bee: Seed The Weather ( _terday afternoon when she ‘nicipal Finance Commission yes-! Us, Weather Bureas Forec: Warmer, humid. (Details Page 2) “ i THE PONTIAC PRESME OVER ep t= = RtaiheMielel ery arom 117th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUS ST 19, 1959 UNITED PRESS INTRRNA TION AL. ASSOCIATED PRESS —60, PAG ‘Death List Could Reach 1 3 . Earthquakes Toll Eight Blast Kills2 .._-—s«#Has Good News Aboard Carrier in Maneuvers 20 Injured as Copter. | | | | | : Tonight will be generally fair Over Identification. as Overspeeds + Test and a little warmer, with a iw ' Body Hunt Continues | Just Below Flight Bo of 68, Precipitation wil] total near | 5 QUONSET POINT, RI. one. quarter of am inch’ in seat, | WEST YELLOWSTONE, 8 seria! tered afternoon and evening ‘Mont. (? — Eight persons! P) — The aircraft carrier: USS Wasp—a hangar com-| partment blackened by an explosion — brought two dead and some 20 injured crewmen into port at the naval air station here to-. day. The big ship was par-: ticipating in antisubmarine, maneuvers about 250 miles, off the Virginia coast yes: . } AP Wirephoto SEES TAX CUT — Grand Rapids’ Frederick H. Mueller, holds | his first press conference since being confirmed by the Senate to | the post of secretary of commerce. He told reporters “I would ; hope that we can look forward within a reasonable period to a tax cut.” e | t was shaken by an explo-' sion. The Navy set the time, | at 4 p.m. The blast occurred when a heli- copter engine “overspeeded" dur- ing a routine test in the hangar area just below the carrier's F kli E t Vj Id Bi Fis flight deck. ranklin LState 1€1QS Dl The copter's pilot, Lt. (4.G.) f B d Jim Frank Hagan of Marianas.) oO urle reasure — ore? Fila., was killed. He was work ing on the helicopter when the | | explosion occurred. By DICK SAUNDERS Aviation apprentice Donald How Oakland County, already famous for its “lake mon-! ard Trask of Keene, N ” “é drowned in an elevator pit while, ster as creeping = panther” can now also boast fighting the resultant fire. | of a “buried treasure. se * | Mrs. Phyllis Bair, of 25360 Devon lane Franklin Vil-) Four déstroyers, taking part in jage, realizes now that her late husband, Clarence W. the maneuvers, helped fight the : | fire. It was brought under control Bair, wasn’t kidding when¢—— | in 50 minutes but tare = again. he told her there was mon- jin a fence surrounding her back | other ae heal ey buried on their estate yard. | Namen of the injared were net | shortly before his death in TALK’ TAKEN SERIOUSLY immediately available. | April 1958. Someone had evidently taken the ‘Rear Adm. Robert Stroh com-| She unearthed nearly $2,000 in “talk” of buried treasure seriously. mended Capt, E. C. Jo. n the Wasp for the “calm and ef- Detectives from Redford State Ernest Nichow, Began trying to ficient manner’ the fire. was' Police post and Oakland County | 9¢ipher a “code” left by her fought. He said the crew per-! Sheriff's Department say she:es- | husband, supposediy telling formed in “magnificent fashion’’; timates her husband—who didn't | where the money was buried. and that there were many individ- petieve im banks—buried any- | They began digging under flag- ual acts of heroism. where from $12,000 to 24,000 on ‘stones, trees or just about. any: The Wasp lost 103 men in the, the spacious grounds surrounding likely looking spot. Pacific during World War i. She’ the Bair estate. A + ‘ was placed in mothballs and reac- tivated in 1951. w hen abe returned from a vacation’ Approve $ Mi Drain Bonds ; pie le behind a tool.shed at the rear of State OKs $4 Million ber statety home. a. . ' A trail of silver dollars, halves, Issue; County Still Must and quarters stretched from the. Face ‘Law Suit |small excavation to a nearby gate’ first attempt! af “silver! Col. &) In their (Continued on Page 2. | The attractive 47-year-old widow ihad been harried by nociturnal prowlers since the first ‘‘strike”’ was made several weeks ago. Her “money problems’ began Reds Laughing Now LONDON (UPI}—The favorite | : joke making the. rounds in Russia goes like this. London News Chronicle: “In America there are two classes | of people, optimists and pessi- - mists. The optimists insist on their children learning Russian. | The pessimists are having them | taught Chinese.” i — —_——— Area to Suffer Heat, Humidity Bids on Library Fredericks of Silver. < ; She and her butler-chauffeur, | j commissioners before the formal: Soviet embassy .— { | | 4 i Four in Family Among Victims © ws, i erat “sat Yellowstone weatherman predicts temperatii es! Still will range in the upper 80's for’ the next five days. Until Tuesday Confusion et thunder showers Thursday vere known through Monday, dead . F from a wide-ranging earth-' The lowest thermometer reading ; hi ey) in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 quake W hich dealt its a.m, was 63 degrees. At 1 E m.{most devastating blows in the mercury had clifhbed to 86. ia southwest Montana fisi- . 5 ‘ing area. . Pontiac 10 Ask ooiicials said the toll Earth slides just west of Yellow- istone National Park roared down, after the quake. trapping the vic- itims and terrifying other vacation- ers with a thunder of rocks, earth! Plan for Civic Center and trees. Structure May Exceed) $500,000 Cost Four of the known dead were from a single family. Thev were F. R. Bennett, 45, of Coeur D'Alene, Idaho; his two daugh- ters, Carole, 17, and Susan, 5; and a son, Tom, I1. Bennett's wife and another son, Phillip, 15, were injured. Pontiac plans to open bids in *jfour weeks for construction of the: | proposed $500,000 main library inj the Civic Center. Taking an initial step to correct a marked lag in library facilities, | ple and a crippled boy swept away | city commissioners last night ac- by an avalanche which struck! | cepted plans for a one-story build-, their automobile. ing of glass, brick and limestone i * * ‘block, drawn. up by O'Dell, Hew-! At another point, parts ‘of an! lett and Luckenhach Associates of automobile registered to Thomas’ ever, that cost of the building | |Slowe, 31, of Sandy, Utah, were: The city was warned, how- | found, along with Stowe's fishing ever, that cost of the building itackle box and some papers, might exceed, slightly, the price | The sheriff's office at Virgirtia. ceiling of a half-million dollars |City, Mont., reported once that! and that the building in mind |bodies of Stowe and his wife had) would not fully meet existing li- ‘been recovered, but they could not! brary needs. jbe located at any mortuary and | Thomas Hewlett of the archi- Other sources couldn’t confirm the tectural firm said that costs might, |Peport. fexceed the cone an as much as! 5 per cent, or $25 | injured, but only 27 remained in in Ralph A. U tine, a consultant, hospitals in four Montant towns. ion the projéct, said the proposed | Six were reported in critical ‘building could .carrv up to 100,000! condition. volumes, about 21) times as jmany as the present main library; |but still far below the number rec- iecommended for a city of Pontiac's size. Hewlett and Ulveling spoke to: , Montana, ‘oi Yollowstone Park. The quake first struck near mid-| commission meeting last night, i ~ * * ‘son River valley, Miss Phyvlhs Pope, Pontiac city fishing country. librarian, was not present at the: ‘meeting but was informed of it to 25,000 vacationers iJater. /stone Park when the quakes hit, “It is great news to learn that | but no one was reported hurt) (Continued on Page 2 2, Col. 7) aes on peace 2. Col. 6) Rees Special Reading Inside Get Ready for School .... Pages 15-27 10v. Williams: A Falling Star? .... Page 2 Tides turned suddenly for Oak- land County’s blocked Eight Mile road storm drain when the Mu-: terday surprisingly approved the issuance of more -than $4,000,000) in bonds to build the project. | But Drain Commissioner Daniel! W, Barry still finds himself unable to move ahead with the project. Holding up the $4,760,000 proj- ect, which will serve mostly Southfield and some of Oak Park, is a lawsuit filed last week by an association of Southfield res- idents seeking to block construc- tion of the 3.7-mile storm drain. A hearing has been set for Sept. 9 in Oakland County Circuit Court. An injunction sought by the pro-}’ testing group could hold up the project for many more months, Barry said. * * * Yesterday's approval of the bond issue took Barry and some other county drain officials by surprise. This was because a memorandum released last month by an assis- tant of Atty. Gen, Paul L. Adams indicated that Adams was recom- mending disapproval of the bond issue, Adams is also chairman of the Finance Commission. His office had had Barry’s pe- titien for issuance of the bonds under: study since January when a group -of Southfield residents traveled to Lansing te protest the project. ‘ Then — and agaiti in the suit! — they argued that assessments | for the. sewer project are so high) “that, there. might be a “wholesale! foreclosure” on their homes. ' A-secretary in Adams’ office this morning said she didn’t know where he was so he could not be reached for comment on the Com- mission's change. . Barry théorized that the mem-| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3V- | HANGAR BECOMES HOSPITAL — Distress on faces of spec- tators mirrors the, suffering of injured campers brought by ‘heli- copter to the West Yellowstone, Mont. airpert hangar from’ the Madison River earthquake “slide ~ The hangar served as an. ° L4 , & e / “¢ 1 i, : 7 Air Facilities Provide Key to Life “AP Wirephote emergency medical center until victims could be taken by plane to Bozeman, Motit. Beds were improvised from bales of hay and mattresses or sleeping bags. Rain and low clouds hampered flying late Tuesday. . _ ° Re oo today | | BOZEMAN, ivivor said today. Survivors reported seeing a cou-, Approximately 60 persons were | ‘ers en ee nae after a steady drop which began at the end of 1955,) = * Or Cc 0. lthe rugged wilds of aotithwesters | (Oldsmobile General Manager Jack F. Wolfram said yes-/p’ Alene, Idaho, truck driver. was less than 20. miles west! terday. There were an estimated 22,000, model year, and he pre- T Nature Goes on the Rampage + AP Wirephete nine miles north of West Yellowstone lies im- passable after being shattered by the quake. Pavement has dropped below the level of the Madison River bridge (background). TOO EFFICIENT — An unwanted destruction job that would have taken a road crew long hours of toil was completed in seconds by a Yellowstone Park earthquake. U. S. highway 287 ‘It Was Horrible’ After Quake ... Screams | Mont. (AP) .— “It, “I looked where there had been ing through the trees but not a \was horrible,’ an earthquake sire railecs and tents. They Werejtree was’ mov ing ‘gone. I went by one lady whose) * * ‘r “The children were screaming!leg was sticking up in the air. 1; “S, Pan) ee for help, erying for their moth-|asked her if T could help. She said nething “struck cule trailes ‘ers,’ recalled Mrs. Clarence Scott her leg was broken.” ,and pushed it up against a tree. of Fresno, Calif. who came out, x * * |The sides and end of the trailer of the heavily hit Rock Creek, Mrs. Scott was in her trailér’ fell off. My husband was gone. I area. when the quake rocked the pop-jfound him just wandering around. | “Husbands begged their wivesiular vacation area late Mondayjte had been in the mud under a ito answer. ‘night. “Someone was screaming for ‘‘There was a huge noise. 1 jiree and Frases EE (eS Siieeze ‘help from anyone w ho could swim.'sounded like a thousand mands go-| free. _ _— |] Ray Painter of Ogden, Utah. | told of living through those same =| moments. Sees “Middle Range Cais sth eho and I knew some of them were on Sales Upswing in “60 S's" lift the tree off my leg. I thougat it had cut my leg off. Finally FROM OUR NEW 0 UR NEWS WIRES ; Although injured and shaken, the DETROIT — The number of medium-priced cars sold Painters had a comforting reun- three guys got it off. I found the kids first, then my wife. She had ion the American market has started to climb again! jion—all were alive, A. Bennett, 45, a Coeur | Vacationing with his wife and four : . ae ‘children. | Wolfram, speaking at“the press preview of the 1960p itered and bruised. Mrs. Ber: night Monday at Hebgen Dam andj|Oldsmobile, noted that sales of medium priced CarSinett spoke through swollen lips farther downstream in the Madi- , picked up for the first timee-—— _-— famous trout, ‘since 1955 during the 1959 ; , in Yelow jdicted this numerical: UAW Official jmong with trees, rocks and wa- from her bed in the small, over- crowded hospital at Ennis, Mont. “There was this great sound,” she said. ‘‘I found myself rolling igrewth would continue into er. (1960 ane oe aso and bevord. Denies Charges ‘that the middle- raiced car market ek * “T really don't know how I got out of it. They say my husband and three of the children are dead. would account for a greater per- Gosser Tells Probors| out {have not lest a pamuate of the total auto industry” ‘Spite’ Witnesses Lie In the hallway. a noree told s 7 \reporter:. | “There's no doubt that the in Smear Attempt | “The poor woman. She just | over-all market will continue to {doesn’t realize.” grow,” he said. “And, as the’ WASHINGTON u—Senate| x & & | over-all market expands, I be- packets Committee records of. Mrs. Bennett's husband, their | lieve the medium price class | daughters, Carole 17, and Susan. closed door hearings disclosed to- - : day testimony that a United Auto| oe "ihe Tom. d. A. henther hsted ‘Workers officials in Toledo, Ohio, | Phillip, was in the hospital with “I think one of the most im- was fired by the UAW for accept-! ‘his mother. He is ad , portant reasons for this is that injing some $30,000 from a manage-j cover. es expetiod fo Fe ‘a ising econo- ment consultant firm. | “ie “ts her my, more people The official was identified in! ‘nurse said. | market will continue to grow , numerically, too. i family now.’ the WOLFRAM Motors division, | predicted on Monday— Gosser was on the stand. |to a question from Sen. Sam Ervin. '(D-NC), Gosser said Zvara had'that on the full-sized 1959 plates will buy the the testimony as Peter Zvara, a} more comfort- ‘|former UAW international repre-| e 5 able, superior, ‘sentative and assistant to Richard | 1960 [ T b full- sized auto T. Gosser, a UAW international Icense a ) |mobiles.”” ; vice president in Toledo. t B G G | d Wolfram _ esti- Gosser himself swore. to the « 0 e reen on 0 mated the total ittee that h ; atito qOarket foe comm ee tha e received no a Ted a: the same payment of any kind from Zvara. | LANSING (#—Secretary of State Jevel that James The testimony was given behind James M. Hare said today auto- ' M. Roche, gen- closed doors in a committee inv es- | mobile license plate tabs for 1960 leral manager of | tigation of the UAW on Aug. 1°. |will be green or a golden yellow another General The Zvara story came up while! background. Cadillac, In reply | * * * 6,900,000. The color’ scheme will reverse + * * Wolfram said he expected Olds-; ‘admitted to UAW President Walter mobile to increase its percentage} iReuther that he had taken money ween had yellow numerals: of the medium- priced car sales|from the Charles Elliott Co., a _ Distribution of tabs will start from 10 to 13 per cent during 1960..New York management firm Nov. 1, Hare said. Production is Although specific details of the, Sen. Carl Curtis (R-Neh) said well under way at the State Prison new Oldsmobile were off the rec-,the money apparently was paid to’ (of Southern Michigan at Jackson. = Wolfram revealed his division @void objections by UAW work: is' APs will introduce a redesigned engine,at the Doehler Jarvis Co. to a ei ee an its “88° series which will use) itime and study survey being con- the as = the tabs,’ 3'¢ by 3 ‘regular, instead of premium, gas. |ducted by the Elliott firm Cited te mobs = ol ‘mumbers “MORE ECONOMY | Altogether, Curtis said, more in motorists’ possession. | “This regular rocket engine will, than $60,000 was paid to Zvara. give our customer's - an i ekale Gosser told the committee he| @ itex*0 =e iment of 15 per cent in miles per; lthinks Zvara told Reuther that he) 'dollar,” he said. “‘This is still aygot $34,000. In Today’ S Press high compression engine. It will “We have checks here running | , ee, ‘say. cote anetias = be standard equipment on the over $60,000." Curtis told Gosser te . |dynamic “83°.” “Now who got the balance?’ , CoMmMCS ...eceseen vee. | . “Why don't vou -ask Peter County News ..... soesers oe Bo) | Poiocaih a Teese a \2vara,” Gosser replied | Editorials 2.50... . cee 6 ration which will give greater | “F did, and he took the rte WOTEOEG aces ive dense. OS iy, maneuverebility jamendment, and he is: your assist: | Obituaries ....... es Seas ee =e po ts caee pt-back fender de; ant, ‘ Curtis retorted. . | SMO woe nceceeen stots 15-27 sign und 2 mew and more nom. i No, he isn’t my assistant,""| Sports ..........5...06.. 45-48 fortable seat. |Gosser said. | Theaters . 5 | “The day he said that he to. ak, TV and Radio Programs ... 99 The 1960 Oldsmobile will be a.that check he got fired and yor Wilson; Earl : . ‘Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ought fo know this.” | Women's. Pages - | } Flying Discs Seen in Area Two yellow discs hovered over}ing for the show to begin while’ other and they stood there drifting the horizon and streaked across our three children were at the in place, | the sky leaving a flaming trail of idrive-in playground up front. It “an of a sudden the lower | red and.pink vapor.. ‘| wasn’t quite dark yet and suddenly! one took off in a straight up- Reports of sightings of the uni-, my husband told me to look at, ward movement and became a. dentified flying objects came from those two things in the lower bar very thin disc with a long yellow | all over the Pontiac area, Wit- izon. | tail with a bit of red in it mak- | nesses say the objects first bs “We saw the people in other ing it look like a fire streak, peared at ebout 7: ee ™: vreante! cars watching, too, and some got | “Then, 30 seconds later, the sec- ee Nn a sures es for! out of their cars to look. | ond one moved up and over and bef ishing.) ‘There were two yellow discs in’ 'down in a perfect arc, leaving a about 20 minutes ore van liow trail behind it. |the sky, not in the heavens, but in’ YeMow ie There is no telling how many “It disappeared completely while |our own atmosphere. The two ob-) saw it, but Wanda Bierl, 405 Lin- | ljects faced each other, and for | the first disc continued to go da Vista Dr., was “enthralled” stood per-\Straight up, then leveled off and about eight minutes they st per- |; with all the others at the Water- fectly still, except that when you began flying perfectly straight for ford Drive-In Movie last night. Vicoked! al them very closely they! jabout three minutes, trailing to When it was over, she turned to looked like they were drifting with| the a hes a stream of of ee her husband, Kenneth, and “in the wind and moving slightly.* pene reddish pane that faded to seriousness, because I was scared ei. * | pink as it disappeared. | to death to mention it” asked him, “They moved separately and of “AS the first ae ae = sec- “Do you think we could have seen their own accord, There wasn't a 0Md flying object came back into, what is termed a flying saucer?” cloud in the sky and 1 couldn't! view and looked like it was coming | Here is Mrs. Bierl’s account of jfind the moon. | Straight at us, right under the oth-| ithey were making a big U-turn and. ; streaked away for the last time.’ e “The objects had very distinct -| p lines, except when they moved in F | nds On | y $15 00 @ a blurred flight. They were very ? / ; distinct in their movements, not | , ‘ like something just falling to of | | arrick j issets “There was a human intelligence about the whole thing . ., or super- Attorney for murdered Pontiac,doctor when the will is to be pro-) human!” | physician Dr, W. Carleton War- pated here. A woman, possibly al The pictures that played last rick said he’s found but $15,000. gaughter of the doctor by a pre- night at the drive-in movie on in assets in the doctor's name as ‘vious marriage, has indicated an Elizabeth Lake road and Scott he awaits court permission to ad- interest in the proceedings, accord-' Lake road were Alias Jesse nearly month-long unsolved slay-! | eould give no explanation for last ing admit they are no closer now, Hartrick said he had received night's occurrence. to solving ‘the baffling crime than only ‘‘evidence that the doctor when it was committed July 24. owned a great deal more than the Nearly. one-third of the _ ($15,000 in stocks and bonds. In-, 1,400,000 population of Northern, Pontiac attorney dames G- jernal Revenue agents said they: Ireland live in the capital. Belfast.’ -Hartrick said it will probably found three-quarters of a million of the coat features large patch of girls and women in every walk of life. Featured at Sears, it has a three-quarter length coat and sliver slim skirt. The styling This year the suit comes in a bold plaid design. 5 a. eOO™—™ / / : : : . | / hi ; A | pss i ao __. ; / . ) + ; THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY: A AUGUST 19. 1959 ae \ / Pontiac Soon to Ask Bids on Civic Center Library \ (Continued From P. Det J Giore. Weeili dlides "cloesd: aceon! | age One) roit firm of ume and Mohr- ‘ : Pontiac is close to ge -|hardt, consultants to Detroit panes" = “ester side of SS ary” ahe ml, SAE the ame /PUDIC Library tem” : e . Additional light Gemone north of}: time, it is too bad that a | dicated stronger poe 7 = Hebgen Dam were felt Tuesday, ™®Y conlda't be spent to = he pou Stat Gece ss Gass our library needs more ade- | necessary in the southwest corner night, { ge. quately.” of the building — next to the None of the famous scenic Clinton River — than was first wonders of the huge summer | _,™iss Pope believed that fans meted. playground was damaged. Old should have two or three library x * Faithful geyser, about 40 miles irra ane oe ohio 75. The ee expense here might southeast of Tebgen Dam, con- |i! 3 0,000 boc tween 1 |push the total cost over the $500,- tinued to throw its fountain of |” 2° ks. (000 mark, he said. boiling water sk®ward on the t present, the city has only; Fina} plans follow closely. the hour. hess 40, gp its main ce and design‘ contemplated when prelim- another in its mobile inary plans were announced ear- Although ‘southwestern Montana. and two branch libraries. ‘lier this year, he said. got the quakes’ most devastating, T blows, temblors were reported in} me Mbenrin®. witensed, Kexs- | Earthquake’s Toll 8, | Could bo Up to 13 ¥ One decision made since then, ‘British Columbia, Washington, teal oes we pena on | he said, is not to invest money Idaho, Utah, Wyoming and both: stead of waiti til monow 1 in structual supports necessary . ee stead of waiting until more build- | tg add , second’ story to the ‘ing funds are available. | building. The $500,000 price ceiling was set| #’Since we plan on having plen~ y the Commission on recommen- ty of land, it was decided to allow | dation of City Manager Walter K. for horizontal expansion only,” said To finance construction on a Pay Willman. as-you-go basis, commissioners set The only other changes affect aside $200,000 out of last year's, two areas in the basement. which ,capital improvement fund, $200,-\ architects originally planned would |000 this year, and plan to budget not be finished off in order to $200,000 next year, $100,000 to go| conserve money. into library furnishings “We decided it would be worth- Willman said that if bids are ‘While to spend a little more money favorable, contracts may* be adding cement floors and lighting awarded early next month and ‘to these areas so they could be the building completed by fall of ‘used for storage and shelter ‘next year, in time for dedication )areas,”’ said Hewlett. | during the 1961 observation of | Pontiac's centennial as a city. Hewlett and Ulveli con Find B dl jlewet and tiveing ste Find Buried Treasure a i hor’ tall hen iy eanson cites ava, ON Franklin Estate abl Containing 27,000 square feet of: The quake victims were camped ‘along the Madison River. It t flows), !from Yellowstone. Park westward, | then northward to join the Jeffer-| son and Gallatin rivers at Three Forks, Mont., to form the. Mis-, The dame on the river forms a lake holding about 337,000 acre- ifeet-of water. | A 10-year-old boy, Robert Ben-' | | /nett of Cottonwood, Ariz., told re-! ‘porters he and his family saw a, car containing a crippled boy, a man and woman buried by a slide 0 feet from the Bennett car. It jcould. not be determined if the three escaped. . At one time Tuesday night the death toll was given by officials | as 19, then was revised down- ward by Montana’s civil defense | director, Hugh Potter. But sheriff's officers near the 'quake-stricken area said others (Continued From Page One)* Pontiac Press Phote MAD FOR PLAIDS — This walking suit is a perennial favorite | might have been carried to their! floor space, the library would have Se they uncovered a tin can containing $800 in coins, according to detectives, Their second “‘strike’’ paid off in, another $800 can of silver. i ded(hal beneaihl huskie styles. Stripes included. SESS OO SSOOCOTS COR OCOCCe $3.95 Zipper Cases Hie tae eae 95 SCOCHHSSHSSSOHSSSHSSHSOHSHSSEHOSOTS . 3 ; Fanows ‘SPENCER’ NOW Greatly Under-Priced! HYDE’ scuftpreof and Y + . falnpecet: Girls’ PANTIES Sizes 8 to 14 anu ; : os Highest quality, heavy nickle-plated ea 69c Value All Prices Plus Fed. Tax brass. Imported for bigger savings. 3 Pai A ee @cvcccccccccocceeoee P 00 S alr 00° Easy to wash, fast | @ ¢ : Corton knit, nylon = dry. 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Here's the finest yep liierainy Stnecals, Balanced support, cushion in. sole, - tugged canvas uppers, non-slip rubber soles. . in unde a ey < eaving = standard size pen- prices. Unconditional money-back —— “Complete. cite “rance MD sapgnapadenestaos cenevsveseey 4 wa Doan's sigeet «98 North SAGINAW St. f'scr2s8 ‘ . . no Ae », 1 x , a re te 4 ; , | With back-to-school-days draw- THIS WINTER ing near, parents who failed to at- ™ ** * tend Pontiac’s ‘‘Kindergarten © 0, een te t haa Roundups’ held in May and June DISAPPO: . will have another chance to take : care of preliminary registration BIRMINGHAM ~ frequirements on Sept. 10 and 11. TRAVEL SERVICE Although most of the Kindergar- GRACE PLUMMER REILLY . ten age children have already 4 379, Hamilten Birmingham ‘PLANNING A CRUISE ~~ & i. al as ‘ % / wy TH PUN'TLAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1959 r been enrolled in Pontiac’s schools 2. The immunization record of all shots given, including the dates and the doctor's name, 3. A complete physical and dental examination for the child and an effort to correct any ex- isting physical defects. ‘panini to Gerald E, White, co- | ordiyator of elementary education, late-comers and people who have recently moved into the district will be able to take’ advantage of the two days in September. When enrolling their children, parents are asked to present these three requirements: 1. A birth certificate showing SCHOOL DAYS | SPECIALS WOMEN’S BOOTS Reg. 3.00 Value Tervever, COLORS wor ac BLACK SUEDE PICTURED RUST SUEDE SIZES 4-9 GREY SUEDE WOMEN’S GUM DROPS - Reg. 3.00 Value 1.99 COLORS BLACK, GREY. SUEDE CHILDREN’S SADDLES ALSO HEAVY STRAPS Reg. 4.00 Value SIZES 4-9 SIZES 814.3 , Widths BLACK-WHITE B and D BROWN-WHITE Fine Selection of BOYS SHOES “2.44 1.99) F that the child is or will be five | years of age on or before the ' first day of December. The hos- pital certificate is not acceptable. On or just after the first day of classes, Sept. 14, parents will re- ceive a brochure published by the Pontiac Board of Education out- lining the kindergarten program and objectives, It is designed to help parents with their children’s dave a Kindergartner? Here’s What to Do . Pontiac Press Phote CHANGING SCHOOLS—Moving from Washington Junior to 4 Lincoln Junior High School is a big event in the life of pretty Patricia Moriarity of 179 Augusta St. For the occasion, she has selected this smart outfit from .George’s-Newport’s. The plaid wool skirt with unpressed pleats is topped by a serviceable white bulky knit orlon sweater. The red poplin jacket—trimmed with plaid is dressy enough for cool days or evenings. school needs and problems. The booklet is ‘‘very attractive and helpful,”’ said White. from Sept. 14 to 18, kindergarten sessions will only be an hour and a half long. Thereafter they will clearly labeled. clothing’ was a “If the children have had. prac- tice in staying away from their parents-and are able to follow simple directions, they shouldn't have any serious emotional prob- lems,” he said. For the first week of school; be 244 hours long with milk served midway through the period. No lunch will be served to the kinder- guiten chile. Check Lights in Child’s Room Half-day sessions are held in the morning and afternoon, usually starting at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m., and to Ease Eyes parents are to determine which " session their child will attend when| CHICAGO (UPI) — Before your he is enrolled. If, however, heichild starts back to school, check must ride a school bus, the child|the lighting in the room in which} will attend the session which the|he will do his homework. i majority of children in his neigh-| The main problem is glare. | borhood attend. says the American Home Light-' White said the new student isjing Institute. Over a period of expected to know his own nameijtime, the difference in lighting and address when he first attends|levels and quality can contribute school. Some teachers expect the|to eye-strain with resulting head- child to bring his own box of tis-|aches and dizziness, the institute sues and in some cases the teach-|said. ers may require other materials. Te correct the situation, the ighting an average-sized room (125 to 225 square feet) used for study and recreational purposes: Have at least one ceiling fix- ture 15 to 17 inches in diameter, accommodating either five 40 watt bulbs or four 50-watt bulbs. af Put a hanging fixture that can be moved up or down over ‘the child’s work desk or table. . This fixture should have 100 watts in incandescent bulbs. , Install a cornice or valance shielding fluorescent tubes on the wall near the ceiling, behind the desk. The installation should be 8 to 12 feet in length. THURS., FRI. & SAT. With This Coupon $469 Pr, Att. Men's, Women’s, Children’s, Leather or Composition NEISNER’S SHOE REPAIR HALF SOLES | To YWiinimize glare, be sure a good diffusing material shields incandescent bulbs in: the fix- tures. In addition, check the re- flection. Desk tops that reflect SPECIALIZED light into the child’s eyes should SERVICE be dulled, or covered with a blot- ter °TVv © HI-Fi © RADIO ® TAPE RECORDERS @P.A. SYSTEMS — © OFFICE INTER-COMS ® WEBCOR FACTORY SERVICE BLAKE RADIO-TV 3149: W. HURON FE 4-5791 Uses Verbal Diplomacy CORYDON, Ind. &—Commander | Gus Yochem of the local American Legion post may have been buck- ing for a diplomacy medal when he reported that the last meeting was! White felt that simple, sturdy, ' institute offers this guide to attended by ‘27 old vets and 23| young ladies.” | YOU'RE RIGHT TO USE MORE SUGAR brings out the best flavor Michigan Made Sugar he that get-up-and Sey the bag wk the bee satisfies appetite so fast with so few calories. In fact there are only 18 calories in a level teaspoonful. Michigan Made Sugar lifts up your energy fast, because sugar. supplies energy f@ the body faster thon any other food. It really helps give you easier— play more fun! 4 Pioneer or Big Chief Suger! MICHIGAN MADE PURE SUGAR Shab sade se Ch itancinlallan cat tos Un AK Se SS ign i ll lapis Nive i AMON I ae nae Slab he Michigan Made Sugar makes good food taste better, because sugar is nature's own pure-food sweetener. It not only adds its own delicious taste, but of other foods. Ips you control your weight, because only sugar -go feeling ... that pep and vitality that makes work red Michigée Made seal... 2 eee S % Wits i e CARDIG Exciting Bonion® that's: kitten-soft and resists piling! So easy to wash, and needs no blocking! Keeps its softness always. Handsomely mock-fashioned by Greystone in white, black, jockey, sap- phire, brown, pink, bive, moss. Sizes 34 to 40. 5¢ 10 $1 — VARIETY STORES Ny, WHY PAY MORE iam =BANLON Long Sleeve Asa See Neisner's Great Selection of Sweaters EISNER’S Pe ay Re ei. os ATER SALE - LUXURIOUS BANLON* WEATER SETS BANLON Short Sleeve AN PULLOVER ot Money Soving Prices. Special purchase just in time for Back-to-school. Orlon* that keeps its freshness ond shape for the fife of the sweater. Four novelty necklines fo choose from. White, red, bive, pink. *trademark ~ GIRLS’ SIZES 7 TO 14 100% TURBO ORLON* NOVELTY PULLOVERS vw ee a nie ee ~ * | pene ee a Big-collared knits that top skirts, dresses, slacks, so beautifully, and go anywhere. New push-up sleeves: Happy-go-lucky Orion* punctuated with peorly buttons. White, black, 3 ; , BACK-TO- SCHOOL SPECIAL (2 , BF aries Shaggy Brushed Hi-bulk ORLON* 100%, virgin Orlon*—so soft, so easy to care for. Just wash—needs no blocking. Dries quiek as o wink. The classic sweater that is comfort- able to wear, and olways looks just right. Charcoal, heather, grey- heather, white, red. Sizes 34 to 40. 42. North Saginaw Open Daily 9:30-5:30, Mon., Fri. 9:30-9 Fi 13 | A Aah ow SW WAN0 2 \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST }9, Many Cities Have Given Up Fight | Pollution Threatens Great Lakes Beaches| fore being returned to the lakes,” “A month ago we even made a large area of De- troit hold off on building any new homes until its storm sewers were Great pikes cities are in ‘ee of surrendering their unique, built- in beaches to the soiled tides of sewage and industrial pollution, a United Press International survey showed Tuesday. Chicago and Erie, Pa., appeared to be the only large cities enjoy- ing the water — and the two have spent millions for the privilege. Enjoy delicious ence MAKE THEM THE QUICK, EASY WAY WITH THE ORIGINAL GIMLET MIX Just add your favorite brand of . - Gin or Vodka to Holland House Gimlet Mix and you'll serve perfect Gimlets every time. CIMLET MIX Contains Pure are, West Indies Lime Juice — Full pint—enough , for 32 cocktails. te At Feed, Drug, Dept. & Beverage Steres Write for free cocktail and canape recipes? meted ee ‘59 RAMBLER RADIO $] 648° HEATER Cheose Your Own Equipment BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER Mi 6-3900 -lriad beach-resort towns would not ’ Milwaukee and Cleveland both admitted it war all but a losing fight to keep their beaches. Rochester and Buffalo, N. Y., said they long ago have given up theirs. Michigan authorities said they had stringent, state-wide dumping laws to guarantee the state’s my- be polluted off the map. ‘Industrial pollution is the most, serious problem in the Cleveland area,” regional plan commission director Proctor Noyes said. “Some pollution may be coming from so far sway as the Detroit; River.”’ Cleveland health officials made no bones about it. They said they flatly discouraged any: bathing in Lake Erie. “Tt's a shame but that’s the way the situation is,’’ one said. Buffalo long ago gave up its entire waterfront to shipping in- MRS. PEARL PUTNEY Discover Bones on Woman, /2 Missing Over a Year in California; Begin Hunt for Ex-Con Motherwell DOWNIEVILLE, Calif. (AP) — Experts are seeking the cause of the death of Pear! Ada Putney, 72, whose bones were found scat- tered in a wooded foothill area of the Sierras a year after she Large Selection STEREOPHONIC RECORDINGS MIRACLE MUSIC AND RECORD SHOP Miracle Mile FE 8-00 21 day, were identified ‘Tuesday. LEAL EES Sak "MOVING SALE , Prices Reduced te 50% # Women's and Infants’ ooze! = DOR‘L SHOP 3024 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor FE 4-1440 EMERGENCY SERVICE . Night No. FE 5-0261 Covey'’s Keego Drug Co. F seuapsaspes SR Pharmacists 3053 Orchard Lake Rd. mecee Harbor Beit one ae ae es aes os pee % | old mentally retarded daughter in #.|Maryland in 1954. A grand jury vanished, The wealthy widow last was seen Aug. 15, 1958 in Marysville, Calif., six weeks after she left her home in Washington, D.C. with an ex-convict on what she called “a last fling.’’ The bones, found Sun- Sheriff W, D. Johnson said he understood the FBI had begun a search for the ex-convict, Larry Lord Motherwell. Motherwell was arrested Jan. 18 in Las Vegas, Nev..for question- ing in the death of his 14-months- declined to indict him in Freder- es gone, the city now finds pol- because of high Lake Ontario waters, this year reopened its lone section — the Durant Eastman Beach..To keep it and its drinking water clean, the city is construct- ing an 18 million dollar pollution contro! project. cago's sewage treatment plants have been Ver of Michigan’s department of called one of the world's engineer-| public works, said it has been five’ ing wonders, ordered an investi-_ gation to determine whether Mil-,in a pollution problem. waukee’s problem was affecting | Chicago water. said such a probe was absurd, It shows how little Ches-| minimum standard of purity be- ‘terests, But,.even with its beach- row really knows about sanitary engineering.” Zeidler said Chicago residents would be “‘shocked” if they dis- covered south Chicago industrial waste dumped into the Chicago River had affected their own wa- ter, ‘1 think someone ought to in- vestigate that,’’ Zeidler said. Erie, Pa., said it was making, club. A $9,000,000 seccndary sew- maximum use of its Great Lakes; age treatment plant, however, | waterfront, relying on the services, under construction, was expect- ‘Richards said, lution frequently tainting the taste of its water. Rochester, beachless for 17 years : enlarged."’ Toledo officials, too, It was Milwaukee, where the problem really was com-) ‘of a $4,500,000 sewage treatment ed to handle the problem for the | ing to a head, Officials were} | plant built three years ago and a next 20 years. forced to close down seven public /$3,000,000 state and federally built Novex gai the onl beaches last week because of pol- | beach- -front park completed, oe oa a ony a4 luted Lake Michigan water result-!in 1955. | Cleveland s| promiems appeares: | ing from the dumping of sewage) effluent from the city’s sewage/told to install their own waste; treatment works. Two of Erie's largest firms were| | treatment facilities, which they, Frank W. Chesrow, head of Chi-' did. Sanitary District, whose} Glenn C. Richards, commission- oyes said ~ made, » thought i found | added sewage facilities a prob- | lem, A new sewer wastextended | |. to 12 homes built near a yacht currently | solution for| be a countrywide sewage system) similar to that used by Chicago. “That's opposed by local poli- iticians and no progress is being Matched Wedding Bands, 14 kt, gold...... Diamond Engagement Sets... E-Z PAYMENT PLAN EDWARD'S 18 S. Saginaw years since the state was involved. 2 for 7" “Michigan law requires all lake} ‘communities to have treatment fa-. Milwaukee mayor Frank Ziedler cilities to remove all sludge and, “silly and|solids and treat water to a: high| 599" Why Gamble . on Home Modernization Builders & Supply REMODEL YOUR HOME in Oakland County Since 1936 FREE MORTGAGE APPRAISAL SERVICE Do Business With an Established Firm CALL FE 4-2575 @ ALUMINUM SIDING @ JALOUSIE PORCHES @ PICTURE WINDOWS @ CEMENT AND BRICK WORK @ ATTIC ROOMS @ ALTERATIONS @ BATHROOMS @ ENCLOSED PORCHES @ PAINTING @ ADDITIONS @ PLASTERING @ BASEMENT ROOMS @ ROOFING @ GUTTERS © KITCHENS @ FURNACES GAS CONVERSION @ GARAGES FOR FREE ESTIMATE Phone FEderal 4-2575 Ne Payments ‘til 1960—5 te 10 Yrs. te Pay—No Money Dn. MIDWEST Builders and Supply PONTIAC, MICH. 718 WEST HURON STREET ick, Md., in that death and he was released Feb. 6. The widow’s parched bones were found by Alma Freeman of Trio Oso, Calif., who was in the foothills hunting pine cones with her granddaughter, Matched Gold Easy Terms Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. 74 North Saginaw St. ‘Martha Raye Parts With Sixth Husband - NEW YORK uw — Comedienne {Martha Raye and her sixth hus- ‘band, former policeman Robert 'O’Shea, have parted after nine ‘months of marriage, the New York; Post said today. It quoted Miss Raye’s manager, Nick Condos, one of her former husbands, as saying: ‘‘It's all over between them.. They have separ- ated with the intention of divorc- ing.” Qo Ff ‘National P ONT I OUR 10th OFFICE With Easy Entrance and Exit From Andersonville Conveniently Located : Road in Waterford. Bank Ac — | re 5 SELF-SERVE pe DRUG STORES ee y pert ROTM = _ mea, ITAMIN VALUE ee RUPTURE-EASER T.M, Reg, U.8. Pas. Off. (a Pilger Brow strong, , sane. , form: hang, Cane te By Sceae es Er teiese ee VITAMIN aren | sen VITAMIN’ C (oo ms | 198 | ABE | VITAMIN C . 250 Ms. | 410 | 86¢~ VITAMIN A 25,000 Units | 410 | J6¢ VITAMIN | A _ a 50, 0,000 Units 9725 138 | | VITAMIN 81 25 Ms. | 275 | A48¢ | VITAMIN B1 50 Mg. ~ 459 68¢ (Thiamin Hydrechleride) JOHNSON & JOHNSON Retail 98c BABY OIL JOH NSON & JOHNSON Jou NSON & JOHNSON BABY SHAMPOO “too AMMEN’ ‘5 BABY POWDER — BABY POWDER — —— 43° —> 74* Theraderm — 48°, ‘Suave Jar pass Retail 98c > 69° Cost <> > 12° Hudaut Rinse 16-Oz. Retail 1.75 1° Tame Cream aan Retail 1.00 = Retail 2. —> | ba | ‘Lanolin Plus 2:21 — 1" TILE »:s We Bought All They Had! CLOSEOUT! ea. Armstrong's Real | CORK TILE GOLD SEAL. VINYL TILE First so 9x9 LID Al) ery ] a nm Q Colors C Ea. rhe 9x9 WE rr PONTIAC’S LARGEST SELECTION OF SANDRAN VINYL! Guaranteed Kentile to Last a Lifetime Kentile Asphalt Tile Now Only abF Kentile Vinyl Tile, 9'’x9’ Now ony HO¢ ka. Corktone Tile, 97°x9"'xVe" rertectGuamy $4560 THE FLOOR SHOP 99 S. Saginaw ‘For Further Information, Phone FE 4-5216 _WE'LOAN YOU THE TOOLS——NO CHARGE! b TEES sna <= '—_> 137 BRECK (e] = Se” > TE A VO Bn > TS JOHNSON & (OnNSON gg Yew ur @ HAIR SPRAYS @ BABY LOTION |= <> 12° oe ot ADORN Retail 15> 1° a OINTMENT #2 —> > 88° ee | . Your MENNEN eaivt ; Breck Mist Retail 200 i as BABY Macic | “t'——> 76 lectve Net me > or ecan Retail °°% 5 ge ustre Ref retail 138 ce 1 IA 69c —> , Your - || MENNEN Retail a 5 Antell Spray Rela 78 14 | BABY POWDER “= ——-> 45 SorayNel Kt > 1" PARKE-DAVIS | Your 43° pray Ne 1.69 Cast 1 Comfort Powder "Gte

121 2.00 € 1.39 - @ Regular R il Your QUICK gece 0 Cont | SILVER CURL yc" (ow } Toni Spin Curlers Retail Your > 6m casei > Tee >. 137. Enden Liquid ee Your = ae 103 —_ =p 104 Chas. Antell 8-Oz . YY Retail 98c Cost > 68c | TONI TONI TIP fests" es Retail Your > > 93c PRELL TUBE Econ. Size Your ayy 101 | TONETTE ss to => 121|Lanolin Plus ,&o ,, Yo" => 69c jPARTY CURL *i) coe > —> 122/PAMPER —,J5i?to0 ton > 680 JPROM—Reg. "71s! toxr p> 137] Wh. Rain Lotion,,\5i7F00 Con > _69C BLISS Bia it Your 146 | Lustre Cream tase to: Your wy 736 pris neta! Yous => 140 Conti Shampoo Zorn, tow => BBC [UOT $2 gi Yor ap 140 AUDNUT EGE , uo7,, x > 128 [PACE SEEM! Cow b> U40/DRENE ys ici’toe Cow Ie = ‘ta Se 1S7/DIAL asian oe > T90 | wagg tveryday LOW Prices on bigaret tes_ Carton Leet tes, camels Chestertasds King Size Filter WIN Carton 228 =; — ———— of 200 Pius Tax 148 North Saginaw St. | _ Near Sears Helena Rubinstein’s ANNUAL BEAUTY SALE Buy one... get one free! Limited time only! Lose 7 Lbs. in 7 Days with Slim ’n’ Trim © Just Released Without Prescription ® Take One Capsule Before WINNERS‘ PONTIAC. — TORE NO. GRACE WALL 511 BARRISON PONTIAC, a GAN STORE NO. MARGARET rOSTER 2349 LANDSDOWN DRAYTON PLAINS, MICH. Breakfast THRIFTY DRUG. STORES 4895 Dixie Hwy. — SDD Liquer 21 Day Supply $ 2° 1 Capsule Daily Dose Huron St. Corner Telegraph WE GIVE HOLDEN RED: STAMPS — iirc el : ' 3 Oeer Charles’ Future School LONDON (UPI) — Queen Eliz- ‘ abeth has wom a family argument and young Prince Charlés will be sent to Eton after finishing gram- mar school, a newspaper report- ed today. The Daily Mail said the 10 year-old prince, now a student at Cheam School, wanted to at- tend Charterhouse, another old- school-tie institution. His the Duke of Edinburgh, wanted him to go to his old school. Gor-| donstoun But the Queen held out for Eton and that's where Charles w ul| go in 1961, provided he can pass! examinations, the! stiff entrance Daily Mail said Backs Expansion Bill WASHINGTON ‘AP) Basil L. Whitener «#D-NC) intro- duced a bill to increase the official) size of the House from 455 to 438) members otherwise, he said. some states, after the 1960 census; would lose seats because of the two new representatives from Ha-'! waii and the one new representa- tive from peeks father! Rep. ! THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; AUGUST 19, 1959 ! _ Hi t eras | SPECIAL SCHOOL VALUES on Genuine Leathercraft BRIEF BAGS Smooth Split Cowhide with Brass Plated Locks. ‘9” 16” Size, $14.50 value now......... 18” Size. $16.50 value me 54 1° Brand New Stock Only! We have only 12 to sell at this price! BULLDOG Pencil Sharpeners For Kitchen, Den, Workshop or Picyroom THURS. and FRL ONLY Reg. 98° $1.69 | GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY 17 W. Lawrence FE 2.0135 clothes. NEW TWIST FOR OLD STANDARD — Hopsacking, an old friend for many years, now has a new look: blazers. Dennis Huff, of 1191 Bamford Dr., Waterford Township, a student at the Pon- tiac Business Institute, models the-new coat for McNally'’s Men's Wear, at 106 N. Saginaw St. Cricketeer tailors the worsted in | antiqued compound colors, which give the impression of a one- color solid but that might be as many as nine colors. has just received a large collection of the versatile Cricketeer Wa terford H igh Schools Registration of Waterford Town- from 9 a.m.-to 2:30 p.m. Aug. 31, ship's junior and senior high school’ Sept. 1 and pupils is scheduled to begin Aug. |registration has been set up from %, through Sept. 2, according to.7 to 9 p.m. Sept. 2 for those superintendent William Shunci. junable to register. during the day. School will open Sept. 9. e 2 = Enrollment for Uth and 12th ipupils’ schedules and textbooks will grade pupils will be taken at Wa- be issued. Laboratory fees and | j and high school pupils. Tenth grade registrations will ; be accepted from 8 to 11:30 a.m. ! and from 12:30 to 2 p.m. Sept. | $5; auto mechanics, $2; drafting, 1, 2, and 3. Registrations will | also be taken from 7 to 9 p.m. working, $3.50; vocal music, $1; ! Sept. 2. office machines, $1; Biology, $1; p : chemistry, $2°*and towel fee of Registration for the junior high ue. : : ‘school pupils in grades 7, s and 9 will get under way at the Isaac Crary and John Pierce Svhools crafts ice an aris and anid a $2.50 There Iso will be of $5.90 SOMETHING NEW FOR | . New Styles in, ee | BURNT IVORY — the burnished leather that launched the new look... burnt ivory 6 Different ‘Styles ‘to Choose From *19” Up Also in Boys’ Sizes 2'2 to 6 $11.95 Pontiac Press Photo McNally’s { ‘1953-54 Autos Leading Parade on Trade-In List crease in trading by owners of ears five and six years old has | contributed to new car sales this _ year, a leading research organi- | zation reported today. t * x * | | ins are running 62.8 per cent | ahead of 1958. The five-year-old - | trade-in rate is 62.4 -per cent | |‘ ahead. | Both are hopeful signs to new | car dealers who are aware that | another year or so. The Polk survey gave | Other increases: these | 24.2 per cent greater rate this | year _than last; Je — -old ———— DETROIT (AP)—A sharp in- | R. L. Polk & Co, said a sur- | vey of the first eight months of | | 1959 showed six-year-old trade- | in times of recession owners , | tend to hang onto their cars for | One-year-old | | models have been traded in at | * As writers like Quértin Re YOU GET aT NO ADDITIO FREE! * prove 3 piece set. FREE PARKING T'S HARD TO BELIEVE! © Fer the Student © For the Solesmon © For the Plant Foremon ¢ dec! for Mom or Ded A matching Cole Stee! desk choir. Cole’s j complete office only PLUS TAX Me 273-TY ) Typewriter and all! © Receptionist s Desk YOU GET the Mationally advertised $9450 Cole Portable Professional ynolds ond Kenneth Banghert choose Cole above al! other portables only because Cole has el! the fectures they demond in a typewriter NAL COST... FREE! A beeutiful two drawer, Cole Steel desk. - folds out of sight. FREE! & dramatic Desk Lomp, opproved by Underwriters’ Laborerory. _ Exclusive diffuser shede easy on the eyes « (without typewriter) steel desk, chair ond desk lamp....... .« Ne. 275 $34.50 ‘“ ond BUS TOKENS WOMEN’S TENNIS SHOES , trades are 34 per cent ahead; , three-year-old trades are 32.9 per | | cent greater, and four-year-olds | are 44.2 per cent greater, Dave Spindler. manager | Of those who wear glasses in the . \Unitéd States, one-half wear them Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday ‘til 9 P.M. Start Enrollment Tuesday 2. A special mening | During the registration period, | iterford High School from 8 ‘to book deposits are to he paid at 11:30 am. and 12:30 to 2 p.m.-this time, with the following list) |Aug. 25, 26 and 27 of fees to be charged both junior | Book deposit, $2; art, $5; crafts $2.50; metal working, $5; wood- | BACK-To-SCHOOL towel fee for wath: semester of|do $o will cause the pupil's delay |. junior high school pupils, only. [ 7 : i U.S. transportation "ships re- turning from the’ Persian Guif in World War {II found bales cf lin starting school, Shunck said. All. Waterford Township pupils | have been urged to register at] A United pare ocibedt is valid|valuable Oriental rugs excellent for ballast for the empty ships. the scheduled time, as failure to'for a term of two_years. regular] y. ‘ Going Back to Grade School . DRESSES with a pretty, Victorian look... popular with the crowd. Sizes $8 to 6x and 7 to 14. $6999 others from 1.99 to 5.99 Ladylike | yi ta Way | New views of the shirt- 2 ,f@ ah f fas dims’ dress, classic plaids and deep tones combined 4/am with white. : MAKE EARLY LAYAWAY SELECTIONS NOW SWEATERS We are proud to present our back to school collection of Ban Lon Sweaters. 2.99 3.99 3.99 Bulky Orlon Knits from 3.99 Short Sleeve Slipovers Long Sleevé Slipovers Long Sleeve Cardigan 41 NORTH SAGINAW ST. and MIRACLE MILE of any 4 sweaters in our layaway “| Holds your selection 4 fun Famous Bratid Cushion sole, arch feature Footwear Flattery in School Shoes FOOTWEAR Filattery in SCHOOL SHOES Every step back to school is . from the moment they make their selection of our young foot fashions. YOU SAVE Last minute Styling in beautiful leathers... famous brand trade names unlimited‘ selecton! Boys’ and Men’s Famous Brand White BASKET BALL SHOES e General Printing & Office Supp Reg. 4.95 $688 : $6988 | teg. 4.9 : Reg, 6.9! 17 W. Lowrence.St. FE Pry | ps 47 N. SAGINAW eat) + 3 _ a _! : dea gS ; she, < ‘ , \ ct 4 7 ’ ’ a _ a } \ ;”® t o% f 4 ht imp sss i cn a i /|______ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUG ou 19, 1959 ‘Vat Ads _ You Asked For It-It’s Here Now-Opens Tomorrow- “Ready I For > School! OU TE ON LiSt | dagger nse ‘Businesses Build, Buy | or Rent Name Slates. to Give You Message NEW YORK (® —Ever wonder why your mailbox is generously, supplied with matter advertising bird seed to corsets, when you've, shown no direct interest in the) products? | The answer is that. your name; has made a list—perhaps dozens of} lists—with little or no effort on your part. “Basically, the success of any business mail depends on_ its reaching a properly selected audience,” says the Business | Mail Foundation. You, the con. | sumer, fit somewhere in this | ““selected’’ audience. Some advertisers build up their, own lists from their sales records or from association lists or direc- tories. Others buy or rent lists. Just about anyone with a mailing list of his own—magazines, manulac- ' turers, wholesalers, retallers—will rent it to a noncorhpetitor, says, the foundation. * x * “Thus, if you’re selling lawn- mowers, it’s logical you’d be most successiul using lists from home- mdking magazines, secd houses or nurseries." There are even fist ‘“brokers’’— agents Who make a business of helping list owners and list ysers find each other. Once the adver- tiser has a list, he test-samples it to make sure it includes people who want and need his product. The reason for your getting more than one piece of mgil on a ‘i | eT | certain product means, simply, Levi Ss Flap Back that you’re on more than one of | wtnwacr"aaisesc “| WASH 'N WEAR SLACKS The foundation says that because businesses want only to place their products or services before those WAIST SIZES 27 TO 38 S 98 who are most interested, ‘you have nothing to lose and everything to The most popular slack on the gain when you open the next piece market. Sensible and smart. of business mail that comes to of business m: “LEVI'S” CORDUROY SLACKS $4.98 Oats, jack oc ccc cece cece cece cece ccc cece cece eee ececcceccececceeeceeees c-, at Feasong Ble Slacks, ; Prices, Ntire Outfit, too, o n Lend Variety fo School Lunch Spanish Egg Recipe, Meat Dish Favorites of One Mother | Levi's Blue Jeans, WAIST SIZES 27 TO 38 The original cow- boy pants from . the far west.. By a IT, no & far the best for 5 school and play. \ “Haggars” Wash’n’ Wear SCHOOL SLACKS Long wearing Hop- sackings and coverts 98 in the new no-belt models; the new fall ivy colors, same as worn at colleges. | suggests the following dishes as occasional alternatives to the us- ual soup and sandwich lunchés, XX SCRAMBLED EGG ESPAGNOL: | Almost any leftover vegetables, meat or fish can be added to this. Spanish version of scrambled eggs. | * * * Just be sure to start with onion and olive oil, In about \ two tablespoons Spanish olive oil, slowly cook one medium chopped onion until soft; add chopped cooked potato, chopped Xreen pepper, diced temato, | cooked limas, green beans, peas — or cauliflower, | : ee =i D\ ae os Or add finely - chopped pork, ; nn ry chicken or veal, or fish. When vegetables are -heatea through | TAKE 12 WEEKS TO PAY Same as Cash! — No Carrying Charges! Open Your Account Today! Sid Barnett Opening Special! Opening Special! Wonderknit i, | Famous Ro alist add well-beaten eggs, one to a Famous Rob Roy Y ' serving. Sprinkle salt lightly over} SPORT Opening Special! mais ater GAUCHO pan and as bottom begins to set, FANCY - Flap Back | turn eggs lightly with spatula, | SHIRTS P SHIRTS - ~ x & * SOX SLACKS All) Washable PICADILLO: As a change from Smart patterns hamburgers, In a generous amount Wash ‘n Wear 3 Colors—All Sizes 1 98 of Spanish olive oil, saute chopped, $ 98 onion and green pepper until ten-) der; add chopped chuck and a . . ce diced tomato, ap, Pf Sprinkle with salt. and pepper, —_ cook over medium heat, stirring! F een or your boy’ s sake you enon visit our new Prep Shop. You'll find a grand selection of fine | ink color and fomito.is soft. apparel for Boys ages 12 to 20. Huskie sizes, too, in a nice variety. = Serve hot inside hamburger buns (like barbecued beef), One pound) iT] 4 3 of meat will make six servings. Munsingwear Austerity, R | Underwear” _ Ausierily, Kevenue Sizes 12 to 20 “Dunbrook Jr.” a Curb State Deficit ea nekh Sy BOYS’ SUITS | it T-Shirts 51. ike Ded LANSING (UPI) — Austerity - aon rms and better-than-expected revenue returns kept Michigan from going over the 100 million dollar mark | with its deficit for the last fiscal | year. That's the substance of a year- end report issued bv state con- troller James W.. Miller on the| ' fiscal year ending June 30. QUILTED LINED * * * | The preliminary figure for the “Windbreaker” Famous “Wonderknit”’ Famous “Rob Roy” | general fund deficit was 96 million | . dollars — about’14 million below | J CKETS GAUCHO SHIRTS Ww h ) Ww Shi i ACI ash n Wear onirts | , \ Sizes 12 to 20 ' ‘Sizes 12 fo 20 Sizes 12 to 20 the 110 million that was predicted | ets Bye ecient Par $ 95 -Smart new patterns and $ 98 New Ivy styles in por - $ 98 HH sensible, yet smart solid colors. Fine cottons ular paisleys, plaids and HT in Gov. G. Mennen Williams’ Jan-| | jacket that will be a and acrilons tPat wash checks. Need little o- no $29” uary budget message. Quiz Women Employes on Texas Bank Shortage , ) TYLER, Texas ) — Two long | = ————— trusted women employes of a small East Texas bank were tof Our Store Is Air Conditioned ... Shop in Cool Comfort! appear in federal: court today to tell what they know about a short- ; age of $130,516.06 in the bank’y be ° ° - ‘8: Paces | Open Friday and. sain Nights til 9P. M. G : * * * j , * e . ‘ They are Miss Yola Rénfro, 55, | a former assistant cashier, and | Mrs. Weldon Conner, 34, a former . beokkeeper. Both were suspended | \ by the Texas Bank and Trust €o. i of nearby Jackgonville .when the | ' shortage was discovered July 23. No, 1 seller this sea- ‘ , son. so easily. ironing. They're grand. Pe rermammaen BP TOE a a en The Very Latest “ROBERT BRUCE” Smart Fall SWEATERS SPORT COATS The new styles NPP Hye style crew-neck puill- $ 98 that will dominate $ 95, overs. 75.% wool, 26% orlon. the Gan us thi The new popular styled bulky : P look, J handsome colors. fall. Very —aklol A grand selection. : FREE BUS RIDES Remember, you pay no more at Barnett’s, more often less, but yoy get so much more for your money. ~ sure to visit Tosa! s before ood buy his new’ clothes. 4 * cdl - : R cri holes a ~ 5 - is : * | we No charges have been filed against “the two women, Es . . us ; : ve x a A +, a. : , « * * rae 7 | co . A | é ; é i * e 5 Sayre. 4 b 4: ff label ,, pono & Sanborn—“ off ta Py 6-Oz. Jar : | 10¢_| Cog a a ieee & i 1-Lb. Vac Can With Coupon Below IP y | Goid . 16c Pus fe — 4 Gal. Jar : Plue ee FREE 50 Extra Gold Bell Gift _ # : Stamps With Coupon Below | | Del Crest—100% Pure . Prices effective through Saturday, August 22. We reserve the right to limit quantitres. , . Camphell’s Tomato Juice 22) <: 2.5‘ ‘Dainty Lunch Jelly vot EY Qe Ph Hygrade’s Corned Beef Hash = 29° Lion Fig Bars &9* Motts Apple Sauce =" 39° Arrow Brand Charcoa ‘39 Open Pit Bar-B-Q Sauce" 39° ReaLemon Lemon Juice“. 35‘ Hormel Sausage 2.3: 49" With Coupon Below Del Crest Vanilla or Neapolitan | ‘Cin, Banquet Ham, Chicken, Turkey, Beef, or Salisbury Steak tt — 38 fore a a Crenge-—Exerveady's boxers rae P Flever of the Menth—Lemen Chifton 14-Gel. Top Frost—Reg. or French Cut 9-01. Cc Libby's Frozen Drinks 4 Cane 59 Sealtest Ice Cream Gms “79° Frozen Green Beans 2 Phas. 39° Finseppie-Reephsrry or Strewberry 6-03. c Fresh Frozen Ferdheok 10-02. 4 c Dartmouth Fresh — 10-02. Libby's Frozen Drinks 2 cam 35 Top Frost Lima Beans me 29 Chopped Broccoli | 2 ga f i aa b> Ea fy! -. Tis Coupen Good Only at Wrigieys Ks ey This Covpen Goad Onty at Wrigieys 50 Extra Gold Bell Stamps 50 Extra Gold Bell Stamps 4; 50 Extra Gold Bell Stamps | a) een _—_ 1, "Theavgh Sat., Aug. 22. ie wl nee 1, Through aa Aug. 22. | With Ms ot One Stamps a] With Purchase of ¥/2-Gal. Any ver Si] With Purchase of 2 Frozen Pkgs. ‘COFFEE 59°: JELL-O ree MOC "coven Bug Bomb £2 Sealtest Ice Cream “| ~— Banquet Dinners 3 iy = Cougen Redeemable Only At Wrisleys ¥.) Coupon Redeemable Only At Wrigieys | | _—Seugen Redeemable ony At wristers _ | come Nes te ee es By Co eypon ae nay Ely oo Cou Hes ‘ fash rdsy A “44 . ‘Cashier Xi . Conver. ones 4 Soon Volos, ‘ave te Cashier comme S Has io Coon Volos. ive nie coer ‘ . a) Before She Checks Yeur Order. " — «a oe nee oe to Sauer ‘ vagy OP most Cheeks Your Order. Ore a Befere She Checks Your Order. os | re She Checks Your Order. - al 6 ) a ms rar ADRS DAD RIDIN OA SSP RIB ADIN SS? POT DUB 4 ST : , — "fon 1 . 5 ‘ . a - ° ? + ‘ <5 - t <= ral :8 ma i hehe. ta. we a — is oe Lean, Strictly Fresh — GROUND BEEF 39 3 Lb. BUDGET PAK $1.09 _ COCO ORCC SCCO EEO OOOO CCE EOE PESCHKE’S Mich. Grade 1 Sliced or Ring Bologna Full 49: “THE PONTIAC PRE SS. WEDNESDAY, U.S.D.A. Choice Quality Beef ROUND or SWISS AUGUST 19. 1959 NORTHWOOD MARKETS 888 Orchard Lake Rd. Open Daily ‘til 9 P. M. Open Sunday ‘til 5 P. M. STEAKS | TENDER JUICY Delicious Vi. U.S.D.A. Choice Quality Tender Juicy — Sirloin STEAKS U.S.D.A. Choice Quality Cube, T-Bone, or Rib Steaks -OQi., | J LEAN, MEATY, ECONOMICAL Chuck STEAKS 87i.| | 67i. | | The “All American” Breakfast | 1-lbh. PKG. SKYLINE BRAND | Sugar Cured Thin Sliced BACON & 1 DOZEN shanYnOok FARMS i Grade “A” Large © / | / Ecos 24 ’ ¢ ARMOUR Star or SWIFT Premium Canned HAM _ @ LEAN ¢ BONELESS ¢ SHANKLESS 5 E5999) | Cc EACH Pound. FANCY HOME GROWN Cucumbers BLUE VALLEY, HIGH SCORE 5. Each FANCY HOME GROWN GREEN PEPPERS Fresh Creamery ; 1 Lb. C CTN. IN Each QTRS. 69: TENDER HOME GROWN SWEET CARROTS 1 0". BUTTER AMERICAN PINCONNING : MILD CHEESE U.S. No. 1 NEW YELLOW ONIONS | Ibs. d 49i. SOHOHEHEOLEE LEH CEEOSOOEOOOOEES ALLSWEET GOLDEN YELLOW 1 S. EW 4 oleate MARGARINE Ibs. -@ ee ores. DELMONTE FANCY > CHUNK STYLE TUNA FISH A | ji f te ~~,’ é ry “Tie ae a ee " - en. . . \ ~ _ iH} + a = Es } : i e 5 . . 5 4 _— ; e / { 3 - 2 — , \ - \ . é e vey & SALE DATES ... Monday, Aug. 17 Through Saturday, Angust 22 HILLS BROS. MAXWELL HOUSE | COFFEE Heo ALASKA DEMING’S FINEST Red Alaska ‘SALMON Tall 1-Ib. Can SEALD SWEET FRESH FROZEN ORANGE JUICE 5 CANS $1° 00 weececceecse eeoooeeseoseaesesosesosooseeeeseee MORTON'S FRESH FROZEN POT PIES e BEEF e@ TURKEY @ CHICKEN 8-Oz. 5 sz; $490 geevecesdcecceecevessbosoendeed€sccsvcesee SOMERDALE FRESH’ FROZEN | STRAWBERRIES 10-Oz. 5 PKGS. $490 - nunc cone tearde” ee A ioe. PERFECT DESSERT TOPPING a decides WHIP | Peace . Con ree & ai ili & Want Industrial Plant on Pelizzari Property ADDISON TOWNSHIP — Petitions signed by some 300 township residents asking that favorable consider- ation be given to the request for rezoning of 40 acres of the Charles A. Pelizzari property were presented at last night’s Zoning Board meeting. The Ferndale manufacturer had previously with- drawn his application for permission to build a small industrial plant in Addison Township because -of the “antagonistic attitude off ' with his as@gciates. «placement exceeding .003 of one “in Industrial II Districts several people at two pub-| lic hearings’on the matter. He wanted the parcel rezoned) from agricultural to light manu-' facturing. ~ * * * The petitions presented last night cited the fact that the signers, “wish to see the township grow | industrially and residentially’’ and| that they favor industry coming in. “Only a small minority were opposed te putting the factory on the Lake George road site.” spokesman Hiram Terry said. “These petitions tonight repre- sent a n@jority.” Pelizarri, head of R. 0. W. Co., manufacturer of windows for; natienal distribution, was asked if, he would reconsider his with- drawal. He said he appreciated the peti- tions but couldn’t say that it would change his company's decision. * * * “I'm pleased to see hav many Sales would like to have industry here,”’ he said, adding that in view of the! signatures, he would talk it overated on the request originally nk that as long as it had been “We may have piiirnialtion 0 ‘our next move in the next week or so,” Pelizarri said. TABLE REQUEST The Zoning Board had tabled action on the rezoning request until it could incorporate proposed changes in the building code or zoning ordinance. x * * Last #night Board members unanimously approved revisions of the zoning laws as they apply to industrial districts. The revisions ing will be permitted if the trade, industry er activity is “not in- furious, noxious, offensive, or hazardous by reason of odor, dust, fumes, smoke, noise, fire or explosive danger or because of being unsightly.” y There will be- no foundries,! boiler works, hot forging presses or machines causing vibration dis- inch as measured at the property line, the ordinance provides. * *® bg Also, that measurable noise from. regular operation shall not exceed % decibles at the property line. Prohibitive uses listed include tanneries, slaughterhouses, stock yards, junk yards and refuse dumps. SET REQUIREMENTS The same uses will be permitted ith limitations of vibration displace- ment of .008 inch and operational noise not to exceed 80 decibles at the property line. Buildings in both districts “shall be of permanent and fireproof construction not more than 35 feet high and shall comply with all applicable laws: relating to health, Sanitation and safety.” A parking area must be pro- vided and gen belts will be required. These green belts or buffer zones “shall parallel all public roads to the width of the industrial property and must consist of evergreen trees and shrubs to be maintained in a ‘SHIP — A public hearing on a | healthy condition to a width of | not less than eight feet.” industrial buildings may not be located closer than {200 feet from the center of previ- ‘ously existing roadways and shall | Plants or not be closer than 300 feet from | jany-previously existing residence junless the owners of the home jwrite- to the Board of Appeals for la waiver of ah set-back provi- |sion. | * * * | Zoning Board Chairman Richard. 1A. Young said, “I think these re- lvisions are reasonably complete. ‘The next move now is to hav@ a \public hearing. Then we will pre- ‘sent our recommendations to the ic ounty Planning Commission iwhich in turn will give them back ito the Township Board ke final approval.”’ * * - When several spectators asked if e Zoning Board could gpave the aay for further consideration of ithe.Pelizzari request, the chairman explained that the Board had not yithdrawn, the next move was up ito the-manufacturer. PLANS TO CONSOLIDATE Pelizzari had told residents and the Board in -previous sessions that he planned to consolidate three Detroit area corporations un- der one roof on the Addison Town- ship property. xk ok Of He said a buffer zone was in- cluded in his specifications and that the building would be of cement block, brick and steel construction. “Altogether,” he said, ‘‘the plant would have involved expenditures upward.of one half million dollars in Addison Township.” * * bg Residents at previous hearings had protested the ‘‘spot rezoning”’ saying they were concerned about ‘noise, traffi@ vibrations and other factors as they affect the safety, health and well-being of the whole community. * * * Action on another request, pre- sented by Richard H. Wingett for a zoning change to permit him to process used cars for parts -and scrap was tabled pending passage of the new industrial revisions in Oak Park Twirler Is International Baton Winner An Oakland County drum major- ette won first prize yesterday in international baton twirling compe- tition at: Russells Point, Ohio. .* * Les Sharon Shutty, 16, of Oak Park, | won the senior championship (age 15-22) as the best in a field of 32 contestants entered in the ninth International Majorette Contest. Runnerup in the senior division was Joyce Burns, 18, of Lincoln, Neb., while ‘“‘Miss Majorette of Canada,"’ Joan Lounsbury of St. Witness il of Phone Threat Youth Saw Fatal Crash on Woodward, Says He Fegred to Report ROYAL OAK — A Berkley teen-| ager who has been sought as a witness by Royal Oak police has admitted that he saw the fatal ac- cident on Woodward avenue last Friday night but said he had not come forward before because of two anonymous telephone calls he Catherines, Ont., was third. Betty Jo Noble, 12, querque, N.M., topped 50 compet-| itors to win the junior class (age 12-14), * * * The contest will continue through of the Majorette Queen and Prin- clude festivities. SUSAN FAYE AEMISEGGER Mr. and Mrs. Conrad C. Aemi- segger of 435 Hillview Lane, Qakland Township, announce the engagement their daugh- ter, Susan Faye, to Michael A. Savino, son of Mr. and Mrs, Michael Savino of 1243. Christian Hills Dr., Avon Township. An , Oct. 24 wedding is planned. White Elephant Sale» Set Friday at Rochéster Ec SER rate Men's Club of St. Paul Methodist Church will sponsor a white elephant sale Fri- day, beginning at 7 p.m., at Hough- ten’s used car lot, 528 N. Main St. Articles to be offered for sale will include clothes, toys, furni- ture and antiques. Persons who have serviceable items to con- tribute are asked to call or bring’ them to the church office. Sandwiches, hamburgers, godd- ies, soft drinks and coffee will be available at the snack bar set the zoning law. . e up on the lot. On West Bloomfield Library Set Public Tax Hearing - WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN- proposed one mill tax hike for a new township library has _ been} scheduled by the League of Wom- en Voters of West Bloomfield Town- ship for 8 p.m. Aug. 27 in the township hall. The league is urging the public to turn out and hear the Library Board explain why, voters should approve the tax in a special elec- tion Sept. 1. Joining in panel discussion will : 6 ity information chairman of the library beard, and Robert Orr, library consultant and head li- brarian of the Grosse Pointe Li- brary. Also, Henry “Moses. chairman of the citizens advisbry committee of the library board, and Mark T. Jaroszewicz of the architectural firm of Stickel, Jaroszewicz and Moody, who will have with him preliminary plans, photographs and a model of the proposed building. A question and answer period of Albu-; |Saturday with team championships!Farnum St., to be decided Thursday. Selection) cess of America Saturday will con-| had received warning him to by “keep your mouth shut.” | * * * | The 16-year-old youth said he ;witnessed the three-car collision on |Woodward at Warick avenue from which Nicolas Stoffel, 79, of 103 W. died of burns and Head injuries two hours later at William Beaumont Hospital. * * * John F. Bulloch, 21, of 30445- Townley Rd., Madison Heights, driver of the car which rammed | Stoffel’s vehicle from behind, was treated at William Beau- | mont Hospital and released Sat- | urday. He has not yet made a | statement to police. Statements have been taken from seven witnesses, said Assist- | ant Prosecutor Donald A. Brown, | gency equipment has been added operate to any emergency unit County Sheriff's Department. It is a mobile dis- aster unit, housed in a $10,000 trailer, which was open to the public during last night's firefighters’ exhibition in Leonard. Showing how the radio will CALLING ALL CARS — A new piece of, emer- to the Oakland state is Officer other sheriff's throughout the Assn. the-mock alert was Sheriff Frank W. 6 Pontiac Press Phete Melvin Pierce. Also on hand at Irons, department officials and equip- ment plus fire trucks from member departments of the Northeastern Oakland County Firemen’s who said he expects the investiga-!» tion to continue for the rest of the eek "43 to Finish Course Berkley Police. réport that Bul-' at Kensington Park loch was ticketed June 30 for reck-. less driving while allegedly racing | Forty-three persons will com- ‘plete the nature interpretation| on Woodward near 11-Mile road) .course at the Nature Center of and is to appear before Justice’ Ralph F. Finley of Berkley at 11! Kensington Metropolitan Park near | Milford on Friday according to a.m. Saturday. Report D ‘Bill Hopkins, chief naturalist for P uke of Bedford ‘the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Critically Injured in Auto. Authority of- which the park is a t. . LONDON (—The 42-year-old. unl xk * * Duke of Bedford was critically in-| This second annual workshop {red in or Pyne accident was sponsored jointly by the De- in the south of France today, his) partment of Natural Sciences and secretary said. the division of field services of Th x * ‘Eastern Michigan University, Yp- had tn oe Ripe see silanti, and the Huron-Clinton Met-| bey, the duke’s huge estate, saying. ‘ropolitan Authority, a five-county’ he | had suffered a sev ‘concus |. park and parkway agency tax-sup- sion, The accident was reported ported by the citizens o Sta to have happened near Calloires ine ayne an the Haulersaycte: During their final week of the * * * course, the group is participating The tall, bespectacled duke has ‘ni the a iamming of alnature éreil” been planning to visit the United States in October to appear on/During the first two weeks em- television and lecture on the Brit- Phasis was placed on learning how ish aristocracy. ‘to identify birds and wild flowers ‘and on learning how to conduct Y (“Nature field trips’’ for day camp ' groups, | | * * | The workshop is conducted by) 'Dr. Herbert H. Caswell Jr. and iRuss W. Loessell, both of the East- jern Michigan University Depart- ment of Natural Science, and as- lgisted by staff naturalists at Ken- |sington Metropolitan Park, Area Family Packing for Free Trip. to Hawaii | LAKE. ORION—An_all-expenses ipaid vacation in Hawaii is in store ‘for the Norman Geisler family of 76 S. Washington St. Mr. and Mrs. Geisler and their daughter, Norma, will leave San _Francisco by chartered plane next VERA ANN CRAWFORD Former Lake Orion residents 'Tyesday for 10 free days in Hawaii. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Craw- ford of North Hollywood, Calif.. announce the engagement of their daughter, Vera Ann, to Gerry McGee. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett McGee of of 927 Long Lake Blvd., Lake | Orion, No wedding date has been * * * Picking up the tab for the Geis-| ‘. will be the General Coach forks, Inc., of Marlette, manu- 'facturer of mobile homes. Geisler is the local sales rep- resentative for the trailer firm which awarded the free holiday will follow the panel discussion. set, be Mrs. Joel Warten, commun- matching feather hat modeled by Merry Lee See ecae aa tee Inc., Tel- and simply styled with three-quarter -" f A PERENNIAL FAVORITE—The ever popular white blazer jacket with crest adds a collegiate teuch to. any school girl's wardrobe. Debbie Burns, an Isaac E. Crary Junior High School student, combiries a bright plaid wrap- -around skirt with the favored topper. The a Shop has this utfit. to his retail company, Oxford Trailer Sales. | More than 100 General mobile home dealers and sales represent- atives from all over the country will participate in the trip. * x * The 10-day Hawaiian holiday: /Program includes a complete tour} jof Honolulu, the island of Oahu, a |side trip to the other islands and ;more than three days of leisure on | the famous Waikiki Beach. | Violent Earthquake Hits “Solomon Islands HONIARA, Guadalcanal (UPI) i— A _ violent earthquake the 16,000-square mile Solomort jIslands territory Tuesday, causing extensive property damage in the World War II battle area. No. casualties were reported ‘,among the 150,000 residents of the South Pacific islands where U.S. ground forces first struck back at the Japanese advance in 1942, tke and Macmillan’ — to Make TV Broadcast GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — President Eisenhower and: British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan). will appear together on a radio-| ITV broadcast the evening of Aug. |31, the White House announced to- day. Press secretary James. C. Hag- étty said the broadcast will origi- jnate from No, 10 Downing St., the} jarred) ] of “434 Second St., MILFORD — Honeymooning in Northern Michigan this week are newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Nelson D. Watson. The bride, the former June Lynne Peterson, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stacy E. Peterson of 1015 Pleasure St. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Da- vid O. Watson of 1100 E. Com- merce St. The couple was joined in mar- riage Saturday at Christ Luth. eran Church here by the Rev. Donald E. Simon. For her wedding, the bride chose a floor-length silk organza gown with a princess-style waistline and empire effect. Alencon lace formed the top of the bodice and the sleeves tapered at the wrists. The bateau neckline was edged with seed pearls and ir- idescent sequins trimmed the front of the dress. A bow at the back Couple on Honeymoon After Milford N uptials MRS. NELSON D. WATSON sash The bride's tiara styled head- piece of iridescent cord with seed ;Pearls and rhinestones held her shoulder length veil. She carried a cascade bouquet of white roses and gladioli. ATTEND BRIDE Mrs. Wayne Chenoweth was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Judy Engel of Ann Arbor and a cousin of the bride, Carolyn Baker of Kiester, Minn. @ Nancy Englund, daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. Blaine Englund of Milford, was flower girl. Ring- bearer was Jackie Stuhrberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stuhr- berg of Brighton and a cousin of the bride. Duties as best man were per- formed by Wayne Chenoweth. Seat- ing the guests were the bride- groom’s brother, Mark, and the bride's brother, Stacy. A reception was held in the church parlors immediately after the double-ring ceremony. Following their honeymoon the newlyweds will reside at 426 Mc- Pherson road, Highland Township. To Repair Novi Bridge Included in six state projects added to the Highway Depart- ment’s Sept. 2 letting is one for repairs on the old U.S. 16 bridge across the C & O tracks at Novi. Completion ,date on this project is Nov. 15. SANDRA ROWLEY | The engagement of Sandra Rowley to James Purdom has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Elwyn Rowley of Orange,- Calif. The prospec- tive bridegroom is the son of Mr, and Mrs, Lawell‘ Purdom Rochester. Both the bride-elect and her fiance are eer of .Roches- ter High School. A winter wed- a -4trolman Richard Voorhies. ended in an appliqued hem-length¢ Report Acid Tossed at Solon Claim Rep. Thompson, Labor Bill Backer, Got Burn on Arm WASHINGTON (AP) Con- gressional associates quoted Rep. ‘|Frank Thompson (D-NJ) today as reporting acid was thrown on him from a passing automobile Tues- day as he drove to his office. Thompson himself was not im- mediately reachable for details. Rep. Stewart L. Udall (D-Ariz), a close friend of Thompson, said the New Jersey representative told him and a few others about the incident. * * * Udall said there was an acid hole through Thompson's clothing and a burn on his arm, about the size of a dime. ; Thompson was quoted as say- ing he threw up an arm when he saw the fluid being squirted at him from a syringe, and there- by protected his face. ; * * ® The Washington Post quoted a source close to Thompson as say- ing he had been receiving anony- mous telephone threats for about two weeR§ in connection with his activities as a leading backer of the ‘“‘middle-of-the-road” labor control’ bill in the House. The House finally dropped that bill in favor of a broader measure, after .|turning down a still less stringent one. Southfield Patrolman Promoted. to. Sergeant SOUTHFIELD — pro- motion was added to Sou ld’s fast-growing police force by the Civil Service last night. Promoted to sergeant was Pa- The force now numbers 21. Three more patrolmen will be added in 1 peal Capt. Milton Sackett} . Last Confederate Still Weak After 2 Weeks HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — Walter W. Williams, 116, a former’ Con- federate and last surviving veter- an of the Civil War, awoke once Tuesday but his condition of ex- continued, qramme. weakiens Teter 5 Cloudburst Kill 3in California Wall of Water Sweeps Cars, Truck Off Roads, Isolates Desert Town NEEDLES, Calif. (AP) — A _|flash flood has left three dead and one missing on the California- Arizona desert. Forecasters say another cloudburst may be on the way. A cloudburst Monday night dropped more than an inch of rain in three hours on this farm town on the Colorado River. Fhe storm washed out major highways, destroyed bridges, stranded hundreds of motorists, flooded Needles stores, ripped up railroad tracks and endangered isolated hamlets. * * * out of normally dry ravines and sent boulders skimming like peb- bles over Highways 66 and 95, virtually sealing off the town. At least eight persons narrowly es- caped serious injury as the tor- rents swept cars off the highways. * * * Killed Monday night when their truck was flipped and torn to bits by a 25foot wall of water were Ben Elthe, Francis -Yazzi and Charles Sanche, Navajo workers for the Sante Fe Railway. They were part of a six-man crew dispatched to check a rail- rag washout. o men, George Ashmore, crew foreman, and Geronimo Rodriguez, scued, Sheriff's officers planned to re sume the search today for the sixth crewman, Mentified as Fred Athene. Pearson Assails CE for U.S. Space Lag WASHINGTON (UPD)—Column- ist Drew Pearson told congres- sional investigators Tuesday that the Genera] Electric Co.’s “in- side influence’ in the Pentagon was a big reason for U. S. failure to beat Russia into the sky with an earth satellite. * bd * Pearson told a House armed services subcommittee the deci- sion to switch t GE rocket en- gine in midsfream had ‘‘side tracked” Dr. Wernher Von Braun and other scientists working on the American satellite program. The subcommittee, headed by Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La), is investigating alleged influence peddling in defense contracts. daily in many newspapers, has written much on the subject in re- cent weeks. * * * He told the subcommittee that ‘Dr. Richard Porter, ‘‘who had worked in a sort of dual capacity for General Electric and as an adviser the Defense Depart- ment,” h@d wielded ‘‘considerable influence” in getting the late Don- ald Quarles, then Air Force re- search chief, to decide in favor of the Navy's Viking rocket which used the GE engine. Mower Accident Claims Her Foot SOUTHFIELD — The right foot of a Southfield grandmother, which was mangled by a self-propelled rotary lawnmower yesterday aft- ernoon, has been amputated by surgeons at William Beaumont Hospital. * * * Mrs. Victoria Stola, 53, of 21322 W. 10-Mile Rd., is in satisfactory condition today, according to doctors. Mrs. Stola’s son James, 19, told Southfield Police that he was riding the mower and tow- ing his nephew Richard Jr., 2, behind on a toy ‘‘flying saucer.” He said he logked back to see if the youngster was still on the saucer as he rounded a tree under which his mother was sitting. * * * The mower plowed Mrs. Stola down, catching her foot in the blade. (Advertisement) STOP dry skin and eczema itch soothing, lanolin-rich RESINOL oem sisiaaane FALSE TEETH With Little Worry nate fac OF eneese without pa or eee rf 1 ding 1s planned. » drug counters everywhere. Massive walls of water poured. the driver, were re-, Pearson, whose column appears pucdiitite THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDN , .SDA y, AUGUST 19, Stock Prices Retreat Some NEW YORK ®-—Stock market prices retreated under mild selling pressure early today. Trading was relaxed. Pivotal issues were whittled fractions to around a_ point. Minus signs spread through all sections of the list. Most steels, motors, rubbers, aircrafts, eleec- tronics, metals, chemicals, oils, raily and tobaccos slipped. The slump extended the price declines suffered yesterday when a late selling wave threw the mark- ae BEST, ‘held Thursday, DEVEREAUX, AUG. 18, ar 395 W. W DOZER, AUG. Death Notices AUG, 16, 1 6240 Sheridan | ee age 44; b yn Be service “will st. Funeral ice will 3 le 4 Mr, lie in state at ‘oorhees. Pu- puera 1959, JULI- Lake Walled Lake; age 85; beloved hus- band of Georgiana bret Wy ory Funeral service will be held . John Mulder ape Interment in ‘dson Cemetery. Mr, Devereaux will he in state until noon taken to the Walled Lake Meth- odist Church to lie ip state until time of service. Memorial dona- tions “may be made to the Walled Lake Methodist Church. 17, 1959, HOMER E., Ra 4308 Green Lake , Commerce, | et for a sharp loss. | I 2. age 716; beloved busband of Julia * * * 2 i Dozer ar senha eid — > o - z = Robert dear rother a. rville Bethlehem Steel and Republic 4 Hubert and Harlan Dozer, Mrs. S . 2 E i } oe Hubert Canole aa Ts. ohn Steel fell close to a point. U.S : # > _ Maxwell; three grandchildren and Steel and Youngstown Sheet & se ee = cree: erepec mise serie Tube each dipped a shade. Ly cay. Aug. ai, at 1:30 “pa trom . 3 toe untoon ner ome W a ee around a point Bd Rev, Jones officiating. Interment Ww a a tors anc ; in Perry ark Cemetery Z. ee JER Go 1} oe v7 Doser will lie in state at the American Motors took fractional o _Huntoon -Puneral Home. losses. : FITZGERALD, AUG. 17, 1959, JOHN | . . . M., 440/42 W. Huron 8t.; age 62, DuPont, Texas Instruments ‘and ear brother ol Baward M, Pits: | Star on he Chi | pe | gera osary service W be ! Carter Products skidded around 3. | held at the Pursley Funeral Home l Declines of around a point were at ried (hee gh oar 2 rate | suffered by Goodyear, Raytheon, bes taken to ‘the Johnson Funeral i ~ . > “ec Texacn :; Ie ome in Mulbery, rvice j Ueneral Electric, Texaco and U.S will “be Eriday, Aug. a1, at | ayYpsum. arys Ca Lic urch, ay- I . £ eite, Ind., with burial at bt. , = Marys Cemetery i ger eieer Mr era. wi. ein ete at : ; New York Stocks ” 4 : the Pursiey Funeral Home. | oe ; KLUGE, AUG. 18, 1959, ETHEL ‘Late Morning Quotations) me sy Christina, 2369 pilver Cirele; age : oe ee ~ : Te _ 16, dear mother of Mrs. Orry : Figures after decimal point are eighihs - yl . : 3 (Alma; Ritter, Cameron Yuke and | ¢ a Mrs. R.G. (Lila) Muichaney; dear Admiral Kelsey Hal a sister of Willie \Lila) Dun 1 ir Reduce Cenmecot! a keld, an rea and two 1 eited cn Kimb Clk se esp assem ag sare: : llied Strs Kresge, 8S : Funeral service wij beld t- Alum Ltd .. Kroges aay, Aug. 21, at 2 p.m. from the | Alcoa LOF Glass + Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Ain Airlin Lib- McN&AL 5 James Luther officiating. Inter- Am Can Ligg & My ment in Ottawa Park Cemetery. _Am Cyan Loeckh Airc o Mrs. Kluge will Me in state at an Pe & zie Leew's Inc : aa the Pursigy Funeral Home. m te ne S Cen oe egal cetera d Ui eetae poet ceca = Wantiaraes vope @ ce ce, © ad McCLURE, AUG. 18, 1959,- MARY Ain N Gas 21) Poriiard ). a , ae og Kathryn, 2930 Avalon, Avon Am Smelt .. $44 Mack Trk = a e - lownship; age 5; beloved daugh- Am Tel & Tel . 497 Martin Co g ate Ve ter of Harry and Joyce McClure, AmVYob .... . £75 wead cp : ee 3 eee: 4 dear sister of Cynthia, Brenda, Acacontn. S37 Merck The Lion Store was a busy place when the Pontiac Press Photo . J kere fF ee: ee i oS. Weer “sae wer ill be held, Armco St a Merr Ch & 3 - . = : . at § wk OS BIO as See Oe MO Re ae Be ee 2 -) ' Co . 29 four Cefai childr ca 5 . M Nae: 6 orduroy. slacks desiz ay 3 Thursday, Aug. at 11 a.m. Armour & Co . 29 | Mpls Hon ce en came shopping. Modeling by Rob toy and corduroy slacks designed by _ a iran Meore Coapel ol tas mperie: veo Corp .. i rae ch the results of a good day at the store are Billy the Kid. Mike in the back row is wearing AUTUMN SPORTSWEAR — Picnics, football Pontiac Press Phote os penetra a eins vee 45 , : wicti ee Dee : , : : . mye F ; 5, ence Balt a a S44 Montewar (in the foreground) Christine who wears a Continental pants by Billy the Kid and a bulky games or just plain TV watching, these com: outfit is completed with a 100 per cent virgin Diekens Officiating. Interment in Bs ih 2 ed . 542 Mot Wreck 4 . , : . : : . : ; Oak Hill Cemetery. Mary Kath- Bond sics, .. 258 Motorola crispy dress by Youngland and Paul who's knit sweater by Robert Bruce. Susan is all set pletely ined brushed wool window pane slacks wool, hand finished swaeter by Piccadilly. Special ryn will He in state at the Moore Borden : a a ‘ prepared for the coldest of days in his parka by for school in her skirt, weskit and blazer by with matching Jacket by Jo-Collins are just the feature of the sweater is its three-way collar. tet Wome nates acne = Briggs MCs 122 Ne bay R North Pointe. Underneath he has on a polo shirt Girl Town. The blouse is by Terry. thing. Selected by Mrgaret Miller at Nadons, the Margaret, 17, is a student at Pontiac Central. MITCH LL, AUG. 18, 1959, LIZZIE. Brun Balke. se5 Nat Gyps ees pie Geekery so a ~ . on Nat eact a 1 R 7 Budd) (a 226, .) 203) =o) bison a oreermemeammaaeitied ae Mitchell; also survived by several Burrougns... 3t —¥¥- Central : is “a nieces and nephews. Puneral | Cal Pack :, 302 Norf & Wes a * service will be held Friday, Aug. | €alum & H .. 247 No ge AY 21, at 2:30 p.m. trom ine Neer | Campo Soup .. 50.4 SOF 2 8e hees-Siple Coapel with Kev. Dan- ae aE oi 8 Ohio On Fi tel J. Wallace officiating. Inter en Pace <85 even : : mnent in emetery. Ts. “apit ° Owens Chg 88 2 4 Capital Airl -. (61 Oxens tlc! 99; The following are top prices Mitchell will le im state at the p Soe pac G & El 61.1 i" __Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Cav JT 03 pan acw air 243/Covering sales of locally grown I M m . 2 hes & 50.7 Panh Ep 48.7 produce brought to the Farmer's n Mei toriam eslce : 63.2 ea c NoRS by us, wers sold a SD Sion mitt-6-e— ies Sve 45 Parke Da jie gro and ae Sr plete MEMORY OF HOW- Chee z aig ; 62 Penney. JC them in wholesal k li Cc. a@rroun, who passed * Coca Cola 151 Pa } aS = esale package lots. sey iegan 19, 1985. Colg Palin 25 Pepsi Cola 2 Quotations are furnished by the We often sit and think of you, ... 242 Pfizer . 5 | : A te te f41 Phelps D "59 |Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of 7. | saggy bol sa a Pogue 23 Phil 24 | Monday uaaere ” , Consumer Pw . 565 Phill Pet 46.3)" a Belore yo you closed your eyes; Cont pax af Aan? (heen ae ved tried so hard ty got i Cont Can 2 ure i 2 r prayers were all in va Cont Cop&S.:36 RCA. . 615 Detroit Produce This” orld seem = like Cont Mot it 6 Re, mu blic Stl .. 73 | weaver. eocber Fre 326 Rey lon : : as FRUITS if atin, could have you back Corn Pd $2.2 . 93.4) Apples. Dutchess, bu. $2.50 seed Don €urtis Pub... 12_ $4.4 Applies, Eariy Mciatosh, bu.... 4.25) =< oe a = Deere 58 6 43.4 Apples, Wealthy, bu . 3.00 Det Edis 43.5 ’ 376 Blueberries, No. 1, 12 pte. .....c0.. 3.754 Funeral Directors 4 es alts s ; 516 perce bu. =eieeercj, 2&.00 wer Wt Pe Jow Chem. : - o4.6)Peaches, Golden Jubliee, bu... 400 DuPont ule 45 $| |Peaches, Hale Haven, bu. ... .+0.. 475 COATS ee ae i Shell Ol 80.6. Peaches, Red Haven, bu. . 3.00 FUNERAL HOME Eas wl 31. Simmons ..... 548 | Pears, Clapp’s, bu Faaenaen 3.00 Drayton Plains OR 3-7757 3 cn ¢ 496 Sinclair . 58.2 ous. ae 4g DU. sew a3 ~~ SPARKS. GRIPPIN CHA! Emer Rad 14.5 Socony ..... . 44.7 Watermelon, bu towers 2.50) Th ‘fal Merties FE 2-841 | Erie RR nel ERA 63 VEGETABLES ° | or Ex-Cello 45.7 Sou Ry +» 53.6 a | ERI Mor ST Speer ma) 330) Beane greea tas, Ou eee 88 Donelson-Johns Firestone a St ran 1 ear und, ese 03 Food Mach 536 Std Oii Cal 51 | Beans, Ky. Wonders. bu. ....... sag wa | pe ek ee OU ede ee ee “Designed for Punerals” reep u 2 t il N 1.1 $s TA We ccrn'eeinareieis © i oe Fruei Tra 25.1 St@ Oil Oh b3.6 Beans, wax. bu Ceecleie 2.50 2 | Gardner Den 463 Stevens, JP .. 28 4 Beets, topped, bu. oe cvsssect 1.50 ee ee ime ak las Stad Pack . 1h? ath No 1, doz. OCNS ....cccees-s a0 oor s 1p eG jen Dynam * Sun oi! .. 61.2 Broccoli, No. t, doz. bchsa. .......... 3.00! A’ Gen eee. me. Seno St Beet a ecoeereee 3 00| FUNERAL HOME cen ee pr? Swift & Co 46 | Cabbage, Curly. US secoeccotonece Leck Ambulance Service Plane or Motor poe Tatars ne Tenn Gas s 2 |Gapbase - ete —“ vaeees Lee FE 2-8378 i Fel & Te mao Texaco age rae BDU saee wesiensiee . Ca ee” ae Tex G Sul 205 ‘Carrots, scktsncessosecccss, 200 Cemetery Lots 5 : Gea Tire 6 Textron 64 Carrots, so behs_ wee eecceweecs 95 RPP PPP PPA LR AA AA Gillette 51.6 Timk R Bear $7.2 Cauliflower. ra ao sialsisiniele vie ac. fa va Pe tp i 9 Tran W “Air iCelery, pasca 3 GOB. ciccsc ee. 2. Origin: eed ta edd - 2 Transamer 31.4 Celery. doz. stks. cesecees-cone 1.00 price $1700." Best offer takes all. Goodyear 133 Twent Cen a Ba pea Rt eet, “an ance : ; ies min ‘+0073. st A & P 40 Underwood ucumbers, : NCY sececescaces 3.45 Gt No R 507 Un Pac 35 |Cucumbers. Pickle, bu. moe) 550 PERRY MT. Pega re ted | Greyhound 21.1 Unit Air Lin.. He | Cucumbers, slicers, Fanc bu. seo. 1.75 Gull Ci iF Unit Atre i | Dull, doz. behs. | tees sadeiee des 1.90 ollanc 7 Unit Fruit .. 3a 5/Fegplant, 1. bu cence 25 REPLIES ‘ Homestk . 414 3 Gas Cyp.. 353 Eggplant, Long tvpe, pk. sO . 1.35 BOX , , foots aw pd Rub . an So Gos. bchs, . 2662s se: Jowntown and Barnett’s go to-| weather 2 gikrecment a. ere = a guare L. ‘ . : cethar - nae oF sai fi n ti] jm an : ~ _ call Cammerciniiy qreded: large . 38: | Mitchell $ announcement had noo CHICAGO GRAIN gether like bread and butter,”’ he ieeated in oe vues a - t, look ne Dee". o200.0 1950, “Dee #9% % always be a Barnett store in it.) neidental to the Proposed merget of the . . ; Sell, swap, buy, rent, er now thay it did two and a Mar. . “ Mar F Bn jtwo banks eopy o ™ aforesal | a ES J rales . May oon 1.97%— ,May r /69% agreement executed be majority of . ‘ i. WID T SELECTION thalf weeks ago, F innegan added. sg Os ee 183% ’ re {tev Mailman Safe Driver ithe directors al eich of the ur Dann or-hire through a want ad * ; 2 ’ ee a Hivture « : OD. -seese. providing for this meet, = USED TV SETS Hyoreiersd con 7 here tase tira ee ee 131"! WATERBURY, Vi {UPD —|ing Duiness hours eS “for fast, low cost results, ip E : “ , /§8 cease te : 1.3 . ? . ‘been no movemert that would inm-ipe 000° 1p Lard drama) *\Mailman L. F Marehi won an| —_— a. @ orem Just Dial FE 2- 8181 and . i - . > Ma; 11$"» Sep 192 eo Nei fic resident _ { New Center Electronics | sticate th particg: are moving 0: ey tite be io loa ce the Nafjonal Safety guiy ve 20 a mo a 8 A | ey «1 , - . oy , 1 yveure 5 os | .£ - i Foun nages mSmiLLEns 8. 1.6. GLENDED MBUSKLY - BG PROBE Qg% GRAIN NEUTRAL Sp MIRACLE MILE FE o.cagy ftv ree of. azteement in “the doy 118 Soe 848 {Councal for 2] years Of sate driv-|40)gne ay ask for an ad taker, ©: , 18. . s r . i s fa ae ja —— "Sep 68 reg. we te al chee, . : ‘ | A ~ . . - : * 4 7 oe rs : te * he = “Today's. Television Programs fursished by stations listed in this column a 7 \ ( i , THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. AUG Us 1 ITV News and Reviews | Programs - - are subject to change without notice Channel ¢-WIBK-TV ‘Channel —WW4-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS - 6:00 (2) Movie (cont.) (4) News, Weather. | <7) Curtain Time. - 49) Popeye. | 4) Mr. Adams, Eve. (2) News. “(4) Adams, Eve (cont.) (7) Curtain (cont. ) (9) Superman. (2) News Analyst. (2) (4) (7) News. (2) Divorce Court. Drama: Wife sues to divoree huspa1d} because he did as she asked:; (4) 1 Married Joan. Com- edy: Joan: wants more} @lothes ‘till she ‘sees hus- band’s spare wardrobe, which she then tnmes to; remedy. (7) Mackenzie's Raiders. Western: Mackenzie risks re-) sumption of Indian war to. shelter Commanche br ave, banished from tribe. (9) Sheriff of Cochise. ee ern: Warning wife not to talk about his new job, man Is’. robbing Bisbee merchants. (2) Divorce Court (cont.) (4) Wagon Train. Western: ; Jane Wyman, special guest! star, portrays Dr. Wil- loughby. woman physician| who joins wagon train and finds frontier practice difti- cult as she struggles for ac-| ceptance as docter. Repeat. (7) Music for Summer Night. | “Music of Russia,’ with guest performers Nina Nov.k and George Zoritch. lead dancers of Ballet Russe Ge Nonte Carlo. (9) Million “Dollar Movie Western: Problems of a Mar- shal in “Lone Gun,"’ Doro thy Malone. ('54). i (2) Keep Talking. Comedy : 8:00 quiz. (4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Music (cont.) i (9) Movie «cont.) (2) Trackdown. Wester: Gilman attempts to halt: reign of terror by four trig- ger-happy brothers and he himself becomés their target.’ Repeat. (4) (color) The Price Is Right. (7) Ozzie and Harriet. Com- edy: David and friend Wally compete for attentions of at- tractive daughter of their is- tory professor. Repeat. | Oye 11:30 (47 Jack Paar. Variety with! Drama: D. A. has difficulty|t@:25 (9) Billboard. with man who wants to de 10:30 (2) Sam Levenson sent to prison. = (4) Treasure Hunt. (2) Got a Secret. Comedian’ (9) Special Agent. Johnny Carson is tonighi's 10:55 (7) News. specia) guest with a secret. 11:00 (2) | Love Lucy, (4) Bat Masterson. Western: (4) Price Is Rigiit. Bat averts railroad war when (7) Lady of Charm. he becomes involved in (9) Abbott and Costello struggle between two rail- 11:80 (2) [op Dollar. ° roads who are fighting for (4) Concentration. land rights. Repeat. \9) Foreign Legionnaire (7) Boxing (eont.) (4) Detroit Today. (9) Waterfront. 11:45 Adventure Capt. John saves . girlhood THURSDAY AFTERNOON friend of his wife from 12:00 (2) Love of Life. clutches of wanted criminal. Hoe (4) Tic Tac Dough. 9:45 (7) News. (i, Across the Board. 10:00 42) Circle Theater. Docu- (9) Ed and Ross. mentary drama: Histone’ 2 as ee art : 2 morrow crossing of Navy's ‘first nb. 5° ia) Teen Be Yon clear-powered submarine, ie : “e under Nerth Pole after two: oo Pantomime Quiz. e ae ey (9) Comedy Time. previous failures to reaclr the} 1». 45 (2) Guidin ‘ pole. Narrated by Douglas °** 2 g Light. : : ane: 12:50 (9) News Edwards. Repeat. . on 'Oug Mika: Brooks (4) This Is Your Life. Repeat 700 (2) (UF AMS te. showing of life of screen sti vr (4) ls ia es Maureen O'Hara. ) ate Ae (7) Donna Reed. Comedy: | . el t oe Wendt Infant is abandoned on door-|!30 (2) As the’ 5 urns step of Stone home and Don-, (4)_1 Married Joan. na decides to try. to find par- (7) Topper. ents without help of police.|"#55 (4) Faye Elizabeth. i Repeat, {7:00 Donna Reed. star. (2) For Better or Worse. (9) News (4) Queen for a Day. 10:15 (9) Weather. (7) Day in Court. 10:20 (9) Sports Show |2:30 (2) House Party. 10:30 (2) Theater ‘cont.) (4) Court of Human Health (4) U.S.aMarshal. Western: (7) Gale Storm. Innocent woman is used ‘is (9) Kennedy's Korner. go-between for narcotics 3:00 (2) Star Showcase. ring. (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Burns and Allen. Coim- (7) Beat the Clock. edy: Gracie saves Harry (9) Movie. Morton from countess with 3:304 (2) Verdict Is Yours. countless charms. (4) From These- Roots. (9) Starlight Theater. (7) Who Do You Trust? Drama: Ginger Rogsi'’s. $:00 (2) Brighter Day. “Twist of Fate.”’ (54). (4) (evlor) Truth or Conse. 11:00 (2) (4) News, Weather. (7) Soupy’s On. Variety with quences (7) American Bandstand ¢Soupy Sales. 4:15 (2) Secret Storm. ‘11:10 (2) Weather. '4:30 (2) Edge of Night. 11:15 (2) Sports. (4) County Fair. 11:20 (2) Movie. Drama: Gloria (9) Sherwood Forest. Swanson, “Father Takes a 5:99 (2) Movie. Wife.”" (41). (4) (color) Presents (9) Looney Tunes. (7) Adventure Time. (4) Sports. George Pierrot Betty Johnson, Hans Conried 5; 39 and Virginia de Luce, guests. 5:15 (7) Shock Theater. Melo-) drama: Basil! Rathbone, ‘Spider Woman.” (44). More Industry Men Pas THURSDAY MORNING ‘“ (9) Movie (cont.) ae: Bi t St t BAT 9:00 (2) Millionaire. Drama: cg (2) Meditations. aS} Stale ert Alda and Ellen Drew as'6:5* (2) On the Farin Front two strangers in Las Vegas7:00 (2) TV College. | LANSING (P — Michigan busi- gain mistaken impressions| ¢? Today. | Ness and industry executives con- about each other’s financial) ‘() Big Show. | tinued today to run up the score position. Repeat. 7:80. (2) Cartoon Classroom of opposition to added taxes on ‘ (4) (color) Music Halt. Dave, (7) Breakfast Time. business. King hosts singer saa (2) Capt. Kangaroo. | Sen. Clyde H. Geerlings (R- | Hahn, (7) Johnny Ginger. } Holland), who has been polling (7) Boxing. Featherweight 9:08 (2) Movie. . | those on Gov, Williams’ roster of title bout: Davey Moore vs.| (4) (color) Bozo the Clown. | «industrial ambassadors.” dis- Hogan “Kid’’ Bassey at Los 9:30 (4) Life, of Riley. — _ closed another batch of results. Angeles Sports Arena. | (7) Stage 3. ; —— ; ies, only | (9) Mr., D istrict Attorney.: :10:00 (4) Dough Re Mi. five said business can absorb an- ° other 18 million dollars taxes on ; : business without materially dis- } Wrest “ore 1 2 re i | 9 MW couraging industrial expansion in : war Ragan m Z P | the state and ultimately depress- equipment | ing employment. 13 Pliers W | \ | Eleven were noncommital, the 14 Edible | senator said, apparently leaving | sa beokcn coere i'6 a 22 taking a negative position. 16 Ag ainst the i) Geerlings said last week 13 of the 18 More: staid | first 16 ambassadors to reply op- oy commarathe a & 21 ia 0 _ Posed more business taxes. sf suttines 0 ¥ The GOP senator quoted Dan 2% Skin orifice | F. Gerber of Fremont, baby food 3 Jockey = ; manafacturer and a: past chair- - wears we 7 4 5 man of the Michigan Economic ae Barre act | Development Commission: = —- melon “I sincerely believe that even 36 Altitude (sb. a token increase in business = Moby fi bg MT 48 jtaxes at this time would be un- 40 Arrow poison | wise if we want to reverse the a Tee ba id | trend in our state.” 45 Ball players 2 49 —— $1 of Brvan poet j I ; Gia Seale to Marry eron ‘var $4 Work unit events happen 47 What boxing 48 Brink x TV Actor Don Burnett Pr —_— i 23 = dreary fans look for 50 Greek letter © ogica 4 tt r st Se a . agra 3 wimps Answer te Previeus Puzzle SAN TA MONICA. Calif 57 Watch 26 Pester Actress Gia Scala of the 7 Armed DOWN . enclosures | 1 Planet ani 28 acolo 3 : to apply for a wedding license to- ; fever : 31 Ririean river = MAE maf~ sit day and marry Thursday 3 Softest 33 Flavo i AS rere It will be thet first marriage for ; ane 40 —_— ai Bieie each. The couple said they will ‘Drea’ at pieying ai PST emis] | ronesmoon in New York. 7 Comoass point Ereyine cece TT SOE = Miss Scala, an __ Irish-Italian ——flier 43 Fabric EC} |e AIP els beauty, had just. finished the mov- 9V bl ‘ . 28 Peraia . pommel ie. ANT TIA e “Battle of the Coral Sei’ Bur- 7 Pig 4a Pemtntws nett appears in’ ‘Northwest Pas- 19 Where sports appellation sage.’ a TV series. -- Today's Radio Programs - - | coming to this country. ‘AP)— revising some military movies and providing $ ry ‘and actor Don Burnett of TV plan a second atomic-powered aircraft , Andy Williams Swingiest | By FRED DANZIG’ United Press International NEW YORK (UPI)—I didn't in- jtend to be. repetitious when it cume time to write today’s col- umn, but — That. Andy Williams show is the most. It deserves all the praise it's getting Did you see it last night’ Andy's vuests on the CBS-TV hour were Mel Torme and Eydie Gorme. Not only do the names rhyme, | but they alsy look like brother | and sister, These three young- | sters put on one of the swingiest, Nikita May Visi Red Chinese Would Fly to Peiping Via Alaska for Tenth ‘ Anniversary Fete | WASHINGTON i1P—U.S. officials indicated Tuesday there is a strong ‘possibility Premier Nikita S. Khrushchey may end his Amer- ican tour next month with a jet flight to Conimunist China by way of Alaska Soviet The propasands offect on As jians of a sudden Khrushchev ap- fpearanee at Peiping-s 10th anni- ly ersary celebration starting Oct. '} is not being overlooked here * * * Final arrangements have — not been completed set, for WKhrush- chev’s }i-day itineragy in this coun- try or his point of departure about Sept. 29. Among hundreds of in- Vitatiuns is one from Sen, Ernest Gruening (D-Ala) to visit) Amert- cas 49th state { In a telegram to President Bisenhower suggesting the Alas- kan visit, Gruening said in part: “It might be useful fer him (Khrushchev) to be able to see the contrast between what was once Russian America and what | Alaska has become under oar ' free society as a sovereign state of the union.” Officials said plans now call for |Soviet Premier Nikita KhruslHchey jto visit six cities and an lowa leon farm on his U.S. tour be- |ginning Sept. 15 and lasting until iSept, 27. | The cities now on the list are | Washington, New York, San | Francisco, Los Angeles, Pitts- | burgh and Des Moines, The Des Moines stop is intended }primarily to Tet Khrushchev visit! jthe farm of Roswell Garst, Iowa, ‘girls died in the burning wreck- V@st influence over it through his | accurate depiction. { this is a man to be/truly honest portrayal in films,” at Toad crossing in suburban Trenton. reckoned with. Clark is here to,he explained. |Coon Rapids, Iowa. Garst, who has, {been in Russia to advise the So-' | viets on corn production, extended Khrushchev a personal invitation ;when he learned the Premier was bd * * | Officials said Khrushchevs {schedule was still tentative bu | fair ly firm. | Frederick Seewald, 20, Cuanael TAAYZAY Cue -oaewtY AS SHOW SCOres Again exciting, spark. - showering and memorable shows of the year.. And in mid-summer, too. , Apart from their singing, and choice of songs, the show included a vefreshing Keystone Cop dance sequence, the wild comedy of Mr. , and the usual assort- imaginative Ballantine, ment of eve-catching, sets .* * cong sratyilations to show together. for taste and a to express it. And, Ny all who put the respect ability superb, man, look shabby this summer. SHORT SHOTS: Molly guest on NBC-TV’s Jimmie Rodg-| ers Show, . displayed a sultry jazz-type sound. She and bouncier country-style singing | she did on Pinky Lee's kiddy show some vears back During last night's show, mie nearly wrecked a big color TV camera while trying to climb off . Fortunately, the crew was near enough to grab the camera be- fore any damage was done. : THE CHANNEL SWIM: Robert Saudek Associates will produce at least eight hour-long classic mys- , tery dramas for viewing next year, | with Joseph Welch, the noted Bos-| as program | ton host attorney, serving Chemical Co., will dramatize mys- tery classics by such writers as! Fidgar Allen Poe, Wilkie Collins and Mary Shelley. Peter Ustinov has signed to appear in at least one show, Producer David Susskind, men- tioned as producer of a TV spe- cial that would honor Mrs. Elea- nor Roosevelt on her 75th birth- day Oct. 11, has learned that Mrs, Roosevelt objects to this plan- and will not cooperate, A spokesman _ for They've a | are they making everything else { Bee, a pleasing, ' has | come a long way from the louder | Jim- The series, sponsored by the Dow} : the former [= POWDERING PET—Dick Clark, the teen- takes a powder break with actress Victoria Shaw who appears in Clark's “Because They're Clark plays a school teacher in the agers’ “leader,” first movie, Young.” Columbia's ‘Hollywood Headlines: By BOB THOMAS AP’ Movie—TV Writer , HOLLYWOOD (AP)—"Take me} eee pod pigs Roos to your leader,”’ I said to the teen- eve nis 2 a é t I was, ta t her Gacthesening birthday to are ee abd there I was, talking, 10) one. Would she watch the TV show, Dick Clark. The Clark if it goes on? “Mrs. Roosevelt . never watches TV, except when cults something important. is on. And! thing un-paral- this isn't,”’ was the reply. | leled e * * tainment his- Heavyweight ehamp Ingemar Jo- tory. Seldom, hannson will spar with dancer} Gwen Verdon on NBC-TV’s open-' has any one per-! | | | in senter-| i¢ you're around it long enough, So, teenagers are wrong. They are over a segment | teens act. ing Dinah Shore Show on Sunday, an on paw = Oct. 4... | of the popula- Two Grosse lle Girls tion. Since i oC : agers practical-, Die in Flaming Car THOMAS =}, support the’ DETROIT (AP) — Two teenage age of a small foreign car last night after it skidded at a rail-| and overturned. Dead are Gale Hamilton, 18, and: They're Young, Ann Powers, 17. Ile. : Officers said the car's driver, of Grosse Ile. was trying to get the girls: out when police arrived. He and| t another passenger. Lynn O'Brien, | were ré-| ly. “‘I-get more put out with o 18, also of Grosse. Ile, :The addition of Pittsburgh to the Ported in satisfactory condition. ischedule was agreed to by the! ;Russians after U.S. officials urged ] which Khrushchev or- iginally mentioned as a city he jwould like to visit, has been ‘dropped. There was no explanation. lke Signs. Defense it. Chicago, Money Bill Into Law WASHINGTON dent Eisenhower has. signed ‘law a $39,228,.239,000 defense money bill — half the nation’s budget — programs 35,000,000 to start (UPD carrier. < * * & The bill. by far the largest appropriation of the year, gives ithe President almost all the funds he requested to run the armed ‘services in’ the current fiscal vear that ‘started July 1. It will finance a fighting force of 2 5'),- 000 men. * * * | But Congress drastically revised jsome of the administration's loriginal plans for the military. It put more emphasis on developing long-range missiles and defenses jagainst enemy submarines and lintercontinental rockets Eisen- ! hower signed the measure laie yesterday. Tax Cheating: Charged to Kirk Douglas, Wife WASHINGTON ernment has filed a against actor Kirk Douglas and his wife, charging they owe $149, ‘519.99 on their 1955 tax bill it was (UPD- The gov- tax claim Presi-' into Ls mee \ er people who try to act young. . on Civil Rights law | pop record field, Clark exercises TV shows. Obviously, ‘make his first movie. ‘year-old who knows his field. * doesn't it * * But bug him like kids because they act their | age. ” He doesn't take his expert-: ‘manship in teenage matters lightly. ° * x * “I'm with teenagers on he explained. “It's like working in a bakery; you'll learn how to bake. I've learned how teenagers act. And | I know that most pictures about older people's concept of how Clark said he will try to avoid, ‘such pitfalls in his film. He is a ipartner with Columbia in it, so he} has plenty of say. But he admitted! *‘Because beautiful and all boys handsome, ’’ and I found him:as they are in films. Not all of both of Grosse tg be a smooth, no-nonsense 28-'them have good-looking clothing. { to be: around teenagers so much? “Not at all,"’ he replied e “ Jet Crisis Primes Otto for a Really Big Plunge By EARL WILSON | ‘kita Khrushchev ‘that it won't be a completely “I doubt if there ever can be a “Not all girls are! |Not all schools are freshly painted and whitewashed.” Hopes Dim for Action WASHINGTON (AP) — House! backers of* legislation to broaden) the civil rights laws were conc ing today their hopes of action | this year have almost vanished. | They were blaming an unplanned combination of Soviet Premier Ni-: and Southern NEW YORK ~ EXTRA! Otto Preminger and Hope Bryce Democrats. | survived a crisis in a jet, so now they're going to try some- thing really dangerous—marriage. * WILSON is: “Easy! Go to Mexico.” Would it be tactful to wish them “Happy landings”? Billy Rose, the quiet Casanova, is miles ahead ‘of all our ——- young Romeos who should study his technique. Midnight finds him very much the stag, with several maie friends, in the celebrity swirl at Sardi’s and El Morocco. “Billy looks so lonely,” a woman sighs. But at dinner he’s been in the House Chan with a tall, pretty. willowy, shimmery ‘leached blonde, whom he’s keeping away from the midnight wolf pack. They have had a non- of alcoholic ‘ball swilling flamin- — goes (a fruit drink mixture) * The movie director and the pretty young early in September — merely by| fashion expert will slip on their ‘permanent, scheduling his visit to this country matrimonial life belts sometime before Aug., for Sept. 15. 22 (Saturday) in Mexico, and will honeymoon) The Southerners as usual are in London, Venice and Israel, where he'll be fighting civil rights action with de- shooting “Exodus.” * ak They were together in the jet with the landing-gear trouble at takeoff here recently. When Miss Bryce was described then as his fiancee, Preminger said, “How can I have a fiancee when my divorce has not come through?” Evidently the answer | disclosed toda, at 60 cents a throw! WIR (260) CELW (800) ws (950) WUAR (1130) WXYZ (1270) WPRON (1460) WIBRK (1500) TUNIGHT WWJ Network Time WJBK. News, Reid | ‘ : A Sit ea pet tleta News Martvn wron a rpeids 5 3 reo WPON New : eee WE. ews. Sorte WXYZ Surrel) re Caves Wark Goce eer 11:40- WIR Muste $:30—CKLW Mary Morgan geste Bob Maxwell CKLW News — 19:30 —WJR Jack.Harris JBK. Basebal! WCAR Mews. Page PHURSVDAT MORNING Wag ne ee WPON News Sports 10:00— WJR. Musie cats Nowe Maxwell ' ¥ 6:00— WJR Agriculure Rpt WWJ. News frue ®t .W Joe Van 6:50—wJm Oinner Oate ee ae eLObY , : WWJ, Bod Maxwell wee Meee, Rosette WXY% Pete: & Mary WCAR News WXYZ. John CKLW foster” CKLW Joe Van Wx: KLW. News Wisk. fence WJBK News C Reid wa “Biter WPON Candielite WCAR, News Shericap SCAR’ News . - Will Guest © WPON fariv Bird $:00-—WJIR, Composite are a+ wens 10:30 -CKLW Myrtie Capptrt | WWJ. News, Maxwell j CKL Fulton _|ewts a 6:30— WIR. Muse WXYZ. Around Town WXYZ. Mickey Shorr } WAR Woodling WJBK News George WJBK Baseball ; WJBK, J Bellboy Wave * Morgan 11:00@—WJR, Oear sniriey | WCAR News Bennett -Wde en Kirby WWJ, News Thester WPON Rob Lark ie-wwe fete wwe News Ruberts WKYZ Around lowo CKLW, Knowles aRYs. News Wolf CKLW Joe Vann om . WXYZ Nient tram CKLW News. iopy Oavia WJBK News Relo 3:30 WJR Composite WPON fone J) WIBE-News je0rge WCAR News 8 Merivo WWJ. Dick French WCAR News WPOK Chork ‘ents WAYZ WSews Shorr . &ste—WIR bell WPON “ewe Ceser CKLW News. Davies WWJ, Peopie Are Funny : . 11:38 WJ Muster WAYS stem ‘rain 30 ws Mdsic Hai) CKLW Mary Morgan 6.00 WK Music oe Knowles WRYZ News. Wolf : WWJ News, roect ¥ AR Wandiing wine =_— Davie —_— - wxve M shor . JBK, Based: wa Geor . oll WCAR News chelees CKLW News Deives ae WW Monitor TRURSDAY 4FTERNOUN WCAR News, cennet! a rebail 6:00— WJ tt 1m owe 6 Guest WPON Cartinge Trade 4, Ww - Roverte 12:00 WIR. News. Roundup | WIBK McLeod CRE Rime xY¥z ‘ho Wolt WW), News, & rd : ie ! WIBK. WJBK. News, George CELW. Joe whens CKIW. News Mevia ’ WKYZ.\Pau! Winter ¢:30-WJK Muste Hel! Tl K, Baseball WCaR. , WIBK Stereo Living WPON News. ‘asev CAR News Vurse 6.08 WIR News “ee « , . WPON News Lewis WWJ News, French : ri “Gaor om wok 7 haa ' we — t-V-- ed errer og, CRLW \ News vi 12:38 WJH, Muste ews cLeoo wae meotes WIBK Newe Cerres: CKLW sicrtie Lapottt WCAR Tenn | Ernie, — 2 ba ce Ses wares \ Wee > hee #90 WIR Newe Page * . +2 WIR Mate Beh WPON News Lart 1:08 WJR Showease WKYZ News Shorr st ta Musie Wd: fave Bifranetpy WW Sevs, Haggard CELW , Spotts eA vies * _ Breakfast Ciut CKLW Joe Van , wibK _ Spa... epee e- { - . a ’ i * | « ° ‘ 4 An appeal by Douglas filed with the U.S. Tax Court revealed ‘the Interna} Revenue Service accused the movie star of deduct- ing $203,794.54 too much on his tax return s Sleeping Sickness Kills 19 in Month in Korea SEOUL, authorities Korea (UPI) reported today has ‘eHealth that jnine: persons had died of sleeping sickness in the so far this month, The hearth Ministry said a total of 4 and: Social atta mi generation isn't creative should watch teenagers buiiding ® _ That's earl, brother. Gisele MacKenzie, who lost her baby last year via miscarriage, made a wish at the Luau-400’s fountain HOPE and, when asked what she'd wished, she answered: all know in a few months when it comes true.” EARL’S PEARLS: It’s a fast age. The impossibility of yes-| terday has become the luxury of today and the necessity of, tomorrow—Quote. _ TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: notes: * . : The. Atchison (Kans.) “You'll Globe: : “Read the Bible to know what people ought to do. Read Republic of Kore® phe Globe for what they actually do.” WISH I'D SAID THAT; Anyone who thinks the younger ‘of the disease haq been 7 ena Vesta M. Kelly. - (Copyright, — since the 35, is ie month. r) i | | | | } | ilayi ing tactics. journment, * * contribution was *® Khrushchev’'s to build up overwhelming senti-!- ment for Congress to adjourn: * * If Congress speeds up its ad- theer will almost cer- ‘tainly not be time for the civil rights forces to maneuver their way around the Southern —road- blocks. The brain of an_ elephant weighs fen Pounds. ito U AP Wirepheoto film. Miss Shaw is the principal's secretagy and Clark's romantic interest. Young America’s idol says he hopes the movie will portray teenagers in the best light and not show them acting the way older people think they act. Dick Clark Making His First Movie Clark plays a school teacher | and he has a romance with the ; principal’s secretary, lovely Vic- toria Shaw. The teenagers in the film wiil except for the two thkt have a scrape with the javerage of five and six hours police. SOME- every day, all be normal types, “The seript is fairly life.’ he said. Most agers are nor ele true teen- . If You’re Sorry With What You've Got Be Sure to See GENE LINSCOTT NEW & USED CARS JEROME “BRIGHT SPOT” Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 Open Eves. (QM DELCO“ COOLING | OR 3-4492 RCA COLOR TV Sales and Service SWEET’S RADIO-TV Open Mon. & Fri 422 W. Kuron Night FE 4.1133 TRON tube testing is of fresh RCA tubes used and cccvmnended 9 A. 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