Ike Enters McCarthy Feu The Weather fos | Ge an . \ Moet ot ONTIAC PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS ¥) ’ Tuesday: Cloudy, - acai tates tine _ Edition *% * * & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 —28 PAGES ACOOCIATED, PRESO UNITED Te 112th YEAR Army Secretary Given Backing by White House Senator May Appeal to President or Wilson in Reds-in-Service Probe NEW YORK ({INS)—The White House today was) drawn into the heated con- troversy between Sen. Jo- seph R. McCarthy and Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens. The Pentagon announced that Stevens obtained clear- ance from the White House for his statement accusing McCarthy of “humiliating” an Army general. Earlier, it was learned ‘McCarthy intends to go to “higher authority’ — pre- sumably Defense ay Charles E. Wilson or - dent Eisenhower — in his fight to get the names of Army officials he accuses of shielding a “Fifth Amend- ment Communist.” An unimpeachable source said today the Wisconsin Republican plans such a move unless their allegedly recruiting (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Scattered Showers Outlook for Tuesday Benson Lumberyard Razed by HI Olympic Diver Honored Sees 2 fi di a = ot AP Wirephete WINS SULLIVAN TROPH Y—Maj. Sammy Lee, Olympic diving champion, holds the James E. Sullivan award—emblematic of having done the most to further the cause of athletics in 1953—after accept- born of Korean parents, is an army doctor stationed in Korea. Oppose More Liquor Places 13 in Commission Race State Stand on Licenses Thirteen candidates for election to Pontiac City Commission have signed a statement indicating opposi- tion to any increase in places selling liquor by the glass. The statements were solicited by Dr: Milton Bank, chairman of the Citizens Referendum Committee. _ The city primary election occurs March 1. J. H. Patrick Glynn, District 6, and William W. Don- aldson, District 3, said they would oppose issuance of more licenses “unless the present ordinance is changed,” seca to Dr. Henry Savage of the First Baptis urch. + The others, Savage said, | a 1t-was—understoed,—_in—addition, Stated they opposed. “nei! ake-Orion Man 1% that McCarthy is trying to arrange | action ,taken by a por Killed by Train "| Auto Thrown 70 Feet by Impact of Collision With Locomotive George E. Thompson, 55, of 2209 Indianwood Rd., Lake Orion, was killed instantly Saturday when his auto struck a Grand Trunk Western locomotive at a railroad crossing District 5, Howard A. Frost, ing the trophy at a luncheon in the New York Athletic Club. Lee, qu 23 Die in State Fires, Traffic Over Weekend Six of Auto Victims Are Pedestrians; Probe Home for Aged Blaze By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan traffic and fires, one of them at a convales- cent home in Watervliet, TClaimed at teast 23 victims since the damp and gloomy weekend began Friday. The Friday night blaze claimed eight lives. Mrs. Jerinie Shuster, 81, of Ben- ton Harbor, was the most recent victim. She died Sunday at Watervliet Hos- pital. An investigation into the fire- was undertaken by Joseph Killian, Berrien County. prosecutor. He planned to meet with state fire officials to determine whether an inquest was re- ired. At least 14 persons died in au- near Sault Ste. Marie. The driver, Royce Miller, 19, of near Pick- when she stepped into the path of a car. Mrs. Rachell E, Prochard, 85, - (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Millard Widens Highway Probe Pledges Speedy Action in Investigation of Road Department LANSING (INS)—State Attorney General Frank Millard today prom- ised “speedy action” in the in- vestigation of highway department closures over the weekend. ‘ . ia Police Inspector Joseph F. | Arthur Ave., was pronounced as Cyclone Hits Austr alia ae ak Gee uaa Maurice The Koreans were cleared from the tracks after some ee eed eee meee this morning at Pontiac General Manshah solici payoffs from rain the store from opening doors | Hospital, and a companion, Alexan- SYDNEY, Australia Sv eaine tine a killed a Muskegon een eee eww geen eer panne ae hig gg at. Shr por time of 10 | der Williams, 49, of 438 8. Saginaw persons, caused $2,250,000 in property damage, saan : port ident, said Army | 40 “teinforcements | St., is in critical conidtion at the wad tev ht N South wales its mo floods in history ure ‘eld’ spokesman. 1. arrive.” hospital . ght New ; However, Kim Ch&n | Korean police reported they knew) 5. ais eered out-to sea today. “Manahan asked me for a $200 | Heung, vice chief of South | Finally, an attempt was made to) Both unemployed, they bad Vv g, of no injuries in the demonstra-| ,amit people gradually, 10 at @| been allowed to stay at the St The storm left thousands homeless and in need of cance cand cise “nan Korea's national police, said | ions three miles north of Seoul.| time. But as one door opened, an| sag W. Service Garage ot 604 food and medical supplies. Anew have to feed the kitty to | American tanks were called) 4 south Korean police official, | avalanche of about 100 poured! Franklin Rd., by the owner, Ray: Telephone lines were knocked out. Rail and ‘road Set my moving jobs trom the |t0 the scene. He denounced | wie said he was present, reported | through before it could be closed.| mond V. Snell of 345 Exmoor St. cities Hens Gah: + . state,” what he called. the 8th that some of the group were for ee ee and im return safe-guarded the ; Army’s “heavy counter-| mer prisoners of war turned loose | trance, set Up ig wooden barri-| garage trom burglars. yer gy end | ay ane ee gues Manahan's boss, G. Palmer| measures” against “a right-|by Indian custodial troops Inst|cades, and tried letting people in| * peony: $e. ci i seals yah ore were disrupted Waited patiently for planes of the Sees tame Commbenre| oe ee by indignant | mas. SS aaa St., garage ‘mechanic, decovered places. All communica-| 500.) australian Air Fores to Charles M. Degier on a charge of | Oe? In: explaining how the South | ‘cr % People aad the men in two separate cars this tion with the North Coast n.'s padty needed emergency ve . * im the state| 4" American officer said the) Koreans were dispersed, the | women fell, and scrambled de-|™orning about 9:15 when he went was severed, with only AM@~| supsties, purchase of right-ol-way land im | ®%tlndian were| ROK official sald: “They were | minedly to their feet again to awaken them. He said the men teur radio tors main-| eds catern: Gleared in about 30 minutes, short-| told te go and they just went.” é * apparently were running the cars taining con from the heron digs hotel In addition to naming Manahen,|!¥ Sfter midnight. They hed) 1 oonstrators were not Once inside, people found they | 5, the heaters would stay on. stricken area the first floor A bet Deitz told State Police of a second massed. on the railroad embank-| 4 se eiicies atid. unt couldn’t get out, Families of the men are both fhundreds of thousands of square | 080" u.0 of Edinburgh stayed 8 State Highway Department em- | ment and had lighted fires to keep| ©) they could do nothing against | In the Bronx, at another Hearn’s| somewhere in the south, Penny miles were affected. Homes were |i Gays ago. «3 | playe who sought contributions to| “**™- “gach an overwhelming force.” | store, more than 5,000 bargain-hun-| said, waiting for word that the men wrecked, bridges smashed. thow-|" 1 .ndstides blocked rosds in and dai 54; 8% | the “kitty.” but this man has since| The.incident was the first show | The Korean official claimed | gry shoppers gathered, but there, | have been re-employed. % sands of head of cattle destroyed, left the state service. | of interference which South Ko- | more than 1,000 Americans were | the situation seemed less riotous Detective John Williams is com na taney actin of Veluabte gras] sound te city ater 26: Subes of reans had threatened against the protecting the train but the &th +e ducting an of the rain in ; Ea " land_ ruined. persons were reported miss Everyone Leyes Keyke Indians. ‘ spokesman _ there Income Tax Reterns Prepared poisoning ‘ pager wed-teeell-hotle dn deontisraeed on Page 2, Col. 3) fins, ha tober ou ste 3 Ses end’ refiins on toast, roll, pam |" Both the Sth Army and South pang Racer ally «i camber. Angus mg ¥% scheduled t : ' . ads : ¥ = ra z Seaton x eet tat te Nii el kp eae 2 ee es tee te ae A _ = oraees = + sane snl See — b.4 - ——— irregularities, following new dis-| Fires Strike Two Pontiac Homes Firemen Fight Blazes for 2% Hours Sunday Morning Five adults and two children were driven from two Pontiac homes in their nightclothes Sun- jday at 6 a. m. when fire of unde- termined origin gutted one home and damaged an adjoining one. Joseph Barkiewicz and his wife, Mary, 29, of 1045 Durant St., were awakened by James Bowner, of 1049 Durant St., whose home wag gutted by the fire. # They called firemen and Mrs. Barkiewics said “if he | hadn’t awakened us I'm sure we Nehru Asks Cease Fire NEW DELHI, India #—Premier seem a tremendous rity that this _|coming toward her and | ducked (Lumber Reduced to Ashes in, Night Fire 4 ROOF COLLAPSES—Picture taken above shows | building Saturday night, after the roof had fallen. raging fire in the Benson Lumber Co. storage| The building was filled with finished lumber. building late Saturday and burned into smoking debris was taken Sunday. of Night Blaze Firemen Fight Flames Over 2 Hours; One Man Cut and Bruised Fire swept through the M. A. Benson Lumber Co., 549 N. Saginaw St., Satur- day night, causing an estimated $125,000 damage to the main building, lum- ber and machinery. One fireman was report- ed injured while fighting the fire which threatened $1,000,000 worth of lumber stored outside the a according to Chief John . Schroeder and Capt. John J. Morrissey. orrissey said 28 firemen battled the flames about two and a half hours before the blaze was brought under control, A crew of firemen was small blazes 7 Girl, 9,.in Box Escapes Death When Run Over WICHITA, Kan. @—Nine-year- old Phyllis M. Martin, running across the yard, tripped and fell into a cardboard box in the way yesterday just as her was getting ready to drive his |’ automobile out. The little girl started to crawl out of the box but saw the car ae back in. The uncle, George F.. Hull, 24, did not see the girl fall. Thinking, the box was empty, he ran over it/ Phyllis emerged from the box— with only a sprainéd right ankle and cuts and bruises on the left ankle. Crown Prince Recovers TOKYO w@ — Crown Prince Akihito has recovered from a month-long virus infection, the im- perial household announced. today. Bargain Hunters Riot at Store Customers Start Fights the crush, At least two of them tainted. Several fist fights broke out as a mass of more than 10,000 people jammed around Hearn’s de- partment store on 14th Street. A peliceman was shoved through a plate-giass door, but was not burt, Thousands converged on the Army said. Armed GIs Scatter ROKs Trying to Halt Indian Train SEOUL (AP)—American troops, jabbing with bayo- nets, chased off without apparent bloodshed 200 to 300 South Koreans who early today tried to halt a train carrying homebound Indian soldiers, the U. S. 8th store long before opening time, lured by advertisements of such “George Washington Birthday” specials as $19.95 watches for $5.22 and $39 pearl necklaces for $2.97. ’ Extra police detachments rushed to the scene, as the throng circled spilled into the streets, blocking traffic. Some stood atop stalled cars, A police loud - speaker truck droned uselessly in the din. ‘i i aly | E i Fre 2 ‘ it att - if i E z z iT - ug Man in Garage | 2nd Person Overcome by Carbon Monoxide in Closed Building One man died last night of car- bon. monoxide poisoning and a second is in critical condition to- day from the exhaust of motors of ‘| two cars idling in a closed service garage. Clarence Daniels, % 25,000 Fire + vy Lightning Bolt Possible Cause ytegeses. bert, listing the city’s past accom: | pet wg ns ae wllicadin A ; ‘ En seek aime meneame LP; ogee Spee... Ele ane dee = ‘ “\ City Manager to Present|PHS Band Wins ~ List of Accomplishments 4p), patina ~ at Commission Meeting ‘st Place Kating From Our Birmingham Bureau = es ™ ‘ BIRMINGHAM—A major portion Affairs , rs. Chartes J. , | Shain speak on ‘The of tg wil be tebe Wy by © repent | Om Cmeteuion. for which Wash- Cub Scouts of Troop B-19 and their families will get under way at 7 | tonight in Hickory Grove School. Another ‘report, from the city| Awards will be presented and a engineer, wil] list major construc. circus film will be shown. Chair- tion projects completed between men of the banquet are Mrs. 949 and 1953, at a total of $2,387. George DeVos and Mrs. Frank J Under consideration wil be a re- | were from Mr. and Mrs. Cari O. p= J "8 Hi it ;. 3 Hi : ia ehii lit . refuge without warm clothing on a Pontiac Deaths Stephen Kissell. . Stephen Kissell, 72, of 521 Frank- lin Rd., died at th> Bloomfield | Hospital today after a six-month illness He was born in Russia on Nov. 28, 1881 the son of Timothy and | Marie Kissell. | Mr. Kissel wag the owner of a 1 grocery store on Franklin road. See aed aa| eng et i at Michigan | son and daughter, Alex Kissell and Normal College Mrs. Alice Western both of Pon- State o. |tiac, and five grandchildren. — na — the on A brother George of Det t also tition Festival for Band and Or- | earl will be Wednesday at 1 chestra were from Ann Arbor and p.m, from the Huntoon Funeral toyed _ are| Home. Burial will be in Oak Hill ision bands Cemetery. éligible to compete in state finals | ers Mi ‘hi- . ae ie See 2 & I | erneat F, Pointer Ernest F. Painter, 62, of 3418 Airport Rd., died yesterday at the “| Pontiac General Hospital after an iliness of 2% years. He was born in Montgomery, Ohio, on Nov. 19, 1891, the son of William F. and Myrtle M. Champ- tion Painter. He married Mildred Price. : Mr. Painter came here from Bir- | Birmingham Musicians Cyclone Devastates Southern Australia (Continued From Page One)—_ swollen | Painter of Milford and Mrs. Rich Richmond River ri from its| ard E. Brown Jr. of Birmingham. ge Also surviving are three stepchil- . The Rev. W VanPlew of the Wa Com- munity Church will officiate. Roland Richards mountain just outside town. from the southern after an illness of two years. He was born in Sanilac County, on May 20, 1894. His parents were Thomas and Etta Hall Richards. He married Ina May Holcomb in 1914. Flint Woman Is Fined After Accident Saturday Mrs. Ethel Wheeler, 24, of 1900 ee Lapeer Rd., Flint, paid a $15 fine Surviving are his widow; two costs toda drunk and | 80ns and two daughters, Thomas and 0 ¢ Sheth LC. of Pontiac, Eugene, of Denver, Colo., Mrs. Marion Williams, of Galatia, [l., and Mrs. Audrey . | Hitchcock, of Milford. Other survivors include two sis- ters and a brother, George Rich- _|ards and Mrs. Kate Wooley, both of Marlette, and Mrs. Mary Fox, of Snover, 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild. The body is at the Huntoon Fu- neral Home. Tire Company Plans to Change Location Ed Williams Tire Co., will move from its present location at Huron and Cass Sts. to larger quarters at 451 S. Saginaw St., about March pital for treatment of bruises. Thieves Nab Cash, Check in Home on Seminole | Seminole Ave., Saturday night an stole $460 and a check for $114, according to Pontiac Police. Detective James Carr said the thieves entered the home through an unlocked kitchen window, The money and check were taken from 15. Williams said the business has a billfold in the bedroom. been located at the same spot for 18 years and that the new quarters be eet, . 1 —_ ‘ I ge ler operon oo Meet Your Commissioners Se orem |Birmingh may hee tname sw. |iFINIngham wi wreaee” in Tradition of Meeting at 10 a.m. tomorrow ta a ‘Terie’ ‘oferieineemtiieg Bnet be ee eee me Barmingham iewmaners, | The series for the city's newest lawmaker, James C. Allen, providing the in Tavern Breakin vacancy. Pontiac Post in connection with | Allen's election was in the tradi- the recent breakin of Dutch and tion of his family. He saw his | Ed's Tavern at 1538 Cass Lake Rd. | father. Harry Allen, sworn in as president of the village of Bir- County Jail, in the tavern breakin | where thieves took $236 last) committee that turned the vil- Wednesday. | tage inte a city in 1933, He then Police said today that a petition) became the city's first mayor, would be filed against the juvenile, and was a city commissioner. State Police were assisted 1" Jon's grandfather, also served as - their investigation by: officers of president of the village from 1920 the Waterford and West B'oomfield 1, 1924, Police Departments The Weather PONTIAC AND vaCINtTY — Pertty Michigan in 1943 troit law firm of Allen, Haass and Selander. He received his law ecleudy tenight ; Teredas with ce- | . easiens! rain 4 and tomerrew He fills the title of ‘‘commis- lg en? ee foaiett ot 2? | sioner” in still another way. Allen _ to werthwester!y 18% Corporation and Securities Com- ——— | mission last year. He had been a Lewest temperaiure preceding § am | deputy since 191. at @ am: Wind velocity 2 mph North west iB views Tuesday ot 116 om | len spends at least two days a Shous rose Wecaday ci 11 0 pam | week in Lansing. He thus is working from the level of local to aerate eS state government much of the jie 12 m om 3 FO. M...05.0. ISM .... ce 00 time. sam M BOD. M .csce- : . as toe . 2pm 38 = An avid reader of 18th century ue —— English literature, Allen was edi- FO geo My poorer tor of the now defunct ‘'Perspec- Highest _tempereture sce Loceees “ tives,’ campus literary magazine Sees poaseetere 0) {at the University of Michigan, | Wee y, .02 of an inch rain =A large record collection also One Year Age tn Pontice shares space on the library shelves ff pry oe 8 a L at his home at 1108 Maple. There Mean temperature’. ............ . 19/isn't too much time for his golf Weather —Trace of snow | game. Highest ond Lowest Sunperaterce Tets| Until recently his family con- 65 im 1990 et sm user sisted of his wife. the former ~» Teagan ,Resemary Aldrich of Ann Arbor, Battie Creek 41 38 Meogesss” a8 2 and three children. i Setislc” = ots Meet tT 88 But James C-Allen dr. made Chicago $3 Beiweskee $3 3) hts entrance imto the world last Beover $2 % New Tork S $)| Christmas eve, to become the ss Phewnts i $f) baby’ brother of Bull, 8, Martha : SS Freee =e 6, and Molly, 3. anotios 88 b Weskingon se 43! AS to his interest in city. com- a. city commissioner was in the cards ; ~ }local citizenry would elect him. ™ Two Keego Harbor youths, one | They did that last April, when he — a minor, were arrested Saturday | was chosen to fill a one-year “F Allen is a partner in the De® | was named head of the Michigan. Working in this capacity, Al. ff wili afford about four times as Man 3 Serves 7 Sa wake service | will be added to the recapping and | vulcanizing plant. now operated, Williams said, and many pieces of modern equipment also will be added. 13 in Pontiac Race State Liquor Stand (Continued From Page One) _ +, the Michigan Liquor Control Commission dees not require that any city must license the maximu:n aumber authorized.” According to Dr. Bank, the state- ment said the city co..1mission vot- ed to grant 12 additional licenses “not because the law required it, but to favor a few individuals who wishes to make possible a greater sale of liquor ,. .” “There are other important con- siderations in the selection of a commission, but the moral issue jis pre-emininent in the minds of |church leaders who have been contacted,”’ Bank stated. | “All candidates, except those who voted for the increase in mission duties, Allen says | liquor sales, have been contacted, ‘l expect to live in Birmingham or repeated efforts have been His Father JAMES C. ALLEN - from the University of for some time, and I'd like to} made to contact them without suc- | | keep it the kind of town I want. cess, and have been asked to sign | for my family.” | this statement,” Dr. Bank said, GET YOUR OUTBOARD | MOTOR REPAIRED NOW! before the season opens. 1%, miles from center of tewn on U.S. 10 All Makes Repaired and Serviced Open Evenings AUGH'S SPORT SHOP 630 Oeklend Avenue Phone FE 4.0824 ‘SLAYB ¥ bs __'\_ THE |PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 10560 | ‘Ike Drawn Into Feud-|Satety. of McCarthy, Army ' (Continued From Page One) Gis into'a Red cell at the Army | post, Stevens loosed a bitter blast at McCarthy last night over what he termed the “unwarranted .., hu- miliating treatment” to which he Camp Kilmer commandant, was subjected before ‘the McCarthy group last Thursday. Stevens charged Zwicker was “‘abused"’ and subjected to ‘unfair attacks’ and said he was ‘‘sure’’ | the other committee members | **will be shocked ... to read the transcript of the testimony.” The source close to McCarthy ,said the senator sent telegrams | early today to all committee mem. | bers notifying them he intended to | release the transcript of Zwicker's | secret testimony unless there was an objection and added: “We will let the public be the judge if the general was mistreat- ed or humiliated.” Meanwhile, McCarthy asserted that “the issue raised by Ste- vens is whether the Army is su- preme over the Congress . . . and can enjoy special dictatorial im- munity in covering up its wrong- doings.” He charged that Peress' dis- charge was “stupidity at its best and treason at its worst'’ and that “those who committed it are now being officially shielded by order of the secretary of the army.” It was understood McCarthy toid Stevens he wants Zwicker to ap- pear before his group again on March 10, the date on which Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo), a sub- committee member, is due back from a European tour. Meanwhile, in Washington, to- morrow’s hearing at which The postponement was announced by the office of Sen. Charles E. Potter (R-Mich), a member of the subcommittee. Potter's office explained that the delay was due to the fact that several senators who want to at- tend the hearing cannot be present tomorrow, Referring to Zwicker’s appear- ance last Thursday, the Army sec- retary declared: “I can not permit the loyal offi- cers of our armed forces to be subjected to such unwarranted treatment. “The prestige and morale of our armed forces are too im- portant to the security of the nation to have them weakened by unfair attacks on the officer Stevens reiterated his determ!- nation to rid the army of subver- sives and Communists and stressed a “full-hearted desire to cooperate with Congress.” He said he ‘‘appreciates the con- structive assistance" of congres- sional committees but. asserted that “I am confident, at the same time, that the American-people do not believe in unwarranted abuse of our loyal officers any more than I do." Stevens added. . “At a closed hearing last week, Gen. -Zwicker suffered humiliating treatment only because he carried out actions which were his official duty and executed an order he had received from higher headquarters and which he was required to execute.” Unofficial reports said that Zwicker, much -. decorated for bravery, complained that Mc- Carthy told him, “‘You are a dis- grace to the uniform, you're shielding Communist conspira- tors, you are going to be put on public display Tuesday for all the world to see, you're not fit to be an officer, you're ig- norant.” The exchange reportedly oc- curred after Zwicker refused to identify officers who approved Pe- ress’ discharge. Northern Maine, Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana resi- dents may see about 25 displays | of northern lights ina year says the National Geographic Society. ATTEN i | said Brig. Gen. Ralph W. Zwicker, | ' 2. ek } ety Theme _~ Topic of Panels at PTA Meeting~ BIRMINGHAM — An open meet- ing of the Birmingham PTA Council at 8 tonight at the high at Intersection Collision on Southfield, County Sheriff's deputies. ‘| Richard A, Rezek, 22, of 34 Cali- _ Bennett W. Root, father vice! on Southfield with three compan- president of the counc il made up of | jons when another car ran a stop 11 PTA groups, is chairman of the | sign and rammed his auto. aa Driver of the other car, Ter- Bar Looted by Burglors | Lake Deon ee ok ar in White Lake Township Reports Children Upset of Namesake With Sales WASHINGTON (UP)—An elderly automobile for 99 cents, typewriters and TV sets for pocket change, table wines for five cents a bottle, and other “fabulous bar- gains” drew thousands of shoppers into capital stores S Hurtin Crash | Capital one Birthday Fathers, Children fo Attend Dinner B'nai B'rith will hold its annual Our Big Fire Hasn’t Stopped Us, We'll Be Open for Business as Usual! Through the cooperation of our many friends in the lumber business locally and our suppliers -- we will be able to furnish you, your lumber and building today. Clearance sales of cut-rate merchandise are a ditional feature on this city’s celebration of W Birthday. Long lines formed outside of department stores, appliance shops, and clothing firms before dawn. tra- is crowds of shoppers offered no visual evidence of a busi- ness slump, one early bird complained that he had| tried in vain to sell his place | —third in line at the C.) Hecht Co. Department | store—for the $6 price it. had commanded in past years. More than 200 shop- rs were in line behind im at 7:30 a. aye 4 Soe First in line was W. R, Raplee who said he had been waiting since 6:40 a.m. Sunday. Behind him were four youths who brought The birthday of after whom this city was was celebrated in other and Fires and Traffic Kill 23 in State (Continued From Page One) Sunday, Feb. 21, '54 Although the jostling*=—= One Way Pheenia Arie. ....44. $4040 REMAIN Boyne Falls, Mich. ...,.. 6.60 Mexico City, Mexice ... 40.65 cai: 2211 UNCHANGED Lupelo. Miss. eeeeeeer 8.90 F U.S. Tes Eure , 1O% Sovings on Reved Trips GREYHOUND ~* Pontiac “TERMINAL Fare Tokens Will be sold at the rate of 2- 25° ALL OTHER FARES TRIPS DAILY City Lines, Inc. . 288 N, Peddock St. Phone FE 2-3711 124 N. Perry St. FE 4-2805 Father & Son Cleaners Sl. Best Suited needs—our modern personalized ~~ - conditioning method of cleaning of your dry cleaning | | | by a car on Detroit's east side. | Samuel. De Roven, 53, of Detroit, | was fatally injured Saturday when police said he stepped into the path of a car in Detroit. Irvin G. Zietlow, 44, of Muske- gon, died of suffocation Saturday night when he apparently fell asleep while smoking. Norman E. Ruse, ¥, of Stan- wood, was killed Sunday on U.S. 131 in Big Rapids when he lost con- trol of his car and it plunged down an embankment. TION— that revitalizes woolens, returns all fabrics to their original look of new! ber bi a Fs . BERT ‘Sees No Need for New Surgery on Godfrey's Hip BOSTON «@—Arthur Godfrey's sary endurance. “An operation on the left hip is not planned at present,"’ the doctor Aufranc said Godfrey flew | isos kat Setating fee a conan tion with him and is expected to weeks later leaving Dr. Aufranc in charge. Godtrey's hips were badly in an automobile accident two decades ago. His Disorderly Conduct Piles Up Police Record " : SINUS: And those terrible head- aches caused by sinus now relieved by tablets taken in- ternally.. q — all oa in wondrous tablets. Get (Advertisement) FADES PAINS of ARTHRITIS and RHEUMATISM he |Mitchell to Give Advice to Party Democratic Chairman to Tell Westerners How to Win Re-election WASHINGTON # — National Chairman Stephen Mitchell is ex- pected to advise Democratic sena- tors and House members from nine Western states tomorrow their best chance for re-election lies in attacking the Eisenhower admin- istration’s farm and power pol- The Democratic chairman, just completing a tour of Colorado,Wy- Good Driver Defeats His Own Purpose‘ TULSA, Okla. @® — A Tulsa mo- torist who told police he was “‘be- ing very careful to drive good so as not to attract any attention” attracted lots of attention yester- day. Officer Orval Bennett followed the car of motorist Troy James Bethagty for three blocks enthralled at the fine driving performance. “I stopped to congratulate him on his good driving,’ said Bennett. But when he asked for his li- cense, Bethany admitted he had been driving seven years without a license. “I had no choice but to make the arrest under the circum- bring on one, weet eee ee eeeee= oming, Montana, Utah, Idaho, Nev- ada, Washington, Oregon and New Mexico, has been sending back to | headquarters here optimistic re- | ports of Democratic chances in | those states. | He will sit down with Democrats }from those states to detail his | findings. Aides said he is expected stances,"’ said the officer. Mobile has lived under six flags since its founding in 1702: French, British, Spanish, United States, Re- public of Alabama, and Confeder- istration’s reputed opposition to public power developments. Although Mitchell hasn't been bearing down on the issue, he has made it clear that the Democratic high command doesn’t share views voiced by some Republicans that talking about a _ recession will When Your Prescription is Filled by Simms... LOWER Some Democrats believe that if a business downturn broadens with the Republicans. in power, the minority party’s chances will be PRICES ' Is the =~ po THE, PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 Church Challenges, Loyalty Oath Law. >|" LOS ANGELES (#— The First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles challenges a state law requiring a loyalty oath of nonprofit organiza- | Y tions seeking tax exemption as ‘‘a frontal assault on freedom of re: ligion as guaranteed by the First r un-American Activities Commit- tee on the ground it sought ‘to invade the intimate confidence of Mr. Fritchman was listed by the committee as a sponsor of ‘no less than 22 pro-Soviet organiza- s . . His congregation voted yester- day to instruct its trustees to de- cide against signing the loyalty oath, The trustees’ chairman, Atty. Robert Schmorleitz, said the se-t cretly taken vote was 206 to 31.) He said Mr. Firtchman did not participate in the discussion be-| CHICOPEE, Mass. #-~Chicopee | Se eae fore the vote. A 1%3 amendment, to the state | revenue and taxation code pro- | the matter with their eyesight. |There are 46 sets of twins plus | vides that the property tax state- ment for churches and other non- | ee oath if -tax exemptions are sought. Wife Dodges Husband, ls Hit by Visitor's Car SAPULPA, Okia. W--A 58-year- "| old wife dodged a brick thrown at her by her 60-year-old husband yesterday but stepped into the path of an oncoming car and was in- | jured seriously, the state highway patrol reported. A. M. Rivers was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon. | Mrs, Rivers suffered a broken leg, | internal injuries and shock The 19-year-old youth driving the | car which struck Mrs. Rivers told troopers he was on his way to their | home to meet the couple's daugh- | ter for a date. l - NO IRONING! WORK TROUSERS CREASE AS THEY DRY! fe ne tweuble te keep the men-folks and increased in the voting next fall on control of Congress. Sen. Douglas (D-Ill), who is run- ning for re-election, hit the issue again yesterday when he wrote ONLY DIFFERENCE. [SIMAS.“.} - PHARMACY DEPT. —Main Floor— TEER Rise, Cy GIR, MS q 96 N. Saginaw St—2nd Floor i “SNAP-LOCK”: TROUSER CREASERS '3 pai! ieee leet 1, President to get behind a proposal oe |of Sen. George (D-Ga) to boost personal 3. 3 5 eenagers fo Attend Mic Driver Parley LANSING # — More than 140 youngsters are expected to attend = = Ta Bigger—Better—Brighter SUPER-SIZE. Prints first teenage driver C safety course at Michigan State College Friday and Saturday. All Stendard Rolls | The course is intended to obtain | frank opinions from teenagers on One Low Price their driving problems and causes |of their accidents, to obtain rec- pag | your films |ommendations from teenagers to pd oo fer improve their driving habits and eae pea ee to recommend a program for stu- greater savings. $8 N. Seginew —Main Floor EO A v First at Simms EW___. ‘of Crystal Falls, $1 Genuine REVERE Brines of Midland, Richard Wag-|$] S'AINLESS STEEL ner of Detroit, Clifton Raum of Grosse Tie and Ward Wheeler of Kalamazoo. : ONE PRICE to ALL Ne Extras! Ne Switching! you meed Bifocal glasses, this amazing offer. is for you! Bere are top quality Available in frém delicate it spreads like magic. scrubbed repeatedly. tion. Painting Problem, RUB-R-BASE Satin Flat Finish | for walls « It’s the paint that’s smart and distinctive. EASY TO APPLY with brush or roller, IT'S DURABLE con be washed ond QUICK DRYING Replace drapes, etc. 20 minutes efter opplica- NO PAINTY ODOR when using Rub- R-Base — no after odors either! Ask Simms Factory Trained Experts to solve your any ~~ EXCITING, COLORFUL INTERIORS ceilings - woodwork 12 decorators colors, ranging pastels to gorgeous deep tones. curtains, Genuine “King” PAINT ROLLER and PAN $939 Value Tonite and Tuesday only. Aluminum pan and full size roller, Easy to use. | populatigh Grows boy'2’s double although there is nothing i twin teachers in the city’s class- rooms. Chicopee's population is | about 50,000. | New Automatic | i | ) 96 N. Seginew . —Main Floor Simms Drug Dept. SPECIALS __ TONITE AND ALL LL WEEK V4-GRAIN epcialiaieiati 2. V7 MILK of *) MAGNESIA ame BO Tabjets TOWELS 150 Sheet Roll {{@ BROTHERS New “Low Cost” Therapy for Pains of ARTHRITIS, RHEUMATISM VEEP ii ate | ef ao eae eT = —TSIMMSIts Alnor” car | n MONDAY Nights a Until 10 o'Clock Extra Shopping Hours So Everyone Can Shore In gain Day at Simms . . . Prices good while supplies last! “FEDERAL” Glass—Guaranteed 1st Quality! 8-Piece—4 Cups & 4 Saucers Snack Sets Why Pay $1.39? —SIMMS PRICE— 10-in. recessed plates hold maetching eups for indi- vidual aerv- ings. Ideal for [™ table or TV snacks. Keep Baby Safe While He Plays PORCH—OR sanway Expanding Gates aed bee 6 ft. long « 34 in. high $2.29 Varnished hardwood gate with everything you need tor easy installation. Strong latch is dif- | ficult for children to open. ' ij] oN. = Main Floor aay \2 A R / : ya Slight Irregulars of $1.98 Values Clopay pusric Drapes Slesh on the “Playtex” Girdles Latex Sheath—Fabric Lined NATIONALLY $ 4” ADVERTISED $5.95 and $6.95 Values Playtex Girdles are known for control, fit, and freedom, without seams, steys or bone. Terrific values at this low price. Regularly sells at $5.95 and $6.95. SIMMS.” od BROTHERS ier SBN, Saginam St. 0 pein ccsagtecngetanins coy © teale, CARBONVILLE, Dtah @—Ken. ~ he ty neth, Howard, 38, Carbonville, was | 4 a= a vente. | electrocuted when a kite he was | svevcerenn scnoce, {ff 27"E became entangled in «| }4,200-volt electric power line. and SKIRTS 5 0%. Phone FE 4-343! prompt PICK: UP nd DELIVERY wr Ae YOU MEED OUR SERVICE-- WE WEL ANSWER YOUR CALL Giparks-(riffin Ph. FE 2-584) a | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 . ‘ j a a ser ‘_|Agony TV Show Wrings '{ of 10 Most Wanted mms. =: 2. ne Potice Seok Tat Shory Tears From Watcher (?) Nabbed in Atlanta’ By SAUL PETT (For Hal Boyle! , I went to an “agony” | + NEW YORK ®—Out of a clinical i everything went according to plan; I never felt worse. The show was “Strike It Rich,” 5 | which gives away about $250,000 a year to people who tell their trou- | | bles before the cameras. For that | kind of dough, you can buy a lot of trouble. The audience involved mostly | women and some servicemen who seemed to haVe wandered in out ; of beredom. On the stage there | were many boxes of a wash deter : | gent and paste-board hearts since this is ‘‘the eriginal show with a heart’ and the soap pays for the heart. * * * A few minutes before air time, a cheerful, tall man came out and introduced “The man with the | | really big heart,”’ who turned out tto be Walter Framer, the show's | | producer, Framer, a short man | | with heavy glasses and a nervous, | | set smile, introduced the man who had introduced him. * - ° Then. Framer made a little speech which I- took to be an an- | swer to recent criticism’ of the | show on the grounds that it at- | tracts needy people to New York | who end up on relief and that it l exhibits bad taste in parading hue | | man misery in public “We're not running a — department,” Framer said. ‘Just | a little quiz game, which is basic- ally for entertainment and also some inspiration.’’ ! * . ° } | Framer cencluded by telling us| he wasn't asking us to applaud | but he'd appreciate it if we did) when he raised his hands thus and | so and, besides, there would be | prizes later for those who ap- | | plauded the most. | . * s | | As the show got under way, | Framer was very busy, running | around checking camera angles, | watching the clock, leading ap-| | plause and several times darting | backstage to announce “‘heartline | | calls,” which presumably come | |from peeple watching at home. _ | After a singing commercial and a plug for a movie magazine, a} to win $125 for a sewing machine. | She said she’s alone in the world, nessean who was one of the FBI's she sews for a living and “they 19 most wanted men has been ar-| took away my old machine, I'm | i rested on charges of burglarizing | television program recently and|i.-% in the rent and my lights|a grocery store. have been turned eff."’ Having difficulty with several | was picked up yesterday morning questions, the woman wen only | by city police after a routine check | $60. But at the last second, (of a store aroused the suspicion Framer’s “‘heart-line” veice an- | nounced that “Strike It Rich’ had ~_ arranged with a certain com- , which he named, fer her to a ‘ sewing machine free as well as the 60 in cash “Ah, bey!’’ Hull sighed. ‘That was to the rescue all right." Works Hard for Liquor BOSTON «—Police said a burg-/ lar dropped through a skylight | } and then hacked his way through | the walls of three connected stores | to reach Brigham's Liquor Store. His loot was 48 pints of liquer. RE-ELECT Mayor John H. RIDGWAY gray-haired, nervous _woman tried | Fun for all the family... But whos getting dinner ? Te Ms f KOAicarl A Tr i. > =, Wy f \ ners, ASA HN mis Nh A oS — “a ' Mis (Oe lala rere: ELECTRIC RANGE, for perfect results for surface cookery, either. Si for the exact amount of heat you need! BE MODERN COOK ELECTRICALLY SEE YOUR DEALER or Detroit Edison ~ of course mply snap a switch Sit down and enjoy television with the family, Mom. Dinner always cooks to perfection in an electric range... and it’s ready on time. Automatic controls maintain the one right heat . No need to experiment with different cooking speeds as 6 feet 5 inches tall. His mick- mame: Shorty. safe which contained about $2,000 broadcasting re Cnliiee rected NY® | forgery suspect, described. him tained about 600 men, he somone geen unarmed and PONTIAC’S OLDEST TV SERVICE DEALER ! did not offer resistance, police a Authorized Factory Service for 15 Ditierent Menulacturers BLAKE RADIO _ TV SERVICE on charges of interstate transpor- | 3149 W Huron E 4-579! Atlanta ® — A 32-year-old Ten- tation of a stolen automobile, un-| lawful flight to avoid prosecution and violation of the federal fire | arms act. |’ Nelson R. Duncan of Memphis, ‘ef officers. Avocados had their origin in| Nelson and a man listed as’ South America. ' DENIM GOES EVERYWHERE PENNEY’S NEEDLE ’N’ THREAD | PRINTS in eye-catching colors to mix ’n match! RICH SOLIDS! GAY PLAIDS! BOLD STRIPES! a See full color photos of fashions in Penney’s denim on pages 142-143 of the March McCalls. Penney’s makes it easy to co- ordinate your wardrobe, give your home sewing a profes- sional look. NO-IRON PLISSE NOW IN BOLD, BRIGHT PRINTS And Penney’s cotton denims are Sanforized', too! 35”-36” wide. 3 o Penney ’s RONDO fashion pereale PLAYTONE—NO- IRON WRINKLED COTTON oo ¢ Pea Lhalelelialeohaa seme ol ali hae a miei AM AcRdallel ame tel ils Ml del lel a+. lop thread count! Thrifty, thrifty buy! Look! Clear, imaginative prints in lots and lots of futon hate, etlid oe oe a price tag that shouts aa ospellen SAVE! It just vendre Rew to discover what ul Reade e can mds to make tsa (and the family’s, too!) bigger, better, more beau- tiful. Rondo prints are a unanimous choice for home decorating, too. . . for curtains, slipcovers, drapes, bedspreads! 35-36” COOL, AIRY WOVEN DELUXE PUCKER NYLON 7 dit ie Hetil a wanted report’ on A standard Roman cohort con- — i. " rail ‘ — = * at ay ie * e< Se Vis ie Wee ele ‘ hia cmd ' 2 ES 2 gy ae, ee - See rr OO te fC ee ee ee oe re : i ie ‘ ayaa \. t ti 4 \ j \ [- ( \ hal \ A & é ae pa BE \ ie : \ : \ ae : | Some bave 2 pockets, sipper enclosure! starionerY | 36 Reg. 3.98 Cotton Dusters................1.88 Se eee eee — . 288 8-M-L, slight soled, scalloped fronts, colertast! ROBES 25—Reg. 2.49 Luncheon Cloths.......... sen cos 88c ; e | 62—Reg. 3.98 Mushroom i i Lamps.... = 2 J Se" cumaes cotleg petata, Give Guatiiy! pana = oo = 60—Reg. to 6.50 Famous Brand Girdles....... 3.88 _—# ? * Til so—Reg. 1.98 Cig AMath. ccc Se | c-sgein chien punk, Bal eee ctw et omens | 1S Reg, £98 Linen Damask Tablechthe.... | =a. — 70—Reg. to 4.98 Flannelette Gowns.......... 1.88 | 25—Reg. 4.98 Linen Damask Tablecloths...... 188 | e ell 48-—-Reg. 2.49 Rinoculars............5..-- . 88e Stees 32-60, prints, solids... all types! Gowns Imported, 50/"x06" cloths! LINENS ees tee ee ee ot ee aia 103—Reg. 49c Rayon 1 and C Cotton Napkins. eee. 22 + @© |] 71—Reg. 79¢ Shu Savers. . seceeees--... 44e Iv"aiT” oles . LINENS is tops S-M-L, plastic beets, keeps your feet ry! STATIONERY AVE ~ OUR THIRD FL R . 59—Reg. 3.98 Vanity nd Dresser eee 1.22 ardrobes ........... 00 eee 88 T 00 — a ee — ° * - . e ® | ry - oe quer! Finn s ON T4—Reg. 2. 75 pr. F Fancy Pillow Case Sets... .1.22 2 pr. “ e® ee @ | ‘| 200—Reg. 5c Men’s Tissue Handkerchiefs weer 2c ea. am —— EXCLUSIVELY OURS | marew-swar-trpe tnnes . . . very sat worvons | 2—Reg. 69.98 Orlon Alpaca Toppers........-;$18 ee ee eee 338—Reg. to 7.98 Needle Point Tapestry . .2.88 to 5- 88 i Sree soars 22 pr. malt 9.98 Ready- Made Draperies....... eres a a wontons 3— Reg. to $119 Fur Trimmed Coats..... caves & Single widths, all first quality 29—Reg. 1.50 Chafe Guards, ..ccscee.aragenes 88c Teast, sine 12; Green ond coats os pr Ree. 8.98 Orlon uciia Curtains ce eces 5.22 = — 1—Reg. 45.00 Chinchilla Toppers. . seawaw ee ne — —-*i —4 57— Reg. $1 Accessory es 3 colors...... 88e ea. 86-inch lengths, Real, size 16: Grey, sine 14! coats 8—Rotary Sewing Machines . ssdehrinde die 52S from $5 , ‘or bankies, gloves, hestery, jew i NOTIONS sewing condition! Singer! SEWING MACHINES 127—Reg. to 29¢ Notion Items. . eres 4c 3-—Reg. 58 3.00 Fur pe —_ Bh re a = elspa Rotery Pesta TT op tne . —Reg. 74.50 White Walnut Console. ....... 66 72—Reg. 7. 25 Watch Bands. Soeeveeees 2 288 64—Reg. to Soe Unirhemad Coats « «25-200 $28 | 1 Reg. 76.50 Whi nut Console 54 . 1—Reg. 59.50 Used Singer Portable......... 44.66 36—Reg. 29.95 Water Proof Watches....... 16.88 S—Reg. to 49.98 Untrimmed Coats .......... vis Handy to ase and store... A-i condition! | SEWING MACHINES —— ee vars oe rs 1—Reg. 268.00 Necehi Portable, Used........ $150 144—Reg. 6.50 Identification Bracelets......... 3.88 2—Reg. to 39.98 Untrimmed Fitted Coats... .$15 » simple to ese, A-1 condition! SEWING MACHINES Statniess steel, rhediom finish, 4 sizes! waTcm Barats Foage, ctvo 18: Btech, sine 101 coars 1_Rer. m6. 50 Large Dress Form... 12.66 16—Reg. $5 Garment Bag Sets, 4 pieces... |. 3.88 1—Reg. 49.98 Red Wool Suit.......... 600.4, $28 Stree ie Sete ces De a Inchudes Gress and cult bag, 2 shoulder covers! NOTIONS 10, famous make .. . you save $20! surTs 98 Duo Table Tops..............- 2.88 ee ee ee EP nid 8—Sacony Wool Jersey Blouses, Reg. 10.95... 488 SAVE on our Fifth and Downstairs Fleors 86—Reg. 69c Printed Handkerchiefs........... 44c i Assorted cotton ena 7 a — 48-—Reg. 5.99 Daytime Dresses. scat parvum oe 3.88 | 2—Reg. 39. 95 20” Bicycles. anew wet orrree 28.88 48—Reg. 5. dl , Orion lizans ae 16—Reg. 3.99 Daytime Dresses. siete oan 2.88 St: 32.50 0 Twenty inch Bicycles....... 7 19.88 | ‘ashable failies, Unens, Misses’ i] YTIME DRESSES Fer and Girls 72—Reg. 8.98 Orlon & Wool Slipcovers. . -..~. 2.88 srenTIne e6ens Broken sieves and colors... save 1.16! THRIFT SPORTSWEAR 42—Reg. 8.99 Daytime. Dresses a eee -. 5.88 17—Reg. 35.00 Dinnerware Sets erTeTe yer ey 10.88 24—Reg. 1.98 Cotton Slip-on Sweaters... 88c 8—Reg. 24.98 Dinnerware Sets............. 18.88 Broken sines and colors... oil first quality! THRIFT SPORTSWEAR | 906 Rey 2.98 Cotton Chambray House Dresses 1.66 68 pieces inchading glesswaeel DINNERWARE 36—Reg. ss Cotton Cardiga ee --1.88 a te ee a 14—Reg. 7.98 Dinnerware Sets............... 4.88 351—Re $1 Boxed J ! 66c 23—Reg., 8.98 Wool or Orlon Skirts...........3.88 ee... se —— oa: usa Geen ne aioe Pleated ahd plaids tm broken sizes! SPORTSWEAR 15—Reg. | 2.98 Chenille Rugs ce ceeeeusucuceuee 122 || —Reg. relry...... ke ceeees ; ee ee ene oa nwoss | 22—Reg. 3.98 Nylon Short Sleeve Sweaters.....2.88 | 115 Reg. to 4.98 Cotton Loop Rugs...... 44c to 2.22 Nvlo Blo 88e Slees 34 te 40, easy to wash and care for! SPORTSWEAR w . gen-ehid, tong beep, 6 cnsel nves a eae eee) ee . 8.95 Jantzen Slipover Sweaters. 5.88 | 49—Reg. 1.98 Chenille Rugs................-, 88e 54—Reg. 3 3.98 98 Nylon or Cotton Blouses...... 1.88 Bnew! _———— a = a aves sleeves, 32-40, whites, pastels! BLOUSES ‘ 20—Reg. 7.95 Jantzen § Short Sleeve Slipovers . .4.§ 88 ee oS o fe © 0.6 s/s wee «6 - 5.58 88 jana: 5.98 Nylon Tricot Blouses. . . 38.88 Kharaficece tn sizes 22 to 60! Modern White and pastels, 32-40, all first guality! BLOUSES 9—Reg. 29.98 Light Aluminaire Luggage from 8. rT “ey 107 2.95 Leather Like Plastic Haas. 1.88 25—Reg. 8.98 Nylon & Orion Cardigans dusamats 2.88 21, 24, 26, 29-inch bags, blue and brown LUGGAGE a7: ee eee et ae dome "** Wawpnacs es eager. Soe — 38—Reg. to 5.98 Silk-o-Lite Lampshades 2.88 & 3.88 “5 53— Leeeees ..2.88 | 30—Reg. 5.98 Nylon-Orlon Slipovers..... 2.88 is” - 10" - 18" LAMPSMADES ' 40—Reg. 1:56 Clad. Belts... .:0:c:c:c0de 0%: 88c 8—Reg. 8.98 Beaded Pandora Sweaters....... 5.88 Rs, ; a and i a Nea LEATHER ovens a ie = Sd ee 8—Reg. 5.99 ae eee, sieeunas cass 3.88 Cir ima mcawean | 6 —Reg. 5.98 Turtle Neck Sweaters..... gg | OF sete Reg. 9) Cooking Doking Shale. = te “a 400—Reg. to to 1.95 Famous Brand Nylons. . ; 88¢ Size 86 only . = 91—Reg. to 3.98 Wooden Sa Salad Bowls. . . .88¢ to 2.66 oR}, " BOSTER : or indtvideal tm cherry or dark! HOUSEWARES f 13—Reg. 69.95 ' . Dinette Sets..... : 7 A 250—Reg - to 1.65 Fam Famous Brand Nylons. . 660 Hurry in “ fay . Tu fay! = eg —o Dougiss =~ Dinette Sets 35. 88 35—Reg. 2.98 Wool Mukluks,......... eee. . 88e 81—Reg. 5.98 DeFrost King OEFROSTERS..... 3.88 Comfortable slipper sex, in small sive only! HOSIERY any refrig y! MOUSEWARES | Raalte Lingerie Reg. to 4.95 Munsingwear 10 Reg. 239.95, 20” & 21” — 118 Reg. to $35 Fashion Reg. 89.98 Famous phere Balbrigan Pajamas) 2™!ssador Console 17s! DRESSES | STROOCK COATS Sipe Sat 3.88 290 Girls’. Slightly marred floor demonstrators in working order! 5 are 7.95 geo 488} ef. -.use 88¢ |: phiico, 17° 239.95 1 Automatic Electric 128.00 200 dresses for iun- } BB ‘O83 Nylon Tricot Bon, 350 Suge 1.88 | Console. reg. 339.95 40” Range. used .... iors, misses and halfs Angee SRE 1 EY paren, 1 RCA Radio Phone. 39 99 ? in emul and dy Strook fleece, milium lined, full 16.86 Nylon Tricot 10.98 | Womes's 3640... LBB T 3 Servell 30-Gallon 98.00 | styles! | and 2 piece B QR | Here cardigans, | & 3 burton panic i RAE Reg. 4.95 Men's— 2 Af | 050 Beer remgtes LO8DO TAK Wore Bootes styles in all fabrics. pon dial kapha a | —_sWatte’s-Linigerie—Seeond Floor Waite’s Street and Second Floors Waite’s Appliances—Downstairs Store Waite’s Dresses—Third Floor || Waite’s Coats—Third Floor bere ; be aacuslaemn ET a ‘ - . : a . i . , : * , Se ee Le r \ ; IRS ae Bening Sate a Tear » Au mall npbgttipions are’ pared Au Pontiac MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS ee MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1954 Clarification in Order Haroip W. Dun ey, retiring city com- missioner, was jokingly chided in the Man About Town column as having a platform of Dudleyism, but. the ref- erence needs some explanation. * * * Dudieyism as practiced by Commissioner Dudley was the forthright voicing of his opin- jons concerning city government affairs. We think it is a good ISM. A lifelong resident of Pontiac, Dudley always had the citizenry at heart when confront- ed with a civic problem. , * *® * - After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1929 Mr. Dupiey im- mediately opened practice in Pontiac. From that time until his decision to re- tire from public office he has consistent-_ ly spent many hours working in behalf of humanity. He has served the city for a number “of years on the school board and for four | years on the city commission. On top of that he found time for active participa- tion in the Exchange Club and assisted several years on the city planning com- mission. * * * The Pontiac Press along with the citizens of Pontiac are grateful for the guiding hand of Mr. Harotp W. Dupisy during his tenure of office. __—— EE Our First President Remote and austere though the figure of Gzoncr WasuIncTon appears on this 222nd anniversary of his birth, time hasn't dimmed the greatness of our first President. Our debt to the man who did so much - to ease the birth pangs of this Nation, now grown to 160,000,000, is far greater than we realize. | x * * History happily has recorded that as President, WasHinoton was more statesman than politi- cian. He put national above party interests and both above personal advantage. He turned deaf to thase who wanted to make an American king. , * * *® It was he who established the two term tradition for Presidents, now writ- ten into our Constitution.. Almost 100 years ago WASHINGTON Irvina, who wrote a four volume Life of Washington, had this to say of him: “Under all dissensions and amid all the storms of party, his pre- cepts and example speak to us from the grave with paternal ap- peal; and his name — by all re- vered — forms a universal tie of brotherhood ; a watchword for our _ Union.” An Inexcusable Smear The Senate's Judiciary Subcommittee licans. Senator Warxins of Utah called the charges a lot of tommyrot and pro- tested the subcommittee’s action in ee eee * LAND branded the television hear- ing at which the charges were aired “the most shocking event I have observed in my eight years in the Senate.” The Press believes Vice President Nrxon spoke for all informed Ameri- cans when he called the charges against the acting head of our Supreme Court “completely and patently .false.” * * * What Senator Langer’s motives were doesn't matter. By his dis- play of gutter politics he has done a great American a serious injus- tice, demeaned his own high office and hurt the Senate and the Republican party. : The full Judiciary Committee and the Senate owe Mr. Warren the vote of high confidence implicit in immediate favor- able action on his nomination. : LL Many a person who doesn't complain about paying 20 cents an ounce for a fifth of liquor is hollering his head off about having to pay 2 cents an ounce for a cup of coffee, with no extra charge for sugar and cream. Why did nature constitute a human ; being so that he’s as wide awake as a popinjay when it’s time to go to bed and as sleepy as a dormouse when it’s time to get up? The Man About Town Early Observance Pontiac’s First Village President Issued Decree Daftynition Washington: A city that sometimes isn't @ credit to his memory. The first official recognition of the birthday of George Washington in Pontiac's history was on Feb. 22, 1838, when then comprised of only a few hundred people, Pleased at the large advance summer camp reservations, John P. Niggeman says that it is gratifying to know that this great manhood building experience is being taken ad- vantagé of by such a large nurhber. Oldest resident of Oakland County's furthest north community, Thomas, in Oxford Township, Mrs. Helena Ward, soon celebrates her eighty-second birthday, and is as active as many people half that age, and does all of her own housework. Just over the line in Genesee County, Fenton's main street is named in honor of Pontiac's first attorney. He was Daniel LeRoy who came here before the county's organization in 1820, and moved to Fenton soon after the first settlement there a few years later. Fenton's main business thoroughfare is LeRoy Street. Gay Herrington says that despite prodictions or prophesies of doom, repossessions have not increased appreci- ably over the same period last year. “If you hear a rumbling sound,”’ writes “Opposed te Murder,” “it probably is none other than a certain William Shakespeare _ THE PONTIAC PR , 4 / me : ‘ t ESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 TODAY AS THEN WE HAVE A CONTINUING NEED FOR POSITIVE ACTS OF RENEWED RECOGNITION THAT FAITH IS OUR SUREST STRENGTH OUR GREATEST RESOURCE = F/SENHOWER te | .7 % : ¥ , Y | ~¥ tuner All History of America Bears Witness of This Truth Voice of the People Reader Claims Progress of Pontiac Has Suffered Due to Lack of Civic Donations wri a hee ters will not pub if the writer so requests, unless the letter is critica! in tts nature) The civic and social progress of Pontiac has suffered over the years from the lack of citizens of means indicating by positive action a philanthropic interest in our city. Many other municipalities, larg- er and smaller than Pontiac, have fine buildings, institutions and improvements as memorials to public-minded residents. to our city. P Pontiac has shown indications of rugged constitution in the past however, and it is hoped that the rank and file of average people will overcome the short-sighted- ness of some of its so-called lead- ing citizens, concerned only with their individual selfish interest, and put these programs across. Disgusted Taxpayer At a recent session of the con- demnation proceedings for the land for a city parking lot several down- town businessmen related their need for a parking lot and whole- heartedly supported the city’s ac- tions against a fellow businessman. Why don’t some of them build their own parking lot either sin- gly or cooperative jest as you find at Huron Gardens or the new Tele-Huron shopping center? A businessman's duty is to sell service as well as goods. To me the traffic problem is the city's problem while the parking is the businessman's concern and should not be paid for by city taxpay- ers nor should Mr. Habel be pen- alized for doing just what the other businessmen should be doing. That is, taking care of his own facilities _ and not asking the city to do it for him. , 138 Thorpe Reader Hasn’t Heard of Rabies in Human Beings Norval Gee a mother in Israel. Judges 5:7 s s ° There is none, In all this cold and hollow world, no fount Of. deep, strong, deathiess love, save that within Lawrence Surprised at Ike’s Evasion Over Real Reason for Firing Manion By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON — Hypocrisy and double-talk are the chief reasons why the American people have be- gun to distrust politicians and to discount the sincerity of their statements to the public. When President Truman dis tary policy in Korea ‘but actually because of a letter the general wrote to Rep. Martin of Massa- chusetts in answer to a legitimate inquiry, there was quite a furor and an attempt by Truman offi- cials to ‘deny that this was the reason. For, obviously, a supreme com- mander couldn't be discharged just for replying to a letter from a member of Congress on public mat- ters. Then came the trumped-up charges on other grounds and the effort to justify the dismissal. Manion gave to his duties on the commission many days a month and went around the country or- ganizing the necessary subcommit- tees for the commission's work. He succeeded in persuading Dud- ley White, a former member of Congress from Sandusky, Ohio, to become full-time director. White worked tirelessly and now, cha- grined at the reports of. alleged slowness of the work, has offered his resignation. 7 White, knew nothing of any slowness in the work though it is reported that Sherman Adams began a_ few ‘weeks ago to telephone individual members of the commission to ask them if the work wasn't going slowly. This was subsequent to pub- lished reports that the White House didn’t like the speeches made by Manion on the Bricker amendment and would be fired. the executive director, as immune from the virus of politi- cal double-talk. 4 (Copyright 1984) * Case Records of a Psychologist é Reassure Adopted Child | That He's ai) “However. I can adopt a little girl about one year of age. so do you think if would be fair to my son to do so?” ERE; its ve Hi Hy f Fe fig x 5 ‘tl “street (or into deep water, etey.” © By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER International News Service Only 11 years collasped between the publishment of the Declaration of Indignation and the justly amended Constitution. It made us curious to locate if George signed the Constitution but not the Declaration. Button Gwinnett sewed his hemstitched signature on the Declaration but not the Constitution. Out of 99 signatures on the two catalogues only eight patri- ots signed both. Of the upper echelon of famous rebels only _ Ben Franklin made it. The other seven were Robert. Morris, James Wilson, George Clymer, George Read, Edward Rutledge and Roger Sherman. Is is true that George made two -whacks of a cherry tree? We do lar across the Potomac? To be- Martha didn’t do so well. She is still served up in candy form. You can put history on a reel From Our Files . 15 Years Ago HOUSE OK LIKELY for Guam Air Base. Foes say bill is opening path to Oriental war. 2 Years Ago PERMANENT SOCIAL changes hoped for in NRA assembly. NRA termed “almost useless'’ by ene- mies. PRINCE SIGVARD of Sweden Part of Family , Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE You said the fault was mine, I... Declared that it was yours . And so it seems from day to B EEE at a ae SEE TL g if £ (Copyright 1954) ; . _M people have thought the i j has made partial amends to Chief Jus- turning over in his grave at some of the tele- sige ackcs “ ‘Dwignt Elsee-| aunt one pukiiie i «wee. . ii ' . tice Designate Eart Warren by favor- vision stuff in his name bower woald be diferest, that teas reports submitted by Manco DP, Br ady Questions Today s Remedies ably reporting his nomination to the there would be forthright action on Feb. 12 to S an Adams. The : My enclyclopedia says that buttons first became and candor and no effort to jaw which c on the President f Ch ° ° Ar full committee. a feature on naval coat sleeves when camouflage truth In the Interest t) appoint a commission of 25 to © or ronic Rheumatism or Arthritis But it has fallen far short of Admiral Horatic Nelson of politics. study the subject was passed last clearing its recerd of th . ordered them sewed on uniforms to discourage In bungling, however, the case of July, but it was November before By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. bother te @efine chronic rheu- Maybe my mind is warped or e ugly the men from wiping their noses on their sleeves. Clarence Manion, dismissed in the the President had completed the I have smudge left by the action of its first instance because of a dislike task of selecting the appointees .4,5 aes ee ee Eee ee Se ee eee chairman, Senator Lan The After trapping along the Clinton River for many of his expressed views on the and getting them sworn in for thor as no plotline many ry —— ee cea pe nn North Dak oti Republican . was years, Fortes Whttney Bricker amendment, the adminis- nin etre difficulty “rheumatism.” If there wasn’ wold be oily $5 dete -" — = 7 tration now has resorted to the ex- was some out of step. ' guilty of an in excusable smear of Waterford Township, says it 1s increasingly cuse that Manion ‘didn't give {n finding an executive director, so a ionic But I'm one who believes there _ 1 had ‘em there I thought Still I'm from Missouri, and all ~ when he made public unevaluated difficult to catch the animals, as each succeeding pega ageel pr gacigta Dragon ar A t H t For the answer to your question, °e 200,000 other physicians in the I can get from intensive study of charges against the distinguished Grocration seems to be wiser to traps. eo muck of it on outside ae un et I advised, consult a physician. don't see thet hdc mean the authorities is confusion. I hon- Californian. Chicken raisers in the Pontiac area tell me = Now, what are the facts? On rs Thea ae wen and = tism is. estly believe they don't know what re * * that the statement of authority of Manion they can grtancd “sufficient = Dr. Osler certainly didn’t know they are talking about. Chapman tated because he has them first- insufferable egotist. The subcommittee's favorable report genie hand. The formet law school dean , wat & mas, Sone *2 ee 6 Oe Tell me, child, what remedy or | of the poultry department of Michigan State Su: S06 oe ; tienes fishwife belief that it @as what treatment of proved value have on the nomination was by majority College, that artificial lights do not increase the . Se y came right back at me happens to “the poor, particular. ’ ; with President Eisenhower at : the doctors found to date? One vote and was a rebuke to Chairman annual production of eggs is correct. But a which Sherman Adams was joinder : ly washerwomen, day-laborers, or another “wonder drug”? Be- lighted coop has been found to spread out the ; yp consulted three or four and those whose occupation ex- taszolidin? Cortisene? Don’t nmiake Lancer who wanted to report the nomi- yield, so more eggs are produced at the season M Manion pointed out that he had informed me, and poses them to cold and damp.” me laugh. nation without recommendation. Also it ‘hem Prices are higher. ; of them said I had (Quoted from Osier’s Practice ’ 7 outside work and couldn't give the h atti written 50 years ) Now I hate to leave the question amounted to a rejection of the charges ~~ commission the time it probably into conference with bi ag hanging in the air like this but _ which have shocked: Washington and Verbal Orchids to— — books, ancient and mod- 4 pcg eee ns lease, please, keep this piece .as ‘the Nation : Mnsahewer woed him never. eventually asserted with ; , ‘Part 1 of the story of rheumatiz, ear: . ° . Mr. and Mrs. Gerdon C. Leanex theless to accept, stating that assurance that no medical = oe i oe to appear tomorrow and Wednes- These ranged all the way from cor- of 3453 Sashabaw Road: fifty-eixth wedding aslen seed not give more than | has defined or can de- pew i 5 day. hile Gov Cal anniversary. ° , a day or co 0 month to the “chronic rheumatism" so that f me Gen & letters, not more than one ___ Fuption while Governor of California to anmiversar) : meetings and three or four-days__ ‘wil * berculesia, 19 times more preva- or 100 words . to per following the Marxist line and drew wt 0 a ee een ‘ @ month te the work and that a har aa anew ae bat dest Se ee os Ee : a az ee 7hpogle _— =p 9 cnet -Millord Township: - fifty-seventh--wedding-Al- full-time director and staff would ssc aan ag te ea ee eevee beasts eee K.. Li... * ubarp - protests | Repitbe Greenfield Church Gets New Minister | DETROIT uw — The Rev. Russell | Hicks McConnell has been elected | Be) minister of the Greenfield Congre-| — gational Church/n suburban Dear-/| § born to succeed the Rev. Myron R. Bunnell who leaves after 10 years for a new parish at Hudson. | © The Rev. Mr. McConnell, a grad-| @ uate of Olivet College and the Chi-| cago Theological Seminary, is pas- tor of the Wallin Congregational Church of Grand Rapids. The Rev. | 5 Mr. McConnell takes his new post | § April 21. . | He entered the ministry in 1934, serving as a Navy chaplain in| World War II. as Campaign Nears WASHINGTON @ + James Bas- sett, 4l-year-old political editor of the Los Angeles Mirror, today Was named director of public rela- thong for the Republican National Committee. Bassttt, who was Vice President Nixon's publicity director in the 1952 campaign, succeeds Robert Humphreys, who was promoted to campaign director, a new job, | The shifts: were interpreted by | party spokesmen as an effort to step up the 1954 congressional elec- tion campaign by relieving Hum- phreys of what was termed “double. duties’’ in recent months. . . . $10,000 - 20.000 . 'has been awarded to us by you, the good people of Pontiac, in establishing * ‘the Plant of Tomorrow—Today!”’ TO CELEBRATE . our ultra-modern, scientifically and electronically developed cleaning equipment by multi-million dollar firms, we offer, after serving Pontiac for almost 10 years, our: 45 Minute Cleaning Cycle PLUS CUSTOM “KEEPSHAPE” FINISHING u EXPANSION WEEK rd * Also, the appointment of Bassett by Chairman Leonard W. Hall was In announcing the two appoint- ments, Hall said: “In line with our policy of leav- ing nothing undone to assure Pres- ident Eisenhower of increased Rep- ublican majorities in both the Sen- ate and the House next year, I am making these additional moves to intensify our 194 effort.” * bd * Hot 85 at Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (—A maximum of 8 yesterday in Los Angeles; and San Gabriel made them the | warmest spots in the nation. The | mark was a 73-year record for the date in Los Angeles, eclipsing | 1896 high of 81. Main Street Rochester a Hall said the party organization YOUR SAVINGS ARE rotected! Twice yearly your savings earn our higher 2% rate of interest . , for you! Your savings are protected by Federal Savings Insurance Corporation to $10,000! will gear itself to tell the “‘com- plete, factual story” of the admin- istration's “many accomplish- SUITS ments” to the country between now sms and election day Nov, 2. ote TOPCOATS Bassett was born in Glendale, | (| e pt * Calif., Oct. 18, 1912. He graduated ; 0 COATS from Bowdoin College. Maine, S t 0 l Pp S and joined the Los Angeles Times soos pl. ROBES in 1934, transferring to the Mirror as political editor i | 1948. He was DRESSES, pl. es 5 Laundered Shirts ...1.09 OPEN a? a0 FREE PARKING! cael Deily FRONT—REAR—SIDE ‘Wel, fan VOORHEIS CLEANERS 221 Baldwin Pom if ame FE 4-4610 Umeuile Liles... Also relieving funo- tionally caused hot flashes of “change of life”. Get a bottle today! Yes! You get this big 8 cu. ft. Westinghouse refrigerator at Federal’s at a $60 savings when you trade in your old refrigerator now! 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Perry Phone FE 5-6931 ly = ; . ‘a __THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 ' Pe te | t mn . “* x : ge = ee ee of Cattle Rustling Jap War Criminal, tren tookie re | |coritomi'in™ A Cow for Mopslong |i Salo ‘Freed by Mistake Would Know That In the space where it says list} DALLAS @ — The Greenhorn) boat, built in Newport, R. 1, 1800- +| FT. HOOD,-Tex. uA newly ar-| your parents, he wrote: “Mother| Packing Co, complained rustlers | 1880, is on exhibit at Mystic See and father.” took four cows from its pens here: ' port, Conn. Returns to Prison TOKYO WA disappointed Japa: |. criminal Hits Philippines rer 1 senses om ; | Irate Magsaysay Bans | captivity by mistake last June, re. | turned to prison today. = i Slaughter of Carabao “}:. was former military police | Needed on Farms | Sgt. Maj. Tetsuo Hayashi, 38, freed | | . | from Sugamo Prison, Tokyo, after | [ 4] MANILA u®—Cattle rustling has| six years confinement. Recently come to the Philippines—and with ae aerate anigraramantirigre ; ; t. ser him, the | a distinctly Oriental ae , Japenese Justice Ministry the rec- | Instead of the cow eer, | ord mistakenly listed his term as | /) it's the lowly carabao, or water | 10 years instead of life. Error was | TF rived young Army private pain ot ie [> HORNSTEIN | Corneal Contact Lens We are pleased to announce that at long last, after many years of research, the new HORNSTEIN lens, invented and perfected by Hornstein of Buda- Hungary i now being manufactured by us under an exclusive World im cur own precision Laboratories: A Burepean scientist, whe spent years in painstaking research in laboratories in Hun- ~ gary, England and Germany, has invented | (patent pending! an amazing tiny. new puptl lens, safer and better than giasses. He calls | his invention the “No-Touch” lens because it | te so constructed thet mo part of the lens } ean touch any pert of the eye. Millions who | could not wear the old type contact lenses because they rested om the central part of the eye, resulting in limited wearing time and annoying discomfort will now be able to hh comfort and satis- They won't even know they are faction : them! FREE DEMONSTRATION! Come in, phone FE 5-9081, or write for : PREE BOOKLET. Ne obligation te pur- - chase. Ne needed Colored Lenses Now Availablei 8: . M. Daily Saterdays 1 Prigey S68 £=zteweeceee ——_—. . . fT | Branches in Many Principal Cities of United States and Canada Feended } buffalo, that's being rustled. ‘It's| made during transfer from Dutch |) a lucrative business because of the | — to the Japanese gov-| 47 . je { Pherae MM] Informed of the error. Hayashi | Furious over the slaughter of this ne to jail. _ h country’s main beast of burden, P 2 ; . President Ramon Magsaysay has Phil d | h p | taken quick action. He also has lid eip ld 0 ice touched off a controversy { G d M c rth Ld] » . i * On one of his first provincial | 0 uar C q y | trips after he became aienrpien PHILADELPHIA wW—A special | pan a Te lneratety aieiiead os police guard was planned today | or ‘they could no longer be classed for Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis) | 5 as work animals and could be/| when he arrives here to accept the | slaughtered. a os ie Philadelphia chapter of the Sons | | Some had nails en into of the American Revolution's Good hoofs to make them lame. Others Citizenship Medal Washi tr. were slashed above the hoofs so — al at a Washington | their legs gave out. Day luncheon. & Magsaysay hit the ceiling. He! Authorities revealed yesterday| ~ said it not only was cruelty to | they had received an anonymous | ‘7 animals but was. sabotaging his | letter saying. ‘“‘We think McCarthy | ~ | agricultural development program. | ought to be bumped off and this is| 3.1 | The carabao supply, badly depleted | & good time to do it." $ | during the Japanese occupation,| Chief Inspector Albert E. Du Bois | © See + was needed to increase the rural | said he thought the letter was the | 7 “economy. j werk of a “‘crackpot.’’ bd * 6 ® ~~ - .* Magsaysay ordered the navy to by seize shipments of carabao en| ‘route to Manila for slaughter. In-'| |spectors found a majority of the animals were healthy. Magsaysay put investigators to) work. They found the country’s ‘carabao supply was decreasing | and rustling was a thriving, profit- | jable business. One area reported | BANK BY MAIL-PAY BY CHECK It’s the Convenient ...Safe...Time Saving Method WARDROBE | CLEANERS |, | for Life’s Rainy Days! |more than 3,000 carabaos. stolen | : . \from farmers for butchering in| em ; , «Neon . dos | Manila. | 2 , Whether the sun is shining ... or it’s raining cats and dogs The President asked Manila ... at 6a. m. or midnight ... at home or away—all you need is a [Priston Arsenio Lacson for permis- | pen, an envelope and a stamp to bank by mail or pay by check... | sion to place an army veterinarian | | in the slaughterhouses. Lacson re- | fused on the ground it would vio ‘late existing laws. * ° Ld Magsaysay countered by signing | an executive order banning the | slaughter of carabaos for one year. | | He said he was ready to approve | |the expenditure of five million | dollars, if necessary, for frozen meat imports to insure the Philip- pines an adequate supply. Meat prices jumped after the ban went into effect. Irate dealers went to the President's office to complain. Legislators argued over | the issue. Letters both supporting | and condemning the President's | She Community National Bank of Pontiac, Michigan With BRANCHES at , N. PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN OUT OF CITY BRANCHES Serving Pontiac for Over 25 Years... The Best Assurance of Qualitya Known and Trusted Name WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR PLANT & STORE action appeared in the press. 1038 Baldwin FE 2-5628 ; : Magsaysay is standing firm. The | ; Member Federal Deposits Insurance Corporation c@rabaos are needed, he said, if| DOWNTOWN STORE . the Philippines expect to increase | ° 12 Mt. Clemens FE_-3-7514 | its food production and make his | | agricultural program work, | % * See eee See ee ee os. + ahammar Aborgpa ge ag + WRIGLEY’S suggests a Special Treat! CHICKEN and CHIPS! TUNE IN EVERY Day'! WRIGLEY Saiz RADIO & TV FEATURES LADY OF CHARM 11 @m—tten., Wed, There, Fri. WEYZ-TV, Channel 7 ay all 20 Coupon laside Can Good on Next Purchase Homogenized SPRY ae =e See TS - the THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 4 . t E, y 4 \ \ j / a ‘ = : q ss | 50. i l po > pio ire to nearly three quarters of a 7) se They and theie families add up to nearly thre Unemployed workers are unemployed customers. Unemployed customers mean goods left on the shelves... and unbought, piled-up surpluses in the barns and bins. It was the President of the United States who made the statement quoted in the line above. Thoughtful citizens must agree with him. The President called on the states to amend their unemployment compensation laws “se that the payments | to the great majority of beneficiaries may equal at least half their regular earnings.” The Presi- dent also wants payments to continue for 26 weeks to all unemployed workers . not just a few! The Federal Advisory Council on Employment Security spelled out the President’s proposal and recommended that maximum benefits in each state “be raised to an amount not less than 3/5 to 2/3 of average weekly earnings.” Governor Williams has called for substantially increased benefits and duration. The Detroit Common Council has called on the State Legislature to carry out the President's recommendations. Michigan needs an up-to-date, adequate, equitable unemployment compensation law. Here are some facts that every citizen should consider in determining what kind of law we must have: @ In 1939, the maximum benefit was 53% of the average worker's pay ee in 1953, the maximum basic benefit was 31% of the average worker's pay. N e In 1939, an unemployed worker earning the average wage lost $14.30 a week ... in 1953, an unemployed worker earning the average wage lost more than $53 a week. e A“necessary minimum” income for a family of four, based on a Govern- ment study, is $76.39 a week in Detroit. The present maximum benefit for that family is $31. e The gap between wages and benefits makes all business suffer .. . sales are down sharply already in many Michigan communities. e Rising relief costs resulting from inadequate unemployment compen- sation inevitably mean higher local taxes on home owners, farmers and small business. @ $439,000,000 in Michigan’s Unemployment Compensation Fund is our cushion—to maintain purchasing power and reduce the relief load. UMERS emplaged weetere in Michigan, accord phe coed latest “UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE IS A VALUABLE FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE AGAINST RECESSION...” NOW ALMOST EVERYBODY SEEMS TO AGREE...BUT... The employment compensation bill which at this time appears to have the “nside track” in the Michigan legislature does not meet the President’s recommendations. Its “improvements” are illusion—and its purpose is delusion. In substantial respects, it is worse than the present law. Instead of meeting the needs of Michigan's people, its commerce and agriculture, HERE'S WHAT THIS BILL WOULD DO: 1. Raid the Unemployment Compensation Fund for millions of dollars for the benefit of a few giant corporations. 2. Decrease benefits paid to thousands of workers sorely and partially unemployed. 3. Set up so many eligibility hurdles that many unemployed will have to 3 go on public relief or private charity. ) 4. Force skilled and other workers to apply for any kind of job...no matter how low paid .. . no matter how unsuitable. 6. Deprive low paid workers of any benefits by raising minimum earning requirements. 7. Deny benefits during vacation shutdowns, even if the worker gets no vacation pay. . 8. Disqualify workers who get back pay, Call-in pay or severance pay. Don’t be fooled by this bill’s phoney promises. For full details and facts on this compensation bill. . . and the whole unemployment situation, write to: “FACT SHEET” « UAW-CI0\ J 5. Force injured workers to abandon claims for workmen’s compensation. 8000 East Jefferson, Detroit 14, Michigan MICHIGAN...AND YOU...MUST BUILD A REAL “DEFENSE” LINE! President Eisenhower Says: “Unemployment insurance is a valuable first line of defense against economic recession. Benefit payments go to a worker as @ matter of right and at the time he loses his income, _ instead of as a matter of need and after he has exhausted his savings or liquidated his house and car... When set at appropriate levels, they can sustain to some degree the eatner’s way of life as well as his demand for commodities. Thus, unemployment insurance payments can help to curb economic decline during an interval of time that allows other stabilizing measures to become effective.” And Here’s How YOU CAN HELP.... Address a letter or card or wire to “HOUSE LABOR COMMITTEE,” LANSING, MICHIGAN, or “SENATE LABOR COMMITTEE,” LANSING, MICHIGAN. Get a message to your State Senator and Representative. "The idea to get across is that YOU WANT A REAL UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION BILL PASSED! SAY THAT YOU WON'T BE SATISFIED WITH ANYTHING LESS THAN WHAT THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES HAS CALLED FOR! Try to get your local city government to appeal to the State Legislature for an adequate new law! If you belong to a business, professional or farm organization, get your organization to WRITE or WIRE! Don’t delay. Do it now: Every workingman’s family . . . every farmer, every business and professional man will BENEFIT with a good law. All will suffer with a weak law. You can see to it that the weak, watered-down bills are rejected and that a good bill is passed. State, County and City CIO Councils and the , s a . * ‘ ; ‘ 4 se eS a eS / Governor Williams Says: “To protect Michigan's prosperity, an- employment insurance benefits must be in- creased. Under our existing law, the maximum benefits which an unemployed citizen can receive is $35 a week—and that is for a family with four or more children. For a family with four children that figures out to 83 cents a day per person—a sum scarcely enough in these times to keep body and soul together. To as- sume that Michigan families can be retained as paying customers during layoff periods one maximum of 83 cents a day per person is utter folly.” ne eee Saea By Lf _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AY, FEBRUARY 22, 1956 er ad Winter } Means Sunny Sojourns | for Many Holiday-Minded Pontiacers Eostem ean Will Sponsor Sports Program ‘A Special program is on the agenda for the meeting of the PTSA of Eastern Jynior High School Tuesday when the organi- zation will gather to honor its past presidents. County Clerk Lynn Alien and Howard Shelley, both of the Oak- land County Sportsmen's Club. will show a fishing film and will dis- play fishing rods. Archery techniques will be dis- played, along with the exhibit of a collection of guns by Art Lawson Mr. Allen will speak on the part sports play in family living. Stu- dents are especially invited to view the film and demonstrations. Hostess to Group Mrs. V. W. Gibbons of East Kennett road was hostess recentiy for a mecting of the Mary-Martha Group of the Oakland Park Meth odist Church. Mrs, Glen Rivard gave devotions and plans for a Lenten dinner were made. a® SERRE BEB RRR oe : ) 4 |. First Methodist Church groups = j|met during the week to make = | Lenten plans. a Mrs. Beulah Whilby of Detroit | ~ BEPRIRING . RESTOLING - REFIAISMING | was guest speaker when General . FREE ESTIMATES | Society gathered at the church for | . t@ recent Lincoln Breakfast. Deb- , © D & D jorah Circle hostessed the break- . IN | fast and Mrs. Chester Arnold pre- | - pay = Lp R G | sented devotions. The group made | * FE aw | plans to serve a family night sup- . ee each Thursday in Lent Mrs. Charles Neldrett of Mariva avenue, Urs. Cecil Diehl of Seward street and Mrs. of the history of the organtzation. Past pres- Sarkis Schnorkian of South Shirley avenue idents will be honored with a special pro- | (left to right), all past presidents of Eastern gram at the Tuesday meeting to be held at | Pentiac Press Phete Junior High Se shool PTSA, look over some 7 30 in the auditorium. Methodist Groups M ake Lenten Plans trom $6.5 Choose from Nationally famous names — Eugene Fredericks, eS Helen Curtis and Realistic ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHOP | S% N. Saginaw &t. FE 2-5600 Next te Basley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) A j | Corwin, Monday, Check the edvertisemen No obligation to you. NEW CLASSES DAY, HALF-DAY, and EVENING courses below which interest you and mail this t today. We will send you our bulletin immediately March 1 VETERAN eeeeeewereres 7 W. Lawrence St., Pontiac, Mich. Call tn person or return this ad for Bulletin APPROVED FE 2-3551 eee eteereer anes The Cardigan, $8.98 IAN. a Just arrived ! Those wonderful full-fashioned nylon sweaters by ANTERBURY These are the ones with all the virtues. They fit beautifully. They've the full-fashioning and detailing of imports — even to the English necklines. And they're nylon, you know how fast thet washes and dries, and never needs reshaping. In all the wonderful pastels and darks. Sizes 34 to 40 BOBETT dimen s Bidg. The Slipover, $5 98 HOSIERY and 1 CORSET SHOP FE 2-6921 Deborah Circle met Wednesday for a coffee hour at the church. | Mrs. Charles Legge gave devo- tions based on the (iolden Rule, and plans were made for serving Lenten suppers. Mrs. Bervel An- thony will hostess the next meet- ing at her home on South Pad. dock street. * * * Mrs. Robert Daisy was hostess /at the home of Mrs. John Cahill | Tuesday when Eunice Circle met 'to hear Mrs. Harry Going's pro- *|gram on ‘Crusade Scholars.” Participating were Mrs. Irving Mrs. Harry Rice, Mrs. Samuel Wiscombe, Mrs. Foster © | Baker and Mrs. Howard Johnson. 6 | Devotional topic was taken from | the book ‘What a Jew Believes” | by Bernstein. | Mrs. John Seator gave the de- | yotions. Guests at the meeting were Mrs ing will be at the church. . s . Mary Trask spoke on mission. ary work Tuesday when Lydia Circle met with Mrs. Jack Biber ef Drayton Plains. Mrs. Clare May led a discussion on Broth- erheod Week, and Mrs. Russell Blackett was announced as host- | eas for the next miceting at her | heme in Clarkston. Mrs |Miriam Circle at her home on James street, assisted by Mrs. Perry Ruffing. ‘‘Soil — the world” was the devotional topic given by Mrs. Mayo, and the program, *‘Quadrennial Goals,’’ was present- ed by Mrs. A. H. Thompson of Wilson Avenue Methodist Church | A box was packed for Korea * ¢ @ | Orpha Circle met Helen Baugham Thursday when Mrs. Elbert Proffitt gave devotions (on “Little John's First Commun- on.”” ‘Crusade Scholars’ was the program topic chosen by Mrs. A. J. Zimmerman, who will hostess | the next meeting at her home on | Sherbourne avenue. * ° * Mrs. Proffitt gave devotions on “Little Jehn’s First Commun. lon” before Phoebe Circle Wednesday when it met with Mrs. Sigmund (Cthmiloski on | East boulevard. The Methodist Church's part in assisting rural Negroes was the program topic | discussed by Mrs. Chmiloski. ° ° * | Rachel Circle met with Mrs. Guy | Williams: Thursday, and = Mrs | James Sorenson was cohostess devotions based on “Vision in Prayer.” * * 6 “Crusade Scholars’ was the pro- gram topic for Ruth Circle Tues- day, and on the program were Mrs. George Heavel, Mrs. Byron Green, Mrs. John Griesen, Mrs. Norman Legge and Mrs. Albert Benson. Mrs. Edward Case was hostess te the group at her home on Third avenue and Mrs. Greea was cohostess. Mrs. Paul Boving gave devotions on “Soil — the World,"” and guests were Mrs. George Cunningham, Mrs. Finie Jones, Mrs. Robert Murnworth, Mrs. LaVerne Cox, Carrie McCard and | Mrs. Paul Astroth. The next meet- | Mary Mayo was hostess to with Mrs Mrs. Kenneth Stephens and Mrs. | William Trarice. Mrs. Oliver Dun- at her home on Hillcliff drive. 160-Degree Water, 'Bluing Aid Washing There won't be a blue streak | in a washload of you make it a | practice to use instantly dissolv- | ing bead-bluing in hot wash water. Besides, you'll reap an extra divi- dend as all your light - colored washables, will keep their ‘‘new look’’ much longer. For best results, set the tempera- | ture control of your water heater \at 160 degrees, because it's the | | very hot water that gets your | clothes white, That's why Grand- ma boiled her laundry, in the years | before washing machines and an | automatic supply of hot water chaneed | all that. | | | | | § ] 3 e sd a ae ea a-eeefe-g: + A an . t , : per case SOLD IN CASE LOTS ONLY Light Marbleized Colors $5.95 per case Open Tonight ’til 9 P. M. SPENCE ST Floor Coverings and Appliances ¥ 1 3511 Elizabeth Lake Read—Pienty of Parking A program, “Radio Broadcast.’ was under the supervision of Mrs | DOREEN CHURCH Howard Dow. and participants were Mrs. Lester Mehlberg on Mr. and Mrs. Robert Church of “You Shall Receive Power’: Mrs. East Tennyson avenue are an- James Van Cleave. “Cross the | nouncing the engagement of their Crowded Way.’ and Mrs. Dow on daughter, Doreen, to Ted Buckner, what the church is doing for rural son of the Carl Buckners of Ger- Negroes. Mrs. Clayton Rule gave don avenue ws SS a * . 2 : —— ig e ig | pecta er | Ga Bi: PS ® ° ° | Limited Time Only | ie % “i EY %, Marbleized t we CASH and CARRY eg nk F ~ aca 2 Te C.F. Shoups Welcoming Son, Harold. i tecenant Is Home From Korea For a Month’s Visit month's visit with his parents, the Lt. Harold Shoup. sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shoup of Lake Orion, before re- porting for duty with the 5th Air Force at Camp Kilmer, N, J. s . . Winter vacations take resi- dents not only to Florida, but also to other sunny climes, The Licyd Thorntons have left their West Walton boulevard te enjoy the sunshine of the Ha- walian Islands, They are guests at Hotel Hana Maui. * * L Mrs. Hazel Welsch of Interlaken road is vacationing in Mexico City. While in the Mexican capital, she is making her headquarters at Ho- tel del Prado. * ¢ *@ | Vacationing in Florida are the | John Downers of North Sanford | street, They are spending their two-week holiday with the Willard | Jewells of Lansing, formerly resi- | dents of reine Ld | The H. V. Phipps of Oneida road participated in the sailing races at St. Petersburg, Fla., Yacht Club Lightning class boat. Alse participating in the re- gatta were Dr. and Mrs, Gerald Murphy. of Mount Morris. Last year he was the winner. s * s Klyces, are remodeling an old ness, Fla. * *« 6 Mr, and Mrs. Gust Schwartz of Benvenue avenue have returned to, | spending the past two weeks in| Florida. They spent some time at Key | West and visited Mrs. Schwartz's | parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Car- mers are wintering in Floirda. * ¢ | Lancaster road and the Rev. Cle- | ment H. Kern of Detroit have re- | turned to their homes after three pulco, They also visited Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Baganas and Mrs. Denia | Morris of San —— Calif. s Word comes ica ole hig Home from Taegu, Korea, for a | recently, They were sailing a’ Former Pontiacers, the Winfield | home they have bought in Ver-| | stan will hostess the next meeting | their home on Sylvan Lake after | mer, in St. Petersburg. The Car- | Mr. and Mrs. Peter Morris of | weeks in Mexico City and ol Antiques Show Set Up for Opening _ fusion and crisis at your house? Then imagine the scene at Stevens Hall, All Saints Episcopal Church, today when 18 antique collectors moved in for Pontiac's second an- tique. show. Since morning vans of furniture, china, glass, silver and other heir- | looms, carefully packed against | C. F. Shoups of Mohawk road, iS scratches or breakage, have been | arriving. From heav. He will also visit his brother and hoards to precious eles have been assembled. Mrs. Amy Harper, antique shows since last year's affair. Serving coffee to the dealers and being By 11 o'clock Tuesday morning, | the bare gymnasium will be trans- | formed to a market place and mu- seum of the household treasures of another age. Dawson Baer and Mrs. Harold Cou- | sins will be selling tickets. Taking | jturns at the door will be Mrs. R. R. Angelmier, Mrs. Russel | Thurston, Mrs. Horace Hall, Mrs. Corliss Armstrong, Mrs. Robert Evans, Mrs. Gil Every, Mrs. Frank Stull, Mrs. Marshall Smith, Mrs. | Bryan Kinney and Mrs. Charles | Kistner. Staffing the kitchen to serve lunch and tea will be Mrs. Silk |and Mrs. Smith and a large com- mittee. Taking turns as waitresses, cooks and dishwashers will be Mrs. J. A. MacDonald, Mrs. | Charlies Sanft, Mrs. George Schroeder, Mrs. Gerald Kirkby, Mrs. W. H. Heller, Mrs. Felix Wotilia, Mrs, L, E. Manning, Mrs, Everett Harris, Mrs. Ver- | mom Abbott, Mrs. Frank Bonner, Mrs, C. R. Gatley and Mrs. Lar- mon Smith. All members of Guild 11, spon- sors of the show, are donating home-baked pastries to be areal | at tables arranged on the balcony overlooking the show. | Old- Style Bottles ‘Dress Up Bathroom Is moving day a time of con-+ . Dwight P. Allen of Walnut Lake road has announced the engagement of his daughter, Sally, to F. Keith Baker Jr., son of the Farnsworth K. Bakers of Falmouth, Mass. Both are students at the University of Maine. SALLY M. ALLEN Say New Zipper | Won't Jam Up NEW YORK (INS)—Zippers — mechanical monsters made for gripping, groping and griping — may at last be fool-proof this year. The zipper people, who brought out the first slide fasteners in 1913, insist they've invented “a “magic tab’ model which gets it- self out of jams. Other companies have claimed they had jam-proof jobs before, but women keep getting into trouble. Here's how the new model works, if the zipper becomes jammed or catches fabric and threads, the wearer need only push its pull- tab backward until] it hits a tiny pushbutton. This pushbutton auto- matically opens the jaws of the zipper—wide enough to remove the to send the tab off its track. To perfect the new zipper, one company says it spent 12 years and “well over $1,000,000’ in research. So if the laws of energy and money Ohio, that Mary Crane, daughter the George H HL. Creche of, Weet| Why not pretty up your bath- the queen's court for the Military fashioned drug store bottles filled Iroquois road, was a member of Toom with a few of those old-| FE 4-9581 e Ball at Denison University Satur- day evening. Mary is a jester at | the university. s s s Three girls from Marygrove Col- | ~| lege are active in campus events. Margaret Soderberg of Shore View | drive is general chairman of cam- | Pus Brotherhood Week activities | which began Sunday. She is the | leader” of all college social action | activities for the week. Skating in Mount Clemens Sun- South Marshall street, a Mary- Marcella Vaverek «* Joslyn ave- | nue, a senior at the college, was hostess for a bridge luncheon and ' fashion show on campus Saturday. She is a home economics: major. * * * Mr, and Mrs. Robert W. Shef- field of South Francis street are | announcing the birth of a daugh- ter, Kim Marie, Feb. 13 Dad-Son Event Slated Tonight The Father and Son Banquet to © ibe held this evening at Daniel beige School will feature music “Spike Jones’ Junior Sylvan ie ” making the second pub- | | hie appearance for the Cub Scouts of Den 4, Pack 727. The Rev. George M. Kennedy of | Belgian Congo, Africa, will give 'the invocation and Thomas Loig- non from Playcrafters Club of Pon- | |tiac High | School will ad | agi tricks i Larry Logdon is general chair- | man of the event, with Mrs. Rich- | | tickets. Martin Readler will give | the toast to the boys and his son, | = | Bobbie, will give the toast to the) Since 1929! RIKER FOUNTAIN Lobby of Riker _ day was Evelyn dackolow ot | | ard Scribner in charge of the din- | yh | ner and Mrs. Allen Carringer, the nd bath salts, dusting powder, | and a powder puffs? close at hand so you won't have | to step out ‘of your cozy soapsuds | | to reach for bonuty items. ‘Coming Events Sorority will meet | Omega My Sigms | Tuesday at 8 pm. with Mrs Leo Half- Bt | penny, 30 Lewis VPFW Auxiliary 1008 will meet this eve- | ming at 8 o'clock in the American | | Legion Home of Auburn avenue | Daughters of - Pontiac 196 will meet | | Tuesday at @ pm. in the Grotte Hall on West Pike street. Maccabees Sewing Circle will meet | Tuesday at 12:30 for a cooperative ‘Junch- eon with Marie Drunim, 164 Mechanic 8t. | Chapter 4 Blue Star Mothers will meet | | Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the YMCA Quick Sewing Circle will meet Wednes- | day at 2 pm. with Mrs. Carl Gaston, 1627 Boston Ave West Side Home Demonstration Grow will meet Wednesday at 11 am. wit Mrs. D. C. Milbourne of the State Hos- pital Grounds. There wil) be a school- girl luncheon Anyone interested is invited to attend the y meeting of the lonette Club to be held at 7 pm. in room 102 of Pontiac High School Pontiac WCTU will meet Tvesday with ig William Kreklow, 11 — a. i= a} noon. The * paward Auchard will speak. Guild 8, All Gaints Episcopal Church, | Wednestiay will meet rens ) Mall at 2 pm. in Ste- | mean anything, it may actually | work! ‘Called to Ontario Mr. and Mrs. George Foote of ‘South Sanford street and the |Charles Crossmans of Colgate ‘avenue have been called to Osha- wa,, , due to the death of Wil- liam Crossman, a former Pontiac | Fesident. caught cloth, but not wide enough | Turn Bristles Down When you wash hair brushes, always dry them with the bris- tles down. It's a good idea to let them dry on a terry towel. WELCOME + RFR Beautiful 3 Piece Sets BOYS’ and GIRLS’ Pink, Blue, Maize, Mint Hand Decorated Pearl Trim Cotton Gabardine | 1. “Dress hg your child for Sprin Spring Hats Latest Fashion Creations French Val-Lace — Nylon Fillet Lace - 2. fond finishing ee for Spring Dresses Blue Broadcloth with contrasting Seaman’s End of Month Sale | DRESSES ' One group of Dresses, broken sizes_and colors, | slightly soiled, were $14.95 to $16.95. | *5 .00 One Group of Dresses Were $21.95 to $39.95 $10.00 One Lot of Gowns and Slips Values up to $5.95 $1.79 One Lot of Blouses Broken sizes and colors. Values to $5.95 $1.79 Dress Shop Start at *5” . 7” = *] 0” ves COLD WAVE MACHINE OR MACHINELESS Including the Italian Boy Haircut OR ANY STYLE-CUT _ No Appointment Needed! Immediate Service Andre Beauty Calon Bldg. Hg Ph FE Sa 5-4490 % Tae tte fines he ae Spe eee = : bacon _—————" es be oo — - i j }) 2, 1954 weekend in the Dinner Key Au- ditortum, the site of the 13th Show. A record fleet of 150 boats and yachts and millions of dollars worth of outboard. motors, engines Women's Invitational Tournament in Miami Beach. Golf is a favorite pastime with Dry Skin A a Drink se eaaks af vomdh EYUET PELE! retell , fiftet fi rie sare ‘women members of Indian Creek Country Club, and Mrs. Morgan Douglas of Bloomfield Hills often 4 are tT : makes a trip down from her home in Fort Lauderdale for a round on Mriti 4 in Jamaica, Jamaica. south Florida took many of which Jamaica Inn's owner, Hugh. Matheson Jr., brought back from Hugh is the son of a prominent have a home in Jamaica and he taken from pictures pioneer family. They the pictures himself. | Hospital Parley Attended by Five CAROL MAE MORRIS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2 Golfing, Boating, Horse Races, Shows | Among Florida’s Midwinter Pleasures palms and other flora typical of the dearby West Indian island. sky above, peeping through a fiber glass roof. At one end of the gar- den, a waterfall plays constantly on the rocks below. ' Murals on the walls of the cock- tail lounge depict sugar cane fields Announcing the engagement of their daughter, Carol Mae, to Russell F. McNamara are Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Morris of ' Forest avenue, | Watkins lake. He is the son P. McNamaras of West Huron street. Two PTAs Pay Tribute to Founders Malkim_ and Bagley Conduct Programs on Thursday Two school PTAs met Thursday to celebrate Founders’ Day, Malkim Past presidents of Malkim School PTA were special guests at a Founders’ Day cooperative dinner meeting held at the school. Mrs, Richard Solomon, presi- of the William | | Ralph MiQigan, Probably You Felt Inferior ; f é at | ¢ | gE i By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—Are you the type who loses things—umbrellas, library books, friends, old den- tures? You know what that means, fel- low things-loser? i creat d i i i f 87 1 t fe} g! trist.. z of xy: I s ¥ Beautifully Re-constructed and Re-finished. Covered in long ‘ Wearing Fabric. 270 Orchard Lake Ave. Save on Custom Furniture Ce Sofas low as $7 4% Chairs low as $3,495 BUDGET TERMS five, william wright 5 Years! FURNITURE MAKERS G UPHOLSTERS FE 4-0558 Betty's Faster styles oy know, your beauty and grace. you the latest in hair trend your new Easter bonnet. As hair and hat must be to best display your Permanents Styled for All Short Hair-Dos! Parade finally had to consult a Lost Your Billfold? Good! may be too deeply rooted to ana- lyze so easily. Mrs. W. points out in an article on her findings that a woman who lost a diamond wrist- He discovered she lost it be- cause jt was a gift from dent, introduced the honor guests, Mrs. Cari Malkim, Mrs. Mrs. Robert Duckworth, Mrs. Gilbert Buhi, Mrs, Eugene Hoisington, Mrs. Floyd Frisch, Mrs, William Mi- halek and Mrs. Lyle Cox. Use the index te find “You don’t find many women = notes on it, “Yet most housewives are just; 5. To build or ma old-fashioned girls when it comes| read the article or book quickly to reading up on events in their|Then read it carefully communities or in the world, The/| close attention to read haphazardly, catch as catch can.” Dr, Witty urged housewives to apply the same efficiency to read- “Ours Alone” ing a a a a a a ” 0.27.50 OAUGY SAILDR coe xeon Body-of Baku straw with o perky twist of contrasting ribbon levels off to spring.’ With the new “Cage-Bird” veil in navy, other styles in black, white ond red. % -_ ment was concluded with entitled ‘‘What Fred Dreamed.” was Mrs. Mihalek assisted by Mrs. ia- | Michael Zussack, Mrs. Roy Ward, Mrs. James Sneed, Mrs. Ronald i : F i f School PTA held its Founders’ “This We Dedicate” was the theme for this month, and Mrs, Robert Clark gave the meaning of Founders’ Day. Mrs, J. E. Stevens spoke on “What We Can Genera] chairman for the dinner a lass 0 eotland be 5 Hn g First choice for It, fashion and flexibility .. . sandals as styles by Naturalizer. Made over heel hugging toe free lasts with the heel two full widths harrower to assure beautiful fit. Fashion- right for spring. We have your exact sizes, Also in red and blue calf. > ws rune cut 7S ness Na 295 | Others to 49.95 % * m A now through summer wardrobe must for vece- tion, town and travel, Knitted cardigan, three tier flare skirt with the graceful “flare that flatters’’ in bright white. It's flashed with hand knit cable stitching around the Johnny collar and cuffs. Misses’ sizes. | ~ Lf Better Knite—Messanine Floor falasles at Arthur's from ‘to you Desk to Date ~-VEROATILE alla .ul10.00 Naturalizer’s first choice for Spring... Gleaming Patent Leather rcp epee woediaee “25 \ ¢ SO LIGHT ¢ SO SMART © SO FLEXIBLE ¢ —— lice TWELVE , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22! 1954 + to Magazine Recipient Wonders | ‘How to Discouroge Unwanted Present By EMILY POST A reader tells me: “For the past two years I have received a maga zine subscription for my birthda, The magazine is widely read. but it is one devoted to subjects which I do not happen to like and could not waste my time reading “When the first year’s subscrip- tion ran out I thought that would be the end,but I received it again last year afd evidently it will be a yearly occurence. Will you please tell me how I can tactfully dis- these unwanted subscrip- you can do but try to find seme- thing of interest in it for your friend's sake. But if he has no personal in- terest in it and is only sending it. because he thinks you like it, the best thing to do is to tell the giver frankly that if he is thinking of sending you a magazine subscrip- tion again this year, you would ‘DislikesGift She Adapts Caree Subscription [——— | | ie rz © mS F 2 Stam CLP MUNIC Maced Ragait | ve . ys (save Tans) Try It We. have not talked a lectieons for several weeks but to- day we will show you how you can make a collection which is most unusual ] wonder how many of you know the different fur-bearing animals of the world. I hope that you can identify the most common ones here in America In the past several years it seems .that fur trim has been used on more clothing. De you have a spert jacket with a fur collar? I'll bet that it is mouten. much prefer this or that magazine (and name a magazine at the same subscription price) Dear Mrs. Post: My half sis- ter, for whom I have been guardian since the death of our father from the Americas, South Af- rica and Australia. Last winter many stores had fur Mary Margaret McBride Says: pelts from our common red fox on entire animal with the head and legs left on How would you like. to start a collection of different furs? This need not be an expensive collec: tion, for people throw furs away when they are very worn. Ask your local furrier for scraps. He has no use for 2inch scraps Mount your little fur squares on a piece of beaverboard, and hang | it in your room. It may take you a long ume to complete your collec- Mouton ts dyed lamb and comes | tion, but that is the fun of making | collections. Do you. have an un- jusual collection? I would like to know about it. will give her mame should the invitations go out are her guar. Marie Curie's once upon a time. be hostess at) . unsettled had flashed into life.” -| mother, co-discoverer of radium. Dr. Maxwell Maltz told me not spoon; I ate mine wi a fork. Which was correct? - If it was thick enough | had a disfiguring hair lip In the same way, a small mosaic —a tray of food set down on a e is not children grown, Lillian w hew to occupy spare time “Tt was too late for breakfast and too early for the midday meal. so I asked what the food was for,’ Mrs. Weser told me. ‘They _ explained that there wasn't enough money for service and so it was necessary to cook the midday meal early in the morning even though the patients would .not eat the almost unidentifiable, unappetizing mess until noon.” Lillian _ immediately. went into action. She found that the hospital held 400 patients completely for- gotten by the outside world. No body came to see them and they, | without incentive to improve, were getting gradually sicker The energetic Mrs. Weser or- ganized neighbors, friends, the membership of 11 churches. fire- men, policemen to visit the wards A local bowling = organization started bowling classes The towns people got up home talent shows with patients performing. General health in the institution “improved | so fast that pretty soon con valescents were helping to lobby for further benefits Neobedy was in the least sur prised when Mrs. Weser got $1,000,000 from the state for fireproofing the hospital, and when officials after an inspection trip decided to replace old walls with new. So the tiny mosaic of circum stances. a tray of badly cooked Sale Special! SAVE $5.05 Permanent & Haircut 8.50 1.50 PERMANENTS Styling, cutting or reshap- ing. Have it done NOW. Short Curl No Appotntment Necessary IMPERIAL Beauty Salon 20 £ Pike St FE 4-2878 Cold Weve Styled Heircut oth For °4* NOTHING MORE TO PAY! 41.N- Seginaw Appetniment Net Always Necessary, elder brother's name? She will | Fannie Hurst, with the novelist’ them “mosaics ‘of circumstances.” | alter the direction of human lives—yours, mine, even the famous [00 never dreamed of becoming a plastic surgeon until he saw that the first baby he delivered as an interne institution—started Lillian Weser on a momentous crusade that was to effect thousands besides herself. Little Turning Points Alter s feeling for felicitouc phrase, calls those small turning points that A few moments among the test tubes of a laboratory and Marie, overworked Polish governess then, tossed sleepless, exulting that her | his destiny at last was fixed. ‘Her vocation for so long Eve Curie wrote many years later of that decisive night and her Tr long ago that he of circumstances table in a state as beginning to when an errand § MISS McBRIDE the mental hospital ¢—- — ~ _ cold food. has actually resulted in the complete metamorphosis of a town, a miracle for hundreds of sick men and women and a won- , derfully satisfying life for Lillian | Weser. By ANNE uxywodd Mothers of the how-virtuous-can- you-get type often tell me, bravely stifling their sobs, that “I adore my children, of course, but when I think of the sacrifices I've made...” And then they tell me of their | training and their wonderful ca- preers in business, or medicine, or law, or advertising or what-not, and add. ‘But. of course, I had to give that all up “When you have children, you have no ‘time to keep up with your interests, and your training just goes on the shelf.” | ee to think of the burden it r-to Motherhood-T ¢ | | | poor kids are goifg to earry | with them through life. It’s no fun | to be reminded, year after year, | | of all you owe to dear old mom. Collect Little Fur Scraps cal | to run a mile! “But when your training has | been specialized, and you can’t £9 out to a job, your hands are really tied,” women tell me. However, I frequently encounter women who have sufficient ingenu- Hy and -persistente to hek that one, — too Mrs. Dorothy Clarke is such a woman She is the wife of a lawyer and mother’ of two daughters, one 15 and one 7 Before her marriage, Mrs. (larke worked for a man who ; Was a censultant in dental prac- tice administration. / He taught dentists — and more particularly their secretaries—the most efficient manner to run their | | offices. Mrs. Clarke worked until | two days before her first child was born But for the past 15 years, she- has managed to keep her hand in, Her old boss passed away and she was one of the few who knew , techniques. When dentists asked for her help, she didn't re- fuse, but neither could she leave the house and children to go out | | “told them,"’ Mrs. Clarke | explained, ‘‘that I'd love to help | them, but they would have to | come te my house. “Then, after that. IT would hire and train their new secretaries in the approved methods — and the secretanmes would come to my house, too. Slightly inconvenient, but they were happy to co-oper- ale “The extra money | make is very useful - “Really,” Mrs. Clarke conclud- ed, “you can do anything if you honestly want to do it" Copyright 1954 | The natural reaction isn't to-| | ward pampering her with affection ; | the rest of your life in order to | sale. These were made from the | repay her, The natural reaction is | || The patches fun ° PETUNIA! Since patching sometimes MUST be done, Why not make Certainly, Petunia! Calico flowers, animals, or mono- grams can be easily appli- qued, and they're mighty gay. City Visitor Tells Recipe for Shrimp Girl Scout Adviser Prepares Dish in Gourmet Class By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor When Miss Theresa Burleigh was in town last week working with the Girl Scouts, we persuaded her to part with a favorite recipe. It | iS a gourmet-type of dish that sounds like delicious eating. Miss Burleigh is on the National Girl Scout staff, working as a community adviser in Michigan, | | Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin. | During the rare leisure hours she | is able to spend at her home in | Chicago she enjoys entertaining, card games and sewing. SHRIMP DE JONGHE By Miss Theresa Burieigh 2 poynds fresh shrimp *. cup butter or margarine ‘4 cup bread crumbs 1 cup sherry wine | ‘, cup parmesan cheese | 1 clove garlic ' Cook shrimp_ 10-15 minutes, or until done, in boiling, salted water. | Let stand in this water one hour. Drain and peel, vein and split. | Saute in one-fourth cup of the but- ter or margarine with the chopped | garlic clove. Beat until light one-half cup of butter or margarine; add bread crumbs, wine and cheese to make a paste. Place shrimp in shallow baking dish. Cover with paste, | spreading evenly, Bake in 350-degree oven 20-30 minutes or until brown. Serve hot. | Serves four to six Brash Boy High-Handedly Interteres in Girl's Life, Scares Away Her Beau By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: I'd been going with Joe for some time when along came Mark who announced to me and everyone else that he was going to take me away from Joe. He called him up and good ness knows what he said—but Joe came to me, asked for his school ring and his freedom. “T begged Joe not to break up with me—but it seems to be all off. Now, Mark is a wonderful boy and all that, but I'm crazy about Joe! Please help me get back the boy I really lke and send’ Mark on his way without hurting him'” Nobody in ‘{¢bis pice seems te care one bit how you feel! Mark seems pretty high-handed in straight-arming Joe out of your picture, And Joe seems pretty scaredy-cat in taking or- ders from Mark. You haven't been asked your opinion by either of them. They both forget that you've a right to story to toss in Mark's teeth’ make a choice You don't have to go with Mark just because he wants you to. And if you aren't seen with him at all, Joe may realize that he jumped the gun. In any case. why not try fo arrange a little talk-it-over with” Joe? Ask him what prompted him to take his ring back so suddenly Ask him what Mark said to make him break off with you when you’ were getting along so beautifully and hadn't fought or anything What caused his fruit basket upset —that's what you want to know Hohe doesn't leve you any more, that's ene thing. You can swaliow the hurt and consider it finished. But if he doesn't like things as they are, admit frankly and honestly that you don't, either. Tell him that though Mark is niee, youd rather date him, Joe It just might cut some ice with him. Hed have a real success Want to Lose Weight .. . Easy-Like? oth Day on Diet (Tuesday) Likely to Be Pretty Rough By ISABEL DU Bots Fourth Day's Menu Tomorrow 1s likely to be a rough anh | Pear, canned, 1 half Lettuce, 2 to 3 leaves Cottage cheese, le cup “Dear Miss Woodward: Bill has been dating me and only me for some time now., But’ a few days ago he took out two other girls and after each date he called me tO teH me about it “This Upset and annoyed me and T wasn't too nice over the phone Should T be nice and listen to him or tell him not to call any more?” You've been snippy to Bill be- cause you were jealous of his flings at dating other girls. You felt it was bad enough to do it, without telling you about it. Yet, telling you is a good sign—it means he's not doing anything behind your back. If you don't like him any more, tell him not to call, But if you want to go out with him, be nice and listen. Then laughingly tell him he makes you feel like a friend of the family Tell him vou're glad he had a’ good time and all that—but you're more interested in the dates you have with him. (Big joke). Then gaily change the subject. F tiny teener— E Unmixed Praise and Undiluted Criticism Both Produce Adverse Effect 7 Refinishing of Stairway Is Problem © , How Does One Get _ Up and Down While Paint Is Drying? The most obvious problem con- nected with refinishing a Qlight of Stairs is how to get typ and down in the the the house while paint on Balanced Treatment This Will Give Him the Ability to Admit Mistakes By MURIEL LAWRENCE Carol F.. 11 years old. cant admit a mistake For example es) i cleaning the bath Stairs is drying : room is her Saturday morning The solution to this one is to ee e . Chore. She'll announce that its paint the stairs at night and to, a ‘finished — when it isn't. Point. use a fast-drying finish. If all goes' @ LY? VG ~ to the unwashed window - ' well the paint should be ; oe spattered cabinet mirror, her =— " mie CA mother will say, “You haven't ~~ | AS cleaned, them, Carol.” | Do act, however, sanke the | lf | Thea Carol's face tightens | mistake of starting at the top of into stubbornness. Insistently and | the stairs and working down, for = untruthfully, she says, “I did | ~ may find yourself spending so clean them.” night on the living room Ys | couch unless you have a down- Sf, 4 Mrs. F. has two ways of deal- stairs bedroom. |S ‘i’ ta ane ing with this resistance to correc- Kapaa | vi & tion. Sometimes, losing her tem- leiiadce aiestoe “a _ hon “Sw. Ww. wea per, she stands over Carol threat- e steps when, “3 , 4 |eningly until she letes her ‘these are dry, doing the others.) - = tL dhe | work. — This doesn't work in households @& ° ap Ge ig - | with children or where the people are absentminded. The choice of the finish for the stairs is important. It should be as durable as a finish for a floor Before -you start application, wipe or wash down the stairs to remove dirt and sand rough spots. If there are any spots where the wood has been torn, file or plane these spots down. Many people prefer to paint the treads one color and the | | Pisers another. This is fine, but if you have children, don’t paint | the risers white or a very light | color unless you don’t mind | cleaning and refinishing at fre- | quent intervals. | Small and even not ‘go small | children can't seem to climb a flight of stairs without knocking the toe of their shoes against the | risers. If you are constantly bothered by scuffed and dirty risers. try | covering them with a sheet of. plastic. This stuff won't chip and dirt marks can easily be removed with a damp cloth Foam | Rubber Mattress Comes in On By ELIZABETH HILLYER One deep piece for a bed, and seat circles for a chaif that easily change their covers — these are two of the newest ideas that fea- ture foam rubber ; Of course foam rubber is a well- | established favorite for mattresses and for upholstered furniture. It's comfortable. It tailors perfectly. to straight, trim lines. and there never was anything like it for keeping its shape. Single slals of feam rubber have been shown before on day- beds, but now a new full-size er twin bed has a 6-inch-deep | mattress that takes no boxspring below. It has a cover of uphol- stery fabric that serves as a bedspread. Shown in the same furniture grouping in the spring previews is Sometimes, in another mood, she'll remember the child-training Sizes | books" advice to praise children. 12-20 [= she'll say soothingly, *‘Never | mind, dear. You've straightened the towels nicely, anyway’ — and _wash the sill and mirror herself. . ie _ | Neither way changes Carol's re- ie at Sasi diagram‘ It's easy, ist “i in. The angry thrifty, quick sewing! Choose first one just makes her angry, pretty cotton, bind in contrast | too. The second one, since it con- color and look fresh, keep cool ail | dones Carol's mistakes, justifies : . | her continuing resentment toward summer at a penny-wise price that | any criticism of tems. will delight your husband. No fit- ting problems, it wraps. No iron-| weote truths instead of half ones ing problems, opens flat. Pattern 4839: Misses’ sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes 4's) yards 35-inch fabric. | This pattern easy to use, simple | to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- To focus our entire attention on the neglected sill and mirror is as unrealistic as it is to concen- trate it entirely orf the tidy towels. We have a child who, like the tern for first-class mailing. Send | rest of us, has done some things to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon. | well and some things not so well. tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West| So Mrs. F. might try saying: 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print “The washbow! iooks fine. And plainly name, address with zone, how neatly you've arranged the size and style number. | towels. It is such a shining bath- eee room that it seems a pity to forget the sill and the mirror... "' And let it go at that. Fear of correction develops from unbalanced praise or un- | balanced criticism. So let's watch unmixed praise and unmixed criticism. We can ignore a child's mistakes and in- flate and flatter his success until ‘he gets to expecting such grand | things from himself that any fail- | ure is intolerable. | Or we can ignore Carol's good work and concentrate her attention on her failures until she comes to expect too little from herself. Then of course any suggestion that she can do better scares her into anger , and resistance. | Nobody rates total praise or total condemnation. Like Carol, all of | us need the praise to give balance to the criticism. It’s this balance that gives us the realistic self- respect that can admit mistakes. anners MAKE FRIENDS When you call a woman on the telephone and her husband an- swers and yells for her at the top of his lungs, you aren't favorably impressed with his manners. How jworth e Deep Piece Mrs. A. S.—"‘I have black and white sectional upholstered furni- ture. and a green chair. Tables about it, men? Isn't it aré limed oak. What color rug, > = draperies and wallpaper do you suggest ?"’ | With only one color established | te go with the black and white, | possibilities are endless. What | color de you like with green, | yellow, gold, bittersweet, blue? The start you have indicates a paper that isn't too complicated. It might be a texture or one color in an all-over pattern on a white background. ; Choose plain colored draperies walking a few steps to tell your and the rug in a bright color wife she is wanted on the tele- for the kind of a clear-cut color : scheme that goes well with the It will make her feel like a black and white furniture, but lady, and will make- you appear make the one additional color, or to be a gentleman to the person two, something you yourself enjoy. on the other end of the line pm ChildNeeds day' You are probably wondering .\o salad dressing | a chair which sheds its cover in ACROSS what this is all about Rran muffin ; a flash for washing or replacement. 1 Parm Remember not to follow your Bitter: 1 teaspoon The seat itself needn't be removed —, i ‘ivetine ‘oo! ‘usual procedure of nibbling on Milk, skim. 1 glass «8 97) as shown in the sketch 4 Farm product | 3 everything in sight. It you must. Coffee or tea. no cream or sugar The seat cover is gathered on }} rel ag 7 Stay out of the kitchen (skim milk or lemon juice and underneath with a drawstring and / 14 Toward the Or try a stick of gum instead, it saccharine may be used! whips off when the string is re: ,, sreliered side contains only 1 calorie DINNER leased. Both designs are bv Cali- 16 Mica ’ BREAKFAST Shrimp cocktail ornia designer Greta Grossman. = aan Grapefruit. ‘2: small | Lettuce, 1 leat = *. / 20 Raises \ - oe | 21 Also Poached egg. 1° Dog died 4s } Mrs. F. D.—“t have a | 22 Variety of agate Toast, whole wheat. 1 slice Coc ktail sauce, 1 tablespoon old howse with very tall a Butter, 1 teaspoon Veal cutlets 3 medium | and don't know what toe dg with | 3 sauee 1 syllable | “Milk, skim, 1 glass ‘8 oz) Cauliflower, 's cup, cooked, ': | the windows. I would dra- | Beaty : ve as butter bet don’t know te | rm tasks | Coffee, no cream or sugar (skim, “@SPoon peries, 55 Goasasbenes milk and saccharine’ may be RUtABARA* CUP, Cooked. '2 tea. make them to keep the /windows | 38 Large farm used} . : poon butter from looking so long,/Can you | 3% Abstract being — fp LUN Lettuce salad . | help me?” | > iemene ; ~ As Lettuce, ‘« head 2-22 . | 40 Asterisk Vegetable soup. *¢ cup No salad dressing but vinegar Draperies color as the —— Fresh fruit salad or lemon juice may be used Heighten you Figure in the Empire walls tade the walls and | 43 email stream Orange, '2 ioerea Na le o si lon't sqvere it in bory 40 not emphasize long lines of 4 Value too low. | G { . ream, vanilla. ‘2 cup oat < 93! Exist ere ruit, ‘ Milk. skim. 1 glass 18 oz) hnes. The briet jacket shows up finy the windows, valances cut 32 Paradice } svapes, green ah dless, 15 ; Coffee or tea. no cream or sugar ine, lengthens feg look. retohe ie an rhat, and Den 34 Deed apell -_. <> (skim milk or lemon juice and Miss T. T —You don't want to ne — the wall tarm produce F E = wider than the Windows themselves 5$ Indifferent rt sn aon ne ann Custom Uphoistering _Saceharine may be used) look “'square."” Too many straight adds width to detract from a long, | £4 Pertis® 1 Small cyst 25 Mideay 40 emant (pretiz) Total calories for day—1,460 lines-can do just that. The Empire icv Seek . Z . 8 Chalice 34 Republic m 4 Guanevenee WILLIAM K. COWIE; ‘ 's wed 0 cate diet, - WRourtie ig act tiny Any of ideas may help 1 mead covers $e Repose 7 Interpret i 8 Spee * but befpre f ing any reducing ‘eener who wants to look like &@ you, but jh.-these.days of low, 2 Medley 11 Cape 28 Soaks, as flax 44 Roman éate 21 y. | Practical juni , 1% 11 Carved figures 29 Bewildered 44 Passage in the egrs of Practical Experience | Program it is always a wise junior, has a tiny waisted high- | ceilings, | wish they~ were — ' 19 Metioniess 31 Missive brain | 9 98 Orchard Lk. Ave -PE 4-897 frre 1 { Your phygician.) “rise princess skirt to heightét the’ nough Se +> = 2P More pleasent ome —, « fl agama = ~ ! : * Mu cane of cei semtiaemaieaat (Copyrighted) short figure, _ * ‘ > | fem, : pay em 1g 2 p. ; ¢ Prayer * 99 Einock _ . i: te. 3 . 1 7 / ~ 2 ‘ i / i / / % \ } " cee oe j a ff oy a , an THE PONTIAC PRESS, ‘MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1054 ee aspen | es sn sea geneoe| PSyCHOIOQISS Pid “Insurance for Home, ___Auto or Life”? DANIELS INSURANCE AGENCY ter readers, psychologists, X-ray and Mayor Anthony J. wants sethething done ebout it. pational therapists, 845% W. Huron St. Ph. FE 4-7644 $3,882. ing a difficult time a district physician. Learns Homemaking the Hard Way First GENEY DRY CLEANERS Pickup and Delivery Service 12 West Pike Street || making-the textbook way. Phone FE 5-6107 ot Oklahoma. CLEVELAND w&—Barbers, mé- He has arranged for a job evalu- | survey to determine if lump- occupations calling for differ- ent skills in one salary band isn't unfair Others in the same group are hospital nurses, physical and occu- horseshoers,| Cor. 5:1 probation officers and recreational == * directors. All make from $2,928 to Directors of various city depart-| ments complain that they are hav- hiring em- ployes for jobs requiring college So she has registered for a home economics course at the University Heard ina Pontiac Church Sunday | T Em- J) teciciane—all-arein_the same, ems Malone, pase ot Sr anuef Baptist “Charchspoke >pay bracket on the city’s payroll, | ‘day on ‘ ‘The Christian's View of SS What does a child of God think of dying? Is he afraid? Does he approach death with uncertainty and confusion? These questions are clearly answered in the Scriptures. Paul never spoke with more as- | surance and Victory than when he training. Pay for a head doorman runs | spoke of death. He did not dread — from $5,142 to $5,988, the same as it, rather he invited it. To the Philippian believers, he wrote: For I. am in a strait betwixt two, having a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is far better (Philippians 1:23). To Timothy he NORMAN. Okla. @—At 60, after | ¥Tote: For I am now ready to rearing nine children and operat- ing a big ranch, Mrs. Goldie B. | Cooper has decided it's about time | 4:6). | she learned something about home- be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand (II Timothy | facts about death. I. Death is to be expected. All men must-face death. It is ap- pointed unto men once to die, Spring Sale --- Markers and Monuments Our entire ‘stock included in —— oF : this sale. All finest quality : oy ranites from ss quarries. It fully guaran TYPICAL SAVINGS SUCH AS THESE: a Me SI / sy Wy I i 4” Lek Tg ‘ DE Ai Ae ae ee which includes all engraving and set- ting in cemetery. out visit our plant. Open daily 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Open Sunday to 5 p. m. SAVE UP to 40%---NOW! | after that the judgment (He- brews 9:27). How foolish for one to hide his face in the sand like an os-| | trich and give no thought to | death, make no preparation for it! The word of God teaches that man's life is like a vapor: Here today, gone tomorrow. Go to now, ye that say, today or tomorrow we will go into such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell, and get gain: Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away. For that ye ought to say, If the Lord will, we shall live, and do this, or that. PONTIAC GRANITE & MARBLE CO, soe fmt ae: | 269 Oeklond Ave. G. E. Sloneker & Sons Phone FE 2-4800 | ae a ec knees am & _ | “tabernacte,’ * which is temporal, How absurd not to prepare for | For What Is Your Life? Only a Temporary House DR. TOM MALONE the ether “a house net made with hands, eternal in the heav- ens.” Death for one of God's children | | clay to move into a new spiritual body which is subject to neither death nor sorrow. Dwight L. Moody, the great evan- gelist, used to say, “If Jesus tar- ties, I shali die but when you stand at my casket please do not say, ‘Here lies. Dwight L. Moody,’ for I will not be there. “Instead, you merely say, ‘Here | is the old house where Dwight L. Moody used to live.’’ Death, for a believer, is merely a change of address, a change ot residence, but it is never a cessation of existence. Moses and Elijah were still very much alive centures after they left this world and they appeared to Jesus and the three disciples on the mountain of transfiguration. They moved and talked! And be- hold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elijah talking with him (Matthew 17:3). To die is to be absent from the body, and to be present with the Lord (II Corinthians 5:8). Mrs. Malone and I have just buried our GA OE OR sy, oe % % ~? this tag ah youl buy with NEW-CAR If you're like most people, you want to buy a used car with the same confidence you would feel when buying a new car—a confidence that's backed by a written warranty. Well, you'll match that confident feeling when you buy and drive a used car bearing the OK Tag here at your Chevrolet dealer's! You see—we take many fine cars as. trade-ins; we inspect them thoroughly, classify some as the best and recondition them to make sure they're okay, then tag them “OK” and back the tag with our Warranty in writing. You can buy an OK Used Car with new-car confidence. Come in soon. # Sold only by on enthorized Chevelet Decler_ tj k " bi i Fi i r it H i be z F bi te E eZ r é u i F i F Ff P i Z bi E i of B MAIN OEFICE: 34 Mill St Phone FE pelle — nfidence =e Saran stem icine ee = Pas + . SS a ~ eee ade voreemher “EB eta a tae cure Six Ways Better ~mr-Om« ** Dope Waxtex WAXPAPER..... xi! L & S Pure Strawberry. or Red. Raspberry PRESERVES...... wW Large aa oz. i et ee ae 125 ft 1% = 49° ieee Ruins Searched Saturday Fire Fought for 6 Hours by Firemen of 5 Communities ROYAL OAK—Fire department investigators and insurance ap- praisers today poked through the blackened wreckage of a plumbing supply store seeking the cause of a $150.000 fire which swept the building Saturday First damage estimates of $350 000 were revised downward today by Allan ¥ Farquhar, Nelson Co vice president He said damage to the building would probably be $75,000 with another $75.000 dam age to stock Farquhar credited a fire wall | ; fer preventing the flames from spreading to a newer section of the Nelson Co. store at 322 E. ue oe acince wee dee (right), at 332 E. Lincoln, was virtually destroyed. battled the blaze for nearly six hours. by heen. hao More ag firemen tought | Co has two branches and its main ° ° ° fords Home, = Nees ee Cheboygan Girl, 9, Shot | the rai for nearly six hours, with office in Detroit and = another Flint Police Keeping Order |iew it canines | as Brother Shows Gun aid coming from Hazel Park, | pranch in Ann Arvor . . . = Chase _. | CHEBOYGAN, Mich. (UP) — scarey eal Tittrsits acchetunn | Michigan Beil Telephone crews at 2 Pp icketed B uick Pp lants Non Gas, Gal 00 Deny ee oe ae to Fire Marshal George Cook, | 2.0" Sheu'3 am. Suniey restoring, FLINT (AP)—The AFL Building Trades Council | “i,t? Pm. Wednesday at) wound police sald she suffered An employe, Charles Inman, 3, who lives next door to the store, first spotted the flames shooting out a shipping room door “I ran to the corner and turned | in the alarm,”’ he said. “By the time | returned from the corner, the whole place was Inman said 300 tanks of bottled gas were stored at the rear of the building. He attributed a series of 8 t 12 small explosions to the intense heat on the tanks. ause of $150,000 Royal Oak Blaze \3 F i : i " ee > iil : . wey ; Ley Ag “THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 1954 | \ While hibernating, frogs t a k’e| getting oxygen that is dissolved in | y's r | bridge Blvd. will be at 2 p.m. | Wednesday at the Church of Christ, | pryit growers fi 15 en | in southeastern Michigan wil] have | County Deaths Fruit Growers i OAK PARK—Service for Edward | Jones, 89, of 26150 Raine St. will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Kinsey funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. He died Saturday at home. dobn BR. Trevathan PLEASANT RIDGE—Service for John R, Trevathan, 79, of 130 Cam- Almo, Ky., with burial in Treva- | than Cemetery. Arrangements are | by. Kinsey Funeral Home, Royal Oak Mr.. Trevathan died Saturday at his home Patrick F. Ward OAK PARK—Service for Patrick F. Ward, 86, of 10401 Vernon Ave. | was held this morning at Our Lady of La Salette Church, Berkley, | with burial in Holy Sepulchre to Hold Meeting specialists as the spring meeting of | SWEPT BY FIRE—A flash fire and explosions ; Two houses on either side of the biilding, one of Cemetery. He died Friday at home. | swept through this Royal Oak wholesale plumbing | which is seen at left, were littered with bricks and | Frederick A. Schwant store Saturday morning, causing an estimated | other debris from the blasts. A car parked next to) HOLLY — Service for Frederick | $150,000 damage. The Nelson Plumbing Co. store | the building was also badly damaged. Firemen A. Schwanz, 51, who died Saturday | Representatives to Talk| About Mutual Problems| Wednesday © | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP an opportunity to discuss crops | and crop management problems when they gather here Wednesday. Beginning at 10 a.m. and con- | tinuing through the late afternoon | eight topics will be discussed by | the Fruit Growers of Southeastern | Michigan meet in the CAI Building. | Included in the topics are the | insect problem, irrigation, soil im- | provement, marketing trends, and | refrigeration for apples, according | to Karl D. Bailey, district horti- cultural agent. in oxygen through | service to 750 circuits which had been cut off by the blaze when heat melted through telephone ca- bles, Falling bricks and debris from the burning building caved in the roof of a house next door damaged a parked car other house on the other side of the store. For a time, flames threatened a Detroit Edison Co. sub-station across the street. Electric lines bringing in power from Detroit ‘their skins,'the water, ~ Fresh and Smart as the Day You Bought It! Clothes cleaned by us have all the freshness, color and “life” of a brand new garment. Call us today! 719 West Huron Phone FE 4-1536 deployed 300 pickets around the Buick plants in Flint |wfth burial in Pinetree Cemetery, | ine her necidentally: dlecharged. today to keep AFL Teamsters from doing work the coun- | ©orunna. He died Sunday. | Police said the brother, Jerome, Amy June Rikerd | 11, was demonstrating a .22 cali- badly | and an-| cil said should be done by carpenters. But the teamsters made no immediate attem pt to crash the picket lines. maintained order but did not interfere with the pick- eting. The police, wearing ( white steel helmets, stopped The area was barricaded | by 100 Flint policemen who pared for any violence in the dis- pute between the two AFL unions. They said they understood State Police would come to their aid if the situation got out of hand. The Building Trades Council Farquhar said the store's 20 em- running near the Nelson store were | all through traffic tn the) had announced it would set up ployes would be put to work in the firm's other branches, Nelson | also threatened by the heat and flames. . ,;area of the plants. © 2 year written HU plete satisfaction needed. for clean, comfortable. As like as two peas hardness quality CLEANER .. the ~ any member a shovelful for for the for Free Home Demonstration NO COST! NO OBLIGATION! Appliance Store 379 S. Saginaw for cleaner, UNIFORM IN SIZE... hontas Briquet ts the same in size. shape and | BRAND NEW! ~ VACUUM CLEANER $] 4s © Complete with sttechments Wee 29 TERMS es For unusual weather such as this you need an unusual coal to give you com- . . . Gee Pocahontas Briquets is that kind of fuel... manufactured from the best grade of Pocahontas smokeless fuel they readily adapt themselves to Michigan's changeable climate low, even fire on warmer days and nights... efficiently to automatic furnace contro ls in giving an abundance of heat when Firm of construction, each briquet of the same size, shape and quality, Ge Pocahontas Briquets are cleaner to handle, burn cleaner, have a lower ash content, form no soot stringers and are all coal through and through which adds up to greater economy . . . Gee Pocahontas economical heat in a pod, each Gee Porca- same in consistent high Water heaters and fireplace. Only the best smokeless fuel is used in the manufacture of Gee Pocahontas Briquets Compressed under many tons of pressure 8 they resist breakage making a cleaner fuel CONVENIENT... Easy to hancle and so light in weight that the the furnace or a scuttlefy) space heater family can easily handle w the grate FUEL OIL U FIED FUEL OIL.. a difference! Attention Get Michigan's most modern fuel oil .. . Get GEE FORTI- SERS . There's ee Sy Le eto ee ® Portable Electric © Forward and reverse switch ® Reund bobbin © Airplane luggage case the Teamsters Union which the council] said has violate’ its | jurisdiction. Apparently a showdown between the unions was put off by the legal | holiday. A spokesman for the teamsters said “Our boys. were told to take the day off because this is George Washington's birthday.” A Flint carpenters union set up its own picket lines last Wednes- day, charging that the Commercial Contracting Co. of Detroit had used members of Teamsters Local 299 in Detroit to do carpentry work in moving government machinery | CLARKSTON—Service for Amy | | June Rikerd, infant daughter of | ——|Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Rikerd of | not at home. | 9700 M 15, will be at 4 p.m. today | \from Allen's Funeral Honie, Lake {Orion, with burial in--Bastlawn |Cemetery. She died shortly after | birth Saturday at Pontiac General | Hospital. Mrs. Lottie E. Seeley FARMINGTON-—Service for Mrs. | | | \ ' | 5,000-ntan pieket lines {. keep out | Lottie E. Seeley, 88, of 238525 Wil- | \ Sy ee ae Se ee NOT USED NOT REBUILT SEWING MACHINE mart, will be held at 2 p.m. Tues- | day at the Thayer Funeral Home, | | with burial in Oakwood Cemetery. | |She died Saturday. Cub Scouts Hold ‘Blue and Gold Banquet Friday AVON TOWNSHIP — Stiles Cub Scouts_held their annual blue and gold banquet Friday at the Com- munity Center, with 100 Cubs and parents attending. | Badges were presented to Louis | Whetstone, Billy Evilsizer, Michael ber yifle Sunday while their moth- er, Mrs. Margaret Barette, was E. J. Smith R. E. Erickson Brace Funeral Home 138 West Lawrence Street Pontiac, Michigan Ambulance Service Phone FE 5-9738 WASHING MACHINE RIOT! Floor Sample, Demonstrator and Crate-Marred Washers longer lasting,.more economical heat Ge....GEE POCAHONTAS BRIQUETS “THE SMOKELESS COAL IN THE HANDY FORM” ADAPTABLE... Gee Pocahontas Briquets fit all heating units ECONOMICAL... Plenty of quick heat when you need it or days and nights. SAVE 25¢ A TON... Order in load lots of two ton or more and save an additional 25c per ton. from the two plants. Foster, William Porter and Charies Carpenters Local 1373 asked for | Sharp. council help when the teamsters| Others went to Larry Flood, | ignored their picket line. | Robert Kilpatrick, Erwin Sheldon, A Building Trades Union| Michagh Sdilivan, David Gibson | spokesman said “we will picket |find Gerald Tallman. | the Buick plants until this thing (Advertisement) is settled.” City Attorney Herbert Milliken| Now Many Weer said he would try to have the disputed work stopped at boh| FALSE TEETH | plants. With More Comfort pleasa ine ° Pl peed qaoy teeth more firmly. To eat and im more County Births | sssam els she pe | ‘ TEETH on plates. No gummy, | Aebern Heights gooey. paw. taste or feeling. Cpl end Mrs, Gerald A. Krueger of B ed * (denture breath). Get Bill, Okla. anmounce the birth of ASTEETE at any drug counter, \@ son, Michaei Wayne, Jan. 30 . holding a long, responding quickly and 2 Briquets cannot be beat ideal for furnace, stoves, space heaters, teady all-day, all-night warmth on warmer PHONE FEdecral 5 818] —_—— i GEE COAL CO. imeaeeetie You Save Here are top names We have taken floor samples and demonstrators as well as crate marred washers and marked them at terrific savings. All are late models and are fully guaranteed like new machines. Hurry! PHILCO CLOCK RADIO Reg. $39.95 29% Beautiful, multi-wave clock radio wakes you to music, turns ap. pliances off and on automatically. NO MONEY DOWN Melt] Sie. felia - $31.95 and $41.95 on These! in washers—the names you know are good! __Enjoy Music While You Wash! PHILCO RADIO $7 te Lowest price ever — First quality Philco table radio. 5 , ee lai + 5 108 NORTH SAGINAW S ~~ 2, 1954 4 Hydrogen Bomb’s Power Compared With Atom Blast _ The above map shows areas of destruction that a hydrogen bemb would affect if it were dropped in the center of the District of Columbia, shown by dotted line square. From ground zero, there would be “complete devistation” within a circle six miles in diameter. a a at How much more destructive the H-bomb is than the A-bomb was disclosed recently in a report by Rep. W. Sterling Cole of New York who revealed the first detailed public discussion of the world’s initial full-scale hydrogen bomb | test at Eniwetok in 1952. The story is told graphically here im diagram and picture. The hydro- gen bomb blasted a crater a mile across amd 175 feet deep in the floor of the Pacific Ocean. The Eniwetok test island was blown off the face of the earth. Nagasaki in World War II achieved total destruction in an area only .one mile in diameter. tire family of H-weapons’’ of pre- sumably greater power. a " * eget ¥ og + * Phote-diagram illustrates terrific ferce of H-bomb that tore a eavity in the floor of the Pacific a mile wide and 175 feet deep. A ae a ee a This is Hiroshima after the A-bomb explosion. | suffered this total destruction. But bad as it was, an area only one mile in diameter | Washington Angered _ Associates By NEIL SWANSON Historian, lecturer, suthor of seven best sellers. A let of Americans who cele- brate Washington’s birthday by sleeping late and staying home from work don't realize that, to They didn’t want him in the family at all. They told him so, in no uncertain terms. They thought he was enfeebling the country, ruining it, robbing it. They told him that, too, WINS JET WINGS—Navy Lt. (j. g.) Edward H. Hawkes, son of Mrs, Mary Lee Hawkes, of 4791 Old Orchard Trail, Orchard Lake, is shown receives his designation as Naval aviator Naval Air | : at P Station, Fla. ~ 98 Heeroma ater ate | ie Pree” : : is Rear AdmrDale | the past.18_ months. i *.. as he! State College graduate, Hawkes: has been sta- Some of his detractors made, ing the Revolution, when he de excuses for him. The excuses were, | clined a salary, were a swindle id|on the country. that he had been ‘‘a very dull; Here are just a few of the other young man.” epithets and charges written, spok- They said t he had not | en and printed by his contempo- raries about the man we now know as “first in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his coun- trymen.” ;.. Hig own heart was ‘‘a stone.” He was “a spoilt child." accusations that he was avaricious and that his expense accounts dur- os BINS? ~ —~ | Jose all regard to the common forms of morality.” He was ‘‘a despot.’ But he was an “inefficient” one. His “subtle selfishness” and ‘‘his want of elevation of mind and un- render him dang- 10, as a jet pilot. A 1962 Michigan Francis received 8t., Pontiac. The weven years. teams. War II. and crafts at Cranbrook. Recipient of the Dawson Beatty Brown scholarship was George E. Gary, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Gary, of 17 Prall Brown's son Dawson, who graduated from Cran- brook in 1943. This is the second year Gary has received the award, which has been presented for George is in the 10th grade and is active on the Cranbrook School varsity football and basketball _FIPTEEN nt to 4th Judge Bill > RECEIVE SCHOLARSHIPS—Francis W. Dun- can (Jeft), son of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Duncan of Ou avor Drayton Plains, has been awarded the Clay Doss Scholarship to Granbrook School by Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Doss, of Detroit, in memory of their son . Clay, who was graduated from the school in 1948. | Dpol j the honor for achievement in arts 2. Representatives Ask for Williams to Choose, Avoid Election State Rep. William S. Broom- field (R-Royal Oak) said today he may let his bill to give Oakland ' County a fourth circuit judge be | amended so Gov. G. Mennen Wil- award is given in memory of the The memorial scholarship program at Cranbrook | liams appoints the judge. began as a dedication to the men from the school| Broomfield’s offer may win sup- who gave their lives in service during World port for the bill from Democrat Reps. Leaun Harrelson of Pontiac and Walter T. McMahon of Hazel Park. Harrelson said last week that he and McMahon would fight the bill, which would have voters elect the judge this November, unless it ls changed to let Gev. An agreement between Broom- | field, Harrelson, McMahon and Rep. Richard VanDusen . (R-Bir- | mingham) could still leave Rep. Fred G. Beardsley (R-Oxford) op- posing the bill. Beardsley claims several township supervisors in his district tell him a fourth judge isn't needed now. Police Play Safe, Examine ‘Bomb’ Saleslady Visions Return of Monkey Fur KALAMAZOO # — Clara Riley | stoles,” she says. “Now they are is spending her 75th birthday today | coming back again. So are petti- watching “monkey fur’’ come | coats, back. She's been a saleslady 62 | skirts, years. Miss Riley, whose tiny five-foot . icine enemas leak Gitta We ‘clad Flint Man Is Arrested ing his pertion of the next presen- After Car Strikes Bus has been a saleslady in ‘‘dress goods” since she was 13 years old capes, hoop skirts, split and I see that designers eee —— A Flint man was arrested on a A - __ |drunk and disorderly charge piikdagie ts acetate one ca his car struck a Greyhound says. “Women never tried on | us in Drayton Plains earty today: the dresses or had fittings at the Charies Foster, 24, told Water- ae vn — Es oe ford Township Patrolman Mil- = yes or ‘lard Pender that another person yen’ Hered ane at Ge Socel Grows was driving the car when the ac- cident occurred on U. §S,-10. He makers.” “Women have such a variety of | said he didn’t know the person s clothing now,” Miss Riley mar a ane. vels. “They need ‘best dresses’ for| Foster was treated at Pontiac half a dozen activities. |General Hospital for forehead cuts “Fifty years ago we were selling | and bruises. 50 Feet Away, | are trying to bring monkey fur back again.” . Miss Riley says she can remem- | ber when a monkey fur cape was | | “really high style." Her biggest sale took place many years ago. A woman purchased a $1,500 moleskin coat and a match- ing $800 muff one afternoon. “You don’t see that anymore,” she says. “Today's woman shop- she wants to pay and she also knows that any good store will be able to satisfy her.” Miss Riley thinks “liking people” is the key to sales success, but she adds: | “These awful blue jeans so many girls wear. Those were overalls| “J when I was a girl and they are still overalls. Things don't change “T'd that much.” i EE iN E ‘ tT rut piel 7 ay ; g 3 ! E Earth blocks are for inside as well as outside walls of the building. Built-in cupboards are featured in the homes. An exterior view of the many homes UNKRA hopes will relieve Korea's critical housing shortage. Reconstruction Agency Assists Koreans Start Rebuilding in War-Stricken Country Although the shooting has barely ceased, Koreans are already engaged in a program of gebuilding their war-devastated country, as shown in the accompanying pictures. Aiding in the huge undertaking is the United Nations Korea Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA). Housing is urgently needed, as enemy bombs and fire made millions of Koreans homeless. Because the country can't turn out all the cement needed by the program, UNKRA has imported 100 “Landcrete” machines from South Africa to produce pressed blocks of earth stabilized with cement. With this machine, blocks are turned out so rapidly and so cheaply that a small home can be built in about two weeks for about $750. \ | a eee ant © een. Ban fire. 4 i d i= + ‘ \\ SIX'TREN ; i « \ i \TITE. PONTIAC, PRESS. \ronDaY. ‘FEBRUARY 22, 1934 3 ae oa! done for newspaper Yeading? survey shows that TV INCREASES it! i what has television | For the fourth year in a row the Cunningham & Walsh inde- pendent ‘Videotown” survey shows that television set owners are spending more time with their newspapers than ever before! And again it is clear that every medium of commu- nication— including TV, the newcomer — simply whets people’s appetites for the full story. In their newspaper they'll find the whole story about the fight they saw on TV last night. They'll read about the entertainers they watched... the debate they saw... or the educational program that was so interesting. No matter what the source of news may be — an angry dic- tator across the sea, an earthquake in Mexico, a tennis match in Australia, a fire downtown, or a TV program in the living room — it’s the newspaper that tells it all. rf t yertising survey solely for the t of 1950 1951 1952 1953 No wonder people are reading their newspapers more! No wonder advertisers are finding newspapers more productive than ever before! “Newspaper reading has been on an upward trend in the panel, and in-the city as a whole, the four years’ check of social actio- ity. Reading of newspapers among — adults was up 9%, in the first year 20% OVER 1952 of TV, another 20% in the second os over W951 year, and an added 12% this 1950 YEARLY INCREASE OF TIME SPENT READING NEWSPAPERS From “‘Videotown 6” by Cunninghomnd: Waloh, Now York. ’ 4 N. Y., a nationally known ad- Ps ssatloniy thle its clients. : This mesage prepared by BUREAU OF ADVERTISING, American Newspaper Publishers Association, and published in the interests of fuller understanding of newspapers by THE PONTIAC PRESS -- t ne ee eee a eee vr, : no . 2 —"" « ; THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1934 < + liger Batterymen Open Training Today ee Whittield Cleared of C harges Hutch Reports JSST ot ere t es sere eee |) Murders Face te stern, "| fe anemane sscene tweet |Hald Tey = Seats, creer, |HOIdout Stat oe citizens of the ing’ sepals ts’ tha Weahingien 0 0 aus help, but from now on our rules United States be selected ag mem- Star meet last year. be 4 Pitching, Not Holdouts Jeramiah T y, f wa” on| Nome of the charges was sub- : sent stantiated ult H irom eg Athletic! The new set of regulations, | foreign trips during the period pre-| snadow Page hadoh gens er Big Problem, Manager nion nited States and adopted yesterday after the com-| ceding the United States outdoor | name was taken off the ballot for a Points Out the most powerful mem- | mittee headed by Mahoney cleared | championships, still one of the coveted inner e . Sulli Award which a’ circle, added that | Whitfield and barred Wes Santee, “Most of our difficulties arise maliialhy que ‘othe amateur ath-| LAKELAND, Fla. w — Detroit Europe the run Sim Iness, J. W. Mashburn and/ When we split the teams in an ef-| ite who has done the most for|Tiger manager Fred Hutchinson, ting with one ear alert for a ringing > ‘U_ simply bar Penalties to Santee, Iness, Mash-| telephone that may announce an- be permitted to|>reaking the team up. The mana-| burn and O'Brien were doled out | other last minute signing, opened mostly the fault of the Euro- take more than one trip abroad | 8** Will be on hand at all times. because of ‘breaking training and | spring practice today. — a year, | Whitfield was accused by a | curfew rules” in Europe. The AAU| Actually only the battery men— jurist, said, “All they want is our | 2, No team going abroad be! Swedish méwspaperman eof de- | declined to elaborate. Harper's Great Finish in Texas Ties Golf Mark Takes Top Reward on 259 Total; Cavalcade |™ Heads Into Mexico men who the meets were interested only in the| Parry O’Brien from foreign com-| fort to be accommodating,” said gn cor * | sports during the year. we is pitchers and catchers — started a! . foe training today. And the pnly play- pes Es = ray cae: ee See — AP Wirephote | pins better than Otis Miller of . YOUNG TIGER—Paul Foytack, rookie pitcher with Detroit, | Pontiac. Ned Garver, Ted Gray, Ralph points out the sights to his young son, Paul Jr., 2, at the Tigers’ Branca and Steve Gromek from | training site at Lakeland, Fla., Sunday. Pop has little Paul decked | Place among the teams with 3129 out in a regulation Tigers’ shirt and cap. Foytack won 12: games Coal of Flint took 3rd at 3068. dissatisfied with meney clauses with ‘Buffalo last season. Tigers open training today. | tint Brickcrete took 5th and West in the contracts. P Side Transfer of ‘Grand Rapids “But, said Hutchinson, they | He'll Get No Results moved into 8th aren't my real problem.” He added that he would natural- ly like them all to be at training | “but I don't want to get involved | in their disputes over contracts.” | Despite that, the five would offi- | ~"\ cially be classified as holdouts if _|they missed the Ist day of train- Trabert Wasting Time Blasting Aussie Tennis | *t: h went to D. Pate a By GAYLE TALBOT the world that it will go any fur-| Cinciala of Grayling (704). Top NEW YORK W—Tony Trabert | ther ‘five in all events remained un- | Only changes in singles were in , 4th and Sth place. Fourth went to D. Pease of ||ing. Hutch pointed out that gen- Tennis officials stick together. has cooled off very little, i® any, | vhanged. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. @®—Golf's _{.j\eral manager Muddy Ruel would | since he returned from Australia, | Our intrepid leaders are on first- = winter tour rattled onto Mexico > J) be in his Detroit office this morn-| ang he still intends to give that | name terms with those of Austra- | p, Palen ng _Beveseon _ City today but without Chandler ing for any last minute negotiat-| country’s terinis officials and fans| lia, and they correspond frequently | re Beer, Meares, na Harper, the tournament old-timer ing. a powerful blasting in an official, | and fervently, None of ours is go- | Senivas Funcral, Reyel’ Ook yest who put on one of the greatest Hutch said that pitching was one| written report to the head men of| ing to write anything to one of | ist Buckrete, Pint sore finishes in the game's history in ng A sgemrrspred the Saar the U.S, Lawn Tennis Assn theirs ao See coments lead | Nesty Five, Detrett 206 att by somehow _@e¢ * «© to raw feelings. Tony means well, go" a Sean 3907 sheers the —_ — 18 pitchers he would have to get) jie for the indoor but he could have saved the |Dee's bervice, a _— with three straight rounds an able staff of ten: ships, the nation’s No. 1 player dis-| effort. rc 17 ET eg ie OC “I don’t want té carry more than closed that during his long sty in * ¢« e Cyrewski-Ga' watramek tae a . aaa ~ ten during the season, which | 4 ictralia with our Davis Cup team There really isn't much of arty- | Behmier-Meaney. ine ter now than any time in his long means eight will have to be cut | this winter he carefully jotted down | thing the men who run the game | ESSObe Srey. rim.” ine career, tied the all-time PGA rec- from the squad.” he said. | in a notebook all the things that |i" Australia can do toward cor- | Geerer-0'Dem. Segmew ine ord for 72 holes as-he wound up Bien: ee cee irritated him,-from foot fault calls | Tecting the situation which has | pem-Pesse. Grand Rapids ites with 259 to take down $2,200 in the ast year . “We | to gallery bad manners, We gather | STOwn to exist within the past few we Tacia| Geass gecsirday aul went simply must get a better brand that he nearly had to buy a second| Years. They have seen tennis be- | Miller, "Pentins. m4 | ‘ian Seardl place adnan the yenn’s if we're going to make any kind of | notebook before he was through, | Come a sort of national madness, Fuh Ber Wy, 4 leading money winners showing this season. So by the time Tony finishes | quse on. 8 Par with horse racing | Steer, Mecbesse Fo] | ee 8 Rest of the squad, which has pecking out his formal hymn of | Md ¢ricket, and they can't sud. | “"** ALL EVENTS | The Mexican National Open until Monday te complete con- | hate he will have gone to consid- | nly return it to its original social B- Qosreer, Pegsaw tes | wanted Harper but he passed it up tract signings and te report to | erable trouble, and it is too bad | background just because our play- EF. Ress. Reseville tes to go home to Portsmouth, Va., on the Lakeland base, has a-better | that it won't do him or anybody | ¢T® Se sensitive. J. Ruth, Grand Raples Ibe | business. signing record than the battery | else a bit of good. Our officials un- . —_ a The tall man from Virginia, who men, who may be paying for a | doubtedly will read the indictment Davis Upsets Dillard for boasts an amazing scoring average poor showing last year. with some interest, and they will | : i | E qinficiers, cutficders and utty| ner, bat there want a crance n FQULGIes Title at New York played this year—67.33—shot a 39 Texas < ~~ — , yee Ee y= Hath, and rookie Buddy Hicks. . ce aan tien ee field at the time. But he negotiated 3 , is right on schedule and if Olympic : | Pesky and Hatfield will probably omeo | S poe Hamilton's predic.| .,2 Brien tossed the 16-pound shot the second nine over Brackenridge | | ~< |hold down two jobs in the in- Cen eon a ens RreTle” | sO-eet, 4 inches, eclipsing his own Park's 6,400-yard course in 31. And || 5% | field. It was Pesky's hitting that aaa er in the world be.| Pst by am inch and a half and from then on he never had a nine drove the Tigers from last to 6th ° daa ele Ad “| Jim Fuchs’ indoor record of 58 ee we : . place. He probably knows it. pstaters In the National Indoor Cham-|2! bY moce-than a foot. He came from 9 strokes behind “ . Set an eee - pionships in Madison Square Gar-| 40 — world tn in the first round to a ?-stroke lead| HOUSEHOLD HARMONY — “No Longhair,|and the kids covered their ears in dismay (top).! Piymors Denied den Saturday night, Davis snapped recurd 3S-pound weight at the finish and the Texas Open| Please, Daddy!” protest the kids of Cleveland | When Pop agreed to “play ball” and give out with ‘ ‘ Bulldogs Beat Tawas, |iarrison Dillard's indoor hurdles |," With & heave of 63.5 after never before saw such golf as the | Browns quarterback Otto Graham. Graham, who | the jazz (bottom), everything was peaceful (7) in Coast Officials but Drop Tilt Against | Winnirig streak at 37. Dillard, close. | area oe in ag a veteran turned in on those last 54| plays violin, piano and cornet as well as he plays| the family again. The youthful hep-cats are (left . to-invincible Cleveland _ veteran, | prelhaghe rg wire — holes. He putted —_ —— football, announced that he was going to fiddle, | to right) Sandra Lee, 5%, Davy, 3, and Duane, 7. Stay Suspended Alpena Catholic alsd was rang his &th straight | 9511 set three years ago by fom a birdie on the green _. | national indoor title. ° Fiv loads of Romeo High Bane of Tufts, but Backus already would have beaten the PGA record vgs if ’ os ANGELES NS) -Commis-| . ce o Undefeated leaders in both) Ca teature matches Chris Aver- | nembiers 2 Lemberjacks 8 Wings lead the pack with eight | Tiwas Gif¥!./:iii2i.!u8 isis ess |Fow. Michigan plays the Gophers | ¥¥© 3 Army “ Basketball League came STH GRADE | Schedules next Monday, while girls and Chicago Black Hawks have ® M4 6 10 17-49 Princeton Barvard Me tramural ater Canada, two falls to win under | sereshets 20 Fiubs 1 will ALPENA CATHOLIC.’' 14 2 5 i¢—ss Friday and Saturday Se ees i. through with weekend victories. | . 9 minute limit. Globetrotters _ 28 Tornadoes e— play through the Ist) seven each. The Boston Bruins That would make it impossible | West Keatechy tes Tenn. Tech 63 Eastern Hi-Y won its 6th straight | O oning match, at 8:30 p.m., will oR week im A , claim six and the Toronto Maple! The University of Oregon has/for the Wolverines to overcome | ¢}™** [no =. | junior circuit victory, 2-0, the easy | 04 irish Sampson of Ireland | Wiest 33: Joveline | 1 Standings and the week's sched- | Leafs five. The Montreal Cana- restored wrestling to its intercol-| Minnesota even by beating the | ru Texee ASM 53 | way when Lincoin forfeited. St.' . oainst Italy’g Danny Ferazza. oad a ie is ule diens list only three bachelors. = legiate athletic program. | Gophers twice. tees ts Stantere me remain place. . . e I . i ass In the snior division, H-Y | Russians Take Bowling Results snew we a wt t f Vi i f N | BIG 10 SCORING | eG. Pou Vora! banded | Most Honors in et F we | aS OS Fem ee 0 ICIOUS Ing eison- 0 CHICAGO W-—Big Ten Basket- | Wilson Avenue Methodist its Ist em 6S Ee S| "riksss¥ amc ve Cheats shes , a —-— ball scoring leaders (conference , Nordic Skiing Jocoheen’s 25. wn ih a s ore @ oF & Ae | Bourn 429; team maxs. We wt @ { ’ a er oo en Or at, Bnd... HL 98 191 BOF 978 | } yh yt — Ff AS, cheb 72 Oliver 864 f . usteneee 1 1 68 h6fe 68 return to Mos- ——— am 8s eee. ti Ebert, OsU...... 13 9h 696 S78 B22 a4 “i LADIES Bike 723 63 WL 18 2 7 98 358 33.0 lion's share of abl Puy | TOMIONT—WL Merchants ve Onver ‘By GRANTLAND RICE now around We can crowd in three or four of these | Preeasn, Ost... 1S tet oe Ses ss 0 | Orsthe tt beokeas NESDAT™ Sie vy WL Merchants NEW YORK—You wouldn't think that the recent | fights; we can’t lose.’ Eimane Nw... ie Ht Se me me strength | Wu Cece ft Grek. Lt. 31| fention Merchacts (ms, 8:30 pa "| death of Battling Nelson and the mental collapse | Tex started to cut in. ‘Wait a minute,’ Greb said. | Leonard, Ind.2 tt S2 ae aes Ths ts of the | Tid, game sd series ME Magier 105. | , THURSDAT ike Ne. 23 ws\of Ad Wolgast had any influence on the fight | ‘Let’s hear from Mickey.’ | Memect, i @ @ Me at Are, Swe- | 009; teom —Sasty Dehery G6, costes ciate » game in general. “What Harry ,says goes for me,’ I said. ‘I | Bee TEN sTANBINGS i Bey aE ee s hadn't thought about it before. But I liked Greb Conference Ail Gomes competed for Pts. Pte. | Police Ht 2 MiKinights 64 8 Probably not directly. But Mickey Walker told me | and Greb, I knew, liked me. ‘ > $3 a major inter. | Gee: 86 Boovore S\iomer 8 8 + ™/ an odd story along this line a few weeks ago. | Greb,' I said. 5.337 With | Orictes 41 Wildcats ae H ye fenter mY | “After Harry Greb and I had our double fight,” . *_« 2 edie, | aber. cote & Poctre Ss | Bing edge na 630 pm.) | S8y8 Mickey, “one in the ring and one out of the “Tex,” said Mickey, “couldn't understand two $ ou for Indies, | Stexns i Ones Si-Kaights | ve tebe. | arena, we were called in by Tex Rickard. Tex | guys turning down two hundred thousand ee for ladies gare S wre Se _ ° had a hot proposition for both Greb and myself. | for a fight. I don’t blame Tex. ss ° regarded | . tet. game—v. Raker 19%: s wt w | 1 want to sign you up for a return bout,’ Tex said. | understand myself. I didn’t want te knock 1s strongest nation in| “Fics ane Weedsuecks Best. Ho i “That's for one hundred thousand dollars each.’ Harry Greb and I didn’t want Harry Greb the 7 countr : kayo me.” sun we we e Driv. “New Tex expected us te jump at that. But eC 3. ..0 pm.) ve Recketeers men’s relay and | Meéhet St SS Accounting = 1) | (7:15 pm), Dich & Wee vs Skid mids| Grob says, ‘Just walt a minute, Tex. One | Back of all this palaver 3 the Norwe- 4 82 Gals. = 3° games af PHS girls’ gym. dollars apiece is a tet of | Walker had in their minds the 43 33 Corner = This a 43 33 Vitamin 3 8 bout 4 41 36 Wants Bee 33 men. ro) ee Fy SES j a 37 HK & Ss 8 and series—R. Collins yhy should we try to kill each other, which | physically. ® what we'll do when we get in the ring together? | was the most violent human collision in any se know I don't want to kill Mickey. And I know | man’s memory. Aer that battle neither was | a he. doesn’t want to murder me. any good again—any good, for.,anything. They Pp. © 8-28 were human derelicts lost upon a forgotten beach. Es ‘Then Greb turns to me. ‘I know one hundred} I think it was the memory of this fight that ; thousand dollars is @ lot of money, Mickey... But | made Greb and Walker pull up in front of the is s _—-feveral interleaguecontests. ture basketball action Tuesday: as | 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1084 ‘ By JACK SAYLOR Oakland County preps near the conchusion of regular season play. Waterford entertains Milford. Rochester is host to Keego Harbor | and Ortonville meets one of its) foremost rivals, Clarkston. Avon- dale tangles with St. Michael's on the Pontiac High floor and Walled ef conference activity, Trey can clinch its ist Oakland B athictic trophy with-s-Win @ver Clawson. Browa City can wrap up its 3rd straight Southern Thumb crown by beating Almont. A victory over Eastland would eae NOW | NOW THE THRILL PICTURE THAT BEATS THEM ALL... MEN .. CineuascoPE . PLAY THE WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS CAME! I |! AS BRAVE ‘Hell elale, QWCK vy % & \ art aha, Sagthd “> 4 . 7 4i Vacuum Cleaned Motor Mart Vaper Cleaned—Protects Against Salt 105 E. Mentcelm Completely Washed & Dried Car Wash 8:30 te 1:00 Sunday | County title and coupled with a! Lake Shore triumph over Utica it | would end the race. j Tuesday's games for Waterford | and Walled Lake are re-matches with opponents met in this sea- son's openers. At that time; Water- ford bowed to Milford, 66-58, and pire Lake downed Creshreok. 31 | Rochester and Clarketen will be protecting’ Oakland County's best. | winning streak.s Each has taken eight straight victories. Dom Mauti’s Clarkstonians have an 11-3 record. Game can be a preview of next week's district tourney ac- | tion at Ortonville. | Both Clarkston and Ortonville | are listed for action in the. Orton- | | ee ee By UNITED PRESS | The New York Rangers played | their best game of the National | | Hockey League season Sunday | night, but still remained one point | | back of the Boston Bruins in their | j battle for the 4th and final playott | berth. 4 ae Rangers. scored three goals within five minutes tn the 2nd peried to whip Toronto, 6-1, at New York and it appeared they would take over possession of 4th place when word reached their dressing room that the Bruins were trailing 3-1 at Chicago, But Boston wiped out that deficit with a 2nd period rally of their Here's your chance to buy Dayton Tires at the lowest prices ever offered! Buy ONE brand new fully guaranteed ~ Tnter Loop Scraps Mark Prep Schedule & Lake goes to Cranbrook for an ; give Warren a share of the “obama go ee] afternoon contest. ia and Geodrich. Keego bumps inte Rochester under much the same circum- Tuesday, Sam Minard's Presi-| dents take an 86 record to Roth- ester. The Konleymen have a 131 record and streak. Both of these. teams will | appear in the district tournament | at Pontiac High, but in different | classes. _Rochester will be tavored in the | bor rates the nod in the Class C/ | field. insights sles asm ta Oa Pontiac “B” tourney, trys the PHS gym for size Tuesday against Bob | Mineweaser’s St. Mikes quintet. _ |Bob Eldridge’s. Yellow Jackets have had rough sledding this win- ter, winning three of 13. Sham- rotks’ record is 7-46. The schedule: TONIGHT Orchard Lake St. Mary at 61. Flerian. TUESDAY Milford ot Waterford; Walled Lake at | t Rochester; | Cranbreet; Keege Harber at | Clarksten ot Ortenville; Avendale at 61. an S&game winning“ Michsel’s; Clawsen ot Trey: F ley; Van Dyke ot Kost | . con at 2 Pointe at Ferndale; Reyal Ook a Basel Part; at Livents Ben Detrett; Armads at Capec; New Meven at seer Rangers Rout Leafs’ Six, Waterford League Trail Bruins by One Point ;own and went on to defeat the Black Hawks 43. Dave Creighton was the Bruins’ big hero with | back-to-back goals that tied the score and then Fleming Mackell | won it with Boston’s 3rd score of the middle period. . Detroit Red Wings, who dropped |a 2-0 contest at Montreal Saturday night, were idle Sunday night, They’ Toronto coach King Clancy admit- ted “the Rangers played their best game of the season." Playoffs fo Start "BRAND NEW — FULLY GUARANTEED DAYTON’S 2 ror] TIRE SALE That's Right! Buy One and Get the Second Tire FREE Dayton tread blemish” tire at regular price and get the next tire FREE! [ ALL TIRES CARRY LIFETIME FACTORY GUARANTEE! } First Line Black Walls First Line White Walls Pentine Press Photo "JACKET LEADERS—Avondale High Scheet's cagers will be out to end a prolonged period of futility Tuesday night at Pontiac High gymnasium against St. Michael's. Yellow Jackets have won only once in their last nine games and have a season mark of 3-10. Lead- ing the ‘Jacket quintet are Coach Bob Eldridge and co-captains Jim Uhan (left) and Dick Kramp. Kramp has been Avon's most produc- tive point-getter in recent games. Dane and Swede lin Net's Finale NEW YORK ® — National in- WRESTLING Wednesday 8:30 P.M. Pontise Armory, 57 Water MIDGETS! Team Match Majer Tom Thumb and Tuffy McRae and Otte Beuman 2 Out of 3 Falls— 1 Hour Limit szeszess eseesses4 -~ -= Babe Calls Win at Miami Beach ‘Biggest Thrill Mrs. Zaharias Edges Patty Berg by Stroke With Par Round : i ii if i - Fred iE § 6 i s ; i 4 E i Ee e& : pis hieet atau ani aE ePEei Fa RTE Fg a. E Faeescesee : g i § uF a fy 35 SLIDE—Mariqn Ladewig a fraction of a second after the cham- pion has begun her final step. Footwork Rated at Least wre |_rte | "Pace | vour'tosr_ ee | ure | e's |. “Sta Srannourer 11175 Per C _600x16 | $20.60° | “An | $20.60". 6.0016 | $26.65° | “Am | $26.65° carson er Cent _$50x16 | $25.95° | “am | $25.95". ae 2 re “ease vranare | _ by MARION LADEWIa 670x185 $23.20" | 4 | $23.20° 6.70118 | $30.80} $30,807 fpf Seats $00 $1 Se | Arne ames ye ICT 7:10x15 | $25.75° | “aa | $25.75° ee | {Til understimate the importance of ~ 7:60x15 o =a o __7.10x15 __$33.75° LSS $33. 15° Advance Ringside Gale at: "tard that the only important _1:60x15__| $28.20 "Yarr”_|_$28.20° 1.60215 | $36.90° “ar | $36.90° _ Onitre gport Concer. At | Hl part of the game concerns what 8:00x15 | $30.95° | “An | $30.95° 8.0018: | $40.10" | “Az | $40.10° Rete, Peonie's creat Clothe | HA] RO? St ant <0 releeuing te Plus Fed. Excise Tax and Exchange Plus Fed. Excise Tax and Exchenge Bex Off. Opens 4 P.M. Wed. On the contrary, most top 2 for 1 Traction Tires for Cars and Small Tracks Advertirement) Pp ASSENGER TUBE BRAND NEW, FULLY GUARANTEED ns SS EERe. | WANTED! ANY SIZE | 79 | _ee —_ i. 67x15 | $2485 | “Yere® | $24.85 __ aa! hoe Ma oe * : |~r108 | $2755 | “AS | $2755 18 a... WOMEN «con tom z : jobs the next twelve months there H+—}>- 3-5-4 3-3-5 ane, NN, GG Si will 8. Gevernment jobs in this 136 South Saginaw St. FRONT END SPECIAL! FREE Complete Front End Inspection! Save Your Tires—Meke Your Cer Run Smoothly! Includes equipment WHEEL BALANCING, Static and Dynamic..............$1.98 t ae ee a ee ee ee Sa 2S A, SN I. E-SERIES -|MARKET TIRE CO Open Evenings ‘til 9 P. M. Complete Front End Alignment All work done on our new Bean Visualiner with the latest modern hed - Castor, Comber and Toe le sol Buy No Money Down ! on Budget! Secg ane teow pend ee opm Fe a les ae ployment. Many of these jobs require little or no experience or te ball elegy «ng naclem —aegh onge we gr lVintense. tn ome "Swell cert eur firm which helps Institute is the lar- Peewee ee eeeeeeeeseebhete | ! i i iz it of Bowling i] ab 7 : 7: ee Pi ‘ ; \ sept ea ‘} i ‘ se | 4 7A ee \ ‘ « . 7 ‘ \ ma y eX THE’ E PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, PemRvany 22, 1954 \ 4 Pe MAE Anutker tar Mihale at Miami ‘iss Geer dike St os sa) tase a has broken rec- ‘ : lords that a eoctahiy’ tad taldciinied io WK SE |Srofeutetas euiee, sane’ Secmfulneibae ‘wathat oierauheea ip "i walkers mile mark | stralian walkers who compete in : ‘Sanday at 6:03.38. It bettered a distances from 3% to 100 miles. ~ By RIP WATSON ahaa cic: aan A three-way tie is theoretically vorites since first-ranked Duquesne pleted by the end of the week. > aaa ELE atone bare Solent Anuacinted Poste pal | end te Monslane mse letra hon gr pel aaa RE ATION 8. nveMaENT ww COU up , at least a tie | in the latest the meet in t tion in New York and| March 6. basketball title tonight and qualify tp thale sonst Chali Wig Ten |bns & 202 secaed be contetoneciah Sues 6 LAX , RENEWED ENERGY! | e style in 2:06.5.and posted a 4: Tournament because of their post- | cast over the weekend and cele- | © Corrective Exercise ¥ Hoosier Victory Big Gathering for Records Fall in the 44-yard Getatete, Sieve | erode status. | brated by thumping St. Joseph's | Exclssively tor Men M-L Outdoor Events land swam the oe which won the of Philadelphia 7867. Seventh- im :22.1 and the 100-yard free. | NCAA crown in 195 and 1946 be- ranked Seattle, Oklahoma City and AL THOMAS [ b lHhi oa ania hory rom style in :49.3. | hind Bob Kurland, could clinch an-| Bradley have been named as “at OSS y ini Fish Derby and Fox Hunt recently. (v ces lit four times eclipeed existing _— Rigor onghsar rag trying. for its Health Club enison meet records. — eo ad ig perch SING (UP) — Four| , Michigan State took firsts in the |" Wichita again Wednesday. That | first Skyline Conference title. can | Hotel Pontiac Open 10-6 Will End Race lowa at Indiana, While crown. And should Wisconsin whip ¢_llinois, the Hoosiers will have the competition, with Iowa (83) and Mlinois (7-3) the only challengers. dianer included Howard Perkins, chairman, and Harry Helvey, Cari Reuthers and Clayton Adams. Movies of duck wild life and a pool and dual meet records went by the boards. here Saturday as ‘Hawaiian stars Ford Konno and Dick Cleveland led Ohio State to a 5538 swimming victory over diving, medley relay, the indivi- |dual. mediey and the 20-yard | breaststroke, Bums Clinch Title in into | Kentucky — Ciiff the fa-|Ramsey and Lou ‘Tsioropouloe-~ |r" ~ | May not be welcome in the NCAA| the Mid-American in the NCAA| |the three stars of second-rated| [a Salle of the Mid-Atlantic Con- Hagan, Frank ference joined Ilaho State of the Rocky Mountain and Toledo of | | would qualify the fifthranked Ag-| join the NCAA club by beating | Stes automatically for the NCAA Utah and Brigham Young this |= Tournament. | weekend. | Three conference representatives | s 2e ¢ |already have been named to the | Champions in both divisions of ; @ Infra-Red and Ultra-Vielet Rays © Heat Cabinet WHEN THEY Illinois Hosts Badgers | South American travelogue von-| Michigan State |NCAA santey. and the next two! the Pacific Coast probably will be | COME IN AND GO OUT , . are weeks of decision | determined by Saturday, but then LIKE THIS” in Tonight's Tilts | Cluded the attair. Keune wen the Si-yard tree ‘ce tha, ealhagiean, ik bath big | there's the matter of a playoff | LIKE THIS... vee Boys Club 1st Round os eae 2S Bes ‘By TOM BRANAGAN CHICAGO #—A quick one-two State Skiers Win Honors Five games were played Satur- | —— tournaments filling up| UCLA, leading the Southern | like a } pair of camels in an oasis. | Division with 7-3, needs only a! Duquesne, the NIT al-| | split in two games at home against | day in Boys’ Club basketball | ready has fourth-ranked Western Southern California (6-4), Up north, | leagues. Bums clinched the 1st- ‘wo Dayton, Louisville, | Oregon State will settle for a split | round title in the Intermediate Wichita and Niagara in its 12-team | in = home-and-home series .with | | Short “Shots edged Misfits, 42.39, ~— —— ——— — | in another Intermediate contest. Onty Junior game played saw ‘THEY'VE BEEN punch tonight is all Indiana needs REPAIRED AT rnc lteit tevoad awe *eet«!in Three Meets Sunday 194 Big Ten basketball campaign.|. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | der class, took his group's title. | First and foremost requirement 1 Piet Michigan ,skiers, two of; At Duluth, Minn., Carm Guil- | is a victory by the H hem women, led Michigan COn-| haute Michigan Tech coed, y oosiers_over | tingents to honors in three out-of- |- ee tse | the 2nd place Iowa Hawkeyes in al | double honors in the Central U. S. OLIVER MOTOR | COLLISION SHOP “Your Buick Dealer” Name Rolladium Winners Terry Ball and Patricia iisecher| ine ~ state meets Sunday. - seiee” Hae — | mwarcare | | winning Class A titles. Winners in| 36 W. PIKE FE 2-910! game on Ingiatia floor. tman alom Championships. Her times | Doormats scrape past Wa ’| Fourth el t res of the | , Boyer © QUICK © DEPENDABLE a 1 oN es a gave her the | 30-29, In Pee Wee action, Vik- | ee Seo j Class B. were Jimmy Boyer and ¢ SURE © GUARANTEED Second part of the parlay would ' through the giant slalom course at aii: cae dak the women’s | ings downed Hot Shots, 28-16, and 3rd racing period at Pontiac Rol- | Sandy Smith. Henry Ball and Paul | combined titles. | Hot Rods beat Chiefs, , BIT. * |adium were _held ‘Saturday with | Burmeister won in Class C. ~ | Lake City took the men’s title on eo en mals nereract modern sD tories and one loss and only two Pi cig Resse Lier eoent games left in the 14-game Big old age group, made the two Ten season. Every other team longest leaps of the day at Fex would have at least four defeats River Grove, Hl, He topped his and not even a mathematical | group at the Central U. 8. Jun- . — of overtaking the Hoos- | ioe Ski Championships with I . leaps for 211.2 U tins wos, os eae | pe | | Lhe new 115-h.p. d-block Six assure : diana of ae the te. Tinoi, came the frst gh] ever to com a 6 FREE-TURNING OVERHEAD VALVES which (nag, won seven and lost pete against boys in the wurme.| 10 the only completely modern six- make possible greater high-compression jers lose their remaining games| feet each in the 16-17 class, but , power, longer valve life. and the Illini win all theirs | finished far down in the competi- With Iowa staggering from two successive wallopings, by Ohio -| Competing in the 11 years and un- cylinder engine in the industry... John Wedin of Iron Mountain, SHORT STROKE, LOW-FRICTION DESIGN vis ma er s Time Out! the only low-priced Six with uuw—« , the Hawks have dropped only three of 11 games and undoubtedly will pull out all stops for the victory that would keep them in the running. Iowa, even though playing on “its | home floor, never was in the game against Mlinois. With Johnny Kerr scoring 26 points, Illinois took a 38-27 halftime lead and then smoth- HIGH-TURBULENCE COMBUSTION CHAMBERS thoroughly mix fuel and air for faster, more efficient combustion. all these features! FOUR-PORT INTAKE MANIFOLD feeds fuel fast and uniformly for quick, starts ond smooth “GO.” * DEEP-CAST I-BLOCK with skirt that extends below the crankshaft, provides the great FOUR-BEARING CRANKSHAFT strength and rigidity needed for smooth, quiet is cast rather than forged for more. engine performance and extra long engine life. precise balance and smoother operation. DON'T DELAY ORDER NOW! Ole. LLU WE re The savingest SIX Ford’s new Overhead-Valve I-block Six, with its com- pletely modern high-compression, low-friction design, brings you even better gas economy than last year’s Ford Six . . . the Six (with Overdrive) that beat all FUE No other six in America offers the short-stroke, low-friction economy designed into this new Ford engine! other cars, regardless of size and make, in the 1953 Mobilgas Economy Run Sweepstakes. And this year’s Six also gives you a dividend of 14% more horsepower! ‘Fuel & Paint Co. 436 Orchard Leake Ave. Phone FE 5-6159 Department Store Dick: Counter Spy OUR STOCK OF CLEVELAND — MACHINE REAMERS 1S COMPLETE © Fraction Sizes © Wire Gauge Sizes © Decimal Sizes © Letter Sizes Ford Overdrive me eptonal ot extra cot Come im and Test ‘Drive the 142 FORD [|-BLOCK SIX CY OWENS 147 Seith Seagieev St. USE OUR CUTTING TOOL SERVICE YOUR INDUSTRIAL SuPPty Distrisutor CUTTING TOOLS & SUPPLIES INC. W. PIKE, CORNER CASS PHONE FE 2-0108 PLENTY OF OFF STREET PARKING. : SPACE tant es : Eve a stories the Roosevelts had laughed at and told, but told varns about St. Andrew Carnegie and John Churchil] which Americans — in, Wanamaker. They talked too much about ‘“‘the cultivation of good Roche. \ Meets M“™ hw mont's findings Fifty per cent of the people turn c msidered faintly sacri accosted said that whenever they jegious character and little about practical thought about Paris, in the spring = — business methods,”’ Wyllie said or otherwise, they thought about ° : | The fessor also tees off on Freach women, Twenty per cent Special Meeting Called such feats “‘success'' authors as said they hankered for museums to Vote on Merger Plan = Horatio Alger, Freeman Hunt, and landmarks. DETROIT «UP) — A_ special Benjamin Franklin, William Meeting notice and proxy state- Holmes McGuffey and Lyman Ab- ments were mailed today to stock- | bott must seem bewildering low to vet- holders of the Hudson Motor Car| “Most of the men who wrote Fifleen per cent were interested in Paris night-life, a figure which MINNEAPOLIS w — Salary in- creases averaging $1,200 a year have been asked hy Minneapolis members of the AFL Federation of | Teachers. Under present pay i schedules, teachers with bache- | | | lor’s degrees receive from $3,300) for the first year to $5,500 in the | 12th year There were 5,679 civil airports | in the U. S. in 1953. erans of World Wars I and Il. Co. and Nash - Kelvinator Corp., | Only 10 per cent voted for art, which have proposed a merger. SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith \ ( x\ \ Ne \ 2 ; ‘ , H ‘ ae ae \ f \ . , ee THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 a ar prone fons ; ; nn hee ' aaccaerGMan 2 aang tia: Wa i ‘ : about | puccess never DIXIE BUGAN Bob Considine Says: Professor Dubious —— enieved it.” Wyte sala. whien is s f P. . ° it something of a commentary on the , sountiness of thtir advice.” = t One-Half of Paris Visitors of Key to Success . | [IS BER , Think of French Women COLUMBIA, Mo. (UP) — Dr. City Uses Gull Crew = \ | Irving G. Wyllie:professor of his- Mai ° e NEW YORK (INS)—If you were | the surest test of President| Eisen. tory at the University of Missouri, to Help intain Streets | ig - going to Paris this year, and 1 hower's continuing_personal popu-. says H ian't necessarily so that the ; LONGPORT, N. J. i#—Seagulls . ; * 4, hope you are for both you and larity with the voters is the scarci-| practice of industry, frugality and | are helping mairitain streets in Paris, witat would you most like ty of stories about him sobriety will bring any American | Longport. . F to see? _ _ &@ fortune i = Louis de Rochemont. the docu- | een a a aon tae OD Dr. Wyllie has @ book on the sub- | = page wrk A pt P ' oe mentary film man (‘‘House on 92nd beloved, there ts acver heard ject, “The Self-made Man in chelis on the pavement. The clanx 2a Street.” etc.) wanted to find out vena tially vaklenelers abeel America, the. Myth of Rags to ae ck Latin n - what Americans yearn most to see tap members and never nev. Riches."” coming out this fall. It nba — guile get their . in Parie—before he set about film) Fo" aig one debunks the idea that “wealth is ON ‘ a - ing his portion of the nextp presen ; - a reward for ‘moral virtue.” - : ~ » Hie whe ein of Ceara. He hoe me caine te mow sliced area Dr. Wyllie also takes a critical “ae en ree pare SPUR LINE Meek tatty suspicious of alulu , 89d Mrs, Roosevelt in the same a a a os eos —_———— | : f : ome of De Category, gravely resented even * John Jacob Astor, Commodore he ~ poinuinus, I present some o Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, Teachers Ask Raise and fashion, And only 5 per cent; Investors in both companies are said that French cooking would be | scheduled to meet here March 24 the reason they would go there. to vote on the plan, which would (The latter mathematics could con- bring the two independent ‘auto | ceivably constitute libel.) | firms together as “American Mo- | mo |tors Corp."' A two-thirds vote is | Speaking of polls, one says that | needed to approve the merger. | WELL.SIR, | UUST TOOK TH’) | [...FOUND A GOLD MINE // COVER OFF THAT BIG CHAIR SIX NICKELS, TWO PENNIES, 1 MINE, AN’... SEVEN MARBLES AN’ FOUR STICKS O' GUM // rd ‘' | aaa SSSR ESAS. benefit of my wife and daughter?" | “Are you the young man whose jokes I've had to explain for the by Jose Luis Salinas * PAN «f : 2-22 : : = al = | bi pier a = tT a | NANCY | -——— _|BB | Oon'r worry--- ; I KNOW WHERE |mt's DARK OUT--- EVERY TREE IN DON'T RUN INTO ANY YOUR YARD !S OF OUR TREES < THE EASY WAY l= To Buy, Sell, Rent, Trade, Hire, etc THRU TH you Is to BACK/ Place a Quick Action is DAILY PRESS | EE WANT AD E ri yh a iS —- os ~ > DIAL FE 2-8181 = fs Ask for the Went Ad Dept. | S «@ > A help on the joh *i7 whet you’ “ag Pp job ...0njey pl barf Don't let hours drag. Chew Wrigley's Spearmint Cum. Our Gives you « nice little lift. one ui Feud uA. Up * LIS SEN-- YOU GOT TO SUFFER S e FER SHOW'IN’' ON THIN ICE! T KIN VPHOLSTER IT SOME , BUT I CAN'T EMBALM FEEL NOTHIN’ _7 we GOT SO YOU WONT TR waian 4 ie ry" ay % i f+ Py j se, Cod tes % La So! 6A eee EtT FIRST, ON THE : K Flood FURTHERMORE, TY MOTHER WOULD NEVER HAVE ALLOWED ME TS PLAY WITH A HATCHET jit —— F : HEARTS OF His AS A SALESMAN JAKE ISI jay FATHER WAG * i AR RE tg:ae cgi } \ - 3 si ‘ at THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1954 DeSoto Executive Dies Your, City Commaieslens Candidates DETROIT ® — John William gms. detit mae soe SEX Men in District Five Are ‘Seeking Nomination at March I City Primary’ fivision of Chrysler Corp. ledo, Ohio, collapsed and Pie Sunday of a heart attack as: be| { left the Detroit Auto Show. Cyrus, 59, of Ypsilanti, was dead on -ar- rival at Highland Park General Hospital. [eo eis sret.e as 8 eg Keego Theater “GUN BELT” In Technicolor with George Montgomery and Tab Hunter —ALso— “TAB HUNTER” | With Joel McCrea | JOHN A. DUGAN An- employe of Pontiac Motor ‘LAST TIMES TONITE Division for 25 years, John A. Dugan, 45, lives at 363 Nelson St. He is a member of local 653, | UAW-CIO, and is presently serv- ing on the executive board of the local. Dugan is a member of the Oak- land Park Methodist Church and fis active in the PTA. He is mar- ried, with two children. | Name Ypsilanti Man as Aide fo Meader WASHINGTON @® — Congress- man George Meader, Ann Arbor Republican, today named Albert E, Eastman of Ypsilanti as his executive secretary. Eastman, a , suc- ceeds Joseph C. Olk who resigned to resume Taw™~practice in Jack- son, Olk will continue serving as a part-time assistant to Meader. Eastman formerly worked for the Ann Arbor News, Station WPAG in Ann Arbor and for the Inter- national News Service in Detroit. He is a World War II Veteran, is married and has two children. He attended Michigan State Nor- mal College. Await Future Sales CHELSEA, Mass. #—A sign out- side the Canter & Sons Monumen- tal Works, producers of cemetery headstones, urges motorists to “drive carefully; we can wait.” Fiesta Days Ahead | Do not miss the wonderful values being planned by Pontiac’s mer- chants for this week's beeg event THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY PONTIAC DIVIDEND DAYS BLUE SKY DRIVE-IN “Your Family Theatre” 2150 Opdyke Road WALT DISNEY’S “BEAR COUNTRY” EAT MORE LUNCH 921 W. Huron St. Next to Huron Theater EVERY DAY LOW PRICES Pork Chops, Salad, Bread and Butter ee 80° Eat at HOMADE TUESDAY SPECIAL DINNER from 4:30 — 7:45 P. M. ROAST YOUNG SPRING CHICKEN with Savory. Dressing, Cranberry Sauce, choice of Potatoes, choice of Salad or Hot Vegetable, Homade Roll and Butter — choice of Hot Tea or Coffee. We Do Catering—Coll FE 2-6242 HOMADE FOOD SHOP 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET y 7 years, Frost was. formerly He belongs to St. Trinity Luther- an Church and is married. Ferguson, Potter Back Substitutes on Bricker Bill | WASHINGTON «® — How Michi- | gan members of congress voted on | recent roll calls: Senate On Ferguson (R-Mich) amend- ment to Bricker (R-Ohio) amend- ment to provide that an interna- tional agreement, as well as a treaty, shall be of no force or effect if it conflicts with the con- stitution; adoped 62-20: Ferguson and Potter (R) for. On Knowland (R-Calif) amend- ment to committee substitute for Bricker amendment to require a roll call vote in the Senate on ratification of any treaty, adopt- ed 72-16: Ferguson and Potter for. On Ferguson amendment to com- mittee substitute for Bricker amendment to provide that no treaty shall be the supreme law of the land unless made in pur- suance of the constitution, adopt- ed 44-33: Ferguson and Potter for. On confirmation, 45-42, of nom- ination of Albert C. Beeson: of California to be a member of the National Labor Relations Board: Ferguson and Potter for. House On motion to shelve bill de- signed to prevent federal acquis- tion of lands from interfering with sustained-yield timber operations, adopted 226-131: Republicans for the motion— Bennett, Hoffman, Shafer, Thompson. baut. Not wating acter (R), Clardy (R), Ford (R), Dingell (r), Lesinski (D). Fire at Engine Company Creates Traffic Jam DETROIT (INS) — A fire that burned uncontrolled for more than an hour early this de- stroyed the rear half of the Re- built Engine Produicts Co. at 24140 | Grosebeck Highway. Warren Township police said traffic on busy Groesbeck near Schoener backed up for more than two miles and was virtually at a standstill. IIT e722 2 Ni New Lake Theater 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE Grade-1 POLISH SAUSAGE 49. Baa aa as. i Present District 5 commissioner, Ronald C. Hallenbeck, 37, lives at 25 Gingell Ct. He is now complet- ing his first term on the commis- sion. Hallenbeck is a native of Pon- tiac and graduate of the high school here. He is a cloth cutter at the Fisher Body Division plant and financial secretary of Fisher Local 596,- UAW-CIO. He is married, with two children, attends the Lutheran Church and is a member of the AMVETS. Prison Escapee to Be Extradited California’s Governor! OKs Return_of- Felon to Michigan LOS ANGLES (UP) — The ex- tradition of Southern Michigan Prison esCapee, Alex R. Bryant, 48, has been approved by Gov. Goodwin J. Knight. . Bryant, who escaped the prison two years ago, was afrested in Highland Park, Calif., where he had a wife, Gladys, 27, and an infant son and where he worked at a trucking company. Gov. Knight brushed aside pleas te deny extradition by Bryant's wife and neighbors. In statement Saturday the gover- nor said: three felonies . . . crimes of vio- lence, including two convictions for rape, a conviction for armed robbery and the present charge of escape in: which he held a knife at the throat of a guard while kid- Bryant, described by his wife as a “mode] husband,’’ was_re- signed to his return to Michigan. Maybe I'll get another chance. I don’t know,” he said. Chinese Nationalists Hit at Big 4 Decision Geneva meeting as “a big defeat MIRAZLEYI ASH MARKET 78 NORTH SAGINAW ROAST 29}. WHITE VEAL SALE !! Shoulder Cut 35i. | LARGE |. EGGS GROUND BEEF 29), tbr te Todor tn Cade 4 = 45¢ | H lena nee eneeseaneansenasensanane with any purchase Pe y aa Manager of a local auto parts store, Leo Morris, 35, lives at 470 E. Beverly Ave. He was educated in Pontiac schools, with two years at the Wolverine Trade School, Detroit. A disabled veteran of World War II, Morris is married with two chil- dren. He is secretary of the LeBaron Neighborhood Club. “Bryant has been convicted of | Lana Applauds Rival Glamor Girl, Marilyn By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD uw—Marilyn Mon- roe may be beleaguered by her | studio and badgered by rival ac- tresses but she has one firm fan— Lana Turner. “Marilyn is one girl I'd like to meet,"’ says the glamor beauty. -| “I’ve followed her career and I think she's got a lot of spunk. She must be a very interesting person. “Now that she's on top, she'll be hit from all sides. I know just how it is. I've been taking it for 17 years in this business.” Technology, the Detroit Library, um ee vemart wvettlistorca Museum, Cranbrook, the cocktails in a quiet corner of a Sunset Strip restaurant. As we talked, several men came by and sat at nearby tables. They stared | at the actress and I could sense they were thinking, ‘That doll looks familiar, but who is she?” She seemed happy with this fragment of privacy. If her hair were its familiar blonde, the male admirers would have recognized and besieged her for autographs. Her it shade is a dark brown, and she is delighted with it. Both For $1295 pega ated "ha in 14K Smnteanion GEORGE'S NEWPORT'S |Community Club Formerly a commissioner from | 1946 through 1952, John H. Ridg- way, M4, resides at 435 Lowell St. Ridgway served as Pontiac mayor from 1950 to 1952. He came to Pontiac in 1928 and is employed | as a supervisor in the plastics | department at Ford Motor Co.'s River Rouge plant. He tormerty worked at Pontiac Motor Division. Last year he was | named president of the Northside | nmi Ridgway _ is | married, with two children. He | attended Purdue University. Fund Drive Begins for Educational TV DETROIT (INS)—A committee of Detroit educational, civic and Cultural leaders today the start of a campaign to raise $1,250,000 for an educational tele- vision station in Detroit. The station would be used by Wayne University, the University of Detroit, Mercy College, Mary- grove College, Detroit Institute of Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Mer- rill-Palmer School and the Edison Institute. A chammel has already been set aside for this purpose by the Fed- eral Communications Commission. Studios will be at the University of Detroit, Wayne University and in the present studios of WDTR, the Detroit Public Schools radio sta- A Pontiac resident since 1936, J. Marvin Smith, 35, lives at: 631 E. Tennyson Ave. He was born and | educated in Ridgeway, Mo. | Smith worked for nine years here as claim inspector and head of the claim department at the | | Grand Trunk Western Railroad. He is now employed in the Service Department of Pontiac Motor Divi- sion and also sells real estate. He is a member of the First Baptist Church and is married. 1 iiekid & ie meen “en Pontiac City Commission ts in the northeast section of the city. It is bounded on the west by N. Saginaw street and the PO&N branch of the Grand Trunk; on the north and east by the city limits and on the | south by Mt. Clemens street. It || includes seven voting precincts: 16, 17, = eM, se Ste ie Attendant Makes Work WINCHESTER, Ind. #—Atten- dant Earl Terhune started out with a Randolph County Hospital am- bulance and came back as a pa- tient with cuts and bruises. He tried to close a side door and fell out. WANTED TO BUY True Detective insides and Front Pages All True Detective Magazines Piper's Magazine Outlet 83 Aubern Ave. All... as brave men... Hel ADDED: fOakiand Pert Thrills in CINEMASCOPE That Beats Them play the worlds most dangerous game! High Water . and a beantiful girl . . relate! “Polovetzian Dancers” & CINEMASCOPE SPECIALS “Tournament of Roses” Week-Dey Mat. Ye @ Eves. & Sen. tie 6 Chiléren Anytime S50 e COMING Martin & Lewis in “MONEY FROM HOME” ‘Open 1:45 FP. M—B, 0. Open “i 11;30—Mat, 600, Eve. G00, Child Ife WwW BI aS ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae a ae ae ae ae ae ee ae ee ae ae TODAY! TOMORROW ASHINGTON’S RTHDAY w é ‘ ROR Pa a oI THIS FEATURE AT: a. a. a a a a a a a ae ae a ae a ae ae a ab ae ab a a a a a a a a ab a ab A/S ALSO -———— “GAMBLING HOUSE” WITH . VICTOR TERRY WILLIAM MATURE MOORE BENDIX : AT 2:10 — 5:45 — 9:20 ONLY | FRT MITCHUM «JANE RU KIND OF WOMAN! fee 3:30 - 7:05 - 10:50 Phone FE 5-8331 Prices: me -/ Brang —ontg? pe j TODAY & TOMORROW — No WONDER- when they join the army...the army wants to join the Foreign Legion! Box Office Open 10:45 A. M. | Strand . NOW PLAYING! Features 12:00 — a 7 7:45 — 10:25 P ——-— ALSO ©0-LA-LA! WHEE! WHEE! They're on a Spree in Gay Paree! LEO HUNTZ GORCEY HALL AND THE— BOWERY BOYS | “PARIS” : PLAYBOYS” | Feateres: 11 :00-1:25-4:00-6:25-0:18 Mat. 50c3=: te Call 33e “DANGEROUS CROSSING™ - 45 oe rere — es ® } ? 7 ¥ \ / & THE B PONTIAC PF PRESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1954 \ wv : \ Hazel Park Youngsters’ Hurt as Car Rams into Reor of Another Auto Four Hazel Park teenagers were | injured last night when their car crashed into the rear of another auto on John R road one-half mile north of Township. Donald Van Landingham, 17, of | 144 W_ Shevlin, driver of the car | in which the youths were hurt was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with a concussion. His condition today is satisfactory, ac- cording to the hospital Andrew Majer, 16, of 413 W. Shevlin; his sister, Lorane, 18, and Dale Tippett, 16, of 23151 Crostey, passengers with Van Landingham, were treated fer miner injuries, According to Troy Township Pa trolmen Gene Sackne- and William Renshaw, Robert J. Clark. 37. of 1830 Austin, Royal Oak. stated that he had slowed to look at a ditched car when Van Landingham's auto struck his car from behind. Clark wee not injured, COCKROACHES One Full Yeer Guarentee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- tery Stores and Restaurants Re- main out only three hours. No signs used Rox Ex Company $4 Pont. Ot Ba. Bide. FE ¢-s002 BED WETTING __ STOPPED R DEVELOPED POND APPROVED ° Fer Free Information Call or Write 14Mile road in Troy! | Markets Closed Today | commodity throughout | the United States Closed to- | day, in observance of Washing- ton's birthday. | MARKETS | Produce 2.50-3.35 bu, apples, Northern Spy, | 450 be; Me 1, 3.26 bu; Ne 1, 236.3% be. Vegetables: Beets, moves. | No 1, 0-1.09 fancy, Cabbage, tabagas Delicious, squash, Hubbard Turnip, topped, No 1 Leaislators Seek Citizens’ Views NEW YORK &\—Financial and | Lawmakers Schedule 5 Public Hearings for This | | Week | LANSING uw — This is public: hearing week in the Legislature. | The lawmakers have invited citi- zens to speak their pieces on big and little bills. The House scheduled five such | events and the Senate two. Wednesday, house committees open their doors to discussion of a bill legalizing automatic milk | vending machines, to consider the type and size of a new prison for | Michigan and to provide a metro- | politan court system in Wayne County SUPER-CHARGED ADVENTURE—Twenty-nine men and a beau- | tiful woman ride a submarine on a desperate mission in “Hell and now at uss Oskland ‘Theater. aside are Richard Bie] | High Water,” White of Railroad Fame Sets Loss at $2,500 Smokers Need Tells Horatio Alger Tale in Waterford Fire 1 X-Rays Yearly Cancer Research Head | Recommends Measu re. as Precaution WASHINGTON wW—The Ameri- | mark and Bella Darvi in a scene from the exciting Twentieth Cen- tury-Fox film in CinemaScope and Technicolor. THERE IS GOOD MONEY IN TELEVISION SERVICING! Start Training Now in Your Spare Time! The Demand for Our Television Graduates |s Far Greater Than the Supply. MODERN LABORATORY and Classroom Instruction Just 4 Hours - - - ONE EVENING A WEEK Phote, Call in Person, o: Mail Coupon for Full Details NAME ELECT RONICS INSTITUTE 2457 Woodward (Donoven Bidg.) WO 2-566] Three Blocks North of Fex Theater *eeeee ee eeeene ue EDITOR'S NOTE: One of the big- est business struggles of the day is tween two men—William White, president of the New York Central Railroad and Robert R. Young for control of that greet rail system ~Unitke Nit SHtAgonist, White Has not been in the news much. Here is | the White story, the story of a man who came up the hard way and who has promised Young a ‘‘bare-fisted” fight epic struggle with financial -< ard Robert R. Young who has set his sights on nothing less than tion’s second greatest producing road. And White has promised Young | “a bare-fisted fight." By ED MORSE | ice im the homme ef Frencis Weed: control of the Central. the na- CUM of 2651 Marlington early Fri- revenue- | day caused an estimated $2,500 | damage, said. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — A Fire Chief Rudy Boss Damage to the building was es- Austin-Norvell Agency, Inc. INSURANCE Ralph Austin Since 1920 Ralph Norvell 70 W. Lawrence FE 2-9221 y FOR — INSURANCE SERVICE See or Call Maynard Johnson G IL e 807 Comm. Nat'l Bank Phone FE 4-4523 Ties oy White succumbed tethe haunt- ‘| timated at $1,000 and to the con- | can Cancer Society's statistical re- | | NEW YORK w — search director said today a heavy | The glint of ing lure of the rails at an early (tents at $1,500. The Enurtone Co. 770 Maccabees Bldg. Detreit 2, Mich. TEmple 2-4100 (Advertisement) director, gave the advice in a copy- | got VanWagoner since he was dis-| righted interview with the maga- iecomnetie ea “ full aoe of | 1917-18 when he was a World War alele tevale he . COUGH closed as a lobbyist for the tunnel | zine U.S. News & World Report. | steam from a nae. ce|I_ sergeant major in the vaites | 313i 568 I : a a ined project And the magazine described him | foes to his present $1 a-year | States Army. { salary " shade unde: The ex-governor resigned from | 48 smoking during the interview, | e stands a sha under six FUSSIN? the Mackinac Bridge Authority to Dr. Hammon said a heavy _Today White is engaged In 8M feet, has black hair with a a Sige avoid any implication that he had §™oker should take the rec- of os at the temples and his! wotce is hereby given that @ public Here's what thousands of doctor have —- for coughs of colds treit te acquire the Detroit. Windsor Tunnel. | | The last event made some mem- | bers’ eyes sparkle because it will - be the first appearance in the Leg. | | islature of former Gov. Murray D an interest in floating a bond smoker “is very foolish if he does not have a chest X-ray taken twice a year''—although there is mo proof smoking causes cancer Dr. E. Cuyler Hammond, the ommended precaution ‘so long as steel rails has always marked | age and was hopping rides on life's path for William White, pres-|. Erie freights when he was 14 lident of the New York Central, near his home in Midland Park, | Railroad. IN. J. | The track has been straight and| Now Now 57, White looks back on 4 | | White has plowed along it like @/ years of railroading, except for | ~ Lodge Calendar ja steady gaze that doesn't miss dark brown eyes are narrowed in| hearing will-be held b } An electrical short was believed | | to have caused the blaze which |was reported by neighbors. The |home was insured. OUPONT MEIGHTS SUBD the Pontiac City Commission in the Municipal Court, there is even a strong suspicion |@ BS Mill street Tuesday, March 9, 1954 fast-acting, pleasant-tasting issue for the straits bridge. His ; m peRTussiN. rs works internally; | employer, Stifel-Nicolaus & Co.,| that smoking causes lung cancer antics Mivias coeelal imasiog. |" tick. You'll see eyes like White's oer tha parce J ecninn ion Hse loosens sticky phlegm; and thus (Chicago, helped underwrite the But he also said everyone, €5-' wednesday, Feb. 24. Co-operative | i" ace tennis players — or loco- | dential Be, 1 te Commercial Be. 1 the “breakeap™ hing | spells. It's | bridge bonds and is backing the | Pecially those over 45, should have qinner 6 p. m: meat. potatoes, | motive engineers. pte prin ot Cows Sates —. i 4 grand for all the family! ‘tunnel project an X-ray at least once a year, = and rolls furnished by the White had to pitch in and Heights Subeivicten. commission Money troubles got you down? Do as more than 30,000 people Got relief with and he added Shrine. Bring table service and help carn money for his family | Dated Ped. 14, 1 do every week at Household Fi Get a lift with a loan this Senate committees Tuesday | «1; are a timid soul, then | dish to pass. Drill 7 p. m.; memor- . 7 y ADA R. EVANS. ee ee ee ona t) a Wednesday will conduct ae = moking | tal 7: rele = odds the Sa. ma | at 16 when he quit school to City Clerk fast, friendly, dependable way. PERTUSSIN | hearings late a constitutional at least ‘until the bh are coon | Special Y eaeth: Ann Arbor Wwise take a $20-a-month office job _ = = leans mede without endorsers. Same-day service. Requirements | amendment to float a $500 mil- |p, Hammond indicated the kind | Men. Bessie Howell, worthy scribe with the Erie, He was the eld- cuaene are easy to meet. Many repayment plans. Monthly payments mame | ton bond issue for highway com (or facts he ter b ont —Adv,| ©st of seven children and his “ to fit your income. Loans made quickly to clean up old _ | strection and a Korean War vet- | — eo ee father, Garrett White, a master fuel, repairs, taxes, any good reason. | we should find that the death rate ’ * mechanic, had tough going * erens bonus propesal. | from lang cancer is much’ higher News in Brief : : SE — 3 Cosh — PAYMENT PLANS ene e at 8 tonight after a. | among heavy smokers and the “Mother always had a hard row id ae Cc ba | TODAY. ee ae P- 8 6 Now's the time for a | the Legisiatyre| death rate from other forms of| Walter Martock of 380 Lowell st.|'©-hoe.”” said White. “Father's pay a Se ‘ perets | parma pest pera ca aes find a solid calendar of minor | cancer is not one bit higher among | reported to Pontiac Police the check went to her and she ran pick up your phone... $ 66s 6 7201 998 18.39 haem heavy smokers, then I'd say the | theft of four hub caps taken from the family finances, such as they Motice Ia hereby. given cower 100 8 3 1) 1421 19.77 36.59 Senate votes are indicated on/¢Vidence would be extremely | his auto, parked on Lowell and | “ere hearing will be held by the | Puntiee cect Eogcle) fe 5) | sear-| ec ‘bills to forbid state gro brite _ oe is a cause-and- | Glenwood Ave. Sunday night. Trough rani however ag! 8. Mill street Tuesday, March 9, 1964 mes bp at ‘ ‘noe ee ‘buy food from state institut oe eer a ‘Wbdy’ pores. aeddelaing: $80|tdoac's ecbeniar et oe oto cele p.m. comere santas ume! get @ Eft with « lean! Lo |to forbid damage suits against e said his “personal guess y's ning ather's principles of “honesty, in-| gential mo. 3 to Commercial No. 1 the — Housshold’s charge is the monthly vate of 3% on ‘hospital employes who administer | Tight now” is that there is such a and personal papers was stolen | | tegrity and willingness to work." following des described property tet per ?, € tutonse out coweding a0 ans relationship between smoking and from an unlocked auto, owned by | Up the rungs of the ladder went viaen Gal auxaomenh uo aaeae mot excending 3300, ond i % op ony remeindar, “shock treatments” to mental pa- Plat 37, provided an agreement is made tients and to allow Detroit Edison | !ung cancer, but he does not know | Mrs. V. E. Reynolds, 87 S. Shirley | White. He became general man. | fer, the right ot Way tor —, Road no Co. to buy submerged lands at eterna the smoking effect is St wegen night, ne ager ‘of the Erie's eastern district | an ebutting the commercial tinesifies- USEHOLD fi NANCE } Harbor Beach for a power plant ‘trivia or so important that Pontiac Police. The car was par ‘in 1938. That same year he switch. | 4" 0m the sout . : | development. Cigarette manufacture should be on W. Huron street near Perry|ed to the Virginian Railway as| Dated Pe i ime Coysoration of Pontiaer —— we find what's in | street. | vice president and general man- ae Se eek 3% Seuth Seal St ° B ° f m that. is bad and remove it.” | ager. Feb. 22, ‘84 . B He said there were some indica- | A driveshaft was stolen — The Key Bidg.; 2nd Floor of your home USINESS ne 5 tions cigarette smokers were more bere -_, a wigs “ Mrs. | — ae ~ a al Fora Motor, xo. MTOAderzsa 2 PHONE: FEderal 4-0535 heati pla More than half a million Jeeps | susceptible to lung cancer, while | Melvin Gerfmell o! uburn | ame president Dela. So a ae ee ureb ~_ wel —T5 per cent of them for the | cigar and pipe smokers were more | Heights Trailer Park on Opdyke | are errr giaay SS gan. . * Loons made to residents of nearby lowns civilian market—have rolled off likely to develop lip, tongue or | Toad. Mrs. Gemmell told Oakland | ~ Leal ae = job he Feb. 19, 20, 22, "34 ed il FE 4 1504 the assembly lines at Willys Mo- | mouth cancer County sheriff's deputies the car —— 4 veg cy = . tors since World War II. it was As for his own smoking, he said, “88 parked near the entrance to! mada ae cov — ; announced in Toledo today by | “I am not going to let it (the | the trailer park ing 18 ote y ee need Raymond R. Rausch executive problem he is investigating) have If your. friend's in jail and needs cnr. sepa compa Act now — while your furnace or vice president and general man- any effect on my personal habits bail, Ph. FE 2-5201.C.A “Mitchell boiler is in operation —to have & thoroughly inspected by our —— Dr. Hammond is in charge of a to head the mighty Central. In« phecarie ¢Meie Sileat Aute- Cariton M_ Higbie Jr... presi- research project under which 22.000 Women’ 5 Auxiliary his year-and-a-half as president, dent of Higbie Manufacturing Co., volunteers have been interviewing | White has aimed at cutting need- matic Heating Experts! Regard- less of its make or model, we will vest all vital parts to pre- vent costly repairs or break- downs in the weeks ahead. We Charge or Obligation! ‘We sell and insall the world’s finest quality hearing equipment. Phone now for free fuel-saving estimate and facts on 36-month easy-pay plan! em) fe | i Si pod bys rll Tea ager of the company. reported today sales of $2.597.- 574 for the six months ended Jan. 31. Earnings after federal income taxes were $139,702, or 54 cents per share on 242,500 shares of common stock. This eompares with 4 cents per share on the same number of shares during a similar period in the previous year. The Rochester | firm's assets at Jan. 31 were $2,221,995 and liabilites amounted to $774,837 C. S,- Young, president of the~| | Federal Reserve Bank of Chi- | cago said today in a report to Midwest banks that 1953 economy ranked “at the top of a proeces- sion of four record years.” The bank president pointed out, however, that the upsurge in bus- iness activity came to a halt last year despite gains in output of goods and services and an ‘increase in personal income until all the facts are known.’ 204,000 men SO to 69 years old about their smoking habits. Each | year, the causes of any deaths |among the group are medically) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— Erveatianaten School Vandals Toke Ice Cream and Cash Thieves broke into the Bagley | Grade School at 320 Bagley St. last night and took $360 and six dozen 2 ice cream bars, according to Pon- tiac Police. Entry was made by | breaking a kitchen window. a Fail to Open Safe Howard Cunningham Jr. of 37 LeGrande Ave. told Pontiac police | today that thieves broke into the Lincoln Junior High School at 131 Hillside Dr. fast night and at- itempted to open an office safe Nothing was reported missing, ac- | cording to police who said the bur- | In August 1952 White was chosen | less expenses, improving the road's Picks Six Chairmen | to <"sna"* e'="hair® bation - | dollar property, and keeping the | 10,700-mile rail empire up-to-the- | minute, Under White the Central's income has increased. Ask him for advice to the new generation, White turns deadly | serious, He drives home the words like rivets: “Live a clean, simple life. Value your integrity and hon- esty, Work hard. Never cease to Chairmen were appointed to. six | committees by Mrs. Maurice Brad- ley, president, at last week's meet- | ing of Metropolitan Women's Aux- iliary 62 Mrs. Leonard Nelson was named to the entertainment committee | chairmanship; Mrs. Paul Meschen ;to the nominations and elections | committee; Mr§. Leland Barker to | membership; Mrs. Edward Smith | ta sick and welfare; Mrs. Howard Wheeler to ways and means, and Mrs. Kenneth Sutton to constitu- tion and by-laws. In other business, Mrs. Bradley,’ | Mrs. Barker and Mrs. Sutton were named delegates to a) conference at Sturgis March 6. Fleas are not found on hoofed animals OPERATION FRONT-WHEEL ALIGNMENT! The Baltimore, Md., office of | Slars gained entry by breaking a McManus, John & Adams, Inc., | Window | national advertising agency with | h —_—_—_—_—__— headquarters in Bloomfield Hills |Chiang Reviews 000 has been named to handle ad- 9 30,( ‘ vertising of the Cumberland | TAIPEH, Formosa «—Chiang : ie Pouss Brewing Co. G. W. Bibby. presi- | Kai-shek and members of Nation- —— a pr ee a Be ap of n Fontiac dent of the Cumberland, Md., | alist China's National Asyembly to-| { “wb, "Coats 0 tet pa (ae. itn. gece —— y . 8 y ended a review of 30,000 to your specific aeeds and income @ payment s Since 1910 eeeey sa aie wel tame: | hy +} convenient. You'll like the friendly, eeighborly aumeephere at Provident. 6° ; 5 over the account = 1 Per: many of them drafted na- | . Aad you wilt fad-dhat- pour teem io waly 2 pl ; . 73 South Parke St. a inn } ve Fprmosans, _ » ence. Phone, write, or just drop in. @ 4 Loon: mode on Signature Furniture er Aute ? FE 4-1504 [Benapinal ident L : : on - . 060 fenton . © ON betes | Ty “4 ‘THATCHER, PATTERSON & WERNET ahs Provident Loan : | © Ol Furnaces | Wy Pontiac's Oldest insurance Agency es i and Sevings Society of Detrelt oe oc ity Nettene! Beak Bids. PR 9-000 2nd Fleer « Lawrence 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. © Oll-Fired Water Heaters | — ee Gerald Harvey, Manager « ° FEderel _ crema oanaenetnaiteint nn es RAE _ = made in senkdent of oll memrmunding towns Artem Dee payee > ae re 4 + ~~ } o ye : hues s. : . es & } \ \ Pa : ‘ ; + ‘ t 4 + \ es et THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 92, 1954 - 7 J J ¥ a. > oe wees o* : my ' 7 Death Notices Saipan Help 7| SLICE OF HAM a cee i ~ & Found 2% Wid, Contracts, Mtge, 32 DEX ’ to ED Laat: Ote.. US a” tae ean Braet Syed ee ue peng es | Maen ths Site a ae. sella: every vie. FS | | Lost: SLACK AND Waive wer. | 44 oer we TO . 4 ws “Rina ; dear MAM WANTE.FoR”Bus "BODY . : bee 4 ae eens Twin Beech | "iat brother of oat of | Wools, some a : fw. Suton er wena Doe Peta | call Bos : CLASSIFICATIONS herul servee Wil be baa Wednes- <~ : ~ag—H 3 Vote, white chest Chuidren's pet M AH AN February 3p. mi. at Fe| on. T ain Reward, PE 2074 ry Puneral Corun- PER Lost: witrre Toy sPiTZ in Vi- na. with Rev Paw- [NED Ais. einity of Russell Ave, Reward. — > aes y x "fee atenee te ore te Sor eet Onde pets a per. Chee oun 7 GLAseES VICIN- ,OPR -_ . Card of THADES .,...0cssecccese 2 | Mrite Puneral Home, Corunne i essential — a part .. shea i _ “ieee FEBRUARY 22 1964, Write .giving expert WILL THE GENTLEMAN WHO Memoriam oo..sseesrecececece Pranklin , employment, & marital ba heme v coeot ” 2% TS, beloveg husband ef Mrs. An: _Stattia “to bon 100, P ac Press. jive in. Call ther @2 REpublis the Girt rout checking conse | S [ ONE FIOWETS ...00.c-ceccceescessemes 3] aetasio Kissell; dear father of {EN WANTED oa _ sion at “Kind Lady” con. Alex Kissell and Mrs, Alice West- |. . 3 | Wao KINDLY PERSON wio is tack Mrs LeRoy er at . Puneral Directors ..csssssss0se0 6} - erm> dear brother of ‘Kis | Tale brand now product te truly | ot to. cook de OLive 2-087, Rochester, to ar- ATTENTION! sell. service will be held | sensational There is else howseworg. tor femily 5. range for exchange Cometery L600 cssceccessscecsee 6] Wednenday, Poe Seth at fp a. | Mue M. It te wet cold im || Good heme snd wages for lett | —"Physle-Therapy 24A|- i ‘yes. ore mtaventel. tu tolling - af tte Pancras biome | Ea ig 20 competition ;| peceen, Ls Jb gt out © hove | nn eee Therapy 2 ~ Your’ equity or land tontract, | _ > Interment tn Mill Cemetery, Geeatae ten cies te ha the, COMPTOMETER OPERATOR — SCIENTIFIC SWEDISH MARSAOE coe i EMTLOTM-NT MuateonPuserel’ ome?" "| ory now precticatty virgin. Wo | | Pet quem wegen, paid erie re ca | Francis E, “Bud” Miller sas eaied Wile neve Bl dec Eee eee ee Een ‘eee Pusstonat Pe ig oe hoes wire f on MORE IPF __Notices & Personals 25) = am — wip Cenhi Bele 10, 1984. I will not de re) land contrat or equity m your, Rd Stoney Lake, Oxford. 19 | of Oscar Thompson and Mrs.| erybody cen afford it, All terrt-| National firm has part time open-| Com &@ Son, FE ¢3767, OR ALTERATIONS. UP AND DE-| sponsible fo: any debts con- | home. NICE CLEAN 2 RM. APT. FOR i __ Moving & Trucking ..........+. 18/ Benjamin Schmidt. Puneral serv-| tory is Bow prectically virgin. No| ing No cepital, No canvassing. be | very if desired. FE ¢2017. —— ten my. | K. L. Templeton, Realtor) SiStipere and us perueular FE Painting & Decorating «........ 9 fira"at ite. m. at Allens Pu. | fou eh up expense. For particu: | PRACTICAL NURSE. 24 HOUR Pitces and. Tepeiras footing er Income Tax Sérvice 17) g:. ponuac, Mich | $9 _W_ Huroe rE ier Te one is Pe neral Home with G. EB. Behnk see Personne! er. y. State experience, salary,| siding, call FE 6-0087, NS < = iS MOD M. UTILITIES Photes & Accessories ......-0... 21 pong emg in ast ply, i Ave., m. ag ag iglanes Pontiac Press, pron ma BLOCK Arp CE- | BENJAMIN RB ACKUS KNAPP SHOES Wanted Real Estate 324, fare. Cullen raceme. | os Television Servis ......+.4.+++ 92) Mich. Mr. Thompson will le in | sareeMaN — BCT FACTORY | PRESSER ON PROSPERITY xo a eer vietn "Whoa Siti. as te aca dk. ms SHUTINS, HAVE YOUR EYES os and an || SMALL APARTMENT CLOSE IW. Typewriter Bervice ...cecseeee: saa | eee Ha chen TN | Mepraing,” Water sseheners, 'mam| Wey press i @ Ave-|“ panda: and finlahing. Phove FE Prone FE '¢iea ‘Eve FE Sll| frammet te Mot pega | ns yy TOR nn mcaeen | Domtie orackshnt-3-BARH fe Card of Thanks ably priced sold on F.H.A.| GIRL FOR LIGHT HOUSEWORK | - : ——— BANNEN-SAVAGE joo WEDDING INVITATIONS $6.50 0 children. . OR Upholstering ...... seeeececeeees MB] of ters s mnorpotie Benen can do a care we 2 quia ren in = je Oem: eal as cosas. a oe ee Printed map ina fag tervice ome = a oo Be. No < ren. Near Airport. OR JUR HEARTFELT THANKS TO Press. . —s P = BSFAUT Y OPERATOR. EXPERI- mins, FE 40368. 7 | ACCOUNTING & TAX SERVICE ELOWE MEET ME AT MANNY'S 8 froot home en all who extended comforting - LIFES TIME . | COMPLETE : Edw. Hawley, FE 2-2602. 5 , : Lake WOTICES pach a help ie cur recent tor. salary the year round, pal va- telient orging conditions Lec's prick, block & stone, PE 3008 Ico TAX SERVICE. NO five’ up. Dencing and Gomme) “s AS TATLOR, REALTOR , Tite floral eS us~} _1¢T Pierce &. Birmingham. __ < 100 §-9532. ty Singing, Wayne PHO: Lest & Pound .ccccscosssscee 4] Other Rindeats’ werate deeply | snee, must be steady and villing | @aWrED EXPERIENCED Tee wOoe SAVE MONEY ie Youn commind GENTLE | ours acy on uae Soum Gans The Helen Mary Lane; rain you the job. Apply Mr be . @, 21 to 30. Inquire PRODUCTS Let ws tle mS A to hands Fina Foam rug and 6 walkne Notions & Persopals ....+0000.-. 35 _Featy” Brown, teh We Saginaw. "| 96 1600 Be. ot. Be. Between | General wood working and plywood,| 4) Clark at. Pa oie for = phoistery cleaner, Waites No- B R ¥ McKINNEY Flowers 3le ~ was Wah some BO en ae ae reasonable rates, estimates | ment. wy tons, . B. MCHA a fer dairy farming. in deck & tne’ Orilt,| Sant Hd. FECAL or FE) incoite tax Sevice | ON AND APTER DATE,| Office e900 Commerce Ra WANTED | __ SCHAPFER'S — FLOWERS 366 Lotis Rd. 6% miles north of 262, "LEte Hwy. Drayton Plains. |—"™% | EM 38047. For appointment ree. > ee 5 ee a oe fe Pounce “1s7e - a 1 AvEURNSCSC*~S~S«S aS me ny | =e Recheste! ———_—_—__ 5 | SEAUTY OPERATOR, 430% BALD- EAVESTROUGHING |Home call, C4. Odell "by any omer "myeet Ray | =i ee _ eREPERRED win_ Ave, FE besit, a a 10% EO Moree Si. FE sae PR) i Winebarger, 16 8. Bath 8.| Wanted Real Estate 32A Wt. Child. to Board ......0000. 36 McLain’s Sheel Metal Co. . +4204. Pontiac, Mich : > Funerai Directors 4 Wili consider ee H Wanted 8 FE 465051 — Home calls by appoint WILL WITNESS TO ACCIDENT Wtd. Household Goods ......... 37 ~ Ws sclalize in used home sales. elp Ps PLOOR LAYING, SANDING AND moos X END ACCOUNTING | (*t Commerce Rd. end Cardinal . +2870 Wid. Misceliancous ...... "|! Voo hee Si ] Real ‘Betate ‘Exchange pay Vet Modern equipment. John Taylor. Mrervice. FE $4632 "| nap, truck. please call’ BM WE WANT rm ee eeeceseeeeees BS le e ie oe | Grinkerso 94392. Wha. Transportation ......++... 31 Donelson-Johns fram Alteraate, 10. weeks Fook. SANDING, LAYING, FiIn.| ¥¢: Pu Pootiae, Leundry, PE Te eS tae Mabe en. = FE 2-0289 Ft ng Sass. 18 Bast onan 18 E Pike Bt._| sad 10 wooks employment: TW | 'R. Grazer, 1 Central. FE) Dele DAY CARE. VICINITY OP CRES| 63., w. murce st “| Fairmount Wee. Contracts, Migs. ....00.... 32 | _ SORMGNED POR FUNERALS” Shang aa] ate phe |, Moving & Trucking 19| cous Lene, Fm cee. | 20. Maren Bi. Open oven, “WS 0 iol LOWED APT. AVAMLAMLD Wanted Real Estete..........-- 324 P “ p— metic, age 25. Instructions . 9 —- and custom building. FOR Past. EFFICIENT PICKUP for, te 7 ae / SOLD Raita, 83 . Pe thee a. . — = y soe iee Suecuxa —b¥|Piawo wD acconniot Lié.| OENERAL BUILDING "REPAIR: tng th Fees, rates, FET ‘any.| Wtd. Household Goods 27 are ne eccident. Past | CANE VERE TO | cat oped mera Orreee there were replies at {| * a pressure, byaraulic. end | teacher. OR 30000. -_rissirar © the work. PE 6208.) cavt, Dick voR SMALL TAUCE.| FURNITURE NEEDED | {emt seuamen tour Ney | ¢0008 after pm. aad Rest Apts. Purnished ..........32 | the Press office in Must have had previous chec Work Wanted Male 10/.‘**** 9 Mulberry Pais, | Good rates Phone PH 34808. -| Entire home or odd lots, Get the | now we are tn need ots, TCHENETTE APT. BEDROOR experience drawings for prec wn 2°) Sick. BLOCK AND CEMENT! HAULING OF ALL KINDS REA-| ‘Pp Soler * oo @ and 7 room city ry Rent Apts. Unfurnished .......24/$ the following boxes: devices, MC Manufacturing Co, | ©~ work. Also chimneys. No job too| sonable FE 2601, bon a a A cuburben homes, Also many | see TRO anne 2, 3, 90, 23, 20, 27, 28, free BE hehe Sree: | Wieitston and minor repair with | went. ou, FR os | tour ‘TRUCKING MAUL ANY: | given ac SOys ALL —PYPES | FO7CT icy 'eke,treat bomen, | Mere Nae Komen anh Rent Houses Purnished ....++.- % ’ reputable dealer node me fe | Ph, FE 4-060. 7 _ thing anytime, FE 4¢-6564. ee of furniture Ph FE 28623 range coseunry Mens f information. ent : ae | | 3% 36, 41, 46, 48, 82, JIG BUILDERS 3 Daily Press. eae a Pe tee T for R CASH WAITING FOR USED FUR. -. PRIVATE. 4 ROOMS AND BATH, Seeaees) Pannen) 0822 56, 60, G1, 63, 78, 82, 87, DIE MAKERS ; Pee | Bade ak shel LruUCKS for Rent] “ature ‘dienes ec. re 000 | John Kinzler, Realtor |_>y Williams Late, Pm 1-708 Por Rent Rooms ........-ss00++ 37] § 89, 92, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, JOURNEYMEN ONLY KORVEAN VET WOULD LIKE | 2000, : TRUCKS, TR LET US BUY IT ON AUCTION IT| eww. Mure gt. TE eel a aa ge nom Rooms With Board .....ssseee+. 38 105, 107, 113, 117. APPLY CABINET MAKER & CARPEN. gy - ont Ye Ton Pick 1% Ton Stakes voRm 7 ANTIQUE Co-operative Resi _Exchange | _5-€800. ne saa : 4 FISHER r Kitchens a speciality FE) Sese1 And Duwp Trucks P cough! ant coi” daily. MY 99023 Sel]? CAREVIEW APT | MODERN GA Convalescent Homes ..... eeeese : - BODY CARPENTER WORK. NEW On| Carpenter Contracting Pontiac Farm and ous OF PONT? Co Want to _ist. MY 3091, Hotel Rooms ...0..ccccsseecee-+ DIVISION _ repeir, FE 5-2041. Rougn or trim yma TERA Industrial Tractor Co, ee + te “ a . : ‘ xis AP Rent Stores cesses @ o00 BALDWIN AVE. COLORED Finst CLASS ME-| Get our pid too. O8 92278. __| _—_FE +0i-FE +142 «| BaRTY woutb Like fo Bty| BUYERS WAITING | tow. is me sues ee The Pontiac Press chenle * work REMODELING TRUCKING AMD RAULING, RUB- ons opt ot vant, Dee pel welt | _ _ sears oe a Rent Office BPace ..ccsesseveeee “1 2 SALESMEN CARPENTER WOR EW i” GARAGES AND Tho TERMS a : : 30 a hts & ress, Please eall FE 6-6626 you _— te a. See a ie, Sees. | For Rent Miscellaneous ........ 4 FOR WANT ADS of} 6 STOPPERT & CECIL | _ Set ct Ot rote, Ce. | - Wid. Miscellaneous 28 action). Immediate bo $150 WEEKLY HAND DIGGING & LIGHT HAUL- GENERAL BUILDERS Se ae ae td. Cash for Land Contracts Rent Houses Furnished 35 . : TANGIBLE AND DeTAnOIBLE | {BETES ea ao | Se ert we answeon see) O'DELL CARTAGE | | pepam. cortaon. w REAL ESTATE POR GALS DIAL FE 2-8181 gt ae igara good trade. Phone OR | MASON AgON & CEMENT WORK, PREE | 1 ca: hone WHITE BROS. clean, 817 Forest, Coder Por Bale Mouse ......c.-2.. |) From 8a.m.toS p.m. {|- Hea “automobile Commissions | CARPENTER WORK WTD, KEW) OR 3003 A. J. Webster & 80. | ———~ "Prace "rE bane 2 "* on iia'er On Sites i nooM CABin” Witt ii . paid t"enee- Opportunity for ad and repair, FE 44210. PATCH PLASTERING SPECIAITY. SMITH MOVING . seo Dine ‘Mighway - W facilities, Winter rates, Por Gale Lake Property ........ 4 an os Vancement. osT for >| CARPENTER WORK, REMODEL Piaering sheet rock filling Van or Pickup Service FE 6400 WANTED — _ ~_ | _tnetuded. MY 260T3, BS Awe Tecate. Teo 1-1 goce bor—biY™ | SanPasrERY CAbINay WORE ; MOvIEG Aim STS conation-| LISTINGS WANTED |? 200 poem natoams Por Gale Resort Property ee aan ae aor Yous, iets | Canrentny c 308. FLEMMING FLOOR LAYING | age ~ American Van | Housetralier tm good re cthes idust be of _and odd jobe. FE 32000, | sanding. finishing. 188 Edison. Ph. vans anywhere in| Must be late model. Write Pos-| Buyers gre waiting, we buy, eell| end lights. Gas heat, 2 bir = Suburban Property seeeereeee «+ 4BA fhea fo ‘cancel oe changes eter. Apo perm. . FounO Maw #. iOS SCHOOL —! : = ee . - reat Fe : — rz tiac Press, Boz 36. ‘HH C. NEWINGHAM $1483 ® week _ Pee oat te vv mses 4) Bie Maen St || tie mnahtttareoumg tot| Reet ihe Rinkas eas hes | Seven Bt, Wan" dace Bone | "Su rean, stoma "ev oe BROKER * Sarees a : Por Bale Acreage ....+.00--000-+ OT tendered valueless through A permanent career, personal! 103 Bales PE 28T4 __| _manure. §-0448. ? 3a 8. Marshall é Bare, OMiLIFim. Ge the error. When cancelis- wea ott Ot ety mene | AVAILABLE PRECISSON TOOK, ALTERA she | DONT AND WEAVY ROCKING | CEMENT MIXER W BAO BaTCH| ore Seed or PE som |’ rege Bhd 1 Por Gale Farms .....+.sccee+++. @ tions are =e be cure te oe ee ee jek mene | “iad @ie meker. 18 years, irs, Al kinds EM3<487 Ln _ _0tse, good condition. OR 3-0666. WANTED i RMS. ALL MODERN. LOCATED Gale Business Property ......... @ Ko adjustments will bx aire ee tle ae tog, tool caginect § youre, FE 18 years experience nothing ts a pe a ONeediion, FE mm __ ot Can et 0 W Buren, =a Rent or Lease Bus. Prop........404 Bae eae Sf Teel utete. ree | WANTED TRUCKING MAUL ANY:| ton’ On 20101 of PE 16. | Painting & Decorating 20) Money Wanted —— 28A HOUSES ¢ RM PARTLY yore HOUSE. Closing time for advertise- For details see Mr. D. F. Car-| thing anytime 17-8717 ates SS ~ in eevance PE 38323 Por Gale or Exchange .......... 60 ts —— type sizes pey, 7 N. Paddock St, be-| i. pee y Rory Business Services 13 DRYWALL AN WANTE $3,000 AT 6 PER CENT FE 5-81 : : SW, gs tween 10 a.m. and 3:30 Work Wanted Female 11) ~~-~- aw ALL AND interest ed se-| - 65 e 12 the en 10 am. and 3:30 pm. | V ye rT IN ee Need ell kinds of 33-en4 |' ROOM MOD. HOME & GA. Ze pete bo pubeiien. MAN YOR HANDYMAN & JANT ne ol «6 TIME AV PAINTING ae eS eS a ¢ betseem hemes ow west cide | Furnished. FINANCIAL “A oo 7 er — ee =n LARG! rER NER. Plaster and — 2p ee eS and - P : neers, Cram be a. worker ga = pension. soe. payroll taxes, deliver Press box NTIAC f —_ Texture Ww to Rent we cae are | ° - * Business Opportunttion .........01| § a7 of publication =— quired “ana ‘relsrences fox ‘ei| Ress. MI 64867. ,| CALL GULF SUPER | MR. CLIFTON HOUGH | poun papnoom cottage.) Geass wyaceme im WANT AD RATES _Pratine Frese WOMEN WOULD LIKE DA sonnei assioelnaeis 10t_Weehtnaten &,, Lebo Guten. p et. cok of Angus 6 ot a tay * «| Oa ~ wEiGNTS Gale Land Contracts .....-...+. 02 Eines 1'Day 3 Deve 6 days ~ College Graduates ee rere Te aD SERVICE _ ss MY aig | _ MY 9B. ee emerarseen or betta Cal new for our | ONE ROOM CABIN. 160 Money te. LOBR cesvvcvarccecess Ls) 2 $1.25 $1.68 62.52 Permanent em our sales LADY BEST OF REF AND Por lease one of our best lo- PAINTING -— INTERIOR, EXTE-| ¢ OR Rag ae al UNPUR- » service. ae nae 160 063.124 86 Stall, open fmmediatery Me over.| UB, Wensporiation. Write Puntioc | cations, doing excellent gellonage,| [ior empart wart, low prices, call) tlrnces PE Serie” “POR FAST CASH CALL” Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 Mortgage LOBRS socccccceesecces « 2.00 6 6.40 night traveling. pon tag MO id and Seeeead bY Yaw bAY_VE up for complete service Call _ today, Fi Bald TEL = s. CENTER —e - thas 1% = ieations | — oy a * ee toi vjemevel. thensenatie,” PAPER owner needs 2 bedroom ies Edw. M. Stout, Realtor |? LARGE ROOMS & BATH UTIL- 8. ried men, .30 to 40. Applications | | 7.0138 Crescent Lake. ribet ator Le ; . Ry Bt w. M. Stout, Lanes noes 5, Hi $a confidential Our men know of | HOUSEWORK W BY THE| Free estimate FE 46005. FE|. White GA 63007 or FE¢iev!. | Apt. or Home, Quiet tamily, | Eve. Till_ 8:20 = Seana ~anted AUTOMOTIVE 4 ea ft this advertisement. Write Pontiee| day Babv aes Pa at Wed Oa ovr NEEDED |e gual gar ee als WAARINOS AND” TROMINGS, VE) "Oopecishy, Cart Bila FESS | qoygy tetera TEI aa. | §b Romtne Motw“Dormy Baner | Calngty Homme Jet amt ue) For Rent Rooms 37 Por Gale Used Trucks ..,-+00+-- : WANTED: WASH RACK WAN,| GoLORED Gtk DESIRES WORK A & B TRENCHING mn 3-00 and 2 children need 4 or § room | sony watt sinh | 2 meen pen ma, Gale Motor Scooters ....0¢++0+++ 63 ter Moter Sales, Roches- 5 de 7, week . Fe water lines, field tile. Wall Parent 2 AND FAINTING. one or ——— Ap. 5M > 2 blocks from town. PE 2-1903 “ Journeymen MAN EXPERIENCED IN WHEEL | woman oe 2 7 “Dhetec , pe Good relerences. | RELIABLE PARTY W. TO SLEEPING ROOM FOR MAN.. Por Gale Motorcycles .....++0s. Woman WANTS DA Wonk, Ex. } Photos & Accessories 21 Guasrrias’ ~pooe. | small house, wets Destics | Bap - wecter, Private eutsanes. Por Gale Bicycles | Machine Repairmen Sed "wim permanent eect: | permet, ea nay F. Preven PE 6-073 — - pols and. private entrant ;| Bree Ben Fe | PR 60713, S07 Euroa sapeeseesooreee deoce “in, area, Felorence neces: | COLORED ” WANTS DAY | Warm air heating & shect mets! | PORTRAITS | FRAMES . COPTES.| in. Write Pontiac ‘Press Hox 8 WANTED A Boats & Accessories ....0s0000+- Ld --Toolmakers _ sary, _apply 8. ‘Saginaw a. ba ‘es = bebe. No or EXCAVATING GRADING, BULL- ipas, Formal le me Lo- $25 REWARD. MODERN 2 “ lets within ¢ e- | or 2 Day workers. No drinkers. TOUNG MAN FOR PART TIME n Hove own ‘transporte. | S0eme fred bide Ph. PW 36422. room apartment or house. 1 five| **,, "uilding | _ PR esee 18 Port — For Gale Airplanes ......+0-000. help sed photostate studios, 1-6/ tion, PE 93186 ~ me _ ment, oe ag ae YE pane Rent Office Space “a PREBBLE ew 3 ROOMS FOR OFFICE SPACE eon Woodward Ave. m Bioomficic wits, MI hg LaRroE 10 HOUSE 100 OAK- land hos "eal for elinie, off.¢ | er an” profesrional business. FE | For Rent d Miscellaneous 42) _ @ acams OF LAND FOR CROP a ag Exe. level land Lo a __b 1641, 8620 Poster Ra, Clarkston | For Sale Nouses bed | PDL LDL OOS Humphries WTLLIAMS LAKE INCOME Pn ern 6 Timent with ne ture) fireplace cil heat, gga | poreh ove e rooms end J excelien return Fine condition—fresh deco- rations inside Permastone exte- rior, 3 car garage, $11 500, con. venient terms. i Humphries { MODERN HOME for | Nicely f lot | insures your pene lage ent residential investment Only $9,000 $10,600, terms. | FE 40521 after 6, rE 6-6878. Humphries BY OWNER Ineome i ge Iso | Co-ope 4 vosas"tasminans house. Looe | | FE 34i31 het | INCOME—Orchard Lake near Johe- Go 8ST § rooms, new condition, cera- beth 300 term. | PE 40521 efter 6 FE 58-7146. We have several low down pay- A Picture for the Young in Heart . ANNEIT Py RR Bay nd ledge rock a awecce — Ey “are. * cane pen- Son > ts Scanian: a and warm po Bases tiie bath. Prevare exe Patee i em large enough for end - ly snacks & & compicte work & laundry area clore be. Pictu ali of La ane car gerege : and your family im this lov- ely setting. This an ou beut op ease ter the way. the vprice is only 617.000 the owner. ‘COLORED FAMILIES | cance Fartety re, Spears. RUSSELL A. crt REALTOR 170 W. Pike FE 45908 | - | ' SPECIAL & RMS PART BATH. | wiility, e@ttic, 2 lote fenced in Price 06.680, 736 E. Tennyson _ FE 40838, i LOW DOWN P AYM’T Is INCOME WITH LAKE PRIV!-} | across street from the lake Reni of epartment will make this pay | for lise: 90.730 J. R. HILTZ | REALTOR 148% rh Saginaw ae Eve 3 OPEN SUI 8344 Clinton River Dr rive out | 4d. past Clinton | New 2 room tered painted walls $7000, Reasonable terms PONTIAC REALTY CO} 3? Baldwin FE 56-8275 CHARLES CLOSE IN, charm and conven. tm this spacious 7 acing Po e, ment, ncloned ore ogre 2 car ge rage rE fiestas pring 6 FE 21704 son, 8 room, 2 family house The basiness frontage 1 RESALE. ON MADISON Deis heal, oak Topm., "shown by before buying = this fine location, $10,- mic tile — eluminu 4 ment homes. Cal! for further ip- formation B_D. CHARLES, Realtor rative Real Estate iEzen ints. Tele graph Ph «008i WILL BUILD 22x40 starter home, double con- ‘| etruc om your jot or BRICK BUNGALOW our. ONLY 9680 DOWN larg on. "dining reow. DAMS REALTY CO S"Cecsant "sareae, ealre lot | 989 Auburn Ave FE 43903 : = DRAYTON PLANS JOSEPH F. RE Beautiful 3 bedroom brick Tied | sae ren FE ny too lets, Priced reasonable ai | “6 ROOMS—4% ACRES LASALLE PARK 4 mun ten betement, ut eet, fares mice Wg. Mag ol oil fred edo water Diving reom kitchen. . e = gp ge hg rr \\ ATEREORD a Siar Cones Sesae sree, Pree WATERFORD | : “CUCKTER REALTY “wpe home cn paved Teed, At-| 2% N. Saginaw t Vel ‘nes: Systran 6 ROOM re tae ern hy Outdoor pai “eh geod bungalow excellent location Call sized sce of Pull base-| after 630 FE 20020 _ _ utomatic heat Ideal home Bh elderiy — $3,500 down. Today’ s Best Suy iG ja saves A rare vergeln you hear about Stee Pontioc Lk ma. PE daze? Rochester tat. ora "gare = ——_—_ Sarat _Cone_tabe Ot | Sisal Wap treet Unt 5 ve tie ROCHESTER interesta and ba ell for only DE, Sr strpos Hse souk Merienge can be ar te Ag EN — kK. 4, Hempstead, Realtor Bisse ceiling with fire.) 102 Bast Huron S&reet vin rms “la oauny, we are ome LES. HOPKINS, BROKER ae ME precons Rechester_1415 Mein 6 asta ® ae; w. aa = KINZLER lapetaigiea ESTATES —- A 3 bedroom modern plastered walla newer FHA 2 hardwood floors, storms and) INDIAN VILLAGE S&SPFE- ARM office NEW WATFERPORD Like mew all brict Ad stairway to expansion E s water heater, =. reiki er exchange for bome in Rochester . IN DRAYTON PLAINS - off Sachabew. Newer } bedroom with nice glassed On furtlace 72 nice for garden Only §2 500 ¢own. John Kinzier, Realtor @e W Huron & rE 4 383% WM po answer pt = 20820 Open Eves & Co-operative Real E: ie Fachange bg, M3 2 TO SELi. REALTOR — Partridge Is TRE BIRD TO SEF AHOME © OWN | West Suburban Loon Leake Sherer—s fire ranc trpe home of 2 becroom: car peting and Venetian blinds ciude@ All good sized room: At teched garage Large jot Price and terms cant be beat You Wanted to Live On tie jake This i+ i‘ x thing to ft Believe it Sa eat $67 with ONLY + dwoep and $55 moruir bedrooms, terrific aitchen, 2? nice . Seem, is buying Seven Room< Fine north side :cighborhood. Im- | — ssion Fireplace, sun room, ) @iming room exeetient women’s kitchen “one best, ), end bath up. _laree lot. Price and Cal tor Crtails now. Commerce Area pong: (l4n16 0 each) — oth sir heat, storm sash and . Goutle garage. Terms Wonder. terms? a * es Ae | Finished of wunfi: F YOUR |" ecreens gas heat This home is | approximately 3 years old and tn! excellent condition, Going for only down | NORTH SDE 2 bedroom modern, plastered walls. ei heat close stores and shop. This home ts selling for enly $7000 Cak today COLORED § rooms and bath plastered walls | oil heat. Thies home fs in above average condition Belling for 63 100 down COLORED 1OT8! LOTS' LOTS! We Just received @ large group today u heve oe! jets Gite us @ call We may have the one yc beet jooting for ADAMS REALTY ©O 32 Auburr Ave FR ¢ 13303 NO AGENTS @y ROOM BUNGA low Stairway to attic carpeting dandy garage ol!) heat fenced Jot. 61.700 down 631 E. Madison off Josiyn Phone FE 68-2105 LHA shed 2 apd 3 bed. | Toom homes with .ake “ es | 2 minites from Portiac sly bak @s $36 monthiy OFFERS Fast Side $ room and bath home tn location on paved street with new autem gee furnace, Frees cown. . = New—Vaeant § room, 3 bed low, situated on 8 lots, car- peted li room with wood : en with _ sider contract price enly $13,500, terms. Lake Area Unusually attractive 3 bed- room Colonial bome with private iake privileges on exclusive Pine yes Living room with natural fireplace, car ge rage ing Value at ais. 130 Suburban Brick Beautiful brick home having fire- terms. floor, Full apace Situated on lot 150s 325) «with lar trees, close to new grade $16,206, terms 10 Acres Modern Country Home c deled large 7 room pn ’ American home carpeted roughout. First floor has living room with natural fireplace, dining room, kitehen, lavatory, den to 8, Sun 1 to & Ph. OR }-1872 or OL 3-1769 ) Dixie Highway _ Waterford Elizabeth Lake Estates tleges. 2 bedrgs. down. Rm 2 more re wires and dinette, large liv room $2,500 down. MORRISON-HEUGH CO. 173 West Ano Arbor. VE 6-5521 WEST SIDE BRICK Beautiful 7 rm, home. overlook- . nice heater gas fired recreation rm. 3 car garage, solid drive. Terms. with netura! fireplace. ace dressing ‘| Base. | furnece. garage tres. 624,500 terms. Roy Annett Inc. Federal 3-7183 Lance peers BASEMENT to Waterford is foes, orgy Will pay for itself poo’ 4 more smal) houses with amall down-payments GEO. MARBLE, Realtor 6261 avpenaoss nas RD. PHONE OR 31268 “STOP—LOOK | 12 Of «long ae!) bome with bemt. is house has * for 3 yre With acre — ea a = A bar- =." at H Phone MY 26032 BARGAIN DAYS has everyth for comfortab.e iving, Mas ee he: and right at yment ou must ou are interested in a nice 2. LAKE FRON Two ) Gana home located on nice lake, Has fenced jot, 000 with terms. GEORGE R. IRWIN 260 = Bald Phone FE 54-0101 or FE 2-8544 BY OWNER RANCH HOME 2 years old ¢ bedrooms. Large liv- ing room with fireplace snack bar and dining L garage, on a lot pga $11,300 with $3,200 down OR ~C-CLARK $050 DOWN 85.960 FULL PRICE Lincoln Jr High & Wisner School district Mas bedrooms. 3} pe bath, gas heat, large jot $005 DOWN $5905 FULL PRICE Purnished home, forced air fur- bony full bath vacant, on city line. Feil $7460 FULL Vacant 2 bedrooms & bath, lote 2‘) car garage. Move right in, $1,500 DOWN $6.850 FULL PRICE Close in, 3} bedrooms, 23 ft, biv- rm. with dining space, NEAR HIGH SCHOOL Large home 11 rooms and 3 baths has been used for small i ta with liv- tng quarters, large Sigh lot 602146. 3 car garage, excellent opportu- nity for doctor or professional man. Cali John K. Irwin REALTOR a 1925 pues oe N inaw Street Phone FE S403 Eve. FE 2- STONE WEST SUBURBAN New 3 bedroom —— — with breeseway to’ gar oak Noors, lastered walls, 20 . pving room, ull bath, extra and breeseway, full basen ei] heat, | - Straits lak ile Midd aoe privileges on Francs FE. “Bud” Miller Realtor $19 Joslyn FE 2-0253 Customers Parking Space in Rear INDIAN VILLAGE See this nice brick rooms and bath bedroom second floor . reation room. Oi] furnace. ‘lanes PONTIAC RE ALTY CO. 731 Baldwin . PE 35-8275 LAKE AREA 20a13 liv- room, excellent kitchen, ce- 2 bedroom wit: 3 piece bath ese ge =, and city bus "CORT M. “IMBI. ER sbDaT Joslyn FE 40524 Daily ‘tl 8 Sunday 2 to 6 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange BY OWNER 5 ROOMS PART hg utility attic, 2 lots fenced Priced $6 850 with $1250 down » E Tennyson off Joslyn FE +005) DOLLAR VALUES — | 2 Acres Good 4 room home on 2 acres of good level garden soil Home is wit partiy te complet: beth New siding. also 2 car garage and small garden tractor All this. with enty of shade and lawn ae be] conte a better call now Suburban W. Reach ace and vestibule en- ; astered walls, large breezeway paneled in knotty ine, automatic of] heat and elec- kitchen oak floors, plastered ric hot water heater concrete walls, basement, furnace, lot 80x| driveway Cedar shakes siding 180 feet. 2 car garage. Quick A big house with @ small price. possession. Don't wait, call today. $2.200 DOWN $5,500 FULL PRICE . Real value, ‘3. bedrooms, 3 pe Crawford | beth oi] furnace, auto hot water aid AGENCY Many more to choose from Drive | REATLOR OPEN EVES cul to our office and look over 2141 Opdyke PE 41540 our photo-listings, Parking. CAMERON H. CL ARK | PHONE FE 46482 1962 W Huron Open Evenings Co-operative Real Estate Exchange GATEWAYS to, Stsefitts fates HAPPINESS | PAST SIDE—PAVED CROOKS ROAD Spick and span large well aianneall 4 room 1 bedrooms, insulated | home with tile bath, oi] heat Venetian blinds, storms and) screens. metal awnings jot 652200 excellent garden spot l‘e car) garage Offered at $7,960, terms. WEST—3 ACRES BRICK AND SHINGLE ies a love rg | planning rd this siz ~_ home from your iairanes into attractive 25° living reom wip patural fireplace and picture windows roughout the six rambling rooms, complete -1952 BUNGALOW Lovely suburban home with at- tached Fa -_ on e parcel 00x 256 , clean as a pin with oak floors and plastered walls m . Niece neighborhood 6 ACRE ESTATE WEST OF TOWN Fpnabrtoinl Early American oll heat. Lovely screened h. Here is a country me on «6 ved road hool bus to lie and ehurch = schools ert lawn, lots of rw shade ag, tage | room for a y for children. This wher wants ac 80 see M today. $10,000 down, - PAUL A. KERN, Realtor 31 Oakland Ave rE “Real Estate Since 1919" 2. bedroom moierm $300 down bath and extra lavatory, full | — & acre, veer @ room frame and basement of! heat, 27 reereation stone hoate or M15 $8500 full room, storms and screens Built rice with terms C Pancus 1019 in 1680 Only 2 — west of eee ome lie reverse city limits Offered $19. 500 charecs terms SEEING 18 BEL TEVING To To Bell-To Trad | rN BU TT- WEL INSURE. iT NOUN TPE INI} | L/ Ni Ly i om bunga * oak floors | | Member Co-op Real Eat, Exch Ine ster wall bat Bh ey shower full base - t a Peay I E 2-0263 ciose ts Ww stores and | Open Eves. "til 8. Sun 14 transport ati ; REALTY CO. REALTOR rane. | Bid” Miller | 1078 W. Huron adhe NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH | _ POST OFFICE . s18 J iar FE 2.0283 Curtone Parting Space in Rear! “ B NCH HOME H ES AN te = IN BROOK. ee oo erage Ms ester Priced Beautiful, long. low b.ing o . ad cown one brick home Full basement, two nfurmation fireplaces and ot] heat. Full bath 'GHTS BY OWNER and half beth 2 car attac hea ran me Breesew arage panoramic view from “ garnet 1 tesement 1 ermopane cture Window, lot a Forepace im breeseway 1002300 $21. total price or com teem Located on sider older home in trade. lar,e 2 ¢ ke rres) = fem See | OFF OAKLAND 61.359 DOWN Larse ated lhe. modern hom — . - asem bin-fed yas . BUYS clean 2 car garage, 04.980 total price. ELIZ LAKE FSTATES 3 bedroom: HEIONTS ranch, $12.800 ‘ie80 BUNGALOW attractive bed- ELIZ LAKE Estates. tic-ctory| hme for inte Oy dion. ates bungalow, $11,500. entry hall” csothes closet, walls, base- DONELSON PARK new 3 betroom| fment wih ‘gus ase at il rapeh. $14 800 50x 150 Gol tine ne. Nearly new 2 TRADE, WE SELL ™ « "DORRIS & SON WM A REALTORS CO-OP MEMBERS KE 5 782 Huron = _ FE 41557 NNEDY ° an REA! TORE. ile ris one Evenings a 1 — FE ¢)060 A HOME OF YOUR OWN You're Missing the Boat Good 6 room home just off East Bivd Convenient to GMT&aC Owner says sel) ing very reasonable terms, Cau N for further deta: NICHOLIE AND HARGER CO. 33 WW. @uron & Ph FE_ 5-618) Open 8.30 ‘til 8 30 | ow NEW NEW NEW 1 reputation for a ae aon | oe itself, see our a with its sitractively denned fe overhang, hail ‘be picture aces ye blower be ‘ol | e floor nthe. pric Be ive only site win with | wn Make an appoint- poreeny today FRONT RANCH gracious living check these features. large recreation room natura; fi and appointment to 4 PER CENT IN EST TER 2 | We built this house in ‘52. 2 bed- | rooms with stairway | tshed attic tile. bath: | Only 62.500 down. | os unfin- heat | «| Russell Young | Two see this today ‘ by Hershberger “Can you beat that? pictures of our home life!”’ Now he'll probably try to sell us For Sale Houses For Sale Houses 43 “BROWN 9005 «down Here is o real rent beater for some y couple All the furniture inci . Two road matic gas furnace. larg kitchen, auto-hot water, priced = only $4,995. 9995 down ate Brand new 3 bedroom . double kitchen all interior studding Large rooms You can save money here. Priced at. only $11,500 Lovely Colonial lake home. 1‘ baths.” basement, 1 furnace, attached ee A-1 condition two lots ruly, a good home at a very moderate price $12,000 Large 4 bedroom modern home on west side, paved st 1% car garage, nice lot, auto- matic gas heat, Excellent “com. dition, Terms. \ lL. H. BROWN, Realtor 1362 W. Huron Ph. FE 2-4810 Member Co-op, Real Estate Exch LOVELY 6 RM COLONIAL $11,600 cash 169 Seminole FE 2-4348. modern fireplace, Ad Nr. McConnell School Here's an opportunity — a good home, plus income! Fotcr large rooms and bath down, a pri- vate stairway to 3 room and bath apartment ba A fine fun basement inclosed porch 2 car garage — it's clean throughout ana t po value at $11,750 CARL W. BIRD, Realtor $16 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. FE ¢421! FE 5-1382 BY OWNER: FOUR ROOMS, ALL modern, newly decorated througb- out. TimFen forced-eir ail heat, stove enclos: to schoo: and buses. $1,100 down. Phone FE 5-3373. SMALL UNFINISHED HOME t $780 down. No agems, EM 3-226. er Established 1016 veer SIDE. Can be used as room- ue house or ~~ full basement with gas heat.enc porch, front and rear. Garage, paved street. $11,600 terms. DRAYTON AREA. See this fine 5- ‘ith he rm. home attached heated garage. Modern kitchen, vene- tian blinds, oil furnace, alumi- num storms, extra large New in 1 Only $9,750, terms LAKE 30x50 ft. All oft rong gy car garage extra fruit. this home now at terms. Call tonight. $1,600 DOWN, It's really nice. See this le home west of Pon- tiac. Carpeted 17 ft. —— lace, full ition. ga Deivileges A real buy at $5,750 1 ACRES. North suburban off Bald- 2-bedrm | omen a ode = modern kitchen, breakf oo garage. Poultry ‘So miles from city limits. s12,680, terms. — BUSINESS. Ideal — elty Now show return on tearing | —. jus own- er's living quarters. roer large garage. Call FLOYD KENT, Realtor 4 W. Lawrence FE 54-6105 Next us Sons Power LOT @x 130 Frame amo 2 bedrooms, — LAKE ORION $795 down $40 ma. 2 bedrms. bath, basement, large lot, vacant. Mrs. Woodcock MY 34876 $1,000 down 4 room H New 4% room . 2 room e e. m 1 ecre all to. co with $1,200 dn. WALTER GR floors, sere storm windows, garage. lot excellent for eS, *. with terms. Less HAYDEN ais he Huron st ives PE 32001 or EM 3500 WILL TRADE 4 ROOM | $4,000, for large house, my eq bal 300, ob ‘m new ance $3. garage. | gered drivewey, lots, ol enty ees and fruit — Oo in pooeg tH end. 21 Partridge 18 TRE “BIRD” A FIREETACE, That will make wtiful, ing lawn, Has of] heat, the hardwood floors, attached garage and is just like new = the bong through. Living reom has mopane picture windows Lesae northwest of Pontiac in a’ well restricted neighborhood Cal! | today on this oh. so wonderful ranch type suburban home lo- | cated on a large lot Just $15.- 500 is the full price | 4 BEDROOMS | Located right tn the city is this! 7 room home IK has a full basement and garage. Full price is just $7,860 om easy terms. NEW BRICK RANCH HOME Located northwest of Pontiac over- jooking beeutiful Silver Lake. Has 6 rooms and 1% baths, bed- rooms, attached garage and large lot. A natural Roman bric features, home must be seen to ciated. Call today for WARD FE. PARTRIDGE, REALTOR @ W. Huron St. Open Eve. 7 to 9 NEAR THE LAKES | 4% room shell home, which e rs, tank, and eh inside and save & le of -cash, only §700 *. “Bud” Miller seater be Josiyn FE 2-035) | stomer Parking Space in Rear BATEMAN \ a me Huron end ; this Francis paved convenient to choc: & Torte. Only $10.- 000 Terms, too. KAMPSEN™ Realtors. FE 4-0528 FE 2-8316) GAYLORD Co-operative Real Estate Exchange windows, oi] heat, 2 fi e wo Frei” t nea cabevew * ana recreation lake. Fireplace, oi] fu fe screened porch. $3,500 €tarkston-~ 5 oenes | ° om a poms ppg ee oe Le with terms. CARROLL PORRITT 26% West Huron FE 271% __Eve. FE 2-7282 or FE 241% BRICK INCOME rent for you end income will more than pay off e. Aon =, and bath each plus room modern on_ rear of ho Garage, See % TODAY. JOSEPH F, REISZ FE 2-0259 53% W. Huron St. Open eves ‘til 8 Cherokee Hills ring | Brand new 3 bedroom brick ranch window, fire- place, tile bath, breakfast bar, automatic heat and hot water, attached garage. Priced at $18,500! » North Side ~ A handy dandy: clean, neat, 2 bedroom home with full basement, automatic gas heat and hot wa- ter, ful] din room, close to bus a stores. Priced at $8,250, terms LW ashington Park Brick and frame 2 bedroom home Priced ai $11,900, terms. H. Delos | “BUD” NICHOLIE Real Estate and Insurance 40 Mt. Clemens 8t pe] 5-1201 Eve. Mrs. Kelchner _ 5-6866 $450 One acre-3 room bungalow. ~ < 7 Reet some finishing. W jin W RIGHT, Realtor ia°S Telegraph Estate ste Pr 6008s KNUDSEN EAST WILSON Dream home, carpeted. modern- kitchen, fs teed room with built in is. F.W.A. heat. of} fired. with : new 2 car WEST SIDE ou : heme for a H ed down, heat. A very fam at $7,500 w #2, and $60.00 a mo. WM. H. KNUDSEN TOR REAL re FE easit, Eve. 2-6320- 2-370 FLASH! ii Fas ane 3 Large home with 4% bedrooms | and bath. A, JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 __1704 S. Telegraph Rd. _ HURON GARDENS SAVE MONEY — Two houses, one 6 room & 3 Se room. e 3 car paved down. Pike Ot +e — LR.TRIPP West Suburban’ B Genesee Street Indian Village Modern 5& room with expan- sion attic. gas heat, screens and storm sach. 2 car ga- rage. Attractively priced. Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 22 W. Lawrence Street Open Evenings FE 54-8161 or “PE 5-030 $6,950 BRAND NEW FHA. Amaz- bed ine value in 2 room bungalow —— walls, oak floors, of] heat, 52 gai- lon electric hot water heat- x. with shower City sewer and side- walk Cali now for trent to see the ‘home buy’ a" Only $1,250 down us mortgage cost and less $43 per month includes taxes insurance Let's — NOW! We have the ey. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 73 W Huron, Open 0-0 Poone FE 3-7103 or OR 31648 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange WEST HIGHLAND, 4 BEDROOM rnace, m, new . Min- Milford GILES ACANT! ay : i —_ setting - -_ Phono vi v Eryide “tof mils "around are th bedrooms up and two down, a liv reom, dining oO Oy ee reauired for targa famby, ot master bedroom or the ‘Ww. Terms can be ar- ag, ony trade for small- er e in ety. itt : : af | Fee 1 ony “ ake { { { d i E E vif a ms 2 ra ee ow Poll . Takes large payment. . EAST SIDE. 6 room modern home on corner lot, paved street location ‘or this family home. Living room, dim room, and modern- ized down. 3 béed- rooms and bath . tub basement, p new furnace. Garage Al tive e ¥ ; np “‘pasement. | walls, floors, deluxe kiteben, BRICK. STONE . pe street. Yes, % has everything. Quick too. $17,850. RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 1S W. Huron, Open 0-8 Phone FE 3-1103 or OR_3-1648 _| Co-operative Real Estate © e This Week's Specials COMMERCE VILLAGE 4 bedroom frame. Very ee On paved highway K: dining living tag room. base *eMBREE & GREGG 1656 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-4393 § ROOMS, MODERN, Gas EF HEAT, Ven, blinds, carpets, — NEW BUNGALOWS 2 and 3 bedroom homes in west suburban + east Biva This home is. par. tially furnished $5,750 with $1,500 F. "C. Wood Co. sag tay el — Lar OR 3-1235 am p.m. Office After 5 OR 3-2603_ WEST SIDE FOR SALE BY NER 4 bedrooms, suto. heat, car- a! ~~ room. PRICE 12,500, payment 62,500. FE s ROOMS & BATH & UTILITY Near Oakland Lake. te tsk Lew avon permed: Fat 5-4628. $1,500 DOWN GAYLORD Rent Lake Property _ 44A th and your family wili be you for a e we can save you & jot of trouble. because we have one with a 120 ft. of ‘ake frontage on Lakevile Lake By the the wi also as year hom« “ROGER B. HENRY BROKER Phone OLive 1-6111 or OLive 32-0011 $11 Main &t Rochester Mich. Say—Look at This! We have 2 very nice homes for “ie $1, Roger B. Henry ott heat, Livernois ond 17 Mile 7 HOUSES. 1 INCOME. BIG DIS-| area. $11,600. count eash, or terms, FE —— — = ORTON 3 RM beh gg Igy Sta eid wim et ie) Ee ERD ee OF Se Ee “| 4940 Rochester Rd. at 18 oie Ra uo 6-1$11 1-781) One Acre — | The All Woman Realty | WHY BE CROWDED? cone | = ee spirit. Sea. bedroom Has beth, garage. of gatgoee, taxes, only $2,000. Woodward Estates 40x133, paved street, sidewalka, Oakwood Manor Waterford 230x269. Perry Park Seesilent building sites, nee John K. Irwin REALTOR et Convenient terms For’ information call OR 3-7614 ~ HOMESITE MACEDAY GARDENS Lari Sanat ELWOOD FARMS 80x300 ft, level, soil, Offered at terms JONES AIRPORT Large wooded lot, nearly 3 acres in good west suburban location, Offered at $1,200 with easy terms. BAKER BEACH Large lake privileges lot 80x310 ft. Offered at $750 easy terms. WILLIAMS LAKE GARDEN Lovely lake gute lot, good — From $550 up with easy rms. F. C. Wood Co. 1725 Williams Lake Rd ooo Office Open 8 a.m. to 5 garden with easy ___ Office After 6, OR 3-60988 CLEAR LAKE 3 LARGE LOTS. _Lake rights OA 8-665 1 WOODED A beautiful site located in a gooo and STREAM Oniy 1 Pao A 4% acre parcel with @ a ae ar arouad stream. lanl yp — site on ® slight hill. $165 “LADD — Cass Lake \- APPROVED 7 ——_ onal home sites in Dray- HOLMES-BARTRAM» oO. Siese Pires Sn een 2 LOTS 170x180 BONDALE NEAR _Earlmoo. 8° 400 FE 23-1182 LADD 1 ACRE close to Rochester, 1 ACRE, corner lot, $1800, 1% ACRES, hilly, ¢ 4 ACRES, 62700. 6 610 ACRES with sata, snag ta mat an Oded in Rochester, Sale Business Property 49 Near Te’ Ra on the Great Dixie way, Zoned commer cial, Priced u. DIXIE HWY. ——— 180 ft. of ideal front the Good spot tor smal) “eat lot or just about $2,800 down, WARD E. PARTRIDGE, REALTOR FE 2-8316 @ W. Hurod st, BUSINESS LOTS NEAR THE NEW Straits of Mackinaw brid, Mig U. 8 BI: Ales, on & ne" 8. near new a rns’ P. . Box 134, __Leverin HAMMON D- Por lease of sale, Seuthwert Poo ie Office, scales. large com building. ¢ | sia Main st. OL 10111 lake large : i 2% W 2TOR window aoe ——- — Figen gee | LADD FE 5-741 Eve. FE 56-4714 sell for $5,975 with easy corner —_ (yg bee on terms, ROCHESTER OFFICE with 8 room GILES REALTY CO. | sew 2 vetreom nome, cise to| shown by eppettnent Guume a ue REALTOR serene Rochester, ready to move in. rE days FE ¢7908 eve-. ‘ ron —— - ae ae = 2 Bedroom ho: FO SELL § ROOMS & BA PULL BasE- west side, eavemmens pore 50 ft. — ment. 2 unfinished rooms up-| on 4 homes, stairs. $1,800 down, $6.278 balance | matte) bent $210 per montn income also 3 a . PE ¢74652. 2 E. Col) vy. ant 3 bedroom home, base-| facin, Maple Dr. Te ace 2 to a WN ee oi] heat, 2 car 4 p™. bedroom e. Large Toom_ picture window. Inge | 4 bedroom oft heat, garage, large} 120 FT. FRONTAGE ses th antid,, septic tank © in — Les ed 5 Teserene Re. Just conte y Realtor PE $-9522. pa hg home, sutomatt Priced for quick sale, STORAGE, Light Manafacturing a ee Two ogg Hho - os ' 4 ; ' ‘ { ’ + . ' ‘ = == | ra F ‘ f ecg | a 4 : x af i > + | an Py oe tant Die as Oe aR i | es ns cae vere ‘ie uh ats “ is ve! \ f i ny xk ‘ a4 its a | het sd fae Mag pk. A) Bier a | c es pal ee ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1054 ° , : Sale or Exchange 50 : tabi tor bed Ca ) For Sale or ram! sae i or ig FR Ban 57; CARNIVAL nt onslied For Sele Leud Care 61)» For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars a _ EASY MOXEY??? ~ Phere’s Se tite ee Bap he sy Ee, boars, im tact oa oe FL a ge SL apd 4.3 just ere ocr ent ab only 080 000, athe TAVERN—LV. QTRS. In the thumb near some of the “we” every- ve. (3425). REAL ESTATE GERV. of PONTIAC BANK BLDG. room for lease or Coo ley Lake Ra. EM 3-601. SALE OR nag = GARAGE AND ter 4:30 p.m. SECTAORANT FOR GALE 01 . Lake Orion. MY 23-4000 INCOME - Oe sea wale eons aioe bene, cc. Also beautiful 8 room 3 story home in fine condition Ser 4 tise epestmanis, Let yest -_ eyes see rd AGENCY ages =e ‘Ff oF iE of EE ICE CREAM WHOLESALE & Ht a cal] | i at i f COAST-TO-COAST Open Need Money? $25 to *500 Is ag near as you telephone. Just FE 53-8121 ey Pee A Home & Auto vacation land in the state. county . f} Get $10 & 00 GET CASH QUICKLY UP TO $500 pg Pe Loans also made on fur- Signature and other appt Loan Co. FE 2-9206 | 203 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDO. LOANS $25 to $500 Community Loan Co. 30 E. Lawrence FE 2-713} La FRIENDLY SERVICE CASH PROMPTLY? — niture or note We've been m friendly loans since 1006 Prone or come in Quick, Friendly Service No red tape OAKLAND|= or td en car fur | _ ‘_ AUTO GLASS. - auto glass, FOR COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE Bumping refinishing. Bee ~ cae Oliver Motor Sales ‘ FREE ESTIMATE ol NUR, Gt BRAID MOTOR SALES See M&M Motor Sales peo For used cars any make model. ‘Baxter & |" “HIGH DOLLAR” __ Mortgage Loans 54 ilaiel “yyy FL — TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN ROCHESTER, MICH. wan Frog Ph. Rochester, OL 60711 LOW INTEREST Unilim fund. or sineie fam —t. Mofigage canceled H. G. PETERSON 1310 Ponti: State Bs. . Bid Phone FE 5-8406 or FF For Sale Housetrailers 55 TRAILER EXCHANGE Pei age gi 22 ft. to 45 ft. tm length. Up to é to pay. Transportation Reasonably PRICED '46 OLDSMOBILE _ Bg ny Peg iy ae $195 46 CHEVROLET MICHIGAN’S FINEST THE A ———— ‘47 Olds Hydro. MICHIGAN'S Be te CORNER O r poprecaagey, Ht Max oo ¢ 5 AS mane & | eerie 51 CHEVROLET -| natin eater a eneowner, mew | oe Wi £6 Pa on \ 1 NEA Service, Oe. “So far it’s just like roller skating, isn't it?” For Sale Used Cars 61 For Sale Used Cars 61 1953 CHEVROLETS Your Choice Of 15 Beautiful Cars Executive’s Cars Demonstrators 2 Doors, 4 Doors, Convertibles & Sport Coupes — $1295 MICHIGAN’S FINEST CADILLAC, 1963, @, 4 DOOR SE- {3.00 miles, 3.500. PE 278, ; ‘ 1961 : a extra care Also have 2 ar. a 4dr. H J. VanWelt _OR +133, : CHEVIE ‘S30 CONVERT. $760, FE 40406 after 6 p.m. CHEVROLET 53 Cadillac cpe, DeVille “53 Olds. super 88 conv. *S3 Buick Riviera cpe. ’53 Olds. Custom 98 sed. | ’53 Olds. super 88 tudor 53 Chev. Bel Air "$2 Pont. Chieftain 8 tudor ’52 Buick special sedan "52 Olds. Custom 98 sed. ’52 Chev, deluxe tudor '52 Ford Custom sedan 51 Ford Custom 8 tudor | ’51 Merc, Custom sedan "4°51 Pont, Chieftain i 8 tudor, ’51 Olds. super 88 tudor 51 Chev. deluxe tudor "50 Olds. super 88 sed ’50 Olds. super 88 cpe. *50 Cadillac 62 cpe. "49 Olds. 76 tudor 49 Chev. deluxe tudor ’49 Ford Custom 8 tudor 48 Dodge deluxe tudor 49 Hudson super 6 tudor 48 Olds. 98 sed. '47 Olds, 76 tudor ’47 Pont, Chieftain 8 sed. "47 Chev. club coupe 46 Chev. Fleetmaster "46 Merc. club cpe. or Your Bank JEROME LDS-CADILLAC . ome. WHAT IS A GOOD BUY? In Used Cars it’s a lot of things. Like plenty of low-cost mileage ... easy riding comfort .. . clean, attractive interior and exterior _.. and most im- portant, a fair price! That's why a reliable dealer is your assurance of a good buy in a Used Car, Easy terms. In- spect these OLIVER val- ues without delay: '53 Buick Riviera, Dynaflow, spoke wheels, radio, heater and all extras. We'll sell for below our cost. ‘50 Mercs. 3 -To Choose From $795 Each Take Your Choice ‘51 Buicks 7 To Choose From $1,095 up All have radio and-heater, some have Dynaflow. Convertibles 5 To Choose From Buicks & Pontiacs Save, As Much As $300 per car Before Springtime SALE Transportation SALE 41 Pontiac »NO. down payment on} these transportation spe- cials and you have 20 months to pay! Will ac. cept any reasonable offer on these sound cars, "BUICK BOB” Oliver Your Friendly Buick Dealer Corner of Orchard Lake & Williams St. Phone FE 2-9101 ‘ 0) nwt..Afr r * Vi ROL! 46 Pont. Chieftain 8 tudor | OREVROL 4 IF CONDITION COUNTS WITH YOU __GOUNT ON. US COMMUNITY Motor Sales Inc. Buick-Pontiac “All Square” 1953 CHEV. $1,595 Hardtop _— convertible equipped with radio, heater, powerglide, white wall tires, and has very low mileage. Beautiful light) green showroom finish, “All Square” 1951 BUICK $1,295 Super hardtop, Finished in. sporty 2 tone gray, luxurious interior fit- tings and is complete with all accessories. “All Square” 1952 BUICK $1,995 Super 4 door sedan, Hand- some 2-tone green finish, the interior is spotless. All accessories including whitewall tires. You'll be proud to drive this one. Many More to Choose From Just a Few Left NO MONEY DOWN 48 Ford, excellent. ..$495 '46 Ford (runs) ...$159.95 ’47 Pont., excellent. ..$395 "48 Pont. conv. ...+. $495 "48 Buick, perfect... .$495 37 Plymouth (beats walking). ..$45 YOU GET A BETTER USED CAR FROM A BUICK DEALER COMMUNITY Motor Sales Inc. Buick-Pontiac Open 804'N. Main Hees eeeeneere Huron Motor Sales 982 W. Huron iH to] ara : ; sésssecd Pontiac-Buick -|7551 Auburn, Utica, Mich. REpublic 2-3001 Pan ise 3 DR. nO ND ate seer one os _ FORD V4. y cA ‘oa 10 miles, : \e) vet rane PF CY OWEN Your Ford Dealer Presents LUCKY RIDER No. 1 Is This Your License Number ? 12 number alse MICHIGAN EB 87 (This posted im our window) If Se . You're Lucky Because You Have ~ Cash Waiting AT . Cy Owens Every day this weet we're But... If You Are Not Today’s Lucky Rider You Can Be A LUCKY DRIVER Tomorrow of One of Our Lucky Week Specials Look Over These Honeys! ‘1952 Pontiac. Sharp car. 1951 Studebaker sedan, radio, heater and hydra- matic, 1951 Plymouth sedan, ra- dio & heater. 1951 Ford tudor, radio & heater. $625 1950 Ford tudor, radio & heater, $545 1951 Packard sedan, ra- dio, heater and Ultra- matic shift. $825 1951 Kaiser Traveler, ra- dio, heater and Hydra- matic. $495 1950 Studebaker tudor, ra- dio, heater and overdrive, $395 + CY “OWENS Your. Ford’ Dealer. 147 5, Saginaw St. Phone FES-AIOL Yes, if you bought your ' — HABI OK. USED CARS It Serves - You Right present car from Jack Habel Chevrolet. It serves you right and will continue to serve you right until it’s time to trade again at Habel’s “O.K.” Used Car Lot, 93 Buick TWO DOOR Radio, heater, whitewall tires; very clean, | $1,845 ‘02 Chev. CLUB COUPE Low mileage, maroon and black finish and white- wall tires. $1,145 ‘O02 Ford TWO DOOR Radio & Heater One Driver $1,095 ‘51 Chev. FOUR DOOR Radio, heater and Power-|! glide, 2 tone green. $945 ‘50 Ford | TWO DOOR “8” Radio, heater and over- drive; sharp. $745 See bald GOOD VALUE Transportation Nothing Over $450 Many. Way Under *46 Oldsmobile 4 dr. "48 Mercury 4 dr. ’47 Chevrolet 4 dr. ’47 Pontiac 2 dr. ’48 Pontiac 2 dr. 46 Chevrolet 2 dr. ’47 Lincoln Customer Confidence Over 35 Years JACK HAB J n) B45 -GHEVROLET S. Saginaw at Cottage PHONE FE 4-4546 CAPRI SINTILAT- 1953 ing siren red with ebony — = ceupanral fre heater, Hydre- metic trassmission and’ the vom. ous Lincoln to while away fs, mice the great ot Som creation Lincoln a " : fis 3 ke lg as ft q 23H i ut re 3E8F fete ois le thi winter expense and re- pairs, buy an easy-start- ing good used car now, 1963 PACKARD Fine heater, tinted owner two charmer! 61644 YOU will receive complete sat- and lass. excellert One paint. A real 1 Fy '52 PLYMOUTH MICHIGAN’S FINEST 53 PONTIAC out, $1,895 MICHIGAN’S _ FINEST ~~ TACOBSON'S _ wnt | We have '47 through ’S1 Hudson.- Come see us i = + en ra N cs 4 of THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22,1958 -PONTIAC| RETAIL | _ STORE GOODWILL -USED CARS “Not ‘ot a Name but a Policy” acaces re eer MT, CLEMENS &T BUY YOUR USED CAR FROM A DEALER YOU KNOW 1946 AND 1947 FORDS PONTIACS CHEVROLETS SPECIAL! s PONTIAC 4 DR. CHIEFTAIN “SOLID VALUE $695 1948 AND 1649 CHEVROLETS PONTIAC FORDS SPECIAL! 1946 CHEVROLET TRANSPORTATION $195 “SOLID VALUE” "80, 51 AND '52 AND A FEW °S3s CHEVROLETS PLYMOUTHS PONTIACS FORDS DODGES __ OLDSMOBILES HARDTOPS SUBURBANS STATION WAGONS SPECIAL! 1949 FORD 2 Door, Radio & Heater $395 - “SOLID VALUE” SPECIAL! 198 PACKARD SEE THIS ONE! “SOLID VALUE” $395 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE Factory Branch 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill Phone FE 3-7117 Mercurys and Lincoln Tudors and 4 Doors Demonstrators AND FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS. up.to $800 Discount LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer “FoR Ng Fe TEAne OPEN EVENINGS “Se Pontiac FP & K- we @ Chrysier Conv $396 ‘82 Por. Vic Bleck aad tvory Dyna: eras at "weed ule 2 dr ‘$1 Ford Vic Fordometic 2 Chet Deuxe Styline — “Bob” Boles Auto Sales 171 8 Saginew St PONTIAC ‘53. $1,560 61 063 sees 2 ee cS Fe PLYMOUTR ~ M-26 PONTIAC { PONTIAC, ? ‘For Sale Used Trucks 62 MODEST MAIDENS __For Sale Used Cars 61 PRICED .TO SELL! 196 DeSOTO— PACKARD PLYMOUTH 1990 MERCURY 1ps1 DODGE - KAISER PACKARD - NASH 1953 PLYMOUTH HERE ARE BUYS! $60 to $295 ‘#8 Chevrolet ‘a? Pord ‘4? Dodge ‘}e Mercury ALSO New & Used Trucks «Riemenschneider Bros. DODGE- PLYMOUTH “T om i HAB =r me ch od USED TRUCKS LOOKING truck? Then look these over before you buy. ‘49 CHEV. 3%, TON PICKUP Ne wred paint and ready for work. 49 STUDE. , TON PICKUP ate is one of the cleanest 232 S. Saginaw St fa & , | in the body nor a knock Phone FE 2-9131 Your “4 on “i a “wie | mate good paym rive Ps ‘$1 or ‘83 model oi "only 33 —, Act ‘6 cacseat a (Sxx" ‘ORION ia MOTOR SALES at Buckhorn L MY 2-361) ‘se 8. acetal 4 DR Hydramatic. 2 tone green White- | and) other extras. FE. bt-rel REED A A SECOND CAR OR CHEAP | ee ORION MOTOR & M.24 at Buckhorn Lr uy «fh 17. 2 DOOR, Low ood tires good cond +7423, 714 | >. after 4 PONTIAC ‘33, HYDRAMATIC. LOTS oarae fos} PonTIAc @._ Dark $1,448 | FE ¢7642 REO 2 T BTAKE Fate c) Oe ERADIOMEATER. | . Reasonabdie “63 CUSTOM CATALINA ee "aaiea. Fownac ‘63, 2 DOOR. vill 8 — ate, call evenings FE "SQ PONTIAC 8 at arn MICHIGAN’S FINEST PAVED Lot j joaded with extras. | of re, 22001 Low mileage 1,600 | AC ‘33 DELUXE 8 cath —— black 1 leather, equipped _@ay after 1 pm. FE Portiac ‘52. an. FE 22110 _ after 4 P. it PONTIAC & 4 DOOR. CLEAN. easonabdle MA 6.2425 ‘8 rng AMLEWER. 2 door 9-3646 , PONTIAC ‘% CHEPTIAN DE- luse, eo. 15,000 miles. rE 2 os 4 DOOR DE tuze, Hydra. Loaded ace E ES ‘3. 2 DOOR DELUXE. — ana accessories, FE Fowriat ‘ai 2 DOOR GOOD CON- troquots FE 23-1581 _ Sher Ar a aS | sTupES: AKER SEDA Radio heater Vou motor automatic transmission. Original bleck finish $595 MICHIGAN’S. FINEST THE BIO PAVED LOT ON THE COR fa YYARD AND 13 MILE ROAD | woo J For Sale Used Trucks 62. Michigan's we've had. Not a dent in the motor. ‘00 CHEV. 14 TON PICKUP A good clean job and priced to move, ‘| 'S) CHEV. 14 TON PICKUP ‘Ol G.M.C. 15 TON PICKUP ALWAYS A large selection at Habel’s THE THRIFTY TRUCKERS LOT JACK CHEVROLET Reece $325. Bibiey Coal Co. Cass. FE 5-8163 "' Cy Owens rs mK" ' tractor,| GAS RA . Ps “i pe ed Pr labor. Michi- television, FR 47810. Finest USED TRUCKS | Fo. Avetion Mart M2 et PARTY WOULD LIKE TO BUY . Orton, MY 31631. _| Sced set of bunt beds wet would A-1 Condition |-aate hoes acaean come. & reas, case call PE 5-3626 TRUCK A-T Quality wen baten gent bewsstn ial ore ; 1c WASHING MACHIN € j ; e a . la Tic w A-1 Value | €e- ace ee good condition, $85. PE graph Open_Eves. Wisesasis ek Ot BARGAINS | EXCHANOE YOUR LAND CON. | © LINOLEUM, 9x12. _ . = as | tract (where you have os paint ; '46 FORD $1 Ford Express erty) for flake” model car Cer & cash. | Jack's Linoleum tsa 8 Petry 2-Ton Platform % Ton | wn fmape A Lats ecb | BOTTLE GAS building do 109 pounds of bottle gas installed $295 'S) Ford % To ment on. 2. bedroom “home” fe for only 421.71 complete including we J UML Lake Orion or Oxford MY Btoves converted — Utilitv 23-1631 ay; We install —— Ken- 'S2. CHEVROLET equity Iw w FoRTIAC zon, Pegiees Sp, som Dente mae %-Ton Panel SO Chevrolet Wtasmenee Sher 8 pS. VACUUM ERS BRUSHES its : $795 Sedan Delivery Sale Household Goods 71 asm TOR Fi BNITURE Of '4$7 CHEVROLET $1 Ford 6 FT. REFRIQ GOOD COND. $25. | CaAsH WAITING FOR USED PUR- Sedan Deliv 14 Ton Panel Ficor model television. exe. eond.| ‘piture, dishes, ete FE $-0006 sedan Delivery 1, Ton Pane _ $80, PE 5- $40 Auburn | MATTRESSES AND [HOLLYWOOD $205 CASH FOR FURNITURE = la badatalline on pes ’§1 Ford rE ¢ —aa | Saturde Hiiberg.” & 82 Williams. rr Wp =4 ae it @ 8 anaes ‘BALES CO. $-8503, $1 CHEN ROLET Vanette tee et een while 7 veer BLOND MAHOGANY ea ne re 4-0378 34-Ton Pickup ‘St Ford about arch ist. WATCH Won! eees: eG ae KEN: $95 > = — — | re washers $1495 & up . 1, Ton Pickup | USED and REBUILT ~| Sou. F Ta m™9 kt » y a5 . | i] - = er AXEL _ Si Chevrolet ~Prieudaire mute. washer ea ee matiress | +23 Pa 2 te . | lectric ranges B: ARG AINS 1'; Ton Cab & Chassis | NEW . ‘31 FORD ; S cu it Norge refrigerator se | pelea © Cont renee oe | WoT Dp 48 Ford T ev ft Breakfast set $15 | 1,-Ton Pickup Frigidaire refrigerator ... $179.50 <\ 3 Blue living toom suite ........ $35 S65 1; Ton Panel 42 in. Youngstows sink .. . $70 eouc.: $25 pure | | 66 in. Youngstown sini she os | ie a piece bdrm suite $40 4 49 GMC | Reais”. RE Ag Use ee 19G M C. See Them today! | CLAYTON’S. | thing for the beme. * 1-Ton Panel Thev're Ready to Go! | 3088 Orchard La Rd. ss ye Oakland Furniture $495 . . FE 5-8f3! 5-8974 104 8S BSagireaw FE 2-582} | : a ene | | 25 oy : : PIECE | ORES} wECTION AL new or genr ee te s2 CHEVROLET sofa Geod ¢ $78. MI MAPLE DRESSER, FRIGIDAIRE. Sedan Delivery Wek cedar limed wardrobe, table top eed eae 5 USED ELEcTRIC -ARARTENT gas Tange, overcoat, ladies —_ z rie ranges i rious sizes ad oe : onl Used gas” —— $40 aged ano Caos Ave. wit a r 3.30. : sed washe s 3 51 DODGE { C automatic Fritaaire, © ¥ t $87 es a ot cover, EM '3-4338 aa, 1,-Ton Panel KW) OR oR MUNK ELECTRIC WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC DRI- ae $595 | 20 W. Lawrence FE 5-0481/ er. 11 montns old $128. FE 5 ° Your Ford Dealer % ise aman MODE. beg s MAGNAVOX aX 13% INCOM . ae . WALTON ay Se eee 20 More to | 147 S. Saginaw St. FE 2-2287 Joslyn Cr. Walton pniy 00.98 MT 6 300,” Choose From- ?P hone FE 5- 4101 Oss CLOTHES 1 TERS. -] mips HAMILTON ELECTRIC DRYER, ALL BARGAINS! Petroleum Ce. 3628 Orchard Lake| $ qs weld, now only $80.98, MI a “MICHIGAN'S FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF $708 WOOLWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD TRUCK 2? speeo axel. Reasonable. Geneva 6-393) FORD 1983 PICKUP 1 “YEAR OLD Low mileage, Lots extras. _ FE 23-4868 ee 1981 INTERNATIONAL MILK truck, exceliens condition, good tires PE 5- 1608 PONTIAC’S ONLY Exclusive Truck Dealer | WILSON GMC | ‘33 GMC PICKUP $i - or my equity LARRY ~— . JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ‘48 FORD 12 FT. STAKE LARRY JEROME | Rochester Ford Dealer for a good used pickup! ay ALaNn— | “There's that new ‘brain child’ in our class! I think she attends college for academic reasons!"’ By Jay Alan . AP twerdeameres 2-22 ; | For Sale Bicycles ° BICYCLE WITH WHIZZER MOTOR _§000 condition. 36 Ghort. Boats & Accessories 66 PR PR Oe rw BOAT OWNERS LET US glass your boat End Se ee paint scraping — caulk ery , durable finish Call EM 3-2560 for information & free estimates. JOHNSON ran MOTORS | Starcraft sluminum wee trailers. Everything! for "ee OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 396 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 23-8030 MERCURY OUTBOARD Switser = & Yellow Jacket Boats M Craft lers ter SHORTY HOOK'S PLACE At Pine Late Ph. FE MERCIJRY MOTORS, 5, Tia, 10 and 14 horsepower tm ‘stock. Or- ders beine taken for 25 and 40 soon. horsepowers for delivery Yelloe Jackets molded plywood boats and boat hardware Ge- nessc Bales 7101 Disie Hwy. FE _30e 2 FT. 940. le FT. rE e610, after 4pm NEW BOATS, _ Transportation Offered 68 TRUCK GOINO __load elther T way ~ TRANSPORTATION PAID , Te Les Angeles, Frisco and other NORTH. PART New cars ready re al now. PONTIAC DRIVE AWAY SERVICE 63% UNION S&T. —_FE_¢$130 of FE Swaps 69 were NEW 30-30 BAVAGE, SHELLS AND year. Garden tractor with some attach- _ ments OR 36840 isso FORD F4 STAKE TRUCK. Will sell of trade for car of pie- | up truck, 28 Moreland. 7] FT CONTINENTAL TRAILER. ditties $1,750 will take lard coo- Clean as 2 pin In — con- tract or what have THELMA M L sgh oga EALTOR rE +1 |? LOTS FREE AND CLEAR. close = Beem in for A §-0008 "S eo: waggle! IN FUR- nished house for late cash, Al FE 25111 after | bab L gag om model ear Hl ta *. sit. SELL ‘AVENPORT AND a BLUE triese witn slipecvers 2 occasional chairs and bles Console FM radio raph. Qeod condl- tion cael RS ~ LAST “YEAR'S mode one. ot America's best teases perfect new guarantee for > years buy a new refrigerator for a little more than a used ma- chine. Michigan Fluorescent 393 Orchare LP 4ve cellent condition 62250. Smal! oil burner, $10. 2378 8. Commerce | Rd allied Lake. sTOvEs BOUGHT, ehanged. Turner « __ens 23-0001 2 PC. GREY FRIEZE LIVING Tm suite Bre cond FE 37428 |REPPLEWHITE . JUNIOR SIZk | dining room tabie chairs and rator cre | corner cu petvige ‘chair and daven- | cover for port, MI 42033 ee OR WHAT NOT CORNER c , ‘ binets, new. D. W. Fit ter, 809 S. Woodward Ph OL 14671 iss Gene bee Wasa Grom.” FI 4 453 ‘OR MORE THAN 30 YEARS a! ards r4 m - 4-4531 GOOD PLACF TO BU | OPEN EVENINGS APLE DAVENPORT. CHAIRS. —_——.| / dinette set, ceaar chest 38 Hol: ied SERIES | _Sale Motor Scooters 63 3 Clarkston Ab. —— atvine ~ ROOM , SUITE = meena linarcln 4 year ° RECKER -CALi aF- new 9, FR Sees oer steel utility cabinets, arenset springs ard- on good” condition FE icrrewen caret a KS, Fa- BLUE PRIEZE DAVENFORT, § KENMORE yisim atic WRINOS WRINOER $65 FE 2-4804 SELLING OUT, . paintings, ~gELLING AT A BIG RADIO, & AND ONE #8. FE _ $8155 oun patina = EASY WASHING MACHINE, FEX.! 65 | Sale Household Goods 71 PEIN TER HEATER, 30 GAL. ges. New, approved for use on cod $i 119,- 50 values, $40.50 ight rs merred, Also electric oil & "e heaters at terrific values. pre-ggr ree 303 mous -model cide are —, ma a2" models at extraor- diary 7 Michigan Piluores- cent, 383 Orchard _ Lk. Ave, Foam rubber cushions. Chair to match if desired. rE 43181 or 77 Dougias __Washer with pum SHOP AND SAVE | Chest of drawers $9.50. hall car- ; Hollywood frames, m. ases; inter- spring mattresses ; roll * way be beds; kitchen unfinished chests, all sizes: wal- fale érecsers and ; neleum. rugs; Wool rugs; 2 gas stoves; kerosene ss @ guarantees te cave vou ™ BANK FURNITURE 13 Auburo FE 47861 ANTIQUES sy oe nary cabinet. __sleeps two, FE 2-200. Las Sale Armstrong Vinoflor ft All — uaranteed Roys, 06 ‘Oakland. PE 23-4021 Saic Household Goods 71 For Sale Miscellaneous 72 USED TRADE-IN» WAYNE GABERT’S APPLIANCE SPECIALS Burmeister’s OPEN 8A. M.TO8P. M, SUNDAY 10 TO 3 LUMBER cer -.. 070 per M ¥% PLYSCORE $2.72 EACH - 4x8’ 3 PLYSCORE $9.75 EACH m2 in. BLANKET INSULATION $4.45 PER 100 FT. WHITE PINE COMBINATION DOORS $14.95 1’x4’ NO. 2 & BETTER YELLOW PINE FLOORING | $99 PER 1,000 OAK FLOORING NO. 2 COMMON $139 PER M ’ ae 2x4 WHITE FIR 7c PER LIN. FT. ~¥/BIRCH DOORS $9.95 4x8 SHEETROCK $1.29. ROCK LATH 99¢ BUNDLE BO mF YOU AR ¥. 2B A HOUSE DRIVE OUT TO ‘8 AND GAVE UP TO 9500 ON MATE .AL8 Make Gure its Burmeister’s Northern Lumber Co, WE DELIVER wun 5 yrecus servings You EM 3-4650 EM 3-3996 NEW OW PRICES 1 fROWRITE IRONER. EXCELLENT working condition. eabitiet model Oniy ¢ $90.98 MI 61300. CHARTREUSE PLASTIC ROCKER | & ottoman. 830 FE 5-6207. fDFAL FOR ‘APARTMENT SOFA. ehair and ornament 2 biond end tables 2 lampr like new FE 50801 after 6 pm ELECTRIC STOVE “APARTMENT size Electromasier OR 30137 aiperig sprr ELECTRIC RANGE kitchen n_cavinet, PE 5-8038. at sed Trade-i -in eee, Love seat. 60.95 12 ne living room — $0.95 living foom........:- $10.06 bes living room .. . $20.85 dining room.......... oe 0 | Setnse . $13.06 Large round ‘kitcnen table 94.85 | Apt. size electric hag as .. | Smal down Wat A Free WY MAN’S 18 W. Pike Only ixé $70. x0 Cedar siting $158. | — Wooden garage doors, “We will install, BLACKETT’S Building Supplies 8161 Diie Hwy ~~ ARE TUB MAYTAG WASHER 4-burner gas . eo = both for $95. _ 29072. RUG *’D PAD. 815 PE 43018, _ WESTINO ATOR good condition, $50. FE 4-180). ey BE cabinet, $39.95. MI 6-1300. | WANTED: PLUMBING SPECIALS 82 gel. electric het water For Sale Miscellaneous 72 Sir pe bathrm. ew free stand tollets SAVE ON PLYWOOD Warwick 2678 Orchare Le Ra. CIRCLE FL’ FIXx- page Bh oe Fealion room’. $11.90 value, $5.38. slightly factory marred. Cali HEATER CONE’S RENTAL 1281_ BALDWIN rE oo pages BS al COAL & aye Ras * 81 Orchard Lak PORCH RAILINGS MADE TO OF- installed. FE 5-402. —; ble _ — Mrs, Hat- CEMENT BLOCKS mate ulate Se Russel] Lemon & heat cook stov 7. retors end ot! to 300 PLANT T8, takes all. MUlberry 98-2175. eer seereesseseseess vet Pye HARDWARE 300 Auburn at Adams FE 2-881! Overhead Garage Door KENMORE WASHING MACHINE, i ah gas stove, right hand oven, laund $10. biar i testes san 6 , $15. Set of left hand clubs and bag, $20. FE 900 Oakland a ave: AUTOMATIC W SALE, ASHER FOR SALE call PE 4-1200 after 4 p.m. INSULATION STORM DOORS COMB. STORM SASH Awning Type Windows M. A. BENSON | sis stove, | _ _te before 5 rE foi N Lapeer Rd., Oxford, OA __8-2681. 9x12 LINOLEUMS _ aod $1.96 Armstrong's Inlaid B8c yd. * 7 Inlaid SOc yd. andard, inlaid Remoaete 57! = APPLES i312 Linoleum: Rugs... 98.98 GLACKMORE FARMS 6 Mnoleums . 1900 Silver Bell Rd. HAROLD'S, 4a 8. 1BAGINAW 3 Miles east off Perry St. YE 2000 pal cg) Mag _____Open Sun. 1 to § pm. Double Red Stamps SAND GROWN POTA- Antique Shop Opening Fora Togs. sso PER NUXDRER a. Offering: Reed organ, . sleigh bed, various a2 . T200 : off Hospital iy converted round cocktail table, | OUARANTEED POTATOES 5 TS walnut «best and mirror fine . Or m = Out pine et é win to Clark: & chairs, eB frames, <— ion ee etter on ae ae i exq od Hepplewhite je CHICK Et. ECTRIC BROOD peed z. hover: APP. 50.000 Bai i a % deliver on your load for RILL. new tires 17x5. Laundry tte, wal _sink. FE 56371. ANCHOR FENCES — PHA down, Ph win ft. semi truck for free ve money, Rock lath, $1.00 2 bundle: 4x8 sheet fect, $1.90: No, 2 box pine. dlls LUMBER COMPANY USED coal > cont faranees, Wm S38,“ is] SPINE: PIANO RENTALS WITH open rE. $10 monthly Gal- apereres, no money | .. $4862 st | TRENCHERS 9427 | nepeirs on _farm, “Sale Farm Equipment 38 1 STOP SERVICE Briggs & Stratton engines Wisconsin encines Cc 8 Cc j ercay tractors acobson mowers s = | mg = SENUINE PARTS IN STOCK Houghten & Son, Inc. YOUR AUTHORIZED J. 1 CAsm SALES AND SERVICE Th Comes inns to Perms with Case” | Ph. OLive 1-0761 Ph. Romeo 2533 BACK HOES BLADES GROUND TOOLS Farm or Industria) We demonstrate BLACKETT INC. OR $454 Dixie Hwy. FARMALL De 20 a Facing weeder rake mower. $600. OA 68-3328. LS! SPECIALS! John Deere L.A. plow and- cultivator e578 John Deere Model B....... 9400 New end g- ghee tors, Pontiac Farm Supply Deere ANNOUNCEMENT PONTIAC FARM & PROUSTRIAL TRACTOR CO. THE ae PaRM _ ND INDUS a Os ONE 1946 D TRACTOR, TWO 1082 FORD TR CTORS. 1953 CTOR ONE 1.0.30 FERGUSON TRAC- ONE jess FARMALL CUB, WITH EE USED WAGNER LOaD- SEVERAL UNUSED 1954 FORD BIG ALL USED MINTED. AND OUARAN. Fre PONTIAC FARM AND WOODWARD. ac ARD AVE.. PONTIAC FIREPLACE. THE BEST 68LAB ATTENTION __ wood. FE 5-3006. = == __ | gg FORE YOU BUY A NEW TRAC- SPEEDWAY FUEL OfL FIRE-| ToR THE NEW FARMALL place compel coal | Kindiing and SUPER C. WITH FAST rnace weod Oakland Fuel & HITCH, THE ONLY COMPLETE. Paiat 4% Orchard Lake. FE LY ULIC HITCH ON a) pares taney Faas . ‘Opeybe Market, ALLOWANCE. SEE US OR C G0oD SLAB WOOD, $5.50 . cord, yan te: Derereé. FS KING BROS. FeavouED Manpwoo 7oa| Your I-H Dealer fireplaces, $10 cord & up del.) Pontiac Rdad at yke —ZE +ent._ i PE 407% FE ¢1112 ~~ For | Sale le Pets NOW is THE TIME TO PLACS ia on 7 STUD SERVICE. 4 POUND Fox| [ER We MAD A i] _Terrier, MAple § tivensp sie of FARM. BLO +07 112 KING BROS. Your I-H Dealer Pontiac Road at Opdyke b_ Astor. 46433, tie Baby Parakeets .... -- 2% 98 801 4th St. PE wit } { , ' sie: rc i aC ee ae ' Arlene Francis -- Today's Television Channel )—WIBE.TV Chane 6~WW3-TV Lover” off-stage lives of actors. 19:39 — (4) — Duffy's. Tavern. “Archie Buys a Dog.” < 10:45 — (T) — Madison Square Garden. Sports events. 11:00 — (7) — Soupy’s On. Variety; comedy. (4)—News. (2)—News. 11:15 — (7) — Armchair Theater. Arturo DeCordova in “Adven- tures of Casanova” feature film. (4) — Plainclothesman. “Uncon- sidered Trifle’ detective film drama. (2) — Wrestling. Pat O'Connor vs. Tiger Joe Marsh. TUESDAY MORNING 7:00—(4)—""Today.” 8:45 — (7) — Cartoons, 9:08 — (4) — “Playschool.” (7) — Breakfast Club. %:45—(2)—Brighter Day 10:00—(4)—“Ding Dong School.” (7) — Charm Time. (2) — “Arthur Godfrey.” Kirby | 10:30—(4)—Betty White 11:00—(4)—“Hawkins Falls.” (T)— “Charm Kitchen.” 11:15—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven. 11:30—(4)—Ask Washington (2) — Strike it Rich. TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(4)—Bride and Groom. (7) —12 Film. (2)—Valiant Lady. 12:15—(2)—Love of Life. (4)—Ross Mullholland. 12:30—(7)—News. row’s Search.” ea oad Light. () — Travel Unlimited. (7)—Stars on Seven. > 1:00—(4)—"“Jean McBride Show.” (2)—Bob Murphy. 1:38 — (4) — Good Cooking. (2)— Garry Moore Show. 2:00—(4)—Telerama. (7)—My Life. 2:30 — (7) — “Theater.” (2) — “Houseparty.” (2)— “Tomor- 10:00 — (7) — Hockey. Detroit Red Wings vs. Montreal Canadiens. (2) — Studio One. Skip Homeier, Betsy Palmer in “‘The Role of a 3:00—(4)—Kate Smith. (2)—Big Payoff. $:30—(T)—Air Base. (2) — Ladies Day. 4:00—(—Welcome Traveler. (T) —Cowboy Colt. 4:30—(0—"On Your Account.” (2)—Feature Theater. 6:00—(4)—"Adventure Patrol.” (7) —“Auntie Dee.” &15—(4)—"“Gabby Hayes.” §:30—(4)—“‘Howdy Doody.” (2)— “Sports.” (7) — Cartoons. &45—(2)—P aul Killlum. (7) — Weather. .. TUESDAY EVENING ¢:00—(4)—"Time for Music.” (7) —"Detroit Deadline.” (2)—"Kit Carson.” - 6:15—(4)—“"News.” (7)—*Sports.” 6:30—(4)—Sports. (7)—My Hero. (2)—“News.” 6:45 — (4) — Traffic Court. Weatherman. 7:00 — (4) — “Storybook.” (T)— Biff Baker. (2)}—This is Show Business. (2) — 1:15 — (4) — TBA. 7:30—(4) — Dinah Shore (7) — American Cavalcade. (2)—Doug Edwards. 7:45 — (4) — News. (2) — Jo ” 8:00 — (4)—Milton Berle. (7)—Col. Flack. (2)—Life Is Worth Living. 8:38 — (2) — Death Valley. (7) — Arthur Murray. 9:00—(4)—**Fireside Theater.” (7) —Room for Daddy. (2) Foreign Intrigue. 9:30 — (4) — Circle Theater. (2)— Suspense. (7) — TV Theater. 10:00—(4)—"‘Judge for Yourself.” (2)—“Danger.” | 10:30(4)—All Star Theater. (7)— Name’s thé Same. (2)—Favorite Story. 11:00—(4)—""News.” (7)—"Soupy’s On.” (2)—“News.” 11:15—(4)—Theater. (7) — Sham- rock Theater. (2) — TBA. -- Today's Radio Proarams -- Programs furnished by stations Usted ts this colums are subject te change witheut notice wm, cm CKLW, (see) ww, (800) WCAR, (1120) Wxra, cz) WIBE, (1600) TONIGHT WJBK, News CKLW, Your Boy Bué CELW, Cecil Brown WJBK. Bd Murphy sa — _— 6:45—-WXYZ, News, Wolfe WCAR. Club 1130 j a Tree 2:00—WJR, Dick Burris . white eunenes Gves CELW, Bports WTR, News, Wolte 7m Pree Marrs ¢:00—wIR, news ° Ww Bendless Horseman WJBK, Rise and p+] Gtaniey ww Nowe 6:18—WIR, Clark %:15—WJR, Music Hall _ Wotsteh, Metenste ww Dead ee WwxyYz, TUESDAY AFTERNOON WIRE, Mesdiees Morseman — ‘ 1:00—WIR, Read of CKLW, Badie Chase "WETE Pred. wolte Wwa Neve Muinelone | *ib=-WIR, Clark, Quartet €:08—WIR, Bod Reynolds W. Austin Grant Charm Time eats. ee ww Pra Pettay WCAR, Coffee Saw’ News, Bud ‘ 1:—WWI, News WCAR, News, Club 1130 6 aw Reynolds - een | perm | ime ee eee | EER oil 1:07, Quest House bt 5G | hy . ¢:45—WIR, Lowell Thomas Wein on cure WIRE. Neve, Oditne tera Bhesy’ tectenee 1:00 JR, Quest Mouse SL. Futon Lewis 2 WCAR, News, Clem CALW. Your Bey Bud sag A. w George 18—WJR, Bud Quest car an Se * Baltes ‘Lowe : Alen Orta ‘EE Gettec With Clem yee _ y ow World 1:48—WJR Guiding Light ae Guy Muna 6:30—WJR. Music Hal CKLW, Powell ‘ware Show Werks Pamily Skeleton Coffee | 3:00—wan, ; A= mrtg Beatty $:45—WCAR, Radio Revival! WWJ, News. Mulholland rg Pamily Skelton by te ee PS me 9:00—WJR. News CKLW, News, wate Gearr of Spee J, Minute Parade WIBK, News. W. Gabriel sarge Sh Pamly, | WXYZ Breasiast Clup WCAR, News, Club 1130 2O-wmR, & Rh pay, 2 eS 21S—WIR. Perry Mason | - WW, One idas's Pamity : con farke, Paul Winter CKLW, Badie Fisher bags ‘Hour #:30—WJR, Nora Drake Punny WETS Your Land; Mine | "US wen, Moe Bowe, OF) ORL TYour Boy hee ww, Dis : Palcon WIBK. News, Don McLeod WXY2, Bock w w George ‘ a Wee, pers WJBK. News, George :30—W Page a: Income Tax WW, Here's the Answer | "05 WIR. Brighter Dey | 9:15—WW2. Prank Ginatre WJBK, T. CKLW, Good Neighbor CKLW Lee Income Tax 6:99—WJR, Talent Scouts WJBK. Bob Murphy WCAR. Club 1130 Rorthe WW, Voice Program 0:45—WIR, Pete and Jos "Ww, Barrie Crate WXYR Band of the O87 | CxLw, Tony Martin a at cee WXYZ Band of the Day aug. 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