: ge aE 
ar’ eloegtines 
JAUNTY wavE-~Altinn ‘Secretary of State John Foster Dulles 
waves tothe crowd upon his arrival at Palm Beach Air Force 
-Base. He and his party will stay at the home of Undersecretary of 
State C. Douglas Dillon, 20 miles from West Palm Beach. Dulles, 
recovering from cancér treatments, is expected to reach &- deci- 
sion on remaining in President Eisenhower's cabinet during this 
recuperative period. 3 
  
: : FROM OUR NEWS WIRES 
: WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court, splitting chiefly 
along liberal and conservative lines, ruled late yester- 
day that state and federal governments can both 
} . prosecute an.offender for the same act. 
The court’s three leading liberals, Chief Justice Ear! 
Warren and justices William O. Douglas and Hugo L. 
Black, dissented in’ both cases. Each involved-the con- 
stitutional guarantee against double jeopardy. q 
Justice William J. Brennan Jr. joined the three in one 
iste Pam a state conviction despite an 
earlier federal acquittal. He 
Vet Fund Bills 
Up for Hearing ‘crime - Senate Group to Get ever had sanctioned a state prose- 
Briefing on Revisions, cuties aaa federal rm 
ere 
to Sidestep Court Test | Bex g diyes’ prone seers 
LANSING @® —-The House-ap-| ble prosecutions’ whe often wiil 
be these “without friends in 
proved veterans trust fund mort- 
gage bills were. up for a hearing high places.” 
today before the Senate Apecopet 
ations Committee. 
The bills, backed by Gov. Wil 
liams, currently hold the No. 1   
gineered the state prosecu- 
tion when their actions. in 
the federal court failed. 
Black asserted that that case, 
        are now “no restraints on the use 
of state machinery by federal offi- 
in effect a 
preme Court has ever specifically    
  | Firing in Flint 
Supreme Court Approves 
of Double Jeopardy 5 to 4/: 
said federal officers en-/rehired 
Brennan Jr. commented there! 
7 hope in the Legislature of avoiding 
. posed by counsel for in payless paydays in a month or so. 
to nadie any need for a court 
test of the measures in the event 
they are enacted. : 
By. some .technical hoteles, Fitt 
said, it. appeared legal questions 
it 
firms which actually would w a 
the mortgages could be ove: 
Sen, Elmer: R. Porter (R-Bliss- 
field) said spokesmen for some 
Detroit area veterans also had 
asked to be heard, presumably in 
opposition to the bills. 
Porter said it was uncertain 
whether the bills would be put to 
a committee vote. 
The trust fund plan as adopted 
: by the House last week was con- 
tained in four bills. 
Fitt drafted a series of ‘‘pure- a 
ly technical” amendments that | 
would condense the = into 
three bills. 
The amendments, some of them 
suggested by bond attorneys, were 
aimed at lessening the chance of 
a court test if the Legislature de- 
- cided to mortgage the 50-million- 
dollar: fund. 
One administration spokesman 
said the threat of a court test 
would be “considerably eased” by for the same crime. However, in ruled that a@ -federal prosecttion 
is,no bar to a state prosecution 
several decisions since 1922 the 
court has upheld the federal gov- 
ernment's right to. prosecute per- 
gons after they had been prose- 
cuted in state courts. : 
Brennan wrote the majority 
opinion in the second case, in 
which the court, upheld a federal 
¢.\conviction in the wake ‘of a state 
convittion for the same act. 
Justice Felix Frankfurter, 
speaking for the majority, said 
that q number of states have 
laws barring. a second prosecu- 
tion if’ the defendant has been 
tried by the federal government 
for a similar offense. The sita- 
ation, “he eaid,raises problems 
with which the states are more 
competent to deal than the 
Supreme Court, | 
In his dissent Brennan said: “It 
is exactly this kind of successive 
prosecution by federal officers that sioners appeared determined today 
‘can refer in lieu of a transcript,     
But Admits He 
Didn't Mention 
Says Application Form 
Lacked Space to Tell 
About Rehiring | : 
By MAX £. SIMON 
against him, Herbert W. 
he falsified his application 
for employment as Pontiac 
police chief in 1951. 
The .suspended * chief made ‘athe 
admission before the Civil Service 
Commission after being handed a 
photostatic copy of his job applica- 
“I was one of 24 fired from the 
department,” Straley said. ‘The 
reason given for our dismissal was 
‘economy’ but it was really po- 
litical. « 
‘NO PLACE ON FORM 
ing that he had never been dis- 
charged from™ public service. 
“I didn't deliberately leave it 
out,” Straley said. 
The chief asserted that 
on the application was 
place to mention that he had been 
“I couldn't find any place to 
explain I got my job back, and 
I didn’t write about my. dismis- 
sal,” Straley told the Commission. 
Earlier in the evening Straley 
said City Manager Walter K. 
Straley. said ryen dh now ‘a ser- 
geant, “perjured h 
DOESN'T THINK oc 
“Didn't you think that your fal- 
sifying your application was just 
(Continued on Page 8, Col. 1) 
x *k * 
Hearing Record 
Court Reporters Can't 
Make Monday Deadline 
in Straley Hearing 
Pontiac Civil Service Commis- 
to render a decision on the Nachert 
W. Straley hearirig before Monday, 
despite the fact that they won't 
have a complete official transcript 
of the proceedings to study. 
Commissioners Stuart Austin and 
Theodore Carlson ‘have been tak- 
ing extensive notes to which they 
said Austin,. and Commissioner 
Gerald Guinan said the latest ses- 
sions of the hearing are: “still fresh 
in my mind, anyway.’ 
Court reporters, who have been     the fifth amendment was intended 
to prohibit."’ = 
Warren and Douglas a g reed 
with Brenan’s argument and with 
another dissent written by Black. 
The Fifth amendment guarantees 
that no person shall be “subject 
for the sameé offense to be twice 
put in jeopardy of life°or limb.” : ied   
adoption of the amendments. 
Larry Lalohe, director of the 
  trust fund, indicated. last night he 
would favor the amendments. 
Lalone denied weekend reports 
that organized veterans were 
’ peady to go along with oan a 
E caaprentse of the fund.   
| Thirty-eight was the lowest en rhometer Only Occasionally 
an occasional burst of sunshine Sun Will Peek Out” | 
This morning's cloudy. skies with | recording the reams of testimony 
from the long hearing, stated flat- 
ly today that the transcript of the 
proceedings will not be finished by 
Monday,- when Pontiac voters are 
scheduled to pass on Civil Service 
repeal. 
*It--would be. impessible te 
have the transcript finished by 
then, even if the hearing con- 
| chaded at tonight’s session,” de- 
-elared Charles- Hauser, one of 
two reporters in the Oakland 
Court Reporters firm, which is 
preparing the official rapes ell 
the. i. After denying all charges 2 
Straley admitted last night} 
‘Being Organized 
“a 
Won't Be Ready: lasked to draw up the ordinance. PROTEST RED CHINA ACTION — ; taillen 
demonstrators carry banners ‘protesting Red 
China’s action in Tibet during a demonstration in 
front of Communist China's ow in New Phiceis Guice . 
Will ch . 
apeennerion 
  
have the appendix taken out 
before it did get serious." : 
  
  
Guidance Group 
Committee to Offer 
Social Service to Aree 
Families 
See eS ere Ge? 
citizens aaa last night to organize 
the Pontiac General-Citizens Com- 
mittee on Child and Family Pro- 
tection and Youth. Assistance, a 
Which proposes to give social 
guidarice to emotionally — 
people. 
The dinner meeting at the Oak- 
land County Children’s Center was 
held at the invitation of Probate 
Judge Arthur*E. Moore who. has 
helped to organize similar-commit- 
tees in Madison Heights, Royal 
Oak, Royal Oak Township, Farm- 
ington-Clarenceville, Troy, Milford, 
Rochester and Hazel Park. 
Philip J. Proud, assistant sa- 
perintendent of Pontiac Schools 
in charge of personnel, was ap- 
pointed temporary chairman of 
the committee, which will seek 
te reach children and families in 
need of counseling ang guidance 
before _ the — becomes 
critical. 
The committee also made prep- 
arations last night to recommend 
that a city ordinance be adopted 
setting up the committee’ and 
rmulating its policies. City At- 
torney William Ewart will be 
A case work or exécutive com- 
mittee of the organization, made 
up of professional social workers, 
was organized six months ago to 
take care of referral cases ‘con- 
cerning children, teenagers and 
— in need of guidance and 
p. 
10 Feet of Snow 
on 59ers Land © 
SEWARD, Alaska (UPI) —: The 
long journey is over for Detroit's 
59ers, but it will be a while before 
the homesteaders can start build- 
ing their cabins and tilling land; 
on the Kenai Peninsula. 
First of all, thé 59ers must. select 
the parcels of land on which they 
plan to settle. Then they must’ sit 
back and wait for the snow to melt. 
‘Most of the peninsula is cov-~ 
ered with 10 or more feet of 
Many of the women and children 
who motored from Detroit to this 
peninsula which juts out into ‘the 
Gulf of Alaska are staying at Hote 
tens Lodge.   
   
          will continue through 
the wea 
lganeni She: sibsente 4 
So ae Uk ee cae a 
reading in downtown 
Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. ‘The 
    ‘secretarial help is. avaligie, 
difficulties over the transcript, 
‘Commissioners “havé decided to 
tomorrow's    
  “We might be able to get Pa. 
transcript finished next week when] go,    Teenie : e a 
“| the Dalai Lama was believed to 
Phave crossed the Great River        
try to. cut him off, 
Whe London Dally Telegraph in 
a dispatch from 'Kalimpong said Nehru gavé his ‘soothing courisel 
to the delegation of refugees as 
Red China offered leniency to Ti- 
into rebel-held areas the Chinese |betan rebels who surrender. Pei- -|filibustering Democrats, 
the Tibetan delegations but today 
they called at his-home and asked 
him to use his influence to guaran- 
tee the safety of the Dalai Lama, 
to protest the destruction of Tibet- 
an monasteries by the Communists 
and to try to preserve Tibetan 
atitonomy. 
Nehru yesterday expressed sym-   them. Reds have not previously man- |ping warned that “those who stub-|$2,000" and there will be just one aged to penetrate.) bornly resist ‘will be punished.’ . |model, the: paneer ov 
A group of 100 Tibetans called on “> ®t. ® Lauria iodel w Prime’ Minister Jawaharlal. Nehru| The Chinese Reds insist Tibet: lice sotianal NS ee a today and handed -him appeals ask-|am rebels abducted the Dalai further personalize the product but 
ing him to take the Tibetan issue} Lama and whisked him off to the new car will not replace the 
before ithe’ United Nations. south Tibet.. Refugee eircles in standard Chevrolet.” Bs 
NEHRU SYMPATHETIC India. say the ruler fled to es- leit One 
Nehru previously refused to met| “*P¢ Commenist capture and ta na a 
Panchen Lama in the missing rul- 
er’s pjace but indicated they would 
again make the Dalai Lama head 
of the local Tibetan government if 
he returns and collaborates with duction in Willow Run. : 
  enter it if it. showed prorhise of 
profit:and permanency. i   
RICHMOND (AP) — An invitation to 
United Auto Workers President Walter P. 
Reuther to address the graduation class at 
Richmond High School has stirred up a 
controversy in this Macomb County com- 
munity. 
“speak to the 70 graduates at their June 11 
commencement exercises. 
‘Now the Board of Education plans to 
meet with Reuther Thursday or Friday Reuther had accepted the invitation to _ Richmond Torn Asander ° 
“we intend to tell him (Reuther) what's | : 
going on and ask him what he thinks we 
should do,” 
president. 
“We will not be sittin him to cancel 
out, but we feel he'll know the right 
thing to do. After all, we really can't do 
justice to him. We'd need a much larger ° 
auditorium.” 
“The protest was. led by three-parents of | 
graduating seniors. They were Clarence Oe ree entits 
by Choice of Reuther. 
sald Harold wets Board 
abe The ‘compariy so far has saidjtrying to capitalize on the h only that it has been studying the|and empty bellies of 
smaller car market and — would! workers.” 
ty|GOP-spon sored unemployment — bill approved by the _ 
Senate. : 
United Auto Workers. 
nounced the un 
to try to stop the whole thing, one: way R bank cashier, Leslie wea : 
or another. uta S man, a service station operator,      
      
        Senate last night over 
tests of labor leaders 
    The bill, which would 
     
             
    
    
   
  AP Wirephete Fae J 
Delhi. Red China last week abolished the regime atlay eee ten 
fe Dal Lamy‘ rot wan SATS NOY, | Date | eam ce . | expire tomorrew te go om: re- 
“for Small Chevy) = S52 Ss) Ami i 4 — ee 3 
3 . Unofficial Report Says ee ene base 
a at Willow Run ‘ benefits to Detroit sree Fo 
FROM NEW wa “+ _. ~~ |workers idled in 1953 as the result 
NEW DELHI — Communist China ees today|_ YPSILANTI sh—General Motor'fof a strike at an Ohio Ford plant g| _ RAN oon Me 3. Raise maximum regular bene | the Tibetan revolution is. stiil smoldering and waned i anit ste Che Sei levels either $1 or $2. The 
reign Me en A india — eainst interfe -pearhy, Willoy. Run by Nov,.1. Mh eon ppallarny wales hy - , rrr iene nak hg _ single — 
The Pilla went? iy. Peiging Radio cegdialrae in teeta with reports the Dalai Lama was nearing — Whe said it aii eae: er SM dongs 
border and that he might+ new car will carry. the| namelpine other thareern ecu seek asylum in India once Chevrolet with a series designation. /most of them restricting its cov- India’s position is clarified pathy se te ‘hina tl i * & & : ict climeonane 
The Chinese ‘Communists’ were! rat ine niet es The een iaid the car Vill "be groups of presently eligible claim. bee t the Indian Parliament: should 
Prantl Ste Dot acs Chinm's “ineroat afthan 10 horsepower ale: OO det, 208. tndigtitinns teeteane a “The new Chevrolet will have = iors the Reds had dropped paratroops| He “ a six-cylinder engine and a bict"thate’ bal soead "tek Sale a south of the Brahmeputra River to| tory’? for Tibetans fighting Chi- ‘wheelbase of a little more than um ; fits 
               
   
    
     
      
        
     
         
     
    
   
   
             
    
    
           
              
    
    
     ‘The 
ae 
Meanwhile, Walter 
  The invitation was extended by Alex Nel- 
son, superintendent of the Richmond Com- 
munity School District... 
“I wanted to get someone of national 
prominence into our community to give our 
  begin. session at 4) ™ 
p.m., 2% hours earlier than usual,| © 
d_on Page. 2, Col, 4). sage 
    mercury rose to 52 at 1 aa. ‘shea pecassd a nes ee ba eae exercise,” ford Hensch, a funeral director. 
“We' re ‘not 
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  a picking on Reuther,” said, po 
      
      
   
   
           
                        
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  THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ‘MARCH 31, 1959 
       
  
  abide and ipo Lt lees sais q 
The, busin of sical Sg cian wadchid Ti4th big; He looked at me dnd I said, as 
few more backs to be made out]! e ‘ome run,,Afd his last. normally as my voice would allow, 
of the Babe after he put aside-his}’ That was a te 688 cOn- ee 
Yankee uniform, It made tone) Sey And ae as ever Seeel oa eo 
bucks ~ and then some. = ‘tad et ce tears ‘Larry MacPhail was the general|°!, T@* ~ In retrospect, I wish Babe bad}~..., tn manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, |**hools 
re or year|... of income, iéwhd 0n the radio “What's he want?” the Babe 
as a Yankee. , demanded. ‘What's his  tele- 
* *« * number? Where is he? 
But I didn't wish it in 1935, My How’d the Dodgers do today?” 
husband was fighting for the right He almost ran to me from the 
knew — a business that was now ~ 
to humiliate him beyond belief, 
The Boston Braves were tee- 
_ tering og.bankruptcy in 1635, 
and the owner, Judge Emil 
Fuchs, got permission from the 
Yankees te talk to their deter 
a year chattel. = 
Babe’s understanding of his deal - 
with Fuchs was clear. He would, 
in time, succeed Bill McKechnie 
as manager, He was, in fact, to 
be technically Bill’s boss, because 
he was signed as a vice president. 
AV. P. WHO PLAYS RIGHT 
A vice president who would also 
play right field whenever his ach- 
ing body permitted. It was another 
of the hundreds of precedents the | 
Babe set in baseball. 
It was a bad, bad deal for 
Babe. It was not only a bad deal 
for the $35,000 he signed for but 
would have been bad for 
$350,000. . 
Fuchs was determined to make. 
his ‘investment in Babe Ruth's 
hopes pay off to the last dime, and 
‘fm no time he and Babe were at 
war. 
* * * 
Fuchs _ scheduled ™ exhibition|, 
games out of all conscience, The 
fields were bad. Babe Ruth, 40 
ars of age, was lacerated in, 
irint because he couldn't play like 
the Babe Ruth who was 20 when! 
he was with the Boston Red Sox. 
Most ball players sulk at crit--| 
ieism and under cover of public- 
relations politeness loathe news- 
papermen. Babe fought back; as     a result, he had far better press ' 
relations. 
So he was baffled and angered, 
by the beating he took in the Bos- 
ton papers. He lay it to insular- 
ism: “If they were any good 
they'd be in New York,” he would 
say. 
HIS LAST BIG GAME 
He and Fuchs fell out complete- 
ly when the judge ordered him to 
appear at the opening of a cheap 
clothing store in Boston. Babe re- 
fused. 
* * * 
By now Babe was aware that 
the man he thought was going to 
give him the managership war 
merely giving him the business. 
On May 25 the Braves were in | ‘ 
Pittsburgh and Babe Rath was 
trying to figure out a graceful 
Way to get eut of his contract. 
On that day he hit three tower: 
ing home runs. 
It was a remarkable perform- 
ance for any athlete, particularly 
one old and heartsick. 
Home runs come hard for left- 
handed hitters in Pittsburgh, but       
‘THE DEPTHS | The Babe and. I By MRS. BABE RUTH with Bill Slocum 
  
  - Batfled Vice President 
three times a week, there were 
lendorsements,.and rare and lucra-| 
tive personal appearances. 
*® * * 
He was a welcome guest at golf; 
courses, fishing lodges, * bunting} 
‘camps and bowling alleys. 
He went to an occasional ball 
game at the Yankee Stadium. And 
he got a standing ovation every 
time. ag 
The fans had better memories 
; than the magnates. Because he 
heard not a single word from 
organized baseball in 1935. 
And it was the same through the| 
1936 s®asbn. And the 1937. And the 
1938 season got under way with 
Babe hearing nary a word. 
      I know .no words for his de-| 
spondency. He kept himself busy 
with hunting and fishing and golf. 
*~’~ * + | 
Whenever he: entered the house! 
there -was always the same un- | 
spoken question plastered all over! 
his big, tanned face, “‘Any phone’ 
icalls?”” | 
Sometimes, rately, there was 
| rage. Often a “To bell with ’em, 
I'm having more fun and mak- 
  mor me. Now and then, 
were hot ‘tears of frustra- . reared, 
~ $15,000," 
in the first two months this year. 
lin February. by 
| Richmond, Va. and Wichita, Kan. 
     
  phone. ‘MacPhail wants to see me 
right now,” he said, heading to- 
ward the door. ‘This looks like I 
might be in baseball again.” 
“MacPHAIL WANTS ME!” 
It had been years since I had 
seen my husband so happy. He 
was back.at 1 in the morning, a 
different man from the nice, baf- 
fled, hurt fellow I had been living 
with. 
“MacPhail wants me,” he 
“He wants me as a 
coach for the rest of the season. 
I told Larry I'll appear in all the 
exhibition games I can and I'll 
give a 10 minute hitting exhibi- 
tien before each regular and ex- 
hibition game. I'll be the 
manager next year!” 
After: some minutes I asked, 
idly, “What's he going to pay?” 
x * * 
Babe Jooked at me in wonder. i 
“Pay? Pay? What the hell is the 
difference? .I think he said it was 
We talked and talked and talked. 
He was ecstatic: So was I. The 
last thing he said before bed time 
was: 
‘Well, it’s not the Yankees. But 
it’s still New York.” f 
(Tomorrow: Nice guy Ruth fin- 
ishes last as Leo Durocher takes 
over the Dodgers.) 
Highway Deaths Up 
by 3 Pct. Over 1958 
CHICAGO (AP) — The National 
Safety Council says it is disturbed 
‘at the upward trend in traffic 
‘deaths .on the nation's highways   
The-council said-today the death 
toll of 5,290 for January and Feb- 
iruary was 3 per cent more than 
the 5,130 reported in the same 
period last year. Last month's tot- 
al was 2,410, an increase of 2 per 
cent. 
« *& * 
The council said in view of the 
severe winter weather it didn’t be- 
lieve the increased toll could be 
blamed on heavier traffic. 
.Disabling i 
‘and February were estimated, by 
the council at 200,000. 
No traffic deaths were reported 
24 cities. The 
three largest wére Norfolk, Va., Virginia Talks 
|session of January 28 called after 
in January| ; ‘Could Be. That Way   
Again   
Racial Defense Assembly Eyes New 
Ways to Block School WASHINGTON (UPI) — Antare- 
fica, now ‘burdened with 4,500,000 
Wheel’ Bieri | fen toe ee ee nit piiamminn Mee lush. vegetation | It is not inconceivable, accord- RICHMOND, Va. rox dee Vir-| ing to Dr. Harry Wexler, chief sci- 
consideration today af new legell fee ce Ges eee 
lines of defense against the spread 
of raciah integration in public 
It scaled the . “program the 
Assembly will be asked to enact 
will add up to a freedom-of-choice 
plan as successor to the’ now- 
defunct massive resistance pro- 
gram which collapeed"li state and 
federal courts. 
The phraseé “freedom of 
choice,” said a source close to 
Gov, J; Lindsay Almond Jr., was 
chosen because the plan may of- 
fer @ community or an individual 
the choice betweeri_ state-aided 
private schooling or integrated 
public schooling. 
* ee ” 
A member legislative com- 
mission has kept its deliberations 
secret, The Assembly meeting is 
a resumption of the special] schoo! will get that way again, 
Wexler said the world through 
most of its past history has been 
warm all over, but now “we are 
in an abnormal age” with great 
portions of the earth—particular- 
ly the six million square miles of 
Antarctica—buried under ice. 
Scientists believe Antarctica be- 
came an ice box millions of years 
ago. There is eviderice of a warm- 
ng spell about 10,000 years ago. 
fore then, the ice cover appar- 
ently was about 1,000 feet thicker 
than it is now. 
But millions of years ago, before 
the ice came, Antarctica was green 
with luxuriant vegetation. This was 
proved by American scientists who 
early this year completed a trek 
from the U.S. Byrd Station to the 
newly discovered Horlick mount 
range. 
the courts invalidated laws which ke o* 
had held the school - segregation 
line since the Supreme Court's 
1954 decision on the subject. - 
Legislators enacted two major 
requests Almond made — state 
tyition grants of up to $250 for 
pupils who refused to attend inte- * 
shale coal beds containing leaf fos- 
sils and 12-foot remains of petrified 
trees. The coal beds, proof positive 
of ancient vegetation, varied in 
thickness from a few inches to a 
few feet. In the same sedimentary 
_jvalve shells. 
Even modern Antarctica is not 
Almond named the commission to| quite as inhospitable to life as 
  Tropical Greenery Once | 
Flourished in Anarctica _ 
Geophysical Year (IGY) research) tion 
| bacteria and insects.”’ . 
The expedition found sandstone-|, 
region the explorers found fossil bi-|. In another American - trek, 
from the Elisworth Station, sci- 
entists found a large pond with 
water plants growing in it. The 
region is ice-free only a brief 
time each year, and the plants 
evidently are hardy enough to 
survive long periods of refrigera- , 
  i 
The theory is that the plant seeds 
originally found their way te the} 
  Thursday Night Is Always ed oe 
' ° Family Night . 
| at :   
    Sylvan Glin Inn 
A Very Complete Hot and Cold Buffet Dinner . : ‘ 
Is Served from 6:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. A F 
tempting hors d’oeuvre table is arranged for your pléasure / 
while having cocktails, Please come—we know you will enjoy it. 
SERVAN GLEN INN_ 
    Antaretic interior on the feet of 
4   
far-ranging skua gulls. 
  
        Seals, penguins, and giant petrels 
thrive’ along the antarctic coast.! 
And perfectly mummified bodies) 
of seals have been found many 
miles inland at elevations up t 
2,000 feet above sea level. 
“No one knows how. they got | 
there,” Wexler said. .« i 
* x * 
Soviet IGY scientists sapnetiedl 
mummified bodies of seals, skya/ 
gulls; petrels and penguins at the 
vestcold oasis “on the shores of! 
lakes of bitter-salt water. , | 
The Russians said the corpses 
were well preserved by tht cold 
in winter and were saved from de-| 
eay in summer because of the dry 
air “and the complete absence of 
So thoroyghly -mummified were 
the seals, for example, that only) 
the eyes and occasional patches of 
fur were .damaged. 
The Russians estimated the ani-: 
mals had been dead ‘‘for hundreds | 
years." a4 
Only 10 per cent of Argentina's 
land is under cultivation. About 80,   
  per cent is regarded as capable of |     
       
    714. Community Nat'l Bank Bldg. depend 
be Phone FE 4-1568-9 
BAKER & HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Donald E. Hansen 
> Res. FE 2-5513 Res, FE 5-372 
Homeowners’ Policies 
Fire Insurance . oe 
Life Insurance .) Accideni Insurance 
Automobile Insurance 
Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance 
Burglary Insurance . Bonds — All Types — 
Tenants’ -Policies ._ 
  
> 
Never injure a friend, even in fost. “ a 
| Cicero, 50B.C. «| 
    
  
      draft a new school program. might be supposed.   producing crops, grass or forests.’   
  
      
   
FOR THE MAN 
OF DISTINCTION “French Shziner Shoes” Town & 
aw! Country 
“Yel-Huron Center 
  
    every one of Babe's clouts was int 
- the true Ruthian tradition — “high | 
‘and far away. 
* * x 
This was the moment to quit, 1} 
told him that and he said, “T) 
thought of it going around the 
bases the third time:”’ 
Christy Walsh called from New! 
York. ‘You're going to quit, Bebe. 
*Dd it now.” 
“F can’t quit, dammit!” ve 
roared, “I can’t.” 
‘ 
  Why? 
- “Because I gave that old so-and-| 
so in Boston my word I wouldn't! 
quit until after the Memorial Day 
double-header in Philadelphia.” 
OUT OF WORK Lp 
But June 2 he called i in the news-| 
papermen in Boston and quit. The| 
third homer he had smashed in   
DOCTOR - LAWYER 
INDIAN - CHIEF 
IS) ©) Whatever Lens 
Type Prescribed 
... KINDY 
HAS IT! CREDIT   
      
    
  
         13 NO. SAGINAW ST. 
HE ROYALTY OF Y Li hed 1 
~ HEARING AID!   
= 
ELECT... T 
* Lawyer—22 years 
:@ State Legislator—4 years 
@ City Attorney—7 years, =A 
* Board \of Supervisors—4 years 
e Overseas Veteran 
NON-PARTISAN N ELECTION. A shies 6 _ HUGHES CIRCUIT JUDGE |. (Short Term) |   
      
         
     
HEODORE F.     
at 
        
      
        
              
                   
       
    | ON TH Enjoy aneaysiE:y 
    
‘tige 
“Stok 
Or TRoITee. 
wren eee 
* 4       
AMERICA’S ONLY FIRE-BREWED BEER 
: . (Fire-Brewed af 2000*) 
In nineteen gleaming copper kettles, Stroh’s is fire-brewed at 2000 degrees to bring forth. the finest flavor of the finest ingredients. 
Fire-brewing creates the lighter, smoother, | A ' 
more refreshfng flavor of Stroh’s beer, that. se on 
  no other American beer can equal. 
  
  Ta Ste ey Cy De 26 a j 
sd 
You’ ll like 
m 
  it’s lighter! 
    
   Be ale —— rns 4 gate THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 81,1959 
            
    
    salle to 3 Po ver on Coattails of ie. stakes hind “thowe hin (66° direct’ snothier ot Stak re: theredibly high was|zeal Khrushéhev mopup 
       
      feet yt tne it 
1 maneuver 
out of office, : “5 : Bim AOL é a man who “fawned and = did NEXT: Fle and oveternt_| which is based on knowledge _ 
      
   
      and experience in selecting — 
-& proper course... this is ; 
  \Motel Battles for License 
Eas Stop Sheriff, Court Asked! CANNER, Lies of: aywithout @pproval of the local 
plush motel, the State Liquor| sheriff. 
Control Commission on their side,| The commission last week told 
save she 00 thane bioch McBride it has the sole authority 
sheriff from seizing their liquor to isene Hquer licenses.   
    
   * % Hlicense. * * * Huron County Merritt-R,| Yesterday. in Lansing, the com- 
McBride has defied the state tried a new tack in its 
Humphrey of Bad Axe to advise Bella Vista Motel.’ acre wet in ek ta 
James F. Woodworth, attorney | Assistant Attorney General 
for the motel’s owners, yesterday | James J. Rossie said the commis- 
Scere cct Meet (Rein ees ke in| 46 Willomis St, Pontioc PE 25841 fterering with tho motets law | ——"_| Moore Chapel, Auiburn Heights UL 2-180"   
    
  Per | BS   
        
    
       oe aca dee i tee a 
for the third time Saturday : Lee a 
/ rt) wo E i ee a when the commission sent the Citizens Not Interested bine en _ 
watel ¢ telegrams eutherhing & i” 5 Member American Ascectation of Credit Cosnsctiony ak a despite McBride's} potuis Okla. (®—Sponsors , ee actions. a program to celebrate this city’s “Let : — . Seventeen youre in ane prarer og gpen  ag an er Lae ol ols Mrs Peer te fone tin ; ; 
. MES CHANGED — Nikita Khrushchev, tough- AP Wirephote murderer, poli cal andthe license without heeding a long-|the proposed event. At their first ne oft Siete Beck Side, CREDIT COUNSELLORS “ 
  talking Russian leader (left) who is a month” button was worn by the young Khrushchev to milkary ‘blundere?_tnd_unperal-lstandng policy of not asung thers! meeting’ six perce turwad ost! euttntes ts ts see saecnpeeesitepens tata 
from his 65th birthday, has taken on a good deal — show i ee , ; 
of hardness since he began climbing the Com- scowl mirror 
munist ladder at age 40 (right). Whereas a Lenin _ boss. 
@ 
a faceless, fawning party hack.’ 
    
          
  
        
    
    
              
       
                    
          
    
    The coattails Otinend De Laxe zar cil of yes-men surrounding Stalin. 
Who, today, would think of ap-|Kaganovich, who pacified the Uk-’That was in 1938. The purge was * 
plying such terths to the man/raine for Stalin in the bloody days|not yet complete. Khrushchev had 
/ whose moon “face, alternately.of farm. collectivization. another agsignment. 
beaming and scowling, dominates x *« * Dressed ‘for the part in slovenly . | 
the world stage? Khrushchev had talent. Kagano-|cap and sloppy peasant clothing, | E mah who now seems play- vich recognized it. With ruthless KRrushchey went to the Ukraine ; 
| \ ad ~ 
1 a = 
Rambler: 7 
he I es xX | 
in Automotive 3 
|| -and Rambler is Ready for itt | . | Covcccccodecceeenccooese \ 
| és Pees -% ' \ , : 
| | Successful revolutions do not happen overnight . to the most practical answer. He put his faith ia 
| —especially great industrial upheavals likethe pub- © Rambler, the car that had met his needs. 
|| : lic’s dramatic swing to Rambler and the new con- The rest is higtory. The market revolution sparked 
| cept of the modern compact car. by the compact car now finds Rambler What Rambler’s Success 
! Suddenly the news erupts in a blaze of headlines: not te oe 
| “Public Rebels at Big, Overweight Cars”... ~selling foreign cars combined. = Means to ‘You 
| “Rambler Sales Up 167% for 1959”... .““Mar es, the market is big—anc growing bigger. And : | for 2,000,000 Compact Cars Predicted By 1961.” is ready for it. 0 | Actually, this biggest explosion in automotive Rambler alone is backed of experi- 
Hasiony ces ae the clnes triton Sooaes ated , ence in building more than or cars by a new agar termes | American motorists f of method—aircraft Single Construction. ‘single J aircraft engineering 
‘ ” SIZE cack ace WAS om: re Tie om YOU ASKED FOR a | i } Say : Modern compact cars thet avoid _ Since World War IT, you have seen this explo- When you buy a Rambler, you 2 excess bulk, weight and cost. 
| ae DESIGN CHENILLE! SSS Sees oe | | year after year. Manufacturers indulged in an all- —_-years of work and devel A greater and better choice in cars out horsepower race and succeeded in outrunning wide availability at nortan 0dr td he m * to meet your family's needs. . 
only one thing—the family’s budget. service departments—thoroughly trained oe SL standards of ie 
| } ) Cars were loaded down with excess outside sheet for these different, more modern Compact Cats. Superior quality in WONDERFUL! 2 SPREADS AT. A PRICE ana euntoeer aetna Yes, ied fe 4 Usage Jo 4. we ot ole 
3 harder to get in and out - + harder to park, car you asked or | Billions of dollars in savings for 
ion CONSUMER REBELLED = = AMERICAN MOTORS CORPORATION ° 
Amazing what $5 spent at Penney’s can do for The motorist became fed up! He suddenly turned . RAMBLER - KELVINATOR + METROPOLITAN. 
your bedroom. It takes on a completely. re- for 5 Lt, 
décorated look with Penney’s richly colored 
spreads. Dyed in rainbow-bright colors that come ~ — twin or full \ ey 
out of a machine washing* fresh as new. Choose 43 oo : 
white, sun gold, pink whisper, radiant rose, cocoa. : : 4 
nceeiens / The Compact Rambler... - Ane UOL t Divee © j ; ; 1 - : pid ies # 
p planewn 2a S eee ‘Co 
America:s NO. 1 Success Car _ 
  
  \ ' ; Z 3 ‘ ; 5 
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Under Invéstigation E, Spier set Troyer's + muro 
  
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_ 9} LONG, EASY TERMS IF YOU BUY NOW We Include FREE 
¥ 
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at his own re-ishe takes approximately three years ago|day. just chewing 
FRED ZIEM... 
ELECT Br oReAND COUNTY LAWYERS PREFER 
   
     Ce Lik te Harn I win ere] 
quest, Clunes substitutes charm and left the cast 
sas ee wick Broadway nearly 
    
       
     a ee 
      bis ob; Saas 
   - this—1951, $3,100; 1952, $3,300; 1953, $3,400; 1954, $3,600;    _'THE PONTIAC PRESS, 4 
  SUMADAY. MARCH 31, 1959   
     
“hina lor You;   
Pan f Relre This Year? ee ae By RAY HENRY. 
A "Media how shu: cae eacialeinerece Racial eben ‘pes 
‘ments if you've been working fairly regularly, but plan to 
retire this year when you reach 65: _—~ 
rae Write down the eamnings on which You paid Social 
Security tax for the years listed in the chart below. © ’ 
eee . §DB6 .cagccesekes 
st WOR, ésevsdicas. “ 1056. cciscseess 
1958... ..6008008 = = VOT csecceseees . 
1H. Ves eneesee : 1958. sa stesewese,. 
gin hand-—call or visit the weares} Secial Seen- 
pity office. From these forms, your office can tell you the 
amount of earnings on whiéh you paid the tax.) 
Remember: 
—The amount of.earnings on which you could have paid 
tax during the years listed above was limited. So, be sure to 
only eee 
T- * 
ike Machiain Ganeeles sh ened settee tenet, 
Social Security tax for the years 1951 through. 1954 was 
$3,600 a year. For the years 1955 through 1958, the most you 
could have paid Social Security tax was on $4,200 a year. 
—If, as a self-employed person, you were net covered 
by Secial Security until 1954 to 1956, there'll be years 
listed in the chart above in which you had no earnings 
on which you paid Social Security tax. ; 
2. Now cross off the chart the five years in which your 
ua eee 
7 : 
RECORD EXAMPLE 
For example: suspedii-saud ; aididin voceet..tesin ti i 
2 
1955, $3,700; 1956, $4,200; 1957, $4,200; 1958, $4,200. You would 
cross off the years 1951 through 1955 sifice they're the five 
years with your lowest earnings. + 
3. Total wp yous etealdels- die this. ylnen wile ro~ . 
mained after you crossed off the five years of low or no 
earnings. 
Using the example above, this means you would add 
your earnings for the years 1956, 1957 and 1958. Each year 
you had $4,200, s0 the total would be $12,600, 
x ««-*® 
4. Now divide the total earnings by the gueaber of 
months in the years you used to get your total earnings. 
Thus, you used three years—that is, 36. months—to 
get your total earnings of $12,600. Se, you would divide 
$12,600 by 36. The result is $350. This is what's called © 
your “average monthly earnings.” 
5. Now look down the left hand. ia of the chart 
below until you find the figure closest to your average 
monthly earnings. The second column shows what your 
monthiy- Social Security payments will be. 
AVERAGE MONTHLY YOUR PAYMENTS — 
EARNINGS 
$50 - $33. 
100 59 
125 "68 
150 73 
175 79 
200 84 
225 * 89 
250 95 
275 100 
300 105 
325 111 
350 / 116   
  Democratic 2 of 1956 had 
  "'a federal penitentiary yesterday | 
{set his trial for. the April court, 
is| $200 and blank money orders from | 
‘| took ‘a check protector for use | said, .' “1 hope you dida't pay the 
ransom! I had a rhe: time 
    
Parolee M ute 
at Arraignment 
in City Holdup | 
, A Pontiac man on parole from 
stood mute when arraigned before 
Oakland County Circuit Court | 
Judge H. Russel Holland’ on a 
charge of burglarizing a Pontiac 
drug sjore last Augiist, 
* *« * 
~ Judge Holland entered a plea 
of. innocent for Leroy. E. French, 
49, of TSS E. Mansfield .Ave., and. 
term. French was taken back to. 
the county jail unable to post a’ 
* |$1,000 bond. i 
Pontiac Police and FBI agents 
took French into custody March 
20 after they had, learned about | 
his ‘whereabouts ‘and liad given . 
him 15 minutes to surrender. 
He did so in front of 4 down- 
town hotel. 
* * * 
French is charged with stealing 
the Furtney’s Drug ’Store, 974 Jos-' 
lyn Ave.,.and then spending the’ 
money here and in other states. | 
This was made possible, pe. | 
lice said, after French aged 
into. a Clarkston coaj yard and | 
in falsifying the money orders. | 
* *« * 
Another Pontiac man arrested 
for the same alleged crime, James 
Mattson, 24, of 758 E. Mansfield 
Ave., also stood mute yesterday. | 
Judge Holland entered an inno-| 
cent plea for him and allowed him |   could swing on him with the fry- 
is gan abe hed in: Sor bond ie to remain free on a $300 bond. | hey Want toRun 
4a lion on your fendert’” the cop 
a. 9; e 3 
started to drive home through | 
the busy main street, 
A cop stopped him. “You've got 
shouted, 
“Yeah,"* my friend isaid, lighting, 
  a cigarette, ““You should have: seen 
the two that got away” ee. imonth, 
| Sentenced ‘o the State Prison of Flint Trio Sentenced 
for Gas Station Job - One’ Flint man received an 18 
months to 15-year prison sentence 
yesterday while two other corn- 
panions froin Flint were placed on 
probation for three years by Oak- 
land County Circuit Judge H. 
Russel Holland for breaking into a 
Brandon Township gas station last 
  "| Southern Michigan. at: Jackson was 
Robert Brown, 25. Placed on pro- 
|bation were George Abrns, 18, and! Ti 
Ronald Spees, 19." Ahens also’ re- 
ceived 30 days in the tounty jail’ 
The trio’wag nabbed | y Oakland 
sheriff's deputies after g tins ‘and 
Brown were spotted fleeing from 
the -station, 2140 Ortonville Rd. 
Spees. was later apprehended in 
his «ar after dropping his com- 
panions off at the station. 
  
            im that once ons eed Se 
Walter sates of the Ube = 
Rangers. i 
Drace seed the Gul wel 
and it was passed on to relatives +. 
after his death. Dillinger bought ~~ the 44-40 ealiber Remington at an The largest game. animal in auction and-his wife fashioned a 
South .America is the tapir. | holster so he could carry it. e 
  
  
  TTL SAS     
  
  
     
      
  
   
  ‘Use a “BIG BEAR” Coriventional = 
| Open End Benefits oS 5 
   
‘ IMPROVE YOUR HOME We Do the Work 
* PAY OFF EXISTING MORTGAGES . if You Have Reasonable Equity . 
Sk ae   
  ‘MORTGAGE ~"® CONSOLIDATE ALL PAYMENTS Save All That Interest Money 
* LOW INTEREST RATE 
  12 to 15 
      
  Year Terms 
CALL for FREE APPRAISALS - 
CONSTRUCTION CO. 
92 W.    
   
   
  HURON — PONTIAC | pee | Kick Z— 
    
0) ad 
    
          
          
     FLORENCE J. ALLEN 
(MRS. LYNN D.) | 
“ Republican | 
Township Treasurers 
Born ‘in Waterford, and resident for the ‘past’ 15. 
years. Property ownér, taxpayer. Capable, ex- 
_perienced, responsible and a for, full time 
on the a 
          
SHOES Excellent buys tee Spring. 
Values to 16.95.               
         
    f aN 
Sizes AV, to 10 
: , ~AAAA to é ! clin 
    1,00 
  
  Values to 9.9 
+Women’s Tennis 
OXFORDS — Your. Choice 
of White or Blue 
ESE A RRB ARES CS I 
WOMEN’S FASHION | 
  $688 0 —— 
    ee BS * Pr, 
  Ladies’ Famous Brand 
oes HEELS. 
WEDGIES 
FLATS 
  5 
   (    
       
   
   “LOOK ot the BUYS 
- DOOR-BUSTER 
_ Shoe Sale 
WOMECS 
| SANDLER ‘ of BOSTON 
TRAMPEZE by hasan 
Flats... 
Dress riots” are 
Styles . 
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to 14.95 | 
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_ Excellent Color 
Selection. Vals. to 10.95, 
MEN’S HUSH ‘PUPPIES ‘ comforta-. 
ble soft, pliable leather. 
Sue they last. Reg. 
    IN ‘OUR: 
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6 rt 
    
   500 MEN’‘S | 
FAMOUS BRAND | 
        
      6 
  Al Othe tia dt th i ttn eo : 
PLAY SHOES: +: ‘Sunsteps and other a i 
famous makes . . . Can- 
~MEN’S SLIPON - . CANVAS UPPERS © 
‘and THICK SOLED 
SPORT 0 
     
     
            
     
    
     
        
     
       
                     
     
  
    
     
    
    
oS 
EPRORER 
CREEL 
ED 
TROTTER 
OER 
TD 
BORER 
Der 
ptr 
eee 
      
     
ey a 
ef ‘ 
y Pete af 
ea Sy. . <n 5 <4 
iS + ie 
    ‘stay 
Clear 
hany tor- rela- 
= in Clear- 
QR. Ma- Z Mrs, John 
eee 
home.on Franklin boulevard 
: are Mr, and Mrs. Donald B. 
2 Hogue who have been, ona 
six-week southern vacation. ~ 
toke and in ‘Delray Beach, 
Fia, they were hosts to Mr. 
and Mrs. David B. Hogue of 
Austin, Texas and Dr. and Mrs. 
Donald B. Hogue Jr., of: Hol- 
4 land.. 
et ee 
i Mr’. and Mrs. G. M. Sprentall 
of Ashland, Ohio, arrived Sat- 
wi. Sea 
she carried a 
Troy ag HF i st 
   a8 heirmeh for the benefia bri i being given 
April 8 by the Pontiac Symphony Women’s Associa- 
tion discuss plans forthe annual affair. ‘From left Re, 
i At 
ie nH 
i, a 
fa 
  ‘ed chairman of the University 
of Chicago Alumni Founda- 
tion's 1968 spring gift drive in the Pe area. Mr. Millis 
of Chicago in 1924, :    
      5 ee ‘ 
fe Be Ps i ee. Peet 
# Ay oe. 
to right are ‘Mrs. Maxwell H., Doerr, 
Oakland Family Serv ice Meeting H eld 
   “Today's Challenge in Social’ Dean Fidele Fauri, dean of | Metuhets vot fhe. Junior Work” was the themevof the the School of Social Work at. Pipes Be abies 
      
      
  a: 
Woolens H ‘Hide | Weight Gain : 
   | 3 Mrs} Howard = mete 
Powers, Mrs. Raymond Rapaport and- Mrs..James Tht Committing shbeling the 
Youngblood. ASSESS "| annual atiair fp headed--by - Mrs,.Ivan L. Baker. Assisting : é i her are Mrs. C. G, Uligian; . 
: ,, PRE od pete aie Mrs. Aleck Capsalis; Mrs. Hel- 
rest in Pontiac Area si™""""~ 1 . : s F f : : - Dalg. jf . 
dtord of East Co §6K, A, Kaestners - avenue, March 18 at gg: | 
wate General Heepial. |” Honeymoon in 
Ruth Mrs. Horace F. Bedford of Cur- New York City , . freshman; Stuart Hill, Burn street and Mr. and Like a breath of spring eet Tae cok hee | Miwohn dS. Morrissey ot Rae- The A heaton — broadcloth dress, Right for holida Kenneth Jilbert and Nancy. tig formerly Of Pottianc: ©. =. are in New York  Proadcloth | s y - Lowery, juniors; James Jolly, oh ee \ _ Gity,. following marriage trips or everyday wear, it launders 
__ Students from Birmingham Brown (nee Linda Fitzpatrick) The bride is the daughter of receiving B or better averages, © of Spokane drive announce thé wr and Mrs»Lloyd Nelson of are Ann K_ McGrath and Gail birth of a daughter, Lori Lynn,  yarmington and the V.: Weckesser, freshmen; Ka-' born March 19 at Pontiac Gen- is the son of Mrs. Tagtet: aomemaller ak teak petal Hospital, En Chatweod ot es ; 7 £ Mr. and . 
ape aan eek A. daughter, Robin Leigh, Fitzpatrick of Geneva ‘road, ra etapa,     is this’ easily 
    NILAH MEIER 
Nilah Meier, 
Lee Theodote 
Plan to Marry 
The engagement of Nilah 
Meier and Lee C. Theodore was 
announced at an Easter dinner 
held at thé home of the pros- 
pective bridegroom's parents, 
. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Theo- If you have been be- 
: fore the all wine’. 
ter, get oat the tape measure 
for a surprise, Unless you also” ~ 
took daily exercises, chances 
are there are some extra 5 b 
inches here and there. calling Shaver of Parkinson drive an- in *% for attention... - . ¥ the engagement of ion 
Bulky wools have been hid- . théir , Rae Marie, to Cyril 
‘ {ng these from your friends. William A. Brian Jr, He is the bergen. 
3 ‘those Tazy pounds, And it’s Brian of Clarkston. A May 2 aoa’ asrg Petrusha. 
ae as time to trim them off. wedding has‘been planned, - - ‘(the Mrs, John Mc- Charlotte emm al arg es v . & =s : : : i “es * Joseph ’ 
jae-Booth, and cited the need for increase ey ¢ de : Janet English, Mrs. John T. 
“doughter of |B mtonal renedity «© -Medical Auxiliary Plans serie S.te cos ‘Mr. and Mrs. “stopgap legislation” to solve ex h mer Calme and Mrs, Neil Mc- 
“Hatley C.  wobeme Wednesday Luncheon. om: of a “I think 
CU is a f 
Doulas. see ee to. , Soroya of Iran, aterfor via from W.itehe raft to 
marrioll < Sammeed ty Ge socal work atllhs” will be, tie tole of Prince Orsini 
Jerold Certain’ that tp heath and. %t,,tet meeting of | Oakland Meet for ‘Date V Hi “dy County Medical Auxiliary. arren tice welfare needs of citizens are The fi will bd r Satiurds made known and are given func’ meeting ROME @—Former Empress 
aturday consideration by our-state and- held at 12:30 p. m. Wednesday Soraya of Iran had her first at Devon Gal Guests are blic Rome date Monday with afternoon at  tederal legislative bodies, wed public 
Alliance - “For only with sound govern- a"? e 2 re peed erg heammedoneene 
mental programs to serve as , Ramp beey: tated, romantically Church. the underpiming can we suc- _ DY: Merker is retired di- with hers. 
“Lap 7 Qed Me Raving: a true parts Te Pade, Depe and Conny. Ce tegiiee, Braye. thee! for Parke, i : 
SAS AS Recah ate toe St ow Lact two hw ne pon Begg rs i our of Cancer ; Prince Raimondo Orsini. 
7 Institute of Science and De- It was their first known meet- 
OFFICERS NAMED troit Public Library. ing since Soraya’s arrival from During the business meeting, He has served on the ad- ' Germany started rumors they 
the following were elected to _ visory board of Franklin Set- might marry. 
serve for three-year terms on nt and- Detroit District Se ae sees ton ae. 
the board of directors: James Nurses Association,  . that Soraya had re- » 
C. Allen, John F, Allen, Paul In. 9957, Dr. Merker was ceived an urgent phone call 
Allison, n Harris, Roy B rary “First Citi- from her father, Iran’s ambas- 
re MacAfee, Mrs, Jack Moskowitz zen of Detroit,”” by the, Detroit, —_—— . sader in Bonn, asking her to 
Best man was Ronald Hamp. 4 Mrs. Theodore Wiersema. . DR. HARVEY M. MERKER _return to Germapy. 
of Battle Creek, and Gary Pet- : Le Hie ful 
dress : Wen pak boost: “The way American women use accessories to achieve 
a well-put-together look for every situation always emazes 
me,” said Mme. Elsa Schiaparelli. 
“Especially by working women who extend the hours 
of every dress they own by adding a different bag, a hat, 
a and. 80 appear at business, chic and 
arrive for dinner and the theater, 
The, clever girl, who has a social evening planned reaches business in the morning with » comple te new set; 
   of accessories: to refresh her at five: * 
hat is added, a 
  ihe may cope with a. severe neckline that would define . no I 
f : & sigan, at. 1 oe ef simple pearls may, 
She dons a fresh © 
ge in shoes ‘thet a tired expression In the evening by pelecting’a soft scart 
or adding @ touch of white at the throat t6 banish adrawn lal. 
Wales 226 
* 42 3 
. Actually, accessories are as important: as the dress or { 
             
    ., _ Ome young woman solves her, a¢cessory problems when, 
»,, fine selects a dress, andiher n canbe followed by many. 
'Bhe asks the sileswoman to suggest accessories that _ ‘WOuld be suitable and becoming, In many shops the ‘sales- womair Will be able to bring a selection to you as you wear | 
the dress in the fitting room. 
In that way she sives herself the time and 3 to Set Mood, Chi nee Personality 
* 
trouble of shopping again for shoes, for gloves, handbags, © 
\ : . ' ere 
    “dnd change. the 
liven one’s life. dore of Orchard .Lake-avenue. 
Miss Meier is the daughter of 
Mr. and’ Mrs, Dayid Meier of 
a 2 i 
The bride-elect ‘attended An- 
derson College, Ande: rson, Ind. 
and hag done graduate work 
at Duke University. Currently 
she is teaching at Keuka Col- 
lege for Women, Keyka Park, 
kOe 
Mr. Theodore attended An- 
of Theology at Demver, Colo. 
  and dries in-a@-harry. The 
demure styling is enhanced by all-over 
pin-tucking of the snugly fitted bodice.    
        
  8) -       
  == Women’s Section. 
  Legion Unit 
Celebrates 
Birthday. Auxiliary Dinner 
‘in Pontiac Draws 
150 Members 
of Chicago. — AH 
Mrs. Donald Richman was 
banquet chairman and Mrs. 
‘Walker was ’ 
room’ chairman. 
F rederiksens Home- 
John Frederik: sen of Monti- 
cello avenue and Mr. and Mrs. 
Walter Frederiksen of Bald- win avenad have returned 
’ from Brainerd, “Minn, where 
they were called at word of 
the illness and death of their 
father, Simon Frederiksen. 
5 that, will coordinate. She:also eliminates the.spe-    
        
dressed. And a 
CREATE ILLUSION « al feats of ‘twemory required to’chodse harmonizing colors when the dreds is at home and cannot be compared. she 
dmiring friends often wonder how she is 
able to do so much,/so well. . 
e# 
Accessories too, can create iilus(ons. Belts, so smart 
ant OE ee TD ae ie as te when 
peo Bing Mariam at 
Peete correct bist ean tal make-them larger. A bit of veil adds mystery. and can give a slender girl 
: wide. 
tention to the eyes — can 
~ a 
. At ‘ a 4 i * : * : " Cf : 
- Working «with basic Ee , accessories set a mood 
personal! ity: They transform a ‘gamine’. . 
into @ ‘femme fatale, a tailored lady to an outdoor'type. 
* properly used, accent one’s type and en- 
%   
dining 3   
    
    
  es     
  ! 
Fa 
" (D), 
       
      
     
   
    
     
    
   {D), Dan M. Mc- 
Le) oaeety lof the Peace — Lopnié r Levy D); Erwin Baker «R), 
Supervisor. — Elwood Dickens), 
ou S Clerk — Artie H. Gray (D); M. Fredricks (R), Ferris| 
S W Holcomb (R), Roheat & Phil- 
_| tips (R). : 
   _THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, Mancit 1, 1950_ - : 
Clérk—Conrad. ppurpell: {R);" Treas- Supcevietpedliha Mi: ene (R); | 
    
Treasurer — L. — @);}- 
Trustee (2) Aubrey Dunn 
Samuel D. Woodard (D); Justice 
C.. Cash 
(D); Board of Review — Mattie 
Brown (D), Henry. R, Maxey (D), “| James D. McCree (D), Square Mc- 
Neal (D); Highway Commissioner 
Frank Miles (Dy 
    a meme a hony Jr. (B)s | WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP 
Pi ie a Bn z|so0 | Mareld J. 1 (RB); Treasar- | 2) Rae he i 
Pangus (D) and Ronald H. Sut-jpuioy ~ dof] er <= Kespeth L. Jobson (p), |)», Rae Becker (D). en 
| SR cn Stic the Peace | oreta a. ope nag ton (D); Treasurer—Earl L, Stone 
Gao W, Oren Oe ee is - ate athe Peace Waliace| OU. Sen TR) ae 
of Review —Lenoy E Bar Do Malay 4), William: Stam “Fan v8 
e (Dy-and er wy Heme yer : 
(R); Constables~Jack Malony' ro ba 
  Sat adh : 
UTH r 
ment, proposition will involve a 
twomill tax levy which will 
amount to slightly less than $4 per   
    
        Commenting on the road paving 
proposal, Supervisor Tiley stated ),) 
Baker (D); Constable (4), — Willie} a sai 
    PATRICIA ANN PHILLIPS 
‘Mr. and Mrs. William Phillips 
of Lansing announce the en- 
gagement of their daughter, 
Patricia ‘Ang; to Keith O. 
Wooster, son of .Mr, and Mrs. 
Glenn L. Wooster of 1475 Avon- 
dale Dr., Sylvan Lake. A June 
27 wedding is being planned. 
  
Utica School Will Present 
Band Concert 
  that Commerce Township residents 
  Orda. 
Jtica; a former. so- 
   
  
      ‘Treasurer — Walter Griffin; Trus- 
tee — Lee Gravlin: Justice of the 
Supervisor — | Frank Js Voll Sr. 
(R);-Clerk — Lucy Alt (D) and 
Mary Reschke (R); Treasurer — 
Walter T. Barkham’ (D) and .Mar- 
jorie Waite (R); Trusteé —- AJ. 
Graham (D) and- Charles Nelsen 
(R); Justice of the Peace — A.W. 
Cohoe (D) and Kenneth Waite (R); 
and Board of Review — 
S. Reeves (D), and — ae 
‘ton (R). 
Constables. (2)—Robert: W. Bark. 
ham (D)}, Willis Muckenhirn 
Bill Collins (R) .and .Jobn 
Chiera (R), and. Highway Com- 
missioner — Carroll Thrush (D) 
and Mickea] Mannino (R). 
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP 
Supervisor — Leroy Davis (D); 
Clerk — Nancy J, Myers (D) 
and Greta V. Block (R); 
urer — Irene I, Bates (D) and 
Goldie B, Mailahn (R); Trustee 
(2) — Mont D. Bodman (D) and 
Gout, E. Lyle. @); Justice of 
— Leonard E, Grain- x, 
bintt {Di aad: Mobert W.ituedge 
(R); ind Board of Review — | Walt 
Garrett Roerink (D). ab 
~ Constable (4) — Eugene L. Da- vig (D),. Ralph a Re (D), 
i, Louis wick (),,Laonand D om yr (R)- and Harold Van  tosen (R). 
FARMINGTON: aos ae are! arthur F. O’Hara 
Margit] (8); Supervisor — Edward 
(D), James L, Reid (R); 
Stanley Freville (D), Bert A, 
McKeachie (R); Treasurer—Mar- 
Malm (D), Ronald C. Voor- 
» Harvey M. Bruns 
*jOlive Hill (R), Esther R. Downing 
(CP); Trustee—Charles Bone (R), 
Lee Caswell (CP); Justice of the 
Peace — Lester Truesdell (R), 
Arthur Blackmore (CP); Board of 
Review — Leonard Sutton (R), 
George P: Sutton (CP); Constable 
— Jack Thorsby (R), Charles 
Zeeman (CP); Highway Commis-| 
sioner — Kelbert Brown (CP).   
Rezoning Trial 
Delayed § Days Shelby Twp. --Citizens 
- Suing Over Major Auto 
“Racing Track Plans 
- SHELBY TOWNSHIP=The ‘trial |. 
in the casé of a group. of. town- 
‘\ship homeowners versus the town- 
ship and Curtis-Wright Corp., orig- 
inally scheduled to.s tart tomor- 
ao ee be SE Be 
at 9:30 a.m. in. Macomb ed 
  SPRINGFIELD ety lige «> 
ae (D): Eva M. Walters 0. 
_ Mrastee <= Harel A, -Hutohia.. 
ooh (@), mance: Hotton pred 
dastice of the Peace -— Odin H.. 
dehnvon (D), Howard F. wren 
(RK); Board of Review — Sammy 
Lee Barnes (D), Frank R. Hal- 
sey (R). 
Constable (4) — tacoma Hart- 
man (D), Quentin M. Rundell (R), 
Fred Kramer (D),’ Francis W. 
Treas- |Sommers (R), LeRoy A. Moller 
(D), Gordon G. Tower (R),. Wil- 
lard D. Turk (D); Highway €om- 
missioner — Clarence G... Turner 
| (R); Park Commission (2) — Nor- 
   
     
Herbert Koester ' 
Meier (R); Board. of Review — 
*|John A, Harnden (R); Constable 
(2) — Leon De Dochot AR) a: 
ie “Avery” 5 Sas » Bupervison << 
— = Nee L. Peterson (D); | Ar- 
thur “S;*Bassette (R), ‘BaWerts| 
Semid (D), Raymond 8B. Wilcox 
(R), 
Justice of tHe Sones _ Harold 
E. Shpiece (D), Robert H. Nelson Justice of the Peace — James 
Van Leuven (R); Constable (2)-- 
  (R); Board of Review — Paul 
O, Inman (D), Victor_J, Saliba 
! 8, Martin Jr, (D), Arthor 8. Geyer (R); Library Board (2)—    
  Pre-trail Raa were resently 
“leompleted: and the trial-date set. 
Miss Dee. Edwards, one of the at- 
torneys fot the plaintiffs, then 
asked for the ent before 
Circuit Jadge James E. Spier. 
Se. & AM ey, 
She gave as the rehson for her 
request that her. partner in law,|: 
‘Donald A, .Schindler,\ was unable}: 
to be in court. tomorrow. She 
told. Judge Spier Schindler’ initiat- 
ed the lawsuit, and she . wanted 
  him to be present when .the trial the new--date set is April 9} UTA ~~ Len - Utica High School 
Ed Sullivan tele-| 
i be the guest so- 
f® consisting of stu- 
Dennis Rem-    
        
Wanted to Sell Gun 
Stuck Through Door 
OXFORD—A 21-year-old Oxford 
man, who ¢claims he was only at- 
tempting to sell the rifle, yesterday 
‘pleaded innocent for allegedly 
March 2 
'- és 
Oakland County Circuit. Judge. i. 
Russel nd arraigned Robert 
IR. Greenwood of 177 Broadway St. | 
on a charge of assault with intent 
ito ‘rob while armed. 
Judge Holland continued 
Greenwoed’s $500 posted bond 
and ordered him to stand trial 
next month. 
in trying to hold up Rex Hallock in 
his station. Hallock told police 
Greenwood stuck the barrel of his 
rifle through the door of the sta- 
tion and he grabbed it, whereiipon 
Greenwood surrendered. without a 
struggle. . 
* * * 
Greenwood told police he was 
only showing the rifle to Hallock 
to see if he would be interested 
tiin peehagiog it. 
Polio Clinic Planned © 
at Gingellville School   
  United States Air GINGELLVILLE—A polio clinic 
a three-time per-/has been scheduled from 9 to 11 
a.m. and at § t 8 p.m. Wednesday 
in the Proper Elementary School 
on: Baldwin ‘road. 
* * * 
Any shot in the series of three | 
plus a booster ‘shot will be avail-, 
able at that time. 
Two doctors and several nurses, 
will be on hand to administer the 
  
      
Denied in Court ans Oxford Man. Claims He| 
atienptly to. hold-up a gas station ae 
jowner with a .22 caliber Hie x 
    
      
He is accused of using the rifle | 
          
          
  ES id from ree ra 
      
   
      
  oni | Independence Township Supers proval OF visor Duane*Hursfall, has full con« 
oe ltidence of the-people in this area 
not going overboard on drasti¢e 
issues, and said, ‘‘I-think the an? 
nual township meetings are a      
      A simple ‘majo’ majority—uenally de- 
termined by 2 veice vote or the 
   
     
     
             
       
     
        
           
          
    planning goes into the government 
      
             
     
      
         
    
  
    
      
     
          
     
            
   
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Lake Orion Schools 
Plan Polio Clinic 
LAKE ORION—Parent-Teachers 
Richard Hohl of Webber. 
The clinic will be open to all 
children and adults in the school 
‘district, andthe sponsoring or- 
‘ganications are urging that all 
persons get their shots before 
polio season begins. ~. ‘ 
Although this ig the second clinic | 
  
  so company’s property 
6 i the Packard Proving] 
‘between Mound: Réad: 
  
ewer « 
DPW foreman Hed 
*lby City of Southfield 
      His starting salary in the newly 
created post here wilt be $7,000 
a year, McNutt sald, “ 
ts ) th 
  Casterline of Carpenter, Mrs. Nor. 
val Wagner of Proper:and Mrs. W., | 
    
     
       
  <i water. 
     
- ¥%4 HP model 124. 95. 
‘Ideal for pumping from great 
depths or when higher than 
normal pressures are required, 
YMP Metal ..... 065650: 144.95 
Sali “12895 
fs wee Erica plenty Ke ;    
        
   
  ‘Shallow Well Pump _ With 17-Gal. Tank 
yu — 94,95. : 9.50 DOWN 
HOMART pumps-_up to 250 GPH. 
Cast iron with brass cylinder 
and galvanized tank all rust 
resistant. 
  
     
   
           
  Gas : ‘Woter Heater: 
“Fite Low Clearances! 
yagnanr” 94,95 +10 DOWN 
tank. és. less lined. .¢ Quar- 
anteed | AP hegh Whité baked 
; ia “Shorty” model,. 
bina is 53-in, high. 
              
   
        
             
      (we. es ee 
    
   
         HOMA RO 
HOMART V4-HP Jet 
Pump is Efficient 
wget. teak Q4,95 — ~ compact - $1@ DOWN 
Versatile! For shallow or HT almost } 
well operation. Automatic over- orawl space: un 
ps clue, co ee bumout. Only. 9x 17iex1 
ir volume control.- aes 1 - Va a 82 95 Powerful HP —     
       
                 
        
         
              
       
      
  
          
  thing for this area. It gives the — 
: wal business, ar cuccese   
          
                  
    
                 
  
  
    
  
           
    
                   
      
  
    
      
                    
     
  
                    
         
    
        
       
         
    
  
                
    
  
  
  
                        
    
      
           
        
  
    
  
           
        
     
7 segetiie dg ETE. A 
gbid ESSERE cre ft is aly z 
ane pape ag my ong 28 =i 4 “Ele 
Kinin a ul Hiatal Ee 1 
any WE SAGER res th abet Teor Whip ste gl (i ie 
gi hi 7*] ¢: ig ees ES HP ty fee ee peat i 
eo omer Tt Cr beady! ores beat HE: ia; fap seuariiiid art =ghega astt ¢ é. <E 
‘cag 22% &= ut 23% an }! , #4 a i oe | a . g§ atk« (up hts 3 | BE ge°3 vayel g. ss 3 
sf3 Hy it i rn nd cea Bt ’ lh HE | ut ay ths adits 
Sox ssf sia 83 aye He 3 afi! iE Zea ar ii 231 Pale “ye Pr : : 
: 3 a Pe it! His iia We 0 HH PE r Fi esa pd HE dis 
dad ai ade iii aii H Tisai He EAE mala a 
35. gp i yt ie tgs in lat aa TH itt bt Hf i} = say in Ma 4 
papa ge) wade if 122% His td quillgd if 1 ae tlt Brean 2 if 
ye th la 20 ig if! iit, gs eluglns ct i fa i uni lig] Be eat 4 
? He tes S5 L = = n as ates 3* ise le : viet Eee2 =. n ba aay eae ines a j EBA 1a 
nial | pl dis 8 een FE tn, Ui Ht (Hie Hitt iti iy | = Hit tot & 4 i 
| < 3 3 | Nay F pit , g 22 Sage by End = rep 3, 25 Shei bs : 
So as : #] woh = £28 ur 1 Hitt Wits 33 = 33 as i} a ee es Th 
- oOo - ly he | 
| a= bs ae i Bab iF l ee ap i it eh : iS tie Te iil H : HT 2 
ae = ag a2 337 —— £ F57tl S 33hs TET5%; Fie naes PE: ARE | 
a= } Hn if ee € I ie ys a i mye lige : 
a z 5a | 4 02 & _ [ A Ay aH F F 4 " ar ze 3 oe E : 
3i6 “ Oo: et ts sail: Eta! a ee 
a ; i: af si4ily E aco ? vt i 
S leis He tay tal! he 
Any He: li fu andl jeu | 
Q> 3il3 cae eet | Ste 
S ilipynith ih pal Welk fee 
= HET | Hit ie = 
5 iat a: 3 
BPR | ut  cieleee | 
, ae a A 2 B ial i iit wats , at a 
oped gs 3 et a2 Fe bigessesaiie? 
dn gute a ia i ie 
23 : Seas bes = pe : a Py . } 
Ta . 
rea a F ie i ae ea, i ¥: ale BS 
1 anf is. a HAE | ee Hg ae 
fab igu He, pul feey AU Carte 3 
= So ee at a on ae 
————— bs He ve , Hs Ea Hd * i i igs “E e i 
ee Pally td ATE ee 1 
ae : pe ah TSH Ha itty ee H a 
£= a TET Ore 
Od a Slee 3 pin i : 
5 3 324 7 ail Bed 
1 net Lee Baye y 
rir iin Hel ae ZB abs 
a a (Rae tt sit: 
‘ilhid-f 7 Sis} ehpdaaa | 
Tea aa RT ful 
3 li 
  
      
       
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    Sia a Page! 
commen ae ee the 14th was/no 
New "York slender. Cali-| Potten” ood ee said. “I think 1 know how| en Seyler: c Nias Oe ig the hole this time.” . : 
_ Te ‘ Behind | “The 14th is Augusta’s 400-yard Igive 
Poladet — ‘3s 1 | par four “Chinese Fir” hole. It lhorgain 
wee i ae } | hase tricky undulating green | collegians i oe ee ee 2% which becomes a putting might- | this spring, 
St. PoE it a 63% mare when the appreach ie left) 
Milwaukee ile te". | fest below s fronting hump. | oS contract 
Stouts vs: Chengs (ay st Tampa | “I feet 1 have ‘paced “myselt| ana whether ea thataes perfectly year,” Venturi ; Chie ete | T tn ‘om the verge 0f going| Sate Se te nSieets diuits"™| good — not quite but almost ready.| Sr tte Se That's ‘the way I want it.” quade,.; wit 
Bi agnehllagy meg Vestet bee hel Soe SS) keane 
Detroit 11, 68 over 90-yard, per 72) pavior. ro and game, <0 course. Monday he toured the front %, , pay nine in 31, five under par with an clubs, 34 G ‘ ‘ 1 b : " * Fay B gl Mae esa \ is eae 
‘ : . ¢ s p * at ee 
ee ¥ : i af i Be | at i hi > : sects : . ‘ e nap ‘ 
A i of — 3 ‘ a < X - They ; oe ‘8 ‘ as 
Wee - oes i wee ‘ : “| | ee ; 
siti i = = ENS 
ive : : ake | i z ( ; ape > Bore: 
pi actions ate : oe 
: oe. © Se in cha . — ; 
" : ad Ke os 
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Coal & Supply Co. 
140 N. Coss Ave. ° 
FE 5-8163   
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     38, TUESDAY, MARCH. 31, 1959 
      
ex-teammate on the Duke Univer- 
    
  
  2 Finals of signing Chamberiain except to 
syracuse at Bonen. Series tied 3-9 - 
woCkEY PLATOrFs AT A atance | Pontiac's state A. A. U. welter. say “we hope to get him.” — 
weight boxing champion Dick) The T-foot, 2inch Chamberiain 
me — SreRbULS Compton left by bus this morning|gave up his last year of college 
TYATIONAL = for Toledo where he will compete! eligibility to join the Globetrotters 
Bestel? semifinals 4, |this week in the National A: A. U.|and he figures to be a prize box 
Mee rorente’ Boston leads 2 tournament this week. office. attraction throughout the 
oTpeaget tenis x ® * league if he joins the Warriors. 
| Feel Bayne st Indianapolis The aggressive Boys’ Club boxer ** 
. and trainer Johnny Ferro were giv-| The Detroit Pistons and the St. 
. FLOREDA STATE COLLEGE en a rousing.sendoff by the spon-|Louis Hawks are among others 
Porida 6, 5 soring Pontiac Junior Chamber of|who may exércise territorial 
dg Ey — --y banana rights. St. Louis has covetous eyes 
- The blond 147.pounder could |° Bob Ferry of St. Louis Univers- 
earn a berth in the Pan-Ameri- |ity and Detroit on. John Green of 
LOAFERS ‘HE can Games at Chicago next An- |Michigan State and M. C. Burton 
Seem. gust by winning at Toledo. The |°f Michigan. Green was named 
(ee top performers at Chicage will only last night as the Big Ten’s 
Osmun’s 7°," be eligible for the 1969 Olymples [most valuable player, =. 
s nh, cre at Renseo. After the roll cail for territorial 
Le - - Compton, who was regional run- choices is completed, the “grab 
Golden Glove competition) beg” starts and there the Cin- 
this year, gained the berth in the) cimati Royals will have first 
Is by taking Michigan hon-| chelce since they had the poorest 
TCLs won two bouts in impressive| It appeared likely they'd pick 
guae 24 and then was/ either Bailey Howell of Missis- 
ace crown the following] sippi State or Bob Boozer of 
Cee his opponent in the| Kansas State, 
|} agus = wee: Most: clubs had those players | go high on their lists. 
| After Cincinnati, the clubs will v7 Miami Paced Nation |. Gxctes®. co at it Na! , ‘Syracuse, 
: Se 
Lew Hoad ls Upset satstca Victim of Anderson JACKSONVILLE, Fla. @® — Mal 
-|Anderson, victim of a slashing 
volley attack in thé first set, closed 
the gap and upset Lew Hoad in 
a professional tennis exhibition 
ning service ‘to, 
Cooper, 63, 64,'and inch up on 
Hoad is leading Jack Kramer's 
crowns last year.as &n amateur, 
has a 7-14 record while Anderson 
only 5 and lost 26.0n the 
  
  a 
ee 
is 
League 
. first Ranger to sign. i eon | 
Rangers Sign Worsley . 
NEW YORK W—The New York Rangers. of. the National Hockey 
announced Monday night 
that they have signed goalie Gump -|Lane to Fight Busso Alabama Pointer 
Leading Tfials 
ST. LOUIS’ (AP)—Storm Trooper 
charged into the front ranks: yes- 
terday as the Missouri State Field 
Trial Assn. meet opened. 5 
x* *« * Sau 
Veteran dog men said the male 
year. He made two good finds in 
the wind and rain. 
The dog is owned by B. McCall 
of Birmingham, Ala., and was 
handled by John Gates of Lees- 
burg, Ga. . : 
  
Seeking 2nd Title Shot 
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. @—Kenny 
Lane,. the top er for Joe 
Brown's lighi it. boxing crown, 
Busso, in Holly- 
ym April 17 inan 
Muskegan Hagan Duo Refains Top - 
Slot in Elks Tournament. 
pointer is the animal to beat this/“* 
gee SMOP RPO <> 
  
said Monday. it: looks. as though 
nition of Ray Robinson as middle- 
weight champion unless he signs 
for a title defense by April 25. 
Ratings Committee Chairman 
Fred Saddy said a poll of the 
NBA’s executive members “‘ap- 
pears to be overwhelmingly against} 
Robinson." Results of the poll have 
not been announced as yet. 
      
    
          
            
         
      Peeps é 
TH = eee 5m 
if v3 B & 
F4 i 
i 
TREES 
        
                   the NBA. will withdraw its récog-| Joe 
        
    
               
     
        won it back from Carmen Basilio. 
The NBA requires champions. to|~_ Wimingion — .:....... Ae 
defend their titles at- least once|" Phoenix, Aris. |. .°... ‘76-73-80-74—302 
a year. ; y—Ineligible for money, : Z 
ar 
i f ie 
; i i     
  [Fond & Merc-0-Matte|| : 
Sy SO 
‘52 to ‘54 .. .$80 
"55 & ‘56 . $100 
Other 57s and 58s available   
  
        
    
    
  
  Compare . . . See Me Before. 
you bay. We take your Old Clubs in trade, 
        
    
  
  
       
           
   
      
H Ba 
ih    i              
       
   
            
    
    
        
        
         
    
        
  - {have been recent. victims of Brown 
The champion decisioned Lane 
  Worsley for next season. He is the 
  
    
> BRAKES 
eee THESE 15, FAMOUS 4. = ‘ 
      
   
  SERVICES: 
          
    
   
         
   
      
ey 
& . 
   f cials 
      
    
      
              
   
   
           | Pantan In R 
i) : 
       CASH 
z clivstscss.. GACH MAHOGANY PLYWOOD ... ay 
eeeteee”™” a * + nd Cc 
SATSEN | 
      
          
      
  
    
  
  
  
      
  
  
os Te ttAP)—Viruses, & suspect’ in the); —— 
_ you... oF you will receive a West | c 
Box 32-£, Mount Vernon, WY. [OMe OT Oe ee bi oe Te Tae eee a FP po Porm) hone, Secale Truth broaden wil be jdeos for | ate tr Pore. Se 
originality weeny" | There is 4 great spurt of white Competition closes March 31, 1959. ar egg al ogee’ Rah 
cepaetections 9p Jn. tit etry, ells are trying to outgrow bed Free Europe. “*-dvirus, Dr. Beard said. The viruses 
<~have discovered the secret of un- | 
tt 4 
i: I   
  al     
     
      
         
   THE PONTIAC PRESS: enzyme, knocks off an atom from| eX. een this ATP bundie of energy, ex- 
  
[Between Takes of Film - 
[Ustinov Becomes Father   
  _} EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, | Mo.     
   
      ot : 
  : 
Eis 
  
   
  
    
        
    
       
   
              
     
     
       
  i ee 
“It’s not.a big ranch,” G 
said. .“‘A. neighbor has. 50,000 * r ds ee tig 
How much of the work does hej 
  the Grangéfs apart at 
snuggled securely in his 
‘1U.S. Ice Show. 
Ratés Cheers 
by Russians     
  
     : have bees | 
“three paimntes ot sctual fim |( 4 os : = . fT : " é Q 
es * ‘ ¥ ie ¥ + 
      
ES — es is eae many 
land Poa 
BRS eogls t oe i o® 
is * 
3 
     
  ‘stants DEBBIE REYNOLDS @ TONY RANDALL 
FRI, in “THE MATING GAME” WITH PAUL DOUGLAS eo   
a   ot gt 
if 
7 i       % 
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if i BaF 
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i aT ef i it was 
to have is zs 
Fy : 
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  his.wife rushing backstage to con-| 
gratulate the. east. 
A stream of Soviet cultura 
cials and stage personalities show- 
red congratulations on the stars 
  
    7 
*s, Open 10:45 
25c to          
   
    ‘ -- 
    
‘ ‘ € 
HE TEN COMMAND   
    
  
   
        
   HOST OF THE CHINA SEA” Also “THE LAST MILE” 
WEDNESDAY, 
THURS. - FRI.   
  
    
        
  
    
  
‘OUR SPECIAL for Wednesday! 
| Baked Meat Loaf Foreign with ell the trimmings cl 
30: 
_WAIDELION’S 
“ARN. Perry 
_ Greyhound Bus Station   
  
   BLUE SKY | 
  
SIERRA BARON] + of 
ae QQRIVE-IN ee aon THEA E gr 
—_ Da tk, Lipps pl aT Fy) Py 
SHOW STARTS 7:15 P. M. 
“WemavE    
    
    
       
   IN-A-CAR HEATERS / 70 KEEP YOU WARM 
  
™% 
TARTS TOMORROW ==> CLUSIVE! FIRST SHOWING! — 
         
        thelr weapons~ 
BROKE LOOSE A   cd 
trey :   
  
  
    4 (4 \ ES “47 se ‘TP 
a» 
    GAM POWERS - BRODIE 
     = [ a il a 2a i > ah a ; = FTE oe eee eat Tae a yee oe Nese tp ie ee ae Pn Fe ee Se ee ge ae eee i eee : : 
* 5 . poet A) = Fi oa fe ‘i ae ; aes x = Gh ‘ 5 = pa 
; : 2 : : %: = * ‘ = ii : of . i i 
E 4 wl ce : i ge       
   
    ES _THE-PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1999 ne 
We. flexasBonger, Have §2-Years Old, - 
£ = r a. perme oe 
Avoided Crash: (Plugs Escapee eae "7 «) 1 AMARILLO; Tex. (AP)=A.pris-|matibhaly Shar the ents at teebiene “| Santa «Rosa Captain |omer sprinted madly for freedom| "Siete and by the West Blooms 
Testifies He Broke Rule|Dt % %yearold former Texas  samheate od agit Ranger dropped him calmly with| VRANK HALLETT, Turning Left. a single slug from his six-shooter|* . rig ci 
a ° Monday. STATE OF MICHIGAN, IN THE 
Bafa i iar the Msn woe a ee oe ee ee i eT & 4 : race r Santa tes-|, “[ called twice for him to stop], I the matter of the petition consern- 
tified Monday that “in all prob-\bat te just kept running, so yltag, Werae, Batlia, loor a ability” he could have avoided a/fired,”” said Dep: Sheriff John| 20,john,Memlin. te via thie Gouri collision with the tanker Viachem|Graves, “I hit him about two ailoging that the presgnt whereshouta   
® 2 Re jes Ae E heat sectey i? s 
mer      ce & 
Was 
     
      
     
    
    
  
  by turning fight, instead of left. |inches from where I wanted th.|tnows aaa’ ssta child has cltnted a, The international rules of the| Just. wanted to wing him.’ ~— S ed ae tat eee ‘Sat 
road, a navigational code, require x * * of this Court. pee 
that ships on a collision course} Hamilton McCampbell Jr/- 32, of Michigan, you are ponple ot ee Meee turn to the right (starboard), so| was hospitalized with a slug in the|t# Beering on said petition wil be held that they will pass port to port/right shoulder. He was hit from Court House Annex, 1 West Bivd., ° 
deft to le. 50 paces Ie ts Sh Se eee ae aa x & &. McCampbell had been sentenced| nine. o'clock tn the forenoon.” and 
The tanker did turn right, ac-|to 10 years for auto theft. —atekis. 
cording to testimony at the hear-/"4n ORDINANCE ABLIBHING| cerview Dereot’ this sumiuons ane uatice ing. Service Charges in Parningten” Inter-/shall-be served by publication of a copy 
: ceptor Sewer System. one 
The ships collided in fog about) The Township of West Bloomfield Or-|The Pon’ zoe, 5 sewenmper preted 
   
       
  
    
  
        perciansianes were practically S-Gake | areas said: ae : County. =? 22 miles off Atlantic City, N.J.,|%!*: Wi h is a Thur: y ioe a _— gg Moore. Ju yg ge Corte fo the ‘CHR ~ 
Uneaeptoy room Soe | ‘ last feld ‘which lie wiktin the ge te. | of Pontine in sald County, this 30th day | surveyed areas 4 b he dos. ween Be . : sew | id sige 
~—_ high levels for t : but the market ignored it. Turnips..topped, BU. ...-seseesseeeee 3. i 2 Known as the ‘armington iniereptor ae "acai ait : ar aage ances “ 
the year. Employers vs : : or , . ' . I Oo desert agreement ELSIE J. Vv a ; ‘a » & q . t ; day of ‘November, 1957, as amended be- 
showing mere optimism a e ers . nen\ abdard. tween the. County of Cakinnd. Teese Juvenile : 
sexi few oomathe fin. they Soest hetd Sieua while otver tnadiie March snd Township of tet Binombi public sa LEGAL NOTICE = DETAOEE. 5 i — Now what? That's ° right ati age : : . ‘a * drain within said service sree lotice 1 given that 
at the same time. last a #e - says — now. what? that when it became ap ar-liatil the Ounet er eamere thorec? OhERIrensiarty . meeting of the sched ent the two ships would pass close/have first emtained 0 permit son sa Weterford Township Board of April 6, 
    
  fo. 
‘ live * ? 
tionless despite continuance of steel : Se light 705 bens 
: ; capensis, 25 together he relied on speed t0-rownship T oe toe tion charge) j Tose at 7:30 seo due to the ~ 
    
    
     
        
        
      
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
   
     
           
  
         
   
    
  production. at record levels. average —_— 
months in a number a on : i rseetihe Holl l : . javoid — cs ie sity kd a wor ca ch pare of property occu pene = ‘ being held 
ing steel, electrical machinery Fhroyy. omg — we > |, BEPRON, March 30 (AP) — Megs, y AsuUTAaNce ' ot ordering a left tur three min-|sum of 4380.00. cay : Waterlord ‘Townchip, chert 
fabricated metals. |motive ap were to as Saree. Sew . . utes before the crash, be was oa by 5 wthtalle aasaeden ve og ok Bs yo : soem B. ‘6. The demand for steel in group v or Maales: Grade 4 ume a; extra targe|N nc in Me 'f asked: a commercial building, a sum to be fixed | steady. i wtd. a + targe 36-37, wid. : : by the Township Board, which sum We . 
booming steel industry avg. 36; jum 633-33, wid. avg. * io of going left at &PPIOX-|he. comparable to the charge im sub- 
buoyed to some extent The lower tilt was established = Fig} wid. ore Wye imately 2:57 a.m., had ‘you gone! division (a) above after taking into con- TELEPHONE 
possible ‘ons | for the list by losses among |37 "large 24, medium 32. Checks 2%e | Te Merger of an Oakland Coun-jright would you have avoided a| tiie, Cul oe tunheeet fou tees i a oe > selected rails, chemicals, utili- A foe 2, oven Jare| (7 murence agency with « Flnt| collision?” : = cal ANSWERING ‘ airlines, aircraft and mail medium = agency was ani 3 s *« * * 2. Owners of property lying within: g 
cat 1 see profasion Widows ue are Paso ingen 3, Browne: Grade A funbe "3-|RE, Addis, president of the Addis| “In all probability,” he replied. tay sith sever er atin whale See SERVICE strike develops. Union Pacific was down about alt 2-20: Grade B iarge 2 — . don wales eee of the Val- iy Subdivision (a) hereot, and. on future ~ "Yom Lew | s Fractional : . He said: he}construction in said district said charge rou | [iG mmenet 
The Labor Department report old ones, Waldron | Shown eee -~ Livestock The Addis agency, with offices) had been resting in his cabin when|pieeuon ior © tuflane Gore : ! 
said job conditions in eens fas asters Ale ‘|at 511 Maple St., Holly, will merge|he heard the liner’s whistle. He J The sum 00 ‘paid to the Fownshtp It Rings— | 
and sireraft centers are on Shak Ausolove woblios, Teuelns lavesrocn. with the Fred Sherff Agency. The|Said he rushed to the bridge, ar-|, separate beh ‘acreont ana’ shail te We Answer Itt gloomy side indicating “a Co ade cattis Gable 8 “bul ( ) —inew corperation will be known as ss — before the collision Sent suey for ‘the payment of He tone 4 : | 
tinued uncertainty about Aircraft, Martin Co. Sears , satra|the R. E, Addis Agency, Inc., and t too late to do ing. He : | 
short range employment outlook —. gin: shoving hetters mont ot aoe the main office will remain in Hol-|said “I actually ae the|® sewage disposst Wpsters "nerve all of FE 4.2541 . = oe eee Rmagg D ges iy potter eg Mpeaa|ly with R. E, Addis as president|Santa Rosa prior tp the impact.”|provided ins ‘certais’ comtenct’ dated : | sessified as hav! points feeders in run} and manager. . Nov, 1, 1957 as bet the! 
cont ep tere of GoneRte conared & ieastion ener’ Souter [the oer Git ; Adie « B k § ships and said. Municipalities Provided Pen unemployed included Detroit realy Sa mse eae, | Wiliam P. Addis, an, Oakland roker Says DuPont |is" ‘rans eat me omer tot ncaa eis ! Muskegon, 1180 t.. ow » 18 resign ; of said moneys for the construction of} : 
. N Es ses eget a ie pro snd manager ot oe SOI WOuld Hurt GM ese it Saco DEALER | Food Chain Faces Business ofes se: etlty TREE, ai, Wile oes, cated ot GB Oak MY os sca I ae a a JACK COLE, Inc. | | ; to low is atility cago stock- visors that Township’ will be —s ; Antitrust Charge angie ny Resesge tig F ; eanners and cutters ; P ; Mote, SAYS, he thinks | General|tntrar ‘notettat ations under seid 1000 W. Maple B4. of Pontian Traft | 
Biredaghens, “hes announced - niger; most 8 Me, 8 snd 3 mixed tot News n ief sharply if U.S. District Cont all 2 ' WASHINGTON @® — The Federal see tatetat ot the. comapay’s| $2, te, 1438; sixed Wo iv ghd_3 100-30 proves a government plan to divest | : Trade Commission yesterday filed Woe, 17-25-1740; several loads mostly Xo! Harold R. Helms, of 860 Oriando|the E. I. Du Pont de Nemours of 
An antierest complaint ee ee presi esate, setae _ St, reported the theft of $70 from|ie 23 per cont GM stock holdings. : 
jational Tea Co. of Chicago, Tiffany formerly z g - A 00 on top @ piano in his living} ¢- "ussell Forgan, senior part- 
nation’s fifth largest food chain. dent and general manager of is%e: standard smd pood 90-0400; cul TOM yesterday, Pontiac -Police (er in the firm of Glore Forgan National Tea wag accused Production Co., makers| ead said, and Co., testified yesterday that 
olating the Clayton Act of special automation active 1.ae eke eee Gane ee: {“simple high school economics 
ing 13 éprporations In his new position he will be|to weak chesie’ wooled Louis Chapman, manager|would tell you such an increase 
stores during the past seven responsible for the development of prime worted fea 23.00; load waatty | of the Sagamore Motel, 789 S.\in supply without an accompanying 
A National Tea special machinery for the mechan- | Hesied, lambs 18.00; ‘tility te. good iambe oodward . Ave., reported to city|increase in demand would result in 
Chicago said the firm ical handling of: sheet metal in)wo. 1 ana “3 pelts 1900-2200; cull to|POlice that someone stole about|a decrease in price.” 
no comment until officials press rooms. chetee F ewes 5.00-10.50. $60 from a vending machine in ! 
to study the complaint. + the motel office Monday. tenn sald the appearance sf ) - . 7 . ‘ owned shares | : : 
National Tea, according Cc rpenters Ret Sentencing Date A camera valued at $55 was| &f GM on the market would not, | oa 
complaint, operates 883 - He pe reported stolen from a car owned| 1 his opinion, attract buyers 2 
16 states and showed = 260 per| . |’ | in 4 Michigan Cities Set for Quintet by Robert Harris of 13 Maysard until the price dropped to about Key to lots of living cent sales growth between * s while it was parked af his a share. stock now is 5 and 1967, It sald-1967 sales | AUNT w — carpenters were'in Narcotics Case |home, Pontiac police reported ee nat oe o'aeg S| 2 ee ’ 
(01 uafiiion Collage, lowing settlement of a dispute Sentencing. of five men. who| Damage set at $200 was caused is teehee “Wis . BUY A HOME i : > ‘The company is which slowed down building jobs|have pleaded guilty to a reduced|>y vandals who broke windows|,- SP hehsmegse Bey ob ve aa 3 three Canadian corporations in Flint, Saginaw, Bay City and of possession of narcotics|@d knocked holes’ in the walls|scnedy. chairman of the Contin- ° 1 wh | 
law Groceterias Co. Lid., Midland. after they first stood mute on a|and ceilings of a home under con-ina! Minols National Bank and | Cos. fitd. and George W Work was to resume on about 50/more serious charge of selling|Struction at 726 Livingston St., + Chicagd, testified his ; If its antitrust in the four cities, said Arthur Tues-| Police said. {bani has cut purchases of Du Pont held, the commission could - “chairman of the dope bins been set for next 43 stock since the U.S. Supreme Court fel : Hetiens fon to ot 106 aegis en monoid . 5 xc |_A tine and wheel valued at $25|ordered Du Pont to dispose ‘of its It's your own! The home.of your dreams! 
and stores it has bought Valley Builders Assn. sate a ee psp coe he bo stolen from a car owned by|GM stock. You have. privacy, a place to entertain aa L. Lee, while it was parked 
.your friends properly, and a secure 
financial. investment! Let us help you 
purchase and finance a héme of your the prosecution's charge of selling|terday, according “to police. To Join Albion Staff: 
Amateur Mércury Gazers 9 |n =P. terete soot et nal mn 90, a 
    a | _ | Michigan. of the First Free Methodist Church| director of the Michigan Colleges| own — with one of our low-cost budget- ; id . Oakland County Circuit Jadge 301 Mt. Clemens St., Monday Foundation, will join the Albion planned home loans. — ' : 
~~ Vital to Weather Bureau) mts Site | nemmace sc rms ponies eine salt a] 4 4 — . = | Sastelalp de 2, 08 tuned tons Sunset, Lake Orion. —adv,| velopment, 
By DORMAN CORDELL _Highlands, N.C., who has been tak-/ “Years ago they--didn’t - pay Bondale St.; Booker Gay, 25, of LOUISVILLE, Ky. \# — Every|ing the readings since’ 1891. nedrly as much attention to the) sess Branch St; Lorensa’ Far. |, j the e time; The Weather Bureau figures that|/ weather and. those voluntary sta-| rar 96 8. | - Charles E. Barret walks out t0/the observers spend an average of| tions as they do‘now,” Barret says.| and James Dooley, 30, of his. backyard at nearby Anchor-/15 minutes a day taking and re-|‘‘Since the airplane has come into Chapman St. : 
age. 3 cording the observations and mak-|use, you know, that‘makes a big) 4) tive pleaded guilty March 13 ne ney seein _— SSceme . % de Gh, pcan Somat of pean. 
’ ot ee _| Despite their unpaid status, the} ; . a anes for 28 a Se ee a eerie am: volar cba show great de-| eartay ct, “ue dope ring, William 
—— votion to their work. Barret says| Township, is awai the eight-hour days of work each | 1. can't explain exactly why he igi sy tt acon Ashi 
tha’ "Capitol Savings & Logn hein 
; Established 189’) or 
75 W. Huron St, Pontiac FE 4-0561 | 
CUSTOMERS PARKING IN BACK OF OFFICE       
       
    
    
  
“FIREPROOF       
      Across the nation, more than year—all without pay. faithfully takes the ii 
r = a es “— sim! ‘The observers recognize that/night: ‘Just got interested in it,” MEILINK * 
hey make wp the | importance has increased|he says, adding that be ites ‘ol Marriage Annulled . Weather Bureau's unpaid Co- (Ve the years. keep records of things. - 
operative Observer Corpe. eens as Judge Sees Fraud The, Weather Burean calls the y : ,_ (a5 Gg al a the group 4 oe 5 miata. = . valusdiie tenant tar tie Vind at a anc make oe climate and climate changes. Judge Neal E. Fitzgerald said yes-| 
x * * terday as he annulled the marriage i 
of a 58-year-old dance student and| * his 25-year-old teacher. 
“The woman was out on the 
prow] and Jured this man into mar- 
riage,” Fitzgerald added. a 
See ee | Oye enn ment Ronald I. Hill of Wind- : 2 2 
i OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO. Rasen . me . 2am O: K. Anderson, chief meteor- 
ologist at the-U.S. Weather Bu- 8 & 
5 
= 
F z 
sor, Ont., testified his 1957 mar- 
  than 50 years luntary observ: mn 
ers. He’s jaate’ the trip to the — > apg Seabee : ATIONERS + BUSINES Bride, also o , Never was me : ae a 
i Hill said he met his wife at a 
Windsor dance studio where he 
bought two- life memberships for     
       
          
  —— - 3 more than $8,000 each at her urg- 
oS ccd aoe aa ing. He said he also gave her sofne| . 
firm im 1961, but kept the ob- $19,000 to establish a dance studio 
om. “ in Florida. He said that as far as server's a a he knows the studio never was es- 
~~ didn't officially. become | tablished. 2 
the observer at Anchorage until oS ‘ a eee 
en ae ae Firecracker-Carrying much as you-wish? Most Mutual Bunds have = My father started it for, the hin I Po accumulation plans to help meet your needs. Weather Buféau in 1900,” he says, Ship Up at Kobe opt ce ae rem at ee “but I guess he didn’t much like KOBE, Japan (AP) — A 60-ton NUMBERS GAME—Doing it by the,numbers, a lab technician |= ¥ pean ates hem ER     to do the work, so he always sent | 
me out‘to take the readings. I 
= boat with 40 cases of firecrackers) focuses a new machine on the head of a patient at the Physicis- in its hold for Okinawa blew up Engineering Institute in Moscow. The woman wears a cap marked 
C. J. NEPHLER ‘CO.                 
              — fae in Kobe harbor today. : off, with ‘eanaterS ‘to locate various. portions ‘ef the brain. The + See i. See 6g Miss ‘ae ee a - One ‘was killed, the ¢ap- ne is used. to te possible tumors in the brain. Responding : 7 - 
8 wt) - WEATHER WATCHER — For 56 years, Charles E. Barr tain of the ablp was missing and| to the ability of radioactive preparations to concentrate in affected 818 Community National Bank _ The dean of the Cooperative Ob- Anchorage, Ky., has been a volunteer weather observer for the. |three others seriously in-| areas of tissue, the machine nofes the spit-of heightened radio- | _ 
server a Barry C. Hawkins, U, S. Weather Bureau — one of 7,000 scattered across the country. {jured. : active concentration, showing the tumor-location. sg Hit 
‘. , = ag, ge { : 2 Re dense 
Ue eee een ere ee er Sack ae i eae a 5 :      
    
  
  
    
         
  tT 
+4 Bey 
‘a 
sonal 
- i Dur i EB By 
i - 
Cy 
“Bud” Nicholie, Realtor 
eal Dolan FE S20 EM 3-4290 
  
$900 DOWN : 
ee ry ot hx tote ee 
sore  peraemny Bctare Now. 
J. R. Hiltz Realtor PE 5-618 
    
OL ES:BARTRAM ; OR 31060 
For Sale Acteaxe 47   
pear Two % lots together. for 
both. $50 7 rm. _iitriows, % aanee, ee 
SS ee c. PANGU Realtor - vs = 
g xz 
{2 Sa 
ii ie SP z < D 
> ba ti 
4 fan | tH 29 acres of choice rolling land 
for your estate site. Some ae 
Bibud' Priced at sit0t0. 
ne OS Open till 6:00 
  
igre it naa on 
Fes eee Ba Se v & acre parcel, Wissen head tn ares! of   —_   
    
  
80 ft. wide water lot =~ 
clusive area, build 3 bedrm. all face 
home, 8 for only $14,- 
700 and $s discuss the trade in 
of your ie. 
9-0458 
C. SCHUETT,. Realtor 460 W. Huron across from Pontiac 
co General, 
  
oo ara RESTRICTED RESI- 
“Lakefront lots, % mile ry sito ren, Sl Vig he 000. Terms. Can build 
smaller’ — here. 
  
  ih i 
We siso have 3 e 1 acre 
ge. Beautiful sites, 
gst suburban. Priced e 
ly. Terms. 
  
  i. P: ise SINC. 2331 8. r Rd. 
Private Lake Estate   
aa Ante ie — mestes tang ‘ 
Open Evenings & Sunday 1-4 Warren Stout, Realtor 
PE 5-8168. : =e fds 
MS at Bs 
Rianne 
  
  
- 
and rent. Shows 
Drive: nr. 
fare," : appear. ance. s pol nerd 
Aerie oe ment 7 Jease OF terms on 
MICHIGAN BUSINESS 
#/ SALES CORPORATION BROKER 
 porth. i = 
sale teak BX Kop 
room to expand on » Be 
teas tot restaurant er house = act today! |. 
REALTOR PARTRIDGE 
  
  
ses ance $3,502.28 
  monthly. 6 
      
FIN. ==] BUCKNER NCE COMPANY 
‘BORROW UP TO $500 OFFT 
  
RETIREES FARM ice 50 ere waren. af ngurnee a3 
  very ‘eerie about 
— Series? tots | ney eos very’ ood “ 
i> us inn ny aoe ‘Stout, Realtor 
Open till 6: Lake | Lots and Lake Priv. 
ls “wor | Sele Business Pepperty 
              
       
  
      ~ iT CHOICE. LOCATIONS 
& oy 
    
1M, Perry st. LOANS $25 TO $500 © ge- 
HOME & AUTO 
LOAN .CO. (Corner %. Pike)   
f 
1185 
    OAKLAND 
‘an 5: TO $500? 
ea SABOARD 
Phone: FE . GET S25 ag ) $500 — 
Signature 
[ PEN2-0200 
     
   
          
   
  3661 N. N, PERRY St). 
Finance Co. P bed. Large chest, $98.50. Pay only ‘$3, weekiy . 
Furniture. Orebard          
  
  
  
  Jigen 268) LAPEER egUPrL ‘on 
aa elkesten t pay ie my iadidbin Wide eons 30 Fag dp STORE, BUY AND SAVE 
Money to Loan 53{ Sale Household Goods 57 “Ee Tag beatae Bien fees ics Be Ca = {fitate Licensed Lenders) ae TRADE ELEC RANGE FOR O56 No. 9 Oak fooring $0 M 
‘TEAGUE FINANCE CO.|—* ee ali i enema ‘tet vacates tas Lasher 
—. 202 N. MAIN — FOR THE HOME CAN BE| teed. Ober TV, Union Lake Store. | 220 8 PE 29784 
ROCHESTER, MICH. | [SQRP at dite ete at « 1t| coe ae Tne ae dee RE | Meenas ORSEE ai PET GAN ‘autos. sicer ofall kings. ew OBkD | S'Crtctaete ts Wi'uron P| COATS Gung CANCER Visit our trade dept. for real : * : i E 
Pe. Rochester, OF 67, OF 14181 “= owrgs To PAT it “Geed Trade-In Dept. | mo. ee Lo mnie 
._ WHEN YOU NEED | | Tit oti round. 3 acres of tree p+ a gg wo oc mee 03 eo suitable tor commer 
eae ae jf og C PRL ie) 10.8 - Bre ee ie $20.05 sale. MY oe Se we 7 7 -| Davenport and chair ........ $34.50 ij ~ : 4 miles &. of Pontiac mile | ney CASH WAY : 
Sor vee: el cig tie ns Gen Tanke weg tis|__ LUMBER PRICES 42 4-1574 | eee te ore +90 ding va. sone. mel STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 
30K THOMAS ECONOMY | Burmeister's 
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
round, both 
  
  
iT’ TV PHILCO, RANGE STOVE, 
1% H.P. motor, 9x12 wool pe 
pad, vacuum sheener, FE ¢ 
8 PIECE MAPLE BEDROOM 
suite, OR 30644, 
4 BURNER APT. SIZE. GA 3 
stove. Used, $15. 132 W. Chicago. 
GRAY BEDRM. SILVER 
Double dresser, bookcase 
2 vanity lam   
  
PIECE outfit.   
mattress. $39.95. 
Furniture. 42 Orchard Lake Ave. 
          
          
  
  
  
  
  
  
¢ Piece WAHOGANY DINING room rm. Call po ty € p.m. EM 
3-0048. 
7 “Tivina ROOM ITE. 
Brand new davenvort = chair, 
  CES IN: Pisins — Utica! 2 modern step tables, matching 
Walled Lk., Birmingham, Plymouth a ue it dec tok fas. + 
Borrow with Confidence Pesreon's Huraivure, . @. Orchard 
$25 to $ Ze a Ties. Household Pole eee $16.50; 1 ded sorted. ation of tiac Axminster, ug 
. pads, rnitute; 42 3% 8. be w St. . PE 4-063 - ia’ Ly rod 
e PE eit between Ye & 8 p.m.   
inte ft. ‘Wall Vall Tile eben House Paint. G BS 
RUBBER or = Wo ne Fe Gat 
oar. 
ood condition. L een 8 $50. U 
it’ ADMIRAL TV, RADIO-PHONO- oom id. 2c 
And Away Thev Go... wnscmatne ASHER || i 7 oe 
Selene model. soateea % Only 
WASHER MOTORS, % and 1/6 HP 60 to choose from 
’ -TV—Rebailt, Guaranteed. New —_ tube vered. * 
PING sHOP 
8 wW. a FE 41655 
AR’ 
saan like new, bared Bx Fairgtove 
| A-1 SPECIALS   
  bination, cond. 
i er cleaner with attach- | M. 
ments $10 ‘A Rey er 
with records $10. 3   
  
LINOLEUM & PAINT BALE. —— 
price. At Jack's, 281 Baldwin, 
MAPLE DINING” RM. §& 
chairs, ently refinished," 
rete aid ec lee ) Ol os 
PE 54-7261 
MATTRESSES SPRINGS, MIS- 
matched ome Mattresses &   
6 es. 
®springs ate of different colored fabrics a. 
ect. Fam aibsal ave’ 
  Yas up. TV rR | 
WALTON iv $15 B. Walton 
FE. 3-2257 
PPORTAREE | SIMPLEX iRONER, 3-3473 
  at 
tee ne nabare dye. 
ERATO paemete ER ha 440, 
$ 1 Biocts erag vee APTACH. r x wth; Bo. 
Ba or. Soros, 
          
     
SIO 
- FERS TR, 
jar Se 
eee) 
  
TRADE-IN DEPT. 
Pabie tor Melee. range >... 
ee ee eeeeee 
ee a 
er 
es. We 
for ap- “4 yi sppuane 
oY Y MAN'S 18_W. terms. FE 41122 
* THESE 2 MUST GO Ow cosT 
eo Pick 
ow port, Pa TV, a 
$100.95 an 
rt" wn om {aE TV 
“have | Was 
$238. $100.95 
  . New knotty pine paneling, iée ft. 
$60.05 
  
  : Fluorescent, 
383 Orchard Lk. Ave. — 45. ‘ 
Television & Radios 57B 
RCA USED TV   
  
57C | w.   ___ Water Softeners 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
heater $67.50 cash & carry. G.A. 
Thompson, 7 MS5@ west. Open 
eves, - 
$2 GAL, ELEc, “HEATER.   — Peer’ Appliances, #8161 
merce Rd. 
$69.96 Ye" Me e per ft. eal, auto. gas heater, ss peek 4 + 
— sinks and fittings $57.95 u cers Paneling oye Sic Nyer ft. war va*’b.% & sucess $23. Bie 
12 South Saginaw Bt, st BENSON LUMBER CO. arated tae Bi Sem art 5 
  ‘BARGAIN TIME 
* QVER STOCKED-MUST SELL 
300,000 F't: EXCELLENT CRED | PuSER 2x4 — 2x6 ~ 3x8 — - 3x12 
Priced for wie shis 
i eo iée each 
PIPE-—BRICK~STEEL 
ild- 
ie mara cpuerrat ts 
PHA Terms Free Estimates 
OPEN 8 to 5:30 MON, thru SAT. 
SURPLUS- LUMBER & MATERIAL SALES co. 
5340 Rd. (M58) OR 3-T002   
| TALBOTT. LUMBER Storm doors wood | : a y Bye put fn ree Oakland Ave       
    
  
  Do tt Yourself 61 
Ay! DO If THE EASY Wat   
  
BATHROOM FIXTURES YOUNGS-' 
town kitchen oil and gas Sprnoees 
  
  
NORTHERN LUMBER 
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
Pa EFINISHED, PAN ano 
  
215-Ib. Asphalt Shiagies 
Hagorery. 2 ae comp. N 
pte ALLED ee st. — M59, We: al 
e repair 
Church’ 3 Inc. | SHEETROCK ultrel_ Rd. UL _2-4000 4x8, 410, 4x12 is AMP, = . * 
sc erly So aan moeed CHURCH'S, INC. be seen a) 2336 E. Walton Blvd, as ~Or_call_ PE ,_after 8 after 8 p.m. | "diamonds Pir ton OF 
~ ANCHOR ‘FENCES STALL SHC 4 i ew 4 He money down, _F FHA ee ands: A valet eee. complete 
me faucets, 
— BETTER R BUYS — =| $1405; ollets, 940.50 value af e i Si le 
$20.80 per Me Gach and carry |, Michigan. ‘Piuarescent 1x2 stripping W-Pine .... 9c lin, ¢, | .ch@rd Lake ave. <— 
ixia ne thin Worine ‘te b 2 im. F wT men hain saw a athin -Pine ‘ an, er 1xt2_ sheivi © w-Pine = Mn, ft] er & tent. Be 3-6366, 
pA a w- eM ae e =. - 
; Beso 3 ft: 
cuapedea «unde arn r 
RB an i Cc and 46,0531 
Puseere 4 Maieany Pirwood af 
“SS | eet id $4.90 Del. 
a Wood. 4x8" - Woe te 
tonolite Howse hi!" Cash and-Carry a . $1.35 Bag . $29.95. Thompson, 
  
  and” up. 
stee] foldaway closet drs. ‘ 
  RANGE haw ¢ WITH FAN, nag Shin   
  
  ng Mus Center . 
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
     
      Processed dri fre citrated travel, Po 
. Also, 
$15 b-yd 
  
  
  FE        
     
       
        
              
   
   
    
           
    
                  
    
        
      
    
     
      
          
       
        
   
       
       
      
   
    
    
  
      
     
  
  
          
  
  
        
  
      
   
     
        
   
   
   
  e-| s FULLY AUTOMATIC | Siectrlc garate coor operators 
$129 SALE PRICE of cal for reg =, umaies | Sale Office Equipment 63 
Cooley soley Soft W. Water Co. ay DOOR SALES | sanguat saeTue 3118. Pada py . x for gas. WT Ee -TENERS AT BiG Dis. NT EPA. St. ee ee $50. count, OR 3-2360. $-8431 or OR 3-8176. - - 
=i aap CBT WATER ApETENERS 21 AT BiG Dis- | HoT WaTER WEaTeERS, 36 Gai-| Sale Store Equipment 64 - 5 uu. _ gas. rie me es CASH REGIS 
eacrk PULL SIZE RANGE. Marea. 8 & new heater for s TER 
Secd wenGition Gn. On Sa For Sale Miscellaneous 60 | iittie more a unit. Also| National, almost new, aid a. electric, ‘of! and heat- sondidon. Wil sae Tifie FOR SALE: SMALL HOOVER fe at terrific values. . talc washe: , ideal for R CRIB, COMPLETE AND| $55 et Orchard Eee 
summer cottage ery good con- ars dresses. OR 34-3135. oR ave. — 6. . 
ig” PLYWOOD. 16x40 INCHES 
5011 _Waldon Ra. “Sea pA ts. Maa - 
* > quivennned Ie _per Ln. j “ " g . 
“ft.” — im" standard . OA. JELLED MAGIC Thom 1005 M59, West. This paint néeds no stirring, will -AAA-1 ALUMINUM “SIDING | not drip, sag or run. Rubber or So spring rush,| oll. base. reds of colors to 
: awnings. ‘No “Oak LaND ‘FUEL & PAIN money down, Ist nen fm, May. 436 Orchard Lk. Ave. 
a BT. er Rds, UL ba 8 A. < a lik, if'ne Ans Ret, OL Leen $00 00 vaiue, $46.30 while they last AN: iy HEAT-| Also terrific values on 54° and 
ing man needs work. Bigger .bar-| 68" models. No orders, STOCK gain than ever on via of + ee ase, Michigan 
installed at once: FHA FHA terms, bo TORTS yaaa .. tac z CAVA a ATORIES, LAV. money down. OR 3-5002. 0. — tories)» all tay colors, rettie 
1s ow, s ight. y fant |F SOR STANDARD DIePRTSUTOR | ele Crum G26, shay. merved.| Wcennres SEOUL sn 
TBS a ed oe aE IGIDAIRE ELECTRIC DRYER, eer. Barre wpa ' ~ AVE. : 
Munro eee ‘Ho Comp "1060 W. ® cchuan sleorewe mae von waren < ; i. een = ao J ee ee: in, Black & Decker drill. % in.| material, pinctie es Ge | BAIT & TACKLE — hguiay Pee : ee BRS - NORGE - FREEZERS past. Pe chit ty MF Im) Ber og. ft, Cabinet hardware at [ Glass inher | © ME IN AND S. 
models, slighty scratched ot | UE OTL TANKS GOOD CON. | Tow asi "wert. POmPNOD. | “SET ee . ie N 1 i S : cotocnacred 1000 "ie aot Will_deliver. PE 8-9120.|" NEW GALVANIZED PIPE av 66 Bor 
al or RATE Phincy AGS, ROMEE, | Sik Sa e .noe oor, ena ona, rate lg ears - OLS, jer TO m r ranan. i ts “4 
90 days ame oo cash at it low, low piven G.A. Thomp- SAVE PLUMBING SUPPLY A , 5 testers, eee’ at WAYNE GABERT __3on, 1005 M59 west 172 8 . Saginaw FE_5-2100 | — : 4 bargain + 121_N. Saginaw 7: an Thar SOIL PIPE § FT. $370 | PULL-DOWN LIGHT rURES, ears trae 
GOOD DAVENPORT, CHA Sump Pumps $32.95 | $695. Ceiling or sidewall. 0.A. 3-0638. ‘Pee KING BROS, dio couch, chair, a vars. iy Be PLUMBING suprLy ‘hompson, 7005 M59 West. Open ot k $10,430, Port. mach. 1 8 PE_5-2100| _¢ves. "SOIL. CRO ‘ONE, | Pontiac Rd. at aia e _FE $- say BLGIN- OUTBOARD. ROD | PATIO -6TONES, SAVE ONE: éifis or rh 2: — £18 son i. RADIOS, $6 TO| and reel, also automatic ree third; sizes 24x24 16x16, 
$10. FE $65 for all. % h.p. motor, d & 16x32 Smooth finish, -7 eaters. | BR AY. 
KE ists TANK VACUUM| ‘Shaft reverse switch. Also one-| Roger A. Authier, Co. 10670 Wolverine Lember ke | _‘hird and % h.p. motor. OR 3-5902. | nd Rd . ‘€ miles west of 
i fhonthly "payments, $122.| l0xi8 BLDG. TO BE MOVE a mM 34038, | 38 PE sam | Ean nee | Mer Orchard Lat ke Mile| POWER GPRAYER, “SMALL Of CRUOGED STONE GARD, GRAv Piast Cin & CRE AND MATTRESS, Lawn Equiptient Co, MI 4005s, ! ;. brand new, $15.95. Pearson's pur 1 FOO? TeBTASLS POOL TABLE = : 
miture, 42 Orchid Lake A Linch console television. PLYWOOD , ED OAK TABLE aise sia ‘brown ae gree ff ovate, A age ORR bee $4.08 and corner sane. Cheap, FE iy on foe ater ER BON ness ic ccs ccceees $13.95 24467. priced. after p.m: api 3.60 
10-YR. 5§2-GAL. ELEC. WATER| %" V-groovea Mahogany. 
  
        Between W. Maple & Pontiac Trall 
PHONE MArket ¢ 
           
OH!) | 1959 ete, “pis SOMETEIN 
  
      
      
       
   
     
    
  
  
    
After All! MONEY TALKS! 
ogee Dixie “O “ Lot} 
rein gy Ba Motor ‘Sales. AUBURN A 
"ATTENTION! “WHY SETTLE FOR LESS” 
“TOP $$$ DOLLAR 
GLENN'S MOTOR SALES . WEST HURON 
  sae 
  
    
  
ere.. "61 
22-2666. 
OR 
5-2000. 
__ For 80A   
a mee ‘ea STATE BALES 5 cast     
  ‘Gen at Pike Pm Be 
yg 
  
  
NEW & UsED ers 
  
  
     BCOOT-| § 2 
E. Pike, a dokoes Bal 
we “For Sale Bicycles 84/\WrD. o 
  inti inte *00 
ESE. BILL SPE ICE 
JUST CAR. dont vetween 5 & 7 p.m. 
See MEM Motor Sales 
age   
“WE NEED CLEAN. CARS 
“We Will Pa 
=| TOP DOLLAR |" — CASS-OAKLAND 
__. Auto Service 81) 312 w. ; pao ~   
  
  
      
  q   
  ON 
N, Maine Rochester, OL 1.9761 g 
Rs s° P 
| # 
rf 
; E 
: i ia 8, 
é i Ee 
fe ze 
F 
: é 
  Trl eee rir 
ae eenee 
      
           
    
condition. PE 5006 
"Eddie Sitole sine cence 
amanae, 2-2620 
~ NORTH . CHEVROLET co. 
‘Has The   
Ate _nTeAHOXAL 
LYEAR 
fects | WARRANTY GIVEN FREE. 
100% Coverage ; No Exclusions 
aoe    
     
  
NEW CAR DEMOS pet ait Ber, ee : fae 
Impala Convert. VA PG... 
BANK RATES 
| Open 4:20 ami to 9 'p.m. 
North Chev. 
  ‘ ! Pesce FA aE 
  WITH EVERY CAR |. MOTOR SALES - 
“Chae at we ug   
bis Eee EAE Ee i oie 
1957 FORD Fairlane 500 aig BE   
 lautomat.c bps a power 
Larry Jerome 
ecole iii   
AW ST. Fe san 
bali ow take trade. Ne" desk: ‘ers. PE 52766. | 
80 FINE.CARS . 
_AT THE 
“" a “sft 
Bright Spot Look’em Over Senay 
*Buy Monday 
    
“Bright Spot” Orchard Lake at Cass 
| FE 8-0488 Open 'til 10   
-HASKINS 
Pre-Owned 
Specials _ 
eee 
atic, radio, heat- 
Stove. average condition 8 
1983 Buick 
1988 Chevrolet 210 ¢-door sedan, V8 
eee. _Powerglide, radio, shan 
1957. Chevrolet 210 4-door sedan, V8 
engine, ig ae heater. Beautiful 
oral and ivory $i Pee eee eee ee eee ee ee ore 
Many more to choose from. 
Haskins Chev. 6571 Dixie Highway at Fag 
Open 
  
  
  MAple 5-5071 Bites tl 8 
; odeling Specials ju ; “See ere a rd, pet motor yiticee $55 
"$3 Pontiac. Hydra .......... $195 hs Pontiac ‘Good motor, tires can 
56 Cony. | Aly vee. "36 Chevy A Bf 
Pe Sy a 3 inte. med Hi ed trans- eis & 
Ee a id. pon MR - rrange 
‘32 AUBURN , 
53 PLYMOUTH  ... 0.6.6 .600de0 195 
Lng, MEET TOL OTT Eee a 
dave cartsayg theses. ae 
68 Po cg new, 
serait v-8. 
INOMY CARS, 22 AUBURN   
MON TH 
END 
No Reasonable 
Deal Refused 
IF DELIVERED BY ~ 
12 N OON 
Maithews- ! 
Hargreaves us 
<The CHEVY Lot 
631 OAKLAND AVE. 
  FE 44547 © "S DESOTO SEDAN V8 “AUTO. sy 
JEROME |: 
we HARBOR | 23520 
,". SESSION - | $335 tan 
$ 505. Beil: Auto, PE 5 
i” FORD SEDAN. FACTORY j| Mk Olds, 98 solider coin, va 
aat “Bale Ste hati 
| PE 5-9204 
Spectacular]   
  
         
      
  
eed 
. No cash needed. $19 Std. V-8.. Mr. 
  eed Bea eee oe "Eddie ala |~ 1957 OLDSMOBILE FORD steering, 88, 2-door, jroken: Quarp vat For Sale Cars 91 
5 0 wow pow pers | 
pak, ease id Bete Eddie Steele 
     
       
TAYLOR’ 5 Chevrolet-Oldsmobile 
W.ALLED LAKE . 
MArket 41561 -   R a HEATE : 
        5 a Country Wen.. V8, with overdrive 
RUSS JOHNSON - “MOTOR SALES MY 2-2371 Sor 
1955 FOR cosToN 3. “fee ee 
cu 2 DOOR, 8, 
“seaia, ba radio ‘end heater. 
‘Eddie Steele FORD ARBOR Saeee H Se 22500 
  
STOP! LOOK! SAVE! 
Prerer a eeeee ee 
radio, heater 
white Fg remap 000 eres 
o— miles on this c 
1958. BUICK 0s vvissaevy cess des 
Hac md 4-door yen 
Lcnosd 
hy Age radio, 
er, te wall tires. A wey 
beautiful and sharp car. 
CHEVROLET .....-..-. 198) 
-_ a, Hhartop, Powerglide, X-8, 
heater, white wail ‘tires. 
1058 ¢ woick $1495 Super cor Puente Looted 
steering, nafiow, radio. 
- heater, white wall tires,.Red and White. 
ee HB Mt YMOUTH 31208 
r sedan with Powerflite, 
gio,” es “eater, white po Sly: tare: 
ee stings. 
ir 5 or Air 4door Ea 
oat bebeedy Sn windows, 
Tree eee eek 
eee eee steed 
“Pe ee 
— 
ees 
a: pene By 
tires, ood 
SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK . 06 
nice 
  - 
  near Me Wee 
  die host heater, whl wail cea 
     
N d Wendie JAGUAR | || MARK VII SUN-ROOF | 
ahs =| Birmham 
Rambler | 666 S.. WOODWARD > 
WILSON & 
"60- GMC ......00+ $2795 
188 BUICK ......«.$2395 
‘$8 BUICK Xvi $2045 
SBIBUTCK -”.... $2245 
88 FORD ...-.....$1895 
P BBICK cote $2095 
57 aa iad $1795 
37 FOR D .. . .$1395 
7 an eae . $1695 
white 56. BU a vo va $1495 ROADMASTER. 
56 ETE +» $888.88 BAO TEs 
56 BUICK so os SLES 
| '56 RD ae $1495 186 CHE 956 C. 
fap old ‘red trim. full Yastory eq including all it power. k 
$2495 
CADIL 
rune ibe KAS Iris with 
sg “including OM air? air conditio 
- $1695 
ng 0st OLpeMontts beige wih 
ful tu-tone 
; kept Bit 
mit ee &. top condition. 9 
"Wind Pontise-Cacillec . 
- 1390 SuRRELEERUEESELGE | 
TTT : ik 
“ours Nieeees $ 275 
LB sescves$ 240 
SLE bees 95 
|| SEE HANK OR GLENN Pontiac's Bargein Barons +   
      
           
       
4h 
% 
. Wagon, 4dr. PG $1 
rere x ‘new. 
Wen. power hardtop 
ees 8 > 
foerrer rere) 
     $1195      1997 DODGE 
Ear oa $1795 ae 
11955 PONTIAC 
WE CONSIDER this Hardtop to 
j be ne af ee Jot ate 195% DeSOTOS     
GAVE — 
1957 CHEVROLET 
RPM Les 
$1095 
-1958 cHEvROLET ates FORD * HARDTOP. Where win you find sie re FR grass cre 
one en ‘this black 
$1995 $605. 
S 1956 FORD 1957. CHEVROLET 
VICTORIA. Tetons arty with bervthe. ms el "ated 
1957 PLYMOUTH 1957 CHEVROLET 
BARDTOP. Red snd white with push button features. 
$1495 ” $1595. 
. WAGON SPECIALS: 1957 BUICK 1958 PLYMOUTH 
«DR. HARDTOP Wagon. A DELUXE for a co 
pew, 
$1895 © $1795 
Ren FORD 1955 PONTIAC ¢ 
asso See 
$1095 $1595 — 
50 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM 
2-YEAR WARRANTY 
~*SCHUTZ, © DeSOTO - PLYMOUTH DEALER. 
912 S. WOODWARD 
BIRMINGHAM t 
* 
~ 
” MI 6-302 pian : 
ae 
aes eae Baers     
         
      
    
  
  1960 Dodge 2 dr. .........-... 
1280 
doors and no 
and me sat silae Star ote 
  
"S57 “RAMBLER” STATION WAGOR: 
4doors-@s & Os . 
- Special. Deals 
THIS WEEK ONLY! 
—TOP TRADE ALOWANCE— 
BILL SPENCE “RAMBLER” 
2M 8. GAGINA 
    
Wicker: Sales 
HEVROLET $1340 
95 BU sick veveees $1095 
55 BU 5 BUICK . . $1095 
55 PONTIAC . oes SINO 
8b CHS S CHSVROLET $1195 
5 BUICK soevtes LIBS 
S65 BUICK < 20.00 $1245 ‘BUPER 2 DR, 
'S4 FORD .......+-$ 595 
bo PONTIAC .....$ 695 
PONTIAC ,.. voce 383 
hick seeveuc.$ 32014 eeeane 
‘31 DODGE toase $121,959) i 
“OLIVER ‘ “Motor Sales . . 
210 Orchard Lake Ave. | 
      vie |FE 2-9101 Open Eves.   5g THUNDERBIRD .. 
57 0) OLDSMOBILE 
BY PONTIA as 
“THE BEST THINGS _ IN LIFE ARE FREE” 
oors THE OLD MAXIM, BUT TODAY 
It Just Ain't. True! rr oe ec 
‘Finest Used Cars 7 EEO vee 
Priced. Low . car "ore Sua YOu THAT : 
"$3495 
‘98 og heey ss SU 
57 FORD e "51895 
'57 PON TAC: } 
‘57 FOREE oe. $2095 SOUT, QUIET * Ping ng iy ee kee 
oe 
oes © @ @ 
ter, Hydramatic 
‘57 PONTIAC ....... | Srv ne my TALINA courm— $1895 Radio, ® Heater, 
4 DOOR HARDTOP — Radio, Heater, Sod Pecer meeting 
'S7 PONTIAC... oss. 
56 OLDSMOBILE 
‘56 PONTIAC adalens i "$1505 "RRR surat Some ete, tts 
56 BUCA og 8105 
‘96 FORD . nm Wagon -s 
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