The Weather Wednesday: Details page two 112th YEAR Jo To Be Guest Noread. a Former Roomers ‘Commi ies (Offer Showers THE PON ———$ $$ os —E—EEE to Swap 7 Gls | While Sightseeing Too | Close to Border BAERNAU, Germany | (AP) — German border po- lice said today that Czech authorities have offered to trade seven U. S. soldiers \they arrested Sunday for) {three members of a Czech |labor gang who fled to the! | West over the weekend | Czech border police grabbed the Americans -| six enlisted men and a cap- tain on leave—when they came too close to the bor- der while sightseeing. Buettner Hans a district com- mander of the German border po } lice, said the Czechs made their swap offer at a border meeting jwith the Germans this morning . , | US. Army officials at Heidels | berg said they had no knowledge of the reported offer. Buettner told newsmen he would |have a second meeting with Resid Czechs at the border near later today We have been told by Ameri ean authorities not to make | promises."’ he said He said the three Czechs who fled lacross are being held the Germans.ig the Weiden area, near here. He said one was accused of murder by the Czech police. by He said four Czechs were pres- SAILS FOR HOLLAND—Mrs. Pearl Penne!l a | AP Wirephete 17399 Brewer Rd., Dundee, waves from the Holland f Tontia plans to visit four GM engineering “There may have been more in America liner, Westertdam, before sating from] students who roomed at her Pontiac home while the vicinity but they must have Hoboken, N. J., for Holland. Mrs. Beoy !, formesly | studying here from the GMC Institute, Flint. | been hiding,”’ he added. Man Drowns at County Park | Detroiter’s Body Found in Restricted Area at Kent Lake Alexander Mayweather t W277 Virginia Park Detr drowned Sunday in Kent Lake a Kensington Metropolitan Beact Oakland County shertff's deputies re ported todas Jerome Gru ber, 18 of Walled Lake. a lifeguard employed at the beach said he recovered the bod. floating in 6 feet of water in a prohibited swimming area about a half mile northeast of the beach. } The assistant superintendent of the beach, William L. Tait of Brighton, said Mayweather wan- dered off from a party at the beach and went swimming alone in the restricted area. Tait ' quoted members of the party as saying the victim was Rot accomplished swimmer. Dr. I. C. Prevette, Oakland Coun ty deputy coroner, pronounced Mayweather dead after uns ful attempts were made to revive him with a resuscitator The body was taken to the Rich ardson-Bird Funeral Home in Mil ford where arrangements are pend- ing. Holiday Traffic Sets Record | uccess- | "S. authorities said for the release of the seven Amer- | icans. They refused to reveal their | | identities Army autherities said: ‘We are | in communication with the Czechs | and are trying to obtain the re- lease of the men."’ They would not | elaborate The Army said a half-ton weap- ons carrier truck in which the men had been driving was found -aban- tioned late yesterday near the vil lage of Weiden, about 15 miles from the Czechoslovak border A West German farmer in the area told the German -police he saw the men. yesterday. They asked where the border was and ‘Mother’ Pennell Will Visit GM ‘Boys’ in Other Lands By LULA OGDEN A long-standing invitation will be accepted this sum- mer by-Mrs. Pearl Pennell, former Pontiac resident who now lives in Dundee, when she is guest of four former | GM engineering students in their homeland Through the years young men studying here from the General Motors Institute at Flint had roomed in her home on W. Iroquois road. They came from Europe, Australia and South America - * While here they became a part of the Pennell house- hold and everything was done to make them feel at Scattered Showers Expected Tomorrow home.” Also. Mrs. Pennell took it upon herself to heJp Scattered showers are expected the youths learn as much | it. Asks U.N. Admit Wednesday in the Pontiac area. as possible about this coun... The U. S Weather Bureau pre- * trys ommie ina l dicts a low of 36 to 60 tonight and In fact, she became ‘mother’ i many of the tact with hack home boys and kept in con- them after they went She is even known as The h2 to is VCs- la high of &3 to 87 Wednesday New Zealand Foreign Minister Sees Move) mercury Fat 1 from terday , grandma” to their children , At 8 am. today the temperature Many of ‘our boys” as she calls| QOS ‘Diplomatic Wedge’ was 65 and at 1 pm. it was 78 in’ them have urged her to ‘“‘come : downtown Pontiac. aver to see our country,” and sev- | AUCKLAND, New Zealand (h— | Temperatures will average 2 to, eral times dates were temporarily 5 decrees below normrat this week | set, but did not materialize. | tonight urged the admission of 1: Secnernl arcane « ; |Communist China to the United | woe : oT SS I A Reinet i This year the plan has worked |. Nations. New Zealand is linked | ag 1b - rap nd i ne - a from the time she lands with the United States in the Anzus | ye (6 In the horth and of in in Purope she will be the guést +t and is ~ { th south. with the 1 yrmal low stand- of four of the “boys” in their | pac a 1s a sponsor 0 e pro: | | jected Southeast Asian defense al- at 39 in the north and 60 in the / Rance. ing | south. homes, until the first of Septem- ber. She will visit Holland, Bel. No Deaths, Few Injuries “’ Occur on Roads in County Death took a holiday on Oakland County highways | over the long Independence Day weekend despite a rec? ord volume of traffic. Authorities expressed amazement over the Police an@ the Oakland County Sheriff's Department had to handle only 14 injury accidents. the Pontiac Sheriff's deputies said jammed Telegraph road, Dixie highway, Woodward and | VACATI wy LS O Highland road Monday ternoon. Cars were bumper- to-bumper at many inter-. sections. The motorists were among the thousands of city dwellers who flocked to beaches and recreation areas in the county Four recreation spots — Cass- Dodge Park No. 4, Kensington Metropolitan Park, Highland Recreation Area, and Pontiac Lake Recreation area — reported a total three-day attendance of 161,000, Rain Saturday cut the somewhat, but a deluge of pic nickerg and-swimmers Sunday and Monday swelled -total attendance _ Even with traffic at a peak, only | eight innjury accidents were han-| ‘ 4 | number Although she will be entertained; d Rd Chna.”’ 7. that farewell when they return to their homelands | would be hard to deny them en- try."’ He did not elaborate fact 4 to be -reckoned with in world af- fairs.’ Webb declared, with Russia, the two countries oc- cupy an enormous slice of terri- tory and have nearly half ef the world’s pcpulation: ‘We must look at our policy in| the fight against communism and see it is in the right direction. We | should endeavor to drive a diplo- | matic wedge between Russia and Red China and the first step would | be its admission to the United N tions.” The foreign minister the formation of a Southeast Asian alliance as extremely urgent. He homeward-bound motorists | died by sheriff's deputies and six| by Pontiac Police. L The two departments reported al total of 34 property-damage acci-} dents, only slightly more than a) normal weekend, Sheriff Clare L. Hubbell said | the accident rate was “extreme. |.- ly low’’ considering the heavy || traffic. His view was shared by 14, Joseph Koren, head of the Pontiac Police traffic division. No highway fatalities marred the = holiday weekend Ss = : Authorities attributed the lower) As ently Alley Oop would put it— accident rate to safety campaigns come clean with the rest of your and a joint crackdown on speeders family and Iet them read their by local. county and state police. | favorite comics while vacationing! . Phone FE 2-8181 and have the “Tel-Neren. | Pontiac Press mailed to you 6 | your vacation won't be a washout. ¥ could help to bring. this about and Britain and America ‘‘upon whom our security so much depends.” Oemeun's Town & Country, Open every night "til 9 o'clock ‘on { Oemen's Tewn & Country, Tel-Reren Open every night ‘til 9 o'clock jto hear Robert A. Vogeler in Communist Hungary on a false e*pionage charge in 1950 set free | He ace that they were pressing said they wanted to take a look at | Foreign Minister T, Clifton Webb | Speaking in a parliamentary for- | sium, England and France. eign affairs debate, Webb said the | She sailed Saturday an the Wes- | Peiping. government should ~ be terdam and will return on. the! brought into the international or- Nordham . ganization in a ‘‘edeavor to drive by only four ef the former room Webb admitted he felt previous- ers. she expects to see and visit ly China should not be allowed in with at least eight. the U.N, until she worked her | Mrs. Pennell says that even af-| ‘way back into the goo graces of ter she moved-to Dundee the boys! the free world.” 4 visit her and come over to say! But he said as a result of Chou En-lai's actions over Indochina ‘‘it | “Chifia is a great nation, a force | “together | described | said New Zealand and Australia | also reconcile differences between | * xxx * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TU EsDAY, JU LY 6 1954 —28 PAGES a — ui Ee Will Speak This Afternoon Jackson Freedom Festival Awaits Arrival of Nixon | JACKSON GP)—Jackson's Freedom Festival awaited the arrival for3Czechs Richard Nixon celebration of Vice President under the oaks’’ to Jackson in a motorcade. He is scheduled to speak late Les afternoon at the Jackson fairgrounds. An estimated 5,000 people the 15 months later “IT am sorry | had to be the American citizen had to be ransomed from a foreign power “I hope the day will soon ‘come when we can demand justice for all mankind and not pay tribute to tyrants.” said Vogeler “warned the crowd, “Tt is their he said | to disorganize to plan,” accomplish that end, not eve gathered at the Anjerican businessman sent to prison celebrating first Republican Party convention held in Jackson duly 6, and the 125th anniversary of the city, a most formidable foe in the Communists of the Soviet Union. to divide and conquer, as the main speaker at today’s _ Nixon was scheduled to arrive at Willow Run airport later today: | U. S. Soldiers Seized lie will be met by 4 host of dignitaries before beginning the journey | fairgrounds yesterday He was to set the precede nt that an ’ Vogeler one the centennial of the 14s that the United States faces “to create and encourage confusion, and they will not stop at anything n murder tight now they are murdering thousands of freedom loving pedple behind the Iron and the Bamboo Curtains.” Vogeler said that during his confinement he feared he was going fo go insane Then, he said, literature to read. said, he discovered thal someone his jailers Vogeler said ‘Because of that Bible | through twice It gave me | arrested. It gave me the day I wquid be returned.” the I was able only determination to live brought him seme Communist Going through the books and pamphiets, he had snuggled a Bible in to him. to retain my sanity comfort | had had since I was and hope that some “Buyer for Nationalist China ; “Arrested on Theft Charge NEW YORK (AP) — A Chinese businessman was ar- rested here today in connection with the alleged theft | emt at the morning meeting. | 4¢ $810,000 in Chinese Nationalist funds intended for) | purchase of surplus war supplies. | The man, identified by Nationalist officials as Ku Chih earlier at; Chang, 48, was said to have received the funds from | Ave. in Sylvan Lake, and was a) a horse Monday when it fell on | former Nationalist Gen. Pang Tsu Mow, who fled ita ita | | Mexico in 1951. | The general was accused Today Last Day of embezzling some six mil-| funds of the Chi-| ilion in ‘Nationalist while in charge 'nese Republic's air force) office in Washington, D. C. | Chang was arrested on a grand | larceny charge at the request of Cha Chien Liang. China's vice: minister of justice. | The vice minister said Chang had received three checks from the general, one for $710,000 and two for $300,000 each. Detectives who arrested Chang | de nce in Michigan and residence | tion has an honorary queen slightly | toe * days prior to the election | different from most at the Hotel ‘Wellington in Man hattan said he denied any wrong | doing and as saying he thought | | the money given him by the gen- | eral was his own. | Chang was quoted_as saying the | Nationalist government owed him | ee than one million dollars for property it had confiscated © from | him in China The Nationalist vice minister | said, Chang came to this country in 1946 and that he and the gen- eral handled the purchase of war surplus: materials for the Nation- alist forces. The vice minister said Chang! | and the general schemed to juggle \figures so as to leave huge amounts for themselves. Chang allegedly set up headquarters in a Philadelphia hote! Not all of the $810,000 has been accounted for, the minister said He added that he believed some | has been deposited in a Swiss bank | A suit was filed in Los Angeles | earlier this year by the Nationalist | government, charging Chang with conspiracy to embezzle $810,000. Detectives said Chang came here three days ago and when National- ist officials got word of it they | | obtained aid of New York police | in apprehending him Gen. Mow now is in prison in Mexico awaiting the outcome of proceedings to extradite him to Formosa to face embezzlement charges U. N. Official in England .LONDON («? Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, president of the lu N. General Assembly, was re- ceived today a Queen Elizabeth | If a In Today 's Press Billy Rose Rirmingham ; Reb Considine "4 4 Caine Mutiny s Comics bd | County News ” David Lawrence .....cccecs scence 4 Pr. George Crane poesevar6en) se © Editorials 7 cemees « Emity - Pest SHB CODS " Mat Royle : saeco Soca " | Markets were 2 J Patterns ” Mperta ~. 2... b we ewtece. a, Theaters aes ™ TY -Radic ee =P " Want Ads . @ 4, TH Women's Pages ........-..1%, Ls Nationalist | for Registering in State Primary Today is the last day to regis- | ter for the Aug. 3 primary elec- tion and Pontiac City Hall will stay open until 8 p.m. to register last minute applicants Pontiec residents who have not | voted in the past four years, who jhave moved to this city recently dr who have changed their address | must register or correct their rec- | ords | US. citizenship, six months resi- lin the local governmental unit are | | re comet Saw Court Upholds One-Man Jury Rejects Appeals of Two | Sentenced for Contempt | in Gambling Probe | LANSING uw — The State Su- preme Court today turned back two new challenges to the power of Michigan's unique one-man grand jury_ system. The court unanimousty rejected appeals by Lee R. Murchison, a Detroit policeman, and John White, proprietor of a small hotel,” who were sentenced to.60 days for con- tempt of court by Recorders Judge John J. O'Hara, a one-man grand | juror investigating gambling in | Detroit The court said both men were | properly convicted, In Murchison’s case, the is- sue was whether the grand juror could sentence a man for con- tempt of court when he had per- jured himself before that same judge in the grand jury room. In White's case, the issue was whether a witness could refuse to testify if his attorney were not in the grand jury room and whether a grand juror was disqualified from sitting as an examining mag- istrate in a case arising out of the grand jury. The court said in an opinion by Justice Emerson R,. Boyles that a grand juror may use the con- tempt sentence against the wit- ness who ‘‘deliberately, knowingly and falsely testifies before a grand jury to the perjury prosecution, | The companion opinion by Justice | Edward M. Sharpe held that the | Legislature may not take away | from the Recorders Court the right |to punish contempt committed in | its presence because the Record- |ers Court is a cupetinntionsl court ‘ot record.” ichigan Traffic Death Claims Businessman I read it | | the | years \* m. today | | old. | senhower returned and that he need not resort |. Merchant Dies | 8 Drownings, 6 Other Deaths = Mar Weekend "| ~333 Perish on Nation's | Highways Over Long Fourth Holiday = as By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At least 33 persons lost their lives in traffic acci-” dents on crowded Michigan highways over the long } Fourth of July holiday weekend. | In addition eight drown | ings were reported and six } | persons perished in miscel- | laneous accidents, ee Michigan tied with Call- \fornia in the number of ‘traffic fatalities and was jnot topped by any other. the national traffic toll so far was 333. . . .. The death count compares to 7? H. F. Stier Dies at 61; killed last year over the Inde Was Former Manager pendence Day holiday. The 1953 of Food Shop | eng death toll for the holiday : Stier 6 a headin The dead included: gsm Stic r, 61, Wh h ded asic kee at SC omade Food Shop for 2) : rand died at his residence at 7 Rapids, who was killed Monday He had been ill a year, | '" 4 auto accident on U. S. 130, Rorn in Vassar Feb. 19," 1883 he south of Mancelona. Also killed was the son of Frederick and Mary | '® the accident was Robert Zals- Woodstock Stier. He married Mary of Grand Rapids, a com- Jansen in Detroit April 27, 1910 man, 32 Mr. Stier was the fffst manager panion of Amante. William Dreyer Sr., 79, of East of Homade Food Shop when it came to Pontiac the Home Detroit, drowned’ Monday at Olson Beach in St. Clair Shores. Dairy Company in 1928 He held that position with the Lee Thomas, 77, of Cheboygan, , was fatally injured Monday when exception of a few years whem | ctruck by a passing truck while he was with the stores in Flint | sitting on the shoulder of a rural and Saginaw. He returned to Pom: | poad in Mackinac County, tiac in 1939 and retired in Jan- | wary 1963, | HERMAN F. STIER as Maynard Arthur Davis, 4year- old son of James R. Davis of Mr. Stier ‘lived at 27222 Garland | Lansing, was crushed to death by Presbyterian | him in a_ riding accident near Lansing. Ronald Wardell, 25, and Carl 25, both of DeWitt, drowned member of First | Church Besides his widow he is sur- yived by four daughters and a ‘son, | Bixby. Mrs. Louise Shaver of Williams/ (Continued on Page 3, 2, Col. 3) Lake, Mrs. Leqna Jubenville of De- | , troit, Mrs Verna Hathaway of San | Diego, Calif., Mrs. Pauline Kelly of Midland and Herman M. of Pon. | Stranahan Qualifies wal vee tron. fOr British Open Also surviving are ers, Ernest, Lewis and ‘William, | all of Lapeer | (From AP & INS ce The body is. at the Donelson-| SOUTHPORT, England ~ Amae Johns Funeral Home | teur Frank Stranahan shot a com- | fortable one-under-par 72 at Royal Birkdale today to assure himself of | qualifying for British Open cham- | pionship play with a %-hole total of 141. Stranahan, who fired a 69 at the easier Hillside course yesterday, played a safe and sound round to- iday to join another early-finishing blooded Indian who was born in| American, Jimmy Demaret with a — | Lassen county and is 105 years T3-T5—148, among the certain quali- fiers Dick Lehms of Dallas, Tex., a U.S. Army sergeant stationed in Germany, took a 79 on the Birk- dale course after an 82 at Hillside yesterday. His 161 total left him = virtually no chance to qualify. To- — day's ecard, studded with bogey | fives, was 40-39—T79, Cantannial \Celabration Has 105-Year-Old Queen SUSANVILLE, Calif. w — The | Lassen county centennial .celebra- Mrs. Roxie Pencom, a full- Ike Returns to Capital WASHINGTON (®#—President Ei- to the White House today after a four day holi- day in Maryland's Catoctin Moun- tains. Will Rule Cherry Festival ce From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM—Relocating Wil- lits street to eliminate the double right-angle turn at the Oakland- Willits-Woodward intersection will be under consideration at tonight's City on meeting. L. R. Gare will outline his plan calling for qa four- lane street from Woodward to Bates. Acquisition of property would be necessary under the plan. Commissioners will also discuss a long-range improvement program for the city's ‘Springdale Park. along with immediate steps to‘ im- prove sanitary disposal facilities there. Bids received for driveways for the West Maple fire station, now under construction, will be submitted te the Commission. They will include one preposal fer constructing a drive from the building out to Maple, and an al- ternative for that drive,, plus auxiliary drives to run west to Chesterfield and east to Fairfax. A hearing will be held to create a special assessment district for construction of improvements on St. Andrews, from Pembroke to Derby, where the street is being vacated. Lots 412, 413, 476 and 477 in Pembrook Manor subdivision would make up the special assess- ment district. . . * Speaking at 8 p.m. tomorrow at a meeting sponsored by the board of deacons of First Baptist Church, the Rev. Dr. G. Merrill Lenox will present an address en- titled, ‘‘We Christians Belong To- gether!" The public is invited to attend the opening, which will be held at the church. A question and answer period will follow the talk by Dr. Lenox, who is executive di- rector of the Detroit Council of Churches. Dr. Lenox, who attended the first assembly of the World Coun- cit ef Churches in Amsterdam, will be introduced by the Rev. Emil Kontz, pastor of the church. The first assembly of the World Council! of Churches to be held in _ this country will take place next month in- Evanston, Il. . . . A visit to Cranbrook’s Institute of Science is on the agenda as British Cooks Refuse to Buy High-Cost Meat LONDON «®—Housewives today began a battle against the high price of Britain's new “freedom” meat, Butchers said a lot of housewives entered their stores but few bought anything—waiting for the prices to drop. Rationing ended at midnight Saturday and prices immediately | went up. Prices were still up today with only a slight drop. One butch- er said: ‘Within a day or so the whole situation will be back to normal, Customers are already talking about boycotting meat and living on fish and eggs.” ’ 7 * At the big Smithfield Market butchers were buying at a few pence lower, Business definitely slackened. . * * One large firm's manager said “we were forced to buy at high prices yesterday, and taking the long view, we are selling at cost price until] this crazy boom settles down.” A central London butcher report: ed “some women come in, ask the price and walk out: others with large fainilies to feed. make do with stewing meat. }t looks as if stew and dumplings will be the . favorite hot meat this week.” > * * A northwest London butcher was selling steak for 91 cents a pound compared with last week's pre- — — = = cents. The csserel view is that prices to Gome down. But, ary of the National Fed. eration of Meat Traders Assn. it is difficult to say.” | The Weather ¥Y — Partly PONTIAC ote = sade Today ih Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am SS At @ am.: Wind velocity if mph Direction: Southwest. Sun sete Tuesday at 6:11 pm Sun rises W: at 6:02 am Moon sets Tuesday at 11:18 pm Moon rises Weadestay at 12.6 pom. Dewntews Tem teres 6 GB. Mi ccceees- mS OOM. ne TO. Mivseseees A 12m . ha! BR. Mirscceees Iipm 7” OB. Min ciccens 10 B® Mer csees eee 1 2 in Pontiac mgusit Sompareeare , 73 Mass simran Aeneas He vaneecpocnscesces as wv evivccesbereerss 6 Will Consider Relocation _ of Willits St. at Woodward, part of tomorrow's YMCA Da-Y program, The tour will be made after lunch, with the morning spent working on crafts and playing of group games. . Sara Strengell, professional ac- tress and dancer who last fall opened Birmingham's. Teenage Theater. left for Europe last week where she will make a study of what is being done there for young- sters interested in the theater. She said she intends to jntro- duce any new children's teeh- niques into her classes when she returns in the fall. An enlarged tall program will include a new department in radio and televi- sion techniques and classes in rhythmic dancing. Miss Strengell, who taught last summer at Cranbrook Summer School of the Theater, said she would like to see the Teenage Theater—become a youth theater and not just a school, so that thig would become their own project. William W. Long Service for William W. Long, 75, of Milford, will be. held at 1 p. m. Thursday from the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. He died at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. Jay Knapp, in Ypsi- lanti, yesterday after a jong ill- ness. Mr. Long formerly farmed near Birmingham for 30 years. Surviving besides his daughter are sons, C. Elmer of Pontiac, and R. Earl of Milford; and four grandchildren. {st-Aid Service ‘Worked Well Sheriff Hubbell Tells of Radio Ham Cars and Red Cross Help Oakland County Sheriff Clare L. Hubbell said today the new Ameri- can Red Cross highway first-aid service stakted this weekend “worked very well." “We hope the Red Cross first- aiders and Oakland County Ama- teur Radio operators will help us again over Labor Day weekend,” Hubbell said. ‘Their on-the-spot ‘first aid at accidents saved quite a few people a trip to the hospital." Radio hams kept nine of their own short-wave radio-equipped cars, carrying teams of Red Cross first-aiders, on the road from 4 until 10 p.m. Friday through Monday. The sheriff's department called the cars fo 11 accidents, the Red) Cross said teday. First-aid teams treated several people for minor injuries. One Red Cross first-aid team stayed at Cass-Dodge Park 4 all week end and treated one person for a foot injury, First-aid teams. stationed at Square Lake and Tele- graph roads and at M 59 at Airpw road, treated people hurt in ar | League hurlers have been selected manage the AL team. Top, from AL'S PITCHING SELECTIONS—These -American. of the New York Yankees for the ariiual All-Star game set for Cleveland next Tuesday. THE Cleveland; Bob by Casey Stengel Casey will Bob Lemon, Chicago; Whitey left: Chicago. a AP Wirephete Turley, Baltimore; Allie Reynolds, Yankees, and Mike Garcia, Cleveland. Bottom, left to right: Bob Porterfield, Washington; Virgil Trucks, Ford, Yankees, and Bob Keegan, 33 Die in Michigan Traffic Over Fourth (Continued From Page One) Monday in the Grand River at Lansing when their speedboat flipped over.- Vern E. Noble, 45, of Laings- burg, was killed early Monday when his car ran off a county road near Ovid in Clinton County and rammed into an abutment. Eddie Eskridge. 17, of Detroit. died Sunday of injuries suffered Friday night when he was struck by an automobile . was killed Sunday when her car plowed into a utility pole near Gladstone ; Herman Seitz, 56, of Tecumseh, died Sunday of injuries suffered Saturday afternoon when his car overturned in Tecumseh. Lee Williams, a 50-year-old Detroit apartment house caretaker, died Sunday after being overcome by fumes from a leaking refrig- erator in his apartment. William Kueppala, 3%, of Dollar Bay, and his niece, Theresa Andreini, 10, of Fiint, were burned to death Monday when an explosion and fire de- stroyed a Houghton home where a family reunion was under way. - Samuel Detorre, 37, of Royal Oak, was fatally injured Saturday when he was struck down by a bulldozer while working on an excavation project in Oak Park. An expectant mother, Mrs. Clara Morgan of Battle Creek, her sons | Donald Jr.. 7. Charles, 3, and Dwayne, 2. and a daughter, San- dra. 6 were killed Sunday night in a two-car collision on M37, 13 miles northwest of Battle Creek, Donald E. Lunger, 27, was killed dents Monday night; but a fourch team at Dixie Highway and M15 reported no accidents Monday. A Lake Orion Civil Air Patrol plane turned out Monday to spot traffic jams and accidents and radio reports te the joint ama. teur-police radio headquarters at Red Cross chapter offices, 118 Franklin Bivd. Pontiac Police radio operator Medford Pittman and a radio ham took calls from sheriff's and ama- teur cars all week end.. James Abbott of Birmingham, radio club emergency ceordinator. and Ralph Forman of Pontiac, Red Cross first aid chairman, super- vised the volunteer work. ! Boys, 13, Arrested in Safecracking Try. Two 13-year-old Pontiac boys are in custody of Oakland County juvenile authorities today after admitting an attempted safecrack- ing Thursday night at the Dixie Lumber Co. at 831 Oakland Ave. _| Pontiac Police said. Det. Sgt. John A. DePauw said the pair also admitted five other breakins. during questioning Sat- urday. BB shot holes in the lumber company office windows led police te believe youths were responsible for the attempted safe job, DePauw said.. A round- up of neighborhood youths netted the pair, he said. Other breakins, which DePauw said netted. the boys about six cases of soda pop, included: land Ave., the Reliable Welding Co. at 44 W. Lawrence St., Art Metal Platers at 61 Short St., tool firm. Accident Story Corrected sesscsszsr32 asssssests° Sunday morning when his car struck a bridge abutnrent on M32 | in Montmorenci County. Robert Deane, 27. of Baidwin, drowned Sunday while. fishing in Lost Lake near Baldwin. — Charles Moceri Jr., 12, of De- troit, drowned Sunday in Oakland County's Upper Pettibone Lake. Twent-two-year-old Victor Marin and Ronald--Manning, 21, were killed Sunday when their cars crashed head-on, three miles south of Sault Ste. Marie. on U. S. 10, midway between Flint and Saginaw, claimed three lives. The victims, all of Flint, were Mrs. Henrietta Rex; her grand- daughter. Nancy Mizrock, 8; and Robert Stevenson, 38. Marcos Garza, 3-year-old Mexi- can farmhand, was killed Sunday when he was struck by an auto- mobile on M99 at the southern out- skirts of Eaton Rapids. Mrs, Margaret Burchfield, 31, of Eaton Rapids,-was fatally injured Sunday when her car sud- dently went out of control on M two miles east of Chartotte. Mrs. Odessa Barcus, 3, o Owosso, was killed Sunday when her car left the road and rammed into a tree, four miles south of Owosso. Thomas J. Navin, nephew of the late Frank J. Navin, former own- er of the Detroit Tigers, was killed Harbor, suffered fatal injuries Fri: Benton Harbor. Mrs. Bernard B. Lightcap, of Dayton, Obie, was killed Satu day in a two-car collison on M 43, 12 miles southwest of Hastings. Keith k-oef,,0criaCp J-eB a Keith P. Campbell, 0, of Breck- inridge. was killed Friday night when his car was involved in a collision with a truck on U: S. 10, seven miles north of Flint. ; Nine-year-old James Besson, of Escanaba, was fatally injured +| Saturday while riding a bicycle which collided with a truck, three a on a wll miles north of Escanaba. driven by Nelson E. Willis, 33, of| . '® Plame crash Saturday near _ A further check of Jones, eight miles east of Cas- Waterford Township Police records | *ePelis, claimed the lives of pilot | “and didn’t see the car Ind, and bis passenger, Irma driven by Houston in time to avoid | Weaver. 19, of Gulliver, Mich. the Walter O. McAnallen 43, of St - _- Ruth Sarasin, 17, of Gladstone, | Friday night, one mile south- of Flint. His car struck a_ utility pole William Kuball, 3, of Benton day night in a three-car crash near | Louis, ich, was killed Sunday in | a two-car collision at we we section of M 46 and Montcaim County. | John Taylor, 34, of Albion, was | killed late Sunday when a car in an embankment off Albion road, five miles north of Concord. Charlies Dix, 4, of Manitou Beach, and his 9-year-old son, Michael, drowned Sunday at Devil's Lake, 18 miles northwest of Adrian, when their rowbeat capsized while they were fishing. Three Flint residents were fa- tally injured Sunday in a head-on collision on U. S. 10. six miles north of Flint. The victims were Garreth Riddle Jr.. 21; Mrs. Car- | rie B. Ross, 45, and her husband, Willie, 48 Marquita Lieungh, 26, of Es- canaba, was killed Sunday night in a collission on U. S, 41 in Delta County in the Upper Penin- sula. City Commission Reviews Zoning Expect to Reconsider Subdivision Housing Units Tonight Pontiac City Commission tonight | is expected to reconsider the piat | of the Green and Sarko Subdivision where about 250 housing units are | being built on East Montcalm street Representatives of the firm and reity planning officials met last week to discuss a question by City | Engineer Lewis M. Wrenn that changes in the plat may violate the city zoning ordinance. A _re- | port of the meeting is scheduled | tonight Other expected action includes holding . public hearings on inten- tion to construct curb, gutter, drainage and related work on Lin- den from James K to Smith and on Smith from Joslyn te West Hopkins. Public hearings are planned on special assessment rolls for: Road-mix of] on Emerson from more to Pennsylvania : Sanitary sewers Gn Ariene from Perry to First: Madison from Arlene to Fuller Mansfield from Arlene to Puller, Tenny- son from Arlene to Fuller. Beverly from Balt\- -}.Arlene to Puller: and First from Arlene Another head-on crash Sunday | to Puller Sanitary sewer and water main -on Pleasantview from Hillsmont to the east line of lot 181 An engineer's cost estimate is expected for planned construgtion of combined sewer on Columbia from Barkell to 400 feet east. ‘A public hearing on interition to construct curb, gut- 4cr, drainage and related work on | First from Highwood to Joslyn. A special assessment roll is slat- | ed for planned laying of road-mix | oil on Second from Joslyn to Ivy. Birmingham Violinist, 18, Is Soloist With Symphony BIRMINGHAM (INS)—Eighteen- year-old Sendra Berant, Birming- ham violinist, will be the soloist with the Detroit Symphony Orches- tra tonight at 8:15 in the music shell at the State Fair Grounds. | Miss Bernat has won the Bir- mingham Talent Award, the Bir- | mingham musicale scholarship for summer work, and the Kate Chase | scholarship given by the National Federation of Music Clubs She also has won a scholarship to the Eastman School of Music. eg, | Miss Bernat will play the Mozart A major concerto for violin and orchestra. Valter Poole will con- duct. 2 Detroiters Sentenced to Prison for Robbery Two Detroiters were sentenced to 2 to 10 years in Southern Michi- gan Prison at Jackson today by Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick for the armed robbery of a Far- mington Township patent medicine store. James Robertson, 35, of 16785 |W. Brooks St. and Robert Kipter, | 2. of 18105 Evergreen St. pleaded | guilty June 27 to robbing the store at 30942 Grand River Ave, June 20 with a téy pistol. They escaped | with $41 and told police after their _ capture they robbed the store after | drinking for several hours, P { 5. which he was a passenger failed | to make a turn and skidded into|67, of 15 Baxter, at her residence at 1:15 p.m. Mon- is _stheduled | Pontiac Deaths Mrs. James E. Bader Mrs. James E. (Maude) Bader, day. Born -in Covington, 3O, 1887, she was of George and Martha EF. Bybee. She married the late Mr Ind., live 25 years ago a son, Mrs. Lee Harris and Ed- ward Bader of Drayton Plains, Mrs. Albert Peterson of Imlay City, Mrs. Robert Erb and Mrs. Leonard Peterson of Lansing, Mrs. Lawrence Beam and Mrs. Burtis Crowe of Pontiac Also surviving are a_ brother, Ralph Bybee of Hillsdale and a sister, Mrs. Ruby Weber of Rush- Ville, both in Indiana, eight grand- children and four great-grandchil- dren. Funeral will be Thursday at 2 p.m. from the Church of Christ on Tasmania Ave. of which she was a member. The Rev. Walter Bankes, her pastor, will officiate and burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery The body is at the | Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home Bennie Lee Davis Funeral for Bennie Lee Davis, 37, of 359 Branch St. will be to- night at 7 p.m. from Providence Missionary Baptist Church. The Rev. T. Walter Harris, pastor of the church will officiate and burial will be Wednesday in Oak Hill Cemetery. * Born in Helena, Ga., Sept. 21, 1916, he was the son of Robert and Lela Locke Davis. He mar- ried Rosia Bell Marbley at Mc- Rae. Ga., in 1939 and came to Pontiac that year. B Sewage Service Co. Besides his widow he is survived by a daughter, Rozella at home. Mr. Davis was dead upon ad- mittance to Pontiac General Hos- pital June 25. ‘Mrs. Walter S. Sherwell neral Home. The Rev. Fred R., Tif- ‘New Water Well in Operation Here at Silver Lake began pumping over 700 gallons per minute into Pon- tiac’s water system today and coupled with a well started last week will increase the possible pumpage by over 2,000,000 gallons daily. With the last new well at Sil- ver Lake expected to start produc- ing another 1,000,000 gallons per day by early next week, City Water Superintendent Joseph W. Gable foresees no rationing of city water in the near. future. The three new wells will give Pontiac a total of 22 capable of pumping over 26,000,000 gallons per day the superintendent stated. Three Injured in Crash at Orchard and Maple Mrs. Dorothy E. Ross 38, of 23353--Harding, Hazel Park, was reported in good condition in Pon- tiac Genera] Hospital this morn- ing suffering from cuts and a pos- sible concussion ‘suffered in a two- car accident yesterday morning at Orchard Lake and W. Maple Rds. according to Oakland County sher- iff's deputies. Mrs. Ross Was riding with her husband, Harry C. Ross, 67, same address, who received head cuts when their car collided with one driven by Joseph L. Hontz, 36, of 6844 Mercer, Detroit. Another passenger in the Ross car, Frank W. Farnwalt, 71, of 117 South Bivd., Walled Lake, was treated for head died suddenly March the daugfiter Myers Surviving are six daughters and He was employed at the B and | Funeral for Mrs. Walter S. (Har: riet R.) Sherwell, 76, of 6470 Alden Dr. will be held Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. from the Farmer-Snover Fu- fany, pastor of Bethany Baptist Church, will officiate. Mrs. Sher- well died Sunday. ’ A second new city water well PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, Jv LY 6, 1954 Call In Mother of Dead Youth Mrs. Thorne Ordered to Testify, Try to Clear Up Son’s Death CHICAGO w& — Mrs.. Marion Thorne has been. subpoenaed to testify at the inquest into the mys- terious death of her 20-year-old son, Montgomery Ward Thorne, heir to a mail order fortune. Thorne was found dead in his apartment June 19. The cause of his death has not been determined. Coroner Walter E. McCarron said the inquest can not be completed until he gets the results of a chemi- cal analysis of Thorne’s vital or- gans, probably later this week. * ° » Mrs. Thorge did not’ appear at | the three previous sessions of the | inquest. A family physician said | She was too ill. However, an attor- |ney said that she would appear | today “unless something unfore- | seen happens.”’ . * * McCarron said he would seek to learn how well Mrs. Thorne knew Miss Maureen Ragen, 18, Thorne’s | Pe fiancee, and Miss Ragen’s mother, Mrs. Aleen Ragen. The two fami- lies have begun a legal battle over Thorne’s estate of almost two million dollars. Thorne in a second will had left the bulk of his estate | to Miss Ragen and her mother. A | first will left most of it to his mother. * . * Mrs. Ragen testified earlier that Mrs. Thorne had engineered the meeting with the Ragens. At a ‘news conference, howeyer, Mrs. Thorne said she knew the Ragens only slightly * . The coroner also seeks to learn Bader in Rockville, Ind. He died| why young Thorne lived in a $5 Dec. 25, 1950 a month apartment instead of in Mrs. Bader came to Pontiac to| his mother’s plush Lake Shore Drive apartment, and whether Mrs. Thorne had her son taken to a police station for questioning on one occasion, as one witness testi- | fied previously. Thorne reportedly was receiving $150 monthly allowance until his | 21st birthday. French Suspect Drug of Killing 12 PARIS W—The French Ministry of Interior today suspended the sale and use of a new drug sus- pected of causing the death of 12 people in the last few days. The drug, made of assimilable tin and vitmin F, ws sold in the form of pills to cure certin kinds of light infection. Autopsies showed that all 12 vic- tims—the latest a 12-year-old boy— died of poisoning only a few hours after taking. the drug. Most of them were being treated for minor in- fections. Government laboratories are conducting experiments to deter- mine the toxicity of the product. The sale of the drug had been approved by French medical au- thorities following tests last Janu- ary. Of 2.400 boxes of the drug manufactured since then, only about 100 had been sold. Gotham F iremen Run Up Against Famed Red Veto NEW YORK «—The New York Fire Department ran into a Rus- sian veto last night when two fire companies were: barred from the Park Avenue building housing the Soviet delegation to the United Na- tions. The equipment responded to an alarm by a passer-by that smoke. sparks and possibly flames were oming from the delegation build- ing. | The firemen were turned back | | by the guards, however. * Ld self as the “‘officer on duty,” said the delegation personnel was ‘‘only using a fireplace’ and there was no reason for firemen to have A Russian, who described him- |- come. A fire official surmised that pa- per had been burned inside the building, as firemen saw sparks and paper ash, apparently rising through a screen covering an in- cinerator chimney. Leaders Meet Secretly TOKYO #—The Communist -Pei- ping radio said tonight Red China's Premier Chou En-lai and - Viet- minh rebel leader Ho Chi Minh have held a secret meeting some- where on the China- Indochina bor- der. 4 By Panama Canl _ thedistance by birth. cuts. | A blue whale consumes as niuch | |as a ton of food a day. |. j Enjoy Our .. AIR COOLED Dining Room! Waldron Hotel Coffee Shop .. 36 E. Pike St. CHARLES GIBFORD Funeral for Charles Gibford, 79, of 206 Raeburn St. was held today from the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Following the service the body was taken to the Kistler Fu- neral Home at Hudson, Ind. for another service on Wednesday and burial. Mr. Gibford served on the Pon- tiac City Commission for 10 years. He = suddenly Sunday in La- Germany May Get Sovereignty U. S., Britain to Push|. Plans if France Fails to Ratify EDC LONDON —The United States and Britain pushed ahead today with plans to give West Germany almost full sovereignty—including rearmament powers—in their two occupation zones if France does not ratify the European army plan. Political and legal experts of the two Allied nations opened meet- ings at the Foreign Office yester- day to draft a program of joint U.S.-British action to be launched if the European Defense Commu- nity is not apis ~ — The conferences here are expect- ed to conclude before end of this week. Under study are pro posals to: 1. Give the West German gov ernment almost complete inde- pendence in the American and Brit- ish zones, including powers to raise a defense army. 2. Abandon thee U-S--British- French High Commission in Bonn and set up American and British embassies. + . . Such action would leave._the French zone, in southwest Ger- many, the sole occupied territory in the federal republic and would put the French under acute Ger- man pressure to get out of tha’. The drafting of plans here was ordered by President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Churchill at their meeting in Washington last week, They agreed then that West Germany should be given “‘its place as an equal partner in the community of western nations.” The French were not invited to take part in the talks here, the first such omission of France from joint Allied ied on Germany since the war. Cattle grubs spoil enough cattle hides each year to supply leather to put soles on the shoes of 12,000- 000 men. Pollution Down in Silver Lake Beach Will Reopen If Second Check Proves Favorable Michigan Health Department lab- oratory reports showed today that Silver Lake is almost completely tree of sewage pollution. Oakland County Sanitarian Rus- sell H. Coltson said the samples taken by his staff and sent to the state laboratories last week showed the water “about normal for an inland lake.” If these samples come out well we'll reopen Silvercrest Beach. We'll run this second check some time this week."’ The health department's favor- able report climaxed some two years of work by Oakland County Drain Commissioner Ralph A Main, county health authorities and Silver Lake families. A check two years ago showed about 30 homes and other buildings were emptying sewage from bath- rooms and kitchens into Silver- crest Drain—a county storm drain that runs into the lake. Main said today that every one of those buildings has been dis-. connected from the drain. “I¢ was through the coopera: tion of Silvercrest families them- selves that the job was done,’ he said, “Main said Silver Laké has had a pollution problem for several years. Complaints of residents, he said, spurred a check by his office and the health department. Coltson’s office checked the lake water two years ago, found it polluted beyond the danger point, and banned swimming at Silver- crest Beach. Main and the families whose waste water emptied into Silver- crest drain then started the job of changing over all sewage con- nections. Main said Galloway Lake and Keego Harbor's Dollar Lake are next on the list for a cleanup drive. ‘‘We hope the families in those places will give us the same co- operation as the Silver Lake peo- = ple,” he said. Fireworks Violation Costs Five $10 Each A Pontiac youth, one from Novi Township and three Detroit men paid $10 fines Monday after plead- ing guilty to illegally shooting off firecrackers at Walled Lake Park. The Pontiac youth, John D. Shedd, 18, of 604 Central Ave., appeared before West Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Dieterie as did Larry G. Behrinds, 19. of 4892 Pontiac Lake Rd., Novi Township. The three Detroiters, all appear- ing before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stanaback, were Ar- thur Rike, John Hipley Jr., and Theadore McCrary. Sergeant Cole’s Father Dies Sunday in Detroit Sgt. Robert Cole, of Pontiac’ Po- lice Traffic and Accident Division, was notified of the death of his father, William Roy Cole, 62, of 18300 Ferguson, Detroit, Sunday morning. The body is at te Harvey A. Neeley Funeral home, 16540 Myers Rd., Detroit. Noroom duage fr dion inde! This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year af Statler % Ifone or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. % Ifone or more children under 14 oécupy a room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a eee Stal family =-the one-person rate applies for the second room. Bring the family for wedkend of fun _ ot the Detroit Stotier | © Children’s menus * Reliable beby sitters SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES © Children's plates end silver * Balloons for the youngsters after meals ¢ Formulas prepared * A besket of fresh fruit in every room occupied by children * Radice in every room © High cheirs and cribs Detroit: Facing Grand Circus Perk ol.—WOedward 3-4000 = é OMT, =|Shea rers Are Hosts The engagement of Natalie Rige- and Lt. Jere he iw er a ee F..E. Eddys, former Pontiac resi- | fet, from which ‘ O t : ht ‘ti | her fiance also en toni | ae aba Pap lead] (aa pane arya id a NATALIE RICE er) gradauad | 4 Pp g John Austin, 5, (left) and his brother|grandparents, the Stuart Austins of Chero- parted apr hhc shssllgeoead . Glenn, 4, agree that there’s never a dull mo-|kee road. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs.| ton, m1. He is taking the physical 7 ment during a stay at the home of their|Stuart Austin Jr, of Gary, Ind. este core at Cam) Honey le Vonna Locke Speaks | —CHARGE ACCOUNTS AVAILABLE— ock, ' ee ¢ 23 OOS SRE RE eT CR ee the Dexter Dalgettys and the Joan Roberts Calls Them Key to Success Singer Stresses Need for Teen Fans By DOKOTHY ROE Associated Press Women's Editor 0” the Know what makes a successful them from disc jockeys. They popular singer? Plenty of teen-age whistle and sing them on the street fans clubs and all at once the song is a hit.” companies realize the of the fan club audi- But they play your tunes juke boxes, and request records, Record importance says Joan, and arrange per- “No popular singer can get along without them,"’ says Joan Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Hindman Jr. of Churchville, N. Y., an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Jane E., June 24. Grandparents are the Charies Pettits of East Tennyson avenue and the Ira Hindmans of &t. Petersburg, Fila. The infant's mother is the former Esther Pet- Junior Naps Easily | %_ a After Noon Feeding | Receiving a master of arts de- i; &@ good Men te gree recently at the commence- pensive campaign of anybody, and that's why he became the idol of the wartime “bobby-soxers."’ State College Vows in First Methodist Touring northern Michigan fol- lowing their marriage Friday eve- ning in the First Methodist Church are Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Lash The bride is the former LaVonna Grace Locke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Russell Locke of Glen- dale avenue, He is the son of Mrs Walter Nelson of Keege Harbor The bride approached the altar wearing a ballerina-length gown Locke, was maid of honor wearing a ballerina - length strapless gown of pink, identical to the bride's. She carried a bouquet of blue car- nations and her headpiece was of pink flowers Ward Lash of Keego Harbor was best man for his brother and Jay Creger and Joe Barkiewicz seated the guests Maxine Schroeder sang the bri- Hair... Dry and Lustreless After the Long Weekend? LET US RESTORE IT’S NATURAL BEAUTY AND star of “Oklahoma!” and other | ence Generally, Iniv of tulle over taffeta. The gown x . . — musicals, who has just written the Sonal appearance tours for their] give Baby his nap right after his Peover wes Willinas piping was fashioned with scalloped lace oa) Fecmal) sed Roy Euey wae Barbara Sl LUSTRE TO AST ALL story of her life in a new book, Stars, provide fan club member-| noon meal. He's more willing to] Guin. pie malairene his bachelor of peplum, matching jacket and long co ‘ in th . a oe SUMMER... “Never Alone ships and autographed pictures.| go to bed after he's eaten than a deenee sleeves, Her fingertip veil was igh boo align al ae and organize the thing on a busi-|he is if he's been allowed to re- ectence ae eet Caeaee. trimmed with seed pearis She church parlors, the new Mrs. | , | ' f mo - lay . Lash changed to a white dress A? ALON Joan. the wife of Dr. John J./ ness like basis turn to his play. By Panama Canal. the distance| C®?Tied a cascade bouquet of a maict é é | rile an oiner oO year “ER wer neces.e ¥ ] f , . » “= a : wi ching accessories Donlon — m ther of a ty : old Every successfu' singer i tm ve might try getting pain un-lis about 50 miles, but it is 7873 white carnations and red roses. The couple will reside in -the 8188 Cooley Lake Rd. UNION LAKE EMpire 3-2723 son, John Jr., is concentrating. last 10 years has had to have a dressed and into his sleepers be- miles around South America these days on singing for records and TV. She recently signed a con- tract to record eight platters a carefully organized fan club pro- motion “Frank Sina- tra had the biggest and most ex- says Joan The bride's sister, Geraldine! Parkside Apartments. fore feeding him, since it will help to get him into the mood for sleep. year for a new company which plans a big distribution in Europe as well as America. She says Necktie Choi Must Match cle dic ated to coon the U.S. male the werld's “Although I miss my audiences, I know that I can reach a far bigger- group through records and “television than I ever did on the stage.” organization is busy building up her fan clubs, apd is. making a personal appearance tour throughout the country. * Right now Joan best dressed, has come forth with a few pointers to aid both men and women shoppers faced with the di- up the fan clubs. If they like you. | you're in. If not, you're finished. | “It isn't that they buy so many claims that & necktie is the most important single item in a man’s appearance. They say that not only | does the right necktie enhance a man's appearance but it can do the | same thing for his personality that la new hat does for a womans | personality. with suits and shirts. ce for Man Personality |headed men don't wear red ties but prefer brown, green or blue. | Blondes wear blue and red but | ne yellow. Brunettes stick to red, grey and yellow and tend to rhy hair coloring. Here's a hint to keep in mind to insure the life of that necktie: After wearing, they should always be untied and hung up overnight to shed wrinkles. Dry clean them |'when necessary, but washing is | not recommended untess specified PARKING AREA FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Money-Saving Spec SEERSUCKERS - DENIMS - POPLINS - SHIRTS - SHORTS - PEDAL P ial Purchase! GIRLS COOL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR => ; = ft away from brown. The grey “In the final analysis, it’s the lemma of buying a graduation gi haired male leans toward red as 49 99 : kids that put any singer over,’’ for a young man, or for any Man| his coter preference but actually she says. “These are the young-, on any day, for that matter. can wear almost any shade, The . sters be sters between 8 and 18 who make This group of style arbiters new blacks look good with any PLAYTONES - COMBINATIONS USHERS.- MIDRIFFS - SKIRTS ONE and TWO-PIECE PLAYSUITS - SLACKS - OVERALLS a 7 es Just in time for this summer’s wearing! Hand selected, unusually fine playtogs that take The fashion experts say that on the tie tag. : ~ [ot eekdl phaays be coordina sed Naturally, the larger the num- the rugged wear of summer vacationing . .. yet need little care. Gold, pink, aqua or red /, | ber of ties a man owns, the longer seersucker shorts, midriffs, blouses, skirts, pedal pushers, slacks, playsuits. 2.49 each. Navy | So, if he wears blue, give him a tie in any shade of red or blue, If — MARY KING — or black is his favorite select a tie in a contrasting tone of the same color or choose a tie in MACHINELESS AND Mark King Cold $650 Wave, Complete. suit shade, | they will last if properly rotated. On figured or patterned ties, an easy method for removing spots is Loosens Glasses ODDS and ENDS TABLE . 2... pr. 52.00 Holeproof Hosiery Regularly $1.35 to $1.65 C 3 Pr. Box $275 Up to 5 to 8 — Children’s Shoes 40% on Sizes 82 to 12 — 122 to 3 @ MEN’S SHOES @ poplin and woven tattersall combination shorts, pedal pushers tattersall shirts. 2.49 each. Copen or maize Indian print no-iron playtone skirts or blouses. Sizes 3 to 6x, 7 to 14 2.49. One-piece playtone | SALON brown is his preference, tan,|to9 scratch them out. Spot remov- = nie ; . = ‘ green or gold ties all contrast cor-| ers are not mmended for ? playsuits. 2.99. Navy or copen plaid ‘n’ plain denim and gingham two-piece playsuits. COLD WAVE rectly. Or if either charcoal, grey | on silk or solid color ties. 2.99. : Peter Kemp L. Oo - . to Fami ly was announced et be i: eee “ Our expert hair styling cutting fF | Fu I ers Entertain at a buffet will give you # colffure for summer- . California Visitors el that will be pretty as a picture. And pS for a Month eee coven co 5 ee ie OO far ; we agli Linger heme cate ROWENA § seavry su0P apolis, ., have arrived ts, eek at the home of her parents, Dr. Mr pele Vrs : and Mrs. John P. Shearer of ul ' B , 8244 N. Saginaw (over Neumode’s) oe Cherokee road, for a month's visit, Slt a armen een : * * * R ice. , * * eT A: Cilia MEI OL Arriving Monday by plane from Mrs. J. E. Castro Valley, Calif., to spend at DeVault of - month with her parents, the Roy or A FINER C. Fullers of State Park boulevard, Birmingham —_——— as — Charies Reug- and Frank Hi. OOn e nitz eon even. Kemp ‘of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley D. John- Detroit are son of South Johnson avenue left Jere’s parents. | Calbecain, They i on tour of She attended : stop at Les : Angeles, San Diego, Terrance and Liggett School}; PARK AT OUR 1662 S. Telegraph Rd Redondo Beach. They will visit and Michigan FRONT DOOR! . 6 pink, heli, blue or maroon, For | Sportswear, the new square and| [f water glasses accidentally = oe’ Prag ey roy | fringed end. ties are very popular, | stick together rather than try to and manicuring. too. lforce them apart, put the outer A bit of information has also| glass in hot water and fill the in- one oer been-unearthed by fashicn councils | ner glass with: cold water, This 152 N. Pe PPO! FE 2-3053 | which can be used as a guide in| will loosen the glasses and avoid. ocdeott A ‘buying a tie. They say that red | breakage. 7 : acest s pee. ous. Coat | pooteneed ' hampemmed "homme "bed < . &, ; 7 nt ho A 'd {a fi ~\ 7 . 4 fa } m oe fig tan : AN - - i a . d & ® ~~ * ~ “¢? ee Red Cross @ WOMEN’S SHOES @ Wedges eed ee } @ PUMPS $ > 80 1. $EA%SBO e@ COBBIES To z @ STRAPS 3 9 @ DESCO Sa Hit @ OXFORDS @ ORCHIOS «= Batats | ' Regularly Priced From $9.95 to $15.95 ’ t Ls | WALK-OVER Srecisl Beck FORTUNE $699 _ : SES ia, ‘ $125 —s1695te— @ PEDWIN- to a Sig) Lg $22.98 @FOOT PAL %§95 20% On Mest Summer Shoes 35 N. Saginaw St. Shop in Air-Conditioned Comfort PAULI'S SHOE STORE Serving Pontiac for Over 75 Years Jacobsen’s Is Your Heedquerters For Edwerds Children's Shoes ; sep _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954 Fo oases ~ Should Not - Keep Prizes Children, Too, Must ‘Be Taught That It Is Impolite By EMILY POST A reader writes me: “You have said many times in your column that a hostess should not accept a Will you please tell me if the same rule applies to a young child who ts hostess af her party” “My daughter day party recently and several games were played for which prizes were given. It so happened that the birthday child won several of the prizes, which she kept. “When my dapughter told me about this I was very mach sur- prised because the hostess in question-ts a very polite person. Don't you think, Mrs. Post, the mother was wrong in allowing her daughter to keep these prizes? 1 would very much like te know what you think about this.” If there were several prizes she might have been allowed to keep one, child does that she The prize is given to the runner- up. The theory to teach the child that a hostess does not play for prizes in her own house. Fur- thermore, the birthday child un- doubtedly has received many pres- ents already) a . prize in her own house. went to a birth not wins keep any prizes is Dear Mrs. Post: A friend wrote that she was sending me a pres ent. That was a month ago and the gift hasn't turned up. Maybe she changed her mind or delayed in buying it, maybe she did send it and wonders why I don't thank her. What should I do? Answer: Under the circum- stances you describe, I think you can write to your friend te say that you are writing to her to let her know that if she sent you something, it must have been lost because you have not re- ceived it. * * > Dear Mrs. Post: When taking a girl out on a date, is it necessary for her host to provide her with Gigarettes—that ts, if she smokes a brand different from that whith he smokes, or should she be ex- pected to provide her own? Answer: I do not think it too much to ask for him to supply her with the cigarette he knows she likes. Wash Both Combs You probably remember to wash your home brush and comb each time you shampoo your hair. But don't forget to give your handbag comb the same consideration Baby Found In New B-29 fer al looks se much lke o BD that it hes modern moth ers wp in the acer with enthusieam The manufacturer has 1. 4 creation, the “Dester Diaper but the shape reminds one - on and off ell-age a positively has mothers nders ane whet to de with they re may make Diaper vepernes with genuine “Dew Diapers’ im stock . Reate tnquiry direes | - E menufacturer for name: of local ‘st # READY To Faeezs wi 1 mumuTE | @ G0T: Paeezme Te wi 4! @ COSTS ONLY PENNIES PER SERVING | But ordinarily the birthday) Firat — Talk It Over By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: I like him just don't The trouble i his so much—but we get along together that terms and I don't want to “Is there any way I can explain to him that I just don't go in for he wants me to accept the kind of stuff he wants me to— and still keep him? He means a lot to me, but I just can't keep up with him. So please help me.’ It's quite possible to feel a ter rifie attraction for a boy—and still net speak his language. But it's not possible to keep on going + with him when you have so many reservations, He you balk He wants to neck—you don't wants to go places where aren't comfortable—so you So coo! for summer and so easy to sew you'll want more than one! Soft front voke and curved neck- line spell figure flattery. Simple flared skirt accents tiny waistline. Choose gay, cotton prints. Embroi- dery if easy! Pattern 4744: Misses’ sizes 12. 14, 16, IS. 20; 40. Size 16 dress 4', yards 39-inch; bolero 1's yards. Embroidery transfer included. 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- tern for first-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams. care of 137 Pon- tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St.,-New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with zone. size and style number. GoLpen FLECCe Pot Cleaner and Scour Cloth “You never used anything as good!" Non-metallic, pliable, sanitary— rinses sweet and clean. Easy on the hands. Her Date Wants to Neck, So What Should She Do? He wants to stay out later than | you're allowed to, ‘se you fuss be- | cause of the trouble ~you _ know | awaits you at home There's nothing peaceful and hap- | py about a relationship that's so full of strain. At the risk of losing him, you'd be wise to talk things over with him. If he's reasonable and patient, he'll slow down his pace for your sake. If he thes you as you are, he won't insist on terms that will change you. But if having his own way means more to him than you do, the} friendship wouldn't work out for long, anyway. — * *¢ * Dear Miss Woodward: All last summer I went steady with Pat and never once let him kiss me. In the fall | decided I wanted to break up, since we were going to dif- ferent schools. But three weeks ago he came over, bringing two boys with him. “One of them, Danny, I liked right. away. The next night tee | came back. and later in the week | Pat called and | told him I liked Danny “That bit of news got to Danny and he called me. He said if I went out with him I would have te neck a little. “He's coming next and I don't know what to do. How | shall I act? Should I let him | neck? Do you think he just wants | to go out with me to see H he can} beat Pat?” Danny has given you considers fair warning doesn't know you yet realize how unbending and = stub- born you can be when you want to | be. And so far, you've no -reason to change your mind about neck. | ing—even with Danny. Be your own gay, light hearted self when he comes over. put te work all the devel | maneuvers described in my book- let, “Why Neck?"’, which I'm rushing off te you. You can talk, laugh, sing and dance your way out of it. My booklet is available to any- one @lse who wants it. Just write | me, enclosing a stamped, self-ad- dressed envelope. Teenagers Just Love Barbecues | Mrs. Martin Wager | Gives Her Recipe for Meal on Bun | - By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press_Food Editor } If you have ever fed a gang of teenagers, you know what prodi gious appetites they have, and how they love any kind of a barbecue. Mrs. Martin J. Wager has a recipe for Cheese Barbecues that should be rizht up teenage | alley. Do try them. | Mrs. Wager considers music her vocation and her avocation. She | is a church organist and gives | piano lessons. She is also an) active member of Tuesday Musi- | cale and of the new PEO chapter. | Within the past two months in their immediate family, the Wa- gers helpe “See > .s st certs a", we 9 Fay SS 9: " ye Say > “2. Fs bay Cowra Wredr One hexagon (20 inches diagon- ally from point to point) — pine- apple design — makes a center- piece; two a scarf; seven a 9! ipeh cloth’ : Crochet pattern 874: A 20inch hexagon in No. 30 mercerized cot ton: larger in knitting and crochet cotton, emails r in No. 56 cotton Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pal tern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea Print plainly pattern number, your name. address and zone. Use Clean Needles Knitting or crocheting will go faster with clean needles. Whether or soapsuds steel,- you can use hot often to wash away the marks of stie ky perspired fingers. sTs PETUNIA! hore: For notes ar + s,} or OF househo! -L-love my Krichen Blackboard doors / Fust _paine your doo: — or cupboard doors — with blackboard paint, and what could be handier? f'\ +oF ptacare Cc J _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1954_ Stengel Names Harvey Kuenn to All- Star Tea CHICAGO up—Casey Stengel of the New York Yankees, who will mianage the American League team in the annual All-Star base- ball game at Cleveland July 13 named eight pitchers for the battle today. ” * * Only one, Whitey Ford ef his own Yankees, is a lefthander. The others are Mike Garcia and Bob Lemon of Cleveland; Bob Keegan and Virgil Trucks of the Chicago White Sox; Bob Porter- field of Washington, Allie Rey- nolds of New York and Bob Turley of Baltimore. Thé American League released Stengel’s choices along with the other players who, with the eight starters selected in a poll of fans, will represent the league. * * * The eight American League starters, announced Sunday night, are Al Rosen, Cleveland—tirst base; Bobby Avila, Cleveland, sec- ond base; Ray Boone, Detroit, third base; Chico Carrasquel, Chi- cago, shortstop; Orestes Minoso, Chicago, left field; Mickey Mantle, New York, .center field; Hank Bauer, New York, right field, and Yogi Berra, New York, catcher. Each of these eight top vote-get- ters must, according to the regula- tions governing the game, start and—play a minimum of three innings. * * * For possible use in later innings, Stengel chose the following players to round out his 25-man squad: Catcher — Sherman Loilar, cago. — Infielders—Ferris Fain, Chicago; Jim Finigap, Philadelphia; Nelson Fox, Chicago; George Kell, Chi- Chi- Ayulo Winner ‘of 200-Mile Darlington Test Bob Scott Is Killed in Crash at South Carolina Track DARLINGTON, S.C., u*—Searing speeds and-100-degree heat spurred Mapuel Ayulo, Los Angeles, Calif., race track veteran, to victory here yesférday in the third Darl- ingion Raceway Big Car event that was marred by a fatal acci- dent. ; a ~ * Ayulo was pacing the field at 128 mph when Bob Séott, Gardena, Calif., turned over against the in- field fence and caused the caution flag to be run out for 15 laps, drop- ping the final spéed to 123 mph. Seott, taken to a Florence hospi- tal, died. He suffered a_ broken neck and other injuries. Relief driv- er Ernie McCoy went over the out- side rail earlier in the 200-mile grind, but was not hurt seriously. The speeds turned up in trials were less than 10 miles an hour slower than at the Indianapolis track. The pace Ayulo was setting when the was slowed down by Scott's tragic accident was only about 3 mph off this year’s winning speed at the 2'2 mile Indiana track. » * * A crowd estimated at 15,000 was parched by the blazing sun be fore race the grind was finished. Exact of- ficial speed was 122.993 Only 18 of the 30 starters were on the track when Ayulo finished his winning race Favored Sickle’s Image Beaten by 5-1 Outsider Favored Sickle’s Image, owned by Clarence Hartwick of Oxford, was upset by Rosemary B., a 5-1 outsider, in the 7th race at the De- troit Race Course yesterday. The Hartwick mare, which has won more than $400,000 during her career, pressed the pace most of the way but faltered going into the stretch and finished 3rd_be- hind Rosemary B and Eternal Fro- lic Sports Calendar TODAY BASEBALL Auburn Merchants ‘Wisner, 5 30 CLASS D—Mets vs Rochester (Washing vs Pon- ton 5 3) Nicholie Realty vs Doris aie ing Rink :C-J south 5 30) LASS F- Rosebud Market vs Cass Ponts ‘C-J north. 5 3%: ‘ SOFTBALL CITY MEN’S—Moose vs General Mo- tors (Beaudette, 7). Drive-In Cleaners Ys Stadium Inn (Beaudette, minghan Riteway vs ‘North Side. 7:1; Milford Merchants vs C-V \(North Bide, 8 30) WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Dixie Rec- reation vs Dick & Wes (Men's. 8 30): Day's Sanitary vs Drayton Drug ‘Junior, 6.30) WEDNESDAY BASEBALL CLASS A—Ben Jerome vs CIO 504 (Wisner, 5.30) CLASS D—Clarkston vs (Washington, 5-30): Pontiac Police ‘(C-J 88 830); Bir- Porster Tool Griff's Grill Lytell-Colegrove vs south, 5:30). A E—Rosebud Market vs Boys Club (C-J north, 5°30) CLASS F—Williams Lake Specs vs Boys Club Americans (Washington, 9); Majes- tic vs Avondale (Washington, 11). KNOTHOLE — Avondale vs General Motors «C-J south, 9) Vollmar’s vs Senators (C-J north, 9); Tigers vs Whit- field (C-J south, 115; White Sox vs Orioles :C-J north, 11. AMERICAN LEGION—Rerkiey at Bir- mingham Reds, Birmingham Blues at a Valley Boys Club, both games at pom SOFTBALL CITY MEN'S — Genera! Motors vs CIO 594 ‘+Beaudette 7:1; Birmingham Riteway \s Stadium Inn ‘+ Beaudette, 8 30). Moose vs Louie's Tavern ‘North Bide, 7) CITY GIRLS—GMC vv Gingeliviile ‘North Bide, 8 30) WATERFORD TWP — vs Gidley «Men's, 8-30) vs White Bros ‘Junior RACING ~ Hardtops at Pontiac M-5® oe trials at 7 p. m., races at 8:30 Richardson Dairy Inter-Lake Steel 6°30). 315-Hit Barrage By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Sportswriter Big league ball players celebrat- ed Independence Day with a home riy barrage that rocked eight ball parks from dugout to bullpen and sent the harried, almost defense- less pitchers running to cover. The of doubleheaders day re- sounded with 35 home run blasts, only five short of the major league record for most homers in one day A total of 315 hits were peppered about the parks as 75 pitchers were used. That's an average of 20 hits and more than four and a_ half pitchers a game * * * Only nine of the 32. starting pitchers went the distance with four of them turning in shutouts * +. * The Yankees trimmed the Phila- deIphia Athletics twice 7-4 and 11-2 to win their first doubleheader in almost a year. They had split the last three twin bills jn 1953 and their first 10 this season. Succes- sive homers by Joe Collins and Mickey Mantle and a run-scoring double by Gene Woodling provided featherweight bout at St. Nicholas feather champ, dropped Manzo for SADDLER SOCKED—Sandy Saddler takes a right @ the jaw from Libby Manzo in the AP Wirephete misses with a left as he Sth round of their Arena Monday night. Saddler, the the count in the 10th round. Not many Oakland County sports fans, particularly those interested in harness racing realize the num- ber of home-owned entries that take part in the daily events at North- ville Downs, now the scene of a good suntmer session. However, according to data supplied by track officials, there are more than a score of Oak- land County horses in Downs stables. And some are = regu- larly up with the winners, About half are owned by Pon- tiac men. These include the four-horse stable owtied by Henry Lobeck whose horses are: Pastime Hank, a four-year-old gelding; Pastime Judy, 6-year-old mare; Pastime Ellen, 6-year-old mare and Pas- time Clare, 6-year-old stallion. Others--are Irene Giles’ Sidney Guy, ll-year-old gelding; Leo Metz’ Scotty Hal, 4-year-old geld- ing; Charles Henry's Peter Don- ald, 5- year-old gelding; Clinton- dale, 5-year-old stallion owned by Elmer Going; Ed Stout's Marcel- la Spencer, 6-year-old mare, and J. O. Shelton’s Fast Delivery, 4+ year-old gelding. From other county communities are Perry Williems, Birmingham, with Doce Biake 5-" ear-old gelding, Hillcrest Chimes. 8-year-old geiding and Lord Darniey 4-year-old geiding Joseph Everson, Birmingham. Wicked Widow. 4- year-old mare. Fred and Glen Harmer Rochester. Monti Maiden 10-year-old mare: Harry and Clint Vreeland, Walled Lake, with Junior K., 4-year-old gelding, Alfred Lemais. Birmingham. 5-year-old gelding, Teakwood King; J. Hort Wilson, Walled Lake, Tommy M., 6-year-old gelding: Harold Hopkins, Rochester, Gypsy Counsel, 17-year-old stallion; Dr. Texas’ King Ranch Holding Pat Hand in Cup Handicap BOB MYERS ELERGOD. Calif. uw — The King Ranch of Texas holds the pat hand in the coming $100,000 Holly- wood Gold Cup Handicap and Cal- ifornia's Andrew Crevolin, the frenzied Frenchman, is wondering whether to change race tracks. * = * Budy Hirsch, King Ranch train- er watched his two stakes horses, Rejected and High Scud, run one- two in the $55,150 American Handi- cap yesterday and Crevolin saw his luck go to pot for the second straight racing day. * * * Crevolin's Imbros, the betting fa- vorite, finished third in the Ameri- |: can Handicap, and two days be- fore his little gray Kentucky Derby champion, Determine, ran third to Fault Free in a battle of 3-year- olds. SANDERS FOR RENT Crevolin and his trainer, Willie Molter, huddle today to decide whether to stay here, send Deter- mine and Imbros east, or give the two a vacation. The time for the mile and one- eighth was 1.48, tying the track record Attendance was 59,178, largest July 4 holiday crowd in the track's history and second high of the cur- 2 Dozen.County Owners Race at Northville Downs Donald Somers Scott, 3-year-old Birmingham, HiLos gelding Sam Reeves, Birmingham. Hill- crest Attorney, 10-year-old stallion Howard McAva of Davison hes Russet Birmingham, Gallant colt, R. Drummond Victor, 10-year-old Hal A. tT. Baxter of Davison has Volo Prince *Les Norman. with two horses Kehoe with one round out the Northville D&W Knothole 9 Wins Exhibition Tilt Dick & Wes Knotholers of the Pontiac Recreation department league defeated Clarkston Monday 3-1, in an exhibition baseball game played as part of the July 4th celebration at Oakland Park. Jerry Bunch and: Allan Tunney shared the pitching for the D & W club and timited €tarkston to one hit, while striking out 8, Second baseman Dan Kimmel came up with two brilliant fielding plays for Dick & Wes. Clarkston Dick @ Wee)... 3... 122 000 x—5 8 2 Powell, Reynolds and Stelmah; Bunch, Tunney and Hertal area owners at bu Verlin W. Emanuel, 1175 S. Har- rison, Denver, Colorado, likes to know what. mileage he is getting from his gasoline. He reports, ‘I am saving approximately two gal lons of gasoline in every tankful since changing to New Super Permalube Motor Oil.” The new oil reduces friction so much that engines just naturally run farther on less gas—especially in stop-and-go driving. Your Standard Oil Dealer has New Super Permalube. Drain and re- fill today with the oil that ac- tually pays for itself in gasoline rent meeting. savings. COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE EAST TOWN COLLISION Bear Equipment and Wheel Balancing 35 Elizabeth St. Ph. FE 4-5941 twin bill. Major League Hitters Celebrate Holiday With Total of 35 Home Runs on Monday the margin of victory in theopen er. Noren drove in five runs with his two homers in the nightcap. Bill Wilson hit Philadelphia's only hom- er The Giants and Dodgers each swept a doubleheader to leave the National League - leading Giants still 3%2 lengths in front pf Brook- lyn. The two rivals begin a three- game set at Ebbets Field tonight Johnny Antonelli won his 12th game with a three-hit 10-0 shutout over the Philadelphia Phillies in the opener. Rhodes, subbing for Monte Irvin in left field, homered and doubled in the first game. He hit another homer. and two singles in the second game and his homer came with two mates aboard to give the Giants an uphill 43 tri umph. Milwaukee won matches from the St nals 86 and 10-4 as banged four homers Cincinnati's Reds defeated Chi- cago 6-5 in the opener despite two homers by Jackson of the Cubs The Reds also took the nightcap 87 on Hobie Landrith’s home run Boston and Washington divided a two slugging Louis Cardi- each team . > . Boston won the first game 140 behind Willard Nixon's six-hitter as Lepcio batted in fiye runs with a triple and single, in adidtion to his grand slammer. Jack Jenson also homered for Boston. Washing ton took the second 7-1 behind Chuck Stobb's five-hitter. Sievers four-run wallop offset a 10 Red Sox lead provided by Lepcio’s sec ond homer Only one homer was hit in the Chicago-Baltimore doublehead er won by the White Sox 3-0 and 2-1. Billy Pierce hurled a four-hit shutout in his first complete game since May 19. The only homer in this action was hit by Ron Jack- son, a 2Myear-old bonus player, subbing at first base for Chicago in place of the injured Ferris Fain. cago; Harvey Kuenn, Detroit Outlielders—Larry Doby, Cleve- land; Jim Piersall, Boston, Ted Williams, Boston. * * * Stengel is managing the Ameri- can League stars for the fifth straight year He presumably stac ked a right handed pitching deck because of the National League's rough Lineup of righthanded batters, at least in the fans’ lineup. It includes Gran Hamner of Philade}phia, Ray Ja blonski of St. Louf& Al Dark of New York, Jackie Robinson of Brooklyn and Roy Campanella of Brooklyn—all righthanders and all with the possible exception of Dark, long ball hitters Only lefthanded hitters in the National League's starting lineup are Ted Kluszewski of Cincinnati Duke Snider of Brooklyn and Stan Musial of St. Louis. Ivy naming Porterfield to his pitching staff Stengel was right- ing what many fans considered a serious error in his)1953 selections Casey was subjected to great criti cism for not. choosing Porterfield last vear Ted Williams, the injury-and ill néss plagued Baston star, will be making his ninth All-Star appear ance. He holds a 407 batting av erage for the series. Berra, Doby and Kell each have been in five of the games * * * Other game personnel named by Stengel Wrists Loose By SAM SNEAD Keep Wrists Loose Pictured is Johnny Revyolta, a fine teaching pro (and quite a golf er in his time). Here he empha- sizes the looseness of the wrists on the backswing and follow don't wrists loose at those two points, it will be impossible for you to get through. If you keep your that ball the snap Mfto your brings the clubhead into the at the right moment Note how Johnny is letting his wrists (A) remain loose at the top of his backswing. But one thing's for sure—he's not letting swing go of his grip. Your grip must remain firm, From this point he will pull his arms—and NOT his’ hands—down hard. The wrists and club will take care of them- selves. Golfers Advised to Keep’. Coaches—Fred Hutchinson, De troit, and-Marty Marion, Chicago Batting practice pitchers— Duane Pillette, Baltimore, and Alex Kell ner, Philadelphia Batting practice catcher Bob Swift, Detroit Trainer—Wally Bock, Cleveland in Swinging):: head wHl lash at-the ball The pull ef the arms and the resulting swing w;roduces the lash. [ recom mend you swing back and forth without stopping and eventually you will acquire the ‘feel’ at the various points. Rhythm and cpn tinuity of action are important in a good swing Dodgers Sign Prep Ace SANTA BARBARA, Calif. uP Brooklyn Dodger scout Harold Phillips reported the signing of Bull Arretianes, 18, heavy hitting third baseman of Sarita Barbara High Wants Major— Loop Franchise Help of Professional, Business, Civic Leaders of City Is Sought DALLAS W — The Dallas News said tonight a group-of wealthy Dallas interested in the possibility of purchasing @ Ma- residents is jor league baseball franchise: for this cits lhe News said it was the most important effort in this direction That has been undertaken sifice speculation began months ago that Dallas might be a suitable location for a big league team ¥ » Ihe group | inall for the mo ment but is composed of men who co ud finance such an investment, B Rive Sports Editor of the ID) Nvws, wrote. “This nucleus however Wants to expand until it it appreximatebys - 30 of the hn professional and civic ke ad rs of Dallas. The interested parties do not want*to. enter into negotiations for the purchase of a franchise, unless they are certain that the residents ef Dallas want a | ig league club here . * * ° Rives said one of the number had approached Dick Burnett owner of the Dallas club. in the Texas League, to sound out his Opinion Burnett reportedty told them he thoucht major league baseball would be a success here and Yhat he would invest money in such®a venture, provided it had the full If the rest of the swing is made as well as the backswing, the club- School. for an undisclosed amount] support of the citizens and-admin yesterday istration Arrellanes, with u 444 batting Ihe talk of a major league club average, graduated from hych| for Dallas was revived with the school this year. He will report to} recent reports that the Philadel the Dodger spring training camp] phia Athletic were considering at Vero Beach, Fla., next year mev ing wv PAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA , d ‘ > $ .» + TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE $ 4 4 3 $ For Your Old Tire ona New 3 . > P 4 2 U. S. ROYAL AIR RIDE 3 . > q 6.70x15 7.1015 7.60x15 > 4 ‘ > F : 2 DOUBLE STAMPS 3 En WEDNESDAY! $ < ‘ $ 5] 2 ; L Ss ; > oO cy 2 4 2 a > $ 2 ; Service 3 > > P 4 $ 5 4 12113 North Perry St. $ > At Madison Street 54 7 Vie Soucy FE 3-9557 Louis Soucy 3 weweweevwrrrrrrrvrvervrvrvrvevrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrryyY wv VY / most modern in the years ahead, too. 130-h.p. V-8 Ford's new 130-h.p. Y-block V-8 is the only V-8 in the low-price field. And with low-friction design and deep-block construction, it’s the 147 South Segiedt s industry. Ball-Joint Suspension Ball-Joint Front Suspension is the most important chassis development in 20 years, for easier riding and handling. And Ford is the only low-prived car that has it. Trend-setting styling . Ford's trend-setting styling has set the pace for [7 a the industry. It is forward-looking styling that’s 5 out front today and will stay attractive for the “ ‘* ”~ You'll get a GREAT DEAL with oY OW a BUY FORD! BUY NOW! ORD ForDs Gor Ir! Sonata Highest resale value An analysis of used car. sles statistics shows that recent-model Ford cars return a greater portion of their original cost than any competitive make of car. oe Ae ne ng sh i Pathe BUY WISELY! Rr miter aero ENS o Phone FE 5-4101 others just want it! FORD OUTCLASSES EVERY 1954 COMPETITIVE CAR! fi te 4 F.D.A.F. DAYTON “BLUE RIBBON” THOROBRED Here is the greatest sefety devise ever put on a car. NYLON, the miracle tire cord that makes blow outs virtually impossible OFF _PLUS AT LEAST *5.00 Aliewance For Your Old Tires Thorobred ist Quality- Ist Line ® All Rayon Cord ® Cold Rubber Tread for long mileage GUARANTEED IN WRITING AGAINST ROAD HAZARDS List 600216 $20.10 $12.65 650x16 $25.95 $16.45 670x15 $23.20 $14.45 710x15 $25.75 $16.15 760x15 $28.40 DAYTON’S BIG 3 GUARANTEE 1. Lifetime F. Guarantee 2. 7,000 Mile Guarantee 3. 2-Year Written Read Hazard guarantee against all possible read hazards. WHITEWALLS A special buy ef those hard to get _ WIDE WHITEWALLS Brand New Ist Line Firsts uv 20 °16,95 *18.95 7.10-15 Pius Tax “xe. Recappable CSG. List 32.40 ROADKINGS Brand New—Factory Fresh -~ (Uifetime Guaranteed 5.00-16 $9.95 6.70-15 10.95 Pius Tax Exe. Recappable C$@ TRUVANIZED TIRES~~ Shoulder to Shoulder full €opped with Premium Quality Cold Rubber on Ist line Rayon Tires. ole $7.97 nos 8.88 soos °9.99 FREE FRONT END INSPECTION Front End Special Complete Front End Caster $9750 Wheel Static and Dynamic including Weights oe-tn T toa wee — gli iin cl ag | u i rf i Smelting, Dow Chemical, Pacific | Mills, Bullard, Atlantic Coast Line | ! Railroad, and ‘U.S. Gypsum. New York Stocks FieeEe EE nit yee BESEEE mE PoSlSsBESisscesssscsessecy 4222 e428 S228euNe & Yee suHeeeu eee oa-ee ~awevww (i ef MEUSSESESEsseszsrssssuzs ce > fi ef 2. i 3 i 2 EEE? Ld 5 gbf2 SSS St0.85 ce wasave > = ie i fn EHH F se=ueecsesresssx z SoRStoSSS=sEs < ——w ee : ‘it opty : 199973722777 7989 iy i ® : OOF aaevepe i e Fepa? ? 3 2 § E i a. - eee —- &#e24eenNuveavee + 298 e, =¥sus Z Fret HH Posususrsiusszs z wveavevuvew &@ “vee ee-¥4 PEPER Ue pa 2] suszscus.sesesesesSexsesssessscscss iy pete wa. - r 4 Z a-wSSS2SS8S5e2 @ eee~auvaveu-eee UHKvee +e “we Hd Peto | FS s2t3eu22% « i S8Sssacssze SFSU AK 2 SAU SSEHUSUHUAFEE— S222 US8 24248684 4 ~ 8 # snRhntF8iR as $224S-Sosx-Sesyusscy ZESSSSESse.8 BOAAAALA ee4Vueue eveoew PF : it | STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press Bs] 5 18 6 BSISSS22,~- 7ee~-Se0e— . duly 6(UP) — Wholesale bay ~ farmers’ markets ré- bureau of markets: opie, eteele’s red, fancy. . 2.80-3.75 bu. strawberries, case; strawber- zit ot ile 3 é z if - ifs by No. 1, 150-2004 bu , 2.26-2.158 bu; cad- 1 bu, Cucumbers, No. 1, 600-700 bu 1.75-1.00 dos. bens Kohirab! 1.50 bu Leeks. No 1, 150 1, 1.50-2.00 bu. Celer is 2 omg > red. No. 1 | bage, No. 1, .00-1.00 bu. cabbage, sprouts, | 26 bu. cauliflower, cabbage, | 00-125 bu. Cauilifiower, | 16-80 ] Wheat Scores | Fair Advance CHICAGO uw — Wheat drew losses The early gains in wheat came This represented a three-day ac- og cumulation and obviously was no beans were aided by early firm- No. 1, 60-758 doz behs;, radishes. white, No a, oS des. behs. Rhubarb, out- | negs in: soybean meal doer -1§ dos behs. Squash, | a oe Talian, — Baty Age bu: squash. Wheat near the end of the first Italian, No. 1. 1.00-125 pk basket. / hour was 1% to 2% higher. Jul squash. summer, No 1. 1.25-1.75' bu ie Pri aner. pard squash, summer, No 1. 100-125 px $1.98'2, ‘“« to %@ higher, July basket. Tomatoes. hothouse. No 1. 2$0- | ¢) 583, oats bs lower to “4 higher, 3.00 64b. basket, tomatoes, outdoor, No. | 1, 360-456 i4-lb basket 1, 100-138 dos behs Lettuce and salad greens endive. No 25-1.% bu bu. Lettuce, butter, No. 1, 200-2 lettuce head, No. 1, 2 50-3.00 }-dos 100-136 bu let- Romaine. e No 1 1, 78-100 bu bu. Spinach: No | Sorrel, No 1, 1601706 bu Swiss Eggs large. 1300-1400 30-dos case | medium, 10.00-11 00. small. 8 00-9 00 Foreign Exchange NEW YORK ‘AP; rates follow ‘Oreat others in cents) Britein in doliare @olier in New York open | market 2 1/33 per cent premuim or 102.T1% U.S. cents up | 16 ® cent rope: Great Britain tpound! 62 81's. uncha ; Great Britain © day futures 341 7 ed; Great Britain 60 =e futures 2.61 13/16 unchanged, Great 00 dey ‘futures 261 26°33, un- changed; Beigium (franc) 1.00%. up 00's of a cent; France (franc) 26% of @ cent Germany (West) ‘(Deuteche ; Helland ‘gui itive) ; Portuga) ; Sweden (krone; 19.34, wnehanged. Switseriand (franc) (free) 33.33%. unchanged Denmert (krone) 14.50, ufichanged Latin Amertea Argentine ‘free: 724 ; Brasil (free) 1.80, unchanged Mexico 6.63. unchanged, Veneruela (boli- var) 30.03, unchanged Par East: Hong Kong dGoilar 11 60 unchanged. Petitions to Gef Usual Study Opposing Groups Can Send Observers for Bingo Check LANSING ™ — Secretary of State Owen J. Cleary said today that petitions to put legalized bin- go on the ballot will not receive any unusual] scrutiny unless there are charges of irregularity. Cleary said he had directed State Elections Director Robert M. Mont- gomery “to make the usual study of the petitions, imposing neigher more nor less critical appraisal than on other petitions which, by stature, are filed with the secre- tary of state." “Unless we are presented with a substantial showing of irregu- larity, we will net go beyond the face of the petitions." Cleary's statement was an in- direct reply to demands by anti- bingo groups that the petitions be subjected to a careful check. He said the Michigan Council of Churches, which opposed ‘legal- ized bingo and the Michigan Axs- sociation of Non-Profit- Charitable Organizations which. sponsored the petitions are free to ) : ers to watch the petiti checked. Cleary argued that the question of legalizing bingo ‘is a matter of public policy which should be determined by the vote of the citi- zens of Michigan”’ if the initiatory petitions filed last week are valid. Boy Electrocuted by Worm-Catcher INDIANAPOLIS @—a 2'3-year- old boy was killed Sunday by an electrical charge when he touched a metal rod device used by his father to catch fishing worms. The s being accident was not reported to police by the coroner until yesterday. The boy was William F. Lynch Jr. The road, thrust into the ground, received 110 votes of elec- George B. Hartrick for stealing pany. of 7001 Anthony St.. Dear- born, pleaded guilty to larceny from a building June 21, admitting that entered the building at 415 E. Frank St. through a broken window June 1. rowt.” “En root,” corrected the dis patcher. “En root,” agreed the car ta3 eesseezyy miiOaed 6 Entomotogists estimate there are Turnip, No | July 71s | September Escarole, No 1}, 138-118 | changed to 3 cents higher, July | 36 bu " P a - pvt $3.83 and lard 15 cents lower to reens 78-100 bu | Collard, No 1, .75-1.00 bu mreneere, No | 1.00-1.75 | 125-150 bu. Turnip. No | Poreign eachange | $1.05,- soybeans 2 cents a hundred pounds Pad July $15.80 Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO P Opening grain Wheat Dec 108', July 197 Merch 113‘ Sept 2.00 Soybeans T Dex ie 203% July }@% [March , 706%. Sept. . 2.79% | Ma) 203". Nov, 2% Corn Jan. 258% July 158 March 2463 Sept 182‘, Lard | Dec 142%e July 16.18 Oate— Sept . 4.35 July Tl'¢ Nov. 12.78 Sept. 10%. De 1 Dee .. T1*s Soybean O11 — Mareh 14's July . 3.75 Rye— . Sept . 12.37 July 100', March 11.26 Bept 103% . Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. July 6 — (AP) — (USDA) — Hogs—-salable 1.000. Market slow; early sales 180-320 ib barrows and gilts around 50 cents iower than last Thurs- day et 2500 with choice sorted 1 and 2 at 325.50. not estedlished others. Cattle —Saiable 3900 Market opening uneven, generally fairly active, sizable supply choice to low prime fed steers end yearlings, sbout 700 stockers and feeders in recetpts, about 28 per cent receipts cows, high geod to prime fed steers and yearlings fully steady with last week's close. lower gradeg not fully established. opening stéady, tows 25-80 cents lower than last week s close, early sales bulls about steady. stockers and feeders slow. steady. two loads prime @round 1060 ib fed steers 35 25: numer- ous lots prime fed steers 25.00: bulk mostiy good fed steers 3) 00-3450, high choice and prime fed heifers 22.00- 23.00, early sales mostly good fed heif- ers 2000-2200 bulk utility and com- mercial cows 1050-1300, canners and cutters 900-1100 odd head utility and commercial bulls up to 18.50, some held higher, several loads good and choice stock calves and light yearlings i 15- 22 00 steady to $100 higher, on cheice and prime grades, mostly chotce vealers 2000-2400 high choice and prime 25.00-26.00; commercia! and good 1500-3000. few light culls down te 6.00 Sheep—Galadie 00. No early sales Mountain Climber Dies on Expedition KARACHI Pakistan W#—A mem- ber of an Italian expedition seeking to climb unconquered K2—Mt. Godwin Austen—the world’s second highest peak, died of pneum6nia June 21, reports reaching here to- day said. The climber was identified as Mario Puchez, 36, a veteran moun- taineer from Aosta, Italy. He was the fourth member of Italian ex- peditions to die in the Himalayas this year. Three members of a separate team trying to scale 3. 399-foot Mt. Api were killed in the past few weeks Dispatches received yesterday the climbers on 28,250-foot K2 their schedule had been dis-, rupted by bad weather after they established a camp 21,200 feet up the slepes of the mountain. Indochina Costs THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY Pontiac Mayor Flies to See Reserve Camp. Portiac Mayor William W. Don- aldson left from Detroit by plane |enough early support from mills | today for Camp McCoy, Wis. where ‘to score a fair sized advance on | he will observe the Army reserve |the Board of Tyade today. Soy- encampment there through Thurs- _ | beans also firmed while feed graitis | day as guest. of the Sth Army | Femistered . scattered \ Gaines and | ua -gnention ta “ctivilies tT | Pontiac's 703rd Tank Battalion now ’ | training at Camp McCoy. Mayors crate: celery, No. 1, ib: | despite fairly large receipts of cash of other Michigan cities inc\udi grain, totaling 561 cars at Chicago Donaldson Gaid he _ would pay | the top Saginaw and Flint offi- cials will be present, Donaldson | stated. U.S. 2 Billion More Money Will Be Poured In This Year Unless War Ends WASHINGTON uw — The United rye 1% to 1% higher, | un- | | States has poured more than two billion dollars in military and eco- ; nomic aid into Indochina over the past four years. An additional billion dollars is tentatively scheduled to aid French and anti-Communist Indochinese armies in the year which began July 1—unless a truce ends the 7\%-year-old war The biggest share of American aid—about a billion in arms and economic supplies — moved into Indochina in the last fiscal year after the Eisenhower administra- tion decided to double American help in a determined effort to crust the Communist threat. * * * This increased flow of guns. planes and military equipment meant the United States was carry- ing 65 per cent of the bill for prose- cuting the war in the 12-month period. The percentage would re- main the same in the forthcoming year, barring a truce or military collapse Prior to the decision to boost the volume of aid, American assist- ance had averaged abou 330 mil- lion dollars a year since 1951. This was about 30-35 per cent of the financial cost of the conflict to the French government. ‘Snoring Means | | _Calves—Selabie 650 vesen.comne Husband Fond of His Wife (?) GLASGOW. Scotlarid u—If your | husbands snore, ladies, it may be | Just a sign they're really fond of | you. So says Dr. A. H. Douthwaite, a | British physician who discussed the | irritating habit today at a British | Medical Assn. conference. Douthwaite said snoring may be “based og race memory and that atavistically the male made the noise at night to keep marauders from the den." Thus, he said, a wife kept awake by assorted grunts, groans, whist- thes and snorts from her ever-lov- ing spouse ‘‘might be encouraged | to regard snoring as a sign of deep affection.” Child Hit by Car Sandra D. McCants, 7, of 411 Branch St., was treated for cuts and bruises at Pontiac General Hospital Monday night when she was struck by an-auto near her home. Driver John Harris Jr., 27, of 2% Esther St., told Pontiac Po- lice the child ran in front of his car from behind parked autos. OLD CUSTOM CONTINUES—As a group of Canadian officers watch, two Chinmokchong. Korea, girls show the traditional way of pounding out a pound of rice flour. The girl at right. has constructed a modern mallet out of a 25pound shell casing, while the older women uses a stone mallet, as her people have for many centuries STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain . direct line to a member of all principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute quotations service available at all times. C. J. Nephler on 414 Community National Bank Bidg. 4 a eames we eo =e 4 Sgt. John W at Fort Knox, MAKING FRIENDS—Four-year-old Naoki Spilman was a little shy when his new father greeted him on arrival in Seattle, Wash., aboard a Navy transport ship from Japan Japanese and his father was an Amé@rican soldier who died in Korea. Spilman, shown greeting his stepson, later married Naoki's mother and adopted the youngster. Naoki lost his shyness shortly after this meeting at the, dock Ky., and Naoki’s mother is working at the Army general hospital in nearby Louisville 6, 1954 ers Naoki’s mother is a Sgt. Spilman now is stationed Foreign Policy of U.S. Open: to Searching Study United | American foreign policy should be WASHINGTON «”—The States is beginning a reappraisal | of its foreign policy which may prove to be much more ‘‘agoniz- ing’’ than Secretary of State Dulles foresaw. Dulles was talking only about a reshaping of U.S. policies in Eur- ope when he served notice France several months ago that this country might undertake an “agonizing reappraisal’ But now Senate Republican Leader Know!- and of California has raised a far more sweeping issue over the pos- sibility of United Nations mem- bership for Red China The issue essentially is: At what point in its efforts to get along with allies should the United States decide the struggle is not worth the result, and strike out on its own? What Knowland has proposed is | that if United Nations members | override America’s objections: and | bring Red China in one U.N. door. the United States should walk out | the other. He has not claimed that this is | Indica. | tions are, in fact, that he would! an administration View be opposed in the State Depart- ment. But he has said that he would resign the majority leader- ship and crusade for his proposal He has asserted, furthermore, that | and that it could not exist as the he is getting many expressions of | powerful nation it is without coop- popular support. While some members of Conx gress have aligned themselves with Knowland, others have declared that U. S. policy toward Red China should not be frozen, and that with-| the policy of alliances—fits with drawal from the U.N. would be a| many of the facts of America’s grave error. . J es * war diplomacy has been to work with friendly nations in expecta- tion of greater security through collective strength. But in the past year the process has become increasingly difficult. France has persistently delayed action on a Europeans defense treaty which would make West Germany independent and rearm it. It was to prod the French into action that Dulles spoke of a pos- sible agonizing reappraisal. Now the long-impending danger of a break with Britain over Red China is becoming much more acute. This, coupled with the prob- on: ‘idea is foreign to afl US. |not embrace all of them. Essen- | The whole purpose of U.S. post ability that France will recognize the Chinese Reds as part of an) Indochina peace deal, has forced the issue of Red China's member. | ship to the fore again. . s . There is great opposition in the Eisenhower administration and in Congress to letting Communist | China into the U.N. The question | ‘thus arises: What should the! United States do about it if Allied administration officials presently nations force it anyway? | The present answer to that ques- | tion in the State Department, so far as it can be pinned down, is) that the United States should stick with the U.N, and its allies what- ever happens. But Knowland, by giving an an- swer of an entirely opposite nature, posed the issue whether Red China policy may not mark the breaking point with the Allied governments. Taken in conjunction with Dulles’ restudy of European policy on which State Department officials have been quietly at work for some time, this raises a funda- mental question of what basic like in the future. * * * | There have been enough recent | debates on foreign policy to make it clear that the choice of basic | direction is limited to about four possibilities. Those are: 1. Preventive war — The Tru- man administration repudiated this possibility when it was widely talked about several years ago. The Eisenhower administration has committed itself to a policy of peace. Yet in some official quarters the idea of making war on Russia occasionally pops up, the argument being that the West presumably holds an edge. But the tradi- tions. And thé European nations are frightened to death of the whole idea of war and could not be counted on to provide any sup- port for such a policy. - s ° 2. Western Hemisphere fortress —This concept was much talked abdut in the early debate prelim- inary to the 1952 election. The idea was that United States has ample power and resources for its own defense, that its allies are not too pendable anyway, and that if hey cannot stand on their own feet they cannot forever be propped up. This notion was disputed by those who contend that the United States is dependent on many vital raw materials from foreign sources eration of countries outside the 2). Island strategy — This con- cept, representing a kind of bridge between the ‘fortress’ policy and position in the world today but does | tially it holds that America’s best allies are those on islands—Japan, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand and Britain. By extension it would include stout anti-Com- munist nations like Spain and South Korea—both peninsulas. It does not make provisior, however, for a defense in the heart of Eu- rope based on either Germany or France. It is in line with some speculation at the State Depart- ment that an alternative to a French-German reconciliation is a peripheral strategy, meaning a system based arouhd the rim of Europe in places like Britain, Spain and Italy. ~ s s * 4. Security through strength — This is the policy which the -Tru- man and Eisenhower administra- tions ‘have both followed. It de- pends for its success on strong and reliable allies and on getting along with them. It bas cost the United States many billions of dol- lars in military and economic as- sistance and it is the policy which intend to pursue to the limit. Nevertheless, it is also the policy which would have to undergo the azid test of congressional and pub- lic support in any future great de- bate. And such a,debate seems certain to develop ‘by the end of the year if Britain, France and many other nations join with Rus- sia and various cold war neutrals to vote Red China into the U.N., and if France meanwhile persists in blocking the European Defense Community with Germany, Although moles eat some plants, 85 per cent of their diet consist of insects. : ED DETROIT EDISON COMPANY COMMON STOCK YIELDS MORE THAN 5% Having paid dividends continuously since 1909, this stock offers an excellent investment in growing Michigan utility. . Telephone: WOcdweard 2-2055 First or Micuicax Conroranox Investment Bankers BUHL BUILDING — DETROIT NEW YORK CHICAGO =| Of candy and cigars .were. taken. | was sentenced to 30 days in Oak- | creased amount of their income ements A e - s - News in Brief Thieves broke into a filling sta- tion at 208 N. Paddock St. Monday and Jooted vending machines, .tak- undetermined amount of a yy ing to Pontiac Po- David Ramsey 0 W. South Bivd., reported to iac Police that his car wash building at #1 S. ‘Perry St.. was brdken into Monday night and about $10 worth The home of Mrs, Thomas Salis- bury, 582 Brooks Ave., was ran- sacked Monday, according to Pon- tiac Police. Missing was $5, taken from a bedroom. The thieves en- | tered with a passkey. Charies McCoy, 35, of 316 Syra- cuse, N. Y., pleaded guilty to drunk driving Saturday before Orion Township Justice Helmar G. Stana- | back and paid a $100 fine. | Failing te pay a $100 fine Sat. | urday when he pleaded guilty to) drunk driving before Pontiae Mu-|| nicipal Judge Maurice E. Finne- gan, Robert Charles, 44, Detroit, land County Jail. If your friend’s in ha and needs bail, Ph. FE 5-5201, C. A. Mitchell. Osmun’s Town & Country, Tei- Huron Shopping Center. Pontiac's finest store for gentlemen who prefer the finer things. Open every night ‘til 9 p m. Plenty of free parking. —Adv Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff, Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv Business Briefs Consumers are spending an in- en housing, utilities, doctors, and transportation, according to a re- port by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago in its monthly review, “‘Business Conditions."’ Outlays for these and other services during the first five months of 1954 have accounted for over 35 per cent of the total consumer expenditures. Last year saw a 5 billion dol- | lar pickup in consumer spending for services and these expendi- tures should continue to gain. the bank says. Ward's-Automotive Reports said today that Pontiac Motor Division built 6,100 cars last week, compared with 6.225 in the previous week. GMC Truck and Coach Division's output last week stood at 1,240, as against 1,383 the week brofre, the De- troit publication added. President Zachary Taylor was | the father-in-law of President Jet. | ferson Davis of the Confederacy. The housefly is found wherever man has established himself. |WAC to Hold Interviews , WAC Lt. Vivian M. Coffey, of the Detroit Army recruiting office, will be in Pontiac on July 8 at 11 a. m. to interview interested wom- en, according to M. Sgt. Paul J. Smith, in charge of the local re- cruiting station at 5342 W. Huron St. Aivme Sevelopment Mutua Fuad _ - % Prespectes “sent FREE en request WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. | Members New York Stock Exchange 716 Pentiac State Benk Bidg. Pentiac Phene FE 4-7895 Please send Prospectas NAME cee e wer eress eovenneess SPORES) .......-.-- cry. CASTLES IN THE AIR... aren't #abjéct to foreclosure, but houses on the ground may be lost through sudden adversity. An inexpensive mortgage policy of the Sun Life Assurance Com- panv of Canada «il! free vour home from any debt remaining at vour death Protect your loved ones’ home ... call me today George E. | Wood Agent 26', W. Huron St., Reom ii FE 5-5631 ~ . ~ ~~ ~ car! H. W. Huttenlocher 318 Riker Bidg. SS tect your personal effects as well as your H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency Vacation Time! Is the time to trovel—so before you go, cneck on your insurance . . . and don’t forget we will pro- Mex E. Kerns FE 4-155) BAKER & Donald E. Hansen. - Res. FE 2-5513 Accident insurance Automobile Insurance Burglary insurance Bonds—All Types - 511 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Fire Insurance Liability Insurancé Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance “CHRISTIANITY HAS NOT WANTING; IT HAS BEEN NOT TRIED.” BEEN. TRIED AND FOUND FOUND DIFFICULT AND K. Chesterton