Li Sultan Mvhammed Ben Vv—nrm—e 
‘The Weather 
Partly Cloudy and Warmer pepe Cra AP | liniy Fd Rows io oy 8 of oe i Ot ie? } seta gfe eee ” iy he. tf 1 ’ a ee aah ' ; 4 
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  ‘THE PONTIAC PE : Quen PAGES “ft 
  
f Pollen Count 25 
Details page two = - . 
* *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955 —28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS PHOTOS Te 118th YEAR 7   
? 
  
Report French 
Easing Sultan 
From Throne Faure’s Moorish Self 
Government Plan Calls 
for Ruler’s Removal 
  PARIS (?) — The French 
government was believed 
taking steps today to ease 
Moulay Arafa off the Mo- 
roccan throne. 
The embattled ruler is- 
sued another statement 
saying God would have to 
remove him. 
Premier Edgar Faure’s ; 
plan for giving Morocco a 2 
measure of self-rule was ap- 
proved unanimously by the 
French Cabinet last night. 
It reportedly calls for removal of 
Moulay Arafa and establishment of 
a three-man regency. 
A spokesman said the program 
would be put into effect immedi- 
ately, 
Morocco was generally quiet. | 
Moderate nationalist leaders urged regency would be established to Sultan on the Spot 
   
‘ 4 t 
AP Wirephote 
replace the controversial sultan if 
French Premier Edgar Faure’s plan goes through. The French cabinet 
last night approved a measure of self-rule for Morocco, 
  
their followers to be patient, say- 
ing at least a partial victory was 
at hand. Terrorists had called for 
a general strike but response was 
slight. 
The ouster of Moulay Arafa 
was the primary condition laid 
dewn by Moroccan nationalists 
for any settlement in the stormy 
Nerth African protectorate. 
French officials gave no indica- 
tion of how they expected to get 
the Sultan out of the palace in 
Rabat. 
Shortly after the Cabinet agree- 
ment was announced, spokesmen 
for Moulay Arafa said in Rabat: 
“In these circumstances, His) 
Majesty once more has solemnly | 
affirmed his determination to re-| 
main on the throne until God) handicapped. 
—— | The lawmaker outlined a 
Pierre July, minister for Tuni- | plan for making use of gov- 
sian =a Merace an aftairs, = ernment wheat surpluses 
nounced the Cabinet approval after | ; i 
a 5\4-hour meeting. |which might reduce insti 
Despite the reported unanimous | tutional food expenses, 
agreement, it was known the Faure | 
proposals drew sharp criticism | information gained in talks with 
from right-wing ministers. Observ- | doctors at University Hospital in ers anticipated possible trouble} Ann Arbor pointing up why -the 
from conservative element? when | state's mentally deficient popula- 
the National Assembly reconvenes | tion has increased and will con- 
next month. | tinue to do so. ing in Lansing. 
  In addition to the removal of | : 
Moulay Arafa and the establish. | ly-ill persons might be housed at 
ment of a regency, the Faure | Pontiac State Hospital if better use 
program provides for: ls 
1. Appointment of a new Moroc- | 2 mek. 
can government representing the) The hospital does not complain 
main political movements in the! because it is 22 per cent over- 
protectorate. | crowded, “but simply asks that 
2, Negotiation of political, eco-| enough staff members be added 
nomic, strategic and cultural ac-| te handle the load,” he explained. 
cords between the new Moroccan) Last year the institution request: 
government and France. | ed 179 more attendant nurses, but 
3. Transfer of former Sultan) was granted only 39, Hudson stat- Mohammed Ben, Youssef from | eq. Its staff of doctors and psy- 
exile in Madagascar to France. chiatrists totals only half the de- 
a | sirable number, he added. | | 
. | Senator Leaves Soviet | FIRE HAZARD INCREASED 
| BERLIN (@®—U.S. Sen William A. Fire hazards and possibility of 
Purtell (R-Conn) arrived by train violence are increased at Pontiac 
today from Warsaw and Moscow. State because of understaffed con- 
After 11 days in the Soviet Union, | ditions, said Hudson. 
he told reporters: | ‘"Fhere are an average 47 pa- 
“I’m very happy to have seen it, | tients in each. of 66 wards,"’ he 
and-I'm very happy to be out stated. “Many wards are large 
again.” ' (Continued on Page 2, Col.-8)   
  
  LOSS IN MILLIONS — Fierce flames swiftly engulf the ‘giant Man- yide Mill Stes straddles the*Blackstone River at Cumberland, Rho@e Pontiac Legislator Reports 
on State Hospital Problems ss *"e""2 
as a member of the committee investigating what action | 
is needed to provide better care for Michigan's mentally | + ‘busiest ports. 
  
The representative reported on | r 
‘Two Campbells 
Building Leads 
in U.S. Amateur i] 
RICHMOND, Va. ® — Big Bill 
He described how more mental. | 
| of state tuberculosis sanitoriums Campbell, the Walker Cup team 
captain from Huntington, W. Va., 
and Shortie Joe Campbell, the in- 
| tercollegiate champion from An- 
derson, Ind., built up long early 
leads in their second round match- | 
es in the National Amateur Golf 
Championship today. 
The tall, broad shouldered\Bill 
| Campbell shot every hole in even 
| par figures on the front nine of 
the 6,713-vard James River course 
of the Country Club of Virginia 
to take a three up lead over an- 
‘other West Virginian, William J. | 
| Rendelman. It was strictly a home- 
town rivalry as both players rep- 
resent the Guyam Country Club 
in Huntington. 
Big Head Problem 
BURBANK, Calif. (—A big head 
is keeping tackle George Nelson 
out of football scrimmages at Bur- 
bank High School. The 225-pounder 
needs a size 8% helmet. Coach 
Hamilton Lloyd says no local sport- 
ing goods stores can supply one 
Until a manufacturer turns éne 
out, Nelson sits on the bench. 
Rhode Island Mill Is Destroyed by Flames 
| Island, ‘Téaving it a smouldering rui 
; would run between five and six million dollars. 
4 
$ Shipping Strike 
Cripples Entire 
East Seaboard Trade Loss in Millions; 
Westinghouse Still Out; 
Packard Threatened = - 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
The costly and crippling 
| strike by some 20,000 long- 
ishoremen in New York 
‘spread along the east coast 
| today as the striking union 
| ordered an additional 70,000 
}members in east and gulf 
coast ports to leave their   
job. 
The order by the Inter- 
national Longshoremen’s 
Assn, was to longshoremen 
in 35 of the country's 
It was made 
in an attempt to bring fed- 
ieral intervention in the   1AY BE EASE — Sultz F b Moulay Araf: ; MAY BE EASED OUT Sultan Mohammed ben : fou ay Arafa) veek-old New York strike. 
occupies an uneasy seat on the Moroccan throne today. :The French | 
government is believed taking steps to ease him out of office to appease 
the nationalists in the stormy North African protectorate. A three-man joined immediately Longshoremen in some ports 
walkouts but in others union lead- 
ers delayed action pending approv- 
al of the locals involved 
Strikes called during the night 
were in Philadelphia, Wilming- 
ton, Del., Bosten, and Jackson- 
jast only a day or two, 
| The week-old strike, 
is directed against the New York- 
|New Jersey Waterfront Commis- 
State Rep. Leslie H. Hudson (D-Pontiac) today sion. The union accuses the com- 
summed up current problems at Pontiac State Hospita 
before a special Senate-House interim committee meet- | ished. ] mission of harsh and discrima- 
tory practices and wants it abol- 
Ld] >. 
| : | Meanwhile, negotiators planned 
27 Westinghouse Electric Corp. 
|plants in nine states. 
| Negotiators representing the 
| company and the ClO Interna- 
ers scheduled another session to- 
day in Pittsburgh. 
| In New York City service re- 
turned to normal on the Long Is- | 
land Railroad after yesterday's | 
slowdown. Federal mediators: are | 
attempting to settle the dispute 
which involves wages and hours, 
working conditions and some 250 | 
* * * 
In Detroit, CIO-UAW officials 
Local 190, called a strike vote for 
Wednesday and Thursday among 
the local's 11,000 members at three 
Detroit area Packard plants. The 
Union, whose contract expires Sept. 
30, is seeking the same _ benefits 
granted by other auto makers, in- 
cluding layoff pay. grievances. | 
| 
| 
A strike also threatened by some | 
19.000 employes of the Northwest- 
ern Bell Telephone Co. in Nebras- 
ka, Minnesota and Dakotas. 
A special mediator continued ef- 
forts to end the strike by some 
10.000 CIO-UAW members in Inter- | 
national! Harvester Co., plants in 
six states. The union struck three 
weeks ago. It seeks a layoff plan 
and other benefits. 
Cool Cadillac     
CADILLAC w — The tempera- | 
22 de- | ture dropped to a_ frigid 
grees here early today, 
   
   
  in sympathy | 
which ts | 
tional Union of Elect~ical Work- | 
    : United Fund Volunteers Sought 
MANY HANDS NEEDED — Pontiaé Area United | _ 
|Furid staff work? Miss Barbara Nichols, of 88 N.| the machines to help get a mountain of work done 
ville, Fla, Reports by observers | Marshall St., sat amidst a battery of empty type-| before the annual campaign starts Oct. 11, Persons 
| indicated most ef the sympathy | writers yesterday before they were moved to the | without office skills are also needed for work during 
| walkouts that will develop will | Uy’s campaign headquarters now operating in the any free hours they might have throughout the day, 
| Hotel Pontiac. Volunteer workers are needed to man| Volunteer by calling FE 5-9451, 4 
     
  Pontiac Press Phote 
  
| It Happened in Lak e Leelanau   
| 
After Five Teenagers Crash in Boat LELAND (®—Three inboard run-| arrived. The engine of the other | dragging operations. The accident 
| another meeting in-an effort to end | ®bouts, speeding in foggy darkness, | boat would not start. Bauer res-| occured midway in the lake about 
another major labor dispute, the | ¢rashed on. Lake Leelanau last | cued the boys and towed both 
strike of 43.000 CIO workers at/ night, costing the life of one of | boats to shore, 
| five teen-age riders. 
Sheriff Robert White said 13- 
| year-old Robert Deo was presumed 
| killed outright or drowned. The 
| body has not been recovered. His 
four companions escaped injury. 
The sheriff said the boats had 
been taken without permission 
from boat liveries. 
The sheriff withheld = their 
names as juveniles, Their ages 
range from 14 to 17. The sheriff 
said he planned to question the 
boys further to determine wheth- 
er any charges should be brought 
against them. 
All the boys are from Leland. 
Sheriff White, after questioning 
| the boys, pieced together this ac- | 
, count of the accident. 
| The same five boys took out 
| three boats without permission 
| Sunday night and then decided to 
go for a longer ride last night. 
| * * * 
About 9:30 last night, Eugene 
| Bauer of the Standard Motor Co., 
| went to a boat house to get some 
| heaters. He noted two boats were 
| missing. 
He heard engines roaring on the 
'lake, then abrupt silence. Bauer 
jumped into a boat and headed 
out into the lake. He came upon | 
| the scene of the accident 15 min- 
utes later. 
Two of the boats had been 
| speeding in circles, Only one of 
them was lighted. The lighted 
craft struck the unlighted boat 
smashing through the side and 
hanging there. The third craft 
struck from the ?rear, knocking 
the two boats apart. Its lene 
operator sped between the two 
disabled boats and headed for 
home. 
one of the disabled boats. His com- 
Panions yelled for him but re- 
ceived no answer. 
One of the disabled boats was   in danger of sinking when Bauer 
Parlly Cloudy, Warm ~ Weather Is Due Here Partly cloudy and warmer {is 
| the weather outlook for this area 
tonight and tomerrow, 
Wednesday's peak temperature is 
expected to climb to the mid-80's, 
following a predicted low of 55-59 
4 | tonight. 
Fair skies were expected to push 
| the mercury. to near 80 today. 
The thermometer reading was 50 
in downtown Pontiac at 8 a.m. 
    Robert Deo was missing from | Other boat operators joined state 
pblice, sheriff's deputies and con- 
servation officers in searching the 
lake but the search was abandoned 
at midnight because of fog. 
The searchers found debris and 
anchored it as a marker for later | Eber Deo, former Leelanau Coun- Thirteen-Year-Old Lad Presumed Dead] Tax Hearings Scheduled Here Thursday State to List 
55 Equalization 
Review Results Many County Township 
Levies May Be Changed 
by Study 
The State Tax Commis- 
Sion will hold hearings here 
Thursday on results of its 
Oakland County's 1955 tax 
equalization review which 
apparently will make nu- 
  one fourth mile from either shore. 
Robert is survived by his moth- 
er, Mrs. Edna Deo, home demon- 
stration agent for Leelanau and 
Grand Traverse Counties, and a 
sister, Betty Lou. His father, 
ty agricultural agent, died several 
years ago,     
    
  | between the two World War 
| West German Chancell 
‘Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulg 
conference in the morning German-Russian Talkfest 
Resulting in a Big Nothing 
MOSCOW (INS) — Soviet and West German leaders 
met this afternoon in perhaps a final attempt to salvage 
something from the talks designed to improve 
at 3:10 p.m. relations 
II enemies. . 
or Konrad Adenauer and 
anin held a special, lengthy 
before the fourth plenary 
(7:10 a, m.     session got under why 
Hurricane Hilda 
Amperils Florida Storm’s Bresent 
Sunshine State 
MIAMI, Fla.  — Hurricane 
Hilda drifted toward the Bahamas 
today and offered a potential threat 
|to the Florida east coast. — 
Hjlda was only about 700 miles 
southeast of Miami, drifting to- 
| ward the west-northwest at about 
7 mph. 
This movement was expected 
to continue for the next few 
hours, with a gradual increase in 
size and intensity, the Weather 
Bureau said, 
| It was Hilda's potential path that 
| put her in the spotlight. She was 
'born yesterday about 840 miles | 
east-southeast of Miami and 165 
miles southeast of Turks Islands, 
|} at the eastern end of the Bahamas 
chain. 
* * 
| Four previous storms born in 
that area hammered Florida dur- 
|ing the past 30 years. The great! 
1926 hurricane that rakeq Miami 
‘came from there. So did the 1928 
| storm that moved inland at Palm 
| Beach and Okeechobee. also came 
from that area, All of them blew 
'up in September except the 1949 
hurricane, which was in August. 
* * *       4 v 
Path | break in the deadlock. 
Leads to East Coast of Pontiac time.) 
A West German spokes- 
man said there was a “hard 
working atmosphere” in the 
private morning session; 
but otherwise did not indi- 
cate whether there was a 
| The conference that began last 
|Friday has been deadlocked on 
Soviet insistence that full diplo- 
matic relations be established prior 
to discussion of other questions, 
including the German request that 
German prisoners of war be freed. 
The Germang have balked at 
full diplomatie relations because | 
it would imply Bonn recognition 
of the East German Communist 
regime, . 
Adenauer also had hoped to go 
home tomorrow with a_ Soviet 
promise to release. the prisoners, 
. The Germans have estimated 
that 50,000 to 100,000 Germans are 
being held behind the Iron Curtain, 
but Bulganin has said there are 
only 9,626 Germans and they are 
convicted ‘war criminals.” 
The historic Moscow talks are 
a prelude to a Big Four foreign 
ministers’ conference in Geneva 
next month, Adenauer has dis- 
cussed the German reunification 
question with the Soviets, but 
has admitted that it is up to the 
Big Four to settle that question. 
Adenauer has hoped, however; 
that he might impress the 
Russians that ‘‘normalization” of 
relations as such are impossible 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 
  Anderson 
“The Equalization Com- 
mittee has given Waterford a 
higher factor than it 
  Cobo Concedes 
Politics’ Talks Summerfield . By-Passes 
Questions on Discussion 
With Detroit Mayor 
Summerfield and Detroit Mayor 
Albert E, Cobo conceded 
that they talked politics at their informal get-together at Summer- 
field's home here lant night, - - 
deny reports that he was seeking 
support form the Postmaster 
General or other influential Re- 
publican leaders in a campaign for 
governor, ; 
“Frankly,” said Cobo, “I 
wouldn't talk or dine with the 
Postmaster General and not talk 
polities, 
“I don't think I should comment 
on what we discussed. It was 
friendly and interesting and I'm 
finding out things and listening, 
| I have gone to other places, too.” 
Then he added: 
OTHER CANDIDATES 
“We talked about some other 
matters, but it was not about other 
Republican candidates.” 
The reference to “other Repub- 
dican candidates" added to specu- 
lation over Cobo's candidacy, 
Summerfield's only comment on 
the dinner party with Cobo was: 
“I had a social meeting with 
Mayor Cobo and there was some 
discussion of the general situation 
in Michigan.” — 
State Republican Chairman John 
Feikens said he had not known of 
the Summertfield-Cobo powwow, 
It also was reported that Sum- 
merfield, former Republican Na- 
tional Chairman, discussed the pos- 
sibility of Cobo's attending the Re- 
publican Conference at Mackinac 
Island this weekend. 
Clifford O'Sullivan of Port Huron, 
committee-     
              | today, after an early-morning low| If Hilda moved fast enough to| [7p Today's Press | man, has invited Cobo te | of 43. At 1 p.m., the temperature | catch a low-pressure trough ex- attend meeting, As yet Cobo 
was 73. | tending southward from Cape Hat-| County NewS.........<.00566 8 | hasn't 
teras, she would swing more to the| Editorials ........cccse0.5.5 6 He was asked earlier this year 
Sylvan Lake Restaents “Beware” north and away from Florida. _ Sports i.0.....0.07e0004..18, 19 | by state Republican te 
3 For School Children's Safety | But if, she misses the trough—/ Theaters ’........ ietewnbs «:+.16 | geek the GOP nominatidn for gov- 
ni Lintetalleseoriions itd tee lens sltow ralitond engines, sod freignt’ ear | and her slow pace indicated she| TV & Radio Programs,.....2%, |ernor. He 2 
ov areas said @ | Sxiening, siecouy om the Fauirond cross | might-gshe could bead for the| Wilson, Karl................08 | At that tite Ne sald he ould : to and from school. Citizens Coinmittes, Coast. " , Women's Pages..... 11, 12, 13 ‘make no decision before Jan, 1, 
we ah | a a x (44 \| fe S Fae ere = ed uae as   But Cobo would not confirm or -   
  tea 
ARE 
Ae 
ei 
is 
seme 
i 
        
       
      
    ee ee ax : oo ues pC ge ep yr, an ene 
7 W THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1055 _, 
7 wr a eS am AR GA rl 2 ERB * emetic “a x —— ~ | cement - 
  
      
  
  . . | | The Day in ares mT 
4). Sef New Mark Couple Arrested City Approves $130,000 * i Q 4 id 
During August |; Gi | De th Asse: oe oie. 
. filed. A wy esas in M 5 | a a | ent on Parking cases fi in August, setting at. |- . “ _ t : bers: i 
all-time monthly record for Pon- Charge 2 With Abortion ‘have dragged on interminably end-| Green, president; Mrs. Burley . 
omit <r sconce in Heiress Case; Duo! ed in just one hour last night|‘aurimore. | vice president and 
Court's office. Out on $5,000 Bail | when the City Commission, after) the jotal branch 
A total of 168 cases were filed, hearing fairly mild opposition, ap- -*.@ « 
an increase of 46 over the same| pILADELPHIA u—The district | Proved the $130,000 assessments/ Mrs. William Lomas, new - 
period last year. Previous record att y’s office last pbsghenshe spread for financing the 223-car dent of the WSCS at ea 
was in June, 1946, with 136 cases. be in ; space . 
tween Merrill and Brown Streets. | Ver the general meeting of the The previous record also was A : 
during "a war ported, when ai- | Mrs Doris Jean Ostreieher died) “7,. 5177 951.03 share to be paid| rou at 2 p.m. tomorrow. A 
vorce rate is usually higher, said | 4nd accused them of criminal by business property owners will program has been planned by Mrs. 
W. Cadman Prout, friend of the | abortion, be made in three equal payments | Melvin Uppleger, assisted by Mrs. 
oot. * * ® over a two year span. The first John Hutton and Mrs. Carl Hon- 
Questioned as to the reason for Dist. Atty. Samuel Dash swore | ij, due immediately and the other kaneu. ere 
the sudden rush for divorces, Prout out warrants against Milton | two within a year of one another. 
said: ‘ Schwartz and his wife Rosalie on Das Mrs, Frank R. Alfred 
“Facetiousl aking. I think charging them with committing P t & id look Mrs. Frank H. (Maud B.) Alfred, 
it might be the humidity and ex. me ng to future business developments | 07° 1:,. 
ssive heat. August set records for |b Food Fair Stores heiress, and) 41, sanene cenendingtt; | eon we Marquette Raiireed. 
hot, humid weather. During such |With conspiracy and perjury. oer thas have existing bast | 200 Monday at her residence, 861 
’ renee Henrietta. She was'a member of 
den, 4¢ |Window Cl 
Sead nk Holdup (ne eee : walkout by 15 window washers 
» Gunmen Stage Daylight | broke off shortly before noon to- 
or +2, day when the union business agent 
Robbery in Detroit; Take Eady oomed Gamer pe 
$4,300 From New Teller | senting contract demands to the owners of two Pontiac window 
é : cleaning firms. 
DETROIT  — Police pressed |“ yirs Robert Bradley, wife of the 
® search today for two gunmen owner of the Service Window Clean- 
who robbed a Detroit bank branch | ing Co., said Thomas Martino, busi- 
of $4,300 and fied in a stolen) ness agent for Local 139, AFL Win- 
automobile. ‘dow Washers Union, presented the 
eo * * /contract and said there would be 
thugs » Van Dyke: | 2° arbitration on it. He then left 
coarest band poe ected the conference in her husband's 
pol of | office, she said. day, took at- gunpoint the car According to Mrs. Bradley, nine 
ss . employes of the Pontiac Window 
The car was found abandoned | Cjeaning Co. and six employes of 
15 minutes after the holdup at | Service Window Cleaning walked 
Lafayette and Concord. off the job Sept. 1 and joined the 
made @ house-to-house union in Detroit. Police 
anvass of the neighborhood where Taking part in the negotiations 
a - were Bradley and Charles Cald- 
  
| 
! | times tempers are short, and per-| The Schwartzes were picked up shoulder mach of the bur- 
haps a number of people who were |at the West Philadelphia home of the First Baptist Church here and 
already at the ‘boiling point’ made | relatives and hustled off to City a charter member of the Women's 
. well, ownér of Pontiac Window 
ee ee eae ond being | Cleaning. The employes are seek- the decision to act when the ther- | Hall for questioning. maa that| City Club, Detroit. 
"personnel were viewing police pho- | ing pay boosts of approximately 20 mometer hit the high 90s." | They declined to answer any under the — = pd eer She is survived by one daugh- 
“It’s the only reason I can think | questions pending consultation with ments must be spread on the ter, Mrs. Wilten W. Minto of 
of for the unusual increase.” - | their attorney William A. Gray. based to be received pres- 
| ently. 
i | Seti Wow only wate bie ng®| Another question enewered wat | vce. wi A that, likewise, benefiting iness rvice will be at 11 a. m. 
Indians Offer cnt ae we eer on | property on the West side of Wood-| Thursday at Bell Chapel of the pyr dea oar hedons Magi- ward. will in all probability be &/| William R. Hamilton Co., with 
rf y sessed if a municipal parking lot is) burial in Orlande, Fla. holdup nd th cents an hour, plus T%-cent per 
x saath == hour insurance benefits along with 
MERONE Ac) “7 = fringe benefits, Mrs. Bradley 
~ While one bandit guarded Har-| Meanwhile, Pontiac Police are 
old Mertz, branch manager, and continuing to investigate the Rirmingham, and three grand- 
children. 
    
money frem a “cadet” teller,/on the windows of the. Pontiac S| e ~ strate Elias Myers. ite 
Cari C, Bahr, of Detroit, State Bank _ the weekend. It j eries Tickets <) ale constructed east ot Reetvert ; 
Another teller, Mrs. Jean was reported that Caldwell washed s z : They will appear in the same| ., " P | 
; Ganyen, fell te the tleor and = the bank windows himself last} SQUEEZE PLAY — Sixteen‘year-old John Eldred didn’t mean to : Eleni coareesus where Mrs. Gor a cela eos aes a ontiac awmaker 
to | week. park” his car in this awkward position in Indianapolis, Ind. He acci-| YW/jj] Accept Orders ‘trude Silver yesterday afternoon Age co he was Galag led dows 
——— dentally bypassed a “road closed” sign, and the car ended up wedged ° found not competent to face R ny H : 
reported | ha P fi sideways in the ditch of a new storm sewer. Eldred squeezed unhurt for Four Contests in pale of being pppoe es to o ve Lares ectreey — e€po rts on ospital 
. ng M FFOSECUIOF | trom the car. Cleveland the = death o ot her davagheer. s1.so0 | that. _ the ISyearcld prisoner (Continued From Page One) ~ 
, bail, with the recommendation that poorgped oy based — ates ie no with several partitions. Often one he LJ * #6 . 
: mace|to Pay City Visit Sh ing Site A : CLEVELAND (INS)—The Cleve- she be placed in a mental hospital } : 
fener anaes on ee va : ' _, Shopping Site Anmexation ini way sweet tt ile cee cers |i py ned when eves tw thers gm after ts chs = County they are accepting orders for | Her attorney and physician agreed $10 costs on a_reckless driving) Federal governn i amplasen ot 
wile 9O7? Commission’s AG ena |wers series tickets tor our games 19 th recommendation and sald | Ears | ee elon Coles 
i scheduled to be played at the, 
Whether or not any action will Rd. and Oakland Ave. and a reso- | huge Cleveland stadium. i soon, In = of prape ee ted Pontiac State, said Hudson, 
be taken on the matter, annexa-|lution to accept a deed for, 4 Tribe spokesman said that . dere a “ot Ag Not | Dut wheat is our largest surplus 
tion of 145 acres of Bloomfield | alley in connection with the re- | deadline for ordering: the ducats, Diane Car in 4 aes attempt to dodge jus- and the hospital has received no 
Township land is on the agenda zoning. | limited to one set per application— | ry g tice, he was picked up Sunday | flour ta the m 
for tonight's City Commission Estimate for a water main on} a set is one ticket for each game ‘ A . ‘jas diese lie van ay government. 
meeting. Telegraph road from Orchard Lake |o be played bere—is Thursday. | Vanishes in West re to reappear in com) | “lt we could get a federal 
Although one of the developers to Golf. Sept. 15. = aye ret eo > four subsidy of four cents a 
eet week satis the city papaerccaggeevesoriaodiog) begat | esd mgt ocedure was an-! 1 AKEPORT, Calif, WA ground| tried te enter the service, but | jn',ro: Patient In sunte operated 
clerk's office that he would like | censes for two Saginaw street used/ (1) Send your application to — = = —_—> sbangee to-| the youth then left town. 000 a year.” 
the controversial matter withdrawn | auto parts establishments. World Series office, Cleveland Sta- rts disappe ared Sunday over The original charge stemmed) co, patrick V./ McNamara (D- 
. r temporarily from the agenda, the! — public hearings are stated on | ium, Cleveland 14, Ohio, Seer forests about 120 from a chase on which Stamp led! yyichigan) has said he will investi- 
Seeley, of Grand Rapids, was | quiring a criminal record. item must be listed because Of intention to construct the fol- (2) A check for $28 for reserved aa ooae of an ranciace | police officers on Aug. 21. Another | gate the whentourplas idea at the 
sentenced J . action two weeks ago. ieee’ seats and $40 for box seats, plus | res F call Gil Ac Patrel youth, Russell Clark, 17, of 288 fogeral level, Hud: 
" ome $1 for handling charges, and a self-| “ur force & vil Air Patrol George St. is still being sought. | “41.4, aon meted. 
Cj Man Is In uf At that meeting, following ® | Concrete base, bituminous re- | addressed stamped envelope should planes searched all day yesterday * ¢ @- | Hudson said progress of medi- | 
| | J stormy three-hour discussion bY | Gap and sidewalk on Carlton court | be included in each application. while rangers of the U.S, Forest! pe fail kick-off dinner meet- cal science over the past 10 years ) 
the developers and downtown | from Saginaw to east end of; (3) When ordering box seats, Service covered on foot the area! ing of the Birmingham Toast. | 'S largely responsible for present 
. . Hi C ' , overcrowding i 1 insti 
merchants who opposed the an: | cireet, enclose two checks, one for $28 where the plane was believed to; masters Club gets under way at ing in menta institutions 
aS rain its Car nesaton, the Commmianion tabled | Storm drain in Lakeside Subdl-|and the other for ‘$12. In the event have gone down. 6:45 tonight at the YMCA. Speak. | ScCording to University Hospital 
_ 33, of 599 Call- the matter for two weeks. vision and assessor’s plat 101 on| your box seat request cannot be | Tus wistiag: ers will be James Beall, Robert = 
fornia Ave., was treated for| In other business, the Commis-| Terry, Parkview, Parkdale, Dres-| honored, a reserved seat will be) 54.) pall a ee Eastwood, Arthur Slemmons, | 30 TB PATIENTS 
bruises yesterday and released (sion is scheduled to consider: den, Hollywood and Woodland. — | substituted apd your $12 check re-' 4 hmacen Telephone & Tele- Lloyd Smith and Dick Van | The local hospital has 30 pa- } 
A suit started in Muskegon from Pontiac General Hospital| A report from the Public Hous-| Another hearing is set for re-| turned, Orders will be filled by graph Co.'s general financial sup- . . tients with tuberculosis, said Hud- 
collect care and maintenance was | after his car was struck by a ing Commission on bids received | zoning to’ residential 1 a parcel | lot. ervisor, Frank H. Case. This summer's national conver | son. The men are kept in one. ward 
Gavepped when he paid the| train at the railroad crossing at |for the sale of $1,475,000 worth of | of jand on the west side of Siam Carol Hore, 22, daughter of E.| Unversity “Women, held im. Loe) “td women in another. | | ; » . . —— a n 5 
amount. Franklin Road. temporary notes, | ley avenue, north of Ypsilantia, Eight Plead Guilty Francis Hore, an executive of the Angeles, a be the topic of dis-| “If they could be transferred 
Henry Hess Lumber Co. in San) .iccion when Alice Beeman,| © the State TB san at Traverse 
FT" * ° Pontiac Police said the Grand| sewer on Columbia avenue from’ p, . . Rafael, Calif. City, which has vacant beds, 
“Junior H h Pu il Trunk train was traveling at about Baldwin to Hollywood. Final Action Slated y C H Charles los mer of the | AAUW state president, speaks be- pe oe 
9 p ee eee oe eae Pommaarary roll ey spied oe | lo Ice ounts ere Monument Motor Co. of Concord, Oe ee ae 2 p. m. at Cran-| #Vailable at Pontiac for aaa 
a ew ° car in the left rear. H Calif.. a son of Dr. John Ise, 
- it Automobile Donald Fuller, 49. of Clarkston, | 29d drainage on Sylvan court from on Sylvan Rezoning Eight persons arrested Sunday is : | besck'a Measeem of Sconce, Ge) ore 
‘ » 9, n, is j recently retired economics pro- ressi 
; engineer of the train, told police | Orchard Lake to 50 feet west of y Pontiac Police detectives on | TSComly, Te versity of Kansas. |2T0UP will hear similar talks by Sapertchanbest'ts) echacaiion cae. Aw that it a that Louis was Myra. Final action on a controversial | Vice charges all pleaded guilty yes- 
5 year-old Lincoln Junior High — AP Request to drop Everett Lacey | proposal to rezone land on Orehard terday when arraigned before Paul Johns, 27, the pilot, of San L. Taylor, who attended the com- 
‘student was in poor condi ing to stop and then suddenly tried a ‘ 7 
~s sarge beat the train, Fuller poll the | ®% partner in a package beer and take road is expected at tomor- | Municipal Judge Maurice E. Fin- | Francisco. ee ee Bag of Chips mittee meeting, Hudson said, 
towerman at the crossing, said the wine (SDM) license at 340 Osmun | |... night's Sylvan Lake City | negan. ; a | A “There are 38 teenage youngsters 
= ihe br ee pscle rien and Conscience at Pontiac State who have the ‘ \ car " St. ' ing = 
on his way home from school yes- flasher warning was operating. Application of Vernon J. Burch, Councit re according to Lewis Cummings, 28 paid a reported late Sunda y touching | ability to learn. but are not re- 
i 16 Baldwin Ave. toc a acw SDM “Mayor Anthony Kreps. $100 fine for maintaining and down at Fuller’s Airport at Lake | Jails Ex -Con . sive etocati y - 
n of Examination Demanded license. | Opphsition to the proposal, which | operating a disorderly house at | Pillsbury. But it departed without | , Paola Wenh aru ndpag oe 
King of 105 E. Brook- : . ‘Request of a local beer distrib- would permit a lumber company | 265 Gillesple St. stopping and headed between two, 4 bag of potato chips and a cate all such youngsters in ike   
    
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    2, J ea 
lyn Ave., suffered a pres fracture | Miguel Rodriguez, of 271" Going |) 45. to change from a partnership 0 build a yard on Orchard Lake} po. ner part in the vice oper- mountains. guilty ‘coce heal tended ©) oouectieas* 
w ‘as conec | : 
rolled another eo Judge — yg noaet | Report from the City Plan Com. | holders " near the property in’ 6+ 219 Fisher Ave., was sentenced M lj C| b convict in Oakland County Circuit | - 
pd struck by the | “ - mission on rezoning to commercial | question. — 7 to 15 days in Oakland County Jail. | efropo itan u Court on a charge of breaking, New Year to Begin 
The driver, Robert D. Hobson. cealed weapon. He was released; 2 | The six or | . yo 
"lon a $100 personal to appear C ) h * | Joitering in the house paid 25 H ld M It all began Saturday night when ee 
2, of 182 Parkdale Ave., told Pol | ‘vial Sep 2h West German-Soviet_ ounty Deaths © fatsrvg inthe mse eid § FOLDS Meeting FILE | sce “Suny ‘incner wateea into @t Sundown, Friday 
Baldwin z William H. Dempsey | ; 54 a 
5 | a“ peey | | send, 32, of Auburn Heights; Don- | jen five members of Pontiac’s Sheriff Frank W. Irons. | Rosh Hashono, the Jewish New 
parked.car and in front . T lk 5 | [William H. Dempsey, 35, 2907) night and heard a report on the | 
r Export to Mexico 1 a S at fa emale | Welch Rd., will be held at 1 p, m./ Pence Gamble, 32, of 221 Rockwell | \tetropolitan Club convention held himself up, Tincher told the —.  Neainninne iar a fed 
- stop in time. DETROIT (# — Detroit's street- (Continued From Page One) | Thursday at the Schreder Funeral | and Roberta Jones, 21, of 380 Bag- ES) day. , os 
cars — all 184 of them — may go | without reunification of West and Home in Plymouth, with burial in ley ‘St pao | The members also discussed | market at 701 Orchard Lake Ave. | 
ice in Mexico City. The Chancellor presided at the | Mr. Dempsey died yesterday at patterned after a ‘“‘showboat” cele-| Returned to the scene of the 7 ar’s observance marks the be- 
liam A. McMaster, 17, of 2609 | Commissi rd ident bration held by the Chamber of | alleged crime, police discovered! Rimming of the year, 5716, since 
- - sachasier, 11, iommigsion - voted yesterday to | long talk with Bulganin and Soviet | the result of an auto accident) . sg n 
“Tackles Dr., stood mute on a car- 1 in chief Nikita | Friday night. | AVON TOWNSHIP—Stone PTA| Further study of the proposed en do not make use of the Hebrew 
abolish all remaining street car |Communist party chief Nikita Friday nigh will meet at the school on Adams| plan will probably be discussed smashed. One bag of potato chiPS  catendar on which this reckon. St., demanded exarnination yester- - =I 
= to a corporation. | road, has sprung up from house-| ations Elizabeth A. Carpenter, 26, 36-year-old Charleston, W. Va. ex-| 
lice said. on a charge of carrying a COM Classification three lots at Kinney | The six persons arrested for and entering during the nighttime. | 
| 52, of 211 Bassett St.; Henry Town- the county jail and surrendered to | 
ba : | | . ” AKEK —. ¢ et ; A | ss 
Street a King ran from be- DSR Streetcars Ready | WALLED LAKE — Service | for ald Franks, 21, of Rochester; Law- etropolitan Club Spirit 6 met last | Asked why he wanted to give ‘Year, will be observed in homes 
_ Ave.; Ivan Atkins, 27, of Rochester, | 1.<¢ month. | sheriff he had broken into Earl's | 
Stands Mute in Theft south of the border soon for serv- | East-Germany. Riverside Cemetery, Plymouth., plans for a possible civic function | Saturday. | According to legend, — this 
In Cireuit Court yesterday, Wil-| The Detroit Street Railways | afternoon plenary session, after a) the Pontiac General Hospital as Stone PTA Meeting 
Commerce in Chesney, Mich, la window in a door had heen! the creation of the world, Jews 
theft and Jud B. 4 ity -iK “hev cht : rlitter- | s survivors | is wife | : ion 
charge ge George service in the Motor City. Offi-| Khrushchev last night at a glitter.) His survivors include his wife roed at 7.30 pm. Thursday. Alat the club's next meeting sched- was missing, eng we Meand' ea cout ter che Gasing 
                              
    “Hartrick entered an innocent plea | ci id t st given by the Russians. | June. three children, Franc s shile | 
ae ie! pl — said ai ee = — a = banquet given by os Rus ans. | ie ae Phe hoon is * get acquainted meeting is planned | uled for Oct. 3, club Vice-Presi- | I get the urge once in a while | og holidays and religious mile- 
Mu ; streetcars repla y|German press spokesman Felix , Peoria, .. William Henry and oy ofreshments will be served dent Sgt. Walter A. Ba If said tao do these things,’ Tincher told) sone ° 
cMaster is accused of stealing | buses by next July. Mexico City) von Eckardt said the discussion | Linda Ann at home; four step (on ving th at Gem Sgt water here Sel trons. | ° 
"ga car in Pontiac rey 2. He is in| has offered Detroit $1,104,000 for | at the party micht give a “certain | children, Jimmie, Jeanette, Joseph | codithidn ) ind Latha ~~ OO Tincher told Detective Sgt. John) Evening service for the New 
SOakland County Jail under $3,000 | its entire streetcar fleet. lift’ to the conference. | and Lawrence Butler, all at home; Z »Church Classes Meet Depauw of the Pontiac Police he | Year at Temple Beth Jacob will 
bond. ry : : = ° ‘one sister, Mrs. Ann Utter ot Troias Opens at Almont DRYDE Crarch school was bothered by his conscience begin at 8:15 Friday evening. The 
* = ee ; 'p to this morning, there was | Plymouth: four brothers, Wesley é . : : aN ts ; after he stole the bag of chips. ;morning service will be held at 
Golf Outing Slated Troy Union PTA Group no indication any sort of agree-| and George of Walled Lake, Jack Nee eee eed | classes were held Regitead morning Municipal Judge Maurice E.! 10 o'clock on Saturday. . 
§ see ek wii Planning First Session ment would result from Aden- of Livonia, and Donald of Wayne. 5, ne ai as ee oh Trola pe vew spines rape oe | Finnegan set a $2,000 bond on The children's service will begin 
shold thet 1 gol eae | TROY TOWNSHIP — The Troy | ce | Bert Henderson | and ‘specializing in Italian Food. | ine Piscopal Church for the BFst Tincher after he waived examina ae ene ee geperati 
heir annua golf outing at) Uni PTA ot f thee 6 ‘ But some Western sources were | eeenmnangce a s ° ie. tion yesterday and was bound over Rabbi Sanford E. Saperstein will 
Sylvan Glen Golf Club Wednesday | Union meets for their first heartened by results of the talks | DRAYTON PLAINS—Service for to circuit court deliver the message at both serv- 
= gr sray e : Coord enclge T | thus far. | Bert Henderson, 63, of 5374 it . . . ices, The New Year's Eve sermon 
n Bro, nator of Troy > & 8 | Louella, will be held at 1:00 p. m. A T ] I t Ly rc is entitled “Climbing Mountains.” 
The Weather Township Schools and the Citizens | One diplomat — who declined to) Thursday from Coates Funeral | a, rave Ing ncog7nil O, Water Sweeps Dirt Saturday morning, eabbi Saper- | 
i ats 2 Committee will speak on the new ibe: quoted by name = said: | Home with burial in Ottawa Park 4 to*Th s nk Ab t’ M ° 4 , | Stein will preach on “By the Skin “ 
pF genie -—. re 5h oops — bond issue. Lunch will be served | Adenauer has won this round, Cemetery. Mr. Henderson died | 1 Ou ar I lage . sd of Our Teeth.” 
yon , é 7 | by the executive board hands down. He has not yielded yesterday St. J h Hospital nt a aaniccl 
une warmer tonight ena temer- | by e iv F c own. ot 3 | yesterday at St. Joseph Hosp tal. X Va ion | e 
i, toe watt _ mapper ae an inch. Besides his wife, Lola, he is” HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Rita, includes a nurse and 20 pieces of | p ’ ry 
increasing to 10-15 m.p.b. this afterneon Church Youth Meets | <= | survived by three daughters, Mrs. Hayworth, reportedly disguised as | luggage. WASHINGTON ® — A water ontiac an Admits 
and tonight. night f | darili : tect, tow near _— ht fair and GREE a Gets 15-Day Sentence Opal Perry, Mrs. Pauline Martin Mrs. Average Housewife, is trying Special arrangements were re-| main burst with explosive force 
Tag Bi _ young peo- en 'and Mrs. Thelma McCoy, all of . ported being made in Washington | today dumping tons of earth into Ch f B H 
Leni eee gin eng 6 om. | Pit Of the Bethel and North Good-; Glen Cox. 52, of Berkley, charged Pontiac; one son, Gerald also of © make a secret jaunt to Europe | ty secure the members of the party | the excavation for the 22 million arge 0} breakin 
Gy Spgeas) SE land Undenominational Churches | with driving under the influence of Pontiac, two sister, Mrs. Julie today, apparently in the hope that | passports as soon as possible so | dollar new Senate Office Building. 
Disedtion: as0th. met recently at the home of Mr. liquor, was sentenced to 15 days in| Michalsen of Jonesboro, Ill, and the gay continental social whirl| that they can leave for Europe | * * * Thomas Humphries, 30 of 107's 
ae sets Tocatay od bl A rae and Mrs. William Davis for a Oakland County Jail yesterday Mrs. Lola Bean of Anna. Ill.; two will help her “think over’ her | before they are discovered in New| Philip L. Roof of the Capitol N. Saginaw St., yesterday pleaded 
marvin — Western Party, 85 guests were after he pleaded guilty in Berkley ‘brothers, Clay and Raymond and marriage to crooner Dick Haymes. | York. arthitect's office estimated the | Suilty to one charge and stood mute 
* * * 
     
   
    
    
   
   
       
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                                                          “ Moon rises Wednesday at 4:22 a.m. present. A Christian film “Sunday Municipal Court. He appeared be- | sev ° : r i 5 
re ° i seven grandchildren, When Rita arrives in France, | burst ripped out 150 feet of sheet | 0" @ second before Oakland County 
eae Des miown Temperateres ts on the Ranch” was shown. \fore Judge Ralph H. Finley. | ee The screen beauty, her titian| representatives of her former hus- | steel piling, pouring earth and Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick. 
WO Mecdedess.-B 49M... <0 000... 71 ‘Second Salk Shot hair dyed black and traveling| band, Moslem Prince Aly Khan, | water into the excavation. Roof Humphries admitted breaking 
a a eeeeeeera Se % Pp : t R = d oo ofs . under an assumed name, slipped | will meet her and attempt to iron | said there had been no official into Hart's Service Station at 188 
re wees al T O , es] e 1 Lapeer Thursday at Almont silently out of Hollywood by train | out details paving the way for | estimate of the damage. Nor, he} S. Saginaw St., last Aug. 28. He will 
Mendes tn Peuties 1 er 7 Saar for New York, leaving Haymes to| Yasmin, Aly’s daughter, to visit | said, is it known yet whether the be sentenced for the offense Sept. 
(as unre wamusateinsttane nee 98 LAPEER — Barbara N. Forester | the hemline. Khe carried white | po}; vahae il be Z — 9 sing the blues alone. her grandfather, the endlessly | loss will be to the federal govern- | 19. 
Uobent’ cempereture: 000000000000 @| and) Fredrick E. Mellish were | roses. Ee Eee Woe a tenis te] ne oe Se oes fe ment, the city of Washington or to| He stood mute on a charge of 
4g oo geen %/ united in marriage Friday night “ie anf = i a ia receive An | Said that before she lett last Satur- Aly ‘has been trying for some - oeaiceptnaiy Aa vane Lea reales T0 em of goods Bem 
at the Monroe Street Methodist Arla Bolton of Metamora was Shots wil ast year’s first and day, she instructed her attorney, ue 06 perenade Mita Roof said no injuries had been| a car in Pontiac Aug. 77. Judge 
on si " to permit 
te | Church in Lapeer. maid of honor. Other atteridants second graders and anyone else| Bartley Crum, not to file divorce| 4, ams ki reported as a result of the mishap. | Hartrick entered an innocent jlea 
Satan h : were Ann McGlashin and Doreen Who has had the first shot. proceedings against the sorrowful the child to visit the Aga Kham. | boii officers the for him. 
a is the daughter of Mr. | sriieh De! Bictoe will) adeniaie a He even instituted court action + acene said 
and Mrs. Fenton A. Forester and | Mellish. | Ut; Bishop will administer tbe) singer, st least for the present.| 4, sereg ber to comply with a [of “arer man bert slow i aes 
Fredrick is the son of Rev. and| Best man was Paul Mellish, | “°° '" [= = » |%-m. causing the earth fall with a Scholarshi il : When she left him two weeks | divorce provision giving him the olarship Available 
Mrs. John E. Mellish. Rev Mellish| brother of the groom and John ago, Rita sald she wanted to | right to visk with Yasmin eix |'0*" which was beard for several 
Mellish III, nephew of the groom | New Agriculture Officers | “think things over.” Apparently | weeks each year. blocks around. The main was lo-| METAMORA—A full $400 schol- was ring bearer. John Meliish she is still thinking. cated near the corner of Constitu-| arship has been made available 
de. wee te charge of seating METAMORA — Newly elected : Haymes appeared calm over | tion Avenue and Shott’s Alley, only | to a sixth grade student at Kings- ) 
guests. ME | officers for the Metamora Town-| With Rita on the surreptitious) Rita's departure as he sang last a few feet from apartment houses. | bury School this fall. Kingsbury is 
‘ > ship Agriewiura] Stabilization | junket went her two daughters, | night at the Cocoanut Grove of the *. «¢ * an independent school near the 
A reception was held at the La-|Committee are: Chairman, Roy Rebecca, 10, and Yasmin, 5. One| Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles; The office building is to rise| Lapeer County line. Any boy or | 
peer County Center Building. Williams; vice chairman, Russell | report said Rita was wearing loose | and indicated he ‘would not try to| seven stories above the ground, | girl in the Lapeer area is eligible. : 
After» trip through the Upper | Parrish; member, Alfred Brady. fitting clothes and was otherwise | follow his wife. He has said re- providing additional office space | For details, phone Mrs, Helen Glo- 
Peninsula, the newlyweds will-re-| Alternates are Wayne Nolan and attempting to pose as just another peatedly that -he believes their | for senators and senate eomnyit- ver, director of the school, .at 
side in Lapeer, k Albert N, Brown, } woman, despite an entourage that | marriage will be mended. tees. a | | Oxford. 2 
      
  
  eats nT ee ae 4 [aad Pee, Petar rl * j rae 
3 SE icasctaynGempl page Mae 8 y Piensa aR oS it plete lle 
| { : ; ae 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955   
  
      
   
    
    
     Advancement 
That Is Practical . . . 
Each improvement made in the facilities of the 
Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is for one purpose 
~~ for better service to the families of our com- 
munity. 
Thus, every advancement here is practical — and 
we constantly advance. And because we con- 
stantly serve more families, costs have thereby 
been lowered. This saving is, in every case, 
passed clong to our patrons. . 
FEOERAL 
  — 
    New Pipeline 
Work Begins Added Natural Gas to Be Brought to Detroit 
Area by Summer 
DETROIT ® — Workmen in 
Ypsilanti and Louisiana began 
simultaneously yesterday to lay a 
new, 1,000-mile pipeline that should 
bring added natural gas to the 
Detroit area by next summer. 
* * om 
The pipeline will extend from 
Michigan to the Tideland Gas 
tields off the Gulf of Mexico, It's 
a $500,000,000 project, expected to 
provide enough natural gas to per- 
mit the addition of 78,000 gas-fired 
  
  
       . West Huron 
et Telegreph 
Thrifty PHARMACISTS Charge oy gtk Se. 
B as hoe DOUBLE HOLDENS ; TRADING STAMPS 
WEDNESDAY | 2. ee ae SR: 
  IODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR:   
  
| JUNIOR EDITORS   
      
‘READIN’ 'N WRITIN’ ’N "RITHMETIO—2. 
The First American Scheolbook 
Reading is a key to the treasure houses of the world. Books have | | 
something for everyone — travel, adventure, nature, history, all sorts 
of fascinating things. 
You're lucky, you have thousands and thousands of books to choose | 7 
trom. A hundred years ago only a few books were brought out each 3 
year. 
Paper was scarce and cost a great deal until the early 1800s. It had 
'to be used sparingly. The first lessons of young children were written | 
on a sheet of paper and pasted on a board with a handle. ... .,. 
The board was covered with a thin plece of clear horn to protgct 
the paper. The child could read through the horn, On the paper was * 
usually the alphabet, the Benediction, the Lord's Prayer and Roman 
numerals. 
The handles of many hornbooks had holes in them so young students 
could wear them aroung their necks. The hornbooks were used in Eng- 
lish schools and brought over with the colonists as the first American 
schoolbook. 
To make your hornbook paste this page on cereal box cardboard. 
Color the back, handle and the edge brown like wood. Make the nails | (3 
Bes Paste on it some poem or story you like to read 
or want to learn. Cut it out and put a string through the hole in the 
handle. Now, there you have a hornbook. 
Tomorrow: An Indian Girl Reads a Written Story. 
  
a Police Conclude 
Raids on Algerian Reds 
ALGIERS, Algeria @ —French 
police early today concluded 
searches of Communist party head- 
quarters throughout Algeria. Piles 
of documents were seized and 
carted off for study by the security   services. Communist newspapers 
were also raided. 
The action coincided with publi-| 7 
cation in the official journal in| 7 
Paris of the recent French decree | — 
outlawing the Algerian Communist 
party and all its affiliates, 
Delaware has 295 miles of rail- 
road, 
  
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8 $6.99 values—Full- bed size— 
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79¢ CANNON BATH TOWELS 
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                    Ee oe ee ee en Add to Schools “ Allot $3,500,000 for 
Southfield; Oak Park 
Designates $4,500,000 
OAK PARK — Oak Park voted 
1,135 to 96, for a 30-year $4,500,000 | 
school bond ee Monday night. 
. * 
ey eo in bb ened ter the 
building of a 14 room elementary | 
school and one other elementary 
school, 
sites for additional buildings. 
Oak Park will also enlarge the 
cial administrative of 
fices and a receiving and main 
tenance 5 
  in One County Area i Hi if FP g z : Ee 
edi 
  — This evening 
as director of Religious Education. 
The dinner will be held at 6:30 in> 
the Church Hall. 
  Power Workshop Nov. 28 
— The 
second National Power Use Work- WASHINGTON _ (INS) 
shop is scheduled to be held at St.| 
— Nov. 28 through Nov. 
othe sessions will be devoted to. 
technical studies and discussions 
of means of furthering the nation- 
electrical 
farming and increased rural use wide effort toward 
of electric power. 
MOMS of Gingellville 
Hosts for State Group 
GINGELLVILLE — 
  to Past President’s Club of Mich "ark, 
Betty Rae Brine Is Wed 
in.Double Ring Ceremony +> 
. given permission 
*|Main to 204 
Moms of | 
America, Unit 33, will be hostess | 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, “TWESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955   
"Southfield Pass Bond ) faites Totaling $8,000,000   
MARLETTE—At a double ring 
ceremony in Our Lady of the Lake 
Huron Catholic Church, Harbor 
| Beach, recently Betty Rae Brisse. 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 
F. Brisse of Harbor Beach, be- 
| came the bride of Thomas E. 
Sullivan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don 
Sullivan of Marlette 
= *   
Oa 
The bride) wearing a princess 
style gown of pure silk taffeta with 
yoke and sleeves of rose ‘pointe | 
lace, presented a bouquet of white 
lillies at the Altar of the Blessed 
Virgin. The illusion veil was caught 
up with a cap of nylon tulle leaves 
and seed pearls imported from 
Paris, France. 
The white prayer book was 
adorned with a white orchid and 
blue tinted stephanotis, ivy, and 
pearl streamers. The bride's only 
jewlery was a necklace and ear: * ' 
Council Accepts 
Bids on Paving Rochester Group Gives 
Work to Company for 
Subdivision Plan     
ROCHESTER — The Village 
Council meeting last night was 
attended. by a full council. 
Bids were accepted for Oak Bluff 
Subdivision paving, The only bid- 
der was the A and A Construction 
Company. of Birmingham with a 
bid of $8,968.00. The streets will be 
coated with bituminous concrete | 
under the supervision of Manager | 
Robert Slone. Slone was also | 
authorized to give Mahaffy Street | 
'a@ prime and = seal coat, 
Five ae owners were pres- | 
ent for a hearing on special as-| 
sessment for curb, gutter, and) 
storm drainage on Terry Avenue. 
The assessment roll of $1125 was 
‘approved and the manager was 
requested to ask for bids. 
Slone gave a report concerning 
water and sewer service to the 
new High School at Livernois and 
Walton. The clerk was authorized 
to order a permit from the Michi- 
gan Health Department. | 
The auditer’s annual financial 
statement for the Water and 
Sewer Departments for July was 
and accepted, Manager 
that the water system | 
was in good shape with the ex:                 The Rochester Lions Club was 
to hold the 
annual Tulip Bulb Sale on Sept. 
29, 30, and Oct. L St. John’s 
Lutheran Church School was given 
permission to place banners across 
W. Fifth Street in front of the 
church for publicity purposes. 
| Tabled under the Sept. 26th 
meeting was a request from Roy | 
Gramlich and John Marmon for | 
Main. The recom- 
mendation came through from the 
the Police De-| approved by 
partment 
PTA Executives 
Discuss Plans . 
tor Fall Festival 
TROY TOWNSHIP — The Coun- 
ty Line PTA Executive Board made 
| plants for their fall festival at their 
| last regular meeting. 
The festival will be held Friday 
and Saturday, Sept. 23 and 2, 
iat the school. 
The event will begin Friday at 
7:30 with a dance. There will 
be refreshments, white Elephant 
| beoths, fancy work and baked 
t goods, Games will be conducted 
for the children, J 
-| On Saturday at 4:30 p.m.         
  roast 
igan at a parley and luncheon on) beef dinner will be served. 
Wednesday, at the Gingellv ille |     
Community Center, The business ‘County Gls Named 
session will convene at 10 a.m 
Set Mission Meeting 
  ORTONVILLE — The Altar So- | 
Anne’s Mission will 
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the | 
of | 
Perum th Road, Bald Eagle Lake, | ciety of St. 
home of Mrs. Alice Simler METAMORA--Six Lapeer Coun- 
| ty men left last week to serve two 
| years each in the U, S. Army. 
They are: Norris Hall, Imlay 
City; Marvin LeBlanc, Clifford; 
Clinton Hollister Jr., Otter Lake; 
Joseph McGorry, Imlay City; Ron- 
ald Goforth, Metamora; and Dor- 
| land Ragatz. North Brané h. 
  
Board Presents Milford ‘Improvements MILFORD—Three recommenda- {tion to an all time high with at) definite can be provided by the 
tions were presented at the village | least $3,000,000 in the construction | 
of new homes in the next five 
council meeting last night, by the | years. 
Milford Planning Board, to 
prove land uses in the village and TO HIRE 5,000 
ale rework the old” zoning ordi-| 
Heading the committee was 
on vee Harvey Stewart; with 
Frank Coé, W.-H. 
Tressler The plant will hire 5,000 em- 
|ployes and village officials -es- 
timate that 4,000 of these will be 
drawn out of the Milford area. 
Car parking has been a major 
problem in Milford for the last five 
years. and Don Breen, representing 
the chamber of commerce, pro- 
posed buying the Chester Arms 
home on Union street as a possible 
village parking lot. The home 
‘would be torn down and the land 
blacktopped and lighted. 
_* * * 
¥| The council agreed to postpone 
  rings of cultured — git of 
the groom. 
Dr. Donita Sullivan, sister of the 
groom, and Arleen Block attended 
the bride. 
Attending the groom were Rob- 
‘ert Johnson, brother of the bride 
land Derrill Schneeberger. Seating 
\the guests were Don Sullivan, 
brother of the groom, Don Rolph 
and Louis Zimmerman. Gary Sulli- 
van, nephew of the groom was 
ring bearer. * * 
Breakfast and reception jmmedi- 
ately followed in the. American Le- 
gion Hall, with approximately 150 
| guests in attendance. 
After a honeymoon in North Caro- 
lina, the newlyweds will reside in 
Mt. Pleasant where both will re- 
‘eeive Bachelor degrees and teach- 
ing certificates at Central Michi- 
gan College in J June. 
Officers Elected 
‘by MOMS Group 
During Meeting 
PONTIAC LAKE—Mrs. Thomas 
Booth of Williams Lake road was 
named to the presidency of MOMS 
of America, Unit 60, recently at 
the meeting held at the home of 
Mrs. Margaret Carnes of Union 
Lake. 
Other officers elected were: 
Vice president, Mrs. Bar| Duryer; 
recording secretary, Mrs. Lorena 
Ogg; treasurer, Mrs. Steve Alex- 
ander; chaplain, Mrs. Michael Pa- 
lazzolo; and historian, Mrs. John 
Cronan, 
Installation of officers was given 
by two members of the 
Mrs. , Edith Wendland. The next 
mee’ ting wifl be held at the home 
= Mrs, George Malter, 6945 Roby | 
, on Oct. 5 at 1 p.m. 
Grow at Clarkston 
fo Mark 50 Years CLARKSTON — Ella Van Meer 
Camp No. 4346, Royal Neighbors 
of America will celebrate 
fiftieth anniversary Wednesday, | 
when the organization meets at) 
the home of Mrs, Opal Beach. 
A special program has been 
planned and the three 
charter members will be honored. 
There will be the usual potluck 
| Juncheon at 12:30, All members are 
urged to attend, 
Present Merit Award 
to Royal Oak Official 
ROYAL OAK—E. M. Shafter, 
  | City Manager of Royal Oak was 
honored with a Special Award of 
Merit for devotion to the cause of 
municipal government, while serv- 
ing the Michigan Municipal League 
at the Grand Hotel on Mackinac 
Island, 
  lin Ann Arbor, Ninety-seven per- 
a transfer SDM license from 306/ of the total city and village 
| Population of the state lives in 
the 385 member municipalities of 
State Liquor Commission and was) | the League. The Association is de- 
voted to the advancement of home 
rule and the improvement of mu- 
nicipal government through coop- 
  erative effort. ’ 
Church Bazaar Slated 
at Ortonville Thursday 
ORTONVILLE — 
and turkey dinner Thursday, 
5:30. 
4346 Royal Neighbors 
of Clarkston to Lunch 
  luncheon. 
County Births Metamora 
Mr, and Mrs 
Metamora are parents of a son an 
  of Metamora, 
daughter 
the Lapeer County General Hospital. 
White Lake 
Mr 
nounce the recent birth of a son, Bruc 
Duane at McLaren Hospital, Piint         group. 
ber of commerce. 
Supt. 
the hot rodders " 
down the street, 
rate of 55 miles an hour.” 
area a 15-mile-an-hour rone, 
        ficlally eriacted. * Sate | 
Board, Mrs. A. T. Kirkwood, and | 
its 
living 
Michigan Municipal League is an 
organization of cities and villages 
‘of the state, with headquarters 
The Methodist 
Church will hold ‘the annual Bazaar 
The bazaar will open at 3:30 
p.m. and dinner will be served at 
CLARKSTON — Clarkston 4346 | 
Royal Neighbors of America will 
meet at the home of Mrs. Fred 
Pritchard, 8531 Holcomb Rd., at 
12:30 p.m. Wednesday for potluck 
Paul A. Broecker of 
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Miller, also are parents of a new 
Both infants were bern in|° 
and Mrs, Duane McKeachie an- 
However, President Bert 
Smith said that the council would 
probably go along with the cham- 
ef Schools Harold Hansen 
recommended that the village post 
signs on Summit street because of 
‘racing up and 
sometimes at a 
Council voted to comply with 
with this request and should the 
signs fail, they will make that 
The McPherson Oil'Co. was giv- 
en permission to build two more 
20,000 gallon tanks for their bulk 
oil’ and an ordinance prohibiting 
“U" turns on Main street was of-     
SPOTS BEFORE THEIR EYES — The freckle champs of the 1955 
Wisconsin State Fair compare their spots after they were selected at 
Milwaukee. bios! are Belva Bailey, 9, and Terry Footit, 11. 
  
DRYDEN—Mr. and Mrs. Frank 
Breitenstein, who were married re- 
| cently at Salt Lake City, Utah, 
Forest Hall Saturday evening. 
Mrs. Breitenstein, 
Jewel] Bonstee!l, is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. John Bonsteel of N. 
Mill street. 
More than 75 friends and rela- 
“tives from Dryden,..imlay City, 
Detroit and Pontiac were pres- 
ent. 
Arlene Bonsteel, sister of the | 
and Mrs. Patricia  Glassford 
served the cake. _Two vocal num- 
City Country School 
Will Sport New Look 
BLOOMFIELD HILLS — The 
City and Country School opening 
nations. Mrs. Harry Mackie incorp- 
orated the new designs. 
    and George Saffian, have been 
employed. They will take over 
coaching. City and Country School | 
is a private school for nursery and | 
grades. were honored at a reception at, 
the former | 
tomorrow in Bloomfield Hills will | 
sport a new look in color combi- | 
Two new teachers, Myron Poe | | Reception Honors Pair 
| grandparents, 
      | bers, “Because” and ‘Until’ were 
sung by Dr. Stanley Daley of Pon- 
County Deaths J. C. Castle 
LAPEER — Service for J. C. 
Castle, ten-month-old son of Mr. 
  and Mrs. John Castle, 138 W. Ore- 
gon, will be héld today at 1:30 
p. m. at the Baird Funeral Home 
here. Burial will be in Mt. Hope 
Cemetery. The baby died Sunday 
at Lapeer County General Hospi- 
bride, presided at the punch bowl | tal. 
He is survived by his parents; 
four sisters, Joan Lorraine, Mary 
Ellen and Darlene, and a brother, 
James, all at home; also the 
Mr. and = Mrs. 
George Castle of Lapeer. 
Sandra J. Sabo 
MARLETTE—Service for Sandra 
Jean Sabo, 7, formerly of Mariette, 
will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednes- 
day from the Brown Funeral Home 
in Flint. Sandra died Sunday at 
Hurley Hospital. 
Surviving besides her parents, 
Mr, and Mrs. Alex Sabo, are two 
sisters, Cathy and Molly at home, 
two grandmothers and her grand- 
father. WALLED LAKE — Walled Lake 
schools will have the services of 
several specialists which were not 
available in previous years, teach- 
ers learned recently. 
these are a_ visiting 
teacher, a speech correctionist, 
mentally handicapped. * * * 
The visiting teacher, Jack Si- 
monton, will work with students 
will have the help of the class- 
room teachers, the administration, 
the school nurse, and the facilities 
of various community agencies to 
assist him in discovering the cause 
of the difficulty and in finding a 
solution for the pupils’ problems, 
The speech correctionist, Mar- 
ilyn Snyder, will visit each 
elementary school weekly, hold and a teacher who will assist the 
| built, Two Specialists to Teach 
|Students in Walled Lake 
Until a new elementary unit is 
the mentally retarded will 
remain in their regular class- 
rooms. Teacher Myrtle Wierenga 
will aid other teachers in plan- 
ning courses of instruction for the 
youngsters, who though mentally 
retarded, may become socially 
competent and able to take care 
of themselves in the future, 
A committee will be organized 
|in each building to find the stu- 
dents who need the help which 
is available through the services | 
/of a special teacher. The program 
is planned to adapt learning which- 
will help each child, Rochester Faces 
Packed Schools Enrollment Is 3,112; 
Officials May Find Need 
to Rent Facilities 
ROCHESTER Cammunity 
Schools here opened Monday to a 
record enrollment of 3,112, This is 
an increase of 274 since close of 
school in June. 
As school officials expected, the 
largest. number in any grade 
proved to be 346 new kindergart- 
ners, with only 114 twelfth grad- 
ers, 
Supt. Donald C, Baldwin stated 
that all ry room sizes 
were low with the exception of 
, the second grade 
at Hamlin School and third grade 
  
|'North Branch School 
Enrolls 860 Pupils. NORTH BRANCH — An an- 
nouncement by Supt. Wesley Clay- 
ton reveals the following depart- 
mental enrollments for the North 
Branch Township Agricultural 
School: 
Elementary, including  kinder- 
garten through sixth, 381; junior 
and senior high school (seventh 
through twelfth), 479. The’ kinder- 
garten group is the only one 
whose two sections are under the 
same teacher. Enrollment for the 
combined morning and afternoon 
sections is 63. 
The total enrollment is 860, com- 
pared to last year's total of 819. 
County C Calendar 
wettest caine rs. 
Bt 6:36, for 8 pot luck supper. 
The 
Churen® will be held om Wednesday at 
46 p.m. Gecretarial and treasurers re- 
ports will 
Davisber, 
The date set for Executive Board 
meeting of a School 
PTA is tonight, in the all-purpose room, 
at 8 o'clock. 
T hacthodist Big Beaver ethodist Church will 
show « John Wesley film at the church 
Thursday.   Ortenviile 
quarterly meeting of the Baptist | 
    Farm Bureau 
at Marlette 
Names Officers 
MARLETTE—The Farm Bureau 
Women's Committee met recently 
at the home of Mrs. Russell Wil- 
son for a picnic dinner, and elec- 
tion of officers. 
Mrs. Wesley Mahaffy is the new 
chairman and other officers are: 
Vice chairman, Mrs. Richard 
Frank; treasurer, Mrs. Harvey 
Petsch; recreation, Mrs. Russell 
Mrs. Albert 
Duckert and auditor, Mrs. Byron Wilson; publicity, 
Hickson. 
To ‘Kick Off’ at Almont 
  at Harrison Central. 
Worst jam was being felt in jun- 
ior high grades, where 288 sev- 
enth graders were creating serious- 
ly overcrowded classes. 
Baldwin stated that it might 
prove to rent additional 
temporary facilities in order to re- 
lieve the situation. . 
Auburn Heights Club 
‘Slates Public Events 
AUBURN HEIGHTS — At the 
recent meeting of the Auburn 
Heights Community Club — plans 
were made for a rummage sale to 
be held at the club house on Oct. 
1. Persons wishing to contribute 
used clothing or household articles, 
may call Mrs. Alburn Davis at FE 
2-5724, to arrange for pick-up. 
Another public dance is scheduled 
      ALMONT — The first football | | Oct ¥ and for each first Saturday 
game of the season for Almont 
will be played Friday at 8:15 p.m. 
when Almont and North Braneh_ 
meet on the Almont Lighted Ath- 
letic Field. 
Past Matrons Meet   
MARLETTE — The Past Ma-| 
trons Club of the OES met re- 
cently with Mrs. George Red-| 
mond at her farm home, Thir- 
‘teen members and guests were 
Mrs. Rufus Walker is present. 
chairman of the group. jot the month thereafter. 
  Saxon and Sigler Expand 
ALMONT —. Saxon and Sigler, 
Inc. have purchased the building 
formerly known as the Almont 
Farm Equipment Company. They 
plan to install a bump shop and 
| will carry on their used car de- 
partment and gasoline station at 
the new location. The partners pur- 
chased the Ford agency about a 
year ago and have since taken on 
| the Mercury Agency.     
  Last-minute news for those 
who waited for a Close-Out 
eal on a new Mercury 
  
    There are only a few days left to cash in 
  
    on our close-out offer on 1955 Mercurys. 
  
    We're clearing the decks to make way for 
  
  d 
e 
    LOOK WHAT MERCURY OFFERS. Distinctive beauty, unmatched by any other car on the road. A 198- or 188-horsepower 
Super-Torque V-8 engine with 4-barrel carburetor. Dual exhausts as 
> Don't miss the big television bit, Ed Sullivan's “TOAST OF THE TOWN,” 
CENTRAL. LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, INC. ‘» 40 West Pike St. 1956 models. You can make a terrific saving. 
“Phone    
  standard equipment on 8 out of 11 models. Ball-joint suspension, 
exclusive with Mercury in its field. You can get all this, and more, at 
terrific savings—if you act in the next few days.So hurry! 
Sunday evening, 7 to 8, Station WIJBK, Channel & 
FE 2-9167— oh     
  
  
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ee 
ee 
Ee 
eH 
8 
8 
ee 
ORO 
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ee 
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° Casual sophistication with a decidedly carefree and |waves at the back of the head form an asymmetrical pat- 
feminine flair inspires this campus .coiffure in the new|tern in keeping with the new swirlawave trend, which re- 
swirlawave trend dlesigned by the official hair fashion com- |quires a soft permanent wave to keep the hair, especially 
mittee. Note the upward movement at the temple line and | at the nape, soft   Fs 
the swirling sweep of the waves circling the head. The \the coiffure design. 
Latest Coiffure Accents Slim Garb, , ;- av : 
_.Womens Section The swirlawave coiffure is the | 
big news in the hair fashion picture | 
for fall and winter, announces the | 
official hair fashion committee of | 
the National Hairdressers and Cos- 
metologists Association. 
* * * 
The new hair fashions were un- 
veiled in New York City at ‘the 
recent National Beauty Trades 
Show, before hairdressers from 
throughout the United States, | 
Alaska and Hawaii. 
After presentation in New 
York, the hair fashion authorities 
left for Europe where the new 
American fashions will be shown 
in seven countries, culminating 
with final presentation_in Paris 
at the first Festival Inter- 
nationale de la Coiffure Fran- | 
ealse, ~ 
What is. aq swirlawave? It's a 
new trend in American hair styling 
»—a captivating movement of face- | 
framing waves that literally swirl 
around the head creating an oval 
silhouette to the coiffure.   
Attorney's 
Tardiness — 
      Upsets Plan Guests Are Irked. 
at Beihg Shunted. 
Into Dining Room 
By EMILY POST 
“The other evening my husband | 
and I had a business appointment | 
at our house with our lawyer aft | 
7:3, We had invited friends in 
later that same evening for bridge | 
and we thought we would be fin- | 
‘ished with our business by the 
time they arrived, but our lawyer 
was detained and did not come | 
until much later. 
“Meantime our friends arrived 
and, as our business was of a per- 
sonal nature, I asked them if they 
would please wait in the dining | 
- room until we had ‘finished. Two | 
of the women in the group took | 
exception to this and felt that they 
were treated rather badly.” 
“Under the circumstances, was | 
f wrong in doing what I did, | 
and if se, how could I have han- | 
dled the situation tactfully?” 
  Answer: I think you should have | 
made another appointment with 
the lawyer as it was his fault that 
he came at the wrong hour 
    
“Dear Mrs. Post: We are mem- 
bers of a Protestant church and 
our Minister stands at the door to 
shake hands with the departing 
members after services each Sun- 
day. ; 
“We feel some of his sernrons 
are very inspiring and would like to 
tell him so Would this be proper, 
and how do we go about telling .7t him this? 
  
Answer: When he is shaking | 
hands with you, it is entirely | 
proper to make a comment on | 
his sermon, 
  
“Dear Mrs. Post: When a man | 
and wothan are seated at a table | 
in a restaurant, should the man 
rise and remain °standing only | 
when a woman comes over to the | 
table, or does he do the same for | 
a man?” | 
Answer: Usually he rises only | 
for a woman, but he would also 
show this courtesy to a really old 
gentleman   
“Dear Mrs. Post: Will you 
please tell me if it is necessary 
to send a present upon receiving 
an invitation to a debutante 
tea?” 
  
Answer: Not unless you know) 
the debutante or her family very | 
well, in which case you would be | 
expected to send flowers, 
Li | Maxine Mary 
Mrs. Wilfred “With the whirl of the fall season 
on the horizon”, say the hair 
fashion authorities, “the whirl of 
the curl will determiné the flair 
in the hair.” Flair, then, is one of 
| the dominating, characteristics of 
| the swirlawave trend in coiffures, 
which are more elaborate and 
dramatic than in previous years 
to accent the slim lines and 
simpler clothes of the fall figure. 
CASUAL SOPHISTICATION 
The new note of elaborate detail 
in coiffures is called casual so- 
phistication. These two terms, 
casual and sophisticated, have long 
been used by hair stylists to denote 
two .completely different style 
treatments. Now they are com- 
bined in a fortunate mingling of 
natural charm required of hair 
fashions for American women. * * * 
“The uncluttered look of your 
fall silhouette’, advise the hair 
fashion authorities, “will blend 
beautifully with the casual flair of 
your sophisticated swirlawave coif- 
fure.” 
Hair’ length ts to remain 
generally short, especially at 
the nape, continuing the popular 
“kissable neckline” of last year, 
which | s especially adaptable for 
the luxury furs trimming collars 
of afternoon tunics ang evening 
coats and dresses, Millinery also 
gains attention since each swirla- wave has a gleaming crown for 
perfect harmony of hats and 
Coming in ‘for special consider- 
ation in the new hair fashion 
picture are women past 30. No 
longer obliged to struggle through 
a slough of gamin and small boy 
cuts which have been completely 
inappropriate for their 
alities, the ,swirlawave coiffures 
are designed to enhance individual 
characteristics, rather than subju- 
gate individual personality to the 
dominance of a fad. . 
* * * 
All swirlawave coiffures have a 
lift at the temple line, very im- 
waves moving upwards and then 
with a backward movement from 
the face, The coiffure is molded 
to the head and in silhouette must 
frame the face with feminine flair. 
None of the sleekness or severity 
which is already dominating. the | 
clothing silhouette can be tolerated 
in the coiffure. 
BACK INTEREST 
Back interest is also highly im- 
portant. Waves swirling from the 
temples extend around the back of 
| the head in a symmetrical pattern, and natural looking and within the lines of 
person- 
portant to women past 30, with the swirling flair its lines, In 
particular, it adds that soft natural 
look to the hair and controls the 
short hair at the neckline. 
All coiffures this fall and winter 
must be polished and gleaming is 
the edict. If your hair doesn't meet 
, ° 
                    usually oval, but dependent upon | 
woman. 
    
Beebe 
exchanged 
nuptial vows 
with Thomas 
E. Slattery 
Saturday 
evening. She is 
the daughter . 
of Mr. and 
Beebe of 
Elizabeth Lake 
road, and he is 
the son of the 
Thomas _ 
Slatterys of 
Ortonville, ' Because of the 
  Maxine Beebe Is Gowned 
in Chantilly 
The Rev. William Marbach of 
the First Presbyterian Church 
united Maxine Mary Beebe and 
|Thomas E. Slattery in marriage 
| at a candlelight ceremony Satur- Richard Valentine of Flint seated 
day evening i x * 
She is the daughter of Mr. and 
Lake road, and he is the son of 
Mr. 
of Ortonville. 
Her floor-length bridal gown 
of imported Chantijly lace over 
satin featured a Queen Anne style 
collar. Her three-tiered bouffant 
skirt swept from a lace bodice. | : i ~ 
An arrangement of orange blos-| Mrs. Slattery wore a champagne 
soms in her hair secured the fin- 
gertip veil and she carried a bridal 
bouquet of white carnations with 
a white orchid in the center. 
* s * 
turquoise, respectively. and Mrs. James F. Slattery | Lace for Rite 
| quet of turquoise-tinted carnations | | 
| centered with roses. 
| best man. Arthur Beebe of Lansing, 
| Louis Williams of Ortonville and 
| the guests. 
| Diane Beach sang the bridal , 
| Mrs. Wilfred J. Beebe of Elizabeth | recital 
| A buffet supper was served to 
| gucsts immediately following the 
ceremony at Waterford Com- 
| munity Center. Mrs. Beebe greet- 
| ed the guests wearing a peri- | 
| winkle blue taffeta dress with 
garnet accessories and a corsage 
of garnet roses. 
i brocade dress with copper tone 
copper-shaded roses. 
* «* 
For a honeymoon tour of the 
| Bridesmaids Shirley Ann Watts | Smokey Mountaine, the bride 
| and Margaret Walls of Ortonville changed to a blue suit with navy 
| wore floor-length gowns of crystal- |accessories and wore the white 
| lette. Their gowns were garnet and orchid fron” her bridal - bouquet. 
On their return the newlyweds   fessional beauty care treatments to 
ition it into the gleaming 
tresses you must have for fashion- | 
able flair, 
  / 
trend, keynotes this coiffure 
dressers and cosmetologists 
for town wear-and career gi ~~ A lift at the temple line, with waves moving upwards 
and then swirling around the head in the new swirlawave 
by the official hair fashion committee of the National Hair-   MAKE j é 
  of studied neatness, designed 
Association. Ideally suited       
     
    
r wave for 
features the smooth crown of the swirlawave designed to 
complement fall and winter millinery. It is easy to care 
for in between beauty salon appointments, following a per- 
manent wave which holds the 
it a soft, natural appearance. 
  irl requirements, this coiffure lines of the coiffure and gives 
  
  
“TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955 “ PAGES 11-13 
  
Elementary 
Teachers 
to Tour City 
To familiarize the new elemen- 
tary teachers of Pontiac schools 
with the city,, surrounding com- 
munities and countryside, the As- 
sociation for “Childhood Education 
(ACE), is sponsoring a “Know 
Your City" tour on Thursday af- 
ternoon following classes. 
  * * 
Hair coloring continues to be a 
striking feature of the hair fashion 
picture, taking its cue from the 
luxurious textures of fall fabrics. 
Depending upon your fall en- 
semble, your coiffure will either 
contrast brilliantly or blend dra- 
matically with rare and unusual 
| individual translation for each 
waves and fine | 
~~ | brilliant highlights will be the most 
Loran Hamilton of Otronville was 
/ accessories. Her corsage was of colors, 
| MOST DRAMATIC 
Carbon tones burnished with 
dramatic and ~- unusual. Among teachers 
Baldauf; LeBaron. 
. Also sharing in the prograin will 
| be Mrs. Florence Pappert, Linda 
Vista School; Mrs. Marjorie Cot- 
terman, Longfellow; Mrs, Mary 
Hodges and Mrs. John Kish, Mal- 
kim; Mrs, Alfred Rothweiler, Web-         ‘them are such sultry shades as 
candlelight blond, carbon fox, and 
carbon mist grays and lavenders, 
all designed to emphasize indoor 
glamour. 
: * * 
Firelight red, peacock orange 
and smouldering ember are vivid 
new shades of striking brilliance 
in the red through amber groups. 
Chestnut flow, burnished umber 
and satin black are making news 
among the dark shades. 
All tones and all lines in the 
coiffure picture for fall aim to- 
wards making your hair truly your 
crowning glory. 
Ronald L. Willis 
Claims Bride 
in Utah Service 
Residing in Ogden, Utah, follow- 
‘ing their marriage are Mr. and 
Mrs. Ronald L. Willis. 
_* * 
| The bride is the former Doris 
| Petersen, daughter of Mr. and 
' Mrs. Peter N. Petersen of Ogden, 
‘and the bridégroom is the son of 
|Mr, and Mrs, Avery R. Willis of 
Stanley drive, Pontiac. 
    The ceremony was performed 
| in the First Ward Mormon ster; Mrs, Thomas Dodson, Whit- 
field; Mrs. Ralph Lee, Whittier; 
Mrs. Lawrence Coolman, Willis, 
and Mrs. Scott Bonham, Wisner. Sharing their cars with the new 
will be Mrs. Malissa 
Brice of Bagley School, Lila Red- 
mond, Baldwin School; Elizabeth 
Halsey, Emerson; Mrs. Martha 
Larsen, Hawthorne; Josephine Stil- 
well, McConnell, and Mrs. Louise Before an altar banked with pink 
candles and flowers, Bett} L. Kel- 
ley became the bride of Raymond 
F. Brenneman Friday evening. 
The Rev. Theo Wuggazer of Luth- 
eran Church of the Redeemer, 
Birmingham performed the wed- 
ding service. 
* * * 
Betty is the daughter of 
Smith of Birmingham, and Ray- 
mond is the son of Mr. and Mrs, 
Jack Brenneman of Gambrills, 
She wore a matching lace cap 
she carried a prayerbook with 
three bronze orchids, ivy and ivory 
streamers. 5 
* o * 
Maid of honor Helen Bruestle 
wore a mint green lace and tulle 
gown with a sweetheart neckline 
and matching headdres:. Her co-       
Married 
Saturday were 
Patricia Ann 
Mooneyham 
and William 
David Brooks. 
She is the 
daughter of 
Mrs. Eleanor 
Mooneyham of 
Forest avenue, 
and he is 
the son of 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Glenn Brookd 
of Fairmount 
avenue. 
            Church by Elder Lewis J. Pas- 
sey in the presence of 150 guests. 
Attending the bride as matron 
of honor was Mrs. Shanna Lee 
Stanley. Other attendants were 
Sharon Petersen, Bonnie McFar- 
land, Mary Lynn Hinckley, Joy 
Holfeson and Ann Carter. 
Serving as best man was Carl 
Grose of West Virginia. 
* * * 
A reception was held immedi- 
ately following the ceremony at 
Mansion House. j 
The bridegroom is stationed at. 
Hill Air Force Base in Ogden. 
  | Australian Speaks 
Before Sunset Club 
The Sunset Club, sponsored by. 
the Pontiac Department of Parks | 
and Recreation, had as its guest | 
speaker, Mrs. Daisy Picknell of | 
Australia, when members | 
Thursday evening. 
Mrs. Picknell described activities | 
of Old Folks’ Club and the Pen- | 
sioners’ Club of Manly, New South |         pictures of the country. 
Miss Watts carried. a bouquet of will reside in East Lansing where; The next meeting of the club will 
pink Carnations centered with roses he is a junior at Michigan State be held at Wilson School on Sept. 
and Miss Walls carried q bou- 
* % } t+ i | | University School of Engineering. | 22 at 1 o'clock. 
# 
+ -: ® . Wales, Australia. She also showed| “P   MR. and MRS. WILLIAM D. BROOKS 
Patricia Ann | 
Repeats Vows Before 150. 
Wearing a ballerina-length white 
crystal gown, Patricia Ann Moon- 
eyham became the bride of Wil- 
liam David Brooks Saturday at 
Oakland Avenue United Presby- 
terian Church. The Rev. Theodore 
Allebach performed the ceremony 
before 150 guests. 
* * 
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. 
Eleanor Mooneyham of Forest ave- 
nue, and he is the son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Glenn Brooks of Fairmount 
avenue, 
The bride was given in marriage 
by her uncle, Wayne Cronk of 
Gladwin, 
The princess-style bridal gown 
of crystal silk was accented by 
a single strand of pearis, the 
bride’s only jewelry. Her finger- 
.and rhinestone tiara. Her flow- 
ers were a cascade arrangement 
of white roses and ivy. 
Nancy Mooneyham served as her | Mooneyham 
sister's maid of honor wearing a 
powder blue brocaded silk baller- 
ina-length gown. She carried a co- 
lonial bouquet of pink carnations. 
Jessie Brooks, bridesmaid, wore 
a dusty rose brocaded silk gown 
and carried a colonial bouquet’ of 
red carnations. Their gowns were 
styled like the bride's. 
* * * 
Donald Brooks served as best 
man. John Gazette and William 
Beckett seated the guests. The 
bridal recital was sung by Carl 
Matheny. 
For the reception held in the 
church parlors immediately fol- 
lowing the service, Mrs. Mooney- 
ham wore a white crepe dress 
with black accessories and a cor- 
sage of baby red roses, 
Mrs, Brooks wore a gray crepe 
d with white accessories and a 
corsage of pink roses. 
The newlyweds will reside in 
Pontiac, + f   with a short veil and mitts, and Betty L. Kelley Becomes 
Bride in Birmingham Rite 
me ve 
MRS. RAYMOND BRENNEMAN 
lonial bouquet was of pink gladioli 
and rosebuds. 
Kay Kelly wore pink tulle with 
a matching headdress for her 
duties as bridesmaid. She carried 
a colonial nosegay of baby pink 
rosebuds. 
ATTEND BRIDEGROOM 
Orval Brenneman of Gambrills, 
Md., was best man. Jack Bell of 
Clawson and James Hengemuehle 
After the church reception, 
guests also met at the home of 
the bride in Birmingham. 
When leaving for a honeymoon 
tour of the East, Florida and 
Cuba, the bride wore a cola-color- 
ed dress with champagne acces- 
sories. On their return the newly- 
weds will reside in Birmingham. 
  ; Exchange Club 
Holds Meeting 
in Avon Park - 
The Teachers Exchange Club 
met in the pavilion of the Avon 
Park in Rochester for a coopera- 
tive dimner and a social hour Fri- 
day evenings. 
Guests of the group were Mr. 
and Mrs. Casey Roback, Rhea 
Jogoe, Norrig Smith, Herbert Crel- 
ley and Elmer Thorpe of Pontiac. 
Stewart Knapp of Rochester and 
Paul Baughan of Auburn Heights 
also attended. 
Mrs. H, Erwin Gottschalk and 
!tesses for the dinner. 
colored slides of a trip taken this 
summer through New York, the 
the maritime provinces of Canada. 
July-August Group 
Conducts Gathering 
The July-August Group of. First 
bard of West Iroquois road. She 
diate, Mrs, Ray Knapp and Mrs. 
Lester Brown. 
The Rev. Edward Auchard and 
Mrs. Lou West were guests of the 
group. The Rev. Mr. Auchard gave 
a talk on the Book of Hebrews. 
Mrs. Herman Miller was accept- 
ed into the-gromp: It was an- nounced that the, next, meeting will 
be held at the home of Mrs.. Berke- 
ley Voss of Lone Pine road...     Mrs. Stewart Knapp were cohos- | 
t 
Mr. and Mrs. Thorpe showed | 
New England states, Quebec and | 
Presbyterian Church met. Friday | 
at the home of Mrs. Hannan Hub- | 
was assisted by Mrs. Harry Win- |» Crafts Join Anniversary 
Celebration Mountain-Climbing 
Vacation Enjoyed 
by Clifford Paynes 3" rn 
i i 
TOE ng ; [i if ; | aT 
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. 
William ‘Trudgen of Gertrude 
street and Mr. and Mrs. Max 
Jaeger of Detralt. 
Coming. Events Anna Gordon Unit, WCTU, will have @ 
family night meeting Thursday at Oak- 
land Avenue United Presbyterian Church, 
| with cooperative supper at 6:30 p.m, 
Better Home and Garden Club will 
meet Thursday at 11 a.m. to view the 
ardens at the home of Mrs. Pred 
| Beardsice, 725 EB. Gquare Lake Rd, A co- 
| operative tumcheon will follow at 12:30 
pm, at Adah Shelly Library. 
A “get-ecqueinted™ 
Pontiac Council] of PT. 
today at 1:15 pm. at 
Parliainentary procedure will be demon- 
strated With a model meeting. 
board The E. R. Webster School PTA 
will meet tonight at 7 o'clock. Home- 
room mothers and fathers will siso meet 
| at . All te will meet with 
ithe teachers at 8 p.m. in the various 
r oma, followed by a general PTA meet- 
ing at 9 p.m. 
The Loyal Philathea Clase of the 
Baptist Church will meet in the 
asement Tuesday at 6:30 p.m, for ® 
a mad dinner and of of- 
cers. 
          meet: of the 
An will be held ilson School. 
Omega Mu; Sigme sorority will ge 
tonight at 8 o'clock in the home of. Donald Nelson, 4650 Ross Dr. « : 
Huron Gardens Eagles Auxiliary meet Wednesday st 8 p.m. at 
Highland Rd. for « first reading of bylaws. . : 
          
          
  a lieastiiaiidaiiadiae  
     * 
      THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. 1955   
    e, Paint, Linoleum 
m Beacon Wax’ ishighly recommended. brand of floor wax--all without 
to pon 4 scrubbing; this *product, 
aptly called ‘Beacon Ali Brands 4 
ax and Dirt Remover,’ gives | 
fine results. 
When it comes to paste wax, 
Paste Wax is a tremen- 
idous favorite amongst paste | 
ip- | wax devotees. 
‘Thrill’ is Beacon's new fur- | 
niture wax that comes in two 
different shades: dark for dark 
furniture, light for light furni- 
ture. Without any rubbing, 
‘Thrill’ shines all furniture to 
a new-like appearance. 
All these four Beacon pro- 
ducts are available at hard- 
ware, paint, department and li- 
noleum stores.       
     
          ll.   
  
  
~- “emeee®” 
A convertible tunic— 
  
  
| Clean-up time will be easier if 
you place a light coat of grease 
in the pan in which chocolate is 
to be melted. 
      Gallita of California at her most inventive. 
| She has designed a slim sheath in peau de waistline in back, then flares open f 
_peche, with a square neckline that can be waistline down. 
‘worn alone, or as shown topped by a com-* 
  
~ISCATTER RUGS 
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OTTON BRAIDS from 18x 30° at... .......... spoeese ese ES 
LINEN BRAIDS from 2x3 at .:....0 0.60. -ce cee cee 6.95 
WOOL BRAIDS from 2x3 at.. ecleee 8.50 
PLASTIC BRAIDS from 2x3 at...... ts 3.95   
* POWDER PUFF NYLON 100% Nylon by Needietuft. 8 Béautiful Colors. sizes 
from 2x3 at 9.95 to 9x12 at 
* TANGIER RUGS BY NEEDLETUFT $175.00 
a owng” ay rl ee te Clipped Pile of Spunvis (e795 
* CALLETTE BATH SETS BY CALLAWAY Guaranteed fast to washing, boiling, and sunlight. Skid- 4 
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OUR STORE-IS AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT 
1666 S. Telegraph 9 
FE 4-0516 | ] Open Monday and. 
Friday Nights 
Park' Right at the Door 
  Mrs. Charles Zuk, department: liam MaéDermaid, vice — presi- 
president of Amvets Auxiliary, in- dent; Mrs, Duane Bell, secretary; 
stalled the new officers and ad- Mrs. John Allen, treasurer, and | 
‘dressed the District Three Couticil 
of Amvets Auxiliary at the meet 
ing held Monday at Bemis-Olsen 
Post home on Oakland avenuc 
In her message, Mrs. Zuk re 
ported that the Department of 
Michigan won the national award 
for outstanding work in American 
ism for the past vear. Hhghlichts 
of the national convention held dur 
ing the past week in Philadel 
phia were also given 
Mrs. Marie Bernashi, depart 
ment hospital chairman, was 
also a guest. She spoke of the 
geod work the members of this 
district are doing for hospital. | 
ized veterans. 
Officers installed were Mrs Wil 
  
individual! Attention to 
PERMANENTS on Long 
, Hair- Styles! 
FINGER 
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this is Francine of | pletely detachable tunic of black Chantilly | 
type lace which buttons from neckline to jcocktail dress of black jersey. | 
rom the low in the back, is piped in black satin, repeated at the slot |       
     
   
    
  Simplicity of form and color denote this Addie Masters | Slim Silhouettes for Fall 
pockets and for the little belt. 
Amvets Auxiliary Installs New Ofticers 
Mrs. Roland Dennis, chaplain 
Others taking office were Mrs. 
McCombs, 
Mrs George 
arms, 
William Cal- relations, and Mrs 
low, parliamentarian, 
District Director Mrs. James 
Houck was previously installed at 
the department convention, 
  sergeant-at- | 
James Parry, public | Past district directors’ pins were 
presented to Mrs, Car] Bartlett and 
Mrs. Allen in appreciation of their 
service to the organization 
% te = 
Bemis-Olsen Auxiliary 113 was 
hostess at the Monday 
meeting and Jimmie Dey Auxiliary 
12 will entertain at the November 
meeting. 
Talk Heard-- 
by Medical 
Assistants The Oakland County Medical As- 
sistants Society will meet Wednes 
day at 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker 
will be Dr. George Evseeff, who 
will talk on “Psychology of a Sick 
Person.’ 
| . ’ : 
The group will be hosted by the 
Merrill Medica] Laboratories of 
Royal Oak. 
The group is sending 12 mem- 
bers to represent it at the Mich- 
igan State Medical Assistants 
Society Convention in Grand 
Rapids, The convention is being 
held Sept. 28 and 29, in conjunc- 
tion with the Michigan State 
Medical Society Convention. 
The Oakland County Medical As- 
| sistants Society is a newly organ- 
ized group and membership is       
  
Furniture 
Costs Les 
» 
' 
{ 30 Year Fam 
    Why Custom-made 
ls Better — 
Stop at Elliott's Conveniently 
located showroom at 5400 Dixie Hwy 
* 8 
“Custom Furniture -and Upholstery ces 
Elliott's rd 
Ss * ° ° ° ° 
ily Tradition, at ° 
Piant and Showroom 
5390 ~ 5400 Dixie Hwy. 
Waterford, Mich. 
OR 3-1225 composed of women employes, in 
ties in offices or laboratories of 
Medical Society. 
  Pilgrim Group 
Holds Luncheon 
Mrs. Robert Reynnels of North 
Johnson avenue was hostess to the 
Pilgrim Group of First Congrega- 
| tional Church for a luncheon meet- 
ing Friday. Mrs. Ora Travis, Mrs. 
| Milo Cross and Mrs. Glenn Grif- 
fin assisted the hostess. 
Mrs. Griffin gave devotions, us- 
ing ‘Christian Friendship’ as her 
theme and quoting from 
Prophet’ by Kaheil Gibran. 
The Rev. Lawrence Graves, as- 
sociate minister of the church. 
spoke to the group on the part 
women play in the Christian 
church. He emphasized “putthig 
first things first.” 
man, announced that the group 
will serve the parish dinner to- 
morrow at the church. medical or administrative capaci- | 
members of the Oakland County 
“The 
  
“Your Health 
Is Our Business” 
You will -teel so 
better aller you 
us!    
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    of.the narrowing silhouette for fall. 
evening * Lo 
  
Gerald Wallaces Are Honorees 
at Open House 
Mr. and Mrs. Minto Wallace of 
Neome drive entertained 100 guests 
|| at an open house Friday in honor 
‘\ot their son and daughter-in-law, 
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wallace. She 
is the former Carolyn Lauten- 
schlager of Buffalo, N.Y. 
a te = = 
The couple wag married in 
Amsterdam, N. Y., in the Zion 
‘| Evangelical and Reformed Church. 
The ceremony was.performed by 
the bride’s brother, the Rev. Henry 
Buege of Louisville, Ky. 
Edward of 
Charlottesville, Va., gave his 
sister in marriage J Wal- 
Ushers were George R. Jenkins, 
Pittsburgh, Pa., and Thomas Hew- 
itt, Natrona Heights, Pa. 
After a reception at the church, 
the couple toured New” 
and Canada. 
University, Nashville, Tenn. 
Mr. Wallace is a graduate of 
Adrian College, Adrian, Both are 
now employed with school sys- 
tems in the area. 
The couple is now residing in 
Waterford. 
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Ree Pee coe Peery TT | 
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re 
ee 
pat 3 dik Se Se ik 
ae ude ee, 
    THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1955   
Flooded Texans 
‘Alerted Again. | Weary , Pelted With More Rain; 
50 City Blocks Deluged | 
‘RAYMONDVILLE, Tex. «A — 
     
  
  
Quickly Fading . 
in Modern Life 
| WASHINGTON @—A title that. 
has been borne by world-renowned | 
Americans from Benjamin Frank. | 
lin to Perle Mesta seems a 
to dignppeer. | by Cart Grohert Renowned Title | 
; i 
| 
* 
‘Tt's cep extraordinary and | 
minister plenipotentiary.” 
Until 1893, this was the highest |   
      
  Homade Food Shop “Cafeteria and Lunch toads 
Call Homade FE 2-6242 
ye ~ For complete catering service 
NENG for banquets and wedding 
           
                          
  * * * 
Fooddsmaged Paomenine title given any U.S. diplomatic | &~ 3 dinners.. Wedding cakes, 
— oe eyed Rea representative, In hit yor the aces’: party cakes and special oc- ambassador was nam ee. : a 
clouds with apprehension. posigglating—en Francis anal Nex. ye casion cakes are our specialty. 
accredit@d to Britain's Queen Vic- ~ i, ‘orecasts indicated more rain. : Se , 
7 aoe vil defense office : idiia ee ter ek = eG tS We Also Have a Large 
warned seule that Gulf squalls} Rubberized Drunk Tank ve pee Somme te nnieh aoa (me Saved Serious H Hurt Since then the upgrading of lega- = ine. Variety of Pastries that cent rainiaden clouds scud- os . . as fresh as the day they were |by "Oui Acta Police tions headed by mabaers to em- rk to Choose From! a cs ” i fin 
mich tng nore toe wc =s| W OTIS Glassiest Clim kyr.  atinic me), WS ANGELES w ~ Pounyear|fsten, Mae. subean aK. hoo 
Tone toe 3 pw : R inforced concrete structure rises |ld Saul az, being an in-| embassies reached 12 last week REX <7 Fruit Punch Prepared 
ee ee cect LAER 5 Vidernce ROOM [sess See ac"S Tales | tive te ton, opened a | wid he promt tthe US|] MRRSGN LYSE. Fruit Panes night appealed at Civic Center, looking much like | ond-story window yesterday a few . < Pe i 
vend of some yin al ag LOS ANGELES ®—The giass-| floors, so inmates can't hurt them-|a luxury hotel. It brings under | minutes after his mother had left Luxembourg — where Mrs, Mesta ee et Punch Bowls and Cups J 
more rain fell. More than 4 inches iest. classiest police building in! selves in falling. | one roof police facilities formerly to take her daughter to school. had served as minister for a tte | for Rental ie 
hit nearby Weslaco, Lesser| the world opened officially for busi- ~ scattered all over the city, The| Saul leaned out, lost his balagce, | until 1953. . / 
amounts peppered the whole rich ness here yesterday | A 400 seat ane with a | cost was 7% million dollars. ‘fell and wound up hanging from There are only five U.S. lega- 
vegetable and citrus-growing area. + * * “show up” screen which permits! .One drafting error, caught just | the window sill by his fingertips, tions left— in Hungary, Romania, 
.7 It has: victims to identify suspects with-| in time, would have ceghort — — ress a concrete walk. Iceland, Yemen and Tangier. 
Tropical storm Gladys last week Jail cells with three miles of|out being seen. Electric controls|on the showup screen facing t ust then a police car came by. eect 
Pg. aed ag tg gee gh er eubretbabie gine pertitiena, quod make it possible to reproduce light-| wrong way. | Officer Robert Lea ran to the spot| In the year 809 A. D. the Emper- , _ 
over a 50-block area ‘of Raymond-| in place of bars in some areas to | ing conditions under which victims “That would have been a/ below the window, just as Saul let | or ee a an one 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET 
ville. Much of the water still re-| permit easier supervision of pris-| saw the suspects during a crim-| switch,” one officer said. “The | go. The boy landed squarely in the a uae tee ee Ladera ’ 
mains and a blocked sys-|oners by 120 jailers, nal act. prisoners would be identifying po~) policeman's arms, unhurt but tear-| wine because it was | “ 
em caused concern over health. “drunk tank’ with rubber! A huge, walk-in refrigerator and! lice and witnesses.” fully scared. unsanitary. 
sprayed over the area, and 
part of the water which sent about 
| ae Marriage License 
Applications 
ied 0 a Se Teddy R. Landrum, 119 Stout 
Janet A. Shoults, Brown City 
Lyle B. Quoin, Walled Lake 
aoe L. Stanley, Walled Lake 
William D. Brooks, 104 Fairmount 
Patricia A. Mooneyham, 61 Forest 
Vern BE. Cork, 609 W. New York 
Sara R. Poppy, 1321 Vinewood 
Bernard J. Zosso, 2139 Dexter 
Mary E. Blanton, 1236 Oniversity 
Robert L. Mitchell, 40 Dwight Wailena J. Brooks, 596 Kennett 
Allen &. Cross, 139 | 
Letha Moore, 133 Bagley 
Robert W. Criene, Havel Park 
Audrey M. Hudson, Birmingham 
Edwin B_ Jones, Wa we 
Ruth FP. sinees 160 Cadillac 
' Jack Snavely, Ann Arbor 
Patricia A. 4 Milford 
James I. Batchelor, 163 8. Shirley . 
Dorothy A. Oldenberg, 638 N. Perry 
Noe! P. Carboneau, 100 E. Zecephine 
Mary L. Thomason, 284 Oaklan 
Marlin LE. Hendricks, 494 Cameron 
Georgiena A. Vargo, 141 W. Columbia 
Edward Petrovich, St. Joseph Hospital 
Prances M. Feargue, Can 
Carl H. #t. Clair, Milford Grace C. Armstrong, Holly 
©onald Keehn, 142 N. Josephim 
Donna C. McDowell, 142 N. Jesrpthne 
core F Beasley, Rocheste 
J. Strickland, North ‘Caroline 
Raymond PF. Brenneman, Birmingham 
Elizabeth L. Kelley, Birmingham 
Richard C. Scharrer, Birmingham 
Barbara L. McCloskey, Detroit 
Charles H. Losey Jr., Birmingham 
Joanne L. Holevar, Royal Oa. 
Conrad V. Dalgord, Auburn —— 
Janet 1. Mayr, Auburn Height 
Patrick G. Murdock, 161 W, Chicago 
Dorothy L. Chapple, 2435 Mann 
dames R. Livingston, 8242 Cass Lk. Rd. 
Edith N. Dalton, 106 W. Rundell 
William G. Franklin Jr., 121 Bagley 
Marveline Howard, 492 Colorado 
Ray C. Love, Auburn Heights 
Beverly J. Russ, Auburn Heights 
Anthony D. Betzing, 166 Mechanic 
Goldie Lapides, 451 E. South Bivd 
Harold D. Crowe, 71] W. Howard 
Martlyn J. Morrison, 1375 Nokomis 
Clyde D. Hargraves, 62 Pingree 
Wanda L. Spencer, 555 W. Huron St 
Gordon L. Shira, Birmingham 
Joanne E. Hoff, Birmingham 
Billy ©. Howard, Utica 
Joanne H. Detkowski, Rochester 
Pranklin A. Johns, Detroit 
Maud G. Beck, 1765 Ward 
Curtis H. Burls, 100%, Saginaw 
Vivian D. Ellsworth, 86 Crawford 
Pharos P. McGinnis, 111 Lafayette 
Ina R. Burrus, A 17 Arcadia Ct. 
Lane VanderHoek, 94 E. Beve 
Patricia A. Campbell, 1 Watery 
Harvey F. Carion, Detrot 
Marjorie J. Bevans, 210 E. Bivd. 8 
Thomas £. Slattery, Ortonvi! 
Maxine M. Beebe, 53 Eitsebeth Lk. Rd 
Robert A. Stuart, St. Louis, Miss. 
Elizabeth A. Cobb, Birmingham 
Raymond E. Cullen, Royal Oak 
Trene Gilmore, Birmingham 
  
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ey Mill St. and 211 S. Saginaw St. | 3 - y y j : z y 
. an [| j i > / / ; b : ' : i ‘ MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. Pontiac, Michigan . 
iS eee ee ae Ee ee eS (Sige cw aa eae ere ae EP er ER I Sar Te        
    
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ii beat. It was a real football club. 
today. 
A glance at the “probables’’ 
shows a lot of speed, good height 
(re) 5-10; tackles — 
  (190 pounds) and Dick Kohrs (rt, 
  
‘Beat You’ Player   
  How About By BILL CORUM g 
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    Top Yankee at Short? 
  ‘Scooter’ LP Hee at 
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3 SF 
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'28388%58 Uf 
dealt f 4 
his job back. Gordon, the acro- 
batic “2nd baseman, ,must have 
been then. " But since 
then Phil has playe! with 
them all. 
great, just great. It's an over- 
worked word, I know. But that's 
Philip. That's Rizzuto. 
  of the National Hockey League will 
open Oct. 6, earliest in the league's 
history, and end March 18, the ; 
Et i 
  = 
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3 § 3 
Werney defeated Milton 
the finals of the cham- 
flight to win the 1955 
O'Shanter Country Club title. 
Leo Mellen won the ladies’ 
over Mrs. George Simons. 
Teal won the Class A Jun- 
jor championship and Stu Bloch 
the Class B Junior title. iy 
eine 
after Tam's professional, was won 
by Harold Sarkro over Dave Mus- 
David Schwartz captured 
the Veterans championship _ by 
downing S. H. Jacobson. 
Anyone for Bowling? 
Openings are available for wom. | 
en bowlers, wishing to roll on 
Those interested should contact ‘Bh 
S 
The Warren Orlick Trophy, named | 
Wednesday nights at 9 o'clock. | 7 pt 
oe 
} a f 
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1955 ay y 
& 
  
165 pounds); guards — 
Baker(165) and Dick Nevis(175); 
center — Don Hardy(165), 
Defensive team, averaging 
ever 199 pounds — Ends, Whit- 
lock and Cagle; tackles — Ken- 
nedy and Marvin Conwell(195 
pounds); guards — Walker and Starters for 
  Bob Holloway(230 pounds); line- backefs — Castell, Watkins or 
Whitely Larson(i65); safety man 
- Jim Shorter(150), 
Chiefs defeated the "Dots in last 
season's Opener at Wyandotte, 27-13 
|and today were rated favorite’ 
to repeat Friday night, 
Hoffheins’ crew this year con- 
sists of some 15 lettermen, plus Friday's. some new players of considerable 
guards — Ken. Boriso and Gene 
Noles; center — Steve Stieler;     four ts,   
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
Can Cleveland's 1's-game lead 
survive the Washington jinx? 
That's the next question in the 
American League pennant quiz—~ 
and the flag may be riding on the | 
answer. 
The Indians look as if they may | 
have packed away the pennant when they came from behind to 
earn a double-header split Sunday 
against the secondplace New York 
Yankees, but Tribe Manager Al 
Lopez remains cautious, He's not 
predicting a thing “until after to- 
night’s two gemes at Washington.” 
* * 
“If we get by Washington,” says Tribe, Senators in Sp Lopez, “we ought to be in an ex- 
cellent position, although it still 
won't be a cinch. I still think it 
It's a crazy race that puts the 
spotlight on a three-game set be- 
tween the leaders and the seventh- 
place club. But that’s the way the 
race has been since the All-Star       
  Ry i 
STARTERS — Here are the probable starters for Pontiac High School's backfield in Friday night's} (left half), Bob Casteel (quarterback), and Jim 
opening football game for 1955, at Wisner Stadium. | (Red) Taylor (right half). Spann and Taylor were 
Chiefs*' meet Wyandotte in the opener, From left | members of the PHS state championship track team 
(above) are Charles Spann (fullback), Ken Fusilier | of last spring. Pentise Press Phete 
  
SAGINAW wild scramble 
for the football. championship, cap- 
turdd last year by Saginaw Arthur 
Hill, is in prospect during the 1955 
Saginaw Valley Conference season. 
Hard-hit by graduation, Arthur 
Hill's coach, Kurt Kampe, believes 
there is little chance of the Lum- 
berjacks repeating last year's per- 
formance of parading through a 
five-game SVC schedule unde- 
feated. 
Three teams which finished in 
the lower half of the standings 
last year—Pontiac, Bay City 
Central and Saginaw—will pack 
the most experience this season. 
Always Flint teams, 
Northern and Central, will feature 
individual stars backed by untried 
material. 
Pre-season nomination .for the 
SVC's best .back goes to Flint 
Central's 195-peund. hard-hitting 
Charles Thrash, beginning his 3rd Chiets, Trojans Pre-Season 
Favorites in Valley Play 
season as the Indians’ mainstay. 
Other backs expected to assume | 
stgrring roles are Bay City Cen- 
tral's speedy brother combination 
of Namon and Willie Smith; Pon- 
tiac’'s Charles Spann, Jim Taylor 
and Freeman Watkins; Saginaw 
High's Charles Ruffin and Jim 
Sherley; and Arthur Hill's Floyd 
Wright and Gary Lee. 
With most coaches employing 
their own versions of the T-forma- 
tion attack, the quarterbacks will 
be on the spot in conference com- 
petition. ‘ 
Ed Graybiel, Pontiac coach, ap- 
pears to have his Chiefs ready to 
shake their SVC football jinx. 
‘With 10 regulars arhong the 19 let- 
termen, Pontiac ranks as a serious 
title contender. 
Elmer Engel, who guides Bay 
City Central's destinies, will field 
a lighter but fresher team which 
rates with Pontiac and Saginaw as 
pre-season favorites. 
  
Solunar Tables Hours during which the best | 
fishing in this area should be en- 
  joyed Wednesday are as follows, | 
according to John Alden Knight's | 
solunar tables: | 
| MONDAY’'S STARS | 
By The Associated Press 
PITCHING—Lino Donoso,  Pi- 
rates, went the route, giving up 
six hits in 9-3 victory over Cardi- 
nals, 
BATTING—Dale Long, Pirates, | 
batted in four runs with a single, | 
double and three-run homer against 
Cards. A 
Minor P 
Minor 
3:65 3 M 
Majo 
425 1 M Major 
10:10 035 
= ots j 
The Dodgers’ 13-game margin in 
1953 was the biggest to take the 
National league pennant in a 10-) 
        Mrs. Helen Swett, FE 5-2680. ‘| year span.   
Another Defensive Record?   
UM Tackle Posts Remain Wide Open | 
| 
as Jack Blott Creates Forward Wall 
  This year Blott's line looks like 
one of his best—strong and deep 
, center and end. 
But tackle, one of the hardest- 
is still up for grabs, 
      nephew of former Michigan end 
. | coach Bill Orwig. 
Blott and coach Bennie Ooster- | 
baan still are hoping for the tardy | 
development of Big Ten shotput | 
champion Dave Owen. Oosterbaan | 
says, “Owen is fast and has good | 
techniques, but he isn't coming 
along as fast as we had hoped. | 
This sometimes happens.” | 
Nevertheless, Owen, a_ 6-foot, | 
216-pound junior, is in his 1st year | 
on the Michigan squad and has. 
three years of eligibility to go. 
Behind these three is an out- 
standing , Dick Heynen 
of Grand Rapids, and Jim Davies | 
of Muskegon Heights. 4 Albany Set to Continue 
Eastern League Play 
ALBANY, N.Y.  -— Eastern 
League baseball is slated to con- 
tinue in Albany for at least another 
year. 
Tom McCaffrey, owner of the 
    Albany Senators, announced yes-. 
terday that he would operate the 
club in Albany again in 1956. 
Major Leagues AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pet, Behind 
Cleveland eo SS #5 — 
; New York .:. 6 «56 «608 Ie Chicago oe «Sf (SM 3% 
Boston aL 60 S74 6 
Detroit. 72 71) «58 8 sas Cit $9 8 415 284 Washington » 8 oO MW 
326 ty Baltimore “o 9. 
TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE 
Detroit at New York, 1 p.m.—Miller (0-0) 
vs. Turley (15-13), 
Cleveland at Washington (2), 5 pm— 
Lemon (17-6) ang Garcia (112) vs. Me- 
Dermott (%9) and Porterfield (10-16). 
Chicago at Baltimore (2), 5 p.m.—Harsh- 
man (10-7) and Trucks (13-7) vs, Moore «7-18) and Palica (5-11) 
Kansas City at Boston (2), 12:3 p.m — 
Portocarrero (3-8) and Ditmar (10-12) or 
Kellner (108) vs. Nixon (12-6) and Bau- 
mann (2-1) 
MONDAYS RESULTS 
No games scheduled, A 
WEDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE 
Detroit at New York, 1 p.m 
Cleveland at Washington, 7 p.m 
Chicago at Baltimore (2), 1 p.m. 
Kansas City at Boston, 1 p.m. 
  NATIONAL LEAGUE 
Won Lest Pet. Behind 
Brooklyn cae & 8 28 — 
Milwaukee teres, @ 8 SS 14 
New York ..........-73 6 34 2 
Philadelphia Soret Mei. 497 2'y 
Cincinnati 72 75) «AM Ti'y 
Chicago ceseceees. 89 7% 47 25% | 
St. Louts . ceceee MO 82 423 
Pittsburgh % 87 3a2 it 
TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE 
Brooklyn at &. Louis, 8 p.m.—Spooner 
(8-5) ¥5. it «3-5, 
New York at Milwaukee, 9 p.m.—Antonelll 
(12-16) ¥8. Buhl (13-10) 
Philadelpbia at Chicago, 1:30 p.m—sim- | mons (7-8) vs, Jones (13-18), 
Puisburgh at Cincinnati, & p.m—Priend 
_— “MOND 1's RESULTS Pittsburgh 9, Bt. ‘Looe 
EDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE 
New York at Milwaukee, 9 p.m. é 
Brooklyn at St, Louis, 8 p.m. > 
Only games ‘sc ~ : Area Gridders 
on State Teams More Than a Dozen 
County Players Try 
for Places 
Four small Michigan colleges— 
Western Michigan at Kalamazoo, 
Eastern Michigan at Ypsilanti, 
Central Michigan at Mt. Pleasant, 
and Olivet College—list 13 Oakland 
County area gridders on their 1955 
foottfall rosters. : 
Leading the area contingent is 
Milford’s Jerry Gantel,  co- 
captain and star quarterback of 
Western's Broncos. Tackle Floyd 
Bailey of Rochester, guard Ron 
Rolph of Birmingham, and back 
dim King of Ferndale are mem- 
bers of Central's Chippewas, 
Seven of the group are playing 
for the Hurons at Ypsilanti, 
include tackles Carl Elliott of 
Lapeer and Max Foley and Frank 
Piccinni, both of Fenton, and backs 
Kerry Keating of Pontiac, Larry 
Wigner of Waterford, Gerald 
Wedge of Birmingham, and Jack 
Perona of Van Dyke Fitzgerald. 
Olivet, a denominational school, 
is employing the services of tackle 
James Hawisher of Pontiac and 
back Stewart Fall of Royal Oak.   Jackson Horse Wins 
| DETROIT #—Sir Dixon Spen- 
|cer won the AA trot feature at Wol- | 
' verine raceway last night, travel- 
jing the mile in 2:08 4/5, The 7-| tender Virgil Akins of St. Louis—! Wilson, Logart took full charge of 
| year-old gelding, owned by Mr. | on Oct. 3. It depends on how Akins | his tall, skinny rival. He had him 
and Mrs. 'F. J. Johnson of Jackson, | fares in his bout with Harold | bleeding from the nose a 
was driven by Jack Williams Sr. will be real tough all the way." | aged tlig game break—just z _— plain: crazy ey i ; 
Bee 
elt 
Boul gFEisi# aad ieteiu Zz 
ry 
. 
Shake With Ted 
Brings $25 Fine 
for Interruption 
he said he was glad to pay it. 
Kwedor was fined on the tech- 
nical charge of disturbing an as- 
sembly. ’ 
He jumped onto the playing 
field at Fenway Park last Satur- 
outfielder. That's when park at- 
tendants grabbed him. 
After the fine, Kwedor said: ‘It 
was worth it.” 
In an “average year 800 hunters 
are killed and 3,000 are wounded Opener 
hands with Ted Williams, Red Sox.   
Babe Zaharias 
Out of Hospital for More Golf - 
' Doctors Are Hopeful 
Cancer Eliminated; 
—— 
    I ! fs te Ez | & 382 cE 5 ¢ 
be contenders and we 
haven't been eliminated with only 
two weeks left to play.” 
e* ¢ 
But the facts indicate nothing 
short of a sweep of their remaining 
13 games would give the Sox more 
‘Cockell Fights Valdes 
Tonight in London Ring 
LONDON (i—Don Cockell of 
England, making his first appear- 
ance since being laid low by heavy- 
weight champ Rocky Marciano, 
was a 4-5 underdog in a comeback 
  in the U. S. 2. bid against Cuba's Nino Valdes at | 
_|White City Stadium tonight.   
NEW YORK U—Isaac Logert, 
a young Cuban welterweight from 
Kid Gavilan’s hometown of Cama- 
taking over as the boxing idol of 
New, York's Latin-American set. 
~ The 22-year-old speed merchant 
|soundly drubbed Al (Sugar) Wil- 
| son of Englewood, N.J., in a tele- 
Nicholas       j;cast 10-rounder at St. 
|Arena last night. 
| * * 
| It was Logart’s fifth win in six 
| Scraps this year. He may get a 
; chance to avenge that loss to con- 
(Baby Face) Jones in Indianapolis guey, is making rapid strides in j Isaac Logart Replacing 
«(Kid Gavilan as Favorite 
tonight. The return would be put Half of Regulars 
AY gb FF 
; ciel 
, g | i i oI F ger SERGE 
its Lig 
Be 
if 
  
Norwood Hills Country Club to 
finish with 289, or 11-under-par, on 
rounds of 7113-76-72. . 
She received first. prize money 
of $900. It was her fifth tournament 
| victory in 24 meets this year. 
Mary Lena Faulk of Thomas- 
ville, Ga., had a 74 yesterday for 
a 2% total, six strokes back in 
second place, worth $630. It was 
-| the fifth time this year she's fin- 
ished runner-up, but as she put it, 
“It's not a bad habit.” * * * 
Patty Berg of St. Andrews, Ill.. 
the first day leader with a 68, had 
a 7 for a total of 296 and third 
money of $540. 
In fourth place was Betty Jame- 
son of San Antonio, Tex., with 302 
and earnings of $450. 
“Harness racing's triple crown is 
the Hambletonian and Yonkers 
twin futurities. 
League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE 
— (Based on at 
Kaline, 
Power. son, Kansas 
on in St. Nicks where they fought | City. 309; Kuenn, ee the first time UNS — Mantle, New York, 118; Kaline, 
Te ails Detroit, 118; Smith. Cleveland, 113; Tuttie, 
Like the Gavilan of seven or 
eight years ago, Logart is a fast, 
flashy puhcher, speedy afoot, and 
solid-chinned. 
He even wears high white box- 
‘ing shoes like the Keed does and 
has Gavilan's former trainer, Men- 
‘dito Medina. 
| “Some day I be champion like 
_Gavilon,”’ said young Isaac. 
| After the first four rounds with 
hurting 
all over from his rapid-fire attack. 
  
WASHINGTON (® — The Cleve- 
jland Indians put their 1‘ -game 
| American League lead on the line 
| tonight against a Washington team 
which swept the last three-game 
| series the two teams played here. 
| A twi-night doubleheader tonight 
and a third game Wednesday 
night loom as a major obstacle to 
Cleveland's hope of repeating its   |1954 pennant victory. 
“If we get by Washington,” said 
| Cleveland Manager Al Lopez, ‘‘we 
ought to be in excellent position 
although it went te 8 cinch.” 
* 
The Senators are only a seventh 
place club, but they go into the 
series with a 12-7 lead over Cleve- 
land in games this season. Wash- 
ington won seven of last nine 
between the two—including that se- 
ries sweep Aug, 5-7.   * Washington Senators Standing Between Indians 
Repeating 1954 American League Pennant Win By contrast, Washington trails 
every other club in the league— 
even the last-place Baltimore Ori- 
oles—and Cleveland,. tied with Bos- 
ton 11-11, holds a lead over each 
of the other five. 
Vice President Calvin Griffith 
said the Washington team is 
“really eager’ about the Cleve- 
land series, and added: 
| “The boys figure they're going 
to knock the Indians off the top.” 
But it will be a matter of beat- 
ing the Indians, not of helping the 
second-place New York Yankees, 
said Manager Chuck Dressen. He's 
hoping to do the same to the Yan- 
kees next week. 
* * . 
“I don’t care anything about 
helping the’ Yankees,” Dressen   said. ‘‘That isn't the point. It would 
just give us satisfaction to make a 
A good showing against Cleveland in 
this series and scramble the Amer- 
fean League race again. 
* * * 
“Then we'd like to duplicate that 
when we play the Yankees next 
week.” \ 
The Indians, with Larry Doby 
back and others hitting better, may 
be harder to beat than the last 
| time they met the Senators. Doby 
| Was on the injured list for most 
of the Indians-Senators games last 
month, 
> * * 
best pitchers, Bob Lemon and 
Mike Garcia, tonight. The Sena- 
Porterfield and Mickey McDermott. 
The Indians had no explanation Lopez plans to use two of his|* 
for their poor showing against the | « rott, 97; ton, 
RUNS BATTED IN — Jensen, 5 
110; Boone, Detrott, 109; Berra, New York, 
104; Mantle, New York, 9; Kaline, Detroit, 
* 
HITS — Kaline, Detroit, 187; Smith, 
ae 178; Kuenn, Detroit, 175; Fox 
: 31; 
Boman 04 Thiges Kansas City, .29. TRIPLES — nt! ‘arey, New 
q er, Kansas City, 16; Eight 
e ‘ 
HOME RUNS — Mantle, New York, 37; 
Williams and ay 27; Dobr. 
——— be and lal, Kan- 
sas . 
8 N BASES — Rivera, Chicago, 25; 
Minoso, Chicago, 19; Jensen, Boston, 14: 
Busby, Chic 12; Smith, Cleveland and 
Torgeson, a) 
i (based on 
Byrne, New York, 15-4, .789 
York, 17-7, .708; 
3 a, 
; , 316; Brooklyn, Pavol gas? Cincinnati oy 
18; 
tors are expected. to call on Bob | Ere 
        Senators this year. 
      
       
  
  
A   
  Regular meeting Pontiac 
Wed., Sept. 14th Pot luck dinner 
at 6:30 p.m. Bessie Howell . Scribe. 
Rummage sale. Stevens Hall. 
Ramone &. entrance. am, 3   DETROIT # — Lincoln Motors, e- 
a i s E 
s 
g3 
8 s a> 
» 37 g | 
  Chrysler i 
at 20 Per Cent 
Strong in Race for 
Fifth of All Sales 
By DAVID J. WILKIE 
DETROIT W—L. L. Colbert, 
president of Chrysler Corp., said 
today the record number of cars 
sold so far this year is not a 
temporary phenomenon, that there 
is “every reason to expect a 
continued high level of demand.” 
He made the statement at a 
press preview of Chrysler's 1956 
line of Plymouth, DeSoto, Dodge, 
Chrysler and Imperial cars, at the 
corporation's proving ground near 
Celbert noted that during the 
first seven months of 1955—be- 
fore it started the model change- 
over—the ration had = ac- 
for 18.1 
output. 
    
STOCKS — BONDS 
Consult Us for First Hand Information 
in Stocks and Bonds   
  
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> We maintain a direct line to a member of all ¢ 
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  C. J. Nephler Co. 414 Community Nationa) Bank Bidg. FE 2-9119     
      
  
Financing plans ‘ 
that make sense 
and save dollars! 
The soundest way to home ownership is with 
one of our low-cost mortgage loans, tailored 
to fit your special needs! 
monthly payments often amount to less than 
rent! Come in today, and talk it over with us! 
— Capitol Savings & Loan Co. _ 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-0561      
  All - inclusive . counted ~ cent of the 
mately t the same 
time, he — oo eae ae 
also were 18.1 per cont of the 
industry ae 
(Chrysler wound up 1954 with 
around 12 per cent of the indus- 
try total in output and sales.) 
Colbert said that including the 
month of August when model 
changeover cut into production 
Chrysler's production for eight 
months this year was 17.3 per 
cent of the industry total and its 
retail sales 17.7 per cent. 
“Last year,” he said, “I told 
you we were shooting for 20 per 
cent of the market and that when 
we hit that target. we would raise 
our sights. That still goes. The 
target we set then is still the tar- 
get for this company. In the past 
year we have made some 
gains. But we are far from satis- 
fied. We are out to get 20 per cent 
of the automobile = and 
more." 
Colbert disclosed it "cast ap- 
proximately 175 million dollars to 
develop and put the corporation's 
1956 model cars into production. 
This was in addition to an expendi- 
ture of 130 million this _ - 
Earnings AKRON, Ohio (INS) — Firestone 
Tire and Rubber Co, reported 
today net income for the nine 
months ended July 31 of $37,584,- 
918, equal to $4.62 a common share. 
This compared with $28,314,009, or 
period last year. Sales set a new 
record at $804,542,173 as against 
$688,033,661 in-the comparable 1954 
period. 
NEW YORK, Sept. 13 (INS) — 
J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc. announced 
net income for the nine months 
ended July 31 of $5,765,085, equal 
to $1.45 a common share. This 
compared with $2,202,079, or 56 
cents a common share, in the same       
  
  
Donald E. Hansen 
Res. FE 2-5513 
Accident Insurance 
Automobile Insurance 
Burglary Insurance 
Bonds—All Types 2 511 Community Nat’l 
Bank Building 
Phone FE 4-1568-9 
BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWite 
Res. FE 5-3793 
Fire Insurance 
Liability Insurance 
Life Insurance 
Plate Glass Insurance 
  
to be kind.” 
  “Civilization is just a slow process of learning 
Charles L. Lucas 
    
  
  
  
   318 Riker Bldg. x Suenetle Insurance 
Is Very Reasonable! 
Wet pavements or carelessness 
may cause an accident. Just one 
minor accident costs much more 
than your insurance policy for a 
whole year. Call toda 
H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Huttenlocher today-— 
Max E. Kerns 
FE 4-1551 
  
  
  
      
     e+» at Your Finger Tips 
call us for experienced 
Your inquiries are welcome 
Member New York “tiner end other leading exchanges 
1AC OFFICES . 
716 Pontiac State Bonk Building 
FE 4-2895 || TO RENT period last year, Sales -increased 
to $230,425,800 from $203,066,309 in 
the 1954 period. For the quarter 
ended July 31, net income amount- 
ed to $1,647,855, or 41 cents a com- 
mon share, as against a net loss of 
$376,538 a year ago. 
CHICAGO (INS) — Montgomery 
Ward & Co. announced net income 
for the six months ended July 31 
of $11,771,690, equal to $1.70 a 
common share. This compared 
with $12,401,602, or $1.80 a com- 
mon share in the same period last 
year. Sales totaled $423,092,027 as 
against $401,321,602 in the initial 
half of 1954. John A. Barr, chair- 
man, said part of the decline in 
profits was caused by the proxy 
contest earlier this year. He 
placed the cost to the company at 
$692,250.   Whirlpool and Seeger 
Merger Gets Approval 
NEW YORK (® — Stockholders 
of Whirlpool Corp., St. Joseph, 
Mich., and Seeger Refrigerator Co., 
St. Paul, Minn., have approved 
merger of the two companies. 
Whirlpool stockholders met in 
New. York, Seeger stockholders 
met in St. Paul. 
Also involved in the merger is 
the Delaware Appliance Corp. 
Walter Seeger will be chairman 
of the new firm to be known as 
Whirlpool - Seeger Corp. Elisha 
Gray II will be prsesident, eeger 
has been chairman of Seeger and 
Gray II will be president, Seeger     
  | City Man Demands Exam 
on Charge of Robbery 
Arraigned yesterday on a charge 
of unarmed robbery, Robert R. 
| McCallum, 26, of 640 E. Columbia 
| Ave. demanded examination on 
the charge. He was released on 
a $200 personal bond after appear- 
ing before Maurice E. Finnegan, 
Municipal Judge. 
Trial has been set for Sept. 21 
for McCallum who is accused of 
snatching a purse containing $7 
from Lela Dewalt of 506 Montana 
St. Sunday morning. 
LATE MODEL 
TYPEWRITERS and 
Adding Machines         
  
' Ask About Our Rental 
Porchase Plan 
TISDALE 
ons MACHINES W. Huron St. 
FE 5-1111 
                  
  Colbert Sees ‘Demand E 
$3.51 a common share, in the same | », 
  JAMES CLARKSON 
Recognizing the increasing re- 
sponsibilities being placed upon 
him, directors of the Pontiac Fed- 
eral Savings & Loan Assn. named 
James Executive Vice 
President and tary at their 
meeting Monday afternoon, He has 
been secretary-treasurer. 
Ernest W. Johnson was pro- 
moted from assistant treasurer to 
treasurer. R. C. Cummings is pres- 
ident and M. A. Benson is vice 
president. 
Report Causes 
Wheat Tumble 
CHICAGO u—A government re- 
port on impoundings on 1955 crop 
wheat under the loan brought an 
end to the current wheat price 
rally on the Board of Trade today. 
Wheat fell for losses extending 
to more than a cent in quite active 
dealings. Impoundings under the 
loan were considerably less than 
the trade had expected. 
Other cereals did not follow the 
trend in wheat. Corn was quite 
firm and rye inched higher. An 
  Wheat near the end of the woe | bese 
hour was % to 1 cent lower, 
"| September $1.96%: corn % ‘to 1%| 
higher, September $1.28%; oats %% 
lower to \ higher, September 57; 
rye unchanged to \ higher, Sep- 
  cents a hundred pounds lower, 
September $10.07, 
Grain Prices 
CHICAGO GRAIN oo Sept 12 (AP) — Opening 
t Mar ..... rT) May sll ee 
00% Sep’ .....c. 08% i Dec oo £08 
— tee: bee : 128% | Serene “* 
128 Sep ooo 10.18 BE acs. sacs 132% Oet 22.527" 10.25 May veces 134% Now , » 095 
Oats Dee ....06.,10.27 
Sep ...... +» 87% Jan BO csccccce - 41% 
  Business Notes ° A local delegation is attending | 
the dist annual convention of the 
Michigan Real Estate Assn, at the 
this week. 
They include Bruce J. Annett, 
president of the MREA and Mrs. 
Annett; P. T. Smith, president of 
the Pontiac Real Estate Board, 
Edward A. Maier, the board's sec- 
retary; Mrs. Thelma M. Elwood, 
Mrs. Ellen K. Gantzer, Floyd Kent 
and John K. Irwin. 
Nationa] speakers in the real es- 
tate field are included on the pro- 
gram, 
National Assn. of Medical-Dental 
Bureaus will convene for its 17th 
annual convention at Atlantic City 
next Monday through Wednesday. 
Professional Service Bureau, the 
only NAMDB member in Oakland 
County, will be represented by 
ideas for better bureau operation | ty 
with more than 300 associates from 
throughout the nation. 
Chevrolet Expands 
Lead Over Ford 
DETROIT (®—Chevrolet is con- 
tinuing to expand its lead over 
Ford. in new car registrations. 
Figures tabulated for this year’s’ 
first seven months showed the 
big General Motors division reg- 
istered 905,912 new passenger imits 
throughout the United States in 
this year's Janyary- July period 
  compared with Ford's 884,300 Ford:| Se, 
passenger cars. 
Ford led through most of this 
year until ‘figures were tabulated : 
through June. 
The January-July figures also 
show Buick holding tightly to third 
place in new car sales with 446,- 
441 registrations against Plym- 
outh'’s 402,209. 
  
Price of Copper Rising 
NEW YORK (INS)—Metal indus- 
try circles reported today that 
copper fabricators have paid as 
much as 51 cents a pound for cop- 
per. This is sharply above the of- | _ 
ficial domestic quotation of 43 
        cents a pound. The higher price 
was attributed to a tightening of 
supplies as a result of the walk- 
‘out of Atlantic coast longshoremen. 
This has prevented unloading of 
foreign copper urgently needed by 
U.S. industry. 
  
   
      Meet Your Friends in the 
         tember $2.22%, and lard 2 to 13) 
John Meddaugh, who will exchange we   
Ms 38-508 
few 4.00. 
  
Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island | es 27.    2 Calif. erte, 9Te- 478-8.00, a" up ba ho 1 
  4 washed, }-Ib film 
Callf. the 4.7 4,35-8.00 cine. Me 2.80; 
oe des 2.:6-2.40.      
    Oirect re Thompson | seedless "30003 18, 
Teeuce sna etns. Toeberg 4.25-4.75, Calif WGA crts 18s 6.00- 
       fale 2.00" 
it, yellows 2.75, 
sy hee yel- 
. Le    Pecoapee ays No. 
otherwise stated: \aich. Hale 
ie 
    [Raise Market NEW YORK w&— Metals and 
motors combined to send the stock 
market higher today in early 
dealings. 
Prices were up around 2 points 
at the best while losses went to 
:| about a point. 
* * * ; 
Trading was brisk, and the tape 
lagged momentarily shortly after 
the opening in reporting the flood 
of transactions, the first time the 
tape has been late in many weeks. 
Coppers, aluminums, steels and 
automobiles were just about alone 
among major divisions. to rise. The 
railroads were mixed while air- 
crafts were definitely lower. 
tes | Chemicals were quietly mixed. 
  
  * * * 
U. S. Gypsum, up 291, yesterday 
;;}on & proposed five-for-one stock 
i:| split, added another 10 points at 
the most today at 335. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
    New York Stocks 
(Late Morning Quotations) 
Admiral ...,, 23 Int Silver ,,. 68 ¢ Reduce ... 36.7 Int Tela a? 
Allied Grom 1B Ist Crk se Hy 
‘* * x, Jacobs = ° 
Allis Chalmers 69.2 Johns Man .. sia jum Lid .,.1176 oJnes & L .,. $0 has « 98 Releey Mages . 288 Am Altline ,.23.4 Kennecott Se | am wo G6 pee OR. BS Am Cron ses 62.8 | as 44 
AGO r' Am QaskEl 48.1 a & eli ana 
Sept. - iAP)—Pote am iy . 39.3 Glass °"; @. Ar on track 279 (CQ), m Motors .. 92 Tih wena Bart, U.8. shipments Priday 482, Saturday Am N Gas .. 58.2 & ae oe: and and Susde 20; supplies te, dew | Am News .,., Ha aire .. 42. mand rate we market slightly fs ~ aE _ iy 
Russets $3.78-4 Ray crt RL Am Smelt... b46 ene. chem. &, Pontiacs | Am TelaTet 4 Goo ie” wiepaaln ‘Trium: noe 1.58 Am ‘Tob... 13 (eu, © Meme i Am \Viscose ,, 64.3 Martin, QI .. Anac\ Co .... 7.2 May D sir .’' 4264 Poultry Anac W&C ., 61.2 Mead Cp .,.. 62 
POULTRY Armene‘@ Ge. es ni apa |! at .. Sept. 12 MAb) Friese paid | Arms Ck .... 284 Mpls uss Ret id, f.0.b. Detroit, for No 1 qual-|Atchison ... 1434 Monsen 49 7 Eve poult: ip to 10 om. Atl Cet Line . 47 3 oMnt Wa as vy hens, 25-28; light type [vf ca. | A ve» 40.1 Motor ’ oe] poneties, one 3%-4 dbs, 23-34) 5-7 | Aveo + “Oh Meter Wheat’: 50 38-44. Ducklings, 28-31; breeder tur-| Bait & 403 use 4 keys, some heavy type hens, 33-34; pendix av 00 8 ou whe toms Benguet ..,. A * Comment: Market steady on hens. Re-| Beth Steel’. 1474 Nat Bise ... al pts hee offerings short on | Boeing Air By Nat fom B 4 fancy quality heavy type hens tor Jewish | Bohn Alum |, 36.4 t Y verse 8 day in heavy sup-| Bond Gtrs .'. 191 Net Gyps .... 63. ply retail buye sostating the lorden .....' @5 Net Lead |... Ot 
demand “for fa Savy. cise.” wore Warner .04.8 Kv comtral"": an oy ‘entrel |. 44, ineutflelent te sceurately deter- rie Me aa) Nie M Pow |. 343 = ale oe ie oe RY Raat a ys ere in te bop Burroughs |"' 304 Bee av 
Calumet & M 132 West atime’ 
™ Camp Soup 3 Ohie Oa 3 CHICAGO, Sept 12 (API etive poultry [eae *7 382 Ohio a3 steady to- firm on heavy tes, }Can Poe |"'" 346 ‘oy BE weaker on youn : Sas P Capital atri' 395 Pan Sas Oe 1,677 Friday 1,054 coopa, 303.318 Wh; £00. | Carrier Cp .. 36 Penh met“: 44 Pens 525-36, i pe hens 1-5-1807 booty’ pase, Bes: 16 Param Piet |) 40 or fryers 20-30: old roosters 13.8-145: Boe” on a, oo caponeties under 444 Mb 34-36, under 4% | Chrysiee asp mS 36-40. Cities Bvi ... 884 Peosl Cole. 97 ark Eoulp 144 Ptiner soos OF DETROIT EGGS Climax Mo ,. 644 Phetos D |... 60 DETROIT, =e | » (AP) . £0.0. |) Ciuett Pea || 44 Phiice .....4.. M 
grades: , wee Sete Sut «a4 ENige Mer .. 944 Whites—Grade A jumbo 64-68, Co! wra a Ss Pillshy Milis a ed average, G54; Ia G0, wid. av.) Col Gas ..... 16 Pit Plate G .. a4. 50%; medium, wid, av ;|Comw Bd ,,.. 47 Proet & G@ ...197 smail, wid. av. 34%. © B| Con Bate ''.) 13 Pulimen .*'! e5 lage 83-54, wtd. av. 54; peewees, 27. Con N Gas 3 Pure OU... 38 
medium, 49 wma 90-38, wid’ av ot ConPw plcesnaiset’s Ree Hold | ee % . ' al E % (4:00) owe . 
yb ‘tarp 68; c 36: | ConPw “piiareiions pu Bt.) st peewees, 21-27, wid. av. 25%. Cont Can ..,, 7 Drug ..- 8 
gaack oe a Whites—Grade A. extra large 8¢, large| Corn Pa |*”” + 20.3 Rock Sug... 2 $ie-tt: mediom, 4-41; grade B, teres Curtiss Wr’ | i z 
Browne—Grace ‘ is...) 344 Bt Ree Pen | 49, sarge, 4-83; medium, 96-44, 3. Bis o feng + BF Sra ae 
Dow Chem ||" 37.7 Sears Reeh |. 1619 u Pont ...,.23°6! Shell ae Butter sendy: reeue ote- | past Air i es g7 | ol rats fas ka ass. ed itt a ay i735: BI Auto Lite’: a) Gow os - os 
cipts 13.683" whelecaie | rat Hes ee i i “. bu pol i" to 3 higher; U.8. Ia: Prie cere by Sverre Rand , 93.6 whites 60.69.9 =, cent A's 2; mixed By-Cell-O ,,.. 646 Rid ° 'o) ey rd = ds 42.6; dir- | Patrb Mor '’"' 974 rand = =6=» 1 
cea 368: current . | Firestone aq «(Std Ol Cont . 91.6 
Pood Mach’. s59 Std Oil Ind .. 4 
. Preenet #ul -: 59 Bed Out Ohis bat Livestock Gen pet” -:: 3° stevens, JP | $13 DETROIT LIVESTOCK Gen Pynam :; 574 Stud Pack ... 93 13. (AP) —H 1-| Gen Elec ..... 624 Sun Of .... 165 able itigher asking prices retard-| Gen Pris |.("' a3 Suther Pep... 466 ing trade; no early sales. Gen Mills .... 1% & & 60.2 attle—Salable generalily steady; smat)| Gen Motors'\\177.9 Syiv Bl Pa ||. 462 supply cholee fed steers 23.00-24.50; seat. | Gem Bhoe |, 60 exas Co... 108.3 red sales utility and commercial grass gee TM vcsese 4 Tex G ful ... 42 steers and hetfers Bes io mest wtil. be Time .,.. 37: p Pd ..., 80.2 ity cows 10.80-12.80; Rls Gen Tire ..... 672 Timk R Bear 68.4 ters mostly 0.80-11:58; wutttity poe! Br... 71 Tran W ed mereial baits Pry Mey, and pa oodrich ..... 7.2 Transamer ... 474 lots mostly good 464 Ib stockers 18.00. Gran Peis "”* “34 Tvent Cen ... 93 eee —fetebie oes Veaie ing | Ot Mo Ry... At Un Carbide | 3 ‘elves \ rs open + ied . active, fully steady; good and low ehotes | ote et 8 - 14 Un Pac .. 1684 19.00-26.00; high choice ie | Oe On... Unit Air Lin. 40.8 dividuals, 37.00-33.00; some al higher: | Mayes Mey... %2 Unit Aire. a wiley ena 4.00-| Hersh Choe’ qn Unit Pruitt. 666 19.00; few tow light calle down to 10 10.00. Hand P ,.. jq UD Gas Co... 326 Bhee ble 300. No early sales. ‘979 US Rubber . 471 Hooker Bl.) 444 ded oud Mer 19, US Te ...:: 19.1 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Mm Cent "5.7 Van Rast...) 37 ICAGO, — 2 uae oe hogs | Indust Ray |; saq Walgreen . 3 10,000; slow early, later trade moderate-| Ing Rand .,°" 594 Warn B . 2.1 ly active; butchers sede to 26 jower,/ Iniand at ’*’ e7g West Un Tel. 23.1 most late and closing sales 25 lower inepir “ e7q Weste A Bk . m4 we wer; mixed U8.) Interiak Ir 11 Weste Ei... 66 No. 1 to 38 200-270 Ib 16.25-16.65; a few) Int Rus Ma ..407 White Mot 40 dred head mixed No. 1 and ds 200-| Int Mary..." "32@ Wilson & ie ib and se i on No. 2 and 3s| Int Nick | ° g5) Ww ‘orth =». 64,7 30-200 th 16.66-16. 60 head mostiy| Int Paper 1009 Yale@a& Tow 644 No. Is 210 Ib at 16.88: * mixed gtades 170. it + 6 YouneQaw m6 190 Ib 15.25-16.25; most sows 400 Ib and Youngest Gh T. 99 lighter 14.00-16.56; a few ery geen er t 
400- 
heer cattle 
weights ib 1. under 300 Ib to 
tb 13.25-14.28: @ few tomas lots up to 60 Ib cae heavier as low as 12.25. 
'* most! 
1,100 Ib 24,000; salable calves 
steady to 25 lower; 
own moderately active, 
bok ad 1,200 Ib steers slow,. with extremes t as 
Lo 
and feeders steady to st 
prime 1,200-1,331 Ib 
or mich as 50 cents; heifers steady 
to 25 lower; cows steady to weak; bulls bout ate \y; Sgro steady; stockers 
cutter: 
merctal culls 13, 75 -15.50; ® 
Jers 20.00-25 
shorn pelts 
ter ewes ‘60-838 “secording to “weight 
and grade. 
Pontiac Guardsmen ) 
at Training Course 
Two members of the 107th Ord- 
nanée Battalion, one of Pontiac's 
National Guard Units, are aoe 7,500; 
slaughter lamthe stead 
classes about 
eens beta a 19 80. 
8.00; good 
Ib shorn + rin 
ot Teartings carryin rong; few loads 
steers 24. 15-26. pod 
teers 22.00-24.50 
¢ canners 
80; ood a and com- 
sey tt — 
wf’ ‘are 
00; a to 
and chotce 
* lambs carrying 
19, 80-20 75; cans | 
‘ull 
© choice uah- 
  
The men, Pvts. Charles J. 
Spain, of Auburn Heights, and 
John U, Tatu, of Lake Orian, left : 
a 
3 
a 3 bere Seomrdey a are echeddied 
  & “STOCK AVERAGES. NEW YORK, Se 13-—-C { 
the Associated Press mee 
ff % 15 16 6 
Indust. Ratis Util, Stocks 
peter day ..2509 136.5 144 178.3 
see eee 
    
STOCKS Nephier Co.) 
Pigures atter decimal High are eighths 
loon Baldwin ‘Rubbers ea 
Gerity-Michigan® |... Kingston Produetes’ wee 
Masco Scere weasel 
i 
=e on we eas 
eee «the 
aoe ee 
  GM Promotes Director 
DETROIT w#—Dr. Lawrence R. 
Hafstad, director of General Mo- 
tors research staff, Monday was 
elected a vice president of GM. 
Dr. Hafstad, 51, is 
Energy mission's reactor development di- 
vision. He succeeds Charles L. Mc- 
Cuen, who is retiring after 29 
years with GM. 
Jewelers Elect Head 
JACKSON (® — Thomas Fox of 
Grand Rapids was elected presi- 
dent of the Michigan Retail Jewel- 
ers Assn. at the group's annual 
meeting yesterday. Ellis Berndt of 
Adrian 
    
  hamed secretary-treasurer 
orale tale ef 6 fou Chyeter, note 
Strela geas Onn, Mase o'clock p.m., othe ‘marheat bidder. This car iy be imepected at the sbove ad- 
corp. " 
Fara Pee ae 
  
SeeuseSvau 
    
ine Martin, uccoy ne '. 
oO oe Pilg Mrs Been.” Mr. Clay . Hen- 
feacral suet a be had Thursday, om. A! at 1 pm. at 
Coats Funeral po Bs Rev. 
James BE. Ta . Ine terment in Otte me- 
  
MARSHALL. SEPT. tet 1065, 
a te it ey s he \e 
band of Mrs’ Mazel V. Marshall, Two daughters survive and two 
brothers and two sisters. Punere! 
    service will be held Wednesday, 
Sept. 14 at 16:30 om. from the 
Donelson-Jahns Puneral Home 
— cremation at White nee. 
Marshall is at the Donelson 
yee Funeral Home. 
Flowers 3 
DUNSTAN'S 
1484 W. Huron Bt. FE 2-8301 
Funeral Directors 4 
fey Punerel Home Pe etait 
oor fence OR Kirkby Funeral Home _—sF'E 4-188 
Donelson-lohns 
a nee 
Thoughtful Service   
  
VoorheesSinle sea ONERAL HOME Jance Service, Plane or he J   
  
  
    
    
TO MEN WITH 
ABILITY If you aren't earning at 
least $150 every week, let 
us tell you about an op- 
portunity with Mutual of 
Omaha. 
This includes a salary with 
liberal increases,  thor- 
ough training at our ex- 
pense, group insurance, 
opportunity for advance- 
ment and everything else 
you would want in a 
career, 
If you are over 25, own a 
good car, and want to 
make money, call us for 
an interview. 
We will show you our rec- 
ords to prove our present 
men are averaging more 
than per month 
earnings. Phone: — 
FE 5-9251 Ask for Paul Williams, 
righ ‘of Omaha, 1715 
S. Telegraph. 
tala se 
  
Pewee on J hed at co sunpeed 
‘. Salary commensur A bt}- 
. it tad cmpertones gm 
tilisation & and insurance, 
ona soa be serene ot edu 
t letter 
to “pox jac Press, 
10°00 ‘and 6:00. PE 3-7281. 
ave: 9135 week, work 
a sotktenent, No cold canveak 
  DON'T PASS UP 
MONEY! Sell unneeded 
belongings for cash 
through Classified Ads! 
FE 2-8181.   
  -MC MFG.CO, . 118 Indianwood Rd, Lake Orton   
BROKERS To trans mobile homes from 
be between 36 
—e aelgerles ts to al Botte ts 
‘i en-Driv 
On sei” zd CARPENTERS WANTED. aon tae work * £— 
ASHERS WA . juron, cone 
    
  
CONTRACT ORS 
i ar < D be 
= 
iN WA’ NAN 
NITOR 
i at truck inal, 
Pome ae CABINET 
MAKER ALL Th on ‘ THAT 18 
FE 5-3281 or FE 5-4506   
We =» work 
‘Sepe th trom tad fo 88 
Bert Falkner 
Circulation Dept. 
Pontiac Press 
  
MIDWEST 
EMPLOYMENT 
406 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDO. PE §-9227 
ion ree wae, 8, aa 
NEEDED 
Journeymen 
For Foundry 
Maintenance 
Millwrights 
Electricians 
Pipefitters 
and 
Machine Repairmen 
APPLY 
PONTIAC 
MOTOR 
DIVISION   
         
   
  
   
            
   
   
          
‘ala 
     
         
      
    
        
  ‘i et I r # Jt, pos 7 re : \x 
pete PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1055 
    
  
  If you. are interested in 
this type of work, apply 
in person to 
FRED THOMPSON 
CIRCULATION DEPT. 
THE PONTIAC PRESS   
   
     
       
     
        
   
    RANC 0, 
er 
  
   bas *. pe 
MECHANIC wt. ; 
Bend pay one . : 4 
Cy Owen ror " > 
Repair Service 
g for shop and 
; STUDY 
ENGINEER 
with at least 2 = ri- 
ence, some co uca- 
tion preferred. a orican 
For y & oe me Co.       
   
      
         
  For girasires. MA Ns . b 
ZNCED DISHW . MI Here is an ing with 
an etter for a 
REAL ESTATE SALES 
    z 
  
  
  
Med \¢ ifice ered Sesmner | eee: 4, fe 
BOND EMPLOYMENT 
B-1 RIKER BLDG, 
FE +4000 
AIM HIGH 
CAREER GIRLS   
    
  ‘MIDWEST 
EMPLOYMENT . poate * **" memhoram 
enced. oF, ey 4 
Ei ees | 4 BY Toni 
  
IER WIT 
KNOWLEDGE OF 
BOOKKEEPING PRE- 
FERRED. 5 DAY 
WEEK. APPLY IN 
PERSON. ENGGASS 
EWELRY, 25 N. SAG- 
NAW ST. 
VE 
! TO LIVE IN. 
_ More for home than wanes. rE 
EXPERIENCED wa ahh resses for afternoon ‘ust 
5 ‘iad or older FE 34135 
Pe. saleabeenoenemee anrcreretie tare EXPERIENCED DISHWASHER 
and waitress, 931 W. Huron 
ENCED SHORT ORDER 
for general, to ive tm. Vicini ive in. Viein 
of Walled led Lake. Must like chil- dren. conety. References   
4-0000. Devain 
f nights ant tn ron 
Clark's Drivets Baldwin. 
rah £ 3 SELL REAL SILK 
  
  one a ou. AL cook. for couble, Fine hom MasD.   
  py Th ie TV. Top eb 
ary, EM 3- s 
WEAT AND . 3 school 
  
  
erators, Secretaries, Ste- 
nographers, Clerk - Typ- 
ists. Studebaker Packard 
Corp., 5500 Mound Rd., 
Utica, Mich, 
LADY FOR 
ALTERATIONS DEPT.   
B 
  yous cates we ern 0 rm Press, Box 
MA) ER oR ng 
re x Larry p.m. 
for housework. 
1, 
GARMENTS Experienced preferred, A: Fos 
Cissners 79 W. + Ware. 
ADIs o GAR 
prefer 
  
“Needed Nescscicte sa 
an 
Experienced 
ADDRESSOGRAPH 
OPERATOR 
MIMEOGRAPH 
OPERATOR 
MACHINE 
BOOKKEEPER 
COMP-TYPIST 
KEYPUNCH 
OPERATOR 
AND 
STENOGRAPHERS 
APPLY™ 
PONTIAC MOTOR 
DIVISION 
PERSONNEL 
DEPARTMENT 
GLENWOOD AVENUE 
___PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 
BINGLE ome 1620 YEARS. — for Drv Cleaners. 121 Wil- 
5 | ESWOMAN tow, dra) gery Sot Call for inter 
~ Saleswoman Por Better Dress Dep't. Position 
id. permanent with 
ree . hours. Paid vacation. 
od 
pertenced preferred. Apply 
ARTHUR'S 48_N. Saginaw   
  ; | WHITE MODEST MAIDENS 
\\y AP ee shears by Jay Alan 
  
    
  
    
    
  
  
ey” AL ANRH 
. | gloves!"   
  
  
      " 9 9-13 
“I don't feel dressed when I go out to lunch without my 
  
  
  
  
  , steady em- 
person, 
. Tel-Huren 
wares, e,CORE gO be bai hear Bete 
Be ace Be gg at hom: to 
\« te rect Soh 
wi ‘ou 
— Ry “daliver orders at Silver tn 
  Hwy. MA 1. 
pe Bohs 
  
Fetal apy POR LIGHT 
ke. Fogo bs gee - ehil- 
_ings, Pi 4-1 enon tf008 
Woman: USED TO CHILDREN 
general housework to 
premises in — rban odes 2 ber ome 
oy modern, mfortable live 
| re. Cail collect Maytalr 
A WA i 
on hve ners Tavern, 637 Bald- 
AND 6HORT aaa 
cook, Some experience 
apply in pe 
  Call or rson wens 
3 and oh pm. ony: eta Union 
__Lake Rd. EM_ 31-4012. 
WANT ED 
Ori eook, Minit Lunch, 8 BE. 
Pike. 
WATTRESS Ww ANTED, EXPERI- 
enced. West Walton Dairy Bar. 
FE 3-0204, 
WOMAN TO LIVE IN, TAKE CARE 
¢ children, More for home 
an wages. PE 5-8857, 
A ST BE EXPERI- 
enced. Cal) after 9 p.m. FE 5-060   
x. | WoMa N FOR HOUSEWORK. GET vere off ed school, Weekends off, 
WArTREas, w LY AT APPEARING reliable 10:30 a   
WHITE WOMAN WANTED FOR 
eare of children, No objections 
_ to 1 child, pee Moon. ann. Rd, 
WHITE ) WoMA TO DO LIGHT 
ork ont help with two 
youne te Shiidren, ae in Drayton 
WOMA 108 CLERICAL 
aptitude os ectaties office work, 
Pypins required, Box 23, Pontiac 
WANTED COMBINATION WOOL — wlll , a? Apply in 
Hour cleaters, Tel-Mu- 
pony Shopping Cente: 
YOUNG LADY Permanent non — = 
Seat wee work,   
YouNG BLOOMFIELD COUPLE 
2 children would like girl 
to wince ‘mn. General ee 
ine 
Private room and oe, gant 
pes for for right person, MI_ 6-447, 
Help Wanted 8   TRU Help Wanted Female 7 Instructions = — 9 
WOMAN FOR CHILD CARE AND 
Settee pete oa | DRIVING LESSONS WANTED EXPERIENCED COUN-| fterangt"? Dt: BY®. or Bum 
Ye, Seems” = O Siarer.| SAFE-WAY DRIVING 
€ yee TENCED SCHOOL 
© | caaDUATER PLANO TEACREE. a sons $1.00, Mrs, Henry Myers. 
PIANO LESSONS 
i, gospel munte Will cive = 
ee 78048 iG AND LING. 
bish any time after 2:30 p.m. 
ranch St, Pty 3-006, 
Work Wanted Male 10   
al 
ly man. ¥ 
; WANTS " work 
OF ANY KIND. house 
  PLASTERING Pat 4ING =AND 
NO. WEW AND 
§-2309.   PLUMBING wore. WANTED.     hed af bog 
in 
FE 37408 Sant 
rnoon till ae JOB, 
lo at night. 
  
CARE 
_ing, PE 3-01 Work Want Wanted F Female 11 il 
WANT WALL wasm 
FE 71-0233 32 WOMEN 
Je a eee 
DAYS. 
2 a eee Aubare Heights. FE 
CAPABLE WOMAN WOULD LIKE _day cleaning work, FE 6-0783.   
  
&-1973 before 9 p.m. GOLORED LADY wisitizg DaY 
work, weer — and dishwash- 
No ‘Ruadays 2 or fotiaay, an COLORED <TC DESIRES 
0 Sandwich 3 $0 Wayne St.| Mon. Wed Fri. and Sat. da 
WHITE WOMAN TO CARE FOR| Work. $7.50 0 2c”, eda * tare, Witr 
2 vear old girl. § days week.|_‘teferences, FE 8:30 to 3:30. Light housework. | EXPERIENCED D GIRL 
3, desires work § gre a ng rE 
ENCED WA FO! = nite work. OA 6-3353 after 
omit IRL. “DES SIRES BABY SITTING moons. in the at of 
rE 145 Walton and Baldwin.   
    
    
  
  
as ing, titln eatate — or 
RELIABLE WOMAN WOULD LIKE 
  
eal 9-010 
EXPE CED CHEF. MARTi- nelli's ‘Restaurant, 138 8. Wood- 
ward. Bham, M1 6-485). 
GENERAL CAFETERIA HELP. WORK K SHORT WHOURS Ow N ALL 
PRESS | BOX he 
PAY FOR THAT NEW CAR, SEE 
the As eat the’ people. Na- 
tiona, 5 preteen | Watkins prod- 
_ Seng. i or part time, N, 
E COUPLE 50- WANTED: UE. 
ber, bi © modern coun-   
SECRETARY Permanent for reliable 
woman with rte 
hand, typing eg = ake 
eon Ge. at aap enh . = 
TAKE conte ely nee x Tie 
r-tine ' 
resentative Por wien tion Call Seasee, 
UA: EN. 
Be Skea yc Management vealiag. 
  r 
per free 
aes Es and 2 
Meg wt pd ae a 
    os home. Mg? * general house- 
——.. 
assist in 
fot ne, 
to Box At “rn e Orton, or 
3-5561, 
___Instructions 2 
CERAMIC INSTRUCTIONS BEGIN.   
  
  
  _ Licensed 
Re 
block 
  oul 
leo hag knowil- 
SO emaaed real fRONINGS WANTED, PICK UP and delivery, FE 2-3191, 
RONING 1080 
PE 2-065) 
TRONING! st] S yee 1 DAY 
_ service, Ex “ES 
IRONING. § 03.06 A BOSH "ve 
shed | Good 
iRONING $3 8 ff so tee aooD 
work, Call 
tare ae Ma RRIED 1D For a ae eves. or days. FE 
jarge ment es Pontiac ASHIN' ROUGH DRY. 
eo Pivee | <<00e3_1ota_Vinewood, COLLEGE STUDENT FOR PART WASHINGS AND TRONINOS; PI 
time appa the — 5 Lae up and deliver, OR 3-4455 
noons a wee metimes ” p.m, PR +1500, = WHITE LADY yc a" ar 
$400 MO. GUAR. COMM. COU jot bedridden, ays 
travel U.S. sell Radio-TV pro- 
Emp. Sec. Comm. FE ~ Building Service 12 
ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK. 
contractor. FE 
ALL TYPES OF TRENCHING. field tile and footings, FE 5-9086, 4-0032, 
  A-1 CEMENT WORK 
LLOYD MONRO 
FE 4-6866 
  14x20, gecenlont sash, it tt, 
souls ne   
  
APPLIANCE SERVICE of refri 
pM al 
of Sg" sh cme? specs       
ne ace core re 
Baiada at = tae company Mo anateurs. 
w B 7 
. No lob big or small. 
ATING 
SEWER CLEANING s — Sunday Service. FE 42012 
  
FURNACE Ue 
work cal us 
4 
re scene, Pe bons 
Electric—Sewers Cleaned 4 hour service, No re   
ont. 
Roto-Re Sewer Cleaners PE #1317 
TREE TRIMMING a app eee Oy: 
  #3767 «or 
“oe MACHINE FILE!   
  
~ Tarpaulin 
Repair Service 13 W. Howard FE 23-1003 FE | Tarps, tents, boat covers, awnings.   
  
    ¥ LEACH. 10 Beniny oF. aT. |   
  Moving & Trucking 19 _25| Wid. Contracts, Mtgs. 32   
A-l ok & Trucking” 
Trucks at Rent 
tre gE cate Pontiac ay Med and 
Industrial Tractor Co. 8. ARD 
  
. FE 4 pial sal cosine re SR NOING, AINTING, id i 0032. 
¥ A 
ae are ainting & Wall Washing Free Estimates, FE 5-231) 
Physiotherapy 21A   
THERAPY. ras technique. 12 Elm 
FE +3 
Television Service _ 22   
SERVICE RE- rx 
ay, & poguens. 218 EB. Pike RADIO a fv, 12'S. 171 8. PARKE &T. 
AVER'S RADIO & TV 
W Huron, Night serv 
    WANTED WAlthinss, MUsT BE men! ice cails, PE 45607. 
Pa PI a a work Poses : «| KERN'S TV SERVICE 7 | oe oe rence Ot Fhone PE 013. _ | Antennas installed e4 and WoMAN FOR PART Time OF- AL WIRING AND PAG. sg ” BUILT CABINETS. OR =e fee work at eens, genera! Licensed Ed Aerial Specialist 
cites Vand, pookhgeninn 'cxoatt tig ta ne A & B TRENCHI ay State references. Nala P 7 Feta, er we) T ERS RADIC TV 
6 9 ANG CURE GIRLS. GENERAL OPPICE WORK TTF. : Heedq warters for gubes chy 
son, bs al s we In, Auburn ing, shorthand, Married, 34, de 30188, FE 43600, = Ez. bane ry 
Ra ¢ sires steady ¢ 
aan pig Work _Typewriter Service 224 | 
TYPEWRITERS AND ADOING 1 ehine ng. wor a 
Genera) Sup Co, w Lawrence. 
_Mitehell's, 123 N. Saginaw St. 
~~. Upholstering 
Phat os lai ete Rae Ed “8 mara PE 6-008 
DR au Your material, FE su 
MATE- 23 | ~~   
og Weg PE 5-19277, 
Lest & Found 
  24 
you | FOUND; BROWN MALE BOXER. 
OR 3-024 after 4.   GREEN PARAKEET WITH YEL- low face, Band Wo, #54, Small 
_reward. OR 3-601 
3 YR. 0 LOST: COLLIE, 1D» FE 
male, sable & white. vuiaty of 
Franklin village. Reward. MAy- 
fair 6-375, 
Lost YOUR PET? WANT TO 
34 ope » home? FE 56-0200. 
_Seicnigan ar Anime! Rescue Leaque. 
LOST: SET OF CAR CAR KEYS. 
at 760 Scott Lk. Rad, 
oe with Riverside, Cottternis   
  
LO8T; TRAY WITH TOOLS, VIC. 
Pontiac & Watkins Lake. Reward 
for return. FE 47270. 
LOST: BLACK AND TAN DACHS- 
hound. Watkins Lake, Reward. 
OR 3-2036,   
  LOST: BLACK AND BROWN y Manchester female. Yr. old 
Vicinity ittemore and 8. 
‘arke, Answers to Tiny. 36 
40568, 
STRAYED ‘PROM 102 HAMILTON, 
small bob-talled terrier, 
with white markings "one 
breast and leg. ia" 
Saeee.   
¥ La se i 8 an nn ihe r sire, me row 
chest. aot OA_ 8-255: ne ag 
Loeb LACK COCKER SPANIEL   
  IF SO, 
Let US Give You 1 Place to Pay 
Ease Your Mind 
+ Restore Credit 
WE ARE NOT A 
LOAN COMPANY 
MICHIGAN CREDIT 
COUNSELLORS 
  
   SPEC, CARE 1 CHILD 
CI TO 
eee ¥ CARE 
+7380. 
    
ANTIQUE DISHES HANGI 
—_ Your r 
OR 
FURNITURE NEEDED nah “bay i 
sell it L) 
Fnsot On 7, 
os \g 
18, BOW, TF on a PS) 
or, ontelien 
of 
Wtd, Miscellaneous 28 
CASH FOR neatly, Penrose 
ornate we 
  
  
_P. Sutton, pgm MY “2 
____Money W Wanted = 28A 28A 
WANTED Would like to borrow $ adress 
give ist tumortaene on 5 Too! 
Tanch, ed road, 
= iment 2% 6   
  
~~ Wanted to Rent 29 29 
entl > bed 
Ercr "Gig vicinity “at Bonties _ va wes Aeker 215 Morrell, 
Sunretian ORO. 
jahes to re 
panos not oes at eltice specs, one 
far from b iechag Bourse 
FAST ACTION! you s 
for 
  
5% MORTGAGES 
ran RLES, Realtor 
sortrect oF equity’ ta sour 
L. Templeton, Realtor 
ARE BUYING A 
sonieerts TODAY! 
ofvetwe. ueck ence 
e Nicholie & Harger ( Co, 
CASH BUYERS 
WAITING We eaawyt you ous ottom, ten 
eall us aS a 
iract man handle your’ sale Call 
Fe 45-0015 Mt and ask 
for Ted McCullough, 
1111 Sea sean. eet Get? Sed “mmeaLcron 
Wanted Real Estate 32A 
ye Ww. 7 on mall 6 5   
  JRADES - TRADES 
  
  
  
tee   
_area. Phone PEs +0400, 
PRINCIPAL OF SCHOOL DE 
sires 2 or 3 bedroom house, out- 
skirts of ac. ristian fam- 
fly Call FE 5-1204, 
HOUSE FOR - 
ployed a within rad 2 
miles Pontiac. Pam! 5, 
references. Will decora’ Cali 
Mr. Tanner, FE 32-2420 between   
anne 
id 4. 
R SIBLE cou- 
WITH SMALL 'Y DE- 
SIRE TO RENT A 3 
UNFURNISHED Fi IN VI- 
CIN) or MAXI- 
    — WORKING LADY WITH 
of references, wants small 
pmo nl oDrivate entrance Box 27, Pontiac Press. 
2 BEDROOM HOME TH GaA- 
rage in desirable foeation Write 
Pontiac Press, Boz 
WOULD LIKE TO sant 3 Gi 3 OR S, 
ished house 
TWO CHIL- 
— 10 and 4 poem hy Referenc- 
  
R ES PONSIBLE WORK- 
ing couple with 3 chil- 
dren desire 3 bedroom 
unfurnished house on or 
before Sept. 15. Close in. 
Near school. Reasonable 
rent. FE 5-5519, 
  
  
LACE CURTAINS PLAIN OR RUP- 
fed. Beautifully finished. 
Laundry. Phone FE 2-6101, 
FA 
ice hh, 
2-4101. 
Landscaping 18A 
YARD LEVELING 
$-3352 LAUNDRY 8ERV- 
Laundry. FE 
  
GRADING AND 
FE   
  COMPLETE LANDSCAPING service, liminary plan and 
ane CNEILA NORSER 
“esr Dixie I oben go 
3 Na SENERAL UA Sinech PING 5005 anders AL a 
Gravel and Free g Bol Reasonable price. 
1196, 
BRICK, lnodeceping. vewavs, © 
  Com: 
a eee: RORSERY 2044 Eilsabeth Leke Rd. FE +3032 
Waterford 
      tion of greenware. Precision fir- 
ing. Supplt El-Dore_ Ceramic 
Co., 3105 E. Walton Bivd. 
  NEW y SCRABBLE a $3. NT 
by number sets $1.69. 
    
‘Notices & Personals 25 
Shoes shoe records 
Arthar Sweet. 
1802. Aerotred Kna Have the fermen. al 
7 fae former 
  POR TES. Mrs. Burnes PE S-0tle 03 Mark. 
Charles Chester Shoes   
va ne 
AN 
Fy ar J WAY 
27383. 
APP SHO 
tas _s,_sanbre §-6720 
sas ? THEN 
inne plastic’ type. tincleum No waning. >, alte’s No- 
gy haat ps Pa ot. ‘Seenends   
  Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 Pupoy Vv Bivicinite of eC Clair Bt A eR 
cee nig gem |WALE BEAGLE. Nano Ripren.| fonts Undiet ue Mert" Fe eens et tnd children's. | oot. Tall cut off one inch. For Bees, REALTY CO. - positive identification, license on x 
Furniture Refinishing 16A| collar, No. 4403, S10 reward. WANTED BY YOUNG COUPLE oF AAA AAR es ae ! . mae p asi, bebe OR 6 se old baby, 2 
cists. FE cole! VE S100." | Hobbies & Supplies 24A | WANTED BY OFFICE MANAGER PW®PRAAPAAAAAAAAAAAAA A . r 
"Garden F house w: arage, near Catholic Ga a Plowing — 168 ARGUS v3, USED. COMPLETE. | School. xe _ wand 10, Ret- 
wi neat PLOWT Cred 8 Fol movie with — to 8:30" ~ bos wm aro! camerss, 
& Share Living Quarter OR 3-6290_or_PE_6-1437 terms, widee shew” Polahlatie™ 3B rots Bs = 
OTe RNS eames | BSGS (APO me! be | PEOVER w OULD mee 70 0 i room modern 
fe + ig poe Geman CLAREER STARTING | Seta? TT? Cert couple. da ___Laundry Service 18 Sept, 15. Pontiac's largest selec- | GIRL a) SHARE 3 BEDROOM 
apt. with business girl, rE 
2-0460 bet. 7 and # p.m.   =| Be SHARE APT. WITH WORK- ine «irl in — Heights, Call 
_ FE 41654 after 4. 
Wtd. Transportation 31 31 PAA ARAAL AR AAA 
SOMEONE WHOSE 
hrs. are from .§ to 5. From 
Lacey op oan Rd. to infirmary. 
Call PE 2-0137 between 8:30 and 5 m. Ase for Mrs. Robinson. 
Wed. Contracts, Mtgs. 32 
Cash Waiting | 
Mr Johnson nosey x uick, r. it 
courteous aotlnn. ’ ’ 
A. JOHNSON, Realtor 
1704 S. Telegraph Rd. 
FE 4-253 _ 
‘an 6 Dinte ob 
WE HAVE 
000 oR   
at x mre ae Sete by 
rou jeareley yenonl rt 
  REALTY 
" f 
* PEDDLING 
YOUR PROPERTY? DOESN'T PAY 
Our m of showing ss 
qualies peoapeete setes pes ee 
me aS erate is erties W 
financing 
tr ewe sone [rt 
"MAHAN Co-operative Res! Es A - og | a 
Ev 1 
FE2 “9; Sun, 
4263 
vox et Ec   
WILL BUY ORF LIST YOUR LAKE 
property. Purchasers waiting. 
vor R800 pp Rae 
Pontiac EM R. F. McKINNEY UNiv 1-6798 
YES We Do Sel] Existing Homes 
Due To Our Huge Volume 
Of Selline New Homes In 
New Developments Over 
The Past Years. A Large 
Number Of People 
Thinking We Will Not Han- 
dle Their Homes For Sale. 
We Mave A Large Trained 
Staff To Serve You And 
They Are At Your BServ- 
jee, It Stands To Reason 
With Our Large Volume Of 
Business That We Have A 
Great Number Of Buyers. 
Remember It Costs Not 
One Cent To List Your 
Home With Us. 
Over 33 Years of Continu- 
ous Real Estate Service Te 
The Public. 
WM. A. =   
Are 
REALTOR OPEN EVENINGS ‘TIL 8 __Huron rE   v1 W 4-3948 
CASH 48 HOURS FOR' YOUR HOME EQUITY 
JIM WRIGHT 
  H. BROWN; Realtor ¥ SCHRAM 
  
KENNEDY 
FE 2-410   
rete