Ziegler, is retir- In several ways, though, the con-
tests are of more than usual inter-
est to Oakland County voters.
for instance, Democrats feel they
have a real chance of capturing
the office of State Highway Com-
missioner, The Republican incum-
Fenn
parties fighting hard to name his
successor, - ;
-| On the University of Michigan
Regents. Board of
Both parties have each nominat-
ed two candidates, one man and
one woman. The two women are
from Birmingham,
Which of them, if either, will
win, is‘a source of local interest.
There is a possibility voters. will
choose both women in preference
from to the men, neither of whom is
Birmingham, * There will be an election of two
members to the governing body of
Michigan State University, called
$0 oon rote the pulls to fit the| Another contest centers in Bir- (the State Board of Agriculture.
state's top-highway and education.| ™ingham. That 1s for two seats *x* & *
branch at Meadowbrook ‘Farms in
Avon Township, Oakland County’s
tie with the arity has become
greater,
x & *
There are two other educational
contests. One is for Superintendent
of Public Instruction, the state's
top educational post.
The other is for one member on
the State Board of Education,
Here They Are:
Read and Pick
As is its custom just be-
fore election, the Press today
presents the qualifications of
ed a State: Highway Com-
missioner, of
Candidates for the State Su-
preme Court. will be reviewed
in a similar presentation later
this week. —~
Possibly you ‘lave already
made your choices; in that
case, the profiles below will be “DR. LYNN "TYNN M BAL ce 2
r (wy)
|Supt. of Public Instruction
‘Two Eye High ale hb Dr. Efigar L. Harden
The Republican candidate is the
49-year-old president of Northern
Michigan College
Dr. Edgar L. Harden was a high|
school principal and later Dean of Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett
Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett, 52,
Schools. With the location of, an MSU) _
‘an educator 32 years, is director of
Pupil Personnel for Grosse Pointe
Bartlett attended University * sae ails Gondnal mooie
Michigan, Eastern Michigan,
Central Michigan and Northern
Michigan colleges. i ‘andidates Scramble to Fill Top State Posts April 1 1 apr nyors: leaving both
As the campaign comes to al highway and oun pro
their candidates.
Democrats are calling for sup- Michigan educational policies and |Close, Republicans are stressing) grams.
is the governing body of Western | the professional qualifications of! On the non-partisan. ballot, six
candidates are running for three
positions as justice on the Supreme ~
| jport of Gov. Williams’ proposed | Court,
University of Michigan Regents
Alfred B, Connable
Republican incumbent Alfred B.
Connable, of Kalamazoo has.served
on the regents’ board, since 1941.
He graduated from the Univer-
sity of Michigan in 1925. An in-
vestment counsel, Connable or-
istrator of the Price Division, Of-
fice of Administration, ‘in Mich-
igan in 1942,
As a regent, he has been
chairman of the Regent's War
Committee and of the Regent's
educational Policies Committee.
He is past president of the Assn.
of Governing Boards of State Uni-
versities and Allied Institutions, a
national organization, and has
been a delegate to the American
a
In “Connable has
been active Saas cea ae
' |Michigan’ Citizens Council of the
—— Probation and Parole
Mrs. Ethel J. Watt
A Birmingham woman, Mrs.
Ethel J. Watt, of 1215 Yorkshire
Rd., is seeking the seat on the
Regents’ board held many years
by a Republican woman. ganized and served as admin-|,
Mrs. Watt, a Republican candi-
date, is a graduate of University
of Michigan and in 1954 received
the Distinguished Alumni Service
Award. She was a member of the
Michigan Memorial Phoenix Proj-
ect and served on its executive
committee three years.
She was Alumna Council chair-
man three years, member of the
Alumni Assn Executive Commit-
tee, Alumni Assn. director and a
member of the Birmingham and
In Birmingham, she is active in
the united Foundation, Red Cross,
Farm and Garden Assn. and the)
American Association of Univer-
sity Women.
Mrs. Watt is the mother of five
children, all of whom have grad-
uated from the university, She
has eight grandchildren.
. Carl Brablec
A tormer superintendent - of
Clarkston schools, Carl Brablec, 48,
has been superintendent of Rose-
ville schools since 1947.
The Democratic nominee is a
member of Gov. William's Educa-
tion Finance Study Commission
and president of the Metropolitan
A 1930 graduate of Eastern
Michigan College, Brablec studied
abroad as an exchange student at | ing village industries. Seek Two Posts on Board the University of Prague, later
receiving a master’s degree from
University of Michigan in 1941,
He has done additional graduate .
work at Michigan State University,
University of Chicago and North-
western University.
. * * *
Mrs. Irene E. Murphy
A Democratic candidate, Mrs,
Irene E, Murphy is a Birming-
ham business woman, living at 444
Bonnie Briar Rd.
She graduated from University —
of Michigan and received a mas-
-lter’s degree there in 1928.
She has lectured at Wayne State
University Graduate School, di-
rected case work in Detroit’s Pub-
lic Welfare Dept., and was em-
een with United Community
huis wil week
Murphy relief centers
in the Philippines Islands and as
‘a staff member of the Interna-
+ tional ~ Fete. Ree ee rene
gt I P
She took on the same job later
with the United Nations and the
daughter. She is the sister-in-law
of the-late Frank Murphy, U. S. —
Sa
~ * * Mackie promises to meet Michigan} of only academic intrest, but |Continuing Education at
He is a propronent of a seven-
year highway improvement plan,
with full use of state revenue bond
acts and no additional state taxa-
tion. . :
* *
Foster is married and has two)
sons, road needs “by clear priority
schedules based on realistic plan- ning. ”
A member of the Shriners, the
Michigan Society of Registered
Land Surveyors and other groups,
Mackie, 35,:is married and has
ithree children. interesting nevertheless.
If you haven't made up your
mind, the sketches will be a
The only further requirement
fs that you visit the polls on
Monday.
State Board of Agriculture
4 Aspire to 2 Positions Frank Merriman
taraser, Frenk| A Deckertierg
Merriman, 3%, calls for expansion:
_ Of Michigan State University ex-
tension and research services.
Merriman, president of the San-| |
ilac County "Farm Bureau for five|
years and chairman of the State)
Agriculture Extension. Advisory
Council, also wants research in!
agricultural problems,
A. graduate of Michigan State
University, the Republican can-
didate is a past president of Mich-
igan Future Farmers, a member
of the State Board of the Michigan
Artificial Breeders and has been
named a “Star Farmer” and an
“Anierican Farmer” by the Future
Farmers of America. —.
He ig secretary of the Decker-
ville. Community Schools and past)
chairman of the Sanilac County
Planning Committee,
Mérriman is married and has a
son, Frederick H. Mueller
A Republican incumbent, Fred-
erick H, Mueller, has been a mem-
\ber of the State Board of Agricul-
ture for 11 years,
He is a graduate of Michigan’:
State University ahd is a Grand)
jRapids businessman, At one time,
Mueller, 64, was president of the
Grand Rapids Board of Education.
A high point in his career came
with his appointment by President)
Eisenhower as Assistant Secretary
of Commerce.
He was originally appointed to
the agricultural board in 1945, then
elected to a full: term in 1%1.
FRANK MERRIMAN (R) cet 2 ep se sega Mueller is married and lives in
Grand Rapids.
Don Stevens
Propounding extension services
and continuing edtication programs
\“‘to all segments of society," Don
Stevens, of Grand Rapids, is a
Democratic candidate,
Education director of the Michi-
gan CIO Council, Stevens, 42, has
served on a variety of state and
inational groups dealing with edu-
cation and youth,
Among these are: The Legisla-
tive Advisory Committee on High-
er Education; Advisory Committee
on labor program services at the
‘Center, Michigan State University;
‘Michigan Youth Commission and
the Michigan Committee on Civil
Rights.
The life-long Kent County resi-
dent was a delegate to the White Jan B. Vanderploeg
An adult education teacher 15
years, Jan B, Vanderploeg, Demo-
cratic nominee, is a landscape ar-
chitect by profession.
He graduated from Hope College
and .attended graduate schools at
Western. Theological . Seminary,
Holland, and at Harvard Univer-
sity,
Vanderploeg, 56, taught adult
education in Muskegon and Ottawa
Counties. He was a councilman in
North Muskegon for six years and
served four years on that com-
munity’s planning board,
He is a charter member of the
Michigan Society of Gerontology
and is associated with the Allied
Institute of Technology.
As a landscape architect, Van- Labor and- Industrial. Relations} State University.
Born in Iowa, Dr. Harden af-
' tended Iowa State Teachers Col-
‘ Harden joined the MSU staff. in
1946, From. 1954-1956 he was chair-
tional Program which toured
Western Europe and Central
America inspecting educational
facilities.
After a brief geriod in private
business, he returned to’ educa-
tion as a college president.
Harden is a member of the
Michigan Educational Assn., Na-
tional Vocational Guidance Assn.,
and National Assn. of Secondary
School Principals. He is married man_of the Armed Forces Educa-} work at Columbia University and
Wayne State University.
The Democratic candidate is a
member of Gov. William’s Educa-
tion Finance Study Commission.
has evolved programs for handi-
of clinical psychology.
* * *
He is a past president of the
Detroit Psychology Club, the
Michigan Psychological Assn., and
the Tri-State Conference on Pupil
Personnel,
x * *
Dr. Bartlett is married and lives
and has two children. in Grosse Pointe Woods.
GEORGE W. DEAN (R).
State Board of Education
CHRIS MAGNUSSON (D)
George W. Dean
George W. Dean, of Detroit
president of the Michigan Federa-
tion of Labor 15 years, is the Re-
publican nominee.
Dean, 66, was Michigan Com-
missioner of Labor from 1543-
1949, From 1938-1943 he was State
Supervisor of Industrial Education
in the Department of Public In-
struction.
Among many educational
causes he has served are the
Michigan White House Confer-
ence on Education, Advisory
Committee to Michigan State
University and the Michigan
Committee on Economic Educa-
in Arkansas, Louisiana and Missis-| 4,
sippi. Holder of an honorary doctor)
So. of laws degree from Central Michi-
Manhattan Will Stage |” College, Dean is vice presi-
Central Park Musicals
dent of the Michigan United Fund,
a member of the. Board of Di-
rectors of the Michigan Society
for Mental Health and a Trustee
of the Michigan Heart Assn.
Safe Found i in Ruins
Vie tor Board Spot He is known for his work in
school organization, finance and
personnel problems. Bartlett also
capped children and in the field) ipeadiine hed?
for Absentees
in April I Ballot
A last minute announcement re-
sentee voters has been issued from
Ray Harrington, acting clerk.
Only 27 Waterford. Township
absentee ballots have been applied
for out of an anticipated 500,
Harrington said.
Deadline for applications is 2
p.m. Saturday, and residents ex-
‘Ipecting to be away next Monday
lare urged to make application
immediately, Harrington said.
\Gulf to Stay Open,
‘Says Israeli Envoy
NEW YORK (®—Israelj Ambas-
sador Abba Eban said last night
the Gulf of Aqaba will remain
open to international shipping
|“forever.”
* * *
He said the gulf will stay open
“whether it be through the con-
certed efforts of the world's mar-
itime nations or . , . by Israel's
exercise of its inherent right to
protect its shipping.”
Eban spoke at a dinner he
gave honoring Israe] Rogosin, an
American
said recently he is investing six
million dollars in a new rayon
“}plant in Israel.
Hubby Out of the Race
LOS ANGELES ® — Superior
Judge Newcomb Condee declared
James D, Starns out of the race
by a default divorce decree after
Mrs, Ellis L. Starns testified he
was more interested in handicap-
ping horses than paying attention
to her. garding Waterford Township ab-|
industrialist. Rogosin)|
}
Chris Magnusson -
A Redford Township man, Chris
Magnusson, 51, is the Democratic’
candidate.
x ** *
Magnusson has been a board of
education member 11 years in
Redford Union School District No.
1, serving as board secretary.
He is a member of the Parks
and Recreation Commission of
Redforg Township, a member of
the Human Relations Committee
of the Wayne County Federation,
.|of Labor, and has served as a
delegate to the national conven-
tion of school board members.
* * *
Magnusson, a native of Canada,
has lived in the Detroit area 31
years, He attended Canadian
schools, Sts
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THE PONTIAC sclpness. quESDAY, MARCH 26, 1957 Eee ae
ss
on
From the |
Press Box * BY BRUNO L. KEARNS
Sperts Editer, Poutiac Press
: We say amen to another basketball season. It was
‘a thrilling campaign with not too-happy an ending for
;some teams and a eateying conclusion for others.
* * *
¥or Pontiac High is-was a bitter pill to be snuffed
Sout of tournament play by Flint Northern, a team it
But the Chiefs and coach Art Van)
Ryzin can point with pride at the 10-mark posted in
what is regarded as the toughest prep conference in,
‘the state.
Walled Lake had its Snieptintinet: in failing to
veach the state finals, but it was fortunate the
Vikings had to have their “off” day in the semi-
finals. There's still a 21-2 season of which to boast.
Now the big surprise of the season and our nomina-)
tion for coach-of-the-year must be Forddy Anderson and
‘the Michigan State cagers who started out dismally and
_. finished by giving the nation’s number one team North
Carolina everything it could handle in a scipie-crec time
NCAA semi-final.
The wishes for future basketball success go to the
NBA Pistons who will make their home in Detroit
next season as the 4th pro athletic team for the
Motor City.
x * *.
The vote for the best player in Midwest goes to Bill
— cog U. of D. sharpshooter who set a new scor-
. : dints | Viet
recognition by the Associated Press faire: more than!
: 300 fans at a Royal Oak dining hall. -
DITTOS FROM THE PRESS BOX
At the testimonial last night it was meant to be heard
that Ebben would be playing for the West All-Stars in
the East-West game in New York, afd that the Detroit
Pistons would have the star cager playing with them
next season . .. that a 7-footer from Syracuse, N. Y.,
and a 6-foot-11 prep cager from Fort Wayne, Ind., have
been stamped C.O.D. to U. of D.... that Georgia Tech,
Marquette, Columbia and Detroit are the Motor City
entries for the December classic . . . and finally that.
Walled Lake’s Larry Hughes was introduced as a “pros- Tri
pective” freshman at Detroit.
“MACLEAY PLANS A VISIT
Civic leaders and members of the press and radio
will welcome Pontiac High’s new football coach Jesse Fi
' $tanley Cup championships. Day)
“succeeded
‘MacLeay at a Saturday luncheon. MacLeay will be in
town for the weekend and then return-to Illinois where || East - West benefit basketball
game.
_ pict off Moore’s light heavy title.
* * *
1927 as a-player. -his contract continues until June.
With him MacLeay will have a couple of assistant “
but the top assisant’s position will go to
Heikkinen, presently a member of the grid staff
and head baseball
MacLeay, incidentally, was a schoolmate at Spring-
field College in Mass., with
Pontiac Boys’ Club. Bill COG. | head of the
‘
Moore fo Defend Crown:
Against Apri DETROIT W — “A fighter van
take two kinds of beatings. One
of them is a physical beating, and
T've taken one or two of them.
The other kind is the bad kind —
that's the psychological beating.
I never took one of them.’
* 2 =a
‘That was Archie Moore talking.
and the veteran pugilist who will)
defend his light heavyweight title
in Detroit's Olympia: Stadium on
June 7 always has words to spare.'ruined him. Well sir, then he must On the Pittsburgh Pirates outside of Manager Bobby,
* * *
Someone broughit up a couple of beating. That's worse than the oth-|
questions about Moore's fights,
with Bobo Olson and Rocky Mar-
ciano, after Archie had agreed to
terms yesterday in a Detroit hotel.
Moore gave Olson a thorough beat-
ing, knocking him out in short
order as Olson — then the mid-|son
dieweight champion — tried to
Moore, later trying to land Mar-
ciano's heavyweight crown, got al-
‘Hap’ Day Ends
Toronto Career
TORONTO W—Clarence ‘‘Hap”
Day, general manager of the To-
ronto Maple Leafs, has ended his
30-year career with the National
Hockey League club,
* * *
In a two-minute conference with
€onn Smythe, president of the
Maple Leafs, Day, 5%, yesterday
simply announced that he was
“not available” next-yéar,
* ¥ *
The move, which was his an-
swer to a public rebuke for the
team's failure this season, term-
inated a career that started in
+ *
Day coached Toronto to five
Spiythe — as
manager on Jan, 31, 1955,
* * *
\ under rookie general
Coach
this}
for) > Winner Perranoski
"|liantly to get the decision.
Podres’ Stint Longest West Shriners »
Defeat East 5:
in Cage Game
KANSAS CITY Ww — Unim- pressed by their opponents’ big names, the-West All-Stars buzzed to a 64-60 triumph’ over the East last night in the annual Shriners’
| ings x ww #® 4
pen wk ke * x
Op
Shoulder Hurt; Takes ies Physical
* * *
Little Gary Thompson, All- America from Iowa State, out- 'scored the shining shooters of the | East and did the quarterback (chores for the West masterfully.
* * *
| Thompson hit 16 points and was named the game’s outstanding
|Player. Southern Methodist’s Jim ‘Krebs hauled in 15 rebounds for the West and also outplayed his southpaw ‘Billy Hoeft, the Detroit
er of 1956. LAKELAND, Fla. ww — Ttelwth ietess tees ne, will find
next 10 days: are critical ones for| out just 10 days from now: | Whether the ache in his left)
Tigers’ second most winning pitch- shoulder will permit him to pitch.| after signing his contract with the
Whether he'll be pitching for the)
Billy, whose life seems filled) Tigers or for Uncle Sam. (up eries. xe
cd
Days of ‘Crises’ for Hoeft: Hoeft who was just married a
few short weeks ago pitched only
limited amounts so far this spring,
Tigers just before the holdout
deadline, opponent, Charley Tyra of Louis- ville, University, in all other de- partments.
Grand National
Set for Friday LONDON — Glorious Twelfth ruled a solid 10-1 choi win the lllth Grand sole
Steeplechase—the world’s toughest horse race—to be run on Friday,
* * *
* *
| over, pour She the t aed of night at
Spartans Open Dixie
rip With 8-3 Win’
Pitched pril-
route from Champaign, Illinois, to
| CHARTING THE ROUTE — Jesse MacLeay, Pontiac for his Diinois.
_trip this weekend. MacLeay will be welcomed at days if he's.
‘| amination which turned up a knee
football injury
Yesterday at the armed forces
induction center in Milwaukee, |
Hoeft was one of a group of men
town, He took his second pre-
induction physica] examination
in eight months.
He = won't know for. about 10
erred again for
military serv: got a de-
ferred verdict at the earlier ex-
condition resulting from an old th Bruins Detroit Champs
Called Weakest
in Thirty Years - Boston. Holds Regular —
Season Edge With 7
Wins and 3 Ties
.DETROIT # — The team Jack
Adams calls the weakest
pionship club in his 30 years in
Detroit. hockey tangles with its
stubborn opponent tonight as the
Red Wings open the Stanley Cup
series against. the Boston Bruins.
= * * . .
* * *
At his re-examination, Col. Wal-;
lace Kruczek said Hoeft's condi-|
tion will be referred to a civilian
orthopedic surgeon whose recom-
mendation will be sent to Wash-
ington for a final decision.
Tiger trainer Jack Homel al-
ready indicated that it would bé
about 10 days before Hoeft could
resume pitching, providing that
ethe inflamed tendon in his left
shoulder improves.
Hoeft won 20 games for the
"~, | Tigers last year, behind a 21-game|
~~@ luncheon of civic leaders on Saturday. He will | of the four so-far- this spring.
Pontiac High's new football coach, charts his be here for a two-day stay before returning to | | vietory total built by . teammate;
= dette: Thetwoare the “fenor of *igee pcing hopes ii year, ;
* * *
The Tigers cut two players from
their roster yesterday and may
drop two more today.
Infielder George Risley was
optioned to Charleston; w. Va.,
et the American Assn, and out-
fielder Ken Walters was re-
turned to the Tiger minor league
training base for reassignment.
Tiger coaches said they would)
have 35 players left in their ros-|
ter after today’s cuts.
Probably under consideration|
for the cuts are outfielders Ray
.| Hawes and J. W, Porter, infielder
Inman Veal and catcher Charley)
Lau. Porter and Lau have the
‘best chance of sticking.
If Porter is farmed out again,
he would be picked up. by another|
j | club for the $10,000 waivers price. The Bruins, with their best club
lin years, defeated the title ~ win-
ning Red Wings seven times dur-
ling the regular season, The Wings
|were able to win only four. times,
with three games ending in ties.
«* * *
The Detroit club won its 12th -
National League title because it
could hammer away at the lower
clubs with remarkable success.
The Wings lost the season series
both to Montreal and Boston, the
teams that finished second and
third respectively. ’
* *
“We can’t play Toronto and Chi-
cago in the Stanley Cup,"’ Adams
the reminded his club, :
Pe ‘The grinnied Sota ROSES
says the Wings have two advan- :
tages. going into the ‘series, *
x * *
“We open at home for two
games, and that's a break We
didn't have last year,’ he said.
“And, our biggest advantage “is
the big fellow. No other team “in
the league has a player who éVen
approaches that guy. He’s the best —
player of all = for my money.”
* * The big fellow, of course, is Gor-
die Howe, who recently wrapped
up his fifth scoring championship.
But the big right winger, who will
reach his 29th birthday next Sun-
day, scored only 6 of his 44 goals
against the hard-checking Bruins.
This will be the severith Stanley
Cup series between these two
iclubs. Each club has won thee
times,
* * & |Lau has made the best showing Two Boston players will miss
the series beeause_of injuries. Lar--
Yesterday's scheduled game ry Regan has a severely pulled an-
‘with the White Sox was rained kle tendon and Allan Stanley is
‘out at Tampa. out. for the year with torn kiniee
A hitch in the Navy
Pred Kenn (8), Rub n Ash aad Joe 7 wath le =. Prank Blusser (9), poor oan threw at the New York Yankees)
in the 1955 World Series.
The slim Brooklyn lefthander, |
who won two games from the)
CLEARWATER, Fla. w—John.|Yanks—including a shutout in the
~| hasn't taken the edge off that old Walk and another on an error. But! ang
black magic that Johnny Podres|both were wiped out, so he wound the Brooks, incidentally, and they,|
up facing only 18 batters.
Podres now has a string of 17
ny Podres’ six-inning sh finale—taced the Bronx Bombérs|ungs of the third game of the 'S5 most the same treatment from the in yesterday's game with the Nex |S Vero Beach yesterday and they| Serie then whitewashed them in
Asked if he sulfered any ill ef:|* 2k Yankees was the longest for| Promptly rolled over and played ‘he os Sods Hak the thisdlaas Sealiaat, Maghe Smyecher this spring. Sai | dead. The Brooks * or the kayo he suffered Inter at/trames, =n had gone five| ee 4 exme, 10, in the Ith inning. That
the hands of Floyd Patterson, Ar- . He went six innings, didn’t al-| nade Ma: Walt Alston hap-
chie cracked: py, but the Yanks could have
“Do I look sick?” - P scored _— _——_ —_ a
The 39-year-old champ went on: S S * G finished his and
“Now, I didn’t hit Bobo hard) * tuart on elf: binerectaes reat’ pilot still would have been content
enough or often apie Pha oor ai a “ow Podres’ pony arm
him any physical trouble,” sa Dodgers ve a.
Archie, “They say ‘that. fight FORT MYERS, Fla. (NEA)—Whatever noise anybody reliatle lefthander all last season,
|have taken a bad psychological
er kind. A man suffers a big let-)
down, naturally, when he tries for
something big and doesn't get it.
\ * *
“Just like I tried for something
big against Marciano and Patter-
son, I.was disappointed, sure. But
I didn’t let it get me down. I
I’m still going strong, right?’
Moore, who hasn't defended his
title since beating Yolande Pom-
pey last June in London, will meet
the winner of the Chuck Spieser-
Tony Anthony 12-round _ bout,
scheduled for April 5 in Detroit.
Both the Spieser-Anthony bout and
the championship match will be
televised nationally. came right back, didn’t I? And’ Bragan is making this spring, as a rule, comes from
Dick Stuart, recruit outfielder.
Stuart hit 66 home runs for Lincoln, Neb., last year.
and it is to be seriously doubted if he ever will stop
talking about them.
Before a game with Cincinnati, Stuart yawned for
the benefit of a reporter and said, “I feel tired, but I'll
probably hit one.”
What makes it harder on those around him is that
Stuart did hit one—his third in as many days and
good for considerably more than 400 feet.
The Reds’ sharp-tongued Rocky Bridges met Stuart
during the winter and after listening to the rookie boast
for a time snapped: “I’m gonna take all my pictures
of Babe Ruth off the wall and put up yours.”
Homie Meter fn ina ‘at
ae to qualify
——\ f
fi
( Mies aged Setoce, Foe + , {ball team for 1957. Podres Still Has Yankee Number By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |low 4 hit and only permitted two;and they've been looking forward
jmen to reach first base, one on ato Podres’ return. Don Drysdale Don Bessent finished up for
too, held Yogi Berra-less, Mickey 3°
Mantle-less, Moose Skowron-less
Yanks at bay.
* * * |
No-hit Don Larsen went five in-
nings and yielded four hits, He .
‘played. At Orlando, Fila., the
Washington Senators defeated the
Kansas City A's, 8-3; at Tucson, |
Ariz., the Chicago Cubs turned
back the Cleveland Indians, 11-6, |
at Phoenix, Ariz., the New York!
Giants outlasted the Baltimore:
. Orioles, 64, and the Boston Red 2
Hollywood | Sox trimmed the host
Stars. of the Pacific Coast League
13-0.
Wynn Has Hip Ailment
TUCSON, Ariz., ®—Early Wynn
doubtful
to pitch when the season opens
April 16.
Golf Registrations
Are Being Accepted The Pontiac Parks and Recrea-
tion Department is now accepting
registrations for golf instructions,
which will begin in early April.
Classes will include four two-hour
sessions covering basic fundamen-
tals of the game through demon-
stration and practice.
Emphasis will be directed toward
stance, grip and swing in rela-'
tion to a variety of golf clubs|
,/and situations. Rules and etiquette
will also receive attention.
Persons of high school age and
over interested in attending these
lessons should register by calling
the Parks Recreation Depart-
ment, FE + x
Walsh, Haase Elected
DETROIT # — Guard Mike
‘Walsh and center Don Haase were
elected co-captains last night of
the University of Detroit baéket- PI wey
sibel
Ireland With Irish” SOUTH BEND, Ind: # —- The
RUG ne, cum tmat Hits cidceoennly 4h Welsh 1. Wittiams is foll-length in mid.
"of action corpo olen dary A aoe wi ne tn its
weekend | ternational match, 19-13.
Dame 19657. basketball
One of ite spares\ was natn
“\NL’s Triple Crown Aaron Gunning for
BRADENTON, Fila. (INS)—Hank |
Aaron, the National League's 1956 |
batting champion, is embarked on
an ambitious program — nothing
less than the triple crown in 1957. |
“That's what I'm shooting for
anyway,” the Milwankee Braves’
slugger said. “I'd like nothing
better than leading the ‘league
in batting, home runs and runs
batted in.”
Last season, the talented out-
fielder from Mobile, Ala., followed
a .314 season in 1955 with a fancy
.328 batting average in 1956 to lead
the league.
“Willie Mays is the guy I'll have
to beat out for the triple crown,”
Aaron said.
Football Leader Quits
THREE RIVERS # — Norm
Harris today announced his resig-
nation as head football coach at
Three Rivers High School to seek
a position elsewhere. Dodgers “eS ae \for the distance was 1:15 45 held Giants 6, Orioles aes 12, innings —— by Simmy and Decathlon.
ts Li, Indians
Rediegs vs. Eisly ood Ph Petersburg can.
as “as a ds Be \Sorni to Turn Coach
Pirates vs, Phillies at Clearwater. can-| PHOENIX, Ariz. @® — The New
Free Throw Rule Changed ligaments, Detroit's Ted Lindsay
has been slowed by an ankle In-
jury. ;
World Mark Set
by Federal Hill
GRAPEFRUIT
AMERICAN LEAGUE Wes Lest Pet. added the name of Federal Hill
New York 200000703 Ri) today to the list of probable favor- Cleveland | 7 § 487 ites in Saturday's $100,000 added Washington -? 9 438 Florida Derby at Gulfstream ago i | td An
Baltimore 6 9 eo Park,
5 w 433 * * *
— 5 sez, Federal Hill, owned by Clifford | Patepurgh $ 40 Lussky of Louisville, Ky., joined
Cincinnat! = 7 ‘563: Wheatley Stable’s Bold Ruler and
Pullecelstia “ % 8 Calumet Farm's Gen. Duke at the
at ae & See\top of the Derby list when he set ‘Chicago react eee te ia world’s record for six and a
Mr, Favor at Paradise ;
|Jan. 15, 1956, Gulfstream’s record A's Ve
Cubs vs, ot een attack Feb. 25 that ended his
oh ES ing career. He is expected to
oe released from the hospital in ‘a
‘White x ¥e Bendtors at! Griande day or two. :
KANSAS CITY # — The Na-
tinoal Basketball Committee, tink-
ering with the college and AAU
*
The committee yesterday decid-|.),
ed the first six common fouls in|*
each half shall be one-shot viola-
tions, Free throws on succeeding
fouls will be awardedunder the
present .one-and-one bonus basis.
A player gets a second shot if he
makes the first,
The Big Ten used the rule dur-
ing the past season,
x* *
High schools, YMCA and Cana-
5
All-County Teams Coming
It’s coming your way Thursday! The 2nd annual ‘All-Oakland
j mayyrndirgnpanltngeateaepo et eh tagacigeat 9) eae
ae be found on the sport pages of Thursday's Press
Featured will be the five outstanding
agen weet yin
A, Class B ahd Class C, a8 well as the Onk
be asi. Honor teams in
land area top stars also w: Pere he ty ig
\
: i : | } ba : Bass fr i J ee eo T i
ie i i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, st iis ee
Cranbrook Opens Annual; we ee SOE WAN Be ae ) 4a”
Boel Toor fuer Entries Moving Fast for Bowleramag=s=.- ocr, Snot, ns ee , ts On @ nine-game southern trip that i CHUCK ABAIR gies nesiead tournament for both o this new ‘oes of tourney andjsable as long as the entry fee of} The tournament “offers . over
will launch a rugged 27-game sea-
son slate,
The Cranes open play on the
8th annual tour Thursday at Low-
moor, Va., against Lowmoor
“School. Games follow on Friday
and decid = Salisbury and
Greensboro, N
Contests are schediled from
Monday through Saturday next
week in North Carolina, Virginia
and Pennsylvania,
Lowmoor replaces . Covington. as
the opening Crane sary this!
season, = Salisbury ont include the Pfieffer College Frosh
(twice), Raleigh, N, C. and Dan-
‘|ville, Va, High Schools, the Uni-
versity of Virginia Frosh and
Mercersburgh, Pa. High, The lat-
ter tilt will be a stopover on the
return trip. —
Play against area opponents
will get underway April 9 at.
Pontiac and conclude June 1
against Flint. Central at Cran-
brook. -
€oach Fred Canipbell is busy
trying to rebuild the Crane combine:
in hopes of bettering or at least
'matching last year’s 11-7 record.
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When you examine our fine ready-made suits—when’
many luxurious imported
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excellent style and fit that only superb workmanship
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Only Harwood Can Do It and Harwood Has Done Ii!
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eve a Huron at Telegraph Know That
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STAMPS
9557 _ Louis Soucy
fi i
}
| i
| first U. S, Men's National Curling
row night at Chicago Stadium.
NBA Finals
{iminutes after the final buzzer)
Just an average or even below
par bowler gets a great opportun-
ity to upset the area’s best and
win a guaranteed prize in the big
Pontiac Press Bowlerama coming
up April 6, 7 and 13.
Everyone has an equal chance
to win the top prizes in this sin-|
Wildcats Seek |
New Cage Head
Promotion to Higher
Position — 7
EVANSTON, Til, (#—Northwest-
ern University is looking for a new
basketball coach with the help of
Waldo Fisher; who resigned yes-
terday to become assistant ath-
letie director, |
* * *.
Athletic Director Stu Holcomb
announced the resignation and
said Fisher’s first job in his. new
‘position will be to aid in the selec-
tion of a new baskefball coach.
Northwestern finished last for
the second straight year in the
Big Ten conference this season
with a 2-12 record. The Wildcats
had a 7-16 mark for the season,
“We will make a thoremeh on
ul i a aa abte
available and we wiil not make a
choice until we have surveyed all
candidates.” *
x * *
Fisher, who served as an assist-
‘ant “basketball and football coach
since his graduation from the uni-
versity in 1928, took over as head
'eage coach in 1952 after the re-
signation of the late Harold Olson
| because of ill health. $
Men’s Curling
Championships
Open Tomorrow
CHICAGO (#—Drawings for the
night with play beginning tomor-
The championships will run four
. * * *
N DOLPH Alterations | Forth top lers from nine
‘states. and Al will compete.
ARWOOD~.. States represented are Washing-|
— -. ton, Massachusetts, New Hamp-| , New York, Tilinois, Wiscon-|
" Michigan, Minnesota and
North Dakota, =| :
* * * |
Play will be supervised by 20)
4 officials, including Ken Watson -of
;Canada who will act as commis-|
sioner of play.
Hawks Enter
MINNEAPOLIS # — A madcap
double. overtime victory that
wasn't officially sealed until 30
cleared the way today for the St.
WITHOUT SA
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FE 2-7849 Louis Hawks maiden appearance |
in the National Basketball Assn.
erent finals,
* *
Amid conflicting cue by the
referees and protests lodged by)
both coaches, St, Louis sera!
‘the Minneapolis Lakers,
last night, to complete a prearg
'gamé sweep of the best-of-five
'Western Division finals.
| * * *
From a post-game huddle in-
\volving rival coaches, Referees |
Arnie Heft and Norm Drucker,
|League President Maurice Podo- |
‘loff and Joeko Collins, superintend-|
-[fent.of NBA officials, emerged a
‘decision to disallow Laker Coach’
‘Johnny Kundla's protest.
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| 4. Tournament will be conducted in strict adherence with ABC
i points on’ 44 goals and 45 assists.
‘Maurice “The Rocket” Richard of
Nebraska Team New
. \day in the singles, He banged out
some of the leading men and wom-
en keg stars from Pontiac and sur-
‘rounding commanition will be tak-
ing part. men and women.
All that is needed is three
games good enough to finish in
‘the top 10 per cent at any one
of three qualifying locations. and
.then three strong games the fol-
lowing week in the finals.
Plenty of surprises are expected * * *
Many have already mailed in
their entries to manager Les Roth-
barth or left them at their favorite
alleys, Either method is permis-| $4.50 is included.
How about the rest of you fel-
lows and gals who can knock
over the pins in pretty good fash-
‘fon? . Have’ you sent in that
seg yet? If not, you better hur-
Midnight Sunday is the dead-
ly That leaves just six more
days, — PONTIAC PRESS BOWLERAMA
ENTRY BLANK ENTRY BLANK
GUARANTEED PRIZES APRIL 6-7-13 SINGLES TOURNAMENT
70% Handicap | Deadline for entries is midnight, Morch 31. All| tt 6 im each division 200 Scratch entries must be mailed or delivered to Secretary-
cen say © Manoger Les Rothbarth in care of The Pontiac Press MEN:
ABC and WIBC- |} Sports Dept. Entry fee must accompany this Ist $400
i -of ; ‘Opplication in full.
Sint Oy. Pe 2nd $200 3rd $100
(Please type or print), : whe
‘ (Besed on 400 entries)
Name—Mr. Mrs. or Miss...... feces s Phone 2... eel 7 ,
POGCOSS one ee ee ee ene City 24.2.6 as WOMEN:
. : C : Ist $200
Highest league average as of Jan. 1....League....... ae 2nd $100
ABC Sanction No>.........WIBC Sanction No........ 5. 3rd $60 - (Besed on 200 entries)
Qualifying Finals Entry Fee
: Prize fund will be re- |
Auburn Lones Huron Bow! | Bowling ...... $1.20 pumed 100% pure to _ : make one prize for every
Dixie toedbepileal (3 games | Tournament Exp. .60] 19 entries. Trophies will
Land-O-Lokes across 6 Prize Fund ..... 2.70 | be awarded winners and
_(3 games on same alleys) _ high gait at each
- »Q.. a SSS SF Se SS
co
raid Sac wy:
league average for 1956 season if less than 18 games were bowled;
2. Anyone falsifying his or-her average will be disqualified and will forfeit rights to any or all prizes er County residents and sanctioned
return of fees.
3. Tournament manager reserves right to reject any and all entries.
5. Final qualifiers will pay for additional 3. games in finals. TOURNAMENT RULES"
1. Bowlers must present their highest league average for 18 games or more as of Jan. 1, 1957 or highest anything can happen,
in. present season.
and WIBC rules,
Qualifying alleys to be published in the Press, April 4 and 5
aa
Lindsay Sets Record |
Scoring Tie 5 sth for Howe MONTREAL @® — Gordie Howe,
Detroit's flashy forward, won his
fifth National Hockey League scor-
ing championship and ‘teammate
Ted Lindsay, who finished second;
set a record for most points by
a left winger,
_ Wie
-Official league wecords disclosed
today that Howe compiled 89 sixth in the scoring..2 race with 62!
points,
Jacques “The Snake ” Plante of
Montreal won the Vezina Trophy |
forthe second straight season.
whose team is charged with the
of 2.21. Detroit. and its net-minder,
Glenn Hall, was runner-up with
157 and 2.24 average.
league. Lindsay, whose 55 assists} Doug Harvey of the Cahadiens |
were high, wound up with 85 had 44 assists, to better his own
points. The previous mark by ajrecord of most assists by a de-|
left winger was 82, set by Bos-|fenseman. The old mark of & was!
ton’s Herbie Cain in the 1943-44
season.
Lindsay's 55 assists were one,
* te *
Montreal's Jean Beliveau,
the defending scoring champion, held by Montreal's Bert Olmstead.
The Final Leading Scorers:
iranked third in the race with 84 Player, Team G A Pts.
points. Andy Bathgate of the New) 3: Tea Lmésay) Det 002.2 Se 3 3 | York Rangers was fourth with 77| 3: Jean Belivesu, Mont’ -.:-: 51 84
and Chicago's Ed Litzenberger| $: Ba meee 8 33 a
fifth with 64. $: Don McKenney Bos"... 31 33 60
Howe was the only player to col § Rew fete, Misa BB lect more than 40 goals. Five ». ™ Uliman, Det.........16 36 52 The award is given to the goalie.
least allowed goals. The Canadiens
yielded 155. goals for an average Miss Melntire
|Amateur Winner
PINEHURST, N. C. — When,
Barbara Mclntire finished . her)
jfour rounds in the Augusta Title-)
holders Golf Tournament last |
jweek she had broken 80 only once |
and was a very discouraged young |
Hady.
* * *
climaxed with a 3 and 2 victory
jover Mrs. Ann Casey Johnstone of |
in yesterday’ S| Mason City, Iowa,
18-hole finals of the North
South Amateur.
‘Softball Meeting Set and |
short_of the league record of 56,| The Ist meeting of the 1957 |
|\Waterford Township Recreation |
| Softball League will be held,
| Thursday night at 7:30 in the Com-
imunity Center. All players, man-
for scheduling, rules and regula-
tions will be discussed.°
other players tallied 30 or better.
Trailing Howe were Beliveau and
the Canadiens with 33 each.
The 35-year-old Richard, who
missed seven games, exceeded
‘30 goals for the eighth time in 15
seasons and boosted his record
NHL | career output to 8. He | was
ABC Meet Leader
FORT WORTH, Tex, — The)
‘Sehwindt’s Tavern team of Lin- ‘TALL TALES by KING EDWARD are Sun popped Florida popcorn
field. imported Missouri mule
thought it was snow and froze
to death!
’ Enjoy king Edward cigars
Today arnd every day- enjoy
E's Tall Tales, foo!
PA KING
BEDWARD CIGARS
Get @ Tell Tele? Send i te King Edwert,
Heride. Yoo may win « prize!
coin, Neb., swept to the top of the)
| booster division standings today in| _ Weimer paces the Pioneer TA|
Sri SEER ei at ‘s-an- Seeeuesiata: -st,.-but..
Today she flashed a @illiant)
smile as she looked back on a way
of steadily improved play that was So
jagers and sponsors interested in|
summer participation in the league‘
iare invited. Preliminary plans |
$2,500 in prizes and several tro-
phies for the outstanding perform-
ances. ‘First place award$ of $400,
and $200 and trophies and 10 other guaranteed prizes make it pretty
hard to turn down such a chance.
* * *
All you have to do is qualify for!
the finals to finish in the money.
The top qualifiers at each house
will also receive trophies,
Such familiar names as Wal-
ter Rennhack, Martha Foster, INSTALLED FREE © )
MUFFLE
© Tail Pipes
® Airplane Type Shock Absorbers
© Starters—Generators
© Carhuretors—Fuel Pumps
At regular or list prices. or,
if you prefer to do your own |-
installing, ‘we will give you
Lyle Redman, Lou Koprince, 1 , 20% discount. Evelyn Prosser, Bill O’Brien, Ben
Armstrong and Ann Weimer are eg
included among the present en- HOLLERB ACK
Rennhack made local history a! opto P ‘ARTS ‘
few weeks ago by scoring the tst| z FE 3-9477
300 game in five years here and) 340 Baldwin FE 8-1431
recently hit 245, Mrs: Foster has
the top woman game of the sea-
son with 277 and a 169 average. | : SANDERS
Redman's 290 reigned as the best
single effort for many weeks be- FOR RENT
fore Rennhack came along. He re- .
cently carded a 246 game and has TRAVIS
boosted his average to 164. HARDWARE
Koprince, along with Rennhack {J “* Orchard Lake Ave, FE 5-872
has been burning up the Motor |— —
Inn alleys with some sparkling : a
First Quality Original 700 series, Mrs. Prosser, of Wa-
terford Township, is the
: oe Equipment Quality .. .
{ _
MUFFLERS |
loop.
O’Brien ranks with the best in
Lake Orion bowling circles with a
186 average in league competition,
while Armstrong gained state no-
tice a year ago by finishing 2nd
in the Michigan Bel] tourney. Mrs.
Alse Tall Pipes-and Exhaust Pipes
member, it’s handicap bowling and
All. entries must be Oakland)
with ABC or WIBC. Applications
by mail should be sent to Roth-
TIRE CO.- |.
barth in care of the Pontiac Press Open 9 to 9
Sports Dept., ce turned in ot ab oF x rE secs
- leys. : pots > :
SAUNDER
ALL 1957 CARS | : Radies—Heaters : , Autematic Tranmission LIFT -GATES—P.
Rates for an hour, day, week or month or year—whether a
new car or truck you only pay for what you actually use! For
information, reservations or free local delivery call FE 8-6811.
Operated Locally by MAZZA’s MOBIL SERVICE
Paddock and Pike Streets FE 8-6811 | e-it-Yourself SYSTEM |
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Hydro-magic Injector Razer
the American Bowling Congress. {
tournament,
* * *
Schwindt’s. yesterday knocked
,off games of 887, 961 and 936 for
ia series total of 2,784.
It ended the reign of Garrett Oil
Tool No, 1 of Longview, Tex.,
which had led the booster division
for a week with 2,754.
* * *
Fréd Breckle, a veteran of 34,
consecutive ABC tournaments,
moved into seventh place yester-
games of 223, 248 and 203 for a.
674 series.
Dean Overholser of Chicago.
leads the singles with 708. i
This powerful, easy-to-use saw quickly handles
Sey > Be peng aS cutting problems at home or on the job! Cuts
: a New , pe ee 8 ee Floyd. 3"' dressed lumber, metal, stone,’ plastics. Adjusts
Peedlec " wemm “Teer” Jones. for depth ond bevel of cut. Universal motor,
ol a York. cutpotnted Arthur telescoping blade guard.
Mass. — Johnny Cunning. |
Baltimore, outpointed Barry
ago Mass.. 10. . nam 158 YOUR INDUSTRIAL
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=
_ \ \RIGHTEEN ey Meee a a ar oe Pe oe
, MARCH 26, 1957 ee eee :
engineers are pondering the latest) through reverse wells.
disposal. a
| 5 -
$treams or large bodies of water. |\CUTS COSTS
a
—Higuids to Detroit.
answer one day.” Corp., is ‘scheduled as principal -
proposal in public sanitation —.a} Not only would this make plant|
pew methed of sewage treatment|location independent of existing!
. waterways, but it would replace
At present, all sewage treatment! ground‘ water which is growing
plants. pour their effluent into’short in many parts of the country.
But a new proposal would permit! Arthur Coltson, Oakland sanita-
establishment of treatrnent plants'tion department head, said the/near the lakes would buy that,
an’a small scale anywhere. pest plan —_ hc cut sae by even though the treated effluent is : a. ‘eliminating t uge interceptor'as pure as present lake water,”
This plan would have the effiu- lsewers now used to channel w New Sewage Treatment Eyed) -: Southeasterw Michigan sanitary| ent pumped back into the ground |are the Clinton, Huron and Rouge \Rivers.
* x. *
water,” he said.
|
aste'he added.
E Motor Executive to Talk caich on ‘soon enoteh te athe, Comp Director to Move -
.< | the southern part of the county,’ | . t GRAND RAPIDS w — George : county,”"| WHITEHALL «» — Edward L.
~ Romney, president and board| %€ sald, “but for the northern Cain for 10 years the resident di-
: chairman of American Motors) "ships it might well be the
speaker tonight ‘at the annual meet-| Coltson pointed out that, besides a Boy Scout field director with the
ing of the Grand Rapids Chamber Detroit, Oakiand County is depend-|Los Angeles Council. Camp Owas-
ot Commerce. The event expects to ent on just three streams for sippee is operated by the Chicago
draw more than 300 persons. ‘dumping its effluent. These three'Boy Scout Council. “Those three streams have
enough to do carrying off storm
Another possible alternative,
Colston said, was to empty effluent
into inland lakes in the county.
|“But I doubt if residents living} _
irector of Camp Owassippee, plans
ito leave about April 15 to become) - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY
DONALD DUCK
BOARDING HOUSE
Lae Zi
UM-YAS/ MORE
FOLKS WOLILD |
ZZ DONE ANYTHING Agour By" - 4 YOUR LOOSE-LEAF NOVEL
IDEA 7 «I'VE GOTA
«~~ SCRAMBLE
TE PAGES OF SEVERAL
S AFTER %
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INSERT A
FEW CHAP-
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JACKALS / Nou'RE
\ JESTING Mw BE
OUT OUR WAY
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THE PRY oon os tes nh I SKIDDED AN’ FELL WHY, I THOUGHT
LIAMS.
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Me.
WY ZA Qn )
MMM"
NANCY---DID YOU TELL I LOST A pad
NO, PEE WEE] | WHY ©. ANYONE
QUARTER
Boer Svat emt
*— SO THE BOSS-MAN OF THE SAFARI DECIDED To KEEP ME
By McEvoy and Strieber
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\ Pare i % | \ +)
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COULDN'T RESIST IT!
L: SIMPLY
iT
MILLION DIAMOND INSIDE rt gs YOU HAVE YOUR
' *
tne. TM, Reg. U.S. Pat.
By Dick Cavalli
iS 1987 by MEA Service, ine, TA. Rag, US, Pet. OFF
ITS YOUR OWN PALIT. YOUKNO ALWAYS
By Charles Kuhn
MRS. GABBY AN’ HER CLUB
COMMITTEE ARE COMIN’
OVER AT 2:00 SHARP/ / I'LL TURN R
By eE Oke AT M eee .
we THEN, IF YOU AN: PICK UP
_THE i 7
PONTIAC ¥ pail i ee ut
ia ee ©
a ar ais “Let's don't put Sen, tee
Set Precedent. + Beck Says Tobin
‘
. ” ,
Pe ee ee
ofa new plant in Windsor, ment that union LO wPiltor Fred Hotibah (3 Production is expected to be- right to know what officers : eee ee ee oe SMR 90 Dave Beck|’
Mundt, told Beck al to say that in letting the “great volume of gy ore }0 a Teamsters Union furnish - hime be
from Teamsters | considered free living quarters he’s only
themselves “aggrieved” and who|lowing p
applauded the activities of the com-|the union's late president,
mittee, _ Tobin. : :
x :- 4 The union provided Tobin with
Beck responded that action ‘un-|homes in Florida and Massachu-
i SE eee ee ee Oi uci ties eink Ainkt” wi : was the “first procedire”’ for a s 48 ts
& Horse! Beck said he would not object | member to take. ciles. One is a lavish lakeside es- March 3 “84,
Leeks, hich tate, complete with ‘swimming : .| to television cameras which were He declined te when : 1.38) 6 ner pool, at Seattle, A second is ane ' —— 60.| Stationed in the room to record LTB] ccnerpee of the beariag tor TV McClellan asked whether “you apartment hotel suite here. Thelf am o ‘2 =
bi 35) news reels, but enld he did net position” that rights un- (third is a comfortable efficiency in VALUABLE ,
“io? lights “flashing in my face.” <<). )< —_
“| The 63-year-old Beck, dapper
Hub-|and well turned out in a conserva- Topped, “itive gray suit and tan checked
little to stimulate buying interest. | en wees the a <
Some individual stocks, however, ee a } a formal subpoena. ‘ continued to perform well. Royal ee - «sé tween $300,000 and $400,000 of union Moms Rummage sale, Thursday | for you FREE copy of
, \But when be ‘refused to turnlsstere he became president of thelwneecn nn ot Belden SE “Div ee Oe s = . = i int t
were about unchanged today, |*vérase ir ita es 3: large e-38, over his financial records, he w&S/114 mitlion-member union after its & Years’ call Grade B. iatge 32°36 wid 33'2:\served with a subpeona on the/1959 election Nothing was reported missing a basic guide for .
; avg 34 *4 | spot. + ‘4a from the Stewart & Glenn Furni-| comenoe stock atten Grade sing embe 9-43, anet Still invoking. the Fifth Amend- Mack's werden wee thet he be ‘ture Co., 92 S, Saginaw St., after) investment
a Bog ‘jment, -he refused to comply with) 04 an of the he |Police discovered the place broken Cl d Mail Th Checks 26-28 wid avg 14 ———|¢he—subpoena'sdemand_ money Ww hen ‘ * : . .
Commercially graded: lone leila into last night, ip an aL 1s Whites: G ‘ , ’ .
Allid*Surs":°° She mw cue 5°. "4c3|tree i a mn 7 een Western Conference of Teamsters,! Lovie Pinkard, 36, of 486 8. Sag: |). Coupon ee Lae ised CREM «pee OT Grade large 29%-32; MANY WATCHING and that he paid it all back.- jinaw St,, paid a $6 fine and was} yo ogy WS “eee LO cote [MESES 30-20. Geode B. large 3. | Specthtors jammed every bit of | 8... 8 feleased yesterday after being ar-/] -
Ae DORs ers Oe eee ee oo ee ig. Supplies excessive on extra|space in the marble-columned| The committee’ has obtained|rested on a watrant charging him|] Address ’
Be Eis Set Loew's .....:..108 nrme Ma ng te accumulate, inree Senate Caucus room, scene f|testimony from staff investigators|with -driving without a license City j Am Motors... $1 Mach Tre ...a0" (tise: ‘meaiums 4 clear.;many other famous Senate hear-jin its hearings that some of the |plate. .
Am Red... 11 Martin, oF ;.., ps] puneergzedes © ng endl to break- ings. Hundreds of others queued|s270,000 was borrowéd in 1953, after - State ee ee Oe eS Oe «Be up outside, hoping for a chance to became international presi-| Robert Edgar Purcell, 22, of 124 :
Ae Pe rel 1115 Mert'ch'& 6" 3¢]| CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGas iget in. dent. Frank W. Brewster, now |Lak St., paid $110 in fine Own your own share of Am Tob...» 2 Mets or come. ee eee eT aie ©@ Western Conference head and its/and pon eecaiee Goa American. business
jAnaconda .... 62.2: : ice 000; wholesale buyi ; — aaah
oe, “he a Ward’ 31/8" 43. core aoe ee Wherever the chance appeared,|S¢cretary-treasurer under ented gaty © ' y Sie Armour & Co. 18.1 “Eee 42.6 |90 Beck pulled the name of
tee ce ed ene se oe a” receipts 19,800; wholesale J Duff (R-Pa) |
Minos. att matin “°::: $23 Nat Bates SrSfaupine, brite Noto cong togert| Sem. James .
rer satandion with rain or sleet fell south of the Che cae habit . . A was. = 5 to 7 re , cs PS eres re et Set Pte e 38 4 e gies Et i? e's ae A SPECIAL oF THE Fox. (SOW Snow was expected 467 Nor Pac ...... 41.1 Seo fe +> tise Township neia/Continue along the southern Great 7. 55.6 Nor Sta Pw ...17.2 : 2
a. ee 130, a1"the Township|Lakes, spreading eastward as snow OT ee, Sn U4) -comcaco, March 25. (AP) — Potatoes tend the hearing. GRETA v. BLock, |or snow and rain across Pennsyl-|puda co...” : i93 Ba, Ww te od: arrivals 260; track 26: total U8. In explanation of his position, 1/7 °tT* ‘ Aiquile’s farm ares.
March ant. vania and New York. — Colum & ; int Param Pict ) 3 Sunday 7; : moderate; | and Beck said at one pat: | ng aC if
STATE OF, MICMIGAN—IN THB PRO-| San Pac... 338 Pa RR ..|.. 308lbe measste 3 rg Be og “When I go to the hospital and . a3 :
pate ‘court, for abe County of Oakland ay Oe Be cae nn Sig peas at Sivee Naner, Sustions 120) hive a doctor 3 Stead. fo llew | 6; ic] GENERAL DYNAMICS CORP Juvenile Case. <2 + 143 Pliner ..... 48.6110; new: arrivals 20; ¢ 19; sup- : When I Fired Rifle at Music’ ° In the vibe mater of the pe concern Chee gs On | tha pages D...... $7 iplies moderate: demand slow; market that doctor's advice: ; i eC
oo ee M@GT DOUNGS see ss BAS oo Easier ecc sateen" “| ine « tnrzer Tintend t» flow | Instructor When She} 1957 EARNINGS OUTLOOK IS EXCELLENT Gears aheging, thet the: sonnee » Cluett Pea... $13 prilsey Miia. 42:4 =. Drove From Home . : sbovts of The thee sina a : : Se lee Gegn ss HD Pu Plate @ .: 184 Poultry Dutt has taken the position that © ELECTRIC BOAT DIV:—Atomic Submarine Builder. violated a law of the state, Tea. et in ains Yop hI a: oe Pure ou 388 eaeee a | he should not, as a recent former RA PID CITY, SD. W—A. col- -@ CONVAIR DIV.—Aircraft and Guided Missle Mfg. . |
Jurisdiction ‘of this Court es eee + Si Repub Stl... 49.6 CHICAGO, eau pa ” brie — pve! Senator, appear before his col- ® CANADAIR DIV.—Canada's Leading Aircraft Mfg.
Seite of Maabinin’ you" eit laces bon = ic Be Be Pe “432) 100 Rex Drug --- $3 \poultry steady to firm on hens and| leagues in behalf of Beck although |lege professor's 12-year-old son © STROMBERG-CARLSON DIV.—Communication and
fled that the hearing on said petition! CHICAGO u — Wheat futuresiGeet Can. ses Rey Ted B ... -- $83) at am. an a veoss, | Sdvising him outside the hearing.' admitted he shot his music teach-| Navigation Equipment Manufacturing Div. :
sia be bes held at the Oakpa land 1 County oor ' £ Neck tor geine © alot cores : 6 wand aos +e gl 24.8 #8 We» rob. paring ume = Two members of Duff's law firmer with a _ fired “——- a * GENERAL ATOMIC DIV.—Nuclear Research Div, ~
West Bed, im the City City. of Poatise in cent a bushel in fairly active board CORP ROE -. 36, Safeway St . 0445 -19, mostly 15-16; light hens 12-13:| were with Beck. |window as the woman started to}. This Growing C _~’ Cell
AD. tock at ‘alas arene the taco. of trade dealings t Oth ee ee ee "Riel ee ee: Tem eae. Beck's putheras references to/@rive off after giving him a mu- For Information Regarding # Company . today. ner . a RR. 325; ws aacer ‘itets tora peat personaily sisal & Rearing. grains and soybeans continued Dour aire’ « ae sears Bere wun Yo p= =o ee ee 1 yen Parker state’s attorney, C. A Ne hier Co. aptviee hereot, mis Summons and pote _ advance of the previous ses- ween... ams Sinclair Peas sf, DETROIT POULTRY j= + ££ \said William J. (Billy) Willard of| ° e p - ‘ eas ‘dis! DETRorr. (AP) — * Rocke shes ational Bank Bldg. m
the Sentied > sooty avaewspaper printed Near the end of the first hour Pair po eee as Seacry Kia 3 paid per Bho vt Genrets Pg soa ~ At one point, McClellan told); rville, $.D., admitted t-| 818 Community N: FE 2-9119
a cievuineea tx Wand Gone ra ? Food Mach". §73 ‘391.1 quality lve poultry up to © am : ing June Hammon, 41, Rapid HOURS: 9 te 5 and ctrouinted | Nonoratie ‘arthur x | Wheat was % to 1% higher, May/Pord Ma $6.6 Std Ol Cal... 464) , heed: 48 , ee | " % ke i .
Dated: March 32 eT ee cone (Salt iene ye ieee cate Ware Brig. lire, and cows a8 2 termi tolmontt;| Beck said “I certainly do not|the willard home where Billy was You maciey gusseetes Ses Sere Oe . 1330 National Bank Bidg = stones Ei day +e ee eee So Wats Ae... 20918 higher: shipping :.¥0.lintend to resign” as a sequel to 2 Contents, and Personal Liability. . = : YOR.
eeeeve ee , (tak Gat & G8 eo Ween Ge seuve pe’ pa - " u
By. J. PR ; = * DB tot eS rer 3 Woolworth’. S4/30106 eoverad tote 18 190-230 Ib mostly his invoking of the Fitth Amend- ty . Maange. ere, «2 1.32 ..Dec. ........1.20%| Sonne Man ... 454 Yale @ Tow .. 98.4 for grade 1810-1838; around | one : : oo H. W. HUTTENLOGHER Agency | BO LETS nang “MH seco] eteey “ay “Zcitee TUEON ST eS te icine saan ee te : x ®- * BR yg ite AB Paty ot 14.40 390-200 Ib 1796-1178; small’ lot'3 us| ee After the shooting, Parker said, H. W. Hutienlochet — : Max E, Kerns
Retice, is hereby ‘even, that 9 Bien-lugay OM — iy HE euadTOO™ AVERAGES to 30 lb dome fo 16.73; larger lets mixed) He said he felt bound “by the|Billy got behind the. wheel pushed 318 Riker Bidg. FE 4-1551
rea os oe bg oretast wee ” aoe By ines slow, mo ya wate fellas cegeet’ ea. Slike Ge Ets |nece bentes and dove tee Deer t i Townshi : ; z KS | week's close: to $0 lower than| © by April 'L. 180T) for the purpose of eleek: Standard Subsidia Noss fuse. 2810 tone Tae 1233 [test Wednesday: ers. steady to 25/C1O code. That code calls for the|used road about a mile and a half tne the (hewing otieete, vis: Previous Day ..2512 1207 24 173 3/0ulls active. string: veslers steady toiremoval of any official of a sub-/from the Willard home. The car)
mre reeents of the University wt 5 d Bi 5 Month Ago ....2479 1205 738 172.8 ; ae aan tee ae — — — ordinate union who invokes the stalled on a logging trail center
struction. Member of the ‘State Board fo pen ig UMS ay an SRT ISS RE several al loads. prime, iins-1838 “To steers hosp Largs _— ecard = ory Segue Ge be abea-|
ra of A ture, State Highway ieee High... $183 is8.1 730 eS snost nich choice. and prime steers | Oe . — othe eed if . = 2 Commissioner CHICAGO (INS) — Standard Oi1|1956 Low .."') 2640 1262 69.6. 171.6) 23-50-25.50: with to average chaice|fore congressional or Tr aul No charge was placed against. NON-PARTISAN OFFICERS ; steers ‘18.75-23 few loads and 16ts\i+og inquiries. ithe boy of Prof. and M
er cuttlces, ot m8 pepreme Court Co, (Indiana) today announced. it eaaer eeeces high weility and standard Holstein nq ae A wm a "whe odaes
One Justice of the Supreme Court tier i planning capital expenditures, 1G. J. Nephier Co.) \T200 tb heifers 23% load ot prime| Further, Beck told reporters ross ran ome qaeaee iM LESMEN to work on 180 N. Saginaw, .
for walk in business J. R. HILTZ| arse N HOUSE CT. YOUNG MEN pay = Realtor — PE 56-0181. flse existing - r- = 2s P.5.A.
en Multiple
’ FORD an wae 2 eo series, Cail for ——- 2 2%. High school graduate.) attractive ye oe ty to do ty
ssleamen for Ford agency in Ox- n roi - rogtam precéeds advancement A bx he = = “=
: fora “pala and commission. ° 4 mana . Contact- Jane wineen. eneepend
Demo turn te good man. A hard TAG SALESMAN | ing ig major part of job.| Service, 406 Pontine State Bank i yorker a , i. money. ae ‘Michigan manufacturer of all — ght salary. tome sme Midg. FE 5-9227. : . ; 8 : s ment oo | ae = E detfrevy. OAkland —- pd ma stan eet poche curity, All modern employe bene- PHYSICIAN SPECIALIST wate of
IP YOU ARE INTERESTED IN| "ePresentation in your area. Won-| fit programe. os, oe evconnn bouss, Ulva pare earning $50 to $100 week working pov moh envelopes.» Sauce HOUSEHOLD nent details, Box #2, Pontiac
DIE Se) STIRS] FINANCE CORP. | ccatcgom reg oxen . 3% 8. Saginaw isn’t it to wilh be a . Box 3 tiac : suits & + Must be experi-|—
: colt and peed family $0 tuvecti- | _ Press. enced. Apply Carolyn Shope, 37
j gate = oer you pe net AND DIEZ ‘
MAKERS | Se. See 258) soins ettiine | Help Wanted Female 7) easel te tine mismatg, i before offered. Manager willing trouble shodting, Ar “ ~~| date, for the annual directory of take time out explain you; © new - . Cut payed. Aitli Need Y the local areas. ' oat wile. ‘appointment | Blue ¥ and in- Irines ou 3 to 4 months of work, excellent ON LY call 2-2318. surance. Pension plan, Also tool| See our ad under Instructions, §.| working conditions. : “
WHY NOT WORK CLOSE TO aid die makers, A Mt.| Univers} Airlines Training Cen-) 4 by only, FE 5.1768. HOME? LIKE TO TRY ? FULL | Clemens . Lapeer : To a.m. ate noon through Fri- ign shift work, @:00 p.m. to| time or part tim.. No experi | Division, 97 Fair 8t., Lapeer. day March 29.
4:30 a.m. ence prain you | hawk 42037. (
cite * new promotional nregram aieuites RY
—Pringe benefits S40 peace’ et bas won cor ons | Medical i ~-Growing company per week 7 oge earned
— lane, program Pommission, ‘$7,500 ~ $15,008 year | Servi tnecme tor mer selected. | CTVice DYXANE Mrone, le Interview phon between 12'noos #755 Rochester Rd, Troy, Michl-| jog § p.m, Tues, & Wed, Mr :
gan. Goxner of at wwe, © len Sonneon FE 8-80 : ‘| Representative =-8* am. ? © - -
y through Friday. LOCAL WELL ESTAB-
8:00 &.m. to 12:00 noon, om Sat-| jished ie Peatles 2 Lake PR HARMACEUTICAL urday. eres. a ight man MANUFACTURER
s80 per week, Pontiac IMMEDIATE ren Sion ae ‘aerate. LOCAL OPENING FOR re tus ae Nd MEDICAL DETAIL MAN AN FOR ORK. DIE rienced. 25420 Halstead Fag 8 ‘
net Se Werae we +o Are, you between the ages
MAN WITB 0 oo Be yen hove ae Ot BS {
MAKERS Must be journeymen or
letters of experience
58 Hours per week
Central Tool & Die Co.
690 ae Rd. TROY TOWNSHI
Must be
Hi the
=
APPLY:
BIRMINGHAM
*
4
Mr.
+ © +» Have had least 4
years of"ANY tad of ties
ance and other benefits
. New York 1, x. ¥.
. \
WRITE IN DETAIL INCLUDING ; _
Dep | BA ND. TO ; records of
B., Mittleman |'-
“faite Fane |
350 Fifth Avenue M.
Disie aes. Gall te per Help Wanted Female 7 yment Agencies 8A
new home
is Pontiee,
P. W. DINNAN _w. HURON
area. Exp.
SALESMAN AT O
TOOL MAKER "Satis. Cok tp. te 6 pai. cniy.| "face chibtncs Werk mae benvee
TOOL MILL HANDS. | aenena ecvtn, We tare tee _teom, Ma's tou bei. 9 and 6. Graebner S) diate placement for you as ite GOOD MeGreger’ Man.» corner uf Cool Avon, Representative. .Call or Ny ye ye
Mig iat Mt _siPe Ra. MMwon | 50. Bee O08. 4 Ay er neetiy shes
HREAD GRINDER TOR. AND COOK, RXP.| Sherees’ ur ean © pr. wk, j Sa am ae - Bae, coery, Soop 5 =
. Rochester . Che ‘
ist eae ex,| Junior Steno. | ss. Ppa ee
et | Clerk Typist i, fo eek Fer.) Men S&eGirls
GIRLS
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY $325
Employment Agencies 84) HEC Sie fx cr. °°
CAREER | "eS"
GIRLS | Ss S= ROCEDTIDNEST Specaiery ... Fa one OORECLERE vs food
ee | ae BOO KEEFER Nandaschine 300 onben Sina akin cael
="——1|Graebner's
__EVELYN | sicuican’s EDW. ARDS LARGEST”
Soe sss. surroundings,
VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE
corres or HIGH PAYING JOBS FOR IN AND
Cc. HERE
6 ;
— 2 hg me elud. 313 Pontiac State Bank Bidg.
SCHOOL ~ a fh} i : tick Coie ie
-
Seti?
Pick & deliver, EM 3-009
1 DAY (SERVICE, DRESS a, TE oe a cPOES a au Sous® PRERUAITIS
| Furniture Reeling 164 16A
I A Johnson
aundry facihties &
a Child welcome. TV. Ds A
en welcome. Cail FE +1473.
FOR RENT SECOND FLOOR APT. come, pony Soule ateerabed, Beer: Base-
bg ge en
Pontise | (TBERTY ST.. LOWER 4 & BATH;
mbpokbrary Anz ay wa & - tom
. 3 & bath, Heat & hot-
see J Bat ea “iat Sa
. All s Hotel Rooms 39. ‘
* Desire A Good Rest? os aati
ated sation § Seg eae Cass Lake 8
ms rag gy Ayn 4 100 ft. waterfront.
included. 8g N'Pe bo eae home
HOTEL AUBURIN |. trement or Rooms Day a FE 46-0476...
pay eet Cooking “ind refrigers lun “Peis | Small Farm on
rae or wae ai of a ine! %
ft. f on West yn y
Manny's , West Huron at .
L LOCATION AVAILABLE ar
“TOVELAND- 188 “ass Lake Rd. Keego
2-485 eel
downtown. or ph. FE 41157.
Gard ults OR
Ri 4 RMS. & BATE. UPPER.
Pei ent 30 8 SATE OPPER. | ~~
ens.
BUY, SELL OR TRADE rn Bia Pag arc ogg tanaet +}
mab eg ~m py made ete.
GEORGE BLAIR ts.
5 a “Lake
BA conve!
vate entr.
bus stop & Mrs: Ne “Was Sees, i. FE
nt: Cees
esac per aoe f ws yo
ADULTS
& shower, convenient
downto’ ONLY,
wo. FE,
bs ork, HINGS eS and + Sh, Li
8-2793.
tation. chliscesineesdintamscne
art & ai BRic == irae
re 8 INSURAN
Pontiae Hard ‘Ploor :
ha OFFICE, MADNTENANCE | VT
FE 44173 after 4 p.m.
| — ooh TAX eeRviCn— | He : te are R. "BACKUS
OR |18
tnd rm. 15 ans 3 6-317
ALL
_Nichotie & ‘Harger_ Co. W. HURON &T
MAHAN: REALTY. Y CO, |
~ A&B TRENCHING | lten‘w"Hunon” >,” Te sane Water line.
ee enn cxavar | Laundry Service 18
n bayipson FE 44410 "s ify Bg A |
_ Moving & Trucking 19
“MSLLENT SERVICE. Reasonable rates
. FE.
RENT A TRUCK Find calling
male
mug & white ‘eek Fe
ala genneaatanmang +
name of Bendy. Reward, ‘FE
5-0534.
ee ae
earnest 113 Bingham
DATE AND AFTER Daren 26,1081, 3 in ae Se ue debts cont:
a ith need
‘Travel Agencies 25A
eUMMER R VACATION
Reservations and Tickets- T LAKES CRUISES ee ete he
« Beattie TRAVEL SERVICE’
oe w. ‘Huron st. FE 8-325!
-_
Wid, Children to Board 26
A GOOD LICENSED HOME. MA
@HiLDREN CARED FOR in licensed home FE 2-8851.
OR ae ao canes
Wid. Household Goods 27
wag
| FEN
et ee ASE ET Ge ae Ce Sl Re ose ie ee | FURNITURE ee
"BOTHERED _
BEWILDERED By all the different prices quoted
on what your ig worth?
FOR YOUR HOME OR UITY
we can get you cash our
and terms are rk
Client wants,
ROY KN. AU UF, Realtor
26% W. Huron OA 86-3339, PE 2-7421
CLIENTS WAITING
Edw. M. Stout, Realtor.
N. Saginaw St. FE 64
™ “Open ves. "th 6:30
LISTINGS WANTED WAITING. now To het CASH F FOR YOUR WE BUY
SLL EQUITIES SMALL EQ’
Leslie R. Middleton ROKER PE 8-6003
SELLING YOUR
HOME?
e in immediate need
bs ie 3 ety, an property
eo Coe voerret Sa
yore takes the — ® from.
. No fog org qraleer at % x» a.
Humphries Realtor FE 47114
Seta two SERVE
Nand Soniracts for re servic by
3 _ ROOM U
Pontiac Motor, vate
bath. Inquire 22 Se. rear of- entr. &
Parke St.
7 aM Per BATH & ENT. HS m 6.
ONE ROOM FOR ONE OR TWO part basement, garage, glassed PE 5-0466. 184 ue Clem- Bed
mes eet ete ae ant ee . ‘ONE NICE SLEEPING ROOM. | arage, natural gas heat, ¢ $9,000 repes. cr .
iG ROOM WITH cmegON INVESTMENT CO antes . ae © School St. | re sass" MI 4-3800/ $1,500 DOWN. VACANT. 2. br. a6 FOR ic oN : separate dinin part base-
LEEP . FOR, Gini oe A ment, large lot. Lake privs.
GRO Mis GLENWOOD $10,750, TERMS. 3 br., basement, ve th TETRIS rom | fees teams. "Botat SLEEPING 16 Mg NEAR AR GEN modern, large LeBarong Farm
Sa * $950 DOWN, & room modern, 3| #1545 DOWN. 3 br., utility room,
sfettang grap cnn |" EE oe a er: west side “DOWN baseme
cual $2 NO “TL | oy Pare < tom, peat ot, gi Seo Son. bie poise. Geet
oss. Dial FE
OFFICE &P RENT,
child | " Main floor. Sa Bae er Rs - Var Welt, “OR 3-135,
ove Heated. Lag y> # ae.
‘BO Woodwart Pontiac. :
For Rent Miscellaneous 42
OUT BUILDING FOR STORAGE
Oy Wal with cement floor,
46 James FE 48-2112.
For Sale Houses 43 ‘ASE. IDEAL Yor | 10-Acre Macsetatahas
Bixee
| peht Office Spec ce_a1| ™ acre.
Needs modernising “Gall work mut Be faber, On
Buy Thru Partridge
List Thru: Partridge
f OWNER: * al aw aly N home. Full
basem ent. Oil heat. Furn. or un-
farn. OR 3-9502.
3 RMS. AND BATH, Gas HEAT. 4 ge Re Ceuple preferred,
TR. — COUPLE.
All utilities furn. Move right in.
$10.50 weekly. MY 2-1864, eves.
Sat. & Sun.
MA Sia enbs or MA: a
ges heat, child
come, ‘nguire at 1188 Taylor Rd.
i ac a _—s aE. Rent How ses Unfurn. 36
ee PRIVATE. EN. $22_wk. FE $-6001.__|9 BeDRMS., WALLED LK. MOD ROOM : rs 4 FP eee a
S eomba, a Ge wah aden .
. Pontiac, MY 23-6186. 3 RM. SMALL
* conaree Gan RATED | AFT. | -EEOROON Ta cE. v5 A EM 3-4207. ¢ MO. OR 31
TTRACTIVE ) & BATH, GARAGE |3 BEDRM LAKE HOME. CON-
a Adults. 3-1943. | tact at 1024 LaSalle. CLEAN AND vi J] ROOM AND BATH HOME IN
ple only entr, E 23-7569. 5 Vacant—$50 pe ee
SASEMENT APT. CLOSE IN. NO | Apply 45 OAKLAND AVE.
drinkers. 165 8. Parke. . House. 1. ANN
GLEAN. PVT 3 ROOMS & BATH. rbor, FE §-6950.
Square Lk Fe sian. 3 ROOMS & BATH
GLEAN APT. (TIL FURN. NO 287 Oakland A
Seeab woe (OOM APT. PRIVATE 6 Mee Gooey LE ] - ah 3 ROOM, APT. : . Ra.
entrance. 50648 5 BA 7
CLEAN MODERN | EFFICIENCY porch, on ornee Lake, Refer-
apt. $15 a week, heat,
10 | eR et ON at Ge 208. EAST SIDE. 3 RMS. & BATH ON ist Henry Miller, Jefferson ;
Rent Houses Furiahed 35
house, not od
"| Open Eves.
RANCH HOME. $10,500 bedrm.
BEDRM. HOME. OAK dnd full basement. Oi fur-
FE ;
7 ACRES 4 RMS. AND BATH.
a om. ?
Ae & bath. 5 rms.
MODERN SOTTAGE, WORKING Se
DRAYTON PLAINS Bowe, eso & ee ty "hocat down. =
| Fooms schools sboppiny area fate 2 bee
ac er! ea laun-
BROS. Phone on 34 est ae OR 3-1872 Will build on your free and
clear 2 bedroom
es with ‘full rier
a koe : OR 31038
Bornes wulame Leke Rd. & Mio_ mse
BY OWNER
WEST SUBURBAN bedroom -
A good Only $7,900 wm , ee Dn.
Attractive 2 bedrm. Sone. oat
as @ whistle. Oak floors th
block from good
. 150 an, Union ‘Lk
ciber fine lakefront hemes in all price ranges.
T. G. Trocke REA EALTOR
1648 Union Lk. Rd.
COZY 1 BEDROOM i No Down Pay ment =|
THELMA'M etm ; ELWOOD
garage Lake
secre ve eS aee, on Ane Bats
5 ACRES—2 BEDRMS. You wil! love this modern home on
The Hw
"til 9 “Sunday 19 to 8 beautifu' 5 - acre
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
2 BEDROOMS-Nice ranch type
with full basement, au-
VERY NICE 9 ROOMS. PVT. ENT. to, oi] heat, corner lot and lo-
& bath. PE 23-5553. ment very clean we. Close | cated west suburban, Full price | Cll
deny CLEAN FuaNtsnED 3 /_' ; . | $9,200 with $1,500 down.
rooms and full bath —orivate—|8 ROOMS, 2 BATHS, COULD
bus—close In. 345 Oakland Ave. rent half as income. $75. Lake BF s = onates
WALKING DISTANCE TO PON- Orton. PE 5-€205. FE 5-8501. ca , large Mving room, ane
tlac Motor . 3 rooms, | CLOSE IN 3 bi 1 large wtility room. geod comfort:
Fades TS Porddna | Sear garage "auc posession ts Pull pce WEST stains APT. 4 #15 month. Fe e108. ‘ $10,400 with terms, to 4 per cent
tms, and bath FE d For RENT: HOUSES APART- Purnished or unfurnished
Rent Apts. . Uatrniched 4) Ze Peps Sey. a Se Sonat pe Irwin
+ROOM AND 1 &ROOM FLA A 4 ® & EBALTOR 269
* Sheree m....2i§ take privileges: toilet. PE 40001, 8 8 PE 60101 or PE
& é location, heat. i 7 BEDROOM . PARTLY FoRN. rei ee North “of Pontiac—this 4 room
sis Pontiac Lx. Ra well built, full basement, is just
ROOM APT, PARTLY FORX. i block, ff “Baldwin. ity of
shade. In * quiet neighborhood.
Bath, heat furn, Pvt.
‘ . INCL, TY. "| South of Rochester, MUlberry
ge Williams & . | _ea6ee.
u ‘ *
loom i eee in- 7 ‘Rent Rooms 37
University 2-9065, —— is ae. FoR LADY WITH coor.
BRAND NEW es FES Balmer just south ot 98 | 7 LARGE SLEEPING RM. DOWN- Qrehara Lake Avenue n, Pvt. ent. PE 40123,
cre rende for occu —oa S ~ ROOM FOR MAN,
at rooms & | a or
oe s all ~ i N
Per: PE 5-8126.
Rooms With Board 38
PLACE A “LOST AD.”
{Call FE 28181 for an_ad
28181 $e! an -ad-writer.
1408, UL [Say Serpe
WHITE
BROS. REALTORS
Phone OR 3-1205 or OR 3-1872
- §660 Dixie Hwy.
Call OR 3-7908.
VETERANS
$250 DOWN
s1980 DOWN yom modern on 1 agre, off mse we West.
- Arnold Real Estate 210 8, Lames A ty
wrens
"perm 3 PER ae a divin
* bath Sere street, landscaped poy ‘tenced. down. ony $800 do
NEAR RLoWwiN— 2
site. home hax full bath, hardwood
la oalnrced full
ogg age reation room wi!
A anced ae ear garage. $10,500,
"$400 Y DOWN ooo |2 drm. full beth. hardwood floors.
5 ACRES—3 BEDRMS. month.
1 acre. 2 bedrooms, bath,
pesemens Oil beat, auto. ao
cae” ee Quoetal Realtor
collect:
i Theine. it viatre xs. good lo
NEWINGHAM 13 ACRES
900. Terms ecasil .
H.C NEWINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Corner Auburn & Crooks Rd.
' PE 8-3002
Marcin s ae bain “THA
“White Bi Bros.
“CLARK $600 DOWN. Starter home. 2 br.,
Eves. ‘til @ Sunday 10 to 8| basement, jarge Jot, $5,000.
BY OWNER, 3 BEDROOM — $950 DOWN. cITy i ‘ br. Base- ee Tent, gus beet. 90.006. :
_pt.- Clarkstonon fet te went Sa ke Pm goo : * ttac i street. Cash to OG. way and garage. $6,450. neene
$7,950, terms, Sub. 2 br. utility Tae eds = porch. Williams
- $1,000 Down. OXFORD. 3 br.-
2 Br. Base- $1,560 DOWN, CITY.
oak floors, Escrow acc. ment,
included. $11,200.
CLARK REAL ESTATE
PP Open Seeewians & Sundays
‘ultiple Listing Service
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE r furnace. ith ets ‘
CU LER REALTY
P. W. DINNAN FE 42517 ow. Huron
5143 Care-Blinabeth RA.
PE 5-1284 or FE 43044
FOh TOWN LIVING AT IT's BEST check “LeChateau
White Bros. Mccel Ph. Fe see or OR 53-1205
KNUDSEN
W ashington Park
bedroom birck ear.
beled po gy rooms, scaped fits 1% car rage with paved drive. *
ably priced—with terms,
W ashington Street Excellent family home in
fine condition. he ena car
WM. H. KNUDSEN
s10 Ponting Stste BAO) Bid FE 44516; Eves. Call 25285
WEST TROQUOIS =. a big
bedrm
erms.
EXC. INVESTMENT 2-room brick income —s =
Weeven St. Available on
aE,
Since 1925 313 West Huron Street
FE 56-0447; Eve.
$1,500 DOWN § ROOM BUNGALOW — Near Tel 3. bedrooms,
Tovey Bae se pigture Sindow &
NEAT BUNGALOW
$6,800 FULL PRICE — Living
room, dining room, modern. kiteh
en ". eating space, 1 bed- 2 ‘ FE 43415
Enclosed & poacsee porch,
basement, 5 Ly
Fenced yard,
-R: Hiltz Realtor
1011 W, Wuron
N ICHOLIE NORTH ASTOR 5ST.
school.
Reasonable
down payment,
NEAR WATKINS LAKE
An excellent new 7
hus 1 baths full bemt.,
reeveway, e. This
home is strictly modern-to-
e-minute- with all of the
latest ideas — materiais. |
sure is home
before you bey elsewhere.
priced at Conserv cuvely
$25,050.
WILLIAMS LAKE AREA +rm. rancher : plus fn” bath & v atility rm. a=
leges. Priced at $10, 300 with terms.
Ce he Most Happy, ro :
PE 54181
= GATEWAYS tol. en oo fe) COMPARE THIS! —
egestas ts] HAPPINESS NICHOLIE ‘Sanrteie, | fea eels ot| WATER FRONTAGE A neering
haniecdomy, your In Excellent community. Dathing Rast
“er SERS | ety en ei : a livin team.
corre fonsen reese) Tesch mies |
oe Dea so NEED A FINANCE:
RE t Tr PAST od To Buy--To Sell 4To Trade FIXER? Order’ Classified \
Eouse a rg any: M AHAN AN, ads to sell, rent, find a
thing — an Ss
38a ACTION. Dial a FE) neat co a _|pood job. VE Z4let ithe
Want Ad number! ele
GALOW, Pull | 2 ‘BEDRM: sone os. om ter heater beautiful — tile
bath oak
Crarksien|
{i ei e,
iad i | ,
For Sele Houses 43 “For Sale Houses 43 |
~- $650 DOWN. <4 * ues ts aPARROCES
: airara B. Keit gg non bos bin rt tee Tae Les rm. dining rm, and beth Ly aan ’
ea ‘Timken, ol trance. Bacri- $400 I DOWN 2 bedroom e Priv. Full price: |
weet 31.800 DOWN ae a Bsa ove & 2- a a type. |° re sa
es ae ee JIM WRIGHT {CLARKSTON -
aac rat Hits sae is 3 er Fer Sale Houses 43 43
SEE THE |
| NORTH STAR HOMES IN CLARKSTON .
GI & FHA TERMS A hm in “4
on ce
RNIVAL 7 5 -
“MILFORD AND ALL | ' LAKE AND SUBURBAN AREA WEST O 3 hod
interior prop-| basement, new
i pking aly ae in, Hs ce REAL ESTATE INC. a oh ene 1 home myERRY E, ADAMS AL ESTA Baz 0 Dale HW as 3 CRAWFORD 4 "AGENCY BROKER 20.6. Main, Clarkston, Mich | O00) ONS ofan -— ‘ < eet My sia cog et et pad MAple 5-821 foares attic os date peivieges = den 3 cebu . ater 8 call ur 1 és THE 0 CIALS OF PONTIAC = i . ry > O° nd at e. 1% tile baths, N _ , , in a SPECIAL Edward. B, Keith Bae ge FE efit “xo MONEY, DOWN = Pontias = "Leche. Located a ey of Pon: _ THE, LAKE | MAN oa F. Se Daily & Sunday 1-7 P.M A JOHNSON, oie say sbell” a = = ‘Wh plus uu enclosed sun 2 car carege with circle -“""" | 1704-S. Tele d yas ite Bros. 4, Sais wake | Nothing Down tre, Las : BERRY ST. FE 42535 i i Pe Sat oc O8 bm wake "sable Saba he td phe Bam ah, th ere | SOXBEMEY ST, , , Me Acres siue + Shenae mum iting toa. Sm 1 bric ome, 3 bed- | : RAY O'NEIL, Realtor A ome iat is 40x 22. Partiy in nice foceien B i in 1983 cons rough, wiring build on my lot ‘Washington Park Sub. oma carport op 2 I]
$9 oF OR sie ae 41 80 da, 58 me ful i Fibergas porch awning, On| Buy Thru Partridge | ¢ ; ~ sores iis'9 73 bedroom btek, matey LARA. CLE eee. | a —. eM EBUILD. | H.W, Bigelow | a i ee'sheS| 12 Thru Partridge Seiten ta ee |e yan ors 9p avewo| CEDAR SHAKES $9,975|" ‘Fe"soue"tr P2"sahs ‘UNION LAKE ment, ot best. gas ho water, | _ Drayton Plains AR Se tee ely or FE | ance Zitlie R. Middleton fitractive 2 bedroom home. wags | © 1957 by WEA Service, tne. “Bier nigh at 8 via awe [o Schuett A S-toomi, Bie Somparion, We bow! 7 NT 2 “7 Smed aa ere Sec RROD
Peak ae este HAYDE ADAMS ichet_ paement end ares) “Let's not crack any old jokes tonight, Dad — particularly | Fanch homes t ced eRe, sok N, SIDE. $1200 Down. Begroom raat wi aba ere at $7890 about Jimmy trying to solve the food surplus problem alone!" NI CHOLIE |x
beseahemt ail ae, host birch Walls. Venetian GgOrS- | well located income "right on pop- Ss ie ct
Bey ed therspes| EveStaPactncs Mer "| Ge zat Wie A | Hew SHAS bs] For Sale Houses 43) For Sale Houses Wy 0 amt on mee cp e build ta : . ee ys ee or.) living room, Eitcbea, full, bath, | ~~~ ine nen | aero nese ore | 2 i ee EM 34200 po sb sc - sig apes cur ‘plans,| AUBURN HEIONTS. quick pos we Sibaocae gissseg jo, Porcl, part pesement| Ruy Thru Partridge | PONTIAC RENTERS ARE, ALL $12,600. $950
: Ponte oe tito dn .d: agetine taxes” anather EMBREE cE & GREGG List Thru Partridge “White Bros. On west : Lave, rom,
ee e yoann Doce. Garage, “Yard is fenced. | Sz" lot, tl, reese se igaen vt tg fs to Model Ph“FE 8.8851 or OR 3-1295 a rai “eater alum, abn POM hose Far cusst| MANO. Terms, 21 pedran needing, work, cay ee ae | bats 24 Acres on Pavement oe 1 ES . ~ is | Rast: }dedrm. home. Osk | 81. Others available. We will giad-| Reef. BX owner. 3 — ’ 1 | With Neat Bungalow . 3 WILLIS M. BREWER = srr tn he] Berea ae Pes | rye Gate | Rete ae | S| seeeertee tre cect] manuaes = tHE re come 6 Em 4 : . ’ " os _ bake pri . % : MA 6-156, FE 60638 FE 6TH J
Job transierred.| shade trees, $9050 Termes) | ee B haeed hg’) Babe godt ae OFFERS at iscatoe ies tae | FoR vite sireet. New, cestomullt gig ty toy 2421 Ivenhoe. : ee -—- o 2 bedrm., 1% baths, oll fur- : é
renee seal iat rns BBs waa Seis tee stowpow | Eanes | et mee ae | Sek cee, Ba ey . : ‘Dress lle ate bate, tat basement, ;-.jmmescuiate . en ee ma £1 eo ‘ ch Nabhan DN Les he be Ag hah from : bedrooms,, ba v 5 eas ' @ work wae es = OO HURO! aa : yh A Ges I ene Wakertord ite. TOS. op hele se NOOSA} - 50 pick up this..good buy al NE EL CO Leal Tevtnince ESE to St Fred's & McCounell| school 3 bedroom brick home on | Model Phi. PR 8-8851 or OR +1205 p— Sp ay — Mad PO 7 | $90 a month. "A real bargain, : _ © emma: So , A Gl—$300 ont floors. Plastered walls. Vene- “BARGAIN, BARGAIN bs * viostet gee 9 "2 bedrm. home with unfinished | Giroux-Franks reation room fireplace, extra at Ooeen HARRINGTON Hl ; tian blinds. with | Sembfintshed flosrs. cae, heat, ends some Sine Rotseom = news L REAL ESTATE, bath. Timken AC heat. Garage. |" gub 3 bedroom brisk ranch, full| ' : a ad ‘Sery sees ond eleant inside ame | 6308 OR. 3-071; © 25.060. Resoment, zotes = - ; Rose § Rose MeLarty, Broker out and can be bought for ealy |= COUNTRY. LIVING — Only 10 win| SE+_ SA, me 4b per Best 2 . ‘ a : =o as : utes from dawntown Pontiae. | oan, E*MOD BASEMEN’ te ; i WRIGHT HOYT - | $2,600 Down Flizabeth Lake Estates Over y- ww eo enon a fee. 1 Mi east. of ys. CLARKSTON - ORION RD. Large : 4 bedrm. home en South | home, Heme ow OF ot yuburn Hejghts. FE 7-0043. Tod $ On Spprox. % Sere | x45 ws ontana "=ALOR 5-0441 ene LB | fear’ = ent, eg Be Large pleasant living room with DRM. MODERN HOUSE ON ay
Could ‘be used as. 40h bedroom. Eves. MY 2.106 SACHIFICE. Ovner + | gg Tags. Priced right. $10,000 3B Aters, i sin ‘boautifel wel arranged | Peo geod Romer | oe The large kitchen has dining : e Peete hose hie tt. henner | $4,000 Down |. ; Kitchen Oil furnece. A stesi at RW. DINNAN {| HURON GARDENS
tea Was “Secanat ts | yy SASO,DOWN «| Eat ite rm, Semi ah |" a ater, icy tron rere ws fe gon] Soeae ge, Sen Living room & dining room.| AVE YOUR CHOICE OF es oun tq tet una lass Cais | * bees al Storms and | - [MACEDAY LAKE ~ | Priviieges. | MES {BORM, wOUsE. | = lock from. Buren Shady - yard. Priced er? wy. ir closets. A real buy. Only §2-| se Anderson | 3450 Winderoft Drive Attractive ranch ia. Near school, store, Ree) Oe Pull es ae en Stenr. A", PO MovEan. 318 down’ to “GI mortgage. $82 | dows. Beautifu eanaeabed, [In Otter Hills | {anh On iarge bigh | well | fondle, PE 4862.” furnace, and gee Waler Pe C. HAYDEN, Realtor | atu Locations, 4 ma. includes taxes - many extras. § AT baseunsa Wiaeed eae | Tot +e 4 heater.’ Priced for quick
SNe Spee eres, 7 “ HOYT REALTY | Se ors ssa 's team renast ron rpate ti esis | = a ” . r r $ 5 GAS HEAT z R. - J. Vv ALUET, Realtor a telegraph ® 2 os ult a re This Priced to sell at $31,500. NORTH SIDE
“3 8 600d ranch house MOLTIELE Listing seavice’ | BARGAIN, BARGAIN | Seated olf’ iti’? | 2442 Square Lake Rd. : oe ad comm bebe, one year ‘oid ats moderate price. | OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL #:30 Semi-finished. 3 bedrm. ranch JERRYE Al E. °F ADAMS In Pine Lake Manor “jecsted ‘on lerge level, tot en i, three bed TN: ome pawous “ Your choice of several at- Oak foors, of] furnace, elec. “| fooms, tiled bath & utility room. | $600 DOWN sheet reoked. wired, also. ua: | 3172 Ww. tera Open 99 tractive 3 or 4 bedroom trie water, heater snd new "| Filed hoors, crapes, alum. storms | {Meee enn pen Brit water tank. total Brice. z re. Joges included. acailent™ E low “priest 'ér.abb. "Mass ug ONLY ComTs || Slum." awnings Corner iota | Moh me IM WRIGHT oe "eC , > bona, “ys Bars Ei¥inG| Gres Deiee hy esis alasees or | C. HOUSTON: REALTY | REALTOR Sylvan Lake Area. CLARKSTON- - LOT, 100 x 150 off winiams Lake Re | 7 On ae. ey oud OO “White Bros. 2214 Avondale we have ie cont aoe 2 KUSCHELL wrtthLD IN ioe aos when | NORTH 1 END | COMPARE pa A ECHATEAT BE. | Model Ph. FE 8.6851 or OR 3-1295 , attractive, 3 bedroom | ranch style home with full MI @4b" ” ©1528) easy walking distance of shop- rm. home with basement. O48 | fore you ps a os t, | coer Rag Syn " ping center @ schools, Living * turning, Sn et. Finteh | White Bros. : home on oe eee | gation, Overigehing | private ot WILLIAMS LAKE gg ad = > aoe a gg NEW HOMES at $15, 750— | lake, Priced to only : Stthey Model Ph. FE 82051 of OR 3-195 ' Terms to sui 96.980 with $1,600 2 starter eed sy Es ee oe. Near Crescent. New. 2 bdrm, bun- —————
: weatled section. oak floors. aes 1% car sarees. e e.F = MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE . Conmfortable Ranch Ww ATKINS LAKE RD. , viele Gwar toes Gown," | SP"ihaae trons. Pail pree stages. | PONTIAC REALTY | ES 5 ea ORTH SIDE |. | 1349 Avondale | hontg bul im 1004 on inte . FP C W Ressenst oe Seren, obese | 137 _Ralewsn FE 65-4275 . Bewer & rater wT jmmotials pes 027.500 atte torms, ap tens| jandesaped Set. ant
3 oc od ( ‘0 v. ocd Baldwin Ave. p session. $7, $900 down. home. ‘ ~ ey a
ore: \ ‘. PAYMENT ‘ DRAYTON PLAINS and sersens. All at the low a1) LOW DN. gsi. with by Owner has pene, par. WEST SIDE Bow 4 yeom madera. Lake pees | On the Lakefront } and ly payments tn ere = : oe *! Lovely 3 bedroom brick with full| 1 ARE A Gl-and ten’ ga b00 good | 2483 Pontiac Drive elude tenes . : & Mee covamte (ed beh we. Pree oS Gaecsnent ont aeetl Gah Bn ey. BF _ ing. $5,960. = spacious kitchen large din- ¢ es . buy at this price, Reasonable A - ing area. Sliding closet plastered walls, wall-to-wall car- costs, this clean, 2 doxn home with full baseme Edw. M. Stout, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | Yehetian bude, oak Doers, fal eting, and. rapes. Fully, land. om, home can be WILLIAMS LAKE rt ; TN, w St. Ph. FE 54168 April Showers heater, See” storma £ screens sise Vek GO Sara. = +B i oe po Bay etn Sioa Sylvan Manor “Bud et : Will bring the May Quwers that) Pered ureesS won't ast og} COLONIAL HILLS ment and 1 car garage. Bre Nice beach. §7,- a3 get, Siake’ privilege bome of le bow deen Beare ® room home—iocated | _Fwil price $8,000, why NSE Gown, _ Priced at $16 R her’ ANNI 2s bal & block trom the lake. 13) K. G. HE} EAD ee ee em ert | epemen sg seem: | 8 CO | eee al oe anecner Soni “ip Basement.” 2 ear em fruit trees ton on this large lot. 192 &, Huron St. FR +004! room, with ledgerock fireplace AROUND THE CORNER ~ Sets SS al lee 1266 North Cas | Tage, ¢
tage od ‘many other features. |—Evt- PE SO PE 2011 pee peartn Pas home is ex-| oifing, if you enjoy’ these ving room. $1,000 with $1.10 | | ower Straits Lake hosts Case R. D. ka Broker : OFFERS
Sah new for reer SOPs acetaTR rosamaaio Giron erste tase fervent ae me | mm JOSLYN S300, soe tal pees. ft BUILT ON YOUR LOT | Stee late Be. Pm cn 2-Family—West 4 Seteet kitshon, some Puloeet conven tas pen ceown ing and en, . mice 4 vem large lot with 8454 $1.200 down— | -$ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Soca ind an, Cosiog street. ¢ The Long Look fo basement, ‘with glove nd re-| see by making an Immediate tn-| Tita” apace, 3. bears. full pasement. “Oa eat $4,880 Call no for appottment te 9975 A Raise? rooms, bath up. ‘Bach rent. a teh is Ke “front ‘nome Full price only ¥0,008 with terms N PAYMENT! fie beth. Piastered Fics: * BLAINE iy eae are : Want A Raise of 13 zooms Saad ten oe Eeittes, "Ou ee ve ‘ Must > beth Lake Estates. dg room moderm. Large living rm. 3 an ; rt re were ry ‘siieee' .
| Se athog ay ES Humphries Cie ee cea | ect wie ro dabsber foams epee, Ait ge ab oe = sett ene e > a aT Ore RON-Ot~ LOANS $000. to, 15th. me ere: ak-Orebee ar. , Sow ieee | __'_ OPEN EVE. “TIL 9 1. 3 wit i mie est of Pontiac vous | NEW EFATIO TA POR LEASE AL SEAL bomen, geneel ca ast ‘a
BROS. We Sil vet street and number lease ‘Call PE 2-013) 2. For home or im-
for quick sale at only $17,800 with HO am... or _enclese tension leaf table. PE —lisms somigigngenigreetearmemteenar | me ie. | sede Oise Hey, $5,700 rine a ment:| gow town om reaps | | Se guy, gmueeiet,| | O12 Felt Base Rugs $595 ~" New Furnitare ALL STEEL FENCE Wirwleta. te toner |
Open Bren. "th & beter 1 te Siem a on DGE " “ye 4ems| 5. 14 rental rooms, 16 beds, plus) 7 Sar : ee : Prices Cut _Fe toast ot. ae tone colors. Sas = ; :
UPPER STRAITS BEACH ee ] i for. old, "and new. fursiture. 5 __ Pontiac or Phone PE j 4% Ft. Wall Tile le tbc j By Ee toss] A h alt Til red. O90 3 gait, Aad Sale Sporting Goods 65
privileges — DAMS casy living for "We right Dery. s RUBBER BASE PAINT, G. $3.73 | Key iperepring mattresses... 516.98 spna UG | BARNES HARDWARE ———~ Ww. a, " meaLton | only $1,900 down and take over| Call for further information Con: wage 55 GUAR. HOUSE PAINT, G. $1.95) } drawer unfinished chest... $1050) = ,nussTRONG Ox0x% INCH | 142 W. Huron St. 1 DOUBLE 2 o PE 5-9532 pis fa s UE ED, OF SHEN HE WE. | on we = Syera, 141 W. Huron, PE 43064 New apt. gas stove iin $45 F SOR SHOP ape eres ase i single barrel ren in
bedroom WE TRADE, BUY AND SELL distance of | **, ear Be Ay EP re: LOO — a ee ; For Sale Resort Prop. 44A EE e house, ‘ete, ‘Sie 4 uae ee Penile Most be. free — WALTON TV a TA ERRE 2 eres ope rt eae 22$ Merevandiae, 88 Dine Hey. * wered shone. Bobby Toumna-
. ADA 752 W. Huron Phone FE 41557) Auburn , te Pontiac w ti 1048. Saginaw RNITY: 9.5623 PE 54230 : Plains. ;
CABINS 302 Auburn Ave 43383 7A Press Box if. ; Pm. c SUN OIL CO. ; its CU. FT. PAK-A-WAY PREEZ-| NEW HP. REPRIG19 PER CENT AUTO. WATER HEA va. Buy, sell, trede, BurrShell, 375
arte, on. Fis] Ontnnde 33008 FE sa?) oo praitbie, new, enter cow | ‘SS Me SA CADILLACS | 9 Stat we: | Sat at ENG SEM S| Sees tap tun ei po “y_| migragpang rove: ror Errrsen, mye, ho hain, minh recat | Sikri Feay Seacetec | te fea tttis “p Pod | md tng Rte oro | ORE nese RACH | Evycawi OA Hoanen i” tal : '. | ments, OR : Cond ” Mavislr 6-210} —* . a a cet arr
Gate Sees ae Py re Paice | Re eee Eat Sino | MG we | eA mn see Tees) © Sheetrock _[agiaduatt Phe oe oem "Fk San Be cases + rece poate SOT Bancial aid available, Call Mr-| Douettallet EM’ Sasi or “Pe | “ARG iG-¥OG, WANT |" weed very inne oni | EE, Oi, Kecge Sport & Toy og 810.98 iwonser Drive, Pontiac WF ~- FI. - Ribolin, dazs. Det. TH 29100:| Some PE CAN BE FOUND| way. floor lamp, practically new. | — 822° Sete 4x8 Sheet t $1 35 | hia tect sow ah FuRMIsiTED COTAGE OF LONG! Pee oe xi tes | ALUMINOM Wes, ae a Le so tot | Germ ke ag | LR at | wie pybeios Reg. $17.96" Johnson
cot tee A Wtte out of ‘be way. but « lot | QUEEN ANN DINING HMC SUITE. mished. mode : ;
SS ecm Melee ein, me ihm | eee | Sate eee | Tae cme asin | ee eee yA « $B IN pe ae ees $5,000, terms. : less for) ment home, poultry i \ Db” in oO OF VALUE ON awrs, and water \e : ELEC. i . — donetite per tag .._..... 3004 A paid dear garage. This 83 acres lo-| TO SEE DOWN Pay.| Bathroom chests, > SY. Gat. Gonp tocma, alanect BARGAIN SALE 1 am, iia
“JERRY E. ADAMS Oe investment 1 ] MENT ON LATE MODEL Cana y owner Noga ym Digg age Bog Lally RoR Ee Se New oak flooring, No.3 . $85 per M atte o ole ae =, ees $811
3172 W. Meron adie qa og, OO ee emp eton panoaie 7 ; . OR TY sets rads "rage, Gina room “Ail, makes, guaranteed. ip | 24's, © te 30", Ge ft, or O60 hey Fee Ay ite” pie be wr sis | Sand, Gravel & Dirt 06
gee__.emee| Roy Annett Inc.| tte nce | eer ete Hee, | Ged ser Gok’ Sad MP sepomnsromycaprenums|fufend emo ce he) Mat | a Water, basement opportunt ; bedroom modern. Lake privi- |. a sy 1955 models, one of Americ bet
KSPR BSR habia Biles en Sy SA | SSO Suet nd | IERTAND Patz ia Pon eh Er paca eg eee |e greet | MA RIDER: MONEE tet todato
For Sale Lots —_ 46/Sale Business Property 49| text or of Basin i sei oe eedia ieee lacie f acres of tree | 35 Other pate ayers STATURE 6 Fr. RECESSED: BURMEISTER Leaded ® pa F ~ Oe sion, re +0201 = - 5 - 5, i —_
} ACRE WOODED LOT IN OAK/ig0 Pr. aoe on mont-| K. L. Templeton, Realtor i dise or 7 we a. OPEN MON. - SAT. #70 8 Attachments. Round bobbin. 14.98, Stall showers, $34.45. Norhern Lumber | Co. | ist Baigwin
Weed eae. +30) calm or lease. PE 2-0432. 20 rd mt. fe +n A, oot tee mites 1 of Fenting or } mie rE &- Will bring to Lake Ave. Poatiac st fa ne | 21 TOP SG. CROSRED BORE. bw. FE 30 desk 4 i ae _ | SATHROOM FIXTURES YOUNOS-| _, Telesranb ran pavilggee ee Union Lake} | WE COVER ; | a aise Aue | GINGER ELECTRIC “PORTABLE | town itches. of sis fernsces 20008 —-___“etbatne| FU bafid or wie bala with prt on Union Lake. gurry Ix HOUSE & at | 5 Bxcellent with attach-| Mot water and stesm boilers, SPECIAL i TOP. Soil, "Rice BCAGR $650 cash. 34285, 3,600 SO. FT ’ THE STATE late model car of | Al ‘and reverse stitch, $30.50.| ments. Fee over balance. $1.25| sutomatic water heater, hard-/|..., Sand, grave! dirt. MODERN 0 SO. 1 pputable z ¢. Peer pe Se. « $1, se B | ‘ ; Par. os $1.25 Wk. Cal FE Mise va tee ware, Soe supplies. Crock “wer ane Pi oo Mm. Tur Bennett. FE
business or é - nee. . 8 Appliance, a. CHINE : = black REDWOOD: energy
ADAMS: s*rimahorany .panelied ‘offices, “4 Be) Eisiot "shan sag trout | Moe Revel. Sisepe 4. “Frage tot | Mad. CWILE BRING T0'¥ Me | Paint “and scot a Keptens Ser Bs” x 10" Siding. pind, rolled cow masure, Choose from city of suburban.| Cupy one, lease the other. $44,000; | terms. This is opmenies. sell for smal ia Sepak | Ben antiques. | STOVES: BOvGHT SOLD. Ex. ae keiowTs sv fare, In6's, date, det's she S0t's. | SANE HON ROAD GRAVEL 3 jote from Fis0 up to S808 pere,| venemle terme. Will take free nad cleat property | _Sehiek's. MY gti. | ok te see gene pre EVERYiNING To ‘biLD 4. Joad delivered, $7. Sppciaite- bere and) everywhere: Call i cs land conmrast sor vert. MODE ous choice, ts Days, Ml Fei STURDY SPICE DINING GUTTE. | At Per sie, dewp. OR 2A BLACKETTE’S Bt S.gh Tere Tresks ieeted ¥ RECLAIMED — AL
bished. lake haat te 1939 Humphries ICE CREAM MANUFACTURING Ty) hk 3 VAN WELT. pice Kelvinator etrie,'S Elec- eevee 5 ve Sin. GUAR. benriis wamcerme ae tee en OPO *¢
down, Walters Lake—extra 4 Resltor FE 4-7114| $80, soda ber, 35x80 masonry +1385 ‘Masters stove & mise. Hems.| £161 Commérce Rd. EM 34 21¢5 W. @ MILE RD. MA s-set1 COW MANURE, : toctates ses REALTY io Teleprerh Eves, | building. sutiful living quarters. WEST SIDE 3 BEDROOM 2 mn faAbe Siscraie geen $495 | som ae o | Sesigies. Brick Ba. | Orie PLY,
Duilang csen afta. vd ‘ fae res, Sareer shop. K List Thru Partridge Snell home, FE OG. | ag 1.80. a WYMAN'S <5 om Feet vases Sees Wa carry a complete, live of Gna vi ONE AND =
: Otter-Syivan| room yecant store. ‘ ROT! : ; 1368. doors — windows : Woolard. PE 52700. |
Sie ee go | ececige | Sale Land Contracts 82} “T"E2 DN [) P| Segeatte mcr Som | at noe meepes | RE apm reek gage | Fania fale" oh tiie ar ee — Patrice ; after AF — thines Far s-son.” - r o_ fren ge. nyt pitierior Paints ‘rank sabi fh URE on ps 7 OR § YD
s9 Goat aga we he * ero Borg, it ned ay I YOUR 5 $ $ what yous SD.'meres on” "Bre. ond Ott Hews. FE Font “HB, Monro Hiei Co. 1005) CASH PDE FORMTTORE sya taghiand ha’ (hse) GR 37009 | Willow & Lock Haven, PE 24700 | ote Pee mae LOSS oa jee e, SE : : :
% BEAUT. LOTS IN EVERGREEN —"*t SS" jean at omcread WORK for YOU. | —figurban ranch with: lots of the new ce io $10. FES USED GAS RANGE. CLINTON OUTBOARD, ‘iste — Talbott. Lumber yg eg $3 on FS. j We have both large and smell) {3'T0s. Youll Mike me lecre | SLOND RM. BRAND NEW a teks sales 4 SERVICE the, trucking. & mortar. |
ef irik "Sana tr ‘doe! SESS EASE) SESE cee sors ti. am | USED TRADEIN Ser saci omgon | sas | ao gue er $ ' Dix Tl ge Sou re bop. ask Ask | tor privileges on — nag a A, eae .: ‘DEPT. “is tke wee Ges Dn a ae tral supplies 1p08 Batland Ave, ROAD OE Sah
- > BUILD NOW wan, on co wee | tee seem Fe ties Reation | Su eric eben | face Fotliaresh Grntra Se | eset sc ie Fa ssa Oe Oe | Tours, vsg VALUE Gh sani, Week air Call FE boa Mill Estimates 't6_E Walton" Open_Eves. SANS WEW WECCRT SaTERETE | Poe, Term, ofl bester:...--- 2 | CRAPrEan eT Taree hae :| SLAG “FoR "34 iERBERT C1 avis" US. BLDG. Bat m sey fie per'eks 9 Sauer |Bateepst Sale ca aiid saree dinoce bell FE Oi. + Sete ‘and cual $08" valve, | 78? #9 load. PE 61471 ex a ER C. DA’ a HOME — B L. Money to Loan 53 e an 3 Eek BO ny See preg Rage ®t, OR. 34147,| Srichignw“Ptanne See eee. Wood, Coal & Fuel 67 190 Pontiee Lake Ré At} Hore’ on oeiomnading eqpocven! | __teate Uswaced Leneetey | Se Appiianes,’ ot Uekiana,” Maytag ‘seettc er... ”'? $0038 | ENGAGEMENT RING AND WED-|_ chard’ Lake Ave. ere cunets Gall Fa | Sma rien ore RROW Kampsen Beary ER, mS BEYRO duns | Wif sctvretsonable. On Seint| || USED DEPT. eae Side wood “tpsetway i . 300 InsiDE Cit “main street es west VITH pS 125 Wk a 5 yr. guarantee, THOMAS ECONOMY Ask for Ron, z Maytag auto washer.. “ne el o2",.2' nd ate. ae ce en mete rect oO cin “hal I Sie" goats tas aan ; Frigidaire auto............... $3:53 & ;
m rtrid pe cncggg Fagen Bags Fi oe Ran CONFIDENCE - #1566. Coronet. FURNITURE CO. Em ire Norge retrig ioc... .0... $09.30 | SLAB ap DELIVERED. 98 uy Thea Partridge wand. full Tt peo" teaee Dees en (REALTORS FR 40GB Sethe ap p bate ‘model alec tangs... g10.80 | "LAS, WOSB,,,|
List Thru Pa baw yay ees poration is America’s oldest and Sn nee eee Pootlac, Michigan ___| 2600 Union Lk, Wd. at Commerce | ESsy, spin dry washer....... a L eet Teme sisteie and will | ‘argest finance company becked | 3778. Telegraph __Eves: and Sun. | FE 26103 tor free demonstration. | O5ED REPRIO............. 395 | ere, pare Mast tan CTAYTON'Ss ™ ‘Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68
ae | acme. Saveclga wet may barrew SP. te $500 it you) ta the chy and. oe, i wah ate sare Et SAVERPORT Bo GRAIN Lame tat, : Phe WINDOW AND TRIM R. | PURNITURE & APPLIANCES |A BLUE SPRUCE FOR YOU. a ee tables. “Mise, cbsire, FE | Rollaway bed with mattress $16.95 Tne Series, Songs trom.’ $535 | REGO BARBOR PE 53-6474 | Also Biackhill and Norway, Pine,
. steady is NEAR AUBURN Herons, * WARD r PARTRIDGE — ge Ba Esme, ie of Pate te = Fetes. Te
day ; Interior door jambs ........ $3. borvitae. Juni Concolor fir.
proximately i sere, i000, s2b0 REALTOR, FE 43581 = Hy ig 3 fast. = ment. meALrons a en, en eee LORD'S WAREHOUSE Deer & window Re ho eee eee ge tools ‘and ee be ig "922 ‘Ble “Slesth
ee ome 3 Be ce Bae : a Sliding windows from ||... tank with Dowex, Used 5 W. of erce Village, stink as 7 8. 1050 W. HURON ST. Pont Susancid: Windaen:. ; ~ Simmons r z Ak-| FAMOUS FLEETWOOD cust mos. $195. Private party. iy mites BE. of Witom Ra. end
ine five sd e ¥ feta for > FRONTAGE | C ; reliable older car and you as| fehio ond phone. = ae Fe fast set. Good cond. FE 5-1496.| saws, Oregon chain, Penfield _§-1100_except Sun Duck Lake Rd. intersection. Open
building price, $1,960, _ pay ‘ : 4.50
aw ans m+
REA. | D&TS Dew & Used. Michigan Chain| WOOD AND ALUMINUM COMBI-| every day 8 te 7. MU 49038, . MY . | mation doors windows. SRAVEL ion
$250 down, New commercial wince att) 3% w ot, he Kay Big. Guise orrtie Lane: : -| “sonable. FE. §3175. Finer guauiry 3 FE BATE at | 7.4 se _ | GRAVEL CONTRACTORS — 106
To Buy—To Sell=To Insure work room, wited for henry eau ~~ Buckner | Castomers _iiodet Wenltgr."Om passe, © Y* | 8. OF 2 ovata | tonal witn tic pump, | $0 fi B grede toilets, 41885 | BENSON LUMBER CO. | _Pisveau sae.” os : ees :
autom 214.95; hand
roads 129.50 value, $60.05. Michigan! pasits, Thomp- | YOUNGSTOWN C: SINK. : Taree fo frootage Very" reason: A Fiuoreseent se3 Orchard Lake ws. niealbinind a ase valle, 98-60 pasar aol, dine rene er - | Sone terme, H F lk —treeee ANDING SEAS | several 42" and ay” maiels, Wan | it, manle, e diameter. z Lavend appy OLKS 31x33 double sinks .......... 695 | Sod base cabinets at extracrd:| 1'2” to 2” available any amount. Dorothy Snyder oe AUTOMATICALLY Washbow!s ** gues — Retail. or whoessle r ‘Jeon. Buckner's Emy ve with « DISHWASHER NEEDS colored bath sets with trim. |Atuex complete “cspiay rooms | ®™¢ shrubs, all
BEV, TMA | pa seb a com. | Fh ue Seer pees wo ucuains | Waa ees aee rt nite ey | set bey pining seit, ies | PONTIAP, bgnuegarma 1108 W.. Huron PE 2-0269 — were ‘courtesy ‘and Kodnees are ponie TRIAL 18. Saginaw ‘Pe $2100) fer, Fe ‘ FE 5-077 or FE 6-906
Pec theta Kava ay UNE MIRAGLEOF | Smee a at a ge ge a ee Fg | oo De It Yourself 61| fem virus free stoek-. Leading Foe Sate Acreage 7) W. HURON STREET | furs bepp nen by arrengine Tor WAYNE GABERT'S | poanaces—on— inka. nw SMO ano | —aritiee eliors. MU $48 4 Sige ge a gg 8 A -3 Lod ME tals we ‘TV and Appliance Sale. | Sue Fegesar Momgti, cm: BOXt AND Tuoon saxpen, ror-| | For Sale Pets 68 — pond Toga bee r- ee auto. Washer ......... 99 PONTIAC aie AND ers Steamers, etc. FE 5-314 240 2 MALE PURE. & BARD LE
a na Siaroe west ot mot tele to $500, tip to 24 months washer HEA Palast Ate RECT pup ta Ne Mer 4
~Bamicmabags| St -| BUCKNER ros Se
| DON'T PASS, UP} 2 MONEY Sell
+) PRED SPRAYERS, DONT Wisi FoR - Open Sunday MONEY! ) Gy Noy
BRO We o sell, rent, bu 9
dial FE 28181, — after 6:00
Strathmore
four chairs; butfet Good tana =
eae p too y ht i og +:
phe HARDW. PR 30230 fg a Fe { S i i - “ ft Ze 9 4 sistas ce Bee! Bh poy ws r fe Bacay ae leg { r . Meet f * eo : ee . ree E ae | z ‘ i ay ;
“| . ae i 2 Z Lae Races ES)
ee one PONTIAC PRES, PusspAay, MARCH $6 19H) |
Sale Firm Equipment 76{ Au s0/° For Sale Trucks 90) FUNNY BUSINESS — 7 He __For Sale Cars 91
Bolens & wh ga trac- of
{CHEVY %-TON PICKUP ‘1054 ) owner, in +
im every CLAP AMO APE ALA ARE atin sail
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MUST SELL THESE BEAUTIFUL respect, full year lt | 227-7 } :
asa WaUlPuenr Piglet hue "hanes |ZZz ZS Motor Sales S301 Dixie Hwy OR THN , FE 2.2361. ois
vee DUMP TR : - 3 | PIG FROM 4 BiG SELECTION «PSUS, Crane Chrysler - Plymouth
1954 ONE-TON V ima, purwouns, Raa 2003 spose eq ent at the John Deere Deal ip in
A Davis
: : “NEW CAR TRADE-INS TODAY! ‘ ‘9g Chev, 2 ¢r, 4 Gr.
: ‘gow | USED TRACTORS. box ‘with high frame and. canvas 1996 Dodge Royal, Lancer hardtop. PLYMOUTH ‘Se ord, pansonrer. "We Auto,
asd Auiyara, Pi enna ind pv vocl sean! ml well! ~ an : : Seowrsemn contin eo ss, ootee oe oe a hee aan Rambler ;
Fes eneg wy terenes| See Us Today , mp | ou sae ws Feget tnt, §, son] So nl te HURON MTR. SALES , training ee Us Today | beeen : tution tnt oe - 'TR, SALES.
Fantatte coiknibe BUF aoe ab | Wormeasn. Gen @iaecous und . Seats e Tine SALES “Pil lnenss Sebo Teen Hanes Vee, | 1954 Buick Super, 4 dr. Dyna. R & $395 nee aay
3 : sinniaka sitter since New Idea. ere) tines. oe ee gt . . H. W.W, tires. : oc an we bate USED CARS AV.
. CANARIES, CaGES..Y HOUGHTEN & SON | Traded in Ry By By —Mae_! ™~ | i961 Buick Guper Herdtop. - S hutz Motors
¥ oe Fi Se oo sae_M._ Main OL (eral Bechester | El gaytet 0m OF Bleed or“ Pomp. 15 fom. same Case.) oN "T | 1953 Plymouth 4-door, R & Hf NORTH CHEVROLET Sp - rae = mie Foncr'ans | "QR SRasMas Eue™’| “ED. WILLIAMS — |iage "were reneron a [h*. \ puus transrontaniow | 1000S. Woodward Ave. |i elau"OOPMARP opens Ms : a carded 3 |.Auctim Sele 77) SS See elo — a SPECIALS BIRMINGHAM —— |” powrido #78 CATALINA,
Dean cigs oamaee, mage| “FRA, MARGE at | oa cere | Seki ey aa Open Evenings—Please |-oomean Bg Wow | Sania gi ne at "4 7 miles west | CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ns h 5141 -Auto. trans. 44. eee y . be
| plaimccnoceee a-uowrse | remastered erpton ana'or't| Stk hans, "Wsct" phase ME| Sposa, ‘ve peer on wo 2 hong, MAple 5 Skisron|#, PLYMOUTH, OOO COND.| Ss “ui a83" crane tk Ma er. PE $0131. | oi north to 2730 Hickory Ridge =. - + ‘ a. ] 1950 ELYMOUTS. CLOe Cours. Se PONTIAC EXECUTIVE CARS
Hay, Grain & Feed 71| “i “trscor’ win’ live power, |, Sale Motor Scooters -82) Tiqcgking Ch 1955 Sown; assume payments of $13.44 O $900 een arperocrce one wer trol, RoDomatic, used very | 0 s Hf eV. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Parks. MId- UP T ger & OND CUTTING ALFALFA a{ Hts. 19@° JD "B" tinctor with | 199 CUSHMAN SCOOTER. GOOD Dixie Highway at MIs | ~ ‘ FORD _ | West 68580. Harold ‘Turner Ford. : 3 elover, ttc _& thc. Cassan.| Dower BM, JD tele inch plow. | cond, FE $313. waite 650m Open nites “til © mat . a : DISCOUNT : D CURTING, ToraL | Batsr'"tys ait'wire te| For Sale Motorcycles &3 |) 70%, RICKER. “a FORD. $100, | 4-TON STAKE - 33 DESOTO ——| os TR omene, t)
: tractor | 1983 ase am vt we weaeen BtsGOE thew vector ne $1350 ~ ' Mery cleat, FE 42004. 5
: | ca Pi aes hee i, winch with “Stop worrying — by the time you pay my fee your in- : - 49 PLYMOUTI a Fe PONTIAC, 7 DR. 8, RAH, GOOD
Panty RE EEE| Seow eGo oe ke | come tx wil came outatabwerfigue!” | | LARRY. Toepa sess ame
$145 - v. ii STUDEBAKER TON P-UP | ~~ ee R FORD DEALER : ciao asle "Radio. & heat : For : iy . Looks ood. Runs - FE . - £ 3 Sale Cars - OL Ou eT : } er. as CA 4
_ For Sale Bicycles 84) 413. camiotel Dove’ esl or Sale Cars 91 or 9 BRAID Shug sad VAN DYKE, NEAR
NEAR 20 agen
ae ,OTRL'S BICYCLE, $30, a0" | MILE. SENSATIONAL | Safe Buy Used Cars |'57 JAGUAR CONVERT. SALES itsi PONTIAC, RADIO AND HEAT.
___For Sale Cars 91) C CENTRAL __ | asim Seve mites tite new. Fe gor Sim Whe wal’ ree, Ne. mecey
|S HP, OUTBOARD MOTOR. | CAREKER SODGE SALES PONTIAC’S ONLY | 8_W._ Huron Fe ee NOTE sold Turner Port eaik—HY-
erates good | _ $25. PE S206. ee Ses van DEE EAR ILE S ALE LINCOLN. Mitse ee Sots, | CONDITION. EVERYBODY'S CAFDIT 18 GOOD | Mitamatic, most accessories, PE
if WoLVERIn ak cunt” saat EVERYBODYS CREDIT Ip GOOD 1951 ¥ CLUB COUPE. T= 9S Eo JONES 5 SaaThe FIVE FARGENOER
eo om eae a MERCURY thet SE fay SEE SQlS ts eee 7 |. ‘97 CHEV. cas DEALER CER V ge ee 8% 2) WILL ACCEPT _
1 Demos. and Courtesy Cars va sass HIGH VALUE | thee gunn, cenaefan “gas
‘TR a 7 SR Gvraatate LOW PRICES terms. a IST SALE FOR’S7 COM). Walls. Real itarn. ah. 2es CARE: | pawe over FoR a nock| ~ BILL. SPENCE
| Rocheste beeen — Brig, Keka # tne ‘ 56 Buick Roadmaster 2 Oauiand ve. =P Sam
ee ee compere 199 __.on TUR CAR Bown | “nadia a Beater Orve, w-wals, | 1°35 Olds. 98 Holiday | “some, aaa 5 " 38g RD. FMT GERBER AL. : : peccraasld os : pw KAN DYKE NEBR 20 MILE. we Orion otor ie
age [ico GLELO “kEaTED ‘Gakiand myer} NORTH CHEVROLET ilisnest "Prades — Lowest Yerms ae ‘SF: ; PO aso pepe aeRO TR Eee ME BEES nena
mney wed sorae Wil Mae | SAVDNG OLE MT Pane wice | “= Cora Fee Meese =H | IQQOS Woodward Ave. | taty'apeamnsom or. cy | We Will Trade SS BuickRiviers. | SWerertinite. as OLive aise SS Care ee t| . sasnwaRE BIRMINGHAM — | 2oW OVEREEAD'Ldcaniok | = Up or Down ‘SA Studebaker Coupe. | , WestSide Used Care AEE MACHINERT AUCTION | ot Big’ Beaver and’ % ‘mile Wi. (2187 8, Telegraph Rd. PE $2002 se We want buyers séeking Sevings| ister model car for your-equity .|’53 Olds S. 88 4 Door Jaakos'b' modele to coeme from, “March 20, at 10:36| of Ra.) on Sat. Mar. 30, | Sunday 9-3 Week Days #4 BUICK VERY GOOD SHAPE. —Service—Setistastion. | or cheaper car and we pay you '/’53 Olds S. 88 2 Door West Side Used Cars _
east, J oe —~ ad ie Seen area By hg ah Buick SUPER AOR —— C8 SerreR oe “tte to 61 models available ’53 Chev. Bel Air #2_W. Huron __——_PE_ 42189
Sette eee Sere eee ot orc HACKING Pree er ; 2 oost ‘at S661 Cooley et INLAND LAKES SALES 3 VAN DYKE, NEAR ‘ 26 HASKIN 2 v YOUR FRIENDLY OLDSMOBILE | "Voice do : $3,450; m -
west Sf | fonder,” John” Deere | 3” section | 3127. W. Huron PE 413i, PE 36122 ine SUE SPECIAL LOOSE | - CHEVROLET. NORTH CHEVROLET |. ome TRUCK > Beaten — | doe, Commander: G27; tures
i eer | ere ead cunatity of bores | ONE, © THOMPOON BOAT WITH | _rod_ 613. = CHEVROLET. “—_ > - 1000 S-Woodward Ave.. |s28 6. Mair " Rochester|. MAZUREK MOTOR SALES wena "betecs | arewh toi, Incereaticnes Pease |. yoter, 5 bp. denneen, moter. sss BUICK SPECIAL HARDTOP. “Oakland Countys Oakland County’s BIRMINGHAM | =] conpr | 2_8.-Bivd ____s_ PE 4-087
“Compile Une “of enteless | cooker AE.” ‘pre. | ~ TONY'S MARINE Chevie, 3 ene. To selile’ estate. | Fastest Growing Dealer” Fastest _ Growing Dealer* ; Bion. OR 34168. 4149 Cuintonville | “@ | STUDER ARE roughout $100
-Beluding ‘ge Forsythe, asuictioneer. Goccaat as ; . ~~ — AMBASSADORS —|igs0 PONTIAC HARD TCP, Ba-| "= 9S
Se gree eres, er) | Fee ——| Fo Senora ine Se | ask Eke oe say | MAT ta “Shee adte Sh Sea gue ec a Ans | Shears NM “ites | Shanes gwen te | nee ena EPR Ta ; 3 trucks, . plows. | For Sale Housetrailers 78| ‘o"*. 147 sway st dank terms. ~ 1964 COUPE ~ | 1988 LET CONVERTIBLE. | “assume ‘small inonthly payments | yysp & Porte, Re EM 34008) ey down; assume payments of |} STUDEBAKER. «DR. Li fact, sherpiine bones: ah yrs. Fe « mee. Private owner, new tires, . stick shift with everything. 14, pt $21.20 Month, aw Pay, ‘ 33. "Can Credit "Mgr. Mr.| new. No down ment x ate : : Lake rd., Keego Har- miles. Exc, shape, 6-3274. LUCKY A SALES BY PRIVATF OWNER, 1955 OLDS er, Ww : s 26 cow : condition. OL 1-661. s. Exc. shape. MAytair 6-337¢. CKY AURO ect 66550, ‘Harold LUCKY AUTO.
i ee Bases | “aatps, Fares sieepe tba gee | HARRINGTON a MEW | 10a CHEY. | ers Sat, en TOWER | SS oes FE cmus| Spe, Suitewail tires Only 23000| Turner Ford” 193 8. Saginaw FE 21
cove, Sette aad ‘Sete ives | $3. FE sist. | = BOAT WORKS Del Ray V9, $1008. PE St | Srey 3 DOOR 7 TONE BER, '33 FORD Piss FS 3 : . oes Soe |r oe ie MAME, BRANDS Serene we: | me Ofeat Laken teem.’ | STATIN wagon = OLS ty. tae ee | ~MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES
2 ee ee a HAUPT | ae |e jalan ety ey er 7 nid Pontiac Sales oie PLYMOUTH | N EW POLICY
Bee Sate rene mare. «| 7-8 sagen rie saan |} Mad top. Beautiful guid ang Designed for. You
$895 | NEW GOODYEAR TIRES
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= cE. —“TiSED rive, se. = figere Small down payment First Line, Factor Guaranteed
' Sale Farm Produce 75 ‘bead temiunber 6 Re cee OUTBOARD MOTORS ‘W CHEVY. i ay 000 » ‘Son ee 8 sree sen Se ore NORTH (CHEVROLET , on all ‘55- Models
| ‘56 Chevrolet 2dr. Black, Ivory | gonabieennrst pe : f : . Binal ior Sr anus Power pack. VR ok top. ed heater, Beautiful | Buick, bargain. PE _0-1008 im BIRMINGHAM ENGINE STEAM CLEANED PE sess] ‘3 Pontiac #70 ¢ dr. Blue white.| 55 SB FORD. Mi aes Tuned Up and Painted WOULD LIKE 1¢PT. ALUMINUM | "% Sontiac Cnlehain Delune. ¢r. T OLDs SR WA GREER bost with or without trailer. OR| R &@ H. Ww Hydra. Power Mgr, — : : = + A glared
ee oe eee | Sea | Se Sea || LIFETIME GUARANTEE» Beater - Rai, 163 8. Seginew _FE ¢3311 oo ’
Oh eee $185 plus tax. Fer- GC EVROLET BUD SHELTON a =: goon Oe ae i sad g& as you own it.
"Foones Pe tics or ORD-100 | 1965 door w | aria Tamer Ford CAR DELIVERED , i CEAVING 1 Perse. coming iit wes, Red ae ose = reat | — a from any of our three locations— : . a : ‘ OTOR Oo
: . Bob Hutchinson SESE GHG WORT FLET $1345 x | 26 SB “pe eee, oil pM and lubrication. Mobile 1 Homes Sales Inc. | load. Either way, FE 54-6806. “
ios "51 le Pe % PLYMOUTH TRY & BEAT THIS! NORTH CHEVROLET | 3 25 LES aecce uae: . i ; APPRECIATE CALL FROM PRI- 1955 station wagon ; } ‘88 ; sacrifice. FE yote party wanting to sell "6, 1000S. Woodward Ave. |:% ab — SE Sa ] '
i- ibs, FF. MOBILE CROBER.| i Taste Corre of Fert) © BIRMINGHAM —_|'t¢ Ghee Soe 2g is : 96 Chevrolet ‘56 Chevrolet OXFORD TRAILER | | AVERILL’S are waaon. |S Seuameneee *'S 3K) © CUSTOM LINE $1595 Sg el ee SALES i. Top TT, Nowy ‘ PerATION 38 Fora a Seo oc ges BR vege hr Low cacy teime $1595 BRS DUSK PEARL &
1961, Generals, stuaris, Holly, and | FE 2-007 ced pase: ws 2 dathemndt we io and Heater : : : i enien Anew pie 2 ety nti | See M & M Motor Sales | ai-cmev—smt_aimaWARP 1s) ¥1 Poick, tke new 0000 es Oradiive NORTH CHEVROLET 'S6 Ford $1645
tate chal" Sai, Fer [aby ammecaiey. = * MOR Sta | MT seee"AGIO datas |S Bere Oo cat ORIRMINGHAM “| sta0n wagon ‘56 Ford t cent bask rates. Only Se down, 1| af MOGH-AS #i0 FOR TONE AND | 1898. Segiose 224 |'S1 Pontiac, 2:Dr. like new '¢ 49s $1350 BIRMINGHAM Gehan Wont |
; SMALL TRATLER “IDEAL FoR | sree? AT TE 2208 G08 or) Crevnoier se set am val 3h Buck GOT, DIME. fo #) LARRY JEROME | ac | fon to 3s Werth A 3 ~ camping or office, $280, PE 5-2766 |." .| “sedan, Radio and heater, gas sav- | +39 Dodge, 2 DE Loo. 8 a8 sD Duatan | tn. '@ Seagebeher. goed conel "$1895 "BLACK. : B ; ROCHESTER PRAILER EXCHANGE |,iways Ready to-Sy. Se ie a ett ake hen | Bee ee ete owt tion, PE +1506. $1595 TRAIL} ee [Junbed and used care. P S| Som cx ipa tee =— Bud Shelton Motor Sales ii ’ ’ UALITY—10 WIDES |BAGLEY AUTO PARTS| ™ = Aubura st. Blvd, Pi 4-198 i951 FORD Vic. RADIO AND Bright 99 Chevrolet ‘54 Chevrol shone som, oe gear tomnting | Saere scan cars| Haskins Chev. | “gore syzinier, st oingusn | Green pit ite tp Mo, money 9 om an sae em © ok. eV TOlet. AND: WANTED: (SCRAE, CARS Gaskins eV. eee, caees eens | " HEATER. bor & RED. BEL AIR HARD TOP—POWER-
Sea REE Me ae LOS | Ba Shelton Motor Salcy | wat eSa? ASI alte » ce ene] Opot gas "Rae Bes a Wides from 16% to $0 ft. * etn ee prt dE anaes SS eRe ma Turner Ford. : a; “$1145
| BOTTLE GAS Cor. Auburn & E. Bivd. PE 46728. | "53 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR te AUTO SUPER MKT 55 Chevrolet. ‘- PARTS & SUPPLIES | | HIGHEST 3, £A1D FOR JUNKED | freer nigh. ot, CARKNEE rs rs ee one s-rowmnoupe, ‘OQ Chevrolet i ‘ = open Bens Eres ut n 4.8 oun. HIGH $$$ PAID PYRE. NEAR 20 MIL ARE Y Ol = aoe ae Sete “Rene REE MEbOOR Rab = ASTE RENT ‘ UYING CHEV 4 E Se aciiac mm IVORY & seorneies
| option parchare pina willect vou = O°T CT ENNIS | _trade. FE 'eepe wT Still Driving ['s6Olds98 Sedan ~ ; $144 ) towards a mod- 1954 A ak : "56 Olds 88'S : 54 F d crs Mattie Rome ot [ow owe | ss 9 SAGinAW st. PE onm | pagm Fever Glee, sate ent | '56 Olds 88 Sedan or ,
P 1 Se isda Se Sea Tee, PES ee ae |e Cea alle Fae P +] A WINTERWEARY._ 1658 Chevrolet Convertible WEsth. GORE EAR 04 Ford | vir, | Bip reper cet? wteu *:|—THE HIGH DOLLAR | cov on soos aunaw oun CAR? 1555 Oids 98 Convertible . EER eta tiie | “s a | Eee Rathscsess now solevtis capa | nti WAR, Sete, wend care, We | ginal Stone Gnteh, a ae Dependable How About A Change? |’55 Chev. Bel Air 2-Dr. J] ¢ $945 chanical condition, Today’s - evro et
siege “and” des, GA Beene oe homes started on this it will pay you well. 4540 Dixie | gain special. $608 full price. Make Birmingham . 55 Olds 88 2-Dr. ; A See
FOR SALED if -WeAD, Mixes | TRAILER EXCHANGE | “Hy. J. VAN WELT ce : "$695 __|'55 Cadillac 62 Sedan “He ni ‘93 Chevrolet Sat te SS Sey | 2S reneee Tee Pe vow _ OR ¥1385 H ki Che Trade-Ins "$3 Pontiac Deluxe 2 Dr. Sedan. | '95 Cadillac 62 Coupe : : 20-RA: ™
Somplete ine of Ford equipment. | aot eo Ee WANTED: JUNKED CARS. FREE CASKINS OV. Radio & Heater, Standard shift: 155 Ford 2-Dr, $895 2DOOR, 210-RADIO & HEA
seve 650%. oe ee Oe ak We tore toe WANTED = ALL KINDS OF | easie's sor” Mga ere ‘nites Tel 8 ser. , ’55 Olds 98 Dix. Hol. Sed. ; ° $695
RDEN TRACTORS as at Holly Marine = junk PE 44878: MY 2-6402 6,000 mi. guarantee on all cars. $2295 54 Buick 4Dr. - 53 Chevrolet ‘S] Ch ] :
New and Used Ge ter - For Sale Trucks 90 gy ag FE ee as uaebiee nom. wiw.| SO Reet Srecel. 1,Dr. Riven. "54 Olds 98 Dix. Hol. Cpe. 210, POWERGLIDE, : evrolet
a Rent Trailer Space 79 | iss) Lona WHEEL BASE, GOOD 4, HEY, GOOD, MOTOR. BODY ap iigramatie, $1,308. Hardtop. n| Wall tires. Stone beauty. '34 Cadillac 62 Sedan’ *EaBIo : Rt ke DARE BLUE See Te oda MODERN “PRIVATE TRAILER iis = motor. aad MU M h ; & oH. ew. Meteo, black +t P $1295 Be ts se ~ ane Wes $395
BASY space, | . % & TON CHEVROLET PANEL 96 Hudson Hornet, Power steering,| ‘54 Pontiac Deluxe Catalina, : : ’ zs — E , a]
arene |Setiar Siete mines | tot wean om — | AVLCULCIL 11) | areeraies. Wine See) oe Ba Wa te os | 53 Olds 88 4 Dr. 56 CHEVROLET ; awe + | ae. i CHEV. DUMP AND ‘50 MERC. : ‘S$ Ford convertible, R & H, WW. | uphoistering 53 Pontiac 4-Dr. ; 0-8 CYL. HEATER, SIGNALS, WASHERS, IvoRY & HOUGHTEN & SON /|6xFORD MOBILE MANOR, 3/ Reasonable, OR 35322. After 4 Before A ril _ Fordomatic, B | $1405, 53 Pontiac 2-Dr *Rracx. 628_N. Main OL 1-9761 Rochester | miles east of Oxford at:1940 Lake-| p.m. 1p 63 Ford ¥ 8. 4 Dr. Res. $895 : me. 1. as LED IS -$1595- ane re See
Mille Re eee erg eh oe mt | 86 CHEV. So TON STAKE, DUAL Prices a "83 Plymouth 2 Dr. Savor. station 33 et 6 ode Co phone : w . sab or . W.. black *.. $1445 fe . + = bs : ’
SPAN AT PURERGRAT | Bat sce! isch Soe | wy post be pe Soc if th ams man Woe ge) New pati ee ee =|. See Our Fine Selection of s includ private : 4 "Sh Dodge ¢ dr, R&H. W.W. 8-"'4 , Dr. oe : ge :
Hert goed ewiomine ere | Haskins Chev. |# ab tomin' cg. nan wie | B.Tvnem Cwret.t Bl:3> Pentine ee, | RECONditioned & Guaranteed
te ‘Aigg Walle tain, Baye Tate | aapie' sett “Opa” Senta 9] See eta pet a) le | Sh Os GB Dr. USED TRUCKS $22.0. Phone_MY rile 2-461). | °51. % TON CHEV .WITH RACK. |'S automatic. R& HWW.) $1395 . |°51 Chevrolet Club Coupe ‘ Auto Accessories 80 “Delixe esd, Good tires, Also "86 8 A $395 "52 Cadillac @2 4 Dr. Sedan, Radio "31 Buick 4Dr, a oe: 15
‘ly caDiLac MOTOR poets "te Ca. 7-QUARTER. ER TON PICK- # Me hasnt cere NO Pipes. Hydramatie, wall tres. a pe hares Se ae A
a corner of Pike & Paddock. |, . a evrol rs 4
prope AUTO GLASS | “CHEVROLET STARE |# Merteul” abit wanmetoe |, un ,S105, . |'S1 Cadillac 62 Sedan _ TOCHOOSEFROM — /
: : A Be ont’ gate tery, tee. exdlege: | Pinancing a specialty! Radio, & bester” Dvnstiow w.|'51 Buick4-Dr. =. - /
Pres tment Of Kay.’ priced to sell PR sem, Denier. | 33 aelied Seis. 1m be See 50 Mercury 2-Dr. —- S
HUB AUTO GLASS Co. ioe CHEV, 14, TON STARE. 4 | hg yi anal TEA | ing. 12,000 -eetual mies. "130 Ford2-Dr. E Oaklan’4 Aye, ‘ ri i, j Fe Ra Ee s ct. ares E s i oe £ A ee * we. “Ait seeds
cua LER» MOTOR Wg8.A 80 fruck \ eppesfance. Save ray a i+ aes a | "49 Cadillac 62 Sedan : é : “wit down. ;
. mr Offenhouser 4, nasito’ ' ’ /
Eat ometorte, se| Haskins Chev: Vela | pull bousetratiers,
= BY cg hubs) for trailer, Maple. \ ome Highway a ° a:
ES 3B] voor tocar. nas peaten |” [> | |'49Chevrolet 4Dr. ct] “Birmingham | OLIVER |“ ena | de ‘Nash| haat BUICK ae JEROME.
cnet | Olds-Cadillac =f | Suliman po teen pen’ | 31 CRE. PA Orchard Lake at Cass | F = —be sure to; lent . Tom ea : FE iN 3 :
. , check our display ed on page 19.! ford.\ MU 44158, ae cee aN
“Chow mein! That's for squares.”
“So look what you've. ordered. Peppered steak! That's de-
licious, but it’s not/as Chinesey ag chow mein. I thought we
_ came here to eat Chinese food.”
\ Tote oe
Td about concluded that the reason we all love Chinese food
_ is that it's so American.
THE MIDNIGHT EARL...
Linda Christian tried to wish “Happy
Wedding” to Edmund Purdom (her ex- 7
beau) and model Alicia Darr but they )~
were off dancing. Purdom’ll marry ©
quickly. Linda’s off to Caracas for a @
holiday .. . Rep. Adam Clayton Powell
visited Eartha Kitt at “Shinbone Alley”
rehearsals ... Ernie crashed
TVs Top 10 on the Ni rating, first
non-quizzer to make it in months.
/ Bob (Confidential) Harrison was with
Dick Weldy (who shot him) to see
Monique Van Vooren (who's suing him)
. « » Jimmy Dorsey’s leading the band Able
EARL’S PEARLS ... : :
“] owe more to this wonderful country than
I can tell,” says Levi Zink, “and ‘payment’s
_ ue April 15.” ee ©
: x“ * * .
WISH I'D SAID THAT: Some girls are single for the same og
reason some drivers run out of gas—they pass too many filling |
~ stations looking for their favorite brand —Quote.
TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Jan Murray was amazed at the
size of Miami hotels: “One lobby is so big ‘they have Burma
- Shave sigris on the way to the washroom,” ; .', ‘That/s earl,
) (Copyright 1957), be Se re
t eae = | ‘ ak ieee oy eek es 4 é i i ss He = ee ee rae 1 iz = ey) fy j ¢ pee : ; e t j : oo z : j H
as ie s Sy j ! eee ? eae: \ soe Sg ad é ; j ; cl ia * f oUF : A . Soke: eee ‘
, rae : : pe t 12 oe =. { id “i a . 5 : ' = ON & ES
, 4 Bah f bes bd nese S THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH a 1957 ys - fis ae nae . : ‘ ‘ ea o mt Se RE ee 7 ‘ ’ ati ined f wi 5 ot eu ; i Ce ) ! Side 4 ‘Ai . / . Wh a i f
Ne a . , Ste ee i se, : At : : Foo WS ee) | j a : . A ks fe sey | TV ; % ,
New Star.Joanne Woodward Prefers TV to Mc 4 : : ; a pipers ‘ ; ie . * Sats 2 e e ss ges ; Ge : ; . is ‘ : :
-+Today’s Radio Programs-- (Actress Yearns Neighbors Move |Fve Reduction . : | phen nh ott deere: ae ee Quickly; Replace ee
Wm, (eH) ORLY, (oem) WW, com) WAR, (Hise) WATE, Gin) WFON, (14a) WIBK, Clee for Live Video. Home of Widow : in Income Tax
w Mews, Bryce Mariya) 8:00 Wm, Pat, Butram Sa e REINLAND, Ky, @®—The homie )
WIR, Maggs weve, : Wants to Return East of Mrs. Verda Houston Duncan B PI ‘
Wek news, od yee aoe burned to the ground 24 days ago. Democrats ase an ,
WON, 140 club After Completing Role But neighbors started ——s on Cut in President's :
“wwg. Mines Hews, | 1" First Major Film -— ae te Mes Danan wast Spending Budget 7
ony Chase By CHARLES DENTON _ told of the March 2 fire that de- | ees WPM, Rese ange ea ane hing wrt ~ ptt o : stroyed all her possessions, a ew) | WASHINGTON (®—Democratic = s aS 4:00-—-WJR, Bands, Ans. blonde Joanne Woodward of) frame—cottage, _ . a ase | a pase helteae yunne omnee ee | screened porch, wae he come eke caer ee oe
: Bed Devies | Bt ie ied # slevisi channels — and she} rip. yg ae catle-y gl veg eoggnericgrslhs to make in 4
ow Drase | ‘Ww. dim Delsnd' Jean't wait to get back. / ‘The S2-year-cld woman opened|President Eisenhower's spending 2:00 WIR. tooo) ne Be oe 8.2.8 /)s- her new home Sunday to those| budget.
+4 CRLW. Austin Grant. Davies| 5: Pail The instant she finishes her star- -|same neighbors to thank “the| The Democratic plan, said to be Mickey Shorr moana eee | Wete tue, ring role in her first major flicker, | |folks” for their thoughtfulness and) under tion by Speaker ‘of 2 foe : WIR, and Burton Fae tens heed “The Three Faces of Eve” at 20th) | | generosity. ; the House Rayburn (D-Tex) and
SRE Sees Hants |utamewsg sm van | SAME Searoeeia's "| OR, Aid aber, lpack up her dainies and. scury| | } News * WWJ, News WCAR. Sporte ‘Parade 5:30—WJR, Music Hall | a dor $:30-——-WWJ. Op, Entertain Calls - 245—WIR. Backstage Wile Wws, tim Delene home to New Y a refresh-
W, Pimpernel WIBK: News, "Tom Ge WCAR, Truman Walrod Wine incised ing plunge back intoTV. ; -“T want to do a ‘live’ TV show
: “a a just as soon as I can,” she sighed | -
‘ : / 4 . into a plate of scrambled eggs
--Today's Television Programs - -| sss !stie' cimmimary “‘t : witheut notice _= Mave | ogre Saeed by Denmheny Hated te Ole exten ove eehdet te change pts wei
Channel 2—WJBK-TY Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 7—-WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV “it's very basic with me, Tele}
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS | gunslinger challenges marshal in| Crawford in “Counterfeiting/in walking on a movie set to make|
6:00—(7) Supérman. “Tomb ‘of| “Young Gun,” (4) Panic. Man| Racket.” (9) National News. (4) @ Scene that 28 million people are
Zaharan.” (9) Popeye, (4) News,| sits next to dead man on “The| News. (2) News. going to see without knowing Sports, (2) Early Show. Subway.” (2) Brothers, 11:10—(9) Weathervane. / {what's going on, All you can think
6:15—(4) Weather. (2) News. _|o.99_(7) Broken Arrow. “The/!!15—(9) Million Dollar Movie.jof is your next line,
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1:15—(1) News. bles ; ert is theory about motion By BAL BOYLE That the modern motor car bas Failed to Register With'Says He’s Just Thirsty ' 1330 — (7) Cheyenne. Cheyenne| %* movie fame in “Hollywood pictures to wit: . NEW YORK #—Things a col-/more light bulbs—20 to 38—~than| «, . : ud
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(9) Million Dollar Movie. vir} Veda Ann Borg, Robert Arm-|, Berm Farm |what ‘makes, movies such a frus-|,,That you can get the best possi-| ieoadik A Madison Heights agent for ala walking to @ gina Gilmore,’ Dan Duryea,| Strong, guests. See) aod Manin. or Today, {tating experience for actors.” |ble mileage out of a gallon of gas} Tiat it was Norse Vineeht| Nevada uranium friend's house for a drink of “That Other Woman.” (4)/10:00—(T) Hockey. Stanley Cup)" uP oan sees sho sald firmty, gece ee ee OF car at 20 miles| Peale who observed, “The Ameri-/will be sentenced April $ for viola-|whiskey when revenue officers Vocalist Andy Williams, guests.| Playoffs. (9) Lone -Wolf. Louis), 0) io."¢ Rac’ ic aie a |G seo ig treba car willcan people are so tense it is im-jtion of Michigan's so-called “Blue| popped out of the woods and ar- (2) Name That Tune. Hayward, Adele Maria in Bal 30—(7) Wixie W cemtbine all the. worst nepects longer. -|possible even to put them to sleep|Sky Law,” protecting stock inves-|rested him, But a Federal District j
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tor , thinking it's} Mitchell = Dear.” | oo att “ae ae earn. she is the ye Sons Jape Crizatncls 929 W. —= Ra. pleaded | oarees ot making —
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%:30—(7) Wyatt Earp. Teen-age (2) Highway Patrol. Buediptck e'ee~G) News, Weather. [emp p plage ane pegpes —— a of War Paroled by U.S. nak ey ee a-day. ai T : 9:55—(4) Faye Elizabeth. ulcers, t America now an “| charges involving his -
fl 20:00—-(2) The Garry Moore Show |they just don’t care any more./mated 41 million youngsters be-| TOKYO ®—The United: States|‘‘at least $4,500 worth of stock’ in Business Insurance ; = (4) Home. (7) Story Studio, It I ever get either way, that’s the/tween the ages of 5 through 18,/today paroled four more Japanese th Mutual Uranium Co., Inc., of
A 7 T k P rt 16:90—(2) Arthur Godfrey Show./day I leave Hollywood forever!” and 90 per cent of them read Com-|war criminals, a former Army|Mesquite, Nev. 1. Stock Retirement Planning mericans a e a Ferny allege Be ie books, captain and ‘three lieutenants. pieens Peamenen Sunes @ ppm Aga yom mo
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NEW YORK — One of the or on Twenty-One _ {that look like paws; can live in or! The releases lowered the total) % fraud-was leveled against Han- ot the greatest indocr sports in America| «essay ayrennoon Y out of water, and can hop, skip|namber criminals still held| °- oe See ee ee | t2:09—(2) Valiant Lady. (4) Tie| NEW YORK @—Mrs. Vivienne|®"d jump across land faster than|in Sugamo to. 96~—T% convicted by} He stated, though, that records| Individual Estate... If you participate, you probably have a favorite dish. I | Tac Dough. (7) 12 o'clock Com-|Nearing lost her new television|‘t can swim the United States, 20 by Australia|show the company in question had Contro! Planning
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Chinese dinner to me is that hot washrag they give you |1%:18—(2) Love, of Life. man last night ot NBC's Twenty-| That Javier Pereira, the 167- MCSC, whose regulations permit] FRED H. MILLIS to wash your face with between courses.” ty wg ag gg — ae — icteow from Colonie, Tree ie Wendie. : ee Oe aly ye
In Greater New York the big problems are, first, which of| Erwins. (9) Telescope. -| tat. Bloomgarden, 28year-cla|@evity rewarded by seeing his} MULLENS, W.Va. @ — Miletus wt the 300 to 500 Chinese restaurants to go to, and second, which 12:46—(2) The Guiding Light. ~ | saministrative consultant in med.|ikeness on a postage stamp is-|W. McGraw, 37, was crushed to| Hanson pleaded guilty to dealing of the 100 dishes to order? “ (aos peg 9 ny| a research, defeated Mrs. Near- gp - sal temehei ee a Oe ae nr a coud ei pecney mat or TY 4
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to the wife, who truly is quite an expert on it, and if you don't f structor Charles Van. Doren. He|>ut only two named Poor. tree. When they cut the second/in 1954, involving seven or eight by H 4 believe it, ask her. . 1:30—(4) (color) Club 60. (1) -Li-| nad won the largest fortune of any *~ * * coligegh glgpm pe Bees wag pomomes t ee Sen 1 Fall Year Warranty. 4 Personally, I'm ignorant about it. The first time I went |,.55 (9) News. Re ne ee ane Sk oat eee sare ee Owe. |"Hanson ie tree under $300 bond.|P Parts © Service © Labor ¢ to @ Chinese resturant, about 25 years ago in Columbus, |2:09—(2) Our Miss Brooks. (7)| Bloomgarden’ took the crown|head. eee TRADE-IN
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called shrimp cups as appetizers, then we have the delicious Eth heen . Cracken, 7%, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.,/testants caught taking @ bribe, ee ond dernics washrag course, then the main course. : Doody Crosby. Ten end ‘eee tn eae iene the money was used to set| By International News Service | up the cause of budget ‘slashing at| [AY [4a MT '11) (BAY)
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