On Memorial D1ay - Local History Archives

Transcript

On Memorial D1ay - Local History Archives
lit .......
All the News
of All the Pointes
Every Thursday
•
rosse
Morning
• • *
Call TUxedo 2-6900
Home of the N~.r
Complete News Coverage .01 All the Pointes
VOLUME 19-No. 22 .
Entered as Second Class Matter
at the Post Ofiice at Detroit. Mich.
All that ,Work an,d
HEADLINES
5c Per Copy
,GROSSE POINTE. MICHIGAN, MAY 29. 1958
No
Fully
20 PA(';ES
13.50Per Ye.
Paid
Circulation
Residents Invited Committee.
•
Appointed to
To Center ServIces Gather Data
On Memorial D1ay
Loot
of tbe
WEEK
As Compiled by lb.
Grosse Pointe Ne'ws
City Chambers Jammed
As
Thursday, May 22
CONGRESS and the Administration
are moving to
counter the recession by raising the wages of three million
Federal employes 10 percent.
The move will cost upward of
$1,229,000,000 year.
It will be pouring an extra
100 million a month into the
free world economy by 'July.
President
Eisenhower ..signed
the military pay bill this week.
Conferees plan to put the
postal pay bill through Congress by Friday. The Senate
-:>assed it Wednesday and sent
it to the House. Next week the
House will take up the civil
6ervice pay bill which the
Senate passed some months
ago.
Businessmen
Discuss
Rosenfeld
Proposal
Traditional
Ceremony
to be Held in' Gardens
Starting
Grosse Pointe's City Halt
The five Pointes wi.ll reAt 10:45 a.m.; Mayor Parker to Read
fairly burst its seams Mon ..
ceive a total
of tt116,068
Star Roll of HOllar
day night when 51 "Vil ..
when the State Highway
lage" merchants
and em ..
Department
beg ins
disThe traditional
Memorial Day services will be held
ployes filled all available
tributing
the first quarter
again this year at the \Grosse Pointe
W,ar Memorial
floor, and wall space for a
of the 1958 Motor Vehicle Center Gardens, 32 Lake Shore road. The pI:0gram will
chance to hear and be heard
Highway Fund Collections.
commence at 10:45 a.m. with the raising and half-maston the matter
of Nathan.
The funds are distributed ing, of the colors by Sea Explorer Ship 690 Scouts.
Rosenfeld's
parking
proquarteTlly to Michigan counHoward Wood, Alger Post~
posaL
ties, incorpoi-ated cities and 995 V.F.W., and Martin NielMr.. Rosenfeld, president of
villages, as provided by Acts son, American Legion Post 303
Jacobson
Stores,
Inc., has
153 and 272 of the 1957 Legis- Color Guards. will lead. the
come up with a plan which he
lature, which combined Act advancing and placing of Colf€'els will help to ease the
51 of 1954 and Act 87 of 1955, , ors.
co u r r e n t shoppers'
parking
Took in 77, Millions
The opening prayer will be
problems in the Village area,
. h
given by the Rev. Father
Specifically, he proposes to
Net receipts of the hlg way Thomas P. McWilliams, of St.
convert
lots No. 3 and No. 4
fund for the first quarter of Ambrose" Rom a n Catholic
(on
the
north side of Kerche1958 amounted
to $77,04:0,- Church, following which there
val, behind Himelhoch's, and
Stolen
Car
Report'
Brings
... '" '"
972.70, a decrease of $874,- will be the introduction of ofon the south side of that street
Friday, May 23
158.34 from the amount colArrest of Two Girls and
lected
the
first
quarter
of
ficiating
dignitaries
by
Charles
behind
the A & P, respectiveTHE ROYAL CANADIAN
Male Companion
by
1957
which
was
$78,914,951.
W.
Elliott,
president
of
the
ly)
into
attended
parking
Mounted Police said Thursday
,
.
Grosse Pointe War Memorial
I
areas.
They
would,
in
effect,
Park
Police
The g.ross coHectlOn for the' Association.
night that 13 children had been
be
similar
in
operation
to
that
first
quarter
of
this
year
burned to death in a fire at
of
lot
No.
5
which
is
behind
came
to
$78,148,782.45,
from
Frederick
W.
Parker,
Jr.,
Two
girls
called
Park
the Anahim Reserve Indian
which was deducted the Sec- Mayor of the City of Gros~e police on Saturday, May 24, Jacobson's store.
School, 140 miles west of Wil-Fred Runnells Photo retary of State's costs amount- Pointe, will read the Gold Star
Bow It Would Work
liams Lake, B. C.
to report a stolen oar and
as evidence. Warrants were issued for
Burglars
took this 700-pound safe
ing to $1,107,989.75.
I Honor
Roll, and the sermon
First reports indicated the
In essence, the proposal
ended up by being held for
the arrest of two persons, including a
from the home of Peter Cavataio, 765
The largest amount of the will be given by the Rev. Marblaze was in a hospital operaguarantees for 3lh years, beinvestigation
of
breaking
total coming to the Pointe will cu~ Johnson, of. the Grosse
John Doe, and another man is beipg
Middlesex,
on Tuesday,
May 20, but,
ted by the Sisters of Christ
of homes in ginmng July 1, 1958, the gross
<'fO to the Park
which will get Pomte CongregatIonal Church. and entering
held as a police witness. Shown exDetroit police recovered
it before the
the King. The RCMP said the
revenue from parking lots 3,
$34,839.90; with the Woods
FOllowing t~e sermon will the night time. A male com- 4 and 5 will not be less than
Indian agent at th~ reserve
amining the safe, are CPL. CHARLES
thieves could eet the $50,000 it consecond, for $31,820.03.
come the p.l~cmg of wre~ths panion was also arrested.
reported 11 babies were killed
$17,740 for the six months beFRENCH (left) and DET. LT. STANtained. The money was 'in the inner
The three were turned over ginning July 1~ 1958 and not
The
Farms
will
get
$28,164by the AUXllIary of ~n:erIcan
in the day-long blaze, Two
LEY ENDERS, Park policemen who
compartment,
and the burglars fouled
.51; the City, $17,374.45; ane. Legion Post 303, AUXllIary of to Fanns police a'!ld were less than $35,479 for each of
C)lder children also died.
worked on the case. See story C?rl this
up the lock mechanism
when they
the Shores $3 869.81.
Alger Post 995 V.F.W., and booked ~n a charge of bur- the three years commencing
'" '" '"
page.
used a drill and acetylene torch. Park
, ,
Girl Scout Mariner Troop 385 glarizing the homes of Hugo
Jam ..ary 1, 1959.
Saturday, May 24
police deposited the money in a bank
Bow' 'Ii's D!vided
members.
Leibold, 184 Lothrop; and WilFurthermore,
if the new
UAW PRESIDENT WALTER
' '
,
All state gasoline, weight
The Volley, Taps and EchO fred Gmeiner, 160 Country operating plans for lots 3 and
p, REUTHER told 450,000 auto
and Deisel fuel taxes and a will be offered by the firing Club drive.
4 are not completed by July
The Gmeiner h 0 me was 1, 1958, the above guarantee
small amount of miscellane<>us squad of Alger. Post 995,
fees colleoted under the above V.F;W., with John Brockman broke~ into on Friday, May shall be adjusted on a pro rata
acts are deposited in the Motor on the bugle. Mr. Nielson and 16: and that of LeibOld, 00 basis.
~:p~~ac~o;~~~~~~~~so~~~
Vehicle Highway Fund. After Mr. Wood will retire the COlors, Thursday, May 22.
The City of Grosse Point~
110force the BIg Three to settle
•
deductions for non-highway
and .the annual memorial cerewhich must obtain revenue to
Three Admit Guilt
uses and coNection costs,' the m()nies will be closed with a
Held on the charges are retir~ the $380,000 bond issue
n€;{eC~~~i~~~e%n~~wo~~~~
balance' of the money is dli- benediction by Father McWilEsther ZappiteU, 17, of 1231 on the Village lots, (since they
company lockout could force"
,
vided as follows:
Iiams.
Lakepointe; Jo'Ann Chapman, are not paid for by City taxes)
Forty-seven percent to the
the UAW- to leave th,e plaJ.lts: T....
x Rate t-o-$-2-' Per Thou.. Expect
Enrollment
of More
Than the
1200 Who
'18, of 1246 Rankin, Windsor; stands to take no loss with
The UAW's strategy m facmg
d d
Y
C
f
B th EI
t
State Highway Dep.artment for
a united front by the Big 'I'hree
sand of Va'uatiorl~ PenAtten
e Last
ear~
ourses
or 0
ernen ary
and William Lowthan,. 19, of Mr. Rosenfeld's proposal since
expenditure on state trunkline
14720 Novara. DetroIt. All those merchants agreeing to
was sent to a tightly closed
sion Fund Appreciates
and Secondary
Students
highways in both rur?.l and
meeting of 650 members of the
.'.
. urban areas; 35 percent to the
thTee admitt.ed bein.g involved. the plan would validate parkPark Police ChIef Arthur ing tickets in those three lots.
union's Ford General Motors
-Summer School seSSIOns of the Grosse Pomte PublIc
counties for their roads; and
Louwers said that most of and pay the City any differand Chrysler' Councils in Ford
The Grosse Pointe City School System will'begin Monday, June 16, Dr. H. Leroy
18 percent to the incorporate~
Grosse
Pointe
will
lose
Qne
the
loot taken from the Liebold ence that might exist from the
Auditorium.
Council
has
approved
a Selmeier,
Director
of Instruction
for the schools, an- cities and villages for expendIof its most popular mail caT~ home was recovered frOm the present mete-red system.
• • •
budget
of $661,150.00 for nouriced this week.
0
- turel:> on their r 0 ads
and riers at the end of this month home of the younger girl.
Presented Week -Ago
Sunday, May 25
the coming year, as eomLast year almost ,1200 stu- weeks,'~ Dr. Selmeier stated streets.
when Frank "Andy" Anderson Some C>f the stolen articles
The proposal was presented
PREMIER PIERRE PFLIM- pared with the 1957-58 bud- dents registered for summer "Primarily
this educational
leaves his Bishop, Yorkshire had been pawned in Detroit, to the City Council a week
Most for Highways
LIN called an emergency ses- get of $650.825.00. The new school work in Grosse Pointe. opportunity is meant for stuand Kensington roads route he said.
ago, May 19, at which time
Under this distribution fOr- after 30 yoors of £aithful servsion of the National Assembly budget is $3.000 more than Twenty-four
teachers
were dents who want strengthenTaken from the Gmeiner the Council called the subsefor Monday as an armed de Mayor
Fredrick
Parker's
er.,1ployed to provide the de- ing in the basic academic mula, the State Highway De- ice to the residents of those
quent meetL.'"1gto be held on
Gaul1ist insurrection
rocked recommendation
of $658,- sired instruciion.
Fur the r skills or for those who might partment winget, $36,209,172- streets, between J effer-son and home was a silver service set, the 26th. in order to afford
valued at $300; and a hi-fi
Corsica; de Gau1lis1:sset up a
growth is anticipated in the have fallen behind due to .57 of the 1958 first quarteT' Kercheval.
Mr. Anderson, of 1159 Way- record changer and 70 records, the rest ot the merchants an
three-man rule in Algeria; and 150.00.
summer school session as high illness or other emergency coHection; the counties, $26,opportunity to air their opin964,277.44; and the incorpor- burn avenue, entered the post- total value, $800.
French-Tunisian
fig h tin g
According to Budget Direc- school records' became more causes.
The Liebolds lost about $6,- ions on the plan. A registered
flared again.
tor Neil Blondell's annual. re- and more important with re"Elementary
age students ated cities and villages, $13,- al service in 1922 at the Fox
Creek station, which was loca- 000 in jewelry and several letter was sent all "Village"
Pflimlin, ill an extraordinary
port, the tax rate is $~l.OOper spect to ac:1ffiissionto college living in the Trombly, Defer, 867.342.69.
The Highway Fund ~ollec- ted on East Jefferson between appliance i-rems. The police merchants, informing them OIl
radio broadcast to the nation, $1 000 assessed v'aluatlOn .. Tot- and job opportunities.
Maire, Riohard and Kerby dis(Continued on Page 2)
after midnight, promised all- aI' tax levy amounts to $524,Morning Classes Only
trims will register and attend tion for the first quarter came Philip and MaIl!i.stique. For list of stolen goods was quite
from
.
the
following
sources:
six
years
he
delivered
mail
lengthy,
and
included
a
numout action ag,ainst the leaders 911.40 and" also according to
"Summ~r school courses this school at Maire Elementary
of personalized b 1an k
of what he called the Corsician official figures, the estimated year will. meet in the morn- School in Cadieux road," Dr. State Gasoline tax, $30,265,907; in ,the territory bounded by ber
checks on the National Bank
Diesel
Fuel
tax,
$397,256.36;
mob.
uncollected revenue for 1958- ings only and will run for six Selmeier said. "Those living
Lakewood, Je~femon, E a s t- of Detroit, J'efferson .and PhilFighting broke out in Tunisia 59 will total $1l,~11.40- '
in the Mason, Ferry, Barnes, Liquefied Petroleum Gas tax, l'awn, and the Detroit River.
He was transferred to Grosse ip branch.
between French and Tunisian
Bow It Will ~ Spent
Poupard and M()nteith dis- $19,735.46; Weight tax (resident),
$46,374,462.30;
Weight
Pointe
routes in 1928 atld has
Brought Own Downfall
forces and a rebel triumvirate
Beginning with the fiscal
f1
tricts will register and attend
tax (non-resident), $183,873.13; been delivering mail for 30
Latest gifts to the Grosse
The
arrest of the two girls
in Algeria hurled new defiance year April-I, 1958 the budg~t
a,t Mason Elementry School in and miscellaneous. '$907,548.20.
Pointe
War Memorial Center'.
years
on
the
above-mentioned
and
their.
male
companion
at Paris in hopes of toppling for the City calls for expendI~
e"
in Vernier road.
1958
Annual
Family Particiroute.
His
r~ti:rement,
at
61,
came
,about,
after
the
girls
the Republic and installing iures of $50,050.00for Admini--"All secondJary age students
pation Campaign have brought
will
be
effective
May
31
of
this
drov.e
away
wi.th
a
car,
and
Gen, Charles ,de Gaulle as strative purposes; $116,470.00 No one's fault but his own, -":grac.es 7-12--will
register
year.
then reported it stolen.
the drive almost within $2,00()
leader of a new regime.
for the police 'department; $81.- there wasn't much dOll/bt~bout and attend summer school sesMr. Anderson has a son and,
Miss Zappitell
and Miss of the necessary goal, A total
'" '" •
1 005.00 for the fire department; that In the mir.ds of City police sions at Orosse Pointe High
daughter,' both of whom are Chapman :vere given a ride by of $35,492.44 has been received
Monday, May 26
and $21,850.00for the Park exSchool," he said. Among the
married.
He is the grandfather
Joseph ElIas of 665 W. Han- from 2,734 families to date.
early Monday morning, as they subjects which WI'II be 0ff er ed
FRENCH A I R FOR C E penses.
Memorial Week-end is the
A lesson in safe boating and of six. He says, at present, he cock, Detroit, who told police
planes, operating out of AlThe. City takes just.ifiable ticketed Thomas W. Lange, of are English I-VIII, French, color movies will feature the 'has no definite plans for the that when he stopped and went end of active campaign effort.
gus, bombed and strafed Tu- pride m the fact that It h~s, 1835 NOl'wood, for reckess Latin, Spanish,. Algebrn, Ge- first meeting of the Grosse future - other than a well into a Mack bar to purchase Board members and volunteera
nisian forces battling French over last year, decreased ltS driving.
ometry, Refresher Mathema- Pointe Boat Owners Club on deserved rest.
are busy calling givers of rec(Continued on Page 2)
troops in Southern Tunisia, deficit .by $19,787.05. >.Current. Lange, in making, a' right tics, Government, World His- Monday, ,June 2, at the Farms
ord urging them to put their
Sunday.
and delmquent tax l~vles were turn Mf Krecheval onto Uni- tory, Economics, and typing municipal pier.
contributions In the' mail at
In Paris the French Govern- collected, as of AprIl 1, 1958, versity 'place~ jumped the curb
(Continued on Page 2) ,
once. With the campaign goal
The instructions and movies
ment acknowledged the attack, up to 99.65, percent.' ,]~he and knocked down the street
so clole in sight a little spurt
will be provided by.-:the twelfth
"'aying it was made to relieve amount of delmquent tax, lll- sign, a stop sign and, What
of giving right now will bring
division, of the U. S. Coast
French . ground troops under eluding last year's current finally stopped him, struck a
the drive to a successful conGuard Auxiliary headed by'
attack. Diplomatic informants
(Continued on Page 2)
tree!
clusion,
Cap!'. Mil ton Hayes
and,
said early Monday that France
The $37,500 is needed to opVice Capta,in August B'e~ens.
Twenty-six burglaries, which home at the time of the theft, erate
the Center beginning
has agreed to regroup all the
The .guest speaker will be netted the thieves more than but the alibi was broken when August 1. ThC! directors are
Tunisian-based
trOOps in the
Richard Wummel of 37890 the division's' Training Offi-, $18,000 since they began their a neighbor of his told authori- confident that the need will
NATO-run Bizerte naval base
r Donald ~acDon~ld,. yv~o Qperations in Janu'ary, were ties Klimbal was riot home be met just as it has been in
Circle drive, Mt. Clemens, did
area , in line with a demand
.
not have time to argue with a WIll show mOVIes on artIfICIal 'solved when Park police broke when he said he was.
past years.,
made Sunday by the TWlISlan
Shores policemen on Saturday, reSpiration"
and
"common the alibi of a man arrested
Lt.
Eriders
and
CpI.
French
The Center has proven ita
president.
May 24, when the officer tried sense aflo~t.".
Sunday, May. 18, for break- said that after extensive ques- worth by serving' an increasing
'" • ~
Park police have obtained
Collins sairl that he and Jim ~o stop hian for drivmg at an,
A half ~our q~estlO~ and an- ing and enterIng a Park bar
Tuesday May 27
warrants for the arrest of two rented the garage where they excessive rate of speed on swer perIod WIll clImax the and taking $740 in cash aYld tioning, of Klimbal, the accus- number of Grosse Pointers'
ed man admitted breaking each year. Nearly 100,000 were
PRESIDENT EISENHOWER men, incuding a "John Doe," left the safe,' with acetylene Lake Shore road. He asked for meeting.
.
about $402 worth of liquor.
into the bar, and also, into 24 included in its activities dur.
~ame out Monday against any and are holding another man torch equipment, which could an escort to St. John Hospital,
All Grosse POl1lte Farms
Warrants
charging Gerald other bars, and one furniture ing the past season.
tax cuts now. Instead, he asked as a police witness in the theft be used to open it. Then, Col- and got 'it.
boat owners are in:vited to .at- Klimbal, 27, of 12213 String- store, in Detroit, St. Clair
The Center is as self-supCongress to extend present of a 700-pound safe contain- ins said, the other man warned
'Wummel was observed driv- tend this informatlv~ meetmg ham court, Detroit; and David Shores and Warren. Klimbal porting as it can be to remail\
corporate and excise tax rates ing $50,000 taken from a Park ~im not to talk, or he would ing south on Lake Shore by which the Club offrcers feel Dunningan, 25, of 14488 Fairsaid they took about $18,300 tax-free and continue to offer
scheduled to drop on July 1. home on Tuesday, May 20,
be hurt.
Patrolman
Harry
Hamilton, willd() much to _promote s~e '\-Test, Detroit, with burglariz- in cash and other loot, since its services freely or at costs
In letters to Vice President
The safe was reported stolen
Disregarding the threat, Coi- who paced (,the driver at 55 bo.Ciltingon busy Lake St. ClaIr ing Verdonckt's
Bar, Mack January. He named Dunning- which encourages broad com ...
Nixon and House Speaker Sam from the home of Peter Oava- lins informed Detroit authori- miles an hour. The officer thls summ€r,
and ,Beaconsfield, were ob- an as his partner.
munity use. AlJ gifts to the
Rayburn, the President
and taio, 765 Middlesex, a bakery ties of the crime and led them pulled up alongsI'de Wummel's
t'
d f
th Wayn Coun
Besides
the
Park
bar,
KlimCenter are income tax de.rom
e
e
his Administration would con- executive.
FOR TEACHERS t ame
to the garage the next morn- car 'when I't turn,
ed' onto Blail'- COURSES
P rosecu t"or S Off'ICe .
bal 'said he and his partner ductible.
__k
l'
tach
y
tinue to consider fiscai me~Wednesday morning, Detroit ing., ,When found, the outer moor, 'and motioned him to the
High' M;UOO 8C.1,ence e
-,
.
The Center's directors wish
era may satisfy education reKlimbal was arrested on: the br()ke into 19 bars and a fursures in light of t~e economIC police found the safe in a ga .. safe door had akeady been curb
niture
store
in
Detroit,
three,
to
extend their thanks and
situation and theIr long and rage at 3560 East Willis. and drilled and partially "torched," _ What Wummel had to say, quirements whi1e taking field day of the ?urglary; Dunmngbars
in
St.
Clair
Shores
and
graditude
to the following genan immediate
re- courses this summer at ,the anga~~
himself up to Park
zhort-range effects.
arrested Ledell Collins, 44, but the money had net yet 'brought
two' in Warren.
erous donors.
'
locked sponse from the officer who W. K. Kellogg Biological Sta- authorItIes. on Tu~sday, ¥ay
'" ... '"
3563 Superior, Detroit, as a ?een t.ouched. It, ~s
.On'
Mayl8,
Maurice
VerMay
19
In an mner compartment.
gave his siren full play.
tion' operated. by Michi~an 27, on. adVIce of hIS. attorney,
Wednesday, May %8
suspect.
donckt of 1491 BeHconsfield,
Mr. and Mr.s. Carl Beran..
rrhe., safe. was taken to th.e
At'the hospital, doctors said state
University.
The fIfth accordmg to Park offIcers, Det.
GEN.
C H A R L E S DE
Collins told police that he
closed his bar at 3 a.m. and Dr. Frank B. BIcknell, Mr. and
GAULLE sped to Paris f~om had been hired by a man DetrC\lt polIce garage to awaIt that Wummel's' mother Mrs. summer school session open- Lt. Stanley Enders and Cpl. went home across the street Mrs. C. K. Bowles, Mr. and
.
his village home Mon~a~ nlg~t named Jimmie, whc asked him openIng .in the presence of Betty Wummel, and he~ neV{- :ll'g June 24 will indU:!ie field Charles F.rench. .
from his busin~8 place. At Mrs. A. J. ~utting, ~.
and
The offleers saId that Klm~,on a suspenseful mISSIon of to drive to the Cavataio ad- Park pollee and an ,attorney est son born during the mad courses in botany, entomo.logy,
about'5:15 a.m., whil[~ relaxing M~. D. W. DIcken, WIlham J.
dash to' the hospital; were both microbiology, 'fisheries
a:p.d bal, v:rho was arrested ~t hUl
mystery that may either re- dress with his truck to pick up representin~ Cavataio.
in a chait- and reading a news- Elliott, E. M. Gregory, Jr., Mt.
Pa<rk Pollee Lt. Gerald :{{E15- fine. Mrs., Wummel's husband~ Wildlife parasitology, aoology DetrOIt home by DetrOIt po,601ve or d ark en the areat gravE-l.This turned out to be
tCJeDtiD.ued GI1 Pap to
~oDtiMed OIl Paa' •
(oCoIltinved ell Pare ...
John was workinc at the time. and l~gr'Wh7.
Yce, olaHned 10 bav. been
Fftnoh orisic.
the nnsponation of the .ate.
a
TeenageJ'S
Booked for
Burglaries
I
',
•
City Passes Summer School SeSSIons
New Budget Set to Start on June 16;.
~~~k~~~i~~Yt~~i:j~:r~e~~
Of $6611,50 Registratioll,Dates,Llsted
Popular Postman
g
Serves 30 Years
Center Drive
Short $2,000
Th 'fee Sf -kes
Offl.c:al Count
I
Boat Owners
To See Film
Accused Man Confesses
Police Recover $50,000
From Safe Stolen in Park
,
y
$18,300 Loot in Thefts
Policeman Joins
Race With Stork
ce.
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4<
.......
....
/
-
Page Two
POINT!
GROSS!
I
Summer School Sessions Center Drive
(CGntinued from Page 1)
I-IV. In addltlon to these regular courses, and 'Others f'Or
WhIch demand may develop,
------------
Publlshed Every Thursday by
Anteebo Publishers, Inc.,
99 Ke-rcheval, Grosse Pointe FaFms,
Michigan
Phone TU. 2-6900
Three Trunk Lines
Elltered as second class matter at
the post Office, Detroit, Michigan,
1JDder the act of ~Iarch 3, 1897.
SubscnptIon Rates $3 50 Per Year
by Mail: $4 00 outsIde Wayne County. All News and Advertlsmg Copy
Must Be m The News OffIce by
Tuesday Afternoon to Ootain InEertlOn.
Trade
Mark
S;NCE 1938
Happy
Birthdav
.I
to these
C'J
• ,
Jrancot.1
Cleanpfate
Cfubberj
JUNE 1, 1958
Kathy Wenner. 20531Ellzabeth
Cathenne
de Martmo, 22741
Carolina
JImmy Ferry. 19830 Shady
Lane
Ruth Gust. 55 Muskoka
Tommy Stanford, 976 Beacons~
field
MIchael Cunmngham, 494
Shelbourne
Donald Loosvelt. 353 RIdgemont
Linda Lake. 275 McKinley
Guy Sewell. 911 Balfour
Holly Angell, 969 Balfour
ChIp ChIlson. 1772Prestwlck
John Vdn Loon. 837 Umversity
JUNE 2, 1958
VIctona WIllard, 1015 BIShop
Ann Dunmngs. 1160S o-Aford
Nancy Wleferman. 1156 Three
MIle
Chnsbanne Weiss. 1114 Bea~
consfleld
Susan Maurer 333 Cloverly
Beck~' Lake, 275 McKinley
Ma:-y Ryan, 19949 E. Wlll1ams
Ct
Bob BrIstol. 243 McMl1lan
Buddy Tocco. 926 Lakepointe
Kathy O'Brein. 183 LakeVIew
Barbara Harpster, 482 Fisher
Jeanne Struthers. 2(112Lochmoor
Johnny Wagner. 1699 Newcastle
Ellzabeth Songe. 1891Norwood
Mary Bracken, 2111Hampton
Sharon Kelly. 1268 Balfour
PattI HIlls. 829 Grand Marais
Peter Blake. 19071Norwood
Janet Br<ldy, 1239YorkshIre
John Wibbelman, 69 Hall PI.
Karen Lena, ISn Severn
JUNE J" 1958
steVIe Guimond. 22425 Ard_
more
Tommy Buergel, 755 Vermer
Gregory Boerner. 326 Hillcrest
SUSIeFletcher. 686 Rivard
Tom Ouellette, 749 West<:hes~
tel'
Alan Thomas. 743 Washington
Tom BaIley. 868 Lorame
Sandra Forrest 459 La Belle
Ben Parsons. 686 RIVard
Nancy Karal. 1574Alme
MarCIa McDonnell, 1059 •
Brys
Jon Verner. 473 Chalionte
FrederIca Fryer. 160 McMillan
Chrlstme Kolowlch, 24 Beverly
JUNE 4, 1958
Susan Marantette, 1008 BerkshIre
Clotllde Book, 263 Cloverly
Robert Vance. 893 Umver "Ity
Mary Wood, 550 Renaud
Janet Rogers. 645 Hawthorne
Trudy Howell, 1805 Severn
Ralph Selloff, 2126 Lennon
Billy Connolly. 1004 BerkshIre
Stanley Renouf. 321 Cloverly
Brandle O'Connor, 322 Hillcrest
Gary Winslow. 1822Severn
JUNE 5, 1958
Robert Hove. 22836 st. Joan
Susan Bandemer, 24200 Dean~
hurst
DaVId Jansen, 22955St Joan
JIm Kendall, 518 Barrmgton
Billy Jenzen. 1152Elford Ct
Lawrence SchmIdt, 408 Neff
Patnck Roney. 76 Mernweather
Ch,uckle Sultzman, 1240 Fmrholme
Kathy Henders.on. 2118 Lennon
Howard Robmson. 381 Notre
Dame
MerrIll Watson, 289 RIdgemont
Mark O'Gorman. 78 Meadow
Lane
Mary Swartz. 1137 Balfour
Sherry Summers, 1605Bournemouth
JUNE 6, 1958
Danny Brinkel, 23019 Lmgemann
Carol DeForest. 1363Brys
Kirk Alyatt. 1323Nottmgham
Sandy Sturtevant, 816 Washmgton
Debra Porter. 966 Lmcoln
Mary Corville. 26 Radnor Circle
Alan Mathews, 1932Seve!'n
I
Parking
(contlnu~
VA. 3-9764
Elmer Scherer
Golf
Driving Range
Mrs.
HOW?
Garden Council
Makes Donation
featuring
The Gros;e t>omte Garden
CouncIl. met Friday, May 16,
and voted t'O contribute $100
toOthe RIchard SchOOl playground
beautificatiDn
plan.
This allocation, it was speci~
fied, was donated preferalbly
for the planting 'Of a gQodsized tree.
The CounCIl also voted to
agam sponsor the annual "Crab
Tree Sale," tc be held in late
Ootober.
Another resolution recom~
mended sendmg letters to the
fIve respective Pomte municipalltles requestmg co-opera~
tlOn In the enforcement Olf the
current litter campaign. (In
conJunction with the Council's
campaign they recently handed out lItterbug bags, gratIS,
to the students at Grosse
Pointe HIgh School which action seems to have stemmed
the trash tide CDnsideiably).
MISS Chnstme Edwards re~
ported that local garden clubs
are sendmg a total 'Of16 teachers to the Hlggms Lake ConservatIOn camp this summer.
Ten of thes-e teachers are from
the Grosse Pomte area.
ThIS proJect IS cleared by
the Garden CounCIl eaoh year.
Donailons of $30 are gIven for
each "camper" by the clubs
and the Board 'Of Education
c'O-operates by recornmending
WDrthy local teachers for reCIpients 'Of the honor.
l'pJ
k
TUxedo 5.9236
We are pleased
to announce •••
I
John B. 'Jack' Carpenter
•.• has returned to ~ctive ~ssociationl
Ch,e~ter F. Carpenter
AGENCY
Dry Cleaned
and Finl.~.d
by ExclUSive
LUSTE~TEX
SHOI REPAIR
'Ju. 2%
Pointe 24
TU 2-9296
Supernarurd
II
Cleaners'
-
more,
..
Priced from
w:
new
520 Wood"
North of elt"
Call: Walter H. Mast Co.
20039 Mack Avenue
TU 2-1400
\
,
r.
_
-r!
.
Famous
SavIng
54
• SAILBOATS
$139
/
LOW DOWN
• OUTBOARD MOTORS of all types
PAYMENT WITH PAYMENTS
THE
e
4
MJ:CHJ:GAN BA:NB:
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
1 5 0 1 0 E A S T J E F FER S'0 N, N EAR
GROSSE POINTE WOODS
TO FIT YOUR BUDGET
Your dealer can also arrange for Mkhlgan Bank Fioonctng
,
20737 MACK AVE.
.
'0
of Valuation, MinimUM IDe
UF to 4&"
Famous Low
Low Price
C
• INBOARD AND OUTBOARD
MOTOR BOATS
• TRAILERS
~------ ..
• POWER CRUISERS
Wa
MEMBER fEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATiON
A L T ERR
0 A 0 I N G~ 0 SSE
P T E. PARK
•
4
II
are the wor
surprisingl~
Milan, Le~
Panama
.Boat
Fever?
DRAPES
S.URTS
I!":J~"
.T
EXCLUSIVE
N.lghborhood
'TIL ':00 P.M.
GroSS(i:
,
~
PAY NEXT fALL
SPORT
.
$129 "
RENUVENA1'1
PROCESS
Week ending .June 7
..
YOll1
*129
SPECIAL5
Plus .2% for Storage Insural'lC!l
Minimum Valuation $100
lI);.
..
in
5 For
~
plUbc.
Ask for Our SpeCIal
It Glazed
By Approved
Furriers' Method.
OPEN FRI. SAT
Gen
Pan
18()38 Mack Ave.
See Us'\About A
:: Shoe Repair ServIce
PROCESS
W~
anything
•
,Cleaned
tl01'
never
f
51
FUR COATS
Th.... '" "
.
man In
with the
tl
MinImum lIOt
CLEANtN"i'i;
the coolf
specializing in insurance for every need
(.
Plul:!%of
Valt! ..tlon
LUSTER.lEX
CALL FRANK JOHNSON
TUxedo 5..0450
c
In
~
Service
t
Shoes
170 15 Kercheval
tlldlvldU'lIy pack'.1d
..'
Switch
•
.'PieCiPiper," are duigned for l1tU.
feet, and are expertly fitted under th.
direction of Mr. William McCourt, Ex~
~ulivel,. at Peter Pan in Gro'N Pointe.
8NU(lfullll'und,rld
and finlsh,d.
l
Time
1f'"
for Infants end Children
H,
Controls
'WHO?
You and Your Fantily
A
family room, ground floor bedroom
WHAT? and bath, or mod~rn kitchen.
let us design your addition to fit YOUR house
WHERE? and
YOUR needs.
WHEN? !nioy, greater livea bility now.
Harper-Melro
m..
Top H(]
Lawn Sprinkler
I
r'
Budget
..
GROSSI POINTE
Woods LIOns Olub, one; the
Grosse Pointe Exchange Club,
one; and Alger Post 9£5, VFW.
one.
CHESTER'S,
. .
Mack at Somerset
Given RelOaJ~dI
tan Club, 'One; Grosse Pointe I
21'
and YOUR Family
I Minutes Drive from Vlllage.
I M1nntes Drive from the BiD.
Safety Patrols
from Page 1)
Mr:
Catering to YOU
:J.rancoij ,
:J.irepface
Burglaries
Fifteen buses were required
(Continued from Page 1)
to transp()['t 784 Pointe and
.,~
and Mrs. Edgar Gore, Mr. and the pr'Oposal, and stating the a package of cigaxets, the gIrlS Harper Woods Safety Patrol
Mrs. John Hammel, Mr. and time and place of the May 26 dTove 'Off wlith h~s car. He boys and 50 supervisors to the
Mrs. R. W. Haughton, Mr. and meeting.
said he had left the key m the Brig~ Stadium to watch the
The entire C'Ouncil was in
ignition.
Tigers-BaltimDre
g a m e on
Mrs. J'Ohn F. Hering, Mr. and attendance
to evaluate the
The car was recovered art; Wednesday, May 21.
Mrs. David E. Hopp, Mrs. Jos. posltIQn 'Of the rest of the
The buses were given a moLeslIe Komar, Mr. and Mrs. merchants,
bef'Ore reaching Latep'Oint& and St. Paul by
Frank A. Krue, Jr., Thomas their own decision 'Onthe mat- Park Police Sgt. Hazen Hen- torcycle escort through Detroit
V. LOC'lcero, Thoma1s J. Mar- tel'. Three hOUIS' worth of nig anc;l Patrolman '.t,homas f by Detroit pQlice.
'Opinions were offered in the Fr:aser and tur~ed over to
Park Police Chief Arthur
shall
close quarters-which
became the o~ner, sans the key. The Louwers, transportati~
chairNeIghborhood Thrift Shop, closer, and warmer, as the
car had to be towed w a serv- man, saId the .event IS an anMr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Net- minutes elapsed. .
ice station.
nuaJ! reward gIven to the boys
tmg, Mr. and Mrs. Donald R.
After much heated "discus.
Later in the day the giJrls for the wonderful j'Obthey are
Newell, L. Pauline Olde, MISS sion," a~d some w'OrthwhiJIe mlled the station' to report domg in prot:cting'School chilCecIlla F. 01schefsky, Mrs.' observ:atIons on the part. of the car missing.
dren at crossmgs.
WIlliam J. Parker, John S. CouncIl and merchants all~e,
Thought Owner Knew
I
The boys were from public,
Pingel, Mr, and Mrs. R. R. May'Or Fred Par~er, (admg
Det. Lt. Stanley Enders and parochIal and private schools,
Ranney, Mr. and Mrs. Vvesley upo,:- the sug%estlOn of bo~h Cpt Charles French" had all
The cost of the buses was
M. Rea, Ehner W. Rupp, Stella partIes~: ~ppo~ted a commIt- the information on the car $660, or $44 each., dQnated by
M. Sheahan, Mr. and Mrs. tee of Village merchants to since it was the one take~ the various servlce clubs" of
Allan Shelden III Suburbia further evaluate the Rosenfeld from Elias, and they pIcked up the Pomte and Harper Woods,
Garden Club, Hem; II. Tiede- proJ?osa~ among the~selves, the girls and took them to the mcludmg:
mann, Andrew W. Ureel, Mr. havmg m ~h~ meanwhl1e c8.l?--station, where under ques~
The _Grosse Pointe Rotary
Adolph A- WIdmann, Mt. and vassed op~n1Qns from 'fueJX tioning by 1ihe officers, they Cll;lb, th:ee
buses;
Grosse
Mrs. James H. Wiles, Mr. and fellow busmessmen.
admitted the car was not Pomte LIOns, three; Grosse
Mrs. Laurence H. Wilson.
The committee was chosen theirs. They said they thougM POl?te Kiwanis, one; MetreMay 20
froon .the six Village parkin;g the owner of the car knew pol1tan Club of Harper Woods,
PerIod IV-ll:15~12:20-4th
Miss FU.orence Bachor,- Miss lots, ill; order that all buS1- they had taken it.
one; Grosse Pointe Metropoli~
and 6th graue Reading, Spell~ Marjorie
Fay Barnes
Cle nesses m the three-lblock area
While the questi'Onang was
mg.
Clark, Inc., Mr. and' Mrs. might be ;fairly represented.
going on, Lt. Enders checked
Opportunities for 5itJh cnd Andries M. Cole, Charles E.
A'C~ordmgly, Mayor Parker the purses of the two young
6th graders to enroll m in~ Cumm~skey, Dr. and Mrs. R. appomted Mr. Rosenfel? as women and in one of the
strumental music courses will C. Everett Herbert Field Ar- chal'rman of the COImmttee,
purses, found s'Ome b 1a n k
also be offered. A fee of $10 thur L H~wel1, Ben W. Hub~ with Howard Jaeling, 01. ~he checks, ~ich had been taken
WIll be charged reSIdents and bard, J'Oseph Lemweber, Mr. A & P; Mrs. Theodore CoggIns, from 1frle Le~bold residence.
both begmmng and advanced and Mrs. D. D. MacMechan, of .Peek and P~k;
Gerald Before the tWQ officers finplayers WIll be a!'commodated. Charles L Palms Jr Howard Stem, of S, Stem & Co.; i:lhed their questioning, the
Reglstratlon for the HIgh and Lois Pennington:' Mr. and Ro.bert Harrison, of Harrison- girls, confessed to breaking
School Summer School sess'on, Mrs. Edwin F. Sanders, Mrs. PI"mgle; W. A. McCQur:t, of into the Gmeiner and Leibold
under the direction of Prmci~ Mark C. Stevens, Abraham Peter. Pan; and. R. J. WIlcox, households, and
Implicated
pal Jerry GerIch, will be held Voorhees Dr and Mrs Ed- 'Of Hlme.lhoch Bros. & C'O. Louthan.
May 28 and 29 for reSIdents. ward A.' WI~hropp,
and serving with. him,
Chief Louwers saId that the
ThIS WIll be done m the HIgh Mrs. R. F. Woelfel, A. L.
The commIttee has been au~ charge of car theft against
School audItorIUm (room 137) ZWIckey, Mr. and Mrs. C. thorlzed to su~mit ~ :r:eport by the girls will be temporarily
between the hours of 3:30 and Henry HaberkQrn 3Td
June 5 of theIr OpInIOns and waived, because of the more
5:30
May
find~ngf1 to the ~City Council, serious burglw:y chaTges which
RegIstration WIll continue on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. upon r(!oCeipt of WhICh the win be pressed by Far m s
FITTED BY EXPERTS
FrIday, June 13 between 10 Baker, Robert H. Dowen, Mr. Coun~il Will pr~tly
~aJil a auth'Orities.
a m. and 3 p.m. except for the and Mrs. Karl W. FIrth, Mr, me~tmg to oons'lder ana. take
Mute at Bearmg
noon hDur. Non-resident stu~ and Mrs. Glen Fortinberry, action on the Rose11lfeldpro~
On Monday, May ~6, Miss
Zappitell and Miss Chapman
dents may regIster Saturday, Mrs. John H. Fr.ench, Mr. pOiFsalll'
....~l
__
June 14 fr'Om 9 to 12 noon ill James W. Greig, Joseph I. h °b ~nrg ththeCCO~tu;:J.
uCSlOn
~~ were arraigned before Farms
BOOT SHOP
Room 114.
Henk, Mr. and Mrs. John W. t e eanng,.
e 1 y oun~ Judge Grant E. Annstrong 'On
Children's Shoe Specialists
i Mulford Mr and Mrs Ger- held a busmess meetmg m dha~ges of breaking and enter15911 E. WARREN
Cost $10 Per Course
ld E Sc' h roe'd er, Ch~..n.
was passed
mg in the night time. They
dJ.~es Sol. which a resolution
.
'4,\.
F ees are $10 per course fa.
at Buckingham
or
Mr
d M
W'll' i A. to a p pro p l' 1 ate funds Wluu. stood mute.
TUxedo
5..0863
reSIdent secondary
students mTho, 'Jan
Trs'Woodh
lam
which to complete the purJudge Armstrong set bond
, $24 f
.d t
A
omas, 0h n.
ouse.
ana
'Or non~reSI en s.
Ma 23
chase 'Of the recently c'On- at $1,000 each for the gu-ls and
maximum of two courses may
Gran t Ax:ms tY
Buswinka-II 'Old e n for Louthan, who pled not
ron,g Mr. an d demned
be taken as the sch001 day J; M
Fr k H B
Mr
d property, aJt Kercheval and st. guilty, and bound them over
d d d
t
t
t
h
I"S.
an
. oos,
• an
.
IVI e
mp0 dWro wo~~our Mrs. Leonard G. Bradley, Mr. Clair. The ~Ity Clerk was to circUit court.
peno ds.
en'O
runs J.l.om and Mrs R C Chilt
Th 'Ordered toO fIle the necessary
8 to 10:05 and penod II from Col n To'n Club ~n, an~ certificate.
10:10 to 12'15 p.m.
0 y
w.
,1'.
"Good attendanc
d habits Mrs. Fredenck Hodges Duf~
.
e an
fIeld, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
of dependabIlIty and pundual~
C Godd d Mr
d '11 .... _
".
ar ,
. an:
J.Vll'S.
announces the
1t Y are '0f pnme Impor t anee,
J h M G h
Mr R E
.
dd d "A d'l
0 n
. ra am,
. . .
Dr, SeImeler
(CGntinued from Pare 1)
OPENING OF
a .e.
al y Keller, Mr. RIchard J. MartIn,
aSSIgnment durmg
summer Mr R ber t M rt
Mad
seSSIOnIS at least three times M' pOt A Ma In,
r. n taxes (1957-58) amounted to
$4,773.98.
'"
d
th
I
rs.
e
er
.
asouras.
w hat l!~ IS urmg
e regu ar
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McThe total taxes- (including
school :;.-ear.Stufients .WIll
fmd Coy, N eil McM'lla
J r., Wm. school and county taxes) for
t'
1
n,
th e program a very In enslve C. Oddy, C. R. Sessions, Mrs.
1957-58~for the City (which,
and demandmg one and 'Only Ra1lph Stoepel, Mr. Bernard notably, is one mile square and
those 'Ofsenous purp'Ose should St h J
M
d Mr :aob- contains 6,700 residents) are
enroll"
ro,
r.,
r. an
s.
Michigan', Fine$t
"All ft.
d'
ert Waldron, 1\.:1rs.John B. $1, 340, 210.10:
ees mus De pal ::.n \'IT
Mr
d M
J k
Premium Fund Figures
f II t 1Jh t
f
. tra
ry arren,
. an
rs.
ac
Harper Ave •• SGO..Ft.
Investments from the Penu
'~h
e
d
I~~h~~eg~~uld
Whiteley,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A.
D.
t lon,
Beyond
e sal .
s
W11kinson, Mr. and
D. sion Fund are most heartenade
be
payable to The Grosse A. WIlliams, Women"s Repub- ing. The carrying
Metropolitall Beach Rd.
amount,
PomJe PublIc School System. lic:tli Club of Grosse POInte.
$428,466.85 has a current (as
Carrying a complete line of
Any'One unaJble to appear at
Wilson goIt clubs and accessorIes
of last week) ma.l."ket value
the scheduled trm2s may how~
at popular prices.
GIRL BREAKS LEG
of $464,566.89.
ever, send a representative to
OPEN a A.M. to 12 Midnight
It is interesting to note the
Sarah Jean Elliott, 11, of 279
aceompllsh the registration for
Merriweather, fell from her continued increase in revenue
Pro in attendance. Free goU
them.
Further
information
bicycle in front of 246 Beau- from the City's parking lots. In clinic Mon. Wed. and Fri, from
9 to 10 p.m.
may be had at any time by
pre 'On Wednesday, May 21, 1955 they realized a total of
telephoning the AdnumstraPhon. HO 5..0261
and fractured her left leg. She $37,929.74; in 1956, $53,005.79;
tlve offIces of the schools, TU
was taken to Bon SeCQursHos- and in 1957, $66,409.38. Mr,
5-2000."
pital by Farms fll'emen. She Blondell optimistically ~ticiwas on her way to scho'Olfrom pates this year's total will surher home a report revealed.
pass $70,000.00.
(Continued from Page 1)
Driver Education wIll be of':
fered qualIfIed students."
Registration Dates Set
RegistratiQn f'Or elementary
summer school wIll be possIble
Friday, June 13 from 1:30-4
p.m. and Monday, June 16 from
8'30-11:30 a.m. Fees for res ident~ of Grosse PQmte al'e $7
for one period or $12 for two
periods 'Ofwork and must accompany regIstration. Advance
reglstratlon WIll not be accepted and,late regIstrants run the
rIsk of bemg refused admitt.ence If the COUI'sesare full.
Non-resident fees are double
those charged reSIdent students.
The elementary sum mer
school day WIll be divided into
the following periods:
Period 1-8'00-8:55-3Td and
5th grade Anthmetlc
Pe1'1od II-9'OO-10:15 - 3rd
and 5th grade Reading, Spell.
mg
Period III-10 15-11:10-4th
and 6th grade ArIthmetic.
Thursday,
Thursday, May 29. 1958
NEW5
('~',
~
_
\
.,
8
r
e
ON
I
Thursday,
May 29, 1958
G R 0 S SE
Top Honor Won By Julie Stindt
----~---~----~(..-.
< . pJtjt!",
>
~D 0 W N f' ~w
tJI
,:('LIVELAND '
, 38MtNtlrE~.
LEAVE
DETROIT CITY AIRPORT
8:10-10:30 A.M.
3:25 - 5:35 P.M.
( E.
s. T.)
EXCEPT SAT., SUN.
& HOLIDAYS
Hol-Rods, Cust()m Cars'
To Be Shown at Center
A local schola1' was awarded'
the newly-created PresidL'nt's
Key at Wayne State University's Honors Convocation last
Tuesday night, May 20. The
honor, given for the first time,
is bestowed upon the man or
woman in the graduating class
with the highest scholastic
rating. Dr. Clarence B. Hilberry, Wayne State's presic1ent,
made the presentations.
J'ewell (lJreferably "Julie")
E. Stindt, 29, of 1309 Roslyn
I road, took top honors for the
feminine portion of her class,
with an average of 3.83. Her
male counterpart had an average of 3.85. (A straight A
average would be 4.0).
Miss Stindt started at Wayne
in 1949 on a part-time basis.
I She wished
to broaden herself
above and b,,:yond ,the secretarial position at the Gener.1l
I Electric
Supply Co. In 1956
; she quit this job to go to school
! full time. Upon her graduation'
: from Wayne State she. plans ...
to becom~ a teacher.
On Sunday, Jun~ 8, from 12
noon to' 5 p.m.' the Tappet
Tickers Hot Rod Club of
Grosse Pointe in co-operation
with the Grosfi'e Pointe War
Memorial Association will' present "Rods and Customs of
'58" on the groYJlds of the
Center, In case of rain the
show will be postponed to the
n;ext Sunday, June 15, at the
same houlrs.
"
This will be the second year
for a Rod and Custom show
on the grounds of the MemoriaL lnfty cars are expected
to be entered in the show and
there is still time, to place
your car by calling 'informa-'
tion in to the. Cehter, TUxedo
1-7511 or the Tappet Tickers
Hot Rod Club, TUxedo 4-
I
I
I
1998.
Trophies will. be given to
the winners of each of the
following nine classes: Street
RO,adsters, Competition Roadsters, Competition Coupes and
Sedans, Street Coupes and
Sedans, Semi-Customs,
Full
Customs, Pick-Ups, Restoreds
and Dragsters.
. Two special trophies will be
given this year. The best car
in the show wi},! be pre:ented
I
SIR HAROLD CACCIA, left, England's' Ambassador to the United States, was a Pointe visitor during
the weekend. He presented a medal to the RT. REV.
BISHOP RICHARD S. EMRICH of the Episcopal
Diocese of Michigan, desigBating him a Commander in
the Order of the British Empire, for meritorious service in promulgating good relations between the t~lO
countries. The award was made at the Lakeland avenue home of the British Consul, Sir James Easton, on
Saturday. The ambassador, a tennis fan, also found
time to playa bit at his favorite sport on the Country
Club courts on Sunday. Bishop Emrich '.vill soon be a
resident of the Pointe, when he moves into the former
home of the late Miss Frances Sibley, at Washington'
and Maumee. She left the residence. to the Episcopal
Church as a residence for the bishop.
man in
tOlVll
never wears
anything but
The'Largest
.
Page Three
.
"
. Decoration for a Bish,op
the coolest
N T E N"E,W S
POI
...,
with
but will not be eligible for 75c if tickets are purchased
trophies.
from Tappet Ticker member.
Admission to this S!lOW is in advance-$l.OO at the gate.
a
trophy donated by Dei t Automotive Products.
The best engineered car will
receive an award from the
Nelson C. Fr0lund Company.
The finest show and drag
cars from all over Michigan
will be on display. An especially outstanding car owned
by Carl Cross will be brought
from Ohio. Mr. Cross' .f1ne
"32" Roadster has won eight
trophies in six shows and has
been written up in Hot Rod
Magazine. The car is powered
by a "53" Olds engine and the
body is chopped and channeled.,
A completely restored 1926
Ford Roadster Pick-up wi1l be
displayed by Karen Schc~nborn, the only gir~ entrant.
Her car is black and gold.
Other
fabulous
Michigan
creations will include Marty
Rebbit's "Golden Nugget," the
Knapp and Perry 130 m.p.h.
drag'Sterand
a many time
show winner, a '40 Mercury
Convertible
formerly owned
by Jerry Yatch and now the
proud possession of Jack Richardson.
Members
of the Tappet
Tickers win display their cars
tr
0
and Most Complete
.Tomorrow is
,Don't forget ...
Film and Flash Bulbs
'~F
==z='
l!
a
--
in the Village
17114 Kercheval
TU 1-4096
Open Friday Evenings 'til 9:00
Selection •
s.
at
• •
Stein and Co.
I
Dewey Kalember Honored by' Band
(l
Amid . bouquets of spring II am NOT sharp ~ the band is
f!owers ~nd mobiles shaped FLAT" or "Mayb,; I look bet- I
hke mUSIcal s y ill b 0 1s, the tel' without my flute."
,
Grosse Pointe High School
At this point Bill Mann took;
Band, members and their par- over as master of ceremonies I
ents gathered in the school' for a ~er:es of skits spoofing I
cafeteria
Saturday
evening, Mr. Kalember'g many talents
May 24, for a farewell banquet and en tit 1ed, "The Three
honoring
Dewey
Kalember Phases of Dewey." They supwryo is leaving the high school' posedly depicted him as the
after 21 years, to be.coine band Artist-musician,
the Sportsmaster at the new Brownell man and the Family man. No
Junior High School.
one got a bigger kick out of
A joint comrnittee of moth- it than Mr. K.!
ers and students had been
A more serious nOie was
busy fer several weeks pIan- struck when the new prin..;
ning surprises. The mothers cipd1, Jerry Gerich, was inplanned the mundane matters traduced and spoke of learnof food, decorations, reserva- ing of MI'. Kalember's statetions, etc. while the bands- wid!:' reputation as a builder
men took over in .the enter- of fine bands even before
tainment department.
meeting him personally. He
Mrs. Daniel Murphy, chair- aLc;oexpressed his pleasure in
man of the planning commit- the idea of forming a Bandtee, set a nice note of infor- Parent group which has his
mality in her opening remarks. enthysiastic approval.
Mr. Kalember was called on
The climax of the evening
and he expressed his apprecia- came when Mr. Kalember was
tion to all the band members given a beautiful
shotgun
and their parents. He sur- with his name engraved on
prised the seven graduating the butt as a parting gift from
seniors when he presented the band. He also received a
each one with a yellow rose. scrap-book in which the comHe had also provided some mittee will mount the candid
slides of baby pictures of vari- snapshots that Jim Podge and
ous band members with hu- Earl Zuehlke
were taking
morous captions such as, "I during the evening.
I
Genuine Eucadorian
Panama
from 3.95
II
•
I
Supernatural
For GOLFING
Pa na mas
Clind
SPORTS-CARS
are the world's best and,
surprisingly,
co
S t
no
more . . . w 0 ...e n in
Milan, Leghorn,
and
Pan a m a weaves...
CAPS
Linen - Chino - Silk
Priced from S6.9~ to S15.
WJH[11ING~S
?JWl)j wea/t,
•
520 ~.voodward
North
of City
County
6329 W. 7 Mile
Bldg.
------------~
Near
Livernois
--~----_._--
by HASPEL
The Wash and
Wear Sun
..,
that gets A
till
for [)isdplioe
T_is1keI~_~~
r
r~
{,
CAPPER & CAPPER
kx*
to ~
PO~A9
~isQ~SK~.*'e
int1'Oduces the
~
We had an idea that many of o~r
~
~~
PefK>r k.eeps a
customers wodd appreciate a rain.
should be soft and comfortable.
y<:)fI'" ~
•
Long
it€Yef ~res
•
Extra
•__y~
Sir,
coo, coH€cted ~~
~
~~
Cr-eooes ~~
dr<>ep.
• Short
the neckline ... likewise, the collar
~
N€¥ef does it get ~
• Regular
,:oat that would resist soiling at
~
of ~.'
irJdles~
pKJ<S~
CORDUROY COLLAR.
RAINCOAT
..
*~
'AI;
0¥EJf~.
is a ~
~
do41'f etJeA ~
tG ~
soiled
it.
rather than "clammy,"
England's leading maker of rainwear agreed-and
NoWOf\~SO~~~~
the result is not
pr~
only practical but we think it is the
P9f.fo<x. No WOftder, we
~
.fleC..o~
best looking raincoat we've ever
it to y~
€OO
wdhout
r~:
,
offered.
Also the
in natural poplin
Wash
Exemplar
I
and Wear
automatic
at 59.50
$39.50
Made in EI/!!,!,md eXc/Ufit,t!y lor
JJJ
Closed
Dav
Memorial
Friday.
May 30,
Wabash Avenue at Madison Street
Open Saturday.
Mail ordm promplly filled
May 311
Slatt suit Jixe
17012 Kercheval, in the' Village
.~(~~&fJ~~~£:)~'&ffr;JXf)r;JNifJ(ii.,
,
.
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cranmars«asmsrs.
7
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2'
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a cm •
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Page Four
~ R 0 SSE'
Police Recover $50,000
Admits
I from
I,
POI
N TEN
E'W S
Mey
Thursday,
Traffic Violators Fined
F.",
oll~w...,t,- ',0 Court He'urlengs
Thursday,
29, 1958
in~:i:t:~:~:i:~:%i:dm::~::~
Chri~tian Living Parley Planned
TIRE-WBE
William Jac
Aline, told W
r----------- .....
A conference on Christian I pre'aching at the Ea~tern Bap- _un_d_e_r_hJ_'s_h,-a_t_.
_"'""'-.........
_
Living will be held in the I tist Seminary in Philadelphia, I
paper, the bar owner heard
.'
'.
,
.
'•
Grosse P,ointe Baptist 'Church and R well-knowH speaker'
residence to investigate the I
..
l'
some one yell "Bring the car
Ibchard L: Dace of 6081 Li~.:. of movmg traffIc; ana", was featuring Dr. Norm'an W. PauI- among Baptists around the
L a F E M M,.E
burglary, said that the safe I of the steps were damaged by around." He 'looked out the w~od, Detroit" wa~ placed on fined $40 with an ~alternative lin as th'e guest speaker. The world. For ten years he was
BEAUTY SHOP
was slid along the hall floor I the heavy safe.
window and saw two 'young thr~e, ''''months p~obationl no, of 15 days in jail. He 'p:~id the sessions w~l~.last .for a w~ek, t~e pastor of the fan;lOus Bat;>Permanent Wave $6,95
----.-------He said there was no forced
dr'iyiJ;1g;',and fined, '$60 for fine. ,",,'
.
' .
June 1-8, mcludmg s~slon~ tIst Temple of Plnladelphla
With .Hair Cut
entry illto the house, indicat- men loading cases of whiskey reckless'drivin
on Jefferson.
. ' .'"
, , ' (\
each week .ex~ept Sa~urda:v,.. founded by Russell Conw~ll
Shampoo &' Fing'er Wave $1.50
WE REPAIR
jng that the burglars had prob- from his place into a car.
~~t ' b . '.g' f g d
'lt
b"~~' KabI J. Sam of 15vO E. conDr. Paullm IS the Vl'Ce-presl- whose ledure "A<:res of DlactU.' &r
em
oun
gUl Y ;Y', g'
]) t"t
d
'It
d t f hAm'
.
" b
A'
18020 MACK
TU 5-3545
ably 'entered through an un..
Verdonckt ran out of the P~rkJud,ge ~~: .Joseph Belan- " res~, . e 1'01', . p~e.. gUl Y to
en 0 .11 e
encan Baptlst mond.s
ecame an
mencan
Bet. Lincoln & Washington Rds,
locked garage door at the side' house, just as the car was pull- ger on ',Wednesday, May 21. oausl~g an" a'CcIde:it.at Jeffer- ConventIOn, pro f e s'S 0 r, of ClassIc.
_
of the house, or possibly ing away, and chased it on Dace's pIe'a w'as not guilty.,
son. ,and Maryland 'and paid a j
through a door that could be foot.
Or,:ille .t\.Pelkey of 18187 N. fine '()f,'$20.
"
Any Glass or Cbzna
easiy opened.
He'" got th~, license num~er Territ'odal, C h e I s'e a, Mich.;
,Knut' E., Johansson' <>f 1771
On Thursday, May 22, the :md turned It over .to pollce. ph;cf'n~t g1.1iltyand was found Burns, 'Detroit, pled guilty to
Drilled
safe was opened by Detroit po~
~he car was regIstered to gU11ty.()If' reckless
driving, being at Jault in'tan accident
lice
in
the
presence
of
Park
Kllmbal,
and
when
he.
was
ar-'
speeding,
'and'
cutting
in
front at Jefferson- aIld Westchester
CUSTOM LAMPS
officers, Det. Lt. Stanley En- re~ted at home, he claimed the
'
and\was fined $25.
'
built from ')'our
del'S and Cpl. Charles French car had been stolen from in
Frank Clark of 21723 G1"and
and Cavataio's attorney, and fron~ of his house. .
,.
Lake, st. Clair S~ores, en~
VASES.
money taken from the inne'r
Khmbal was arraIgned betered a plea of guilty to causcompartment.
I fore Park Judge C. Joseph Be~
ing an accident at Jefferson
STATUES
The Par.K policeme~ counted Ian gel' on Thursday, May ~2,
\
a.nd Not~ingtham and ,p'aid a
We can
raise
out exactly $50,000, which was and entered a plea of not gUlIA burglax,.broke into a medi- fme .of $25. . ".
Or lower
your
latcr placed in a 'bank to' be ty,. A bond of $3,000 was set, cal clinic at .18430 Mack ave"':
Florentz ~Irsch. (}f. Barnsfloor or
":: held as evidnnce untl'l the case whIch the accused man could
"
.. .b.oro, Penn., charge~ WIth caustable lomp,
- Papers
'"'
~
i::;closed.
that had been not meet and he was reman d.- nue sometime :between Satur-' u~-gan ac.cident at St. Paul and
f~'
in the larger compartment of ed :0 t?e Way~e ~ounty ~all day; May 17 and,Monday,.May
Be~cO'nsfleld ~as found ~ot
Special Bases
~.
the safe, were bur n e d by unhl hIS exa~matIOn, WhICh 19, and' escaped with a sum in g~llty, ~d the case was dlsMade
~
torches and destroyed.
was schedulea for yesterday. cash after ransacking
desk mIssed.
r--~
h' f L
'd th t C 1 May 28.
d"'awers" l'n the' offl't'es' ~",four'
Mary S. McLaughlin of 4021
Come
in and
r C'.le b ,ouw~r~dS~l at to - . Dunningan was scheduled
,-"'.1,
Neff, Detroit, paId court costs
lllStIdS emg e . m ~tro ec ve for arraignment Tuesday even- doctors.'
of $5, after entering a' plea of
talk. over your
eus a v as a po lIce WI ness.
.
J
F .
'It
. b'
'I .'
o 'Th d
P k
"
mg May 27.
,eanette
romm of 1816 gUl y to emg at f.au t m an
lamp problc"nS
nul'S
ay,
ar
pO~lce
'______
Hampton, a nu.rse'working for ~ccident at Jeffers'on and Elarrested James S. Salvato, 3.8,
lair place.
of 1?15 ~efer place, DetroIt,
the doctors, told Farms Det.
,Gerald F. Lamp'e of 4720
and on Fnday, a warrant was
Sgts. Jack Paisley and George Drexel, pled not guilty and
recommended ~y t:le Wa~ne
Van Tiem, that the thief pried wCl;~found not guilty of causCoun~y P.orsec.uto~ s ~ff:ce,
open the desk d1"awers in the ing an accident at Maryland
~harglllg hIm WIth lmplIcatlOn
Three cars were involved in offices olf Drs. D. M. Davison, and Jefferson.
.
17222 E. WARREN AVE, III the ~urglary. A warrant an accident that occurred in F. P. O'Linn, .J. H. Luzadre
Walmer A. Lawrence of 3430
was also lssu.ed for a John Doe, the early (7:37 a.m.) morning and 'A. J. K6'cris and went Dickerson, Detroit, paid a fine
)pp. E, Warren
Bowling Alleys
who, was sald to ha,,:e helI?ed traffic last Tuesday, May 20, through them tJhoroughly.
of $10 after entering a plea of
TU 1-1917
~ollmsf and Salvato m taklllg on Jefferson avenue near LinShe said she discovered the guiUy to causing an accident
e sa e.
coIn road.
breaking and entering when at Charlevoix and Jefferson.
Gloria Clarice DeMare, of Sihe returned to work early
Thomas H. TennaI).t of 600
30211 Elmgrove, in St. Clair Monday morning. The dctec- Newport, Detroit, charged with
\
Shores, was the only woman tives said ther'e was no evi- reckless driving on st. 'Paul,
driver involved and, regreta~ dence of a, forced entry.
\
pled not guilty and was found
Current Rate
bly, the one at fault. She was,
Dr. Luzadre mi,;;sed $38, and guilty and paid a fine of $15.
accordingly, ticketed for reck- Dr. p'Ltnn, $104, the detec- In addition his driving priviless driving. Served witness tives said.
leges were suspended for 30
notices were Robert E. Sharp,
days.
of 35780 Union Lake road, in
Lynn B. Harris of 1066 ManMt. Clemens, and Stuart R.
istique, Detroit, pled guilty to
S pin d e 1', of 22718 Rosedale
speeding on Jefferson and paid
avenue.
a fine of $11.
Sharp and Spinaer were both
Dominic Pizzo of 222070 Ard•
headed west on Jefierson when.
Grosse Pointe High School's more park, St. Clair Sho~s,
Use Our ~rive-In Window
they had to stop for a car mak- weekly newspaper "The Tow- charged with cutting in and
ing a left hand turn off the er" received honorable men- out of, traffic. pled guilty and
\
street l'nto the driveway at 'tion for over-all feature cov~ W<:lS fined $7.
17840 East Jefferson. Miss DeDominic J. Racine of 4690
look for the Sign
Mare, who was also headed erage and Janet Collinson, on Beaconsfield, Detroit, pled not
west came up behind the other "the Tower's" staff was given guilty and was found guilty
of Good Savings Service
two cars and, unable to stop in special recognition for an in- of running a signal light at
time, carreened into both.
dividual feature story last Fri- Mack and Whittier and paid a
A passenger in her car, Jacfine of $5.
queline Appenzeller, with the day, May 23, when Michigan
Carl B. Anderson of 2803
same address as Miss DeMare, high school journalism
was Oliver, Royal Oak, accused of
.
.
I' 11ght at Jef.
suffered head injuries in the honored at an awards lunch- runmng
a SIgna
Yes, this beauty is British in every way!
crash and was taken to Bon eon at Michigan State Uni- ferson and Cadieux. was found
Our 1958 Grand Touring Model looks more
Secours Hospital' for treat- versity.
guilty and paid aiine
of $4.
•
British than ever ... with its smart,
ment.
.
The third annual Journalis- His plea was. not guilty.
tic
Enterprise
Contest,
for
pardetachable, weather-tight hard.top. And
WOULD ABOLISH GRADES ticiption in Michigan week,
it's British in economy, too. Gives you so
Students s h 0 u I d not be was this year based on the
many thrill-happy miles per gallon ...
given grades for school work theme "What our area has
with power, suspension and handling
because they are "unfair," de- done or is doing to develop
clares an outstanding teacher Michigan."
Qualities that are famous as the world's
Winners, whose features and
and scientist now serving as a
grandest performance value!
editorials
appeared in their
distingUished visiting profesCome drive it today for a real thrilf!
school
newspapers,
were pre50r at Michigan State University. Dr. Max S. Marshall; sented with certificates by Dr.
read of microbiology at the Fred S. Siebert, Director of
University
of California medi~ the M.S.U. School of JournalGUEST-DRIVETHE TRIUMPH TR~ AT
cal school, has been experi- ism.
menting with the elimination
qf grades since 1930. He says:
Students are-or
should be-:in school to learn, not to be
('o~pared with others ..
(Continued from Page 1)
tleloot, sent to the Cavataio
the second story .of the
home, and down ~he staus. He
, said the h~l~floo and the foot
(Continued from Page 1)
n.
._ .
I.
I
Tuesday, May 2
had stolen a 1
from his ar. j
not kn"'W the
the theft ')-eeur
I
l
LAMPS
Michigan',;
Easte!
""" Com ple'tr
.1)
Fire Prof,
""" Under 2-
Physician~
T.h,l-e',f .., p, l-lfers
M' ,'edz'.c'ul Cll'"nZ-C'
,.
"
..
":
...
r
""" Congeni"
",
Gracious
Y01
Ea.rnings start the 1st on
".,
.4
SAVINIGS
J.
ad'~ed by the lOt~t of th:e mO,nth
Wom,an BIame d
C C h
As 3 ars ras
OLLIG
ELECTRIC SHOP
670
.'
,
r
- at this 240 Mi.II.~oriDollar
Savings Association
Here's the world's
grandest performance
value ••. our 1958
3~
Award Prizes
To J ourlialists
Grand Touring
Model."only
$2675.'
KERCHEVAL
Near ST_ CLAIR
14K GOLD
15-inch len!
Grand {
hand cut hec
de$i
(&,0
ptl
MODERN 8m
January - G.
February - 1<1
&TRIUMPH TR3
HANSON
CHEVROLET
Murder Report
Exagger~ted
CO.
A reformer is a fell-ow who . Park police were given a
wants his conscience to 1:>e,'your murder scare on Sunday, May
25, when they received a call
__
_
guide.
reporting' a man claimed to
-------_._-~.~~---------------------------_._-~~-have killed his wife at 2209
Ridgemont.
Cpl. Gordon Duncan and Patrolman James LaPratt, sent
to 15012 Mack avenue, ar~
rested Richard C. Van Velle.
34, no address. 'rhey took the
man to the Ridgemont address,
but found out that he never
lived there.
Van VelIe WCi$ arraigned before Park Judge C. Joseph
Bellanger on Monday, May 26,
on a vagrancy charge, and was
found guHty.'
•
The judge ordE'red Van Velle
. to pay a fine, of $20, or do five
days in jail. Not having the
fine, the man was sent to' the
Wayne County Jail to serve
the sentence.
14259 MACK near- Chalmers'.
March -Aqu
April - Whit~
May - Emem
June - 1>.I&xa
•
•
Parking
next
our building
t~
VAlley 2~9800
VALEN
$pe
one-of-a-kind
kitchens
morvel
by
Jl
1660
harle)
,I
"
.,
w
;
If all practiced what they
preached, preaching w 0 u I d
soon' become a lost art.
SILVER
#
SPRINGS.
. ..
.
*CA,R':TO'N ED
'V/,ATER
..,.
• One of t'! kind St. ChMles Kitchens-designed just for you by our expert
kitchen plann ing staff.
NORMAL FIRM
• Choi'ce of 3" Worlds of style temporary. Traditional, Modern
the~ Floor."
50
EXTRA FIRM
Con-
Box Spring
"Off-
• Cnoice of steel or wood front units16 decorator colors or nt!!ltural wood.
• Every kitchen custom-built
d:vidu<"ll owner.
$
$79,50
We'll he,l,; YOt;; to wi" in this exciting new Simmons contest for those who ore
interested in buying a new mattress, 837 wonderful prizes-Sylvania radios to
Edsel cars-plus the grand pdze of a eieautyrest flJU of $10,000,00 cash!
for the in.
Call now for a free estimate.
Small Down Payment
•
A. L. Damman Co., Inc.
Kitchens by
9941 HAYES
Jl:(}mler~
btw, Httrper and Outer Drit'e
r
'\
,.
J
'f)Osable oaJf gallon cartons. Available
at
leading beverage stores, or call
Open. Mon.\ Thurs.,
TO. 8-4735, for your nearest dealer.
,
e
Friday & Sat.
\.
.New light w.irl'll half 1.1\0n Cilrton.r,
,
9 to 6
Di.trlIwI..J ~
H..bltt D€troit
80ttllng
LA 7..9600
Easy Credit Ternts
Silver Sprinis water emllhasizes the
full flavor and color in beverages.
Packaged in modern convenient, dis-
Tues. & Weds~
Co.
9
1\50 Oakman Blvd.
Dfmolt, Mkh.
f
to 9
'
:~
t-
.'
.~
, ,~.t.
tc
i.~~
fi''''~j'
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0
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m
2 S
t
p
s
St
peps
~---:"
958
Ian ha.
around
E
P
.. -
~.~
•. _wa
._~._.
...."L.!.A-
Thur$day, May 29, 195&
I
rJi1
Rds,
Congregation Hon,ors Its pastor
By
""
Under 24 Hour M e d i c a I Supervision
Physicians
by Re9i~tered
JIll' Congenial
""
Gracious,
•
,
•
,j
".
Hot Wire
.
.
, " " '
Use'the new City-owned,
John Schultz, 28"of 2138 Roslyn, was knocked out when he
touched a 220-volt e~o5ed
wixe in the Industrial Arts
room in Grosse Pointe High
Sohool em Monday, May 19.
Wnen Farms firemen arrived
at the high school, SohuItzhad
regatined consciousness, and
was taken to Bon See,ours Hospital, wher~ he was trE:sted
'and released.
A fire department report
showed tha,t SchuLtz was work.
ing on a lathe in the Industrial
Arts machine shop, when the
mishap occurred.
East Civic Convalescen1t Home
Underwriter
•
~
Worker Joited
Afichigan's Newest and Finest Com:alescing Facilities
Facilities-Authorized
I
Page F;v.
K!e:Jel'valion:Jnow Being Accepted
"" Completely Modern
Fire Protection
,
t,'
POfNTE"NEWS
.95
$1.S0
';.3545
./..
"
GRO's'se:
...
TIRE-WHEEL STOLEN
HUBCAPS STOLEN
William Jackson of 1269
Victor D. Kapius of 685 BedAline. told Woods police on ford, complained to Park poTuesday, May 20, that someone lice on Tuesday, May 20, that
had stolen a tire and wheel someone had stolen two hubfrom his ar. He said he did caps from his car whHe it was
not kn"w the time and place parked in the rear lot of 15300
the theft "ccurred,
. E. Jefferson.
i
Private Home Atmosphere-Excellent
Meals
Dignified Surroundings-Finest
of Care
fully pay~d, attendant-operated
PARKING
LOT
at rear of Jacobson's
off
St. Clair Avenue. Lock your
•
, car a!1d shop in leisure!
Jacobson's
-in the Villag~
A reputation cannot be built JL.---- __ .".,.
on the things you intend to do.
Your Inspection lnt,ited
_
Call or lJ'l'rite for Details
670 East Grand Blvd,. Detroit, Mich.
WAlnut
1-6716
hurry!
The congregation of St. Paul Lutheran Church, 375 Lothrop, honored
their pastor, Rev. Charles W. Sandrock, for the anniversary of his ienth
year of service here and 2rst year in
the ministry, on Sunday May 18. A
special gift from. the congregation was
pre s en t e d to him, a 1908 Bel-Air
Chevy, silver-blue and white. Charles
lVIadigan,of Country Club drive, presented the keys in the special ceremony after the 11 o'clock service.
From left to right:-MR. MADIGAN,
REV. SANDROCK, his son, JOHNNY
SANDROCK
(age 3) and MRS,
SANDROCK.
Violators Pay
: July - Ruby
August - Peridot
April - White Sapphire
May - Emera'd
June - Alexandrit.
Parking
next
our building
.
September
MAY
~b
WHITE
SALE
'ery speciG4
'O~
iD
towe.1s _. tobJe Iiaefts
Mddmg
DlGoDy of roW bottsehold Deeds.
......so
I
I
•
MODERN BIRTHSTONES
January - Garnet
February - Amethyst
March - Aquamarine
fl
Jacotisob/~~
POOL
...lte.l4.an
Grand fashion ideo for a splendid gift. A brilliant
bond cut heortshoped synthetic birthstone.
, .
designed to rest at the hollow of her throat
fir. .0 m<Jrvelous look when worn atone or with
pearls ... for every occasion. -PItts Fed. tax.,
Ii
SWIMMING.
I
14K GOLD CHAIN AND SETTING
15.inch length
Ii
--
----SC'-h-oo-l-n~spapers
throughout
joyce An'drews and Dave the country.
Three teenagers brought be- Cook, reporters on the Grosse
*'fore Shores Judge John Gillis Pointe HIgh School Tower,
WILL YOUR
on MondaYt May 19, were won creative writing awards in
. found guilty of violating Sec- the Q\lill and Scroll National
tion III of Ordinanc(t 84, pos- Writing Contest.
session of alcoholic beverages.
Joyce won her silver key in
Each was fmed and ordereo. to the feature wriotingdivision for I
write the ordinance 50 times, a story about two opossums'
BE READY WHEN THE
and ~o report on their activi- who escaped caJptivity in the
WEATHER BREAKS? .
high
school
biology
room~
ties every Monday for two
Only crystal~clear water is safe
Dave received his award in
and sanitary! For your health')'J
months.
sake .•. stock a complete line of
the sports division for his news
pool chemicals now!
I Besides the additional pun- story about the! Port Huron- approved
Assure sanitation and proper
testing methods, including algae
ishment, Hartley H, Holimes, Grosse Pointe football game
tuter powder and cleaner. ALL
last
falL
Both
articles
were
CHEMICALS NOW AVAILABLE.
Jr,. of 1091 S. Renaud, paid a
control, chlorinat!on, pH control,
published in the Tower.
, fine of $10; David L. McMillan
The contest was held under
PHONE FOR FREE POOL
of 2049 Norwood, paid $27.50; the auspices of the Quill and
MAINTENANCE
GUIDE
and Donald W. Watson of 1180 Scroll S 0 c i e t y, a national
N. Oxford. paid $27.50.
WE 3-1504
honorary
society for high
Shirlian Kuhn of 2156 Lake- school journalists.
wood. Detroit, was found
By placing in the contest,
•
' Chemicals Co.
gUIlty of speeding on Lake
Dave and Joyce became eligi12345 Schaefer
Shore road, and paid court ble for journalism scholar.
~
Detroit 27, Mich.
costs of $7.50.
ships, worth $500 eaoh.
Thomas D. Lindsay of 1204
Dave has decided to apply
Manistique, Detroit, was found for the sch~laTship; Joyce will
to be at fault in causing an not.
accident at Lake Shore and
The contest was open to stuN. Edgewood. and paid a fine dent staff members of high
8.nd costs of $17.50.
Irene R: Paeteh of 26421'
Clancy, Roseville, paid a fine
and costs of $27.50,rather than
serve 10 days in jail. She was
found guilty of speeding on
Lake Shore and never having
acquired a Michigan operator's
license.
Joseph S. Frith of 22104
Colony, St. Clair Shores, paid
a finE:of $10 after being found
visit TOYLAND
ct
guilty of not having his car
Jacobson', -an exciting
under control and causing an
world of young dreams
accident on Lake Shore.
William A. Motschell of 824
fome true'
Lake Shore, was foond gulilty
of speeding on Lake Shore and
paid costs of $7.50.
Paul D. Grubbs, Jr., of 22925
Gary lane, St. Clair Shores,
was found guilty of speeding
on Vernier road and paid a
fine of $25.
;)ur new dazzler
i
'II
Writing Awards Won by Students
Shores Traffic
:#!e'i $eVhatr»zfJ :#!ea'it
ending -Saturday
- Blue Sapphire
October - Rose Zircon
November - Topaz
December - Zircon
fO
TU 1.4800
we toast
summler
16601 E. Warren, at Kensington
print.,
every
hour.
left:
afternoon,
fitted,
a
to
for
barely
backward-bloused
.ilk I.heath.
OFF TO CAMP WE GO!
the
they impart
softness
'(!)
the pretty
willow
turquoise.
orange
I
with white;
young
or black
10 ..18. right,
bouffance
dancing;
cotton
for
blue/green
voile.
8 ..16.
each, 29. 95
-
Ja-coh~ons
Jacob.on'.
;rs.,
completely
t-shirts
i. our favorite
for camp,
to terry
ca m p. itel
with everything
towe,ls,
Jacobson's
,boys and
from sJi,ckers to sleepwear,
girls
outfils '.,s
need,' •. from
from swim su,i.ts
\
to sweaters,
our
from sh~rts
to shoes .•.
011 rtlgged
enough
to survive
•
fun - f i11e d . sum me rs , wit h h or d d a iI y .,sea n d v e r y I itt I e eo r ••
tnjoy ~ delightful
in the new St. Clair Room,
\
.
.Jac9bson's-Secot1d
..
)
lunch
i
.-.'~
...
_
....
..-
-,
f
' __
-....
"
----01.
_ .......
.-
-..:..
......
....:
-.a..
.......
.._
__
........
--'
__
_
__
.......
Floor
..
Page Six
G R 0 S'S E POI N T:E NEW
Burglary Prevention
ShQltld Interest Pointers-
Gem Cutting
~ppeals to all ages
hobby
as a
East Side R.ock Sh:op
COURSE-$1S.00
for information - TV 2-9846
Phone
15226 Mack Ave. at Beaconsfield
Just Arrived
Named Varieties
and Annuals Galore
Coreopsis,
Delphinium,
Hardy Salvia and many
.
JOHN O. laBELlE.
Trees
Shrubs
Hedge
Materials
17878 Mack Ave.
~ity of Grosse Pointe 3D, Mich.
Most
COVERED
WITH
195
BUDS, ready
FREE
2.50 Rose with purchase of 10 thru
ROSE TREES, 5.95
Aug.
1.
HALL'S NURSERY
between 9 & 10 Mile
Open Daily and Sundays
24300
HARPER
PRescott 5-3455
QUI'
21st Year
STEELCOTE
• Impervious
chemicals
~~tt!j~!:1
~
»:
... ,.(
to pool
.",
•
!
...
colors
-
•
• Economical
Mocomb
County
for -Over
16' Years
with
"Quality Paint for Every Purpose"
22400 Harper, near 9 Mile Road
PRescott
Dog Dumps Lad
On Motor RIeke"
SERVICE
Kills Weeds
and
Mo. (AHTNC)-Pvt.
Marco A.
Scapini, 26, son O'f Mr. and
Mrs. Marco Scapini, 1806 NewClasUe road, Grosse Pointe
Woods, Mich., recently completed eight weeks of basic
combat traln'ing
at For t
Leonard Wood, Mo.
Scapini, a 1949 graduate of
De La Salle iRgh School in
netroit, is a 1957 graduate of
the University of D~troit. He
was employed by the Detroit
Edison Company as an equipment inspection enginee:r- before entering the .Army.
Scutl time is Here. To kill crab
grass start applications
now.
Wm, J,
ALLEMON
(at
SUPPLY
University)
TU 2-9085
FREE DELIVERY
Potted. Roses
$175 and up
7;. .",,"
FINEST
~
1'I!tinf
EB
ANYWHE,RE
10% Discount With
Purchase' of 5 or More Roses
~tUk-~
I
r:'K\
Charles E. Yonkers, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Yonkers, formerly of Grosse Pointe
and now living in. Scarsdale,
New York, will stuay at Gres-'
ham's School, Holt, Norfolk,
England next fall.
,
Yonkers, currently
senior
at the Taft School in Watertown, Conn., haD been accepted as an exchange student under the International
SchOOl boy Fellowship Program of the EngUsh Speaking
Union. He will enter the
freshman class at Yale in 1959.
Yonkers entered Taft in 1955
and is, presently head monitor,
or president of the student
government organization. He
has been a member of the
vaxsity football squll,d for two
years, and this winter was a
member of the Taft basketball team. He was editor-inchief of the studeni; newspaper, and is in the top fifth
of the class academically.
1
DD\ES"
21724 HARPER-Between
Modern color that
RESISTS FADING!
Du Pont IITrutintU
The
Engineer
Compan~
pose of (
posals th
The
arrangerr
Park con:
-Apn
Attorney
operate
amended.
CQverage
coverage
FREE
AND
KENTUCY
P\oV loX
bills.
BLUE
Coun,
City at 0
Grosse FI
Youth Ct:
SA~D
80
C
a
Perrr;
MAKE THE VERY
FINEST LAWt~S
..
COMPLETE
LINE
•
_I
Appn
I.
.--
MICHIGAN PEAT
50 lb. baC). Rec'J. $1.29 ..•••
794:
PURE MARION GRASS
Seed. ReC).51.95 ••••••••
Premier Canadian
ft.
Bole, Reg. 5.75. . . • . • . . . .
Peat
Moss,
6 cu.
GARDEN
TOOLS
I
TUxedo 1-9760
VAlley' 2-2772
Free Parking
WILLIAh
$4 86
Mayo~
•
Publishel
17727 MAGK (at University)
FREE DELIVERY.
TU 2.908&
ON
1.. ln
O~J
2.-ln he
$2.50
$3.95
anc]
-$
ALL ACCOUNTS
I
UP TO $10,0_00
",
Folks save at' Peoples Federal Savings tc ;)ducata children, purchase a home,
many worthwhile' pUrposes. Have a savings plttn too. Start your account now.
Funds received on or befor~ the 10th Qf the month earft from the first of the month.
'
MELDRUM
TRUCKING & GARDEN. SUPPL Y
17921 MAOK AVE.
TU '4.2184
F!EOPLES, FEDERAl. SAVINGS
. GRISWOLDAT STATE
•
f
-
•
HARPER AND OUTER DRNE MEET
14729 B,il'ER AND OUTER'DRIVE
PHONES: Main OlRce WO 1..0172
7 ? 7'
. The?1
lb.
WM. J. ALLEMON GARDEN- SUPPLY
SAVE
CONVENIENTLY'WHERE
.:
.
,
159
Sr, the sv,
mooring i
eLl
MERION
SEED & ;OD
Of
,
Free Delivery
Col. Fred
the stree,
ARE INSURED
Kitchen
Scoop
20481 Mack Ave.
14500 Harper Ave.
Apprj
of the 195
Granulated Wonder 6ro-
5000 sq. ft.
98
installed
plaCe the
LAWNS
Open till 6 p,m.- Thurs, and Fri. tiil 9 p'.m..
c
The (
from the
that the ~
Pointe Bl
too mucf_
removed.
the Detr:
,
to stay bright .• ~ last for years,.
SET
which we.
cepted th
tain exce
write the
them of t.
MICHIGAN
for
new shades. Because their
"
the devel
at PEOPLES FEDERAL SAVINGS
Formul,ated Especially
Colors come in a wide
3 .~
,BRUSH
The:
from the
3, In pic
2500 sq. ft.
•
The'
widening
the cont
Board of
,-
as often. They are sCientifically made to resist
•• aozoots?
The
from the
the Boan
COnstruCi
ment on
aine. Th,
although
than the
8 and 9 Mile Roads
beauty lasts longer, you don't have to paint
S.9
(b)
.---
MARION BLUE
BEST SOURCE OF GOOD. ROSES
c
(a)'
$1.79
VARNEY'S NURSERY SALES
CLOTH
The
were ree
$1 97
Blazing Basket
17127 MACK
DROP
Mint
were apT
Memorial Day & Week-end Specials
GARDEN
95c - 9x12
ing pern
ROSES
Firemen Douse
. Pvt. Marco A. Scapini Charles E.Ybnkers
Ends Basic Training
To Study in England
Fel'tili:es at same time
FORT LEONARD WOOD,
5.80 J I
BUY THE PAINT THAT'S
WORTH THE WORK
fading •••
was in v
Garden Specialists
Cook Paint an!d Wallpap,er
range of smart
In ~(
er, of 25~
providin
remOdell
into a s:
hardship
Meldrum & Smith Nursery Sales
• Satin, tile.like finish
Sei'Ying $outheostern
May
ftem att'
$699"
~r
-
"-'
t'.:.:::..~
• Deters algae and
marine growth
• Non.fading
..
May
Geraniums
EVERGREENS
by water
• Has great resistance
to sun
Pres
William
and Ed""
Abs(
cilman ;,
SHRUBS AND
Swimming Pool Paint
• Unaffected
Mee
a
to bloom
from
SUI
II. VIAENE NURSERY
Beautiful
POTTED ROSES
Thousands
The Farms' Pier~p-a-r-k-w-il-I-I
be--op-e-n-from10 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
-be open for the Memorial Day and that a lifeguard will be on
A -"Beauty". contes-t, sponLeon Wllson, 37. 1039 Hen- 'weekend, Friday, S~turday and duty.
State Police Commis.sioner It's -an ala-rming figure,. but
ed b h
P .
sor
y t e Grosse omte anddrie,
Detroit, was arrested by Sunday} May 30, 3j. and June
The official opening ,of the
Joseph.
A
..
Childs,
pr~si~ent
of
ma~y
canbe
.prevented
by
fO,IEastern
Michigan
HoriiccuIPark
poll'ce
on
FrI'day,
May
1,.
it
was
disclos,ed
by
Farms
Pier-Par.k
wil,l be Friday, June
the MIchIgan AssoclatIOn of lOWIng the sImple precautions
Chiefs of Police has announced sug'gested by. your police de- turaI, Society will "again be 23 on charge of uttering and CIty Manager SIdney'DeBoer.
6, and It wIll stay open for
,
.
He said that the park will. the season.
that the week
of June 1 partment
when leaving' for held this year to select the publishing.
through 7 will be observed as several days ~r longer.
. ..bustness establishment in the
Nicholas Telegadas of 5766
Burglary Prevention Week.
1. Do'leave a lamp or tw,o, G
P'
t
d
't
FOR LAWN" LANDSCAPE
rosse
0 I n e an
eas ern Haverhill, Detroit, proprl'etor
With the Pointe experienc- connected
to an automatic
.
OR GARDEN
ing an epidemic -of burglaries timer t,o turn Iigh4 on and off Michigan area, with the best of. a grocery stol"e at ~eaCQnsin recent weeks, the advice regularly each evening. This landscaped and m a i n t a. i ned field and Fairfax, made the
offe:red should be of special makes the home 'lived:'in' and propeMy.
compl~int against Wils~n, who
interest.
.
is your best :protective. measWinner of the contest will
As Commissioner. Chi 1d sure. .'
.'
receive a Gold Seal Certific:aJte he said passed a $25 bad check
pointed out, experienced bur- . 2. Do can<:el all deliveries of Merit, and'second
place at hig store last January.
Very Large Stock of
glars know when to invade' a including
milk, newspa'pers, winn-er a 'Certificate of merit,
Telegadas signed the comhouse. It's up to the home etc. Have the post office or a both of which ar,e to be pre-. plaint ,before Park Judg-e C.
owner to fool him by creating neighbor hold your mail until sented at the. socjety's annual Joseph Belanger on WednesALL KINDS ~ LARGE AND SMALL
the impression
someone is you return.
ba~guet held iil November.
-~- ..
home, though the house may
3. Do cl?se. and lock all
The objeot of. the contest, day, May 21, and the judge apFlowering
Shlfubs and Trees
be empty.
windows and doors, including which began May 15 and ends proved a warrant for the arMany people leave their basement, porch and garage. October 1, is to improve, and rest.
• Rose Bushes
homes for an' evening, week- Use pin tumbler cylinder locks keep up the grounds of the
Wilson was picked up from
• Fertilizen
end, or vacation and fail to on all outside doors, still the business establishments,
and the Livingston County Jail, in
• Insecticides
take the simple precautions most secUre key .. operated thus keep Grosse Pointe and Howell, Mich", by Patrolmen
WE DELIVER
dictated by good com m 0 n locking device known to man. its neighboring. communities George Blair and John Car.
sense. These citizel1JS'wouldn't.
4. l)() have your lawn mowed beautiful. 'This year, a larger. roll; .where he was held on a
/-< .. :f WE ARE A SCOTT
DEALER
think of leaving the front and sidewalk ,swept by a number of busines~ places in similar
charge.
Charges
door open or hanging up a neighbor 'at least once a week. St. Clair Shores are to be in- against Wilson were dismissed
sign reading "Burglars Wel- . '5. Do tell one neighbor you cludeo. in' the contest, under in Howell, when the vIctim
come - Nobody Home Here." are .leaving. Have them check the directio~ of Charles Jac- could not identify him:"
Yet, they give all' the indica- your house perioq.ically and obs.
Park Police' Chief Arthur
.21807 Mack Ave., between
& 9 mile
tiOllS necessary, such as news- notify the police if they see
Grosse Pointe will be under Louwerssaid that Wilson" who
. PR 7-0639
papers piled at the front door, anyone prowfling around.
the direction of Ernest Brown. was identified by Telegadas
a totally dark house, or even
6. Do notify your local po. A committee of professional through a police'mug shot: is
worse, lights left burning 24 lice officials as to the date gardenerS, headed by Herman believed to be a member of a
hours a day. you are leaving and when you Hinsenkamp, the contest chai.r- gang
passing
bad
checks
Police officers know the re- will return.
man, will make at least one throughout the Detroit Metrosults of such action - crime
7. Don't close blinds or draw judging a month, with final politan area.
and more crime. During the shades, leave them as you nor- judgings October 1.
Wilson was arraigned before
o Reptoat
first six months of 1957, over mally do when you're home.
Charles Verheyden, of Ver- Park Judge C. Joseph BelanSal. CIft
16,000 burglary offenses were
8. Don't. I e a v e valuables heyden's Funeral Home, hItS ger on the day he was brought
committed in Michigan . . . laying around the h 0 use. been first place winner for back to the Park. He entered
BEAUTIFUL
over 4% of the nation's total. 'Place them in a safety deposit four consecutive yealt"s,. last a plea of not g-uilty and a $2,~
ASSORTMENT
__________
.__
box.
year being in a very dose race, 000 bond was set. When he
n. Don't tell friends, neigh- with the Automobile Club of could not meet this he was
9 COLORS
bors, or work asosciates of the M i chi g a n on E. Jefferson taken to the Wayne County
14 FOR ONLY
. valuable possessions you have avenue,
Jail until examination date',
around the house.
(
----~which was scheduled for yesEver Blooming
. • GRASS SEEDS
10. Don't advertise your de.;,
terday, May 28.
TEA and CLIMBING
parture with an item in the
~
_
PLANTING AND
• GARDEN SEEDS
paper and don't broapcast the
TRIMMING
news to your whole .neighbor• BULBS - PLANTS
hood.
Fred Wilson, of 706 Rivard
• GARDEN TOOLS
boulevard,
called
City
Police
3
for
For Definite
~~.
• NURSERY STOCK
S~t. Charles Vernier
only
on Friday, May 23, to report
•
Hour and Day Appointments
Stationed in Germany that his canine had been the Fire at the residence of H. A./
Turner, 544 University place,
CALL
cause
of
an
accident!
The
dog,
had 'Jiremen and neighbors
FULDA, GERMANY-Army
HARDY MUMS
TU 4..6670
Sergeant First Class Charles a Brittany Spaniel, had run awake and alert at
o'clOCk'
~o~Ol~: 85~,~~i:sn
E. Vernier, son of Mrs. Gladys out into the street in front of Monday morning.
j
D. Young, 4005 Hereford st., the Wilson's house, and gone
A waste basket in an up- '
Controls Weeds
Detroit, participated in Armed
pell mell after a boy on 9. mot- stain:. bedroom had caught fire
Forces Day ceremonies with
Faster and Surer.
and the blaze had spread to
the 299tlci ~ngineer Battalion or bike.
Easier to Use
He not only caught up with the floor. Quick action by City
in Fulda, Germ'any.
Sergeant
Vernier, an as the. lad, but he smashed into firemen snuffed. the flames,
sis-tant platoon sergeant in the the bike and knocked it out and both trucks were back at
battalion's
Company
A at from under its rider. The boy, the station house within 15
Hcechst, Germany' arrived in Patrick Johnson, of 20506 Sha- minutes.
17750 MACK A \IE. near Rivard
TUxedo 5-5433
Damage was minor, with
Europe in December 1956. He dy lane, in S1. Clair Shores,
G~OSSE POINTE 24, MICH.
has also served in the Far age 22, was headed south on only a small portion of the car.
peting,
and
a
dresser
scorched.
Rivard
at
the
time.
East.
The 30 - year "'old soldier,
The upset broke the bike's
whose father, Charles E. Ver- headlight but Johnson was unnier, lives at 699 Vernier rd., harmed and continued on his
Grosse Pointe, entered
the way. The pooch was taken to
Army in 1948. His wife, Wal- his vet's for a check-up-after
traud, is with him in Germany. the thorough shake-up.
.
~,
ROSE LOVERS!
Michigan's
Check Passer'
A good
never do
buy all thE
_--~
TUxedo 4-6610
See
Farms" Beach <OpeningS~t
EVERCiREENS
Fertilizers
Seeds
Plant
Foods
Garden Center
Arrest Bad
I
9 WEEK
Shasta
Daisys, Coral Bells, New
Rock Plants, Potted Ro;es, Geums,
other perenials.
.
Beauty Contest
For Businesses
Thursd,
a
offer!i
SPECIAL CLASSES in Gem Cutting.
Day or evening,
Monday
through
Saturday.
All equipment
furnished.
Hardy Phlox -
Thursday, May 29, 1958
I
M~ke Your Qwn Jewelry
Ship",e~t
S
15839 E
Branch' LA 7..7210
.'
i
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~ .s..'.pli.••• p.s
•••••••••••
z••• z
n••• n.r
r.n.
.7.. m•• _ ••• _ ..
m
tr__
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_
t
m
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8
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•
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.......
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'
...
'
••
,',
'.
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••••••
--_'
••
Thursday. May 29, 1958
p.m.,
n be
:>en for
~,
...
'
.....
4
..........
'
••
'.
-.'
..
....
POI NT!
"
',.)
,
II.
"
,
,
NEW S
Page Seven
A good many people who
A man really puts his foot in
never do anything on time, it when he attempts to stand
buy all their things that way. on his dignity.
UA Grosse Pointe Tradition"
More joint planning re.garding certain common problems
between the Grosse Pointe
communities
was advocated
recently by Paul Reid, executive directoI', Detroit Regional
Area Planning Commission.
Citing. the advantages evident in operating a joint school
system, Mr. Rei(l indicated his
belief from the planning viewpoint that local communities
'could join together for planning for certain
functions
such as protection, health, and
recreation without losing. their
individual identity.
Introduced by Edwin Wendt,
retiring president of the board
of directors of th'e Grosse
Pointe Woo d s Community
Club, Mr. Reid was the guest
speaker at the annual meeting of the club held recently.
Elected president fo~he"
coming year w~s S. J. Schaaf-'
sma, Serving with him will be
ponald Strnad, Mrs. George
H?rtmayer, Edward Snell, anp
Mrs. George Britton.
Newy elected board members for the next year are John
Brubaker,
Robert Chandler,
Mrs. Robert Dice, Mrs. Leon
Englehart, James Healey and
CITY OF
•
<Vro~St'jPointe J'MtnS
MAY 19, 195&
Meeting was called to order at 8:00 P.M.
Present on roll call: Councilmen Henry E. Bodman II,
William G. But~er, William G. Kirby, Richard L. Maxon
and Edward C. Roney, Jr.
'
Absent: Mayoi: William F. Connolly, Jr., and Oouncilman J. Lawrence Buell, Jr.
Mayor PrQ Tern William G. Butler presided.
Mayor Connolly and Council Buell WE~reexcu~€d
from attending the meeting.
In ~onnection with a petition from Mr. Claude Greiner, of 259 Lake Shore Road, for a ruling from the Council
providing for the issw:ance of a building p€r!!lit for the
remodeling of a garage apartment located on hIS property
into a single residence, which petition was based o~ a
hardship claim, the Council ruled that thl~ remodeling
was in violation of the City's ordinances and that a bu.ilding permit should not be issued.
Minutes of the regular meeting held orl May 5, 1958,
were approved with changes,
The following reports for the month ~f April, 1958
were; received and ordered filed:
(a) Police Department
(b) Controller's
YEAR
report
report
A proposed form of agreement. prepared by the City
Attorney, to be used in connection with the license to
operate the Pier Park Concession was ~approved as
amended.
\
The City Clerk reported receipt of a r'ommurucation
from the Grosse Pointe Board of Educati;;m relative to
the development of the Richard~McMillan Playground in
which was set forth certain conditions, Tb.e Council accepted the conditions mentioned in the lel:ter with certain exceptions, and the City Clerk was!, instructed to
write the Grosse Pointe Board of Educmion notifying
them of the exceptions.
i
The City Clerk reported receipt of a cbmmunication
from the Lakecrest Lane Protective Assodation stating
that the street lights along the sidewalk bl'tween Grosse
Pointe Blvd. and Lakecrest Lane are unsatisractory due to
too much il1t.lmination and requesting that ~the lights be
removed. Tile City Manager was instruct~d to request
the Detroit Edison Company to exchange ~he presently
installed 6000 lumen lights for 2500 lumen ~lights and to
place the lights in operation,
Approval was given to prepare a brie~ explanation
of the 1958-59 City taxes for enclosure with, the City tax
bills.
Councilman Bodman was appointed to represent the
City at a meeting to be held on May 22" 1958 in the
Grosse Pointe Woods Municipal Building' regarding a
Youth Center.
I
Permission was ,granted the Gen. Ru:>sell A. and
CoI. Frederick M. A~ger Post No. 995 to seN poppies on
the streets of the CIty on May 21st Clnd Nl'ay 22. 1958.
Approv.al was given to refund Mr. F. D. Runnells,
Sr, the sum of $15.00, the amount paid by hiip for a boat
mooring permit.
The meeting- adjourned at 10:35 P.M.
WILLIAM
G. BUTLER
DAWSO~l, F. NACY
Mayor P.-o Tem .
Now thru
Published in Grosse Pointe News May 29. 190B
e
'f\~U
.
<Soed Food-Good
Kercheval Ave.
,
Pick~"p and Deli~~ty
and DYERS
No connection
Reputation
16719 Mack
VA 2-5800
f'Grosse Pointe's Oldest and Finest"
Un
CS
15839 E. Warren
___
!!III!....
any
IQ~" \1 , 2
12 :30 p.m. to 9 p.m •.
Sun .. Noon to 9 p,m.
9
other
Cupid's
Saturday
Saturday
Matinee onlyHumphrey
Bogar,t
"OKLAHOMA
KID"
THE STAG ROOM
, OF OUR
WE. WILL
GUEST$
SOON OPEN
r/the Perfeet Room for the Perfect Party"
Reservatic,ns Suggested: VAlley 2-4118
15301 E. .Jefferson. at Beaconsfield
Marie Eva Saint
4'RAINTREE
COUNTY"
(M.G.M, 6S and Color)
-----------
----~._--_._~------J ..
lUXURIOUS LOGE SEATS
Visit -Our Tele~jsjon Lounge
....-:!!..
LAST THREE DAYS-YONB,Y
~
Matinee 1:30 p.m.. Sa•• ~
May 3i1
ESQUIRE
.,Theater
Starting fri., May 30
Through June 5
. i
,Special Kiddie Matinee
SATURDAY
I
~~~~~_n
...
SEE
..
o..-.a-I:I_~~-.ts:-~-l
BUY
,DRIVE
TRIUMPH'
I
$1 ,=6FROgMgoo,'"
!
I
EUROPEAN MC)TORS, Inc.
I
I .E"GLISH FORD.
II
$1 6 g500
Open
ANGLIA
PREFECT
, CONSUL
I
I'
=
,
o.
?
E.
'ROADSTER.S
SEDANS
WJ\.GONS
UP TO 35 M.P.G.
DETRO/TIS
P.
o.
E.
UP TO 40 M.P,G.
!
!,~~~~~~~~-~
OLDEST
ENGLJSH
I
FORD DEALER
ENGLlSH- CAR SERVICE EXPERTS
i
i 7079 GRATIOT at E. Gd. Blvd.
Complete
GARDEN
SHOP
Res.taurant
!
WA 5-8600
fFlrolund's
in
I
Leaders
d
latest Pow.!r.Mowers!
Sat. 12:30 to 11 p.m.
8
REPAIRING
3
7 6
all kinds
,all makes
4
5 .
..
.~
Modern - Antique
-
SEED!;
Fe rti Iize rs
F1r~
Scott's
Domestic
Turf Builder
Ag'rico- Triple-X
Milorganite
Wonder-Gro
- Foreign
Terms Arranged
Free Estimai!es
HEREI
Telephone VA .1-6257
Telephone
DELIVERY SERVICE
..Our 35th
Tools
Power Equipment
Plows. Harrows,
Cu !tivators,
Shovels, Hoes
...Choose good seed
if you want the
riche~t of gardens.
Buy at F1'oltl1ul's
Factory Trained Personnel
Low f~riees
•
Plea sura
FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND' COMFORT
SPECIALISTS IN
Quality lnstallati(~!ns .
•
with
TU 2-0102
Fine Carpeting
•
and Dancing
Gttlrden Equipment
It's No ~;ecret!
•
for Your
Deborah Kerr
David NhT!m
"~ON.JOUR TRISTESSE"
(in Cinemascope
and C,>lor)
12230E. W'arren Ave., at Conner
Between Yorkshire and Bishop
Monday thxu Friday
1918-
Banquets
A Family
,HONG-KONG
CHOP SUEY
ot Lokepointe:
CLEANERS
Breakfasts
Sundays
Home of Famous Banana Cream Pie
Your Hosts: PETER and DAN MASOURAS
Our New Phone Numbe-r-V A, 3-2022
CARRY OUT SERVICE
CHINESE
FOODS
Wedding
RESTAURANT
7909 E. Jefferson at Van Dyke
VA. 3-1155
15139 '~
Evening Dinners
'1
VI
_
BeIJinljj
Me.n's
Luncheons
Eddy Shep,herd's
wa~+
3. In plastie storage bags.
-SINCE
Business
Special Attention to
Bowling Partie:
\,
AND HIS SOCIETY ORCHESTRA
FRO M
Closed on Memorial Day, Friday. May 30
good food
good fun
I.. In our own safe vault, insured to your own vai~ation.
2.ln heavy cedar bags.
TU 4-5015
Piano-Organ Duo
Swingtime for Doncin!:
Out-of-Seasol~
• • • any way
Reservations
Dristy-Gale
•.
Garments
*
OPEN II :30 A.M, TO I :00 A.M.
on Furs,
Blankets and.,
•
AL NAVARRO
Starting
Sunday
Elizabeth
Taylor
Montgomery
Clift
CUp
"best music
· t own "
In'
NOW APPEARING
P~lm Beach Towers, Palm Beach, Fla.
*
,
Combines Fine Food with Fine E~tertainment
AL GRI:EN'S POINCIANA ROOM
City IClerk
,
YEAR
/
AFTER
Direct from
Garage in Park
The City Manager was instructed to proceed with
arrangements to erect a memorial plaqu? at the Pier
Park commemorating the late Harry A. Fu).ton.
YEAR
,
Listening
Fire Dest"oys,
The City Manager was instructed to 'nvite the City
Engineer and a representative of the Glmeral Electric
Company to attend the next Council meeting for the purpose of discussing the matter of installin,' garbage disposals throughout the City.
AFTER
~v1usic De.signed
tho.e,1 ~
The Ci:v Manager was instructed to pr:>ceed with the
widening of Williams Avenue as soon as th~ City received
the contribution of $8.500.00 from the Grosse Pointe
Board of Education.
b.
Tickets ,for two, (on the
aisle, if they' ,wish!) in""Traffie .Court were issued by City
police last Thursday, May 22.
Regretful recipients are William R. Morgan, 11750 Mor'ang
drive, and Laurence A. Dentsche1, of 1886 Manchester road.
Morgan was headed north on
:N;effroad' when he pulled over
to the curb, to allow traffic
through. Dentsehel was going
south on :Neff at the time and,
as Morgan attempted tb reenter traffic, the two piled into
each other.
Robert Kef gen. Re-elected
T'he Boy Scouts troop of Trombly School held its
board members were S. J.
Scha~fsma, Edwin Wendt and
Court of Honor there on May 22. One of the highlights
Mrs. Hugh McTavish.
of the ceremony was the awarding of the Eagle Scout
A special feature of the
badge to BROOKS
BOCK, son of MR., and 'MRS.
meeting was the- presentation
FREDERICK
BOCK 'of Lakepointe
avenue. All three
of a resolution, a,dopted by the
Bocks are shown with SCOUTMASTER
GEORGE
membership,
especia1y, com- BLAIR) who is an offiGer in the Grosse Pointe Park
mending John H~mmel a~d Police Department.
(O)--,-~------_.- ---Mrs. T. K. Jeff~flS for. theIr.
Brooks also won the Bud
long and splendId servIce to Vogt Memorial placque, prethe club, .as members of t~e sented for the first time; in
~
board of dIrectors and as preSl- memory of the late Otto "Bud"
dent of the board.
. Vagt, who devoted years to
'the
scouting movement. A
perpetual annual award, it is
given to the boy in Troop 8,6
who rates most" highly in
leadership, advancement, 8otnow featuring
. Park firemen made 'two fire tendance and mo:rals.
dance music by
calls to the home of Henry
Dr. Salvatore Longe, chairP r i n g h ~ m, 976 Nottingham, man of the troop committee,
"THE
within a few short hours.
made the presentation.
TOWNSMEN"
On Sunday; May 18, the first
alarm came in at about 10 p.m.,
Be captivated by this '
and firemen and equipment St. Peter Altar Society
beautiful
new
G 0Id
Cup Room in the
rushed to the residence and To Hold Monthly Meeting
Whittier - at the river
put out a. mattress fire, be, .. favorite rendezvous
for cocktails. dining
lieved to have stclrtea when a
The Altar Society of St.
and dancing . . . be
plastic shade on a lamp was Peter Catholic Church, Vernier
tempted
by
exciting
flaming
sword
food
ignited by the heat of a bulb and Beaconsfield,
H a r per
speCialties
and other
which fell on the bed.
famed Whittier cuisine
Woods, will hold its monthly
; .. Smorgasbord
lunchPark Fire Chief George de- meeting on Wednesday, June
eon daily. Open SunCaussin said that the firemen 4; at 8 p.m.
day for family dinner.
took the mattress outside and
Election, of officers for the
• Dance Vocalist
Nancy Peters
drenched it with water, and coming year will take place.
• Cocktail Music
then left.
Members are urged to attend
by Pat Crctt
Pringham turned the garden this important meeting.
hose on the mattress and then
took the item to the garage,
GOING TO PHn.lIPPINES
thinking the danger of fire was
Dr. Guy E. Timmons, on
over.
saibbatic<:l leave from MichiAt 2:43 a.m. the m~xt morn- gan State University's departing, firemen were routed out ment of teacher education, will
of bed and again rushed to the spend a year in the Philippines
Nottingham address, where it on a te~hnical assistance prowas found the garage at the ject for Stanford University.
rear of Pringham's home was
engulfed in flames. The fire
fighte'l-s could do nothing to
save it, but managed to put
out the fire that spread to the
garage next door, at numbers I
978 and 980, a two-family flat.
The side of this garage' was
charred and burned through,
123 KERCHEVAl.
Chief deCaussin said. Also deGrolle Pointe Farm.
stro~'ed, he said, was an Edison
pole and telephone pole next to
*
*
*
the garages.
Owner of the property in
Luncheons
E~~PtM~~d:;;1J
1.50
which the Pringhams reside, is
Florence Conner of 404 Rivard
3.15
Evening Dinners
from
boulevard.
The City Clerk reported ~eceipt of a (:ommunication
from the Grosse Pointe Board of Education stating that
the Board voted to contribute the sum of $13,500.00 for the
construction of sidewalks and the widening of the pavement on Williams Avenue between Lothx-op and Touraine, The Council voted'to accept the offl~r of $8,500.00,
although it was noted that this amount was $3,000.00 less
than the estimated cost of the improvemeds.
433
..
: 'S It 0 SSE
SUMMARY OF MINUTES
'S
."
on
of the
y,June
mile
,_'
------------------------------------------------,------------_._--------_.~--------------------------------
~t
16
.:w
Edward
YCa1'
-
..
TUxedo, 1-623;
Craft, jUgr.
GROSSE POINTE CLOCK
rperinl
~o.
---~.f._----~-_1iMI
TUxedo 1-6022
Mfgr. and Repair Co.'.
15233 Kercheval
Be~c~~tie~4
Grosse Pointe
Grosse'
19815 MACK' AVE.
1
Pointe s
Garden
Headquarters
GROSSE POINTE
(Bet. 7 and 8 Mih Rds.)
I
..
J
,
-~..I_~-~~~~
__
~
__ ~~
_
','
~,'
!'
"
,
,
~,
..
Page Eight
GROSSE
POINTE
NEWS
,
Southeastern Grads Sought I
Graduates of Southeastern and Goethe. on WednesdrtY,
I
High School. from Jnne. 1920, June 4, at 8 p.m., in the school
:
through June. 1925. are in- library.
William A. Freimuth df 1645
vited to attend a re-union at
Southeastern
High, Fairview
Fair cour\.. presIdent rt! the
1920 class' and the first'presiFor Reliable
dent of the alumni assodation
said that purpose of the re.
.
.
umon IS to start a pernlanent
organization
of the.school
alumni. The 1920 class w~s the
first class to graduate I from
Southeastern.
He said that th r'
e e ,lre a
nU!llber of old grads living in
the P?inte and through?ut the
DetrOIt area whose reSIdences
are not known,
especially
women wh~ have married.
whose marrIed names make
. them difficult to locate, he
said.
L. L. DACKEN
A committee of 15 of the
ELECTRONIC
LABORATORY
grads
of the school have been
RCA Victor-Frazier
Speakers
working diligently, trying to
Custom
High Fidelity
20313
MACK at loch moor
locate other alumni. The matter is so important, it was
said, that Miss Marjorie Readhead, principal of Southeastern. along with other members of the school faculty, are
also trying to help,
Anyone having any knowl-,
edge of thf:: whereabouts, or
are 1920 though 1925 graduates of. Southeastern, should
contact Mr. Freimuth at TU
4.4174, or write t'O him at his
address before June ~.
No Kindling Needed
Name Winners
Christ Church
I
C'olleiie Wornell
Meet June 7
The College Women's Club
will hold its annual meeting
at the Detroit Yacht Club on
Saturday, June 7 at 11 o'clock.
At this meeting election of
offic~rs for the. club's 26th
year will be held fo},1owedby
luncheon and bridge.
This Saturday, May 31, Mrs.
Kenneth Patton, president of
the club, will open her Bedford lane home for a tea from
3 to 5 to honor the members.
<Yf Lot~'s home, was damag~d
I
Thursday,
Reform is a thing everon.
$700, the chIef wants to apply. but no one
.
wants to receIve It.
I
. .
Allied Naval
Officers ,Feted
WH
y(
do II'nowJwith an
-
FHA HOME IMPROVEMENT lOAN
at.
at
MANUFACTURERS
NATIONAL BANK
SOMEl
AI
Eitl
.
with
FIRE
KINDLER
City of Grosse Pointe
for
Fireplace - Grill
Campfire - Stove
Furnace - Stoker
BUDGET FOR ,THE CITY OF GROSSE POINTE AS APPROV-ED
BY THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL
LIGHT FIRE KINDLER
then ADD FUEL
oFIRE
KINDLER
REVENUES-GENERAL
Assessed Value-Real
Tax Rate
"
Total Tax
uvy
Estimated
• SAFE • SURE
and Personal
$24,995,300.00
21.00
1" ••••••••••••••••••••••
Fire Kindler
POLICE
11,911.40
$
Income from Taxes
.........................................
TIVE
II
FIRE
513,000.00
,
~
.
SEWER,
WATER AND INSPECTIONS
,
Estimated
Revenue
Estimated
Revenue
1957.1958
1958-1959
Mayer Parker's R~commendlation
Approved
By City
Council
$513,G00.00
$513,000.00
.,
COLLECTIONS,
1958-1959 Tax Roll .......:.... $503,000.00
REAL Delinquent
PERSONAL,
Taxes
Delinquent
Taxes
$510,000.00
..
2,000.00
1,500.00
.
500.00
500.00
PUBLIC
WORKS
SIGNAL
AND PUMPING
2,000.00
500.00
500.00
....
,
PARK
EQUIPMENT
2,000.00
..' ..'
CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT
IMPROVEMENT
'fOTAL
1957-1958
1958-1959
A'5
Budgeted
Requested By
Dept. H~ad
,
Mayor Parker's Recommendation
,
Approved
By City
Council
$ 50,050.00
110,870.00
118,080.00
112,270.00
116,470.00
71,320.00
80,945.00
71,245.00
81,005.00
66,435.40*
70,267.15*
70,267.15*
70,267.15*
,
118,540.56
113,956.72
109,707.44
109,707.44
.
14,195.00
14,295.00
14,295.00
14:295.00
.
21,930.00
21,855.10
19,130.00
21,850.00
13,625.00
33,600.00
26,600.00
14,500.00
.
21,000.00
37,500.00
23,700.00
21,700.00
.
$421,430,56
$470,281.82
~426,997.44
$429,677.44
BUDGET
FUND
EXPENSES
$ 49,950.00 $ 50,050.00 $ 50,050.00
~ ••••••••••••••
,
\
Complete Pl!!ckage for
Picnic or Grill
ADMINISTRA
524,911.40
Convenient Packages ot 4
Also Pkg. Cases of 8, 16 or 32
Charcoal
with
RECAPITULATION
FUND 1958.1959
EstimatedUncollected-1958-1959
CLEAN
Fire
Destroys
Parked Car
'.t d.
....
an estlmated
A 51h or e WIre was blamed' I fire of that nature
.
.d
for a fire that 'completely en Th e ve h"ICte, par k'ed' In f ran t sal . ,
gulfed the car of E. R. Loth of .,---------.."..------------------------Eight GTosse Pointe High 315 Belan.ger .on Monday, May
School studenrts have been 19, it was disclosed by Farms
named winners of scholarships Fire Chief M. William Mason.
to Michigan universities. Mary
The chief said that it was
Evely, Karen Hancock, Judy the ,first that he could remember, since he has been with
Henry, and Vern'e Istock, all the fire department, that fireNeed another room?
seniors, have been awarded
four-year grants to the Uni~ ~en were oalled to put out a
Need your ki~he~ modernized?
versity of Michigan.
Need your house painted? ••• a new garage?
Michigan State University
has given four-year scholarships toSherriH Bell, January,
'58, and Judy Himmelsbaugh,
sen~or, valued at $600 each.
Local indnstrialists and naval
Of comparable worth is the
officers
were. hosts at dinner
tutition ~cholarship won by
in
their
homes
to 28.key nava~
Mary Lou Rydall to Central
officers
Thursday
evening,
Michigan College, in Mount
The
foreign.
officers,
are .in
Pleasant. And Charles Munk,
America
attending'
the
Navy
June '58, has been awarded a
War
College
under
a
,military
grant to cover tuition for ~next
Manmacturel'8 National Bank makes loans up to $3500 for
semester at Wayne State Uni- aid' program designed to inte~
grate
the
free
world's
naval
home
improvements or repairs. . . and you ean take as long 88
versity. ,
theory, strategy and. tactics.
5 years to pay.
'
They come from Europe, the
Why not stop inat the MNB office nearest you or make the arrange ..
Lord Dufferin Chapter
Far East, Latin AJ.nerica ~nd
menta through your dealer.
the Middle East. The group ~
Plans June 4 Meeting
You'll be pleasantly surprised at the speed and ease loans are
was welcomed here at a reLord Dufferin C hap tel': ~ep:tion at Broadhe'ad, Naval
made
MNB.
Daughters of the British Em~ Armory at 6 o'dock by governpife, will meet at the home of ment, civic and. industrial
~
Mrs. Samuel J. Barker, 395 leaders.
Among
the
pointers
opening
Fisher road, next Wednesday,
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
theiT
homes
for
dinner
were
MACK NEAR LOCHMOOR
JEFFERSON
E. AT COPliN
June 4. Luncheon will be
WARREN
E. AT THREE MilE DRIVE
Admiral and Mrs. lueon J'acobi.
served at 12:30 p.m.
PLUS 11' COMMUNITIES
WHERE WE MAINTAIN
OFFICES
the John N. Lords, the Paul
Richmonds,
the
John
KenPeople are turning to higher
things-the
higher cost of liv- ealys and. Mr. and Mrs. John
Renhcard.
ing in particular.
.
Recruits Choir Of Scholarships
A general invitation is being
extended to college students
returning to. Grosse Pointe for
the summer holidays to sing
in the summer choir at Christ
Episcopal Church during the
months. of July and August.
They will join with the mem ..
bel'S of the Festival Choir in
preparing music for the 11 a.~
services.
Richard Roeckelein, organist and choirmaster,. has selected an interesting group of
anthems by such composers as
Heinrich Schutz, J. S. Bach,
Mendelssohn,. Ralph Vaughan
Williams, and others.
Weekly.' rehearsals will be
held on Friday evenings from
7:30-9 in the choir room.
Thursday, ~Aay 29, 1958
-
If yo!.!' re pIa
our display 0
will design i:\
We've desic
••• and wit~
!
STORE HOt:
•
DISTRIBUTION
FROM STATE
DEBT RETIREMENT
Intangible Tax
.
Mich. Sales Tax Division
Gasoline
arid Vleight Tax
Liquor Licenses
Operators'
9,500.00
.,
::
Licenses
9,500.00
9,500.00
9,500.00
50,000.00
M
FUND
..
51,000.00
50,000.00
50,000.00
.
39,000.00
39,000.00
39,000.00
39,000.00
Bond Retirement
Bond Interest
Fiscal Agent Fee
..
1,500.00
1,500.00
1,500.00
1,500.00
TOTAL
.
1,500.00
1,200.00
1,200.00
1,200.00
.
,
.
.
..
47,000.00
8,613.75
100.00
47.000.00
7,386.25
100.00
47,000.00
7,386.25
100.00
47,000.00
7,386.25
100.00
.
$ 55,713.75
$ 54,486,25
$ 54,486.25
$ 54,486.25
Detroit Edisn
GENERAL
LICENSES
AND REGISTRATIONS
Bicycle Licenses
Distributed by
Dog Licenses
Mcintosh
Plumb.,
COAL CO.
,
elee., ~as and oil reg
Fumigators
'125.00
..
125.00
125.00
125.00
.
600.00
600.00
600.00
600,00
..
500.00
500.00
500.00
500.00.
..
50.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
•
11850 Kercheval
Business
Licenses
..
6,500.00
6,500.00
6,500.00
6,500.00
Detroit 14. Mich.
VAlley 2.8500
Builders'
Licenses
,
100.00
50.00
50.00
50.00
,
1,509.00
1,500.00
1,500.00
1,500.00
Birth
and Death
Certificates
PERMITS
.
3,000.00
1,500.00
1,500.00
,1,500.00
Plumbing
.
800.00
800.00
800.00
800.00
Electrical
.
200.00
200.00
200,00
200.00
1,000.00
500.00
1,000.00
1,000.00
..
13,500.00
12,000.00
12,000.00
12,000.00
.
500.00
500.00
500.00
500.00
READING AND ACCOUNTING
(WATER :B"UND)
..
1,150.00
1,150.00
1,150.00
1,150.00
Building
Construction
Automatic
COURT FINES
INTEREST
How TO PROFIT
THROUGH
TAX EXEMPTION
With today'. high tax levels. in.
veston in medium and high tax
brackets are turning to tax,£ree
Municipal Bonds fot" income that
they can keep,
If yon have a taxable income
of $10.000 or more. you may be
well repaid by investigati.ng the
METER
"How
,
t.~ ••••••••••••
AND VIOLATIONS
AND PENALTIES
"
3,500.00
3,500.00
3,500.00
3,500.00
SUNDRY
.
300.00
300.00
300.00
300.00
SaIary ..
1,000.00
700.00
700.00
700.00
..
5,000.00
6,000.00
6,000.00.
9,000.00
INCOME
Reimbursed
PARKING
,
One Crossing Guard's
METER INCOME
Boat Moorings
TOTAL
WATER
.•,.
Deed for tax exemption, tell. how
much these high-grade inveatmenta
C4Il be worth to you. There'. DO
obligation. Send for copy today.
4,500.00
4,500.00
.$650,825.00
$653,650.00
$658,150.00
$661,150.00
----' .----,
Water
and Services to
.
.
:.4,250.00
..
.•.1,500.00
,..•...
\\ 2,500.00
Taps and Permits
Sale of New Water
TOTAL
••••
~ •••••••••••
500.00
1,500.00
10,000..00
250.00
5,5UO.00
650.00
125.00
1,000.00
500.00
1,500.00
10,000;00
250.00
5,500.00
650.00
125.00
1,000.00
2,250.00
2,250.00
2,250.00
2,250.00
-026,000.00
260.00
500.00
41,000.00
1,000.00
1,960.00
2,000.00
28,000.00
260.00
500.00
45,175.00
1,000.00
-0-
2,000.00
28,000.00
260.00
500.00
44,175.00
1,000.00
2,000.00
28,000.00
260.00
500.00
44,175.00
1,000.00
7,200.00
2,00Q.0(
1,200.00
1,000.00
1,000.00
1,700.00
1,800.00
1,000.00
12,000.00
37,000.00
1,972.50
12,000.00
$ 10,307.50
28,692.50
7,200.00
2,500.00
1,400.00
1,500.00
1,000.00
1,700.00
1,800.00
. 500.00
12,000.00
39,000.00
1,905.00
12,000.00
7,200.00
2,500.00
1,400.00
1,500.00
1,000.00
1,700.00
1,800.00
500.00
10,000.00
39,000.00
1,905.00
10,000.00
7,200.00
2,500.00
1,400.00
1,500.00 '
1,000.00
1,700.00
1,800.00
500.00
10,00000
39,000.00**
1,905.00
10,000.00
inho
theIe~
.
the n
In home
in these
TOTAL
..
$169,367.50
$181,215.00
$176,215.00
.$176,215.00
You can
Super S
TOT~L
.
$646,511.81
$705,983.07
$657,698.69
.$660,378.69
family's
laundry,
**NOT INCLUDED
,
Here's t
for an op
IN TOTALS
"
Salaries' and Wages
,
General Expenses Including Capital
charge for sewage disposal, pumping .and treatment
,
,
.
Bond Interest and Maturity
::
..
Cost of .Water
,
.
New Water Meters ,
~
,..
\
OF MI(;HIGAlf
Meters
,
t •••
, •• t ••••••••••••••••••••••••
---
!J1,250~00
TOTAL
• •••
' •••••••••••••••••••••
t
It ••••••••
~ •••••••••••
$ 7,228.04
Onlyele
18I
17,557.86
7,981.25
35,000.00
2,500.00
f8]
$ 70,267.15
--"\
(;0 RPORADON
Buhl Bldg,
Detroit
WO 2.2055
Grand Rapids, Flint, Bay
Battl. Creak
Lansing,
Port Huron
. 4,000.00
. ~~\63,000.00
or phone
tlRST
3,500.00
500.00
1,500.00
10,000.00
250.00
5,500.00
650.00
125.00
1,000.00
,WATER DEPT. EXPENDITURES
Billing to Consumers
Hydrant Rentals
Bldg. Dept,
Profit Through Tax.EKemplioDuplains in plain language yoar
._---
DEPT. INCOME
Metered
'h
JI
500.00
1,500.00
8,000.00
250.00
4,500.00
650.00
125.00
1,000.00 '
$ 39,000.00
GENERAL
RENTALS
It's $.Omething 10 tlt.iNc about!
Our New Booklet.
t
SALE OF SAL VAB;LE MATERIAL
advantages of tax-exempt State
and Municipal Bonds. For in.
atance, if yo~ file a .ingle return
011 a taxable income of '14,000,
~ou would havo to receiYo a did.
dead return of 7.45% on a taxa.
ble security in order to equal the
yield from a 3.50% tax-free Bond.
Heat
W elf are
.
Health
'
'
.
Workmen's Comp. jns. surety bond
.
Dog Law Expenses
:
..
Gasoline
~ ;
.
Oil, Lubricant and Alcohol
..
Bicycle Law Expenses
,
..
Miscellaneous
Engineering
: .
I:Iydrant Rentals, 225@ $10.00
(Paid to Water Fund)
;.
Contribution
(Mr. Beatty's servi'ces to
Bldg. Dept. Paid to Water Fund) ..
Signal and Street Lighting
..
Municipal League
;
..
Recreation
"
,
.
\Employees' Retirement
System
..
New Shade Trees
" :
.
Disposal of Garbage (at dump)
.
Disposal of Municipal
Waste Ot!ler
Than Garbage (at dump)
..
Building Maintenance and Repair
..
New Fire Hydrants
(2)
..
Zoning Or~inance Revision
..
Ci ~,Tj.l Defense
.
Police Radio
\
.
Judges' Salaries
~ ,
Street Signs and Markings
..
Sidewalks and Curb Repairs
..
Street Improvements
(Act 51)
.
Park Land Contract
;
.
Tree Spraying and Trimming
..
*For Debt Service
.
For Street Improvement .. ~
;
.
26
NEIL BLONDELL,
\
ei~
\
Published
1J~gel l)irecto~
[8J
Long I
standa
~
Autom
Budget DirectOf'
See your pi
\I
'I
/
.
'
.
'.
..t
'
\.
\
:I~.....
'"
Instal,
near a
NEIL BLONDELL,
Grosse Point~ News May ~9, 1958
\
Efficie
water
.
'
5'
or F 7 F
7
{
eo
I~,"""
r
-,
'.,
.
~
.
r
\
\
I
I
ne
i
\
Thursday, May 29, 1958
GROSSE
\
l
ne
'r
POI N T
~
:
!Ch.'
.\
h
.
·
..\
'N
':
: . Ur(1 . ews:.
e
.N E W S
POINTE CONGREGATIONAL
Page Nine
.ErnestA. Bauer Gets Fellowship
Even though a m.an does
change his mind he has never
240 Chalfo"nte at L~throp
been known to get a better
Ministers: Marcus William
. LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Ernest ,'effective teachers and counselone.
Johnson, Arnold Dahlquist,
A. Bauer, 1596 HawthOlrne,. o~s. The fellowships are pro•
'..'.
"'l'
.
\
•
J ohnso.n.
.
by the Geneml Elec:
"
:.
Sund'ay, June 1: 10 a.m., Grosse Pointe. Woods, Mich.,-I, vl~ed
trlc Company and the courses
I, Worship
Service.
C h u r c h has been selected as one of the I are tal"gt....4.
b y, sewor
. rnem bers
... U1~
~T. J~MES ,L'QTHERA;~'
ST. PAUL EV. LUTHERAN
School ~or a11.ages-.Crib room 50 students from an ll-state
of the Purdue mathematics
McMillan, at Kercheval I.'
37~Lothrop at CJ:1alf~nte
througli S~r:lOr HI~h; 1l:~0 area to attend the General staff.
&av. George .E. Kurz\
Thu:rsday, May 29: 12,' Pre_a.m.,
Worshlip ServIce. CrIb Electric C?mpany Fellc:wship
In addition to the class in. Rhod G"1
~\.
Schodler's Birthday Party. 6:30 Roo~ onl~; 7 p.m., Congo Club Program I~ M~the~tlcs
at struction, the F e 11 0 W s enMlSS
a. ~ mer, DeacOl,\ess ,.'
..
.'
' m,~etmg In YoUlbh Room; 7 Purdue ymvesnty
thIS sum- rolled in the pro grit m
'11 I
and ParIsh Worker
..\.
Chi:t.pel ChoIr. 7.30, Semor,
.S .
H' P'l . 'F 1
.
' Choir;
p.m" emor
1.. 1 gnm
e- mer: H~ IS a teacher ?f mat~e- make field trips tOGen~~'
I
Fnday-A~ult
class, 8
lowshipin Lounge.
matlcs In Gros.se Pomte Hll!Jh Electric plants in Indiana and
COOncel chOIr, 8:15 p.m.
';
Saturday,
May 31:,10:15"
M?nday" JUn£;- 2:
p.m., Sch()ol. .
,Illinois
to study practical aphe 50 persons who WIll ;~e- plications of mathematics in
Sunday-Sunday
school, 9':90 Junior. Choir.
. .
Marmer Sco}Jts.In SocI8!l Hall
celVe. all-e~nse
fellowshlPS industry. Personnel from theSe
a.m. ffigh scllool. Bible claJ}s,
... .. III
No. 1.
to
this
p~ogram
were
selected 'plants also may appear from
10 o'clock. Service, '9:30 ash..
Sunda~, June, 1: 8:30, Holy
Tues'~ay, June. 3:. 9:30 a.~.~
, CommunIon: 9:45, Su n day Wom-en s Assocl!atlon BOaLd fr0In; a fIeld of more than 250 time to time as SlP'Cdal lee- 17600 LIVERNOIS nt. McNichols • UN 3-7800
turers
and 11 a,m. N~rsery at botu~. School (all ages). 11, Holy meeting in Lounge; 9:30 "a.m., appl;Lcants. The p rlo g ram,
153D4 KERCHEVAL nr. Beaconsfield • VA 2-9070
which
wilL
be
operating
for
.
s,t. J'ames Semor~, supper ,Ji.1 Com m u'n ion., 11, Sunday ~oard of..Deaconesses. meeting
o clock. Parents mg.hft,
\ School (1-8).
In Youth
Room.; 9:45 a.m., the sixth c"n.secutive year at
Purdue, is sponsored by the
\
...
..
lie
'!
' ... 11<
...
Chapel service in' Sanctuary'
Complete
$8 FUR
\I
. , Ger.eral Electric Educational
GRACE EVANGELICAL'
Tuesday, June 3: 7:30, Sun-10 a.m., Mart Linen Commit.
and Chal'iitable Fund in coLake~int
t Ke h
Ii
day SchOOl Teacher's Meeting. tee in. Soci,al Hall ~o. 2; 7
No charge for rips.
JI~
ea
rc eva, ,;!
* * ...
p.m. Boy SCoutS in Social Hall operation with the' DepartRestyUng any type
Ladies' - Men'a
Robert P. Beck Pastor,
..'
~- ,
ment
of
Mathematics
and
8ta.:.
Wednesday, June 4: 7:30, No. '.1; 7 p.m., Group 4. potfur.
We eonverl dou~le-br(~a8ted
tistics
of
the
University.
It
will
T~ursday: 8 p.m., Semor Executive Committee, Women luck supper at Mrs. Hoerner's,
$8.00 (Val. $100.)
s u f t s to singie - breasted
open June 23 and ext end
models.
Cleaning, glazing
Ohmr.
,
_ of the Church. '
8848 Marseilles.
and insurance.
through Aug. 2.
Sunday:
10-11:30, Church,'
'... ... lie
Wednesday, June 4: 6:30
The objective of this proMINSPECIALlSTS
School fo~' Beginners through.
WOODS PRESBYTERIAN
p.m., Church night dinner f01gram is to provide teachers of
COMPLETE FUR SERVICE
Junior High; Crib room; 10-11 '19950 Mack Ave, at Torrey Rd, lowed by Board and Commitmathematics
in junior and
a.m., Mc:rning. WorSih!p; 11- \ ,.Andrew F.Raugh, Minister
tee m~~tings; 7:30 p.m., YoUJ1Jhsenior' high s c h 0 0 I s opporCLEANERS & TAIl.ORS
11:30, DIScussIon PerIod for lDharles B, Kennedy, Assistant ohoir rehearsal.
EXCLUSIVE FURRIER
tunity to widen theiJr back904 ChlJlmers
VA 1.4063
Junior
High, Senior High,!
.
Mipister
Thursday, June 5: S p.m., ,ground in the field with a
904 Chalmers
VA 1-4063
NEXT TO HEALY'S
NEXT TO HEALY'S EST. 1915
Adults.
VICtor G. Novander, Jr,~
.Ohancel choir rehearsal.'
view to making them more
Monday: 8 p.m., Consistory
Assistant l\'Iin~ster
Ill......
Meeting.
: Sunday, June 1: 9:30 a.m."
CHRIST EPISCOPAL
Wednesday: 8 p.m., Worker's f;\rst worsh~p service; 9:30 a.m.,'
61 Grosse Pointe Boulevard
:Conference at Gra:ce.
.
o,'ltwCh sch~ol -;. N u r S e r y
Rev. Erville B. Maynard,
Th
do • 8
S'
tl\I'ough Semor HIgh; 11 a.m.,
~tor
. urs ay.
p.m.,
emor second worship service'
11
I ChOIr.
..' church school-Nursery
a.lp..,
Sunday: 8 a.in;, ,Hol'Y Com-
1.
,
•••••• ~•••••••••• e"I'
I
WHEN YOU SEETHIS SIGN AT
~.rn.
YOUR NEIGHBORS
• ... •
'!
'F
-
STORAGE
Alteratiolns
.
(
I
.,
.'
'j
Cri&t'j
YOU KNOW
SOMETHING NICE IS BEING DONE
,A NEW ROOM.,
Either
-
.
• A NEW HOME
a Hi-Fi Cabinet, Bookshelves
or General Remodeling
================--
HERE~
-"____________
th::ough Junior High. Sermon
thtlme at both services: "An
EYI~ Opener." The R,everend
Victory G. 'Novander, Assistant. Minister, preaching; 5:30
p.m,:,Westminster
Fellowship
-Parent
Night.
. M\:mday, June .2:. 4-5 p.m.,
Crus,ader Ohoir rehearsal; 4:155:15p.m., WestrrllnSiter Ohoir
rehearsaL
Tm.lsday, June 3: 1 p.m., "The
Fin'st Ladies of the White
House" given by Mrs. D.
Dwight. Struthers. A tea will
follow, 3:45-4:30 p.m., Carol
Choir lrehearsaL
Wednesday, June 4: 5:30-8
p,m., Strawberry Festival; 7:45
p.m., Class for new members
joining the Church.
Thursday, June 5: 7:15 p.m.,
color cued 10 your
.Applia~ces
CUSTOM KITCHEN
•
C. GOUNARIS
munwn.9:30'and
11 a.m., Holy
CommurnQn and church school.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday
'and Friday: 8:45 a.m., Morhing
prayer. 10 a.m., Holy Communion. Wednesday, 7 a.m., ~oly
CQmmunion. 8:45a.m., Mornin.g prayer. Thursday, 5:30 p.m.,
Evensong.
. At Christ Church. th~re are
daily intercessions: Monday -
Missions. Tuesday - The Sick.
Wednesday - The Community.
ThiuTsday - The World. Friday - The Departed.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, Sj\TURDAY AT
. '.,
c~Verbrugge Markel
The Pointe's Oldest bfarket
898 St. Clair Ave. near Mack
Leg
O'Lamb
Ignored Sign
Causes Crash
Failuxe to respect a stop sign
at the corner of Charlevoix
7:45 p.m., Chancel Choir reand St. Clair resulted in a
hearsal.
...
ticket on Wednesday, May 21,
POINTE MEMORIAL
for Janet Milryann Lawitzkej
16 Lake Shore Road
of 4118 Dickerson, in St. Clair I
Dr. Frank Fitt, Minister
Shores.
I
The Rev, Paul F, Ketchum and
It also resulted in woe for
the Rev. Ben L, Tallman,
Earl
Charles Kindra, of 21
associate ministers.
Radnor' Cli-cIe, whose car it
Sunday, June 1: 9:30 a.m., was that Miss Lawitzke slamChildren's Day Service in the med mto. She was driving
church for all children of the south on S t. C I air avenue
Primary IT and In through when. the accident occurred .
Junior High Departments and
their parents, followed by cofThe man who takes time to
fee hour in the gymnasium; explc.in his mistakes has little
9:30 a.m., Ohurch School for time left for anything else.
Toddlers through Primary Departments;
9:30 a.m., Adult
Bible Study Group: Leader,
Mrs. Frank Fitt-Libraryj
11
a.m., Morning Worship, second
service: Sermon by Dr. Frank
Fitt, "Even Our Faith"-I John
5:1-5; 11 a.m., Church School
in all dep'artments-sootion
II;
12:15 p.m., Session me-etingMinisters Study. ,
Monday, June 2: 7 p.m., Boy
Scod't Court of Horior.
Tuesday, June 3: 10 a.m.-3
p.m., Women's
Association
Sewing and Knitting-Women's Par.;' 10 a.m., Service
Guild-Assembly
Room; 12:30
p.m'l Luncheon-GymnasiUn1.
Wednesday, June 4: 8 p.m"
Marion Mill Pr eminge:r:Church.
Sausage Meat
Reody to Serve
For Your
Holiday
Breakfast
Pecan Pie
Family
Size
TU 5-1566
Hame Made
Frosty Acres
Young Prime
and Choice
TU 5-1565
8Sc:
Boy Scout Tiroop 546 meets;
. .
I
If your kitchen
Is unbecoming
to you, you should be coming to ~s!
If you're planning ~ new kitchen, your first. move is to see
our disploy of GE color-choice appliances around which we
will design ~ whole new wood or metal kitchen for you.
We've designed many of the finest kitchens in the Pointe
• • • ~nd with so little inconvenience to the housewife.
Call for Estimate
TU 5-3206
STORE HOURS: Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday till 6:00
Monday, Thursday and Friday till 9:00
'eurlis mower
ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
18538 Mack at Touraine
Detroit
Edison Service
Agency
illhome after home after home...
III
there's always plenty of hot water
the new electr~cwater heater way
In home after home there'S a new electric water heater. And the families
in these homes enjoy all the hot water they want.
109
Swiss
Steak
\Velners.................
HOI?e Made
75c Ib•
Fre:;h
Ground Beef........
59c Ib•
Silvereup Rolls
Hot Dog or
Hamburger,
Pkrr. of 8
You &analways be sure of QUALITY
t100DS
"
49c
at
Verbrugge's
FREE
.
FREE
DELIVERY
I
DELIVERY
•
POINTE METHODIST
211 Moross Road
Hugh C.White, Pastor.
Helen D. Th~mas, Director
of Christian Education.
Sunday, June 1: 9:30 a.m.,
Worship and Serm'O'Il, Church
School for Nursery, Tiny Tots,
Kindergarten,
Primary
and
Junior . Departments;
11:30
a.m., Adult Bible Class; 11:15
a.m., .Worship and serson;
Oh1.irch SClhool for Nursery,
Tiny Tots, Kindergarten, Pri-'
mary, Intetmediate and Senior
Departments; 3 p.m., Church
Planning Conference; 6 p.m.,
7, 8, 9 Grade MYF; 7:30p.m.,
Senior MYF.
Wednesday. June 4: 8 p.m.,
Finance Committee meeting.
'r.hursday, June 5,: 'r p.m.,
Chancel. Choir rehearsal.
.
Frid~'Y, June 6: 4 p.m.,
Junior ChQir rehea!rsal.
Saturday, June 7: 11 a.m., At
boat dock for all-'chl:R-ch.Bob-
I.
Lo Piez.llc.
Qpen Su'ndays
You can be confident that an electric water heater, plus Edison's new
Super Supply Plan, will provide round.the-clock hot water for all your
family's needs, too. Then you can plan your day more efficiently-do the
laundry, wash dishes, schedule showers when you want to.
10:00 to 4:00
,
WE
DELIVER
Here's the convenient, modern way to GET IT HOT ••• GET A LOT
for an operating cost as low as $3.88 per month.
Only electric water heaters give you aU these"lmportant
III
Stouffirs
Holiday Picnic Specials
,ON
advantagesl
.
FAMILY ORDERS
'
OF $5.00 OR OVER
[8J Efficient-the heat goes into the
[gj Fast-new, more efficient heating
[8]
(8J Outer shell-!:ool to the touch all
water
anywhere-need
near a chimney
Install
[g} Long life-meet
standards
Automatic-all
~
not be
Edison's rigid
the time
units
, Open Tburs. and. Fri.
Evenings Till 9:00
over
, Su,ulays 10 to 4
[8] Edison maintains electrical parts
ROSLYN
MARKET
without charge .
[8] Safe-clean-quiet
- modern
Old.lt
See your plumber or appliance dealer DE TR 0IT ED ISO N
SERVES
SOUTH5ASTERN
in the Wood;
21020 MACK at Roslyn Rd.
TU 4..9821
.Gross. Point. Woods
MICHIGAN
I.
;
.1
.
,
\
,
_~_~~~---'--.-L
~~~~_~~
__ ~
__
~_.~
__
~
~_~iiL
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Page Ten
P,OI':NTENEWS
G,ROS'SE
-11------------i
. Grosse Pointe News
GrosseExaggerations.
Phone TU 2-6900
Member Michigan Press Ass'n and National Editorial Ass'n
REPRESENTATIVE:
Weekly N~wspaper Representatives. Inc.
.
404 Fifth ......
venue. New York 19. New York, BRyant 9~7300
CHICAGO OFFICE
333 North Michigan Avenue, Phone Financial 6-2214
Entered as second-ciass matter at the post office, Detroit,
Michigan, under the Act of March 3, 1897.
FULLY PAID CIRCULATION
ROBERT B, EDGAR ....EDITOR and GENERAL MANAGER
MATTHEW M. GOEBEL
ADVERTISING MANAGER
PATRICIA TALBOT
"
.FEATURE PAGE, SOCIETY
FRED RUNNELLS
,
SPORTS E1JITOR
JAMES J..NJAIM ......•.....•...........•.......•..••...
"
NEWS
ALDEN G. EDGAR ....•....., , ,..........•.........•........................N..EWS
ARTHUR R BLYLER ,
ADVERTISING
PATPJCIA BLYLER
"
ADVERTISING
MARY LORIMER
,
ADVERTISING
JOHN MacKENZIE
".,
, BUSINESS
ALBERTA WILKE
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
FERN GREIG ,
,._
,
CLASSIFIED
JOANNE EASON
ACCOUNTS
FLORA HARDING
,
CIRCULA TION
What Could Be More Fitting!
With Memorial Day upon us, it must be reported
that once again, the annual Family Participation
campaign conducted for the operation and maintenance
of
the Grosse Pointe War Memorial Center has failed to
reach its goal.
The Center drive always achieves its, goal, but it is
difficult to understand
why it always takes so long.
Much additional
expense is entailed and considerable
needless effort, when the Center staff and volunteer
workers have to prolong the campaign for months past
the deadline, with supplementary
mailings and telephone calls.
It is even more difficult to understand
why such a
small percentage
of the residents
participate
in this
campaign ~or the support of one of the community's
greatest assets, To date only about one family out of
every five in the Pointe has made a donation.
We would suggest that all of those residents who
have not made a contribution
could not find a better
way to observe Memorial Day than to send in their
gift, no matter how small, immediately.
Every Pointe
family should Piave a part jn the operation
of this
magnificent
property whose primary purpose is to pay
honor to those who sacrificed so much in two wars. All
gifts are tax deductible. Checks should be made out. to
the Grosse Pointe War Memorial Association and mailed
to 32 Lake Shore Road, Grosse Pointe 36.'
A Wise Decision by the P-TA
In a formal session last week, the Grosse Pointe
P-TA Council, a group that includes representatlves
from all the Grosse Pointe public schools, voted down a
proposal that would have given local P-TA backing to
the Grosse Pointe Council of Better Literature
for
Youth.
It was a wise decision on the part of the P-TA CouncE and one that warrants elaboration.
The Council of Better Literature
for Youth, a
relatively new organization in this area, advertises itself,
as its name suggests, as a group interested in promoting
better reading for our young people. This is a laudable
ajm it is doubtful that anyone could argue effecti.vely
against it. But the Council's manner of reaching that
goal leaves a great deal to be desired. As a matter of
fact, it's rather fanatical methods suggest an organization to be avoided.
The Council has drawn up a list of periodicals, if
they can be called that, and said, in effect, these our
children can't read. Most of the periodicals on t.he list
are, we certainly agree, the poorest type of reading for
either children or adults. Some of the material in these
publications
is utter trash. But the point that has been
overlooked by the Council in its zeal to improve reading
habits in this: Who is to judge what is trash and what
can and cannot be read? Is this to be a decision of a few
people, undoubtedly
well meaning, but whose thinking
and background may be in conflict with yours and ours?
Our problem today is not to remove printed material
from sources that would make it available to young people. Our problem is to make certain that our youths are
enccuraged to read and that a wide selection of material
is made readily available to them. As we see it, far more
damage can result from a habit or not reading than from
reading, even though some of the material could be considered by some to be objectionable.
We'll take our chances with the parents of today.
Generally,
they are a sound lot. They haven't done a
bad job in developing good, sound interests in their offsprings. And this is exactly the way it should be. A child
who has had considerate upbringing,. who has had parents who respect him as an individual and who is given
the benefit of a doubt is not going to be s~t astray by
some pulp garbage that he might happen to come across
in a drug store. Hiding a child behind a protective veil
seldom lea,ds him to well-rounded
maturity.
But more
important,
a parent who has done an' effective
job
has bestowed in his children wholesome interests that
~annot be easily supplanted
by unhealthy
interests.
.
,
i
~
r
I
~
'\'I MAY
'.
A. ,PRYOR
Three Trunk Lines
ADVERTISING
'\Memorial
The Council insists that to call its action censorship
is incorrect. The Council considers any suggestion that a;;
fundamental
freedom is being tampered
with as mis-'
understanding
of its motives. We ~ertainly don't see any
public book burning as a part of the Council's program.
But in its negative approach. to a problem that we all
know we have with us, the Council is committing
a
grave mistake. If the Council of Better 'Literature
tor
Youth wants to ~erform a valuable servke for our community, then it could well come out with a positive
program for better reading, pounding home the idea
that there are many fine things to be read between the
(!ov~rs of a. book, inside the slick pages of a magazine,
or In the ruled columns of newspapers.
An excellent
example of the good that can come from a program
pointed
in this direction
is the motion picture
and
television council in Grosse Pointe and in communities
all over our country. These groups take a postive ap-'
proach, emphasizing
the good qualities
of these two
vital mediums.
Any effort to contFol thought is dangerous.
Any
effort to stifle choice is heretical. It is in these areas of
freedom that the Council has come a cropper. We would
like to remind its members that all too often it is far
easier to be against something than for something. We
are for good reading all the way, and that, certainly;
does not single us out as being uniqae. We simply think
there are far better ways af protecting healthy reading
interests than by saying "You ean't read this."
P. T, D.
I
Schedule
.Petti-Poillters
OPEN SUNDAY 12.5
J' .' TU 1-7511
,.
,
~
,
Hmfpital equipm~nt availabl~ for free loan - crutrhes,
-,wheelchairs,
,heat lamp and hospital beds. "Blood
.Iavailable to Grosse Pointe Residents in ease of Bcd
der't, ,or emergency-free
of charge".
.
•
,
*
*
'j
*
App~rently the Duke Ellington ni~~t ~t the Country
"r
,
Thursda;,
May '29
1
Club w~s a HUGE success ... accord1ng to' all reports.
*Auierlcan Red Cross Braille Transcription
Not havmg been there, we have.nothing
to say about it. " ;10 a.m.
,.,
_
class _
,
. , . except, a tidbit from our spy:who is'in charge, of *Ba~let Classes - Mary Ellen Cooper - Instructor
covering chic things to which we are not invited.
to 7:3.0 p.m.
..
,interest
.
'
.. ,,'
,
' Gr:bsse POInte CommunIty Theatre - Play rehearsalSaId underground
agent tells. us tha~ in the middle
. ,7:30 p.m.
of ?ne of the Duke's most flamboyant
inimbers , .. he *Fe,hcingClasses
- taught by Istvan Danosi-fencing
notIced what he thought was a hearing aid, stuck in the
:master of, Salle deTuscan Fencers Club and ¥layne
~ar of one of the trumpet players. Being the reporter he::Snate
University
Coach - ages 8-16--7:30 p,m. IS, he coll~red the gerlt ~ft~r ~hewingdin~
was over and
,Adult class-. 8:30 p.m.
asked IF It WAS a hearmg-:-ald. The mUSIC man replied:
..
"
*
* *
"NO ... I h.ave.a sm,all port~ble ra"dio with an ear plug
,Friday,
May 30
an d I was 1lstenIng to the ball game." TEIS is the >.1eatest *M'
. k 0 f th e wee k as f ar as we are concerJ,1~.d BI owing
. ,Eimoria! Day Service - Promptly
at 10:45 a.m. the
t TIC
.
t 0 tea
h b II game
Color Guard. of Sea Explore Ship 690 will raise and
your he a d 0 ff on a t rumpe. t an d I'ISt enmg
at the same time!
:then half mast t~e colors on the flag pole in front of
the Grosse Pointe War Memorial - at 11 o'clock
services will be held honoring the Grosse Pointe
*
*
. men who gave their lives in \Vorld War II and
This is the kind of sweet rosemary and frankincense
Korea.
story we like to repeat. A dear elde~ly lady who lives
*
* *
alone and likes it ... has a next door neighbor .. , a dear
elderly gentleman.
, , who putters about his' garden in
Saturday, May 31
fair weather and exchanges a few 'words with our heroEXHIBIT OF P A I N TIN G S BY GROSSE POINTE
ine when they happen to be in their respective gardens
ARTISTS ASSOCIATION-WEEKDAYS
9 a.m. to
at the same time. One day last week, the little woman
9 p.m. SUNDAYS 12 noon to 5 p.m.-Please
call bewas dressing to go to a luncheon when ti.at thing of all
for coming'to exhIbits to make sure rooms are free
things that happens to us females ...
happened. 'The
'of meetings-EXHIBIT
ON THRU June 1st.
zipper on her dress got stuck half way up and there she "'Ballet Classes - Mary Ellen Cooper - Instructor
-.:9 :30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
was without. a soul to help. After tugg-ing away to no
avail, she happened to glance out the window and seejng *Children's Art Classes - "Art for Fun" - taught by
her lleighbor in the garden; got a brilliant idea. Down
Mrs. Margheritta
Loud-l0:30
a.m. to 12 noon and
1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.,
.
and out she went . : . showed him her predicament
and
asked if he would please try to release the zipper with
Grosse Pointe Community Theatre - Play rehearsal2 p.m.
plyers or do SOMETHING so she could get going to her
luncheon.
Students of Margaret G. Noack - Rehearsal for June
1st recital - 3 p;m.
,
The little. man looked horrified ... glanced afOund
* * *
as if he were trying to avoid the FBI • . . then actually
Sunday,
June 1
WHISPERED 'to her ... "Better come on into the kit~
Students
of
Margaret
G.
Noack~Piano
recital-3
p.m.
chen; I wouldn't want any of our neighbors to see me at
.
*
*
*
thi's " •• they might wonder!"
(Into the kitchen they
Monday,
June
2
went ... the sweet old gal explaining the while that the
neighbors might well think the WORS'f •. _ seeing them *Advanced and bE-ginners water and oil painting c:lasses
- Hughie Lee-Smith, Instructor
- 9 :30 a.m. to 12
duck in the back door after first mawking around with
the zipper on the dress, .• _ right out in the open!)
noon and 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
*Cancer Information
and Service Center-Service
\Vork
*
*
-10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The volunteer workers are urg*
e~tly in need of"clean white material, to ,carry on
,..,.Anold friend (}f;"o111""Sentus some -letters recently,
their work-anyone
having old sheets, tablecloths,
that she was thinking of publishing in book form. She
shirts
or
the
like
is
urged to press the material
found'~them in an attic'tr1.lnk and remembered
well the
and
drop
it
by
the
Center
to aid ,this :worthy enwomap who wrote them. The woman, (a relative of some
deavor.
other obs~ure relative in the family) had passed on years
ago and the letters were saved because they were so Rotary Club of Grosse Pointe - Luncheon arid Meeting - 12:15 p.m.
"Dear Mabel-ish" in context.
.....
*Memorial Bridge Club-Duplicate
Bridge - Mr. and
Our friend recalls that this gal (whom we shall call
Mrs. Andrew Walrond, DiJ;ectors-l
p.m.
Bessie) ... was large of frame and had a mind of her *Ballet Classes - Mary Ellen Cooper - Instructor
own as to what the well-dressed
woman should wear.
3:15 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
She went in for heavy "tapestry type" clothing.
, . long
Grosse Pointe Community Theatre-Play
reading comdangling earrings of the gypsy type .. , but no matter
mittee - 7:45 p.m.
how' elegantly
she dressed, she always wore old flat
Recovery - Meeting - 8 p.m.
heeled brogue~. More often than not, her dresses were
Grosse Pointe Artists Association-Annual
Meetingspotted with dried tomato seeds or a glob of spilled soup
8 p.m..
*
that had ddpfled
. unnoticed down the front of her frock.
',;4
.
*
*
*
Tuesday, June 3
But her letters were the things that MIGHT yet
make her famous. One read that her husband
had li<Service Guild for Children's Hospital-Service
work"drownded". The recipient of the letter, taking it at face
10 a.m. to 3 p.m ..
value, in spite of the ~pelling, raced'to Bessie's house to Tuesday Painters-Class-l0
a.m. to 3 p.m.
Board of the Thompson' Home-Luncheon
and Meeting
offer her condolences .. , only to find the husband well
-12:30 p.m.
al}d hearty ... reading in the parlor. It turned out that
Mothers' Health Council-Meeting
and Tea-l
p.m.
he. had gone fishing, had fallen in the pond but was
qUIckly pull-ed out by his companions.
Junior ~eague
Glee Club - Trcuping
Rehearsal
-
1:30 p.m. to 2 p.m.
In another letter, Bessie told of her experience
at
her LODGE meeting,
.. when a woman walked passed.
her that she didn't lik~. She wrote: "When I saw her
coming, r,just lifted my head in the air, nose up and
looked insipid."
,
*Children's Sum mer Art C amp - taught by l\.1rs.
+VIargheritta Loud-Enrollment
today-ages
7-1.2(10) lessons for $15.00 plus $1.50 for material .3 p.m: to 5 p.m,
Grosse Pointe Optimist Club-Dinner
and Meeting6:15 p.m. .
'
Exchange Club of Grosse Pointe-Dinner
and M~ting
-6:30p.m.
'
.
Kiwanis Club of Grosse Pointe, InC.-Dinner
and meeting-6:30
p.m.
*Sea Explorers-Meeting-7:30
p.m.
. Grosse Pointe" Community
Theatre-Play
Rehearsal7:30 p.m,
Wednesday, June 4
,
*Children's Art Classes - "Art for Fun" - taught by
Mrs. Margheritta
Loud-3:45
p.m. to 5:15 p.m.
*Ballet Classes -.. MaryEllen
Cooper - Instructor
. " 4 to 9:30 p.m.
,
*Memorial Bridge Club--:-Duplicate
Bridge - Mr. and
;Mrs. Andrew, ~ alrond, Directors-7
:30 p.m.
960,~ir Force Reserve--:-Meeting-8
p.m.
,
Austin High School Graduating .Class-Dance-9.
p.m.
Another time, she wrote' of visiting the cemetery
where h,er husband was finally laid to rest. Part of this
went as follows:
"Mrs. Batley a,nd I went to the cemete~y last Sun~
day to' put some flowers on the graves. It was hot and
we walked and walked and walkeq_ to get to Mrs. Batl~y's family.!
was sotired and my' feet hurt so. By the
tune I got- to Sam's grave I was real done in. All I can
say is that Sam' is lucky because he is buried near the
'front gate." (Sam b~ing Be.3sie's husband.)
It is obvious looking over Bessie's' letters, that
w;as fascinated
.with the endings of any social
respondence.
ALL the. letters ended: "l close now
sincere good wishes, lots of love, yours truly, as
your friend, fondly, Bessie. P.S:, Please excuse
pencil."
*
*
she
corwith
ever
lead
FREE
ESTIMATES
1928
What Goes On
at
YOUIre Library
It was in May, 1868 that the was a Pulitzer prize winner
first Memonal Day 'was ob- in 1954.
served to honor the soldiers
One of the most inclusive
who gave their lives in the works on this subject is the
,War between the States.
four volume set "Battles and
Ninety years later this chap- Leaders of, the Civi,l War.'.
ter of OUT history still attracts Out of print for a long time,
morr: writers aild more readers this has recenUy been reissued.
than any other period, and the
Edward C. Boykin's "Ghost
is a continuing one. Ship of the Confederacy," the
Among the rash of fiction story of the Alabama and her
books based on the Civil War Captain Raphael Semmes, is
we mention several published an interesting addition to tha
in the last year or two.
naval hisrtory of the ConfederA well~told first-rate adven- ' acy.
.
'"
ture which commends itself to
RoJ:>ertW. Da~~ In .Hew the
masculine readers especially, MerrImac. Won.. ,revIew~ the
is Harold
Sinclair's novel, parts of the CIVIl War mflu"Horse Soldiers." It centers enced by the f~mous battle
about the CI'VI'lWar m<'neuver betw.een the.Merrimac and the
at Grierson's Raid. "Y.'.nthis Morutor. T.hIS author contends
f
th at th e
fiction-ed accomlt Colonel Ben~a th t d espi te th eact
jamin Grierson becomes Colo- Monitor ~s a,lways rega~ded
nel Jack Marlowe-and
the as .the VIctor, the Mernmac
leader of the notorious six~ succeeded in its objective, the
teell-day raid beginning at La upsetting .of ~cClellan's plan
Grange and ending at Baton. for a SWIft VIctOry over the
Harnett Kane a veteran writ. South,
er of historical romance bases
"Tin Can on a Shingle" by
his "Gallant Mrs. Ston'ewaU" W: C. White also. gives a deon the lives of Stonewall Jack- taIled ~count of this battle.
son and his second wife, Anna and discusses' the events. which
Morrison,
preceded and followed It.
"Captain Little Ax" by the
Three books now o.n order
late .Tames H, Street is a post- should be on our hIS tor y
humorous publication revolv- shelves shortly, "Guns at Geting about the achi~vements ~ysberg" by Fai~fa~, Down,:y,
and exploits of the son of a Death of a Nation, by CllfConfederate soldier killed at ford Dowdey and" The Battle
Shiloh. A portion of this book of Gettysburg" by F"ran~kA.
BJppeared as short stories in ~askell. The. last mentIon~
Colliers during World War II. IS not a new ~Itle but a cla.sslC:
Richard O'Connor, biogra- of long standIng, newly edited
pher and historian, has turned by Bruce Catton.
to fiction in "Company Q,"
----which tells of a group of Union
EASY DAY FOR .JUDGE
army men who were deranked.
After last week's heavy
In an effort to rehabilitate schedule Judge Joseph P.
them, they are given unwel- Uvick had a well deserved
come infantry tasks, and only easy time of it with but one
a few of them Come through. case on the Justice Court dockVan Wyck Mason, proiific ~t Thursday, May 22. He heard
writer of robust hi3torical John Frederick Ricketts, of
yarns, centers his story "Our 2235 Anderson, charged with
Valiant E'ew" in Charleston reckless driving, plead guilty,
and Savannah during the time and fined him $20.
,
when the South was a;;tempt_
ing to break the Union naval
blockade .... ,
Recent biographies of tlie
Civil War period include "General Gecrge 'B. McClellan"
,'p.....
Grosse Point.
by Warren W. Hessler, "Mighty ~
Stonewall" by Frank E. Vanivel' and "Lincoln's Commando," a biography of William
B. Cushing, by Ralph J. Roske
(Presbyterian)
and Charles Van Doren. Bruce
16
Lake Shore R4.
Catton says of the latter, "This
~._~,
MINISTERS
is a thought-provoking
and
Rev. Frank Fitt, DD.
completely hair-raising study
!
Rev. Paul F. KetehtlDl
of unadulterated courage."
Regarded by many critics
ReT~L.
as the best one~volume history
~
-WORSHIP SERVIC.
of the Civil War is Bruce Cat~
_,.;9:30 and 11 a.m.
ton's "This Hallowed Ground,"
-<
CHURCH
~CBOOL
published in 1956. His book,
9:30 and 1I a.m.
-~
" A Stillness in Appomatox"
-'
~-
'J~
;~
J
I
~
Memorial
Church
'.- ,
II
--
Increase Your
"Good Days"
...........
....
By' Fred Kopp R. Ph.
Are the days you feel
ton.
SpencliI'i
Kingsville, (
road, with th
Mrs. K., whc.
use. She nee
task of linin!
the GPUS C
Also cotl
but they wi:
vacationing
parents, Mr.
Jefferson av
round use,
Morrisons
Here at
homecoming
Jefferson a\.'
peets her hul
In the 1
BuhI Jr. whrJ
and the Coa~
On Satu,
Ridge road, 'l
invitation
Ii
Blisses, the
sons, the Fre
the George.
Mis.Wesso;.
Artists Ma
Lovely c
ranged abou1
home -of Mr.
The occa
Market and t
Among t
rick M. AlgeI
Backus, Mrs
1.frs. Gordor
Ion Ford and
Others
,1
Marks, Mrs,
Mrs. H. LynrJ
Lord, :Mrs. \
in.law, the j
really well rare occasions?
Do you feel fatigued, listless
most of the time? This is a
condition from which many
persons . suffer, yet feel
there is little they can, do
Mrs. Gr
Suzie, who,
ity to spenrl
Mulfords, of
about it.
On the contrary, your
doctor can' help restore
your. energy and of course
improve your health and
increase your zest for work
AnnualM
nr.
17600 LIVERNOIS
McNichols
• UN 3.7801
U304 KERCHEVAt nr, Beaconsfield • VA. 2.9078
j
Just
bef
and pl~y.
The average person wculd
amazed at the number of
carefully developed drug
products that are available
to counter-act mineral deficiencies in the body. Let
your doctor. determine your
needs by a physical examina.tion.
Buy pure' fresh drugs
frort:!-a trusted pharmacist.
b€
ThIS 1s the 703rd of a series of
Edit~rial .advertisements appearing In thIS paper' each week.
(Copyright)
,.
..22500 MACK AVE.
LAST 'CALL
FOR
Chef Sampson's
European Tour for
YOUN'G ADULTS
Seven Y1/eeks in Europe
Including Ireland, Engiand. Holland,
Belgium,
Austria,
Germany,
\ Switzerland,
Italy and France.
Itineraries (J1rdApplications
I"
.
O~FIGES
available at
CHET SAMPSO~~'S TRAVEL S~RVICE, INC.
S?phiaJ.
TU 1.1285
Wybrani, Vice Pres.'
4()()S W.est Jefferson, Ecorse 29i ,Michigan
100 Kercheval Ave.
, fthone: TU '-7510
..
(
will be wel
cottage at H
In their
Mr. and Mrf.
This w
from f;level
•
..
Cottagei
week-end ill
many a Poi~
with the we]
The Jer:-
Family Re
'r
..
Fro
~~~~~~~~~~~~~----
'.
.
7
1-----------
ECORSE L'OCAL LOAN, INC.
"
16421 HARPER AVE.
look
Creek!
Like Battle
'
. For Complete Details Call or Stop in
WA.8-4150
CUSTOM FURNITURE' CO.
E~.
This week,
My' cupboards
By Jean Taylor
. fA YABLE MONTHLY TO OUR INVESTORS
" CARPETING
::Journier
I
Investors.8% per Ann;;;;
and Living Room Furniture - Custom Made
to Order In Our Own Factory
INTERIOR
DECORATORS
,
tThursday, June 5
*Amer~ca.rl; Red Cross Braille Transcription
-' class _
:, 10 ~m.
Welc'O'meWagon'
~lub of Grosse Pointe -'Morning,
Coffee-11
a.m.'
.
. ,
Women's !i-ep'ul;ni<;:~nClub of Grosse Pointe - Meeting
. and Tea-l
:p;m.
' .
'
*Ballet Classes - Mary Ellen Cooper '- Instructor
_
4 to 8 p,m.
:
".Gros~ePointe
Chapter D.O.C.I.-Meeting-.',
7 p.m.
"Fenclng Classes - taught ,by Istvan Danosi-fencing
master p~ Sall.e deTuscan Fencers' Club and Wayne'
State UnIve~slty Coach -.ages
8-16-7:30 p.m. ,Adult class-8:30p.ni~
RE.UPHOLSTERING
DRAPERIES
*
*
*
One more thing: our friend recoJleets is that as a
ch~ld she saw Bessie at a family funeral one hot summer
day. The latter was wearing a flowel'eddress
.~, . LARGE
flowers, that is , " . in shades of purple and red, The dress
had short sleeV'es ... but, Bessie ... thinking -this not.
fitting for a funeral serVice, bought some purple material and add ~t to the short sleeves to make them reach
to the wrist. Below this, she wore pu~'ple gloves (dyed
to ,ALMOST match the flowers).
A~ded to this ("hie
ensemble, she wore the usual long earrings, lot~ of necklaces. and the old! brown leath~r llOrg~es. QuIt~ a ~al,
Bessie ... rest her Soul. They Just don t make em lIke
that anymore!
ALSO FINEST
No new. magic rings
Gr~~se Pointe' Garden 'Center Room a'nd Libral~Y open
!for consultation
and service. Mrs, Leland Gilmour
lwill be 01\ ~utyinthe
Garden Center Room every
i week on T1J:esd~y, Wednesday
and Thursday from
:10 a.m. t04 p"m. A consultant will be on duty Friday
<from 2.to 4 p.m. (Call TU 1-4594) ..
(Barney Lefferts)
\
Box..Top and a Dime
I
:
*AII Center' Sponsor~d Activities Open to the Publie
, 'fOTI(:::E:
Pleasee.alI for lost artides at the office.
,"
They. wIll. be held for 30. days.
:;.
*
iV*E5-
i,
tlWhen it's moonlight on thelJ7 abash, '
or on the JerJey 'fl~ts, '
Y ()U can hear the folks a-slappin at the '
radio-active gnats;,'
A-settin' there so purty; with their
Geigers on their. laps, .
Ta~in' skeeter readings 'twixt the
kisses and thesltips';;
.
'*
29.,;
Center
29~'1958
, Thursda)
I
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY ANTEEBO
PUBLISHERS, INC. ALSO PUBLISHERS OF THE
DETROIT WESTWARD,
OFFICES UNDER THE ELM AT 99 KERCHEVAL,
GROSSE POINTE FARMS 36, MICHIGAN
NATIONAL
,Thursday,. May
_
'
"
.
GROS
,
.
.
. Thursday, May 29; 1959
GROSS!
.
POINTI
.
NEWS
Pag.e Eleven
'.
,
J
GPUS Students Go All Ouf for Carnival
I
.
.
British J!\mbassador
Honored at GPYC
.
.;":,>,L',~£L,';'1~,rl'!i'kt~:ifu4b{jI:C
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WOMEN
PAGES
a!
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1P~ftmllc~ N~w~
lsive
the
and
Tar,"
"me.
:ued.
'host
, the
her
I
is
5,
the
~er-
/
•••
'.
th,e Pointe
:..::'
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the
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,
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l the.
E'nds
tl:e
rded
imac
.• n
, the
plan
the
ton.
" by
de-
lttle.
'hich
MR. and MRS. E. B. KELLY,
of University p1pce, are vacationing at the ,Homestead in
Hot Springs, Va.
Spending
the week-end
at their summer nlace in
Kingsville,
Ont., will be the Henrv Kleins of Touraine
road, with their bevy of daughters. Not much of a rest for
Mrs. K., who will be rennovating
the cottage for surruner
use. She needs a vacation because her's is the arduous
task of lining up all the manpower,
(that's parents)
for
the GPUS Carnival June 6 and 7.
Also cottage bound will be the Edwin Clarke family,
but they -will have an eaSIer time of it as they wHl be
vacationing
at the Camlachie
summer
home nf her
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fraser Sullivan, of East
Jefferson
avenue, who keep the cottage ready for year
round use.
.
v
~rder
ory
Getrney.
Clif-
attle
~ A.
oned
assie
iited
*
*
,..
eavy
P.
'rved
one
iockLeard
" of
with
I
lilty.
L
~
Here at home there will be partying to honor the
homecoming Dr. and Mrs, rrhomas Morrison, of East
Jefferson avenue. Mrs. M. arrived last Sunday and expects her hushand by Friday.
.
In the meantime she welcomed her son, C, Henry
Buhl Jr. who stopped over Tuesday enroute from Kansas
and the Coast to his home in New YGrk.
On Saturday evening Mr. and 1\11'5, T. D. Buhl, of
Ridge road. will give a dinner for the Morrisons. On the
invitation
list are the ,Harley Earls. the C. Hascall
Blisses, the John T. Woodhouses, and Patrick Adam50ns, the Frederick M. Algers, .Tr., the Harold R. Boyers,
the George O. Johnstones, Dr. and :1\1rs.John Hartzell,
Mrs. Wes!iOonSeyburn and Mrs. Allan Shelden.
Artists Mart Sale
)
Rti.
DD.
;chum
*
*
'"
4<
'"
Arriving this Thursday from
Santa Barbara, Calif., are MR.
and' MRS. R. FENTON FISHER, who will be the guests of
MR. and MRS. HERBERT B.
TRIX, of East Jefferson avenue. The Trixes will have a
sman dinner party for them
on Saturday.
'" '" '"
JUDG E and MRS. NEAL
FITZGERALD,
of Lewiston
road, have invited guests for
cocktails on June 7.
*
'" '" '"
The ARTHUR
P. NAULovely oils and water colors will be fetchingly
ar- MANS, of Moran road, and the
ranged about the gracious gardens or the Provencal road E., A. SCHIRMERS, of Lone
home of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Shelden IlIon June 3.
Pine court, S'pent the weekThe occasion is the annual sale of the Detroit Artists
end fishing at Burt Lake.
...
•
II<
Market and the hours are from 2 until 6 o'clock.
The JAY BERRYS, of Co!oAmong the hostesses on the sale will be Mrs. Frederado Springs, Col., are spendrick M, Alger, Jr., Mrs. Wendell Anderson) Mrs. Standish
ing some time with her parBackus, Mrs. Henry M. Campbell, Mrs. Harold R.,Boyer,
ents, the RICHARD A. FOR~
Mrs. Gordon Weller, Mrs. Lynn McNaughton, Mr~. Ben- SYTHES, of McMillan road,
I;on Ford and Mrs. Edsel Ford,
before leaving on a trip to
Others will be Mrs. Wesson Sey burn, Mrs. Alfred
Puerto Rico.
Marks, Mrs. Herbert
1. Lord, Mrs. J. Stewart Hudson,
... '" '"
Mrs. H. Lynn Pierson, Mrs. Walter B. Ford. Mrs. John N.
Scholastic recognition was
Lord, Mrs. William C. Ford and Mrs. Alfred Glancy, Jr. receiv€:d by JOHN C. THISTLEW AITE, son of MR. and
*
*
MRS. FRED H. THISTLEFamily Reunion
WAITE, of Colonial, and MISS
Thi5 week-end the Sterling Grahams are arrJving CAROLYN MAY HALLENfrom (:Ieveland to be guests of their son and daughter
BECK, daughter of MR. and
In.law, the junior Grahams, of Lothrop road,
MRS. WALTER L. HALLENMrs. Graham, Jr., wili also be welcoming her sister, BECK, bf Handy road, in the
Suzie, who will be arriving from Northwestern Univers- Honors Day convocation 'at
ity to spend the week-end with her parents, the John Albion college, held in the college chapel, Monday morning,
Mulfords, of Provencal road. '
May 19. Thistlewaite, a senior
*
* *
at Albion, was cited as a mem~
Annual Meetings
ber of the Economics club,
Just before everyone
checks out for a summer
of membership in which is con(Continued on Page 13)
fined to outstanding students
*
Z'--; ...
~'
CD
I
I
CIQ-sedMemorial
Day I May 30 ••• Open Saturday May 31
--.. -
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,iffEg\.i".;'~,
, ',~; .,': .
..
... '
..
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•
by Frederick
S. Ford. Jr.
road. From the mid-way to the white
elephant
booth it will be a complete
fair enlisting all the efforts of GPUS
pupils, faculty,
parents
and al.lmni.
All proceeds from the giant fun fest
are designated
for the GPUS Scholarship Fund.
l
I
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MR. and MRS. RONALD
THOMAS NELSON, of Lakewood. avenue, announce thebirth of a daughter, NANCY
ANN, on May 22. Mrs. Nelson
is the former BETTY JEAN
HOYT. -'" * ...
MR. and MRS. ROLLIN M.
DUENSING and their daughter, LYNETTE, of Beacons~
field avenue, are home after
y...,.. iDitiat8 ••• iudPidaaIIr ,8tyIed ill
I
,.our 0WJl llDOnogt"aDl •• " create 1be
~,ksignof the unique new Kirk paUerD..
IMh piece of Sigliet is a di8tincti~
sterling sarpriee ••• pedection in
ba~
weight and line ••• ~
pier.e
fDodionaI1y designed for 80 many
Me&. Gracefully styled in modern ~
••• y~ timele88 in beatRy • •• SigDet
is iodPriduaR,' ft'afted to be 80 •••
,
,I~
l~rOfWa.
I
Ie' ,.
WHAT WOMEN
PUT ON MIN
WHO TAKI TtIIM .
I
.
S.T.' CLAIR .INN
Regular or
Sman,
I
There's ,nothing
obsolujely nothing
that a
women appreciates
more thon a second honeymoon!
The three-day Memorial Day week-end is just one doy
away! ST. CLAIR INN offers you: GOod food, good
drink., good rest, good golf <l8-hole course), good
swimming (heated poon, good mUiie, good view, Qood
fun! For GOODness sake, be impulsive! 'phone your
reservations today!
•
• Fe4. Tax J1IdluJeJ
• • • and be sure to visit
DUff
--
America's '»1,ostbeautiful,
-~
._~.
...
:..;..-
I
& COMPANY
JEWELERS
· 1520
TUxedo 2-3700
•
•
•
•
•
•
Ave. rteor Cadieux
AND
SILVERSMITHS
WAS H IN GT ON
Detroit 26, Mlchlgan-Telepho".
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CHARLES
__
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. .
- THISIS"
, ,-
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'"
DR. and MRS. J A COB
WENZEL, of, CloW'rly road,
left this week on a mOltor trip
through the East. On their
way home they will stop at
Syracuse
University,
where
their daughter, BARBARA is
a sophomore, and bring her
home.
... ... ...
MR. and MRS. ALBERT
JEHLE, of Rivard boulevard,'
medium or large. 5.00
GROSSE POINTE-Kerchevol
:.:-:~
.~.'.:
TO
..
~
\Ir
•
fashions with a maXImum of
panty styles .. White only.
",>.
of economics. Milss Hallenbeck, attended his reunion at Phillips a week's'visit with Mrs. Duenand sisa sophomore, was named as a Exeter AlOOdemy,Exeier, N. H. sing's brother-in-law
member of Kappa Mu Epsilon, on May 27.
(Continued on Page 12)
national mathematics honorary
'" '"
fraternity.
CHARLES WATKINS, of
'" '"
Grand Rapids, Mich., is visitRICHARD H. WENDIN, '58, ing his son-in-law and daughson of MR. and MRS. SIGURD ter, the- WILLIAM TALIAR. WENDIN, of C10vE'r1yroad, FERROS, of Rivard boulevard.
.~~/::'(~:~,;.::?'
t....
,:::
...
:'
..,
won second honors at the end
'" ... '"
of the just concluded fifth
MR.
and
MRS.
JAMES
marking period of the aca- FREDERICK DONOVAN, for~
demic year at Williston Aca- merly of Grosse Pointe, now of
> .......: .~
...:~ ::
demy where he is a student. St. Clai~ Shores, announce the
: ":..~ <
He qualified because of the birth of a son, JAMES FRED:~:~
:: .~
high numerical average of his ERICK, JR., on May 17. Mrs.
class grades.
Donovan is the former BAR... ... '"
BARA Eu..EN KLENK.
MISS SUSAN LEVANT was
a candidate for an Associate In
Enrou te to Europe are MR.
Arts degree from Stephens and MRS. EPPA HUTTON
',~<&<:::'. ."~'~,': .'. '.':, .: :," ,:'
/::::.:',)::
College. Commencel~1ent exer- HEATON, of Handy road, who
cises for the 125th graduating were entertained berore their
t
class were held Tuesday morn- sailing date by the THOMAS
~
l 1)1Vl
:i'\:':( '. '., ~ ;'(':~
'''x'',' "w.
,o.i
ing, May 27. Miss Levant is J. HAMMONDS,
of Sunning.::~~,mh"<':::lk::::::;i~?:'~~'",~:,~.,::.',>"~',.'
@t :'..
- .j
the daughter of DR. and MRS. dale drive.
ARTHUR LEV A-1'IT of Ven'" '" ...
dome court.
A daughter,
LIS KERR
'" ... '"
STEPHENSON, was born to
MIKE DAU, son of JOSEPH the JAMES F. STEPHEN"~A ,""'.;c::<. ,~:' :.. "'~
' ••,
'
. "':'::
DAU of Nottingham road, a SONS, of St. Petersburg, Fla"
"J •
'.',., ' .. ~, s::y
~~:t#::?'
..''::':X'"'' ~'iM:;:}t:~
~.~
.
.:•...
-;
graduating senior, was recog- on. May 13. ~he mother is the
nized by Lake Forest College former MARY: EILEN 'ANat their traditional
Honors DRUS, daughter of MR. and
SnttuttG
Convocation Tuesday, May 13, MRS. FRANK B. ANDRUS, Olf
in the First
Presbyterian
Cranford lane.
Church of Lake Forest. Dati
... ... '"
was honored for his participaTHE EARL RATZEItS, of
tion in varsity athletics at the Vernier road, who have been
College. He received a life"on the verge" of moving to
time m e m bel's hip in the
Mid1and, Michigan, since JanAlumni Lettermen's Club.
uary, have set June 5 as THE
'" '" '"
date. Wishing to keep in close
First of the YWCA-spontahs with the Pointe, they've
sored trips for young adults
already arranged a reunion, in
of 25 young men and women
Midland, with the WILLIAM
this summer begins Thursday
ELMERS,
of Berkshire road,
night (May 29) when a group
over the week-end of July 4.
leave for Washington, D. C., to
@",:<~~",
~\,,:
..
'"
spend the Memorial Day week~.:.?'~~.:~;,~;[\.~,:~~.\.;:
.~
'~A..,'.:
...:".,...~;.....:'. ~
EDWtARD COOPER, son of
end sight~eeing.
.<,
~W'::", '~!F:.::'" >
FRANK
Other trips will include two MR. and MRS.
:1:~. '<:'~~..
.",'
j
COOPER,
of
Merriweather
visits to' Stratford,
Ontario,
~tffi~~'.:I~"':
'<Wi:"
July 19 and August 16, to at- road, has been accepted for the
tend tl(e ShClkespeaIlian Festi- fall freshman class at Dart/7~'- ~ '.'
~~'hA
val. Among those taking the mouth College, Hanover, N. H.
trip to Washington is MRS. He is currently studying at
7n
lj'CTU/eAr
@ltl
ANNA VAREE, of Beacons- Phillips Exeter Academy in
r
~:~~:
Exeter, N. H.
field road.
under your' Summer
cool comfort.
,
.
, ':'.»
';;';.Y?:~":~;l:~'r'.
r"":~~', '....,'
>:</i.:,'<;
•r
assunng you lithe contours
>
~;
-Photo
'" '" '"
•
,
/,
Changing
their headgear
because
Carnival
time
IS here
are Grosse
Pointe University
students CHARLES
UZNIKIAN
and SUE SISMAN. They
will represent
the
GPUS
student
government
on the Carnival planning
board. The big two days are June 6
and 7. on the school grounds in Cook
'"
The ARMIN RICKELS, who
moved recently to a new home
on Tonnancour place, from Edgemont park, entertained
at
a cocktail party
Sa turday.
They are just back from six
weeks in Pa.]m Springs, Calif.
'" ... '"
MR. and MRS. ERWIN F.
FAUSER, of Toorak, Australia,
are here visiting his brother- ..
in-law and sister, MR. and
MRS. GEORGE P. CAULKINS,
of Rivard boulevard.
Morrisons Here
-
~:-..
,.,.:
Cottages will be getting a thorough turning out this
week-end
in preparation
for the summer
exodus and
m~ny a Pointer
IS inviting
his neighbor
along to help
WIth the wor~ over the Memorial Day holiday.
. The J ermiah Van Buren Jenks, of Rivard boulevard,
wIll be wending
their way to "Stonesthrow",
their
cottage at Harbor Reach on the Lake Huron shore.
rst~clhtO~O:l:U.:~~~~?~~i;gd~~ I -".,,~,,:
..:,:',;,:,,::,,:.;~.$.~'>,:"L,~,-,'
,7>""':!./.,'~:.:,:~,,.~,;,,::',~,:,::,::;,;'.?~.;,:
;'.:;,',
..,:,;.,,'v,:,~,;,:,'.;:,::~,;;,:,,~,~,::/:.,..' ..::,:~':':'"
In their party will be lVIr. and Mrs Brooks Beggs,
• • •
'.' . '. ..•
. '. "
•......
•. .e,,'
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fischer and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tip--
attle
.9070
•
"
~
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,~~\,i,
MISS KAREW DUELL, a
-; ~,
freshman secretarial student,
has been invited
into the
pledge class of Alpha Omicron ' . ':, ':.'..;1ii:;:¥.;::=i
Pi social sorority at Western
..", .JITjffik'>
Michigan University, Kalama- :
:{';:~i:::,J
zoo. She was also chosen sec. >,', :::" ':;~,
retary of the group. Karen is
',<::...:"
..
By Patricia Talbot
:lf1u-
'.~
Short and to
From Another Pointe
of View
r the
.7800
Sir Harold Caccia, K.C.M.G.,' British
Ambassador
to the Unit~
State:>, was guest of honor at a beautiful
dinner party given last Saturday,
May 24, at Grosse
Pointe Yacht Club by Commodore
and Mrs, Charles L •
Jacobson.
The dinner
dim axed
the spacious card room with it!
busy day for His Excel- p~cture windaws and sweeping
lency, and his accompanyVIew of the lake.
ing aides from the British
For dinner, the party was
Embassy
at Washington,
seated at a U-shaped table in
Lord Nichol Gordon-Lenthe Commodore's Room where
nox and Mr. Paul
Scott- flowers and lighted
tapers
were In patriotic red, white
Rankine.
and blue. Between the arIn thll afternoon, Mr, and I rangements
of blooms were
Mervyn Gaskin, of Oxford low standards holding small
road, entertained the disting~ American and British flags.
uished visitor aboard their
The other guests at the JaccrUIser, the Margaret G., for obson dinner, besides the ama river tour cf the Port of bassador and his aides; the
Detroit and a compehensive Gaskins, Sir James and Lady
view of river front deve!op- Easton and Miss Hammond.
ments both here and on the were the Alfred R. G1ancys.
Canadian side.
Jr.. Walker L. Cisler (Mrs.
Besides Sir Harold, Lord Cisler being out of town), the
Gordon-Lennox and Mr. Scott- Rt. Rev. Richard S. Emrich'
Rankine, the Gaskin:;' cruise and Mrs. Emrich, the John S.
guests were Sir James Easton, Sweeneys, Jr., the A, D. Wilthe new British consul general kinsons,
In Detroit, and Lady Easton,
Still others were the Rev.
and Miss Doris Hammond, and Mrs. ErvHle B. Maynard.
British vice consul here.
the Nicholas Kellys, the AI...
The river tour was e~rly len B, Crows, Mrs. Ruth Stev-'
enough to allow time for ens, the Wi1l~am C. Newbergs,
change to formal dress, the and Mr. and Mrs. Mark C.
entire afternoon party then Stevens and the Arthur J, ta
joining Commodore and Mrs. Fushmans.
Jacobson at the club.
The British Ambassador and
In honor of Sir Harold, Brit- ~lis aides had arrived Friday
ain's Union Jack flEW from from Washington for a series
GPYC's high flagpole-to
the of events. Sir Harold gave the
left of the United States' Stars Empire Day address at St.
and Stripes and with the club Paul's Cathedral Sunday night,
ourgee a~ove in official yacht and was guest of hon~r and
club fashIon.
speaker at the Economic Club's
Commodote and Mrs. Jacob- British - American Relations
son first hoste~ cocktails in luncheon Monday.
... ::.'
-
rmer
Sir Harold Caccia Guest of Commodore and Mrs.
Charles L. Jacobson Last Saturday at Dinner;
His Exc~lIency Also Entertained on Cruise
"~
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Page Twelve
&ROSSE
POINT!
...
. ... , .....
"
..
~'.'-. ~,
NEWS
Thursday,
Thursday, May 29, 1958
Society News Gathered from All of the Pointes
Crowell-Lewis Vows
S'hort a nd, toth e Pointe Mary Sue Morgan
Exchanged Saturday
I
,
•
...
oll
'"
(Continued from Page 11)
ter, DR. and MRS, JOSEPH
BISSELL, of Washington, D.C.
'" ... '"
Home from a winter spent
in Coral Gables, Fla., is MRS...,
JOHN MEAD, of Nottingham
road.
... ... '"
ERNEST KANZLER,
oi
Lakeshore road, leaves Friday
J
Mrs. JOhf1
Foster ero'wet!
... ... ...
DEN and her husband will be
living with his parents the
ROBERT MAYS, of Aline
drive, for the month of June.
They expect their apartment
in Vernier road to be finished
by the first of July.
.
'"
--------Will Marry Charles Burham, of Birmingham, in Grosse
'" '"
Shores JUDGE and IvIRS.
JOHN GILLIS. (JOAN MURRAY) of Vernier road, announced the birth of their
fauth ohild ,a son, JOSEPH
AUGUSTUS, on May 11.
...
CAROL GEORGE, daughter
of the S. W. GEORGES, of
McKin!ey avenue, appeared in
a student organ recital last
week at Denison University
where she is a freshman.
'" '" ...
MARY JAN~ SHERWOOD,
of Univer~ity place, was recently elected treasurer of her
sorority Alpha Delta Pi at
V/ayne State University where
she was also named vice pre:sident of the junior class.
'"
...
'"
THE
REV. and
MRS.
LEONARD P. WITI'LINGER,
of West Covina, Calif. (the
farmer NONA HEMMETER)
announce . the birth
of a
daughter, SARA, on May 26.
The baby's maternal grandmother is MRS. HERBERT
S. HEMMETER, of Notre
Dame avenue.
'"
MISS JOAN A. RESSEGUIE,
Regina High Holding
daughter of MR. and MRS. L.
Social on June 7
J. RESSEGUIE of Three Mile
-Photo by Paul Gach
drive; and MISS JULIA MAY
At a Saturday noon ceremony in St. Paul's on the
A cordial invitation is ex- JONES, daughter of the JO- lakeshore, MARIE ELIZABETH LEWIS, daughter of
tended by Walter Gogoleski, SEPH M. JONES of Lakeland
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Ingersoll Lewis, Jr., of Lewischairman, VE 9-8416, to attend avenue, wil'l receive tneir de- ton road, became the bride of Mr, Crowell, son of Mrs.
the Regina Parents June Social grees from Mercy College on .
Marian F, Crowell, of Long Island, N.Y.
in the Green Room at Notre Saturday, May 31. Miss ResDame High. School at 20254 seguie wiM be ~~rded
a
"
Kelly on June 7.
bachelor of
degree in Social Science, and Miss Jones, annually to seniors who have
a baohelor of arts degree in combined hi g h scholarships
Sociology:
and outsUuiding leadership and
'" ...
service
to the University.
RONALD E. FINE cA Gray,,: Among Lynn's activities are
ton road, is included in the corresponding secretary of the
152 freshmen at the University Student COUl'lcil, correspondrA Michig1an elected to mem- ing secretary of t~e Women
bership in freSlhmen honOraTies Students' League, and a memfor their outstanding scholatics. ber of the organizations staff
He was made a member of Phi for the U of D annual, The
Eta Sigma. He is a major in Tower.
the College of Engineering.
'"
arts
.
.
Northhampton,
Mass.,
. .
'"
AGNES LlNDE&\1ANN, of
Harcourt road ,has received
word that her oil painting
"Ann" is one of the winning
wnrks in the First Salon of
the 48 States, to which is
attached the Prix de Paris. The
canvas will now go from its
New York exhibition to Paris,
where it will be on exhibit in
the Ligoa Duncan Galerie Des
Arts until next November.
... ... *
June 21 has been chosen by
Miss Morgan and Mr. Burnham
as the date for their wedding
before a small group of intimate friends and relatives in
the Grosse Pointe Congregational Church.
A ga,rden reception will follow &t the home of th(~ bride's
parents. Mr. Burnham- is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Burnham, ,of
Birmingham,
Mich.
Headquarters for the bridal
party will be the home of Mr.
and Mrs. George W. Williams
of Lakeland avenue. Ushers
who will be in residen~e there
include: Royal C. Riedinger,
Jr., of University Heights, O.
and F. Lawrence Hol mes, of
Cincinnati, O. Robert W. Morga~ brother of the bride,
will serve as best man for
the bridegroom.
Miss Morgan's
at1endants
will be Barbara Tucker of
Lexington, Mass., and Jean
Leete and Judith Huntington.
Parties will begin with a
luncheon and kitchen shower
on June 11 with Mrs. Ellsworth
R. Beeman and Mrs. .rohn D.
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.
David W. Palmer of Mt. Vernon road whose marriage to
Loren Robinson will take place
'on June 15.
Friday, June '13, has been
chosen by Paula Mathewson as
the date for a luncheon in her
Lakeland
avenue h orne for
Miss Morgan.
Jean Leete will entertain in
her Lochmoor boulevard home
on June 16 for luncheon and a
"round-the-clock"
shower.
A ~ktai1
party is planned
for the bridal pair for. June
18 by Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
W. Pritchard of Neff road.
The Charles H. Burnhams
will be hosts for the rehearsal
dinner to be given in "The
Shores Room" of Stouffers'
Eastland on Friday evening,
A Sunday luncheon in the
Lincoln road- home .of the AIonzo C. AlIens will honor Mrs.
Ralph Tucker of Lexington,
Mass., and the out-oi-town
members of the wedding party.
The young couple will make
their
home in Cambridge,
Mass., where Mr. Burnham is
studying for his advanced de.
gree in Geology and Geophysics,
RICHARD SCHMAL, son o-f
MR. and MRS. A. H. SCHMAL
of Harcourt road, is one of 37
Micrugan
State.
Univ~rsity
juniors to be initiated into Phi
Kappa Phi, national schalastic
Clubs in the ditsrict are coAt the annual May meeting
honororary. The forma'! cereoperating
in
carrying
out
an
of
the For t Pontchartrain
mony will take place Wednesorder
adopted
at
the
annual
Chapter
of the Daughters of
day (June 4), at a eanquet to
JUDITH GOODNOW, daughmeeting
in
January
of
the
the
American
Revolution at
ter of the Nathan B. Good- be held in the Student Union United States Lawn Tennis As- the Women's City Club recentnows, of Handy lane, will be building.
I sociation. The order requires ly officers for the coming year
...
graduated from the Newton
that all players who ('ompete were elected.
College of the Sacred Heart,
THOMAS W INGRAM, son '
.'
'.
.
Mrs. Carl D. Macpherson 18
Massachusetts on June 2. Other of the KERM' INGRAMS, of In san~l,lOned. tourname~ts
't
I b ,':lted nlust regIster WIth the aSSOCIa-the new regent; Mrs. John C.
local students include ANNE Lak epOln
e avenue, ce e ra
t'
d
1f
.,ees.
Shav.:, fIrst VIce rege~t; Mrs,
A, CANNIFF, of Lakeshore his birthday with a party last IOn an pay annua
Sunday. On the guest list were
The fee for adults is $3 per M.errlll Cross, chap lam; M.rs.
road; DEBORAH
FITZGERALD, of Lewiston roa<L JOAN and J E A N WORM- year and for juniors, 18 years RIchard F. Lang, second VIce
Robert Henand MARY BUSH, of Moran BOLD, NAN C Y BRENAN, and younger, $1. Clu.b players regent and
GINNY HOLGON, 'WINNIE who do not participate in tour- derson, recordmg secretary,
road.
MARSH, DAL E GREENE, naments and those who hav<!
Others axe Mrs. Leo P. Rich'"
PETER
NEIBOR
and
JOHN
played
in
the
past,
~.re
also
ardson,
registrar; :Mrs. Horace
Entertaining
at a cocktail
QUINLIN,
JR.
urged
to
register
and
pay
the
J.
McGregor,
treasurer, Mrs.
party on Ju..."le7 will be MR,
•
l!'
•
fees.
Robert
H.
Peterson,
historian,
~
and MRS. WILLIAM
D.
MR. and MRS. F RAN K
The action of the associa- ~nd Mrs. F. M. Harris, librarBYRON, of Rivard boulevard.
TEN D I C K, JR.,
(MA,RY tion was deemed necessary as Ian.
.
... '"
Mrs. Roma?- B. Black ,WIll
Coming from her home in WHITCOMB), of Summit, N. it only has a fixed annual inCin<:innati, 0" this week for a J" announce the birth of a come of about $6,100 und has means comnuttee. The. dll'ecvisit was MRS. PETER P AD- san, WILLIAM LOUIS, Te- had to depend on profi ts from tors of t?e chapter .mclude
Edwm L. McClam, Mrs.
DOCK. Sl1e drove here with cently. The grandparents are the National Championships ~.
her husband's
parents, the the FRANK H.' TENDRICKS, and Davis Cup Interzone and Mllbert Ellman and Mrs. RoBENJANITN PADDOCKS, of of Pemberton road, and former Chalelnge ROtLTldsfor its ma- man B. Black.
Mrs. Harold G. Stevens will
Ridge road, who were visiting Poi n t e r s the L. K. WHIT- jor source of revenue.
COMBS,
now
of
Sharon,
Pa.
open
her Pleasant Ridge home
her over the past week-end.
...
'"
...
The
funds
provided
from
the
on
June
6 for members of the
MR. PADDOCK will join his
MARK
SCHERER
HIGBIE,
registration
fees
will
be
of
service
club.
This group prow:i:fe for the Memorial Day
son
of
the
HUGO
S.
HIGBIES,
great
importance
in
jW1ior
devi
des
funds
for
scholarships to
holiday, She will stay with her
of
Merriweather
r
0
a
d,
was
ve~()pment,
which
will
result
the
Kate
Duncan
Smith School,
mother, MRS. CHARLES B.
WARREN, JR., of. WQSihington christened Sunday in Christ in more ar.d better pl.ayers in The Tomassee ~and St. Mary's
Church by the REV. ERVILLE the country.
Indian Schools and the Lincoln
road.
MAYNARD.
Part
of
the
fees
are
reMemorial
University at Har... ... ...
•
•
....
turned
to
the
various
areas..
rowgate,
Tenn.
MRS. THOMAS W. McMAROB E R T HOWENSTEIN. One dollar from each adult
The executive boa r d of
HON, of Oxford road, leaves
son
of
the
HARRY
B.
HOWregistratian
fee
and
50
cents
management
will meet June
Friday with young MICHAEL
ENSTEINS,
of
Vendome
road,
from
junior
fees
collected
10
for
luncheon
in the Fernand TOM, JR., to visit her
wiI
be
home
this
week-end
here
will
be
available
for
the
dale
home
of
Mrs.
John C.
parents at their home in' Marfrom
Wharton
School
in
Phil
apromotion
.of
tennis
in
the
Shaw.
Mrs-:
Macpherson
will
blehead, Mass.
delphia,
Pa.
Greater
Detroit
area.
be
co-hostess
and
preside.
... ... ...
MR. and MRS. MYRON R.
MAY are due back in the
Pointe next week, (;liter a two-'
year absence during which he
paid his obligations to Uncle
Sam. The former JOAN 'DRY-
Tennis Players'
DAR Chapter
Urged to Help
Names Officers
and
.
.
f
ca \
Youth (.
Holdi~g
.
,
1
f
The Youth (
Grosse Pointe '
will hold its fin
school year for
and parochial
grades 9-12 on t
lakeside terraCE
green of the (
evening, June
o'clock.
Fred Crissey'~
play for the da .
will be summer
summer suits as
jackets will bl
order for the be
It is planned ~
and light refresr.
the terrace and
Garden. In case
ever, the party
indoors.
There will be
price for this 1
Admission will
couple as ust:
couples will be <
1
I
\
i
I
'j
..,1
I
,
Club Fo
Play Gr
Plans for 0
group service to
youngsters age
being completed
Pointe
Woods
Club,
. .
In previous su.
have met under
of volunteer lee.
.or twa-day a WE
mornings, from
.of June until .:
time will be ba:sires of those pa:
the availability
Parents intere
their children e~
Play-Group pro'
coming summer
call the Commu~
4-2050). Require
Mothers must se
ants to the leae
tion basis, eac'
have a physica"
and assisting 1
have a chest XFee for the ~}1'1
the yearly fee o.
adult, and $3.00
<:hild.
This
progra
planned aceo~di.
pressed imerest .
Deadline for pre
tration is Frida~'
MJ:s,
..
short
Chantilly lace.
the same lace
.. -
'" '"
Eighty students from the
state of Michigan wi'll receive
degrees at the University of
Notre Dame's 113th annual
oomnnencement excerises to be
held in Notre Dame, Indiana
on June'l.
Local scholars to receive
their sheepskins are, JOHN A.
B ERN A R D, of Devonshire
road,
B. S. in
Commerce;
CHARLES McCAFFERTY, of
Nottingham road, B S. in Engineering; ROBERT T. TAYLOR,.of Yorkshire road, B. S.
in Commerce; and MICHAEL
J. THOMPSON, of Maumee
avenue, A.B,
...
...
MRS. C. ALLISON MONROE, of Ridge road, leaves
Saturday for Mil1brook, N.Y.
to attend the graduation exercises of her niece, VIRGINIA
PENROSE, from Bennett Jr.
College on Monday, June 2.
She'll then visit friends in her
old home town of Silvennine,
Conn., returning to the Pointe
later in the week.
'
... ...
LYNN VAN TIEM, daughter
of ME. and MRS. E.C. VAN
TIEM of. Whittier road, has
been elected to Gamma Pi Ep~
silon, National Jesuit Honor
Sorority, at the University of
Detroit. Miss Van Tiem, a 1954
graduate of St. Paul' High
School, was selected by the
faculty on the basis of soholl8.rsIl1p, loyalty and service to the
University. At the University's
Honors COnvoation she was
among one at ten seniors to be
gv'en the Dean's Key, awarded
,,
..
In Grosse
Sue Temple,
Fisher road, '\
of the Robert
For her wed(
wore a gown
t a f f eta fast
scalloped pori
Wedding plans and graduation plans are making
a busy month of June for the Sidney H. Morgan
f.amily, of Lakeland avenue. ..
Their
daughter,
Mary ---------Sue Morgan, will receive Veech in Mrs. Veech's Lakeher degree on June 8 from land avenue home.
Smith College '\vith her
Miss Morgan will turn hosbrother Robert, and fiance tess on June 12 when she will
rnham
t honor, with a luncheon and
Ch ar 1es B u...
presen
kitchen shower, Betsy Palmer,
...
...
...
Pair Exchange.
rial Churc
Pointe Congregational Church on June 21
After Graduation from Smith College
for the weekend festivities.
...
Wed
Begins Party Whirl
in
MRS. ALVAN MACAULEY,
JR., of Kenwood road, had as
a house guest over the week~
end MRS. ED ORR, of Cincinnati, O.
Karel
.
'I
I
I
I
.J
I
,I
Pre-U~
I
\
')
r
FUR STORAGE SPECIALIST FOR 48 YEARS
..• and all
• • •
•
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r
in SHEPLER'S OWN
Storage Plant!
Opp.
Howard
Johnson's
20445 MACK
Insured.
Personal
PRIDE
Care of
Every
Item!
garments,
blankets, ete., are ~n
reliable Shepler hands. every minute while in storage .••
in our own modern storage vaults ••. in our own building
" specielly designed jusi' for .that purpose. Join the hun-'
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Your fine furs, winter
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De'
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Rugs Pic
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Cleaned
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OSllIOJNII
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As neat as your phone •••
,.
Free Estimate
Ie
•
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/
;8
Thursday,
29, 1958
May
G'R 0 5 S E POI N TEN
Woman's Page
ossa
king
.~an
.~ .
A June Luncheon, anticipated annually
by members
of
the Grosse
Pointe
Woman's
Glub, will be held at 12:30 on
Pair Exchanged
Vows Saturday
in Grosse
POinte MemoWednesday, June 4 at the Detroit Yacht Club.
rial Church;
Following
Bermuda
Trip will Live
Mrs. Alfred Mitschke, lunchNear
Harvard
University
eoneJ1airman
will be aided by
Mrs. R us s e 11 W. Randall,
In Grosse Pointe
Memorial
Church
Saturdav
Karen
tickets;
Mrs. Arthur
BayUs,
S~e Temple,
daughter
of the Wallace
A. Temples,
01 publicity;
Mrs.
J ames
GilFIsher
road, was married
to Robert
G. Wiese, Jr.~ son mour, decorations;
Mrs. Earl
of the Robert G. Wieses. of Wellesley
Hills, Mass.
Meyer, favors; and Mrs. Fred
For her wedding
the bride
W. Adams, mistress
of ceremonies.
wore a gown of white
silk bodice and full skirt which
t a f f eta fashioned
with a deepened
into
a c hap e 1 The highlight. of the afternoon will bea
play "Club
scalloped
portrait
neckline
train.
Talent, and How!" produced
and
short
cap
sleeves
of
A fingedip
veil of handand directed by Mrs. Murray
Chantilly
lace. Appliques
of made Venetian point de Mar- Young. Members in t!).e cast
the same lace accented
the
guerita lace was drap~d manare
Mrs.
Victor
Schneider,
- tilla fashion and, she carried
Mrs.
Edward
Pisula,
Mrs.
white orchids, stephanotis and Daniel M, Co:nson, Mrs. Richlilies of the valley.
ard Stoner, Mrs. Stanley PloMrs. Wililam G. Elliott. of pa and Mrs. J. W. Snyder.
Lexington, Mass., was matron
Mrs. Warren
C. Dilloway,
of honor and the bridesmaids
club president,
will end a
The Youth Council of the were Anne Leete, Nancy Mac- most successful year by handDonald and Molly Olson, of ing the gavel to Mrs. Edward
Grosse Pointe War Memorial
D. Trowbridge, incoming presiwill hold its final event of the Birmingham.
They wore ballerina
gowns dent, in an Installation
Cereschool year for public, private
made with mony conciucted by Mrs. Corand
parochial
students
in of aqua taffeta
grades 9-12 on the main floor. bateau necklines swatched in son. Other officers to be inlakeside
terrace
and bow ling chiffon. Their headpieces were stalled are Mrs. J. W. HarTiveiled petal caps.
son, first vice president;
Mrs.
green of the Center,
Friday
Plopa,
second' vice
evening,
June
6 from
9-12
Willis-m H. Wiese served as Stanley
Mrs. Hen I' y D,
o'clock.
his brother's
best man. Seat- president;
recording
secn=:Fred Cris~ey's orchestra will ing the guests were William G. Lampman,
play for the dance. The dress Elliott,
of Lexington,
Mass.; tary; Mrs. John Wetzel, corresponding secretary and Mrs.
will be summer formal though
John E. Braun, of Grandville"
summer suits as well as dinner
Mich., James Temple, of Bir- Fred W. Steiner, treasurer.
jackets
win be perfectly
in mingham;
and John B. Wilorder for the boys.
liams, Jr., of Welle~ley Hil~s.
It is planned to serve punch
For her daughters
weddl11g
:1
•
and light refreshments
both on and reception
at Lochmo?r
the terrace and by the Formal
Club, Mrs. Temple wore a SlIGarden. In case of rain, how- ver-gray
brocaded
silk dress
Five s t u den t s from the
ever, the party will be held and matching hat. Mrs. Wiese
Pointe will be among the 482
indoors.
was in a pale chartr~lIse lace
members of Smith College to
There will be no advance in sheath with matchingaccessoprice for this Formal Dance. ries. Both mothers wore orchid receive their c!ipl.omas on June
8 at commencement
exercises.
Admission
will be $1.50 per corsages.
Senator
John F. Kennedy
couple
as usual
and
only
Out-of-town guests included
will give the graduahQn
~dcouples will be admitted.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry S. Wurstl
dress. On the evening before
of Buffalo, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. there will be traditional
Ivy
G. D. Elsworth, of Ridgeway,
Day ceremonies as well as an
Ontario;
Mr. and Mrs. John Alumnae Parade.
Naylor, of Toronto; Mr. and
Elizabeth Buell. daughter of
___
Mrs. Robert Braun, of Grandthe J. Lawrence Bue1ls, Jr., of
Plans
for
offering
playville, Mich.; Dr. and Mrs. Ter- Vendome
road;
Jean
Leete,
group service to pre-schoolers,
re11 D. Lewis, of Sebring, Fla.; daughter of Alexander
Payne
youngsters
age 4 and 5. are Miss Hattie ~liott and Mrs. .Leete,
of Lochmoor
bOUlebeing completed at the Grosse M.. F. Hawkms,
of Mount vard, and Elizabeth
A. Moll,
.,daughter of the L. S. Molls, of
Pointe
Woods
Commllnitv
DOla, Fla.
Club.
.
Folowing a trip to Bermuda,
Moross road, are among the
In previous summers, groups the couple wil live in Cam- class of 1958.
Mary Sue Morgan, daughter
have met under the leadership
bridge, Mass., where Mr. Wiese
of volunteer leaders on a one wil continue his studies at the of the Sidney H. Morgans, of
avenue, and Susan
Qr two-day a \veek basis in the Graduate
School of Arts and Lakeland
Lane
!;)cott,
daughter
of the
mornings. from the latter part S.ciences at Harvard
UniverSherrod
B.
Scotts,
of
Elm
of June until August.
Exact
slty.
cnurt
are
the
other
two
Pointe
time will be based on the degirls graduating
this June.
sires of those participating
and
the availability
of le-adership.
Parents interested in havineJbanne
Lucille T aroli
their children enrolled in th~
Getting
Nursing
Degree
Play-Group
program
for t : I\;'
Mrs. E. H. Bahn \vill open
Miss ~oanne Lucille Taroli,
coming summer are urged to
can the Community Club (TU her 1386 Grayton road home daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alon Monday. June 2, at 7:45 fred Taroli, 1585 Dorthen, and
4-2050). Requirements
include:
Mothers must serve as assist- p.m. to all Study Group AAUW a graduate of Dominican High,
a Bachelor
oJ
ants to the leader on a rota- chairmen. The purpose of the will receive
Science
degree
from Mercy
tion basis, each child must meeting is to make co-ordinating plans for the coming pro- College on Saturday, May 31.
have a physical examination,
Miss Taroli, an outstanding
and assisting
mothers
must gram :,>:ear, commencing early
seholar. has made the coveted
next falL
have a chest X-Ray.
Dean's'List
for four straight
The AA UW's board meeting
Fee for the program will be
the yearly fee of $1.00 for the of the month will be held at years, ...an honor rl;'served for
adult, and $3.00 to enroll the the home of Mrs. Edward' F. students winning a B plus or
better average.
child.
Suits, 820 Rivard
boulevard,
She is a member of Theta
This
program
will
be on Thursday,
June
5. The
Alpha
Chi, Kappa Gamma Pi;
planned according to the ex- women wil convene
at 9:30
served
as class treasurer
in
pressed interest of the parents.
a.m. and Mrs. James Graves
her
freshman
year;
as
business
Deadline for preliminary regis- will assist Mrs. Su;ts as comanager
and staff of "Outer
tration is Friday, June 6.
hostess.
Echoes" in her sophomore year
as well as social chair111.an of
the House Council.
She is active in Sodality,
earned
co - curricular
honors
and in her senior year was
nominated
to "Who's Who in
Catholic Colleges and Universities" .
Page
Winners Listed From' Another Pointe of View
By Bridge Club
(Continued from Page 11)
Mrs. Rob,ert G. Wiese, Jr.
,Grosse Poi n t e M~morial
Center Bridge Club winners
have been announced.
May 19: North and South,
Adele Bea.tty and Helen Long;
Eileen Bradley and Jackie Wilcox.
East and West: Vi y ia n
Champion
and Betty
Tue!!';
Agnes Sandersop
and Gladys
TerBush.
May 21: North and South,
Mrs. Paul Sutherland
and Mrs.
Frank Coolidge; Beulah Cress
and Earl Gurnack Jr.
East and West: Gerry Windisch and Yvonne Young; Audrey Burnham and Albert Boelens.
May 23: North and South,
Ivan Hina and N~ll Pethick;
Jane Sutherland
and Richard
Sutherland.
East and West: Emma Har.,
vey and Jackie Wilcox; Betty
Stump and Dr. A. P. Pilides.
I
hoswill
and
[mer,
'Mrs.
Tern-
'e to
place
been
on as
1 her
for
in in
nome
md a
r.
nned
June
erick
d.
hams
rsal
"The
erst
~
g.
tne
AI-
Mrs.
gtOfit
own
arty.
ake
'dge,
m is
deGeo-
Youth Council
Holding Dance
I
Cl Ub F ormZltg
Play G'roups _
I
on is
C,
Mrs.
Mrs.
vice
Hen-y,
ich-
race
Mrs.
rian,
rar-
AAUWGroups
Makil'tg PlaIts
~Photo
Pointe
Memorial
Church
on Saturday,
KAREN
SUE TEMPLE,
daughter
of the 'Wallace
A.
Temples,
of Fisher
road, was married
to Mr. WipseJ
son of the Robert
G. Wieses, of Wellesley,
Mass. ,
To Talk on Presidents' Wives
The Women's Association of
the Grosse Pointe Woods Presbyterian Church will sponsor a
special program
for members
and friends of1 Tuesday, June
3, at I p.m. in the recreation
room.
Mrs. Dwight Struthers, president of the association,
will
give a talk on "Our Country's
Presidents'
Wives," in which
she relates the intimate story
of the lives, secrets, personalities,
strange
habits
and
dress styles of the wives of
fonner presidents .
Mrs. Struthers
was graduated from Lindenwood College
for Women,
a Presbyterian
College located. in St. Charles,
Missouri, majoring in history.
She is the mother
of three
children-David,
now teaching
science in California,
Jon in
the . Navy
Air
Force,
and
Jeanne in Mason School.
Her hobbies are sewing and
reading, and she used to transcribe articles
in Braille for
the blind.
She became interested in the
While House about ten years
ago. An al'tic Ie in "Readers'
Digest" titled the "Ghosts of
the White House" started her
on res~arch for more information. She became interested in
finding out about the people
who lived in the White House
and how they
affected
the
house itself what changes
they made in 'it-the
social enTaroli
Daughters
Two Birthday
Feted
Parties
At
SALE
of all
merchandise
tertaining,
the personalities
of
the various families.
Through
the
years,
they
have become very real people
to her and she likes to present
them as such-interesting,
hu~
mora us, and very
hum a n
people.
Following the talk, tea will
be
served
in
the
Church
Lounge, Reservations
may be
made
with
Mrs. Gerald
C.
Schroeder
by calling TU 24335.
Pointers
to
I
Din neTwa re ...
Opp. Howard
Johnson's
20445
A few of them include
the Theater
Arts
annual
meeting
with luncheon
included
on June 3 at the Boat
Club. Three
days lat8r Ibex will be entertained
before
shutting
up shop for the summer
at the Lakeland
avenue
home of Mrs. Charles
Beltz.
On June 6 still another
theatrical
group will have a
soiree. This will be the Fine Arts formal
dinner
dance
at the Grosse
Pointe
Yacht
Club. Mr. and Mrs. David
Gamble
have invited
most all the members
to a giant
cock~ail party in their lovely Renaud
road home before
this dressy affair.
"
,..
*
*
Party for Parents
What .could be a better excuse for a party than the
arrival of your parents, especially if that lucky pair are
enroute to Hawaii?
Mr. and
weather road,
their home in
give a cocktail
Mrs. Clinton R. Scharff, Jr., of Merri~
are expecting his father and mother from
Ft, Lauderdale, Fla., shortly, and they will
party for the visitors on June 14.
history,
has been named
a
Durant scholar for highest academic achievement
at the college. She wrote music for the
JuniaI'
Show and has been
vice-president
of c amp us
chapel organization.
Wellelesey Internship Program
studying government
in Washington, D. C. She was president of the campus
Young
Republicans.
Miss Diekoff, an honor student and a major in Eiblical
I
the
harelD float
Club Prepares
For Holiday
as featut'ed i,Z Va gUiJ
M e m 15 e r s of Lakepointe
Country Club are 'sharpening
up their golf games in anticipation of the long Memorial
Day Weekend. It is a tradition
of the Club that both men and
women hold F Ia g Tournaments on May 30.
By the end of the day the
fairways are gay with fluttering American
flags, planted
where the players have used
up their allotted strokes.
Climax' of the weekend
at
the Club will be the Summer
Formal Dinner Dance on Saturday
night . .Mr. and Mrs.
James G. Berry are chairmen
of the affair which will begin
at 7 o'clock with cocktails in
the newly decorated lounge.
Mem bers and their guests
will have their first official
look at this room since its complete re-doing under the direction of Mrs. Gene Charles. Mrs.
Charles
has used
a black,
white and gold color scheme to
produce
a stunning
modern
effect.
Receiving with'Mr. and Mrs.
Berry will be Mr. and Mrs.
William A. Biekel, Mr. and
Mrs, James H. Quello, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl R. Boonstra and Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Charles.
"A Summer Garden" is the
theme of .the party, to be c.arried out with pink and white
blossoms and balloons. During
the evening there. will be entertainment
in the form cf a
floor show.
~
Early reservations have been
made by Mr .. and Mrs. Edward W. Taube, Mr. and Mrs.
I Jerome
E. Friesema, Mr. John
LaFata, Dr. and Mrs. Waitel'
Promack
and Mr. and Mrs.
Hall Lippincott.
••.
dance', dance,
dance in a
new Molly Parnis summer night
fashion ...
low-backed,
scarfed
neckline with harem bubble
overskirt. One from our
designer's
collection.
125.00
76 Kercheval ••. on the hill
from the D.ant's
Spode .. Royal Crown' Derby .. Coalport
MACK
gro_sse pointe
PRIDE
CARPET &
FURNITURE
'Cash
&
,
Hair Coloring
.. Royal Copenhagen.
, I
WOOds
-
by . mi66 .Atick
I
• • . who is telling a' color story
CLEANERS
by erasing those few tell-tale grey locks,
making hair a little brighter,
...
or changing hair color completely
to complement facial tones.
Carry
20~o Off
•• '.
then,
for
that
young
and
happy
feeling
/
• • •
sunstreaks, tipping or frosting to bring
sunshine into your summer evenings.
For formal serving, the fi~est quality English and Danish <::hina so popular
for its grace of line, beauty of design ... and hardne;s a~d brilliance of its
protective
Cleaned
and Mothproofed
Rugs Picked lip and,
Delivered.
.
Free Estimate
t
TU 5-9955
Apl,ointments
:lite Dants'
Guarilnteed and
Insured
98
Cadieux
__
«
cd
.rf
•
zm
~
,-
,...-
= -,.- _
Kercheval-on
,I 15
the Hill
",'
'.
/
•
«
A fifteen minute consultation
is certain to bring you color joy.
glaze.
in Your Home
10615
up
.
~
TOWN 'N'
come
Receive
Wellesley College on June 9 at
the 80th annual
commencement.
Miss Dauch, an alumna of
the 'Convent
of the Sacred
Heart,
is a political
science
major. Last summer she par..:'
ticipated,'
in the
Vas s a r-
by Bachrach
In Grosse
A birthd~y party was held
at .the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Taroli, of Dorther road,
for their
daughter
Suzanne
Marie who was 9-years old last
Saturday.
Thos~ present. at the party
were Nancy Matzka, Joanne
Mercea, Linda Colombo, Susan
Z e m m in.
Wendy Geyman,
Margarea
Zavela,
Rosemary
Die hI,
Patricia
Beaurgard,
"M" Given $683,233
Lynn Thompson
and Norene
'f '
.
' Whyte.
G 1 ~s, grants
and bequests
The Tarolis also had a party
totallmg. $683,233.27 were ac- for their daughter
Diana on
cepted by the Regents. of The her 6th birthday
on Sunday,
University of Michigan Friday May 25th. Those present
at
(May 23.)
the party were Mikie Bielicki,
Largest amount accepted wras Juliann
Krol, Susan
James,
a. total.of $505,014.88, from the Rosemary
Bagby, Linda Luestat~
of Stanley
Dickinsonchoy,
Mary Matzka and Carol
McGraw orf Detroit.
Mercea.
Pre-Ilolid.-'T•
will
su.uling
~nd travel a host of organizations
WIth theIr annual
meetings.
The seniur Schar(fs will be staying at the SUl1l1ingdale
drive home of the Arthur W. :Moestas, their hosts
Degrees
from Wellesley
being away on a European tour. The party will be there
Suzette 'D~uch, daughtel' of also as the junior Mrs. S. says there's so much more
the Emil O. Dauches, of Lake- room.
land avenue, and Donna ,DiekShe will be welcoming a member of her fanlily, her
off, daughter of the Arthur E.
hrother
Bill Moesta, who is expected in momentarily
Diekoffs, of Hawthorne
road,
from
the
Coast.
will receive
diplomas
from
Two
5 to Graduate
From Smztlt
·
Thirteen
by, of, and for 'Pojnte. Women
•••
Woman's Club
Sets ,Lunclteon
Karen Sue Temple
Weds Robert Wiese
E W.s
cd
•
..
Kercheval
,
--- - --.............---__
~~-:~--~+.
~-~,
.-~-.
-"--~-~-."'--.-7"':--,,'
: -~ -.~,:-.::-~-.":-.,
..-,:-..-:=""-:""~--:.;, ~-.'"_.,..,~-.,'~-, ~"":--.~-.
l
GROSSE
Page Fourteen
'-:-"'~:"-:"""-""_'r",:":'!""O,:,"':'-,-_r,\""..,:-:-i!-;.!'
PO.INTE
\
;.,-,.: ,..:-:.-.";~~ ~ .;t"",:"
,••,. ; ~
, .. ~
:~'
:,4 ._.~.
_l!II,
:.~~,4OI.,,#
••,1.:...,a
..
)..;
elllll~_,:-1I4,:p.,.~: -..,
*", f.IIII~:.•••
".C-••,••", -:_
.."~II
u-.-a-
•••_._C!!l
Thursday,
May 29 .1958
S•• -.--.-
IIC..
NEW'S
,•.! ___
Thursday,
t
Society News
Gathered
from
All
of
the.
Pointes
..
,
"Hall Table" and "Fabric"
classes. This award was a silver tray given each year by
the Grosse Pointe Garden Center to the Sweepstakes winner
for that year. '
,
The ~inner of the highest
blue ribbon in tJ1e arrangement classes was Mrs. Harry
Short, who was' awarded 97
points for her composition
which called for a 'composition
using a fabric to cOJ:nplement
the quality and plant material
and accessories."
She was
awarded the Garden Center
prize, a set of luncheon plates
with botany print motif.
Mrs. George Vnlerot won
blue ribbons in the ,"Victorian"
and "Exuberance
and Restraint" clasSes and Mrs. Kenneth Strang also won two
blues in the 'Fabric" and "Hall
Table" classes.
Other blue ribbons were won
by the following, in the arrangement classes: Mrs. Dexter Ferry and Mrs. Wood Williams in the Tables for Outdoor Living class: Mrs. Edward Wishropo in the ~pring
Flowers and Primrose class;
Mrs, Ralph McElvenny in the
Tulips in Early American Containers class; Mrs. Berrien E~ton Clnd Mrs. G. Bethune Duffield in "Exuberence and Restraint";
Mrs. Earl Heenan,
Jr., Mrs. William D. Laurie
and Mrs. Nelson McCormick
in the Copy of a Flower Painting class; Mrs. Sheldon Drennan in the "Arrangement for
a Hall Table"; and Mrs. John
Herman and Mrs. John H.
French in the French class:
In the Horticultural'Division,
the Sweepstake
Award (an
Egyptian copper planter given
each year to the winner to
keep for a year) was won by
Mrs. Peter Galette for her seven blue ribbons. Mrs. Howard
F. Smith won a spcial award,
a tri-color ribbon for her four
igh blue ribbons. These were
for two rare orchid specimens.
a tuberous begonia plant, and
a standard "tree" type ger?nium plant.
Other blue ribbons in Horticulture' were won by: Mrs. Edwin S. Barbour, Mrs. John
Lord, Mrs." Frederick Campbell, Miss Marie Louise Anderson, Mrs. Reuben Waterman,
Mrs. Sheldon Drennan, Mrs.
Charles. Crouse, and M l' S •
James McMillan.
Flower Show Lures
Crowds to Center
Birthday. Present for Nancy
.
-,'
'
,
Republican's
Holding Party
The Women's
Republican
Club of Grosse Pointe will
have it$ biennial
candidate
garden party ~t the Grosse
Garden Center Presents Successful Event Directed by
Poi n t e War Memorial on
Garden Club of Michigan at War Memoriah'
Thursday, June 5, at 1 p.m.
.
Winners Listed.
.
All local, state and national
candidates
for office. to , be
\Vith sixteen Grosse Pointe garden clubs participatvoted upon by the voter's of
ing, the Spring Flower Show, presented by the Grosse
the 14th Con,gressional District
are invited to attend.
Pointe Garden Center, and directed by the Garden Club
of Michigan on l\lay 21 and 22~ at the Grosse Pointe
Known candidates who, will
be present include U.S.' SenV/ar Memorial, drew a crowd of over 800 people the
ator Char1es E. Potter, runfirst dav.
I
.
ning for re-election 'as U.S.
Backgrounq.s
of slIver ~?ite li.lacs,' ~to~k and blue
Senator; Paul Bagwell, canand pale blue made a dis- lr:s. ThIS was In the room
didate for governor; Lois Nair,
tin uished setting for the wIth the Fr~nc? Arrangement
candidate
fOT
Con g l' e s s;
9.
..
class. (InvitatIOnal
arrangeCharles Lasky, candidate fur
74 mterestmg composItIons.
ments received special awards)
state senator; and Representa~he ~h ~me was "G ross~
Mrs. Elmer A. Clark's Georgtive Robert E. Waldron, runPomte Llvmg. over the Y.e~rs ian composition created much
ning for re-election as state
and the perIod CO!1lPOs~tIOnsinterest. She used Spring flowlegislator.
and man~' ~f the classes mter- ers and roses in pastel shades
Mrs. Irving Ingraham, club
preted thIS Idea.
in an antique Georgian silver
president, will introduce the
As a focal point in the great urn and the accessories were
candidates. Each candidate will
hall. Mrs. L. Rothe Farr creat- silver candle sticks and a Staf-'
be given an opportunity
to
cd an arrangement in the Vic- fordshire Whippet in beige and
speak in his own behalf. Foltorian manner in a large ~rn peach tones which repeated
lowing the meeting, refreshon a pedestal, resplendent w!th the colors in the arrangement.
ments will be served in the
fl.'schiar.. beg.onias apd tra.iling
Mrs. Bert Wicking's contemgardens of the Grosse Pointe
vmes. Arrange~ on the plano, porary creation with a hand
-Fred
Runnells Photo
War Memorial.
was a contrastmg contempor- carved \vooden figure, sedums
MRS. JOHN P. REED; left, .MRS. ALOIS LAFor reservations which must
ary arran~emen~ by Mrs. Han- and dried material, afforded
be placed not later than TuesPEIRRE, center, and MRS. WILLIAM MOORE, right,
1'el. D. W~lson In. y~llow .a!1d a contrast to the period comdaY,June
3, telephone Mrs.
display a birthday
present that is being made for
\'.:hlte: usmg majestIc daIsIes, positions in the same room.
Henry'
E.
Bodman
II at TU.
Mrs. G. Mennen Williams, wife of the governor. They
an~ gla_nt s:,apd~'agons a,nd eU-1 were extremely dist~nguished.
1-6511
or
Mrs.
Robert
E. Waldare all members of the atixiliaryto
Alger ~ost 995 of
onymus f~lla~e ~n a low b?\:l. They induded furmture and
ron at TU. 2-5117.
the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Mrs. Lapierre is prEsiOther InVItatIOnal exhIbIts accessories brought by the exAll Republican ,women in
dent of the group.
were as follows: a French ar- hibitors.
the area are cordially invited
Democratic women al'e givMrs. Frank Szymanski, wife to attend and to m'eet'the can ..
r?,ngeme~t by Mrs. George
They we r e as follows:
ing
a Birthday Ball for Nancy
y l~lerot In an alabaster .urn, Georgian,
Mrs. J. Stewart
of the Auditor General of didates. This meeting provides
Williams, on June 7, at the
one of the few opportunities
tlsmg pale yellow carnatIons, Hudson; French, Mrs. Wilfred
New Light Guard Al'mory, Michigan, and Mrs. Clifford the voters will have to talk inTeetzel; Early American, Mrs.
Kubert are co-chairmen of the
4400 E. Eight Mile road.
formally with the candidates.
Alfred W. Crabb; Victorian,
At the ball Mrs. Williams ball.
Mrs. L. R. Montgomery; Colwill be presented with p needGETTING
Mrs. Frank Marsh, Three
onial. Mrs. Harold Beatty, and
Jepoint tapestry whi-..t. hunMile
drive, Mrs. Ar-thur KosContemporary, Mrs. C. Leslie
dreds of Democrartic women
cinski,
E. Outer ch-ive, and
. Mitchell.
have been working on fol'
Mrs.
Howard
Williams, S. OxThe urns 1n the entrance ha~l
several months. The tapestry,
ford
road
are
co.-chaimen of
I were
arranged'
with green
which is 34 inches by 24,
TUXEDO
ticket
sales.
beech leaves by the Grosse
depicts the state of Michigan
MargheriUa (Mickey) Loud
AlsoPointe
Branch
of
the
National
in the official colors of the
Democratic women of the who has conducted Children's
Full Dress
Farm and Garden and the
state, blue and gold. It con- Alger Post Auxiliary of the Art Classes after school and
Strollers-Cutaways
small memorial urns donated
tains
93,000 stitches. A book Americ'an Legion, the post Jo on' Saturdays at the Center
RENTAL SERVICE
recently by Mrs. Russell A.
with the signatures of all those which Governor Williams be- this winter will be starting a
Business Suits
Alger on t,he chest in the hall,
who have worked on it will longs, while Mrs. Williams is Children's Summer Art Camp
were arranged
with v'hite
be
presented to MrS~ Williams a member of ~he Auxiliary, on the grounds of the Memo"The Proper Apparel
stock and lemon foliage .by
at t.he ball.
have worked on the t.apestry.
-With Personalized Fitting"
rial as soon as school is out.
Mrs, Elmer A. Clark and Mrs.
Enrollment
date for the
C. Leslie Mitchell.
Children's
Summer
Art Camp
O'Brien's Tuxedo Shops
The Sweepstakes Award for
is
Tuesday,
June
3,
between
It's Fun To Go Formal
the highest number of blue
the hours of 3 and 5, M~.
ribbons in the arrangement
The 32nd annual n,~etitlg of as officers from the BrancIl Loud will be on hand to out19045 MACK AVE.
classes was won by Mrs. Bert
the Michigan Division of the garden Clubs.
line her theories of teaching
Near 7 Mile Rd. TU 4-4715
Wicking for her three blue
Woman's National Farm and
Among
the
Pointers
attcndart to children.
Second and third prizes also Garden Association will be
ribbons, in the "Victorian,"
ing will be Mrs. Carl J, CarlShe was an art major at
went to many of those first held in Lansing'on June 5 and
son, Mrs; Herman Kuester, Sarah Lawnmce, is a graduprize winners danddthhe.fdollO~- 6.,
Mrs. Clarence Maguire, Mrs. ate of the Corcoran &hool of
mg won secon an t ,lr prlz-The
officers of the Michigan
Harold R. Smith, Mrs. Vincent Art, Washington, D.C.. an Ases in H('rticulture:
Mrs. Jer- Division will be there as well
K De Petris, Mrs. William J. sociate of the Art Students
orne H. Remick, Jr., and Mrs.'
Chesbrough. Mrs. J. Crawford League, and was formerly inSeabourn Livingston.
Frost, Mrs. John Veech and structor at the National CatheWHY NOT LET US
A most interesting Conser- Helen Hallett Wins
Mrs,
J. Nall Candler.
dral School in Washington.
vation exhibit receiving a spec- Vassar Scholarship
From the Grand Marais I Mrs .. Loud ~upervises a ~amily
GIVE IT A "CHECK UP"
ial award was created by Mrs.
Branch will be Mrs, Alfred of fl",,'e chlldre.n and IS the
Charles Wright, Jr., and Mrs.
A scholarshi,p ior 1958-59
~f the
Neil McMillan, Jr. Two wood- has been awarded to Helen W. Crabl';, Mrs. Cecil 'Shuert, inco.ming preSIdent
Mrs.
Ernest
Rlliihmer,
Mrs.
JUnIor
Leag~e
of
DetrOIt.
land scenes, about three feet Hallett. daughter .of Mrs. John
The beautlful grounds of the
square, with growing plant ma- J. Bradley, Jr" of Moross, road, Charles Fisher
.
Grosse
Pointe \Var Memorial
terial and nCiturallandscape
.by the Detroit and Birming~rs. Be~ Beyer; Mrs. Hansell with' its gardens and views of
featur,es, all in scale, were de- ham Vassar Alumnae Club.
DWIg~t WIlson, Mrs. Gerald. F. Lake S1. Clair are a perfect
picted, one showing an unD~wh~rst
and Mrs. M. Lvrolm- setting to inspire young talMiss Hallett will graduate
touched spot with the beauty
SkI. WIll represent the Grosse ents, Ten hours of instruction
.AND OOMP .ANY
from
Grosse
Pointe
University
and order of nature.
Pomcte .shores.
are given for $15. There is a
The other scene depicted the School in June of this year.
Mrs. Charles Groves, Mrs. $1.50 charge for materials.
She
is
a
member
of
the
Cum
same place after vandals had
INSURANCE
Robert Zimmerman and MiS.
visited it; and left it cluttered Laude Society, was a recipient Anthony Nestico will be apof
,
the
Scholastic
Magazine
wit,h picnic debris, the wild
pearing for iee Harper Woods
2711 East Jefferson, Detroit 7 Mich,
La 7-6100
flowers trampled, the bird's Literary Award in 1958, was Branch.
nest demolished and general editor of her school newspaper
destruction and disorder left and assistant editor of her
behind. An appropriate quota- school literary magazine.
The Detroit and Birmingha:':l
tion by Ruskin was hung
The Detroit Yacht Club will
Vassar
Club offers scholarships
above it and Mrs. Wright
hold its 43rd annual Memorial
painted a poster showing with annually and is presently seekDay Regatta beginning at 10:30
humor and chagrin how much ing candidates from next year's
o'clock on the holiday.
At 8 o'clock, on Monday,
harm. thoughtless
and care- senior classes. Mrs. Robert 1.
Commodo're
Sydney W.
br~nette to b 10nd in
Stevensen, 960 Arlington, Bir- June 2, Dr. Wallace F. Watt Warner
less people ean do.
is race committee
The Food Fair was a most mington, will provide appli- will address the G'rosse Pointe chairman for the regatta which
:: •.. .,,:>Ntt:'.,,\,,<
.a nlatter of minutes.
fascinating feature of the flow- cation forms for any girls who Council of Better Literature traditionally opens the season.
for Youth, Dr. Watt is a staff
er Show which was enjoyed are interested.
Com mod 0 l' e Charles S.
;.•• an illusion of light
to the Michigan Tompkins will head the hon.The announcement
of the consultant
by all who came. Mrs. J. Crawtones by our special
ford Frost, Jr., is president of scholarship award was made Department of Mental- Hea,lth orary judges committee and all
the Grosse Pointe Garden Cen- at the annual luncheon meet- Education. His topic for dis- the commodores in the area's
.;process.
ter, and Mrs. Wood Williams ing of the club recently 8ft cussion will be,'" A Positive clubs will assist him.
president of the Garden Club which t~me Mrs. John C. Hed- Approach to the Problems of
The day's festivities. will in.
of Michigan. The schedule ges was' elected president; Mrs. Youth."
clude a cocktail 'party and
"Dr. Watt has an important dinner for the club's flag officomprised
M r s . Longyear Frank A. Lamberson, of Birrole
in the educational pro- cers and visiting comlTIodores
mingham,
vice-president,
and
Palmer, Mrs. Frederick Campgrams
in mental health, and and their wIves. There will be
Mrs.
John
J.
Bradley,
Jr.,
vice
bell and Mrs. Howard Smith.
juvenile"
problems, carried on dancing and a floor show.
presiden1.
_
Mrs. William P. Bonbright, II,
by
the
state
of Michigan," said
.Mrs.
Paul
H.
Selden,
of
Dearwas staging chairman for the
born, is the new secretary; Mrs: Robert Curtis,CounciI
show.
Mrs. Willi om H. Jackson, of Secretary; . "His iresearch and Church Holding Party
.~irmingham,
treasurer;
Mrs. teacher-training .pr 0 gram s
The toughest assignment in Rop.ert .I. Stevenson, of Bir- make him well qualified to For Pre-School Kids
19027 Mack at Moross Road
TU 4-1 130
the world comes in trying ~to mingham, .' scholarship chair- give parents a better insight
The annual birthday
and
of the
Open Thursday and Friday Evenings
I convince a self-made man that 'man and Mrs. John S. Prescoit, and ,.' understanding
luncheon
party
for
pre~school
I he has cheated himself. .
Jr.,pr()spective, student chair- problems facing oUr young
peop[e today."..
, ~hildren and their; mothers,
man.
.
_The meeting will be l).eld at sponsored by the Women of
.Others are' M~l:g:aret Watkins
the St. Paul Ev. Lutheran
and Mrs. RiChard~ Heavenrich, the Central Bran~h of the
Church,
Chalfonte and LothBirmingham';' who are ticket Grosse Pointe Public Library,
rop,
will
be held at noon to,.
chairman for the Seven East- at F'isher and Kercheval Ave':'. day, Thursday, May 29, in the
.ern Colleges . project, coming nues, All ,Council meE:tings are
FellowSlh.ip Hall of the church.
up this fall. Mrs~ William D. open' to' the. public, , and 'parOur highly spec'il3liz\ed, service
Mrs. Harry K;all is in charge.
Byron, Jr., is handling publi:. ents are especially invited and,
About
75 youngsters are exurged, to attend.'
city. '
can save you time and trouble.
pected. In addition to entertainment by a clown there will
Like An Old K~epsake
'We will run an errand for you ...
be games and favors.
MARRIED?
I
I
Plan Art Camp
For Children
Gardell/ Group To Meet Here'
ARTHUR J. ROHDE
Council to Meet'
At~ibrary
Frosting, Tipping
B.
Junior Swimmers
Open Season atClub
Our
-. ...,
..~*
Pool to Open at Grosse Pointe Yacht Club on Memorial
Day, Dr. Harold E. Cross Will Be
in Charge of Activities
Grosse Pointe Yacht Club boy and girl swimmers
will get their 1958 seas6n under way at a meeting
scheduled
for Saturday,
June 7, at 12 o'clock noon.
Having won the Inter-Club
championship
last year (for
the second consecutive
time), they're girding to make
the upcoming
sea~;on another
successful
one.
. On the aquatic side also, I .
...
GPYC announces the open-I Pmkstons agam w~ll be l.n
of the 1958 season this Fri- ch~r~~ of ..the ~lub s .aqu,:tlc
day (Memorial Day), which ~ctJvlhe.s, mcludmg SWImmIng
.
t'h
"
I mstructIOn.
m~ans . J.,je s~~mnung p.oo
The team is oJ)€n to All
W:111 be In readmess for fIr~t GPYC boys and girls in the
dIps-only
~ood weather IS age groups beginning with the
needed. IneIGentall:'f, Mem- youngest of 10 yeaars and unorial Day at the club will del', and continuing to the 17be informal, the highlight
18 year old group,
being dinner served most
Besides Dr. Cross as chairof the .afternoon .- from man, the sports committee in12 :30 .~o 4 p.m .., and then a eludes Frederick K. Cody, vice
buffet
dinner
from 6 to chairma~, and members John
For :
and .~
HOURS:
rn
405 Fisher Rc
G. Banmster, James T. Barnes,
Bill 0: Brink, Hans Gehrke,
Jr.
Edward J. Schoenherr
B~:;ward A. Shaw, Wilfred P:
Whyte and Kent A. Zimmerman.
9
p.m.
The swimming team's organizatio~al meet!ng June 7 will
comb me a WIener roast and
busine';s session at v!hich the
eL~ctiG>11
of a, boy and a girl
as co ,captains for the 1958
season will be the important
feature. The gathering will be
in H,e park adjoining, the
GPYC grounds - if it rains,
tIle cbb's Fo'castle will be the
Char.,
Missionary Guild Plans
Musical Program June 4
8L.
Quic
Mrs. Oscar Kolberg
will
have charge of the musical
program on June 4 at 1 o'clock
at the meeting of the Women's
MisS!onary Guild
of First
English Lutheran Church.
The Hope Circle will serve
~he lunci;eon at noon which
will hon0r the past presidents
of the Guild, Mrs. Marie
Seeley. Mrs. Louis Sielaff,
Mrs. Johr. Siefert, Mrs. Henry
Horn, Mrs. Free Schroeder
and Mrs. Norman Miller.
locaJt:~,
Candidates for the boy and
gi>'l co-captain posts are Eileen Cross and Judy Schoenhe,rl', and Jock Banni~ter ar:d
Ml~e Brem~r: Ballot:ng WIll
be m an offICIal elec'~IOnway.
.'Dr. Harold E. Cro~s, chair.
man of the sports committee,
will be in charge. ,There'll be
b~ief talks by Dr. Cross and
c<lmrnittee members, an.d by
the famed coaches, Clarence
and Betty Pinkston, whose inA total of 38,700 Americans
spiration led the team to vic- were killed in 1957 traffic aco,
tory two years in a fO\\'. The I cidents.
I
Grosse
Pointe
For :,
9:00 ~
9 to :
University
WE HAVr
Our system
shorten
timl~
Thirteen
r
School
SUMMER S:CHOOL
I
June 23 to August 9
9 CI.m, to 1 p.m. MondClY thru SaturdClY
DOLI
FOR MAKE-UP WORK AND STRENGTHENING
College
Driver
Preparatory
Courses
In an erne
can hardI;'
Medicine
Grades 3 Through 12
TI~aining Program Available
Call Pbilip P, Perkins, Director
Yet it is a
the averag
is about S.
of all pre:;
Although
in the cos:
that of oti
TV. 4-4444
TV
1-4819
ANNOUNCtNG
Memorial Day
,Races at Dye
THE
When
YOll
your are s:.
NEW
You
STUDIOS
are g:
OF
r"'?"'~.':T7f':l}!:':?~;::;~:~<::fC:7'~
P
H
I,
STYLE HAIRCUTTING
1.75
Robelle' 5 Beauty Salon .
In A
•
18431 MACK AVENUE
we
TU.2-4212
, of
FORMERL~
PHOTOGRAPH'ER
FOR
DEIGH.NAVIN
! '
...
because
our service ...
prescriptions.
that of the preparation"
of
YOUNGER SET DAYS
. JtlONDAYS and TUESDAYS
, . is a~ close as your telephone.
/)J"
II
. -il'fle.. ... JVaif'cul
"-0)
.'
GIRLS UNDEE~14
GIRLS 14 THRU 17-
Dial TU 1-1385 or TU 2~i 040 and we
wili extend
our efforts
.
.
A. J. l\1eyer Pharmacy
to serve you.
:Mack Avenue at Torrey.Rd.
Mack A v e n u e at Courville
..•••.•..
$\.00
$1.50
I
BY
•
TV 1-1385
•
TV 2-1040
PICK
"The" Bernard Hair Stylists
2 Locations to Serve You
.
20307 WEST 7 MILE
2 BLKS. N. OF 8 MiLE
ACROSS FROM CITY BANK
DETR.OIT, MICHIGAN
TUXEDO I-09!j3
18500M
KENWOOD 4-7630
.
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hen
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UP .
.
20845 MACK AVE.
GROSSE POINTE WOODS
.... _
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.
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I
I
I
Thursday, May 29, 1958
f-~S Woman's Page
r- .. ..
B. Our
I
!b
Guest
for
'_
\
~
t
~a\rOl\S
~eW
\ bulge, relieves
__ -"",'
nervous str~in
l...
",,"'---::-~
and te nsion.
Call for appointment
I
I
't
lmers
~eti.ng
Ij10on.
HOURS:
r (for
make
If
For Mrs. Trim-Open
Mon,. Wed.
and Thurs. 5:30 to 10; Saturday 1-5.
For Mr. Trim-Open Tues. and Fri.
9:00 to 9:00; Mon .. Wed. and Thurs.
9 to 5:30: Saturday
9 to 1:00.
:Jim
AND
405 Fisher Road
Rear Entrance
&
TUxedo 2.8440
Parking
an
Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Coburn of Edgewood drive, announce
the engagament
of
their daughter, JOAN, to Timothy Joseph Reardon, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Rear~
don of Santa Rosa avenue.
The bride-elect
will be a
June graduate of the' University of Michigan's College of
Literature,
Science and the
Arts. Mr. Reardon will receive
his Master's degree from the
. U n i ve r sit y of Michiganis
School of Business Administra, tion in June.
They plan an October wed.
ding.
1n the
ith the
nd un-
[he 17-
.:hair~'-:einr, vice
John
arnes,
ehrke,
nherr,
ed P.
mmer.
I
Charming
ns
e 4
Three
Bedroom
Southern
Colonial
Quick possession. $32,000 - Shown
by Appointment.
will
t'lusical
p'clock
pmen's
First
h.
serve
which
idents
Marie
ielaff,
Henry
roeder
WE
HAVE
MANY
OTHER
GROSSE
POINTE
A~ain this s~mer
the Ce~ter IS presentmg Mrs. CarrIe
Kiley as .instructor for: Bridge
L~s~ons 1~ the Center's highceIlmged lIbrary ~ooled by.the
breezes f~om Lake St. ClaIr.
Mrs. KIley ha.> taught at the.
Center for the past three sumd h
b'It
't
mers an.
as Ut
up ~UI
e
a .fo~lowmg of exce:dmgly
satisfIed
students.
Pnor
to
.
.
teachmg at the MemOrIal, Mrs.
Kiley taught for years at the
d
t
YW CA
th
Inown own
. . ..,
e
ternational Institute and Den-
HOUSES
Our system
of photographs
and small floor plor,s c0r:t
shorten time-consuming
period of preliminary
inspections.
MAXON
BROTH
83
ERS,
INC.
KE:RCI-U:VAL. AV!:NUE:
TuxtOO
zeooo
Thirteen
Full-Time,
----------~~
Informed Grosse
&
Pointe
46
1
&
Specialists
ncans
fic ac~
-
.
by' HIgh SchooL
There will be two classes in
bridge instruction. The beginners class will be Monday'
evenings beginning June 9 and
co.ltinuing through July 28.
An advanced cla~ will be
held on Tuesday mghts ,?eginning June 1Q and e~dmg
.Tuly 29. Both classes begm at
8 and last "till 10:30 o'clock.
The fee IS the same for both
beginners
~nd advanced ?tudents. It WIll, he $10 for eIght
lessons. MarrIed couples however may enroll together for a
total of $10.
,-----
DOLL~L\R VALUE-PLUS
In an emergency, the value of m~dicine
can hardly be reckoned in dollars.
Medicine is priceless when need~d.
Yet it is an interesting fact that nationally
the average cost of a pharmaceutical
prescriptian
is about 52.50 - and more than half
of all prescriptions
cost less than $2.00.
Although higher than 20 years ago, the increa~e
in the cost of medicine lags far behind
that of other, and less essential, commodities.
When you purchase a prescription,
your are sharing in the fruits of scientific
You are getting to day's best buy.
research.
Trail
P
H
c
A
Kercheval on the Hill
Hospital A ides
Pick Officers
Last week the annual meeting of the Bon See ours Hospital Assistance League was
held with the election of new
officers the main order of
business.
Mrs. Richard
C. Connelly
was named
president;
Mrs.
Evan P. Bayne. vice president;
Mrs. Eugene Fisher, recording
secretary; Mrs. W. C. Moesta,
treasurer, and Mrs. Thomas E.
Morris corresponding secretry.
Others are Mrs. John Hastings, membership
chairman;
Mrs. Harry Mack, publicity
chairman; Mrs. Cyril J. Burke,
historian;
Mrs, Thomas
J.
Murphy, parliamentarian;
Mrs.
Da:1iel Shea, ways an'd means,
and Mrs. William E. Imhoff,
... celebrity chairman elect.
I
I
THAT
I
I
I
RUGS BOUND
45c ~:~d
FAST SERVICE
McCOY & SONS
CARPET COMPANY
Films will be shown stressing individual responsibility in I OPEN THURS. AND FRI.
local and national government.
UNTIL 8:30 P.M,
T~e Republican
State Fed14301 E. WARREN
eratlon Conference to be held
Corner Lakewood
t G t' tIP
H
a
ra 10 nn at ort
uron
VA 2.4100
on June 11-12 will be discussed.
Board meeting is at 1.1 and Ii
san d w i c h luncheon at 12.
H
M d
G
ostess~s are
es ames
.
Sam ZIl1y,. Byron "C~ambers,
Fred SchneIder and MISS Ethel
Francis:
_
daughter-in-law,
the
SCRIPPS WILKINRumson, N. J., have
from Europe.
THIS IS ,rHE LAST YEAR
I
CARPETS and
The East Side Women's ~_
publican Club wiill hold its
mor,4:hly meeting on Friday,
June 6, at the 14th District
Headquarters;
E. Warren at
I
The A. D. WILKINSONS of
road,
and their
Lakeshore
son and
WARREN
SONS, of
returned
eHET SAMPSON
WILL C:ONDUCT HIS
Western Tour
THERE ARE A ~EW OPENINGS
.LEFT OIN BO'TH TOURS
A special showing
of the movies of the trip will take
piace in the Meeting Room of the Main Library at Kercheval and Fisher on
TUESDAY NIGHT, JUNE 3,
You are invired
to attend
JUNE 14 - JULY 18
JULY 26 • AUG. 29 Onf! FM Girls -
at
8 P.M,
this progra~
$410.00
Total.Price:
East Side Republican
Club Meeting June 6
Plans Benefit
'Beaconsfield.
Grosse PO-i-n-te-Farms chap-j
ter, Elizabeth Cass, National
Society
Daughters
of the
American Revolution, is havl'
1 k d
t be f"t
mg a
0, c oc
e~ser
ne I
card party, on Tuesday afternoon, June 10th in the home of
Mrs. Lee J. Engel, of Balfour
d
roaMrs.
. Charles R. Williams,
of BishOp road, is chairman for
the party
Assisting on her
"
M
J h
C?mmlttee are:
rs.
0 n E.
Fmch, of CadIeux road; Mrs.
. George G r i vas
of Rivard
boulevard
and Mrs. John H.
Howard, ~f Moran road.
The money raised from the
party is for the scholarship
fund in the Crossnore Mountain school for boys and girls.
Mrs. Genevieve Smiley, of
Chatsworth road, is Regent of
the Elizabeth
Cas~ Chapter,
Neff road, is chairman of the
and Mrs. Jesse W. Shields, of
Ways and Means Committee.
The Chapter is closing its
year's work' on l\!onday, June
4 with an 'annual luncheon
at 12:30 at the Woman's City
Club. Mrs. Oscar A. Marcus,
of Ellair place, is a member
of the arrangements
committee for the party.
The Valparaiso 'University
Guild, Detroit Chapter, will
hold its annual meeting on
Monday, June '2, at Redemption Lutheran
Church, East
Seven Mile road at Strassburg
avenue.
Luncheon
will be
served by the ladies of the
chu:r.ch at 11:30 a.m. and the
meeting will follow with Mrs.
Erwin Kurth, presiding.
Mrs. Leonard Aumann 01 the
Program
Committee
has arranged for the showing of the
very inspi,ring film of the "Life
of Helen Keller."
.
Members are reminded
t,o
return their Htte "Gold Bag"
at this time. The proceeds of
these bags will assist in the
completion of the new chapel
on the university
campus in
Valparaiso, Indiana.
This architectural tribute to the goodness of God. upon our co-educational Lutheran
university
will not be dedicated untH the
centennial year of 1959,. but
it is to be used. for Commencement this year.
Mr. a'nd Mrs. }""rank V.
Olds, oi Lexing.ton road, an.
nounce the engagement
of
their daughter,
DEN ICE
ANN, to Gerald L. Salter,
son of the Ray Salters, of
West~d
Villa,ge, Mich.
Both are alumn,i of Michigan State Uniyersity where
the bride-elect was a member of Kappa Delta and ner
fiance afftliated with Sigma
Chi. They will be married
in September.
Center Offers
i~~.on and Mrs. T. H. Roch-d
Brl ge Lessons DAR Chapter
Built 1951. Excellent condition.
~G
Girl Scout Troop 1596 of
Kerhy School is having a Court
of Aw~rds Ceremony on Tuesday evening, June 3, from 7
to 8:30 o'clock, to present proficiency badges to the ~irls
who have earned them. The
entire" troop is going to receive the "My 'T'roop Badge."
The girls' families ar.e invited
to watch the program and see
the troop 'advance into Junior
High Scouting.
The guest speakers will be
Nan-cy Eias,ton, a Mariner
Scout, and, Jane Evenden, a
Junior High Scout. They wilJ
talk about their e}OJ}erien-cesin
sCQuting. TlJere will .be exhibits of the'troop's handicraft
--plaster
C'aStts, photographs,
pottery, copper enameling, a.nd
other
projects
fl'om badge
work. As a community service
project,
the girls collected
comic books and magazines for
Herman Kiefer Hospital and
gave gifts to the patients of
the ,Grosse'
Point~ Nursing
Home.
Refreshments will be served,
pun'Ch, cupoakes and fudge,
made by the following gids:
Barbara Rochford, Carol Krae.
mer, Diane Hassig, Jeanne
Gerow, Judy Cudia, Lisbeth
Carson, Kathie O'Neil, Ten'Y.
Stacy, Suzanne Lehr, Mary
Trigg, and MM'Y Einfeldt. The
troop's leaders are Mrs. Harry
HAT HINT
Fabric and straw combinations are new in the hat picture this season, says Margaret
Werner, retailing instructor at
Michigan S tat e University.
Valpar,aiso University
Guild To H?ld ~eeting
Bride-Elect
To Girl Scouts
::Jnd the Tr',m
Automatic table
tor the middle
tor
lorial
110
To' Be Wed , To Give A.wards
a FREE
Page Fifteen
.'
HAND MASSAGE
~R£t \\1\Ca\l.e
C
G'H et
P 0 I,N T E 'N.E W S
by, ()f, al)d for Pointe 'Women
•••
Steam Cabinet
Professional
I
~~
G R 0 SSE.
For Girls Only
In two sections:
One Fot' Bo)'s
This tour covers 14 states and eight national parks:
y osemite, Yellowstone,
T etons, Bryce, Zion, Grand
Canyon, Mesa Verde, and Rocky Mountain
National
Parks; Hollywood,
San Francisco, Salt Lake City and
Lake, Las Vegas, Hoover Dam., Black Hills, Mt. Rush.
more, Badlands, Petrified Forest, Painted Desert, Laguna
Beach, Colorado Springs, and many more.
.
Applications
and In/ormation
A'f.,'ailable at:
Chel Sampson's Travel Service, Inc.
100 Kercheval Ave.
Phone: TU 5-7510
l'~~;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;=;;;~;;;~~;;;;;;~~~~;;;~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Room Size Carpet Remnants
All top grade
5100
All first quality ,
All nat'l known brands
Choice colors-limited
Po,lpo,d
PLYMOUTH PAVING CO.
P 0' Bo_ ~n
Pl YMOUTH. MJ..CHIGAN
Per Room
OPEN MON., THURS.• FRIDA'( TILL 9 P.M.
82 Page book With 15 eaSily understood work,
ing plans and Illustrations tells you simply h.ow
to build this beautiful solid m:sonry SWlfMHng
pool ••• water h!ler. slide. foot bowl. falls.
steps IS well as other useful hints, So, well
engineered 1I husband and Wife can bUild It.
Send only $2.00 to Engineering Depl.
S20d
quantity
Frank R. Brown
CARPET~i
18520 Mack al Touraine, Grosse PoinUe
TU 1.4484
--_._--
Woods Garden.
CI U b t 0 M ee t
-
The Grosse Pointe Woods
Garden Club will meet June
3 in the Lochmnoor boulevard
home of Mrs. Arthur E. Hirt.
Mrs. Arthur Swanson
and
Mrs. Charles L. Brownell will
assist in serving a salad luncheon at 12:30 o'clock.
your day
of days
zn
informal
•
ortralts
FUR STORAGE
In Addition to doing the Finest Cleaning,
we like to give the Very Best. Service!
lJlN
Dad escorts you up the
aisle ... the clergyman
intones the se'rvice ... you
and your new husband are
whisked away - these most
precious moments are best
saved for future.years in
ph~tographs by our studio.
Arid your album of informal
photographs will help to
make each happy anniversary
more mea"ningfull
YS
t
00
50
f
PICK
:S
c
....
NK
UP AND
:JU 2-8120
DELIVERY
llpper maek Cleaners
GROSSE POI NTE
18500 MACK .AVE., at Cloverly Rd.
with.
an' :I.IISrA.LO~
Bransby
. _~~~~~_ .. _ .. rl_
7
STUDIO
M ore Jr~
because we help mort peopl.6
20083 Mack Ave. . TU 1-1336
-in Ih. W ooJj
NATIONA~L BANK
OF
CLOSED MONDAYS
Srrld_ddC<ddrrdCd.rrdd.r.<
Onebenefit
'.
,.
Ji.... ,..".
h._..~
DETROIT
.DepoeI
1m
",
lit
I,
L
_.. An iNSTALOA~, exclusivewith National Bank of Detroit. pil~
right on 'top of the other and delivers them t~ you at a reasonable cost Look: It's fast-can be approved in the same day. It's
convenieilt-you
can choose a repayment schedule to suit your needs and make payments b}' mail or in person at any of our61
friendly offices. It's.economical-you 'get low bank rates.and for a slight additional charge you can even include life insurance to
cover the unpaid balan'c~; Insist on INSTALOAN, the eas~, low-cost way to finance your automobile. Ask us or your car dealerfor details.
'••
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Page Sixteen
GROSSE
IBlack Knights
BeateR in. Two,
by fRED RunnHLS. ::~:~:
Purdy Cracks State Mile.
Record in Ann Arbor Meet
Remington "Skinny" Purdy did what was expected
of him in the State Class A track meet at Ann Arbor last
Saturday, May 24, when he made shambles of the StHte
mile record with a blazing 4:21.8. The old mark was set
by Gerald Zitney of Fordson in 1953, who toured the
distance in 4:28.8.
POI.-NTE
NEWS
Thursd~
Thursday, May 29, 1958
Laker Champions Honored At Sports Banquet
Banter
Boat
The Black Kniglhts- of GPUS
dropped two" ball' games last
week to run their losing mark
to 8 in 11 con tests this spring.
GPUS drtllpped a lopsided
12-5 decision to ':Lanse Cruese
on the latter's di,amond on
Tuesday, May 20. Nine GPUS
errors and 10 Cruese hits off
losing pitcher Joel Gershenson
~ontributed to the defeat.
The '.winning pitcher was
John Stevens who held GPUS
to 8 hits whie striking out six.
The leading hit t e r was
Cruese's Peter Boone, who collectedthree
hits in four trips
to the plate.
The Kni~hts dropped a 9-8
'heartbreaker to Southlake on
Friday, May 23, on the winner's field. The Knights lost
the game in the seventh inning to the Bi-County League
ohampions when Joe Clemen
led off with a double, moved
to third on an infield outadn
seored .on Gymi Mussellis'
single to left.
Jim Oregan Wus the winning
pitcher who came on in relief
in the sixth inning. He was
the fifth Southlake pitcher to
work that day. The Southlake
hurlers gave up 8 runs on 11
hits and struckout 5. Gregg
Dodds went al the way for
GPUS and gave up 9 runs on
11 hits and struckout 5.
. By Ft'ed Runnells
Memioral Day w ill get the
1958 boating season off to a
flying start. The D€troit Yacht
Club, which traditionally gets
the season underway with'its
Memorial Day rega tta for sail
boats on Lake St. Clair will
again fire the first cannOn of
t.he season. Race chairman Sid
Warner will shoot the warning gun at 10:30 a. m. and
every five minutes thereafter
a gun will be fired until all
22 classes have been started.
The wind wagon fleet will
sail a new Detroit
River
Yachting Association
course
established by course chairman
Maury deClercq which has
been moved approximately a
mile and a quarter closer to
the entrance of the Detroit
River.
~.
.
seen all winter long. But GEE
it was a good party, -
...
~
...
YOUR AD
The Detroit River, all the
way to Trenton, will be a
seething turmoil as upwards to
150 outboard marathon drivers
get the 1958 season underway
in the Detroit Times-Belle Isle
C>utboard Club 50-Mile marathon, on Memorial Day.
Already
e n try.
chairman
Edythe Forcier has received
entries from drivers from New
York, Pennsylvania, C>hio, Illinois, and Wisconsin in addition' to entries from all over
Michigan.
There will be prizes for the
winners in all seven classes
which will get their starts of!
Memorial Park, at the foot ot
Burns drive in Detroit .. The
course will take the "buzz
wagons" down the river to II.
turning point near Trenton,
and return
to the original
starting point. Each class will
be ,staggered so as not to interf~re with each other.
The United States Coast
Guard will patrol the course
along the American
shore
where spectators can witness
the event from Memorial Park,
Owens Park, Belle Isle, foot
of West. Grand boulevard, foot
of Southfield, Bishop Park in
Wyandotte and Elizabeth Park
in Trenfon.
CLASS
Ch~rge Ad~.
C~sh AdsSe e~ch
TUXE
3 ':
LINE:
CUNNINGH/\
16941
HARKNESS
Purdy amazed th.E'spectators being questioned, as H is not
when he broke first, turned k
'f 't .
t bI' h d .
in a 58-second first quarter . nown 1 1 was es a IS e m
and was never headed as he dual meet competition. All naNew brightly painted mark!
!;napped the tape a good 50 tional marks must be made
will greet the sailors as they
yards ahead of second place I in meets where four or' more
navigate their respective triJerry Bashaw of Lincoln Park teams compete.
angular COUl"Sewhich are enand Larry Beamer of Pontiac.
Purdy's individual
victory
tirely on the Canadian side of
Purdy. had met both of these coupled with the Blue Devil's.
the shipping channel. The 15
-Fred Runnells Photo
lads m dual meets during medley relay team c.~"RonHarmile
course "E" will be markEach Spring the St. Paul Dads
boys and' HELEN VANDERMARthe. season and drubbed them per, Dick Kn~pp, Terry Donoed
with
ORANGE markers;
Club stages its annual Athletic Sports
LIERE topped the girls. Shown left to
eaSIly.
van and Dave Mawhinney
the
9
mile
"D'
'course will have
Banquet to honor 'the athletes of Sf.
rlght:-are
JOE LOUWERS, GLENN
Ranks High Nationally
which broke the Grosse Point~
YELLOW
markers;
the 6 mile
Paul School. Featuring the awards on
WALTERS,. former winners of 'the
Rem's new record stands as school record with a 2:32.1
"0" course will ha7~ WHITE
Sunday, May 25, were the two perone of the four best in the gave the Devils a tie for sevDick Faber trophy, BE A U PRE,
markers and the new 3 mile
nation. The best being posted enth place with Lansing Sexpetual trophies presented to the most
COACH ED LAUE,R,MISS VANDERJunior course will be identified
by a prep fr9m Oregon who ton and Grand Rapids Catholic
outstanding athlete-scholars. R U S S
rYIARLIERE a.nd TIM HUTTON, new
with BLUE markers.
covered the distance in 4:13.2 Central. The Devils' relay. time
BEAUPRE
eal'ned
the
award
for
the
The starting line wilJ be
State
Class
C
mile
champion.
and a lad from Illinois who placed
third
hehind
Flint to 6 win over the St. Paul's
marked
with either RED or
has a mark of 4:16,0. The Central and 'Birmingham with Saints, after being rained out
GREEN
maTkers
and this will
in
the
second
inning
on
openleagues
in
the
Pointes
which
between
the
Tigers
and
Red
'Mike McDonald, of the Pirates,
mark by the Oregon lad is 10 points.
• * *
ing day with Wichita. Kerry will be announced in the News Sox. 'Excellent fielding by both and Joe Brady and Mike Van~ depend upon which way the
Windmill
Pointe Yacht Club
teams resulted in a 5-5 tie at Deginste, of the Dodgers.
Luber. was the pitcher and Bob on Thursday, June 5.
judges decide t~ send the fleet
will
stage
a "Race Kick-off
around th~ course. If stakes
6 innings, which was broken
Grosshans, catcher, were ably
CITY
Four
~ams
remained
ul)deto
port,
the
line
will
be
be.Party"
at
the
club on Wecnessupported by all their teamSteady pitching and good, in the 9th by a two run homer feated in ~he two Collegiate tween the judge's boat and the
day,
June
4.
at which time
mates both in the field and at all-around early season play by Tiger pitcher Tom Baranek. Leagues after seven games.
final
preparations
for the 12th
RED
bouy.
If
to
starboard,
it
The game between the Yankbat.
featured
the first week of
Stin carrying perfect records will be between the judge's Annual Detroit Me m 0 ria I
The Columbus Jets flew into comp'etition in the Grosse ees and Indians was another were Fordham and Harvard at boat and the GREEN bouy. (power) Regatta will be anthe Richmond Virginia home Pointe 'City Little League as thriller, as the Yankees re- the top of the Northern Con- No course n.lmbers will be dis- nounced. .
grounds at Ghesquiere Thursh the Braves and Cardinals each mained in front, when they ference with two victories played from the judge's boat
WOODS - SHORES
Denver
8
ciay May 22 and after four inn- scored two victories, one each stopped a four run rally by e.ach.. and Alabama and Caro- "as has been the practice in
~Iajor League Standings
Louisville
5
ings of fast and furious' ball over the winless Cubs. and the Indians in the 6th innings. IIna at the toP. of the Sou.them past years.
American
Buffalo
The National League sea- Conference With one VIctOry I The Memorial Day regatta
5
flew off into the night with Dodgers.
Athletics
2
o
Montreal
3
their jet streams showing a 22
One-hit pitching by Greg son got under way with a bang each.
will slee the introduction of a
Orioles
2
o
Richmond 15
III
to 17 victory. The Jets opened Miller c~'rried the Braves ~o as the first two batters for
Summaries
MAJOR
LEAGUES
new
class. Cruising D, which
Indians
1
.1
Toront'o
14
the battle by straffing home a ~-O WIn. over the Cubs In the Phillies, Don Wenzel and
Yankees
1
14
1
will sail under the new PerFortified with seven cinderColumbus
plate for one run in the top theIr opemng game. Catcher Jim Swink, hit home runs over
Braves
4
6
0
formance Handicap ~ystem and
Red Sox
1
1
Havana
9
of the first. The Rebels came Barry Trombly slammed a the fence. A three run homer
men, Grosse Pointe University
Dodgers
2
7
0
not under the Cruising Club School finished nineteenth in
Tigers
0
2
Rochester 25
right back with heavy AA towerin~ 3-ru homer for the by Jim Turner of the Pirates
Giants
16
3
2
measurement
rating.
was
not
enough
to
subdUe
the
Montreal
National
11
fire that scored eight dir~ct Braves In their. second game
Cards
6
4
2
Ready
and
waiting for an- the State Class D track chamPhillies
who
went
on
to
win
Miami
Braves
2
9
hits on home plate.
to help them defeat the ~od.
o
OrIoles
11 10
1
other exciting season. and a pionships held Saturday, May
.
. . gers 8-4. It was the C 1 t Y by a score of 11 to 10,
Buffalo
Cubs
1
8
1
Yankees
4
3
4
I chance to defend their DRYA May 24.
_.H~w.ev.er, thIS looked lIke league's first homer of the
The game between the Reds
Havana
Dodgers
1
8
1
GPUS was figured to be
Indians
13
11
1
championships
are Nub b y
\
Irglma
peanu.ts
wh~n
the
Jets
year.
and Giants -was a pitchers
Toronto
7
Giants
1
much
stronger in the State
1
Yankees 10
8
0
Sarns'
Class A "Revelry";
came back. With mne bombs
Johnny Schmatz was the big duel ending in a 2 to 1 vicColumbus 20
Phillies
1
1
meet after winning their reGiants
4
2
4
Hank Burkard's Class B "Meon target m the. second f?l- gun for the Cardinals ag he tory for the Reds. The Red's
Richmond 17
Cards
0
gional but only two boys
2
lowed .by ~hree In the third ~itched a 3-0 shutout over the pitcher, Allan Spa u 1 din g,
Dodgers
0
0
3
teor III" ,a,nd Tomm~,r,Hanson's placed in the finals. Dick JohnRochester
Results
12
Athletics 17
9
0
CI
C D
tl
an~ nme III the four:th; es- Dodgers in the Card's first cinched it in the 'first inning
ass
aun ess.
I son paced fifth in the broad
. Miami
Amerkan
8
peclally ,;he~ Br.uce Zmk the game arid homered with a man with his own two run homer.
... ...
Senators
1
2
2
... * *
jump and Dick Strother was
Athletics.
4
6
squadron
s
pltchmg
I
e,a
d
e
r
on
two
nights
later
to
lead
The
Summaries
are:
Red
Legs
13
7
3
There
was
a
sad
note
aboard
sixth in the pole vault.
Indians
3
14
A "Grand Slam" home run overcame b~ttle ~hock III the the Cardinals to a 6-2 win
CardS
3
3
3
Nubs
Sarns'
"Revelry"
last
Tom Schanke the GPUS exAMERICAN
LEAGUE
John Gilmore, winnlng'pitch- by Grei Reynolds in the fifth
second and silenced Rich- over th€:,Cubs.
Braves
3
5
0
Sa!urday,
May
24.
Baron
Von
change
student,
broke the
Tigers
7
17
0
.r; John Knock, losing pitcher. inning gave the Braves a 5
m?ild's
AA
guns
through
the
As
testimony
to
the
,steady
Pirates
2
3
1
Sklppenhaus
passed
away
the
school's
mile
record
with II.
Red
Sox
5
5
2
Orioles
3
2
•
to
victory over the Cubs third.
pitching,
the
h\lIler3
in
the
Athletics
15
10
2
night
before.
The
Baron,
time
of
4:54.0
but
this
was
Winning
Pitcher
Tom
BaTigers
2
4
in the opening game, which
The Rebels got theii" gUI1S first four games gave up only ranek;
Orioles
2
0
2
known
to
everyon,?
on
the
good
for
only
seventh
place.
losing
pitcher,
Ken
Marsh Moser, winning pitch- was rescheduled from Sunday.
Whit~ Sox 10
8
0
river, was better known as
_
going again in the fourth when 35 hits 26 runs, aHowed only Smolarek.
~r; Chuck MeFeeley, losing Gary Dlouhy, the winning
Columbus
changed
pitching
25
bas~
on
balls
and
struck
Senators
6
3
0
Skippy
and
he
was
the
only
Yankees
11 11
3
pitcher,
pitcher, allowed three hits and commanders and sh~t down out 54 batters.
Giants
3
7
0
sailing canine that has looked
Indians
10
7
3
Yankees-Red Sox - Called struck out ten, while getting
nine scores before the battle
In fielding, only 17 errors
Red
Legs
2
3
3
at more said boat spar:; than I
Winning pitcher Tom Carl;
Jack Pioh, winning pitcher; three hits himself.
Rifle ranges, skeet,
ended when Richmond's first were committed, very few for losing pitcher, Dave Hughes.
Athletics
14
9
0
trees,
Skippy suffered a heart
Danny Pool, losing pitcher.
trap, and pistol shootThe Cubs pitcher, G;.ry Filu- base coach (who shall remain the first 'week of the season
Yankees
3
3
3
attack after having an exciting
STANDINGS
'
ing within 25 minute8
Athletics
4:
5
pait. gave up six hits while nameless) inadvertently
got when many youngst&s are Tigers
drive of Gr. Pointe.
Braves
5
3
2
romp with some rabbits on the
,
" 1
o
Tigers
1
7
Gun
s hop
carries
striking out eleven Braves and hit on the head by a pop foul playing in LiJttle League comCards
2
3
2
Sarns'
estate
on
the
banks
of,
Yankees
..,
1
o
complete line huntGary Shirilla, winning pitrh- walking only two.
which Bill Kuritz, the Jet's petition for the first t,ime.
ing equipment
and
Pirates
8
11
0
the St. Clair river.
Indians
0
1
•
•
oil
~r; John. Zimmerman, losing
cloth i n g. Telescope
Dodgers
4
7
4
*
*
•
wing first baseman. was chas~ox scores for last week's Red Sox
0
1
and iron sights sold
pitcher,
The Braves again showed ing. The umpire Joe Merki- games:
Indians
11
9
1
and installed.
ExNATIONAL LEAGUE
Auntie Ruth and Uncle Toot
Orioles
11 13
batting
power
as winning vitz called the batter Fansler
perts on hand at all
White Sox 1
1
0
Cardinals
2
3
1
Reds
2
5
2
Gmeiner
had a wonderful
times to "sight in"
Red Sox
1
2
pitcher John Gates and Greig out on the coaches' interierDodgers
3
0
4
Giants
1
3.
0
The Standings
gathering of yach1.men and I v()ur rifle or to help
Greg Moser, winning pitch- Reynolds hit homers to pace ence.
you decide on your
Winning P~tcher, John SchAMERICAN LEAGUE
Winning pit c her,
Allan
their ladies at the annual
er; Mike Balleaua, losing pitch- a twelve hit attack and lead
hunting equipment.
Capt. Kerry Kirsten, flying matz, struck out 9, walked ~paulding; losing pitcher Walt
Spring Gizmo at the Little
AthletiC'S 3
0
er.
the Braves to a 22-3 victory left wing, caught a beautiful none. Losing pitcher. Bob Gier- Hageman.
MAPLE(), ..
Club
last Saturday, May 24.
Indians
2
1
YankeeJ\ 10
8
over the Cards. John Reynolds, game and along with Kunitz man. struck out 6, walked one.
Phillies
10
8
3
The
ladies
looked
like
new
White Sox 2
1
GROVE "~~ ..?I
Red Sox
8
1
Braves catcher, hit safely four boomed out a double' and a
Braves
4
3
2
Pirates
9
9
4
born butterflies in their beauC>rioles
1
1
Terry O'Hanisian, winning times and nll the Braves saw single. Robbie Zinz, Brian McCubs
1
0
3
Winning pit c her,
Steve
tiful gowns. Actually we doubt
Senators
2
0
pitcher; Jim Chandler, losing action, including nine-year-old Donald and Phil Hodgeman
Winning pitcher, Greg Mil- Bachle; losing pitcher, R,on
and Shoo~ng Range
if
any of their sailor husbands
Yankees
0
3
pitcher.
Paul Moran.
each scored three runs for the ~er, struck out 9, walked one: Loosevelt.
noticed
.the
new
fashion
de21.Mile Rd. at Gratiot
NATIONAL LEAGUE
National
Three Card pitchers, Tom flyboys.Losing
pitcher, Dave Sachs,
STANDINGS
signs
as
they
were
busy
reFour
Miles North of Mr. Clemens
Braves
4
0
Dodgers
9
,8
Kull, Bob Brownscomb, and
The Virginians showed a struck out 6, walked 2.
Reds
1
o
Grosse Pointers can take Harper
newing
acquaintances
with
old.
Giants
3
0
Cards
6
7
Jack Conley tried to halt the very tight inner defense but
Braves
8
8
2.
Phillies
' 0
to Beach Highw/llY. to U S. 25
1
sailing buddies they hadn't
Pirates
1
1
Carl Meiel', winning pitch- Braves hitting spree but the sixteen paS'Sed through the
' Dodger
6
4
3
Giant
\
0
1
Red Legs 1
2
er: Harry Momberger, losing ball didn't bounce right at any line along with nine rocketing
Winning pitcher, Bruce Har- Pirates
,
0
1
Cards
0
3
pitcher.
. time.
hits proved too much. Wag- per,. stru.ck out 4, walked 6.
Dodgers
0
3
Giants
8
7
... • ..
ner, Franklin
and Colonial Losmg pitcher, Dave Aronson,
PARK
, Phillies
1
4
Columbus Jets enjoyed a Calhoun each fired two hits struck out 7, walked 6.
Collegiate Leagues
Two no-hit pitching per-'
for
Tom Reed, winning pitcher; very pleasant visit from the through the Jets defense as
Ca'rdinals
8
6
1
Harvard
11
3
1
formances featured the first
Russ Stricker, losing pitcher. Sugar Kings Havana Tuesday the Rebels picked up a total
C.ub~
. 3
2., 1
Evansville
8
6
1
full week. of competition in the
Children of Grosse Pointe Park Residents
Braves
5
6
~ylor
.
. 11
4
3
evening May 20 at Parcells, of ten along with six. walks.
Wmnmg pitcher, Mike La- Grosse Pointe
Park
Little
Ages 5-12
Cubs
4
3
winning 14 to 9. Havana was'
oil
...
...
Rue, struck out 10, walked 5. League, which wound up with
Kentucky
10
8
2
Small Classes
Red Cross Certificates
Gary Dlouhy. winning pitch- far superior making plays at
Individualized instruction
C>n Thursday ilight May 22 Losing pitcher, Don McQueeny, three teams still undefeated.
Fordham
7
7
1
Awarded
er; Gar y Filupait,
losing the bases, but Columbus gave the. Havana' Sugar Kings de- struck out 3, walked' 3.
Illinois
6
8
0
Remaining in the unbeaten
Enroll Now for 15 Lessons
pitcher.
them opportunity by putting feated Toronto by a score of
Note: A Memorial Day dou- class as of May 24 were the
Alabama
9
9
0
Classes conducted by certified Red Cross Water Safety Instructor
Giants
3
7
--4 years experience Waterfront Director New England boys'
20 runners on base, 11 by way 8 to 7. The game was played ble header \ViIi be played Fri- Braves and the Giants in the
Duke
0
0
0
. camps-now teaching in Grosse Pointe Public School System.
Cubs
10
6
of hits, seven 'of which were at Barnes Field and some pf day, May 30. The Dodgers and National League with four and (Duke forfeited for using inCall ED 1-3403 after I p.m. week~days, any time
Bill
Freedman,
winning for extra. bases.
the interesting points are as the Cardinals will meet in the three victories, respectively,
eligible pitcher.)
Saturday or Sunday, for further intormatlon.
pitcher; Gary Nolan, losing
Bowers was the big gun for follows:;.
first game starting at 1 p.m. and the Athletics :n the AmerHarvard
9
9
o
pitcher.
the Kings getting a double and
The score see-sawed "back The Braves and Cubs will ican League.
Great Lakes
4
4
o
Braves
22
12
a triple. He also made the and forth a total of rour times square off in the second' game
Carolina'
37 13
1
The Athletico, in winning
Cards
3
7
only double play of the game with first Havana and then at 3 p.m. Thegarnes will be three straight gam~s, gave a
Baylor
'13 12
3
PICK UP YOUR PHONE.
John Gates, winning pitcher; unassisted when he took Kir- Toronto going ahead. Paul De- played on the Grosse Pointe convincing display of power
Fordham
13
3
2
CALL TR. &-7283
FOit
Tom Kull, losing pitcher.
st,en's pop fly and tagged Zink Griek 12 year old Havana Little League diamond, Char- at the plate, which aln'ady has
Evansville
9
9
2
Dodgers
2
4
coming back to second.
shor't stop hit a total of three levoix and Neff. _L
marked them as the team to
The Standings
Phi llie s
6
5
DeGriek and Kefgen also did home runs. His most Important
"
STANDINGS
beat in the American circuit.
NORTHERN CONFERENCE
Bruce Darlington, winning some sweet swatting for the home run coming with two out ~Brav~s
2
0
Rolling up 46 runs in three
Fordham
2
0
pitcher; Richard Rozycki, los- Sugar Kings. l\!eadowsj the in the last of the sixth inning Cardmals ..,
2
games, they defeated the. SenIs your filter equipment in'good operating
Harvard
2
0
ing pitcher.
'losing pitcher, had the mis- and Havana trailing by one . Cubs
0 _ '" ator~, 17 to 1,' the C>:rioles,15
condition? W~ provide quick service on
Great
Lakes
0
1
American Association
fortune of facing a fired up run.
D~dgers
0
2 to 2,and the Yankees, 14 to 3,
.any make of saTld-type filter J including
Illinois
0
1
Charleston
2
{)
bunch ()f Jets who belted him
Havana had one man on base
quartz, sand. stone, other filtering material.
while committing only two
Evansville
0
2
Denver
2
0
60 Ytterrs ,n Detroit
for eight runs in the first inn- when young DeGriek came io
Th
G FARMS
P . t
F
misplays in the field.
SOUTHERN
CONFERENCE
Dft;g"*" and Monufoduren
C>maha
1
0
Atpletie Pitcher Tom m y
ing. After that he held them bat., Havana Coac~ Mr. Tom Littl: Le~~~~eope~~de its a1~~
Wichita
1
0
Alamaba
1
0
d 'season, Saturday., May 24, with Thompson was perhaps the
to one tally until the bottom DaVIS asked Pa.ul I~ he thaDe~
HYGIEIA FILTER CO.'
St. PaulI'
1
Carolina
1
0
biggest
individual.
contributor
of the fifth, when Columbus 3r~ h?me run m hIS ba .
a parade <?n FIsher road to
3422 Denton Aven"e, Detroit 11, Michigan
Indiana polis
0
1
Baylor
1
1
iced it with five more runs. ~nek~, reply wa~ a very con~ th~ Little Lea'gue Field on the to his team's success, pitching,
Louisville
0
2
Duke
0
1
Needless to say steadier sup- fldent Of Course. and he pro-. Grosse Poirute High field 0PPo- a n07hit game against the
Mil':neapolis
0,
2
Kentucky
0
1
port by both teams would ceeded to prove It. He .batted site the Punch and Judy Thea- Orioles, and aiding h7.s own
International
have helped hold down the in a total of 5 runs m the ter.
'
cause against bot.h the Orioles
o
Columbus
2
score.
• .gam~...
Following the parade all the and Athletics with a home run
5
Yankees
2
Columbus started Jimmy AIWm1?'mg p~tcher was .N~r- major teams played games in each game.
12
Indians
1
The leading home run Hitter
len on the mound and while he man DICk, a SIde arm specIaII~t which proved to be thrillers to
Rochester
2
o
allowed three runs 011 five who .has found .control thIS the last innings.
at the end of the first week ()f
Buffalo
1
1
was G reg
hits in three innings, he kept year. Steve Bowers started, for
After the flag raising /by the play, however,
Havana
1
1
the situation well in hand by Havana but ~as relie~ed in t~e 5th Army Command Color Smith, of th.e Giants, who conCity'VVide and All Suburbs
Paced
by Tim H:ltton's
Richmond
1
1
striking out six. Phil Hodge- fourth by DICk. Losmg th~Ir Guard, the pledge of allegiance tributed three round-trippers
sparkling
'victory
in
the
mile
1
Miami
1
man who was the Jets' star second straight game was no was given a sthe uniformed to his team's 16 to 6 victory run in the State Class C track
Montreal
0
2
• RESIDENTIAL
clouter, getting a sIngle,- two discredit to Toronto since there players stood at attention' on over the Cards in the operiing meet last. Saturday; May 24,
Toronto
0
2
doubles and a triple, pitched is no defense for the home run. the ~-Field.. The drawing for game. for each of these squads: the St. Paul Lakers tied with
• COMl\IERCIAL
Results
the last three stanzas and
Bob. Crawford, manager of lucky winners of television sets
The second no-hitter of the Oreh~rd Lake St. Mary and
....
Omaha, Wichita - Called while rather I:tenerous with the Toronto, has a fine team and sent a colored set to little Jane week was turned in by Dur•
INDUSTRIAL
Saginaw
SS
Peter
and
Paul
at
St. Paul
4
Annie Oakleys, handing out will get on the winning track Lord and a portable set. to ward Decavitte also of ~.the 6 points in the "29school meet~
Minneapolis 2
COMMERCIAL
seven, he was stingy with the soon we believe. This proved J 0 h ~ Murphy. Autograpihed Giants,. who blanked'the Dod- for 13th place.
'"
Charleston 19
hits allowing only three.
' to be one of the most exciting baseballs were given six boys gers while his 'mates werecolHutton became the class of
:Louisville
0
SATISl:ACTION GUARANTEED
Kerry Kersten, the Jets cap- games ev.er played in the In- having' done an outstanding lecting ~our runs. ,
the
field with a 4:42.3' which
Denver
13
tain and Bobby Stall- shared ternational league.
job on the ticket donations. . In all, there were. 13 home
Neorly a quarter of a century of erecting fences of all types.
Indianapolis 3
the catching and showed a lot
--These included Dave kUard, runs in the 15 games played. was ~the best time he, has
Wichita
18
of hustle for two boys whv
As a tribute to Little League Bill :Remick, Tom Carl, Frank Aside from those already men- turned in this year)n an unMinneapolis 6
had never worked behind the Baseball June 14 has been pro~ Wilberding, Bill Lindy, and tioned, . there were two' by' defea ted personal campaign,
St. Paul
10
plate prior to this season.
claimed Little League Day Dennis Pishula.
,_OFFICE & YARD ~ 18569 CONANT
Bruce Myers, of the Senators,
Omaha
6
* ... •
throughout. the nation. EXJtenThe American League race and one each by Bob Purcell,
J Blocks Soutk of 7 Mile Road
Sa~e, yours~1f useless wor;y
Charleston 13
On May 21 the Omaha Card- sive pLans axe currently bei~g I:tot off to an exciting start of the Bra~es; Bob France, of by letting others ~rry
about
Detroit 34, Mich.
inals earn. through with a 10 fOImulated
throughout
i h e with an ext-ra innini ball iame the, Reds; . Jeff Thomu and their own affairs,
Indianapolis 1
'IOU 4-3100
KINSELS
17051 Kercl
TU 5-4827
lA-PERS1
NEED a b~
nursemai~
hour, da;)
ity help i
ters Clu~,
BOOKKEE:~
service
Your off:
TU 1-955]
DP,IVING J.
Driving S
lice instn
up. LAkE1
HOW'.'
CONVAL:
If you have
lecting a SL:
home for r
send for fr~
obligation. 1
to the East'
which is op
Pointer at
Boulevard.
Jefferson 1
way betw€
and downto
the-clock 1
maintained
nurse in c,
of the boc
8-0436 or V
GPUS Is 19th
State Meet
I
r:
1B-ENTEf
AAR
AT!'
.
Call us no.
. a.nd summ~
TO 5-2990
2A-Musr
INST
SPORTSMEN
SUMMER'
piano Ie:
classical.
TUxedo 1
2_TUTO
CO
TUTOR
I
Private Swimming
MRS, LOUIS
Tutoring
by ,
. able in 011 Sl.
5chool, colle
tion,
\&~,.
GUN SHOP
OPENINGS
33~ Merriwe
TUx
PRIVA
YOUR
All subject;;
and childrc
Lessons
ers.
DETRC>IT
TUTC>E
WO 3-8315
3-LOST
LOST: Boy
Grosse p,
TU. 5-702
FOUND-B
frames, \
Circle. T
I"
4-HELP
MALE;
.CIiiii ~
Swimming Pool.Water Filters
Pool Cleaners • Accessories
?
H l!tton Wins
MEN-F(
5 men to :
positions ir;
lar nationa:
$500
B. V
TUl
EXPERIEN
teacher 1
week in t'
ative m:
5-0331, Tl
lIercury Fence Co.
Class C Mile
I
A SMf,
25 to 50, iJ
ing profe;
first tin:
opr
pany
dei
as import
perience.
TUxed'
TWir.brook 3-6060
I
ment
Flexible
helpfuL
• PLAYGROUNDS
..
to $12(
your nstrt •
Earn whilE
into lifetim
income and
I
FlEN(;ES
Mus:
Orch!
A-I
'*
I
MATURE
companion
read, wr ..
driver'g
hours or
ences. V~
p.m.
.
•
'.
,
,Il.
••••
\
.'
"
I.'
....- ;"""'tSz if.ini •
iriss
=t
hehc
»
'M itr _ *tc ........
__
...
+en
!en
-em....
b
b)"
...
.... .... ......
'.........
>n=e __
...............
~....-.....
---......-.....
-...
~
.
----.....
t
20313 Macl:
Little League
Baseball
I
KerCJl
TU 5-9698
c. ,.". _
•
958
Thursday, May' 29, 1958
G R 0 55 E PO I N TEN
EW S
Page Seventeen
-
•
ut GEE
\
YOUR AD CAN 8E CHARGED
all the
: be a
~'ards to
drivers
Iderway
elle Isle
~ mara\,
J
CLASSIFIED RATES
Ch~rge Ads-IS words for $1.00
Cash Ads- i 5 words for 90c
Se each addition~1 word
.
over
for the
classes
;arts off
foot
of
>it. ,The
~ "buzz
:er to a
[renton,
original
ass will
to in-
t
r.
Coast
~ course
shore
.Nitness
al Park,
:le, foot
ird, foot
!Park in
rth Park
~htClub
Kick-off
Weclnesh time
he 12th
orial
be an-
th
et
cinderivusity
enth in
It chamy' May
r
to be
State
and Female
SECRETARY WANTED
- City of
Grosse Pointe F~rms
GIRL-For
general office
workmust have fair knowledge of shorthand
and
good typist. Interested persons may apply'at the City
Office, 90 Kerby Road,
between 8:30 A.M. and 4:30
P.M. Monday through Friday, Wednesday until 6:00
P.M., or call TUxedo 56600 for application form.
3 Trunk Lines
LINER STATIONS
C,UNNINGHAM
DRUGS
16941 K('Icheval
TU 5-9698
HARKNESS
"I'U
at Notre Dame
PHARMACY
20313 Mack
Ave.
at
LochmoO\.
4-3100
KINSELS
17051 Kercheval
TV
at
St.
.
1----------.----
Call
TUXEDO 2-6900
-lairman
~eceived
)m New
lhio, 11in addiill
14-Help Wan+ed"";'Male
.
Clair
5-4827
"
CALL,TUxedo 2~6900
Thr••• Trunk Lines to Serve You Quickly
6-FOR
5A-..:>SITUATIONS WANTED 6-FOR RENTDOMESTIC
(Unfurnished)
.
EXPERIENCED colored womHI,1 wishes day work, Mon~
. day, Tuesday and Wednesday, or by week. Call alfter
4:30 p.m. LOooin 7-5637.
'Three Trunk Lines to Serve You Quickly
RENT~
a-ARTICLES
(Unfurnished)
"
GROSSE POINTE
RIVARD: Blvd .. 414. Unusually attractive terrace,
. 3 bedrooms, two barth'splus
- maids quarters, good condition, two-car y ar age,
EXPERIENCED wOlJl~mwants
day work, cleaning pre ..
rental $200 per me. Open
daily. WO. 1-1507.
ferred. Good references. ED
..
1~0335.
.'
o
•
5-6523.
-I
FOR SAtE
_8_-_A_R_TI_C_L_ES......,....-FO_U
__S_A_L_E '-ARTICLES
AUTO DRIVERS-Only
$9.16
NEARLY new
modern
qU0rterly
~uyg $10,000Grosse Pointe Farms home,
$20,000 Bodily Injury and
4 bedrooms and study, 2
$5,000 Property Damage Li.:.
baths, enclosed breez,eway,
ability. Tp 1-2376.
2 car attached garage, gas TRADE-IN sofas and chairs.
. heat, lao::ge grouI\ds. Near
schools, churches, shopping
All in nice condition. Reacenters and transportation.
sonacly,priced.
Van Upl101Available i m me d i:a tel y.
stering Co.. 13230 Harper.
Shown by appointment only.
Op~n 9 'til 9.
Call TUxedo 1-5980 or TUxVACUUM BARGAINS
edo 4-1504.
......-_______
Rebl.ilts 1year guarant,ee
EXCELLENT cook (white), APARTMENT on Cadieux betw,e~n Harper,.,:and Morang.
desires position with family
,Living r.oom, bedroom;bath,
6A-FOR.RENT FURNISHED
spending season at summer
..and kitchen alcove .. Stove,
----.,--------home. Will do light house- I
.refrigerator, heat, hot water GROSSE POINTE Farms.
3
keeping. Grosse Pointe refand. pa,rking fur..n,ished. $85 . bedroom house, furnished.
erences. Reply to Box B-10,
per. month, no . lease. TU
References. TU, 2-0119.,
Gro~se Pointe News.
------------
Hoo;ver w/beaters
Rebuilt Eurekas
Rebuilt G.E.'s
Rebuilt
,
Royals
HARPER' VACUUM
A~thorized
Eureka,
JUNE 2 3,4
j
Hoover
l1-AUTOS
Specialty gift house selling ouf one - of . a - kind
sample gift ware from
leading brand mau nfacturers. All items maked at
cost price or below, ranging from $1 to $100. Suitable for gift givir:g to fit
any occasion. Sterling silver, brass, stainless steel,
imported glasswar'~, leather goods included.
$21.95
$14.95
WANTED
BOOKS bought in any quantity. Entire libraries, book~
cases, art objects. Mrs. B. C.
Claes, 1670 L-everette. WO
3-4267.
SALE
$16.95-$49.95
$19.95-$34.95
$19.95-$24.95
Late Models. assort. makes
!)EADLINE 4 P.M. TUESDAY
FOR SALE
BUYING A NEW CAR?
You'll save money selling me
your old car and taaking a discount. For 32 years we have
been paying up to $100 more.
E. H, COOK
15701 HARPER
Berkshire - Balfour
Tuxedo 4-0933
Open Till 9:00
Dealer
1470 E, Outer Drive
AUSTIN-Healy, 1954 Convert.
'.h
WILL SHARE room or home
SALES and SERVICE
woman ~s - .GROSSE POINTE GARDENS
or rent a room to congenial
NEW - RERUILTS - PARTS
ible. Wire' wheels, white.
1A-PERSONALS
es w~ek work. Home mghts.
Nr. H ud son) s Ea&tl~hd,
person. PRo 8-7159.
17176 E. WARREN. at CADIEUX
TWinbrook 1-6665
walls,
overdrive, 90 H.P. TU.
A-I coo~ and laundress.
Kin g s vi) 1e, 21'401-'1TU 1-1122
OPEN 10 TO 7
•
NEED a baby sitter? Reliable
4-3795 .
Grosse Pomte .references. TY
Extrem~ly attractive large
MOROSS and Mack. 5 rooms CHINA, furniture, rugs, annursemaids a v ail a b 1e by STENOGRAPHER and general
office
work.
Smal,l
Grosse
7-5769.
1
and
2
bedroom
apts.
with
and tile bath. 2 bedrooms,
tiques, miscellaneous, bought LEAVING CITY. A:most new 1954 HOLLYWOOD Hudson
hour, day or week. Maternfurniture.
Sacrifice prices.
Hornet Hardtop .. Full powPointe office. VAlley 2-8613. EXPERIENCED
girl wishes
full size din. rm. and sep.
carpeting, venetian blinds,
and sold. Majestic Furniture,
ity help available. The SitLiving
room
chairs, coffee
er, automatic transmission,
-4-A--H---W-------1
d
k"
g
H
e
kitchen;
Ige.
closets,
cross
garage,
disposal,
automatic
10227
Woodward,
TOwnsend
ters Club, PRescott 7-0377.
elp
anted
. ay wor or lfonm.
om
velltila'tion, freA.. parking,
and end tables, studio CQuch low mileage. Clean. Owner'.
.
'g"ht WA 3 5521
",
hot water and gas heat. Re6-2500.
D
and Hide-a-bed. Older maomes t Ie
m
s.
. '.
new decorations, adultS.
decorated: Especially nice,
353 Rivard.
BOOKKEEPING
and typing
hogany
end and c 0 f fee
WHITE
WOMAN,
g
e
n
era
1
EXPERIENCED
cleaner
and
Mgr.
TU.
4-1641,
1
blk.
E.
of
$110.
TUxedo
5~1585.
.
.
FIREPLACE
EQUIPMENT
_
service
done
efficiently.
tables, mahogany drop leaf CADILLAC 1957, "62" Coupe.
housework, assist with chillaundress
wishes
3 days.
7 Mi. Rd. (Morass) 3 blks. '~------------Screens, all types, grates,
Your office or mine. Call
Like new. 4,800 miles, All
dining table and 4 chairs,
dren. Stay in 3 days. Wages,
With references. TE. 3-2475.
S. o~ Harper.
1876 STANHOPE. Furnished 2
andiroo..s, tools. See display
TU 1-9551.
extras. Bargain, MI. 6.1875.
and
1957
Frigidaire
electric
$25. State age, references, -.----------GROSSE POINTE WOODS,
bedroom ranch. No children
at SMITH - MATTHEWS,
No dealers.
stove,
yellow.
TU.
4-2788.
COOK
and
h
0 use k e e per,
t $200 1
'
I
DRIVING LESSONS. Mitchell
!elephone number.
Grosse
'
.
:J f 11
near Eastland, 3 rooms, al'ror pe's.
. year sease.
6640 Charlevoix Ave. WA
--------.,,.-..----thoroughly expenenceu,
u
A
OR
G
MAN
Driving School. Former poPte. Park. Reply Box A-5,
S I
dult
cunditioned', stove, refrigerNN BE,DF. D
OOD
2-7155.
TORO power handle with reel STATION WAGON, Ford '52,
Grosse Pte. News.
or part.-time.
ma 1 a
..
TU 5-6063
LO 7-4706
lice instructor. Home pick~
9 passenger; fully equipped.
mower, used only j'ew times;
family.
Goo d references.
ator. Heated. Park PTlV1JOHN S. GOODMAN
ANTIQUE lady's chair; blue
up. LAkeview 6-6960,
5667 Lannoo, vicinity Mack
Red Devil lawn sweeper;
MAID for small adult family.
TY.4-7361.
leges, garage, disposaL TU -----------,Willow china; Hudson % tcm
and 7 Mile.
child's
3 wheel
bike, 12
Live in; other help employ- -----------1-2782.
FURNISHED
gar'age aparthome air-conditioner.
TV
HOW TO SELECT A
EXPERIENCED lady wishes
_
inch, good condition; Syl- .grATA ITALIAN sports car.
CONVALESCENT HOME
ed, TV. 4-0688.
day work, Monday and Wed.
.
ment. Model'n kitchen, 3
1-8675.
vania
17 inch TV. table;
yellow
convertible;
top,
If you have the "roblem of se- EX PER meED
I
f
nesday, $8 plus carfare. RefGROSSE POINTE PARK
bedrooms, newly decorated, -----------Motorola
portable TV. Both
~
I.
coup
e.
or
0'1
heat
ne
scr~ns
ar'd
BLUE
willow-ware
set
of
heater.
1/3
original
cost.
lecting a suitable convalescent
cooking and housework. 2
erences. WA. 1-0052.
.Maryland, 1011, at E. JefferI
,
W
"''''
..
in
good
working
condition.
TU
5-5372,
256
Fisher.
've
or
f!'I'ends,
son.
5-room
front,
including
storm
windows.
Near
bus.
china,
suitable
for
su.mmer
home for relatl
adults. Willing to leave town
$20 TU 2 6108
tt
Oth
h'
d
TU. 4-2586.
send for free booklet without
for sum mer.
References. HIGH SCHOOL g r a d u ate dining rm. and'" sunrm. Cross
0.,
.
co age.
er c ma an
1953 STATION Wagon, Chevobligation. Telephone or write
WAlnut 1-1832.
wal1lts steady bCliby sitting ventHation, newly decorated.
glass, books, brief case, sofa.
AIR.
COMPRESSOR,
air
hose,
rolet. 9 passenger.
Excelto the East Grand Rest Home
.......,.____
job for summer. References. Adults. Available June 10.
LAKEPOINTE
4874, near
VA 1-9843.
4
ft.
ladder,
electric
hair
lent
condition,
$650.
TV.
NING h If d
W d
TUxedo 1-0728.
VA 4-5389
Warren, upper 5 room in- -=-----------which is operated by a Grosse IRO
, a - ay,
e nescome, comfortably furnish- GRAY StorkUne crib and chifdryer, G.E. canister vacuum,
4-2788.
POI'nter at 130 East Grand
day, $1.00 per hour,' carfare.
f aro b'e, c0 mp Ie t e. PR 6-2155.
14" TV, . 3 piece bedroom
an d
.......,
;---__
ed, heated. Adults .. ReferBoulevard. This is located near
References required. TUx- GIRL wishes fday work WAI
i,
1-1
_
suite, maple you t h bed, DESOTO Fireflite, 1955. Power
.laundry. Re erences.
- GROSSE POINTE Par~; lower
ences. TUxedo 5-8921.
maple chairs, dav(!no, drum
steering.
bra k e s; 32,000
Jefferson Avenue about half
edo 1-0726.
nut 3-0186.
six
rooms,
heated.
VA. 1------------ALGONAC INN GIFT SHOP
way between Grosse Pointe -S--S--.-T-U-A-T-IO-N--W-A-N-T-E-D-----------44665
table. electric fireplace logs,
miles. One Qwner. Garage
and downtown Detroit. Round1 MIDDLE-AGED;
coo kin g, 1 __ - __
•
_
Select gifts, fine jewelry from
lamps, odd tables, Clothing
storage,
new tires. motor
OUTER DRIVE-CADIEUX
$1.00.
1/2hour
drive.
Finest
the~clo~k nur.sing serv.ice is EXPERT BOA T refinisher
downstairs work in small DEVONSHIRE, near W'arr en,
and
miscellaneom.
A
I
so
0
vel'
hauled
in February.
SECTION
Food, Cocktail Lou n g e,
mamtamed WIth a regIstered
wishes weekend work. VAIfamUy. Live in. WAlnut
Lower 2-bedroom, lar,ge ret- Brick, 3 bedrooms, living room,
toys. All reasonable; transBlue v.;,ithcream trim. $1395.
Dockage, 3649 M-29 Hwy.,
nurse in charge. For a copy
ley 4-8538.
1-3685.
reation room, newly deco- dining room, kitchen, garage,
ferred out of s tel t e. TU,
TU. 5-0667.
Algonac, SWift 4-3911.
of the book. phone LOrain
.
.
I
rated, Heated, dishwasher, side drive, oil heat, 1 yr. lease.
4-1351.
I -F-O-R-D--'
5-6-co'-n-v-er-t-ib~l-e-,
-e-x-c-e-l.
8-0436 or VAlley 1-1704.
HOMES tnmmed and pamted., &~PERIENCED shirt finisher
garage.
Adults
preferred,
Completely furnished, $125.
,
"
lent condition, 3 tone blue,
---------'
----"--Window glazing and caulkwants day work, laundry or
$125. For appointment call
MABARAK
REALTY
YELLOW
ballerina
Ie
n
g
t
h
MEDIUM
Size
mahogany
Gov.
All
extras one owner. 354
1I-ENTERTAINMENT
ing. VAlley 1-4127.
cleaning, MQnday, Tuesday.
VAlley 2-4946.
11005 MACK
VA 3-2121
formal junior 9 worn once'
Winthrop sde~~etar~d~Skt'exMoran Ro~d, Grosse Pointe
City ref ere n c e. VAlley
. . '1
.
11
'
cellent con Ibon ....,prIn car,
F
2 6 '
AARONSON ACE
STORMS removed, windows
2-8425.
TROMBLEY, lower. Carpet,
orrgl,~a ..cos~ ",50, se
$15,
$350. TUxedo 2-9193, VAl-.
arms, - p.m.
ATTRACTIONS
washed, g c r e en 5 put up, ------------baseboard, gas heat, comMan s, zIp-Imed toP. coat,
ley 2-5225.
'39 MERCURY V-8 4-door;
Music Unlimited
awnings hung, eavestrough COLORED girl, ,with Grosse
plete electric kitchen, 3 bed- WOULD LIKE middle-aged
hounds-tooth check, SIze 36d'
dh t
TU 1-6446
lady
or
couple
to
share
my
37, l"k
ea er.
.
A-I Orchestras-Comboscleaned, wall washing. and
Pointe reference, wi she s
rooms, 2 baths. Possession
I e new,. $5. TU 4- 6846'HOTPOINT
e Ie c t l' 1. c stove, 1 ra 10 an
_
home. TUxedo 2-6151.
Bands
painting. VAllE::Y1-41~7.
cleaning,
Friday.
WAlnut
now,. $300. Root.. TUxedo
DAVENPORT and chair $75.
good condition, reasonably 1957 CADILLAC, 62 coupe;
Call us now for your spring
----------5-5386.
2-4645,
be-OFFICE
FOR RENT
Modern, foam rubber,' ideal
priced. TUxedo 5-:2942.
6,900 miles. Like New. G. M.
. and summer musical affairs, LANDSCAPING. grass cutting -G-I-R-L-W-ISH--E-S-w-e-e-k-w-o-rk-o-r
89-3-t-l-.--------for summer porch or recreaengineer's, $3,500.TW 2-575(1.
TO 5-2990
TO 9-2517
and yard maintenance. RAys . c all'. roomy upper, gation room.;.-.TUxeco 5-6438.
NORGE gas stove, 38" wide. ----------O--B-U-Y
__ ....:.-___________
mond 5-U456.
days. Will stay some nights.
rage. parker, Tuxedo 5-0448.
______
,
~__
Must be sold by Sunday. 12--AUTOS WTD. T
KERCHEVAL
.
Reference. TRinity 2-8059.
2A-MUSICAL
BUSINESS
DISTRICT
SUMMER. TUXEDO, white 1 • Cheap. TUxedo 5-3228.
----W--E-N-E-E-D---LAMPS
g. p. park, 5 good "rooms, carINSTRUCTION
t d
645 Notre Dame Avenue
Custom-made
1amp
shades EXPERIENCED lady wishes
pe.e
, a tt.IC, b asel11en,t gas,
dinne~ jacket, tropical trous- CARPETING stove refriger1953 and 1954 Models
1 to 5 rooms, ample parkday work. City references.
$115. parker, tuxedo 5-0448.
. ers, SIZe 40 long. Very good.
'
,
, .
SUMMER is a good time for made and recovered in my
LOrain 7-4812.
ing. Newly de cor ate d,
condition, $25. TUxedo 4ator, wash<:r. C~rome dmAny Make or Body Style
piano lessons, Popular or home. Grosse Pte. references, -------,----5796 YORKSHIRE, at~ractive
10"'6
ette, draperres, mIrror, desk;
Have Customers Waiting
automatic heat. 0 w n e r,
classical. $2.50 at your home. TU 2-0315, 139 Ridge Road.
CARE, of children ')1' elderly.
5-room
lower,
carpeting,
_~/_'
_'
miscellaneous
h
0
v
S
e
11
old
For
32 Years We Have Been
TUxedo 5-0518.
Hourly,
weekly,
week-ends,
d'
.
d'
I
TU x ed 0 1- "371
ELECTRIC
STOVE
with
clock,
furnishings
and.
clothing.
Paying
Up to $100 More
/
.
WALL WASHING, painting,
rapenes, garage,
Isposa ,
20 years experience. Hos$'35 ....U 5 9134
light,
"timer
and.
warn'ler
_R_e_8S_o_n_a_b_le_._V_A_ll_le_:r_4_-r-_/4._8_8_.
E.
H.
COOK
g....
... ..1
.
2B-TUTORING
...ass cutting, etc. LA 7-5124.
pital training.
References.
bD--RESORT PROPERTY
oven. Good conditIOn; ideal BOY'S BICYCLE 20" English
15701 HARPER
EXPERIENC~D Belgian garWAlnut 2-2828.
ANN ARBOR students: One 3
for summer plac~. $25. TU
Gresham Flyer, $14. TUxBerkshirc-Ba.Ifo1,lr
COMMUNITY
denel', carpenter
and a11.
room and one 2 room apart- COTTAGE on Lake Erie near
5-0252.
edo 1-3832.
TUxedo 4-0933
K'mgsvl"IIe,' Iot approx.
'
100x
TUTORING SERYICE
around worker desires em- EXPERIENCED woman wants
~en t or 5 .rooms comp 1et e
------~-Open Till 9:00
baby sitting or q,omestic
for group of students Sum
400. Beautiful trees, high NINE-FOOT Hotpoint refrig- -~-"'"
MRS. LOUIS MARICK. DIRECTOR
ployment by day or season.
work, 3 to.5 days. Reference.
..
.K.LING maple bedroom set,
erator-freezer,
2
piece
coral
PR 6-2774.
mer school or longer. TU.
banks, wide' sandy beach.
pine poster r.ed, marble top I WILL CALL at your home to
Tutoring by degree t~ochE:r~availWAlnut 4-6850.'
2-05d'4.
$15,500. Owner. WOodward
sectional, rattan I eat her
chestS, ant i que sofa and
buy any model used car, any
able in all subjects for grades high LAWN J.nd garden
mainte- ----------------~-~--2-3400 or TUxedo 2-6259.
cushioned couch, Hollywood
chair,
Sheraton
love
seat,
age, for cash and pay you
i:l
NEAT.
experienced
woman
Jr-FFERSON
&
CADIEUX
bed, complete. 'TUxedo 1school, c:ollege and adult educanance by experienced Ugh
wants 3 days baby sitting,
t:
.
glass
top
desk,
lamps,
RCA
more money. Tom Roney,
6654.
tion.
school boy. Ask for Joe, Jr.
cleaning, laundry, Saturday, Beautiful location, a bedroom COTTAGE for rent. Very pritelevision,
treadle
sewing
Roney Motors, LA 6-6611-15.
OPENINGS FOR TEACHERS
TU 1-3022.
.
,
Wednesday and M 0 n day. terraCe unit. Available around
vate, over 200 feet sandy
machine, electric c lot h e s
M
.
th
G
Pt
Farms
.
June
1. Garage. refrigerator,
lakefront.
3 bedrooms, na- TORO self-propelled 20 inch
33'"
'1'
errtwea
er, rs. e.
HANDY.MAN, German-Ame'rl'VAlley 1-9274.
'
drier, ele~tric mangle, power 12A-BOATS
& MOTORS
cut rotary
lawn mower.
.
stove, $175. WOodward 1-3570, . tural fireplace. 15 miles past
Used onlY,6 hours. Briggs &
drill and tool bench, dishes; 14-FOOT' WOLVERINE; lika
TUxedo 4-2820
can.
experienced, wan t S BABY SITTER _ Mat u r e or TUxedo 2-448'5.
'Port Huron. June, July Aug:"
m i s cell a ne 0 us. TUxedo
Stratton engine, $100. TUxpainting,
carpentry,
furniwoman available by day,
ust, $600. TUxedo 1-8904.
nev. condition. 10 h.p. Meredo 1-9138.
PRIVATE TUTORING
ture
r e p air,
gardening.
hour or week. Excellent ref- 5 ROOM lower flat, Grosse
2-074\.
cury, trailer. 866 Lakeshore
IN
Grosse Poi n t e references.
erences. TUxedO 5-1228.
Pointe. Available 1',!:?,y15th. 9540 SAND POINT near CaseCARRIER Air Conditioner,
drive.
YOUR OWN HOME
PRescott 7-7663 or after 5
Sleeping porch. Excellent
ville. 21/2 hours from De- SOFA, beige and rose, down
like new. Electric air horns, -EX-P-E-R-T-S-M-AL-L--B-O-A-"""-.l-r-efilled. Blond mahogany dinAll subjects; all grades. Adults
PRescott 7-0093.
EXPERIENCED colored girl
lo cat ion.
$175. TUxedo
troit. 4 bedtooms; beautiful
ing
room
set
with
break-I
baby
bathinette. Everything
pairing and ref i n ish i n g.
and children. Certified te~ch-.
would like day or week
5-9292.
sand. beach, safe for chilfront and 6 chairs. Bot.h in
% original price. TUxedo
S h aft s straightened. Comers.
EXPERIENCEDg
a l' den e r
wOl'k.WA 3-7825. '
3-BEDROOM duplex, newly
dren; electric stove, garbage
good
condition.
TUxedo
24-6939.
plee machine shop, boat supCall:
wishes work by th~ day.
disposal, etc. 16-foot Lyman
8440.
DETROIT AND SUBURBAN
VE 9-5450.
EXPERIENCED colored girl
decorated. White, gas, good
boat-good fishing and huntHOT POINT e~ectric range.
plies, boat 1u m be r of all
would like day work, gentran~portation.
Cad i 11aCing.
Rent by the seas~n. Will
Reasonable. TU 1-7013,
kinds cut to size and shape.
STUDIO
COUCH,
Simmons,
TUTORING SERVICE
AMBITIOUS colI e g e boy
eral house cle.anl'ng. WA
Blvd. ED 1-28'40..
------------Lakeland Boats, 11471 Kerapply rent to purcoose. TU
KE
7
4653
like
new.
TUxedo
1-6355.
WO 3-8315
would like work in office,
2-4752.
5-7900.
SA-OfFICE. EQUIPMENT
cheval near .st. Jean, VAlBEACONSFIELD
nor t h of 1
3-LOST AND FOUND
store. or what have you. P R .
-'_
FOR SALE
ley 2-5593..
LAMPS, Shades, Chandeliers,
8-7159.
Mack. newly
Upper decorated.
6 large bright
------------:-:: 5B-EMPLOYMENT
BUREAU
rooms
New FURNISHED. Pointe Aux Bar- Fixtures. Lamp parts, custom TYPEWRITERS
and adding- SAILBOAT, IH2 feet. Circle
LOST: Boy's glasses and case, MIDDLE-AGED man would
gas furnnce, .garage.
For
ques, Michigan. 7 bedroom, shades, lamp mounting, remachines, new, rebuilt. ReaM class, Priced
to' sell.
Grosse Pointe area, Reward
like janitor or maintenance CO UP LE S, cooks, maids,
adult family. Now avail3 bathroom cottage.l Com- pairing. Best selection of lamps
sonable prices. N a t ion a 1
Fiberglass bottom. Excellent
TU. 5-7038.
work in hospital or church.
chauffeurs, caretakers, janiable. No pets. TU. 5-3595.
pletely furnish~d. Includes
and shades in town.
Off ice Equipment, 16749
condition. PRo 7-1985.
_.~----------Also experienced gardener.
tors and porters. Day or
linens. From June 15 to
Lamps by Martin
Harper at Bishop. TUxedo FOR SALE-26 foot Privateer
FOUND--Bif~c~ls wifthRPldastic TU. 5-6698.
week. Field's Employmen~. CHATSWORTH. Lower, living
Augus t 1St. Mr~. Cthas. Ten- 14637- 41 Kercheval, corner
frames, vicmlty 0
a nor
---:TR 3-7770. .
room, dining area, 2 bed.ney, 6 0 .Farmmg on Ave.,
1-7130.
Sloop. Excellent
condition
Manistique, VAlley 2-8151.
Circle. TU 1-4761.
HAVE equipment, will travel.
rooms, kitchen,
bath, gas
Longmeadow 6, Massachus9-ARTICLES WANTED
and rea d y for the water.
-----------Landscape work, grass cut- 6-FOR RENT (Unfurnished
heat, stove and refrigerato~
'etts, or C. W. Toles, 44 KerBest
to be had in equipment
DO IT YOURSELF
4-HELP
WANTED
ting, shrubs, bushes sprayed 1 -----------garage. Adufts .. TU. ~-4609.
cheval, TUxedo 5-4100.
-P05ITIVEL y
for both cruising and racing .
MALE and FEMALE
for insects, $4.50 per yards. PHILIP, near Jefferson. Cheer~
----~------• CABINETS.
HIGHEST PRICES-PAID for
Will oonsider trade for powWindows washed;
c 1e a n
ful upper; den, :unroom, 2. GROSSE POINTE, 829 HarGRAND H.AYEN
e FORMICA
er boat, Can bp seen at BayMEN-FOR
PART TIME
eaves. garages,
basements;
bedrooms, gas heat, firecourt, 1st blk. sou~ of Jef- On Lake Michigan, 5 bedt' PLYWOOD
Furniture and Appliances
view Yacht Club at the foot
5 men to train. nOw for key
cars waxed. $7; ail odd jobs.
place, garage.
EDgewater
ferson. 5 rooms, screened
rooms, modern kitchen, tiled
• PANELING
"I Piece or a Houseful,"
of Clairpoint, Detroit, Call
positions in multi-million ~olExperienced, need w 0 r k.
1-2101.
porch. Rent $195 including
bath. Nicely furnished. $400
• DOORS
PR,escott 5-5733
TU, 4-1504 for appointment.
lar national concern. Earmngs
Call Bill, TU. 2-9284.,
2 garages.
0 w n e r. TU.
per month, $700 fot the sea• DRAWERS
$500 to $1200 per month. start
5-ROOM upper flat, 1037 Lake5~9037.
BOOKS purchased for cash. SAILBOAT, fiberglass, 16 ft.
22500 MACK
your nstructions
part time YOU N G man desires land'pointe, nea-r Jefferson. Will GROSS.E POINTE-, .1419 .Somson.
Entire libraries,or fine.single
Rebel. National champion,
'PR
5-0470
Earn while you lecu:n. Leads
d'
d gen
give year lease, $70 per
.I1l
TUxedo 2-8522.
items. Midwest Book Serv1955. $795, complete. TUxedo
. h h' h
scaping. gar emng an
-.
F t 'J
WO
erset.
Spacious, modern 5
into lifetime career WIt
Ig
1
al'ntenance
Ve ry
month .. J. (.;. ros,
r.
HAMMO.ND'BAY. Lake Huron DRAPERIES, made to order
ice, 4301 Kensington,
TU
4-4733,
era
m
.
'
room
uppe--r,
newly
decoratincome and complete security
reasonable. WAlnut 2-7273.
1-2415.
frontage. 2, la;-ge beautiful . by a '.professional. Gua'fan5-2450.
16 FT. THOMPSON, excellent
Call:
ed, disposal, incinerator, 6
lots. PRescott 5-0312.
teed. TUxedo 1-5210.
B. Von Albrecht
LANDSCAPING, grass cutting, 7-ROOM HOUSE,_ screened
large closets, divided baseWANTED. Child's tricycle in
condition. Newly painted, 30
TUxedo 2-6167
edging, odd jobs. Grosse Pte.
terrace, 2 baths, fireplace,
ment, sun porch. $125 per RUSSELL
ISLAND (across ELECTRIC STOVE with clock,
good condition. TU. 2-5562,
h.p. Johnson engine, pur------------references. VEnice 9-2278.
oil heat, 2-car garage. Near
morIth. ;Available June 20th.
from Algonac) for sale or
ligb t, timer and warmer
c has e d new. 1956; plus
EXPERIENCED nursery school
•
schools, churches, shopping
SL. 8-5'742.
rent. 4 bedroom cottage,
oven .. Good condition; ideal WANTED - Hide-a-way bed,
Sears' Elgin trailer. For sale
teacher for 3 mornings a YOUNG MAN needs work.
center and tr.ansportation.' --.,-------...,-----ranch style, I1h baths, mod.for summer' place. Cheap.
studio couch, 9-piece dining
by owner, $775. In qui r ~,
week in established co-operWill do anythin,g available.
Available July 1st. Gall CR HARPER WOODS, 2-bedroom
ern kitchen. View of South
. TU 5-0252.
room suite, 9x12 rugs, 2TUxedo 5-4834,
ative nursery
school. TV
References. TUxedo 5-7120.
8-2541, DU 3-0441 (Business
brick single home, near EastChanneL TUxedo 5-7774.
piece .living room suite, 3SAND
it comes from dunes
1
hours)
land. Year lease, vacant. ---~-------piece bedroom suite, refrig- 12-FOOT plywood boat with
5-0331, TU 1-277 .
REGISTERED NURSE wants ---.-------,
TU 1-853!.
7-WANTED TO R~NT
of Lake Michigan ft)r .chilerator, washing machine, gas
3% h. p. J ohnso'n, $100. TU
position in .doctor's office, GROSSE POINTE mod ern
dren's sand boxes. 50 lbs.
stove,
automatic
washer.
VA
1-6446,
hospital,
or private
duty
large 2-bedToom available. 4-ROOM HOUSE, 13809 Ten LOWER FLAT only. Near
$1,25 delivered;. TOwnsend
A SMART WOMAN
1-1793,
12-FT. BOAT and trailer, $ioO.
during June. On maternity
Fireplace, gas heat, garage,
Mile. See house before callGrosse Pointe Village. Two
8-1641.
1\
park
privileges.
No
pets,
ing
VAlley
2-36}Q
between
adults,
no
pets.
Excellent
5917
ft
WILL CLEAN basements or
4001 Neff.
leave. TU 5-,
a er (,;
.
25 to 50, interested in changadults only. $150 per month.
7 and 8 p.m.
references. TU 4-0688. .
ing profe~ion or earning for _p=-._m.
-'--_~--::TU 4-6994.
.__ -:_
DO IT YOURSELF
attics for unwanted articles; 14' CLYDE, molded plywood,
first time. Sales manage- HOUSEMAN, gardener, chaufWHITTIER, 5932. Upper 5 FRUEHAUF Trailer Company
UPHOLSTERY SUPPLY
Junk moved free. VAlley
varnished, snap on tarp, run2-5123. '
.
nl'ng II'ghts, etc. TraI'ler wI'th
ment opportunity with comfeur. Reliable and steady. HARCOURT, 939. Upper 2rooms, newly decorated, gas
needs unfurnished house, 3 .Foam rubber, plastic, leathers.
pany dealing in services.
Grosse Pointe
reference!).
bedroom, 1112 baths.
Gas
heat, $100 monthly. Adults.
bedrooms, for one :of it'~ per- close-out ~abrics, 98.c yard and ----~--------winch, $325. 939 Hampton
Flexible hours. Use of car
Would like position. at once:
heat, 2-car. garage, adults.
TU 2-8762 or TO 8,,8680..
manent employees, in Grosse up. Tools and
expert
advice.
WANTED
Rd. TU 1-4596.
,
helpful. Social background
R. L. Hull. SL 7-2715.
VA 1-0524.
GROSSE POINTE Woods-VerPointe area. No small chil- Shredded foam rubber, 39c per
OLD CLOTHING
OUTBOARD 15 H.P. deluxa
as important as business ex- __ -,--~
dren. VA 3-0300.
pound.
model: Excellent condition.
erience.
call
.
SA-SITUATIONS
WANTED
ATT.RACTIVE
English
stylenier.
Modern
lower
2
bed---".--.;
_
P
fj
~
4 bedroom home onPemroom. Carpeting, gas heat .. 8--ARTICLES FOR SALE
Lawrence Upholstering
BESTPRICES PAID
Used 2 seasons. Rea's<>nable.
TUxedo 5-3387, 9 to .
DOMES lie
.
_ berton Road. Large living
PRescott 5-3225.
.
14331 Kercheval
FOR MEN1S SUITS
Cal PRescott 8-7285.
W-O-M-A-N-(-w-h-i-t-e)-w-i-sh-e-s-w-a-sh~-I
and dining room, 2 baths, ----r--------rHINA
cabinet and buffet,
YA 2..6891
TO'PCOATS AND SHOES 13-REAL ES'!ATE
.
.
t d
t
1
a'nted
C 11 PRes
walnut, priced reasonable.
MATURE white woman as
ing and lromng .? ? a
new y Pl.
. a
- GROSSE POINTE TERRACE
PRescott 8-9099.
TUlsa 3-'1872
FOR SALE
companion for elderly lady, to
home. Pick-up and dehver.
cott 7-5765 after 7 p.m.
Jefferson and 8adieux
SPIN-:DRY washer, $50; gas
call will bring us COMPLETELY furnished. six
read write letters and hav~
LA. 1-2754:
GOOD HOM:£, 5 rooms, oar- Beautiful location. 201' 3 bed- MAHOGANY spinet ,piano,
range, $50; l() cu. ft. refrig- A telephone
to you I'mmediately'
driv~r's license .preferred. L.-i---------------:."""":h:-peting, gas heat, good neigh., rooms, garage. $160 and $175.
good condition, $350. Tuxede,
room house, Grosse Pointe
eratoI' and freezer, $85; davW1S es
d
dit'
hours Or more daily. Refer EXPERIENCED woman
WANTED:
24"
girl'n
.bicycle.
City,
$18,000. Cash required,
enport,
$50.
A<ll
like
new.
k
Referborhood-Goulburn
and
7..,
:
Call
WOodwar:d
....
h.35_70
.
size
40,.
in.gop.
,,~on
.
lOn,
wor
-nces. VAHey 2-0789 after 8
wee k or day
.
$20, TUxedo
.
f:l584'
Call TUxedo 1-:0029.
$8,000: Owner.! TU 2-6479.
TU. 2-34~, 1312 Manistique .
..,
encetJ, WiA 1-1935.
Mile. PR 5-2459.
or TUxedo 2-4485
4-~.
.
p.rn..
BEAUTY
operator,
female
only. Must be experienced.
TU.4-1130.
EXPERIENCED
I
I
I
l!"
I
I
---'-----------
cates
ctor
boys'
I
._---
I
pes.
as
•
~
...._
•
d _
Ed.
S •
r
esse
rt td
r Cd t 2' $2$$
rr
1 •••
sse
$
SF
em Sltrtttmc,;"
• d Srtd
•• d.
1m_
rt
<rids.
d Md ••
~dds.
a'S dnt
gIrt
,.
rd.
C st.
c••••
us C
t Oed"
[< ..
,
Page ~ighteen
G R 0 S SE
POI
N TEN
EW S
Thursday. May 29, 1959
Thursda}'
21R-eEME
YOUR AD CAN BE CHARGED
13-REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
'CALL TUxedo 2-6900
Three Trunk Lines to Serve You Quickly
13-REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE,
13-REAL ESTATE,
FOR SALE
16--PETS FOR SALE
BEDFORD. First advertising.
KA.RL DAVIES
Attractive
4 bedroom, 21;2 GROSSE POINTE FARMS
REALTOR
batJ:1, 70 ft. lot, south of St.
'j
Paul. Well cared for. TU 265 MERRIWEATHER. Ideally
TU 5-32.(.0
2-6000. Maxon Brothers, Inc. situated and in fine condition.
3 bedrooms, new paneled den,
81 Kercheval Ave.
powd€i" room, gas he~t. Priced
WINDMILL POINTE
Member G.P. Broker's Assn.
for
quick sale. Mr .. Post.
Farm Colonial with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, library with
C . W . TOLES
fireplace,
breakfast
I' 0 0 m,
powder room, terrace;
rec. 74 Kercheval
TU 5-4100
room with deluxe mahogany
bar, one of the finest. Lot
CAPE COD, 1922 Oxford. Open
80x180, All this for $46,500.
Thursday
evening. 3 bedANN BEDFORD GOODMAN
GROSSE POINTE SHORES
room, llh baths, c a cr- pet,
TU 5-6063
LO 7-4706
26 Colonial. Unique WilliamsJOHN S. GOODMAN
Florida room, 1% g'arage.
burg 8-room tri - level near
Priced at $21,500, terms.
lake, $61,000
, QUI~N
TUxedo 4-6060
NEW HOMES
FOR SALE
4 Bedrooms
GROSSE POINTE FARMS
168 Hillcrest. 7 room Colonial,
Farm House Colonial or
Cape Cod.
Living room, dining ell.
Paneled Family room.
Large kitchen, all Built-ins
2% baths, 2-car garage.
Features galore.
$12,500
184 Hillcrest. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, activities room, $45,000.
183 Hillcrest. 6 room Colonial,
$41.500
SEMI-RANCH, 4 bedrooms,
carpeted, large kitchen, dining Ext I' a s. Reasonable.
Open Thursday,
S'aturday,
Sunday. TU 5-3498.
KENSINGTON
GROSSE POINTE PARK
Georgian
Colonial,
4 bed1002 Harvard. 4 bedrooms, 2,NOT A STEREOTYPE BOX rooms, 3 baths, maid's quar$29,900 on your lot or ours.
bath, library, $45,000.
ters, family
room, library,
$28,600 for 3-bedroom.
1003 Cadieux. 7 room Colonial,
modern
kitchen.
200 ft. lot;
GROSSE POINTE LOTS
$36,200
may
be
subdivided.
Bargain.
FROM $6100 UP
Call for appointment or see
CALL FOR
HAWTHORNE
your broker.
Near
lake.
Choice Colonial
APPOINTMEt'JT TO SEE
residence.
Family
and rec.
COMPLETE PLANS &
rooms, attached garage. Con- SPEClF-ICATIONS
genial neighbors. Fairly priced.
RICHARD M.
KIMBROUGH
CO.
COX & BAKER
TU 5-7900
After 5 p.m. TUl-4042
CHAMPION
TU 4-5700
17850 MAUMEE
TUxedo 2-2593
Monday through Friday
GROSSE POINTE
WESTCHESTER
RD. 781
I ..
POODLE tr~mmrng, bathing,
tinting, professionally.. Appointments .necessary. VAlley 1-0084.
'
LOVELY little kitten
too a
little girl who will take care
or it and give it a good
permanent home. TU. 5-2536.
LABRADOR Retrievers. AKC.
Sired by field champion, 9
weeks. TU. 1-2511.
STANDARD POODLE puppies, champion sired. AKC.
Male and female.
Paper
trained,
home raised. MI.
4-7335.
C'OLLIE PUPPIES
9 weeks old. AKC registered
Shots and de-wormed
TUxedo 1-5310
Garage, storms and screens
and landscaping i n c Iud e d.
Trao'? considered.
LEON P. SANKAR
TU 4-3078
TU 5-1770
130
Best of Grosse Pointe
e
Interior
References
H. E. GAGE & SON
• Exterior
TU 4-0136
Free Estimates
EXPERT gutters, downspouts,
metal and canvas decks,
roofing and roof repairs,
free estimates. VA 2-5361.
MORTGAGES
R. FORTIER
21
3%
CURRENT RAT~ ON SAVINGS
PR 1-6571
M~Sewer
Cleaning
VAlley 3-11 13
Free est.
A.M.-P.M.
Hughes Brothers
Painting and Decorating
Si>:
14711
1Il-=d1:
H
Wee;:
MOD_
FACT:
MABI
for lost i
"Best-lookiq
when
house and ;;:
from dogs,
children ao<
screen fence j
picket desig .
Come in lU.,
living area :1
mey ~
PAUL'S CONSTR. CO.
All kinds
Garages
Porches FREE
of Cement Work
- Driveways
Steps - Repair.
E.9TIMATES
TUxedo 2-8750
SAM VAGNETTIE
CEMENT WORK
Sidewalks, Driveways, Garage
floors, steps. and porches.
"
Basement, Rat Walls
3908 Cadieux
TU ~-0785
EXPERT brick ~paira
my
specialty. Cracked 1e a k y
basements waterproofed, repaired. Guaranteed, licensed,
insured. Work myself. City
wide. UN 3-9491.
RAT PROOFING
Cement work, garages raised,
leveled, straightened, porches,
cement steps. Bonded. FHA
I
terms.
FO
If you
or new
Famili
and th
you pl'
you an
I
YDUragentJ
JULIEl
VAN L1NES,ir.
~
'=====
Re-Roo
GUIDE'TO GOO'D SERVICE
For Finer
'Interior and Exterior
Paintinga,nd Decorating
CHRIS C. CHARRON
FOR THE BEST in 'workmanship at the best price, call
TUxedo 2-5308. Best of references. Extensive decorative
work at. Northland.
Mack at Hunt Club .. Groll.
OPIN MON. - THURS. 9:30.4:30
..,'
Point.
Wood.
• nlDAY
.:30 -1:00
LO
Shoe R~pailr
YU 1-9813
379.Filher
:4-Br. a Day
Rd•• Opp. High
Earle
A
For You
Service
Ave., lII,th. Woods
A. H
r----=-.....
-----.-
TV & Radio Sert,ice
INTERIOR - EXTERIOR
Neat, clean,. dependable.
Reasonable rrices. For frep.
estimates call
For Quick
Guarantt'll'd Itepair Wal.k
. a Television
a Radio
• SOl!"d Equipment
EAST END
VEnice 9-7169
RADIO AND T"
MAINITENANCE
S & BBUILDING
Sales & Service
Washing. Ex,13940
Kercheval "ear EastlaWf
Cem~nt work,
VA. 4-9823
p()rch repair.,
.
I
VA 4~39571
POIIYE
-
Park Cab Co.
I
VA 2-2411
(IDSTOM TAILORS
Men'. and l:-adieJ' SUits Ta11eotedto Order. Alterations, reliJiing, Double brlluted auita restyled
to lingle breuted. .
VA. 2-3040
14931 EAST JEl=FERSO", af Oil, Limits
Fred M. SchWlWl Established 1925 Open Eves till 6:30
.
"
I
Coli Will
Est. 1923
Richards
.20397 Mack
WALL WASHING
PAINTING
Wall & Window
teriorpainting.
chimney and.
Free estimate.
PR 6-5270
Repa
GROSSE POINTE
INTERIOR and exterior, decorCO.
ating,
reasonably
priced.
DR 1-2686
PR 8-4778
Gall between 6 and 7' p.m.
. Satisfaction Our Guarantee
TW 3-3944.
Established in 1925 ' .
WASHING
Full Insurance Coverage For 21J-WALl.
Your' Protection
Where Your Dollars Earn More
TU. 4-5200
COMPLETE
Alteration~.
work. PRf~
J. G
I:
,COLONIAL FEDERAL SAVINGS,~~
20247
•
I
I
SAVE AT
WORK
In terior- Exterior
210--Waterproofing
Wall Washing
SPRIK
Free Estimates
LEAKY basements w ate T- I
21H-RUG CLEANING
1367 LAKEWOOD
Expert Paper \ Hanging
proofed. Brick repairs, steps,
VA 2-2706
TV 5-1165'
TU 1-7687
porches. Guaranteed, licensCARPETS, rugs, furniture ex5293 Yorkshire
ed, insured. Work myself.
._~-...
pertly cleaned in your home;
City wide. UN 3-9491.
prompt, courteous service, ALL - AROUND PAINTING.
_
WE DO
Free estimates. Kief Carpet
Work guaranteed. Good refOUR OWN WORK
Cleaners, TUxedo 1-0369.
Basements Made Dry
erences. Jesse Page. 'Wbite
-labor, work myself. VAlley Cracked walls repaired, l"e-in~ Brick, block and cement work
RADKE CARPET CLEANERS
2-7348,
forced. ~ll brick repairs. Guar-I PR 8.4184
LA 1-2275
Rugs, carpets, and furniture
anteed,
msured.
,
cleaned beautifully.
Oriental INTERIOR PAINTING, wall
Man~el Marchese
rugs, Wilton, wool, rayon, nywashing, residential,
comLAkeview 6-9300
lon, tacked down or loose,
mercial. A good job every:
_ ALL BRICK WORK, basements and porches, built and
c I e a n e d in your home and
ti.me. Will 'lccept your best 21P-FURNITURE REPAIR
repaired.
VAlley 1-0860.
bId. WAlnut 4-4801.
_
mothproofed, the modern, way.
Free estimates.
-------'
----C U S TOM
upholstering.
A -----------DR 1-3133
PA INTI NG
splendid -selection of decoPRescott 1-5057
rative fabrics, Expert needEASJERN MASON
BESTCARPET CLEf,NERS
lepoint mounting. Estimates
cheerfully
g i v e n. Ewald,
CLEANING
DYING
CONTRACTORS
13929 KercheY=il. VA 2.8993.
REPAIRING
Commercial & Residential
PROMPT HOME SERVICE
Building Tuck Pointing - Ma21Q-PLASTERING
FREE 'ESTIMATES
sonry Repairs-Cau1king-Build~
EVERYONE TRUSTS
REMODELING
h
A BRAND NAME
arc es, coves, iug Renovators - Basement!
INSURED
You can trust us too; to satisfy
all kinds of plastering. Work Waterproofed - Gutters - GutTU 2-6556
your painting and .decorating . guaranteed. Free estimates. ters Plastic Coated. - Roof
needs. Inside or outside. We
VAlley 2-0021.
21I-PAINTING
AND
Leaks Repaired.
have the know-how and clean
DECORATING
EDWARD M. COOK
equipment. We will assist you
PLASTERING
if 'you have a problem. I work
16484 E. 10 Mile
SPECIALIZING in ranch-type
and I1h story building; in- myself. Over 30 years serving Additions, basements, arches,
PRescott 1~5057
teric'
and. exterior.
Alc;o Grosse Pointe and east side. ceilings, general repairs. Rea~
wall 'washing. Elmer T. La- We are insured. An estimate sonable charges.
A-I MASON will repair chimcosts you nothing.
VAlley
badie, TUxedo 2-2064.
PRESCOTT 3-2968
neys, porches. All types or
4-3227.
brick
and, cement
work.
JOHN
F
TROMBLEY
DONALD BLISS
TOwnsend
8-2034.
Decorator
PAINTING by Master Craft. PLASTER~CONTRACTOR; repair work. Rea son a oj e.
Exterior
Interior
Special low spring prices.
CEMENT WORK, all typ~.
Maniaci, TUxedo 1-7179, or
Free Estimates
LA 7-5124.
Interior and exterior. GuarDRexel 1-8293.
30 Years in G.P.
anteed workmanship
with
TU 1-7050
references.
Free estimates. SPECIALIZING
in repairs. C E MEN T W 9 R K. garage
TYler 8-7017 or TYler 7-336l.
New ceilings, arches. Satisbuilding, city sidewalks, pri~
faction guaranteed. PRescott
FOR THE FINEST general
vate cement work, masonry.
CAULKING, painting and wall
9-1558.
TU 2-7225.
painting and decorating at
was h i n g by experienced
reasonable cost see Charles
man. GOod references. TUxA. Schra.der VAlley 4-0388.
edo 1-6275.
l
H" that scatters
thruns, let him go
barefoot.
21R-CEMENT
,
WATCH CONDITIONING
Fine
workmanship, Reasonable
TU 4-4040'
prices. Compfete service.
Residential - Commercial
J ewelry repai~ed, mountings
A-I Painting' and DecoFIRST MORTGAGE
and engraving.'
Commitrrtent 24 hI'S. Money
rating, wall
washing,
GROSSE POINTE WOODS 4 days $1,000 up, 6%, 5-7 Yrs.
CERTIFIED
patch -plastering
lawn
MASTER WATCHMAKER
Repayment.
LOCHMOOR. Comforta.ble and SECOND
furniture sprayed.. A..,I
MORTGAGE
charming 2 bedroom bungalow LOANS, Equity above MortDYGERT'S
references. C 0 lor e d.
with ex;>ansion attic, screened gage of Lane: Contract Balance
16956 E. Warren at Harvard
James L. Crawford
terrace, 2 car gacr-age,and very plus Chattel on Contents, $525rlJ:Uxedo. 5-9121
attraotive
rec. room. Many $2,000 - 18 Mo. 'Repayment. No -".,.
"
Vf\lIey 1-3385 ,
other des i r a b I e features appraisal charg(;.
.LHIR:'XJewel~y,.2~756.M~.ck at
throughout.
GRfSWOLD
; An~t~. Specializmg m w~tch "THING o~Beauty- Joy For,
repaIrs.
Watches. repalred
ever." Painting; paper hangCARTER & CO.
TU 4-4400
MORTGAGE CO.
from all over the world. All
ing, plastering,. wall wash423 Ford Bldg.
WO 3-7280
work guaranteed. '..
ing, etc. TUxedo 2~2041.
CHALMERS
WASHING
DASCHUND puppies,
AKC
PR 7-3551
registered, male and female. 21G-.ROOF SERVICE
24 HOUR ELECTRIC 3ewer
Call TUxed'o 2-5057 after 6
EXPERT painting, paper hang~ I cleaning. Free est i mat e .
GUTTERS cleaned, repaired,
or Saturday and Sunday.
ing by mechanics, free estiGrosse Pointe Plumbing Co.,
and painted. Conductors unmates. Van Assche, TUxedo
VAlley 1-9218.
MINIATURE POODLES, 7lh
plug.ged. Any kind of roof
4-1187, VA 4-1492.
weeks, AKC registered. TV
repair, creosoted or recovBLO CKED
SEWERS and
2~3006.
ered. TUxedo 1-5110.
COMPLETE decorating
lerdrains cleaned by electric,
vice. Interior and exterior I reasonable. VA 2-5361.
COLLIES, AKC registered. 8
painting.
Paper
removiilg ~
_
weeks. VAHey 1-1050 after 6.
ROOF R,EP"'IRING
and
paper
hanging.
Wall'
21N-Furnace
Work
Expert on leaky roofs: caulk~
SPRINGER
SPANIEL
type
washing. W 0 l' k m it n s 11 i p
ing and gutters unplugged,
puppies. Healthy. Fine dogs
guaranteed to be the best.
hung-up, painted inside and
SMOKE? - NO HEAT?
for children.
Satisfaction
For
estimates,
out.
guaranteed. TV 2-9362.
Chimneys Cleaned Top to
CALL ~.
FORSYTHE
VEnice 9-2220.
VAlley 2-9108
Bottom
20-PIANO
SERVICE
GUTTERS cleaned, repaired
Furnac€ls cl. $6.50.
and decorating.
COM P LET E piano service.
or replaced,
metal
deck, PAINTING
Plaster
repairs,
paper
hangAll mokes repaired.
Tuning, repairing, refinishroofs l' e p air e d, flat or
ing', wall washing, carpet
ABCO
'CHIMNEY &
ing and moth proofing. Place
shingled, private party. Free
cleaning.
WAInut
1-0122,
your order early. R. Zech,
estimates. Ask for Nelson.
FURNACE SERVo
TUxedo 2-6521.
RE 9-3232.
PR 6-7159,
CITY SASH &
SCREEN .CO.
HUGH
21'J-WALL
!»EADLINE 4 P.M. TUESDAY
EXPERT
A-I CillMNEY, broken steps,
WINDOW AND \VALL
repairing.
Prompt. service.
brick work, waterproofing
PAINTING, interior and exReasonable, prices. Bradley
CLEANING
walls. All work guaranteed,
terior.
Free
estimates.
Ex. Jewelers,
20926 Mack at
free estimates. Call anytime.
perienced painters. Leo ,P. For neat dependable servic&
HamptoI.. TU 2~93(j9.
.
LO 7-3230.
Kistner, PRescott 7-5876.H
MEL & DON
no
,answer
call
-PRescott
21C-ELECTRICAL
7-5853.
VE 9-6609
EVE, TU 1-7871 A-I CEMENT and brick work
SERVICE
of all kinds. Chimney repairs. All estimates
free.
window
BROWN ELECTRIC - Master PAINTING, papering, pa~er' WALL WASHING,
VA
2-4618.
removed.
W a 11 washmg.
cleaning, tile floors cleaned
eledHcian since 1920. RegisNeat,
reliable.
Work
guaranand waxed. Experienced. Intered and licensed. Repairs,
LICENSED
teed.
Mertens,
122
Muir,
TU
~ured.
Free estimates. J. Halreplacements
and mainten~
2-0083.
lam. VEnice 9-7281, VAlley CEMENT CONTRACTOR
ance. TU 5-0014. Personal
service.
4-9676.
WALKS DRIVES FLOORS
ERNEST A. BOCK
I PATIOS: BRICK '& BLOCK
Painter
and decorator;
quality WALL WASHING, 27 years WORK,
PORCHES,
ADDIand color matchll;'lg, the finest!
experitmce. Elmer T. La- TIONS.REASONABLE RATES
Served Grosse Pointe homes for badie, TUxedo 2-2064.
PR 8-6448
J 0 years:
ALL TYPES of cement work,
~0685 Woodmon+
TU 1-6905 21K-WINDOW
WASlilNG
p a i n tin g and carpentry.
EXTERIOR - INTERIOR
Early spring l-ates. Call after
LEE'S
5, A. A. Younga, VEnice 9Grosse Pointe references.
WINDOW CLEANING
0152.
Fine Paper Hanging
Storms and screens serviced,
Wor k myself, insured.
Covered by insurar.ce.
AiL BRICK WORK
Winter prices now.
TWinbrook 1-0670
Written guarantee.
NEW AND REPAIRS
Terms if desired.
PORCHES, STEPS, ETC.
WINDOW CLEANING
Leaky Basements Repaired
LEON STRIEGEL
LICENSED
AND INSURED
WALL
WASHING
VAlley 1-7275
~~UAL
~CHES~
Service on Screens and Storms
Brick
Washing
Expertly
Done
LA 6-9300
P~inting ~nd Decorating
Basement Painting
JOHN
SELDON
OPEN DAILY, 1-5
Excellent opportunity to purchase Q NEi,V home in the City
of Grosse Pointe. Has 19~foot
paneled activities rm and electric kitchen.
,REPAIRING '21I-PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
WATCR and clock
2 beautiful
silver miniature
males,
8. and
11 months.
Trimmed,
innoculated
and
registered.
Very reasonable.
Younger pups, toy and Ininiatures in all colors. Dachshund
puppies also available. Coomplete trimming service.
GARGETT'S
PRescott 5-0794
for holidays-forever
anne parker offers:
4 bedroom gray brk. Col. All
in
Park:
1111 nottingham, a
660 COOK ROAD. Just com- large rms. CUSTOM BUILT
proud
5 bedroom copleting 4 br" 31/2 bath, 11;'2 1956 2 car att. brk. garage,
lonial.
$6000
down on 50
story Early American home Florida room H x 20, brkft.
or
100
ft"
also
a fresh 3
in Deeplands
Subdivision. room, rec. room with bar and
bedroom.
cape
-cod,
$3000
Cherry paneled den, 2-car nat. f.p., carpeting in din. Ii..,.
down,
fast
...
attached garage, 15x30 rec- and stairs. Lot 80x200. Must
in City: 763 loraine, a. generreation rO':Jm,Terrace porch, be seen to appreciate.
ous philadelphia colonial
fireplace in living room and
on short quiet street
FISHER
ROAD
587
recreation room, p&rtitioned
with new extras ...
basement.
Disposal,
dish .. Ope,n Sunday 2-5. 3 bedroom,
in Farms: 382 mckinley, a rewasher, built-in oven and semi-ranch CUSTOM BUILT
vamp 4 bedroom, 21;2
range, m~my other fine fea- 1952, Nat. f.p .. 2 baths, Philipbaths, terms ...
tures. Open Sunday, Call pine mah. paneled den, rec
in Shores: wal~-to-swim, an
builder, WOoclward 1-5340 room, solid side drive, 2 car
interesting
4 bedrom, 21A-GENERAL
SERVICES
or TUxedo 5-0001.
brk. garage. Lot 50 x 156.
den, everything new . . .
For further information call and on the edge of grosse DRYERS VENTED, $15.00. 3. in. standard installation. Call
pointe: 4548 farmbrook,
WINDMILL POINTE
LA 7-0533, TV 1-4162.
a
6
room
surprise
packSUMMIT REALTY
age, $4800 down . . ,
DRIVE, 15315
zippers,
VA 2-9975
21816 madison, near 10- LUGGAGE, trunks,
4 bedroom Southern Colonial
sample
cases
repaired.
Gold
Jeff. a perfect cot for
overlooking
water.
Paneled
stamping,
custom
buDt
lugone or two . . . 22429
cocktail lounge with built-in
gage.
Travelers
Trunk
Co.,
gordon, Jeff-Martin, a 3
GROSSE POINTE WOODS
Hi-Fi on first floor. Complete
10323
Mack.
VAlley
2-6734.
bedroom ranch charmer
modern kitchen with utility Wedgwood, 20661, 1/2 block
. . . a 3 bedroom ranch
room. 2 car attached garage. from Vernier. 1 bedroom, full
sprawled
on 100 ft., 12
Open for inspe~tion 1-5 by bath, library down; 3 bedrms.,
Suburban Maintenance
mile-harper
to exchange
full bath up. Terrace, channBuilder.
Assoc,iates
or sell.
ing kitchen,
good storage
1TXEDO 1-7786
"No
Job
is too Small"
tuxedo
5-0448
space, recreation, incinerator,
One
p
h
0
n
e call for aU
ROBERT E. SCHULTZ
gas heat, garbage
disposal,
13A-LOTS
FOR
SALE
home
maintenance
probgarage.
Drastically
r~duced
lems.
this week for quick action.
PR 6-3038
TU 1-4571
TWO ACRES or more on GarBroadstone,
1894.
Center
hall
field road, nead Hall road,
CRESCENT LANE, 985
Mt. Clemens. TU 1-4275.
Corner Cook road. Midwestern Colonial on large, wooded corWINDOW SHADES
Contemporary,
no basement, ner lot. Libr&ry, 1st floor lav
down;'"
3
bedrooms
plus
dre~5~
3 bedrm., 1 % baths; loaded
PORCH SHADES
LOTTIVUE
with special features. 80 foot ing room up, gas heat. Must
ALUMINUM STORM
landscaped lot, $36,800. Owner. be sold quickly. Open to rea.
WINDOWS AND DOORS
ON THE LAKE
sonable offer. Consider tenns
TUxedo 1-4042.
ALUMINUM AND FIBER
Live Where You Play On The
GLASS AWNINGS
MARTHA BACHERS
GLASS BATH-TUB
Sandy Shores of Lake St. Clair
VAlley 1-7710
ENCLOSURES
NEWBERRY PLACE nr. Lake
Choice homesi tes on lakefront
Complete
Repair Ser'''ice'
Shore. 2 yrs, old custom built
or lagoon. For the most disCleaning,
Repairing
Fam, Home, Ideal for execu.
GROSSE POINTE FARMS
Recondi
tioning
criminating,
at
the
doorway
or Profess. Man. 4 bdrm., 3
FOR SALE
ESQUIRE SHADE CO.
baths, 3 fp., att. 2% car" Qual- MAPLETON RD-Just
a step of America's finest fishing and
15133 Gratiot
ity thru out.
to 2 bus lines, one block to, St boating area.
Open Friday Until 9 P.M.
PEMBERTON
nr. Windmill Paul's Catholic' School, couple
LA 1-1516
Pte., Center Ball Col., 3 bdrms. blocks to public, elementary Exclusive residential develop- LA 1-151?
2 baths, 1st flr. lav .. screened and high schools. Older frame ment. 25 mils. from downtown
FIREPLACE equipment, brass
terr., 2 car att.
colonial with 3 b,r., ba., 1st Detroit. High bldg. restriction.
and irons, tools repolished
f1. lav. Gas heat, 2-car gar., City water and gas. Adequate
and
lacquered, screens relow taxes, lake privileges. Just
scholJls.
Paved
streets.
Low
p
air
e d. Smith - Matthews,
co. under $15,000.
h.m.
6640 Charlevoix. WA 2-7i55.
taxes. As low as $500 down.
185~0 Mack Ave.
TU 4.6221
GROSSE POINTE PARK
CARPET LAYING
INVESTIGATE
-----------I
FOR RENT
NEW AND OLD
Then Anchor With Us
We have a newly decorated
NEWCASTLE, 21742
Stair Carpet Shifted
Near Mack, 6 years old 1 % and reconditioned 2-bedroom
Repairs of' All Types
Lo+tie M. Schmidt, Inc.
story brick. 2 bedrooms down, lower apartment for rent at
LEO TRUDEL
1 large bedroom up. Separate. $85.00 per mo., with garage 48400 Jefferson, 2 Miles N. O'f
TU 5-0703
dining room, recreation room, Just a step to Jefferson bus
SELFRIDGE
FIELD
HO
8-4422
occupancy. Lake
carpettng, gas AC, 2-car gar. Immediate
WiNDOW SHADES
privileges. No pets, and prefer
SHADES MADE
adults only.
JOHN B. DOYLE
WHILE YOU WAIT
GROSSE POINTE Woods, 100
128 Kercheval
TU 2-6262
feet on beautiful Sunning- Complete REPAIR SERVICE
INDIAN VILLAGE
dale drive. Make offer. TU.
FOR SALE
5-8386.
2 HOUSES - One on Burns
BALFOUR ROAD, 1001
New 4 bedroom Colonial, 2~h. with 5 bedrooms, 3 ba., plus
baths, G.E. kitchen, paneled maid's quarters, and on Sem- GROSSE PTE. Woods. Deeplands
subdivision.
.Peach
library, recreation room. By inole with 3 bedrooms, 2 beL,
plus maid's room and ba. Both
Tree lane, Our Lady Star of 14000 EAST SEVEN MILE RD
builder. Open daily.
in nice condition, and priced
the Sea parish. TU. 2-1595,
VAlley 1-9389
LA 7-3700
at the market. Please .call for
or WO. 3-2050.
complete information.
21 B-WATCH
REPAIRING
850 LAKELAND
NEW CAPE COD
4- BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
21I-WATCH
POODLES
-----,
-
Three Trunk Lines to Serve You (i)gickly
CEMENT an
tor. Rep i
rates, free
aci, TUxed
exel 1-829;
1
,
•
Thursday,
May 29, 1958
G'R 0 S S.E POINT!
NEWS
.
21S-Carpenter
Classified Continued
,,
~
~
,
21R-CEMENT
I
y
os.
ng
~d,
rle.
WORK
21R-CEMENT
21S-CARPENTER
COMPLETE masonry service.
Alterations, repairs and new
work. PRescott 1-1907.
J. GAGNIER
REPAIRS and improvements,
All types of carpenter work.
Also aluminum combination
dors, windows and awnings.
J. Barker, VAlley 1-8146.
WORK
c.
...
Sixth Church of Christ,
ee.
Scientist,. Detroit
)R
14710 Kercheval,
and .Ashland
b~t. Manistique
Sunday Services - 10:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
Infant's Room Open for 10:30 Service
tS,
~K
1Ilednesaay
)1-
ES
Evenlng
READING
Testimonial
ROOM -
Meeting-3;OO
16348 EAST
I
p.m.
WARREN
Wednesday 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday 2 to 4~30p.m.
Mon .. Tues .. Thurs .. Fri. and Sat. 10. a'.m, to 9 p.Jr..-
rk,
rYe
ter
9-
FACTORY
FABRICATED
HABITANT
for lasting
CEDAR FENCE
beauty!
protection
and
privacy
"Best-looking home in the neighborhood"that's what they:ll say
when they see beautiful Habitant natural wood fence around your
house and grounds. Habitant Fence protects your lawn and garden
from dogs, thoughtless children and tresp9.ssers, keeps your own
children and pets safe at home. StYles range from high, tight woven
screen fences that af!C)rdmaximum privacy to low spaced lattice and
picket designs . . . factory fabricated to fit your exact ground plan. '
Come in and see us today, we will be glad to plan your outdoor
living area and install Habitant Fence to your exact ground plan.
d
)
).
k
,
\
i
,rk
re-
.. ~lZ-LANDSCAPING
CARPENTER, 'repairs, doors, DESIGNING fashIonable suits, SPRING clean up; seeding,
locks, sash cords, cabinet
coats and dresses,. alterations
f~rtilizing, .rolling, weed and
work. EDgewater 1-4576.
and .hats,; restyling,. re'Rcrab grass spraying, prun~lS-:-CARPENTER W~RK
sonable ....VA 2-3610.
ning, spraying, m 0 nth 1 y
MODERNIZING'
maiIlltenance. 12 years exJIM SUTTON
SEWING alteraiions,
a€;lults
perience. Free estimates.
,
REMODELING
' 1677 BRYS
and children; hetns, zippers,
TU 1-6950
Kitchens, Family Rooine,
Carpenter Work, Repairing ~
plflin
cL'apes,
aprons
and
CAL
FLEMING
GENERAL
Attics, Ree. Rooms.
Remodeling, Attics, .Porches,
pillows.
TU
1-7455.
LANDSCAPE
SERVICE
Licensed Builder
Garages.
Plans Fu,rnished, .
DRESSMAKING
and .re-de'- COMPLETE landscaping and
TU 4-2942
'Grosse Pointe References
signing;. sui~sf d re sse S,
lawn. care,
soddIng' and
'CARPENTER - finisher. Builds
bridals and maternity, Reaspraying ,painting, wall and
porches, r 0 I) m S, garages,
sonable. TU 4-4705.
.w~d6w washing. TU 5-3318.
Does all' type of commission
ALTERATIONS: LadJY tailor, TREES TAKEN DOWN by exwork. Fixtures, flooring, asBILDOR
Belgian. Fa m H y service;
perts. Call after 7 p.m. WAlphalt tiling. Paneling and
~UXEDO 4~0522
men's, 1ad i e s " children's
recreation rooms. 'Estimates
clothing. Quick service. Cali
nut 2-5259.
MODERNIZATION: Kitchens,
free. TUxedo 5-5892.
Mrs.
Pollett,
TUxedo
1-4877.
KRANTZ
BROTHERS, comattics, ree, rooms, porches;
plete
landscaping.
Reasonrough 'and finish work. GuarHOME REMODELING
ALTERATIONS
6n- dresses, . able and dependab~e. Free
anteed. TUxedo 5-0143,
SPECIALISTS
men's suits. VA 4-~665.
estimates, VAlley 2-4236.
Bfrch . kitchen cabinets, bath
CUSTOM dressmaking,
defixtures, formica vanitory, at- H. F. JE~ZEN BUILD'IN G
.. signing, re~styling, alteraRAY'S LAWNCARE
tics, porches.
spring clean - up, fertilizing,
Home
and
Industr~l
Repairs.
tions.
Best
references.
Van
No money Clown, easy Jerms
~dditions,
attics completed,
Dyk1e"Jefferson. Mn-,: Sharp, seeding, summer maintenance.
HERMAN BROTHERS
PRescot 5-7486
Porch enclosures, re<lreation
ADams 1-9150.
vA, 2.8333
VA. 2-0304
rooms, gar age s repaired, '.EXCLUSIVE alterations
on
FERTILIZING and ROLLING
TU
1-9744
TU
1~961l
dresses
and
suits
by
Marie
KITCHEN CABINETS
1awrts; peat moss and top
hE P A I R SCREENS, fences,
, Stephens;. ~lso remodel~ng
soil. By month or season.
& FORMICA TOPS
porches, 'steps, doors, wmand. repalrmg
furs. QUlc..k
Custom Made Furniture . . . ,KitchTUxedo 1-2278, or Howard
en Cabinets . . Formica Tops, Bars
dows cab i net s boo kservIce on hems. TUxedo D8-3919.
. . Recreation Rooms . . . Floor
cases: good work: prompt
7610.
and CeiUng Tile.
. G~ranteed
Work.
service. S. E. Barber, 20380 21U-PLUMBING
.
FREE ESTIMATES
Hollywood, TU 4-005l.
HERBOLD
,r
AMERICAN CABINET &
PLUMBING,
heating
and
gas
KITCHEN
Formica
counter
WOOD PRODUCTS
conversion,
electric
sewer
LANQS<;APIN$ tops;
cabinets
remodeled;
16750 E. a Mile RQad
I
cleaning,
aut
0
mat
i
c
gas
new sinks installed, Old or
East Detroit
Merion blue sod, laid ()r dewater
heater
installed
as
new work. PRescott 5"8710.
low as $100. Licensed plumb- livered. Spring c1ean.up. Top
PR 1-5269
er. J. M. KUShner, TU 5~2959, soil. PRescott 6.5852, Phone
TU 5-7132.
KITCHEN remodeling and dePORCH ENCLOSURES or
cal15 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Evenirtg
singing and all built-in apFlorida "E 0 0 m s. Quality
calls.
pliances. Queen's Kitchens,
FREE estimates; repairs, rematerials
and workman16117 Mack. TU 5-6238.
modeling, .gas heat, sewer
ship. 7' wide double seal
cleaning,
f I 0 0 d controls.
jalousie windows, awning
Working master plwriber.
or casement win d 0 w S.
BEATTY LANDSCAPING &
First Et'glish
VAlley 1~9218.
Kool-Shade s ere e n i n g
LAWN CUTTING COMPANY
available on any job. For
21V-SIJ..VER' PLATING
estimates
phone
TWinGraduates 'Of M.S.U. School
brook 2-8033.
of Landscaping .
SILVER & GOLD PLATING
Spring
clean-up. Gardening
Oxidizing and Repairing
Superior Sash ond
Evergreens
Trimmed
Vernier Road at Wedgewood
Brass Polishing & Lacquering
CEMENT WORK; all types.
Repairs, porches, steps. Ern-I
est, PRescott 7-4336.
invited to attend
21 T-DRESSMAKING
I
WORK
CEMENT and Brick Contractor. R e p air s, reasonable
rates, free estimates. Maniaci, TUxedo 1-7179 or DRexel 1-8293.
You are cordially
Work
Page Nineteen
B. HELMER
'Evi Lutheran
Church
Screen_ Co.
Drive, Grosse Pointe Wood,
ALTERATIONS;
rooms and
garages.. Licensed builder.
DR e x e I 1-1195, VEnice
14508 CHARLEVOIX
1 Blk. east of Chalmers
TUxedo
4.5862
9-9964.
,
y
y
.,
I,
~~
reed,
ity
FOUNTAINE
ed,
es,
A
Church
""'Ii..
A..',
, dlatilalli
I
at 8. Mile
Free Estimates,
\~~-;;
l
~J
rk
.,~
,
75
~';"i; ;
\
..
#'
'"
~
I
l~
L
I
I
I
~
~
How to move
with children
to a new h,ome!
~'1~.
.
send
TU 1-8863
~ =-
~
or new neighborhood, ask us for a copy of 4 When
Families Move," .prepared by Allied Van Line!
and the Child Study Association. It will help
you plan a safe, smooth, headache~free ~ove for
you and your children. For free copy, Just call
Kitchen Modernization
or Minor Repair
Free Estimates
Licensed C<:mtractor
I
I
Near 8 Mile:
Ave.
G. P. Wooda
~
~
~
Devotional Services
Sunday.
11 :00 a.m.
~
Midweek Service.
==
~
Wednel!day -
~
~
~
8 p.m.
Instruction Classes
Thursday -
11 a.m .• 1 p.m.
E
I
I
~
TU 5-5791
CARPENTER repairs; kitchens
attics, recreation rooms, additions. Also smaU repair
ja.bs. By hour or job. PR
I
6-5363,
~===
_
Jefferson AYlnue
Baptist Ohurch
::;
~
~
3
==
13337
~
~
E. JeffersC)~ at Lakeview
Ho",.r
~
3
J. Armstrong,
Minister
~
DIAl.-A ..PRA YER
~
David W. Bi,hop, Miniit.r
~
TU 4-0412
~
iE
Rev. Eve ;Edeen Minister
S
MORNING WORSHIP
lunday. 9:00 and ll:OOa.Di.-
I
t
'TUxedo
4..5230
I
CHURCH
sunday.
~lIInllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllll~
SCHOOL
9:46 a,m.
~!I
MOVING & STORAGE
~Il
~
r;A\~
CJ'
0
JUL.lED
~
I
For Everyone Concerned About'
Living for Christ in 1e58
(
.
!.!~:fnf\
", T
II' "'IJ.wIf~
I • .]
11850
(
We cordially invite you to
E. JEFFERSON
"
A Conferenc~
on Christian Living
I~~
,
of Philadelphia,
SERVICE
.
RESIDENTIAL
.
COMMERCIAL
Place-Grosse
INDUSTRIAL
Celotex
Bird Co.
• FlinkOte
Authorized
•
•
•
Dealer
Barrett
U.S. GYPsu,m
Bring
~ample,
For Your Selection
Est. 1923
Pointe Baptist Church
Pointe
SKIS
STOLEN
.
Estdblished
ASPHALT
.;;..."
IN
'.
Hotel)
;
OUR 26TH
12057 GRATIOT
AVE.
DETROIT ~ MICH.
LAK!VI E'tl! 6-7100
WAlnut 1-4330
TUXEDO 4-5~
I
t
....
14.95
WA 2-7155
HOURS: 8:30 to 5:30 Daily
Repair and
Adjustment
Underground
Sprinkler
ON WELCOME
WAGON.
\
of
PHOI'4E
TU.5-4817
SYSTEMS
CoIl D & D Sprinklers
TU.5-0994
TU 1-1526 .
Guarantoed
.
ALL MAKES
Workmanship
STORM SASH
SCREENS - DOORS
ALUMINUI'
REPAIRING
Open Tues., Frt. 9 p.m.
Sun 12 to 4 p.m.
AI R-TEe •••
TW 2-7800
Blk. W. of Oakland
640 E. '7 Mile-I
Harry Smith
Construction (0.
.
LICENSED
BUILDER
Residential and Commercial
Modernization
and
-
and
BuildinCJ
Alterations
Repak -
Designing
Maintenance
Planning
Office:
TV 5-3900
128 Kercheval
Res.
TU 5-7013
~rosse Pointe Farms
PORCH
DOORS
JaI~uti.
Awning
Slider
Screen Encl.
Combinatioii
CO.
,
TILE
I
~~j~
-
.~\
~.
A
L
U
M
Jalousie
Combination
Plain or
, Anodi~ed
ALCOA
Screen
I
N
Louver
. ...I
U
M
Good "Fence~sfo'r 49 Years
Every. style 01 Fen~i:.
erected I,or you
ALL UNITS DISPLAYED FULL SIZE
I:l.isplay Open Daily
,
lto 5:30; Fri. 'til 9 p.m.
FreG Estimat'es
Tarms te Suit
.
WA. 1-62.82
.
1DclutUnl
Chain Link All-Steel and
R"JsticStyles
'SHEET M~TAL WORK
TIN OR COPPER SKYLIGHTS
20105 MACK ,A'/!. at V!RNU!R RD.
GROSSE POINTE WOODS 36, MICH.
posi-
FOUNDRY CO.
FOR INFORMATUON
YEAR
GUTTER CONDUCTORS
'106' Mack Avenue
Estab.191.
..
'
.
MEHLENBACHER FENCE CO.
10403 HA.RPER
RESIDENTIAL. INDUSTRIAL
a J
6640 Charlevoix
,
ROOF REPAIRS
RE-ROOFING
to 4 cooking
0
,SMITH-MATTHEWS
life.
Rambler • Metropolitan
Sales and Servic~
.Detroit 15. Mieh.
SLATE,
•
flavor
Spit adjusts
tions
OTHER MODELS AT
Additions
: VAlley 2-3459
'~1
Fits any grill or fireplace
Self basting, seals in juice
Heavenly tasting c h arc
good will
in busines~:
and community
14201 E. Warren, at Newport
-
extra.
•
•
•
Thirty years
of experience
fostering
Hudson &. Nash Used Cars
1917
,A.' G.MARX
COMPLETE
~,~
We Specia lizel n
(Next to the Savarine
barbeCuei'
with motor. stand,
meat forks, spit
llfter. 6 ft. UL approved cord. 30 ft.
extension cord 2.50
24-
WELCO~1E
WAGOI~
Lavigne Auto Sales
HOJ\1E
•
~
95 3
Serving All of Grosse '-oint.
Phone VAlley 2.3560
dle ~
There is
only one
DELIVER
EAST NINE MILE RD. Phone PR, 6..77521
Between Mack and East Jefferson
~
Hudson
Nights, TV 1-1259 . ...
FUNERAL
"'PARTY-Q
Only ONE!
We Also Service Nash Car
A. H. PETERS
Cooking Outdoors
Woods
Tim.--Sund~ys, II a.m. and 6 p.m.
,
Week Nights-7:30 p.m, (Except Saturday)
LA 7-7200' F:~:i:T
(Licensed)
LANDSCAPING:
Spring
clean-up, lawn cutting and
landscaping. C 1e a neaves,
basements, garages, windows
washed, all- odd jobs. Need
work. Reasonable. Call Bill,
TU. 2-9284.
0
22437
Dates-June 1 thru 8
LOCKHART ::'o?~~~tND
A Can Will
Pa.
Grosse
John.ManVllle
WATER
Al Blossey, 14, of 1S82 Haw.
thorne, informed Woods police
on Wednesday, May 21, that
someone had stolen a pair of
his water skis .from the garage
at the rear of his home.
Sharpening • Overhaul • Repair
Hand 'and Power Lqwn Mowers-Garden
Tool.
Knives Scissors Saw Filing
Mack at 8 Mile Road
EAVESTROUGHS
Take the Ohore
out of
2-,1157~
WE PICK UP AND
Dr. Norman W. Paullin
Re-R00 f log
•
••
Rspalrs
COMPLETE lawn care. Expert
cutting, trimming, weeding
and window washing. References. Call Paul, TUxedo
2-0151 or Dwight, TUxedo
GRIFFORDS TREE SERVICE.
TYRR;ELL'S
Trees topped, trimmed ,and
Complete Tree Service
removed. Reasonable. TUx- Dutch elm removal and sprayedo 1-5110.
ing. Trimming, r~iring
and
ball
planting,
TREE 'I'RIMMING,
PRESCOTT 1-3061
REMOVAL, SPRAYING,
Dutch Elm disese spraying,
cabling.
Free estimates.
Approved FiIme ~i8ted
TU 1-6950
f,'-AL FLEMING TREE
By Movie Council
SERVICE
The Grosse Pointe Moti'On
MERION blue grass nursery Picture and Television Counsod. Landscape designing and cil has released their list of
planting. Patios and natural approved movies for children
stone walls. Free estimates. eight years and UlP, for the
TU 1-6950
months of May and June.
CAL FLEMING GENERAL
Especially recommended is
LANDSCAPE SERVICE
"Underwater Warrior", showLANDSCAPING,
so din g, ing in detail. the fascinating
lawn cutting and mainte- work of the UnderwQiter Dem~
nance, tree work, soils and olition Unit of the U. S. Navy.
Recommended for children
supplies, WAlnut 5-9323.
are "Fort Dobbs", "Red BalLAWN CUTrING $4 per house, loon," "Run Silent, Run Deep,"
all landscaping work. Clean and "Saddle the Wind." Of
eaves, ,garages, basements. special merit fqr teen-agers
All odd jobs. Need work. are "Paths of Glory", "RainExperienced. CalI Bill, TUx- tree County," and "Witness fQr
edo 2-9284.
the PrQsecution".
Ouhitanding Preachers
I
Grosse
Pointe
University
School's undefeated dual meet
tennis team and defending
State Class C~D champions
over-whelmed
the Dearborn
Regional competition to qualify five boys for the State tourney ot be hed in Kalamazoo,
Michigan, June 6-7.
George Haggarty and Bob
Wood, 1957 state C-D doubles
champions,' defeated
t h ~i r
teammates
Bruce Birgbauer
and Dan Book in' the all Grosse
Pointe finqI 6-3; 6~3.Birgbauer
and ~ook reached the finalS.b!
bea~mg another GPUS combln~,tIon, Dav~ Templet?n. and
DICk Baron In the sernt-fmals.
. Peter M~nroe captured the
~mgles reglOOOcrown by beatmg. Ron. See :?,0In Ann Arbor
Nm~erslty HIgh 6-3; 6:'1 to
qauhfy.
FIRE RUINS CAR
Farms firemen answered a
call to the home of E. R. Loth,
315 BelJanger on Mon<iay, May
19, where they battled a blaze
that completely engulfed Loth's
car. The vehicle was a total
LARCENY REPOL:tTED
loss.
Damage, was estimated at
August J. Mayer. Jl., of 2064
$700,
according to Farms Fire
Anita, reported the theft of a
Chief
M. William Mason. A
. hubcap
and a b~r
guard
from his car on Tuesday, May faulty wire was blamed.
20, to WOO<J.s
police. The police
report did no:t give the location
of the car at the time ~)heitems
were stolen.
Greenlawn Mower S~arpening Shop
led by one of Arnerica's
ge
1-
TREE REMOVAL
PRUNING - .I.'OPPING
LANDSCAPING
FULL Y INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES
PRescott 5-2328
IF NO ANSWER CALL
PRo 5-8659
COMPLETE landscaping service, lawn cutting, cultivation
and fertilization, edging and
clean:up work. Top dressing
and seeding. Julius LaQuiere.
PR 8~2709. Free estimates.
$1.85 per hour.
d
WOLVERINE
,(( Ymlr aget1t jor
POWEll ROLLING
Tandem Rollers
PRESCOTT 7-5296
•
FRAt'-JK J. ST. AMOUR
TU 2-8324
EASTLAND
LA'WN CUTTING CO.
Tibbies' Tree Service
VAlley 2-4540
rii'
~\l.
20760
to a new, town
If you are movipg with children
JII) .
I LAKESIDE
I UNITY, DENTER
I Mack
(
::--
)
1\
- Alterations
GENERAL contractors. Modernization, homes and ga~
rages. W A 1nut 2-6353 or
evenings TRinity 2-4107.
~1I11f111111111111111"1II~1I11"'' ' ' ' 'II'' ' ' IIII1''III''lIl1f1l1l1l1n,,~
Fencing Materials or Erection
20760 Harper,
Additions
8625 E. Jefferson at Burnl
Across from Whittier Hotel
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
Holy Comm\1nion
Rev. Arnold G. Fredericksen
9.;30. 11 :OO--Church School
Ministers;
'., Allan A. Zaun
Arnold G. Fredricksen
Clinton W. Lowrie
Organist: Robert Hawksley
FENCE CO.
21Z-LANDSCAPING
BEAT the summer heatl 4 roof
ventilators,
$26 installed.
SLocum 7-0379.
JeHerson Avenue
Presbyterian
)
VA 2-7318
The Sputniks
and 'Vagabonds battled right down to
the wire in the final three
game
championships
series
before thQ Sputniks emerged
the winner, two games to one,
to become the champions of
the Senior Girl's Volleyball
League -at the Neighborhood
Olub last Thursday, May 22.
The title series produced
some of the best volleyball
seen at the club all winter
with 'some volleY-oSlasting as
long as three minuter:.
T'l:e playoff series was necessltated when both teams
wound, up the regular season
schedule tied at fifteen games
each.
The Sputniks won the first
game 26-9 and then bowed to
the Vagabonds
20-3 before
coming ba~k and taking the
final game 1l.10~
Senior Girls will play on
the Playground
Court. Any
girls in the commwrity who
may be interested are cordially invited to play.
Do as well as you can today,
and perhaps tomorrow
you
FR 8-4334 mey be able to do better.
Engraving
SILVERSMITHS,
Church Worship 11 a.m.
:
Repairing,
LEEBERT
Sunday Schi)ol 9:30 a.m.
ge
Jewelry
20460 John R.
8p,utniks Capture GPUS Nette,..~
Volleyball 1jtle Win Regionals
I
•• ••
..
.
- - - -, ,--.--~~ -~~--~~~¥~. ~------~-"""-"'' '-----'' '---------'' -----.-F'' ' ' '-' ' .'...._.-:-."'._$ ......---_ ...-- __ •••:""'4._.:..:__
• f,
I.,.
'\
~,
l
•'
....
\.
~.:-n, • ;
Page Twenty
*
I
•
"'it", ,',
,
'
••
,I
•
"
'"I
_,
••
04_......".....0.. s.. ~ .... _"",.wllC_..
','
,
,.
.....
Thursday, May 29, 1958
Feature
*
*
'.
. ~.
Po:inter of Intere'st
POINTE
~rowin9 UP,~
r 'uJhen 'the
'"WaS
Favorite
By Pat Talbot
You could have a fish fry in your back garden (if the
barbecue craze had been popular then) any evening in
1917 with perch dipped from the lake' just a half hour
before at your request, Total cost 50c.
Fisheries began in the Pointe in 1816 when Charles
Poupard sold s;)me land off Windmill Ppinte to George
McDougall and reserved the right for his sons, Simon
and Charles, the privilege of seining for fish.
The first big" commercial fishery began with Shadrach GiBet in 1829 who operated from 12 acres near Fox
Creek. He sold to Peter and John Bu£1o, who ran the
plant until 1890 when Joe Miller, the greatest fish
entrenrenellr of them all took over the plant.
In those days nets 350 feet long were towed in small
boats out to capstans and tied. Then the boatmen shouted
"Bral-Ie" to the shore crew who whipped up the horses
who pulled the ropes. Perch, pickerel, mullet and white
fish were drawn in, sorted and sent to the fish house
wh~rc they were sold for 5c to 25c a piece.
Joe Miller ran the fish house, a road house and was
host to the Peoria Gun Club in his heydey. Doc Conley,
a veterinary doctor, ran a bus from the end of the street
car line on Alter road out to the fisherv and Joe hhnself
operated a motor launch from the same site. Each run
cost a nickel.
Other prominent Frenchmen ran fisheries, among
them Maglory Gouin and Rufu~ Kerby who sold their
interest in 1877 to Ferdinand Rivard for $1 000.
.
' ,
. G~orge Marh!'i and Charles Morau. also operated
flsherIcs and LOUISMoran, who could fInd no acreage
on the shore, built a pier out into the lake and did a
thriving business.
By' 1917 all this industry came to an end aud soon
after so did the road houses which served the famous
.
f rog an d f.IS h d~n~~rs.
The cause was the Warner Crampt?n L.aw prohIbItmg,. by ,U. S. g'ov~rnment o~der, all.
fIsherIes on the Detrmt RIver and Lake St. ClaIr,
who!,where and whatnot
by whoozlt
Grosse Pointe University School's Fair corning up
June 6-7 is responsible for some heavy advertising effort on the parents' part. Spied Mrs. H. Gordon Wood,
looking oh so chic in fashionable printed shorts and a
lush pink sweater, doling out yellow bumper stickers to
all the mamas and dads coming to chauffeur their offspring home. The stickers, now seen on many a Po~nte
station wagon and sports car, tell the news that the
carnival is coming.
*
*
More news items on the fsir come from Chicago, no
less, A conscientous parent in a \Vindy City bistro was
successfully selling tickets to the Fair to ail his cilhorts.
Will they drive all the way from Illinois to attend we
wonder?
*
*
*
*
*
*
In our zeal to spread the word about the Cottage
Hospital Kitchen Tours we upped the date. The culinary
triumphs will be seen June 6 not the 7th as previously
stated.
Italy is the fashionable tourist mecca for Pointers
these days and the many visitors brought back Chianti
bottles from such spots as Paradiso, Rossini's, LelIi's, or
Vannelli's which they donated to the Garden Celltp.r
Flower Show last week. The bottles were fetchingly
filled with ivy and eucalyptus sprays, which' is a decorative note for porch and terrace decorators this spring.
*
*
*
Shopping on the hili one sunny day was Mrs. Roy
D. Chapin, Jr., in the un i form
shirt, sweater and
Bermuda shorts. But she was toting the most enormous
straw basket bound in leather and her unusual fashion
items were the gold leaf barrettes binding her page boy.
Most attractive!
*
*
*
Two sisters, in the kindergarten ~et, were having a
tug of war with a jump rope one of these fine ~pring
days when one let go suddenly and the other suffered
quite a jolt on her noggin from the sidewalk, Her father
picked up the child and spok,e harshly to her. sibling.
"She might have had a concussion", said the wonied
daddy. The sister, not abashed, asked her sobbing vis-a
'\'is. "What's two and two"? Still cr~'ing the little girl
said promptly, "Four". "See, daddy," the other said
scornfully, "She doesn't have any concussion!"
*
*
~
PILFERINGS
"If you have her for a friend," quipped actress June
Allyson, "you don't need any enemies".
*
*
*
*
*
*
A woman's boss asked her, "For a dope, I've come a
long way, haven't I?"
BANANA NUT BREAD
Contributed by
1\irs. V. H. Condon
1% cup flour
1% tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
%' tsp. salt
2/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup shortening
2 eggs
l/z cup broken nut meats
2 or 3 bananas, enough
to make 1 cup mashed
MRS. MARIA ROUMELL, OF LAKEPOINTE
CHRIST, SCIENTIST,
GROSSE POINTE
FARMS
Sunday Services
10:30 •. m
Sunday School-Infants.
Room
,
10:30 a.m
Wednesday Testimony
Meeting .......,....................8:00 p.m
KERBY SCHOOL
Road, at Beaupr •.
ALL ARE WELCOME
UI'
*
*
*
lie
*
What a difference the right tie IWikes!Th.e subtle coloring
of silk shantung always adds the finishing touch to a man's
summer wardrobe. Particularly effective with Proper's bandsome light-weight suits.
*
*
*
5
A
Colonial Group
To Have Tea
L
J
I
E
I
8 DAYSaNty
ar:
All
Rackels
I
, , Camp. for Boys
""ID\Wt&\1
Saddle (torses for Hire
HAYRIDES
25% Off
longhorn Ronch
Restringing
T l' U bey,
of
Mich.
Cost'
14.75
13.75 :
10.50
8.50 ~
Expert Repairing
and Finishing
Gold, Silver
Brass
Fittest Sterling Carefully Refinished
6.00
5.00
.
VA 2.4043
:Jhat /or Pelj
New domestic and imported merchandise
Complete supplies for all pets
• PURE BRED DOGS,
.....-------.
and KITTENS FOR SALE
Grooming service
for .Poodles, .
8 BIRDS BOARDED
Terriers and
TO OR DER
19587 Mack
Grosse Pte. Woods
by
~8doz.
50ld on5y by the dozen
at this price!
"
Reading Room
0 S
DO G HUES
5.00
4.00
All 1958 -Stock
Carveth Silverplaters
at Alter
SWIM TRUNKS
Tennis Balls
Free Estimates
' Insured
Reasonable
All .work done in our own shop
14824 Charlevoix,
12.9,5
11.95
8.50
7.00
NYLON
30 Yeal's Experience
h
•
See Gray ••• and Play!
Cast
GUT
NEW OWNERSHI'P
Open from 10 a.!h. to 6 p.m.
daily e:x c e p t Sunday, and
Holidays. Friday evenln:1I frOM
7 to 9 o'clock.
*
Summer is well met .. , at D. ]. Ilealy! The mood is
Mediterranean, .• with swim suit color~ a torrent of gatet,'
. . . some abloom with lovely pastel flowers . . . otbers
'plainly pe1'fect in solids. At Healy's you. can find the suit
that will do wonderful things for 'J'fJurftgure becausfJ R?se
Marie Reid planned it that way. Whether J'ou are an acttve
outdoor girl or a terrace beauty • • . the Sports Department
" • , with its coordinated ensembles, pictures j'OU at your best.
Tennis
Christian 'Science
First Church of Christ,
Scientist,
Gross. Pointe Farms
Cook-out headouarters in The Village is Jacobson's
Home Decorative Shop. Here you'll find everything for
the barbecue, excE..pt 'the meat itself! J?raisers range
f:-om about seven to ten dollars. Accessones are abundant and include meat thermometers
.. , implements,
the chef's apron and cap ... a delightful fringed picnic
table cloth ... even a seasoning and cook book set . , .
for the open-air go urmet.
See Gray
and Play!
the
93 Kerchevol
, By Pat Rousseau
"Every Englishman has his garden . , . so it's only
--Fred Runnells Photo
By Patricia Talbot
The Starlighters of Our Lady natural that artists should create beautiful flGral patR.eveling in t~e applause of the Carnegie Hall audiStar of the Sea Parieh are
' ence IS Mrs. Mana Roumell, soprano concert star" who the RowneHs all enjoy their having their monthly dance terns for fine English china. At The Dants you'll find
(Starlight Fantasy) on June the charm of these patterns, as well as elegant simpliCity
san~ in that august auditorium on, Saturday, in New domestic life in the Pointe.
Spade, Ro:val
Opera Beckoned
6, at 9 p.m. in their clubroom in designs. Included in the collection ...
YorK.
Copenhagen,
Royal
Crown
Derby,
Coalport
... also for
Mrs. Roumell auditioned for in Fairiort road.
Mrs.. Roumell has sung. at she lnet her husband, who is
the
every
day
table,
Poole
pottery
and
Spisa
Ribb ...
CarnegIe Hall before and IS a in the catering business.
the director of the New York
star with the Michi,gan Opera
a sophisticated
Swedish setting, The traditional
OR
City Center Opera some years Pointe Soroptimists
Sang Before Royalty
A£sociation, where she escontemporary minded bride-to-be will surely find china
ago and was offered a starring
Award Dinner
Mrs. Roumell is very p':oud role, but she couldn't leave her Attend
pecially delights in Puccini
for her new home at The Dants.
of
her
Greek
ancestry
and
Several
members of the Sorroles. M'ost of her professional
family. She feels she has comopt i m i s t's International of
*
*
work is done on the ,concert was thrilied to sing before the bined her maternal duties with Grosse Pointe attended the WoIs it time for a change--maker at rout. I~ouse.' Slipc01'e1's
King and Queen of Greece her career for the most enstage beo~use she won t lea~e when they visited this country
m'an of the Year Award dinner, can sometitlleJ be the answt'r to a room's plea for attention
her Spamsh stucco hpme m
joyable life.
Wednesday evening at the Wo. . . . trans.form~ng the whole t:tppearance with touches of
the Pointe and more par- same yea'rs ago. She will leave
The
coming
trip
to
Greece
man's City Club.
ticularly her husband George for Athens in August to sing
1teeded colo,. , .. 07' calmness. It's ,'our choice •••
but
will
be
the
first
time
she
has
They included, Mrs. Rich- If/a11.amakel"s Studio can help )'OU :m.ake the Ubeautiful"
and children Martha, 11,' and at a special Gl'eek Indepen- left her children in some time
ard Lehman, Mrs. A. J. Meyer,
Anthony, 9, students at Trom- dence celebration there.
for S() long and like all mothers Mrs. Russell Harkness, Mrs. decisi011. Select from. a wide varietl' of fabrics ••• rel1' on
bley sehool.
Her first pr'ofessional con- she has qualms, but she feels Herbert Bachman, Mrs. Louis expert fit#ng . , . a11d hat'e confidence in the subtle touch
cert
was in oonnection with the trip would be too much Hutchenruther, Mrs. Joseph of 4 decorators expede11ce!
Practices Daily
this national day when she for them with school work Riley,
Mrs. William McClena.
Tile brunette, olive skinned sang at 14years old. She is one
*
*
*
soprano, practices daily in a of the few concert singers of left behind. Her ties to her hen, Miss Doris Forsythe, Miss
"Here comes the bride" . . . and here's a gift suggestion
dramatic black and white liv- Greek descent in America and homeland are strong and she Carolyn Wicks, and Mrs, Arch- that is sure 11» please the b'ride AND groom . . • a camera
mg room a,ccented in green is often eaHed upon to sing recently recorded some Greek ibald Trowbridge.
from The Camera Center. It's a wonderful way to start a
_-<-------with zebra striped furniture. at Greek festivities here. She national songs fur the Colum- _...........
marriage
with happy memories recor~d on film now
.
She is every inch the popular is a member of the choir of bia label.
to
be
cherished
later. Truly the gift of a lifetime!
With all her concert work
pict.ure of prima donna, but the Assumption Greek Orthoadmits to many domestic dox Church where her family around Detroit she has little
*
*
*
regret for the opera career she
yearnings. _Her concert work worships.
"Gather ye rosebuds while ye may" ... or lila~s ...
has sacrificed and in her
takes her out of town inlily of the valley or carnations ... for the most fragrant
As
a
mother
Mrs.
Roumell
is
charming
home, practising at
frequently and she has turned
summer. These bouquets are found at The Notre Dame
down a career in grand opera kept bcsy chauffeuring her her grand piano she feels
Pharmacy.
The lovely floral perfun1es and colognes
because she would have to live children to piano lessons and secure in the knowl€dge that
they
have
collected
are available in spray, sachet and
concerts. They are both musical she has the best of both posin New York.
solid
forms
for
your
pleasure and beauty.
She is of Greek descent and and enjo~ their mother's daily sible worlds.
*
*
*
was born in Decatur, Ill., practis,ing. Like aH singers she
Mary wouldtt;'t h,lve been quite contrar.1' and her indoor
where she will return this fall is still studying and takes
garden would have prospered . . ~ if she had a delightful
in triumph for a concert. Much lessons here three or four Creative Writing Test
of her t!1aining w~s taken in times a week, She has sung Won by Susan Baker'
snu;1.l
brass wate1'ing can, •• the k;nd The League Shop
Chicago between jobs as a with the Pontiac Symphony,
carries at four dollars.
Patricia Krause, chairman 1
cashier, waitress and hostess, the Wayne University Sym*
*
*
When applying for a job as phony, th~ Tuesday Musicale of the Creative Writing ComI
Whether the campsite is the back yard , . , or a lakeside
and
the
New
York
Opera
Comhostess in a restaurant there pany when it appeared here. mittee of Detroit Commercial i
, miles away. : . Jacobson's Youth Center outfits the camper
.
College, announced Monday
tip to toe. Fm' boys and girls there's a large selection of slaeks,
Appears With Greek Tenor I that Susan Baker was the win- I
shorts; blue jeans • . . shirts, terry robes and all manner of
practical, washable, wearables!
~i~h so many local oppor- ner of first place in the 1958!
tumtles Mrs. Roumell doesn't
..
have to range far afield for annual .wrl'tmg contest. The
GROSSE POINTE
can c e r t s and I"arely goes finalists in the writing con- I
Mrs. Arthur Maxwell Par- farther than Orchestra Hall in test wrote on "Detroit, a Major
METHODIST CHURCH
ker, first vice-presIdent of the ~hicago. Appearing w.ith her Seaport."
i
211 MoroS! Rood
Society of Daughters 'of Co- m 'her second CarnegIe ConTh
r.t' g h
. h
9:30 a.m. - Mo;;:uing WorshIp,
lonial Wars, State of Michigan, cert was a famous tenor from'
e w 1 m C' amplOns Ip
Moross Rd. at Harper
::hurch School for Nursery, Tiny
Tots. Kindergarten. Prim ary and
will open her home in Old Greece, Niko Gournaris" and trophy will be presented to
Junior Depts.
Postor E. Arthur McAsh ~
Brook lane for the June 3 she was thrilled to share' the Susan at the 55th annual com10:30 a.m. - Adult Bible Class.
11:15 a.m. -- Morning Worship,
meeting of the Society.
w:oo a.m. MOrn1ng Worship
stage with her countryman.
mencement on Friday, June 11.
Church School for Nursery. Tiny
Mrs. Marvin L. Hoagland, of
Tots,
Kindergarten.
Primary,
Inl1
:20 a.m. Sunday School
At home she does a gre'at
She is the daughter of Mr.
May 29 ...June 3
termedIate and Senior Depts,
Dearborn, state president, will
i?,r herself and and Mrs. Gerald D. Baker of l
7:30 p.m. Evening Service
~
conduct a Council Meeting at deal of sewing
REV. HUGH C, ,WHJTE, Postor
d lIKes. to cook, 768 Trombley road.
daughter
'
1:15 .o'clock, and the reguJ:ar Greek natlonal dIShes, of
~ELEN D. THOMAS
All Welcome
~
meeting a"t2 o'clock, at which course. She dishes up a wonDirector of Christian Education
reports will ,be 'given of the derful lamb fricasse and de- .. a:n.sdo""ne
TUxedo 1-7888 .
Annual Assembly 00 the Na- licious milk pudding, which ~
odge Ma:utoulin
tional Society held in Wash- are family favorites.
District
ington in April, by officers
~tJ&A6td ~ 9"~24y
With her family the prima
and deegates, among whom
Catering to Sportsmen who like
was Mrs. Willard O. Wilson, of donna enjoys Florida and Cat- . to
and' they are all .
fish for the big ones. _DeLuxe
skill mountain vacations, but American Plan accommodations.
Bedford Road, G. ,P.
We feature good foodj 'good b~~s,
1958 MODELS
The program will ,consist' of
g,ood boats and good, fishing.
Families welconl~.
;.
..
a, paper written' by Mrs', ParLocated
15
mil~
east
of
Little
ker, the hostess, espeC'aillyfor.
Current - .away 'from h~ghways
Horses Bought and Sold
the occasion, entitled, "Octo.
, in a newly opened virgiil fishing
district.
ber's Chid.A Story of Old
9 ,to 14
Opens June, 20th. Reservations
Wilson - Spalding
Detroit." Tea and a social hour
recommended .. Write for f91ders,
Camp
for
boys
9-14,
organized
rates
and
how
to
get
there
,
.
:
will conclude the afternoOn.
Cortland - Davis
C. Ben Johnson, 8104E. Jefferson
Arn,ong Pointers who will exercises, 'g,a me 5, recreation,
Bancroft
Detroit 14, MIch., PH. LO 8-1473
Physil;:al fitness tests on arrival
Phone STilwell 1-4101
attend are: Mrs. Wilfred J.
and leaving. Good food. For fol.
Oampbell, of Fisher road; Mrs, der.
write Olympic Sports Camp
VAN DYKE AT 25 MILE RD., WASHINGTON', MICH.
Arthur Hamilton Bacon, of
,
"
for boys, Belmorol' Hotel, SparBarrington road; Mrs. Lloyd row Lake, KilworthYi Ont., CcinDeWitt Smith, of G I' and
ado, or J. Rhyndress, 2201 6
Marais boulevard and Mrs. Englehardt, St. Clair Shores,
Regular
Sa5. '
Am b l' 0 seE.
\'ou are tnVited to
Starlighters
Holding Dance
AVENU,E
Counter Points
Add
dry ingredients. Sift ~wice
ag,ain. Cream sugar and short.
ening uutil fluffy. Add 1 egg.
Beat slowly at first. TIlen add
second egg and repeat. Add
nuts. Add flour mixture alternately with bananas, Blend,
Pour hi lo.af pan. Bake 55
minutes in 350 ~egree oven.
When cool wrap in wax paper
an~ keep overnight before
cutting.
The irading stamp craze hit a new peak wh~n a Stephens road.
Greensboro, N.C., funeral home advertised; "We Give
Top Value Stamps".
.
Sign on a Fort Worth, Tex., mo\,ie house; "Double
Feature. SUPER HORROR SHO"'. Free lollipops."
* *. *
At a Washington party photograrhers
were busy
snapping pictures of Dame Edith Sitwell, the English
poetess. During the workout one cameraman was seen
shaking r.Lis head and muttering to himself, "What's the
matter"? asked a pal.
.
"I just don't like it", he said, "People shouldn't call
a dignified broad like that a dame."
* * *'
After all, our worst misfortunes never happen, and
most miseries lie in anticipation . , . Balzac,
FIRST CHURCH OF
f!J~nte
Recipes
Siff: flour and measure.
*
=
I
of
People in The Know
+ •
*
'
Good l'aste
*
*
*
;
;.~~
III"'•
-11•• '115.e.o.Lu~ ••••••••••••••
_¥
...a.....
J .e,..z~
..e 11II0"'...
4%
...
.
..
'
G R 0 -S S E ' POI N:T ! ,N E W S
*
2&5 Kerby
.
. I
S panlS.S,
by appointment.
Sat.!
p.m.
Men's and Boys'
,
2:95 to 7.95
OFFICIAL SUPPLIERSTO KAMP KENWOOD
j
Racquet and
Sport Shop
.
Racq~eland
Sport Shop
106KERCHEV AL.
TU 1-5262
TU 1-2162
TU 1.5262
,
b .~.b
•
-.;.. ... ;;. ....
106 KERCHEVAL
TU 1.2262

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