* ge of 6 that og’ ey “pel: the gals, especially a Pontiac Tippitt is finding | sters, W. O. Moulton Jr., director of the Oakland | motorcade. Above, PHS Band leads the motorcade. Shopping Values, New 1956 Models Drawing Residents Despite Weather Drawn by the twin attractions of a motoreade of 1956 Pontiac atitos plus a parade of shopping values, shoppers. flocked into Pontiac early today despite threatening skies. The motorcade of 20 shiny autos, Debt Pool Pro Opens in Detro Broomfield, ' Committee Holding for Possible Laws Harry F. Publow, president of a Royal Oak debt pool «agency, said yesterday he is prepared to de- fend his firm before a Michigan Senate investigating subcommittee holding open: hearings on debt pool | practices. Publow, ‘president of Credit Con- trol Corp., was at the when it opened in Detroit yester- day. More than a dozen persons testified’ they went to Publow’s firm or the Advance Credit Corp., diso of Royal Oak in an attempt to free themselves from debt worries. Publow, who appeared at the hearing voluntarily sald he would defend his com- pany “case by case” as they | came along. | : The committee, headed by Sen William §. Broomfield (R-Royal Oak), 18 seeking information for possible legislation to control debt pool firms. The debt pool, for a fee, splits a) customers’ available income among creditors when a person has fi- nancial difficulty. — Witnesses said that some firms not only did not distribute amounts given them from pay checks, but sold their accounts and caused them, to be sued. The hearings are scheduled to run through today. Senators Deny Request for Special Planes WASHINGTON ®—Sens. McClel- Investigation. hearing | yesterday, , | driven by attractive young women employes of Pontiac Motor Divi- sion, wound its way. up Saginaw street to the division's administra- ‘tion building at Oakland and Bald. | ‘win Aves. | ‘There, the Pontiae High School Band, which led the parade, | completed its part of the event. A miniature Pontiac convertible continued with the regulation-sized ‘cars to the Tel-Huron Shopping ‘Center. Five of the cars were left ‘on display there. | Shoppers in the meantime, | bustled through stofes observing | the second annual Pontiac Leader- ship Celebration, inaugurated last |year with the advent of the 1955 | Pontiac models. Stores displayed the celebration's | slogan, freely borrowed from the | Pontiac auto’s advertising theme— |“Dollar for dollar, you save more in Pontiac.” The sale aspect of the celebra- tien continues through tomrerrow, “Pontiac offers the largest range ‘of goods and services in Oakland County.” said Richard 1 MePart: Fair Weather Seen With Moderate Wind According to the U. S. Weather Bureau, it will be mostly fair to- morrow, o Moderaite northerly winds are predicted for the area also. The lowest temperature preced- ling 8 a.m, was 48 degrees. The thermometer registered 48 / de- grees at 2 p.m. | Football Forecast Good football weather, | with sunny skies and a high ranging from 56 to 60. degrees /is the | weatherman’s forarast for the game between Michigan State | Hlinois at East Lansing to- lin, president of the sponsoring Re- tail Merchants Assn. “This leadership - celebration helps us to emphasize that. It also helps us to show our appreciation ito Pontiac Motor Division for the important part it plays in our com- munity’s economic life.’ Will Start Soon 70 Stores to Be Built in Bloomfield Project, Developers Announce Construction of a 70-store shop- ping center at Telegraph and Square Lake Rds. in Bloomfield Township will be started “‘in the very near future,” it was an- nounced today, ; A release stated that the 70 stores will be built simultaneously and that the estimated total value of the development eventually will |reach $35 million. Caste and Don M. Casto 4r., of Columbus, Ohio, who control and operate a chain of % shop- now ander construction, Bloomfield Township Supervisor David E. Anderson said the devel- opers will build their own sewage disposal plant and have drilled their own wells for water. These were two of the major problems facing the project when the township board mulled permit- ting the land to be annexed by Pon- tiac, as the developers requested several months ago. Today's announcement clears the picture on the’development, which has been clouded since last month when the annexation request was withdrawn, Not on Agenda | Atty. Gen. Brownell. jhis Sept. 24 heart attack, there's nothing like A Camels Children's Home, accepts the keys (9 the battery-powered miniature Pontiac from Ri A delighted Barbara Rose, 9,| McPartlin, president of the Retail Merchants. Amp imagines she’s on the open road. Behind the young-| The. auto was presented to the home after today's Shopping Center| Developers will be Don M. | rs Di ee ee 4 Meth YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER #1, 1055 4s PAGES". SOT Political Issues for Ike, Brownell President Will Discuss Only Matters Affecting Justice Department DENVER (# — President Eisenhower gets back into still another government business field today at a hospital conference with Step by slow step since the President has been re-. suming active direction of international and domestic | policy at meetings with top administration officials. He will discuss Justice Depart- ment matters with Brownell, who Shooting of Doe in Self Defense Brings $90 Fine conservation officers it was self- defense, but pleaded guilty yes- -terday to shooting a 125-lb. doe out of season, Hill claimed he was out for pheasants, and was startled into blasting the doe with his shotgun as it leaped over a fence just behind him. He paid $90 fine and $10 costs. It was his second appearance Oct. 27, 1952, he paid $10 fine and $8 costs for hunting out of. | season, 2 New Donations Reported by UF Contributions by Firms, Individuals Are Swelling Campaign Fund Some $1,399 has been contributed | to the Pontiac Area United Fund drive through individual, employe and firm gifts from the Buckner Finance Co., it was announced to- William Hill, 26, of Flint told!) before Justice Butler. In the first, | (am 2 Fatalities Due to Heart Attack; ] Others Shot Season Opens Under Good Conditions gan’s small game and day however, that politics was not A prominent physician said he ‘believes another term if he wants to. They inchided Eisenhower's as- surance to Russia that “under no circumstances is the United States An 88%-page booklet of about heads of mit conference last July, ‘Wins Crown 4 t AP Wirephote SUSANA DJUIM | Venezuela Girl Garners Honors as Miss World’ | LONDON (®—Susana Djuim, a |today wore the crown of “Miss | World,” @ title that covers a lot’ jo territory. | Wearing a bathing suit, that did not cover so much, the 19-year- \old Venezuelan, beauty won the title in competition with 20 other girls last night: The contest was sponsored by a chain of British dance halls and the London news- paper, The, Sunday Dispatch. Margaret Anne Haywood of Jonesboro, Ark., a greeneyed blonde, was runnerup. Miss Djuim stands 5 feet 8 inch- es, Her other measurements: bust 3, waist 21, hips 34. the President can run for. $120. costae. ° be a party to aj- against any nation.” | cach $1 Employes pledged $229 and sa | firm $500. Individual gifts came | from Norman Buckner, $400, Noel | | Buckner, $150, and Merle Voss) Meanwhile, the UF full-partici- pation banner was posted at the Pontiac Press with gifts totaling $4,800. Employes pledged $1,750, and i the company contribution was | $1,800. | Individual gifts totaling $1,250 came from the following men: Harold A. Fitzgerald, $600; and Conrad N. Church, John W. Fitz- gerald, Horace Brodie, Howard H. Fitzgerald II and Russell Bassett, recorded STARTS YOUNG — Dick Brooks, 13, of 3122 a happy hunter. The fine pheasant Dick displays was his first game of any kind. He bagged the rooster, a three-pounder, in a field off Crooks road yesterday, first day of the season. be oF. ag ; i I i Pontise Press Photo Devondale, , is i ; f g Jth Date in 8 Days 30. | One of the first pledges at UF this year from Mr. and Mrs. 0. L. Beau- dette, for $1,200. Other early givers were A. C, Girard, $330; Thomas P. Gillette, .| $125. and Milo J, Cross, $192, The combined Pontiac State Bank gift from its downtown and { Auburn Heights offices was $950. | Other $50 and over contributions recorded during the drive's first Lake Huron Pipeline Authority: Approved DETROIT @ — Supervisors of three counties have approved or- ganization of &n.inter-county water authority to build a pipeline from ‘ Lake Huron to fill water needs of extreme Southeastern Michigan, Mayor Howard Kelly of Royal Oak reported today, : Macomb County supervisors will vote Monday and Wayne “County's | Novy, 1, “ Kelly said. these which have “approved in principie” the for- mation of an inter county author- ity ‘are Oakland, Washtenaw and 2S. Clair counties. . | Kelly. said “fa@ts and figures” ping centers. Five others are (tall brunette model from Caracas, on costs. needs, anticipated popu- | lation growth and other factors | would be presented to a meeting jof the Inter-County Supervisors iCommittee in Mt. Clemens next | Thursday. Maid Knows Her News BRISTOL, Va, (—The Bristol Herald-Courier lost a subseriber this week when a housewife wrote the paper’s circulation de- f prepare breakfast until she has/ read it and this makes all partment: “We are stopping the | paper because our maid won't / of Townsend and peysonally picked the World War II air hero for the court post which Ayrought him in) garet. ~ / - Margaret and Peter's ‘rendez- vous at the lorne of Maj. and Mrs. John Wills—who were their hosts at the county home last weekend —was their seventh evening ‘to- gether in Ahe last eight days. for appointments each morning.’ By JOHN © A man who the water business from long experience believes it would be cheaper in the long run to lay conduits into the area from Lake St. Clair. The reason, of course, is be- cause Lake St. Clair is closer, The southern tip of Lake Huron is approximately 50 miles from lan (D-Ark) and Chaves (D-NM) | says the Detroit metropolitan area say they have not asked for special | is ‘letting itself in for a loy of govern t planes to fly them and | unncessasry expense if it. goes their wives horne from Europe, | ahead with a proposed $30,000,000 (See story on page 11). a to pipe in water from Lake . And an aide of Sen. Stennis (D- | Huron. Miss) said in Washington he knew) Ray D. Baker, who owns a con- of no such request by his senator. | tricting firm at 19200 W. Eight Stennis himself could not be Mile Rd. and lives at 3011 Warner \Dr., West Bloomfield - Township, reached immediately. ‘In Today's Press || downtown Pontiac as ‘the crow flies. Lake St. Clair is only 2 County Ne@WS... 0.600006 | > Editorials .......... estcsss ‘¢ | miles away. High School News........... 13 Baker, who was a ciyil engineer - Sports ........ 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 | with the Detroit Water Board in Theaters ............5055 77 (1912-13 and has worked with the TV & Radio Programs...... 43 | installation and operation of water | Wilson, Bart.....-......005. % | systems all his life, cited figures New Water Pipeline Route Recommended Cost of piping water Huron would amount to $4.03 per 1,000 cubic feet..a to an alithority survey. It only: $1.90 per 1.000 cubic to buy Lake St. Clair water . Women's Pages.,....19, 20, 21 | released in a Southeastern Oak- kn that the princess has not |is reduced $150, to $400. is being drafted by the Army, made the final decision and * ¢ = a do. so unfil she has dis-|j- aan et Ge with the 40-year-old com- square moner all the consequences of TODAY AND $5,500,000 and does the work of their marriage. _ EVERY DAY... 300 men, will be set up at the And while Townsend can give Army Ordnance r (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) You'll find Command's electronic processing — in the Want Ads., Join the || branch here. eee oe” Gls Gear With no less than 95 trained } ave shines, you on track of 150,000 separate items Want Ads to find a buyer, || stored in Army ¥ after passing through the grow- This little ad brought 15 |) When ‘supplies ing industrial areas. vw both calls and a buyer from the “safe” level, Meg, Peter Stay Up Late at Cousins House Party LONDON (INS)—Princess Margaret and Peter Town send were ast night at a gay London dinner 5 that stretched into taday’s early morning hours. Their reunion, a happy and merry one after a daily contact with the young Mar- | ; each other for nefirly 24 hours, lasted seven hours at the ; town house of Margaret's cousin. Dee abe ios ek ie ‘The party was held on¢—— - in the € 4 emotional test, for the 25-|P iac ri preggo emotional test for the 25- ont p iC eS ie Sees ay Fe her year-old princess who wants Te Flint. to marry the divorced ps | "The tte Townsend but still is con- Adva f , | ville early sidering he meager ae : out for the repercuss ‘of such an : aluminum > sag "| 1956 Models‘on Display .| Today, Margaret, along with) Today; c INQ hight: her sister, Queen Elizabeth, their f mother and the Duke of Edinburgh, | Cost Cut by $150 | — will attend the ceremonial unveil-| = / / pn page ,|ing of a national memorial to ber | . Prioés on 1956 Pontiac cars were! refuge on an | father, George VI. F vi today by R. M. Critch-| carried their . Some persons believe the prin- fel, keeral manager of Pontiac — cess might break ¢ the 1 Division. List prices for the; home in - ogg lage “I new passenger cars are from $75 |.companions, cere bec R ee ine in, |to $90 higher than for last year’s | of cult decision she has béen * b yer r~ Bor pa erage ots held for ka The 1956 cars went on display in stepped into There so ase penn very| arial aa Mat | ana, sulle al ear close to the court who /believe| tesg cars, A fourharrel carbu- | tack while | with had George mot died in February!) seige fas been made standard | ‘0 companions and. 1952 his daughter would’ be hav- hes eo. eet tens ds Gs Or The ss ing a far easier time today. chit ented. State z= 2 KING LIKED PETER | The new prices, which do not in-| ditions on the opening day “as — The late king was/ deeply fond | clude federal excise, state or local | ged or better than last taxes, transportation or dealers’ handling charges, are: Chieftain 860 s2ries Catalina: 2-door hardtop, $2,127; Catalina 4door hardtop, $2,195: 2-door station wagon, $2.311, and 4door station wagon, $2,389. Chieftain 870 series—4-door - se- dan, $2,167; Catalina 2-door hard- top, $2,229; Catalina 4-door sedan, | ~ ae and 4-door station wagon, kil) nearly 1% cess was determined to see the A : Star Chief series—4-door sedan, | yy- ’ ef. | — oats, s pg hard $2,273; convertible coupe, $2,579; Biggest Brain fe om Catal: 2-door hardtop, 2 ‘ wal ony Mood cen gg $2,401; Custom Catalina 4-door | for Detroit Job ; hardtop, $2,466, and custom station IZMAC. that wagon, $2,831. 3 DETROIT w— B constant rendezvous were awesome electronic computer said The new hydramatic transmis- sion will-cost $190. Air conditioning (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) sides of the St. Clair River, first insertion. up, blink, and flash warnings. He noted’ that big, fre ee red Ean oe goon are fecoming more len peo bow et FE ime _ |} tracts, every year . Clair, tually despite pollution. To Place Your Want Ad |) ing rapidity sty DIAL FE 2-8181 en af Just ask for the WANT AD DEPT. *, bgt 2 » ; 4 aes! THE PONTIAC PRE jee oe ee ery, 7 pene Se rH ae. i Iii Ndi Se rit iu Ke a eM ge yma BL Ege . weap Soy OE ERE TIEN OCOD retina, Soe: i| | sity , ! 7 | E i i e 2 a z ¢ i | | & vl . i 3 z erat s wR 2 Princess, Townsend Sy late at Party wat “Meaty fair tomorrow.” Moderate ow winds. Teday tn Pontise Lowest temperature preceding § a.m Moon sets Moon rises Ss" a.m. ae 2-45 mm vee eewann eS sther-Cold. Seen rere eewenat® . Sass leasssese AE Fa —j > | pheasants before the season closes (See interpretive story-on page| Nov. 10, Three-fourths of the. total ) , gg Sh were brought down yesterday and MacArthur freely admitted that he. spoke in favor of Russia's entry | DY the end of the weskend wa be into the Pacific war both before |. tod tee. Oe and after Yalta. Although he found aa” ' : department Most of the gunfire injuries suf- fered Thursday were minor, but several hunters were hospitalized unpalatable, he added, they were binding upon him. He went on: » * om “The attempt to interpret any rious wounds. statements I may have made in wah: ¥ *, the course of stich post-Yalta dis-| Ome ef the most seriously in- cussions as reflecting my pre-| jured was John Sheedy, 17, of Hunting in Nankin Township, he received a full charge from a 12-gauge shotgun at close raage in the right leg. Doctors feared wholly unwarranted,” REKINDLES ROW MacArthur's statement came as the Pentagon records rekindled the the leg would have to be ampu- old controversy over the Soviet | tated, entrance into the Pacific war just) another 17-year-old Harold A. six days before Japan's surrender. | pray ot Clio Last March, a Republican-Demo- y running with a loaded. gun, He was reported in fair condition with considered serious: Eugene L,. Adams, 36, of St, -| Charles, wounded in chest in Swan Creek Township, Saginaw County;, George Mann Jr,. 12, Freeland, | shot in legs, chest and arms in Kochville ‘‘ownship, also in Sagi- Anthony Gerhardt, 67, of De-| troit, shot in the right leg; Ga-) briel Hensen, 18, Washington, shot in the head and chest; Albert Taft, 17, St. Clair Shores, shot in left after leg. and foot; James Dunson, 26, was aes farmer near. Mt, Clemens, shot months before the | the nose; Albert Zadony, 14, me fan- St. Clair Shores, shell exploded in, his hand, Casimir Michalski, 30, Bay City, shot in chest; Byron Shann 40, of Flint, shot in back of his head and neck; William Deonan, i ¥, Prestel, 46, Detroit, shot in head, hand and leg; Thomas MecQuerry, Detroit, shot in left | ear; Joseph Dybilas, 31, Tyre, shot in back, Wildie Kichter, 35, Mt. Clem- ens, shot in right leg and groin; | Henry Von Movrich, 30, Detroit, | shot in head and cheek; John P. Clark, 26, River Rouge, shot in| head ! forehead. John Mell, 71, Jenison, ged both hands and right leg; Ralph| At Yalta, 2 Russian Crimean | Miedema, 51, Byron Center, shot resort, Roosevelt and tii ie Jackson. - i Later was | Store. } survived by her husband | four brothers, William H. of | . B. Van Orman of | C. Van Orman of | _ Burdette of Auburn | oT, ue 3 5 Jackson, G. Milan and = ‘King is at the Pursley Home where service will Mrs. Friends may call after 7 p. m. this, evening. Mrs. Wm. J. McLaughlin Mrs. William J. (Jessie B.) Mc- years, the | te 1370 of Pontiac. Besides her husband, she is sur- | ‘Wins Harrier Run | .| and Waterford scores did not count in the arm and ear in Lapeer in arm and hand; Harry| right Dunkley, right arm. .James Clark, 18, Applegate, shot himself in the foot in Sanilac County; John Ravetta, 37, Detroit, | | shot in the right hand by an un | known hunter in Sanilac County; | Donald Hudgens, 36, Utica, wound- | ed in the face, temple and neck | by unknown hunter in Sanilac County, Albert Brummell, 17, ‘shot In the left arm near Goodrich; Ken- neth Sparrow, Lincoin Park, shot in the right hand in Sanilac Coun- Walled Lake Viking harriers ran| ty. Cecil Woodward, 64, of Clinton, | shot in the face near his home; | , Detroit, shot | | points, while Southfield captured | ell, 42, Detroit, wounded in the | 2nd with 51; Farmington 3, scoring | right eye in Tuscola County; Roy | 58; Berkley 4th with 105 points. | MacInnis, 7, Flint, hit in the fore- | Southfield's Dick Holliday set a , head; new course record of 11:06.3 when | Arthur Wheatley, 13, Flint, shot he galloped ac the line Ist,|in the arm in Tuscola County; The old mark was J1.08. Van Dyke Gordon Gallagher, 19, Flint, shot British Prime Minister Churchill Stalin into the Pacific war. That was in February 1945. Russia finally entered the war against Japan six days before the surrender Aug. 14, 1945. Walled Lake Team in the running as both teams failed | County; Raymond Drodt, 39, Ida, to start five men. | shot in Monroe County. Theft ‘Teacher’ Jailed City Motorist Injured Off DETROIT (®—Mrs. Naomi Fra- as Car Runs Road zier, 32, accused by police of giv- James O. Griffith, 22, of 2403, ing her 12-year-old daughter. shop- Woodale Rd., was treated and re- jifting lessons, was convicted of leased from Pontiac General Hos: | simple larceny in Recorder's Court pital yesterday after he ran his Thursday. She was given a 90-day car off the road at the intersection sentence, Police said they caught of Mount Clemens Street and Bay her in a downtown department Strect, hitting a tree. |store pointing out articles for her | daughter to steal and place in a seriously | day and this morning to capacity in | cision on the gubernatorial post m.: wing wiedty tt moh Franklin Rd. died at his home | ons Priday at 8:41 rises Gaturday Pride, 41 deverday at 12: ee eeeeee ${| Chapel. The Rev. John W. Mulder,’ vived by four children, Jack Bro- Crash Kills State Gi gan of West Unity, Ohio, L. D.! - McLaughlin, Kenneth, and Mrs.|_ FT. ORD, Calif. #—Pvt. James Jay Kelly, all of Pontiac, 12 grand- E. Mathews, 19, of. Detroit was . truck overturned at a curve. Eight A brother, Will McDivitt. of Other soldiers were injured. Thir- Adrian, also survives teen basic trainees were in the The funeral will be held at 1:30 truck }p. m. Monday from the Voorhees- | Siple Chapel. The Rev. James Du- | chan will officiate with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. | SIMMS Is ‘LEADER’ John C. Popelka | John C. Popelka, 69, of 388, Electric Cli | Wednesday afternoon. | He was born in Czechoslovakia | May 16, 1886, the son of Anthony | |and Katty Popelka. | Development Co. Service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday from the Voorhees-Siple | associate pastor of the Central Methodist Church, will officiate. ee Albert Williams Service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Sparks-Griffin Chapel for Albert Williams, 63, of 4001 W. Walton Bivd. Burial will follow in Harbor Beach. Mr. Wililams is survived by his} wife, three children, Claude of Waterford, Rosilla and Alberta, = at home, and two grandchil- He. was dead on arrival at Pon~ tiac General Hospital Wednesday. children and 10 great-grandchil-| killed yesterday when an Army dren HOME BARBER OUTFITS! pper Barber Set | shopping bag. Cold Kills 10 Mexicans MEXICO CITY tA cold wave sweeping Mexico has brought ‘death to at least 10 poor persons ‘in Mexico City, Five bodies were | found on streets and sidewalks. , in Pontiac for Famous | 7-PIECE OUTFIT ®@ Electric Clipper with Adjustable Taper Control © Crew-Cut Guide @ Neck Duster © Barber Cape © Clipper Oil ® Barber Comb $15.00 Value ALL FOR Use Our Layaway Proteoctens Gomes lippers has Just- ss, IDAY, OPENS TOWN HALL SERIES ~Madame Wellington Koo, wife of | China's ambassador to Washing- ton .opened Birmingham's 1955 Hall Series. She spoke Thurs- audiences at the Birmingham Theater, discussing customs and culture of her native land, Uroes U.S. Cut European Aid Bentley Tells Views to _Ann.Arbor Group After Trip Abroad ANN ARBOR —Rep. Alvin M. Bentley (R-Mich) last night called for an end to this country’s eco- nomic aid to West European na- tions “with one or two possible exceptions." - Bentley, speaking before a local manufacturers. association, re- viewed his recent European tour as a member of a House foreign affairs subcommittee. “My personal feelings, with one or twe possible exceptions, is that there-should be no more economic aid and little military | ald to Western Europe in the future,” he sald. We did not mame the countries he felt should continue to receive aid. The touring congressmen “found economic conditions pretty good throughout Western Europe,”’ he | said. ‘But we also found a certain apathy and neutralism." IDEA WIDESPREAD “The idea of neutrality is pretty | widespread over Europe,” he said. “They want to let down .. . take OCTOBER a). yeas “They want to shake off the burden of armaments . . . they don't worry too much about com- by seme elements of the Repub- lican Party as a potential candi-_ date for governor, spurned talk of his political aspirations in - response to questions before the speech. not in a position to make any de- cision at this time—until I have been back here for a long enough esi ; period to familiarize myself with | tionf and her lot is larger than | — the Michigan picture and discuss the matter with all available in- terested parties." Republican sources said it was unlikely Bentley would make a de- until meeting with Mayor Albert B. Cobo of Detroit, another GOP possibility. Cobo is visiting in Arizona. To Manage Company DELTON W — Robert Kelley, telephone construction engineer previously employed by .a Madi- son, Wis., firm, is scheduled to take over Monday as manager of the Delton Telephone Co. -| ordinance effects some 1,000 lots “I've been away from Michigan | in the Leinbach-Humphreys Sub- for a number of weeks and I am | division south of Lincoln, |Grimes’ property comes close to meeting requirements because her " ? = |Madame Wellington Koo }|Opens Town Hall Series BIRMINGHAM — From. the !Rev. Albert B. Cleage and the woman China tottering along | Rev. H.R. I. Gnanadason, of South , ing robes, to the sheath-clad, edu-| . There will be an 8 a.m. break- |! 159 Pilgrim Rd., will be at 1 cated women of today—these de-| fast meeting for young people Se = ee ee pict some of the changes the| tomorrow, » 10 a.m. coffee hour oan be ok ae Bailey: modern Chinese woman has trav-| amd group meetings of church | Puneral Home until Saturday eled to gain her freedom. school tegchers and Women’s | morning. Mrs. Uthe, who had Yet today she, like her fellow| Fellowship leaders, meeting with er Or Gee een aot men, can see a new threat looming} Miss Smith and the Rev. Mr. |day sa ahead in that path, in the face of} Gnanadason. He will also speak ‘ * 2 & : the wall of Communism. St 11 a.m. service Sunday. The | Besides her husband, she is sur- resents a “symbol of loyalties,” | Value of benevolence giving. | Charles S. McCarthy of Birming- Madame Wellington Koo called it |" ©8en Ashblower’” and “Hans ‘ ham. in opening the Rirmingham Tewn Halil series with her lecture yes- cae heel ais Even at These Extra “N try in Asia h to ceiNo country in Asia bas gone to E AUUREUB Aas LOW PRICES—You | i zg Pt TT 3 = ti & purposes. | ‘The property is s0-zoned but be- alterations making the house more suitable for multiple use. Hascall said that while the. city Mrs. nce is of two-story construc- most of the others. . that the effected properties per- haps should be rezoned to single family. * MOMS Club, Unit No. Three will hold a bake sale starting at 9 a.m. tomorrow at Nan's Hat Shop, North Jroeiware avenue. * * “Missions Unlimited,” a three- day program at Congregational Church, will open with an aill- church dinner at 6:30 tonight. Three guest speakers will be fea- tured. They are Helen H. Smith, formerly of Foochow, China; the HOURS: OPENS TOMORROW HUNDREDS OF HOW-T0-DO-IT'S || New Products + New Ideas * New Methods | HOW TO BUILD in storage—moke handsome furniture —do household repairs—re-vpholster furniture—cut, | lay, repoir flooring, paint interiors ond exterion— | repair and refinish furniture—buy lumber, point, refinish floors, make fences, walls, walks—repair leaky rogfs—make lamps, terraces, signs, plant boxes— Plus Many Other How-To's 1 te 11 P.M. Dally PLENTY OF CONVENIENT PARKING ADMISSION 50c * Children under 12 Free ie Famous AMPLEX No. Flash Bulbs “BLUE-SPOT”’ 0 for 69° Regular $1.20 Per Carton Famous Amplex #5 flashbulbs are the same as ‘Press 25' bulbs. This tow price for full CARTON of 10 for . Friday and Saturday! No Limit! 5 wey) Newest for Stills & Movies $16.95. ARGUS ° Exposure Meter *T a” Argus, accurate and Comnlete case. deposit holds. SOHOSHSSSSSHSHSSSSSSSHSSSSSHSHSHHHHSHHOHSSHHOEES Makes INSIDE‘ MOVIES Easy to Take Flood Lite Holder With 4 Flood Lamps $12.00 78! Value Keeps the flight on your subject at all times. Easy to operate, handle for hand or tripod use. $1.00 holds in layaway. PYTTIT Iii Get Top Trade-In Allowance Only $5 Holds This a eme=fent 9 80 Latest Model — New 2.80 | BELL & HOWELL | Rolleiflex 8mm Automatic MOVIE Reflex Camera CAMERA 291" 4g* oer Medel 220 fa8D eat ath Guaranteed for Ziess tone, fully Ife. Dial sets automatic shut- camera for you, = ter and winding. Get top trade-in Easy to oper- at Gimme, LEE appraisai—no obil- - : .= perfect MTTTTr rrr SMM MOVIE CAMERA FANS NEVER BEFORE—2 LENSES IN 1 Fl i FREE | - $3.50 DUAL as VIEW FINDER TELEPHOTO uo0 000 ef GLE 4h WIDE AN ‘DUAL-LENG OMY ze Taepworo/ we angie °24°° Now any camera becomes a turtet camera with DUAL-LENS .. . for all movie cameras, gives your movies that professional Hollywood B touch with close-ups and panoramia-like shots. Complete with adapter, leather case, and lifetime guarantee. Bring your camera. SOSSHSSSHSSHHHOHHSOOH OSE SHOSEOSOLOOEOOOEOEEOE®S KODAK PONY 135 Made by Minnesota Mining Camera Outfit 1200 Ft. Sound Medel ‘C’ Recording Tape a7 | i $5.50 Value $49.50 | ’ ke Value oe Every thing , * take Seem Plastic - Base as nee (@ BROTHERS S : m ” : y 5 } ff Prony te I ais we" ) \ z , © f fi } ft y ; five : } I oe f THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. ‘OCTOBER 21. 1955 ! . THREE Sen =e Simms aii Sensational Bargains That Equal pe on BINOCULARS { —_==| the Value in New 1956 Pontiac Cars! Nature a. — Football Games — Sports Gade ike eon ravens BINOCULARS § | sore « samc ’ é — Is ‘Beat Out’ of but Few ‘Baby Diapers Simms says — “Hats off to the new Pontiac for 1956 ... ~ This week-end, we are colebretine the. new models with « ‘never before so much automobile for the money.” Take more of the SUPER-VALUES that thrifty folks have come Fees by Fishermen — 8x25 POWER s Lav away : FULL DOZEN our word for jt — we speak with authority ... here at to expect always from Simms. Here’s but a few... you'll LAWTON (#—Boat liveryman Se Se Simms — BAGAINS IS OUR BUSINESS! ; find plenty more on every counter in every de -partment on all 3 fleors. | puts fishermen on their honor $2.39 Value when they rent his boajs. With Case. ’ Wagner,* 73, operates a unique $ 66 All Prices Effective “honor system" of renting boats $46.87 Vol- x ° Tonite and Saturday ‘til 10 P. M. from his lakeside garage. At the rear garage door he has in- stalled a system of — num- LIMIT 2 bers corresponding to boat num-| “ © bers. tse DOZEN A sign directs the customer to) vidual focus. insert his money and help himself | $78.50 Val- 99 to a boat. ve—16 x 50 as Soft and absorbent diapers in ful! standard size Sone of Birdseye or Fianne,ette brand Rental fee is one dollar a day | ny ad sae and Wagner says he doesn't set a definite time for return of the Sina made boats. In two years of operat- day and Saturd “o om, 30, Ing fhe system he figures he’s . football, viewing. | ieee \dleakinntenna et: “nan Gay COTTON PRINTS [—~Werdwood SPECIAL BUY for This SALE! | joes | : Toilet “ that ‘t intentional, 98 North : Tm sure," he adds | Sagi Tive — raed Girls’ Dresses | Seat SALTED SPANISH : Wagner, formerly of Hammond, Street orce Vups 48 P t ) Ind., concedes that his “honor” 2 FOOT HANDLE « $348 eanu Ss rental system is partly the result of failing health. -He retired after % years as a painter in Ham- mond. GOT TUCKERED “Before I had the slot system 1 used to get all tuckered out. About the time I'd go to bed, or start getting something to eat, | % is Values Cc White enameled N to $2.49 08 vind Pier Gallo rm ' AN @ All Sizes, 7 to 12 veer Anti. 1* At “0 ~ @ Choice Assorted Styles Freeze Na “Choice of assorted styles and = 23° $-Inch rubber opetion eup, 2 foot hardwood handle, POUND BAG E24 Regular 59¢ Pound Seve Your Time G aii b ‘Huriting Bargains’ Shop Simms .. . Where You're Sure 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS — ear would come in,” he) ; ‘of Getting a! LIGHT BULBS ae colors. Contrasting trims, self , c Fresh feat eefection ong | 3 ‘ BIGGER BARGAIN’ belts, ete. Cotton prints in Regular i" peanuts in cellophane bes or cm - : aiaceien uae s te , a sizes 7 to 12, Crest ey a $1. 00 2-Cell Flashli If Less Batteries 129¢ | ea Wetter stave tecide tna |E __ CET YOUR HUNTING LICENSE HERE! _ $3.95 Curity Diapers Full Dozen $2.94 g | | — os system take care of NO Off-Brands! NO Old Stock! NO Substitutions! _ $2.49 Child 's Ski Pajamas 410 19 $1.69 “4-Cup ($2.95 5-Cell Flashlight Less Batteries 98c i inet ithe iat — Famous SHOTGUN SHEL ero | 2 4-Cu $27.50 Bemington Electric Shaver New $19.95 Wagner's wife died nine years | ’ 3 to 8 69c * ver New 5 ago and he moved from Indiana | Brands i” 99¢_ Children’s Polo Shirts 3 ‘0 Tea Pot $3.95 Baby Bottle Sterilizer Aumnium _ $2.88 9< } $10.95 Ladies & Girls Wrist Watch swiss $7.95 BARGAINS IN WOMEN’S WEAR wi an on to Cedar Lake a year later. He | said he played professional base- ball with a Kalamazoo team about 49 years ago under the name ‘of = Edwards. Wagner says he also played with a team at Jackson of Choose from one of Michigan's largest stocks where you can — poop kind, the gauge and shot size you want , , . always LOWER PRICED, Your Choice of Nationally Advertised REMINGTON or ‘WESTERN’ \' Comfortable Sarong Styles , 6-Inch Round | the same league and with semi-pro Field Load Heavy Load : . ’ ; $1.89 Value a clubs in Chicago. 12-16-20 12-16-20 | Regular $4.50 O'CEDAR ge - Officers Suspected in Burglary Ring Jeans 97° Buspender style ue, : 59 Boe Me) 228 vats 1 66 (by Box of 25 Box of 25 |B Cou Hands never to $3.95 ict oe ; ST. LOUIS » — One policeman | SOeooececooeovosoecosereeosseceoooeeesoeNeeees El Rt jee oes’ vas Main Fleer Sturdy plastic treme. clear bright “has been charged with burglary | 12-16- ue 12 ue : juee Yy mirror. Choice of bive or pin and two others were suspended | NEW jon ° MAGNUM z Men. $2.88 We es esi — pending investigation of an alleged | COSCHHHSOHEEHHOSOSESSSSSSELESEOOEEECEAOLOOLESE : e@ All Sizes $-M-L $2.59 Valve $1.00 Compacts Assorted Shapes iy Designs 69¢ burglary ring. , Ladies John P.-Graham, 34, a patrolmang Guaranteed NEW MODELS — Wide elastic band around top. Satin or Pai $1.50 Nylon Bath Brush Long Herdle 69¢ | in suburban Wellston, was released | no used guns at Simms. Choose | nylon panel front. Criss-cross style at alamas i yesterday on $2,500 bond after | \ from tamous brands —- | bottom. Straight or panty style. $ 56 49c Deodorant Sticks jumbo Size 19¢ a Magistrate Raymond Harris issued plete selection, =, 3 a second-degree burglary and lar- Ladies Dusters Washable, No Ironing cotton chains in es- | L0€ Bobby Pins Card of 24 Pins 3foride ceny charge against him. ; Sli sorted om Sires ' ‘ Several other Wellston policemen : tton 32 to 44 s te ‘ é ’ ee ee Feature Value $1.49 Ladies Cotten Slips ~Matn Pee Evening in Paris’ Li released after questioning in con- | nection with recent thefts from stores, All denied any part in the thefts. Graham also denied the charge against him. 12-Gauge doa Shotgun \ Quentin R, Stewart of Wellston Regular $31.95 Value MOSSBERG . Model 195 $1.25 Nylon Hosiery Sheerspun 8 10 1! 66c age $6.00 Ladies Playshoes ‘Cushion Walk’ $3.69 Boys’ Socks ‘ | $2.00 Value _! for 49° | “was charged with receiving prop- . | " ; —_— Pr. 8< ‘Choice of ony toe erty the policeman is accused of pretest Briana PRICE $ c- een CHOKE Ne AIS ; a ore Ptormae taking. seamed Weighted Bottom = : Cushion sole, ankle Poli said about $200-in stolen Complete. with famous ; -~ - sour Safety Ash Tra . length, white in all 8c nice KAM n stoer lect Ch he { bett a wie 6) . aizen if } edhe payor] bp en Eradtet| | 7 , -navomnt | $1 Tergens Lotion Fe >< : ome. He said he didn't know the PIITITITIIITITTTI Titi Tite : aL - $1 Ch 3 for $1 | | nese: enyw Lipsticks Assorted goods were stolen. when he otal a — ‘@unies Special Group ae $2.29 A St. Louis county grand jury aor Po bbye 3“ $3 Music Boxes Assorted Tunes began ‘an investigation into the | 1.59 to :: . cane. $10.98 E Neckties $6.95 Eléctric Hair Dryer Portable $4.49 Army Association Meets Flannel Lined on 7-Piece Dish Cloth: Dich tT eeak a | M ' * 4 we Regular $1 values. § S e) 4 ERS SP ECIALS for Annual Convention Zipper Gun Cases Kit | = - a seal ns core terme & FT. BENNING, GA. —The As- |B Crack, fray and peel All gauges — 410 to For : ~Secomsems 7 ati ed . . * proof. Fits most eel $ 3 12. -Rod, solvent, oil, 98 Allows Use of Both Hands 1Se ) sociation of the United States Army R A Velue ¢ — dedicated to the task of remind- lengths. patches, brushes, etc. | ound-Neck Mirror “ $4.98 Value | ing the public and Pentagon plan- | , Colorful striped borders 15 «x 27 inch, striped bor- : Curtain | fers about the Army's mission in Heavy mesh lock. — First ders. Very absorbent qual- a defense — gathered here at this quality. ; i Stretcher ) home of the infantry today. ° The two-day annual convention Winter Complete brings together members of the — 7 $ an rawers Selection | active Army, reservists, National Guardsmen and just plain civilians who used to be Army men, $1.98 White Sheet Blanket 70 « 90" $1.57 $ 3% $1.69 Plaid Sheet Blanket 70 «x 80” $1.37 54x00" sine aia proof hardware and Fleer $3 Foam Rubber Pillow 85° Shredded $1.44 pins st Famous brand names to choose from. Hanes in- | cluded, Made for warmth and long, wear. Shirt | sizes 36-46. Drawer sizes 30-44. , The Great Lakes Region, of Hanes Short Sleeve Pullover Shirt........$1.29 | $2 Men's Sport Shirts Sizes M-L $1.33. $2 Value. CARSTAIRS sich chien the cer od Sian Greer ts bre $NS8 Be Made el ot 35 Sn nt cans aun 9Q¢ | Feather BRIAR PIPES. ioe ee tat mt oo i teem (es aos a ere ig ea ETE piow | Imported trated market. There 21 per cent NV Bindtord tony Stoece Shin 25% Weel 'sz98 £ Utility Truck 4 $5 Men‘s 100% Wool Sweaters 351 «5 $1.97 of the nation's population lives on 8 per cent of the land area and produces 33 per cent of the dollars added by manufacture. K > —- Bradford Drawers, 50% wool, orlon, cotton. $3.69. > on . , ] ] c Regular $1 Each : eeeeceseoeeeeseeeaoosesoooeseecoseseeeeeseeeeeee i- pf As Pictured $2.29 Union Suits wredorweights $1.57 la , i 16x24-ineh size, ACA Choice of styles, straight, stem, # . id stripe ticking bents, semi-bents, saddle bits ‘ ? s ae A D |) . i ~Basement | bul. dow. apple bowls, etc All oe ~ Pg . q Dd with meta; filters *nd metal : . ‘ \ ‘ band stems No limit Ohhh! | . | Opens and Closes in One Easy ‘Motion 79¢ Value i , Bath A those ' 56 o | (SAA eagmiuy 9 FOLDING ALUMINUM Towels | : OLDSMOBILE pty 200 ibs ‘easily Cloth D r eT Folding Table with Detachable. Tray - - : ; * eameliy ‘ Joa See] Clothes Drye Le |mt2=:| TV Servette TABLES — RoUUNGY Oma” pepe ervette | id i , ‘ wy oe ~ Basement whe & | | en wih o” $2.95 Value | Padi @ Menyg | alue $2.95 Value $ 17 Lace Tops | 16-Inch Rubber | Thermo Insulated [— ° ; Z Uses “ _ + wed i 4 tone cotten fie Electric Ste : s ‘ ms an ripo« pase, “ on ’ ee 12” Rubber Paks Lace Paks | Pac Boots ove 50 teat af avvine space. Easy for women to handle. Toaster : L* Quaranteed leakproof. | Ideal _for* sport or Thermos bottle prin- Sturdy tripod base. 3] 99 $4.44 é 7 Rugged tread soles. Ati work. Gafety tres“ «ole ciple keeps feet warm | — sizes, 6 to 12. 49 | tne ise: 49 crainarh 1 98 | $5.95 Swivel TV Stand Wrought tron $2.99 2 - sites, ftp > fhep e@ - —— 6“ §*° oon. acs | Ee pos doors, cord is -—. 1g TOO rrirerrrrrrrrrrr ers 25¢ Plastic Butter Dishes corned ile amen ® Sturdy Tubu- Biggest BOOT SOCK Lowest $19.95 “Casco” Steam and Dry Iron Colors $11.88 [> lor Legs Selection . Prices $1.29 Foot Scraper: Mat 14 x22” Rubber 73¢ Clo*hes e Sarsucg of Compare quality, material, workmanship and PRICE. You'll see that your best buys are at Simms. 50% Wool, 35% Cot- 40% Wool, 35% Prop &. BO Qc $2.19 Lunch Kit with 1-Pint Bottle $1.88 Perfect for TV snacks, ‘ t isitin ok Och coos alin 59 49c Enamel Roasters 6-16s. Capacity 37¢c - — —. ys . = 40°% Wool, R ayon 59% we —=.. its over the a | and Nylon sine 50% Weel, 50% $1.49 Snack Set 8-Pc. Cup and Tray 97c¢ f >**- Galvanised. ass Oh-h-h! New Rocket T-350 powee 100% Weel Hy sg ars % é . New Jovewy, Hydra- Matic White or Grey... . 79 x aca. “- % $1.98 ‘HALL’ Chinaware wt Mi ao ew Hit Fav OL Salad Bowl Styling! You" il say “Ohhh!” for Long Socks ...,.. seeds oc Geey... Bite 3 sure when you see Olds for "56! See them on 98 North “OM! Day" Nov. 3rd at your Saginaw OLOSMOBILE Deasierst i 9” diameter, 3° high. White. in- $8: Tonight and —2Jnd Floor terior, bright red & Bargain exterior. . ca Saturday, Basement | , ' ‘til 10 P, M, SIMMS.@ 2OTHERS a Kt Shs . stig > giao . . / y: th " i J j r, fe aa 4 Vis j f rs as f \ Pas Be Bae | 4 s if j ey ' ies i ‘ ' i } \ ged iy / ' f ' f } | ia ery alee. ‘ fy , Hage 4 . f f j ' if | , i ‘ ee { ; j } & } E ; : : y | . ' if (7 Ai s ‘ Pee ee ~ 4 ; ; “ THE PONTIAC’PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21; 1955 | ee | 16 | STEWART-GLENN COMPANY...QUALITY HOME FURNISHINGS SINCE 19171 Fietiin| cue tM dy | Tires of Housekeeping, | = pi Yes yest , 8 es Gets Into Brawl, Police Arrest Him, His Wife NEW YORK i — Joseph Fer- - nandez, 16, hasn't been going to school lately for what seemed to) . him a very good reason. He got) married last January, when he was | SS ecae| SPECIAL PURCHASE | @yi SSS | «,, pontiac Leaperstip | ever Before... Ph groom anscrnteneed 12 ch Sutes| De ee | SALE SUCH A LOW, LOW PRICE FOR A GENUINE U. S. FOAM MATTRESS and Joseph had. to have a little | (a | : : 42" FOAM MATTRESS fy it i i ee ee ee OPENS TO A COMFORTABLE BED SIMMONS | rx, BED ; CHAIR © 72 Coils be . @ Kiln Dried Frame _.. > - Plain or Figured Fashion Denim | ¢ Wire Tied Coit = $AQ% oiePrieas | U.S. Foam Rubber t ui i ure Ae 2 i ! Ht ft gif si i! : "4 Army Corps of Engineers w ter today showed ven Was) ol | the state’s busiest Lake Michigan | AY pec hinne t t ta3t , 412-INCH THICK MATTRESS, and SPECIALLY ENGINEERED BOX SPRING Simmons gave us a break on this fabulous lot be- | M with } : : * . . . | decide. "| cause there are only a few of each kind. Result: The fact that we've never before been able to offer such quality | Tuo Sigures showed Grand Hoven | You get ‘this wonder chair in a much higher grade so low-priced makes this the bedding highlight of our Cele- ony agg pee ee fabric than you could really expect at such o low bration Sale! This is genuine U.S. foam rubber, a full 41/2-inches Complete 6,287,991 tons when combined with price. But you better scurry in here quick before ‘| thick; supported by a specially engineered box spring and Twin a nearby Bass River gravel, sand they are all picked over! covered in blue-and-gray striped ticking. Full Size : it | | i unit, the Federal District. Sixty per cent of the district's 450 square miles is forest and 10 per cent is farm | , ‘ ES FOR YOUR : se Forest, Farms in Ci The Marvelous 6 TROPICAL PIEC Cre a sectors soit omc : 88 a wes payment Waite’s White Sewing Center—Fourth Floor \ Save a Big 82.00 New ‘55 “Corsair” 742 H.P. Outboard Sy i @ 50 Lbs. Forwerd, Neutral & Reverse! @ Fully Gueranteed! Twist Grip Speed Control @ Complete with Separcte ‘Stowewey Fuel Tank! Regularly 219.00 by Scott Atwater! Waite's Sporting Goods—Downstairs Store Save to 1.99! New Wrought Iron Pieces Values to 3.98—SALE ° - PRICED pieces that have sold out several «times! Add a sophis- _ ticated look to your — settings. Ultra smart, modern and so func- tional. Hurry in today during Waite’s Greot © Fall Sale! . Top: Woll Shelf with 2 shelves 30” long. | Reg. 2.99. Center: Phone Stand 27” h. x 12 x 12, Reg. 3.98. Bottom: Jumbo zine Rack; 18 x 18 x 1942. Reg. 2.99. Waite's Stationery—Street Floor »y Reg. 2.50 | Men's Wallets 99° per opening. Bill compartment Genuine leather wallets with cip- Reg. to 3.98 Women’s. Melray Blouses 1.99 Beautiful daszie cloth in fall styles and colors. @ sleeves and *s 32-38. Street Floor Windows for pictures. Street Floor ‘Reg. 79¢ Children's Pioor % Reg. 5.98 Chenille Bed Spreads 3.77 Polo Shirts 2 for 99° Sturdy cotton knit. Guaranteed washable. 6 and L siseves. 1. to éx. Stripes, prints & solids. Second Pourth Full twin in solids & multi-colors. , Pioor Reg. 4.98 3-Pc. ‘Bath Set 2.99. Multi- color design Attractive fringe. All firet quality. Washable and colorfast. Save today. Fourth Floor. Reg. 89c Rustling . Taffeta Fabric ad° Acetate & Rayon. Heavy 180 Denier quality. 48 wide. 18 colors First quality. Fourth Floor Reg. 3.75 Infants’ Gauze Diapers 2.40 | Nationa! brand soft and absor- bent. @light irre. Full regular size. Save today. Second Floor, Reg. 5.98 Boys’ Warm Surcoots — 3.99 Warm quilt lining and 100% pret intertining ter te 12. Navy and brown. Fioor. Save 99¢ on Warm Flannel Sleepwear 99 Regalarly 2.98 @ All First Quality! Gowns and Pajamas! @ Many Assorted Styles - to Select! @ Sizes 34 to 40 in Solids, Pastels _ and Printed Trims! @ All Fast Color and Sanforized! ' Save Today! Waite's Budget Lingerie treet Floor Save 18.01 on Famous Nationally . Advertised "7" @ Regularly 35.00 and Fully Guaranteed! @ Luminous Dial, Shock Resistant, Dust Resistant! © Sweep Second Hand! Reg. 12.95 Speidel Bands............. Waite's Watch Shop—Street Fioor Save 9.96 on NEW “MOBO” Pony Express _ Regularly 17.95! 4°? ”) @ Deluxe Pedal Drive! All Steel With Rubber Tires! e Adjustable Seat for Kiddies | to 7 Years! When Baby Outgrows Stroller, Slip Off Handle ond Footrest, and Use it os a Pedal Drive. @ Pony Stands 22 Inches High, Seat Is just 81/2 Inches Off Ground! @ Durable Baked Enamel Chip and Weather Resistant in 5 Bright Colors! b Waite's Toys—Downstairs Store Save 4.18! Children’s Popular Saddle Shoe Regularly to 7.95! * ye White Colors! @ White Rubber Sole! @ Hurry in Today During Waite’s Great Fall Sale! Waite's Children’s Shoes—Second Floor ;* A he ot | ee en ere Ne ~ i “ie AI teem anion shui pyhilailinaln cine a ne THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 pie Abe Aaa iepeaai sites “ a Aa lin Abe ia y fay a fal i sep f 4 lf y f MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS aa FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 « Oregon Farmer and Wife Adopt Eight Korean Tots Out in Creswell, Oregon, live Mr. and Mis. Hagry Hort with a love for chil- dren strong enough to revive anyone's © faith in human nature... The Hotrs have a large farm. Their own six children, ranging in age from. 9 to 22, are growing up rapidly. This | _gave Hott an idea. Last Spring he sug- gested to his wife that they “raise an- other family.” Without hesitation she agreed, saying they had foom for eight. *...2 .* In June Hour went to Korea - ~ -Now they are established at the Hotts’ comfortable farm home where there is plenty of room to play, all they want to eat and all the loving care they It is heartwarming to read about the Hotts. Their story is a reminder of how wonderful people can be. ~ Bt Vance Gets AEC Post There should be general satisfaction with the recess appointment given Harotp S. Vance to fill the vacancy on the Atomic Energy Commission. The appointment is a good one in its frown right. It is excellent also because it fills a vacancy on the commission which has existed since the resignation - Nearly a year ago of Josern CAMPBELL, now Comptroller General. A previous nomination of ALLAN WHITFIELD to the post was withdrawn. x *« * Mr. Vance, who is chairman of the executive Packard Corporation, should strengthen the AEC. He takes into it the kjnd of experience the commission/ needs to handle its primary job of production. In addition he has the breadth of ex- perience and outlook which should be of great assistance to the commission in deliberating its other problems. * * * President Etsennower’s choice of Mr. Vance to fill this post should win Senate confirmation early in the next session. Pheasants Lure Hunters Unless you are a pheasant hunter, you may not realize that this exhil- arating sport has grown tremendously. Before the end of the season, which began at 10 a. m. October 20, experts say 500,000 hunters will have tested their skill against the wiles of these magnificent birds. On the basis of reports showing that pheasants are plentiful, conservation officials predict that the season will be even more successful than last year. With so many hunters in the field, a few words about safety are in order. Don’t become a statistic. Fol- low the common sense safety first rules of hunting and don’t forget if you are a guest on a farmer's land, to treat that land as a guest should. , don’t forget our prize contest committee of Studebaker- “Talmadge Vs. George Believers in gdod government on both _ _ Sides of the party fence are worrying about a seriatorial contest shaping up in Georgia. Present indications are that 77-year- old Senator Grorar will be bpposed for re-election by former Governor Herman TaLMapas. The probability of such a contest is indicated by speeches of both. “men with Sen.-Gzorcz having been stung into appearance of candidacy by an editorial suggesting he retire. ; x * * The worry. results from the reported ‘ ‘fact that from an organizational point) | ~ of view, the advantage is all on the side of the former Governor. Sen. George has served with distinction: as chairman of the _ Foreign Relations Committee. In the matter of bipartisanship he has been to Mr. Eisenhower what the late Sen. Arthur H. Vanden- ' berg was to President Trumgn. * x * TALMADGE, in contrast, is a_recog- nized demagogue who appeals to igno- rance and prejudice. Not only has he always been a race baiter but is one of the most vociferous foes of the Supreme Court’s desegregation decision. One can only hope that if this séna- torial race materializes, enough Georgia voters will distinguish between the statesman and the demagogue. Yesrerpay a car scooted around us so fast it was hardly possible to read this prominent sign on the rear as it flipped by: “Slow down and live.” The Man About Town. Frank Confession Old Almanac Points Out the . Fallacy of Its Predictions ¥ generation: Of which some oldsters are envious because they don’t belong to it any more. The first of the 1956 editions of The Old Farmer’s Almanac has arrived. From it I learn that most of the corn husk, caterpillar, bird flight, hog ‘spleen, squirrel storage, sheep fleece, horse hair and other indications on which the weather predictions for the coming winter are based have been 75 per cent wrong dur- ing the last quarter century, And the same almanac then goes on to predict a hard winter, frankly admitting that during the same period of time it has been 67 per cent wrong. “Many of the good residents of Oakland County find difficulty in appreciating its marvelous growth during the last few years,” are the words of H.-W. Huttenlocher, who has connections, civic and otherwise, so he speaks with authority. In St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, in separa _ ton for a cataract operation on Oct. 28 is Floyd Andrews, ’- Chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. Recently voted Oakland County 1955 Corn King, Jay Cox tells me that he did §Qothing anybody else could not do with hard work and proper attention to seed, soil conditions, fertiliza- tion, weed fighting and other essentials. Crocus plants are blooming in October for ’ Mrs. Leroy R. Smith of Waterford, who .planted the bulbs last spring on her mother’s grave in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. The migration flight of geese at - ‘The Jack Miner Bird Sanctuary, 33 miles southeast of Windsor; will be at its height during the next three weeks. The best time to be there is for the four’ o’clock flight that takes place daily. There is no admission charge, no solicitation for funds —just thousands of honkers. After we've séen him risk his life many times as school crossing guard at the busy intersection of the Dixie Highway and Sash- abaw Road, Herb Sweet is in Pontiac General Hospital, following serious injuries—in a fishing accident. One of a pair of pet cats in the family of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Bingaman of Waterford was killed by an automobile as the other watched. The survivor was an interested mourner at the “funeral” and burial conducted by the children, and now sleeps on the grave. ¢ In a deep quandary are the family of Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Waterman of Walled Lake. They wonder if possession stil} is nine points of the law. While on a vacation trip, a pair of squirrels stored four bushels of nuts in their garage. Legal ques- tion: Who owns the nuts? SEE Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sharp. of 608 West Huron St.; fifty-third wedding anniversary. ‘Avi and the Man David Lawrence Says: How Can Research Fund Make Sure Browder Is Not Withholding Red Data? WASHINGTON — There's some- thing strange and mysterious about * the case of Earl Browder, secre- tary general of the Commumst Party in’ America from 1929 to 15, who, it is announced, has. been hired by “The Fund for the Republic” at a substantial salary year for part of his time as “source of information and raw “The Fund for the Republic” is one of the so-called “liberal” or- ganizations, financed by the Ford Foundation, and one of the cries of protest raised by the “left wing” is that the government uses paid informants or pays ex- Communists as witnesses to testify in trials involving Communist problems. But so far as can be discov- ered here, there is no case on record in which,.the government has ever pald money to any person while he himself was under indictment, There is pending against Brow- der a criminal indictment accus- ing him of perjury. WHY RELUCTANCE? But the curious aspect of the matter is that if Browder, who claims to have forsaken the: Com- munist Party, has done so, why should he hesitate to furnish all the information he possesses to his own government?, He was summoned a few days ago to tes- tity before the Senate subcommit- tee on internal security in execu- tive session. He was under oath. He is reported to have refused to give any information of sub- stance—and, of course, in such-a refusal, he is protected against prosecution under the Fifth Amendment to ,the~ Constitution. ¥ * *- Again and again it is said that the Federal Bureau‘ of Investigg- tion has endeavored to presuade Browder to give under oath the history of the Communist Party as Browder knows it—the very _ material sought by “The Fund . for the Republic*—but he has de- clined to do so, The question naturally arises whether “The Fund for the Re- spublic’’ can be sure that it is getting complete information from a man Who declines to testify un- der oath before his, own govern- ment. Various attempts have been made in recent years to have Browder make a clean breast of what he knows. There have been suggestions that geome charitable foundation grant money to fi- nance him during the - period when he devotes his whole time to refreshing his recollection of what happened when he was in command of the Communist Party in this country. These efforts collapsed because those to whom Browder talked became convinced he was holding back the key parts of the story. Browdet’s position is that the Communist Party never engaged in espionage while he was con- nected with it. Maybe he was unaware of that phase but, if so, he should not object to telling who he met at meetings from 1929 to 1945 and what they said, and what officials of the American govern- ment or other governments were i AND THIS IS MOMMY'S = LITTLE in consultation with him and when and under what-circ - It will be recalled that, due | to a feud inside the Communist | Party in this country, Browder was ousted in 1945 but he later went to Moscow, where he re- ceived a warm welcome, His perjury ease stems from an allegation that he made a false statement in connection with some immigration documents relating to his wife's alleged par- ticipation in the -Communist Party. His wife died within the past year, _Up to now Browder, hes refused ts copabiie sin tak iw ints: ment. He insists he jis not a Communist now and insists also that from 1929 to 1945, when he was head of the Communist Party, there was nothing relating to sub- version or espionage going on with his knowledge. It is, indeed, an unsolved mystery, and some of- ficials are still hopeful that Browder some day will come through with the complete story of what did happen. (Copyright 1955, Now. Nerk Wosald Tribune ine.) ‘Exercise Break’ Urged - to Prevent Varicose Veins By WILLIAM BRADY, M., D. When veins anywhere in the body are swollen, dilated or enlarged they are called varicose veins. The superficial veins of, the legs are most frequently varicose, particu- larly in women, more particularly pregnant women and most particu- larly women who sit or stand many hours daily without an exercise break at two or 2'g hour intervals. Exercise break? Come, come, now, you know what a coffee break is, don’t you? And even if you never indulge in it you must know what exercise Js, A break means a mid-forenoon, noon, and/or mid afternoon ten table, bench or counter and get your heels up higher than your head, in one way or another. Preferably standing on your head, high kicking, lying on your shoulders riding an imagi- nary bicycle upside down, doing forward rolls or, if you are feeble, just lying on your back with your feet on the mantel. — If there's no mantel within reach prop ’em on the nearest desk, counter, chair, table or whatnot. Only so you keep em elevated for at least three minutes. BRISK WALK Better than any of these ways of taking a load off your tired veins (the weight of a tall column of blood which is no longer sup- ported by the valves in the veins) is a brisk walk around the block— not a drag nor a stroll] nor a saun- er. = * * * Varicose veins in the spermatic cord constitute what is called vari- cocele; Varicose veins inside or outside the rectal orifice constitute what is called hemorrhoids (piles). Everything said above about pos- ture and .exercise applies to these conditions as well as to dilated veins in the legs, The great doctors of yesteryear philosophized about the state of the “vital rubber’’—the elasticity of blood vessels. For instance Dr. Osler said, in his famous Practice, that the onset of arte- riosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) primarily upon the quality of the arterial tissue (vital rubber) which the individ. tear te which he has subjected This is a neat way to blame grandfather, but it doesn’t mean so that the accuracy of their judg- ment was not subject to proof or disproof by, say, precise chemical test or X-ray examination. This explains why ‘gout’? was so com- mon in the 19th century and is so _ rare today, * s * For the pamphlet on - Varicose Veins and Varicose Ulcer send a stamped, self-addressed .envelope. If you ask also for the booklet The Calcjum Shortage, enclose 25c in addition. If you ask for the pamphlet Young Folks and Old Folks, enclose 10c in addition. Signed letters, not more tha or 100 words long. pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease, diag nosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Wu y, if @ stamped self addressed envelope is sent to the - tiac Press, Pontiac, Mich. _ (Copyright 1955) community _ The setting up of the framework REP. MARTIN Dies forecasts more sabotage. 26 Years Ago HURRICANE BATTERS Cuba. SHIRLEY TEMPLE film, ‘Little Miss Marker’; banned in Den- mark. ; NAM, C. of C. Don’t Rate Special Legal Privileges ; ; : i B it z tl oe | ca C. has special privileges, created by statute to be sole or exclusive bargaining agents for any one. Neither the NAM nor the U. S Chamber was granted any exemp- tion from regulation by the anti- trust statutes nor by judicial de- cision, ° * . * On the contrary, while no statu- tory- mention ig made of such ex- emption by unions, the impact of the U. S. Supreme Court in the Hutcheson decision in 1941 tends to give such qa status to unions. -Whatever the merits or de- merits of these voluntary asso- ciations of businessmen and com- panies may be, neither the NAM nor the C.. of C. is authorized by law te compel individuals or firms to join, nor can any busi- Ress associations ye mem- bers of the right to resign at any time, Top spokesmen for both the AFL put getting rid of the and the “right to work’ statutes in 18 states high on their agenda in connection with the big labor In the. future of the American labor movement, controversy over these legislative acts to regulate unions and limit their authority will be lively. RIGHT TO WORK Socalled “right to work” laws . are designed to prevent denial = employment to an. individual be- union “objective of setting up a “union shop,” in which all eligi- Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE I pray I shall not leave this world .. . With a dishonored name I hope no wrong will then be lett... For which I ath to blame . « « However great or old the sin « «+ That may be charged to me . . » May God forbid that .it has left . . . A lasting injury . . will be glad to suffer when... My life is at its end... But may no guilt of mine affect ... A relative or friend . . . May no one ever be disgraced ... By something 1 have done . . . But may my sins be hidden then .. . Beneath the set- ting sun... Not to escape my punishment . . . The hour I depart . « » But only that my errors will - « « Not hurt another heart. (Copyright 1955) Smiles We could stand fishermen telling” tall tales if they'd just keep ‘em short. * * * .Lots of men are slaves to fash- jon mainly because they have grown daughters. ep Case Records of a Psychologist: Difference Between Success, Failure. Dr. ‘Menninger says psychol- ogy counts for about 80 per cent of your success in life. Other leading psychologists agree that Dr. Menninger is not exaggerating to any great degree. So scrapbook these true office cases which give you ac- cess to the raw data from cur- rent American life. And raise your popularity rating by using the tests described below. By DR, GEORGE W. CRANE Case P-371: Dr. William C. Men- ninger, aged 56, is one of the world’s leading psychiatrists. Recently he was asked “Why do men fail?" * * LJ And he replied that “the differ- ence between success and f depends on knowing how to get along with other people.” That's why I launched this psy- chology column 20 years ago. That's why Dale Carnegie wrote his popular little book. That’s why Dr. Norman Vin. cent Peale and other leading nating survey some years ago concerning the amount of money earned by Purdue University en- gineering graduates. Taking them 5 years after grad- uation, he compared the salaries of the brilliant, Phi Beta Kappa graduates with those who barely - made passing grades. The brilliant engineers averaged $150 per. year more pay than the “C" men. * * s But when he contrasted the en- gineers who had “rated tops in personality traits, such as personal charm and popularity, with their introvertive, shy classmates, what do you suppose was the result? As you may have guessed, the popular engineers drew about $1,000 more per year in salary. Se the diligent “A” students - excelled the “C” students by $15@ in annual salaries. : But the friendly fellows had al- ‘Is Getting Along With Other People that of the 3,607 employes he analyzed who had lost their jobs, 77 per cent were fired for psy- chological reasons, such as bad manners and tactlessness. So make psychology your hobby, regardless of the type of work at which you labor. Serapbook these practical cases from my office files. They are usually drawn from my of- fice practice, so you gain the benefit of figuratively looking over my shoulder and getting in- formation at first hand. The cardinal secret for being popular and winning friends, con- sists of tooting the other fellows horn, instead of your own. Visualize all your associates as tattooed across the chest at birth with this statement: “I want to feel important!” Then make them feel important by honest compliments. Please no- tice that I never advise flattery, A compliment is an honest statement of praise for some ” virtue that is obvious and merits commendation. You. can even praise an enemy with all sincer. ity if you are willing to look for one“ of his good points, Send for my “Tests for Employ- ers & Employes”, enclosing a stamped return envelope, and 20 cents (non profit), They are widely used in indus- Le ee ee ee eee ‘ dj € Bea. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955: ae ee a ke ? ° Pontiac Press Circulation Beaches All Time High e ‘ ite October 1940 « $3.479 . . i / Oetober 1945 88.252 | October 1950 ANB YESTERDAY, * a THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1953" bosis yeah f ae hie eAtdriw pale She I ie \ ; ie) cc | pad “ y * TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR. JUNIOR EDITORS| Whangdoodle New Mexico Antimagnetic 17-Jewel Watch The watch for active men with stainless steel expan- sion band. a a nificent watch &t a great savings. Shock: rolls off like water off a ducks. back! | Compare Values Es*¢ CREDIT | Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. Arrow E- ~ : California After a Normal Day Are You | TOO TIRED? | Get Energy - Enthusiasm With NUTRI-VIM ! U s Sunrise Rocking R- 1- MONTH New Merice = { NUTRI-VIMS HORSES! HORSES! HORSES! The Western Horse 5. Before the Ice age, horses roamed over the North American conti- nent. Then for some reason, they all disappeared. There were no more horses here until the Spaniards came to Mexico in the early 16th cen- tury. ‘ Some of the horses belonging to the Spaniards escaped or were left behind. They became the ancestors of the wild horses the Indians eventually tamed and used for hunting, making war and moving the tribes. As great cattle ranches developed, horses were used to ride the ranges and herd the cattle, The wild horses were tamed, their stock | | improved through the years and now we have the splendid Western horses. These are the horses you see at the rodeo. | i Here is Dick, who lives on a ranch, and Lope-a-long, his Palomino | horse. The Palomino is a beautiful golden colored horse, with white mane and tail. , i Paste this picture on cereal box cardboard and color with crayons, | | Cut out the circle. Cut around the top of the horse and rider along the | dotted line; and fold back the upper part of the circle. Now the horse will rock back and forth, or go galloping across the ; A Guaranteed Solution To That Tired Problem When ystem lacks strong. red blood and is vitami carved you took Ballons, sarvewn, tvlichie ... Wesk bleed q Rid yoyr system of that “DEAD TIRED” | range for you. | Around the edges are some famous brands and the states where | | they are seen. A Palomino, however, would not likely be branded. | ‘ TOMORROW: Ponies a 435,000,000, tobacco $437,845,000, cotton $1,422,000,000, butter $165,- Farm Price Suppor = ten, eter ‘Loses $100 Million sss =m BSS | WASHINGTON W®—The Agricul. Hotelman’s Wife Dies | | ture Department reported today it} GRAND RAPIDS ® — Mrs. | lost $100,563,000 in July and Au-| Joseph H. Brewer Jr., the former | gust on farm price support opera- | Jacqueline Denise Campau, 41, | | tions, This was $6,182,000 greater died Me ge mond at her home in’ J | than the loss in the corresponding Hopewell Junction, N.Y. Her hus- | months last year. | band is president of the Morton The losses stem from the dis-| Hotel Corp., and son of the late posal of surplus products. | Joseph H, Brewer, Grand Rapids The department also reportéd financier, Mrs, Brewer was the its investment in surplus farm) great-granddaughter of Antoine | products went up again in August.|Campau, whose brother Louis ' Investments included: Corn $1,-| founded Grand Rapids, feed =) 9 Mes. () 4 Bey Sepply Send Chock o¢ MO. Seve C.0.D. Cherges. Addrows Chy ROBERTS VITAMIN PRODUCTS COLLEGE PARK STATION UVETROIT 21 MICHIGAN ° EDERAL Pontiac Leadership Celebration Dollar for Dollar you $ave more in Pontiac Stepped-up performance is yours in this all-new TV for 1956... 21” MOTOROLA 239% The all-new 4-Star Power Panel is more efficient than any convention- al TV chassis. New Accurashade provides widest range of black-to- whites. Aluminar 90° picture tube increases contrast and brilliance. New Golden Voice speaker accompanies picture. 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OCTOBER 21.1955 FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. # — It} lin the night, setting off tear gas, ' was a tearful scene as employes | which filled the aaling. ‘Tae Romance Cannot Thrive on Chipped China ss3222 = neers are using “hot dirt” in the form of dirt serge —— By PHYLLIS BATTELLE To keep women «from making Miss Stupell, “that china, glass, “They're always changing presi- pensive to be beautiful, -Just | ipa obese and how best to! NEW YORK (INS) — “Women such ‘psychological boo-boos, Car-| and linens have been elevated to’ dents down there, you know,” she | the table in lovely colors, correct- ove it, ‘The procedure involves | “© psychologically lopsided. They | ole has just opened, on New York's | the ‘couturier standard, But after; says, “It's rather exciting. roa coordinated, with no conflicting. — always gyp the one they love.” ' <7, sireet, what is unmistakably all, a table setting is more import- for business, too.” patterns in china, glass and eal | i i racing carbon -through the tement ppear t ' ‘ : ~* Fa ug Ahsan icieg, rpm od the a table-settings setup | ant—Dior will forgive me—than a! By making a woman aware al | yer. ti Sg 2 Hot Dirt Aids Test , NEW YORK — Research engi- FOR THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION OF DRAPERY , him? Vanderbilts and Rockefellers buy | FORGET THE Foop = wk weartien, ‘be many table settings at. Stupell's “No matter how mediocre a doesn't expect his wife to hand stupefying prices, Haile Selassie woman is as a cook, her husband him the world on a silver- plat- is an old customer, and Carole has. will be calmed and soothed by a ter. But muffins on a silver-plate furnished dinnerware for the last dinner served beautifully,” is her platter . , .is that too much to three presidents of Cuba. ‘opinion, “And it needn't be ex- ask?" OPEN MONDAY -- FRIDAY 10 ‘til separate salons where a woman @elight and loveliness, they get | may rest her feet and her mink | married,” Miss Stupell goes on, | and sip a cup of tea, while she is. still referring to the lopsided sex, being advised in what color tureen “and what de they de then? to serve her lobster bisque, They put away the candies and | “ * * the loveliness and mark it ‘for | “‘It is the first time,”’ PENNEY'’S fe Guir bustande cn chipped | ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! “After a courtship full of can- : has just caught his nose in a|in the world | dress.” the importance ot correct dining! 1. ine pride. she will most FABRIC—BE. SURE TO SHOP door slammed by a girl for whom | ELEGANT MANNER A costs. more, {decor (i.e. displaying it fone " ee " he bought champagne. but this ; * sy ve, © on * ltantly, and charging important | UMely receive some lovely wed . ; They said it could WTAE | is not the case, It was uttered| 9 ne Complete table settings in| when done up in this splendid | orices) Miss S. moves to overeanns| 208 oe haar me: Renceinel: FA | ey couldn't be done by Mi Carole St shrewd the. same elegant manner that a new manner, Gold place settings, the trend tomad wntnaty- peareway again—do not stash them away for | | Pan cllbvamie ’ upell, . French couturier sells little thou-| such as one Sophie Tucker has, dinners,’ and bring the romance | COMPany. After all, whos more’ ws Q " sand-dollar frocks, she features| cost $1,000, | back «into wedded life, | important in your life: Them or Ue ALUMINUM TUMBLERS 11 N. PERRY proclaims china and plastic plates." Miss Stupell calls this sheer) cruelty. Not only. to husbands, | but also to herself, for she is ped expert in dining decor, Or, A she puts it, “I am in pe: table settings.’ Rockefeller.Is Mum in Lawyer Fee Suit NEW YORK @®—Winthrop Rocke- | feller, in a’ pretrial examination of a suit brought by a Boston attorney, has refused to answer) | several questions pertaining to his life while married to Barbara (Bobo) Rockefeller, The attorney, Joseph Sax, is su- "ing Rockefeller for $100,000 as the cost of legal services he said he rendered for Mrs. Rockefeller. Sax contends his services culmin- ated in a five-million-dollar settle- ment on Mrs, Rockefeller by her | husband. The couple were married in 1948. Mrs. Rockefeller obtained a Reno divorce last year after getting the settlement, Three City’ Residents ‘Given Amvets Posts | Jacolyn W. Smith of 32 Bagley | St. has been named state historian of the Michigan Amvets, it was announced yesterday by state commander Edwin L. Numbers. of Detroit. Anthony Renne, 645 Fourth, has been selected for the Parliamen- | PARK Jewelers 1 NORTH SAGINAW FE 4-1889 Blended to keep their flufls nap: SAVE *50% On a NEW 8 Gu. Fi. CROSLEY SHELVADOR with freezer chest ond butter keeper, 5 year war- ranty. | yeor free service || tariaw committee, and Richard | ond delivery in Oakland || Moore, 131 Ascot, is on the Honor County. and Awards committee. Reg. $239.95 | city Doctor to Attend |New Orleans Meeting Donald Smith, M.D. of 135) Wenonah Dr., will take part- in! the 3ist annual meeting and 28th scientific session of the American | 331 S. Broadway a Association scheduled for My 32-3711 2-28 in New Orleans, the | : Leke Orion | Saichigan Heart Assn., a United | Fund agency, has announced. YOURSELF BLANKETS COLORS: Hunter green. flame red, DACRON®-FILLED COMFORTER “ e = . ad ad |< e “ z e e4 0 ° ° * ‘ maize, leat green, eche pink, surf 2” —_— % : Retains its warmth because it E blue, lilac, peacock. Acetate bound. 3% iss, 3 t tl fl ' These are Penney's big success-story blankets—bought up by the “e stays permanently Tu y hundreds from their very first introduction to our customers! 4 5 Here it is at Penney’s...the long-awaited Durafleece is no ordinary blend. To 10% wool, Penney's adds 90° comforter you can keep as laundry-fresh as of a very special rayon, a rayon set in a permanent wave! Subject your sheets! Wonderful Dacron filling fluffs s this rayon to water and it doesn’t flatten, lose its spring, comes out right up in washing... sculptured rosebud curly as ever! Result—Penney's Durafleece blankets wash rich and print nylon cover needs no ironing... and aa fluffy, retain their warmth year after year. Double-woven, graceful stitching holds filling firmly in « @ Moves silently at « | place. Air-light, superbly warm, Dacron 90 on nylon offers all the luxury of the traditional com- touch ylon rollers | forter with modern practicality undreamed 72 by 84 of till now. Rosebuds on white, pink, maize, blue, mint green. inches cut size @ Gracefully fluted. shatter proof panels @ Fits all standard size tubs 9 5 : EASY AS 1-2-3 3 , ! 1. ait sits bette trace te 2 Just place the already e+- id veomhied dems inte the track. ‘<2| IMAGINE! Hine, fleeey I wool blanket | at this low price! Everything Is Included— Nothing Else to, Buy! 3 Juet attach the adjustable . flange to side walle with “Bel-Aire” Model coment and insert top track (Glas-Clear) assembly. a “Stardust Model (Silver Speckled) : c, ty OW Ni : a 36 SS. TELECRAP | a ° . * +4 ] ros i { ore ee * . ve , th ill . 7 : j << a en ate i ue % ef - a 7 ee ee rer eee a ae x aya eal , H SAC. MICHIGAN iy PLAID PAIR .. . REALLY FALLING LEAVES WARM WOOL BLANKET : i _ 1 have enclosed check a I have enclosed check or t : 2 BLANKETS iN ONE HIGH-STYLE JACQUARD! A : 1 money order for $37.95 plus money order for (494.95, plus #7) f 3 ¢ MPLE 90-inch LENGTH ' a a ve “perder” Mead-soupee, 21 Loomedin one long piece, a So decorative you'll: hate to Plenty of length for com- : H | whole 168-inches, this plaid 98 cover it with a bedspread! fortable tuck-in, plenty of H = Eas. t wis gay tae pont: [ ] 2o0 1 om cor moon E pair folds over—gives you the * Leaf. design is stylec to smart warmth for: chill nights 9() 5 fas, Seem pian toe tow, 1) mse .s, ghee sas ed. of Bipheteng eid eeuletine modern taste—the blanket, @ Samed ins dneaeaen ae . ae ' in-between air pocket, 31, velvety-soft, warm blend of: : 3% pounds, SS tuchea wide: 1 NAME . Me } pounds, Cotton, rayon an rayon, nylon, wool. Extra 5-year guarantee against > wil aed eee Ley ote e ceresseoudendees wool, 72x84 ins. folded | long, _90- inches. 3% pounds.72 by 90 bashes moth damage. 72x90 inches ete wd | | Reemaeccrrtere nt cee nestisiciaremspae ie cid || RMSE se eRe mee meee "hh ; ot * i } ‘ ih Bie al yr € bedhead ee ‘ Z . Y © Re te ice... cess, ZONE... .STATE. . 5.0065 nt : me ACURA: Sis ilies ic Mpls isis sag ] eee — 1 t ory * Paden f ” j ss + fod Cocos ieschnalenlaaitanteaten tankentaalealaiadanialatadaneketateteated -—- ' ae ‘oy THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 ee _KLEVEN On the Marelane question he _“Ah, yes,” Alexey said. : | LEWIS: > fine furniture LEWIS — fine furniture Presented exclusively at LEWIS" ... that exciting new Profile K2 Mirror Plate size: 36W 32H Overall: 38'2W 3542H K2 Dresser 52 W 21D 32H K70 Desk with White Naugehyde Top 54W 330.35H K80 Same Desk with Smoke Leather Top K71 Lady’s Desk with Walnut, Charcoal or White Tambour Top 34W 26120 3442 H $105 145 @ i: f sz ? E He i H if F i : : HE 1 SHOP eo ee le a takes 2 F. : Fs : 4 Fs i “There | ! : 2 & EF i 5 ig Ht 1 +) 7 ‘cosmic What's with TV atoumd Moe ? asked. farm experts through the U, S., via ed the Metropolitan Museum of Art. | clubs have been formed, far, | there, and what amounts to fan 5 * * a. 2 the standard DR. H. BUSSEY cheeks. expense of their factories, offices Optometrist “Who?” he asked, apologetically. and schools. It's a hard life, he Eyes Examined He wanted to see everything in | "8ured- Sem Recetas of 0 ©. Gage Next te State Theater Er America FE 4-521! DR. HAROLD BUSSEY, a EYES areas " important. as BOOKS to your children’s learning! MV See That They Are FULLY Equipped for School This Year There was no hesitation. “Dean- na Durbin,” he said, with the hint \ Frem cake ian eee “Who is your favorite?” I asked of another ear nn a depend on his hosts, he granted. through U. 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Not-at LEWIS’! - PARK FREE! | Rear of Store | cee ee ‘gdtaacand tela yas, SP ie a EE NN TT ee NORE Wey eee ee arn ee dials leenaliias hoon: ates a \ es / ‘ } pA 4 eis bead yf, Laps i ae * t ipod e ‘ t i ‘ ts , Fs , | n ear j : wy i $ I | 2 : | ¥ * ¥RE is F 5 4 | Wut Disneys True Life Adventures ‘AQUATIC ROUNO-UP “ee 2 ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. _FRIDAY, OCTOBER NR APR Eee Ee | Fresh Evidence | gm - ) Found in Probe | Cases on Voluntary Aid to Government Aired; Businessmen Cited ite weer teeget WASHINGTON ®—Rep. Celler | (D-NY) said today House investi- gators have assembled new evi- dence of what he called “‘question- able” practices by businessmen serving the government in an un paid voluntary capacity. ae Celler’s Judiciary subcommittee /resumes hearings next Tuesday on ithe government role of “WOCs" | —the modern version of “the old i style dollar-a-year man on loan from business ‘without compensa- Se PE SSI 2 ow ¢ THRESHER A PAIK OF ~ — * ee SHARKS CIRCLE A SHOAL OF FISH, VIOLENTLY © tion.” newsmen, Celler said hig subcom- mittee will air a number of indi- vidual cases demonstrating ‘‘incon- sistencies” in having businessmen serve the government while re- maining on their company sa hh * * * “The evidence will clearly show that these men, while working for the government on a voluntary basis, were aiding their own com- panies,” he said. Celler has also accused the | Business Advisory Council of anti- | | trust. violations. SS . ar" tp THRASGHING THEIR GREAT TAILS TO HERD THE PREY TOGETHER, TO PROVIVE A FIGH DINNER FOR TW Israel Wants US. | Security Guarantee JERUSALEM ® —Premier “We now feel more urgently en- titled than ever before to a secur- J ity treaty with the United States which would go a. long way to wards buttressing our security and deterring from aggression the forces of evil,’ Sharett gaid. principle, as a direct, urgent issue and one which can now be resolved without waiting for further prelim- inary developments.” _«Michigan’s lakeshore line of 3,121 miles is the longest coastline | of any state. in the union and equal to the Atlantic coastline from 0. King Features Syndiaw Julia Maniu Death ‘Confirmed by Paper NEW YORK (®—The New York “Our hope is that the U.S. gov- | Times in a dispatch from Buchar- | ernment will regard the idea of a | est said today that fo security treaty with Israel, which an Premier Gheorghe * atarescu has long been under discussion and | had confirmed that famed Peasant which ‘was recently affirmed in| party leader Juliu Maniu. died in Romani- 1952. in a Communist prison. He was 79. The dispatch from Times cor- respondent Jack Raymond said, Ana Pauker, former Communist | foreign minister who was purged | from her government post and! from her place on the Romanian) Communist party’s Central Cun | The BAC is an advisory group including top-drawer executives from the nation’s largest corpora- tions, as well as economists and business experts. It advises the ecretary of commerce on national economic affairs. 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Support the United Fund Give Once for Al ae re? t f f t __THE PONTIAC PRESS Your United Fund Need a Your Help — Now! i , ‘ / FRIDAY, OCTOBER PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, | a Z PR. > hoe Pare wher unwillingly returned to school Wednesday after enjoying -their Big news is the game tonight with Saginaw Arthur Hill High, the first Saginaw Valley Conference encounter on home ground, and the ' %, + Sad t 21, 1955 } IS Students |first home game in two weeks. A pep rally was held this afternoon for the game. With Halloween less than two weeks away, the Retailing and Office Club has been making deco- cmnien oxctig Oe a rations for. their nycide and Hal- | GROUPS ACTIVE Speech, art and vocal depart- ments, along with the home ec department have been “and are hard at work. trigg Ayame he Pontise Press Pactos COMING — Members of the Pon-| paper. bats, while Carol Bolton hands Barbara La- HALLOWEEN'S, tiac High School Retailing and Office Club make Hal- loween decorations in preparation for their Hayride Point cutouts to try for effect. The club, one of the larger ones at the school, was formed to give retail- and ‘party to be held Oct. 29. Left to right, seated, | ing students, who attend class half-days, a chance Elaine Hamilton ané Estelle Rognaldson cut crepe | for extra curricular activities. Area Schools Set Homecomings, Dances \is swinging into action, after its | evening. After the two-day MEA> vaca-; tion, students in schools through- | out the Pontiac and Oakland Coun- | ty area Were back in the stride | of, planning dances, homecomings and other activities. Queen of the Hom@coming to night at Walled Lake High School is Carole Lee Moyer, a -senior. | Joan Andrews is the senior at- téndant, Barbara Gilbert is the junior, and Kay. Armstrong is sophomore attendant. The queen ang ber court will | be crowned at Walled Lake's | athletic. field just before . the game with Farmington, at 8 p. m. tonight. Rennie Dion, mascot of the Varsity Team, will place | the crown on the Carole’s head. . A pep rally will be held at 7 p.m. at the field, preceding the game. There will be a big bon- fire, and cheerleaders will lead the rally, Homecoming festivities will in- clude~a gala dance, sponsored by the senior class. * ae oe Six Walled Lake students par- ticipated in. the Pontiac Symphoriy Concert Wednesday ; night. and Teresa Perani, AT WEST BLOOMFIELD The Student Council at West loomfield High School is con- sidering the possibility of having a homecoming festival on Nov. 4. If it pans out; the affair would’ colorful uniforms and some ne w | max the two-day affair at the include a big dance and the crown- | props. White sweat’ shirts with | Homecoming Dance on Saturday in zg: of a queen, to be chosen through a contest. * A meeting of the Wayne-Oak- land Student Councils was held yesterday with Bloomfield’s Stu- dent Council as hosts. The Girls Athletic Association organizational meeting Sept. 29. Members 1 Art students realize Christmas is closer than yoy think, and are pre- |paring for it as they make and | silk- screen original Christmas ‘eards, i oe * a The informal fall vocal clinic to be held Nov. 7 is keeping vocal students hard at work practicing. The students took time out, though, last week to join all PHS students in a songiest assembly. DISPLAY EDIBLES “Sugar and spice and all things nice’’—that's what home ec proj- ects are made of as girls -display the best of their efforts in the lower front hall trophy cases for all to see, and for judging in the |. home ec. contest, Although the cross country team has finished its regular sea- son of » the boys will be hard at work for forthcoming meets, 3 Yesterday the Saginaw Valley meet was held, and the Albion In- vitational will be held tomorrow, A week from tomorrow the region- als will be held at. Birmingham, and the following Saturday the state meet will be held, . * @ Monday “PHS students will do their part to help in the United Fund drive as they contribute to the fund during their. third hour classes, ' Wayne University debaters meet at PHS Monday to debate the high school on free education, Monday > the Farmington and the PHS de- baters met. ,™ r Waterford Set for Homecoming Waterford Township High School is humming with activity as it prepares to hold its first Home- coming Oct. 28 and 29, Four major activities wilt high- light the célebration. A football game that Friday afternoon with Southfield will open the event on Waterford's field. A victory bon- ; fire is planned to follow in the “College Days,”’ a variety show Last, week, 16 girls went to Clar- '0 be held Friday night at 8:30, enceville for the All-Sports { , = j days * * J Play- is scheduled. Major GAA sports Charles Hartle and Don Parrish. for the season are volleyball, basketball and softball. WBHS will ,serve as hosts for the volleyball : playday. * * « WBHS cheerleaders have new hoods are set off with green slacks. Props such as green | Steering wheels with horns and ;somhe paddies complete the para- | phernalia. Varity Cheerleaders are Sandra Gidcomb, Louise Smits, Judy Bellows, Betty McPeake and Jean Randall, with Mrs. Jean Wa- ters as sponsor. te saa 9 Ww fA i Se They are Kathleen and Tom Dunn.) \jonday an eléetion of officers | Angelina STUDENTS GO SHOPPING — By JANET ENGLISH Highlighting the news from St. Michael High this week is the free day enjoyed by the student body today. The recent victory over the Rams merited this reward for Shamrocks. Before their field trip to a local supermarket last Thursday, mem- bers of the Economics Club elected Larry Maison leader-spokesman of the group and Janet English secre- as * * * This particular tour gave. t students an understanding of the operations of a supermarket and was also the completing factor in Consumer." Varsity cheerleaders chose the Junior Varsity Cheerleaders Thursday. The girls picked for _ the JV squad are. Pat Harbert, Betty Cronan, Gloria Barnowski, Jane Rindfuse, and Shelagh O'Rourke. : ' will feature 10th, With, and 12th graders, alumni, and faculty. Su- cents and alumni will compete for The Homecoming queen and ber six attendants will be chosen also on Friday evening. Only present Waterford High students are eligible to take part in the contest for queen. Bob Olsen's Band will help cli- ‘|night. This nine-piece' band from | the University of Michigan will play from 9-p.m. to midnight in | Waterford's gym. Replacing the annuf] school carnival, the Homecoming is spon- sored by the Student Council, with all students working on the vari- ous committees. 4 . YREPARE THANKSGIVING ASSEMBLIES 2 Fd At Lincoin Junior | Jones.do some heavy — % Sa &> (left to right) Cora Duke, Dennis Roberts, Gary MacDowell and Ann/ full swing, ‘ ( research during the script-writing stage of the High, the ninth grade Expression Class of Mrs. Mildred Wiersema is | production. The pageants, ‘Harvest Festivals yaa de World” will hard at work preparing two Thanksgiving assemblies. Above, students | be written, acted and produced by the group. Rehearsals are now in 22t Fred Plans | '3-Way Meeting Parent-Teacher - Student Night Slated Monday; Program Shapes Up By ANN SCHACHERN Student Council activities were the focal point for St. Frederick students this last -week. ‘ | Monday, Student Coiincil officers and representatives’ made plans for the parent - teacher - student meeting -which will be held next Monday in the parish hall. Officers from each class, the explanation of what their or- ganizations intend deing for the coming year, : Also scheduled to be heard from are the Teen Club and Student Council officers and ‘representa- tives, ; SKIT PLANNED . . For entertainment, the sopho- mores will put on the skit. which they performed at last Friday's pep meeting. Choral members of the senior class will sing two selec- tions under the direction vf in- structor Dominic Kline. ‘Following this program, the parents will have a chance to get | acquainted with the faculty mem- bers, t, only members of St. Frederick High School will be admitted to the weekly Friday | night teen-dances. Representa- | tives say that they hope to iron out this difficulty in the near future. Physics class journeyed to) Cranbrook this afternoon on their | first field trip of the year. | Seniors who will compete in the | National Merit Scholarship pre- | liminaries to be held Wednesday are James Duren, Michael Kopesik | Students Will Attend | Debate Clinic at UM More than 450 debaters from | 44 high schools in Michigan will | attend a debate clinic at the Uni-| versity of Michigan Saturday, Among them will be students | from Pontiac, Avondale, Lake | Orion, Holly, Goodrich,. Farming: | ton and Bloomfield Hills High Schools. The program will feature a morning discussion of the current | debate topic: “Resolved: That the’ Federal. government should guar- antee higher education to quali- | fied high school students by means | of annual grants to colleges and) universities.” Football Steals Show at Junior Highs The Lincoln Junior High School , slacks, ties, and. white shirts make , High, | Band has. been spending all its spare time these fall days prac- ticing marching, in preparation for its appearance at half-time at the football game between East- ern and LinciIn on Tuesday, Del- mar Benson will be the drum major, This will be the first appearance of the band in the new uniforms, The only difference between all | the city’s junior high uniforms are the hats, which come in the colors | strength, though, will come Nov. Wednesday afternoon and Thurs, of each school. Black shoes, socks,|2, when they play Lincoln Junior ' day, the outfit, with jackets of gray. Hats are the overseas type of blue and, gold. The ninth grade Expression Class is now rehearsing those two * Thanksgiving assemblies the whole school. is looking forward-to, - Washington Junior High ‘beat Jefferson 19-6 Wednesday in the game at Wisher Stadium. Next game will be Oct. 26 against |Wever. Real test of the Braves’ ‘a = Given Dental Treatment Cee ee j/ elected class officers last week. and Mary Kay Schlesky. Class Officers Named Lapeer High School students Named president of the senior class was Paul Cote. Darryl VanAlisburg is vice president, i The Home Ec class ‘made $26 | on that candy apple sale—sold 400 , apples, They're planning another sale inthe near future. “Grade school pupils at St. Fred-. erick’s are expecting brighter teeth and fewer cavities. The were Gail Babcock, secretary; and Mina Stocker, treasurer. Juniors elected Thomas Wilson, their study of ‘How to Be a Wise Members of the Economics Club at St. Michael High School get behind-the-scenes information on meat cuts during a field trip to one of the local supermarkets. The boys and girls St. Michael's Football Team Wins Holiday for Students As of last Tuesday, St. Michael's houses some 40 TV celebrities— well almost celebrities. Students took part in the TV Top 10 Tunes program over CKLW in Windsor at 5 p.m. Tuesday, and also got the opportunity to see a television program “from the inside." Pat Lane and Jim Barnowski were the winners of a subscription to a record magazine by success- fully completing the stunt of the day at the affair. are priced, and sales techniques, The ruling body of the re got a close view of modern retailing methods, with store and depart- ment managers explaining grades and types of merchandise, how they of job oppartunities existing now and methods of finding out which one an individual is best suited. : >. * « j "T . foment escet Pas a: ‘tl ie "OM PAINTING 18 GIFT—An Hills Students Deep in Exams But Social Activities Continue; Many Admire New Painting Although busily engaged in the six-week exams, Bloomfield Hills Due to lack of space,.for the finie to stop in- the entranceway | and admire the new oil painting of ‘in time for the dedication Sunday. | The painting is a gift of the class of 1955. * * # And in spite of the rush to bone up on textbook work, there was time, too, for some social activi- ties. The junior class dance .com- mittee met Wednesday night at. | the home of Betsy Arnoldi. Posters and programs were made for their first dance of the year, entitled “Autumn Leaves,” Nov. 4. The senior girls recently en- Birmingham, with a baby. shower at the home of Judy Duncan. Mrs. president; Dale Coller, vice presi- dent; Shelly Sullivan, secretary; and Doris Ritch, treasurer. Richard deBeaybien heads the | sophomore class; Douglas Muir is vice president; Colleen Kilgren, secretary, and Sharon Rinn, treas- uret. Freshmen elected Weldon Winger, president; Butch McKillen, | Fernelius was formerly their class ‘adviser and an English instructor at the school, ‘ * * Clarence Luchtman has = an- notinced the members of the tripe trio, known as “The Jills.” . The group includes: Mary Lou Fuller, Sue Quinn, Letitia Pinney, Cath- erine Booth, Janet Richards, given fluoride treatments last vice. president; Mary Kay Wit | Phyllis Steele, Jacqueline Tromb- | i Henderson liams, secretary and Charlene , secretary, ley Sally Grisinger and Barbara Woolson, THIRTEEN — Varsity Club, and the Choral | of the Vaughan School was presented to the in the stairway ee ee Gn Bloomfield Hills High School last week by the at the main entrance. The painting is the work of parents, and then of 1955, Above, Eugene L. Johnson (right), superin-| Mrs. Charles Brashares of Jackson, sister of Dean which will be held Saturday, | tertained Mrs, Earl Fernelius of! JEAN . LIIMATTA Waterford Township High School students. put forth their last ef- forts. today as the class «books were closed for the first marking | period, .With their eyes on the number one spot, the Skippers, now in second place in the IL League, ‘kicked off to Berkley this after- ‘High School students still found noon on the home field. A pep meeting this afternoon sponsored by ‘the cheerleaders, gave the ifeam and their supoorters the | Vaughan School, which was hung {ighting spirit. Lawyers, doctors, models, and many other business people will take charge of Waterford's classes next Wednesday as the according to vocational choices. Busy planning the Career Night to be held at Bloomfield Nov. 9 are Nancy Schack, James Wager, Bill Cox, and Diane Craig. Al- most all of Michigan's colleges will be represented and the stu- nar No tendent of Bloomfield Hills schools, and Irving E.| LaRue, French instructor at the new school. WTHS Faculty Prepares to Grade Students’ Work ne will have a chance to talk \with the representatives in the ) afternoon and evening. : | With $23,000 in pledges, the $25,- 000 campaign to light the athletic field is almost over the top! The seniors and faculty hope to | become better acquainted tonight fas a “get together” party is held South Shore Dr, The Atom Smashers Chemistry - Club. held their first meeting last week under sponsorship of David Klinke. Newly elected officers are Dennis Johnsen, president; Warren Miksch, vice president; Renna Goschke, sec- retary; Ruth Goodwin, treasur- er; and Carole Fortin, librarian. ‘Future Nurses’ Club held. their ‘first. official meeting last night at 7:30 in the high school. Nancy Newman, president, led the plan- ning for a trip to a hospital in the near future. Miss Sue Hough- | ton sponsors the club. * WORKING FOR LIGHTS — Working hard in the Waterford ship High School drive for $25,000 to secure lights and fencing fur athletic field are‘ members of the Student Council committee @-r). Hickman, Judy Boardman, Janet Hudson, Bob Hope and Jerry | at Larry Sampson's home on 4160 said how deeply he appreciated | Cite ie E ees EE Ege BAS if a 3! Abs Ei ” him’ just before his speech Sent. | Liosech oF the | whole speech. * | speech before I gave it,” “corpses” are chugging and puff- | ing their way around in Michigan's | [@ | booming railroad business. a billboard advertising the bank. | The painter did such a good job ° 2 i | \ oF ‘ ud ie { ¢ } Y, -4 or ee 1 - / f f ' /. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1955 ( m gr 0 gy to the roundhouse * on steep grades that f ip f diesels climb wth : W allace Refutes Truman ‘Memoir Comment (Corpses Stea aaa ; : fore while ot leant, coe wurrs ‘ SOUTH SALEM, N.Y. o-— be. eaid in Ae interviéw he sshd ieee uabitias ‘wlth Yao Prodl-| ti Ges aeolteeias Seana joie New York Times of Sept. 13, 1946, Th St { old iron horse is what it used to GENUINE BLUE WHI , Henry A. Wallace has cited rec-| would “refuse to get into any ar-/ dent, I went over page by page, at that point, boned an ie” New Yank Times of Se 1 18 if ale we eee oe ieee Ct. DIAMOND + ortis which he claims show that | gument or controversy” but) with him, my Madison Square Gar- ey wet Michigan * former President Truman gave) would confine his reply “to the | den .speech, to be Sept. 12 Old “Iron Horse’ Chugs | scene, : po by Wallace pope Fo Prong ay? on een in Sep-| right os “Yes, et is erg pom Bravely On as Railroad Fore Clock Perple w | Own | 5 . es, , ae Semel 68 ry et ee pernatos Business Booms Prva Cc ty Gi "a wea * commerce, raneeke —< PRESIDENT EMPHATIC | - onsciou itiz ¢ ‘Truman, in an installment of bis _in the Washington Post said a re- oe —— want — Ma ant ‘ JACKSON « — Some lively one sks tad ae era PAY ONLY °9.00 Now : > L] J { 3 1S at Medison square srruman said he approved| At, the time, Wallscé’ said. the The old steam locomotive, slat-| SePicting the clock ttt Cine bank 00 Weekls | “truman said he had fio time the whole speech,’ Wallace said/PTesident was “very emphatic in ed for the scrap heap with the |, complain about its time being | : to “read the speech even in part’ | the Sept. 15 story said, ee Ses en ee change to diesel engines, has won and added: He also cited the Washington | ese words from the speech: ‘I a reprieve because of soaring) 4 thur B. Eisenhower, a bank “To make things worse, when |News for Sept. 14, 1946, as saying|%™_ neither anti-British, nor pro- F | business demands. | vice president and brother of Pres- Wallace delivered the . speech, | that Truman “said he had read oo ar antRunden Ser And cr Lanta tttecens | ident Eisenhower, said: attack on our | the whole speech and approved it | PFO ‘Wallace said that when he gave — ese havey te see | We're going t6 have to put a the he added after the their favorite engines still in) action. real clock there.” * he talked to me in this vein and with our foreign policy.” speech alter f | words “nor Russian” — “and , as eee © went be wi ae anetine Ot seal Sy eet hat ba Gers Sa when President seebtiactincn atiatt thai Po aslehpeton oh gin gvery TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER | WON'T ARGUE 10, 1946, two days ‘before the | *Tuman read these words, he said lined diesel is more efficient, | its 22,221,000 population is in a OPEN EVERY | Wallace, from his farm here last x ay Teanien fe py a. but know nothing can replace | narrow belt along the Nile, most | M—L( CML IEELE the excitement of the steam en- [of the country being desert. ~ . * * @ Wallace said this was the only SAVE WASTE F We Are Now Paying NEWSPAPERS . 230». 00 4. MAGAZINES . . 50¢ ; Scrop lron—Junk Cors—Structurel Stee! . WE ALSO PURCHASE TIRES AND TUBES ee ee grapher's notes show a second case in which “he referred to Truman approval of the speech. ; Wallace said hé preceded an- other reference to Truman by say- ing: “China is a special case and although she holds the longest 20, of NOT THE QUITTING TYPE — Paralyzed by polio, Don Kollar, Cleveland,’ Ohio, punches out words of encouragement to his| five others pull freight on branch fellow polio patients. The former scholastic basketball star, who has! lines between Jackson and other g pumping of its drive rods. The Michigan Central Railroad reports its Michigan division still has 10 steam-powered engines in operation, One is used to switch cars to industrial areas in Jackson. Four haul freight on the mainline track between Detroit and Niles. And over. Just drive up—sound thé alarm button and we take In less than 3 minutes you're on your way. 2 a a 4 d > a ; d , d a , d : a a 4 ’ a 4 d a d d 4 d d > * _wrerrreerrvrrft'TrrrvrrTrtrCrTC CTT. Bi Bn Bh By hi hi A Mh hin hi Mh hi i i wrervvvevVrVVeVTVeYTeeerererrTTeT,T Wallace anid ma ‘utente : TE L frontier in the world with Russia, | spent two years in Cleveland's City Hospital, uses a gadget designed | Michigan cities. - : PHGON the interest of world peace de-| by his father to type articles for the ward's mimeographed publication. | use Less sTEAM SYLVAN SHOPPING CENTER i mands that China remain free | The device is a stainless steel rod with a rubber mouthpiece and tip) 44. of these would have been FE 8-0433 ; : FE 4-9582 : from any sphere of influence either | which manipulates the keys of the electric typewriter. His most recent | in service if the business upturn * 135 Branch St. ecross from Americen Forging & Socket politically a economically. = article urged the patients to have hope for the future. Kollar wears jhad not developed. The boom a ayy STORES TO pe et ad A ‘|: chest-type respirator, tube of which can be seen at bottom, center. | upset the: railroad’s timetable for FE 2-6137 Li 2 . [I rrupay vom | ‘a MONDAY | Boys’ & Girls’ washable EVE. “tit 9 —_— ‘ 100% NYLON : See the selection of t : fine All Wools— Ss SNOW SUITS Nylons—Blends—Wiltons ci | . 7 and Cottons that will j with matching hats * ; ; : +e fe oe ee ee of Oe re ee ® 2S EDM ee ee RO ee ue Pink Shirts in Court Not Contemptible ALBUQUERQUE W—U.S. Dist. -e oc on new pink contempt. Tye Two Swap Elk, Monkeys ' TOKYO W—A Japanese official just back from Moscow said he had negotiated a Russian-Japanese trade deal which should arouse no free world opposition. Takazo Kato, member of Parliament, said zoos | of both nations would benefit from .| Zanzibaris to Help Rule | the exchange of Russian elk for Japanese monkeys, DELUXE Forger Is Sentenced: | One Year of Sundays ROANOKE, Va. )—Sunday is a | good day for meditation and Robert A, Moore will have a chance to meditate for 52 of them LONDON (—The people of Zan- zibar, where most of the world’s gloves come from, are going to get a hand in their own govern- ment for the first time. British Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox- Boyd approved today a plan to put | Zanzibaris on the island's execu- tive council, a policy-making body. The colonial secretary said he | looked forward to the time when a popular government could be | elected, ! “Teday we are using less steam than ever before but the still on the job may be retired by the first of the year. The diesel engine's greater efficiency at cheaper cost spells the end of the steam locomotive era. Diesel fuel is much cheaper than steam; diesels can be used continuously for periods as long as 48 hours, and are so maneu- verable they can ge any place | a boxcar can go. The steam engine needs ‘more | Full Size AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC RANGE Regular $269.95 ° 1956 DELUXE enrich your home. Toddlers’ l-piece snow- bb | suits of 2-ply nylon, ; 30 AUTOMATIC fully Intercel lined! $ ff ELECTRIC RANGE ao : ; yoke, shirred waist, and : Regular $239.95 We have a group of roll balances that must be sold! | %| matching hat! ; F @ee We need the room for new merchandise, | | Completely washable! | NO MONEY DOWN GREATLY LY REDUCED | Red, blue, green. 1 to 4. USUALLY $6 24 MONTHS TO PAY WAYNE GABERT Your Electrical Appliance Specialist "Nie mse. 6 FE 5-6189 Nights ‘til 9 P, M. 121 N. Saginaw St. ees Es Ee eee i SHAg geen cee ee ORR OR Tene es Momeni pe evenn 5, aes ek uw Buty For Your © | have a wonderful Ra Home! 4 Spencer’s large selection SPECIAL eYoloh am lonitlaelohy 9 A.M. VXI Lard Exports Climb - THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 FIFTEEN | 465,000,000 pounds of lard to buyers’ per cent, due to higher: prices,” abroafl in 1954, a gain of 10 per cent over the previous year. Total BOSTON—The United States sold | value of lard exports climbed 55 PIANO SALE! WE ARE MOVING! Discounts on All Spinets, Consoles, Grand and Uprights. This Sale for a Limited Time Only —Balance on E Z terms— j Come Early for Best Selections STEINWAY GRAND and Many Others A small down payment will deliver any piano BETSY ROSS—KIMBALL—GULBRANSEN—Used. Come In Soon—See our Com- GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. lete Line of Philgas-Tappan 18 E. Huron St. FE 4-0566 gos anges at new, low prices! G8 Philgas PHILLIPS PETROLEUM Co. 1He Ott. PURPOSe Fert 20% Orchard Lake Ave., Pontiac, Michigan FE 72-9195 chromed. diat. Save on make. . AUTOMATIC DEEP-FRY COOKER Tremendous value! Compare with toaster at more than twice the price! Fully Selector this nationally famous | of the Senate Appropriations Com- | mittee for travel to Europe and ation of estimates and other ac- | be returning at different times. \ | | | | i | | | | | the last session of Congress, the | Famous brand. Extra large size. Complete with cover. Makes 8 portions. Fully auto- matic. More efficiency! Less oi. Drastic re- duction! if! j i THE WORLD ser RE ig COPPER pan h cas *\CAIL 18 pieces. p26" RESERVES ANY GIFT UNTIL CHRISTMAS! | tions Comamaities. | jat Paris. ° | | representatives abroad that a | prepesal to use a later sched- | tive” except the special flights. | Impatient Solons Want Special Planes WASHINGTON ®—The Defense , ment of Defense has a duty to Department said today two large| Provide without question trans- portation toy-members of Congress passenger planes: are being coat) who are traveling under such on special flights to- Europe to). wthorization.” bring home. three gaunetors and; 4 Spokesman said the planes | their wives who declined to wait! will be Constellations, four-en- for scheduled flights. zined transports, and that the fen eg gy ‘Mayor Invited to Air Toll Turnpike Views | and public affairs, said in reply) | to questions that the planes are | being sent to bring home certain members of the Senate Appropria- ° | DETROIT i#—~A leader of op- The aE tae ait Democrats, are | ponents to a proposed Rockwood- McClellan (Ark) and Stennis to-Saginaw toll turnpike states he (Miss.)—who will board one plane had “no fear” of being converted in Madrid—and Chavez (U.M. )| |by an Ohio mayor, an exponent to who will be picked up in another | oll superhighways. “IT would be happy to meet with jhim,” said Robert Vanderkloot, | president of the Citizens Protective | Assn. of Michigan. “Nobody is going to convince me that toll roads are superior to free public | highways," he added. Ross said that when the sen- ators toid Defense Departnrent uled plane was unacceptable, the Pentagon had “no alterna- George N. Higgins, ‘heiheniaes | ef the Michigan Turapike | Authority, announced he would invite Mayor J. Grant Keys of Elyria, Obie, to Michigan to | chairman of the Senate Appropri- | give his views on toll turnpikes, | ations Committee Officially re-, Keys said Elyria's 35,000 citi- quested that the Department of | zens were told Ohio's newly com- | Deleies provide government) pleted turnpike would form “ transportation to certain members | Chinese wall" through their city and cut off easy access to streets | and schools. Instead, Keys said, values along the route have gone up and new business is being at- A formal stateme nt by Ross said: “Soon after the imo nt ot | return for the purpose of examin- tivities in the field overseas.” The request contemplated that | tracted to the area. individua} members, because of | VanderKloot responded; ‘But | the various commitments,, might | just think how many more there |would be if it were a freeway “Under the statute, the Depart- imore accessible to -the public.” | ‘about $325 per hour. ay | } | at cost of sending the planes will be approximately $20,000. A plane of that type is operated by the Air Force at a Cost of | o# * oe Ralph L. Matthews, administra- tive assistant to. McClellan, said | McClellan-was reluctant to make | the trip and told the Air Force | he would go only if it agreed to! get him back in-time to attend a} meeting of the Arkansas River) Valley Association on Oct. 29, Frank Burnet, administrative | IN EVERY Sire Chaves tnd not requested a | = DEPARTMENT! special plane. We said Chaves | had advised the Air Force he would have to be back around Nov, 1 and left it up to the Air Force to arrange the necessary transportation, Tom Fontaine, administrative | assistant to Stennis, also said that | he knew of no request for a special | plane. He said that he knew none | SAVE THROUGHOUT THE WHOLE STORE ~~ property | was made from Stennis’ office. leaving that he wanted to return) quire a special plane, | Lake Champlain includes about a 50 Seperate islands, yl* } ‘ aa a: pe FALSE TEETH © | Rock, Slide or Slip? PASTEETH, an improved powder to be sprinkled on upper or lower Plates, holds false teeth more firmly tn place, Do not sitde, slip or rock. 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DRESSES - COATS - CHILDREN’S WEAR CONSOLIDATED from OUR VARIOUS STORES for TREMENDOUS SELECTIONS OPEN FRI. 'TIL 9 | CHARGE ACCOUNTS UAT © One and Two Piece © Velvet. Jumper Types © Wools and Blends © Casual Jumper Types SACRIFICE PRICES DRESSES SIZES FOR JUNIOR —~ MISSES’ & — WOMEN A”. i Values to $1499 Values to $169 Fall and Winter COATS Ja": 19" Values to $2999 FROM OUR CHILDREN’S DEPARTMENT Specially Priced 1 GIRLS’ SPECIAL DRESSES Sizes 1-3 and 3-6x LITTLE GIRLS’ COATS _ and Coat Sets Sizes 1-3 and 3-6x 15 Values to $2499 SNOW SUITS repellent! front, colors, CHILDREN’S Interlined for warmth. Water Lip Fall _ Ohio Congressman as Convention Opens DETROIT @~Young Democrat- ie Clubs of Michigan will open their convention in Detroit tonight i ty i UH ULE ii ib ; oo dern Art so pas eg mee = a ag = to give their country a “European” | 90 per cent of’ the Saar’s voters 2 : ¥ ty, autonomy under Western Euro- | decided in a plebiscite in 1935 to) Ss yrageey lt ay oe tion of Bodies of State pean Union court p a “J pope Universities the importance of “From sae on, an the. coms trusteeship and go back to Ger- er’s newspaper, Correio Da Man- i SS paign closes, things will get tough- | ™any. ha. Bittencourt replied that he CP g came Silomted of “a” |e, and teugier,” 8 high police West German Chancellor Konrad . cial predicted, Sek unt fad wan “hen oe for motives. int Gs coef? ¥ * * * . the Saarlanders to vote y don” Monel ¢ to the mu-| @ to send educators who either Members of the International | Sunday, Adenauer seum when he heard Bittencourt perpen aye rentgn n Commission on Neutral Observers | agreement as a key piece in his Gas Gere. é who seek to assist honestly and ’ ’ faithfully the host country in (dies from Western Germany in’ European unity and defense. Natural Birth order that through the educative | the next 48 hours. coe Son Welcomed by Jan Sterling Sterling, wife of actor Paul Doug- las, gave birth to a baby boy yes- later was and able to talk to the telephone. doctor said it was a “natural | Her birth” — without anesthetics. the first The and told a reporter pom childbirth was “just won- voted at a 10-minute meeting last worse than the birth,” she said. In| J aders explaining the natural method, she "S'c None @ Charleston, stafe said “You try to learn that the | president of the National Assn, of things you might re afraid of are | the Advancement of Colored Peo- compietely normal ' | ple, said that the board's plan would take too long, He said the Nabs 18 Car Ocupants | NAACP planned to take the matter as 2 or 3 More Escape eee ST. JOSEPH, Mo, @®—Police Lt. Leroy Surface halted a car yester| to. HARBOR ue—in an ct. | day and arrested the occupants— 18 of them. ° Actually there were more riding in or on the car, Surface said, two or three got away. The boys, all high school stu- dents, were turned over to school authorities. The superintendent sus- pended them indefinitely. ‘|where we were with regard to| war. The price they paid, in ter- was the actress and Douglas, in Miss Sterling, 32, answered the; BECKLEY, W.Va, @—The Ra- ization” accord. The compact part of the bargain omy and foreign relations. = People Will Argue It for Years By J. M. ROBERTS © _|it by the Allies. ‘ Associated Press News Analyst | The fact is that Roosevelt}- and | ‘The Pentagon report and General | Churchill acted on military divice | MacArthur's reply leave us just | in trying to get Russia into the | Russian participation in the Japa-j|ritory that wasn't theirs and con- nese war and the price paid for | cessions of Chinese rights without entire length of the car from the front seat. The station wagon also MacArthur Notes consulting China, can be argued; and that if the Allied leaders about all night. Arthur's statements do indicate that many believed Russia would enter and take what she wanted THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955. were giving away something they didn’t own, they also were merely giving away something Russia was going to have any- way. regardiess of the concessions, PONTIAC STATION WAGON — The new 1956 Pontiac 870 four-door | features new interiors and the new 205 horsepower strato-streak V-8 station wagon features a rear seat backrest and seat cushion which folds | engine. The 1956 Pontiacs go on public display in dealer showrooms | neatly into the floor providing a completely level surface running the | today. Nations’ Friendship’ ' EAST LANSING’ #—College ex-| By GODFREY ANDERSON tension services, once used to| SAARBRUECKEN, Saar ® — spread research results to farm- | Saar police tightened their precau- ers and other employed adults, is helping America develop ties with nations not committed to either the United States or Soviet Russia. Dr, Milton E. Muelder, dean of ders as the hotly disputed weekend balloting on the border territory's | New efforts to break up Premier | | Johannes Hoffman's meric: | last night, are a caeannen | Hoffmann's automobile was halt- | 14 in January of 1953. | He said MSU is a leader in’ | global extension, operating mis. | the way. « « sions in Okinawa, Vietnam, Colom- bia and Brazil. ; NAACP ‘Disapproves of Integration Program °; propaganda for the pro-German leigh County Board of Education The compat, part of the bargain | ‘night to begin racial integration in its plans failed to win approval of economic and customs union with | College Courses Aid!Police Brace for Trouble \Nation’s Polio Cases in Weekend Saar Voting nation Western European Union. * * a Pro-German parties in the Ger- tions today against possible disor-| man-speaking valley have cam- paigned bitterly against. the pro- Europeanization statute future approached. : | They waht to return to the _ Saarlanders will vote Sunday for fatherland. Once before, when or against the French-German plan |*Hitler was in power in Germany, | | cast eff a League of Nations Adenauer last night again urged es next views the Saar supervising the plebiscite were} policy of settling old scores with) direct relief cases handled by the | known to fear an invasion of row-| France for the sake of West | state in September rose 282 over ithe August total, the State Social | “T sincerely hope that the Saar pro-Europe population will take a_ politically Dean Muelder *said there were Meetings were made in two areas | wise decision,” he said in a mes- | sage from his sickbed at Bonn. The French Cabinet Wednesday aw, ed by a road block, A crowd! also joined in the pressure for a jat the end of 1955, compared with surged round his car and police | “yes” vote by declaring that Saar- had to turn on fire hoses to clear | landers could not hope for union with Germany now if they reject the statute. The French said that At Querschied later, the Premier | if that happened, the Sar would had to break off his speech while | continue as it is and there would police located a tiidden loudspeak- | he no new negotiations for a differ-| aid to the disabled, 2,344, up 13. er drowning Hoffman out with! ent arrangement. : —_—_———— The Saar now is governed in-. parties opposing the ‘‘European-|ternally by its own premier and Diet and France controls its econ-| LOUISVILLE, Ky. (®—Apparent- forage for German rearmament in NATO, | pr: * T had three or four bad labor | schools with the 1956-57 term, but | provides for the Saar (1) a firm Dies of Crash Injuries pains but the labor was much ’ SAGINAW The implication, by omission of Lowest in Six Years WASHINGTON ® — The -states reported 884 new polio cases last years for the comparable week. The total was down 15 per cent | from the 1,037 cases in the pre- | /ceding week, the Public Health | | Service said today, ' | A spokesman said it would not | be surprising if the weekly totals from now until the end of the) year regularly fall below the, lowest in the last five years. } State Welfare Cases Are 282 Over August Totals LANSING \—The number of Welfare Department said today. | W. J. Maxey, director, said the increase was a ‘seasonal one," occuring every year at the approach of cold weather and, higher fuel bills. The state handled 15,822 direct | children, 19,460, down | | 260; aid to blind, 1,773, down 11; Fire Blamed on Ire | ly peeved at finding no money, a. burglar built a fire.in the automo- | bile firm office of Ray Kaufman yesterday. The yegg started the fort to stem a rash of head-on col-— lisions; the City Commission has banned passing by autos on Colfax ‘avenue for a 60-day trial period 'There have been 261 reported traf- ‘fie mishaps on the seventh-tenths of a mile stretch in recent years, | Albert B. LOWRIE 112 of them head-on crashes. | With cut up sash. . SIZES and all selling at PRICES! CURTIS CASINGS 2%-inch WHITE PINE in Troy or Regency design. SPECIALS! CURTIS FLUSH DOORS Made in AFRICAN MAHOGANY and selling for the SAME PRICE as BIRCH! Curtis WINDOW UNITS « 29 DIFFERENT LUMBER Company | 42” Sink and Cabinet 356% REDUCED choice of "QVr* 2x4's ' 8-ft. lengths No. 3 Fir 2 2x 8-ft. lengths No, 2 Fir 65° eoch PINE SHEATHING ae BoarD | | . 12-inch | Qi/a*«. 4's With Drewer ‘usenr ». LOWRIE LUMBER °°. vin (Cor. of Walton) (. Fe 2.9106 | Ves ia 42” Sink and Cabinet 566% ==-==. | CABINET SINK SALE! | $79 26x18 Double Sink $]]2 $35 | ‘} months after ' Jeaders was in ignoring the fact week, the smallest number jn six [- Leave Us Right Where We. Are —_ sime of the tacts, thet Russia en-jword thet be dide’t want ‘Russia tered only at the last moment to) mn, and you can't go dehind that. The record shows other mil- seize unearned benefits, after fail-| ». sh ts Up , warming ing to relay Japan’s surrender! gnq then cooling off about Rus-| feelers to the Allies, is a distor-| gian participation from time to : tion. |. | time, too. oe infant in his ps * *..*: Recorder s dudge John * RUSSIA WAITED. . Russia for her own reasons, Hindsight frequently interferes adnan edie e ny Sones ; ' with what historians select as the of neglecting a minor. The infant didn't relay news of the Japanese | fase feelers, and it is quite possible she | most - sinapaae 3 o ste ® oo ‘t_want peace before she | recollections of attitudes at given could get to the front. But she did |times. That makes | Set enter the Far Eastern war three | . se Commi oe liars, out of those involved. render, as she had agreed. The main failure of the Allied All we can be sure of is that if Russia had done what she was going to do anyway, without Al- lied approval if necessary, the world would have had notice, a | that the things for which Russia asked their approval were part of a formula, made biatantly public over a long period of years, for Communist conquest | about her postwar intentions. year or so before it did, of what first degree murder. it should have known all the time | uled for examination A leaving the child with her brother, of all Asia, As for the political gambits of | the MacArthur-Democratic dis- | pute over pre-Yalta and post-Yalta details, neither side seems to have made moch hay. DOUG COOLED OFF MacArthur still says he favored Russian participation immediately after Pearl Harbor, cooled off on it by 1944 when things were going to suit him in his own war, and was merely pursuing the Yalta | verdict in his references to Ree | 4? @legance for today H Ciridoll IU) LUTUPE OW WE GIVE § & H GREEN STAMPS PARK JEWELER 1 Nerth Saginaw As for what he might had he been asked, we VE 41889 ELECTRIC SAWS There is « very real saving on saws made by one of the world's largest are not permit : 224 lumber at 48 degrees. War- ranted for a full year, 529.95 Lists at $44.50 Don't Take Our Word COMPARE THESE VALUES YOURSELF! We offer you the incomparable quality ol Nationally Advertised Merchandise at Prices You Can Alford. Nothing has been changed but the high price. West Bend or Mirre AUTOMATIC COFFEE MAKER Values to $19.95 $9.45 Nationally Advertised TOASTMASTER AUTOMATIC TOASTER GUNS SHELLS SUPPLIES BLUE ROCKS $2.37 _Regular Price $ 352.50 This is quality saw. equipped with double shielded, lubricat- ed for life bail bearings Regular price $52.50. OTHER BENCH SAWS ump ........ $60.75 $120.50 Winchester Automatic ..... 94.50 $110.95 Remington Automatic $86.75 RIFL $ 69.00 Winchester $ apg ep he aa ....$53.75 104.40 Remington 760 Pump ...... .. .$81.75 . $124.95 Remington 30-06 Automet. ..... $97.50 Other Guns at Like Prices Just Fabulous Values in WATCHES Waterproof, shockproof ..... $19.95 $71.50 Hamilton ‘ilincis Men's 17-}, Yellow filled dress... ... $38.50 $49.75 Ledies’ white or ye 17 jewels -50 Men's 23 $71.50 x mee Bulova, $15.95 - Usually Sells tor ) rslope more 2 at, NS neepower Westinghouse “ $14.95 $1] e e 7 9 Lists at $10.08 vs Regular $17.95 Stina naw” ah SANDWICH SHELLS orn eee GRILL “ie Cones * $16.38 eeeeoeer bal Nat. Adv. at Magri cas sasSh79 ides ms WHOLESALE ON ALL GUNS! “..gUGGAGE ‘\ » SHOTGUNS Tin nue: "GE" wenetnar: 3 : << | aterpreot ..... $47.50 ; ‘| $59.50 Ladies’ Benrus Waterproof; | a8 . | tecend head eivewessi'e $37.50 ve G. A. Thompson & Sons || General Warehouse FE 2-2939 - . Pe y , ! Peary Aer 80'S veny st FE 2-2939 |] 2238 Dixie Hwy. Near Telegraph Rood Sender 10301 Tae ns at i / , ; : v ; / \ oe sk my ee. os Ag 8 Cat ae / Sec to ee Mea Brucker Favors Mental Hospital | Tells State He’s Willing to’ Lend Custer Wards — for Retarded Children . WASHINGTON #—Army Seno! tary Brucker has promised to take | “another look” at the possibility of the Army leasing its Fort Custer Hospital at Battle Creek to Michi- gan to use in caring for mentally retarded children. * Brucker: told a Michigan delega- tion that he “personally favored” leasing the hospital to the state on an emergency basis. The secretary, a former Repub- | lican governor of Michigan, said he would have his staff reinvesti- gate the question and would have “a decision in principle” ready © 1955 Whor's My Line, Ine. Yesterday's enewer: Bum, Apple, coke, chErry, potty, a, vitaM'n, bredd, brawNie. 10-21 when the Michigan Legislature ‘meets in special session Nov. 1. | The Army recently rejected a | : should be for 2!) years proposal by the state that it stinuiation that the state would pron eas Ragheb Rinng orifoaem a vacate the hospital in four use in caring. for mentally tarded child oo 5 ee - Gov. G. Mennen Williams called | pest. the special session to provide more died Wednesday at her home after a lingering iliness, She was 59, Her husband, attorney Laurent K. Var- In event of reactivation, Bfucker/™¥m, is president of the Grand facilities for the mentally retarded, | paid the sate alen id have to| | Rapids Symphony Society, to improve highway ‘safety and to increase school teacher pay. agree to turn over some of the State Senator Creighton R. Cole- | hospital beds immediately. man (R-Battle Creek) said Bruck- In. addition, the state would have er told the delegation there was to agree to rehabilitate the hos- | precedent for the federal govern-| pital and to maintain it in “A-1 ment leasing buildings to states | condition.” and that he had a request similar! Senator Coleman told newsmen to Michigan's from another state. ; he was “greatly encouraged” after | conferring with Brucker. oe Cane Besides. Williams and Coleman, Williams said the hospital could | the Michigan delegation also in- accommodate 600 to 700 children, cluded Rep. August Johansen (R- “ approximately half those now | Mich). fs of waiting lists for instit tutional | 7. 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SAGINAW s LOUNGE CHAIRS 5 ret SER i ea gS seh siiichamiatabacoen SG AIOE RTS ihe et, Loc tho aia aaa tea rs ser eee ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 i—— ye ee ee Re ee ee ae a ae a ee, eee ee ee sisteny woes : Young De People Will Argue It for Years _ Meet Tonight State Clubs Will Hear Ohio Congressman as) Convention Opens . By J. M, ROBERTS it by the Allies. ‘ Associated Press News Analyst | ‘The fact is thit Roosevelt and The Pentagon report and General | Churchill acted on military advice MacArthur's -reply leave us just | ‘in trying to get Russia into the where we were with regard to | wer. The price they paid, in. ter- Russian participation in the Japa- | ritory that wasn't theirs and con- DETROIT #—~Young Democrat- nese war and the price paid for fe Clubs of Michigan will open their convention in Detroit tonight PONTIAC STATION WAGON — The new 1956 Pontiac 870 four-door station wagon features a rear seat backrest and seat cushion which folds neatly into the floor providing a completely level surface running the ; | entire length of the car from the front seat. The station wagon also cessions of Chinese rights without about all night. : The military reports and Mac- Arthur's statements do indicate that many believed Russia would | + enter and take what she wanted were giving away something | merely giving away something | ing to relay Japan's Russia was going to bave any-. bio ee | tion. The buetcation. bw ovmlonion St nuseta WAITED. , Russia for her own reasons, didn't relay news of the Japanese feelers, and it is quite possible she | didn’t want peace before she | could get to the front. But she did | enter the Far Eastern war three months after the German sur- render, as she had agreed. The main failure of the Allied leaders was in ignoring the fact that the things for which Russia asked their approval were part of a formula, made blatantly public over a long period of years, for Communist conquest of all Asia, , the MacArthur-Democratic dis- pute over pre-Yalta and post-Yalta details, neither side seems to have made moch hay. DOUG COOLED OFF Russian participation immediately after Pearl Harbor, cooled off on Be: ales a ee cae =| it by 1944 when things were going features new interiors and the new 205 horsepower strato-streak V-8 to suit him in his own war, and engine, The 1956 Pontiacs go on public display in dealer showrooms | W4@s merely pursuing the Yalta today. | verdict in his references to Rus- : sian entry thereafter. ~ The Pentagon renort doesn't ‘College Courses Aid|Police Brace Nations’ Friendship’ in. Weekend EAST LANSING’ (#—College ex-| By GODFREY ANDERSON tension services, once wed to| SAARBRUECKEN, Saar i — spread research results. to farm- | Saar police tightened their precau- ers and other employed adults, is tions today against possible disor- helping America develop ties with ders as the hotly disputed weekend nations not committed to either the | balloting on the border territory's | to whip him with | United States or Soviet Russia. future approached, toa tried his oi last night, Bystanders| ‘Dr. Milton E. Muelder, dean of | Sa#rienders will vote Sunday for separated them at the Museum of science and arts at Michigan ° @#ainst the French-German pian | Modern Art State University, told the Associa- | '° 8'v¢ their country a “European autonomy under Western Euro: | pean Union. “From now on, as the cam- 2 er and tougher,” a/ high police official predicted. / And this enables * 6) Members of the International Commission on Newtral Observers supervising the plebiscite were known to fear An invasion of row- Ha did ral fist [is é j “| east off a League of Nations paign closes, things will get tough- | ™any. show that he was asked or gave his advice directiv in connection with Yalta, as the Democrats imntied, and he says he wasn't and didn't. for Trouble Nation’s Polio Cases Saar Voting ‘Lowest in Six Years WASHINGTON & — The states nation Western European Union. had he been asked, we -have his * cpitcitlig Coie can be argued and that if the Allied leaders fateh beepers that he didn't want Russia tered only at the last moment to they didn’t own, they also were | setae unearned benefits, after fail-| surrender feelers to the Allies, is a distor-| As for the political gambits of | MacArthur still says he favored | " As for what he might have said | (MacArthur Notes tease Us Right “Where We. Are eta peel Hindsight frequently interferes | with what historians select as the |} most pertinent part of a given | pecord, as well as with personal recollections of attitudes at given , | times, That makes humans, but to = heapitel. not liars, out of those involved. All we can be sure of is that jf Russia had done what she was going to-do anyway, without Al- lied approval if necessary, the world would have had notice, a/ year or so before it did, of what it should have known all the time about her postwar intentions. dy “Heirloom lor tomorrow WE GIVE 8 4 H GREEN STAMPS PARK JEWELERS 1 North Saginaw FE 41880 * * reported 884 new polio cases last Peiereee postin poles Ger- | week, the smallest number in Bix | * man-speaking ley ve cam- | ears for the comparable week. | paigned bitterly against the pro- y The total was down 15 per cent /posed Ewuropeanization statute ‘from the 1,037 cases in the pre- | | They waht to return to the | ceding week, the Public Health| fatherland. Once before, when’ Service said today, Hitler was in power in Germany, | | 80 per cent of the Saar’s voters |, A spokesman said it would not | 93° surprising if the weekly totals | decided in a plebiscite in 1935 to) re now en Ge end at Ge year regularly fall below the lowest in the last five years. State Welfare Cases Are trusteeship and go beck to Ger- | West German Cliindiiner Konrad | Adenauer last night again urged the Saarlanders to vote next | Sunday, Adgnaner views Go Sear 282 Over August Totals agreement as a key piece in his} LANSING (#—The number of policy of settling old scores with | direct relief cases handled by the France for the sake of West | state in September rose 282 over | $29.95 dies from Western Germany in’ the next 48 hours. | New efforts to break up Premier | Johannes Hoffman's pro-Europe | Son Welcomed Dean Muelder “said there were | meetings were made in two areas. by Jan Sterling © comrects wan Antanas mee g fo ae automobile was halt- | | HOLLYWOOD @<—Actress Jan versities for overseas cooperation | fa 1955 pooch plone block. A crowd! compared with | at dane of 1953. ™ he /round his car and police He said MSU is a leader in| had t6 turn on fire hoses to clear operating mis-| ~~ / y- a At Querschied later, the Premier ‘Natural Birth’ Her doctor said it was a “‘na’ had to break off his speech while birth” — without anesthetics. police located a hidden loudspeak- boy, the first NAACP ‘Disapproves fer drowning Hoffman out with was the child actress and Douglas, | /\propaganda for the pro-German 466 teen wed in $08. of Integration Program eaten eppeuieg the. “Rarepeans n Miss Sterling, 32, answered the | BECKLEY, W.Va. @—The Raé- ization” accord. reporter the | ‘leigh County Board of Education The compact part of the bargain natural childbirth was “just won- | yoted at a 10-minute meeting Jast| The compat, part-of the bargain derful.” | night to begin racial integration in for German rearmament in NATO, T had a prog labor schools with the 1956-57 tery but | provides for the Saar (1) a firm France, (2), the natural method, she T. G. Nutter of Charleston, state internal self- joven: (0 of Birch Run died Wednesday ment and (3) supervision of its| night of injuries suffered Tuesday president of the Nationa} Assn, of | foreign relations by a high com-| when his car crashed into a con- the Advancement of Colored Peo-| missioner appointed by the seven-| crete abutment south of Birch Run. | the August total, the State Social Lists at $44.50 Welfare Department said today. | “I sincerely hope that the Saar| W. J. Maxey, director, said population will take a politically | the increase was a “seasonal wise decision,”’ he said in a mes-|one,” occuring every year at the sage from his sickbed at Bonn. approach of cold weather and | The French Cabinet Wednesday | higher fuel bills. | also joined in the pressure for & . The state handled 15,822 direct | “yes” vote by declaring that Saar-/relief cases during September. landers could not hope for union|Other case totals compared with with Germany now if they reject | August figures; Old age assist-| the statute. The French said that| ance, 73,750, 384; aid to! if that happened, the Sar would children, 19,460, down | continue as it is and there would | 260; aid to blind, 1,773, down 1); be no new negotiations for a differ-| aid to the disabled, 2,344, up 13. ent arrangement. —_—_—_——_ The Saar now is governed in-| ternally by its own premier and; Diet and France controls its econ- omy and foreign relations. European unity and defense. * m * . Fire Blamed on Ire LOUISVILLE, Ky. (®—Apparent- ly peeved at finding no money, a burglar built a-fire in the automo- | bile firm office of Ray Kaufman) yesterday. The yegg started the blaze in the middle of the floor, | using the firm's records and an Dies of Crash Injuries SAGINAW «®—Thomas K, Weir, did not spréad, Only a small table radio was missing. ‘ ple, said that the board's plan overcoat for kindling, but the fire : would take too long, He said the NAACP planned to take the matter to court. f as 2 or 3 More Escape GUNS SHELLS ranted for s full year. a tmg teel oi 0 tow petes.” De- velops more than ‘% horsepower. Ceneral Electric or Cast an housing; precision Ww cut gears; self lubricating b STEAM pe wpa genuine daeste ‘tes er DRY 3 . IRONS 514.95 Lists at $19.95 ST. JOSEPH, Mo, @—Police Lt. Leroy Surface halted a car yester- day and arrested the occupants— , 18 of them. Actaally there were more riding in or on the car, Surface said, two or three got away. The boys, all high ocheal stu- dents, were turned over to school authorities. The superintendent sus. pended them indefinitely.. Trying to Cut/Crashes There have een 261 reported traf- “142 of them head-on. crashes, BENTON HARBOR (®—In an ef- fort to stem a rash of head-on col- lisions, the City Commission has banned passing by autos on Colfax avenue for a 60-day trial period fic mishaps’ on the seventh-tenths of a mile ftretch in recent years, Albert B. LOWRIE With cut up sash. a ro PRICES! CURTIS CASINGS Trey or Regency design. SPECIALS! ¥ CURTIS FLUSH DOORS Made in AFRICAN MAHOGANY and selling for the SAME PRICE as BIRCH! Curtis WINDOW UNITS . { 29 DIFFERENT 2%4-inch WHITE/ PINE in choice of | LUMBER —— | | | REDUCED "9 V>* 8-ft. lengths 2x4's No. 2 Fi Fir 65: eoch PINE SHEATHING BOARD LUMBER © FE 2-9104 12-inch | g1/,<..| | CABINET SINK SALE! 54” Sink and Cabinet - 556% ‘79% 26x18 | Double Sink | 31] 2 42" Sink and Cabinet 66" G. A. Thomp son With Drawer & Sons FE 2.2939 FE 2-2939 80 S. rm SUPPLIES BLUE ROCKS $2.37 SHELLS .12-16-20 Gauge Light Loads .....+-$ WHOLESALE ON ALL GUNS! Get Our Prices First or Last - $124.95 Remington + $65.00 Le $71.50 Men’s 23 2B jet Bute, Shock and $59.50 Ladies me w second hand . eee een 2238 ma Pump ........ 0.75 $120.5 50 Winchester Automatic ..... f $110.95 Remington Automatic 15 RIFLES $ 69.00 Wincheste Carbine ....... «oes QSB.7S $104.40 Remi 760 Pump ..:.. ... $81.75 30-06 Automet. ..... $97.50 Other Guns at Like Prices Just Fabulous Values in WATCHES Genera Warehouse __ en fiQuns: Don’t Take Our Word VALUES YOURSELF! : s We olfer you the incomparable quality of Nationally Advertised Merchandise at Prices You Can Afford. Nothing has been changed but the high price, West Bend or Mirro AUTOMATIC COFFEE MAKER Values to $13.95 $9.45 N Advertised AUTOMATIC TOASTER $15.95 Usually Sells for This is a quality saw, equipped with double shielded, lubricat- ed for life ball bearings. Regular Price $52.50, WAFFLE and SANDWICH GRILL $16.38 Nat. Adv. at $24.95 biue, or - set constels of jam tens with mirror; 31° Weekender; 24” Pullman Case. , Durable scuff reste- pn A exteriors and rayon silk finings ‘Near ee Road / apmatpentdgmmannenagnenmaapetal - Brucker Favors Mental Hospital Tells State He’s Willing |. to Lend Custer Wards for Retarded Children WASHINGTON (#—Army Secre- tary Brucker has promised to take “another. look” at the possibility of the Army leasing its Fort Custer Hospital at Battle Creek to Michi- gan to use in caring for mentally retarded children, " Brucker told a Michigan delega- tion that he “personally favored” Son « * be * y ‘ : : : leasing the rang adh to. the state : : ; ma an emergency basis. . The secretary, a former Repub- : lican governor of Michigan, said . oe ee ee : he would have his staff reinvesti- Yesterday's, enswer: Gum, Apple, coke, chErry, gate the question and would have : pacity, Mae, wielt'n, beeAd, Repettio. ah “a decision in principle” ready © 1955 What's My Line, Ine. 10-21 when the Michigan Legislature ® . ) ‘meets in special session Nov. 1. i : anes ny _ Pital were leased to the state it | Music Patron Succumbs Army recently rejected should be for 2); years with «| GRAND RAPIDS W — Mrs. ! I ae: yp Hong: ao eone | stipulation that the state would Maryellen Vurnum, active in vacate the hospital im four | Grand Rapids symphony projects, ak aa ee tenths if the Army decided to | died Wednesday at her home after eatpoted | Feactivate the big Battle Creek | a lingering illness, She was 59, Her : | Gov. G. Mennen Williams called| pest. | husband, attorney Laurent K. Vari] © ou ences Seen ay Seavads Seas In event of reactivation, Bricker | num, is president of the Grand . . ‘ se prone Mackeaatie ww the rgd said the state also would have to| R&Pids Symphony Society. Here is a wonderful opportunity increase school teacher pay. | agree to turn over some of the | : a a Be wea Creighton R. Cole- | | hospital beds immediately. a | Get Relief with to secure new chairs for your OF | Sa tran { ittle Creek) said Bruck-| In.addition, the state. would have | i er told ~ delegation there was! to agree to rehabilitate the hos | RESIN OL home at tremendous savings. Or precedent for the federal govern-| pital and to maintain it in ‘ ‘Art| . : ment leasing buldings to over pital and, ‘ "tre m discomfort o of if you wish buy two or more of t a request similar Senator Coleman to! newsmen | Ecseme—Commen Resh : . . to Michigan's from another state. | he was “greatly encouraged” after . © On re these chairs for Christmas giv- i ferring with Brucker. @ Mi | : . : . - AID 700 CHILDREN Besides Williams and Coleman,| ‘This famous -cintment, 60 ing. $1.00 will hold the chairs of | Williams said the hospital could | the Michigan delegation also in- yor in popular nan contains : gis accommodate 600 to 700 children, | ciuded Rep. August Johansen (R- ming ry Ei yon — your choice ‘til Dec. 20th. ~ ey half those now Mich). 4 pw» i softe ting lists for institutional nd poate Caz, i Semen uopeneg There are no rabbits in Ber-| se Resinel for comfort. Sample free. Brucker sald that if the hos- | muda. Wee Bectecl, Begs 4, Betsinere 2, B50, NEW,-ULTRA SMART OCCASIONAL CHAIRS for 549° | MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY AT $29.95 Craftsmen spring construction chairs that are as comfortable as they are good looking. Sturdy, hard- aa wood frame. Your choice of covers and colors. b 10 CUBIC FTW neue mlecimmmanchy 5 ‘mes FIRESIDE CHAIR for $5 9° MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY FOR $34.95 Never before in our history have we offered such | qs @ smart styling and long lasting comfort .. . and at such Our Prices ees Cae oa te a | a low price: Extremely sturdy hardwood: frame. Include 8, no. Ue” IP ce Craftsmen construction. Choice of newest covers Delivery ; = a.) and colors. Normal _ Installation 5 Year Warranty Dependable Service When You Need It! SMARTLY DESIGNED LOUNGE CHAIRS 2, « $69" MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY FOR $39.95 ‘ek Oe eo , i * ** Full spring construction, sturdy hardwood frame, extra smart styling makes these comfortable lounge chairs and Ward's Low, Low Price brings you Liao 24 MONTHS TO PAY “ , 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH i \ savings. Choice of covers and colors. ; : oe . | moO es ape OPEN FRIDAYS and MONDAYS ‘til 9 P. M.fm | 45k About the WARD-WAY 4 & WAYNE GABERT |) = SOUTH ‘ Your Electrical Appliance Specialist oe ° cuereet” : = ON ee eee ssi Madani Att oo | ae comemne et ay AR om gc $ Nat THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1953 4 H . i ‘ __-RIGHTEEN ON LEADER CELEBRA sisi <4 An Event That Means Greater Savings at Home...Proof "Bolin jit YOU SAVE MORE IN PONTIAC | After Months of Preparations ... These Pontiac Merchants Now Bring You the Year’s Greatest Buys! Alison Shop Arthur’s Barnett’s Clothing Bazley Market Brown Bros. Sam Benson Clothing Outlet Burton’s Apparel for Women Calbi Music Co. , Carolynn Shop Christian Literature Sales Cloonan Drug Co. Community National Bank . Connolly’s Jewelers Consumers Power Co. Dickinson’s Men’s Wear fy Thomas Economy Furniture “ Enggass Jewelry ‘ppert’s Photo Service Firestone Store Gabert, H. Wayne Gallagher Music Co. General Printing and Office Supply George’s-Newport’s Gillies Shoes Grinnell Brothers Bobette Hosiery & Corset Shop Jane Lee Store, Inc. L. G. Haig Shoes C. R. Haskill Studio Homade Food Shop Hub Clothiers Huddick’s Kaufman’s Credit Clothing Kresge, 8. S. Co. Lewis Furniture Linda Lee Shop Lion Store , W. N. McCandless, Inc. McNally’s Men’s Wear Maling Bros. Ine. Market Tire, Inc. , . Merit Shoe Co. Z Myer’s Jewelry Neisner Bros. Neumode Hosiery Shop Osmun’s Osmun’s Town & Country Pauli, Fred N. Co., Jewelers Pauli’s Shoe Store Peggy’s Women’s Apparel J. C. Penney Co. Pontiac Press | Pontiac Retail Store - Pontiac State Bank Pontiac Varnish Retail Store R & H Shoe Store Rappy’s National Clothing Redmond’s Jewelry —= - Rogers, S. C. Sporting Goods Sallan’s Jewelry Co. Sanders, Fred Scarlett’s Bicycle Shop Sears, Roebuck & Co. Sew ’n’ Save Fabric Shop Shaw’s Jewelry Simm’s Bros. Singer Sewing Machine Co. Stapp’s Juvenile Bootery Stewart-Glenn Furniture Co. Three Sisters Dress Shop Thrifty Drug Stores United Shirt Distributors WKC, Ine. Waite’s, Inc. Walgreen Drug Store Ward’s Home Outfitting Wiggs Winkelman Bros. Apparel | Wrigley’s Stores, Inc. Wonderland Shop Wyman Furniture Co. na ememmnmemnnmemmeenannN | ‘ —~ ma ‘ Alph ; a Announ as ces Christ mas Da 4 if eo y t) Pontiac Press Photos Players at their playhouse on Chestnut street. Three of the | and Stanley Gillen of Bloomfield Hills. Spending Two Weeks inFlorida | Mrs. Baldwin and Mrs. Brodie Take Fall Holiday Mrs. H. F. Brodie of East Iro- quois road and Mrs. Frank Bald- win of Oakwood avenue, Sylvan Lake, are spending two weeks in Nakomis, Fla., where the Brodies have just recently purchased a home on the beach, * *® Members of the Fireside Club were entertained this afternoon at the home of Mrs, Frank Castell on Ottawa drive. € * * Ld Mrs. Leslie Tripp of Hlinois avenue entertained members of ——— 4 her bridge club at her home this afternoon. | * * * Mrs. O. A. Carmer of Avondale | avenue has returned to her home | after attending the southeast dis- | trict convention of Women’s Clubs | held in Jackson Tuesday and j Wednesday. * * * Mrs. Maxine Gruber - Bailey, | whose parents reside on Westbrook | avenue, was among the beginning | nursing students who took part in the recent capping ceremony at Hinsdale Sanatorium and Hospital *. Sail all News behind barbed wire enclosure is | street, will be presented again Oct. 28 and being received by the cast of “Stalag 17.” | 29. In the picture (left to right) are Horton | 5 |The play, being presented by the Birming-' Allen, John Gilray Jr. and Douglas Brown, | Mrs. A. E. Kilpela, Mrs. John | School of Nursing, Hinsdale, Il. urday evening in the playhouse on Chestnut * s * = ‘ . Mr. and Mrs, C, William Sal- | ton of Lincolnshire drive are | spending the weekend with her | parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. ‘Eames of Okemus. ! On Saturday they will attend homecoming at Michigan State | University, of which the Saltons | i. are alumn . ee Announcement hag been made} by Dean of Women Audrey | Wilder of Albion College that Leah MacNutt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Omar E. MacNutt of Neome drive. has been pledged to Alpha Chi Omeya sorority. * = bd Mrs. Duren Tucker of Tyler. | Tex., {s visiting at the home of | Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilson of East Iroquois road. Shower Given for Bride-Elect Mrs, Leon Tatro entertained at} her home on Cottage street Tues- | day evening honoring Joyce Piant-| kowski, bride-elect of Bernard Morris. Assisting the hostess at the pantry and miscellaneous shower were Marlene Daly. and Sue Tatro. Invited guests included Mrs. Charles Morris, Mrs. Joseph Erris, Mrs. Leonard Piantkowski, Mrs. Leon Tat’o Jr., Mrs. Edmund Tatro, Mrs. Joseph Kowalske and Mrs. Leo Kowalske. Others invited were Mrs. Pearl Stevenson, Mrs. Edward Shediow- | sky, Mrs. Art Tatro, Mrs. Les Da- vidson, Mrs. Edna Stevenson, Mrs. | ‘Stalag 17’ Regional Director to Visit Opening Set |Pontiac Cam for Tonight “Stalag 17° by Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcuski will open the Birmingham Village Players’ 23rd season. The play is one of two open to the public gnd_ will be presented at the Chestnut street playhouse in Birmingham tonight and Saturday, and also on Oct. 28, 29. The production has a 19-member all-male cast and is the play that won recent Oscars in Hollywood for its movie version. The comedy melodrama, un. | der the direction of Dr, dack | Hassberger, had its first run in | New York in 1951 under the di- | rection of Jose Ferrer. Dr.. Hassberger is a life mem-" ber of the Village Players, having belonged 25 years. Mrs. Edward S. Reid Jr. is his assistant director and Mrs. Richard Brown is hold- | ing lines. Properties for the play are be- ing made and secured by Ed Tobin, who will be assisted during the performances by Mrs. Gordon Love and Mrs, John Kleene, OTHERS ASSISTING The set will be the work of | George Green and 10 members of | his scenic design workshop (an in- | novation this year). Costumes are | Dively is a graduate of the Uni-| work, she was instrumental tis in Chicago, Harriet Dively, regional direc tor of Camp Fire Girls in six | states, will visit the Pontiac Coun- cil of Camp Fire Girls Monday through Thursday, William Me- Lean, council president, announced today. While in Pontiac, Miss Dively will visit with various board and council members as well as group leaders. A meeting for Blue Bird Leaders and their assistants is scheduled for Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the new Adah Shelly Library. The Camp Fire leaders and their assistants will meet with Miss Dively Wednesday at 1 p-m, also in the Adah Shelly The board of directors will meet with Miss Dively Tuesday eve- ning at the high school. A tea will | be held Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m, ; at the YWCA to honor Miss Dively. | Miss Dively, whose headquarters is regional direc- tor in Michigan, Ohio, West Vir- ginia, Indiana,- Illinois and Ken- tucky. Prior to this assignment, | she was regional director in New | York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, | | Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and | {the District of Columbia. UM GRADUATE | A native of Grand Rapids, Miss | p Fire Girls ‘ham Village Players this evening and Sat- all of Birmingham. * HARRIET DIVELY \land, and as executive director of councils in such widely scattered cities as Sandusky, Ohio, San Diego, Calif., and Seattle, Wash. Miss Dively is an enthusiastic Sportswoman and a strong advo- cate of camping for young peo- ple. She has directed Camp Fire camps and was an officer in | the Pacific Camping Association. Through her interest in social in || be displayed by Dorothy's | | president. ey Fs 5, Christmas is + FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 celebrated with special |to right) are Richard W. Brown, Gordon F. . beverages in “Stalag 17,” the play being |Jeynes and Robert Halsted, all of Birming- “Stalag 17” will be presented this evening and Satur- | actors engaged in a scuffling scene from the play are (left pr esented this evening and Saturday evening |ham. The play will be presented again on day evening and again Oct. 28 and 29 by the Birmingham \to right) Al Riebling and Hans Schjolin of Birmingham at the Birmingham Village Playhouse by the | Oct. 28 and 29. : Village Players. Photographed above (left Womens Section © 0 . PAGES 19-21 Told About | | Conference Better Home and Garden Club | members gathered at Central Methodist Church for a luncheon and meeting on Thursday. * LJ a A highlight of the meeting was a report given by Mrs. Fred Bohl- man, president, who told about the regional meeting of garden clubs held at Hotel Statler in Detroit Oct. 6-7. Representatives of gar- Garden Club Club Hears “Are we beginning a new era of the earth? What is earth’s place in the universe, and are we about to stop thinking in terms of war and conquest, and start to live in a great new universe?” These were the questions Mrs, Caroline McLean, former univer- sity professor, asked members of the Zonta Club of Pontiac Thurs- day when they* gathered at Hotel Waldron. . , Mrs. McLean, whose hobby is collecting information concern- ing flying saucers and space ships, feels that we are on the den clubs from six states attended the meeting. | | Mrs, Bohiman spoke of the | future home of the National - Council of State Garden Clubs | that will be the garden center | of every club. Construction will | begin in 1956 at the Missouri | Botanical Gardens in St. Louis, Reports were given by officers of the group, and by Mrs. Pearl | Kline, Mrs. Maude Place, Mrs. | M, Beauchamp, Mrs. Schledorn, | | Lyons and Mrs. Ralph Parker. * « & ‘ Mrs. John Cowe was chairman of the day assisted by Mrs. Joseph | Phillips, Mrs. Maude Scott, Mrs, Irt Williams, Mrs. Harry Stowell, | | Mrs. I. J, Mintz and Mrs. Joseph | Schledorn. Rosary Altar. ‘Society Plans |Party on Nov. 2 | An autumn fashion show and | card party is being sponsored by ithe St. Vincent de Paul Rosary | Altar Society on Nov. 2 at 8 p.m. | in St. Vincent Hall, Plans were | | | ~ | completed when the group met , | Wednesday evening. | Linda Lee Shop will present the fashions, and hats and jewelry will | Hat | Shop, according to a report pre- | sented by Mrs. Joseph Spadafore, | Mrs, Marshall Sprague is serv. ing as general chairman for the party assisted by Mrs. James McGuire, tickets; Mrs, Arthur Crawford and Mrs. Spadafore, prizes; Mrs, Harold Brady, re- ception, and Mrs, Robert Croas- dell and Mrs. Wilfred Hinds, dec- orations. Mrs. Albert Teays, Mrs. Delmo | | Chapdelaine, Mrs. John Trick, | |Mrs. George Thompson, Margaret | | O'Connor and Elizabeth Halfpenny | | will be in. charge of refreshments. | On Dec, 3 Christmas booths will | deck St. Vincent Hall for the an- | nual festival, , Mrs. Basil Martus and Mrs. | John Zubalik are serving as CO | George Stevenson, Mrs. Ray Den- being handled by Mrs. Hans Schjo- versity of Michigan and also did organizing a branch of the Ameri-| chairmen of the chicken and ham ton, Mrs. Fred Postl, Mrs. Anna jin, and Mrs. Dyke Dwelley and | graduate, work at the University |-ay Association of Group Work in| dinner to be served by St, Vincent | Fredericks, Shirley Biskner, Gail Mrs. Gladys Colgrove are handling | of Washington. Kowalske and Marlene Beattie. i ‘garden tools before putting them | makeup, Charles Blunt handle lighting problems, is head of the! . * * | She has been associated with the | Seattle. Sleepwear takes on a Far It is a good idea to shellac stage crew and Bill Genung will youth agency for many years both | Eastern look with nightgowns of | Mrs. | as a member of the national staff, | cotton challis in handsome Oriental | Guilds on Dec. 4. 1 nent tence Patient in Hospital Mrs. Anna Mathews of Ward's | away for another season, Clean Wallace R. Ivers is in charge of ,Supetvising Camp Fire's program | designs, The Ciffnese tunic with} Orchard is a patient at hig Fusted. paris with steel woo! first. | tickets, - jin the Southwest ‘and in New Eng-i trousers is popular for lounging.' County Cohvalescent Home, verge of a whole new concept of life—as revolutionary’ as that following the veyages of Columbus. She spoke of the quality of won- der as one of the most valuable we have, leading to most of the great discoveries. Significant dates mentioned included the speaker 1944, when fly- ‘Saucer’ Talk ing objects were first seen, and 1947, when they were described as saucer-like—hence the name flying saucers. Then in 1948 a cigarshaped craft was reported, and called a ' space ship. These were labeled as illusions or hallucinations. Mrs. McLean cited the Navy's 20 million dollar project to launch satellites into space, and the work of the Army in the same field. The speaker concluded by saying that we should be prepared to someday receive visitors from out- er space, , Coming Events The Lake-Landers -are sponsoring ® hayride Sunday. Members of the cor- mittee will meet the gtoup at N. Sag- inaw and Cottage Sts, at 6:15 p.m. Huron Gardens jes Bagles , 2867 will meet Wednesday at 8 . for the third and final reading f by-laws, "Panny r Tompkins Tem: 41 «will Auxil-' e: ance Annual Ball. to Be Held © December17 Sorority Conducts Model Meeting at YMCA Thursday Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority announces its Christmas dance Dec. 17 at the Hotel Pontiac. Pro- ceeds of the dance will go to the Child Psychiatry Program at Pon- tiac State Hospital, Ld * * The announcement was made at the model meeting held Thurs- day evening in the YMCA, Reports of standing committees were giv- en to the president, Mrs. Alex Morris. Reports of past events, plan- ning a varied calendar of com- ing events and reception of new pledges was the business of the day for the sorority, indicative of a busy fall season, New pledges were introduced by Mrs. Morris, and Mrs. Benjamin Sweeney, rush chairman, instruct- ted them in the procedures of the sorority, : Welcomed by the group were Mrs, Fred Mueller, Stephanie Lin- abury, Mrs. Eugéne Burdette, Mrs, James George, Mrs, Earl Smith Jr., Mrs, Edgar Plympton, Mrs. Harold fl; ia in yi r : | ; 5 i f 5 1 i Panny meet for officers’ practice Monday at 6 Huron Bt. p.m. in the hall on W. i a ean Pentiee Press Photo The third annual Harvest Time Frolic ingston of Woodbine drive and Gwen ‘held from 9 p.m. until midnight Saturday |\Vernon of West Rundell street (left to .at Roosevelt Temple. promises to be a gdla\ right), members of Job's Daughters, spon affair judging by the smiles of Bernice Mc-\sors. The girls were pictured ing Lean of Elizabeth Lake road, Sharon Liv-|temple after completing plans for the m bs aes a pial, i A ARNE PHA I I 2 eS TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1955 | SALE ON All Better Lamps Greatly Reduced! | You'll find wonderful buys on Lamps by Paul, Remington, Royal Hager, etc, Lamps in Wood Glass Metal Pottery All Specially Priced from $998 Up Gift Items Galore at Dixie! DIXxiE Porrery 5281 Dixie Hwy. (Near Waterford) OR 3-1894 For Your Convenience Open Daily and Sunday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. 1 gh n°? RMR ne Serving Good Food Since 1929! Breakfasts—Luncheons | 2” Long, 1%” Wide J FOR FREE HOME | | ° eet Genre DEMONSTRATIONS | | ° See's "m= Call or a at ag FE 8-0751 | BETTER HEARING CENTER 8 Mt. Clemens Street , | X PARAMOUNT BEAUTY SCHOOL | O1% S. Saginaw, Eagle Theater Bidg., Pontiac, Mich. Enrollments Available in Day or Evening Classes. Write, phone or call in person for Free pamphiet. PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 bh | >) “Dear Miss Woodward: | ing lines, accented by dainty ruf- | fles—flower embroidery | gay pocket! | to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- | Although it is an exacting silhau- the designer of the dress and its She Fears. Being Labeled 'Anyone’s S Girl ously, If it’s “anyone's girl,” _— it goes over big, toe, meas bie WA ah tes tape San with the boys in your life. poser vragen we abl at them: There will come along someday | | you seriously. a * * And at this point you know, By ELIZABETH WOODWARD My problem is different from a lot of , other girls’—I have too many boy | friends. My parents and relatives - like it that way. They say,. since ‘anyone's girl,’ and: that no boy could ever take me seriously. -, “Frankly, 1 don't want to get serious yet. But 1 don’t want that kind of reputation, ejther. I'm now going out with five dit- ’ | serious over—when it’s appropriate | ‘for you to. pin your hopes on one_ I'm just 17, that I shouldn't give ferent boys. Am I right or guy. . He may be someone you) myself the chance. to get serious wrong. your family knows and your haven't met yet. He may be one_ _with any one boy. , es | friends must. know that you ‘don't | of the five boys you’ re dating now. “But my friends disagree. They Answer: Your. friends have take any one that seriously. | “ Most particularly the five boys you) The mood will duaner: your own . go out with must be convinced,’ responsiveness and readiness will They like to date you, they don’t: show, and you'll fall headlong. | feel possessive, you don’t feel He'll take that seriously when it! possessive; you are all free to date | happens. around, playing it free-lance. | tit tor new, You're nobedy’s girl. But you | gums. Explain te your needling have lots ef boy friends, and lots | friends that these boys are just of dates and lets of fun. And | frieads te date occasionally. | say I'll get the reputation of being planted an idea.in your head that has yoy in a swivet. The reputa- tion they talk of doesn't sound | very pleasant, They're trying to convince you that you're doing | something wrong. But, frankly, I can’t see where | their interpretation of an idea has | anything to do with you. If you | are known as someone's girl, it | means you take him pretty scri- | that situation is popular with the | There's no roniantic stuff going members of your family. Ap* | ea to make them get (dens. |Red Cross Revises Plan .o \ for Staffing Bloodmobiles The American Red Cross blood spend a few hours each year in/| advisory committee of the Oakland | volunteer work a New opportunity | County Chapter adopted a revised to be a good neighbor. ~ | Plan for staffing the area's blood- In the past, ‘area mobiles were | mobil whe; es — a n members met at the staffed only by members of | | | | 1 * * * * * just the right boy for you to get | stick to your | of Mrs. DePauw on Argyle ave- | ’| ‘Platinum for Rings Platinum and palladium jewelry lis not without news these days, | There are some very interesting heir romances; | | down to going steady. | wedding bapd designed in contour |so that it fits around the point of Remind hein Pen Ps will happen | the engagement diamond. to you when the time comes. And | | that time isn't now. (Copyright 1955, Auxiliary Plans Saturday Party Final plans and announcement | of committees for their card party | were made by members of the | Ladies Auxiliary to Metropolitan Club Spirit atx, IN 7 CELEBRATION OF PONTIAC LEADERSHIP } * The ising met at the John A | DePauw home on a ovens | PREVIEW OF | Tuesday rs |Baker. president, was hostess to | CHRISTMAS GIFTS [oo oe : JEWELRY The card party will be, held | Saturday at 8 p.m. at the home | | COSMETICS CERAMICS EVENING BAGS nue. Members of the auxiliary amon are donating gifts and refresh. | ments to be used at the party. | Mrs. DePauw is general chair-| man of the event. Ticket chairman | Lovely and Unusual Gifts for Everyone - | is Mrs. George Hermoyian and | , < prizes are being handled by Mrs. | on Your List John Schroeder and Mrs. Omer | Winton. Table arrangement and, —— f table giftseare under the direction of Mrs. Joseph Koren. Donations from the card party | will be used for the Penrickton Nursery for the Visually Handi-. MERLE NORMAN STUDIO capped, Taylor Center. 12 W. Huron FE 2-4010 Open Mon. & Fri... Evenings Tu 9 P.M. Willard WCTU Installs Officers New officers of the Frances Wil- lard Unit, WCTU, were. installed | by Mrs, John Little Tuesday eve-| ning when the group met at her home on Franklin road. , Reserve Your ) Hot — Barbecued RIBS Frances Priest, guest speaker, | Lovely cover-up when company | was introduced by Mrs. Irene Al- | comes—this apron puts you right bright, principal. Miss Priest ex. | | in the party mood! Graceful curv- | plained the program of the visit- ing teacher. for the Make one for your- self; others for gifts, bazaars! Pattern 4624: Misses’ sizes small | Reports were given by Mrs. Daniel Peterson, fimance chair- man, and Mrs. Frank Phelps, | membership chairman. The executive beard appointed Mrs. Seven gay motifs to decorate | towels, brighten your | All easy to embroider—_ | Franklin boulevard chapter house . Thursday. | service groups, Gray Ladies, Mrs. John Blanchard of Bloom-, "U/™t’s sides, staff aides and field Hills is chairman of the com- members of the Meter Service | mittee, Corps. - * According to the new plan, each. This new plan, which requires blood collection area has a staff | just three’ hours of training and chairman whose duty it is to re-| | six hours aid a year, offers Pon- | cruit. train and assign volunteers | tiac women _who find they can strictly for work on bloodmobiles. | * * * | Mrs. Dalton F. $ifton, recruit- Baldwin PTA ment chairman for the southern | Oakland County area, says that |Learns About | these trainees will not take the | : © ene place of service group aid but will) Visiting Teacher | supiement it. Mrs. W. H. Ruggles Jr., presi- ALSO ATTENDING dent, opened the October meeting | Meeting with the committee were of Baldwin PTA Thursday after- | area mobile recruitment chairmen, noon. Mrs. N. E, Durocher of Pontiac, Mrs. Roy Torrence of Milford and Mrs. Edward Lerchen of the Bir- | mingham-Bloomfield area. e e Ld Dates for the training periods are Oct. 27 at 1 p.m. at the Bir- -| mingham Community House; Oct. | 28 at 12:30 p.m. at St. John Church, Royal Oak; Nov. 2 at 9 ,a.m. at the .chapter house on | kitchen Franklin boulevard, and Nov, 7) heme! at noon in Holly. More classes will | Cheery,helpers for daily chores! (14, 16); medium (18, 20); “large | be scheduled for the out-county | Set of seven different embroi- (40, 42). Small size 1% yards 35 | Peterson as the new president, | 44 dery transfers included in Pattern | inch. Transfer included. Mrs. Lyle Dusenbury as vice 531. Smart for gifts, bazaars— | Send 35 cents in coins for this, President, and Mrs. William Sessions in any area are ope® | cach design about 7x8 inches. | "Travis as historian. It was decided to have children | of Baldwin School register at the | tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West school for prizes to be given by 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print the PTA if they are home at 8 Margaret Geyerman. chief nurse Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea | plainly name, address with zone, |p.m. on Halloween. Names of of ‘the Detroit Regional Blood Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print | Size and style number. "| those to be called or called upon Center, and her staff will teach the | plainly pattern number, your name, | |if they have no phone will be classes. address and zone. Meeting Conducted drawn from the registration. | Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Ruff were by Paulson Circle ‘named chairmen of the Christmas Mrs. George Thomas entertained | goat, members of the Paulson Mission- * ary Circle of the Emmanuel Bap-' Mothers from the homerooms of tist Church at her home on Kohler | pielen Barnett, Mrs. Leon Leece. drive Wednesday evening. Mrs Mrs. Eugene Carey, Gertrude | Lyle Howard and Kathryn George Foley and Mrs. A. J. Cadieux, | assisted the hostess. served refreshments. Devotions were given by Mrs. - Torche seagate em but the | Se edvincs oft ace te nd 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- the area in which the volunteer 1217 for first-class mailing. Send will work. to 124 Pontiac. Press Needlecraft pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send Eleanor H. “Harris ¥ Wed Glen L. Greetileaf claimed Elea- nor Helen Harris as his bride Sat- urday in a double-ring ceremony | jat Our Shepherd Lutheran Church fof Birmingham. | The Rev. H. G. ‘formed the 7 o'clock ‘ceremony. * * iwas of brown silk shantung wets | which she wore a matching head- piece and carried an arrangement of yellow asters. Performing the duties of best — | man was Allwardt per- | |Eldon Peterson, following which , ~ | dohn Brown, and the group sewed on a quilt to be OES Group Four |; ‘The bride is the daughter of lowell Wright and Donald Jauss . : . . . '| seat er in —— oe 6 Chooses Leaders Mr. and Mrs. Gerald G. Har.’ ed the guests, rrangements were made to se ris of Birmingham, and the = The bridal recital was sung by for Mrs, Maurice Paulson, who will Officers were elected when prigesroom's parents are Mr. | be leaving soon to serve as a Group Four, OES, met Wednes-| 334 Mrs. Morris H. Greenteat of | Harold Bannasch, cousin of the | missionary in South Africa. day evening at the home of Mrs._ Clawson. | Bssee. Brice Rockwell on Gingell court. | | Following the reception, the Mrs. Arthur Augustine-assisted the| A floor-length gown of Italian) hostess. . To serve this year are Mrs. Thomas Webb, president; Mrs. Russell Shaffer, vice president; Mrs. Rockwell, treasurer, and | Mrs. Frank Parks, secretary. Mrs, Samuel Gray has invited | The slim, sleek, uncluttered look is the newest fashion sensation. |newlyweds left for a honeymoon silk, fashioned with a portrait | trip to northern Michigan. The neckline, was worn by the bride. pride was wearing a navy blue | Her fingertip veil was held in’ suit and the corsage from her | ‘place by. a®tiara of seed pearls bridal bouquet. and she carried a bouquet of | Upon their return the siewlwotie| white carnations and roses. will reside in Royal Oak. ette from the standpoint both of wearer, the American woman has accepted this stem-like look. t é | 1 1 Is the Time to Order Your [a-L-frocker Choose a Style to Suit Dad or Mom.... Pick the exact fabric and the group to her home on Mark avenue for the November meet- ing. Her only jewelry was a stra olpeverty hee ened a ker Di nner Attended by Honorary Teaching Group | sister's maid of honor. Her gown XI of Delta’ Kappa Gamma, national honorary society for women teachers, held a dinner meeting at Highland Manor Thurs- day evening. * * * Vera Mae Adams. president, conducted the business meeting and guided planning for a discus- sion of the problem of selective teacher recruitment to be held at _the November meeting. DIAMONDS of Finest Chapter Mrs, Edna Forman, scholar. ship committee chairman, re- ceived a report from Ora Hal- | | lenbeck on the progress being made by the recipient of the | 1955 scholarship award. Worthy of the loveliest bride are our fine quality diamonds. Before you buy... Those installed were Mrs. Alva | Ashley, president; Mrs. Leroy | Schafer, vice president; Mrs, Mae | Hillis, secretary, and Mrs. Mabel | Wiser, treasurer. Mrs. Ashley presided at the business meeting, which was opened with devotions by the Rev, Lola Marion, Reports were read and three new members ac- © CHICKEN - HAM Call FE 2-1021 DAVE’S MKT. North Perry at Clenwood cepted inte the club, CAPITOL . Mrs, McCollough of Framington . WCTU spoke on the topic “‘Chris- BEAUTY SHOP tian Citizenship @f America.” Mrs.‘ § 580 W. Huron. FE 5-8912 Mary Carls sang several solos, § Due to eatre help we i — and group singing was led by Mrs. I astivas bow with us Wiser. | salt belied Tela ol acca ei -- — ror rus LADIES ‘ * —— aM. t’s So Easy to Have a Quick Delicious Meal When You Call TED’S e * Any of our meals are prepared and packed in aluminum foil to keep them “piping hot” till served. Just a phone call and everything is ready to be picked up at your convenience. P.S. For your next lunch- eon get-together — why not meet at Ted's? MI 4-7764 Woodward at Square Lake Road - PROFESSIONAL HAIR CARE . .. does not mean a stiff, rigid “set”... but rather a soft, well groomed, well brushed style for you. RANDALL'S HARPER 88 Wayne Street RENT — RENT — RENT Country Estate Residence Modern—4 bedrooms, bath, shower. All weather library porch, 2 fireplaces, full basement. Recreation room, laundry, lavatory, 2-car garage heated. Workshop. Setting in fenced wooded grove —3 acres. Horse riding ring... at corner of Scott Lake. and Watkins Lake Roads Within Two Miles of P diate Possession, Call FE 5-8387. Inspection by Appointment Only, Will Lease for One Year. METHOD SHOP Phone FE 2-1424 4. have your chair in time for COMPARE our Miss Hallenbeck also discussed for ways and means for the raising . ' CS diamonds a Christmas! > color: cut, of echolarsiip money. ! beauty... General arrangements for the and PRICE! meeting were handled by the scholarship committee consisting ; of Mrs. Forman, Miss Hallenbeck j 1%. Carat and Marietta Spring. | @ The only Rocker with a built-in foot-rest. = Priced from *, $26250 ' @ Rocks, reclines and locks in any position. oy Yellow or White Gold Meaunting ©@ Lever easily raises the built-in foot- @ Truly as beautiful as it is practical GENTRY’S , ‘MONDAY and FRIDAY NIGHTS ‘TIL 9 You Will Enjoy Shopping at DRAYTON HOME FURNISHINGS 4479 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains rest 98” “Green The Visit Our Store... Youll Save More! LEONARD’S id Refreshments — (Above Scarlett’s) * FE 4-6800 OR 3-2300 20% E. Lawrence LEON AND MYRL WINDSOR of their new store in Keego Harbor 3034 Orchard Lake Rd. next to the Theater SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2 P. M. to 6 P. M. Thumb Florists” cordially invite you to Grand Opening Door Prizes THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955. i . ) | iG ner is _ TWENTY-ONE On Tuesday. of Bloomfield Open Hunt will begin their fall activities with a benefit Yashion show and lunch- eon. Mrs. Carey Matheson and Mrs.. J, Philip Moses will serve as cochairmen: for the affair. o'clock luncheon are Mrs. Irving Duffy, Mrs. John Davis, Mrs. B. C. Mcintyre. i te Pentiae Press Pao Resersathine are being received at Bloomfield Open | noon ride to check with Mrs. Carney D. Matheson of Bloom- Hunt for the benefit fashion show and luncheon Tuesday | field Hills (center) the names of those appearing on the | noon, Glefke (right) of Birmingham take time before their after-| affair. Mrs. Arthur Buterbaugh (left) and Mrs. David | reservation lists. Mrs. Matheson is a cochairman for the | | | | | By ANNE HEYWOOD , firms to send to for more infor- Old Ambition Inspires New Hobby began giving samples to friends. , birthday and Christmas presents Behind many a successful side- | mation. line venture lies an early frustra- tion. In fact, if you're trying to decide on a hobby, or a spare- time activity, look in your past experience: and see if there isn’t some big disappointment which you can turn into productive channels. « . *. Mrs. G., for example, makes per- fectly delightful perfumes, which “It sounded like a big order, but I did as he suggested and found a special laboratory which would send me the necessary sup- plies, “‘My first couple of experiments weren't too successful, but after a while I came up with a pretty good perfume. to used at myself, then" “Then I worked out several quite | to all our female. relatives and | good scents and bought some fancy | friends, It's such fun. glass bottles for them. I enjoy trying to dream up new names and labeling them in fancy eee: * » * : “I now have some customers,” | Venture often lies in an old frus- she concluded, “to whom I sell my | trated ambition! perfumes. Bill and I give some as' “i'm reading all the old his- tories of perfume and having thé time of my life!” Yes, the clue to a successful (Copyright, 1955) ‘Open Hunt Will Feature| Pashion | Show, Luncheon decorations are Mrs. eb he Mrs. A. A. Clark | and Mrs. Clyde Hagerman. } Mrs, David Glafke, Mrs. Wil | liam 0. Bridge and Mrs. John | Maddox‘are in charge of tickets, | and Mrs. Arthur Buterbaugh is chairman of the. luacheon com- mittee. , women members. Serving as hostesses for the 12 Everill E. Fisher, Mrs. H. J. Havermale, Mrs. R. L. Lawlor and Mrs. affair are Mrs. James Vernor; Mrs. A. L. Moses, Mrs. Robert | Vinton, _ H. L. Cohimeier and | Mrs. E, E, Wilson. Others = Mrs. Irving Babcock. Mrs. Raymond Crogin, Mrs. Gor- Ms. Ann Reid of Washirigton, | don Hess, Mrs. Roger J. Emmert, D, C., is announcing the Oct. 14| Mrs. Merle O. Bates, Mrs. J. H. marriage of her daughter, Nancy | DeVisser and Mrs. F..M. Ham- Carol, to David G. Bell, son of Mr.| yirs. C. E. Carey, Mrs. T. E. and Mrs. Alfred J, Bell of Garner | Wilson, street. 'T, F. MacManus and Mrs. Alfred Dr. Edward B. Willingham of|F. Fortier have also made their the National Memorial Baptist reservations. Church in Washington, D. C., per- a formed the ceremony. Insurance Women The newlyweds are making their See Slide Pictures home in District Heights, Md., while Mr. Bell is stationed at An- Harris Carr showed colored slides of his recent trip to the Hawaiian drews Air Force Base. : Islands at the Wednesday lhincheon New Oriental Blacks | meeting of the Insurance Women's Dior’s black is definitely Orien- | Association of Pontiac, tal in feeling. His little black out-| Beatric Dodge, president, presid- side camisoles button in back and | ed at the business meeting at which have a deceptive air of simplicity. | time plans were made for a card “Mystere de New York"’ is like a party. Barbara Hess was appointed black “Winged Victory” in chiffon, | chairman for the affair. short in frent and sweeping out in| The next meeting of the associa- long folds in back. ' tion will be held Nov. 16, wa ee David Bell Claims Bride in Washington. INTENSIVE TRAINING COMPTOMETER (Felt & Tarrant) CALCULATOR (Burroughs) ELECTRIC DUPLEX (Burroughs) TYPEWRITING and other state a courses are available in Day, Half- Day and Evening ol. This specialized training can prepare you more quickly for a start in business cone Students are a to advance as rapidly as their industry and ability permits PREPARE NOW for a good position at an excellent begin- ning salary. 7 West Lawrente Street Phone FE 2-3551 Call in Person or Return This Ad for New Bulletin Among those who have already | made reservations for the benefit. Mrs. C. M. Pierce, Mrs. | ‘ Scientific comfort and control... PRE. NATAL BRA Firm uplift: in this white cotton ? 50 Lightweight, 2-way stretch girdle 695 with adjustable laces. Sizes S-M-L. : Shop On Credit With Purchase Coupons! de Bt . FEDERAL ::::.; } SAGINAW AT WARRREN, PONTIAC b'cloth bra, Front opening. 34-40 B. C and D cup, 34-42.......... 2.95 ADJUSTABLE GIRDLE SOR CESARE aL she sells from her own home. And | the key to her success: is. the fact that she always wanted to be a‘: chemist! “But,” she told me, “halfway through college I met Bill and | —_=_ po a = Ee married him, so the career in chemistry went out the window. | EF Celeste $305.00 “Not that I ever regretted it; r hal we've hada wonderful life. wil is x now, with the children grown, I desperately needed some kind of | / activity to keep me interested. I | » thought about that old love—|— chemistry. | we "Chantilly $288.50 * * * | “Of course,"’ she continued, ‘‘it was too late to go back to college | to get a degree and try to find a| job in the field. Moreover, I didn't | = want a full-time job—just some- |» thing to do afternoons, to keep me | © active and growing mentally. SUGGESTED PERFUMES “One day, while I was talking to | _ a friend of Bill’s, who is a chem- | - ist, I told him my problem. He |” suggested that I might make per- Nov. 2. _ ___| Willow $305.00 Theme $305.00 ret LEARN to EARN! FALL end WINTER COURSES Day or Night Classes Call Today for * detailed information No Age limitl Phone FE 4-1854 Call Miss Wilson Today for Information PONTIAC BEAUTY COLLEGE 16% ©. Huron, Behind Kresge’s ¥ 2nd Fleer Decor $397.50 Prices include Fed. Tax EE OS es to 16 W. Huron St. JEWELERS “CHOOSE-AND-USE-PLAN” | ...in your favorite Gorkam sterling pattern 46-PIECE SERVICE FOR 8 FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY! AS LOW AS ONLY *3°° PER WEEK On a BUDGET PAYMENT ACCOUNT 46-PC. SERVICE INCLUDES: @ 8 Teaspoons @ 1 Cold Meat Fork e 8 Forks @ 2 Tablespoons @ 8 Knives @ 1 Gravy Ladle @ 8 Salad Forks @ 8 Place Spoons @ 1 Sugar Spoon So be sure to visit our store the very- next time you are downtown, .. permit i us to assist you in selecting just the @ 1 Butter Knife OR... Order Now for CHRISTMAS! A SMALL DEPOSIT will place your choice of patterns in Layaway ... and, most important of all, account PAY- MENTS WILL NOT START UNTIL AFTER JANUARY, 1956. right pattern for you! Fe RR on ae New Sterling Patterns for ‘55! ‘by REED & BARTON and other famed silversmiths i 6 ERENT, RE la Wleateaate ci0 6 OE Tas Wallace TEE MBE tactics altars Lunt Towle SILVER SILVER SWIRL iain hue Y $29.75 $35.00 $35.00 Prices are for 6-piece piace setting and fe include Federal tax . ‘ Certified ‘ Gemologist 16 W. Huron St. JEWELERS _.. AL'S ind SOE Sl EAE RR i ¥ The Spot” Retief Acid indigestion ASK FOR CAMEO LARGEST SELLING CALIFORNIA WINES IN MICHIGAN FOR 6th YEAR c. AVAILABLE ONLY AT SDD‘S OR STATE STORES. "CAMEO VINEYARDS CO., L | t | | chapter, American Red Cross. | Robert Dunn of the Birmingham | | Fire Dept. and Leon Bumgardner | will teach a course beginning at | |7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the chapter | house, 118 Franklin Blvd. Beginning Nov. 2, Daryl! De- Vaney, also of the Birmingham Fire Dept. will instruct at String- ham School on Elizabeth Lake road. Enrollment information may be obtained by contacting the. chapter house. Cardinal Spellman Says | Soviet Smile Only Front | NEW YORK &® — Francis Card- | inal Spellman says the “Russian | smile," prevalent since the Geneva | conference, cannot erase ‘‘the memory of Soviet cruelty.” i Speaking last night at the Ith) annual Alfred E. Smith Memoria! | | Foundation Dinner,. he warned PONTIAC 860 TWO-DOOR SEDAN — Pontiac's 1956. two-door sedan ance unequalled in the mediu | rides on a 122 inch wheelbase with 206 inches over-all length. Its big | display in dealer showrooms today. | 205 horsepower strato-streak V-8 engine gives it power and perform- | . Red Cross Offering \Judge Black Says Lawyer ‘Want Control of the Bench DETROIT wW — Aftorneys press- of naming judges by popular elec- | tion actually want to control judi- cial selections themselves, Supreme Court justice-elect Eu-| gene Black contends. Black, elected last April to a State Supreme Court starting Jan. 1, made his charge Wednesday | in a debate before University of Detroit law students. Opposing him was Neil A, Patterson, De- | troit attorney and executive sec. | retary of the Better Judges for | Michigan Committee Patterson argued that the popu | lar election . system of naming judges is “one deeply enmeshed in polities.” Black, now a circuit judge in Port Huron, said the so-called Missouri Plan for choosing judges would give lawyers con- trot ef the selections, Patterson's eommittee supports the Missouri Pian for Michigan, Under the Missevur system the | governor would fill judicial vacan- FRESNO, CALIFORNIA } | against what he termed “the bland- | cies from a list of three nominees. lishments of the Soviet smile,” and | The nominees would be selected | added: | by a commission that would in- “It is possible to be under the | clude a judge selected by judges, mistaken impression that a person | three lawyers named by lawyers is smiling at you when actually | and three laymen named by the | he is laughing at you." | governor. Within a year after appointment One of the wildest Ivy League and every six years thereafter, football games ever played in-/ a judge would run for election on volved Yale and Dartmouth in his record without opposition by | 1931. They played a 33-35 tie. a candidate. If rejected, a suc- | B. FE Goodrich TRAILMAKER | SALE ENDS OCTOBER 31 LIST PRICE $2585 SALE PRICE ww pans 20: 6.00-16 plus tex end @ Wades through snow your receppable tires @ Walks through mud ®@ Grips on ice ri {7 ] RRY! AS LOW AS 2?” DOWN ciways exists when PUTS APAIR ON YOUR CAR FRONT END ALIGNMENT Thad ho snow is forecast. Caster, Camber, Toe-in...... WATCH BURNS & ALLEN—WJBK-TV—-MONDAYS 7:00 P.M. B.F.Goodrich 2: J11 WM. Perry St. Open Friday Night ‘ti 9 = FE 2-0121 ee: cessor would be named from nom- inees of the seven-member com- mission, Patterson said-the plan would eliminate leaders of political par- tiles from in effect, naming judges.. Moreover, it would tend to remove judges “who have outlived their usefulness.” m priced range. The 1956 Pontiacs are on | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21, 1955 . ; nr |Born has been born’ to the Butte | fore the doctor, The father, Henry New Born Born Early the Borns first born but he created BUTTE, Mont. An impatient | quite a fuss {tee had ignored his suggestions for S | court reform “by improving the | | present system, not junking it,” Black said he proposed: | (1) Filling judicial vacancies by | lelection rather than appointment | by the governor; (2) Nominating | Supreme Court candidates in pri-| | maries- jnstead of at party con-| j ventions; (3) Eliminating ballot | |designation for judicial incum- | | bents; (4) And staggering terms | |\of judges in metropolitan centers | |to avoid “bedsheet” ballots. | Black said the legislature could Beals DECORATOR Power Panel Ultra-modern and eco- nomical! 4 star Power Panel’ inside. Right- Up-Front Controls on front. Mahogany. Model 21 K. 38. 21” Console $ 2 3 9” Trade-ins — Easy Terms! Prices Include Fed. Tax! Full Year Picture Tube Warranty! 17" TV ideal for the bed- room, the kitchen, the kids in beautiful Mist Green, Cerulean Bive or Tan shelf- size cabinet. Ask for Model 17725, , aarelateny crane buy! SWEET’S Radio and Appliance Free Parking 422 W. Huron St. FE 4-1133 '56 Chevrolet streaks: up Pikes Peak to new record! § What you see here is automobile history in the making. For this is an actual on-the-scene shot of . a camouflaged °56 Chevrolet shattering the Pikes Peak record in a dramatic, top-secret run, supervised and certified by NASCAR*. It’s the first and only time a new model ever proved F itself such a great road car before its introduction to the public. Even before you see it, you know this '56 Chevrolet is a record breaker—with the power, cornering ability, and sureness of control that will make your driving safer and more fun. And you can see and drive this new Chevrolet goon now. Just wait! *National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing whose officicls timed and certified the performance of this preproduction model. A RECORD-BREAKING NEW CHEVROLET The hot one’s F RIDAY, NOV. 4 even hotter! __MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. a bat he aa | | ; | | } es | i "9 i? y a | ‘ pum G' | Pee 1g on ae ay Caer Ye. / . : o ‘4 | A bay J ‘be ; f \ / f é J , ; At fp : af ‘ : ie A | / y. ! i, | , f ( / PA q t ! ce J k oe ye _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY; OCTOBER 21, 1955 Xr : ___TWENTY-THRER * Famous CANNON... Sensationally Reduced! 38 es {| PIECE |3 - | \ | 7 Ay i | | 9x12 Axminster Rug Luxurious, deep pile rugs expertly woven for long wear and lasting beauty. A wide pattern selection and choice of colors | to blend in modern room settings. Wonderful values! | ql ' ¥ & ' ' : } , \ it + . tif : Lao “ ~ | i] i : aa vr ii ) » scale MR UR i 9 Hi Plas red | BATH TOWELS | | WASH CLOTHS | ““«"| DISH TOWELS 5“ DISH CLOTHS | » ar we ik 4) POT HOLDERS | ~~ as ll Ul Pa Tapestry Sofa Bed Modern style sofa that converts to a comfortable bed at $ 50 night for extra sleeping accommodations. Sleeps two! Reg- ; ty a A424 4%.% 2 014 MNECUCETECECTTCCEE OSES ular $69.50 value . . . Save $20.00. See it now! Convenient terms. arranged. « saad 1a aABRE*RSAABRARSEHELLAAKAELAE® _ sees ee Rea # ‘ e ° Full Size Innerspring Ma Here's sleeping comfort at an unheard of low price! ‘ Innerspring mattress or box springs with heavy $ 50 layers of cotton padding and covered in durable : striped ticking. Full or twin size. Convenient terms arranged! ~ ; : a — [= fhmited supply of these S6-Piece CANNON Encombles will soll fast! 81x99” SHEETS e 6 BATH TOWELS 8 . 8 PHLOW CASES. @ 12 WASH CLOTHS’ 2 @ 4 DISH TOWELS Ample Free Parking! ——e a A > ae (5 os Maden ro } This low price includes the full size panel bed, chest and double dresser with mirror! on Davenport & Chair $119 |= 5179" = . | Handsome living room suite in a choice of colors to enhance your home. Solid Only $12 Down comfort at an unheard-of low price! Has reversible innierspring cushions. and coil spring base construction. LP MTL itt a, You'll admire the tasteful : lines of this sparkling new. pei suite .. . the hand-rubbed blond finish and the top Watch Us Grow! quality construction fea- tures. This value stimu- lates your pocketbook as well as your eye, for just In the Exciting New ond at the’ low prien that OPEN TONIGHT and MONDAY ‘Pearl Finish #}#‘™~”* Until 9 P. M. Ample Free Parking — Easy Credit Terms! It won't be long now! Our new building will soon be ready for occupancy but in. the meantime hurry down and take ad- vantage of the tremendous savings during our Expansion Sale! © Double Dresser, Chest and Bed “hy See. ~ Over 40 Years of Serwice.’ Ai be ie Uae ily } . t 4 Oi Ne | f L | 1 |". THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1953. iy ee Ee ertare ly As j J \ men \ : ( x 4 é } : \ , : /) pt Reraeg Yt / “Trick or Treat’ Hours 6-7 P.M. Parties Will Follow at Schools, Costume Event for Teens WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Pians for township-wide celebra- tion of Halloween ‘trick or treat’ nounced by the Waterford Town- and area parties is being an- | ship Recreation Department. ~* * co As in other communities, and in a i : 5 ~ i | i Hy f i pati # iii at | chairman, Dinner was served to about 85 members and guests by the Navy Moms, . Guests included Mrs. Mary Bruce, past state auxiliary eom- mander; Mrs. Virginia Hayes, prés- “ent state auxiliary commander: James Lumson; Father Emme! of - St. Vincent's Parish, Pontiac, and , Capt. Harold E. Strong of the Au- burn Heights “‘Nike’’ Guided Mis- sile Base, who spoke to the group on Base organization. Blood Program Talk. Highlights Meeting ' NORTH BRANCH—The meeting of the Lapeer County Hospital Auxiliary, held Monday evening at the home ‘of Mrs. Robert Belanger, was highlighted by a talk on the Lapeer County blood program, given by chairman Mrs. Fred Jens of Lapeer. Eighteen members of the group attended. Co-hostesses assisting Mrs. Bel- anger were Mrs, John Lamphier and Mrs. George Furse. iL for Youth Department. Leading in activity attendance each week is high school you'h Reveal Names of Co-chairmen Committee | Campaign for Proposed Hospita Notes Progress ROMEO-—Along with the an- nouncement that Charies D. Fergu- son and James D. Ligon will serve as cochairmen of the Industry Corporate Gifts Committee in the $350,000 drive for a new hospital Rochester Youth Will Participate in Civic Concerts ROCHESTER—The Detroit Sym- phény Young Peoples’ Concert, sponsored by the Harrison Central Parent Teacher's Assn. with. Mrs. f fyi i ir . : Lake Orion Ayrshire Sets Record in Test LAKE ORION — Proud Ruler’s Maida, a three-year-old Ayrshire in the Sky Light Farms herd of Marvin Ludwig and Sons at Lake ‘Orion, has recently completed a record on official Herd test of 18,- 405 pounds of milk and 777 pounds of butterfat made in 305 days, milked twice daily. This record is equal to over 28 quarts of milk per day. ee. Semen — * ies 5 ‘on Bond Issue Ballet instruction is second in attendance with 250 girls re- celving weekly lessons at the Rounding out these weekly fall activities for young people are: | Junior High Youth Night, Satur- | day Morning Fun, Junior Football | League and Ballroom Dance Les- s0ns. Adult recreation this fall con sists of: Travel Adventure Series, monthly .conducted at the junior | high school: 300 persons attended | | | the first film on “Holland and | Belgium,” shown by Robert Friars. | Ladies Fashion Your Figure Club and Adult Camera Club completes | fall adult activities. | “Al of these activities are tro- vided at little, or no‘ cost,” an nounce’ Superintendent of Recrea- tion, Thomas Belton, Troy Will Vote } TROY TOWNSHIP—Troy Town- | ship residents will be asked to vote Oct. 31 on a $1,500,000 bond issue to supplement school needs. The program includes additions to two elementary schools, one double ring candleli ceremony recently united Shirley Ann Fast, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fast of Maceday Gardens, and new elementary school, an exten-| Ronald Lee Ray Inscho, son of sive addition to the junior high} Arthur Inscho of Oxbow Lake and and an addition to the high school| Mrs, Pauline Sheldon of Frazer and remodeling of existing facili-| Township. : ties there as required to meet \e 8 8 prescribed North Central Assn.| The bride chose a ballerina standards. length gown of white lace trimmed in net lace. A small hat held the MR. AND MRS. RONALD INSCHO Candlelight Rite Unites Ray Inscho, Shirley Fast WATERFORD NSHIP — A/ three-quarter veil. She carried a | white Testament with a corsage of white roses and white pompons. danet Thoens, niece of the bride, was maid of honor, and the bridegroom's brother, Dan Inscho, served as best man. After the ceremony, a reception for 125 guests was held at the |home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred | Mayhew, the bride’s sister on | Watkins Lake Road. Also OKs $3,500,000 Plan for Outstandi The Board of Education tentative- ly approved a 3% million dollar, Brandon Installation Scheduled for Nov. 4 ORTONVILLE—Brandon Grange 973 held election of officers at its ‘names to the four elementary buildings now under construction when it met here last night. * a Pending further study, the board set’ February ag the time fer a special election to gain approval for issuing bonds which would pay for six school sites, four more elementary buildings, an aididi- tion to an existing building, and a junior high school. Two of the chaplain, Mrs. Hazel Overly. building program and also gave | Installation will be at 8 p.m., sites would be used for a third Nov. 5, Alex Solly will be installing officer. No Hearing Date Set for Dance Hall Permit INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP— Victoria James is, attempting to get an Oakland County Circuit Court order allowing her to oper- ate a dance hall and tavern on | junior high and a second senior high school. . In naming the four schools now under construction, the Board felt that both men and women should be recognized and that their names should be meaningful to all and that they should have a background in Michigan history. Some time ago members named *|land she owns in Sunny Beach the school on Crescent Lake road *| Country Club subdivision. jnear Hatchery road, the John She asks that a clause in the | Monteith School, honoring an early | township zoning ordinance be set | Michigan educator and mission- aside under which, she alleges, , ary. In 1817 he was appointed: one | the township board refused to is-|of the two faculty members of sue the necessary permits. the “University of Michigan” by | A similar business was operated | Gov. Cass. In 1818, with a group | on the site from 1933 to 1953, she | of Detroit citizens, he made a tour | asserts, No hearing date has been into Oakland County to explore the | set, recently surveyed areas. Shortly | 7 ee _ | thereafter the settlement of Pon-| ‘Honor Grand Officer | Bec aa Wotestetg Teena oc: | * LAPEER—Rhea Harvey, recent-| McVITTIE HISTORY : ly elected Grand Secretary of| The school on Midland Avenue, Michigan Pythian Sisters, was between Waterford Village and. honored Tuesday night at a recep- | Drayton Plains, will be named the | tion at the American Legion McVittie School in recognition of | | Building: Seventy-five guests at-' Kenneth and Effie McVittie. The tended from Flint, Oxford, Port "couple moved to Waterford Town- Huron and Ann Arbor. }ship in 1920 and shortly there- | a ae — |after, Mrs. McVittie began teach- | ‘ing school in the Waterford Vil- | lage School, and taught there un- | til the time of her death in 1950. | Kenneth McVittie served as chief | probation officer for Oakland ‘County and referee for the juve- | nile court for twenty years. He was one of the organizers and | first president of the Clinton Val- | Waterford Names Schools ng Pioneers served on the Waterford Village board for a number of a public park. The fourth school, | School. Burt came. to Michigan in | 1822 and as a surveyor was re- |sponsible for discovering much of | the vast mineral wealth of North- 'ern Michigan: He is better known jas the originator and developer ‘of the solar compass. 7 * * * In other business, the board opened bids for construction of an eight-inch water main to serve the Winding Drive building. Low bidder was George W. Tripp with $4,216. The bids were submitted to architect Eugene Cléland for recommendations to be made at a special meeting Tuesday, October 25, at 8 p.m. U.S. Grange to-Meet Nov. 15-24 in Ohio WASHINGTON (INS) — The Na- tional Grange has the program all mapped out for its 89th annual ses- sion to be held in Cleveland, Ohio, from Nov. 15. through Nov. 24. Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Renson and Ohio's Gov. Frank J. Lausche are among the scheduled speakers. C. M. Ferguson, Feder- al Extension Service administra- | tor, will speak at the annual youth | banquet. | ne Holland Bulbs’ | “ McNeil’s Nursery Charter Vote \Set for Dec. 12 | Nominations Petitions | Available at Township | Hall at Troy TROY TOWNSHIP — Dec. 122 | Troy residents will vote on adop- tion of the proposed city charter. A mayor, six commissioners, a Petitions for nominations are Voting will take place at the usual . Big Beaver Fire Hall, Rochester Rd., Troy Township Hall, 60 Wattles Rd. and Troy Fire Hall, 5930 Livernois, New Committee Officers Named in Farmington The Farmington Cub Scouts, pack 45, began another year with their meeting Wednesday evening. Webelos badges were awarded te four cub scouts and ten new applications were filed. New committee officers are: Le- land Cijfford, institutional repre- sentative; Earl Laverty, commit- tee chairman; Arthur Riopella, organization chairman; Burton Heist, secretary; Norman Celin- ske, treasurer; John Breitenbeck, | cubmaster, and Donald Bird, new committee member, serving as as- sistant cubmaster. Leonard Festival Due LEONARD — The Leonard PTA ord Plans Halloween Festivity Over 1,000 Avail Selves ao a. of Waterford Recreation | WATERFORD ‘TOWNSHIP —| night with an average of thece More than one thousand boys and | hundred people... iPTA Program . {tion of Juvenile Delinquency * Arkansa City, father served as his best man. : LJ tJ Immediately following the mar- ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle left for San Antonio, where the is serving with the Juveniles Head West Bloomfield Group. Stresses Prevention in Delinquency WEST BLOOMFIELD—‘*Preven- rather than Correction,” was the topic for the West Bloomfield High School PTA meeting last night at the school. | Albert Willis, program chair- | man for the evening, introduced Lieut. Ray Guilloz of the Berkley Police Department. He is in! charge of the Youth Bureau and | the Liquor Complaints Bureau, in which today’s youth are involved. } | paster of the Community Church arti Hl tl C. Weed, principal of the high school, spoke on the accredi- with the Univer- It. has been approved for a two year period, Betty Murphy, girl's counselor | and a teacher at the high school, discussed the new National Merit | will hold their Harvest Festival | Scholarship which has just become Saturday beginning with a ham |available to the seniors this year. supper at 6 p.m. There will be She said that this scholarship cor- carnival booths, auction, crown. | poration was a non-profit, inde- ing of the festival queen, plus aj pendent, organization, dedicated | variety show. The public is inivited. to the discovery and development | of youth: MILFORD — Members of the Huron Valley Saddie Club are sponsoring a benefit Trail Ride Sunday for one of its former | Slate Benefit Trail Ride | Grubb and Duck Lake roads at 10:38 a. m. : A “Penny-a-spoonful” dinner has been planned by the members, | which will be served at 3:00 in the presidents, Ross Eaton. | Doctors. have given Eaton only a short to live. He was re- leased recently. from the hospital and is now living at the home of Fay Titus at 501 Oxbow Lake Rd., Route No. 5, Milford. afternoon at the Highland Rec. | ° * * * ' For reservations for the dinner, | call MUtual 42552 or MUtual 40511. . Proceeds of the Trail Ride will Persons in the area wishing to | be added to a fund already started participate will meet at the | by residents in the Huron Valley Highland Recreation Area at | area. FREE DEMONSTRATION! SS UKE SLICING BREAD! er Watch Clinton Chain Saw cut through Seein’ is believin'! the a, hardwood logs like this in seconds! .. . See it fell 2-foot trees in a minute or two!... Why, it can even clear a good- size woodlot in a morning’ o~ La itletu if to you SEE US FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION store , prove PHONE, WRITE OR 5 HP with 20” Guide Bar and Chain .. .$287.50 4 HP with 20” Bar and at our im your yard Via AotetsiielL he |Auburn Heights Couple to Mark Golden Wedding AUBURN HEIGHTS — Mr. and Mrs. Bowker of 170 Juniper are celebrating their 50th weddirig an- niversary on Saturday, Oct. 29, with open house at their home. Their children, Perry of Dray- ton Piains; Vern of Owosso; Dan- iel of Ortonville; Amos and Ward, both of Auburn Height» and their wives, and a daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Kallas of Fiint-will be hosts, — The open house will be from 2 until 3. p.m. and from T until 9 p.m. Waterford Permits: Drop 50 Per Cent - WATERFORD TOWNSHIP House permits for September showed more than a 50 per cent drop from the previous month in Waterford Township. In August 126 building permits were issued at a valuation of $1,373, 440 compared to 60 permits in September at a valuation of $644,580. Total permits for September were 173 at a valuation of $867,- 220. August totals were 247 per- mits ‘at $1,796,964.53. Other issuances were 34 additions and remodeling to homes, 59 ga- rages, 7 commerical and one build- ing removal. Towa has 8,522 miles of railroad. Perennial Sown in Late Fall will make a better lawn than if sown in Spring. Grass Seed Prices Lowest in Years L Merion Blue Grass . "375 Kentucky Blue Grass . ..89 C. Red Fescue _..... 65 Illehee Fescue ...... 75 Chewings Fescue ...... 75 Meadow Fescue ...... 45 Kentucky 31 Fescue.. .40 Highland Bent Grass .1.25 Perenial Rye Grass... ..35 SALT for Water-softners Granulated Salt .....1.55 C. C. Rock Salt ....1.55 ee ! i f | t 3 Former Drayton Plains | Deg wide . nen of ve Degree , ‘ : Chain .. .$262.50 We Take Trade-ins— || Med. Flake Salt... ..1.90 oiled Evergreens — Shrubs — Shade Trees sane Credit Terms! Salt Pellets ....., . 2.00 Mason MRS. ADELL RICHARDSON -, Grown at Our Nursery . re + A-1 Rock -" soos 2.00 a change to : a Ri ge ly announced. Ladies 70 ee eae agp pe her ran iertee | ow td eg awed varieties to choose from K | N G B R _ WE DELIVER a sa valescent Home. She was born in West Bloomfield Township on Oct. 25, | % Import olland Bulbs . , e : 1855, and has lived in Oakland County all of her life. Her husband, the * Fertilizer and Garden Supplies | oa late ape Richarfison conducted had and ten cent si > Pontiac Landscaping Service Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. FE 4-0734 - FE 4-1112. during the horse and buggy days. was a farmer in Commerce : . | # , Your Authorized Dealer Richardson's hel fot er memes Geer, and swe es wes! MCNeil’s Nursery ramuass Tacrons — sou catoon reacroxs | Fed & Lawn Supply recollection, reaching back to Civil War days. She had much to do with |. MsCORMICK FARM IMPLEMENTS — KASCO FEEDS | 28 Jackson St. ss costa foundation on which our county was built. Her nearest rela-|f| MA 5-7946, 6670 Dixie Hwy., near M-15, Clarkston | SCOTT LAWN PRODUCTS. | FE 2.0491 _ i] \ ‘ ao renee ae : | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER a0 1955 MF | ; DON'T PAY MORE! TT Open 9-5:30—Fri. ‘til 9 (188 Oakland Ave. CROSLEY wR (With Trade-in) | | Hospital again Pontiac State establishes itself among the lead- ers of the state hospitals jn rec- ognizing new ideas in therapy. Following the lead of the nation jin the increased interest in golf as a form bal relaxation and exer- Hear Specialists State Hospital has | 18-hole miniature cise, Pontiac completed an golf course This course Includes water | holes, sand traps and other golf hazards to make it thought. pro- voking and entertaining. It is expected to service 200 patients a week, Hal Boyle Says: NORT HHOLLYWOOD, Calif. w| here tomorrow for actor John Termite 0| son | NOT) services will be con-| Hodiak, who died of a heart ab j | ducted privately” in a merunry tack Wednesday, He was 41. Meet the Rolling Skull and Crying Duchess fatal tg Woman 3 NEW YORK @—A human skull; at the start. You should begin day after day and your readers | Otherwise he couldn't write the|from an inner need? If /so, what, | Autumn rolled out on the table, and the every column with the sentence, ‘Would never tire of it.” po on 20 times. over and still |is “ ° Hollywood Secretary , cia ie : : a - keep a clear conscience. ‘ A. Hunge ‘ iy duchess cried, “Take your hands “a. human skull rolled out on the . ’ rae a q. Do. Sie ite euch meer Mistakes Killing Fluid 7 ne . dice , ell off me!” . table’ —and then go on and write | Bene gee =~ tay gondby | other? | - ; Q. What is the greatest problem | ‘for Wine, Police Say Michi an’s Ideal Lest any mystery arise from the | #bout whatever else you have in forever to the rolling skull and the | vA, Sure, the same. way women | ‘that could face a columnist? d td , 2 f : foregoing sentence, let me hasten mind." " dechoass like each other, A. Having to write a column on) WHITTIER Calit, n : to explain. I wrote it only to please | ee i =. reason many readers Q. Why are columnists always a typewriter with a broken “I’’ swine” which oe Rose ‘ones e “~y , | ae a ay ™ — | earn mets friend has a au} |are interested in the behind-the- neh or ant a What is the one thing a Finigan fatally sipped ina moment Pla n Ui ng Seaso n. : wi im in principle, but bula : Pr. | Ss the . A dozen years ago'l took up that out for. this sosuion sentence, | astro eal youl th agora A. They have found that if they | columnist needs most to become | of hospitality was described by | odd kind of mental carpentering ‘Take your hands off me,” the ‘Today I'd = a se some of it real people, the real people successful? sheriff's officers today as termite 1¢ You Are P led | called newspaper columning. | duchess cried, the paledrtoe most often asked me hit back — and that hurts, A. A successful employer with | killer fluid. U e Fuzzied— ‘ Over all those years a news “It has the three things that. p wll m 2 years. of buried life. @- Do most columnists write a sense of humor, Inspector F. W. Rosenberg said And need help with friend has told me perhaps a interest people most — sex, money eed 7 ~ | the 50-year-old personal secretary . d 7 thousand times, “‘the only way to and high society,” he claims. “You | Q. De you ows 8 ‘acht? | to film producer C. B. De Mille your landscaping, Tet interest readers is to startle them could use the sentence day after A. “No!” 7 y . | | apparently poured —_ a ve us make helpful, con- “ | a is it hare getting a new idea ae ee eel structive: “suggestion ’ | arsenate. ~The 2 Pane " wy m se S t every day? arsenate ve inspec all saic . Me : " . bottle had been taken accidentally P orgy A $Quiss | A. No harder than it would be from the home of Mrs. Finigan's We are always glad to OOTHBRUSH to give blood every day. | brother-in-law, a termite extermi- , iS! ' | BECAUSE YOURMOUTH || Q. My son, who is in the 6th. visit your home and oe nator, ; : WON'T OPEN WIDE LIKE | Stade and says the cutest things, | Mrs. Finigan died yesterday, | Suggest a planting that é ‘ce wants to ‘be a columnist, What | _ ‘ é rahe a! . A LION’S, —, 1 do? | = 12 hours after taking a sip'} will add beauty and i with a neighbor, Mrs. Dolores | : | A. Hold his ede —_ cold Hoyle, 26, who had complained of value to your property. 4 out of Scavities § =—=«_ "°F Tepeat whenever nF: la cold. Mrs. Hoyle is hospitalized, : strike your back teeth | @. What really ‘ts the best train- | ol — _ to — vain ; ne. mystery ¢ . ; Use the brush that’s bent like ing es mie egghl wine was solved’ suddenly, Rosen- | d A. Ditch digging, flagpole sitting | , your dentist's mirror to reach | nd strip teasin | berg said, when officers went to| ay a an those hard-to- “get-at places, er A - , the home of the brother-in-law, | : bg bao on . bs sume really | cart Finigan, where Mrs, Finigan | 100 DOWN i" A. Crying himself to sleep. | and her husband formerly lived, - | SO Q. Columnists ere always cru- "=? | Balance in 3 Monthly. Installments @ | sading to change the world, Which Carl Finigan told them he used | of your crusades are you proudest sodium arsenate to exterminate of? termites and frequently carried jt . A. My lifelong attempt to gain to jobs in old wine bottles. ; d 4 | more recognition each year for the “How would it look after stand Gg) }second robin of spring, ing awhile?” he was asked. - = ¢ ‘sSomething like sauterne,”’ Fini- | 4 q Q. Does a columnist need a good | from a bottle labeled ‘white port,” | Garden Center memory? - which resembles sauterne, Rosen. | | A. No. He needs a bad memory berg theorized that Mrs, Finigan | “pe f . . ” eens and her husband Harold took the | “Everything for Lawn and Garden | bottle w with them by mistake to| 5812 Highland Road (M-59) OR 3-7147 ; , ‘i ‘ their new home. , Ch oice of ODD SHIP SHAPE — Rear view of an experimental jet plane at ak Finigan had been employed | JUST EAST OF PONTIAC AIRPORT FIN EST : Farnborough, England, gives it insect-like appearance. Craft is de- by De Mille for 25 years, first as WE ARE OPEN SUNDAYS | signed to explore problems in auper sonic area | an accountant and bookkeeper and U A LITY : rr a — later as Sere secretary, a ONE LOW PRICE! Miniature Golf Cours Set, Le | | * I for State Hospital Patients ' veer ) The entire athletic field ei FIRST QUALI T Y FRAMES & LENSES f 5 p handle the recreational therapy |: | ‘ A eds of yer 500 -nts he @ Your Prescription Accuratély Filled | 0 Jurvey Frogress —- Patients eac | @ First in Pontioc with the Newest NEW ORLEANS up—Many of the The staff has long been aware @ Fast Service @ Satisfaction Guaranteed @ Only Ist Quality Materials @ For Men, Women & Children DISPENSING OPTICIANS Room 2-3, 15 W. Lawrence Phone FE 2-2895 nis NEWEST FEATURES Brightest Picture Smallest Cabinet Biggest 21" Screen @ Weighs only 45 Ibs. @ Carry it anywhere @ Beauty without bulk @ Mahogany or Blond® finished . FE 2- a 81 Open Daily 9 A. M. to 10 P. M. Park Free in Lot Rear of Store No Money Down—Easy Terms | nation's top heart specialists began gathering today for a three-day scientific survey of late findings on the nature and treatment of maladies of the heart and blood vessels—diseases responsible for more than half of all American deaths each year. At a time when public interest | in heart disease has reached a new high due to President Eisenhower's ; recent heart attack, the American | Heart Assn, prepared for the open- | : | ing of its 28th annual scientific session. commencing tomorrow. Dr. Paul D. White of Boston, ‘a consultant in President Eisenhow- er's illness, is scheduled to take | part ina panel discussion Sunday on the subject _ penenination and Heart Disease.’ Adlai, Kefauver to Run in Oregon ‘56 Primary PORTLAND, Ore, (®—Adlai Ste- 'venson and Sen. Estes Kefauver of | Tennessee will be entered in the Oregon Democratic _ presidential primary balloting next May, their backers said yesterday. Averell Harriman, New York governor, also will go on the bal lot “if he becomes a candidate," another prominent Democrat, Mike DeCicco of Portland, announced. It takes 1.000 signatures to. put a candidate's name on the prefer ential primary ballot in Oregon. 'A candidate's permission: is not needed, Architecture is the mother of all the arts, | COUrSse , tator sports. vehicle of these needs but it was not until last year when funds became avail- able that actual work started. All work has been done volun- tarily by patients with the Recrea- | tional Therapy Department as the sponsoring group. Funds for the and other athletic courts have been given by organizations and individuals throughout the state. “ The overall plan to make Pon- tiac State Hospital's recreational therapy facilities the finest in the state include tennis, paddle tennis, badminton and: shuffie- board courts, a series ‘of horse- shoe pits, a new baseball dia- mond and a quiet patio area in addition to the 18-hole minia- ture golf course. ‘Plans are also under way with the State Legislature for eventually having a small stadium for spec- Completed now is the golf course, shuffleboard courts and the badminton courts. The remainder of the facilities are being held until spring when it is | expected that additional funds and | weather conditions will allow them | to go on to completion. Death Claims Are Down | NEW YORK — The Institute of Life Insurance reports that motor- | fatalities accounted for! 19,000 life-insurance death claims in the first half of 1955, represent. | ing $40,000,000 in benefit payments. | This compares with 20.000 claims for $39,000,000 in the first half -of 1954. A Honey Advertised in SE\ "EN TEEN for the Money... ay ae: SHOE STORE in BASEMENT pinkioe ! They're the popular loaf moc you saw in Seventeen magazine! THE MOST SHOE FOR THE MONEY IN AMERICA! a RED BLACK BROWN | “ ALL-WEATHER JACKETS THAT LOOK AND WEAR LIKE CAPESKIN WATER REPELLENT © SPOT RESISTANT CRACK RESISTANT WASH WITH DAMP CLOTH The rich good looks . . . the smartness of fashion’s favorite capeskins! BUT ... at the merest fraction of the price . . . and with all the easy-care advantages of Harte’s famous “Wata Seal” vinyl! Handsomely detailed with raised yoke welts in front and back, buttoned cuffs, matching belt. Warm quilted lining covered with shimmering rayon taffeta. 10-18, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 FLOOR SHOW Friday and Saturday KID WILLIAMS * Comedy MC KIM SCOTT Lovely Dancing Star LOU KRUEGER Accordion Virtuoso Plus ALVIN WALLS and His Orchestra Phone FE 2-2981 for Reservations ; JAM SESSION. 3 4 EVERY TUESDAY EVE. : ‘ Music by SO-PHIS-TO-CATS ‘ pihb hb bb bt bb toto. trtn tata rh Linhin hes DICK DENGATE and HIS ESQUIRES for Your Dancing Pleasure on FRIDAY and SATURDAY BARNARD WILL BE AT DIXIE ON SUNDAYS SPECIAL SHOW! Mary Jasey gy Ao Comedy MC KEY EN [EVE ‘aah * @ BEER @ WINE @ LIQUORS 4904 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 2-6052.$ Jean Wilson Exotic -— “oe eee c—a_Ooreeeeeereereeereryeerrerree a Af: | Ls x la ‘ i i ro, : THE PONTIAC PRESS, man, this is what happened The comics sat down at a . Dean, Jerry jine comics black. Toss Around and cutting up, In'no time at all Vegas Mone Fike of Newark, NS. and were g Y passing out cards, advice and LAS VEGAS, Nev. Oct. 20 @ —| monty to patrons. : This gambling resort loves “i » * licit : j ‘When a couple of characters like | tog wonder. ns naga Dean Martin ‘and Jerry. Lewis) ying off double, t then come to town it would be a sad see They ae ak Sayer day indeed if the local press agents hole cards, gave them ketter ones tailed to capitalize on them. | it they needed them. They} Take lest night, Ke sestatce. | | screamed at those that rejected There were Dean and Jerry, loung- | advicn, . ing around the Sands Hotel, wait-| The press agent quoted manager ing for a plane to return them to| Jack Entratter as saying the Hollywood after a brief vacation. | Shenanigans cost the hotel $74,895 According to the hotel’s publicity |be pg the funriymen left after half a hour, although how so precise | - ‘ a figure Gas serived at was not | | explained, ' * * * ‘nothing compared to the two mil- public."’ faa and goat hides annually. | EVERYTHING FOR Make Up—Horne—Noise Makers or just eee for a Piver's Magazine Outlet darned good time? 35 Aubern Ave, FE 4-8240 The Sportsman's your = a best bet. i hi i i i hi i i i bd . i Kitchen Open Daily | D AN CE: 10 A. M..-.10 P. M. e . F every Nite of the Wook Fomily Style Chicken | p43 LITTLE WORDS” Dinner, gh iv ; emashing af pepelerity records! | Phone OR 3-9325. | DELICIOUS FOODS | Complete Dtnne: 4 woe Lesa taas Orders! } 14 , {CueT '} WLUB EAHOE | ) 3412 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9754 4 rTewerwrrwrwereehlehlUlehULhL = —r ENJOY AN EVENING DINING A BLOOMFIELD INN Try our deliciously tender broiled filet mignon. Our fried chicken. Our lobster tails, broiled over charcoal right before “ your eyes. Dining at Its Distinctive Best! ‘Luncheon Dinner . Cocktail Party Banquet Meeting a Henry's Bloomfield Inn DINE and DANCE © ‘TO THE MUSIC OF JOE BANKET’S TRIO A sens OCKT Combo ange Wi . pad Sundey on Cover or Minimum Charge OPEN 4 P. M. TO 2 A. M. DAILY EX PT SUNDAY FOOD seT Bood UNTIL 1 A. M. 1420 South Telegraph Road at Orchard Lake Road Tor Renrcotions Phone FE $8060 Sn LIN MOLI Js Th sXingaley Inn - PHONE Midwest 4-1400 __ WOODWARD at LONG LAKE RD. BLOOMFIELD HILLS ie Catalina Piano Bar Entertainment Fri., Sat. and Sun.-ELAINE TITUS SPECIAL SAT. MATINEE ~~~ STARTING AT 3 O’CLOCK ~~~ JACK AXFORD FROM THE PIANO BAR “88 Keys to Relaxation” Wednesday Dancing to the Four Kimtones MANNY'’S "cs W. Huron ot Elizabeth Lake Road FINE ENTERTAINMENT Featuring Joyce Songer Trio Stare of Radio, Recerés and TY and Introducing NOBLE LEE views Ay Ry Haha rel Seturday 9 to . Sunday 6 to? ?? SPADAFORE'S BAR 6 NORTH CASS ‘ Near Haron Street Complete Sunday Dinners from $1.50 | Delicious Mixed Drinks Town and Country | Beer—Wine—Liquor Formerly ’ ’ : BUSINESSMEN’S Old Heidelberg LUNCHEON 1727 S. Telegraph Rd. | | Every per fe] 7 7 AM. Sunday. “Noon to 2 AM. Jim Anderson Mark Levejor —| CHICKEN HOUSE 497 Elizabeth Lake Road at Telegraph FEATURING “SULLY” “The Man of Rhythm” AT THE PIANO and ORGAN ppearing Nightly & DINNERS * COCKTAIL BAR DINNERS .TO TAKE OUT Call FE 3-992! . . Your Food Will Be Ready Asin Ry DANCING AND TWO SHOWS WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY Entertainment Fea ART SIEFERT — AL LLOYD Organ Music HOTEL GOMMODORE SHOW BAR BUSINESS LUNCHEONS Served In Our Sues Room PRIVATE PARTIES end BANQUETS “FET EPEPECERETELPI Tita er But the loss, said Entratter, was | | lion dollars in good-will with the | India produces about 36,800,000 | | pay the bill at the Kalamazoo Hos- * * + pital where her husband has been) The question had been asked 'a patient since April. Mrs, Darlene Carlson, 22, mother Seinen natn Clooney Girls Enjoying New Motherhood Roles Movie-goer Jessé Kaplan says the scenery in “Oklahoma!” is so realistic they struck oil in the center aisle. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK-You know the Clooney. Sisters—but have you met the Clooney Mothers? Rosemary Clooney Ferrer holds 8-month-old Miguel | (“Bombo”) Ferrer tight against her breast, trying to rock-a-bye him to sleep, while Betty Clooney Campo, who's expecting in June, watches worshipfully and then whuspers: “Isn't it funny? A year ago babies bored me.” “Now it’s different, huh?” nods Mother Rosemary. “I can’t hear enough!” Betty stares ecstatically at young | nephew Bombo, who’s trying to fight back a yawn. A wide awake guy like his pop, Jose Ferrer, he won't shut an eye. | “D’ve given her 11 books on pregnancy,” Rosemary says. “Pupi’s reading them with me,” announces Betty. .“All about the four quarts of milk- a day. He’s always handing me a) glass of milk.” ; Yes, the Clooney Mothers ; act may be even better than the Clooney Sisters, which | originated in Maysville, Ky., and Cincinnati and was pretty good, too. I discovered it at the Ferrer apartment. | Stepping: inside, I was | greeted with a big “Sssh!” “This is young Mr. Ferrer,” ‘Rosemary whispered. “He won't go to sleep.” But finally he did. “I had a name picked out for my next one, which I hope’ll be. a girl, but Mrs. Campo here . . .” said Resemary. “Listen, Betty, if you steal that name Maria!” uf MIGUEL AND ROSEMARY “You're planning another one?” I asked. “Ever since this one was three months old. I'll have a dozen.” Young Bombo flies between the Ferrers’ N.Y. and Hollywood names yawhinperingty. He'll be going to Spain in April. * * * , “Is he talented?” I inquired. “You wouldn't remember how | mothers used to put down on the floor a Bible, a bottle and a) dollar, when the babies started creeping. The baby was sup- | , Posed to be either a clergyman, a saloon keeper or a banker, according to which | ‘ one he reached for.” “Bombo was given a choice of Joe's hats—his hunting bowler, his grey homburg, his jaunty I’m-a-director © cap,” Rosemary said. “He took the hunting bowler . . . because it had a string on it which he put in his mouth,” : “I must go start dinner,” wide-eyed Betty mentioned. © “Drink your milk,” Rosemary urged, ; “and if you don't feel good, come see your | , old Mother Ferrer here. It's only two , blocks.” Papa Wilson said goodbye and creaked home feeling unusually antiquated ... _ he remembered both the Clooney Mothers as teenagers. | THE MIDNIGHT EARL. . . Author Irving Wallace (his “Fabulous Originals” is just out) is troubled writing “The Ed Sullivan Story” for films—no- body hates Ed, no conflict! . . . All Holly- wood studios are after Jayne Mansfield | since her luscious acting in “Rock Hunter.” -BETTY CARR Martha Raye, whose Conn. home is on a hill, took in ten families evacuated from the flood . The Tony Bennetts had their second boy . . . The 64G quiz’s Lynne Dollar has a roommate—actress Narcissa Nickel . . . Betty Carr (of “Damn Yankees”) will be named Nat'l Wine Week Queen. Marine Capt. McCutcheon will be a Collier’s cover-boy ... . Liberace’s dinner invitations add the footnote: “Mom's cooking” | . . Audrey Meadows will do a CBS-TV spectacular , , , Grace Kelly's lunch date at the Colony was Oleg Cassini. ‘ * * * * WISH I'D SAID THAT: “A career woman is one who goes out | and eafns a man’s salary, instead of sitting at home and taking | it away from him.”—D. O. Flynn, Taffy Tuttle complained about her elderly escort: even for his second childhood.” That's earl, brother. (Copyright 1955, The melt Syndicate, Inc.) Woman Pleads Return (Wife, 22, Prefers of $190 for Hospital Bill Late TV Shows KALAMAZOO (#—Mrs. Charles | Wright has appealed in a brief | to Married Life newspaper ad for the return of, | $190 taken from her purse while! CHICAGO U—A young wife told she was, talking over the phone in gq judge vesterday that her tele- a downtown booth. vision and late-hour movies were She explained it was all the mon- | worth more to her than her hus- ey she had and it was borrowed to band. “He's old, Fine Foods . Friendly Atmosphere 'of two babies,. by Superior Judge George M. Fisher. j Her answer was a quiet but firm | “No." Judge Fisher shook his head sadly. Then he entered an order that her husband Richard, 27, a painter and decorator, must pay $25 weekly for temporary support of his family. * * 8 Mrs. Carlson was in court acek- | yur th Why is it that people ing a temporary support order for who dine at Wilkins | herself and children, Stephen, 2, | always return? The and Mark, 6 months, during pen- dency of her divorce suit, The suit charged her husband With cruelty. Mrs, Carlson's attorney said Carlson struck her several times and had moved from their home Oct. 5. answer is that they like the friendly informal atmosphere... the really fine foods. You wil I] too! * bad * Carlson's ,attorney admitted the charges but said Carlson pupched her only after arguments over Mrs. Carlson's insistence of watch- ing TV movie as late as 2 a.m. He said the TV volume kept Carl- son from getting enough. sleep as he had to arise at 6 a.m. Carlson was willing to return homie, his attorney said. if Mrs. Carlson would keep down the TV volume and maybe turn off the set at midnight. Fine Foods Since 192! at Wilkins Daas wins | Demand for black pepper among ‘U.S. cooks and chefs pushed the ORCHARD LAKE AT _imports of this popular spice. to | 12, hag completed only half the eee A ee ee ; about 35% = million pounds in| | 1954. iS Scout Snatches ‘Mother From Fiery Trailer Home OWOSSO \M—Bobby Harrington, class. - But he displayed the poise of a Harrington, 46, from’ a fire in their traile home. Mrs. Harrington was trapped against the wall when her bottie- gas cooking steve shot flames between her and the door. Bobby grabbed a wrench, ran! outside and turned off the gas) tank. Then he opened his first | aid kit and rubbed ointments on his mother’s hands and legs. | She was given additional treat. | ment at. a hospital and released. | - in the easly American tradition ... Rotunda Inn Michigan’s mest picturesa Inn, _— all that wed |} “inn” implies... noonitaiity, fine food “and charming atmos- phere. '| Dine im the fabulous new || Lakewood ° | Pine Lake. Watch the Indian SQUARE end ROUND DANCING CARDEN CENTER on BALLROOM '| your saverit? cock: 2987 Wootwe whetting appetite ‘for ee et buffet . . all you can eat from dishes rd—Detreit Danein, ‘hur.-Sat.-San. | HALLOWEEN MASQUERADE | || SUN., OCT. 30 | ‘ AL so— CAMPUS BALLROOM PENKELL and A VERNOIS DETRO! OLD TIME DANCING EVERY TUES. -PRI.- BALLOWEEN ‘MASQUERADE | i ; ‘ ® ' Totert 3 Shows! Continuous Entertainment or Dancing Every Night COCKTAIL LOUNGE 1122 W. Huron St. Huron Bow! Bidg. dol DONNA NORMAN DANIELL LA ZAR Recording Song mc ; Stylist He's Terrificl ROMONA BITTLES DANCING Acrobatic Dancer EVERY NIGHT . . . Bring the Ladies Daring—E xotic ANNOUNCING OUR NEW HOURS Open Daily 5 A..M.-9 P.M. Sunday 7 A. M.-9 P. M. Sunday Dinners Our Specialty Auburin Coffee Sho top 462 Auburn Ave. Blanche & Owen Morgan. FE 4-6323 You can fool some of the people some of the time, but only once when it comes to eating. Wholesome tood—appetizingly served, is our business. Jack Decker's ogee - @ Breakfast @ Lunch _On._US-10 in Drayton @ Dinners . Meno ROWROLO nO Joe’s Famous SPAGHETTI HOUSE 6:00 P.M. te 3 AM. — Sun. 3 to 12 P.M. — Closed Mondays 1038 West Huron FE 3-7396 g; BOWRORO RO WRONG OXBOW LAKE PAVILION 9451 Elizabeth Lake Road BEER—WINE—LIQUORS DANCE To the Best Band in the Land The ‘Sunset Rangers‘ EVERY SATURDAY WIGHT MC and Caller GLENN EASTMAN MODERN and SQUARE DANCING MAKE A DATE FOR OCT, 20—HALLOWEEN DANCE ete aialaielelaialalelalelalalelelo ee LOL) ‘ CORR R Eee eee . — + _ | : | | EY INI He EE EMT OA atl Oe oe op fi oe i i , ¢ \ : / es lL, / \ a -_" Ty / i “THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 ft ae | TWENTY-SEVER . Hollywood Headlines: Bob Hope Is Being Raced for ‘Time Out for Ginger’ I , By LOVELLA 0. PARSONS Just before John Hodiak yard Wecause he would play’ a sports| that Wanda Hendrix and Jim | i HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Those|for “Threshold of Space,” which | writer and each part of the series | Stack are having trouble. They're =. Vis - inches Bob Hope's wes having | called for some exciting scenes, he | would highlight some big sports| as happy as happy can be. - F tr 7 ere Wrst | a | aj with Hal Wallis haven't been to/ had a complete checkup and was event. : ee : : = i rea _ | diseuss diets or for any reason| pronounced okay by his doctor. Don De Fore is taking” a whole | STARTS | .. a Oe sete OL eee ee ce nm ae! eee ! . iF that he never r.| per race's fi e U t oe . . = Aapemel Bob to star in this | He had signed an. agreement with| “Sincerely: Yours.’* It's corn, | versity of Iowa, and UCLA tomor- . . S oteeee ‘ van comedy which Melvyn Douglas | Cohn to make a half-hour a pure and unadulterated, seal it’s | row night. : brought to the stage two years ago. | series called “Storm Carlson,” going to clean up. " . SATURDAY MATINEE* Jack Jack Benny just did righ TV, had expressed himself as delighted Lee was so happy at the preview, Jimmy Cagney, come what may, The most “Wanted” woman « Speciel Kiddies Matinee today. ne show Snly. In tanked on one ide by Mame nc | fest Pare in wwe wore “| TEXAS ROSE f the Rockies! : bana veg Hg — hour of ell your™ Favorite : = on the other by brother George, is wie @ ° . | ; west 0 e oc es: we viel: “ irl " pl P that he couldn't conceal his de- | Fegu r show. wen ws “Conse it TONIGHT light when the ondiad sellenes Tee oy . S DE k d h d ! Bvening Show Starts 6:45 Sat lay as lay . Nation into applause again and | rane nent Bete moesd inte LA The man who tracked her down: his dressing room on the Para. | mount lot- complete with frying pan, coffee pet and toaster. I'd like to say that Mr. Piano's {warmth and charm really come sade ph er across on the screen and, if 1 know Ope my friend Jack L. Warner, this | Good reports. about. Donald . . ¥ ' ) P.M, won't. be the last Liberace be . picture: | ’ ih ¥ Drive- In shee Sterts |) Ralph Schoenstein, just back | Fs poner on a nae al] autographs a: _ 7:00 P.M. from military. service in the East, | phetti _ & good boy. ] heater | and son of Paul Schoenstein, city | —————-——__--______— (editor of the New York Journal- ra VY E . I N. | American, has written an inter- VECHCE is | ' | esting play. "Box Office Opens 6.30 P.M. — Show Starts 7:00 P. M. 2150 Opdyke Road at Pontiac Road | He and Hal Friedman, producer | for the mysterious Golden Gate | STEPHENSON & E, MAPLE (15 Mile) | ‘of TV's “Open House," have col- ) ‘TONIGHT-SATURDAY (| OFROERIS .e ‘explosion of Sept. 30, the blast that | laborated on a film. story called | -1902 ALL COLOR PROGRAM OAN CRAWFORD | rocked 15 square miles of San MU SASS ee | Francisce — ee NOW THRU SATURDAY Tel thats TPP ARE ate HERBERT J. YATES “The Big Burner” which accounts DRIVE-IN THEATER EE RIG LIL It’s Wow! ! Wow! Wonderful! | " as the woman who loves - y nays: Don't pay any otteation A HILARIOUS to that commentator who says vent || JOHNNY GUITARS Ihe Theater MAVERICK STERUNG HAYDEN WERCEDES MctAMBROKE | : MEN... STOTT BRADY marked for t anne ners Oey nies h ‘ino! = c:2 a «had el. killing! tp |i * RORY CALHOUN PIPER LAURIE | WANTED ~g JE ACK CARSON. MAMIE Van DOREN | WOMEN. : j Shue vee _| WARE i @ | “oe shame! a Sundays 12:45 , & i Y AIK ONE DAY ONLY - SATURDAY! : | | TODAY and TOMORROW A Sarees: Beautiful Film’ tine : ; . | £ OWL SHOW Sat. Midnight } | eee || | | }“Man Who Reclaimed | fh mae sores ay | 13 His Head” $ ne pat te elon by 2 +e = 2 © eee © / ae “™.. - es : ) "e iy FILMED IN VIVID [Sig AMR SUH-RUN WHR-CORES MUN wh CR ces PATHE COLOR! | 110 mancra-Prodeced by HOWARD W. HOC-Scmnly my aca sum somes oR ys SA sae seantmanc ma ep Rs the music in | —_ ~~ Y your heart! | | | | | “amSUNDAY> THE FAG TTS te vies - SUPERSCOPE a ne TRut-boy § | sao ceo eas ea ca come . co | ‘Topays § he Doors 0 | MARI [siféioayESLEREOCEN 2 || JY eRieSON - BLANCHARD | | \ nevis BRAND ! An ALLIED ARTISTS Picture 15 sh Toit | Chien der 15 q, Daa ltie/ Ay itn Sete = _ Pes IRAE Of BATH a 4 BIRTH Natures | ‘ of & Miracles RAE GREATEST | MW SSscRionny 44 Why is PONE Ne By EEE ae! | a — A a he’s +, isevitsceth ea ee ae oo EEO OE OEE OOPS DOOD PP DOP OPP PPP PP PP PPP PPG wv BLLL TEX witttams * RITTER —I¥. “APACHE AMBUSH” | _——STARTING SUNDAY——— coe BEE ee @ FORBIDDEN LOVE IN A JUNGLE OF FEAR! Wittettrbittbbbbbbbbbrodborbbrbooborocoodcbccdcdcdbbdbodcdbdbdbdtdbdbdddbdatdtdddduttttuutats LATEST | | wa s ~ nua COLOR! atdvioinde| "STRANGER Te eee eres ploy a | = A o+e with lives! TERRIFYING! FANTASTIC! STARTLING! =| =i/SAT. cn) 1PM. WORLD | Private |“ NEWS Eye Pooch’ Ahoy” ff) ‘ ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1935 _\PWENTY-EIGHT By Carl Grubert DE TOUR (—Robert C. Hed-|away from Mrs. shotguns Wednesday, and ended up| gnLY ONE SHOT almost Shades of Davy Crockett , : 1 # | bear—Hedrick and his wife beat ~ He Kilt Himself a B’ar | Maia ie , Hedrick and rick and his wife, Edna, are likely | lumbered toward her husband, | Answering his wife's screams,| They » grouse and | Hedrick replaced bird-shot loads in| friends—and rifles—and went back. | his double-barreled shotgun with | They found the bear dead, only 30 . bd ltwo buckshot shells a De Tour They took only the customary | neighbor had given him. As the bear tore toward him| left foreleg. The Hedricks make | “\ from an angle, Hedrick fired, Knocked down, the bear then | | turned and lunged into the woods. | With only one butkshot toad— | which, often as not, doesn't kill a ALL | parked a mile away on the ex: | treme eastern tip of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. came to De. Tour, got, feet from where Hedrick had shot it, The buckshot had hit it in the | left chest and had shattered its their summer home at De Tour. | TROPICAL FISH and SUPPLIES Many species te be seen in our 50 Display Tanks THIS AD WORTH & TROPICAL risa BRENDEL’S 2441 Auburn Road (M-59) 8 Miles West of Utier RE t-6141 PARAKEETAS and SU Open Monday through Saterday eed PPLIES i é ! . gti {tigi nll ie reife: g sirele f fi F 3 With that, the bear whirled opportunity. LAND CONTRACT = INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY | two hes. sd « 6% land contracts on Flint area property, During the next three months, 1 will have available to i over $200,000 worth of 6% land contracts on new, modern homes. $6,240.00 payable at $63.00 per month. These homes have a bank mortgage irsal value, a licensed appraiser, of $5,250.00. The cost of the contract to you is $4,996.00, $1249.00 (bonus to you) less than the contract balance, and $254.00 less than the ised valuat has become about the most sound investment The balance due appra When this contract is paid in full it will have earned $2,512.00 In interest. This amount, together (or discount) of $1249.00 means that your original investment of $4,996 earned .761,00—a nearly unbelievable increage in capital of about 75.39>—an overall return Where can this be equaled? Any person or company buying one of. these contracts will be furnished the following items : 1. A credit report from the Retailer's Credit Bureau on the person buying the home. 2. An up-to-date abstract of title showing clear title and tax history. , 3. A warranty deed and assignment of contract. We recommend that you have your attorney examine all papers. - If you have never purchased LAND CONTRACTS FOR INVESTMENTS before, we will gladly have an agent call to answer your questions and explain the value and simplicity in obtaining one or more of these sound contracts, at mo obligation to you. pressure sales talk, only an explanation of the facts. If you have bought contracts before you will recognize the fairness of the offer. made here and will mo doubt agree that as this Country, and especially the Flint area, continues to-develop, land ‘Partial proof of this statement is the millions of dollars worth of land contracts purchased in Flint eagh year by*people from all walks of life. How- ever the building in Flint has mow become so tremendous that it is going to become necessary to obtain outside investment money. Therefore WE are now offering the people of Pontiac the above Make an investigation; thefe will be no high : $500,000 worth of tee contracts sold by myself in Flint each year for the past several yeas. WE BACK THESE CONTRACTS WITH OUR EXPERIENCE AND INTEGRITY more heide ip tev sponte} ¢ totals also higher than those in the | first quarter of. the 1955 Siecal | year. E it The monthly Treasury budget | if one of your clients purchase a contract | Attention, Attorneys and Brokers --- A cl; sing fee will be paid to you. _ MERYL STODDARD, Land Contract Broker 4231 E, Potter Road Flint; Michigon 000 ‘an increase of $1,970,000 Se ee of Cannons PHONE CE 5-8058 ure, and spending came to si6.| and the Retailers’ Credit Bureau Call Collect 947,000,000,369 millions more. eemmcomsovecion pennans \) A\ our new 5 - year pian. ity DOESN'T COsT- jy a .« '- - AANA) Why settle for less when you can afford the luxury of CAST-O-STONE for your home with CAST-O-STONE is a genuine pulverized stone, reformed to fit the a) suit individuality of your home. BACKED WITH 20-YEAR. GUARANTEE! More homes featu there must be a reason! ? - MR & MRS. HOMEOWNER: PROBLEM: Use Cast-O-Stone to Solve Your Painting, Siding, Insulation Problems Forever! of bs §% ith CAST-O-STONE in this area than any other — : at A re nial SOLUTION: Do you yearly go te the expense and trouble of scraping, ting or re-siding your home—yet if pimost always jooks y and shabby? qa «CALL i\ | 3-9081 j ~ORIando Call Collect Anywhere in State ——_$_ rs CHISEL Es, Prices Starting At 3/9 Ist Payment in 1956 5 Years to Pay CASTONE MICH. CORP. 2536 Dixie Highwey OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 6 Regardless of whether you have a frame, brick, stuece siding er bleck home, it can be transformed into stone-iasting beauty with Cast-O-Stene! «mm wmeMAIL COUPON TODAY = ===, 3 : ' 3s CASTONE MICH. CORP. ’ 1 2596 Dixie Highway, Pontiac, Mich. 1 Furnish me information on beautifying and = g protecting my home or business with perma- 1 1 nent, low-cost Cast-O-Stone veneer at no obligation. | ’ 1 Bo Name cocccsccccscvenesnevecoseseessercueneee t H ‘ PPTTTTTTITI TIT eee ! ' BO CHP ccrsovescsadcccveveces y Vijy VA, 9 SP UU _ Buick Riviera rere $ 599 1954 Ford 2-Door.............. .. 999 1953 Dodge 2-Door ............. 744 1955 Ford 8 Pass. Country Sedan.... 1944 1951 Chevrolet 2-Door............. 299 1952 Ford Victoria... 799 1953 Plymouth 4-Door............ 699 1955 Ford C8 2-Door............. 1299 1953 Mercury 4-Door............. 899 1952 Ford 2-Door................ 544 1952 Mercury Hardtop ........... 799 1954 Chevrolet 2-Door.....ss«i(w‘éiétw¥ 999 1954 Ford Victoria ............... 1299 1951 Plymouth 2-Door..... 299 1952 Kaiser 4-Door . 344 1953 Ford 2-Door..............., 699 1954 Ford 8 Pass. Country Sedan.... 1399 1952 Chevrolet 2-Door ss si«siwi 544 1953 Ford Ranch Wagon... ..-.—=s—=s—s—é7299 1954 Plymouth 2-Door .... o... G44, 1954 Chevrolet Station Wagon... __. 1099 1951 Ford 2-Door................ 299 1952 Pontiac Hardtop ............ 699 1952 Plymouth 2-Door............ 499 1951. 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Others, from left, swarmed over Michigan's fields yesterday on opening | Smith (for dad, Caleb Smith), 348 day of the season. They include (2nd from right) Tom | Homer Thrower, 114 East New York, Pontiac, Coomer of Ortonville, who is the early leader in the at right, Charles Edson, 117 East New York. juries Hit Chil Pheasant: Derby,” (with a i = Regulars Among Hang Up Title Tonight At Least Fight By H. GUY MOATS A season-long series of 1st place | was snapped. yesterday afternoon over the hilly Swartz Creek Golf| course. Perry Williams, ace PHS. miler, beat out teammate Bi!! | Williams Edges Dougla as Chiefs Win Harrier Championship Ss | of Arthur Hill’s Don Brown, 3rd. Stephens, Flint Northern, 10th; | | Bob Smith, Northern, 11th; Ken finisher, - « ties in dual cross-country contests; Chiefs compiled a 25 point tote Ballien, Arthar Hill, 12th; Dave for the title. They have now won | ‘the event four times in’ succes- sien. ‘ Other team totals, in order—Ar- Douglas, state half mile titlist in thur Hill 63, Flint Northern 72,/ 20 yards of Williams and Douglas a great duel. And the Chief hill: Fiint Central 113, Saginaw 119. just: after the start of the last in Hot Duel Walkowiak, Bay City, 15th. Brown offered the biggest chal- lenge to Portiac’s aces. The Ar- thur Hill runner spurted to within and-dale runners romped off with | Bay City 129. -| mile, He faded, however, in the the Saginaw Valley Conference; Pontiac placed four more in the | stretch, where Willi ‘made a’ championship, ist 15. Gene Cretal was 4th, Rod/| hot finish to beat Douglas, the | Treais 5th, Don: Evans 13th and‘ 1954 champion. Treais and Cretal Ailing Players PHS Underdog Against Stadium Contest Pontiac High's hopes for a vic- tory tonight over the defending Saginaw Valley Conference foot- ball champions have been dealt a body blow. Arthur Hill comes here for the game at 8 o'clock in Wisner Sta- dium. * * « While there was indication early in the week that several reguiar players might be on the sidelines fok this game, there was no ex- pectation that the list would grow . | to at least eight on the eve of the tilt. But that is exactly what has happened. Even Coach Ed Gray- Santee Gallops to 4:05.2 Mile Brightens U.S. Olympic Hopes by 6th Fastest Indoor. Mile Young Love Calls! OWENSBORO, Ky, w—Why did promising young football player Bob: Cravens and his coed sweet- NEW YORK u—Wes Santee, he of the rubber legs and endless | stamina, won't be any less effective in the 1956 Olympics because of his hitch in the Marine Corps. : In fact, it may help. The gangling University of Kan- sas graduate certainly looked like heart disappear from the Univer- sity of Kentucky last week? * * * | Cravens’ father, R. Y. Cravens, said last ‘night he believed his son ‘and Jane Ayer, 17, ran away, pos- ‘sibly out West, to be married. | He said the couple, both fresh- |men at the university, had been 'going together for a year and that Parents Thi Gridder, Coed, Eloped jasked state police to issue an money in the bank last night in the | they may have feared their parents Olympic carnival in Madison would not consent to their mar- Square Garden. He ran the mile in riage. 4:05.2—second fastest ever in the Garden and sixth fastest indoor. * * * Before he starts his. Olympic plans, though, Santee has two other | important tasks, He will go after | Gunnar Nielsen's world indoor rec- | ord of 4;03.6 and try to run the 4} minute mile. If he keeps in his present condition, there seems lit- tle doubt that he'll break Nielsen's mark sometime during the indoor season, The 4-rhinute mile is some- thing else. © * * ® The mile was the feature’ of the six-sport Olympic program and the crowd of 10,300 had to wait until almost midnight. After five laps, it | was strictly a two-man race. be- tween Santee and his old sparring partner, Fred Dwyer.. “The carnival marked the .unoffi- | cial kickoff of the 1956 Olympic fund-raising campaign, Saturday has been proclaimed Olympic Day by President Eisenhower and that will signify the official start of the drive. ‘Hunters’ Can't Decide What's the Best Game DETROIT «— The opening of | Michigan's smal] game hunting season yesterday brought varying reports of what spertsmen thought was game, Hunters, shooting at overhead cables, knocked out long distance telephone service between Saginaw and Bad Axe. A charge of buckshot in. television station WKAR-TV's audio cable near its transmitter ouside Okemos, knocked out the service for three hours. ; In Macomb County, Earl L. Do ver, 35, fined $100 for bringing down a doe with three shotgun blasts explained: ‘‘I thought it was a rabbit.” , om . CHAMP — Willie Hartack. piled it on at Atlantic City to rum away with the year’s riding champion- ship. There are 5 Sports Pages in today’s: Pontiac Press f 5 oo. hed = ‘ 3 Buddy Young's Little Brother . MSU Freshman Tiny Gridder. Trying for Frosh Team; Wins Coach's Praise EAST LANSING (#—There's a | little fellow working out with the | big bruisers on the Michigan State ‘freshman football team who is only 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighs | just 141 pounds. He looks like a high school who got mixed up with the college players by mistake. — But the coaches have great hopes for him because the little fellow, Henny Young, is the younger brother of the great | Buddy Young, formerly of Iili- | nois and now with the pro Balti- | more Colts. Henny, who has been living with a cousin in Detroit, came to Michi- gan State because of Lou Agase, | now a fine coach for the Spartans. ; Lou and Buddy Young were team- |}mates and Buddy recommended that his brother go where Lou was coaching. Henny only played basketball at | Chicago’s Carver High but picked | up some football experience in the service. Freshman coach Don Mason thinks Henny can make the team and weight. “He has tremendous speed and | great determination,’’ Mason said. \‘‘He’s one of the most willing ; workers on the team.” Solunar Table | Here are the times at which hunting and fishing in this area should be the best, according to John Alden Knight's solunar tables, Tables below are for Saturday and | Sunday. SATURDAY Minor “Major 10:25 4:15 SUNDAY ; Minor Major 11:40 5:25 ; Minor Major 10:58 | 4:40 Minor “Major 11:10 8:00 Hits Away From Power Bill (Moose) Skowron of the Yankees, whose three-run opposite field homer helped win the. sixth World Series game against Brook- lyn, hit five home runs into right field seats during the American League season. as' a skat-back despite his size | nk Missing “We don't disapprove now, cer- tainly,” the elder Cravens said. Their ages are the only reason we would have disapproved. We just want them beck? Cravens, 19, and the girl were last seen on the Lexington campus Oct, 12. Wednesday night, after be- coming concerned over their pro- longed absence, Cravens’ father | alarm. The alarm was sent to all Ken- | tucky points and to all stations | west of the state. Cravens hag rel-’ atives at Tucson, Ariz, . had been maRing “average” | grades at school and seemed to. be pleased with his football work. | | Cravens, regarded as a bright | | prospect on the football squad, took All-State honors and was voted | | the outstanding player in a recent | North-South All-Star game. Campo Defeats Ortega | | SAN FRANCISCO . w— Tanny | Campo, flyweight champ of the | ‘Far East and bantam champ of | the Philippines, easily outlasted and outpointed Johnny Ortega of | boy Oakland last night in a 10-round the National Hockey League this | bout. , at Chicago U. Students Start Sport ‘Again for First Time Since 1939 biel fell victim to illness, and was kept to his bed yesterday, - He expected to be on hand for tonight's encounter, however, aide Dean Wilson reported. Injuries in the. rough Flint Cen- tral game, and from Bay City, the previous week, plus illness, have decimated the Chief ranks. This has brought about a number ‘of shifts in both offense and defen- | sive units. * * * PHS has yet to win, a Valley Arthur Hill in Wisner | Williams finished on top in the big field, He hit 10:24 (10 min- utes, 24 seconds) for the two- mile, rugged race. Douglas was 2nd, with a 10:30 clocking, some | 20 yards back, bag well in front Pontiac Press": annual “big pheasant derby” got off to a fast start yesterday. The state fall sea- son was only a few hours old when the Ist entry reported in. Later came others, and the racé | for the $50 U. S. Savings Bond for the heaviest bird bagged by an Oakland County hunter was well under way, ' Seventeen-year-old Tom Coomer ‘of 12268 Ray Rd., Ortonville held the early lead with a 3-pounds 5-ounces entry. The bird measured 34 inches from beak to.end of tail feathers, It was brought down with one shot in a field off Baldwin Read on Pontiac's north side. Among those having tully suc- cesstul days, for the season's CHICAGO u»—They've tgken the | football equipment out of moth-| won their only SVC start. ‘Jacks balls at the University of Chicago | and issued it to would-be players) for the first time since 1939. Nearly 50 students are working | out in Stagg Field, in uniforms and pads and other gear that has been saved since the University dropped football: 16 years ago. game in two times out. The Hills| opener, were five in ene Pontiac are at full strength for tonight's | test. : a # * Pontiac’s “hospital” roster {n-. Mike ‘Quarter’ arse ea = Back in Lineup big tackle, hurt at Flint; Ron bad | | Pete Cox 14in, . Jerry Tilley, Flint Central was | 6th; Richard Fisher, Arthur Hill | Tih; Abe Huerta, Saginaw, &th; Bih Russell, Flint Central, 9th; Bert Pheasant ‘Derby’ Entries Coming in Thick and Fast hunting party, in the Caro dis- ‘trict, All downed their limits of two birds. 0 In the party were Walt Asher, former Goldén Glover here, of Watkins’ Lake; Mrs. Ben Etbling. Auburn avenue; and Allen Ritchie, Watkins Lake, | birds, and all were very fat. Walt reports coloring exceptionally bright. The ist’ pheasant was weighed and measured at noon. It was bagged by Edward J, Hockey, 30, of 2380 Marwood St.,- Waterford, It scaled 2-pounds 12-ounces and was 33% inches long. It was shot at 10:02 on Hockey's father's farm in Clarkston. Youngest hunter was 13-year: old Dick Brooks, son of Mr. and Mrs, George Brooks of ‘3122 Dev- ondale, Avon Township. It was Dick's Ist bir@ and weighed 3- pounds and measured 3¢ inches. Four others who reported were: Caleb Smith, 48 Seward, Pontiac, 2-pounds 4ounces; Fred Parsons, | who later won the state title. |gionals at Birmingham HS Oct, Dixie Highway; Sherman Lacey, | | state title at Washtenaw Country Asher says there were many, moved past a half dozen runners in the last quarter to finish 4th, Sth, Pontiac's dJayvees didn't fare © so well, They were 3rd, back of Northern and Arthur Hill in the junior varsity meet. Vikings had 8, Hills 40, PHS dayvees 6i, Central 123, Saginaw 153 and Bay City 231, Fred Burgett of Northern was Ist, Hastings Martin (PHS) 2nd. Burgett’s time, 11:17. Coach Wally Schloerke was de- lighted with the title win. He said the team will run in the Albion College Invitational, Sat@rday. It, was 2nd in 1934, to Kalamazoo, Chiefs will run in the MHSAA re- 29, then, if qualified, shoot for the Club, Ypsilanti, on *Nov. 5, PCL to Decide Seals’ Future by Vote Today SAN FRANCISCO w — Pacifie Coast League directors vote today on whether to donate the San Franciseo Sedis’ franchise to Hank Greenberg, general manager of the ind Indians, Z z 3 The students, under the direction \of Kyle Anderson, assistant direc- tor of physical education, are in The elder Cravens said his son ® football class and will compete ankle; Bill Kennedy, end, back in- jury; Maitin Smith, tackle, illness; Don Hardy, center, fury, illness; | Dick Neaves, tackle, illness; Jim- : = for Sunday Tilt 7016 Barkell, Pontiac, 3-pounds; Homer Thrower, 114 E, lew York, Pontiac, 2-pounds 12-ounces; and Charles Edson, 117 E, New York, interest in the game here and “get the city or county or somebody to put up a new stedium which would | [ILLINOIS THREAT — Halfback Harry Jefferson of Illinois is one of the leading runners in the potent | Mlinois ground game which will go up against MSU in intramural football. They peti- tioned for the class. They want to | play because they think it is fun. | The squad consists of some who have played in high school, some | who played on sandlots and many | who are complete strangers to the game, The enthusiasts range in size from: 128-pound Paul Eager, who ence attended Texas A&M, to a 240-pound teen-ager, Pete Madden. ; ey Coach Phil Watson of the New York Rangers predicts that Lorne fo: Cag’ Worsley will be the best goalie in 'my Shorter, safety man, bad ankle. Pontiac, 2-pounds, 12-ounces. seat 45,000." Bob Mineweaser Returns for St. James Contest; Rams at St. Clement Here are tonight's probable | starters: | For Arthur Hill—ends, Sten Leland and Dick Dietrick; tackles, Tom Pugh | and Thelvius Wintecke; guards, Berry | Braun and Roger McIntosh; center, Bert Rak csty Murphy; fullback. Ployd . r jurphy:; . . Wright: right belt Bill Lesser %¢ coach, Bob Mineweaser, who has For Pontise—Ends, Frank Whitlock or been forced to field patched-up Bob Boxter, and Marvin Cagle; tackles, lineups nearly every weekend this guard, Broce Maher end Jock Olsen: | season, will be able to use his| champions—was lost to the Detroit | goater, Cozy Van Resin Ot Be oes ‘Ist-string quarterback Sunday for| Lions after their ignominious 56-10 to. score during the exhibition and scot Kenny Pusilier. Charley the Ist time in four weeks, @rubbing at the hands of the Cleve- | regular seasons this year, * Parker Bpenn (fb), Jimmy (Red) Taylor ‘rh’. | oy Jinior. his son, returns to land Browns last year. said, but we haven't been doing the si ; . * * * it. We usually get to the 10 or 16 signal-calling post for Sunday The the Matectet-of| varé Yan, then waec™ | afternoon's Suburban Catholic me pome wes SMP Of | yard Nae, then sop. DETROIT ‘#—Something vital—,or the last two minutes of the call it poise or the confidence of | game we'd usually get it.” season, carry. For the defensive unit the following will. t le, Baxter, ends; Olson, Thomas, League encounter at Wisner Sta-| th National Footbel! League sea-| Parker was at a loss to explain | dium with St. James of Ferndale. “We've had those same chances | gon and the favored Lions .were the slowdown when the Lions get - Saturday. He has averaged more than 5 yards a rkies: Ted Wiersema and Bob Hollo- way, is; Arnold Larson, Cherter yam Mnebackers; Bob eg = s mmy = halfbacks; Lonnie Hum- | Mineweaser suffered a kidney in- | jury during pragtice and has not ) | seen quartezbacking duty since the ‘2nd game of the season against | St. Frederick. : | Mineweaser’s _ reinstatement, | will permit Dan Dropps to re- , ' turn to his original position at left intact, their 4th triumph of the season. against a capable St.‘ James team, They are seeking their 3rd SCL win with an eye toward 2nd place in the loop standings, The erndale 11 is tied with St. Cle- ment for runner-up and matches the Mikes’ overall record of 3-2. Game time is 3 p.m. St. Frederick faces a_ for-' | midable task Sunday afternoon in | quest ef its Ist football victory in '22 attempts. The Rams, under. | head mentor Gene Wright, tackle . | strong St. Clement at Center Line, |The Rams find themselves in the familiar role of underdogs for the SCL tussle, which starts at '3 p.m. Orchard Lake St. Mary resumes its bid for its lst Suburban loop |championship Saturday. afternoon at Orchard Lake against the win- Shamrocks: will be aiming for | ready to claim their 3rd straight NFL title. ‘ But the Browns, fired up after losing to Detroit the week before, touchdowns all afternoon. When the contest was over the Lion ‘were a thoroughly routed bunch of football players. - Coach Buddy Pasker said the team never got over the pasting it absorbed that December after- noon. ; . * ee * | Appearing on a television show | here, Parker sought to explain the why's of Detroit's record in play this season. club before that game (with Cleve- land), he said. “But we haven't had the poise this season. In the. past if we needed a toychdown in the last two minutes of the half Lord Steward 1st in Greyhound Trot WILMINGTON, Del. «» — Lord Steward won the $15,000 Greyhound Trot at Brandywine Raceway last night, withstanding a late chal- lenge by a W to 1 shot, John Worthy less Irish from Royal Oak St. ‘rently hold undisputed possession Of 1st place, Tomorrow's starting ‘time is 3 p.m. | St, ct of Highland Park Sunday at Hazel Park at 2:30 p.m. 4 | Since the Southeastern Confer- # fa is the only school to have three | AP Wirephote unbeaten and untied- teams—1934, 1937 and 1945. The S-year-old bay gelding took Stenographer, then relinquished the lead briefly to John Worthy be- fore going in front for good with a burst of speed three quarters of a length back, | with .Maximilian third. The win-| : /ner’s purse was $7,500, bringing his ;tackle Jog Carruthers, an out- 4 ence was formed in 1933 Alabama lifetime earnings to $275,000, His standing lineman at Detroit West-° time was 2:03 2-5, Lord Steward paid $4.60, $2.80 and, $2.80. c ‘ “We had always been a poised | | within scoring range. ‘Yanks Mauled by Japanese Photographers | TOKYO w—The New York Yan- |kees may grow to hate cameras ‘to Japan, The Yanks, who arrived in Tokyo last night, were followed, hounded and mauled by what must have seemed like an army of news pho- tographers, television cameramen and assorted amateurs, * * * | The Yankees play a 16-game ex- i\hibition series against Japanese | professional teams, starting tomor- row night against the Mainichi Orions at Tokyo’s Korakuen Sta- dium. ; Hartack Draws 10-Day Suspension From Track | CAMDEN, N.J. u®—Jockey Willie , Hartack has drawn a 10-day: sus- lq shot at three big stakes at Gar- \den State Park, including the | world’s biggest, the $250,000 Gar. |den State Handicap, Oct. 29. | The stewards at Garden State | Mary. The undefeated Eaglets cur- the lead at the halfway mark from Park ordered the suspension yes- iterday for the nation’s leading jock« ey. It is effective tomorrow through Oct. 31. He was set down for care- ‘ess riding aboard Yellow Dot in battles ‘St.’ Rita in an SCL game | Stenggrapher "finished second, the last race W EAST LANSING—Michigan State ‘ern high school, also won All-City | baseball honors as a first base- man, Battle for Top The 1955 area prep football card has passed the midway point and |heads into the home stretch this afternoon and tonight. There are 21 contests scheduled in this, the Sth week of action, * * * League will be at stake when Southfield faces Van Dyke at _ home at 8 p.m. Both’ squads are | a oa First place in the Inter-Lakes | Srd I-L match, Farmington plays at Walled Lake under the lights. In independent action, Bloomfield Hills goes to Harper Woods, Romeo challenges Oxford at home. Lapeer tackles Gene Konley’s Rochester squad while Oak Park hosts a South Lyon contingent. Holly is a possible, spoiler to Clarenceville’s bid for the Wayne. | Oakland League title, Clarkston clashes with 4th place Northville number one in loop play when it) encounters’ Brighton. West ed field is- idle, “enim enn at home. Milford hopes for win | ononvine®'s I-L Tilt Pits Southfield, Van Dyke in Feature of 21-Game Area Program Four Oakland-B contests feature Troy at Clawson, Avondale at Lake | Orion, Fitzgerald at Roseville and Detroit Thurston at Madison in an inter-sectional battle, * «* Other gameg ate: North Branch at Ortonville, 3 p.m.; Bay City’s St, Stanislaus at Millington; Mem- phis at Imlay City; Warren: at Center Line; Eastland at Utica. games ere: North Branch at laus at Mill oon a 4 ‘a —~ ; . 4 miay Guy: Warren af Center ; Eastland at t Line; es Ton n't oenap Dry tag aoe bes" 0): Mew Hay ¥ im. Capac at ‘Aleman ‘ : Pastime Clare Shows Old Form at Jackson JACKSON (# — Pastime Clare, | ‘one of the better pacers of a few. ythe featured 8th race at Jackson Raceway, | With Bob Stansell in the sulky, | she returned $32.60, $9.40 and $5.60 to Wisconsin. Both are unbeaten | Mystic Grattan in league play with the Badgers | serene the board. finished 2nd and Ted Armstrong ‘vig for their 3rd success and) — © the Buckeyes for thelr Od. A toss | i ard. i iby either or a tie could put a i eee - crimp in title ambitions. First Time for Pafko. ; Michigan the nation’s No, 1 The Braves’ veteran outfielder. ~ team, warily goes to Minnesota Andy Pafko, was thumbed out of for the tradition-packed Littte | | a game this season, the first time| Brown Jug rivialry, Wolverines ‘in his U-years of playing in the! hope to stretch their league mark | majors. . | to three victories and their all- bound to have its hopes jarred. ' The main game sehds Ohio State | (4.4 jn conference action) i In other Big Ten tests Illinois Michigan State (1-1) and Indiana (0-2) is homecoming foe for North- western (0-2). Purdue and passer Len Dawson host Notre Dame's Fighting Irish. 'who were smashed 21-7 by Michi- | gan State last week and who suc- -cumbed to Dawson's four touch- down: tosses a year ago. Wisconsin coach Ivy Williamson has never beaten Ohio State whose break-away All-America Howard | Southern Three Big 10 Leaders Hope to Extend League Winning Streaks but at Least One Will Fail seasons ago, showed some of her, Ci1CAGO «m— The Big Ten’s| game record to five. Go plwers | (Hopalong) Cassady has rallied the old-time form last night in winning | three football leaders try to extend | have lost to Purdue and Winoils | Buckeyes for victories in the last conference winning streaks tomor-| and have only one victory for the a row but at least one of them is} campaign over Northwestern. | three years. His 88-yard scoring |runback of an intercepted pass 4 ‘touched off a 31-14 rout of Wiscon- sin last season. Cassady apparently is reandli | back into form after a. siege minor injuries this week, | Wisconsin will have Jim Miller Jim Haluska at quarterback. Both teams lost to outside pension that will eliminate him for. back in harness to altertiate with — {test week, the Buckeyes bowing $9 unbeaten Duke 20-14 and the Bad- gers a 33-21 decision to on the coast. * #) >, THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 cic RE-BUILI MOTORS Phone 18 Months — We Arrange to Pay FE 2-9111 wvwvvTrr7 rV—00r""r"rv"rv"rVrVVY ‘AND ACCESSORIES » COMPLETE AUTO PARTS > > i‘ wT.rrrwTrtrrCrClrrorrwrerewreerewreweweweewewyeww* ba ll i i 4 ‘ a . 4 PLENTY OF PARKING Pontiac Piston Service ~® CORNER OF CASS AND LAWRENCE | Commerce, Parks and Recreation Ninth annual Midget Footbay All-Star ‘Night, co-sponsored K4 the Pontiac Junior Chamber ;of | Department, and Board of Educa- tion, will be held Saturday under | the Wisner Stadium lights. Starting at 7 p.m., an estimated | 250 elementary and junior high | 7th grade boys will wage two and | | a half hours of continuous action. | || Six games are scheduled as a {fit- | | ting climax to six weeks of train- ing by Pontiac High School in- structors in football's basic. funda- | mentals. Eight Sth and 6th grade teams representing a dozen schools will play four contests on 45-yard | fields. The first half of two games will be played simul- | taneously, then one-half of the remaining two games will be | | held in the same manner. Rota- | then continues until all four con- tests are completed. Four Junior High squads, com- | Posed of Tth graders and repre- - MOST FORDS ieeeaseeee §=CHEVROLETS FREE WHILE YOU WAIT 121-123 E. Montcalm STUDEBAKERS Low Prices on All Other Makes ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT Motor Mart Auto Parts FE 4-8230 Try a restful ft will do Discover today the Step te Today fer Kates 10 SENECA STREET | TIRED AFTER A HARD DAY’S WORK? do wonders for you. facilities available at the YMCA ATHLETIC CLUB FE 5-6116 Te a. ae ee BEHIND-THE.- SEAMS STORY... ay . . 0 Story only Hart Fes Schaffner & Marx can , tell. Behind - the - seams < x x of the exclusive Pon- ° American tweed topcoot is some wide-awake wool-gathering in, South America. From Argentine sheep comes fine silky wool; from Chile, strung: resilient wool. Blended together for surface- softness with rugged wear... and styled by Hart Schaffner G Marx in a comfortably hand- ». $0 2e_ raglan-shoulder style. *6 5 00 PAN-AMERICAN—reg US Pat Off “Open Monday and Friday Nights to 9 BONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER Dickinsons Birmingham—272 W. Maple ATHE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIACEE Pontiac Bow Three years of hunting with a bow and arrow has finally paid | | off for Mr. and Mrs. Omer Vaught | | of M6 North Cass. The couple, both employed by | GMC, returned home last week- end with a prize catch of a one- Vaught’s prize, Omer used a 58- pound bew, Both were taken at Roscommon with the doe falling Saturday while Mrs. Vaught was successful Sunday morning, with one arrow, | Vaught’s are members of the TE | Big Sale in Advance | Australia has sold more than $1) million worth of tickets for the 1956 | Olympic games which are still! | more than a year distant. as eeranae sentative of five schools, are slated to play two games at the conclusion of the Elementary pro- gram. The rotating system will also be used, but the older young- sters will employ the full 100-yard gridiron. Approximately 150 boys will | compete in the 5th and 6th grade | games. Elementary schools par- ticipating tomorrow night are Mc- | Connell, Wilson, Webster, Malkim, Crofoot, Keego Harbor, Walled | Lake, St. Michael, St. Frederick, | os | Whitfield, Bagley, and Wisner. Junior High schools taking part are Lincoln, Wever, Eastern, Wash- ington, and Jeffersom One hun- dred 7th grade youths are expect- ed to play. Elementary boys will play seven-minute quarters of unin- | terrupted time, while the Junior High teams are scheduled for periods of eight non-stop minutes, Feotball equipment for Mid- get Night will be issued Satur- day morning at Wisner Stadium during the concluding oes H unters F ale Michigan Bow Hunter's Associa-| tion. They have participated in |deer hunting with bow and arrow |since 1953. That year both were unsuccessful. Last year Mrs. | Vaught, a typist for GMC, brought | _ home her deer. ‘Selick Aids Tech Team Charles Schack of Pontiac, who | played his high school football at Waterford, participated in two touchdown drives from the guard | post | Northern Michigan last week, 46- 12. The Upper Peninsula school | meets Northland College Saturday | nce nn Horse Races Top Cors while automobile speed races of 40 million. Grand Slam Home Runs Three players have hit two) grand slam homers in a single game: Tony Lazerri of the Yan- kees in 1936; Jim Tabor of the Red Sox in 1939; Rudy York of the he Tigers in 1946. as Michigan Tech routed | cousins. AS Seat wae weve gar ticipated in the ‘ Tickets for Midget Night can be purchased at all Pontiac schools and from any member Pontiac Jaycees. Jaycees 1 | | ! | | mon, ~ 1250 ‘Midgets’ Play in Annual Grid Shan The Tigers’ .316 team batting League record. - mneeeed | OW Webster No, 1 (south end); sone of 5g OR GET THEIR DEER — After three years of bow hunting for deer, | 1% /Mr. and Mrs. Omer Vaught, Pontiac, finally collected last weekend. | Above they are shown with the spikehorn and doe, bagged at Roscom- | ‘Center Line Ace GMC Archery League and the, at Houghton. Tech holds a 3-1 rec- Boosts Record las Top Passer Horse races in the U. S. draw| about 50 mfition fans cach year, Larry Bielat, | before the eyes of scouts from at | least a dozen Midwest colleges, has heaved 85 tosses, completing | 60 for a remarkable .706 average. | In guiding Center Line to five straight victories, including three CENTER LINE —Quarterback | in defense of its Bi-County League whose passing won | title, Bielat has thrown 12 touch- him a berth on the Associated | 40wn passes. various classes draw a total of | Press’ Class B All-State team last | | year, isn't content to rest on his | laurels. j° In fact, the lanky senier pass- | ing ace is bettering his pace of a year when he completed 81 of 150 passes for 1,273 yards, 15 | touchdowns and 11 extra points, T | So far this season, the 6 foot 1, 185-pound aerial artist, performing THURSDAY'S sand ee Rochester 104, Bos Port Wayne 97, a Ty “All-Stars 93 NHL enews L T Pts. GP GA Montreal ....4.. 7. 1 1 @ 47 8 Boston ...cceeee 3 2 1 FT 1 WB New York....... 3 2 60 6 8 6% Chicago ..ssseee 22 2 6 YW & Detroit ..cccee 2 3 ; 5 13 ‘ore 1 5 3 ® 23 THURSDAY'S asst LTs 2 Boston 3, Montreal Chicago 2, Detroit 2 ‘tie Why let your radiator pick your pocket all winter? .. ake advantage of PURE’S Guaranteed | ee All-Winter Anti- Freeze ‘Protection ...you pay for one fill...that’s all! No charge for any refil your anti-freeze up to all winter long. Drive in now. Your Pure Oil cooling system to make sure cal defects and that all hose Then he’ll add the right am FILL Anti-Freeze for this moment on, you need never anti-freeze all winter long, are needed, he’ll add them without charge. but ACT NOW Be Safe With the ORIGINAL Guertantes Plan Is needed to keep original strength dealer will check your there are no mechani- connections are tight. ount of PURE ONE- climate. From that pay another cent for If any replacements Another reason to B@ sure with Pure and betfer at | your Pure Oil | dealer's. Badgers Seek to Stop OSU's Winning Roll Ivy Seeks 1st Victory Over Buckeyes After 1 Tie, 5 Defeats _ MADISON, Wis. @ — Wisconsin University’s football coach, Ivy Williamson, has settled one of two | ‘old scores: outstanding when the | |geason began and will’ have the | 4 a BUY A 49-750 ‘9- i) USED CAR No Money Down! LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES Buckhorn Lake M-24 at |vhance to even up the second to- to- | | morrow against Ohio State. | He wanted to beat Iowa in the | worst way this year to make up tor last year’s 13-7 loss and he, did, in spades by a score of 37-14. Now he would like nothing bet- | | ter than to remove a thorn in his’ | side put there by Ohio State. | |” Ivy has ane of the finest coach- ing records in the Big 10, yet all, ‘he has to show for six meetings | j with the Buckeyes is 6-6 tie in| 191. The Bucks shut him out in | | the first year, 1949, 21-0, and fol- |fowed that up with victories in) | 1950 (19-14), 1952 (23-14), 1953 | (20-19) and 1954 (31-14). His record of 40 wins, 15 jot | and 4 ties averages out to .714. The inability to beat Ohto State is the one flaw in the otherwise | imoressive picture. The oddsmakars think he'll pro- duce Wisconsin’¥ first victory over Ohio State since 1946. They've in- stalled the Badgers as one touch- | down favorites. Neither .team will be at its of- | fensive peak for the Camp Randall | | Stadium meeting expected to at tract 53,000 fans. stionable starters include the | Bucks’ right halfback Jerry Hark- rader and the Badgers’ end Jim) Reinke, tackle Jerry Cvengros and guard Paul Shwaiko. Wisconsin's air arm probably will be the deciding factor. ee weer line BEGINS AT...$1 445 FOSTER'S GARAGE (?.0.8.) 467 Aubern Ave. average in 1921 set an American - Bowling Clinic By BILLY SIXTY DUMPING THE BALL — When you force the delivery from the top of the backswing, trying for added: | speed, it loses its groove, as the | sketch shows. The upper line illus- | | trates the changed course of “i | ball. It is driven downward, into | the alley. You dump it, release it | | sharply. without follow-through, be- |. cause your footwork comes to an | abrupt halt, and you are too erect | at the foul line. | | | FORCED BALL CAUSES ABRUPT STOP AT 'LiNE” | The lower line is the more pleas- ant, free swinging, relaxed action that results when the ball is al- lowed to drop downward from the peak of the backswing of its own weight. The weight takes the body | | downward gracefully, comfortably, | _and the momentum of the swinging | ball carries you forward to a fin- ishing ‘slide. You'll reach out in releasing the ball exactly where you aim to. Remember: Swing is the thing. (Copyright 1955, John ¥. Ditle Co.) G) We'll “winterize” our car in a jiffy! o waiting, no de- lays! Every job finished when pressed and inished right. Come in now! BRAID MOTOR SALES DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer -Coss at W. Pike FE 2-0186 Super Special FITS BOTH FRONT AND REAR OF CAR _ RUBBER expensive car * Ge foor me rms wo, dirt, ete. @ Choice of Maroon, Blue, Black colors. Green or * pos ae te — 146 W. Huron 140 N. Sagnaw ime FIRESTONE === STORES FE 2-9251 FE 5-2620 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, ? ¢ Z£ OCTOBER 21, 1955 this weekend, and most conference ~phampionships and the big New Year's Day bowl games are far Grid. | darough the shadows, Reaches fi READY TO JUMP — Here are four of the top steeplechase riders who will be in the $50,000 Temple Gwathmey Handicap, richest race of its kind, at Bel- mont Park, today. ey ee, ee —— on Ryton. LADIES ee BOWL HOUSE w cers 19 ‘ Tricker's 1 a Nat'l Coach 15 9 i. &. —— Nichole m8 it i Mam sit Pita 4 i ower e out Rity.. 13 11 618 ers 13 11 Sctaat 5 19 its 21% P. gteck te A Beat, iccene 801, Pete's Place 2579. 8ST, BENEDICT MEN'S J. Powers is 6 murom Bal i and a French Syearold gelding see eet, 1410 Marecro’s - ‘9 19| COWld be the Cinderella horse of Don's @erv. 12 13 on 915 the lot Gottschalk 32 3 Cinrs, 116) wo Ameri ' Mrs. Dooley Adams, Albert Foot, Flint Schulhoter and Pat Smithwick. Adams rides Neji. Foot is on Shipboard. Carafar is Schulhofer's mount. Smithwick has leg up | | lll Classy ] umpers Ready for Rich Gwathmey Test NEW YORK ®—Eleven jumpers | Ogden Phipps’ Ne | haye a date with the starter today | rion duPont Scott’s and Mrs. Ma- ipboard, head in the $50,000-added Temple Gwath- | the weights in the 2%-mile affair | mey Steeplechase at Belmont Park, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION ADJUSTME COMPLETE PRICE eer srk st AND MATERIAL CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES 40 W. Pike St., Pontiac GOLI SMITH, NT SPECIAL © Drain and Flush Out verter SERVICE MGR. over 16 fences. Neji has 167 pounds, while Shipboard carries one less. The Frenchman is Templier, who used to have a terrific record rac- -| ing on the flat and over hurdles across the seas. In April a year ago, Templier was one of a dozen horses brought to the United States by a syndicate, He cost Laddie Sanford $11,500, but showed very little. So Templier went on the auction block at Belmont Park, and sold for $600 to be sent to Puerto Rico. Mickey Walsh, the trainer, stepped in and offered the buyer $800 for Templier, and the jumper stayed in the U.S., racing in the colors of Mrs.*Walsh. About four weeks ago, Templier ; won a hurdle claiming race at Bel- here and last Saturday he won a ‘chase at the Rose Tree Hunts, | Media, Pa. He was entered in the |Temple Gwathmey, and has only la feathery 130 pounds. Horsemen | say if he runs back to his French form with that kind of weight, he ,could prove very dangerous. John Cotter will ride: eated - powianaerss wh Chuck's 18 6 Curnell’s 10 14 Acker Co 8 §. Reliable 10 14 | OL Tavern 1410 Paramount . 10 4 | Craig Heat, 13 11 peecrters 9 15 Avon Inn 10 14 Gene & 8 16) arison 199, D. Miller ot Para- ‘mount Beauty School 976—2768. | NORTH SIDE LADIES | Pts. Pia, Bob's car 10 Neceht 7 Oak 9 Owen's Serv. 5 “Saion Stinson 5 ; Seam 7 Willis 4 D. “schater 171—468; — Ne. 4%, 410—11 IT’S PROBABLE that 148 Americans have annual incomes of over $1,000,000 featecte States. A 7 CROWN. after year. ‘Say Seag AIN'S and be Sure _ -..0f American whiskey at its finest IT’S Sure that not one of them can enjoy a finer American whiskey than Seagram’s 7 Crown. Some things change constantly: like the number of millionaires in the United the distinctive smooth flavor of SEAGRAM’S ship among fine whiskies goes on year few things never change: like That’s why 7 crown’s leader- Orange Bowl assignment it's, Colorado, : Maryland,’ which is expected to represent the Atlantic Coast Con- ference in the Orange Bowl, will have a scrap on its hands against once-beaten Syracuse in another big battle of the day. * a * Michigan, the nation’s No. 1 team just ahead of Maryland, has its eyes on the Rose Bowl. How- ever, the Wolverines have a bit of business this week with Minne- ritical Stage 2."= sota in the Big Ten Conference scramble. | Wisconsin, tied at the top of the | Big Ten heap with Michigan, must knock off Ohio State Saturday to) remain in the running. Clemson got the weekend rolling poet with a 2814 Atlantic | Conference 8 ® Chuck’ 015 Binge nary and Southern Metho- | Puller” of 4 2 Amer “car, * : 18 dec ist Newport's 1410 Paul's No ision over | still in the running. However, | Pauls No. 1 1410 Team No 10 7 17| JacKolow 100, G : romael 466; eee Carolina. The victory, de- | Baylor meets Texas A&M tomor- | cided in the first period when | Clemson’s Joe Pagliei scored twice, put the Tigers in a first Cotton Bowl date Jan. 2. '|place’ tie with Maryland with a 20 record. * * * There are five big games on to- ham Young, unbeaten Boston Col- night, and one will be watched | lege meets Marquette and Okla- with interest, although it has no' homa A&M tackles Detroit. -THIRTY-ONE ‘SPECIAL!! Complete LUBRICATION and BRAKE ADJUSTMENT INCLUDING PULLING WHEELS TO CHECK LINING CY OWENS Come for Your 1956 Pontiac Demonstration ‘Bowling Res | wt Saad 4 Ht Pont. “Shumb, ie ‘i Bowlerettes 3 1 | B. Smith 199-404, Cass Brake 623, Moldamatic 2224. 7-& DIVISION - wt 7 Oakland 6W 11 13) Moldamatic Miller's 6 i bd Ouse Brake = sone SSeeer hienting on conference or bowl) bids. UCLA, a favorite for the | Pacific Coast ‘Conference title and Lining Mary. the Rose Bowl job if it can get - past Washington later, goes - out- ay side the brotherhood to meet Iowa| 8. Howard 202, of the Big Ten. serv, TL, Parmer Mit. 3 1-B p DIVISION Washington, a winner over South- ern California, takes on Stanford “ tomorrow and should win without too much difficulty. Auburn, winner over Georgia | Tech and with the Southeastern | Conference and Sugar Bow! peek: | xgoter Inn ing over a far-off horizon, picks | Benson's | Lien No, 1 jon a petay urman | Ma le Leaf * | Jack O'Hearts | M:> Powell 211- yor Altes 2058. 4 ¢ —- 17 51” FE 5-4102 147 S. SAGINAW Quality Cinrs, Hutchinson’ t) Oliver Buick 123 wr Bank " £5.% Leaf 746, | The Southwest Conference cham- |pionship may not be settled for | | another few Saturdays, 9A-DIVISION wh ‘ith Baylor | Cutaway Mt. 16 L| Team No. 7 i 13 row, and the winner may wind | aisieis Newport's 143 143— up a favorite for the title, and a WEST SIDE SENIOR HOUSE Ride Today! Pta. 4. aw kt. 12 : In the other four top attractions | earl ” is a i! 1 ‘| tonight, Texas Christian play 8 pers Cole hy ee L. C. AN DERSON INC, .Miami, Denver goes against Brig- | Westside Rec. 15 Coca Cola v| Lakeland 14 Tru-Biht 8 Sisters ow, i$ Brian coer. ¢/ Lake’ Orion, Mich. MY 2-2411 a: Lat a 237, Osta 612; Westside Ree. It's Good Bye to 55's | and a GOOD BUY for you! ‘ti Why shop around . . ‘em all in one spot for balanced stock . . you want we have! in 2 Bl pen Friday Night SLASHING PRICES « ™ BIG EVENT! 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Ted Lind- spirited Chicago team when— HOLLYWOOD (The an-| pages filled with the terror of war | | the ‘sky. They looked pretty. Then say in-the final period to pull the Lindsay Jeok a pass from Bob neer merely horror risons * he re- | 'Detfoit Red Wings to a 2-2 tie| Goldh _ out ' vered two 7 tre ay Gat the io © ¥ prvghaece the Romie Segoe © Grp.” in Coast Game | with the Chicago Mack Hawks last Hawk defensemen and -blazed in Dramatic Pages of Novel Lie Being Duis. va Wings Tie Hawks 22 Mpls, Rocks cso nde sano ts ene SHOOT for Same —one short of the’ 270 posted by ‘Aurel Joliat, highest scoring left om = © § | wing in National League history. a Ly oni f | Chicago built up a 2-0 lead on ; : t R t yoni: qvent pt Hollywood Legion contr va “my asa ~— mip Two years later the ‘Goldstein | “night, a M-footer at 4:06 of. the period. | gamis by Ted Sullivan and Harry . o. . crag gy Goldstein Ay - haa Pid . *. * family, mother, father, Dickie and. UCLA Could Enhance, ‘the Wings were heading for | _ It was Lindsay's “Sth goal of the Watson. Birmingham, E. Detroit geles and Ramon Tiscareno of The sunlight and peace of pre- jhis brother, were herded to, Kiev National Prestige by | a a war Warsaw, in his native Poland, | for slave labor. ; ‘then the blight and suffering at When the Nazis invaded Kiev | Kiev, Stalingrad and finally months Dick was taken back to East Ger- . of imprisonment in the symbol of | ™#Ay. | ee wm ;. But behind the name of Goldstein 4 chambers of mass torture and| He never éaw his parents again. | LOS ANGELES «®—The Bruins «Juarez, Mex,, a pair of promising | -young welterweight boxers. * * * Downing Hawkeyes } is a story worthy ot a novel, its' death, Germany's Buchenwald|The brother, like Dick, escaped of UCLA and lowa collide in a) Sireceapeteepeeenerrere—mrrnree : prison—these are vivid chapters in | death. Coast Conference-Big 10 football the life of Dick Goldstein. | Goldstein finally reached Amer- game tonight, with UCLA favored | ane = ‘| Dick is 2. He attends Santa‘ica. He enlisted in the Marine to topple the visitors and possibly | ‘Monica City College and is fizht- Corps and served in Korea in an enhance their national prestige. ing his way to becoming a dentist. intelligence unit, thanks to his abil-’ Kickoff time in Memorial Coli He has a most engaging personal- ity to speak eight languages, in- seum, with upwards of 60,000 fans ity and a marvelous sense of hu- chiding Russian expected to sit in, is set for 8:30 mor. How he developed the latter “Make it seven and a half. I em. (PST) is a tribute to the ypung man him- only speak English half good,” he oy. ic gtill a Rose Bowl candi- self cracked | Dick was a lad of 9. the son of ‘Tomorrow night is my first big a gentle school teacher, when the chance. I hope to- win. Most of | © Russians invaded Poland. ‘all, TI hope I do not disappoint my “ We saw _the airplanes high in friends,"" he concluded. date from the Midwest despite aj Joss to Wisconsin and last week's tie with Purdue, Hawkeye follow: | ers who live out here discount their | team's chances tonight, pointing | | out that “ team has a very i im- | |Sooner's Top Ranked Team fm." * . s “| Boasts Powertul Reserves | UCLA, loser only to Maryland and given a score last Saturday by Stanford, is still the top choice | to represent the Coast in the big) bowl game New Year's Day. NORMAN, Okla. «— When it) Even the hedging Sooner coach /comes to pluck and hustle, Okla- admits the well-primed alternate | jaeme'e elite Sooner eleven is team is largely. responsible for | ; | being shoved into the back seat— Oklahoma's prolonged victory Both squads have injury prob-| |by the second stringers. ‘march and No. 3 rating in the lems among their line forces. | Bud Wilkinson for years has | nation. | Jowa's fine tackle, 215-pound Rodg- | Swedberg, and the Bruins’ best | . ‘ 2% 4 sie rc stressed speed and depth in guid = * er . We Eh " es 2 ling his Sooner mane to nen | The alternate team is composed lineback, Steve Palmer, are not % @ and the dizziest heights of cottage |* single senior ; ies = kfield talent is apparent: | ems to be yanking at the head of Pat O'Sullivan, who has just made football. Here's what the subs have ac- ly Mmlac ! a desperate effort to put New York ahead in the first half of a Gaelic * * o * 6 8 oe Noda t basil to a stand.) UCLA will rely on the triple football match at Dublin's Croke Park. Johnny Manning of the home eS This year is no different. Wil-) si while the regulars regrouped | threats of halfback Sam Brown and side connects with his head to keep the visitors from scoring. Dublin SOCKO!--Bob Davenport is the kinson's shock troops are an eager Hor a last-half assault: ran and fullback Bob Davenport in the run- | won with 2 goals and 9 points. big smasher in UCLA's single-|bunch of sophomores and juniors passed for 183 yards against Pitt ning department and rookie Ron- oa wing attack. ‘who are performing like veterans. | and scored one touchdown: put nie Knox passing the ball, seer 7 a atin a2 ae down two Texas drives; ran wild| The Hawkeyes’ passing threat is | Wolverines Take Tp ] u ved for three touchdowns against Kan- | Jerry Reichow and the ball earry- . of E Smi ud. MMs one Big Seven wit omerved. die Vincent it witely ecomnizet ON? Jaunt to Gopher Lair “Bud Wilkinson has two of the best Coach Forest Evashevski — indi- | : teams in the conference’ / cated, however, he might lead off| MINNEAPOLIS Uf — The _ top- warned them of a hulking Min- sos | with Eldean nope * omy Do- | ranked Michigan Wolverines -nesota fullback, Dick Borstad, who Casey Uses Personnel | brine at Smith's lett haltoac -_ brought their injured with them leads the Big Ten in rushing. | For those who love match Manager Cassey Stengel of the | tween linemen the game offers an) today as they landed here to de- Yankees used more players this excellent one between two Aill-| fend their Little Brown Jug and ssn. Se waea:'Wimneacia® ead year than he had used in five America candidates, Calvin Jones | Big Ten title chances against FOu™ m) Rous | immense te Bi: previous World Series. He wed 21 | | of Iowa and Hardiman Cureton of | pireee acts: way saw Minnesota trim North. different men in the first’ four the Bruins, a pair of big, agile | On top of all their injury prob- wentern 13-7 and bow to Illinois games. In 1951 he used 21 Yankees. guards. lems, Michigan scouts have 21-13. “You might say as Borstad The Gophers gave Purdue a battle before falling 7-6 and lost to Washington in thei opener, 30-0. Nevertheless, they still have two hacks in the top 10 rushing leaders in the conference. Borstad tops the list with 185 yards for a 5.4 vard average. Right half Bobby b Schultz is eighth with 127 yards for la Hale tt “ team,”’ Hollway said) ‘They build their offense around Borstad and he can deliver.” BEGINNING TODAY { Besides, the Gophers are in top physical shape for their regionally S a] S ) mg ‘televised battle tomorrow. (CBS— ‘ pec ial he i ng 23 pm. EST), WJIBK Channel 2, 1955 . ~ Bowling Results FORD - MERCURY - LINCOLN re, Prices Like These Prove COST MEANS NOTHING. As I Raise $50,000 Cash! . NEW FALL STYLES Stroh. WW Le Tay 7 2 ae l ‘ . . < . 12-Hi Rar 1 Frankitn . 5 = + Drewry's €& Mich Bel 3 e Factor) Offic ials Cars and fxecutives , Drewry's ‘ a rd Cars . . « Customline, Fairlain, Conver- 5a ne Te & Pepaaieg 401. FAS ul S — opco S tible and Victoria Fords. Monterey and cae Kith Owis 7 . * w w Custom Mercurys, Fordor and Hardtop S| seenay’s Wee 18 8 Deron Hews 16 40 . . . I 1 OLak 1a 10 Pon Heat 12 14 2.50 Val Val Coupes. Many with Power Steering, \ Dean's Serv 1710 Pont Bldrs. 11 18 To $4 .50 Values To $50 alues > : : Crescent Inn 16 12 Cherri-Von 10 18 - Power Seats, Power Windows, Power Higgins 1612 Serv. Glass 6 22 * . . + * 8 ° F 4 M. Bird 243° D. Sweeney 601. Manny's Brakes. Some with Air Conditioning. 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Bill Dineen spoiled Chicago goal- EASTERN MICHIGAN LEAGUE SFANBENGS Birmingham Hi ‘ Port Huron Raat Detroit : © Hazel Park eco~s | | lof the opening period. een i | Pere 3 fi ie Al Rollins’ hopes of a shutout | eee eg tONIO! East Detroit; Port it; irifling in a 15-foot shot at 17:45 of | | Rares ot Ferndale; Hazel Park at Mt ithe 2nd period. It was Dineen's | “*"* a a ast goal of the season. | Football teams from Birming- log ~ it high schools | Ch ut to repeat the defeat | ham and East Detroit it —— gre Wings in a league Will discover they both have plenty in common when they clash in to- A night's Eastern Michigan League —, en by Dae showdown game on the East De- Last year” Detroit whipped | (roit field at 8 p.m. Chicago 12 out of 14 games. In | ‘rie Maples and Shamrocks will the last five seasons the Wings | have three identical objectives in have taken 56 out of 70 games | ind. They can be listed as -fol- they have played with the |)... . Wewks. 1—Both schools want to preserve The deadlock failed to boost De- | flawless 5-0 records. | | - |troit's 5th place position in the 2—They are seeking the East- | NHL standings although a gain! oy Michigan League champion- | was made on league-leading Mont- ship. An East Detroit vietory jreal. The Canadiens lost their would virtually wrap up the 2.9 Ist game of the season, 32, tO crown, while a Birmingham win straight Big Seven championships | five sophomores, five juniors and due to play at all. HOLD THAT GOAL! — The Dublin defender, second from left, Golf Tourney at PCC 1948. _ tered in the annual Bermuda game fishing tournament. The largest weighed 70 pounds. Van Buren Sets Mark 1 BATON ROUGE, La.—Steve Van { "1007 yards, set in 1943, still stands as a _Lousiana State record. ae er TH ise meninaciigipis sciatic + | s Boston, | almost assures it of at least a Detroit meets the Boston Bruins | tie for leop honors. Port Huron jhere Saturday night. would still confront the Maples. ~~ | 3~—Both teams are shooting for Raymond Wins Fisher | their Ist EML title. Neither school owns a league diadem although | both have come close. The Maples’ Jim Raymond fired 71 to win strongest bid was in 1951 when , ir, . rr the championship flight in the they were runners-up to Port Fisher Local 396 golf tournament | #uren. = oo mUENa RCT Using their only mutual foe, held recently at Pontiac Country | jraz6) Par, as a basis for com- Club. Jeff Green was low set parison, tonight's tilt must be con- winner in the same flight. sidered a tossup. Both downed First flight was won by Leroy the Vikings by 3-touchdown mar- | Eastham with a gross 77 and Bob. gins, the Maples winning by a 33-13 Mayo for. Grant Chapel and/ count and the’ Shamrocks by an Bill Medlock were 2nd-flight win- | 18-0 shutout. ners in gross and net respectively East Detroit, which boasted a Jean Lee won the women’s title | perfect defense mark until its goal with Ruth Dinkle and Colleen! line was dented for the Ist time Gaves knotting for 2nd place. by Port Huron last week, is rated Trophies were awarded to all win- | 4th in this week's Associated Press ners. poll of Michigan's top 10 Class A ina high school teams. Birmingham , s ri h. Notre Dame Iron Man is ranked % Dick Prendergast, Homewood,! George Munger, slated to return Ii]., sophomore end, led Notre to the major leagues with the ‘Dame's squad in playing time in Pittsburgh Pirates next season, his first game. He played 46. pitched his Ist victory in the ma- minutes in the 1955 opener against jors in 1943 with the St. Louis SMU, the Irish winning 17-0. | Cardinals. a 19.7 average. be re “They're mostly a running 3 ved HANGING ON — Baylor's Del Shofner swings around end as Wash- ington's Earl Monlux latches on and hopes for a short ride. Sports Briefs _ See the NEW The largest fish ever landed in Berritda waters on rod and ‘reel . was q 343-pound blue marlin. * * * Binghamton, N.Y.. led the East- ern League es se won MARK-30 tendance during wg ts Kee es | TURBO-FOUR “sc atchisan sae | OUTBOARD Gerry Plautis, Michigan State 175-pound fullback, spends Sunday mornings giving religious instruc- tion to boys at a correctional in- stution in East Lansing. * * « ? Al Kaline of the Detroit Tigers was the only major leaguer to make 200 hits during 1955. * * wt Chuck Congdon, Tacoma, Wash., pro who taught U.S. Amateur golf champion Pat Lesser for seven years, won the Canadian Open in * * * More than 65 wahoo wefe en- Buren's season rushing mark of Old Work—New Work WATER SPORTS CALL HEADQUARTERS H A R P Eg R Lay-a-way Now Electrical Contracting ver Sprteg 1329 Reechiand—Keeee Harber 1215 S. Wobdward at 14 Mile John R. Horper~ FE 2-1620 Birmingham Phone Mi 7-0133 | a { i / Pensa ‘ | 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, enka: OCTOBER 21, 1955 “a 1 # “PHIRTY-THREE “And it'll bea tough one, too,” he predicted: With the Mlinois game, Mich- igan State hits the. mid-season mark. It's the Ist of four con- secutive Conference games, to be | cawed oy eee Reread | Minnesota. The shadow of Notre Dame | alse stretches from last Satur- day until tomorrow. There's the Chief Jayvees Edge AH Squad TD in Last 2 Minutes Gives PHS Gridders a ing 19-14 victory over Arthur Hill's JV's Thursday afternoon at Sag- inaw. It was the 6th straight win for the Little Chiefs. back to score twice in the 2nd pe- riod for a 13-7 halftime lead. Jim a 6 yard drive. Nick Shorter set the 2nd touchdown for the Little Chiefs punt 65 yards for a touchdown, then plunged for the extra point to hand Arthur Hill a 14-13 advant- age. That set the stage for Pon- tiac’s late winning rally. SAVINGS * | PENN BONUS Mewoen wuiskt™ in eZ 7 | TASTE You Could Pay MUCH MORE for WILLIAM Quality Millions Say ‘When’ with WILLIAM PENN $930 Pint Code Neo, 771) - ENDED WHISKEY, 86.8 WHISKEY 6 YEARS 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL a, GOODERNAM & WORTS, LTD. PEORIA, HUINOIS. £ The word is that Ilinois gach | | Canadiens Lose Ist Contest of Season By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The mighty Montrea] Canadiens aren't invincible afterall. They fi- nally tumbled to their first Nation- | jaged $63,609 per race in his Ist | poste al Hockey League defeat of the | | 11 starts this year. He won nine of for season last night, It was a 3-2 setback engineered | jby the Boston Bruins with Don McKenney slapping in the deciding | goal at 18:28 of a blistering’ third | period. Montrea] had won four and { for New York's Madison Square | the trip. | Michigan State, meanwhile, will | ready sold out for the game. tied one. Black Hawks 2-2. Money-Making Nashua Nashua, destined to become the | year’s 3-year-old champion, aver- je races, finished 2nd in the Ken- | litucky Derby and 3rd against older horses in the Sysonby. 'Garden, Nov, 1-8. David P. ee Fire Claims 2, Horses ARCADIA, Calif. @®—A yearling Dies at Age of 74 filly was burned to death and a PASADENA, Calif. »—David P. picked Agony : ay hb wrens on State was ieee be. weekoned tar’ tes Anh Gatelata _ century ley Enter. nich Sate wae edhe ead by prises, including baseball, | two years ago. The former president of the Los - A team that boasts the 2nd best | /ft half Clarence Peaks, lead: | Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast total offense and the 4th best rush-| 1" Spartan ground-gainer, def- | League succumbed Wednesday in ing offense is bound to be a rough | lltely will not be a starter, His | hospital after a short illness. ‘The : one. twisted ankle ts still weak and | Angels are @ farm club of the e+ Peaks probably will get in only | Chicago Cubs, both owned by P. K. Z SP The last.word from Champaign, | ° * few spot plays that call |Wrigiey and his father, the’ late too, was that Illinois will be at a * — ball handling William Wrigley. Ford, Chevrolet, Ply- physical peak for the homecoming |. In addition to being the number peers game in Macklin Stadium one MSU rushing threat, Peaks Johnny: Blanks Yankees : Ske elton Pa * ‘ hi | also can pass and is a specialist | Dodger World Series hero John- ‘ , ‘ Peake pepo Rin ee ee in the quick-kick and its many | ny Podres pitched shutout ball dur- © Quality. Fully Guar- k layoff to supply the power | variations. jing his last 11 innirigs against the F _anteed. one of the favorite Illini plays} Jerry Musetti, senior from De- | Yankees. They scored three runs | : a —fullback straight uP the middie. | troit, will start at left half and | against him in 18 innings but only ‘Says. ‘thins jame Crucial’ at Santa Anita Racetrack yester day. Bill Tuttle and Babe Birrer of 2-year-old colt, Center Star, burned| the Tigers have the same birth- Dennis Mendyk, junior from Sag- | ‘two were earned, End Rod Hanson, earlier this week by a knee injury, sidelined inaw, will be behind him. The 38-man Illinois squad was - Eleven of 13 compieted Tulane National Horse Show is listed | also has recovered in time to make ‘due in late this afternoon for a forward passes went into the hands brief workout in the stadium, al- of Green Wave halfbacks in the | ist three games this season. 80 badly he had to be destroyed! day, July 4, 1929. 77 W. Huron St. BRAKES RELINED ECIAL COMPLETE JOB Ss] 49s Parts and Labor * COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE * MARKET TIRE CO. Open “9 to 9” = FE: 8-0424 NEW POWER! short stroke power in every model and at no extra cost! New Ford Trucks for '56 give you powee itiedsaes up-to 98%. You got rolling faster, cruise at sustained highway speeds and have more reserve power! Treat yourself to America driving "s easiest- Pickup — with Fordomatic! ! tOptional at extra cost. Pe, cial LENT Le" NEW SAFETY and COMFORT! 1x Driverized Cab comfort, plus the protection of safety features you can’t get in any other trucks . ; , new Lifeguard steering wheel, new Lifeguard door latches! NEW CARRYING CAPACITY throughout the line. New Ford F-500 “‘14¢-tonner,” for example, has new 15,000-Ib. GVW—an_ increase of 1,000 Ibs.! New higher- capacity tubeless tires standard equipment on all models! power in every truck! ‘The result: lee power wiete . re savings . . leak wear 08 thoving ports . + much longer, lower-cost engine life. More Horsepower per Dollar in new FORD TRUCKS for'56 Ford Trucks for '56 give you the world’s greatest line-up of modern Short Stroke power. Now, your choice of eight engines—seven Y-8’s and a Six—from 133 to 200 h.p.! Only Ford has Superior Short Stroke . Choose from over 280 models— from Pickups to BIG JOBS! Shown: new Ford F-100 8-ft. Express. , Gives you more usable power, Y-8 or Six, - than any other truck in its class. *PROOF! Comparisons of makes of trucks, based on horsepower and suggested prices, show that Ford gives you more power for your money than any line. It looks the leader, too! all net list Only Ford gives you all these new and exclusive features Ford Trucks are first with safety first in new Driverized Cabs! Only Ford gives you so many safety features . . . tubeless tires now standard on all models, In no other truck engine will you find the complete combina.ion of sodium-cooled \exhaust valves, self-sealing intake valves, stress-relieved cylinder heads and other long-life features that you get in today’s rene: 4 rom Truck engines. NEW! 8-ft.. F-100 Express for bulky loads, avail- able at smal! extra cost. Also, popular 614-ft. Pickup stand. ard. GVW rating 5,000 Ibs. NEW! aeee- center Life- guard steering wheel helps protect driver from steer- ing column. Only Ford has it! No extra cost. door latches Ford cafety exclusive. MEW! wee weather starting, improved high-speed performance, greater electrical reserve. NEW! Hood air scoop, * 4-barrel carburetor, and dual exhaust system avail- able on Series 750 and up, for extra reserve power! NEW! Oa5" cooler, tive YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD FORD DEALER -- HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR TRUCKING * : TOP TV! NOEL COWARD * MARY MARTIN * ON FORD STAR JUBILEE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22 / NEW: Steering now avail- able on most conventional and Cab Forward Bia Jos. Stand- ard on many Ford Tandems! NEW! Sodium-cooled * exhaust valves in heavy-duty engines operate as much as 225° cooler than solid- stem valves, last far longer! NEW! Full-wrap rear window for easier backing; parking, maneuver- ing. Low extra cost. New full- wrap windshield standard. . Master-Guide Power . } / ‘ vy, ] ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 We Want You to Help Us Celebrate ”Y Attending Our THERE WILL BE UNHEARD. OF - VALUES ‘THROUGHOUT THE STORE...COME EARLY— FOR VALUES YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS! VALUES YOU WILL NEVER FIND AGAIN! BRING YOUR FAMILY and FRIENDS! SALE STARTS — Aouirs J OMORROW 2X. "seer HOTPOINT | |§§§._. APPLIANCES . Small Appliances OTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER AND 90 «HOTPOINT ELECTRIC DRYER—With 95 RANGE. DAYER—Washer installed both for only. . $299” porcelain tub .......... Maveiai eae $134" nd ae: ot = 95.... $24.95 ORs ne rmeyer er | D ‘i Tres 2" CL eee See | 6 SM BANGE—A name $119° Reg. $29.95, a eaeeeneee $15.95 { Ce eee 6 een, | + et “eee Wy wectuoghonse Sioa, inna. 12'31R? | MONSEraGtiON FF cexcaa cuscrnc vere nancr— 95 HOTPOINT 11:5 cu. ft. Double Door, | | | ; emo | ' Lighted push buttons. Reg. 399.95...... -5299*° moyen Dest Bey tesss.... 2299% pp cae oo $14.95 SATURDAY! == & wesrincaouse 20° euscraic nancr— $44Q° RoTromT 10 cu. Retigerme— ——_$99495 I Telechron Electric Kitchen Clock. § 2.98 With that wide oven ................ Reg. 259.95 ooo. ccecceee } Nesco Automatic 20 Ot. Roaster, BUY ON LONG EASY TERMS! Reg. $79.99 ................ $49.95 Proctor Automatic Toaster ....... $12.95 Universal Sandwich Grill and Waffle Baker, Reg. $22.95..... $12.95 TOYS No. 4'2 Gilbert Erector Sets, Reg. $8.85 ............ Lo. . 86.29 No. 1% Gilbert Erector Sets, Reg. $2.00 .............000.. $1.29 No. 1 Gilbert Chemistry Sets, Reg. $3.00 ............00000,. $2.09 JEAN HARDY | : .~«« «ff HOUSEWARES HARDWARE visor from the De: Hl Ekco Stainless Kitchen Tool Set......... $3.89 Easy On Plastic Storm Window Kits.....$ .39 troit Edison Co. will 7 Pieces, Gift Boxed, Reguar $6.95. be here to demon- Pyrex Prize Recipe Set................. $2.98 Metal Broom Rake ..... see e cease .. 8 55 “strate and onswer 12 pieces of Pyrex plus Recipe Book. Reg. 4.95. Zipper Top Trash Burner $ 1 49 any questions con: Ironing Board Pad and Cover............ S$ .88 ; cerning electrical Mf Cellulose Sponge Mop .................. $1.29 16 Oz. Claw Hammer................. $ appliances. Dust Mop .............:.. 0... cdeee $1.09 Storm King Door Closers, Reg. $1.98..... $ 1.59 Covered Sheet Cake Pan..*............ $1.19 Brown Jersey Gloves, Heavy ........... $ .35 » ££ fae 1 Qt. Aluminam Sauce Pan............. $35 § Tine D Handle Hay Fork, Reg. $8.05... .$ 5.59 SEE AMERICA’S MOST WANTED Good Grade Corn Broom............... $ .98 Y viii cla ° : Long Handle All Purpose Shovel........ $ 1.39 fm Kay Stanley Cake Mix Set, RANGE IN ACTION —_— SEE THE 3 Doz. Clothes Pins ee ee er rr a $ 21 Re $3. 00 ce eeeeeeeceecuees 1.98 GOLDEN GRIDDLE, AUTOMATIC fm © Assorted Cookie Cutters ............. $ .29. Shop Master Band Saw, Reg. $52.50..... $39.50 oy. 4 Up Sais Sets Oni Hy a ROTO-GRILL, AND GOLDEN FRYER IN USE — PLUS ALL THE OTHER FEATURES. 2 OVENS — HANDI- RAISE BROILER — NEW SUPER Toy Electric Iron, Reg. $1.00...... $ 69 Bat-M-Up Pinball Game, Reg. $3.00. .$1.98 Little Nurse or Doctor Set, Reg. $1.00 ........0000000... $ .69 Toy Ironing Board, Reg. $2.00..... $1.49 LAY ANYTHING AWAY AT THESE TERRIFIC PRICES! PLENTY OF FREE PARKING ' reuse TELEVISION Use Duet, the money back Outvide Dutch $ 89 , guaranteed low suds de- —_ House 1% WE WILL GIVE You THE tergent in your automatic set heed LARGEST TRADE-IN = |“ na wat” SQT9 | _IN TOWN on YOUR on Ya rein ut cay | © SMALL SCREEN SET! Lbs. SPEED CALROD BURNERS — LIGHTED PUSH BUTTONS — NEW MEAL TIMER — EXPERT STYLING! This $519.95 Range Used in Demonstration will be auctioned to highest bidder. The L. A. WAGNER Co. HOURS: 8:00 - 6:00 DAILY — MON.-FRI.-SAT. ’til 9:00 P. M. - 1960 H. orone at PONTIAC ROAD ObEN SURDAY 10:00 to: oaib , FES5 9221 = 3 ; ; ‘ = ’ * ¥ ‘ i hy ‘ 4 * i \ i : ee ‘ : ay ; ae Weck i We ee WSs ae oe «x = : See goa BNA ee i a ee se ee ee ‘joe Py ' I } ‘ : r 1 , : ‘ “eicnihs ° : Ae) 4 i ‘ i ; { F ' \ %, i i wa i? . vn j ; / : I i / oy j ail * D is | ey, 7 | THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER. 21, 1955 , | NICK HALIDAY | Rep ge ROR ee re eee Oe Re A tt oy SIR A ok ee 2 ee ? ee oe Cie wy Se ei ee oe ee ees 4 Fes) =i \ \ 4 ode ot Nae eal * P| } Phe | ee, ji / ye Sa oa Eee eae ’ Building, the Detroit Convention and Tourist Bureau has announced. Delegates. to the conventions, scheduled for 1959 to 1962, will spend from 12 million to 15 million dollars, said the bureau's execu- tive vice president, H. E. Bon- ing Jr. y At least 58 other convention requests have been refused be- cause the building will not be cempleted in time, he added. Construction of the $24,200,000 building is scheduled to begin in March and to be completed in January, 1959. It is planned as 4 showpiece of the $76,000,000. Civic Center. OF THE GUE * STREAM, AND © OW fare Strawberries’ picked from the / garden are popular Christmas fare | ‘gaat ” in Bermuda. | lveally don’t think Crosscut has the patience to be a good painter = BOARDING HOUSE IT'S A GIET, MAIORS 3 ALSO IT'S A GIFT THAT “G GAD, MR. MORRISSEY/ YOU ' Ds EIN ACAINT ITs UNCANNY! Mah T KNOW YOUGE Tink 7 TM ACCLAIMED AS THE CINCH J. WO THEN eee CHAMPION OF THE OWLS U, all e- ee ver irs Mee cuLD's // LIKE SHE Ono 3. 7 || RR WZ | bee PLAY FOR NOL TO DEFEAT @/)\ VoRe WRONG! naam a8 He, Zz antl] EZ Be Ne ese UNC Rove j w LIKE I SAY, (| | ta J | a = pt By Ernie Bushmiller A ee SMALL Tae {1 Be pee | NOVELTY co] STAKES! He || Tale WiLL ald Fo |\|STAGE MONEY 1 eeaif BE YOUR : « - ‘% ~(4 ; | if \ \ UNLUCKY : \ DAY : : \ Ole =, TEX. rf: \ —, \ WEIGHT - Ci, o by \ AND ball A wa “ys \\\ FORTUNE , ; Su ——% th _ ‘ ‘ \ AS 2 1 ~ ie Y . ; eas St RR CSS : Se ee Sy , MARTE YEE Saar a PT SS YS - fo QXx Sy SAA WS == SSS . SS MORRISSEY BA =| ~ ZA HAS A : = Cope. 1958 by NEA Service, tan, T, Mt. Rog. th & Pet OFF. | % * TALENT = a. ot (0-21 OUT OUR WAY : SEE WHAT IT'LL MAKE IT () THEY'VE BROUGHT | WORSE! YOU DON’T si ON US-- SOME |} TOUCH TH' STUFF, GUYS ON TH’ _A BUT THAT PRESENTS NIGHT SHIFT A CHALLENGE TO YOUR UNUSED LIBERTY AN’ MAKES YOU MAD, SO IN RESENTMENT YOu'LL | BE CLIMBIN’ TH’ FENCE AN’ SOON =|. HAVE A BEER BELLY TOO/ ee TM GOING OVER > CHECKED - : 0 PEGON ANN WOTHER? = G 7] EMMRA | ok, CALDWELL S - — ee 7 -|] SQUIRES | & HOUSE... | Ce IS NOW . SLUMBER WHERE. 2 | om; PRRINS : [IS } yz : = ANY ayy =_ e eh T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat Off,» | p.. . WEY) — ¢GRANDMA _ 3 By Charles Kuhn THE IRRELS CLIMB GEE,1 NEVER TH a WAS AN OL) FRIEND * AT. O THEIRS . BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON coy swe (052, TRNILUAMS DIXIE DUGAN — By McEvoy and Strieber ri ALL OVER ME,AN’ 1 CAN'T] | [BUT MA’ UNDERSTAND IT.’ tA Let | HALF ACRE CASTLE — : WHO KNOWS, DON’T LET IT BOTHER SHE MIGHT EVEN you, STEVE... IF JAN TOSS OFF A t eel = ware A BEST SELLER! (TLL KEEP HER, You'll Find PROFITABLE ; OPPORTUNITIES While Every Doy in the Pontiac Press Wont Ad Section e Take edvantage of this easy way | | to solve all your buying and sell- | You Drive! |)" To Place Your 7 ne WANT AD Keep alert-chew gum DIAL FE 2-818) Avoid traffic jitters and driving drowsiness. \ Chew gum while you're gum you like but chew behind the wheel. while you drive. Nat- Chewing helps relieve urally, we recommend strain and ag + te mang sme | helps keep you fee gley’s Spearmint | fresh and alert for Gum —for lively, satis- \ patos dinate: fying flavor and real \ Chew any brand of chewing enjoyment, ae “a ai : “Don't mind us, daddy. We won't bother you!” . - 3 x a Abe _THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 “_rmrry six by Hunting Companion BAD AXE ® — Joseph Dyblas, hunting companion’s gun . dis- charged accidentally. - Dyblas was hit in the back and arms by 10 pellets from the shot- gun of Maurice Wolschlager, 36, of Detroit. Wolschlager said the | gun went off as he removed the safety catch to fire at a pheasant. Record Budget OK'd GRAND RAPIDS —A_ record Kent County salary budget totaling $1,232,025 was approved Wednes- day by the supervisors committee of the whole and referred to the | ®* i heifer calves 16,50- 18 50; feeders about steady; a few hee time calf club steer pit. byeae ce ice to average yearlings 22.00- ® load and prime 1,100 Ib steers 23.50; choice “on 1,150 Ib down 19 0-23.00. most! 75-23,75 with a few ao mix ‘“n olce — 21.78; @ load of chote 1,220 Ib steers 292.75; a few loads thoice s Ras] prime 2.200-1,000 i 20,50: of good to low enon 20.00: a few scemmoroted” Seer 16.00-18.00; good and choice heiters 1e nate -€ uiility and commercial — 10.50-13.00; canners and cutters il 33: —_ a commercial bulls bse. 15.50; odd head 15.75; good to prime vealers $3.00-27 00: eull to sommnerete | 10.00 - 22.00; a lo LS of goo 308 ‘| stock steer dsives ae head rant and choice 450 Ib a8: cene g008 a few loads 680-800 Ib yearlings and | jee | and choice load of steers vita s : med yearlings 17.2 Poul . DETROIT POULTRY , Oct. 21. (AP)—Prices . : —. oom. for No. 4 ualit ve try wv a.m. , Heary Nene 38-27, ®, t hens 7 heavy broilers or fryers (3 ¥e-3% Bee. Gray croses 25-26, Barred Rocks 221. gure omitted a salary budget at the | Insurance . trends as be under | discussion. 100 new Fruehaut Hayes Freight Lines, fist step in compiete of ayes’ 900 Purchase c. as ue Market steady. Receipts moderate and generally edequate as overall trade is Just fair. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO, Oct. 21 (AP)--(U8DA)— Live poultry fully steady on hens, bare- ly steady on young stock, weak on caponettes', receipts in coops 867 (yes- terday 883 coo 196,638 1; heavy | hens 22.5-25.5; light hens 17.5-18; reef ers or fryers 23-35; old roosters 13 me age under 4% Ibs, 38, 4% Ibe, 29-( Upper Peninsula Fund -| to Help Lure Industries HOUGHTON ~The Upper Pe- ninsula Development Bureau's In- ‘dustrial Board ‘today announced paid /emigrants wishing to return to Poland.” Metal S ociety Presenting Medal to A. L. Boegehold | ALFRED L. BOEGEHOLD She sale: bid ond asked.” The three-judge high court ‘Reserve award and the six ye | | phone FE 3-7402. Produce Market gl perncrr, Cet ig — wholesale spite nag The ‘American Society for Metals y : ert i award its 1955 Gold Medal to prices Ras F Pubue renner Markets w , Berees mal L. t to <7 ks puta euutile Boliot to t ey, 3.25 bu., No. 1 2:80-300 -|ket advanced today for the sixth | General Motors Research staff, other session of relatively quiet | then, fancy 3.50 bu: be. 1 2503.08 Pe.) traight session, but it ran into| ~ ps . dealings on the Board of Trade | te-iis tu", Wainy. “taney .3,'s4 | mild selling difficulties in early | St the society's atnual Mnner to today, [Be pletion "apie, Sear "30-480 dealings. sg uly dtr yg mgd PIE The market weakened from the | 5%. Beers 58. pe. beat. - A few gains went to between 1/110" creat versatility in applying opening bell. December corn | Grapes, No. 1.1, 00-1.25 pk. Pears. Bart-| and 2 points. Most, however, were nslieen ty tee tose teeees” dropped more than'a cent. An at- | lett fancy, ¢.60-6.00, bu: No 1. 3908.9 | small. as were the losses. - ; , a Pate ri gory the first Ro Ha wa Wateraelons Pf Steel, international Harvester, | compass ease ghee of tel hour was % to %s lower, Decem- | @¥inet. 3.00- daag » nar | Usited Aircraft, Kennecott Cop- ering, ber $2.01%; corn 1% to-1% lower, we 3.0 $0 ba: green. round, fancy per, American Cyanamid, = from improving the agg gli December $1.26%: oats * - % tueky , Wonder No, 1. or 0-4 00: zm, yy . metal through changes om" lower, December 63%: rye % to! Beets fancy, 1.25 ‘dozen bunches; | Texas Co. position and internal grain struc- 1% lower, December $1.08'2; soy- | No, 1 .75-1.00 dos bets; sapped. Ke | Lower were General Motors,| ture to the development of new beans % to 1% lower, November ba te 1 Lice te ng ne: Chrysler, Republic Aviation, West-| foundry and metal processing Sees “pounds. raed to 25 conte | ir ba sed Mey Leg ae, stadars | OED passes” Pines, deka. sertatgees. ovem : : ; 1, 1.00-1.25 bu. Carrots, No. 3, 80-.98 @03. | yo, ui Genera Boegehold resides at 3742 Erie $10.95. moe me) tee me, OTS yet : _ _ Dr. He was named to his present — Tower doz.; No. 1, 1.73-3.28) American Potash ““B. Grain Prices. $51, Fe", Psd Soden SEN" Soe. . position in 1952. CHICAGO GRAIN sweet, No. 1, 3.60-2.00 8-dos. bag. Cucum- | New York Stocks Boegehold joined the GM _ re- CHICAGO, Oct. 21 (AP!—Open today: | Pan” won?) 1bo.1.28 dosep tenet (Late Morning Quotations search staff in 1920, and five De 2.01% Dee 08 |; spiant No 1, 1,00-1.25° bushel: oak te 1os.9 Years later was named ‘head of Mar ciccece 307% Mar ol... Lt? | Kon 8. Ry ye Baa ee | PR eae if et Gabe” X53 | Metallurgical Engineering Depart- MBS conve + 100%: May ...... 1.12%) 100-125 dos bens. No 1.86/ Air Reduction 37.5 Int T . 28 Election. as American So- ns— doz Ne. 1, 386-300 pk. | Allied Chem. 105 Isl Cre Coal. 28.5 | Ment. a o+eeee “ on Conteog’s, basket. Ont dry. Paney, $1.00 per | Allied Strs.., ne Jacobs oe fi ciety for Metals president came Fear tL Le Foo I T3808 Pi cd ae neha Berets, "Mot | Alum Tad "103.1 Jones ak «. 486) in 1947, and he has held other of- ee poudiee H Mero. s0e0 He 1'50-2.00 by &. Peas, eye, | A 8 uae ¥ eer Daves P fices in the group. pote pee ey .. 3.388 | Das . Paar pe basket: hm Sen 81 Kim Clk - 463 ~ devising a test which cor- aigenies er 1, 3 ow m . roger. «+s. 1| relates a particular steel’s strength Mar sesccsee 06% Mov +107? | No 3. 150-200 bu; sweet, No | Am Bi... 46.1 Glass .. 81.7 ~~ setacese. 8 Dee sesese 108 bes het tanta a sae im & Fay at i Meir with the Coaree to which it is _ No. ia r Am Bad -.'' 22) Loew's. W#-1ling treatment, he established an | Ne. i 80 dozen . Am Bmelt .. 472 [one 8 Chem.. J Wild Truck Hurts 3, |#=;.2°;"1 cpusisstes, Stites | tm $e ners? Eee" fhe] entirely new concept for: epeciy- 3 Las seasaoarg, ee tcetae | Aeeegt <4 Meshal yt) tule new system permitted i i $87 MeGrew M2588 Smashes 10 Autos a ae 8 ee gs pm Ang farmer. 30 end Co... @4| metallurgists to substitute low al- mot 15-1.35, Siet | 190, pk edgy +9 364 Mifar Bu Pd $64) loy steels for steels containing KITTANNING, Pa: u—Truck-| Sood roses MRE FL oe Balt & Ohio 457 Mois Fea ay relatively large amounts of stra- driver Charles Detrain — plucky, | "ch#;, (oped. No, 1, 1:50-2.00 bu. Fen- Benius,*'\.. “13 Mont Ward, 884! tegic’ materials, which was in- Sey Git bineed — stayed wih eee | Bett Steet .c0182 7 Motoroia 13 |valuable during World War IL. his runaway rig as it careened | Colsrd. No 135. Wa “Male, No | Bona "Alum's "a6 Murer Of ie a urri hate: ieee weed! Set eg i oma RE ee gE be Amer 5 . . ‘ a BS oe . le quae, sod Induring three pernons| vis oucy Term Men cctecre| prance Rat Hrd 4/ MOFE AMELICANS , i s tral... 48. : The brakes ou the seclladen *CiR'as, Neate hehe heat | so eae HE RSPB +» Duce: "truck gave way about one third | Pa. Reearole No. Xe hseats euabel| Burrage ii te Reap AY oF eporied in KuSSIa of the way down Route 422 yester-|Bine No. 1 150-240 pk. paghet; Butter | Camp Boup .. 404 Nor Pec Wy), , day The 42-year-old Willi 4 300 bu: i 50-4.00 Camps Wy hi to FS RY] CAMP .FRIEDLAND, .Germany . Iiamsport, erate; o bade ber | Can Dry... 187 Pac ge 48.3, 0) — German repatriates from Pa., driver told police later leat No. 1, 1,00-1.80 du. Romaine, Wo. i/ Con Mie i 3s Pan ALM Alr 179) Russia told today of meeting three “All I did was push on the brake, |"? : Carrier Cp... 48. Param Pict - 314] more Americans in Soviet prison blow the horn and pray.” CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS caer , 504 Penney. Jc" oe camps. Bag SS ag eects tare | kare ASO. OS. Oe Nr ieleetle bere Chrysler ens m3 pst Cole He Maria Jakisch, a civilian inter- » the speeding | ine priests unchanged: As oth; + ie p1.'..894| nee, said she met an American truck sideswiped 10 autos before | $3 § [2-73 $8 B get: © S428: care Cluett ee. aae pblieo |. | woman in the Taished camp area Ragen i on a main street of oh wens: receipts 11.963; whele- Cole Palm cn". bat Phill Pet: 388 = omer oe a her name western Pennsylvania towm.| > 5, Whites €0-40.9 per cent A's Loses @.: as ary Silberman- , Leaking gasoline ignited, but fire- #2. mined, 8, mediums 33) Gs. te | OR Gee -ovoe SEE Beast ong Konrad Schlegel, another civilian men quickly put out the blaze in ee a om Con Edis 1°, 47.7 Pure Of :.:.. 3% | int he ina R the truck and the last car it-hit.| jl es a af selece ts Root arlin te MOE with Consum Pow.. 49.5 Re ee rin in Livestock Cont Ran aka Rey Mery [an American soldier, Willem Diet- Soviet Arms ab DETROIT LIVESTOCK Gont Mot ... 03 ork - 1|erson, from North Carolina. He 1h Ne caniy salon AP)—Hogs salable | corn Pd... 384 Bt sos Fsa 44.7| Said Dieterson told him he was salabie 268 Martet y Curties Wr + 243 BF Reg Pap... $: picked up by the Russians while on Has West Puzzled sneha and heifers itneral for Det Stine: oS jeod A) RE + ag? a drinking spree. Se eeee ne: eee enud mesure | Deug Aire’... 13.3 @hell Gl .... 4! U- S Army officials in Berlin UNITED NATIONS, Nx. w —|Soitesess feQaeerfinniare atl | Brvvctt™ aig fecki'g..- i’ | PMS wutlan h Pepraon of Bowe * . s } gin William J. Beau- Puzzled Western delegates ; East Air L.. 462 Socony Mob. sa | Pvt. . , of Be Gud cut. Made. thet and 3 Rest Kod .... 19 fou Pac ...... $7 | fort, N.C., listed as absent without Russia's urgent call for a UN. ye rH haus a ae Sperry’ Rand Fs : leave. ' Disarmament Commission huddle 23.50; gence see aid Of Calit.. 47} Paul Biedermam, a former ‘on the eve of the Big Four foreign isthe ig Bale 004 and ge WS Hs 4 Oll Ind... 49.1 | Wehrmacht intelligence officer, re- ministers’ conference. Fei steers. $0.48: ond patly prime | Food ‘Mach. $38 Std, O8 Ohio yee stab met a ee American circles expressed open And good’ steers 18.80-40,00: te head | Preepet geal AST Stud Pack." 9 jan in Taidhed in ; to in the | Prime 864 Ib heifers 22.00; bulk good | Frewh Tea .. 491 Bun on 1... 17 he could not recall his name. 9s Mp «Phe choice ‘helfers 18.00-21.00; most | Gen Bak 917 Suther Pap. 444 wind ug Chlet U.S, Delegate Henry | Sibu if era emai” ce |Get Be tty SRR St gt Se Ban Je. ta- app 4 : See arias commie | PRUE eves creme eres | os ta foo, 29 8D Stoney Barred members prepared to meet Siogkers end feade my grat Sa ae ten ta its Thomp pd": 443 From Legal Actions A US. spokesman said Russia's | ctu) Compared inst Thursday de. | Gillette aa 228 W Air. 45) LONDON um — Stanley A. Bar- request came as a surprise since | mand broad: treding active, prices fully Goewel Br ::, 64 Twent Con.” 286! nett can't sue. anybody sey pam it had been generally to om to low choice vealers rich .... 10.4 Underwood |. 35.2 : 18.00-90.69; high enates and most: | Loodyear 69. Un Carbide | 1016) UMess he gets court permission. hold off any disarmament debate | Orie to-ia.c0, cull ‘and low uulity Gren Feige: 2. Un Pre 1886) In the past three years he minis- . o Ry... 45 Unit Air Lin. 37 : in the U.N. until the foreign doenidoe Pully steady today. | Ot. West S--. 222 unit Aire 3a.4| brought 14 unsuccessful actions ters had a chance to thresh out conpates 4 _ = y « a A ¥, | Greyhound .. ser Unit Fruit 43 | against vari gove nt offi- the issue py Sag be Rigeeet eee demand siauguier lambs, Say | Soltang’'P .. 121 US Lines”... 23, | cials in efforts to get a war erring Oct. 2 in Conse, igher, iso "head rt and | Hooker El"... 302 US Rubber .. 46 sion Finally. wee government. * ime ughter | lambs 21.70; : ee : Ja agg Consolidated Gos Asks EE sReetie cetaittr esr reser, “att Ghats, Be] contending he ele were “ive solice s $ good. lambs ieo0-t0'00 ioe so ogy Be Rey .. B34 worn B Pre 313 ee ee te pry pe P t * lew es es n Te a su m They a a co Bids on Mortgage Bonds choles light nt ewes t's, ood and | Inland Bt! .. 82.4 Westg A Bk $7) ; eis choice native feeder lambs’ 1 MO-18 as, | Eneole. Oop - 63 Wit Mot. 406 — Prevent him from suing | BER YO w-Metim Om. cece unarecn. feo Real, ay Meme i n ary ‘ Yn B&B & T 45 ms AGO, Oct. 20 CAPi--geiehle hogs Int Nick 16.5 zenith Rad . 127 bids starting next month of its Py slow, steady 25 lower on granted the request, and also ex- 30-million-dollar first mortgage Sunehes meat ‘decline on F gh ngs Be : STOCK AVERAGES tended the order to ban all suits bonds, sail Mainly mixed ‘tote No. 2 | Tye honor Proce 2 —Complied OF) by Barrett without specitic per- and 3s; sows mostly 25 lower, instances ission, The firm has filed a stration | 5 much as $0 lower i, good sh Ingust Ralls vt vil, stocks a certification for. ou let; =! ge 2 ee vely wet change Tren ee — ding with the Securities and Ex- teat moet mined se. ot 38 aoe Pretows a7. i , a He it Director to Be Named 1 rae W38 lareeiy, mined * 190- No.| Month ago.,...287.4 1381 74.3 ist GRAND RAPIDS (#—A mem- ome Detrot = ver: 1a3h. and 1440; gio, “mined i Toso. nigh. "I Sst iats|ber of a candidate interviewing Michigan Consolidated recently | tew smal fots ito“tae i age 0, | wees Aa 683 1333 / committee has told the City, Com- sold $13,020,000 worth of common | '5'75, ithe sprinkling up to 600 | TRoMT srocks mission that a new city planning stock to its parent firm, American | *s_ low 25, (C. J. Nephier Co. director will be selected “prob- Natural Gas Co., and plans to sell | w Salable cattle eee atiriy active: Pisures after decimal points sare tenths “ably next week” from a field of | another $1,008,000 of common to tr’ seady: ‘heifers mostly steady, 1n-| Beri happen 02002 1 erie? tea 12 candidates, Scott Bagby, who the same source in November stances strong on weights B86 Ib down.) Shuicn Prencse costs 23 3, resigned the planning post in come teem acady, tates ches | Mae Sr. so 9 Stand Resets, il rewedinites con ; . ay ie dy Mf¢* . 11 §¢ Sultant to the new planner for Man Accidentally Shot S2¢. ine cig pou sas ee, Bay et a1 13 these ricathe, wiccordiag: team re cent agreement. ‘Reds Aim Br oadcast pes Succumbs to ccumbs to Polio :|at Emigrant Poles | VIENNA —Communist Poland | NEWBERRY «® — A 12-year- “nl boy, Kennth Clark of McMillan in | the Upper Peninsula, died of polio | Moriday. He was the first fatality South Returning ‘Solid’ for 56 Governors See Little Maybe Ikeless GOP | POINT CLEAR, Ala. (—The once: ‘Solid South’ may regain some of its solidarity in the 1956 election, if the Southern governors conference is an indication: }ern and border states making up | the governors conference were ' Jargely in apparent agreement—at this precampaign stage—on two things: » * 1, That there were few signs presently of a third party move- ment, The main dissenter to that belief was Gov, George Bell Tim- merman Jr. of South Carolina, He said he believes a third party movement is “a strong pos- sibility.’ > @¢ ¢ President Eisenhower as a candi- date, would have little chance of carrying a Southern State. *“ * © Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina the Thurmond-Wright States Rights | da, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia —went a - 1952. Gov. Theodore FR. MeiKaldin, of governors in the conference, stated without a candidate of ‘‘Eisen- hower's philosophy.” Local Guardsmen Presented Awards Several members of the local National Guard unit, Co. M, 125 Infantry Regintent, were honored recently for awards and promo- tion. - ° * * First Lt. Robert G. Carland was | awarded the 10 year Armed Forces | Broadsword Service Medal awards | were presented to M.Sgt. Keith G. Kerton, Sgt. Kenneth E. Francisco, and Cpls. Robert T. Herr Jr. and Robert P. Riggins. * ** ¢ The one. promotion was 2nd Lt. Robert L. Fields to 1st’ Lt. * * * From the 107th Ordnance Co. (DS), Sgt.1.C. Frank M. Hamlin has been assigned to ‘the Adjutant General school, Ft. Harrison, Ind. Woman, Doughter I Hurt Arnetta W. Sumner? 33, of Dray- | , ton Plains and her daughter Janis, | 3, were treated and released from | Pontiac General Hospital yesterday after a two-car collision in which Mrs. Sumner's car struck one driv- en by Louis H. Cole, 60, of 37 Ot- tawa Dr. Police said the accident occurred ihas founded an organization to| from the disease this year in the at Whittemore Street and Center | spread propaganda among Poles) uneete -Luce-Mackinac County » | living aboard, Radio Warsaw indi. | * : cates. Street when Mrs. Sumner failed to _yield the right of way. A broadcast monitored in Vie nna Ch eck Tw O New Le a adi Ss last night said the new outfit named * ‘Polonia’ has the task of “keeping contact with Poles living in foreign countries and of aiding The deputy president of the Polish Communist Parliament Stanislaw Kulczynski, was made chairman of “Polonia.” Hugon | -Radio Warsaw said. Hanke, who headed the Polish exile | government in London and who | returned to Poland recently, was named third deputy chairman, | Appeal Is Withdrawn KALAMAZOO (® — Stanley B. Edgerton, 29, once under investi- gation. in the slaying of 8-year-old Edgerton was found guilty of the plans to raise $250,000 to stimulate | charge Sept. 12 after a trial. The industrial improvement in Upper Michigan. The money will be used to-en- _ courage and foster | try and attract new enterprises. ~— James Robertson of Sault complaining witness testified he accosted her at about the same time and place that the Singleton present indus-| girl was abducted, Jeannie was | kidfiaped near her home here; at- ‘| a lie test would be given to a 47- irl, | @ forest ranger reported seeing a in Slaying of Three Boys CHICAGO w& — Police today checked two new leads in the strangulation murders of three young boys. Sheriff Joseph D. Lohman said year-old unemployed laborer who i told of sleeping Monday night, along with his deaf mute brother, | in the wooded area where the vic- tims’ bodies were found Tuesday in the slaying of Robert Peterson, M4, John Schuessler, 13, and his brother Anton Jr., 11. Lohman said the lie test was planned for Edward Rohlfes, father of nine children. * * «* He said Rohifes and his brother Herman, 52, were picked up after | the truck, and that they often pic- nied knowing anything about the The union sought at 21-cent pack- any bodies either Monday night or when they left the woods Tuesday morning. Edward Rohlfes was quoted as saying he and his brother slept in nicked or slept in the woods, about 12 miles from their home. * * * A girl who gave her name as Gloria Vasquez and said she was from the Sacramento, Calif., area, was picked up without charge at Brookville, Ind., after she went to a priest to confess an automobile theft. Sheriff James Hixon of Brook- Chicago ‘last weekend and that panel truck bearing the name “Rohife’ in the Robinson Woods | Monday night. not far from the = diteh where the victims’ tiaked bodies were found. Lohman ad pénere was héld | slain May 23. ca | ew charge, but Hérman was vass for clues in the Northwest Liman, said oth Driers de Third Party Activity; Chief executives of the 16 South- 2. That the Republicans, without Ticket in 1948, Four others—Flori- | Maryland, one of two Republican | his party would have a hard time | Benjamin | ville said she told of: being in|. Ri ae ea pond 22, 10 a. m. to Albert News in Brief Donald V, Campbell Jr.. 19, of Detroit yesterday pleaded guilty to reckless driving before West. Bloomfield Township Justice’ El- mer C. Dieterle. He was fined $50 and $25 costs. Detroiter Charles Cutajoc re- ported to police yesterday that four chrome wheel discs valued at | $40 had been stolen from his car while it was parked in the Pontiac Motors lot. William Thompsen, 24,-of Walled Lake yesterday appeared before Farmington Township Justice Al- len C. Ingle charged with two traffic offenses. He pleaded guilty to both. For the first, reckless driving, he was fined $25 and costs and sentenced to 10 days in jail. For the second, driving without a license, he was fined $10. if your friend’s in jail and needs bell, Ph. FE §-9424 or MA 5-403. Adv. FE 2-3231. Rummage and bake sale, Fri. and Sat., Oct. 2ist and 22nd. 9 to 6. Newman A. M. E. Church, 14 Auburn Ave. —Adyv. Rummage sale. Pontiac White Shrine. Friday and Saturday, Detober 21-22, 92 W. Huron. For pick-up, call FE 5-8698, Wed.- Thurs. nights. —Adv. Rummage sale. First Methodist Church. Fri., 9-12. —Adv. Rummage sale, Youth Center, Lake Orion, Pri. and Sat. —Adv. Rummage sale. St. Mary's Unit Benedict Chureh at K. of C. Hall, 295 S. Saginaw, Pri. Oct. 21, 9 to 1. —Adv. Rummage sale. First Presby- terian Church, Fri. eve. 6-8:30. Sat. morn, 9-12. —Adv. Rummage sale, Grace Lutheran Church. Genesee and Glendale, Fri., Oct. 21, 9 to 9 and Sat. Oct. 22, 9 to 12. —Adv. | Rummage sale, 128 W. Pike St. | Set Oct. 22,.7 to 1. Chapter 294 of O. E. 8. —Adv. Good used clothing and rum- mage. 1218 Baldwin Ave, —Adv. Rummage sale. Congregational | Church, Saturday, Oct. 22, 8 a. m. Colonial Group. —Adv. Fish supper. 82 Perkins. Friday, 5 until ... $100. Malta Temple. —Adv. Rummage sale. Central Meth- , odist Church, Oct. 22. 8:30 a. m. e —Adv. Rummage. 2012 Cass Lake Read. Oct. 21 and 22. . Adv, Special Sunday Dinner. Jack and Ina's Grill, 4668 Dixie Hwy., Dray- ton Plains. —Adv. Rummage sale, Zeta Eta Soror- ity, 29 Auburn Ave., Fri. Oct; 21, 5:30 to 9 p. m. Sat., Oct. 22, 8 a. m. till 12 noon. —Adv. | For Nutrilite Radio entry blanks, —Adv. Checker Will Build a Smaller Taxicab KALAMAZOO — A smaller taxicab, suitable for conversion into a private passenger car, will Cab Manufacturing Co. | cember, in De- Announcing this today, the com- -pany said its new model is de- signed to‘ meet a growing trend to smaller cabs noted in New York The néw Checker Cab will have a 12-inch wheelbase and overall length of 200 inches. It will be powered by a 6-cylinder Continental engine. The company said the cab can | converted to general use by | changing its vinyl upholstery to — | cloth and removing the traditional green and checker design from the exterfor paint. The cars will sell for $1,805 f.0.b, | Kalamazoo with standard gear shift, and $2,206 with automatic | transmission, power brakes and steering. —| PUBLIC BA 1965 Oldsmobile solide Motor No. V55681 1:30 p.m. owner “oe, mass West | Lawrence Street, Pontiac, iebane i Oct. 21, 22, 1955 Hayride parties. Food furnished. | go into production at the Checker | Lodge Calendar ‘(Offical Cautious Reduction to Come Only With Reserve in Sight © | | tional tax | Board of Commerce luncheon; Rose summed up what he said sight” In meeting with President Eisen- | Newer last Satay Rese said | state- t “in effect” was that “we _ hope to balance the budget” by ' mext June 30 through savings in spepding and bigger-than-expect- | ed revenues. The estimated fed- | eral deficit’ for the ending Ripon was dune 30, as of last $1,700,000,000. “We are opposed to a tax cut until we can see where we get the money to finance it,” Rose said in summing up Humphrey's position. “This does not mean that we have to wait until the money is actually in hand; but it must be clearly in sight. “When that time comes, we shall support a tax cut. But until that time comes, it is idle to speculate on“the form that it might take, because you cannot intelligently consider how most equitably to distribute tax relief before you have some idea how much there might be te dis- tribute.” Rose called this ‘entirely con- sistent” with the tax policy of the Eisenhower administration since it took office in 1953, and he said “The present highly coe condition of the economy fairly be said to-have readied in some measure from the success of the fiscal and tax policies that have been followed since that time ” is no plan “that our defense pro- grams be cut to put the budget in balance ... our hope is... that by close and unremitting con- trol, and by the elimination of save enough to balance out. ** Williams May. Sign Social Security Move LANSING # — State scat hoped that some 23,000 state em- | | Ployes would go under federal So- cial Security today. Aud. Gen.- Victor Targonski, chairman of the State Employes’ Retirement Board, said the board | had prepared a certificate that the employes had voted overwhelm- ingly to merge their state’ pension system with Social Security and that it might be presented to Gov. Williams today for signature. Targonski said he anderstood that this was the final step to completing the merger and com- bining state pensions with the federal system. He said that 20,918 cmnlines had voted to merge the two plans out of 22,336 who voted and 23,020 were eligible to vote. The percentage was 91 per cent of those eligible to vote and 97 per cent of those who actually voted. Eight state agencies voted 100 per cent for the the merger. New Sheriff Sworn In... KALAMAZOO — Undersherift Bertram K. MacGregor was sworn in Thursday as sheriff of Kalama- zoo County to succeed his brother: | in-law, the late Otto K. Buder, 61, who shot and killed himself Sunday night in his living quarters at the | county jail. His family blamed ill | | | | iff for six years and previously had These Aide “Says The treasury official said there re waste wherever found, we can stilf and Chicago, its principal markets. wae een was undersher- | s 38 i : i tts tizicl J : 3 E - elated Rostovers took off for ii 5 § Eg be gr The disappointed tractormen re- turned to Moscow and now are waiting. to see what the Kremlin has to say about a U. S. delegation. Hospital Raises Deposit Rates Trustees Approve Hike “at Pontiac General for Non-Insured Admission deposit rates at Pon- tiac General Hospital were boost- ed last night by the hospital board of trustees. Under the new schedule, a de- posit of $90 must be made when a patient enters for ward accom- modations. Semi-private room de- posit will be $110 and private, $150. Deposits — as 5 ward, $95 for semi-priva $125 for private. Tonsil and ade- noids removal will require the were “more in line” with room rates, which were recently in- ased. Admission deposits are required only from patients without hos- pitalization insurance. In other action, the board un- animously empowered the prop- erty committee to make all de- cisions pertaining to constructing and equipping a new addition to the hospital within the $3,000,000 limit. The board reported architect \Leo-J. Heenan is still ‘‘shooting - a Feb. 1 deadline on comple- n of plans for the addition, ‘Diver Finds Third Body in Sunken Auto at Soo SAULT STE. MARIE \(h—A diver recovered the body of Ar- thur Rooley, 50, from a car in the St. Marys River yesterday. Rooley’s disappearance follow- | ing a threat of suicide had set off a search that resulted Wednesday in the discovery of a car contain- ing the remains of a couple who had been missing for 15 years. In looking for Rooley, diver Charles Thom solved appearance of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kirk of North Bay, Ont. Rooley was a gas company em- ploye in Sault Ste. “Marie, Ont. His suicide threat led to dragging and diving operations in ‘the river which divides the United States and Canada. Wanted to borrow $25,000 for capital improvement. on land and worth $50,000. Legal j|rate of interest on loan. CO Reply to PONTIAC PRESS | BOX No. 34 | served six years as a deputy. | Cash for acerage. lake within 35 miles of D We are the buyers. write us what you hav: a quick reply. Bernard Edelman, 10300 LAND WANTED type. any section, with or without buildings, from owners or through brokers. Phone or CLIP THIS A property or farms. any etroit, on main. roads. We will buy directly e and we will give you Woodward, TO 8-5010 1 don’t want to be left I want to go with you ‘the Chicago slaying. Hixon quoted | her as saying, “I know who did it, but I promised I would never tell," Meanwhile, investigators doub- | | led the area of a door-to-door can- Side area where the boys last |. Sunday ep oe night. she “knew who the fellows was” in | - Jerome Oldsmobile-Cadillac the marvelous new 1956 Cadillacs! home... to see f the dis- © = eNO ote ener RRRRE TSH SER ero Ste Sheep trae nee ie es THE PONTIAC PRESS, rapa. ¢ OCTOBER 21, 1955 7 | df “THIRTY SEVE: SR pee ee ~*~ County Deaths - Death N oti C es __ Help. Wanted | Male 6 ___Help Wanted Male 6 Help Mantes Fomete Female 7 | ONL LOLOL OP Oe 4 ENEWS FT | _Carpenters—Rough | Ream som onaal ‘ | - | ) ce Anthony _ | cacy pcre. 18, wh Cat Ta mye der 5 4 Worn | Ave. Grand Trunk Western Rall- | Pingyns -b Secretary os ‘| . : WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — Hom 6.177 és. \Ponjine rel 7 Milford. Call OL 1-0300 after aa ‘rauaW—j FULL OR Parr | -_ dabie for Serv Anthony Cece allied hs = notch poo = scenenaty. 0 ; avern iver eg - and sormeriy — Mi it Vreeland La ae ‘ cas AB. DRIVERS — STEAD: Semeens paid | pera oGed Prggzred but ot nee — for pre BE , : : : 7 Apply 438 Orchard = ee ludes: occasions} rere . lo e! ford; gn be held at 9 . Mon-| a a “th Ren Whe Wentall hk 2086 “p.m Cae ST OR M W INDOW 2 AND Sitteeet Bactarmons Service Frenchman Exploring day a Mary's Church in Mi | ame tgieeh cificieting.__ tnter- COUNTER MAN | «AWNING SALESMEN tiac Bank - Bee . ‘ ford with burial jin St. Mary's “Mr. Vreelan omenaey Two rienc: ...Marge Taylor. -Underground Stream Rosa: “i the: Docbardacr™ “Bort Seas, at MEAT CUTTER. |; ta Bpntios. Toot tretee soueen EXPERIENCED “FUR ~ venues Cemetery. ry will be said at Wome. Walled Laker ‘Mich Wrigley’s has imme: — |” meat.” Write Pon:ine Press. Box poy hy — AE — 8 p.m. Sunday in the Richardson- * waka ; a Bird Chapel in Milford. Mr. Gece ae & Whales te eb, Good hrs, and os 23 E. Pike. PE 21310. beloved husband of aes’ wil Roane? EXPERIENCED BAR Day VERY LARGE LiPE INSURANCE company will pay tp to 91 pe in Pyrenees diate opening for ex- : oséph erienced men in’ our ~ WASHINGTON — Once again the wt as Ha Merey Hanpital eed Alveree * Pence service will rel - Huron store. bonus (is mans who can meet the Call ther "€ FE ie.” pe lights of speleogists shine among Survivors include his widow, Car- rng Ay he Soiree eats ‘pa Many employe bene- 1 sien comune as teaching re ant Restaurant. the = fying wonders of the — rie; two sons, Mark J. of Highland Marver Becen” Bite eS we fits and opportunity 2 age 0 to 42. Preferably mar- 138 ee codward. Birm. Mid- ee heehee and Anthony Jr. of Berkley; end | _Sparks-Orittin ' Punere! Home,‘ "* we for advancement, Ap 3 “Potential management ability. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. 3:30 ern France. a fifteen grandchildren. ply ‘meat dept. man- Secret tig analy inocese pies EXPERIENCED chee eee cc @: Gnas ee Edward Cline Card of Thanks tI _ager, 45 S. Telegraph 7 emg gua ications from ven te 5 apes, coe along the often-explored river is at Huron. Norbert Casteret, no stranger to LAPEER — Service for Edward EXPRESSION oP TRAnea TO WANTED: SALESMAN AT ONCE. HELP WTD. FEMA! a . : ; friends, relatives, neighbors, PW Dinnan & Son, 66 W. Huron, EXPERIENCED \ WArTRERS the cavern. The French cave ex- Cline, 79, will be held at 1:30 Dudley’ Moore and’ Elks. in the Brey wien, SS PE 42525. i; tome teen te Peek Ge p.m. Saturday from the Baird Fu- | e. 3412 Dinte Highway. pert is well known in the United . Donald ‘ DRIVER WANTED FOR CLEAN- WANTED States through his books and his neral Home with burial in Colum-| lores, Barrett ety eed De ing route. Married man preferred. py ag gl builders, 8 “ EXPERIENCED cod Nwortwas OP- illustrated articles in the National biaville. Mr. Cline died Thursday Flowers —— g sce ee oo a QUALITY risetor, athe 2nd wil Full time, Apoly. Opto a Clean: morning at his home in Gladwin. ee food marke’ Steady pleasant 2910 Indianwood ‘Ra MY 31151 no gg yke, Utica. RE- Geographic Magazine. Labouiche flows near Foix in worker. . ke O Maple, sake Orton Surviving are a son, Edward L. WANTED _ of Detroit; a daughter, Mrs, Mary EXPERIENCED BILLING CLERK CLERK P puree ss 8S FLOWERS fer auto, gue Many bene- FE 2-8301 Guatiot Ste SPierket, “11 144 OW, ; ‘MUMS, 16,000. OVER 100 Vani i side the pi hier Leogthy, = Busch of Dearborn; a sister, Mrs. tice gt 50 gals. Dahiias, Peo. "EXP. CAR SALESM. AN acne ae Br dogger BR Pontiac Prese Box ieemand luminated stretches * : _ Dean Millard of Lapeer, and nine bulhe now ready: Datiodile ‘aized To sell Ghevrotets & Oldsmobiies. = Harn. while you learn =xP ae TS . a o ‘0 ag lg rates erm cravat iat | ieuinengin ee | Einar sie | Ee . rt _N roreavil t iT C river has defied full exploration GETTING HIS GOAT — A reluctant goat wearing a striped T-shirt | | Mrs. Cox Nursery. ay Mn iste peer EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN Paddock, Bt moet e. goa Ra), 7 mi N of Oxford. Vi chore eneral farm since its discovery nearly 50 | is dragged along by his master in the annual Kiwanis Pet Parade in| LAKE ORION—Service for Mrs. _weleome a von b ‘menin Carl Dobat, 2460 a rekon ee, sa Experienced counter girls. years ago. -| Topeka, Kan. Turtles, opossums, raccoons, fleas in bottles and dogs — Joba (Julia Maria) Cox, Bist of | - nee button Tad “Rochevter, AND MY 23-5211 Apply after 12, Huron Spectacular Labouithe is one of all were marched in the parade by about a thousand childre “n, | 2210 Waldon Rd., aga A alee, enattiadh toting Mo WANTED ONE MORE EXPERT. Cleaners and Shirt Laun- many notable unde nd rivers., }0 a.m, Monday at: St, Joseph's The Pontiac Press ee gs Tb ge ery me only. JR. Hilts Real Estate, dry, 944 W. Huron St 7 ae ero ~ | Catholic Church with burial in the Woodward, Rochester OL. 2.7711. _1011 Wo Huron St. PE_ 5-6181, ’ : : Some havé been traversed for sev- * . ‘ EXPERIENCED ENGINE LATHE Pair Announce Hospital Approved |B 2osent Sesry il we all ot FOR WANT ADS Tednee Mgt ieee ee WANTED EXPERIENCED FRESSER FOR and Myrl Windsor, -owners of the ee shift. Apply 687 eral miles. Explorations nearly al- f+ ar een wie = “Siz: I ndered i ; . FE 2. ple Birm. MI 43540. Designer, checker to desi " wool and silk. Steady job. Good snp! Wi aabancvant toe Line Grand Openin (E> Bm. Sunday in Abows Fer Brat. Fe satel EXPERIENCED — DRIVER POR electro mechanical products for wages. Apply Star Cleaners. 206 stopped by submerged roofs. Like g ;neral Home. Mrs. Cox died at St. | established route. Apply Walkera consumer market and for indus- _E. Pike ordniary rivers, these waters un- | | or U ie rea | Joseph Mercy ‘Hospital today From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m Cleaners. Lake Orion fetal ue Must, hove ability te EXPERIENCED | walrni o es “aber ; Ww | | : ‘ ; le . ; ad layout draftman and chec yrs. or er start work a der the earth have tributaries, of Ne Store S ivi her husband; one | All errors should be re- aber ag ge WATER” WELL complete products engineering once, Furnish own transportation i | SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The. erviveg: are f | rted immediately The driller, PE _¢-1061. es drawings including drawing of Afternoon or swing shift. Cal) floods and periods of low water. WEST BLOOMFIELD — Leon _ >2% e ‘ daughter, Mrs. Martin Lietke “| ress assumes no respon Eg xP RIS we CED CLOTHING assemblies components and bill to FE 2-0135 before 5 p.m. i “ : ame j {bil t tert ¥ rience _ Occasionally waterfalls break the Zoning Board of Appeals last ‘Lake Orion; two sons, Marcel ot then 46 coneel ths’ charees spply unless you have with design ‘of die casting. stamp- EXPERIENCED oly abt We He: | biack surrounding silence. — ‘ ; |night gave. Providence Hospital | Detroit, and Frank of Roseville: for that portion of the fitst iy Ualon Store,’ T°N. pagina. tng end production oe. Apply _ fon i 2 nser t - ¥ | _ply Union Store.’ 5 N. Saginaw. t “ 60-MILE RIVER eee ho ae & the green light to go ahead with one sister, Mary on Re ment which has Seen ren EXPERIENCED |” SERVICEMAN “phone OA 8-2588.. FEMALE OFFICE detaled paper 4 * * P rr The underground rivers of. Ti- = ee . elie /plans for an $8,000,000 hospital on Belgian; ‘a bea nail ild error. “When eanmations ary open. PE 2-448 _ WANTED © Ce aE Mait _work, Box 11, Pontiac Pre mavo, Reéca and Pinka in Italy '"& &rand opening for their new ; Nine Mile road, just west of ~~ 2 “rene Your kin ymber.” Ne po age te ey Transport. bao | Fitter- ‘Seamstress es you " number." ° ‘o * i 5 = = —a 6. aa a Pe . are among those party navigable. store in Keego Harbor. \ Grecelield tied. Manley Maxon adjustments Will be given 200 E Tennyson —— declgutsa, wad tock ont he sma: asl eee Nl on ag = | In France the Padirac and Bethar- | Open house will be held at the | _ ROMEO — Service for Manley wow A. : C000 PaY AND STEADY. PO- ore “ter oma week. lions. 3 day ¢6 hour week & other ! ram draw visitors. M. Casterct/ sow atere, 3034 Orchard “Lake | + Detailed plans for the hospital Maxon, 67, of 265 East Lafayette, mecning time for advertise. iso “experienced euto saleamaa. a duciric and Mans incéutives. ! calla the 60-mile-long Trebinjcica) pq, trom 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday, | Will be completed.tate next year will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at ister ‘then "rebuiey” uanes Economy Car's. 23_Auburn. mingham. ARTHI JR’ S : p.m. > | and construction will begin soon { type is 12 o'clock noon t GROCERY MEN YOUNG MAN FOR FURNITURE i in southwest Yugoslavia the erent: All sales will be made from the| 4 os Pa tite | Roth's Home for bles . h doy previews te tenant Chain dine saseiece en Wnt. salesman in large ‘Pontiac fur: : est underground river in the wo Au 8a a afterwa accord * | burial in Lakeville Cemetery. Mr. Union - votes. jecation with pay. niture store Experienced pre- 46_N. Saginaw : Seasonal variations affect the Keego store in the future, though Mary Elizabeth, hospital ad- Maxon died suddenly yesterday of: BIB mcr up te ese er “fous 3 M AR KET ie oe aeeaiites ee Gilt wrapper sand stock 4 rivers’ rate of flow. Some have. the owners will retain their green- ministrator. }a heart attack at the W. Rumsey the day of publication after sibilities rmane* position, work. Wi iggs 24 W. Hu- large outputs. Several risings in|, and gardens at the Green! The 330-bed hospital eventually | Co. here, where he was a foreman. the first inser! =° Oppere,an Re Weis giving G60. euportense. o¢- bon. ’ America give 4,000 gallons a sec. | 00US¢ & . _will replace present Providence | He is survived by two sons, Mer- uae ‘bey ge BATES waive OPENING FoR 1 FULL anon am 5SUE ° ond. The Fontaine de Vaucluse in | Lake address. | facilities in Detroit. yn and Norman, both of Romeo 2 6180 8188 ante eee ee ae immediately. athe wan home in Birm. 3 boys. France ranges between 2,000 and/! land five grandchildren, 2 Ihe “3 OS I Cc TIAYDE N, Realtor. ; aan 35,000 gallons, perhaps a egret Dews deunctte Meere 5 225 405 600 8 E. Walton Bivd Help Wanted Female 7 . Middieaged preferred. PE [ Ol San er § Area Girls in Contest $ 270 486-120 INSPECTOR | oe ee : volume. Other large —_ ' ROCHESTER — Prayer service 1 31s Ser eo INSPECTOR oenanal 7 r ee Soars Seat Ang for Homecoming Quen | for Dawn Jennette Moore, 7 week o Ses: tae tees Rapoctenced tp sortase pine ong AIM HIGH Sieep tn Mon, to Pri. Dishwasher, i ee ee en vee fo Bu L ion Hall | BIG ys — sight |Old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.| 4 o soaean pare. Bapentng same im a One. and La Sorgue Aveyron’ in Avey- ft Bt : pring — “ * | dames Moore of Detroit, formerly | ————— -— ~ re Menu ne C. CAREER GIRLS HOUSE " ron, : reshmen ¢ nominated as can- . anutacturing Co, . ° - - a 4 ROCHESTER — The National jdates for 1935 Ferris Institute | of peers vi al poten Funeral Directors 4 118 Indianwood, Lake Orion apremiee - 0 SF tee Ph te any subterranean rivers en. , : 7 : 7 a.m it y from y zi ener ote LICENSED 2#WAY RADIO RE- eenerei clerical $235 week dangered their early explorers. j Bank of Detroit has offered $100,- | Honsecosming Pagers ed ea neral Home with burial in Mt. ls oo AMBULANCE oe P ag mee. og Checker | senret meta & ite office... 4 _ Walled | Lake yx! 4 One party entered Labouiche in | 0 to the American Legion Homer = ms tt at Wai riord, == Avon Cemetery. Dawn died yes- ane pole howe i ExPenieieet cae OLEF WE ae Secretary with tax e HOUSEKEEPER. ait TIME; eathcott o: c Office beginner with sar $210 prefer live im, five beats, progressing inte “nar. ing Post No. 172, for its hall on ¢ ¢« e« | terday. Complete facilities, OR 3-757 _chanic. 161 W. Huron Bookkeeper salary. MI {i 6.2908 for appaintment, . : ton Plaing - Waterford a SERVICE °* = t : row waters under a low cetling. | Wen FEGh at Waleet: | The winner to be crowned to- | Survivors include her parents; | P**z* DIONIFIND # FERVicEs— oan Matin PE SSI anal een 8, Theverezaeremteneses es ee to 40. Maluly for A boat capsized in a 13-foot depth, = meeting will be held Dec. 2 ‘night will preside at the campus one sister, Denise at home; her Kirkb Pe Funeral Home FE 4-1883 MAN FOR BODY COLLISION RE. Midwest heavy cleaning aad isemmng. Oth- Is occupants swam about im | to make the decision whether to éelebretion dersscrew. | grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Vivian D ] J hn Core” “Seesire. “idan” Weeven, Employment Service pe By Hh “a blackness and barely escaped. sell, The American Legion Build- |Moore of Rochester;; and John one SOn- 2) S __Jerome Motor Sales a7 as vowttad orate bane B00. gic costing. 2 days ene west, 6 Another beat struck a sharp ing Committee, beaded by Wil- Milam of Oklahoma. PUNER HOME ; _PE 5-227 two a Week, $24. Refer- . A } _"DESIGNED FOR FUNERALS” _ an ences. MI sien ~~ bet ter. cae sas ', son Severance, plan to investi- Airborne Canine | ~irapevorprte a ts MIDWEST APPEALING TO A Lal a was = INSPECTOR ushed ultimately te the situation. Thoughtful $428 sewing. w for advance- turned back. ne are Is Well Traveled Style Stepper Se pl Investigator bi0e ment with paid. Yacation. insur- Vict small prostslon ports, stesdy If building and grounds were to Voorhees-s Si e General offiee —......... $975 seco & ~ in inal in biue . 4 K For more rite for gee Mire reading Later M Casteret advance “od by h Th Manager tratmees ....... a0 r pa. Pr Be: prints ‘utting his way into dry galleries BC S04. possession could not be Combat Veteran Choose Theme FUNERAL HOME scone ne =) a a MC MEG. CO. cutting Mis way into dry galleries given before June, 199% as two Ambulance Service Plane er Meter Office trainee se where the river had flowed before ll 2-4978 Seles e000 AMBITIOUS WOMAN EARN: $a 118_Indlanweed_ R4.__Lake Ovien : ‘ rooms are now being used for high — PITTSBURGH «® — Major Fritz | for Ha oween — = ~ . weekly handling beautiful sterling LUNCH COUNTER HELP WANT- dropping, as underground streams school classes, Legion officials leads a dog's life — except when Monuments 4A MIDWEST ; . val ch s. Leaas oo. Wir tenth ft Geonaey sometimes do, to lower channels. | 64 — he's flyi ia ol, | AVONDALE — Goblins, spooks,) ~~~~~~~ — EMPLOYMENT ~~} taseth, PE) 34108 or be seas), pst Bicomiiels Lane between To reach these abandoned stream. “°°% : oe ‘and witches riding on broomsticks | BUY USARCT AND SAVE CROeuIee AUTOMOBILE ack icY WEEDS an | beds he chiseled through rock —— ; M r . _ ee hep.| will be the theme of the ‘Hal- Revert dw Ovorge E Rloonies soe ree EN ICE see ex —— er INSPECTOR while lying on his stomach.’ Area Meat Retailers ‘hh ajer Fri . a loween Dance’ to be given by the — re PE 5-0277 . tine Pr oe. . clean. work, Previous ; _ . erd dog and mascot for the 146th | Somehars Lots” 5 MEN WANTED TIBBITS CIDER BILLING CLERK FOR CHEVAO- in reading bie RUMBLE EXPLAINED Will Attend Classes | Fighter-Interceptor Squadron of | Style Steppers Sqaare Dance| .___ SSUESY OARS Mull, 29501 Northwestern, near 12 let auto dealer Good working # desirable. ® pt 9 t : itions. Paid MFG, CO. Other hardships plagued his way. : : , the 112th Fighter-Interceptor Wing, | Club on Saturday at 9 p. m. @ OAKVIEW CEMETERY ROYAL Mile : ns. » - MC MFG, Olen he hed le Moog Or creel Schoolbells ring again for meat Pennsylvania Air National Guard, | the Avondale Community Build- Coe 2S gipre ns. Syotiens MDD LAGE “Wi MAN FOR Wik wor cree on. Matthew 118 Indianweed Rd.. Lake He ve “a thocceh clinein ° tan 4. retailers in Pontiac and vicinity. | : | ing on Auburn Road. OR 31790 Sito” end clerical vee Chevrolet . utes Lap Panny tn re A The first of a series of three! He's been shot at in the air 2 PLACE LOTS IN) WHITE. PARKING ATTENDANTS. 16 AND PPORTUN after ; oO cond Vet. Pamily Section. FE } aed about tne mhy’ cavern l4SS i etal meat merchandia-| during a tour of duty in Korea, | | TMs will be the second tn the | 7 ext. Fon eae eee | BUS. OP te serine og | MOOUEATED WOMB TO TIVE Again, an alarming rumble echoed i"& Conducted by Michigan State , he's had to make two én te be given by the Stile OAKLAND HILL, MEMORIA GAR- Bt eetf. from yeor head’ eas 1. Write, Peatiae’ Press from the rocky roof, as from the University extension personnel will | parachute jumps from transport nces to be given by 7 Gone, _¢ grove mee PRUDENTIAL INS. ¢ CO. bmp pao eg ae” Box 116. ‘ be held in the Kroger Store, 170 aireraft and once made a cross. | Steppers. 7 Anpounces an opening for available for you on & salary, TE ee outdoor world far overhead. It was . ay executive salesman. Salary plus comm Gress shop. i Eo the noise from-a train passing over N. Saginaw. Pontiac, at 9 p.m., ep =~ outside ; plane- Membership to this club is lim- BOX REPLIES bonus. Call FE 20325 for desis. Pontiac vietnity. Call wood: = oe. tacp. ise a | specia . pointment. wa: ent. . . the cave on its way from Foix to Oct. 31. All interested meat retail ban, . the-w ly con- | ited to fifty couples, and nebo At 10 am, Today PART ae vo cane Caan iw ALL AN sew. : Saint Girons. Then the “stately sie ers, and employes are invited to, under- ing fuel | Mrs. Harry Tom, mem p There were replies . at tery, afternoons rdays, Christmas selling “Call SIDOLAAOS WIAs fo Tan jence” ¥eterned. attend, according to co-chairmen | tank. chairmen, indicate that the list the Press office in the when needed FE ‘sas — Products. | PE for pee an oe Pe, se What is so alluring about this. “Maurice Croteau and Gerald Mc-| He's probably the world’s fastest is_rapidly filling. following boxes: ‘ CASHIERS. | EXPERIENG - mens Fovegs. 86g stately silence and the savage y. dog, too, because his present own- | S ] mM labeaae’ Packing “a ~' iDBLESGED WOMAN -OR-OIRL charm of this underground world? | - * * er, Lt. Lynn A, McKinney, a pilot &, 7, 10, 11, 15, 16, 18, a es . en Super Market, iada B4. |, fie beeen mene’ Genes M. Casteret has answered: | These merchandising meetings | with the 146th, flies a Republic | at otices 22, 23, 25, 28, 29, 36, 60, R ] E tat . Eat boos. “Where, indeed, can we experi- are sponsored by the Retail Food | bomb-carrying fet fighter-bomber ; eal Lsiate a % ence such varied sensations; look Dealers Assn. of Michigan and the that holds the transcontinental} cece, ocT. 20, 1955. ANTHONY. 71, 00, 94 96 160 168, 116, _— Treetieek —_ Broad CONSUMERS yate room, OR upon such strange sights, live Michigan Chain Stores a Shores Berean. speed record jot 652 miles an hour. 160 Garena Bt. age 67: beloved Plenty of listings, advertising, & sane F through moments so thrilling, so bd * father of Mark J. and Anthony tacts. Baroni limited complete charge of house for full of poetry; where can the joys Before going into the service the} _ Soe 2. funeral eevee see __Help ‘Wanted Male 6 | To Buy—To Sell—To Trade POWER CO. cideriy couple. $38 per ae Toukae of inward satisfaction be so keen- nior tudy Gy y ul | dog acquired a taste for flying | with interment in St. rat A A GOOD FULLER!’ BRUSH MAN YOU BUY IT-WE'LL INSURE Ir. __Pras Box Box bs. ty felt as among the surprises and | when his former owner, an airlines pea dr bens Sun. can earn $100 to gee of week. . NEEDED the perils that await us when we Slates Psychodrama pilot, took him along on trans: a See hc i bee onie geen lance, cin me & call MAHAN HAS A IMMEDIATELY xo down into the recesses hidden y oceanic flights. Bird Funeral Home, Milford, hy Seyi show you how. Call Beauticians, We have te chen. down below the surface of the eee sys, aie ernteriin He HAMILTON. OCT. 19, 1988. JOHN [0 ’ tele--you inittative. elient marth?" SOUTH LYO N— Marguerite Mo -_ pene loci ei aag the BUTCHER WHO | cooperate’ nos renee Beene | Stenographic | saesgresau tor your ime ae Danas director of social service Claims Traffic Violator | —_ eed husband of May Hamiuvon, WANTS EXTRA CASH F-20363 MOTHERS! HAVE FON AND a Jepartment, Pontiac State Hospital . iiton, Morley -A and Ho Keith cual ‘be am 4 _ ' ty will present a psychodrama de nn Would Shock Namesake t Hamilton dear brother nad Mrs ens toe oraenic bor the right NEXT pi Bi m TO, BRANCH VACANCY in yout ‘hee Can Pie Pt. rue 0 0c ere Prances Walker Funeral service wae Call in person Huron _POST OFFIC orice Wohi: wosAN “3 y stration at 8 p.m., Monday in the DETROIT uw — “The father of ig we noid (Roturday. Ont J. Friend!y Market, 884 W. Huron _— oncioii . Saention ar elementary gymnasium, sponsored our country would be mortified." neral Home with Rey Harvey ™ Tre better, Mist typewrite, ad . : : 7 ) : f “ Scramble Discussed ime Snir chia Sidr rib eae gadget Carer Wty, Heth uc Met WARINGHAM Salesman Piast worting cntninns, | Ets "Refernen Appt i Patients of the hospital wil! enact ington after fining him $50 for ton will Ne tm state at the Purs- MAINTENA N¢ kK MAN Mighiy respectable position for a Abundant benefits, ‘ OLDER WOMAN LONDON—Everyone in the vil. i? Play form their illness from in- lage of Oddington, in the Cotswold C¢Ption to their present stage of district of England, was talking | COnvalescence, recently about the Case of the It is a form of therapy for the move his car after a minor traffic | ; 168 Wo Maple Good f . 2 : aken to the Parsons Mortuary, . - ; < _ ws lor experienced Canceled Cockerel Scramble. patents and promotes a better wn: collision. He asked for a push, | Parsons, Tenn for service and CORRUGATED BOX SALESMAN - man. Pontiac Carpet, 82 W. Huron. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN cheerful | responsible middieaged P F jersta burial. Puneral arrangements by Experienced man, qualified to an- STEEL FABRICATING, MUST BF ft othe: Gond But iegtid was sure whether a ders nding of their mental jll- age hin pilin oa him | the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home hett & handle corrugeces Secourts Sty William J./McLaughtin: dear | FOR LONG Cache "academe HelerehlD,-,BxPerience preferred. hight ceremony in the Orchard Leon Lavern Hubbard, son of Mr: | eer tee 2 es Do PROGRAMS cs 5% Merere. eaceecik ES ban w Avely Ponties FORD “MOTOR CO. ee . i ‘ene x Aspirin Warning Asked — Lake Community Church last Fri- ae Elden Frank Hubbard of | der an, ite ee we | 6 DESIGNERS | ferred” adember ecetraits | CURB GIRLS WANTED APPLY Bircsine ham LOUISVILLE, Ky. (The gov- day united Barbara Jean Booth, Ore 5 view) | ev. “Semen toechan otficiscine | DETAILERS | Real, wastate WAN aciina tor autora Ba. Olen e =. Fm ‘ine ‘Seumeaaes phe ee ernment is asking drug manufac- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold t nied the rte. eee et“) in a iene ae | | __REALTOR. FE ¢- CASHIERS — ; turers to label aspirin and aspirin |" = Fee ; * i itate at the Voorhees-Biple | CHECKERS ROUGE a¥b oPINaht CAPEK: SALESGIRLS Stenographers compounds with warnings that they Milford Suing Alleged | For her wedding, Barbara 5 eaiki 18, ose SOHN | ; _ 4615 Dixle Hwy. Drayton P Plains. Experienced cashiers and sales. AND should be kept from = children's Z L Vi | | chose a floor length gown fea- 388 Pranklin Rd, age | . ON RE ALE STATE SALES” girls seeded ts aa > tupe Secretaries reach. John A. Kedzior, inspector oning Law Violators turnig a lace peplum flowing an Gn ae ‘ng theta’ Secur- TOOLS Will consider, sales minded ener- Wiarry cere otice ft ae * * ye Sietion naa os and Drug MILFORD — Milford Township | oo omnis into a train. a agg i nade, stlnteting, | | omes sales, A neomber of Co- “4 N~ Geos Steno- ion, e agency is jal bouque: tained w operative i) : asking Chit labels or proper | has filed suit in Oakland County’ carnations, white fones and baby the ; Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home special Machinery All appoint Cal “swrence 7 CURB 2500. Maple Rd warnings within six months, Many Circuit Court against Mae township "mums. “Fre in Moaree, Drayton Plains, | satoBady Fixtures 1 Best Pine see W Open nrmineian pm : : ; aii a cal ‘ | ; | ° seu polsonings have occurred when) Men ft ceims are vigiating son Beverly Hubbard, sister of the Retns berseeetgcrite, of Clayton | Welding Dies SALESMAN FOR AUTO PAINT AITRESSES aa Ae children swallowed large quantities ing regulation. | ot ie. wen tiald of femme | a’ Dimer: dear mother of | and equipment. Must be able to ‘Ted's hag & fimited number of Wire | OMAN AS HOUSEREEF. of aspirin. Named as defendants are wit. | jrii°ejoum. was maid of honor clayton, Roth 3.0 dear sister of TOP /RATES "Sn soeaeaslanteancant night abut SST waitresses Lat Ae Soave 8 et Oe liam: H, Combs, who owns the | Aughenbaugh and Mrs. Maureen Chester Porceste nome ees ALL FRINGE SALESMAN $500 MUST BE 18 C h Ini uries Fatal building in question, and Corbin. |, ice will be held Friday. Oct. 21, IOMERITG Progressive company wants man Apply ' in person ras | ‘ « Vrecland. at & pom. from the Community | BEN FE | rs with some salen Cockere Ter- ‘ DECKERVILLE ws — Theresa) Wersole, whe oceuples it, The” pest man was Elden Hubbard United Presbyterian Church with rite, “future sith this. company TED'S = : i" hasan claims the house was ; ’ Rev. Waiter Teeupissen Jr. of ! * See Nancy at Career Batons Bi Carty, 29, of Marysville died in a # é want “brother of the groom, Tont Miller, cating. Mrs. Roth will lie in Riker Bidg. PE #0416, (Woodward wt Square Lake na hospital Wednesday of injuries suf- | iso 9 in eo if an srainanee | Robert Jenson, George Smith and poe fir Br ae ig ed STOCK ROY. OVER 6 APPL EXPERIENCED casitimn ron Experienced office cleric fered in a traffic crash Sunday. Seb. 9, 108 / David Conture seated the guests. ane wail time. of service." she Manufactuting Co. 2422 E. Maple pty? Rg ER night near Forrestville, She was| Passed Fet . will then be to the | ‘ ; Birmingham with Stuart Cunningham Jr. permanent injunction against | After a ssnlitias in the West. | Heverstos ; Engineer in Classified Ads! To swa aga te, Ind. where service will be Pp 24, of St. Clair when the car left! use of the building as a acres Clubhouse, Mr. and Mrs. take weet Interment in Pine S ' Co what you don’t need for M35 and struck pe Pomp is asked. No hearing date hag Hard let foe trp to Nigar Mra. is, at the Coals Fu- ervice ‘ what you do, call FE Coneiadhans also was injured, been set, . | Fal Drayton - 12 Mile at Woodward +} 2.- — reckless driving. * * * Police had ~ told Washington to chim.” oo | ley Puneral Home HOUSTON, OCT. 20, 1955. ELIZA c, 1435 Rosedale, age 84; dear moth- er of Mrs. Jo Rammes: dear sis= ter of John, Curgus and Wesijey Mrs. will be Houston; Houston service will be held Monday. Oct 24, at 10:30 a.m. from the "oda ley Funeral Home with Rev. Har- this evening. After service Mon- For woman's speciality shop Must be good handy man as well as janitor. 49 hour week. Apply man- “VUIMELHOCH’S neat appearing man’ who is sober and aggressive. Jerome Olds-Cadillac — SALESMEN, CARPETS. LINOLE- um oe general floor covering For time or full ves men. 21 3% to work 6 to famous CORY co High earnings eves. for SALESMAN FOR RETAIL PHOTO APPLY ROOM 420 28 \V. LAWRENCE ST. CASHIER home {in exchange hou k & pene Lovels ig ge peiting. 2 person. Gdatibows = Margrestes M Chevrolet tot, Ce. 1616 8S, Main &t., Royal Oak, LI. 4-4300, _ Clark, OL 1-921. rmnty. BIGHT 4 1 i THE PONTIAC rr FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 oy ee ph eee hat Ay ke he Ee Wb ORE ot / Pa : __Help Wanted Female 7| Work Wanted Female 11 Deeiiniatiiog Talloring 16 . AN : iv ‘Eategette Paar WANTED KITCHEN woman. Apply in person. WALDRON HOTEL ay ae ad KF 500 Ars * | women WwanTs Wane, wasumna ' NO TY wom in 4 work from 10 to AL un ‘Trees TRENCHING, | _ field tile and fo 6-9056, ALL KINDs OF CEME! tT RE. Licensed contractor FE . ARPENTERS ter, i) jalty. £000. — qi t =, and) — Ed i657. ° ensed . Bond- on PE ‘3.00 contractor. Let Ba AT ANY TIME ' MIDDLEAG peat. don't use wtber or experience. Ph MO Ss 3 Ps 1) dirt. va tom Brake ARM tractor. +2416 UCK- brs evenings. Sipericened. FE Work Wanted Female male 11 | BRY coment BY MACHING. a4 COLORED GIRL WANTS HOUSE. HOUSE- y the day or. == fo any kind _ VE 3- ince i ANTED. GOOD. work. 2-2240 LabyY Por TO WORK OR | ; Pronto ra Box 73. invalid sit vee. BABY SITTING DA bi work, References, ener WORK MON. = Fri. only. nH, pine fare ~ "ENDAI Bi paras 4 MY HOM: z. RL. WANTS pat PE 5-4646. ass __foctors ; q 6107, 2 WOMEN EN Ww ANT WALL Wass . FE 71-0233. and tronings. FE — WANTS DAY W WORK. FE lhc Baal re ture Refinishing 1 16A REPAIRING ANTIQUES SPE- —fiaity. FE 50162, Fe s-7932. & & Lauridry Service 18 “fea. § etutily oS eee seb onsi ALL ro g s Storms, siorw cathe re bung materials or will do sal budget. FHA, oe Cas D&M Building Service FE 1008" . oe 23-6245 Ev OR A-1 CEMENT W LLOYD MONROE FE 4-6866 3 AND oc re ann BOB-DEAN ; hy sah a preterred. aad catlelectied our spec BLOCK, NT W doetou aa HI nancing. ate 4-5470, BRICK, MENT Terps Anentjent Residential Pade commer. — a . esimates, ( sed a A- custom ¢ ; Rough finish, Work guar.| BULLDOZING -~ LARGE AND anted. EM 3-8¢01 oF EM 3: or EM ORADIKG. VAR Lovie. " : ATTICS—DORMERS eg me ety =e Aen eager Boag EXERAL LANDSCAPING GOOD e Guerantesd work at dis | fine fimate ening. Rete : prices di t ing. Pree estimate, Reasonable MICHIOAN HOME REMODELERS | Price. FE ¢1is 3377 W. Huron Rict var o oy oF CHEAP. PE 4-5063 After 5, MA 5-1134/ _ We load daily, FE 2 AIR COMPRESSOR GENERATOR, | ROTOTILLING AND SAY 4) power trowel, mixer. sanders, eee base. plum tools, tools. Open Sun. LING n’s alte and FE 6-1842 62 Ww. 45240 ome a DArING, HERE hag ing 18A BULLDOZING, BMALL OR LARGE s 4-0078. y petmenanss and “Moving, & Tewing 19), AA-1 MOVING TRUCKING. PICK. service at +1803 or eT) Any tme ee EO EORD MOVING | CLEANUP ORs op eaend HAULI NG POR PICKUP TRUCK, anything, anywhere, eawvtime. FE 65-0675. “Call, Bil. Fi LIGHT a "HEAVY TRUCKING eee intend. gravel.” Pi CINERATORS Lg too Trucks to Rent TiPMENT a Pontiac Farm a and Industrial Tractor Co, Open Dally a ~REI Pe soa te RATES | ° ee serve you, Smith Eira a Touhy PE eae noe Painting & D & Decorating | 20 A-l DECORATING — PAINTING - ane well rere Call for ew ua oa: Pare: | 0 8 sal WILL BUILD TO YoU TO YOUR PLANS OR iR 3-4740 for free estimate. i "e Duals. L Licensed builder. 124 | ~~~ LUMBER __Building ¢ Supplies 1 nail-free_ FOR SALE: 1390 Lake Angelus Rd, | Corner Roor 1.). Out Baldwin, turn left, FE_ 5-3701 | ASSORTMENT OF GOOD 1 LUM- _ber. Cement blocks, FE _2-765 13) ___ Business Services _ APPLIANCE SERVICE We service ali makes of refrig- erators, Washers, radios, cleaners forse: "bet css ve, __2-4021. i-1 TRENCHING, FOOTING AND field installation, Also peptic ‘aake and fill dirt. OR 37318 or OR A & B TRENCHING Fes, water line, field tile. 5-006), ; 7 = 7 > FURNACE WORK Cleaned, repaired, reset. resealed, new pipes etc. Also boilers, fire. places cleaned, repaired, Home owned registered company If you want good work, cail us. No “mateurs. FE §-3701. ALL nig OF FOUNTAIN PENS aired ined ™.| TREE ‘TRIMMING AND REMOV- | #131 | SR Fa RE- © fob too bi FE @ or smal), GET READY FOR JACK FROST Have your furnace cleaned and repaired, Call FE 6-2492. | al, Free estimate. F’ E 26019. FE FURNACES CLEANED AND hE sired. Ofl, coal and ga: te Chester Nelson. FE 5- Sins. * ” SEWER CLEANING Sinks ~ Een eo Service. FE 42012 “Eer Setgiee Be Ei Electric—Sewers Cleaned 24 hour tvice, No resw nm charge: ¢ chemically fronted th Se ° Roto- Re Sewer Cleaners 4 or OR NEW SCRABBLE SETS $3 PAINT, PAINTING IN_ TOWN —FE 346318 NG PAPERHANOGING bes, SET FAINTING & FAPER HAR HAN NOING i ames & Wall W ashing mates. FE 5-2211 “aN6 | Painting | & Wall Washing Free tes, FE 2-2706,, Physiotherapy 2 21A SWEDISH eae & Ri Television Service 22 22 DAT OR MIGHT TV | SERVICE co SUIGANTERD 7V iit a’ tv. in 8. ue ‘Ss TY. 131 8. PARKE ST. ¥ Pie . av repair, ron, Night ee _tee calle PE G60 TUCKER'S RADIO-TV, FE 63710 _FE_ +3600. 168 E. Pike St — _Typewriter | Service | 22A TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MA- . work. Sentral ine fo. 17 W. ee DO ENTED TPCO' & BED wopreads, our material, PE 5-5797, Lost . & ; Found 2 24 POUND: FEMALE ENGLISH SET- ter. Black and white, Near Capac and Riley Center: OR 3-6443 aft- ter, 4. te FOUND: PEMA “poa IN V cinity of i rengale High. Owner can have by tdentifving. Cal at 2804 Woodelm and Bagley | FOUND PURSE ¥ month ago in the Linda Lee Shop. Have girl claim. Pay a LOST: SPRINGER, BLACK AND white, male. In vicinity of Middie- belt Rd. Cai) Farmington. GReen- 46780 1 ? WANT i me? PE 2-240, 1 Anim res Le STEVENS PUMP GUN. Left at Pontiac La. Name is _Uunder stock, FE 47877. LOST: PONTIAC LAKE RECKEA- tion area, biack Spite, —— eye hite neck. Phone_FE 2- You spots, } 23-1963. Lost- eeadL HOUND NAMED “Rusty’’ in Ortenville bunting area. Pontiac License 2306. Re- ward OR 3-7087. { LOST: BLACK WALLET. p RARE | | IDGE RD T RINK, M55 R i CLUDED _IN Babe ag WAs VALUABLE Es a ° D PAPERS, INC LUDING REGISTRATION AND DRIVERS LICENSE. CALL FE 4-2880. T — BEAGLE HUNTING Doo | —* Rec, Area. of rE LOS in vicinity of Highland Tame Lady. 46386, Answers to the _License No, 3015 M LOST DIAMOND RING. HURON Friendly Market, Finder call FE _3-7414 Reward. LOST: BLACK AND WHITE Pointer in Oxford area. OA 8-2008 _Reward. Child's Pe _ LOST BLACK & WHITE POINT- er in Oxford aren OA 68-2008 _Reward. Child's, LOST OR STOLEN: rn a RED Irish setter, raid reward. Call PE 4-7003 LOST: FEMALE BLUE Tick Vicinity Franklin Rd. and Tele- raph. If found, gael Leland Jraham, FE 4-5023 ard. Lost: BILLPOLD SSN pAiNiNS rtan Tenn. Keep money, piease return billfold. 2-0881 or 165 W. Rut gers WOULD THE PA EASE RE- turn the beagle th licked up * ~ evieinity of Vaapie Ra, No questions ~ Hobbies & Supplies 2 244A PRALRALAM ead by number sets, $1.60 frames fitr B 2” | East nee axe OF HAM. Hobbies & & Supplies 24A | Shai REGULAR $2.25 SLIDE $14.95 cameras $5 dow 7m Bervice, 1055 Huren, FE 3-475), _Notices | & Personals 25 AAA PRIVATE VES. Licensed, 30' years exp, FE 5-620) Aerotred Knapp s Shoes | —_ HER 2070 Airport Rad OR 3-1582 ANY GIRL SR WOMAN pare woe' Mts ey oithalesn, “Noes Phone otc onfidential The Sab ps By Army hoUae wives wELP Wink ete bet oertr. ar. ere a tres SOUsEWIVES: ee eon expenses, Have a toy party. Earn free gifts. EM 3-2880. ALCOHO will not be than myself. 166) = Bundale, PAY CUT? |+ IF SO, Let Us Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind Restore Credit WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS South Saginaw St. FE 68-0456 Above Oakland Theater VELVETEEZ-MASON 8 AND boots 28 E, Yale . . 8-1310. wee Coen Seat 2 1936, I sponsible for any Vv Waariee Heartin, 41% CHILDREN LOVED AND CARED for, FE 2-1730. LICENSED BOARDING HOME, Preschool children, PE 45440. Wtd. Household ¢ Goods 27 27 FURNITURE | NEEDED ‘dollar “will oot “outright \or tt eel gouar. wr Community Bale, ter Om 3-217. BUY iron AUCTION ow for you, ONE OF Tey LARGEST furniture buvers. Cash waiting. _ FE ¢7881. | 333_Orchard Lake Rd. - FE 4-4563 WANED TO BOY ALL TyYPEs _of furniture, Phone FE 2+ _Wtd. Mlecsilaiania 28 | TWO U-SHAPED CORNER AND stool; grill and sane y with fil- ters aod misc ing equip- ment. FE 45252. ser “OF FRENCH DC DOORS. Size 26" x 68". FE 2-506 STOCK BINS AND eAiL PARTS __cabinets, MA 5-7878 or OR 3-8506. “SEPTIC TANK IN- ret ed, 1008 gal. o90 f. of tile. WANTED TV SERVICING EQUIP. tment. Phone OR 3.7665. OR 4° BOY'S BIKE. BET. $10-$15. MI 4-9863 _ WANTED TO BUY 2 GOOD 20-68 outside doors Also 3 ft, outside door, BH. P. Sutton. MY 2-6432. WANTED TO BUY LATE MODEL = e size oil cireulating heater fan also fuel oil ‘ank, H.P, Sutton’ MY 26432 __ WANTED: conten. __ OR —— Bt ? GooD oa ewe hy utility room 4 room house, _H: P. Button, “Nay 29-6432 ___Money_ Wanted 28A WANTED 13.000 TO PINANCE and complete a ge type home Valued at $22.000. Can pay $100 a month at 6 per cent interest. FE 2-6432 ; NEED 96.000. WILL PAY $100 ogre d at 6 per cent int. Write __Box 86, Pontiac Press. Wanted to Rent 2 Couple with 3 yr. old girl desire 3 room and bath 29 Share ) Living Quarters 3 30 COUPLE TO SHARE HOME AS companion for lady, FE 4-0709. LADY 8 OR SERVICE MAN’S WIFE home and care for school ie nehid after 3, OR 3-7452 or ine oh F c= SHARE wo —#t)_ FE 90388 Wanted Real Estate 32a| Mahan. ‘Has Bu rs after 6 p.m. Y's Selling Your Home? * We have customers w homes and farms, or will sell your 10 experienced range financing equity for you, for we W @r- salesmen to serve you. We get results; try us and see. self. for your. Russell Young jam REA 412 W. Huron Bt, ALTOR Ret. th, vate fee aenged Perle tor mile’ N. 13 pe FE zie cman sautts only, FB ATTRACTIVE, NEWLY DECO- rooms and bath. wate week. OA 86-3646, SASEMENT APARTMENT, WiCE “Bnd clean. Close to bus line, One w en. io East Siva, South. _ week. CLEAN <3 oe ADULTS: REF- azan r 00M Pues. APT. 210 W _Wtd. Transportation 31 Oa CAKE 7 SnnOoRT ‘RANSPORTATION PROM HOME Press. FURN. APT, PR ets - a P: — Diceesmrenniliinn _field Milla, 6 to 3,"Calt Ma Stas? CASH ms WME hy FE carta %. ROOM, KITCHENETTE 1’ to May 1. EM 3.3324. Wid. Contracts, Migs. 3: 32| For small equities. If you have “aod wath for couple. 4 eee | YEARROUND § ROOM LOG CAB- what we want we will be st your | MODERN 3 ROOMS, AL L Orit in, Pontiac Lake, OR 3-013. Pte gba A 6, rs with cash | tes furnished. Adults. Rent $18. |————————————__ Ca h Waiti : : S fos| Ing for your omy, Ce now and tell r week ord, OA 83% Rd. Stony Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 ad Spey Bey : MODERN 2 AND 3 ROOM. AUTO. wetioa. Edw. M. Stout, Realtor. hg Ay ot The Tred. = seavenionses 2 biks y. 1 Mt. Gaginow, Bt. a ** 5-4165 ing Post Grocery, 406 Ormond| Re: bie. Br. ‘MA A. JOHNSON, Realtor MU 42546. +i 1704S. Telegraph Rd. | GR EN LAKE OF cite, "on beaut, Pontiac Lake, ‘s odors. couple” only,” souh FE 4- “WEADQTRS For ALL. LAKES” ble. References required. | John R. MU 9-2302. FAST ACTIONY | "Sites tesgetast “1 ieee 5 5 Hummer Lake Ra. Ortonville. =, RICE ; 3 pe. bath; | i ay an See ee a ae e Mr NEWLY DECORATED; FOR 1 OR _ Clark. WE 4 ARE BUY YING AND SEL WILL BUY Om LIST YOUR LAKE itt St we Huron FES ty 1 ee Couple saree ‘us } Ice UP- | [Room HOU F vicuTirT oF 7, fa tes Case settlement. Pa’ Pootiac Eat 331 per. No ia pets, Pre ter |” gir Port. OR 2768. R. F. McKINNEY FatvaTe Sen PALATE ¥ ROOMS. (GAS HEAT “1 CHILD Nicholie & Harger | Co. UMiv 1-6798 beth ond cutrenee. iit Telegraph VAILABLE. WOV : DW. PE 65-6183 aus fre. at 79 a ae a oe Lares livingroom with ‘QUICK CASH ~ EAST SIDE, AUBURN HTS. cuwance, "3 end witeame.” To- hire schoo! o gememe. bus uire in back, upstairs. 1498 Vine- | —* aE. Be G. Bromot a amy «HH wim EIGHT R BRICK HOME WITH “WHITE BROS. se Lj we. _Phone OR 31872 or OR 3-!768 To Orr 3 THE M MOST FOR YOUR te the > weina 7 i ant we Huse . Phone PE 2-8316. ; CASH pavers waiting for iand contracts, ar and small ne. or seasoned, SCH RAM FE 5-5001 FE 5-047) If no gnewer a ; It Joslyn Coe we Res Co-operative our clients. Bee me before you sell, ASK FOR BOB MAHAN, -To Sell- To Bu To Insu YOU BUY IT-WE'LL INSURE Ir MAHAN ALTY CO. REALTORS coon om cd Real Estate Exchange | Grontane and Sundays 101s WW. Hur 5% MORTGAGES on ve OR fda orgy be from 2 with seatege. pote. J or BD. CH rial eon ari eet eve Fe 8. ke tines TATE CASH FOR rou and —— or equity in KL. Templeton, Realtor CASH — Untimited funds bona iy ines | contracts. Both new R large or small. For intormation call FE 5-0975 or FE 8-044], for Ted McCullough J. C. HAYDEN Realtor _86 Naw Walton CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. VanWelt 4540 Dixie Hwy. OR. 3-135. ACTION! | t } Ask coh can sel we unlined bi vere . your ag oe deal com “RIDGEWAY a oe -0541, Roch. So ceeenee Real Estate Exchange STUDIO 1 BEDROOM APT. ranch bidg. Union Lake. Adults. EM 3-4285 SMALL MODERN APT. Vi WE NEED 50 two, three r bedroom henes. That’ Rg age we're about sold out of our homes. If yo want prompt courteous service, oa) Partridge is “ to see WARD E, PARTRIDGE REALTO FE 28316 43 W. Huron St, - SOLD —or Not Sold your ogg yr tan't sold ret. I because it hasn't been usted ‘WHITE BROS. REALTORS - 8660 Dixie Hwv. Phone OR_3-1872 or OR 3-1760 Rent Apts, Furnished 33 FURN 1 ROOM __Grouna floor. 139 ron man. Raebu' 1 ROOM wias Paivare EN- e and tr lav. furn. Working gitt. Sion in, FE _2-7578. OOM. bath For 2 couple. Adults -dock, NETTE. PVT. aed Ras or “only. 290 Alberta Apts. 2 an pena Be rooms, or 3 adults. FE + 7 noteia AND KI DECORATED bath and entrance. +7338 ITCHENETTE. suitable for two. 104 Going. corner Whittemore 2) ROOM FURNISHED BASEMENT apt, Can be seen __83 Ruth. 9 a.m. to from 2 to 6.) _ 6 p.m. Sat 2 ROOMS ON BUS LINE. REF- _etences, 318 Orchard Lake Ave. , Ri URN. welcome. Close and APT, “INFANT Yellow Cab Baldwin Rubber. PE 4-0380 2 Roots WITH PRIVATE BATH. . Adults only, Carpeted floor W. Pike. 164 2 ROOMS, ea: PRIVATE sale of your Land entrance. FE 5- fract ‘it .* ma " ore oe; | _ ROOMS, apULTy ONLY. lace them for you within 24/_ FE 20566. 89 State nw NFAR fours. See us tor the fast serv-|2 ROOMS, “PURN, NEAR ice you are looking for. No com tract too large or too on Edw. M. Stout, Realtor TIN. Saginaw Street Ph. FE 56-8165 eve. till 8:30 | Wanted Real Estate 32A TRADES—TRADES We are apecialists im tradin bomes, farms, lake do to satisfy all rties cone Do not fee! obligated. Cal! us ot an appointment and we e ‘ou our honest We are establishing 6 reputation as the leading traders of DORRIS & SON mews FE 415357 752 W. Huron ‘Co-operative } Real Estate Exchange | WE HAVE QUALIFIED BUYERS | for a Class C Bar, including real iam <—. estate. Also medium furn. apt. Vicinity North station, well located. immediate Ss actio Perry sss t| ROY KNAUF, Realtor rent, SPOOL, 26%% W. Huron FE 2-7423 OA 8-3339 FPREE pr ona TO LANDLORDS Bave ex time and dozens BUY OR SELL of enwanted calls. We, cond 1'witl personal yd your prop- screened tenants by appointm oF Se ne kee only. ‘ADAMS neater co. today. price is retsonabie. Call-now and | = FE 2- pro Sesrinasetnenamrinindaine hruapsneiieensinenenpenel: R. D. RILEY SAGER GAS STATION WITH HOIST & AIR FE 4-1157 7-0906 gomp. thet’s not pumping gasoline. Hl or Al od vi ond cities. Call 3 : 3 a, ir e a « ow Banas eMMGET IT (QUICK, RFSPONSIBLE PLE WITH SMALL BABY DE. { ~—— meniaain Ads! ix es "ERIVATE BATH. bus line. 68 8, Pranci NICELY Stans or fade girls. aaD BATH. | Sontag 2 ROOM ated. Couple, Off N Robinwood. erry. 7 LARGE ROOMS, FIRST FLOOR. ivate entrance, otors. 1 small Pontiac welcome near girl FE 4-4625 after 5 p.m 2 AND 3 ROOMS, REFERENCES. _Adults” only, 240 8 7 ROOM RtaELON "a FE _ 44-5655. seen Ruth. from 2 {a yacee FORRISEED BASE: MENT q Y Room i MODERN. HOT WATER Pontiac Lake. Take Rd EM_3-5333 hams 1555 Wil 7RKOOMS. UTILITIES, REFRIGER- ation and 2-2661. gas heat Adults. FE 2 ROOMS. CHILDREN FE rR Pairk BATH. 1 _enild welcome. Apply 79 Clark St. 3 ROOM “FURN APT. FE 5-1460 3} ROOMS, PRIVATE. WEST ate. One Lasal piset from Tel-Huron. T ROOMS. 200 SANDERSON &T. _FE_2-4050 7 ROOM “APT. 01 UTILitigg FUR- ron __nished, ene cone. ie Pe trance. 26 E _P.m, PE ea oa Sheffield.” Cal after 5:30 5-2442. AND Waiton B 4 7 ROOMS NEWLY vate DECORATED. bath and entrance. West _Central. re goons t FURN RNIBHED. ADOLTS i} ROO ST Sar: PRIVATE EN- trance. Working = ie. “ — lor. FE #1222 i score. 155 only. 1 zeer is, pretorre Der month. erred. aah oe. ROOM two baths, can be used as income or single, at 846 Round * . Patrick Church & Union VERY pper clean $15 per week pius utilities. heat gartgs, adults re Sases OR }-0389. even UPPER « ROOMS & BATH PVT CHA entrance, electric stove « iretriger. FOR sat cE og white LAKE stor Heat furn. North side. Good |" Park, Call MA ‘A_$-3202 tr Couple only, Rent, - $ mo PE 20708. LARGE 7 ROOM MODERN HOME | WANTED on 1 acre of ‘and, located 3 miles | New married couples gr bache-| West © pcos oly — | ved ~~ = apts. 2088 “Common- con con furnace, Tn | Than ROUND 3 ROOM MODERN | | clean lake front Apt. nicely fur- | nished, private entrance and bath. | Oil_heat, couply only, OR 3-508? Rent Apts. Unfurnished -34 a Wit BATH. REFRIO. STOVE, utilities. Close in. FE 27425. J} ROOMS AND BATH. NR. GMC EM 3 200 Fisher. $12 weekly. S CUNFURNIHED APY. th. — HOUSE. 6 ROOMS OIL Inquire 77 Saginaw Street. 2 ont. ne coco mo. A or without children. ADAM”? RENTAL SERVICE yaa Anvers Ave "We _phone calls, please, __ MODERN; 12 MILES NORTH OF Pontiac, $15 per week. MA 54-9702. v1 rooms 3 neous ‘OLDER COUPLE PRE- SMALL HOUSE ‘N CITY: CHIL dren- welcome. 131% E, Huron. 4 LARGE Erte Shem & BATH. Heat & hot water furnished. Cou- _ple preferred. OR 3-1978. th or wit out child AVAM4 RE NTAL Se m2 At Ne hese” tg LAPGE ONE BEDROOM APT ON | lake Ret Stove, electric and nest furnished: we per month | Year round, OR 31784 | MODERN 3 OR ¢ ROOMS ON Pontiac Lake. Heat and li oy 9243 Camelot Road, OR 3- NEW. LARGE 3 ROOMS 7 hear General Bong =o Adults — All utilities furnished in- rt month, Located 13 yaa tor arrangements. WEST SIDE TERRACE: § ROOMS. ‘Seek Fate * ——— ars Wl j (ROOMS AND "BATE Bare vewry | ~~! __ For | Rent" Rooms_ _ 37 ee @ OF smo eet Se 2746, | AVAILABLE. NEWLY DECORAT- My yas00 * eonard. OA 6 | # qlleeping room. Quiet. FE «ROOMS AND BATH, PRivaTe —*!* —- entrance. Couple only. 206 8. Park 2 PEOPL” TO SHARE LOVELY T ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE | ™Sstet bedroom in refined wid. entrance, utilities, Couple only. ome. Ne other roomers. 66 Henderson _Setorg 6 pm need apply. FE 2-8547 7_ LARGE ROOMS. DUPLEX. a Tee ATTRACTIVE LIGHT HOUSE- Lower, Pvt. FE 2-5408. keeping room for lady. 647 W. ee ee eek ae eee CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM: GEN- $80 per month. DORRIS & SON,| teman only. 42 Matthews. FE Realtors, PE 4-1557 or PE | _*0378. a re CLEAN WARM SLEEPING rooms. s: Very close lose in. FE 5-0 GOD RENTALS AVATCABLE | amas SLEEPING ROOM. othe | DESIRABLE FOR E privileges, | LIGHT OCTET EP ING Pee LARGE WARM ROOM aa LOOK: yy See ine Take e rie ‘amily IN — he - and wer ore zi. ~_ Orton, MY Y 2-1741, erly couple only, no NICE ROOM WITH TELEPHONE, __Charlotte ‘radio, electric clock. Near bus line, rr 5-8717, —_ & at ane Cee ee Fr 2-8289 or We sesso on days, Huron bus. FE 2-06804 E ROOM I¥ A CON- venient _location, FE 5-5017. (PLO’ ED LaDy: HOME | 128 Lincoln G000 SLEEPIN’ ‘OOM i LADY. 103 Thorpe, FE 2-5619 ROOM. | per week. Ph. after $ p.m. | _9-0527. ” radio. No restrietions to eieitinn hours. OR 36320, Owned & ir ated by Br. & Mrs. Peter 3. Wen Boxclaer, Hotel Rooms 39 HOTEL ROOSEVELT Rooms orn Ta* $17.50 up. refrigeration a A ee HURO? eM dost Te oe For Rent Miscellaneous 42 GARAGE. 32 z 6 FOR RENT. “ has both ‘; ai vi ‘Pees after 6 Py ain ONE WAY RENT HERE LEAVE THERE Open Closed FP. E. Howland, x Dixie Hwy. FOR RENT ON RE BASIS. 190 ae dairy firm. with 9 . wit pr ate, Maren o. ah i DOWN ma any ¢ homes; basem Perry & Ket: tnx 2 Banaoon HOME OFF BALD. win, $7, $800 down, Immedi- _ate possession, "1 MA LA 54051. NEAR SANFORD 8TF STREET 7 house pA ew 1 motors. Sooty tures, new modern kiteh Seat ete Mar SEL West New York $700 wown, raPSSE, SAT $695 DOWN PLUS CosTs NEW 2 BEDROOM FHA HOMES Including onjometie 6 hot weter. Oak Binks | tages Gries out Lames Madison Ave. Turn left PARE naa Op eee 60, FE 5-7923 WE TRADE DRAYTON — PLAINS “ 1 acre of ground, fenced in yard with this 2 bedroom home. Has paneled breakfast nook, full base- ment. wonderful hot water heat- ing system. Beautifully completed recreation foom. ‘t miss this buy THELMA M. - ELWOOD REA $143 CassBlisabete Lake Rd. FE 5-128, FE 43844 "a aoan FRONT HOU furnished, 2 ant PARTLY WEST SIDE. 4 RMS. AND BATH. Adults only. FE 2-5045 PLEASANT ROOM FOR BUSINESS ! PE +4323. PLEASANT ROOM, N See BUS. Indy. West side. OXFORD ies with livias room, dintn _eall owner wner MA bial. CRESTVIEW | Inc. LOW HLA forme Oa Meare. rE 8-1370. SLEEPING ROOM NEAR pmioe SINGLE 81 school, Men only, FE 4-8 GR POR BUSINESS ir professional person. West side, FE 4-134. EEPING ROOM FO ye he 17 Clairmont Place. FE 54-7041. Call after 6:30 p.m. WEST SIDE, DONELSON PARK, VACAN 4 bedroom home. 2 baths, nice living room, fireplace. large a inette, weveuewny, full Ou HLA. furnace, 2 car oaeean. Children welocme. 2 year face Move right in. Nicholie & Harger Co. 33 W. Huron 8t. FE_5-6183 WEST SIDE 5 ROOMS AND BATH, rt. Adults, Available at once. 40800 after 5:30 or PE 23-5440, vgparnt FE 2-8206 or -|Rent | Houses Furnished ed 35 3 oe. WALLED LAKE. onveniences biks. io ni ®, Reasooabi —, $55 BE, Lake A SLEEPING ROOM FOR MAN, SLEEPING with SLEEPING ROOMS FOR 1 SLEPING RO ROOM FOR KITCHEN lady = pre- private entrance and shower. ar __2-2416. ROOM P ituren pn FE on tf 8 MEN, week; near plants; on bus _ line. . FE 46324, NG rivi- couple. Brea kfast ene t desired Close to business trict and all FE o furn. bedroom, living room vt. Auburn Are, home. +2025. through Rent Ads! Room, house, thing — RENT IT FAST apartment, any- ant Ads give ou- ACTION, Dial FE) 8181, West side. FE 4-4 RE BUY ROOM FR RENT FOR 1/ 43 room oe 4 ve. person: 120 Raeburn St. 7 room on Green st 5 ROOM AND GARAGE POR GEN- —s house = —— 5 and 6 _tieman. On_west side TE 3-$058, | zoom pousce og, Contras St. And ROOM GENTLEMAN ON er houses. WILLIAMS LAKE. 6 ROOMS, Woodward Ave Son. 66 W. Y. Huron, _Hills. Phone MI44253. BY OWNER fireplace, gar, $70 mo. FE 8-1370.| SLEEPING WITH TWIN BEDS. ge West side. 4 bedroom home. 1% tivate entrance. Close to baths, New carpeting plants. Men. 138° Cadillac, heat. cat Coed garage. en Fenced “ta gard Close hools. = al neighborhood. Call OR bar 4 rooms and bath, =P b spd by fire, $2,750, w down p:. went es oe cash, Call after 6 PE 4-4097. BARGAIN! 4 room house on large pa $6,000 small =" ater ment. New- Vimar beak eter oo * mace ee a 2 SF ES $3500. 4 roomed — Oll furnace lake gh : ms tee ern. z. mae jan 7 . Drayton : € ROOM ALL MOD. ont 4 TE i ergo corner lot, 4 Roce A D BATH ON Lange 185.000. mt price. $700 down 7 BEDROOM HONE ON [ors Lower Straits Lake. eM 2403, For Sale Houses 43 short distance from the Ties of ake tee sore peaceful, quiet country self in L and © waewe could than in BE VAN MANOR. Think of ay A spacious facebrick ranch style home on a large lot near schools and churches and within walking dis- tance of a new shopping center ! $14,350. Sutnaiig 76'x150 ‘ot. As Low As Per Moxth . weki's ite SoS TURES: 3 or 4 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS SOLID DRIVE CARPORT See the Furnished Exhibit Home Square Lake and Middlebelt Road Northwood ORGANIZATION INC. Phone FEderal 4-6191 A 3 BEDROOM OLDER home in a tiac, Near and Huron Gas auto, immedi- oe on $10, Terms. WHITE BROS. NEW HOMES: LAKEFRONT Do tt yourself—finish the interior to your own desire, This year and can be only wn. $5,800. This won't last long. Call for appoint- ment ay Your Rent for Free ood 8 room modern home. Basement and furnace Can be used as a 1 family or 5 fo: Full price $8,500. down. $70 per mo. GAYLORD m2 Whittemore Street AWRENCE W GAYLORD FE 4-9584 3% E. Pike &t., B, Suen Be Eves, & Sun. Co-operative Estate Exchange IMMEDIATE POSSESSION MYERS or_15 Miami Rd. : 2 BED . ATTACHED OGA- Faee, 800; $1. ‘dowa. INCOME HOME, 5 RMB, 'N, : 4 rooms and bath up Pull bese: ment, gas —_ paved x} a hE * St, ent. Per- $500 DOWN New Srichenets. two bedroom home on lot. Exterior com’ ly tnisted with —_ - rough plumbine in. Will al — on ag linag ba down. siso dels. GC. PANGUS “1919 M15 Ph. Ortonville 132_ collect. For Gracious Living See this lovely home featuring 3. bed ith closets Large laundry roo attached garage Beeautitul Bs with basketweave grill Srcpined nd patio and Hanaing or at only $18,000 mW HITE “BROS. ont ALTORS 3-1872 or OR 3-1769 _™ OR Sis ot OR 3-2081 Charles | ARE You CRE RISK? Walton Blvd. Phone now for details. TOO MANY ROOMS for a man | and wife, but 7 rooms & bath t just suit vou, if you have * ig family. Bargain priced at $8,726 with only $2,000 dn VERY ATTRACTIVE 4 room block rancher with Il‘: car garage | Good location on western ocee | of city. Well worth the asking price, $12.500 . ELBOW ROOM TO SPARE! This 6 room brick, 35x41 ft. home, with full basement. has excellent floor pian. Built new in ‘52. On lot ere ft. In Sylvan Lake area. $18,750. — B.D. CHARL Es. Realtor FE 4- 0521 1616 8. Telegra Eves. & Sun Co-operative al Estate Exchange RENT BEATER $1,250 down and immediate pos- session on this 3 bedroom lake erea home Total $5,200 IN PONTIAC Warm 3 bedroom home with base- ment an, garage 42x46 ft i and business together. $10, terms. aan ~ os | A. G. ELLIOTT & SONS Northwestern Hwy. at Middlebe) FE 81134 MA 6-2503 JO 4-612 ? OPEN SAT. AND SUN. TO 6 Woodward Estates, 207 Bassett Ave. 2 bedroom home Tiled bath New gas water heater Venetian blinds Water softener Storms and screens Awnings Newly Wredecorated inside and out, Extra large lot Completely landscaped price Indian Village Modern five roo’ hoods the ctr, of Full price only $12,000—term: J. A. Taylor REALTOR - INSURANCE 190 Oakland Ave 4.2544 | Open Eves. Pree eee | YOUR LOT &/OR Low DOWN PAYMENT And we will build you a frame | or brick home ' completely | -| & Best Buys Today Suburban Fast side home located: on large lot with lots of nice yard. $1500 rar 7a DOWN For this five room home located on north side with full bath, large kitchen, 2 bedrooms and oi! furnace. Walking distance to Fisher ody and Pontiac plant. Total price only $5050. SHARP 2 FAMILY Located close to Lincoln Jr. High we have this in- come, consisting of two 5 a floors, aths, large bedrooms and _ kitchens. 11 basement with a8 furnace and. automatic water heater. If it’s an in- come you are looking for, don't fail to see this one. Only $4500 down. WEST SIDE Large 3 bedroom home !0- cated on paved street, close to schools and bus line Lovely remodeled = kitchen with lots of space tile bath with er. full basement, and screens and Tage Priced with terms storms car ga- $11, 950° rd eg 2 Gi at SASHABAW ROAD ts bath large kitchen and utility room. Almost two acres of land with this home and also 100 feet of business front- aved . y here for and business. Only with terms F-dw. M. Stout. Realtor 77 N. Saginaw St. Ph. PE 58-8165 | Open Eves. Till 8:30 SYLVAN LAKE gar! Warwick has several new bedroom homes on woode Chetingbam road with beautiful taftered ceilings. massive xd fireplace, plank oak floors, ley kitchen with built in oven and dishwasher. Large family room. These homes really stend out. Built and sold by a builder with 30 years experience. have real plaster. real ceramic tile. gas heat. retnforced con- erete driveway, city sewer and water. Lots 84 wide. Only 2 | blocks from City maintained bathing beach. Just north of Middlebelt and Orchard Lake road. Call 4-000 or PE 2-2105 for eggenent and directions. nday 1 to 6. Price $23,- up. I STARTER HOME, PART BASE- ment, Williams Lake %2.900 cash. OR 3-4837. WEST SUBURBAN Lovely modern 2 me kitchen home. bus 50 with very attractive ‘ms, $750 DOWN Buys this cozy 2 bedroo pn home. Lot 50 x 0, Paved ‘oad. Complete price, 86,050. Dorothy snyder Lavender | 3140 Wk ‘Huron BRICK. LA odern $850 DOWN Meee Lake na "Low price ik sal Lake. hom mes new heat. Immediate PONTIAC REALTY 137 Baldwir PE 54-6275 LAKE ANGELUS AREA ON LAND-CONTRACT $3500 DOWN * apn 1095 bp HBA fenvion tne, [02 -<< ~ S probably overeating!” ___ For Sale Ho Houses “a ON Immediate - Oceu ney Of sow heme a oe ee rooms om, vi co fon ment of FE ‘om. and 47197 oon een ahd a.m. and PULL | _7 p.m. B BASEMENT, AU t| = heat.. Close to: Loveline Veterans Only 5 Lett 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME ‘ FULL BASEMENT $450 Moves You In See model at 906 Kettering, just off N. Perry a oo HANNAN REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE Lincoin 44900 Pe 30188 ‘| COLORED. EARLMORE BLVD. | near Crestwood by o — will be shown A appointm only. FE 4-3003 after 7 p. m. DRAYTON PLAINS bedroom, ranch ‘lose aethhernert ~ kids. Take over 4 grimy call OW 3. ‘down. “si0.006. Cr Call 5-512 Opportunity We haves large, but sound, old im an e NOTHING DOWN TO Gi's “NOW OPEN—Brand oe 3 3 bedroom saat, “Gas, furnace ce tile F. C. Wood Co. Corner wetems Lake Rd. & M50 + Office 1 Oe “RIDGEWAY 976 Beliwin FE 46203 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange HOME location, Private owner, BY OW Te a +4 _ 23-1104, home in Auburn B tenes plastered walls, Kitchen, dining LARGE TEE ROME. 91600 com Sa Scapesens up. All oak floors, full basement, iarge _ SOUTHEAST fou el sheds, new walk. Showa with off shade, by appointme.t aft. ¢ p.m. OR heat, jores, thaded tot ‘7 nn can be esvenned VACANT \% BLK, TO TO SCHOOL Cortes. Oe ee, a ElizabethLakeEstates this lovely 3 year old 2 bedroom Living a. 11%x22, natural tome. Has basement knotty | fireplace, 2 bedrooms with ex breezeway, garage and sion up "hee two meen Cc enced beck yard, Located of 1S pg Pg mas hess ~ ™ . car garage consider says ‘au ia $00. SEE call Broker. at OL J-7511. Immediate Possession ed 2 bedrooms vear round home, nice shadv lot —, Aig 5m Lake privileees ‘Onlv 81.600 own. $750 Down possession 4 room. “ on ot Ful orice | Quick La - CUCKLER REALTY (8S N Sacinaw FE 4-4091 | HAYDEN | Tare OR SELL. East side. Good | 3 bedroom older home on paved | street in convenient location Bath, enciqsed porch Full basement with oil furnace. J car garage. $2,000 down or owner will con- sider trade for income. E. WALTON BLVD. $775 down. Bus- iness frontage with 4 room house. Full price $5,775. OPEN DAILY 2 to 6 P.M. $950 DOWN New 2 bedroo White Lake » Large living room | with picture window. ae | kitchen with wood cupboards, mica countertop. Bath, oll terend air furnace, auto. water heater. Choice of 4 elevations. $7,900. hd lly ol out M58 to Duck Lake Rd. ].C_ HAYDEN. Realtor 86 E. Walton Open Eves. FE 8-0441 milk” house . LOOK! good tillable- land, 1 Mr Here — The Price of this home bas Reaston for additional j= an en reduc w price o ~ ‘ . Sle.see, yet is co high quality ‘Te vag Fe To i... Insure me. rooms, large * ivi Be a — GAY LORD replace eautiful en, nrg bath wer, and is located | FE 4-9584 on 0 beaut 1 wood lot in a 136 E. Pike 8t.. Open Eves. & Sun very nice neighborhood. This Co-operative Real Estate Exchang won’ last long—call us now, TO y comfortable livine— ~~ 4 room brick ranch type ho fire: priced only os tasg fee’ an ap ent. LADD’S Are offering Be, pnee ~located in Dr tome this 3 bedroo =m hese ‘eit ‘led: bath and shower. Livin, are dining L, Very nice kite 2 car ga rage. autiful Bet am is of pa ant Bie is only $12,900 LADD'S INC. 4286 Dixie Hwy. Drayto! Piains OR ott" ‘open Suncare jonal buy INCOM E Woe side. a ane 3 room and for two smaller aes. Very posed condition, Rental Oll heat. good invest- ments, this is a teal buy. IVAN W SCHRAM FE 5-5091 or FE 5 9471 If no answer. ph FE 5-2564 Open Evenings a Sundays ttt Joslyn, Cor. REAL Co-operative Real Esiate Exchange GAYLORD Lake Front A wonderful view of the lake from a large living room. Com page tiled bath and tiled kiteb- ps . akfast on Al heat. This will seit tor ‘Sit. soo With reasonable terms. | 10 Acres room modern homes at Two large ceiling to floor picture Windows in this attractive living room with a bric fireplace. Kitchen with a convenient gnack bar. Two car garage with circular drive. e will giadiy ~ you this home at your convenience Farm Property We have @ 120 acre — _— a seven room e, iarge chicken pours LAKE FRONT 7 porch, basement. “one. ot bb water heater, » Breakwater. au scaped. down, iroom bome. Piastered R21 ‘picture Cc - NEW Unfinish 2 starter home, tie square feet, wooded r i lake privileges, $04,900, 9450 own GooD rE . __ For Sale Houses — home that's owned, OXFORD have » safe place to pla 2 bedroom home, $1,500 DOWN § room basement, automatic Bereened: front perch, st ‘SPORTSMEN’S Tops for L go Little explorers, eee Seo wil) . Modern 2 car garere, Nice yard, Imme- PONTIAC modern aenesion. Pull as furnace. “storm and ee eee Lang =. ‘a a eth to HUNTERS AND jow taxes, near sch ‘ls, tonnes schoo: andscaped. “Short of breath, eh? Well, cut down on your hay — you're | 43 | “HAPPY, Is A SOUL CONTENTED Round Lake ' Nicely finished lake front pensteting of large living e. and Nel bath. Screened SaaLTon home me | with Shasta ; Snir 300 down “mediate ‘oe John K. Irwin” 1925 _~ 1% WN. i Street . Phone FE 5-0447 Eve. FE 2-1804 * $700 DOWN Neat and clean 4 rooms bath alow. ed partial heat. 10 days posses: basement with sion. tw ‘San see tt GI Resale Attractive home old, plastered Tagg os & screens, e lot Thal, Possible to take over existing 4 tod cent GO! m age with very pend payments. Call to- |. ADAMS: east of Shown by, appointment 382 Auburn Ave. EAST SUBURBAN. About 6 miles fenced ot. wired auto. er, $8,000 total price. $2,500 down. a WEST SUBURBAN LAKE PRIVILEGES - hew seotic tank Lot $0: diate cate, Pemoceten ONLY 4 rooms, Asbestos siding. New 2 car $6,700 with terms. ae PROPERT tal units, A at “Where ice 1s given with confidence ”' 32.W. _Huron St IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Move in today choice cated on on easy Satme LAKEFRONT RANCH HOME aod warage arge lots. Only paradise wei ved tre WARD E. REALTOR . Amazing value full price. See it to- Russell Young | Bieta ville Rd i : A HOME OF YOUR OW HOSPITAL ROAD—ONE ACRET . utility, vom. in fine "Condition, Tenants a for heat & ity. Good ly rental. Only $3, 000 down. Investigate this, persona! real estate serv. NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. _FE 58109, East level jamotress yanch home Wate cue 199 feet of lake- fisherman's landscaped lawn. ike new ——— eit ledre: fire. eewood paneled. "reevention room. 1% car attached garage. PARTRIDGE FE 2.8316 43 W. Huron St. Open Eve, 7 to 9 Shee ent. ECIAI N "he 4 roomis Var ' Near 5 2 cant, i & elec- - ROSE "MeCARTY = oe i e rk . tact. ont ro Cash to mort tena evel rraneed EMBREE & GREGG 88 ONION Mike Wiuiace ~~ For Retired | Persons - The best way years of your Lg lor special winter & wummer. our place and en. and te “youreelt At. tentive er endlv -. mespere, [8 for voooreal now! OR . NEW HOMES: LLOWING NEW HOMES THE DpEN «TO 8 WEEKDAYS. 1 TO 8 BAT. & SUN. ‘The Letart’ $11,950—GI's $650 Down the tower- dows. Many trees on all lots, Gas heat & hot water, Lots of clos- ets, Solid paved driveways, owe 4 ’ ‘Lotus Lake Full Price $12,900 3 BEDROOM FULL BASEMENT Ld the year— with wy. Williams Lake Rd; drive left to sign; turn ng od at sign. and fo low the — & the mode! GLI.'s P Nothing Down Full Price$11,990 Es Lal ON WIL- LIA) & M ¥ LA ome of tie pie range’ St area. With carport, eter one Larg gitar : " earn | 1362 Windtite umioum * win. ri Munna “Atpar Rar Williams Lake Rd. _o ¥ ’ ’ The Eldorado $14,950 GI’s—$750 DOWN FHA—$2,100 DOWN IN CLA N GARDENS Bier UNITY WATER 3 bedroom face brick ranch home with ig — @as heat a as dis- alum storms - tg Extra 4 livin: ceramic tile cenit fh hone wil fruit tree Winding blacktopped roads, to schools and shop- ping. U.S. 10 to M15 to Wal- Clarkston riebt — te model, a - eg insulated § rooms & bath w oll furnact, new water heat x. Owner leaving this area, Tame: | $5,500. rage, School bus. You'll like this | Partridge 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE into comfortable 3 bedroom home located right in | . Close | so you ¢an decorate to your own | All jo- | $7,960 | Pn PLACE A“LOST AD.” | Call FE 28181] for an ad. to recover a loss. Dial FE) |28181 for an ad-writer, | 7, one Sag | i eNnecenae: ‘Loon Lk. Shores SPACIOUS LIVING See this new 3 bedroom ail brick home with extra if Select oak fleors thrquchout. x | utiful birch deere | and distinctive. hardware Plenty | of table space Large utility room — awe space, The bath- lott has 110 ft blacktop street. Lake privileges on beautiful Loon —. Pull Log A oe a0. Look for our signs w. Bona Bivad % “ni. east mV HITE BROS. ALTORS on. iter or OR 73-1789 , Mhhis or OR_ 3-2081 6 room modern home, facing lake. Newly dec. 2 car parage, sun reqm. brick nook and fireplace. 2-8405. Ne L MODERN HOME, NEWLY | decorated, 50 ft. on Baldwin Ave., | some furniture for a. Cash or | terms. 1217 Baldw | BY OenER. iy PRIVILEGES, Co-operative Real Estate E: thes, large living pine di and of] heat. fe wits low down pey yment. CLARK Etat — IN THE COUNTRY ty garage, basement | ze, Pav lot 62 x 380 feet, fer- tile, fend a Abuntuncs of fruit and berries for the family. A well brick e, 2 car garage home features 2 bed. rooms down, 1 bedroom up, Car- peted liv! room, m kite en and din . Oak . [* ed and red walls, All well decora’ full ent, forced e, Situated just east Pontiac, Good schoo! district. $15,- 950 with $5,000 down ieee’ by appointment, Files Beoiiod TEE ved street, lot *O x 140 ff cement drive. 2 car garage eg pd the wall + bet stream kitehen outstand home, Ohtly 1.000 ane and ov by ent CLARK REAL ESTATE FE 46492 1362 W. Huron Real Rotate Bachangs For Sale Houses 43) PE_2-2162 or 5-3578 nt You Like to- Stretch? : Bee owner $420 “BLOOMFIELD 1 HILLS. oe: ba 2 oe built: 140 x 170. Builder or LAkeview Gisrear ¢ . SILVER LAKE ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Attractive 2 Full basement. Nicely bedroom bungalow. 2 car garage. . Terms. NEAR FISHER BODY Res tad eneben “Oulity beat, Altractively deco- PE 41802; Eves. PE 8-0317 Ey Near Webster School } ' with Seeieee. roeting. Gas . Feom rated, Terms Ba | BENJAMIN R. BACKUS it) ‘es juren St Room 15 | oye Spertiing New est Suburban © 2 Bedroom Bungalow More living unary "tate “matic heat and x water. "Ready to oceupy and only $2.000 do Why. wait, see it wow. No Steps to Climb In. this ogee, ta suburban F or Men Only “ room and ~ . Big > Lake estates. ce pitas v RIGHT, Realtor pointment only. “BUD” NICHOLIE Reag Estate and Insurance 49 Mt. a ar | St, FP £E5-1201 _ Allen FE 2-8800 BUILD NOW In our well restricted, Waterford Hills Estates, estimates freely iv from our plans or yours, 7, wy ERBERT C. DAVIS 4025 + Rad. Pontiac Lake ar sarase, ona fing iot. $1 ‘tee with Wee Boeetal diets CARROLL G, PORRITT ood fish Wty be ~y Huroa 2-6104 outs Greseupuve | Real 2 Estate BAS GILES JV ATKINS LAKE + and beth, paved -frcet™ nda sheds and only with forme. WE CAN SELL YOUR HOME 2 GILES REALTY CO. CO. Open 9 to * BROWN $27,500 SYLVAN — Baen a: Any Built in H led. ‘nalgnbornood.” by & judes = com: landsc to Bo w Lane. $25,000 with’ $7,500 “@ Near Rochester This lovely brick taco you ve and ed 3 car garage, extra ee lot. Priced at $25,000 with . Don't miss this, he Walled Lake st section in cit Lovely 2 bedroom home, newly decorated. screens. Located on lovely land- tua 90 x 210 lot. Bee this to Bi-Level Building Site er access % canal to t Lake. cellent, well re- stricted loca: near Middlebelt and Square Lak 7 hee one e Rd. $3,000 with SYLVAN- REALTORS | 2338 Orchard Lake Ave. FE patuee Johnson FOR BETTER HOMES CRES INCL vpino* TAKEFRONT P+ Fs? Pigs of A e ake ‘ront, | $22,509 includes 2 Romer, an rented, also strawberries and tnd screace "you have niente c dreamed of Got Me Sosa 6 NEW HOMES Near com in price range $24,800 to $31,000. All are brick on large lots, fireplaces and “oe other ling fea- tures. Call for an to see these beauties GooD Priced low at $7,050 dee for immediate sale, Investigate these bargeins now and ret ready od seme fun and recreation on TTENTION FOLKS This i bedroom a few miles east | | Pontiac is beautiful. Loca ted | 4 ure nirel decorated i Fee ny ic este os new septic | this home cannot be Evenines after 6:00 call Mr. Welt | vel PE 56-7585. 3 OFFICE OPEN 9-4 A. JOHNSON, Realtor 1704 S. Telegra sae ‘ FE 53 TRIPP Outstanding Lakefront Home, | Story, Brick Contemporary to owner's home —~ large - —_. ~~ new rms to Leslie R. Tripp, ae 22: W. Lawrence Sirest or 95-2858 =irts Lee * be eae nee Rete w asphalt tile co See OE | wines ™ and part . im 1016 le Me peat furs. room. 3 bea. | : . living ne two Meepinces. oak. tion. for fre Gea, sinrered, sais, igs | fnued home op arama, 8 “Living at its best.” ‘ull 2 car garage. v fully “recs sand labs. priv $13,900 WEST = > Som ~ ogg, tee og BE wie vd room. Brick & frame total price. i fo porte. : METAMORA, — Find . ; noe com &rme., a ag 100 2 300 ft. let, 34x43 home rea. Cabinet ink. and metal with full basement, Oil AC heat, © in rooniy : ee A A. oe: ‘Sm fe us show yon thie 12 3 71 ft. ving rm. y ‘Vouse, Gall Only ¥0.280. | $1, SPECIAL. 5 | DRAYTON WOODS — Attractive ee ad & ream te. TOs modern on spacious lot baths, oak floors and plastered 2 22 ft. living walls 1 ment, OTL AC tied e. tiled furn. Lot 83 x 136. Call Mra, Hoyt Le ree rE for full particulars, jot. sutalde, aril All to condition. Shown by "bedroom ery sice and clean, | ment. $13,000. wot. vy block to°St. Benedicts. | QUALITY BUILT = . HOMES. L. H. BROWN, Realtor ||. #iMy “iced tnd ads Cooperative Neal | Real Estate Exchange Sora bearme toner’ Sylvan Lake Srila on your tot for tow ‘orice sooty pat anche ss We nome Stusos! pleas priced from. $0. EE 2, et oe Sg ag Rar gr te as * bem oy expanded - jor year ‘oneuna y 1K RANCH ea handy man Pat Pris he BR Hs : bearms.. al 3 OPEN basement. on heat See this : 4 Pa, motein EPahen. You eam Saturday and Sunday Le tas preed int eater oF 0 a.m. 8 p.m. fame Sef G26.008. Hear Ae | aii is FLOYD KENT, Realtor 4 W. Lawrence Next SLES: pe Power | ANNETE $11.959 price 7 i ‘OFFERS North End ‘ 4 rooms and full bath, base. ment, heat, tnd drver. storms tose, atop “ap gare , terms ™ Suburban Ranch ttractive 5 room ranch _ in excellent oe arpeted Uiving — + fireplace. ih scregned. Moreh with ft Forced bergias roo hot water omiend radiant heat atteched cara e. Laree well landscaped lot. $16,600, terms. Clarkston ; Large 7 room home in ex- cellent condition situated on ged landsea: lob 00% taving room 12223 with poh Soning sum parlor 19%23, 1 hedrooms, master bed room 12%23. Tull basement, FP beat, carnetine inelud- ed, 2 car race, extra oh lot available. Fis.900, tdrms. Ranch Home 3. bedroom, 2 bath home of brick. and frame 4 ae gee tendocaned —- value po A remade. Hie 4 Bedrooms—Bloomfiel Paes ga situated | on “ns Buchsage TEMPLETON PRESTON STREET West side. 4 rooms, 2 8, car garage. Nicely landsce enty of shade Close shopp < center, Si.s80 with sub- stantial down ymen MUST SE LL Large ranch type. 2 bedrooms, large living room wi picture window nice large kitchen with dinette space. Bath room ne some finishing. Extra large utility room well and garage, 2 + with some fruit. trees = thout furniture. $2.000 do SPOT for HANDYMAN “Nice neat 4 rooms and utility bungalow. House needs some fin- sae is — 5 extra lots. Only “p RICE REDUCED 2 bedroom modern. Large 26 ft. living room, plastered walls, oak finished floors, tiled bath, nice lake privileges, $950 Templeton, Realtor ° 239 Orchard Lake Rd. -PE 4-4563 After 6. Mf no ans. call 31708 FE 23-0602. on 3s Bateman Washington Park alow =, a* expansion at- wall carpeting. ic, wall to Tie recrea- hick Ali i lor “eaty 7 pizeee, ne, ee Kampsen , Realtors ‘ FE 4-0528 am 6. ive eal iste & Sun, GATEWAYS to HAPPINESS. YOUR FAMILY WILL To Bu YOU BU Tremendous HURON GARDENS room. icely desoreted. te NEAR STATE | ST. * geres of w p 4 Large fram * grounds ‘ving room 16x2* Full base oe natural ¢. adjacent | $12,500 with . family room @ 12x19, 6. large kitchen, PONTIAC LAKE > Bed front ean Mean’ ond lavatory, pe automat ee 2 car garage oo! mone age building. $27,500, terms Roy Annett Inc. ia E Cron nig cso 2" * For Sale Houses. ry aga ft oe PERFECT CONDITION can pay =. _ - Oak floors. Nicely deco- oa Gas heat and ed lot— =. wate orhee ng {site tat Us bay aie “tie ba terms HUMPHRIES Realtor FE 20474 a3 N. bimity Open pechange Drayton Plains Area Spick and Span 2 Bedroom. Large 12 « 2% Living Room, , storms and screens, 1% car carage, nice- KENNEDY i MRISZ. PE East Suburban for ot 2 ae ; a's ent « a Ardmore Street ‘ z & 3 & ‘ George R. Irwin Se erases TY no ans. Estate garage -~¥ availa! Benjamin and Stephens, Inc. es ee a NEW RANCH HOME 5 WOODED ACRES | Country living ina alore, y decorated fome has full basement, gas fired ‘ padiant heat, and 2 car garage. The acreage is. :olling, sightly and ied. Just Dixie Hwy north of Full price bacngpedl _ $5,000 down, locate: ” space and two | ae ble j E NEW hedrooms, Ba piace and space, At “rage. wee condition, clon Perea atin. BST an gue « Soe ea base: , Cal mow!!! RAY O'NEIL. Realtor of Eee, | SYLVAN VILLAGE % a choice, like-new, be 4 fausoe | BAST Ath et _ * Fidme uate, fu Oa Buy! Why not see it to ay? : - to igre eon ES with vestibul ind Fe ol — beth on fit aa ene M ent ce ghee, ‘Cormee BRICK RANCH HOMES» og ye pens che bre ted saw. GS oA PEED For Sale Resort Prop. 4 4A A tt tit NEW CABIN end at St, Helen (3 hour drive from Pontiac). In heart of deer -coun- try: 1 mile from public 4 pm, land- - $3,396. lots, from | . MAple 3, he [) Ac-, wens te Guay Lake 2 tac “— wal wooded . 62,000 for Sale Suburban Prop. 45A _— asonabl S11 Main 8t | LAKEVILLE VILLAGE briek 1 Roger B. Henry Ine. Roch hester _OL 241 1 or ou 01 a _ For Sale Lots CRA WFORD é Community National ae | +4211 Eves For Sale Lots 46) For Sale Farms_ 8 basen ACRE. rieulta BLWO0.) nad ag mer Goean SITES: og al —- SUITABLE TOR. SUBDIVI- Ws, for multiple comme commercial sate "Sylvan Realty 2383 ORCHARD LAKE RD. at re wis : Beautiful section on Poo e _ oe EALTOR 432 W. Main OL 1-441, Rech. Co-operative Rea) Batol Exchange SYLVAN VILLAGE Large lot, located just one biock from Sylvan Lake. a ced at aniy $1,100 with WATERFORD- PONTIAC ESTATES jot mn new saa” with __ MAYBEE ROAD po lope pve = mg lot eri Se OFF OSLYN LAKE LOUISE ree 4 7S x 300, located at one loots from ty tO] ake, ay ‘Site privileges $375 down and 6/0, per on balance Edw. M. Stout, Realtor it: PE 60165 . "Ti 8.306 T WN, Gaginaw m=. —_ Eves. he For Sale le Acreage 47 WEST SIDE—CLOSE I “Naa | Wooded Acege six acre sooded = sin, fine Bet: ont cate 4 Sales west CARL W. BIRD, Realtor Es REAL VALUES $260 Down~2% acre parcel. Near west side. road, lake vileges Pric at only $2500. age, don’, pass you Want ac is one up, , L. H. BROWN, Realtor FR 32-4610 Keech . Some. trees. Only “% mile north of downtown Auburn Heights. ’ ay ng liv) Hunting Land S'Lesseoms ona Pull tare. | 80 seat Ue eeated Wyat one Pg ay aT feces ES Ence ents | by hunts _ MEAGHER REAL ESTATE | |-John K. Irwin Value Seldom Equaled =“ sei OE meee FOOT, 'e w reet. veins room Fireplace. “4 ; b-O447 Eve, FE 23-1804 ing. Loy ' 2 Oarage Huge aoe of, ad tor 16 Acres—Modern Home | Li price om ge ° approxima’ 500. is ‘of hav. os eee’ Sn ese er fect of. pond front: ‘oximately & 5 room Schoot = 7 door. $3, j | — | 64 Acres—Clarkstori % j 2 Lave Lots IN ROCHESTER afea, 6 lakefront; one acre 3 tem acre pareels. Ail y priced with low down aa ™ 41540 Real Estate _ _Llncoin LAKE LOTS jue on bay srg | front lots. eooneae thoy Pr ter Bee’ eales- pag ny me de! “heme. arter | ile north of Pontiac Trail “and | Commerce to | 7 p.m. Pri. t., HANNAN LARGE LOT, ae | cay PRIVI- es, Crescent Lake a¥ OWNER: lot. cash, ake PE 2-0023. NICE BUILDING Lake Te Piireeeee. Only $500 |r OFF C00 LEY i =, privileges, oo cash RD. . 180 x LEVEL | SITE. 1 250. Near eed. bus, In Avon. Reasonable terms, FE 5-30a3. PERRY ACRES iL Out ‘un N. Perry, n Farms “WwW aterford- Drayton 100x190 ft. building sites. Highly rettricted for ranch type, homes and better living st 4 om imits. $825 with $100 down. On good roads north of Pontiac city Low as 100 x 170 ft. sites, well restricted J Located approx, 4 miles north of a elty limits. $825 th $85 down. i, x 150 ft, lot, Moderately re- A nuice location just north of Drayton i. As low as W alter tarkston- Orion Acres ere are sothe bea 4 acre parcels, Some ‘i eon & paved road. All moderately re- Priced as low $1.7) Containing 6 room and bath .2 car 7 stanchions, poultry house i4x30, and other outbutld- - by door, Low taxes, andine value at rms. Roy Annett Inc. TORS 2 EF Mayen FEderal ib ad Open Evenings and Sunday An out- $21,000, re eet ids 8 Rent Lease Bus. Prop. 49A re ciut | ear. PROEE -o006) _ TRADE ioe = edits Sak as, Petts, RIDGEWAY | Bad naMaieyees bet, Bathses Sale Pacimete Proper me Wieeated nest to ah for lease or fiving a. Living quarters. oe ee es cTCRE, 40 x ee GROCERY AND Pag A ae fers. Phooe MO SMALL SHE it #raTid ON ¥ 0 SUB. | lease, after 3 p.m. FE 3-9004 from @ a.m. to 3 p.m. ATION TO sus. porte 3 dou! “cor ners. Le school and eg with of free e Fe Se Beene ALE OR RENT 30 PONTIAC “gut pee. ane iat we. 1. sotet 8 A. JOHNSON, Realtor’ 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 CLEANING AGENCY JN, RY elty, reasonable price 1-024 _ after 7 p.m, CLASS C BAR ne cg ee of shots ancy Sotares. jets & beers, oy eo and shown only by appoint- worth it, ment, MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION 416 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. PE i802 ae ‘Is THE “BIRD” TO SEE AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY No experience needed to handle | i this very table business oe deen ’ "aes EY ara wife eaecelten or could evea ‘be | j Tun by a ‘manager, MAIN STREET GRILL Located ae mt = eee this com _ ation price $16,600 ‘on terms. HIGHWAY CLASS “Cc” One of Oakland County's a Hquer -bars ar s88.c00 " ent Bony soa @| t eve Plenty of ss. Pull eres Just besa - fey rma Ysera WARD E. .PARTRIDGE REALTOR © W. Huron St, FE 2-8316 Open Eve, 7 to 9 WILL PURCHASE . BOOKKEEPING & tax service accounts, FE 2-26002 SACRIFICE Pully a: uipped re :taurant Saginaw St. tn downtown Pontiac Ideal or even @ spaghetti house. Every. thine ready to to carefully considered, See this out standing offer at anytime. WARD E.- REALTOR 43 W. Huron. 8t., Open Eve. 7 to § BE INDEPENDENT OWN A WELL ESTABLISHED CANDY MACHINE BUSINESS Located im Royal Oak, and Pon- Mich. i |. JUST ONE LEFT “ihe acte ao site. Rat- talee Lake Full price $ +. es PA Saina rE Estate “Since ioe." CNE ACRE PARCELS. els, lots in Rochester area, CRAWFORD AGENCY 53% W Huron Fre Eves, MY 3-7085 _For ‘Sale Farms 48 17 ACRES. ONLY $9, #900. 37, ACRES 7¢ 3 5 23 41540 a. Sens, 66 W RMS AND ) ACREAGE Call Ratton cage. OR }-1111, PE 40003 Romeo Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor Ww a Street pe ora ar PE -2080 pent fle trom tine pit Modern Teme, ten, ter ft Fae <4 fO SELL. REALTOR 18 THE “BIRD” TO SROOENY STORE. BEER AND wine license. All stock going for $3,000 cash. 48 Putnam. rE TO BUY, | bid ba as and om on 10 1 Taeal for “nibdivinin, 35.000 down will large home. Russell Young REALTOR 110 Acres WILLIS ‘MC BREWER 56. N, Parke me oes igs aye PE 65181 PE 24532 | EM 9-4098 room m™) yooan fs lures nn GAS feeaton. PE S47 & nenace, G@ooD 3 bat fandiog. "held ia, BUST — daa tomwoes on U.S 10, bullding includes 1 ve m. 80" So. and d cat. Hv tia Lee oe fe ba E room? ite guar | _Cell_tor_eppoint sa tment, MA 5-6611, |. corm ¢ mary. ee ESTAU- ‘ 2 siarale’ wh windmill thet works. yet pores H. ge" Motor | This farm ig ideal for hora¢s, 1 Giese cattle or a tiane nee to hie will ease: Lense: Bundings and a oy 3 aq Let “Us show You. $300,000 Volutne New self xetve food market 2 W, Huron 4-4525 Seni Eves. "til 9 Sun, FE 40612 BARBER'S 2 et CRAIR, _lights, ete. 3 ~ CLASS € LICENSE — Good close in corner in city of Pontiac. Has been to jake = Good fixtures, Good stoc Good PROFIT, Easy to Dave Call for details. Bateman & Kampsen on | location for short orders | Any offet | PARTRIDGE. | FE 28316} eau automatic! —— | CARNIVAL pat by Dick Turners iy 10-4! T. M, Reg’, &. Pat Oit, Copr. 1965 by NEA Service, Ine ~ *‘Allow me, sir, to demonstrate ‘Jiffy,’ the world’s greatest c, ” ae shaving bargain! Sale Land Contracts 52 LAND CONTRACT ON 4 NEW 4 room house. with basem: $5400 Money to Loan 53 (State Licensed Lenders) I Rn et ID do WHEN YOU NEED to come Most loans made on your first visit me in of #1 ABOUT ANYTHING Y A Br POUND i'n es. tables, $198 up; sew book- Blond aneane 4 bdrm. fot Blond cakt ov table and spelt. toes, Elgin €-3762, be _tween 6 LJ ll p.m. iis INCE INCH RCA CONSOLE. i088. enna kit, “WALTON ” TV. Walton Cor, Josivn AR OAK were cosa Le ERRVED 5 room reuiasor, ant Sat, or Sun. a.m. “MA G-2414. we e Mile, OOM SET; ‘= i maple, $55. rE 5-1481. 4 Pigs DINING ROOM. SUITE, w . reasonable, good shape. ’ pisH- = 68. OLive ’ BOTTLE GAS te Complete with all controls & boat trailer. Will swap for bricks, building materials or plumbing. phene fer cash to on your Sute furniture ot sienature and ® reoayment plan suited to your neets Friendly courteous service nits you, Leslie Fleisher Man- er, Berkley Voss, President, Ph. FE 5-8121 Home & Auto Loan Company Ponre: 0 te 8: Saturday @ to 1 47 Community Nat’! cerca ~GET MORE AT BENEFICIAL — “Yes” — prompt tte employed men and women wide Credit and Bill Consolida- tion Service. Phone for loan tn 1 tri woet or come y NS $35, TO BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 7 Wet Lawrence ot. 2930 Pontiac 35,000 Families Recommend Buckner's . Four (4) Bucaner Conven- fent offices an veatios area, whete you can row to Ol et, needed og eh enickty oan mpany. Buckner Finance Co. Offices are located: Pontiae 20d Floor National Bide. Drayton Plains 4512 Dixie Hwy. Walled spat to Rate Utica 45462 Van Dyke _ Call after 6 p.m. FE 5-998 _ SHARP, LARGE, 2 BEDROOM strictly modern home. Excellent: ation, immediate possess Will trade substantial equity for a smailer-bome that need not be R: J. VALUET, Realtor STOVES. BOUGHT. SOLD, Ex- changes, Turner's, €02 Mt. Clem- ens, FE 2-0601. REBUILT, 2 a SQUARE 7 TOP MAY- 1 round 7 teed: Thyle Biectric, naan | UG OVAL HAND, HOOKED” HF ron |e ee a RGA, 7 Wonderful buy. id ue after 8:30, 2567 Orchard Lake Ave. SPEED PLAYER. #i4 ALSO small radios, $7 to $12. FE 5-8755. a a MATERIAL SALES CO. cL SE ‘ FE ‘ INCH PE 31319 ;| Artists’ supplies, hobby ies—check our clas- sification “Hobbies and Supplies” No. 24A, BARBER CHAI ee - oh ae 33000. 196s. . sprees SP ae Barn 22x32 gable Dole. Sears comtalng 1 eh coat “e ‘s, & eutructed. 108 ip hig, roof. ‘ie SURPLUS LUMBER & M ATERIAL. SALES CO. 2.9956 FRIGIDAIRE COLDWAI. L ” RE- aoa p REED CROW. SaTaRaF ments. Page ORION MOTOR SALES M4 at Clarkston Rd. D TU MY 2-2611 WILL, TRADE 1948, 27 FT. HOUSE trailer for land im Michigan. $1,- 200 value, MA 5-3504, Becre' ® x 12 woven rug. 345 Oakland Ave. 'E 5-0603 Co-operative Real Estate Eachange Rerinished antiques. OL 2-0009 WILL TRADE USED CARS FOR | GIBSON APT. SIZE STOVE. esmepuine cnotoreeouters jecttt ): §75, Lady's rust suede will accept these articles as down ag tg Tilden. 14. like new; 9 *pnce OAK DINING ROOM set Cost $450, will sacrifice cheap. OA 8-3692, Oxford. HOOVER VACUUM, LIKE $1495. Belts, bags, brushes, ali . =r 936 Myrtle, Huron Gar. ens BLACK % PERSIAN FUR COAT. $75. Biiver” Fox furs, double, like new, Dresses, suits and coats, Sizes 16% to 20, $5 to $10. Day- time PE 29-2106, BLA AW CA acket. Size i028, FE ST. BOY'S SIZE 10 FUR COLLA RED #. Lady's shortie, GIRL'S Lady's os Albine Lenk Soe 14, FE TT. aed SKIRTS, and 2 coats, Size 10 Bandura ¢ coat set, brown. Size 4. Kenwood coat set, red. Sire 5. All excellent condition, OR _ ast GoLD AND GREEN CRYST wn, sole to match.; a i ‘orn once. $40. Call for rv pointment. §-5248 ed HAND MADE APRONS, EXCEL FE 2-846 lent X-mas niet te ha it NATURAL MUSKRAT 10. FE 20367 after RANCH MI NK CAP et tase iberts, inch pene, Ses. Hate Fivcilent” ar and LS x, ble, EM s 5 sonable, 34364, ’ ene block North across from Bank, ‘| Realtor's FE 40528 Cooperative Ree , Boi & Sun. For Sale Clothing 5 56 IMPOR TED LAMP TABLES, COF- LA table, desk, cabinet, glider. cu. FT 2-DR, REACH-IN Kelvinator, Cheap, 2487 Oakwood __Rd., corner, of Baldwin. jR. DINING ROOM TABLE, EX- tra leaf, and pad. 4 chairs. $25. LOVELY ‘win ACK tg stered chair. Like new. $35, 4-1000. Lord’s Specials § pe. dinette set ‘ : 2 sofa- $49.05 Used TVs mm $24.95 up Hide-a-bed frotm $139.95 up gas stoves , 00 Lord's Furniture and Appliances 128 W. Huron 8t PE 40583 “where W ler's_ Used To Be LINOL: PAINT 8ALE. oy Jack's gal Sale all "rinds stoves. 277 Baldw' CADY'S DRESS ‘COAT, sZE 1a AG AUTOMATIC W capt va OE a ; ER = iw oan. QUAR- cont, size 12, $15, mr brown i. ue walnut coat, ne 1a = 54 ae we 2 chairs, bedroom coat, &.. 14 wuite with fan marble tops, peay'e en, at Me. pr. ona tee tables, book- PE 43025, wha antique dianes, other * alse. itema, 45 Ori- NEED A FINANCE: | | FIXER? Order Classified) ads to sell, rent, find al este Want Ad number! - good job. FE 2-8181 is the | 18 W. Pike St. Easy verms FE 4-1122 ; USED HOT POINT AUTOMATIC frigerator.. Good cond. MI 6-2034. washer, $09.59, Used TV. $28 95 (te ¢ New Hot Point dishwash- FOR SALE GUARANTEED | RE | | or $320.00. now $229.95 Sweet's Wringer washers ...... $39.95 up | Radia Ps 423 uy Spinner washets ....- on fog up| — Rope se Gabiand, oe S402) Used Trade-in Dept, | i082 EASY SPIN ; WASHER AUTO. | Television set... ~~ ag SPL * eer in aa Sewing cabinet ..... pees are Mt CONOMY FURNITURE CO. 3618. SAGINAW ST. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 0x12 LINO. RUGS. .$2.98 | & real buy for only | $149.95 WAGNER CO. | 1960 N. “onde. =. Pontiac Ra For Sale Miscellaneous 60 ALL HOUSEWIVES oomeesee at ose Di —. wSesent Warwhengs, tw. age ee 50.) HEARING balance. 20 t “Giscount. tsa ter okie Sas, ness enyon Kenyon | REFRIOE riment sie & Core | 5300 Rd. (Mg). OR 3-102 Con te ee, ee een eta | to Pai, DS epartmiens cine bas ors | SoT ar iT AND SAVE. awisiens accic, Bary TUR FOR SALE PANG | nds vB and Wien ap 1. LEPTLE | fuly 7 ' " GLASS | au cr.” ges 2. RAY O'NEIL, Ri Realtor pte A Sisto ROE Act t00'N. Perry, FE | 80. simple vou can. install and dorsers, Payments to sult your NITUR: INCL. service it yourself Hundreds in Phone ve rine. gaa 5-1282 bud Ww to Holly wood Gots pace dresser : use in this area Demons Co-operati wiles Peat ent. ey Lod ag ip | ‘with ‘mirror, chest of drawers. i, 1955 dail x ™ = ems | night stands, comer table. we = ag ek Bay PETRO HEAT SERV. CO. win buy =e contract on 2 S | A F eet. et draperies & bed- "| Asupeiated with Trailer Exchange . ag) ee aye soy |* PIECE W. 8, Telegraph FE ~ gi ee * ; r. PH REPRIG., GOV, |9 as Paymeats $05 per mo, at 6 per| Me inrep Mah desk. sofe and | Suile, 187 W. Ypsilanti, PE 20631, BEFORE — FINANCE CO. aah MI evenings. cala prices go up. Rem nom $4000 ings. _ wan contract. Bal- __ 2 Pontiac State- Bank Bidg. uBIC, FT NT RE- : ;| a8 Your “best inve . of oe sink on ‘Te rec ai ee Cr ey a ba J $199 85 and your re- se , commete with| for f vstima Bold Me ns rte} TEAGUE FINANCE CO. frigerator R. B.. Munro Electric utility table and + ir BOULDERS & A"PELY | +2075 202 N. MAIN Co. ist he” sions aixcren cox 0668. 08_FE 5-1433 5 {OOM GREY, $260 GER CONSO! E, Ry “PORT- CASH S FuRNITORE itinee & & ‘GREGG ROCHESTER. MICH. |") gaat “ater e p.m.” "| _sble 477.80, On +t UNIO? ikke. ‘VILLAGE LOAN $25 TO $500 Cast} “FOR SMALE RADIOS AND AUTOS FE 5-8755. Sto ide Cl LIVESTOCK = Fem. _ orewide Clearance Money to Loan 53 D re wa JALNUT DINING ROOM | grep wecteant ... nfState Licensed Lenders) | Ph, Rochester OL 60711. OL 1071 | suite, Very good cond. Reasonable S870 oaleak,' COMPLETE HOUSE OF FURNI- $05 sofa bed “e498 Garage Doors : O ANS 4 _W_ Lawrence & FE +1538 _thown Sat — $10.95, Hollywood ores. $38 TO_ CHOOSE TOPPER to 900 Mort: tgage Loans 54 | CHROME DINETTE SETS, AS- $04 apt, ns range, i only $ 30. _Berty sal set fay guaranteed LOA i semble these yourself and save.| $179 blond bedroom crat a, = ee ates on % EB. LA ‘121 LOW INTEREST four chairs and table, Knott wae rred $120.00 | , remodeling tree. "____PRIENDLY cenvite Unlimited | oo x on lamity | eis es omens yoke. Fer-| spring maport sleeper full inner-- """ BERRY DOOR SALE CO CA “CASH QUICKLY ol e fe all colors. ‘ 130.90 6 IN. METAL LA N “GET SH ICKLY See Come in’ look, compare and be | $39 oC drawer unf. ae ey Cuts 8 to 96 Legge r in, H. G. PETERSON convinced of these extraordinary | $45 chrome 4 3995 Stand & ac *. com- p to 1340 Pontiac State Bank Bid bargains. Michigan Fluorescent, ner jorcasional rockers, spring | plete. OL 1-6646. , Phone FE 5-0406 or FE &€713 383 Orehard Lake Ave $ 11.95 | CLGSING OUT 1948 to 1955 cars, B: your title. CHESTS, 18x7ix35, $15.95; 15x27x44, re nieple erieket yoapes 2 : sas | i stost —_ — —— $17 5. Room dividers, wall cab- | i“ an A. oligo ong 3 "sos + ae B's BS sav "worthunie © Vo | 30 FT. ROUSETRAILER: “WILL | Kitchen table, #10, Mayiag, vache 104 & Saginaw __PE_ 3-082) te 8; 3221 a1" qoubte sinks, gies: te 20 months to revav trade for contract, er, $15. Music cabinet, mirror, a ¥ WITH PAD. bt gg AE ae from $10.96, land, your — in a Bes or 3h ae, rece. Reege me: x 13. Like new, $75. ag 8. 1 erry. O O cash. 656 E. M ore — MACHINE “yacvun FURNACE. DUO-THERM. HEATS ) rooms, 66,000 BTU. $45 Hi USEH LD WASH RAMBLER STATION rinea DvO-THER M OIL BURNER WITH _S'y00" inlined manndhidal Herge heats 6 rooms. $95. Will , for building lot or sell. FE 42514, | blower. Excellent condition. Also GAS RANGES FOR ELEC. | _ Sel! either one, Private. EM 3-5333. FINANCE mn a new single laundry tb includ- | FRADE AS R aut AND § CHAIRS. MAHOG- SMALL HOUSETRAILER. JUST | [ng fixtures, FE. 41196. trie RB. Munro Electric, tome | GLIDER AND § CHAIRS. 1G 3% South Serinaw 8th Ray’ Bide have yor of 000 cock, 1 mle ELECTRIC 8 TOVE | 438. os mide Me SAGE HEATER FOR | _"wite complete. MI_6-2208. 2nd. Ploor___Phone *Eder norte of Deltuin end tndienwoud, die sited = Sink ‘cabinet with race suite or will sell|9 PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE, LOANS TO $ _ 1635 8. Coats Rd., Oxford. se, Laree weigu “Teesonabien | ‘e820, * modern, ‘8, OR 31078 after $20 500 1950 NASH AMBAS. SWAP FOR]! book case with 2 top ravers USED EFRIGERATOR $35 AND kup or sell. Good m —M condition. T¢-dios Munro Electric, 1060/5 TO 6 ROOM OIL BURNER, EX- HOUSEHOLD Sasaki Geet ener | Miers ret T Bn sos | ican Pe mt TRADE ee CALIBER RIFLE FOR | GsED WASHING MACHINES| G&M COM 9 ICE ELECTRIC STOVE IN GOOD CON: . FINAN CORP. OF a <> dition, new coeers. bakes good. $33 ee” s —— Elec SAWS AND LAWN MOWERS MA- PONTIAC WiLL ae 3 ROOM HOUSE | 435 453 N. Perry. ¢ Co., . Hu ATA AP ENED. 3% 8. Saginaw St, PE 40038 | ee et Maceen be ict | ELECTRIC RIMENT USED DEPT. 2235 _E. Walton and some. cash. . size, Dinette set and fone studio Pc. Guar. Elec Washer .. $49.95 | FREE STANDING TOILETS $21.95 Need $500 Wiis BREWER | Sees pa 2 FE FER To Tih ie A BR eh ie at . ang ne a eure bow la. fittings . : or Less : paneled ENTIRE HOME E FURNISHINGS A At Ss'inen Gas Range $39.95 Colored Bath sets, “th 1 EM. 3-4008 94 Mary Day Ave. Heavy Wainut Twin Beds... $ 9.95 essmni-3 $ WITH QUICK WANTED TO TRADE; 3 ROOM | p.m Heavy wood 46 Beds $9.95 Facto Beconds - Int rre Jere house, 100 x 140 fot for house and SPIN-DRYER. $40. Targe Ches ef Drar ors $22. FE 52100 SERVICE? ‘acreage OR 3-002] after 4 p.m ~~ EASY Easy SND pathy $15,008 Value = Camps, 6288.| 190 8. Segment Fe pain o NE Festa. een nctcecine enon : any other items ni AS RANGE. 40. 1955 4 PT. RUNABOUT BOAT 1 7 Then Home & Auto. ts the place | with radio. 1965 25 HP motor. PRIGIDATRE REWRIGERATOR) 7 WYMAN’S frigerator, sa, Excellent condi 3 PIECE SecROn SET. 2 GdOD | ine 10 girls’ winter coats, Hang- , ing wall shelves. MI 4-1276 1 GRAY BABY BOODLE “BUGGY. $10. 1 child's extra large sidewalk auto, can ride $5. Both very good cond, 320 Judson GIRLS ROLLER SKATES & ICE me 2, 4684 Ross Dr. skates, wn OR FOTO. Alps NEW AND used. Phone Rules. FE 2-7000._ HOT WATER joe WITH COAL heater, EM 3-2308. HAMILTON RAILROAD WATCH. 3 years old, FE 5-B014, after 5:30. HIGHCHAIR, TRAINING” CHAIR, Tricycle, # boots, tennis shoes, size 11: All good, FE 5-5670. HAYRIDE PARTIES Food furnished. FE 23-3231 HOLLINGSHEAD VARIETY 8TORE Sale Alcohol — Antifreeze} 1 mies out Maldwin Armstrone th 5 1, $3. tf coverr- ai ac: ie GINVE INDAID “TILE “ “PRICE. daints. Phone i ; RUBBER BASE PAINT GAL. $3.50| HOME DRESSED PORK AND vee 141 W. Bee FE 4 beef bacon ap¢ sausace FE R, $20; EFRIG., . F _5-TH41. Oa, atr and otner items. HOT varree ig +5 wire E WASHER, em, ERATOR, iGt-WhTER. re 30 GAL. $35; odd cha va and other items. as, new a ed for use on FE_ 54-2766. bie ~g = p>] and $119.50 see mavGAO AEE ASH. e $48. These are we eo pafaeone tion, pL fae = u meeree. ame — E ed vers at ter. Fe | _bum Ave. PE Bee — vs, Hitenigan Fluorescent : e Ave. --WAYNE GABERT’S | ~tontkk wie SALaNCEN— Floor Sample Sale TERESIFO in on $228.98 Norge auto washer 168 |e combaneet end aoe seem rr Sores dix we ites? mien bs room i i230 # Norns e 10 cu_ ft. iretrig sie sive Fi ication ree 2 elvinator a ork, fully mitomati CAMERAS & EQUIPMENT 61A i908 8 North 12 ew. a Guteamne KITCHEN CABINET SINKS, a frigerator-freeser [} beautiful 42 in, model, $95 value, MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE $50.50. Slightly marred in tran: ve pei sit. Also Fg son , — 66 a in. mode a rrific values. 121 BR. SeeEARS TO PAY Michigan 4 "Piuorescent, wy Or WALNUT DINING ROOM SET, $50. are Antique four poster bed, $25. Wal- TART nut bed and mattress, . Double 4 foot wire gates, ancy, 42” d . 892 Ann &t., Birming- Six marble colors xi% Westinghouse 9 CENTS EACH esting FLOOR SHOP 30” electric — with ‘Wide. oven. | Open 0-0 © St. LIONEL & AMERICAN ote TRAINS _ TASKER 1 a “to R 8T 1955 EVINDUDE 15 HP MOTOR bought last Aug. | than 15 hre running time. $300, Phone FE 4 ; WA : i ae i a \ “ ( | ; j é a st i - ore THE PONTIAC! PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 a s For, Sale Pets _ Came 3 x EMAL ERAGE PO ND CANARIES. SLAYBAUGH'S | * ai, th 4-000. aK FE 8-048) | PARAKEETS, BETS CANARIES, CAG trade te _atepaeee he pene AR AREY Ba Bat wee Oakland at per cent off om all bird hunt- |_2-S4y Ing coats and pants. coats PARAKEETS ties wy a teed 501_4th St. FE 24026 Closed Sun. 16 and 20 gauge heavy PEDIGREED GOLDEN RETRIEV. } $2.58 per : shells Be ee fe er w , Shores Kea- KELLY’S H RDWARE PARAKEETSP see gate, PE 3861 _| 2 voorbels ae ae , CONVER RIFLE, POODLES; BLACK STANDA é . ; red. Lincoln 40631 BURMEISTER | "sai nS |e Northern Lumber Co. __ | PETIOREE GERMAN SHEPPA S107 Cooley Lake Ra. is RRETNOTGR AUTO, LOADING Woodland Shore's Ken- noe te yifie. 1 box shells, $75. Call alter nels, PE 66452 Rae | ee Se eam sees ok See a tor, $85; 8 Mauser rifle! REG ~__ Used Buildin , porter conversion, $08. FE P2116. | rier unptes #11 E. Tennyson oft | Materials of All Kinds Av : _ Jost e 2:30 p.m, Ad it Pd eerie ee Loew Gels wenn, vipa om : Office, 4 Patierson. | after 4. OR sree on 138 pisces of oak timber {oxi by | ONE 18 GAUGE AND ONE 19 GAL FISH iw rae * 110 |" Pincomb's, 49 Perr St., Oxtord. 486 pieces of pne timber 12xj2 by ice Ave - OA 42076, Open j 1s 2 mets ot fata by UF one, TAXIDERMIST I. GREEN. 97% | j AKC | BEAGLE EEN AE. w mantling two. blocks wat trained e after mansion tron becses oh Peiay- Hunting Accommod, 65 653A} _* Pm. er and a materials | We 2 RADSITS | FOR 8AL: LE of ant Pecde Pisid: Sales. and PE 4-5867. —_Me 2 NICE CABINS ON LAKE NE TRinity 2-7571. . ome Open Sunday Lewistesise or Dogs Trained, Bparded 70 SALE | é _Pachoud wW recking Co. Cee an cian | SORRDING. BATHING AnD CLIP. — Beside Pontiac Drive- Theater” or FE $45 ao te ROARED. pods Used Building _Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66) traineg Burrsnet 1s 8. Tele Materials of All Kinds A-1 TOP sort. P. 3. WALOIE. |” Hay, drain & Feed 71 NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS PE 2-760 sane [nachos nena that Ses im ber, , le OSHED STOW SECON cUrrena. re) S Psa ~ rarer fi art avast oon Conklin, “alias = Brome mixed alfak lab ‘tw FE #1112 or PE ; oO timothy med oe yy Pachoud W oor Co. “crushes stone a tL DERE. vravel. _ Slecth Rd ince | Wino ‘Rd, 2301 Hw PE 56-9108 | _Eary Howard a Bret Pontiae ‘Drive-ta 1 Drive-In "Mester ‘Best Grade OP soll, SHRED: cuting, ‘Also straw, Will Slade. FE "LL KINDS HAY. = MA seein bepation wtntows BLACK DiRT, PEAT. age m4 §-066¢ or FE 2.5093 after 3:30 p.m. cates ii LFALFA AND oTHY cond, Tank on stove. Heats 4 to sr Y bea ~Spuace BING, ge 1 $10 ts oo Mileed Sever rained om. Also — 1822 Milo, Brookiands.| = #9 am. o ® om _oats, corn, OL 2-008, er. 8. oe aa ) CONCRETE = win por rene ETT a BLACK DIRT AND Gaited LOAD |) PUREBRED 0 owes and base. ‘seas ROUGHS, WAR- | -°¢ S04 ¢ 4 OR Artifically bred, High producers mos. “QUAKER © Te myles 40 ie. = 28 in. = a driven fan. Save Money at - BURMEISTER’S . ~LUMBER ~ __ 800,000 "AT BURMEISTER'S vn sENVICE is A . 3 YARDS TO SERVE YOU "Se ae wares SAVE wicks USED * “OIL SPACE a a Rd. FiL~ DIRT WANTED of and ci 18 Mile Rd. = a. $30.59 cash, MAfair 2 CONVERSION Unit, GUN owak SINT SALE Outside bright white at $5.95 gal. “CHURCH'S *S INC. ae a hp jet ps with 15 gal. va hp je t gl shallow and deep Sump Ea is, $90.95. bles pumps. jets and submersi- KELLY’S HARDWARE at Adams. Auburn 23-8811. PLUMBING SPECIALS a bath set. A quality with im Open dally’ 8 to 6; Sun. 10 to 2. Arnason Plumbing Supply M15 30 We deliver 1c mannan. +1217 All kinds at lowest prices, Also cabinet hardware Wholesale and retail Pontiac Piywood Co. _ 1488 Baldwin Ave. . PE 2-2543 QUAKER OIL HEATER, LIKE _new, $45, with fan. FE 26119. _ JET WATER ba ben. 05, G. A. ee a BEAMS STEEL I-BEAMS suiertis “UMBER & MATERIAL SALES CO: and Rd. (M59), OR 3-7002 5340 ad. REN oe bag gd HEATER — 701 La Due a REDWOOD jatiful eling. siding, boards, eee axee. 4’s™and 4x6's. $175 “Wrecking i| AM Minds of bidg. materials sal- and sold at bergain pee. ea. atid Many othe~ ttems. Gk WRECKING CO. INC. (Main vard) 3148. W. 8 Mi ‘a. Corner Or- chard a . Datly 8:30 to 6. Sunday 10 to 2. For job site location near you call KEn 5-9200 . SED FRAME STORM WINDOWS, ‘izom, Michigag, 2 miles west ot Walled Lake. USED FURNACES, OIL BURNERS. stoves, Wayne - oe Co. Ro chester OL 20211. USED 2 GAT. OTL E ‘BURNING HOT HOT =. neater, Good condition, §25. SPS paint al: 8 &3, a. nha ap ool “ay | and ware. & full line ot lumber "106 Oakland td _Ave, Ph, FE 6-24" VENTILATING ¥ FANS FOR KITCH- 95 value a $29.95. Also large, selection of door chimes raordinary values, Michi- an ‘Proreseene 303 Orchard Lk. WEATHER STRIPPING RUBBISH burners. bamboo and: steel leaf rakes, Parker lawn sweepers. ear- den carts,. wheel barrows. Com- plete line of fireplace fixtures, stove boards, furnace pipes and ~— Fg oa as bg shot gun a thousand up. Knotty pine panel- ing, $140 a thousand. Paint as low | BARNES H ARDW ARE “ for prices | ca a er biting rede 742 W Huron ourself 61 BUILDING G SUPPLIES enw A 5-5811 pi lg eh UR OWN 8161 Dixie Hey, Clarkston plum ing. wiring n repairing. Com ete 8 soil sewer ¢ p + Ls an ne gg . & i drain tile. m ers’ a drill. Fiexibie sh eft Supply 156 West Montcalm. FE er. Pus corte, Gas en-| 54712, Fri. Wed. 9 to 6:30. fines. Wheelbarro Close’ every Thursday. EVANS EQUIEMENT JACERONS RENTAL Guex bea’ 6501 Dixie Hw hd supp! MA Te or OR T3900 2 Ww ¥. fontcalm F Fé Me STALL. — COMPLETE ~~ “FOR ~ RENT SHOWERS with faucets and curtain, $60.50, $33.33. Lavatories fauc . value, =. 95. These are factor: seicii ged Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake Ave STOKER AND woe $15. i@ STORM WINDOWS, 24 X24, " __3-20n14 4 and 2-24xl4. FE 5-0046 floor sanders - | nd sanders— wall paper «teamers—waxers furnace vacuum cleaners Onk- land Fuel and Paint, 436 Or- chard Lake ave. FE 5-6150 gas burners, blowers, stokers, and Wasi Talbott Lumber |} °° OE, | en atemenecestciias % SAT. NIGHT AT 9 PM. 1 MILE south west of Lake at beef prices. Reuben 3. miles, Font and 2 miles north of Rochester, daily, FE 4-3263, or, FE 31066. $_vas, $7.00 delivered FE +6588. Shredded Peat Humus - Fi ‘6 fa te . ae omy cL AND _fit, Cs Call "hed 'B TOP SOIL DELIVERED OR LOADED. PON- TIAC AREA. CALL TWEEN 9 AND 4. FE 2:2065. | SAND AND GRAVEL. ASHED Fill dirt, trucking, cement & m: Lake Builders’ ‘Sue ~_ Wood, | Coal & Fuel 67 B WOOD, $ PER CORD. 2 for $11, Delivered. FE 4-4588. DRY CORD WOOD. DELIVERED. _2 cords, $11, Mixed. FE 2-7188, _ DRY SLAB WOOD $6 A CORD. _2 for $11, delivered. PE $-2006._ FIREPLACE WOOD, fecal Cut to order MY 2-3603 FIREPLACE CANNEL COAL - wood, nor aie Fuel Oil, Oak- land Fuel Pa _chard Lake Ave, FE__5-6150 HEAVY OAK SLAB 3 WOOD. ). WELL seasoned, $5.50 a cord or two for _ #10. _ OR | 34098. HEAVY DI DRY & a8 bytes ons 6 A A cord; ? for ¥ FE 5-3006 KIND. se woop PE 46493 USED LUMBER. 3890 Lake Ra, Owner on prop. Fri., Sat. Sun WOOD, “LUMBER ant axis. ODDS & ends in wood material, FE 2-8745. OVER 5,000 BEAUTIFUL ply greens, 27 varieties, $3.00 to $5.00, bd to 6 ft. tall. Groveland Farms. east at Groveland, Mathews Gigte. Half. ay — 7 on Dixie Highwa: SALE LILIES, LILIES LILIES Piant now for lovely blooms next spring and summer. Get Jan De- rest aed eat. Royal Oak Market, Oot. im LAKESIDE “NURSERY 3944 Elizab FE 43032 | Catheras, , Equipment 614. OTHER CAMERAS & & quip _— plies.” eslneation’ or senor 244. SUNBEAM FURNACE, A-1 COND. $80. FE 45420. pos and Siding mbination Doors Insulation M. A. BENSON | » OIL, waren : vee — of 20 x 24 and x %& double bung windows; inside and outside doors inside trim; girls coat and ay _ Rad. OL 29602. ae io John R. anes SINKS FROM M 85 a. - GAL. ELEc- tric water we $79.05. 30 gal. Sos Perry. $55. G, AS ‘Thompson, Jor ¢ OR «ROOM SIRCGLATING OIL heater, MA_6-3126. site PIPE 030 Tar wan | gg ast Aue woes then 18 bre. as a, et $ romne t “$300. Phone FE 49-0201 after” H om OYE oh GEER See _Lake_Ra. i. Te ~ STOPLOOKING ~ open head steel thing — Bs 4750. J evtye Da a por Sale Musical Goods 62 APT Lege ag PIANO, BALDWIN make, $325. FE 2-6587, 2505 Sylvan Shores Dr. 120 BASE — REA- sonable. FE 4-2043. USCHER TROMBONE, $35. A ARM- fgg A flute, an good condition. CONSOLE PIANO, eet ener condition, 177 Dove —_4£ Pm MAHOG ANEY SPINET MY 2-3184 BIANO. TUNING AND REPAIR ing, Osca, Schmidt, FE 2-6217, PIANO, BALDWIN e, v Harp attachment, excellent con- _fiition. OLive 2-K PIANO ‘0 TUNING, REP REPAIRS. GU. 8-3925, OA 8-3325. WANTED. 7. FLAT CORNET R 3-6362, WE ARE “MOVING LE on all Spinets, Con- soles, Grands ae a negro time dow, ment wil, deliver any panne. nce within easy terms. Come early for the vent selec- a Gallaghers, 18. E. . Huron : Sale Office Easement 63 vsED FLAT TOP Ds DESKS. ¢ ™ Sock 8; Serie A + tables. 7 to era & 4 yp a easte 34 vival sherk Gt rs, ai 6&7 p.m. or Call fin | AKC REG. i Lk. Rd ____ Open Eves. & Sun WEEPING D WILLOW TREES, $1 UP A Soe SPRUCE FOR Also ante mal orw Bas y, per, ‘our on. Bring burlap an vin 3 miles me of mmmerce age on bok el road, bea: al . Open *oreenridee Farm SHA ADE TR EES he oon sliver master, tice opi WHITE. S NURSERY FE 5-4711 718 Cass ‘ake Fd __ WALNUT | Plants, Trees, Shrubs 68. int. 438 Or | ~ | 528 N. Main 301, BLACK DIRT. DG NG ie SADDLE Pa yds. $10. Delivered Fe eee Commlete, $130. PE _ 4301 Dixie Hwy. FILL DIRT. SAND AND GRAVEL. _ 56 “Drayton Pisins _OR SAND. SLACK IRF AND Lg | GRA En? _ OR BDO ~ a , FILL Sanp. 8 SLACK On T A few Piambs a washington. 2020 8, Dort Hwv Flint HARDWAY Yorke sow AND 6 PIGS, soy, one 0 2 —- Top soll, blacw dirt. veat. 7-0814 Also « ‘ine selection and gravel, FE 5-475 io ia PUREBRED GUERNSEY Cows. of used trailers i You weer wt BLACK DIRT Artificially bred. a S etuenee js) 2] FT. RICHAR Now LOADING BOF 3 Miles a és ant S allies North sey. Vor oe an. Fully, eeuipped Ce od ee ee ee cantina | O87 HOUSETRAILER Ty € eer . Loading aware ‘ROC rk. Cheap. +6062. 7 days. resis. — Ce aca 610 M15, Or- _Dm. sid ° PT DELIVERY. YARDS ville, TRAILER. FUL- binck air or peat OW D084 ~~ For Sale Poultr a eauipped. $380 Als 2) wheel D ROAD GRAVEL AND | TOF O8 » Poultry , 74 strait $2872. stone loaded or delivered FRYERS FE 2-7052 100 acne. ~CAYING HENS a) Sale Farm Produce _75 APPLES & SWEET CIDER, MC- —, age Delicious, Spy, and others. Fine quality fruit. "Bweet cider freshly pressed. Oakland Orchards, East Rd., Burns __ and Duck Lake "Roads, Milford. APPLES, HOMESTEAD ORCHARD, $1.80 ond up of pick your own, 8 a PICK Foun Own. FE 2-1766, POTATOES. EXCE Setrent Qcal- ity. Sebagoes, 75 cents bu. up. Lockhaven Rd, 1 mile south br pg Lake’ Rd, FE 6-1413 _or FE 17-9062 POTATOES, South af Sashaba’ a Fag Ge PER BU. APPL: Es $1.25 per bu. Baldwin to Ist = mast Clartsten-Orien Rd WANTED, TO BOY: EAR, “CORN. Phone 1-9511, 8 to Sale Farm Equipment 76 - HEADQUARTERS FOR, CHAIN ‘SAWS NEW AND USED. SALES AND SERVICE See us now for'a free demon- a, OT EN HOU IG HTEN & SON Case. Fergusen the Idea b eomogud OL 1-9761 ALLIS-CHALMERS — MODEL WM tractor bulldozer. Perfect coridi- tion. Priced for quick sale. After Pas Hazelett, 5 A BU. eT aos ranger Rd. at” EW, aa M ODELS ~ $.HP. ‘HP: 3H. P. ae WE TAKE TRADE-INS CREDIT TER DEPENDABLE PARTS AND SERVI 40734 FE 41112 KING BROS. YOUR I-H DEA.uER PONTIAC RD_ AT OPDYKE BOLEN'S “TRACTORS. ME TIL- lers. Roto-hoes. Snow blowers. Bargains on lawn mowers, Will swap, WHAT HAVE YOU? ANB UIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-7878 or OR 3 JOHN DEERE 3 TON CATERPIL- lar. Excelient condition, 30 Whit- temore St. FE 2-7657. LEE THY TRACTOR wan Will give $100 worth stamps with the purchase eee eee nee ee CP Be 18” rotary uicher. mower complete with en mulc Re: rf en 7 $89, LEF’S Sales & Service FE_ 39830 “21 Mt Clemens GORN PICKERS NEW AND USED. Corn cribbing, stock tanks. Davis ____ For Sale Pets A-l, AKC REG. BEAGLES. PUPS and grown hounds. Good hunting stock. Phone 1 EM 2423 AKC BOXERS. MALE, mos. MY }3-3207 A-l BEAGLE — TRIAL _fiven, FE 401 FAWN. 15 SIPEARY —. Reasonable. ie First nk re aera on ——. S RABBITS R_ 3-232 BOXER Fer AND GROWN _ dogs. MA 424 a Forres BOXER, MALE, 2 YEARS OLD, ~ Well marked, EM 3-4664 } age 4G & CAGE, $5.69 Closed Sun, BEAUTIFUL Mie RIBBON, EM pane. Fox Terrier puppies. BOSTONS AT STUD, : OR_3-9296 CHAMPION SIRED, AKC C REGIS. tered. cocker ies, FE L mii UCKY NR. a. 69 ry. Phone 45 Ortonville. Mich. Chain Saw Distr. Sales & Service. Rentals. MY 3-5821. 1951 ford TRACTOR & TOOLS. Dole Oliver plow, dise, culti- vator, weeder, scraper and a — Mrs. Nina Pisk, ‘alled Lake, Mich, et Rd., Market 4-1156. ERAL GOOD USED FORD actors Massey-Harris demonstrator trac- cond, in excellent and diesel , bar. H | 23 | pe udimg the Ford-Pergtson, Massey and Oliver. Pontiac Farm & Industrial Co. 3%, WOODWARD Ave atria, 41442 REACH CASH CUS- TOMERS ‘through Classi- fied Ads, Call FE 28181, A. Cox, nice aeag Lassen te Mae boot _ of. Oxford. ” For Sale Housetrailers 78 78 EDROOM. Lor rt, 1953 ALMA ‘36 2 BI 6, ret Trai LA 77\ Li ° ) Cee C & G Service, corner 4 Opayee. PE 5-5151 Auto Service REPAIRS, BUMPING & PAINTING FREE FSTIMATE AKES OF CARB MENT PLA BRAID MOTOR SALES STAR ECONOMY CARS | CARS 22 AUBURN 1956 ‘PONTIAC | CHIEF ACOMPLETE CHANGE IN BEAUTY AN CONSTRUCTION NOW ON DISPLAY AT HUTCHINSON TRAILER SALES, PT. FACTORY MADE, BRAKES, “opr a tires and truck type wheel, FOR SALE: % PT. HOUSETRAIL- er & guns. 2685" Buick St OXFORD | Trailer Sales See the new 1954 General, Stew- ot Skyline, and coaches, 15 ft. to 47 ft, New low bank and Seutunen rates. Only 4% down, months pay, Ever see a trailer 12 ft. high? DEER HUNTER SPEC. 10 USED TRAILERS TO PICK FROM $195-$595 BUY SOW! See it ner-t. he ft. high Oxford Trailer Sales itichignn am soe gas, Trailer partes ‘12 ft. high, t See it eat “a ALMA 23 FT. GOOD Ideal for hunters, 6400 ‘Pra- irielawn at Williams Lake. FE 5-2600. * “48 PACKARD FOR __num_ bost. 318 N. Per is FT. ALUMINUM aon TRAIL- er fot Sa 0 N. furnished, $350. )_N. Opdyke . Trailer — : Exchange DERSON CHAMPION, GREAT LAKES, 27 “0 a7 wi HOME wR CATION AD TRAV- ILERS 14 a ALUMI- __Rent t Trailer ! Space 79 79 . Auburn Heights Trailer Park ee we | sete’ pot of Lake Orton on 3430. | MY 2-072 pein cowl wih h cee trade-in, FE | 3-9630, 921 Mt. mv. $295 Sale Motor Sco Scooters 82) ‘63 CUSHION FAOLE, GOOD CON- eee rE 2 For For Sale ao FOR PARTS AND SERVICE woe our Harley Davidson vy Davidson Sales Co., mm south Saginaw, For Sale Bicycles 84 20 IN. BOYS’ BICYCLE, FE 20451. ‘ : Rs. | Boats & Accessories 85 aLuMa AFT BOATS HULL REPAIRS VARNISHING STORAGE MAREE 1 90.8 2 Seavice BIG DISCOUNT a (m all new 1056 - Johnson otors ay a iit a TRUCE ,» PART _load- either way PE bien Wanted Used Cars 88 SCRAP ae quaap CARS. _Day_or eve “CALIFORNIA BUYER Mey 3 DIXIE HWY... y Me COMMUNITY MOTORS 803 N. Main, Rochester OPEN TILL 10 P.M, OLive 2-031) WANTED — JONKED “OR USED ears, any make a Too BAGLEY AUTO PARTS BAGLEY GT. PE 5.9219 170 THE HIGH DOLLAR grade used care. We “Drive the extre ee. 1. «00 DO “ty J. VANWELT OR 31356 Prick THE REsT - THEN GET the best from BILL SPENCE AN re sate aod MY 2202, | Floor Cars, Officials’ Cars|’ Whom, Fan erie. & aCnAE Courtesy Cars 70 WRECRED ANE AND JUNKED oe FE #143 aden and 4 if. Grupee 5 apap 150s 210s -Bel Airs ___ For r_ Sale _Trucks 90 |: é ae : Se wie ixes and Eights “LR Bae BR [mney Seo Sen reury. MY. |. CRniune Ges. eh Be donnie AS i VROLET. HALP TON ickup. 3-4303. scumarponr«7o%| LOW AS 2; % and Sun. $1,579 1982. . DODGE PICKUP, LIKE NEW “. Caan “4,70 TON Pit RICKOP +35 0 nro si TO [| Mt. Clemens. DODGE PICKUP. NEW MOTOR, $195 a, e- alter 1. $3 DODGE TON FOOT stake. Excellent cond. Fy 26 tires. Like pew ‘ LAKE ORION MOTOR SALES M24 at Clarkston Rd. - URY 2-2611 TRUCKS 1948 FORD | TON 4 SPEED Pay. tar otLan For | power, just like new, | radio & etter, w hite-| walls .. . $2895) 55 Olds Super 88 Holiday | sedan, full power, ra-| dio & heater, w'walls, | a real nice one. . $2895. *55 Plymouth Belvedere 4) door, full power, ote & heater, w'walls, all TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 50 Ford Tudor 48 Ply. 4 door "48 Chry. 4 door 47 Chev. Tudor 48 Ford Tudor A Good.Deal on ‘59 Plymouths & De Sotos Only a Few Left — | SCHUTZ Motors De Soto-Plymouth - Dealer 912 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham MI 47811 $2095 © ey Here: taal the bie cer va 9 a small car OLIVER BUICK ae Grpacé e Ave, OLDS © 1955 Demo's Final Clearance No Financial Problems . Just Your Car Down HASKINS 6751 Dixie Hwy. at M-15 MAple 5-5071 rs og A-1 condition. biltord. MU. Chevrolet FULL PRICE No Financing Problems As iow - . your car down. and to 28 Months Take Advantage Of Our Low Overhead Location SAVE AS YOU HAVE NEVER SAVED BEFORE Don’t Delay — Act Today HASKINS Chevrolet 1941 FORD 1 ‘, TON 4 SPEED $95 “ JERRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer PH. OL1-0711 “POR MORE THAN 30 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO BUY” Aute Glass Service you need it! Have you tried service? Glase instalied bocen 4 an work guarante Free . 1b. ; coffee t « customer with each door glass or windshield installed. ott ae Cote © OLASS | 4. 122 FE 47006 muffiers, tall pipe exten and accesso: oe a. B, AUTO PARTS Open E we ~ Days a Week Starters and generators $6.50 ae springs : et used oarts for rm up 9n6 Oakland Ave. CLEARANCE SALE OF ; ENGINES Poniiac Dod oe or, 8 ‘6 care Ford, fare ey Pord, ew , Olde. Beiees automotive SCHRA AUT pants troit ison. A || $4 PORD iP, EX- FE 65-3361 10 to 11 am., 4 to &| cellent condition, Best offer, EM p.m. 3-5808. MOBIL. HOME = ESTATES, : | fina 4 pepe Piente Fark 9516 ‘hiehe Trucks Are _Auto_Accessories 94 Our Business DvaL aaa ny HOL- |. ly'wood Ph. FE 44513 | 100. BUICE RIVIB WILSON GMC OAKLAND AT CASS OPEN EVENINGS FE 2-9203 FE 4-4531 For Sale Cars 91 Bg H RAwAO, . ane 4 im ust, go e Ward at 13 Mile . Oakland County’s’ Fastest Growing Dealer _ 6751 Dixie Hwy. at M-15 Onen le 5-5071 Nights ’til 9 $1285 a rates ee ete ‘u en ne beauty off. 16 perfection thi OLIVER BUICK 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 You Name the Price! And We Mean Just That 1955 Dodge Demos, to Sell Quick, up to $700 off Hurry! ‘54 Chrysler @ r ea whee meee. \« vate owner, OR 3-007), CEL | Low Ter aides, By TIE oes DAN. LIKE NEW. $000 miles, Radio. , Dyna. | White walls, 2 tone wer brakes, custom valk, pow *“FIURON MOTOR - ag ae eked 2508 Dixie Hwy. 0. W, eres “+0 nh 3 2 / cite | Got the extras ..:.. $1895 | " i yt A BUICK HARDTOP. . 21-0678. : {1955 Demos) # . Pontiac Retail Store ~ | 6 Mt. Clemens FE 37111 |—e a cane bday BLACK EX cellent battery. Piet Cottage St. or FE | CADILLAT red hd x SEDAN. rane ota Ener WAGON, $1003; reduced 2 we $1296 for tall wer * WORTH LET Woodward a Mile aT eS tot CHEVROLET 4 DI tone green radio, beater, ho | side sunvisor, Tires lke { ie tate ~*~ ‘ CHEVY DELUX DDR. 9 EN- ‘Ee rent offer, Original owner a G00B ical nee CGON- ae ani 4 coeee | hew tires, _Geod ? pody $100, MY 32748, — $195 lee Chevreiet 2 dr. A sound Hittle = lee wite for her shop- BUICK OLIVER 310 OreeE adh a Ave, 15 6BEL AIR encn? save Easy ‘Haskins Chev. | yey ie sagan Raigad teen sae Missle wire TAYLOR'S $769 1963 Chevrolet “210" 9 dr. This Gite onde and ready for OLIVER BUICK 210 Oneonta Lake Ave, , Fado, ater, turn wo tone in ‘Ivory over Ses Mist Green. , EX- . eal four Haskins Chev. mt Re Tint? TON meena ition B+] price. for ‘ te have to make foum , NORTE u OLET Whejeenic ue Cunt tessedesssddss sé , | 232 S, Saginaw FE 2-9131 | say nt a1 take it om ae For Sale Cars 1) For Sale Cars 1 For Sale Cars; 1993 BUICK (SPROUL HARDTOP, ee ee eo ; a0 s- Mg i 4 1952 BUICK HUDSON & RAMBLER as | 2 DR. “SEDAN- , 55 Chrysler St. Régis, A REAL VALUE chauffeur driven, full! $895 glide, er ‘ r. white Rg eialie color. All leather ‘erkr. L7H CHEVROLET Woodward at 13 Mi door deluxe, with cake Powerglide, opens tires glass actual Wife’ he de- wavs cet, sp every ‘$0 CHEV. D 42444 $118! 1954 Chevrolet 2 dr, one owner beauty is perfect. — in today and see how easy it cam be yours. OLIVER z iv & bieck, loaded. . x A m 1963 Buick hard- tart Mr TUCKER PE esis . 54161 : sad i : THESE gegen NOTHING BUT ~~" DRIVING Dodge V-8 eee ree eee ne eee we: eee tenwe . ar, sendvaneaee ed Eee, Cdr J ee ed ee ed Pe ee Club Coupe... Cee +ceeeebeseeeneeee« iste Bede WGP... oe cennweoer« = ais Now Te eer oa ces Fon ore eee iin) * No Finance Co.! Buy Here—Pay Here YALL C COME NATIONAL MOTOR SALES m8, sacmmaw ft : ore, Priced for quick sale. Sat Mechanic, ue 4 cera ten at A tae k ee eee - | 1956 Studebaker club coupe...61605 1983 Oldsmobile 4 door, 88... .61285 1825 1054 Ford 2 BOOT. ss ceeeees+ + SIS 1983 Chevie ° sognveenereneene® 805 1983 Buick Riviera 2 door ...81008 870 | 1954 Buick convertible , «..+« $1008 COMMUNITY MOTORS OPEN OLive ? 803 N. Main, Rochester _ ht: ll segeeaminetiats ot AG area a. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 1 MOTOR SALES 264 5S. Saginaw St PE ¢7371 157 Cea tere he Cee ee oes Ochs sasmmesoemesseeeressw@erreunsssumETsOMeiTeineseerechsoumaresoens a: TIP TOP VALUES CLEARANCE Choice Brand New 1955 Chryslers BIG SAVINGS 1966 aND tise 2 Wr... $625 ot mouth 4dr. . ey oh ost Nach Ram! Seatien Wagon a dee Sa a CLARKSTON Lgakins C Chev. ae ee heater, H __ ker, MI 10, Birm. 30 HUDSON: $125. ALi, WINTER: | ized and a for cold weather. take buses? — NORTH CHEVROLET at 13 Mile Lincoln 5-1100 Lincoln Capri | COUPES .. 1962's, 1952's, — -_ 1065's Radio, heaters.” Most all. — ° nower ween power sp stecrtig ant power w ido ¢ OLDS. ‘DOOR - DELUXE ong 2-tone rematic “MUST HAVE ROOM ‘MO Chevy deluxe, 2 ar. .. ‘4 Olds, R & H. Hydra, +. $105 “49 Pontiac. 5 he a. H sie peed “* mgd takes. "0 Buick, new gay $295 ‘bo _. Py “ar qvetdinve - oo "52 Nash, oo $08 "St Pontiac 6, S306 ‘S23 FORD PICKUP. SHARP 146 Pord ‘pickup 145 We also heve 180 other care from which to choose, Pg a Model A Ford ilec 196 4 dr. A luxurious oe ee Soa prestige of a big car. It's BUICK — 210 Cretges iat Ave. . $1095 1) PI ymouth Station Wagon, A bile. Id OLIVER BUICK 210 rd Lake Ave. aie 32-0101 automo! eal rhan home dweiler. ee ee Tm een eee maria eT an en EAP Tae NR ee Sn! Sage 2 ACTION ° FOR 30 DAYS WE WILL ACCEPT ANYTHING OF VALUE IN TRADE ON ANY OUR CARS, WHAT HAVE oF You? . PONTIAC’S ' TOP TRADER MIKE’S AUTO SALES | 70) Oakiand Ave. FE 2-9408 JEEP. i948. 4 WHEEL DRIVE | with power takeoff, $275. OR condition. OL 14487. Rochester. is: Mi a3 MERCURY 3 2 | DR 0 DOWN ment +4 Wood ward. Birmingham. BH oe equity out on NASH, 600, 3 Linco NAB! A RDTOP. r ; now 9005. as , everythin . f Ds a re i cars we have ; acces: tie- a ee CM) B° LF. 1 tetinh Y BODY FAIR, RUNS Best offer. Farmington Scean tas = __ Ivory. Radio, clock, seat covers and directional signals, $11.02 1963 prone 6 6 club genes. = wew Radio many extras. ‘as owner, $1180 per 1953 DeSoto 8 club coupe. 27,000 [ee miles. Powerflite Extra clean in ow out. fei per week, ; |1953 Dodge Coronet Pordor. v-8 Radio, renee trans. $11.31 wee per .- | 1953 Dodge Suburban. Heater, di- rectional signals and WS wash- ers. One owner. $1082 per week 1953 Plymouth club sedan Low mileage, Radio and heater. owner. $0.34 per week 1953 Plymouth Cambridge Fordor | Gas saving overdrive, heater and | 1954 CHEVROLET FORDOR, MO del 210. 11,000 miles. Blue many extras, One owner, $9.34 week. per 1953 Willys 6 Fordor. Radio, heat- er, directional signals. .Overdirve | WS washers. Up to 30 miles per | gallon. $6.76 per week. | 1952 DeSoto V-8 porter. ee | wa green. Radio, clock. W ers. WSW tires. 1 owner, $13.11) 1952 Dodge Tudor, See and Drive. this one.'A bargain at ust $8 20 | per week. 1951 DeSote Custom fordor ai dio, heater, seat covers ood | tires. Runs very good. $1167" per | week. test hp wig Cambridge Fordor | ._.. | 1951 Plymouth club coupe Mens | extras. Clean and runs fine | tires. Reasonable. oe per week. 1951 Plymouth Tudor Black This | is the economy model Heater, | Fine for a “second” car. $7.03)" ' 951 Plymouth Cranbrook Pordor. | 2 to choose from. Radio, heater | directional signals and etc. $10.97 . Good condition, Ben tie ta to per: week. (1951 Chevrolet Tudor. Seat covers directional signals, heater and, fender skirts. $11.67 per week. BRAID MOTOR SALES DeBoto-Pliymouth Dealer Cass at W. Pike St. FE 2-0186 66 8 Perry St. . FE 2-5106 For Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars | SON ee YOU NAME iT : Ww EK GOT IT THE “== | MOSTEST |Bob Frost, Inc.| BESTEST Ware SF LEASTest = sous fatter gx| CENTRAL | * Safe Buys |. 55 Mercury Montclair Coupe, radio & heater. | W.W., Merco . . .$2295 | _ tes 35 Ford 2 door, radio & heater .......$1545 55 Lincoln Capri Coupe, | radio & heater, all the power and equipment $3295 ee "34 Lincoln Capri coupe, radio & heater, full POWET wocseeeee $1995 54 Chevrolet 210 4 door, radio & heater,.. .$945 '54 Ford 2 door sedan, radio & heater... .$795 ’54 Mercurys, 4 to choose _ from, starting at $1345 » | '54 Mercury Monterey 4 door, radio & heater, Merc: Matic sees . $1395 53 Mercury Hardtop Monterey, radio and heater, Merc-Matic .. neds hoes waar #95) ite POMTEA 53 Chevrolet 2 door Bel Air, radio & heater, whitewalls ......$895) 53 Pontiac 4 door, radio and heater ...... $895 -- .{'s2 Mercury, 4 to choose from, starting at. .$645 ‘52 Ford, radio and heater, lord-O-Matic ....$645 51 Ford 2 door, radio and heater, Ford -O- Matic os aed eaias dees . $495 "31 Mercurys, 3 to choose - from, starting at. $445 e Lineoln 2 door, radio and heater, Hydra $345 -CHEAPIES 50 Mercury, R&H...$395 50 Hudson, R&H....$145) ’50 Buick 2 dr., 49 Ford 2 dr., R&H. .$145 | ALL CARS WINTERIZED CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY 'CASS AT W. PIKE ST. | FE 4-3885 . Lincotn ‘and ° asoume Woodward. Birm: ™. | 1677 c (LIDAY. sag egres, Low) S§ CYLINDER 2-DOOR $33.85 costing. All convenience and ¢ Yellow Fer Sale Cars ‘oh foes wee ta We've’ making ‘ONLY "ee STAR 4 DR, § N mews, 464 3. | 2: PONTIAC . White tires, under- and Sinek s $2, 13 HEA condition. All it needs is a set of $375; HYDRA. RPECT | hydramatic. Cape baa * | JEROME | 1955 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN CATA- al Syecanene. radio, heater, white wall tires, FE 29-3578 $10 ra and assum 'bL PONTIAC. 4 DOOR SEDAN | 464 8. Woodward. Bit ovner. $600. Call EM 3053 | 59, AC dramatic. Fu ipped Per. | mo CONDITION. | _fect shape. Price $0". OA 8-3910. | Mghew offer takes. PONTIAC 1965 SAFARI STATION 7 ¥ONTIOE < GONVERTIBLE Coupe PONTIAC CHIEPTAIN HY. | Hn shape Price ease" "Oh e000. Low’ _ PE 17-0588. After 5:30 p.m. ment pirments. DOWN Pt LARRY NORTH Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoin Rochester | Ford Dealer $2080." . je + i nes “FOR MORE Bian the zane A _TO BUY ‘SL PONTIAC CATALINA. _ oe “GOOD throughout. | i983 pean pat gaw 6 a? DR. dition. $75, FE isi PONTIAC COUPE, $885 rege 1053 Pontiac Deluxe 6 Chieftain | ia pawris 2 dr. A clean beauty thet has 38 PONTIAC : SEDAN: WAS 005: many miles left. OLIVER ae BUICK aaron. th 210 Grapgrd } Lake Ave. 1953 PONTIAC CUSTO 8 Woodward, Birm isss PONTIAC, 4 DOOR custom teal blue and Starchiet “as tak Rata Cue. _ OR : eins. Bas. "| ta PONTIAC CATALINA, ; 3-3080. what @ gorgeous « FONTIAC tare ao BOOR Sx. must come and iv a w. NORTH CHETPOL eT Working or BE Ks Woodward at 13 Sus a Reasonale, Org. eve ‘s a +10) After 5 p.m. - “PONT FDR” Ml PE 3000. | 5 pontiac «DR. tiled; JET - Dear Bay $1565 1954 wentas Sarchelt_ sedan with Cleon. F' | ee cod | Hvdrematic | 57 STUDEBAKER: V8 COMMAND. | nee. $275; $1 down ont ; ond month. Why wait for buses; | _- ‘can't Tene values Like this OLIVER | "sy DOMTIAC a utiful car. |° | Call after 6 p Radio. ‘3s dan deluxe, like PONTIAC ca > RUNNI miles, A-l condition. | PE. 4-4316. Pontiae ’51 deluxe 4 door | sedan. Completely. os voy Good condition. NORTH CHE ve's st". complete- with all accessories. Call FE 2-6168. CHEVRO! Woodward r fie Mile ___Lilneoin 5- _ Power steering. Hydra. Wh. rE CHEVR Woodward at 13 Mile Lincoln 5-1100 KER 955. WILL TARE. older ca im trade & take oxer | Rochester, OL 6-0951. ae a Piao ee 210 Ore eae Sake: Ave. debaker, aie Gatto. | "62 WILL YS 2? DR. HEAR THIS: was $505, now for fall Seas ealy $395: no 2 eens LET Woodward at 3 Mile ‘Lincoln 54-1100 ; WILLYS, + WHEEL DRIVE JEEP. | new ba re aher' 4p snow plow. | _MA ™m “1055 F FORD © C-8 2 Dr.. Fully Equipped Including Taxes and License With Only T: "46% Monthly datsr'Bonn —OR— $51” Monthly esas 1955 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE, full power, 3,000 miles, like new......+ $4199 A-] Buys Cheapies 52 Buick Riviera ..$599 50 Ford 2 dr.... .»$199 '54 Ford 2 dr......$999 49 Plymouth 2 dr. $144 49 Chev. 2 dr...... $144 50 Plymouth 4 dr. $199 |; ’53 Dodge 2 dr... .,$744 55 Ford 8 Passenger | Sta. Wegn.... $1944 '50 Chev. 2 dr...... $199 | 51 Chev. 2 dr......$299 49 Ford 2 dr...... $144 | 52 Ford Victoria ..$799 *50 Pontiac Sedan $199 ]) 53 Plymouth 2 dr. $699” - °51 Nash 2 dr....-. $199 55 Ford C-8 2 dr. $1299 53 Mercury 4 dr., .$899 '52 Ford 2 dr....,.ss44 Convertibles | 52 Mere. Hardtop $799 '55 Ford Conv... .$1944 "54 Chev. 2 dr...... $999 _'54 Ford Conv... .$1299 |, 'S4 Ford Victoria $1299 °53 Buick Conv. ...$999 }) 51 Plymouth 2dr. $299 48 Ford Conv. .... $74 '52 Ford Conv.....$699 53 Ford 2 dr...... $699 °30 Ford Conv.,...$299 "53 Chev. Conv..... $899 || 52 Kaiser. 4 dr.....$344 54 Ford 8 Passenger Wen, .....0e- $1399. °51 Ford Conv.....$444 52 Chev, 2 dr......$544 . 53 Ford R. Wegn.. .$799 54 Plymauth 2 dr. $044 Trucks 54 Chev. S. Wgn. $1099 54 Che® 34 ton *51 Ford 2 dr...... $299 pickup 6.8 ate os '52 Pont. Hardtop $699 — "54 Ford.4 ton ’52 Plymouth 2 dr. $499 . pickup ek ne in $744 '51 Merc. Cl. Cpe...$299 54 Chev. 34 ton 53 Chev. 2 dr...... $699. pickup senses $99 52 Pont. Dix. 4 dr. $699 “54 Chev. Cab and 53 Olds 88 2 dr.. .$1099 Chassis ....... '52 Mercury 2 dr...$699 "48 Ford 1% ton ’54 Olds 98 H’day $2199 pickup ........ $144, 53 Buick Riviera $1099 = "53 Ford 4 ton, "52 Olds 88 2 dr... $899 12’ stake ...... $799 — ATTENTION PLEASE — DAY WORKERS Let us get vovr car reedy for Winter driving NOW! During. eur EVENING HOURS TILL 9 P.M. SERVICE SPECIAL — '§ Pree lubrication with any of] and filter change. a mad tune up. or permanent Anti-Freese change. From 6 PM to .Harold Turner, Ford ‘ 2 BIG LOTS MlIdwest 4-7500 JOrdan 46266 Liberty 9-400] Immediate “Spot” Delivery 4 ow, Low Bank Rates — No Dewn Payment BUSINESS MEN Liberty 9-4000 | BARGAINS THAT ARE. - - READY “FOR YOU — FOR. WINTER 1952 NASH Statesman Super ¢ dr. Radio, oven Oe BG beautiful forest finish, make this ides! for any family. 1953 ( C HEVROLET 1951 NASH Rambler Convertible with radio, heater. You could pay for this ‘| car with the money you'll save on gas alone. $425 1953 CHEVROLET Deluxe 2dr. 2 tone paint. Beige over Saddle brown. Just as neat and clean as &@ pin. $895 1953. PONTIAC 8 passenger Station Wagon. Power steering, radio, heater, and a light ‘green finish. $1195 1953 PONTIAC Y Convertible 8 Hydramatic with radio, heater and white walls. Light blue with a black top. Neat as a pin. $1095 TRUCKS 1954 CHEVROLET % Ton pickup. Grain sea) box, heater and direction signals. Dark blue. Ready for the road. 1950 FORD * rier merge evict sal rubber. Here i truck for the | Bee it toda $225 1951 CHEVROLET Van. If you operate door to — service, you will this val te ven Seeal ‘y tim my high loading capacity. Pine truck. $375 Sargent Y our Local United Fund MATTHEWS HARGREAVES Where Your Customer Sends His Friends 1211 S. Saginaw St. 1955 CHEVROLET blue and is equipped an eq direction 1951 PACKARD Clipper 2 dr. beauty with the massive spark- radio, chrome gril) has heater and Uhre Matic. 1953 PLYMOUTH Cranbrook with radio and ter. Beige and Brown fin- ish. h rubber - age make this ie sae ey: 5 1951 CHEVROLET beauty ts: aes. er can be 1952 G.M.C. Tractor with S&h wheel and saddle tanks. This is the work- horse of the road end tt is Teady to prove it. low mileage car is —_ ir. This light grey $565 $985 FE 4-4546 R&H $250 | “ PACKARD « a, ULTRA. 3-607. PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON. “40. | See at 1140 Webster, Birming. | Mu $3380 acm, | BIRMINGHAM CLEAN CA Mercury ‘51 4 door $ Ford a 2 door $ ae "83 2 door $ ercury ‘$2 Hard top coupe $ Reser, 53 4 door $ a's Capn 2 door. $4 in oor "d4 Cony: .§ ee ‘86 Hard 8 , Ww wasn an, 8332353 7 = & 1495 1995 | LATE 190 PLYMOUTH DELUXE radio and heater, new paint. __ eS Going, OLIVER: BUICK — HAS. 60 _ FINE USED CARS! SAVE Sb GET OUR - DEAL BEFORE YOU TRADE! OLIVER _ BUICK OPEN TILL 9 PM. 1952 CHEVROLET DRIVE IT 1931. PACKARD FULLY EQUIPPED $550 1952 PONTIAC "E OWNER * $605 1952 BUICK MAKE A ~ CHANGE FOR THE BETTER 1 Buy a GOODWILL Used Car 2. SEDAN 2 DR. SEDAN A REAL FINE BUY $595 , ’ SEDAN 4 DR. SEDAN _ VALUE NICE 2nd CAR $8995 oe $85 You Cannot Buy Better Or Pad Less Than at tne PONTIAC RETAIL STORE "Goodwill Used Cars” 65 MT, CLEMENS ST. Behind the Post Office 1954 PONTIAC 2. SEDAN 4 DR. SEDAN THIS IS ONE /BUY IT FOR THE 5 $1,305 $395 1951 PONTIAC 1950 PONTIAC 2. SEDAN 2 DR. SEDAN FACTORY EXE. CAR e208 $395 1951 PONTIAC Cy Owens" Your Friendly” Used Car Dealer! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT | We Have a Wonderful Ass'mt | of ‘55 FORDS Discounts. Up to $1,000.00 VICTORIAS CUSTOM 2 DOORS AND 4 DOORS Wholesale Prices On Older Models 1953 Pontiac 4 dr. Sedan ......... 0.00 eae $795 1954 Buick Hardtop .......... 0. cece eee $1595 1952 Nash 2 door .......... chi wa os aca ws $550 |) 1952 Plymouth 2 door ........... 0c eee ae $495 1952 Ford 2 door ...........cccc cece ceeees 365 | 1955 Olds Convertible ......... eee $2695 1953 Mercury Monterey 4 dro ............. $995 1952 Buick 4 door ....... Die cusveeeeceees $695 |. 1931 Ford 2 door ....... ccc cece cee cee eee $375 1953 Hudson 4 door ..........00000 cece eee $695 | 1950 English Ford (Perfect) ............04. $195 1950 Lincoln 4 door ........c.eee cece vane $195 | 1949 Chevrolet 4 door .......0....0055. oe S135 7 1949 Ford 2 door 2.0.0.0... cece eee eee eee $120 1951 Nash 2 door wo... ccc cece cece eee ee S275 1950 Ford 2 door ............006. Fe ia: esie: Sur! Bie $195 Over 75 More Real Bargains Priced to Sell Fast TERMS — WE TRADE "Cy Owens’ Your FORD Dealer! _ 147 S. SAGINAW ST. FE 5-410] ‘. Open 8.A.M. to 9 P.M. i PE 5-3588 |. in | HI Bright Spot BARGAINS 1954 Oldsmobile Super 8&8 2 Door, Two Tone Blue, Radio & Heater, ge saeesay $1195 Hydra., W. Walls. 1954 Chevrolet Delray Club Coupe, Black & White, Radio & errr $1395 Heater. 1954 Pontiac .. Two Tone Green, 2 Door, Radio & Heater, Hydra., W. Walls. 1954 Pontiac 4 Door Chief., Deluxe, W hite, Hydra., P. Steering. 1954 Ford ....... , Mainline Eight’Club Coupe. Radio & Heater, Ford- O- Matic. 1953 Pontiac .... 4 Door Chief. Deluxe, Radio & Heater, Hydra. 1953 Ford ....... Custom 8 Conv., Radio & Heater, Ford-O-Matic. 1953 Nash ....... °4 Door Custom Statesman, Radio & Heater, Over- 4 drive. i 1953 Kaiser ..... 4 Door Custom, Radio & Heater, Overdrive. 1953 Plymouth. 4 Door Cranbrook, Radio & Heater, One Owner, 1952 Pontiac ..... 4 Door, 8 Cylinder, Radio & Heater. 1952 Studebaker Commander “4 Door, Radio & Heater, Overdrive. $95.00 No Money Down ’50 Pontiac "50 Buick *50 Hudson ’50 Lincotn "49 Lincoln Cpe. "49 Buick Super 47 Chev. Aero ‘52 Ply. 4 Door 51 Ford 82 Door "51 Stude. Champ. 51 Nash Sedan ’51 Stude. Comm. ’50 Olds 98 ’47 Chev. Cl. Cpe. Bright Spot" | Jerome Olds- ie Cass at Orchard Lake | FE 8.0488 rer $1695 Radio & Heater, Cadillac $495 FE 8.0488 —"s EUR TARE Ri TONNE RN RA Se I / ie i SY THE PON NTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 195 Big Battle of the Comedians Rages ‘Across. FOOTBALL on WPON Notre Dame vs. Purdue Tomorrow 2:00 P. M. . as ) fi one Saal “Scoreboard” (Following Game) 1460 On Your Radio Dial A GERITY BROADCASTING - ' COMPPANY STATION -- Today’ s. Radio Programs - -- Wim, (700) = CRLW, (00) WWJ, (958) WCAR, (1130) WXYZ, (1270) «=: WJBK,; (1490) = WON, (1460) TONIGHT WrON. News, Zee Orville WAYS, ews, Slagle WXYZ, MeKensie ¢:00- WIR, Joueph Mainline Sma tien tes | GH Geek Benes Menus | Scone * waen, y Lewis : exw ae Shea AR, TBA. wean. arte | Roundup cxuw. & Rews * Mickey Shorr 1eelWIR dim. Vine! oe wet ee ero Pe and oe! aan ee Oem team ow Nene: aeDrake 6:30—WJR, pe Reynolds WW. Radio Pan chub. CKLW. Good Mornin Ww: Winter ww, Mu Edw. P. Morgan WJBK, News, Gentile Binge | CKLW, News, Birthday WXYZ, Bill Stern CKLW, News, J. VanKuren| WCAR, News WJBK, New CKLW, Eddie Chase WJBK, News, Mickey Shorr WPON. News, Rise, Shine WCAR, News WJBK, Don eas N. te Ly rig Porm Porum WPON, Polish Hour, News WPON, hme nnessee Ern' . Mon ry 1:00—W, E Ww. News by Lewis News, Woif a ge ey tn a WWJ, ‘Three Star Extra WJZ, the Town CKLW. jorning WXYZ, Slagle WXYZ, Stars at 7 CKLW, Rollin With LeRoy| WJBK, News, ge Gentile) Cxiw' Mary Morgan CKLW, Pulton Lewis Jr. WJBK, Mickey _WCAR, Coffee with Clem WJBK' McLeod See, eee tes Ea | ee Se ans ome p News, Rise. Shine WCAR,.Musie in the Alr | . News Record 11.60—WwIR, ph $;00--WJIR, Jack White WPON. Polish Hour 7:30—-WIR, Guest House ww. yer WWJ. Monitor WWJ, Morgan Beatty WXYZ. 5 Town WXYZ, News, Wolf 11 0o we JR, Robert Q Lewis WYZ, —- CKLW. News, Sports ou. Goed Morning Weekend Music CKLW, Heatter WJBK, News, Mickey Shorr TOK. News, Binge Gentile | wxv?, “Slagle WJBK, Micheg er WPON. News and Sports WCAR, News - | CKLW, News, Bud Davis WPON, Reco WIR. Midnight Music WPON. News WJBK, News, Don McLeod 8:00-—WJR, Bing Crosby =| '! WH Mag : 8:30-—-WJR, Music Hall WCAR, News Ace we = WXYZ, Tee of Town WWJ. Storyland : B’Ham Party bh nA a SA ten wan’ Lees WXYZ, News Aco 110-WIR, Robert @. Lewis WPON, News. Record Room wien Seas ee oan Reve. wits e e Gente WXYZ, Bd i MeKenate . Cab, Shep Foncinet SATURDAY MORNING Rise ‘n’ Cae’ oe wae y 6:00—W IR, Jim Vinall Preece Jim Vinal WCAR, Pauste in the Air a oe menroee | wed. Bows WW3. Minute’ Parade WPON, B,Ham Party P . MeKenz 06 White whet ee, CKLW. Good Morn CKLW, News, Coast Tg ee 9:00-—-WIR. News Carson WRK, fee bot al Gentile Binge at Gewe. Den McLeod WXYZ, News, Winter Dewing "ave WCAR Ace CKLW, Johnny Desmon ¥2, San WPON, fon Music WPON, Unreinien Hr., News WJBK, News, Don M wave 6:30—WIR, Voice of Agricit.| 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Paige WCAR, News WJBK: News, band Rey Shorr WWJ, Hummin’ Along WWJ, Minute Parade WPON, News -- Today's Television Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed tn this column are subject to change without notice. MEN. WANTED Vo, Teste for AS Phases of America’s Greatest NEW INDUSTRY” TELEVISION-RADIO ambitioes ATEST Orrortt UNITY sand fold! Be Our Guest at the MICHIGAN MINNESOTA Little Brown Jug Game Sat. 2:15 Scores Alter the Game W-CAR 113 on Your Dial Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WW4J-TV Channel 7—-WXYZ-TV Channel 9—-CKLW-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS |¢:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Puppet comedy. (9) Circle 9 Theater. Gene Autry in ‘“Sage- brush Troubador.” (4) Sonny Eliot. Variety. Quiz. 6:15—(7) My Story. “He's Gone "ie. * (4) News. Paul Wil- liams. (2) News, Jac LeGoff. 6:25—(4) Weekend Weather. (2) TV. Weatherman. Dr. Everett Phelps 6:30—(7) Rin Tin Tin, Rusty and dent.” (4) Eddie Fisher Show. Music. .(2) First Nighter. Drama TBA. :45—(4) Jack Bailey host on stunt quiz. (2) Mama. Katrin’s ——— All Makes! WEEKDAYS 9 to 6 FRIDAYS 9 to 9 See the Beautiful Sylvania TV CONDON'S RADIO & TV _ SALES & SERVICE 127 S. Parke, Corner Auburn Coll FE 4-9736 and Colorado It’s Fall Planting Time at ROMEO GARDENS Our Big Autumn Sale Continues thru October 20 % Discount on all EVERGREENS including Yews Specimen fresh dug Northern grown, Trees All Varieties Included INSPECT THESE FINE TREES—SAVE MONEY Blue Spruce FREE more in Evergreens. With this ad and the purchase of $10.00 or 10 hag Size Imported Tulip Bulbs GIFT ROMEO Phone PL Just Asrived--Steth Imported Dutch Bulbs Tulips—Hyecinths—Crocus and Many Other SPRING FLOWERING BULBS Open Daily Including Senday—9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Romeo Gardens on Van Dyke (M-53) 2-3838 MICH. HIGH FIDELITY HEADQUARTERS Wide Selection of Components Catalogue “Net” Prices Attractive Demonstration Room Expert Guidance—Complete Installation McCALLUM & DEAN | 409 £. MAPLE, BIRMINGHAM MI 4-5230 | News Caravan. . John | | 8:00—(7) best friend comes home to be married but her fiance shows in- terest in Katrin in “The Right Man.” Peggy Wood, Rosemary Rice star. :30—(7) Crossroads. Luther Ad- demned killer in “Unholy Trio.” (9) Million Dollar Movie. Der- mot Walsh, Kathleen Bryan in “The Night of the Full Moon.” (4) Life of Riley. Riley builds a “do-it-yourself"’ fishing boat and causes havoc at home. Wil- liam Bendix as Riley. (2) Our Miss Brooks. Connie must leave old friends to move nearer to her new job at Miss Nestor’s. Dollar a Second. Jan Murray -host on quiz. (4) Big Story. How Ft. Worth reporter persuaded teen-age robbery sus- pect to surrender to police. (2) The Crusader. Roving writer Brian Keith uncovers interna- tional boxing fix. 8:30—(7) The Vise. English woman finds tragedy and despair in Paris in “Cross Channel,” (4) Star Stage. Gary Merrill plays musician whose wife inspires him to make a comeback in “Trumpet Man.” (2) Playhouse of Stars. Country school teacher resents addition of man teacher who is to bring culture to the schoolroom in “The Girl Who | 11:30—(4) ——= | 8: 45—(4) Seared Men Off.” with Phyllis | Avery, Hans Conreid. :00—(7) Ethel and Albert. edy with Peg Lynch, Bunce. (9) Ralph Ballamy in mystery. (4) Cavalcade of Sports. Welter- weight Boxing Bout: Gil Turner vs. Isaac Logart. (2) The Line- up. Elderly playboy, close- mouthed lawyers and terrified wife hamper search for de- mented husband. 9:30—(7) Jumbo. Theater. Jane Greer in “Look for Tomorrow.” (9) Canada Savings Bonds. Lil- lian Hellman's ‘‘Montserrat,” drama of young Spanish soldier forced to make choice between lives of people and his own con- science. (2) “I Led Three Lives.” 9:45—(4) Red Barber’s Corner. Sports talk. Jockey Ted Atkin- (Com- Alan son, guest. 10:00—(7) Colonel March of Scot- land Yard. Boris Karloff in “Passage at Arms.” (4) The Great Gildersleeve. Gildy goes after some publicity and makes quite a splash in “Gildy Goes Driving."’ (2) Insp. Mark Saber. Tom Conway in “Artful Mur- | der.”’ 10:30—(7) Sherlock Holmes. -Ron- - ald Howard in ‘Case of the Singing Violin." Assignment. Brian Donlevy in “The Submarine,” Mitchell hunts gun-running ring off China coast. (4) M Football. Comments and predictions. (2) Conrad Nagel Theater. Drama TBA. 11:00—(7) Soupy’s on. Variety. (9) pS (4) News. Paul | Jac LeGoff. | | Film Theater, William | | ta National News. Wiliams. (2) News. 11:15—(7) Tracy in Casey Clark's Jamboree. try-style variety. Jorga Courtright, stone in ‘Vicious Circle.”” (2) Miss Fair Weather. Pat Rous- seau. 11:20—(2) Les Paul and Mary Ford. Music. . | 11:25—(2) Nightwatch Theater. “Jim the Pen Man.” Tonight. Steve Alien. Abe Burrows, Jeri Southern host. SATURDAY MORNING 8:00—(4) News. Garden Show, “As You Were.” (9) | 8:25—(2) Meditations. | | 9:00—(4) | 9:15—(2) |8:456—(4) City Affairs. 8:30—(4) Industry on Parade. (2) M.S.U. (2) Mich- igan Conservation. Pinky Lee Show. Wayne VU. Mich. Conservation. Mahoney, (2) (2) 19: 2—(4) Winchell, TBA. | 9:45—(2) Sausage Sinema. 10:00—(4) Fury. (2) Captain Mid- Ward's TV Service TV, Radio, Car Radio FE 2-2976 46 N. Hilldale ; : i ler plays rabbi who reforms con- [ Follow That Man. | f © (9) Dangerous | ~ Steve| Coun- | - (4) Little Show. || Eddie Fire-| — > night. 10:30—(4) Andy's Gang. (2) Texas Ranger. 10:45—(7) Comedies. 11:00—(7) Ramar of Jungle. (@) Big Top Circus. (4) Rough Riders. 11;30—(7) Captain Fiint. SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(7) Buffalo Bill Jr. (4) Bob | Maxwell. (2) Lone Ranger. 12:30—(2) Uncle Johnny Coons. (7) Ed McKenzie. 12:55—(9) Prayer, Sign On. 1:00—(4) Salad Mixer. (2) Satur- day. Showtime. (9) Liberty Tem- ple. 1:10—(2) Pre Football Show. (4) Triple Theater. 1:30—(2) NCAA Football. (9) TBA. (9) Sports Reel. 1:50—(9) Big 4 Football. 2:15—(2) Pre Football Show. 2:30—(7) Broadway Star Theater. (2) NCAA Football. 3:00—(2) Western Showtime. (7) Jumbo Theater. 3:30—(7) Royal Playhouse. 3:55—(2) Scoreboard. 4:00—(9) Wild Bill Hickok. (2) Milky’s Circus. 4:30—(7) Super Circus. 4:45—(9) Sports Film. 4:55—(2) Scoreboard. 5:00—(9) Wild Bill Hickok. : (7) Frontier Justice. (4) TBA.- (2) Milky's Movie Party. &:30—(9) Million Dollar Movie. (7) Cowboy G-Men. (4) Showcase of Stars. , ‘Weekend Sports on TV, Radio Tonight Football—University of Detroit vs. Oklahoma A&M, 8:15 p.m., WJBK-Radio, Boxing—Cavalcade of Sports, Welterweight Bout: Gil Turner vs. Isaac Logart, 9 p.m., WWJ- TV, Channel 4, Saturday Football—Michigan vs Minne- sola, 2:15. p.m., WCAR and WWJ-Radio, and 2:25 p.m. WXYZ-Radio, Football—Michigan State vs. Illinois, 1:45 p.m., CKLW-Radio, and 1:55 p.m., WJR-Radio NCAA Football—Michigan vs Minnesota, 2:30 p.m., WJBK- TV, Channel 2. Football—Notre Dame vs. Pur- due, 2:15 p.m., WPON-Radio, Football—Canadian Profession- al Longue, Hamilton vs. Mon- treal, 2 p.m., CKLW-TV, Chan- nel 9. Horse Racing — Interborough Handicap from Jamica, 3:15 p.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel 7. Bowling Champions — Carter and Lindeman vs. Hett und Gnu- _~ 5 p.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel Hockey—Detrgit Red Wings vs. Boston Bruins, 10 p.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel 7. . Sunday Football — Detroit Lions vs. Los Angeles Rams, 5 p.m., WJR- Radio. Football—Detroit Lions vs. Los Angeles Rams, 5 p.m., WJBK- TV, Channel 2. Anewer te Previews Pussie OOOLILICI (JL tia ATVI IAD TIS) Sie ini ALT ie) M33 I aa LL Riel TST INAS TY AIM CILAL Iie Il Cee OLA CALI LI ee lin (INIAD 2 0 2 7 SAIS BA! IAINIOINE TE se OOS ka Piel AT 1S AOL JALOCIE S| Si ATT] | | Risis CyLII CN bd OUI LIe CURIA IST 1S iAlT aia, WISINITIOIR, (6) 6)\.i 1a 1s, L3G FILI) LIONS) + Movie Party. (7) Super is Fruit drink | 15 Voice communica tion 17 Vegetable 18 German city losest majesty” 23 Uncooked 24 Girl's name 27 Unfasten 29 Ark-bulider 32 American canal 4 Opposed 16 Newspaper executive 37 One who 3, Berle, Gleason Feud Over Job Miltie Claims . That He Hamilton and Harry ‘The Actor’ is John legend crossed with W. C. Field's. Could Have Had It, but Jackie Disagrees By JACK O'BRIAN NEW YORK (INS) — The TV- tempest in two egos—Jackie Glea- | son’s and Milton Berle's—is being | some 3,500 miles, | ' Jackie is sasihe in his anion | Manhattan penthouse; Berle issu- ing belligerent broadsides poolside from his Hollywood estate. The crux of the fuss is over Gleason's job. Jackie has it. as saying he could have had it. Jackie says “He could like hell!” Both boys were wracking their brains for ‘toppers’ in this bat- tle of the os aang at — t thought Berle only stole jokes, but I guess now he’s going in for stealing glory, too,” Gleason roared Westward, s * Gleason,” he had not mentioned the matter before. He did not say why he mentioned it now. “What friendship?’ Gleason de- manded, _ BOB HOPE TOO One of Berle’s management said he would not go into further detail about Uncle Miltie’s prior claim, : “You will find out, if Berle was quoted in Hollywood | : Berle said ‘Out of friendship for | nothing but a cheap-leoking ki ney comedy in early vaudeville, . “Why, his Pang so enmonre ‘The Bickersons’ kitchen driver’s go back; ‘Mr, and Drew’ did thi “His ‘Poor Soul’ is just Ham Langdon, and Barrymore's polite applause. Berle stood up, shook hands with *‘The Bartender’ is any standup | Jackie and, in a veice loud | comic monologue pushed behind a| enough for all in La Vie to hear, bar. Uncle Guilty, eh? Well, he’s | said: | another.” “Jackie — you were never. fun- _ First t Public: airing of | Berle | ver- | | nier,” fought at a safe enough distance—| i Asphalt TILE 4 ae Carpets Wall Tile Lino. Tile & Rubber Tile Renning Feet Pontiac Carpet & Linoleum 62 W. Huron Open Mon. and Fri. 9 te 9 FE 5-3460 ATTENTION! Pheasant unters! SUNDAY From 9 to 1 te serve all of your needs in Hunting Clothing and a Slaybaugh’s Sport $ 630 Osklond Ave. Phones: FE 8-0453 & 4.0824 seethes 34 Major —— ” grows Hae 41 Gorr a2 Riecirie unit “4 Poker stake 49 Kec. 53 Mohammedan name * Gove ph own pluriges 56 New (prefix) 8 Weapon 57 Plastic ® Parasitic on dae 10 Poems m: ee 11 Plesh . Indians” 16 Lung (prefix) 60 Impudent +4 —— wife ” mange 24 Imitated apeiel 26 Movement 1 fiber ade of 2 Monkeys r cerea. 30 Bewildered passes 31 Drove 4 Genufiect 33 Smatiest 5 Cheer rticles 6 Made amends 35 Absolute 40 Less difficult — 7 Sound Frigidaire - Detroit Edison Home of We Are Also a Service Agency : b AUTHORIZED to © Exchange Burnt Out Lamp Bulbs ™ © Replace Worn Out Appliance Cords © © Accept Electric Appliances for Repairs © Receive Payment of Electric Bills PRICES PLUS and TRADE-IN! ar HAMPTON’S AT NEW LOW PRICE ONLY. $2995 ALWAYS LOW, LOW GUARANTEE -- SERVICE - CREDIT -- DELIVERY Medel 247070. 24-inch toble made. Mohogany groie finish. Matching swivel base slightly extra. 24-inch TV loaded with quality features—at 'd ex pect for 21-inch. Famous G-E Aluminized comes $0 New * 43 Volume Contret, with push-pull on- FREE 1 YEAR PARTS! Skint teoges off switch. Your TV comes on at previous volume setting—ne waiting for set to warm up for adjusting volume Open Evenings ‘Til 9 P. M. HAMPTON ELECTRIC Near Tel-Huron-Shopping Center 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 - A THE. PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1955 ing “‘a matter of necessity,” Sees Only Few in AMA Ssthe AMA baa its tongue tn its .|From-Top Target Areas CD to Remove Supplies | Opposed to Osteopathy “It is the last tors fon use in the event ef any enemy attack. The equipment also is used during major disasters. FILL SAND Loading 6 Days a Week a Hatchery Rd. and Crescent Lake Rd. PONTIAC ASPHALT PAVING | E 4-8770 DETROIT —A spokesman for the American Osteopathic Assn. says only a segment of the Amer- ican Medical Assn. is resisting closer working agreements with osteopaths. Dr, David D. Darland, director of public and ‘professional welfare - LOUISVILLE, Ky. ~The Fed-| ° eral Civil Defense Administration) 78 Policemen Promoted | said today it is removing stock-| perRorT a—Jn one of the larg- | piles of emergency engineering | + mass promotions in the his- equipment from. critical treet tory of the , t, 78 De areas by Oct. 31. Amvets will hold their first annual}. John L. Sullivan, the FCDA ad- troit policemen were promoted ministrator for Region 2, said or-| Thursday by Edward 'S, Piggins, na-| police commissioner. Nine inspec- of the AOA, told a luncheon meet- ~~ pone: jc sees ora ders came from the agency's ing of thé annual conference of the | T%¢ sToup will discuss a legislative | (i414) headquarters but ' he de. tors were transferred. Piggins said American College of Osteopathic program and a stand on the Michi-| clined ‘to elaborate, The FCDA| the transfers were in line with Internists yesterday co-operation | gan Veterans Trust Fund and Vet-| stockpiles such items as pipe, wa-| normal practice and reflected no between the two groups is becom- | erans Facility. _| ter purifiers and portable genera- | shakeup in the Department. i SEARS | SMiYeld:itla ali naey (eS | =e =m" "=| Shop Tonight ‘til 9 crowned cane is dwarfed by parents at Milwaukee, Wis. 200, The little | fall blouses feller hasn't grown a crown yet. . in smart new styles! $3.55 Take your pick! Here are all the styles you'll want... crisp cot- tons, dreamy nylons, soft wool death struggle of some ancient prejudices.” State Amvets to Meet MARQUETTE (®—The Michigan A SALE AS GREAT AS ITS NAME! Tonight and Tomorrow! all wool fleeces and Last Days! pinchecks in fabulous autumn colors 4) Joyful Russian Seamen Find Asylum in America SEATTLE «@--Almost boyishly | waiting plane which took them n exuberant and showing their joy |to New York. But time was found | . without restraint, nine young Rus-/| for a brief word with news repre- | .. sian seamen found asylum in this | sentatives, ; country last night. | * * « ~ > ian Peano icon canitied to fe eo tataryoet v they ox. jerseys ... and in the smartest Is. Ch yg t i errs oe eae, Com | a ene eae Ain ao ite baseten hoses Brownell des p ite protests from | cause of its reputation for free: | So an the Russian 1 Ababa The nine dom and opportunity, Y- . were aes 3 20.in the crew of the Still apprehensive, though, one _ tanker Tuapse who asked | jtall and lean seaman asked: political asylum in Formosa after| “Can I change my name in! the ship was — by the Na- America?’ and then he asked that wool blend skirts reg. 29.95 $5.55 , 4 value tagged at tionalist Chinese ‘last year. | his Russian name not be used. | : Another said He did not like Skirts with so many uses! And la Brownell sates their admis-| “polities in Russia” but a third really priced for savings! Tweeds The most MF, sion under provision of the immi-| said: and felts in wonderful blends of “We have very little feeling one | and way or another toward the Soviet wool and cashmere, wool nylon and wool and rayon. Fiat- wanted hguettes: Sears Second Floor for otherwise — aliens. en. We discuss politics | tering’ eolecn tn oltm end full of the season in luxurious all- and ‘Tacoma International Airport was saneemanteeag wool-and-mohair fabrics! Beau iling ag -and- ul detai | __Shricial bustle. “checking througn |CFOteau Honored Guest | ‘ . Sia! P expensive tailoring make these ts : 4 customs and arranging to board a gt Teachers’ Meeting Ladies Ready-to-Wear Maurice Croteau, former mem- . , : ‘i ber of the board of education who | SERVICE? | setired recently was an honored | , s | guest last night at the regular | meeting of the Pontiac Federation | = Y J @f Teachers, local 417. p ; es Mrs, Frieda Parmalee of Flint, | a truly outstanding buy... shop now, eee now during this Sears Days sale! Sizes 8 to | A—Mohair and wool fleece with small wing collar. Beige, red, $: a member of the Michigan School | peacock or cotillion blue. ; oT.V. | Employes Retirement Fund board, | ‘2 ® Hi-Fi | explained the retirement plan | B—Mohair and wool fleece 2 © Radio which will be voted on in Decem- | with double tab fastening. stone Recorders ber. Beige, red, peacock or . ; Record Players : otillion blue. © Inter-Comm. Systems Brakeman Wounded | ee a © PA. Systems DETROIT ® — Ronald E. Gun- C—Aa wool pincheck wae ztip- out liner. Blue, gray, beige, ther, 45, a New York Central freight train brakeman, was | wounded slightly Wednesday by al shot fired throught the window of | mauve or turquoise. coh begat (fA —ag Maen Fam lgrsend : FE 4-5791 | | as the train passed a ae between : } so | Dix and South Fort. noteworthy ek — , knits ) ‘ll ...and what a thrifty price! ° <= ‘9 special \>_ ACROSONIC oe purchase! start two-piece styles in all- ymodern wool knits. A wide array * . . ‘ol fashion colors and distinctive reg. 3.98 and | patterns. Many beautifully . _ 7 trimmed with fluif or exotic 4.98 values \ / embroidery. 10 to 18. Dressy rayon mat velvets, fur felts and fur velours in really exciting shapes. Cloches, scoop bonnets, helmets, shells, pillboxes, sailors ... rhinestone and sequin ornaments, rayon satin pleated bands. Black, brown, navy, pastels and bright fall shades. 5 i a Shania At 7 | “a y 4 i « ' = : *e . by +? e > SO 1 reg. 9.98 Plus Fed. Tax all of the exclusive features : : : yours only in the Acrosonic by Baldwin ; ; ; styled in an excitingly mew. . i delightfully different ‘modern'—superbly finished in luxurious new beige walnut. An exceptionally fine fashion buy! Genuine Cuban alligator bags in classic lines, or complete’ with life-like head and-claws.,, polished to a high luster! Roomy bags with adjustable shoulder- straps, sturdy plastic linings and inside zipper pockets. Dark brown or honey tan. « «+ this new Acrosonic “modern” : ; ; ultimate in fine spinet pianos: ; can be yours for much less than you'd expect—and our liberal budget terms are certain to please ‘you. — for you. .. see and hear it... CALBI MUSIC CO. | Pontiac's Locally Owned Home of Conn | | tastruments and Baldwin Pianos and Organs ; Bees -. REE PARKING AT REAR oF STORE | «419 NORTH SAGINAW ST. | Plage 9 PHONE FE 5-8222 Just Say, “Charge It” New Convenient Way to Use Your Credit. Sears Revolving Charge! 6 Months to Pay ... Small Service Charge! Phone FE 5-4171