The Weather ~ U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast : y. (Details Page 2) Tee eee see eee ee ny ee ‘ pa 2 = as | Sent ie ee eee a 117th YEAR ¢ Ike and Macmillan See Compromise as Way to Summit f. chev next summer. discuss military arrange- ments in support of their! determination to vine f | a ae Macmillan Sees Secret *' Pentagon? GETTYSBURG, Pa. iPresident Eisenhower may the Western position in Ber- lin despite Soviet pressures. Dep. Secretary of Defense ae ald A. Quarles was summon from Washington to — in! the Berlin crisis talks. Also asked to the Catoctin Mountain conference room were GETTYSBURG, Pa. (#) —- —President Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan today) were reported seeking a compromise route toward a) summit meeting with Soyjet Premier Nikita Khrush- Moving" into the secorid day of their Camp David) conference, the Allied leaders also were expected to (UPL —, have: dohn A. McCone, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and presidential science adviser dames B. Killian. : asked Con O’Neil, and Sir Patrick. Dean, defense matters, Washington * * * by Herter, Macmillan's chief adviser is | Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lieyd. conference Christian A, Aside (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) x * * Bulletin GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP)—President Eisen- hower and British Prime Minister’ Harold Mac- millan agrééed today on a formula for offering to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev the pros- pect of a summit con- ference later this year. Ailing Secretary of State John’ Foster Dulles 1s represented at the! fighment isin the bowels ef a acting Secretary) smait mountain not far arene: | let British Prime Minister Harold | | Macmillan take a peek into the! highly secret “underground Pen- tagon” not far from Camp David.’ On the British side Macmillan Mé assistant secre- tary in the London Foreign Office, | ‘but the two Western leaders were) Foreign |in the neighborhood of the emer- | Office deputy undersecretary for gency military headquarters during} to come from 4 solitary The White House did not say so, | auto ride yesterday | afternoon. | Camp David. The President has visited the headquarters, operated As an ad- from Berlin and German junct of the Army's Camp Ritchie) lin Marviand. on a couple of past ‘occasions. | * ® * The Waite House press head. ‘quarters here carefully kept their) ‘auto ride from reporters until the itwo principals were safely back ‘in the Camp. David compound. +¢ The President and the Prime ‘Minister slipped away for their ride without so much as a Foreign Minister to monitor their words. | With a U. S. Secret Service driv- ler and a small group of accom. partying agents, Eisenhower and Macmillan left all of their policy, advisers and staff assistants behind) and headed into the hills. The cavernous military estab. . Plan fot Tie-ln fo Federal Levy Individual, Corporations. Would Pay 5 Per Cent of National Charge "LANSING | ( — The first state income tax bill of the 1959 legislative session will be introduced next week, ja Democratic senator said - today. Sen. Philip Rahoi (D- Iron Mountain) said he will present 2 proposal for a state levy to ride piggy back on the existing federal income tax. The rate would be fixed, KNOCKED ON THE GOLDEN DOOR — The Pontiac Central High School basketball team failed in its bid Saginaw Valley Conference. finals in MSU's Jenison Fieldhouse. Harrison Munson, George Fed, John Bandy, Bill Hayward, Amos Bailey and Phil for Glass A Here .are the Chiefs. - Front row state championship honors last night at East Lansing, but the Chiefs are still the justifiably proud champions of the They bowed to Hamtramck, 33-40, in Friday's semi- (from left): Rabaja. graduated at mid- -year, Standing (from left): i i t Pontiac ‘Press Photo assistant coach Fred Zittel, Charlie Barge who was Fred Staley, Bill Pritchett, Bill Roach, Henry Robertson, Dick McCauley and head coach*Art Van Ryzin. Missing from the team picture is Jim Patterson. The Valley champs ended their 1958-59 season with 2 sparkling 18-2 record, tournament play included. City Earmark Fe’ - Firearms. Instructor — Turns Guns on PPOA ‘targets, however, Verhine directed Verhine, his shots at the Pontiac Police Airport Funds Vote Tuesday Expected to Advance $356,000, | | Shades of Spring Se IIR I ace Pontiac Press Photo OUT COME THE GOLF CLUBS—Yesterday’ s balmy weather was’ the signal Pontiac golfers eagerly looked for. Charles Har-" mon Jr., 48 Thorpe St., Is ready for the greens after removing his» clubs from cold storage. Scenes like this are taki place fn thousands of area homes. Tuesday, ‘itheir costs, as listed by Airport In Today's y's Press Expansion Program City Commissioners last night favorably heard details of a $356 (000 federally aided expansion ane . gram at Pontiac Municipal Airport} for next year, opening the city up| to turbo-prop aircraft and most! twin-engine transports. In a formal vote. scheduled for | commissioners are ex-| pected to promise the Michigan) Department of Aeronautics that. $89,000 will be earmarked as -the, city’s share in financing. Under the federal-aid formula, the state would put up $89,000 | and the federal government. | $178,000. The House Thursday" passed a. $279 million four-year airport aid, dent Eisenhower's recommenda. : tions. by 97 millions. * *« ** adjustment of the differences be- tween the House bill and the $465, million. airport program the Sen ate previously approved,: Meanwhile, airport aid is meet- ing opposition in the Michigan Legislature, hard-pressed to find a solution fo the state financial difficulties, If approved, the funds - would continue the $390,000 development program under way at the airport this year, under the accelerated federal aid to airports. * * * Upeoming improvements and Manager Homer Hoskins, are four- fold, 116A $137,000 apron for‘parking, loading and unloading aircraft in front of the new terminal building and a taxiway to it that would carry subsidiary traffic from the commercial hangars without inter- fering with main traffic from the east-west runway, 2.. A 1,500 foot concrete exten- sion, 100 feet wide, to the main (Continued on Pane 2, Col. 6) ; sve 19 Editorials .... en _ Flome Section .........65 15-18, , Obituaries ..:.... evr. 20) Sports iiss. ceeeeser cs cey MRA Theaters . 0.566. .e eros eee | | TV & Radio Programs ..... 2% Wilson, Earl ..... yirucvceee S Women's Pages ..sseeeeers 67 TC ‘former Pontiac Police Dept. sell of Detroit argued that killing was without motive, that Flannery suffers from a split personality. ‘| psychiatrist, testified as a de- _jenee Schrier, superintendent of the state mental hospital at Kalamazoo _ }Said in rebuttal testimony for the | {state that Flannery. knew the dif- ference between right By MAX E. Patrolman Robert W. SIMON County Offices ihis own and that both for individuals and coroporations, at five per cent of each taxpayer's federal tax liability. ‘ | Rahoi said the proposal would iproduce about 275. million dollars jin new revenue, It would be ‘coupled with proposals to Angee ithe existing business dctivities tax land possibly the ~— intangibles tax. The BAT, currently the state’, 1 general imaker was being asked to jin sponsorship. * * * . There was no indication when ‘other income tax plans might ap- pear on the legislative scene, but it was generally assumed none lwoukt come in until after the arms instructor and range officer, termed its “unorthodox” practices. 'W illman. ‘found himself in a familiar place _ last night—on the firing line. * * * Instead af aiming at paper: Verhine was a defense witness - | for suspended Police Chief Her- | bert W. Straley before the Civil Service Commission. t Flannery Innocent in Death Because of | HILLSDALE () — Pat nsanity-- Jury rick J. Flannery, the Hills- ‘dale coHege student who admitted killing his college roommate, was headed today to the state mental hos-|1958 by . Public Safety Director’ ‘|program, which exceeded Presi- pital at Ionia. A Circuit Court jury composed of farmers, house- ‘wives and salesmen’ found It now will go to a Senate- degree murder by reason of insanity in the bludgeon House Conference Committee for slaying last November of* ; ‘Thomas Neitling of Tecum- ‘Seh..The jury deliberated more than six hours gente ‘day before returning the, verdict. Circuit Court Judge Charles 0.! Arch ordered Flannery committed) to the institution for life, or until | he is proven of sound mind. Flannery, 19, of Berkley, ad- | mitted kifling his roommate, and | said “Something get into me, it must have been the devil.” | ' fled | Through a back door and back Flannery innocent of first. Who’s on First? LONDON (UPI)—Police gave *hase to a motorist yesterday con the suspicion he was a_ thief. The motorist stepped on the gas, was clocked at 70 miles an hour, smashed into another car and into an apartment house. streets he raced. to fhe nearest police station to report: He had | been n chased by thieves, lcers were qualified fire- Officers Assn, (PPOA) and what heifiled by City Manager Walter K. April 6 election. 4 Sef. Lewis G. Christman : (R-Ann Arbor) is waiting to put viore e in a bill. for a two cent fiat rate levy, with exeniptions ‘of - $1,400 for a married couple and oh eo ‘acxee! Budget Planning Begins, 5600 for each dependent. e commission is considering: 1 opie M ebserv li fouster -charges sgainst Straley| @8 St Ya Million Increase | any nay ne os Is Predicted resembling it, has the best chance of winning final legisla- ASSIGNED IN 1955 First of a series of meetings |v approval. The patrolman told commission- petween Oakland County depart-| ESTIMATE COST i bib "i wee ae by Straley '0 ment heads and the Salaries Com- State Revenue Department of- a jtake his special assignment as/ ; ficials have estimated that to ad- 2 |weapons instructor in 1955. mittee of the ae “ nine TVISOS | inister an income tax represent- a “When 1 thek ever.” ‘be toil. was held yesterday as the county’s' ing a clear-cut addition to the F tied, “the average firing score proposed 1960 bade began to take present tax structure would cost for the department was 189 out form. |between 2%2 and six million dol of a possible 300 points. ~~ & * jlars annually. “The men were very, very poor Details of the preliminary budget Lt. Goy. John B. Swainson, ‘< shooters,”’ .he said. * * ® -Verhine said that by December, of 1938 the average had soared to 249. He was relieved of his duties as ‘weapons instructor in December of to routine patrol duty. Both the aim of officers and the quality of weapons in the department were raised under Straley, Vehrine testified. In 1955, he said, only 29 offi although now 110 of 113 are expert shots, the department when he became jrange officer, the patrolman said., ANSWERS CRITICISM Since then, Straley has chased 12 shotguns, 6 rifles, machine guns and 2 gas guns, he said. He had a quick:reply to criti- pur- (Continued on Page 20) two) George D. Eastman and reassigned. marksmen, , \E. Moore, representing his court) courses for major economies: — : . . ‘and its branches, and George N. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) unary Wee Gey four eles in Skrubb, director of the Oakland tell” financially ithese and other expected requests a, Democrat, said today that fir- _ ing even one-half of the statelx — 32,000 employes. wouldn’t erase Michigan’s deficit, expected ia hit 110 million dollars by dune 30. . Swainson sought to illustrate ‘what-he called the “myth” that ‘rigid economics offer a -way out of the state’s financial dilemma. _ * * * What is needed, he said, is less vague talk about economy and more “‘public legislative respon- sibility.” In a weekly newsletter, the lieutenant governor said there were only two conceivable — will not be revealed until super- visors? réceive copies at their an- nual budget and election of officers meeting April HM. Robert Y. Moore, chairman of | the Board of Auditors, however, did give a brief sneak preview of the 1960 operating budget, saying it would be 1‘: million dollars higher than the . 1959 budget of $12,285,723. As in the current budget, a large social welfare load is primarily responsible for the increase, Moore | said. . * * * Yesterday Probate Judge Arthur ‘County Planning Commission, ap- | pear ed before the committee: Both] lrequested additional department personnel for next year. Moore said it was ‘too early to whether the county will be able to comply with Sadness, Joy as Holly Wins, Pontiac Loses There was success for Holly and failure for Pontiac Central yester- from other departments. Defense counsel Joseph W. Loui Cold Reluctant to Bid Us Farewell the and x * Louisell had fought for such a‘ verdict as the jury returned. The area today but winter isn't over. prosecution had sought “a first de- gree murder conviction — impos- ing the giate’ s maximum penalty, life imprisonment, on Flannery. Dr. John Tracey, a Detroit fense witness that Flannery had all the symptoms of the mental ailment, But another physician, Dr. Clar- and wrong "{Comiooed on Pass 2 Col. 3) Fe ¥ oer Scat, Winter! Spring Is Here Spring breezed into the Pontiac * * * Before this day ends, weatherman forecast winter would again make its presence felt. The last lash of winter is ex- pected to be brief — although long enough to make Sunday chilly. Yesterday the state basked in Maytinie temperatures witb the thermometer hitting ~an official 60 degrees in the Pontiac area, and as’ high as 58 even in the Upper Peninsula. REACHED 81 IN 1938-2: -<(n March 21, 1918, the mereury ‘reached 72 degrees. On March 22, Rew Ae Te net? ‘can ” t ”* at Jerome ds-Cadillac, 100, ” 1938, it hit 81 degrees. ‘ie the| | night, ‘of night while most of the state It wilf become cloudy, and colder later in the day, high today will be between 36-44 | degrees, with a low of 15-22 to- The high tomorrow was expect- ed to be between 28-34 degrees. * * * Spring's coming was in the dead shumbered, Officially, rived at 3:55 a.m., crossed the equator and entered the vernal equinox, Only at the time of the Mach spring ar-| windy ywould The doesn't. the time the sur: and September equihoxes is the are equal, If the axis stayed that way, there'1 p.m. was 38, cae ae “+ ‘parth’s axis at right angles fo itiac dropped from a high of @ the stn, Then. day and. night degrees at midnight to 31 at day in the semifinals of the Mich- igan high school basketball tour- nament at Michigan State’s ek son Fieldhouse in East Lansing. Holly kept fooling the “experts” by reaching today’s game in Class B witha 0-47 vic~ —" tory over Sault Ste. Marie, The be no sea sons. By June the axis is tilting 23 degrees and 27 minutes toward the sun, In December it tilts at the same angle away from the sun. So (in the temperate zones) we do have seasons. Despite equinox reports,’ evi dences of winter still show in many places. Twenty-one mesgerd of snow are on the ground - at Traverse City, 34 inches at ret { ston and a whooping 45 inches at. Grand Marais in the . Dee Peninsula, Temperatures in downtowns Pon- pobcae for the state Class 6 wn, ‘For the first time this Season, Pontiac Central ‘lost its pois ing Sexton, the panne : finalist, for the erg ee A title ‘a.m. The thermometer reading at sideline pictures by a Fa bell ne ae . States. * gains, bringing a welcome reprieve > to weather-weary residents of the __ «Eighty-mile-an-hour winds lashed e page becoming windy and colder . merrew 34. Highest and Lowest Temperstures This + eas 3 i : * . EASTER BUNNY IS IN-TOWN—The Easter expressions. of these three Bunny isited the Pontiac Area Day Nursery, 125 Raeburn St., yesterday and presented children ‘ there with chocolate bunny candies. He also . Ganced for all of the nursery children. From the Fund. must have been a lot of fun, too. Merchants Association sponsors nursery is financed by the Pontiac Area United THE PONTIAC PRESS, Pentiac Press Phote children’s faces, he The Tel-Huron the bumny. The Snow, Cold and Tornadoes Bluster in With Spring . Spring blustered its way into the nation today on the winds of a near- Blizzard that swept the midlands and stirred up a flurry of small tornadoes in the western Gulf * But the U. S. Weather Bureau promised the vicious storms would gaim into gentle breezes and light central states who have suffered through one of the worst winters’ ip decades. * Spring officially arrived at 8:55 ‘a.m, (EST), but winter called: The tune up to the last moment >y dumping up to 10 inches of snow through Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming ‘and Kansas and dipping tempera- tures near rero along the Can- adian border. ote the snow into drifts that blocked highways and toppled lines and sparked a blinding dust’ storm in a 700-mile wide belt across central Texas. One tornado struck near Tren- ton, Tex., 50 miles northeast of Dallas, destroying or damaging five houses and six barns. Another tornado uprooted trees and dam- aged two houses as it brushed the northeast edge of Marshall, Tex, _ "The third damaged 22’ homes, three badly, at Paxton, a village of about 200 persons 40 miles south of Marshal near the Louisiana line. Winds up to 36 m.p.h. howled across the Texas Panhandle Fri- day night piling up snow in three-foot drifts. Blowing snow reduced visibility to zero, The Texas Highway Department closed all roads in the Texas Pan- The Weather -_Fall U.8. Weather Bureau Report / PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly! to~ Clearing and colder tonight, partly 'y and cold tomorrow. Variable ds 16-15 miles, becoming northerly 30 ‘miles this afternoon and tonight. Nerthwesterly 15-22 miles tomorrow. High today 44, low tonight 2%. High to- “ing them, ‘ —— : ‘ octal temperature preceding 8 a.m. «At @ a.m.: Wind velocity 20-25 m. p. h Direction—Northwest. Sun _, os or eepeeenerd eitasivevdl Friday in Pontiac Highést a recorded, downtown) MpPOTAtUTE ...... 00.08 Lowest POTACUTE 2 nc riccccccsser: — WOVOEYTS .. ions. scoecues 48 eather—Partiy Cloudy. Pee eeweeeree oer eer te? ee eee ee ee Date in 86 Years 72m 1918. <1 in 1885 Friday's Temperatere Chart : 65 ,three persons drowned in snow- ov, Ohio Valley. handle north of the. Canadian River because of the drifts. It said the drifts in the Téxline area were so big snow plows had difficulty mov- Near Vicksburg, Miss., high ‘winds during a thunderstorm snapped a Mississippi River steamboat loose from its moor- ings and sent its 500 drifting one-quarter of a mile downstream. The huge old stern- Wheeler finally ran aground on a sandbar, f The weather was blamed for at least nine deaths in two days as two men died of heart attacks fighting the Colorado blizzard, swollen Iowa rivers and four. per- sons were killed in a bus-car crash during a rainstorm near St. Atg- ustine, Fla. Winterlike temperatures of 5 to 10 degrees above zero were re- ported early today from the upper Mississippi Valley into the eastern Dakotas ‘and sub-zero readings chilled Colorado and northwest Kansas. Thé Weather Bureau in Chicago forecast a gradual cooling for the Great Lakes region and the i Atpena 44 25 Memphis 55 Bismark 34 20 Miami Beach #2 66 _ 0 86 Milwaukee 43 23 64 37 Minneapolis 48 | 55 30 New Orleans 73 58/ 54 30 New York 68 48, 33 14 Omahs “8 19) 60 37 Peliston 4 620 42 «60 Pittsbar “ 4 70 44 Bt. Louis 65 38 $4 30 Ban Fr’cisco TT 40 3% «$ 8.8.Marie 44 22 &% 28 Washington 42 a6 60 Beattie 56 39 14 Tampa 71 61 Sunny, clear skies, following Fri- day’s springtime 60 to 70 readings, were again on tap for New Eng- land. ~ : Outside the storm center, heev- i¢st rain was reported along the Gulf section. Pine Bluff; Ark., was doused by 1.22 inches .while Mon- roe, La. had .85 during a six-hour period, Jackson, Miss. reported .81-] an ou ee a ee ee ee Letter Deluge . Planned by City Pontiac Homeowners to Get Mail Appeal on Séwage Bond Issue A plan to flood the city with let- ters was adopted by the City mission last night to put over sewage treatment plant bond April 6. * * * Commissioners, meeting mally, decided to send out 26,000 letters in an effort to every Pontiac home with an appeal for approval of the $3,300,000 bond issue at the spring election. The cost of the effort was un- determined, but $700 for adver- tising was approved, Only property owners will be ¢l- igible to pass on the bond issue, Fu Lik which has been defeated twice in the past two years. _ Commissioners are also schedul- ing town meetings within their dis- tricts, with administrative officials speaking on the need for expanded facilities, Flannery s Found [nsane in Killing (Continued From Page One) when he beat Neitling to death with a shotgun, NOT A WORD The state attempted to prove that Flannery killed Neitling in a rage him and put his clothes into a hall. because Neitling had needled Flannery often sat staring at the wall during the trial. His parents came to visit him in his He kept his eyes on a waving tree branch outside the window. The parents finally got up quietly and left. : x * * The youth was described as hav- ing a bright future when he was graduated with honors from high school last June. He showed prom- College. : Hillsdale coach Franklin Waters of the most promising young mien he had’ met, Waters said he was tstanding athlete, - born too soon. too old. He took any menial . Whenever he applied for a job he was © told that anyone over 45 was considered Camp David, Md., headquarters, ,000 to the Tax| Altogether, the Appropriations Eisenhower said: # et S. é oe ee Committee slashed the omnibus “The action today if not re- : |verse@ will represent a Jong. step|60 milion dollars from proposed| These’ sums are $51,520,000 less| meanire bY SHSSLAAS of wiih s\backward toward ifolating our|funds to fiance the Treasury and/than the Post _, Fequested, ' rejection . country and weakening our nation-|Post Ortice departments durng|$2314000 ess than the ‘Treasury [DiggEt cut, ea, al security.” the 1960 fiscal year beginning next|asked but the same amount sought ot a Be Speaking * in unusually strong|July 1. ; by the Tax Court, At least part - “may terms, Eisenhower said the loan| x *« &# Passage of the bill cleared the/be restored Jater whet Pepe fund ‘‘must have additional funds; Without controversy and by|way for a House vote and an al-|considers JRonye Fagen now.” The fund finances loans to/voice vote, the House passed and|most certain floor fight next yeek|propriatiog. IA one underdeveloped areas in connec-|sent to the Senate a money billion an omnibus appropriation money against rs Ition with the foreign aid program. |appropriating $779,402,000 to the|which had contained Eisenhower's |new ge 2 which Eisenhower The committee’s rejection of the!Treasury, $3,847,160,000 to the Post|loan fund request. trying pales ar — The bill now earmarks $2,479,-/ ; s 340,494 to finance miscellaneous}. The administration had request- federal agencies and departments|ed the money be included in the for the remaining three months of|current year budget, which is/al- -|Lenten Guideposts a H Values Are as Vital : fo Business as Economics _ By ROSS L, HOLMAN Writing About Philip Kerrigan, Businessman -Franz Schmidt, engineer, now 60 years old, thanks 1God and Philip Kerrigan Jr., every day that he is no longer sweeping floors or hustling crates. . Schmidt had come to America with his engineering degrees, impressive experi- ence in German industry, and high hopes, only to find that he had been job he could * Behind this reasoning is the com- passionate heart of a devout man who was a blacksmith's helper in 1929 when he started his plant in an old store with two helpers, “Ithree shop tools, and a loan of $1,700. Kerrigan now does a $10,000,000 a year business. He has always held that each person in the plant is as important in the sight of God as the owner. “Each one here has as much right to consider the plant a guar- antee against poverty and want as the owner,’’ he says. “No busi- ness is a real success unless it accumulates human values as well as material wealth,” Since he started, human values and a complete indifference to age, race, creed, nationality, or even physical handicap, have de- termined whom he hires. For Kerrigan, allowing the un- handicapped part of a man to wither is sinful. When a polio vic- tim in the plant, one among a num- ber of handicapped, came down with TB, Kerrigan not only kept his job open until he was healed, but lent him enough money to tide him over the worst of his illness. “A non-interest loan plan, repay- able on easy monthly installments, is maintained for all the plant’s employes. It must be just good business management that has made this company show a profit and volume increase each year since it began, or it may also be because of its accumulation of human values. Kerrigan or his executives visit the home of any employe who is has any other kind of a problem, and offer assistance. The firm feels that a man’s family is at the core of a man’s job. Kerrigan sure all found testified that Flannery was~-one|suitable homes, and the ren- for food, word of il, in financial difficulty or who | Eisenhower, as he said in a broadcast speech Monday night, is prepared to go to a summit con- ference if developments justify it. This means that he wants from the foreign ministers meeting some toward resolution of the Berlin crisis. Macmillan report- edly’ believes that a summit meet- ing must be held regardiess of what the foreign ministers do, and he wants the new notes to Moscow to fix a definite time for a top- level meeting. Pontiac Woman - Will Preside at PTA Clinic Mrs. Charles W. Neldrett of 62 Mariva St., president. of the Mich- igan Congress of Parents and Teachers, will preside at a one- congress and versity College of Education, will be held at the university, Mrs, William Wright of 184 Chip- Wess Mh Fy Trip to Russia lke, Macmillan Talk |=" Strategy With Dulles e Day in Birmingham’ ~~ ey U. of I. President, Five Other Educators Plan _ Journey Next Month gregational Church of wifl present “‘The Seven Words of Christ” at 4:30 p.m, a uy ll ¢ & : Sq ie Pa i i & Ji _* Besides visiting Moscow, Lenin- Russian cit- ies, Hatcher said, the group hopes Helsinki, Warsaw and Vi- to night in a two car crash Maple road near the Oakland Country Club. Police said Burtram Rutledge, #2, of Ferndale, was-making 2 left turn when his auto was struck by a car driven by Thom- as E, Nigg, 18, of Walled Lake. Bloomfield Township police said that because of a sharp rise in the road, neither driver, could see the ‘lother vehicle. Susan Davis,.17, of Milford, a passenger in Nigg’s car, was re- _|ported in satisfactory condition to- day at William Beaumont Hospital, ° Oak, after receiving head and leg injuries. * * * The two drivers and David Bal- lard, 31, of Ferndale, a passenger in Rutledge’s car, were treated and then released from the hospital. University of Michigan alumni in the area are entertaining 40 U. of M. foreign students in their homes here this weekend. For the first time, students are resentation. Standard , such as the|try about 4:30 this morning when type used for air cargo by Gen-/they noticed a broken window on eral Motors Corp. and/|the east side of the building other local industries, could land - and take off easily on the 5,500 John J. Babcock foot runway, Hoskins said. Service for John J. Babcock, 76, of 5750 Euclid Dr., West Bloom- Fish story: A bl field Township, will be held at 1 \weigh as much as p.m. Mondaly at the Bell Chapel ‘or 150 oxen. of the William R. Hamilton Co. Choir. of the Con- Birmingham Last Music, Sermons to Mark | Palm Sunday Observance BIRMINGHAM — Special music John A. Reid The body‘of John A. Reid, 61, of 311 Woodbridge Rd., Bloomfield Legislator to Propose State Income Tax (Continued From Page One) cutting the state’s 173 million doliar a year payroll or cutting services. One option, he said, was the state might withdraw all support of higher education and from all safety and defense activities. This, too, would bring things into ‘fi- ‘LUDICROUS SUGGESTION’ “But this suggestion is ludi- crous, to be sure,”’ Swainson said. In Ann Arbor today, the Univer. sity of Michigan regents called upon alumni’ anq friends of the university to “help acquaint the people of the state with the gravity of the present financial] cri- sis and the importance of an im- mediate solution through legisla- tive action.’ ~~ & & Payless paydays for university professors and others are threat- ened, but no employe has missed _ja paycheck yet. governing University, voted in a partisan 4-1 split yesterday to support Williams’ program that includes a graduated personal income tax. j * *® ® Thus, the regents likely skirted political implications in which the agricultural board .may find itself embroiled when appropriations come. before the Republican-do fnated Legislature. ‘ There is now manufactured an executive's office chair with a {built-in massager. NEW YORK WELCOMES IRELAND’S PRESIDENT — Amid a shower of ticker tape, Ireland’s President Sean T. O’Kelly (left) waves from a rear seat of car to crowd during, parade >» next to O’Kelly a a up Lowér Broadway to City Hall officially welcomed ‘by Mayor Wagner. Seated York City’s commissioner of commerce, ‘: Friday .to’ be is Richard C. Patterson Jr., New ae ee: ee WASHINGTON (AP) — Historyjer’s restraints See a series of} et troops out of West Berlin. He ap-/carefully avoided any sign of bel-|held this summer. may s President Eisénhower’s| negative actions. But Eisenhower,|. There have been other in-|peared to be setting a six-months’|ligerency or irritation. Thursday Khrushchev called a/ x *« * - |giant news conference. He too|® ~ ‘greatest contribution. to’the presi- responntile for the leadership not| stances, most recently the Berlin| deadline for it. dency was his restraint in time/only of of danger and critical stress. ee toatl ‘ ' sdemocratic goverament of its own cies wae used adrabs tel Kinushchey who demanded last -|avoid catastrophes. Nov. 27 that the Allies get their The West assumed he meant by May 27. The West stood firm in refusing to get out, although the this country but of thelcrisis created by Premier Nikita ieneillion parently, it has just paid off again, In a week's time there has been’ a definite relaxing of tension over | Berlin. Since November Khrushchev conten rue cai ‘Ti yer Mathematics ie ee a number of pay when, through! - some belligerent, ‘such as warn- emotionalism x ing the West it faced war with the aggressiveness. he could rill | precipitated un- predictable events, including war. When the British, French and get out: They did. Cairo. We were about to go out to the (ed when talking of Khrushchev ~« *«* & my The Red Chinese—bent on de- desert for a tent party? “There’s a sand- and his Berlin demands. He even ip py ares from a ob Skyscr aper st Kai-shek’s Na- *. : ” « . {indicated that, any Soviet attempt | ry Pierce schools” w . stroying Chiang * Kab-shek sere 7 rear comethieg Weting: Seat IN" Grow coll tae Allon might| portray the main characters of “On to Be Built on various. times have bombarded the — ‘is a leo nate eaats . |mean nuclear war. the Bridge ‘at Midnight,” a three-| p * a? f offshore islands of Quemoy and ‘ ’ s mink exclaiming : « * * act gomedy, on the Pierce school| QI1S eft Bank | { Allies eyed each other carefully, ,wondering if any of them might , weaken. Martha Reveals Some . * *&« * NEW YORK — Martha Hyer is back from her camel-rid- ing tour around the Sphinx and Pyramids now—back in Holly- wood saying, “This is my big year °. . the year I make the . jump and get my name above the title.” Communist East Germany to their Martha’s speaking about billing — _— ieee ze and it started that Tuesday morning 6,000 At a couple of news conferen- 2s miles from here .., in a hotel lobby in | Eisenhower sounded a little heat- Soviet Union if the Allies, refus- ing to pull out their troops, at- tempted*to force suppli¢s through “Did you hear about me?” And he poked hard at Khrush- fon eng “Got one of the nominations for an chev, who kept insisting on a sum- ‘Township junior high schools at 8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MARCH -21, 1959 ableness from Khrushchev, Eisen- hower in his nationwide broadcast| He went further than he ever had before, although laying down some conditions, in suggesting not * Hage oe Po the, Seminars dir t Michigan |d ag that a summit conference p was possible but that it could be| sounded reasonable and praised! Eisenhower «for his reasonable- ness. Waterford A “rip, roaring melodrama of the Gay Nineties” will be present- ed by teachers of two Waterford p.m, Friday and Saturday, —— Directing the play is Pa- tricia Hott. . to Give Melodrama Teachers women teachers putting the finish- ing touches to the outside canvas. All proceeds will be used to equip the John Pierce school stage. i i PARIS (AP)—The famed Paris LAKE Matsu. * : Eisenhower could have resorted Oscar for ‘Some Came Running’!” she an- mit conference to settle things,| 4 socialite mother who objects |-e!t Bank, which has always con-| to extreme steps. < ; that such a conference was US€-| to her son’ to ex-show |Sidered an attic a decent height] He could have ordered Ameri-| nounced. Tt wasn't a squeal because Martha studied speech At/iess until the Soviet leader began| girt « Queenie” te tae thane et (ff anyone, is to be invaded by sf ANGE LUS can planes to bombard the Chi-/Northwestern—but she was ecstatic. > showing more signs of willingness! the play. Villain Jack McCaf- °2-Story skyscraper, ° VIErUy meraties nese mainland. 2 * * * to negotiate. frey is folled in his attempt to * * & STATES ~—This~ would have been a good) “What a place to get the news in!” Martha said tn the bus| Whether or not Khrushchev took} persecute the hero and heroine. Tradition-minded officials fought] ind shore lots for sale! bet to bring on a war eee Preemie . . and was still thinking about that|this as a real nudge, only ue of tume it, but finally bowed to pressure; | China's ally, the U.S.S.R, Instead,| when ugh O'Brian was helping her get on the camel they|nows. But at least in recent| All the costumes, rented from) and persuasion. oe | Eisenhower used less drastic! oy) «whisky and Soda.” weels he has’ talked less beltig-\the Detroit Historical Society, are) The skyscraper—tallest in Eu- For People With riers satiny ! means to bolster the defense off uw: oo my father and moth - erently, put more stress on the) authentic clothing worn during the|.. is planned as the center- ' Golfview ESTATES : the islands and sweat out the Red} + 8€@* my ce: a ; value of negotiations, and repeat- Gay — a ie ball coco for an witrameders: -Genubt Vision . attacks until the Communists)¢f in Dallas.a cable when edly said he wasn’t setting a dead-| Sowns a are Pal-\ooment project that will root out} In the next few . close-in | quieted down. -. heard the news — it cost me Tine or-laying down an ultimatum. | ticularly beautiful,” Miss Hott said. on, of the rickety but pictur LAKE PROPER with CHAR- | The same was true in Indochina) $28,” she said. ~*~ * * : the show, will be jesque studios. pets a, VEN = : when North Viet Nam was falling Then last Monday night, as if| the and assistant prin- | The main building will rise 600 . COVENANTS will 2 Her father, Julien C. iding become PRACTICALLY to rebel forces of Communist Ho H okie al i j responding to increasing reason-| cipals of the Waterforg Township (fee; towering over the Paris sky- EXTINCT and PRICES on this : | Chi-minh and the French colonial) “Y€*». unicipa: schools in a “singing walter” |line now limited to about 10 stor- bo ag mens Bs PROBABLY masters of Indochina were disin-| judge and a Methodist act. lies. But it still will play second SETIVE. 7 tegrating. Sunday School teacher, ° fiddl '— 985 It was necessary to construct all/fiddle to the Eiffel Tower's So Look Ahead NOW *- * * and her mother will prob- Asks Reduction : ~ Eisenhower. could have sent in} abty attend the Oscar din. . ew mcanety or Se play Becoee e- Take Your Place American planes to bail out the ee a a ae mo In Auto Fleet this will be the first presentation! A concession tothe Left Bank: : ner April 6—“I told them from the stage of the new Pierce will be 25 acres of new studios for, in the Sun French and smash the Commu- in the cable that I felt I f Ik . Offi 7 ] school. This hds been accomplished painters, sculptors, artists and with Red ‘China Eisenhower, owed tt all to them for OF IKE S UTICIGES | by the men of the faculty with the writers, ' ESTATES combines ideal subure didn’t. everything that’s hap- WASHINGTON &—Sen. Paul ban_ living 2. easy True, half of Viet Nam was lost, pened.” to the Reds. But the rest of the| country, freed of the French, be-| > gan for the first time to have ai the H. Douglas (D-Ill.) says the Eis- enhower administration officials “could begin to practice what they preach about inflation and | It was over the Atlantic on return that Martha teed ow “ wah ask { ficial Imoustoes — = 7 a towent oie i fret foot of “From now o ask for . . NEW ‘59 WAGONS fo. ‘cost costar billing” She * * * } NEVER HATE THE MAN any lake property in the area— RADIO 00 | Douglas said Friday eight big | _ as low as $49 per front foot. Drive 9 | was sitting beside me. Van seven-passenger cars afe ss | An ageless philesopher said: “If you must out today and select your lake HEATER -FJohnson and Evie, his wife, signed to the White House, 37 to || bate: hate what a man does but not the homesite, ‘ BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER }.were in front of us. “And I the Pentagon and at least one | ™2.” LOCATED ON A PENINSULA MI 6-3900 want to play some more sym- each to members of the Cabinet | The person who perpetuates a violent crime SURROUNDED BY THREE ipathetic parts from now on.” MARTHA | and numerous lesser officials. 3. L, VOORHEES She herself had snared the role of schoolteacher Gwen He suggested they be cut to 35. | ‘French in “Some Came Running.” in | “I liked the book and said I'd give anything to play that Airliner Stops in Detroit | part.” MGM had tried to get Deborah Kerr and Jean Simmons, as Passenger Gets Sick i who weren't interested in a supporting role. “They asked me to audition with Frank Sinatra in a very sexy scene in which he takes my hair down. Vincente Minelli (the director) asked me the very first thing ‘Is your hair long?’ is sick, deserves pity not hatred. We bitterly _ complain about the younger generation but = rae never hate them. Their conduct is little dif- i f hy ferent than the conduct of children a gen- a eration ago and those boys and girls are | PRIVATE BEACH PRIVILEGES WITH ees t now good, solid citizens. We shake our fist ALL LOTS e TOTAL COST PER LOT { at the automobile driver who does some foolish act, but think a minute, be honest, Includ: from 4900 inset CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE | | DETROIT @—-A passenger aboard an airliner enroute from | | Chicago to Boston becatrie ill yes-| iterday and the plane made an |unscheduled stop here. and nine chances in ten you will recall times when you did equally foolish things—and no one hated you, only what you did. A friend TOP NOTCH a = The r — Eric W. Wolfe. is on the of our political fence; ETT pees hives ee, 22 eee age Ee pare (ot Lestagicn, Maen, — wen talon! should I hate him? Oh ho! I respect hig ideas NEWS G ER Frank, she says, “is a real genius as an actor. He's prob- t) Annapolis Hospital in suburban as he respects mine. GORDON WILLIAMSON ably the best natural actor living. He does spontaneously what Wayne, where doctors said he fell M. E. SIPLE seed : lant it. method actors do after a lot of studying and thinking over.” into a diabetic coma. mae 8 ot visence; never plan RCA Victor VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME American Samoa _ consists of) Low cost mode! radio fits an “Sabrena” was her first big picture. She goe her mink coat, 266 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8387 budget, any space but mace as a bonus. She's been working her way up since, with never icant oontirwest of et . = as cs bog _with T any unkind gossip heard about her. She’s 36-24-38 (“probably | Ecidex Thesat fore. ‘" 8+ Teoing on 39 since the Cairo trip”) and she learned to be a lady at Pairfax Hall Junior College at Waynesboro, Va., be-' a : : $1.25 Weekly fore going to Northwestern and Pasadena Playhouse. ae Day Eres: ervies! TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Jackie Kannon explained his : f THE wig cae a the 7 ie crap tables: “She didn't talk to z i e dice e nagge em.” Good Housekeeping WISH I'D SAID THAT: Some women retain their youth SHOP by a simple exercise—they just keep pushing 30. .. . That's earl, G et the Best Deal 51 W. Huron = FE «44-1555 | | brother. i (Copyright, 1959) — a rene | = Shop Monday Night ‘til 9 o’Clock MONDAY ONLY SPECIAL SALE! Full Coil Innerspring Construction! on a New Car BUT DON'T STOP. THERE | Be Sure You Get the =. Best Deal on Your F inancing UTO LOANS PERRFELT Plastic Cover. . DIVAN -SLEEPER BED Orig. $49.95 Sellout! MONDAY ONLY Dae” A ARIES Nl 2 ee A a *38 No Money Down Pay 3 Monthly Know exactly what your new car will cost... See how mpl can enjoy new car ownership. 2 Ae & A handsome living room piece by day—a comfortable single bed by night! Covered by rugged plastic, it wipes off with a damp cloth, will not fade. For rec room, den, living room. Choose white or black. 12 only. Waite’s ... Rowasicirs or Pow T tae Branches at W. Maron ot Tilden «= M. Pery at OM et OG i cae bee oe ee __}_ "THR PONTIAC PRESS, ‘SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1050 Fast Talking (Security forYou. + He Re he 8 See a aah g 2 ft; ta if ey f 1 ! & WILLIAM P. SANDERS ~ ROCHESTER "William P; Sanders, 49, of 1117 wet 4 “Cherrylawn St., died ay ot Ween tiac Motor Home. Burial Surviving are his wife, Edith, ington Cemetery, and a brother, Delbert Casey of Mr. Miller new . Hospital ter. Service will be held at 2 p.m. iliness. He had ; the wae’ a the Parc the F , EF Godhaeat Panera Home Bye “gy 30 p.m Rati! i Vime of service. Sees iuet. : The at nS “ son : layne Web- won't sound eh <8 - er of Hastings, ded yesterday in ee 2 .asiner Holland Birt at | | Drayton Plaine FO OR 2-708 a ” 7 . M>of -, er of Mrs. Laile i * also a cS Rimi be ¥ oci‘es maa| Tee eeee arin os Rien | Ee eeeeaeete | Doneleor Johns He ix survived by his parents Ha The % take you up on your of wnat iy Sree ¢ for 1958. On the basis of this March Uh seam fram spe | __“Desgned _for_uceralet__ en gt | Sauk Moe at F oO pocketed his gun and| 2 find dat { ool made a total of $1,158 last ees and ci, Intarment in Petrate Gen Tauguii serves Fs Sia ] mee ee aisappeared in the crowds on Ful-| should have received all my checks Sem tied teese eer ice’ raersi'none.” | . Voorhees-siple 4 Funeral é 53 ¢. which were withheld?” MARCH , | noon Sunday True to his word, Berg waited tie. = . “Mam B 11M Cherian wae sa UNERAL HOME i WALTER F. BENNETT noe and fis igs Riniicl eeieh cc eetand- th senders Chen fearers ot ‘i cain" snr sei fale, cides resell Rate resort | EME fg | commis 8 “ an ek hasnt ar te you, since your total earnings for 1958 were less Sea ce Boney cet 1 Lor 14 GARDEN The Annual the Town- aun ot white ‘Lake ‘will. be held i E Fi I | the 7625 Highland Rd., - ° ° aie mh fe Bee BS x-Firearms Instructor Burglary Probe. (Clticers Deliver | ee a ——— aoe Turns Guns on Baby in F Series | | aman cay tee] corse y in ront ag a were replies at the Press Notice ts hereby given that the An . Eff p f ; ; ging. Ar by Parmer. office in the following | a ly bg eg clsm of weapons instruction in the|'™& the welfare of officers. Two Rochester patrolmen had) ‘¥re¢ Watne dna ‘Doris - . a a Jean Wi 4 &, if 14, xu, 28, $1. 32, oeeek PR ROBERT H. DUDLEY + oes Sr eating om _ 9 © | Ex-Convict Surrenders|t "oles of “midwives” this morn- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Moen. Par : ~ - Blgomtield, Township, Chirk still targets. One by oné, he acknowledged a) Aft . ing, Welivering a baby seconds be-| Btral_SFrangements will be en- ©, B, ©, G, 14, 76, TI, 21, 28, “Se. “You've get to be able to tir | % benefits for afficers ob- ead Police Trace 2 \ tore the mother was to enter the sp % the Syerks- 81, 91, 94, 163. ™ ne ve re aes beline pon Gh: of snowing et Crimes to Him Oa a - ) alia cli tained aconlianaer a The Michigan ordains = Service Martin : served. . ‘ Sure, they all that,” Rob sie ere eee T?. of 564% Tuscola St.,| An ee \Verhine said, “dat ?._ ~ oft Se ental the wienan in CLASSIFICATIONS The Pontiac Press fy bapa, agp rH Ty at at we FOR WANT ADS two years an eX-con- a Se I, 3ee| Church. Burial follow in Com-|s0 that officers could fire at mov.| *@? Past three years.” vict, Leroy E Vous. @, of, Mil cure edimmsnnesd bean neat oct DIAL eee 5 ; “vate “Townsio. wa te wh ing targets, Verhine recalled. fn hie epinton, Weebitie said, the| ~~. aemteld St., surrendered to|as the woman was ready to From 8 a.m. to § p.m. nareny, “ncaa tobe Ime body wil be at tie C. 3 “The chief said Willman was an{PPOA ruined its reputation by|" Iench ons boned ethene | Cut of the car. = mors shouts : public. health, wank and ane are Harbor, until 11:30 a.m. Monday| the pnd Rare Fg re false charges against |jang Coty dud for Seatiasiien Mrs. David (Roberta) Sexton, 20 red Immediately. The : mph gg ®gure |and will lie in state at the church|man was going t aay ; of breaking and entering ir the\ 2% First St. and her new 7. sibility for ccaprs "ember warts BOARD} from 12: © build an out-| One of these. charges the! pound, 4-ounce : than to cancel LAKE TOWNSHIP, BOAR 12:30 until time of service.|side range for us. Eten was that) night time. 2 . baby boy were “do- for that portion of the fitet Tywasnip Clore) Mr. Halsema died Thursday at “But mio property was ever|tund, he said. a flower! He has been charged with a ) ment which has, been. tame ” . bought and nothing ever happened breaking into fi Work Wanted Male ..........+- dered valueless the sae eee at” .” He denied the Fraternal Order! store, 974 a They shall mount up with wings Work Wanted Female ........... ii error, “When,” cancellations Notice given. that the gext Mest of the of Police was organized in opposi-| ang Jostyn St., im August ins eagles; they shall run; and not VICES OPFERED your "nin ‘number. fro the ‘Township. of meer etl policemen were C&Iition to the PPOA. ‘ stealing $200 cash plus & |be Bervice eats wil be gives State of Michie pvt hei oun 0 S — old 1929 revolvers in _1955,/never been for or ‘The FOP has| jarge quantity of biank money = : Sutiting Supplies resis without ot the Township al, 08 Milt Bt. erhine testified te esteem,” fg tas Straley,| orders. hn OrgRDINANCE NO. 33 | Sorthocene @ Taxes ........ 4 ands Gaden Gan dee > oaths oe: . ones and had him new | Two other witnesses at last aro s on broke|Zeuing ‘Ordmance “as Township Rural) Oconee ® 7 ee ae tee io 13 weheee peen tee Dated: March 17, i968, ) recondition |night’s session testified into a Clarkston .coal yard office|. The Township Board. of the Tefering «..... 4 day previous to publication. HELEN M. JENCKS, rriVa the others’ he sald. record on police! and took a check protector for use|;%z °f, White Lake, Guapit at Ook. ‘ rower Transient Want Ads may March 30, 21, ‘58. eee Among other duties, the ex-range| yg, in falsifying the money orders. Towasalp Ordmance tie t, ce amenbea ie Hy mg FB NOTICE-ANNUAL TOWNSHIP MEET- Respiratory Infections et, ait he made ammunition] , : ee ee x & be amended nd supplemented as fol- the first insertion "Gicttce te given, that ‘the next for the department, 45,000 rounds} 44 clerk, said Eastman act- | Since then, according to police, Artele T¥—Health, sanitary, safety CASH WANT AD SATES Annual Township Mseting of the Electors Take Baby, Other Tot|yvearly. : too hastily in installing & |French has been on an “extensive|amnded ss flows, Lives Days 6Dare ) Sounty of Of tie ot wienieas:| This Morn ‘He came to grips with the PPoa| ScMraleed records system. |vacation” financed "add Section 4.12: 1-Day . County of Oskland, State of Michigan, ing personally in 1956 when he placed “More planning was necessary | checks by the bad! nusoun. he: apne = ; is Sh we on I a ee — a special officer serving as Stra-| “24 “lerts and officers should | ne is accused of lor other sbmonious matter shall be kept 3 ie ike She ® qrm, Seandere Time, on Saterday. Apel Two area children, one of them|ly’s administrative aide on the| "Ave bee trained before the chalet issuing seven |in open containers on the open ¢ 300 540 820 E « shan einnen a three-week-old baby. were pro-|Pistol team, he recalled _ | move was made,” she sald. tn Mane! Park, 0 = ; iS tS OAs a +, aoee TPE? Clare nounced dead on arrival at St. ‘DIDN'T WANT HIM’ The changeover will necessitate) ada and several other places. | © «Ske B be Re gga _=_—— utes of each other this morning: liked to t president told me he|records section, she said. Pp ap Door docelipear yg re : PALE, -- pe ey >a a gage rong ‘Jcer) on the teasn because he woan't|(cmtralizing, records. hind 15 maoutes yw ceieteseees™ eo i. . Notice is ty the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene he wasn't minutes week. AUTO MECHAN! a tat on Apel re i960, at 11:00) Statler, of 2451 Opdyke Rd., Pon-|¢ regular pélies ofticer,” Verhine fia SOnA, wil be aa terials inciden sect Se ecm ome rs Orion, Michigan, public sale of |tiac Township, and Keith B. Bailey,|" pu on mete, would like * * dont fe Hon cess 3 ay and commission Couteriibie, bearing Motor ‘o.|80n Of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon t-in talking to the team mem»|*° incorporate parts of the-“old- French called RATESURE CoETEaet SALms Seameeet, wie be eld, tor come lot Si83 Frankwell St indepen’ [bers himself, Verbine sn Salted ee, Ore eee. back and said he 21" MECHANIC — may ‘be made at above aaareay tne|dence Township. ~» Indepen-ing objection to the officer, Theo-| oreo. recommendations con jin front of the Hotel cause to be ‘provided for each builaraa | Rett Apte Furnished ......... p ston Ht, MECHANIC serves the to bid “.~ According to dore Villella. oF systems, ejan hour. He did. 7 : : sion, have. & references. Dated: 3-18-88. wes Oakland County said, “If they recommend it, t . s PE _¢-3566 ; 2-100, cecour cons | Bepaty Coroner Dr. J, F. Naz | , Despite « FPOA boycott; team |it’s a pretty good thifg.” a és No occuoent., owner. iesese ‘or arent DRIVER SALESMEN By E.R. of Clarkston, this members didn’t Hb shall nermit the ent, N San type of infec- : quit and none | AV ek ee ne Gene er commen aired for the tollowlng: Pontiac tare Se fion is becoming increasingly fa- ever complained, the firearms seers Gene tein ie can ‘ lary Se bags’ te ance yards or ine hh mee 1 Sirmmanem 3, Berkicy 3. Re. iS Instructor said. station had been broken into and \ however, be vlared ; petees Py ky Pe oe peal Es ER 69 Rl. a Honors Past Chiefs |" ce tse sess acon eg ~ handled such . ; the, Towne of Brandon wi Board sf] involving babies four months old Hee station baven’t been cleaned) Pontiac Sales tee prticine BERT “ swemohin Chore genset ouitons Apply ‘Mondar. | FERS ee See woe ae eee ome ae aac = annual settlement. All “V infection acts| © .éns ; . ATE OF M'CHIGAN— our wile with | RoR SRL SARS AE Oth clecming rapciy,-many|,, 77 im poor condition andl dy Ineeduced ara aly exhib ane, Asay flows were how |r Sev tee Soe ot Sens | ty bel conan predag three hours, Dr. Naz paver after. It would|"— as a city exhibit. night at the Past) In the matter of the petites Ge. . MEAT : Sy SR Sa Sc win ee ts De Nene teh a a a lee a Beni Ok Ss tw Eee i , Clerk and _ . "8 Sa a! er at Bemis - Olsen| .7 Charles M ° PER a CRAN? iia Township of Brenden|sherift’s deputies nosy ie ia a * * think the chief did that,” Gale|Amvets Post 570. kien wetine § a hes en, “maa, for machine shop. Under #0 } Oaklan. oe, rh “Itempts to revive the child Verhine said he quit the PPOA countered, ‘ Mrs, George Williams, immedi- Court altering that the srenei tiene good references. Give ; fa be 4 in 1958 because * * * ate past chapter commander 2 ahoute of the father af colt minor chita| Sale Business. Property ........ r) ™ . Must live in general area of its attacks on COM-!are unknown end said child hag violated For Bale or Ph arsenide Walled Lake. Write Pontiac Ss raley. He said he did not qualify as a|Mander, and Mrs. Ralph Ells-/*, sv, of the State. and that said ehnid FINANCIAL ae eceeees * Press, Box 00. I never heard these attacks|{Mgetprint expert in court, put worth, immedigte past commander| sm‘. "sornyctt under the Jurtadietion| Suisef! ts Opportunities ........: 81 High School Grads (5) made at PPOA meetings,” he said explained it was because “most|°f the auxiliary, were presented|.,.), fy nacre of the peonle nf the) money, to oes es —— se a oo de me oe ve om at = ae toy tieet with past poocarsceng2 pins. titted thet the hearing oma said petition s MERCHANDISE — * uestional Bias realy “Avni Ee fd “ case against| . Among “guest speakers for|¥! be hid at the Orkiand County) Swaps Ch gat . Mr. them.” ; the event were. Addison Revviee Center. Court Bones Annex, Sale Clothin ina fee mtice | The PPO : Alguire, | 12e08 w Z een 12 p.m. and 6 p.m. tay ‘neeas A opposition to Stra. ae’ of the Michigan Trust Fund, and/‘!*¢ in oil Cooly: on tn ae ad at Ne Meusehold Goods 22... wt =| CAL TUTOR RE in 1955 and night’s hearing was March, A.D. 19 ° . wires 3 men | o was cen- Mrs, Margaret Tyvela, past com 59. at one o'clock in the lentine Gifts ........ 1.88 = for tri-county area. | tered in “five or six men,” he marked by frequent clashes be- | mandier -jafterncon, end you are hereby com- mas Gifts * rare vagy to learn and good work said tween Ewart and of the DAV state depart-|™2"4*¢ to appear personally st said mas Trees _ ite more im it than ex- le é d Smith, with the |ment, who discussed programs at hearing. For Gale Miscellaneous . 60 poppe Wl aE. car peces- “If this clique fel city attorney charging that testi- | veterans hospitals ort, beine Imorectical to make personal! Dg. ft | stacusses OOS ings plus ‘sooty b:30' te aa t they might| mony about the PPOA was ir- a ton “shall be vorved ‘by punileasion af Camere auipmen etn ea “e sdeahers,. Gag’ cal oan) re ae neue ene ae «conn nny eens onestnas to seid Rear-| Musial fatten” “iportuntty. Call BM 98071, meeting "and notity. only ‘people| ne Lodge Calendar — |risia“zefaronsucl. intros] $36 Ser Baaecnt | Mita otal oe pet who agreed with them, Facing commissioners, Smith de- mcsite uation Ohi Mona, dviden of x6ld Coat, oa one eel ing Goods a 85 to 38 states. Call Paul at Their opponents wouldn’t know|“lared: “You won't decide this on|ter No. 228 OES. Mon. Eve. M Spine Mecrch, AD, Me caine joes | pte MEN - I AM ANXIOUS sae a N E . Eve. March| " D1 pe oo MEN - 1 AM ANXIOUS al t until it was too late for, com and ; ineffficiency.|23 honoring - life, honorary and| (e*" ARTHTR ©, MANRE, Wood. Goal & Fuel TO TALK: TO § MEN them to attend.” You'll decide it on the strife in the Charter members. Dinner at 6:30)“ °°" sere 3, vancensewnc. Plants, Treen shrubs fault of their own, Men who are T hl * Li te le a e separ to show amare the trode ten.” ee enrney Svante stn nines saree yay e aaa iy Prisca con otggnr PPOA pres-| Commissioners have set meet- —— Derience ne wane previous or pe e cessary. ent 1988 wth ony ve vot ne Monday, Tenis, Wedneses] — NewS in Brief .|S"oeiias me = nme Saeki "flat . . wn. Under eieebexamiation by Cityle' dedaher Velie Agee 6. when ray mniet, Of the, patton con-| Bel arm Prafuce Biz nm Sh ayia, Ono Attorney William A. Ewart,|Pontiac votes on repeal of civil| TWe Poor boxes containing an/", "Sine mr: e recanre: SOON» Site Per Sevtoment an... Mtn dowet's ney Castemer’ Depart Verhine* admitted the PPOA hadiservice. i untetsteinnd "ammount af money) Sacer ere Oe Tesensaems | Ree oy sit. “Gani at ewes < and a set of books were reported |u"t, tiene thet the nresent phere-| For, Sale Housstraiiors ..-...0--78 2rd, 1338 N wootwari, "Royal ‘ae oe wane of sald 'mgnor| Rent Trailer Space. ...,....+.+- 1” Oak. 1 block 8 of 12 won eee gigs — — Bee yor gue Pe esenoriog x po Mwah ar great he mood “under Aut perviog, oo scsussscose HI etn tn a fat tg” Hooters ceseveeess. . MA : | pep aw! >. apchinsne a ore x od pe Por se SRATOND Lov vess or w POR A AN G.MLT.C. EMPLOYEES she ee ae rae] RUE Sele oc | Etta ie 7 e FEDERAL Secoten Conter, Gmart Pree Teane| aa iy Can ME_ miley ot Pe fast ; IT Hae ve path Cod on he th tor a oe , . a felesman. to take on adi: | _ CREDIT UNION strain,” oattons aie" wie 0B | jiidiererveia-ia ; | ' od to a@iear. personally at Bald . 904 For Employees of GMC T. wait Mees | ‘ : | Nenrine, ron hie aed Thetr Families - | of - Hae, Seauty, irene carwano tea ie o- oi . 'W. Huron. ot N. FE soon Salvatic Hine shalt ha seveat he mibiication af. # Card of Thanks 1 | 156 W. Huron. ot Norton 53-6151 j Sore mene pe ariel meet ) Pay : 4 j . & newananer| a . : Eee ee i : | ! rintad sated tin wistt TO 4 Be i - HOURS: ” WATE te | . nsurance ; ' Writowse the, Peele arthur “Fonda! neighbors rad. tess oe toourenee. Novexperignes ‘tee Mon., Tues., Thurs. 10-5:30 Do ALL Your, | 2 c% af Pantinn tm ent4 Aannty, hie 10th fora oeterings, and cerds W. Huron Datly 8:30 to 4 a.m gues : , ' 1 804 bay at Nee vores at cur pemene ced caren WANTEN APPLY TN 4 Fri, 10-6—Set. 9-12 Financing Here | Pontiac State Bank Bldg, be rE §-8172 hives onaft yeas oe trtec fates, Bet, ‘peier uM. “Bristol A rate | W. DINNAN- i i : | aN : ELSIE J. wonee ene .\tamoon : Home, eR. wana : ne rE 42577 Prohet> Pamtater. aes Mrs. Peter Bristol, WANT OR MORE ALIV! Stare Tes, r. Edmund Bristol, snd Mrs, “a um | cleaner or oy von? i, '6 ; wi | j Py es! eee ee a ge ‘65 CHIPPEWA ROAD me ‘ Maple ae ‘PONTTAG PRESS, SATURDAY, ‘MARCH 21, 1959 Orr GARLAND, Lon dove pat pay: Pe agerwit ag ie eet Paved drive, ioe “yard, ard. Bate Payment ornon Bows R. er. “dome, Bs be ete r 5 A NEAR os th Good 2 Baih, Ou farnsce, Immediate Por:| feat session, $10,000, Terms. SYLVAN LAKE PRIVILEGES, % ra Behan beach. 2 Bedroom home. foore poi See ag Gara = ediate Possession. $7600. “iene INCOME. Wi 5 5 - ee = wae Side. 3 apts sai AN. Near and s farage. $13 ps ng Terms. immedi- a a ei AYDE N, Realtor PE 6-041 Sun. 10 jo 2 OPEN 3 TO 5 P.M. SUNDAY ge _ ; DI beobe ~~. "ti, 6 p.m, NOW 1S TEE TIME Low af #18 NORTHERN HIGH Pats sae as et pg a with sewer.and water. Call Warren Stout, Realtor — yaite fram. ie ar “ge blinds ~ | FOR ILDING IN ~ Doren tw Waiha, Netaral’ fre:| CH CHEROKEE HILLS! Ss int dope ae Ga ae selection of 100 tt. pov lb a } pay ty for ¢ homes — com- 7) etc loc: S Leslie R. Tripp—Realtor Select NOW to sult YOUR exact 1 West Huron Beeds! - FE 5-8161 or PE 44278 Saas with eh brick "a wr evated close to/ EX sofl. No se tank Ww Qu fire-| trowbles. Beautiful view every place, tn living room, hen| direction » eorestng and weated Ra La- drapes er rs teahoren gy * miles north of ws aa ia PRICED from $1,200 with 10 per poo «anal or 10 per cem discount EAST SUBUR a 3 room close stor at the Porat ACRES, office to —— ached pny Boon or tr 23881 Filan Now Now 503 PE 4-4211 H. P. HOLMES, Inc. 283 Carl W. Bird, Realtor Community Bank Bldg. Eves. PE 5-1302 PERRY ACRES Toads, 50 ft. Joins Btate Park ‘ . fishing, swimming, riding Lake Orion Eveoings after 6 call FE or PE 4-647. A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd... |3 4 PVT. ON 6 2 . near Holly. No bidgs $475 FE 4-253 sere, By owner. PE “ey p ar Bt peut } * -~ e a re a, = —e road. Schoo! bus at it . vi y =~ +S ~— easy Sacre parcel and in . . , rural area gf sige bomes. me SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. be exclusive getete. off Black. road, Only $8, With $1,000 5705 Hummingbird Lane we. 3 bedroom brick ranch bun- STEELE alow with automatic Ps water’ Rd. asst Wichland "MO aoe Beat. ¢ floor, ceramic tile bath, prem Bane oe 6 garage ona 12 ACRE * tJ e 4 t ie trade DIXIE MWY. TO MAY-| Scai'“ie'tube Orie Sree. sootock EE D TURN RIGHT TO road frontage. y can be STREET AND LEFT TO ,, into 6 and Tecre parcels. OPEN - A; ~ meee J terms. 3540 SHELBY ST. Oxford, OA $3123 Orion MY_ 2-291 14 ACRES 3 bedroom ranch t: bungals | with 2 fireplace. Mas cok floors. | plastered walls, ceramic tiie be Vanity. Nice kitchen with all en | w APH TO LAKE RD. LEPT TO GENELLIA AND RIGHT TO MODEL. George R. Irwin 269 BALDWIN PE 54-0101 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE PERSOALIZED HOMES — FE 8-2209 .2FAMILY INCOME $750 DOWN yely SUBURBAN LOCATION. ND 4 DUPLEX os? OIL FUR-| BLACKTOP ROAD. re OAK a IMME- TE POSSESSIO: R. J. VALUET: Realtor 346 OAKLAND AVE. Sunday call) FE 86-1644 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _Income Property 43A 2-FAMILY ZONED COMMERCIAL This brickcrete 2-family carpeted home which is = on a T2x- FE 5-0603 | On a meg, | Partly bg age ——— Dizte Hwy. » Slag md area, ‘CUCKLER vie 736 WN. Saginaw PE 44091 _ 10 ACRES Beautiful 10 acres close in. Fruit, . house 3 years old. . 't miss _- [ - — farm house with full basement. Good condition. West of Pontiac. Vacant 12 miles northwest of Pontiac, $250 per acre. $3,000 pote Be RIDGEWAY, REALTOR PE 46203 Lake Area ag 65 acres. Beauti- land “Very: scenic. | Prite —_ $225 per acre E-Z terms White Lake Rd. 100 acres or any, part Just west of Waterford. As ‘low as $400 per a -SCHUETT, Realtor 190 b2 tres atage. lot. Hse wach | a OR 3-3671 J a A=. filed bath oll heh tn ha oan BY OWNER 10 ACRES OF LEVEL heat, price $17,250. E-Z/- . 12 miles North of Pontiac. terms. $4. oe down. OA 48-2250. FOR SALE BY OWNER 16 ACRES ore Oe ES-BARTRAM | is cute Lake Townani, . rontage on Jac acres, Eves. OR 3-3230 anid wooded "ne to Park MIL ~~ 2 LARGE APART-| ¥ . Grass Lake frontage. ments, complete. 2 baths, MUtual 4-8642. ; gas furnace, carpeting, paneling, large 10 ACRES & UP shaded let. in center of t 424 Hickory. By owner. of town At P, W. DINNAN 66 West Huron FE 623577 . For Sale Lake Prop. 44 POP BLDW PAPA PDD APPL PPP PPL LPL at z =. Fas 6 LOTS 30 ACRES With 422 feet of road frontage. 3 7 sEpEooT OM LAKEFRONT. NEW) choi Lilst in ‘57, terms. OR 13-0139. Outland” a ate Pca - EXCLUSIVE, RESTRICTED RESI- on White to sell, cash 200 feet left to “sell, wi divide. Hurry on this Tl 'N. Saginaw St. Rd. and MBUO. Rr stent at $13,000 cash, Warren Stout, Realtor FE 5-8165 Open ‘til 6 p.m. . Lakefront lots. % mile off M59 a Milford _ . Only $1,600, Off vane $1, — Can build Siler house here Highland STEELE REALTY Rd. (M59), Highland: ri 4-2045. For Sale Farms 48 80-ACRE DAIRY FARM. SMALL $5. payment. Ottie Ward, FE Lake Lots and Lake _Priv. art ACRES. BARN FOR GRADE milk, Good —<; Terms. Manley Sweet, South ardman, 1-3 to acre, Cla.kston Q churches, shoppi ng at S osie Wind- ng paved street, $1,095 full price; $20 down; ® month, Al How- ard Phone! Lincoin 8-711. ARGE NT LOT ON Whipple e, FE 2-6373 WOLVERIN ® LAKE, RANCH brick on 1 acre 6 Mi. from Lin- 120 «Of. Lakefront, silo and other | coin Plant. outbuildings All in A-1 condition. Large living room Fire lace. 2 bedrooms: ag : Pp $11,250 down. room. atha. ci E Fruit trees. Underground sprin-| Warren Stout, Realtor king system, oor grill.|77 N. Saginaw St. FE 5-8165 rere: n'a .2 car garage Open ‘til 6 p.m “Market “etl, after 6 p.m. For Sale le Resort sort Prop. : 444 4 WATERFRONT LOTS AND : gabins. Gladwin quick sale, UL _ For Sale Lots 46 2 LOTS, OSCODA, BISsON. ette, 7 Mile’ aa pee EM 6 aboot oe th es acre 1500, 0 down hard beach. 2 EB. } Pg Evenings & Sunday 155 ACRES Located near Almont. Good f PRIVATE LAKE ESTATE — 165 acres. completely private lake, 5 bedroom, 2% living room With fireylace, oii heat, 2 sc ed in im ming pool, ‘Modern tenant house, 2 age 30x110 & 50x50, 1 anes north of Pontiac. $90,000 - te Roy Annett, Inc. : Realtors since a na 10 seta? pear, Mu M16 good ground. winier’ priced “lakefront lots $50 down tare ANGUS, ‘Realtor 2160 oes NA 17-2815 140 FT. PRO: a ed MT. Clem we goned commercial, PE 8-1 LAURA ‘LA M an * = rng fi e ERSHAM Mayfair 6-6250 oeee a re Sale Business Property 49| 26 10 LOTS excelent mercial having approx gy ge cell 8 Me one haa for ima WILLIS Mi BREWER ts ante “. | sale bushes Property 1 Business Opportunities 51 5 ACRES 92000 DN, DN. nt| REALTOR PARTRIDGE |. OPEN ‘TIL 8” “STATEWIDE Real ‘te Service of Pontiac a RLES REALTOR BD. CHA 1711 8. Telegraph PE 4-0621 COOLEY LAKE RD. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor © TIN, Saginaw St. 58165, Open ‘til 6 p.m. . M59 FRONTAGE ZONED COMMERCIAL 200 ft. frontage 2 wonderful or ssiad site or buy a i investment. Quip” $5.0h0 1.250 down. Dorotiry y Snyder Lavender ea.” (hase pons’, Ool Highland Rd. (M36) “> any of . RIDGEWAY, REALTOR - FE 46-6203 old i" bedrooms, bath, oil forced sir furnace. oan . With 100 frontage i road peekeeent coun’s ot suite. eee REALTY, 135 a ar (2438). Highland. 2045. mail. for ealth Call FE 5-0000. Business Opportunity “RESTAURANT Beautifully decorated th with leather booths. Kitchen equipment. Gross monthly average Reasonable rent. WM. A. KENNEDY | REAL 3101 W. Huron PE 4-3569 Open Evenings till 9 BARBER SHOP FOR SALE. 7 * FE 5-331, Can Hem pstead aa BUILDING Sn cy as or gy organize: tion hail or club house. Building ft. constructi an capacity aa main audito- classrooms, bap- on & balcony. basement seal = men’s & P s EA sys COMMERCIAL Two lots with small office build- win @ W. New . Ideal for cleaners, — shop, insuranee or real estate fice, Call us for information, K. G. Rest eemaD) REALTOR 102 E. Huron "st. PE 4-8284 After 5:00 p.m. call PE 5-0610 or FE 32-3971 Lakefront Bar ‘Liquor, Beer and Wine 9 month Class B and §.D.M. masonss i yr, en Wel maker. Never offered Ml equipped, seats 200. 5 in Summer, . & land for & Franks. , Drayton Plains, OR 3-9701, + , “LET’S TALK BUSINESS” Gift Shop. Outstanding volume Sharp. Very la-de-da. . Drive-In Make offer—must be sold -this month Business Opportunities B. _ STANDARD oft OL, ~SERVICE. STATIONS FOR RENT Eetteca is wine pe PROX $1,500 SALES CORPORATION | inventory $1,000, JOHN A, LANDMESSER, BROKER cash OF” or swap, OR 1573 gk, EB Boor HAVE sMALL ara aT * PARK %. — e, just ane = wa an ie neste ie ‘burminghém Wit act oa a. thabe OUR EQUITY in 6 room house for 2 betroom trailer free & clear FE SALE OR TRADE ‘58 AMERICAN FE 56-0192, Rambler. Like new. WILL SWAP '5l PLYMOUTH S8E- dan. cond, atx haa boat with motor, FE 8- For Sale cleans 56 be et MUSERAT COAT, $65. 2 MENS SUITS, 8. VERAL ? MENS SUITS, SIZE 30. SEVERAL sport coats. Reas, FE 4-2708. 2 MEN'S SUITS, 38 —* in excellent cond. FE 2-9034. ALL SIZES, CLEAN USED ‘WORK ait AN'S TOPCOAT. PEARL Gi Size 40, Worn : i 23 < | A or & petite girls dresses, Size 14, 778. : ‘RENT IT FAST} i through Rent Ads! Room, |. ; house, apartment, any- thing — Want Ads give 28181. ruout Mich. 1060 W. HURON Wet | ool ACTION. Diat FE ie Wa 5 oo Led & a, Credenza buffet .........,es. Solid oak dining rm. suite .. $25 WOOKCREE | eee ee, Keen erenes Baby bed, complete ........ w biond bedrm. suite 104 5. Saginaw nena bee ee Open § ®. ALL MAKE VACUUM CLEANERS aired. FE 85. 441 Emerson es Stk GER ZIG ZAG ing panties does Seeees a p obnhon Ho sth tachments. Sheriise for sm $71.20 << Eat clu cree anaes 5 A oka A 8 APPLIANCE BARGAINS -— 3 APT size refrigerators — like new. 1 Whirlpoo] auto. washer. 1 Wi in se auto. washer 1 Mavtag erat washer. 1 Kelvinator elec- dryer, get Appliance, _Davisburg. MA 5-60 OUT Fab Be ond YOU WANT “a fa HOME CAN BE 4 the Bad but 8 : Nw ae ‘our teas” “dept, for real sare i. We b pol ee. @ out Ay d res of free PaDEN MON BAT. » TO 6 4 miles ac or 1 mile E. of Auburn Heights on Auburn 2616 Dixie ser. a8, 10, perms OLD, r trade aa $3.75 | N YRS. foam rebber viike new, ide ex: | te. FE ° ‘Here We {Ge phionn ion ok 51_W. HURON Hamilton auto, washer, 6 Me . Call OL’ }-1 $10 “ae die Call between FE 46337, oe er eens GOOD HOUSEKEEPING sHOP Of Pontiac - 4-1555 | Corner Or :| HUTCH, HONEY MAPLE. 4¢INCH. wens i iene ‘VERY . MI 6 i i mason | 107 Squirrel] Rd. MARCH Appliance Clearance | cu.ft, GE Refrigerator Lay A ‘ Now: Savings $229.05 $1909.00 98 a Now Ss meiiqereter vines 199.00 . Raf Was ” = $249.95 Tea 95 Norge Gas ‘as Chew oe $269.95 $199.00 GE Air Conditioners ‘as Now Savin, Sas 95 $199. 00 $1 Ww oF iw * s as oO a . ‘nye 95 $149.00 "Sb. 95 *GE Dryer Wi N Ba sous he0.00 Gdns Your old appliance can be the down payment, Take from 6 mos to 3 yra. No pindting charge if paid in 00 days ~ GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 5-6123 SELL LA 30_8. Cass MOVING — model room MAPLI t, dinette ta ie Studio. MI 6-23' MU. refr <_ 75. . 189 i TE Living Rae- CAB- le, knee-hole desk. OVER 90 USED TV SETS, FROM $44.95 up. ON Ly L wneeerere, A, Henne eee ha eee ee ee ATER. AL : 40 Highland Rd. (M0) OR 3-foyi ‘ W-Pine .... : Birch 2 Bem xe” = dig “thes t= sectional, eee eee eeaee ee rere ee eee L Hal g eee Re ee VACUUM CLEANER _tachments, $40. Call OR 3-2161. WM Stero r ‘der, 1 YR. ore re ee = ae: fui hogge is. TY chats ie, 3 basi. winter DIN: She 32x48, 3 . $20, Pad included. LPOOL AUTOMATIC WASH- | er, suds saver, = it’ TY with stand $35. 220 ©. Iroquois, FE 23-1860: ZIG-ZaG SEW et model. Make igh or ebay oe ar “a eh Television & Radios 57B _ mal RADIO, PHONOGRAPH minatian. lyr, = OR 3-1664 after 5 RCA ra FV. OFHER BAR- ins, Peer's Appliances. 8161 merce Rd. Water Softeners 57C POPP el FULLY AUTOMATIC $129 SALE PRICE ~ Originally sold for $329. Cooley Soft Water Co. : PE 25821 ah eat SIC” CHEF 9 cu, Sree a cond, Reas. UL_2-4000 sar GAS KILN FOR CERAMICS $25. Phone LI 6-4234, Royal Oak. A-l_PATIO STONES Save on eee Sites 24x24, pat 16x16, 16x32. Smooth finish, 7 c ors, whole and retail. Also sae large selection of outdoor fire- pone metal units and electric Roser A. Authier Co. 1057) High- land Rd. (M59), 4 miles west of _Pontiac Airport. EM 3-4825. AUTO REPAIRS AND DUNLOP tires, No cash down, Herb’ s. Au burn & Shirley. FE 2-1311 ANCHOR F ENCES ge on otairee FHA roved. aa sEeP AND TMATES — HAL quarters yke bee PE S041, BURPEE< PRESSU) COOKER, _lge. Used little. pd cooking or canning, MA 6-3811. BATHROOM FIXTURES YOUNGS- town — oil and gas furnaces water and steam boilers, automatic water heater, hard- ectrical supplies, crock lvanized copper black f Bros, 1GH' 2685 LAPEER BATH TUB, 5 FT. ROLL RIM ON legs, gi condi ition, , includ- ing fixtures. Phone OLive 1-3301. BARGAIN TIME OVER STOCKED—MUST SELL 300,000 F't. EXCELLENT USED LUMBER axé — 2x6 — 208 — 2x10 — 2013. Priced for quick. sale Sutxd ff. 2.0.6... sweeey 15¢ each New knotty pine paneling, 16¢ ft. PIPE—BRICK—STEEL ona us figure your complete build- m needs. We pews eve you cannot ry better any place FHA Terms Pree, Estimates OPEN 8 to 5:39 MON. thru SAT. SURPLUS LUMBER & & — BETTER BUYS — vaeae eibeey side . Zonolite House Cash and ee. as Bag aE * AT- }. aod hie te, bene ben: Large @scount on all sieve of Joon “wench oteine., Sas | bower acourdions. - ie saw, 2, . corn. a new a R siti ry Mich Rpinteau ant Rd. °e electric, ot] bottoa ‘ens eat new fvorles ........+ seenees piano yi e Sus’ eurnbocir, foams] [uvereege 90 Orchard bake | Small medium plane cenvn ings $57.95 up. . - Good practice piano .........$80 Bi . aie me FE Saal oF 3-9176, FREE DELIVERY-TERMS tape eae JELLED MAGIC 215- Ib. Asphalt t Shingles tity “eebe ened on i GALLAGHER'S one — not drip, or run, ‘| ie B. é ; : aang er : oil base, Hundreds of eolors | War 30 GAL. * Church’ Ss § Inc. “OAKLAND ; 1 PO 1488 Baldwin Ave. HAGGERTY i rice SOLRIAN OIL Loon nace,. beste 3 i _ oan. : CASH a a Oe | Ce RER EE WINDOWS Burmeister's | ORES LUMBER ‘Closing _ Out! Only a Few More Days | PAINT HAVE A GOOD SELECTION Super Kemtone $378 to $4.80 Der ee * see me imp Leann pide 00 ase Smith io, is Am i19 or olt, dee demecstration on < —MODI 77 ——r Tis oie ay tig a eae agney aT or sidewall, west, rg Tateoret. sieaeweseaes rece. $4.05 pee a “$9.88 r White root and mare pre-tinthed $6.25 iN AC as a 240 Bi Cherry Renee uy" rt Phone FE BENSON LUMB ‘AN, SEWIN' 1 stand 7" ier: Liberty, Apt, + SHEETROCK | 4x12 ’ Mee INC 2-4000 MArket 4-1084 ple Ponting Trai eae PT a ee ee ee ee Gas Chamber Edict VENTURA, Calif. (AP) — A Ge cater ext Tecalay bold _ Elizabeth Duncan’s last hope of of her daughter-in-law, * * * A jury, which earlier had con- vieted her of first