Three Policemen 
Win Promotions 
by Court Order Judge Adams Rules Two! fs 
City Officials Evaded 
Senn Service Law. 
"A court writ ordering the 
promotion of three Pontiac 
police officers, who had 
— denied the higher 
ranks by two top city offi- 
clals, today was granted by 
Oakland County Circuit 
Judge Clark J. Adams. 
  - Judge Adams said the 
two, City Manager Walter) 
K. Willman and Police, 
Chief Herbert W. Straley,|, 
had attempted “to avoid” 
the Civil Service Act in not) 
ree. si 
“It was at-best @ piecemeal ef- 
pgp ll pee] penal 
Goines, Cooley and two o other ol 
ficers filed suit against the city in, 
dune saying they should have been 
promoted to vacancies on the force, 
since they place on the.top of civil World Series 
ithe World Series will leave the 
* |totaY turnout for this year’s Series 
  service eligibility lists drawn ‘up 
after written and ora! tests. 
City officials contended that posi- | 
tions they originally asked to be 
filled, were no longer needed. 
* * * 
Bale gets a promotion under the 
‘writ of mandamus even though he 
was not a party to the suit. He 
(Continued on Page 18, Col. 2) 
Cloudy and Cooler 
Outlook for Friday 
Mostly cloudy and cooler with 
scattered showers or thundershow- 
ers is the prediction for the Pon- 
tiag area tonight. The low will 
be-near 52. 
~The U.S, Weather Bureau's fore- 
cast for tomorrow is mostly cloudy, 
windy and cooler with some light 
showers likely. Winds will be north- 
westerly at 20 to 30 miles an 
hour, Tomorrow’s high will be 
about 62, the low tomorrow night   |a seven-game series is 394,712 — 
\capacity Yankee Stadium in New 
  40. 
| The ouflook for ‘Saturday is! 
mostly fair and quite cool with) 
freezing temperatures likely in| 
‘northern sections and ~some frost! 
in southern Lower Michgan. | 
Sixty-one was the lowést record- The Yankees’ 10th-inning rally 
ed temperature in. downtown Pon- 
tiac preceding 8 a.m. The reading) | 
was 70 at 2 p.m. 
    liman, archbishop of New 
York, landed at Praia de Vitoria 
ae G ae : 
and prepared to depart for 
Rome, 
Praia de Vitoria is a 
Force will take.the cardinal to 
Rome, but no official announce- 
ment has been made. ; 
VATICAN CITY — & — Bene-   
detto Aloisi Cardinal Masella was 
elected by his fellow cardinals 
today as papal chamberlain, to 
_ administer affairs of the Roman 
Catholic Church ‘until a new pon- 
tiff is chosen. 
Burdette, Larsen 
in Final Game Tumect 
Just Short of Record 
Set Last Year 
    
From Our Wire Services 
MILWAUKEE — A fourth 
straight crowd of 46,367 at county 
stadium for today’s final game of 
games just short of last year's 
record, 
The ‘same turnout as at the 
three previous games in Milwaukee 
would make total attendancé for 
the series 393,909. The record for 
iset last season when four of the 
games were played in the 70,000 
York, 
Tetal receipts for this Series 
figures to core to about $5,- 
400,000 against the all-time ree- 
ord of $5,475,978.94 of last. year, 
which incladed $3,000,000 in radie 
and television receipts. , 
This is the day of decision for 
the New York Yankees and the 
Milwaukee Braves as they clash 
in the seventh and final game of 
the World Series, 
ay the Braves planned to 
start with right-hander Lew Bur- 
dette, who beat the Yankees three 
times in the 1957 series. His final 
victory came in the seventh and 
deciding game. 
‘He beat the New Yorkers in 
the second game this year, but 
they finally drove him off the 
mound in winning the fifth game. 
New York Manager Casey Sten- 
gel was not positively set on his 
starter, but it appeared it would’ 
be right- hander Don Larsen, who 
‘hurled seven scoreless innings and 
was credited with the third victory 
last Sunday. 
was opened Wednesday by second 
baseman Gil McDougald, who hit 
ohh       
  
  '   
Pope Pius XII       
Catholic 
Leading Up 
in St. Peter’s Basilica — 
Pope Pius XII lay in 
palace. 
* 
the flannel pajamas he 
    
Eisenhower Expresses Sorrow   
| Bells Toll in Europe, Asia, America 
By The Associated Press 
The bells tolled for Pope Pius 
XII today throughout Western Eu- 
rope and the Roman Catholic 
countries of Asia and the Amer- 
icas, 
Yellow and white papal flags 
flew at half staff from Catholic 
institutions. 
fany thousands in connor, 
reverent mood flocked to ca- 
thedrals for masses repeated 
  a home run. at half-hour intervals.   “His was a full life of devotion 
to God and service to his. fellow 
men. id 
These words by President Ei- 
‘senhower summed up tributes to 
the late Pope Piux XII by Ameri- 
can leaders in government, reli- 
gion and other fields. 
In London, revérent demon- 
strations at Westminster Ca- 
thedral were of a marked cos- 
mopolitan character. Catholic refugees from Hun- 
gary, Poland, Czechoslovakia and 
the Soviet Union converged on 
the cathedral in masses. 
* * * 
Queen Elizabeth II, from Bal- 
| moral Castle in Scotland, direct- 
ed the British minister to the 
Holy See to convey ‘‘an expres- 
sion of the déep sorrow’ of her- 
self and her husband, the Duke 
      of Edinburgh. 
  
Schools Get Pontiacs to Train Drivers   2 
Parade of Cars Opens Salute to Industry Pontiac’ S gala “Galute to Indus-|of 26 new Pontiacs through down-| 
town streets. 
The motorcade, led by Pontiac try’’ was launched yesterday 
ernoon by a sparkling procession 
    KEYS FOR STUDENT CARS — Semon E. Knudsen (left), 
general manager of Pontiac Motor Division, presents keys for 26 
new Pontiacs to,Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent of ‘schools, and, be used in the’schools’ driver training program. Central High School's ‘colorful 
bandsmen, marked the first time 
that the 1959 models—longer, low- er, and wider—went on public dis. 
play. 
The new cars will go on dis. 
  
  
Pontiaé Press Photo 
_ Mrs. William Mihalek, Board of Education member. The cars will 
  play teday throughout the rest 
of the nation. 
Highlighting the festivities yes- 
terday was the presentation of the 
keys to 26 new Pontiacs to the 
Pontiac school system for use in 
the driver training program. 
* * * 
Making the presentation in front 
of the Oakland County Courthouse 
was Semon E. Knudsen, GM vice 
president and general manager of 
Pontiac Motor Division. 
Accepting for the school system 
were Dana P. Whitmer, superin- 
tendent of schools and Mrs. Wil- 
liam Mihalek, a member o the 
Board of’ Education. 
* * * 
Next event in the celebration 
will’ be a special three-hour sale 
from 6 to 9 p.m. tomérrow by 
member stores of the Downtown 
Mefchants Assn. of the Chamber 
of Commerce, featuring special 
prices on fall merchandise. 
Oh, That Corn Bread! 
ATLANTA (UPI) — Gov. Mar- 
vin Griffin has signed a procla- 
mation making this official Corn 
Bread Week in Georgia, to com- 
memorate “the ancient and hon- 
orable industry of corn milling 
and the making of corn bread.”’ 
‘   Man Kills Wife, 
Takes Own Life Daughter Hears Shots 
Through Barred Door; 
of Lake Cottage 
A White Lake Township man who 
finished a 30-day jail term 10 days 
ago, apparently killed his wife in 
a jealous rage last night and then 
took his life. _ 
The body of Mrs. Clara M. Ki- 
ser, 37, was found crumpled on the 
kitchen floor of her rented five- 
room cottage, 9470 Thames Blvd. 
on the west side of Pontiac Lake, 
while that of her husband of five 
months, Thomas, 30, lay sprawled 
ten feet away in the living room. | 
A .$2 caliber hunting rifle lay 
near Kiser’s body. Mrs. Kiser 
was shot once in the neck, Kiser 
once in the left chest, 
Climaxing a long quarrel, the 
shootings occurred shortly after) 
9:30 p.m., while Mrs. Kiser’s two 
children by a previous marriage 
were out asking neighbors for help. 
* * *     
One of the children, Judy Frye, 
14, told police that her stepfather 
was angry over attentions he 
thought were paid his wife by an-| 
other man while he was in Oakland! 
County Jail, serving time for pos- 
session of an unregistered pistol. 
Judy ran for help to a neigh- 
bor’s, Cas J. Cerwin, 9474 Thames, 
who called police, while a son, Carl 
Frye, 17, ran three blocks to the 
homme of a White Lake Township 
patrolman, Louis Marsh, 2132 King- 
ston Rd. 
Judy told Sheriff's detectives, 
who aidéd in the investigation, 
that the front door was locked 
when she returned home and all 
the lights but one were out. 
Not tall éneugh to. see through 
the window, the girl stood by the 
door and heard three shots ring 
out. The first shot was apparently 
a misfire, police said. 
Marsh and Andrew Plano, town- 
    folded in prayer over a b 
the foot of the bed. 
Although the fisherman’ 
the pope’s hand, it was not 
marked with his pontifical Leader Begin Elaborate Rites 
to Burial ~~ 
in St. Peter’s Basilica 
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (#—Pope Pius XII 
died this morning at 3:52 (Rome time but at - 52 
Wednesday evening Pontiac time.) 
The Pope will return in death Friday to his na- 
tive Rome, to lie in state-at the Vatican and be buried 
His death, though anticipated fee {aa sent a 
wave of shock around the world and brought wide- 
spread expressions of tribute from political and church 
leaders outside the Iron Curtain. 
He was 82 and had served 19 years as the 
supreme leader of the Roman Catholic Church. 
his simple metal bed today 
-in—his bare chalk —white-bedroom at his summér -==—~S 
x * 
In death, he appeared as in life except for the 
absence of his eye-glasses. 
DRESSED IN RED AND WHITE | 
The body had been embalmed and changed from 
wore on instructions of his 
physicians in the last days of his illness. 
Now he was dressed in the white pontifical 
robes and short red cape familiar to millions. 
On his head the usual white biretta was replaced 
by the camaure, a medieval pontifical headgear - in   
Related Stories on Pope 
Pages 2, 18, 19, 23, 46, 47, 49, 50   
which traditionally popes are buried. His hands were 
ig crucifix and a rosary. 
GUARDS STAND WATCH 
Four Noble Guards stood watch with . drawn swords at 
s ring had been removed from 
revealed whether the ring had 
been already destroyed as required by Vatican rules. 
But the door leading from the Pope’s bedroom to his 
private study was closed and sealed with big red wax seals 
arms. 
A very sm@ll number of high-ranking—Vatican digni- 
taries were admitted to view the Pope’s body. They knelt 
+ * 
Among the first callers 
mier Amintore Fanfani. 
the Pope, knelt and prayed. 
(Continued on in prayer on special stools arranged around the bed. Finally, 
for tie last time, they Kissed his hand. 
* * 
from outside the church hier- 
archy were Italian President Giovanni Gronchi and Pre- 
They were escorted to the body of 
The princes of the Roman Catholic Church quickly set 
in motion the elaborate ritual for the nine days of mourn- 
ing, the funeral and the election of a successor. 
Page 2, Col. 1)   
Pay Tribute 
death of Pope Pius XII. 
given to The Press: 
pastor: 
ithe Catholic world lost a g 
has lost a great humanitarian. Father Pacelli—Car- 
dinal Pacelli—Pope Pius XII will go down in history 
as one of our greatest popes. 
mortal names of the im-+ 
t/ pope, devoted and a great man and , mortal names that was no 
born to die.’” 
Dr. Richard H. Dixon Jr., 
‘tors’ Assn.: 
* * 
Rabbi Israel Goodman, pastor ofl 
the Congregation B'nai Israel]: 
“The passing of Pope Pius XII] 
is a great loss not only to the 
Catholics, but to the entiré world. |, 
He was ai great 
‘preached the Word of God, cou-f 
pled with the need of the day.” liberal _ 
Dr. William H.:Marbach, First 
Presbyterian Church pastor: “He 
represented such a great follow- 
ing the worla’over that his pass- 
ing is a.loss to all.” 
Rev. William C. Norvell, 
brook:             (Continued on Page 18, Col. 1) 
i ‘ & 
= who} 
asso- 
ciate pastor, Christ Church Cran- 
“He was a very great] Women’s Pages ., Church Leaders in Area 
to Pope 
Church leaders of all faiths in the Pontiac area 
today joined with the rest of the world to mourn the 
Following are the comments. 
Father Michael J. “O'Reilly, St. Michael's Church 
“In the passing of Pope Pius XII not only has 
reat leader, but all the world 
His is one of the ‘im- 
  
one that did a great deal for the 
cause of peace.” 
pas-| x * * 
tor of the Trinity Baptist Church) 
and president of the Pontiac Pas- 
“For his life dedi-) 
cated to peace and equality for! 
all men, regardless of race, creed 
or color, the death of Pope Pius 
XII is a loss to the whole civilized) w 
world.” « Father Francis T. Stack, pastor 
iof St. Hugo of the Hills: “A great 
man has gone to his rest. Pius 
the XII had borne for over the 
19 years the. burden of an incom- 
parable spiritual responsibility. He 
was literally worn out by his un- 
remitting devotion to the demand- 
ing tasks of his en office.” 
seen 4 
Pe 
Commies... . .sccesiens 
County News ..... seaeleesse 8 
Editorials ......-...... AGoore 6 
Food Section ........... . 33-39 
Obituaries |... ...........,. 58 
Special ..........05.. cee. 1 
Spette ....cuess sSihemicerinc 53-87 
Theaters °..... noes Li 
TV & Radic ‘Programs +. 
Wilson, Earl ceseeeeene «2. & 
          World Mourns Loss 
                                         
  | 
     
  ~ Was the leader of the world’s 500 
2 Die j in Fort Worth | | Msgr. an Sente 
“ the city. 
      
  
    
  2 & $ : ie me : oe = pa @ , oe ee : he 
TWO 3 {ru PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 ‘ wipes ete a ‘he Day in Birmingham: ee a ie der bang tating a long ie » |Camuse Morrow; 
= 1x pacldent ob since| a... : 
‘See Need for Key Plan BE nape eg oe a Woman's Soetety tor Christan ves two 
to Pace Area Growth “|e «ae 
  Frederic Calleri di Vignale, BEDSIDE — Msgr. 
Mario Nasalli Rocca di Cerneliano stand by body 
of Pope Pius XI in the Pontiff's chambers at Castel Gandolfo 
today after the ritual of dressing the body was completed. Pius 1s AT POPE'S 
left, and Msgr. 
will be moved to the Sistine.Cha 
orld Mourns Loss of Pope are able were preparing for th e Archbishop Glonenal Batlsta 
nine days ef ritualistic mourning, | Montini of Milan, who turned down 
the funeral and the grand conclave a cardinal’s red hat in 1953 to re- 
{that will eleet the next pontiff. /main close te the Pope as his pro- 
* *” * secretary of state. 
The cardinals, princes of the| The Pope’s death was announced 
pease will make the selection. | by Sea eater 
overed in death’s' Their choice most likely will be! a ves priest, who ha a 
agony. oo aa millions around one of their number, though ae the povebasi eng etc 
the world prayed, he died at 3:52/Could be a prelate not a cardinal. Wan = antechamber througnou 
am. (9:52 p.m.. EST, W ednesday) | Pius was the first pope to die at! — ay. ; 
in the papal summer residence in|this papal summer residence and_ dened,” he a ae 
this hill town 18 miles south of the first in 200 years to die out-; <n t 3: mae ac Aes Ai 
Rome. side Rome. Changes therefore are NOW, & a.m., the following 
y in ‘the traditional ritual. 42nnouncement: The Holy Father, ’ Pius XII, is dead. Pius XII, the 
But Pius already had provided | man most esteemed and venerated 
million Catholics in one of the | for that contingency in a regula- in the world, one of the greatest 
: P tion issued in 1945 which said that most burdensome times in the | a) s a) | AS pe died! outside ne |pontiffs of the century, passed 
2,000-year history of the church. | away in saintly manner at 3:52 7 | should be returned to Vatican today.” . . 
e J 
City in dignity andlecorum. 
*Pope of Peace” but when he was. . Sn 
elected March 2, 1939, is world! Later the, 
already was on the eve of World 
War 41, Ahead were the - years of @!Tangements for the motorcade been placed over the Pope's face| 
onslaught against religion by com-|Which will bring the Pope's body’ and officially recognized his death| 
munism. ‘along the Appian Way to Rome. |in the presence of other cardinals. A * * Thetime of the procession was; Then the fisherman's ring, sym- 
> 55 cardinals who | yet announced, but a reliable bol of papal power, was removed 
informant said it would be early from the dead hand. 
= riday afternoon. | At the other end of a tiny square 
‘from the 16th ‘century papal pal- (Continued From Page One) 
The weight of 82 years, two!) 
strokes since Monday and other 
illnesses ‘at last wore down the 
steut heart of Pius afte. 19 years 
and 7 mionths of an energetic and 
brilliant reign. 
profoundly — sad- 
            
Eugenio Pacelli, the 261st pope,’ | 
wanted to be known as the 
today cardinals in Cardinal] Tisserant ceremonious-! 
Already all the   clad in silk, velvet ‘and ermine. At = left is Noble Guard. Body 
to the Basilica of St. Peter's Cathedral. to both parents and 
cials, Johnson said, 
Mrs, Oscar 8, Wageer BIRMINGHAM — Agreement be- school “offi-|7 
tween the Birmingham Chamber 
~ tof Commerce and the City Plan-} 
jning Commission on the need for 
@ comprehensive master plan to 
growth was ansouaged. toe y by 
Charles Mortensen, ber pA 
ager, 
(we. * * 
A recent population survey .of Birmingham, will be held at 2 p.m. 
tomorrow at the-Manley 
  Service for Mrs. Osear S, (Kate) x 
keep pace with area — Wagner, 90, of 880 Ridgedale Ave.,     
   
    south Oakland County shows sharp 
increases in the Birmingham- 
Bloomfield Hills - and - Bloomfield 
‘Township areas since 1950, _ 
Birmingham has had a 62.9 
increase, Bloomfield Hills, 87.3, 
‘and Biéemfield Township, an as- 
tonishing 372.6. 
While there is little chance of 
—_in —Bir-|] 
“Totter much in tae way oe Bar: 
ban development, Mortensen said, 
The “Music Man Himself,’ Mer 
edith Willson, entertained Birming- 
jham~ Town Hall audience at the 
Birmingham Theater. this morn- 
ing with his program of “Mirth 
and Music.” 
Willson, composer of “The Mu- 
sic Man,” and his wife, Bini, 
played, sang and spoke about 
music,   
  
  ‘AP. Wirephote 
pel in. the Vatican; then carried 21 8 
Choose your favorite brand 
Gaia Philp. Bieri, Chae ee Regular 5 Sise 
Per Ca 
jter- 
Tris low ‘price plus 
  
  To tax. 
The Willsons replaced actress 
Peggy Wood, who canceled her||j@ Zing and Filter 
appearance here. Per Carton ... 
_—_ st goat’ 2th Seas reign, although Castel io is! Installation of fire h alone rae Vis” Po ae Be 
drainage facilities began this week 
‘at the Adams Fire Station, Fire 
Chief Park H. Smith said the work 
on the concrete slab for the train- 
ing area is expected to be started 
soon. supposed to be a place of rest. 
Almost daily during September he 
addressed large audiences. 
As October started, he was 
clearly fatigued. 
* * * 
Gastritis and hiccups, which had 
brought him close to death four 
years ago, returned last week, His 
doctors suggested he reduce his} 
work load. 
x * * 
He tried to compromise with the 
physicians, and refrained from 
addressing one audience.   
10¢ Fairway 
Lighter 
Fluid 
  St. Dunstan’s Guild will open 
its 28th season tomorrow night 
with the comedy hit, “The 
Matchmakers." Additional per- 
formances wil} be presented 
Saturday and Friday and Satur- 
day, Oct. 17 and 18. Roger Mar- 
quis and Mrs. Benjamin Brews- 
ter are playing the lead roles. 
    
Famous Names Fresh         
   
       
   
     
‘Rome area were to meet to make | ly kfted a white cloth that had', coma and partially paral i SUFFERS STROKE 
Early Monday he was stricken 
by a cerebral circulatory attack) 
— stroke, He rallied slightly Tues- 
day. Early Wednesday there was 
a second stroke which left him in 
In the afternoon he suffered a} 
grave cardiac pulmonary collapse. 
A kidney block troubled him. His 
temperature rose to 107.6 degrees. 
* * 
Roman Catholics around the 
world were asked to pray for the 
    prefect of ace, the bells of the local Church 
Vatican ceremonies, said the body of Saint of Villanova tolled mourn- | 
jwould lie in state in Castel Gan-| 
‘dolfo for three hours before ‘its; v F 
| removal. | VILLAGERS PRAY 
| The Italian government ofdered| 19 minutes the square filled with | ise days of national mourning. \vilagers, Until past midnight they’ 
Ital ian flags were flown at half-| had prayed and kept vigil. Many! 
lstaff and all theaters and amuse-| ‘had gone home, told by doctor and | 
|ment places were closed. ‘priest there was no hope for the 
On the. motorcade to Rome, the Pontiff. The tolling bells brought! 
body will be taken first to the them back. 
Basilica of St. John Lateran, the: x *& 
Pope’s own titular church in his) A heavy chain, placed between | 
,capacity as bishop of Rome. Then two concrete posts at the en-| 
‘it will be removed in a solemn trance of the palace, symbolically | 
|procession to the Sistine Chapel closed the residence, pending the, 
‘at the Vatican, where it will lie'election of a new pope. 
jin state for three days | The yellow and white Vatican 
; « * * iflag was unfurled at half-staff on 
The full mourning period is nine a smal] balcony of the palace. 
days and at the end—presumably| Slowly other Vatican flags ap- 
/next Friday Oct. 17—the body will peared, at half-staff from the win- 
|be entombed in the grottos of dows of other Castel Gandolfo 
St. Peter's, in a place of the residences. 
nosr®, eee A Pope’s own choosing. Pius XII] There was sadness on the faces 
it wan im one of the under. ieee asked to lie alongside Pins| (of the villagers as they gathered 
ae . X, whom he canonized as a saint in the square, usually a scene of passes that Mrs. Louise Allen, | 954. i} by t t d 43. and Mrs. Jessie Mae O'Neal, in 1954 joyous pilgrimage by tourists, an 
ae lawned arorcatiy as The cardinals at their meeting prepared to attend a funeral mass 
a Negro, drowned, app hing (today also will arrange for the in the village church. 
oe Oe escape. the rushing (interregnum, the period _ be- - + « 
« * * tween the death of a pope and the For an hour the bells toljed. election of a new one. During this mae 
Mrs. Allen had offered a ride period: the Beco of eee | Their sound echoed across the 
after Mrs, O'Neal, laden with @ \affairs of the church will fai) COUntryside, and down the ancient 
sack of groceries, appeared at largely on the shoulders of Eugene ‘Appian Way, There the early 
her front door during the wind- ‘Cardinal Lisserant, 74-year-old | ‘Christians buried their dead in: 
blown downpour and asked that dean of the College of Cardinals.’ inearby catacombs. The bells of, 
someone call a taxicab for her. Rome took up the toll, led by the! fully. ' 
as Rains Flood City 
FORT WORTH, Tex. \?—Two 
showers colliding over Fort 
Worth dumped torrents of water, 
drowned two women and sent 
floods surging into hundreds of 
homes Wednesday night. 
* * * 
Up to 6 inches of rain poured 
down within. an hour. .Flash 
floods swept across low areas 
in the south and east aha of 
* * 
Dozens of underpasses filled 
with water up to 16 feet deep. 
One street in the downtown dis- 
trict flowed four feet deep, easily 
floating a police rescue boat. 
The water ran off within a few ‘Pope in his last moments. 
* * *® - 
Cardinals and other high church 
jprelates, gathered in his room, 
watched his labored breathing. 
His relatives and personal aides 
‘were there. In all about 30 per- 
sons were present. 
A rosary was in the pontiff's 
left hand, a crucifix on his chest. 
,A mourning mass was said for the| 
jdying. 
x * 
His doctors watched him close- 
ily. Then, when his time had come, 
ithey notified Cardinal Tisserant, | 
who’ entered the plain white cham-. 
ber with its brass bedstead and 
performed the traditional service 
of recognition of death. 
DRESSED IN SILK 
The body was embalmed imme- 
diately and dressed in the pontifi- 
cal robes familiar to millions — a 
white silk cassock, an ermine- 
trimmed crimson velvet cape and) 
on his head a camauro, a medie- 
‘val pontifical headgear. 
k* *« * 
| Members of the Noble Guard, 
‘with drawn swords and golden! 
‘breastplates, took stations in the 
room, High-ranking Vatican digni- 
taries began a mournful pilgrim. 
‘age to the bier, to knee] in prayer 
‘and to kiss his hand for the last 
ae   
  .jevenings from 7 to 9 for private Bloomfield Hills School spare. 
tendent Eugene Johnson is continu- 
ing his open door policy for par- 
ents. 
He has scheduled Wednesday 
discussion with parents about their 
children’s progress in school, 
The plan has proved beneficial   
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       tetera re refaX ie 
“vee a eteiye eter 
* * * 
The vicious storm struck about 
nightfall and moved on toward 
the south and east, also loos- : : |soon as possible after 15 days fol. 
_ ing up to 4 inches of rain around lowing the death of a_ pontiff. | In the Pope's last hours, ex-! With 88 . 7 3 
Waco, 80 miles south in central — * * ‘pressions of hope for his recovery | Irving Merkovitz, 29, co-owner of Tiade-In $2.95 S 
Texas. | There are 55 ee cardinals, had_come from around the world Gresham Cleaners, last night was Value Py 
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The Weather | For the last 400 years an Ital- | These messages now turned to i Area Junior Chamber, of Com- The razor that shaves the hid- ieee eee oe = 
jian always has been elected. For) \pressions of sorrow from the high | merce. Merkovitz, who lives at 864 den beard . reer tusive roller : faa oa Br rd Agi A pecraeg | olf 
Fall US. Weather Bureau Report’ the first time in 600 years Italians) ‘and the low, | Menominee Rd., fills the vacancy eo eee In colorful metal container. . 
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly 5 cy T left by Leonard T. Buzz, who re- *Standardé Brands, Men's Elec- $5.95 FRUIT CAKE $¢>39 5 
cloudy, scattered showers or thunder-/ are a minority The Soviet news agency Tass,| ~ “toe 6 trie Razors Accepted as Trades §-Pound 
showers today and tonignt, Coeler vf; | Cardinals, but most church circles which had fot reported the Pope's S!8ne! for puainem cee es e 
and cooler ad Nok shewere| expect they will choose an Italian illness, reported his death in a) John H. Hinlinwer, manager of| "e 
miles i .) ‘ 4 I : 
aaj ue! trnlg nt becoming northwesterly, Zain. ‘br ief dispatch. Onn inger, ger of all 
today 74.) ®-38 miles temorrow. High 
Low Lew tonight 5%. High tomorrow 6? 
temerrew night 40 The secret conclave for cee ter bell at St. Peter's. 
jing a new pope is to be held 
AGAGIANIAN? 
Most prominently                   
mentioned of 
a Oe ee 
    FULL 2 POUND |boom of the Campanone, the mas- | Rollectric Regular $32.50 Seller Pontiac Jaycees Elect 
Merkovitz to Board 
Viiven. et 
* * bg 
  
                       
      
      th Pontiac Area Chamber of Com-| 
merce, spoke on the forthcoming) 
| Pontiac ; Area Uuited Fund drive. The death of Pius XII. who guid $8 N. Sag. 
ed the church through Nazi-fanned | J —Main Floor 
        
  
       
   
  iDusters _ Should, Sell for $2.49 |SPECIAL PURCHASE! 
Ladies’ ffintis Funeral Home, Burial will be inj; 
: -SIMMS Low Price-_}   
  @ Cotton Fiannels . 
: @ Waffle Weave Cottons 
@ Sizes 10 to 18 
Specially bought to bring Simms cus- 
tomers this extra low. price. Sanfor- 
;, ized, washable. fast colors in assorted 
| patterns, colors, designs. Ghort sieeves, 
|p tailored collsr styles, etc. 
      ; 98 North Saginaw St. 
acacia i F ea 
" 
        
         
          
     
      
      
            a   
  | Why Should YOU Pay Regular Prices for. 
Famous DRUGS? YOU Can Get It 
for LESS at SIMMS — Here’s Proof!   
Friday and Saterdgy Only — Rights to Limit Quantities   
SAVE 25¢ on Popular 
      
  
  
89¢ LISTERINE 79: BUFFERIN.... “@ 54 SAVE 23c on Famous Osatuss 
67¢ POLIDENT ... == 44¢ SAVE 16c on Dr. Miles Lievi 
49+ NERVINE .... «t= 33° SAVE 20c on Famous 14-0. 
  
  SAVE 24c on Famous 
$1.07 CARTER’S Little 
. Liver Pills 8 3 ¢ 
  
SAVE 43c on Famous ENDEN 
$1.50 SHAMPOO .. Cream er 
Liquid 1.07   
SAVE 16c on Popular 
52¢ PHILLIPS Milk of Magnesia ¢ 
: Liquid ; 
  
MAALOX Liquid. Reg. $1.75 
1” } For heartburn and 
indigestion. Limit   
    
  | Absorbine Jr. pei 
  
4 COLDENE 
CHEST RUB 
  SCOTT'S 
EMULSION 
$1.79 
  
  Lae Value 3 
  
  
1.25 Fitch Shampoo-Dandruff Remover. . han ee ont 
ewe 
Ow 
i 
  
eh ee ee hae ww eH ew 
  
85c J&J Back Plaster—Heavy........ 58c ;   
  ; wi Communist-chilled 
ae eTedey in Pontiac ing 8 am /Non-Italians is Gregory Peter Car- a ware aud nel dene ive it of his’ 
nn | chee sanees §@ Hen dint -Agaglanian. Russian-born | guidance, He left behind scores of 
Diceciion Bethy = LAE PTR) Ch CoSeane |, Che Paty ‘eneyclicals, speeches and other 
Bue tiess Bria a Bn OWS ae) SOS PS ari) cise ORS become | Moon sets Thursd Ol pr. |XIL called him to the Vatican last| Moon rises Pricey “at 3 Slam Bune cordire Une) church is anid: (eas of Roman Catholic heritage. 
iF 
Downtown Temperatures “ wide“ missionary activities. He. : i = 
1 a s . res A 
ane oe sa succeeded Samuel Cardinal, He literally worked himself to, 
aaom él JD us £° Stritch, archbishop of Chicago,ideath, in the opinion of Vatican 
oem 0 who died before he could fill the! officials. oa.om 6) who died belo e ct 
Wednesday in Pontiac | post. | The last two months here, were, 
(ae recorced downtown) =, | Prominent among Italians is among the busiest of his busy Highes t temperature   Lowest temperature ....+s.. oO | 
sen seotpererure peasor - 685! 
One Year Ago in Pontiac Prices Slashed for Weekend! 
PR EEN cen muon CHILDREN’S SCHOOL 
LUNCH BOXES Mean temperature .. -cerers 
Weather—Cloudy 
Highest and Lowest Teespereieres 
This Date in oy ears 
6 in 1949 29 tn 76 ith Th . Pore 
Wednesday's Temperature Chart | Wi ' ermos BOTTLE « 
Atpena 66 55 Memphis &2 70 
Bismarck 16 40 Miami 85 80 = 
Brownsville 88 75 Milwaukee 64 85 $2.59 
Buffalo 66 59 Minneapolis 67 45 V 
Charleston 79 60 New Orleans 64 71 alue. e 
Chicago 69 55 New York 69 88 b _& __. 
Cincinselt ud i onan He a an * meray | 4 a: Aa pictured — choice of hip fe | i Piisto - é i 
Oise 72 46 Phoen!*< $2 68 roof box or square box complete 
ye roit 19 64 ard Ha i 3 with genuine ‘Thermos’ KEAP- 
Duluth 49 45 Bt Oise 5 6F ; ; 
Fo t Worth #8 60 A Francisco 82 §3 SIT Vacuum hottie. All metal 
G Rapids 66 57 8 8 Marie 59 £9 in assorted patterns & designs 
Houghto 86 43 Traverse C. 66 57 
acksonville 83 61 Washington 77 54 
Kageas City 88 70 Seattle 60 46 
Tos Anggies 77 64 Tamps s6 68 
Merquetie 84 68 
    i 
| 
Exactly as Pidured 
Automatic UN-COUPLER 
Model 1542—Electric Switch-Engine 
LIONEL cittrme TRAIN ELECTRIC ‘Complete Set Consists of — Regular $19.95 Lise— *   
       
  
              Model 1543 | > - 2 Béz,S"" + 
ot 48 pose ze ttomatie coir Sealed ¢ serene Sgt! Gini meegnaions. 
magne-traction. ch ans : 
Model ,! 545 ue ak 
ut 19 IMM) BROTHERS Northern Pacific Past os song freight. 
uto-coupl 
      
       
    
    
      BABY NEEDS 
Ss. M.A, 
LIQUID 27¢ Can 
6 Cans 
| 
      
   
       * $1.96 Size 2% Pounds 
1.66 Limit 1 Can 
    
| 50c'Norwich Baby Cough Syrup. ree   
      
  
               
      
    
    
        
    
ae 
  
a 
ee 
ee *& 
& 
24) 
e 
€ 
& 
Oe 
Oe 
ee 
2 
6 
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ew 
be 
© a € 64 
he 
Se 
Oe 
Ree 
& 
eee 
ee : Reg. $2.50 
y 1 i ; i For a and .. muscul@r pains, . 
Also for athlete's | foot. 
        
        
| 3% Energine Cleaning Fluid............29c. oS 
2b 
€ 
* 
O-a- 
me 
¢ 
6-4 
& 
eee 
HO 
ke 
my 
& 
3,25 J.& J Baby Gift Box eeeeeere reer se 
| 59 Mennen’s Baby Powder and Q-Tips. Ale’ 
90¢ J&J — Shampoo Combinetion : De - 
98 N, Soginaw St. 
‘4 *, F SsimmM).         ROTHERS 
DRUGS—Main Floor 
»e    
  
    sind 
  
  
      
  
       
            
   Telescope on eye 
pod___with leve} tri- 
2 $0mn leas. ry   
| to 800 power scopes. 3 A + Rotgy gaat 
    SH Seine Kaisa | 
Fri. and Sat. Sale 
FeAIN’ Jeaee _ Ready Mizted—Easy Brushing—Durable 
$5.98 Gallon—NOW 
Gives a durable, long lasting fin- 
ish. Tested white formula paint 
Limit ¢ gallons. Save exactly *‘, 
off regular price. 
Coc rccercecccesccvccceseconeececccoccoooeoes 
Easy fo Apply With Brush or Rolle; “Famous 
F ENTERPRISE ‘Low Lustre’ 
Latex Interior Wall 
5.99     
  PAINTS 
3.44 Choice of white and colors — easy to 
apply with roller or brush.: Fully wash- 
able—lasts a long time—dries quickly 
in 30 minutes. No limit. 
: cla kha ad dh dd a lt lal a | 
PROTECT YOUR BASEMENT 
AGAINST LEAKAGE! Rox Masonry Paint is Guoranteed 
Water leaking through foundations or walls causes deteri-. 
oration and, eventually, costly repairs 
But there is now an easy, inexpensive way to stop damag- 
ing water leakage. answer is Rox Masonry Paint. 
Rox actually becomes part of the surface to which it is 
applied, gives ive protection against water leakage 
and adds enduring pasty to your home. Rox is guaranteed 
not to blister or peel. 
Rox Masonry Paint is ideal for brick, concrete, stucco and 
block — inside or outside. Rox protects against leakage and 
transforms a damp, useless basement into a dry, cheerful 
  Rox is economical . . . covers up to three times more than 
old fashioned masonry paints. It is available in white and 
in five decorator colors to harmonize with your home color 
theme. 
| Here’s another fact! Rox cuts heating costs! Write today 
a for.literature on this } important subject. 
BEFORE: Valuable space 
is lost when water leaks 
in. A wet basement m a 
useless basement.     
      
   AFTER: Rox seals your, 
basement, decorates it. 
Now it can be a game room, ca 
workshop, etc. 
a 36   
50 
a 
  16° 
“He ee ccecer os Cenncbr encase aoa 
For 7-Inch Rollers 
DYNEL REFILL’ 
ROLLER PAINT 
THINNER 
Replacement sleeve 
for all T-inch rollers. 
Limit 2 sleeves. - Limit 2 quarts, 
Metal Pan With Roller ) also excellent 
or cleaning brushes.      
si29 = 2™ ¢ 
Value 
Both the metal pan and 7-inch roller 
Ya at this low price. 
“\y ~ sleeve. Limit 1 set per person.   
  
is a seccccecccccscccccccececeneneaesccsoascoeee 
  
  Big 9x12-Foot Size : Full 60-Yard Rolls 
Drop Cloths © co Tape pl. 19 Value $1.00 Value 
Treated paper “ ) fimtt 
cloths to ne 2 Rolls 
7 ; 34° inc ideal for mask- 
repeal, — ing winders, mouldings, etc. 
   98 North 
      a VN PAINTS 
Street SE VAM 2 scctiies ie 
       
   
       
    
      
             
       
   LOWEST PRICE on BUNGALOW 
White House Paint! 
2.99 
    
Paint Roller Sets 
Washable roller |—     
what we mean. 
      
  “ -every-day-of-the-week at SIMMS. 
Men’ S iyicr 90% Wool-10% Nylon “ 
MEN’S Lined © REVERSIBLE 
Fleece 
  
       
        
     
   
            $15.98 Value     
     
   Ra 
* Sizes 36 to 46 
Blended wool and nylon 
for warmth and wear. 
Multi-flecks im black or 
charcoal Full] cut with 
side vents and big pock- 
ets i : 
: 
¢ i 
         
    Boys’ Gate dine 
   
Quilt Lining Moston Collar            
    
      
     
   
    
     
    
    
   
     Regular 99 
$8.98 
Value 
Water repellent surcoat with 100 
xnitted- wrists. Navy 
or green colors in 
sizes 6 to 18, 
eeccbdcccccccccesecccccccccocce . 
FUR-LIKE Mouton Collar 
Ladies’ All Wool 
Car Coats 100% Wool Quilt Lined 
g* 
White fur collar to contrast with the 
red or dark blue coat colors. Flap pock- 
ets, large pearl buttons. Sizes 10 to 20. Regular 
$1295 
Value. 
Infants’ SNO-SUITS 
$7.98 4s § Value 
‘Warmly lined and inner lined suits. 
4 and mitts. Sizes to 18 months. Maize only. 
lok Special Group of Children’s 
SLEEVE or Reg. ! ¢ Values to $12.95 88 
Reg. ¢ 35 Choice of 100° nylon pram suit 
60¢ : =o or | and 2-piece snow-suits. As- 
Best for) Ciinning sorted sizes to extra large. 
  Sensationally Underpriced! 
Originally $2.50 
Choice of Colors 
Vertical stripes in gold, red 
or blue colors. Guaranteed 
first quality. Sizes small to 
large. $2.50 
  Pull-Over Style—Inner Fleeced—3 Colors 
Men's event Shirts 
Values 
to 
$1.98 t 
  Medium weight cotton knit sweat shirts ' 
with crew neck. Choicerof white, maize 
or grey colors. lreegulars, ; 
¢ * Ig 3 as       a Just Try to » Equal. This Bargain Anywhere! 
ge RIRCHASE— Sensational Savings 0 on these 
Jackets LIMITED LOT—Only 114 of "Em 
Suburban aie Coats $12.88 
NOW 
ONLY 
* Machine Washable 10 
* Warmth Without Weight 
* Wind and Water-Repellent 
Handsomely tailored with 3 color stripe 
across chest of fleece side. 
water resistant nylon sheen on other side. | 
Zipper front, 4 slash pockets, side: elas- 
tic, etc. Fully machine washable, 
Winter Surcoats 
wool interlined, elastic sides. buckle front, 
     Princess 
after baths. 
of two colors. 
29nd FLOOR SPECIALS Any Size TV Set 
ALL METAL “ROL-EZY”’ Washable 100% NYLON 
Guar- 
anteed washable—no ironing. Attached bocts 
PRAM & SNO-SUITS . 
| BARGAIN BASEMENT 
Men’s Flannel Shirts 
  ae _THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER a. 1058 | 
‘ ao OP E 
ompare e Prices 
ss) befor os 
You a a « » Shop every floor, every department to see— 
No need to: wait for Sale-Events 
—YOU'LL find what you want usually underpriced..     * # 
77 
Sizes 
36 to 44 
°/, NYLON    Wind and 
Stripe Denim     
   BOYS’ 
_. ty League 
-PANTS 
$2.49 Quality 
1)” 
(2 Pair $3.00) 
Sizes 6 to 16 Values to ©0000000000000000000008 Mostly tan col- » 
or, fewinchar- @- 
coal. Guaranteed : 
washable and e 
color-fast @ Choice of + 
e@ terials... 33 Polished 
lee $4 e sorted colors 
Pants 
»,eeee” 
Washable Cotton 
GIRLS’ Quilted ; 
Dusters Ladies’ 2- Sanfort 
  ® e Corduroy Tri 
style—ideal for lounging or 
With full belt. 
Limit 2. Choice @ Pan collar, 
    Adjustable—Holds 
TV 
      
As pictured—wrought 
fron stand with arms 
that extend to 28- 
} inches for TV or Hi- 
. . yy Sets. Stands 22" 
s tall. Plastic . rolling 
‘ casters. 
  -14x50-Inch Fram: 
$4.95 
Value 
LIMIT 1 PER 
Ideal for use on any door 
use over fireplaces. 
backing. Packed to carry 
oo 4TS 
    
  Rayon or Challis ~ 
Sport Shirts 
Original = 
2 ho 
WUTTITTT TXT 
zed 
FLANNEL 
: Pajamas ge fo] 
188 
Values to $3.98 
3 2 Pair $3.50 
= Deluxe style — Peter 
@ waist. Sizes 34 to 38. 
* 
BOIMMs. ‘@ Fridays 
@ Saturdays 
-@ Mondays         
   
  
Long Sleeve 
$1.98 
  ayon or challis ma- 
easy to launder, as- 
to choose from. 
Pe. - 
mmed 
elastic s 
Stand 
  In ees n’ Black 
$5.95 > 3 7: 
Value 
ia KD Medel 
      
    
         
      
   
         Framed 
999 
PERSON 
in your house. Also 
Framed mirror with solid 
home. 
   ROTHERS    Since 1934, Popliac’s Discount Store 
Me 
ee 
Hee 
Spa 
oeeeenderscescccccaeescccsceoreneseecscescesssseweesessseseseeeessssssssaauneeeeees    
    
   
    
           
     ; SAF-T-BAK Hunters’ Apparel @ feathres: long wearing-guaran-— 
tallored for aetioa-f9e comfort. 
‘em at Sintms. 
Straight or Knit Cuff 
COATS PANTS ; Reg. $8.95 Value 
6” 7s 
Double seat & knees, choice of 2 leg styles. 
beriged game pockets, Heavy, long wearin extra- pockets. Sizes duck materi al. Al 
36 to 46 sizes. 
Underwear, gloves, caps, hats,” an 
boots, socks, ete. SIMMB is YOUR } as 
one-stop headquarters. . . 
   ~ GAME POCKET -; 
\W//\ shell Vests     
  Holds 24 shells: Extra 4 
ee Bizes 36-46. 
ts 
PYUTTII IIIT rrr 
FIBERGLAS Insulated _ Hunters’ Heavy RED 
Sweat Shirts 
] 39 
$5 quality Tower 
ront. Re or 
yellow ee. All 
     Hooded 
‘ shirts 2. 29 Sweat 
HUNTERS’ SHIRTS 
coneny a 100% ot mot B08 
» Flannet—. 
- Check Simms selection and lowest prices before 
you buy hunters’ shirts. 
100% Dacron 
  Special Lot 
    
     
        
      12-Inch INSULATED 
Rubber Pacs | U-Suits Top or Full Lace 
$10.98 7 2-PIECE 
Values 6 Both For 
Guaranteed 
Waterproof, sizes 
6 to 12. Black or 
OD cclors. ] 2" 
Zipper or button 
front. Weighs only 5 
ounces Small and 
medium sizes only. 
  
  Genuine LEATHER or RUBBER 
THERMO Knit Insulated PACS 
i” sg itda hidirtellig = All sizes. Patented 
thermo knits. 
1 1. | 
Popular stvies. 
sizes 6 to 12. 
  
  BOLT ACTION 
REPEATING C-LECT-CHOKE 
        
     
      ular $39.95 LIST 
MOSEREEES odel 195. Single barre], 12- 
gauge with barrel vents and recofl pads 
pariebie choke. $3447 
  Regular $38.95 LIST 
MOSSBERG Model 190. Popular 16- -gauge 
Barrel vents. Variable choke. $3410 
       
  Regular $36.95 LIST . 
Model 185K MOSSBERG. 20-gauge. With 
barrel vents. Variable choke. $3235 
    Regular $34.95 LIST 
Model 183K MOSSBERG. 410-gauge. Vari- able choke. 
Proportionate Savings at Simms DISCOUNT PRICES on Remington, gavare, Stevens, Winchester and Other Famous Make SHOTGUNS & RIFLES 
Poceseecccosccceccesscouceececeeectecessooes 
Every-Day DISCOUNT PRICES on Famous Brands 
Shotgun @HED Always lorg STOCKS at Simms .. . You'll find all gauges in all wanted shot-sizes . . ..no substi tutions, 
we sell what we advertise, no switching to ‘off-brands.’ 
REMINGTON ‘Shur-Shot’ or Western ‘X-Pert’ 
FIELD-LOAD SHELLS 
Reg. to $2.95 List— 
Choice of 12, 16 or 20 ga. 
4 to 9 shot- size. Box 
of 2. 
  RE mingiton, 
Expres ss <o8 REMINGTON ‘Express’ or 
- WESTERN ‘Super-X’ » 
Regular to es 40 List 2” ' ecmune ren wen 
i Reming’ on 
aueepmmes Heavy loads in ~ 16, or 20 
mw gauges... 4 to re shot sizes. 
“BOX of 25. 
    $3 Outers Long Rifle 
CLEANING KITS .22 Cal, SHELLS 
for shotguns ¢969 Box c 
and rifles. . 2 of 50...., 68° 
JERSEY GLOVES—red or brown—pair ......... _. 29¢ 
HUNTERS’ DUCK HATS......... wield e wigs ee as $1.39 
HEAVY sOCES— work or boot sqcks oseeeed Bt. 31. 09 
A 
    =< _ nn a 
   
  THE s PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER ®, 2 UND Ets a RR Oe ste   
mgt ON et YOR DAME. OB B22 OSD 75 1) OA OO ee Oy T Pri DONS, Ba sft Sel Hur c.  puee 228i! Oe Ea 4 Soe ae fos 
i HigHEST ‘QUALITY ~ Cs ote 1 VER SH Ml Mall it nad ne SNA ALA. TE en, CS | a ¥2 | 
}} ef: AT FA Buy today and save! For the home 
  
  
  
  Limited quantity ! Special purchases! Save now! Opena convenient charge account—at Waite’s you can choose just theo one that suits you best! 
  
  MILK GLASS 
27” TABLE LAMPS 
te 8.97 $13.98 e 
Beautiful milk glass table lamp with attractive match- 
ing shade. Brass plated base. gFor any room! 
Waite's .... Filth Floor INFANTS’ COTTON KNIT 
TRAINING PANTS 
«AN OT 39c 
Double crotch cotton knit training pants in ee | 
to 6 years. White. ‘Save now! 
Waite's ... Second Floor GIRLS’ COTTON KNIT 
DAINTY BRIEFS 
we 3" 9T" 49c 
' Famous brief styling in cotton knit. panties. In white 
‘and dainty pastels. Sizes 2 to 16. 
Waite's ... Second Floor FAMOUS GOSSARD 
STRAPLESS FOUNDATIONS 
$2750 : 8. 97 
Super special in full length strapless foundations! 
Finest nylon lace with power net. White, 33-38. ~ 
Waite's. . . Second Floor 
  
SERVICE FOR 8 
IMPORTED DINNERWARE 
$39.95 } *29.97 
53-pc. service in two attractive patterns. 8 each, 
plates, fruits, cups, saucers, bread & butters, soups, 
] plotter vegetable, cov. sugar. 
| Waite’ ss... Filth Floor MEN‘’S HANDSOME 
FAMOUS BRAND TIES 
Reg. to 
$250 } 97° 
Our most famous brand! Dacrons, silks, rayons, 
blends, in very handsome fall ‘58 patterns. Buy now 
_ for Christmas! 
” Waite’s s... Street Fleet: ra '. HOLLYWOOD STYLE 
WOMEN’S NYLON BRIEFS _ 
Reg. . 2 For *] 
89c . 
40 denier nylon tricot full cut briefs in white, pink 
& blue. Tailored elastic leg, well made. ES 5-6-7. NYLON TRICOT . WOMEN’S GOWNS 
Reg. $5.95 ‘4.97. to $8.95 
Cozy warm famous make nylon tricot gowns. Full, _ 
cut, lace and embroidery trims. Pink, white, blue, 
moize 34-46 =   
  
Waite'’s .. . Second Floor Waite's ... Second Floor 
  
IRONING BOARD PAD, 
| COVER SET 
$1.98 97 ¢ Value 
Full 2 thick waffle weave pad and silicone alumi- 
nized cover. Fits all standard 54’ boards. Save now! 
Waite's . . . Fifth Floor. FAMOUS BRAND 
MEN‘S JEWELRY 
19° The most famous name is stamped on the back of 
each tie bar, cuff link and tie pin. Match up sets, 
it’s the ‘‘swankiest!”’ Values 
to $2.50 
Waite's ... Street Floor WOMEN’S SMART 
WOOL GLOVES 
77! $1.00 . 
All wool gloves in the season’s most beautiful colors! 
Sizes S-M-L. Save now during Waite’s Great Fall Sale! 
S 
Waite's . + Street Floor SPECIAL GROUP OF 
DRIP-DRY APRONS _ 
Bee SY Ld 
Permanent pleat cotton, nylon, terry, organdy and 
embossed cotton aprons in oa bibs and cobblers. . 
Prints and solids. 
Waite's ... Third Floor 
  
ATTRACTIVE PLASTIC 
SHOWER CURTAINS 
“i {1.97 $2.98 e 
Large 6 ft. by 6 ft. size shower curtains in many 
beautiful colors. Matching window curtains avail- 
able. Save! 
Waite's ... Fifth Floor FAMOUS BRAND 
MEN‘S BELTS 
$2.50 *] Values 
Natural leather men’s famous brand belts in sizes 
28-44. Save now during Waite’s Great Fall Sale! 
& « 
Waite’s ... Street Floor WATER REPELLENT 
WOMEN’S SCARVES 
$1.98 2 For ] Values : 
Oblong and 36” squares in a large color assortment. 
Wonderful for gifts—and they're water repellent too! 
Waite's . . . Street Floor BEAUTIFUL PRINT 
NECK SCARVES 
or 59c $1.98 | 2 For *] Values Each 
Beautiful print scarves imported from India. Rolled 
hems, large squares. Many delightful colors. 
Waite’s . . . Street Floor 
  
FAMOUS KENT 
BATHROOM SCALES 
3 °2.97 $5.95 e 
™ 
Smart new styling A voth scales . . . always accurate 
weight. Choose yours in white blue, pink or green 
to match your both 
Waite's ... Fifth Floor 100% AUSTRALIAN a 
MEN’S SLIPPER SOX 
tt 1.97 > $2.98 
100% Australian virgin wool uppers, natural leather 
sols. Ankle length, red, brown, black, green, in sizes 
S-M-L-XL. 
Waite's ... Street Floor NEW 1958 DESIGN CHRISTMAS CARDS 
Reg. to 2 Boxes 
$1.50 
Brand new styles and designs, 12 to 21 cards per box. 
Modern, novelty, religious types. Buy now and save! 
Waite’s ... Street Floor IMPORTED PIQUE PLATTER COLLARS 
‘m = OT Women’s imported pique platter collars in a nice 
assortment of styles. Dress up your sweaters and 
casual dresses at savings! 
Waite's ... Street Floor 
  
FAMOUS EASTERN VENETIAN BLINDS - 
| Reg. 2 For 5 
\$3.99 
Famous Eastern quality and construction in durable 
venetian blinds. White slats, cotton tape. 230 _and 
36” by 54”. 
Waite's : .. Fourth Floor WASHABLE RAYON BLEND 
“SOMERSET” BLANKETS 
se, 2° 15.57 Beautiful rayon and acrilan blend washable blankets 
with 7’’ nylon satin binding. Mothproof. 72’ * by 90” 
size. Save! 
Waite’s ,.. Fourth Floor 8 NESTED GIFT 
CHRISTMAS BOXES 
$2.00 1 Values 
8 Christmas gift boxes nested in this large gift pack. 
Most popular sizes, wrapped beautiful for Christmas. SATIN LINED BEADED COLLARS 
nego DS] op ste Just add one of these luscious collars and make an 
‘old dress look like new! Pearl or crystal beaded 
_ Peter Pan white collars. 
— Waite's ... Street Floor 
  
3-PC. REVERSIBLE 
BATH SETS 
es, *3.97 Extra thick bath mat, contour mat and lid cover sets 
that wear twice as long because they're reversible. 
Many colors. ~ 
Waite’s ... Fourth Floor STURDY BELLAIRE 
MATTRESS PADS 
Reg. to 
$3.99 2.97 
Heavily quilted full or twin size mattress pads with - 
sanitary bleached cotton linters inside. Washable, 
long wearing. ~ = 
Waite's ... Fourth Floor . Waite's ... Street Floor , 
JUMBO SIZE * - GARMENT BAGS 
$2 5, 2 re *3 
Full 57” tone! full length al heavy quilted 
plastic garment bags. Holds to 16 garments, strong 
metal top frame. 
Waite's .”. . Street Floor EVENING IN PARIS 
LIPSTICKS 
750 to. 4 rv 1 
Beautiful brass cases hold your very Geen shades 
of famous Evening in Paris lipstick. Brand new, spe- 
cially purchased. * 
Se 
  
36’ LONG BROADCLOTH 
CAFE CURTAINS 
eiig9 | | 7 
Crisp, ruffling broadcloth cafe curtains in many 
attractive prints to accent your kitchen or utility | 
room. Colorfost. 
Waile’s oe» foutth Flees   “DEFENDER” PERCALE 
PRINT FABRICS 
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      | . : ‘ e oe / si % | ee ™ . ‘ ee ee ee ; a » | : ae ee | : 7 — 
= joes a eed he ae a THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 woes s | FIVE. | 5 i Z : ¥. : “ . 3 | 
Broadway Newcomer Sori,” His only ae = Sinaia Gil aocsihiieiy A ei vety ct Yolen uote aide; sini, stm stalin Gitgtt: Sid ade? Ch eee 
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THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS | 
BAROLD A. FITZGERALD 
President and Publisher Editorial Page 
Owned and Published Locally ASSOCIATED . PRESS 
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 
  
  
What’s the Cause 
of This Attitude? 
Perhaps there’s a lesson to be 
learned from the slump in registra- 
tions for next month’s election. But 
what is it? 
x ok : 
it doesn’t even “andl 
Nobody except the candidates 
(and not all of them) seem te give 
a faint whoop about Nov. 4 
x *« * 
Advance use of the political pul- 
motor is necessary for either party 
to arouse any enthusiasm in a meet- 
ing. And then its artificial respira- 
tion is obvious to any knowing person 
in attendance. 
It usually is only the “ins” or the 
“want-to-get-ins” on the political pap 
who do any cheering—and that often 
is badly timed. 
x *%Ǥ * 
Some novices in the big game have 
tried to pull smears, but all they get 
is laughs and boomerangs. They’re 
learning a lesson. . 
The registration fiasco is not 
pertinent to Pontiac. It was prev- 
alent throughout the county and 
state. In Flint the shortage ex- 
ceeds the 15,000 mark. ° 
x * * 
It proves that neither party is well 
organized. All that talk about a 
house-to-house canvass to get people 
registered was either without any 
business background or was pure 
hooey and went flooey. 
Both parties are energetically 
_ raising campaign funds, as each ac- 
cuses the other of having the most 
money. Who’s getting it? 
Does the thing all simmer 
down to the fact that the think- 
_ ing people are satisfied, and have 
no ears for the political wolf cry? 
xk & wo 
One might think so when a recent 
national survey shows that the 
farmers who really farm never had 
it so good. 
    
County y Peat Bogs Are 
an Overlooked Asset 
- In Ireland, Scotland and other 
_parts of the British Isles, as well as 
in many other countries around the 
world, peat is-a°Standard fuel. 
Around many of tite numerous 
lakes in the Pontiac area are peat 
bogs that have untold possibilities. 
* * * 
Peat is such a crude fuel that it 
has no value in the modernized setup 
in which we live. 
But, its stored up fertilization puts 
out a beckoning hand. 
Composed almost entirely of 
decayed vegetation, principally 
weeds and grasses, it is the resi- 
due of what came up after the 
glaciers scraped down through 
this area untold thousands of 
years ago. 
x * * 
Every year since then has added 
to the deposits until now they are 
several feet deep in many localities. 
And in Oakland County alone they 
cover several thousand acres. 
Worked in less than one per cent 
of the available area, Oakland County 
peat already is a staple article of 
trade. 
x -.«©§ * 
It has the essentials needed to 
  
  
THE PONTIAC PRESS Published by THe Ponwriuc Press Company 
48 W. Huron 6t. Pontiac, Michigan 
Trade Mark Daily Except Sunday 
‘Roser. Bassert, Jou~w A. River 
Executive Vice President Assistant Advertising 
and Advertising Director Manager 
Prrzoeracp m1, Ean. M. TReapwett, 
Circulation Manager 
G. Mansmatt Jordan, 
Prreorsas, Local Advertising 
and Editor Manager 
Rosekt B. Tanz, Grorce C. Inman, 
Managing Editor Classified Manager 
eR A TR RTP SNL AR EAC   
  
The Associated Préss te entitled <aclusively to the use for republicatiom of ‘all local news printed in this 
newspaper as well a¢ ail. AP news d 
The Paes ts delivered by carrier poodle 
in Oakland, Genesee, Livingston, Macomb ay mo 
: where car labie by mail & week; Phot is not avet 
in Oakland, -Gen ‘ingston, Macomb, Lapeer and 
wchiean . al 42 ts darted Brea rv td fon 
te ni in Un ates 
$20.00 eed cueert yabje - in 
sévanee. ctond oem. ered | Pon tine, 
ber sc° phone Fos Pontiae FE 2-915.” ‘make some of our arid land produc- 
tive and profitable. 
It would seem that the future 
holds another reason why our 
lakes are an increasingly valuable 
asset. | 
x * * 
Yet confined only to making better 
lawns and gardens, we have the peat 
  
  Fair Weather Friends _ 
Give Layne Bum’s “Rush | 
How fickle can you get? One min- 
ute a hero, the next a bum. Some | 
fans and the majority of the Detroit 
press corps have succeeded in giving 
Bossy Layne the ‘“‘bum’s rush.” 
x *« * 
Perhaps this decision is right. We 
hope it works better than the same 
move engineered by this same group 
involving personable JAcK TIGHE. 
Now that the fans and sports 
writers have solved the Lions’ 
- difficulties, we can all sit back 
and watch the championship roll 
in. 
x *« * 
In the meantime, Messrs. Rote and 
the newcomer, Morra.t, along. with 
the sidewalk engineers, will have 
their work cut out equaling LAYNE’S 
record. 
We wish them all well. 
  The Man About Town 
Frost Is Delayed 
Nearly Third of Century 
Since It Was So Dilatory 
Politics: What might get some _ 
attention if it wasn’t competing 
. with the world series and foot- 
- ball.   
  
One of my most *d@pendable weather 
watchers js 
Howard Halliman 
out on Pontiac Trail.. He says we have 
had no serious frosts this autumn, and 
are making a record. This is the latest: 
date in at least 34 years that J. Frost 
held off his first chilling bite. 
It also is pointed out by 
Gregory Walford 
of Drayton Plains, that most erersihing 
has matured to such an extent that-a 
hard frost would not do much damage. 
Word also drifts in from 
Herman Ratzloff 
who operates a farm in Oxford Township 
that corn stalks frozen in the field are 
just as good silo Uumiber as7ir harvested 
when green. 
After keeping tab on the shirig for over 
a quarter century, 
Jerfy VanOrder 
of Waterford says it is only about once 
in every five years that we do not get 
our first killing frost in September. 
  
Doing better than most of our farmers, 
Randall Ostendorf 
is getting four .1958 cuttings of alfalfa 
from a field in a farm which he works 
near Rochester. 
  
Noticing that her wedding ring was 
missing when at their cottage near Che- 
boygan, 
oe Mrs. Eber Greggson 
of Auburn Heights, hunted all over the 
premises, but didn’t find it until she 
came home—beside the kitchen sink. 
  
Entries in our potato-tomato 
contests must be received by to- 
morrow noon, Don’t bring them 
to our office. Write or phone 
(FE 2-8181; extension 28) before 
_ that hour. . 
  A cucumber that weighs over four 
pounds grew in the garden of” 
, Joseph DeCovich 
at 1064 Tecumseh St. in Waterford; a big 
bunch of pickle timber. 
  
Word comes to me from Metamora that 
the Ayrshire herd of 
Adolph F. Broecker 
has won national recognition for averag- 
ing 1,002:pounds of milk per month. 
Verbal Orchids to- 
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Huelimantel 
of 930 Lakeview Drive; fifty-first wed- 
ding anniversary. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J. Friday 
of Clarkston; fifty-first wedding ann!- 
versary. 
The farmington Enterprise; — 
enetring its eightieth year of publication. 
The Utica Sentinal; 
entering its elghty- -third yeas of E publls   
— ation. - a   i 
ag 
4 
q 
        
  
   
      
The School Wasn't t Emsty   
~ 
David Lawrence Says:   
Political Parties Labeled : ‘Wrong 
WASHINGTON—Maybe the time 
has come to change the names of 
the two major political parties in 
America. Speakers for the Repub- 
lican Party, for 
instance, have 
lately reverted 
to the custom of 
their. forefathers 
in resenting the 
idea that the 
opposite party 
may take unto 
itself exclusive 
possession ef the 
word “demo 
cratic” witha 
  LAWRENCE 
they feel it really has ceased in illiam Brady Says: ee 
a Republicans are pegiming 
again to refer to their on as 
“the party of the Democrats” 
“the pone rey - 
Conversely, the cater in 
large part, have ceased to be 
“republican” with a small ‘‘r.” 
The Constitution explicity says 
that the federal government ‘“‘shall 
guarantee to every state in this 
union a republican form of govern- 
ment.” Nothing is said about 
Arkansas, or Virginia, or any 
other state being excluded from 
this provision. To ignore the rights 
of the states and to support the 
doctrine that a Supreme Court in 
Washington may alter at will the 
basic document that specifically 
provides its own method of amend- 
ment is, in the North, considered 
“democratic” with both. a large 
and small ‘‘d,” as well as 
publican” with a large and small 
“r"' but just the opposite in the 
South. - 
: ek ek 
On economic issues, the Repub- 
licans like to think of themselves 
as “conservative,” while the north- 
ern Democrats prefer to call them- 
selves “‘liberals.”” An examination 
of the voting records in Congress 
would seem to indicate that most 
of the Democrats from the North 
are liberal spenders of the citizens’ 
income and are not_ much inter- 
ested in conserving the dollar's 
purchasing power, as is, for ex- 
ample, Senator Byrd, Democrat, 
of Virginia. 
The Republicans would more 
fittingly be described as the 
“conservative party’? were it not 
for the modern belief, propagated 
‘Dy the radicals, that to be con- 
servative is to oppose all fees 
and “progress.” 
What is : progresive’’—the word 
that used to be proudly proclaimed 
in the slogans of the Republicans 
of Theodore Roosevelt’s era? To- 
-day, under the still-powerful im- 
petus of the New Deal and fair 
deal, the country is in the throes 
of a progressive inflation that 
everybody fears, but nobody prom- 
inent in either party seems ‘willing 
to advocate the steps necessary 
to reverse the trend. 
* * * 
Today, ‘‘public spending’’ is sup- 
posed to be “‘popular,” and there 
are in both parties those who 
actually believe that the bigger the 
federal deficit, the better off the   
The Country Parson 
     
    fo eer ge ‘ty CN * 
TLL 
“Every person will be pointed 
out as an example by someone 
—either as a good one or a bad 
‘one,'*- small ‘“‘d’’ when ~ 
“Te. - country will be on the economic 
side. 
* * * 
In some countries they name 
political parties after individuals. 
Perhaps the hero of political sci- 
ence in America today is Machia- 
veli—the man whose name is 
associated with the doctrine that 
“the end justifies the means.” 
Both parties, however, could 
qualify for the right to use that 
slogan. 
The real names of the two 
major parties in the North ought 
to be ‘‘Conservative” and ‘‘So- 
cialist,” respectively, ’t hough neither party will admit that the 
predominant strength within it 
-ranks deserves to be thus de- 
scribed. The central idea of 
socialism is government control 
or regulation of almost every- 
thing. 
lina, Democrat, in a speech this 
week, says of the Democratic- 
controlled Congress: **‘The action 
taken in the ‘legislative halls. of 
the 88th Congress justifies the 
statement that in Congress, as well 
as in the Supreme Court, socialism 
is preferred.” 
(Copyright 1958)   
  
: Many Fear to Take Stand 
“ Against Social. Drinking 
“For the past four years my 
husband has been drinking on ‘and 
off, and when he stops he is very 
sorry for what he has done. I 
know you will help me if you can. 
I have left him. 
Still, when he’s 
sick I come back 
to him and feel , 
sorry for him, but 
it lasts only a 
few weeks and 
then he is drink- 
ipg again. He is a 
veteran of World 
War 2. (Signed) 
Mrs. — —.” DR, BRADY 
This might be a composite of 
hundreds of letters I have received 
from wives, sisters, mothers or, 
sometimes, husbands, brothers or 
fathers of narcotic! addicts, habit- 
ual users of alcohol, that is. For 
there’s no blinking at the fact that 
alcohol is a narcotic, in any dose 
and in any circumstance. 
* * * 
In this instance my advice is: 
(1) If the man, in a sober in- 
terval, will consent and can af- 
ford it, he-should consult a psy- 
chiatrist, one his regular er fam- 
ily doctor will recommend: 
(2) If he spurns the suggestion 
that he is a litfle insane or if he 
can’t afford the service of a priv- 
ate psychiatrist (and I don't mean 
psychologist or psycho-analyst), 
then by all means let him tele- 
phone, write or visit the nearest 
‘Aicoholics Anonymous chapter or 
group in his own or any com- 
munity, listed in telephone direc- 
tory, under AA. And let him re- 
member that anonymity is a prime 
factor of the success of AA in help- 
ing addicts to break the habit. - 
‘PLEDGE’ OUT OF DATE 
I have repeatedly urged parents, 
grandparents, big brothers and sis- 
ters, teachers, doctors, 
and even pastors to ask boys and 
girls pnder their supervision or 
tutelage to pledge themselves not 
to use alcohol or tobacco before 
they are 21. I have been grievously 
disappointed and a little frightened 
    
at the negative response to this 
appeal. 
I believe there are two reasons 
why people today are so prone 
to dismiss the pledge as un- 
worthy: First, 
who are fond of a nip themselves 
can’t consistently teach their 
children total abstinence as a 
way of life. And second, because 
people who are total abstainers 
or at least temperate too often 
are afraid to stand up _ be 
counted. 
For example, the Washington 
politician who doesn’t drink arms 
himself with a glass not quite full 
of pop, and circulates among the 
guests at a cocktail party without 
being pressed to fill her up. He 
hasn't enough character to say no - 
thank you, 
\* * * 
Before I surrender to the nar- 
* ‘ me coaches * 
    because people ~ this final appeal to drinkers, occa- 
sional drinkers, social drinkers, 
steedy drinkers, periodic drinkers: 
Please tell me confidentially 
1. When and why you started 
drinking, or at what age and 
under what circumstance did 
you take your first drink of beer, 
wine or liquor? 
2. If you do not believe grow- 
ing children should be asked to 
take the pledge, why not? 
3. Confidentially, remember, 
tell me what you think of cock- 
tail lounges, parties and ameni- 
ties in social life? 
* * * 
Signed letters, not more than one 
page or 100 words long pertaining to 
personal health and hygiene, not dis- 
: ogis, or treatment, will 
answered by Dr. William eeecy, BS a 
ht 1958) Toe oa? acaee tg Santis be a ple of aad Mic eee © 
Bs _tuild a drag strip in a well-known location. If we're successful in the 
  
ress, as well as lack of money. It we're able to obtain land, it will have 
“Union Would Hike 
Salesgirls’ W; ages’ 
I work as a salesgirl and have 
working under some of the condi- 
tions we do, either, like pulling 
-our own stock. (It’s: heavy.) 
We put in as hard a 40 hours as 
anybody. I’m sure some other 
salesgirls feel this way, too. With - 
a union, they’d have elie! SI 
least $40, a dollar an hour 
Mrs. L. T. 
Urges All Parents 
to Check on Boys 
This concerns a teenage boy and 
his parents, perhaps all coe 
Maybe when the boy is 
evening at Mohawk and Huron. 
The amount was $90. 
I'm wondering how he’s keep- 
ing the source of his spending 
money from his parents. Se par- 
ents, take a check on your wan- 
dering boys’ activities before one 
strikes again and gets into pert 
ous trouble. 
~~ Tm all for a nine ‘o’dock curfew 
for all boys and girls under 16, 
- seven nights a week, unless ac- 
caer by parents or older 
responsible people. 
Fearful Lady 
  
Portraits 
By JAMES J. METCALFE 
The sky is overcast tonight . 
There is no moon on high . . . But 
only darkness all around... Be- 
cause you said goodby .. . With 
every step I stumble as .. . I try 
to grope my way .. . Along this 
lonely path where I. . . Can only 
‘hope and pray .. . Why did you 
leave me, dearest one? . . . What- 
ever did I do... To cause the 
cold indifference . . . That has 
enveloped you? .. . Or was it just 
a simple whim . . . That made you 
change your mind . . . Regardless 
of the smiles and tears . . . That 
you would leave behind? . . 
Please think it over, dearest one 
. Whatever it may be... I 
love you and devoutly hope... 
You will come back to me. 
(Copyright, 1958) and clearing $25. We wouldn't be — stil interested in drag strip, I would appreciate hearing from then 
. “ed appreciate baying their cooperation. ~~ ' Stephen Navarre 
Oakland County Sheriff's Dept, 
‘Why Should We 
- Pay for Mistake?’ 
We recently received a letter 
from the. Lapeer County. sheriff 
~ ek 
Not having been in Lapeer in 
over twe years, we phoned the 
we 
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rowe 
5018 Thornapple Dr. 
  
orma: 
withheld upon request if the letter is 
not of a critica) nature. Letters tmaust 
be under 206 words and The Pontiac 
Press a right to edit all 
letters, eae     
Smiles 
The person who looks the picture 
of health usually has his face 
framed in a big smile. 
* * * =e 
The chief objection to hiring an 
inexperienced stenographer is ~ 
that words fail her. 
x ® * 
It's probably a good thing that 
the people who make an awful fuss 
over a brand new baby can’t read 
its mind. 
* * * 
Some TV celebrities are in the 
public eye so much they get in 
the public hair. 
  
‘THOUGHTS FOR TODAY 
Yea, surely God will not do 
wickedly, ‘neither will the Al- 
mighty pervert judgment.—Job 
34:12, 
«* * * 
It is highly convenient to believe 
in the infinite mercy of God when . 
you feel the need of mercy, but 
remember also His infinite justice. 
—B. R. Haydon, ; 
  
A 
Case Records of a Psychologist:   
Parents Aren't Always 
Bella’s case should make all 
of you teenagers sit up and 
take notice. And if you have 
real courage, then rate yourself 
per the test mentioned below. 
Until you attain the emotional 
level of true adulthood, don’t 
try to pass the buck to Dad or 
Mother for your own lack of 
friends or poor grases, or fat 
figures. 
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE 
CASE Z - 340: Bella Z., aged 18, 
is rapidly becoming a problem. 
“Dr. Crane, Bella is our young- 
est,” her father informed me, “and 
maybe Mother and I gave too 
much attention to 
our two older chil- 
dren. 
“At least, Bella 
says that is why 
she is going to the 
dogs, But our old- 
er children made 
DR, CRANE felt she had been 
cheated in life, apparently becayse 
she was the baby of the fam 
* * * 
“So she got belligerent and tafled 
in two subjects, Then she grew 
cross and irritable, so she put on 
weight because: of excess eating. 
“Now I find that she has been 
subsidizing a no-count fellow in 
our -town, and furnishing him 
money for liquor, 
* “They were arrested by the 
police last week for making a 
disturbance while drunk in an 
-apartment some friend had lent 
them for the night. 
“Dr, Crane, where did I make 
my mistake in rearing Bella?’ 
BASEBALL AVERAGES 
prea eas Smee era too much for the failure of your 
kids, 
You can’t be expected to rate 
a 1,000 batting average. In fact, 
if you, attain the 0.333 of a star 
outfielder, you deserve a gold 
star in this: hectic modern age. 
Besides, children are not clay 
tablets, passively waiting to have 
us imprint good habits thereon. - 
They can size people up and do 
a lot of sensible figuring, long 
before they leave grade , 
x* * * 
And by the age of 16, their brain 
reaches maturity so they are ca- 
7 of adult thinking thereafter. 
y this because a lot of 
wo i parents come up with 
~ “rotter” sons and daughters who 
then try to make those parents 
more miserable by charging 
them with being at fault for the 
children’s crimes or illicit af- 
fairs, 
FACE THE FACTS ( 
Being a good parent ig-not a 
one-way street! You kids (have an 
equal obligation to be a son 
or daughter. 
ek &® OF 
If your dad brings home a fair 
pay check regularly, then you 
should also bring home at least 
a fair grade (‘‘C’’ or better) to 
show you*are working equally wll 
at your main job, too, ~ ~ 
If your father furnishes you 
food and clothing, plus:a warm 
home in which to live, then you 
should also furnish your parents 
evidences of your gratitude by. 
helping with the chorés and by 
_ Siving verbal compliments to 
Dad: and Mother, 
Tae enough, some Dads stumble 
home drunk and beat up their 
wives, or curse at their children. 
But did you kids ever realize 
you also get into a lot of jams, 
too, that cause shame ce worry 
“to your- folks? to Blame 
How many of you have been 
_ suspended or expelled from ‘School? 
How many have brought home 
flunk notices? 
How many have been arrested 
for reckless driving of the family 
car? How many of you still 
“sponge” off your parents for 
' spending money, instead of earn- 
ing your own funds? 
Too long we have stressed the 
obligations of parents to their chil- 
dren. : 
It is high time we also em- 
  
    
  phasized the obligation of kids to 
their parents, 
x *® * 
So send for my ‘Behavior Test 
for Teenagers,” enclosing a 
stamped réturn envelope, plus 20 
cents (non-profit). 
It will show you whether you are 
 eeeeieny juvenile or a true - 
‘And it will be a good. com- 
panion Rating Scale to the “Tests - 
for Parents’ offered yesterday. 
If you kids have courage, take 
_thistest.and see how you rate, 
before you try to pass the buck 
to your parents for your own er- 
rors. e 
Always write to Dr George W. Crane 
in care of The Pontiac Press. Pontiac, 
Michigan, ‘enclosing @ long 4c stamped 
ool _soctewed Bi Ning and 20¢ to cover 
costs. when you send 
for ars ily cholagiod! charts and pam- 
MNES (Copyright, 1958) 
eS: x 
      aPPD gc Nagin ie AR as bird, Bij Bea Sa ory pS ay Sey 7 SUG Ae = Se ae re et ee 
ments at the Oregon line to dusty 
lemon. groves along the Mexican _ border, 
~ American marimba bands, a 
_drish-pipers; Spanish barbecues 
of<a grim game _of- Republican 
| musical chairs, no incumbent ‘is 
of those two offeces. They’re smiling here, but the rift between California Gov. | + ee Goodwin J. Knight and Sen. William F. Knowland is damaging 
ate at the tee © 
Goodwin J. Knight, had an 
nounced’ he was in the battle for 
re-election to stay and that he did 
not have the “slightest interest’? 
in trying for the Senate. — 
election, Knight turned up in 
Washington. After audiences with 
Presiden Eisenhower and Vice 
President Nixen; the governor an- 
nounced that he would be a can- 
bined two-party vote under the 
ceeded Knowland’s by 662,000. Caught in the crossfire is Vice | 
for senator is Cbngressman Clair” #8¢d if the state house and the | 
| phrasemaker. For 15 years Engle 7s He calla himself an “Eisenhower 
third largest in the nation. ,;at factory gates and pensioners’ jeign policy. Knight says his record   
  
Knowland-Knight F Rift Helps Dems 
GOP F ights to Hold C alifornia ‘By SYDNEY KOSSEN 
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (NEA) — 
Republicans and Democrats are 
fighting frantically for California: 
Next to New York, it's the juiciest 
| political plum in the nation, 
Both. parties are pleading for 
votes from remote forest settle-   
In this polyglot Western state; 
citizens have been lured out to 
hear the candidates by Latin 
Chinese glockenspiel orchestra, 
and potluck picnics. 
To.the candidates for governor 
and U. S, senator, this is the 
opportunity of a lifetime. Because - 
trying. toget re-elected: to either 
Solemn, deep~-voiced William their efforts to trade jobs in the November election. 
Fife Knowland is leaving the Sen-' : 
Tun for gov : 
His fellow Repebiican, Gov. 
* * *® 
But as the Knowlang band- 
, wagon started rolling seven 
“months in advance of the primary 
didate for the Senate. 
Knowland and Knight have al- - 
ways run in luck. But, after a _ 
poor GOP showing in the June Attorney General Pat Brown may he listening for the sound 
primary, luck may run out en of a Democratic landslide, but he’s campaigning hard for the 
them on Nov. 4. governorship. 
State Attorney General Edmund . 
(Pat) Brown, a friendly, persua-|paréntly blame him for the rift.| Goodie Knight, 62, has been an 
sive 200-pounder, is expected to be) another drawback: Knowland’s elected public official for 22 years the first Democrat to occupy Cali-! fornia’s Executive Mansion in 16 open espousal of a ‘right to work”’ and governor since Earl Warren 
years. ‘in| thellprimary | kis (cone law. Knight and° other top-level resigned in 1953 to become Chief 
5 Republicans consider this an alba-|Justice of the United States. 
tross around the party’s neck. Knight obviously likes being gov- 
‘ernor of California's 14%4 million. 
  State’s cross-filing system, ex- 
‘He has an attractive 40-year-old 
iwifewhom he married in 1954, 
ifour years after the death of his 
ifirst wife. 5 
* * * * * * | President Nixon, whose political | 
Knight's Democratic opponent) *t==ding and power will be dam- 
Engie, a pry 47- year - old senate seat of his home state fall | 
= — to the Democrats. 
_has represented the mountainous, The 53-year-old Brown has the modern Republican'’’ and praises 
| Second congressional district — the politician’s gift of winning friends the President's domestic and for- 
“*, o*® picnics. Knowland finds it difficult| in Sacramento proves that he 
One of Knowland’s big handi- to carry off the common touch and| knows the needs of California. He 
        caps is that the GOP is split in even canceled a walking tour of tries hard to cultivate Democrats 
c alitornia: Many Republicans ap- 5an Francisco. and ally himself with labor.   
           
   
   
    
   
          Economy Specials   
GER womens, : dept. stores TEENS’ and 
~~ CHILDREN’S: 
SHOES 
1” Reg. 2.99 to 4.99   
  
    
Women, teens’ 4-9 in group. 
Childs’ 812-12, 122-3 in grp. 
@All new 1958 styles 
@All new 1958 colors 
@All first quality 
@ Many styles in group 
@On sale’ while they last 
    
+    
      
  
~ - GIRLS’ 2-PIECE 
MATCH-MATES 
ARE WASHABLE 
wl 
Swishy pleated skirt -all- 
. awhirl under a matching 
‘chemette top! Best of all, 
it’s washable! That's because 
it's made of rayon and 
Dynel in coral or royal. 7-14. 
  se) GIRLS’ POPULAR 
FULLY-LINED 
PLAID SLACKS 
2" A hit with girls! Cotton Jam- 
s §  boree plaid slacks. Band- 
A front an delastic backs. 7-14. 
        
        
    
    
      
            
         
        
       
    
   
    OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO9 
Pontioc and Drayton. Picins : 
Value Plus! 
~ GIRLS’ COAT SET 
AT A LOW PRICE 
Sizes 8 98 LS 
7-8-10 | 
Wonderful warmth, wearability in 
this wool Melton-type set! Boxy or 
fitted, dyed mouton processed lamb 
collars, matching slacks, Charcoal. 
  ON-THE-GO 
CAR COATS 
FOR GIRLS 
9° 
Sturdy wool blend ; : 
warmly interlined. | 
Attached hood is © | 
lined with fluffy 
rayon pile. Char- 
coal in sizes 7-14. 
GIRLS WANT 
EAGLE KNIT 
HEADWEAR 
4 12.2% 
Pom-poms! Peak 
caps! Bulky knits! 
Angora pokes! And 
‘ many more! Hurry! 
      
Keep warm from the inside out. 
SAVE ON FEDERAL’S HUGE STOCK OF 
WARM UNDERWEAR FOR MEN AND BOYS 
  BOYS’ COTTON 
* UNION SUITS 
ne Short sleeved ankle 
length union suits of 
extra-warm cotton. 
Sizes 6 to 16... 1.59 
  
MEN'S 12-LB. 
UNION SUITS 
Short or long sleeves 
with ankle-length 
drawers. Sizes 38-46. 
2.19—2/4,30 
  ANKLE-LENGTH 
BOYS’ DRAWERS 
Fine heavy weight 
cottons, fully-cut. 
Boxer - waist. White. 
Sizes 6 to 16........ $1 
MEN’S DYNEL 
UNION SUITS 
Rib-knit and brushed 
for warmth. 75% cot- 
ton, 25% Dynel. 
Sizes 38 to 46.3,75   BOYS’ SHIRTS, 
MIDWAYS 
Winter weight short. 
sleeve shirt, mid- 
length drawers. Full 
cut cotton. 6-16. 59e 
  
  
UNION SUITS 
OF 10% WOOL 
Men’s full 12-Ib. suits, 
short or long sleeves. 
Ankle® length. Sizes 
38 to 46, ........ 219        
   
    
         
   
            
    
    MEN! OUTDOORS A LOT? 
KEEP THE COLD OUT WITH 
| THERMAL SHIRTS, DRAWERS 
98 
Ea. Pe. 
Thermal shirts and 
drawers, full - cut. 
Hvy. weight cotton. 
S-M-L-XL. Natural. 
THERMAL 
SHIRTS ’N’ 
DRAWERS 
FOR BOYS 
1°? 
Ea. Pe. 
Nazareth circular « 
Thermal underwear 
keeps boys warm! 
Fully cut. 6 to 16. 
  DYNEL SHIRTS HANE’S WINTER MEN’S SHIRTS } 
AND DRAWERS SETS FOR MEN AND DRAWERS 
Long-sleeved, fully Short sleeve shirts, Cotton, long - sleeved 
cut, heavy - weight. ankle drawers, ab- shirt and ankle draw- 
250: os pel, 75° cot- sorbent. S-M-L-NL. ers. Fully-cut. Warm. 
ton. S-ML-XL 2,65 — Shirt 1,50drw1.85 °° 10-Ib. 1.59 - 2/$3 
> 
     
  
      
   
           
    
           
               
    
         
      
     
                    PANTY GIRDLES 
ability of these garments. 
  AD 1 rf] 3 
LOWEST. priest | 
La 
a Christmas 
ao 
Famous Name 
GIRDLES and HI-BULK 
ORLON SWEATERS 
“Reg. to 3.98 
$497      
     33 °3.97 
$7.95 4.97 
You look and fee! your loveliest 
self in these famous brand girdles 
and panty girdles. All white, in 
sizes S-M-L. Very slight imper- 
fections do not mar the wear-    , Short See stipons ‘ Girls’ New 
Sane ‘nwt FALL SKIRTS orlon, so sudsable and Wool flannel, cor- 
soft as a bunny. Pas- R to 5.98 
tels and white, sizes’ eg. duroy and orion 
flare and 
7-14. *2 99 e- pleated Subteen Bulky’ Kult skirts, Solids, 
——— plaids, ‘sizes. 7-14, 
     FAMOUS NAME 
NYLON TRICOT SLIPS" 
tea S595 SOQ Waite's ... Second Floor 
    
  Waite's ... Second Floor 
<j; FAMOUS BRAND 
.-? BRA SALE 
Reg. $2.50 
*] a7 
              Special Group of Buster Brown 
CHILDREN’S SHOES 
Reg. to $7.95 
, Choose their new shoes at Great Fall Sale sav- 
$ _ ings! Boys’ oxfords and girls’ straps, loafers 
e and ties in block, brown and red. Sizes 612-3       You get firm, lasting fig- 
ure beauty from these 
fine famous brand bras! 
Lined and stitched cups. 100% OPAQUE NYLON TRICOT 
Grecian style bodice of permanent Becutifully shaped bodice of all- Fully lined fitted bodice of dointy 
pleated nylon, edged and criss- over “Sun Flower’ Belgium style  “Pointees Spree” lace front and 
crossed for separation with scalloped loce. Slim jine skirt trimmed with back—new “Empire” cut. Ruffied bot- 
  Sizes 32-38 A, B, C, in laces, Matching lace and plegt trim diamond shaped matching scal- tom of 15 denier nylon with “Point- ' . : ot bottom. White or “Gigi” Black. loped laces. White or Paris Pink. ees Spree” insets. White or French ' 
white. Sizes 32 to 40. Sizes 32 to 40. Champogne, Sizes 32 10 40. it most styles. Hurry to.Waite's! to $6.90.     
      
                        
        
            
    MANY OTHERS NOT PICTURED IN SIZES 32 - 34 Waite’s ... Second Floor Waile’s . . . Second loos Waite'’s .. . Second Floor. 
    Rhinestone and Stone Set Jewelry. 
Reg. 3.99 = to 5.00 
_ Necklaces, pins and earrings in 
_ Bleaming rhinestones and colorful 
\. sets. You'll want several matching 
sets. 
  SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 
Boys’ Wool Interlined 
Hooded Parka JACKETS 
ve : | *5 97 Value ° 
Boys’ B9 hooded jackets with fur-like 
orlon pile trimmed detachable hood. 
Snug knit wristlets and warm wool inter- | 
lining. Choose..red, charcoal, navy or 
tan, sizes 6 to 16. 
AR 
SSEAEER 
ON 
* 
* see 
ee 
Hae eee? 
, tieel eee 
ehet 
gente 5 ee + 
* 
~ « Waite's ... Street Floor 
      
     
      OVERALLS 
and 
SLACKS 
Reg. 1.98 
1.27 Washable corduroy 
and flannel fined twill 
boxer and bib style 
slacks and overalls. 
Full cut, red, blue, 
brown, charcoal, sizes 
3-6.    
VELOURS! 
VELVETS! 
FELTS! 
FEATHERS!     
           
      
    
        
      
    Waite’s .. ..Second Floor 
     
   
     
    
       
    
           
     ELECTRIC VIBRATING 
MASSAGE PILLOWS 
res” = 83.97 
Eases tired muscles! Removable 
washable carduroy cover, 8-ft. cord, 
UL approved. Full 5-year guarantee. 
        
        
    
   
    
       
   
   
      Waite’s Own Exclusive 
ALL TRANSISTOR 
PORTABLE RADIOS 
$29.95 e , 
4 RCA transistors plus diode, 4” 
PM speaker; extra’high gain fer- 
rite antenna, two large controls. 
Attractivestan leather case. New Fall MILLINERY 
to $8.99 “4 ; 89 : 
A collection of consequence 
many silhouettes . . . all available 
to you at a tiny price! Craftsmanship 
you'll cherish in colors of incredible 
clarity and spectacular depth.    
    
   
          Waite's ... 
Second Floor     ’ Waite'’s Cosmetics ... Street Floor 
       
     
        
   
   
         Boys’ Long Sleeve. 
SPORT SHIRTS 
Reg. 91937 3 for 1.98 “$4.00 
Ivy and regular collar styles in 
flannels and ginghams, many wash 
‘n wear. Stripes, prints, sizes 6-16,     
          
     
       Batteries sccn0oeo 64600 Ue) 
            
      
        
    
          Waite’s ... Third Floor 
  Waile's . . . Downstairs . 
Waite’s ... Second Floor _ 
        
       
    “Save Almost Half on Soft 
LAYETTE ESSENTIALS 
Reg. 1.00 to 5.98 
57°" 2.97 Shawls, sweaters, sweater sets, 
booties, knit “caps, mittens in 
white and pastels. - Tots’ Fonews Brand 
‘WARM KNIT SLEEPERS. 
Reg g. $F 
$2.50 and ~ 
$2.98 ! 2-piece gripper or middy style with 
special treatment for less shrink- 
age. Pink, blué, maize, mint, sizes 
6 months to 8 years,           Tots’ Shep Crotch. 
- CORDUROY CRAWLERS * 
i °1.27 
Tots” corduroy crawlers With dainty 
embroidery trim, snap crotch. Red, 
blue and pastels, 6-18 months.     
    
   
       
         5 CONVENIENT WAYS 
to CHARGE - 
at WAITESS! 
Ask about our many time payment plans! 
There ig one to-suit your needs perfectly! 
. Credit Olfice . , . Fifth Floor 
kd    
    
   
        
             
         
       
     
                     
      
              Waite's .. . Second Floor _ Waite's . . . Second Floor.       Waite’s . . . Second Floor 
   
    
          
     
      neu “s THE PONTIAG. PRESS: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958   
“sy pth BOS. Ore a nus MPG ee fe 0 es we Os es 
= “y: ~'ae he: a Sesia BNP ee Aa Marry Ing or Call. Fe ‘aasitt 
hundreds of saie-priced Christmas gifts! 
             
     
        ‘Man's Long Stove SPORT SHIRTS 
. a 2.99 Wash and wear Dacron and cotton, 
silk and cotton, broadcloths-in solids, 
stripes, and fancy patterns. Full cut, 
sanforized. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Guar- 
anteed for | full year! 2 and 3.BUTTON pt ia 
SWEATER-VESTS © 2a ae 
=s *6. 95 
The season's most ae 
style . . . solids with con- 
trasting trim. All fine # 
lambswool or lambswool, “ 
‘and orlon blends. Wash-+ 
cable, sizes S-M-L-XL. 
               
          
       
     
         
    
   
   
       
            
  MEN'S 100% Woo. 
~ FLANNEL SLAGKS 
16.97 | Fine 100% all wool flannel 
slacks all full cut arid pleated. 
Free alterations on cuffs even 
at this sale price! Choose 
light or dark grey, brown or 
charcoal, sizes 30-44. 
          
       
      
            
    
  Man‘a 
Famous Brand | 
SOCKS 
to "S50 9 1 . 
A really outstanding group of men’s 
sized hose! Wool, wool blend, orion, 
orlon blend, cottons, latest patterns 
and colors. 10%2-13. 
Waite’s ... Street Floor     
              
       
Waite's... Street Floor 
Waiie'’s ... Street Floor 
         
     Waite’'s ... Street Floor 
  
    MEN’S DRIP-DRY, NOAIRON 
_WASH-and-WEAR 
DRESS SHIRTS 
100% cotton broadcloth drip- es: $4.00 
    ~  Men’s-Lambs Wool = . MEN'S WARM © —— ‘Men’s Famous Brand  - MEN'S ONE-SIZE | 
< Grew Neck Sweaters FLANNEL ROBES = BOXER SHORTS ~=—S STRETCH SOCKS 
~ a $4.97 as, $3.97) sy 97 6 Br OT 
            
          
     
   
               
       dry dress shirts with convert- = . 
“ible cuffs, permanent stay col- $ Soft as a kitten, toasty warm! _. Men's warm flannel robes in Premium broadcloth famous 100°% Helanca nylon stretch 
‘lors. In white, sizes 141/2- 100% lambs wool sweaters, full poncsome fancy patterns. , brand boxer sho ie hand- hose, one size fits all. Solid 
16! ; 32. omfortable, full cut. Sizes - some patterns ull cut for colers and fancy patterns. Re- 
| 62, sleeve 32-35. ae rig Grey, brown, tan, /  §-M-L-XL. Buy now for Christ- =  roominess. Sanforized. Sizes _ inforced heel and toe. Save 
; charcoal, sizes S-M-L-XL. ‘imaclondiscave! 30-44. ; now! 
Waite's ... Street Floor _ : \, 
Waite's ... Street Floor ‘ Waite's .. . Street Floor : . Waite's... Street Floor : Waite's Street Floor 
‘ _ SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 ee SHOP TONIGHT ‘TIL 9 
Dress Weight ~, .. Washable No-lron 
a a 8 it SLIPCOVERS 100% WOOL =), . Sure-Fit SLIP E 4 0 a a \ — . Chair, Reg. 16.95 Washable, textured covers you 
ces 2 on “never iron. Drax treated to 
& L ; $5 97 repel soil. Red, green, brown. 
Reg. $2.99 ° _ } a 
Sofa, Reg. 27.95 
97 Wash-and-Hang 
re Fiberglas Wash-and-Hang 
Fiberglas CURTAINS  , Draperies | : Single Width by 90” ‘abe g 
*% TAILORED <6 ] 17 . Reg. 10.99 $899 ' 
4 oF 4” ae pe 
m by 5 R my 2.99 e Panel at 1% Width by 90” $] 299 
     Beautiful +00°% wool 
4 Reg. 14.99 ; dress weight fabrics in 
- seal riage 90” “A 77 cna wise ey) $07 5 checks, plaids, tweeds! 
” Reg. 5. 99 ° Pair | “Reg. 32:99 29 Just right for fall and 
, . winter. All bolts 54” 
4y" by 36’/ TIERS, Reg. $2.99. 5b one $2.17 -. Floral print in ercoal cocoa or aqua, (wide. Save now! 
modern print in black with gold, red 
VALANCE, Reg. $1.99 ...........- $1.57 © or agua. 
Woite’s .. . Fourth Floor a Waite’s ... Fourth Floor Waite’s ... Fourth Floor 
   Waite's 
    
   
    
  . « « Fourth Floor 
   
Full Size CANNON TOWELS = WiiTE ROUND BOBBIN PORTABLE BATH TOWELS HAND TOWELS WASH CLOTHS 
Reg. 89c Reg. 49c Reg. 39¢ 3 , Fully ‘Guaranteed by 
2°1.3"15"1 WHITE : eure sizes in famous Cannon towels!. -Many S em ae ae ee oe ow ow ow oe = sewing 
Waite's... colors, stripe with mylar accent. All first quality. ie 
Fourth Floor SINS Ue ae machines a 
     
   
    
      
  ies oe ; OS No Money Down, 
SPECIAL PRICES on WAITE’S PeCrreie 7 $39 05 ' ie canbe 
BELLEAIR MUSLIN and PERCALE SHEETS wwncvname “imihitu ie 4 to give. yeu professional sewing ©.) 198 models ; 
® Stitch Selector *MUSLIN   
® Automatic Bobbin 72” by 108” 81" by 108" Cases : 
Reg. 1.99 : Reg. 2.29 Reg.. 55¢ ® Round Bobbin 
With © Fully Guar 
1.57 ‘1.97 47° =| e e : Mahogany “tae Size Sewing | 
| . 4 Cabinet net x | 
| * PERCALE . Only ® Automatic Tension 
        72” by 108” 81” by 108” Cases 
"Reg. 2.79 Reg. 3.09 Reg. 79c $ 29 Winder 
®@ Multi-Ran 
a 97 $2 3 7 67 ¢ more! Speed Control 
° ke Waite's 
Waite's «+ Fourth Floér . Fourth Floor 
      
“™NOB HILL” FRINGED HOBNAIL BEDSPREADS NEW LOW PRICES ON FULL SIZE PILLOWS! @ White ‘ - 97 
e Pink ae 2 ' ‘9 . Dacron or Foam Latex DUCK DOWN 
  
      Reg. 7 J For TT . Reg. For 4] 0” @ Green a 
($4.99 fm - $5.99 © Hunter FULL or TWIN SIZE | 
Washable, ever plump, non-aller- Soft, buoyant, resilient pillows filled @ Aqua Pre-shrunk, lint-free, no-iron heavy hob- | 
~ genic pillows, percale ‘covered. Save with 100% pure duck dewn! Down- @ Yellow ~ nail spreads at savings! Washable, ‘per- 
now, outfit afl your beds! ¢ "proof ticking. " manent color, contdin avisco fibers for long P 
@ Red wear. Backed with heavy muslin, round 
. fringed -edges. 
mEmuooM SeAWGHD "LOW D tor $Y] waies.« ruth ro Blue fringed edges | caine ee - a 1 —— @ Brown Waite's... Fourth Floor 
. ‘ i ee s P ; * > : 3 
       
  
       © ; = = sana ‘ . 
* abe re Hs Ps my eee — : s s e wit yee : Sar Re a yeas 
— : es __THE.PONTHAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 0.1958 0 : 
hq LOWEST paices! WAC FN eS Se os 4.25! Lae ‘51077 = ae j\mianesr QUALITY, AY. Sala cas! Wrry In op Call FE 4-291)! F\\ Als oe oe ORL (fo a) Uae | , 
‘ane rs : 
mrisrmas 
        SHOP TONIGHT “til 9 
MIRACLE “DURAN KID” ~ 
MAN’S CHAIR — Reg. $3 NO: MONEY DOWN, BIG SAVINGS on the leaner that walks on Gir ... the. 
  
‘HOOVER CONSTI     SS 
  | AT A NEW LOW NO MONEY DOWN ... PAY 4 MONTHLY. 
Complete with tools! The “Constellation” follows 
you-on its own air stream — without pulling.   
    
     
    
       
       
   
      
   
  , $49.95 1 Nozzle glides smoothly on 3 wheels . ... double- . PAY % MONTHLY! ’ stretch hose lets you clean a full flight of 
_—e , oe ge stairs. Full 1 horsepower motor; king size This: big he-man‘s chair is fin- Sold fer $97. 50 throwaway bag. 
ished in handsome “Duran Kid’ 
—that looks like leather—feels 
like leather—and wears like iron! 
Just wipe with a damp cloth to 
clean. A handsome addition to 
any room—and you save! Choose 
rich green or red.    
       
    
     
    It Beats, as It Sweeps, as It Cleans! | 
Hoover “Convertible” Special 
@.2-Speed Motor y | 
| 
| © Automatic Shift *64°> 
| 
L     Waite's .. . Downstairs 
@ Throwaway Bag 
@ Modern Styling : Sold ‘for $89.95 MODEL 31 = ayoc —— SS A AS A YS A SS | | | A =| STS 
S ALE! Hoover Does 4 Jobs! iu gt Cleans! Waxes! Polishes! Scrubs! 
Come in Today and See $ 8 8 $58.96 
the Hoover Demonstrated! Velue 
Revolutionizes floor cleaning! It scrubs, . 
applies wax, and polishes to a mirror finish 
all in one simple operation without chang- 
ing brushes. You can even clean your rugs 
with the carpet attachments included in 
this amazing sale price! 
NO PUSHING 5 . Ait Yen You “ Is walk Alea 
_— Deluxe Self-Propelled* 
22-In. ROTARY MOWER 
99 $ - No Money Down, 
$89.95 Pay 3 Monthly! 
@ Dependable 2% HP Briggs and 
Stratton Engine    
   
   
      @ Recoil Starter SS a OO = 
Do a Hundred Jobs. in Half the Time with 
HOOVER 
DUSTETTE | 
*31.99 “roca Powerful hand vacuum cleaner that 
| cleans~ all those stubborn places with @ 
ease. Easy-grip handle, light weight, % @ Controls on Handle 
  ® Rustproof Aluminum Deck 
- @ Full 22” Cut 
© 90-Day Warranty HOOVER PIXIE- CLEANER 
($39.95 
NO MONEY DOWN, PAY MONTHLY: 
What a joy to use! Wear it over your 
shoulder, leave hands free to do hundreds 
of household jobs and clean the car. @ With Leaf Mulcher 
   
     long cord, brush, in nozzle picks up lint . 
and litter fast. 7 . * “ 
Waite'’s ... Downstairs 
| Waite’s ... Downstairs 
—_— a TS se A SS = se ee | a ee see | ~-Waite's . . . Downstairs 
         
SAVE $18.00 on 9’ by 12’ Room Size =| ~—»s SPECIAL ONE-TIME PURCHASE OF FIRST QUALITY 
HAND-HOOKED RUGS — INNERSPRING MATTRESSES 
58.00 °39.97 SA A RET oP ‘ , | NO MONEY DOWN wa SMEs ssoees 4 v Po we ; —_ = -< a sede $28 PAY Ys MONTHLY!    
“ee ee 6 eo ee 
3’ by 5’ Reg. 8.98 .......... - . 
4’ by 6’ Reg. 14.98 .......... : a 
6’ by 9 Reg. 38.98 .......... ea a FULL and TWIN SIZES 
Choose either mattress or box spring 
at one low price! Pre-built border. on 
mattrésses, firm heavy gauge steel 
innerspring ' construction. Strong 
woven stripe ticking, handles, air 
vents. Guaranteed for 5 years! Highlight your decor with 
these colonial beauties, now 
yours at unheard of low 
prices! These are handsome 
year round rugs that blend 
gracefully with traditional 
rooms, sparkle with interest 
in @ modern’ setting. Save! 
Waite's . ... Downstairs 
Waite's . ... Downsiairs    
    
      
  
  2 ys Cs THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 a . ELEVEN 
: | gated at sebbterraban) eae a : 
Mou A fiona ists. « = tas of cara 1 : . aA eee . ‘Expedition. Ts ‘Success © | cant ag yet Open Every Night Until 9 
Bees anon nie = aie RING Cl ried aa ruaes| meicae anata | Sang ee "(A REGULAR 3-RING CIRCUS OF FUN- dug. up important new evidence of) northwest shores of Greenland. ee Gee ee 
Moreau S. Maxwell ame. home 
‘with a new respect for the primi- hence dell,” necthactaish “valu: 
    
    1 [{Girl, 10, Starts Out Well ‘on Goal of ‘Private Eye’ 
  
     
           
    
    
       
      
         
   
          
      WATTACHED. ED ATTACHED 
* ’ ‘onat hed WHILE-U WAIT   
OAR SHOP 
  
  
       
   
   BRING THIS COUPON WITH YOU TO 
S. S. SMES Se     \|Shell, 10* confides that her am- 
|| bition fs to grow up to be a lady 
i} “private eye.’ 
ii\trying to break into a filling sta- 
F7 || \disclosed a burglary Mim provid- 
iirested. 
|} ain Bank Deposit Box 
| “money to burn” in the Broadway 
=) National bank night depository box, 
4 passerby deposited a burning cig- 
7 4\\ arette, 
or Wilmington noticed smoke jicoming from the depository. The 
i il 
SYLVESTER, Ga. (UPI) — Mim 
|. Mim saw two men apparently 
tion partly owned by her father, 
iCarl Shell. Her father laughed at 
her but when later investigation 
ed a close description of the cul- 
iprits and they were. quickly ar- 
Lighted Cigarette Lands 
w@— There was QUINCY, IL 
but none was destroyed when a 
    Bank officials were called after 
blaze was doused with water. 
  
  
HOLIDAY. SHO    
   
  -our most 
comfortable. 
health chair 
MORE SEATING AREA 
DELUXE BUILT-IN 
VIBRATOR MOTOR 
C@VERED IN BOLTAFLEX | AND SCOTCHGARD TREATED FABRIC 
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS 
“FAMOUS KIDNEY ROLL 
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED 
Regular $129.50 
we. a4 550 
~ Adjusts to 
any desired 
position! 
4    
     we    Specially Priced for 
         
  See it! Try it today & Layaway for Xmas.       
       
         
             
        
   
    
  PPERS! |   Help /relieve Backache, Tired smote Nervous Tensions 
        
  
  
    
Charge |! 
BUDGET | OPEN MON., THURS., _ FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M.     t 30--60-90 Days! IT! * a 3 
    
      
  . 4 BLOCKS MOF 14 NERD... noes Md   EASY TO PARK—JUST DRIVE UP! 
) HI-WAY FURNITURE MART /522 WOODWARD AVE., B/RM INGHAM, MICH.    
  PACKED VALUES... 
CHRISTMAS sae DON'T MISS i 
       
   
        
     
    
    
        
   
     
     
        
        
    ‘Mercedes-Benz’ racer 
signals automatically 
Goes forward, back automatically 77 
on battery al sagan Signals red or 
green. Sturdy construction. Less batteries 
V7 YOUR 
ted) 3     
     
      
   
   
  Battery-operated 
giant helicopter 
Goes backward, forward at 
remote command. Rotating 
blades with lighted tips.    
   
    e 
    
            
     
       177 
~ 10}-inch RO” 
‘grown-up’ 
dressed doll “Big sister” doll wears high 
heels, pretty dress; has root- 
ed hair and moving eyes. 
All-viny] body. 77 
      
             
         
     
            
     
       
      
       
        
     
   
      
     
Pre-school peg table‘ They learn while they play 
with this sturdy playtable 
pegboard. Attached bench, 
mallet and pegs. 177 
          ¥ Automatic 
wash machine It really washes . . . has timing 
dial! Battery - operated. For ~ 
“pretend” housewives! 1 
Less batteries   
    te pody 
All pls 
Dress-up fun for kiddies! 
Gay Halloween costumes All their favorite TV, comic strip and movie charac- 
ters ... and many, many more! Widest selection in 
town. Gay colors for loads of “trick or treat” party 
fun! All are well-made and flame-proof for safety. 
177 
Chrome-finish 
cash register Push ap sale rings up in 
top window. Big enough to 
hold real coins. 177        
               
  Big doll carriage 
Heavy plastic body, hood. 
Folds. 5-inch wheels. 77 
       
       
    
        B-Z porter is 
most amusing He won't be trapped . . works 
his way around any obstacle. 
Battery operated. Sturdy. 
Less ] y a 
batteries       Strato-jet with 
red and green lights Battery operated. Speeds up, slows down and 
flashes running lights automatically. Realistic 
model is sturdily constructed to last. Buy now ‘. ¢ 
for Chaistmas and save! _ 7 
Let batieries 
  10-pe. ‘cleaning set; ; ‘Bingoratma’ 
  
o ae : - . 
\ ae 
; sy rN ed ce ee See eee a fs TS . BUY NOW FOR 
paitagay ae : Folding wooden yacht | ame pre: ‘Pony Ride’ <itme - @hg broom, cafpet sweeper, chair, smoothly sanded vides tons of fun for horse is brightly peint- _ = 
ing optitu H¢8. 2! 77 dust Pan on Sree I 77 i fatahed... seseuees 1.77 the whole family 1 .77_ ed end durable....1.77 =.   
  ta Ve” ee ee 
i EC Se RC SUES, I AE ee Naa eee 
     TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY, OCTOBER. 2% 1058 > et . 
‘ ; < = ; ee : 
aes Se, nA ex agar ape ge gh aap. bi ea ape .- 
    at 
  AN EEO A or 
= 
ages       
    
Great Lakes Remain eer gn tan wd sevl21 U. S. Airports Set ; ropped at about normal rate, = 
Below Average Level ite, uate: Gnari ‘secinea oui tg Handle Jet Traffic iless than normally. Lake Superior, 
iwhich normally rises, rose at a 
‘DETROIT (UPI) — The Great) greater than normal rate but was 
  Wayne Major), Miami, Seattle, St ; 
Louis, ‘Pittsburgh, Boston, of, Phila- 
delphia, Kansas City (new airport), 
Dallas, Cleveland, ~Atlanta, 
Memphis, Nashville, Tulsa, Albu- 
querque, Toledo, Tucson, Portland 
and Louisville. WASHINGTON (UPI) — A total/dre. 
Lakes remained below ‘their aver-/still below the average level atjof 27 U.S. ‘airports will be ready   
age level for September, according |602.40 feet. Normal is 602.66 feet./tp handle all or some commercial | P|qnes Halt Eager 
of the U.s Al the lakes are expected to jet traffic by Jan. 1, 1960-— 
to the lake survey decline in October. Army Corps of Engineers. 
Lakes Michigan and Huron, at) 
578.70 feet, were more than two) date: for full-scale jet operations. 
These include:   — 
Templehof Airport in Berlin is target) 
feet below their average normal one of the few airports in thejnational, Denver, Baltimore, Chi- the 1860s, was changed after just 
level for September. 
All the lakes but Lake Superior | large city.       ,world located i® the center of ajcago (O'Hare), Los Angeles, Fort/one day because commercial @ir- NEW YORK } (UPD) = The loca-jand_ 
tion chosen for filming ‘‘‘Rough| sa 
San Francisco, New York Inter-| Riders,” a new TV series: set in):: “Wit Characterizes 
pom of te me   
    Worth, Detroit (Willow Run andjliners kept passing overhead.       
      
      
   
       
    
   
   
    
    
      
  
  
  
  
AMERICA’S BEST 
Griddle-in-the 
Grill bacon, hamburgers—fry 
top ALUMINUM GRIDD 
griddle-height makes 
Work-space cover fi 
over Griddle. 
ag saad Sears Slashes Prices 
@ 25-IN. OVEN! 25 inches wide—baking 
room fer your entire dinner! Room to put - 
your roasts in sideways so you can 
baste from side to side, not awkward 
front to rear basting! 
@ Removable VISI-BAKE OVEN WINDOW 
e Big, gtide-out SMOKELESS BROILER 
e Full-width FLUORESCENT LIGHT casts 
“soft light,” accents range’s straight-line - q 
: styling. ELECTRIC CLOCK, 1-hour ° 
° KEN-TIMER in backguard 
@ Two 16,000 BTU SUPER JET BURNERS 
sear, seal in meat’s natural flavor | 
NATION-WIDE SERVICE 
Wherever you live in the @.A., 
there's Sears service near you. 
it’s quick and economical! 
Phone FE 5-4171 
Hf you can't come in, phone for 
information. You can trust Sears 
low prices. USUALLY 179°! 4 
T 
    or é 
ric eut © 
  
    
  
  12.9 CUBIC 
REFRIGER @ Priced lower than many 
smailer models with 
defrost bother! 
® Touch-a-button Cold- 
spot makes frost vanish 
in minutes! e   
      
    
  ® Enjoy storage space 
galore, plus big porce- 
lained crisper!   Ra 
80 LBS. OF FROZEN FOOD             WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL Should you ever need service, It’s 
alweys near as your 
JUST CALL FE 5-4171 >: * 
  1 KENMORE 30-INCH GAS RANGE 
with the 
serving them wonderfully easy! 
Entire Griddle can be soaked in 
‘warm water for quick-cleaning. 
ts right ~ 
  SEARS PRICES ARE LOW PRICES 
Sears doesn't offer you a “discount” on artificially high 
list prices. Sears prices are honest low prices. 
*S DOWN io nonnty peyments "il Pebrvery, 1959 
  Save money, live better! Buy in bigger quantities ot sale 
prices... oll fits in big freezer chest ond chiller. 
FREE 5-YR. GUARANTEE on seqle: FREE 1-YR. SERVICE, parts and labor 
  SELLER! 
-Middle 
eggs—rapidly on 
LE. Convenient 
tending foods, 
      to Bring You a 
NEVER-TO-BE-REPEATED LOW PRICE! 
DAYS ONLY! 
  
FOOT 
ATOR   
229" Ist Payment 
February Ist 
STORAGE, TOO 
d unit; 
  
    
@ Only $5 Down - 
@ Reg. 229.95 
Freezes and stores 350 Ibs. of food.. Has a white porcelain 
enameled interior, two door racks, threé ‘direct-contact 
freezing shelves and cold control. 5-yr: Ponce on n the 
sealed refrigeration system. FABULOUS 
SAVINGS! 
THIS 
SALE ONLY. 
     
    
   
     
           rege ms i 
Riel nade be! me * 
        ‘AT THIS LOM price! 
~ KENMORE GAS — 
Ahilomitio 
DRYERS Guaranteed First Quality 
© Automatic Ignition 
\] FIRST PAYMENT FEBRUARY FIRST!    
for More 
Convenience 
@ Kenmore Dryer Has 
3 Drying 
Temperatures 
@ Big Family Size 
10-Lb. Capacity 
@ Load-A-Door Eases 
Loading, Unloading 
on Sears Easy Payment Plan is ail it takes to 
put one of the Kenmore Appliances adver- 
tised on this page in your laundry. inquire! 
SHOP SEARS APPLIANCES—BASEMENT 
TOMORROW NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. 
    gO try, 
OUR LOWEST PRICE! 
-No Monthly Payments Til fo 59 
        
   
    
  
      
. Budget-Priced 10 Cu. Ft 
— Upright Home Freezer 
12 he 8 
. a ‘Ist Payment Feb. 1st —   
Ladies, here's the home 
freezer that you've been 
wanting for.so:‘lang and 
specially he os to 
save you $40. .15 cu. ft. 
“stores and~ te chae 350 
pound Appliance Dept., Main Paement , = 229° Ist Peymen Feb. Ist 4 
Chest-Type 
15 cu. ft. HOME FREEZER Regularly Priced at 269. ce 
8 0 
Down.      
  
154 N. Saginaw Street "Phone TE 5-4171           
     
  
    
  
    
  
        \. ROEBUCK AND CO. / 
              
  ig “2 
   - put your little dreamers 
‘in warm, cozy flannel! 
as low 98 : Others 
of to 3.98 
'. leopard, bunny or kangaroo 
Mom will delight with these fanciful Animal 
Kingdom Sanforized cotton flannel pajamas 
that make little ones happily look forward 
to bedtime. And, it's no wonder. Pou while 
they last. Bunny Style... .3.98 
Children's and 
Infants’ Wear. 
    ERANK D, MURBACH sCH 
Frank D. Murbach 
Honored as Carin 
           
      
        
    
     
        
          truly proportioned sale 
_ Royal Purple Nylons §     
          
         
      cpeukarly 1.19 to- 
1.39 ... same 
quality os other   
    Thirteen-year-old Frank is the | - fomous brands ~~, Sears Main Floor 
son of Mr. and Mrs,—Frank -B.j — —— selling at 1.35 rh 
Murbach, of 2376 Mulberry St. He’ to 1.95 « pajr. 
   os bee 6 tee Free cer 
New York Kids" 
Ignore Grass, | 
Want Paving : For that lovely head-to-toe look . .. 
filmy stockings that mist your legs with 
color to blend or match your costume. 
Pick your exact size from a rainbow of 
tints.   
ang     
    | in vibrant colors and basic shades: Washable Nylon Washable Outdoor 
y YORK # — ' full fashioned finely knit ultra ° 
Paredes gE pad) sheets with sell sanen 4... _ 99¢ * 2-pe. Outdoor Suit Suits for Tots 
to look at. j 
But for playing games, a lot | seamless ulgs sheer microfilm 99s 88 88 . 
of kids think there’s nothing like mesi—cant mun Hpi s eta Se Only Only | 
the good old sidewalks of New . 
4 ’ ° 
York. in fall’s popular basic shades: Spec ialpurchase! Sizes 2 to Boys’ and girls’ sizes 3 to 6x 
— = * * full fashioned utility sheers ‘ for little boys, gine Cron in completely _washable cot- 
Boys and girls from six to the a SHUSy 82 leece trimmed hood. Fully ton sateen. Zipper convert- 
ie . with self seams .. peoocootoggesesce 99¢ lined. Matching slacks ible hoods: Colors. early teens in Jow-rent housing 
projects have been chalking , 
squares and circles on the paved © . 
walks to play their games. They <q 
“pave been skating around - the 
project walks at dizzy speed that o. ; 
scare package-laden housewives. Lingerie Dept. Main Floor 
* * * 
So the City Housing Authority 
“dig -up-grass and |     
     
  
—   
    shop Friday night ‘til 9   
    has 
uproot shrubbery at some of its 
projects and pave the space. 
Then the kids can have a good | 
hard surface for their hopscotch, | - s 
top spinning, roller skating, and | “On or e 
other traditional sidewalk fun. . 
- Despite changing times, theyll | 
be able to trip the light fan- 
tastic on the sidewalks of New 97 
York. } 
regularly 5.98 each 
Tests Indicate Silica | | | Extra long panty and girdle gives you that long, smooth 
| Can Control Roaches 4 look. It smooths your tummy while the new contro- 
comfort double panel-back won't ride up, bind or make 
LOS ANGELES — Experiments] you tug. Light nylon power net controls without bones. 
at the University of California at - 
Los Angeles indicate that cock- 
roach control may be greatly im- 
proved by use of inert, nontoxic 
silica dusts that kill faster and, 
more consistently than chemical; 
insecticides. 
In the tests, a powdered form 
of silica aerogels of the Syloid | 
group was sprinkled on the floor. | ~- 
It was found to absorb the water- 
retaining, protective coating of the 
roaches walking through it, and to} 
kill them by dessigation. 
Since the powder’s action is non- 
chemical, the researchers say it’s 
highly possible that the roaches 
may not develop an immunity to 
it, 4 | S for girls Ttol4... Honeylane 
S i) coats for fall on sale for Sears: Days! 
MY yes at 16.95 “charge   — 
              
     
   
   
        
      
      
    SS 
7, wenally 99 S 
/ dthis fall Sears Days mean lowest coat prices 
Wait ‘til you see our stun- 
ning assortment of all vir- 
gin wool Honeylane (R) 
coats for Fall. Theyre 
- ideal for school .. . dress 
up too! And are they low 
priced. Fleeces, plaids 
with velveteen trim, che- 
mise effect tweeds. Hurry 
in today! - 
Corsetry Dept.. 
Sears Main Floor 
Just Say, “Charge It’ on 
Sears Revolving Charge 2 
gg 
pr Be 
UE 
me 
ws 
gets Menths te Pay or Use 
Like a Regular Charge Account 
  a Se 
ood 7 to 14 Shop. 
Sears Second Floor 
Special Purchase 
Quilted Dusters 
Usually — 99 
4.98 to 5.98 Just Say, ‘Charge It’’ on 
Sears Revolving Charge 
Take Menths to Pay or 
Use It Like a Regular 
Charge Account   
Assortment of brisk 
cotton quilted tote in 
geometric and floral pat- 
terns. Hurry in today... 
Save! License Plates Ready | 
LANSING (UPI) — The state’s| 
new license plates go on sale Nov. | 
1 but already first supplies of the 
| green ahd gold tags have been 
shipped fo Secretary of State 
_branch ‘offices in the Upper Penin- 
sula. Secretary of State James-j 
M. Hare said the plates were taken by truck 
Capacity of the U.S. steel indus- Proportioned Fit Charmode Longline     
     
  
    try is About 126 million tons per] Charmode Girdles Wonderstretch Bra 
3 77 : 44 
Reg. 9.98 Reg. 4.98 
For straight, average and full Wondrously comfortable and 
hip figures. Flatter-ees front beautiful in black or veges 
boning won't dig. Rayon and Nyice Dacron* elastic. 32-B 
AY, OCTOBER 12... cotton, 27-36 . 42-C. 
i's NBC-TV Spectacular “DuPont Trademark 
  heart warming 
lush Chenille 
| dusters 
99 each 
    
    Sale! Fairloom 
colored felt 
Reg. . 1° Yard 
MONDAY, OCTOBER 1300 2.79 
THRU SAT., OCTOBER 18 a 49) Ryle net 
Yd. 
Special — 3 9° 
Beautiful wispy net in all 
strong riylon. Lovely colors . .-. 
white to deep jewel tones. 
45-in.Chromspun - 
Acetate Taffeta 
Only 58° Yd. 
                
    
  So many wonderful things you 
can make with this 72-inch part 
wool felt . . . skirts, pillows, 
peniante for school 
~ skirt lengths Reg. 3.98 Nylon 
Tricot No-lron Slips 
oy” Save now. on- lovely.-no-iron wear it 3 ways: 
belted, loose or half belted 
You'll love the look and feel. 
of ‘this bright, cuddly chenille 
robe. Keeps you warm and 
cizy, too. Sizes 10 to 18.   ~ 2 ITEMS for the PRICE of 1 
ess plusapenny! | 
L$ Omar Banoant parE! oo ra 
get that skirt ma- Regularly 79c¢ delightful rustl- . nylon slips with frosty all robe 
He terial. 142 yard )« ing acetate taffeta, resists nylon lace trims. Y ull Full length robe ....... 2.99 
long, 44 inches water spot. Hurry in today for ~ flounces. White or pink, sizes , 
wide. this oats SOVINGS 32°40 i Lingerie Dept. Main oc           
  0 Oe Youn money bach’ “SEARS AN. Saginaw St. Phone FE: 3-4171 
  H . 
4 r’ a ‘ . < * ; ‘ ¢ | . ¢ 7 | _ “. # = | 
4 
     
    
        
  
          
    ; 4 } pS . 
a ee So oe = : co | e. : 
FOURTEEN Pet oe 
: = s “ = i 3 LA oe aes Calif, 
By DELOS SMITH _ brain to swell, but Zimmerman > taken place and the resulting | by: Autting cells, oe. rinod ls wes: theory, but they had neaive. “They sbataatialed the pono Bo ges 
UPI Science Editor | and Spencer took the presence of | pressure of the brain against its | In making their reat to-the|their seven out of. 11 recovered |“theory’? further with srominents ‘pee: 
CHICAGO (UPI) — Quick and” fluid to mean that swelling had.! bony case had produced the fluid ‘surgeons’. _congress, they empha- |patis patients to make ‘the “theory” im-|with 24 dogs, - it's 
       
   . skilled refrigeration will save a oo 
man’s brain after his stopped) 
heart has been restarted, the 
American College of Surgeons’ 44th 
Annual Clinical Congress was rd 
this week. 
It was new proof of science’s in-, 
creasing ability to tip nature’s bal- 
ances toward life and away from 
death. 
aE tee The heart stops beating and | 
the flow of exygenated blood to | 
the brain stops. I has been be- 
lieved that brain cells start | 
dying almost at ence and, if the 
flow of oxygen is stopped for | : ; _ A Ss A LL a A Ss G R FE AT A aa | T Ss fa A dd E: : 
five minutes, the brain is irre- 
versibly damaged.     
  
    
  
  
  
  
      
  
; But it occurred to Drs. Jack M. = = \ ‘ : . : a : na sous — 2 . = 
at the Johns Hopkins University . sears days are pay-off days for shoppers with ma \ , | wc 
Baltimore, that what was happen- S RO a : Sa ve ‘ a 
ing to the oxygen-deprived brain & x : ’ —_— =J ; 
was poet happened to a eames ‘ : ‘ 
= tiny budgets ——— famous Biltwel — | ” e fj h 
our acrilan* jersey $ 3 children’s shoes 
blouses are washable! / 6 6     held in its rigid case, the skull. | 
Swelling compresses it against its | 
case and cells are damaged and, 
killed by compression. This the 
doctors set out to prevent in 11 
persons whose hearts had been 
stopped for four to five minutes 
before they were restarted. They 
sought to do it in the way a          
  Both swell. But the brain is, 
Regularly $2.98 ~ 
            
        sprained ankle is prevented from! , ; . 
swelling—by the application of, Because they're Acrilan* you can wash them and “Charge 
cold, never touch them with an iron. They'll keep their it’     shape, too. And what wonderful fashion shapes they 
_ are! Chemise styles! Blousons! Tuck-ins! All in 
wonderful colors. Sizes 32 to 38.. : 
eur all-wool flannel $ 4 
skirts are seat-lined! 
Regularly $4.98 This was done by encasing the | 
unconscious patients in ice packs, 
reducing their bedy temperature 
seven to eight degrees and hotd: | 
ing it there for some time. Seven | 
ef the 11 got well, and without | 
any lingering damage to the cen- 
tral nervous system of which the 
brain is the master, 
_All 11 had been ‘‘dead’’ as the 
’ Jayman understands death—their 
2 hearts had been stopped by stab 
wounds in some, by drug reactions 
in others, and by shock and other 
heart stoppers in still others. Re- | 
starting stopped hearts, however, | 
is almost a routine matter in to- 
day's advanced state of scientific 
know-how. But what good is it to 
save a man’s heart for him if he 
thereby loses his brain to oxygen 
lack? 
None, because that kis him, | 
usually one to three days after 
the cerebral flood flow was in- | 
terrupted. At autopsies these 
brains show~a high amount of 
fluid content. No one has proven 
yet that oxygen lack causes ze © popular boys’ and girls’ styles, sizes 812 to 4 
@ made on combination lost for better fit 
Reduced for Sears Days only! Scientifically proportioned » 
to correctly fit growing young feet. Supple leather uppers 
are stitched with rip-resistant nylon. Flexible, lightweight 
Searolite soles take lots of rough wear. Leather insoles. 
      
      
    
     
          
  
     No worries about these skirts keeping their smart _ 
lines! Every one is lined in back, Every. one comes in 
luxury-type all-wool flannel so unexpected at this 
price. Exciting high fashion colors. Sizes 10 to 20.. 
*CHEMSTRANDS ACRYLIC FIBER Glove-soft black or 
vicuna color tex- 
tured leathers. 
Ribbed soles.              
        
     f light, flexible ribbed crepe | 
DN soles put a new spring — 
-— {A your step 
Come try them on and you'll Reg. 5.98 
understand why these new 
soles have become fashion 77 
favorites for walking. Choose 
    Women's Ready-to-Wear Dept.—Second Floor 
     
    Mr    
      Just Say “Charge ir’ on 
    Sears Revolving Charge 
May Also Be Used as a 
Regular Charge Account     
        
       
   
     
Lady Treasurer 
Writes Book Ivy Baker Priest Tells 
of Combining Career 
With Homemaking from these and other smart Fall 
styles in flats and heels ... all 
beautiful, luxuriously _ soft . 
leathers. Comfortable. Poir. 
Just Say “Charge It”           Mid-heel T-strap 
—vicunda pig- 
grained leather 
or black.             
    
     
  
           
    
    
       WASHINGTON (UPI) — Never 
underestimate the power of a 
woman, at least in politics. That 
could well be the mottS of Mrs 
Ivy Baker Priest. 
Mrs. Priest, who climbed the 
political *ladder from a small 
Utah mining town to become 
Treasurer of the United States, 
has just written a testimonial to 
the effectiveness of women in 
polities. ° soft glove leather 
Kerrybrooke casuals 
usually . 97 
would be 3.98 “re ie" 
Special purchase for this big sale! Wondertully comfortable 
. designed for people who are on their feet most of the day. 
Attractive wedgie in vicuna tan textured leather. Oxford with 
open toe and heel is in black crushed leather. Hurry in today 
and shop early for best selection. Save during Sears Days! | Her newly publis shed memoirs 
r are also a testimonial to the career 
woman. The idea that ‘‘a wife and 
mother can, and. should, have an 
active life outside her household” 
sounds almost commonplace these 
: days. . 3 
| But when the ‘‘wife and mother ‘| special 
| : is Ivy Baker Priest, when the 
“active life’ involves holding one 
| of the.tep-jobs in the Eisenhower+ purchase of 
administration. and when the 
“household” includes three irre- | - 
pressible youngsters. the theory lovely fall 
takes on new meaning. wool long 
* + + dresses Those hoping for revelations of squares scarfs 
national political scandal from ‘ Reg. $10.98 > ; .- : : 
Mrs. Priest's autobiography had % solids or plaids with fringed ends 
better look elsewhere. Fabulous Fall wools and wool 
“Green Grows Ivy" (published [| blends in jerseys. flannels, herring- 
by McGraw-Hill Book Company, bone plaids. prints and solids. A oe fee - re fo $ 
Inc., New York) is an informal, real fashion saving in new silhou- 4 
woman-to-woman account of how ettes and colors. Sizes 10-20, 7-15. “y : 
“P About 32” by $2” with self fringes, : 
Co 100% wool in a wide 
choice of colors and 
»; plaids. Buy now for ‘blends, wonderful 
yourself, for fashion head warmers... . 
gifts. very welcome gifts. 
our casual felts 
and dressy velvets are 
sensationally priced! 
$ DS5 “Charge It” 
You'll have the time of your life 
selecting from felts with beaver-like or 
high-luster, finishes and dressy rayon 
velvets ... all the latest silhouettes in * 
lush shades and basic colors. to combine the role of home- 
maker with that of politician. Wide choice of col- 
orful “plaids: or jac- 
quard weaves in 
wool nylon or luxury Mrs. Priest. who writes that ‘‘my a 
work in politics and in government . Ny 
has been secondary to my job as , 
' homemaker.” frankly admits that 
she has often been somewhat in 
awe of her own success.         
    
  
         
         
   Leaky Valve Adds Fizz 
to Beach Club Shower 
NEW HAVEN, Conn... — For 
weeks members of the Colony 
Beach Club had showers that J 
seemed to ‘fizz 
Finally it was ‘discovered that a 
valve in the club's carbonating 
room was defective, allowing car- 
bon dioxide gas to escape into 
the water system. Now members 
are showering with plain old wet 
water. . fashion 
handbags 
novelty fabrics 
3 99 
Plenty of fashion ex 
citement in this col 
lection! Flannels 
tweeds, corduroys 
tapestries and plaids 
‘in, a sparkling array 
of colors. |     
  th 
stordy jeans $922 
come in high sicyarge i’ 
fashion colors p.qutany $259 
Yours to choose in black, blue, beige 
or red{\They'’re heavy duty cotton 
twill, have adjustable snap fastener 
and bar-tacking at points of strain. 
Sanforized*. Sizes 10 to 20. 
*Max. shrink 1% 
    lons Can Clean Glass 
SUSSEX, England‘ — Research- 
ers at a Sussex plant have found 
that glass surfaces can be cleaned : i 
by bombardment with ions gen-| | - 2 '  Wothen’s Accessories Dep!.—Main Floor 
erated by an electric glow ‘dis- | ~ : 
charge. The action of the ions is bf ; _ | | 
mechahical- they knock contami 
Rt ae” gan oneal 5 Ot foe money b tach” SEARS © As N. Saginaw at Phone FE 5-4171   
    
    
  cleaned glass is said to be so free 
of surface contaminants that metal ‘ . 
films readily adhere to. it. It at as eames ee ees : eee couse eee ——: a |   
    re         
   
      
    
  
  A SALE AS GREAT AS iTS NAME! 
~ our usual price for this 
quality would be 6.98 
Just Say. “Charge It” on Sears Revolving Charge 
Take months te pay or use like s Regular Charge Account 
Choose from five handsome Fall styles— 
blacks, browns and wine color. All 
genuine Goodyear welt construction. 
Pacifate lined vamps fight growth of 
bacteria and foot odor. Long 
wearing rubber soles and heels. Come % 
‘in early for best selection. Sizes 6/2 to 11. 
    . $, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 
      
      
  - Store-Wide Sale Starts ‘Today—Hurry In Now! 
            
  
  
  
    
    . newest stylet in boyswear 
Boyville 100% Wool 
Ribbed Pacer Coat 
         
    reg. 7.98 : 
6** 
sizes 4-10          Rugged ribbed melion has sparkling 
flecks of color for added style and eye 
appeal. Rich 24-0z. wool with quilt 
- lining keeps boys warm and smart 
looking in coldest weather! Talon 
“big-zip’ is easy to close even with 
mittens on! Charcoal gray, black, 
blue. Hurry, while they last.   
       
       Boyville Parka 
Lined for Warmth 
Wp 
Usually 998 Cotton sateen 
with 70°, wool. 30% rayon 
liming. Warm on coldest ~ 
days. 3 colors. 4-10. Hurry.     
       
       Only 
               
     Boy's Wear—Main Floor 
         
    
  
    
  
WHILE SHOPPING AT 
SEARS YOU CAN PAY 
© Your Phone Bills 
© Your Gas Bills 
© Your Electric Bills 
© Travelers Checks 
© Purchase Money Orders       
Shoe Dept. 
Main Floor 
  
  
sale! engineer's boots in 
‘black water repellent 
jeather . . . rubber soles         
   
    9” Save 1,80 y/, 
Select Arain cowhide /with nylon 
   
  10-2, Res. 5.98 4.66 
Older Boys’ Sizes 
334-7, Reg. 098 5:97 
      / mee. 10.50 80 
f Seryles Oxfords 8 
Shoe Dept—Mgln Figee 
Z 
              
‘Fashion Tatlored 
nationally 
advertised 
at 45.00 
  long sleeves for warmth — and sale priced! 
flannel or ‘gingham sport shirts   
    saving for the working man... 
matched outfits ¢ 
of 
shirts ? 7 7 . 
reg. 3.29 
pants 
Buy the Outfit at 5.99 
and You'll SAVE 1.28 
New stronger Army-type twill. 
Combed cotton reinforces wear- 
ing surface . . 
luster. Sanforized, washfast pro- 
portion cut. Lined shirt collar. 
Wool Suburban Coats, . 
values to 15.98 ........9.99 
Men's Workclothes Dept. 
Just Say “Charge It’ on Sears 
Revolving Plan. 
used just like a Regular Charge 
Account,     
                 
      
   
      
       
    
     
  luster chino 
glee 
. gives lasting 
Main Floor 
Also can be 
      
  _FIRST TIME AT THIS PRICE! 
fall and winter weight 
Wash n’ Wear Suits 
NO MORE DRIP-DRYING . . . THIS SUIT CAN 4 BE WASHED AND DRIES AUTOMATICALLY 
—WITH VERY LITTLE IRONING 
‘Yo Choose the latest fall deep-tones 
o Sizes 38 thru 44 in short, med., tall 
  
  
    SHOP THESE SPECIALS AT SEARS FRIDAY NIGHT ‘til 9 P. M. 
Surplus Stock of First Quality 
WATCH BANDS 4 aN 
ata: “35    
        
   
             S92 ] ~~ @ For Men! roe SR z SOS 
ara\r AA ee 
s0CS anes It” 
  
    
      
  
     - rai ee 
New mid-weight wash ‘n‘ wear suits for fall x 
and winter. No-more drip drying, this suit can y “ 
te 57 stl buys a lot, mister. If gels you a really ily be washed and dried automatically with very XK * 
handgome sport shirt . . . moss$eft to keep you emeeey 5 - itleroning. Nationally advertised at $45 XS 
warm and comfortable. Comes in a variety of would be non See introductory price is going to save \\. 
he-man colors dnd patterns, with neat satin 1 98 2 for $3 you $10:50, Hurry in today and take advantage. ¥ 
yoke, tough plastic buttons . . . one pocket. "Cha rge Ie” of this special price. 
+ S, M74: Likes sudg and resists shrinkage, : Men’s Fashion Tailored 88 
| Hurry th today while quantities last. Stock Up Toney (ome. (see Trousers, Regularly 6.98 4 a 
Men's Accessories Dept——Main Figor- Men's Weat—Main Floor i . Watch taal Dept —Main Floor 
154 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE 53-4171 | ee “ —————— 
  
 . a 4 . a bs e “< me Pe at 7 5 ie ae s m He mS 3 x - Ry fo 
diccapiradet acid ; 4 re aatert ae - Se Pe eee SE ae i 2 eee c : . Se z : mes eee 
: ee 4 ghey. ge ole gt ae ee ee ee er hi i et Seah a fgets eh ada ee : : — sa 3 4 ‘ ugiiiaes 
re: ~ co ee ee ee a ee eee — Gc auties ail 4 ‘ f “ « Z Ate : ie = a a 
ges Peete. Ue ee Z « aie ot PG Lee <8 i ¥ P rhe : } Fs > < oy £8 a 3 ‘ “ : : ty : : : et 3 Pee / 2 : omit   
  
¥ 1) = ~; 2 s oe : = R i y Bont a woP par * se = Pas ee 2 $3 
of a 5 ae 4 2 ‘ ‘ 3 fen xe Re i eg : a Sa = 2 = = = fe 4 iu " sig 
+ = : “ : z ; = bee ale 
  |. SIXTEEN as = 
4 News About Social Security a a 
Goal Is Better Care for Age By RAY HENRY 
Associated Press Writer 
The American Medical Assn.—with its 200,000 doctors— 
has just set up its No. 1 target for the year: Creating 
better care for the aged. 
This should be welcome news for older people. The 
AMA, a powerful and potent organization, has done little 
so far as an organization to offer national leadership 
to help solve the problems of the aged. As a really 
a active force, it has much to offer. . 
AMA President-elect Louis M. Orr named the target at | 
a special meeting of 200 state and national AMA officials | 
in Chicago recently. He told the meeting: | 
“You might. ask why we as physicians and related © 
professionals should concern oyrselves with these people. — 
The question can be answered simply. Ten years ago, life » 
expectancy was 65 years. Today it is pushing into the | 
lower 70's. 
“Medicine and its related fields have been largely 
responsible for this expanding longevity. ‘Therefore, medi-— 
cine and its related fields have a responsibility of doing all 
they can toward solving any problems which they them- | 
. selves helped to generate.” 
“ * * * 
Orr ticked off. six ways which the AMA—as a program— 
could attack the problems of the aging. And, the program 
was accepted by the meeting as a challenge for the AMA. 
. They were: 
1. Stimulation of a realistic attitude toward aging 
by all people. 
2. Extension of effective methods of financing health 
care for the aged. E ; 
3. Expansion of skilled-personnel training programs and | 
| improvement of medical and related facilities for older | 
a people. 
: Ly 4. Promotion of health maintenance programs 
_wider use of restorative and rehabilitative services. ; 
5. Amplification of medical and socio-economic yee 
search ‘in problems of the aging. 
6. Cooperation In community programs for al eltt- 
zens. 5   
  
  
  
    
  
RS ROEBUCK AND CO. /   an   
   
      
    WE 
BELIEVE 
      
  
  
Backed by ALLSTATE Famous Triple Gucrantee! 
Backed by ALLSTATE Famous Nationwide Service! 
FULL 18-MONTH GUARANTEE 
ALLSTATE CUSHIONS 
ie and 4 
   
  x x. * J 
of oe how successful the AMA's pieram will be | 
only time will tell. 
Orr told the meeting that “all the best ‘plans wil] mean 
nothing so long as you and I think of our aging population 
as an abstract problem’ involving oply a large umber of 
faceless people. A plan develops meaning when you regdce 
that figure of 15 million oldsters t6 those aaa or so pefsons 
who are close personal friends of yours.” ~~ 
* he said, “15 nijttion Amepicans or i 
           
     
       “There afte now, 
  ¥ 
one out of évery 11 over 65 years of age. By 1970, one out 5 : pay 6.70 x 15 
_ of every.10 Americans will be 65 oy older. [Arust that by ‘ . Tube-Type 
then there will be po need for a ‘meeting. such as this on ¥ a Blackwall . 
the problems of gar aging population. | (4 Each, Plus Jax 
AND YOUR OLD TIRE | _ “Why? Begaluse the problems of” our aging population | 
Ms so important that someone’ is going to solve it—indeed 
“must solve Jt—in the ngxt few years. | 
“We yh the field-of medigthe have the special under- | nly e 18-Month Service Guarantee 
prorated on months of service 
    
  
     
        
    
    
                 
- guards against tire punctures 
e Bonded Rayon Cord cyshions 
road impacts for extra sofety. 
HERE ARE JUST A FEW HAZARDS YOUR GUARANTEE COVERS 
      NO MONEY DOWN. .. Your TRADE-1M © 
ALLOWANCE 15 THE DOWN PAYMENT _ standing needed to’ find anal yl and current price without = Lo aig = ag _ 
SS trade-in. 0 ee CFoni5 —_ : / « Tough cold rubber construction (208+ 2580 es LALICS ~ Regularly 2.2 29 8 
“AF 'P alcon’ Being Added ; Dee ee GAL. YOU SAVE 41c      “Charge It” 
Now is the time to buy that anti-fréeze .. . and you can't 
buy better anti-freeze than Allstate, Laboratory tests prove 
ALLSTATE permanent has a.higher boiling point, lower 
freezing point, greater rust-resistance than other leading 
brands costing much more. Hurry in today ... SAVE! “to Air Detense of State . 
The radical new interceptor , 
carries two types of air-to-air 
       you st ‘CLEME! iS (UPD ~ OK 
péw fighter, plane capable of ‘going 
high’ enoygh and fast ewough to| guided missiles, as well as rockets 
~ knéck gown any airplahe in the —making hairline efficiency ‘‘part. 
' arid is being added to the Airjof the job.” a 
* Force defense in Michigan, it The new plane is bigger than      
TRACKS 
AND TIES    
  * DRIVE IN TODAY OBJECTS!      
  —Auto Accessories Dept.. Perry St. Basement 
   
      was announced totlay. 3 ; : is abo 3 
/ , aia previous interceptors and is about | F ‘AST F 
v4 Colonel Glen# E. Duncan, com-|the size of a World War If medium | REE 
vA “ mander of Selfridge Air Force |bomber. This is necessary because INSTALLATION 
é - Base, announced that the Tist/of space requirements for the J51| LA ; 
engine, plus more than 1,700 
pounds of electronic eyes, muscle | 
and brain — and the missiles and, Fighter Interceptor Squadron based | 
| at ‘Selfridge Field will be equipped NO CASH DOWN! 
with the new planes within a week. 
The new plane — called the 
“Falcon” — is the Convair F102A 
which, according to Duncan, can 
fly in any kind of weather, day 
or night. rockets. . e 
Its swept-back Delta wing design 
provides stability and maneuver-! 
ability. It flies faster than sound | 
in level flight.     
    
  
Values to 1,69   
You Save 2.10 
      
                 
            Selfridge-based F102As could, 
according to Duncan, intercept 
attackers far up in Canada’s 
wastelands, with minimal dam- Low Cost, Hi-Fi 
Rear Seat Speaker About 35 to 40 per cent of all 
cobalt preduced is used to make 
alloys designed to withstand high Auto Tune-Up Kits for 
Handy Car Owner REC. 4.79 ALLSTATE Shock Absorbers 
    
  | age to le or industries. temperatures. B : : 
peop : Your Choice QQO¢ Reg. 10.98 = BBB Give a Safe, Smooth Ride kL | ' . ’ Ve 
| 20 | Includes : condensers, rotor, Smut die Le grille fer New ALLSTATE Shock “ | HI points. verything to com- , by eauty, dual cone speaker fo ew ocks are equal to or surpass originals 
| S p EC IA L SA L E coe FS os distributor. greater fidelity. Enjoy hi-il on new cars. Replace old shock’ at 25,000 miles. Increase All high quality parts. sound in your car today! tire life, get safer, smoother driving. Drive in for free shock | ive in for free shoc 
inspection| 
  H.0. TRAIN SETS 
    
    
    
Durable, neoprene rubber with 
rayon-braid reinforcement: Re- 
sists heat; COMPLETE LINE OF TRAIN 
ACCESSORIES - unaffected by oil, 
anti-freeze. grease, 5, ie ! P ‘7 0* UY | & 
| a To Special Purchasé! pane . ees wig 9 . 
| ENGINES “i”... 51595% || ff ore et yt Esee: dc Seve 32 Spel chee San Rog. 8s, bony oy. 9 | - ¥-In. Diam. ‘ : 
|       7 
ELECTRIC oy 
Outboard Motor 
raNesse $7 98 
COMPLETE LINE OF AIRPLANE Chrome Polish 
Reg. 79c, Save 13¢    
  aa New Low Price for ALLSTATE 
10-30 High Compression Oil 
77 ] 0-Qt.   
  1] e Regularly sells at 3, 49 
| @ It's 3 grades Sled Sone 
e Adjusts to all temperatures Safer, Tripod Sack 
Won't Tip or Slide   
KITS AND ALL ACCESSORIES ‘ Enjoy the benelits of multi-grade oil at economy price, Now Only 8.29 . * Whitewall Tire ’ Steering Wheel Cellulose Sponge Chamois Sponge 3 
less than -28¢ qt. in 10-qt. can! Gives better engine pro- Takes little effort--your car ———— and Brush Cover, Reg. 79¢ ‘Special Purchase contionten 
goes up easily. '-ton ca- ff ‘tection at all speeds, at Gll temperatures. Anti-sludge acity. Tn - 
agent Jninimizes wear, increases. power. pasty, Rawes bee Ue. © 261/2-in. Folds for storage. MAKE US YOUR HOBBY HEADQUARTERS 
SCARLETT’S BICYCLE SHOP 20 E. Lawrence St. FE 2-7221 
® * 
j 4 i , = i ry . 
i ses, ES *; : * j 
. i = : 4 » — =) ae > = * a Tae 7 i + - cond ¢ 
ns ; | Ae ‘ . : \ : , x | _ 2 
’ , { f z ‘ ®   
                      
   {: -      
    
    
  
  
  
   THE | 
  
  
   
  éight 12-point sockets, universal joint, flex ‘ gi*iie    
socket 
  
   
   
        
    
  6-Piece 
Reg. 5.79 
3.99 
  pouch plastic pouch. 
  
  
  2. am Sa 
Spécial 
Price for _ * 
This Sale!     
   
     
   
   . Water Repellent Matched 
Hunting Coat and Pants 
ee 44 Pants 
Made of heavy Zelan treated army 
duck: Plenty of pocket toom. Mus- 
tard brown. All popular sizes. 
Reg. 8.95 Coat ....... 7.44 Wrench Set * + 4 
  calls, shell belts . . Stripping Reg. 1.29 
98s Hard, lon Craftsman @ Seals out drafts, ¥ 
| ing brand. Drop - 2 dirt. dust. Pre- = 
cludes forged steel al- i vents sash rat- } 
loy. Chrome- ; 3 tling. l\4-in x 
plated finish. In BM 17-f- roll size. 
. Your Choice! 
a Your Choice of 15 Items 
J Get Them Now and Save 
Capg, shotgun and rifle 
cletming kits, decoys, hand 
warmers, foot warmers, lan- 
terns, knives, socks, gun 
covers, recoil pads, duck 
. your 
choice at alow 88c each 
Be Warm... Be Dry.. . Be Comfortable . . . 
J. C. HIGGINS HUNTING OUTFITS Nylon Underwear Insulated 
IN With 3 Oz. *Dacron Fiberfill 
Now 
Only 
2-piece jacket and pants. 
Tan shade nylon outer fab- 
ric. Snug knit cuffs. Zipper 
jacket. S-M-L-XL. 
*DuPont 
Polyester 
Fiber     
   
     
   
          
           
      
        ~-€ SOCKET SET , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958   
Le 
2 * 
= € 
ool 
tool 
rectl 
Aluminum alloy 
back prevents 
  a 
Assorted Craftsman 
Hunting Knives 
Reg. 2.49 1,88 Ea. 
Select the one you like best. 
All with leather handles. Em- 
bossed sheaths. Hi-carbon, heat 
treated steel. 
    Rain Parka Keeps 
Hunters Dry 
3.88 Waterproof, lightweight plastic 
with zip front, 2 pockets. Folds 
compactly: Tan for blind, red 
for field. 
= Reg. 4.98 
        Warm, Snug. Hooded 
Red Sweatshirt 
Reg. 2.98 2 44 
Hood drawstring keeps breezes 
out. Rib culfs, waistband. Rein- 
forced seams. Raglan sleeves, 
Red, yellow. 
  
  Regularly Sells 
Now’s your chance to get the high quality, precision 
every tool againg§ defective materials and work- 
manship. We believe this socket set is unmatched 
at this low, low price! Hurry in today. 
Shop Vacuum 
Dust Collector 
Reg. $8 
54.50 
a 3.50 DOWN 
Powerfyl suction draws 
waste directly into 28-gal. 
fibre drum. Attaches di- 4 ’ 
y to any shop ma %& y es CS 
Piro) == tae LEPTIN ELAS 
   
       RAFTSMAN 
60-PIECE 
el 
SAVE 13° | rey: 8 
Balance on Sears Easy Terms 
    at 42.95 
s you've alwgys wanted! Sears guarantees 
Hardware Dept.—Sears Main Basement 
         
    
     
   
        
           
    
Craftsman 
RasPlane 50-Ft. Tape Reg. 2.98 ° Reg. 6.39 
     
  4.99 -No more hand 1.99 Plane - type for i 
   : for flat surfaces. = rewinding. Just 
| Leaves surface press button — 
you won't have tape rewinds 
au t omatically. 
Steel blade. to sand. Fast, 
easy. 
        J. C. Higgins 
Sleeping Bag 
9.88 Red cotton J. C. Higgins 
Qt. Vacuum Bottle 
Reg. 2.39 1.88 
Keeps liquid hot or cold for 
. hours. Handy handle clips to 
belt for easy carrying. Get 
yours at this low price. Reg. 15.98 
Water repellant! 
poplin, quilted with soft, 3 lb. 
celacloud. Flannelette  Ifed. 
ot Full zipper.     
    
  
  
  
  
SALE AS GREAT AS iTS NAME! 
        
  
@ Cuts ot ony angle 
6 Automatic clutch 
@ Regularly 199.95 Completely New! 20-Inch 
Gear Drive Chain Saw 
*149:: BRADIL EY 
  Engineered for best performance, dependable service and 
simple customer service. Has exclusive, patented 2-posi- 
tion guide bar for easy cutting. Powerful engine with 
increased horsepower. Try one today! 
Reg. 209.95 26-Inch Saw 
— Fencing Dept—Perry St. Basement 
  
  Skea SS 
14-2 with Ground 
' Non-Metallic Sheath Cable 
50-Ft.—Reg. 1.99. .1.49 
  ” £ a NT TE 
Reg. 1.15 
76¢ Coil 
100-Ft.—Reg. 3.79. 2.98 
. 250-Ft.—Reg. 8.49. 7.30 - 
12-2 with Ground Non-Metallic Sheath Cable 
25-ft. Reg. 1.39 
100-ft. Reg. 4.69 ......3.60 
    
Lightweight Vest 
Holds 24 Shells 
1.66 Fits comfortable under hunting 
coat. Holds 12, 16 or 20 gauge 
shells. Bellows type pocket for 
cigarettes. Reg. 1.98 
Fastest Pump Action We’ve Tested... 
J. C. HIGGINS I[2-GAUGE SHOTGUN _. 
      
     IN 31/2 
sat | 
         
837°5 
Extra Range. 
Shotgun hells 
Reg. 3-15 12-Gauge — re 
ae 2.85 16-Gauge ae aT 
Res. 2.15 20-Gaus® aL 4 ro) (02 
SECONDS _ 
Model 20 Deluxe 
Regularly — 
Balance on Sears Easy Payment Plan 
e With choke, ventilated rib, nameplate, recoil pad — 
© Free-falling, short-stroke (only 3'/2-in.) action | 
© Walnut stock and fore-end; checkered pistol-grip 
© Tubular mag holds 5 shots, plus 1 in chamber 
ON DISPLAY NOW...COMPLETE LINE 
OF NATIONAL BRAND FIREARMS 
@ J. C. Higgins © Winchester © Remington ® Browning ® Savage 
@ Stevens © Hi-Standard @Fox © Marlin - 
COMPARE OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY! GE 
g* 50-ft. Reg. 2.59 ......1.80 
250-ft. Reg. 10.75 ......8.99 
  Quilted Plastic 
Waterproof Gun Case 
2.44 Treated to resist rusf and cor- 
rosion. Lined with cotton nap- Reg. 2.98 
ped flannel. Strong leather 
hanging tab. 
yer? 
= a 
        
      Only 10% Down 
: Sale Starts Today—Shop. Tomorrow Night ‘til 9 P. M. 25-Ft,     
    
  ® ag fg + aS se on your money ace SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-4171 
. 4 
. 
-    EIGHTEEN af   
ne PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 et 
* * te 
a 
        
  
Patient's Death 
Laid to Ailment Ask State Police Aid, 
After Autopsy Report 
Given at Coldwater 
LANSING (UPI) — The 
of a severely bruised patient 
prompted lawmakers today to seek 
state police aid in a probe of 
alleged brutality and mismanage- 
ment at a mental hospital. 
These were the late 
ments develop- 
—Two pathologists said death 
yesterday of a patient at, the 
Coldwater State Home aad Train- 
ing School was caused hy a 
chronic kidney ailment. The pa- 
tient, Joseph Kibiloski, 45, Bron- 
sea, had cuts, bruises and three | 
broken ribs when he died. 
—Rep, Harry J. Phillips (R -Port ; 
Huron), chairman of a House com</ 
mittee studying operations of all 
state mental hospitals, said he 
would ask state police for a lie | 
detector and detectives 
out who’s lying.” 
—Phillips claimed to have medi- 
cal advice, pictures and recorded) 
testimony which witl show Kkibi-| 
loski’s death was ‘thastened by a 
saat or sadists’’ among the hos- 
pital attendants. 
—The Mental Health Commis- | 
sion was summoned to an emer- 
gency meeting today at Cold- 
water with Mental Health Di- 
rector Charless:£. Wagg and 
Hospital Superfrtende nt Dr. E. J. 
Rennell, who-was returning from 
a hunting trip in the western 
Upper Peninsula. 
—Wagg said he was ‘‘somewhat 
critical’’ of the handling of Kibi- 
loski’s case but both Wagg and’ 
Phillips denied reports an immedi- 
ate shakeup of the hospital salt 
would be sought. é : : | 
Wagg insisted his own investiga-| 
tion disclosed no evidence of mis-: 
treatment. 
  
Husband Slays Wife, 
Then Ends Own Life 
(Continued From Page One) 
ship police chief, arrived soon aft- 
er, broke in the door, 
ered the bodies. 
Sheriff Frank W. Irons and Det. 
—_Dernaid Francis tabled the deaths|— 
murder-suicide. 
Police said Kiser, a warehouse 
dees who has been unemployed |; 
since last December,.shot his first 
wife to death accidentally while 
cleaning a rifle at their home in 
Charlevoix in 19533. 
Married in May, Kiser and_ his’ 
second wife lived in Keego Harbor, 
until three weeks ago, then moved; 
to the Pontiac Lake cottage. 
Mrs. Kiser ie another daughter, | 
Elizabeth Frye, 16, and Kiser had| 
one son iy he first marriage, | 
Thomas Jr., 6, who lives with! 
grandparents in Cheboygan. The 
bodies were taken to Pursley Fu- 
neral Home after examination by! 
Dr. W. R. 
depu Rech, Walled 
ty coroner. Lake 
Good Bargain on Socks. 
LANSING (UPI) — Michigan’s 
mental institutions are getting 91,- 
000 pair of federal surplus socks 
at a real bargain, State Controller 
James W. Miller said today. The 
socks cost $50,000. The state will 
get them for $459 Goldfine to Get 
death | 
“to find | 
and discov-'   
That Carpet 
Back Again 
| WASHINGTON ®-—That rug is 
going back to Bernard Goldfine. 
What rug? The one that figured 
so heavily in congressional inves- 
tigation testimony. about, the rela- 
tions between Boston millionaire 
Goldfine and Sherman Adams, 
President Eisenhower’s chief aide. 
* * 
An employe of rug cleaner Har- 
eld Mark Keshishian, who -refused 
to identify herself, said the clean- 
ling establishment had received the) 
rug from Adams with instructions) 
‘to clean it and ship it to Goldfine. 
| “We are just about finished with 
jit. It will be sent today or to-| 
/morrow,”’ she said. 
+. She said “‘this beautiful rug was 
in wonderful eondition'' and needed 
vonly cleaning. . | 
The rug, valued at ‘$2,400 in 
testimony before a House inves- 
tigating committee, figurd along 
with $3,000 worth of hotel bills 
and other gifts te Adams in 
building a storm of- criticism 
| which wound up with Adams’ 
resignation from his White House 
job. 
Goldfine testified the rug was 
lonly a loan. He said he needed. one 
for his showrooms in Boston, 
| bought this one and let Adams use 
‘it for the bine ee being.         
* 
Presumably fe removal of the! 
Tug means Adams is breaking up 
|his Washington home where. it 
| graced the living room, Adams is}‘ 
|still around the White House but is 
jstaying only long enough for. an 
jorderly shift of his job to Wilton B. 
(rae 
3 Pontiac Policemen’ 2 
Win Promotion Suit 
(Continued From Page One) 
placed first on the sergeant eligi- 
bility list. Detective James H. La- 
|Ponsie dropped out of the suit as 
|it was being heard last month 
since he placed third on the two- 
| vacancy sergeant list. Cooley was, 
| second. 
oines placed second behind 
William K. Hanger, who was the 
only one to get lieutenant bars 
based on the lists. Goines will 
get the only other lieutenant pro- 
motion open as the result of the 
suit, 
~ Judge Adams said W iliman' vio- 
lated his “clear lega] duty” under) 
the act to promote the men highest | 
on the‘eligibility lists. Instead act- 
ing officers were placed in these 
positions. 
“In this case we have an ap-   By BOB CONSIDINE 
ROME —<“What do you hear?” 
The man~-behind the desk at the 
Grand Hotel asked early Wednes- 
day morning. I said that the last 
I had heard a few minutes before 
4was that Pope Pius was hanging 
on to life in a most courageous 
and dogged way. 
“Wrong,”’ the man said, close to 
tears.-‘"He-is dead.” 
“That's net possible,” I said, 
“anless you've heard the news 
within the last few niinutes.”’ 
The man shrugged and said, “I 
theard it some time ago.” ~~ 
I-snarted at the ignorance of the 
amateur journalist and went to the! 
door’ of the hetel. A boy rushed in} 
with an armful of “Il. Tempos.”’ 
The thick emus across the top| 
read: 4 
“Tl Papa. Morto.” 
A second paper, “Il Messag- 
gero,”’ said the same thing in a 
special edition minutes. later. 
“Giornale d'Italia” 
with further confirmation. 
Pope had died at 10:40 a.m. An- 
other paper spoke of tearful scenes 
at bedside and so forth. 
* * * 
news service correspondent on the 
scene at Caste! Gandolfo -flashed 
‘Pope dead,”’ then related in the 
mest miniscule detail the scenes 
iblack, the solemn closing of the 
old gate at the -Pope’s came -along 4 “Ty a 
Tempo” came back with a second |} 
extra edition which related that the |f 
At 6 p.m. the semi-official Italian |} 
that followed—the hanging oul-ef aj} 
thalf-masted papal flag rimmed in| 
summer |} 
palace, the reaction of Signor Fan- |§3 it oe Final Howe" wl 
fani and his host of children, and 
so forth. 
It was wrong in‘ its gravest 
detail. Eugenio Pacelli still 
breathed. . 
At 11 p.m. Vatican Radio an- 
nounced that it had a. ‘somber 
jannouncément to make at 11:30. 
That had to be it, some ‘said, and 
so readied their flashes and stories, 
There Was no announcement at 
11:30 beyond a repetition that the 
Pope had received oxygen,’ peni- 
cillin and streptomycin. 
a® x * 
Oné of the: Roman: newspapers) 
iwhich put out the death story this 
imerning sent operatives into the 
jstreets. offering: 500 lire {80 cents) 
|per copy, trying to buy them back. 
iBut police had seized the necessary. 
papers and thefe_may be prose- 
eution of this _and™-other papers     
    “came” and ons Thursday. The Pope, Vatican Radio said, 
  
Waterford Towinhip 
Cafe. Robbed of $75... 
ney Island - Restaurant, 3172 W. 
Huron St. carefully removed two 
  ieigarette -- machine, W 
Township police said. - 
The owner, Joe _Hebda,— 
  
  found near the-door.. 
  Westcomb St, told police he so, 
the restaurant at 3:30-a.m. Police} © 
discovered the breakin at 5:30 a.m.) 
and. are y tars ig Stee Someone familiar with Joe's Co: 4 
panels from tie back door early| - 
this morning, loosened protective} ” 
iron bars and stole $75 from the} ’ 
  
  
     
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Archie Barnett 
        pointing officer (Willman), encour- | 
aged by his chief of police, at- 
tempting to avoid the provisions of 
the act by the Obvious. expedient 
of a change in the title of a posi-) 
tion but without a change in the, 
‘character of the duties per- 
| formed, ’ the judge said. 
“Regardless of whether the pub-) 
/lic officials of the city like it or 
jnot,. the law (civil service) must. 
be obeyed,’ Judge Adams added. | 
Insects? ‘Tis Nothing 
NEW DELHI (UPI) — The 
| state health minister fhade a 
| personal investigation of a com- 
plaint by Madras state legisla- 
tors that insects flowed out of 
water taps almost as freely as 
water, “A slight deterioration in 
the chemical quality of the wa- 
ter,” the minister admitted.   
      
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MAIN FLOOR SHOE DEPT. school children attending mass at St, Vincent 
de Paul Church this morning offer prayers with ilar \prayers were offered at daily mass this 
morning.in other Cathatic churches of the ares.       America. 
          
    
  OP Investigators Charge:   
Mackie’s Blunder Cost State $155, 125 
LANSING’ # — Republican in- 
vestigators have fixed the price of 
Democratic bond issue blunder 
ast June at $155,125. 
That was their conclusion yester- 
day after a special legislative com- 
*Imittee sifting governmental waste 
fheard the story of how a 100- 
million-dollar highway bond sale 
was handled. 
“Incredible,” said Sen. L. 
Harvey Lodge (R-Drayton . 
Plains), committee chairman, 
during the recital by Highway 
: | Commissioner John C. Mackie. 
Sanford A. Brown, who also had a 
role in the transaction, disputed 
the loss to the state was 
575. 
As he has before, ‘the highway 
commissioner took the blame. 
“J am responsible and I admit 
the mistake, regretfully,” he 
said.   Mackie and State Treasurer | 
the Republican figure. Mackie con- | A hitch in the sale, to be com- 
pleted June 23 in New York, de-/ 
veloped when Mackie shared the 
bond signing chore with a deputy. 
The purchasing syndicate. refused 
to accept the bonds, and it was' 
lto say whether it was Atty. Gen. agreed that they would be re- 
printed—at a cost of $32,437, all 
signed by Mackie and that deliv- 
ery would be taken on July 9./ 
This was done. 
* * * 
The state was paid accrued in- 
terest from June 1, the date on 
the face of the bonds, through June 
25 in the amount of $235,934. Lodge 
and Sen. Paul C. Younger (R- 
Lansing) insisted that the state 
should have demanded and re-| 
ceived accrued interest of $358,621 
—through July 8. 
Repeatedly, Lodge and Youn- 
ger asked Mackie, Brown and         other participants in the sale 
  who advised them they had the 
authority to accept the lesser 
    
    
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DELIVERS pasked the amount of Mackie’s 
| that the Michigan officials might | 
     
     
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* * * 
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TWENTY-ONE     : SDAY, OCTOBER ® 7958. pa F ps 
‘ROME (NEA) —There re no man n living ‘who com- 
"~manded the power, the. prestige and the authority of! 
_ Pope Pius XH. SS 
There is also n5-man. in the world ao aosaiserce such-overwhelming respons ss. His task.was both 
  crueifying and-harassing and, a the: same: time, in-| 
oe ae anda}: 
    ~- Twenty centuries of 
long life’s experiencé. fashioned the Rg and spirit of 
82-year-old Eugenio Pacelli. 
gious aspirations as old‘as man, ‘he was perfectly at his 
ease in an era which has.seen the splitting of the atom. 
a *. *... 
The result was an extraordinary. human being. 
Vicar of Christ and successor to Saint Peter, the su- 
préme spiritual power over nearly 500,000,000 Roman 
Catholics and revered as such,.Pope Pius XII was a) 
man whose culture was so extensive that he often as- he represented reéli-| 
tounded his close collaborators. 
_ -="Phe Pope was; above all else, @ priest. But besides 
that he was statesman, administrator, humanist, as- 
trologer, journalist, professor, orator and linguist. 
  
Pope Pius XI was also the+— 
man the Kremlin feared 
- the most, 
    Anyone who has stood among 
the crowd which flocks to the great 
square facing the Basilica of Saint 
Peter in Rome on Easter Sunday 
up on a balcony, 
blessed his e. 
* * * 
The cry: - “Evviva el Papa” 
gushed from thousands of throats. 
Mothers held up their babes to re- 
There are many 
garding the Pope’s human ap- 
proach and simplicity. 
STORY OF LITTLE BOY 
There is the story of the little 
boy who, with his parents, had at- 
tended an audience at the Vati- 
can, After the papa! benediction, 
young Giovanni cried: “Holy Fa- 
ther, when I am grown up I want 
to be Pope.’ 
The other pilgrims, including 
his parents, were horrified. But 
Pope turned to the child with 
smile and said: “Ah, my 
you do not know what you 
wishing for.” 
This cry from the heart came 
‘ffom a man* whose sole ambition 
was to be a good parish priest. His 
love for and inherent understand- 
ing of his fellowmen is evident to 
all who have approached him. 
Protestants and non-Christians, 
even unbelievers, who have had 
the privilege of seeing the Pope, 
whether in private or, public au- 
dience, were all impressed by the 
aura of spirituality and simplicity 
which radiated from him. 
Not so long ago, hundreds of 
pilgrims went tu Castel Gandolfo, 
the papal summer residence some 
fifteen miles south of Rome. The 
Pope welcomed them in Italian. 
But one of the groups cried: “We 
come from France, Holy Father." 
He spoke a few words in French. 
* Then the chorus was taken up 
by the crowd. The Pope spoke in 
German, Spanish, Hungarian, 
Polish, Portuguese and English. 
Finally a voice in a small group 
said. ‘We come from Ireland.” 
The Pope smiled, and raising his 
h 3 “Cead mile failte,” he 
said in Gaelio—“May you be a 
hundred times welcome.” 
The Pope discussed church mat- 
ters daily with priests of various 
nationalities but there was never 
an interpreter present. Pope Pius 
was not only a great linguist but 
his hobby was words. His favorite 
pastime was reading the diction- 
aries of a dozen. languages. 
_ * * * 
Since the days when the first 
Popes fought for the life of the 
Christians, no other pontiff before 
Pius XII has ever had to mobilize 
the forces of Christianism: to fight} 
cemmunism.. The Holy Father, 
furthermore, had ‘personal experi- 
ence of Communist methods. - 
WITHIN RANGE OF FIRE 
In 1919 when, as Cardinal Pa- 
celli, he was- appointed Papa] 
Nuncio to Bavaria, the Commu- 
nists. took over the government in 
Munich. The Nuncio’s residence 
was actually within the range of 
fire. 
few days later, during another 
ee ee 
Pisa tHe could cite from memory all the 
their|anti-Marxist declarations made by ‘the door in person. With the ut- 
most calm he faced his aggressors. 
Their leader pointed a revolver at 
his heart, ordered him off the 
premises. The two men looked 
straight into each other’s eyes. 
“] am here and I will stay 
here” said the Nuncio, after a 
few seconds of silence. “No hu- 
man power will make me move.” 
The Communist chief hesitated, 
then under the inflexible gaze 
of the priest, turned on his heels 
and left. 
The Pope did not consider him- 
self a pioneer in. the struggle 
‘against communism for all that.   
his predecessors since 1864. His 
memory was prodigious. 
For- most people, Pope Pius XII 
was @ spiritual Jeader, an imper- 
sonal being hidden behind a fa- 
feade of dignity, tredition and cer- 
emonial. BEFORE CORONATION—Borne on his port- 
able throne, Pope Pius XII enters the basilica Pius XII_was one of the 20th Cen- 
“ipius told the world: 
.|weapon I carry is the cross.” 
| And he warned all nations that | 
  Y VATICAN CITY. (UPI) — Pope 
and its most uncampromising foe 
__fot communism. ( 
: “7 * 8 : 
Known-as “The Pope of rane” 
“My mission is peace. The only 
ecommaunism had raised its 
*elenched fist of. anti-Christ in 
ing defiance against 
heaven,” and that calamity was” 
' m certainty “unless the spirit of 
justice and love enters again 
into the hearts of men and unites 
them in brotherly love.” 
As Pontiff of the Roman Catholic 
Church, the gentle-mannered Pius preach. Pius took the duty  seri- 
ously. 
‘tury’s greatest champions of peace |~“‘The~topies-on-which-he-wrote_ 
and addressed people cover an 
apap range in the history 
oft the p Ley. The~subjects 
inged ; animals to 
“te atoms. He cod 1k 
about them. flgently in en} 
The. Pope’s voice was.never 
raised more loudly or more -force- 
fully than when he spoke against 
communism. His life-long wish was 
that communism would be crushed 
by the time of his death. Although French; munist — 
Se 
if x * .* 
fy y Mission Is Peace, — 
My. Weapon...the Cross’ the Pope fought the-atheistic doc- 
trine as long as he was able to 
ea Titi outh to speak se 
SWEEPING DECREE 
He issued a of major ex- 
commanication, Against Communist 
leaders, e Communist propa- 
'gandistsand sympathizers who 
embraced and —— the Com- 
doctrine. 
“The decree, judged as the most 
sweeping decision in the modern 
history.ofthe church, did not strike 
at small-fry Communists who 
through ignorance or some neces- 
sity. were in the Red ranks. To 
them the church held cut an invit- 
  that wish was not to be fulfilled, ing and forgiving hand. 
  
‘I Met the Man’   
was the spiritual leader of the, 
world’s nearly 500,000,000 Roman | 
Catholics, but his influence extend-| 
ed far beyond. the confines of his take pen in hand or open his — | 
  # 
of St. Peter’s in Vatican City for Mass March 12, 
1939, preliminary to his coronation. faith. 
: ie  & : 
‘| Born Eugenio Pacelli in Rome on 
March 2, 1876, he was elected Pope 
just 63 years later—March 2, 1939 
—after the death of Pope Pius XI. 
IN CHAOTIC TIMES — 
Pius’ career in the serviee of his 
church and God spanned some of 
the most turbulent years in the 
™ ‘history of mankind. They were 
years that saw the rise of fascism, 
nazism and cofnmunism, two world 
wars, the advent of the atomic age, | 
the Korean War, unrest and change | 
in the Soviet bloc and the Suez: 
crisis. ~ 
        cl 
‘AP Wirephote 
* * *   
Pope Paid Visit 
—as a Tourist 
ROME (UPI) — During one dec- 
ade when Eugenio Pacelli was car- 
dinal, he traveled widely in Eu- 
rope, Latin America and the VU. S; 
His trip to America in 1936 made 
history because it was the first 
time that a man in that office Rad 
      _* * * 
Few people knew him as hé; 
was — a man with a charming 
lsense of humor. a man who re-   |mained humble in the midst of 
his almost superhuman responsi- 
bilities, and that behind his urbane 
exterior he had his weak points 
and idiosyncracies — just like oth-|. 
er men, 
But unlike most men, he was ab- 
solutely alone, a solitary figure in 
the busy and vast Vatican City. 
The spiritual leadership of 
-Rearly 500,000,000 souls is an 
overwhelming task, It means the 
: the Pope insisted on being 
on the smallest details. 
His decisions were made imme- 
his counsels and en- 
couragements given without de- 
lay. ; 
Besides this, his activities were 
far-reaching, Last year the Pope 
made some 20 speeches over the 
radio, over and above some 
declarations on scientific, social 
and economic matters. He spoke 
on the theater, sports, and statis- 
tics, on agriculture. emigration, 
\credit and journalism. 
» 5 *»* A few years ago, at a congress 
which brought together more than 
a thousand Superiors of women's 
convents throughout the world, -he 
discussed with them the ways and 
means of keeping abreast of the 
modern world. His Holiness even 
found time to suggest a modern- 
ization of the nun’s habit which 
  visited the states. 
The Cardinal arrived in the 
‘midst of a presidential election 
campaign, a 
casioned widespread comment. 
He insisted he had come only 
for a vacation and to see the U. S. 
And he did all the things a tourist 
is supposed to do. to U.S. in 1936 | 
nearly 500 million Catholics. 
In allocutions to the Cardinals 
each June 2 (Feast of St. Eugene) | 
      and on Christmas.Eve, and in fre-| 
fact which oc- |quent encyclicals, pastoral -letters, ‘them ba 
radio messages and addresses, he | 
ing -from to war 
crimes. 8 
But the theme to which he re- 
turned oftenest was peace. 
The Cardinal took an elevator to| Excerpts from his major pro- 
ithe top of the Empire State Build-| 
ing in New York, saw the Liberty 
Bell in Philadelphia and addressed 
the National Press Club in Wash- 
ington, 
On a whirlwiftd tour, he saw 
Cleveland, Chicago, St, Paul, San | Cpurcn in Society—"‘The Church! UMtiring in his appeals to prevent, 
Francisco, Les Angeles, Holly-. cannot, shutting herself up inert. the conflict. Undaunted by his fail-; .. A 
wood, ee Boulder Dam, Kansas 
City and Niagara Falls.   | Yontincal /nguncements:. 
Atomic Bomb—‘‘The most ter- 
ribie arm that the mind of man 
has yet devised.”—Address to 
Scientific Academy, | 
Feb, 8, 1948. 
in the secrecy of her tempies, 
‘desert her divinely providential /1"& 
His appearance at New York’ s|mussion of shaping the compiete 
St. Patrick's Cathedral attracted! ™man,, and thereby collaborating 
the largest crowd in the history | without rest in ‘the constitution of 
of that church. 
On Nov. 7, ‘the solid foundation of society.”’ 
he sailed for Italy) Allocution to new Cardinals, Feb. 
and arrived home after covering 110, 1946, 
some 16,000 miles. 
  
Vatican Stamps, Coins 
to Note ‘Vacant Seat’ 
VATICAN CITY (AP) — When 
Pope Pjus XI died, the Vatican's 
postage stamps and coins were is- 
sued with the mark ‘sede va- 
cante’’ (vacant seat) until Pope 
Pius XII was elected. | 
Presumably the same thing will 
ihappen now until a new pope. is 
elected, probably within 30 days. 
Normally Vatican coins and 
stamps carry the name of the 
pope in whose reign they are 
  (Continued on Page 47), fissued. 
  
    speak,   BLESSES CROWD—From a window at his residence in Castel 
Gandolfo, Pope Pius XII blesses a crowd that gathered to hear him Communism—“‘The Charch . , . 
cannot but tear the mask from 
the ‘forgers of lies’ whe come 
forward as founders and pio- 
cannot but warn the faithful not 
to let themselves , . , be delud- 
ed by fallacious promises.”— 
Christmas Eve, 1947, 
Family — ‘The family is the 
building of the creation.’’—Radio 
address to Bolivian Eucharistic 
Congress, Jan, 30, 1949." 
Labor — “A busy life, whether 
employed in the fields, in the prof- 
itable trades or in the liberal arts, 
does not bemean the mind but 
elevates. it, does not reduce it to 
slavery but more truly gives it 
. coritrol over even the most) 
difficult circumstances.”’—Encycli-| 
cal ‘letter to clergy, March 21, 
1947, 
Marriage and Divorce--“Mar- 
riage betweén baptized | pe 
legally contracted and eee 
mated, cannot be dissolved by 
any power on earth, not even by 
the supreme ecclesiastical au- 
thorities.”—Address to Roman 
clergy, March 16, 1946, 
Peace — ‘{Nothing is lost with 
peace, Everytifing may be with 
war. Let men return to under- 
standing. Let negotiations begin.” 
—Radio address, Aug. 24, 1939. “A 
fundamental postulate of a just and 
honorable peace is to assure the 
right to life and independence of} 
all the nations, great and small, 
strong and weak.’ Dec, 24, 1939. 
“The first certain and resolute step 
  
| Sister, Three Nephews 
Are Survivors of Pope ~ 
VATICAN. CITY (AP). — Pope 
Pius XII is survived by a sister 
and three nephews. 
The sister, is Countess “Elisa- 
betta Pacelli Rossignani. 
The nephews are the Princes 
Marcontonio Pacelli, 51, Guilio 
Pacelli, 48, and Carlo Pacelli, 55. 
  All live in Rome. Pope's Words to Followers::: 
Dwelt Frequently on Peace VATICAN CITY W—Pope Pius)toward a true peace has not been 
XII spoke out often on the state, 
of the world for the guidance of its June 1, 1946. 
gave his judgment on topics rang-| 
neers of a new golden age. She | His long years in the Vatiean’s 
diplomatic service proved invalu-} 
able during his papacy. From 1944, | 
he served as his own secretary of! 
im-an untiring éffort to pro-| 
|mote world peace. 
Yet, despite the time and 
energy he devoted to interna-   any pope in history, was a pope 
of the people. He held audiences 
fer more persons than any other tional affairs, Pius, more than | Wisdom, Kindness 
Characterized Pope 
on my person, when d entered 
the room. 
Then, for 35 minutes, I asked 
questions and he talked about af- 
fairs of the world. : 
There was no visible hésitation 
or equivocation. 
* * * 
Some of the answers would have 
: Started the world’s news wires 
ape cathepeiate sa — * humming. Some did at later times, 
i 'when he expressed the same ideas 
He had, however, agreed to see| publicly: 
Brig: Gen. Willard S. Paul, now | After one or two such occasions 
president of Gettysburg College. '1 wrote, asking if because of public 
and Mrs. Paul. jutterance I could be released from By J. M. ROBERTS 
AP News Analyst 
No sensitive man could talk with 
Pope Pius XII without realizing 
that he was in the presence of a} 
great intellect, a great force, yet| 
with it all sincerely human. 
I met the Pope in his study at - 
Castel Gandolfo under unusual 
and informal circumstances, He 
had been through a tiring-season. 
He had just participated in the 
famous 1948 ceremony of the 
lighting of the candles at St. 
Peter’s, when the entire edifice 
          pentifi—hundreds of thousands of 
all races and creeds. Prince and 
pauper alike were made welcome 
on their pilgrimages to Vatican 
City. 
Those who came saw a slender, 
frail man with an ascetic face. 
'His mouth was delicately carved. 
|On his strong, aquiline nose rested 
| gold. rimmed glasses, behind them 
ja pair of black, penetrating eyes. Pius Prayed 
and Bled for rit ie mn tu sein War Victims |delicate health. He helped maintain 
ihis strength with daily, early morn-| 
ing exercises. 
ROME (UPI) — When Europe} * 
|was hurtling down the road to a’ 
jnew and bitter war, Pius XII was| faken.” — Address to Cardinals, 
“The present state 
lof affairs will not improve unless 
jail nations recognize the common 
spiritual needs of humanity, unless 
they help each other to attain, 
.’—Christmas Eve, 1933.             
* 
But more important than the! 
exercises was his iron will. When 
his doctors begged him to take life 
jeasier, he was quoted as saying: 
pope must work until he   
| ure, he turned his attention to help- dies.” 
ing the war's victims. 
He created an organization of The Pope looked upon his office mercy which girdled the globe and | primarily as that of teacher. He 
oa = we moe SS, the| was Bishop of Rome, and the first! ungry e homeless—regard-| duty of a bish 
less of their creed or the side oh Yoo ee ee * * * 
  Frank Gowan, aide to Myron the original restrictions. Blessings 
Taylor when the latter was Presi-|on ae eek was the reply, but 
— Bogerae ee. represent-| he couldn't change the rule. 
pericad oe = ay Pope. = 3 When I left the rogin I had only 
companying the general, he told| 'a vague recollection of what he 
maaliiollconiellabuns tandlibe would | Wore. of what-kind of desk he sat 
see what he could do about getting | 
me into the audience chamber. I remembered, however, and 
* * * still do, the eyes, the mobile face, 
I waited in an anteroom without | the ascetic hands, and above all 
much hope. | the voice and the words spoken 
But Gowan had interceded di-| in perfect English. 
rectly. He fell back at the door) 
when the General and Mrs. Paul tonghn which ccrrceeed _ Ries 
emerged, and crooked a finger at crystal clarity. 
me. Quickly I was in. 
* * * I had a wisdom and kindness, I explained my understanding of | jand seen diffidence in a man who ithe limitations: against reporting: for many stood next to God. 
ithe interview; that [ was seeking * * * 
information and opinion for guid- | I still didn't understand why he 
ance, not for quotation. at time seemed to place stress on 
The Pope gave no sign of ANY tn. morality of matters which feeling that I had intruded, or iseemed to me of less than major 
that he didn't have much time for | consequence. 
a But I felt then, and I still feel, Noting from the absence of the that I had talked. with the greatest 
outward displays of reverence to |man who has lived during my life- 
which he is accustomed from time. at, or how the room looked. 
            * 
~ 
  
ona aes which they fought. 
- When the battle came to the | 
gates of Rome, he disdained an | 
offer by the Nazi government to ~-- 
transfer him ‘‘protectively" to | 
Germany. Instead, the Pepe | 
| bluntly told the Nazis that they 
never even should have -suggest- | 
ed such a step. 
When Rome was bombed on July 
19, 1943, Pius was among the first 
to rush to the aid of the wounded. 
His driver sped him from the pro- 
tective walls of Vatican City at the 
pontiff's insistence and Pius. 
prayed in the rubble as he blessed 
the remains of the dead. . 
Pius virtually emptied the Vati- 
can till of all its cash to bring 
help to the needy. 
On Aug. 13, Rome was raided 
again. Heediss of falling buildings, 
Pius ministered to the wounded in 
front of the church of St. John 
Lateran, unaware that his shoes 
were cut by broken glass and his 
hands and clothing were smeared 
with blood. 
When Gen. Mark W. Clark final: 
ly entered Rome in June of 1944 
with liberating American troops, 
he apologized to the Holy Father, 
saying: 
“Tam afraid you have been dis- 
turbed by the noise of my tanks. 
I am sorry.” 
The Pope's face lit up with a 
happy smile and he replied: 
“General, any time you come 
to liberate Rome, you can make 
' just as much noise as you like.” 
The tide of war receded and the 
Pope intensified his relief work. He 
allocated millions of dollars to- 
assistance of displaced roms 
alone. 
British Prime Minister Winston 
Churchill was received in private 
audience by the Pope shortly after. 
the end of the war. Churchill told 
the Pontiff of Stalin's remark at): 
Yalta: “How many divgsions has 
the Pope?’ The Holy -Father re- 
plied: 
“When you see our son Joseph 
again, tell him that he will meet 
our divisions in the hereafter.” i aes ee. 
DURING MARIAN YEAR — 
    Vo m ‘ ; Ae was borne on portable throne ffom St. Peter's 
Basilica, Vatican City, Nov. 1, 1954, in a cere- 
mony marking climax of the Marian year. The 
  S 
f   Pope Pius XII 
Pontiit pessid through crowd of pilgrims after 
crowning an lnage & ae Veen honored: 
, during the Marian year. .      
    ere 
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"TWENTY-TWO eo ___ | THE-PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 | . 
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NEW MURAL UNVEILED—The Pontiac Knights of Columbus — . Renting Prose Photo, —_ 
have just unveiled this 8 by 16-foot mural depicting the landing inspecting it with alps vas a enya (left). ype : INNERSPRING WAT T RESS 
of Columbus. It was painted in honor of Columbus Day, Oct. 12, who lists painting only as a hobby, put a hours work S ss ae 
by a local member, Edmund Smith, (on the right) who is shown the mural. With s dhower Praetey —_ 50 = nied & Boord eS Save $ 5 
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ae ~ was ; Pull, twin or % size. Gave on , “ i ‘t Cover . By DICK SAUNDERS |member with a natural talent|in the main hallway of the Knights) ‘‘Another party carrying heavy Smarty covered. with Casters = = Itor painting. lof Columbus Hall, 295 S. Saginaw armor folfowed,” Smith explained. 9 95 $ 50 
When the Pontiac Knights of| | $ 30 e fantac Anights Ol; The center of attraction this St. The actual painting took about (7 . Columbus celebrate Columbus Day weekend, and for some time to) x *« * 50 hours, or about a month's |# 
this Sunday they'll be doing it come, will be a newly finished | It was painted by a local K. of] werth of weekends, He did it, |; . in a big way, thanks to a fellow:8 by 16-foot mura] now hanging ¢. member, Edmund Smith, of) all in his garage where he built 2 ox aes 4%" Geld Label : |115 Alice St., who modestly admits,| a makeshift scaffolding to held |~ or 
‘I do some painting in my spare! the four panels of canvas. 4 Blond or Mahogany Foam Rubber eS 4 . | 7 1aq time.” - é PILLO Box Spri : Van Cliburn Flies “I was quite the neighborhood BED PILLOWS x Spring i ge au ions “7° | The mural, painted in honor attraction,” Smith laughed. “Each)— COFFEE TABLES , All colors and ah and Mattress 
to. Ailing M other ; | of the ty’s patron, depicts [weekend I had a bunch of neigh-|, € . Ser 0 the landin#¥ 6f Columbus on the |borhood kids hanging around) © Step Full U N on Tests Cancels Concert | island of San Salvador. |watching me work, ] finally set)= Tables $ 95 ¢ yaa $ 5 * ; r : iup a regular grandstand out of| — : . _ : DALLAS (AP) — Pianist Van), Sith, with Mao ae condary (boxes and wastebaskets for my’ | Ales Modern colors ang merce _— j Wants Question of Ban nee eee oe in| motive behind the painting. “We|urious audience,” | i He ttle tates 4 bo had to cover up that blank wall Fe : t \! Pp 7 : on Atom Blasts to Be ing mother, visited with his|with something,” he said a te ike eee : Settled at Geneva {patents and relatives here today.! tzTTLE FORMAL TRAINING os ere aoe the finished p rod-| ; a | a ee | Actually, Smith has had little uct ‘and will be forever grateful {f UNITED NATION: , N.Y. (AP) “Mother has been suffering from forma] art training. Aside from to Ed.” 1 : as —The United States sought sup-' an infected tooth and it has caused|tWo summer courses at Cranbroo Both th b nd their |# ° : : -¥ = in the ay Assembly today), nerve disturbance tint her face, back in the early 1940's, he iS wives a wi a Ss look at la: Bazaar Area — Miracle Mile Shopping Center i 
as ee tering Soviet We thought she would have to go|S¢lf taught. ‘the mural this Saturday night at)? FE §.955] _ FE 8-9551 : 
mediate end to nuclear weapons to a hospital for oral surgery, but| His hobby rarely reaches the \their Columbus Day Dance be-|@ ; co — , 4 tests. \that will not be necessary,” Cli-| Proportions of a mural thi€ size, | ginning at 8 p.m. Son RET TPR TLE BRC IT OE ES RR, CTE RTS aad a ER St 
* The Americans worked private-|burn told newsmen afer “flying| Bewever, Hie; researched: ‘he | : —- = ly as the debate in the Assembly's | here from) New! Janey landing ‘scene for about a month | LILLIA ALATA TTT TT TI PI PP POA PII IIIA DI I 
top Political Committee centered *« * A | befece: bextenine ai le a - * still on Russia’s call for giving | getting 1¢ down on canvas. \\ top priority:to the question of end-' aban. who ne Moscow | “I took the rough design from) . \\ ing tests. sic contest early this year, sai : ay ” 4 TUS, Anibeasedor Henry Cabot @8.™mother, Mrs. Harvey Cliburn ¢ ces ea Ss oi ne .) 
Lodge already had cautioned the of gore, Tek Probably wil th | kt * * ! - Wee to we no action that might New Verh jate! this ay urns °| “Then I went over engravings is r a ‘ endanger success of the big Power ee in historical books to authenticate 5 ~ talks starting in Geneva Oct. 31... te . the costumes.” me ee ee He was the first speaker on the Prince to Visit Detroit a | 
8l-nation committee’s: list. | PaO = ea He has even studied documents . 
The tentative U.S. resolution) DE — Prince Norodom] to arrive at the right number J N T ed T was getting a cold reception from | Sihanouk, a former king who abdi-| of persons in the initial landing n a ew . - we opcoat some Asian-African countries who | cated to ‘become aes ie ‘ party. ; rj want an immediate and uncondi-/C@mbodia, was schedu Oo visit; | - f O : 2 eaneat t ediate a condi (Detroit Thursday. The prince plans As far as I can find out, it rom smun S 
The American draft was said|Visits to Ford Motor Co. andjis safe to assume that Columbus 
to: \Chrysler Cor. plants. Cambetia landed a fwo-captains 6 monk, Our smart new Chatham Tweed Coats are more 1. Voice hope for success of the 8S Carv om Indochina. in .| page and probably two : . See CS Oe Me Prince Sihanouk stepped down| lieutenants in his immediate| than a match for the blustery weather just ahead 
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_THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, OCTORER 9.1958 
‘rom axonalion to           
      “VATICAN: CITy jupp— tie 
      
   
                 a Wk -Annpntad Eis pcaseees pilgrims. in ‘St... Peter’s free mations to resist “Soviet: July” Wont See 
ahs tthe ren Pope Pa Reside site, mene A ~g omgy threats and<pressure. © departure for Castel Gandolfo and ~~~ 
XH: i Mngt =~ be ‘archbishop of} Jan. 3, 1955 — “Issyed telnet Feb. 2, 197—Told Italian dee. jgees cent woe because 
b fol al, This was.ainied| poor. Sy | Dec. %, 19)4—Suffered near- tence in truth.” » 1958 Castel 
ch, ey eon en, it i, ya" ee i "en | wen une | ete <a i, cm mao was elected Pope on the third bal-| setting pe gander a pains ; Po * M2 |saint in 242 years. ing a vision of Christ at his bed- | Jan, 12, 1955—Interrupted COM-| administration of pain-relieving —delivered nearly one speech. a 
lot of the conclave of the Sacredlchurches"" in Iron Curtain coun-ltree pire the Balin of Py og | she. Five: doctors struggled to |valescente to receive then French'G-10¢ to persons on the point off 48Y im September. ~~ 
College of Cardinals, receiving @1\trieg =... > Sate Alesie . June 12, 1954—Created five other| ®@¥° Bis life. > ~~. -|Premier Pierre Mendes-France.. death was legitimate even if they! Sept. 29, 1958—Suffered slight ye- 
of the 62 votes (all but his own). Te 6 eo — -. |saints, raising the number of can-| Dee; 18, 1964 —-Condition im-|_, SePt. 3, 1956— Warned German might shorten’ life. leurrence ‘of hiccups but did oss 
March 12, 1939—Coronation as| Aug, 10, 1950 “ eneyclical Jan, 5,-1954—Sets May 29, 1954 onizations. in his reign to ajproved, doctors diagnosed illness Roman - Catholics against the|"" April 21, 1957—Said in an Easter call off public appearances, 
Pope Pius XI. “Hhamank Canaria,” whick warned 2 ctte tor te eereninny cf CAR a coed 32. as “gastritis and hernia of the| Mirage of false coexistence’ with Message the world had entered a| Oct. 6, 195%~-Suffered cerebral“ <_ 
Sept. 1939—Issued first encyeli- (against ~ distortion of Catholic 22%" of Pope Pius X. | "Nov. 1, 1954~—Proclaimed new|esophagus, >». ~ ethiptatic: commmaestats; new epoch of hope for the peace- | stroke. 
« ” ‘ : - Dee. 25, 1954—Appeared at-win-;- Dec, 23, 1956—In his Christ. (ful uses of nuclear energy, but) Oct. 9, (Rome time), 1958~Died 
cal,.“Summi Pontificatus,” con-” : : 
demning totalitarianism and ap- : ’ mas Message appealed te all |warned against atomic warfare. ‘following second ‘stroke. = 
      
  
pealing for world peace, 
June 2, 1944—Entranee of Allies 
into Rome, 
Feb. 18, 1946—Created 32 new 
cardinals from 19 countries; end- 
<a coy = 
Sacred College, 
. a a 
Oct. 14, 1946—Exeemmimication | - 
of Marshal Tite and other. Yugo- 
slavs who had any hand™in: the   
Oa 
Dec, 28, 1948—Excommunication | of all Hungarians who-participated 
in the arrest of Josef Cardinal 
M   
indszenty, 
Feb, 12, 1949—Excommunication 
of all participating in¥ the trial and 
sentencing of Cardinal Mindszenty. 
July 13, 1949~Issued a pon- tion of all persecutors of-the Cath- 
tifical decree | stating : olic Chureh in Czechoslovakia, - 
Catholic who became «on June 3, 1951—Ceremony of beati- nist or defended Communist doc- con, re Ee > em ee 
penMrwersng “ Ga 29, 1951—Excommunication 
Dec, 24, 1949—Opened 25th holy trial and aa Sepia of Arch-. year of the Catholic Church and bishop Josef Grosz of Hungary, - : 
in a Christmas Eve message urged'who was the highest ranking a : : wo ; : : 
‘al’ Christians to unite under the churchman in the country, follow- -— <7 er Se ‘ ar | . : £ 
Rome Church. ing the arrest of Cardinal Minds. : aeeneeeiammemets ' 
March 17, 1950—Excommunica- zenty. 
tion of all Czechoslovaks cannect- | * * * 
ed with the house arrest and ban-| Sept, 17, 19§1—Excommunication 
ishment of Archbishop Josef of all Rumanians connected with 
Beran. : |the trial and imprisonment of 
7 | Meer. Augustin Pacha, bishop of 
Timisoara, 
Teaching of Safety C2. 2icur ems \them to stand fast in their faith 
Belongs in Homes = ‘ ‘cc ot persecution . Nov, 22, 1951—Confirmed in a 
DENVER UPD = Alecteran 96 |e ee ee ii : pageomanyed between science ice officer blames parents for not and Bi 
accepting the responsibility of blical scripture. He sup- ported scientific estimates that teaching safety to their children. |, | the universe is billions of years | 
“They are giving these respon-| old and said that science itself sibilitres to the schools, churches proved the existence of God by 
and police,” said Lt. Leonard John-| provi 
son, head of the Denver Police] Preging ‘hat creation took place 
Safety Education Division. 
“How can citizenship or respect) July nae Piaget apostolic 
cf the laws be imposed without the’ —_ A e peoples of Russia, 
responsibility starting at home?” Cling for a strengthening of the hel asked) adding: Pepa lenge This is believed to 
“It_certainly isn't the right of a herrea os tly ue the peoples 
policeman or teacher to spank a lof Russia. - 
- youngster when he disobeys, but Dec. 29, 1952—Issued en — cyciical| 
— is something lacking in many |.-Orienales Ecclesias,” in which he. 
mes.’ protested Communist persecution 
. . . of the Church and called for 
Indians Using: Narcotic prayers for the persecuted, 
Fightin ici Zo 9 9 Council Ban Jan, 12, 1953—Created 24 new. 
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. w —In- cardinals at a secret consistory, 
dian users of the narcotic drug, thus raising the Sacred College to| 
peyote, which grows from a spe- full strength of 70 members for | E 5 Le 7, ij é : j 
cies of cactus, have filed suit in the first time in almost 250 years. Bee ; tha F : : Se J 
aia our here —— a N@-) jan. 22, 1953 — Canceled all Ms : = a4 : Ge Re : : 
are. ribal Council ban off the, audiences tiye to illness, i ees as — ; . ; 
| - § 
The plaintiffs contend they use, March 15, 1953-Resumed audi- 1 K COLLAR 
peyote in religious rites, and the| vences after recuperating from ill- s 
tribe is trying to interfere with "€55. 
their constituti rights. Aug. 27, 1953—Concordat signed | o aa) between. Vatican and Spain. 
Good Samaritan Jailed «of 7 persons connected with tye | 
ension of Stefan Cardinal Wys- | 
PAW PAW, Ind, (UPD) — Wil eynekd, Archbishop of Warsaw SAVINGS IN LODEN-LOOK COATS BELIEVE POSSIBLE AT THIS PRICE! 
liam Summit, 19, was jailed for) from his ecclesiastical duties. - / 
letting his sympathies get out of f 
hand. He told police he banded aj . Oct. 3, 1969—Called for an in- |     
  > 4, 
  
      
        
          
        
  hackshaw through a barred win-| *ermational legal code for pan. | Penney’s tailors these 9-ounce cotton sheen Just check off these extras: Rugged water- : 
dow of the county jail because| ‘shment of war criminals, coats with more of éverything . . . full rayon $ . repellent 9-gunée cotton sheens! Full 14-ounce - $ 
ae ph Met Ralph Wil- Bias oe ay a eceeer| quilt lining, zip-off quilt-lined hood, , inside , : quilting in body and sleeves! 3-piece coristruc- 
_ : zipper ... all the same styling, details you see tion hood with furry dynel trim! Knit turtle 
| in imported coats. More? ‘They’re water repel- : neck dollar ben hood is zipped off! Rugged, 
Z lent, wind resistant! Natural, charcoal grey! quality zipper! And those are just the big ones 
E TON S Penney priced unbelievably low. sizes 36 to 46 7.) come 2 to Penney’s and see for yourself. sizes 4 to 12 
a 
        
                  
Coat Week GREAT SAVINGS FOR THIS WEEK ONLY 
Every woman who intends to. buy a coat now should see how 
much fashion . . . how much quelity ... . you get at Eaton’s, 
Last week these coats were a sellout and we're happy to be able 
= “to repeat this sensational sellout at Coat Week Prices.   © TWEEDS 
FUR BLENDS 
© CHINCHILLA 
© 100% WOOL 
© ORLON PILE 
LININGS 
| © ORLON DYNEL 
FROM 
Use Our Convenient 
Layaway Plan ,   
  FEEL THE QUALITY IN _—'| GO AHEAD! WASH THIS THIS WARM SUBURBAN - 
LUXURIOUS FLEECE vo LUSTROUS COTTON PARKA IS ORLON PILE LINED 
This is it in suburbans. A dark | | 9-ounce panied cotton sheen, Warm-up time! Here’s a heavy 
charcoal or grey coat that is — Q” quilt lined with Celacloud (proc- a” 16-ounce blend of nylon and . 45 oe 
“WITH, CAP OR 
POPLIN CONVERT HOOD 
+] RAINCOATS . . . $9%°   
tastefully subdued in rich fleece essed acetate) is machine wash- cashmere fleece with quilt lined se , : 
of 75% -wool, 15% nylon and aes cine» oe red knit sleeves, plaid rayon and acetate 4 
          
    10% cashmere. Quilt lined. 3 sizes 36 to 46) Im tukewarm water. | ‘hse 10 to 20 | kicker. Greys, tan! sizes 10 to 20 
7 i Ree PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS "PENNEY’S DOWNTOWN STORE HOURS: =f — 
Open til 9 P.M. ¢ ton b we. OPEN EVERY WEEK DAY — MONDAY | OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. 
4 Mon, - Fri. a Saginaw _ THRU SATURDAY. 19:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. - Loe ALL OTHER WEEK DAYS 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. | 
  : : . . + < * : i a i = ¢ + ‘ : _ , * ; \ i 
. : _ 24 ae ay Sg Vo se font : ¥ . fp : _ ™ Cd : eo 
= ; Pt san “ Z x : ae a : ei ; : 28 }s a . : i : S eS ; : x . ia * = : =a 
           
   
     
       
           
  
     
   
   
   
       
       
   
      
       
    
     
     
   
     
        
     
  CREE EEE OO GO ET ee Spe ge ett eit Si Rats ee ee org ae ae gn ae eee 
ee - — wow oe ee SOS wow = eS ¥eu 7+ ON Me er Ee Se 8: ek, 2. Ah, so ok ies he 5 so ali eae nici cates <caasins sda os aaa ae Sie aed 
* : ‘ oe : ‘ f at ke A : 4 oe : — a5 
ee : a beng ence f cae 
: ij : : ay = Pe 
TWENTY-FOUR fast ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, _HURSDAY, OCTOBER. Dy ain 058 _ a Oe 
~— Ohio Bri k F Fi ht in interests make t'vulner- Stymied by US. Courts: aS sat pebtia. sense 
‘ines ined ch sn oll oe 00] 7] | Pw = 2 ne ‘5 
10S DIICKer aces QI) sy meses" 881 School Segre vationists. i Bricker, a manner of the Senate : rag ot t Clintons bombed hgh .. an 
. Interstate and Foreign Commerce school .were to resume in " at ee 
for Third Term as Senator commiee whi deci Tall SOCK Individual Support = recy negate case Dock ; of Supery freight rates, ge ee oon sae ine 
oe from his Columbus law firm which bailding, ae teaed axiea” ollie 
represents the Perinsylvania rail- By The Associated Press ere Court's integration rul-|. Three dynamite blasts Sunday State High Court say finance the proposed building in the 
CLEVELAND (NEA) — Ohio Re- common, and the puffing never Dee wer to that one at| School segregation leaders, sty- ing. caused an estimated: $300,000 dam- ‘Hear Oakland” County Service Center on Telegraph road. 
publican John W, Bricker; the sen-|lets up. Says an aide: ‘‘His wife is alice . bay se knows|mied. by’ federal court orders in Paul declined to rule an NAACP age to the building. % “Appeal Next Week Lo “oo Om 
ator who looks like a Senne y always on um o cut owe: I'm st.” T i aie: Virginia and Ark appealed| request’ to Ww, Four Anderson Coun Brrences Judge Dehnke agreed, saying the 
gunning for a third term agains Hindlprng ie ae that’ old chest,|t0 individuals car ae port on ated County ves peg eer onires _ nulat 
Democrat Stephen M. Young, the} A few moments after the aide)" |, in operating ~ private white “ School : es- ; House aides ¢ . &. Edu. 
man from Puckerbrush Township,|said that, the senator waved a nut. neal ne schools because the state law/cation Commissioner Lawrencetively expected to 
amid a big stir of voter interest./dollar bill toward him and hol- Basically Young believes he pre . Wy ch closed them is being tested] Derthick on. the. possibility of ob- 
' x *® * lored: “Kenny, I want some ci-| will haye a smooth Voyage on , Bing a crag any private|in the Virginia Supreme Court. taining direct federal aid in re- 
[ The state's registration totals) gars.” Nov, 4, riding a crest of protest pape cha gitdpterind x * € building the Clinton school, nest 
f have hit record levels, surpassing) emeeratic candidate Young is against recession and the right to era 2 thout any ae ee the court order| Derthick sidestepped the issue 
busy 1952. The lists are especially by contrast short of stature, a work Proposal (which states that — selene ta" whethoe ted: lay ely paid. teachers, Atty.) by ae a survey will be — 
swollen in the large industrial sec-|* genial man with a deep tan, (a man doeén’t have to join a Erg! so clear-is w bel rou i §. Battle Jr. of Charlottes-|t- determine whether new 
tors where union workers with! — oo lgmile crea lliseen bis ‘union to held a job), se agheingneg gtd - ville. indicated he would “seek| can be provided under'sa federal 
Democratic leanings congTeBate-! husky voice, He doesn't have to | The Democratic and ieboe tre igh echool in’ racially treubed' pa ‘sources _ to 6 ey Saw F 
Reports indicate that union brush-| 94.. Bricker any points on vigor. |¢5 which drummed out the huge - 
beaters really drove them out of At a confessed 68, he’s a year- registration seem to have the Clinton, same a ‘ The integration - struggle was! 
the woods. round tennis hound (“doubles |Money fo eee things Neal until Virgin's plan ice. pereting be ty aero, This lone ogre) two sed y 
Observers say heavy registra. and we don't rush the net”), and Sesh va Sepa coal peers white schools with public triennial ~cortvention fs 
tion in Ohio usually spells pro- | an 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. eléck-puncher |COMPIAL), as they do in meen Bleachers was tossed oat the win. é 
test, though the late Senator Taft | at the office. eee ce “a big dow Wednesday by Federal Judge 
confounded, that motor er those | YOURE practically made a eareer| Yet, with all the signs, Bricker|John Paul in Harrisonburg._ He 
conditions in 1980. out of running against George| stands as tough to beat. The feel-|Said the practice violates the U--S.'I         
  Benger for the now abolished Ohio|ing is that if he should go down, 
Young himself is with the vet-|post of congressman-at-large, tak-|the Cleveland terminal building— 
eran appraisers: ‘Nobody waits injing four out of seven matches. Last|tallest west of New York—surely 
line an hour or more to keep the time they reams wen & 1950. would be next. 
‘INS’ in.” * [   
  
If a protest is building, the feel-| Since their little world series =e 
-ing is mueh of it may reflect)ended, Young has practiced law Amateur Radio Club 
hostile worker response to a pro-jin Cleveland. But he still bearsiElects New Officers 
posed right to work law, with &)some of the marks of his country 
good mixing in of resentment/upbringing in Norwalk and Puck-| Members of the Oakland County | 
against recession, easing now injerbrush Township, a farm area in|Amateur Radio Club last night | 
Ohio's worst spots but still felt. |Huron county west of Akron. elected Leon Grogg president for | 
* * * Despite the signs the Democrats/the coming year. | 
wate Sash Oe Ghssliiey alte fore sas lance a Gy ak a | GALORE at Your Plusibing Department Store predict it will swallow up Bricker. /torial nomination last May. tiac, Albert Lewellen was Gest | ; 
Most professionals believe he would x * * vice president; May Frose, secre- . o 
breast anything but a sweep that} He calls Bricker the “darling of tary. and Thomas Beale, treasurer. 
Quality 3-Pc. Colored t | 2-Compartment Cemen would deluge the GOP everywhere the peactionaries’’ and says he de-|.-The new president announced | 
A ' .. - in the nation. cided to run because he thinks the|that novice amateur radio exam- 
| = mi senator's votes against certainjinations for the public will be 
With Cast Iron Tub 
Reg. $21995 Value 
1944 presidential race on opening This tall, broad-shouldered man) welfare measures and the St. Law-|offered free by club members after 
@ COMPLETE @ 
convention day in favor of New is a kind of Republican high water|rence seaway and his allegedjall future monthly meetings of 
York’s Thomas E. Dewey. He be- 9 ° 
ce Dewey ming ae GOODMAN'S With All Chrome * * * mark. At 65 he stands stately and| friendliness to real estate, oil, and the organization. 
: 
Walking six miles a day to and 
i               
          
      
                  
  er’s gray and starched white, with 
ruddy face and silver hair. 
He’s an inheritor of the old 
ssseresers “ce 2t] Corduroy Crawler flowing tie, an inspirational ora- - 
tor who can invest the flattest | ij 
statistic with urgency “and make | 
the declaration “I'm for human 
freedom” sound like a bolt from . 
on high. Suspender, bib top, 
Bricker’s success in politics is} elastic back, beau- 
almost unbroken. Few Ohio bal- : : 
lots in the last generation have tifully embroidered, 4 
| not borne his name. He was threeil snap —eretch, solid — 
—————¢imes governor, and he crashed : 
| through to the Senate by 320,000] colors. . Red, blue, 
in hee =e in es? beige, green and 
In the early 1940s he was the flamingo. 
shining young Republican knight} . _ , 
who roused conventions with his . 
ringing phrases, most of all when Regular ly $1 I =) 
he dramatically pulled out of the i 
       
        
    
    
           
         
       
           SHOWER STALL 
White Enamel - 2-Compartment 3-PIECE WHITE trim, impeccably attired in bank- 
tti BATH SETS from his Senate office helps fuel DEPARTMENT STORE Fittings Kitchen Sink 
                
             
         
    ina Ee eee 520 8. Saginaw—1 Block North of Wilson Rersgpeig ete sini ' Slightly Irreguler “op Mn 
cen OPEN SUNDAY 10-4 octal. 5 YOUR CHOICE. Bricker even pursues his weak- 
ness—cigars—with vigor. Three in for your shopping convenience 
a row at breakfast time isn’t un-                                                 Includes 5 ft. tub, 
wath beatin and 95 
ee Samer 
 eotoned Sets, $99.95   $595 
Compartment 21232 Cast ron | FULL FACTORY GUARANTEE 
“SINK -3 $25°°__ | SUMP PUMP 21x32" Stainless Steel Double Comps 
KITCHEN SINK "39" | wou ‘29 $69.95 Value          
      
   
            
5 Ft. White—First Saar rt 
Steel Bath Tub... - 
Cast Iron Bott nebee “—e . 
Tub Enclosur .$18.9 
Bath tu ae 
$ 3.19            
    
    
    
    
    
    
      
   4” S, H. Soil Pipe. vente 
3'’S. H. Soil Pipe. . - uate *9 
White Toilet Seats. - quai $ 2. 
Fiberglas Pipe Wrap non S10 
V"" Galvanized Elbows : 52 GALLON ELECT a 
WATER HEATER tez-ze-7= Beautiful New “Sd catty ghee . 
PBetig FOR me 
= eae a ha SS o* *% | : 
$ ‘ 
¥ 43 ‘ 
BERS * ae   
    
       $047 30 GALLON FAMOUS MAKE 3/4" Galvanized Elbows. - 19 
ey Regular 25:79) 7 Y2" oleae tee 27 GAS WATER SAAS 
ee . s NOW ONLY 9 5 3/," Galvanize ees. on HE ATER 
a LE PRICES ON 4 STEEL — 
eek poe cASH AND CARRY Automat ~ & It is solution dyed which means Sq. Yd. 
you can clean practically all 
household stains with ease. 
Special Purchase MICA COUNTER TOP Finest counter topping material . 
available. Burn-proof, stain- Re C 
proof, not affected by acids or eB: 
alcohol. Choice of patterns and 98c | 
colors. Sq. Ft. ON GLASS LINED - 
CAS ATER HEATER» 
10. Yeer Warrenty = 56 4s 
Full Factory Guarantee 
U. L. Approved 
“The Store That Values Built” Will Be 
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘TIL 9 P. M. 
3 WAYS TO BUY: COPPER PIPE } ft. 1 
," RD—20 Ft. Length 50008 
Va" L SOFT—6 O Ft. Coit aeoeeeee r 
ia SOF e0 Ft. Col a * 
Ss FITTING 1 \ 
” PPER ELBOWS ssmecevess* ©" 
He COPPER ELBOWS epeseter ge 
y," COPPER TEES recon eeeeset ss" 29¢ 
a,” COPPER TEES ..---++7°"°          
      
    
      
         
      
    Armstrong 9x12 : PLASTIC 
INLAID Linoleum | “rie | WALL TILE RUGS Lifetime Guarantee TILE All Colors -. Reg. $6.95 Regular 2c Each    
9x9 — , Se 
. - WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE vias Commitment 
Free Estimates on All Tile- Linoleum and Carpet Work We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities TRA as Low As re ee Nights 
| 1.25 WEEKLY 
  
  FULL STOCK OF SOIL PIPE AND FITTINGS 
-——EVERYTHING IN PLUMBING SUPPLIES 
Free Parking on a St. Side Ph. FE 4-1516 or FE 5-2100 172, SACINAW Delivery Gath “see Carry on o Floor Shop 99-101 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET __ Park Free Rear of Store 
We Loan You Tools Free a | ra FE 4-5216 A E' LUMBING SUPPLY CO. 
 iit eee Te ay THE. PONTIAC PRESS, a HURSDAY, gcronrn 9, 1958 
et Octet Ne pet fc snot Res Crs Wih i ss ; dge Lobstering Licenses 4 Sui irs towed 608 tel Wettest Spot on Eorth arly healers Over a 38-year 
ee Marine C pees aay oats onan (Drop Sharply in Maine  premekaaetyee dp cmt HONOLULU w — - Raingall a Mt.|was Soake, taba ‘7 inches, a : 
  
  : eo ee eee Ste. we ees 
Se Be ale tee Dg ae fe 
  . 
‘TWENTY-FIVE -   
       
         
         
  | PORTLAND, Maine (UPD. ~The) 
number of lobstering ‘licenses is-   
fikid'the kee woe UE. towed to get their snow plows out in the 
    eee = see ek penne te   
dropped 148 ; last Bo ~ Sweden, alarmed -by the shoré 
drought is-in sight, however, The|age of physicians-in that country, Pa 
mountain is -one of the wettest|is inviting doctors of other. coun. 
    
  
  
eee ea 
~ Wool and Nylon 
Tweed and Plaid Skirts 
Brilliant and beautiful for teaming 
up with blouses, sweaters, jackets! 
_And at our sensational low price, 
you can buy every gorgeous color! 
But hurry...this fabulous special 
is for one day only! Choose from 
beautifully tailored flecked 
tweeds and plaids... 
attractively detailed! 22-30. 
  99 LIMIT 
2 toa 
CUSTOMER   
  clear their streets. 
See 5 
      
_ The jacket value of the year — at an unbeatable 
  
Plaid quilt-lined 
cotton poplin, warmly lined hooded — 
car coats” 
88 $10 Values: x |   
A terrific coat at a 
fabulous price! Fine 
with plaid chromspun 
quilted with wool. Smart 
style with pop-up hood 
that converts to a lay-down 
collar, toggle closing, cord 
trim. Beige, black, red, 
blue. Misses’ sizes... 
       
  Plaid-lined raincoat, 
hat and 
umbrella 
COMPLETE SET 
88 
$12 
Values | 
Raincoat and hat in natural 
poplin, lined in colorful 
chromspun plaid...PLUS ~ 
a matching plaid umbrella. 
Complete set at a give- 
away price! Misses’ sizes. 
  “More fabulous doflar saving. specials 
celebrating the opening of the 4 giant 
| ~~ new Robert Hall family 
clothing centers in Michigan! 
} 
They’re $15 Values! They’re reversible! ' 
Men’s Wash ’n 
100% Du Pont 
Nylon Jackets 
88 
low price! Just like getting two jackets in 
one... because this handsome reversible 
model is nylon fleece striped on-one 
side, solid color nylon taffeta on the other! 
Top tailored with knit collar and cuffs! 
New Fall shades. 36 to 46, 
Flannel and 
sheen gabardine 
slacks Imagine 2 pair for $7! Luxury 
flannels, sheen gabardines or 
coverts from Burlington 
Mills in fine tailored 
rayon-acetates! Ivy-style 
flannels! Pleated-front 
gabardines and coverts! 28-42. Alterations 
  'spots on. earth, a ee ee ere 
      af 
    
             
     
        
   
  Wear _ 
  
  
  included 
  
      
200, North Saginaw Street, Pontiac Michigan saath Snes era 
wok. 
be) 
  Girls’ quilt-lined car‘coats with orlon-pile hoods! 
’ Be 88 J 8.98 Values 
Carcoats with heavy quilt lining. Choice 
of two styles: Combed cotton plaid with 
orlon pile edged drop hood...or print 
' cotton stripe with orlon-pile convertible 
hood-collar, PLUS matching pile back 
mittens. Red, blue. 7-14, 
USE OUR CONVENIENT 
LAY-AWAY PLAN...NO EXTRA CHARGE 
  
ECDSA 
HEOREOEL 
ERE 
TOOROOC 
ERODE 
ERO 
eeenend POCARA 
Ct $440 ee 
Tye 
tere    
s 3 acerca     
  _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER Lm 1058   
  TWENTY-SIX 
Pontiac 
20 W. Huron FE 2-3821    
      
         
    Like 
the 
99 
  
ny za m 
ae ~ 
“ 
= BE We) - 
a- : 
20% Discount on All 
oe \ Children’s Shoes During — 
, Our 3-Hour Sale! y 4 
Ns “Sp 
TODD'S 
Shoe Store 
ONE-PIECE . . 
FORGED STEEL 
HAMMER 
* Hardened 
* Tempered 
* Unbreakable 
* Rubber 
Handle 
* Chrome 
Plated SECONDS +.» betause 
of minor 
surlace 
scratches 
   
  Account Special 
SALE. Between 
6 P.M. to 9 P.M. FRIDAY “NIGHT 6 to 9 P.M. SHARP! 
EVERY ITEM GUARANTEED LUNDER-PRICED!,_ 
  HOUR CHARGE 
| 1 o” — | 
Ln On pt ; 
° Re-Open or 
AY Add-On Charge } Accounts ¥ 
Purchases of 
Famous. Brands 
of Ledies’ and 
Men's 
Merchandise 
OPEN FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 P. M. 
9 S. Saginaw FE 2-6811 
ag     
  Tulip Bulbs 
{2 BULBS 
, Sogn 2 Imm J BROTHERS ae   
yv-Imported from 
Holland 
ve First Quality 
vv Guaranteed to 
Bloom 
Jumbo Size “Darwin” Mixed Colors 
FRIDAY ONLY! 
6 to9 P. M. 
Regular $1.50 value now on sale for 3 hours only! 
& Top size DARWIN bulbs in mixed colors. Govern- 
ment inspected, guaranteed to bloom next spring. 
Right off the boat, direct from Holland. 
   
     
     
   
       
          Very Special Selling! 
All Wool, Flannel 
SLACKS 
- Regular Values to $16.95 $@, 4 54 Pr. 
TWO PAIRS FOR $18.00 
© Sizes 28 to te 44 
= e Both Pleated and Ivy League Styles 
@ Colors include Char-Grey, Char- heowe! Medium ao 
Light Brown, and Navy 
© Cuff Alterations Free 
& © This Sale at Osmun’s Downtown Store Only! 
At 
Downtown 
Store Only 
“Shop the Stores That Never 
Compromise on Quality” - 
IN SEASON 
REGULAR STOCK 
TODDLER 
COAT : Sizes 2-4 
Reg. $24.98 » 
19% GIRLS’ COATS Sizes 3-14 
Reg. $29.98 
2378 
$98 
The MARGARET ANN + Riker Bldg. 37 W. Huron ~ SHOP § Reg. $24.98 20 for 
   
     
   
   
     3 HOUR SALE | 
COATS. 
  “BOYS! JACKETS | ;/ as oy WIN 4 FREE 
* — ‘FREE : : . Se coal 1 | 
  
     
        
  
   
           
   
   
          
       
   21" ‘ae TV BUY NOW and SAVE $245.05! 
   
  NO MONEY DOWN e 2 YEARS TO PAY 
WAYNE GABERT Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 P.M. 
121 N. ‘ae ; FE 5-6189    
   
        
  Never Before at 
This Low Price! 
Downtown 
Pontiac 
‘Store! 
Protects ‘Tots From Tumbles ane 
Siberia eae 
       
  
  
    
  
        
rere 
: a seg “PEARL f Necklace & Earring Sets 
Regular $8.50 Value. 
F ‘] 88 |    
          Limited Quantity ( 
. ta ee 
   
         
       
  Regular $18.75 
 EVERSHARP err Pen and Pencil \ 
Sets $ 3 88 
LEONARD'S» Assured Satisfaction —Guaranteed Quality 
20 North Perry Street (corner of Lawrence) 
Every Unit Fully Guarwnteed by Us and the Manufacturer. 
10% Down. 1 Year to Pay! i, 
          
     
    
    
        > Paid Trip to BERMUDA! —_ . Get Your Free Entry Blank 
‘{. \ at Any of These 
= ie: - Downtown. : 
Tell Why You 
Like the 
— PONTIAC i, 
    
  
m S-HOUR SALE § 
  , 2.49 Muslin Sheets. 
© Full Size $ © First Quality     
      GP. a, FRIDAY NIGHT     
       in the New Ivy Style! 
NEVER HAVE WE SOLD THEM 
AT SUCH A LOW PRICE! 
~~ FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY — JUST 
: 7 $3 6 ° i) 
Here’s a buy that’s a buy! The most 
\ popular siff* today. The new Uni- 
versity style in solid colors or muted 
stripes that are so good looking. All 
sizes—but come early, they‘re bound 
to sell fast at this low price. 
il You Don't Need the Cash!     
        
   
         
     FRIDAY 6 P. M. to 9 P. M. ONLY 
1.00 Ladies’ Bras 
mez 49° 
        
® Fine Cotton ¢ 
-@@ ® Flannel, $,M,L. 
     
  © Fine Cotton ~ 
1.69 Ladies’ Blouses 
bee, Tie 
| 3.75 Curity Diapers 
© First Quality = § 277 © Limit 2 Dozen 39c Cannon Towels 
Seaps Pdo\Z 
69c Men's U'wear 
ran SO 
1.99 Men's Spt Shirts   
  
  Boys-Girls Car Coats 
© Worth 6.99 $ 5 
       ® Sizes 3 te 12 
  A BEAUTIFUL NEW 
MOUNTING{ WITH 2 DIAMONDS 
Regular *O7 50 
$45.00 
Price includes your aamene and 
Federal Tax 
Beautiful Y%2 Carat 
SOLITAIRE DIAMOND - Ring in 14K Mounting 
4. Regular 
$300.00 
Yellow or white gold mountin 
away for Christmas or use our ae 
_Venient charge. 
  J EWELERS ) 
16 W. HURON 'ST. FE 2.0294 
    
     Se ee ae ee en ee a Te 
pee        
           
   
                             
       
      Library of Congress for display 
September-Octo- 
    ‘because of the then inadequate “Twas. subject to the gout; 
laws, often without cred- At last she got disgusted - 
it. In time, the lines went fully| . And pat it up-the spout.” ; | 
into f ic consciousness un-| Mrs. Hale’s career in other fields) 
sened. The Iat or ng of Me-| was most remarkable. Born in New 
  publish ahout Mary and Her Little 
Lam ‘Hampshire and educated by her. 
family, she taught private school 
played a large part in betcha) oy sae A RS eer of five children in nine years of 
marriage, 
death of her husband,-she began 
college and army songs and in-|‘o write. After the publication of 
ny hounds parodies were based on|her first novel she was,offered the 
editorshi 
Godey’s * Magazine published the for ladies. 
Aa i pablisthey are|became one of the greatest editors|" 
adoption of Thanksgiving as a na- left penniless at the 
pepe eager 
* * * 
Mrs. Hale was responsible for the 
  
the royal] house, Sarah Catherine | 
was sent to stay at the home 
of her brother-in-law, John Pol- 
lexten Bastard, M. P. of Kitley, 
Devon. While there; Sarah Cath- 
erine whiled away the hours 
drawing illustrations and writing | 
children’s verses, one of which 
was the now immortal poem. 
Old Mother Habbard was, ac-   COMING OUT PARTY — Opening wide to display their soon-to-be-gone tonsils, 
seven members of the Bernard Martin family arrive at St. Mary’s Hospital in Roch- 
ester, N. Y.*Examining the youngsters prior to the mass tonsillectomy is Sister Stephen, 8. 
  — 9; Daniel, 4; and Rita, 5.       
      that finished the Bunker Hill Mon- 
ument and rescued the movement 
to preserve Mt. Vernon. 
An early champion of elemen- 
taty education for girls equal to 
that of boys and of higher -edu- 
cation for women, Mrs. Hale fought 
for-mothers and wives, demanding 
the dignity of a prafession for 
keeping. It was she who put 
term “domestic science’’ into 
~our language. 
NOT SUGAR AND SPICE 
Grown-up little boys who once 
smarted under the assertion that ‘terest in the gutogra 
uj) manuscript is the addition of the 
they were “made of puppy dog 
tails,” while obnoxious little girls ry. neoicalcky Lai Seem oh BE 
utograph Southey 
following verse: 
“What are some women made of? 
Bell metal mouths and leathern 
fungs, 
Goose’s brains and parrots 
tongues.”’ 
The verse was probably extem- 
porized for the person to whom 
the poet presented the manuscript, 
The collection will be on exhibi- 
beginning in early November and 
A Fine Complexion 
were said to be “made of sugar 
and spice and everything nice,” 
may find some small comfort in 
the fact that Robert Southey, at- 
thor of What Al] the World Is 
/Made Of, really said that little 
girls are ‘“‘made dfhoney dew and 
violet blue." (Editorial note to 
little boys: What a mixture!) 
tk * & 
Robert Southey; the 19th Century 
British poet whose autograph man- 
uscript ef the poem is a part of 
the collection to be exhibited at 
the Library of Congress, main- 
tained that ‘‘sugar and spice and 
everything nice” went into the com- 
position of young women, an anal- 
ysis with which grown-up little 
boys are more apt to agree. Important for Potato 
‘WASHINGTON (UPI) — Agrl- 
cultural economists are trying to 
improve Irish potato sales by im- 
provingthe color of their skins. 
Louisiana State University ex- 
pérts say that it's no use improving 
the inside because most consum- 
ers judge a potato by the way it 
looks on the outside. 
Does the public prefer a red or 
a white potato? A blocky, round 
or slemder potato? 
Agricultural specialists aren't 
quite agreed. 
But one thing they’re pretty sure 
of: “A fine complexion by the 
current standard of beauty is just 
as important for a potato as it is 
to Miss America.” 
  
Smashing Beer Bottles - 
Loses Zest for 3 Boys 
  GRAND HAVEN, Mich. (UPD— 
The gentler (?) sex, on the other} Three Grand Haven area juveniles 
hand, as wives are made of “all | 
that’s good, if well understood,”’ 
and as. widows, 
and fiddle de dee.” 
  “sipping of tea! ) 
WNowers, the | watchful eye of a deputy sheriff. ‘recently retraced their steps along 
paburban Lakerhore Avenue, with 
and and under the          
manuscript reveals, are made of Ottawa county sheriff's officers 
  | 
i 
  i é i 
UPI Phete 
Simplicia of the Sisters of Charity. Left to right in front row are: Thomas, 6; Jane, 
Left to right in rear are: David, 11; 
    
  = — 
2. BIG 
_ EVENTS Filled With Special Interest and Excitement 
for Everyone! 
    DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS 
AND ITS 
EMPLOYEES 
   
       Say 
We Like the 59 PONTIAC 
  
  
     stuff," while bachelors are 
jale and vinegar stale.” 
— : “powder and puff and all such apprehended the youths after they 
As hunters, 
men are “bluster and fluster and 
| dogs all in a cluster.’ 
It is with elderly ladies only| 
| that Southey was less than lauda- 
tory, for he characterized old) 
James, 10; and maids as “this and that and an| 
    “sour, jhad smashed beer bottles along a 
lone-mile stretch of the road. The 
|boys were handed brooms. Two 
and a half hours later, they had 
swept all of the broken glass from 
the roadway. ° 
There are 2.15 pounds of milk in 
‘old Tabby cat” and old women as a standard quart. 
oe ie | 
tion at the Library of Congress _ gs enqtts = « a) will be shown through the end at . | 4 the year, age 
  — 
  
PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISIO 
You bet we salute Pontiac Motor Division and its Employees! Together they have produced 
a really outstanding Pontiac for 1959! We've seen it! We're thrilled with its appearance and 
the advance engineering that bring the WIDER TRACK, the great new windshields and the -- 
rear-vista windows; the colorful interiors; the new, brilliant exterior colors! We're especially 
thrilled, too, because when the public see it they will want the satisfaction of owning a really 
great, new car, a 1959 Pontiac! To ‘launch’ this new Pontiac we have these events planned - 
for everyone this week! 
  aps 
FRIDAY 6 to 9 P. Come-on Downtown for the EXTRAS! 
merchandise, 
for your close inspection. 
ou 4 " Sn oon. ro s, 
  FABULOUS and? GIGANTIC 
Ds hour ‘Sale 
EXTRA values in 
every Downtown Merchant's store . . . bargains on new, fall, 
EXTRA TOO... 0 really close look at the 
new 1959 Pontiacs. Spotted around Downtown on the street ae) 
M. 
a ge ee ee ee 
  
      Tes! 
(25) words or tess, 
winner of this 
(- ISLAND OF BERM 
tours, swimming, = Keg foal ; Rip TO THE 
ek 
fishing tie ne hotel with mea 
Enter as often as you IPI POODLE Se 2 
8-DAY 
-ALL EXPENSE 
_ BERMUDA TRIP FREE 
FOR TWO 
uring Salute to tndustre seys:! you may enter the great contest. 
entry blanks in Downtown Merchants’ 
tell “Wh be — a New 1950 Association Member stores. . . 
ROMANTIC. *TRoPi CAL 
S gisethenn Air Lines, complete —_ sone 
Is. Come on Dewntow 
  OO POO PP PP al 
Get free 
shot made five 
  ¢ aan eateta ~~ PAPA R AAS 
    
Miacacfro--. 
opbcesebnoceyte 
|, 
oybecsehyee 
sresefpeeryleseofpas 
i] t o aan 
| 
   
  -/ TWENTY-EIGHT —__ eet EE ee EEE EL EG EE CEE ewer 
{ ‘ . . ‘ ‘ 5 ' Sw eet egg ereme 
2 
__ THE, PONTIAC PRESS, SS, eS 
    
Deaths. in Pontiac and Nearby Areas Sets Boys on Survey” Ruling at Girls! School ool {Insurance leaders 
NOCTINGHAM, England (UPD: THURSDAY, ocTOBER 9, 1058 ee be 
  
  
| MRS, LULA M. ELKINS ~} Service will be at 2 p.m. Satur- 
Mrs, Lula M. Elkins, 45, of 24 {ay from the Voorhees-Siple Chap- Taylor St. died yesterday morning in Perry Mt. ic with —burial 
in Bloomfield Hospital after an ill- | 
| Park Cemetery, 
  
ness of 11 months. 
She had’ been a resident of Pon-| 
tiac all her life. Deaths Elsewhere | Surviving besides her parents, | 
Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Inscho of, WASHINGTON (AP) — Dr. 
Pontiac, are a son, Roy H. Elkins | George Beniamin W. 
Auburn Heights: a daughter, | 7°°'S jamin Woods, 79, a for- . mer dean of American University Mrs. Phillip Dibble of El Cajon, - : 
Calif.. and four grandchildren. (died Wednesday. He had taught 
Service wil] be at 2 p.m. Fri- lat Miami University in Oxford, 
day from the Voorhees-Siple Chap-| /Ohio, and Carleton College, North- 
cl with burial following in Perry Held, Minn., before becoming 
Mt Park Cemetery. dean of American University’s 
\College of Liberal Arts in 1925, He 
MRS. A. R. MARSHALL was born in Morris, Til, 
Mrs. A. R. (Virgie L.) Marshall, | . * * * 
54,of 146 W. Longfellow Ave. died} OSE BSC, Conn (AP) — 
yesterday morning in Pontiac Os-, Yasha Frank, 55, a New’ York tel- 
teopathic Hospital after an illness’ -evision producer, was found dead 
of a year = Thursday, A medical examiner 
A city resident most of her life, | called it a suicide. Frank, who 
she was a member of First Meth- WS born in New York, spent most 
odist Church and Disabled Ameri- Of his life in the entertainment 
can Veterans’ Auxiliary No. 16. ‘business. His real first name was 
Surviving are her husband; her} Nathaniel. 
mother, Mrs, Loretta Stockwell of; | = x * oe 
Pontiac, stepchildren, Hershel | WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald 
Marshall of California and Glenn Harold Dabelstein, 51, a federal 
Marshall of Indianapolis, Ind.; [specialist on vocational rehabilita- 
three grandchildren: seven broth-'tion, died Wednesday of a heart 
ers and two sisters, Mrs. Margaret | ‘attack. He was assistant director 
3ailey of Auburn Heights, Mrs.|for programs of the Department 
Sich Logan, Garnet C., Forest, of Welfare's Office of Vocational | burial. 
_1M, Osborne, 73, of Durand, a for- 
  Jack and Albert Stockwell all of Rehabilitation. He formerly. was 
Ponti iac, John F Stockwell of| director of special education and_| 
Davison. William Stockwell of San/vocational rehabilitation for Min-| 
Diego, Ca]., 
of Korea and Robert Stockwell |nesota. He was born in Winona, 
‘Minn, : 
  
| 
         
     
             
   
   
     
   
        
   
     
  FOR YOUR OLD WATCH WE GIVE YOU 09" 
1 Year Guarantee 
  BENRUS 17 JEWEL 
SELF WINDIN 7 oust yitteg a 
GUARANTEED 
WATERPROOF 
~ $4950 
onty 529°° with your old watch ywhe for 
  FREE 14 DAY —~ Students-at Hollygirt -Girls’ RUTHERFORD E. BARRETT School here were: told they cual 
SWARTZ CREEK — Service for|no longer talk to ‘boys within a 
Rutherford E, - Barrett, 69, -who!mile-of the school, 
‘died yesterday at his home, 6168} This angered the girls until boys 
Ray Rd., will be ‘at 2 p.m. Sat-/at a nearby school promised, “We 
urday from the Bowles & Son Fu-|shall soon find out where the mile 
neral Home in Linden. His bodyjradius ends.” 
will be taken to Ortonville ‘for 
Mail planes, when they began 
Surviving besides his wife, Olive,|Service 20 years ago, landed at 
are a daughter, Mrs. Marguérite|dusk and transferred their mail Johnson of Grand Blanc; a son,|Sacks to trains for overnight trans- 
Ernest of Ortonville; six grandchil- portation. - Nevertheless; this fly- 
dren; eight great-grandchildren; |by-day system cut 22 hours off the 
and two sisters. coast-to-coast mail service.   
  M. J.-Beekers Agency Manager 
Martin J. Beckérs. Attending will 
be managers from -Ann Arbor, 
Flint,. Ferndale, St. Clair Shores, 
Owosso,- Port Huron and the Pon- 
tiac office staff. 
St., has been active in the com- luncheon at the Elks Club. 
She_will receive an award from 
  Overcome by Smoke 
local-firemen- were- overcome by 
Mrs. Jackson, of 82 Mt. ‘Genens smoke during an. exhibition of fire- 
fighting and rescuing techniques. 
  GREENSBORO; N.C. (AP) — 
  fo Fete Mrs. Jackson|inctratcua"*"* "gu Mrs. Merien tt: Jackson will ber: eo 4 
honored for 25 years of-continuous Fire Ends Fire Parade: 
service withthe Equitable _ Life 
Insurance Society. Friday, witha 
e|teon 
O. SAGINAW ST * 9:30- 9-30-5:30 daily . 
12:30 Wed. 9:30-8:00Fri 
  
    
WILBUR M. OSBORNE 
MILFORD — Service for Wil 
    
    
    
      mer Milford resident, will be ‘heldiy~ 
at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Richardson- 
Bird Funeral Home, Milford, Bur- 
ial will be in Oakgrove Cemetery. 
Mr. Osborne died Tuesday in 
Hurley Hospital,-.Flint, following 
an illness of three weeks. He was 
a member of Milford Methodist 
Church. 
Surviving are his wife, Julia; 
two sons, Donald of Detroit, and MN NS 
  
Dorland of Byron; and two daugh-|—   
   
   
    ters, Mrs. -Austin Palmer Jr. of 
Milford and Mrs. Charles Flitcraft| 
in New Jersey. 
A sister, one brother, 16 grand- 
children and five great-grandchil- 
dren also ‘survive. 
a 
Reds Bouncing 
U.S. Newsman All Because They Didn’t 
tike’ Program on TV; 
‘Plot to Kill Stalin’ ; 
      
MOSCOW, (AP)—Paul Niven, | 
ait i I Moscow correspondent of the Col- 
umbia Broadcasting System, 
packed to go home today because | 
‘of Soviet government anger oyer | 
the CBS-TV play “The Plot to — 
iStalin.” 
| The Foreign Ministry informed | 
‘Niven of his expulsion, It said the | 
‘action was caused by dissatisfac- 
tion with some recent CBS pro-| 
jgrams rather than being directed | 
| against Niven personally. 
|Ambassador Mikhail] Menshikov) 
protested in Washington Monday. | 
(The State Department in Wash- 
ington accused the Soviet Union | 
of indirect censorship by attempt- 
ed intimidation of CBS. State De- 
partment press officer Lincoln 
|White noted that ‘‘this comes on 
the heels of the expulsion of Roy) 
Essoyan of The Associated Press. |    
   
    
        
   
             
       
   The charge by the Soviet Union 
/in the case of Essoyan was that 
he had violated censorship. The 
‘expulsion of Mr. Niven constitues | 
lindirect censorship.’’) 
| x * * 
Niven was the. fifth American) 
correspondent expelled from Mos- ; 
‘cow since April 1956. 
John Day, director of CBS news, 
said in New York the ee 
would seek to have the order re-, 
| Scinded. HOME TRIAL 
NO MONEY DOWN 
$1.00 WEEKLY   
No Payments When Sick, 
Laid Off, or on Strike - 45 N. Saginaw FE 2-2400 
Gane See 
Columbus 
Discovery   
  
  
Open Fri. and Mon. Nights ‘til 9 P. M. 
FRIDAY- SATURDAY-MONDAY . 
Discover Greater Values . at Jane Lee’s. Gigantic Savings 
on all Winter Coats these three days. 
— 
  
Complete Stock 
GIRLS’ and BOYS’ WINTER COATS 
10% oFF All Coats Priced From $10   Sizes 
1-3, 
3-6x, 
7-14 
      
   Use Our 
y i es Convenient ; Charge It 
at Either Vane 41 North Saginaw Street Store 
      - ; Layaway Miracle Mile ° ‘ Delivery! 
Installation! 
1-Year Service 
  
  
  | Hamilton . WRINGER WASHER Automatic : | 
WASHER Special 9 900 Fully flexible . . . full oF With Trade family capacity. 
      
UGE Data Sovings Day NO MORE 
MAYTAG 
  
  Was $239.95 
168” | With Trade {SR 
Selgneo 
ates 
apangeonecay —— 
  
Automatic 
WASHER 
With Gyrafoam washing 
action. Fully flexible . 
controls with lint remover 
tub. 
“168” With Trade 
  a ee % . 
    
  
  
  
        
—*258" COLD to HOT, 2 wash Wash In. Tub 
Rinse In_ Other 
} Reg. $179.95 Value’ |" 
128° With Trade 
EASY 
Automatic 
5 temperatures from 
speeds, 2 spin speeds. 
Regular $399.95 
With Trade 
    
      90 DAYS 
SAME AS CASH > BUDGET 
‘WORRIES 
  
  Speed Queen | 
AUTOMATIC 
WASHER 
  
  
  = : : 
OS AG Be* 
ee TT a wt 4 
tS ae 
Safe For All Fabrics 
Regulor $279.95 
198” With Trade 
    MOTOROLA 21” 
1959 TV 
Featuring 3 speakers with—ecoustically balanced 
sound. 262 Square Inch Viewable Area. 
$938 With Trade   
    
      
      
      
        
   
   
The Cleaner That Walks On Air « 
HOOVER DELUXE Upright CLEANER With Tee Freezer 
r 
was $124.95 $3995 $239.95 wan tak 
51 West Huron St.       AUTOMATIC | AUTOMATIC 
Noe OB) Waster | Sadie axiomatic — Bectie $138 
168 , lect 5158 
cee pe cores 158 Te pamemell S198 Constellation 
  Complete With Attachments. 
Wes $97.50 
$ 49” RCA WHIRLPOOL 
8 cu. ft. Family ‘Size 
REFRIGERATOR 
     STORAL 
BUTTER 
KEEPER 
  Including Attachments Delivered wed Serviced Free 
Me GOOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC 
Open Friday & Monday 
ti o P.M, 
  FE 4-1555 INSTALLED FREE 
HAMILTON 
   mm at 
DOOR : RCA Whirlpool 
Deluxe 10-Ib. 
GAS DRYER “* 
Has autematic pilot, ignition, . 
positive heat control. 
Was $239.95 
159” 
       
    
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH       
Ms a . i | te 
       SD) eS: eae ae. on 
ae 
5 
‘ Sener 
= ie THE : PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1058 _ .TWEN TYNINE 
Jon't Be. Surprised if ‘Milbencire. Race | 
7 for. Governorship of New York Is Tight cession,” the Skefman’ Adams 
Case, some uneasiness over Eisen- 
hower’s Quemoy policy, and the Democratic triumph in Maine, 
,| All added up to give the Demo- 
The| ‘rats confidence that this is their 
year. 
But New York Republicans con- 
tend the New York campaign will 
hinge on state issues—not Quemoy 
_|or-Adams, although Rep. Kenneth    
   
    
       
     
    
         
        
   
               
  sensed VERE AC - Dd va i 
alues pow NF ow XN 
B. Keating: their candidate for thei ipaks ac aces cas Kc eo 
Senate, was one of the GOP office! tener. 4 
pony who demanded ‘that Ad- 
é s % “The outcome in Maine,” said 
,,| Morhouse, “actually was a per Although Rockefeller doesn’t 4 
mention it, Republicans have been) *Mal victory for a vigorous young) j Public figure—one, it can be said, 
with a knack of getting things 
done —. . . and augurs well for 
Nelson Rockefeller and the Repub- a a 
  a spirited, personable ae ee eee ticles bere York campaign that has en- Nov. 15.”.° stots.” av 
couraged Republicans 
  Rockefeller’s activity in philan- 
rk Not Much as: Plumbers, Nuclear Blast recs. nrsere foi God Cee 
Shakes Mount 7 "2%. asti areata ee ee s rate Hart shop's- advertisement _in 
‘Tons of Rock Tumbled plumbing 
the Jackson Hole Guide read: 
“Sink Backed Up? Toilet 
Call us. We'll gladly 
poll conducted under GOP aus-| by Small but Powerful |Nesro advancement ~ with you while your fqebend |i pices in September showed Rocke- Atomic Test Rockefeller himself appears in-|“"*°S it. zg 
feller and — = even creasingly confident. 
They report te polled 40 “I think I've got a fighting 
per cent_and 20 per cent were oe ot TEST SITE, Nev. (AP)| Chance to win,”-he said early in Football Takes Over 
undecided. — Tons of splintered rock today|the campaign. Now, he tells his|~ HONOLULU @ —The shopping } * * * blocked a long tunnel in which a| audiences “why the Republicans| istrict ofthe town of Aiea became 
“Anybody can take polls to;*™all but powerful nuclear device 
they want,” snapped|W@5 tested. 
The device was in the one- 
oerats-would do far better than/kiloton range—equal to 1,000 tons and-has participated in causes for | Clogged? 
are going to win.” 
Tops in Republican optimism, 
probably, is L. Judson Morhouse, 
New York state GOP chairman. 
He interpreted. Muskie’s victory in     
a football casualty for a few min- 
utes. A ball from a sandlot game 
was kicked into the electric power 
system, disrupting service for the : 
whole area.    
                  
   
   
    Fabulous Value     election he won of TNT. This is puny as nuclear 
weapons go. But when it was 
        
  
Ladies’ Corduroy 
Storm Coats _ 4a 
N      SPECIALS 
Specials for Weék Ending 
October 18 
CHENILLE = | 
Bedspreads... 99°   Observers watching from 2% 
by the Demo-/miles away saw a shudder pass 
Maine Sept. 8.over the rocky face of the flat- 
       
       | It will be. weeks before the 
is taking nothing for Atomic Energy Commission is 
been visiting able to get through the shattered, 
every section of the state to speak | radiation-filled tunnel to the de- 
and shake hands with the same jtonation chamber and evaluate re- 
fervor he did in 1954. sults of the test. Safety engineers     SPECIALS 
           
  
  * * * who approached the tunnel en- y . 
That year be won the governor- trance within an hour after the an nerae was as 
~ over Republican Sen. Irving shot said some radiation had 
. Ives by pig les squeaky margin of seeped out, a development that Cl oth * * 
r3 000 votes of more than five mi]- had not been expected. es 4 A 
lion cast. It was the first underground sees 
    ‘Since then he has had ample shot in the current series. The! f 
opportunity to build his political AEC set quickly to work setting! [ 
strength. scheduled for} 
‘The prominence of his office has Friday. A tower shot, it will be! 
kept him before the public. ‘or the fourth of the 10 tests planned 
four years, in contrast with 1954 for the series. 
when he was appearing before the! 
voters for the first time after Woman Dies i in Storm 
a in federal appointive offi- 
GRANT CITY, Mo. (AP)—Tor- 
He was able to build the Demo- nadic winds and heavy rain bat- 
cratic organization through tered northwest Missouri Wednes-. 
patronage after 12 years of Re- \day night, causing widespread 
_ publican state administration un- | property damage and one death. 
der Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. Mrs. Frank Porter was killed 
x & when the winds destroyed her 
Meanwhile, came what Harri- farm home four miles southeast 
man calls ‘The Eisenhower re-jof here. Her-husband was injured. 
Zany New Quiz Contest! Everyone Wins , who answers 3 questions correctly —complies with contest rules. Heavy wide wale corduroy, fully quilted lined. 
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Fabulous Vahee NEW SHIPMENT 
Ladies Boy Coats | 
19" Six Items for Special 273.0» 
3-Hour Sale—6 to 9 P.M.—Friday 
HULA HOOPS __| Ladies’ Orlon Cardigans 
: 2 for, Reg. $5.98 ‘ 
59- $1.00. $59 |       
        favorite restaurant ur. or at a on Canada Dn! 
    
        
    
     e” 
HOW CONTEST WORKS! 
First, get entry blank at stores, restaurants, or wherever 
bubbly Canada Dry Club Sods is featured. 
STUDY THIS PICTURE WHICH IS ON 
ENTRY BLANK...TELL US: 
Question # 1. The name of famous movie star butler serv- 
a ing Canada Dry Club Soda highbalis. Is it Jim Rankin, 
Bob Stone, George Wright, Sir Cedric Hardwicke? 
Question #2. Which guest (in picture above) will have a 
sad morning because: He’s not quaffing a tall drink made 
with Canada Dry Club Soda whose bubbles curb hang- 
overs, aid digestion. Is it Bill Dey, Jack Dowd, Cocktail Carl, 
Charlie Noble? 
Question #3. Which one word most aptly describes the 
look on the famous movie star butler’s face: Disdainful,    Supercilious, Indignant, Arrogant, Piqued, Appalled? 
_Te quality for grand prizes: Complete this statement in 
13 words or less...“‘Canada Dry Club Soda will be the life of 
my party because...” 
Civest (a) “It makes drinks taste better’...(b) “It speeds 
liquid through system 80% faster”...(c) “Its Pin-Point 
_Carbonation makes drinks sparkleflonger’”’...(d) “Its exclu- 
sive formula points up flavor.” 
Each Entry Blank must have with it 2 of our Club Soda 
bottle caps. Send it to Canada Dry Quiz Contest, P. O. 
Box 170, New York 46, N. Y. Enter as often as you want 
: One entry per envelope * You must comply-with entry blank 
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will be judged on sincerity and aptness of thought. Contest 
ends November 8, 1958. SaeeaneRgaS~ Be 
  
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Contest wubjct to federal, wate ond lal regulationa: Downtown 9:30 to 5:30; Monday and Friday "tit 9 
      
       ll agate ¢ 
  _ 'PHIRTY 
  SHOW PREVIEW — Bob Henwood (left) and 
Bill Goulet are preparing to install over-street 
banners in various sections of Waterford Town- 
ship, announcing the Junior Chamber of Com- 
merce's first minstrel show, to be held October 
16 and 17 at the high school. If the Cotton Town ee i 
        
  
Pontiac Press Photo 
Carnival, which is the title of the show is a 
success, tbe JCs plan on making it an annual 
affair. All proceeds are turned back into com- 
munity projects, according to director of the 
production, Zaven Melkonian. Lebanon's F remier Cuil. 
_igtrikes and barricades, It became oon bee of the capital after(had taken no stand for Chamoun. ‘Insulated Underw’ r 
‘resignation was in Chehab’s hands = is what tells man peers when aang 
  
  
Pas 
__ BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) —Rising irenienad by President Nasier’s 
tion from supporters of for-)United. Arab Republic. The State 
= President Camille Chamoun] Department said that the ‘current ¢ 
reportedly has forced the resigna-|unrest appears to have essential- 
tion of Premier Rashid Karamijly domestic origins.’ 
after only 14 days. in office. Karami once told newsmen he 
President Fuad Chehab was fe-jconsidered Nasser. a superman. 
ported considering appoisiting a|He said he favored federation with |, 
miiitary government, Chehabithe-U.A.R., but only “if all Leb-j__ 
headed the army until he became} anese agree.” de “at CONN’S CLOTHES | Mon’ s Suits 3 Price 100% Lambs Wool 
Ast Suit.... $24.95 | $8.98 Crew Neck Sweater i 
  president in. September *.* naped persons -and the - situation! s 9° 
~ * * Tension akan acutely in| calmed. ‘2nd Suit... . .$14.95 Ist ter Sey 
Karami, a~ 37-year-old Sunni| Beirut last night when between * * * 2nd Sweater ... .$2. 
Moslem, was a leader of the|100 and 200 Phalangists were re-| Karami’s opponents: pave been 2 fer $39 20 2 fi $8.98 
armed rebellion last ‘summer|Ported kidnaped, -Pedestrians and|demanding inclusion in his Cabi- ‘or 
against Chamoun, After Karami|automobiles quickly disappeared net of members of the   
  became premier, the Christian|from the streets. Se Pialene — _— —= ~: _ re 
Phalange-a militant party. sup-| Security forces oved porters uded : FREE PANTS with porting ‘Chamoun, launched|tion ‘between — ~Moesiem—and.-Chris-|former. rebels and-moderates who Ducat Fad chase- <-aip- Bped-Coal” 
  apparent Wednesday that Karami}, in store priced at — 
could not win a confidence vote 
m'Patiament irene ot ores | EXPERTS, , . PROMPT SERVICE | iS: now 999% $1495 STDS   
    
  
: Although- —Karami.-himself told : 
newsmen he~ had “not--yet quit, | 
highly reliable ‘sources said his —Thermal. Galera : ~ CASHMERE = 
Shirts and Drawers SUBURBAN COATS . - -f Reg. $34.00 Velie ow 16.95 
tow. 32.99 Now sD had ad ae Be wow '12.95 
TUXEDOS RENTED — SPECIAL PRICES sf      but that the President had not yet 
acted on it. :, ' 
* * * : . 
“niwtot ote of §=©6§ CLEANERS. partment announced the approxi- , ~~ 
mately 7,000 U.S. troops still in      
        Lebanon would all be pulled out é 
by Oct. 31 “in view of the progress in PONTIAC 2 C L 0 T 7 ES 
made toward<stable international 
conditions." 339 W. Huron 26 E. Huron " 
ser ee imen tecnen Federal.8-8252 ~ _ FEderal 8-9255 71 -N. Saginaw 
           the country’s independence was 
  2: = = <= ae a a — SS = - I an ———_ a = Gara _SAVE- Wye SER aah os WS : THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ‘OCTOBER 9, 1958 Boa Se ee eee Foe ee ea, 
| Sse ‘es having SS Shae staal ream eon Earl Wilson, 
  
    
    
  
Finding Diamond." on Taplett’s finger Top Teuisiand Dems 
An employe of a concern in 
Among Peaches Moorehead, Minn., 
No Small Task and returned, it, 
        . oa 
found the dia- Opposing Integration mond on th floor of the b 
ees ° OxCar’ BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) = |The Democratic party, which lost | 
= . ‘Louisiana to the Republicans in) 
WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) — Woman Receives Money | the 1956 election, learned again   
  soe 
  
        
      
    
  
      
  
    
      
  
        
  
        
  
    Finding a needle in a haystack |Lost Ten Years Ago |W ednesday how the state's party | Pa | 
is bad enough, but searching for) leaders stand on the segregation | , 
a diamond in a boxcar, loaded) UNIONTOWN, Pa; (AP) — Mrs. issue. 
with peaches, 1,600 miles away. ..| Marie Pollock ‘remembers losing! The Democratic State Central 
ek jher purse 10 years ago. Yesterday Committee voted 69-30 to oust Ca-| 
R. F. Taplett, Wenatchee fruit! |she received a $10 bill attached to'mille Gravel Jr., the state's na- 
marketer, lost a two-carat dia-|@" unsigned note which read: |tional committeeman who had| 
mond in a boxcar here about §&/| ‘Quite a few years ago -I found; supported the national. party's | 
weeks ago, He asked his fruit your wallet, I should have re-} icivil rights platform. 
broker to spread the word of his turned it to you then, but I had| Gravel said the state group | 
loss to buyers receiving the ship-| lfour small children and it was /doesn’t have the authority to re- 
ment, ; jnear Christmas, so I used the|move him. He said he will carry| 
, * * x ! |money, I hope you will forgive | the fight to retain the post to the 
Today the gem rests snugly in|me.’ National Committee in December. 
$cheniey Distilters Co. NYC. - Blended Whisky of Eapanee + 86 Proof, 65% Grain Neutral Spirits 
C— i, , tA | 
C ole once | 
5s an” La San” Mle 
REGULAR $69.95 
Compare with other 
woe nlite ue -—-« POSTURE-TYPE Spe ee ee TURE- mattress 
priced-tagged much higher! 
WARD’S FAMOUS QUALITY ky Gan en ae moh x pagcpholsery firmly anchored ... can't shift, slide or 
Innerspring Mattress y | ween Extra otzing | yer... “extra support for thful, 
BOX SPRI Croch-prest border « . «fx ears of long wear 
Any Size ............... Eight vents give free flow of air through mattress. Four 
LAST TIME AT THIS PRICE Vcfding Kos srk anche dncpet a cag ws m 
ova mum service and comfort. y 
chenle waavi DESERVE WARD-WAY CREDIT PLAN & 
° No Interest If Paid Within 
G, i, /f i i, WA i, @ No Finance Company to Deal | | 
lear Ly fr fir ner in the bottle...ctealy fn lo 4 your taste With — You Make Your 
Payments at Our Store ras 3:2::3: fl A HT 
Pint 4/5 Qt. 
- a smemmeinamemmants       
      
          _THIRTY.ONE 3 e |   
          
  
   
    lye (Oakland Red Cross 
  ‘ “Plans Nursing Course =< He ea 2 
The Wéyear-clé ex-President jand a white T-shirt, His room is| A fourteen-hour home 
will be guest of honor at sep- |studied disorder. A vigil light|course under the auspices of 
celebrations. Esoteric jazz: records stacked in| American Red Cross will be held 
the corner, Elsewhere Roche, sree: £28 6 9:05 Dee, SOHNE, 
er The mye it B taught . by 
= young =pebet who 
history's first rebel. 
storys tet rebel meet at shan 
  
hyp Ch “eee si | McCandle ess   
again at the Veterans Park. : -|Porcupine Visits ine Visits Bonk 
Later Truman will stop in at is< sponsored by seven Croatian) GRANTS, N.M..i@ — First Na- 
the International Institute. .and jorganizations. : tional Bank officials turned down. 
make a short address at cere-| The ex-President is due to take |one prospective depositor who wan-| 
monies. ‘honoring the Yugoslavjoff at-5 p.m. from Willow -Runjdered in and sent clerks scram-| 
eardinal Stepinac. The observance airport for Kansas City. bling: a porcupine.       
      ing the news. ob deme gen 
man, you're the dullest kind of 
crawling, avaricious Babbitt there 
is, et cou 
If you're a doctor with a. gen- 
have found cure for cancer in- 
stead of being greedy. If you're 
lawyer, you should have defend- living, 
aa He thinks = : 
living and support a family and 
~ {follow ua never heard of.jus a 
= 
  a yeutinehave somehow|to support the-girl. so safe, =a er 7a He s * Sa = : = FYE 
“gut, Somewhere : 
he is convinced, ee Tell him} 
to us one and offered |to withhold his cracks, his dis-} “LIVING: 
    
a am 
Let him-know be’s distinctly “an oe ie he Young h Intollectuall | watts 4 R   
choice: Be Dene an por di, condescension until all ° ROOM 
est and “ later time: Come back, little reb- 
  dra d, old-fashioned,| ‘This is the kind of young snob Ijel, when you've been a father and} 49° KE 
ja creature of habit, conformity|think ‘we should clobber. Don't let|tried to find the wisdom to an- to $1.00: . a Olgas aan 
him intimidate you. Let’s hit him|swer your son's questions. Singie Roll. “ bag = : 39° Saray . 39 
            
      et en gc had ee. alta | SALE OF CURTAI NS 
Come bak, ‘little rebel, when you SAVE UP TO 50% Cp ly el gy ia ony x *« * ; or ane p all night working 
cases. If you're a reporter, Let him know that life ‘seldom /|on poi con ny ero ittle reb- . 
Giana fixew wittion the pronto presets such easy black andlel, when you've faced the stark on ALL Curtains and Drapes in the Store 
troversial novel instead of cover-| white choices, Disabuse him of thejterror of a deadline or searched | l 
idea that devils with dollars are|your soul for the words to fire ROSENBERGER S 
lurking in the corners ready toja man ftom his job. 
buy his soul, Suggest to him that; Come back, little rebel, and 
; ; the = too, -when--he—wriggies~ loose;make—your—eracks . when you’ re! WALLPAPER Co. 
poeta * 8 * trom the mire of-his self-centered-|dry behind the ears, when you're. 
in Jove and want to|a professional. No oné is so brave Ad Suh Seginae Stenat ee SRR ae 
get. married and even may want|as the amateur because no ‘one B| 
  
  
  
  
+ 
IN PONTIAC 
    
In Shades 
of the 
Midnight Sun 
P ap tes 
Shimmer—not shine—is the essence of iridescence this fall! Inspired by 
the light-at-night radiance of the Midnight Sun, Eagle instills a muted 
gleam into richly masculine hues... . hard-tailors worsteds of character 
with boundless devotion to detail! There’s nothing newer ! 
Eagle Worsted Suits 69.50 to $9.50 i } 
A Hub rs | i 
    Open 
a Hub 
Charge 
Account 
se eent eg | | 
| 18:20: NORTH: SACINAW STREET 
One Hour Free Parking in the Hubbard Garage with hay Purchasé_ Open 
              FINAL 4 DAYS! ies Warehouse Sale   
“Mon, Thurs., Fri: Open *til 9 Tues., Wed., Sat. Open ’til. 6 
  
Twiki $0 
Twist 
Reg. $15.95 Sq. ¥d. 
  NOTICE! We have just pur- 
chased an entire 
warehouse of carpet 
as the result we are 
passing this savings 
on to you. Wools, 
Wiltons, tweeds, 
bark textures | 
  Reg. $6.95 Sq. Yd. | early for selection. | Reg. $10.95 Sq. Yd.    curi \ “brought to you at | Wool 
Tweed S 350 Savings Up to 50% | Tweed "SES 
Carpet and More. Shop | !2 
   Scroll 
Reg. $12.95 Sq. ¥d. gato $7 
  
. wes r ~ SRB 
Tere ~ ga. ¥d. 
  I All Wool 
Teed shi Wilton ‘$gs0 Nylon $R* 
Bark Text. _ 
15’ Width = Sq. Yd. Reg. $11.95 Sq. Yd. 8 Colors Sq. Yd.     9’ and 12’ 
Widths _—_ Sq. Yd. 
  
  cree S400 Carpet 00% na | | smsieiiene 
Nylon $9.00 im | $70 canna S ge 
Plush Scroll Stripe 
    12’ Width | Sq. Yd.   Carpet Sq. Yd. | 12’ Width” Sq. Yd. | 9° Width — Sq. ya. 
    witor $995 Reg. $18.95 Sq. Yd. 
  
Vinyl Floorcovering | COTTON RUGS | CAVE 49% to 70% on 
6’ and 9’ Widths 
Reg. $1.69 § 00 6x9 $] Pi Ea. 
sa va | 9x12) $9750 ROOM SIZE RUGS   
NLAID LINOLEUM LINOLEUM | RUGS | We Still Have Some Carpeting Lett 
$700 from Our Fire Damaged Store at Reg. $3.29 Sa. Yd. 
Now 
=     2 Sq. Yd. a s4% a ah 00 $ 2” $ 30 Sq. Yd. 
—WHILE IT LASTS— } + 
  
© Free Home Service 
© Layaway Plan 
@ Easy Credit Plan 
© No Money Down 
© Delivery Anywhere 
  Pontiac’s Oldest and Largest Floor eri Specialists 
MceCANDLESS     li N. Perry St. FE 4-2531 
63 N. PERRY ST. PONTIAC FE 4-2531 
    Woven Pattern 
RUGS 9x12 
$9750 ba 
    
 PN De aia " 
~~ New contaminated equipment in 
".. ....Hanford’s reactors to the separa-| the metallic halo sets off the car 
  seg ® ee 
a 
     
            
      -OPHIRTY-TWO ee | rary _THE PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 | Se ee aoe Se ee tf 
3 eal — Army Bans Zoot Suits - recent post bulletin said: _|Walt ‘Street Sponsors c 
Atomic Laundry , ‘Adapted’ From Khakis | personnel to, “form Courses at University 
Cleans Machine FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) — lay thing itt] 
Uncle Sam's soldiers can't use G.I. sued and wl be diotnied York Stock 
Use Boiling Chemical, 
Deep Water to Reclaim garb to affect zoot suifs, 
Radioactive Equipment 
    
    
  RICHLAND, Wash. (UPI) —| 
Boiling chemicals,a 75-ton crane; Ei 
and a 28-foot-deep pool of water} 
are some of the things engineers 
at the Hanford Atomic Works are 
using in a strange laundry opera- 
tion to decontaminate and reclaim 
costly equipment that has become 
radioactive.   
  * * * ee — a. ae —- 
Formerly when such equipment ° Bd Fee: 0°50 %e% arate? o @ @ @ 6 6's 
broke down, “it often was hauled f es easbanRt “et ke as 
--into the surrounding. desert and 
‘buried. It was cheaper to do this 
~—-gnd-repiace it than-to~ cleanand{- 
repair it by existing methods. a 
> . 
aan 
i ¢ a feed -of repair is disconnected, 
placed into big boxes ‘and loaded 
onto a flatear — all by remote 
control ‘inside the separations 
plant in which it is used. A switch 
engine, separated from its radio- \Y, 
active freight by several empty} [AIM 
rail cars, hauls it to the king-size; BAA 
laundry. There the equipment is) 
lifted from its box and into one 
eleaning process after another by 
< 
- ww 
Ni a®pvatatataa tate’ \e, 
2. 
ii oe ee ee ee > 
wy SAVE ON BIRTHDAY 
GLASS BOWL D   
          means of the remotely operated TRANSPARENT CUT GLASS 
crane. PROTECTIVE HALO — New- SALE on REGULAR 
* * & | est Italain safety device for | - R : PT 
Some items are dunked into a! sleepy motorists consists. Of a PRICED! > EPACOL ANTISE ic ooee 
  
Special: pool and repaired while) metal ring which fits almost 
under as much as 28 feet of water.) flush with the underside of the A REGULAR $1.23-— BOTTLE OF 100 
Other pieces are submerged in a steering wheel. With a normal . a Q a, a BUFFERIN Unbeiios cecceces 
-caustic solution heated to the boil-| grip (drawing, top) nothing hap-   
  
   ing point. Railroad carg used to; pens. But as the drowsy driver's 
haul irradiated fuel elemems from) Ward relaxes tdrawing; bottom) 
tions plants are steam-cleaned.| horn and automatiaclly engages| DAe-\W Ss IN, UU Pas Sense --- sss’ 
Some contaminated equipment will] the brakes.   
  
  
  
  continue to be buried because de- \ WP, ; $1.50 SIZE—4-OZ. 
contamination would be more ex- iT] oe 
ipemsive than replacement. Gauge Scratch Depth ve Pe ABSORBINE . eee 
* * * , wae rw Vv 7 NS ¥, 
Genera] Electric Company engi- NEW YORK The depth of Ve Ay é + ad 30¢ SIZE— 13-02. CAN 
‘Reers say the cost of decontamin-|8Cratches on the surface of metals Y er SIMILAC LIQUID 
ation, inspection and repair often|now can be measured by small, AMERICAN GREETINGS ahem 
runs as much as 50 per cent of the|telescopelike instruments develo RDS 
price of the piece of equipment./py an American aircraft wins BOX CA REGULAR 49c— PKG. OF 10 
But the savings are large when a/facturer. In use, a beam of light CHRISTMAS = BLUE BLADES . Blelelels 
- $20,000 piece can be restored to|is played on the scratch at a cal- ASSORTMENT 
service (or a fraction of replace-| culated angle; the instrument mea- Ae ¢c 
Ment cost. sures the length of the resulting 50 TED CARDS 
— shadow, makes trigonometrical cal- $2.50 CITRATE. OF MAGNESIA .. 
Jet engines can go twice as longjculations relating shadow length VALUE! 88: bYevere 
as piston engines before needing/and light angle, and gives the : o.¢.¢ 0,4 OOOO AT   
    i" KARAAOOOOC 
Rerelerere ee ae overhauls. baal of the scratch. 306 SIZE— BOX OF 12 
———— je wv, . a, ~ 2 *. 4 2: 
pea ~~ v JUMBO a AY COLD TABLETS .. seeee 2 
HAMBURGER\§ tout 19 — 12-02 111 ON TOASTED BUN WITH AMPHOJEL coc rege ------- EO 
LETTUCE AND TOMA . FRESH ay lo $1.00 SIZE—ROYAL 
CHOICE OF 10¢ DRINK! | 
ALL FOR ONLY 
NX 69° (ss 
“COUPON   
       
  
  rwvvevvvvvvvvvVveVvvYVeWVwY*" 
wwwwvewewevwvevwrvrvwrvevvvvyYY™,   
y™ rwwwvuvvevvuvrvver..Y* i 
i 
ht 
i 
inlined. Flame-Resistant 
CEILING TILE   
      revuvuvVvVTVTeVreT 
TTY. ll 
lt 
tl 
hi 
i 
nd 
    
    
    : BIRTH 
; BOOK OF 
! i ONE-HUNDRED 
$ CAULKING NEEDLES 
f ,chnrmpars arp s ~ a 3 Suet | «$949 A 
Outside White Don’t Delay! Shop and Save Today! 
, | . if 7& ge 
PAINT :$ -<>pa aul cageuiane «| BA ci iis A Cg (Pag a BOWL i? 0 FF. x 18 INCHES y mastic wind a como 
Se SIZE BOX Or 3 *, sem” 33° h _ff Re SPACEMAN 
LUDEN COUGH DROPS, 2 for 6e Ti-FREEZE.. REGULAR & 1 ey wr raicd 
LUDEN'S STH AVENUE @@% ds 
Set! BARS 6: “G ey : A a & : ys ELECTRIC ‘Sl are BOX OF 24 RESULA Si $1.20 Aaa GUIDED MISSILE 
= OR Of a NR BLAME Yess V3 THe RIGHT TO tnatt | Sete WITH HEAT CONTROL—DoU ety bf 
» QUANTITIES OUS PLAYTEX - WIE QOP=AE SAWS p00 si7e_AssonteD COLORS. ies — ccceecow RUBBER GLOVES Se ses. ) | FOR SMOKING PLEASURE nr ye ps VALUE 14°] OIL PAINTING 
: Ie SIZE ASSORTED 4 : BY NUMBERS _ 
Sat novran Oy oes AUTOMATIC STEAM AND DRY 
, A&C Sat EASTMAN FILM @ Xx, ELECTRIC IRC REGULAR 60c ian oxa0-b420 3/9 conn a NEAT CONTROL 
CIGARS Gage aes; #) $14.85 VALUE!   PeuCuvrrVCCCCC 
CC 
CVrVVeVTeVw. Ye 
ty 
te 
in 
Ai 
i 
Mi 
hi 
i 
hie 
lin 
hi 
hi 
in 
i 
hi 
hn 
hi 
Ll 
  eX   ; _—— Gallon 
Brand Name Harlequin Design 
Vinyl--Plastic , 
PAINT SALE} TILE Pay Regular Price of - rend 3 € Ea. 
$5.95 for 1 Gallon . 
* Never Needs Waxing 
SECOND , * Lifetime Casrantes 
GALLON C SALE_ON PLASTIC   
  
  
for ONLY — 
House & Trim @ Exterior Primer WA LL TILE 
@ Masonry Paint @ Flat Enamel 
@ Gloss Enamel @ Semi-Gloss All ] ¢€ Ea @ Primer-Sealer Undercoat 
@ Vinyl @ Latex Wall Bond Colors 
SPECIALS on FLOOR TILE 
Corktone Asphalt TILE, 3 Shades, Box of 80 .$5.60 
Spatter Asphalt TILE, each .............. 
9x9" Inlaid Linoleum TILE, each ...-..   ~ BOX OF 50 
SAVE ‘Tl Box oF 50 
He sge SAVE 41e! 
BOOK MATCHES go PADS | y, PIC SHOP “AND awe a 
Ce || Ny ace UNNINGHAM'S / s cuore S'Gaae/ 
| rans’ i : 
<= ange i sa , a 
SAVE Ble. $2 | ROE ASST,   
    
OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY ‘TIL 9 
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY ‘TIL 6 | 
FREE PARKING RIENDLY 
JUMBO Da -_ ——— 
He “° Color _ Prints Tile , TEL-HURON CENTER | DOWNTOWN PONTIAC | DRAYTON PLAINS SHOP pENTE! | OF ile Outlet “Telegraph at Huron 29 N. Saginaw 5060 Dixie — hace 
1055 W. HURON, PONTIAC FE 89717 os . ~ KINSEL DRUGS 
Huron ot Sogieew (Downtown Pontiac) — = amieies Mile Shopping Center         
        fi. : (" , : Ny pe \ a . - z : 7 F ; See a \ . : ; - : , * i —. \ : \ 2 We | . ® ‘  ee ee eae eee ai es Ae oR Bement ae ont oa ee ” : : 2 vate "a eae a Boo iatewen Soe eee ae ‘ pe Os i Z : = . A = cearaioed i 
e f : Se : 4 AS ee ; “t ; : seer 4 ; 
: eee : , -> : | 2 * { 
ji 7 é : a i ae -   
    
  tL THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9 1958 ke ee a oe ve 
   
         
      ‘THURSDAY, 
: - FRIDAY | 
: a SATURDAY, 
and ll We Reserve the Right 
to Limit Quantities 
None gerd fo Dealers or Minors   
i 
. , an 
~ . : . / Re 
‘, W ol Fresh 7 i < } LZ 
i ' Pe ‘a 
ae - f " a 5 , Great Big Tender Sweet B U T TER    
    US Courow = 3 
  
By Pineapple- 
By Srapefruit 
Juice Drink 
  
  
  
Stokelys Finest 
C | PEACHES Halves or Sliced in Heavy Syrup 
lb. } Large 23° 
: 242 Can 
      OCTOBER 9, 10 
   
     
    
   
     
    ‘Creamery : 4| 
       
    
    
    
‘Oven Ready, 1958 Crop, Fancy Young 
HEN TURKEYS 
     9-12 Ib. 
AVERAGE 
     
    
U.S. No. 1 Michigan 
POTATOES 10 POUND BAG 
          
              DARTMOUTH 
Fresh Frozen’ 
STRAWBERRIES 10 Ounce Package    
      1200 BALDWIN AVE. at COLUMBIA Open Weekdays 9:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. 
‘CLOSED SUNDAY Open Sundays 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.            
    2135 Dixie Highway-at Telegraph Rd. Open Weekdays 9:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. 
Open Saturday 8:00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. 
CLOSED SUNDAY 7680 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) at WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Open Weekdays 9:00 A. M. to 9:00.P.M. 
Always Plenty of Free Parking Spoce at All Faod Town ‘Markets 
é , 
} , 5 { . \ : * . c . 
» * ’ ry fie ; f % 5 
=. a4, ; : : | : y \ are 4 ' ‘ \ 
the * s 4 rj °     
     
    
  
  AVOCADO CHEESE SALAD —\ Avocados combine well with itestify. And, of course, the more hand in ‘hand as any Mother can 
original the sandwich the more 
they like them. 
This oven-baked: beef and cheese 
sandwich which is encased in a 
hollowed out roll has lots of taste- 
appeal. It is made with a handy 
package of onion soup mix which 
permeates all the other ingredients 
with its savory flavor. 
The sandwich is made- by 
sauteeing ground chuck and green 
pepper in butter, then stirring in 
the onion soup mix (right from the 
package), water and catsup. This 
is simmered five minutes. and 
then you add a grated sharp 
cheese. 
  Heat all together until the; Bake Foil Wispped. Rolls 
‘Filled With Beet Mix © 
tain. qpoctiod inte ie. Wiliaie ak 
each roll, the top is replaced and 
the sandwich is wrapped in foil 
and baked for 15 minutes or so, 
Serve this. hearty. sandwich to 
your youngsters when they come 
home from school for lunch. Youl Doughnut Faces | will find it a perfect choice the 
crisp Fall days ahead, 
Baked Beef and Cheese Sandwich 
1 table, butter 
% pound ground chuck < 3 e e@spoons chopped green pepper. 
3 tablespoons onion soup mix 
\% oup — vq cup cats’ 1 cup grated. a Le page on 
BEPOon ¢. powder teptio 
Prench or hard rolls 
In skillet melt butter and saute) 
ground chuck and green pepper 
witif neat browns. “Stir in- onion     
          
     coarsely grate cheese then stir 
into beef mixture and heat until 
_ engane matte. 00 clit porate # 
heat in 400 degree oven 15 
minutes. Makes 6 Jo Sieeevings   
aa 
powdered .sugar doughnuts... from 
eur pitaee's tera ont Coa de 
partment. are al] you need to make 
a new treat for the trick-or-treat- 
ers on Halloween. Doughnut faces 
are easy. and fun to make. Just 
place chocolate “bit. “eyes’’~ into 
place on a doughnut, the hole for 
a nose and a few bright red cra: mer five ae leccnta 
  
A package of cranberries, some s 
chocolate bits.and a box or two of} 
  “td ei aay aa eee NE 
      
    a 
  =n : : i ¢ | mixture is; - mouth. 
any tart food. In this interesting layered salad they are keeping ‘ Beene pnvelts: = ature is jsoup mix, water, and catsup; sim-jberries for the Se a2 — : ose Jaane = — eee 
: company with a clear tomato aspic. Danish Blue Cheese is added 
: to the avocado layer, along with sour cream. This is a rich and o 
appealing salad. Garnish with thin slices of avocado. ; 
Fruit, Cheese Blend in Smooth Layered Salad When a success story relates to! gelatine with cheese and remain- . 
the culinary arts, almost everyone| ing ingredients. Cover container) 
enjoys reading about it . so/ turn on blender, for about 1 iy 
our story today offers double en-| ute. Stop to scrape down sides, i 
- joyment as it describes two culi-| necessary. 
nary successes which c omplement | Turn into an oblong mold (6 cup 
each other .. . Danish Blue Cheese) | size), chill until almost firm. 
and Avocado pears. | Aspic cave 
The sheer luxury of choosing S| s vureioves unflavored eelatine | 
fruit whose origin was one cour | 3s cups cold tomato Juice (divided) 
try, a cheese from another coun-| Se teneusen Colaty salt 
try, and combining them into aj 1g teaspoon tabasco 
delectable buffet supper dish is} 2 tablespoons lime juice 
Americaine~ aire—at— its- best. Tuite to Se S| = aA 
* | juice to soften, Place over boiling 
DANISH BLUE CHEESE. AND water, stir-until gelatine is dis- 
| AVOCADO PEAR SALAD wat ea 
| Avocado Layer | Add to remaining 242 cups toma-|. 
, cup Denn pre ces ea to juice; stir in remaining ingredi- gelatin hj : ; bated peeaed cs ae ents,. Chill until mixture is con- ', cup very hot water 
U sergelevoceds |sistency of unbeaten egg white. ial crea . . 
4 Caepsanitahaece oe | Pour on top of almost firm first 
1 teespone mrerceeterehixe layer; chill until firm. Unmold, 
34 teaspoon salt garnish with slender half circles of} | 
Pour gelatine into glass contain-| unpeeled avocado, Serves 8-10. 
er of electric blender, Add hot wa-| 
| ter, blend 20 seconds: scrape sides. For weight watchers: There are, 
{ut avocado in half lengthwise; re-_ 100 calories in a half cup of fresh | 
move seed; peel, and dice. a to blackberries.         
        
  
+ 
    eee ee ee gE ES — 
| Delic ous eating with” 
| lew"Krispy” Flavor! 
|| KRISPY™ soup SPaRRise\   
    
      ee RE 
  2 
oniey” Soup sportier Sprinkle grated cheddar } __| : ae over tomato soup. Serve with lots of fresher, akier Krispy Saltines for lots of compliments!     
  
  
  
  
  ‘Kri : sty tray of your cheese 
“Krispy”! Cheese Pleaser Ata A -. es ap 
i er wit favorites, made even tasti 
“Krispy-er —new Sunshine Krispy Sal tines. | 
    
  
    
    
    eae YO “KRISPY” DIP DeuicHT | 
{ 
H 
| 
| 
            You'll smile... you'll start to sing... when you 
discover the new, new look Ivory Liquid brings 
to dishwashing! There’s never been anything like this 
detergent before. You'll love everything about it... - 
its creamy whiteness . . . its rich, long-lasting suds . ... its 
fast, ‘fast way of cleaning even “problem” dishes (grease 
vanishes without a trace) . . . and most of all, you'll love 
‘Ivory Liquid’s gentleness to hands. Imagine! It actually can 
leave your hands feeling soft as your face! Try it for dishes 
soon and see how wonderful it is. . . the only detergent _ 
with the famous Ivory name for mildness, | Completely New! Creamy White! 
hrory Liquid - - DETERGENT ‘Y     / ‘a } s and chopped corned beef. Add chopped Greriaee . i great with that great new ‘ ‘Krispy” a be 
| K rispy”’ Dip Delight. Combine ¢ creamy cre 
(2 flavor.        
  
      
  Entirely different cleaning formula.. : 
            = 
© Procter & Gamble © Now available in most areas = 
i The saltine of 1000-and-1 uses from : 2 ; A Oe, ae — : : 7 | thé Thousand Window: Bakeries of Sunshine Biscuit... _— | ‘ ee pel ; isc ae SEES O 3 ; : : ; - ‘ 
\ \ ~ , f u ' ' v 1 eg > -  
      
  
        
  
     
       
              “ Lee eee se oe a ce ee TS Pe eg ee eee 
: recone eee THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER %, 1958) 7 THIRTY-FIVE. 
| teiban very : Sle pig, ft, a8 th ao waste, Doll to a cht la Blend 
ood Buying ( Course Michic gan n Offers. 8 | Dell- Quick. Ldsagne. Comes - | |poised for the first delicious bite), /heat and simmer 20- minutes. Gi card Ces ao 
Five Varieties T ee ae en ee Cook lasagne according to pack- in Gingerbread Sauce 
Ofiered by YWCA Somes [tO able’ in One: Hour» “‘Trainty appreciate the “fact that|age directions.“ Alternate layers) Make gingerbread a glamour 
ad baw lof Fall Squash ae “variety keeps” ene wie Nakheg it 11d Sa siete. Parmesan cheese dessert: While it in sti] warm, 
un is the title of Wer Wak oining bandw o schools of thought on Iasagne|W@8™ land cottage cheese in a 9x13-inch sprinkle the gingerbread with Span- - a of lectures on buying food Fall's nen’ of plenty’ te: filled pe ae a re ining te bandvagon oo sl ls of ths prabryross E Quick Lasagne baking dish, ending with beef. Bake |ich sherry, preferably an olor , 
spaneee ce meee a raat ae mas Most everyone recognizes the od also adding its own quik trick }2°2un4 beet init and those who] ’t pauné.griusd beer “(in mederate oven (51> degrees) 21 cream) type. : Cc 4 Y a oe . hs : oa. Te minutes, : 7 : 
Scheduled fo run for two hours Acori,. Butternut, Delicious, But- large Hubbard squash. In most for Italian lasagne is Ac’cent-Inter- ~oligdleene ant, coon ee is toatnooe = id i: ; During. last 5 minutes baking * * * ; _ 
each week for seven weeks, the|tercup and Hubbard. markets, it is cut and s6id by the| national, In addition to a.new Tec-| pound beet viah taeaiet ned i 4 _ |time, cut Mozzarella cheese in half} Serve it topped with this hot 
classes are open to the public.| The small green acorn shaped/pound. This fall, why not try alllipe for lasagne, other new ground/—¥., adds a twist of its own. -} 3 ta ied, ; diagonally; arrange on top, Yield: |sauce: Blend 1 tablespoon corr- 
Mrs, Josephine Lawyer, Consumer |*quish isa very popular Choice. |, oes of golden squash? _, beef egokery ideas were talked Ar oe | tS e 8 yen each) wae squce|S to 8 servings. starch with % cup sugar, add 1 
Marketing Information Agent, wil|Each half makes a generous serv-;"" : about in the Ac’cent-International|; The ground beef. is’ seasoned f . tablespooti each lemon juice -and 
be the instructor. ing. . news room at the annual News-| with MSG to bring out the. good ye ~ wll Par pS Crystallized Ginger oloroso sherry and 1 cup water. 
' Homemakers will jearn how to| Butternut squash is gaining) Salmon’s in the Pink {paper Food Editors’ Conference at| beefy flavor, and to blend the ‘siti . Feig coutuge encese: | ; Bring to a boil, simmer until 
get the greatest possible food value|favor each year ag homemakers) * . the Wallost Astoria recently. separate flavers of the cheeses, Sprinkle beet. ‘with MSG, salt,| Crystallized ginger will keep for|smooth and thickened. Take from 
for their dollars. Subjects to be/discover its excellent: features. It} There is a short supply of red ee ee ee Stereo gather basil and oregano, Tos s|a long time if it is put into a jar|stove and slowly beat into 1 cup 
discussed include Meat, Eggs and|is bell-shaped with light cream salmon this year. Lasagne is one of those Italian tusclously meliow combination. 1P°°h vith fork to distribute sea-|with a light screwtop. lid. When|sour cream. If sauce is made in 
Poms Tesh and Vegetables andi het Gr nies oo 1€ lh aot meg ena eh er A hs OS lag eg lang yo Blgnd More Brown beef and onion in\used in main “dishes, it is a good|advance, reheat just before serv- 
Products. The last meeting Why gene in i reo oil “in ‘skillet, breaking up idea to rinse the ginger in hot|ing, ag 5 care not fo let it come 
will be a tour of markets. reup 4 tnot: ’ with a fori, Add tomato sauce! water to wash off the sugar. 
  DS dads 
ceuameue 
te 
“HERE S WHERE YOU CAN COUNT SAVINGS EVERYDAY 
SPREE SIT gee)” NEE eens I 
Sliced or : 
SCOTKINS ' : ; 2 Holves 
Family Sixe Nopkins «/ 2 
. Yellow Cling : 
  Escort TOWELS. enbor, | "Large : White’ or Colored | 21 Can Vy ‘ 
T= 
Delsey 
WHITE TISSUE 32 
yA or’ 4% a 3 \ 3 ‘a , ) ‘Wieed': cies King 
oe | Vegan On" NE Sliced BicoN 59: - TOWET TISSUE 
2 Rolls 29 m | : \ , : Me Cénter Cut , 
IN pork cuors 9: fl ”<. a . > E Cream Style or 
Whole Kernel 
Puss ‘n’ Boots } 1 : Round or Swiss. Cut Wax 
CAT FOOD | WEEK-END SPECIALS d or Green , 
: . STEAK Mix or Match ‘Em   
  
  15 oz. Can i ; | SCOTTIES 
9 29° & White—Pink or Yellow, 400 Count 
¢ 2 | ™ " “Facial : Fresh Picnic 
— 4 Tissues i a PORK ROAST ~ MAZOLA OIL 
Pint 39°4 SCORE A HIT WITH THESE Lean and Moore   
    
Size J 
Y | 
= Dressing »} CUT-RITE WAX PAPER SPARE RIBS AS 2 range f | 
‘ « afl 2 : ; “ ‘el 39°) a Rolls 49° Small 114 Lbs. to 3 Lbs. Avg. 
om Roll ! 
Little Bo-Peep 
} “AMMONIA 
ie ae a | Fresh Birds Eye Birds Eye , | 7 Premium Flavor 
ime : Ponki Cello / Beef=Chicken-Turkey 
CARROTS \f FSH STICKS WW pot Pies” 
Skecta roel: | ° | ! } 4 for 89° 
Pkg. 39° & 
_ CHOCOLATE “STARS   
    
SS et 
  
corre. OT ational Retail Marketing 
on Pi > a aa Huron Friendly Shop Rite Market’ | Gingellville Shop Rité m | io 
263 AUBURN AVE—OPEN SUNDAY 884. W. HURON--OFEN SUNDAY 3390 BALDWIN Paectiveun   
  
  
    
OT ge a 
 * 
4 
  THIRTY. SIX     
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4 
     
  
Marco Polo Gave By JANET ODELL 
Pontiac Press Home Editor 
Marco Polo is credited with in- 
troducing macaroni to the civilized 
world after one of his voyages to 
China. 
According to legend one of} 
Marco Polo’s handsome young sail- 
ors distracted a lovely Chinese 
maiden from her task of kneading 
dough. In his effert to rid the 
dough of leaves he forced it 
through a wicker basket and left! 
the doughy strands te dry in the 
sun. 
Taking some of the strands back 
to his ship, he tried to soften them 
in hot water. He hastened with 
them to Polo when he discovered 
Sandwiches Put 
Balloon Sticks 
Fun to make and fun to eat 
are these sandwiches - on - a - stick 
that are just the kind of easy to 
make yet festive party treat that 
a teenage girl can prepare when 
it is her turn to be hostess. 
Balloon sticks are used for skew- 
ers. You can get them in the 
5-and-10, variety or hardware 
stores. Each sandwich has a dif- 
ferent deviled ham filling, favorite 
of the teenage crowd. 
Ham-Wheels on a Stick 
2 loaves party rye round (36 slices) 
2 family size (4% og.) cans deviled   
am 
6 small slices onion 
6 smal! slices cheese 
6 pieces lettuce 
18 small chunks dill pickle 
Mayonnat: 
6 long ciewers or balloon sticks 
Spread deviled ham genereusly 
on 18 slices of bread. Place a 
slice of onion on 6, a slice of cheese 
on 6, and a piece of lettuce spread | 
with mayonnaise on 6. Cover ‘with, 
the remaining 18 slices of bread. 
Put one of each kind of sand- 
wich on each skewer, separating | 
and. topping them with a chunk of 
pickle. Enough for six hungry 
teenagers. 
  
Olive Oil Penetrates 
Dry Game or Meat 
Frequently recipes for game 
specify that the meat should be 
larded. The old-fashioned way to 
do this was to insert strips of fat 
salt pork intg the center of the 
meat, pushing the fath through 
with a skewer. ¢ 
The Spanish have an easier, 
quicker way to lard game or any 
less-tender roast: simply punch 
holes all the way through the lean 
of the meat with a heavy skewer 
or an ice pick, then dribble | wheat. how good they lea Polo ‘eck 
the new food back to Italy. 
Now macaroni is a basic food 
throughout the world, Macaroni- 
is understood to mean also 
day, surprisingly enough, the 
United States has the targest 
macaronj industry in the world. 
About 150 different shapes are 
made here. 
At one of our sessions in New 
York we heard a group of home 
economic students from New 
York University present a 'esson 
on macaroni products. They re- 
minded us that all macaroni prod 
ucts are made from coarse-grind 
|semolina flour milled from durum 
Only water is added for]- 
+macaroni and sphagetti, while.eges} 
'are the extra ingredient in noodles. 
It is interesting to check the 
various shapes of -this product 
favorite-.store, 
see some of the fancier shapes. 
The studepts mentioned above 
had prepared a number of dishes 
to show the varied ways macaroni 
products can be used,.One of the 
more colorful ones was the folluw- 
ing salad, This is the type of salad 
you find on smorgasbord tables. 
Swedish Maearoni Salad 
1 tablespeon salt 
3 quarts boiling water 
23 cups elbow macaroni (8 ounces) 
.1 medium-sized ape ores and diced 
1 tablespoon lemon 
1 B-ounce jar basrine! ‘fillets in cream 
*%, cup chopped celery 
“% cup chopped sweet mixed pickles 
1 cup commercial sour cream 
Add 1 tablespoon salt co rapidly 
boiling water. Gradually add mac- 
aroni so that water continues to 
boil. Cook uncoverea, stirring occa- 
sionally, until tender. Drain in 
drain. 
        Combine apple 
juice; mix well, 
aroni, apple mixture, herring, 
| eelery, pickles and cream; toss 
| lightly but thoroughly. Chill. 
Garnish with additional apples, as 
desired. and lemon_ 
Combine mac- 
and meat balls or Italian spaghetti. 
There are, however, other ways of 
Serving it. Take, for instance, 
this Creole style casserole. 
Spaghetti Creole 
2 slices bacon, diced 
‘4 pound onions, diced 
Ye green pepper, diced 
4, pound ground beef 
l cup cooked tomatoes 
1 cup cooked lima beans 
1% cups cooked spaghetti 
‘Salt and pepper 
Fry bacon until crisp. Remove 
bacon and saute onions and green 
pepper in bacon fat. Fry beef 
until well browned and add rest 
of ingredients. Blend thoroughly. 
When mixture starts to sim- 
mer, season well. Cook 10-15 
minutes. Serves 4. May be poured 
into casserole for final cooking. 
    Spanish olive into each hole. The, 
oil, penetrating to the fibres of the 
meat, softens and tenderizes it and 
over-all roasting time may be con- 
siderably reduced. It’s an économy 
trick because not only can a 
cheaper cut be used by by shorten- 
.ing roasting time, there is less 
meat shrinkage — and more meat 
for the table. 
  
How They Rate 
Most popular of all frozen potato| 
products is the traditional French 
Fry, followed by Potato Patties, 
the Crinkle Cut French Fry, 
Mashed or Whipped, Potato Puffs 
and frozen Diced Potatoes. New) 
specialty items recently introduced | 
on the market are the Rissole Po- 
tatoes, the Frozen Stuffed Baked 
Potato, the Escalloped and the Au! 
Gratin Potatoes. x & 
This third dish, one using 
noodles, is made like an upside 
dewn cake. Luncheon meat, placed 
in the bottom of the baking dish, 
comes out on top when the bake 
is served. 
3 in 1 Upside Down Bake 
B-ounce package medium noodles (4 
cups dry noodles) 
+4 cup evaporated milk 
2 eggs. slightly beaten 
% cup condensed tomato soup 
4 cup shredded Cheddar cheese 
2 teaspoons grated onion 
3 tablespoons butter 
| 112-ounce can luncheon meat, cut 
[inte 12 slices 
Drop noodles into boiling water 
and cook just until tender, about 6 
minutes. Mix evaporated milk, 
‘eggs, tomato soup, most of the 
cheese and onion. Stir in gently 
| ithe drained noodles. 
Melt butter in bottom of 9§- 
| inch square baking dish. Tip dish     
  
Chicken and 
Best Buys of 
Foods for October take part of 
their cue from the weather, but 
meats take their cue from plan- 
ning that may have started 10 or! 
12 months ago. 
MEAT CUES—Pork prices are 
expected to drop during the month 
as the spring pig crop comes to} 
market in full swing. There may 
be temporary changes in both 
wholesale and retail ,prices as the 
supply varies from week to week. 
but the Arend is more ‘pork at 
slightly less cost. 
* * * 
Beef prices are expected to stay) 
about as they have been. Good 
supplies of better grade beef and 
scarce supplies of lower grade 
beef is the reason why the present. 
price difference between the high- 
er and lower quality is less than 
usual, 
Hen prices usually hit their 
lowest level in October and this 
year appears to be no exception. 
Broiler prices are expected to 
continue at the reasonable rates 
available during September. Al- 
though the turkey crop is small- 
er than last year, this plus large 
suppliés in frozen storage guar-. 
antee plenty at prices slightly 
higher than a year ago. Toms 
are the turkey value this week. 
At 39 te 49 cents a pound, a 
serving is 20 to 25 cents, * 
Fresh fish are more plentiful and 
prices are lowering accordingly. 
Fish fillets serve three people per 
‘pound while dressed fish serve 
eae two. When buying whole fish, 
allo¥ a pound for each person. 
EGGS. AND DAIRY—Checks in 
several markets this week show 
large size eggs ranging from 55 to 
65 cents a dozen or 36% to 46 cents! 
a a pound. ‘Medium size eggs are 
3 to 30 cents a pourid: smatft sizes 
are 31 to 35 cents a pound. 
Need a copy of the Egg Buy- | 
er’s Guide to help you quickly 
figure the best egg value of the 
week? Contact Mrs, Josephine Apples Are 
Week 
| Lawyer, 1260 West Bivd., Pon- 
tiac, for a free copy. 
This is the season when some 
| Surplus milk is coming to market 
jin the form of cheese. You may 
jpick natural cheese made from 
whole milk. You may choose a 
jprocessed cheese which is a nat- 
lural cheese that has been ground 
and cooked with certain salts that 
prevent fat separation. Or you 
jmay select a cheese food spread 
in which cream, non-fat dry milk 
jand mineral salts are added to 
processed cheese. 
FROM THE PRODUCE COUN- 
TER—Apples are the ‘Big Story” 
for October. Michigan's crop is 
estimated at 10.6 million bushels, 
6 per cent larger than last year. 
Most will be harvested by the mid- 
dle of the month, but shoppers can 
enjoy October fresh apples as late 
jay/tune of 1959 due to improved 
tage facilities being used for 
‘approximately 500,000 bushels this 
year.   
McIntosh is the apple variety 
in the October limelight. This is 
a good all-purpose apple with a 
soft flesh. Apple cider, served 
cold or hot, is about 69 cents ‘a 
gallon, 
October is the month for the 
igreatest supplies of squash, cauli- 
‘flower, carrots, table grapes and 
pears. Rotato supplies are larger 
than a year ago, and prices are 
lower. These seasonal choices may 
mean savings in your market bas- 
ket. - 
The first Florida grapefruit of 
thé season appear in the market 
this week. You cannot expect the) 
first of the crop to be high in 
quality and flavor, 
OTHER __FOODS—Canned_, vege- 
_ tables, fruits and juices and frozen 
litems are offéred at speciat-prices+... 
in some stores. Price varies | 
among brands and quality of pack. 
If the brand is new to you, try one 
ean first, then buy in quantity if 
it suits your needs.   spaghetti and egg noodles. To- | 
you find on the shelves of your|— 
We -have-yet—to}— 
colander. Rinse with cold water; !- 
Everyone knows about spaghetti x 
   dish. Cover with about half of the neodlé mixture. Place re- Bake in slow oven (350 degrees): 
  MACARONI SHAPES — Investigate the dis- 
play of macaroni products at your market. Here 
find. Starting at upper left and reading across, 
they are: Folded fine egg noodles, creste di gallo, 
-wide egg noodles, shell macaroni, egg noodle 
bow ties, stelline, riccini, folded medium egg Macaroni to grease. sides. Place ¢ slices” remalning noodlo misture, Top ouside edges. Place serving plat 
of luncheon meat in bottom of | with remaining shredded cheese. on top of casserole and turn over, 
maining .¢ slices of tgncheon |for 45 minutes, stating ten gare Bearer goth the 
meat crosswise, then cover with ang run sharp knife gently around|desired. Makes 6 liberal servings:| 
            
   are just a few of the many shapes you might toni, manicotti rigati, mostaccioli, long maca- like upside down cake. 
Heat remainder of 
  chopped | chives and" 
Pao seeded grapes cit 
 thalf. ~ {tablespoons 
_ }2%. cups seedless green grapes left) -   
at] Avocado Sauce for Fah: 
  
    Passi nti her       
   
     
    
      
    
  
  
all the rest. 
  ROMAN BLEACH is the 
~ bleach that’s best! 
For, NYLON, COTTON— 
Clothes come white— 
Sanitary, too! 
With ROMAN BLEACH i in your washing! 
     
   
    
      
GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS for 
Finer Gifts Faster—and 
Less Stamps Per Book! 
Prices Effective thru Saturday, Oct. 11th 
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quontities   
      Ph 
Ptdddtddead 
  
    Il-oz. box - 
Now Only   SUPE ig 
Starch Reduced Snack Treat 
New Era POTATO CHIPS 
39° Desserts, 
Vegetables, 
Fruits and 
Combinations 
  
         “ALL STRAINED VARIETIES 
$508   
  
  
  Serve A Mueller Treat - Once A Week 
Mueller’s Spaghetti 
Thin or Reg. € 
1-Ib. Box 
    
Sauce of Many Uses — T: 
Spaghetti, Macaroni, Pinkal 
PREMIER Meatless 
Sauce 8-oz. Can 
Arturo 21° 
    
Add Zesty Flavor to 
Soups — Sauces — Gravies 
Onion, Celery or Vegetable. 
  Durkee's Flakes R WAL FOOD Tow’ in fat—highest in protein of 
mii all leading brands 
1-Ib. cans 
  FREE Brass Pet dentification Tag WITH PERMANENT NAME & ADDRESS 
50c Value — See RIVAL Labels for 
  
order-blank at WRIGLEY’S 
Soft — Cozy — Sanitary 
and easily cleaned! 
7 
  . Whole Fish plus Vit. B-1 
Puss ‘n Boots 
CAT FOOD 
15-oz. 
Cans     39 GET FINER GIETS 
        
    
  and 3 Labels — Get Your 
  EASTER WITH c easy send-away detajis ! 
B fete 19 NEW-FORMULA—RICH IN VITAMINS > B-on.. € 
Rival Cat Food 3 = = 25° 
| PUSS n’ BOOTS CAT BED Only $2 t's Wonderful for 
  WATER 
CONDITIONER 
1-Ib. Box 40-0, Size 
33. 73'| 2 
                   
     
  7 @) L [ Swiff’s ict Dinners 
Swift's Meats for Babies 
Boby Deserves The Best— 
Pablum Mixed Cereal 
Choose from 5 Delicious Kinds 
BIB Juices for Babies New One-Dish Meals in Exclusive LOW-BOY Jors 
  Strained 
o@ Junior 2D sae 3 
2 son 4% 
eo 73° yey 43° Choose from Strained or Junior Verieties 
Packed by Pablum 42 39°   
  
  
  Tres KOROSEAL® 
pane AY | Medium-Lerge-X-Large 
Yur Bat Bay Ey!     
Moisture - Proofs Your Baby 
Against Diaper Irritation 
LB.I. Baby Powder 
Get Flavored, Genuine When You Want the Right Size, Large Size 
10-oz. Can 
With - , 
Olive Oil 
Bottle 
of 48 
Bayer Children’s Aspirin = 2.55   
Get 216 y gen I 
Get your. away ay ant ea -bine 
      
      BELL xf _ TT New-Safe DRY CI hlorine Bleach 
That Beats Any LIQUID Bleach! 
| Beads-O0-Bleach 
ate ay A 
om any en pan ee eS BEE Lay ne 
         STAM = * 
"700-Pontiac. Trail _ 455. Telegraph Rd. 998 Auburn Avenue ‘836 N. Perry St. 59S. Saginaw St. - North Hin 5060-Dixie ay 
Cor. W. Maple “"~~(Fel-Huron Shopping * Open 9 to 9, Open 8 to 9, Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri, . ~ Shomning Plaza Open 9 to 9; Thurs.. Fri. - 2 
Walled Lake Center) Open 9 to 9, Thurs., Fri., Sat. Thurs., Fri. Sat. op! (Rochester) amine un i Thurs. Fri., Sat. yo . ( pen 8108 Thurs. Fri. “ 
     
       } 
_s THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 
              
    oll THURSDAY aa) : 
ou FRIDAY 
SATURDAY 
Oct. 9-10-11                
        
, 4 f \¥/ (iy s. a fr Vg. fe ~ 
~ PEOPLE'S | BONUS Coupon Sey)          
      * Supermarket Expires October 1 
j meg Me. eo’ : 
= : <e : c mrt =® 4 be 
3 : 7 
+ NEY pO a5 
: WUSAR py) "am = . —_ QenA AAAABAA AZ : 
er FNS PEOPLE's BONUS COUPON 
SUPER MARK ae Royal 
Prince 
Northern n TISSUE; 3} nk POTATO AG; Pumpkin cups 4 WHITE Or COLORED 
PHILADELPHIA              
                   
    
        
      
       
Tall 300 Can ¢ - = 
a a i 
J “ ae Be Bee 
be oe a 
a #3 Pane Ag ee 44 
ae 3 4 ea 
eg = #, 
whe = 
Gi px 
* a . é 
en 
j -_" 4 5 * 
: Hi Stokely’s Fines >. % : 
; : DICED fs wre Toll ot Se T 303 
: _BEE S - 
. I 
ad 2 
on ee —— : ; 
= 
Del Monte 
vi e PINERPPLE- GRAPEFRUIT 
DRINK    
    
            
          
      Sutton’s Bay     
      
plums © 25° ZION COOKIES .; 2.» Sugor—Raisin—Dixie Iced—Your Choice 
         
      
      BANQUET FROZEN 
CHICKEN 
TURKEY ch c 
BEEF once Ea" 
10°-Produce Sale-10°§ 
© Pascal Celery ... 10°" § 
© Sweet Potatoes . . 10‘* 
Fresh Cucumbers. . 10“ 
Radishes © Carrots. 10°™ 
Green Peppers | 
Cabbages ..... 10° Acorn or Butternut 
e Squash © Rutabagas 10°"   6a 
      Chef Boy-Ar-Dee 
Spaghetti 
& Meat Balls 
. | | g ‘ ale ‘. ., sie “ 40 Oz ho 
E = =| Mime. 
am B LOTION 
SPARE | ’ , 7 f i ft , ) \ \ $1.00 SIZE 
LEAN and MEATY         
   
     
     
     
    
              
    
                = We Reserve the Right 
to Limit eene nee         
   f 
FOO D a Dita: 0 ie 465 E. Pike Street Corner Sanford Street Ph. FE2-1298 
SUDER=“MARKET I] TAU Umpattlolite: mea auer Ph. FE 5-8311 
i 
     SE ES eee os ye 4 
  
THE PONTIAC: PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958. = Se 
ne 
2 eee 
—— ayes 
  
_permarkets. Then when we consid- THIRTY-EIGHT 
              
     
     
       
   
    
ture shows (from top to bottom) FISH COOKERY — There is almost no limit to the ways fish can be cooked. The above pic- 
  fish steaks on _ they prefer. 
a plank for broiling; pan-browned curried fish 
Broil, Bake, Fry or 
Whole Fish or Fillets 
Someone once said, ‘I have a 
thousand favorite dishes, and 
they're just one thinz — fish.” 
The versatility of fishery products 
has been appreciated for centuries. 
Today the annual Fish and Sea- 
food Parade (October 6 to 12) spot- 
lights this very fact. 
Of the thousands of species in 
the oceans, lakes and rivers of the 
world, there. are about 200 kinds 
available in American markets— 
fish shops, grocery stores and su- 
er the different forms of fish cook- 
ery, we realize that the ways to) 
serve fish are practically limitless 
We can broil, bake, fry and poach 
fish. We can serve fish whole, in   _ fillets or steaks, in fish cakes or| 
using other methods of prepara- 
tion. 
Here are recipes for four of the) 
most popular. 
Broiled Fish Steaks Paprika 
Plan on 1 pound of fish steaks 
for 3 people. Place fish in pre- 
heated broiler pan. Brush with 
sauce made by mixing together 
3 tablespoons melted butter or 
margarine, 1 tablespoon paprika, 
% teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon 
pepper, 42 teaspoon Worcester- 
shire Sauce, and 1 tablespoon 
lemon juice. 
Place pan in broiler 2 inches 
from heat and’ broil 3 minutes. 
Turn steaks, brush again with 
sauce and broil 3 to 5. minutes 
longer, or until fish flakes easily 
when tested with a fork. 
* * * 
Pan-Browned Curried’ Fish Fillets 
Pian on 1 pound fish fillets for 
3 persons. Let 1 pound fillets thaw 
on refrigerator shelf or at room 
temperature. Separate fillets. Mix 
together 4 cup flour, ¥ teaspoon 
salt, % teaspoon pepper, and 1 
teaspoon curry powder. Turn out 
mixture onto a piece of waxed pa- red butter or margarine. Why Cod tiver Oil? Popcorn Good | really ‘sets off the sharp, delicious = wna cus a 
  
  
fillets; oven-tried fish cakes; and baked whole 
fish. Let your family make the decision on which       ison tenn sole tas ae ie a ero e cooking oil. |eave’ pam tre Bt sad emoty 
you are a lennese Sage sprinkling hot, oil get hot ~. contents into a/ large, bowl. 
source of Vitamin D, saan Dunk Into buttered popcorn. with curry or ee oo or (to nated i butter and salt to taste, _| vitamin? 1 because bis te, uke] Ni ppy Dips ea powder ‘6ah before dunking | four kernels. When they Serve on cod and halibut, feed on. smaller been ‘to spin in the hot oil, it’s time ee 
fish, which feed-on plankton, And Next time you have the gang| The Popoorn Inte cca tat peg a 
[plankton consisting of the ralnute lin, serve some of your favorite! ooning perfect: popoorm: | 4. Pour enough kernels to cover 
| face, of the ocean, is irradiated by|dips and use popcorn as the dip 1 Warm the popper, heavy pan|the bottom of popper or skillet. dunker. T's © easy to fix andlor heavy: skillet. : ~~ 5, Cover and shake gently. When! 
  
          
  semen 
“= Steaks 
  Tender, leley: 
SIRLOIN, SWISS    
  
      
78 N. Saginaw < Se aT 
SALE DAYS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY 
Tender Beef 
CLUB 
    
      
      
          
     
       Fresh, “Lean, Meaty 
FRYERS BREAST. STEAKS. ; 
SPARE RIBS Shenk Holf 
HAM 
    
minced fresh parsley (or 1 tea- 
spoon dried parsley), % cup 
minced celery, 2 tablespoons melt- 
Shape into cakes, using 4% cup 
mixture for each cake. Coat cakes 
in % cup dry bread crumbs and 
place on greased baking. sheet. 
Sprinkle with 2 tablespoons melted 
butter or margarine. Place in very 
hot oven (475 degrees) 10 minutes 
or until hot and golden brown. 
Makes 8 cakes. 
* *® * 
Baked Fish with Lemon Slices 
For serving $ or 4 persons, 
you will need a 3 or 4 pound 
fish. Have your fish dealer dress 
it for you, which means scaling 
the fish, removing head, fins and 
insides. Sprinkle fish, inside and 
out, with salt and pepper. Place 
fish in a greased baking pan. 
Brush with 4‘tablespons melted 
fat or other shortening. Preheat 
oven. 
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de- 
grees) 40 to 60 minutes, or until 
fish flakes easily when tested with 
a fork. Baste occasionally with 
drippings from the pan or with 
melted fat. Before serving, make 
3 slits in side of fish and slip 1     
      Poachy         2.9: | “39° | 69 Smart Shoppers look for the “MARKET BOY" in the grocery 
‘Cause they. know he as vdeo —_— on = quality foods dorsi om       
               
    
  
  MEAT.COQKERY ® 
  
  Q. What is the name of this 
meat cut? 
A. Lamb Shanks. 
* * * 
Q. Where do they come from 
and how are they identified? 
A. They come from the tront | 
shanks of lamb and contain the 
two fore shank bones, elbow and 
part of the arm bone. Layers of 
meat surround the bones. A thin| 
paper-like covering called eS) 
covers the meat. 
Q. How are they prepared? ; _ | 
A. They are cooked slowly by | 
braising or in liquid. After. €ooking | 
until tender, they may . be. -boned, | 
stuffed and finished cooking. This   
      
     
Wescafe Instant Coffee 
Nestles Quik Cocoa c 
2% Lb. Can §9 
Nestles Eveready Cocoa 
1 Lb. Can 49°   
             Hamilton 
Grade A Medium 
EGGS Large 6 Oz. Jar 
  | LiZiBuye Columbia Sliced 
  lemon slice into each slit. Garnish 
with watercress or parsley. 
      cut of lamb requires approximate- 
ly 1 to 1% hours for cooking.   
Fresh Mushr 
By JANET ODELL 
Pontiac Press Home Editor 
Those fresh mushrooms you 
bought last weekent to serve with 
the steak may have been grown 
right next door in Macomb County. 
Twelve growers in that area pro- 
duce approximately 800.000 pounds! 
of mushrooms, an annual million | 
      per. Dip each fillet into the flour 
mixture to coat both sides. 
Melt ', cup butter or mar- 
garine in a frying pan. Add fillets | 
and cook about .§ to 8 minutes, 
or until golden brown and fish 
flakes easily when tested with 
a fork. 
* * wk - 
Oven-Fried Fish Cakes 
Combine 2 cups cooked flaked 
fish with 2 cups small soft bread 
cubes (lightly packed), 1 beaten 
egg, % cup milk, 2 tablespoons 
minced onion, ] tablespoon salt, % 
teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons 
lemon juice, % teaspoon dried 
crushed thyme, 1 _ tablespoon 
  
Fresh Beets Join 
Blend of Soups 
Just as hot soups have their 
appeal on cold winter days, a cold 
soup can be equally refreshing on- 
warm autumn days. Here’s a cold 
soup that has a tangy flavor and 
is hearty enough to be a one dish 
mea] in itself for a luncheon or 
light supper. 
Lemon-Beet Supreme Soup 
2 cups stifedded fresh beets 
1 tablespoon pected or margarine 
1 tablespoon lemon juice 
2 cups consomme 
1 cup onion soup 
2 cups ap 
% to % cup sour cream 
Cook beets in butter over low 
heat for a few minutes. Add bot-/ 
tled lemon juice, cover, and sim- 
mer 20 minutes. Add soups, water, 
tomato juice, and cabbage. Cover; 
continue tq cook over low heat for | 
10 minutes, 
Serve hot or chilled with sour 
cream, as either a garnish or 
stirred in just before serving. 
‘Makes 5 or 6 servings. 
ao 
Lf dollar business. About half are sold, 
lfresh and the other half put into, 
cans. 
Mushrooms are temperamental. | 
We found that out the year we 
succumbed to an ad: and bought a 
box of mushroom spawn. We just 
didn’t have the right touch. Now 
we let the professionals ‘worry 
about such things as non-acid soil, 
proper ventilation, an even tem- 
perature and sterilized soil. 
There are two seasons for 
fresh mushrooms—spring and 
fall. The peak months are Octob- 
er, November, December, March 
and April. Michigan mushroom 
houses are not tempe-ature, con- 
trolled which prohibits a year- 
round industry. 
The finest mushrooms are white 
and spotless with their tops tightly 
closed around the stems. If the 
tops are flattened out like an 
umbrella, they are perfectly good 
tu eat, but less attractive. Mature 
mushrooms vary in size. ; 
DON’T PEEL 
All you have to do to prepare 
them for cooking is to wash them 
and trim the stem ends. Peeling 
is both unnecessary and wasteful. 
Keep fresh mushrooms coer 
ated. 
Canned mushrooms may be 
substituted for fresh ones any 
time the former are not avail- 
able. Keep on hand cans of vary- 
ing styles for different pur- 
poses, It is not economical to 
use whole button mushrooms for 
soups, casseroles or spreads. 
One. pound of fresh mushrooms 
iwill give you two cups of slices. 
Two six-ounce cans of sliced mush- 
jfooms will give you the . same 
|amount.         * * * 
The American Mushroom Insti. 
tute suggests using fresh mush- 
rooms as hors d'oeuvres, Make! by Neighbors Next Door 
             Nestles Gandy Bars 9Q¢ ~ Milk “eee Bars. or ars 39 
KLEENEX ..... Pee. 10¢ 
PIZZA MIX ..3/$1.00    
        
       
   Pressel’s. No. 
Hot Dogs 
  ooms Grown   
      
    
  Remus Country-Fresh * 
BUTTER 
“29% 
        
    these the day before you want to 
serve them. 
Mushroom Hors D’Oeuvres 
1 pound fresh button mushrooms | 
% teaspoon salt | 
Hye to taste 
teaspoon tarragon 
2 bay leaves | 
1 clove garlic. minced { 
19 cup olive or salad bi! | ij 
   
    
      
  Maxwell House | 
      
                
         | 2 tablespoons lemon juice AMBOY Zé 
Trim, wash and drain mush- Evaporated 
rooms. Place in a bow] and add | ‘oth dient bi ILK Philadelphia Brand 3-Oz. Pkg. 
jall other ingredients except lemon. M . 
|juice. Mix well and refrigerate 12| ,* Cream Cheese ae | 10¢ 
hours. : ¢ aa Pillsbury or Ballard = 
Turn into a saucepan and Tall T 0 a _. ; 
simmer 10 minutes. Chill thor-. “~ Can Choice of Grinds ~ Biscuits ounce Com 10¢     
   
           
     
           
           oughly. Add lemon juice just be- 
| fore serving. Yield: 6 servings. 
A main luncheon supper dish fs 
easily made with spinach and fresh 
mushrooms. 
Mushroom and Spinach Casserole 
1 pound fresh mushroom: J cups cooked cho 
packages frozen coo 
1 teaspoon salt 
Little chopped onion 
3 soeimepecus melte@ butter or mar- 
gar i map undiluted evaporated milk 
1 cup freshly grated American cheeses 
Garlic salt 
Wash and dry mushrooms. Slice 
off stems. Saute both caps and 
stems for several minutes, with 
round side down first, until brown. 
Line a flat baking dish with 
spinach that has been seasoned 
with salt, chopped onion and 
melted butter. Arrange sauteed 
mushrooms and stems over spin- 
ach. 
Prepare sauce with evaporated 
milk and cheese. Bring to sim- 
mering point and allow to cook 
for 2-8 minutes. Let sauce stand 
about 5 minutes. 
Sprinkle mushrooms with a little |. 
garlic salt. With a spoon pour 
sauce over them carefully, Bake; 
about. 20 minutes at 350 degrees. 
Then ‘broil for several minutés 
until top is brown. Serves six.   
BLUE WATER FROZEN 
OCEAN PERCH {. ....39¢ 
TABLE KING Kidney Beans, Cream Style Corn, 
Whole Kernel Corn, Wax Beans, 
Edgerton Green Beans 
10° Can 
Swanson TV DINNERS 
Chicken - Turkey - Beet - Meat Loat 
Sirloin of Beef + Haddock 
«49° 
Fresh 
CABBAGE 
‘Lb. 3 ¢ ie   
. Kraft's Sliced, : 
American or Pimento 
CHEESE 
3 te 89° 
We Reserve the Right 
to Limit Quantities 
SUPER 
« MARKET 
@ Beer © Wine — @ Liquor to Take Out 
Corner Baldwin Ave.’and Walton Blyd, 
Stere Hours: Mon., Tues, pranks np yale Phone FE 2-5192.   
spinach or 2 
d spinach 
Your 
Choice            
    
         
   
            
    
   
   
    
    
   
      
  
  
Do .you remember to. pead 
recipe through, from beginning t 
end, before you attempt to fo! How | 
it? If you do, you'll know wha 
‘ingredients and utensils are need. | 
ed; and most important, you'll) 
know whether it is written clearly | 
enough for you to make the eh 
successfully,    
          Feder 9 fo \S-—feder 9 40 $. = 
         
THIRTYNINE.   
  Cereals 
Mlnasés cookies have been fav. 
This molasses is a popular sweet- 
ener and flavorer in cookies, and 
a wide range of cookie styles and 
flavor variations can be developed 
iby using a favorite cereal as an 
ingredient. lee te 
ee 
= ped 
= * ‘e 
= Bei 
Fe 
- 
pee 
. 
into lacy, crisp cookies. A truly 
.. delightful -macaroon.can be 
poy i with molasses and bite- 
little cereal pillows give a Zod! 
  ' Molasses-cereal cookies are more 
3 than dessert treats. They actually 
- : ; . |help out on the daily nutritive 
HAM ROSEBUDS—Little rosebuds of biscuit. ness. This yeast dough is easy to make and the [seers f enol or ion Pon ace dough with a tantalizing ham filling come out of ham filling starts with a can of deviled ham. sulphured The cereal 
supplies protein and B vitamins. 
Molasses Puffed Balls 
% cup unsulphured molasses 
4 cup sugar 
1% teaspoons. butte 
2 quarts puffed Ges cereal 
| Combine unsulphured molasses, 
| sugar and butter in a 2-quart 
|saucepan. Place over low heat, Herbed Biscuits Ham Filling Baked 
Top Hamburger 5! n Yeast Biscuits Peete one 5 th H Filli Ro |until syrup, when dropped in very 
pread. wi are eae: al \cold water, separates into threads 
‘which are hard but not. brittle, or 
until candy thermometer~reaches|   
  Se, brand new treat, a! 
\yeast-raised roll with sandwich, #7 for jelly-roll. 
-filling baked right in. It ta8tes just| Cut into inch slices and place; 
: . cut side up in greased 2} inch as good as it sounds. Though you muffin pans. With o pair of scis 375 degrees. . 
can't tell by lookfiig or tasting, | Pour syrup over puffed rice, stir- cut crosses about %%-inch deep 
these yeast specialties are quick- across the tops of rolls. Cover, let! |Fing quickly to coat each kernel. Your trusty skillet, “which was 
such a boon during hot summer, 
days, also comes to fore this fall 
as a glamorous time-saver when 
you're entertaining friends. 
* * * a _THE. PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ‘OCTOBER 9, 1958 _ , te a eer 
Oatmeal cookies with the nutlike| ¥% 
size shredded rice biscuits. These |_ = , eee # F 
Vary Molasses" Taffy Cookies ty teaspoon, ss ee w= When cool enough-to handle, uae Remove fou heat; stir in milk, 
  % ¢ into large balls with lightly but-|unsulphured molasses and vanilla.| 1 cup bites size shredded rice nleentt Loe. beaten ; 
tered hands. Yield: 1 dozen. _‘[Sift in flour, baking powder, salt| “cuts.” °° “"™* “*feaded Mee % cu Unsuiphured molasses Note: To make miniature balls,| and sugar; “mix well. Stir-in oats; Combine molasses, cornstarch, a Cases vane” 
cut recipe in half and substitute|and chopped nuts. Drop by level|and baking powder; reserve. Beat) }, WZ.d0on sat ny er ee re teaspoonfuls 2 inches apart onjegg whites until stiff, but not dry;| Jf tesshoon, Peking sods 
rate into 1-inch balls. Yield: 3 greased baking — como 4! eradually add sugar and beat until| 1 cup chopped dates 
zen moderate.oven (375 degrees) 6 to 8 : es minutes. Cool. about 1 minute: re-|“er¥ stiff. Carefully fold°in molas- Combine egg, sugar, unsulphured 
. ses mixture; fold in flavorings, | lasses, ter and vanilla. Sift 
Molasses Oatmeal Lace Thins |™ove from pan. Cool. ‘ "\together flour, salt and soda; stir 
% cup butter Told: Apptentannpaly # doses. ee ke into egg mixture. Stir in bran and 12 cu Unsulphured molasses e FS inches by 5 ane 2 ldates Turn into a lightly greased 
anills » Molasses ps Meringues apart on baking SAV" and floured "Sinch square. pan.   eréd with brown paper. Bake in a 
  
  : _ | % en ured molasses slow oven (300 degrees) 30: min- * ke te salt | o< , . 
© cup suger ‘ i? neomatareh lutes. Remove from paper when/|Bake in a moderate oven (350 de- 
i cep = eek nats 2 egg whites _ .-teool. grees) 45 minutes. Cool and cut 
% tonepeen simend flavoring ~ | Yield: Approximately 2% dozen.|into 1 x 2-inch bars. Yield? 32 bars. —_   Melt butter in Jarge saucepan. ' 
ON THE PURCHASE OF 2 LBS, OF 
GOOD LUCK 
MARGARINE 
; "The Price is Right” Contest Srand 
- F9909000000000 00900000000000000000000000000000000 Do |    
       
  
      vena 3 Neagle 
on brando specified. We will. not outside wn. Thi 
  
     
      
      ell, 
oe. 
presented. res sales tax must when so 
paid by pod omy Void in any place where 
1% use is prohibited,taxed or réstricted by 
law. Cash value 1/20 of 1¢. Lever Brothers 
ny, 390 Ave., New York. 
“Expiration date October 36, 1958 
VOSS OST O ROI OOO TOU OOo’ Se eS        
    
  \4 FV al al ol aV al al at at al 
MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHOS 
  
4 9.000000000000000, c7 
      
For instance; this recipe for 
Hamburger Biscuit Puffs delicious- 
ly and quickly fills the bill for an 
after - the - football- game _ buffet. 
There's no oven t6 be heated and 
the meat and biscuits cook all in 
one skillet! 
* as-a-wink to make. rise in a warm place, free from! 
The dough is made using a brand (draft. until doubled in bulk, about | 
new formula that has just 3 in- 1 hour. 
gredients. So little to measure, but * * * ; 
that’s not all. The ingredients are’ Bake at 330 degrees (moderate 
mixed together in one bowl, knead-|oven) 25 to 30 minutes. Brush with | 
ing has been shaved to a few turns, melted margarine .or butter. Cool 
and there’s just one brief rising. on rack. Makes 12 rolls. i 
All this and in addition you get| ‘*Ham Filling—Combine two 45, | 
the most flavorful home-baked ounce cans deviled ham, few drops 
rolls ever to tempt family and of Tabasco, % cup coarsely 
friends. ‘chopped pimiento and 3 table- | 
Ham Rosebuds ‘spoons India relish. 
Sees” Friday Burgers | 
‘Use Rice Cereal 1 package or cake yeast, active dry 
or compressed 
2% cups prepared biscuit mix 
crumble in yeast. Stir unfil dis- socal . Here is a recipe for metted-| 
{cheese burgers which are popular 
| Mix in biscuit mix and Poti always at these outdoor feasts. | 
Prepared with * * 
While the small hamburgers are 
browning in hot pure vegetable 
oil, biscuit dough is shaped into 
small balls, rolled in oregano and 
paprika and arranged on top of 
the ‘burgers. Then, after about 20 
minutes of cooking, the skillet en- 
tree is ready to go right on the 
table for ye oat of the skil- 
Jet, of course! 
Meswbereet Biscuit Puffs 
und ground beef 
i aa slightly beaten 
1 teaspoon salt 
- teaspoon pepper 
1, "Biscuit ree pure vegetable 01 
—_ recipe or $ canned bt. scuits 
aspoons cregans 
; “Yeatooon paprika 
arge green pepper. choppéd 
1 large onion. chopped   
* Ham Pilling 
Margarine or butter 
Measure water into a . large mix 
ing bow] (warm, not hot, water for 
active dry yeast; lukewarm for 
compressed yeast). Sprinkle or 
vigorously about 1 minute. with flaked tuna fish, 
ento board dusted with a | and seasoned with pickles and on-| 
mix and form into a smooth ball. ions these Friday Burgers are a 
Let stand 5 minutes. Roll into ® treat any day of the week. i 
rectangle about 12 inches haumatl ; i 
_ a. Friday Burgers | 
2% cups oven toasted rice cereal 
2 cups (2 7-oz. cans) tuna fish 
‘l cup mayonnaise - 
1 tablespoon minced on 
2 tablespoons cheapest ‘ai pickles 
% teaspoon salt 
'g teaspoon pepper 
14 teaspoon celery salt 
6 hamburger buns, split, buttered 
-6 slices processed American cheese Mix the meat with egg, salt and’ 
pepper; shape inte 12 small ham- 
burgers. Brown in hot oil. While’ 
Meat, is browning, shape biscuit 
/dough into small balls, then roi] 
in mixture of oregano and paprika. 
When meat is browned, add green 
pepper and onion; stir a bit to 
loosen browned bits. 
* * * 
Arrange biscuits on top of ham-   
Enrich Many Foods 
With Extra Dry Milk 
Use larger amounts of nonfat 
burgers. Cover tightly. Cook over ar milk in these preparations ; ; -medium heat about 20 minutes, = : = - Crush 142 cups of the rice ceredl : , for more nutrition values. Meat! ; 
until biscuits are done. Makes 4 into fine crumbs. Drain and flake loaf—6 tablespoons to each pound 
‘of ground meat. Soups and gravies : 3 : 
— 6 tablespoons to each cup of Crumbs, mayonnaise, onions, pic- 
liquid. Puddings and cocoa — 2 Kles and seasonings; mix lightly. 
tablespoons to each cup of fresh Shape into patties about 3 inches 
fluid milk, or 6 tablespoons to each 19 diameter, using about +a cup 
cup of water. servings, - tuna fish. Combine with cereal 
  
‘Use Canned Onions 
Summertime isn't the-only time 
for picnics—get one in during the        
‘CENTER CUT-RIB 
    
Jast warm days of fall. And, serve 
Crisp Topped Baked Beans. Com- 
“bine a can of baked beans and a 
half can of French fried onions; | 
mix thoroughly. Add catsup and! 
mace to taste. Bake in a mod- 
erate oven. about 20 niinutes. Yeast rolls — 6) Mixture for each. at with re- 
Alice attorie /maining rice cerea 
ences in eee, cup OF liquid Put opened buns on grill rack! 
and heat while patties are broiling. | 
| Broil until golden brown, about .5 
-You can mix two parts of un-| minutes, and then top each patty) 
salted vegetable shortening with | with a cheese slice. When cheese 
‘one part of flour and use it to coat | begins to melt, remove from rack, 
Sprinkle with remaining onions; the inside of a pan in which ajand serve at once. Yield: 6 serv-, 
return to oven for 5 minutes. ibutter-type cake is to be baked. | ings. 
fg FRIAR IITA ITAA RATA SHA |   
  
OUR OWN HICKORY SMOKED 
BACON SQUARES OUR OWN GRADE NO. 1 
RING BOLOGNA 
|| POTATO CHIPS 
         
    Box 
                 
19: 29°" 
se BACON OO “Doz. a | 00   
    | Pan Ready 
FRYERS       o |     
            
A 
       
  PICNIC CUT 
PORK ROAST 
    capBace -10°* U. S. No. 1 Mcintosh 
EATING sides 
4 Lb. Bag     Heavy Roasters 29. 
PORK STEAK 
39 « SPECIAL! Fresh Killed 
Stewing Chickens 
Heavy | 
are 9" [E 
GRADE A EGGS 
ORANGES 
ANGEL FOOD a 
DSSS SSESSS ESTAS SESS SETI SITS eases 
        
    
608 
  UT OPEN |? DAYS A WEEK *9 a.m.fo9e.m. 39 
N 
     * i 
x6 
r 
  
an ae de | 
     3 SISTERS’ 1 Se: ES EALIL SSS SLES SES HEAT AAA A ARDEA AAA AL 
¢ 
      vt 
    
   en, spielen 
es 
| 
* FORTY : 
    tT 
‘Mrs. Barrett Opens Home for Meeting   
~ Needlework Guild Leas 
             
      
      Mrs. 
opened her Bloomfield Hills home for 
an executive board meeting of the 
Pontiac Branch of the Needlework 
Guild of America Wednesday after- 
WES meen RA Edward P. Barrett (right) 
  Pentiace Press Phote 
noon. Attending the gathering were 
Mrs. Basil E. Brown of Mary Day 
avenue (left) and Mrs. Claire R. Gauk- 
- ler of Franklin boulevard. 
Vomen's Section » 
ue SSR 2 
365.53) RR RA 
  RE RRR Sas 
  Bloomfield Hills Social Scene 
» Dinners, Bridal Fetes, Visits in Focus 
By RUTH SAUNDERS 
BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert C. Fisher 
entertained at dinner Monday 
‘for their house guests, Mr.. and 
Mrs. Cyrus Young of Fort 
Lauderdale, Fla. 
* * * 
Bride-elect Carlin Bay will 
spend this weekend in South 
Bend. Ind, visiting her fiance, 
Howard E. Rodgers, and his 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard 
E. Rodgers. Carlin and How- 
ard will fo to the Notre Dame- 
Army football game Saturday. 
Before Miss Bay left Friday 
she attended a party and mis- 
cellaneous shower given in her 
honor by Mrs. Glen R. Miller 
and Mrs. William A. Reid in 
Mrs. Miller's home on Lake 
Park drive. 
Other parties before the 
couple's Oct. 25 wedding in St. 
James Episcopal Church, Bir- 
mingham, 
shower which Mrs. George H. 
Dear Abby...   
  include a treasure Fox will give Oct. 17 and a 
brunch at the Charles H. Bay 
home, Oct. 19. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hamil- 
ton Bay will give the rehearsal 
dinner Oct. 24 
* * * 
Mrs. Clifford B. West is vis- 
iting Mr. and Mrs. Beekman 
Pool this weekend at their 
Dublin, N.H., home. 
Mrs. West also will visit her 
daughter, Jill,.a freshman.at 
Radcliffe College, and her son, 
Joseph, at Putney School. 
* * * 
Mrs. Henry C. Johnson en- 
tertained at luncheon Monday 
in her Quarton road home, 
later taking her guests to the 
meeting of Bloomfield Branch 
of Woman's National Farm 
and Garden Association at 
Cranbrook Institute of Science. 
* Mrs. Johnson’s guests in- 
cluded Mrs. A. S. McEvoy and 
her mother, Mrs. Arthur F. 
Benzer of Long Beach, Calif, my 
RE SES 
who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. 
McEvoy; Mrs. Fred L. Black, 
Mrs. Wyeth Allen, Mrs. Fred- 
erick C. Matthaei, all from 
Ann Arbor; and Mrs. Dexter 
Craig, Mrs. Richard G. Eng- 
lish and Mrs. Hugh Loud. 
* * * 
Attending the Michigan-Navy 
football game together Satur- 
day in Ann Arbor will be Mr. 
and Mrs. Russel] Strickland 
and Mr. and Mrs. William C. 
Newberg. 
* * * 
Many parties are being giv- 
en for Mr, and Mrs. Richard 
D. Young of LaJolla, Calif., 
who are here for the month of 
October. They formerly lived 
in Bloomfield Hills and Bir- 
mingham. 
Tonight Mr. and Mrs. Fred- 
erick Darden of Orion will be 
hosts at a dinner party for 
them at the Bloomfield Hills 
Country Club. THE PONTIAC. PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER. 9, 1058 
~ - 4 
    et: wot 
ers 
Refreshment time at the Barrett 
home gave members a chance to dis- 
cuss the garments various sections of 
the guild are preparing for the annual 
  Ingathering to be held Nov. 13 at First Presbyterian Church. 
right are Mrs. William S. Isgrigg, Mrs. 
A. H. Harrington; president of the 
branch; and Mrs. W. Ross Thompson. E 
as 
     
From left to 
Ella Kuhn of Lake Angelus Too Busy to Retire   
Runs Hospital and Home at 73 
An urge to “get more done 
before it’s too late,” has kept 
Mrs. Ella Kuhn of Lake An- 
gelus young and alert in spite 
of her 73 years of enthusiastic 
living. 
Each morning this energetic 
woman, who has raised 11 
children, arises at 6:30 a.m., 
straightens her 12-room home 
then drives to Detroit to super- 
vise the operation of her priv- 
ate hospital. 
Eight full hours later, she 
gets in her little car and drives 
home through heavy night 
traffic. 
*52 MOTHER OF YEAR 
Honored as Michigan's 
‘Mother of-the Year’’ in 1952, 
Mrs. Kuhn still maintains the 
position as chairman of the 
American Mothers Association. 
She has traveled to Alaska five 
different times, and has toured 
Europe. 
* * * 
From the day she married 
Dr. William K. Kuhn in- 1962 
and organized the Warren Diag- 
nostic Hospital, Mrs. Kuhn has 
been an enthusiastic mother 
and successful career woman. 
Soon after their first son, 
Charles, was born, came Ed- 
ward — then nine other chil- 
dren in quick succession. When 
her husband died in 1935, Mrs. 
Kuhn continued to raise her 
family, operate the hospital, 
and educate her children one 
by one. : 
* * * 
She says all her children 
worked and earned their own 
way through college. However, 
the record of their highly 
skilled professions is a living 
tribute to their mother. who in- 
spired them to “‘move up.” 
3 ARE DOCTORS 
Of the eleven Kuhn children, 
Albert, Henry and Robert are 
medical doctors. Jolin is a 
= 
Readers Give Cogent Reasons 
for Putting Wedding Ring First By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN 
“DEAR ABBY: You 
me. A smart girl like y 
knowing why the wedding ring 
goes on first. It’s an old super- 
stition that 
once -the 
wedding ring 
is placed on 
the finger. 
it's bad luck 
to remove it. 
The engage 
ment ring 
HAS TO be 
removed for 
cleaning 
(and fre. 
quently to 
remount the 
more modern setting) so in 
order to remove the engage- 
ment ring without disturbing 
the wedding ring, the wedding 
ring must be Placed on the amaze 
you not 
diamond in a 
finger first.” 
BRODKEY (OMAHA) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: The wedding 
ring goes on FIRST because it 
must always be closest to the 
heart of the wearer. ] thought 
everybody, knew that.” 
@'NEIL (CALIFORNIA) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: I am sure 
  the reason why married wom- 
en wear their wedding rings 
on the inside js becau’e many 
men can’t afford an engage- 
ment ring until after they have 
been married about 10 years, 
so their wives wear their rings 
in the order in which they got ~~ 
them.” KELLY (MASS.) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: You Ameri- 
cans seem to think that be- 
cause a custom is observed in 
your country jt js correct, and 
those who do not follow that 
custom are in error. I wish to 
state that in Australia the en- 
gagement ring is placed FIRST 
on the finger of the intended 
as a warning to all hopeful 
suitors that the young lady is 
spoken for. That ring is not 
removed unless the engage- 
ment 
the wedding ring is placed on 
the finger, and both remain in 
place as long as the couple is 
married. Doesn't this make 
more sense to peciel 
“AUSSIE” 
(SYDNEY. ae ISTRALIA) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: If you'd like 
a minister's explanation for the 
reason the wedding ring is 
placed on the finger first, it is 
because when the bride comes rf § 'with an engagement ring, 
is terminated. THEN,. to the altar to be wed, she 
comes with bare hands, free 
from adornment. 
“If she has been presented 
she 
does not wear it during the 
marriage ceremony, but plac®s 
it on her finger after the wed- 
ding band has been placed 
there. Most brides prefer to 
leave their wedding rings in- 
tact, once placed, hence the 
order. Very truly yours.” 
REV. LARSON (IOWA) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: Who said 
there must be some involved 
or mysterious reason for wear- 
ing the wedding ring on the 
inside and the engagement ring 
on the outside? In my case, that’s the way my husband put 
them on, and I've gained so 
* much weight I can’t get either 
of them off. Thank you.” 
SEGAL (BROOKLYN) 
* * * 
“DEAR ABBY: It is a pleas- 
ure to be able to give YOU 
some advice for a change. The - 
engagement ring is strictly 
ornamental and hag no spirit- 
ual or ceremonial significance. 
The wedding ring, being the 
more important of the two, 
needs protection against get- 
ting lost, so the engagement 
ring is slipped on the finger to 
serve as a guard for a woman’s 
most precious possession, her 
_ wedding band.” 
WALTERS (MANHATTAN) -   Pontiac Press Phote 
Seventy-three-year-old Mrs. Ella Kuhn of Lake 
Angelus likes to wield a paintbrush after driving to 
and from her private hospital in Detroit every day. 
She has raised 11 children, and supervises her hos- 
pital in Detroit with energetic vigor that amazes 
her friends. 
lawyer, Charles an undertaker 
and Edward a teacher. 
Sons George and Paul are 
administrative executives and 
Richard owns a Pontiac busi- 
ness. Two sisters, Helen Gris- 
by and Clara Graham, are 
heusewives married to elec- 
tronic engineers. “ 
* * * 
Three fimes week, the 
energetic Mrs. Kuhn personal- 
ly selects fresh food for her 
_ hospital and has fun shopping 
around for “good buys.” 
Located on a 10-acre tract of 
land facing Lake Angelus, Mrs, 
Kuhn's Swiss type home has a 
spacious entrance hall, open 
stairway and sunken living 
room. : 
BIG FAMILY SUPPERS 
Padded window seats in the 
dining room and a huge table 
with seating capacity for 20 
people is set up ready for 
weekly, Sunday night suppers 
for the entire family. 
Outside, a cut-stone patio 15 
feet wide surrounds the entire 
gingerbread-trimmed house, 
where umbrella tables and 
chairs lure family and visitors. 
The front lawn drops down a 
“hig rolling ‘hill to the lake’s 
edge — and in the winter her 
23 grandchildren use the area 
for a ski and toboggan slide. 
* * * 
For recreation, Mrs. Kuhn 
loves to putter around the 
house. She has just finished 
painting two walls of the guest 
room in the boat house — ‘and 
only two to go,” she added. 
Retire? 
work someday, maybe — but 
not from life, says Mrs. Kuhn. 
AIB Women to Get Tips on Charm 
“Charm in a Capsule,” a- 
program featuring a represent- 
ative from a Detroit finishing 
school, will be pre: by the 
Oakland County apter of | 
American Institute of Banking 
at 8 p.m. Wednesday on the 
fourth floor of Community Na- 
“tional Bank of Pontiac. 
The representative will speak on charm, visual poise and self 
confidence. 
* ® * 
Mrs. Ronald C. West, chair- 
man of the event, is chairman 
of the women's committee of 
the Oakland chapter of AIB. 
Mrs. Dee Moore, ticket chair- 
man, is assisted by Franees 
Greer. “Margaret Samuel is chairman of the refreshment ~ 
committee and Dee Brim is in 
charge of publicity. 
: * * 
~ Procgeds from the program 
will be turned over to the fund 
for adult education in the barik- 
ing profession. 
Tickets may be purchased at 
the door. i 
. From professional © “I've got a thousand things 
that I want to do when I get 
the time.” 
~, 
Oct. 27 Concert Set 
Opening the Cranbrook 
= Music Guild’s new season Oct. 
27 will be Pro Musica Antiqua, 
the virtuoso ensemble special- 
izing in Renaissance music. 
The concert will be held at 
8:30 p.m. at the Kingswood 
School. Guest conductor at the Fall 
Vocal Clinic to be held Nov. 
acant. 
with “the annual Fred Waring 
Youth Workshop and conduct- 
“sed all-state elinics in New 
Jersey, Connecticut, Tennessee, 
Pennsylvania, Indiana and Vir- 
* & & 
He also has directed District 
Festival Choruses and Music 
Educators Conference festivals 
in Oklahoma, Texas, Nebraska 
Florida and Illinois. 
1,000 TO SING 
Some 1,000 singers from Cen- 
tral and- Northern High Schools 
will be directed by Dr. Ray- 
mond in a wide variety of 
selections. Among seiections 
are: “Dream,” written by 
Johnny Mercer and arranged 
by Hawley Ades; “There's a 
Meeting Here Tonight,” ar- 
ranged by Harry Simeone; 
and Roy Ringwald's arrange- 
ment of Whittier’s poem, ‘‘O 
Brother Man.” 
* * s 
Other songs are ‘Blessing 
Glory and Wisdom,’’ by Bach; 
“Plenty Good Room,” a spir- 
itual arranged by Smith, and 
“Go Song of Mine,” by Cook- 
son. . “Johnny Schmoker,” a 
Pennsylvania Dutch Folk Song, 
eompletes the massed num---—~- 
bers, 
* * * 
Dr. Raymond will have two 
rehearsals with the students 
participating in the concert, 
one on Sunday, Nov. 2 and 
the other Nov, 3. 
The program will be held at 
8:15 p.m, Nov. 3 at Pontiac 
Central High School. Special 
selected groups from the city’s 
two high schools also will ap- 
pear. 
Shower Honors 
Janet Fenlon 
Janet Fenlon, bride-elect of 
Richard MacIntosh, was hon- 
ored at a miscellaneous shower 
at the Coleman street home of 
Mrs. Thomas Ogden. Cohost- 
esses were Mrs. Robert Ed- 
wards and Mrs. James MacIn- 
tosh. . 
_ Miss Fenlon is the daughter 
of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Fenlon 
of Edison street, and. her fi- 
ance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert MacIntosh of Valencia 
_ drive. The couple will be mar- 
"ried Oct. 18 at St. 
Church. 
Mental Health Topic 
for Whitfield PTA 
_ Wallace Watt, Michigan 
mental health consultant for 
the. Pontiac area, discussed 
“Bring Out the Best in Our 
Children” at the Wednesday 
evening meeting of Daniel 
Whitfield School PTA held in 
the school gym. 
A report on the schoo] fair, 
to be held Oct. 17, was given.     
    
         
         
               
     
       
        DE. JOHN B, RAYMOND 
Soroptimist 
Delegates 
Are Named 
Delegates to the Midwestern 
Regional Conference, appointed. 
when the Soroptimist Club of 
Pontiac met Wednesday even- 
ing at Hotel Waldron, are Mrs. 
Raymond Swackhamer and   
in Women’s Section. 
  
Michael Chapter’ of Mrs. Richard Paschke. The 
conference will be held Oct. 
25-26 in Indianapolis, 
Mrs. Karl Schultz was ap- 
poirte? a member of the 
regional extension committee. 
* *® * 
Midwestern regional gover- 
nor Virginia Sink will speak at 
the Ocf. 22 meeting, to be heid 
in Hotel Waldron. . 
Alice Kimball, delegate to 
the Committee for Camp Oak- 
land Girls Ranch, reported on 
the progress made toward 
completing the buildings. 
* * * 
Club members will meet at 
the home of Mrs. K. R. Wright 
Oct. 15 for Christmas bazaar 
workshop. 
Beta Mu Unit 
Has Rush Party 
“Come As You Are,” rush 
party was held by Beta Mu 
Epsilon Sigma 
Alpha Wednesday evening. at 
Adah Shelly Branch Library. 
* * * 
New pledges are Judy Mar- 
entette. 
Alice Sanchez, 
Stickle Linda Noel, Sharon 
Donley, Jean Parmenter and 
Janette Zatick. 
* * * 
On the decorating committee 
were Barbara Morton and Don- 
na Burling. Entertainment was 
by Norma Thyle and refresh- 
ments were served by Mary 
Kay St. John. 
  Oakland County Chapter of Ameri 
can Institute of Banking will present - 
“Charm in a Capsule,” a ‘program fea- 
turing a speaker who is an authority on 
charm. The ee will be held at Pontiac Presa Pheto 
8 p.m. Oct. 15 on the fourth floor of « 
Community National Bank of Pontiac. 
Making final plans.for the event are 
(left to right) Dee Brim, fi rances eles 
“and Dee Moore. . 
“4 
      Four pages today — 
  
    
         
        
  
  GOLD-FILLED WATCH 
$79.50 . 
Good taste and simplicity are 
characteristics of « 
the Omega “Classic” series. 14K 
white or yellow gold-filled case, 
each with raised 18K gold hour- 
markers, 17 jewel movement. 
Jewelers—Optometrists 
81 N. Saginaw 
FE 2-3612   
  A Name You Can Trust! } 
|REDMOND’S| 
- met a few weeks ago. who 
has two attractive daughters. 
She, said at that meeting, 
Come and see us. sometime’* 
‘but nothing more definite, On 
this flimsy pretext: would. it 
~ be proper fo go and if it 
wouldn’t be considered ak 8 
Be: 
82 : ag a3 fi 
: 
i 3 
I 
| I bave been living at home 
1 with an older brother and sis- 
' ter, Both ar unmarried. We- 
| always got on very wel] to- 
gether and I am devoted to 
both of them.*I am going to 
be married ip the not too dis- 
tant future’ and I would like 
to know if jt would be proper 
to have the names of both my 
brother and sister on the in- 
vitations ?”’ 
  Answer: It will be proper to 
'- have the invitations read: 
Miss Mary Smith 
Mr. John Smith 
request the bonour of your 
presence at the marriage 
of their sister Elizabeth; 
- ete. 
“Dear Mrs. Post: J] was ad- 
vised that it is very improper 
to wear dark (sun) glasses 
indoors. I see no impropriety 
in keeping them on any more 
than ordinary glasses, Am 1 
wrong?” 
    
Answer: There is no im-   
  
GETTING MARRIED? 
es specialists in Formal Wear 
Rentals, you are scoured that 
the Greem oné tie men will 
be correctiy Greased and ews- 
tom fitted te the finest quality 
garments. 
HARWOOD CUSTOM 
TAILORS 
908 W. HURON 4T TELEGRAPH 
  | propriety in this, but dark 
| glasses indoors give the im- 
| pression that the wearer is try- 
ing to hide bloodshot eyes. 
| “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Rein. | der,”’ 
  which became an interna-. 
and varied toys, was originally | 
written by Robert L. May in 1939 | 
}as a Christmas give- away for a 
  ‘mail order - firm.   
  ‘tional best seller as a book, song |   
Know This? + 
A girt's bom. triend, if she wants} 
to-loekgood,— 
bed by 10:30 or 11 p.m, But it’s 
merely cutting in uselessly on your 
all-important sleep to waste an) 
evening. 
The best way to break this habit 
‘yourself a home permanent at 
| midnight.   
Lips May Become 
Weather-Beaten 
Changing seasons are nice, 
if it weren't for what wind, 
rain or sun does to the skin. 
Lips, too, come in for their 
| Share of torture. 
Treat them gently by remov- 
ing completely all lipstick be- 
fore going to bed and apply- 
ing a lip pomade with some 
medication in it.   All pleasant enough if you're in   
  -- A reception honoring Congressman 
William S. Broomfield (left) and Paul 
Bagwell (center) was held Wednesday. © and Frank 
afternoon at Bloomfield Hills Country . Mrs. 
Mrs. Harry Meharg. 
Modeling were. Mrs. Harry 
T. Hahn, Mrs. John H, Holms, 
Mrs, Peter Dunn, and Mrs. 
Galardi. 
Mrs. John Irwin was wel- 
comed as a new’ member. Atkinson, Mrs, Josepli Galardi, 
Barnard Woessner and 
  * : . Se Be Ps = a 2 ie RS os E ¥ . - ‘ oe * . 2g ‘ —t atu BS o 
z ; ts : a < ss 3 Se = < ts i Ps a : ’ _— : ae 
pa : Scere e | _THE PONTIAC. PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1958 FORTY-ONE  }, 
| “| Call Her Sorority. Names. [Patty for Broomfield Bagwell, % Pe z _| Newcomers. Eunice ae ay 4 | ue : ey New Chairman T Fe d t Re ti Hold Show roject il t ne 7 
To Make | saree wo ete a ecep) ion Dr ang More Rng oor | Bo tid, man at the Tuesday evening met Wednesday evening at |Church met Tuesday evening at : 
a , meeting of Xi, Alpha Nu 4 VR ers eres Selma’s Smart Shoppe, Roch- [the church. Plans for a money- ‘ 
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi. ester making project to be held Oct, 18 i 
ad Date The meeting was held at the ’ Hostesses were; Mrs, Earl |were made. 
. Mrs. Vergil Myers participated — 
in the program. Hostesses were 
Mrs. L. A. Silvis and Mrs. Richard 
Hoban. 
There’s a_ brand-new look for 
blouses in one shown in Par- 
is. It’s an overblouse knitted of 
black satin ribbon. —   
  
    Club. Hosts at the affair were W. A. P. 
John (right), L. C. Goad, L. L. Colbert 
Duffy. 
  
This way; you wen’t wind up giving’   Mothers Meet 
New Director 
of Boys Club | 
, Cressy B. Larson, new executive; 
  man of the card party to be ned 
Nov. 19. 
Hostesses at the meeting were, 
'Mrs, Thomas Dodson, Mrs. Leon-| 
jard Noren, Mrs. Eugene Affolder, | 
‘Mrs. Charles. Eaglen and Mrs. 
|John Jones. 
New members are irs. Warren| Herrington PTA | 
Meets to Hear 
Panel Discussion 
A panel discuésion on ‘‘How Par-' 
idirector of Pontiac Boys Club, was, Byers and Mrs. John Ferro. Mrs.jents and Teachers Can Work To- 
lintrodu@ed to members when the 
|Mothers Club of the Pontiac Boys| 
\Club met Tuesday evening at the! 
|Boys Club, |Donald Brooks was a guest. 
  
Jean Laussier plunged success- 
ifully over Niagara Falls in 1928. | |gether More Effectively,”’ was held 
when Herrington School PTA met! 
|Wednesday in the.-school’s multi- 
purp0se room. 
Mrs. Harold MacKenzie was ap- Where his competitors had used) On the panel were teachers Mrs. 
| pointed chairman of a money-/steel drums and similar devices,|Clinton Lefler and Mrs. Andrew 
making project to be held Oct. 17|Laussier placed himself in a large Donnell. Parents were Mrs. How-. 
at the club. 
| Mrs. Kenneth Nichols is. chair-   
. 
  
  
  
  
        
549 N. Saginaw St. 
  ADD-A-ROOM 
M. A. BENSON, CO., Inc. Give yourself a 
Christmas present early 
enjoy the _ : 
convenience of an extra 
room! It may-cost less 
than you think. Let us - 
give you an estimate 
on your builders 
supplies now. 
. FE 4-2521 ment month. 
parents and _ teachers. 
chairman of Cora Bailey Pontiac Council of PT. 
nated October as membership enroll- 
Membership is open to 
any civic minded adult—not only to A has desig- 
John 
teacher vice 
Membership 
School Mrs. Sturdevant 
School, Mrs. 
tion of both teacher and parent is neces 
sary for PT. jrubber ball and bounced over the 
falls with little damage. 
} 
| 
  Pontiac Press Phetos | 
(left) enrolls the 
president of Cora Bailey 
Arthur Price. Coopera- ryear’s Michigan Stdte 
sheepskin slippers and a _ tooled 
wallet he displayed. Other patients | ° 
'biles. 
'‘reasonable.”’ ard Malwitz, Mrs. Lester Davison 
and Edward Lenon. Mrs. Richard 
Tomkins, visiting teacher, was the 
moderator. 
A special meeting, an ‘‘Opinion- 
aire’ on Michigan's education pro- 
gram will be held next Wednesday 
at 7:30 p.m. 
The recreation program will be- 
gin at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday with 
‘men’s gym, Thursday evening will 
be women’s night and Friday eve- 
ning will be for teenagers. 
  
County Patients 
'to Exhibit Crafts 
Handwork of patients at the Oak- 
land County Convalescent Hospital 
will be shown at the Detroit His- 
torical Museum as part of the Sen- 
ior Citizens 
10-26. 
Phillip Sloan, a patient. won two 
second premium prizes at this 
Fair for 
made items including leatherwork, | 
weaving, crocheting, knitting and 
woodwork, for the fair. 
Six states do not specify a. 
\definite speed limit for automo- 
These six states say 
That should lead 
to some long arguments between 
\traffic cops and motorists. SHOP SATURDAY...    
  
~ Corrective Step 
FOOT FREEDOM AT 
_ITS BEST ; 
WHITE, BROWN, 
GREY, CREAM 
        Arts and Crafts Ex-' 
hibit of Southeastern Michigan Oct Ask 
  for 084 and BLACK 
5" 7 
a 5 to 10 
Ramen Rare Wide 4 
  
MEN’S SHOP OXFORD 
NEOPRENE SOLES 
+ CUSHION INSOLES 
ARCH SUPPORT 
WIDTHS B to EEE    
      
3 Hour Sale Friday 6 to 9   
    FRISKIE LOAFERS Regular $3.99 Value 
White, Brown, 
Smoke, Black 
  ‘Open Monday and Friday Nights ‘til 9 
73 North Saginaw Street     
  
  SST     
A success. . 
  
| The Ross Ice Shelf, on which 
| stands Little America in Antarc- 
itica, moves north at the rate of 
|about four feet a day. The Ross 
Ice Shelf is about the size of 
    California. 
  
that all 
         
   
flattery begins with feminine softness . . 
pouf of silk upon black or brown suede, giving the 
impression of being infinitely more costly. . 
Shoe Salon ... Mezzanine 
eaenindlie     silken Vamp-point from. 
the beautiful world of 
Jacqueline 
> 
es, Pointed Pump designed with area flair. . .-and the wisdom 
. this 
125 
    
      
72 N. Saginaw 
  CLOONAN’S | = “Where Quality Counts”   
by 
Parfums Arpege 
in the squar® bottle 
with the signet stopper 
Yy on. — $12.50 loz.— 23.50 | 
Eau de Lanvin Arpege 
to drench you frequently 
from top to toe. 
your favorite fragrance 
402.—$ 6.00 | | 
8 oz.— 10.00 
ell pins tott | 
s~ ff 
FE 2-0161 ..in i       
The FISHER 
    || GRINNELL’S, 27 South Saginaw Street      
     
        
   
        
STEREOPHONIC high fidelity 
This complete stereo phonograph and extreme- 
sensitivity FM-AM radio ushers into your home 
all the depth and direction of true stereophonic 
high fidelity. 60-watt peak amplifier, SIX speakers, 
. 4-speed Garrard changer with diamond stylus.     
Reg. $695 
499% 
in Teak 
FE 3-7168 
    
 . 3ae ae ee eae ep ee ee 
        
  
    
  
  i ; Rat ae : 
Ee , , : 7 : Seen, By eae ke 
Pt FORTY-TWO tex “ THE PONTIAC PRESS, “pnunspay, OCTOBER 9, aie eR Ta eit Sa GE De 
Slates Card Party ie tere ove What Young People Think: ee ne Bee Ser (ase me ¢ the Be | Auxili yo 
Arimenian-American Veter-|Mrs-oJack Mouradian. Pl z 
anning me ans Auxiliary will hold @ luncheon When you use “salad oil’ for 
and card party Friday beginning] french-tried- Potatoes, heat it to 
at noon at the home of Mrs. Harry 375 degrees. 
  Teenagers Inherit Hatreds of Worl Var IL Fall Fair   
  
   
           
  } 
By EUGENE GILBERT Bat: onthe otiec heat, dasa cher pions and chor “Cherry olka ale del Pagene Mall", of Philadel & : Plans for fair were 
At SIBLEY’S | Gilbert Youth Co. young people have a-number of| blossoms, ~ weeping willows,” to Surella| Phia. Pate ca tal Women’s 
| World War II has been over for| good things to say about the ene- intel im Bruckner, 13, of Dallas. -—s'|_‘“Sausage, dachshunds, Porsche, Ausiligiy ot We’ Neglec 
13 years but bitterness lingers on,| mies of a-decade and a half ago.|one in six. One ip 12 thinks of; “Harmony. of life, cotinganicn Mercedes Dens, best’ ee sich ot tha Alva at ot 
ce the mn of these He] aoe at fie aa te |o"an i Bf pose, AMA Pie rat, oes | th he Minera : derstand it f Japanese as quiet, sott-spoken |like beer, pretzels oF cars when|® 000 UM “Stern, strict, rough, smart sc+}. Head of Bloomfield-Hills Tues- a: 2a ully. and gentle folk. One out of three |the word German is mentioned. ~ entists,"" to 17-year-old Sandra Dee} day evening. Cohestesses were  ~ 
ou tL | “Nazis... War... CONCeN-| admires them for their art, ar- | Japanese means: 1 “& smart, elever person,’ te ' of Boston. ee Mrs. Robert Miller and Mrs. 
'tration camps .. . persecution... or : Robert MacGonigal. 
Hitler . . . falling bombs. YESS rae * a“. . . 
Wi ‘as .those Hugh MacDutf, presi- 
f the plea a om ae pa dent of the auxiliary, an- 
. nounced that the fair will be 
American young people when the nai at the Maliday-& na 
ano |word “German” is mentioned. Nov. 12 from 
\ | “Barbarism . war... ph se Sag o> is 
: ; | sneaks’ rene fanatics +s hari) John_S. Hart is- chair- 
‘kari , . . untrustworthy.” ‘ man for the fair. Cochairman ; is Mrs. Clarence Suhr. 
Those are the sort of: things a Sar eet 
js that one out of three American i. Rex. john Wigie, pas — 
_ teenagers told our poli takers: 
thby think of first. _when . the 
word “Japanese” comies into the 
conversation, 
On the other hand, another ex- 
enemy, Italy, came out very well 
in our suryey. Less than one in| 
20 think of Italy in connection 
with war and Mussolini. Italians 
are viewed in terms of spaghetti, 
musio and friendliness by four out 
of five. = Ser yeagng Richard. ; 
Lambert conference 
  
      
  TOO YOUNG TO KNOW VISION <T 
The oldest teenager in our poll = 
}was 6 years old when Germany DR. B. R. BER N 
| fell and the Japanese surrendered ° MA 
aboard the battleship Missouri. The WON FE 4701 
youngest was scarcely born. Saginaw 
* then MALING SHOES   lt eee eRe _   THE WORLD'S MOST 
GLAMOROUS SHOES! 
2.99 to 6.99 
MALING SHOES 1 x. teciase _ i Why, then, does the simple men- 
|tion of these former foes turned 
friends and allies conjure up such 
‘a picture jin the ~minds of our Of ficers Are Elected | 
j Young folk by Mothers’ Group | Perhaps it’s the influence of 
Officers elected when the Amer- the movie industry, still turning 
| out war pictures, @ perhaps it’s jican Gold Star’ Mothers, chapter +   
ifen tne Press Phote 
~ the event, the Rev. Richard W. Thomas, | 
and Mrs. Allan Neville, president of | 
the women’s guild. Planning for the St. Benedict Fall 
Festival and dinner to be held Sunday 
at the church are (left to right) Mrs. - 
Roy M. Jones, sitient chairman of     
  
  
  [eon 
1 PIANO.ORGAN 
      
  
  
          
        =| cution of the Jews’’ to Catherine | 
  
742 W. Huron Pickup and Delivery FE 5- 1241 | Bruda, 16, of Bayside, N. Y. Tuesday at the Mathews stree 
home of Mrs. H. A. Sibley for a 
luncheon. Seventeen members and aimarried and gone from 
home. the utmost—all the way from plan- 
ning for it to looking back on it as, |tha Lock, Mrs. Kyle Wilson, Mrs. |   television with its old movies jnine met Tuesday evening at a | 
| produced while the passions of [DAV Home are; Mrs. Lola | WCTU IH i . 
| wartime gripped the land. president; Mrs. Edward Ellifson, | er Ou e d Nn | as ACCORDIAN 
-- -sweet nothings of slim lightness, pleasingly softand |) or more probably, the kids are' first vice president; Mrs. Edn ‘| Al l. D ] Le za my Sin : ple Chord low ... forall your casual and caretree influenced by the still vivid recol- ee cueey ice ia reste | ay = m vetem . 
') ow ilections of parents and older : Li O T S of ours ith just the bright fashion detail | @endisl whol lived through tose on Mrs. Sybella Stevens, treas-| Ive r m VY Meeting Dorothy Dingman Stewart 
to make them really smart! years of pans N ad eae Se Others are Mrs. Daisy Langton, | | me —" 
; : | sargeant at arms; Mrs. Joseph} 2 | ‘The Pontiac Federation of Wom- Saginaw 
Michigan’s Largest Florsheim Dealer Carol Yasner, 14, of Brooklyn,/Doyle, historian; Mrs. Lauretta| By RUTH MILLETT ses te Tacilarecie: Unica! FE etn” OR 3-170 
) 9 7 was a little more than a year old/Stockwell, chaplain; Mrs. Ruth Ol-| ‘They could be regarded as the “poor lonely Whites. l-day session Tuesday = ———-——---— in 1945 when the fighting ended|son, banner bearer and Mrs. Daisy met for an all-day MA in Europe, but to her the word Hight, flag bearer. rattling around in that big house, with not a single; First Baptist Church. LUNCHEONS 
Miracle Mile “German” is matched by the word| ee lone of their four children living in the same state.” | Participating were Mrs. Nellie Sealtest Ice Cream 
shorn coo Bakes OK ee eal Nor-Pontiac MOMS Unit | But nobody could ever honestly feel sorry for the Monrce, Bese nae ome = Populer Prices 
. le at jten, speaker rs. Lt] Shoes = Ts. ‘Ariens. “Heveoce, 17. it ‘Meets for Luncheon | Whites. Because they aren't rattling around in that |Snapp, soloist. RIKER FOUNTAIN 
Open Every Nite ‘til 9 P. M. Olean, N. Y., it’s “concentration | Pontiac MOMS Unit ret met| ‘big, old house they lived in* = Others were Mrs. Frank Davis.| Riker Building Lobby 
_ camps.” Germany means “perse- t/unfil the last child: was'are to visit, and enjoy each trip to Mrs. John McCormick, Mrs. Ber- La 
  
|John Little and Mrs. Ruth Mason. 
Mrs. William Carls had charge 
  3 _DAYS ONLY! 
  until the A-bomb.” a guest.     sible. 
* * *   
THE 
Hekmans QUALITY 
   THE BA 
  
  LOUK: MUSIC is FUN for everyone! j A : \ 
get their | | a soNs . | \ 
choice nee ——  } } } TE ‘ 
" ar. pea = 
of ; } = — ey 
crore WITH PORTABLE TV SET Portable Hi-FiPhonograph ; ae : 
y, New 1959 Model. Trim, modern styling. 104 RETAIL Uitra-deluxe mode! made by the world's RETAIL & t | y Le . 
8q. inches of rectangular picture area. Rated VALUE largest manufacturer of phonographs and An ; * ile ——— 7 . ) rs 2 
best of the sets tested by leading inde- § 95 rd ch rs. 4- d record ch , bs) | : : —. : 
. aaa 489 Np et cies aes wee oT SS | Mp l pI NIN sx Brown x White ; | = Size¢ 814 to 12 - f | ; | . 2. Get entry blank in every !-pound package o a vwere'e ai | | : = = Wi rg elie 
Enter often... : is 
Hekman.SALTINES picalalie It’s easy! It’s fun! ‘Here’s all you do! | 
y ines On an official Hekman entry blank, tell us in your own words the oe, a = : 
as you like! name of the grocery or supermarket whefe you shop, and why ~o-_— ~ ee Bie $ 48 ra , 
you prefer to shop there...and enclose the red Hekman oval from . 
either end of a one pound Hekman Saltine package wrapper with a . 
each entry. i ~ 
| Example: ‘I can always count on fresh fruits and vegetables, Start YOUR child on this new. 
quality meats, and friendly courteous service that , ; 
makes shopping more fun." : , 4 4 
went send- . this example. The idea is to think of your | GRINN FLL SPINET PIANO Anniversary 
: own reasons je 
4 Tes fs ceria panpenli mans easier ror ” It's a real inspiration to start music lenork on a Special 
4 to win because it is yqurs and yours alone. Open only to residents | ; 
F of Wayne, Odktand, Macomb, Washtenaw and Monroe counties new ‘piano as fine as this onel The graceful Grinnell $ OQ 
in Michigan. You and your Detroit area neighbors are the only Clayton," crafted in Grinnell’ s own piano factory, YU 
oe eeuh tte cone Any pipet moreientiesiyoulnend in, | has a full 88-note keyboard, vibrant’ tone, lifetime ‘ f we . 
durability, Reg. $598. Get entry blank in every one-pound package of | : ~ . 7 
Hekman Saltines | Extended Accounts Available 7 Il 26 W. Huron St. 
1 FE 3- FG Re tors   
MARK 
QT 
MKER'S AR Love that Grocer 
     50 sic PRIZES! 
y"   
      CONTEST 
(Limited to residents of Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, 
Washtenaw and Monroe counties in Michigan) -     
    
  
    
Contest subject to all federal, 
state and local regulations, Closes midnight, November 29, 1958 
  And instead of being lonely, the 
Whites are having as much fun as 
anyone in town. 
That is because the Whites are 
making use of the advantages 
that come with their time of life. 
They aren't wasting their new 
freedom on loneliness, or busy 
work, or fretting about the lives 
their grown children are leading. 
PLAN TRIPS 
They are using it to do at long 
last the things they have wanted 
to do for years. Théy can't travel 
as much as they would like to, but 
they make up for it by carefully 
  planning the trips they do take. 
They study up on the places they|i ticipation. They have more time 
for developing friendships than, 
they have had in years, so their Townsend. : 
a I | Mrs. Monroe is delegate to the’ 
They have more fime for each) state convention at Boyne City Oct. | 
are! other now, too. And they are using) 15-17. 
it to shar@ ideas, talk over the| A meeting will be held at 7:30) 
books they read, and to plan their', m Oct. 20 at Bethany~ Baptist 
social life far enough ahead s0/ Church, and the district convention 
that there is no time for feeling will be held at 9:45 a.m. Oct. 28. 
lonely or left out. 
* * 
No two people who care about, i 
each other need dread the dele Whitmer Speaks 
when their childrerf are grown and; Dr. Dang Whitmer, superintend-) 
gone from home. It doesn’t have!ent of, Pontiac Schools spoke on 
to be a lonely time. Like the | ““School Financing,” when the Mc-; 
Whites, any couple can change|Carroll School PTA met Wednes-| 
from living for the children to liv-|day afternoon. Plans for the fair to! 
ing for themselves. 'be held Friday were completed, Mrs. Floyd Locke and Mrs. Rath 
  
  
  
      
  
  s Mrs. Frank Deaver, Mrs. Patten, = 
& United Presbyterian Church. i 
       
       CONT ! , 99 Alvin Stark, 14, of Jackson,| guests were present. them : 1.98—S4-Pe. 
Now Is the Time Miss., :a year old when the big) Mrs. John Brewer, president,| They sold the big old, house and ane ore exactly what of the cooperative luncheon. | Set of Dishes. . $6.95 
to ‘bomb fell on Hiroshima, thinks | gave a report on the state MOMS|built themselves a house exactly they wanted. Heading committees are Mrs. Pontiac Stati 
of the Japanese as “fanatics —! convention held in Saginaw last right for two persons who want @) They are both busy with hob- | Frank Hardenburg, Mrs. Elva aa a a : 
Repair or Remodel Your Ftirs’ | they were losing the war but would| month. Mrs. Inez Johnson of Hy-|home—te have as mich comfort) pies, some shared and some pur- | Ashley, Mrs. Caris, Mrs. John | JR Saeewe _Fepins., Z 
‘rather die instead of surrendering mera, Ind. a former member, was|@nd require as little care as pos-| syed without the other’s par-| Watkins, Mrs. Anne Thompson, § 4 N. Saginaw FE 2-422 §     
    
  
  (flnivesary 
  
      
    
  
            
  
——e GRINNELL’S, 27 -South-Saginaw-:Street   
}-Shoes for Young Folks 
  see Soa            
    
    
   ro as eo : ates . ; “ | ae” A 
— bP THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ocropER 0, 1958. | FOR eae 
ee Cak . = ~~ eo = second vice president; “Mrs. Em-| . pee : 
e, amg — Philathea Class ory Kalso, secretary; and Mrs./| Women’s Half Size © “ae ~ ‘ i 
aS xX {Holds Banquet — Jack Brien, assistant secre] DRESSES 
ee jand-Installation Others are Mrs. Harry Hagear Aranda collection br . , treasurer; Mrs. Florence Har-| Sizes 12%. to 2244 
Sa He New officers were installed at] court, sen conan Mrs. |} . “ S 
By a few: drope habkaeteer thatwen tate avek the annual banquet and: installa-|Maurice Scott, reporter; Mrs, Em-| e ‘or 
| more ofifine for you. They are low in tion of First PhilatheaClass of}ma Souther, assistant reporter; | 
ac: synthetic First Baptist Church, held Tues-|Mrs. Howard Barnett, pianist; | 
a :: - calorie count and you can have day evening at the church. Harcourt, chorister; Mrs.| Sho = j a little catsup witha dash of : Davis installed’ ae : teacher; Mrs. Warren Pp 
granted the they eat worcestershire satice or . horse- Margaret Putman, ge ve escott, first po serenttiga end Distinctive » Women's Apparel 
during period must radish to give flavor. When you Mrs, tt Ete and Mrs. Harry ‘| 718. W. Huron Only 
ty Hang gs. deeb have a sandwich make it an open president; Mrs. ~ eee eee 
off the exotic sauces, the luscious sneak cue; oaly one alice af brand. 
tidbits, hot buttered rolls, gravies, [ORE Eraied yormeian. Chases $6 fried foods and so on, bist you can con dts ck / We Like the 
Se Se Se ee ae cui a 9 
reducing menus with out. adding 
many calories. Use low calorie salad dressings. 195 
Here are ¢ suggestions. .You can make these using tomato 
Use skim julee or sauce as a base and 
you use butter make and lemon juice. “Always broil 
     
     
    
  
‘Oxford Shop 89 W. Huron St. 
    ~She’s taking a good,   
  
  
PAINTS 
beokiet en decors’ 
PAT LALLY HOUSE OF COLOR 3139 W, HURON ST. 
FE 8-0428 
  
  Come tn for onr FREE 16 ful 
color Pda aes “self before starting to diet. 
grim affair, but Josephine 
can       
     
             
   
      long, “last’ look at her- 
She thinks it’s a pretty 
Lowman advises that you 
flavor in many ways to your TASOnE ® menus 
without adding many calories.   
Members of the League of. Cath- 
olig Women met for a luncheon at 
the Pontiac Federal Savings and 
Loan Building this afternoon. 
    
  
       
       
      SPIED 
Watch Bands 
Na FE 2- 
  (11)   lewelers 
88 N. Saginaw) Chairman for the day was Mrs. 
Delmo Chapdelaine. 
On Wednesday, league members 
|attended the Northwestern Deanery 
"meeting and luncheon at Lake 
| Orion. 
| Mrs. Lewis gwartz, president, 
| has announced that the Archdio- 
cesan League's regular meeting 
will take place Oct, 30 in Ann 
. Arbor. Speaker for the occasion 
| will be Dr. Wilma Donohue, 
_chairman of the division of 
gerontology at University of 
| Michigan. 
| Mrs. W. J. Hinds reported that! 
| 400 cancer pads were sewn the past, 
month by members. 
The executive board will meet)   
  | 
  
      
  FINE 
    JEWELRY - GIFTS 
McKim Jewelry $41 Orchard Lake, FE 4-5065 : sister; Mrs. Hinds, 
     at the league building Oct. 20. 
Committee chairmen for the year 
}imclude Mrs. Arthur Crawford, 
‘Dean, membership and USO chair- 
‘man; Mrs. ynouse chairman; Mrs. ‘William Bt” 
-man: Mrs. Marshall Sprague, big, 
cancer chair-| 
Joseph McCarthy,| Catholic League M - 
publicity; Mrs. Frank O'Neil, 
cards; Mrs. T. H. Gottschalk, Fed-| 
eration of Women's Clubs; and 
|Mrs. T. A. Daily, Camp Fire: 
Girls chairman. 
E. Z. Kaplan to Wed 
New York Girl 
Dr. and Mrs. Burtis B. 
Breese of Rochester, N. Y., 
announce the engagement of 
| their daughter, Jane Burnett 
Breese; to Ethan Z. Kaplan 
of Chicago, Ill. His parents are 
former Pontiac residents, Mr. 
and Mrs. Morris J. Kaplan 
now of Chicago. . 
Miss Breese graduated from 
the University of Rochester 
and is now attending the Uni- 
versity of Chicago. Her fiance 
received his A.B. from the 
University of Chicago and is 
now working for his M.A. 
there, 
  A new look for that simple 
little black dress is found in 
10 rows of jet beads. Try it 
and see. 
  | lteaspoonful of chili sauce on. top ‘meats or chicken or fish. Never 
try, 
make them more. enjoyable at 
little calorie cost. If:you are sick 
to death of poached eggs, put a 
of them. 
diet will allow you pleasant and 
adequate meals and will result 
in a loss in pounds. 
Of course one of our problenss 
is the food we eat when at 
social oc¢asions. Take what is 
offered but take smaller helpings 
and no seconds, When no one is 
looking scrape off the rich sauce. 
Take the roll but don’t eat it. 
Take the dessert but eat only half 
of it or if it's a “help-yourself” 
affair, take a small amount. 
When the canapes are passed — 
concentrate on the carrot strips, | 
the cucumber canapes, the olives, 
celery and shrimp and avoid the 
cheese dips, the nuts and the 
creamy lovelies. 
On of the best -ways to prop 
up determination is to have some- 
one take a candid picture of you 
BEFORE and then AFTER. 
     
       
   
        
   
     
       -| Celery and capers added to meat> 
patties or to fish or chicken salad 
These simple changes in your) 
  Start the day in fine fashion 
-\styled to slim the shorter, oiler a 
half-sizer. 
Printed Pattern 4816: Half sizes | 
1434, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. 
Size 1644 takes 4 yards 39-inch 
fabric. 
Send 35 cents in coins for thi 
pattern — add 10 cents for each 
  (243 West 17th St., New York 11, 
  
    
  
i & 
FEDERAL OPEN EVERY 
Pontiac and 
dept. stores 
  bra by 
Here is the only brassiere in 
the world that fits you, in- 
stead of you fitting the bra. 
White cotton with wonderful 
neveride band. 32-38 A-B-C. 
2°90 
seene seven 
‘for comfort and 
». figure flattery. a A Naw...a wondrous 
SELF-FITTING 
Our expert corsetieres 
will fit you correctly ( M Monday through Saturday : 
Drayton Plains i * 
NIGHT TO 9 A 
   
        
     
       
         ] If you missed my 9-Day Reducing 
Diet which gives you a loss of! 
from five to 10 pounds in nine 
days send 10 cents and a stamped, 
self-addressed envelope with your 
request to Joséphine Lowman in 
care of this newspaper. 
* * * 
} Tomorrow: “You Can Lose a| 
Lot of Weight and Not Be Flabby.” 
  
Dresses, skirts and sleeves 
and collars, too, take to fringe 
this fall. Both wool and silk 
    get this new and interesting 
treatment.           Mrs. Greathouse 
‘Heads Committee 
| Mrs. 
‘pointed chairman of the Ingather- 
jing Committee - for Needlework 
i|Guild when members of Alpha 
| Chapter of Beta Theta Phi Sorority 
‘met Tuesday evening at the Sylvan 
|Shores home of Mrs: John Kinzler. 
| Mrs. Glenn Grim will assist Mrs. 
|Greathouse. 
| Each member of the sorority has 
‘been asked to bring articles for in this crisp and fresh casual that’ s      
     
      
  
     Gi 
wy 
5 
      
  pattern if you wish Ist-class mail. @ 
Send to Anne Adams, care of The © 
Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., © 
N.Y. Print plainly name, address # with zone, size and style number. © 
1 
% 
; 
Jack Greathouse was ap- | 
Needlework Guild-to the next meet- 
ing Nov. 4. —+ 
    
PARE LLL OIA EE Se a 
         
      oo 
te wnoeTn 
    
        
          F © WHITE 
> @BLUE . 
@ MINT 
* PINK PEGGY'S 
Irregulars) from a famous maker, ie tt PE RBS. ai Fae 
SAGINAW 57. 
  by famous: manufacturers 
UP TO 
@ MAIZE © BEIGE 
@ BROWN ‘@ TURQUOISE 
© POWDER © COPPER 
@ BLACK @ RED 
¥% Short Sleeve Full Fashioned Ban-Lon Slip-Overs— 
Sizes 34 to 40. Regular 6.98 value eoeee er anene 
% Long Sleeve Full Fashioned Ban-Lon Cardigans— 
"Regular 12.99 values! 2...........-..-- eeenens 
* 
* Novelty Cardigans and Slip-ons — All Full 
Fashioned — Regular 14.95 yalues eee ee ene     
    
     
        
   
           
   
           
      rl 
Black Calf 
Briarwood Calf 
High or*Mid-Heel 
Matching Bags of Course 
“ eet DRM: Ge 
OUR BEST 
SWEATER BUY 
YA OT We purchased the complete stock of better sweaters (First Quality and 
Fine ‘short sleeve Banlons, 34 sleeve 
novelty cardigans and slip-ons, and long sleeve cardigans in the most beau- 
tiful colors, and all FULL FASHIONED. Buy several at these low, low prices. 
6.9 YET! 
Last 
3.9 
5.9 CHEMISE OR TRAPEZE. os 
  ‘PEGGY'S te NORTH sacinaw st. 
ta put you in step with fashion's 
smartest new styles. ——ore J 
3% wwe 
= 
oi 15.95 
     oor * * P4e eg Co rve tte by 
... slim, sleek and sophisticated, 
as seen in GLAMOUR 
one 
me 
ee 
Oe 
ee 
eee 
Re ee 
eh 
& 
& 
& 
% 
& 
« 
        
  
       
      
       
        * 
    —— . Ts yd 
3 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘tHURSDAY, OCTO! 
      
     
  
\ tr Le ae POSE LHe Tht OO So] 
pte 
eee. é 
bea 
mea 
ees 
  
aimee SR RRC ees 
  
       
     
     
        
    
         
  
    
                
      
        
  ° e e e eee @®@ e 
Sele ele 
ee? ecee, A 
. . . e G@ee0® 
WHO’S THE WIE) : 
aioe 
2| BUSIEST | iS : 
You know him well. On his daily rounds he calls on nine out of 
every ten homes\ in town. Every door opens wide for him. Every 
family warmly welcomes him. He knows more of our town than 
anyone else in the world—and more of the world than anyone else 
in our town. He brings you news of every product and servicé for 
sale. And about each he tells you all you need to know. 
He comes and goes at your convenience; returns at your command. 
He’s consulted on almost every purchase made in our community. 
7 Who is this perfect salesman? He’s with you now—your daily news- 
*. paper. The busiest, most successful salesman in town. 
THE TOTAL-SELLING MEDIUM IS THE DAILY NEWSPAPER . 
; | — , 
4 . _ : - . ’ } ; 
Published in the interest of more effective advertising by” . 
. a t Ly ‘ i » . F as ; : . . - . . 
         
    4 1 é ; A ry 2 ____- nts ane ns ¥ : < f 
\ 
  
  
  , ovie Qu ¢ apni en Hides F 1 is) see ine Siu oT thease 
Ma vie olicaaines or they aie cae 
Sheila is a movieidim corner of the Stork Club in- 
  by PRviuas natrene: 
. NEW YORK — Sheila Ramani 
siaaied into town, last week. And,|?. pond they are. rend t dnt the customers if : oe 
pectin: rae, she more or less| wear although she is toothsome, SS Eh Soc see perfect, rom India In India, she says,| 
  
—|than baloney. 
Sex appeal, as you call it, ra 
| from the nose up.” 
She pitched out a-slow under- 
healthy form of love. dramatics, 
explained, has caused realistic di- 
rectors and producers in India a 
—igeed—deal_of trouble in _ recent} 
<jyears. They've tried almost every- 
thing to get around it... from 
putting swords between the teeth 
of their heroes, to whipping up dust 
storms in the climatic moments of 
great romances. 
Most commen solution, how- 
ever, is to bring the couple into 
one another's arms and then 
shift the camera delicately into a 
pan of the moon. India’s pictures 
often de more justice to the moon 
than the stars.. 
Sheila, who has played lead roles 
‘for six years—since she answered 
’ * jthe want ad at the age of 2i—is 
which was christened and launched in Jyly, is #80 @ producer. She explains that 
shown as it made a stop at Sault Ste. Marie. ear cries Pail ran Rory 
Ranger III is 165 feet in length, 34 feet in beam they sign up big n = ‘ = 
and has a draft of 10 feet. credit, then invite wealthy friends   NEW MOTOR VESSEL FOR ISLE ROYALE 
— Ranger Ill, the new motor vessel which will 
provide passenger cargo service to Isle Royale 
National Park from Houghton. The new vessel,   
  - |lash curve. “We think it is a more’ miu 
=}perhaps, than the western way.”’,0gist said _ 
. The ban against kissing, it was to what {s called a “muhurut;” the| 
[paeee of which is earthly, 
! of which 
| SELF-SER POC De “ot; FORTY FIVE. 
st 
i 
Bonds gore DRUG STORES 
    
ducer in a difficult situation, since | 
the plot and locale had nothing 
ito do with. momeane. 
. = ee “ee 
“They. solved = of course. Made 
the heroirie’s last name -‘Moun- 
tain,’ though she was a little thing. | 
‘And so you see,” supplemented | 
Sheila, “the movie was a towering 
success.” ; 
  
Spaniards Promenade 
MADRID — “People-watching”’ 
is a popular pastime in Spain. | 
Every evening an informal parade | 
is staged, even in the smallest, 
towns, with husbands showing otf 
their wives, wives showing off new) 
clothes, and young people carrying 
on discreet flirtations. In some 
towns the unmarried men and 
women walk in opposite directions, 
the better to see and be seen.     
Enjoy summer fun 
in a king-size way... 
give an | 
    
    
              with King Size COKE! ets. 6.6. Pat, OFF 
given here, then shop at your grocer’s for all the fixings. Of course he’s featuring that big 
picnic favorite... King Size-Coke! What a handy way to get more of : 
the réal refreshment, more of the cold crisp taste of Coca-Cola. ‘ese 
* King Size Coke is great for king-size thirsts, so stock up | 
  _4ndoor Picnic Whatever the weather, enjoy the fun of a picnic...right at home! Just take your pick of the recipes         
          
    
     
   
   
       
   3-Speed $1.50 Bottle $2.00 Bottle 
SEAN AND FRANK CAS- VITAMIN BREWER'S aoe 
ade canned baked = B-1 10 Mg. ane Coe ves a tasty sur- : ¢ . 
top with, lit d 88s Bottle of 500 tab- Guaranteed 1 year. 
Removable cover. 
UL approved.    Bottle of 100 tab- 
lets. Aids digestion. lets. High in pro- 
tein. 
      i 
Fe 
: 
    
NEW, MODERN 9 NOXZEMA for Problem Skin ALARM CLOCKS 
sizzir «=o YPC $2.98 Values *] 88 
look what a lot of time a Greaseless, medicated skin        
         
     
    
                    
                         
    
         
   
             
    
   oo 90 SIZE eee 
limited time 
offer! — 
DESERT 
FLOWER 
hand and 
body 
lotion 
  SHULTON offers you a big, B-ounce 
bottle of this luxurious lotion — for 
half the regular price. Contains the 
“heart” of lanolin—nature’s magic 
ingredient that softens, tones ond 
restores moisture to your skin. Non- 
greasy ... melts instantly into dry, 
thirsty areas. Buy DESERT FLOWER 
.HAND ond BODY LOTION now... 
while this offer fasts! 
FILM SALE! ist 2.65 Kodachrome daylight or 
rtificial 8mm roll type film. .1.75 
    
on cartons of Coca-Cola in big King Size today.      
      
      MAWAIIAN RIBS. Combine 1 can con- Garnish your Hawaiian ribs with pine- MAKE TYME CLEAN-UP EASY: With 
densed consomme with 1 cup orange apple and green pepper cubeson picks, paper plates, napkins and cups you 
marmalade, }4 cup each catsup and half tomatoes stuffed with coleslaw. can clean up in a jiffy, and they're 
vinegar. Marinate pork ribs in sauce, It’s these little touches that make the part of the fun of the picnic. Just fill 
grill, basting often with sauce. Deli-* difference . . . just as Coke makes a the cups with Coke and you're set for 
cious with’ Coke. difference, too. a pleasant picnic. 
YOUR GROCER IS FEATURING ALL THE MAKINGS! 
    SNACK TRAY. A picnic tenting estes only 40 Coms-Cola! TUNA SALAD ROLLS. Add diced celery, onion and capers 
to drained, flaked tuna. Moisten with salad dressing*\_- ‘ Coke actually freshens up your taste between bites, 
Heap into split and buttered rolls. Let guests help them- § makes every mouthful more delicious. No wonder Coke 
: gelves to Coke, served in an ice-filled plastic bucket is a favorite with food. So'treat guests to the real 
(available at your grocer’s). People do help themselves —_refreshment—Coca-Cola. They'll appreciate your good 
to Coke over 58 million times a day. taste in serving Coca-Cola, ice-cold !. 
    Remember— 
COKE and Good Taste 
go together! 
Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by 
      'piente sticKs. Place slice of American cheese between 
itwo slices of canned luncheon meat. Slice into sticks, 
fasten with picks. This easy “finger food’’ tastes so good — 
with sparkling Coca-Cola. In fact, the cold crisp taste of 
Coke brings out the flavor of almost any dish you serve. 
           
                   
                    
     little bit of mone ill buy. fm cream. Excellent for burns, 
Money back susraniee.. uM chapped hands, softens skin. 
   Helene Curtis 
SPRAY NET IPANA PLUS © 
DENTIFRICE 
si.i9siz R° s1.35Size  §R° 
Modern women won't set 
their hair without it. Fine 
spray mist. Makes hair man- 
ageable. New formula Ipana with WD-9 
destroys decay bacteria. 
Sweetens breath. SAVE 3lc.     
    
    
    
      = J = # 
GERITOL ‘GELUSIL 
Liquid or Tablets LIQUID 
$2.98 § 88. $1.49 83° oo om 
CIGARETTE 
LIGHTERS 
$2.50 c 
Values     
      
  Value Value 
   
  , BONNE BELL 
PLUS 30 LOTION 
Vitalizes your skin. smooths away telling 
lines for a years-younger look Perfect 
make-up base during day— 
make-up goes On smoother — 
stoys fresh longer Plus 30 
lotion restores precious 
moisture to summery dried 
skin, fortifies and renews 
complexion beouty- 
| D omc 
* Huron Corner Telegraph    
        
       
   
           
   
    
    
  x 148 N. Saginaw 
Near Sears 
Ay     List 4.00 Kodachrome 8mm maga- 
sine-type daylight, artificial. .2.89 
List 6.35 Kodachrome 16mm mag. 
type daylight or artificial film 4.63 
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      FORF TSX z es ———————— a Se       
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  PIOUS MOTHER AL TAR BOY 
ho was to become Pope Pius XII, had decided to be a 
Roman Catholic priest by the time he was ten years old. He might, like his 
father and grandfather, have been a successful Roman lawyer. But his early 
determination to become a priest pleased both his parents and they did every- 
thing possible to foster his interest in that direction. 
Born in Rome March 2, 1876, Eugenio had an older brother and two sisters. 
Their mother, a pious woman, inculcated religious faith in her children as soon 
as they were able to understand her words. A studious boy, Eugenio donned the 
cassock for the first time when he was ten years old and became an altar wey at 
the parish church in the center of old Rome. “Eugenio Pacelli, w 
VATICAN JOB 
When Eugenio Pacelli was ordained a Roman Catholic priest at the age of 22, 
he accepted a post as instructor in canon law at the Apollinare Academy. But his 
teachers’ accounts of his brilliance already had reached the Vatican — the place 
where he someday would reign as Pius XII. Thus, instead of going to the Academy, 
he was summoned to the Vatican to become an apprentice in the Congregation for 
Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, which is a kind of investigation bureau for 
the Vatican Secretariat of State. 
Pacelli aided Pietro Cardinal Gaspari in codifying canon law and became for 
a time, as he later said, ‘‘a library mouse.’’ He never again left the shadow of the 
_ Vatican. Twice he aecepted professbrships in Catholic institutions, but each time 
Gasparri persuaded him to change his mind. 
  LIBRARY MOUSE 2 
  : ae Soa. ae a 
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, OcTORER 9, 1958 | : See 
enhow ‘on Way. eens New Soe ere 
eying. He lo a oe UNITED. NATIONS, NY. “Py 
     _..... NUNS'’- SCHOOL ee 
He first attended a nuns’ school, then the Royal Lyceum and then -the 
Capranica College. Throughout his school career he-lived at home with his parents, 
An exceptional student, he won many honors. Well_versed in.Latin and Greek, he 
also showed great aptitude in modern languages. This aptitude led to fluency in six 
languages — Italian, French, German, English, Spanish and Portugese. As Pope 
he often surprised visitors from remote countiies by his fluency in their languages 
—a cultivated product of his studies. 
At the age of 22 he was ordained a priest and said his first Mass in the 
Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore. In reporting it, the Vatican newspaper Osserva- 
tore Romano predicted a.‘‘great future” for-Pacelli. But it could not, naturally, 
forsee the steps that would lead the young priest to the Pages: 
  
CORONATION TRIP 
In 1901 he made the first of his many trips abroad as papal emissary when he 
carried to London a persona! letter of ¢éondclence from Pope Leo XIII to Edward VII 
on the death of Queen Victoria. He returned for the Londen Eucharistic Congress in 
1908. He made a third visit to England in 1911 for the coronation of King George V 
and received the Coronation Medal. Thus he was the only Pope in history with a 
British decoration. 
#iie moved up to the post of Secretary for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs 
in 1913. When Benedict XV became Pope in 1914, Gasparri became Secretary of 
State and Pacelli Undersecretary of State. 
(Continued Tomorrow) 
    to Mountain Retreat yey or 
  
  | Tunisia and Argentina are 
oe nor mene fe UN Se 
    
  
  
          
      
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Choose from several decorated pat- 
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16-Pc. Starter Sets just *2.88   
° Tel-Huron Center 
and others! All available 
in open stock.     
. they will resume full-scale classes 11 Negro students until the Clinton Baby Girl Dies of Polio; 
in on 00 oves under guard, building, wrecked Sunday by three <3 — 
“Clinton High School,” dynamite blasts, can be restored—|Detroit’s 17th Victim 
was placed on Linden Elementary Probably months away. The ex- 
‘School at Oak Ridge, vacant for Plosions caused $300,000 damage. A sign, 
Pupils fo Oak Ridge 
CLINTON, Tenn. ‘two years. The school was made 
the white and Negro pupils of its owner. 
bombed Clinton High School - to| x * * 
nearby Oak Ridge today where | It will serve’ the a white and Miss. (AP)—A_ yel: available to Clinton officials by | The last heavyweight champion- 
low caravan of school buses takes the Atomic Energy Commission, ship fought with bare knuckles|was the city’s 17th polio death of| 
'was between John L. ‘Sullivan and |the year. 
Jake Kilrain in 1889 at Richbourg, shots. 
of Detroit’s polio epidemic. 
Sharon Scott’s death Wednesday period of 1957. 
  
She was one of. six 
authorities none of the family had' year. received any Salk polio me | 
| Four new polio cases were 2s] 
| ported in the city Wednesday to 
DETROIT (AP) — A tiny 10-|\pring the total thus far this year| month-old girl is the latest victim | to 553, compared with 173 cases 
and two deaths for the =e 
India’s population is gaining at 
children. Her mother told health|a rate of about five million per, 
  
  
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    “ - ss  PHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 <___FORTY-SEVEN 
iS ine Cha oe [Pope . Pius -FENGON |sisted of soup, eggs or fish, vege-| ton. iz | 
24 . cheese. s ne . 
nd chocolate, He drank one glass|age was the one he made to the 
  be 
  
STOVE INSTALLED 
the news. At the last election, they * * * 
CARDINALS RULE 
_. The cardinals, princes of the 4F 
, Church while the Pope lived, be-| “A long oath required of the car-   _|and those of the pontifical almon-   ments along Raphael's loggias, 
er, 
Each cardinal will have three 
or four small reoms in which to 
live with his conelave secretary 
and servant, Each 
apartment will be outfitted with 
beds, tables and chairs, and 
litte more. They will be as- 
signed by lot. i 
At°their sessions in the Sistine 
Chapel, the cardinals will sit along 
the walls, under the silken cano- 
pies, before desks on which rest 
silver ink wells and quill pens. 
The church's severest sanction, 
excommunication, may be visited 
upon any persons who violate the 
secrecy imposed on the conclave. 
LIPS ARE SEALED   ope ips if iy 
    
ule i fi 2 FF etl 
z| + 
  
  
Promoted at Lawrence 
DETROIT # — The Michigan 
Trucking Assn.'s 1958 Roadeo will 
be held Oct. 11-12 at Northland 
. More than 35 professional 
trick drivers will compete in six 
tests. | 
  
Care of mentally ill persons in 
  the U. S. costs taxpayers at least 's Election] about its doings. Only the|and | | 
z 
cf 
a 
5 
g F] 
: 
: i   
must have special per-|it an honor to bea member of the} from the ranking pom ase Vatican's only Academy, that of 
and i ; Science. > 
members of the Atomic Energy 
But the man who could refer to 
the most extensive documentation 
on human knowledge in existence 
remained nevertheless a simple 
priest at heart. , 
His private life was restricted 
to a few hours at the end of 
the day, It was then he received 
his intimate 
his private 
_ eazzi-Lisi, 
A nun, Mother Pasqualina, with 
two assistants, all three Swiss and 
of venerable age, prepared the 
Pope’s meals and looked after his 
apartment, Mother Pasqualina had 
done this for 30 years. Her main 
worry was to get him to eat 
more. 
His breakfast, after having cel- 
ebrated his daily mass, consisted 
of a-piece of bread with coffee. physician, Dr. Gal- 
  The Pope stopped eating butter        Ht ? g 
esliaborators and |Fratice 
and the Argentine, nearly always 4 
*‘Look.’' He then passed the razo: 
a few times over his chin. “‘Si,’ 
said the barber sadly, ‘‘it is true.’ 
by air. 
els ceased, He only left the Vati- 
of American Catholics. 
No. 1. 
to take him to the Vatican gar- 
dens, which cover almost one- 
half of the Vatican city, for his   When he became Pope, his trav- 
can to go to his summer resi- 
dence, Castel Gandolfo. He trav- 
eled in a black Cadillac, a gift 
Every Ital- 
ian knows the number plate, S.C.V. 
es) 
The automobile was also tsed , unperturbed, .continued to creatures|Pe Out his next speech on his). 
  who the were three : 
birds — two canaries and a chaf-|_ Tree years later he became 
finch — who are so tame that|?oP¢ Pius XII. they perched ney bol pe er Sagan a 
"the scvom aeermet wal QTCINAl Hears the Pope occupied is very sparsely ' . 
andes d Os atte a nee tA I in his bedroom, there is only =:\News by Radio 1 
rest consists of a chapel, a} Hungary Likely Will Not 
eg gm at = Let Josef Mindszenty 
“This modest apartment is in| Go to Rome ~ one of the oldest and most 
beautiful palaces im the world. | vienna Austria (AP) — Hun- The —— represents — gary’s Roman Catholic primate, 
Pius XM introduced the remedy ap rqer ge ay 
technical aids of his century. He atria XII, Western sources in Budapest 
said. 
* * * 
Cardinal Mindszenty has been a 
refugee in the U.S. Legation in 
Budapest for nearly two years, 
Hungarian revolution. The card- 
inal apparently heard of the 
Pope’s death from the Vatican 
‘Radio. “You are wrong” replied Pius XII. x *® 
_| The Hungarian news agency 
, MTI quoted a government spokes- 
jcontemplates no offer to let Card- 
inal Mindszenty go to Rome to 
attend a College of Cardinals 
meeting for election of a new) 
Pope. The possibility of such an 
offer was reported here Wednes- 
day, 
Ford Declares Dividend 
DETROIT  — Ford Motor Co. 
today declared a 40-cent quarterly 
dividend payable Dec. 11 to stock- 
(holders of record Nov, 10. It com-| 
pares with a similar dividend in 
ithis year’s previous quarter and) 
ja 60-cent dividend in the same 
\1957 quarter. sd   
    come its reigning sovereigns on'dinals and their aides seals their'$] billion qa year as of 1957. 
-4 Sw 
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” Trees Topple in 
- Lightning Strike A flash rain and hai] storm, winds snapped trees, sending them 
which darkened the sky shortly across roads and power lines, the 
toppled trees, Oakland County Road Commission! of Rochester, Another tree struck after 8 a.m. today, 
knocked out power and telephone reported. 
lines and flooded streets in several; No serious damage or 
northern Oakland County 
communities, 
In the Ortonville area, missed) Several streets in Romeo were 
this morning by the storm, a house; empletely -fleoded during the 
was struck by lighting last night, downpour, blocking many sew- 
causing an estimated $4,000 dam- ep, 
age. 
The two-story dwelling is the ‘Orion, however. injuries) 
area were reported there or in Lake x * * 
Romeo State Police reported a minutes, Storm; 
s House large tree was blown across Roch- 
ester road, abqut two miles north 
= ets 
line near the Bernard 
Main St. a power 
Desmond home, 450 N. 
The brunt of the storm apparent- 
ly bypassed south Oakland com- 
‘munities, according to reports 
‘from fire and polite departments 
there, Rain fell hard for about five   
  
home of the Clifford Nienow fam- 
ilv, 45 Cedar St. lt was struck 
about 9:40. 
No one was injured, according ~ 
to Fire Marshal Witliam Buck- 
ingham, who estimated that 
damage to the house ang its elec- 
trical wiring at about $3,000 and Newly Martied 
Couple to Live 
« at Whipple Lake 
to contents at $1,000. | CLARKSTON — Making their) 
Many phones in the area, served, home at 9110 Evee Rd., Whipple} 
bs te (cena Telephone Co.,|Lake are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. 
wepe still out of order this morn- 
ing. 
Inch-thick hailstones pounded 
window panes in the. Gingellville 
area in Orjon Township  shortly}t 
alter daybréak today and heavy 
Marine Band 
fo Play in Area 2 Performances Slated 4.31. families, 
in Rochester High Gym 
Night Classes Slated 
at Avondale High ifrom a wedding trip in the West. 
the Rev. John Baltz, pastor. 
The former Mrs. 
  
Hollis of Oxford. 
| Gatlinburg. 
  
ROCHESTER — The 57-piece, 
red-coated U.S. Marine Corps Band 
will give two performances 
Wednesday in Rochester. _ 
The nation’s oldest military sym- 
phonic organization, the band is 
led by Lt. Col. Albert Schoepper. 
Its appearance here is being spon- 
sored by the Rochester Tuesday | 
Musicale. classes will begin Monday at Avon- 
to Claude J. Wiseman, director. 
First performance will be a 
matinee at 1 p.m. in the Rech- 
ester High School gymnasium for 
students. The second, open to the 
public will take place at 8 p.m. 
in the gym, which has a 2300 
seating capacity. Eight-hundred 
reserved seats are being sold for 
the evening performance. 
Acting as ushers for both shows 
will be members of the Rochester 
High School Band. Other area) 
school bands have been invited to 
attend the concerts. 
The afternoon performance will ‘class will meet for one two-hour | 
session each week. 
Registration will be taken at 7 
p.m. 
school, Wiseman said. 
Classes being offered this year 
are shorthand, bookkeeping, be- 
ginning and advanced typewrit- 
ing, square dancing, beginning 
and advanced cake decorating, 
Spanish, French -and driver 
training for adults. 
all ages, according to co-chairmen 
Mrs. Sally Boeberitz and Miss Nat- 
alie Stevenson. The evening con-|Persons enrolled or 
cert will consist of symphonic num.| discontinued. it will 
              Frank Devips, who have returned. 
They were married at St. Mary’s| 
|Church in Gatlinburg Yenn., by 
Emma_ Hollis 
of Clarkston, the bride was given 
in marriage by her son, Edgar 
Matron of honor was Mrs, John- 
|nie Conner, and serving his brother 
‘as best man was John Devins of 
Following the double-ring cere- 
mony a reception was held at the 
Mountain View Hotel in Gatlinburg 
for members of the couple’s imme- 
AVONDALE — Adult education ‘to become acquainted 
dale Senior High School. according .. 
The program will run for 10) 
|weeks, starting next week. Each Lock Doors in Order 
Monday in room 106 of the \door-locking system which involves| 
If enough persons are interested 
in a particular course not offered, 
be aimed at pleasing students of Wiseman said he would attempt to 
have it included in the program. 
Each class must have at least 12 
be BPW Sponsors | 
i 1 
i 
i 
      
  
Night Program Club at Walled Lake 
Asks Women Employes 
From 80 Firms - ' 
WALLED LAKE — The Walled 
Lake Business and Profession Wo- 
men’s Club is sponsoring a “‘Know 
Walled Lake Night’ at 7:30 p.m. 
Monday at Stonecrest. 
Invitations have heen extended 
to more than 80 business establish- 
ments in the area asking them to} 
send a woman employe to the, 
affair. For firms not having wo- 
man employes, it has been sug- 
gested owners send their wives. 
Each representative will speak 
briefly about her business. 
A welcome will be extended by 
|Mayor William: Nixon and greet- 
‘ings will be given by Mrs. Emil) gowan chose a waltz-length gown 
,Couture, club president. of rose point lace over bridal 
| Following the more formal part! gatin. It featured a Sabrina neck- 
of the program, a reception will be} jine of scalloped lace and a fitted | ROC HESTER — 
Church in Rochester was the Scene 
Saturday afternoon of the marriage 
of Johnnie Irene Taylor to James 
. Rowan. The candlelight rite 
was performed by the Rev. Donald, 
Olsen. 
* * * 
The bride is the daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. John Taylor of 2874 
Woodelm St. Parents of the bride- 
groom are the Harry Rowans of 
2879 Alexander St. 
For her wedding, the new Mrs.         |held giving the ladies opportunities) podice. | 
according to| 
iMrs. Ted Christensen, general’ 
chairman. Her fingertip veil fell from a: 
headpiece of seed pearls, and she 
- |earried a cascade bouquet of white 
|Chinese mums and white carna-| 
| tions. | 
‘| x * *   
      | HEMPSTEAD, N.Y — A Hemp-| 
T)stead concern is marketing a new)   
ithe use of locks actuated by 
series of interconnected keys. The 
layout is said to make it impossi- 
ible to forget to lock any of the 
doors involved when locking up for Faubus Tax Bill. 
tema sine cn dor an | AAS 10 Probe The system prevents the locking| 
of the final exit door until every 
‘other door has been locked. 
to “Investigate © Error) 
- Made by Subordinate | 
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI)—A| 
\five-state regional supervisor of| Handling of machinery is top| 
cause for most fatal accidents on 
American farms. Second cause 
for fatalities in the rural areas is | 
\ drowning. 
      
bers, overtures, novelty tunes and| 
martial airs. 
The band is scheduled to arrive 
in Pontiac ut-10 a.m. Wednesday. 
White Lake CD 
Officers Picked Classes in First Aid, 
Auxiliary Police Being 
Organized Now   
WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — 
Appointment of several new offi- 
cers has been announced by the 
White Lake Township Civil De- 
fense unit. 
They include: Clayton Walters, 
township engineering deputy; 
James Roy, assistant township po-|- 
lice deputy; Sibyl Mohr, chiéf sec- 
tor warden, sector 7; Gwen Pow- 
ers, personnel officer, and Doris 
Foster, public relations. 
It also was announced that 
first aid and guxiliary police 
training classes are being or- 
ganized. 
The first aid class will begin 
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the White 
Lake Township Hall, Meeting for 
two hours a week, it will continue 
              training$ class will! 
start at 7:30 p.m., Oct. 23 at the 
Dublin Community Center. on, 
Union Lake road. It will run for! 
eight weeks, with sessions being, 
two hours. | 
Anyone interested in enrolling | 
may contact Eleanor Vetter. { 
i] 
i The police 
is introduced by Paul Jordan, 1 
cago Wednesday. The 
Ampitheater. 
competition.   
  
RADIATION BELT   JUNIOR CHAMPION GUERNSEY — Flowing Springs Be Bop 
ton’s Chico, a chihuahua, at the International Dairy Shaw in Chi- 
7-day, show is being held at the International 
About 1,770 heads of cattle tthe Internal Revenue Service be- 
lgins today a personal imvestiga-| 
tion of an income tax bill sent to) 
Gov. Orval E. Faubus “by mis- 
take.” , : 
The regional superintendent, 
B? Frank White of Dallas, Tex., 
said he was making ‘‘a trip to | 
Little Rock to see fer myself | 
what is going on.” 
Faubus got what is known as a 
‘10-day letter’ from the IRS, say- ! 
ing he had 10 days in which to. 
protest the tax request. But most, 
of the items the IRS said the) 
lgovernor owed back taxes on were, 
rent on his executive mansion, 
servants and a gift automobile. 
District IRS Director Curtis R.| 
Mathis immediately said ‘‘some-| 
body goofed,”’ explaining that 
nothing which a state lawfully 
furnishes its governor is mubject 
to such taxes. 
Meanwhile, W. C. Brashears, 
the newly-appointed superintend- 
ent of schools of the Little 
Rock Private Schools Corpora- 
tion, took a six-man committee 
on a tour of churches, lodge 
halls and rumpus rooms last | 
night. The group talked over | 
where to put in makeshift par- 
| titions and sized up places which 
might be used as emergency 
classrooms.   
“Time is getting short,” said 
Brashears, who came out of re- 
tirement to take the superintend- 
ent's job, ‘‘and we've got to get 
, “|these buildings ready for stu- 
UPT Phote dents.” Brashears retired last 
spring after 11 years:as a grade 
school principal. 
The Private School Corporation’s 
President, Dr. TO. J. Raney, said 
the amount of money collected for 
the schools ‘‘won’t be known until 
we get ready to release it publicly. 3, of Mount Gilead, Ohio, to Min- 
are entered in the 
          
jwere, exchanged Saturday 
jnoon at St. 
Gayle Winkler and Harry A. Julien. 
Performing the rite was the Rev. 
William C. Hamm 
| The bride is the daughter of Mrs. 
Kathryn Winkler of 292 Lakeview 
RADIATION-FREE ZONES AT} |Dr.. Lake Orion, and William R. 
NORTH AND SOUTH POLES | Winkler of Manchester, ‘ents of the bridegroom are Mr. 
and Mrs. 
'E* Flint St. LakeOrion, 
The bride chose - a floor-length 
gown of nylon tulle, featuring a 
fitted bodice, V-shaped neckline 
and long sleeves, Her fingertip 
veil of silk illusion fell from a 
headpiece trimmed with pearls 
and séquins, 
          
LOOPHOLES INTO SPACE — 
The recently discovered band of 
lethal radiation’around the earth | 
may not be a barrier to space 
travel as first thought. Dr. Her- 
bert York, chief Pentagon scie#ss| 
list, says that there are radia- | 
lion-free zones near the poles | 
through which mien could safely 
leap into space. ‘Dr.. York says | 
that. except for these “holes,” 
  She carried a white satin cres- 
cent bouquet of Amazon lilies, Jo- 
data from the Explorer IV sate]. hanna Hill roses and a ivy. 
lite show the radiation belt ap- | Attending the bride were Joanne 
parently extends some 1,400 Blarka of Pittsburgh Pa and 
mules out. jAdele Leslie of Frankenmuth, Kathleen Winkler Wed in 
LAKE ORION — Marriage vows 
after- 
Mary's in the Hills 
Church in Lake Orion by Kathleen 
Mieh. Par- 
Donald M,_dulien of 240 1) Lake Orion’ | 
Best man was James E, Jones 
dr. of Pontiac, and ushers were 
Art Howland of Walled Lake and 
John Page of Lake Orion, 
A reception was held at the home 
of Mr. and Mrs, Lewis E. Lucas, 
915 Orion Dr., Lake Orion: A buf- 
fet supper was served. 
+ « -*€ 
The newlyweds will make their 
home in Pontiac. 
  ‘Avondale PTA to Hear’ 
Talk by MSUO Official 
| AVONDALE — Dr, Roy J. Alex- jander, director. of student services 
jat Michigan State University Oak- 
beat will be guést speaker. at the 
Avondale Juntor High School Par-| 
ent-Teacher-Student Associ a tio n 
imeeting at 8 p.ms Oct. 19. : 
| He will discuss plans and -pro- MR. AND MRS, JAMES E. ROWAN 
Rowan-Taylor Nuptials — 
Solemnized at Rochester 
First > Baptist|groom’s sister, Jean. Bridesmaid 
was Wilma Cummings of Utica, 
and flower girl was Janey Kay 
Taylor, sister a the pride 
* 
Robert Smith ve os was 
best man, and ushers were the 
bride’s brother, Rébert, Richard 
Smith and Elmer Close. 
A- reception was held at the 
home of the bridegroom's par- 
ents. 
Following their joneymoon in 
northern Michigan the newlyweds 
will make their home at 2 
Alexander St. 
Southfield Name Names 3 
to Board of Review 
SOUTHFIELD — Positions on all | 
|Southfield city boards have been es ‘Mrs. Ralph is organist; Mr 
Fitch, chaplain; Mrs. Jesse Spark-   
    elected worthy matron and Marvin 
Roberts, worthy patror. 
* * * 
“Other officers include Ruth 
| Ream, associate matron; O s¢ ar 
‘Ream, associate patron; Mrs. How- 
ard Johnson, secretary; Mrs. Roy 
Mrs. Harold 
| man Gentry, associate eonductress. 
_|EMPLOY-19 PEOPLE + 3 
    *— marshal: Hareld|— 
man,. Mrs, Homer Viondi, ~Mvs. 
Samuel Sparkman, “Mrs. Robert 
Morse, and Mrs. Murie] Sanderson, 
star points; Mrs>Margaret.Thrash- 
er, warder; and Herman Gantry, 
sentinel. 
ar, Lorena Paine- and Priscilla 
Bevin. : 
<8 8 # : 
Elected Auxiliary officers were 
Bernice Griffith, Elaine Milleur, 
Milfred Broadway,. Dorothy . An- 
drews; Margaret Eageeond and 
Martha Johnson.    
Color bearers are Thelma Bon. >     
             
     
           
          hed.) Air Force. Tries * 
| A EE toFire 
Mc 
  _The complete operation is. 
being trangferred. to. Ortonville, 
Grubb. said; = 
Production expected. = a eas 
here in te SEE Se aS 
“Main reason for~the transier; “flouse 
Grubb ‘said, is that“the.company| tee: 
could employ local men, workers}. 
who live in the tewn where the The 
plant is located. He-also mentioned} “Able.       ; James T. Patterson “(R-~ 
    
Lake Orion Board ‘Ackpaniebe:   
School Loan 
        ‘Community Schoel Board last} 
night announced the sale of $150,-! 
(000 in notes to the Communit ¥11 505 books, pamphlets and maga-| National Bank of Pontiac at an 
jinterest ‘rate of 1.73 per cent a 
year. 
| The loan was made against 
future state aid payments. It 
will enable the school district to 
meet its teacher payroll . this * LAKE ORION The Lake Orion) that the move will bring him closer Nae wa 
to his home in Clarkston. “Aly Force scientists tell me 
The transfer was thade possi- | that changes ~of a successiul shot 
“are about )” Patterson said. 
ina. statement released at his> 
office here Wednesday aight 
: x * & 
He said the Thor-Able will be of $150,000 equipped with infrared camers te 
moon, Pictures would be trans- 
Proper “School, and the Dec. 10| mitted back to earth by coded. meeting at Carpenter School. signal ee chet af the ni Sa 
A réport from the Lake Orion 
High   Sehool Library stated that 
izines were circulated during Sep-| a few seconds after firing. 
tember. —— 
‘City Center Gets Hotter   
  Oxford FFA Teams | CHICAGO —"Scientists studying 
to Aid Farm Safety 
week, although state aid, due in | heat have determined that teme- 
‘peratures often may vary as much 
OXFORD — Members of the 4% 20 degrees between a city’s filled with the appointments of) September, tas mot been re (6.1574 Chapter of the Future business district and its suburbs. 
i Review. 
Detroit, Maid of honor was the bride- three members to the Board of | ceived, the Board said. 
| In other action, the Board ac- Farmers of America this fall are | They say the extra heat comes 
‘taking part in a statewide cam- jfrom the release of energy from 
| They are Hugh ie Joseph of cepted an offer by the Lake Orion paign to prevent corn harvest '848. électricity, fuel oif, and coat 
a veteran consulting en- Motor Sales to provide a car for, accidents. a 
jgineer; Maurice R. Geisel of Bir- driver training. The Board agreed! FFA 
[pungham. accountant and present to replace tires on the car when évery farm family in the area. md from the buildings’ capacity 
member teams will visit Store solar energy.   
|treasurer and member of fhe it is returned. The car will be reviewing with the man in the) US. Sells Turks Most 
\Board of Directors of the South- 
field Business Assn., and Alex J.) 
}Olshefsky of Cambridge Village, | 
iwho has been employed for 25 available Oct. 17. 
* * * 
Future meetings this year will 
be held at different schools 
| Internal Revenue Chief | years as auditor and supervisor throughout the district in order) family the safe operating rules for | 
corn harvesting equipment and ANKARA — Although imports 
asking: for his pledge of safe oper-/from most of Turkey's trading part- 
ation. jners declined during 1957, imports 
Those agreeing to. follow thetfrom the United States reached a 
iby the Chief Audit Branch of the to give residents in outlying areas) isafety rules will be given a ‘‘safe record high of $122,000,000, an in- 
| Michigan Office of the Department 
of Internal Revenue. 
They will be paid at the rate 
lof $25 for each day they work. a better opportunity to attend 
‘meetings. ~ 
——= © * * 
The Nov. 12 meeting will be at <= operator’ sticker to put on their/crease of $36,000,000. The United 
equipment, according to Richard|import source, replacing West Ger- 
Daly, vocational agriculture ,in-|many, which had ‘been the top sup- 
structor at Oxford High School. ‘plier in 1956. 
  
4 Now Now. lo Serve the Growing Demand for Rambler... “| 
      AMERICA OT a ES TT TD 
; 
a 
AN Morors 
ANNOUNCES THE APPOINTMENT: OF 
RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES AS’ “Your NEw 
MBLER DEALER 
    The Compact Car wi ith the Best of Both: 
BIG C AR ROOM and COMFORT                SN { Vi 
V an 4 L- oe 
cL a) Fi —— il 
a = i A Qa Pte = rit 
American Motors takes great pride in 
‘introducing the newest member of the 
outstanding Rambler dealer organiza, 
tion—a friend and neighbor who will 
serve your automotive needs well 
through the years to-come.   
SMALL CAR ECONOMY and You are cordially invited to visit 
his modern showroom and service facili- 
ties . . . to meét his courteous, com-   
HANDLING EASE petent staff of skilled automotive tech- 
nicians. Your dealer will be especially 
happy to welcome you now during his   
    
        igrams of MSUO and how they will 
|affect local parents and their chil- 
MRS, HARRY A, JULIEN idren, 
YP eee = 
a Pe iad exciting grand opening celebration. . 
+ 
f “Headquarters For | See And Drive.Them! Get Our Introductory Offer! | 7| RAMBLER 6 and V-8 ! é pe 
| AMBASSADOR , | , . 2 
| RAMBLER AMERICAN | RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 
j METROPOLITAN | 51 N. Broadway, Shadbolt and M:24, Lake Orion= = MY 2-2871 
' 
De - | == 6 * ‘ | treet | | wi 
; A the sing this village, ac- aC-| given by y voters cording. to ptt gg Grubb of| district ae 
Soi ee Le eee ie ® Work already is under’ way The y presently turns out the: first. mult <t.the pleat. at, aes lateat ence eos half a day, Narrin St., site of the old ball Ibb said. They are the deluxe, ~ 
diamond oft Ball street... sethausteiniig type, igned for 
Total cost of the plant is expect traveling, he mt 7 ae 
ed to be $25,000, Grubb said, This 
   WATERBURY, a 
        
   
    > a ees eS ete ig FES a ee ea Se Se FN ee ee DS a 
} : = : = ! 2 : i : 2 ae 2 6 = ai 2 i 24 : ae ; : oe . < = : my ‘ : os rt : , : ZB T ‘ ! 1 : | 
‘ ee _ THE. PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9.1958 | "FORTY. NINE! 
    
— surprise, Suprset’ 110% DOWN BUYS: { Balloon Flight Ends. (cn an " st 10 %o 
| Before Reaching Goal woe art von ty oo] ANY THING AT: $1,780 strewn in Highland Park. 
~ ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP) wind pushed him back to the mid Apparently the thieves were sur- 
‘}Phe “Air Force's third Man High|dle_of the. big test and training|*Pised, too. The shoes were sam-| 
balloon Zight to the stratosphere |range. He landed at 6:45 p.m, A|P!es—for the right foot only, 
was at amend today, about 12/helicopter brought him back the . 
hours short of its goal. _ |25 miles to @ hospital on the base Husband Gets Ticket; 
The ‘balloon was. returned to|for a physical check, Wife Is Safest Driver 
earth, an Air Force armounce-| What the Air Force plans in the 
at said, because “capsule heat|way of Man High tests now is all) MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Ever 
and humidity rose to an extreme/up in the air. An officers said it CU5S the woman driver in front 
degree and could notbe lessened,” is: “certainly too early to say.” of you Listen to this story. 
and to prevent ‘the pilot from de-|_ * After trailing Mrs. Walter J. 
veloping heat prostration. x air for blocks, police ordered 
-<_— 3s College Enrollment Up ~ jher to pull over to the curb. Tore 
14. Clifton McClure, 2-yeat-old) MARQUETTE W®— Northern ab aun cea ee gor bteg Bh ail Sergey, Michigan College reported Thurs-| At about the same time, Mrs. 
tay ito pce, rat ack Go| ea at U1 nen |e n ie Ey, sae en a. sae ‘i — oa largest..number-_in. the college's|dered over to the curb. He was 
; history. given.a ticket for speeding. 
         
     
     
    McClure’s aim, when the three | 
ee million cubic: foot balloon and its 
~_}9x3-foet sealed metal cockpit cap- 
“lsule left the ground early Wednes- 
day,-was to rise to 100,000- feet— 
Roughly 20 miles—and stay there 
for a 24-hour day-night cycle. 
: * ~* *   
he was to.pass to them the infor- 
mation they sought from the. myri- 
  An Air Force spokesman _ex- 
plained’ that McClure’s replies 
would have helped supply “clues 
on hundreds of questions that must) 
be answered before man ventures 
further into space.” 
* * * - 
_It was a perfect launch in the 
calm .dawn, in contrast to the 
abortive attempt Tuesday. 
The balloon. climbed quickly 
over the western edge of the Sac- 
ramento Mountains, Then drifted                 TYPICAL GESTURES — This sequence on Pp = adapt ath ot. Alam cag 
Pope Pius XII leaning from window of summer ago, in September of 1956, as he spoke to visitors At that point and 11: oe a.m., 
residence at Castel Gandolfo was taken two years in the courtyard below. : McClure reached his peak altitude | 
~ ;—99,600 feet. i 
and meyed 32 ave ® 
| nual Veiled Prophet parade, with | ——__—_—- * 
n iuents depicting “‘Great Discover-| The Automobile Club of New | About 4 a * McClure started | 
es and Inventions,” drew a crowd! York reports that 55 per cent of ‘his descent over Truth or — 
Getininied by Police Chief Jere-|vehicle-miles driven in U.S. are, _quences to the west, : i In the first Man High flight in| 
| ‘Vei | », | Carolyn Lee Niedringhaus, 18- June 1957, Capt. Joe Kittinger rode | 
Islanders Fear eiled Prophet Parade ‘year-old burnette crowned as|to 96,000 feet, The second ascent | 
‘Has 600,000 Viewers Veiled Prophet queen, rode in a Was in August 1957 when Lt. Col.| 
| ST, LOUIS (AP)—The 76th an-|Plastic-enclosed float. [a meg ea Cac el 
WELERS Quemoy Natives Stay miah O'Connell at 600,000 Wednes- connected with earning a livelihood | At 5 p.m., he was down to 73,000 House of Discounts 1 NORTH SAGINAW ST. 
in Ground Shelters day night. ‘and 13 per cent with shopping. ‘feet. As he dropped lower, a west.     A ne tay . : ; 
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ij Keystone    Despite Cease-Fire | 
        “SECOND GREAT WEEK” FRAYER’S ANNUAL NANSAN, Quemoy (AP)—Hun- 
dreds of civilians in this Chinese 
Nationalist village scarcely five 
miles from Communist territory 
slept Wednesday night in water- 
logged holes in the groursd. 
They plan to do the same again | 
tonight despite the Communists’ 
cease-fire in the Formosa Strait. 
The islanders fear the Reds may | 
resume shelling at any time. And | 
few have homes left after the 44-| 
‘day bombardment of Quemoy | 
which énded at midnight Sunday. | 
The situation remained quiet al-| 
though the - Nationalist Defense | 
Ministry said the Communists 
were strengthening their fortifica- | 
tions in the Quemoy area. | 
A Peiping radio broadcast 
heard in Tokyo said Communist 
gunners at artillery positions sur- 
rounding Quemoy on three sides 
“are standing at alert.’’ It indicat- 
ed they could resume firing at a 
moment's notice. 
(“During the past three days 
over 19 military transport vessels 
and escorting warships that dared 
not sail in the Bay of Quemoy for | 
about a month docked at the) 
wharf every day and unloaded 
large quantities of supplies to the 
island,” the broadcast said taunt- 
ingly.)       
      
     
            
         
  
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There was no sign by midmorn- 
Ing of new Nationalist supply) 
operations. Several amphibious 
vehicles laden with supplies were) 
dispatched during the night from | 
Quemoy to nearby Little Quemoy. 
‘The U.S. State Department an- 
nounced in Washington that Amer- 
ican warships had stopped escort- 
ing Nationalist supply convoys to 
Quemoy but would start again if 
the Red - firing resumed. Radio 
has promised a cease-fire only 
until Sunday midnight. 
The 1,100 residents of Nansan 
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Nationalist officials said all but 
four of Nansan’s 185 dwellings had 
been destroyed or damaged, Nan- 
san is located ini the part of Que- 
moy closest to the Red China 
mainland, It is surrounded by 
Nationalist gun positions. 
Only one child and one adult 
were killed in the village and none 
were wounded because the people 
stayed underground, an official 
said. 
Mrs. Ta Chai, 54, showed news- 
men were she lived. It was an 
underground tunnel eight feet 
deep and about 15 yards long with 
dirt stairs at either end. Nearly 
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  MARK DAVIS 
AMERA 83 N. Saginaw St. FE 4-4343   
   Boy Perishes in Fire 
DETROIT » — Edward Peters, 
10, perished Wednesday when he 
dropped a match into an empty | 
antifreeze can and was enveloped 
in flames from the resultant ex- 
plosion of fumes.    
       
    iF IT'S PHOTOGRAPHIC ... WE HAVE IT FOR LESS 
                 “the Nazis and ; f 
  wy 
Se Eien REE 
Ls 
  oie    
  FIFTY 
Office Buildings es U} 
to Be Automatic Skyscrapers Will Have 
Prefabricated Interiors, 
Electronic Gadgets 
NEW YORK (UPI) — The bdffice 
building of the future will have 
prefabricated interiors and will 
feature electronic gadgets from 
ton to bottom. * ; 
Experts in the office building 
    field said everything from the 
telephone to the elevator in the! 
skascraper of tomorrow will be' 
radica different 
* * * i 
Some das according to 
ésman  far-—d-estinghouse. 
  aa ill be ile to get 
elevator and just call out the, 
floor you want. The elevator will 
autemat ieally 
and tell you to get otf.” 
Norman Tishman, president of 
Tishman Realty & Construction 
Co., predicted that electricity in 
future buildings may be trans- 
mitted by ultra-high-frequency 
radio, eliminating the need. for 
miles of wiring in walls, ceilings 
and floors.       “Some. day. we'll see radio-tele- 
vision phones that will enable: 
us to see whem we are talking to,” 
he added. 
Tishman, whose company built 
the first aluminum-clad building) 
and the first fully air-conditioned | 
affice building, said “the total, 
amount of leaseable space in the 
building will be increased by 
small electronic units for heating 
and cooling. : 
* * * 
“Installations smaller than one 
foot square and less than one-half 
inch thick should provide  suffi- 
cient heating and air-condition- 
ing for as many as 12 office 
building floors. The heating and 
air-conditioning should be fully 
automatic, synchronized with out- 
side temperature and humidity 
conditions.” , 
Tishman said buildings will 
make more use of plastic in the | 
future, both inside and out. 
Law rence Lerner, executive vice 
president of Michael Saphier As- 
sociates, industrial designers. said) 
oftice interiors will be prefabri-| 
cated at a factory as houses are| 
today.       He said “it would be faster, | 
better and cheaper to prefabri-| 
cate office ceilings in standard] 
sections, with built-in lighting, | 
air-conditioning and acoustic fix-| 
tures,”’ 
Report Stepinac 
to Stay Home Yugoslavian Cardinal 
Not Expected to Attend| 
Ceremonies in Rome   
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) 
—Roman Catholic Church sources 
in Zagreb today said it is unlikely 
\lojzije Cardinal Stepinac will try 
to go to Rome for the furferal of | 
Pope Pius XI[ and the consistory| 
to elect his successor. 
The ailing, 60-year-old cardinal 
himself was unavailable for com- 
ment. He remained. isolated from 
the outside world at his native vil- 
lage of Krasic, where the Yugo- 
slav government has confined him 
since it paroled him from prison 
mn 1951, 
* * * 
Church officials in Zagreb be- 
heved Cardinal Stepinac would 
again refuse to leave the country 
that President Tito’s Communist | 
government would not allow him 
to return. Although the govern- 
ment does not allow him to func- 
tion as archbishop of Zagreb and stop af the floor: — arthur smadbeck president _ of 
s { 
—as he has twice before—in fear) Markets of World Brought to Buyer   
Trade Show Boom Tallies Its Billions | NEW YORK (UPI) — Business- 
men in the past 10 years have 
increased their spending on trade 
shows and expositions six-fold to 
more than three billion dollars. 
Thse shows are .patterned after 
county fairs and feature everything 
from flowers, fancy foods and an- 
tiques to plastics, heavy machin- 
ery and automobiles. 
Growing competition in world 
markets, especially from the re- 
vitalized industries of Europe 
and Asia, has been the key fact- 
or behind the growth of trade 
shows, 
    Some of them, such as the mot-, 
or boat, mobile home and auto-) 
mobile shows are open to the pub-) 
a‘lic. Others, such as the U.S. World). qin the show this year, with some ware, atomic energy, chemicals, 
on the & Confection Show, “ate open~onty+©f-them-setting -up—expensive: ex-/heme furnishings, outdoor sports| _ ihibits ranging from a Balinese|and many others. Trade Fair and the Fancy Foo 
to businessmen and buyers. 
EXPECT 4,000 
the Coliseum Exhibition Corp... op- 
erators of New York City’s huge 
showplace, predicted that more 
than 4,000 expositions will be held 
in the United States this year, 
compared with 900 in 1940. 
* * * 
These are in addition to the 
2,000 trade shows that will be held 
aboard, and to the 6,000 state and   
Neighbors Rally to Aid 
as Stork Arrives Early 
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UPI) 
=~ Mrs. Roman Walker started 
for the hospital but only. got as far 
as the driveway of her home when 
the stork arrived. 
Three neighbors helped deliver 
her four-pound, three-ounce son.| 
Only one of them had any medi- 
cal experience, and he — Richard 
Hennessy — was a Marine hospital 
corpsman during World War II. 
  
North Carolina and Virginia is 
plagued by a green striped worm 
which eats the needlés off the pine} 
trees. Doesn't harm the tree, but| 
leaves them quite bare.       - 
v 
WELL, IFIT ISN'T THE 
FACE HIMSELF, OTHERWISE KNOWN 
AS THE NEIGHBORHOOD DELINQUENT/ 
— HOW ARE THE VOCAL CORDS yf 
AFTER THAT LATE M 
PERFORMANCE LAST © county fairs or permanent exhibi- 
tions and showrooms in-this coun- 
try. 
The U.S. World Trade Fair 
held in the Coliseum in -May 
drew exhibiters from 60 nations 
and wags attended by more thay 
127,000 buyers, according te 
Charles Snitow, organizer of the 
giant exhibit. 
“To cover the markets repre- 
sented at the Fair,’’ he explained, 
“a buyer would have had to travel 
argund the world approximately 
two years. The Fair brought all 
these markets together in one 
place.”’ = ' A 
arte 
temple to the recreation of a trop. 
ical island; te ae | 
4n big orders for exhibitors. At 
a-foreign car exposition this year 
a total-of 12 Rolls Royces rang- 
“ing in price up to $25,000 was 
sold right off the floor, Seme 
of the buyers even-paid cash, 
a key factor behind the construc- 
tion of the Coliseum-in New York 
two years -ag 
than five million persons have at- 
tended the wide variety of shows 
held there. 
The Coliseum has played host 
  GOVERNMENTS JOEN i 
Various governments took part! to shows featuring plastics, anti- 
motor boats, automobiles, 
‘medicine, photography; pets, hard- ques, ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 
The growth of trade shows was|_ 
ago. Since then, more|   
      i 
: 
  
      
  
      
    
THE GIRLS 
     
  
“You'll just love him, Ma’am—I was out‘with him last night.” 
BOARDING HOSE   
HAVE A CARE, BAXTER / I 
GREAT STONE WITH 
YOUR 
USICAL 
NIGHT «DON'T TELL |$ 2 A ME YOU'RE TAKING 4% = 
‘VA DOWN THE SCREENS Ji a ‘. 
7\ “YOUNE NEVER 4 VR We (\ BEEN KNOWN To /\\l 7 — REMOVE THEM \ Ni 
BEFORE THE FIRST BLIZZARD! 
  
  
           
GRAD CHER 
¥ PREYSE     
          Berte 4 
WHILE YOU'RE 7 SHAN'T BANDY WORDS 
YOU «I'LL IGNORE 
FLIPPANCY AND 
RETAIN A STOICAL 
SILENCE, AS BEFITS 
<THE DIGNITY OFA 
HOOPLE! BUT DON'T 
GO TOO FAR—— 
IF MY (REIS = AROUSED YOU'LL Y REGRET IT/ 
  
    
      “MW i JM, Z 
QUIT ~~? 
    
OUT OUR WAY AHEAD, BAXTER = “7” 
*   
       
     
    
          
  A HOT BATH 
AFTER A HOT 
    GAWSH, LOOKIT 
COOK CHOPPED? 
ZS a 
        primate of Yugoslavia, he and the 
Vatican still consider that he 
holds those posts. ° 
* * * 
The prelate was convicted in 
1946 of wartime collaboration with | 
sentenced to 16 
years in prison. In July 1950 the} 
government offered to free him on! 
condition that he left the country. | 
He refused. | 
Again in 1952, when Pius Xii| 
elevated him to the rank of cardi-| 
nal, the government offered to let | 
him leave. Again he refused, and! 
consequently he never received 
his red hat from the Pope. 
* * * 
The cardinal has been critically 
ill twice during the last year with 
a blood ailment but is now report- 
efi to be in good condition. A few 
weeks ago he resumed the: reading 
of Mass at the parish church in 
Krasic. oe 8     a 
v   
HALF ACRE CASTLE 
  
  | 
    
  ©1958 by WEA Sermee Inc TM Reg US Pat OFF   I THINK J'LL TAKE 
SUPPER, AN’ THEN 
SIT BY TH’ GLOWIN' 
FIRE TILL MIDMIGHT-- 
TH’ FIREWOOD TH’ O’ LUCK TONIGHT 
IF HE HADN'T HAD 
/ TO COME THRU A 
BIG FOREST TO 
GIT TO THIS 
WOODLESS 
PRAIRIE! } Gz O' BEEN OUT 
        
      
    
  
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THE FOREST SAVER   
   
70-9 
TRwittliams     
John Morris 
  
JO, CANT YOU AND your 
LITTLE FRIEND PLAY 
FOGETHER IN ALITTLE 
MORE. LADY-LIKE FASHIONS 
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  By Franklin Folger iM   
            
  
  
GIVE uP 
    
      
By T. V. Hamlin   
         
IN JAIL FOR JUST SAYIN’ 
“BOO” AT ‘im! 
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  ; ; By Ernie Bushmiller 
, EER [1 Hope you've |[HumPty DuMPTy | q TAUNT FRITZI---1'M STUDIED YOUR SAT ON A . 
GOING TO BE LINES WALL --- HUMPTY ry 
DUMPTYy HUMPTY DUMPTY    
     
    
      
        
    
        
  
          
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  By Dick Cavalli   
      
     
    
      OH-OH / HERE GOMES I WISH HE'D GO SOMEWHERE THAT DOPE WHOEATS | J ( ELSE..HE ORIVES ME CRAZY, HIS LUNCH HERE ALWAYS ASKING ME THE SAME EVERY Day STUPID QUESTION > 
  
  
  © 
1056 
by 
WEA 
Service 
ne 
TM 
Reg. 
U.S 
Pat. 
OF 
          gE 
10-3 
By Charles Kuhn       
  
SURE ,JOE. WHAT 
    GRANDMA, WILL YOU WELL,GIVE ME FOUR O’ 1 COVER UPA SMALL 
HELP ME T’ KEEP CANI OOP YOUR COOKIES, SHORTAGE IN TH’ ORDER 
MY JOB DELIVERIN' / PLEASE... eM DELIVERIN’ NOW,/     BAKERY GOODS?   
            
  DONALD DUCK   
THEN;GO TO SCHOOL. 
AND as FORGET   
L DON'T FEEL WELL, BOYS... 
CAN YOU GET OFF 
TO SCHOOL B» 
YOURSELVES ? 54   
     
      
                           
        
    
     
     
             
   
     
       
    
      
     
             
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cone , d pone THE PONTIAC PRESS. ‘THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9.1958 ae _ -FIFTY-ONE 
Rhodium, a precious’ metal, is er : kei . a : , el used for “agra Merb surfaces 00 Hollyw ood Headlines : “i = YoctsAround Production |Killed Walking on Road {f- : 
a . oe coi «| F Ste ; M, k C3 ge, iHinges on Sales Balance | moowr cuemEns » — James} GREAT FILM SERIES : a ew: ars a e Gr ade Sapere, 63 of Mount Clemens, was ard, brilliant-~white, nontarnish- pongp Mega : GRAND RAPIDS (f-—Production cited Wednesday.when he was} CHARLIE CHAPLIN surface tremely |< gg re ee ee tr a ta ea| struck by a car as he walked along|| - in his tuuniest comedy ee? came aS LD ee Ae aera wes E ee eA would -nenst tram ed “balanced” |, road two miles north of here. ome sieitiad 
a : fe me ee Ro ae aS | oe Ee sag job, an a oar The. car driver, Vincent J. Paw- “THE GOLD RUSH” 
on 4 . me ejenn Motors Corp. Kelvinator lowski 36, of Selfridge Air Force|] — (1925—Original Version) pxehrne ue Base, was not held. 
_| B. A, Chapman, executive vice * ° 
address before some 600 Kelvina- ANN ARBOR Albert T. Jones . 
tor distributors coucluding @ two-|s7 night news editor of the De-] 4d BUSTER KEATON in 
day” national fates convention in| troit Times for the past three years]  “QNE RUN ELMER’ paid little tent. re pi died Wednesday of cancer at the ? aster’ of ] If we really try to do a balanced University of Michigan Hospital 
* wt As Le: which hit it rich) Job on all our. products,” Chapman | here. Jones is survived by his wi-| =*clusive Limited Engagement Sheet with ee “Trapeze,” ete. , |said, “we could practically elimi-| joy Betty and # son Donald P.| 
end. the rieb of the! wane pen Sek Inate a seasonal factor in produc-|soncs, Clawson Playhouse 
studios, Most starsia profit on sete th Mag tion." ae us eee 14 Mile Rd, — 2 Mi. E. of W'ward. salaries ‘ i : pe : roe : ird the | JU 8-3977 — Smoking Section — 
: | rising taxes dug into their he pans ssem maples < | -Kelvinatot is centering all its vee ens eas Park Free 
SPPPE | take. Irv ttmeauel for Rah ot New Mnetive. appliance manufacturing at its — — 
CRANK E mewae high tving - eters| 2 The coproduction deal.” A Grand Rapids plant. The company | SINATRA like Errol Fiynn and Welles or producer’ takes care of} | Mme” ~ }unveiled: its 1959 appliances Mon-| TONY to endaup in hock to vite Sara. all the details. The star offers-his is day as.a convention highlight. 
1 w the movie power has shift. | *¢Vice @nd_ performance and—-be-|—_F {= — ae 
om the major studios to the), comes a partner in the deal. This The electrical system on a jet- 
   
       
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“Season Tickets for the 
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Concert Series | /é 
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7 phrased anna A BEAR T0 REMEMBER — Just about able to reach the 
income orl payment males _ paw of this male Alaskan brown bear is three-foot Bruce Sherman 
most famous is Holden’s “River| °! Beachwood Village, Ohio. The enormous bear, which stands 
; .| Kwai” deal, which may pay him} eight feet tall, was recently placed on display at the Cleveland 
1 hei avi $50,000 annually for the next 50| Museum of Natural History. It was killed in Alaska, the only 
ase douoes Erect of operation | ¥©2"S- place where bears of such size are found.   Price: $6.00 
  
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/, FE 43739   
      
- |Ike Wants Him to Spread the Word 
== Visit fo Russia Opens Eyes of American   
      
  
  
  Features‘ 
: : | LAST TIMES TONIGHT 1a ye F.0.E. #1230 PHILADELPHIA (AP)—President Eisen- hope that any lasting, honest agreement ARV bane Oh 
      
      289 W. Montcalm 
_ FISH or CHICKEN 
ama" Et Fig hower has told a Philadelphia real estate can be reached with the present regime. 
man to share what he knows about the Rad strongly feel . . . the American had it too easy, are too com- critical Soviet problem with others as a PEPE Dave : lacent and self-indulgent to appreciate 
patriotic service. He said he, too, has been y . 4      
     TENNESSEE 
WILLIAMS’ 
         
                
  
      the complete dedication that the Russian sultry stage 
astonished at widespread apathy to the people in their slavery are giving to the | play has 
NO DANCE danger. _ goals their masters wish to attain.” | become the ear's movie 
— OCT. ith The realty dealer, Frank G. Bins- Eisenhower replied that “I am often oe ncetoat . 
seed ap plat wanger, his wife and a son, Robert, an astonished, as you are, at the apparent MGM 
an POR a. instructor at Deerfield Academy, Deer--. apathy of so many Americans. At the parents 
' . field, Mass., recently returned from a 30- same time, I never for a moment feel 
: —- day trip te the U.S.S.R. and sorties Poland that the people ef our country will fail | at 
| | and Czechoslovakia. to respond in time of crisis. | 
Enjoy y ourself Binswanger wrote the President: “We “May I remark that one service ‘you | on a 
; felt it was imperative to .. . compliment can perform in this situation is to share | | 
in you on your present positive policy towards your knowledge of this critical problem with | i g Hot 
Oakland County's Newest Most the Soviet Union. your friends and associates. 
Beautiful Cocktail Leauge “We feel very strongly that it is almost “I am taking the liberty of referring | | 
| impossible for the United States to have the your letter to the secretary of state.” ie 
An OU of complete relaxation, cocktails i 
the way you like them, and a luncheon and po @ ee |   
dinner menu to please the most discriminating © 
palate. 
For Your Added Enjoyment 
STEVE STEPHANI 
AT THE ORGAN Sue Judy Garland, Mate: Biggest Fastest. Marilyn Monies Sick 
| LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)—Judy Mail Season Due | HoLtywoop (AP) — A. virus 
Garland and her husband Sid Luft! infection has caused Marilyn Mon- 
are defendants in a suit for re- This Christmas 
covery of $7,384 filed by the Fla-} 
COCKTAILS LUNCHEONS DINNERS sum was advanced the couple Christmas mail season is expect-| the infection for several days, She Starts FRIDAY ? METRO 
STARRING 
AF Eizabeth TAYLOR 
     
     
    
    Toe to interrupt -work on a movie. | 
    
    She is appearning .now at another f Postmasters. ishe had a 102-degree temperature. | 
* * A   
  Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Evenings mingo Hotel. The suit alleges that, MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — The 1958 The actress has been bothered by’ J @ Paul NEWM AN. | 
; 4 ‘ed to be the biggest and fastest! | 
@ Businessmen’s Lunches Served Daily @ while, Miss Garland was headlin- on record, says Lowell Galbreath, las Wer oa te ale wpacicny na "” Burl IVES | Open 11 A. M:. te 2 A. M. ing a show at the hotel in 1957. | president of the .National League "Suite Lee UBS sae ai ROCKABYE BABY 
| Jack CARSON 
Judith ANDERSON heres Fiay by   
       
     
     
   
    ‘hotel, the Sands. 
Henry’ Ss Miracle Lounge | Galbreath told the league’s con-| 
is ivention that postmasters plan to) we ‘an a ASE | 
i recmatiy Henry's Bloomtield Inn) Blasts Harden Metals make certain no Christmas mail BLU Kk NN °O 7 “ 
    
  _ Miracle Mile Shopping Center, Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. . 
a CHICAGO — Researchers at the) om unteliversd : ‘on Christmas| 2150 OPDYKE RD. Riv, ts RICHARD BROOKS , waa, | University of Chicago investigat- post office: MAGGIE THE CAT and JAMES POE 
FE 4-461 | asad Oe tm Play 
ing methods of hardening metals me the unloved Pear ioaiatacr lial 
FRI DAY SPECIAL! by use of explosives have found Cafbreath said late arriving gift wif : TENNESSEE 
that shock waves from shaped/parcels will be delivered Christ-' wile who Cawed WILLIAMS 
charges harden metal more than mas Day. and scratched davon reoceccom 
cold-rolling processes now in| He remarked postmasters are, to regain the nie 
  LJ 
use. The explosions are said to concerned over the growing vol- | love of an RICHARD BROOKS 
‘cause changes in the crystalline | ume of obscene mail. Despite vig-| f indifferent husband! Produc by 
structure of brass, copper, andjorous prosecution it has become) y Wont FISH FRY ALL YOU CAN EAT! 
“11:30 $ 5:30 
- 125 & 2:30 ° 10:30 
MANNY’S Cocktail Lounge West Huron ‘and Elizabeth Lake Roads   
    
     
             The THIS IS THE LOST TRIBE OF [IE 
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Story ...each a beauty ...each a deadly trap 
They for the men they make 
Said their love-staves! 
Would 
Never iron without changing the metals’ ia multimillion-dollar business, he/ 
dimensions. - noted.       
  
          
       POPOL IOI 
Bm The OAKLAND Theater Takes Pride in Announcing 5 rwvuvuvvvvvvuvueVvVvYTYTVveVeUee Te FOO EOE SETI ENTS. 
        
  
     
    
   
   
          OPEN 6:30 P. M. SHOW STARTS 7:00 P. M.'   
            the Engagement of 
Be » Walt Disney's ‘ 
STARTS Pp ONTIAC . Filmed “The Light in the Forest” | 
     
   Starting Oct. 15th 
PAA RAR A PARA   Ip THRILLS—TONIGHT—LAUGHS © 
MARTINeo LEWIS         | SUNDAY EXCLUSIVE! TWO FIRST RUNS!   
        
  
         
  ONE THOUSAND THRILLS 
    SHOWN FOR THE FIRST TIME IN OAKLAND COUNTY mE HCOLOR ; | NOW! Strand | Open 10:45 
STEWART GRANGER J | eee Thru Sat. Pissecnins 
BARBARA RUSH . GIRLS! CAGS! MUSIC & MIRTH ae ——$—————_——— Today’s youth fells its w     e story in ANTHONY STEEL : f “ 2 sensational. entertainment treats! | The Adventurous Lite Story of 
HARRY BLACK AND 
             
           
      e Lill MARK 
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‘3 es, F ee ; " / 
. PARINE pK vo >| we IN-CAR HEATE RS | SOON | aa riuest acivEns |] STARTING SUNDAY! ANOTHER “SMASH” 2-HIT PROGRAM ve , e | ANTHONY PERKINS in _ ROBERT IVERS in 
ENNAN Saprranne eet ave | -~ q “THE MATCHMAKER” “SHORT CUT TO HELL” 
tf i 
| | . {i : \ . | ae ~ ee                   
           
  
    
        
  
  
  FIFTY-TWO _ nee ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19598 os = SE II Sa ee I 
: . : | a) tat “| : - : : i oo ’ sk as S a : ee m : ~ ge sae ! 
== == == == == = oe 
Introducing | The Car That's Exciting from Every Angle... - 
PONTIAC | 
| 
The Only Car With Wide-Track Wheels | 
Coming or Going... Pontiac Can't Be Beat in ‘59...   
| Pontiac has broken all bonds of traditional styling and engineering in 1959 to come out with an all-new automobile. 
, From every angle the car reflects ultra-modern design. In its:all-new body design . . . the only car with 5-inch wide-track - 
| wheels... more glass in front and rear for better visibility ...a new high performance 389 cubic inch Tempest 420 . . 
.V-8 engine... and a special economy engine available on all models at no additional cost. PONTIAC...A TRULY . , 
ALL NEW CAR FOR °59! a _ | . 
See These Beautiful Models On Display At The oe | , 
4 . a 
etal 7 
Pontiac nits       a > 
"FACTORY BRANCH”, © sit - 
- 65 Mount Clemens Street oe , a ‘+ Behind the Old Post Office” : ~ 
‘ a . @3 Dead Duck.Patko Was ILarsen Today. 
2 Many - timers may still remember the wprid- an S ur Pp r ised. Baserunner ; s . : 
‘eum Scars as hich used tobe _aruavere ap vat tone new at vn ste f) Decide Title. When home teams went on the road, local fans homé in the second inning yester-jman told Pafko to go. ~- New York 11-10 Choles @ 
gathered ‘to “watch” the play-by-play as the whe 
came in on wire or ticker tape. : 4 
| A large board.was marked in shape of @ footbelll | 
field and as each team moved up.and down the gridiron} 
hundreds of miles away,-a small object in ‘shape of a 
football would consequently ‘be-moved showing the “play,     
  
  
    
         
         
         ‘Coach cn Herman Gambled on Bad Throw   
  of a World Series controversy. 
But then, with two out for the 
Milwaukee Braves and the bases 
od and      
   
      d._stand- | coes 43-—- Pafko wouldn't have been out 
by much.more if he’d walked in. 
But if he’d ‘stayed he might have 
changed the course of the game 
that went to the New York Yan-| qt a 
“I wasn’t going to send him in 
at first,” Herman said, ‘Then at | = Burdette Duels 
After Getting Even | 
Against Spahn, 4-30 
"MILWAUKEE (AP)—A suiden> 
ly tight, wofried Milwaukee team 
  - the last second I thought of that c = b today in the = : “on, the grid-graph. {prow that Howard made in that dent New York club toda as the = ’ The grid-graph was a big thing in. those days. Sa cee bola went] World: Series —— Eh Hotels publicized their use just lik — _ “] was a little * Paf-| Lew Bere and Don Larsen, 
ko said, “But I. went. You have 
oo. 
like that, But Howard’s throw TV first came out, and fans would jam the estab- ~ 
lishments often cheering wildly as. changes wernmite 
at was perfect,” __ each Pang ne the paye 
The latest resemblence to the “grid-graph” squid i off game world champion- 
be the Naval Academy’s “man-o-graph” which is pro- apeeee Manner ~~ a ship. ioginead =e ara year 5-6, 
~ duced by a “yella-vision” setup. 
the University of Michigan there won’t be any Mid- 
 shipmen attending the game but the gridders will still 
be getting the vocal support from 3,000 Middies at 
_ Annapolis right in Michigan Stadium. . 
diagramed on the court, the Midshipmen will watch 
_a@ Navy ball carrier and a Michigan ball carrier move 
. the ball on the yardage markers. 
cheering back into Michigan Stadium. 
attendance at the football writers’ meeting when Cox 
- detailed the long distance cheering section for the Navy 
was quite happy over his team’s showing against Michi- 
gan State last week, but he nays he doesn’t ‘care for 
“moral victories.” 
&. = gd x * * 
Thus, Saturday when Navy’s football team visits 
A telephone hookup will be made between the   
  view. © 
“That’s what we've got coaches: 
. “I was notin 
  
LA Rams Found 2-0B four straight before they got to 
him in Monday's game, professed Despite Burdette’s, four victo- 
ries. over New York in five meet- 
ings over a two-Series span, and 
the fact that he was pitching on 
home grounds, the Yankees ruled 
a 11-10 favorite to gain revenge 
on the Braves. 
Their spirits soaring because of * 
terday, which gave them two 
straight, three out of the last four, : s to find a bright side to the defeat 
fieldhouse in Annapolis and the Navy bench with handed bis roommage, Warren oe oe to square ine 
loud-speakers. VS em uf DI OCUCTIVE se once cack a Manager Casey | Stengel wit, 
In the fieldhouse, which -will have a football field . them,” he said. Noe cies . : sak at sepa wr 
x *« * 
Cheerleaders will lead the yells at the Annapolis 
“football field” and the loud-speakers will carry the 
“The Middies are not required to attend the The Los Angeles Rams, who— 
like the Detroit Lions—have found 
that the two-quarterback system 
does not always work well, are 
favored to beat the Lions when the 
two clubs meet here Sunday. 
The odds were posted before the 
people who make them learned of 
Tobin Rote’s leg injury. But the) 
Lions had good news today — that a 
(1. So far, he has done a splendid 
lly “the better team did not win.” | 
‘better. Down the hall the Yanks were 
full of praise for Spahn, who beat 
job. ; * * * 
The Rams lost a tough game to 
Cleveland 30-27 and coach Sid Gill- | 
man of the Rams said emphatical-|     ning encounters — one last year, 
one last Wednesday—but finally 
‘met disaster in the 10th yester- 
“I feel better now for my club 
Then the Rams trounced San/and myself, said New York Man- 
7 ager Casey Stengel. “We finally Francisco, andl Wade newex okra and e up that one- 
man show # theirs—that Spahn.” the Yanks in two previous 10 in-| to dim their enthusiasm. 
* * : 
"We're finally playing like we 
should,”’ said Stengel. ‘“The shoe 
is on the other foot. They’re down 
and we're up, We've got them on 
the run. We won't let up now.” 
Casey’s enthusiasm was shared 
by his players. 
“Those guys were talking about 
four straight a few days ago,” 
said Yogi Berra, “They'll be eering sess the muscle pull is not serious and 
fieldhouse ch sd ion, but at one wht ee that Rote should be ready for the| "we Rams are rated three | x * lucky to win it at all. We sure we had 3,000 of the 3,700 Midshipmen there,” said Rams on Sunday. He may have|Poimts better than the Lions, | put —_ was dissatisfied |j,oked bad in the early games. 
Navy publicity director, John Cox. “This 18 what you 
would call ‘closed circuit’ cheering,” he added. 
Fritz Crisler, U. of M. athletic director who was in 
team, said as a jest, “With all that moral support, I 
might have to pull the plug on your speakers if those 
- Middies get too high Saturday.” 
_OOSTERBAAN NOT KEEN ON MORAL VICTORIES 
Benny Oosterbaan, also at the writers’ session, was 
“They could have won, and we could have won,” 
said Oosterbaan, “and although a tie isn’t as painful sequence.   SERIES oF SPILLS — The 6th game of the World Series had 
its series of spills when Hank Aaron of the Braves collided with — 
first baseman Moose Skowron (14). The bal} glances from Aaron's 
Sent Aad Seth whee tm trterine to fae reid’ ewe’ AP Wirephotes ‘he ordinarily does, but as for run-| some difficulty running as fast as 
ning the team — he will be fit. 
In years past — in fact, in 
every year from the mid-1946s 
on — the Los Angeles club had 
two top-line quarterbacks. For 
years, they were Bob Waterfield 
and Norm Van Brocklin. Then | | 
Waterfield retired, and Van 
Brocklin had to share the job 
with fellows like Bill Wade and 
Rudy Bukich. ‘comers, 18 still are with the club. | who have yet to win in two about a number of other things. 
= aS For one thing, there was that 
hit This is a very young, very sinking liner Wes Covington 
capable Les Angeles team. The to center field. Secand base um- 
Rams added 10 rookies in 1957 and pire John Flaherty ruled it a 
10 more this year. Of the 20 new-|trapped single. 
      Now, the Rams have traded Van) 
  f Brocklin to -Philadelphia for his | 
waning seasons and Wade is No. 
  
        as defeat, the best for morale is a victory.” 
; wk k& 
Crisler, who fostered the two-point rule into sottege!    
   
     ST. ANDREWS. Scotlar 
—Britain carried a si 7 (AP) 
stroke 
  sen and the Panther quarterbacks. 
* “It puts too much pressure on the coath and the 
quarterbacks,” said Cook, whose Pitt team plays at 
MSU Saturday. 
xk * 
“If the new rule is such a tax on coaches and 
quarterbacks, and it makes football too complicated for 
them, then maybe we should suggest that all defensive 
“units be the same 6-2-2-1 and that all offensive plays should be only off: tackle,” said Crisler shaking his a 
x * * 
“We wouldn’t have anyone watching college foo 
ball by that token,” he finished.   
      pionship today with/ *the players | 
from 29 countries poping for bet- 
ter weather. ; 
“The weather jh St. Andrews in| 
good,"’ said igadier Erie Brock-' 
man, secre Dy of the Royal and 
Ancient Chfb/ So far, this doesn't 
He. /the right OctoKer, 
i jt * * 
The Axtish team built up g Six- 
lead over the favored Unit- 
ed States team yesterday as gale 
e, gusts of wind up to 60 miles 
‘hour and a steady wind of 35) 
swept across the ancient course. 
“The wind was strong enough!    
    
      
      
         
       
   
       
     
   
    /\to move a ball as much as a fot® 
  in a tie for fifth behind, 
teammate Reid Jack (72), Charlie 
Coe of the U. S. (74), R. J. 
Charles of New Zealand (74) and 
Luis Silverio of the Philippines 
(75). x * & 
Raul Borges, of Brazil, chalked 
his disastrous 99 to the wind and 
5g said: 
“Most of the time I was actual- October has béen known to be, 7 
  ily 
|wind while I was putting.” football this year, listened to Pitt publicist Carroll Cook | ad into the i of the! But the player with the day’s|tition got underway was the US. in {st G ame The club will play its first. ex-/waJk and hits by Hank Aaron and 
‘ relate how the rule was disliked by coach John Michelo- world's first amateur folf cham-|most serious problem was 18-year-|team with a total aggregate of ae Pa a yes awralion Jée Adcock produced a Milwaukee . Sia 0 aul e tour W 
  old, 116-pound Francisco Reyes, 
‘of the Philippines, who explained 
'his 87 score this way: 
“I couldn't stand still to putt 
jin that wind. It was so bad I felt 
\I-was being blown off balance all 
the way through the ropnd.” . 
. Even old timers admitted that 
St. Amdrews was acting up be- 
yond its reputation for the first 
round in the first competition for 
tHe Eisenhower Trpphy. 
“7 
Speedway Patsy Winner 
JACKSON — Speedway Patsy       
featured Lansing Pace here Tues- 
day night before 2,565 trotting fans 
at Jackson Harhess Raceway. 
Speedway Patsy, ownéd by Cliff 
Hess, Liberty Center, Ohio, cov- 
‘ered the mile in 2:07 1-5 to finish | 236 
a léngth in advance of Lesota’s 
Counsel and Clark’s Mistery Boy. 
Speedway Patsy returned $7.60, 
$3.80 and $3.20 in registering her 
      sixth victory of the year. ening backwards into the} Trailing the British as the sec- 
ond round of the 72-hole compe- 
233. 
Low first round scorer for the 
U. S. team was 34-year-old reign- 
ing American amateur champion 
Coe, of Oklahoma City. 
Philadelphia's. Bill Hyndman 
had 79; Billy: Joe Patton of Mor- 
gantown, N. C., 80, and Dr. Frank 
Taylor of Pomona, Calif., had 81. 
Coe played his round before 
yesterday's wind mounted to its 
full afternoon fury—and said he 
had no particular problems, 
But Hyndman, who played later 
in the day when* the cold wind 
was almost at its height, said he 
had to hold his putter off the 
green to avoid a penalty shot 
’ Later, Taylor drew two penalty 
strokes when the wl an just 
that, 
Tied for third place were Ar- 
os and New Zealand with 
Canada, with 240, France with 
242 and India, tied with Australia 
with 244, rounded out the list of 
fop teams as the second round 
    opened.     
would say. 
: Lucky for us Swamis there is such a 
wor a an upset, at least hypothetically. The 
’ tie, the M-MSU tie, Holly’s defeat and 
  
      Egad! As our friend Amos Hoople, a Major 
in the Swami Association of Grapevine Pickers    the winning 
column. Southfield'’s case of dropping the ball when 
scored, didn’t figure in the sour grapes 
But the Swamis pick 'em on paper and those 
creatures called football players sometime just 
don’t follow the. script. - Inetted the puck: after taking a re- St. LOUIS (AP)—The St. Louis) 
Cardinals depart today for San, 
Francisco and a month-long ex- 
hibition tour of the Orient. 
The traveling party will include 
20 players, Managér Solly Hemus, “Sure I caught it,” cent field- | 
Detroit coaches said a year ago er Mickey Mantle said. “But 
teams — personnel-wise — gen the 
National Footbal Leave. stil’ Cardinals Head 
its games. bition The only -change in the team . for Exhi 
jter this season. The Rams have a 
istrong running game, a defense 
weaknesses so far, and Wade is 
a strong passer. the Rams have one of the best What's the use of arguing?” 
Los Angeles could win only balf 
\that the personnel probably is bet-| TOUT of Orient 
that has not shown too many 
N p * 8   
Keane, business manager Art 
Routzong and traveling secretary 
Leo Ward. ~           clude a lengthy ‘exhibition swing 
through Japan against Japanese 
all-star and U.S. Army teams. 
wk ke KS 
The Cardinals yesterday ac- 
quired the contracts of right- 
handed pitcher Gary BJaylock and 
Dick Ricketts .frpm Rochester of 
the international League, which 
has a working’ un with the 
Cards. 
Tribe’ § ‘Move Rangers, Black Hawks 
Play to 1-1 Deadlock 
in. Hockey Opener 
CHICAGO (AP)—The New York 
Rangers and Chicago Black 
Hawks opened the National Hock- 
ey League season last night by 
battling to a 1-1 tie before 10,253 
fans in Chicago Stadium. 
The rest of the clubs get later 
starts. Boston is at Montreal: to- 
night and the race blooms into full 
force Saturday night with Detroit 
at Montreal, Chicago at Toronto   
    lead in the opening period when | “MILWAUKEE (AP) — William 
defenseman Pierre Pilote a led R. Daley, chairman of the board 
a shot past Lorne Worsley, from | of directors of the Cleveland In- 
30 feet out after taking “passes|dians,.,said today the American 
‘from Bobby Hull and lage Fer-|League club may move out of 
guson. xf Cleveland by next year. 
‘ Daley, who is the chief stock- 
Ferguson was in th¢ penalty box'holder in the club, said: 
in the second frarhe when the . * OF coaches Harry Walker and Johnny| Now they’re the ones who are 
looking bad." 
* * * 
“This will be the sweetest vic- 
tory of all,’’ offered Gil McDoug- 
ald, “‘They were counting us out 
a while back. But we proved we 
play harder when we're behind.” 
Larsen, who hurled seven shutoyt 
innings and_ was credited with be/ 
third game victory last Saturday, 
would pitch the decisive gatne Ae 
just said “it looks like Larsen will 
go tomorrow,” 
Johnny Kucks. You méht consid- 
er Bob, Turley glso, And maybe 
Ryne / ‘Duren vill’ be in. there 
| again.” fo 
-  ® * 
Duren ane Turley worked 
yesterday's “ game, Along with 
starter Whitey For’ ‘and Art Dit- 
mar, Dufen took ger in the sixth - 
with the score tied 2-2 and pitched’ 
four “scoreless” innings befdre a 
fun and.forced his exit. Turley 
came in to retire pinch-hitter 
Franke Torre to end the game 
with the tying run on third, the 
potential winning run on first. The 
victory went to Duren, who fanned 
eight, 
* * * 
Their composure badly shaken 
were banking everything on Bur- 
dette just as they did ‘ast year, 
Fidgety Lew was making his 
third start in seyen days and his 
second in three. He won the sec- 
ond game 13-5 but was shelled* 
from the mound in a six-run sixth 
inning of the fifth game Monday, 
after it rested on the greens,”’/Was rushed up én the lead shortly|from having the ball blown/and New York at Boston. Seems Likely moa by ay Yankees 7-0. 
said Britain's Guy Wolstenholme, |4fter the start and was never seri-| against his club. * & * as whose opening round of 76 placed |ously under pressure to win the! * x * & The Black Hawks took a ly ri The’ ‘Braves were a crestfallen 
lot in the clubhouse after the 
game, For the first time in the 
Series, they appeared nervous, 
tense, dull and dispirited. They gave the impression that they had missed their big chance to make 
it two in a row over the American 
League champions, 
NEW ocean fa) 
> 
a 
= 
E bs] 
          ' kk ke 
Rangers tied it. Camille Henry 
will have a meeting in Cleveland: 
bound off the boards behind the} and lay the facts before the stock-| 
      
  touchdown could have been 
      ‘Bill Gadsby got assists. 
~| Red Wings ended their exhibition 
{Cleveland Barons, 8-3. The Wings, holders, At that time we will de-| 
cide whether to stay in Cleveland 
or move.’ | 
Under baseball laws a club has) 
juntil Oct. 31 to make a request 
to move its franchise. 
* * 
Daley did not indicate where the 
club might move, if it does, but 
there was a strong possibility the 
Indians might transfer to either 
Minneapolis or Houston, Tex. 
Daley is known to be disap- 
pointed by attendance in Cleve- 
land, which drew a major league 
record of 2,600,000 in 1948. Chicago cage, Andy Bathgate ahd 
            Worsley came up with a total of 
133 saves, 4 more than the Hawks’ 
all-star goalie Glenn Hall. 
  9 Straight for Wings 
CLEVELAND (® — The Detroit 
season last night by trouncing the 
      who were, undefeated in nine exhi- 
bition games, scored six times in, 
the second period and’ never were| 
threatened by the Barons.   
          “Within' the next two weeks we)? 
|S; | Mantle (Se Bone 
Howard If ...... 
Berra C 
Skowron lb ., 
Kubek ss ......... 
A-Slaughter . 
|Duren p .. 
Turley p 
Ford p icine 
Ditmar Pp 
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s-| | 3! | PO PROS DOR BOOS Totals .............,. 
MILWAUKEE (N) 
Schoendienst 2b ...... 
Logan 85 s........c.0e-e 2 
Mathews 3 b Ssnndocde cant! 
Aaron rf 
Abcock 1b 
C-Mantilia 2... 0.0.0.0... 
Crandall ¢ .....2.:....:-. 
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Covington If 
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Totals . n 3 10: 2H 30 au 
A—Grounded out for Kubek in 6th. 
B—Struck out for Ditmar in 6th 
C—Ran for Adcock in 10th. 
D—Popped out for Crandall in 10th 
100 000 2-4 
  r) e ; 
. 
New York (A) ........ 001 
Me coer ae meeene Ape ppasbly Mathews Dro § In Lineu Dee ceaeonaie C sa oruaan = (42-14-3—.750) (87-19-8—.661) (36-20-3—.642) (82-24-3—.571) Brutes (De mesa qvowan peirg Ditmar -|PONTIAC at Arthur Hill PCHS H PCH CH Howard and Berra; Cran- CONCERNED coacH - ners George Wilson of the Detroit LMONT at Imlay City Aivavat Ae A mont hint MILWAUKEE (AP)—Th 1 i b dall and Schoendienst. LOB—New Yor 
Lions watches in the background as his number one quarterback Avongals at LA Hh aa Lapeer Lapeer Lapeer Lepeer E (AP)—The World Series troubles of the Ey peed el Le Bauer, Mc ig : J le ( j " oan _—— 
Tobin Rote works out in Briggs Stadium yesterday. Rote hands Flint ‘Sentra ras B CITY ep Bay ‘city, Flint Central Bay city ete ee Braves’ nore Sea reached 2 the b eral ii Dougald. 8—Logan 2. SP_Berra. 
ncey: MFIEL oomfie field Bloomfield m was 
ci 0 Gene Geta He cue rat concern eer ing Ns |G ESSUgLt ast Wat Ee Elan Bene | phim Ba was rome fom te turd sma ithe tating gee oO a jar nm ar stor is 
oes ee Cranbrook st Shed ryt tertord Cabot, shady Bide ghady side > Cranbrook “He isn’t hitting a lick,” said Manager Fred Haney Pee - a aterfor arming irmington ‘armin, nm ‘armin, , ‘ Duren ew) ~ 
a NORTHVILLE at Milfor Northville Northville Northville Northville “I just can’t bat him in the No. 3 berth any longer.” Turle: * bal y 
. * b k C : FRANK ENMOTH ORION rastennaen Preukenmath Frankenmuth Prankenmuth “Frank Torre will most likely be the third spot hitter (|; BB—Spahn 2 (Skowron, ‘tumbe Ford 
Ex-Derby King Dies Comebac ontinues ROMEO at L’Anse Creuse omeo’ Romeo Romeo Rom : SE pase spr mgt paren)? eeeeer rte 
oe a at ie tke spammed * Rochester peceare Rochester against the right-hander we expect, or I may move Wes ([fvira Dane Ceres ubek, | Lumpe 
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)—Pon-| PORTLAND, Ore. (APY-— For-| or" st. Mary at ST. FRED St. Pred St. Fred St. Fred St. Pred: Covington up. I'm pretty sure I will have Covington bat |{Duren), Ford 2, {Mathews Crandatt 
- der, 1949 Kentucky Derby winner mer welterweight champion John- Southfield et Dale = har ce Rear a trea” ae ans naa fifth. Mathews will hit sixth or seventh.” \ (Adcock, Crandall, Bruton % Spahn 3, 
; ny Saxton will meet Denny Moyer |piet at sic STATE 30 MSU, MBU “ His batting average is .167 on six hits in 24 tri Covington, | Mathews). and sire of the 1956 winner, Nee-|;, 5 10-round bout here Oct, 21,|DETROIT at villswova Villanova U. of D. U. of D U. of D. : DS. {pia Gorman (i) first base 
“Ti died yeste ray dt Calumet! promoter Tommy Moyer said last HAMS at Lions a Lions Rama Rams He has had four singles and a pair of doubles and drew fymont <a) tett fend Seok ae 
F ‘letters. “ne oo : three walks. He has three runs-batted-in. right field. To-3:07 A—46,367, Recet Farm, , night, (nét) $277,263.68, = 4 
4 e * 
‘ a . 6 \ Stengel didn’t sav fer sure that. si 
Then he added: ‘it hight be” 
by yesterday’s defeat, the Braves - im / 
f é their 4-3 triumph in 10 innings yesy | ala ie tonyad seneinaueys 
  
  
 a fo ce oR, =. win Se wee ere OEY § = é 2 SPR digg ogy get Me MFO Ee a ee ee 
red be, 
      _FIFTY-FOUR_ 
» Puts Paris on Gridiron 
STILLWATER, Okla. ® — Four 
members of the Oklahoma State | University football team are from 
brothers Dara and Vandiver Childs 
of Tennessee; Bob Pratt of Texas 
and Frank Wade of Arkansas. 
    
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  , ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958. | 
Flint Central Invades Bay City C   
BAY CITY « — When Bay City 
Central and Flint Central meet 
here Saturday night in the state's 
top high schoo} football attraction 
of the season, more than 10,000 
fans will be on hand. 
Bay City must be rated a slight 
edge, if there is such a thing in 
this cdntest between two Saginaw 
Valley powers. 
Elmer Engel’s Wolves blasted 
Flint Central last year 47-6, but 
that was a strong Bay team and 
a weak Flint one. In fact, Flint 
Central has not had a powerful 
teani since 1955. That season, 
the Flint eleven had an-everall 
record of 7-1-1, winning 13-12 
over Engel’s team, losing to 
Saginaw Arthur Hill and tying   Valley Powers Clash ~ The year before, the Indians 
had an 8-1 record. Their last. un- 
defeated season. was. in 1947. when 
Central won the mythical state 
Don Coleman,, who went on to All- 
America honors at Michigan State. 
sold out quickly without an. an- 
availability. ce 
  
Wrestling Date Set- 
DeKALB, Ill, @—The second 
annual wrestling _ championship 
    In Flint, there were 40 reserved |», 
seats available — and they were), 
nouncement being made of their Et 
championship and had a tackle, /pa)) 
  
    
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the 1958 season. 
an ef 
         
      
   
   
    
        
      
   
   
    
       
      
i F a 
ag g 
Quarterback Phil Bird was play- ing halfback when the year began. 
‘Top Spots Won by Alpena tusslé and went to the 
|sidelines for the pest of the year. 
Tom Miteheli movéd inte the 
So the Lumberjacks will throw 
ly new backfield at the 
jChiefs—Bird at quarterback, Bub- 
lijé at fullba¢k and Mitchell and 
sby at halves. 
Gary Hayman and Joe Gwiaz- 
        
  
    
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cas eaaiaandiag THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC jigs       
  n they West Bloomfield Meets Brighton 
  
| i i g 
a2 88 Pe 
$ z 5 
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i ti z 
pull :! i :   
Pontiac Area Dogs 
Dog show at the state fair grounds. 
Best of show went to Ch. Arturo 
Best of winners (longhair dachs- 
hunds), Ed-E}-Fra’s Can Do (Sum- 
ner L. Goss, Birmingham), and) 
best-of-opposite-sex (shows), Ma- 
honey’s Sun-Ce (Eugenie Mahoney, | 
Farmington) finished champion-| 
ships. Can Do's points included! 
four majors. . 
Other top placements—bvest-opposite- 
sex (LH dachshunds) Baechofen’s een   Jackets ... - $8.25 @ Your choice /of insul- dowski are a pair of : ends 
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Wat Raw’ SUITS 7 enough to hit his receivers. The i am eng Sizes: $, M, L, XL |Hillites have fine breakaway “ 2- cke an : 
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$6.95 Pont. “Guaranteed $9.95 w ition. 
on = Kampe makes very few echang- 
POI ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER Figpaaneeaernies 
ling. Peedee Pfieh of the Swale fe (Maria Hayes, Birmingham); best-of-| 
variety (part-cocker!) Norbill's Heaventy 
| (Dick Beauchamp, Rochester); 3rd work- 
(Ger. 
i | shep.). Emma H. Kaufman, Walled Lake; 
‘\2nd hound group, Ch. Siefenjagenhelm Lucadam, Jack Newton, Tom Bell 
  \Lazy Bones (basset, Chris Teeter, Bir- 
: 4 |mingham). 
     and. Wayne dias 
much to be de: on defense. 
Lucadam, who does everything welll with the ball, hes had to do a   
  Pontiac 
WOMEN’S MVP Nancy 
Wickmart, who pitched: for €os- — 
tello Trucking during the past |f 
season in women’s City League Sy 
S Glenn's Auto Sales ~ softball, was the winner of the 
198 Most Valuable Player 
       
                
    
      award. She's pictured here with 
her Pontiac’ Press trophy em- h 
blematic of MVP honors.      ere 
Munger 
Wensel Bird 
Siiehen Seeeene Seay 
“rows rong 
wits IOAQaes 
    Hills gave Northville 
trouble for one half and the Barons 
are confident they can snap their 
scoreless and winless drouth at 
the same time. Clarenceville has 
lost only two games so this shapes 
up as a battle to decide who es- 
  —. |capes the cellar. 
           GE 
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        ae time 3 PONTIAC PRESS, “THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 + pet 
| FIFTY-FIVE   
  gree 
aNeCae Field 
see of the year will be present- er Saturday 2 
ed at McCabe Field this weekend, 
"The Michigan All-Stars, a select team from the Detroit Soccer 
League; will oppdse the ‘London,        
      in Two Inter-Lakes Cosleerenice foot-) 
ball games of ’ grave importance 
. jare slated Friday night anda 
    
greater insight into the eventual   
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  outcome of the league race. will 
ride on the results. 
Waterford, Walled Lake and | 
Farmington, which won their Inter- 
\Lakes openers last week, and 
defending champion Southfield, 
which took it on the chin, are the 
_feentral figures in tomorrow's grid- 
iron drama. 
and the Skippers are playing host 
“to unbeaten Farmington 
; annual eceasion. Southfield, with 
) its back te the wall, invades 
| Walled Lake for the other 1-L 
| headliner. . 
Whether or not the Waterford 
homecoming celebration is a-happy 
one is strictly up to the Skippers. 
Needless to say, they will be de- 
cided underdogs against the touch- 
_ | down-minded Farmington club. 
i * * *   
  
  
Immediate     ae 
  
Custem Trim — Floor 
Cushions — Complete Auto Trim. 
138 S. toi St.   CUSTOM WORK 
BY EXPERTS Y 
NOW IS THE TIME FOR NEW SEAT COVERS Installation 
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— Door Panels — Head Carpeting 
Liners — Convertible Teps oeee Boat Tops and 
SEAT COVER MART - FE 2-0391 The Falcons, with a fleet of fast- 
stepping backs and explosive scor- 
ing power, are hungrily sighting 
ithe I-L crown after last week’s 
20-14 conquest of favored South- 
field.   | : i 
i 
: 
| the Bluejays, they spanked 1i- 
' vonia Bentley and Rochester with | 
re 
. before opening its league cam- 
paign.a week ago with a 12-6 
win over Van Dyke. 
It’s ‘‘do or die’ for the Jays at 
Walled Lake and the Vikings of| 
‘Dave Smith will do their darndest | 
to make it the latter. 
Walled Lake, also undefeated in!     
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NOTE AND THEY’RE ALL   It’s homecoming at Waterford, 
forthe + - 
Prior to their success against ler 
little trouble. In contrast, Water- ~ 
ford absorbed decisive beatings | 
from Pontiac Central and Lapeer | 
  El three garth, will rely heavily on 
the dynamic-running of Frank Fink | 
and the arm of BillHavel plus a 
rock-ribbed line to put ail stops 
Grid Calendar FRIDAY'S PREP GAMES 
we **: Central at Saginaw Arthur 
Plint Central at Bay City Central.   
‘ark at East. Detroit. 
Port Huron ~ Mt. Clemens. = 
Parniington- at— Waterford. ~ Southfield at Walled Lake: 
Berkley at Van Dyke. 
Madison     
ton. 
West Bloomfield at Brighton. 
Northville at Milford. 
eee at Bloomfield Hills. 
Armada at New Haveff. Brown city at Memphis. 
Dryden st Capac. 
‘Almont at Imlay City. 
Frankenmuth at Ortonville. 
—~ Branch at Millington. 
Climtondale at Madison Lamphere. 
Oak Park at Detroit Oxzborn 
Rogal Oak Dondero. 
ATURDAY'S. PREP GAMES 
Dearborn. af Royal Oak Kimball. 
Cranbrook at Shady Side, Pa 
Country Day at Harpey Woods. 
Romeo at L’Anse Crevse 
SUNDAY'S PREP GAMES 
Orchard Lake St. Mary at St 
tick. 
St. Rita at Roval Oak St. Mary 
St. James at St. Clement 
L. Royal Oak Shrine at Lourde: 
Farmington Our 
|St. Agatha 
i WEEKEND SCHEDULE 
| Saturday Afternoon 
; Pitt at Michigan State 
| Navy at Michigan 
Detroit at Villanova 
Eastern Michigan at Central Michigan | 
| Bowling Green at Western Michigan 
John Carrol] at Wayne State 
We higan Tech at Moorhead State 
Albion at Hillsdale 
Hope at Eamaoee 
Alma at Adria: 
Northern Michigan at Quh&ntico 
Saterday Night 
_Ferris” ate Olivet Pred-   Lady at ‘Redford 
Pa 
  
  
  
    
  
      
        
  
  
  
      
  
  
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a bd) 
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POAT Pury TA Sa ~ 
RAR. T TIRE CO. 
  Just phone our main store between 8:30 A. M. and 5:30 P. M. ) 
We'll take the information. Your tires will be ready for mount- 
ing when you arrive. 
      
      
  Dayton 
nr horobreds |    
11956. —  € 
Navy, Irish Sold Out - 
with Notre Dame’ is @ sellout. eee 8 Se ae 
4000 is expected at Baltimore’s) oi-4,0, 
Memorial Stadium for the Nov. 1| Seattle, w. 
contest, It will be the 32nd game 
|tha the» Middies* ‘football game |in a series’ unbroken since its be- LOUISVILLE, 
i cecmealt 
  WEDNESDAY'S FIGHTS 
outpointed Eddie Cotton, 67% 
  | Stru ggl es on the Jays, who were favored to 
repeat as I-L champs this fall. 
Southfield comes into the game 
with a 1-1-1 record on a tie with 
Royal Oak Kimball, a victory 
ever Ferndale and the loss to 
Farmington. Walled Lake has 
conquered Redford Union, Howell 
and Berkley. 
With one league setback already 
on their record, the Jays cannot 
afford to drop another if they hope 
to gain even a share of the titles | 
|The Vikings, it can be safely stat- 
ed, have their eyes sharply focused 
on the eee ~~ won rin 
a a 
While Farmington will be heavily 
favored to take the measure of the 
Skippers, the Southfield - Walled 
|Lake game looks like a toss-up 
from the word go. Breaks are 
likely to play key roles in- the 
all-important struggle. 
Inter-Lakes game, Berkley goes to 
Van Dyke for another outing be- 
tween evenly matched teams. 
  
DUNEDIN, Fla. (UPI) — The 
Professional Golfers Association 
announced yesterday that the 
$15,000 West Palm Beach Open 
Invitational tournament has _ re- 
placed the $15,000 Miami Beach 
Open for the Nov. 
= golf tour.   = 1938-S2=6 eytc-cecn rw 
In Friday’s other scheduled, ° 
Tournament Replacement' ‘AUTO STORES 
MUFFLERS For BUICK 
1953-56—Series ~ 60,70. ees 
1954-56—Series 4 95 
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1957-58— Windsor & Sora.8 .12.95 
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Marlin 12-ga. shotgun 
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Remington pump shotgun N 
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Remington 4-shot rifle 
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   FIFTY-SIX Sa ey a ey 
} 
    
  is 
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958    
    ae Moe ee ete 
ei 
    
    
Houston Pilot Wins 
Sailing Championship 
HOUSTON (AP) — Ernest Fay, 
the fidgety little pilot from Hous- 
ton, skippered his Sabre to victory 
again Wednesday to win the U. S. 
55 meter sailing championships 
on Galveston Bay races last. week, Fay now turns 
his victory streak toward the cov- 
eted Scandinavian Gold Cup com- 
petition which getsunder way 
Thursday.   
WEDNESDAY'S EXHIBITION PRO 
ASKETBALL , 
Philadelphia (NBA) 107, St. Louis 
    xk & * State and ‘M’ Avait a 
* koe 
    Victor in the Viovanneli Cup! “Boston (NBA) 98, Cincinnat! (NBA) 96 Spartans Expect 
    
Insulated Underwear 
HEADQUARTERS 
* 100% DACRON Another Busy 
Saturday vs. Pitt Daugherty Hopes to Use Composite 
vd ORK 3 
  
  
   
    
  
      
  
      
    
Swing is fun for all the family and is a marvelous means of 
and relaxation from daily cares. getting needed exercise .. . 
. and see how well you feel! Why not begin bowling tonight . Enduro on Sunday 
16 A.F.M. Automatic Alleys | 
? INSTRUCFION 
Open Bowling Every Day ‘fing out at 10:01 a.m. 
By Margaret Young Every: kok 
Wed. Afternoon 1 to 4 p.m. | All riders have numbers as- The 4th annual Acorn Enduro 
Run sponsored by the Pontiac Mo- 
'torcycle club will be held Sunday 
at Gingellville Community Center, 
(3575 Baldwin Rd. 
| About 100 riders are expected to 
/compete with the first cyclist start-    
signed to them and are sent out 
at one minute intervals. They re- 
| main on a schedule of 24 m.p.h. 
throughout the run and_ points 
are lost when the riders are not 
= fe on schedule at any of the 10 
4443 Dixie Hwy. | check points. Drayton Plains 
  gellville Mom's Club.   
    —_——— = Se FOR RESERVATIONS CALL — OR 3-7464 | igo ea tmcrstcee br the Car be Wiliam Cowie,           
    
  game), 2:0 ( ga 
game), Ea (sixth Sains 
eo 71,563 (fourth game) 65,279 
Receipts et) —$277,263.60 (first game) 
(third aoaneys $434,479.07 (fourth game), 
(sith game). MILWAUKEE (AP)—The composite box score of the first six games ef 
1958 World Series: Series Box 
a 
NEW YANKEES : BR H 2B 3B BB B.Ay. POA E F.Av. * NYLON SHELL | | Soph ~ leer nt... eee eens te ee im 
~ Several Sophomores in S$ 7 10 2 4 3 4° 3 aro Lom * NON-ALLERGIC | Mant! 6 20 460 1 2 «3 6 8 300 144 8 8 i 
JIN-ALLE : +-East- Lansing Game _ 1 2 2 9 0 © 1 t 3 333 1b 2 © 1600 
eee one | -$-+-4-4- 444-34 ard $3 ay 
* DUSTLESS » as Lansing (UP — ie BE Piliiiiii mari g EAST LANSING (UPI) — Michi- : 
= e a3 6 6 60 8 8 lt ll te 88 OO 
* MILDEW PROOF igan State coach Duffy Daugherty] farhes 405 } e 8 ¢ r) 9 ¢ H = ‘ 4 $ 18 
* MOTH-PROOF indicated yesterday he would puss i 4 1 $ a ° o 2 2 FJ fae: Pig 
play a lot of sophomores to see = : ey ye ee es St pana 
* HAND what they can do under game con- ~2 ¢ 0 0 6 6 8 8 0 8 me 8 8 8 oe 
WASHABLE ng ehen the Sorte eer EEL EE EEL LCR EEE Pitt Saturday. ; 2 0 o 0 @ 
f 60 06 0 0 1 00 8 8 UO 000 
“Pitt is a good team,” Daugherty i ¢ ° @ 0 0 00 8 6 09 ¢ 8 ‘ A] 
$4495 admitted and said the Pennayivanialearee Secccet TEREST EE BE Eg contingent would be hard to beat.) Totals 22002... 6 199 Lo ae $7 «206x164 53. 3 
| But, he said the Spartans d 28 %BHR Rdi, BB SO B.Av. PO A E F.Ay. 
_ @ looked a “‘lot better” after brief sr] 3 ‘ ° ot 7 44 4g ut 3 : $y 
drilis yesterday and the players vie a i oar fee a ee] 4 1 
Insulated Socks were “coming out ofthe letdown Secceeece eee they were in” after Michigan’s @ 106 @ © 6 @ 0 000 6 G0 0 000 ; 20 3 62 «(60 (1000 
$ 50 p- rugged defense held the East ae ee Oe ee ee 
. Lansing squad to a 12-12 stand- wee ce es tee ees oe 
ff Saturd ‘90 300-2 «261.000 
anid : pease stig MR eS The Spartans did lose a ‘lot of $3 Ree i 3 4 3 = 3 aes oe 
All Types of prestige and self confidence, and| "us? P 20 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 mo o 0 Oo |e 
|then dropped from fourth to ninth] McMahon p ee eee ee stm tt 8 Come 
Insulated Underwear 'in the AP poll, just a notch above esses ue oo my -¢ 1 8 1.008 
. unbeaten Pittsburgh, the opponent G 210 23 55 10 1 2 22 21 53 262 162 65 5° STS 
® DUOFOLD see Sateeey Fy * owe ~~ rh Pafko in 9h Anning of first game, ran for Covington in ‘Sth 
inning of four game. j inning of first for Adéock in 
@® FISHNET |_No levity has been apparent on! fa isuing ‘ot fours’ gene wa anes ote Bae Pr aS” ies a ete 'the Spartan practice field this|s#me- Adcock im 10th . ust) for Covington in 7th inning of second game, ran for 
@ ALLEN- A week. Coaches have been grim inning of sixth game. Sak es . ier » 
: | and serious about the work on =: beri f 57 fame, struck out it pimar in th ne ot cor game 
hand, concentrating on errors un- Pg ra Thank for Mone euaon on ahha he we ath 
‘covered in the Michigan game and/fourth game out for Kubek in 6th ie 6th tnning of sixth game. 
on position shifts to bulwark weak-|*—Struc for mu fm ioning of third thine game. fouled out for Pizaro in 
nesses. inning inn! of third game, ran for Covington in 
| Indications ate that Michigan|3,SHUsk, ot for, shan oo win maine ot seat. oom: 
State will do. some gambling on|!—Celled out on strikes for Bichsried in first game. 
lthe sophomores in this third home ST aleoaee 
‘game before the Spartans travel NEW YORK YANKEES mene FAS 
SPORTING’ GOODS ee en ccqag tans ESTAR we m1, mg, eames | Purdue. Duren 6 913 72 6 4 O 331 30 3 2 
- 300 4 «| (3.80 Tommy Wilson of Lapeer, a jis? : 3 2 ; i . ° : : ° wp ae 
sophomore who was out last year Kucks > hekd- er fer Ye Vane Joy ee Se J 
24 E. erence ST. ; because of a leg injury, has been Monroe 4 i 203 } i 8 ° ¢ FL an . ue 
ee =a | moved up as high as the second bers $333 $$ 8 2 6 6 8 8 (0 8 (OO 
|string at quarterback. Ores. ifs 1 ma fod oe Ss, — ; @ 3 3 3 SO 2 360 
at > . 
* * * | 7 ES \ yj | Another sophomore, Herb Ad-| OE ee co aD W Pw L Pet. ER ER.Av. 
Z derly, has been tested at second| But, te oe 1k me te 
team fullback in an attempt to) 302 $ 3 ° H $ i ome 3 aa 
Nn remedy the unsatisfactory situa-|peorro 211 3 0, 1 2 ° ‘00 H 4 
[on there: Totals anu 38 3 3-3 (500m 887 
The extra point failure — only| jeu tout Spann. 
“one success in seven tries after) ,Composte sgore © by mags: us 5-23 
\touchdowns — has been another) Milwaukee (N) $20 201 350 2-23 c 
, “ida point, calling for a lot of re-| gp .athews. §—Schoendienst, Logan 2. SF—Covington, Crandall, Pafko, Ber 
So | hearsals ‘a. = . .—_8choe Torre: Logan, Schoendienst and Torre; Crandall 
. . | seahorse: Spandall: cad gehoendiens Mathews and Torre; Duren, Kubek and 
_ FOR FUN AND FOR HEALTH | Bhowron’, Meiougn, Kubek and, Sows co Borer leet ee Ath Annual Acorn Berry tA), Gorman (N), ay (A), Jackowski go Umont (A). T—3:08 ¢ 
| 
' ie), E ec 
fifth game) 44,367 (sixth ie). 
eo 10.47 263. ame), $419,079.09 (fifth game), $277,263.60 
  
Pythians Hold Hunters 
Banquet Next Thursday 
Conservation department men, 
and possibly the grand chancellor 
lof Michigan Knights of Pythias, 
will appear at the 18th annual 
Hunters’ Banquet at Pontiac Lodge 
No. 19, Oct. 14. Event will take 
place at the Pontiac lodge hall, 
18 West Huron St., starting at 
6:30 p.m. It is expected that 200 
will attend. 
A sportsman program will be 
presented by a conservation de- 
partment man. Toastmaster will 
grand outer 
guard of Fellowship Lodge No. 227. 
Fanny Tompkins Temple No. 41, 
Pythian: Sisters, will prepare and   
C ongratulations, 
PONTIAC MOTOR COMPANY     | serve the dinner. e 
Cardinals Buy 
Two Pitchers 
ST. LOUIS (AP)—The St. Louis 
Cardinals announced Wednesday 
tracts of right-handers Gary Blay- 
lock and Dick Ricketts from Ro- 
chester of the International 
League, with whom St, Louis has| 
a working agreement, 
* * * 
The 6-foot-? Ricketts, former 
player with the Cincinnati Royals 
of the National Basketball Assn., 
is passing up basketball this win- 
24-year-old pitcher won 15 and lost 
13 for Rochester this year and had 
an earned run average of 3.22,   Kucks 
° Oosterbaan calls it “‘A ham and 
of |eggs attack — that is half-running, 
First |Tranchini, Navy’s rapidly devel-' 
night they have acquired the con- 
ter to concentrate on baseball, The: Navy's Tranchini 
to Throw Works 
at. Wolverines ‘Bold .and Confident’ 
Quarterback, Middies 
Invade Ann. Arbor | 
ANN ARBOR (UPD —"He's be bold       
                  
          
      
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INSULATED BOOTS 
Reg. $14.95 |) 33 
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MOSSBERG SHOTGURS . Model #173, 410 Ga. 
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~ Model 189K—410 Ga, Model 190K—16Ga. Rog, St $34.95 $26.88 “OW 329,99 
Meet iEt8 Go $39.95, now $30.99 
THE SPORT SHOP. "16 South Cass Lay-a-way for Christmas    
       
    
    eee 
junior quarterback are will. lead 
Navy's _ powerful. middies into 
Michigan Stadium Saturday. 
+ * * 
Groce knows Tranchini well.|- 
They teamed together.as part of 
- undefeated Clairton, Pa., orn i 
a few years back. Ironically, 
will be members of unbeaten 11}. 
when they reunite this weekend.    
  
But the little wolverine half- 
back isn’t the only..one whe 
Michigan scouts have warned 
their team to be prepared for the 
most dangerous quarterback to 
visit here since another junior 
Minnesota's Bobby Cox, single- 
handedly stunned the Wolverines, 
20-7, two’years ago. 
* * * 
Tranchini is the key man in 
coach Eddie Erdelatz’s pro-type 
offense. Michigan coach Bennie Hot Spray a a “Guaranteed for the life of $ 1 4% 
your car.” Protects your car 
from rust-out. Quiets your 
car-ride. Plus 
Tex 
Pontiac Undercoating 136 S. Seginaw FE 4-5453 , 
half-passing.” 
    
    
The young pass master didn’t 
see much action behing All- | 
American Tom Forrestal last 
year although he did engineer the 
Middies first Cotton Bowl’ score. 
: * * * 
But the stout, 187 pounds is leav- 
ing no questions unanswered after 
two games this year. He plunged 
for the initial TD in Navy’s open- 
ing victory over Williany and 
Mary, then barraged Boston Uni- 
versity for 221 passing yards and 
three TD’s last week, The Boston 
game was one of the finest ever 
by a Navy quarterback. 
‘Back of Week’ 
Honors Given 
to Middie Ace 
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — Joe, FINAL CLOSE OUT AT EDDIE STEELE FORD, Inc. -. ONLY 
11 NEW 1958 FORDS 5 DEMONSTRATORS 
to Choose From 
DON'T WAIT! First Come, First Served! 
WRITE YOUR OWN DEAL... 
“Let Us Try to Get It Approved for You” 
EDDIE . STEELE - FORD 2705 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor 
“Out of the High Oveshead Area” 
One Mile West of Telegraph     
     oping. quarterback, earned two/| 
accolades’ this week. | 
“Trigger Joe” 
passes paced Navy to a 28-14 vic- 
tory over Boston University and 
the Associated Press yesterday | 
designated him “Back of the. 
Week” for the same performance. 
* * * f. 
The honors for the a pon 
junior from Clairton, Pa., were FEderal 5-9204 
    
earned in: less than 30 minutes   
against Boston University: But he 
jcompleted 18 of 27 passes for 221 
yards and three touchdowns to put 
the Middies in a commanding 
lead, 
  
STOP TODAY Por Brake Service and 
Expert Motor Tune-Up Football Attendance Up 
DALLAS (AP)—The Southwest 
Conference is 35,822 ahead of last 
year in football attendance. 
To date this season 13 home; 
games have drawn 401,600. For   
  
ANNOUNGIN   on the Finest Pontiac Car 
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FRIDAY and SATURDAY: 
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Dodge — Plymouth — co ta! _ Imperial   G 
    
    
    
          10-11 
M. to 9 P. M. 
7 P. M.- | 
Will Be Served 
    Rochester, Michigan     
         
    
     
    the same period last year the to- 
ital was 365,778 for a like number 
of games. 
Rice has pulled in 86,000 for 
itwe games to lead the way, The 
|Owls had played only one home Mon-Wed-Fri. 8 A.M.9 PM-Tues.-Thare. 8-5:30—~Sat. 8-12 
-ACROSS FROM THE MIRACLE MILE 
. WOHLFEIL - DEE 2274 S. Telegraph 
FE 2-4907 
               
      
     
           
            
      
    
           game last season and drew 54,000. 
  
lacluding Clear Plastic Quobty lor Quel 18 beings youths eet Seat Cover Value ia moet =i poe eGo Sng ee" 
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x A 
|) 
bye        me ee __FIFTY-SEVEN. 
  
     Wabash 21-0, Kalamazoo 27.9 and | fo defeat Fraser’s Albion team, Adrian 39-0, while Hillsdale has | 20-14, and barely got by Hope downed Lakeland 21-0, lost to | 7-6. ; 
| Central Michigan 13-19 and wal- | ,inion has the MIAA’s leading 
    
      
        
        
     
      
          
      
    
  
    
    6 a 1S loped Olivet 44-0. rushers. Don Van Gilder hasif} 
Ts ae $ . < ~ kk picked up 142 yards on the ground |i 
Mir inn Ree, 7 $3 sy B, White's Nurs'y tit : chools. —_ Sica oad’ coon Matty Hillsdale has won four straight|in the Britons’ two — — ie 
gg : ; Huron Bowl|the spotlight from Michigan fo | va MIAA titles and has goné 29 league|while teammate Dave a J 
013, Shaw's Jewelers 80h, Poems he's ee Michigan State who play non-con-|Fromhart still is shaking up his|ames without a defeat. This is|back, leads the league with 201/fF. , : : 
ee seus ine apace _ ee wi me ce oe sata: [Weg teen veoetin ft MWe or tna nates lege kk ' FOR THE FINEST IN isetth’s. 13 3~ Car % %| The two big games pit P at | have not been beaten in eague ¢ FOR | | 
wh W L[Bewseise ity {i Gekiana Vend $ $| dale against Albion in a contest |terbacks, who had a minus 42\since Hope gained a 28-7 triumph| The leading passer is Bill Klenki # ARCHERY EQUIPMENT 
Ait, ison ib H John Ds 3 tees service 10. 6 phic Vela 7 S| that might well decide the MIAA “Yards against Air Force Academy |in 1953. of Alma’ with 165 yards on seven} @ Case Le, Phy. 18 H Briges ca 4 §)Fost ar-Rilby ig Williams Broo. # $| championship almost before the and minus 39. against Quantico. * *% * ___— |completions. His team meets é Reg. $15.00 
Cities Serv. 1 8 team No is 4&8 Ais Corral” cc mher  it| league campaign gets started | ‘There's no denying that Hills- | The last blemish on Hillsdale’s adrian Saturday in another MIAA} Glass Recurve Bow qos Be. 18. 55 Deller Beker 6 eee Te kad nas: Bolte ins} While Eastern meets | dale and Albion are the class of league record was a scoreless tie fray Another top passer is Doug!” ng ing ¢ 6 Bert then 3 | _taoe See Central Michigan in a game that | the MIAA. Each has won three [With Albion on Nov. 7, 193. /Perry of Kalamazoo who has ¢ 
Marphy 202, D. oe rn ese Lk. ELKS’ LADIES MONDAY | A year ago eet had two | thrown for 163 yards on git ~— Lé 
= Pts. a ; harrow @scapes in the MIAA.-The | pietions:—tHis—team— be % 
‘ELMS LADIES LEAGUE SEmhows 1) Geies’s 3 Dales had to come from behind ‘against Eve this weekend. i 
WL Dr. Millers 56 1 Trucksway 33 : Land O Lake 4 2 Cham. Velvet 3 31! 3. — Chucks Shack—4—3 — Averilt 24 e . __ Woolivgrs Pas 4 2--B’wers B. Est. 2 ¢ me Sait S Ser as see Gu, fe 
= a 1 6 
ton 208, G. Bradley $33; Brew- we wh 
ers jy Estate 168, Chucks Shack 2241. Hanger Gril) 15 1 kel'd 8 8 : =~ 
A&A Home H. 10 6 “ Hdw. 6 10 
WURON BOWL w Li cepltal Gass’ 9 7 Wilder € 10 os Ww ob W LiPsims Postal en W Side Mobil 14 2 W. Side Rec. 7 9|Pont. Pistons Aeceasory Tool 3 13 _ a pis Ss Pat Sweeney 13.2 Mont. Centre 6 8 : tb Musi¢ Wio-§ Haz’iton Lirng 610) Individual (1 game) Enapp 197; In- : = > Humphries 1 6 lets 4-12\ dividual (3 games) Lemon Pos; Team % 
Roth Lumber 16 6 Sparten Air 412/(1 game) Pontiac Pistons 141; Team rj $ 0 " e . = * a 
E. Highland § & Cone Rental 2 14/(3 games) Capital Glass 2005. rk @ er ; alt 142; W a . eice, Mobi) Tibt, East Hignland Sacrea:| SUNDAY NIOMT MIXED DOUBLES MATCHED HUNTING $4 495 - Hot Shots 92 4 C's 66 F 7 ARROWS, $18.50 Value ——— : . so 3 De: WURON BOWL WEDNESDAY “Av Boule Trouble ii Beidom Strikes 3 1 [zy 4 . a : 
| we ts in Pasters ; ARROW ec fA OO ig aa I om Getter Dusters 3 9 , ‘ NOCS per 40.48 Hann bes il Prenk’s Market 7) Individual. (1 game) women — Barb i ¢ J 11 Bulman’s Héwe 6 pickett 237, men — Cliff Senter 266: : : pe ichea af . a §| Individual “(3 gamer) women — Rarb Rugged Waterproof _ Northern Lumber § Dean Bros 6 \Team Pippen ie cag ermed Camouflage William Bull 228%, 233. :L. G. Pidle it 315. Kas Co. Oh abe — 665 Team (3 games) Seldom ontee z Parka and Pants | 
; Suits for the   
ELKS LADIES WEDNESDAY 
Schrarseany 's Martha ty Strikes and Spares Made with Benkaetet By doe Wilman 
Bowling courtesy is the thought 
for today. Courtesy in bowling is 
Pts. pis.| no different from courtesy any- 
Helge & Kidd =» 3 GingelivilleMkt =2 where, and it can contribute a Earl's Mrt 3 Shaw's 1 ' 
dacobeen's 2 Merle Norman ij 
£. Van Camp ‘Gingellville Mkt.) 166, 
M. Retzlaff (Heiae & Kidd) 435; Heide 
& Kidd $$1—1627 Po: 
Super Chief D1 ‘ Waterford Mkt 
Avastin Norvell Ag 6 Twin tg 
Midtown Bhop € Paddock Pilm Ber 
T. T. LEAGUE wenvan” 
    Firestone RUBBER-X 
for Extra Long Mileage Value 
  | a $13.95 $@95 D 
  “et ead Py 
  
  
ELK'S HOUSE LEAGUE   HUNTERS! 
  
  w : we “ 9 3 MiracleMIS 6 6 of 
Cariings BiL 8 4 's 6 6 (f Sed 
“ete i Sy Drewry's Beer 17 § Det Design Eng 4 8 . “ 
Huron Clean'rs 7 5 Nu Brite Plat 4 & 
Toon aCee L 6 6 Behr Cats 216 
E. Stanley 229. D Stone 623, Town & Plus tax and   
Country Lounge 048. Club 99 2720 
FIRST MtGuTES recappable 
tire 
  wo wu. an Oakiand Pek. 12° 4 Peas. Ladry 0 7 6.70-15 Size Prues il §& Weldon's 8s Blackwall 
Rips 11 & Abstract,Title 7 
Drewry's 19 6 B&B. Sewer 6 10 Tube-type Hert: 16 6 Tmpitn R. 412 
A a Heat 10 6 State Bank 4 12; 
G&aM 6 ce Geet C. 412 
ae Bank 10 6 
  E Needham 190, Needham $19: Gskuae Packing 161, Oakland. Packing). | « §TAY WITHIN YOUR 
2178 } OWN ALLEY PREMISES          
                 
     
           $2.66 | $2.29 @ S/F Safety Fortifiead Cord     
                            srivax mixzp =| great deal to the enjoyment you Body for extra blowout protection Chest Hich ea 2 ‘ Penguins : : ~ your team-mates receive from | : HIP BOOTS 5 love game. i ees 11 ; Bluejays 1 ; For instance, do like our bowler @ Seven Sturdy Non-Skid 10" HE COS in today’ drawi . Stay wi in ' _ *s _* 
= 10 : — a laf chiceee emg ies Tread-ribs for longer mileage vaive 10   
-K. Clark 1%, _ W. Pitser | Move over onto the next alley if 
buvebirds Yei—2ivr | anyone is bowling there. @® Rugged Shoulders and Never annoy or distract a bowler 
"Save! Save! Save! wees fe 6 upom the speve® tt Sidewalls for better performance Marble Shotgun-Rifle 
Cleaning Kit 
DUCK CALLS | Fes. ‘2 87   
ach 
HW ar 
bother_him just enough to make 
him miss his strike or spare. You   
14.95 White Gym $4550 
    
       
    
  
  
    
    
  
                  
  
  
  \ pen sesiewewaessiwcis Nex it anyone to do it to you, | 
| so just use the same consideration 
\ Supporters 75 \ for others. Water Eopuliont 
Don't waste time yourself ‘when| c 
y ns . $7.95 Football § m Nin oe aera Dent Pe 
Shoes spondSootanobog pose. Concentrate on your shot. 00-1 : . : 
y: Gwent $465 \ Don't worry about any bowler ex- Size 6.00-16 Size 7.5013 Boys’ Hunting CHIPPEWA 
\ ters 1 A cont the one on your immediate Q5 85 SOX Ae ee rifht. we Be 
\ ALL STAR CONVERSE \ Don't stand too long at the foul] sree nei 98 e PRTING BOOT 
® BASKETBALL SHOES \ line after your ball has struck the| it... 21.95 pins either, Remember, bowlers on| i 
N Boys’ Football Face Guards  acioining alleys are waiting to Plus tox and Plus tox ond Plus tax and Men Lee Geasins) Ras) Mose | bor wl, and you are a distraction recoppable tire recoppable tire recoppable tire Rez. $1.29. SHELL ~ 
\ WELDEN Qo at the ‘foul line. Blackwall Blackwall Blackwall Nylen, Wool, BELTS 98¢ \ If you use common sense Vand Tube-type Tube-type Tube-type —_ . OA 
® SPORTING GOODS the Golden Rule, your bowling ae : 
Ne 51 Mt. Clemens FE 4-6211 Sz ooeey wih Be en comple © | a 
Od ddd (Copyright 1958, John F. Dille Co.) ; . = ge sal italia 
See quality chart posted in our Tire Department. At Firestone, ) Thermo-Knit 
| price is the true guide to the quality of our tires. - X : sore . ‘ 5 : . eeps warmt in — insul- 
Smart das a fox : a \r9 =° , ated to keep SE #95 
} YOUR TRADE-IN TIRES ARE YOUR DOWN PAYMENT WREXK *5” That's what people say about the man who “ een a ( \\ | 
wears Kuppenheimer suits. Every suit by | Famous ALE eee EES es SS a cde. : 
Kuppenheimer ‘is style-right. And so com-   fortable. Sleeves and armholes are designed | 
and tailored for a new kind of comfort and a, 
freedom. Trouser wiist and legs enhance this 
year's trimmer look. In ultra-smart fabrics BAe WINTER TRE ADS. 
and colors. Be smart in a Kuppepheimer. 
~ + Applied on sound tire bodies 
or on your own tires. FAMOUS BLACK BEAUTY 
Lifetime Guarantee 
Convenient Brunswick 
ice —»s : BOWLING BALL with 
SCRAPER | BAG and SHOES 
COMPLETE   
    omc Toe 
he 
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      UPPENHEIMER 
Ay investment in good appearance 
    
            
         : No 
L ki Fil 2 Obligation OUTFIT 
ocking File 
nd recappable tire Supply Cabinet 
Piss Seog or Tubeless Compare 88 
at 14.95 S     
Pay only 1.00 down 
Hundreds of uses around the 
home — receipts, bills, office 
and school supplies! Built of 
furniture steel with pearl gray 
finish. 12% x 10 inches — full 
30 inches high. Ball Alone “@gF 
$2495 ‘exactly fitted by our 
factory-trained 
specialists Same tread 
design, tread 
quality, width 
and depth as new 
Firestone Tires. Remov es - 
ice and 
snow in 
a jiffy!       
  WC , > iad 
Open Friday Nights til 9 P.M. =) 140 N. SAGINAW FE 5-2620 146 W. HURON FE‘2-9251 106N. Saginaw St. 
    
                      
  : j . . . s S : rs ‘ a oe ee pg Se Oy Sa ae Ts oe 
rs * ; = diy . . “ % ee ap Mpg : 
: =. v . eae | os i : ; j ” : = oF : . a ae : 5 Bug Pee, Hee : 
2 G8 : é ; % wae < Ze we Se 
- y 
     
         _FIFTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1058,   
News in Brief 
Frank W. Oliver, 38, of 14430 
Northfield St., Oak Park, pleaded 
guilty to reckless driving before 
Municipal Judge Maurice E, Fin- 
negan and was fined $100 or 10 
days. } 
dames Cole, 37, of 550 Montana 
Bioeas bound cute to eineait cout Corn, 0 sans | M ARKETS yesterday on a charge of assault 
with intent to rape after saa 
nation before Municipal The following are top prices 
Maurice E. Finnegan, Bond i: Move on Mart covering sales of locally grown 
set at $500. protons histgs co to a Farmer's 
et by growers sold 
Max R. Warren, 88 Edison St., them in wholesale package on 
reported to Pontiac police yester- CHICAGO uw — Grain futures ‘Quotations are furnished by the 
day that an estimated $300 worth prices weré .nixed in fairly active| Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 
of golf-equipment has been stolen early transactions on the Board of| Wednesday: , 
from his’ car. Trade today. 
| ction n 2 * 
Thieves broke into the Delmos. ny ae patel pnesd Detroit Produce 
  3 
  
  Mart Continues | 
lrregular Today NEW YORK (®#—The stock mar- 
ket continued irregular in active 
early trading today. There was a 
slight tendency to the downside. 
Key stocks showed changes of 
fractions to about a point,      
     
    
   
              
      
       
     
       
     
    
    
       
      
  
   
     
   
       
     
       
    
    
   
         
      
   
                
           
    
      
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
  
      
  
  
    
  
    
  
    
  
  
    
  
    
  
    
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
        
  
  
    
    
      
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
  
    
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
      
    
    
    
      
  
    ‘isher St.. and) j x Grocery Store, 186 Fisher a aweather for harvesting! ___ child _The mixed pattern was asserted 
stole an undetermined amount of ang forecasts of freezing tempera-| Azle, Meteiedt feser.-e on WSR St the “start ‘The Beker tape was merchandise, “it was reported to) |tures over a large portion of the|Grapes, Concord ee) pk. wise 1.25 | behind transactions for four min- = 
Pontiac police yesterday. fawest it belt t and| Peaches. Elberta 4.00 Iga ' est farm omorrow rear Bartlett, bu. * ie utes. Os, 
F Rummare Sate. 14 E. Pike, Mon.;Saturday. _ Watermetnn. 6; cccse oss coe Meters were down _ slighi Oct. 13, 12 noon till 9 p.m. Pues | There was some commercial buy-| precerrreee ee at lightly; , ; steéls and rails mixed. Utilities, through Pri. Oct. 17, 10 am. to 4/ing of wheat futures at the start VEGETABLES : Se p.m. Clothine and household. New | against export sales of the cash|5e#ns. green, round, ou. ........+ 4.50 tobacces and drugs leaned to the 
and used. Sisterhood of Temnle Beets, topped, bu. es 160; upside. Aircrafts, chemicals Beth Jacob. adv. product. Trading in the bread|sroccon (behs.» dos. 235)~ . ol 
| grain,y however, was generally aay etnias ted 1.75) Fubbers were mixed. ass e: Notice of Clarkston Farm andj)" Cauliflower. dos ........ - 250 HULA-HOOP CONTEST — Three young enthusiasts help ad- ~ eG z Hentee” Rowe: taste Garden rummage sale in Clarks-|light. Celery, dos. stalks. 110, The second day of irregularity the - on cousins, Alan- Weddle, 9, of ston Community Center from 9 to; Near the end of the first hour Cora: sweet. 4 dos, =. 150/followed the market's sustained vertise the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce hula-hoop _—and her brother, Robert, ‘9; and.their cousins, So 
9 on Friday the 10th. 9 to 12 pare wheat was unchanged to 3g lower,|Dill tbchs: doz... 95] climb to a series of record highs.} _ contest, scheduled from 5-9 p.m. tomorrow at the municipal park- 1160 Premont and Barbara Weddle, 12. With the contest .open to 
urday the llth. adv. Dec. $1.96; corn % higher to 4) Hee oy oe 1-18/ The day-to-day advance haked at! ing lot at Pike and Mill streets. Left to right are Sharon Brady, - any skilled hula-hooper, there'll be trophies and prizes awarded 
A rummage and bake sale of the |Jower. ojd style Dec. $1-14%2; cats} Ketiran) wits dem ++ 1.38/a level in the averages which Wall). 11, of 172 E. Iroquois Rd.; Diana Weddle, 5, of 1124 Premont Ave. _in two age brackets, 12 years old or younger and age 13 to 19. 
Mt: Bethel Methodist Church, lo-/ unchanged to % higher, Dec. 64%4; |onions, dry,‘ (bag) 80 ‘Ib. .. 2.00| Street analysts anticipated would 
ery eyed OO Meat 2nd rye % to 1% lower, Dec. $1.31%; Racaiey | cra) bes aN !.90/ be a resistance point. , : . 
t. 11, 9 to § p.m. adv.|and soybeans 3% higher to ¥% low-|peppers, red. sweet, bU. ............ 2.50 xk 8 seizing the silencer oa a in f< 
» aminage » eale--Oct 10th, 10.00.) NOV S217. Pumping ty. ©) ME swscccciittt 14s] Studebaker-Packard was about ierd rf | nt “foreibly, unlawfully, and 1 ae raffic on Great, Lakes © 
1:00. St. “Andrew's Episcopal wey | eee: a Le oe a _ unchanged in moderate dealings ly’ from a neighbor of Kierdorf's care fe . : 
Church. 5301 Hatchery Rd., Dray- Grain Prices Squash. Delicious. bu. .....-......, 150\@fter being the most active stock in Madison Heights. h T ] 1n 58 ton Plains. adv. Tomatoes, No. i DU. .seesvereeseee 1" yesterday. Kierdort’s TOPS HICAGO GRAIN i rips opped. ee ery aes Ss all . w sted for attorneys also say 
cnr Y Sale: At First Con-| crc Aco. Oct. 9. (AP) — Opening} GREEN. = wae ee no search warrant or warrant for 8 . 
oO urch. E. Huron and «rain : Montgomery Ward, Boe and S - 
SET oe ning oe 8-00. | = sfenpoage, bu oooses cossssesneeens Hae) OOTY ey ene v™Ms arrest was used Aug. 4 when the | ANN ARBOR w — Commerce|in traffic was due mainly to the aay | WHEAT Dec, ATs ‘\Xale Be. occblslke "rott 38 hin . . «|, Weapons and silencer were taken on the Great Lakes dropped rag recession, 
= Mustard bu. 's.ccccciicscscesssesee 128 losers were Goodrich, In") Asks Hearing to Dismiss)‘ as evidence. ly in the first eight months of ke Rummage Sale. Pontioak | Ch s feteee 254 |SOFFEL, DU. © ss eeesseteees tens ceees a ternati Harvester, United Air- eee 1958. 
ter. National Secretary Assn val 3149)8wtss chard. So Se ete ee nite craft,- General Electric and New Charge of Possession The court is <sied to release) Commission figures show iron 
ae ney ae Ree ho om 9 pm. | ee 133% rine een York Central. of Pistol Silencer the 67-year-old Kierdorf, once the) In some cases, the drop ‘ranged |ore traffic from Canadian and U.S. 
[Dee i Mar peek ee OO a on , major suspect in the still unsolved /nearly to 50 per cent below a com- jake ports dwindled from about 
Rammes So Par abe Dec 0.14. 118% Dee... 10.48B- SsA Endive. bleached DU ie New York Stocks fatal burning of his nephew, Frank./ parable period a year ago, accord-|§9 500,000 tons during January- 
cee 9 ee I che . s . : 
Hall. Sat., “Oe from 10 till adv, | May Saree Aare ao 10.16 jLettuce, leaf, bu. .... Jaooncccsde { (Late Morning Quotations) Attorneys for Herman Kierdorf x *& *& | ing to the monthly newsletter of|September 1957 to 39,800,000 tons 4 
[ERR o52 oes HESS May oe pm rn Romaine. dU. -..+ .....06-seese-. 1.35 Pigures after decimal point are eighths| yesterday ‘iled a motion to dismiss} Chief Richardson discovered the the Great Lakes Commission, for the same 1958 span. 
Rummage Sale. First Presbyte-| s.niq: a-Asked ©) ; : Admiral ...... 14 Kresge SS ... 29.3\the charge against their client of) homemade silencer, along with a e+ kk. 
rian Church. Pri. 6 to 8 pm. Sat. «| Poultry agd Eggs —|Achegue v2 Kort," #2 | possession of a pistol silencer. |German luger pistol and dynamite The cay are Soong 0 
eda Independent, but Tidy - perrorr TRY Allied Btrs ieee @ os Lor Glass. 07.6) Oakland County Circuit Judge|caps, at the home of John Tyler,, Total traffic through the Soo rise traffic was grain, 
Rummage pale 95 Wall St. Fri- pende ALY DETROIT, Oet. 8 “WAP)—Prices_ paid) Alum Ltd ..... L-: 3 |Frank L. Doty set Oct. 14 at 10:30) of 29078 Spoon St. when he went:.to canals from January through {newsletter said. 
day 9 to 9, Sat. 9 to 5. adv. Tete 6h, = firg aries CSS ey ? !!49.8|for a-hearing on the motion. This|look for -Kierdorf to inform him| Ausust this year was down more * *« tf I S$ ua. v : $ 
Rummage sale. 461 S. Saginaw. ne seahorse ube eeren’ do .--. 20.2/ is two days before the former De-| his val lay dying in a Pontiac! an half, said the newsletter.) 1. 14 7 ¢ ef the Labes* 
Ginn, a cafe operator, said a pa-|| Heavy type hehe 17-19, light type hens oa F | In January-August 1957, 73,696,- pe per ow a | Sat. Oct. adv. walked into her establishment, | u i. ge ‘we 1. rafal a troit. Teamsters official was to! og | 701 the snaice ‘iiron ere, fleet was in operation by 
tron a} s., W Ss - . 5 . tons went a 
: Rummage  Sale—Bat. Oct. 11th, /asked for an old newspaper, pro-|caPoneties, under & Ip : ga'¢| Stand trial on the charge. oe Kierdorf has been free | ereneh mid-September after a gradual in- s Ibs. 20-21, Ducklings a | : compared to 31,722,195 for a * 8-1. p.m., . Hall. adV.| weeded to carve up a cantaloupe| Heavy wpe fase spare ed hy bel * * ; on a $15,000 bond since his arraig like 1958 period, crease during the last* three | 
2 he carried and after eating it) | Market steady on wn Fe “yeti Aneconda 300 _ 3 2 pel The motion “7 eu rok pore on be — arin in} i Last year at a 
ae mo. en fryers caponettes e =e vs¢ &)*icharges Madison ights Police . Conviction could bring five; Marvin Fast, executive com- ber per cent o' vesse: wrapped the remains in the papel|ample on hens and fryers. Farm offere|Armour & Co. 19 Merck . ..... 68 ; i e Offers Feast for 35c and dumped them in a cafe waste|ine of caponettes ‘continue “iberal” ang| Atchison, 34.7 Mergen Lino. 43 ||Chief Robert E. Richardson with'years in prison and a $2,500 fine. ‘mission director, said the decrease 'were in operation, 
CHICAGO (UPI) — The oldest |Dasket. aggressive. Overall demand is fair. Tur-| Beth ve: 492 Mpls Hon... 94.6 | S keys are steady. Pairly good interest : Minn M&ift .. 93 . = ; reetaimara in Chicner ciennicla : ; a ts heute Sone 20) Minn Pal .. 314 Death Notices Funeral Directors 4 Help Wanted Male 6|Employment Agencies 8A 
celebrated its 90th anniversary No Escape! Danger! arn ... 387 Mont Ward .. 39.2 “s HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE” | TOP FLIGHT YOUNO PAR . . DETROIT EGGS priggs sees 86 stot Wheel .. 15.7 COATS manager, € all three. Jor r rut ' 
today by offering meals at 1868 | TULSA, Okla. @ — A sign on @| DETROIT, Oct. 8 (AP)—Eggs, f.0 Y--2+ 70 stotorola . .. 48.5 age 4 : Roreugsly  igasiiie, sree} EVELYN EDWARDS 
prices, including: Sirloin of beef, |fire escape door on the 18th floor|Detroit. cases included. fe eral-state voce ET MUFTAL SD: ae ee gl as Gee can FUNERAL HOME parts wholesale, ae ze best of] VOCATIONAL COUNSELING 
madeira sauce, 35 cents: half a of the National Bank of Tulsa sa nnites: Grade a tombe $3; bse me us ise Mat Span a .e— E ean acarasy: oie bon a | SRM | write Pontiac ‘ontiae Press Box 191. or. Wasa - ; “32, W avg. , large a w Nat air . 5 4 7 : FOR . East 
baked chicken or roast leg of |building reads: avg 41's. medium 35-96, wid. ave. ap. tre Net Oyps 1: 832 Oct. 11, at 11 a.m. from Voorhees- Donel son- Johns WAgTED ELDERLY wae | SUITE 4 
spring lamb, also 35 cents; | Fire Escape . : small 24-29, wid. avg. 38%; grade Bian Pre |... 30. Nat Lead ...1114 vale oes eal eer ee wae a Wages. Living quarters fura, “Pe | 
home-made pies, five cents a | High Voltage pee ieee" welice ne 35: ed are roa oo pry eb cy oraed AS vo Oxford Cemetery: Mrs. Carr vin ““Deslaned tor Puen | Instructions 9 
slice. , Keep Out. 129. wtd. avg. 28. sees 203 Sta Pw .. 216 e in state a e Voo | 
: ; “P Se ey Commerciily rs ss anes Cater oe i Ohio Ol... 402 Ren oor “ee cara | ™ Bd ee services Ts Be ™ _Help Wanted Female 7 7 So et) ar) MA. es: Grade w -50: .. 65.6 Owens Cng .. 54 COMPANION FOR ELDERLY! | _ "le SDH _ po large 45-47: large 43-47; medium 32-33%;|Chrysler ...... 58.2. 75.6 24 Taylor: age 45: beloved daugh- | S R eR LY LESSONS WELL - QUALI . small cy arade A jumbo 48; Cities Sve 2.1. 584 coherent as A ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ro ye c ' Voorhees- iple lady. Verv tight work VE b-3166 | VOU ter with yearp cf axperh arge 42- extra large 44; medium 30- + 5446 pan A W Air 21.6 , . - omen WATFREas a. ence, FE 46458. ssk for rs. . a small 24-25 Cc on a8 Elkins and Mrs. Philip Dt ble: F N < Sig eps : 
; Market fully steady on large with Cols ot Seal 43.7 also survived by four grandchil- ~ US ERAL HOME | Oakland Ave. Paul, Near Lincoln Jr, igh, 
stferings | barely” ample | particalarty ea ee 14 Parke Da ....1036 Se rocet see etea pecs from PE 2-8377 EXPERIENCED LADY FOR RE Work Wanted Male 10 } es edium. 8 ooee ‘$ Penney, JC... ® ; WVoorh -Siple Chapel ith R Ls « @ » ON en eee 
oe S sere, Receipts on, small the slow de- Hee goree B42 Py gd ois 239 Theodore, R. Allebech ofrae dias nnn Cemetery Lots 8) riz Fes Drs Ciessers. 10 WS | 94-CARPENTER WORK BEW- 
. 8 mand. on NG 48 ee Ot nterment in Perry Mt. Park Cem-/ prauTiPUL 6 GRAVE LOT PER- Bx RIL’ WOMAN POR KITCH av taBLE GO % 
| - 33 Phileo ° 500 3 Stnvoorhaee-Siple! Funeral Home. Bish eed Betas wil dt werk 1é y Bie Boy Drive | 4V: w =o 
U f 0 UC lon | ags Livestock ia Sec eos a M Rea We Garten: wae $4 ber EXPERIENCED WAFTRESSwiit| Put. D_B-Mfuronek, Pel bes | tvesTo te Pure Oil ..... 40.2 2 y. Longtetiow: see ° a 
te oernorr uivesrocx Mba RCA 8 sored wsattet By Mei taretta | | At 10 a.m. tones there | | soir" on Pant Tie REGU. | Bad, teagonable Call after 6 p.m. - : : . . | DETROIT, Oct. 9 Sabie Cetle t Senne 486 Rex Drug .«. 28 ' Pet aicao tac Deall dear ener were ie pal elle laters eS po CARPENTRY 2 YRS =P 
DETROIT  — Local disputes,ers continuing on the job. No/Saiable 200. Bulk early supply slaughter ro Be be ICE con Li of Mrs. Margaret Bailey, Mrs. office jp the following mother Mo investment or sotieit-| Kitchen cabinets and formic « 
at General Motors and Chrysler hearing has been set for’ a perma- Saughter steers add) belfers ten Seneca ed Royal Dut 13 ot Willan, Robert ack ; ina | 3 boxes: ye eee trate training OR 2g as | Eee tahoe Gene REDES slaughter steers and heifers unchanged, - 66.3 2 oo! 5a ¢s Le eck an iP YOU CAN WORK Fs HOURS |C & V JANITOR SERY REDEC- 
‘nent injunction. . few lots mixed high good and choice ; Safeway St .. 343 Albert Stockwell. Puneral service Box Replies rat and painting 
held back 1959 model production j = ee steers 26.00, small 16t choice steers 21.50; Es. 6 St Reg Pap .. $3 will be held Saturday. Oct. 11, 9¢ |. 7 SY Fal sake ae. Bec ot any kind" Ress. Call 
today despite a new contract cov- Chrysler yesterday fired 26 | 35'00.25 75; utility, caste ana iaifers : $7.6 Sears — . ne Chapel pela as T. Hart 5, 28, 32, 63, 74, 76, AARDIC oP ED PERSON FOR IN- CABINET Mak NET MAKER AnD CARPE 
ering 25,000 workers at five GM! yesterday fire EM |20.00-2.75; utility cows 18.00-19.50: few ee als 6... 088 Sat) Pack Cemetery: Mire. ug DLE | 91, 110, 115. teresting telephone work. Boats 
|ployes at the plant on the grounds | {rene "elses ay ote Ibon, Com. : 9:1 Socony ...... 50 will lie in state at the Voorhees- Liege | LE & lose 
plants. | they had continued a walkout! pared last week trade first of week| ET, RR ----- 11.1 gou Bac s..-+ $6.7 _Siple Pune renee Home. = ae WE EXP » AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC. 
General Mot d the Int active, slaughter steers and heifers fully $1.1 gou Ry ..... 51-2 OSBORNE. OCT. 7, 1988, WILBUR LADY TO L. IN. OWN ROOM With tools. FE 63146000 
national Union of Exectrical Work: UAW officials had. ordered them stn’ sansvria Ss cont Ssr™-oltlfeog Ma = HS aed Bea. He soni er, Lae, Sees |Help Wanted Male _6| telua’ witty “wee | EXPERENCED, ron MEATS ational Union 0 ric or i te) icial e ‘evenly steady to 25 cents lower; cows OG Le coo 86. ch. (formerly 0 or +4 _gtoceries, produce F 
IUE) hed SEI GSA Sace) oe closed fully 60 cente lower, instences! “++ 46.5 std Oil Cal .. 85.6 73, beloved husband of Mrs. Julia; qaygpro BIBLE STUDIES  DI-| LADY WANTED FoR cee | BARD Y MAM re LIKB ers ( reached agreement last to end. 1.00 off; bulls steady; several loads! + $3, Std Ol Ind .. 48.1 Osborne: dear father of Donsid | “vision of Sacre records seeks| Care, Light Keeping some small fob of cement, 
night on a three-year pact cover- The UAW, reporting 43 men arencenre ne cae meee a "45.21 ro a bard 0 pee ere NG at bw bes gecreseatett = Eesenen Sree ——~r * meg io can 5 or romeie 3-43 
5 -27.75; Py 8 _prime! . 5 ve ~ | Sher Ss Pe aA BE | Ess Ui 
ing IUE workers in all company! fired, charged Chrysler with “reck- 2211 Ib. steers 27.75: few loads mixed rane postin i rr Marguerite Work and. Dr. Bari istormation, call Rochestey Part | MIDDLE AGED WOMAN & "ig a = Bp oo Se a sonar ee 
plants except one at Dayton, Ohio. | jes. anq irresponsible’ action and atSere antes toad mesuri prime) Aine tb. 83. gun Ol ..... ol Osder ne; also survived ~by as time _permisseble OL 1-100). sales) ane cid sivag win tem | 9 for'earpentre— = 7 : ! load mostly prime 1128 lb. Gen Fds ..... ; Q r vi reat- epin x « * trying to. ‘‘exploit the good faith Coat 28.00; moet ped to _averdge 2 ‘ad pang! P 1 Hs snchilgren,. “Puneral” service A M AN ouseke ping Own os Seger AN a reps Sone wT Sint 
The agreement, after a week's efforts of the union.” average choice 1060-1090 ib. steers late, 1) 283 Sylv cree! : . A ge Vlg for interview References Re- | 7° So = : gr & at 27.00: standard to low good steers|Gen Tel ..... 625 Texas Co .... 77.2 A Tale from Richardson-Bird Pu- wanted toy 1a mater ment __ quired aanaED MAN 19 Wants WORE 
strike, followed the pattern of the x * * 2275-2475. utility steers 20.50-22.75; | Gen 11234 Tex @ Bul .. 23.3 Fide emilee nh tell || Ghar working tondificte Hours | NEEDED WOMAN, AGE © TO 66, | of any kind. FE 385 
United Auto Workers Union agree-| 1, 4 statement from international] Ms, £002! ,io,e Taree <hotee 750-000 1B. Cheeta"? 185 Thomp Pals. 682 ment in Onkgrove Cemetery, Mil- | URimited, Apply ose W, Huron) ©, PD care, tos usr eewerk. | ites ent tate Sane § veces eifer 4 oad good 770 Ibi qo.) pr ; en an! tate etwee: and 11: mn. 
ments with GM, Ford and headquarters, the UAW said the heifers 25.25; load average to nigh g ogi BS I a at Hichardscn bird Puneras Mame, : = segs Mage Cite | Work Wanted Female 11 
Chrysler. company did not give the UAW|sra ‘to ‘iow ‘good heiters 22 80-24.50. 793 Beet thc WAGNER KATE (Nan WICKER: Auto . TT Gd Tg ea aaa j utility . heifers 20.00-22.50; utility eows . 68 * 90. = Sepeaeereenmremaee A 
Local disputes continued to hit |time to. implement its return to coi iriy 1850-20 50, late trade 18.00- foots) Cece ee isa ham: widow of Oscar 6.. mothe Finy FO0E wirrndes Gapres. |) A BOOS Bare 8 Bc GM's 1959 model production with | Work order to the locals. |19.50, few up to 20.00; late trade on/Gud OM ..... 115.4 Un Carbide a BP dent = +e = Pasquale's Restaurant Lake Or [3 =) ORK HOUSE. 
111 plants closed. Soi = [eR ELE eat node cir aa 383 Unit air Lin 30.6 Robert M. and the late Wilson ALESMNEN) | 02 cet _sner_ 4 pm_my $1an.|7 Wore or restaurant, Exp. PE AW use < ais : ne ae | Chrysler did not state the num- bulls 22.50-24.00; | few | strong weignt Hl ee 920d eG Coe Wagner; sister of Mrs. George ROOM AND Es IN EX-| 80061 Cal after 4 members have return o | bs u y bulis up to 50: cutter bulls ge we. 48.3 ~ Brooks and Mrs C. R. Boone. We are looking ior an automobile change for licht housekeeping * ANT : ASHI 
work out of GM's 275,000 | ber of ‘men fired, However, John 29 00-22 50: lot, good #20 1b. feeder steers| Iniand Stl .118, Un Gas Cp +. 384 Puneral service will be held Pri-| salesman who wants to make | child care. OR 3.7343 2 ind house cleaning PE Sis ! 5 man 6D. Leary, vice president of per. | 28.00; lot medium 680 lb. yearling stock Saowr Cop 39.4 Us Lines 30.2 day at 2 p.m. from the Maniey- money We are looking for one | SALES EXECUTIVE Par £ 
work force. “Sonnel, called the action “prop. |%2t"% 2600: small lot choice 245 1b. steer/interiak Ir -. 243 Ug Rub ..... $1.8 Baliey Punera! Home. 830 Oak-| who can find ‘things to be done | Interview & class train sales repre. |" tine Kane Oa Gin OC AT a He ; 1 heife 50. 442.4 115 Bteel ..... 81.7 = ut the help a manager | tati y home. Of&il - 
Chrysler also was hit by dis- ¢t-’’ Me said the men were dis- | Veaiers—saiable 25- Nominally steady.’ + 383 Van Raal 2... 28 Seo Ee ett | Od Ge, Se FE 5-653. 9 "til noon 1 TRON ae rr icere BORE. he ‘ .. OF. « = 
putes with 10,800 workers out at entices ter aire tac |iteady to. strong" most. choles and Drime|Int Paper |. 1164 West On Tel. 283 Card of Thanks a | best again, enyners = oeling SECRETARY Reas. Pick up & del. PE ¢-2177. j ’ cs—in defiance o r OWN | vealers 33.00-39.00, few up to 4.00:|Int Shoe 33.17 Weste A Bk .. 255 €| small manufacturing plant has|A-1 IRONINGS NICELY DONE. 
A ee cated 4. | unions orders.” eee uee eee coe a eviews Getter nel TE Waa co saan cae bon | tae Sour Sainte hats Yon | am RE deaed came | Bhegle Pew sna detver Chrysler obtained a temporary utility ‘ Is] Crk Coal . 42. sap DO bet EW TO NK THE ELM-| can a with the top trader in s watchs AS c : rantt : j * * b Sh nd lambs—Salable 500. NotiJacobs ..... 84 son @& Co 283 wood Methodist Church and all th — See P ae ust have at least 2 years exp. GiaE “WANTS BABYSITTING AND 
Anjunction today preventing pickets ; : 2 enoueh” seas <att te makes market, Johns Man .. 43.4 Woolworth ... male our friends and neighbors for, or° pod pid rnp Fete Auge _week. Call Mille og 5i2 4 light sework Apply Pontias 
at the company’s Twinsburg, Ohio| Leary ‘said continued shutdown] compared last week slaughter lambsiJones & L .. 586 Yale B AOS 2-184 nee Ruth Gibson and tamiy, | Russ Dawson Motor Co. | typisp - statistical. SxEEnt ess "Bor a : * . L £ 8! . 2 * < 
plant from interfering with work- foe ai eae one potas coed eee caghtar veer, feeder inmbs|Kennecott,. 102.2 Senith Red ..120.6 WE WISH TO THANE pena | 232 8. SAGINAW . enced in, tying financial pate Manheld Preeti 2 ave serious e OM) steady; bulk of week's suppl feeder f 
NOTICE OF SPECIAL Ass T other Chrysler operations fambs: slaughter lambs 24 00-24, 8; few STOCK AVERAGES for paetr sincere. kind sia and Capable Furnace Installer now ee movings DORE. 8 5G. aay OR Combined sewer on Walton Boulevard: a late sales choice lambs 23.50-23.75; good) NEW YORK, Oct. #—(Compiled by the beautiful, flo “ofterings F 64 a ee Ee 
3 Te: Aime Vv. Rodgers Lucile Gregory,| Prior firings had set off the sot cece s 16, “ate c _eluaghier Pikes Associated Press). . - hose td pee, my dear usband, CAB DRIVE ADY. age z “tie Woodward corner ak TADY WISHES CLEANING. $i HR, 
: » Ss ; arly a r 0 Cotré Spec 
Connaaaa ‘Beryl. melitere noosa strikes, The UAW,. cracking down| cul! to choice good and choice Tee Sone UL Stocks to Rev Baltinger Frank Car-| or over Apply 3 lvd Ex: Ret. 
Garyet, Sam Cosmas, Eugene Cosmas,/on the wildeattérs Tuesday, said 60-75 1b. feeder Tambs 21.00-22.50. Net change .... —9 3 ruthers Funera! Home Pontiac | chard Lake Ave wrD ae SITTER, 5 DAYS WK. IDOLE reed Waite MAID 
L. J. Westphal, Orville -W. Thompson, Noon today ....201.8 125.0 85.5 197.6 Retail Store. Mary McNea EXP SINGLE MAN FOR FARM to 9 p.m Must have own yon housework & ironings. 2 or 
Cones Equip. Rental, Steve Secora, De-|S0Me Of these firings had been; ; = Prev. day ......29 85.5 1979| - WE THANK OUR MANY work by month Car! Dobat, panpeeriagen "MI 6-4 um HU on lle aaa pits Saturdays & 
troit Edison Company, James Hargraves,|settled and others were in griev-, . Week ago ..... 84.6 195.4 — es, friends and Dutton WILL SHARE ne £0992. 
Leslie Hudson, Phyllis V. Schneider, ; : | Month ago 83.5 189.2 for their sincere kindness and MEN TO LEARN HEATING AND| change for baby matte, EM aieROoLE Pee NG. TYPING. SEC- 
omer gehneon. Henry Thyle, Preda| ance action. The international | Year ago 2 69.8 159.7 ae pte 0 ol Seed Cl alr, “conditioning business, Pa 3-0129, : . retard service, EM 3-242. 
serps Abd a ng tet ta CANES, stike Tenders with, ives } eee ROBE Be ie Sieg Meataab inchs "se™ | Sa Herne hoo IK Pad | wre MIEDLEAOND NOMEN Se | MIpe-eGAOH? COMIN," OOaD notice: e roll of the Special As-| 3 1957 High a 188. : : “ FT r elderly woman Oct. to May 
sessment heretofore made by the City. ‘nothing to defend the union locals Studies Future Needs : 1957 Low 66,2 150.9 % | pone pp acd Mrs Ruth Gibson JR. DRA SMAN~* EM_3-0582, PONTIAC BABYSITTERS BUREAU 
peseeey tee) = pean) of defraying against any charges the company . tnd nly. eee A a with progres- Hale Wanted 8 Licensed and bonded Drivers 68 
at part o e cost which the Com- ie DETROIT STOCKS >—_ ve manufacturing company, ex- e ante cents per h Adult . st Ol 
mission decided should be paid and might bring. jac) Board ti “ill (C. J. Nephier Co.) : pee egeres | Seeks Pontiac p 3378) Call. early, wiornings of pores wy special esseesment for the con-| Pontiac of Eaves aK Figures ater) aectead points are eighths The Pontiac Press i 91 SGIRION WHICH | *RE, YO WANTING WORK OR late evenings. combined sewer on bot : : i i ow Noon ME F DECISIO . RSE EXPER’ 
sides of Walton Boulevard from alley - * * * meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Allen Elect & Equip Co. * aS 22 #24 pain wi 4 tere? Married men; erg ving ne pe teil PRACTICAL || NURSE ti Ep east of Baldwin Avenue to PO & SRR ny "GAL IUE cettl ‘ded board offices, 40’Patterson St., for Baldwin Rubber Co. *.... 15.6 16.1 FOR WANT ADS to 40. start with us at 885.70] Can make above average ‘wane 8.2202. OL 
Mughal o Ramin Go bot ce ies settlement provided’ a review of building plans. @ Louk chem. Cos. NS , | GENOMES etrenctaeee eres. | Ue N Perry * to 1 om WANTED: WASHINGS ' now ven fi f . side ts for q pay raise and improvements = 1 ° . . : : int t can Fi ELDERLY COUPLE FOR CARE- 9417 
= le in my office for public i" Ogeion and layoff pay plans,|.. The need for the proposed addi- ito a Elect. M. ose : $3 6s DIAL FE 2-818! Roe et taker § apartment building. Res- ? ‘eninsular ri 0. 
Wesco is also hereby given that the ac wel] as including th UAW tion to Bagley school and the |m .. 3 96 : di PIZzZ Zt TO ASSEMBLE | ‘Sonable rent for large Toom “Building Services 12 
Commission and. the Asées: f the! g tne new 85 From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. vith - = ti artnent. References Call § to 
Citv of Pontiac. will meet In the Com.|Severance pay arrangement for) Square Lake elementary school ; 46 ° erisnce Mi ate fear Cel tte adh COMPLETE BUILDING SERY- mission mber tn said City. on the! permanently disch will be discussed in the light of 50.75 An errece Pv ~ Rust Call EM _ 3-4852 REGISTERED NURSES AND LAB “tee. aality work, licensed Bows 14th day of October. AD 1958 at 8 00) permanently discharged men. 1958 enrollment, according to Dr.| “N° tle: dtd and asked. gortea immediately The RATE CLERK iL acemeienas C4 aan [ita nied 2860 or FE pea 0 cloc: m. to review said assessment. | ° —_ | 0s ie. " a ASEM Ts PUT UN 
at Tepe and, place eppertunity| ee Maree: ue secretary- |(Otto Hufziger, "assistant superin- = Ey gibinty ne” ectees omc Must be ye. experienced in motor car. ind —" Center (Osteopathic) a Sones, bs ie ang en all persons interested to easur * . p rier 3 m a eve- | —___ ‘ 
a a | one eae ree arate is pamen of schools in charge of Round Lake Association ele eee ee pings. No. phone ealis | Apbis 26i | TECHNICAL ae: 70 WORK | _masay We Goes 
i ao : | hour | business, lea: . j insertion of the advertise yd, East, Pontiac scientific =manu- 
wom apa e rvane  SPread over the three years. The | The Board will also consider St#ll in Formative Stage ment which har deen ten. ge" Please ‘a es tara) AAA F Floor Sanding ; dered walneless through the SALESMAN 0 re ra r taving ~ Finishing city clerk, UAW’s has been estimated at 24 Ps we } data on record to ciser 
Oct! 8. $8) to 30 cents study sketches of the proposed ad-| INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— are made be Sercrtettert [| Would you invest #750 to earn | _ Pontiac Bre a ee a3 TRENCHING nse : ition to Washington Junior . * an unlimited return? This item | WANTED ey MAN WITH = . 
KOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT Industry wages vary depending] bef ni : coda "| Final details on the organization ad mente “aaphee etver guaranteed and, does sell, itself | car for Rawlelgh business in Pon- Septic Field OR 3-6608 Water main ti Featherstone Road, ges y_depending|before preparatioh of preliminary) (¢ the Round Lake Improvement advustmer and only one of its kind io this| tiac, Buy on time Write {immedi Footings Septic 
To: Newman Farms. Inc. Kopman &|0n job classifications. The produc-| plans begins ae , j Seat ae Lake ad bl wen Po “te AIR. ANY Hassin and to all persons interested. take onl lworkenler Gall acais : Association still are being consid- Closing” time for sdvertise wart at 487 Eliz, Lake Rd. be- notipe: That the roil<of the Special as-/ ON ter ab BvereEe ered, according to G R ments containing type sizes Pde Oe LDS tk E ne ENDS Cl WORK, a ent  erctorore made by the City| about $2.49 an hour. Chromi * St * | al & to George loan ‘armer than Hb satapd agate te ; “NTE D reasonable, Jensen, Fe 22300 
that’ pact “or the fort ahicn the Gome| The {UE workers are in Dayton OO A Cee aute Gake dae etovioes te eutiicction” SHOE eee 2, tad Bet, Tot Metal bah | AL SREP 98, PURER, 6 OTH. ek : oe : : ' ‘ or over Call —— @ and 6./“","; 3 
borne ‘by ‘pectal adseatment “tor the oat panel NE ie Cig GARY, Ind.—To be called “‘stain-} It previously had been stated: in __ ttre Wasik Ade may - Sat Hike man. Reels FE |3-7632. A&B TRENCHING struction wate { t to ‘ ee , ne . : of water main tn Featherstone less,”’ a steel must contain at least! The Press that the association was Sorat ke | alle me Bs BE ay ae MIDDLE- Employment Agencies 8A FE Bie eon, He Oe 
the first insertion. “aged, single ra hand GEneva | ~~~ | any Te $C ANS 
  
      OFFICE MANAGER .- guttoto drawn” ‘OL 14200 SAL = WE VE GOT WHAT CASH WANT AD RATES ou’ve Deen looking for. Train- |- Woman aged 30-50 to take com- * * * ; 
Notice is also hereby given; that the | tion of a minimum of 8 per cent NAG: 
ing Progra us Pian, Ex-| plete charge $f office. Must be bas Commission and the Assessor of the} As Genera] Motors worked to get of stainless steels to ¢orposion and   
            ‘AI RING 
k, block, cement work, house- | 
#2200. . :   
      
                       
              Road from existing main to a point 182/N_J, ; . 
fort west is néw on file in my office| NJ 4 11% per cent chromium. The addi-| established. 8 for public tnenection 
4 City eof Pontisc. will meet in the Com-ihack to normalcy, three local inickel improves the resistance of Lings i-Day 1Days &-Days a § 
Tith dey of “Ontaber, "AD ‘ised at pate were settled yesterday and stainless steels to corrosion andj We’ re Buy ying ; Ve se 83 seat ee atin Fi ete $0 ae. we -_falsitig. Pe 
Somos tee sea pines. opportunity overnight. One was at AC Spark/heat and increases their SCRAP IRON—METAL ; i2 is ie Be tins tee stark nehing ew |-_State Bank Bldg ting Pic ha — $575 
will be given all persons tnterested to/Plug inp Flint, Mich., another at/and toughness. The most popular Pontiog Waste Material C é 370 «4.88 139 Chrzalers, “Biymoutns aad i= SECRETAI ARY : The Sree oe ¥ oe? gminter. 
"Dated October @. wee Lagrange, Ill., Electromotive, and| type of stainless steel contains 18 iy shana on Sane ; te & ¢ Sb a dealership, See Tony| Ared 25-49 to. ng, ight | only, ‘Terms, FE 69122 or FE 
ADA R. FVANS. the third at Fisher Body Division| per gent chromium and 8 per cent et / Rk RUMTRS, INC. - Babe, bee > . 
* oct. 9, ‘68./in Willow Springs near Chicago. ‘nickel. apo = PONTIAC, Buda - Bide FE s221 s State Bank xr ee meys. 
= = “i u *. 
2 é 4 ‘ fo ee ee 
e , 
     
    THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 _ 
    
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
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: "ATTENTION!!! ; 
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na cow r DIscoUNT Open 9 9 — Sat. Sto & 
pane €9, 
  Beit SLICES OF HAM * 
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
  
    
    
  
  
    
  4 Rooms IN HURON GARDENS 3 "EepaoO TERRACE, PLAS- (}) ‘ $-0004_ rage Drayton Le month. butid room hous tered valle hardwood floors. ~ ~~ 
- ROOM FURNISHE ED HOUSE ON | _FE ie ede or Om sik. Caan os your lot. Seams $6,000 full price vere 
CASH yp * Galverine Lk. EL 66151. Ee. EE 6-603. | NEW 3 NEW 2 BEDROOM HO with tile bath, hardwood. floors, PW. DINNAN 
ALL RENTAL NEEDS SATISFIED _Long Lak FE 5-1958, and sutomatic heat. Don 66 Ww, HURON rE can 
AVA FOR LAND 5 . = & apartments. NEW SINGLE HOMES 3 _ald. OF 
f : or unturaised TRA AND OME. 23 areas a vrice built in features, heat. |g MILES 
NO ATION ‘CA ; renges aaa mur —~ ful basement, es ee tive shaded, 3 bedrm. wit | empstec a 
[$13 PE $2000 | sie _possesaion, Loce don Pon-} with = s ear oon nit.eee with | — 
“jyOnrnsoen be ee ‘BEDRO gee ne tana is fentes | pte re Fe Peet “$650 DOWN = ae : ee ri. ‘MI 5650" township. after § p.m. VE| STARTER = _ feaisn A sen, sar a real buy for the large 
708 8 Telegrach Ra GLEAN 3 RMS & BATH. LOW Se ar ROURE it_OR_ 3.2681 ot OR 31070, 1s ed" Lops seereemaraie : : S Fz 20s sais Eizabeth Lake Rad.| NICE 4 7B EDR OOM, HOME BY ones Bibs tue A een = 
= == 1 = H ES pee is a “ON ++—-OR see poynent_ rms eal “heat Pull 
jes Carey + : _# ub bath ein OR 3-6008, + At 
UNLIMITED 7 (proses Mae Ss month ‘ti! June 1998 pool re- = a | Nc thi Do AV. —— 
For land tract Newsteatures eg wired. Also one at $55. Call Jack fe) ing wn Beautiful Cape. Cod style home. 
or, land contracts, new sch Pe PT 
er seasontd. Lowest pos : Sy Saou HO! RENT WITH ON 2 oe ae ee "plan. fu twed bata wich mall in. vanity - LOW S~- : bedrm . $75 mo./ lot. Sor your plans.) > up. Se EE Y ; ; _ ; : i 2u carpeted iivimg 
sible discount, no obliga- “He enjoys making the tossed salad!” DUPLEX. 3 mes <i ER ROE in Englvwood 2 bedrm $82.50 mo Se ae ie room, with’ natural fireplace: car 
tion. Call FE 4-3844 or — Unturn. Also 3 rms. & bath. Furn.| FE Gerry Van, Broker. Donaid OR 3-2837__ Saye A merican beauty Kitchen 
FE 5-9975, ask for Tel A Furnished 33| Rent A Furnish FoR pee NEW 2, BEDROOM Gate fle HOUSE. 4) S eee yeso down, Take over pay-| ” Full’ basement with =A 1 _ i its. R RENT Ww rooms, 114 baths Of] heat vic. i 2 ie asement wit. 
McCullough eo Rent Apts. Furnished 33 / "Qe nc fursunegs child weleome.| _{'5,0:0, revesse TT) penis tes gman call eer | fs lage in fecreation room,” ol ; NEWLY DECORATED 3 RENT WITH OPTION oe : 
ARRO REALTY Sega athe! me ay UTIL. PYT TEE ol Bio ccoceatarret weak cor. tide tae: | FOR, BERT. FURNISHED _MOD- bedroom BRICK, | Basement. ust SELL. BHAM. L meh ye 
“ . ern home For sppolatment, call icone to- buy. FE down payment, 1\-story brick, car 
$143 ic Fl Rd PE sts Wr Ponti, Press age rage ‘Additional al ls Jot care . 
ass-Eliz. Rd. Re SoS aay BIDE — Write _Fostiee _OR after 6 pm 8-019 Gerry Van, Réal Estate.| ull basement gas heal. water) ible. Nice Eastside located Fou 
2 LAs see, aes farm ger | PUT. 2 RMS. 8, BATH, — PURNISHED | HOME FOR RENT. | SCoTT LAKE a BEDROOM. MOD-| {ng room. PE 5-998" .Jaree HY" | price $14,500 cash to new mort- 
CA$H ences Write Pontise P ae aan: he wererteerd: GA neat) meters) OF | mera, Taeee i | Acatal eiriass Aue DOTR | E 14, RATE — nite, | "= A A EDROO 5 < : 
WE NEED q 4 ae PRIVATE. UTIL 0] plenty of storage, died bath and| MODERN HOME FOR LEASE ON . Ot WARWICK HAS r Ag) Devs ensed porch a oil tees garage, Lovel Gh S eae 
‘ taundry frun Near Pontise garage. Everything  new,no| Sylvan Lake. Gas furnace. fire-| erly Gas heat ee ie; Tot $6x120" sath : rant shad J fed rooms See bun- 
J J ‘ ehiidr Grinker: cou-| piace, Newly decorated. Reliable) caf port carpet, lake rivileges.| . Ww i ng = ng ell, 
LAN School PE — i sell LI itehen, two bedrooms & tiled 
2. s 7 RM CABIN. BLoOcE ple. 2 rms. 4 ‘airgrove proce « only, $115 month, FE por posscasion 108 lease. __5-7760_ or ee bath. Hardwood floors, full Sane 
; G i Bd a 7c. = Haron. urea Trailer Park. REL od aa — Eee Ev- 7 ODERN 4 ons ry 3 ARAGE. SMALL 2 (HOUSE AND RE. BY — a rae coe i peclincegy ieee ee 
Ditches & boat weils on oes Suvaiops Gcmtalning ‘ebeck Gap 1s 7 OR 3 ROOM APTS. 1 BLOCK | VERY & 3 AND BATH. PVT. = @ ¢ month No chiléren. ple. " veal round terms, | tifuily fenced backyard for the 
! ‘ $89 t Se $-5182. Ent sinkers. NICELY PURN > Epa MOD- Notes Harbor. FE mies or cash, OR 3-3860. children se to stores, schools 
UNDER; bills. ¥ may keep money, Nicholie & Harger Co. rom Sears. 7 em home. Nice and clean, School! §MALL HOME REAR FEED 00111) DRAYTON PLAINS VL & bus line. Good northside joca- 
Block & cement work | ® return watch which is only 3 W HURON 7RM, See PVT, BATH | WES DE Pe ase “URN. r bus by door Lovel shade. On Btore at 2656 Orchard Tue Gas | eas “er ,eatia | ton. Pull price $11,145 with $1,- 
23706 & FE 5-006. sentimental value Reward offered ¢ 7) cours re as ent, Sere ey furn. . vo it me "4 oats aCe i 5 $7 monthly EM Lsse3 M heat. $50 per month. FEdera) eircactaet ect yh Bank ae vores = Cl ple r month inc. 
61 — y cluded OOM. 4-641 2- ith Oakt es per ce nt int. 
Business Services 13 (Ost: BLACK BROWN MExI- ooo Soe Se? 5 ee Apt cLosE Ife ma aod bee ne halts, EM suf, | OXBOW LAKE FRONT. =e * WEST SIDE MY D0 Uakerorivieeee:| 3° 1 DRM. — VACANT 
~~ since Thu 8 ‘ ene room modern, cely ed. be i ti 
a ronmace Guna wml BNE ad his tceiett| [MMEDIATE. | iitrth. fe tai uct Se tee ana EPS |? ciate aden APOE |PCEOpveR, “ee ce oes| Goa! katt Eee eavestr FE 25824 FE base Nghe ame Rent Apts. Unturnished 34) -T#zier Reston OR WOULD LIKE EMPLOYED COU-| Clean. Call after 6 p.m. MY| Three. large bedrooms & tiled 
MAKES OF NTAIN Lost. ocr Hom ee aca wa BMALL raent aed — (T. IN-| ple io rent 2 bedroom newly dec-| _ 2-5161 : bath tp, living room, separate 
aioe aoe py togeeey MGaleteria® Ladies Tissot watch. AC a | ION T RMS & BATH OTe RX. |1 AND 2 BEDROOM PARTLY| {4"*Lons a orated home. near Pontiac Drive 5 BEDROOM BRICK. BREEZE-| 4uway Piasteted mene ana 
our office Genera! Rhinestone ‘bend. Lincoln § C018. prt = : owas turn, Lake front apts, OR 3-0166. a eee i Ps rE" 42031 In Teeter ‘References, required. way. 1Mecar garage, 1 acre. Only Pee Aareades) Walls, hardwood 
at” Phong PE 2-013 © | LOST. YELLOW PARAKEET. | 08 any goog pas) comeree ener |e ROOMS PVT BATHS. AP-|1 BEDROOM aPT POR CEASE, Wee ee cae huinceaces TE pisces STvcme = Ladingor Recht Sree nest gar evater ei eet 
Woes ait akon of wringer | FE 45640 ida cash = ply Apt $, .® Clark St $100 per mo. Adults. 130 Sem$| required ‘27719. cluded igs a 10 ft. retrigerator, 
e makes wringer | = actory of ny ies | __nole Beiair aes PE 41559 For Rent Rooms 37 SEES AREA kitchen cabinets d Venetian 
automatic : and title Ask Ken Temp! eton | 2 ROOM APT UTILI WHITE LK. FRONT NEW 3 BED- 190 W oa roomy 2 bed- linds. Close te Lincoln Jr. High 
at ear ee K. L. Templeton, Realtor nisbed Pvt entrance PE 79. Ad ean, FLOOR PVT ARM, 3 cl room. furn oi) heat aoe Oct. ar BUS STUP IN NICE HOME. room fram 1946 Oak firs.| New low price $9.900 with 
aot FUUARCS GERVECR , Py ae ue (Osmaa Rd PR o4sen|? 2 LAROM AM. BRICE APART repre coo and earace FE FF a) re) Vie | nS pases watts, Troop tiel tw) OE CN OES CC 
ments town = —— T le PSTEA 
BULLEOEEO & CUTTING Lost, PINK BILLFOLD IN VIC.| Read Willing ih Able | eat @ bath. evervthi ed. |18T PLOO! R LOWER FLAT. NR.| YEAR ‘ROUND FURN. HOME ON nary, BT Gr ees wr: oe LAUR low down, payment. Pa ments like | 102 iz. Huron St 4-8284 
FE 24 or FE ¢i8ta racle Mile Please return . Inquire 22 Auburn. tear.| City Hall Chandler canal adjoining lake EM 3-3275 rent. Vacant Move right ._ FE 45-0510 FE 2-3971 
rs ward. FE 3-7188, ? Cash buyers watting for yqur land 5 7 RM BACHELOR APTs..|7 BEDROOM. BRICK SRRACE, Cizam iE cated ROOMS, BUS Creigiiton, wostsert coted if no 
A WA ;: A MY 3-3931 eontrect Cal! Realtor Partridge. roe $35 to $35 per mo.| tiled bath. gas heat fenced yaru Saginaw. FE 2-0700.| answer VErmont 
» _Free est_ No obligation. PE 2-161) | LOST TAN SecnRranyY WALLET noe aac ann Ua | FE | _Pull_ basement, $75. FEs-9018. Rent Houses Unfurn, 36 cheng ~ COMFORTABLE SINGLE | 3 7 BEDROOM BRick "RANCH TYPE 
AIRING. REWEAV- anew SEE ¥ ROOMS PVT_ENT BATH. TY |7 BEDR. KEFRONT RANCH | ~~ coe = : abe Tore i 
“Resiretching OL! Hobbies & Supplies 244A gapttot SAVINGS & LOAN CO. | ee rears rigerstor pores nel a | 7 REDE Oca MOD ERR eee CLEAN J les Bod sey ener t: oo Or INSTINCT 
; ice RE w_ FE ¢081 2 COZY R — CLEAN & CLOSE Bias remecs e, con Lk. area. Schoo: = 92-2418. Low DN PYMT TO Gl MTG) eG eke eS reach for your 
i ne on _Wanted Real Estate 32A “7 LARGE, ROOMS PRT LATE |? BERD Wer berm” OF | TBEDRGUN TERRACE #5 4 HO CER AO Pree TOO | norma Pi hea Srcces "Wigs | arm eared Sued} Setoce . th trance | | | . Ne ch wi attac 
bs ree PE 3405 or FE2U ee | "Rooms 1) STOWELL. FE 7 BEDRM. HOME MODERN. GIRLS BUS STOP. PVT. ENT. monthiy Owner Of €8 rag6. Natural fir eplace, oy amily 
AINT BY NUMBER PICTURES | CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE — WE|” snd $15 per week. Inquire BY Aue | 2-830 Auto. heat. Newly decorated. Car- | _!aundry_and_ cooking, 7 SMALL HOUSES SELL oR room, 1% baths, 
Scrabble ga 2 * Athen yy) i Iles at ett Sal HOMES. UP Aree burn, off Sagin 71 BDRM atid Lact pe GARAGE. eee earea parses iyceces Ficlets ae oa Pus. 4 GEN- trade, Lake Orion. $509 down. Beals ertine sn ove “eat the 
ro i WOOD REAL 1 ea 00 in rive se a 
Faas £ rea Pap c NEW) FE ¢so03, Voeent a i EM, {CLO I, Os | oo RARRSENT 6 DONTE. downtown Pontiac, stores, end | LARGE COMFORTABLE ROOM | Gennes GEDRMBRICE CAm| sort. The’ buying poeridceats 
(CicuT TRUCKING ENDS) Cieo's Renn oe we eee CASH 7&2 RMs PVT BATH 69) ROB- PE 8-2284 . scpoes: a8 near hospital & High school, FE | “be part income 2 baths, reo rm.| for $26,900 with only $3,950 down. 
and evenings Reasonable PE| tion, 97 Oakland Ave. | por YOUR HOME OR EQUITY | _‘2¥cod,_nr_Madison_Jr_High_ | 3 RMS & BATH 4rgs s. 2 Beet Ei per mente Cal SceEeinG ae aeTE low taxes, exe school” FHA) ~~ BEESS MY SOUL! 
che sal _ Notices. & Personals 23 33 ‘Uf cash interests you let us look 24) RM RST PLOOR, P¥r.| drimkere. Hest, FES163. 11 8) ¢ 1559 URS eae Fequired. on _$PP500°Good location. F "yess, | Reduced $2,000. Try to imagin 
LET US a UR | ath and ent. Newly decorated. _“©S5¢ os 
Se TE eae ee sale, ip many can ated el can. get Smail child welcome Gingelivile. J CLEAN ROOMS PVT BATH s T BEDROOM HOUSE. GAS HEAT | vn PE coeeleveaings 1 WILL SELL OR TRADE BRICK! [iocr'nome with 3 full bows, ae 
finance AEROTREDS you cash for ge | _FE $1001, ext, beat refrig & stove, $60| 5912 Anytime weekends and SE POR ROSENERE ee: cornet, OF armasra | ‘ached 2 car garage, nai ral mo uits | . . 5 \ 
Burke Asphalt Paving KN APP SHOES equities | We also ave buyers for | 5 ROO ca FURNISHED APART. | ; serine its “FE 234 a an, ao y Seas ROOM FOR BU what have you P.O Box 3034 fireplace, knotty pine family areal 
E 46492 or §-2920 a ¢ Ww 
PE 5-501! Pred_Herman OR 31582 tand contracts Clark Real Estate, AOR WEST HU.| Welcome Near Oxbow tx 945 7? ,,BEDRM COUNTRY HOME| PRivaTE ENTRANCE _AUTO.|W LONG LAKE RD NEW 3 BED-| soutn of Rochester. $15,500 with 
; |3 RMS. 18ST FLOOR, WEST H _ Steam heat and hot water tin- m ‘i 
J. W. CROOK anY¥ GIRL OR WoW NEED. _*4813_ Ask for Mr Clar ton, garage. FE 8-3320 _month. 3-3800 or cluded. At 3309 Dutton Rd. Cail _beat and hot water FE 4-2780.| room. 2 baths. split level ranch | $2500 down. Monthly payments. — 
: ene AVENUE a friendly a@viser phone FE — Sel] (Js Y E ; ee pati & ENT LO. | UPPER FLATS: 2 @BEDRMS.| Olive 1.1080 of FE 48586 Eves.| PVT. RM. FOR COLORED YOUNG qed (LS |, be ee 
WILDER 123 Confi 3 The Salvation e s§ Your qui y 3 RMS. PVT BATH & $60: & I-bed $55. ‘ =|" man or lady FE 4-7883 ower level with bar, 2 car ga won't last — hurry 
COMPLETE BUILDING SERVICE| arm Don't tove cur home-cash wait | closets, nr, downtown FE $1607.) [oy So a ? BEDROOM. MODERN, $60 MO. rage, one acre excellent view | Tae 
AGES EW HOMES. -— i on we ‘cise need | RMS, AND BATH. PVT 1 PER- Lincotn | r. High |” 3" enildren allowed. C. ‘Pangus, RM & BATH LK SIDE HOME.| Open daily 2 to 6 {EE AND THOU 
Sopent woke - Gen Nees ec eee ings Giroux Pranks 4385 Dixie| son of couple Util furnished, 365 | 9533" orn mp wugid tr Restor Base eet ereanl creterred) ae (coon Comm coe = Will like the early American 
mse at Scribe playing for dancing | HY. OR 30701 | _mo_ 194 Florence i ROOM; STRita FER Wo |? BEDRM HOUSE WITH AUTO. | 46003 perese T ACRE. MODERN 9 ROOMS,| motif in this charming 2 bed- 
es afternoon. Sta this | HAVE BUYERS FOR LAND CON-,3 RM APTS OR 3-4706 4145 5 oe O-| oil furnace Inquire 06 Oliver Bt.. | 555 preeseway rca? garage, full serge gs read [oral pard 
y « FE 46908 | ROOM POR LADY, LAUNDRY &| bas t ly Foom, with natural fireplace. 
4ND GENERAL! sunday, October 12th. tracts and home equities, Rea- Clintonville Rd lj 00. —or call 47922, —— priv 1266 N Cass Lk. One ual Ou beat, carpeting. raul basement pent Eri. 
ascary ema wedtem ot Jerks |oorD WAVE SPECIAL; G_ SHAM | teosbe discount and orompt ac |7 ROOMS ALL UTHITIES CAUN: |” Airnienea “adute ii Oakland |? GLDnat gwyAWED UF MOR 3-206 before 1_p.m, Gal cae shee corn, Se | es lot. We think we 
sod new PE. S300. Be 88 #150, Mall Styie-Rite dry rooms, neat. clean, well fur-| Ave. Close i toe city Rens MARS 22 =a ROOM. REFRIGERATOE 381235. have a charmer — ‘located here 
3 take Ro & GEORGE BLAIR nished. of closet space, | ——— BEDROOM RANCH-TYPE ALSO |~ Prt ent Parkin tot. chester for $11,990 with 
L -NEW AIR | Mise adults only. 18 Pinegrqve |4 RMS PARTLY FU ryment, 3} YEARS OLD 3 SEDROOM 
Work ranteed 5-038 KEAL' | ee BATH & EN.| Gren, Welcome Utilities furn_ $18 one TREALTY c co FE Se! | Cottage. | brick near Perry Shopping~Cen- ay "3. 
8A ACHINE PILED BEAUTY IS 638 Dizte Sey OR 31251 J ROOMS PRIVATE BATH & EN- weekly, 57 Whittemore. le teeenine PNOGiE gPORMBUSE)| lee: cee (aa meres call oger Henry, Inc. 
los ples 1¢ st 5 DRA N PLAINS i trance, Gas Heated 87 8 Parke © Rooms AND BATH UPPER [? BEDRM. BRICK. 1'% CATs | ness girls, kitchen & ese | awnings $550 down Take oret| $11 ee St Rochester 
TRENCH BACK FILLING EVERYONE'S DUTY at Ea 7 ROOMS _AND PVT ENT CHIE | "Bloc to General ‘Hospital, | a aeDAM SOME ee —Privileses_ PE 20015 or FE 5666 | ese re ee | = Pac 7 R SA v ock to General ita! oe 5 
—tepeoteole err, FE E800 Eres | G15" Stovtge “elects ese | an my ake i ig papers, We Seeger EN te ae soOW HOUSE wre Rooms With Board 38 —"" BY OWNER | uate A ote | skin ts sane a e G ROOM APTS CLEAN ROOMY ‘e en 5 AND BATH, PRIVATE 3 ROOM HOUSE WITH PARKING. * eee = 
Dressmaking, Tailoring 16 wo Gtlsgis) taecees trou bemics) Sileimeripcapertion: || >) ere: comics Utllities turn cntgence, heat and bot water fur.| near downtown. Reas FE ¢7059 1ST FLOOR. CGUPORTASLT | Nimiee! eciguectsosale) (postecl: 
_Krogers) Birm MI Cun + _is to $100 monthiy FE_ 5-40 nished Vicinity of Auburn Hets.|3 AND § RM HOUSES INQUIRE| 3 5437 with or without board. FE) Near Telegraph Carpeted Auto | 
ALL KIN WHI Os FE 46041 | 8-947 | matic heat Full basement Alum- 
lato eae oF boat bags ae = 7 OAINTY MAID MRS SE J ROOMS AND BATH HEAT AND | 22 Auburn, off Saginaw |GENTLEMEN GOOD FOOD,| !5um storms end screens Fenced | 
_ladies dresses specialty FE $4254 A Tayior $6 Gi 7293 REAL ESTATE gas furn Pvt ent. $1750 7 ROOMS # BATH | OF 4 UNITS 3 BEDRMS LARGE REC RM | itanomod me. FE 20318. Yard Vacant $11 950 $600 down. WOODHULL LAKE 
DRESSMAKING TAILORING AND DUBLIN COMMMNITY CENTER OR 3-1295 week FE 2-5203 of Pre +833 "5. W side brick ,Modern heat & $75. Gas Heat 431 Hickory Lane. an_modern home. 2-03 FHA Ol 1-1951 rivilegey with these 2 modern 
Mrs. Bodell FE| hall for rent. itchee fact GI AND FH JROOMS & BATH. ADULTS ONLY ‘Ot _ water furnished $75 mo. near school FE 3-7658 |ROOM AND BOARD FOR PEN- | 50- Gu, 5 ae omes Each have 3 bedrooms, 
150 capacity rate $50. Call : A |" Tow rent 6§41§ Eliz Lk. Rd. | Adults only 5000s |3 BEDROOMS NEW HOUSE. 7m | —tten_men 313 Wit Mile Ra. Pesce) medrece, ae Nbene sé large living room. kitchen and 
ORES Lesar. FE_4-0987 CASH FOR YOUR HOME | FE 24919 RMS AND BATH $45 MO IN |“ paths In Clarkston. $75 mo. Call SOMETHING REAL NICE. COME! fi “tot gi200 down $87 monthly| Paruy furn Nshed Fenced in lot. 
031. 
io my home Call 
TAILORING AND ALTERATIONS, 
vot i kinds for ladies & men. FE 
4-3229 31 E Strathmore, 
Garden Plowing   
  
16B   
CUSTOM PLOW Bteeatst & LIGHT, 
R 35086 “grading Anywhere O' 
Insurance Agencies 17A.   
  
FOR GOOD INSURANCE CALL DANIELS AGENCY 
“¢] © Huron FE 3-711) 
Laundry Service 18   ESSMAEING. TAILORING AI- terations Drapes & formals done) 
PE 8-8455.   
  
      
CHARLES CHESTER | AIR CUSHIONED &H 
| MILLE OR. 
  = Ts) 
| nee nominee Wallace PFE 
  
PAT FOLK. 
= as has come true Now 
lose weight costly s guickiy Imagine \osing 10 fed be 
for appointm 
  
  
FOR FAMILY poral pant SERV. 
— phone Pontiac Laundry, FE 
  
  Landscaping 18A 
A} ACE TREE 8ERVICE RE. 
moval and edo Sh Get our bid | 
FE 2-718 FE   
  
ATTENTION TRUCKERS. 
Ing black sandy 7m 
ioap.| MICHIGAN CREDIT SOuneE 
loam top ee) Sara LE mee wee Pontiac     
  
  
        
  
mm ediate ession. Bxomen, 2 a 8, Orelegraph 
iN TO ENT WITH 
buy, 2 ¥ old 3 
bed \%y gore cor-   
ner lot MAp Aa a 6748 Snow- apple Drive. . Michi 
he bas OR UY, $ 
. P.O a, 50 
ope ER 3 BED Staion 55 
Dayisbur ™ Pimtine FE 44568 oF 
Holly. ME 46831. 
MODERN am Lg nl WITH GA-   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
    
  
  
  
    
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
    ir 
terms off ba e 
MUTART REALTY 
10 Commerce MA 4-2301 
WEST BLOOMFIELD 
a ta GI ranches with car- 
port, 84 ft lot, ares seeek. No 
down payment, age costs 
$84 per neath Includes every 
KUSCHELL REALTY 
ba As OWNER: 5 aan AND 
era PE 38-1207.   
    
  
  
  
      
  
  
  
  
      
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Yes, we can sel) your home for 
cash, with very emal! down pay- 
ment Call as for further tnforma- 
tion, do not feel obligated We 
will appraise your property and 
tell you the eash vou cap receive 
aet to ¥ 
: TRADE. WE BUIL: 
Pet wn & SON REALTORS 
uron Phone   
OTs WITH SEWER 
j= Williams FE 
HAVE .CASH WILL 
TRAVEL We gill travel to see you and   
  GET THOSE 1 NEEDED TOYS, show you how to get cash for 
and gift items for your home land t or acre- 
Christmas by just ha a few —, } now = ®. 36-minute 
friends a _Call_ Anita a71. rvice No charg 
HALL POR RENT ” $75. WILL AC- R Dp. RILEY, Broker 
commodete 100 for benenets and $09 Elizabeth Lake Ra io people. tar” dances. Asplait | pe ¢ ftir PE ¢4821 par area FE 47101 before noon, bet, 1 Wa WILL BUY RUN DOWN. Sass ouse to repair,   
  
Stevenson Hwy. and R 
TREE SERVICE 
remove, cabling, surger 
Land clearing Insured MA 
COMPLETE LAWN BUILDING. 
fepair and maintenance Free es- 
th ey 7 Landscape Serv-   
  
’ fee, 
LDOZING . YARD & 
driveway grading Back filling 
Roto-tilling, Terms. EM_3-3023. 
  EXPERT FREE TRIMMING | AND 
removal Ph FE 6-6503 ce) 
Soo oe 
grote head BLUE oi NURS- 
30 cents ard, 8. 
Biva, oy 0 ‘cents delivered, Nursery 
kK and lawn construction. LI 
cate, FE 21730. ____ 
COLORED DAY CARE FOR Coani 
.| dren.   
\JACK'S BARBER opt MOVED 
from 481 §. pened (3001 Higb- 
land ae 
our SAFELY & ECO.   or h 
any location EM 3-0135 
WANT 10 SELL? 
List With LaBelle BUYERS WAITING 
FOR , &4 BepeooM HOMES 
A 
SMALL “ACREAGE & FARMS 
LaBelle Real Estate   PB +188? |         -   
  
  
  
  
vt 
J ROOMS AND BATH, PVT ENT West side FE 2-066) or FE 5-5322, 
after 6 pm _for_ three adults. 1 FE 47050. 
  
3 RM AND BATH UPPER. PVT. 
Ent Util furn. West Side. Ing. 57 
Edwards. FE 6-034).   
ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND 
evtrance Heat & utilities fur- 
nished $16 weekly One child or 
baby welcome Appiv 804 S&t 
Clair 3 
  
LARGE ROOMS, PRIVATE 
a and entrance, West side. FE 
23.   
4 ROOMS AND BATH. 
1 Young St.   
4 ROOM 
furn, FE 8-3530 
@ NICE ROOMS OR 3 NICE RMB. 
Heated. FE 4-4686. 
4 RMS BATH, UPSTAIRS, COU- 
ple with children. Close to school 
ond cowie wn 28 Matthews. FE, 
_*e   
  
  
4 ee BATH. CLEAN UPPER. 
gas heat, Pingre 
4 ROOMS AND ra LOWER, 
in Auburn Heights Eecenniag | 
furnished $80 month. FE 2-8991   
4 ROOMS adults only, East side FE 2-1672   
  3 ROOM APT. IN PONTIAC OR 
3-8832-   
NOw BOOKING RIDEA 
team puiled. Seconient rides. MU 
  
USED JUKE BOX RECORDS 25c. 
Sat. only, 210 E. Pike. 
Wtd. Children to Board 26 
A-1 BOARDING 
or wk. Licensed 
BABY SITTING 
Loving care, FE   
  
HOME, BY DAY 
i. FE_5-3534. 
a Be NIGHT. 
1730.   
  
Licensed home, FE 4-   
  NEW LA'WN BUILT FIN: 
trading Backfield top soil FE 
— EMOVING AND crear 
rg Pg Reasonable rates FE 17-8019 
§-4941, 
“WEED SPRAYING, 
SEED, sOD EYEROR NS, ETC. OR_3-0624 31033 OEM 61417 
oe Moving & Trucking 19 
1% TON STAKE WANTS WORK, is bbish, OR  3-3€03 
| wl CW HAULING & RUBBISH i pe t load PE 8-0145.   
  
  
  
Savina - HAULING 
‘EXCELLENT SERVICE 
§-3458-FE 2-2008 
AA-1 Reduced Rates Smith Moving. Large van oF 
ickup, FE  4-4864, 
BASEMENT CLEANING AND 
ight hauling, Call Bil, FE §-5033. 
HAULING & RUBBISH NAME 
‘our price Any time. 0095. 
HT HAULING & MOVING OF 
any kind. Real cheap FE 8-2404 
anytime, 
LIGHT A HEAV Rabid Soak 
Rubbish. Fill dirt, top ay 
el & front end loadin 3003. 
MAN WITH 
wants work   
  
  
*   
L 
1% N 
“Call Tow TRU [9 183 | W td.   Household ‘Goods 27 
FUI UR! NT ees N EEDED   
mar 
sell t “tor ae 
Sale Phone 
PIANO IN ate om 
wanted Bf chureh.. Call otter 6 
p.m 5-5005, 
Wa ANTED TO +0 BUY - ALL TYPES 
Ph FE 2-5623. 
w5 ray | DISHES, AN- 
heels lamps Antique furniture 
Wi. " Miscellaacous 28 
WTD: BOAT TRAILER TO MOVE 
i8-ft. boat onto beach Any con- 
dition FE 8-8074 
WANTED: WEIGHTS BAR BELLS, 
dumb bells FE 5-2154 
Meney- Wanted 28A 
Late pro ghie H SoMa 
Pay er cent repent tall 
20839, reasuret. 
29 Wanted to Rent 
K|CHRISTIAN COUPLE WITH TWO 
d 4, desire 2 bed- 
er. re. vicinity of Orchard Furn. or   
    
  
    
  
  
  
  
O'DELL CARTAGE Local an lees distance moving 
ne FE §-6808 
Trucks to Rent   
TRUCKS,- TRACTORS 
TAND EQUIPMENT 
%-ton Pickups 1\%-ton Stakes 
Dump Trucks Semi-Trailers 
‘Poritiae Farm and 
Industrial Tractor Co. 
Open Dai Dally © wo eludlae sundas 
UNWA 
. Up free; ohare, 5-4638, |thing — Want Ads ; give 
2-8181. Lak Mags ke 
RENT IT FAST 
throur' Rent Ads! Room, 
house apartment, any- 
you ACTION. Dial FE):     
Paul M. Jones, Re Ear 
832 W. Huron   WTD. OM OWNER = ao 
heer Highlands, 2 bedroom home, 
eo re Ww neat, re pay 
to $14, cash. 5-1528.   
          Rent Apts. Furnished 33 33   
1 RM LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING, 
util, furnished, Adults, 268 Or- 
chard Lake.   
He BEDROOM DLXE EMPLOYED 
girls or bachelors, Save money 
by living close in 5-3706 or 
FE 2-8756, 
LARGE ROOM BACHELOR 
$9 8 week. FE 2-0566. 89 Btate Tot. 
1 AND 2 RMS. WITH KT KITCHEN 
— eee all linens, ul 
. No eae . poly is8 
N. “Berry FE 2-5 §-7805 
1 AND 3 LaDkGoM LAKEFRONT   
  1L 
  
  
  . Kids OK. OR 3-01 
i FLOOR FOR MEN. NICE 
apt Pvt entrance Parking close 
in FE 43372 
IST. 2 FLOOR 3 Gee SEP- 
erate entrances and b ol] heat 
Auto, hot water, atilities fur- nished. Child welcome. Inquire 1 
Norton   
OOM, $8 WK, 1 GIRL. WASH- 
ing Close in, FE 2 
1 RM KITCHENE ea APT UTIL. 
un Pontiac Lk., M50. OR 3-4555. 
KITCHEN BATH _ re 
block from P.O   
  
1 BEDRM.. 
utility 1 
23-7425   
ROOM KITCHENETIE & PVT. bt 2 employed girls or cou- 
dults only N. Pad- 
_Sock, Alberta Apts. 
Ist Floor—3 Rms. & Bath Priv. ent Clean & attractive. 
FE 5-5375 
} THREE RM. APTS.. PVT. ENT. 
{ an ae OR 3-1388.   
  ENTR: 
* ana tig Tied are LB of eae lake 
3-ROOM TO APT Pp BATH AND 
ent All. utilities furn. Washin 
privileges Quiet street Qne chil 
come  § 7866 after 3:00. 
| BATH WITH PVT ent asta welenme $12 per week 
PE #1431 
2 Rie, ON FIRST FLOOR, HBAT- Uslities ‘Furnished, Private Soin & Eni renee a Josiyn Rd. 
3 7 RMS. PVT ENTR, & BATH, 1 or 2 adults a ‘rail, FE 4-3046, 
- FISHERS, PVT, ENT. Ba ee $15 wk. OR > 14068. 
T-AND 3 ROO! nT ENT, AND li Ls ‘Telegraph,             nomtcal PE 5-3142 OR 3-3922 
Dex-A aly tatiets om Pre at WANTED iMMED:iATELY.|§ RM & BATH UPPER CLEAN 
SIMMS Homes farms. lake prevent? & Stove & refrig Gas heat 81 Tre- 
land contracts. Buyers waiting. fier 5 pm. or [bess FE 5-3413 a 
4-3950 
$ RMS FURN LAKE PRIVS. 
Keego Harbor, FE 8-8054. 
§ ROOM HEATED FLAT. CHIL- 
creat allowed $90 per mo. EM   
  
  
ATTRACTIVE—STRICTLY MOD. 
3 rooms and bath, washer, new 
garage. ple round. Cass-Eliza- 
__beth Apts . $: weekly. FE 4-5203. 
BACHELOR APARTMENT TWO 
rooms and bath, All utilities ae 
$1? weekly Call at 288 N   
_Perry_ 
Cozy APT. OfL HEAT. " HOT WA- 
ter, Pyt. Entr. OL 1-0646. 
CLEAN, QUIET, COMFORTABLE 
kitchenette apts. Gas heat, Henle. 
refri $15 per a On Ponti ac 
Lk. OR 3-9389. 
CLEAN AND BRIGHT 3 RM. AND 
path Upper income. On East- 
side near bus and town Hes for 
a couple Call @ to Fi   
      RM APT SLEEPING RO OM‘ 
APT HEAT & LIGHTS : 
        AND PVT BATH t 
I     
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
          
downtown Gatore: Large rooms. | 
Ph. OR 3-139   
4 RM. MOD NEWLY DEC. 22 
_Cadilac, $65. FE &-1063 
§ RM NR GENERAL HOSPITAL 
Clean. Lower Heat, garage and 
fenced yard. Call at 9 8S. Pad- 
dock 8t 
5 ROOM UPPER, WEST SIDE. 
call after 5, FE 4-4081. 
$6 ROOM APT. ALL ee 
furnished, colored only. FE 5-8   
  
  
§ ROOM LOWER. STATE st 
(1 block from High school.) 
  Auto. heat. fireplace, Los 
er month NICHOLIE 
ARGER. 33 W. Huron. FE 
5-8183, 
2 
5 ROOMS BATH AND FULL BASE- 
ment. Terrace. apartment. All 
newly decorated. 3-9243.   
5 ROOMS AND BATH DOWN, GA- 
rage heat furnished, near Gen- 
eral Hospita, Call) FE 5-6766. 
5 RMS. & BATH. LOWER, 4 RMS. 
& bath upper. FE 2-7832. 
‘5 RMS WEST SIDE UPPER & 
garage $75 mo. FE 8-9806 
OOM & BATH UPPER. FE 
2-6332 or 2-5788 
i ROOM LOWER 2 APT IN PON- tiac, OR 3-88. 
$ RM, APT eeaie AND STOVE 
furn. Apply at 103 Bloomfield Ter-   
    
  
15 
  
  race. Next to Joseph Hos- 
pital $85 month. 
5 RM APT. UNFURN ALL UTIL. 
furn For rent at 259 E Bivd 8. 
FE 4-5067.   
ALL MODERN FOUR ROOM TER: 
race, gar SES West side. Full 
basement. $ per mo. FE 2-2044. 
ee ST OFF OAKLAND. 
Upper Pvt entrance Pvt. bath, 
Carpeted living rm. large bedrm 
Kitchen, ‘dinette Couple only. ma one month, Paul A. Kern Inc, FE 
CLEAN 18ST FLOOR 2 BEDROOM 
children welcome north side $60 per month FE 471581 or FE 4-0090 
FOR RENT waite APARTMENT 
unfurnished or vartially furnished 
Commerce and Union Lake area 
Reasonable rent Write Box 115. 
_ Pontiac Press 
“HOLLYWOOD APTS. 
Furnished or unfinished, & 3 r 
bath & utilities furnished 114 E. 
Howard St FE 28 34. : 
LARGE LOVELY 4 & BATH. GA- 
aay Near airport. Adults. OR   
  
  
  
  
  
COZY BASEMENT APT. ALL 
utilities furn. Close to 
chael’s Chureh. For information 
_come to 550 N. Perry 8 
DUPLEX, FURNISHED, 4 ROOMS 
and basement, gas heat, land- 
scaped 4 blocks to shopping area. 
$90 month FE 2-7940. 
FOR COLORED — 4 ROOMS AND 
bath. Upper Walking distance of 
D in Fee Bice pitet: Call after   
  
FURN, JA 
Bed- 
room: kitchen, Hting 
__ bath, Pvt. ent. MY 3-9091. 
FURN 3 GAS HEATED 
apt Private entrance and bath. 
$15 week or $60 bee jr Ly Au 
_burh_ Heights area. FE_1. 
LARGE NEWLY ea 
per aa Pvt. Entr., hea 
eee furn. On_ cit 
. Marshall, FE   
  
  TARGE, 2 BEDROOM eat CLOSE 
FE 2-4090,   , after 4 p.m. 
Goat SR OUSEREEPING ROOM, 3300 Rd, No children. 
LARGE AND BATH. LY 
sermons pictur eingow mr alr 
_port ér°3- 943, 
iawn 3 aa a at H & ENT 
Adults. Util furn 1 light house- 
_keeping room 258 Orchard Lk. _ 
DECORATED 4 ROOMS, 
ph entr. Nicely fur-   
  
  ns lot Close in 90 Cottage. FE 
NEWLY DECORATED 18T FLOOR. 4 bath -and gerage. West 
2.4644, side. FR   
¢ ‘ho era ee 
M., WASHER. PARK-’ 
      CLOSE TO 
50 E. MODERN 6 ROOMS 
bus and schools off heat 
. Kennett   
MODERN 4 RMS HEATED. 4192 
Dixie Hwy over Keego Har. 
Call FE ware Drayton Pisins 
2-244.   
NEWLY DECOR. 3 AND BATH. Pvt. Entr. Adults, $55. FE 5-8586. 
ON ELIZABETH LAKE, YEAR 
around clean, pleasant a cou- 
_ple. No drinkers. FE 2-416 
ORCHARD CITAPIS:   
  
‘9 SALMER Street 
newest modern apartment develop. 
ment Balcony y ¢. Individual en 
trances. Beautiful kitchens; Stove 
& Refrigerator furnished Aw 
ano he water furnished. 
on EDROOM APARTMENTS 
for immediate occupancy 
N DAILY & SUNDA 
AM. THRU @ PM 
8-6918 UPPER 4 RM. UTILITY FURN 
_1 child welcome. FE “#7473, ° 
WEST SIDE WEBSTER 
Washingtor Jr High area — 5 
rooms, gas heat $90 m 
2 bedrooms, up gad apt., Wisrer ano 
Lincoln Jr High aren $55 mo 
Coe eit 5 4-252) ot after 6 
WATERFORD APTS. d rooms TT Ee $65 per mo, 
WHITE BROS. 
: of — 205 
$660 Dixie Hwy. 
Open. Eves, ‘til @; Sum. 10 "til & 
7 te   
  
  
s - AND |.   
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
after 5 FE     3 
mo 10 Buffalo, Clarkston.   
3 BEDROOM MODESE, BARN, 
and chicken coop 12 3 Tes 
miles west of Pentiac $65 mon 
€ rooms and bath, 
of Pontiac. 5 acres. 
8 room home in Davisburg, $75 
Month Immediate possession. 
Clarkston excellent location. 
bedrooms, ? baths, newly decorat- 
ed, gas heat, garage, $115 month 
References and deposit required. 
R #H._ Smith Reéaltor, 28 E. Hu- 
ron, FE 8-0466. . 
  
BEDROO.f! MODERN, 
around Fu!) basement. Central 
heat, $85 month. EM _ 3-3630. 
BEDROOMS, 144 BATHS, STORM windows, Nr schoo! in Clarkston. 
MA 5-1887, after 4 pm 
3 BEDRM 2? YR OLD HOME, 880 
_mo, Clarkston area OR, 3-2938. 
J AND 5 RM HOUSES INQUIRE | 
22 _subumn. off Seon | 4 ROOM HOUSE, PARTLY FUR- 
_nished $50 mo. EM _ 3-4207 
4 RMS & BATH ENCLOSED | 
porch Ol heater, newly decorat- 
ed On Long Lake Adults pre- 
_ferred _EM 3-8571 4 ROOM HOUSE. UNE URN eee”: 
in Auburn Hgts. full basement,     3 
  
  
  
  
ol heat 3173" Bessie St., Inquire 
115 Seminole Pontiac,-or call 
FE 45425   @ ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITY room, FE 2-6332 or FE 2-5788.   5 RM. HOUSE FOR RENT MOD- 
ern Near GMC. $55 Mo Ph. 
_ FE 49772   Bi aes AND BATH INQUIRE 
Ta 
$6 ROOMS NEW. 2 BEDR 
ful! basement, §75 per month 
W. Strathmore, FE 5-6215. 
| ROOMS 2 BEDROOMS: 30 ROS- | 
shire Court. Gag heat, air cooled. 
Recently decorated. Large yard 
Chiidren welcome. Rent $79.50. 
_Call Harry Serwin RE 20156. __ 6 ROOMS & BATH. NR_ TEL-HU- 
ron, Bus service FE 5-8257, 
6 ROOM. WEST SIDE HOME, COM- 
pletely remodeled. $75 per mo. 
Call Realtor Partridge, FE 4- 3581. 
6 ROOMS AND BATH, GAS HEAT, 
2-car prarage Lake Orion. $75 OR 
3-1547 after 6 p.m_ 
6 RMS 11 EDNA $60 MONTH. 
Inquire 47 Edna.   
OOMS, 
219 | 
  
  
  
  
  
  
A MODERN WEST SIDE “GROOM 
home, 3 bedrooms, large living 
room’ separate dining room. Full 
basement, oi] heat, lovely shaded 
lot. Miller, Broker. FE 2-0263. 
BUNGALOW ~ WEST SIDE NEAR 
Tel-Huron,| ideal for working cou- 
le, gas heat, newly decorated. 
ving room. dining room. kitchen, 
bedroom. dressing room, and 
more, 1011 W_ Huron, ask for Mr. 
or Mra. HILTZ, 
BRICK 6 RMS AND GARAGE 
Newly decorated yee Pontiac 
Central High. $85 MA 6-6603. 
CLOSE IN 3 Been SOM 
$59 month. FE_ 56-6106   
  
  
  ¥ 
SAVE ENERGY, USE 
fied NOW! 
      
  
_job, place to live or a)   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
      
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
  
          
    
      
                
  ROOM HOUSE WITH BATH, $60 
th. | 5 miles west | 
$75 month. | 
jon 
4 
YEAR 
  
WANT ADS! To find a #15.000, $3,000 ¢ 
‘good used car, see Classt 7 ~     
              
  
  
    
  
see. TV, FE 5-0377, 14 Matthews 
Convalescent Homes 328A 
HAVE VACANCIES MEN, OR 
women. Bed or ambulatory pa- 
tlents accepted Easy rarees nese 
Lane Rest Home, 
OPENING SOON 
Glen-Acres Nursing Home 
accepting applications. For 
formation call FE 8-8013 
Hotel Rooms 39 
HOTEL AUBURIN 
Booms Day or Week 
Also | 9 room apartments. 
~ Cooking and relrigeral on units 
464 AubU FE -9 
Rent. Stores 40 
FOR RENT BLDG. 40x60. 2618 
Dixle Highway PE 4-3528. Ask 
for John Panchuk. ] 
NEW STORE BUILDING. 6.300 SQ. 
s Will split 1052 West Huron 
Pontiac Ideal for drug, fur- 
Saure, variety carpet or what 
have you in mind in 
trading -center with eight Rott 
businesses Front and rear b 
top parking Gas heat Reasonable 
rent Call owner OR 3-460) after 
_i pm,   
  
Now 
in- 
  
  
  
Rent Office “Space ¢ 41) - 
LOCK FROM SEARS ON 
Ourlane — 2 large rooms. heated 
FE 3-9826 
Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 41A 
COMPLETING 20X44 AND 30X60 
attractiwe suburban stores or of- 
fices to lease. Finish to suit. 
Beasonable. EM’3-3022 
FOR RENT BARBER SHOP OP- 
eeeel on buying equipmet, FE 
FOR 
LEASE- OF FICE—26x28—main high- 
way % 
  
  
  
T 
Pee 
Kampsen 233) MT ROYAL 2 BEDROOM, ‘9 baths oi] hea car ga- 
rage spacigus yard seacue 9 FE 4. 0528 
to 5. FE 8-0421, Mr. Lee /3 Eves. 8. & Sun. 
    RESTAURANT LOCATION NEAR 
Pontiac Mtr main office. Heat 
furnished, parking OR 3-1391 
For Rent Miscellaneous 42 
+CAR INSULATED GARAGE OR 
workshop 125 N. 
a month     
  
For Sale Houses Ce Be 
WILL SACRIFICE $3,800 EQUITY 
in 2 bedroom home on 1 acre 
for $2,500. or anything of equal 
_ value, FE 5-2073. 
3 BEDRM BATH & %. WALL TO 
wall carpeting storms & screens. 
_ Make offer, O ‘902. 
GooD > HOME It IN PONTIAC, SELL 
or trade, will take ree home   
  as down ‘payment, MI 
EXCEPTIONAL, OFFER DRAY- 
ton area, $26,000 home on large 
spacious lot, will sacrifice for 
owt: ON $, 
natural fireplace, pine paneling. 
wall .to wall carpeting, living 
room, dining room, master - 
room, full basement, oil heat,; 2 
car garage. OR 3-1301   WALNUT LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3 
<bedreom: neh bari 
fenced yard, Bhan. schoo MA | 
ol ase   
NO MONEY DOWN 
sparking new ree Eos home 
3 bedrooms, 114 baths, rec. room, 
        Telegraph. $20) 
51 | 
          2 car sttached garage. $20, 7§0. 
M 30242. 
      
  
$1,200 down 
pay ments EM 3-4232. 
Country Living 
Near Miracle Mile Shopping Cen- 
ter Livjag can be most pleasant 
in this” cistom built ranch 
large bedrms & den. 
kitchen, center pass 
tached arage Professionally 
landscaped lot A splendid oppor- 
tunity at $20,500 Terms Call 
Pinemis 7-2000 ask for Teresa 
REALTORS CHAMBERLAIN CO   
  
WILL TRADE 
New 3 bedroom home needs some 
_ finishing Large living room, 
kitchen with mahogany cupboards 
bath, all plastered walls. Full 
basement with oi] heat. Lot 100x   
ue ft. $9.900, E-Z terms, Call us 
° 
$65 DOWN 
3 bedrm.. new brick starter home | - Work yous ee gave money. Call 
today on 
CRAW F ‘ORD AGENCY MY 3-1143 609 E Fiint St 
___ LAKE ORION, MICHIGAN 
EAST HIGHLAND OFF M59. 1 
shopping center Nearly new 2 
bedrm. ranch. picture windows, 
oll AC auto gas hot water Lge 
lot, Full price $7,990 $245 mores 
you in is is a beautifully butlt 
year around home Priced $1.200 
elow replacement cost Lot 50x 
KUSCHELIL-REALTY VErmont 8-6800 
Dorris & Son 
BRICK RANCH HOME LONG, LOW & RAMBLING 
e of the nicest 3-bedroom 
ranch homes with full base- 
ment and two fireplaces 
and two baths, on the mar- 
ket today Attached 22x24 
garage. wall-to-wall carpet- 
ing gleaming oak floors and 
plastered waHls, 14 ft. solid 
concrete drive, basement 
paneled with Philippine ma- 
logany, and asphalt tiled, 
priced to sell 
VACANT BUNGALOW 
$7500 GI Five room bungalow, newly 
decorated, forced air ~ oil 
heat, oak floors, 
tionally large lot, 
. between Walton Blvd., 
Pontiac Rd. $350 
handle, 
COLONIAL HOME FOUR BEDROOMS 
Spacious and gracious fam- 
iy home. one betiroom and 
half bath down, two bed- 
rooms and full bath up, 
mirror-like oak floors, beau- 
tiful modern ‘kitchen, excep- 
tional™ basement, privileges 
on 40 “in -Mheht with finest 
beach ucblgae $15,500   
should 
bedroom home, 
ment, forced air oil heat, 
garage new bath and-kitch- 
en xtures, foctes fericed 
lot, ‘% block to bus, stores, 
and short walk to St. Mikes. 
Assume goes) GI payable 
$72. mon $1500 down 
DORRIS “e SON REALTORS 752 W_ Huron Latch FE 4-1557   
“FOR CASH INA 
HURRY, sell things 
through ~ ~ Classified Aedget— 
Anything goes! Dial FE 
2-818L 1, 
block from White Lake and nice | 
| Lakeville   
Owner moving to Florida. Full 
Price $6,500 each with terms. 
CLARKSTON AREA 
3 bedroom home with 1% baths, 
nice kitchen, large living room, 
ell furnace. Close to schoel and 
shopping area. Only $550 moves 
you in Low monthly payments. 
Evenings after @ cali OR 3-5597 
JOLL, REALTY 
FE J 
236 DIXIE Hwy. +456)   
LAWRENCE W 
Gaylord S@UARE LAKE FRONT 
sores i % story, and 
s a dan ak fe 
aneled wails. ors 
eat. oat car garage Large 
lot oy $15, with terms, 
Call MY 2-2821 or OA 8-2543 
CITY OF PONTIAC 
Three bedroom Ranch Hom 
in Perry Park Oak fieors. 
heat. Nicely ene: 
lot See it today 
Call MY 2-2821 or OA asa 
18 ACRES 
South of Orion. Id. 
ghorch oy call a ree 
Y 2-2821 or 
oa 
ZONED COMMERCIAL 
146 ft. frontage on Lapeer 
Rd_ South of Lake Orion. 
Call MY 2-2821 or OA 8-2543. 
36 ACRES 
» Oniatd oct Will divide 
operty to suit 1 
MY 2-282) or On -25e3. 
10? S|) BROADWA 
Lake Orion MY 2-287] 1319 ROCHESTER RD 
OA 8-2543 
KENT Established in 1916   
DIXIE HWY. — Zoned commer- 
cial 8 ¢ home with full base- 
ment. Ideal for business and liv- 
ing Ste Extra deep lot 
Plenty of ce for small stole 
or office sif "000 terms 
NEAR 8T FREDS — 12 room: 
and 4 baths Ideal for 4 fami’ 7. 
income. Now showing income of 
$270 per mo Full basement, gas 
heat. Ideal for large foray plus 
rental Cal) for detail« 
10 ACRES PLUS — This neafly 
ne 76 ft ranch home. 3 Spa- 
clots bedrooms 23 ft living rm. 
with fireplace, kitchen and break- 
fast nook, tiled bath 25 rum - 
pus room has built-in grill. Base- 
ment, ofl heat, attached garage. 
Small barn for saddle horses or 
kennels, Excellent landscaping. « 
cau fos further details. Clarkston 
VACANT 51% aeeres ‘230 ft. main 
hwy. frontage and ft.” eke 
frontage on ercatect Waning lake. 
This would make ideal home site 
or possible future business one: 
One of those hare to find loca- 
tions, $8,750 terms 
DRAYTON AREA -, Fine'3 Lain 
room home complete with 
ramie tiled bath nice kitchen, 
oak floors, ai wm = 
New. in, BB. 500 w: wih gO down 
Floyd ent Inc., Realtor - a Hwy at Telegraph 
- n 
AMPLE CUSTOMER PARKING     a 
* 
alt y t t 
17 
* ® eve 
* 
Seal    
           
      
    
  
         
  
  
HOUSE. ARRANGED IN 2 APTS., 
Each with bath, It's a large lot with trees & garden, $8,300, $1,000 
down 3151 Helena. ‘OF, ich. 
Near Livernois-& Beaver Rds.   
“Bedroom 
HOMES 
$100 DOWN Plus minimum costs. 
Moves You In!   SO 
WHY PAY RENT? 
BUILT IN RANGES & OVENS | WI | 
LOADS OF MODERN FEATURES, 
WEEKDAYS & SUNDAY 1} TO 1| 
Cay veel FRIDAY - 
306 Stanley st et Kinney 
“$ blocks nert Montealn 
Lincoln scp High 
WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 or EVES LI 23-4671 
3-BEDROOM — CITY 
LOCATED in geod residential 
area, Includes 6 rooms. 
_ full basement. auto. | 
oi] heat Full price only $7,- ; 
$50 — $1,000 Down — $69.50 | 
Per month 
4-BEDROOM—SUB. 
NEW HOME located in North 
Suburban area Features full 
basement, gas heat and 
large jot 80x200 Full price 
only $12.609 — $1.250 Dowa 
— §70 per month 
J. A. Taylor REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE 
7732 HIGHLAND RD. (M59) 
OR _3-1348 : OR 4-0306 
The 
Spectacular BONUS HOUSE 
BI-LEVEL 
3 bedroom—l1's baths. gas 
Choice of eines: 715x150 ft. 
ALSOVSEE 
The Saratoga 3 bedrooms, full basement, wet 
plaster walls Choice of built-ins 
Gas heat 75x100-(t. lots. Lake 
privileges Paved streets and 
curbing. Private park in sub. 
ONLY $440 DOWN 
$71 PER MO. | 
PLUg TAXES, INS. & INT | 
Located 142 miles W of Woodward! 
on Williams Lake Rd 
Cox Realty Co. 20069 James Couzens 
BR 3-2755 
IN MILFORD —- A DISTINCTIVE) 
redwood contemporary 3 bedroom | 
home. nestled among pines on a: 
100x150 ft lot. Built-in kitchen, 
Hi-Fi and FM. large Tennessee 
ledge rock fireplace. 14a ceramic 
baths with elty water and sewer, 
2 blocks from grade and Jr. high 
stool. $22,000. terms. By owner, 
_being transferred MUtual 4-5733 
BRICK. ST BENEDICT AREA. 3 
bedrm, basement, rec room| 
large landscaped lot. Lake privi- 
leges. Immediate possession. OR 
3-8315 
CROOKS AND AUBURN, BY OWN- 
er 5 rooms and bath sunporch 
and utility Large 
fruit and shade trees. $7,900 
down, or $7,100 with $1500 down. 
_ FE 8-2467 __ 
$300 DOWN Modern 2 bedrm. full bath. hard. | 
wood floors Acfoss road from 
c PA beach, for lake priv 
NGUS, Realtor 
my ine Gace NORTH EAST SIDE, LARGE 4 
bedroom with 1'2 baths. Newly 
decorated Zone Commercial 
Room home on 2 lots. 50x165 
each Fine location 
With more than the asking price 
jp the Rochester area. 
6 rm. on Lake Orion, paneled uy 
SS nice firep ace On 
& % Easy term 
1 ok modern, some sh needed. Seli or trade. 
W. DINNAN 
66 W Haron FE an 
LAKE ORION 
4 bedroom frame. modernized. ex- 
cellent cond Lot 112x240. FA ou 
heat. 6 rms and bath down 
tTms and bath up Full carpeting 
except baths, kitchen and utilit 
4 biocks from veav beck and Le e. 
sono Barn $23 cash MY 426   
  
heat 
lots 
  
  
  
    
  
  
ATTENTION 
LARGE FAMILIES This 6 year old tri-level is the 
dream home you have been 
searching tor. @ lovely bedrooms. 
Large carpeted liv 
room with ledwerock firepl 
A dining room for gracious Saving) 
‘A large iamily hep that is 
every womans dream Complete 
basement with ledgerock fireplace 
and completely tamuaned kitchen 
Automatic heat Incinerator & 2 
car garage Large well shaded 
lot Schoo: bur door Lake 
privileges Owner transferred Will 
Bell [or only $18,500 with 86.000 
own 
DO YOU LIKE TREES 
AND PRIVACY? If so you will love this 6 
acres with new modern 3 bed- 
-room ranch home Large living 
room. dining room sunny kitch- 
en Loadg of closets. Screened 
breezeway. Garage. Owner leav- 
ing state. Price reduced to $17.- 
erms 
1442 ALHI ST. 
Lovely custom built brick, 3 bed- 
Fam'iy kitchen Tiled 
Attached garage Large Jot. Im- 
mediate Larpecepas $.6,800 
reasonable te 
WIXOM wv ILLAGE 2 bedroom Nearly modern. Base- 
Corner lot. nice 
oad Near new Lin- 
coin Plant Only $7,500. Reason- 
able terms 
Dorothy Snyder Lavender REALTOR EST 29 YEARS 
001 Highlane Rd (M59) 
EM 3.3303 6417 or MU 4 
MULTIPLE’ LISTINGSSERVICE 
Waterford—Trade 
7 room brick and Jedperock) 
ranch with attached 2-car   
tiled baths 
clude new To in-| 
carpeting and dra- 
peries Widow owner will con- 
sider a smaller well located, 
bungalow in trade 
Sylvan Lake 
On bay Inlet and wonderful view. 
of iake 5 extra large rooms. 
and all niceiy decorated Full 
basement and ol! furnace 2 
shaded jots A buy at §14 500 
on easy FHA terms 
West Side Brick 
This is a choice, all Brick 
Ranch Home Built in 195t.24 
ft. carpeted living room, latest 
in kitchen design 3 nice bed- 
Fooms and 1% tiled baths High 
light basement for recreation 
To include new carpeting, dra- 
peries and extras ue velvet 
green lawn and shad 
Resale—$600 Down : 
Vacant and all well decorated 
Newer Brick Front 3-bedroom 
ranch home Ot] heat and alum.-| — Ney 
— 
inum storms and screens Well: 
iocated West of city Can be 
purchased by Veteran or Non- 
Veteran 
JOHN 
inzler _ Phone PE 43525 : FRANKLIN KNOLLS. OWN = R 
06 | 
__NA 17-2815! 
with | aes lege sey 3 
  
+ TEEDEooual GAS heat Located = sme eee 8t., E. of Joslyn, FE $-2 aS. 
Cherokee Hills rick 
Custom built tp 1950 for ro 
owner. this 6 room 1% 
plan includes many 
designed to add to its 
venient, pleasant livability! ™~ 
basement. attached 16 x 
rage, a 40 x 12 second ‘ieor 
room provides fine storage. ana 
could also serve needs 
growing family You'll like the 
close-in cae jocation of this 
fine home, it's well shrubed 
84 x 178 it” and particu- 
larily t's Qealistiel mice 
Carl W. Bird, Realtor 
/503 Community mesocel!! Bank Bid ae 
FE 4-421) . FE 5-1   
  
SYLVAN LAKE 
Sam Warwick has new 3 bedrm 
brick tri-level High basement, 
woodeq lot lake privileges $20,- 
1800 erwood FE 45090. 
PE 2-2105, 2s Sunday.   es 
JUDAH. 
LAKE 
ESTATES |" You'll be surprised at the 
size and beauty of this 3 
bedroom ranch home com 
plete a every cota On lot 
860x125 - FH and VA 
TERMS - come out and 
check plat and see what 
your friend: are buying. 
— Model Open Daily — 5 MILES NORTH OF 
PONTIAC ON JOSLYN RD. 
VA $72 TOTAL DOWN 
DLORAH BUILDING CO. 
Builder of ‘‘National” Homes 
‘FE 2-0123 2FAMILY EASTSIDE. 1GI- 
  CHEROKEE HILLS, BY OWNER, daire & stove. Some_ furniture 
included. 2-ca » Large gar 
den space. 
. Rose M: Clarty, Broker 
Lf 
down or swap mauity ) house in same 
PE ¢-9715, after 
rg   
REE BEDROOM BRICK 
hase- 
$350 DOWN PAYMENT 
An excellent ro bedroom 
home wit besemens 
comb storm cash, oi] heat 
Monthly paymen 
clude taxes insurance and 
5 per cent interest Sada de 
WEST SUBURBAN 
Off Sashabaw Ra — a fine 
three bedreom: brick “and 
frame ranch type home — 
mation storm sash, ol! 
AC heat. Large lot Priced 
ith dows ray- 
ment. gerbes payments to 
"5 per Frees *satnt aii 
ai oe 
chee eatatin zg BEDRM. 
wigs 000 $600 down, FE. 5-5246,   
moving out of town, must sacri- 
ee ES er, ties FHA appraised 
HAYDEN ; ncere eS AST SIDE. 2bedroom 
home   
fnene $12,500, 
NEAR WILLIS SCHOO bed- 
room home ons floers. Xe sane. 
Oil furnace car iis be Im- 
w ediate SS scaslen 
INCOME Between Auburn and 
Pike. 2 story 8 room frame & 
room 
& Gining room. 3 room apt. & 
bath on 2nd floor, Garage. Fenced PE $8183}   
      
  
    
    
  
    
    
  
    
  
  
1958 by NEA Service. ing, 
Tk. Ree. US Pat Of,   “Roger sent me a DOZEN roses — I had no idea he'd 
hurt my feelings THAT much!”       Jeb 8 a oe tev ee » x, 4°46 = y og. "eo ew vw , » © 5 45 a if 99 
SIXTY ; | THE PONTIAR: PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER | °, 1058 
For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 Fér Sale Houses: -43|TIZZY ss by Kate Osann _For Sale Houses _ a 
CLARK — DOWN. $3,900 
wae 
aoe Pe oe he i ee ee BEDROOM BAvES. 
BLte care soe eee eater ern Den, oak floares plastered 
ea oat tl $11,950, Easy Terms. 
CLARK REAL ESTATE 
TRADE TO BUY. To SEL. 2 L, 
SULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE   So ae ane 
R. VALUET: Realtor 
| “CREE nk SS   
RANCH, 3 BEDRMS.’ 
za nl ag 
ment, regteetiog “spac 
here OWNER LEA 
DIXIE HIGHWAY a Bh a STATE. we et 
  
    
WF 
  
    
  = 
  For Sale Houses 43 For Sale Houses 43 
Immediate Possession $1,000 DOWN Owner retiring to Florida. Will sell 3 bedrms. Hardwood: floors. Full 
3 bedroom imedern home, 2% lots. ee ae «furnace i acre of 
Gara 
Seashtal ps Les Ax 
Terma, ment, awnings. 
yard. $8500 — 
“ ree 
Zara: ULL: Low EEA Heme Tri-level starter home’ 23 ig? 
helt Jae ei eh pesece ue saad Mads duplicate. $6450, 
and up ave plans ta choose ee or will build te your plans. ae OAKLAND COUNT BEAUTE 
available. Call le en 2614 UNION L   
New Home 
$8,200 Would you like a few 2 or 3 bedroom ranch home— 
i123 and ask for ital Li- 
Dur ss ey co. 
ARRO r 
WHY PAY RENT? 
You can buy this home for $7,900 
with $600 down on a land contract 
This 4 yr- old home has been 
newly decorated throughout. You 
can have immediate possession. 
There are 2 bedrooms, a large 
living room. kitchen with plenty 
of cupboards. Located in the 
“WEST SUBURBAN This Cape Cod ts located on 1%   
acres of land, only 7 miles from [ 
downtown Pontiac. There are 
large bedrooms & a possibility of 
a third The living room its 12x19 
& dining room 8x12’. 
ment with oil furnace & 1% car 
garage * ba TT 
NOTHING DOWN To a qualified GI buyer, owner 
wants to build this fall, so fast 
lection fs a necessity. This 4 year 
| old home has 3 large bedrooms 
with double closet space in each. 
      The beautiful paneled living room 
has a ledgérock fireplace. There 
{s a full basement & a car 
garage to add to the many oth- 
er features Located itn Drayton 
Plains & priced at $12,700. Call 
now for care 
TY 
TED McCULLOUGH bse 
FE 5-1284 & 43844 
Open 9 am. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday 1-4 
2 CERAMIC BATHS FAMILY RM. — 3} BEDRMS. 
Full basement — custom built. 
ONLY, $12,566 
W. H. BASS Builder & Broker 
FE 3-7210 or FE 8-0531 
BROWN   
  
  $400 DOWN — Lovely erick bun | basement oi} fur- | galow with full 
mace paved street. oak floors, | 
alum storms. “A wonderful val- 
ue.’ Only 5 per cent Interest. 
$360 DOWN — Modern 5 roum bun- 
galow only 3 years old Full base- 
ment. Oak floors Paved street 
wee decorated” Plastic tile 
a 
Lovely ranch style bunga- 900 
value.’ 
Oak floors low with 3 bedrooms 
  “This 
new" J 
steal" lovely home ig just 
large iIcts. ‘It is 
Easy terms. 
$22.950 LARGE BRICK Ranch | 
bungalow with exposed basement 
Large game room, two fireplaces, 
two ‘a. baths and one full bati. 
Large lot and wonderful jocation 
“Priced to sell.’ 3 bedrooms 
Owner leaving city 
L. H. st OWN: Realtor 
1362 W Ph 
MUL TELE LISTING SERVICE   
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
/ - 
C) LE L 
3 BEDROOM BRICK 1-Floor 
pian home Near Watkins 
Lake. Living room with pic- 
ture window wall-to-wall 
carpeting Ceramic tile 
bath Nicel decorated 
throughout Basement com- 
pletely finished includin 
built Landscape 
Brick Bar-B-Q 
$15.265 with approxi- 
mately $3,400 down to exist- 
ing GI Mortgage with pav- 
ments of $83.55 per mo in- 
cluding taxes and insurance 
|. DON'T RENT when you can 
buy a well-kept almost new 
3 earn brick for $1,000 | down, Assume an existing 
low interest mortgage No* 
closing costs or investiga- 
H tion and almost immediate . 
| possession. Yes — There's 
a basement   
      
      Ue eG FOR SOME. 
HING a bit different’ 
Then, do let us show you 
this Contemporary Tri- 
Level 3 Good bedrooms. ce- 
ramic bath 2-car attached 
garage <A value at $14 - 
500 with about $1,300 
handle Wenderful location 
Drayton Woods 
$500 DOWN is all ygu 
need to buy a sharp hew 
bungalow, clas: extra large 
bedroom, a 19 ft living 
id a 12 ft’ eiteose 
? 
countertop You'll love the 
pretty colors that have been 
used. throughout Gleaming 
oak floors too. We have the 
ev - 
OWNER MOVING to Czli- 
fornia Will sell hic beautiful 
3 bedroom. 155 bath home 
at only $2,000 down 2%. 
car rarag® Beautifully 
landscaped jot too Expen- 
sive carpéting and drapery 
will stay :-May be seen any- 
Cee Call now Bafore it's 
LURAY O'NEIL, Realtor 
    670 West Huron 
OP, EN EVENINGS 
    [282 8 Telegraph Rd. e 
FE 3-7103 FE 31839 your needs. 
5 ACRES Clarkston area. 2 bed- 
room home. Large kitchen. Oil 
furnace. He. Oe. rms. Immedi- 
ate possession 
J.C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton FE 8-0441 Open Ev ; 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
LAKE oe : 
room bungalow with 11% 
es pets Has carpeted living 
room, incee dining room, base- 
ment lovely shaded lot. Located near Drayton Yeins business sec- 
tion. $l. down   
WATKINS-PONTIAC ESTATES 
3 bedroom brick ranch type bun- 
galow with ful] basement, auto- 
matic heat a hot water, at- 
tached 2 car garage, -1's baths, 
carpeted Dying room and bed- 
rooms, large kitchen with built 
in range and oven, beautiful cup- 
boards and formal diving room. A honey! 
NORTH ND 
Large an bedroom home with car- 
eted living and dining rooms. 
‘ull vecement, automatic oi] heat 
extra bat car garage an 
beautiful Career lot. See by ap- 
pointment. 
Geryors R.Irwin REALTOR 269 BALDWIN 
FE 5-0101 
BEAUTIFUL RANCH 
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, basement, 
2 fireplaces. rec. room, screened 
porch, many extras. Walking dis-   
          tance Miracle Mile: By owneyz. 
“$25,150. FE 4-656 4 
  
‘Honeymoon Special! 
ROOM BUNGALOW -— 
FURNACE — CUTE 
AND COZY - BARGAIN 
eRe AT $7.450 — EASY 
ERMS - LOCATED IN 
DRAYTON 
JIM WRIGHT ALTOR 
348 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-944] 
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8:30 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
NORTH... Side HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL. 
Lacks only hot water heater. One 
bedrm , ideal for elderly couple   
  who wish to be near Bus service. 
This home is very attractive, nice 
landscaped lot. City water and 
sewer Only $6,500 Very reason- 
able down payment 
$7,900... home. Oi] forced air heat. Bullt | 
in 1955. Near school, shopping | 
and bus service. Only $1,800 
  $1000 DOWN — Rambling ranch 
bungalow. Large omy room, 
two baths, large attached two car 
ghrage, paved street. Located 
near dancaday Lake. 
FULL PRICE — “A real, - 
Oil AC furnace. plastic tile bath | 
lke = 
a 
FE_2-4810 | Humphries FE 2-0474 Healtor FE sis 
| 83 N. Telegraph en Eves. 
| MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE   
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
2 FAMILY $500 DOWN 
bath side with | 
separate utilities throughout. 
Individual garages, paved 
street, quiet neighborhood, 
and best of all only $13.500 
— FHA Ternmis on balance 
— Better be first! 
WILLIAMS 
LAKE AREA ° For your retirement. 
extra’ well built home has 
all the extras like plastered 
walls, shiny — 6: 
and activities reoms with 
new ‘edge stone fireplace. 
This home is in “Better 
than new" condition—Only 
6 years old! 
aluminum siding, 
garage. blacktop drive, nice 
dawn and shrubs, a variety 
of fruit and garden, partly 
Anchor fenced. Owner going 
North — Your chance to 
own this izcetem home for 
only $15,9 
4 BEDROOM 
BRICK you need 4 bedrooms, 
2 2 bathe. and a large lot? 
you want easy terms? 
Ths Brick Ranch home has 
ali these things and more. 
Drapes and carpeting are 
inciuded at $14,950. 
BRICK 
RANCH AND EASY TERMS 
NEAR SILVER LAKE—With 
3 bedrooms, ceramic tile 
bath, attached plastered ga- 
16 ft. Jalousied rec- 
parcel — ‘landscaped to 
perfection. Priced far 
WE BUY LAND conpeects 
ASK FOR TOM BATEMAN .- 
          ‘Bateman 
Kampsen 
  REALTOR FE 4-0528 
377 8. Telegraph Eves. & Sun. 
- ft, | 3060 8. Commerce Rd. 
Very clean—north side 2 bedroom | 
Own | 
duplication with easy Al. 
erms. EM 3-4164 or EM 3-2411 ‘after is p.m.   FOR SALE BY OWNER: “APT. 
house. Newly redecorated inside 
  * ® out 11 rms, 3 baths, West 
side, FE 4-6950. ‘ =| 
OPEN DAILY 2-7 
Exclusive Pleasant Lake Woods 
the most wonderful ikaw 
homes imaginable. Full 
ment, 3 bedrooms, base- 
2. ceramic 
paws, family room, fireplace with 
bar- pit, hi-fi system, farree 
ing, attached garage. 3 of these 
levelyi homes to inspect. Out Eliz- 
abeth La to open signs 
at Pleasant Lake. 
$400 DOWN 
Off Joslyn on Beverly 
New 
gas heat. 
payment just s4k. 24 
Call street. 
2 bedroom home with Laie 
today and see this sharp 
home in one of Pontiacs most 
desirable sections. 
NO MONEY DOWN GI 
Outstanding 3 bedroom ranch 
80x157 ft lot. Plastered wal on 
is, 
select oak floors, neat and ¢lean, 
attached gine paved 
A beautifu street. 
home in a desirable 
location for only $11,800 full price. 
JIM WILLIAMS REAL were & BA ho 
FE 4-0547 1483 BALD   HAVE ae WILL BUILD 
Split-level starter home. No 
money down $6,450. EM 3-0482 
Gordon Flattley, Builder.   
Multi-Lakes Realty 
ON BASS LAKE 
2 bedroom ts $0 foot ir 
age. furnished, car Una, 
nice quiet eeighworsond. $8.5 
terms 
MK 4-1 UNFINISHED HOME crete on Big Lake. $6,500 with 
$8 own 
CUCKLER REALTY 236 N SAGINAW 
FE 4-400) 
FOR COLORED — $600 DOWN ~ A GOOD BUY 
Neat 5-room, modern 
separate dinin: 
en with bre   
FE 4-6492 
' 4-4813 S opeee Evenings   
          578   
NO DOWN 
PAYMENT 2 of 3 bedroom starter hom 
m Corner Willlams Lake After 6, OR 3-7038 Sith full basement and rough wir- 
  
COMPARE THIS 
Custom built t.200 sq ft.. 3 
room bric« ranch home 
basement, 2 (fireplaces slate 
trance’ 1% baths 
| floors 22x24 plastered carage 
this for $17,000 on your lot 
J DUNLAP 
| dustom Builder FE #1 bed- 
Pull 
en- 
ceramic tile 
with vanity Plastered walls oak | All| 
198)   
NOW FOR SALE MODEL HOME, 
| Attached heated garage, bot wa- 
3. bedrrm 2 ter heat. baths, 
thermo-pane windows wall to 
wall va eting GE ee 
lot 182 ip 
  
BY OWNER Nice 3 bedroom brick 
fireplace. attached garage 
breezeway ‘arge kitchen. 
tion room ih basement 
corner lot in good area 
state and must sell 
Teasonsble” Ren pay ment. 
brokers 3-3297 Leavy 
| ranch with 
and | 
recrea- 
large 
ing 
$17.800 with 
No 
  
GILES $600 Down on this 7 room 3 bedroom 
home. Also glassed in perch 
and attached patio plus a 
2-car garage all for only 
$7,975. Hurry on this one! 
$650 Down 
2 bedroom*located near Tel- 
Huron Shopping Center. 
Monthl¥ paymente only $60 
Call for further information. 
Auburn Heights 
2 bedroom ranch with base- 
ment, auto. oi] furnace. Lo- 
cated on a well landscaped 
lot. Breezeway and garage 
Call for appointment. 
PE 5-6175 GILES REALTY CO. 221 BALDWIN AVE. 
hee 9am — , Pam 
MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE   
MILLER nice bedrooms The vey livin 
room is carpet to-W 
There ts a1” ft nomen ond 
8x10 breakfast nook full mod 
only $13,900 on FHA t 
sarge kitchen bre 
beautiful 
or 
NEAR TEL-HURON 
center, 6 and bath 
room separate dining room, 
oak floors and plaster 
Full basement 
painted walis clean gas he 
jow taxes Tt is vacan: i 
* candy 15 
to G ment 
William Miller 
Realtors. w a 
‘oe 8 to 8       an 
have the key See it now it is a 
$99 No down pay- CLOSE IN suburbar beauty — 3 
aif an 
em 
basement with rec. room, Breeze- 
way to 2-car garage, huge lot 
135x285 ft This home was built 
in 1950, it is in at condition, 
rms. 
rooms are oa 
ax. 
loors. Full base- 
shopping 
one-floor 
home. 2 bedrooms, spacious living 
all 
od wails. 
has, plastered 
heat, wr 
FE 2-0263       Gaylord 
    $e DDLETON 
LOCATED 2% MILES West 
< Pontiac, cute Ficeng cozy 3 
. hot air furnace. 
hot water $2.500 down or 
ieee oe. clear smaller home 
tra 
$460 DOWN - Located on Wat- 
kins Lake Rd., § rooms with 
stool, water and septic 2 
car ee, On 80 ft cor- 
ner Full orice only 
$5,950, 
Leslie R. Middleton 
BROKER 188 N, JOHNSON 
5-772   
DOWN 3 BEDRM. DINING, 
oe kitchen, and basement. 
Gas Beat. $70 a month FE 2-084) 
after 5.   
ASSOCIATE BROKERS INVESTMENT CO. FE 38-9663 
$990 Down 2 & 3 BEDROOM homes. 
In desirable locations, See 
them now! 
443 ORCHARD LAKE AVE   
LAWRENCE W. on   
  
school ‘bus at 
~ $13,200. Why sot see 
Better Than New beautiful es harm in: dl sh nas 
‘eens, 
terrace, fenced rear yard w 
outdoor apie. clase oe 
water, more 
cae closet space. Close to 
—— an shopping 
ms 
aud Nicholie, Realtor 
wens Clemens &. 
M PE S120! ter EM ase ne?   
  
      
WATEINS LAKE. 
frontage with attractive c aa 
tom-b room e 
Center hall with spacious 
carpet liv room 
overlooking lake i} 
Priced at $13.950 with 
down! Sho wo by appoint- 
ment only 
Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor Huron Street 
FE sais! or FE 2-1306 
PERSONALIZED HOMES 
PR #220 
John K. IRWIN 
OAKWOOD MANOR Lovely ranch home situated on 
a beautiful wooded | 150 x 
tains 1,800 con : 
area. 3 hig 
ceramic tile   
  
garage. Owner 
sxrya* SHORES 
beautiful ranch type home 
compan with 3 bedrooms, 2 
full baths kitchen puilv-ins, 10 
x 25 family room, 2 fireplaces, 
  FOUR BEDROOMS 
a beautiful recreation room. 
Paved 
tage -Fenced back yard. 
House ts very nice inside 
and out. A real bargain at 
only $11,700. 
OFF CLARKSTON-Orion Rd. 
Three acres of land and 
a good four room home 
for only $7,250. Good utility 
room with large elects hot 
water heater. Call n 
FAMILY HOME 
four bedroom brick colonial 
ome. Excellent basément. of closets. Gas heat 
baths. Drapes and car- 
e in sale 
street in excellent 
neighborhood, Total rice 
$15,000 with terms ake 
an appointment to see this 
today co 
SEVEN: ACRES 
with a @ rm. colonial home. 
1% baths. Fireplace in lige. 
vies room, Large remod- 
eled kitchen. Three acre ik. 
on property: Only 20 miles 
from Pens. _ is é real 
good hom be 
shown any cme “Call fader 
136 E PIKE ST. OPEN EVES. 
lg, 84 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 
Pioneer Highlands 
Attractive, modern bungalow, 2 
bedrooms tiled bath, oak floors, 
lastered walls, basement, gas 
eat storms & screens, 2 
garage, close to schools 
19 Rosshire Court 
All newly decorated. § room \mod- 
ern brick terrace, handy” west 
side location, will take only $750 
down to qualified buyer. 
Income 
Located close to public & paro- 
chial schools, this clean 2 family 
income has large bedroom 
apartment for owner plus neat 
apartment for tenants. Rent will 
cover come ey ments Gas heat 
garage, 
WILLIS M. BREWER JOSEPH F. REISZ, SALES MGR. 
53-55 N. Parke FE 4-5181 
ves* FE 8-0823 
RILEY $750 DOWN — 2 family income 
wie 4 rooms & bath in each 
unit, 
hear new post office. 
NORTHSIDE ~— Off Walton Blvd. 
Carpeted . bedroom ranch type. 
Breezeway to attached gerage: 
$1,800 down. 156 x 150 
WASHINGTON PARK — Lovely 
colonial type with 3 large rooms 
& fireplace downstairs. 3 bed- 
up. Full basement 
Paved drive & 2-car 
garage Small wots payment, 
BR 
+e Elizabeth Taxe Rd 
FE | 4-4821   
  
FE 41 
  
      
EAST SIDE nice wit! wall SD wal enrtetine rs ving   
room and h 2 bedrooms down 
Ee. areas = — needs 
a little Aang Full basement 
of] heat. New garage. Cy- 
ed yard. Pav ve. 
s8. Les with rensonate Gown pay- 
“W ILLIAMS LAKE 3 bedrooms, 
and 
se 
ed air olf furnace. 
matic. washer & dryer, 
s age Nice shaded lot. Walking 
distance to 
privileges on 
er eerie 
immed buy at sees _ 
ai TO 
4536 = a 
DRA Located in Keego Harbor, | full bsmt.. with complete rec 
room. 2 car attached plastered 
arage 24 x 30. Call for in- 
ormation 
1925 
313 Wert" meren Street 
Phone FE 447 Eve. MI 6-3783 
SUITABLE FOR CONVALESCENT HOME 
This spacious, modern home sit- 
uated on acres of beautifully 
landscaped grounds in Waterford 
Township 
For Further Latorm suse 
Call 
WM. 
KENNEDY REALTOR W_ Huron 
Open Evenings till 9 
KNUDSEN Dofelson Park 
A lovely home 6 large rms 
1% baths, living porch and 
recreation room with 
fireplace, and indirect right: 
ing 2 car attached garage 
and large to Price includes 
carpeting and drapes. Let 
us show you this nice home.   
3101 
  
Clarkston Village New brick home with 6 
pists rooms, 2 Ceramic 
home with full base- 
ment and expansion attic. 
Aluminum storms. 
& doors. Gas heat & 
landseapel yard a 
of the features, $10.050 is 
the price. so call us now! — 
WM. H. KNUDSEN 
  REALTOR 244 8. Telegraph Rd. 
FE 4-4516 Evening No. FE 2-8503 
COLONIAL HILLs 
Near moon Hills and St. 
od-burn- 
es paar bogg ‘eres 
screened BBO YOK $21.900. 
300 B Woodward B'ham MI 4-6700   
4 BEDROOM RANCH 
12x25 living room with fire- 
place, 10x10 dining ell, 10x 
16 kitche ith wall 
~pur- 
this one today! 
WEST SIDE 
‘oom sereher with 18x 
fe on A 20 ft lot, 
for oaty $13,950 
terms 
NORTH EF 
Brick ry 4 story bungalow. 
‘Lar Lares living room, 8x20 
ly kitchen, 
ae with gas 
Recreation space and close 
to Madison Jr 3 hand 
Northern High preea Ay 
only sil. 259 on PHA te 
Let us show you today! 
IVAN W. 
SCHRAM R EALTOR FE 5-9471 042 JOSLYN, COR 
            Eves. OR 31708     D OPEN RRVENINGS 8 & 8 SBURDAY 
MULTIPLE LISTING 6 must sel] and tf) ice. 
$31,500. Ss eee STOUT'S Best Buys 
Today 
TROY Investigate this sic 
rary dream ef just 
BI the 
finest in advanced 
{it-in and oven, «' 
tractive i 3 
bein 4 piece a Soper poo 
: . FOOM, e 
with bi tank, just 
$2,309 down FHA 
YOUNG MODERNS with « Let 
ed. aluminum storms and 
screens. $509 Down F.H.A. 
$350 DOWN Lecated on Near North Side 
OXFORD rar offering Io a _newer 
fdas ts 
ing gas 
lot, city water A ¥ 
we at $10,500 with terms. 
BALDWIN SCHOOL 
Is just a block away from 
this reconditioned beauty 6 
rooms, and bi with 
full basement, new — 
with excellent terms. 
Edw. M. Stout, Realtor 
Tl N Saginaw 8t PE 5-6165 
Open ‘tli 600 P.M. 
  
Templeton Elizabeth Lake Estates 
-Sell or trade for smaller home. 
Ranch home 2? bedrooms 
extra large itving 
fireplace, wall-to-wall ca . Extra large Tote 1% baths 
with breakfast bar Large d 
ood fire 
od on 2 nicely landscaped corner 
K. L. Templeton, Realtor 2339 Orchard Lk Rd 
After < PE 20003   
IDEAL HOME 
Faas retired connie Living room 
cethna toantly ining room base: 
ment, fence a Priced for 
quick sale, $9. : Terms. 
SUBURBAN 
brick ranch 3 bedrooms extra 
large kitchen with plenty cup- 
board space. vent fan. and pic- 
ture window in dining 
basement with rec area. 
heat, large planter box, 
ft landscaped lot. CALL FOR 
APPOINTMENT. 
NEAR AUBURN HEIGHTS 
Neat bungalow, 2 aeriaert bath, 
full basement nice . Only $7,- 
300; rms. 
RANCH HOME 
Plastered walls, large kitchen, 
pienty of work space with dining 
area, paneled breezeway, 2-car 
garage, 3 good lots, $10,000 — 
erms 
Smith- 
Wideman REAL ESTATE Agi EVES 
FE 4-4526 412 W. Huron 
se 18 THE “BIRD” TO 8EE   
ed & 
Waterford oi plenty room for 
the kids to to play and ae ® gar- 
den too! Vet's just the closing 
costs move you in — see it today. 
Shell — $3,775 It won't take much to complete 
this 24x38 shell with crawl «5 pace 
on big ie lot b 
siding and roof on. Good | location! Full price e775. including some 
extra materia 
REALTOR PARTRIDGE FE 43581 ny +1000 W. HURON 
MULTIPLE LISTING. SERVICE 
| WHITE 
DRAYTON WOODS 
If you have *$1600 to pay down 
ere is a real buy for some- 
First time. offered. This 3   
g c tile 
Plastored walls, full bens''., 
well — ed lot. Yes sir, 
the full price is just $13,400. 
DRAYTON PLAINS... _ x 60, zee the’s the 
tlynew 3 bedroom 
recrea’ 
- utility reom “EIy 
home has a fireplace, walls, coved coenee 
aluminum stotms & screens. an undersized patio. 9x24. 10x15. This wee 
A ogy Sede 
wis A iitt'e 
0. ft, 
lot. It’s vacaat—we hav the i Li 
Price is $18.600, $4,000 d do ? 
WHITE BROS. REAL ESTATE 3-1205 
        
  
“ACRE SITE dees HILLS | 
entietl Te, “Sera, 
  
  
room. den, 2 
seg act no oa room, kitchen, and 
breakfast room. 
terms, 
METAMORA - 1 ACRES — 
at edge of Village. rolling 
lelds and woods, 4 m home 
com ly fr care 
riage house, fire- 
ace. very modern kitchen in 
rch, tile FPA oil at. 
“L" shaped barn w and 
tack room. A good value at $50,- 
terms. 
Roy Annett Inc. Realtors since 1923 
2% £. Huren eral 8-0466 
Open Evenings & Sunday 1-4 
G's Nothing Down   
$9850 FULL PRICE Large 4 5. Wicheels family home near 
haels, 2 car ee 
eligibie (gal a? 
FULL ae pao only $5,000, 
An older 3 bedroom home 
Has full basenfent. furn 
and auto water heater You 
wil] need very little to han- 
die + i, po dl providing you 
ere a 
DRAYTON PLAINS Must 
sell]. Owner has marese out 
of State 2 room home 
ts of a 189 ft. living 
room ample kitehen cabi- 
nets and large 1% ad ‘a 
rage Nice 
s id mov oo: in 
' with payments fess than 
rent 
A BEAUTIFUL big Colonia! 
in the city) An entrance 
hall leads to the 19 ft. liv- 
ing room and acent to 
this is the den din- 
ing room kitchen with 
breakfast nook Upstairs 
there are 3 bedrm 
a net 
m ready cash, this may 
be solution to your 
ing problem 
NEAR OXBOW-A cute 2 . Modern 
th, al 
pace, 
taxes Full price 
simply can't afford to rent. 
RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 262 § Telegraph Rd. 
3-7103   
2. PAMILY EXC CONDITION $12,700 and $1,500 down. FE 2-7832. 
INCOME BUILDING SELL OR 
lease. Four a 2 stores, 
office & FE. 4-725}.   
15 UNITS. 
asoned contract 
part payment. FE 2-7611. 
INCOME—WEST SIDE 5 sees “rst re eee floors. 
Gceod rnace. Corner 
lot. Price 913.300 Terms. 
Russell A. Nott, Realtor 170 W Pike PE 45905 
For Sale Lake Prop. 44 RAS 
COMMERCE LAKE PRIVILEGES. 
Fishing. sandy beach. swimming. 
ots $695 full price $10 
th Wo extras 
streets Near public and 
schools, churches, shop- 
ping All year livin 2 
privileges Phone Mis atson. 
Incoin 8-771] or JOrdan 46871. 
FOR SALE REASONABLE, 8 ACRE 
farm, lake frontage, 5 room mod-   
  
  
‘wood, 
Choice corner lot, by owner. Lake 
ES $4.950 FE 5-0453 or FE 
LAKE ORION 4 bedroom lakefront year around , dome Gas hea rge lot, $60 
| tlle: month small down payment.   
  8 
ce $2300 } : 
‘WATERFORD tL Choice corner, ict. by owner. Lake 
Se $4950 FE 68-0463 baad rz. 
  
. For Sale Acreage 47 
1 TO $ ACRE PARCELS BEAU tifyl building sites $100 down 630 
Fac trede month Will %a i< . 
C. PANGUS, Realtor eu M-1§ Ortonvile WA 1-2815 
ACRES. LEAVING ATE. 
© pores to sel] 6 acre bul! 
site some woods. $4208 cash 
sold at once! Lake Orton. MY 
3-3807. ~ a . _ 
10 ACRES ON EAGLE RD_ 62 $00 
wih ternfs iguucer Reali Es- tale OR 3-8138 
HOME IN COUNTRY   
  
  
16 miles north Pontiac. 
on ope ? livens rm ase 
with . 9 bedrooms, 
bath. and util reom. 2 oor at 
tached garage 1%. ecres land. 
Immediate possession +10. 500 with 
low down 
Cc A WEBSTER. REALTOR 
Lake Orton MY 23-2291 
Walton Bivd 
1% acres with 109 { frontage, 
op paved ‘oad. Priced at 62- 
000 on terms 
North Side 
Off Walton Bivd 136 « 150 eae) 
phage = rtd year-round stream. 
R "D: RILEY, Broker 
$09 Elizabeth Lake Rd. PE 41157 PE 44821 
mar Parms — 
40 ace   
  
  
ot} beat. smail barn & all 
farm tools including 
MY 3-114) eo E Flint st. 
Lake Michi, 
Attention. Mr. Handyman 
Here's your cheree to have « 
smal) farm of 1) acres with cosy 
2 bedroom ) Gearlv culm pleted 
Has bath ' tonk et¢ This 
property ha« of roac froniage 
to sell With some beautitul batid- 
ing sites Owme” gavs sei] ‘or 
$9500 with $1,009 dows or will 
discount for carh. 
  etd na “ausee EM_ 33303 $6417 "fos Ponte LAKEPFONT 18 MILES 
A fea) buy. 
P. W. DINNAN 66. W Huron __ Pe enn 
“HADLEY TOWNSHIP       Open 93. 
FE 2-1530 
income Property 434A. 
ern house full Pessenset oil fur- 75 acres. 7 rm home basem't 
and furnace milk house, silo, 
other outbuildings 22 m! from 
Pontiac 2'5 mi eg : ian Bar- 
gain $16500 Ter 
Paul M. Jones, ‘Real Est. 
  FE 46550 __ OA 86-3653 
TREMENDOUS 0 5 Oot Oe TUNIT TY 
a F 170 acres, beauti- 
ral ski hilis Tes orchards. Near 
Pontiac Lake tion area. ecrea 
Gravel possibilities also 35 acres 
level land on main road Private- 
ly owned, MA   
Sale Business Property 49 
22 W KENNETT 
Scar commercial garage. toned 
amelie Inquire at 40 Baid- 
in   
FE a 
A B* els 
See this 40 x commercial 
Bldg. 2 stores, zaps Oil fur- 
Beet , ates lot. at Airport. 
"PONTIAC REALTY 131_ Baldwin Ave 
LOT 100 x 190 — ZONED FOR 
betcess Pontiac and Lake Onan n ac an. 
oats bese , with $700 Down _ 
iH P. “TIOLMES, INC. FE_5-2933 253) 8. Lapeer Rd, 
Business Opportunities 51   
  
  
  
48% TON CHEVY PICKUP. tar. kettle, $350, complete, any. 
  
190 1 CENT agp § CENT VEND- 
On location, ag 
  
  
  
Edw. M. Stout, Realtor 
Tl N. Saginaw St. FE 5-816 Daily ‘th 6 oa 
Loon Lk.Shoreg x20 living room 
teat dinin 
Treat 14x: 
40 finished rec. room 
pos Ha plus hot. thr ok heat, car- 
2 On an §5x208 
paved ios lp only ty “59.500 with 
HOLMES-BARTRAM 
On 5:19 Resales om 3300 
For Sale Resort Prop. 44A 
120 ACRES OF EXC HUNTING   
  
    Dixt ’ Open Eves, “til Bi eundey 1 ul 6   “AY Pontiac Reasonabl 
CaRGr TARE Org TOR Tega | Lal aner S04 es\ av 8 A Fier TL babel we Hides vf ue tor your own busines. Distrib- _ reed trom yA er 1% ui ship open in akland _ County 
eveloped-so: v rome acts ute KELLY COOK. INC. Well rated mfg. will estabi . esta EM_ 3.6531 10-8 Dally} business for you Steady. weekly Spemrgh ly oo tae car ae 
LAKEFRONT LOTS @ uipment Sen nn e. 
Your chdéice of excellent lake- rite Box 25, Poutise Press a aaeree ot Soe ect papal BOAT LIVERY mn an sed ex- | 3 lakefront lots toe pressway. 20 per cent’ down to Men butiging Qualifie da buyers. fell iomeaatay enigan. Must, 
Paul M. |. Jones, Real Est. 
W . Huron 
r+ +9550 rR 8-3653 
EAUTY SALON. $20 $20,000 B 
Owner retiring. $8,550. it 3.300 ie 
perlence building & broperty Ex- 
n charge Strictly confidenti 
information .on the we rs 5-9855, for a intmen ‘a 
R LEASE - NEW 2-BAY SERV- ice station. 
Fontins rg ot gated cee ESTA FOR SALE ISHE: 
cleaning pick up ri ace ag 
sae pe Press 
Hempstead CHURCH BUIEDING   
  land with cabir N-ar Haw Buiiding SR ree eae! | Mruotion. charge “Seg hfGk Com 100 ft Lake Huray wASADA,| france main auditorium seatin lots. $400. to. ie 10 — po capacity plus Pastors study 
ova Balance to suit, Basement auditorium pon enmed f oom mode col % 20x3 ity 135. plus ing ca- 
owe Ba bad = “mo MY! Plen forced ai he 3-1367_or SLdcum i$ a. Plenty’ of ah ane. ont Pr rty 
UXURIOUS «HO ON 115 FT| »y appointment only, pect Be pode 
Ise. cho om tities eae, tas ic. Mi IPSTE hurting & fishing’ 10 mie fron | 102 8. ituron Bee eT EAD ag _— cents area. $35,000 i ve. §-0510 Fr ‘tei 
; i ORIO : EM erm ler” 5 at SHOE REPAIR, $508 48. 
CRAW FORD ACENCY * 
Dorothy Snyder Lavender.      
   
   
        
            
      
     
han... 
               
           
  
    
  
  THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958 
SS Sd Dick Turner 57) Sale Household Goods 57   
    motel ~ Liquor - 100 | from 
pe ial aoa papers with living quar- 
MICHIGAN BUSINESS 
SALES Heaps 
  
     
          
         
  
hogs Seep oe ae Pa 
sete tibe 
soc 
seen Thrucut ge 
ye cue eee ae M MURON |. SELES sas rage JUST ‘RE, NEW 
2. ars 
       
          
      
  “eye —_ rT 
t <> or smaller Neiaalvaled or fur- 
ay Sh x PORN. 
Be Bs equsl “value. FE 
    
iW WELL 
gal. — ha for 20° or 410 
    
oid. Modern | to room 
REALTOR P: ARTRIDGE — 
  
  
  $e oF 50 m 
SELFERVICE BE TEsT- T 1958 L CITA. 
er On loc Tgsacll ecucamend vie sedan for land contract of 
tube stock PH. FE 5-0602 reeable value. Only 6,000 miles, 
partite, Sock FLT bem | tne, Tren. Romenechons 
Corner of techare Lk Guavs er. 148 Dwight. FE 2-7937. 
j WILL SwaP EQUITY IN 3 BED- 
¥ ee ee room hom 
testness 
MOTEL § UNITS & HOME On the 
ta tie rt a nt A oe of rend Hag donee —_ in 
remo of room’ & = 
ieciliies _ = re) more units. 
“STATEWIDE. Reel ea Service of Pontiac 
CHARLES REALTOR 
Pele ri rE 
at ste “ fee rwisvrook 35-3286 | fabu- 
rontage 
a = 
  
: Sale Land Contracts 52. z RO ree 
HAVE SEVERAL ccosenet trade —- $1,000 — Up 
A TAYLOR. oR +0306. 
  
Money to Loan 
(State Licensed Lenders) 
Loans $25 to $500 eo signature only 
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORP. OF PONTIA 
  ee 
NEED $25 eon $5007 
SEABOARD CRIENDLY SER vice   
Seaboard Finance Co. 
ans re @ Problem” 
3188 KOR PERRY STREET _ 
WHEN YOU NEED 
$25 - $500 quickly on four 
pale on or furniture Wo 
endorsers, payments to   
“FINANCE CO. 
FE 4-1574 _ 09 Pontise State Bak Bide 
. LAID-OFF 
WORKERS 
— CASH LOANS — 
No Principal Payment UNTIL YOU ARE BACK 
TO WORK FOR # DAYS 
LOANS TO $500 MADE QUICKLY 
BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY BIRMINGHAM 
ALLED LA 
DRAYTON PLAINS 
Quick Cashi=:   
  
  
    ¥ 
Gotog | for sale! 
53   Por late model car Or eal “vith 
smali down payment. MA 54-0607. 
For Sale Clothing 56 
ALL a CLEAN USED WORK 
pants from pc; shirts from 33c. 
Also overcoats, suits, $5 or less. 
389 Orchard Lake Ave 
BARGAIN BOX Woodward 
Good clean 
the a 
Fri. 10 “oa 10 to 2 
consignment anaes accepted 
wunth after Nov 
BLUE & GREEN The PLAID coat. Exce: — Paid 
a take wit} OR 3-4283   
  
  
  
after = 
  
      BRAND NEW ALLEGRO COAT 
| Large size @ Gray wi bik. 
| stripes cost $125, will 2 $65 
PE 212347   
S1Z—Z it. KNITTING _yarns. Drapery fabrics. PE 62150 
Wavy BLUE GABORDINE STORM 
— excellent condition $15, FE   
i ‘Tapas CLOTHES SIZE 7. REAS. 
PE 60609 anytime 9°30 io 5 
                
BED) S Nelson 
PROP LEAP TABLE AND 4 x 
chairs. Duncan Phyfe china and 
. stove. Exc. condi- 
ar ia 
       
          
      
      b Davisburg. 
[+ MA 56-6011. 
- FAMOUS 
they 
                    
                   
        
      
           
            
   
         
             
    sep a Seeds 
ns Trade-In Dept. Bon 2 Sree   
   
   
       | Adiddedaddadded 
eerreneee 
Tr ee 
Eee eeenenseaee | 
ee 
wN 
  
WOOD & COAL RAN 
oo 
i , Som:    
  
  
59A 
    _S Christmas Trees 
BEAUTIFUL SELECTED SCOTCH 
_=ple_ 5-150.   
For Sale Miscellaneous 60   
13% % IN. oe keke 2 
eents per ft. 
  
pores ALOMINOM 
ICA & ‘pik 
<eert workm enttip ti fewest poe 
elble price ‘Com cn 
do-it-yourse 
  : — AWNINGS we & , Or x namental En storms, 
Johnsen J AL Tas co. 
a “The Oia Wella oe 
ee 
rr answer, call 
2 WHEE TRAILER, 54 1 OREY. 
i ; OIL TANKS . CON- dition, Will deliver FE 5-0120. 
3 PC. BATHROOM FIXTU! — 
white Ciean, not modern. Re 
_FPE 5 5-T245. 
CINCH SOIL PIPE. 6 FT. $ 3.79 
—— Pum a) 
ave ‘PLUMBING SUPPLY   
    
PE 5-2100 
TEP NEVIXRUDE WOT OR 
c new ype ree 
ower, exc. cond. a tio. 
8 LARGS GOOD PORCH BC 
Treen door wind 
foor casing, outdoor 
lawn mower, 
ee   
  
  
  2. G60D puseD TV FROM $15 AND +0736. 36 8 Telegraph. 
Gray Tyce PRIEZE UPHOL- tered open-arm iounge 
ecccsent condition. $35 Om 21183. 
GRINWELL FINE PLAYER PIANO 
bench other furniture. FE 
bee GUARANTEED REBUILT WASH: 
ail makes, $30.95 
“HIGHGHAIR CRIB. __piaypen, end tables, 
KELVINATOR REFRIG 11 CU. FT. 
Exc cond FE 8-1427,   
  
‘Wane SUIT. SIZE «@: LADIES 
coat, enone and sults, size 14. 
He 't8 . Household rum mage 
unre —— COAT. veal 
pew, size between 66-50 FE ¢- 
Sale Household Goods 57   
  KELVINATOR REFRIG 8 CU. PT. Excel. cond, § FE3533. 
dOUSEHOLD O Boone Ips OF ALL DE- Boog! furnace. & cash 
Pontiac Trail op- 
Livery. posite Le  ennser s Boat ALUMINUM GARAGE DOOR 
Laundry trays, stand 
SAVE Lie ear tans 
__172 South Saginaw St, 
30 3. 6 OAL. AL. O1L Leos HOT WATER 
OR 3-146. 
» “pGrie sj = YEAR GLASS 
lined ht, recovery water heater. 
tric heater. $60.95 elec 
$69 95 7005 M50 % mile 
west of Airport. 
2 SPECIAL ag #x12 BPORTS- 
* ane tent. % b.p. electrie motor. 
on. = 
HEAVY D oe dle OIL 
ae heater used un aM for 
to AG ieeainies,   
  
  
  
a aee DRYER, GOOD 
; CR ic 
cere. és every except Sat “til 
12465 “Auburn _FE_¢3573 
2 Pe DRAPES. “, I LEC. LOG 
andirons $7. 4 qt essure Cook- 
er ar) new $$. 16 Rosshire Ct. 
_after 6 p.m 
2? BOX OX SPRINGS & a 
eize with Me need , 
freese, 10 eu. weeds. 
$2 dining 
le buffet & 6 (aa "$50.  MApIe 
5- 1676 
3 SPEED COMB RADIO AND 
layer $22 One, $8 FE 5-8755. 
\3 COMP E ROOMS MOF FUR- FUR- 
niture, good condition, 
Gale. Southfield EL elise. 
3 ROOMS OF GOOD MODERN 
furniture Package deal only. FE 
$-0863, after 6 p.m ESSES. 
1 deep 
Bibs eg 
  
  
  
‘wrought 
padded seats and ba 
é YEAR CRIB $10 BASSINET $5. $5. 
Taylor-Tot $5. Seton sips ice 
skates, size 5. 85 
é ne SILVER | SaAT [oats 
(oo : bookcase 
large ie vanity jam 
P Apter $0 Pay only ref dott 
Pearson Furniture 42 Orehard 
) OAK DINING RM, 
power mower, $35 
_B Scion cond 4-8369 
1. PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE, 
brand new dav jee ehair atching cof- 
decorator lamps All 
weekly. 
Orcha:   
  
  
  
  
  7x @ RO ACE, 615 95. Reversible. Imported, 
$34.95 tad 98 Rug rniture, $16.50 
is 
42 Orchard hard Lake Ate 
9x12 Felt Base Rugs $3.95 BONNY MAID VINYL TILE. -8c 
414Ft. Wall Tile 25c RUBBER BASE PAINT Gal 83.75 
GUAR HOUSEPAINT Gal $1.95 
Syers, 14] W Huron 4-3064 
12% * AMBASSADOR TV, EXTRA 
Ea ere With revolving stand,   
  
= an TV. Go USED 
TVs $19.95 ee We sed Philco 
cane Sweet's Ra- 
PEG , 422 W Huron. 
i 30 ‘GALLON Gas “HOT T WATER heat - $54.96 New 21 tn   
“7 
  
  TV's $99 
$25 TO $500 er used washers: Wrineer and Auto 
rf auto,> or 
pier sects : Pp oe months ee ae 
7 serv a quick. | oe P) eA! PARTS 
helpful FE|96 Oakiand ave 92-4021 
121 of at our office | 949 BENDIX A ATIC WASH- er, excellent running cond. Re- 
| Home & auto cently overhauled, $25. MI 4-8509. 
1951 - COLDSPOT. REFR 9350 
LOAN CO. Milford Rd Holy, Melrose 17-3592. 
Corn: & BRAND NEW SINGER PORT- 
Vater ee able This week only $89.50 at 
TEAGUE FINANCE Co. our Singer Sewing Centers, 102 
Saginaw Gent aaa and at 
202 N MAIN Miracle Mile in th Cc. Penney 
ROCH ESTER, MICH. Fabric. and Notions “pepartment. 
LOANS §25 AAA SPECIALS 
AU 19" ay ceeeeccceccceectceess $14.95 
LIVE: tig) lars vemvenree _ $19.95 
HOUSEHOLD. 3 00D i Ts oo... $24.95 & up. 
Ph. R L 6-071) OL 1-979)/ 21" biond & mahogany vs ae 
coarse ra Lath oad fh sets guaranteed 30 days at 
BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE ae iia Einav Lake Rd. rence St FE 41598 41508 PE 44945 
  WwW Law 
GET CASH QUICKLY 
Up to $500 
Oakland 
      
AUTOMATIC WASHER AND. MAY- 
tag - electric fas is Balance $2 
per week Therm oll nan 
gas heater, Maytag washer & 
Schick's M¥ 3-3711, 
AB GAS RANGE _   
    
  it nt t Excel- 
eat eoanees “ko Fea: TPE 2-40963. 
No you WANT 
Loan Company |e" tir "peti Wot be FOUND AT L & 8 Sates 
i FE ? 9206 A little out of he, way but tot 
= ances of al O97 inde NEW & USED. 
: isit our trade dept or real 
PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG | bargains 
| “ral ae ONT? Za Bn ot _Mortgage Loans 54) fia lock around, 2 acres, of free 
- SPEN MON. Eo to 6 
Want A Good 1 Mortgage? 2: miles 
rene and, your Scots te consal Hated] b ote o£ ee eights al iufers 
EF 78 WASHING MACHINE Ke Stee CER StROFF FE ee   
THE ANSWER TO 
ks OUR PROBLEM: 
puke Ads! To sell, rent, 
Babe aes sF a 2-681. 92 W, Huron fi bathtub, FE 3-7251 
AUCTION” pai. FRIDAY & saT RDAY—8 
RIUNDAY & > M & 8 P.M. 
New & teed. furniture ‘ht out- 
right or sold for you. 6-1341 
hr a: Leg Sales. s 
Hw oa ast 8. of M-I8. 
BLOND MAHOGANY DINING RM 
Few with non, #6 ebairs. Exc, 
    Pioneer, |" IRONRITE AUFOMATIC IRONER. 
MIXING viToutEe, \ tou 4 $2450 value $1495, also Bathtubs, ag 2 oh Shower Btalls. 
Pactory trregulars 
Orchard Lake Ave.- LAWSON —* TAP 
& cover. M: org _& 8 
LINOLEUM, 9x12, $3.9: 95 $8.95, 
44 ae 2c running ft. 
Reg paint, $1.89 gal. 
wince PAINT & LINOLEU aginaw Near Robt, | 
| LIVING ROOM FURN BEDROOM 
set hospita] bed, and misc MI) 
41687 18910 Warwick 
Southfield 
MAGIC CHEF. APT SIZE GAS Duo-therm oi] space 
tm | Good cond. 
30 E. Erinceton 
MAHOGANY DRESSER ROUND 
oak table and 6 chairs. Reason- 
__abie. PE 2-4069 after 5 pm   
west 
  
  
_and @ishes right away. PE 1347. 
BNEW GREEN SOFA-BED $40. OR 
34102 
NYLON SOFA. $35. Davepport-and 
chair slip covered 635. Tabies 
and lamp 984 
NEW TWIN SIZE BEDS. 
hed left Factory prices.   
  
  
JUST 
MApie 
  
OCTOBER SPECIALS GE SWEEPERS, New. 
All attachments $38 
HOOVER Upright, New $64.95 
REFRIGERATOR, 14 ft. New 
Preezer $189 95 
MAYTAG Washer, Ree 
Pull Gssramee $98 
GooD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 
Pontiac before @ &m, oF 
  
220 GAL 
mats tank MA 
220 GALLON OTL aS ptt ks 
therm gpace peater: both for   
  Hall | 
of Sy GAL OIL TANK. FILTER & { nd. FE 5-2579. 
MUST SACRIFICE FURNITURE 
  $1 W. HURON FE 41555 
OIL HEATER. 4 RM. $27. 896 
Melrose 8t 
dIL_ FLOOR ACE, 50,000 FUR B 
_T.U_2 years ae $75. MY 3-1927. 
ONE FULL SIZE BED. SPRING, 
and mattress. Matched wainut ve- 
neer. Roll-away bed. FE 2-0402 
_{from 5 to 9 p.m 
ORDERS TAKEN FOR NEW GEN-   
  
sink FE. 51927, 
OIL OR GAS 
HEATERS ~ ie ld Rees you furnace heat 
144 the cost. Schick's MY 
33711, 
OVER 59 USED mo betes ‘Ero 
$14.95 up TT ante: 
~~ WALTON Nt 615 E Walton 
oun 2-2267   
  
  
PERPECTION ELECTRIC RANGE 
two Orcas ooam seer far bur- 
ners, deep well cook ia, 
drawers. Lo ea condition 
terms aftTan B. Olso' 
gig neone ses Grinavilie. MA 
  
RCA VICTOR COLOR TV. 
$645 console. only 
Ironrite troner, now esd ee $14 
Kelvinator .ef! if freezer $69 Zenith High Fide ity. 5 + speakers $89 Many more to choose from 
; GABERT. . 
rh N. Saginaw 5-6189 FE 
ROGERS SILVER PLATE inlay 
Excellent cond. $45. MI 6-5523. 
REFRIG LARGE SIZE, WITH 
full top freezer, $55; Whirlpool 
atte washer, exc, cond. $45.   
  
  
SOLID MAHOGANY DRESSER. 
good drawer space, $25, Tea cart 
with drop leaves, beautifully made 
$45, Antique burled walnut desk, 
$75. All in excellent condition. 
Call MI 44760, 
  
STOVES. BOUGHT. SOLD, EX- 
changed Turner's. 602 Mt Clem- 
_ens 2-080) 
SOLD HOME, GAS STOVE, RE- 
_{rig table, boat misc. OR 3-2279. 
SINGER PORTABLES WITH ZIG 
zag euach mers $19.50. pare   
Paee Ape RAIN L Derr Guar. elec. ‘washer 
   
      . Hying Tm. cae 
:} pe. wood dinette 4.95 
Modern bumper sofa 20080 50 
Walnut — & bench .., $24.95 
pao sectional ... $20.95 
Tab Meet elec. Lier de fener heidi 
0 
Miny OTHER [EMS AVAILABLE 
WYMAN’S 18 W. Pike @-2 Terms FE 4-1122 
TRADE ELEC RANGE FOR GAs 
renee R. Eon Munro Elec Co. 
TRADE ey RANGE F FOR ELEC- 
oc range Manro Elec 
tric Co ‘060 W Huron. 
Vacuum CLEATS 87.60 & OP. 
              Murrey ae Myrtie. 
UsED R One® GUARAN- 
CWilage, mnpire 3-051 Bila ; . 
      | 
| 
eral Chef comb stove, refrig. and j 
  tmsYlation — po patch - __MaArket” +31 
Fra] GAL. FUEL OIL TANK, PRAC- 
tically new. 3039 Grove Ci. Keego 
_ Harber   
  
uel, Good cond   
AVAILABLE NOW 
Tayigr steei garage doors. fac- 
tory seconds 8x7 9x7 Reason- 
able G & ‘onstruction Co 
2260 Dixie Hwy. 
ANCHOR FENCES   
  
  _No money down, FHA approved. 
FREE ESTIMATES. F 5-741. 
| ATTENTION 
ys thing im Building Materials 
sed sas. ....: $0c and, up 
| Used storm sash . 50 $2.50 ba 
| Field tile . llc ea. 
| Good exterlor paint | - $3.25 ies 
Saw & hammer set . 
We carry a complete fine of nails 
doors — 
ES FHA TERM 
BALES : 
(M59) OR 3-t092 
Burmeister’s 
CASH WAY 
LUMBER 
PRICES 
4x Bx 34” 
PLASTERBOARD 
$1.25 
4’ x 8 x %" 
PLYSCORE 
THIS WEEK ONLY 
$4.95 
ROCKLATH 
BUNDLE 98c 
ora 6 V- arooyes pshes- doo MATERIAL 
$340 Highland Rd.   
$4.05 
a. 
Ae comb dr.,“Co 
MATT THICK 
INSULATION 
$29.95 
PER 1,000 FT. 
Burmeister’s 
Northern 
Lumber Co. mS Conley. rare) ne EM Peele 
a.m 
Sundays %o 5m 3 
a 
  
BEEF AND PORK — AND 
quarters Opdyke Mkt. HOE §-7041 
BATHROOM FIXTURES, YOUNGS- 
town kitchen of] and gas fur- 
Hot water and steam boil- 
ers, automatic water heater hard- 
ware Electrical supplies, crock 
galvanize 
2 ef y nes. we 
aint and as eam tone 
HET UPPLY 
2685 LAPEER   
GET IT QUICK 
through Classified Ads! 
Yes, whatever it is — dial 
writer and get it! 
  Pine Corietmen trees. Rank. MAe 
SIDING insulate same 
LON HOME Fe FUEL OIL | 
SURPLUS LUMBER & 
FE 2-8181 /for an ad-) CARNIVAL 
     
        
  
eg, VS. Pot OF 
          
“Henri’s going in for ladies’ coiffures! He's away 
taking a six-week course. in listening!”   
          
For Sale Miscellaneous 60   
BLOWER AND CONTROLS oe 
- — furnace, very good. $50 
— CARPETS — TYPES — ey 
ADVANCE CAR co 3700 Seshebes—Drayiee—O8 +1407 
COLD WAVE bo COM- 
‘s FE B pine 
COMPLETE = OF BABY FUR- 
niture for sale MAple 6-6104. 
Sprecher vd bh ae oh HUTS. 
= = Phone 34542 after 
DIAMOND ENG WHITE GOLD, soutaire 43 point diamond. FE   
  
  aot a, fal 608. MU ern at 
  For Sele Miscellaneous 60 
OCTOBER SELLOUT 
Beveral riding mowers 
offer over cast. 
mowers At 30 per cent disco 
me at cost. Also some tillers. 
Moi eg gts 6507 DIXIE HWY 
§-7878 or OR 3-1024 
M caona Until Monday 
<1 Dg FURNACE, POT TYPE. 84,000 
reas. MA 42252.   
  
QIL iL FLOOR Lod etl & ALL 
controls good condi 32:8. 
Parke a   = ee) 
Spin lod EO 90.000 BTU 
zee beOl iP -ADAPTER POR 
PITLESS PUM APTER FOR 
well. 6. = diameter. 5 ft. long. 
Call R. J. aogersan Market 
41543 or MA rs) 
POST LIGHTS. PORCH LIGHTS, 
—— iron posts $19.95 value 
Most oom ee selection of 
is pts for all . se, ter- 
ic hte Michigan Fluorescent 
393 Orchard Lake Ave. 26   
  
£2 “EMPIRE Special 
1x4—6-8-10-12 
2x4—6-8-10-12 
CARRY Truck load lots delivered free 
Empire Supplies C Co. - Mi 3-448 2600 Union L&E 
ELEC. “220 Woe ac AC. 
135 to 250 am Also 
ing outfit. ‘after 
and Sat, FE 40284. 
FURNACE AND ri, noon 
  
m 
tri m 
BA ousted sees 17? 8. Saginaw FE 56-2100 
| POR BALE ‘2 Ong D DEEP well jet pump & tank. FE 83076. 
GAS STOVE. 275 Ol) DRUM. [ $30 
, for both. rand new gas hot 
_Wwater tank, $40. MA 5-1018. 
GASB & OIL FURNACES SERVICE 
al} makes Free estimates. FE 
‘Garage Doors 8sTEEL Sibel _ 
Factoty d 
sizes: i238 an Led Ls steel fold way closet doors   
  
  
  
m Sat 
BERRY Hee SALES 371 S. Paddock FE_ 32-0203 
GAS FURNACE. 175,000 BTU WITH 
blower { controls. $150, MY 3. 33011 
HOUSE TEAR DOWN HEATING 
and plumbing 720 Tierney Har- _vey_ Lake, Kevtora. 
HOT WATER HEATERS. 30 ERS. 30 GAL. 
Gas. new. Consumer Power ap- 
roved $98 50 yale 49.50 and 
59 50. These are Saas y marred. 
Also Electric Ot! jottled Gas 
Meaters at terrific eer Michi- 
Leo he Sore Snes 303 Orchard Lk.   
  
  
HOLLAND 2 COAL FURNACE & 
casing. T3 8. Parke 8t.   
HOMART 2218 at oe 
nace, eee new i 
Mt 45568. 
“SINK DOUBLE 
drainboard and all chrome fix- 
tures $20 Large vise, $10. Press, 
$25. FE 92-1516. trols Reas   
  
K GUTTER 69 CENTS PER L 
Warwick’ s_ 2678 O Orehard Lake Ra 
KENMORE , OF. 1 BURNER. GooD 
cond. MY 3-7 
LARGE SELECTION USED 8HOT- 
guns & cifies Ben's Loan Office. 
4 Patterson FE 46141. 
MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE 20" 
mirror, slightly marred $3.95 also 
tremendous selection of medicine 
ts with or without lights. 
Sliding doors and Vanity mirrors 
at terrific savings. Michigan Fiu- 
orescent. 303 Orchard Lk. Ave.   
  
    
  EW Ae) PIPE 
yin” ws len: coanaes 
%-in. 21-ft eng noon 
SAVE PL SING 
1732 8, Saginaw 
.NO MONEY 
DOWN lfc ft. 
  
DO YOU NEED 
MATERIALS FOR A 
Garage porch, breeseway, 
walks, oS aad peice: 
reation room ition, 
wane insulating Eitchen eer 
nets. attic remodeling. paneling, built ray miso repairing elde- 
eee, 
bet as ens your needs — and 
ney down 36 months to 
oer mall mip '§-2400. 
INDEPENDENCE 
Building Supply Co. 7183 N, MAIN ELARESTON 
ONLY ce Fo Feet TERLY 
Can buy $ 20,000 public Na 
billty ata O00 pore da~. 
_Sge car insurance. 3009. 
OIL SPACE HEATER; 3 YEARS 
old, $40. FE 8-4177. 
OCTOBER 
SPECIALS Mahogany Plywood “y" grooved 4x8x'%4"* $409 ea 
Er Plyscore   
  
  
4x8x%"" C 
4x8x%" seers 
4xax'4" Int 
Knotty White Pine 
Paneling Bee W. pine shel 126 lin, ft. 
Ww. ema seiune 2e tin. 
ix be pine pee 30 lin. 
Qx4x7 Kl. W. 
AeA 
ss 
2 eS 
OTHE BARGAIN 
su! BIECT TO *pRIOR SALE 
Bacuees, 
LUMBER CO. 1047 Haggerty Hwy., Walled Lake 
Between W. id e and Pontiac 
Phqne MaArket 41084           as weld-— ” 
io ft. | 
| Cameras, Equipment 61A 
    
  INSTRUMENTS 
pera! pnt th ated “Ti SkkIs, MUSIC 4 8S. Talegregp BA FE 20567 
CON Se as 
NEW CONDITION 
COR FE co rE 
  
CLOSE OUT 1958 modeis x the famous 
NN 
ELECT RONIC | ORGANS 
“MORRIS “MUSIC 
UPRIGHT PIANO 
ys in tune. 518 
PIANO- TURE BABY GRAN 
Poel Sol Mahogany finish. §550 
eash. 8-9569. 
PIANO TUNING 
"MORRIS MUSIC   
  
      
    
  
  
  , BALE, $35 OR 440.) 
to 
| Egret   
    
      
    cor 4 os fa aro ol 
er Hyerereen, ston. MA Sina 
OAKLAND TREE SERVICE TRIM- ing & removal, FE 8-2275.   
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
        PAINT SALE 
Pie es wal, > "Ports a 
15 ora Lake Ave. 
, PLYW SOD wall Leeman fi   
Prefinished 
groove Birch 
  AC PLYWOOD. 
1488 DALDWIN AVE. ; 
STEAM BOILER & DELCO OHL 
burner in good condition. Suitable 
for 5 or room house. 73 3. 
Parke Bt. 
EEL DRIVEWAY cones   
  1 Berry Bros poe |     
  
  
  
__Maniey Leach. 10 Bagley 
SUNS. GUNS WE HAVE A COM- 
pee se.ection of all makes in- 
cluding Browning, Colt pistols and 
nities also scopes and mounts, We 
all our own gun work, biuing 
ieitenoven: cutts comps. 
    incinerator and 
Manhole Rings Covers and 
BLAYLOCK sr ths 8UPP 
81 Orchard Lake A FE an 
SHALLOW weeea 
pletely rebuilt, $25. 
- rebuilt, $20. Drill 
model. OR 3-4314 
SPECIALS | Gas water heater, 30 gal 
Elec. water oa 62 raat   NY ree! 
  
0, 
Deep wen ee 
tr eos | 
      
New 
Panalyte, sq ee 45 
New No 3 oak  ieotoa 
440.8 Paddock _ FE 29784 
BTALL SHOWERS COMPLETE | 
with gleaming chrome faucets, 
Toilets $4950 valued at $2450 These are factory sec- 
onds Michigan Fluorescent, = 
|__Orchard Lake Ave 3 
_| STOKER WITH CONTROLS COM 
pone tire. tube and flap. FE   
  
SHALLOW we g RcRctRIC 
_pump, $65, FE 
SAVE UP "TO 50% 
On house paint Interlor a4 ex- 
beta $105 gal., $295 gal. and 
95 gai Guaranteed satisfaction. 
iG Ss 
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke 
FE 40734 or FE 4-1112 
DOUBLE 
B_ grade. 
M59. “%   
    
STAINLESS STEEL 
sinks, $3250. Toilets 
$19.95. Thompson. 7006 
mile west of Airport. 
TWO 775 GAL OIL TANKS, 
cond. $20 each, MA _ 6-2942 
TALBOTT LUMBER form doors and windows, wood 
or aluminum. Glass put in your 
sash, 10235 Oakland Ave FE   
EXC. 
  
  
THE ape ARMY 
ED SHIELD STORE 
this to meet your needs, 
tniture, Appliances. 
118 WEST LAWRENCE 
TRAILER AND ae BURNER FOR 
sale. OR_3-3507 
USFD OIL FURNACE WITH CON- 
trols and blower. sNot gun type. 
$50. EM 324.   
  
  
USED OIL BURNERS WITH ALL 
controls reasonable, can arrange 
for installation, 73 8. Parke St. 
UsED EVANS OIL FURNACES. _FE_ $3785 and FE_4-0032. 
USED SS FURNACE. REASON- 
ie 187 Exmocore Rd. after   
  
VM HI-FIDELITY PORTABLE | 
prones rege. 3 speed automatic, 
new, Electrolux vacuum 
cleaner with cord winding attach- 
ment, EM_}3-0129   WALL -FURNACE FOR SALE, 
very reasonable. MA 4-1075. 
Wood Closet Doors Closing out. Birch, mahogany - 
louvered bryfold type doo A 
BERRY DOOR SALES S718 Paddock “FE 2-0203 WOOD AND ALUMINUM COMBI- nation doors and windows. 
FE 42521 
BENSON LUMBER CO. 
FES & COAL HEATERS AND 
® used ofl Loe ne dete 
DELS A APPLIANCE, MA 
WURLITZER JUKE BOX. a oe   
  
  
  $38. “Rubber hunting boots, size 
9, worn once §8. 86776. 
Machinery 60A   
D DEISEL ENGINES, 4 & t 
eylinder Bs trucks, saw mills & 
| Serer engines for 
Vogsune industrial arene 
tions Call distributor, MI 46053 
Do It Yourself 
FOR RENT 
Wall paper steamer, floor sand- 
ers, polishers, hand sanders, fur- 
nace vacuum cleaners, Oakland Fuel & ae Saal Lake   
6l 
oe 
terial. 
icy sleo- 
lies on! . wee 
ys a to 4:00, Mon ats sv poner = 
ply. 156 W Montcalm. gers, Sup Es in ae ram be 
4X § SPEEL GRAPHIC — 2 
x 3% Kodak enter eee Many ac- 
cebsories PH. FE_5-5743, 
8 M B&H CAMERA’ AND KEY. stone projector. Also V.M pe 
__recorder. 4-9736 or OR | 2.0613. 
FOLDEX FLASH CAMERA won)   
  
  leather case practically new. 
_ MArket_4-2672. _ WE BUY AM- eras 
  Eppert’s per 75 00 
New 3 ft a o— cots $12 aS 
4" soll Leos! Pg noe $37 
3” soil p $38 : 
W VOLVERINE 
LUMBER 
with faucets and curtain $69 50 
value, $3445 Lavatories complete | 
| 70 N Saginaw | fore you buy on our rifle aa 
and trap field. Also Coarse line 
of bear See a pre 
Bports Center. vol Holly 
-| Holly, MElrose   
GUN SALE Shotguns & rifles 
  $15 up 
Gun air & 4 Score Mountin: 
a | “SURRLSHELE 373 8. an   
HUNTING SUPPEY 
SALE Shotgun shells Field & target 
loads All gauges. $2.25 box. 
coats & p: nr =   
  Meg Te— eer somo? | Many, ngs ides haf ance ef IN: apie . Any am 
| ais 32-5217 Bee them aes you bu 
SEINGERLAND SNARE DRUN. Iva. 50477 or FE t- 
jike new, ne a 
STANCATO SPEAR “XCCORDION: Rorthess, grown, ready to oe 
Be end SALE ON FRUIT TREES. 
ORRIORT go COOP COMP) WHITE'S NURSERY CPE SAH 
TREE TRIMMING & REMOVAL |- Sale Store Easipment 64 Get our iree,guumaie before 70% 
NATIONAL L CASH R = ae =< - 
Good. ¢ or ets 
SMALL see REGISTER. $25. 1900 | ~ 
—Segs=: | MALE & e FEMALE CHIHUA- 
JS rtin oods 65 ~ tus $8 33522. ale Sporting G ax SeOTTEIED DACHSHUND uppies, 16 and 8 weeks old. Also 
1 1 seo hes TENT; 2 FOLDING ad Biadg:) 1220 Mt, Clemens 
cots: 2 as bags; 1 nested xe Phone 23-6418. 
cooking kit: cor zie tarrier. 
_AN for $45.0} “pups es etter bird doe. 
FDOG TRAVEL STA- oon! wagons. she ‘weight deluxe swap. «pr bo 
mee as eee model 09 2-1025 | AKC ES ae 
after 6 p.m. ue call PE 5-0571 
12, GAUGE REMINOTON PUMP, | AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD. MALE 
_ $55, Call after 5, OR 3-7178. 1 weeks old, Champion- 
{2 GUAGE SAVAGE PUMP, COM- ship Mbreeaing. PE 5-4588 after 
nsator lise choke, new cond., 
oe AUTOMATIC ae RECITES ED WEIMARAN- 
16 GAUG REM. Merge er puppies. MY 2-1462 
with poly choke. si0. EM 34100. | BosTON TERRIER STUD, 11% 
2 8EM1-AUTOMATIC RIFLE | Ibs. Champ. stock. Curtiss. OR 
_wWith scope, PE _ 8-3608. 3-8296 
6 MM BAUSCH & LOMB. BAL- BRITTANY PPInS. AKC. 9 WK. 
Sr 6 telescope, JOX | $20. 8470 all. Davisburg. * te 
einen — fee a on “rose 40 4-0401 
aie ‘s new L 
Misener, 1155 Fairfax (Lot 13) BEAUTIFOL er renova’ 
_Pontiac Mich 0 apie 5-1975. 
39 STEVENS LONG RIFLE $25. CRANES BIRD HATCHERY — 
FE _8-4642 2489 Auburn A HU NTER'S TRAILER. | 1s Fr. z, 
covere wagon Or trail 5 b 
sleeps. 4, all equipped, ready t0| $2 Sonas cadet “Miller, Peyorccnty 2 ° rice FE: Reitman Ct_ Rochester. 
| ALU: 0 Ee PUPPIES. 
ah ae bal oaoe £3 tank, Yor Ale | @ oto P 
& eater $280, a PEMALE a ) aa OLD DEER HUNTING CAMPING TENT. ie 24. ft. side walls. Also wh pares Sale or trade, FE 
nt camp ‘ove GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, 
GoNs — BUY SELL TRADE | CERMAY , Mt auful sold Diack 
rifice, $35 
LONG HAIR KITTENS. FREE TO good home. 2 mos, old FE 86159. 
MALE TOY POODLES. AKC. 12 
__wks. old Reas. MAple 5-1528. 
PARAKEETS 61/PPLIES 
183 Sanderson PE 2-1727 
PARAKEETS — TALE. 
es 59) 4th St. FB 23-4025 
POODLES, TOY PUPPIES, 641 
Third Ave. Pontiac, 
PARAKEETS cCANARIES. fies, CAGES. 
Food. Since 1977 584 Oakland Ave 
POODLES. WHITE TOY PUPPIES. 
_123 Seminole Ave. 
RED, MALE Seeks PUP- 
pies AKC reg. $35. MA 45-1138. 
REG. TOY FOX TER RRIER 
puppies, $20 & $25. OR 3-8079. 
8T. BERNARDS, AKC REG. 4 WE.   
  
  
  
  
  
        old, OR 3-1836 after 3 p.m.     
= per cent off on 
shotguns & hi deer ites | Goat Sante 2 ADE 
i / 
| 
Drowns automatic ota 
| Discounts on al} 1958 rude 
| motors boats. | Used boats & motors for duck 
hunting 
We trade guna, motors. 
Kelly's Hardware arr) Auburn at _Adams Auburn Hgts. 2-8811 
| IT ALIAN RIFLE 7.35 SU LIEER 
1 so PE ae parts chrome.   
  
ENOTTY EINE GUN CABINETS. 
OR 3-5526 THOROUGHBRED SCOTTIE. Harriett off Hatchery Road. ry 
ChB A oaptet ad Jaan SgETTER 
Fe "D   
_Shop. 68 Williams, PE 
__ Hunting Dogs __69A A-1 BEAGLES, COON poGs AND 
pointers Will trade for gung or 
chain saw. Trial given 1 Rock 
Haven. Off Auburn Rd.       
  
LARGE SELECTION USED SHOT- 
guns & rifles Ben's Loan Office. 
_# Patterson FE ¢5141 
~ RELOADING COMPONENTS 
USED GTINS 
SLaYBAUGH'S 
630 Oaklano FE 8-045) 
REVOLVER. : = CALIBER & HOL- 
ster. $25. FE 4-2008, before 3:30. 
STEVENS 16 GUAGE DOUBLE 
barrei shot gum like new. 3142 
Henrydale, Auburn Hgts 
SHOTGUN, DEER RIFLE, BROWN- 
me eet and hunting clothes.   
  
  
  
  
Shotgun shelis-maz load — 12-16-20, 
$266 box 
7 x 35 Binoculars, reg 850. now 
45 
HILIPs SPORTING GOOD; 
FE 5-1401 
USED ARCHERY EQUIP, ARROW 
making en, ey cheap. MA   
_> 1954 or 
WINCHESTER PUMP, MODEL 12 
12 gauge ‘ull choke Se hates 
Ventilated rib $090.   
  
Hunting Accommo. 65A 
19858 TRAVEL TRAILER FOR 
rent during Oct. on asasca: 
Sleeps four, LI 447 
Bait, Minnows, Etc. 65B 
POR 49c   
  
NITE CRAWLERS 2 DZ D 00 
Open 234 hours, 7 days. 
Sand, Orayel & Bit 1 DAY SERVICE. ets DIRT, 
sand, gravel and rock, FE 5-7645. 
1-2-3 OR MORE LOADS TOP SOIL 
. Loaded of deliv- 
$10, Field office, 
876642.   
  
or 
1 OR MORE YDS. OF PEAT humus, iA! a Week. 
5-1413.     
waded 7 
Lochaven, FE 
‘gi, YNS, BLACK DIRT OR AT, 
=o delivery, OR 3-0644, 
YARDS OF BLACK ne . 80. 
Cees & gravel, EM 
soIL Back a OTET 
gravel. -PE 4-3058, FE   
  
“bang AKC SPRINGER SPANIEL, FE 
_4-0027   
AKC REG COCKER PUPPIES. 
_Also older _cockers. OR _3-2602. 
~ AKO WEIMARANER PUPS 
MUlberry 9-2001 
AKC REG BLACK AND TAN male coon ‘hound 17 months oid. 
$65, Call FE 2-0329r 
ENGLISH POINTER PUPS, REG- 
istered. FE 8-6460. 
GEaMex SHORT HAIR POINTER, 
aed e, 2% beso old. A-1 bird dog. 
GERMAN SHORT HAIR. 2 YRS. 
_old. Female, Reas. MA 5-2430,   
  
  
    GERM@gN SHORT HAIRED POINT- 
er hewaen Ee papers available. 
Male, years old. OR _ 3-1488. 
eae DOG GERMAN SHORT 
haired pointe- Reg. male. §125. 
MaAytair P3018 
R Bey pores. WELL 
eee 307 N. Perry. 
RABB DOG — WILL Come 
ede a ese Pointer or gun, $50, 
POINTER PUPPIES, REG, AMER- 
ican field. FE 5-6637. 
Dogs Trained, Boarded 70 70   
  
  
  
  
G8, CAT& BOARDED — FE 2-4708 Burr-Shell. 375 8S. Tele- 
raph, Hay, Grain & Feed 71 LPPLLLP LLLP LLLP A 
18T AND 2ND HAY. $17 AND UP 
Straw & twine. Phone MA 5-0666 
ee mat Ae OF HAY SsTRAW. 
Also muicb hay Will de- 
liver OA 82179 
GENESEE SEED WHEAT. } YR 
from certified. $1.90 per bushel 
at the farm mneleeon or $2.15 bu. 
cleaned and treated. plus bags. 
te tested. Order now. or 
Held Hickmott Jr. Oxford, OA 
__For Sale Livestock 72 
ieee SORREL MARE. EM   
  
  
    
  
  
CK, GELDING. 15 HANDS, 7 
= at premises. Also 30 varti- 
ies Fancy poultry, reas. Brown, 
9921 Ardmore, Farmington Twp. 
MA 6-2486 after 7:30 p.m.   
a ae CK DIRT TOP. SOIL. 
Lawns seeded. $10 FE 5-0214. 
A-1 TOP SOIL, CRUSHED STONE 
sand Cissy peat. fill Bari 
3-053) Howa 
4-1 TOP 80 SAND, a 
ex- 
33.   
  
tL 
fil) & black dirt. Bulldoz: 
favating basements 
A-1 TOP 80IL, CRUSHED eT gel) 
Sand, Gravel rin AERTS Gan FE #1112 or FE 2-8 
LA TOPSOIL, BLACK RT & 
peas re sand, clay or gravel.   
  
  
  American 
Stone Products 
oon E Sap stone A 50 per load 
Beach sand...... .19 per ¥ 
  Delivery extra 
6335 SASHABAW RD. 
BLACK AND FILL DIRT, BEACH 
sand, Road na Vicinity Union 
Lake, ™ ae 
Goop ARM OIL AND 
black dire &% Oe ry delivered. 
4-6588 _FE 
Good ROAD GRAVEL, § YDB. $7.00, Delivered PE E8888, 
DoUG FOWLE BLACK DIRT 
®: Walton Boule eva 
We load your truck or tatver e 
ours Peet black dirt, top 
clay or sand fill and dirt mixed for your personai needs Phon 
1 or = 31411. After 8   
  
  
PREPARED Y DRIVEWAY r GRAVEL 
FE 263, om * 1466 
SHREDDED ‘PE Will Del, B. L. | WELL ROTTED MANURE. of farm top soil, MY haz 
YARD & DRIVEWAY GRADING, 
    ito recover a 
French - 3ens| 2 CHEVIOT RAM LAMBS ELIGIBLE 
  
  
  
__Sale Farm Produce 75 
es DELICIOUS ORCHARD 
N Squirrel Rd. Auburn 
Heights 
XPPLES—ORAVENSTEIN, CORT- land, McIntosh Delicious, Jona- 
than, now, Winter. Banana, 
others, Hallo-   
  
merce between Burns and 
Duck Lake Rds, Milford 
APPLES PEARS, “CIDER. HONEY 
Kingsbury’s 2330 Clarkston Rd. 
__Lake _Orton 
APPLES & SWEET CIDER. HOME- 
_Road Orchards, $460 Orchard Lk. 
oad, 
RTLETT FIA   
  
  
CHOICE BA PEARS. aP 
Corner of W. 
aple and ore ard Lake Ri 
De Conlck Bros, Orchards. MAy- 
_fair_ 6-2106 
GLACKMORE FARMS 2156 &. siL- 
yormell Be . Canning apples. OL   
  
PLACE A “LOST” AD. 
Call FE 28181 for an ad 
loss. Dial FE 
7/2-8181 for an ad-writer. 
  males. AKC poatee se Must sac- | 
MI 6-1840. 
ale. $35. Call 
ee WHITE MICE, BIRDS. ALL PET 4-6433. 
My oe Priced low 
For Sale Poultry 74° 
ENS AND DUCKS VERY 
feasonable FE 27179 after 3:30. 
FOR SALE. 95 CHICKENS. 3, 60c 
ea OR 3-8151      
   
        
    
          v4 4 & i PER POUND. Nearin, Roebes th Blvd. 24 5-6576. = = 
SEBAGO WINTER ‘AT! 
$1.40 per bu, 3356 Bal Bad? Mt ee 
& KING OF Seren AP- 
1246 Eason. OR 3-197: 
8| piers SGUAERC ALL VARE. eties, Pumpkins. 3680. Giddin Rd. PE 5.6060. “s* 
Sale Farm Equipment 76 
CHAIN SAWS UCH 
rvice 
EASY CRED’ TERMS 
HOUGHTEN & SON ee Spend & PERGUSON DEALER 
OL 1-0761 
6 HP Sari TRACTOR WITH 24° 
mower ee & 36” blade, 
_idke new. $250. FE 8-6840 
Gaaly SAWS 3 HP. SAWS ALL 
. Reg. 0, Our   
    
  
  
  
  
$119: 
mowers aT ey reduced. 
““Lee’s Sales & Sérvice 
  — = = M24, 
Just. norm wo 
“FORD ) TRACTOR 
with Bly mig ~ 8-1984, 
TOOLS — NEW USED AND BA 
ma ard aho Deere Mew lee 
ee CHAIN SAWS 
1890 Crooks Ra 1 
McCulloch Chain Saw 
Headquarters   
  
  
PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYEKE 
PE ¢-0734 or FE ¢1113   
OCTOBER SALES 
Tractors, lliers. & mowers. New 
& used. Wl] consider any rea- 
sonable offer over cost to reduce 
stock. 
EVANS EQUIP. 6507 DIXIE HWY. 
MA oo or OR 3-T924 
Clos Till Monday 
SPECIAL ALLIS8-CHALMERS 
“S WITH Boor EW 
W°TH PLOW, CULTI- 
ae cee CREDIT : CE $595. 
KING BROS. 
PONTIAC RD AT OPDYKE 
PE 4-0134 or FE 4-1113 
Auction Sates 77 
AUCTION SAT. OCT. 11 AT 1 
o'clock located 8 miles south of 
th Lyon on Pontiac Trail and 
4 miles west to 1175 N Territorial 
. 31 head Holstein dairy cows. 
5 registered Jersey cows also 
registered Holstein bull. This 
he ig poco zn care 
ok sak Gottschal 
terms—Floyd Kehr, clerk 
B&B 
Auction Sales 5089 Dixie Highway 
Drayton Plains 
Every Friday .....7 p.m. 
Every Saturday ...7 p.m. 
Every Sunday ....2 p.m. 
Buy and Sell Daily 
ORlando 32717 
SMARTS aOCTION 
Wednesda 
aniile west tN af am Phot 7a est of No pping 
Cenfer Rochester 4 
For Sale Housetrailers 78   
  
  
  
  
  
  
ww ALMA, BEST orrEn 
takes, After 6 — FE 3-629 
«' BY 10° CUSTOM BUILT = ITH 
4” alum awning. Sacrifice. FE 
5-6519 
‘46 POOT BY 10 FOOT. 1957 DE- 
troiter, 2 bedroom sleeps 7. au- 
tomatic washer excelent condi- 
tion. Sacrifice Call 8-9053 
‘$7 14 MALLARD SEAVER TRAIL- 
er Sleeps 56. Elect brakes & gas 
lights. $900 OR 3-4152. 3562 Frank- 
man. Drayton Plains 
AIRSTREAw LIGHTWEIGHT 
Trave! Trafler. Since 1932. Guar- 
anteed for life See them and get 
@ demonstration at Warner Tra!l- 
098 W Huron. (Plan 
ot Wally Bryan's 
exciting caravans } 
ALL ALUMINUM W FT. HOUSE. 
paler Sell or trade for ? FE   
  
  
  
  
  
eS HUNTERS. CAMP- 
ing trailer for sale, fits back of 
Beet Srack. Priced to sell. 3414 
FE" 8-0851.   
Sse = FT. SCHULT WITH 
bath 3151 Helena. Troy.. Mich. 
Near Livernois & Beaver Rds. 
IF YOU'VE LOOKED.   
  Alma 1953 at wea tte $1395 
R_3-2309 
FOR LE OR RENT Rao 
1957 Giider trailer 34 ft, 2 bed- 
excellent cond. Nilecos 6. 
my int r Imm diate oc- 
cupancy. MI 60892 after 4 pm.   
gal “oil tank outside 
come FE 8-8019. Mrs La- 
™   
MOBILE HOME oS! §1-27 ft. 
Pontiac Trail $1.995 
right on new 1953 
New Moons, also see the fabu- 
lous 1908 Ventura Homes New 
Moo! MY 2-4611. 
PARKHURST TRAILER SALES 
Oxford Trailer Sales 
tad a GENERAL   
IMMER 
Y wide used 
trailers Bottle gas & accessories. 
_For variety Poise 
terms we cannot mile south Sct Lake 
M-24. MY 2-072 
Pontiac Chief Detroiter 
5 EST 10 wide 
“plnese trade-tn allowance ever. 
our dea) before you buy. Re- 
oan, you will save hundreds 
of dollars at: 
Bob Hutchinson 
Mobile Home 
Sales Inc. 4301 Dixie mignesy 
4 Miles OR 31208 of Pontiac 
Open ‘ bere “4 Week 
SEE US FOR BUYS IN CAMPING 
trailers or hontes Champion 1955 
bedroom 4] ft wi alum 
special $2,450; Anderson 
1955 41 ft n'a 09, Roycraft 2 
bedroom 45 2 
2 ft. $1,100; Holly 17% ft. 
1958 used $1,450; New Toura- 
homes, 15. 17 and) 18% ft, Many 
others to choose from. Holly Ma- 
rine Coach Bates 15210 Holly Rd. 
_Holly_ MElrose ‘71 
MICHIGAN ee %° FOOT 2 
_bedroom, very reaé. EM Opes 
MUST SELL: 18 FT. HOUSPTRAIL- 
er. sleeps 4. $175 or best offer. 
OA $-2918. 
TRAILER EXCHANGE 
New Andersons 
We buy, sell and trade. 
8-10 Wides £   
  
  
Bottle Gas 
Parts and Supplies | 60 8 Telegraoh 
Open 9 to 6: Cloned Paacare   
                                    opEEL, & TRADE CA pro, a ‘a, eee Wao 
a * 
FE $6615." ron St, too soil, gravel, fill, ete, FE aS ¢ i, fill, Say “charge it.” Let ts. sell your trailer from 
large lot We wil Dick ap ecar 
trailer wdvertise, demonst: 
sel) anu arrange ancing, 
so you receive — Ded age 
for only 10 per ‘We hare 
buyers z. and 
Roach Seles io aly Ra, +6771, you : 
* f 
. ef 
sy genes 921 Mt. Clemens. 
PARM CHINERY — lebbed AND 
used Proux 
6-0446 > 
“SHORT OF MONEY?    
  
- 
    ; 
| 
           
Sa 
aaa 
a 
a 
aaa 
ta at 
“4 4 IXTY-TWO - 
  ; aBe PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY: octopER &, 1058 
          
  
Rent Trailer Space 79 Wanted Used Cars 88   
dopteste HOTS. MOBILE VIL- 
Pon- 
  — The tinest % mile 8E 
170 -N. Opdyke FE 5-3361 
INSIDE CITY. 2 BLOCKS 
from bus st Pontiac Trailer 
Coach Park, 5-9902.   
OXFORD MOBILE MANOR FOR PE 2-0878 WE NEED °° |] 
Cars 
"BS to "58 mdels- Must be clean, 
AVERILL’S 2020 Dixie Hwy 
  
thuss who want the best. 40x80 
foot iots, 1ix40 Seaiper patio 
Sidewalk room te on 
seer sput 36 ft. Storm 
er WTD 1955 PORD OR CHEV. . WITH Have in good cond. 
FE auto. shift, please. cash, No dealers 
2-5998, after 6.   
= omi east ‘ saplets Op 
Lakeville Rd Ph. OA 83022. 
MOBILHOME ESTATES MODERN 
Sas and opiaygrounc. EM   
    
YOU'VE SEEN THE REST; NOW | H gee the best te Lake ‘Trailer | 2635 Auburn Ave. Used Truck Parts 89A 
USED TRACK PARTS 
ALL MAKES AND MODELS 
EIGHTS 
  e 
Park FE 2-520.   
___ Auto Accessories 80 
197 FORD PARTs AND TIRES 
Cheap OR _3-6073   1gs3 FORD 6 MOTOR 1951 PLYM motor 197 S Johnson | 
AUTO TOP CARRIER 6 FT LONG 
8 in high zippered waterproof 
cover, Bargain $40 K B SOD, 
, 3410 Reese Road, Ortonville, Pb, 
MA_5-2375 | 
SET OF “HOLLYWOOD FENDER | 
skirts & 1 haby 
T 
* For Sale Tires ON ree   
  
Oe 
A-} USED TIRES $350 UP. WE: 
buy sel! Aiso whitewalis. 
STATE TIRE SALES 
563 3. Saginaw § a FE 4.0687 
STANDARD > BRAND. ND, NEW TIRES 
traded tn on Genera} Safety Tires | 
Up te we per cent off Black or. 
whitewall 
KD “WILLIAMS _ 451 S*\Saginaw at Raeburn ————— a USED TIRES. GUARANTEED ALL} 
sizes Your choice. $6 95. & 5 
Standard Serv, 644 Goviend \   
  
Auto Service 81. ROI 
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE) 
ear Cylinders rebored Zuck ll 
caine Shop 23 Hood Phone 
_2-2563 
    
_ Sale Motor Scooters 82)“; 
+54 ALLSTATE GOOD COND, $110. EM_ 3-535] 
CUSHMAN SCOOTE ANDERSON SALES &. SERVICE, 
12 § PADDOCK at Pike) FE 4-4246   
  spotlight $25. CHRYSLER. FUYMOUTH ee Clarkston, “Mieh Ao Sial 
804 * Dixie ‘OK" Lot 
Dixie "OK" Lot 
Spoke Plains. Mich 
  
1950 For Sale Trucks “90 
TON DODGE. STEEL BED, 8 
sides. Very good FE 3-7162. 
‘46 CHEVROLET 1% TON STAKE, 
helper pce 200 15 6 ply te: 
Call es Haro.d Tur- 
ner Ford MI 4-750   
  
$925. OR _3-7135__ 33 DODGE 143 TON STAKE. Ad condition, must sell, terms. 
Clarkston- Motor Sales 
  
TRUCK SPECIALS 
+53 FORD V-8 %4-ten pickup. runs 
good, new. paint. ONLY $505. 
"50 FORD DUMP, good rubber, 
new ane ready to go to work, 
ONLY     
    '48 STUDEBAKER 113 ton stake, ; 
complete With racks, runs good | 
ONLY $295 | 
‘48 DODGE ‘y ton pickup, new 
aint runs good, must be seen 
appreciate. ONLY $295, 
      For Sale Cars © For Sale Cars 91 | -   
*Heedanburd ies in RAH ....... 1795 
57 Plym. . i 
Chev.     
       
    
     
saree 2 ¥;, ae AS, Eadie Bteele 
Be FORD EXCEL. COND. Mid- 
‘64 FORD STATION WAGON FE 
vt GOOD CON-   
RIA, 4-6654 
  
    “If Fifi decides she likes it, I'll take ith’ 
  
For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars 91   
  at Sashabaw 
OR 3-6111 = 
% TON PICKUP P WITH ‘47 | 
Mercury motor or will trade} 
for good Mode! A_ Ob OL 2-5382 | 
DONT BUY a YEW i OR USED TRUCK | 
“Til You Cheek Orr Low Prices 
BCE Ow 147 S Saginaw Dixie Hwy 
  
DODGE 1,TON DUAL wheels. Tires like new. $250. FE 
5-9061   __For Sale Motorcycle 83" 
1955 ies ALISTATE $95. 6151 ORION 
Rd 1'2 mile East of Clarkston 
FOR PARTS AND SERVICE ON 
your Harley Davidson, see Harley 
Davidson Sales Co 3728. Back 
_naw   
- Boats & Accessories Se Lake eS 
FT YELLOW JACKET CEN-' 12 ter deck. Windshield Steering 1b); 
  
        ‘DODGE - Plymouth - 1955 DODGE 
3, TON PICKUP 
4 Speed transmission 
JACK COLE, INC. CHRYSLER 
Trail 
1s eo 4-45 ye i 
1952 FORD 6 PANEL NEW PAINT 
_and | tires FE 2-722). 
“$4 FORD TANDEM 10-YD DUMP, $675. 
  W. Maple at Pena 
  
  
    HP Fitestene $225. 16. Mohawk) “go 200 FE 5-825 
after 4 4 ZANa pe ——— | 50 FORD F3 ee UP. V-8, ONE 
14 FT BOAT. 15 HP EVIN owner, extra sharp Call BOB 
motor. Good buy at $500 In-| BuTreR. Harold ner Ford, cludes skis ORS Eyres Jackets) ag) 67500 
Call after 6 8286 — Nn nines -U ly TO 
lo HP JOHNSON EL oe ‘TH Ce ee PE 0927 a 
memotelicontmlan 92 GMC 9 TON DUMP, 5 YARD   ig FT. CEDAR STRIP. CAN BE seen at 1701 Orchard Lake Rd 
is FT. NATIONAL ONE 1 box, 8-25 20 tires, 2 speed axle. 
Call BOB BUTLER, Harojd Tur- 
ner Ford.«Mi 47500   ONE DESIGN 
class sloop. complete with sails, 
Tig hp. auxiliary outboard, atl te 
pump cradle & rest of season's 
dockage at Frenchie’s Landing / 
_FE 2-8880 |   HIGHWAY BUS 
assenger flexible ‘53 INTER- 
netional motor, §°25 20 tires. new 
“paint Call BOB ules _ Harold 
urner Ford, MI 4-75:   25 Per Cent Discount 
1958 soles motors & 
ats & trater 
OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 
396 Orchard Lk Ave rE _ 2-80% 
% OFF 
BOATS, MOTORS & TRAILERS 
TROJAN ee & Runapouts 
NEW & SED BOAT TRAILERS 
SCOTEATWATER Mtrs. & Service 
CRUISE-OUT BOAT 8 
1401 Highwood at Walton 
FE 8-4402 9-9 Onen Sun FE 40770 
FIBERGLAY MATERIAL TO COV.   
  S51 GMC. 3%, TON PICKUP 
Very Good Condition. 
$375 
BRAID DeSOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER 
34 Years Fair Dealing 
Cass at W. Pike Sts. 
FE 2-0186   er. your boat. decks etc Plexi- 
lass for boat windshields & win- 
ows, plastic supplies Fiberglas 
panels made order Plastic) 
Tesins compounded         for any spe 
cial requirements | 
Car repair kits 
“* n 9 
Reinforced Plastics 
  Federa) 
45 W. 14 Mi oe —" John R 
ut: 3-4 i _| 
SAILBOAT ome 16-FT , ry beam, fiberglassed wooden hull 
sails and cockpit cover included 
$300. FE 8-1978 
SEE THE NEW —FIBER-OLAS! 
Teal Craft @port boat. Ideal for 
duck hunting, also good util. boat 
Only $249 50 
Harrington Boat Works | 
YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER | 1899S. TELEGRAPH RD sFE 2-8033 Open Sundays) 
STORAGE I Make your reservations now for 
boat Latins storage Complete 
winter se 
INSIDE ‘OUTSIDE STORAGE 
Harrington Boat Works YOUR EVINRUDE es   PONTIAC'S TRUCK CENTER 
GMC | BACK IN AR 1957 BUICK. fc DR. 8 AUTO. R&H 
Whites. Like new. Eddie Steele 
Ford PE 5-9204. ; 
BUICK 1955 4 DR ONLY 29.000 
mi Very clean Avail] Sun. or 
_weekdays. $1,100 Liberty 98-3158. 
FOR QUALITY CADILLACS   
  
Also a fins selection of other 
clean used cars. 
Wilson-Pontiac Cadillac 
1350 N. 
Woodward. B'ham MI 4-1930 
1952 Buick 2-Dr. Specia) today It’s a super 4 dr 
Looks good, runs good, R&H. 
Automatic trans An® for $245, 
PEOPLE'S AUTO “ 
68 Oakland FE_2-2351 
1958 BUICK SPECIAL 2 DR. HT 
Hey equipped. 4500 miles FE 
-345:   
  
  1956 BUICK, 2 DR. 8, AUTO R&H. PE S020 Eddie Steele Ford. 
  $3. BUICK FULLY AA De 
Drives good EM 3-0081. H. Rig: 
gins, 
‘56 SUPER BUICK CONVERTIBLE, 
Coral & White White nylon top. 
full power A beauty at §1.595 
Rass Johnson Mtr Sales MY -2871 2   
  MY —- ‘49 BUICK, 
pees body and chrome, $75. FE 
  
FACTORY BRANCH 
{EVROLET 4 R 210 
& heater, 
_ $695 PONTIAC 
“RETAIL, STORE” 3-T117 Radio 
stick. straight 
FE 
65 MT CLEMENS ST 
BEHIND D THE POST OFFICE _ 
1951 CHEVY DELUXE 2 DR. POW- erglide R&H ABSOLUTELY NO) 
MONEY DOWN Assume pay- |           RETAIL BRANCH 
Oakland at Cass 
HUNTER'S SPECIAL   
1’ TON WALK-IN’ VAN, dual 
wheels take your choice Call 
BCB BUTLER, Harold Turner 
Ford. MJ 47500 
54 INTERNATIONAL 1'3 TON 12 
ft stake mew paint. like new 
condition Cad BOB BUTLER, 
Harold Turner Ford, MI 4-7500 
Pee CHEVY TRACTOR $200. 
  
NEED. A US™D TRUCK? PICKUPS from ‘52 to "57 
Panels from ‘49 to ‘56 
25 trucks to choose from 
Call Bob Butler at Turner's I =e 
4.75   
ete = TELEGRAPH 
FE 2-803 Open Sundays 
STORAGE BOATS & MOTORS IN AND OUT SERVICE 
INL AND TAKE 5 SALES FE ¢7121 3127 W Huron FE =|   
    Foreign & Sports Cars 90B 
1959 NASH HEALY $600 MY EQUI- 
ty, Will consider trade. MY_3-1635.         1957 MCA ROADSTER WITH RA- 
dio, heater adjustable steerin 
column wire wheels, knock o 
hub cape Good condition, 15,000 
mee est offer over $2,000. FE 
  
86 MERCEDES BENZ For Sale Airplanes 
"46 SRONCA CHIEF $1,500. 
en Airport. FE 8-1321. 4251 Ere 
  190 SEDAN 
new low mileage. tuily 
sipped Will trade. 
Mazurek Motor Sales at 8. Bivd. & S., Saginaw 
FE 49588   
Transportation Offered 87 
CARS ,FOR GREENBORO, N 
Gas dilowance to Hartford S| 
_FE 2-3215 FE 2-5823 efter 6 p.m dings Rd Pontiac. | 
| 
FLY 4 ENGINE AIRLINER TO. California $80: Hawail $99 10 
__ Ferry Service. _'ne_ OR 31254 
TRUCK GOING NORTH PART 
_load, either _way FE 5-6806 
Wanted U sed | Cars: ea 
1957 OR 1958 MERCURY 4DR 
automatic transmission power 
__Steering. $2000 cash OR 3-3112 
AS MUCH As $50 FOR JUNK AND 
cheap cars FE 2-2666 days or 
eves. : } 
BEST PRICE FOR JUNK CARS FE 4-4878 
CASH FOR CARS HARDENBURG MOTOR SALES Cass at Pike FE_ 5-7308 
CAST: FOR ise MODEL 
USED CARBS 
Community Motor Sales | AUBURN AT EAS£ BLVD. | 
_FE 8-4539 
B ~J VAN WELT 4540 I 
Hwy. Drayton Plains 
High Cash Dollar for 
_mModeis Ph OR_3-1355 
See M & M Motor ales) For top dollar, on late mode] cars | 
2527 Dixte Bwy OR 23-1603; 
ATTENTION! 
WE NEED 
CLEAN ‘CARS 
All Makes — All Models 
SHOP AROUND 
THEN SEE US 
WERE PAYING ars 88 
  
    
  IXTE paves the) 
all late! 
  
  
  Top $$$ Dollar | AND WE'RE IN TOWN 
GLENN'S | OFOR SALES | R NEW LOCATI 
“052. W. HURON™ FE 67371 FE 1797 A-| PRICES JUNK CARS § AND 
scrap. Free tow, OR 3-6018. 
TOP CASH FOR ANY MAKE OR   
model Trade up er down 
ECONOMY CARS 22 AUBURN 
WTD USED CARS AND i Em For Sale Cars 91 
| 1956 BUICK SUPER 4 DR. HARD- 
top Dyna-flow. power steering. 
tadio. rear speaker. 2 tone beauty. 
A-l sharp Sacrifice for $1.495 
2.5070 4 
"400" 
This car's previous owner 
was an executive of Pack- 
ard Motor Co For the ul- 
timate in luxury appoint- 
ments this car cant be 
duplicated Thi« 1956 hard- 
top has ful! power eo7lp- 
ment plus torsion bars. Very 
low mileage, Birmingham 
car of course Ever-Luster 
Copper Glow {s the color 
Sioesie even especial. Only 
SCHUTZ | 
  DE_sOTO - PLYMOUTH 
912 8 Woodwa ar? MI 6-5302 
FACTORY BRANCH 
*S7 BUICK 
<PECIAL HARDTOP 
29 door—Radio & heater, 
Dynaflow . 
5 
PONTIAC 
“RETAIL STORE” TT E 3- 
65 MT. CLEMENS 
BEHIND THE POST OFFICE _ 
1955 BUICK 48-D 
stick. R&H, rear seat speaker 
sharp OR 3-6446. 
BUICK Better Buy Used Cars   
  
Chance of a Lifetime 
FOR ONLY 
YOU CAN DRIVE 
ards OF THE re The 
ARS OLIVER'S 
PERSONAL LIMITED be 
VERTIBLE (A TERRIFIC 
LOW MAL EAGE VALUE 
    ears Will buy OLive 1-1 
“ DON’T WISH FOR 
MONEY! Make it easily, 
through Classified Ads. To 
sell, rent, buy, swap, hire,| | OLIVER 
BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. 
dial FE 2.8481, IKE 2-9101 : ,Open Eves. 
_. fm “ - x   STRAIGHT mente of $5.83 month Call Credit 
Mg Mr Parks at MI 4-7500 
| Harold ene Eee 
DR., 
REPOSSESSION Good motor and tires no rust. 
$175 full price. No cash needed. 
Payments $1034 mo. Mr. Bell. 
    
  _ Great Lakes. FE 8-0402. 
SEE THIS! 
"54 Dodge V-8. 2 dr.. sharp . $675 
‘b4 Chevy 4 dr, like new ... $745 
'55 Olds Holiday Cpe. nice $1295 
‘53 Olds super 2 dr. a steal $505 
“ Ford ¢@ dr., cyl.. Tou 
or only ° : : $ 
HOUGHTEN & SON 
YOUR FRIENDLY OLDS DEALER 
FOREIGN CAR SALES 
AND SERVICE 
528 N. Main, Rochester OL 1-8761 | 
‘$1 CHEVY PANEL. BY OWNER. 
$175 Apply 2345 Crooks Rd. 
36 CHEVY V-8 HT WW TIRES. 
Straight stick Slightly modified 
engine and body $900 or best of- 
er_FE_3-7631 evenings. 
CAR . PAYMENTS TOO BURDEN- 
some? Let us help you So luat *Q 
some less eat 
Lake Orion Motor ‘Gales M%& AT CLARKSTON RD 
FORD — MERCURY MY 2-261]   
  
    
  
“CY" OWENS FORD 
53 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR 
$445 
SOX" 
147 S SAGINAW ___ FE ‘5-4101 
$6 CHEV. BEL AIR V-8, 4DR 
P-P, PG R&H. Cont. wheel. 
21,000 miles, A-1 shape. 260 W 
_ Fairmount. After 4 pm 
33. CHEVY CONVERT. TAKE 
over payments. 385 N Johnson 
MANY ‘52. "53 & ‘54 MAKES AND 
Models on hand Come out & 
look them over! 
Auburn Motor 
Sales CORNER PIKE & FE. BLVD. 
eat) CHEVY . DR. $150, FE 4-9424 
r MY 3-2746   
  
  i CHEV. STATION WAGON. Clean. Bargain. EM 3-0081. H 
_ Riggins _ 
1957 CHEV. WAGON, $1,550 EM 
3-089   
1956 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR HARD- 
top. V-@ engine, radio, heater an’ 
powerglide Our stock No, 4242. 
real buy for $1198. 
North Chev. Hunter Bivd at 8. Weodeere Ate. 
Birmingham 135 
STOP 
LOOK 
SAVE dae BELIEVE WE HAVE 
FRESHEST TRADE- 
xs ANYWHERE IF YOU   
  
        m4 
az 25 
a 
Ls} 
2 
~ 
DF NOTS. OTS PLYMOUTH 
912 8. Woodward, Bim, MI oa |     aa   
1956 Ford Cason liee: Fordomatic 
Radio heate 
1953 DeSoto Automatic transmis- 
sion. Radio & heater. 4 dr. sedan, 
Sharp! $495 
1949 Chevrolet Carry-All. Hunter's 
$195 Special Good cond. ....... 
1953 Nash. 2 dr. sedan ... $295 
1953 Cheyrolet 4 dr. sedan ... $445 
1953 ‘Pontiac “4 dr. sedan. Hydra- 
matic Radio & heater, Good 
CODE. cans. ieeceecdetaees aes $495 
HOMER HIGHT MTRS. "15 minutes from Pontiac’ 
On the Bargain Blvd. 
Oxford, Michigan OA 8-2528 
"96 CHEVY V-8, 4 DR. R&H. 2 
tone. 1 owner. $1,195. 
R&R MOTORS 
124 Oakland : 
1957 CHEVY. 210, 4-DR   
FE 43529 
8 CYL-   
  inder Rae powerglide, quite _ walls 86-1376 after 6 p.m. 
SELL OR aaDe UITY IN 1958 
Chev oh for cash Deer eS oe 
_ or pickup, F. 
1958 7 CHR YaLEn EARDTOP 2-DR 
automatic, power steering and 
brakes. big radio and hea 
premium nylon white wail tires, 
other extras. Like new. Must seil. 
Terms 
Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH eer ety 
M-15, Clarkston A 5-5141 
1950 CHRYSLER, PERE EXx- 
cellent cond Clean throughout. 
Aseume payments, LI 8- aft- 
er 6.   
  
  
IMPERIAL, 1955 Luxury ebbs from within 
when you take the wheel of 
this reat NEW" hardtop. 
Desert eige lower wi 
Coto upper harmonizes with 
White leather and Beige ny- 
lon. We can't describe the 
superb condition of this one 
owner Imperial. See it to- 
day only $1,695 
SCHUTZ DE SOTO . PLYMOUTH 912 S Telegraph MI 6-5302 
  
DESOTO 1952 V-86. RADIO. HEAT- 
er. Auto trans. Power steering. 
New tires Very clean Full price 
THE BARGAIN LOT 
Hunter B'vd. at Haynes, Birm. 
MI 6-4456   
DODGE, 1955 
Royal Lancer hardtop that 
was “REALL? OWNED BY 
AN OLDER COUPLE ' Tri- 
tone paint regily sets off 
the immaculate black and 
white tnteriar. Underpriced 
to save at only $995. 
SCHUTZ SOTO . FLYMO 
912 & Ewocewerd 
  BUY YOUR 1959 FORD’ FROM 
_ Ford. FE atte, | 
I 6-530? 
Bob eee one Eddie Steele j   
    “LItw 
thirds. Your cheice of. col. 
s. Call Li . Bad 
Siecle Fora PE S030 ee "$3 JEEP SsTATI AGO) 
clean, pew motor. Le awe 
‘51 JEEP STATION WAGO 
mi aet oe -eondition R&H. 
“4K LINCOLN, saSatad COND., $250. 
“1334, 387 Going.   
  
1956 LINCOLN, CLUB KOTO 
Aha ening. ike wehbe Steele Ford: Egil ae   
54 Lineal 4 4-Dr. 
No down ment: uired 
TOM BOHR NC. rea +176 
Leet, MARQUETTE. Exe. COND., 
"54 eecuey < CONV NEW 
top down See Mr. = Murphy 
    
  
    B’ham 
ward, MI 6-3000. 
1952, MERCURY 2-DR. OVER- 
drive R& LUTELY NO 
MONEY DOW Assume pay- 
ments of $6.65 month Call Credit 
Mer., Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. 
Harold Turner Ferd 
Nod NASH, 4 RDTOP. 
Sharp. Eddie Bietie pond, FE 
"§2. RAMBLER STATION WAGON. down, $5 week See 
y. B’'Ham-Rambler, 666 
ward, MI 6-3900.   
  
  
  — full 
Pass ‘ayments 
at 44 mo mo Mr Beil. Great Lakes. 
  
a aa METROPOLITAN. 
$1095 wih § 145 down See Mr. 
Murphy, B’Ham-Rambler, 666 8. 
Woodward, MI 6-3900,   
’°59 RAMBLER 
TRADE-INS ‘55 Plymouth V8 4 ve sedan $605 
"63 Chevy Bel Air adr. .. $395 
‘53 Ford 8 ope 3 dr, $395 
"51 Chevy 2 bG ance $1 
Roger’s Giles & Service 695 Auburn Ave. FE 
Rambler — Jeep Dealer   
  ‘65 RAMBLER Red Slt oo oh 
Serpe ei Ri: bi ‘666 s. y. B’ 1 “es er, 
Woodward, Mi 6-390 
STOP; LOOK, BUY ‘57 Chev. convert ....... . $1005 
V8 Powe ‘ide. e b 
"8? Mercury Montclair 4 dr Full LA Se aaron $1905 
"$6 Buick, 2 dr eae $1595 
Dynafiow, radio and heater 
‘$6 Pontiac 87 < 1495 
" Feotes 2 Ane ceneoeero $ 89> 
d and white 
“33 Buick hi eee 695 
naflow, red and black beauty. 
‘53 Ponttag +f heetee $ 
2 aioe! Hydramatic, radio and 
‘s2. ‘Buick S . & 205 
Real good. transportation ; 
‘82 Pontiac Hydra. R&H. ... : ced 
‘49 Ford, only 
SELTON Pontiac - Buick 
Rochester OL 1:8133 
1958 NASH. STATION .-WAGON   
ful fn V-8, Lope et Large 
radio. an e over 
ments FE sone and   
PLYMOUTH, 1957   
~ Get Wise, ‘Economize 
RAMBLER & eae. CAR’ 
“BILL. SPENCE RAMBLER 
211 8 Saginaw 
‘87 FORD FAIRLANE Four 
Power brakes & steering. $1400.   
2- SALES & ena You'll nba le 
degree. 
power steering, large radio 
& heater, Even has a bra: 
new spare. Hurry! $1896. 
SCHUTZ DE SOTO. PLYMOUTH 
912 8S. Woodward MI 6-5303 
1953. OLDS HYD     
$185 down. 
B Hie ‘G66 8, Woot ward, "87 FORD CONVERT | $1495 WITH Mr. Murphy, 8 SEDA oom W-wall tires. ABSOLUTELY MONEY DOWN Assume pay- 
  
1954 FORD CUSTOM 2-DR Ree 
FO R&H aeaOr Ue 
MONEY DOWN 
ments of $19.76 metic 
Harold Turner Ford. 
75 FORD MAINLINE.   
§-2350 after 6 p.m. gr. Mr Parks at MI 4-750Q,, 
°62 CHEV- 
Tolet deluxe Can be seen at 1791 
Orchard Lake Rd. or call FE Harold Turner Ford” 
*85 OLDS 88. FULL POWER. EXC. 
cond. Must sell) OR 3-8887. 
8's   
  
  
- 1952 FORD V-8 
REPOSSESSION $189 full price 
month 
Good body and tires Radio a 
Bell, Great Lakes, Payments only 
engine. |   Edsel   
45 DAYS 
Before You 
PAY ‘32: PLYMOUTH CLUB SEDAN 
sion coe Ser as 
"53 DR. 
Cust. Pe. * rordomatic, radio 
and heat 
rl eee 
‘56 CHEVROLET 2 DR. 
vV-8. heater and ‘white 
Hydrametic radio and 
  
USS 
“Mercury - Edsel - Lincoln 
- English Ford Lifie 
232 S. SAGINAW FE 29131,                 a 6-cylinder standard transmis- $ 395 
see eS $295 | NEW YOREER 
..$ 165 
=. Dawson CITATION, 4 DOOR HARDTOP — 
power windows, power seats $2750 
Lincoln Premier COUPO .essercovseegs. $4250 
Chrysler 4 DR. HARDTOP 
210 
wall tlres. 0. ....-.. see $1005 
65. CH 2 
“se aries rae heater $ 945 1 
HT. Mercomatic, H . .$1195 t r 
55 FORD 9 PASS. GON on 1aC 
V-8 Fordomatic, R&H ..._. $12 
55 Zon Cc 6 PASS WAGON 4 DR 
ee $1 85 FORD. FAIRLANE. vicToRIa 8. Fordomatic, R&H. ....$1145 | 55 CHEVROL R. P-Glide, radio & heater ..$ 985 i 
'§5 FORD FAIRLANE 2 DR. mol ] Fordomatl R&H $ 985 ‘57 FORD FAIRLANE H- TOP Fordomatic & . . $1895 BELVEDERE 4 DR. HARDTOP — 
Victoria, FOM .. $184 Sen) heater. automatic trans- 
'5T PLYM 4 DR, SAVOY mission 2.0... fe etecess 50 
Std tat heater _..... 1285 
"56 FO! PASS. GON 
County gauire V-8 R&H . $1305 
* ig pce ide . R&H $1235 owerglide, R&H ..... 
‘38. ENGLISH FORD WAGON DeSoto Heater and white wails $1640 
"57 Ltn ¢ on abut spins 
; TOERBIED F FIREFLYTE 4 DR, HARDTOP — ot THUNDERBIR | atc hep radio, heater, power steering & 
‘68 FREN 4 DR. Drakes ....... 2. cn cceseencoes, 
V-8. Htr. & W-walls ...... $1905 
LARRY 
JEROME | ‘Rochester Ford Dealer ° }EM_3-0142 
mente of $27.24 — Call Credit |. 
MI 47500. 
STARCHIEP . HARDTOP — 
radio, heater. hydramatic, $2750. Stock 
Clearance : iiees. tntna, 
eae wee 
1956 <heazeiet convertible, 
- emgine, radio and heater . = 
“1957 Chevrolet 210 \2-door, V-8 
_ engine” pe Pg heater $1627 
2987 Ford Fairlane Victoria, V-8, etehpeeeteee | 
* siSat 
weemem, radia oad heat- poiite Sr aes siT17 
Stin some 1958 1 gons, 
Bel Bel Air (doors and Mand ‘betray 
Haskins Chev. | Maple Scr Mish yey at. bias tue 
Oe ee > ig Abe a GOOD TART   
  
  ae OL : 
eat ale |g ites. 
  
R>& C, Rambler|*, We cha Beat Any Deal, 
“36 Merc . Hardtop. R&H. Merco- 
= AOE Le +g. ain Sharp. 
<¢- ackard 4 ~— ie vot ale 
"S33. Rambler, Hardtop, Priced right. : Chevy., 2 dr. =. 4 dr, ‘good transpor- | 
"52 spre 4 dr,, g0ed transporta- 
50 Ford, 8 cyl, 2 dr. 
49 Chevy, we 
COMPLETE setae Soe 
  
1957: PLYMOUTH 4 = Green & Ivory aati radio & Eecae One ‘owner, On- 
ly $1,445. 
  JACK 
COLE'S: AUTO SUPER MART 
PLYMOUTH 
—— Bas - = fda py 
Walled Lake” MA. Zi 4311 
"$7? PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 
spo! cou! Like new cond, 
Woodward, 
  Firuoon OTH “st 8 & CYL 
owner Will Po cond 
922 Timber Lake, Bloomfield 
MI 4-5289 
sell or trade FE 2-7145   perce, i 
x heate nycramatie Pric r, ed shete- 
om" e PONTIAC _ . 
ibys PLYMOUTH, RRR. EXC CON: RET eae 
      Pontiac ‘Sales sin v8. has, 
    Pid ; i sawed , 
Hardtop. Powergide” Power & ater. Tur- it.* i 
bed ents oh dr ae White 
seat eaker. fads. ‘eater. vet Ht} = a 
ne area 
tapi, Bete _— “‘MAple Este 
AN. weleak FE Saw huge * PONTIAC, RED WHITE tation wagon. White - .. By- 
re., full power, poreslalnised. ipervisors’ car. ST 1-7231, 
1953 PONTIAC H . a a     
oe LAST ‘USED ¢ AR I DID > YOU LATER 
FIND THAT teciy: ONLY GUARANTEE was 
    
    raeterea 
ee (A pice and Nothing More) 
REMEMBER: 7 RE nan oa CAR. =~ ‘FROM ; = 
“ESTABLISHED: REPUTATION” ; 
Glenn's S Motor Sales- 
— “osTo! 
    
HARDTOP, RADIO, 
h 
ur stock No. iors Yours for 
Neth Chev. Biresinghass ~ 8. Weedvaré Ave. 
42735 
  
"81 PONTIAC 
e 
SHARP "53 PONTIAC ¢ co) $675. Will ut trade) for. ie AIN SAPARI 
wagon, low. 
  
aoe 
“85 POwrTiAG Pvt g OWNER. $900,. 
46 PONTIAC, Lr Ri 
white walls, $1, fi PE tig 1958 c « DR Drakes hk steering 4.000, mile _Will take wiser of sn ‘Tt PONTIAC’ HYDRA, & heater 196 State egy 
This Week Sore $ ise uick. ate BeW. ...... 
1854 Pontiac 2dr k 4dr. Sos 1954 Rg 4dr. P. Glide. 
1958, Bik. Beauty. ... $745 
Very Smad down payments — We 
arrange financ 
wef cad a with no money down 
LUCKY AUTO SALES 
. _re thit or vy we 4-1006 = 
4 AC SUPER CHIEF. 4 
Terenas ear siasa 
1962 PONTIAC 2 DR. R&H. A 
LUTELY NO MONEY DOWN, 
    
  
  
  
Assume payments of $8.65 m 
Call Credit Mgr, Mr Putte ol 
4-1500. Harold Turner Ford. 
FACTORY BRANCH 
S88 PONTIAC STARCHIEP CATALINA COUPE Radio eate i dramat- 
ie ever stee and 
- brakes. J 
Re) 
65 CLEMENS 8T 
BEHIND THE poet OFFICE   1952 PLYMOUTH CLUB COUPE. 
R&H ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY 
DOWN Cretpcb les beire ral of ss = 
month Parks at oa 47500. Harold itone 
Ford 
‘85 PONTIOC 4 ¢ DR EXC. CONDI tion. FE 3-7546, after   1953 PONTIAC 3_D 
REPOSS ESSION Perfect engine good 
$292 
  
*63 PONTIAC eee WAGON. 
  
. ea ody 1955 Now is 
toes “ 
anted all summer 
8 tar chief eomoplevely 
equi with hydramatic 
rad 
steerin, steering & roughout at a price 
you aeavoun afford to pay $1095. 
SCHUTZ     
  DE sOTO . PLYMOUTH | 
912 8, Woodward MI 6-5302 
| | 
— | 
      
  
    =I   
10 P.M. 
1959 NEW CAR TRADE-INS ARE BEGINNING TO 
POUR INTO sptlf eld 
8POT” LOT. VER FINE USED CARS TO 8E- 
LECT FROM. . HURRY 
IN TODAY! 
$99 ‘31 NASH EAMeELER STA- } 
TION WAGO) i 
$845 | 
54 BUICK CENTURY | HARDTOP, DYNAFLOW 
$1295 "55 ae 88 HOLIDAY 2 
DR ARDTOP 
— $299 ‘82 MERCURY 8 DOOR SE- 
DAN 
01895 “ST Bl oe BEL AIR 
ci BLE. JSOGLDe 
$995 ‘84 OLDS 4 DR, HYDRA- 
MATIC 
$495 enon BUyecn “JET 4 DR. 
$1695 = eee 62 4 DOOR 
D1195 ‘55 BUICK. CENTURY 4-DR. 
HARDTOP. POWER 
$2495 *86 CADILLA 
SEDAN. FULL £ fower \ 
$345 | a a ee 2 DOOR SE- 
JEROME | "Bright Spot” Olds-Cadillac Dealer 
Orchard Lake at Cass   a 
a 
e 
& 
            ‘1146-T- TO     “gl porriac. a 4 DOOR, RUNS 
fine. Going in service Sacrifice. 
_Can arrange terms. MASe 5-2289 
1957 RENAULT. 4 DR. THE ECON- 
be ee Eddie Steele Ford. PE 
STUDEBAKER ise a coupe, V-6 Fr a 
One owner, clean iy 1 6148 Washington, Royal O ple 
8 WILLYS. OVERDRIVE-NEW 
- it   
  
  
    Raw 
  “y AIR DEALS FOR EVERYONE” . 
   187 CHEVROLET Bel Air ........-.2.2+s. $185 HARDTOP—Radio and Heater. Powerglide, Poosepaek: 
*§7 BUICK Century 4-Door ........--- oo $1974 
etc cid and Heater, Auto. Trans. Power : 
'38 FORD Ranch Wagon ee ee 
157 anne Del Ray . veka ce bee ee o GESTS 
2DOOR 210--Radio and Hea’ Powerglide 
‘36 FORD Ranch Wagon sesacsssveeeees $UITA 
2DOOR~Heater, Buckskin Tan paint. 
‘36 CHEVROLET Bel Air ........-..2-+ $1394 on P—Radio and Heater, Powerglide, eige and Red paint. Sharp! : 
56 PONTIAC £Door ee veceeees QLL94 
SEDAN~Radio and Heater. Hydramatic. 
§5 BUICK Special .......-..--:9- sacar @ OM 
ne er and Heater. Iwory and Chinese Red 
'56 STUDEBAKER Champion . eaeeceeeied 944 
2-DOOR—Radio and Heater. 
1S$4 PONTIAC Starchief ......... Le aeseeee$ 694 
4-DOOR—Radio and Heater. Hydramatic, 
53 FORD 2-Door ....... ven eeeeceeee se BS 494 
8-CYLINDER—Redlo and Heater, 
$3 PONTIAC 4-Door ....... ve esesees $ 494 
SEDAN—Radiv and Heater, Hydrematic. 
54 FORD 4-Door .........-.-.-+- caus ae SOF 
SEDAN-Radio and Heater. Pord-O-Matic. 
°56 OLDSMOBILE 2-Door & ...... nee $1294 |. 
HYDRAMATIC Radio and Heater. Nice! 
"55 CHEVROLET \%4-Ton Pickup .........-' 
DELUXE CAB. Dark Btue paint. 
GLEN \ S —MOTOR SALES-— 
At Our New Location 
’ The Home. of “Top Value” Used Cars 
952 W. HURON ST. FE47371 = . FE41797   Ma mile East of Clarks ton. 
  
Only 
< 
1957 
Pontiac * BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE 
Fuel injection, Bucket seats, 
Power seats. Power steering. 
Power brakes, Power windows. 
- $2684 
Chevrolet IMPALA 
Full power, w/walts. Radio. 
Harbor Blue paint. 
$2591 
1957 
Chevrolet 2-DOOR 7210 
Radio and Heater. W/Walis. 
$1395 
1953 
Cadillac 4-DOOR 
Fleetiine body with ful] power. 
$953 
  H 
  FE 8-0488 ‘Open till 10     MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES’ | 
"Greatest Offer Ever’ | 
BUY OF THE YEAR $ALE 
$ 
FOR YOU. AND THE ENTIRE FAMILY 
  HERE'S HOW IT WORKS... me, IN CONJUNCTION WITH OUR SALE. “SPORS MERCHANDISE CATALOG CO.” WANTS 
ADVERTISING IN THIS. AREA. YOU AND YOUR FAMILY PICK OUT ANY GIFT 
VALUED UP TO $50 FROM THEIR 600-PAGE CATALOG—ALL YOU PAY EXTRA I8 THE 
POSTAGE—YOUR CHOICE IS "MAILED DIRECTLY TO YOUR HOME FROM “SPORS”’ 
—OUR AGREEMENT WITH “SPORS" IS SPECIFICALLY. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES. 
CAN WE SELL A NEW OR USED CAR DURING. THIS WEEKS SPECIAL SALE 
WITHOUT GIVING YOU A $50 GIFT 
Hurry—THIS WEEK ONLY—Hurry 
MATTHEWS - 
RGR OAKLAND COUNTY’S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER 
The BIG—BIG Lot 
631 OAKLAND AVE. ~ - 3-Days Lett 
O Gilt | 
1958 
Chevrolet B/AIR. SPORT SEDAN 1658 
‘Chevrolet 
a HIeIMRRE practi. Poway eine $2990 $2290 
1956 1956 
- Chevrolet » Pontiac © 
Bel Air V-8 eee betel Byére wale hate cat Heater steering, Faclo W/Walls: Ivery and 5 et . 
$1287 $1265 
1957 4955 
a 
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and Heater. W/Walts.. Ivory Ri Greca Sen Wewans. 
$1792 | $1004" - > a a 
1953 1955 
onti Ch : Pontiac evrolet » B/AIR_ 4-DOO ?DOOR Va. Powersiide, Poesr ocr Hydramatic, Radio and Heater.. tng | Radio and Heater. White 
oa $1033 
  A 
  ES. 
FE 4.4547              
      
         _SIXTY-THREE | =   
     
   sueshiaed by sininia Sop Wi Sie estan     FG cacage Genet ootes   
  wt ‘Channel SWIBL-TV "Channel ¢—-WWI-TV   
‘TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 
  Channel 7OWAYZ-TV Channel 9--CKLW-TV . 
    
    
  — Andy Stewa 
\s Bright Boy 
    
   
     
    
     
    
   
   
        rf 
little Tot Keeps Busy 
for $155 Each Show 
By RON BURTON ! 
-paid-$155- 
appearance he makes. So far it's 
the toy ang not the money that 
counts. 
“T show him his check cach 
week, and he’s not at al) im- 
Andy is a bright boy 
things like the 
Pledge of Allegiance, a German 
folk song and whatever his fath- 
er says when his mother’s tires | 
hit a curb, 
“He’s listed as scorekeeper on/| 
the show.” Mrs, Stewart said as With 
  
      (2) Zane. Grey Th. Sheriff 
90 (1) Curtain Tithe. Comedy. tries to get fair trial for|#:00 (7) Cartoon Carnival. 
(® Popeye. - killer but townspeople . 
(4). News, Williams. fp lyoch bim in (2) Racket Squad. fold. 
so (4) Weather: lot, 9:30. (7) Rough Riders. — 
c15 (4) Box Four. to rescue Confederate pris- 
330 oe (cont.)~ (9) Marko (cont.) en ea - 
78 King- (4) Ford Show. Ann. Blyth, |* sotinid dogma! _@ Life of Riley. Comedy, guest (from Detroit). | Eg sec 24 Room. @) News: LeGoff. e Plighene #8. Jackie! — 3S oe Friend Harry. 
340 (2) Weather. ee ree ceetiee PL) Bildboard. 
son) sparks the hilarious ad-|+0?00 (2) For Love or Money. 
45 (2) News. ventures of ag roup of saloon (4) Dough Re Mi 
00 (7) Girl Decoy. New adven- Your an mete Poroalag @) . . 
cence) eee James. Barton, Jack \Klug-|10:80 (4) Treasure Hunt. 
Hound erty man, Bobby Van co-star. (2) Play Your Hunch. 
Service : 11:00 (2) Arthur Godfrey. 
a ° (9) News. fe. aS . (4) Price ls Right. 
(4) Bet Your Li wit 
= ud heave + Beever Groucho Marx, 11:15 (9) Nursery School Time. There's trouble when Wally’s (2) Playt (cont.) 
hin ees 0 dete be 7 11:25 (7) News. 
(9) Million Dollar Movie. |#@:15 (9) Weather. Robert Young “Married 11:30 (4) Concentration. 
(2) Top Dollar 
Jeff Dram. Dram ts 10:30 (7) News: Daly. 
aot (9) Boots and Saddle. 11:45 (7) Noontime Comics. 
(2) 1 Love Lucy. Lucy de- arse ine 
ce waa (Reren) ms (2) Playhouse (cont.) FRIDAY AFTERNOON 
00 (7) Zorro, Season premiere. 10:45 (7) Sports. 12:00 rh ae ufe. 7 
Violent welcome awaits Don 10: 58 (7) Weather. (9) flidden aes 
Diego in Monterey. 
(9) Movie (cont.) si 11:09 (7) Bowpy's On. ti (4) It Could Be You. 
Shag ikea en ; pare (9) Starlight Th. “Too Later aa (7) Stu Erwin. with cmemcial ule. for Tears.” ('49.) Lizabeth (9) Myrt & Doris. 
/ Scott. A (2) Search for Tomorrow. (2) December Bride. Matt (4) News: W'kamp- 
gets set for his Air Force Gy News. LeGott. tts Series 
todr of duty. ulding Ligh 
z ‘1:1 (4) Weather: Eliot. hee 00 (2) Ladies Da 
= mao age "| 2) Miss Fairweather. w Amos ‘n’ Say, 
(9) Movie (cont.) © (7) My Little Margie. 
{4) Tw | a (Sports (9) Movie. enty-One. (2) Sports. 
2) Yancy Derringer. Der: ae 4 
ringer aids lady in distress 144.95 (2) Nightwatch Th. Frank (9) as World Turns. 
9:00 (7) Pat Boone. Roy Rogers ee C51. ;Double Dyna-| <4) TV Reader’s Digest. 
Sons of Pioneers” square 
dancers. 11:30 (7) Night Coury, 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. 
19) Markov Joi for home 
viewers. 
(4) Behind Closed Doors. 
Communists hold German (9) Theater (cont.) 
Allen. 
  
           
        
       
      (SBie 4 
(8.-)(-) 3 (20 ein g 
Ti) iNeed ie 
nde i 
18 TN +e TAP itoDpeert 1S AID) 
     PNA 
Ay ) N'watch (cont.) 
FRIDAY MORNING 
6:39 (4) Continental Classroom. 
6:80 (2) Meditations. 
€:£5 (2) On the Farm Front. 
1200 (2) T. V. College. 
ey)     
ACROSS -+ 
  
  
      
  
4 Mediterranean 
ot] Presa fairy 
1§ Born     
          
      
  
‘V4 Grafted (her) 
18 Appeared 
a Desuetude         
2 Some dae 
FH French river   hy 
  
  
4 Impudent 
    
    
    
      
  
  India: 
34 High “card 
3¥ Containers 
  
      ote 
fT 
                  
| 688 River, 
severate 
le ed fear that 
Rivulet 
| 35 Bellow 
-§@ European 
ae bid 
58 Hostelries = DOWN . 
1 Breaches 
“9 Urinecessary 
& Hallowed 
9 Primitive M4 River 3¢-Afanchurfan- 
steam——— river 
24 Oriental 29: Honed.maker 
40 Leases 
‘1 River in 
* England 
“42 Biblical name 
43 Rusé¢ian city 
te 44 Gra 
46 Shakespearean 
5 er 
47 Bahk 
48 Makes 
: Gallatim rivers mistakes 
35 Row 51 Celestial bory (4) Jack Paar. Singer Dect (7) Lady of Charm. 
(2) Our Miss 3rovks. 
(4) (color) Haggis Baggis. 
(2) House Party. 
(9) Home Fair. 
(2) Big Payoff. 
(4) Today Is Ours. 
(7) American ~ Bandstand. 
(9) Hour of Stars. 
3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours. 
| (4) From These Roots. 
(7) Who Do You “rust | 
(2) Brighter Day. 
(4) Qveen for a Day 
(7) American Bandstand 
(3) Big Rascals. 4:00 
(2) Secret Storm. 
(2) Edge of Night. 
(4) County Fair. 
(9) Sherwood Forest. 
(2) Susie. 
(4) It’s Great Life. 
(3) Looney Toons: 
5:30 (2) Detroit Bandstand. 
(4) George Pierrot Presents 
(7) Mickey Mouse Club. 
  
  Held for Manslaughter 
YPSILANTI (® — Vincent’ 
Weisgerber, 44. has been ae 
held for examination Oct. 16. 0 
manslaughter charges in the oe 
pedestrian death of 35-year-old 
Shirley Baker of Ann Arbor. He 
‘stood mute at his arraignment 
| Wednesday. 
  
Four out of 10 persons in Amer-, 
ica are handicapped in their work 
by some form of inadequate vision. |   
-- Today’ S ‘Radio Programs --   
WIB (760) 
  
      Ss CKLW (800) ww) (950) WCAR (1130) WXYZ (1270) WPON (1460) _ WIBK (1490) 
TONIGHY un: :00—WJR, J Vinal WJBK. News. George 1:30—-WJR, Dr. Malone 
WWJ, Gandstand : CKLW Heatter. Davies 
 €:00-WIR, News *WEYB gurrel) 0:00— WIR, Hews. Mrs. eage 
WWJ. News WCAR News ; WXYZ. Breakfast Club 2:00—WJR, Rt. to Happines« WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenzie| WPON Muste CKLW News. David WWJ. News. Ameche ~ -CKLW: ° WIBK, News, George WJBK, Reid , 
e Ok. heel Chase 11:30—WIR, Muste WCAR News. Martyn WOAH. dow owe def wavE, Surreil WPON. News. Lark - ene WCAR. Sports Page WPON Bob Lark 
WEON News, Bee =? 9:30—-WJR, Jack Harris ' a a CKLW News M. Labbitt | %:80WJR, Cpl. Next Door! 6:30—WJR. Oinner Date wwi. o M 
WWJ, Tews, Maxwell ©“ JIN 10:00—WJR, Arthur Uodf me Mees Fanti’ | WXYZ, FRIDAY MORNING WWo News T ur Ps rey | CKLW. News. Shift Break 
WCAR. News Pat WXYZ. Curtein Calls WPON _ Sports _ Candlelight 6:00—WJR, Agriculture CKLW News, M. Morgan 3:00—WJR, Helen Trent 
WWJ, News, Rober WJBK News. Reid WWJ News, Matinee 
-2:00—WJN Juest House WXYZ, Fred Wolf WCAR. News WXYZ, Ed MeKenzie WWJ, News,, Maxwell CKLW onoone con Ww Chuck Lewis WJBK, McLe: 
WXYZ. EB. P Morgan WJBK. WCAR, meee Bennett CKLW Sell dr. Sion! News 8 *pheridan 10:30—WWJ, Don. Ameche WPON Jim Ameche 
WJBK, Jack, boy esiev W. News, David 
WPON Sports Tose lelight WPON Chuck Lewis a: ewe, oh rr pe 
6:30—WJR. Music Hall oman ouse 
4:30— W Wa core star Extra! cKLW. Guy Nunn 11:00_WJR, News. Wspg Sts.| WXYZ. News, McKenzie WXYZ, ~—_ Train WJBK. News, George WWJ, News, French CKLW. News, Chase 
Site ee WPON Farly Bird Sports | CKLW News, Davies WJBK Me ON Jim Casey WJBK. si Reid 
71:00—WJR. Dan Kirby WCAR, New: 4:00—WJR, Parade of Bands 
6:00— Amos ‘a’ Andy | wwJ, News, Rober WPON Chuck Lewis WWJ, News, Deland ww yf, Mignttier WXYZ News. WXY%, Sports, McKenzie 
WPO! CKLW News, Toby David ena BS Time for Musie | CKLW. News, Godfrey 
: WJBK. News. Ge A urley, Davies — fskscth Bennett 
$:30WJR, Answer Please || WCAR News, Sheridan in McKsanea 
— #00—WUR, World Tonight FRIDAY AFTERNOON 4:90—WJR, Music Rall 
CL ped La wrk. Sd _ Muste Hall WXYZ, News, McKenzie 
CAR, New WRYE, News, Wolf “12:00-—-WJR, Wm, Sheehan CKLW News. Chase WK jack. Bellboy CKLW news Devid | WWJ, News, Cederburg WPON Carey WJBK News, George oRLW Grant, Livestock 5:00 WIR Philip Lenhart K, stereo WWJ. News, Deland 
$:30—WJIR, Dance Orch. 6:00 WIR News, | Quest Waar, Rens, Purse WXYZ. Sports. McKenzie  CKLW "*yerle Today WWJ. News, Roberts WPON News. Lewis CKLW Sports. Chase 
0 oKLw O'De vi ‘David 12:30—WJR, Time for Music Wear ert Ernie 100— WIR, A tiv "Dell, Day 4 92:3 ; s G 
wwe sh ome ive WIBK eons George WWJ Maxwell WPON Don McKinnon 
c ; ow ' WCAR. 
WXYZ. Surrell ~WPON ive Lark 1:00 WIR, ws ore 5:30—wJR nh Be 
WPON asey Ww, Bob fier WXYZ, News, McKenzie 
10:30-- WW, 8:30—WJIR, Music Hal WJBK, News, Reid CKLW, News, E. Chase 
CKLW. ewe, “Knowles, CKLW, News, David WPON, Bob Lark > WPON, Sports 
bo ’ 
  (4) Truth or Consequences — ‘Andy bolted away briefly to re- 
trieve a dropped pencil. “He 
takes props around and has a few | 
lines. One show he carried a bag| 
with prize money and led in a dog. | 
'No one ever knows quite what he's: 
'going to do or say.’ 
i * * 
| Andy appears Mondays on “‘Any- 
‘body Can Play.’ George Fenne-| 
‘man is the amiable master of 
ceremonies on the ABC-TV show. 
“1 like George,” Andy said. - 
“He asks me how I am. [I say, 
Fine.’ He’s my friend. Once I 
made a lot of noise with my 
feet and he told me, ‘Shhhhhhh.’ 
I was kicking my feet against 
my high chair.” 
Andy slid back down under the 
table after the: pencil again. His 
mother kept a wary eye on him. 
After all, it was in the Brown 
Derby. | 
| 
|     
* * * 
The Stewarts met producer John , 
Guedel and his wife, Helen Par- 
rish, last summer at a dude 
ranch. Miss Parrish was _ in- 
trigued by Andy, particularly by 
the allegiance routine he learned 
from his l]-year-old brother and, 
nine-year-old sister. 
Now Andy performs on a show- 
to-show basis. His father, Ronald, 
a Hollywood contractor, has ob- 
jected only once to Andy’s activi- 
ties—when he was all set to play 
\golf but had to be photographed - 
instead with Andy. — 
* * * 
So far Andy has been on about 
a dozen shows. His father gives) 
him stage directions. pushing him | 
toward a camera when it’s his 
moment, , 
“TI don't go to rehearsals any- 
more,” Andy said. 
“You bet he doesn’t.”’ his 
| mother said. “He went ence , 
' and listened to George's lines 
and then was ciiming out with 
all Fenmeman’s punch lines just : 
as George was about to say them 
“on the live show. Poor George 
had to ad lib most of the show. 
| Andy remembers things.” 
“] help George,” Andy e 
Eiee 
* ® &, 
Mrs, Stewart said Andy really | 
jarred them once when he told his; 
neighborhood cronies that he was, 
lon “The Andy Stewart Show.” 
|He mentioned that a George Fen- 
neman was on the show, too. 
“He's been straightened” out.”"j 
she said, ““- | | 
Berle’ 5 Vv. Return 
Is Mixed Blessing 
‘NEW YORK { AP)—Milton Berle: 
returned with a new show on) 
NBC-TV’ Wednesday night after, 
itwo years absence as a television 
regular. — 
Berle defined his new program 
as an “adult comedy” in which| 
‘“if you don’t get laughs, you- just, 
keep going.’’ He is goiig to keep, 
going and he is surely going ‘to’ 
get laughs. 
*   
* x. : 
He won his loudest laughs when | 
he was being Milton Berle, stand- | 
up comedian, He appeared weak- 
est when he left his current video 
fate in the hands of a team of 
so-called television experts. 
; ek + & 
It is to be hoped that the new' 
iBerle show will not present an- 
‘other team of phony Russian Cos- 
sack dancers such as appeared in, 
ithis one. Probably it won't, for in 
‘Berle’s words, it was ‘‘the last 
time I'll ever buy an act from a. 
Gypsy in an empty store.” 
On the other hand, the Dunhills, 
a trio of precision dangers, were 
fine as professionally) accom- 
panied by hoofer Berle. |   
  
Fire Engine Burns 
PITTSBURG,. Kan, (AP) —John 
Marietta and his son took a 1921 
vintage fire engine into a field for 
a trial run. A broken’ fuel line 
caused a fire in the engine, and 
the flames ‘spread to the dry 
grass: of the field. 'The fire was 
pwt out with a hand extinguisher. 
  Minnesota leads in iron ore pro- 
duction. The ore was first discov- on ” Anybody Can Play’ |! Bing’s “latest exemption” and brother Dennis’ new hairpleces. 
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Andy! 7 
Stewart, who just turned three aj 7 
a toy ‘for each brief weekly TV} 
‘him. I sent him my record and he lost it,” beefed Phil (who's 
‘recorded “Ball of Love”). 
|Actor Barry Sullivan, estranged from 
" was an emerge ACY, 
         
     
    
            ered in this state in about 1850. ‘Crosby “Boy s Discuss 
Family Sacteis Freely 
- By EARL WILSON 
NEW YORK—The Four Crosbys—and Phil's bride, Sandra i 
—had supper around 1 a.m. the other day and freely discussed 
& «® 
I had a happy time listening to Gary (“the den mother”) 
telling ‘the honeymooning Phil and ‘Sandra, 
and Dennis. and Lindsay: 
“Yes, you put on shirts and ties here. This 
They'd flown in—first. time together in 
New York—te film the Phil Silvers “Sgt. 
Bilke” show—and Gary, so warm and a 
junior edition of his father, was at the 
piane. 1s 
“Want a little taste?” he asked. Everybody 
, did, except Sandra, who doesn’t use it. He © 
‘WILSON gave the order. 
“Which Crosby is getting married next?” I asked. 
x *« *. 
“y Saow which \one ain't!” howled Gary.. Phil then play- 
fully kidded the wrematurely-bald Dennis about his curls. 
Gary said Dennis acquired a couple of “divots” to make him 
look practically shaggy on TV. 
“He’s got a couple of the old man’s rejects, ” Gary taughed_ 
Dennis — who married beautiful Pat Sheehan last 
summer (she’s expecting in a few months)—nervously 
wondered whether this was news. 
“Sure!” Gary waved away his -objections. “Your p 
was on Life. You come out looking like a grizzly beer cea 
people are going to notice it.” 
“Dennis, they said, “is now the power in the tamtly_—| 
he’s a disc jockey— he plays people’s records—everybody loves, at 
      
     
    dens, Fla. 
  
Death Verified Army Says 
* * x 
_ “Have you thought of singing as a quartet?” I asked. 
. “Pye been thinking about it,” Gary said, “but we'd © 
have to wait till Slip-Out Louie gets out of the Army in | 
_ about four months.” “Slip-Out Leuie” turned out to be 
~ Lindsay who hadn't attended a family dinner the night 
before with Bing and Cathy; he’d slipped out to see “Auntie 
_ Mame.” 
“When are you v going to let your dad retire?” I asked 
“Not till he gets some more exemptions,” one of the 
boys said, but Gary said, “He’s losing one exemption— 
Lindsay’ll be 21 Jan. 5—but he gained another one with 
the baby. I don’t think he’ll ever retire.” | 
| t 
| 
MONTEREY, Calif. 
\spokesmen say that 
eee: Sgt. John W. Hamm 
lette ... ” 
37-year-old Ft. Ord solcier. 
still   Army 
questioning Cpl. investigato 
By the way, you may notice that Sandra didn’t get a NIVESIEATO€S 
chance to say anything in this story. She didn't in the hotel 
suite, either. 
  shot - himself in 
Jackie Gleason's first TV’er was SO strenuous x had an 5); aying ‘Russian Roulette.” 
ambulance -bring an oxygen tank. to his dressing room . ko * 
Milwaukee Braves manager Fred Haney couldn't get énouc’| Brennan said he and Hammond 
tagther and 
| started playing with a Swedish re- Series tickets, had to, ask Bob Feller-for two . .-. Barbara had been drinking 
Hutton’s talking to attorneys about ts<o«% 
ending her absentee marriage to Baron — 
yon Cramm ... Hope Hampton’ll pay 
$50,000 to redecorate her apartment 
. Luis Russell, one of the top band- 
leaders of the early ‘30s, is now a 
‘chauffeur at Yeshiva University a. 
  AA | volver. 
at * * 
ed it to Hammonc. 
| Self in the head. 
his bride, Gita Hall, is dating producer +: 
Barbara Wolferman ._ . Pretty Peggy 
Connelly has been screen-tested. 
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Aman who j 
made a trip back to his home--town | 
(says Ima Washout) was surprised to 
see some of the old landmarks—wear- 
ing shorts and halters ... That's earl, 
brother. , | carrying a concealed weapon. f4 | 
+ 4 
PEGGY 
language. school, 
terey, because he did not 
‘the high standards requiret!:   
and the producers are currently,   ONE .OF THE SWEETEST — 
The U.S.\Chamber of Commerce 
has declared Oct. 18 as. ‘‘Sweet- 
est Day,” and.ready to welcome 
it is sweet and lovely Shreve 
Huggins, above, posing amid the 
sweet blossoms at Cypress Gar- 
-RussianRoulette 
Evidence | 
Bears Out Story Told ried on a Western regional Net- 
by Michigan Soldier 
uR— Ar my} 
Raina Pleads 5th Amendment 
died through playing Russian Fon 
were, 
James J. Bren-) 
Jr., 27, East Lansing, Mich.) 
ie told military police Hammond: 
the head while 
Brennan said he thought the re- 
volver was unloaded when'he hand-, 
He explained 
\that Hammond spuf the cylinder, | 
| pulled, the trigger and shot him-! 
Brennan, the atmy Peperted! 
had been demoted ‘last Friday 
from sergeant- to corporal be- 
| €ause of “an accumulation of | 
past incidents,” incloding arrest | 
| for drunkenness in a car and 
The army said he also had been) 
dropped as.a student at the Army 
Presidio of Mon- 
meet) 
  a, Ohare. 
Smooch Lines 
After Protest 
_ MANHATTAN, © Kan. (AP) — ‘Only an epidemic or the individ- 
jual involved can stop the smooch 
Ymes at Kansas State College 
thanks to a committee of Asso- 
leiated Women Students. 
x * 
K-State’s traditiqnal practice of 
congratulating girls announcing 
jengagements or pinnings with a 
‘kiss was ordered stopped this year - 
by Margaret Lahey, dean of wom- 
en. Bad health practice, she said. 
But the committee won a re- 
~ersal of the ruling. The new pol- 
icy, as set forth in the student 
merece u 
x * 
“Smooch lines may occur dur- 
ing times of good health at the 
discretion ef the individual pres- 
ent if conducted in a way to pre- 
vent the spread of infectious dis- 
eases.” *- 
  |tke to Appear in Public ; 
at San Francisco Oct. 21 i 
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Presi- i. 
dent Eisenhower will make two 
public appearances here Oct. 21, 
his first here since the 1956 Re- 
publican National Convention. 
After arriving from Los Angeles, 
he will appear on a television, cof- 
fee hour with 25 San Francisco 
housewives, The show will be car-       Seana aie 
After the TV show he will ad- 
dress a rally at-Civie Auditorium. 
  
DETROIT w — Mrs. Petrina 
Cavataio, wife of a wealthy Grosse 
|Poipte Park bakery owner, plead- 
“It looks very much like the ied the Fifth Amendment Wednes- 
wound that killed him was self day when called as a witness in inflicted,’ the spokesman added | 
yesterday, referring to the shoot- 
ing last Saturday night of the ‘the theft of $50,000 in a safe from 
her home. She acted- on the 
jadvice of her attorney at the pre- 
liminary examination of James 
Salvato, 38, on a burglary charge. 
  
  
GAS or ELECTRIC 
DRYERS i taetaiied Installed 
$14.78 Nown 
$159 95 = $1.28 Menth 
HAMPTON'S ELECTRIC 
MUNTZ TV 
| SERVICE | Member of 
Electronics Association 
- 
C G V ELECTRO MART 
158 Oakland 
: Open Daily ‘til 7 
Monday and Friday ‘til 9     
  
  
        
                       
RELTONE PONTIAC co. Cords—Batteries—Repairs for All 
Hearing Aids' 
3 
(Downtown Pontiac) en Lyon Jewe & Perr 
Federal 4-7771 
Hearing Tests, Home i South Saginaw 
(Bet we jer °F 
Free er Office 
    
considering Trevor Howard, Jack 
Hawkins and Michael Rennie for 
the Mason part., Mason s War on 
_. Raises British Ire NEW YORK (NEA)—The Eng- Room for Longer. Cars 
lish aré slightly angry with James 
\Mason. He was supposed to star | (AP) 
in a filmed series, ‘The Third poe lanes are being 
Man,” which is going to be made | shortened to make room for the, 
‘by the BBC and America’s NTA,'longer autos, The city is, cutting: 
‘a couple of feet off its 22-foot working together. 
But Mason insisted on the in- parking spaces but between each be eight-foot ~no- clusion of a “war clause® in his two there will eel, ‘contract, a clause which stated parking zones to permit better 
‘thet in the event he tNought there @neuvering. 
he sould. re 
released from his . contract. 
series gs going to be m: ade any , Heads Dearborn Health 
“in England, partly here. | DETROIT P_Dr. Joseph G. Mol- 
The producers would not agre€ ner, Detroit-Wayne County health 
‘to such a élause, and word of this. commissioner was named Dear- 
get out in England. Mason was born | health officer Wednesday. The. 
‘roundly criticized for what the) appointment was part of a plan to/ 
iBritish consider ‘alarmist’ eventually consolidate all Wayne! 
tendencies. | County health departments under | 
The series will still be made one head.   
N.C. 
here CHARLOTTE, 
  
Now Only CC 
     
    ne BALL BAGS Automotive Vinyl—Reg. $1 
wow 2 6”? 
‘Others from $4.95 up 
Bernz-0-Matic Torch Kit — Complete with Metal 
Carrying Case and Accessories — Reg. $12.20.    
        
   
         
      
                
      
       
          1.95 Each 
a eee oe ee yew 
  
Gutter Guards 6°x25-F 
Only .. Ce ee ee    
      t. Galvanized Steel 
$3.98 roll ee 
     
ANOTHER TV SALE at WALTON TV     
  Now both for .. rene Caulking Gun and Cartridge—Reg. $3.00. 
Peo teves    
       $1.49 oe ee ee eee 
  
"Get the Kids Their Own 
TV Set and Avoid the Battle 
of the Channel”      TOY SPECIAL--JUST ARRIVED A large selection of good ~ 
quality toys — All types 
for both boys and girls. 
          
      
40 Used TV Sets Pe ee 
        
    Admiral 4-Speed Automatic Phonograph— = 
    ee 39.95   
1495s" ” Terms on Some Sets 
30-Day Exchange Period OPEN SUNDAY 
ve * 
          - Mon. 
   WALTON RADIO & TV _5tS E. Walton, Cor. Joelyn Rd. FE 2-2257 
  1550 Union Lake R 
  Granco FM Radios from. . 
= 10 A.M. to Cle M.—Fri.. 
VERKLE We Sell Wholesale to Everyon?—Free 0-Day Layaway Year ‘Repnd          
          sesseees. 929.95 ap 
10 A.M. to 3 P.M. 
Sat. 10 A.M. to 9 P. M. 
           DISTRIBUTING 
COMPANY 
EM: 3-4381 
  oad   
   _SIXTY-FOUR          
  ie 
} :] 
  
    ER 9, 1958 _     _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, acto 4 
    
         
    
  
  
SEARS | (e] 4:10 14. @.\, ea aer   
    
* @ 
SALE AS Cheat as. ITS NAMED 
FREE RUG PAD Included i on Purchase 
SAVE “ of 40 $4 Yas. 
     
                     
       Carpet Rayon Broadloom 
PRICED FOR REAL SAVINGS! 4 POPULAR COLORS 
® Green ® Beige 
® Gray ® Nutria 
      Even at this low, low sale price, you get Harmony House ; = Ironing Table Cover, alePriced - ws quality and styling! Low loop pile is tufted of tightly twisted ff - Special 
yarns. Vat-dyed colors. Plasticized, latex-coated jute back- I P 2 Pad and Iron. Rest 1 5-pe. Geaee Assortment $e 
ing. 9', 12’ wide. Save! Usually 1.69 $1 , 
Staneed cover, go Usually much more, this selection includes stainless — 
pad Gives: smooth even iron- Steel tongs, egg beater, stoppers, knives, openers, turn- 
ing. Dorit miss this sale! efg, 4-pc. measuring cup set. 3 way can opener, rolling 
pin and many other items. 
         
          
                        
           
   
   
        
    YS RE EE ee    
       
SAVE ‘85 cir", Pe,” 
he ty Rayon-Nylon Pile Carpet 
IN 4 DECORATOR TWEEDS Ge   it 
® Parchment Brown/Shell Pink/Ivory @ Charcoal/Aquamarine/Ivory 
® Sage Green/Parchm't Brown/Ivory © Speice Brn./Ming Bine/Tesry 
e@ Beige Tweed — 9x12 ft. wide 
Remember just $5 down carpets any home with this lovely 
carpet. Choose from 4 tweed textures and 3 self colors. Vat- 
dyed colors resist fading. Plasticized latex coated jute back.     All Steel Adjustable save 1.54 on Sliding 100% Nylon Yorn | | 
Enamel Ironing Table = Door Wardrobe Washable Dust. Mop > 
neg: 59s «4,99 peg. 8928 «|= AG Usecity 1.79 = $$] 
Exceptional at this low price. Rooen ly fiberboard has “Nylon yarn has ma ic ac- 
Solid steel top, tubular steel Peer, 7 teed oak finish tion picking u hulding 
legs. In red and white color wood reinforced doors. Helds dust. Removable head for 
combination. 20 garments. easy washing: 48-in. handle. 
  Housewares Dep!.—Sears Main Basement 
SHOP FRIDAY and || 
MON. NIGHTS ‘TIL 9   senageg 
ene S AVE ‘4 on Purchase 
of 40 Sq. Yds. 
Chrompoint Broadloom 
100°/, Chromspun Acetate for LOCKED-IN COLOR 
@ Black Tweed e Pink Tweed 
e Brown Tweed e Green Tweed     
   save 1°" fo a7 on 
stylish fixtures   Aitrective Coach 
Lantern Fixture 
Reg. 4.49, 3.88 
This handsome lantern adds 
to the beauty of any home's 
exterior. Black metal frame, 
brass colored trim: It's made for extra long wear of Chromspun color-locked 
acetate... truly an outstanding buy! Multi-level texture is 
slow to soil. So resistent, it bounces right back from- foot- 
prints. 9’, 12’, 15’ wide. 
      
an ne Sitraccscsnccioanetetthan 
a! i 
| ava sale priced... guaranteed for 5 Years! aelatiae) (3 
for the | ,save up to *5 on miracle fibre Whitiitel ism la 
  Brass, copper, | 
chrome finishes. 
  Ltr telalel i packs BS — 2 . Sn | _ Sale Priced: Glass 
sleeping | : J ie . all Oma IG ye : S Kitchen’ Fixture 
comfort! oem Usually 1.59 $1 
Here's an ideal “extra” fix- 
ture for kitchen or bath, 8-in. 
glass shade,. white enainel 
yt 95 holder. Hurry in today:! 
Twin Size as sosas cme canerrney 
66x84-in. 
“Charge It” 
BEST BECAUSE: Guaranteed 5 full years against 
defects. 8 full inches of extra width on the full 
size. 100% Miracle fibre. Automatic pre-heat. 6   
  soft Harmony House colors—matching face plate in. diameter. 
controls. Beautiful package. Circline, a% : in. diameter. 
Regular $29.95. . . 80x84-in. 25 88 Chrome holder. 
Single control blanket ..... Sales sole oe es Gs : : : 40 watt 1 It. 
Sale Savings on Ken- | j strip light. 
more Corn Popper oe * 49% in, fong. 
Ree. 477 ~=—- 33,99 
4 Polished, durable, fast-heat- 
     
     
   Regular $35.95... 80x84in. 30 88 
          
           
  
    Dual control blanket ...... : fen) Eee 
= oak Sa oil cages Wate : 
ia esigne pops fluffy - 
here’s a real value... ‘ally desig ~ 
| Wiring Deluxe 
part Orlon” blanket Book Wallplates 55 ’ . FREE ; Reg. 17¢ 
. egularly $6.40 Sale! Luxurious, Requicty © Swika ‘Sine eae 7 dd e = savor 
Thick, Absorbent Warm and fleece, 12% Orlon, 88% Rayon New! 68 Pages i new. aedigs ’ Blanket, with nylon binding for longer life. packed with . fits every de- 
Towel Ensemble Compare with pee selling for much information on. cor. For recep- 
more Hurry in today ... SAVE! wa how to do it tacles or 
Bath Towel 6 §* aig Apo a yourself. switches. 
. 98¢ sabe 
_ 100% Orlon® blanket renee na Cotton terry provides smooth °o n = Tape Switch Box 
velvety oie in ete nae Ned Single Pole 35¢ Reg. 35¢ 
ulfy towel sets oice 0 bd ease 
lovely colors. Sale priced. Buy* Peocalarly 6.96 7” Mercury Switch U + eub: 31¢ 
now and save! Twin Si od fegbheed obs nals win Size Reg. 89c 69¢ ber tape on G al v anized phoutitu, soft, fulffy 100% Orlon* blanket - splices. Cotton Steal beak hin 
Reg. $9c Hand Towel. .... 42c Ve ith nylon binding for longer life. Guaran- Now... buy 3 and save 60c. fabiic. Tacky ps —. 3 
teed machine washable. Choice of colors Single . switch in surface. Many bes Sah jainps, 
Z Reg. 29¢ Wash Cloth......19¢ 4... Hurry in Jodey! Domestic Dept. brown Bakelite. | j uses. 60- ft: me eGay fit 
“ . _2ipbeees . tne, 800 | OR ie” Main Floor Wwory Color Bakelite Switch 69¢ UL listed.” 
e. - by me 
154 N. Saginaw Street Phone FE | . Saginaw Stree hone FE 5-417] oe | os | fae , , : 
wn 
* 4} | 
+ iA ' “ R oe 2 ; 4