RE ESB aie n. tak ~ The Weather Wednesday: Fair ~=-Detalls page two SR TO UL eee Se e. Fhe eee , ! ee es OE Oe se ed THE PONTIAC PRESS: Home Edition 1llth YEAR x* * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953—28 PAGES MOSNTERKATIONAL NEWS GERVICE 7c Police Scour Resort Area for Missing Broker Quiz 2 More in Sex-Slaying Earlier Suspect Cleared After Police Show-up Authorities Sift 200 Tips; Plan Sketch of Girl’s Attacker Police are questioning two more men. the sex slaying of a Pontiac woman and the attack on a teen- age girl after clearing an earlier suspect when the rl failed to identify him as er assailant. The first suspect was cleared after the girl was unable to pick him out of a police show-up at Oakland County Jail this morning. He and the other two men held by police matched the girl’s general description of her Saturday night attacker. Meanwhile, Pontiac and State Police sifted more than 200 tele- phone’ tips in en effort to get a definite lead on the sex-deviate who killed Mrs. Hallie, Perkins, 55, of 76 W. Longfellow Ave. Mrs. Perkins’ body, bound hand and foot, was found Saturday afternoon in a field behind a gasoline station at Baldwin and Beverly Aves. An autopsy indi- cated she had been raped and strangied. While police searched the field for clues Saturday night, the 16- year-old girl was attacked only ' two blocks away as she walked Seek More Slaying Tips Pontiac Police will man a di- rect telephone line reserved for calls on the Perkins case 24 hours a day in an effort to solve the brutal slaying. Anyone who has any information is urged to phone FEderal 2-2426. home from a bus stop. Her arms were bound in the same manner as Mrs. Perkins’, leading police to believé the same man is re- sponsible for both crimes. Police plan to have an artist make a sketch of the girl’s at- tacker from the description she provided. She described him as weighing about 200 pounds and standing about five feet, eight inches tall. She said he wore a dirty T-shirt and soiled, brown trousers. Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief ot Pontiac detectives, and De- tective John DePauw said they have sent a man’s coat which was draped over Mrs. Perkins’ body to the Detroit police crime ratories for analysis. The coat was purchased in Pon- tiac. Mrs. Perkins, who lived with her son and daughter-in-law at the Longfellow address for about seven years, disappeared Aug. 4. Her body was found only four blocks from her home. Pithy Warning PHILADELPHIA ® — A truck rolling through Philadelphia had these words, for the benefit of passing motorists, printed on the rear: on the left side, ‘‘Over- taker;’’ on the right side, ‘‘Under- taker.” _ Plant at Livonia with swinging PREPARE FOR NEW PLANT—Salvage crews wreck the burned shell of the GM Transmission Crews Wreck Shell of Burned GM Plant ¢ ee ee ee ball and other | structure. ° , alted apparatus. The ruined factory is being cleared away in preparation for replacement of the $50,000,000 French National AsSsembly “back to work ultimatum.” ing, 14-day work stoppages. Greek-styled parliamentary Joseph Laniel prepayed for a bitter and possibly violent shéwdown with 2,000,000 French workers who defied his Behind the new barricades, Laniel and his government were mapping a new “tough” plan to break the paralyz- Open grilled portions of the railing surrounding the bank of the Seine were hastily bricked up’as a precaution building today as Premier Palais Bourbon on the left Reds List Holly Gl as POW ‘Escapee’ Listed by _the Communists as an ‘‘escapee’”” is Sgt. Charles V. Bailey, 23, of Holly, according to a telegram from the Defense De- partment to his mother, Mrs. Nora Bailey. Bailey enlisted in the Army when he was 17 and was honorably discharged three years later. He re-enlisted shortly afterward. He went to Japan with the 5th Cavalry Regiment in June 1950, and soon after was transferred to Ko- rea. He has not been heard from since. In response to a request from his mother over a year ago, the Defense Department informed her that he ‘probably had been taken prisoner.”’ Mrs. Bailey, a widow, has three other sons in the armed service In commenting of the recent in- formation about Charles, she says, ‘‘He may have made his way to China or some other country, and I am sure we will soon hear from +against feared rioting. him.” Paratroopers guarded Laniel’s official residence at the Hotel Matignon, and tank-supported infantry- men and crack police units reinforced garrisons on the outskirts of the tense capi- tal. Laniel demanded in a surprise national broadcast Monday that the strikers who have crippled communications, utilities, mines and factories all over the country for 17 days return to work today. He implied a threat to use force, and hinted he would jail strike leaders and workers who failed to heed official requisitions to go back to their jobs But‘the workers stayed out, and the government feared that if it resorted to force, the Communists would call a general nationwide strike and send members of unions they control into the streets of Paris and other big cities for riots. * * * Garbage piled up in the streets. Train service from Paris was but a fraction of normal. Telephone and telegraph service was main- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Why Wait for Dr. Kinsey? Pett Tells All About Women After Years of Unofficial and Stormy Observations By SAUL PETT_ NEW YORF (®—The Kinsey re- port on women will be out Thurs- day. Why wait? The Pett report is out today. It is based on interviews with women, even arguments — on 35 years of non-objective observa- tion, on rumor and gossip, on preju- dice and bias regardless of race, creed or color, and on long con- versations with many men. The Pett report shows that: kissed behind the ear while bak- ing a cake. 51.3 per cent of all married wom- - en know as many cuss words as their -hasbands but only .0009 per cent admit it. During osculation. 33.8 per cent of women of al] ages cheat by keeping their eyes open. 74 per cent of all married wom- en wear shoes that are too tight. 22.3 per cent of married women ’ throw dishes at their husbands and 22.2 per cent miss, During courtship, 88.4 per cent of women of all ages talk qnly of marriage, a home and children. After the wedding, 73.5 per cent complain that if they hadn’t been rushed into marriage they might have had a promising career. 74.8 per cent of married women, while visiting their husband's of- | fice, can’t resist looking at his| desk calendar. | 84 per cent of women under 25| overuse the word, ‘‘cute.”’ 53.5 per cent of married women would have more children if only they had a full time maid. $4 per cent of women of all ages say “yes”? more often than men because men aren’t asked as often. 78 per cent of the women who | wear low cut dresses pretend to | be annoyed when men stare. | 87.8 per cent of women of all | | ages are prettier than men. 53.9 per cent of married women think that 98.9 per cent of the other married women are better off. 87.7 per cent of married women will merely hold out their hands in the general direction of their husband, Then they complain bit- terly when he doesn’t immedi- ately understand they want a cigarette, 74.3 per cent of the women in America who play poker play with all the red cards wild. 68 per cent of women of all! ages snore in bed, but only .09 per cent admit it. 96.8 per cent of the women who turn away from an off-color joke at a party insist on hearing it later from their husbands. 78 per cent of women over 25 over use the phrase, ‘I can’t stand it (or her or him).” 83 per cent of women of all ages have fewer inhibitions than men about money. Before marriage, 74 per cent of women talk about marriage being a ‘two-way street.’’ After mar- riage, 73 per cent make it a one- way. : 99.8 per cent of women of all will disagree violently with ages what they just read. Laniel Builds Barricades GM May Move Against Seething Strikers PARIS (UP) — Barricades were thrown up before the Into Willow Run Negotiates With Kaiser “to Get Space to Resume Transmission Work , DETROIT (#—General Motors, burned out of its Livonia Trans- mission Plant in last Wednesday’s $50,000,000 fire, probably will move these operations to Willow Run. Preparations were going ahead today to put the work into space vacated by Kaiser Motors Corp. since its loss of the air force C119 planes contract. Negotiations between GM ‘and Kaiser remained to be com- pleted. However, Kaiser said it is pre- paring now to move out aircraft material immediately from the huge factory. It was indicated that all space may be available to GM by the end of this month after comple- tion of work on 11 remaining C119 planes. These are now in final as- sembly. Kaiser was represented as seek- ing to turn the space over to GM “as fast as possible.” The death toll directly and in- directly attributable to the blaze rose to six yesterday when two construction workers were electro- cuted clearing rubble from the ruins. The victims, Walter E. Smith, 40, and George Trombley, 53, both of Detroit, were killed when a crane they were operating touched a high tension wire. Curtice said GM hoped to lease 1,500,000 square feet of the Wil- low Run plant. The space involved is part of that which until recent- ly Kaiser devoted to the produc- tion of C119 “Flying Boxcar’ planes. Kaiser’s contract to make the planes were canceled this sum- mer by the Air Force. Curtice said the Air Force had promised to cooperate in making the space available at Willow Run by moving out its machinery and materials. “Because of its close proximity to the Livonia plant, this location is considered to be particularly advantageous for our Detroit employes when they can be re- called,”’ the official added. The Livonia fire has meant lay- offs or threats of layoffs for at least 50,000 GM workers, since a shortage of transmissions has slowed auto production. Cool Again Tonight; 78 to 82 on Wednesday Although cool weather with a low of from 52 to 56 is forecast for tonight, Wednesday is expect- ed to be fair and slightly warmer with a high of 78 to 82 degrees in the Pontiac area. The mercury climbed Monday from a low of 51 to a high of 74 by 2 p.m. it had climbed to 72 de- grees. Soviet Suggests : Five Neutrals for Peace Talks Wants 11-Nation Panel, Including Six Countries That Fought in Korea UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Russia proposed to- day that the Korean peace conference be made up of five so-called neutrals and six of the countries which fought in Korea. This chal- | lenged the U. S. concept of the conference. The United States insists that the conference be lim- ited to countries which actually fought in the con- flict, with Russia a possible exception. The U. S. position is that Russia can take part—if the Chinese Reds and North Koreans want them.’ The Soviet proposal called for participation of the United States, Britain, France, Russia, Red China, India, Poland, Sweden, Burma, North Korea and South Korea. Before this proposal was made, Russia suffered an expected set- back. Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vi- shinsky rose at the opening of the U.N. Assembly’s 60-nation Political Committee session with a demand that Red China and North Korea be invited to take part in the committee debate. The committee voted him down, 34-14 on China and 34-18 on North Korea. Vishinsky made it clear that he would not complicate this session by moving for the seating of the Peiping regime as a member of the United Nations. He said he would make a formal to do this. at the fall Session which opens 15. Britain and got quickly into the fight over composition of the Korean peace conference with declarations favoring a broader representation than the United States .advocates. They did not comment directly, however, on the new Soviet proposal. U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., listed as first speaker in the Politicad Committee, has announc the United States will agree tg Russia's in- clusion in the Koréan conference if the North Korfans and Red China desire it. Hé insisted, how- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Democrat Chief Dies in Ireland Edward J. Flynn Aided Roosevelt’s Nomination in 1936 DUBLIN w — Edward J. Flynn, American Democratic Party lead- er, died here last night. The 61-year-old Democratic na- tional committeman and leader of the Bronx, New York, had been vacationing here. He died in a hos- pital. Long in ill-health he sailed from New York for Ireland on the Mauretania July 25. He went aboard the liner in a wheelchair. Flynn was credited with James A. Farley in obtaining the Demo- cratic presidential nomination for Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 de- spite the opposition of Tammy Hall. Currently he was pitting his strength against the reelection bid of Mayor Vincent Impellitteri. Flynn entered politics in 1917 at the age of 26 as a member of the New York Assembly. He served four terms there and later four years as sheriff of the _Bronx. When Franklin D. Roose- velt was governor of New York state, he named Flynn secretary of state. He was frequently the target of running for governor in 1938 he said that Flynn, while sheriff, had appointed Arthur (Dutch Schultz) imer, a notorious under- world character, as a deputy sher- iff. Flynn accused Dewey of in- duiging in “half truths” and said Schultz was appointed a deputy sheriff before he was known as a racketeer and the badge was confiscated six months after the appointment. Flynn was born Sept. 22, 1891 in the Bronx. He leaves his widow ‘and three children. 7-Year-Old Expert Diver A. es Dm! Preas Phete SERIOUS ABOUT SWIMMING—Seven-year-old Ondine Piroux of Cap D’Antibes, France, wears the latest in professional diving edulp- ment as she prepares to go for an underwater swim. The little French girl has been swimming “‘like a fish’ since the age of three. Edgar Sanders Freed free man. where he and American Ro Britisher Jailed in 1949 in Red Hungary Released NICKELSDORF, Austria (AP)—Edgar Sanders, Brit- ish businessman jailed by Communist Hungary for near- ly four years as a spy, walked across into Austria today a The Red Hungarian government pardoned the 47-year- old Briton last night and expelled him from the country in February, 1950, on charges of espionage and sabotage. Vogeler was released in April, 1951. Like Vogeler, Sanders came across the frontier to free- dom at Nickelsdorf, a little Austrian border station. ert Vogeler were sentenced Bandits Grab Bank Official Dump Him Alive After Making Him Open Vault With $160,000 FLORAL PARK, N. Y., ® — Daring gunmen grabbed an as- sistant cashier on the lawn of his home this morning, forced him to open his bank’s vault and escaped with $160,000. Eric Gronewall, 44, told po- lice that he was leaving his Bellemore home to go to a branch of the Franklin National Bank, a man stepped out of the bushes. He had a gun and a canvas bag. —+Russian tanks on maneu- vers and Austrian farm com- bines cluttered the narrow road on the Austrian side of the frontier. Sanders crossed the frontier in a car of the British legation in Buda- pest. He looked pale, wore his custom- ary glasses and a grey suit. Shortly after Sanders crossed, the Italian legation car bearing Vincenze Sciotto, an Italian, also reached Austria. Sanders and Sciotto stopped on the Austrian side of the border only a few seconds, then drove toward Vienna. In London, a Foreign Office (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) E. A. Parmenter Flees City After Probe Is Opened Letter Hints Suicide; Charged With $12,660 Theft of Securities Police are scouring a Northern Michigan resort area today for a Pontiac brokerage firm employe who may have committed suicide after allegedly ob- taining a $12,500 bank loan under false pretenses. State Police are hunting for Eugene A. Parmenter, 53, of 6366 Thurber Rd., Birmingham, an employe of the W. H. Protiva Co. Charged specifically with larceny by conversion in a warrant ‘issued today by Cakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem, Parmen- ter is accused of using $12,- 661.81 in a patron’s stock as collateral for a personal loan. The loan was obtained from Community National Bank. Police believe Parmenter may have committed suicide as his wife received a letter from her hus- band Monday saying that his body would be ‘‘found in the lake.’’ Assuming the lake referred to was Crystal Lake near Frankfort where the Parmenters have a sum- mer cottage, police searched the lake yesterday but failed to find Parmenter’s body. Frankfort is located about 30 .| miles north of Manistee on Lake Michigan. The warrant was issued on a complaint by Clarence Neph- ler dr., owner of the Protiva Co., on information uncovered by Hugh A. Clarke, an examiner for the Michigan Corporation and Securities Commission. Parmenter left the Protiva office for lunch about 1:30 Friday while Clarke was making ar examina- tion of the firm’s records follow- ing an anonymous phone tip that names on certain shares held by the company were incorrect. Par- menter never returned. Friday evening Parmenter’s wife called the Protiva office to report that her husband had not. re- turned from work. Subsequent checking indicated Parmenter had driven to the Pon- tiac Municipal Airport where he left his*car and piloted his pri- vate plane to his summer cottage on Crystal Lake near Frankfort. The plane was recovered at Frankfort but a jeep stored at the cottage was missing. It was found later at Manistee. Evidence at the cottage in- dicated Parmenter had changed from his business clothes to old fishing clothes before leaving. His watch, wallet, driver’s license and personal identification papers were at the cottage. He was last seen by a neigh- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Hey Bud, Get Dressed! Nudist Meet Has Ended PASADENA, Calif. (—Probably nobody told Francois Fisher that the nudist convention in Southern California ended a week ago. He walked into a bank here yes- terday clad only in his imagina- tion. But as Francois is only 3 years old, bank employes fash- ioned him some zootie shorts out of a money bag. When Mrs. Edmund Fisher final- ly caught up with her son, she said, ‘“‘This is the fifth time he’s run away in his birthday suit.’’ Residents Jittery After Attacks Urge More Street Lights, Cutting Weeds for Safety Jittery residents in the sex-slaying area near Baldwin and Beverly Aves. said yesterday high weeds in nearby fields and inadequate street lighting increase the danger of sex offenses. All of the parents interviewed were worried about their children’s welfare after the discovery of the body of Mrs. Hallie Perkins, 57, in a field and the report that a teen- e girl had been attacked near the field only nine hours found Saturday afternoon. -+ ter the woman’s body was jf ‘ In Today's Press Birmingham ........cccccccccceces 2 Combes 2... ccc cccccccccccccccccees Coumty NMews......ccccsreccccccecs 16 Dr. Ee CFAME......ceeeeeeee.-s 6 Editorials .......-scccccecsscccsens Ramily Poot... .....cccccsccceccccese 10 “TE Cam’t Cry New... .coscccssssecs 22 Markets 2... ccceccssccccscccsecees 23 POSOCGME ccc ce vccetccecesescac 16, 12 Bperts.....cccccccccceseees 19, 2, S TV-Radie Programs................ 14 Want AGS... ..cccees 26, 26, Z7, 28, 29 Women's Pages..........-.. 1s, 11, A Fairmount avenue housewife mirrored other parents’ reaction to the morbid crimes when she said, “I’m not letting my little girl go across the street to my mother’s after dark anymore.” She also expressed fear that high weeds add to the danger. “Those high weeds should be cut (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) WS ~~. The Weather Wednesday: Fair Details page two wy ——- se —— a rt gs th " ee ball and other | structure. ° OD, UD Led ry apparatus. The ruined factory is being cleared away in preparation for replacement of the $50,000,000 crt | French National Assembly Joseph Laniel prepayed for “back to work ultimatum.” Open grilled portions of Greek-styled parliamentary Laniel Builds Barricades Against Seething Strikers PARIS (UP) — Barricades were thrown up before the building today as Premier a bitter and possibly violent showdown with 2,000,000 French workers who defied his Behind the new barricades, Laniel and his government were mapping a new-“‘tough” plan to break the paralyz- ing, 14-day work stoppages. the railing surrounding the Palais Bourbon on the left bank of the Seine were hastily bricked up as a precaution Reds List Holly GI as POW ‘Escapee’ Listed by the Communists as an ‘escapee’ is Sgt. Charles V. Bailey, 23, of Holly, according to a telegram from the Defense De- partment to his mother, Mrs. Nora Bailey. Bailey enlisted in the Army when he was 17 and was honorably discharged three years later. He re-enlisted shortly afterward. He went to Japan with the 5th Cavalry Regiment in June 1950, and soon after was transferred to Ko- rea. He has not been heard from since. In response to a request from his mother over a year ago, the Defense Department informed her that he ‘‘probably had been taken prisoner.”’ Mrs. Bailey, a widow, has three other sons in the armed service In commenting of the recent in- formation about Charles, she says, ‘“‘He may have made his way to China or some other country, and I am sure we will soon hear from him.” +against feared rioting. Paratroopers guarded Laniel’s official residence at the Hotel Matignon, and tank-supported infantry- men and crack police units reinforced garrisons on the outskirts of the tense capi- tal. Laniel demanded in a surprise national broadcast Monday that the strikers who have crippled communications, utilities, mines and factories all over the country for 17 days return to work today. He implied a threat to use force, and hinted he would jail strike leaders and workers who failed to heed official requisitions to go back to their jobs But'the workers stayed out, and the government feared that if it would call a general nationwide strike and send members of unions they control into the streets of Paris and other big cities for riots. * * * Garbage piled up in the s ts. Train service from Paris was but a fraction of normal. Telephone and telegraph service was main- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Why Wait for Dr. Kinsey? Pett Tells All of Unofticial By SAUL PETT NEW YORF (®—The Kinsey re- port on women will be out Thurs- day, Why wait? The Pett report is out today. It is based on interviews with women, even arguments — on 35 years of non-objective observa- tion, on rymor and gossip, on preju- dice and bias regardless of race, creed or color, and on long con- versations with many men. The Pett report shows that: 68.8 per cent of all married 51.3 per cent of all married wom- en know as many cuss words as their hasbands but only .0009 per | cent admit it. During osculation. 33.8 per cent of women of al) ages cheat by| keeping their eyes open. 14 per cent of all married wom. | *% en wear shoes that are too tight. 22.3 per cent of married women throw dishes at their husbands and 22.2 per cent miss, About Women After Years and Stormy During courtship, 88.4 per cent of women of all ages talk only of marriage, a home and children. After the wedding, 73.5 per cent eomplain that if they hadn't been rushed into marriage they might have had a promising career. 74.8 per cent of married women, while visiting their husband's of- desk calefidar. 84 per cent of women under 25 overuse the word, ‘‘cute.” 53.5 per cent of married women would have more children if only they had a full time maid. $4 per cent of women of all ages say “‘yes’’ more often than men because men aren’t asked as often. 78 per cent of the women who wear low cut dresses pretend to Be annoyed when men stare. | 87.8 per cent of women of all ages are prettier than men. 53.9 per cent of married women think that 98.9 per cent of the other married women are better off. 87.7 per cent of married women fice, can't resist looking at his| Observations will merely hold out their hands in the general direction of their husband, Then they complain bit- terly when he doesn’t immedi- ately understand they want a cigarette, 74.3 per cent of the women in America who play poker play with all the red cards wild. ‘ages snore in bed, but only .09 per cent admit it. 96.8 per cent of the women who turn away from an off-color joke at a party insist on hearing it later from their husbands. 78 per cent of women over 25 over use the phrase, “I can’t stand it (or her or him).” 83 per cent of women of all ages have fewer inhibitions chan men about money. Before marriage, 74 per cent of women talk about marriage being a “two-way street.’’ After mar- riage, 73 per cent make it a one- way. . 99.8 per cent of women of all ages will disagree violently with what they just read. resorted to force, the Communists | | called,” GM May Move Info Willow Run Negotiates With Kaiser “to Get Space to Resume Transmission Work o | DETROIT (#—General Motors, burned out of its Livonia Trans- mission Plant in last Wednesday’s $50,000,000 fire, probably will move these operations to Willow Rum. Preparations were going ahead today to put the work into space vacated by Kaiser Motors Corp. since its loss of the air force C119 planes contract. Negotiations between GM ‘and Kaiser remained to be com- pleted. However, Kaiser said it is pre- paring now to move out aircraft | material immediately from huge factory. It was indicated that all space may be available to GM by the end of this month after comple- tion of work on 11 remaining C119 planes. These are now in final as- sembly. Kaiser was represented as seek- ing to turn the space over to GM “as fast as possible.” The death toll directly and in- directly attributable to the blaze rose to six yesterday when two construction workers were electro- cuted clearing rubble from the ruins. The victims, Walter E. Smith, 40, and George Trombley, 53, both of Detroit, were killed when a crane they were operating touched a high tension wire. Curtice said GM hoped to lease 1,500,000 square feet of the Wil- low Run plant. The space involved is part of that which until recent- ly Kaiser devoted to the produc- tion of C119 ‘Flying Boxcar’ planes. Kaiser’s contract to make. the planes were canceled this sum- mer by the Air Force. Curtice said the Air Force had promised to cooperate in making the space available at Willow Run the ‘by moving out its machinery and materials. ‘Because of its close proximity to the Livonia plant, this location is considered to be particularly advantageous for our Detroit employes when they can be re- the official added. The Livonia fire has meant lay- 68 per cent of women of all! offs or threats of layoffs for at least 50,000 GM workers, since a shortage of transmissions has slowed auto production. Cool Again Tonight; 78 to 82 on Wednesday Although cool weather with a low of from 52 to 56 is forecast for tonight, Wednesday is expect- ed to be fair and slightly warmer with a high of 78 to 82 degrees in the Pontiac area. The mercury climbed Monday ake ee by 2 p.m. it had climbed to 72 de- grees. Soviet Suagests: Five Neutrals ' for Peace Talks Wants 11-Nation Panel, Including Six Countries That Fought in Korea UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Russia proposed to- day that the Korean peace conference be made up of five so-called neutrals and six of the countries which fought in Korea. This chal- lenged the U. S. concept of the conference. The United States insists that the conference be lim- ited to countries which actually fought in the con- flict, with Russia a possible exception. The U. S. position is that Russia can take part—if the Chinese Reds and North Koreans want them.’ The Soviet proposal called for participation of the United States, Britain, France, Russia, Red China, India, Poland, Sweden, Burma, North Korea and South Korea. Before this proposal was made, Russia suffered an expected set- back. Soviet Delegate Andrei Y. Vi- North Korea be invited to take part in the committee debate. The committee voted him down, 34-14 on China and 34-18 on North Korea. Vishinsky made it clear that he would not complicate this session by moving for the seating of the Peiping regime as a member of the United Nations. He said he would make a formal move to do this, at the fall Assembly session which opens 15. Britain and got quickly into the fight over composition of the Korean peace conference with declarations favoring a broader representation than the United States .advocates. They did not comment directly, however, on the new Soviet proposal. U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., listed as first speaker in the Political Committee, has announced the United States will agree to Russia's in-| s in Red Hungary Released clusion in the Korean conference if the North Koreans and Red China desire it. He insisted, how- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Democrat Chief Dies in Ireland Edward J. Flynn Aided Roosevelt’s Nomination in 1936 DUBLIN w — Edward J. Flynn, American Democratic Party lead- er, died here last night. The 61-year-old Democratic na- tional committeman and leader of the Bronx, New York, had been vacationing here. He died in a hos- pital. in ill-health he satled from New York for Ireland on the Mauretania July 25. He went aboard the liner in a wheelchair. Flynn was credited with James A. Farley in obtaining the Demo- cratic presidential nomination for Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 de- spite the opposition of Tammy Hall. Currently he was pitting his strength against the reelection bid of Mayor Vincent Impellitteri. Flynn entered politics in 1917 at the age of 26 as a member of later four years as sheriff of the Bronx. When Franklin D. Roose- velt was governor of New York state, he named Flynn secretary of state. He ea of sharp criticism. When Thomas E. Dewey was running for governor in 1938 he said that Flynn, while sheriff, had appointed Arthur (Dutch Schultz) imer, a notorious under- world character, as a deputy sher- Cap D’Antibes, France, wears the SERIOUS ABOUT SWIMMING—Seven-year-old Ondine latest in professional diving ment as she prepares to go for an underwater swim. The little French girl has been swimming ‘‘like a fish’’ since the age of three. Edgar Sanders Freed Brifisher Jai NICKELSDORF, Austria free man. old Briton last night and ex where he and American Ro dom at Nickelsdorf, a littl led in 1949 (AP)—Edgar Sanders, Brit- ish businessman jailed by Communist Hungary for near- ly four years as a spy, walked across into Austria today a The Red Hungarian government pardoned the 47-year- Bag: him from the country rt Vog eler were sentenced in February, 1950, on charges of eaptonige and sabotage. Vogeler was released in April, 1951. ike Vogeler, Sanders came across the frontier to free- e Austrian border station. Bandits Grab Bank Official Dump Him Alive After Making Him Open Vault With $160,000 FLORAL PARK, N. Y., ® — Daring gunmen grabbed an as- sistant cashier on the lawn of his open his bank's vault and escaped with $160,000. Eric Gronewall, 44, told po- lice that he was leaving his Bellemore home to go to a branch of the Franklin National Bank, a man stepped out of the bushes. He had a gun and a canvas bag. Jamming the gun into Grone- wall's side, he warned him not to cry out, adding, ‘‘we know all about you and the bank.” They got into Gronewall’s car and drove to the bank. home this morning, forced him to! —+Russian tanks on maneu- vers and Austrian farm com- bines cluttered the narrow road on the Austrian side of | the frontier. Sanders crossed the frontier ina car of the British legation in Buda- | pest. He looked pale, wore his custom- ary glasses and a grey suit. Shortly after Sanders crossed, the Italian legation car bearing Vincenze Sciotto, an Italian, also reached Austria. Sanders and Sciotto stopped on the Austrian side of the border only a few seconds, then drove toward Vienna. In London, a Foreign Office (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Flees City After Probe Is Opened Letter Hints Suicide; Charged With $12,660 Theft of | Securities Police are scouring a Northern Michigan resort area today for a Pontiac brokerage firm employe who may have committed suicide after allegedly ob- taining a $12,500 bank loan under false pretenses. State Police are hunting for Eugene A. Parmenter, 53, of 6366 Thurber Rd., Birmingham, an employe of the W. H. Protiva Co. Charged specifically with larceny by conversion in a warrant ‘issued today by Cakland County Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem, Parmen- ter is accused of using $12,- 661.81 in a patron’s stock as collateral for a personal loan. The loan was obtained from Community National Bank. Police believe Parmenter may have committed suicide as his wife received a letter from her hus- band Monday saying that his body would be ‘‘found in the lake.’”’ Assuming the lake referred to was Crystal Lake near Frankfort where the Parmenters have a sum- mer cottage, police searched the lake yesterday but failed to find Parmenter’s body. Frankfort is located about 30 miles north of Manistee on Lake Michigan. The warrant was issued on a complaint by Clarence Neph- ler Jdr., owner of the Protiva Co., on information uncovered by Hugh A. Clarke, an examiner for the Michigan Corporation and Securities Commission. Parmenter left the Protiva office for lunch about 1:30 Friday while Clarke was making ar examina tion of the firm’s records follow- ing an anonymous phone tip that names on certain shares held by the company were incorrect. Par- menter never returned. Friday evening Parmenter’s wife called the Protiva office to report that her husband had not re- turned from work. Subsequent checking indicated Parmenter had driven to the Pon- tiac Municipal Airport where he left his*car and piloted his pri- vate plane to his summer cottage on Crystal Lake near Frankfort. The plane was recovered at Frankfort but a jeep stored at the cottage was missing. It was found later at Manistee. Evidence at the cottage in- dicated Parmenter had changed from his business clothes to old fishing clothes before leaving. His watch, wallet, driver’s license and personal identification papers were at the cottage. He was last seen by a neigh- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Hey Bud, Get Dressed! Nudist Meet Has Ended PASADENA, Calif. @—Probably nobody told Francois Fisher that the nudist convention in Southern California ended a week ago. He walked into a bank here yes- terday clad only in his imagina- tion. But as Francois is only 3 years old, bank employes fash- ioned him some zootie shorts out of a money bag. When Mrs. Edmund Fisher final- ly caught up with her son, she said, ‘‘This is the fifth time he’s run away in his birthday suit.” Residents Jittery After Attacks Urge More Street Lights, Cutting Weeds for Safety Jittery residents in the sex-slaying area near Baldwin of sex offenses. and Beverly Aves. said yesterday high weeds in nearby fields and inadequate street lighting increase the danger All of the parents interviewed were worried about their children’s welfare after the discovery of the body of Mrs, Hallie Perkins, 57, in a field and the re girl had been attacked near the fiel only nine hours after t the woman’s body was found Saturday afternoon. rt that a teen- In Today's Press v + A Fairmount avenue housewife mirrored other parents’ reaction to the morbid crimes when she said, “I’m not letting my little girl go across the street to my mother’s after dark anymore.” She also expressed fear that (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) iE. A. Parmenter. we TWO 2 . Birmingham Commission Decides to Assess Part of West Maple Widening (From Our Birmingham Bureau) BIRMINGHAM — Reversing last week’s decision to pay for the widening of West Maple road from current city funds, the City Com- mission agreed last night to as- sess business frontage for a share of the $230,000 project. Three hundred and seventeen feet of business-zoned frontage will be assessed for half of the city’s share of the cost of widening the concrete slab in front of their lots, according to the lawmakers. They will not pay any. part of | the necessary drainage costs. Land owned by the Lutheran and Presbyterian Churches, zoned for business, should be re- zoned and not assessed, the com- mission decided. They set a hear- ing on this for Sept. 14. To be done in conjunction with the county in 1955, the project calls for the county paying for the center 20 feet of pavement and half of the drainage costs. City Assessor Elmer Haack said the business-frontage assessment is by the same formula -used in widening other roads with the county. Haack originally recommended that residential areas bordering the widening be assessed, but the lawmakers did not agree. The city’s stop-sign population grew again when the lawmakers favored a petition from residents of Melton road. They sought a stop at Melton and Sheffield roads to control speed and pro- Urge Better Lighting to Cut Attack Hazard (Continued From Page One) down, too. I’m not allowing my kids to play around them until they are.” Playing with several of her friends, a little girl exclaimed, “Everytime a car comes with someone we don’t know in it we run to our houses.”’ Mrs. Darwin Catlin of 61 Strathmore Ave. said, “I saw a car slow down by my little boy the other day, and it scared me half to death. In broad daylight too.” Many thought more adequate street lighting was advisable. Mrs. Keith Wheeler of West Beverly avenue said. ‘‘Our street is poorly lighted. I think everyone should put a big bulb in their porch light and keep it burning all night. , “The bus doesn’t stop at every corner, and it should. Some of the girls coming home from work have to leave the bus quite far from home and walk past those fields in the dark. I’m not going out after dark. I worry about every stranger I see.”’ Mrs. Mary Mitchell of 32 E. Fairmount Ave. stated, ‘I’m def- initely afraid. It may seem silly, but it’s not funny when you jump at every sound heard at night. “I want them to do something to scare this man. Put up more’ street lights, cut the weeds, pa- trol the ‘streets. I want to be able to breathe after dark.” George Gibson of 16 W. Long- fellow Ave. said, “I told my wife to keep the blinds pulled and the doors locked. We need more lights on this street.’’ Mrs. Mack Johnson of West Beverly was concerned about her 17-year-old daughter. ‘‘She works up-town until+after dark. Now we have her phone when she quits work and my husband and I meet her at the bus stop. “The other night a bird made a noise at our door. We thought it was a man and couldn’t sleep until my husband came home from work.” Capt. Clark M. Wheaton, chief) said the! of Pontiac detectives, area was being patrolled day and night, and told residents they could obtain police escort if they felt they absolutely needed it. The area’s whole. ‘‘on-edge’’ at- titude seemed summed up by Mrs. Otis Newton of 37 E. Fairmount who said, “I won't even let the meter reader in unless my hus- band’s home.” The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Coo!l te- night, low 52 to 56. Fair Wednesday, high from 78 to 82 degrees. Variable winds 4 te 8 miles tonight and Wednes- day. Today in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. 51. At 8 a.m.; Wind velocity 2 mph.; direc- tion northwest. Bun sets Tuesday at 7:29 p.m. Bun rises Wednesday at 5:43 a.m. Moon sets Tuesday at 11:34 p.m. Moon rises Wednesday at 3:48 p.m. Downtown Temperatures CCS Bacdeccooe 51 PA: Massie 68 TB. M.scccoes 53 120M... caasesestee 70 BB. M...-cecee- 58 1 PP. M..ccoccece. 72 © Bs Wisvccnccx: 61 2 Pe WR civcees 72 CWS Banas Aagcad 65 Menday in Pontiac Highest temperature.......... eeee Lowest’ temperature. .sccscccsseccces Moan “temperature....ccsceesccecess 62.5 Weather—Fair. One Year Age in Pontiae Highest temperature.............. - 80 Lowest temperature.....cccccscese see 56 Mean temperature.......sce00- te Weather—Fair. eeeee Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 81 Years 95 in 1947 50 in 1890 Monday's Temperature Chart Battle Creek 75 47 Memphis 91 71 Brownsville 91 77 Milwaukee 73 «58 Ruffalo 73 #49 Minneapolis 83 61 Cadillac 71 36 New Orleans 87 72 Cleveland 76 #52 New York 75 64 Denver 78 53 Omaha 83 55 Detroit 73 52 Phoenix 108 80 Gd. Rapids 74 46 Pittsburgh 75 48 Jactsonville 91 73 St. Louis 84 60) Kansas City 81 61 Frisco 68 a! Los es 74 60 Traverse 7 Marquette 65 523 Washington 79 a! tect children in their residential area. Reiterating that stop signs are not in best usage when placed to impede traffic, Police Chief Ralph Moxley added however, that much northbound Eton road traf- fic was using residential Melton as a shortcut. = s . Premier .performances of the dance-drama ‘Dreamers original on a Slack Wire,” by Marion Nevill Kirk and Austin Jones, will be given in Cranbrook’s Greek Theatre on August 20-22 and 27-29. Performances will begin at 8:45 | p.m. Written by Jones and choreo- graphed by Miss Kirk, the story deals with a large, self-centered family seeking to learn their ‘‘Mad Grandma's” secret ot happiness. Heading the cast of actor- dancers are Kova Geer, Nancy Shile, Jarvis E, Bancroft, Joyce Edgar, Bruce Carlisle and Bev- erly Zahler, Composer Bernhard Heiden’s original score will feature two pianos and percussion. Pianists will be Judith Patterson and Milton Setzer, both of whom have given numerous recitals in the area. Costumes and set pieces have been designed by Betty Conn, De- troit sculptor who has studied under Carl Milles at Cranbrook, and who has exhibited widely throughout Michigan. James Schneider, Birmingham, will be technical director. Other members of the cast are Anderson White, Rosemary Res- siguie, E. Paul Rebillot, Lorraine Ravanal,: Phillis Stern, Robert L. Huhn, Peggy .Barnett and Anita Peterson. Others are Rodney Smith, Sandra Bader, Chih Ming Chang and Joseph A. Podrasky. bd] * » A successful YMCA summer pro- gram has concluded at the local ‘Y’, and Secretary Edwin Kerbert is off on a vaction, Me&nwhile, until the fall program begins in September the ‘Y’ will be open from 9a.m.—5 p.m. , Summer housecleaning has set in, but the youngsters may watch television, and play ping: pong, chess, shuffleboard and checkers. Boxing gloves will also be avail- able for sparring partners. * LJ * A new wardrobe room for the the Village Players’ latest under- |' the Village Players latest’ under- taking. To be built on the second floor of the large storage ware- house, it will be fitted with rows of hanging rods and wall shelv- ing to house the Players perma- *nent collection of woolens, cottons, Satins, and brocaded clothes dat- ing back over a hundred years. Plans drawn ‘up by Executive Board member Mrs. George F. Green were carefully reviewed by a committee of the board, includ- ing president William E, Kegel, Russell M. Richardson, Howard C. McDonald and Herbert Royal. Along with the wardrobe room, more storage room will be added for records and files, and stage lumber. Assisting Mrs. Hans Schjolin, wardrobe chairman, in moving the extensive wardrobe are Mrs. Green, Mrs. E. P. Crenshaw and Mrs, Douglas A. Brown. ‘Wants 5 ‘Neutrals’ Included in Parley (Continued From Page One) ever, that Russia should sit as a representative of the enemy and not on the U. N. side. Lodge has declared emphatical- ly that he will not support a British-backed proposal to invite India to the conference. But de- spite Lodge’s objection, the inclusion of India has strong support among the British com- monwealth nations, the Arabs, the Asians and some Latin Amer- ican and West European coun- tries. Only last night, Mexico's foreign Minister Luis Padilla Nervo an nounced in Mexico City that his government favors broadening the conference to include some neu- trals. Laniel Barricades French Buildings (Continued From Page One) tained only for essential messages. Paris subway service was 50 per cent of normal. Bus service was crippled. In mines the strike was nearly 100 per cent effective. * ” * The workers were rebelling against economy measures ordered by millionaire business man Pre- mier Laniel.’ Socialist members of parliament led a move to force a special ses- sion of the national assembly now in recess, to reconsider Laniel’s economy measure. Truck-Auto Collision Injures Hills Woman BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —A truck-car collision at Woodward Ave. and Square Lake Road sent Mrs. Helen Peters Greer, 43, of East Long Lake road, Bloomfield Hills, to St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital yesterday. She was treated for cuts and | bruises on the face, and released. Truck driver Lawrence Patrick | Kenny, 41, of Saginaw was ticketed for having no chauffeur’s license. £ THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 WHO’LL BUY MY WARES?—A c 2 taken on. Saturday by Birmingham’ shown above as he sold a multitudinous amount of car parts, along with bicycles and clothing. The sale marked the first police auction of unclaimed items the Birmingham Police Department has had. i eeenadl ore Pentiac Press Phete new duty, that of auctioneer, was | Set. s Police Chief Raiph W. Moxley, Womans Purse Tool Frees Strangling Boy KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP)—Ten- year-old Bill Redden probably owes life to Mrs. Ona’ Rasher’s long habit of carfying a knife, scissors and a screw driver in her purse. The youngster slipped while playing with a rope knotted around | hes neck and dangled from a tree, | his feet almost but not quite touch- | ing the ground. Eugene Carter, one passerby, | didn’t have a knife to use when | he spotted the boy. But Mrs. Rash- | er also happened to be nearby. Carter cut the rope with Mrs. Rasher’s knife. Claims 20 Gls | Purged inGroup FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea (® —At least 20 Americans were ‘purged’ from the Reds’ repatria- | tion roster because the ‘Chinese | thought they had beaten other POW’'s who cooperated with the Communists, three returned sol- diers said today. “Some of the progressives were slugged one night,’’ said Sgt. Ed- wir. W. Erickson Jr., Somerville, Mass. ‘‘After that, there was more or less a purge of those the Chi- nese thought were responsible. “At least 20 were pulled out of Company 4 (Erickson’s company in Camp 1) on July 13. We never saw them again.” His statement was supported by two others—Cpl. Joseph A. Nich- olas, 25, and Pvt. Anthony McDon- | ald, both of Philadelphia. | Parks, Union Sponsor Free Children’s Movies Free movies for youngsters will be shown at Oakland Park Aug. 19 and Sept. 9 starting at 7:30 p.m. Co-sponsors of . the entertain- ment are the Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department and Fish- jer Local 596, UAW-CIO. | It is believed that not even | bacteria can develop in the heart | | of the lifeless Antarctic continent, | says the National Society. 4 Juveniles’ Arrest Solves 12 Breakins BIRMINGHAM — Twelve break- ins in the past month have been solved with the arrest of four juvenile boys, police announced today. The youths, aged 12, 13 and 14, | confesséd to entering several ele- | mentary schools, a local office a church, the Community House and attempting to enter a gasoline | station in search of money and items of value. They also admitted vandal- izing the high school, where win- dows were broken, acid spilled on the floor and ink and paint smeared on walls. At one elementary school the youths climbed a drain pipe to enter the principal’s office on the second floor. The quartet and their parents are scheduled ‘to appear in Pon- tiac Juvenile. Court. Swedish Railroads Garden-Conscious STOCKHOLM @® — Swedish railwaymen are often gardeners, who fill in time between trains | by trimming and watering the plants and lawns in Sweden's 4000 flower-decked stations. The Swedish State Railways began planning gardens for its stations as long ago as 1862, when a protective green belt around each wayside stop was considered | advisable to protect wooden houses fpom flying sparks from the loco- motives. Today, nearly the whole system has been electrified, but there are still 4,500 acres of garden to be looked after. Passengers waiting for trains can sit in attractive | park benches beside flower-cover- ed walls and gold-fish ponds, snif- fing the fragrance of roses in the summer months. Annual prizes are given for the best-kept gardens along the line. fore World War II. Commies Free Three POWs | | | Geographic} about 80 per cent above those be-| We didn’t care. We threw ciga- | rettes at them,” said Pfc. John W. From Michigan Airman 2 C. Edward R. Collins; mother, Dorothy Warren, Jackson. Pfc. Lawrence R. Schadler; mother, Bertha Shaffer, Benton Harbor Cpl. Wiliam D. Martin, nephew ot Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer De Hoff Kalamazoo. Pfc. Richard Drennan, Lincoln Park. Cpl. Audrey T. Harris, Benton. Califernia Sgt. Ralph G. Eveland Jr., Los Ange- les; Sgt. Manuel G. Morino, Anaheim. Connecticut Sgt. Benjamin L. Comeau Jr., Mystic. Florida Cpl. John W. Freeman, Eustis. Geergia Cc Norman L. Long, Hill City; Cpl. Ww esboro. P. Oliver, Wayn Idahe Pic. Robert Windsor, Idaho Palla Iilinets Pfc. Robert G. Draper, * Pte. Peter J. De Michele, bag oe . Lil burn L. McCardle Jr. Ne Indiana Ps oa Richard K. Davis, Cambridge ve lewan . Gordon L. nadecn, Gowrie; Cpl Me Rund, roel tecky Pic. Wallace J. Greenwell, Webster; Sgt. Owen D. Latham, Madisonville; Cpl. Kenneth Spurlock, Sereeen: Massachuset Cpl. Lo gd R. —. Malden; Edwin Erickson J , Somerville: Staley w "Havener a. Glouchester ; ard P. Robbins, Fal River. Ggt. John T. Harbour Jr., Rio. Misseuri Pic. Frederick Butler Jr., Marston; Pfc. Benjamin E. Chastian or., Joplin; Pie. Chester A. Kacsorek, 8t. Louis New Jersey Pfe. William B. Brown, Clayton; Pfc. Harry iain > Hammonton. of Surgrue, Nerth Carelina Pfe. Arthur R. McDuffie, Biscoe; Cpl. William V. Stogsdill, Erwin. Cpl. Christepher Ogee os Jr., Cleveland; Pfc: Paul ¥: ey, Colum- bus; Cpl. Edmond E. York, Columbus. Oklahoma Sgt. Robert L. a Jr., Norman. Pfc. Manuel Castlewits, Philadelphia ; . William J. Dengel, Erie; Pfc . Jo- seph J. De Philadelphia oe alter Kelman, Natrona; Pvt. 4 Me- Donald, Skippack; Pfc. Thomas Me- Murtle, Pottsville; Cpl. Robert L. Peters, ou . James H. Stoffa, Sgt. Paul Vrabel, Johnstown. Seuth Carolina Pfc. Clayton Taylor, Campebelie. Tennessee Cpl. William A. Bailey, Hampton; ee Jake Harrison, Lake City; Cpl. Har- old E. Humphreys, Harriman: c. Har- old BE. McManus, Trimble: c. Everett McNabb, Newport: Pic. Chafles J. Mil- holland, Copper Hil! exas Sgt. Roberto V. Hinolosa, Weslaco; Pfc. Edwin F. King. Fort Worth; Sgt. John E. Minchew, oda Sgt. Marcus FP. Palacio, Brunda Cpl. Milturn Hines Starnes, Ama =f Pfe. Robert D. Wahler, Rockport; Cpl. Lester E. Wil- liams, Kemah West Virginia Cpl. Roy E. Farley, Buckhannon. Wiscensin Pfc. Paul BE. Braun, Milwaukee; Pfc. Otis Kammerud, Blanchardville; Cpl. Norbert FP. Gaksefski, Milwaukee: Cpl. | David D. Schwart, Wisconsin Dells; Cpl. Frederick C. Schwitzer. Shawano. Howell Pair Win Awards at MSC HOWELL — William J. Mce- Quillan of Howell, a junior in yet- erinary medicine and Carolyn Mae Dorner of Fowlerville, a senior majoring in English, both of Michigan State College, have been awarded scholarships at that col- lege. | There were among 106 graduate | given the William and Sarah E. | Hinman scholarships for 1953-54 | college year. Requirements include high scho- lastic standing, character and per sonality demonstrated by particip- ation in extra-curricular campus | activities and financial needs. Kyoto Flood Damage May Reach $40,300,000 TOKYO — Damage has been estimated at about $40,300,000 in a flood that killed or injured scores of Japanese last week in a suburb of Kyoto, the city’s Disaster Re- lief Headquarters said today. A check for $8,698 from the men and officers of the U.S. Far East Naval Forces Command was)! turned over to the Japanese Red Cross today for flood relief. Throw Cigarettes, Candy to Sullen Ex-Captors FREEDOM VILLAGE (—Amer- ican soldiers liberated today were so happy to be going home they tossed cigarettes and candy to| North Koreans on the trip south from Red prison camps. ‘‘We passed two girls. One threw | CHECK TIPS—State Police Fetective Charles Leaf | Mrs. Hallie Perkins, 55, and the attack on a 16-year- (left) of the Pontiac Post and Detective John|old girl in the same neighborhood where Mrs. DePauw, who is co-ordinating the investigation, are | Perkins’ body was discovered Saturday. Police urge shown handling some of the 200 tips phoned in by| residents to give them any information that may Pontiac residents in connection with the murder of | help the investigation. Pentiac Press Phete British exports in 1953 were/a rock and the other spit at us. dee and drink hot water. Or if for three years. ANTI-RED—A kicking South Korean repatriate (above) is restrained by U. S. Marines. The demon- strative POW, who lunged at Commie observers AP Wirephete (right) was among those exchanged during the llth day of ‘‘Operation Big Switch.” Stock Broker Sought in Northern Michigan (Continued From Page One) boring cottager about 9 o’clock Friday night. The warrant for Parmenter’s ar- rest charges him with using 400 shares of Admiral Corp. stock owned by Walter Finley, 35 N. Telegraph Rd, as collateral for a personal loan on Sept. 23, 1952 without obtaining Finley's consent. The stock was worth $12,661.85. A complete audit of the W. H. Protiva Co. books was started |}, Saturday morning by White, Bower | b and Prevo, Detroit certified public | accountants specializing in broker: | age house audits. | Nephier, who has obtained the stock Parmenter gave as col- | lateral, bas reassured owners that the brokerage firm \ill cover any loss that may result. Clarke said both he and the audit firm are continuing their examina- tion, Parmenter’s wife received a let- | ter from her husband Monday. It had been mailed from Frankfort and told her that his body would | be ‘‘found in the lake.’’ He admitted that he had mis- used funds and said that he feit this was the only way. He ex- pressed the hope that she would forgive him, Mrs. Parmenter has told friends that she had no intimation that anything was wrong and that her husband never discussed business matters with her. Oakland County Prosecutor | | Frederick C. Ziem said today Par- | | menter was sentenced to from 414 | to 15 years in prison in 1931 after 'and undergraduate students to be|he admitted embezzling $25,000 ters. from the First State Savings Bank | at Birmingham. Nephler said today that ac- countants are continuing thety examination of his books and records. To date the only dis- crepancy found discloses that Par- menter used certain stock cet- tificates belonging to three clients for his personal use. These certificates have been lb- cated and repossessed by Nephler, who now holds them for his clients. The brokerage office is conducted under the rules and regulations of the Michigan Corporations and Securities Commission, and existing surety bonds will provide addi- tional protection to clients. Prescribe Hot Water Only for Sick POWs FREEDOM VILLAGE (® — Chi- nese doctors at Camp 1 prescribed only hot water for seriosly ill pris- oners who did not cooperate, a prisoner liberated today said. “A lot of fellows died because of holding back,’’ said Sgt. Walter Kemans of Natron, Pa. “If you didn’t get along with them you got no treatment if you were sick. They'd tell you just to an injured bone, they’ d say go back and put water on it.’ Gaspe Murder Inquest Will Reopen August 27 GASPE, Que. (®—A _ coroner's inquest into the slaying of three Pennsylvania deer hunters in the Gaspe Peninsula wilderness is scheduled to reopen Aug. 27. The date was announced early today by Dr. Lionel Rioux, Gaspe district coroner. He acted shortly after Wilbert, Coffin, a 37-year-old mining prospector held as ‘‘an important witness,’’ was taken to Quebec Provincial Police ilead- quarters to be photographed and fingerprinted. $3 License Is Too Costly, but Fine Costs $50 SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. ® —William A. McMullen told the judge he had never taken out a driver's license because they cost too much. City Judge Stanley L. Vanrens- selaer fined him $50. Driver's li- censes in New York state cost $3 Michigan to Crack Down on Illegal Liquor Schemes LANSING (#)—Representatives of 100 liquor distilling companies today were on noticc from the state Liquor Control Commission that | improper promotional schemes, wilknot be permitted in Michigan. The commission met with the distillers’ representatives yester- day in a follow-up to the convit-, tion of five companies of’ promotional ‘‘gimmicks,’’ prohibit- ed under Michigan law. Commissioners spelled out to the representatives that ‘‘kick-backs”’ to bars for pushing any particular brand, ‘‘giveaways’’ of any kind, uying drinks on the house to push | any brand and like stunts would be dealt with promptly and se- verely. Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Eta Ula Wilson News has been received of the death of Mrs. Eta Ula Wilson, 72, formerly of Pontiac, who died yesterday at her home near Clare. Mrs. Wilson was born in May- ville Oct, 7, 1881. She and her | husband were pioneers in this area, once having farmed land north of the present Fisher Body plant as well as land near Lake Angelus. \ Besides her husband, David, she is survived by four daugh- ters, Mrs. Lena Strong of Pon- tiac, Mrs. la Deneen of Che- boygan, Mrs. Hazel Talman of Manton and Mrs. Marion Jarman of Fairbanks, Alaska, and five sons, Hiram, formerly of Detroit, Archie of ‘Evart, Norman, Mel- bourne and Eimer all of Clare. Also surviving her are two sis- Mrs. Maggie Abernathy of Vassar and Mrs, Lizzie Miller of | Flint, and three brothers, John, | Isaacs and Will Craig of Vassar. Service will be at 2 p.m. Thurs- day at the Gilmore Christian Church, Gilmore. The body is presently at the Coker Funeral Home in Farwell. JESSE a YOUNG These men discovered the body of Mrs. Hallie Perkins Saturday afternoon in a field near Baldwin and Beverly Ave. while they were searching for crickets in the tall grass, preparatory to a fishing trip. Edgar Sanders Freed by Hungarian Reds (Continued From Page One) spokesman said no negotiations di- rectly preceded Sanders’ arrest, but exchanges have been continu- ing since he was arrested Nov. 21, 1949. The spokesman said his re- lease opens the way for resump- tion of normal trade, which Brit- ain shut off a month after Sanders was arrested. Sanders, cousin of film star George Sanders and accountant for the Budapest subsidiary of the In- ternational Telephone and Tele- graph Co., and Vogeler, East Eu- ropean representative of IT&T were arrested in November 1949 and sentenced after trial the fol- lowing February. Sanders was sentenced to 138 years in prison and Vogeler to 15 years. Vogeler was released in April 1951 after negotiations between the American and Han- garian governments. During their trial] both Vogeler and Sanders ‘‘confessed’’ their guilt, and both the British and American governments promptly branded the confessions the result of Communist pressure interroga- tions. As a result of Sanders’ convic- tion, Britain broke off trade rela- tions with Hungary, and the United States also took retaliatory meas- ures. * * * Hungary recently has shown in- terest in reopening trade with Brit- tain, and it was presumed the British have readied concessions along this line in exchange for Sanders’ release. On July 27, British Minister of State Selwyn Lloyd told Parlia- ment negotiations for Sanders’ re- lease again were under way be- | tween the British charge d'affaires in Budapest and Hungarian of- ficials. * * * "The Hungarian announcement of Sanders’ pardon implied the action was based on a clemency petition submitted to President Istvan Dobi earlier this -month by the Briton’s wife Winifred. She gave her letter of appeal to Hungary's ambassador in London, Imre Hor- vath, just before his return to Bud- apest Aug. 11. The Czechs in releasing Associ- ated Press Correspondent William Oatis earlier this year also cited an appeal from his wife. Later it was revealed the United States had offered to negotiate the removal of the Czechs if the newsman was freed. Two Escape Death by Twenty Minutes Mrs. Herold Jones of 1109 Lake- view Ave., and her daughter Tem- pa, 3, missed possible electrocu- tion by about 20 minutes Monday, according to Oakland County Sher- iff's deputies. The housewife had bathed her c.ild in the bathroom of their home, and was preparing Tempa for a nap when the power lines in back of the house fell. Deputies think the lines ground- ed to water mains and shorted through the Jones’ plumbing sys- tem to burst out in the recently vacated bathroom. The bathtub plug melted, fix- tures turned black, enamel flew all over and plaster crashed down. Mrs. Jones and Tempa escaped uninjured through the front door. Ulcers for Trucemaker WASHINGTON @® — Assistant Secretary of State Walter S. Rob- ertson, who played a large part in arranging a truce in the Korean War, has been advised by his doctors to get some rest and is for a week or two. He guffers from ulcers. Ferndale Man Wounded FERNDALE—Late reports from the Defense Department list Sgt. Henry Williams Jr., husband of Mrs. Willie Mae Williams of 20788 Westview St., Ferndale, as wound- ed in action in Korea. away from the State Department ~ae ee a i ssf o Ne te - aa eS SR. BR ee ag ee es ne ee ee ee ee ee ee F 0H WS ley, A ey sy THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY. ‘AUGUST 18, 1953 4 & Niet slg ast Cg ig Be 6 te eye ees ow Le an American soldier, were re- leased from hospitals after treat- ment. Chlorine Gas Poisons 36 on U. S. Freighter persons suffered gas poisoning last| ACquit Actor Tierney NEW YORK (®—Actor Lawrence cylinder leaked chlorine into the} Tierney, who once portrayed out- law John Dillinger in the movies, was acquitted yesterday of charges that he hit a night club pianist on the head with a micro phone. ’ PASSING DOWN OUR STREET, z Y/ DROP IN ANO SEE iy; OUR STOCK COMPLETE (Advertisemen Who Is the “George” That Will Start the Next War? Accérding to ancient prophecy, in all of us, and that methods for a man named Gog, of the Land using them are now simplified of Magog, will bring about the so that they can be used by al- worst w in history. A new most any person with ordinary book, entitled “Beware of These intelligence. Days!” reveals that the Land of The 64-page book he is now Magog is Russia, and that “Gog” offering free to the public offers is an ancient spelling for the guidance for those who wisely name of George. There are sev- wish to prepare themselves and eral leaders named Georgi now their affairs for the great crisis prominent in Russia; so the au- ahead. It gives details of what thor warns that any one of them to anticipate, and when. Those is likely to be the prophesied who do pull through will have lit- Gog. tle to fear, because a glorious The astonishing 64-page book, era will follow. Meantime, it which gives a complete analysis says,,“Beware of’ These Days!” of several great prophecies cov- The book formerly sold for a ering these times, is offered free. dollar, but as long as the present of charge by Edwin J. Dingle, supply lasts, it is offered free to well known explorer and geogra- readers of this notice: This lib- pher. He tells of a remarkable eral offer is made because he system that often leads to almost expects that many readers will unbelievable improvement in pow- later become interested in the er of mind, achievement of bril- entire system of mind power he liant business and professional learned in the Far East and success and new happiness. Oth- which is now ready to be dis- ers tell of increased’ bodily closed to the western world. strength, magnetic personality, For your free copy of the as- courage. and poise. tonishing prophecies covering These strange methods were these momentous times, as_ re- found in far-off and mysterious vealed in this 64-page book, ad- Tibet, often called the land of dress the Institute of Mental- miracles by the few travelers physics, 213 So. Hobart Blvd., permitted to visit it. He dis- Dept. G530, Los Angeles 4, Calif closes how he learned rare wis- Send no money. Just your name dom and long-hidden practices, and address on a postcard or in closely guarded for three thou- an envelope will do. No obliga- sand years by the sages, which tion. Readers are urged to write enabled many to perform amaz- promptly, as only.a limited num- ing feats. He maintains that ber of the free books have been LIGHT AS A FEATHER—United Press Staff photographer Renee Falcke, in Hamburg, Germany, is delighted to find feather-light slippers to wear after a hard day’s work. slippers advertised in the shop window as ‘“‘light as feathers,”’ and decided to put them to the test. Marriage Annulled for Parents of Five BALTIMORE ® — The 10-year marriage of the parents of five children has been annulled. The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Eari Robbins of Baltimore was annulled, yesterday on grounds Mrs. Robbins was not divorced at the time she married her second husband. Judge S. Ralph Warnken award- ed custody of the three boys, 3, 4 and 8 years old, to the father. Custody of the two girls, 1 and 7, went to the mother. The husband sought the annul-| meht. To protect the five children, Judge Warnken declared them to be legitimate. Record-Breaking Yacht Moors at Last Port BORDENTOWN, N. J. (®)—A sleek yacht that set a record for crossing the Atlantic Ocean in 1905 | to win a gold cup offered by | Kaiser Wilhelm II has made her last port—at a junk yard. The Atlantic, one of the fleetest, | proudest yachts ever to sail the | seas, is at the wrecking pier of the | Doan Salvage Co., Fieldsboro, NJ. | In a few months this onetime blue | ribbon ship will be scrap, but her | record in crossing the ocean in 12 days plus still stands for sailing | vessels. FASTEST KNOWN RELIEF FOR GAS ON STOMACH THANK HEAVENS! Most attacks are acid Erdicestian. When it strikes take Bell-ans | lets. y contain the fastest to of heartburn and gas. S0¢ ref fost | 4 Ih, Have you really United Press Phete Renee saw the new tried everything 'Next Released POWs May Be From Camp 3 FREEDOM VILLAGE wW— An American soldier freed by the Communists today predicted the next prisoners repatriated will come from Camp 3, which some returning POWs have said holds men who gave the Reds the most trouble, “Those guys will have less fa- Chinks,”’ said Sgt. George Stoffa, 22, East Mauch Chunk, Pa. ‘‘The Commies first released Camp 5 — a model camp — and then started to work on Camp 1.” Stoffa said he understood Camp 3 holds 200 to 300 Americans cap- tured in 1950, | The Central Railroad of New | Jersey put the first diesel switch | engine into service in 1925. these immense powers are latent printed. 4 HAULING 70 make a Home! IF YOU'VE BUILT a new home recently—or are in the midst of doing so now—you know how dependent building is on motor transport. From the moment the big exacavating shovel arrives at the vacant lot astride a low-bed truck-trailer to dig the hole for your basement, it’s a steady procession of trucks of one kind or another until the house is ready for occupancy. © i Cement blocks, sand, steel, lumber, roofing, brick, piumb- ing, hardware, paint—everything that of your home has to get to the site in goes into the building motor trucks. Then, when you arrive at the point where you're ready to move in, you call on motor transport again to transport your household furnishings for you. If you've got it, a truck brought it! Michigan Trucking Hotel Fort Shelby Association Detroit TRUCKS ARE YOUR FRIENDS — Sereceg You NIGHT AND DAY! vorable things to say about the | Marriage License Applications Raymond L. Podlasek, 245° Nelson Donna L. Furguson, 610 E. Mansfield Vernon J. MéVety, 577 Going Mattie L. Davidson, 402 N. Saginaw Delbert E Burnett, 42 E. Longfellow Maryann M. Bawgle, Clarkston Jack D_ Bittle, 4610 Fiddle Glenna J. Webster, Clarkston William L Jean E Lloyd G. Lindsey, 720 Joslyn Ruth J. Julich, 645 E. Fourth Belt, Oak Park Walls, Birmingham Robert K. Russell, 19 Niagara Mary M. Muma, Clarkston Peter H. Kracais, North Quincy, Mass. Connie R. Empson, Oxford Allen T. Wickman, Lake Orion Shipley J. Vallad, 755 Alberta Robert F. Agnes M Watson, Ferndale Hovey, Cleveland William A. Williams Jr., Macon, Ga Jane A. Blight, Huntington Woods Chester W. Weir Jr., Birmingham Virginia M. Lanctot, Clawson Earl A. ‘Roberts Jr. Nancy L. Arthur, Clawson Clawson ‘James H Curd. 2181 E. Walton Joan B. Maleski, 2545 Opdyke Clarence E. Sanke, Rochester Marie A. Doenges, Rochester Charles H. Ashcraft. Royal Oak Donna J. White, Birmingham Charles J. Satterfield, Ferndale Verna M. Polikowsky, Ferndale Russell J Morrow Jr., 201 Willard Madelyn R. Wylot, 201 Willard yal Oak Boening, oyal Oak Reinhold Parolin. Edna M. Sam 8 Perez. Drayton Plains Opal © Majors, C 81 Union James E. Boyster, Royal Oak Elizabeth J. Batdorf, Midland Ronald H. Weaver. 338 Ascot Mona L. Barnes, 105 W. Fairmont Raymond J. O'Rouke. 2058 Knollwood Margaret H. DeHetre, 16's E. Huron Donald R. Hawes, 147 Hudson Juanita M. Hawes, 491 Robinwood Charles L. McKeller. 673 E. Pike Marjorie M. DiCoa, 871 Robinwood David C_ Stuart, Beverly V. Jones, Birmingham Birmingham Ciifford J. Griffith Jr. Birmingham Clarice A. Torikka, Royal Oak Glenn R. Ward, 583 Arthur Dorothy M. Miles, 583 Arthur William G. Schrader, Farmington May Johnson, Farmington Allan P. Willis, Walled Lake Ardent G Leavenworth, Walled Lake Salvador T. Galvais Jr., Royal Oak Shirley M. Richardson, Royal O Water R Emma F Chester L. Bloom, Royal Oak Viola Stanley, Centerline Meyer, 219 Barrington YoYung, Birmingham George F. Joanne D Raymend P. Elliott, 141 Chippewa Joyce B. Rathka, Ann Arbor Ehlenbach. tc ead Karns, Detrof James R. Osborn, Lansing Nancy A. Wells, 5780 Lakeview Peter Prutchick, Haze) Park | gan, 4, 4-Year-Old’s False Teeth | Should Become Obsolete | Try inhalation therapy with the ASTHMANEFRINe | OTTAWA, Ill. (Ronnie Milli- - - ; } is chewing his spinach Nebuliser and Solution ‘A'@ Imhalant | on a 10-day money-back guarantee. So these days with false teeth. y to use—just inhale the mist-like = directly into the affected area. te us tell you about the welcome relief thousands of users are finding with AsthmaNefrin after other means had failed. | An Ottawa dentist made Ronnie a set after his baby teeth had be- come decayed. The permanent teeth which will replace the false choppers are expected to be normal. Modern Way to Co i a ae $5 . . — a : f s& to PR x % Z ; ~ ae o SIMAS.“¢.@ | —Main Floor | 98 N. Saginaw ntrol Roaches, Ants | 7 Bee | | as odie % cea ; Scientists Discover New, Easy Way to Kill Crawling Insects OACHES and ants, pests that/to prevent re-infestation and to they are, are usually found|keep your home free of crawling near food and cooking utensils| insects all season long. where you should not use bombs Contains Chlordane or sprays. And no need'to either,| If you brush Johnston’s when you can brush Johnston’s| NO-ROACH across window sills NO-ROACH just where you want|and door sills, ants will not cross it, around cabinets and sink or|the invisible coating. You may wherever these bugs are found,| also control silverfish, water- without having to move dishes or| bugs, household spiders and any pots and pans, other crawling insects with r NO-ROACH. Effective for Months One important point to remem- Johnston’s NO-ROACH is col- ber: NO-ROACH isa unique for- | orless, odorless, and stainless. In-| mula, made only by Johnston. It sects that walk across the invisible|cannot be duplicated. For truly | coating become paralyzed and dieleffective control, use genuine | within three hours. Then the coat-| Johnston’s NO-ROACH. 8 oz. 89¢; | ing remains effective for months] pt. $1.69; qt. $2.98. | us OVW KRCE = Saginaw Main | Street BROTHERS Floor Delores A. Muentener, Hazel Park Jack T. Sassamon, Little Creek, Va. | Joyce V. Ball, Ortonville Charley E. Davis, Detroit Effie Gates, Walled Lake Hugh L. McMillan Jr., Hotel Auburin Madeline Eggerton, Hotel Auburin Paul A. Deschaine, 87 8. Paddock Ellen M. Head, 4014 Lark - Pred FE. Herron, Royal Oak Tensel Garlow, Roya) Oak ohn D. MacDowall. Pontiac Lake winds L. Glenn, Charleston, W. Va. Arnold Murray. Royal Oak Wilma K. Bennett, Royal Oak immie Garrett, Hazel Park Wine J. Truitt, Hazel Park (Avertisement) Why Suffer Bleeding Piles Even dectors and druggists are amased at this new, quick-acting Miracle Medicine Throw away your messy ointments, sup- positories and injections. Take a table- spoonful of the new pleasant, harmless miracle drug, RECTORAL, after meals and at bedtime. Gives fast amas re- sults. Usually in just a few days.- bleed- ing, soreness and irritation disappear. Not one failure or return of bleeding has ever been reported where directions were | followed. You too can get these amas- | Walgreen's; Luttrell Pharmacy; slanks- ter & Jones: Dunseith; Cole's; Blinks: | Rule; Quality; Keego Harbor; Drayton Plains; Auburn Heights. Do not accept anything else. Funeral Services , Are Held Under the Most Favorable Conditions Here... 1. Convenient location 2.Homelike chapel «< 3. Parking lot 4. Competent staff 5. Provisions for family privacy H unloon HOM FUNERAL Tw Oakland Ave. FE 2-0189 Handles Guaranteed If the handles on this canner break eff, FREE + Extra ‘Durable Belmont Enameled COLD PACK CANNER 5498 Rich deep white-flecked blue on new porcelain surface. Com- — with rack which holds 7 one-quart jars. Easy to clean and as many other uses before and after canning season. Holds 7 Quart Jars Pint Size PYREX MEASURE 99° Graduated ounce and - cup measure in easy Stain-resisting finish. to read print, always Saves work, food and | sure of how much to time. use. CANNING FUNNELS—solid aluminum ..........10¢ SUGAR SCOOP—stainless steel .............. .69¢ FREEZER PAPER—70 ft. K.V.P............... .69¢ HOME FREEZER THERMOMETER—Taylor ... $1.75 Nationally Famous “BALL” Brand . MASON JARS | rm 122 985 Quart Size Jars...12 for $1.19 Wide-Mouth Pts. .12 for $1.19 Wide-Mouth Qts..12 for $1.39 Aluminum ROTARY SIEVE 1.79 All Purpose FOLEY FOOD MILL AVE, Used as masher, co- lander, sieve, strainer, all in one. . Pirst quality, crystal clear jars complete with caps. Buy now and seve. >< — “Ball” Dome Lid Jar Caps “Ball” Jar Rubbers 12 for 10° New fresh stock —perfect seal. Complete with lids and bands. Keep Foods Better in Aluminum Foil For HOME FREEZERS Pure aluminum foil, 12 inches wide. Excellent for baking, cooking, deep- freeze, refrigerator storage, etc. =a Prepare Your Own Frozen Foods! — con KORDITE Freezer Sy) ox) Bags and Boxes a.» AX bE Pint BACS ADDU DUD ODOULS. for 55¢ Pint BOXES .......+6+.25 for 70¢ Quart BAGS ..........25 for 75¢ Quart BOXES ... 25 for 98e Use them over and over again. Idea) for home freezer and locker pack- aging. Complete with rubber bands. ~ | 1 te tess nos NEY Keep Frozen bods in Clear Plastic Freezer Boxes Pint Size ..12 for $3.59 25-oz. Size 12 for $3.98 Ideal for refrigerators, home freezers or food lockers. These transparent containers seal perfectly, can be la Genuine ‘SEALRIGHT’ Frozen Food Container Quart Size. .12 for $1.10 Pint Size ..24 for $1.59 Good for freezing meats, fruits, vegetables. Easy to use. Remove cover, fill container. In handy, dustproof bags. coaOIMMS.{8. bes et ene ny +. cee ee oe ” THIRER It’s Simms for Lowest Prices on CANNING NEEDS Pi FOUR THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 Vodavari River Flooded | Vodavari River in central India. Damage was estimated. at more MADRAS, India — Unofficial | than 100 million dollafs. reports today said at least a mil- lion people have been made home-| The perimeter of the Antarctic less by flood waters of the sacred | continent is 16,000 miles long. AT OUR EXPENSE! Dead Duck Behind Foul Play as Grate Flies LOS ANGELES w—Everything was ducky until Ducky Sue — a fowl of questionable temperanient — came between neighbors. with assault and battery. Hajj said Ducky Sue belonged to Joseph the Hajj; that is, he did untik Jack Stewart dispatched Sue to duck heaven. Stewart said he killed the bird after she nipped his infant vs daughter's fingers. Hajj said non-|t© Get Its Vital Frijoles sense, the duck was the pet of his WANT A GOOD USED WASHER? Low Prices—Famous Makes Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. Huron Street GQ ONLY] COMPARE THE NEW NORMATONE . with hearing aids selling at $200.00. 3 $ 5° HEAR BETTER or PAY NOTHING! “yinrss COME IN TODAY FOR CONSULTATION HEARING AID TERMS BATTERIES Dr. Spencer Oates, All Types—All Fresh Optemetrist . 13 N. Saginaw St.—9:30-5:30 *yae8e0 Fei ‘Health Officer Doubles for Flint and Genesee FLINT (UP)—Dr. L. V. Burkett, Conscience Prompts $20 Gift to State bet evee E Fish Fry Called Off: Jesus." 248 Trout Confiscated S e 5 9 : . “ai f HL: confiscated in his deep freeze by! treasurer said. ‘‘Every noté we state game and fish authorities get credits religion with putting were being saved: for a big*fish, the sender back on the right try for his t-iends. | track.” ‘The latest Michigan brewer months show Drewry beers shipped into the s the next leading brand by ove 0 a } even more Drowrys quality carit be You hear it everywhere in Mich- igan—the preference for Drewrys js growing so fast that folks would like us to supply even more Drewrys Extra Dry Beer than our present record- breaking volume! We are trying to do this... but only as rapidly as our high and exacting sfandards of quality will permit. Please remember that Drewrys Qual- ity cannot be hurried. It takes added time and expense of extra brewing care and extra aging (as well as cost- : liest ingredients) to make a beer as DREWRYS Extra ORY... Extra LIGHT Drewrys Ltd., U.S.A. Inc., South Bend, Indiona y sales figures fo s Extra Dry Beer the le r 195 a oe 2 to 1 and outsells the next Swe - - ant be \ Jer hee 7 r fifty consecutive ading seller of all 3 to date, Drewrys outsells *~, Michigan folke are demanding Drewrys...but fine as Drewrys. That's why Drewrys is so wonderfully light you can enjoy as much as you want without a feel- ing of fullness afterwards ... yet so hearty in flavor that Drewrys is always completely satisfying. Absolutely no other beer has this method of brewing and aging. Today —prove to yourself what a tremen- dous difference this makes in beer en- joyment. Then—like thousands upon thousands of Michigan folks, you too will say, “Il LIKE DREWRYS BEST. IT’S THE FINEST BEER I’VE EVER TASTED— AT ANY PRICE!” PREMIUM QUALITY WITHOUT THE PREMIUM PRICE hurried *| Ave. in Southfield, Royal Oak, 13 Road Projects Opened for Bids on August 26 LANSING (UP) — The highway department said today bids will be opened for 13 state highway projects Aug. 26, including four new projects. New projects include: 2.9 miles of concrete pavement widening, concrete base widening and bituminous concrete on M-102 from Grand River to Wyoming Farmington and Redford townships and in cities of Detroit and Oak Park. 0.6 mile bituminous concrete sur- facing on US-16 from Crockery Creek east and west in Ottawa County. 4.1 miles bituminous concrete on M-37 in Caledonia. Bridge to carry Second boulevard over Edsel Ford Expressway in Detroit. Sue Union for Costs of $250,000 Strike DETROIT (UP) — Wyandotte Chemicals Co. sought $250,000 from local 12270 of the United Mine Workers (Ind.) today on grounds a sit-down strike by 110 pipe-fitters had cost the company that amount. A company suit filed in federal court Monday charged the pipe- fitters have done no work since last Thursday because of a dis- pute over protective work clothes. The suit said the men were pro- testing a company rule that they wear rubberized suits while work- ing near acid. A request that ,the men be allowed to wear cooler suits was turned down for safety reasons, the company said. Limit Picket Activities at Grand Rapids Plant | GRAND RAPIDS ® — An out- lof the Quake Victims Ask U. S. Aid American Red Cross to Relay Fund Appeal for Greeks Oakland County Chapter, Amer- ican Red Cross, today relayed a Greek appeal for funds to help vic- tims of that nation’s recent earth- quakes, landslides and fires. “Communications are broken, so the full extent of the earthquake toll in Greece isn’t yet known,” Harold B. Euler, chapter chair- man, said today. “Latest reports indicate about 600 people are dead, about 700 injured and over a_ hundred thousand are left homeless. The Greek government and Greek Red Crogs are doing relief work. The Greek ambassador has asked the American Red Cross to take responsibility for col- lecting relief funds in the United States.” . Euler said the Red cross isn't considering collecting clothing, food or other material items. Any funds for Greek earthquake relief may be sent to the local Red ross office, 53! W. Huron St. Economy Viewed Sound Despite Korean War End DENVER @ — The end of the Korean war need not depress American economy in the eyes of Charles R. Sligh, Jr., president National Association of Manufacturers. The Grand Rapids, Mich., furni- ture manufacturer told a news conference here yesterday: “At no time was our economy on a wartime basis. We have been prosperous despite the building of non-productive defense items. Now | break of violence yesterday prompt: | |ed the issuance of a temporary | |restraining order limiting the | | activities at the strike-bound Lear | |Inc., plant here. | Circuit Judge Dale Souter issued | the order after a five-man police | Squad clashed with pickets who | refused to let non-striking produc- | tion workers enter the plant. | Three pickets were arrested dur- | that this defense production seems likely to be efit, we'll be able to produce more consumer goods and raise our prosperity and standard of living to even higher levels.’’ Cop Hits $650 Jackpot DALLAS, Tex. (UP) — Police- man J. M. Sears ran down a speeder Monday and hit the jack- ing the brief struggle but were pot. The motorist had been on later released pending further in-| the police wanted list for non- vestigation by the Kent County | payment of $650 in back traffic Prosecutor's office. Burglars Strip Home | While Family Vacations | | Burglars practically stripped the home of Arthur Richardson, 2610 Oakley Park Rd., last night after breaking fm through the kitchen | déor, according to Oakland County | sheriff's deputies. When Richardson came home|! from a short vacation, deputies | said he found the following mis- | sing: four kitchen chairs, six din- | ing room chairs,” the table pad from the dining room table, a 12- inch TV set, all the family’s bed clothing, one truck tire and seven boxes of shotgun shells. tickets. Sears left his ticket blanks in his pocket and took the speeder directly to the city jail. GAUKLER STORAGE CO. 9 Orchard Lake nol specialists it, storage, packing, local and long-distance moving patel abe ALLIED VAN LINES, ina, Ge. | on U.S. Highways + Me. | 2 Services Re. | is Your Command 9 Orchard Lake Oh RUMBA FOX TROT SAMBA TANGO WALTZ la Fi m come in NOW! 25 E. Lawrence St. . Now You Can Learn S DANCES A THIS MONTH ONLY AT ARTHUR MURRAY’S Imagine learning the most popu- r dances at the famous Arthur Murray studios for only $24 in 5 private half-hour Kssons! What fun you'll have at those lessons! rst, you learn Arthur Murray’s “Magic Step To Popularity.” This the key step to all dances and $0 quick and easy to learn that even if you're a beginner you can aster it in almost no time. Now you're om your way to being an expert. Your enrollment entitles you to come to ‘our Student ) Teacher parties, too. So don’t wait. Enroll today. Stu- dios open 10 AM—10 PM. Studios air-conditioned. First lesson free to all who enroll this week. So 8 1953—Archur Murray, Ine. ARTHUR MURRAY Phone FE 2-0244 pam EE ae ' , : ) ————— ee Ss ST ee ee ee ee eee oe Mig a tee te ee Ce, ex, Gon q . - - a i ee ee ee ee Pe ee PLO Pg GG OG LE I A A OR Bae Wy A tte as | ee fe a, he, tiny en, le ny _- a ots es, oO nye ang ad THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 . Last Two Weeks of Our 16th Annual August Furniture Sale We must make room for our fall shipments arriving daily! | Savings Up to 58” Shop and Compare Three floors of bright new home furnishings of style and quality You Always Get More for Your Money at , MILLER FURNITURE 144 Oakland Avenue Free Easy Parking Closed Wednesday Afternoon Prices Smashed HOM ADE The Sign of Quality While Shopping This Week Relax and dine at Homade — Pontiac's finest cafeteria and lunch counter. CHEF’S SPECIAL DAILY . Special Every Wednesday and Thursday, 4:30 to 7:45 P.M. Roast Young Turkey with Dressing, Cran- berry Sauce, Choice of Potatoes, Choice of Salad or Vegetable, Roll 79 a i} } Oo ead ° is Dd ~ a = ~ HOMADE froop sHor 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Fruit Punch Made to Order Bowls and Cups for Rental BAKERY DEPARTMENT Ay1jon@ 40 ubig yy PV AO Pecan Rolls ....... Leese eees 6 for 33c Poppyseed Rolls .....;..:....:..doz. 39c White Nut Bread .:........... loaf 40c Glazed Donuts .. .-.:. .:.-crs...6 for 28¢ Maple Nut Rolls ........... . .6 for 28c¢ Sour Cream Cookies ......... doz. 39¢ tional Studios. Miss U. S. A. is STEPPING HIGH—Myrna Hansen who was Miss U. S. A. in the recent ‘‘Miss Universe’ contest, climbs to new heights in the tial picture world after winning a film contract with Universal Interna- bier: *hbe oo. Scha ountain ; exe lewsa Cpl. Richard D. Filloon. Pocahontas, oe Delbert L. hg one ' he nuel J. 8 in, ariton; c. . sedman, Greenfield; Pvt. Dale E. Van Draska, Grinnell. Kansa s M. ; a Cc. Hes worth: Bet 1/C. Robert ford; Cpl. James A. Mood Cpl. James H. Balls, Joseph W. Evans, Lyons, i Topeka. H Ulman, pe Ecateck , Leaven- y Jr., aa tani M. ck, Paducah, pl. ry A. ‘Campbell, Elizabethtown; La T. : 1. Cpl. L Claude Bruad, Gonsales: - soaeta repas; Pic. Sam W. Fontenot, Maurep geen ., West Monroe; Sgt. George Ne Orleans; 1st Lt. William H. Kellum, Haynesville; Cpl. Harry J. Kling. Gon- sales; Cpl. Maple L. Leader, Whitehall; M. Sgt. James E. Williams, New Or- leans; Pfc. Keith K. Clark, Angie: Cpl. Anthony C. Doucette. New Orleans; Cpl. Oscar H. Hargrove, Baton Rouge; Cpl. Louis Sonnier Jr., Morse: M. Set William R. Swarmer, Reddell, Cpl. Stev- ens Wililams, Hamburg Maine Cpl. Carleton V. Agreli, Old Town: | David C. Lorrey, Bangerville; iL Pfc. John lege Sgt. Rovere J. Tait, Bar Harbor: A. Allen Jr., Peaks Island; Cpl. E. Douglass, Steep Falls; Sgt. Harry Eldredge, Portland. Maryland Pfc. Charles T. Compton, Sgt. Emanuel Ellis, Baltimore; Roy E. Head, Baltimore, Pfc. K. Wallace, Edgewood; Sgt. Bredeson, Rock Hall; Sgt. Hill, Mechanicsville; Sgt. Gladkowski, Baltimore; Howell, Baltimore; Sgt nings, Baltimore; Cpl Krepps, Baltimore: Cpl. McPherson, Edgewater; M. Miss Jr, Cuckeystown; Capt. 8. Overton, Silver Spring: Cpl. Doc Riddle, Hyattsville. Massachusetts Bgt. Owen J. Cameron, South Athol; Cpl. Richard R. Koroser, Worcester; Cpl. John Martins, Ludlow; Cwo. Leo J. Manegre, Springfield; Cpl. EBarle C. New- ton Jr., Leominster; Sgt. James P. O'Leary, Acushnet: Cpl. Prank J. Pina, Roxbury: Capt. Rodney F. Cloutman, Athol; Cpl. Robert M. Englehart, Rox- bury; Sgt. Vernon R. English, Groton; Cpl. Charles T. Foley. Woburn; Sgt. 1/C William H. Moss, North Adams, Cpl. Roger B. Smith, Pittsfield; Cpl. George A. Tondreau, Salem. Bethesda; Bgt. 1/C William Arlin 8. Xavier W. Alphonse F Sgt. Elmer Alfred 8. Jen- Richard W. Sgt. Ira V. Lawrence k L. Minnesota Cpl. Lyman H. Arionus, Blackduck; Lt. Col. Arnold N. Brandt, Austin: Pfe. | Gudmund C. Johnson Jr, Red Wing; Pfc. Joseph N. Dehaaft, Red Lake Falis: Cpl Harold F. Diekman, Minnesota City; Sgt. John Eide. Wabasha; Cpl. Robert D. Frisk, McIntosh. Mississippi Anice D. Bridges. Jackson; Tylertown,; Bet. Bet. . Cpl. 1/C Winston Graves, Roy Stewart, Jackson. Misseari ” M. Sgt. Raymond J. Adams, 8t. Louis; Pfc. Roy G. Breedlove, Southland; Cpl. Ralph E. Hawkins, Clinton; Cpl. James L. Moore, 8t. Louis: Pfc. Robert L. Wright, Platte City; Ist Lt William R. Adams, St. Charles; Cpl. John W. Currie Jr.. 8t. Louis: Sgt. Julius W. Hawkins, Canton: Cp!. Norman C. Mathews, Sim- mons; 8gt. Ronald R. Sturm, Illmo; Pie. Earl W. Taylor, 8t. Louis. Montana Sgt. Dale E. Joslin, Sidney. Nebraska Sgt. 1/C Ramon L. Huber, York; Maj. Durfee Larson, Minden. New Hampshire Pfc. Joseph R. Robillard Jr. Man- chester. New Jersey Cpl. Raymond C. Haigh Jr., Atlantic City; Cpl. Wesley Stephens, Trenton; Sgt. Douglas L. Taylor Jr., Jersey City; Sgt. William H. Graham, Bordentown; Sgt. James L. Green, Montclair; Set. John Loschiavo, North Bergen; Cpl. John C. Perry, Newark; Pfc. Stanley F. Peterson, Barnegat; Pfc. Stanley W. Reynolds, Neptune City; lst Lt. Joseph W. Smith, Newark. New Mexico ‘ Sgt. Samuel Corney, Hobbs. . New Yor Cpl. Pranklin M. Barber, gi G. Blowers, New York; Swain; Bresett, Gouverneur; Greco, Brooklyn; Pfc. . 1/C Charles H. . Buffalo; Sg%. 1/C William W. Johnson, Clyde; Cpl. Bertram E. Jones. Yonkers; Pfc. Robert H. Korehler. West Hempstead, L. Isl.; Pfc. Max R. Michiel, New York; Pfc. falo; t. Vincent A. Piatteli, Water- town; fe. Raymond A. Rojas, Hicks- ville; M. Sgt. John R. Whalen, Brook- lyn; Cpl. Riehard C. Brucker, New York; Sgt. Albert C. Capozzi, Brooklyn; Sgt. Richard B. Charland, Lyon Moun- tain; Pic. Thomas J. Coraci, Brook- lyn; Cpl. Harvey G. Engelman, Bronx: Set. 1/C. John C. Keller, Bronx; Set. Robert J. McCaul, Watertown: Pfc. Cpl. Thomas H. Cpl. Richard A. Winnie, New Paltz. ek _ North Carolina Wi; emry D Bassett, Winston- | Salem: Cpl. Elwin C. Martin Jr., Leaks- ville; Cpl. Garl' N. Parker, Kannapolis; Cpl. Joseph D. Choate, Sparta: Pfc Dallas . Dickerson, Greenville; Cpl. Clarence C. Downing Jr., Roper: Sgt. 1/C._ Horace 8. England, Newton: Ist Lt. Roger B. Kirchofer, Raleigh; Sgt. 1/C. Fred Threet, Fayetteville; Cpl. Harry C. Tolley, Monroe Nerth Dakota Pfc. Stephen K. Roe, N ; V. Smith, Marmon. aan See ea M. Sgt. Clifto ag | : ~ mn C. Bragg. Pr - ville; Sgt. Arnold C. Galienns. Toledo: Pfc. George R. Garrett, Cincinnati: Prancis B. Henig, Cleveland: : oe ward J. Hess Jr., Dayton: Jones, Cincinnati: Cpl. Kenneth W. Lip- pert, Canton; Sgt. David L. Nicholson, Irondale; Sgt. 1/C. John H. McCall, Cleveland; Pfc. w McNeil, Mount Vernon: . Robert L. Rousch. Marietta; Pfc. Walter C. Feder, Cincin- :; Col, Thomas J. O'Hara. Youngs- : Pfc. William P. Huth, Lakemore: Cpl. Cebert W. Mullins, Cincinnati: Cpl Jackie F. Powell, Glouster: M. R. Canton; Pvt. Ed- Pfc. Leroy lahoma Cpl. Merviol W. Biair, Oklahoma City: Pvt. Elmer D. Gardner, Carter; ist. Lt. W. Ledbetter. Oklahome City. Cpl. Julius Koster, Albany; 1. Mutter, Eugene. 7: en Pennsylvania Cpl. Joseph Antrom, Philade!phia: Pfc. Roland L. Bowser, New Kensing- WANT A GOOD USED FAMOUS TV? Best Buys—Easy Terms Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. Huren Street Prisoners Ee ia. 2. ae Sa Sgt. Thomas E. Hurt, Jackson; Pfc. Harold 8S. Jackson, ttanooga; M. Sgt. Arthur E. ee Clarksville. ezas Bart, Houston; Pfc. Vesteen Christi; ist Lt. Richard B. Coke, s: ist Lt. Philip K. Glenn. ’| Gunter; Sgt. 1/C Harold L. Main, Gor- "| don; Pfe: Kenneth R. Miller, Wharton; | Lt. Gg) John a as Houston. 5 rginia Capt. William F. Bivens, Ft. Lee: Cp! Nels Opheim, Wil- W. Winter, VC Edward C. Wa . Charies 8. Branch, Olympia; Frederick L. Horn ton H. Jackson Tacoma; Pfc. James EB. Pier, Chehalis; CWO. James E. Stevens, Tacoma. West Virginia Cpl. Melvin Branch, Fairmont; : Davis E. James, Charleston; Cpl. James J. Kittle, Clarksburg; Sgt. John B. Peppard, ee onsin Sgt. Ray L. Arpke, Sheboygan: Cpl Ralph Bender, Sheboygan; Pic. Stanley 8. Krukowski, Chetak;: Cpl. Alfred R. Paschelke, Milwaukee; Sgt. Glenn Huff, Milwaukee. Hawaii Sgt. Daniel K. Brown, Honolulu. Philippine Islands Sgt. 1/C Lawrence L. Arias, Bobon Baniar; M. Sgt. Domino T. Avelino, Pineda Pasig Rizal. Ex-Superintendent Loses Teacher's. Certificate LANSING wW—Napoleon Martin, 60, former school superintendent at Baraga, Mich., today was strip- Franklin D.| ped of his right to hold a Mich- |igan teacher's certificate. The cértificate was revoked by | the state board of education after Martin had been convicted of padding school enrollment records. He pleaded guilty in Baraga County Circuit Court to adding the parochial school enrollment to that of the public schools to illegal- {ly increase his district's share of | state aid. ‘He drew a two-year suspended sentence and a $250 fine. ‘Air Force Budget Cut to Close Detroit Office | DETROIT uw — A reduced Air Force budget will force the clos- ing of the Central Air Force Pro- curement District office in Det- troit, Brig. Gen. Russell Keillor reported yesterday. Gen. Keillor said the office would be merged with the regional office at Mobile, Ala., and 104 of the 276 staff members would be transferred to the southern city. The air regional office here will continue to function, he added. Fire Cuts Production SAGINAW (UP) — Because of $50,000,000 General Motors plant fire at Livonia, production at the Saginaw Steering Gear Division has been cut back to a five-day week. a Jerome Brunson, Richmond; Cpl. Edgar : , Danville; Cpl. David F. Hun- |: ae and Gracious Beauty Floral Tributes Are Always in Good Taste... There have been occasional requests from fam- ilies to have friends ‘‘please omit flowers.’’ We i appreciate the motives and in complying request i that an alternate offering be suggested. In reality, the sending of flowers is an out- pouring of regard, and must be accepted as the i wish of the giver. Whatever our desires or i thoughts — flowers are always in good taste. ! Parking Phone Ne + One ¢ ae Gp lon- FEDERAL 4-4511 ge" | | DR. H. A. MILLER: Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842— “Better Things in Sight” Closed Wednesday Afternoons Polio Can Strike Anywhere ... and Can Be Mighty Expensive Protect Your Family’s Financial Future With Polio Insurance Today from “ane Sa ’ LATELLE ee 504 Pontiac Bank Bldg. ae 4 af g Dan Mead FE 5-8172 we | BUYING A NEW CAR ON TIME ? BE SURE. Look Ahead! {OU SAVE 4. WAYS without delay. when your dealer in General Motors Products uses this GMAC THRIFT-GUARD PLAN 1. YOU SAVE VALUABLE TIME. Your dealer gives you complete financing at one place, 2. YOU SAVE EXPENSE. Your dealer gives you flexible, personalized, low-cost financing that buys the greatest value—and with no red tape. 3. YOU SAVE WORRY. You receive considerate treatment when financial problems arise. 4. YOU SAVE TROUBLE. GMAC makes emergency assistance available from coast to coast, through its 230 offices in the United States and Canada. You establish a nation-wide credit standing. Y} = ; Bay. —= TIME PAYMENT PLAN The Pion that Helps Millions Again and Again! Ask your dealer in CHEVROLET « PONTIAC OLDSMOBILE « BUICK * CADILLAC pew cars, and used cars of all makes}; NOW THE DOUBLE PENALTY ts OF EASY TERMS” sires yos vay on so-called “easy terms,” you pay too much—and you pay too long. The faster you pay, with comfort, the better you will be satisfied. . GENERAL Motors ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION . ee a a i al = Pe . —_ SS yy Sie Se i ay ey . <> - ° wil pe la pe we OS et wo pe ge ree eer 2 Sgn Pe, Sy pS Dw Ps Pd a THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 POW Tries To Escape Reds . Noel and Pal Flounder Through Ditches, (Editor’s Note: Frank Noel, AP pho- tographer and Pulitzer prize winner in 1943. came back from more than 32 months in a@ Communist prison camp on Aug. 9.) By FRANK NOEL (As told to Olen Clements) TOKYO # — In the minds of prisoners — whether it is Le worth or a Communist hole in North Korea -- escape always is running through your mind. Four times I planned to escape. Once I did. It was with a pilot, Capt. Zachary Dean of Kansas. It hap- pened in August 1951. I had been a prisoner of the Communists then nearly a year. Dean, a P51 pilot, was shot down in April 1951. He was a bridegroom of six days. First I'll give you the picture. Escape in a country where you Wa inew the route from the can’t speak the language, read . the road signs, show your face |, camp~we were going to take. It at all, is something that must 5 be thought out. Dean, a lanky Kansan with the guts of a lion, wanted to steal a We began to connive, scrape food bowls for leftovers and horde up everything we could lay hands on that we could eat or use for trading or bribery. Communists are easy to bribe. Refrigerator - Washer Repair Service @ All Makes © Expert, Trained Technicians © Prompt, Dependable Service @ All Work Guaranteed Bussard Electric 84 Oakland Ave. — Free Parking Phone FE 2-6445 Member Oakland Co Electronic-TV Service Assoc. Well, that damned pig wanted no human company. He squealed and mouthed around there until he woke up the Korean farmer. The farmer poked his head out special There's something special about Dayton Koolfoam ... NO other foam pillow gives such 00! comfort, such deep, relaxing sleep! Now you can save money, for a short time only in our white sale All first quality, finest 100% pure foam latex. Koolfoam gives up to 14 times more surface oir flow than ordinary foam. That's wny it’s gooler, more “Air-Conditioned.” =Kaolioan TRAGE MARK Wonderful for hot nights... ard ideal for hay fever and asthma sufferers. Save money by buying now! ¢» « regularly $8.95 now $°795 el CRISP RUFFLES So Very Fresh and Friendly Ruffles ...fluffy favorites... always give a friendly glow to every room in the house. So wonderfully simple to coordinate with almost any interior decorating motif. Save on these 60 singles cotton marquisette curtains in all lengths and. widths. Regular 6.95 to 19.00 according to width. WHITE 2 5 SALE PRICED % OFF Oven Monday and Friday Until 9 P.M. 1666 S. Telegraph Plenty of Free Parking at Our Store HOBNAIL SPREADS Famous Radiant Heiress suitable for any type of room. Rayon tufts shed no messy lint. Practical super size in new col- ors as well as white. Regular $11.00 Double or Twin Size $ I FAILLE SPREADS Quilted white floral top with plain flounce of jade green, blue, raspberry or yellow. Double or twin size at genuine sale savings. Regular $17.50 *$ 450 Open Monday and Friday Until 9 P.M. Get Soaking Wet, Only to Be Caught We would It took us most all night but we swam the half-mile wide lake and got over on the other side of it. Probably all night long we walked. Yet we didn’t make over a mile from the camp. But we had the lake between us and the camp. We slept all day in some bush- It was raining and we were wringing wet. We were heading for the Yalu, going to swim across, Trails in that country all have B $ 8 E E 3 3 8 “I’m going to steal a MIG. (MIGs cannot carry any pas- sengers) and I'll have to go it alone. What aré you going to do? I said: “I'll stick with you until you take off then I'll go on down the coast, steal a boat, bribe a fish- erman or something and try to make it down south of the 38th parallel or hit an Allied carrier or something out in the Yellow Sea and go aboard it.” We decided we would stick to- gether until the MIG stealing be- cause you can never tell, a guy might get sick, break a leg traps- | ing around at night like that or | something. You know how it is. | Our tobacco was wet. The book | Dean brought along so we could | tear the pages out of it to roll | cigarettes was all wet. We were miserable. But we were free. That night we stumbled right into a Korean fyoad block. There was a couple of guards in the hut and they heard us. They stumbled out in their underwear, carrying those bamboo pike spears of theirs and making a lot of noise because they were scared. hkike a couple of schoolboys in a grave- yard at night. They looked around, went back into their hut and closed the hut door. Dean and I took off in high gear. We jumped in behind a_ high clay embankment facing the lake. Ten or 15 minutes later the Ko- reans came yak-yaking down the road. We were trying to roll cig- arettes and were not paying any attention to the noise the Ko- reans were making. They were scared of their own shadows, and we knew it. We just shut down everything. They walked right past us. Their wet tennis shoes squished. Then we sneaked up on a hill, hid in some bushes all day, be- cause we knew we had been de- tected. It was good and dark when we started. Only Dean had a watch. Dean began to get sick. His back groins. He had hepatitis. | Oh, yes, I forgot. The Chinese inoculated 120 of us with the same needle. The last 20 or so, you could hear the needle as it screvred its way through the tis- sues. It was jaundice Dean had. There was no mistake. Dean was very sick. “T can’t go any farther,’’ he said. “We’ ve got to find a hiding place | for a couple of days.” | When you get jaundice our camp doctors, who had treated the other 27 of that 120 who came | down with it, had told us you | might lie still and take as much GENUINE LEVI'S 3” fe For small boys, big boys, and *& ; } men. Ladies’ Levis 4.45. | trust hurt. There was a swelling in his | sugar as possible. Of course, we +-4 mo sugar but Dean knew that. We had to find a place to hide. We were on a high hill. The clouds went floating by. We had been three days and nights in a torrential rain. We were cold. We wanted warm food. We saw the farm compound. We decided we'd take a chance. Maybe they wouldn't turn us in. Dean could get two | c. three days rest. We made a mistake. There were about seven families in it. That’s where your commu nism comes in. One of them turned us in. We'd taken a long shot and lost. They did give us warm food, kindness, dry tobacco. Then the insiduousness of communism reared its ugly head. They. had to tell the gestapo. Too. many people had, seen us. It was that old snitch govern- ment, that shotgun diplomacy again, The Koreans could not their fellow Communists. Somebody had to report us, we knew. So we started to leave. We got out on the road. We didn't know it but we were only six kilometers from the Yalu. We knew its direction and we started that way. These Koreans said that we should go the other way. We said we are going our way. Dean offered them his watch. They grabbed us. Dean was much taller so two of the three men who were trying to detain us grabbed him and one grabbed me on the left shoulder. I grabbed his thumb and doubled it up. It must have hurt him to his elbow. He was at my mercy. Dean whipped out this razor he | stole from the company barber | and he made a couple of swipes | at his two tormentors. They re- treated to the embankment. I didn’t let go of that thumb. I knew he was hurting up to his elbow. I bet he hasn't got that untangied yet, Dean, who was free, said: “What the hell are we going to do?"’ I said: “Let's get over in that cornfield and fight them if they find us.” So’ we made a couple of ‘‘s’’ turn and dived into that cornfield and under some climbing bean vines the Koreans always have in their cornfields. We laid there in the mud for about an hour. Then they found us. The kids found us, They turned about 50 boys be- tween 10 and 12 loose to look for | us. They found us and raised hell. We were captured by a bunch of kids. We didn’t want to kick their little teeth out. 'rose from that camp of 1600 men | They'll Heed This Sign Then the grown folks moved in. They bound our arms behind us and bound us together with ropes. Dean told them he'd give them his watch. If we had had two,. we'd have been free. When we walked, we almost re goose-stepped. We must have looked ridiculous. Then Dean broke out with disen- tery. It was bad. There we were tied, together. They said we had to march back the whole 27 miles we had come from the camp. Dean was sick, bad. Have you ever been tied to a man with dysentery on the road? When he took a step I took alk | Step, I always had to assume the same position he did. They never let us loose until we got back to the camp. Then they threw us in the hole— Dean for two months. I got six. Neither of us served the full sen-| (# tence but the Communists never let us forget that we still had part of our sentence hanging over our heads. Dean served about 32 days in that hole — an abandoned, un- cleaned latrine. I served about 42 days, because Dean's sentence originally was shorter than mine, in a better hole which was not a Ilatrine. But it stank. They gave us flea-laden uniforms and those fleas hit us like they had fish hooks for snozzles. It was bad. we'd be shot. One thing I'm pretty proud of was when those sentences were pronounced. There was a small (maybe I imagined this) but it seemed a very small amount of applause in Camp 5. There was complete silence from the officers. I was the prize reactionary. * * s But when I hit the hole, and I shall be ever grateful for this, the officers, witi whom I had been quartered, sent a petition to the Reds saying that I was down to 125 pounds and they did not think I could survive a six-month sen-| & tence in the hole. * * s Well, after that the Communists ne would bring me out of the hole, in which neither of us could stand up, lie down or relax, and they and my newsp4per friends, includ- ing: some publishers in the United States. They put 60 watt lights in my/|} face. They wanted strictly favor- able propaganda. That is com- munism, The Communists — they are bastards. (To Be Continued) CHULA VISTA, Calif. uw — No- body seems able to explain a sign beside a little-used road near here reading: ‘‘Drive Slowly — Baby Skunks crossing.”’ ae Sold With a Sere Re » ea $e me. i ae gor ot heed ve ee a Sew Checks, value! ee BAN 88 esi os COTTONS and Save! Only This BACK-TO-SCHOOL 69°" Choose from Plaids, "" Stripes, Prints. Regular 89c J A ag ; tae % [Rees sree ~— on Sold Only With This More ot those 7.99 Nylon Dresses 3” Folow the crowds to this sen- sational value. Sizes 10 to 20. % Some sizes 38 to 44. But we were lucky, We thought ao suggested that?I write to my cor-| ' respondent friénds at Panmunjom | ¥ Sold With D * ani GIRLS’ BACK-TO-SCHOOL Only This COUPON, ; RESSES 2” | Back-to-School. Sizes z oe Ome a geome ee ete et oe © DOUBLE S23, RE UN AWS DAY $ Cute cotton frocks for her set aed appearance 3 to 6x; 7 to 14. ‘ WEDNE Extra dividend for tomorrow's SDAY thrifty shoppers. Double stamps on every purchese of quality season- bs H able merchandise. 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Matin Fiser | SS) TLL Llelelebabsbabstatetatat Regular 3.99 Nylon Sweaters 2” ers. for To-School. vorite Sport Blouses and Skirts. Siz- _es 10 to 18. Main Fleer | Regular 3.99 Ladies’ Purses 2” All great buys. Main Fleer : heehee tet ' heal baal aleateeledelealed-t Regular 2.99 SPORT SHIRTS sport reduced prices. * Main Fleer ; SESE REEEEED s Good at dress styles at © oo Regular 10.99 > pray g Secend Fleer @ Clip this cou- # and save i quality * 4 4 ¥ Se ar OM 8s = Oe i | Slipover sweats, 4 Back- Fae <@ colors, * Sizes-34 to 40. = Main Fleer - 4 ae OR RRs i SS TS eee eae ree - } TEN , THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST I8, 1953 ray Bath Technique Fine for Large Family With several children in the family, bathtime can become quite Cornwall, 4 Washable Pads Ease Tired Feet If your poor feet really hurt in hot weather, you can help them back to normalcy with some foam rubber and rayon pads. They’re absolutely washable — an all-important factor during steamy dog days when you want nothing but tubbables from the ground on up. 20% off ‘PHOENIX NYLONS TODAY! Reg. 1.35 sheers 1.08 * 3 for 3.20! You Save 85c Reg. 1.65, .plain dark seams 1.32 3 for 3.90! You Save 1.05! to I]. Save up to 1.20 when you buy 3 pair of famous Phoenix Beauty Marked Nylons. Buy a DOZEN and you get a 13th pair FREE! Take advantage of this record breaking sale, Choose taupe beauty, rose beauty, mist beauty, and beige beauty. Short sizes: 8- 10, medium sizes: 82-11, long sizes: 9'/2 Waite’s Hosiery—Street Floor Reg. 1.50, | 51-15, 51-30 1.1 t i's 3 for 3.50! You Save 1.00! Reg. 1,95, 66-12, 60-15 1.56 | 3 for 4.65! You Save 1.20! Shop in Air-Conditioned Comfort! MAIL ORDERS FILLED .. CALL FE Foundation Cracks Not Disastrous BY HUBBARD COBB Nothing can worry the average person quite as much as finding a crack in a basement wall. To most it means that the house is falling apart but fast and the best thing they can do is to pack up and get out before the roof falls in. This is something of an error. Basement walls of poured con- crete or masonry block will often crack because of a slight set- tling. Usuglly this takes place | when the house is moderately new and the settling process does ' pot last for very long. Once the house has finished set- tling you won't have any more trouble with the foundation or basement walls. If you find a crack in your basement walls, don’t get excited. Mark a mark at the top and bottom of the crack and wait a few months to see if the crack is growing. If at the end of this time the crack has not been en- larged, go to work and patch it with some concrete. | Should the crack have grown, | don't waste your time trying to | patch it now. Wait until it has | stopped, for a patch applied to a | growing crack will soon fall out. Many cracks, especially in the | case of masonry block, are caus- | ed by excessive water pressure on the other. side of the wall. If | this is the case the wall will usually be wet or damp and if the pressure grows too great it can knock out a section of the wall. The cure here is to remove the water pressure either by running | the water off through drain tile | around the outside of the founda- ; tion wall or making holes in the base of the wall so that the water can flow through the wall and out through a basement drain. Remove Peach Stain With Bleach Solution Peach stain on fabric is one fruit stain which may not respond to clear boiling water. Since it contains a tannin, you'll probably need to bleach with oxal- ic acid solution and ammonia. Answer te Previeus Pussle PICTURE OF A LADY TENDING HER HUSBAND’S SOCKS They’re PHOENIX Miracle Fibers, of course. That’s why she has lady-of-leisure time. They couldn’t be more independent of human effort. They wash and dry wink-quick. No stretchers, either, they refuse to shrink. They’ll be his favorite year-round socks, comfortably warm, but light as a sigh. Moths and mildew make no impression on them. So make a note to always buy him socks that give him pleasure, give you leisure — PHOENIX Miracle Fiber socks. PHOENIX MEN’S SOCKS... Waite's Men's Shop—Street Floor 00 pr. Others to 1.95 4-2511 cloisé Lit iMiA KIAIL JE O[Hlo] folniels| felvialel TODAY! mii [Ol fc lelsiéig@inii injo bd NIOIOICILI@l¢é LIOICigis Mi@is| jelciuls Ololil in VIiSiEio olirTr MIAITILINIS Olagimlilole AINIBIMII [A Bio; | rTioia Riels! jelslols!| joleleim Alcla|s| jnlaln | [sle|Nisle ‘|Tl@iRiAlr ie Plelels|siUlml@isf iriile Ol: lsjey iri Inisl faici Tleleir] feletelel [elec ENJOY COOL COMFORT! ‘ yy — have s Support just for you. enjoy new vitality and lovelier figure lines. Spencers are (@H moderately priced — guaranteed to keep their shape. MRS. ILA E. SEWELL 683 Bileomficid Birmingham Mi 4-0005 Spencer designed You'll ct Former Customers ef MES. URA YAGER please call MI 4-0095 & Kurtz SEWING CENTER | | OR 3-9702 |{ Rebuilt Sewing 50 Machines .............. 29 Electrify Your Old 50 Machine. 6605355565 SOA 1 9 Clean and Adjust 50 Machine ................. 3 = ‘ ‘allt ube Here is good news for every girl who|Honey and it is being introduced by a well. | Known company, would like to have a honey of It is a brand new powder a complexion. shade called | By EMILY POST A wife writes: ‘Just recently we bought new liting room fur- niture and a friend of mine who crochets beautifully made me a set of antimacassars to protect the arms and head rests of our chairs, “IT never liked these on furni- ture and certainly don’t care to use them on my new furniture, but what can I do about this without hurting her feelings? “She comes to visit us quite often and surely will notice whether they are being used. Answers: I think a friend should be consulted before being given anything to be put in her house because where one might like the item another would not. If you wish to please her you might put PETUNIA! My high morale is slipping — My Spirits sag and droop Im tired of plain old crackers To serve with plain old soup. Then butter them lightly, Petunia, sprinkle generous- ly with celery salt, and Crisp in the oven. Fine with soup or salad! BISHOP -Beacxen fine furniture . will find the results of this fine craftsmanship in every beautiful and durable furniture piece by Elliott. and reupholster your furniture now. Fine Since 1920 Elliott has been a famous name of . and today you Let Elliott restyle ELLIOTT ssemexpeeF URNITURE CO. ey OAC A LOCATED ON THE EAST SIDE OF THE DrKIE| to send for—ideas for gifts, bazaar ieee ' \% MILE SOUTH OF WATERFORD OR 3-264] Antimacassars Crocheted by a Friend Are Unwelcome Present to Housewife them on when you know she is coming to see you. Dear Mrs. Post: My son is going to be married soon and I will, of course, stand in the receiv- ing line with the bride's mother. l am gotng to wear a light | blue lace dress and long gloves. I would like to know if I should keep these gloves on while re- ceiving, and when do I remove them? | Answer. You remove them when | you are going to eat but not | when you are receiving. Dear Mrs. Post: Please tell me how peaches, pears and apples are eaten at the table? Answer: Peaches may be eaten in the fingers when freestones are served. The fruit always is broken in half. A clingstone you can't break apart; therefore you eat it whole. If you do this you take very small bites to prevent the juice from running down your wrist. Usually, however, you peel the peach whole and then eat it with knife and fork. Apples and pears usually are quartered with a knife. The core then is cut away from each > On ee . a. pte ig ‘. * > New! The circle tablecloth is| the center of attention on your dining and coffee table! Jiffy pattern stitch is fast and fun— use heavy cotton (string) for this! Crochet a 55-inch circular cloth for gracious dining. Pattern 642 has easy-to-follow directions. Send 25¢ in coins for this’ pat- tern—add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Daily Press Needlecraft Department, P. O. Box 164, Old | 11 He has a Chelsea Station, New York 11, New York. Print plainly pattern | number, your name, address and | zone. Exciting value! Ten, yes ten) | popular, new designs to crochet, | | sew, embroider, knit—printed right in the Laura Whéeler Needlecraft Book. Plus many more patterns money-makers, fashions! Send 28) cents for your copy! quarter and the fruit is eaten in the fingers. Those who do not like the skin peel each quar- ter separately. Dear Mrs. Post: Is it proper to cut hard rolls with a knife, or must they always be broken by hand? Answer: They should be broken Applesauce ls Featured ~ in Brownies New Kind of Recipe Is Given by Visitor Erom Illinois By JANET ODELL A recent visitor from Jackson- ville, Ill., Mrs. C. R. Short, con- tributes a recipe for a new kind -of brownie. Mrs. Short is a merry person who loves a good game of bridge. At home she is a Sunday school teacher, is active in church work, does some hospital service, and is an election worker at the polls. APPLESAUCK BROWNIES By Mrs. C. R. Short _'s cup shortening 2 squares unsweetened chocolate 1 cup sugar 2 eges, well beaten 44 cup applesauce 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup flour ‘ 4g teaspoon double-acting baking powe er 14 teaspoon soda \ teaspoon’ salt % or % cup chopped nutmeats Melt shortening and chocolate over hot water. Blend together the sugar, eggs, applesauce and vanil- la and add the melted chocolate mixture. Sift together the dry ingredients and stir in. Add the nuts. Spread in a greased and floured 9-inch square pan. Bake 35-40 minutes in a moderate oven, 350 degrees. or until top springs back when touched. While hot, cut in squares and remove from pan with spatula. Makes 24 pieces. These are delicious spread with a thin burnt caramel frosting. Manne! MAKE FRIENDS When you can, it is always better to compliment a _ person than a thing. Say ‘How pretty you look in that dress,’’ rather than ‘‘What a. pretty dress.’’ Or, “I love the way you've chosen the colors for this room,’ instead of, ‘What a pretty room.” Remember it’s the personal by hand. compliment that really pleases. Clock Designs Are Keyed to Contemporary Rooms . By ELIZABETH HILLYER One thing conspicuously lacking in many a living room is a clock. Old faithful finally broke down and was never repaired because it struck a false note with the new furniture, and now the family checks time in the kitchen and it’s always later than any guest thinks. Every living room needs a clock, but quite rightly, it's wanted as decoration as well as for telling of time. Perhaps the last shopping trip didn’t turn up just what the dec- orator ordered, but look again as new home furnishings fash- fons come into the stores for fall. Even the most modern room can be completed with a clock in the right style. Here are three soon-to- be-seen electric wall clocks de- signed by George Nelson: A sun- burst in birch or walnut, a harle- |quin colored “‘kite’’ in enameled "wood and a round shield in per- forated metal. Mr. Nelson believes that what you look for is the hands, not the | numbers, because their position is |so well in mind. Thus hands are especially con- spicuous and points of the sunburst and button markers on the other clocks serve instead of any nume bers at all. ACROSS 1 Screen actor, ! 2 Charlies —— ; Fr PPP 6é His —— name m is Charles Ruppert portrayed many —— 12 Papal cape Lt) 13 Cuplike spoons 14 Used to lade . 2» water from 7 SY SS 19 Cubic meter Canvas shelter Soak up eggs 4 Body of water Boy's wa ZZ gon Musical study Worthless table scrap 44 Diminative of Lilian Strays 46 47 50 Consumed Unexploded bomb 52 Obtained 53 Trapped 5 Hydrocarbon 57 Woodland patch $8 Billy 58 German city 60 Depressions 4 Sharp 5 Worms 6 Tennis stroke DOWN 1 Hangs in felds at 2R 18 Pedal digit 3 Entire 21 Drops of eye fluid 23 President ( 26 Tumult 28 On the sheltered side 28 Laminated rock 31 Stagger 35 Mine sheft ute 36 Citrus fruit 37 Perfumes 38 Disencumber 40 Pressing 41 Male bees 42 Royal Italiae family name 56 Light brows i A a a OS er ere ean eardige in" . THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 - ELEVEN Couple Returns Home After Spending T'wo Months Touring in Daughter, Son Visited by Beckers Travel in France, Germany, Holland and Belgium Mr. and Mrs. Frank Becker re- turned Friday to their home on Lincolnshire road after spending wo months in Europe. While they were abroad they visited their son and daughter, John and Margaret Becker, who have lived in Paris for almost two years. From Paris they took side ~“Trips to Germany, Holland and Beigium, and a boat trip down the Rhine River. They returned home on the Queen Mary. s * s Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rowston of Poplar street returned home Saturday evening after spending two weeks with their son and his family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rowston Jr. and Sharon of Shawnee, Okla. ss: s Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Hunt of Davenport, Iowa, visited during the past week with his brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Savory, at their home on Young street. They also visited at the Scott Lake road home of his nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Savory. * * Visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Kitson of Park- hurst street for the past two weeks were their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Nord and daughter, Deborah, of Schenectady, N. Y. They also visited his parents, Mr. Mrs. Paul Nord of Ferry avenue. * * > Mrs. Frank Diener of Scott Lake returned home recently after spending a week at Elk Rapids. While she was in Elk Rapids she visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warner and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Warmer. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Edward Batten of Elsinore drive, with their son, Richard, traveled to Exter, Ont., Sunday to meet with 8. other members of their family at the Batten reunion. s = * Alberta Ross of Ditmar avenue received a bachelor of science degree at Tennessee State Uni- versity’s August commencement exercises In Nashville. s * > Announcement comes from Sil- ver Spring, Md., of the birth of a | son to Mr. and Mrs. Clinton H. Watson. The Paby’s name is Mark Herbert. The Herbert N. Watsons of Nelson street are the grand- parents. > * * Mr. and Mrs. Lawrencc Derr of Kirkwood, Mo., formerly of Pon- tiac, are announcing the birth of a daughter Aug. 12. Natalie Bailey Wed to Ted O. Alspaugh Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bailey of Cass Lake Front announce the marriage of their daughter, Nat- alie, and Ted O. Alspaugh. The rite was read Aug. 1 in Angola, Ind. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Alspaugh of Osceola drive. OES Group Meets Areme Chapter 503, OES, met Monday evening for a co-operative | dinner at the home of Mrs. Alfred | pital committees, and plans were | returning they will reside in Bir-| Martini on Cooley Lake Road. Kurope Sheriff and Mrs. Clare L. Hubbell of Wayne Street are announcing the engagement of their daughter, ; Mary Lou, The John K. Frosts of North Perry = Street are & John’s parents. MARY LOU HUBBELL Wedding Plans Revealed At a recent luncheon and shower in her honor in Lebanon, Pa., Mildred Elizabeth Kratz revealed final plans for her wedding. Mildred, who is the daughter of the late Rev. and Mrs. Ronald vows with Neill Hodges Nutter, son of the L. F. Nutters of Crooks road, Aug. 29 in Lebanon. The bride-elect’s sister, Mary Grace, has been chosen for her maid of honor, and Shirley Smith, Mildred’s roommate from Wheaton College, will be her bridesmaid, Janet Nutter of Vandalia, Ill., will be flower girl, Stewart Nutter will be his Kratz of Lebanon, will speak her. @ . MILDRED ELIZABETH KRATZ brother’s best man, and grooms-’ men have been announced as David Kratz, Leonard Schott and Richard Smith, all of Lebanon. Mildred is a senior at Wheaton College and Neill will receive a bachelor of science degree from the same college Friday. Floridan Honored at Pink, Blue Fete Mrs. Jerry Spangler of West! Palm Beach, Fla., was honored | Monday evening at a pink and| blue shower given by Barbara Saners at the home of Mrs. Rob- ert Eduard of North Paddock street. Guests included Mrs. Cecil Spangler, Mrs. W. S. Spangler, Mrs. Rose Bivins, Mrs. Casey | Jones, Mrs. Gene Johnson, Mrs. John Kennedy, Mrs. Wayne Fuzgitt. Mrs. Lyle Douglas, Mrs. Earl Robert Russell Claims Bride in Clarkston Rite The First Methodist Church of Clarkston was the scene of the Saturday wedding of Marguerite Andrews Muma and Robert K. Russell of Niagara Avenue. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Andrews of Clark- ston, and Mrs. Nellie Russell of Napoleon is the mother of the bridegroom. The Rev. William H. Collycott of Rochester read the ceremony at 1 o'clock in the presence of relatives and close friends. A two-piece suit of moss green Giles, Mrs. Hershel Johnson and | Opal . Winstead. Mrs. Claude Curry, Mrs. Wil. | lard Saunders, Mrs. Verneal Jones, Mrs. Lucy Randall, Mrs. Mildred Blackwell, Alice Ed- uards and Sophy Hovagimian com- pleted the list. Moose Unit Plans ‘October Christmas’ A list of acceptable gifts to be prepared for ‘‘Christmas in Oc- antique satin with matching feather hat and brown accessor- ies was chosen by the bride for her wedding. Her flowers consisted of a cor- sage of Johanna Hill roses. Mrs. Donald V. Smith, sister of the bride, was her only attendant. She was gowned in beige crepe with matching feather hat and brown accessories, and she car- ried Cavallier roses. tober,’ was presented by Mrs. Peter Spehar when the Women of | the Moose met Monday evening at their hall on Mount Clemens | street. Reports were given from the! library, ritual, publicity and hos- | made for a meeting Sept. 8. | Donald Smith was Mr. Russell's | best man. Following the ceremony the | couple left for a trip to Washing- | To Have Operation ton, D. C., and New York. Upon mingham. ort ree ee i aOR Seoehe abeeien cane ea Here are two examples of what the girl- on-a-budget can find this year in thrifty fur|blond swagger coat in sturdy muskrat unica coat buys. Left, the smart and youthful Per- SR AMDT : a oe ee is right for all sian lamb short coat has wide adfustable a | cuffs, full swing back. At right is a honey occasions. | ae Owens Clan Gathers at Watkins William H. Bedards Also Are Hosts to Family Members Sgt. and Mrs. Bernard F. Owens, who are traveling from Ft. Rich- ardson in Anchorage, Alaska, to Camp Attabury in Indiana, were recent guests at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fergus : 0 | Owens of Watkins Lake road. ' Jahn K. Frost... Also visiting at the Owens home were their son, Charlies of Mecosta, and their son-in-law and daugh- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deibel and sons, Patrick and John, of Cheboygan. * ¢ 6 Recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bedard of Crescent Lake road were Mrs. Bedard’s brother-in-law and sis- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Cam- eron and daughters, Diane and Judith, of Larchmont Woods, New Rochelle, N. Y. While in Pontiac they also visited with Mrs. Rhoenna Dobson and Ashlyn Althouse of West Rundell street and William H. Dobson of North Francis street. * 7 * Mr. ‘and Mrs. H. Ray Hudson of St. Petersburg, Fla., arrived Sat- urday to spend two weeks with the Montford Sharps of North Perry street. Sunday the Hudsons visited their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Slaugh- ter of Banks street. * ¢ * Shirley Dobson of North Fran- cis street recently returned to her home after a three-week visit with Mrs. Nadine Dobson of Long Beach, Calif. * * * Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Abare of Geneva road and Mr. and Mrs. William Abare of Lakeview drive, Clarkston, had as their weekend guests, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turn- er and children of Litchfield, Ohio, and Mrs. Arthur Hawke and sons of Grafton, Ohio. s * . Mr. and Mrs. Vern L. Bleise of Edison street are receiving con- gratulations on the birth of a daughter, Larraine Kay, Aug. 14 at Harper Hospital in Detroit, Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cowdrey of Lexington place and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bleise of Union court. Charlene Maher to Become Bride Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Maher of Liberty street are announcing the engagement of their daughter, Charlene, to James Cole, the son of Mr. Montrose. Charlene is a graduate of the) Detroit Bible Institute. James is | a graduate of the Detroit Bible | Institute and Wayne University. Peter Evarts Feted at Sunday Dinner Peter Evarts, a recent gradu- ate of Michigan State College, was honored Sunday evening at a din- ner given by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orson Coe of Berwick boule- vard. Guests included members of Alpha Gamma Upsilon fraternity |from Ann Arbor, Detroit and Ypsi- and Mrs. Roy Cole of} Darlene Beck, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. John Beck of Mount Clemens street, will undergo sur- gery in St. Joseph Hospital. Coming Events Deborah Group of the First Methodist | Church will meet with Mrs. Orion Het- | tinger, 530 Tex S8t., Wednesday for a cooperative luncheon at noon. Royal Neighbors will hold their an-! nual picnic at the summer home of Mrs. | Albert Wyss on Whipple Lake Wednes- day. Members will meet for a cooperative luncheon at noon. VIRGINIA ANNE SHEARER The George Shearers of West Iroquois road announce ' the engagement of their daughter, Virginia Anne, to James Ervin Bensken of Drayton Plains. He is the son of Ralph E. Bensken of Portland, Ore.. and the late Mrs. Bensken. Virginia ... attended the -.\ University of | Michigan. A midwinter wedding is planned. ‘Fun-Loving’ Not Applied to Margaret By CHARLES A. SMITH LONDON (INS) — The British have eliminated ‘‘fun-loving’’ ‘rom the adjectives they use to describe Princess Margaret, who reaches her 23rd birthday this Friday, as the most wondered-about young woman in England. Transformation of this petite, good-looking and once mischievous bundle of royal girlhood into a serious-thinking, dignified ‘‘per- son"’ is the talk of the British nation, The girl who zipped her way through her teens, and who got columns of newspaper space be- cause of her mildly shocking ex- ploits, is today a mature woman full of her years, The smile that was hers isn't quite the same, and there are Nowadays These same people declare it was only natural that Margaret, in her loneliness, drew close to Group Capt. Peter Townsend, and that the dawning of her reported love for the handsome former air ace coincided with her realization he was ‘‘good for her.” Whether or not Margaret will eventually be allowed to marry Townsend, or even if she still is in love with him, or is now going through the process of trying to forget him, is anyone’s guess. .|the same: Sorrow on the Seashore Bathirig Beauty Vanishing By ARTHUR EDSON WASHINGTON (®—All summer long you've seen those fine ads showing good looking giris in bath- ing suits. And no matter what company had the suit, or how it was cut, the result always was pleasantly Wonderful. With your vacation coming up, to be spent at the seashore, you even debated whether you should practice your wolf whis- tle. You decided not to because you remembered your wife has sensitive ears and you're afraid the noise might bother her. Finally E-Day, Escape Day, ar- rived. And, filled with anticipa- tion, you're off to the ocean. Hot ziggity! Well, the vacation is over, and the Society for the Study of the Inhabitants of Swim Suits made its report today. The report is appalling simple, or maybe it's simply appalling. Those girls in the bathing suit ads—it’s not clear yet where they go, but they certainly don’t spend much time on the beach. The society conscientiously looked over all shapes and sizes. Woman can be divided into two classes; Those who are fat and those who are skinny. Neith- er improves a bathing suit, and vice versa. Some of the larger women have tried to disguise themselves by | wearing suits with flouncy skirts. | They look OK until they go into} the water. Then they look like | tents which have been improperly set up for a rainstorm. Because this is a family news- paper, we will not discuss the artifices used by skinny women to disguise themselves other than this! Nobody is fooled. As you know, the society has been renowned for its fairness. It looked over the men, too. They roughly can be divided into two classes. Those who are too héavy and those who are even fatter. A nudist once declared democ- racy will never really come until nudity returns to the earth. His point was that take away those finely cut clothes and that big car, and what have you got? A fat man. A fat man with no distinguishing marks except his blubber, which certainly isn’t dis- tinguished. Don’t get the idea there were no cuties on the beach, because they were there, although hope- lessly outnumbered. Mostly they pranced up and down the beach a few times, and then raced off to some hotspot. But a few even went in the wa- ter. In fact,-it was a good look- ing gal with her good looking guy who were in part responsible for this gloomy report. SCHOOL Hair Styles for the Jr. Miss © CUTTING © STYLING e COLD WAVES || Dorothy’s*saor. 500 N. Perry FE 2-1244 ‘| those who declare the joy of liv- ing isn’t what it was with her. | It could easily be because of a} frustrated love affair, and prob-| ably two-thirds of the British na-| tion believes that is the explana. | tion. But the other third could be| right in its belief Margaret has never fully recovered from the shock of the death of her be- loved father, King George VI, in early 1952, and that even today he is constantly in her memory. Persons around the British royal court say it is a combina- | tion of both causes, and that there has been a change in Mar- | garet’s inner character after | undergoing two strong emotional | experiences. These people, who include some | of the staider, older men and wom- | en with long experience at court, | declare that Margaret has got over the deep and utter loneliness which possessed her inner grief over the death of ‘‘Dear Papa,’ which was so sadly expressed in her com- ment to her mother: “Life seemed to stand still after Papa's death, and I still cannot believe I will grow old without seeing him again.” Lr! ——MARY KING SALON MACHINELESS AND COLD WAVE Mary King Cold Wave, Complete $62! Hair cuts, bleaching, dyeing, shampoos ‘finger waves, facials, and manicuring. 152 N. Perr 2-3053 FREE PARKING Appointments Lanolin Cream Snap-Curl COLD WAVE Machine or Machineless Including Haircut, and Hair Style SENSATIONAL MIDSUMMER SPECIALS! $15.00 Permanents ... NOW $10 $12.50 Permanents . .. NOW $8 No Appointment Needed! ' Open Wednesday All Day—Friday ‘til 9 P. M. Andre Beauty OSalon 2nd Floor Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 4 ‘ — Immediate Service Ph. FE 5-4490 SEARS ROEBUCK AND CO Phone FE 5-417] ‘HOME TRIAL for free literature for free —or mail this coupon _ iW as ‘ > & ='\ rs igi ei ve mAh Pontiac, Michigan NAME a 5 8 6» 66:6 6:68 o 86° 014 66:8 11 of Complete Set of IC HM KK RH HH KR HO Sears, Roebuck and Co. 154 N. Saginaw Street Gentlemen: Please send me further information de- scribing Kenmore Sewing Machines and Vacuums. “full rotary Kenmore CONSOLE SEWING MACHINE 95 with old machine Attachments @ 8-Hour Sewing Instructions d¢ Only $5 Down Delivers Forward and reverse stitch- ing. Complete set of attach- ments. Ideal for plain and fancy sewing. Sale priced at Sears. eeneee eeeeeeve REGULARLY 74.95 | Ot yout monty Salitfaclion guaanided' back Tank oil. Complete set priced! SEARS Kenmore Deluxe Sears best vacuum, 154 N. Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171° Vacuum | 95 with old cleaner d Complete Set of Attachments d Only $5 Down Delivers 34 h. p. mctor sealed in of metal attachments. Sale TWELVE THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 Wise Girl Insures Against Stocking New Needlepoint Pieces in: ® CHAIR e PURSE @ PILLOWS @ PICTURES The Knitting Needle 452 W. Huron It’s the simple fact that they don’t know what it feels like to look for a job after years and years of operating on one’s own, in charge of a home and chil- dren. But the other day I met a woman Typing, Professional Approach Assist] Homemaker Who's Hunting for a Job By ANNE HEYWOOD Some of the advice business ex- ecutives give the older woman who want to crash the business world, after years as a housewife, is pret- ty unrealistic. It isn’t that the gentlemen don’t know their business. who knows exactly what she is talking about. Mrs. C. J. is in her late 50's, Opposite General Hospital] Private Party and Luncheon Rooms WALDRON HOTEL COFFEE SHOP Downtown Location For Your Convenience 36 E. PIKE ST. Last Christmas I saw some double-deck doll beds at the,stores. I am certain that all little girls Try It Make Bunk Bed for Dolls You will now need four sticks of like size. In the drawing I have shown four tree branches Sodas 18° RIKER FOUNTAIN ‘DP ricer Bidg. Lobby would like to have one of these to play with, for then I saw these beds there were always several little girls standing around looking at them. Here is a way that you can make a double-deck bed for your dolls. The first thing is to decide what dolls will use the beds, then look for two box tops which will be the right size for them. I suggest box tops since they are not as deep as the bottom parts, but if which have been cut the same length, You could also use broom sticks or dowel rods. Make four holes in the bottom corners of each bed, and these should be very small holes. Now, punch the sticks through these holes so they will just fit tightly. then put your dolls to bed. IF flat, boy figure—’ ee PO should boxes, use the bottoms. you find two shallow High Fashions for the Busy Beauty! You'll love our “Career Girl” styl- Ca Designed for the minimum of eac style and permanent solves your particular hair problem! Complete Beauty Service for~a Lovelier You! ROWENA’S BEAUTY SHOP 821, N. Saginaw Over Nemode's FE 2-9382 SRS _ Let Crocker’s tel You Plan’ Your REE Saat Re “and Parties! (eRe OMNES Develop bodice and sleeve interesz to balance straighter skirt. More design to necklines. bustline drope to feminize. coats, suits and dresses. ® Party Wafers ® Nutmeats ® Wedding Bells lends necessary curves to straight figure, rounds out con tours end definitely feminizes. ® Party Candies Miss B. F.—There’s an unending supply of neckline treatments be- cause fashion detail is at the top of This the The Burlington and Union Pac- college. I had never had a job in my life, but I learned how to type and I worked my way up. “When the Korean War came along, our company needed a lot of women workers in the assembly line and in the office. Because I understood these women so well, they put me in the personnel de- partment,’ hiring and _ training housewives. “Here is some advice I would like to give women who come under that awful category of ‘just a housewife who's never worked’:"’ 1. Learn how to type. Even if you don’t plan a clerical or typ- ing job, you have to know how to type, because all the young wom- en know how, and nothing dates you so much as not knowing how to operate a typewriter. 2 Adopt a professional approach. When they hand you an application blank, don’t just scrawl across it diagonally, “I was at home” or words to that effect. Fill’ in all the volunteer work you have done, with the right dates and the name of the organization, even if it is only your local PTA. If you treat it like business ex- perience, so will your potential employer. If you act as if it wasn't worth anything, so will he. 3. If at all possible, wear a suit to your interview. Most wom- en have some kind of a suit, but if you haven't, get one. So many housewives look for jobs in formal afternoon dresses or slightly elaborate setups, that the one who wears a suit stands out immediately and looks very efficient. 4. Be open-minded in the inter- view. Even if the job which the interviewer suggests sounds un- pleasant to you, be willing to give it a try. 5. Remember that the world does need you, but employers will never realize it unless you do. (Copyright 1953) Stainless steel flatware for the table is durable and practical. advise home economists. They recommend buying stainless steel that is simple in design, with rounded edges and light in color. ee) [THINGS TO COME \ This smarlty-dressed girl believes i in run|plenty of ‘ ‘spares” on hand when you = Buy protection and tucks a “spare” in her sum- | your stockings in threes—the ‘ mer handbag. You can be sure of having |spare” way. Hane by Carrying é a | Spare Nylon. roe eee a Extra Hose’ Will Fit Into Little Space Handy to Include in Vacation Luggage on Handbag i Oft for the day — to the office, shopping or simply ‘“‘spreeing,” a smart girl carries a spare nylon, just in case of a snag or sudden run. Light as a wisp of cloud, a filmy nylon takes up less space in a summer bag than a linen hankie— and enclosed in a plastic envelope, or wrapped in tissue, it takes a logical place beside the indispensi- ble lipstick and comb. When packing for vacation, It’s wise to tuck in a “spare” for each pair of party-sheer nylons. They're so light and soft they offer no packing problem at all. dust be sure they are covered to protect them from catching on zippers or buttons. It’s easy to have plenty of “spares” for your holidays when you buy your stockings in a packet of threes. Some companies offer “‘a pair and a spare’ as a premium with their products. They're delightfully sheer, fully- proportioned and come in flattering shades that go with all popular colors. It pays to stock up “pairs and spares’’ for vacations, back-to- school wardrobes, gifts — or just common everyday wear! We can , all have that confident, happy, “‘spare-toting’’ look! Shape Gloves on Plastic Tree Gloves stay young looking longer if properly cared for. A new aid along this line is a plastic ‘‘tree” ‘pair and Girl Advised Making Any Between Her By ELIZABETH WOODWARD “Dear Miss Woodward: Last summer I met this boy, got to know his family well, and we had many happy times together. Dur- ing the winter I didn’t see him at all, as we don't live very near, and I became interested in an- other boy whom I dated until I came here for the summer. “My last summer's romance has started all over again and I ought to tell the boy at home, but no matter how I explain things he'll get mad and wind up hating me. “I’m just postponing my troubles if I don’t speak now, ‘cause my summer beau will be going to my school next winter and I'll be seeing a lot of him. I don’t want to hurt either one, so please tell me what to do.” The circumstances of your sum- mer vacation enable you to see | a lot of this boy you like. But I} wonder how he'll look to you in other circumstances, in the winter- | to Postpone Choice Now Two Beaux will still be there when you get back from vacation. Lots of things may have changed his tune by | then. So I recommend postponing any decision between the two boys. There's time enough to choose when the three of you are caught up in the same set of circumstances and you can real- ly see which way the wind blows. ‘‘Dear Miss Woodward: My par- ents have some very good friends who have a son who's a perfect drip! They're all the time push- ing us together. ‘“‘Whenever we're over at their house they make us sit together at the table, run. errands, do things together. I hate this kid, so how can I make my parents and his folks stop pushing us to- gether?” Sons of family friends often look particularly loathsome just because you have no choice but to accept them as friends. They CROCKER'S | 857 W. Huron St. ific railroads were the first to use diesel-electric passenger locomot- ives. time! He made no effort to keep in| a "i Re Open 9-9 Closed Sundays © Mrs. Reuben E. McCurdy and daughter Susan Little Susan McCurdy, 2, of Manton was only showing her affection for her dog when she tried to put her arms around him. For some unexplainable reason the animal turned suddenly and bit her on the eyelid ~ and cheek. Susan’s mother hurriedly telephoned for Meantime, Mr. was trying to calm the badly frightened child and applying cold compresses to her wounds. As Mrs. McCurdy later! wrote, learned that the doctor was out, and would not be back for some time, I went completely the local doctor. to pieces.” She shouted frantically to the operator, The operator “Get a doctor! Get a doctor!” “Woofie” McCurdy “When I Mrs. Helen Kleckler < Dam grat for he offical, ough soraie ° on duty, Mrs. Helen Kleckler, called another doctor immediately as Mrs. McCurdy stayed on the line. Reporting that the doctor was on his way, Mrs. Kleckler continued to talk and tried to soothe the excited ' woman. Today, Susan has only two tiny scars to remind her of the frightening experience. In her letter to Michigan Bell, Mrs. McCurdy says, “Mrs. Kleckler showed fine presence of mind in her calm reasspring words and in getting another doctor for me almost at once. An incident of this nature is probably a matter of routine to you, but it was a very upsetting experience for me. I am grateful for the efficient, thoughtful serv- ice your operator gave me.” It’s people who make telephone service good MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Cari 7 Cay touch last winter, so counting on} his transplanting romantically to | your school is a risky business. | On the other hand you can’t be too sure that your winter beau Smoke ov 5 SUN-PROOF | HOUSE PAINT wilnot ditolovit! Most important Paint Advancement in 25 years New fume-resistant, Sun-Proof, House Paint produces a film of unusual whiteness. It will not dis- * color or darken from coal smoke or industrial gases. It’s self-clean- ing, too-—removes surface dirt. WAMAMAg : | SS uae F Get Your FREE copy of “Color Dynamics for the Home” booklet. Special, cracking and peeling . THE ONLY HOUSE PAINT MADE WITH VITOLIZED OIL! enriched oils used in Sun-Proof products keeps the film alive, tough, elastic, uniform, resistant to weather wear, . also makes for easier spreading. Try Sun-Proof and see the remarkable difference. 28 W. Lawrence St. WE DELIVER PONTIAC GLASS CO. Ph. FE 5-644! | Get yourself back in the setting he | of him. are even harder to take when there’s some other boy you do like, and have to put up with the ‘‘drips’’ anyhow. | Putting up with this family | friend is what you'll have to do. | | It's good practice. After all, you |may as well: learn now how to 'get along with a lad who has | absolutely no romantic possibili- for drying and shaping gloves after they're sudsed. A handy set of four trees can be had with an attractive quilted > ; << plastic case which also contains ¢ re . two roomy compartments for stor- = 4 2 ing clean gloves. | Recent Births Boys Joseph M. Preece Jr., 62 Bloomfield Whit D. Jones, 520 N. Saginaw <1 Julius E. Dean, 345 Prospect John R. Lawson, Birmingham John FP. Osborn, Lake Orion Victor R. Ayling, White Lake Maurice A. Wahl, Lake Orion ”) Benjamin J. Carriere, Detroit Dixon E. Lawrence Sr., Rochester Robert J. O'Connor, Commerce Harold P. Chapman, 290 Tilden Jess G. Clayton, Royal Oak Charles C. Hayward, Orion Albert Kraft, Farmington ‘® Burl L. Starnes, 644 Collier Albert R. Teays, 297 Osmun Robert G. McCann, Leonard Roy L. Johnson, Ferndale William R. Giles, Keego Harbor Glenn W. Carter, Keego Harbor John H. Cvengros, 509 W: Iroquois Arthur A. Gale, 811 Englewood Garrison B. Haynes, 199 W. Wilson Curt Morris, Orion James T. Threlkeld, 22 Maine Harry D. McCreary, 79% E. Montcalm Frank J. Vandruska, Keego Harbor Roy Duncan, 243 Norton Glenn E. Fries, Waterford | Roy E. Flemings, 4193 Baldwin snes s Jimmie J. Arnold, 385% Mt. Clemens Bernard F. Smith, Drayton Plains Robert E. Brown, Waterford Lloyd M. Cooke, 312 Seward Harold N. Hayter, Berkley Allan L. McDonnell, 640 Peacock Harold J. Hackett, 13 Osceola Elmer Rabideau, 40 Michigan Perry H. Ziel, Birmingham William Ford Jr., 50% Waldo l Sylvester V. Schmansky, 186 Crestwood i Rufus R. Overby, Waterford ties. There are lots of them around. “Dear Miss Woodward: I've been going with Jerry for a year | now, but he makes no effort to/|the shorter, fuller figure—designed to slim you, trim you where it does | only at school that I see him—and | | the most good! No alteration wor- see me during the summer. It's | I sometimes wonder if he likes me. “Should I give him up, or al- ways keep planning ways to see him? That gets tiresome some- times.” Relax and wait for school to | Start again. It won't be long now. | prefers and you'll be seeing more Of those people in’ the United States who marry between the | ages of 30 and 34, about half have been married before. West 17th St., - Richard L. Sheldon, Rochester Manley E. Kelly, Rochester George M. Townsend, Walled Lake Carlton C. Fagerlie, Walled Lake Michael Kelly, Lake Orion Joseph Olesnavage, Birmingham Pau) M. Schirmer, Southfield John A. Holtkamp, Roval Oak Harold W. Churchill, Avon Winifred C. Baker, 1385 Stanley Basi] N. Hughes, Rochester Melvin L. Lambert, Lake Orion Raymond L. Denis, Lake Orion John Fields Jr., 107 Lafayette Girls Charles L. Moyles, Royal Oak Robert K. Schaffer, Birmingham | Waldo A. Schram, 3048 Hazelmary Hollis P. Zimmerman, 180 E. Huron — 4528 by_-fne Ams Look at the scalloped buttoning, action back, easy-walking skirt— | have vou ever seen a smoother, smarter casual! Proportioned for 1412—24% Edward J. Derocher, 50 8. Marshall William G. Mitchell, Detroit | ries. Lawrence A. Beemus, 326 Osmun = 4 , Stanley Rembach, Davisburg Pattern 4528: Half sizes 1412,| Harold N. Ackley. Walled Lake Harold A. Dean, 735 Alberta Leopoldo Sabatini, 74 Pitelens 4 Adrian R. McDonald, Auburn Heights Vernon C. Hect, Dravton Plains McAllister Stock. Rochester James B. Murr, Roya! Oak Allen B. Hardenbrook, Birmingham Leslie H. Hudson, 69 W. Colgate Robert 8. Iceberg, Walled Lake Edward W. McCabe, Roval Oak Vaughn E. Spencer. 361 Waldon William D. Weir, Berkley Thomas J. Dunne, Royal Oak Donald 8. Leinenger. Waterford Lexie H. Johnston, Royal Oak Efim Wladishkin, Rochester Donald J. Horton, Lapeer John D. Milam, Clarkston Edmund Bechmann, 159 Whittemore Edgar E. Bartlett, Commerce Victor B. Hadley, Birmingham 1612, 18%, 20%, 2212, 24%2. Size 1642 takes 3%, yards 35-inch. This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send 35c in coins for this pattern —add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 Pontiac Daily Press Pattern Department, 243 New York 11, New York. Print plainly name, address with zone, size and st;le number. Easy way to clean, brighten upholstery grime like magic! Watch the beautiful colors of your rugs and upholstery snap out bright as new when you go over them with Little Bo-Peep! Nothing like it for loosening imbedded dirt and greasy grime. Little Bo-Peep shortens housecleaning time in millions of homes! Little Bo-PeeP AMMONIA CLEANING COMPOUND lightens dozens of tasks! Benjamin R. Sweenev, 221 Linden Hugh B. England, 307 N. Perry James R. Vaughn, Waterford Svivester J. Salvador, Waterford Thomas V. Kirby. Birmingham Arthur C. Schlink. Avon Harold R. White, Farmington Kendrew M. Worthley, Royal Oak Ketth K. Cooper. Clarkston Oscar Fourez, Walled Lake Philip B. Thomses. Farmington Pedro Gonales, 183 Florence Richsrd D. Mitchell. 342 N. Cass Theodore N. Bogs. 85 Oneida Dele F. Carney, 180 Mohawk LeRoy McKinney. 53 Orton James F. Pickel, 364% W. Huron Burman K. Benscoter. Drayton Plains Julfes A. Garbovits Jr. Auburn Heighte Aovv Juras. Detroit Melvin C. Holmes, 493 Branch Francis J. aaa Mo Parkwood and rugs! Norman O. Jone«. Lake Orion Twins John Davis, 565 8. Hospital (boys) MEL’O makes quick work of cleaning floors See instructions on bottle mode by mekers of SANI-FLUSH a * m ~ « be oe So cat car ge agg cil pm pyc gpiRGnenh Pm. ’ mene Bi ie tig oe Police Protect Phone Workers Windows Broken, Wire Cut in Indiana’s Strike of Bell Operators INDIANAPOLIS w— phone strike. A cable cutting left Muncie with fourths of the city. telephone building. Service in the] .. western Indiana city of 6,000 had been shut down for the second time officers led workers and E. R. Moore, head of the com- pany’s engineering department in Clinton, said he believed the dam- 8 > was caused by young hood- lums, not by strikers. Naguib Leaves on Pilgrimage to Holy Mecca CAIRO, Egypt ® — President Mohammed Naguib put on the tra- ditional white robes of a Moslem pilgrim today. Then he took a mod- ern airplane for the holy city of Mecca-and important political con- ferences in Saudi Arabia. . After completing the pilgrimage to Mecca, holiest of the Moslem shrines, the Egyptian soldier-chief of state will meet Saudi Arabia’s King Ibn Saud at Taif, near Mecca, on Saturday. They are expected to confer with Pakistan’s Governor General Ghu- lan Mohammed, also to be a guest in Saudi Arabia, on problems of the three Moslem countries. Douglas Hits Congress for Missing Big Issues WASHINGTON (®—Sen. Douglas (D-Ill) today criticized the first session of the 83rd Congress for failing ‘‘to act on a number of is- sues of central importance to labor and the American people.” Douglas, a member of the Sen- ate Labor Committee, termed ‘‘de- sirable and long overdue’ a series of possible changes in the Taft- Hartley law listed by the White House for consideration. The list went to chairmen of the House and Senate Labor committees three days before Congress adjourned Aug. 3, but ensuing protests forced its withdrawal, reportedly for good. Senator Asks Overhaul of Federal Aid Grants WASHINGTON &® — Sen. Hen- drickson (R-NJ) said today the new commission on intergovernmental relations should examine every fed- era! grants-in-aid program ‘o see whether it should be continued. More than two billion dollars a year now is poured out from Wash- ington to the states under these programs, The grants make up about one fifth of the state rev- enues, Hendrickson, who has been ap- pointed to serve on the commis- sion, said he would press for a close study of every one of the agriculture, health, public housing, municipal airports, hospital con- struction, and several others. During a.normal year, about six million” enterprizes in the U. S. hire fabor at some time. Wil UII FLINTKOTE ASBESTOS-CEMENT SIDING MAKES YOUR HOME LOOK LiKE NEW What shali I do about those old sidewalls?” you ask. “Cover them with Flintkote Asbestos- Cement Siding,” we reply. And then, you'll have a snug, weath- er-tight home with walls that have the charm of wood and the permanence of stone. Let us tell you about this remarkable fire- proof material. Samples and es timates free without obligation on your part CORWIN LUMBER CO. ™ es aT a _e Ms s a * rf! ; a4 eh iy ee ee Soi ot tr rare Riands pe ieee f “See. «+ { we “<3 ee ee ore J + “ey United Press Phote the job is firished the buildings auditorium will be the site for future graduation ceremonies. Cost of sprucing up the building is $1,250,000. $1,250,000 FACELIFTING—Jesse Hall, a landmark at ivlissouri University since it was built in 1893, is being remodeled to meet fire safety standards. When Work has begun on a 30-|Tema, on the Gold Coast of Accra is the capital of the} million-dollar port project at! Africa. African Gold Coast. |Expect lonia Fair Will Show Loss parking for cars last year when the net profit of about $4,000 was shown. The fair ran but six days +| Clark Leaves for Tokyo HONOLULU @ — Gen. Mark FRANK CARRUTHERS FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance Service at Any Hour a fire in the second floor of the| extinguishers. We've Got ‘em! ; three-story building of the General . Detroit Corp. The fire, which| It takes four tons of bauxite to Good Homsekeeping Shop started when sparks from an! make two tons of aluminum. . _THIRTEEN —_———— WANT A GOOD USED APPLIANCE? | SSS SSS SSS SY SASAA WOOO W& BERXQ GQ CL zc: HEL. Ue EE OE INVESTIGATE | WHY PAY MORE! | That’s Exactly What We Mean! 4 | When You Can Finance Your NEW CAR for Only y 5A vr 7100 WHY PAY MORE! We render you the same identical service that you get else- where . .. maybe a little more friendly, and you can save money by: dealing with the Pontiac State Bank. Per Y Year 4 WAY All We Ask Is This: CONSULT US WITHOUT OBLIGATION BEFORE YOU BUY THAT NEW CAR We Strongly Recommend That You Buy Your Insurance From Our Own Local Agent! Insurance premium may be included in the Y financing if desired. SRMWAMHAQHY SS SAAN WG MAAAVG¥PWQVOSS COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE ORAYTON PLAINS “UMMM, ember Of Federal Deposit Insurance. Corp: ZZ 2. Honest new-car value 3. Style leadership Don’t miss the big television hit, “TOAST OF THE TOWN” with Ed Sullivan. Sunday evening, 7:00-6:00. Station WJBK, Channel 2. 1. Top trade-in allowance 5, Proven V-8 performance 0K a wl OU deal includes! } 4, Prize-winning economy Move ahead with ~ MERCURY _get more for your money 6. High future trade-in value ~CENTRAL LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES, INC. 40 West Pike St. 117 S. Case FE 2-8386 Phone FE 2-9167 - ‘ FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 ‘Hep Cats, —+ -- Today's Television Proarams - - Channel 2—WJBK-TV “TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:30—(7)—"‘Beulah.” Family Fun. lage. (2)—“‘News.” Doug Ed wards. 6:45—(4)—“News Caravan.” John Cameron Swayze. (2)—"‘Summertime USA.” Teresa Brewer, Mel Torme tour straw hat circuit. 7:00—(%—''Motion Picture Acad- emy.” Chester Morris in “Girl From God’s Coun- try.” Feature film. ()—"Mirror Theater.” 17:30—(4)—""Break the Bank.” Bert Parks host on quiz show. (2)—‘‘Dotty Mack Show.” Music and variety. 8:00—(7)—"‘Stranger Than Fic- tion.”” Odd events on film. (4)—“Nothing But the Best.’’ Eddie Albert host to talent. (2)—"Follow the Leader.” Vera Vague with audience participation stunt show. 8:15—(7)—"‘News Ace.” 8:30—(7)—"‘Boxing.” Middle- weight bout; Phil Rizzo vs. Vinnie D’Andrea. ()—‘Award Dinner.” Craftsman’s Guild presen- tation of Fisher Body an- nual awards and scholar- ships. ()2—"Suspense.” O. Z. Whitehead, Louise Larabee in “Nightmare at Ground Zero.”” Dummies at bomb test are quite real. 9:00—(4)—‘‘Judge For Yourself.’ Fred Allen with audience participation show, panel and talent. (2)—‘‘Danger.”” ‘Letter of Thanks.’”’ Drama with Ed Begley, Kevin McCarthy. 9:30—(7)—‘Name’s the Same.” Robert Q. Lewis with name- sake game. (4)—"‘Doin the Town.’’ Mu- sicale with vocalists Janie Palmer, Jack Harris; Earl Stewart orchestra. (2)—"‘The Unexpected.” “Merry-Go-Round.” With Raymond Burr, Gloria Blondell, robbery and mur- der committed to buy girl a gift. 10:00—(7)—"‘Theater Hour.”’ Anna Lee in “GI War Bride.” Film. Channel 4—WWJ-TV (4)—“Storybook.” Short drama. (2)—""News Roundup.” Ear! Hayes. 10:15—(4)—“Life Begins at 80.” Jack Barry with panel of oldsters. ° (2)—*‘Sports.”” Ed Hayes. 10:30—(2)—“‘Into the Night.” Mys- tery drama. 10: 45—(4)—-""Time off for Sports.” Bill Fleming with latest sports news. 11:00—(7)—‘‘Say There Neighbor.” Betty Clooney sings request numbers. (4)—"“News.” Paul Wil- liams. (2—"“Telenews.” Ken Cline 11:15—(7)—"‘Lifetime Studio The- ater.”” Paul Kelly in “Faces in the Fog.” (4)—‘‘Weathercast.”” (2)—"‘Go-To-G ether The- ater.” ‘‘Cover Up,” feature film. 11/30—(4)—"‘Tuesday Theater.” Todd Slaughter, in ‘Curse of the Wraydons.’’ Feature film. WEDNESDAY MORNING 7:00—(4)—Today (7)—W. M. Kelly 8:45—(7)—News (2)—News 9:00—(4) — Playschool (7)—Coffee n cakes (2)—Arthur Godfrey 10:00—(¢4)—Hawkins Falls (7) —Playhouse 10:15—(4)—The Bennetts (2)—Murphy Calling 10:30—(4)—Three Steps to Heaven (2)—Strike It Rich 10:45—(4)—Follow Your Heart 11:00—(4)—Glamor Girl (7)—Charm Kitchen (2)—Bride and Groom L1:15—(2) —Love of Life 11:30—(2)—Tomorrow’s S’ch (4)—Movie Quiz 11:45—(4) —News -(2)—Guiding Light 12:00—(4) —Ding Dong School (7) Comics (2)—Ladies’ Day 12:30—(4) Cinderella (7) —Bud Lanker (2)—Moore Show AFTERNOON 1:00—(4)—Jean McBride (7) —Theater (2)—Db!i_ Nothing 1:30—(4)—Sallye Show (2)—Knothole Gang 1:45—-(4) —Nancy Dixon 2:00—(4) —Break the Bank Channel 7—WXYZ-TV (2)—Baseball 2: 4)—Welcome Travelers 2: —(T)—News 3:00—(4)—On Your Acccunt - (1)—Hometown Hoedown 3:15—(7)—Tune Parade 3:30—(4)—U.N. Gen. Assembly 3:45—(7)—Songs and Sonnets 4:00—(4)—Atom Squad (7)—Cowbey Colt 4:15—(4) -Gabby Hayes —(2)—Circling Bases 4:30—(4) -Howdy Doody —(2)—Theater 5:00—(4)—Beany Time (1)—Auntie Dee 5:15—(2)—Kids Kartoons (4)—St. Antoine —(2)—Kartoons 5:30—(4)—Adventure Pat. (7)—Superman (2)—Lady Dooit 5: 45—(2)—Sports WEDNESDAY EVENING 6:00—(4)—Song Time (7)—Det. Deadline (2)—Capt. Video 6:15—(4)—News (7)—News 6:30—(4)—Eddie Fisher (7)—Date With Judy (2)—News 6:45—(4)—News Caravan (2)—TV’s Top Tunes 7:00—(4)—I Married Joan (7)—White Camellia (2)—Arthur Godfrey 7:30—(4)—Music Hall 8:0Q—(4)—Theater (7)—Double Exposure (2)—Strike It Rich 8:30—(7)—Club Cosmopolitan (2)—I’ve a Secret 9:00—(4)—This is your Life (7)—Story Theater (2)—Boxing 9:30—(7)—Celebrity Playhouse (4)—Theater 9:45—(2)—Greatest Fights 10:00—(4)—Nature Trails (7)—Wrestling (2)—News 10:15—(2)—Sports 10:30—(4)—Man About Town (2)—Pathe News 10:45—(4)—Time off for Sports (2)—Featurette 11:00—(4)—News (7)—Say There (2)—Telenews 11:15—(4)—Weather (7)—Film —(2)—Feature Theater 11.30—(4)—Wed. Theater (2)—Big Picture 11: 45—(2)—Weathervane = Today's Radio Programs -- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice. WIBR (1490) Wit «780 —_— CALW (800) WWJ (850) WCAB (1130) WXYZ (1270) TONIGHT WEDNESDAY MORNING 12:00—WJR, W. Warren WWJ, News 6:00—WJK, News 6:30—WJK, Farm Forum WXYZ, Turn to Friend WWJ, News WWJ, Bob Maxwell CKLW. Curt. Massey WXY2 Wattrick Mcnxenszie WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WXYZ, News CKLW News CKLW, News WCAR, News WJBK Headless Horseman WJBK, Rise and Shine WCAR News Ballads WCAR, Coffee, Clem 12:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny 6:15—WJR, Clark Quartet CKLW, wWwwJ. Budd Lynch 6:45—WXYZ, News Toby David WWJ, Fran Harris WXYZ, Betty Crocker CKLW, Austin Grant WCAR, N'Day Caller 5:30—WWJ, L. Jones CKLW, Wild Bil WXYZ, Ed McKenzie WJBK, Bob Murphy 6:45—-WJR, C. Massey WWJ, Doctor's Wife CKLW, Ceci] Brown WEDNESDAY EVENING WXYZ. Lee Smith 7:00—WJR, D. Burris 6:00 Win News CKLW. Eddie Chase WWJ, News 12:30—WJR, Helen [rent WWJ, News WCAR, Sports WXYZ, Fred Wolfe WWJ, Cinderella WXY4 Wattrick; McKens CKLW. News WXYZ, News, Crocker CKLW News. Sports 6:30— WWJ. Bod Reynolds WJBK, News, Rise CKLW, Your Boy Bud WJBK News Horseman WWJ, Pran Pettay WCAR, News, Coffee WCAR, Club 1130 WCAR News Ballads McKenzie WCAR “Weary Taylor 7:15—WJR, Music Hall 12:45—WJR, J. White 6:15—WJK, Clark (quartet WXYZ, Dick Osgood WXYZ, Talk WWJ. Budo Lyncb WJBK, Don McLeod WXYZ, Lee Smits 6:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas 1:30—WWJ, Listen, Live CKLW. Eddie Chase WCAR Ballads wxyYzZ, CKLW, 7:00—WJR, Family Skeleton WJBK. WWJ, Three Star Extra CKLW. Fulton Lewis 7:45—W WCAR, News. Magic Music CKLW, 7:15—WJR, Guest House 8:00—WJR, Jack White Pred Wolfe Austin Grant Gentile & Binge 1:00—WJR, Road of Life WXYZ, Mulholland WJ, News WXYZ, Charm Time Toby David CKLW. Austin Grant WJBK, WEDNESDAY P. M. News, McLeod WCAR, News, Club 1130 WCAR [alk Sports 6:30—WJKR. so Neynolds WWJ, Pran Pettay WXYZ. Ed McKensie WJBK. Horseman WCAR Ballads ews, Parade 6:45—WJR, Edw. R. Murrow WXYZ, Auntie Dee WWJ, Minute Parade 1:4}—WJR, Ma Perkins 7:00—WJR, Pamily Skeleton CKLW News Seat’ Gao, a W, 8. C. Johnson WwJ, % Star Extra oe een ae CKLW Fulton Lewis 71:30—WWJ, News WJBK, News, Gentile 1:30—WJR, Dr. Malone WCAR. News, Music WXYZ, Starr of Space WCAR, News WXYZ, News, McBride WJBK fom (teorge CKLW Gabrie) Heatter CKLW, M J. B Show 8:15 WJR, Bud Guest WCAR, Tiger Tunes 715 WIK (Guest House 7:45—WJR. & R. Murro® oa Bee ina ‘ wiek. Tiger Teike boda Hews Parade , . e, . armu me u e WWJ, One Man's Pamily WCAR’ Coffee, Clem = [ CKLW Guy Nunn CKLW Three Suns 8:00 WJK, Preopie Funny WCAR. 8:30—WJR, Music Hall Lady of Day 1:45—WJR, Guiding Light CKLW. Your Boy Bud WJBK Rerenre Room 1:30 WWJ News ww —s tant 2:00—WJR, Mrs. Burton wxyYzZ, City ine WWJ, News, Mulholland CKLW Hammer Man 8:45—WCAR. Radio Rev. WXYZ, Talk 9:00—WJR, News WJBK, Tiger Game 8:15-WWI) R Cieoney WWJ, Newscast WCAR, Tiger Game WV? sammy Kave WXYZ, Breakfast Club tl WJBK Tiger Talks CKLW, News, Mischa Barr "WXYZ. Auntic Dee WJBK. Don McLeod CKLW. Your Boy Bud ge [6TH UPhe Northe WCAR, News, Rhythm WWJ, Craftsman’s Guild WXYZ Discovery CKIW Ateh 44venture CKI'W OM Off Record WJBK. Tiger Game R15 rv. Creats 9:00—WJR Jonnny Dollar ww, CKLW, WJBK, WYYZ ttter> ww, CKLW. WWJ. Raron and Bee WXYZ Town Meeting ww CKI.W Pight for Life CKLW 9: WIR Bet Precinct baci WWJ, Do'n’ the Town CKLW State of the Nation ww, 9:45 WXYZ & Canham eae 10:00—WJR Parsons WJBK, WWJ. Two Por the Money WCAR, WXYZ. News CKLW Prank Edwards 10:15—WJR. Michigan 2000AD WXYZ, WXYZ, Top of Town CKLW, CKLW June Christy WCAR, 10:30—WJR Wizard of Odds WWJ, Cassidy Kenton WXYZ. News CKLW. Girardin WwxyYzZ, WXYZ, 10:48 WJR, Milt Herth Wisk: WWJ, Stan Kenton WCAR, WXY7. Top of Town 11:00—WJR, News wees. WWJ, News WXYZ News ww, CKLW News wxyYzZ, WJBK, Scores CKLW, WJBK, 11:15—WJR, Bod Reynolds WWJ, Guest Stars I pt dt | Top of Town WJBK, CKLW, Manhattan WCAR, 9:15—WJR. Organ Footnotes 9:30-WJR, Mrs. ‘9:45—WJR, Pete & Joe 10:00—WJR, A. Godfrey 20:15—WCAR, Temple 10:30—WWJ, Bob Hope 10:45— WWJ, Marriage Pays 11:00—WW4J. Strike It Rich 11:15—CKLW, News 11:30—WJR, Grand Slam 11:45—WJR, Rosemary ww. 2:39 WJR Nora Drake WXYZ, Lone Ranger CKLW Gabriel Heatter 7:45- WJR. & & Murrow WWJ, | Man’ Pamily CKLW [hree Suns 8:00 wWJR, Bi WwwWs, My Son Jeep WxyYz City Byline WXYZ. Crocker, Winter WJBK, Bob B. Maxwell WWJ, Dave Garroway x Murphy Heatter, Crosby St. » Gaye Don McLeod 2:46--WJR, Brighter Day WJBK, Tiger Talks WWJ, Mulholland: Page CKLW. Cashur Antel) 8:30 wJM, Crristian Bob Maxwell WWJ, Gllaersieeve Kitchen Club 3:00—WJR, Hilltop House WXYZ Eimes Square WWJ, Life Beautiful CKLW. Wonderful City 3:15—WJR, House Party WWJ, Road of Life CKLW. Holland Furnace 3:30—WWJ, P. Young WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW. Eddie Chase 3:45—WJR, Our Gal WWJ, Rt. to Happiness Here's the Answer Good Neighbor Temple Academy Welcome Traveler My True Story News. Homechat News, McLeod News, Temple Whis ng Sts. Mary organ Harmony Hall WXYZ, Wattrick, McK, WJBK, News WCAR, News, Ballads 4:15—WJR, Deland Show WWJ, Stella Dallas 4:30—WJR, Matinee Girl Marries Curtain Call WWJ, Widder Brown Ladies Pair WXYZ, Auntie Dee Ken Cline WJBK, McLeod News, Harmony 4:45—WJR, Hap. Day ww, Woman in House CKLW. News 5:00—WJR, News WWJ, Plain Bill WXYZ, Don Wattrick Harmony House Phrase Pays Dbl. or Nothing Queen for Day News, McLeod 6:15—WJR, Music a steeny Ballads weak, 3 Hall WW4, Pront Page Farrell Ballads ~e ters WIBK, a Murphy Oe ow ite ‘laytouse WWJ. Best of Groucho WXYZ. Mr President CKLW Henrv: Music 9:15—CKIW “ion Muste WWJ, [ruth or Con WXYZ, Crossfire CKLW fonrd Roard WW, “ali! Plinpernel) WXYZ. News CKLW Frank Edwards 10:15— WXYZ, Bob Wyatt CKLW. Fran Warren 10:30 -WJK Wisard of Odds WxyYz €. Hill CKLW News 10:45 WJ, Giuest Star WWJ, White House Report WXYZ. Top of Town CKI.W. Quiet Sanct. il: wWJK News s WJBK News. Gentile 11:15—WJR, B. 9:30—- WJR, Rogers of Gas'te 10: Swi e Strawhat Concert WWJ, Cassidy. Whitehouse Whiskers and All, Provide Top Yowls on TV ‘Masquerade’ Has Star List Panel Spots Celebrity From Clothing Clues} Seconds Are Dollars Have you ever wondered how Jimmy Dunn would look dressed as a woman or noticed the slight resemblance between Sen. Kefau- ver’s and Andrew Jackson's. gaunt features? Did you ever think of Mel Torme and Teresa Brewer as a couple of actual hep cats? Whiskers and To the average viewer, a half hour packed with celebrities is almost too much to bear. The bright names are blinding. The fan fare is at times overwhelming. But ‘‘Masquerade Party”’ is real- ly quite unpretentious, taking the luminaries in stride. The panel, quick-witted and tal- ented, usually spots the celebrity after concentrating on the cos- tumes which are at once colorful and misleading. The outfits are supposedly clues to the masqueraders identity. The clothing may pertain to his back- ground, his history, his nationality, his accomplishments — practically anything. With such a wide vista to choose from, one is constantly amazed at the precise way in which the field is narrowed (each second counting as a dollar for said star’s favorite charity), The panel itself consists of quite an outstanding roster of names. Emcee Doug Edwards is well known as a newscaster and com- mentator in his own right. He handles the role of moderator with restraint and dignity, not falling prey to a prevalent television sick- ness of grinning at all times. Edwards, one of the few major commentators covering the corona- tion ceremony, is often called the dean of American newscasters. Peter Donald, cherubic TV comedian, is added somewhat as a comic relief to comic proceed- ing. The show is far from morose in any respect, Star of stage, motion pictures, raciv, television, lecturer, author, witty emcee of fashion shows and greatly sought-after guest of honor, Ilka Chase would be an asset to any show, One of America’ s most fashion- able women, she is also the author of ‘Past Imperfect’ and ‘‘In Bed We Cry,” among many other best sellers. Buff Cobb, the other feminine element of the show is small, blonde and delightful. Granddaugh- ter of Irvin S. Cobb, she is adept in almost any media of entertain- ment. Wi.h husband Mike Wallace she | | was teamed in many radio and including ‘‘All Around | TV shows, the Town,"’ a series in which she and her husband interviewed fash- ionable guests at top New York/| spots. Ogden Nash, whose limericks are fast becoming Americana, adds his poetic touch to the general goings-on. A native Vew Yorker, his voice is gently remi- niscent either of the deep South or of the brittle New England atmosphere which is not as im- possible as it sounds. Born in New York, of Southern parents, he was reared on the east coast, between Savannah, Ga. and New England, A few school-boyish attempts "| convinced Ogden that he could not write serious poetry as he had once dreamed, so he contented himself with verses that were “thoughts that must occur to many thousands of men.’” The following is an example, “I do not love Loutse Angeles, I came here all agog, To find myself a lone D.P., invisible in smog.”’ These five witty and brilliant people complete the ‘regulars’ of a show which may rightly boast of bringing to American homes the most ‘‘star-studded half hour on TV.” Colorado Police Force ‘All Chiefs, No Indians’ ENGLEWOOD, Colo. #—Engle- wood’s police department is facing the old problem of ‘‘all chiefs and no Indians."’ Chief Joe Kollar said yesterday that three patrolmen may resign because of an internal _ squabble and another will be promoted to fill a sergeant’s vacancy. That would leave only two patrolmen in the 15man department. OGDEN NASH Hoodlum Enters Jackson Prison Since Capture in 1950 Purple Gangster Harry Fleisher entered Southern Michigan Pris- on yesterday to start serving serving sentences for armed rob- bery and conspiracy to murder |a state senator. terms nearly eight years after he was sentenced in Detroit by Circuit judge George Hartrick. The 50-year-old hoodlum was found guilty of robbing a Pon- tiac night club and ‘of conspir- ing to murder state Sen. Warren Hooper whose _ bullet-riddied body was found on a _ lonely road near Albion on Jan, 1, 1945. Fleisher, now 50 years old, re- ; ceived a 25 to 50 year sentence ;on the armed robbery count and |a 4% to 5 year sentence for con- spiracy to kill. Fleisher appealed both sentences to higher courts and when they were upheld by the state Supreme | Court, he skipped a $25,000 bond and led from the state. Subject of one of the most intensive searches in police his- tory, Fleisher was nabbed by FBI agents in Florida in Jan- uary 1950. Returned to Michigan, he re- ceived a five year federal prison sentence for unlawful flight. With time off for good behavior, Fleish- er completed the federal term at Leavenworth Prison last week and | was transferred to Milan Fed-| eral Prison. Monday he was brought to Southern Michigan to start serving the 1945 sentences. Agents Suspect Arson in Coal Tipple Fires BUCHHANNON, W. Va. #—Fire which destroyed two coal triples and damaged a third were being fire marshal's office today for pos- sible arson. At least two of the blazes were set -by crude bombs fashioned from a gallon jug eontaining gaso- line and black powder. Cause of the third fire had not been de- termined. State Fire Marshal C. A. Raper expressed belief yesterday that they. were the work of the same persons. Narriman Sues Farouk CAIRO, Egypt uw» — Ex-queen} Narriman is suing ex-king Fa-!| rouk for alimony, her lawyer's of- fice said today. The amount sught was not stated. The claim is being made though a Moslem court and the custodian of Farouk’s assets in Egypt, the lawyer’s office said. Picture Tube Too Small? Too Weak? DOES YOUR TV NEED REPAIRS? - TRADE IT IN! GET A NEW TV! WE HAVE ALL FAMOUS MAKES No Cash Needed! HAMPTON T-V 286 State St.—Open Every Nite—Phone FE 4-2525 Terms Available! | Fleisher Did Time in Leavenworth | JACKSON (UP) — Former. investigated by agents of the state | ' ILKA CHASE TALENTED TRIO — Doug Ed- wards (upper left), Ika Chase (upper right) and Ogden Nash (lower left) are three of the five 4 2 4 distinguished personalities who ap- pear every Monday night on TV. A Their vehicle is the popular sum- mer replacement (which may be slated for fall) called ‘‘Masquerade Party.’’ This completely different | type of panel show is packed with show world dignitaries who appear dressed in costumes as clues to Bs their identities. The panel which * consists of the aforementioned (Edwards being moderator) in- ) cludes Buff Cobb, and well known TV comic Peter Donalds. MONROVIA, Calif. (®) — He wasn't too worried about being ar- told by a woman that her 4-year- old son had been hit. The child, with legs and arms skinned, pointed toward a parked car, But the car’s owner insisted it hadn’t been moved in 24 hours. Then the officer spotted a toy pedal car near the automobile. Sure enough, that was it. And the child pointed an accusing finger at another ¢year-old who was driving it. Walker walked away mopping his brow. There are about ‘3 million dairy cattle in the United States. Ike Thinks Truce Will Last, Says Adams yesterday and will remain for a few days. The President will leave Denver by plane tonight for New York, ter for the New York m elections to be held this fall and hold a round of conferences, He will fly back to Denver tomorrow night, A-Bomb Eaterie Waiter Kept Mum as POW FREEDOM VILLAGE, Korea —Cpl. Harold E. Humphreys fig- ured his Communist captors would decide he knew all about the atomic bomb if he told them he once worked in a restaurant inside an A-bomb reservation. So he kept his mouth shut. ‘I knew I'd be in for a rough time,’’ Humphreys, of Harriman, Tenn., said today following his re- lease at Panmunjom. ma GET READY FOR OIL New Value $ | @ Gives more heat from every drop of oil. @ Exclusive Duo-Therm dual chamber. e Burner burns clean at any setting. 7” NO MONEY DOWN WINTER HEATER ELECTRIC DRYER $999° No Moisture, No Lint, No Heat Can Escape SEALED-AIR DRYING Phone FEderal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW —— ‘ POO FP Orr ~ ee ee THE PONTIAC PRESS a a a i ie PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1958 WATCH THE BIRDIE—Fred Metz, 90 W. Berkshire, (left) and Tommy Teague, 125 W. Berkshire, are discovering a bird in the hand is a lot more trouble than two in the bush. They found this gray dove banded with the serial number MP-99-5AU53 on Berkshire Road recently and took it into custody when they discovered it was scarcely able to fly. Now they don’t know how to get rid of it. Michigan Tourist Industry ‘Chalks Up Biggest Boom LANSING (UP) — Michigan’s tourist industry is having its great- est summer season in history, the director of . Michigan’s Tourist Council said today. Robert J. Furlong, just back ' from a tour around the state, said: “I’ve never seen anything like it. Every tourist and resort operator I talked to is having his best year. Tourist activity in some areas has increased nearly 100 per cent com- pared to a year ago.” Furlong sala Michigan is ex- ’ periencing the greatest invasion of visitors from out of the state in its history. He said an esti- mated 2,500,000 persons from other states will have spent their Shafer Greets Postoffice Survey in His District WASHINGTON (®— Rep. Shafer (R-Mich) says no fourth class post office in his district sells enough stamps to pay the post- master’s salary. Shafer reported yesterday in his weekly news letter that he ‘‘wel- comed” a survey being made by the Postoffice Department of the nation’s 17.608 fourth class offices to see if some could be closed for economy, In many cases, Shafer said, better mail service can be pro- vided by replacing a fourth class office with extended rural routes. “There is no intention to take any action which will inconven- ience the public or impair the post- al service,’’ he sajd. In addition to postmaster sala- ries, the offices have additional ex- penses like rent and supplies which increased their losses, Shafer said. vacations in Michigan before the summer ends. Another 2,500,000 Michigan resi- dents remained in the state during their vacations, Furlong said one of the biggest reasons for the banner tourist sea- son has been good weather. Furlong said tourists will spend upwards of $600,000,000 in the state this year, compared to a little more than $500,000,000 a year ago. “Nearly every tourist ®perator | told me they could have filled, twice as many accommodations as they have,”’ Furlong said. At Manistee, a motel owner said he could have filled each room three times a night after June 1, Furlong said. Further, resort owners told Furlong they could have filled ‘anywhere from five to 50 additional cot- tages all summer.” Furlong said greatest concentra- tion of tourist activity is in the’ area north of the Muskegon-Bay City line. Tourists are exploring | the vast Upper Peninsula and | southern Michigan in record num- bers, too, Furlong said, and De-| ‘You may build a link to the nicely on-a diet of corn, bread troit is attracting more tourists than ever before. | Tourist activity is expected to reach its peak during the next three weeks but will continue ‘‘at a good pace until well into Octo- ber.’”’ Furlong said bus, train and air lines report travel to and in Mich- igan is up over a year ago and state ferries at the Straits of Mack- inac, where cars line up for two to three miles waiting to cross the five-mile stretch of water, re- port they have carried 12 per cent more cars during the first seven months of 1953 compared to the same period in 1952. Turnpike Map May Hit $75,000 Authority Will Receive Detailed Survey Bids Next Meeting DETROIT (UP) — Chairman Charlies M. Ziegler said today Michigan's new ike Authori- ty interviewed 11 highway engi- neers Monday to gather data on the proposed Detroit and Chicago and Detroit and Toledo toll roads. The experts said it would cost between $35,000 and $75,000 for a detailed survey of the routes. also sions, At the next meeting, he said, contractors will be on hand to submit bids. One of the engineers, Curtiss J. Hooper, warned against building a Michigan tollroad too close to the Indiana-to-Chicago route be- cause there would not be enough traffic to support two toll roads in the area. Ohio-Indiana line, probably to the near corner of Indiana, but if you built a completely parallel turn- pike to Lake Michigan it would kill the two turnpikes,’’ said Hoop- er, who represents the New York Brinckeroff ,Hall & McDonald. Ziegler said the group would: meet again “within two weeks” | to receive more facts and figures on the building of toll roads, Automotive Pioneer Dies NEW BALTIMORE (UP) — Al- fred H. Helwig, an automotive pioneer credited with inventing the gasoline pump and the sparkplug, died Monday at the age of 79, Good Samaritans Just Plain Stuck: Pigeon Sponges After playing the role of Good Samaritans recently, it looks like Ww. Calling about 15 various cities and agencies, the boys said they got the same answer each time: “‘We don’t handle pigeons.” “So finally I called the police and they told me to call the con- servation department,’’ Tommy said, ‘‘but the conservation de- partment told me to call all the others I had already called.’ Now the boys have decided to take care of the pigeon, bearing the tag numbers MP 99-5AU53, until someone claims it. Meanwhile, the bird is living in |a plush cage, once home to a | houseful of hamsters, and is faring and water. The gold-bricker still can’t fly. Detroit Marine Pilot Missing Over Florida MIAMI, Fla. @® — Miami-based Marine Corps planes searched the Everglades around Lake Okeecho- bee today for a missing attack bomber piloted by 2nd Lt. William E. Becker Jr. of Detroit. Becker was last heard from at 4:20 p.m. yesterday when he re- ported by radio that he was mak- ing a simulated raid with a smoke bomb on a target 10 miles Would UseLand for Parking Lot Attorney Readies Action to Claim Disputed Area on Parke Street Pontiac City Commission to- night will take action on a reso- Confirmation is set on special assessment rolls for curb, gutter and related work on Bellevue from Paddock to Jessie Street, and for storm drain in Fiddis from Rose- lawn Drive to Tasmania. An agreement with the Mich- igan Highway Department is set to come before the commission regarding ‘the development of the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Commissioners will decide the proper action to be taken on a resolution of public necessity for combined sewer on the north side of Walton Boulevard from New York to Stanley. Women in Arms Over Statue’s Honor GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. @—The Women’s Relief Corps No, 41 of the Grand Army of the today. The irate ladies pointed out that a city statue erected years ago in memory of the ‘‘Boys in Blue’’ is painted Confederate gray. Further- more, they said, the statue “‘leans a little toward the Mason-Dixon City Manager Millard Moore promised the statue would get a new coat of paint (blue) and a west of Lake Okeechobee, straightening-up job. Care for the Halt and the Lame Marines Treat Wounded Koreans While Off Duty at “Able Med’ SPARKS (NEA Sta/f Correspondent) try road, I saw a straggling line of Injured and ill Koreans limping | along the dry rib of an adjacent. they recalled a biblical sketch ‘of the halt and lame nearing a re- ligious shrine to pray for cure: For these hurt people, the shrine was the United States Marines. i 2 q [3 ¢ code eke Tay t pitched on the side of a shell- sand-bagged bunkers. , A sentry, with the camouflaged helmet, square shoulders and strong chin of the corps recruiting posters—aided by an interpreter MEDICAL CARE—Corpsman Eari Nichols, of Emmet Id. looks after ailing Korean youngster. —recorded their names and guid- ed them to a large tent with a white cross. I followed and saw them re- Here is a boy ripped by a grenade. The ball-sized weapon, found in an abandoned dump, was a plaything for some youngsters until the pin shapped. There is a man with heavily an Army folding cot is a four- week-old baby, not quite well. Delivered in this tent during an artillery exchange before truce, while Chinese shells poked the camp, he is fondly called: ‘‘Mister Incoming.” It is not essential to suffer a voilent ailment te enjoy Marine treatment. Locals who never saw a brush have teeth yanked by Lt. chest and back, transporting an old shaking sick woman on a seat made by their clasped hands, an- other customer for the United States Marine shrine of charity and good will. City Commission Scheduled to Approve Condemnation Follows Dad’s Example Dutch Immigrant to U.S. Goes Back to Homeland By ROBERT F. MAHER A 22-year-old Dutch youth who finally realized his ambition to “live in America’ found himself two years later serving with the U. S. Army in Germany — only 150 miles from his hometown in Holland. “You might say I was follow- ing in my father’s footsteps,” Herman G. Pruyt of 32 Mary Day Ave., said today. ‘“‘You see, al-/| most the same thing happened to Dad when he first came to America.” Herman then told how his - father, Joseph, 64, came America in 1910 and homestead- ed in Montana. “When this country entered in World War I Dad was drafted ' and served in Europe with the American Army for two scale “That's right,” his father put| in, ‘‘But then. I went to Holland. to visit my mother in 1920 and stayed there to marry and raise a fam- ily.” “Dad received his citizenship papers for going overseas in 1917,"” Herman said, “and I hope to get my papers by next year.” Joseph's wife, Alida, 60, their two daughters, Lidy, 24, and Tiny, 26, and another son, George, 27, have also applied for citizenship. Asked what he thought of be- ing drafted, Herman said he ‘didn’t mind.’’ ‘“‘But I was hoping to see more of America,’’ he add- ed. ‘‘As long as I had to go over- seas though, I was just as glad to be stationed so close to my former home. *“T acted as an for my outfit, the 804th Station Hos- pital at Landstuhl,” Herman said, “and was able to make many trips to Harlingen, Holland, to visit relathves and old girl friends.” “The thing that struck me fun- ny,” he added ‘‘was being identi- fied as an American, soldier by people in Holland and then having. them talk about me and my uni- form in Dutch thinking I couldn't understand them.” ‘Mostly they'd talk about the fine material in my army uni- form and how they wished they were able to buy civilian clothes of the same quality.” “Since most of the cloth manu- factured in. Holland goes to the military there is only a small amount of inferior material left Herman ex- seas,’ Herman declared in a wonderful privilege itis to live in America.” é “It’s also good for people in other countries to have Ameri- can soldiers stationed there,”’ he continued, “because the soldiers’ great purchasing power is help- ing to re-establish business.” Pruyt says he may go to school under the GI Bill of Rights but for the present he is working at Pontiac Motor, 2 Parties Already Dispute Outcome of 1954 Election WASHINGTON (®—A Republican claim that the GOP will strengthen its control of the House next year brought a Democratic retort today that it’s too early to make pre- dictions on the outcome of the 1954 voting. Democrats are counting heavily on tradition to recapture House control in Novembere 1954. Tradi- | tion says that the party in power loses seats in an off-year election, in which there is no presidential contest. * ¢ «¢ Only once in modern times, in 1934, did the voting deviate from that tradition. 7 * «*& Right now Democrats trail Re- publicans in the House by 6 seats. Reuther Praises No-Raid Pact Tells AFL-ITU Meeting He Expects No Trouble Attaining It (From AP & UP Dispatches) DETROIT — ‘CIO President Wal- ter P. Reuther told delegates to the 95th national convention of the AFL International Typographical | Union Monday that approval of the ‘‘no raiding’ pact between the two unions would be the ‘“‘first step’’ toward labor unity. The no-raiding agreement al- ready has been approved by the AFL executive council. Reuther said he expected little trouble when the pact comes up Thursday before the CIO executive board in Washington. Convention delegates today began debating a wide variety of propositions, ranging from pay raises for international of- ficers to policies for dealing with labor saving devices in the pub- lishing business. Such matters will take up: most of the more than 400 delegates’ attention from now until the con. vention ends Friday. j The hottest issue of all, coming up Thursday, revolves around whether the ITU should continue to publish rival papers in cities where its members are on strike. Another speaker Monday was Gerhard Van Arkel, an ITU at- torney who has led much of the union’s extensive litigation since Rep. Richard M. Simpson (R- | the Taft-Hartley Act took effect Pa), who, as chairman of the Re-| six years ago. publican Congressional Committee, has the job of directing the GOP's bid for continued control of the House, claims Republicans will pick up 25 more seats next year. He conceded, in an interview, | Doesn’‘t Like Criticism ADDISON (UP) — John Walkup said today he resigned as mayor of Addison because people com- plain too much, “I was required to spend more time answering criticism than I spent on the job,"* he said, U.S. Bookbinder Refuses to Answer Hed Charges WASHINGTON (® — Edward M. Rothschild refused today to say whether he is a member of the Communist Party or whether he ever stole secret documents from the government printing office. Rothschild, a bookbinding ma- clined to answer on the grourid that he might incriminate himself. Chairman McCarthy (R-Wis) made against him in secret testimony before the subcommit- tee are perhaps “the most seri- Both Rothschild and his wife, Ethel, were named as Commu- nists by witnesses who testified be- fore the Senate group yesterday. Then, in a reedy voice, he pare ried all questions about his as- sociations, alleged Communist con- nections and other activities with the repeated statement: “Under the Fifth Amendment I refuse to answer that question.” McCarthy has declared there is every indication the printing of- fice has had an ‘extremely slip- shod"’ security set up in the past, McCarthy made that comment despite assurances at yester- day’s hearing from Harry D. Merold, production manager at the printing office, that is would be extremely dififcult for any loyalty board that (a) both the man and his wife were Commu- nists and (b) a woman witness declared she once saw Rothschild. take a secret paper from the’ plant. The senator indicated this wom. an will be called as a witness be- fore his committee later in the -“_- «* i i i a THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1958 meais, ice on the Maple Leaf Roate. Take Canadian National to Toronto, Montreal, Quebec. . F. WRIGHT, Gread Treak CANADIAN NATIONAL Compo Is Best for You ALUMINUM Windows Call C. D. Mazzola OR lande 3-0562 CAN'T SLEEP? There Is No Substitute rsa = SHERWIN-WILLIAMS SWP’ HOUSE PAINT Weatherated for Extra Protection Against— Excessive Loss of Gloss Uncontrolled Chalking sR 99 A CALLON IN FIVES iBT US RECOMABND A GOOD PAINTING CONTRACTOR SHERWIN- WILLIAMS STREET ADDRESS + PHONE NUMBER DPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT + WE DELIVER 71 W. Huron’ FE 4-2571 Open a Charge Account We Deliver No Contract Necessary FUEL OIL Call Today Gregory Oil Go. 94 East Walton Blvd. Phone FE 5-6141 WANT A GOOD USED REFRIGERATOR? Lowest Prices—Famous Makes Good Housekeeping Shop 51 W. Huron Street (Advertisement) Husbands! Wives! Get Pep, Vim F Feel Younger money-saving At aD drug stores—in an Simms Bros., Walgreen's and Cunningham's. TV REPAIRS Work Guaranteed! HAMPTON TV 286 State St. FE 4-2525 | of Windsor, Ont.; +> Precise Aircraft Industries Plant at Milford Sold from Milford was used during the last school year for elementary class- rooms. Lapeer County’s Deepest Oil Well Is Abandoned METAMORA — Lapeer County’s deepest oil well was abandoned || last week at 5,118 feet. According to drillers, a, few traces of oil were found but none of commercial value. Drilling on the well has been in progress for several weeks. The site for the well, on the Gordon Smith farm two miles east of Attica, was leased by the Brazos Oil Co., a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Co. The firm has not revealed furth- er plans for drilling in the county. They began sinking a pipe this week on a site near Richmond. Attend Convention METAMORA — Two local women left yesterday as delegates to the national convention of the Federation of Teachers. Both are teachers in Wayne schools, County Deaths Mrs, Bridget E. Monett ROCHESTER Service for Mrs. Edward (Bridget E.) Mon- ett, 66, of Route 3, Rochester, will be 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac, with bur- ial in Perry Mount Park Ceme- tery. She died Sunday at Pon- tiac General Hospital. * Born in Ontario, she had lived in Oakland County since 1927, mov- ing here from Cheboygan. Surviving besides her husband are four sons, Raymond and Roy of Pontiac, Albert of Marquette and Elmer of Battle Creek; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Strong of Pontiac and Mrs. Ellen George of Rochester; two brothers, George Getzmeyer of Onaway and Charles and five grand- children. About 30.6 per cent of the na- tion’s farms are on hard-surface roads. =z) County Ce plete Ladies Aid aeaeey will meet Thurs- day afternoon in the MOMS Club rooms over the Metamora State Savings Bank. MOMS of America Inc. will meet at the club rooms Wednesday evening. Armada North Armada Home Extension Club — meet Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Walter Decker, 13900 Hough Rd. w Orien Township will serve dinner as Howarth wscs Church on Silver Bell Road tomorrow at noon. The public is invited. BLACK TOP @ DRIVEWAYS © PARKING AREAS FREE ESTIMATES—EASY TERMS Gs ASPHALT PAVING CO. 2010 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-2227 ago the boy was found unconscious where the five children of Mr. Hallman suffocated Wednesday at played. MENACE OF THE OLD ICEBOX —The abandoned icebox holds untold horror for unsuspecting tots who innocently enter it to hide or to play. Above, left, is Gary Smith, 4, of Springfield, Vt. with his mother, Mrs. Richard Smith. box at his home. In a coma 59 days, his sight and speech were impaired, his limbs useless. Top right, Skeet Jackson examines the death trap in Proctor, Ark., when the lid slammed shut as they A A ESI LESS EINECS 2 EEE I A ER a LE Just a year in an unused ice- and Mrs. J. W. their farm home | pictured.) Lower left, are four boys - found in an unused refrigerator in Richmond, Va. after a 3day search. Shown (left to right) are George, Woodrow and Wilson Blackstock, brothers, and Walter Boykin. Lower right, Radko Misic, 4, lost ‘iis life in an old ice chest near his home in Chicago. Latest to die, Thursday, were Michael Rogers, 4, and Edward Ferguson, 3, of Haverhill, Mass. (not Removal of latches on unused iceboxes would render these death traps harmless. METAMORA — Detroit Scouts will entertain Detroit ae Sceuts tomorrow evening with sightseeing tour around D Bar A Ranch near here. The girls, from Camp Metamora for Detroit Girl Scouts, will be en- tertained with swimming, a wiener will play for dancing. The official season at the camp will close this week. White Lake Teen Club Holds Dance Thursday WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — Members of teen age clubs of other churches will be invited by the Teen Age Club of St. Pat- rick Parish to a dance Thursday night. The dance will be in the parish hall from 8 p.m. to 12 p.m. Chaperones will be present. Ferndale Man Wounded FERNDALE—Late reports from the Defense Department list Sgt. Henry Williams Jr., Mrs. Willie Mae Williams of 20788 Westview St., Ferndale, as wound- ed in action in Korea. roast and dancing in addition to) touring the. camp. An orchestra husband of! Boy Scouts Entertain | Blue Ribbon Winners With Tour of Ranch |County 4-H’ers to Exhibit ‘at State Show in Lansing Several Oakland county 4-H boys and girls were chosen to exhibit at the state 4H show in Lansing the last week of August. Blue ribbon winners who were selected are: Becky Joslin for her muffins; Judy Brendel, alternate; Sally Taylor, cookies; Eleanor Tapp, alternate; Pat Render, un- frosted cupcakes; Ella Bouckaert, rolls and bread; Donna Frisbee, alternate; Lois Stevens, fruit pie; Irene McGill, alternate. In the coffee cake division, Marion Pickering was winner with Bob Mann named as alter- nate. Janett Miller won for sponge cake and Marguerite Houly was alternate. For frosted cupcakes Lois ‘Wel- “berry was tops with the Rochester Variety 4H club winning for picnic basket, outdoor meals number one. Another club, the Thomas Busy Bees, presented the best in three types of campfires and the Lake- side 4H won for reflector oven. Others who will show at state are: Pat Render, spice shelf; Ro- berta McCrory, basket; Brenda Miller, chiffon cake; Donald Campbell, apple pie. SOUTH LYON—Plans for the opening of Lyon Township schools for the first week in September were announced this week by Supt. Frank Bartlett. Teachers meetings have been slated for Sept. 1 with general sessions in the morning and build- ing meetings in the afternoon. Registration of Kindergarten children will be Sept. 2 between 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Classes will open the following day. Grades on through six will regis- ter Sept. 3. School busses will transport the students, the super- intendent said. Ninth and tenth graders will enroll at the high school the same day but classes wil not begin until Sept. 4. Sixth grade pupils in the district will attend classes at the South Lyon Township Schools Announce Opening Dates 3. Eleventh and 12th grade stu- dents will register the same day at the high school, Bartlett stated. According to the superintend- ent, Worden school will handle grades one through five, but kindergartners and sixth graders will be brought to South Lyon school for classes. Bartlett also explained that all schools will be closed in areas where annexation . proceedings have recently been completed. In- eluded in the recent South Lyon annexations are Walker School in Salem Township, Maple Ridge, Wagner and Fohey schools in Northfield Township and Washburn in Green Oak Township. Schools previously annexed were Wood, Smith, Wilson, and Black- wood, which along with South Lyon and New Hudson schools comprise the present township school sys tem. In field crops and vegetables, Paul Ballow and Charlies Rupp will show at Lansing with the following selected for vegetable exhibits: Gary Burkhardt, Glen- ing, Schmidt and Ruth Wernet. Other vegetable club winners were the Galloway Lake, Lakeside Club, Thomas Busy Bees and New- ark Bustlers with special vegetable booth exhibit going to East Orion, Newark Bustlers and Galloway Lake, respectively. Selected for State Fair open classes were Jane Wiggins, Shir- ley Bowers and Sally Taylor in canning. In canning class two, Jane Wig- gins and Shirley Bowers were tops with class three and four going to Mrs. D. S. Wiggins. Jane and Shirley repeated in class four for jelly and in baking bread and cake, Jane was again tops. Needlework divisions found Ruth Miller winning for best crocheted tablecloth and Diane Wildiey and Mrs. John Mann for best crocheted articles other than tablecloth or bedspread. Mrs. Glenn Johnson was selected for best knitted article. For state show canning, Sally Taylor, Barbara Quick, Judy Van- derhoof, Pat Hopkins and Jane Wiggins won with freezing awards | going to Bonnie Upthegroye, Sally Garner and Doris McDonald. Rebekahs Meet, Picnic, Elect New Officer Slate ARMADA — Fourteen members and five guests were present at the annual meeting and picnic of the Past Presidents of District Five of the Rebekahs Thursday at the home of Mrs. Harry Green in Washington. Elected as officers were Mrs. Susan Schottler of Port Huron, president; Mrs. Edith Waltz of Almont, vice-president; and Mrs.| 4 Clara Starkweather of Marine City, . secretary-treasurer. | | | Conservationists ‘Try for Award Five Lapeer Members Compete in Statewide Goodyear Contest LAPEER — Five members of the Lapeer County Soil Conserva- tion District will compete in the upcoming national soil conserva- tion awards program sponsored by the Goodyear Company, it was announced here this week. The men, all members of the group’s governing body, are An- thony Kreiner, Lloyd Burley, Adolph Broekler, Don Mawdesley and Edgar Miteen. They will com- pete against members of all other soil conservation districts in Mich- igan. Non-partisan judging committees will determine the state’s outstand- ing district for a period from July 1, 1953 to April 30, 1954. Points will be awarded on the basis of per- formance of regular district du- ties. A grand award for one member of each winning district governing body and the top cooperating rancher or farmer named by the district will be a one-week, ex- pense-free trip to Goodyear’s Wig- wam Guest Ranch, a winter re- sort at Litchfield Park, Ariz. Birthday Club to Meet WATERFORD—The local Birth- day Club will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Clifford Wood of Williams Lake Road, it was re- vealed here this week. The group will be served a potluck picnic dinner at noon. County Births Lyen Mr. and Mrs. William L. Oakley an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Mary Demise, Aug. 4. announce vin, Aug. Mr. and Mrs. Robert _ birth of a son, Robert Mr. and Mrs. Lee Donley announce po oe of a daughter, Denise Eleanog, of a 808, Howell Pair by Dr. Gentles New Howell Club Has Election of Officers and Directors HOWELL — Dr. Ernest Gentles, medical superintendent at the Michigan State Sanatorium here, has been elected president of the recently organized Kiwanis Club in Howell. Supporting officers include Vic- tor Kohsman, first vice president; Oscar Holden, second vice presi- dent; Dr. Joseph Schafer, of the The new club meets each Tues- day evening at 6:30 in the Episcop. al parish house and at present is chartered by the Brighton Kiwanis Club. This is the first Kiwanis club to be organized in Howell, County Deaths Mrs. Eliza Levique FERNDALE — Requiem Mass for Mrs. Eliza Levique, 76, of 506 West ila Ave., will be to at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Linden, with burial in Mt. Calvary Cemetery. Arrangements are by Kinsey Fun- eral Home, Royal Oak. She died yesterday in Royal Oak. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Walter C. Koppelman of Ferndale and Mrs. J. J. O'Malley of Bay City; a son, Joseph R. of Bancroft; 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Minnie Wolfe WARREN TOWNSHIP — Service for Miss Minnie Wolfe, 70, of 27051 James St., will be 2 p.m. tomor- row at Sparks-DeMund Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in Adair Cemetery, St. Clair. She died yesterday. Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Cluff of Detroit and Mrs. Amelia Stahl of Warren Township, and a brother, John, of Snover. Mrs. Antonina Murawski ARMADA—Service for Mrs. An- tony (Antonina) Murawski, 74, of 23707 Main St. was this morning from St. Mary Mystical Church with burial in Sweetest Heart of Mary Cemetery, Detroit. She died Saturday in Romeo. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Genevieve Oke, also of 23770 Main St.; two sons, Walter and Edward of Detroit; three sisters, Mrs. Madeline Chrostowska and Mrs. Frances Mikulewicx of De- troit and one in Poland; two broth- ers in Poland; 14 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Elizabeth M. Whitbeck HOLLY Service for Mrs. George (Elizabeth M.) Whitbeck, 89, who died yesterday after a long illness, will be 2 p.m, Thurs- day at Bendle Funeral Home with burial in Beebe Cemetery. Born in Canada, she was a mem- ber of the Holly Baptist Church. Surviving are three children, Harley of Mancelone, Ivan M. of Kiwanis Headed Rosey 4-H Fair Opens at Lapeer Today Talent Show Tonight Follows Judging This Afternoon LAPEER—Hundreds of Lapeer County 4H members, all with their eyes on blue ribbons, began trooping into the County Center this mortiing to set up exhibits for the anni bits paced for the from needlework ernoon. Also slated for today were a horse show at 2 p.m. and a talent show at 8 p.m. According to fair officials, cash premiums will be offered this year from over $1,000 in funds donated the 4H Foundation. Premiums will range from 50 cents to $4. Besides the cash premiums, local business- men and organizations fill offer merchandise, scholarships and trips. guests of the Lapeer Kiwanis and Rotary clubs for the annual supper. Livestock showmanship winners will be picked at 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day, with the 4H queen contest and style show following. Dryden Couple Repeats Vows in U. S. Capital DRYDEN — Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hagemeister announce the mar- riage of their daughter, Coleen, to James Middleton, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Middleton. The ceremony was solemnized Aug. 8 at Washington with mem- bers of the immediate families present. For her wedding Coleen wore a yellow suit with navy blue accessories and a corsage of red roses. Attending the couple were Lola Middleton, sister of the bride- groom, and John Hurska. 70 Attend 18th Reunion of Beam Family in Almont ALMONT—Some 70 persons were present Sunday for the 18th annual reunion of the Beam family held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Greenman of Almont. Following a potluck chicken dinner, the group held a business session and elected officers. Next year the group will meet at Murphy Park, Pontiac. Lou Ann Weaver to Wed Pvt. Daniel J. Fulgenzi CLYDE — Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Weaver of Clyde announce the engagement of their daughter, Lou Ann, to Pvt. Daniel J. Ful- genzi, son of Mr. and Mrs, John Fulgenzi of Oxbow Lake. Pvt. Fulgenzi is stationed at Lakeland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex. A wedding is planned Dec. 18. Beautiful Convenient PERRY MOUNT PARK CEMETERY TELEPHONE FE 4-1563 878 NORTH PERRY STREET COCKROACHES One Full Year Guarantee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- cery Stores and Restaurants, Re- main out only three hours. Na signs used. Rox Ex Company | Elkhart, Ind. and Beatrice J. 1014 Pent: St. Bk. Bidg. FE ¢-9462 ONE PRICE TO ALL... ors arse [13 W. Lerene 5 =. No Appointment Necessary dl Gisecais ané Special Frames Only $3 More NU-VISION OPTICAL CO. DISPENSING OPTICIANS Phone FE 2-2895 tot as bes $A — 2 . , > a rg gh TN ER aN i aI I ge + THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 __ SEVENTEEN nutans 5 ; es = ° 2 ae ee a eee BEE I con, 3 pe : Ce eS aS ee is, Bie ce SO RS. ON ee f: t eee wy Ee Oe ee of ARES es . * S. Se fae o w Kt = Soy ee 7a eee om. np a Bie ; ¥ ed * « % oh ae as ‘ s wae ait aetna AR BS ie os ¥ a A See oF *. % & ° ‘TE. ae ‘iret ee By . ES i FOR Aen a 3 ~ 9 BRM aed tg RR AS 1) . zi is : . f i ms ag ae . * iy dat aa . “S ; y == . 5 ' # . ——— 5 ae j Fs a ee . J * é Sipe ead . - - j x gat ‘ ‘ {> Peaches ar 321: LOSE WEIGHT WITH & bea . TASTI-DIET 24d Peaches “2 "2 33° CHIE aes ict Pear Halves +3: 23° ; os It Day om SS een ~ NOW APPEARING DAILY C= Pear Halves 2: 39° IN THE DETROIT TIMES RS a aS Fruit Cocktail +: 21° | DI 4 Ful Cocktail "s.,2 39% TASTI-DIET Grape Jelly 31 Apple Jelly 37 31 TASTI-DIET Chef Dressing '32 3 5: \ TASTI-DIET {Calorie Dressing sz 35° TASTI-DIET Puddings 7 29° TASTI-DIET 3 Gelatins us) ." “29° con brush efter meels HERE’S A TOOTHPASTE Se FOR PEOPLE WHO CAN'T " malt | BRUSH AFTER EVERY MEAL! ve _ Just One Brushing Destroys GET 4th BAR FOR ONLY le WHEN YOU BUY 3 REGULAR get AT 23¢ 4 ¥ Fe Ay, At gi Bath Size Moet Decey. en SWEETHEART SOAP Odor-Causing Bacterie ECONOMY , cs . SIZE IZE GET AN EXTRA BAR FOR ONLY le Contains GL-70 WHEN YOU BUY 7 3 BATH SIZE BARS FOR 32¢ Exclusive Cleaner 6 3° 4a Cc and e —— Pry 3 Bacteria Fighter 4’ ; ly POPEYE T-SHIRT FOR ONLY 39¢ oe < =, Gre . Ww ITH LABEL FROM Zo" . - TL) , , a - - ° fe - By Me “ a . ; a” of hg | e ' an? oss :, > . 3 a % : 5 . Fi i > > ns j é : $ fe : * é Se 4 ? ’ White or Yellow m 2-LB. CELLO . BAG MAIL 39¢ AND A LABEL TO POPEYE POP CORN, DIXON, ILL. j c evave SIZE OESIREO Nitipiant' GET AN EXTRA PKG. FOR le WHEN YOU BUY 3 PKGS. AT 27¢ A Softens Water—Blues While Washing ) on ., RAIN DROPS Mi . 2 1, LB. ¢ wot PKG. Cuts Soap Bills 1/3! TRY THESE FROZEN FOOD FAVORITES : Save More - Save $1.7] oe Buy a Cie of 80 Packages. S$ 5 49 Regularly $7.20 . . . Now Only ae MARGARINE 1 LB. FAMILY 1 LB, CTN. ne 500 yl co , FAR nore Bill Stern's ROQUEFORT : anki SUNKIST PURE FROZEN : ‘99° 3} DRESSING |TQ LEMON JUCE = 2" 35‘ * 5S" Land O' Lakes Honey 3° : SOUTH COAST FANTAIL 69: Red Star Yeast wi. > hie 89° '& | BREADED SHRIMP ‘pe: 125 WEST HURON ALL PONTIAC STORES 436 NORTH PERRY AUBUR OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 69 SOUTH SAGINAW Also Open Saturday till 9 P. M. TILL 9 perm Also Open Saturday till 9 P. M. FIGHTEEN BLUE SKY | DRIVE-IN THEATRE Ee = Gt WARNERCOLOR VINCENT PRICE - FRANK LOVEJOY - PHYLLIS KIRK @® PLUS On Our Newly Enlarged and Silvered Screen! Bf took a gangster to make her feel like a women! Chizabeth TAYLOR Fernando LAMAS William POWELL . M-G-M's WHO HAD 1 COTTHING JAMES GIG UNG » WHITMORE THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Block North of Telegraph FE 5-4500 Dh An Le a Mn Aa Mi Mn Mi A Mi A Mi Mn Min Mh Mn A Me Mh Mn Man Mi Mn Mn Mi Mn a Mn Mi Mh i he Mn i Mn i i bb bi bi bb hi hi hi hi hi hi hi hi Li hi hi Li hi i Li hi hi i Mi hi Li hi hi i Li i hi hi Li hn , rm >< +) re t J ” ee < rm “Ti Peres =] *M + =] = =z “” DLL hn hn hh Mn A Me Mn Mi A Mi i Me i Mn Mn Mn a Mn MM Mn Mi Me Mi Mi Mi Mn Ma a Mn Mn Mn Mi Mn Mh eC TCS OC CT CTC CTC CUT OW eT CT eT e eeooen es rr. °e wT CC VC CTT CCC TC CT eT eC CASE OF LARCENY ROONEY-BRACKEN A Elaine STEWART - {ato | over with 9006s, They'll steal everythi but your finaysena'” in M-G-M's 4 EDDIE MARILYN ERSKINE ~- bp bp bp hp bp fp bp by hp bn bp bp hy bp bp be bb bo be be be ho bo ho i i be he i bi hi i i a i he hi Mi Ln i hn Ma a nM i i Me a i hi i Le hi Ma Mn Mi Mi Mi Mi Mi hi de i he hi he he he hh i i he te et i i i be bp by bn bb bo be be ba i hh he Mi hh ha Mi Mn ha i hi i Mi Mi he i i i i i ha i hi te i Mi i i i i i i hi a i i i i i Mn . ee fb fp fb & & & fb b> bp bp by tp bp tp tp bp by by by be bp bb bn be ho hn bi hh ho hi hi ha ha ha ha hi hi i hi hi ha hi ha La hi Mn hi ha hi ha hi a hi ha hi hi hi ha i Le hi Mi hi ha hi i hi hi i Li hi hi hi hi hi Li hi hi Mi hi Li Li hi Li i hi i hi hi hi hi La hi hi hi i hi hi hi hi hi hi hi i hi hi hi i i hi i i Li hi hi hi Li hi hi La hi hi hi hi hi i hi hi La La ha hi hi hi hi hi hi hi ha hi hi hi i a ® Red Radio Announces End of State of War | Ike's Pal in Denver Has Call From Hoppy smiled broadly and talked for five minutes to Hoppy, who's actor William Boyd in private life. Mexican Mob Attacks Protestant Missionary TOLUCA, Mexico w — Officials Heavy eater or light eater you will find our menu crowded with good, taste- tempting suggestions. Salads Fruit Dishes reported today that an angry mob Sandwiches i Soggy attacked a Protestant missionary Stews ma sQ in nearby San Francisco Tepexu- Steaks Snacks xuca and fired on a Protestant church in which he took refuge for four housrs. The-missionary was identified as Felipe Vazquez Aguirre. Police fi- nally drove off his assailants. Officials said they did not know what touched off the attack by the DINING ROOM || what touches te ttronaly. Casholie s 130 S$. Telegraph Road town 50 miles southwest of Mexico City. we Tues. - Wed. - Thurs. ON THE GIANT FULL STAGE , FUTURAMIC SCREEN! Up to Deadweod the gowmg was ecsy. FROM THERE ON IT WAS UP TO YOUR All at Reasonable Prices— Well Within Your Budget Serib’s ~~ 2ND MAJOR FEATURE ON OUR REGULAR SCREEN! SUSAN -4eL22A CHARLTON © HAYWARD HESTON ® Au (Ng NM Maes aeagey: " PRESIDENTS E [AbY % IS A GREAT ROMANTIC ADVENTURE...A SAVAGELY POWERFUL LOVE STORY OF A MAN OF FURY — AND A WOMAN OF FIRE...! ‘SCaEER PU SOL. SIEGEL: HENRY LEVIN-JOHN PATRICK A quiet, restful and peaceful oS )\ THRILL! SAILING! | >< | Unsinkable, Sate and Exciting! LESSONS FREE of Charge! Rates as low as $150 an hour HOLIDAY PARK PRIVATE, CLUB-LIKE 4300 Cass-Elizabeth Road on both Cass and Elizabeth Lakes “Skipper Your Nipper” = Broken Neck Can’t Hold Cisco Kid By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD ® — Youthful TV watchers will be happy to know that the Cisco Kid will be back in the saddle by next month. Duncan Renaldo, who plays Cisco, reported today he is mak- ing an amazing recovery from the broken neck which almost crippled him for life. With a de- gree of sentiment, he attributes part of his progress to the prayers of thousands of his young fans. “It may sound strange to some people, I know,” said In 1981, fams tore clothes the Latin from Camden, N. J. etf my back in Washington, “But I'am convinced that it D. C., when I was todring with is the young children who ‘Trader Horn.’ Six months have helped me make a mi- later, nobody cared if I was raculous recovery. There is no alive. “I have had success three or four times, but never have I known the amazing reaction that TV has brought. It is something entirely new’in the entertain- ment business. When you enter people’s houses every week, you when a prop boulder rolled down a hill and struck him. Two ver- tebraes in his neck were dis- located and fractured, the disc crushed and the spinal cord - “The doctor said if sald be will be able to resume | begin at 20,000." Western series by Renaldo the middle of next month ligation to he sone aulbeiee “The doctor is amazed,” he At his request, the Cisco Kid related. “At first he said I series has toned down the vio- would be in traction six weeks lence in its films. “I don’t want to be a part of CLL L SSF 7 a venture that teaches kids how \ New Lake Theater \ ane. Sa te ee ee aa Troll ; marked. films we have Pontiac been doing lately there have \ WALLED LAKE \ been no killings. Occasionally we = will shoot the gun out of a man’s \ Pick Up on \ hand. But all that other violence ‘ South Street \ is bad for children. With Richard Widmark “I hope some of the other & and Jean Peters \ Western series will follow suit. - ‘ I saw one the other night that Fast Company had seven murders in it. Why \ With ) Howard Keel and a don’t they use a little sense?” rle Main Renaldo also ds his per. | weer saaay sonal life. He hari bien hag S PHONE FEDERAL 2 4N51 3 —COMING—— OT VG aU tOR Saturday, Aug. 22nd SAMUEL GOLDWYN's “A thing of New Musical Wonderfilm ! WATERFORD tal DRIVE-IN THEATER THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN Cor, Wililams Lk.-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 7:15 TUES. — WED. — THURS. starring RHOWDA FLEMING Wel LIAM LONDIGA night club in years. ‘There's too great a danger of getting into a fight,” he said. “If you are challenged and fight, you look like a bad man. If you don’t fight, you look like a coward. You cannot win either way.” 50 Die in Tobruk Blast BENGASI, Libya (#— Reports from the World War II stronghold of Tobruk said today that 30 peo- ple were killed there in an am- explosion. With Burt Lancaster and Shirley Booth —ALSO— ; “Sword of Venus” With Robert Clark and Catherine McLeod PHONE FFDERAL 2 485) OAKLAND MOODFRANLY AIR CONDITIONED THE THUNDERING SAGA OF STEVE MARTIN... THE BAYOU WOMAN HE LOVED!... c o oO te TODAY thru FRIDAY UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL presents wea| JAMES STEWART | JOANNE DRU GILBERT ROLAND DAN DURYEA VAS Ges i HN £204%2FR | $ . 4 ay Color by : a cJeck COLDS | =r * Conner Features at: 1:07-3:10-5:13-7:16-9:21 EXTR 7 LATE Aopen «rom & Jerry Cartoon = News ALWAYS COOL— STRAND OPEN AT 10:45 A. M. | GIARTS Plus i—. “SAFARI DRUMS“ ——_ WEDNESDAY WHERE CIVILIZATION ENDS... | CLAUDETTE COLBERT Quipest | JACK HAWKINS + ANTHONY STEEL PLUS Paulette GODDARD @ ADDED LATE NEWS @ Gypsy Rose LEE EAGLE SeMeitriictnts: = LAST TIMES TODAY “Treasure of the Golden Condor” “Invaders From Mars” Deers Open 10:30—Sundays 12:30 4—BIG DAYS—4 2 GIANT COLOR HITS STARTING TOMORROW leita tt LL bbeldtttltleltoletlaelteteleett tet tet bette Lette ele telat ‘ig, oe & A WALTER WANGER Production sterring JAMES CRAIG RITA MORENO . KEITH LARSEN . AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE Fort Vengeance Starts at: f DNLEY-HAVER-DAY. cool eGirl Next Door WwW . fh TECHNICOLOR Ml The Girl Next Door Starts at: 11:20-2: , a SF ete _ POE FF EO” * ee ee ee ee Oe ewe ae: We ws THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 NINETEEN —* Tennessee's Robbins Leads Western Test Oakmont Youth Takes Lead in Jaycee Tourney Dick Chase Posts 74 in First Qualifying at UM Course By JOHN F. MAYHEW ANN ARBOR (#— Dick Chase, an unheralded 16-year-old from| Oakmont, Pa., led a big field of 223 young golfers into the final 18 holes of qualifying play in the International Jaycee Golf tour- nament here today. Chase zoomed to the fore yes- terday with a fine opening round of 36-38—74 on the rolling 6,600- yard par-72 University of Michigan course. He was one stroke ahead of Jim Raines of Augusta, Ga., and two ahead of Ed Jenkins of Jacksonville, Fla., and Bob Dunn of Camilla, Ga. Chase stepped into the place that was expected to go to one of such players as Rex Baxter fresh from winning the USGA Junior title and Hearst Junior Championship, Scotty Fraser, or George Warren III. Baxter, from Amarillo, Tex., was one off his regular game and came in with a 41-40—81, a stroke behind Warren, from Hampton, N. C., who had a 40-40—80. Fraser, Panama City, Fla., golfer, fired a 38-45—83. Best predictions had it that a two-day score of 170 strokes would be -needed to qualify. The 100 top performers will start the cham- pionship round on Wednesday in quest of a successor for Tommy Jacobs, the 1952 winner from Montebello, Calif., who is now over age. The giant tourney, limited to 17 years old and under, drew rep- resentatives from practically ev- ery state in the Union, Canada, Hawaii and the Caribbean area. The field was so large that the first threesome teed off at 6:45 a. m. and the last cleared the 18th hole just at dusk. Scores ranged all the way from Chase's 74 to well upwards of 100. Michigan Contingent was led by John Schubeck of Detroit, who was well up among the leaders with a 39-38—77. Fred Micklow of Hillsdale scored 42-39—81, one stroke better than the 42-40—82 posted by Detroit's Bill Tiefke. Bob Zimmerman of Jackson scored 44-43—87, and William Mor- gan of Detroit had 46-44—90. Ist Day's Cards in Western Test GRAND RAPIDS—(The 20 low scorers in the first qualifying round of the Western Amateur Golf Championship at Blythefield Country Club (par 37-35—72): H. Rebbins Jr.,, Memphis, Tenn. 33-35—68 Harvie Ward Jr., Atlanta, Ga.. .35-34—69 TOM DRAPER, BIRMINGHAM Lloyd Marts, Detroit........... 34-37—71 John Barton, Davenport, lows. .37-34—71 Dale Morey, Martinsville, Ind.. .37-35—72 John Levinson, Chicago......... 39. Reggie Myles Jr., Lansing....... 35-37—72 Harold Brink, Grand Rapids.. .35-38—73 Arthur Hoff, Lagrange Park, Ill. 36-37—73 J. Johnson, Richmond Hgts, Me. 36-37—73 Earl Moeller, Pine Lawn, Mo., .35-38—73 R. Spangler Jr., Lincoln, Neb.. .35-38—73 D. olyneaux, Davenport, Ia., John Royse Jr., Indianapolis... 37-36—73 Dr. W. Aldrich, Angola, Ind.... D. Holmes Jr., Kendallville, Ind. 38-35—73% F. Strafaci, Long Island, N.Y...37-37—74 Ray Palmer, Wyandotte........39-35—74 Scores of Michigan Players in- cluded: Louis Wendrow, Lansing.......39-36—75 | C. Taylor, Spring Lake....,,..39-36—75 James Frost, Battle Creek..,.... 39-33—76 Charles Harrison, Lansing.,.... 38-38—76 Randall Ahearn, Detroit....... 37-40—77 John Griffin, Lansing.......... 37-40—77 James Funston, Detroit......... 38-398—77 Matrice McCarthy, Muskegon. .37-40—77 PERRY BYARD, ROCHESTER. .41-38—7 Ralph Elistrom, Dearborn..... 40-38—78 Arthur Olfs Jr., Detroit......... 36-42—78 Carl Sielaff Jr., Detroit.......38-40—78 David Reniger, Lansing........ 41-39—80 Orator Woodward, Grosse Ille 41-39—80 Edward Ware, Mason........... 39-43—82 Fred Behymer, East Lansing... Patrick Carrier, Three Rivers.. John Dykstra, East Lansing..... 48-40—8% PHIL DE BEAUBJEN, B'HAM. Hardy on Harvard 11 Bob Hardy, senior back from Birmingham, is listed on the Har- vard University football roster for 1953. He spent the 1952 season as a linebacker. The 20-year-old Har- dy stands 5-11 and weighs 170. He prepped at Birmingham High ' LEADS WESTERN—Hillman Robbins Jr., 21, Tennessee state amateur champion out of Memphis, held the lead as qualifying went into 2nd round of Rapids. Robbins AP Wirephote the Western Amateur golf tournament in Grand shot 33-35—68 for a 1l-stroke lead over Harvie Ward, Atlanta, Ga. sentative in the Michigan Recrea- tion Association baseball tourna- ment, Lunsford Market, advanced to the finals of the test at Jackson Monday with two victories, while Class F Mets were ousted in the second round. Lunsford’s edged Adrian Mason Pontiac’s Midget league repre- Cubs, 7-6, in the first game and downed Wyandotte Shell Milk, 83, in the second. Battle Creek Elks will provide the opposition in the finals, Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at Ella Sharp Park. Mets tripped Hamtramck St. Ladislaus, 2-1, in the opener, but General Motors won a 8-7 victo- ty over CIO 653 in eight innings Monday night to gain a finals berth in the City Girls’ Softball League playoffs. GMC and Shaws Jewelry meet tonight at 7 p.m. at Beaudette Park for the title, If a 2nd game is necessary to determine the championship, it will be play- ed at 8:30 p.m. Monday’s game was forced into overtime when GMC pushed across a single run in the last of the 7th to knot the score at four runs. Union squad came up with three tallies in the top of the 8th, but GM netted four markers in its City ‘A’ Title Playoffs Open Ortonville and GMC Start Best - of - Five Series Today Regular-season champion Orton- ville and runnerup General Motors tangle this afternoon at 5:30 p.m. at Wisner field in the lst game of a best-of-five series to deter- mine the city’s Class A baseball championship. Other games are scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, with ad- .51-44—95 | ditional games, if necessary, slat- | ed for Friday and Monday. Winner of the series will meet Royal Oak in a 3game playoff on Aug, 28-30-31, with the survivor of that test advancing to the Amer- ican Baseball Congress’ state tour- nament in Battle Creek, Sept. 47. TODAY A YEAR AGO — The White Sox released Catcher Phil School. Masi. s. | | | Coach Nine Gains Finals Berth in Girls’ Playotts half of the frame on two walks, a hit batter, an error and two hits. Winner of tonight’s final game will represent Pontiac in the Michigan Softball Association State Class A tourney in Cold-/ water, Sept. 47. Runnerup will enter the MSA ‘‘B”’ regional meet here on Aug, 21-23. Boykins, Marshall and Hooper, Mathes; Bender and Hoffman. Geror Winner of Waterford Batting Crown Gerald Geror won a close race for the batting’ championship of the Waterford Township Softball league, while his Drayton Drug teammate Al Emsley was the loop’s top pitcher. Drug players took most of the individual honors as their team finished in first place during the regular season. Playoffs are underway this week. Geror posted a .450 mark to 442 | for runnerup Stu Hutchison, Tom Studt of Gidley Electric was third at .433. Emsley’s pitching record was 80 with an earned run aver- age of 0.13 runs per game. Bruce Dryer had the most strickouts, 104. Drug’s Fred Boss led in homers, | slugging average and tied with Paul Atkins, also of Drug for the lead in runs batted in with 17. Jim Long of Dixie Recreation had | the most hits, 21. Top 10 batters: - Gerald Gerer (DD) ....ccscceeeeeers 450 Sta Hutchinson (DD).........--0+055 442 Toes Gtmit (GE) ccvesiviesiecvevecns 433 Jian Long (Bee.) .....ccccccvcscercces 429 Ceell Hanes (D&W) .....cccsesseeess 415 Bruce Dryer (Rich'seon) .......+s++++: 405 Dick Mason (Mere.) .....ccccsccccces 405 Wimp Caswell (Rich'seon) .......+++6- 391 Fred Bese (DD) .......ssecvee . 378 Dave Ruelle (DAW) .......ccceeeeeee 355 Champ Becomes Straight Man Licking Company Bully in Army Started Rocky Marciano on Way to Fistic Fame By GAYLE TALBOT GROSSINGER, N. Y. ® — Out behind the hotel here there is a great stoned terrace, and as we walked out blinking‘in the sun- light our ears were smitten by the raucous tones of a loudspeaker. There on a slightly raised plat- form stood the establishment’s of- ficial master of ceremonies, his left arm draped across the shoul- ders of an individual obviously his stooge. A large and appreciative audience was roaring between the gags. It is a common tableau be- tween meals in this section of the mountains at this stage of the va- cation season. * b . The only thing that, upon closer observation, seemed to set this one slightly apart from the run of aft- ernoon exercises was that the straight man was a prize fighter, name of Rocky Marciano. * * * Rocky, a neighbor explained, was taking the day off from train- ing and had dropped down from his camp several miles higher up just in case some of the guests would like to see him. “Is, it true, Rocky,’ he was asked, ‘‘that you began fighting when you were in the Army be- cause there was a bully who was making things miserable for every- body in the company and the boys asked you to take him on?” “Yes, it is,” said Rocky. ‘He was a great big fellow from Texas. So the boys began talking it up and there were a lot of bets and stuff about it in the camp news- - paper. First thing I knew we were in the ring and I knocked him out in the second round. I guess that’s when I became a profession- al fighter.” Qualifying Round Today in National Caddie Test COLUMBUS ® — The National Caddie Golf tournament, which could’ mean a college education for any of 61 youngsters, gets un- der way today with a 36-hole qualifying round over University course. Caddies from all over the coun- try have their sights set on $5,350 in scholarship prize money. Eighth annual tournament will continue through Saturday. Match play begins tomorrow. Midgets Reach Finals fell to the Battle Creek Elks, 12-6, in an afternoon game. Elks thus put both Class F and Midget en- tries in the state, finals, Pontiac’s Cass D and E cham- pions, Jack Habel and Gingellville, are in action at Battle Creek today. Habel met Grand Rapids at 10 a.m., and the winner plays the Port Huron-Jackson survivor this afternoon. Gingellville tangled with Willow Run this morning’ and if victori- ous, also plays in the afternoon. Finals are Thursday evening. Five runs in the fourth inning helped Lunsford to its first game triumph, while pitchers Johnson and Morris hurled four-hit ball to eliminate the Wyandotte entry. Arnold Larson’s two-hitter gave Mets their win over defending champion Hamtramck, but the Battle Creek Elks came up with eight runs in the third inning to end Pontiac’s Class F hopes. CLASS F PONTIAC METS..... 000 010 01-2 8 2 HAMTRAMCK ....... 100 @oO—1 2 2 Larson and Trevino; Steplitus and Snow. PONTIAC METS......111 3000—6 9 3 B. CREEK ELKS..... 128 001 x—12 8 2 Weeks, Evans and Trevino; Wilson, Seibert and Rollins. MIDGETS PONT. LUNSFORD...000 5061 1—7 6 2 ADRIAN CUBS........ 311 100 O46 8 3 Jones, Honchell and L a Gid- cumb; Fisher, Green and Webster. PONT. LUNSFORD... .230 003 6—8 10 6 WYAN. SHELL .. O11 010 6 —3 4 3 Jehnson, Morris and Gidcumb; Horn- yak, Kiimowics and Malicki. Pro Cage Loop Will Experiment With TV NEW YORK — National Bas- ketball Association will have a “game of the week’’ on television this season from December through March. NBA president Maurice Podoloff and Tom McMahon, sports direct- or for the Dumont television net- | work, concluded arrangements for the series yesterday. First game will be aired on Dec. 12 pitting the Baltimore “Bullets against the Boston Celtics. Baseball Results (By the Associated Press) AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pet. GB New York.....ccccee. 79 #37 ~«(.68l ss Chheage ...ccccccses 7@ 4646 © ©=6.603 L] Cleveland ...ccccee. 6 = 561 14 Bestem ...cccoceses 4S 5S S48 16 Washington .......- 58. 68) 4822 Philadelphia ....-.- 45 ov 410 sie et, eee 42 «730 365 BB 1G Bt. Loewe ....cce.e: 41 77 «347 «3 TODAY’S GAMES, PITCHERS St. Lewis at Chicago (2), 6 p.m.—Paige (2-8) and Kretlew (1-2) vs Tracks (15-6) and Fermieles (7-4): Cleveland at De- troit, &:30 p.m.—Gareta (14-6) vs Gre- mek (3-6): Washingten at New York, 7:30 p.m.—Schmitz (2-7) ws Miller (2-1); Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30 p.m.—Byrd (10-13) vs MeDermett (12-8). MOND ‘Y’'S RESULTS New York 10-9 Philadelphia Only game« scheduled. WEDNESDAY'S GAMES St. Lewis at Chicago, 1:36 p.m.: Wash- ington at New York, 1 p.m.; Cleveland at Detroit, 2 p.m.; Philadelphia at Besten, 1 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE w iwc “Pet. GB eodevcces ™ 37 678 nee Milwaukee ......-.. 71 4647 «602 BIg Bt. Leeds ..cageccees 62 «652 (O44 516 Philadelphia ,.....- 63 53 BSS 1516 New York......00::: 57 S57 0G mHtG Cineimnati .......-. 53 65448 BHT Chieage ........65.. 440 670 BRE OBBYG Pittsburgh ......... 330hC«kS tia TODAY'S GAMES, PITCHERS New York at Breoklyn. 7 p.m.—Worth- ingten (2-4) vs Lees (12-5): Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 7 o.m.—Lapalme (6-13) vs Ridzik (7-5): Milwaukee and Cincin- nati. 8&8 p.m.—Serkent (11-5) er An- tonelli (9-8) vs Nuxhall (6-8) or Bacsewski (7-2); Chieage at St. Leuis, 8 p.m.—Hacker (7-15) vs Staley (14-6). MONDAY’S RESULTS Breoklyn 5 Pittsburgh 2 _— Po ad York 2-6 games se L WEDNESDAY’S GAMES New York st pen ig 12:38 p.m.; Mil- waukee at Cincinnati, 2 p.m.; Chicage at St. Louis, 8 p.m.; Pittsburgh st Phila- delphia, 7 p.m. Golfing Buddy of Middlecoff Edges Favorite However, Harvie Ward Is Still Rated Best Bet at Blythefield By JOE FALLS GRAND RAPIDS ™ — Some- times it pays to watch. That’s what Hillman Robbins Jr., of Mem- phis, Tenn., did and today he carried a one-stroke lead into the second qualifying round of the Western Amateur Golf Champion- ship. Robbins was a golfing buddy of Dr. Cary Middlecoff when both were back in Memphis. A student at Memphis State college, he close- ly studied the good doctor’s form. He learned fast. The slender, 21-year-old Rob- bins shot a 68 yesterday to edge favorite Harvie Ward Jr. of At- lanta, Ga., by one stroke to take the first round lead. A pair of fantastic chip shots did it for Robbins, He dropped a 90-foot chip on the sixth hole for an eagle 3 and then, on the 18th, holed a 50-footer for a birdie three. Add three other birds to this and you have his four-under-par round of 33-35—68. Oddly enough, he could have had a better score. He missed seven putts of eight feet and under. Ward, winner of the British Amateur last year, was less sensa- tional but still plenty good. He toured the 37-35—72 Blythefield Country Club course in 35-34—69 and still looks like the one to beat for medal honors. Only three other players were able to beat par—Tom Draper of Birmingham, Mich., Lloyd Martz, Detroit, and John Barton, Davenport, Iowa, each with 1- under 71s. Second qualifying round was on tap for today with the ‘low 64 scorers advancing to match play through Sunday, when the cham- pion will be crowned. Reggie Myles Jr. of Lansing, winner of the State Amateur title at Charlevoix recently, shot a par 35-37—72. Myles, hitting his irons brilliantly, was 2 under at the turn but faded on the last few holes just when he had a chance to move up with the leaders. At any rate, he was one of three golfers to match par. Cobb Selects an All-Time, All-Star Club By RUSS NEWLAND SAN FRANCISCO (#)—Ty Cobb was one of the greatest players in baseball history. Many experts contend he had no equal. The old Detroit star studied the movement and field habits of the opposing players. He knew both the weaknesses and the strong points of those on the other side. Cobbs all-time, all-star club, therefore, must command atten- tion. He was on his way to his home in Glenbrook, Nev., when we tagged him. This is his team: P—Walter Johnson, Washington. P—Christy Mathewson,’ Giants. P—Grever Alexander, Chicage Cubs. P—Ed Walsh, White Sex P—Eddie Piank, Phil. Athletics. (LH). P—Lefty Greve, Athletics. (LH). C—Mickey Cochrane, Athletics. C—BIill Dickey, Yankees. lb—George Sisler, Browns. 2b—Eddie Collins, Athietics-White Sex. 8S—Hoenus Wagner, Pirates. 3b—Hareld “Pie” Traynor, Piratés. LF—Jee Jackson, White Sex. , Indians. Chadwick Tries Again DOVER, England \ — Weath- er permitting, Florence’ Chad- wick, two-time conqueror. of the English Channel, will attempt a round-trip channel swim today. A 14-mile-an-hour wind forced the San Diego, Calif., secretary to call off a scheduled try yes- terday. Park Key to Deal LOS ANGELES (#)—Bill Veeck ie i i i Og ake Last spring Veeck made an un- successful attempt to move the Browns to Baltimore when other American League owners turned down his bid. Later the National Veeck Offers to Take Browns to Los Angeles League approved transfer of the Boston Braves franchise to Mil- waukee. Veeck returned to Los Angeles Monday for further discussions of the matter but could not be reached for comment. In Chicago, Jimmy Gallagher, busipess manager of the Cubs, con- firmed receipt of,a letter from a Los Angeles civic representative iri whether' Los Angeles Wrigley Field could be purchased in order to make Veeck’s proposi- tion workable. Gallagher said he didn’t know what Wrigley’s reply would be. The owmer was reported out of town. Veeck apparently plans to go from here to San Francisco which also has been mentioned as a pos- sible major league site. Art Wall Wins Pennsylvanian Beats Middlecoff Two Strokes in Playoff FORT WAYNE, Ind. ® — Art Wall Jr. of Pocono Manor, Pa., was never behind as he defeated Cary Middlecoff of Memphis by two strokes in a playoff for the Fort Wayne Open Golf title Mon- day. His $2,400 check was the first winner's prize he had pocketed in two years on the tournament cir- cuit. Middlecoff took $1,800. Wall’s 70. and Middlecoff’s 72 were anticlimactic. They shot the fourth round Sunday in 65s, and Middlecoff set a record for the Elks Country Club with a 62 Friday. Wall went ahead with a birdie on the third hole, made it two strokes as Middlecoff went over par on the fifth, and went three ahead with a birdie on the sixth. Middlecoff went over par on the seventh again to fall four strokes back but regained that one with a again with a birdie on the 130- yard 12th, dropping a wedge shot 10 inches from the hole. He slipped over par on the 13th and 14th to cut his lead to two strokes, but he held that the rest of the way. Trapshooting Title Is at Stake Today VANDALIA WwW — Trapshooting’s most coveted title, the Amateur Clay Target Championship of Amer ica, was at stake today as the 4th Grand American rolled into its second day. The shooters aim at 200 targets at 16 yards. A perfect score has been necessary to win it the last six years. Rudy Etchen of Ketch- um, Ida., last year’s champion, will not defend his title. Experts have a good chance to win because the entire field, ex- pected to be around 1,000, - fires from the 16 yard mark. In the handicap events still to come, top flighters are handicapped back as far as 25 yards which usually means the up front novices win. Julian Petty of Stuttgart, Ark., scored 95 of 100 to become men’s doubles champion of champions yesterday. Seixas Injury May Delay ‘Showdown BROOKLINE, Mass. ® — Aus- tralia’s 18-year-old stars Lewis Hoad and Ken Rosewall led the way into today’s second ro’ of the National Doubles tennis cham- pionships, but whether the UV. S. Davis Cup pair of Vic Seixas and Tonny Trabert would play was uncertain. Seixas, the Philadelphian who holds the imbledon singles crown, injured his right knee when he fell Sunday in the final of the Newport tournament. The tennis world is looking for a showdown between the Hoad- Rosewall combination and the American stars as a possible pre- view of next December’s Davis Cup challenge round play. Ft. Wayne Open| Musial Gains on NL Batting Leader Irvin Couple of Good Days Will Put Stan Within Striking Distance NEW YORK — “The patient is recovering and gaining rapidly.”’ That bulletin might well be is- sued today on ‘the condition of Stan Musial’s hitting as the St. Louis Cardinals’ outfielder strives for his 7th National League batting championship. Musial currently is batting .316, 9th highest in the senior circuit. But a couple of good days will put him within striking distance * of Monte Irvin, the NL’s pace- setter. | Irvin, New York Giants’ outfield- er, has been on the shelf with an) injured ankle since Aug. 9, and| has held on to his No. 1 spot with} a .339 average. Carl Furillo of the| Brooklyn Dodgers is 2nd with .333) followed by Cincinnati's Ted Klu-! szewski at .321. | In the American League, Mickey | Vernon of the Washington Senators | is leading with a .331 mark. Min-| nie Minoso of the Chicago White Sox has zoomed into the runner-up position only two points back. Eddie Mathews of the Milwaukee Braves tops the National League in home runs with 37 and Brook- lyn’s Roy Campanella has the most runs batted in, 111. Al Rosen of the Cleveland In- dians and Gus Zernial of the Phil- most tallies, 101. adelphia Athletics share the Amer- | ican League home run lead with | 29 apiece. Rosen has driven in the | players register, double rounds will Rookie, Veteran Out to Extend Hitting Streaks Kuenn, Souchock Boast 11-Game Strings; Steve Faces Tribe DETROIT w — Rookie Harvey Kuenn and veteran Steve Souchock will be out to extend almost identi- cal hitting sprees when they and the rest of the Detroit Tigers face Cleveland’s Indians tonight. Both have hit safely in the last 11 games and hope to make it 12 in a row off the offerings of In- dian righhander Mike Garcia. Aug. 6, when Bill Miller and Allie Reynolds of the New York Yankees beat the Tigers, was the last day that either the young shortstop or the seasoned out- fielder went hitless. Since then, both Kuenn and Sou- chock have picked up 16 hits in 43 times at bat. ; Souchock’s batting average has improved far more during the hit- ting streak, because he has far less times at bat. Steve moved up from .286 to .307, tops for the De- troit club. Kuenn, who was an even .300 when he started his streak, now stands at .306. Steve Gromek, the ex-Indian who set Cleveland down with four hits and won 42 July 2, the last time he faced his former teammates, was manager Fred Hutchinson’s choice for pitching duties. He will go after win No. 3 against six defeats. Garcia has a 14-6 record. * Tigers, now six games behind. « Philadelphia's sixth-place Athletics, : will be aiming to pick up some ground during the short home stand. Cleveland, far behind in the pen- nant chase but with eyes on the second-place spot occupied by Chi- cago, has equal hopes of gaining during the Detroit series. Entry List Hits 159 for Women's Tourney NEW YORK (—The all match- play National Women’s Amateur Golf tournament has drawn 159 entries and the United States Golf Association today prohably was se- cretly hoping that not more than 128 show up. : There were no sectional quali- fying rounds this year and there won't be when the tournament gets under way at West Barrington, R I., next week. If more than 128 be required on two days. By JOE REICHLER PHILADELPHIA (#) — What makes Robin Roberts, Philadel- phia’s 4time 20-game winner, so great? Roberts’ pitching equipment and delivery have been the topic of lively debate ever since he came \ % " 4% $ , \ ; 4 Os AP Wirephoto ROBIN ROBERTS Hall of Fame Selectors Should Get Old-Timers In Before Votes for Modern Players End Al By GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK — Baseball's Hall of Fame i: facing something of a snarl or tangle. It has a considerable amount of unfinished business from the past to look It has plenty of business just ahead to take after. care of. s s s There are still the important cases of Bill Dickey, a real Hall of Famer, Bill Terry, Chief Bender and Dickey has been rated neck-and-neck as a catcher with Mickey Cochrane. Cochrane is safely inside the sacred walls. several others to consider. Terry has had a big place in baseball. The trouble is that Bill was rough with so many baseball writers he is now paying the pricé, although he is quite affable today. Joe DiMaggio is another who will probably come along for the next vote. But the main trouble lies in the future. Among those who must soon come in for consideration are Stan Musial, Ted Williams, Bob Feller, Country Slaughter, Johnny Mize, Phil Rizzuto and Allie Reynolds. Those There are also be Bender. He be- liams, Slaughter Chance in the more distant future include Robin Roberts, Roy Campanella and Yogi Berra. It will be tougher for the old-timers to make the grade in the coming year with people like Di Maggio, Musial and Williams coming along von. complaints that Joe McCarthy and Bill Klem are on the outside looking in. Something should be done about exceptional cases of this type. You don’t want to overcrowd the Hall, but you don’t want to leave any of the honestly deserving out. s s s I knew Bender when he was a great pitcher. Con- nie Mack told me, in those far-off dys, if he had to name one pitcher to win a $1,000 game it would The Chippewa Chief was a magnificent competitor, besides being equipped with all the needed attributes of brilliant pitching. His trouble? He pitched too long ago. Few remember him. But he belongs. s Hall of Fame selectors had better concentrate on a few old-timers such as Bender, Dickey and Terry, and clean the slate of the past before facing a future packed with complications—Di Maggio, Musial, Wil- and Feller and others. Control, Stamina Roberts’ Biggest Pitching Assets to the Phillies in the summer of 1948. There is nothing extraordinary in Roberts’ pitching or re- pertoire to account for his suc- cess. Roberts’ fast ball is alive but not as blazing as that of his team- mate Curt Simmons. Other pitch- ers have better curve balls and he admits his changeup could stand improvement. Yet he wins and wins and wins. Why? Some rival managers and players attribute his scoring vic- tory record to his competitive fire, his willingness to work, his poise, his gameness. Roberts is a winner for all of these rea- sons but his greatest assets are uncanny control, stamina and ability to get t.e maximum use of each of his pitches. If he can continue at his pres- ent pace, Roberts will go down in history as one of the most dur- able pitchers of all time. Last year he pitched 330 innings, the most in the league since Burleigh Grimes pitched 331 in 1938. When the current season two-thirds gone, Roberts has worked 258 in- nings and has an outside chance of reaching the 400-inning mark. Only four pitchers in modern times have pitched 400 innings or more in a_ single season. Ed Walsh, the record holder, hurled 464 in 1908 and 419 in 1907 for the Chicago White Sox. In one respect, Roberts’ endur- ance is the most amazing of them all in this age of lively ball, he has started 30 games and has completed 27 of them, not one of his 20 triumphs this season or his 28 last year came in a relief role. It's Time Out! the woods around this course that they’ve all become very attached te him!’’ ee ee A TWENTY THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 Babe Voted Place in Texas Hall of Fame Kazoo Netters Win Junior Davis Test KALAMAZOO @®— For the third straight year, Kalamazoo’s tennis squad reigns as champion of the Junior Davis Cup tournament staged by the Western Lawn Ten- nis Association, Kalamazoo compiled 34 points in | the week end competition to beat out eight other Midwestern squads in the round-robin tourney. | But while edged out in the team } competition, Chicago's delegation boasted both the singles and doub- les winners. Earl Schulze took the singles i crown, and he and Bob Ezerwon- } sky joined forces to win in doubles. . Hy mn F IP oe eee fe E g : 2 q ig E : : g : é iS Drobac Rates High Michigan State’s Stan Drobac, } TWENTY YEARS AGO—Frank _ Shields defeated Ellsworth Vines t in Newport tennis semi-finals, 6-2, the Mid-West’s best tennis player ‘ 6-4, 64, since Tony Trabert. | For Lease by SOCONY VACUUM OIL, Inc. Large volume 4-bay Mobilgas station in Birmingham. Excellent location with fa- cilities for washing, tune-up, and repairs. Rent is reasonable and you buy inventory only. For further information call MR. DART Pontiac FE 2-0103 AFTER 5 P.M.—FE 2-3433 COLLISION SERVICE EAST TOWN CALLISION Bear Equipment and Wheel Balancing Fram. and-Axile Straightening 35 Elizabeth St. Ph. FE 4-594) 7 MID-SEASON CHAMPS—Victors in the mid-seasen championships at Chief Pontiac Speedway are shown above. From left are Elmer Ferstle of Clawson, the runnerup to champion Joe Puertas of Pontiac, and at right, Jerry Davis of Pontiac, in third place. Ducat Requests Sent Out for ‘63 PHS Games Pontiac High School football sea- son ticket applications were mailed Monday to all previous purchasers and stadium bond holders, accord- ing to faculty manager Robert F. Beauchamp. Season books will cover four home games — Hamtramck on Sept. 25, Lansing Sexton on Oct. 2, Saginaw Arthur Hil on Oct. 23 and Flint Northern on Nov. 6. Wisner’s 50-yard line section has been set aside for geason ticket purchasers. Applications may be returned to Beauchamp at the high school between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. this week and next, and also be- tween 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. next week. Tickets will go on sale for the general public on Sept. 1. Shannon Talks to JCC Tommy Shannon, Orchard Lake Country Club pro and president of the Michigan section of the Pro- fessional Golfers’ Association, will speak to Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce members at their final golf meeting of the season Wednesday at Sylvan Glen Golf Club. | Golf will start at 1:30 p. m., with the dinner meeting at 7:30 p. m. Indians Aim at 10-Game Marks DETROIT w—Fourteen games out of first and facing an uphill battle to regain second, Cleveland Indians may yet become the first club in 53 years of American League play to have three 20- victory winners three straight seas- ons Manager Al Lopes says he will give Bob Lemon, Mike Garcia and Early Wynn every oppor- tunity to win the honor two years running. “If any one of them is a@ game or two short of 20 when the season is about over, I'll give ’em a chance to go for it,” Lopez said. Lemon, shooting for his fifth 20- victory season in the last six cam- paigns, has the best chance of making it. His record is 16-12. Each of the trio will have about nine starts in the tribe’s remain- ing 40 games, and Wynn needs seven victories while Garcia re- quires six. Only one other American League team has had three 20-game win- ners two years in a row—Boston Red Sox of 1903-04. The great Cy Young had 28 and 26; Bill Dineen 21 and 23, and Tom Hughes won 21 in 1903 and Jesse Tannehill 21 in 1904 to complete the trios. FIVE YEARS AGO—Rex Bar- ney pitched a one-hitter as_ the Dodgers defeated the Philies, 1-0. “For your Whosis S ays: . next truck ‘ remember Chevrolet Company.. Their trucks fit your needs and your wallet and are backed by service day and night.’ Jack Habel wl ‘fa, | qe « AT = Whosis and he’s sort of a NAME FOR WHOSIS: eoeee34sonsreeeeeeeeeeee ee y WHOSIS CONTEST This little fellow has no name. We call him trade mark with us. Name him and you may win our Whosis contest. Mail your entry to us on Mill Street before August 31, attention Miss Wagner. gested are Jake McChevy and Bill Buyrite. ) YOUR OWN NAME, ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER: PRIZES: FIRST: $20 . SECOND: $15 THIRD: $10 FOURTH: $5 (Names already sug- 22-34 MILL STREET, FOOT OF EAST LAWRENCE PHONE FE 5-416] iia \ALs aja “TESA Lf. a bod 3 J TRUCKS AND USED CARS SOUTH SAGINAW, CORNER COTTAGE PHONE FE 4-4546 Jack Habel Chevrolet aay Company PcHevaoue | TRUCK and USED CAR CENTER OF OAKLAND COUNTY Barred From By TOM BRANAGAN CHICAGO —With the name of mighty Notre Dame added to its list, the National Col- legiate Athletic Association turned to other investigations today. A spokesman said five more schools are involved in charges of violating the NCAA's athletic code but that investigations are in- complete. The schools were not named. s » s Notre Dame—along with Michi- gan State and Arizona State—was reprimanded by the NCAA's 1T- man council, a policy-making group, at the close of its meeting yes s > * Michigan State already had been put on probation by the Big Ten conference because of the ac- tivities of an off-campus ‘‘founda- tion’’ which allegedly aided ath- letes. The council said it supported this action. All three schools were cited for permitting campus tryouts of pros- pective athfetes. Neither Notre Dame nor Michigan State received any specific punishment but Ari- zona State, at Tempe, was put on two years’ probation. In addition to permitting tryouts, MSC, Irish Reprimanded; NCAA Eyes 5 Others Arizona State Athletes Are Title Efforts the Arizona‘ school was charged with permitting pay to athletes. As a further punishment, all its athletes were ruled ineligible for NCAA championship events for the 1953-54 school year. s s s Notre Dame and Arizona State admitted doing wrong but grum- bled about the severity of the NCAA's action. Michigan State, which protested loudly after the Big Ten’s probation was announced reacted mildly to the NCAA pro- nouncement. Said Ralph Young, athletic director: s . s “We're hoping that the Big Ten probation will be lifted soon. We are observing all Big Ten and NCAA rules in every way, shape and manner.” The Rev. und P. Joyce, CSC, executive vice president of Notre Dame, said Irish coaches had used a ‘‘modified type of try- out.”” He said the university stop- ped the practice when it learned of it last January and invoked “disciplinary measures” against the coaches. Arizona State's president, Dr. Grady Gammage, said, ‘‘We know there were infractions ... Our house has been put in order.” Live Lampreys to Be Displayed at Sports Show A large display of live lam- preys, the parasites that have been infesting Mchigan waters, will be a part of the vast free Sportsman's Show at the Michigan State Fair, Sept. 4 through 13. Another new feature will be a display by the Michigan Depart- ment of Conservation illustrating game and deer conservation, farm planting and game habitat. Movies of large and small game, fishing and outdoor life will be shown at regular intervals. Public will be invited to use an 80 foot casting area and a large archery range free of charge. Equipment will be supplied or yisi- tors may take their own. , There will be nightly demonstra- tions by nationally known experts of casting, archery, use of firearms and other sports equipment. There will also be nightly programs of dog training and expert trainers | will be available for free question- ing. Bay City Nine Out | FORT WAYNE, Ind. (®)—Bay | City’s entry in the Midwest Re- | gional Little League Baseball tour- | nament was out of the running to- |day as Columbus, Neb., and Joliet, Ill., went into the finals. The Michigan squad bowed to Joliet 41 in a semi-final test yes- terday. Dan McCarthy spaced out seven hits for the Bay City team, and outfielder Erwin Mann made three circus catches to cut off extra | base hits. Officials See Best Year at Hazel Park DETROIT (—The Hazel Park race track celebrated its 5th an- niversary yesterday with officials predicting that this will be the track's greatest year. Track officials said that attend- ance and mutuel handle for the first nine days of the current meet- ing showed an increase over last year at this time. In 1952 Hazel Park broke all records in both departments. Williams Impressed BOSTON W® — After watching Tommy Umphlett and Jimmy Per- | Sall perform in the outfield for | several days, Ted Williams joking- ly remarked that maybe he should | shift from left field to center. “The way Piersall and Umph- lett roam around the outfield, I could plant myself. in the middle and just stand there while they gobble up everything from the foul lines to center,’’ declared the lanky slugger. AIMS TO WIN—Eberhard Althanns, 13, of Stuttg ae oS ae art, Germany, winner of Wurttenberg rifle title with score of 144 out of possible 150, has de- feated two champions in competition. Golf Clinic: Here’s How By SAM SNEAD The player illustrated is demon- strating pretty good form in most respects except for one serious er- ror. I have had the artist illustrate this with dotted lines. Can you spot what it is? It’s that old bugaboo of about 99% of all fair-to-middlin’ golfers he’s uncocking his wrists too early on the downswing. The wrists must remain fully cocked until the hands get down to about hip level. If they don’t, the “oomph” is all gone from the swing before the clubhead gets any- where near the ball. If the wrists remain properly cocked, then the club at this point of the downswing is still back over the right shoulder, as indicated by the dotted line, instead of per- pendicular as shown by the solid line. Other than this one flaw (which creates slices and robs the stroke of power), the form shown is good. I like the straight left arm and the way the player’s hip turn and body pivot are leading the shoulder and arm action. State Officials Silent on NCAA Committee Slap Young Is Hoping Big 10 Probation Will Soon Be Lifted . EAST LANSING (UP) — Dean Lloyd C. Emmons, chairman of the Michigan State college board of athletic control, said he and other members of the board had ‘no comment”’ on the slap on the wrist dealt the college by the NCAA. Emmons said he felt everything had been said after the Big Ten action against MSC last February, “Our comment on the Big Ten action still stands for the action ot the NCAA,’’ Emmons said. “We feel there is no sense in saying anything now. The NCAA told us to right the wrongs al- legedly done by the Spartan foundation, so we will clean up as best we can.” Ralph Young, MSC athletic direc- tor, said the NCAA action was ‘“‘a | reiteration of the probation placed |on us by the Big Ten.” | “We're hoping the Big Ten pro- bation will be lifted soon,’’ he said. “We are observing all Big Ten and NCAA rules in every way, shape and manner.” Dr. John A. Hannah, president — of the college who is on-.leave to serve as assistant secretary of de- fense in charge of manpower, was unaware of the NCAA action when he left Washington Monday for a tour of Korea. Has Manifold Duties By GAYLE TALBOT GREENWOOD LAKE, N. Y. ®— One of the unsung heroes of the fight industry is the official camp manager and public relations ex- pert provided by the promoters whenever a champion or challen- ger goes deep into the woods to cogitate and tone up his muscles for an impending brawl. * * * Among the manifold duties of You'll like the NEW, LARGER Sizes Te give you even better heeting satisfaction ell sizes of the fomevs WHITE OAK Smokeless coel are now larger — KING SIZE! NUT is mine-sized for furnece use. STOVE is now sized fer feol-preef wse for ALL hend firing. You'll tke this bigger better KING SIZE WHITE OAK—at the same cost. Order Yours Today ~~ ABOUT A BUSHEL 140 WN. Cass Ave. Wi oF ASH PE ° Heaote,. © Fir, ELEY. © Hot yw »* Ways, r Boul, rs - Summer Prices in August! SIBLEY GOAL SUPPLY CO. FE 5-8163 this minion of the vested interests is that of smoothing relations be- tween the brooding gladiator and members of the visiting press and generally keeping everybody hap- py. Also, at least in the early stages, he must compose those daily dispatches telling how his man is polishing his left hook and giving his spar mates a hard time. * * * Harry Mendel, one of the most renowned of this hardy breed, is in charge of Roland LaStarza’s es- tablishment here as the boy from the Bronx prepares for his Sept. 24 date with Rocky Marciano. He has done the same chore scores of One of Unsung Heroes of Boxing Game Camp Manager-Public Relations Expert times before, and quite probably is known personally by more per- sons even remotely connected with the fight game than any other man. You always ask Harry what he thinks of his boy's chances. For the first time we can recall, he hedged. “I'm getting to where I don't like to pick ‘em any more,” said the former czar of the six - day bike races. ‘‘Since Joe Louis, the greatest of them all, went down, I realize I’m inclined to grow too fond of a fighter when I’m around him for a while. This is a fine boy here and on his record you've got to give him a chance, but...” Athens Trotter Wins Wolverine’s Feature DETROIT — Linehan Volo, owned by Rosalia Stump of Athens, Mich., won the ninth race, a trot feature, at the Wolverine Harness Raceway last night. Driven by Mel Stump, the 8 year-old gelding returned the best price of the card, paying $29.40. Legion Nines Honored Birmingham American Legion post will honor its two entries in the 18th District American Legion baseball, league, Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills. Players and their fathers and coaches Herb Kelly of Birmingham and Jack Sanders of Bloomfield will attend the party | Wednesday night at Kingsley Inn. Eight Miles Out Track Megr., Special Two lucky spectators will Gen. Adm. $1.20 Res. Seats 1.50 EM 3-236] Plenty ef Seats Sanita Restreems Recrea Facilities Pontiac M-59 Speedway Stock Car Racing, Tues. 8:30 P.M. against regular drivers in a racing car provided by the association and compete for prize money. Full Evening of Racing Thrills and Spills ... with Drivers You See on Detroit TV! RACING EVERY TUES., SAT. & SUNDAY Sponsored by Land-O-Lakes Racing Association on West Huron Lloyd Shuart Feature be given a chance to race FREE PARKING SPECTATORS’ RACE .. . feur lucky spectaters will be chesen te compete with each ether im an authentic race in cars furnished by the Association. + a THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 TWENTY-ONE Yankees and Dodgers Set 100-Victory Goals By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sports Writer Now that the New York Yan- kees and the Brooklyn Dodgers vir- tually have run off and hidden from tne rest of the clubs, they're working on a little intramural com-, peed to win 22 to hit the century petition to hold their interest. bd] 7 s Their new goal is 100 victories each, well within range but still a tory. The Yankees will have to win mark that will keep them hustling. |}21 of their last 38. Yankee teams The Dodgers with 39 games left!in the past have reached 100 or mark—a figure reached by only two other Brooklyn clubs in his- a CHALLENGER’ CLIPS CHAMP—It looks like challenger Billy Peacock, left, of Los Angeles, is|the North American bantamweight title fight at lifting champion Henry ‘‘Pappy’’ Gault, of Spar- tansburg, S. C., off the canvas as he connects with a left to the midsection in 12th and final round of Young Billy Peacock Aims at World's Bantam Title By JACK HAND BROOKLYN (® —Billy Peacock, a 21-year-old lad from Los An- geles, with only 18 pro fights un- der his belt, today was thinking in terms of the world’s bantam- weight crown after winning the “Yorth American championship from Henry (Pappy) Gault of Spartanburg, S. C. First on Peacock's future cal- endar, however, is a return bout with Gault, whom he defeated last night in a 12-round split de- cision at Brooklyn’s Eastern Parkway Arena. The rematch may be setback to mid-October so that Peacock can have his bad tonsils taken out. The new North American cham- pion also wants to even matters with Baby Face Cutie Gutierrez who took away his California ban- tam crown last month. “We should be ready for Jimmy Carruthers, the world titleholder, League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Vernon, Washington, .331; Minose, Chicago, .329; Resen, Cleveland, 320; Mantle and Bauer, New York, .300. RUNS—Minose, Chicage, 87; Mantle, New York, 83; Vernon, Washingien, 78; Yost, Washington, 76; Resen, Cleve- land, 74. RUNS BATTED IN—Rosen, Cféveland, 101; Minese, Chicage, 36; BOONE, DE- TROIT and Berra, New York, 8&3; Vernon, Washington, 80. HITS—KUENN, DETROIT and Vernon, Washington, 154; Philley, Philadelphia, 145; Rosen, Cleveland, 140; Minose, Chicago, 138. DOUBLES—Vernon, Kell, Boston, 32; Jensen, Washington, 29; Goodman and White, Boston, 25. TRIPLES—Rivera, Chicago, 10; Pier- sall, Boston, 8; Fox and Minoso, Chicago, BOONE, DETROIT, McDougald, New York, Philiey, Philadelphia and Vernon, Washington, 7. HOME RUNS—Rosen, Cleveland and Zernial, Philadelphia, 29; Berra, New York, 21; BOONE, DETROIT 19; Ger- mert, Boston and by, Cleveland, 18. STOLEN BASES—Rivera, Chicage, 19; Minese, Chicage, 18; Jensen, Washing- ten, 14; Philley, Philadelphia, 11; Busby, Washington, 10. . PITCHING—Lopat, New York, 12-2, .857; Ford, New York, 15-4, .789; Brown, Boston, 11-4, .733; Trucks, Chicago, 15-6, -714; Shea, Washington, 10-4, .714. STRIKEOUTS—Pierce, Chicago, 142; Trucks, Chicage, 113; Parnell, Boston, GRAY, DETROIT and Wynn, Cleve- land, 98. NATIONAL LEAGUE Washington, 34; ) | BATTING — Irvin. New York, .239; Furille, Brooklyn, .333; Kluszewski, Cin- einnati, .331; Schoendienst, St. Lewis, 330; Campanella, Brooklyn, .323. RUNS—Snider, Brooklyn and Dark, New York, 92; Gilliam, Brooklyn, 90; Masial, St. Louls, 89; Robinson, Broek- lyn, 87. RUNS BATTED IN — Campsaneils, Brooklyn, lll; Mathews, Milwaukee, 105; Hedges, Brooklyn, 101; Kluszewski, Cin- cinnati, 93; Irvin, New York and Ennis, Philadelphia, 91. HITS — Ashburn, Philadelphia, 151; Leckman, New York, 149; Kiuszewski, Cincinnati, 148; Schoendienst, St. Louis, 143; Dark, New York, 140. DOUBLES — Masial, St. and Bell, Cincinnati, 29; Breoklyn and Dark, New York, 27. TRIPLES—Fondy, Chicago and Bruten, Milwaskee, 10; Gilliam, Breeklyn, 9%; Thempsen, New Yerk, Ashburn, Phila- detphia, Bernier and O'Connell, Pitts- burgh and Hemas, St. Lewis, 7. HOME RUNS—Mathews, Milwaukee, 37; Kluszewski, Cincinnati, 36; Campanella, Brooklyn, 32; Snider, Brooklyn and Kiner, ee 28. STOLEN SES—Bruten, Milwaukee, 23; Brooklyn, 16; Gilliam and Robinson, Brooklyn, 4; Snider, Breok- lya, 13. ¢ PITCHING—Burdette, Milwaukee, 11-2, 346; Ree, Brooklyn, 8-2, .800; ef Py Milwaukee, 16-5, .762; Haddix, St. Louis, 15-5, .750; Erskine, Brooklyn, 14-5, .737. STRIKEOUTS—Roberts, Philadelphia, 146; Erskine, Breeklyn, 137; Mizell, St. Louis, 114; Haddix, St. Louis, 106; Sim- mons, Philadephia, 103. We Rent Sanders TRAVIS HARDWARE 456 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-8724 Leul-, 38; | Snider, Brooklyn, $1; Basmhoitz, Chicage | Robinson, | Brooklyn’s Eastern Parkway Arena Monday night. Peacock, a 20-year-old former amateur, took the title by a split decision. | AP Wirephete by the end of the year,”’ said Joe Stanley, Peacock’s manager. Carruthers is the undisputed world’s champion in the 118-pound class. National Boxing Associa- tion set up the North American championship to stimulate interest in the divisién, once one of the busiest classes. Gault won the| crown from Fernand Gagnon at} Quebec Oct. 27, 1952. ‘Il thought-I won. He is a strong, experienced fellow,’’ Peacock said. Gault thought he had pulled the fight out of the fire with a late rally. “It was a tough close fight, I thought I won it in the last three | American League team to be_elimi- 'kees won the first part of a twi- rounds,”’ he said. Browns Marked Out of AL's Title Race ST. LOUIS wW-—It was only a matter of time, but the St. Louis Browns no longer have a chance of winning the American League pennant. The Brownies became the first nated from the flag chase yester- day when the league-leading Yan- night twin bill against the Phila- delphia A's. Victory gave the Yankees 78 triumphs for the year. Browns only have won 41 and a clean sweep of all of their remaining 36 tilts would give them only 77 wins, os a > A Pri © Remove front wheels and inspect lining. © Inspect, clean and repack front wheel bearings. FRONT END ALIGNMENT LSI aaIa aa as 2 Sa, ys 146 West Huron St. hanced GL VA aA Cama Adjustment HERE’S WHAT WE DO: TERMS CAN BE ARRANCED FOR ALL WORK FIRESTONE STORE VAF*ABssAsAethsthtittttit = wr od 0 © Inspect brake drums. Check and add brake fluid if needed. ® Adjust brake shoes to secure full contact with drums. © Caretully test brakes. $1.98 FEderal 2-9251 I FPAAALALL A PRICES SLASHED on New and Rebuilt MOTOR INSTALLED IN ONE DAY | BUICK DeSoto and EXCHANGE CHRYSLER 1169 on SuEUROLET | rurwouta | FORD. $99 $129 $109 HUDSON EXCHANGE °149 DODGE EXCHANGE °139 Oldsmobile and Pontiac EXCHANGE $139, 401 South Saginaw St. ®©NO DOWN PAYMENT . ® NEW CAR GUARANTEE Free Towing—No Block Deposit Motor Exchange Co. Phone FE 3-7432 cated a833 ie Feed HE Hi =" i ie In the only other activity the New York Giants and the Phila- delphia Phillies split a pair in the privacy of the spacious Polo Grounds. Only 2,885 cash custom- ' Jackie Robinson and running the count to 3 and 1'‘oh Hodges. The big first baseman then found the left field stands with his 26th home run, = s s Yogi Berra hit his 2ist home run in the Yankees’ first-game romp. Whitey Ford picked up his 15th victory, tops on the New York mound staff, but he had to have help from Tom Gorman in the seventh. In the second game the Yankees opened with five runs, more than enough for Bob Kuzava, who scattered 11 hits effectively enough to score a shutout. Pierce, Spahn Leading in ERA NEW YORK w@®— Billy (the Kid) Pierce, who has emerged as a top- flight American League pitcher this year, and Warren Spahn, one of the National's best since 1947, lead their respective circuits in earned run averages today. Pierce, slender Chicago White Sox southpaw, has given up only 40 earned runs in 201 innings for a 2.19 mark. He huried three straight shutouts in his most re- cent starts and hasn’t been scored on in 34-2-3 innings. Billy has won 16 games, his major league high, and lost seven. Spahn, a 20-game winner in four of his seven big league campaigns, has permitted 45 earned runs in 183 frames for a 2.21 average. The 32-year-old Milwaukee lefthander has a 16-5 record this year. Virgil Trucks, another White Sox pitching ace, is runner-up to Pierce in the American with a 2.54 ERA. Robin Roberts, major leagues’ only 20 game winner, is second in the National with 2.55. Upset, Near-Miss Highlight Township Softball Playoffs A pair of underdog teams pro- vided surprises Monday night as the Waterford Township Softball league playoffs got started in Drayton Plains. Gidley Electric, the next-to-last place team, upset Township Mer- chants, 10-7, to oust them from the playoffs? and cellar-dwelling Legionnaires gave Richardson Dairy a scare, taking the Dairy- men eight innings before bowing, 7-5. Dick Shafto had four singies in Gidley’s victory. In the night- cap, Lester Loper smashed a grand-slam homer in the fifth inning to give the Legion club a 5-3 lead. Richardsons tied the score in the seventh and pushed across two runs in the eighth to save the game. Gidley and Richardson's meet at 8:30 p. m. tonight with the winner advancing to next week’s two- game knockout play with Drayton Drug, Dixie Recreation and Dick! & Wes Sports. TWP. MERCHANTS ..410 0270 @— 712 2 GIDLEY ELECTRIC. .112 501 x—10 11 2 Weber, Myers and Feneley; Jenks, Shafte and Frasier. RICHARDSON DAIRY 001 002 22—7 8 3 LEGIONNAIRES ....... 000 050 00-5 5 7 Seery and Richardsen; Bunten and Bliss. Oscoda Paddlers Win Festival Canoe Race CHEBOYGAN WW — Ralph Saw- yer and Eugene Roy of Oscoda are winners of the 35-mile Wol- verine Trout Festival Canoe race on the Sturgeon river. In beating out 13 other boats in the Sunday competition, they covered the course in three hours, one minute and 24 seconds. That was five sec- onds less than the old record set last year by Jay Stephan of Gray- ling and Ted Engle of Gaylord. MONDAY’'S STARS (By the Associated Press) BATTING—Duke Snider, Breeklyn Dedgers, collected three of Brooklyn's seven hits in the Dodgers’ 5-2, 11 inning vietery ever . Pittsburgh, including a ninth-inning hemer that tied the score. PITCHING—Beb Kuzava, New York Yankees, gave up 11 hits but scattered saree A A i I lleas ever Philadelphia le Arcaro Might Ride Dancer. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., ® —Native Dancer, Alfred G. Vander- bilt’s grey comet, will go postward in the $100,000-added American Derby at Washington Park Sat- urday with a strange jockey in his saddle. But just who the rider will be was a question no one could answer today. It was known around the barns here that Vanderbilt and his trainer, Bill Winfrey, would like to get Eddie Arcaro to handle the Dancer when he goes after his 18th victory in 19 starts. But Arcaro is Jamie K.’s regu- lar jockey and Jim Norris’ colt is slated to take another try at beating the Dancer. Jamie K. ran a poor race in Chicago Monday, finishing fourth in the feature, and there was talk that Norris might decide to withdraw him from the American. If Jamie K. doesn't start, Van- derbilt’s troubles will be over since Arcaro will have no mount in the race and would be available. Eric Guerin, who has ridden the Dancer in every race of his career, drew a 10-day suspension at Sara- toga for a foul last Saturday. ‘HARD TOP: F Every Wednesday Night " " CHIEF PONTIAC SPEEDWAY = : Time Trials—7 00 First Roce_—8:30 : =’ PARK CHILDREN ADULT ADM. §& = FREE FREE $1.20 . ™ PTT TTT TTT Hi, Friends! Come in for a chat soon. I'm back on the job now, after duty in Korea. I'm eager to see all my friends again! Vic Souty SOUCY'S SERVICE 1211 North Perry St. FE 3-9557 G.C.W. Bac Jons! F-100 Series 6'A-ft. Pickup. Also 8-ft. Panel. 6'‘4-ft. Stoke. 4800 Ibs. G.V.W. 110-in. wheelbase. w! Choose New trans- missions, power, frames, springs! New Drwerized Cabs cut driver fatigue—most com- fortable on‘ any trucks! Driver- ized Deluxe Cab (on models Come in and see the new Ford Economy Trucks today! EARL R. MILLIMAN 147 South Saginaw St. ‘ 5.350 Series 9-ft. Express 7,100 ibs. G.V.W. 130-in. wheelbase. Abo 9-42. Stakes. 9,500 ibs. max. G.V.W. F-250 Series 7'4-ft. Stake. Also 8-ft. Express. 6900 Ibs. G.V.W. 118-in. wheelbase. r F-750 Series BIG JOB with Tank Body 19,500 Ibs. G.V.W,, 38,000 Ibs. G.C_W. P-350 Series Porce!l Delivery Chossi- Windshield front end for 7- to 11%4-ft. bodies G.V.W. 7800 ibs. F-608 Series Tractor with Vou broiler 36,000 ibs. GV. vastly expanded line of Ford L£conomy Trucks Over 190 models! ta ngenen | BEES ase a caige - | ~ 28,000 Ibs. G.CW: F700 Series BIG JOB with Dump Body ay 346-passenger bodies. With V-8 or Sax. C800 Series BIG JOB G.V.W. 23,000 ibs, G.CW. 48,000 Ibs. Phone FE 5-4101 Over 30 Years an Authorized Ford Dealer i meet 5 7 i 7 ee ae ee es — S| aS es ll , TWENTY-TWO se THE PONTIAC DAILY PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1953 ‘I Can’t Cry Now’... by Addie McElfresh | *n« she was just trying to throw | a twinkle, “‘You might feed her, Katy, Shaking With Fear, Goes to Dave for Refuge CHAPTER VIII if you did that your position was suspicion away from herself, she had read about murderers who did that. “It does not!” Dave had the tel- too. They say it helps.” He was gone before either of them could retort and a moment later they heard his car faily leap from the garage beside the house. It sounded so like Chris's, that night. Katy closed her eyes. Katy Elmo a of} made known to the enemy and ty got a glimpse poem Katy shrugged off the memory} ter and eased up on the accelerator. | of the two voices raised in friend-| Some Slits lt necessary, Oyster Farms Profit There was no use going nowhere|ly argument through so many ‘ e b Land’ i in such a hurry. Chris had always | pleasant evenings. She had made “Td rather—” y s Dry Spe “You stay here, Katy, My sis- Ee —~ — : i : i E E f e the wrong 7 .|. Dave went to the door, called to} ANNAPOLIS, = people drove themselves too hard able. move, she was vulner-| iis sister, and came back. “I Pinan sng soir through life but he drove himself] She turned into the sleeping side | #houldn't have let you stay out — : eerily i most, | street where Argus lived | there. I should have » .J@ lengthy dry spell. During the} _ was the | with his ioe uae her husband. oo and baal Katy ae same drought, underwater farms} NANCY “] must | Emma Ward might think plenty | 5s concern. “I'm sorry I ran were prospering-was a direct re-| . 7 , ; a baby, Dave. I won't again, I --- AND THIS WHAT'S MY DOG IS ONLY s old girl coming call- ide. Tat ee eS back with sult of the dry spell. OLD PIECE THE FRIENDLY AS LONG .AS not been able to touch | ing at daybreak in robe and slip- = Chairman Artbur H. Brice of the ' ‘ pli ae was at the door, sleep dropping Argus shook his head. He turned Tidewater Fisheries Commission OLD , SLUGGO 2 \ a = : ] , Yo By Ernie Rushmiller -——— “oe as to that. to Mrs. Emma Ward, who came in memory stirred.| Katy curbed the car, started to = ting Nees ” oy xety poe ¥ g gtk 1 ao Re ill eect TO etait pa ea OF GR ON FE Ot a I ly a a, We & rpbeeecye Seok eEee® phate ae ere ce mle cine s E:f idEe Even upstairs she could hear Chris thumping away on the old typewriter they both had used in high school and she drifted off to sleep in one of the creative si- lences that sometimes seemed loud in’ the den. When she wakened it was to hear Chris hurrying downstairs and out the front door; she called to him but he didn’t hear and a moment later his car spun gravel in the driveway. Chris was having one of his bad times with the book, she had guessed, and had gone back to sleep — and then Ted had come to awaken her. Chris was dead. What now? What next? The tempo of the engine of her car seemed to be asking that question. What was in store for her? Someone had cut the phone line and there could be only one rea- son for that. The person who had killed Agnes Jerome wanted to kill Katy, too. order Major to “Stay!” and thought better of it. Major at her side was reas- suring. She touched the bell, heard it jangle discordantly somewhere inside, and waited. And waited. Forever, it seemed. Then Deputy Sheriff Dave Argus was at the door, sleep dropping from him like a cloak at sight of her. . Katy! What happened? Come inside!” She was inside, she ‘and Major, and the* door closed behind them almost before he stopped talking. “Is something wrong? Katy, you’re shaking! Here, let me—sit down, Katy.”’ He led her a step or two to a chair and his hands were gentle on her shoulders as He sat her down. Katy sank into the chair grate- fully. She had not realized how weak with fright she was until Dave touched her. She looked up, to the question in the cloudy gray eyes that could be so gay. “TI—”’ suddenly she didn’t know how to tell him—‘‘someone was there, in the barn.’’ The words came then, pouring over one an- other. ‘I tried to call but the tele- phone was dea®”’ clothes, Em? And keep her here?” Emma looked from her brother to Katy. “Do I say yes?” “He says so,”” Katy nodded. “Yes to both questions, Em,” Dave told her firmly. Then, with SIDE GLANCES ee) LP ae CAPTAIN EASY Leslie Turner | It had been foolish to plunge|* ,, : | headlong out of the house, fool- What!” Dave Argus cried. hardy to leave the only advan- Katy stumbled on, ‘All I could tage she had—shelter, with her| think of was that someone had and Major inside it. cut the wires. It — it sounds The killer was outside. ‘‘So am| 8-silly, doesn’t it?” I outside. Outside and, therefore, It did. Strangely, hearing her vulnerable. rushing words bog down in their She realized she was thinking | own imaginative idiocy, it sounded like Chris and Ted on those oc- | utterly foolish. The mad_ night- casions when they were lost in {mare of a frightened woman. he 4 : memories of practice manewy | Katy bit her lip. “Our new neighbor isn’t very cordial—you’d think she’d ask ‘ . , my Yee > ~~ all vers ... you did this because Dave didn’t believe her, he'd us in to tea one of these lazy summer afternoons!” wf! wy —y waeabinapeer Te Bv Walt Disney| FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS EZ DONALD DUCK | THEY SAY I CAN ’ TAKE HIM ON THE BUS, UNLESS HE'S IN NG By Merrill Blosser FRECKLES! No!No! A PLEASE OONT/ ~~ ee Wee. 7-5 TO > =< JE BOUTS AND HER BUDDIE By Edgar Martin CRAIG LIL OKAY, HES ASKING FOR IT $ te i el ees DIXIE DUGAN OH, YES — [T WAS LOVELY— WRONG! HE COULD HAVE REPAID THEM WITH A YOu SA! HEL-LO—*LOVE’S INN’, OH,YES CALLING —- REMEMBER ??) —— 1 WHERE YOO SPENT REMEMBER I et a 88 Cape, 9983 by MEA Sereten, tne. 7. ML ng. U B-Pen, OF. BOARDING HOUSE GRANDMA by Charles Kuhn WILBUR, I. ’ , — FEEL TERRIBLE! WEATHER AN PALE YOU WIV VB: HE'S Got YOU IN THE WRINGER, HANE mys STWIGSS/ AN OMINOUS Ry HUME ca SEEMS TO GROW ON A PERSON SS Sy ~ SRR, AWA SESE AMSAA LoS} > SS NS SS fA s Y XY * ~ ‘ > > 7 SSN SS ‘ “ SS “FS WS & x C , Xx 4 se TH’ TALKING PARAKEET HAS | |...BUT THEN, HECK, HE'S SUCH BEEN TELLING ME If LOOK A FLATTERER, A FELLER CAN'T GOOD... DEPEND ON A WORD HE SAYS. \ ey ep GA vA Z Z Z Z 4 LA 4 Z 4 Z A Z Zz Z Z Z Z ad Z 7 Z Z ' f § i } 1258 ty SRA Sorte, ee, tS ey © OP : | TWENTY-THREE % higher. September $1.46%, oats were % to % iower, September 76%, soybeans were unchanged to % higher, September $2.45, and lard was 20 to 37 cents a hundred | pounds higher. September $13.37. Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, Aug. 18 (AP) — Opening grain: WHEAT— S bondotno Le Bept. ...... — MAP, ssc. 1.27 Dee . 2.43% « 2a 2.40 2.42 2.43 RD— ; 13.50 . 12.30 : 11.50 Res oreneciy se Lia SOYBEAN OIL— ! en 10.45 R Deere. ces ccs 20-00 Bept. ssee 38.15% Produce CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP)—Potatoes: arrivals, 100; on track 236; total U.S. shipments 395; supplies light, demand fair, market steady; Idaho-Oregon Long Whites $3.00- 3.15; Round Reds $3.10-3.25; Idaho Russets $3.75; Washington Long Whites $3.05-3.15; Russets $3.60-3.65. CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP)—Butter steady; re- ceipts 644,066; wholesale hig bp! _— 30 Bes: 88 93 score AA, 65; 92 A, 64 oe 90 B, 62; 89 C, 57.5; cars B, 63; 89 C, nn. receipts 5,196; onclinnts buying prices unchanged to 1% cents g pound higher; U.S. large 60.5; U.S. medium 52; U. 8. standards 46.5-49.5; Satrent receipts 41; dirties 38.5; checks DETROIT DETROIT (AP)—Prices paid fo.b. Detroit case lots fe graded eggs. Whites—Grade A jumbo 72-74, weighted average 72%: large 66-68, wtd avg 67: Se 58-59, wtd avg 58%; smal) 45; grade B large 59-62, wtd avg 59%; pee wees 33. Browns—Grade A jumbo 12-73, wtd avg 73; large 68-66, wtd avg 654; medium 57; small 44-45, wtd avg 45; grade B large 58; grade C large 40: pee wees 33. Checks—38-39, wtd avg 38%. EGGS r dozen ral-state Kitchen Cabinet Sinks Beautiful 54” medels, $139.50 value for no These are marred. Michigan Fluorescent 393 Orchard Lake Ave. Local Markets Farmer to Consumer Beets, buneD ..........000 3 for osen Tomatoer, quart .......... Racithes. bur — es. bunch .....00.-- snsksksksksesksesk for eee eer eee eeeeeeee Carrots. cccccccecce — Se eeeeeereereseseees potatons shal 22020000 2 Cabbage. eeeeceeseeee 18 Apples, bushe pBanerne eeeeseereses 1.00 to se Bers” doven. ~ajueesuseue il, 0 and "78 ppers. bushe) ....... — Flowers Carnations, dozen ........ 1.00 Ge dozen ...ceeee 1.00 Gladiolis, CD ccccccccccccds and 50 Wholesale DETROIT PRODUCE Pg rood (UP)—Wholesale prices on the farmers public markets: Fruits: so ower No, 1, 2.50-3 bu.; 1, 4.00 bux Tran peaches, early variety, 7 a; pears, Clapps favorite, No. 1, bu.: pears, sugar, No. 1, 3.25-3.78 bu.; plums, Burbank, be 1, Led Y% bu.; watermelons, No. 1, 2.50-3.00 b Mee beets, No. 1, .70-.85 No. 1, 1.25- 3.00 % bu.; beans, green, : beans, green, Roman, No. 1, 3.60-4.00 bu.; green. round, ba 1, 2.00-3.00 bu.: wax, No. 1. 2.50-3. : ; tucky Wonder. 1, 2.25-3.00 bu.; beans, lima, fancy, 5.00 bu.; No. 1, 4. 4.50 bu.: cabbage, standard variety, No. 1, .75-1.00 bu.: cabbage curly, No. 1, 1.25-1.78 bu.; cabbage, red, No. 1, ee 2.50 bu.: cabbage, sprouts, No. 1, 1.00- 1.25 bu.; carrots, No. 1, .65-75 doz. behs.; carrots, topped, No. 1, 1.80-2.00 bu.; ami ade No. 1, 2.00-2.50 dos.; celery, °. ’ pickle "size, . 4.50-5 bu: dill, No, 1, .75-1.00 dos. egeviant, No. 1, 2.50-300 bu.; egeplant, long type, No. 1, 1.50-2 bu.; kohlrabi, No. .75-1.25 doz. bchs.; leeks, No. 1, 1.25-1.75 doz. behs.: okra, No. 2.50-3.00 pk. basket: onions, dry, No. 1. 1.50-2.00 50-Ib. bag; onions, green, fancy. .85 doz, bchs.; No. 1, behs.: parsley, curly, No. 1, peas, +; Peppers. Cayenne, = bsk.: peppers, hot, . 1, 1.50-2.00 : peppers, pimento, No. 1, 2.75-3 % ba: peppers, sweet. No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu.; potatoes, New, No. 1, 1.10-1,25. 50-Ib. bag; potatees, No. 1, 2.10-2.30 100-Ib. bag: radishes. white, No. 1, .80-1.00 doz. behs.: radishes, red, fancy, 1.00 doz. behs.; No. 1, .70-90 doz. bebs.; squash, acorn, No. 1, 2.00-2.25 % bu.; squash, butternut, No. 1. 3.00-3.50 bu.; squash, Delicious, No. 1, 2-2.50 bu.; squash, Italian, fancy 2.00 % bu.; No 1, 1.00-1.50 % bu.; squash, summer, No. 1, .75-1.25 % bu.; tomatoes, hothouse, No. 1, 1.25-2.00 14-Ib. basket; tomatoes. fancy, 2.00 pk. bask.; No. 1, 1.25-1.75 kk. bask.: turnip, fancy, 1.50 doz. behs.: 0. 1, 0-1.25 doz bchs.; turnip, topped, No. 1, 1.50-1.75 bu. Greens: Cabbage. No. 1, 1.00-1.25 bu.; collard, No. 1, .75-1.25 bu.; Kale, No. 1, 1.00-1.50 bu.: mustard, No. 1. .75-1.00 bu.; spinach, No. 1, 1.50-2.00 bu.; sor- rel, No. 1, 1.25-1.50 bu.: Swiss chard, . 1.00-1.50 bu.; turnip, No. 1, .75- bu Lettuce and args greens: Celery cab- . No. 1, 2. 50 bu.: endive, No. 1, pa fal bleached, No. 1, : fescarole, bleached, No. 1, ‘lettuce, butter, No. 1, 2.50- . fancy, 5.00-6 00 4.00-4.75 3 doz.: lettuce, , 1.25-1.50 bu.: lettuce, leaf, 2.50-3.00 bu.; romaine, No. 1, bu. Large, 19.00-20.00 30-doz. 17.00-18.00. Eggs: case; medium, Donald E. Hansen Res. FE 28-5513 Accident Insurance _Automobile Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds — All Types 511 Community Nat'l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Richard H.~ DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Fire Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance Plate Glass Insurance “CEREMONY THE INVENTION OF WISE MEN: TO KEEP FOOLS AT A DISTANCE.” —Richard Steele Call or NEW YORK GROWING WITH MICHIGAN Earnings Per Share of CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY In the Last Ten Years Have Increased From $1.22 to $2.65 Dividends Have Gone From $1.00 to $2.20 a Share We Recommend the Purchase of This Growing Michigan Utility Stock First or Micuican Gorporation . Member Midwest and Detroit Stock Exchanges BUHL BUILDING, DETROIT Cleveland — Grand Rapids — Port Huron Battle Creek — Bay City — Lansing Write CHICAGO INSURANCE HAS M4 Howard W. Huttenlocher ° 318 Riker Bidg. H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency Insurance of All Kinds . ©0000 00808000808 8880000008880 08080888080888888 NO SUBSTITUTE Max E, Kerns ‘FE 4-1551 When in doubt . . ‘ . call us about... * our Insurance Protected Program ® Insure With Us Now @ THATCHER PATTERSON WERNET 609 Community Nationa) Bank Bidg. Pontiac’s Oldest Insurance Agency FE 2-9224 Admiral ...., 26.6 Int Paper .. 52.4 Alleg L 8tl ... 33.2 Int bg nd Tel Hae Allied Ch .... 69 Johns an : Allied Strs'... 385 Kennecott 63 Allis Chal .... 466 Kimb Clk Pe Alum Ltd . 48.2 Kroger ; 4Jlum Co Am .. 51.5 LOF Glass : > Am Alrlin .... 13.5 Lib McN & L . 4m Can .. 35.3 Ligg 4& Mey 14 am Car & Fdy 362 yee) Airc — 4m Cyan .. 48.5 ews am Gas & El 303 Lone 8S Cem ae 4m Loco 152 Mack Trucks Am M & Pdy 22.6 Marsh Field 43 Am N Gas... 35.1 Martin Gl 13.5 . 7 May D Str 30 — or 7 Mid Cont Pet 62 Fre Monsan Ch ... 86.4 pd org 31 Mont Ward ... 581 Am a & Tel 155.3 Sictae BA 265 aekt Coo. 707 Motorola |"... 36 Anac W & Fe 49.5 Mueller Br ... 25.2 Murray Cp .. 19.4 ahi eee Nash Kely ©. 193 > vere at Bise . . 35.6) Miag'eae ORME Gah 8 eas vat airy 625 re ee aa Nat Lead .... 32.4 Balt & Ohio. 24.7 Nat Stl _— Bendix Av $615) 5° de Benguet 11 Ny Central =. 33.7 Beth Steel. $06 Nia M Pw 37.1 ; a Norf & West 44 Boeing Airp .. 40 No Am Av 114 Bohn Alum 185°) Nor Pac 656 Bond S8Strs 14.2 Borde 56 6 Nor Sta Pw 13.2 Bris Dei 345 Northw Airl 12 ees Ohio Ot] 57.1 Brist My 20 Packard 46 Budd Co - 132 pan AW Air 9.2 Calum & H.. 8 Param Pict 27.2 Can Dry ...... 116 parke Dav 335 dn Pac 25.5 ,° c . Penney (JC) 170.5 Capital Airl bo tks Pa RR ...... . 20.7 Case J I .... 178 pepsi Cola ... 14 tite. M4 Eee Ot et sists MEO) esas 2.1 Ches & Ohio ..373> Philip Mor .. 53.7 Chi & NW 192 Phill Pet .- 54.7 Chrysler 702 Pilfs Mills ., 344 Cities Sve 831 Pit Plate Gl 50 Climax Mo 413 Proct Gam 64 Cluett Pea 32 Pullman 39 3 Coca Cola 111 Pure Otl 496 Col Gas 13.7 RKO Pic 3.7] Con Edis . an? ooo Te ai Con G-E 255 em an ee Consum Pw 38.4 Repub Sti .. 491 Con Pw Pf 45 1032 Reyn Met 50.2 ; Rey Tob B 46.7 Con Pw Pf 412 103 Cont Can 55.4 Scovill Mf .. 29 Cont Mot 9 Sead Al RR.. 42.2 Cont Oi) 572 Sears Roeb 59 Corn Pd 133 Shell Oil . 16 Curtiss Wr 75 a reg are te Det Edis 8 heer Vis 358 Doug Airc 66.2 - Do Sou Pac ai) Alaa an” Sou Ry ...... 44.5 Fast Air L .. 243 one Woate Fastm Kod . 425 std Brand .. 28.3 El Auto L 43.7 8td Oil Calf 54 El & Mus In 16 gtd Oil Ind 13.4 Fmer Rad 12.3. Std O11 NJ .. 741 Erie RR 20 Std Ot] Ohio ‘35.7 | Ex-Cell-O 48.3 Studebaker .. 29.1 | Firestone 58.7 Swift & Co... 392) | Freept Sul .. 444 Sylv El Pd 334 Gen Elec . . 173 Texas Co . 566 Gen Fads 553 Timk Det Ax 22 Gen Mills 574 Timk R Bear 40.2 Gen Mot 586 Tran W Air 156 Gen Tel 39.6 Transamer » S01 Gen T ub 285 Twent C Fox 17.7 Gillette .., 40 Underwood .. 43 Goebel Br 16 ha .. “ers Goodrich 67.23 BD PRE oo sens Goodyear 492 pon Air Lin 34 Grah Paige | 15 nit Aire ... Gt No Ry Pf 861 United Cp ... Gt West 8 ... 181 Unit Pruit .. 83.7 Grevhound 133 S Lines 7a Gulf Oi] 48. US Rub..... . 26 Holland F 143 US Smelt . 476 Hooker Fl 59 US Steel 37.5 Houd Hersh 142 US Tob eovcge 18.7 Hud Mot ‘* Warn B Pic 142 Ill Cent 13 West Un Tel 473 Inland Stl | 39.8 Weste “EI t. 466 Interlk Ir 16.5 White Mot .. 271 Int Harv 267 Woolworth .. 45.3 In&® Nick 41.3 Yngst Sh&T 396 dip in the cooling waters of Fox ~ "ia ls oP” a LEND ME YOUR EAR—Lending a shaggy ear to Daffy Duck, Cindy, a winsome pooch, hears that a |help in conquering the heat. When las: seen dog and might | duck were romping off toward the lake. together. Lake, Il., Kan., and that the district court here — in Sedgwick County — has no jurisdiction. Red Prisoner Charges Are ‘Silly and Childish’ PANMUNJOM @—A top Red Cross official from a neutral nation today described Communist pris- oner atrocity charges as “ridic- ulous statements by silly boys.” He gave this example by one Chi- nese POW: ‘He talked impassionately for an hour and it added up to the fact that he had been forced to take a bath. “Then they cut his hair — and with scissors.” The Washington monument rises to a height of 550 feet. Bank Robbery Nets Pair Seven Years in Prison GRAND RAPIDS @® — John E. Stevens, 32, of Dearborn, and Donald T, Dewey, 25, af Detroit, have been sentenced to seven years in prision for breaking and enter- ing the Peoples State Bank at Munising July 24. Federal District Judge Ray- mond W. Starr sentenced the pair yesterday. They had pleaded guilty. They were nabbed by Escanaba police July 29. They also pleaded guilty to trans- porting a pair of stolen cars across state lines. They were given 18 months each on that charge to be served concurrently with the longer term. United Press Phote Stocks Mixec Trading Light NEW YORK (®—The Stock Mar- ket was mixed today with prices moving narrowly. The start showed prices mostly unchanged to lower. A few plus signs appeared later in the list and created a more even balance or gains and losses. Trading was light. In the unchanged to lower gate- gory were railroads and oils. High- ey were motors, coppers, aircrafts, and electronics. In the mixed class were steels, utilities and chemicals. Lower stocks included Santa Fe, Du Pont, American Cyanamid and Texas Co. Higher were US. Steel, Chrysler, Phelps Dodge and Gen- era! Electric. New York Stocks Figures after decimaj points are eighths STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK—Compiled by the Asso- ciated Press. 30 15 60 acne Ralls Util. — Net change..... nee)! +.) Previous day 85.2 641 108'5 oon, jay. 853 542 108.6 Week ago 86.2 53.8 108.9 Month ag 86.3 523 107.1 Year ago 829 53.1 107 1953 high.. 936 55.5 116.3 1953 low. 82.7 50.5 104.2 1952 high... 948 548 1157 1952 low........ 66.7 50.7 97.0 DETROIT STOCKS (W. H. Protiva Co) Figures after decimal points are eighths H igh Low Baldwin Rubber* : D.&C Navigation® ws Gerity-Michigan* sore Kingston Products* .. Masco Screw ....... 32 Midwest Abrasive* News in Brief Justice Willis Lefurgy of Water- ford Township fined Richard Watt, 20, of 370 W. Chesterfield, Fern- dale, and David Hall, 17, of 6386 Hatchery Rd. $10 each yesterday on charges of entering a highway without stopping. West Bloomfield Township Jus- tice Elmer C. Dieterle fined Alon- zo Dixon, 28, of 4203 Rivard, De- troit, $25 yesterday on charges of illegal possession of gambling equipment. Albert Martin, 36, of Seven Ponds road, Dryden, was fined $75 plus $25 costs yesterday on a reckless driving charge by Jus- tice Helmar G. Stanaback of Orion Township, Alford Ellis, 27, of Chicago was fined $25 by Justice A. J. Richard- son of Bloomfield Township yes- terday on aé_ reckless driving charge, Close-out. All merchandise has to be sold. Up to 25% off. Gam- ble’s, 1751 Orchard Lk Rd. Adv. Hey, Kids! Howdy Doody’s pal Clarabell will be at George’s New- ¢| port’ S shoe department Tuesday, 5) August 25, 12:00. ¢ —Adv. if your friend’s in jail and needs | bail, Ph. OR 3-7110 C A Mitchell. Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—Hogs—Salable 450. Market opened unevenly 25-50 cents | higher, some buyers going very slow and bidding steady on barrows and gilts over | 240 lbs; most sajes 180-260 lbs $25.00- 25.75, latter ig for 200-240 lbs; few choice 1 and 2 $26.00; most 160-175 Ibs $24.00-24.75; early sales sows under 400 $21.25-22.50; heavier sows §18.50- Mar- 20.75 | Cattle—Salable 800: calves 225. Gket tairly active, generally Steady; bulk | high good to prime fed steers and year- lings $24.00 50; two lots high prime 932 Ib and 950 Ib yearling steers 27-75; very slow on meager showing commercial and good grassers and short feds sell- ing $18.00-22.00; most utility and low commercial grassers $12.00-17.00; bulk utility and commercial cows $11.00-13.50: some heavy high commercial cows $14.00 and few on heifer order to $15.00; can- ners and cutters mainly $9.00-11.50; some heavy mixed cutter and utility cows $12.00; bulk utility and commetcial bulls $14.00-16.25; some cutter and utility cows 13.00; vealers active, fully steady; bulk high good to prime vealers $24 00-29 00, latter price readily; few prime . 180-220 lbs vealers $30.00: most commercial and low good $16.00-23.00; cull and utility | mainly $10.00-15.00 Sheep—Salable 300 steady native spring lambs $25.00 scattering | Springers $20.00-23.00; | ewes $3.00-7 00 Market mostly $24.00-25.00 to utility and good few cull to choice CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—Salable hogs 6,000; active, 25-50 cents higher on butchers and sows; most advance on butchers under 200 Ibs.; most choice 190-280 lbs. butchers 25.25-25.75; a load choice 260 Ibs. at 25.90: most 290-330 Ibs. 23.75- 25.00; bulk 160-180 Ibs. 23.00-25.25: sows 400 Ibs. and under 21.75-23.75: a few under 24.00; bulk 400-600 Ibs. 19.50-22 00; g00d clearance. Salable cattle 9.000; salable calves 400; moderately active; slaughter steers, yearlings and heifers uneven; steady to 25 higher; cows 25-50 lower: bulls and vealers about steady: choice and prime steers and yearlings 2400-2650: few loads prime 26.75-27.01; some held high- er; good to low choice 20.00-23.50. Choice | and prime hetfers 22.50-25.75: good to low choice heifers 19.50-25 Tie utility and commercial cows 10.75-14.00: can- ners and cutters 9.00-10.50: utilit commercial bulls 12.50-16.00: nee ie ree vealers 16.00-24.00; culls down o Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)—Live poult: rices _~ per pound f. o. b. Detroit tor No. x ee: mange 4 hens 27-28; light type 23-24: heavy broilers or fryers mixed sizes 29- 33; caponettes 36-39; old roosters 16-18: ducklings 31; heavy ducks 26; youn hen | turkeys 37- 39; young tom turkeys fs CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—Live poultry unset- tled; receipts 937 coops; f.o.b. paying prices unchanged to 1 cent a pound higher; heavy hens 24-26; light hens 22- 2A; fryers or broilers 33-34; old roosters 18-20; ducklings 26. Foreign Exchange NEW YORK (AP)—Foreign exchange rates follow sreet Britain in dollars, others in cents Canadian deine in New York open market 1 3/16 per cent premium or (101.18% U.8. cents unchanged. Europe: Great Britain (pound) $2.81%, unchanged; Great Britain 30 day futures 2.81 7/16, unchanged; Great Britain 60 day futures 1.82 3/16, unchanged; Great Britain 90 day futures 2.80 15/16, un- changed; Belgium (fmanc) 2.00%, un- changed: France (franc) .28 9/16 cent, off .00 1/16 of a cent; (guilder) 26.34, unchanged: 16% of a cent, Seed; Dest (franc) (free) 23.34%, tachang "No sale; bid and asked, mark (Krone) 14.52, unchang s sided bulk choice and prime 78-79 i, | Pule over Morocco and ha Pasha Warns rench Friends Morocco Seethes With Conflict About Sultan, Nationalism RABAT, Morocco (®—The Pasha of Marrakech threatened today to turn against the French if they continue to back the Sultan of Morocco. Later he softened his tone and said he only wanted to warn the French. Known for 40 years as France's best friend in this strife-ridden North African protectorate, Pasha Thami el Glaoui is a bitter foe of Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben Yous- sef, titular ruler and nominal spiri- tual leader of all Morocco. The fierce Berber tribesmen who support the Pasha were re- ported ready to ride out of the hills against the Sultan at the first command. The Pasha’s menacing words were contained in an interview published this morning in a Casa- blanca paper. Later El Glaoui said he had given the interview over the telephone and that it had been ‘‘badly understood and badly interpreted.”’ In a new statement, he reaf- firmed his long-standing attach- ment to France and said he wanted to ‘‘warn French opinion against waiting too long’’ before doing something about the Sultan. Diplomatic envoys from seven Arab countries met today in Cairo to discuss the situation in Morocco, where the Pasha and tribal chiefs |have deprived the Sultan of his religious leadership. They will also discuss the situ- ation in Libya, where the recent Angio-Libyan treaty gives Britain a foothold in an Arab country. In the complex situation, the French have been placed in the position of having to defend — under long-standing treaties — the Sultan who has fought against their with nationalist demands for in- dependence. (In Paris it was learned the Foreign Office put in a hasty call to the Pasha this morning to ask for: clarification of the newspaper interview. It was probable the Pasha’s new statement was issued after this call.) NOTICE Notice is hereby given of a public hear- ing to be held by the Waterford Town- ship Zoning Board at the Township Hall on-Wednesday, September 9, 1953, at 7:30 p.m. to consider the following changes to the Zoning Map To change from Residential District 1 to Commercial! District 1, Lots 160 and 161, except the East 50 feet of Lake Williams Heights Subdivision. To change from Agricultural District 1 to Manufacturing District 2, a parcel of land lying North of the G.T.R.R. and in the BW % of Section 4, Waterford Town- ship. All persons interested are requested to be present. A copy of the soning map together with a list of the proposed changes is on file in the office a the Township Super- visor end way bo eusmined by those in- teres LOUIS G. BARRY, Waterford Township Clerk. Aug. 18, Bept. 1, '53 STATE OF MICHIGAN—In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland Juvenile Division. In the matter of the petition concern- ing Charles ~ Minor. Cause No. 12547 So Eugene Hill and Madeline Hill, par- ents of said child. Petition having been filed in this Court alleging that the present where- abouts of the parents of the said minor child is unknown and the said child has violated a law of the State, and that said child should be A nga under the juris- diction of this aoe way neariel ° og ou 2 that a gov ee will be held at the i tease Oo CO Pontiac in said County, on the 25 day of August -' 1953, at nine o'clock forenoon, and you are hereby com- manded to appear personally at said hearing. It being impractical to make personal service hereof, this summons and no- tice shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said hearing in the Pontiac Daily Press a newspaper “oe and circulated in said County. Moore, Judge of said Court, in the City of Pon tm said County, this 17th A.D. 1953. ARTHUR E. MOORE, Beal A true et male of Probate. Probate Register, * veaie Division. Aug. 18, '53 AUGUST 16, and Elmer Monett, Mrs. Getazmeyer. Funera be held Wednesday, August at the Pursiey Funera] Home 2:30 p. m. with Rev. Elder H. Lohr officiating. Interment Perry Mt. at the Pursiey Funera) Home. 19 at E. in Park Cemetery. Mrs. Bridget E. Monett will lie in state Card of Thanks 2 WE WISH TO THANK OU many neighbors, relatives, friends {er floral tributes our mother, Schroeder The American Canc Bociety Se ae and and many acts of kindness to us dur- im’ our recent bereavement and Martha Visiting Nurses Associa- ti a, Michigan Bell [Telephone and Convalescent y Dr. Milton H. Beak” for his comforting words. Signed: Sons, Carl, Mavcis and Donaid Schroeder Edna M. Bruch and daughter WE WISH TO EXTEND OU ede te thanks and appreciati fo ‘he acts of kindness, it of sympathy, R on — ererines received f ron frie mds and neigh po ae our recent bereavement i the loss of our beloved husband anc uncle. the Rev. Raymond Wreath. We especially thank Also the Telephone Pioneers of Wol- verine Chapter No. 10. Mrs. Wil- liam Elam and lace. Clayton Love- IN. GRATEFUL APPRECIATION for the kindn.ss and showp us during the sympathy recent bereavement of Alli Ahmet. Wish- e, to publicly messages cards, flowers and fers of assistance helped lighten the sorrow. Friends. thank all whose of- to Flortsts-Flowers “PLORISTS—PLOWERS 123 AUBURN 3 “_—AAA FE 32-3173 Ambulance Service 3-A, HUNTOON Ambulance Service FE 2-0189 79 Oakland Ave. Funeral Directors 4 Donelson-lohns FUNERAL HOME “DESIGNED FOR PINERATS Brace Funeral Home Bstab 18866 Distinguished Service Voorhees-Sip! FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Gervice. Plane or Mo Pe 2-8378 e ton o— BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there were replies at the Daily Press office in the following boxes: $, 4, 5, 8, 12, 14, 15, 18, 23, 27, 31, $2, 33, 38, 50, 52, 61, 69, 75, 78, 79, 83, 84, 88, 89, 90, 102, 104, 114. Qeee..<-.e Cemetery Lots trance 3 graves. $150, __ $290, Lincoln 2-2167. a 4A WHITECHAPEL, er EN- for The Pontiac Daily Press FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-818} From 8 a.m. to § p.m. All errors should ve re- ported immediately The Dally Press assumes no re- sponsibility for errors other. than to cancel the charges for that portion of the first insertion of the advertise- ment which has been ren- dered valueless through the error When cancellations ere made be sure your “rill numbers.” ° adjustments wil) be given without {t . Closing time for vertisements eon taining type sizes larger than reg- ular agate type is 12 o’clock noon the day previous to Dublieation Transient Want Ads may be cancelled up to 0:30 the day of publication CASH WANT AD RATES Lines 1 Day 3 Dave 6 Days 2 $1.25 $168 6§2.52 3 1.28 2.43 3 60 4 1.60 3.12 4.56 6 2.00 3.60 5 40 6 2.40 4.33 6.48 1 2.80 5.04 1.56 8 3.20 6.75" 8.64 ® 3.60 6.48 9.72 10 4.00 7.20 10.30 Birmingham Office Ph. Midwest 4-0844 379 Hamilton Wanted Male Help SALESMEN MALING SHOES 50 N. SAGINAW. ST. train. Pontiac's A salary no lay itel and “hurd insurance benef! LOOK MEN 7 the year around, paid vacation, hos- ts. © experience necessary we train you for the job. A chance @ /ance to man stores Singer Co., 102 N. wing v. to er to one of our Machine KITCHEN HELP _ Po ay of becoming second cook. BLOCK LAYERS, STEADY Exp. work. FE 5-3004. Wanted Male Help 5 Neat Appearing Young Man for DISPLAY ADVERTISING POSITION Experience not necessary but helpful, or if you are the man we want we will train you. a Write stating“your qualifi- cations to Box #4, tiae Daily Press. ROUTE SALESMAN Nationally -known ftood concern. “ar furnished. per month starting TROMNGE curtains, neat, men’s collars and cuffs turned extra, Pickup and _ deliver, FE 56398 WIDOW, 58, WILL ASSIST SEMI- ! invalid or couple, Do light house- | work Experienced driver. Local | | ref. EM 35216. - i} POSITION AS office nurse with M.D, 2'2 years experience as office — industrial | nurse with X-ray and labratory. | . 5 years stenographic experience fS Reply Daily Press Box 26 | | WOMAN WANTS WASHINGS & | jronings done in my home. Work! }_ guaranteed. FE 2-7775. | SEWING, ALu KINDS, GOOD work guaranteed. FE 45232. MIMEOGRAPHING, ’ TYPING, | themes, dissertations, secretarial | _ work. FM 3-5197 7 IRONINGS OR SMALL WASHINGS | _ wanted. FE 4-9343. ; | IRONINGS, BABY SITTING. FF 5-4520 | COLORED WOMAN DESIRES DAY | | work. $7 a day pilus fare. No Sundays. FE 4-7749 after 6 p. mm.) 1 FOR FAMILY LAUNDRY SERV. ice phone Pontiac Laundry. FE) | «810 Laundry Service | LACE CURIaINS, PLAIN OR Tuffied beautifull iimianed. Pon- tiac Laundry Phone FE 2-8101. Painting-Decorating 11A PAINTING AND DECORATING. Paper removed, free estimates. Bi, PAPERING. PAINTING, WALL washing Paner removed. FE 2- 9192 FE 4-7790. WALLPAPERING AND PAINTING. _ Call for est. FE 4-0255. INTERIOR * EXTERIOR PAINT- ing FE 17-6596 FE 5-0242 PAINTING. INSIDE & OUT FREE estimates _FE _2- 4137. Painting & Wall Washing Free Estimates Reas, FE 23-2706 | PAINTING. A-1 WORK, GUARAN- _teed. FE 2-4315._ PAPERING, PAINTING. REF. FS 5-4520. MIDDLEAGED /-WOMAN | — aged mother while daughter works | - Wall Washing & Painting Free estimates, Reas, FE 5-2311 MAN WITH % TON TRUCK WANTS work. Call any time. FE 4-8421, SUDDEN SERVICE, ASHES as and light trucking. } RUB- FE AP Newsleatures ~ SMITH MOVING Van or Pickup Service. FE 2-4864, O’DELL CARTAGE Local and Long ey Moving Building Service 415 Notices and Personals 22 22 rou, MOWING 480, #708: |” FAVESTROUGHING | |©%,4" AGEN "ait RAPE Mt United States. Quick service. FE 5-8562. 341 N: Perry. ‘Fill these balloons up for the kids!” Coal, oil & gas burners. McLain Sheet Metal. FE 4-5051. ROOFING, BUILT UP ROOFS AND _ Garden Plowing 12A roof repair, FE 46113. — 4-1 CEMENT WORK, BRICK WTD. PLOWING, DISCING, block, all types. Reas. George Dragging, | level ari & weed Reid. EM 3-8258. mowing. Jaycox. 9997. LETE ABO GARDEN ea FLOWS, a block 1 ax rat ooh eve ace, any time, prom service, Al) power ~~ CHIMNEY WORK | __ litt. equip. - 43371, ‘Let a reliable home owned reg- Hy Servi istefea company clean, repair ___ Business ce 13 ©. rebuild your chimney. Also ‘ gas chimneys lined. Foreplace EAVESTROUGHING __ cleaning and repairing, FE 5-3701, Bryan P. French FE 5-6973 | COMPLETE LINE OF MASONRY, Warm air uir heating & sheet n metal, cement & carpenter work, brick block laying. EM 3-8061. EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE- —BASE- __moval, Ph. FE 5-6593 or O OR 3-2000, SAWS SHARPENED, 27 W PRINCB- n. PE 2-6382 eves. and week- ends BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walls and, Windows Cleaned. FE 2-163). APPLIANCE SERVICES We service all makes of refriger- radios, cleaners and all types of smal] appliances. FE 2-4021 ators, washers, ROY’S. 96 Oakland Ave, ELECTRICAL SEWER CLEANING Binks Sun. Service. Ph. PB 4-2012. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE, RE- _ Pike and rewinding. ke. Ph. FE 4-3981. TREE ; TRIMMING & Pree estimate FE 4-8805. 71-8628. MALE BOOKKEEPER AVAILABLE, REMOVAL. PE POURED CONCRETE ments Why build with blocks? Get our bid wo! Or 3-7184. SMALL CONTRACTOR WITH well organized crew would like opportunity to bid rough in i projects or otherwise. OR 3-2183 or contact in ag at 180 Wa- basso Walled CARPENTER & CABINET h wishes new and remodel work. _ FE +0720. BRI B. work. Also chim oer No job too @ or too ‘en _ Wo Ph, FR +36m% CARPENTRY, B CEMENT work, etc. re erie. ROOFING All types, new & old. Free esti- mates. Joy Pennebaker, FE 40612 ESTIMATES ON “SIDING, ROOF- ing, and repair work. OR 3-0503. PLASTERING, PATCH - PLASTER- FE 27-8997. full or part time. Tax, profit ing. and law statements. EM 3-4047./ TERRAZZO RUBBER, CERAMIC 7 We 7 ti flagstone, Commercia! and PLASTE RING Seaaeatiat PHA “terme. | PE 5-' 0626, FE 5-0925 Leo Lustig x BUILD ER. PE 2- - 2671 | SAWS, 5, LAWNMOWERS WORK, ALL KINDS MACHINES SHARPENED _MANLEY LEACH — 10 BAGLEY BULLDOZING, FREE ESTIMATES. Prompt service. R. Dunn. 41925 or FE 4-7329. FE Seat] driveways, eto. Jensen FE ‘MASON 7 "CEMENT T WORK, FREE estimates, our work guaranteed. OR 3-0402. A. J. Webster & Son. *URNACE CLEANING-REPAIRING Let home owned company clean, repair your furnace, fireplace. » FE | FIR New pipes installed 5-3701 etc. P & B HOME SERVICE CO. WIN- dow & wall washing. FE 2-515. ~JOHN’S TRENCHING | Footings, water lines, and septic ‘8643. __and drain tile lines. re q- SEPTIC TANKS, SOIL PIPE OR complete plumbing Reas. rates. 5- installing. SUBURBAN SEPTIC TANK CLEAN- ers. Lake Orion. MY 2-2842. EXCAVATING, GRADING, __ dozing, road olidg + Ph FE 2- 5422. FREE ESTIMATES ON NEW FUR- BULL: BLOCKS, posene’ fireplaces and sea-walls 3-4879. CEMENT WORK. BLOCK EPLACES, STONE WORK, fireplace repair. FE 5-3026 after PLUMBING AND HEATING. H. —— & Son. FE 4-3767, rE 2-5440. _ : GUARANTEED ROOFS, ALL kinds. Est. 1916. J. A. Hugus, 352 N. Cass. PE 2-3021, PE 2-8946. FLOOR SANDING LAYINQ, PIN. R. Gardner, 491 Central. PE __2-1519 ee COMPLETE REMODELING AND modernizing service. Attic rooms, recreation rooms, dormers, addi- tions complete apartment altera- tions, custom F. H. A. vuilding. hom __ financing. ! maces, oil, voal, or gas conver- GENERAL ee DIN Sa, repair and cleaning. bric stone & a G REPAIR, ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS repaired by factory trained men at our store. Genera) Printing & Ww. Law- Office Supply Co., 17 tence St. Phone FE 3-0135. ~ EAVESTROUGH _ New repairs, cleaning. FE 5-0733. '