™ : : i | piers ‘ 3 : aa - The Weather ee Mostly Fair and Warm e , Home < Details page two - 118th YEAR y * % PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955—28 PAGES = “Tent... UTED enme Muoroe ” 7 INTERNATIONAL ? r Blast Demolishes Two-Family Home in Pontiac Diane Storming Into Mainland Marines Called to Help Build Breakwaters for Carolina Shore Areas | CHARLESTON, S. C. (# — Diane, her hurricane winds spinning at 115 miles an hour, moved relentlessly toward the maipland today. She was the _ second hurricane in the same area in less than a week. —€arolina—and— Georgia} coastal areas waited anx- ipusly as the furious storm, Two- ay ‘we ee ~~ * fourth hurricane of the sea-| | : : son, edged ever closer, The! ; day brought a drop in her forward movement from 15 to 8 to 10 miles an hour, but the strength of her winds was undiminished. . At 8 a.mc she was 300 miles east-southeast of Charleston. A Weather Bureau storm: bulletin —{ssuet at 8:20 am., sald: "Move- | ment at this slower speed and a change of course would bring the center to upper South Carolina or the North Carolina coast late to-| * night or Wednesday morning.” Throughout the night, Diane had | remained eon a west-northwest —more west than north course, but forecasters said the 7 forward speed might cause her to turn toward the north. Such a direction change would place the North Carolina coast, swept last week by Hurricane Con- nie, in extreme jeopardy, Diane's worst threat appeared of to be to beach areas. Tides were forecast at some points as much as nine feet above normal, Marines: joined highway crews, civilian volunteers. and convicts to- day in a feverish attempt to throw up sand breakwaters“#iong North | Carolina's beaches. Connie's high tides washed away many of the dunes which protect beach -buiid- ings. GOVERNOR SCARED what would happen if another storm struck,” said North Caro- lina's Gov. Luther Hodges after a 600-mile flight over the stricken area. <1 Reports from. South Carolina beaches said that little prepara- tion was needed for the blow. Vacationers went for early morn- ing dips !m the surf at Myrtle) Beach beneath a warm sun and blue skies. Civilian defense spokes- men said last week's rehearsal for Connie had prepared that area for any eventuality. “Vacancy” signs appeared at most of the beach inns and-motor courts, but town officials said there had been no general evacuation, ~ as such. They said there simply were few incoming tourists to re- place those who departed after completing vacations. The Charleston WeathersBureau said heavy rains woukl visit the| ably would be induced to run Arr apport ties wi the June revolt, and other top offi-| July 5. His body was found Sun- |fire. I drop to the entire coastal area tonight. The| the Republican party. - 8,700 Michigan Troops mee ich have re-| cials and army commanders, and| day five miles from camp, He | ground, looked up and saw fused along with the pacifi- | + * forecast was for four or more Williams, in ‘an interview last| ‘Defend’ Grayling Area go : to launch a wave of. terror by) had been shot through the head. ylight above me. inches of rain. Inland floods and extensive crop damage were feared. Amateur radio operators set up an emergency network to handle emergency messages, Vessels of the Atlantic Fleet Mine “Force here. were moved from the Ashley River to hurricane anchorages at the Naval Ammuni- tion Depot in the upper Cooper River, Naval, Marine, Air Force” and Army planes at numerous military installations have’ been, flown in- land for the duration of the hur- ,* Williams Hazy ‘on lke Comment “It scares me to death to think | Says AP Reporter Bell Scrambled His Words; Writer Denies It GREEN BAY i — Gov. G. Men- nen Williams says an Associated Press reporter “interpreted” his recent Chicago remarks to mean that he said President Eisenhower was “an old man.” Williams said the AP man was the only one in the group of news- men to do this, * = * The AP story, written by J ack Bell, veteran political writer, quot- ed Williams as saying Mr, Eisen- hower was “an old man who may not want a second term" but prob- night, was- asked if he wanted to add to what he said in Chicago, specifically the quoted reference’ to “an old man.” “That was the interpretation of one reporter from the Asso- ciated Press,” Williams said. ‘In the news conference with a group of reporters, only one seemed to find enough information te draw that conclusion, He took several — and placed them in a: COMPLETE DESTRUCTION ~ two-family house on Liberty street | Monday afternoon was taken from the roof of an adjacent huose, and shows the complete destruction | This view of the! razed by a blast tures, page 15}, * Pontioeg Preset Photos | which occurred in seconds. Some idea of the size of | the rubble pile can be gained’ from the officers ‘in | the picture, as they inspect the ruins. (Other pic- Roundup of Enemies Seen: BUENOS AIRES, Argentina mn, | Government charges that “Catholic [nationalists and opposition potit- | , clans had plotted to shoot President Juan Peron brought Argentina to | its greatest state of tension since the June 16 revolt. ‘ | said more than 50 persons arrested. Other sources Guard Battles , Mock Invader in Sham Warfare CAMP GRAYLING (#—Michi- gan’s 8,700 National Guardsmen in training. here moved out of camp, téday in a mock defense against an invader. The 46th “Iron Fist’ Infantry Division, started a two-day tacti- cal problem, rolled by truck into the wooded ‘areas of the Pickert Artillery. Range. . * #8, Its task was to defend the Gray- Tension-Mounts in Arg Arrests 50 in Alleged Death Conspiracy indicated as many as 200 might | nouncements of such plots during to scatter the crowds, arresting capital and 15 in Cordoba. the nine years of Peron's regime | have of his enemies. pias This could be the end of the “pacification” campaign ‘Peron launched after the abortive navy uprising two months ago. , It also could mean a new flareup in the feud between the President and the Roman Catholic Church mostly dormant since the revolt —and a new crackdown on the cation campaign unless the gov-. ernment ends its restrictive meas- ures. . Adding to the unrest were new : antigovernment demonstrations, in front of Buenos Aires’ Metro- politan Cathedral last night and earlier yesterday in the central Argentine city of Cordoba. Po- lice used tear gas and fire hoses There were no signs of .special signaled widespread roundups | measures to protect the President, | The government announcement said the plotters had planned to shoot him yesterday, from an | apartment they had rented on the route along which he usually drove between his olfice and his home. * * * The announcement charged that the conspirators planned also to kill Maj, Gen. Franklin Lucero, the army minister who quashed disrupting power lines, commu- nications, radio stations and pub lic: utilities. . The government charged the “Catholic nationalist’ _ plotters were “perfectly organized’ in Communist-like cells and had ‘se- creted their arms in a Catholic seminary, It, said some arms caches were seized, Police refused to reveal the names of those arrested. Clues Dwindle in Scout Slaying entine as Peron Lie Detector Tests Show | Nothing in Murder of Peter Gorham ‘death crept along at what police MUSKEGON (—The investiga- | | tion of T2-year-old Petér Gorham’s | Co. | “Bavedge received first and second degree burns to the \ ‘phon « Injures Seven Persons Nearby: Residences Damaged; House Owner Hugh M. Dana in Critical Condition By GEORGE T. TRUMBULL JR. Three men miraculously escaped death yesterday in a mid-afternoon gas explosion that rocked Pontiac's. west side and demolished a two-story house at 6-8 Liberty St. The shattering blast, which was felt two miles away and resulted in an estimated $42,000 damage, caused in- juries to seven persons, three of them Consumers:Power installation at the house. -Reported in critical condition this morning at Pontiac General Hospital was the owner of the house, Hugh M. Dana, 45. He suffered first degree burns. to the front of his body. His wife was at work at the time of the blast. The two Consumers employes with: Dana-{y the base- ment when the explosion occurred were Benson Savedge, 26, of 2401 Opdyke Rd: and Lawrence Abbey, 21, of 37 Cayuga, Lake Orion. TWO IN GOOD CONDITION head and was reported in good condition this morning - at Pontiac General Hospital. Abbey was in good condi- tion with second degree burns to the forearms and feet. * The third Consumers man injured was Clifford Doug- : | las. 26, of 6954 Saline Dr., Waterford. He was standing outside the home beside the company truck at the time, He was treated and released yesterday for minor burns, Also treated at the hospital were three ocru- pants of the nine family apartment building next door at 4 Liberty St. Treated for minor cuts from flying glass were Mrs. Gay Harshaw, 23, Mrs. Carol Stilwell, 23, and her 15-month-old daughter, Robin Gail, ; According to Edward L. Karkau, district manager of i. | Consumers Power, the three-men were making an in- spection of the company’s installation in the neighbor- hood prior to the explosion.’ 7 “We were checking every possible pipe installation on # he said. INSPECTION MISSION “Our mission was strictly inspection. We were not. called on a reported leak and as yet do not know what actually caused the blast,” Karkau said this morning. The manager said the company was conducting an investigation at the scene today. It is believed statements by the in- eos jured will help deter- __ mine the cause. Fire | called-a “turthe’s pace’ today-with | lie detector tests shedding no light jin the slaying of the Evanston, | l., Boy Scout. | Two of the camp's counselors | were quizzed yesterday in the case, | Police are checking the possibili- rty the 12-year-old was killed by a | sex deviate, No charge was méde lagainst either of the two coun-|denied rumors that a cig- sejors. beter vanished trom Camp Wa- baningo at nearby Duck Lake William Jannega, 2%, Muskegon car salesman who discovered the body while driving through the Laketon area with his wife,: also took a lie detector test yesterday. He asked for the test “to put an story of the grisly find was pub- lished, Police said the tests indi- ‘Heard Dull Explosion’ Marshal Charles Metz, who spoke to the injured at the hospital, the gas that 5 ently had collected in- he basement “was from a sudden flow of gas'in a big volume.” Metz said all three men arette touched off the blast. Abbey told Metz theb last appeared “like a big ball of Abbey. added he — Savedge and started re- moving debris to escape when an unidentified man a and helped them out-of the wreckage. He said he did not know how Dana escaped from the) building. A FRONT DOOR MOVED — This door to the adjacent’ apartment - building was torn from its frame and left leaning by the entrance, as shown above, when the blast Story —House- Turned Into Rubble ‘in Seconds Liberty Str eet Explosion service rs the street in preparation for a city re-paving program,” ei demolished the two-story house , ~, next Gow ! : he had just removed the meter in the Savedge was. next door in the apartment. _ building sesine ofet. | a saa to make a head. panto genteel area against a . —_ a T 7 ‘a an. inspection when on cateen scoopemnmeeert thera stain en myvucal._alfacking.... ar tl F one sa = | Savedge told Metz this morning Mercury fo Return (aun mists sateen," "|Traverm Guy.” “NY * Ey ewttness Tells Ss CON Y | criiea' sree ci", | ed ern over and trails nthe movement) ot yoard a dull, thudding explo-| Venetian blinds, pieces of hotse-| were torn. by gam |Hunter Plane 0 Near 7V \0day _—— aeee case ween ta cay atr| *0ld. good end’ staoke swept the Spee , . _ | BELL ANSWERS ie ‘iia sion, the house seemed to rise off poms ae | ae All windows in the front of Mrs. | Sp j All Night- Ta. m....0 11 erm.,..a5 | At Washington, reporter Bell) ase rey nage lat the Manat | it foundation and debris started Allen, former Pontige| Alle’ home, located barely’ 60 ines AH Night —+- Paiogeg "om ‘| Bay statement, : Se ee eee flying everywhere." sp eee Said she was unable | iowa in, =e home, ‘some Around Diane 19 a. m.....88 2p. m....90, <_Williamms,” ‘Bell sald, | pages of wartare | is Was Mrs. F. Dewey Allen's | vi co smoke filled her home, oe | Reporting a similar experience| JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Navy A return to near 90-degree tem-| President Eisenhower ‘is an old | Army planes will be busy on/the front porch of her home at) ¢.' coe | berty, next door to Mrs. Allen. | weather laboratory plane its first peratures was predicted for to-| man’ before mote than 5@ re- |*eComnalssance. Wire and radio/9 Liberty St, directly across the 3 | “E-was talking on the telephone | chance to shine in an all-night day and‘ tomorrow by the U. S.| Porters. (He supplemented - this communications will be tested. street from the Hugh Dana home| “It seemed that every window | and looking out the front door when flight over, around and across “= ‘to a + that Eisens might | TRUCK. MEN which was leveled by anexplosion| fm the house was broken; glass | I | the explosion. My first | Hurricane Diane. forecast calls for fair ‘skies | ‘dle the next campaign. truck ames Ceand | ae re Was everywhere,” she stated. was for my two children, | ‘The Constellation took off- fren a high thercury reading near | “He also said after a reporter sae aan et Ratan “| was talking with a neigh-'| Figurines were toppled feom | Gregory, and , Linda,” she said.| Jacksonville Naval Air Station 90, followed by a low tonight of 66 |for the Washington Post and Times | Were presented by Maj. Gen. Gor-| ber om the porch when 1 men. | Shelves, vases were smashed t0 | nay piunt, holding her t.wo | arly last night and aimed its mil- to 70 Tomorrow it will be| Herald had asked him to amplify|40n A. MacDonald. of Detroit,| foned that I smelied a. dust : youngsters, 19 months and 4 | ion dollars worth of electronic slightly cooler with cloudy sktes}what the reporter called ‘a cold|COmmanding general of the “46th (een, Gres Cimsemers,’ Power: | J Today's P ran from the house, I don’t (equipment at all facets of. the and temperatures ranging from 85/ blooded statement” that he or any | Infantry Division. wr | Mew drove up ina truck and |412 AY S FIESS - | think 1 touchea one of the steps |hurricane. ° — to 90 _. © lother political office holer might! There are hundreds of trucks in| Went in the Dana home, County News..............,.28 | 0M the porch. AN I could think | . Yesterday, ‘the downtown Pom|die at any time. the camp. ‘The awards recognize| “After they went in the house,| Editorials .................. 6 | of was getting my children to | Spanish Jet Test—OK | blast tiae thermometer hit 9 high of 86, ae a 2 * * > the best appearing and best main- two. ot the men began running Sporty... <0. cdebses sete Tt, » safety.” y ¥ s 3 ; [ Spain @® — The first “the | while the low reading was 66. At) “The Governor's words speak | tained trucks. The winning trucks | back and forth to the track to get} Theaters ’...........1........18 | Mrs. Blunt, like several others | Spanish jet plane built under the to # a.m. today, the temperature wes for themselves, He was acc were given metal pennants to bé| tools,” Mrs. Allen related, _ . | TY & Radio Programs..,...27~| interviewed) in the immediate | supervision of famed German 72 degrees, rising to 90 degrees/quoted and his remarks were not| worn for the remainder of the two| “ The crewmen were inside when| Wilson, Eafl.....-.,.........27 | neighborhood, said she smelled gas | craft designer ‘ was taken in the : ¥ oe < e wee bed r : . a * : as 4 ieiepeneuil ; was e a 4 > ST Pm mitateretet i may wey “hans allan the blast rocked the neighborhood. | Women's Pages : just before the blast. tested Vig a i as : OEE PULPOSES — ——— = The V Weather ey y | i sat t t ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST. 16, 1955 -A resolution to give tentative approval to the Elks Club, 114. , to add space REPORT SCHEDULED The city attorney is set to report | on a request from the part owner | of a Class C liquor license that he be allowed to maintain the owner. | ” ship though he moves out of the city. Another plan commission report __js—slated,—thisone__regarding _vAa- cating an alley parallel to Perry Street between Ariene and Madi, son. hy, Engineee's estimates for curb, gutter, drainage and widening East boulevard between the pres- ently widened pavement ending _north_of Mi. Clemens and-south Approval of a plat — ‘Herrington . scheduled, The Commission also is sched- uled to consider: of public necessity earing and | ip at Pon. | Water Group - Plans to Talk Pipeline Project A 000 water pipeline from Huron to serve parts of Wayne, Oakland, Monroe and Washtenaw Counties will be dis- cussed Aug. 24 by the Water Com- Stevens admitted ‘Aug. & stealing a car in Royal Oak July 20. a Lowest temperttere ‘preceding @ a.m. At 8 oi: Nw al ase Ss. tures 1D B. Mans oens es 8B m.. Ms eevee s i ehewiewes Besewedien ‘ Tcvageenee Mie rhoasers i 3 m.. +edeues - Menday tn Pontiae As downtown) ls neWne eer apencene 4 ee weer eee ig ‘ SC eemeeel eee = Feabheossesecacy O0 ieee phy Aaah cobeade * 2 - ee » 45 es fe a : s ee eee —=—+-—= Sire Dennis | a. aa Mrs. Charles Folhow in Lapeer, Mich- had | Stephen Johnson Public hearings are set for the |; porecall FE be “te construct dione eon. wepeatag, striae, curt, © end bituminous re¥ap on Mt. Clemens. street to Bast boulevard tonstruct curb, guiler and street from Marshall construct two-inch black- tep on Aven. road from Argyle to Ber- Special assessment rolls are to be confirmed for curb, gutter and drainage on Gerdon street from Oakland to Corwin, and sanitary sewer on Nebraska avenue from | trunk sewer east of Motor to {Franklin ‘road. Pontiac Deaths * Mrs. Dennis Benard 'Theélam Mary) | Benard, 65, of 101 Auburn Ave. | was dead upoti admittance to Pon- | tiac General Hepkal at 6:15 p. m. Monday. oan in Cabernet May 18, 1890, she.was the daughter of Andrew and Madeline Geroux De Long- champ and the widow of Mr. Be- nard ago from Calumet and was a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, the Rosary Altar and Daughters of Isabella. Surviving. are five sons and two daughters, Alvin, Owen, Clinton, Robert, Mrs. Doris Olsen of Pon- tiac, Kenneth of San Francisco, Calif., and Mrs. Louise Schram of Saginaw; two brothers and three sisters, Harvey of Flint, Russell and Mrs. Phoebe Graham of Pon- tiac, Mrs. Vinia Lumback of De- troit and Mrs. Florence Sweney of Lake Orion, . Parish rosary service will be) "| Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. and the Knights of Columbus at 9 p.m. in the’ Melvin A. Schutt Funeral Home. Funeral will be at 9:30 a.m. Thursday in St. Vincent de Paul Church. Burial will be in Mt. Hope Funeral for Mrs. Charles (Char- |lotte) Felshaw, 84, of 473 E. Mans- ‘field Ave. will be at 10 a.m. | Wednesday from St. Rita Church in Holly, Rosary service will be té- night at 8 p.m. in Huntoon Fu ‘neral Home. Mrs. Feishaw died Sunday at her ang Mrs. Russell Jackson Mrs. Russell (Grace Edna) Jack- son, 65, of 2086 Walnut Rd. died ~~] at 2:25 p.m. Monday in St. Joseph | Mercy Hospital. Born in Lapeer County Dee. 7, 1889, she was the daughter of Nich- olas and Elizabeth Nilés Stone. She in 1916, She came to Pontiac from Port Huron 25 years ago and was a member of First Baptist Church. Besides her husband she is sur- vived—by— her stepmother, Mrs. and a daughter, Harold Lynch of Flint, Arthur Lynch of Lapeer and Mrs Jean VanValkenburg of Ro chester, a granddaughter and a great-granddaughter. Funeral will be at 1:30 pm. Thursday from Huntoon Funeral Home. The Rev. William E. Hakes, assistant pastor of. First Baptist |Church, will officiate and burial will follow in a aie Cemetery Stephen Johnson, three-year-old son of Duane and Adde Birrell Johnson of 2811 Pontiac Rd. died at 4:15 p.m. Mohday in St..Joseph Mercy Hospital: He had been ill nine months, . Born in San Francisco, Calit., ‘April 12, 1952, he is survived by his parents and two sisters, Nancy and Kathleen at -home. Funeral will be Thursday at 10 Fu- In lieu of flowers the family re- quests contributions be made to the Children’s Leukemia Founda- tion, 660 Frederick St.,. Detroit. Mrs. Jay L. Lloyd »| ais Jay L. (Flora Leona) Lloyd, 7, of 820% Baldwin Ave. died at see p.m. Monday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. She had been ill four months. Born in Romeo March 1, 1908 she | Bellevue, Lake Orion, will be sen- married Mr. Jackson in Port Huron | | Emma Stone ef Lapeer; two sons | . ‘erick of Lincoln Park, 11- "grand- | children and one great-grandchild. Also surviving are two brothers and a sister, -_ in Sydney, Aus- tralia, James and Mrs, Annie Har- ydie in Scotland. The body is at Sparka-Criffin Fu nera] Home and the funeral will be Thursday at 2 pan. at All Saints Episcopal Church of which he was a member. The Rev. C. George Widdifield, bis pastor, will officiate and burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. In lieu of | flowers, the family request dona- j tions to be made to All Saints | | Chure h for tise in the Children’s * Home. Detroit to Restudy MTA Pike Route DETROIT (INS)—Detroit and the Michigan Turnpike Authority ot- ficial are going to investigate claims it would cost the city $100 million for sewers and drains if the proposed Rockwood - Saginaw jiumnpike _ the Rouge j and Eliza Howell Parks. The cost estimate by city engi- neers yesterday was termed “co- lossal and irgedible’ by Carl H. Smith, a member of the authority. “Ste” Senator Higgins, Fern- dale Republican, has indicated may be wager é to re-route the turnpike if the city's éstl- mates are correct. ners and the authority Friday will inspect the parks. Clyde L. Palmer, assistant city: engineer, has warned construction of the turnpike in the parks would upset the flood basin and create mammoth sewer problems. Admits Check Charge tenced for bad-check passing in Oakland County Circuit Court Aug, 22. He admitted to Judge Frank L. Doty yesterday cashing a bogus so Aug Mayor Albert E. Cobo, city engi- |” | blast, Mrs, ] 'terical fearing her husband had Gas Blast Levels Home Here Mc Monday (Continued From Page One) | that after he smelled gas in the vicinity of the Dana home, he went into the house to tell Abbey. Douglas told Pontiac Detective heer said the apartment wall had been weakened Slog the 24 tenants sought shelter with rela- tives, 100 WINDOWS BROKEN The concussion was estimated to eo oe to more County Sheriff Deputies roped off spectators. ° ° * Mrs. Bessie Briggs. of 14 Lib. = St., said the gas company crew had been trying to enter the jhouse all day. She said Dana ap- parently came home around 3 p.m. and let the crew in. The upstairs apartment at the house was eccupied by Joseph Odertzzi, 28, and his wife Doreen, | 23, They had been living In the apartment since their marriage six months age and both were at work at the time of the explo- | sion, When notified at work of the Odorizzi became hys- not left for work and _— be trapped in the LEFT BEFORE BLAST Odorizzi said he had left approx- imately 15 minutes before the ex- jon plosion. —— said children had beet playing. on the Dana lawn and = “of the apartment building just minutes before the A similar explosion in the city occurred: on April 4, 1951. The 13- room home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mowbray at 115 Ottawa Dr. was destroyed when gas from a line to the furnace was being Mrs. Mowbray, alone in the JAMES WALLS James Walls, 89, Dies in Bloomfield dent of West Bloomfield Township and a retired farmer, died at his home at 7 a.m. today, He lived at 5631 Old Orchard Trail, Born in West Bloomfield Aug. 3, 1866, he was the son of William and Caroline Walls. He married Nellie Ort there Dec. 31, 1891, Besides his widow he is survived by two sons and two daughters, Fred J, Walls, Orchard Lake, Dr. Arch B, Walls of Detroit, Mrs. Dorothy M. Selle of Orchard Lake, six grandchildren and nine great- grandchi ildren. Funeral will be at 2 p.mx Thurs- day from Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, Burial will follow in Pine Lake Cemetery. In lieu of — the family request contribut made to the Joan Walls Fund, : James Walls, 89, life-long resi- | @ Caroline E, Smith of Pontiac, Mrs. | = and his telephone was discovered 40 feet from the house. No Bull, There Was Bull in Psychology Office NASHVILLE, Tenn. (® — “This may sound illogical,” a Vanderbilt University student told her psy- chology professor yesterday, ‘‘but there's a bull in your office.” “Nothing ever sounds {logical ."" began Dr. Stanford C. Erickson. Then be turned and faced a young bull calf, a fugitive from the stockyards here. || smashing equipment and sending students and secretaries scurrying. fart Alt, Pontiac building engi q have—broken—about—100—-windows the area to keep back hundreds of Back-to-School Shopping Tio: to keep arriving at classes on time a. Pontiac Press Phate COLLEGIATE ACCESSORIES—Lucia Arnold of 448 E. Bivd. South, inspects a fine array of equipment which helps to make college life} easier. There is a Sheaffers’ Snorkel Pen, an Underwood portable typewriter, a matched set of Samsonite luggage, a Bulova wrist watch and a man’s fitted traveling kit. Post 66 Scouts- Make 97-Mile Canoe Journey Nine Explorer Scouts and two adult leaders of Post 66, Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian Church par- | ticipated in a 97-mile canoe trek over the weekend, according to | King Stetler, adviser. The group started the trip ‘Friday at Grayling, and trav- eled down the Au Sable River, | stories and songtests, The 1!-man con- tingent stopped four times along the way. | Post 66 was attivated a year | ago, and Stetler said the group hopes to make the canoe trip an annual event. Stetler was ted {Man Stands Mute ‘on Larceny Charge Earl Dean Scribner, 17, of 1637 | Beechcraft, Keego Harkgor, yester- day stood mute when arraigned on a larceny charge in Circuit Court and Judge Frank L. Doty directed that a trial date be set, Scribner is accused of stealing st€ tires and whéels during the last three weeks off new cars ready for out-of-state transit at the Pon- tiae Motor Division parking lot and Motorcar Transport Co. here, ac- cording to Robert C. Miller, chief | ————— = no The accused is in Oakland Coun- iy Jal aoa 9008 bee. oe , Africa's Gold Coast has no nat- ural harbor facilities. The Day in Birmingham Commission BIRMINGHAM — A $2,000 ad- vance for engineering studies on a new proposal to solve the city’s Sewage difficulties was approved at last night’s City Commission meeting. But more talk centered on the decree which ig to be given by Oakland County Circuit Court next Monday morning, which will spell out time limitations concerning Birmingham's. violation of a State Water Resources Commission or- ider to. stop.Rouge River contami- nation. The proposed decree. sels a May 1, 1956, date tor determina- tion as to whether Birmingham structing what eventually would be the northern portion of the Ever- green sewer. In this instance, sew- age would flow into Birmingham's, sewage treatment plant instead of the Detroit system. A $2,000 ap- propriation hag been asked from each community to initiate the en- gineering studies. complaint of a citizen) said yes- terday, “This; will in no way be an audit, but more a policy check | on our basic approach and pro- cedure. but because of prior commitments will probably not begin their re- search until after Labor Day, ac- cording to Renfrew. Action was prompted by com- plaint of T. P. Gobeske, 1466 Bir- OKs $2,000 to Plan” New Interceptor eral times before- the Board of Review and City Commission. - . ‘ “It is a smart idea not to keep any money in an office like this. Box has been washed, There are no fingerprints on it.” _ The theft was reported to police yesterday by E. H. VanNorwick. Police said entry apparently was made through an unlocked door. A similar breakin occurred at the offices -of Drs. J. B. Hass- berger and Robert Mason, 620 N. Woodward, where $177.50 was taken from a file cabinet vault which had been pried open, |Polio Shot Program |Hits Low on Monday The anti-polio makeup shot pro- gram hit a new low yesterday when only 72 youngsters were ‘in- oculated at two Oakland County clinics, . The Pontiac clinic on West Huron street treated 41 first and Yesterday's figure brings the total of children inoculated during the makeup programs to 1.613. When the regular clinics closed two weeks ago, some 12,746 eligible youngsters had not been treated. Makeup shots will be given daily France Takes Cool View on Showing Big 4 Data PARIS ®—France is cool toward a U.S. proposal to publish official records of the recent Big Four conference at Geneva, informed sources said today. : A request for French approval of the plan was received through - the French embassy in Washing- +} ton, they said. A British Foreign Office spokes- man said in London yesterday that Prime Minister Eden's government also is cool to the proposal to publish the Geneva record. The average person who attends a convention spends $93.69 in the - mingham Blvd., who questioned his convention city says the American Hotel Assn. own assessment and appeared sev- by Abel Borey. Only one mishap marred the weekend journey — Stetler and Srout Larry Hoyt lost control of their craft and were dunked into the river. Several scouts came to their rescue. Pays Driving Fine Jimmy McDaniel, 2%, of Roches- ter, paid a $75 fine and $25 costs to reckless driving. He IN SPITE OF OUR FIRE WE ARE STILL OPEN for BUSINESS! ‘ YOUR GIBSON DEALER FOR OVER 25 YEARS FE 5-8413 ROY’ $ FE 5-8413 96 OAKLAND AVE. Bf Save Yourself Hundreds of Salon with this Amaring yesterday after he pleaded quilty | before Pontiac Township a . 1662 S. TELEGRAPH RON? Bloomfiold ~TASHION SHOP ~ Park at Our Front Door ~~ } Come to the Bloomfield Fashion Shop. Fashion Sh and College Clinic Pid OW — sons, Sandra Woods, Mrs. Shirley Coyle, Edwin Lioyd and Franklin Spencer of Pontiac, Mrs. Norma _|Graves of Snyder, Texas; a broth- er, Burton Matthews of Lake Orion “and a sister, Mrs. Grace Souler of Saginaw and six grandchildren. Ww from V Funeral will be at 3:30 p. m.}~- oorhees-Siple stot estes Ath Ror ihe Bek tat What's the trath about car values today? Now for the first time you can get all the data on-all the cars—all 16 makes. Shows you how they are built. The weak Hidden details never only Nash dared to print! Your Nash dealer will be \ hang) £0 9 yee Fae. "ay you hundreds of oi on your st ew ca. Yours Free At - Rogers Sales & Service, 696 Auburn Ave., FE 56 o1 ‘He's listed under “Automobiles” in your Classified Telephone Directory dea hai: pu 7 shined See TV lating Tie and Chol. igen THURSDAY EVENING, § P.M. SHARP Ld ——# You'll know what to wear on campus and for dates from the college girls yre will model the newest clothes. sa fall. - } Complete. showing of. ‘sportswear, coats, dresses, 4 accessories, jackets and shoes. & - oe a *To Accommodate Those Who Wishto Make |. : Saaeen, We Will Remein ego "il 9:30 | i e - f . + - 3 ‘ : . 1 . - | re Ae ‘ | ' : ’ ‘ a . a 4 $ i = : \ =e S : : ; 4 a ee ; é _THE PONTIAC PR ESS,” TUESDAY, “AU 'GUST ad 1955 ia Cer Gee THREE = American railroads hauled more, or enough ast make a train... ami (ee = | Day In — Day Our Item for Item—You'll . Save More ‘at Simms! F Bhop any ey of the @eek at Sioume _ ond you'll ‘see what we mean by ‘you'll save everyday—item for item? — Here are but a few ef many other unadvertised- values, . ZIPPER Fly—10 Ounce BOYS’ SANFORIZED pttggicneresrerratinteng| Maria Monroe | batte-ScwlShopeing Te: Renort Red Cells| arse eeceeeeccee never driven an aut mobile. She © * Air Conditioned Can Visit Soviet get iach sates : ~- Anytime’ » in (3 " Marker Honors Mix Farmer -Snover MOSCOW (INS)—A: ‘Soviet cul- |. ul Government FLORENCE, Ariz, (INS) — A, ‘tural official said today Marilyn | — FUNERAL HOME © 3) Monror—w : Un-American Commitee monument of a rideriess horse | Monroe—with curves and culture 160 W. Huron FE 2-817] Head Plans Probe of imarks the. spot near Florence |—would be welcomed to Russia. "ro dbbdbddd eda tPrIIIIIITitiiiiiri iii iti titi ty ~ . : : where the beloved cowboy ffl m But the blonde bombshell's pro- Commie infiltration star Tom Mix was killed in an posed “Mission to Moscow" has ;@utomobile crash a number of | failed to cause much of a rumble years ago, a | in the U.S.S.R. capital. j : | A Soviet official issued a ten- Homade Food Shop | tative welcome te Marilyn who i wants # study the Russian the- : ater. Then he asked, “How de 144-146 N. Saginaw St. you spell her name?” Phone FE 2-6242 | Not Marilyn, but Deanna Durbin is still the favorite This correspondent recentiy Quality Baked Goods at Moderate Prices | es » roves, posicard-sized picture of Deanna, film sweetheart Poul M, Saever © cecccccccseseses @ Ceecccccecsooooe: NEW YORK (#-Rep. Francis E, Walter (D-Pa) says testimony | : , - before es House Un-American | PEELS--SHREDS--SLICES ‘ eel ONLY Activiti Committee which he olne . QUICKER AND EASIER - heads has disclosed the existence THAN ANY KNIFE | of Communist ceils in government circles, $1.69 Value All sieves 6 to 19 at this price for Wednesday only. Limit 2 pair per customer, tise ValeerNew........ Shel9 = * * * He said last night the commit- tee intends to launch a full-scale probe of Communist infiltration, in | government in February, - | Preliminary ‘investigation and pened Bak of a number of years ago, for a _ | examination of witnesses under opera? ced by Our Expert Baker ruble from a woman peddler out- oath has shown “Communist cells Plane STined MR : H LTZ side the farmers’ market in Mos- in the United States Senate, the Anne! Lip —_— . OMER SC U een as : > | War Labor Board and ‘the Naticnal Dungarees '|Labor Relations Board,” Walter So far as is known, ne pictures said. 5 of sexy Marilyn—clothed or as § g ee $938 bd ® eo The Original unclothed as-in her famed calen- He explained, he meant staff . : Matching Jacket - dar photo—are readily available. lemployes of the senate and not. Miracle Peeler Bipes 6-16 $3.19 Sanforized, stitched seama, sipper fly, bar tacked, scrateh rivets ete. But there is evidence the Rus- |sians would take to Marilyn. A 'membeér of the Soviet farm dele- |) senators. Walter, who is here in connec- chi tion with the current probe of Red Exedhly 00 Pleteres Popular | gation visiting the United infiltration of the theater, ad- i School Wear | States remarked after seeing her dressed a rally of the Alliance, [ gave time and labor .. save || Boys’ Tan 7 in a movie: Inc., which describes itself as an | food and vitamins, too. Oscil- anti-Communist organization which | lating blade peels potatoes, ap- “ . rie ereive | ples, carrots, cucumbers, ett. * tae * ss work on subversive . Shreds cabbage, lettuce, Complete New Air Conditioning Fedor F. Solomatin, second sec- ecUvites : chocelata, ae 3 removes * * oe ° ‘ im T | Sanna nen corn TromM 6c etc. SO @asy For Your Dining & Shopping Pleasure oe ee USER cohen © Peatiog Proce Peete | to use that you'll never go back | Washington has been quoted as READY FOR CLASS — According to the latest word from campus Car eless Woma Nl | to a paring knife after the first | saying that Marilyn's application | ¢,.nion authorities, Laura Terry of 245 Preston, and Kathy Johnson, | time you try it or te a visa “has ae in our hands | 9659 Chadwick Dr, Waterford High School students, are wearing up- Begins Mishap ae nif =ere days. _ to-the-minute classroom favorites. Laura is fashioning a new Black Chain Reaction SIMAS.&.. | “7 ( arts j , a > “i aa y (vw e “' ile . . re new 7 aching | now ts able to TW atch tartan in one of the new corduroy Coodinates While Kathy modets Sishenweres. ~2ad Fleer || manufacture butter without churn- | @ "ubby tweed skirt topped with a matching cardigan in fine, inter ing and is said to be highly satis locking Orlon, Frosting on this delectable costume is the novelty pique “Every man should have a wom- an like that.” CHINO PANTS Sines 6 to 18 * Sanforized chino panis with sipper fly, wide helt loops, KANSAS CITY UWA. taxicab in which Maxine Bruce, 26, was: a button back pockets All factory, lanchor collar with checkered taffeta bow, passenger collided with another the foliage wear to school — _ sen eee resents tester eee = = SS t ; ; ear yesterday. While the drivers Special Value! ' é | Were discussing the superficial For a Limited e damage, Miss Bruce tried to slide Ti 0 } ' &-In, Handle—4-in, Cup ® . ‘past the cab's steering wheel ; me my Si k <—- Police said this is what happened n next Miss Bruce accidentally released | | _the emergency brake,and stepped | 9 “an the accelerator’ The cab darted + forward, bowling over Sam Rus- Mi 38, and David Withers, 27. Both were taken to a hospital with leg injuries, Then the cab rammed another automobile, which in turn was ii tesa ion i cis ties econ x ss Lao aia a a EE Lae See ee a ee B WEDNESDAY ONLY SPECIAL Zipper Top—Galvanised Wire Rubbish Burner knocked forward and hit Jessie ‘ agratt semfety sipper top. Large capacity, Bure rubbish safely ] eS ee 12-Inch Electric FAN | sia Value 313° © « ¢} tating style for com- plete wenttla- tien Famous Handy Breese ray ARTHRITIS. LIPSTICKS #2 Value e 1 he y SUFFERERS! epulor $2 Value $427 in | eers eco ee _ | | D aves 4Qc en Pamous Evening tn Paris Npeticks in choice of any two shades in extra‘last er regular formula. tubes A regular $2 value for onmiy 4#¢ OFFER SAME DAY RELIEF! ; SIMAS... 100 Tablets $2.49 : 9 N. Saginaw —Main Floor Yours in ” every bottle of ‘< : eee Come 4 Simms Has LOTIONS for Better Sun-TANS N ; ‘ ° and LOTIONS for Painful Sun-BURNS ; | 2 ? SDA ee seceats bronmemn “wl Complete Cxtea Day r £ RLU ANS : Selection of : , es Sun-Tan Lotions ‘ BEER | $ i / and Oils xe al electric 13-18 rt oti SOLAR TAN..... 39 fan 6-Ounces LANA TAN..._._.. .49%e m WEDNESDAY ONLY SPECIAL 314-Ounces SKOL SUN TAN. . 49¢ 4-Ounces GARBY SUNTAN . 60c 4-Ounces TARTAN Suntan. _79¢ 6-Ounces BRONZTAN.... $1.25 6-Ounces SUN ‘a SURF... -~$150- Sun Burn Lotions and Insect. Repellents . BB Calorie-Controlled aimee - ‘| Norwich SUNBURN Lotion .......... 79¢- | TT TELLG LLM L \ te Bright Colars—ALUMINUM - (2-0z. Tumblers Regular $1.19 Value 6" 97° i 98 North te DRUGS Ff Makes beverages stay colder or | Saginaw —Main hotter longer. Assorted bright . | Seecet BROTHERS colors. In box. : WEDNESDAY ONLY SPECIAL ~“ Go right ahead and enjoy yourself! Drewrys is the one big difference in beers — yours in every , these are the beer that is brewed with high protein _ bottle of Drewrys. Start enjoying DREWRYS— ceeited) | ingredients ... brewed and aged an exclusive the man’s beer women love—right now! 7 controlled way to bring you a beer that is won- ’ : derfully light and-dry. You can enjoy as much MAKE THE FAMOUS DREWRYS ) “7” ___- ONE-BOTTLE TEST TODAY!: —as-you like with no feeling of fullness after- : 7 7 ae T Fis ti wards. Yet, Drewrys is rich in the fine flavor ust ene bottle will prove to you that Drewrys i the | led a Platters _finest” beer you ever tasted —no matter what beers a yeu Fan afford Amer- iea's most famdus glazed chinaware Nationally Rdvartinnd wt - Genuine HOMER LAUGHLIN _ Big 2-Quart GLASS Mixing Bowls Clear glass bowl for mixing or serv- Siesta eect + are ccnersinenmmlicrmmaeey ™ wei : es i : von | Pe ae ch = 5 elements that makerit tasteso good; that makes — may have enjoyed ne mallet what you ay B96 . Drewrys always completely satisfying. This is _ paid for other beers. Find out for yourself — TODAY! : 12 Inch : ose “ay ; . ; Beautiful pastel colors, fire-glazed for ‘long lasting quality. 4 ee Lge es wood — = Decorative and useful, Buy for gifts.and your own, i a . $0 Stendord | ™ ; 12-In. Oval. Plotters SIMAS,& Ne. 160 recht If Perfect, BROTHERS f | $1.39 vatue 29 98 N. Saginaw—Second Floor —— i ae a eg Bie liself the First Time You Use ai ne me \\ — ) meme . SCISSOR | re ae 1 tS ES: Extra - Rh te Wie 9 Shelf Assembly — ld, USA, fre. “ Zi ‘ a For Wells or Window. —-——__ Drewrys : és saimare! $9.98 Value noe re hee 7: | Deere || arene : TH E MAN’ nd 5 E Ee R w ° M E N L S 7s E - BF ea eee pire ‘ tl : e . ‘ ‘ | : : eS os , : e a> | Me AAS. S. od s - ‘ : ; j * tac : 4 . ina Mein Floor ON TV: EDDIE CANTOR COMEDY THEATER — WJBK-TY (2) — THURSDAY — 9:30 P.M. — * , esse row ; y. t grins e a. mee : a fees Se Ke Seaene ni ‘es A e a an Perennials in August . Just Arrived . INSECTICIDES FUNGICIDES -‘Tasker’s 63 W. Huron St. FE 5-6261 lore Power... Smoother Hearin 4 TRANSISTOR Hearing Aid ‘New Shipment of Seeds oe ‘THE, PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1935 , ! workers, Reporting this, Dr. E. W.| . Frowns on 1 Marriages by ot cs te, ema c SONOTO NE with ron - shown by many children whether they paint by brush or Sesmeetcar [IT tare: dren tare eetomerer JiInterest Children in Art $11 Penta \by Personal Admiration State Bank Bidg. FE 2-1225 OUR HEARING DESERVES THE 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. The easiest way to interest your child in the arts is to show him you're interested in THEM your- anyone else. But # does give them more than they had before. self. It broadens them. It awakens | That ought not to be so painful them all the sooner to rich and re- | for you, either. | warding values in life. ~ PRAISE YOUNGSTERS ART — A “sense “for expression in-color+ _ing or playing ball as expertly as| \ tonal Research Council, said the policy stems from uncertainty LOOK - SEE - COMPARE WISE’ BUYERS GET OUR PRICE TO BE. SURE Aluminum Doors, Windows, =, Screens SIDE SLIDINGS “FLORIDA AND RECREATION ROOMS nee QUR SPECIALTY a ALUMINUM STORM SASH & SCREEN COMBINATIONS JALOUSIE DOORS CASEMENT STORM SASH - SCREENS jALOUSIE WINDOWS WOOD DOUBLE HUNG WINDOWS AWING WINDOWS ALUMINUM DOUBLE HUNG WINDOWS JALOUSIES CASEMENT WINDOWS ALUMINUM & FIBERGLAS AWNINCS FREE ESTIMATES — 36 MONTHS TO PAY Open 6 Deys o Week — 7:30 A. M. te 6 P. M. 1661 South Telegraph FE 4-2598 SAM BENSON SAYS: -- JACKETS and SLACKS y the Hundreds ‘to Choose From — Save °3 to 56 Sam Benson Says: Take the Side Street to My Store eee You'll Save More! And i Mean More! YES, MAM! YOU SAVE uP TO $2 TO $5 ON YOUR DRESS AND SPORT me ¥ ~ i ) , ‘ Se “CLOTHES! e ! ing | > . Corner WATER STREET 20 S. PERRY STREET You praise him when he catches | the ball for the first time, you like to let him think he can run as fast as you across the yard. He needs to be encouraged to the same degree in the pictures he draws in school, in his reading, and in music He's imitative, and he'll imi- you think good music is worth | (Adsestionment) - fork, igieen Play : -In Comfort Without g Backache Nagging backache, headache, or muscular - aches and — may come on With over-exer- _ ten emetions| upeets or ee | _ strain, And foie who eat and drink unwisel sometimes suffer r irritation . With that restless, untemfertabie feeling. Uf you are miserable and worn out because of these discomforta, Doan's Pills often 4 ~ by their pain retiewing action, by their sooth- ~ ing effect to ease bladder irritation, and by | @ their mild diuretic action a | = — tendin, © miles of > fo if nagging backache makes you feel | to increase the output of the 1b tdney tubes. ™ dragged-out, miserable...with restless, sine | __ ee nights.,.dom't wait...try Doam's Pilis.. ™ get the same happy relief miftions have on- j ee Get Dean's Pills today! (Révertionment ' : , Bledng Piles. No Longer a Problem Medical research has developed 4 miracke medicine = =talled RECTOR Al. 10 does away with the con- toual om of atts 4 cuntanemta, suppome- . re, that give little, # any sar . vemnparery rele. RECTO JRAL hae e tendeney ~ shrink the piles and vy in a few days, the - Rieeding, careatis, invitation and pole veart to ~ Smeg ant 8 9 Ge dege mare tre complrtely gone of wafferers have used thasremark * painful would ' ‘ oagert Cot well NOW! Stay welll Get w butile of listening to, se does he, When Pctrea ‘he. trans with coord | pictures he draws with colored crayons, he'll try all the harder. | Turn the tables on him when | jhe begins to find his way through | a book and let him start reading | to you. Let him write the thank- | you letters, or the boliday greet: ings, to his aunts; they'll be as | pleased to hear from him as from yl en and this practice gives him a start at shaping his ideas, at making them into sentences, at being attentive to words and their | meanings. Take him to a4 children's con- cert not as if it is a chore for | you but as if it is as much fun as, say, the movies—as it may weil be | Twe of the noisiest children I know turn absolutely quiet when | - they are given drawing paper and crayons and allowed to make pictures. Why does it matter to them? Because they know their parents are eager to to see what they've done. Dees this make artists out of them”? Not at all, and -it doesn't = them from sw vimming or rac- | ‘Picked Right Man for Job | CHEYENN& Wyo. (®—The Wy- = Simms; Walgreen's; Thrifty; J. V.: /oming Travel Commission hired TBlankster & 3 ny nell Pharmacy: an assistant secrtary to brag about = amg, tarters‘brayen, Pm Aw | ee Been - ale 2 Q@ MEMOTO STATE FARM MEMBERS Q “i FROM 4 ALL LOCAL 4 | REPRESENTATIVES 7 - - GREAT News: t 3 3 3 E ue £ rs ; a ce __ No other car like it—anywhere! For in the entirely new field of 4-door hardtops, here's the finest of all—Oldsmobile’s Ninety-Eight DeLuxe Holiday Sedan! It’s the ultimate in :looks and. luxury—with no center post to mar the smart sweep of its convertible-like lines— FIRST AND FINEST. % a New car field ! ag ee Periweereeee everererstaee evens: i ki ' ’ 2 4 . E, ff fi ie . : £6 = Robert Gaff, Jr. OR 3-2778 Vern Hartman, FE 4-9546 Howard C. Bratt, FE 4-6921 Earl Davis, FE 4-9546 tee Huffan, FE 2-0201 ~~ Lester Oles, FE 2-0396 Harvey Perry, FE 2-0201 Jalives Schell, FE 4-9546. |] Franklin Aherns, FE 4-9546 with stunning interior elegance—with marvelous spaciousness and convenience. And this car is equally distinctive in action ... for the famed “Rocket” 202 Engine makes going smoother and safer than ever. Visit our showroom and you'll agree that here is the finest of its kind by far. Come in today! Superlative is the word for this hardtop with 4 doors... —- a eed new tyes seer i ? Sf, 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. o FE 4.3566 ran! a ee Pi THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16,1955 = | oe FIVE: A portion of. veal and some car- rots taken from fin eans -broughit ee this year in. London by the back by Sir Edward Parry's Are- Canned Foods Advisory Barens, tie expedition ot: 1824 were’ dis- we Want to \By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—‘The Face on the Barroom Floor” has. often struck me as a fascinating title, jter all, how many faces do you see on floors in the course of a year? The number is negligible. * * * “Ah, but you'll be seeing more and more of them,” said Edward Fields today. ‘Faces on floors are becoming quite a thing these days. I personally have decorated many nightclub floors recently and...‘ Now this statement may appear to indicate that Mr, Fields, a tall ; and handsome gentleman, is a drunk. It is not so. He is a custom | | being walked over by some of the | | wealthiest matrons, smartest im- | bibers and best-groomed poodles in | the world, But back to the subject at hand: “Tt think some of the most ex. | citing new qarpets—me call them though completely unrealistic. Af-| »| who happened ‘on the color quite | carpet maker and his products are! Call MSU Most Step On Bomieone?_-Buy New Rug ste Hon Ge i -CHARLOTTE #—Vance Joppie, <* mR Negi eR plains Fields, “but young. And | “This young woman came to my! for Fiplds to send ja woman's | citing. There is a decided trend | 29-of Grand Rapids, csbvicted at: Mrs. — was in deep despair about | office one day and said, ‘I have| girdle to bis factory in Flushing, | back to patterned carpets in the Soot dene : cleaning bills, Well, we fashioned al just stumbled upon the most tabu- N. Y, (“I am not a prude, but 1.| smartest homes, It needn't be’a ret egree murder in the fatal most beautiful tnottled rug for her : : want to retain the respect of my | {face on the living room floor, but | beating of a Vermontville gas sta- and called it, simply, the “Ever- helpers’’); But he did so. The | it could be stripes, or geometric | tion owner, yesterday was sen- | Stain Design." ; color was matched magnificent: | designs, or the very latest thing— | tenced to life imprisonment by_cirs “Shewas delighted, naturally. ly, and the lady does searcely | which is a parquet floor design | cuit judge Archie D. McDonald. | lous shade of blue, and I wonder | iif you can match it for a bedroom | | carpet. With that, she whipped out | And the servants—well, they have ‘ navy — babel which she had anything except bleach clothes | sculptured into a carpet. Joppie and -his 17-year-old girl never stopped raving about it!" rroneously washed in too much now—WVainly hoping ‘for another “It looks like ‘the most beautiful | friend, Mrs. Carol Strader of Grand Ly : bleach, so that it came out a sort coup de carpet. t Boore < t you don't have to | Rapids, admitted the attempted LUSCIOUS COLOR. of cerulean shade; indeed a lovely sel pene: Load ta Shy | “Anything goes” in floor decor | wax ‘it.’ Fields turns up ,his| robbery that resulted in the fatal | these days, Fields maintains, and | palms) happily, ‘Could anything | Slugging of Glenn Powers, 49, last It was a little embarrassing (the more original, the more €x- | be sweeter?" May 4. One. of the most luscious colors | mistake." in his carpet line was suggested, Fields says, blushing, by a lady by chance, Soviet. Fo armers . oe SPPiie “only 4 more big days!~ Beautiful School 7 EAST LANSING (UINS!—Twelve touring Russian farm experts think Michigan State University the | most beautiful univ = they have | Phoenix Hosiery Sale Zip -in-or-Out Cotton Print 3% Flattering creation by Faithful Frocks, for wear in or out of the house. -Sanforized and so easy to launder. Attractive 80 square percale floral print with grounds in blue, gold and pink. Two roomy pockets in slash style. Sizes 12-20 and 14'2-24'2. Hurry in today for yours Waite's Dresses—Ti\rd Floor of Fashion aren ‘are theme being de signed “with caricatures ry fa- mous faces on them,” Fields went on. “Some home-owners like to have their own faces on the floors of their dens or ree- reation rooms, But in public gathering places, of course, it is preferable to have well knowa personalities on the “earpet. ee ~ Can't you think of a lot of peo- | ple, he asked, you'd like to walk all over? We conceded we could. | HOT TREND | | said Fields, is to reproduce a original of the painting, or he does not have the right to reproduce it against the law.” For instance, only the Louvre | Museum could be carpeted in the | “Mona Lisa.” A guy in Hoboken, New Jersey, could go to jail for | putting her in his Parlor. | In_ this icles for nearly K) years, Mr, Fields has had the | pleasure and honor” of “doing the floors” for such well-padded | carpet lovers as the Vanderbilts, the Astors, the William Paleys, ‘anid Conrad Hilton, his homes” and hotels. Many of his imaginative cus | tomers, he admits, have given him | his fancier ideas, | For example, one gentle lady | Whese name is on the tip of | every Dun & Bradstreet em- ploye’s tongue, presented Fields recently with a most practical problem, She owns four giant Mastiff Hounds and a small bur- ro, which are given the run of the house—if you call 30-odd rooms q house, _housebroken 1 after ¢ a fashion,’ ’ ex- * * — YOU CANT eee They’re 100% Safe e INSTANTLY ACCEPTED e SPENDABLE ‘- > ANYWHERE @ QUICK REFUND IF LOST @ GOOD UNTIL USED __ @ ONLY 75c PER $100 4 Convenient Located Branch Banks @ PERRY at GLENWOOD ¢ W. HURON at TILDEN ‘@ KEEGO HARBOR. _@ WALLED LAKE . WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS Another hot trend in home decor | painting on the carpet. ‘Of course, | Hh the—-home--—owner must own the | ‘on his floors.. Otherwise, it is. “These dogs and this burro were | MSU President Dr. jaa Hannah | said the -Russians were particu- latly interested in the many short | courses: offered at the school’ $| Kellogg center for business groups | when they visited the campus yes- terday. ot Ldn Co Lo Reg. 1.35 Reg. 1.50 Reg. |.65 Reg. 1.95 4 WAITE'S Exclusively... your BONUS VALUE! favorite hose at new money ; r) saving prices. Every style and type to keep you fashion Buy 12 paire of ec oeits night. All Custom-Fit Proportions mie wn’ lots, “When 1 mentioned short and you the ee pcos courses for bankers,"’ Dr. Han- | ¥ 13th pair free as a : us! ~* Air Conditioned Street Floor nah said, “one of the visitors | , asked if the bankers get paid | . ee | when they come to school. . “I told them I thought so.” SAVE 4.99! REGULARLY 9.98 A PAIR! WASHABLE WONDERS! The delegation: toured the _ $50 : “a ° million’ centennial af farm | mechanization at the university | scsi TIE yesterday. | -_ Sy Tene SKee ete iv? is = Y Oy m my 4 ty Mt} tf; ¢ i Super Deluxe Snow White Fe 4 Reptile in Cupboard Meets Speedy Death eased oe es teeed Nylon Ruffle Curtains Boers used.a shovel and a croquet mallet to rid her cupboard of a 55-inch Blue Racer © " Mrs. Boers was painting when | 99. she heard something fall in the cupboard. She investigated bat| 72”, 81" & 90" Length! found nothing—at first PAIR As she was about to resume | work, she ‘spotted the snake's tail moving slowly behind some boxes. | - ‘One mighty btow withthe meatier 4-|-—@ Jumbo 9-Inch Ruffle! 1 to 134" Fullness! felled the reptile to the floor. As | j it headed for an open doorway, ‘ ’ . . -4 she finished it off with the shovel. @ 108 Inches Wide to the Pair! All Inches Wider for Picture Window Look! | Cruiser Now Flagship ; TAIPEI, Formosa (#—The- heavy | : . cruiser St.Paul, recently arrived | @ Little or No Ironing! Wrinkle-Resistant! from its home port of Long Beach, | Calif., today became the flagship | : of the U.S. 7th Fleet. The El @ Well Tailored! Resistant to Abrasion and Tearing! Dorado, fleet flagship since early ; 7 May, is returning to the United antiies eal . i : | States. _ Fresh and frothy as a cool summer breeze itself! Sheer Nylon French Marquisette Ruffle Cur- About 15.008 American tourists tains! Super Deluxe Ruffles in crisp, easy-to-care for Nylon! Frosty snow white to please any ‘visited Berlin last year, | homemakers dream. Can be hung shortly after sudsing! Hurry in today and save on several ° remppemrpoc ome eee | pairs! ; ee | Waite's Curtains and Draperies—Air Conditioned Fourth Floor all-woal girl’s coats big and little sister famous make coats that g-r-o-w with your child! ‘ai Made to Sell for 29.98! : e Little Sister hetehiog Stocks oe With Hots to Match! : @ Slacks with He ov y Duty. Elestic! Cotton Kasha Lining! @ Choose from Soft Fleece, Cobblestone or Ribbolene! ‘@ All Warmly Interlined with Wool, Quilted with Iridescent Rayon aie : Member Federal D {posit Insurance Corporation - DOWN .@ Two Season’s Wear with ores heer f 3” Hems, Sleeve Out- @ Canvas interfaced at sinus Points for Last- - ing Neotness! : Girls’ Sizes 7 te 14; Little Girls’ 3 to 6x! . @ Exclusively at Weite’s in Pontiac! Weite's Children’s Centor—Air Conditioned Second floor \ ee : } t @ ‘ Ce \ 4 Yee gp « : + ~~ . _ : president should be made to understand » that neither our Government nor peo- ple will look with favor on financial aid .’ toacountry that daily is becoming more peg 4 ut eS sy ce 1 & a » 4 : ; . i sdoteun MEMBER OF AvDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 Dwight S. Adams Resigns United Fund Post Pontiac loses a valiant and valuable —_—titizen tr the resignation and departure "of Dwiaur S, Apams, United Fund Sec- , retary. Mr. ApaMs came here during the period of rapid advancement and ex- pansion in the Pontiac Area United Fund, and he was of inestimable help- in instituting new programs and doing a scientific job of surveying the giving in this.locality, oe x * * Pontiac had been weak in her community contributions for tors had faced the problem squarely and set about to cor- réct the situation and bring Pontiac into line with comparable cities elsewhere in Michigan and in the country. Dwicut ApaMs was admonished that this was his Number One Job and he — any years, The Beard of Dire of a military dictatorship. A Loss to the Nation The sudden and tragic death of Am- bassador Joun E. Pueriroy is a loss both to the inistration and the Nation. Like many other distinguished Ameri- cans, Pugriroy had to overcome a seri- ous setback early in his career. Born at Walterboro, S.C. 48 years ago, he was forced by his father’s death to leave West Point in his second year there. After employment in several jobs he’ began his Federal career as a $90 a month elevator operator in the Senate Office Building. . | a eee From that humble beginning he rose to posts in the Treasury, Labor and State Department - and to the rank of ambassador. His first assignment at the top diplomatic level was at Athens. There he compiled a brilliant record in the months immedi- ately following Greece's victory over the Communist rebels. * * * Pueriroy’s next ambassadorial. as: . signment was in Guatemala. There he also served brilliantly avdiding any ap- pearance of intervention. Nonetheless he played a helpful part in the estab+ lishment of the anti-Red regime of CarLos CastTiLo ArMas which replaced the ousted Communists. At Bangkok, Thailand, where he had been since last ae ‘ THE. --ments\ in Colombia. That country’ " TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 ” VaR UT onEe ee oe peti Me tee ™. ee r,s ; eS as tae « Se sei, Voice of the People "2 Likens Williams’ Rer “© to Television Commercial cbeen the Commander-in-Ct our Armed Forces during the past few years. If I were Mr. Williams I would be prouder to have my picture at the table in Geneva with other world top men than to see it in the Saturday Evening Post with Harriman. : The Stowaway David Lawrence Says: | ADA Ballyhoo Over McCarthy Defeat Could Backfire on Democratic Cause ee “i — re ; x..helped.to.streng! WET EEOUT IT WIKN Tine Geterminallon. The Board is very happy with the re- en that country’s pro-American regime. In full measure he deserves WASHINGTON—Just_ahout_the Dexter White relegated to ‘po time that almost everybody has ‘been in a mood to lay aside ic mo. But there are plenty of stump speakers who.can still ask ques- for it to ‘rub off’ and you no s s’ Remark doubt wish that you hadn't ‘smeared it on, srs cre. Resident Is ‘Disgusted’ at State Office Rudeness Looking Back 15 Years Ago ; NAZIS BOMB Cryodon Airport in London: ~~ HIGHWAY PLAN offered as part of draft bill. - { a In Goldfish Bow! President Has Prestige __ WASHINGTON ® — The minate ‘a man is elected President of the United States he moves into a gold- - * - ™ US: ternational. Monetary Fund remain on the Senate calendar, not only letting the nomination of White as He's guarded night and day Rg “McCarthyism” as a political is- sue, the “Americans for Demo- cratic Action’’—an organization of “left wing” radicals who have an refused to withdraw it but, over a devoted crew of men in the world, “period of 11 months, sui —the U.S Secret~Service;-His-do-—a job ______ sults he produced and with the manner _ he-snust-Si- adequately ~ wrote two separate letters to ings are reported by probably the going to be an effective chief ex- af of achievement, Had this assignment been handled poorly, Mr. ApaMs could tions, and one of them will be why a former president of the United States, after having been warned by the head of the FBI and by of- — “the high: - tribute” ~paid him = by President Eisenhower who called his death a serious loss to our ecutive, most curious and observant group have made himself and the United Fund diplomatic corps. influential part in managing the Democratic Party and picking its ficials in his own cabinet against Harry Dexter White praising him for his service. == anywhere, the White House press corps, Add to these a few other little chores, such as being commander very unpopular. : — = presidential candidate s—has Anything a vabupanto says, Dea in chief of gahigts forces, = : brought the issue back to life. 3 ' P the mest offhand remark, is noted, you wonder why any man. ¢ * The Man About Town wa esemete Periberi Used to Claim analyzed, interpreted. Any tailor wants to be president even though However, he won a host of friends and the Pontigc Area United Fund is resting today on the firmest foundation in its history. The people of this locality believe in the one campaign idea and they are happy at avoiding the two dozen or so with which the community had previously been afflicted. Dwicur Abas has continued -to dod his part skillfully and with excellent results. The community is unhappy at losing Mr. and Mrs. ApAMs, but all of their friends on the board and elsewhere are pleased with the promotion and Des Moines will find that it possesses a cap- Cost Was $4.50 Stylish Furs Were Not So Expensive Fifty Years Ago . Vanity: What makes us see ourselves ag others see them- _ selves, . ‘ Around the turn of the century the ward- - robe of no fashionable Pontiac woman was complete unless it-included an electro seal neck scarf. At the store of P. H. Struthers and Company she could buy one for $4.50. According to their adv., that was a bargain, as they wete “$5.00 elsewhere.” Mr. Struthers’ daughter is Mrs. Roy Wilkinson of 153 East Iroquols Road, and ~ Joseph L. Rauh Jr., national chairman of the ADA, in a public address, claims credit for his organization in initiating the--fight against Sen. McCarthy, “both the man and his ism,”’ and is exultant because, as he puts it, the Wiscon- sin senator is now ‘‘Washington's ~forgotten man.” - What the ADA chief says, how- ever, in the rest of his speech indicates that he would be happy if the whele anti-Communist quest in Washington and the in- tensive seach for security risks and disloyal employes in the government would also be for- gotten, . This is what most people who have been concerned about the anti-Communist crusade, and not necessarily with any of the per- ence between the atmosphere of 17,000 Japanese Annually By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. Before we begin today’s lesson may I inform knuckleheads I have heard from scores of correspond- ents about a catcher on a big league baseball team. o * * Beriberi. is a Singhalese word (the principal race of Ceylon) which means great weakness, Full- fledged beriberi causes one-fifth of all disease in Malaya. Formerly it caused 17,000 deaths in a year in Japan. It is endemic (prevails constantly) in India, China, the Philippines, East Indies. It is a nutritional deficiency disease, due primarily to insufficient vitamin B1 (thiamin) but lack of other vita- A tablespoonful of B-nutron syrup with or after food twice daily or 2 B-nutron tablets twice a day, to supplement the ordin- ary diet. In either form it is virtually the same supplement— an optimal ration of vitamin Bi (thiamin), riboflavin, niacina- mide, , calcium panto- thenate, vitamin B12, folic acid, ferrous (iron) gluconate and manganese, Supplement the diet thus for at. least three months or until you learn how to get daily ration re- quirement of vitamin B from na- ture’s source—plain wheat. Learn how to use plain wheat in your everyday diet, by reading the pam- feels qualified to pass judgment on a president's wardrobe. Any house- wife feels free to criticize his wife's. hairdo. Herbert Hoover used to say @ president can be by himself only on two occastions — when fishing and when praying. Even thaf isn't quite true any more, Ei- senhower often has a gallery when he fishes, and crowds form to watch him go to church. * - * - So it's no wonder all recent pres- idents have fled from the White House at every opportunity. Ike's out in Colorado now, looking for a little peace. Harry Truman used to hole up in Key West, where peo- ple couldn't stare at him as if — to use his own phrase for it — he were a two-headed calf. Franklin D. Roosevelt spent more time at the pay is good — $100,000 a year and an expense account — and you get your picture on a. postage Stamp after you're dead. * * ° Thomas E. Dewey, who tried as hard as anybody ever has to get the job, was asked near the end of the 148 campaign why any ration- al person would seek the burdens — and tribulations of the presidency. The then governor of New York scratched his head and, finally, gave a rvueful little laugh. “I don’t know," he confessed. Still, there never has been any shortage of applicants for the job. Where is there a public official— village alderman or U. S. senator —who hasn't, in the secret recess- es of his heart, nurtured a wild hope that some day lightning might strike and blast him into the ranks of Washington, Jefferson and Lin- able, diligent and personable sonalities in Congress, have feared. ™ins usually plays a contributing phiet Wheat to Eat, available on Hyde Park thay in Washington dur- 7 ececutive in Dwicut S. ADAMs nn. 1 Sante Silay would happen this year. There is Part. '__, written, signed request if you pro- jing the later-days_of his _presiden-- eh ; ae . of 41 Oriole Road was a clerk in the store. ample evidence that the Demo- Reriberi. devel ps insidiously vide stamped, self-addressed enve- . cy. - ; Md TS cratic Party in Congress is very net abruptly. Instead of a tew ope. It’s inevitable that Americans Privacy? a men would count ‘ ° Inside information from my New anxious to soft-pedal any further gays or a week it is months, : Signed letters, not more than one page throw such a strong spotlight on it a small price to pay for a sure Press Freedom Taking . York men’s fashion expert tells me revelations concerning the Demo g rule, before tt dieablen, Bt Seam_ced hysiete, om to wseuse, ding: their president for the simple rea- place in history. Only the 33 men ’ °°: e . that an aerosol hair spray for men cratic administrations. ‘is charactert by heart-arte: a ge a stamped. sei son that a president fills several. who have held the presidency of : Bad Beating in Colombia will soon be on the canis It is on ey troubles aie 9 fs pCa calied Fe eh enveong to the Pontiac poles, all of them starring ones: the United States could tell them mc an entirely different formula from There is, as Rauh says, a differ: “neuritis” but ts really not nerve * __-Caprrignt_ 1958) Mb ©, Geet ond teremmant, head how great the price reelly 1s. Freedom of the press, ostentatiously re-established in Colombia two years ago by the new President Rovas women's sprays, with a “masculine” -- scent. A Pontiac area resident, ‘1953 and 1955, which are the two years contrasted by him. There is even a differenee between 1955 and 1954, when the Democratic But such full fledged beriberi is seldom encountered in North Amer- Case Records of a Psychologist Diagnosis of Son’s Ailmen t as Rickets . NILLA, 3 . Pe * — a ng — ri weniane—al “ 4 a oe Palys F — y i in-grave danger F. Lee Johnston Party got control of Congress. (on, Wat we pave renee dae bad . tide : In truth the situation is such of White Lake, has had @ prominent part in “RISKS” DISMISSED “nosed even if the affected indivi- | f ve, ti to Wealth Socie ~Mc t . that the Inter-American Press the photography at the new The difference, so far gs the: duals consult physicians. F Nn uria Ing y a ron - Teese tion is 1g the P — : Walt Disney - executive branch of the govern- DELAY DIAGNOSIS . : : Associa’ askin _ ment is concerned, is that the . - Dr. Lucille shows how even a this second doctor handle the ft apparently had coated us and radio of the Western Hemi- _Fantasyland near Los Angeles. Eisenhower Adininlstration is weasel ee sa the saluable criticlem na cost the case.” —— — = sbiripes a our . tes’ : . ; i ti id of m or. Chara : : : ic th an - use us as leverage sphere to protest the military Recently ‘hemed someiosoncr of the See van aon ‘aed oy oe om fledged beriberi sis the dis- dase ‘ote person hE ad perairanetes for gaining contributions for Ks censorship established at Bogota Michigan State Bar Association is previous adriinistrations and who Com i described in aoa oF dae. benefits. For the deflated per- VY". pageadall pa.nntgrat ig 8; own fund raising drive. « . by the Rovas Panita adminis- | Attorney Donald E. Adams have been found to be “security ci sake aan aak ie econ son passes the buck and an- iy iciian. De. Ca .* * trati f 2711 West Walton Blvd risks. . grily blames the critic instead . Gault properly informed the —_ covers the aighteenth congressional districe. ‘There hee been wo pulilelty ne wipes al ceeey Gitapenis gam Of SORT, SUTTSL alee: Ne Bese Oh Poe eae oe Se el tome on covers the é nth congressiona rict. vague an suc! : iain . , et kk & to individuals ensept in rare as “neuritis.” “run. d hires a rival doctor to remedy — = = life of eee ree was — In sending out this appeal, IAPA has That tired feeling will be elimi- cases, but one of them operated tion,”. “overwork and need of a fhe error. omy at you and ite-and neue’ ached 6 Ger ccd Ge invoked the. Panama Doctrine. Under . nated by “heliumized” working con- pr larencBteproed as fcodygiecors bong resto circeyatian.” By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE confirming your diagnosis by not let them monopolize our re- this, newspapers, magazines and radio _—itions, according to a science from the confidential code of. Symptoms are generally out-of page alien . ne ol et ee have agreed to resist collectively viola- ; engerareaee mudora en © _ thee ‘known as the National Se- = ina oi pigeece but even . h: = ne oo . sack F oe le back in a iddle RECEPTION ; = curity Agency, and turned them mention of Yankee beriberi would Physician. or example, t the m COOLS tion of press freedom wherever they eight hours’ work in ¥ix. > . over to a European government. = a brane unless I tell you ‘Dr. Crane, I wish I had used 1920's, I spent five years with Dr. = Well; our warm reception im- occur. He is now in jail: Had there t I'm talking about. Here, then, - ‘sandwich’ plan recently," sh _ Mediatley grew more frosty, . The forcible closing August 4 of the Former resident of Pontiac and Lake been such an efficient checking _ are the common manifestations taded with nparipmrsg fll we 15 if] i] Ye the chill became lig poe ~| ’ .. Orion, f ____ dene under the Traman Admin- of Yankee beriberi: : sat beside each other at a medical Ke “HN h # ~ began comparing the teenage deaf |.....__..___ liberal El Tiempo of Bogota, one of the = —--—sBen Morfordson, : — nog lteod gas not Fatigue. Dyspepsia. Palpita- > a re ee a»! os poy comme with the reading attain- Most respected newspapers of Latin now tiving in Chicago, writes that he well a tion. Breathlessness. Slight swell “A young society woman from NE ea youngaters fT pa America, isa ‘most flagrant example of remembers 2 : Sacra ae Men a ‘aaa tw soenaag on ale ee ae iG Ge pa ae , : ae i era 0 brought her little boy to my of- pressing the usual — press censorship. El Tiempo mistakenly Crp Sete penheimer” and others, but the cles. Pins and needles sensa-, tice, for-he didn’t seem to be as | “Oh” and “Ah” of unstinting : accused President Rosas Puma of dis- “"° conducted the old River Hotel here over Republicans—and particularly Vice tions im hands and arms or feet active and energetic as she had . praise which many an uncritical aa ceeeerererens Sa SS EEE ad x nt. - President Nixes: it he p i = legs... Distension of ..veins.in- 4edt--tee- should. be. parent. i. 4 f bstaaereecee: ee torting facts in a murder case. It then the Oakland Theater, and Crip had a bjg again—probably would like nothing Meck and arms. Squatting on “pus balers 1 bad t fi H 14-year-old barely able to bas is offered to publish the government’s black bear for a pet. He later moved to Lake better than to set all the facts from heels is painful and it is difficult een ber T to te HH or first grade book, we ston and tom Orion, taking the bear with him, and con- the sworn testimony in the Oppen- oF Impossible to rise from squat- minutes checking hita, : Ny and tried to show ; version promptly and fully. dueted the hotel there many years. Morford- h¢imer case before the American fing without using your hands. "N) i ee | _ how that child could close the ee *® von writes that Crip endeavored to tench the YOlCrs next time if the Democrats Fete, memory. Inability fe cew | 1 SoG a a te pe eee an ie oe on Oe inbteal; the Prestdent demand: bear to owim, thinking Wel jhe telah pall. “ett © Sebo thet on trun. <: saunas, Aasty ond See oe ee Reheet Gaal, lavertigntiog the Ot ond pereiel Meyearetts ed that it publish the same gov- his boat ground the lake. “But on the first the ADA fears Nixon. Some of to perform accustomed work, — . bio bitty $s 1 ‘eaes tar lesson the bear upset the boat and several : ernment dictated abject apology men just escaped drowning. Verbal Orchids to— J. Henry Wood of 87 North Shirley Ave.; eighty-seventh + Mrs. C. B.. Voorhees ittee on Un-American tivities to expose Alger Hiss. #929 r rH z | af i | cit 7 slifiiter te I i i _ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, AUGUST.16, 1955 | , ‘ 2 re , . ee | SEVEN Jacquard Loom “JUNIOR EDITOR French Making ‘Project Michigan’ Aids Infantry ~ Savin Indust J [ : E : Sead S ee H 4 R . _ ANN. ARBOR o — Te Arey stare, the shy and the “trans. battlefield surveillance must be| infra-red as means’of aiding night ey , ‘ versity ot | parency of the atmosphere.” —_| evaluated in ternis of the many| detection, - pF q ry i We 1OUSE epaills | pulled the curtain just a crack this} “Of particular interest is re-| factors which influence. the tight: et 1 ' “ . ‘month for the first peek at secret|search on the actual capabilities | signal reaching the eye and the Project Michigan, the article Guatemalan Indians Use ‘Prison’ on Saint Helena “Project Michigan.” of the “eye in order to develop | jnterrelationship of these factors.”"| *#idralse is concerned with Mete- New Weaving Machines Which Held Napoleon | ,, 8 vaguely worded information, ‘means for wilting and Improving." a a.nep "| erology, It wants: to learn how: . - : . they amplified slightly on what the | these capabilities. : . weather sfiects radar, wich’ ls to Spur Textile Output Now Tourist Attraction | research project, located at Willow| “Each specific wie of the eye in, Researchers are working on meget pegs 7 . bb | Run, is doing. Primarily, they said, | ~~~ : — 5 » prime means of watching a WASHINGTON — A new loom, WASHINGTON—A lonely house it deals with battlefield surveil- — when haze limits the adapted from a 19th century Jac- | of exile on St. Helena Island today | @¢°- = | quard model, is helping Guate- stands reclaimed as a memorial to| From an account in the Engi- Finally researchers said, they mala’s Indian weavers to save its famous prisoner, Napoleon | Peering Research Institute News are working on “data processing their ancient industry. te. the soldier and the war —— techniques.” These would gather PF % British-owned St. Helena looms | Tow look even more complicat and assimilate all information Bal rl pemncor er de from the se ikea grat black tan the Inide of television set GENTLE REMINDERS | |nned on the baled i fortress 1,000 miles south of the | The A * . ‘ We CENTURY ENGL AM A'SiUceag? WAKER" i faced a losing battle to make a Equator and 1200 miles west of | ¢ Ponictntieponeriae an Serincnor meen nese or esas Project Michigan suggests living from thelr slow and pains- Afri Whe ve ponsoring resea te s : Tos SLEEPY LARERS Wh A AO TA. RAPPING Plana Povsapar oy taking work. The Guatemalan Jac- =. n a man-olwar alr | ef ebserving the enemy by vari- _ Tug NOOONE MALES WITH AN MOON BELE Mint = ard ‘i chored off the island in October.| ous means. It also indicated the Patrols, dread duty of the In que is noe rege? vets eeid emptied 1815, to unload the fallen conquer. z i fantre soldier, could annarently to the problem of increasing pro- . onquer | Army ts using new methods of : y/1a4 aka on lensonad | ‘tance. The or and his small suite of 50 per- | ing the da ts 7 vy o~ j take on le J imeortance. Theo duction without losing the charm eons at Longwood Heuse Napoleon | precesung ta.. i Ms 0 { reveally, new deviees could pro of the old Mayan designgs. observed glumly “This is no heli- | The article described se.eral ‘ V/ q vide the same information The loom operates on the play- day resort.” vad elements of the research, / ? : ne ee : er-piane pringiple. Its sponsors Seismics: This concerns the vi- Grand Rapids Investor say any pattern can be punched During his exile, Napoleon | bration waves that travel in the _ err. aati Beas. a out on the mechanism's endless lived ter the mest part __ earth. , iz POETS 4 Weak an May Swing Deal roll and duplicated by the weav- = ea gustan wilh phacockhn This research is to determine | 8 evmies donee, GRAND RAPIDS # — Frank | =: tress and hedges. We slept on a | "OW seismic energy may be used = Ks secur ne Mee D, McKay, Grand Rapids Inves- Cotton was the chief material AT THE BEACH—2 camp cot. But he demanded |, “determining geological prop- . MARDNe cmon | tor whose -enterprises include the spun and woven by the Mayan an-| Girls like to play in sand at the beach as well as boys. ecel. As the |*rties of the earth, physical roeeAn, plush Bal Harbour Hotel in Mb eine the palace-style prot characteristics of soils, and vibra- today he_is “definitely cestors of present-day weavers. | Sometimes Molly digs tunnels or builds castles. Other times she is | court necessarily spent mucii ami, said ¥ Introduction of sheep and goat ee tion levels produced by nature and interested" in a multi-million dol- p and goats by| busy looking for shells or other objects on the shore. There are| time with Napoleon in the Spanish colonists brought welco’ by man-made sources. lar deal with a major motion pic- pe S srough welcome | bottles, net floats, pieces of wood and muchr else. cramped quarters, ‘his insistence RECORD BREAKER ti Californi wool to the chilly uplands for : on the men's standing In his pres- | SOUND STUDY ture firm in California, — : blankets and heavier garments. Her playmate is a big rubber blow-up Stal which can be used as @ aan o tpeught them-| - Acoustics: This ts the acldace of a ANOS Rue T can’t discuss details."" he said, The Spaniards also imported silk, | 10at on the water or as a seat on the sand. near the point of collapse. sound. The project deals. with |~ =} cond LAS8ER Cn ORONO AD {tut_woe have Gene gome sage " still popuwar along with modern | She has brought with her a big sun hat in case it gets too hot and, . ; sound waves in the atmosphere — rx OF THE none, s.usoee tating. | ray of course, she has her pail and shovel ’ A new house was built for Na- |‘ A= = He said there is a drive in Flort- rayon, ® : a . = as her pa = ; secler ws poleon but. he refused to move in, methods of detection, analysis y cas cn tae ta ane ies da ts “nk eeu af es tee : Liernipoe ged uarenrulgen sagan ante the pictars en aiMtt, benvy pager mad colet & WOR CONUS © tenting Gel i redings re-| 4 Ome... Oot VEE LEAR LEADER & RBs, co-re) | | production stuff down there " Oth- 7 mala’s story has been written on paints. You can color Molly's hair brown, the sand yellow and the hat | minded him of an iron cage. Work has been going on toward; >= MONT BASES OW GALLS OH WORLE C6mES Gane... i4) ler picture industry leaders are its textiles. Colors repeat and ac-; tan with red tassels. Stomach trouble plagued Napo- | the design of “electronic systems —a eres...‘ | | inspecting the situation, McKay cent the tones of Guatemaia’s You can make your own little play beach by getting a pan and |leon during his exile, and he died | Which are capable Red presenting | IST CONSECUTIVE PA Bs WINES OF | said. and named producer Howard ~mountains, sky and earth. ~—Tfitling it with sand: Then cut out the pieces In the picture and place |at 52 on May 5, 1821. According accoustical informa on in such & , M WOO COO... Hughes among the group, . j ; , manner that it will be of optimum POTOMER WINNS LOMSGST SEEMS Gams (14 bonnes) From simple hapd tools, plus} them as you like on the beach, to tradition, his final words were, " ‘a Se the larger,. more complicated foot/ Fold the front and side panel forward to make the girl sit up. | “France, Chiet of the Army . , . | 0% == Shipments of U.S. coal to Canada looms, comes an astonishing vari- ; . - Josephine.” —— : in 1954. were greater than total ety of intricate designs for Cut through the dotted line under the. seal. Put the tab on the bottom Opties and Vision; Research. py WESTON US. to Europe Asia and huipiles (blouses), wrap-around | ©! the sand pail through this slot and fold’ it up at the back. If} amonton, Alta., has grown| ers are concerned with how well aN a teams Ge TO INVEST IN South America. Canada took 15,- skirts, trousers, “halo” bands, and| You cut the dotted slit in her hat from a trading post in 1900 to| the human eye can see by nat- — }909,6 tons and the other conti- sashes. Tomorrow; Making a Boat more than 200,000 population. ‘ural light from the sun, moon, - — | nents, 14,891,906 tons, * * / : J ee ar . aod : Pei S Preis | i A pacer only one sensible way to judge your find Pontiac outmeasures any car near its price consider any deal on any car—remember this: ; best_automobile buy—and that’s to measure and many tagged at hundreds of dollars more. When you deal with us for a big, powerful Pontiac, ¢ ; how much car you get for your money! As for style—well, one look will tell you that you start witha car that represents an unmatched On every important point of motor car value, here’s a car so distinctively beautiful it’s bound to value—and in addition you save still further from the 1955 Pontiac stands head and shoulders above stay in style for a long time to come. the most liberal trade-in policy in our history. any car in its class. oe Certainly all this adds up to a wonderful buy Come in as soon as you can and ~~ “h.p.* Strato-Streak V-8' is priced hundreds of any new-car budget. That’s why Pontiac sales are is the best deal you can make! , dollars lower than any other car equalling its at an all-time high! | | CUptional ot tow eeare east. ~ power! And no car at any price is more advanced Now consider this important point—this same mae noe Saisie: in engine design.. : So _record sales volume permits us to make trade-in | Take the vital matter of wheelbase—so impor- allowances that equal or beat any deal in town! So — : . | tant to ride, comfort and stability—and you'll before you buy any car at any-price—before you WE'VE SET OUR SIGHTS ON THE BIGGEST YEAR IN HISTORY * COME IN AND TALK TRADING NOW! : : - : : . : ; ea ‘ . \ | j é ee ee ’ | i - | : . ties ' on a pele PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE | ae KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, Inc. bs COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, Ine. 5 us, Clemens Ste Ponting ik Michigan : (en oe lara nae . pape wy 2 a : . : eee i = : , . wag ; : | — ‘ - ; E aa ' : . oe __ DW. D. WHIPPLE PONTIAC SALES L, 6. ANDERSON, Ine. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, Ine. ae . North Mato Street, Clarkston, Michigan — a Park Bivd, Lake Orion, Michigan | : 160 G; Washington Gtreet, Oxford, Michigan =~ ECIAL! ‘Aluminum columns included with every porch. ALUMINUM AWNINGS - PORCHES - PATIOS | - ALUMINUM STORM SASH af ~ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 _oliowing is the omned es of four-part condensation we the book into gilt by Arthur Charles Clarke, gravity field keepé the earth and- tant body in the sky. Its enormous | the British inierpianetary Boclety.) By ARTHUR C,. CLARKE The time has now come for us to look further into space — far beyond the remotest of the satel- lite space-stations we discussed in the last chapter, We're going to ie 5 Oe er ae something about the cease ovo Wil be aha to sialt when we have perfected space-travel, and flight beyond the atmosphere has become an everyday achiev ment. it Wherr you look-up at the sky ona iclear night, it seems packed with | stars, It is hard to believe — and ‘it was many thousands of years before it was discovered — that! all-those stars ‘are suns. Most of those that you can see ee own sun, and some of them a TS ee oe ae a { WINDOW SALES 9AM. ALL AWNING & STORM x oe \For All Type Windows 10 Seli-Storing Windows Extruded 2 Combination Doors Complete ten S318 $1 BQ" FHA TERMS Call FE 4-6089 = 9PM, 233 S. Telegraph L. W. Bogert Se eee dt eee Urighter. Yet they tre at such colossal distances that they ap- . pear merely as points of light, giving ne trace of heat. It all the stars were ‘suddenly wiped out of existence, it’ would | make no difference at al] to us ts movingrégularly in their | torbits, and will also control the paths of spaceships when they start traveling to other worlds, id Fas ? The moon’ is a much smaller world than ours and is only 240,000 | ‘miles away, as compared with the 93,000,000 miles to the sun. Never- theless, the total area of the moon is as much as that of the whole continent of Africa, so it will take us quite a while to explore it all. Even if we abolished the stars, the sun and moon would not be dealy emptied skies, There would be five other brilliant lights, look. ing just like stars but moving in the heavens in the way that the stars never did, These would be the planets, Two of the most brilliant. of the morning or the evening, but never in the midnight sky. This is be- cause they travel around the sun well inside the orbit of earth. LIKE ARC LAMP Even amid the glare of cities, people sometimes took up and sre, here on earth — they are so very ‘far away. Let's imagine that this | improbable miracle has happened, | 1} and consider what would be left, } | GRAVITY VITAL First of all, of course, there | would be the sun and the moon. They look almost exactly the same size, but the sun is really much- bigger—and—much further away. Without its heat, life on earth would be impossible, and it is therefore by far the most impor- Father Denies Burial of Car Next to Dead Son Optometrist 7 North Saginaw “Better Things in Phone FE 4-6842 Oper. Friday..Evenings I} DRO. A-MILLER __| Street Sight” Closed Wednesday Afternoons KEY WEST, Fla. wW—A father rwho has had workmen digging a’ large hole in a cemetery here, denied today rumors that he Planned to bury an automobile. Raynardo Garcia was quoted by the cemetery supervisor as saying that he was preparing four burial vaults for future use of his family. ‘Reports swept this island city yesterday and last night that Garcia was planning to bury a car owned by his son, Raynardo Gar- cia Jr., 24, who was killed in an auto’ wreck about a year ago. Garcia refused to talk to news- men yesterday and again today. Robert Dean, supervisor of Cath- olic Cemetery where the hole was being dug, talked to Garcia at a reporters request. Dean said Garcia told him he had never considered burying the QUICK In Our 18 £. LAWRENCE INSURANCE AS A WINK! BUY YOUR INSURANCE ‘OVER THE COUNTER And in Most Cases Issued While You Wait Modern Downtown J. LVAN bal AGENGY, inc. Rey Wilton—Howard Looney—leck Brannack FE 4-9571 automobile. He said Garcia was unable to account for how the story originated. The report was brought toe the attention of city commissioners and other officials, who discussed the matter of whether an automo- bile could legally be buried in the cemetery. A priest at the Catholic church said he considered it a matter for city officials to decide. Open Agriculture Confab DETROIT — More than 100 farm writers and editors yesterday opened the 3-day convention of the American Agricultural Editors Assn. Gov. Williams welcomed the delegates and they toured Detroit industry. Fifty years ago... — pein apne _tonlt for greater convenience and too, wherever you - one was enough | in the early evening when the sun | has just set, the dazzlingly brilliant glare of Venus, hanging like a tiny arc lamp in the sky. It is so brilliant, indeed, that it is quite “the only objects left In the sud. ee ee ae that you may see them in the a telescope to see. NONE LIKE ¥ARTH All. the planets have atmos- pheres, that is, rounded by layers of gas, Some of i these layers are enormously. thick |.and dense, others very thin indeed. Unfortunately, there is not a single planet with an atmosphere which we could breathe, so anything you may have read ‘about people like they are sur-)| our own sun is not true. | (Although the distances between the planets seem so enormous by our usual standards, that is not as great a handicap to space- flight as one might think. Be- tween the worlds there is a per- fect vacuum, and hence no air resistance. at all, Thus a space- ship could not lose any of its original velocity through friction, Folks Living Today May Travel Into: Space’ and Pluto — which you would need us living on the other worlds ot and under the right conditions could keep up its speed forever. So interplanetary flight is largely a question of aiming yourself in the right direction; building up the proper speed — and then sitting back to wait, . The first of the “other worlds which men will reach and explore will undoubtedly be the moon, for it is so much closer to us than any other body in space. Even Venus, arest of the planets, is more than . hundred times further away, Because of its closeness, we also know a great deal more about the moon than any other world, so our ~ first explorers will not be going completely into the unknown, Let's follow them now on one of those voyages ~ those great adventures of the future which many of you who are reading these words will live to see . (Condensed trom “Going into Space.” Capyright 1054 by Arthur Charles Lega ol Published oy Harper & Brothers. printed ty special permission Dist ari. ted by INS : easy to see in broad daylight if * * La orbit is. Mercury, so close to the sun that it-is not: often noticed, though it is quite a brilliant object when you can catch it against the sunset glow. Besides Venus and Mercury, there would be three other bright planets visible from time to time. You would often be able to see them high in the southern sky at midnight, These three planets are Mars, Jiipiter, “and Saturn. At their closest jo us they are respectively, 35,000, miles, 390,000,000 miles and 793,000,000 miles away. . This list contains all the planets that were known before the inven- tion of the telescope. Together with the sun and moon, they would be the only visible objects left in the sky if the stars suddenly disap- peared. There are, however, three you know exactly where to look. | The other planet inside earth's | anes” of % (i
their memory isn't as good as
mine, I can't help that.”
Gallagher, who was to return
to the stand today, gave his ver- ee | 4 end tuck to said of
“They're not lying — they're |
Back-to-School Shopping Tip:
Paid Blood Money -
OMAHA, (INS)— It cost ‘Dale
G, Case, 19, a pint of blood to-ex-
ceed the speed ‘limit in Omaha
while he Was home on leave from
the 8 Case didn’t have the
money to ae ee appeared before Municipal Judge
Robert A, Nelson. So—the judge
asked. the _sailor to donate a pint
7 i an hoor sharp crema
; ination.
*-? Py
degree murder in -the alleged
~ deaths of three prisoners.
Before Gallagher took the stand,
._ & Score of prosecution witnesses
testified that he sought. favor with
. the Communists and that his treat-
_ Cpl.
ment of three prisoners caused
their deaths They said he threw
Donald Thomas Baxter,
Waukon, Towa, and Cpl. John
William Jones, Detroit, out of the
. Prisoners’ squalid hut and let them
freeze to death. Both men were
weak and ill with dysentery.
Nixon Launches Bowl
Festival in Hollywood
LOS ANGELES —Vice Presi-|
‘Returned Airman’s Wife| dent Richard M. Nixon, in south-
ern California on vacation, steps
back into the spotlight tonight to
launch Hollywood Bowl's Festival
of the Americas.
He is the honorary president of
the festival, a weeklong program
of musie of North and South |
America. He will dedicate the fes-
tival flag. :
The Sheriff Is a Lady
SAN ANGELO, Tex.
Green County's newest deputy sher-.
iff is a red-haired grandmother
. who doesn't like guns but knows
how to use them. Mrs. Capitola
Stone, 45, a former Menard County
Treasurer named to the deputy
post yesterday, learned about guns |
as a west Texas ranch git.
FRANK CARRUTHERS
FUNERAL HOME
110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374
(n—Tom |
) down. Pontiac Press Photo
MSU STUDENTS—What every young accountant-to-be will be wear- .
ing this year is modeled by Gary Spees of MSU. Wearing a charcoal | >
grey suit by Calvert, a white Arrow shirt with a striped tie give just the
right contrast note. For his leisure hours, Gary chooses a solid color
Donegal sport shirt.
5
Chooses Logger Husband) SACRAMENTO, Calif., @—The; Schmidt's mother Mrs. Nellie} |.
Korean War B29 gunner whose | Peters, of Portland, Ore., Welch
wife sald she wed another man. said.
in the belief he was dead has de-| Thomas J, Murray, state com-
cided he'll unravel the mz arital | | mander of the Veterans of Foreign |
tangle by seeking a divorce. | Wars, has been in contact with
But Airman Daniel Schmidt, 22, |
still hasn't made up his mind! knows of the VFW’'s offer to fi-
whether he will seek custody of| nance a divorce.
his 24-year-old son, whom he saw .- * «
for the first time after caneee| “Welch told me he had been
from 32 months imprisonment in | retained by Schmidt as his coun- |”
Red China | sel,” said Murray, “and I assured
him he will receive the full cooper-
Schmidt returned last week with ation of the VFW—including asso- |
16 other airmen who were with |
him in the B29 when it was shot | * * *
“If this turns out to be a child
custody case it could be a wing-
ding and Daniel may need all the
jhelp he can, get,’--Mytray. com-
mented. F His divorce decision. was an-
nounced yesterday by his attorney.
It followed a face-to-face, meet- Schmidt's attorney and the airman|
ciate counsel—if he needs it.” »
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Low Prices and Holden Stamps ee ?
ing at which auburn-haired Una
Schinidt-Fine, 20, refused to leave
Alford Fine, 21, a logger. °
“Dan wants whatever is best for.
the welfare of ther boy,” his at-
torney Howard Welch said, “and
hasn't decided yet whether that
would mean leaving him with wel
boy’s mother or seeking custody.”
Welch said Schmidt would prob- |
ably seek a divorce on general
grounds--including extreme. cruel-
ty. :
“Just the fact that she’s not
living with Schmidt is enough |
grounds for extreme cruelty,” he
~ || Ambulance Service oan: “
4 at Any Hour the custody of Danny Jr, and wins,
4 the youngster would live with |i}
=.
4 ‘
4
WE'RE CELEBRATING THE...
We would. like you to accept our
, invitation to come in.and take a
demonstration ride in the
Pontiac and see for yourself why
—Pontiac- is- wrocsing alt ‘previous =
) = ee seconde. = recap
er)
GEORGES NEWPORT TS
WEDNESDAY IS |
DOUBLE}
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September '
avis 7 W. Lawrence St., PONTIAC
A beginning ciass in Stenotype and Stenograph is bein Phone poate ‘Tuesdag
pd
FE 2 -3551
Ore
ized in the Evening School. For more information, Phone,
all, or return this od.
se eneweene
| Gerieral Strikes. oh :
\ ay ete
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, ‘auGusT 16, isi
Sweep India. Protest Against Violence
of ‘Portuguese Seen in
Bombay, New Delhi.
NEW DELHI, India @®—General
strikes swept New Delhi and Bom-
bay today in protest against yes-
terday’s violence and bloodshed in
Portuguese India.
Business in Bombay was virtu-
ij ally paralyzed as crowds dermand-
ing military (action against the
small Portuguese colonies: foreed
shops and restaurants to close.
public vehicles.
In New Delhi, workers paraded
with anti-Portuguese banners.
* « @&
Several thousang “nonviolent”
Indian. nationalist demonstrators
naan ae
: 1.85
Scott’s Spec. Lawn Seed. .1 th. 1.35 ~
Scott's Haven Mixture. 1 tb. 85
Saper-Turf Lawn Seed:..1 1b. .85
Regal Special Mixture...11b. .65
Fast Growing Mixture...1 lb. .45
Lown Fertilizers — all brands —
every onalysis. Fertilizer Spreaders,
Lewn Rokes, Lown Combs, Lawn
Sweepers.
The Gest tive Of year to
through September.
because the delicate new
ef hot and dry weather
Fall rains are gentile,
usually heavy dews.
REGAL
a8 8 8! eee ee
It’s Lawn Building Time!
build a new
lawn or repair an old one is late August
Fall seeding is best
seedlings are
less likely to be affected by extremes
Fall tempera-
tures are ideal——warm days, cool nights, -
and there are.
Soil conditions are
perfect for root penetration, and Fall is
also a time when weeds are inactive.
Prices ra New Crop Lawn- Seeds marched into the Portuguese col-
onies of Goa, Damao and Diu yes-
terday on the eighth anniversary
of India's lhdependence from Brit-
ain, They sought to arouse popular
support for the Indian campaign
to take over the areas, the last
foreign territories in the country.
Reinforced Portuguese border
guards opened fire on some of
the marchers and drove others
back into India’ with. clubs. Many
were arrested
* *
Estimates i; the number of
demonstrators dead ranged as high
as 31, with many more reported
wounded or missing in the jungles.
The Indian government radio said
the killing of 12 marchers had been
confirmed, while in Nova Goa an
official Portuguese spokesman said
‘Feed and = Supply Co.
_ Jackson St.
ne naaPaataMaMaMaaMa"a Pata se Diol FE 2-0491 as, 8 Lee, 10 Lie, ite, 686 Loe 2
Merion Blue Grass . 3.75 18.50 36.50 90.09 175.00 |} st \oant 1S mndlans were killed and
Kentucky Blue Grass. .95 4.50 8.70 20.006 37.50 || ‘The india radio said it was be.
Poa Trivialis ...... 95-450 0.70 20.00 S150. [] Set Be Permomes bes carries
Creeping Red Fescue. .70 3.35 6.50 15.50 30.00 cle les
Penn State Fescue .. .75 3.60 7.00 16.25 32.50 ; r Fish i
Kentucky 31 Fescue 40 1.95 3.80 8.75 15.00 ||/1eSt fo Fish in
~: tage EEE RESUME TO pjnan’ Aaplecnimen El Alta Fescue .... 40 1. : , . ae =
Creeping Bent Grass 1.50 7.25 14.00 33.75 65.00 || rower gets down to Teal vacation
Porenial Rye Grass... .39 1.75 3.30 7.75 14.00 || ine today with a trip high into the
Domestic RyeGrass. 25 115 220 5.25 1000 livww tan
Fancy Red Top 95 4.50 8.70 20.00 37.50 8 ee |
Timathy Sood ...... 35 1.65 3.10 7.08 13.00 [i ay ausomoune onerty afler move
~ "White Clover ===. $.60-—7:75-15.00-36.25 69.00 || to Fraser, Colo., about 70 miles northwest of Denver on the west-
ern slope of the Continental Divide
for a stay at the secluded Byer's
Peak Ranch of an old friend, Aksel
Nielsen,
Tomorrow Eisenhower will be
joined there by his 71-year-old
grandson David, who stands to get
some expert advice from the Pres-
ident on how to cast dry and wet
flies for trout, The youngster,
vacationing now at a boys camp
at Estes Park, Colo., never has
done any fishing , * * *
"In advance of departing for
Fraser, the President planned a
brief stop at his Lowry“Air Force
Base office, xnd then a round of
golf at Denver's Cherry Hills Coun-
try Club. The drive to the fishing
camp was scheduled after lunch
here at the home of Eisenhower's
mother-in-law Mrs. John S. Doud.
Coal was used to produce almost
66 per cent of all the electricity
generated in 1954 from fuels other
than water r, according to powe
recently published statistics.
‘Just happen to have a picture
of both of ‘em in my pocket...
...and in another
pocket { have a
i eres
.____ Start_your loved Peng a road to “theft = 7 Sep
“and The yewards that it brings Open weavings
account with us for each member of the family, ~—
and make every-payday deposits.
NEXT PAYDAY IS A GOOD TIME TO BEGIN!
} ’
)
od
ee
ee
err ~*~ * ‘
; }
} oi
| '
‘
Of Federal 0 AC STATE BANE COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE
SAGINAW AT LAWRENCE
ORAYTON PLAINS
. ¥
Insurance Corp. ee oem Tee vi nnn Mean AP nee:
f. ere :
4
ann a
AUBURN HEIGHTS
Armed police and troops guarded
Peatiae Press Phote
STUDY AIDS — Happily contemplating return to school life, Donna
Brown of Waterford High School inspects the compact floor model
filing cabinet and its mate, a typewriter table, which doubles as a
writing table or vanity. To help with word meanings and correct spell-
ing, Donna iets Websters’ New Collegiate Dictionary.
— _ € —
\
q
66
AMERICA’S ONLY
FIRE-BREWED BEER
(Fire-brewed of 2000°) ul. $. Aim — to Prevent
Nation From Atom Attack ,
FEderal 2.3711
Our information.staft will
be happy to tell you when
the next city lines bus
leaves your nearest corner.
For Every
Riding Need
Use City Buses -
PONTIAC. GITY LINES, Inc.
Those who have tasted |
the refreshing difference of
? America’s only fire-brewed beer, say-"
_ Once you've ‘tasted the refreshing difference fire-
aa __brewing makes in Stroh’s beer, we think you'll
In twelve gleaming copper
kettles, Stroh’s is fire-brewed
at 2000 degrees to bring forth
the finest flavor of the finest
ingredients, Fire-brewing: |
creates the lighter, smoother, |
more refreshing flavor of
Stroh’s beer that no other
American beer can equal.
: The Stroh Brewery Co.
Detroll 26, Michigan ete io tl ae
. WEDNESDAY, is &
=| DOUBLE gE
RED STAMP DAY I
a ‘SAM'S WALGREEN
ae
DRUGS
3293 Aub
Yeux JF oa hs”
4
Just ene careless flick of @ cigarette out a cor window con cause fire dam.
age so terrible it takes years to recover. Last year corelessness with fire coused
500 forest fires a doy! Please —be extra coreful with your smokes, Alwoys use
__your osh tray or aay a a ae you can prevent forest
fires!
oy
THE PONTIAC PRESS
“Stroh’s Beer"
every time!
pe teri Aces:
too. So make a note to ask for Stroh’s beer. ;.in 7 0z,,
12 oz., and 32 oz. bottles, i in 12 oz. cans, and on Grait.
#
: ‘
. PET I wena AB
ai “THE! PONTI AC PRESS. * TURSDAY. AUGUST 16, 1935
- IN THE pay tl pasy CROCKETT |
Jers mater hd hepa he wold be
come a preacher but she didn't keep her sons
= their country. Andy became a
the Colonists. His first battle
Told by an old Scout
Deputy Sheriff Injured
lin Patrot Cor Crash
Swerving to avoid a tank truck,
Oakland County Deputy Sheriff
Thurman Sauvage, 42, of Orton-
The truck driver apparently
pulled from the nearby weighing
scales into Sauvages path, accord-
ing to Waterford Township Police.
LET US WRITE A Theft Policyto cover, both parents and stu-
dent at home, traveling and at college. You'll
be owrprised @ at the low rates,
Be Sure You Ave Well Insured!”
Te
Kenneth G. Earl C. Mills, 60, of Detroit, the
driver, was unhurt.
Seven of America's 23 leading
mines are located in West Virginia,
the nation’s foremost coal produc-
ing state, Produetion-in- those West
Virginian mines in 19%4 exceeded
10.2 million tons, HEMPSTEAD
Here’s why w we say New Chevrolet Zisk-Force Trucks
are the most Modern trucks for any job today! hal ™
WORK-STYLED LIGHT- AND MEDIUM-DUTY MODELS
have their own fresh, functional appearance. They're
styled to say good things about you and your business.
WORK-STYLED HEAVY-DUTY MODELS look every bit
as husky and efficient as they are. Styling that fits the
job is an advantage only new Chevrolet-trucks offer!
is
MOST MODERN V8's. New V8 is standard in the
new Low Cab Forward, available at extra cost in
all other models except Forward Control.
2
PANORAMIC WINDSHIELD sweeps around the corners
6 ee safer view of the road ahead. Rear
and side windows are bigger, too, giving you increased
_ Visibility in all directions.
-
"REVOLUTIONARY NEW'LC.F. (Low Cab Forward)
HIGH-LEVEL VENTILATION provides.a more constant
supply of outside air'in all weather. Special air cham-
’ ber prevents rain or snow from entering the cab.
is the successor to the C.O.E.! The new L.C.F.’s are
“much lower than former C.O.E. miodels yet they
offer C.O.E. compactness and maneuverability.
eee
STROKE 3.0
OVERSQUARE DESIGN is the mark of Chevrolet's modem truck V8's. The ultra-short stroke means less ria . Bort ars
Five new high-compres-
US «6 o ¢ Sim valve-in-head’ sixes
>the most advanced
sixes in the industry! New, roomy Flite-Ride De Luxe
rear window that sweeps clear around rear cab corners
(optional at extra cost). A smoother, load-steady ride.
New gas-saving Overdrive (an extra-cost option)
offered on “4 -ton models.
cab—the truck driver’s “dream. cab!” New Full View
NEW CONCEALED SAFETY STEP is covered when the
door is closed . . . stays clear of snow, ice and mud.
You step in and out with greater safety regardless of
the weather.
é *
Pere
These are just a few of the reasons why new Chev-
rolet trucks are the most-_modern trucks for any
cuca Ob today...’ are lots. me.onin.and..
see for yourself. ‘See why these great new trucks —
will save hours and dollars on the job—and why
they'll put you way ahead when trade-in time rolls
‘around. Come see why anything less is an old-
_ fashioned truck!
J CHEVROLET
Year after year tee America’s best-selling truck ,
~____ MATTTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. 9 SS ee “HE Mi ond 2115. Sennen St -
4 sled :
— Michigan “
| and are tm their forties and fit-
_ Hes, : gee
THE PONTIAC PRESS,
egg, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 oe
ed mee
Tae
] O
crn
»
The Reverend and Mrs. Fred R. |
Tiffany are visiting their son, Ted, |
who is an assistant in the depart-|
sity of-Ulinois in Urbana. |
‘They will continue their travels |
into Iowa where they will visit
relatives and will spend some time
at the American Baptist National
Assembly at Green Lake, Wiscon-
Ellen Seeterlin of Lockhaven
Margaret Hensel
Becomes Bride o
Clifford Morris: |
Margaret M. Hensel and Clifford
Eugene Morris exchanged nuptial |
yows before the Rev. Michael J. |
O'Reilly Saturday morning in St.
Michaels’ Rectory.
* * *
Margaret is the daughter of Mr.
0
Pontiac Press Phetes
The William S. Isgriggs are home now, but they are remembering| Mrs. Isgrigg are photographed with their sons, John (left)-and Richard.
the fum they had during their two-week vacation at Platte Lake. Mr. and| They reside on Cherokee road.
ah
scoctummteshpprngrrer mrtotes 4
QO and Mrs. Adam Hensel of Cham- |
beriain ‘street ‘and Clifford is the |
son of Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Mor-
ris of South Avery street. .
The bride wore a white linen
corsage Wag of roses,
The bride's only attendant, Mrs. |
Velmer Croteau, wore a Navy blue
linen suit with white accessories. |
She wore a corsage of roses and
chrysanthemums. . |
James Doyle served as best man. |
° « *. LJ |
A wedding breakfast was served |
at Hotel Waldron with an evening |
bride's parents.
After a honeymoon trip to north-
a reception held Poel Personal News of Interest in Pontiac read, who recently returned from
Florida, sailed Satdrday on the
S, S. Masdam for Kent» England.
ment of pyctiology at the Univer- | While there she will visit Maj. and i
Mrs. Gordon Stewart.
Befare returning home in the
fall,. Ellen will tour Switzerland,
Italy and France. ‘
* * *
¢ Mr. and Mrs. Harvey W. Perry
sin. | of Alice avenue have returned |
The Rev. Mr. Tiffany wilt | to their home following a tour of |
preach in the Park Baptist | the New England states. Among
Church of St. Paul, Minn., on | the places visited were Boston, |
Aug. 21. Cape Cod and Plymouth, |
They returned via the. Adiron-
dacks, Lake Placid and ‘Brockville,
Ont, where they visited relatives.
* = a
Guests at the State Hospital
Emmitt Berry and daughters, Bar-
bara, Beverly and Brenda of Fres-
no, Calif. * +
Visiting at the home of Mr.
and Mrs,, Arthur MacGregor of
Palmer street over the week-
end were their son and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard MacGreg-
or, Gay and Steven of Oak
Park, 1.
* ” *
Mr. and Mrs. N. Stanley Hutch-
inson have returned to their home
on Pine Knob road after spending
Lake Huron at Oscoda.
* * *
Mrs. Florence Pappert. of West
Huron street accompanied by her
mother, Mrs, Bert R. Sydnam of
Alto left Monday for Custer, S..D.
where they will visit Mrs. Syd-
nam's brother.
* They will also visit in Denver,
Colo, = * *
_ Mr, and Mrs. J. D. Shirley
of Littletell Lane drive are leav-
ing Pontiac to make their home
side on Fourth street.
— in Dallas, Texas.
+
a
>, 6 =
| ‘Mrs. Gelston V. Poole has re-
lturned to her home -on South
|Shore drive, Watkins Lake, She
has been visiting Adeline Hook at
her home in. Bay View, near
| Petoskey. * LJ
Helen Turek of West Huron
| street, accompanied by Clara Me-
gredy and Ella Loseman of Cot-
| tage street returned to their homes
} Sunday.
| They spent two weeks travel;
ing in Indiana, Kansag and the
Wisconsin Dells, On their return
they enjoyed the boat trip from
Milwaukee to Muskegon, * a a
Qut-of-town guests attending the
Saturda-' wedding of Nancy Jean
McClyre of East Beverly street
| grdunds residence of Mr. and Mrs. and Harold W. Johnson of Oliver
| Duncan McVean are Mr. and Mrs. | street were Mrs. Abigail Kirkham
of Plano, Ill, Mrs. Michael Paul-
son and son of Gary, Ind., and Mrs,
John Bunch of Sullivan, Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Freeman at-
tended from Port Huron and the
Robert Miller family was present
from Royal Oak.
Prosecutor's Office
‘Has Annual Picnic
The Oakland
tor’s Office held its annual staff County Presecu-
picnic recently at the Cass Lake -
outwith. savy_aon s.Her the past two weeks vacationing on home of Mr. and-Mrs. Homer G.
Gerve
In attendance were Mr. and Mrs,
Frederick C. Ziem, Mr. and Mrs,
Rufus Schulze and daughter, Wan-
da; Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Long,
|Mr. and Mrs. Gerard A, Poehl-
| man, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Ted-
‘castle, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
C. Miller.
| Others were Mr. and Mrs. Don-
|ald Plankel, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
|A. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. M. A.
|Hightower and Lorraine Bruzde-
| wiez.
Pontise Press Photos
Robert Castell prepares to take Mrs. Castell, their\ter) for a spin on Platte Lake where they have been
By MURIEL LAWRENCE couldn't. run ‘to her with his fear knows how many lonely bedtimes ,
A year ago, Mrs. Helen S. put; and hurt. The small child's person; were needed to persuade. Henry |
her five-year-old son in her to be counted on wasn't there. Who | that mother no longer loved him? |
“ care—and went off to a) : — ~~ | Whto knows what fears cofVinced
work. | Personal” ud ee eer eee ff
the lake. It’s a cool retreat from these hot summer days, | their cottage at Platte lake.
Mr, and Mrs. William Rogers of Washington street are | 7 ‘There’s all sorts of fun for those owning cottages at | photographed with their children, Debdrah and David, at
It’s Far Wiser to Admit Real Age By ANNE HEYWOOD : sult is that everybody thinks ‘over | | He h be y » dine wade ae BA! iy | e has about thirty-one clerks in ‘ forty” is too old, jhis place, so he decided to take wardian period, made a remark) yf seems to me, that if we would out a pension fund.
to the effect that no woman should i i 3 | begin to admit to being over forty,4 = ever tell the’ truth about her | le—; ers " : | people—and employers particular-| 1; was funny,” he told me, ‘‘be- age—it looks so calculating, \ly—might gét over their age block, | _ ig Ss + | : Ir | cause we had to get birth cer- | Because that's all it is, really. | tificates from all of them, if they
I, personally, wish he had kept| Once. the word gets out that the were te eticinate f 7
——tptriet bec: use the-tendency on the "woman over forty is hot a queru:) .., = ‘ : aA ,
part of most women to lie about lous old wreck; ready to fall into Well, the ‘girls turned out to
their “ages is a. boomerang. ithe grave, the job market wilt |e Se from tte . eleven
‘ d open up for. all “oldsters.” years elder than they had ad- I know plenty of young-looking | wi D for all “oldsters. mitted on ‘their original applica-
Nard.working, successful business RECENT DISCOVERY
women who are doing 2 good Job | jyct recently, I talked this over ,t0 look at Xhem. - es
- gency who was pretty’ ‘For eXample,” ihe continued,
| astonished at a number of things /“Mary J. looks about forty-three.
But too often, nse meg od be had just happened in his of- Turns out she's fifty-nthe. And
re-| fice.
ry x
. ‘ tion: blanks. You'd never know it) forty-one, That medns she's been
here eighteen years.
“While Mary has been here,
the desk next to Mary’s has been
eecupled by young girls, who av-
erage less than a year on the
job! \ a
“In other words, there’ve been -
| twenty-three girls inthe job next |
ito Mary's, while Mary has stuck
| with it for eighteen. years, ~
er girl Was ‘safer’; but the truth is,
the older they are, the longer they |
Stay! From now on, I'm hiring *
women over forty for each new
‘she came to us when she was’ opening.”
want the- mother 'who was their D. Graham and Mrs. Charles Ash-
WET | could no longer toleratey
>» f6r P& Ticia qi] ~ CONSIDER PossIMIUTY. |
: It's time that Mrs. S, considered
Mrs. William Davidedn of East-| the Possibility that Henry is wood drive entertained at a per- abusing her for depriving him. of
sonal shower Friday evening honor- | herself
ing her niece, Patricia Lou Hall, | , The fact that she hasn't sbveady
Patricia, daughter of Mrs. Harold | ' 4 aracteristi¢
Wileax of Garden City and the late | ™"¥ ——— illiam B. Pontiac,
exchange nupital wie on ene hm gg failure — a sty
Gerald H. Dearborn. eaving us he con
“— salve: vietion that our love is undesirable.
Invited guests were Mrs. Wil- | Because Henry's father scorned it, cox, Mis. dames Hall, Mrs. . we feel it can’t be important to dames Hall Jr., Mrs James Cros- Henry, either.
by, Mrs Leland Gutrke, and Mrs. | So when he behaves abusively, his her for depriving him of | Donald Baum. _ ~ | we think, “What angers this child
Pam! . Maybe he's angry | Mrs. J. W. Davidson, Marilyn-and | #s loss of his other parent's love.” hecause she deprived him of his | pti, PB gears geome : hed It's inconceivable that Henry could
psceege Graham were also invited. be abusing us for depriving hint
When children are made weak From out-of-town were Mrs. Rich- oe ea ops
yo it : ¥ ‘ by sickness, fear or hurt, they ard Leitch of Rochester, Mrs. John natnie’s e's in jt- fl
| failure to sustain our marriage. Maybe Heary ian't angry with
daughter, Judy (right) and his.niece, Frances Reish (cen-| vacationing. The Castells reside on East lrequois ‘road,
Divorce Tension May Hurt Child for reasons other than my bad.
ness. Your love is most desir-
able te- me. H-F've tout tt by
offending you in some way,
_there's nothing for me to de but attack you in despair of having
te live. without it,"”...... cee
vorce is not divorce but the self-
centered tensions it induces in his _—. It’s very hard to avoid
m.
But we can remember their
| effect on Henry. In his abusive behavior, we can hear his plea for reassurance that he is a good
has done nothing bad
that could lose him the. love of either parent. i
Mrs. Larry Collins Wins Figure Prize
: Fashion Your Figure Club's
weekly trophy was won by Mrs,
Larry Collins at a recent meeting,
Mrs. Thomas Lewis won the prize
in the “Marathon Contest,” having lost weight each week since Feb ruary, .
The group will hold a plente
little boy who has been hurt, The of Dearborn, Mrs. Harold Wileox| Actually, what Henry's de-
x wed of his. home shifted the of Garden City, Mrs. Willard Rigel-| fiance may be saying to his
under hi# feet. . GE man of Milford, Mrs. Raleigh Car-| mother ts, “Tell me that 1 did
But mother was in that distant penter and Mrs. Sam Bunting of | nothing te send you away from
state getting her divorce, so he | Fenton, . 4 : | me, Tell me you abandoned me ¥ evening at Avon. Park in
What threatens the child of di- —
: apres ba "
: he
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 ch
m HI RTEEN
Nancy Jean By ELIZABETH WOODWARD |, snappy. But horrible things | ot 'oe poe and laugh’ ‘at some Maybe, you can talk him into You're his best girl. He cares :
McCl “Dear ‘Misa Woodward: What a that give you night-| of that-—have been! acting a bit:more adult... inte | what you think. He doesn’t, want
mre | can a girl do when she is going "Poy" to him quietly about his! compléte dio at sen os hig | Sounting to 400 betore letting bis | to make you miserable, And if he daughter f steady with a boy who is speed temper. Why does he let little! actions when he's seeing red. In| temper explode . . . and inte | knew that you were ashamed of 2
Mr. and Mrs.| crazy? He gets angry at the| things annoy him to a@ frenay?| fact, in that condition he's a, keeping his hands off the wheel | his behavior, worried over his ™~ ;
Harvey R. | silliest things and then drives like | Why can’t he keep ae nt ea on be anenye: - * of his car until he calms down. | safety, and literally scared pink
McClure of | # mad man, sometimes with the) | ne mae \ pes with = eng atoper ene} QORA OBRECHT ‘un , S| crazy, i :
Ge eet (Cr Asks Proper. |". Nemeed weet at wit) ELSIE DRELLICK . : him. . street, became| “But it is too dangerous to let di é Specializin in ‘-. him do it again, Though I'm James H. Wor Ing for Just stubbornly (though good. Hal stv
the’ bride of afraid he will, I almost got my B e = | humoredly) refuse to ride in his air yung
Harold W. |ring back one night ut he shined’ Mary | Marriage pat cengen for & wile. Ai| and Permanents t P . promise anything in order to get
ane ao" = > Jean Walton Prospective Bride you in his car again. Then it's Complete Beauty Service
Saturday : as his bride | Prefers Usage of)” s podenline gd oe pee of} 152.N, Perry FE 2-2053
afternoon. He Answer: You can wait until he loti , caution ne gets hand, :
is the son of | 10 Se oe 6 Me ens ee Saturday Relatives’ Names ire ati
Mr ond Mr “lod cong pecs the oom emening. oo7 By EMILY POST Mr, ad Mrs. : MILY Fs et aoe
Sam T sciousness and make him apply the.son of the 4 bridetobe tells me: “1 ai Those Sweet, uicy, Delicious
“—— *. the brakes. ; Rev. and Mrs. 8° to be married in the near
Johnson of Or you can start working on him future and was wondering how to
Oliver street, | Téety white you're both-tar trom} _G. J. Bersche , go about having my wedding an- || eh Le
* | his car and quite safe on terra of North Cass /nouncements worded, I have been 1
firma. Tell him bluntly and frank- living with my aunt and uncle
ly that his driving scares = to Lake road, and_ tor the past five years, My aan
mots : death. Teéll him that you realize . is Ssesneed ont my mater re-
- ana : fw. Bh neck he's risking when he loses daughter of | “1 aE A my aunt t 5
N M C| B pote og starts yeding = the Rev. and | 24 utcle’s names, but = — PICK EM you RSELF
ut a at you've no intention ss that might hurt my mother’s fecl- ‘ ONCY IViCCIUFE DECOMES name we oes ak ae Mv. Cal Lie ee ee oe CLIMBING NOT NECESSARY
Bride of Harold Johnson | ss imod ata it gute sew Wolion of -\Saa asa gue te ee , of his . Make it quite clear and uncle are closer to me ag |.
[that you'd rater al than ie Edgefield |they tave given me vo mn | SACOBSEN’S Garden Center —— : : s m when goes 5 i “If my mother’s name should irestdnyenags J oa ped bolcheol W. Hastings of the Keego Harbor crazy. drive. be used, must I include my step- 15 Magee From Pontioc—Out M-24 (Perry)
W, Johnson,
* * *
The—bride—is-the former Nancy |
Jean McClure, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey R. McClure of
East Beverly street. Mr. and Mrs.
Sam T. Johnson of Oliver street
are parents of the bridegroom.
The couple were married Satur-
day at four o'clock in the Church
of Christ with the Rev. Marvin
| Church of Christ officiating.
A floor length dress of tulle
| and Chantilly lace over bridal
satin was worn by Nancy. -The
Panels of Chantilly lace extended
down the sides of the bouffant tulle
skirt. The bridal bouquet was
composed of Frenched carnations,
| stephanotis and ivy, centered with
a white orchid.
STUDENTS
RUGGED ROYAL
HURRY) HURRY! Seotot &
sbogs Soe Rental WHITE NYLON MOTIF
Mrs. Charles R. Buell of Bir-
| mingham attended the bride as
| mantron of honer, wearing 0 white
_Schiffli_ embroidered nylon or-
gandy gown over blush pink
taffeta and a matching picture
hat. She carried a pink fan
feath- 4
A ballerina length gown of white
| Schiffli embroidered nylon organdy
over sky blue taffeta was worn
by the bridesmaid, Ruth Ann
Johnson. She also wore a match-
ing picture hat and carried a bou-
quet of blue feathered carnations
A reception was held following
the ceremony in the church pariors
| and an evening reception was held
at the Gingellville Community
House, :
A gray print dress with white
accessories and a corsage of white
roses and feathered carnations
“When the couple left on the wed-
ding.trip the new Mrs. Johnson
a pink linen suit with
and orchid
“gins Jemena °
Special $ 35° 00
No Appointment Necessary! -
_ Belva’s Beauty Salon Drayton Plains
He'll argue with you and pro-
fess to be a good driver with a
ear that's always in geed con-
dition. But snap back with the
reply that you can't vouch (and
neither can he) for the good
driving of cars coming toward
you, behind you or out at angles
from side reads,
He may not have had any acci-
dents yet, and his reflexes may be
Coming Events The an ~My! he Republican
Federation « of Women's ctu will be ay
Zoaretey et 6:30 p.m. et Avom Park.
rmen are Mrs, Charles
a Barrett and Mrs, Everett Trane
tien is handled by Mrs. &. G. Wil-
end Widewers’ Acquaint-
meet Tuesday in
for a trip to
Ladies joey te’ the Metrepett-
tan Clab, Spirtt Six, will meet tonight
by 8 with » doha DePauw af Argyle
The Anna Gordon one 1 sreneg Willard
Units of WCTU iil
Methodist Chureh, Thureaay a 1:30 Bm.
Huron Gardens Lady Eagles wil! meet
Wednesday at & =. for initiation
hall, 4403 Highland
Especially for the shorter, fuller
figure—this slimming step-in ac-
cented by a new and dramatic col-
Picture this in’ crepe,
MR. and MRS. JAMES
A floor length gown of nylon
tulle, paneled with Chantilly lace,
over white satin was worn by
Mary Jean Walton Saturda} eve-
ning for her marriage to James H,
Bersche.
* * *
The fitted bodice of the gown
was fashioned sweetheart
neckline and long pointed sleeves.
Her fingertip veil was secured by
a headpiece of red sweetheart roses
and she carried an arrangement of
red roses, white stephanotis and |
ivy in semi-cascade design. Her |
only jewelry was a heirloom locket, |
a gift of her mother. Mary Jean is
the daughter of the Rev. and Mrs,
Carl A. Walton of Edgefield drive
ot and James is the son of the Rev.
_ Verna Joy Walton attended her
sister as maid of honor. She wore
a ballerina length gown of white
tulle and lace over biue taffeta.
Her headpiece was a band of blue
YELLOW AND PINK
Ebey and Jean Fry. They wore
ensembles like the maid of honor’s
in shades of- yellow and pink-re-
spectively.
ers, Paul and John. i Mary J. Walton Wears
Nylon Tulle for Wedding
Other attendants were Evonne BERSCHE
A reception was held in the home
of the bridegroom's parents, Music
was provided by Mrs. Steve Kus- |
ner of Detroit.
Mrs, Walton wore a navy silk
shantung dress with rose acces-
sories and a corsage of pink
roses and white stephanotis, A
pink lace dress with navy ac- | 'as he and [ never have gotten.
on together." father too? I would prefer not to
Answer: These last _elream-
stances that you describe makes
it plain that the invitations should
go out in your aunt and uncle's
names as you cannot possibly use
your mother's name without that
of your stepfather,
“Dear Mrs, Post: I erdered a
floral piece to be sent to a fu-
neral and in some unexplainable
way the order was lost and the
flewers never were sent.
the charge did not appear on my
bill."
a left on a north- |
Bis fore igan wedding trip the
bride was wearing a navy silk
shantung suit with rhinestone trim.
pleted her ensemble.
Upon their return the couple will
‘find that the florist hadn't sent
them as you had ordered and that
they are. now sent in very deep
sympathy, You would,. of course,
Rub moistened soap around your “I inquired when I noticed that |
Answer; You simply write and |
tell them you are distressed to | Right as You Enter Leke Orion
ee ess. SHOP
R ~ Il was worn by the brid an Joe Bersche attended his brother } lawl WAVES. oa nol . as best man and seating the guests Over acer Sy ar
Our Specialty “* @ «© were the bridegroom's other broth- | FE 2-9382 FE. §-3735
First-grader or colle
bound—a new hair-sty .
and permanent for the
TRY ROWENA’S own MAKEUP — ns
FOR A WONDERFUL COMPLEXION
-ROWENA’S _ PORTABLE — at the and Mrs. G. J. Bersche a North | reside on Payton avenue. He ts a/ finger and that tight ring will stip slip
The Typewrher of @ Uletime 9 and ivy = _ R = The enaeel Meoster ~tente wit ve | Cass Lake road. graduate of Wheaton College, Whea- | off without damaging the —- = : it Oskland Park at 2 p.m. Sun- ton, MI. or fi — fer @ Lifetime! Charles R. Buell of Birmingham | 7- The bride's father ae somnd ee? an _oF your finger. =
Pareac! Invest le your | served as best man for his. ate Seen enone eee oe » pra dare earpemad ee — —— |
feet them set, higher brother-in-law and seating the Better Home and Gardens - — Alliance Chane. "tle wen enciated A Ne H § \ marks with this most O° Bf) guests were Harvey R. McClure, | mest at ine home of Mrs. H » =e w Hair style waned Posenbie } 782: - ‘brother of the bride, Richard | moms. 190 East Iroquots reed, « y the father of the bridegroom,
wotees, Deceneing ee, at O Rice ’ Teeredey. on, mesting will he "tolicwed whe is pastor of the church, f. h 1
new Rueged Fibergias Care | aioe ant ory ee : — or School
NORTH SIDE BEAUTY SHUP
Your
Shirtwaist
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in Switzerland. Feels like
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| *
faa te" Se
Park Free Rear of Store
anit Dt mad
HARDWICK CARPET...
your welcome to quality at home
HARDWICK'S
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Williams = Rd. | Hair ct Dress... VE Linds: b ef ° af ee ee h. , ame
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Fine Draperies and Floor Coverings Since
FOR YOUR SHOPPING co EASY TERMS — 24 MONTHS TO PAY |
compliments galore : é ' = ition 3 sails
go! Proportioned to fit—you wan't | Sanforized and Mitin moth: why this wool broadioom is the. “buy
agg, ; Half sizes rs proofed... OCakhurst's ability to take hard wear is astounding.
cas es } » 24%. Size i Es Its edaptability to modem living is a joy. In terms of the
| hel ing ha This pattern to use, simple Sizes 7 to 15 * stereo _yeer-of underfoot Juxyry.it.will provide, : =f
A ping nd g | it mer “g om & aot it ia the most inexpensive corpet you con buy ! oq
Send 35 conta in coins for eons CE 2 9% | - $] 5°. sq. sak ae 7
| pattern—add 5 cents t- - tere. fot! lstctaes malig. "Send Le , 27-in., 12 & 15 foot widths
to Adams, care of 137 Pon- . ; ; - ‘ :
= tine Press Pattern Dept., 243 West} Many Other New Fall 3 eH suger beige + dream gray * ivory limetone —,
Ith St., New York 11, N.Y ® $i o marie.» erystel green Dresses to Choose From Ben grey-beige © grecion rose © trquelee
‘4-0516 | ‘TISDALE feathered carnations and she car- new 8 . ns and sh chool term is a a The bride's rag were © ried a blue lace heart with a cor- | must for every girl. |
FE 5-Lil1 dress of cotton and imported sage of blue feathered carnations. | af )
“=
Ase
THE‘ PONTIAC PRESS, ‘TUESDAY, AUGUST 16. 1955 i
sake : ‘ i &
—_ a. es
THE BERRYS
up to 12 feet
includes hardware
Pontiac Window Co. 357 N. Cass
$10000
Phone FE 5-3281 “fr't.sc"
j INDEMRITY COVERAGES
EF Now Available Under |
1. Automobile Liability Policies
accident.
* accident.
) walking or riding.
you
Cail, write or see us for complete details on these important
new coverages.
CALL FE 5-8172
LAZELLE AGENCY, INC. 504 Pontiac State Bank Bide.
By Carl Grabert
Guard Armories
”| Against Irish British Schedule Special
Actions Against Possible NEW YORK, (®—A congreasion- |
al probe of Red activity in show
business brought up a, solid line
of opening-day witnesses firmly
opposed to answering questions.
“Guerrilla ‘Warfare
fresh activity by Irish terrorists LONDON &® — The British War)
Office clamped a tight guard on}
its armories today amid fears that | actress were called before the
House’ Un-American Activities
|Committee yesterday and each in
turn refused to answer when asked
about communism, When one de- : Alt reac a aT ore and vy
“ PAYS YOU from $25 to $50 & week for 2s long 2s you are unable é te werk es « revel of injuries sustained in an automobile
PAYS YOUR WIPE er estate s bump sum of $5,000 or $10,000
if you die as « result of injuries sustained in an automobile
Makes no difference whe causes the accident or whether you are
Costs ONLY from $2 to $10.2 year depending upon the amounts
purchase. clared this refusal contained no
implication of guilt, Committee
Chairman Francis E, Walter (D-
| Pa) snapped back:
Afjer a special Cabinet meeting) “you ¢an refuse to answer and
jlast night, the War Office. an-| we can all draw -whatever inter-
| nounced it was taking ‘special prp- | | ence: we wish. "
cautions” against further raids on *
/ arms depots, may lead to guerrilla warfare in
joes orth ireland.
| The probe was denounced as &
. polP pe sinh cag ty, he Pertti “star - Cesaskes ee ee by ac- nh é » Ignoring the
field depot in Berkshire Saturday | nara and Walter’s =
was found abandoned and empty | ing gavel, Polan read a statement |in London. The raiders, believed | arguing that the committee lacked ito be members of the outlawed | guthority to condact the investiga-
Irish Republican Army, seized 68 | tion At the end he announced:
weapons and some 80,000 rounds | “T refuse to answer any ques-
{of ammunition.. A search for the | tions that this committee puts be- "arms was launched in the London | fore me.” His defiance brought ap-
area. |p plause from the hearing audience, Two smal] groups of Irishmen} pyt Walter warned it could bring a
tried to raid arms depots at Rhyl, | citation for contempt.
Wales, yesterday and at the Hor- | *
field headquarters of the Bristol |
garrison Sunday. They fled when
sentries alerted other” garrison
guards.
The avowed aim of the IRA,
-banned_in_the Irish Republic as,
well as the United Kingdom, is to hit “Can Can,” and on several
unite the six Ulster counties of| TV shows. He declared:
Northern Ireland with the 26 coun-| “The committee is, intruding
ties of the republic. The six ve | upon my privacy as an. American
ern counties are part of the U. K.| citizen. In America you can be- Most witnesses mind that
the committee’s questions invaded
their privacy and threatened the
| constitutional right of free associa+
tion. One of these was Phil Leeds,
wh ous
fi f rcoevee eee: i . : sieesbetetiss tte 4
‘under the British crown. i eve in anything. You can believe
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available in genuine cowhide tan 39, who played inthe recent stage}
Defiant Theater Peo ple
Plead Fifth Amnedment in Yogi Berra or that lanolin will |
Save the world.”
At the end of the day,
commented:
“T am sure that these people Walter
You Treat Him Kindly;
Me, I'd Rather Leave
SCARBOROUGH, England ®— |
Adrian Darley has appealed to)
anyone finding his pet 15-foot py- |
thon to treat the snake kindly.
Reporting the snake's escape, |
Darley told police:
“Tickey is perfectly harmless
docite“te~ |
Mads Praca By Care Gud Devon
Deliberately Designed for
Your Peace of Mind...
We oiter the convenience of extended pay-
j ments. The Donelson-johns Funeral Home has
through the’ years, trusted the families of our
community-mand. will continue to do 80.
ine ave wea ed bernd rats-and-} > = rites
somet concealed in the But I've had him since he ly dee
framework of the (theatrical) | wae only two feet long and he may Palle gregh laa org rg Spe wigs. have forgotten by now how to most helpful in easing your financial burden
Unions repeatedly mentioned | catch them for himself.” —and will help you to keep costs low,
ie the hearing were Actos we
clon af Taide es TS Patriotism Plus . Artists, ST, LOUIS —Raymond L. An- 4 Five witnesses cited the Fifth| derson and his bride were mar- ‘ Amendment to the Constitution,| ried by Magistrate Thomas Gab-
which protects ‘a citizen trom self-|bert—last-—Saturday. The groom) ¢
ee — who ow —- Feo he —— have ee
r re on “ i it
tuck of ‘authority: the, parte et | day: Cobleen ieee nuke ae | SCRE 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC the committee were Polan and | derson started a week of jury duty | Ps actor George Tyne. _ ‘ in his court. =
6. N. SAGINAW
iD Bl | ® ' )
|
(Some slightly irregular—will not affect looks or wear)
Sale starts Wed., Aug. 17th — Store closed Tuesday, Aug. 16th to prepare for sale!
- ' ' A | . i }
Ladies’ Summer Dresses | g COATS and TOPPERS ¢
In all summer fabrics, all sizes. Were pi Boodles, fleeces, velvet trims, elpacs | lnings 15 : 4 in owes, S charcoal, red and pastel. All sizes.
Ladies’ Nylon Hose 2 for $] SKIRTS 8959
Were $1.99 each. — Wools, part wools, a taffetas, gabs and
SLIPS & eultings. Fall colors. 22-30—32-38. Were $4.99. . ;
Multifilament crepe in white, pink and $] SWEATERS : $9 blue. Sizes 32-44. Were $1.99. Orlons, nylons and wools. 32-40, 42-48. Were $3.99.
PANTIES fo $ BLOUSES - $]
2-bar tricot in white, pink, maize 3 l Cotton, pylon and dacron in assorted colors. Sizes
and blue. Sizes 5-10. Were 69¢ ea. 52-38, 40-46. Were $2.99 and $3.99
} ? ‘ ' ’ O
7: BA e ele :
GIRLS’ DRESSES BOYS’ POLO SHIRTS’
Cottons, rayons, fancies, lace Fancy, stripes, | d sho t, Al :
ay Assorted colors, 3-14. Were $9 — $3 Wace $1. gs a wn wml abi 20°
to $8.99
SLIPS JACKETS
ma oe : Wool plaids; nylon gabs, quilted linings Rayon and cotton in white, pink and blue. 50° in all aenerted colors, 6-18.7Were $14.99 $7 99
Sizes 4-14, to $17.99.
|'PANTIES BOYS’ SHIRTS
2-bar tricot in white, pink and ie $] Assorted flannel shirts. in all sizes, W ereS 450
blue. 4-14, Were 39c each. . $2.99 and up. : l
PAJAMAS ooo ee BOYS’ and GIRLS’ HOSE
‘Flannel prints in white, blue, maize ei" Cotton, nylon. Sizes 614-10. Were 39e ¢
mint. 4-14, Were $2.99. to 45. / 15
Watley AVIF NA
eharcoal, teal, skipper and brown. riieod One to a
Customer, Were $29.90.
UNDERWEAR Wiiihe o0es boners and srippers. Assorted
28-40. Were 69¢ each.
JACKETS Nationally advertised quilt lined wool jackets in
fall colors. All sizes, many styles. a og med
| to $1499,
391
6 ‘ Rayon. gab slacks with tab pockets, Saddle stitch-
“SPORT SHIRTS
cies, solids.” Famous makes, dozens of styles. All
_tolors. S-M-L. Were $4.99.
MEN’S $5.99 PANTS
- oO a7 ; a | ' ; . bmn g se :
a -# hapeny a pe THE PON TIAC ERE SS Teed Ree are . Press Follow — Call FE 2-8181 | ‘Read it in Today's Press ~~
TUESDAY, BURST 6 1955 ~NPONTIAC, MICHIGA <6 . a FIFTEEN = armen apeniemeresereniananentionnen Sar rEpean easements t
a)
4 te
CAR DAMAGED — Flying chunks of wood wt feet from the blast. Another car: directly across the
bits—of-glass buffeted this auto parked about 50/ street was also damaged.
~ Blast Sets Ott Brief Reign of Terror
-& in Quiet Liberty Street.Residential_Area
By BURDETT C. STODDARD | first-floor apartment when it hap- blown out of his house, “I just
Terror reigned’ briefly in the | pened. I felt it before I heard jt. | entered the house after work when
quiet aw pion! cmprsed| Window frames tonflled on top of glass began to fall. I ran to the
area where & gas explosion Gem®- | the baby (Robin Gail, 1) and.1/ tront of the house saw ladies ished a home yesterday at 3 p.m. | ran to remove the debris. The | 1 child a i .
Neighbors described a maelstrom ‘explosion had knocked me clear | “™® C™#GFen running an crying.”
of flying glass, tarpaper and shin- across the room. | grabbed the | Larry Smith, 7, son of Mr, and
gles which sent them scurrying for baby and ran out. i Mrs, Leon Smith of T- Header
cover or racing in frenzied 2S Soa a “It was just a miracles we | %% St, was playing by the
aren oa oo came out alive. I thought the | *partment house when the blast
| baby was dead. We all prayed.” | ‘ok place, Me ran home fright: Two mon inthe severelydam- she and Robin were also treat. ; ©#ed, bet unhurt.
aged a eae to | ed at the hospital. [The shock knocked merchandise
the pono a bullding Cady said, “I checked the apart- | ‘off shelves in.a nmiarket a block
were cred wit! keeping ot | me nts to see if anybody was in- | @¥ay- Mrs, Edward Vennard, of der and ushering the occupants jured and ‘might not have gotten | 102 Washington St., a clerk at the
- poems Goss okans | oo ay: | out. I thought the explosion was in Store, sald, “it actually looked like e ‘Tress 0 on : . | ay ‘ady. 2% Silver Lake. | the base < the north wall of the store moved NEIGHBORS SURVEY WRECKAGE — A group of neighbors survey debris strewn | plosion yesterday. Windows were shattered in about 30 neighboring homes. A heavy | — py Pox Privat — = — —_— — the furnace." | from the explosion.” over the yard behind the @ugh Dana home at 4 Liberty St. destroyed by a gas ex- | venetian blind in the Dana home was blown 100 feet. | takers Mr. and Mrs. Otis Rainey | WINDOWS BLOWN OUT | Mrs. Pearl Beetley, of 12) Hen- Rey re st} Gearge Galstian, of 102 Hender- | derson, stated, “! was never so, in the building at 4 Liberty -St. | ore aed
: ce “— ‘enamnn commie son St... said seven windows were | scared in all my life,”
Blast Catches Neighbor on Porch With Parakeet sis: sss sx marrage eh
ing calming the 12. terror-stricken
. |oceupants, hel them through A near neighbor of the destroyed home was sitting quietly on mal A daughter, Barbara, is employed in the office of Dr. C. E. |», avec 7 ane pel prime
front porch of her house at 14 — St., Playing with her pet | Ekeluna. ing against fire,
= : A= Co., where he many setae nea eet ae 4 me “irre sa yn : i | Harshaw Sa) was in the The cxile blast blew in the windows behind her, and a large, re Liberty Street home for the last 13 years, Mrs, Maurice \living room with my 2-year-old
foot-square fragment lodged against the wall just behind Mrs. Bessie | Fitzgerald Jr. said. son Donald ‘when the explosion | ; Briggs. The blast lifted her from the couch. She grabbed her A is Gaus & Ge of the Glam was tecber | occurted. i don't know—what =
parakeet's-cage-ancd-ran-to the-kitchen-. a ; -—— == ta . ;me. Donald started screaming anc
| Pere Secord, former owner of the house (1935). I immediately. ran for him. E
pee Sas wuF see her pat wae injared. Mowever, the Early arrival—before firemen, police or Consumers Power crews “T saw Clyde Cady running into
reome on the right frent of the house were damaged considerably. were there—was Fred N. Stout, 120 Prall St. Stout lives less than a | the apartments to see if anybody
Mrs. Briggs related that Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Fitzgerald, at | block from the scene. He ram around to the rear of the then-burning | ¥@S = rs a8 opp — Pose
No. 10 Liberty, next door to the wrecked house, left Saturday for a | house, grabbed the garden hose of a neighbor and began throwing | fast, He strand te ties 1 left
vacation trip. Later it was confirmed that they, were in Traverse City, | water on flames that'shot out from the crushed remains of the rear. | on,"
and had — to return to Pontiac Wednesday. | wall. Mrs, Stout called the fire department. eeee. Mevehaw" bald the hed
smelied gas ali day, but had
checked her stove and “thought
nothing more about it.”
Mrs. Harsha wand her son were
treat@d for cuts at Pontiac Gen-
eral Hospital.
¥ ry PLASTER, GLASS FELL
= Mrs, Rainey said, “I ws read-
ing in our basement apartment
when something popped, The plas-
ter started falling in and -glass
and shingles fell all over the
place.” :
Mrs. .Richard Stilwell, 23, an-
other apartment occupant, stated,
“The baby and I were in =
U.$.,Red Envoys —
{Recess Sessions.
? GENEVA @™ — U.S. and Com- CLOSE CALL — Mrs. Bessie Briggs, of 14 Liberty St., surveys
munist Chinese ambassadors met | damage in the living room of her homme, separated from the explosion
for nearly two and_a half-hours to- | by only one house, She was sitting on the potch when the blast shock
day and then recessed their talks | wave blew her from the am, “It was the closest call I ever had,”
= | until Thursday. They gavé no in- : :
the release of 41 Americans held
by Peiping.
At the end of their session be-
sed doors, the negotiators ay that-they would’ again take up the issue of civilians re-
an at thelr next session.
The meeting was the -seventh;
3 and one of the longest, between U.| |
Alexis Johnson, U, S. ambassador
fo Czechoslovakia, and Wang Ping-
nan, Red China's envoy to Poland.
Tubby Housewife Admits
Faking Diet Prescription
: WELLINGTON, England @ —
.) Mra, Josephine Leahy, 31, admit-
ted in court she had forged a pre-
scription; for 320 slimming tablets
~to trim her 238 pounds to some-
thing more suitable to her five-foot
* The. tubby housewife told the|
judge yesterday her doctor pre-
seribed only 60 pills at a time,
a ee Se Set getting. the de-
worried "that he had been.
inside, She was informed
ai Meal Da are doe to
ee ' .
i : j : *
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 3
“reduction” sesttion leading to the Hollywood Headlines yore & . —. .
U. . Discloses Disabled Navy Blimp
Lands in Cornfield - hy le ul, Me
those of all nations participating
in the conference. Nationalist Chi-
nese delegates protested and
threatened to quit the conference.
There are no delegates from _} tary police have arrested. a group
of Russian soldiers who reportedly
| broke windows, upset statues and
defaced the interior -of. x small |; production of uranium metal itself.
Uranium metal, as distinguished
from raw uranium ore, is the
basic materia] of atomic energy
Producer Searches World church near Uriahr in the Soviet
jto make high -
Uranium Secrets _ Details of Production
for Atom Use Revealed
to the World
GENEVA (®—The United States
told the world in detail today how
purity uranium
metal—a basic material for atom-
ic energy production—on a large
scale and at low cost.
* a aa
__ The operational technique was |
described at the 72-nation_atoms-
tended to be detailed enough to
allow uranium metal producers in
any .country of the world to dup-
licate the process,
JAMES STEWART
JU UNE Al A
VIS
OUR tnrecl
‘KIDDIELAND=
Phone
ORlando WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER
Cor, Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Opens 7:00 P. M.
she’s DESIRABLE! Ne “The “process, “Tie “sald, “Tivowved
mixing uranium. compound—uran- |
jum tetrafluoride — with magne-
sium metal and placing the mix-
ture hal a furance to initiate a preduction for both peaceful and
military uses,
Wilhelm hinted that the method
he described played the key “role
in the wartime production of the
metal for the atom bomb.
Russians Warm Up —
‘fo ‘Ex-Spy’ Douglas
LONDON # — U. & Supreme
Court Justice William O. Douglas,
who used to be regarded by the
Russians as a spy,-was the subject.
of a friendly interview broadcast
The broadcast said Douglas told
the interviewer he and Kennedy
had choser- own route and
were free go__where _ they |
"pleased. anak how heading
into Siberia.
“Itime in Hollywood
A light year is about six million pl
million miles, tor..Costume By JAMES BACON
HOLLYWOOD @—For the first
fr a
|producer is conducting a world-
wide search for a costume de-
signer,
And what's really strange about
the search is that the job requires
costumes for the original Adam
and Eve, but no nudists need ap-
ply. : a Ma
Somewhere, Vanessa Brown and
‘her producer-husband, Robert Alan
Diary” and ‘Eve's Diary.” This
is believed to be the first Adam
and Eve script ever given . the
Code Administration.
Franklyn wants to make
icture—and cost Pp
ly acceptable to the: code, The
movie censors, in giving the script
a go shead, warned that final
approval would have a lot to do the _
’ 4
4 |
[of the sex-on-wheels girls in the
|| came up With. So far, the local with- costuming.
Shapely Vanessa will play Eve
She’s the one who created the part
Broadway version of ‘The Seven
Year Itch.”
* i *
The international designer search
stemmed from the dearth of ideas
that the Hollywood designers Designers fig leaves, flesh-colored tights,
tree bark wrap aroungs and bird
feather sarongs.
“The script calls for Lilith to
braid Eve's hair and pile it on top
of her head in one scene,” he
states. “Where would we be with
the censors then if we had only
hair for-e-covering?” ~
However, he insists on some sug-
gestion of nudity, with good taste,
to keep the picture in the spirit of
Genesis.
* « *
Costumes must be in good taste,
say Franklyn, because there are
so many love scenes. When Adam
rendEve-narer’t én thee LEKEHURST, N.J. -—A dam-
down in a cornfield by three crew
members last night after —_—
helplessly for 15 miles.
None of the three civilian erg
men aboard the 350-foot airship
was hurt. The craft had byoken
away from ground crews after an
initial landing at the Lakehurst
Naval Air Station in which her
landing gear and both propellers
were smashed. Five crewmen
jumped to the ground/ The pilot,
copilot and a4 mechanic stayed
aboard to dump the ghip’s gasoline
and water supply.
for-peace conference by Dr. H. A. 0800 oday Franklyn, are convinced, there's| (Otherwise, he notes, there will ade the
Wilhelm of the U.S. Atomic Energy = —e a genius who can figure out &ibe no dramatic impact in the — pag gro rotons aground.
Commission's contract laboratory son -_ is ae = Sov ay to costume theif forthcoming | scene where Adam and Eve are | og jt went, and floated helplessly
at lowa State College. dp ee ee — arab eee he Eve."'| banished from the Garden of Eden| for 93 minutes. It was finally He said the description was in-| on Government Operations. mae oa «oll i ‘ance me ay. - ore their bodies for | brought down by releasing helium
gas.
Red China Loses Flag
at-Universal“¥.Confab_
bower, the seductive Lilith is bat-
ting her eyelashes at Adam to get
him to taste the forbidden fruit.
Segregation Renewal
Request Rejected
HOXIE, Ark, (H—A petition de- |
manding that racial segregation be
restored in the public schools was
rejected last night by the Hoxie
School Board.
Foes of integration immediately
announced that they would present
the board with petitions demandirig
that its members resign. The
Teater forthe prosegregation
group, farmer Herbert Brewer, scissors men haven't come up with
anything better than giant-sized said 1,063 had signed the petition.
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Phone FE 2-0244
2)50 Opdyke Road at Pontiac Road
Phone FE 4-461]
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Edward G
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Theater Show Starts at --TO G
sh EXCLUSIVE! TOM & JERRY cuvo ShEW k VE: The
FIRST SHOWING! CINEMASCOPE and COLOR IZAAC *
| Easter 4> TS NEW! II SENSATIONAL!
PARIS, «—Communist China's
flag hauled down yesterday
from Paris Sports Palace,
where the 22nd Universal Confer-
ence of the Young Men's Christian
Assn. opens today. aged, runaway Navy blimp was set} ; Peiping here for the meeting.
Lake Theater WALLED LAKE
' TONIGHT
—The_flag_was_raised _along with |)
THE .AIR-CONDITIONED
STRAND
FEATURES SHOWN AT—
20:06 ~ 1:30 + G:18 ~ 6:47 ~ O98 HELD OVER...
2nd ao WEEK!
Stands Alone!
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NOT ASA
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TU ES.—-WED.-TH U RS. Sas secret is Arthur STARTS ONE. DESIRE" z Murray's » Th FRI.! Also “THE MAN FROM BITTER RIDGE” M Seep To <:
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Lauren BACALL
Charles BOYER
Gloria GRAHAME
Beginning 5:23 - 7:26-9:48 | See it From the de At 1:00 ~ 3:20 - |
SUN.: “INTERRUPTED MELODY” Lillian GISH
Late World News
PHONE FE 5.8331
at 10:45;
Sundays 12:45
ez “JOHN WAYNE in “SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON" also “TIGHT SPOT”
THE SHEA OF
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f
THE PONTIAC ‘PRESS, 1} ESDAY Vavetsr 16, 1955
Laboratory “Methods Help S tudents 15 Persons Fined
- Acquire Phenomenal Reading Speed ‘After | Police Raid
make mistakes such as failing to
been repeated four or five times
in a book.
“Actually children have to. see
and read a word as many as 40
or 50 times before they can be ex- |
pected to learn it. Parents can pro-
mote their children's reading by
choosing material written appro- / 1 WEEK ONLY! | RRUG STORES | ‘ ne priately for the child's reading 148 N. Seginew St.
— and concerning their in-/]} CASH and CARRY ONLY! | Near ts DN SDAY erest. :
o_ i West Huron FE FE Too many books for. children 00
are bought because of their beauty W L at earl }
|
receguite a word after it has | rested by
‘for participating in the operation All but one of 16 persons ar-
Pontiac Police Sunday
of an illegal liquor establishment | fore Judge Cecil B, MeCallum.,
Gladys C, Cowan, 49, and James |
B. Young, 4, both of 467 Franklin
Rd. were fined $100 each by Me-
Callum. She pleaded guilty to aid-
jing ahd abetting an illegal liquor
place and Young pleaded guilty to
the illegal sale of liquor.
Thirteen persons arrested for
at 467 Franklin Rd., pleaded guilty | loiter ing in p the Franklin —_ €
DRY CLEANING SPECIAL
annem ne a RSS O
‘Aug. 25.
EVENTEEN
yesterday in Municipal Court be- |were fined $25 each. Webb Red- |
‘mend 43, who lived in the same | ' Split Cable Kills Rigger
BOSTON, -®-An anchor cable
residence, pleaded innocent to | split and killed a rigger yesterday
charges of loitering and was re- jon the Texas tower radar station
leased on a $50 bond to reappear) being installed 100 miles off Cape
"Cod. _The victim was Arsen 8. outa, 41, of Everett
father of two and a veteran of
24 years i the ‘Navy.
There usually are at least five
boc ke on _every auta,
DOUBLE HOLDENS
_ TRADING STAMPS
and are rot what a child wants to
read. As a result, the child's in-
terest lags and parents have
’| wasted their money.”
SPEED READING—Read the tops of letters for speed, Dr. George 10 Thrif ty GOTCY NIRS ae Filling, BLANKETS PLUS FREE PLASTIC BAG
late
D. Spache shows how “Bill'’ ahd “Alice” can be spotted quickly.
GAINESVILLE, Fla. ut—Think |
you could -read 40,000 words ay
minute?
” » * read better and faster.
He says parents often become
Australia,
often is called the “land of living
fossil."
fe s-themreticany possinie “with
the assistance of machines to
speed up turning pages, says -Dr. |
George D. Spache, head of the
Reading Laboratory and Clinic at
the University of Florida.
No one who has been helped by
the clinic has reached that speed,
but several have increased their |
rate to 10,000 and 1?
minute with excellent comprehen-
sion
There was one student,
Dr, Spache, whe was reading 150
words a minute when he came
to the ctnte-
After a course of six to ei
weeks he was reading 10,000 words
a minute and scored 80 per cent
+, 0M One comprehension test and 100
per cent on another.
Most of the people who come to
the clinic are not trying for such
high rates. Many are university 8 f uw ae | .
students who want to raise~“their
ability to that necessary for eres no U | e ad
graduation
DISCOVER DEFICIENCY
Most students discover their de-
ficiency from a test given all
freshman English students. If one
decides to go to the clinic, he will
be given more tests to discover
exactly what his trouble is. Then a
program is laid out for him which
he completes at his own conve-
nience.
Students are taught by thought
units. In this manner he reads
only important phrases. For ex-
ample, a sentence reading “ As-
suming that we average eight
hours sleep each night, those of us |
» Who must work for a living spend
one third: of our waking hours at
our jobs.”
Utilizing the clinic method it
would read “Assuming we average
eight sleep night, those us must
work a living spend third waking
hours at jobs."
The student is taught to recog
nize words without: spelling out
each letter by looking at just the
tops of letters. Dr. Spache points
out that everyone reads this way
to a certain extent but has never
realized it:
The clinic uses mechanical
reading accelerators only where
~@ther methods don’t work, An
accelerator is a device that ex-
poses only one line of type at a
time. It forces a person to read
at the rate set,
A techistoscope may be used on
those who have formed a very
strong habit of reading slowly to
show them how fast they can read.
This is a projection machine by
which an image can be flashed on
a screen for as little as 1-100th of
a second,
DEVICES DON'’T-HELP
Mechanical devices are not too
helpful, Dr. Spache believes, be-
cause a few months after they are
discontinued the_ individual -returns
to his prior rate.
Dr. Spache thinks people read
better than they once did. For
example, the first grade child now
reads 17 times as much as his
grandfather did in the first grade,
he said. Slow, analytical reading
is not stressed as it used -to be.
Instead the student is taught rapid,
fluent reading. -
Dr. Spache says fewer words are
taught in spelling now because sur-
veys have shown that people don’t
uSe many of the words that were
formerly taught. The time wasted
on learning to: spell’ these words
can’ be better spent learning to
GOING BACK
TO SCHOOL?
Visit Gallagher’ s
Instruments! 000 words a |
ght | save | concerned when their children
Seed
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_ our leadership sales pace puts us in position to
make you an extra-good — = ol
@ Get long, low terms in town! t
High trade-in is only part of our “deal” An it
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payment plan. You can tailor your payments -
down low! It’s easy .. . convenient, too!
@ Get top resale value
Mg Fy
used car, be sure to For years, Ford has returned more of its original
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m
THE wows PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST, 16, 1955
“4 ne
Joepesster oad
é
Sip Past Trib
G/ ‘Into.
nae
ies ; i
E 4
ith} ae i i : i Hd
—- ~—-taliasion,—told—the—350—-regrenentiin
doom @f chabes. Comedia seek, Sidi HEE box+ | ble salvation of boxing.”
a! big a job for the NBA.” Barton called the FBI probe “the proba-
“Yow can't merely point an ac-
cusing finger at an alleged mobster
suspected of being an undercover
manager and order him te divorce
himself from all connection. with Ask C. angress to Probe Boxing boxing,” Barton said. “You must |‘
have evidence."
“ ng evidenct,”” he said, “is about as simple as picking,up
a gob of quicksilver with a base-
ball catcher’s glove."
It was after learning of the FBI
probe that convention delegates
passed unanimously a resolution |
~ Offo aes
= Return to
Browns’ Fold — Retired Veteran Isn't,
‘Too Enthusiastic Over
Possibility
CLEVELAND w—The Cevetana |
: Blue Bombers of the Canadian
= League. Winnipeg had signed Free- last night, grins listening with Leo Kiely, relief | tieing him with Cleveland’s Ralph Kiner
ast her, to Jimany Piersall, left, recount his homer | active playets in that — >
‘urgently requesting a committee
of Congress to inaugurate at the
earliest possible moment a com-
plete investigation of boxing in the
United States.” the idea, the re-
solution stated, is to “determine
whether there exists such undesir-
able interests as has | been publicly |
| charged. . I's Lead)
AP Wirephete
RED SOX c STARS — Ted Williams, right, Boston | and their 8-4 vic tory over Washington. Ted's. 450-foot
Red Sox slugger, who hit a grand slam homer | grand slam home run was his 13th in the majors |
on
"| Roll- Y our-Own! —
Canadian Fire- -Guards Gét a . Dinner
Warn Against Non-Dead Smokes
} > Pilineer. A few
‘ moments Tater]
his favorite
smoke—all with-
out basing & islets 40 haat aoa
_ “thew _weuld you like to visit the fire fighter’s camp?” Bill in-
quired. Naturally we were eager,
for it would simply add ene more
invaluable experience to our
- bush country exploits,
Bill then added, “You know, 1|
think those boys would enjoy a
nice mess of walleyes for dinner.
Suppose we try and catch some
for them.” To this we agreed, and
six walleyes and a half hour later, |
we were trading freshly caught
pickerel for a folder of straw wrap- ee
pers, and a pack of roll-your-own
a happy Indian, and particu- |, was
hardy American jarly jubilant over the deal he con- | S™oking. tobacco. _cocted.
* * *
Here, I should explain why most
guides and northern forest travel.
ers are urged to use “roll-your.
, own’ _brand of - _The_pri.|
mary reason is that the firmly
packed commercial “fag”, upon
being lighted will continue to burn
for several moments when the
smoker quits puffing. The hand. man and Locklear to contracts a
month before the Auburn gridders |
_ Signed last Feb. 8 with the Browns.
In his fivé-page opinion, Jiidge
Jones simply held the cartier Ca-—
nadian League contract was a val-
id obligation for. Freeman - and
Locklear.
Graham: who had nine seasons.
with the Browns and who will be
: 34 on Dee. 6, was unenthusiastic |
about a return.
But when he went into retire-
ment, Graham said he qwed thé
Browns a lot and would answer a
call if they needed fim. He said
yesterday: “If the Browns: still have only.
one quarterback when the season |
rolls. around, I certainly would
give serious consideration to a re-
asked by Coach Paul Brown and_
that he would not return volun- Buddy Harris
Seeks 6th Win
at Motor City
Pontiac's Buddy Harris goes
after his 6th straight win tonight
when he meets
a bout at
Motor City Arena. .
Victory over Barnes would be
a big step forward for the un-
defeated fighter, whose last out-
ing resulted in a knockout of
Napoleon Lady at Wisner Sta-
-dium. Barnes, former Michigan .
lightweight king, is currently a
leading contender for the title
held mae Kenny
Eddie Smith of stroll and Let. |
fie Walker of Saginaw meet in a
co-featured, televised prepa
The_¢
s John Barnes in a | Boone.
‘ LEAGUE LEADERS AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (based on at bats)—Kaline, Detroit, 348: Kuenn, Detroit, 3:
Kansas City, 319; Srvith, Cleveland, Alo;
Mantle, New York,
RUNS—Kaline, Deiroti and Mantle, New
gus 9; Smith, Cleveland, 91; Geodman,
enn, Fi 5 Boston and Power. Kansas City, 27; Smith, Cleveland and Finigan, Kansas ‘City
9: Bema, owen and Powe ey, Hew Tork,
} Ba City, 7.
a pene—Seetie, ee Pe
i, ro rs
nial, yp By 24; Berra, New Yori, 21,
Py A ee Busby, a 10; Smith, Cleveland, 8,
A 0 Soclnan) Byrne, New et fart ts
.
& ' fi
tin! . dente
tee Bsn, Ppt Chicago. $0: Bhs’ Philadelphia, ba; Maya,
Cincinnati, 152; Post
Sa mae,
Ct aaa a i New York; yg solder, Beckie: 6: Mathews, Milw | they were disappointed to learn
cigaret tobacco. Once more Bilt; that our only. made one will die ee, 4 taslantty.
Strange as it may seem, but never-
theless true, few forest fires are
blamed on discarded roll-your-own
cigarets.
* * *
The fire guards had been in the
bush for 10 days. They were eager
to go home. With each new day
they expected to pull stakes. When
they saw our boat arriving their
hopes soared expecting that they
would soon be breaking camp. But
purpose there was
to trade a mess of fish for some
Also, a few days before our ar-
rival at Pine Portage, a fire had
broken outa few~—mites” distant.
After getting it under control 21
weary and hungry fire fighters
your: | suddenly showed up‘ at camp for
dinner;—It happened there~
several lucky fishermen in camp,
~~ eee ee
With our travel permits can-
celed (they are issued by the
camp operator upon the guest's pe
| their, taat seven games in the ding-
| ans out of first piace.
| sweep at Baltimore in two days,
j action tonight at Detroit and the
White Sox play at home against
_| Kansas City, here's the way the |
race stands:
Won ee Behind
New York .71 OT
Cleveland 70 ~ 603 4
Chicago ...67 45 598 1%,
47 «6©49~—OST78 3% Double-Header
Sweep Makes It
Sixina Row
Win Over Senators,
Stays 3% Off Pace |
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
You can't always tell. the depth
of the well by the length of the
handle on the —
*
Which is to say, both Cleveland
and New York have won six of
League race, yet
‘the Y have pushed the Indi-
eee ee ee
The Yanks, who have played and
won one more game than the
Tribe, slipped back into the lead
by a half-game yesterday, walking
off with. their second doubleheader
34 and 124.
Cleveland and third place Chi-
cago, now 144 games behind, were |
ddile. 7.
. * *
In the ‘only other game, fourth
place Boston stayed 3‘, games
by smacking Washington 8-4
of warmup for yet another
series with the Yankees
tonight in the Beantown,
| second and Cleveland third. Last |
Thuréday, the Indians were in first
| with a half- — spread over Chi-
| cago and the Y Yanks.
* *
And as Cleveland gets back to
back into the driver's seat, with
Bauer’s solo shot in the ninth
his third in three games, |
up a 4-4 tie in the opener. |
the second game, Mickey Man-
his 28th with two men
to give the Yanks an 8-0 lead
the fourth, then belted No, 29
make it 10-2 in the sixth inning.
*
one hit the rest of the way.
LJ * *
Jim Piersall” homered forthe
Red Sox’ other two runs in the
seventh.
Williams’ homer, his 20th of the
year, was a 450-foot wallop off Ted
Abernathy. It was his 13th grand |
slammer, tying him with Ralph arrival) plans were made for next
day's lunch. Bill Essery did not |
_overlook the fact that the Shel-:
ley's were healthy eaters when on
Power, the trail,
He prepared several. Finnish.
home-made bread double-deckers
of such proportions that- both
a, | hands were needed while sur-
rounding one’s face with the full-
zed meal, :
brought about another peculiar cir-
cumstance at Lake Wabitongushi,
a few miles to the south. A man
and wife and ancther woman were
fishing, when they heard an air:
| Plane engine. A few seconds later Hazardous fire conditions. | dice,
| British track star, arrived here
Home runs powered the Yanks |)
St urvey Shows Contests
2a Hour at Present \ NEW YORK (—Baseball fans
who've been ome about the in-
creasing “Téigth of major league
games have just cause for com-
plaint.
Big league bell’ games this sea-
son are runing more than 30 min-
utes longer than they did 25 years
ago and more than 20 minutes
longer than they did 15 years ago.
* * *
An Associated Pre ss survey to-
day revealed these startling fig-
ures (besed on nine-inning games
and through games of Aug. 15):
1930: Average time per game-—
1 hour, 58 minutes; games under
two hours—443; games over three
hours—2.
1940: Average—2 hours, 7 min-
utes; under two hours—281; over
three hours—9.
1955: Average—2 hours, 29 min-
utes; under two hours—38; over
three hours—Ss. | Bengals Open.
‘Against Tribe
‘strong finish in their 39 remaining ‘Spoiler’ Series
Win Exhibition From
Cincy; Face Chisox,
Yanks, Bosox Later
ane @— Detroit Tigers a three-game series with
the the Cleveland Indione tonight with
little more to for than a
changing of pitchers, pitchers de-
liberation in throwing and exces-
‘sive’ manageriar ‘werategy. ~
‘Boxing ican
‘Seeks Aid to
Land a Job
FLINT, Mich. w — Herb Odom,
National Intercollegiate Boxing
champion in 1954 and 1955, says he
can't find a job in his hometown
ef Flint because of racial preju-
The husky Negro appeared be-
fore the City Commission last night
to appeal for help in fating em-
ployment.
i * *
Odom, father of three, told the
commission he was graduated from
Michigan State University last
June with a degree in chemistry.
He starred on the MSU boxing
team that captured the NCAA title
—_ year, winning the 147-pound ti-
— commission responded by
applauding Qdom's athletic
achievements and expressing con-
cern over his predicament. How-
ever, it took no concrete action to = Br fish h Miler |
Arrives in U. S. Pirie, English —_Track
‘Star, Here to Battle
Top Distance Runners |
TORONTO w — ‘Gordon Pirie,
" to meet the United
States’ top milers in a_ special |
mile race.
Pirie will run in Varsity Stadium
| Saturday against Wes Santee and
Fred Dwyer. All three have raced
over the distance in a little more’
than four minutes. .
Santee, with 4:00.5, has the best
time of the three. Pirie has done
it in 4:05.2 while Dwyer’s fastest
time to date is 4:01.8. :
Arriving with Pirie today was;
s|his brother, Peter. The pair will | |er in Gemelo, five-year-old Argen- run in a series of exhibition races
in the Toronto district, with Peter |
probably eritering three-mile aaa Nicholie Club
- Again Involved
in Tie Contest Realtors, Auburn Go!
Scoreless in Class A)
Playoff Tilt
Don Nicholie Real Estate can't
break the habit of playing tie ball
games.
After battling to a pair of draws
with the L, C. Anderson Jets last
week before bowing on the 3rd
try, the Realty club fought a'score-
less dual with the Auburn. Mer-
chants Monday night at Wisner
Field in the 3rd round of the Class
A City Baseball League playoffs.
‘Game was halted at the end of |
seven innings because of darkness. |
tonight at 5:30 p.m.
Don Nicholie’s Dick Lewis and ” of the
” But the Tigers could hold the
key to the pennant race as they
play the rest of the Ist division
teams — Chicago, New York and
Boston after the Cleveland
meeting.
Manager Bucky Harris will
~ Bunning
tonight's
right hander, hes a 16-6 record
for the season and twice has
beaten the Tigers.
Hoeft has an 11-6 mark for the
season but a 1-3. record against
Cleveland. Bunning escaped with-
out victory or loss in his only
start against Cleveland.
Netrly everybody got in the act
yesterday in the Tigers’ exhibition
game against Cincinnati at, Flint.
Dizzy Trout, the one-time great
righthander, now turned to broad-
casting, pitched two scoreless in-
nings against the Redlegs as Jack
6th benefit of the Flint sandlotters and
ties the exhibition score —with
Cincinnati for the season. Redlegs
won an eatlier game, 5-4, at Cin-
cinnati.
Phillips’ big 370-foot drive came
with no one on base.
Detroit opened the scoring in
the 4th inning when Bubba
Phillips beat out an infield hit,
moved to 3rd on a walk and a fly The two squads will go at it again. | Cineinnatt ... cess .
} {
| +8) and Wilson,
Auburn's Hud Johnson tangled ia |
| a pitchers battle last night, John-
son yielding two hits and Lewis
giving up three. ‘Lewis recorded
six strikeouts and walked three
while Johnson fanned seven and
passed five.
Both teams made mild scoring
threats, Lewis was stranded on 3rd
in the 3rd stanza, Dave Zittel died
on 2nd in the ist inning, and Don
base in the 7th. Merchants strand-
ed two runners in each of the ist
(and 4th frames and one man-was
left on in the 5th and 7th.
All hits were singles. Bob Doan,
Jim Berg and Johnson accounted
for Auburn's blows while Zittel
Don Nicholie.
Don Nichoile.......... 000 000 OO 2 3
Merchants =... sewer ees 000 000 0-0 3 1 Lewis and Gery; Johnson and Berg.
Able Argentine Import
tine importation. Hanger accounted
rr the United Nations handicap
six-mile events. here in 1953 with Iceberg 2nd.
PHILADELPHIA o— Harry |
|(Happy) Hopman, . Australia’s
Davis. Cup captain; was positively |
'Kiner among active players.
Cows Like Golf
Balls; Mustard,
Pepper Desired
GAINSBOROUGH, England ~ A
has the right to pasture
cows on the Thomock Golf Club
course in Lincolnshire.
The bovines have taken a great
liking to golf balls. They hide be-
hind trees, dash for balls and
swallow them.
Professional Arthur Brown filled
the balls with mustard and pepper
instead of the: usual core. The
cows swallowed them with delight. likeable- today as he
| tennis—Australian, American
| Italian varieties,
* *
| Hopman, on occasion, has been
known to be something short of af-
fable, But he was safely back in
the challenge round and the wolves
back home, who have been howling
for his scalp for two years, will
have to hold off until they see the
results of the big one the
Aussies against the United States,
* *
Two final singles matches are
scheduled against Italy at the Ger-
'mantown Cricket Club today, but
they are meaningless; The Aussies
‘gained the challenge round when
their doubles team of Rex Hartwig and
| Now they are worse than ever, j rola” and Lew Hoad whipped Orlando Si-
‘and Nicola Pietrangeli, 7-5,
Eisapiahipaii e ne
1411, 7.5, in the doubles. That gave
tm 3 a the best-of-five
2 More Rookies
Dropped by Lions
YPSILANTI uw — The Detroit | Lions squad was reduced to 42
today after the Lions asked
| waivers on three more rookies.
The three, who left the Detroit
training came at Eastern Michigan
here yesterday, are Dun-
Michigan quarferba
Powell, Catawba (N. C.) College;
and defensive halfback Marin
Johnson from San Jose State
(Calif)
Fullback ran Gajda, formetty |
Nicholie left a pair of runners on}
Hooman Pleased as Aussies ="
Clinch Challenge Position
Stays in U. S. | out and came. home on Ray
| Boone's sacrifice fly.
000 000 000-0 7
00-101 tot -een—0-® 1
+
Podbieldn, +, and Batts, Cristante, Coleman (4),
Tighe (8)
Home run- tyeer en J. D. Phillips. W
_ ene eee Podbielan
Wightman htman Cup
Trou 4
feo contgnenaeigpee *
American Women Net
Stars Win 19th in Row
Over Great Britain
RYE, N.Y., i®—The Wightman San ai ot i i epersn
Tomasino Winner
in Pro-Aide Test Compiling a; neat’ 73-70—143- for
, the 36-hole © assistant-pro golf
| tourney yesterday at Plum -Hol-
low, gave Larry Tomasino the
title and-$100 cash top prize.
| Larry is. Joe Belfore’s assistant
; at Country Club of Detroit.
Bob Inman of Detroit Golf Club
| Was runnerup with 73-71—144. A
bogie on the-par 5, No, 16 cost
him his chance at top spot. Monte
Bradiey of Blythefield, Grand -
‘| 147, Tommy: Cosmos of Oakland
Hills with 154. Bob McKinnon of
Pine Lake pro shop had 165.
Major Leagues
ee ee ny eee
’ Ath-Inni General Motors erupted for four
riins in the 7th inning to down Bic-
mar Inn, 6-2,.and win the men’ 8|
~ Class-& City Softball League play-
es is Monday night at North Side
os GMC’s last-inning rally broke a
* 2all tie and sunk Bicmar's hopes
for a “B” title. Losers, who fin-
ished the regular. season with a
514 record, were the surprise of
the tourney. But they couldn't
cope with Doug Hall's pitching and
the Coachers' big bats.
Hall set down the Bicmar nine
with three hits, posted six strike-
outs and walked two. GMC's
vietim was John Helisik, who “THE PONTI AC PRESS. TU DESDAY, AU GU: ST 14, \ 955°
burled entailing ball for Bie-
mar during the playoffs. Hell-
sik. was nicked for eight» hits,
three in the fatal Tth inning.
John Seay's single, a ttiple by
J. C. Jenkins, and another. three-
bagger by Rudy Taylor were the
big’ blows in the Tth. Jenkins
emerged as the hitting star of the ‘General Motors: now contest, clouting @ 2nd-inning hore
run: By virtue of. its triumph,
enters the
Class B district tourney at Water-
ford running’ Aug. 18-22.
Avondale. blasted
16-5, in the Ist round of the Class
C girls’ league tournament. Avon-
dale's girls. collected nine hits, in-
Studies Throw
Illinois Star
for Big Loss J, C. Caroline Fails’
Summer Makeup Work; |
Hits WHini Hopes
CHAMPAIGN, It. w — Tilinois’
hopes of emerging from the Big
Ten cellar and back into national
football prominence were dealt a
shattering blow yesterday when |
J.C. Caroline, one of the most ex-
citing backs in Illini history, was
declared ineligible.
The No, 1 man in MHiinois grid | utive Council upped from 14 to 17 CHICAGO —The NCAA Exec-
the number of conferences to par-
ticipate in the national basketball
championships yesterday and ap-
pointed Northwestern University
the hest school, March 23-M.
: 2% *
Previously champions from, 14|
| ccchueanen automatically qualified |
with others being rated at-large en-
trants, Henceforth, champions of
Errors Cost Game
for Keego Leaguers
“Kee go Hardware made just too
plans, Caroline was declared scha-'|
lastically ineligible to play football
after failing a summers school
course in psychology,
J. C. dfopped out of school “in |
food standing" last spring because |
of the death of a grandfather and /!¥o earned_runs,—Then-the-hard- the serious illness of his mother.
At the time, Ilinois officials an-
make up his work in summer
school to regain eligibility. this fall. |
* * w
Football Coach Ray Eliot shook
his head sadly after hearing the
news,
“He was my No. 1 offensive
man, No. 1 defensive man, No. 1
punter and we planned to use him
on kickoffs and extra points. There
_isn't_ much to say except this is a
serious blow to ILinois.
“Right now, I guess we'll have
to move Harry Jefferson in Caro-
line’s spot with Abe Woodson at the |
other half. From there on we'll just |
have to fill the gaps. Locking over
the situation, we'll probably have |
to start four or five sophomores.” |
Caroline virtually came from no-
where in 1953 when he led Illinois
to a share of the Big Ten title. jer-manager for White Brothers, nounced Caroline would return to | & . imiany errors Monday night in al
Waterford Junior League softball |
double-header and lost both ends
| to White Brothers, 12-8 and 18-4,
Keego committed six errors: in
ithe Ist tilt as White's made only |
ware club collapsed for 11 miscues
in the nightcap. Art Larson, play-
collected five singles and a double
in nine trips during the twin bill.
Deteat moved Keego into a tie
for the league basement. White's
club occupies 2nd place. Last
night's opener was the completion
of a protested game.
Standings:
Junior League Little League
w wiih L
Drayton Drug 8 3 Jack's 10 (3
White Bros. 6-s pworves a4
Keego Hdwe 4 9 a4
Fillmore Hdw. 4 7 Union ee 7 $6
19
2
wita. “Vinage 1
17 Conferences Now Set
\for NCAA Cage Title Play
as | large entrants will compete in the the newly-formed Yankee Confer-
ence, the Ohio Valley Conference |
and the California Basketball Assn.
will draw first round byes.
The 17 champions and eight at-
tournament,
* * *
The NCAA assigned regional
tournaments March 16-17 to lowa,
Pennsylvania, a and Oregon,
State.:
The executive coimell will close
a two-day meeting today with a re-
view of the association's financial
operations,
*
Omaha again will be the site of
the baseball championships June %
13; track competition will be held
at the University of California at |
Berkeley, June 15-16; the U. S.|
| Naval Academy will host the fenc- |
ing tourneys, March 23-24. and Yale |
will be the site of the swimming |
| championships, March 29-31. *
2 Tied for Junior
Ist Qualifying Run
COLUMBUS, Ga. W\—The half-
way mark in the 36-hole qualifying
for the International Jaycee Junior
golf championships found Billy
Dunn of Duncan, Okla., and John |
Liechty of Iowa City, Iowa sharing |
the lead with 69s, three-under-par
for the 6,537-yard Columbus Coun-
try Club course.
Georgia led in the team cham-
-pionship competition with a com-
hinéd score of 303. California and
LOklahoma teams were tied at 304.
Rivers Wins Big One
NEW YORK uw—Neal Rivers, a
baby-faced _middleweight with a /|
real man's punch, had the most
important victory of his budding
| career to his credit today.
| The 21-year-old prospect deci- |The team title will be decided aft-
er today's second qualifying round, |
Auspicious Beginning
| Jim Hinegly, star Michigan State
lend, wasn't especially interested in
The fleet-footed Negro from Co | sively outpointed Jimmy King, the | sports, but when his buddies at,
lumbia, S.C_, led the nation in gush-
ing offense with 1,256 yards-in 194
carries, *
Rochester Golfer Gets
Ace at Bald Mountain.
‘Holes-in-one are getting cheap at
‘Bald Mountain Golf Club. Another
ace was posted there Sunday to
continue a summer-long tattoo.
Clarence. Cadieux, 506 Orchard-
ale, Rochester, aced the 155-yard
llth hole, using a six iron, The
ball landed three feet to the high
side of the pin and backspun into
_the cup, Cadieux shot an 85.
Witnessing Cadieux’s hole-in-one
were Ray Sann and Jim Kennedy,
h of Rochester, and Ed Cadieux,
brother of the lucky golfer.
MONDAY’S STARS
PITCHING—Leo Kiely, Red Sox,
gained 8-4 decision in relief, snap-
ping off four-run Washington rally
with two strikeouts in the third
and allowing one hit the rest of
the way.
HITTING—Mickey Mantle, Yan-
kees, hit 28th and 29th homers,
two doubles and a single while
driving in five runs in double-
header sweep at Baltimore that
boosted -Yanks back into first
* place.
veteran from
in a television
Nicholas Arena | European-polished
| Birmingham, Ala,
| 20- rounder at St.
| last night.
\, \
\ ‘
i ‘
seems th last forever.
Chis fel. thrity, automa’
| ™ ble ly omg water dae able bie pupply of
Easy Terms”
del cioten vee bined
@n @ convenient time payment plon,
= Kea A rows
5e Pike me FE 3-7195 % provides an phere | Baby your engine, we mean. | Detroit Miller high wenf out for
football, he tagged along, too. . .
and caught e‘ght passes in his 1st |
game.
.. with a =: new kind of
gasolene that’s ' designed to do just that.
\ It's Cities Service New 5-D Premium.
Now father knows the importance of the 5 great features of New 5-D.
That's why he buys New 5-D. But thother buvs Check Officials
on Duck Season Telephone Roundup
to Get Views for
Wildfowl Laws
LANSING (®—Michigan Conser-
/yation Commission was polled by
telephone today to decide the
state's waterfowl hunting laws this
fall.
Commissioners reported — the
United States Fish and Wildlife
| Service gave Michigan a choice
of 70 days instead_of 55, or a
split season of 63 days. The serv-
lee also restored the privilege of
one wood duck if wanted and pre-
scribed a daily shooting deadline
| of a half-hour before sunset,
Spokesmen said it also gave
Michigan a choice of eliminating
| the noon opening on the Ist day of
| ithe season and of setting a 15-day
jacksnipe season any time within
the waterfow) hunting period
The poll was expected to be com- rs
pleted by tonight.
| 10 Pacers in Field
for Yonkers’ Futurity >
YONKERS, N.Y. @ — Ten 3}
year-old pacers, headed by’ Quick |
Chief and Libby's Boy, rece ‘x
the richest purse in history for
horses of their gait’ in the $71,040 |
William :H. Cane Futurity Pace at |
-Yonkers- Raceway
The race is the first of Yonkers’
twin futurities, named in honor of
| the president of Yonkers Raceway
and sponsor of the Hambletonian
(re $74,000 trot will be raced Sept
“The winner's _Durve is $35,164.80 Gingellvilte, |
‘SANDERS FOR RENT
-TRAVIS HARDWARE 4M Orehard take Ave.
eR 6-nyt g Uprising Wins Title or
Wednesday night at North Side.
Avondale tangles with General Mo-
| \@rs at. 8: ®.
ome on 1 4-4 8 4
Bicmar o20 0-2 4°45)
Hall and G. Dennis *Hellash and Bud |
Reed
Avondale 266 005 2-16 6 «|
| Cingetiville 000 62
MeCasiin and Goodey; Wickman and Galante
=. —— 100 110 0-3 9 41]
200 003 »~5 6 6)
| Msehinets and Aramian; Saddier and |
McLeod
‘Pinckney .... , 000 020 4—4 # 2)
Southfield ooo 000 1--1 6 F/
Bouthwell and Reader, Bortcous and
Rourke
|
| cbatine home ruts by Shirley
Grusnick and Shirley Thorpe, and
ran up an 8-0 advantage before the
losers found the plate. Rhea Me-
Caslin hurled: —six-Hit ball for
Avandale.
Louie's Tavern, National League
softball champ, scored a 3-3 come-
back victory over AmVets
Highland Park in the opening
round of the men's Class C dis-
trict tourney at Beaudette. Trail-
ing by a 32 margin entering the
bottom of the 6th frame, Louie's
tallied three times on a walk, sin-
gies by-Don- Dubats -and--Bugene
MeLeod, and a triple by Del Wheel-
er. Walt Saddler limited the
Parkers to three hits.
Pinckney of Howell deleated | Southfield, 6-1, in last night's
ether district tourney ‘ contest.
Southfield was shut out until the
7th inning by Southweilt's six-hit
pitching. Muyer led Howell's
six-hit attack with a two-rue
homer in the Sth inning.
. Class C district playoffs continue
tonight. . Louie's meets Drayton
Drug in a 7 p.m. encounter at
Beaudette, with the loser engaging
Southfield at 8:30. ~ Howell faces
Roseville in the 7 o'clock opener
lat North Side, the loser taking on
Highiand Park at 8:30 p.m.
Girls’ Class C playoffs resume
—
‘New Gridiron Foes
EAST LANSING—Michigan State |
; Meets two new football opponents,
Ulinois and Stanford, at East Lans«
ing.this fail. of |
Sam Snead’ sl
Golf Clinic
Hold your club so .your
work together.
On a recent day we told all you
fairway fans to grip your golf club
firmer but
member? The club handle passes
from the hook of the right fore-
finger diagonally across the palm
of the left hand.
In the address position the line
|2 >) hands
\ ’ i
formed by the thumb and fore- |
finger of each hand will point up|
and over your right shoulder. The
left hand grips the club handle
about an inch below the top of the
shaft,
The right hand grips. the cs
just below the left with the little
finger of the right hand placed
over the index finger of the left
hand, This is the. “overlapping”
grip. But if it feels better to let}
the little finger of the right hand |
“interlock” between the index. fin-
ger and second finger of the left
hand you will still be using a sound
‘grip. The object of using either
grip is to make the two hands. op-
erate as one
(Copyright 1945)
Normalize Your.
| Weight and Relax
Steam Baths,
Electric Cabinets
Physio-Therapy Daily from
j 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.
| Call Teday tor Information
YMCA Athletic Club FE 5-6116 without—tension.—Re-+ « A 4
- -NvETREN’ .
| Valuable » Player award were Paul
of the Pittsburgh ‘Pirates to have | Waner in wet. and Arky Yeats ee | won the National League's Most | in 1935. '
“\WE HAVE MOVED TO Our Lorger, Finer Store ot
908 W. Huron at Telegraph
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©COMPLETE
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35 Elizabeth St. Ph, FE 4-5941
Only two vnvens in the late
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Also TAIL PIPES and
EXHAUST PIPES Ford, —
Top Truck JRaper
it
»,
NOW FORMING
KEECO HARBOR Call Elmer: FE 5-1662 BOWLERS ‘OPENINGS FOR LEAGUES
INDIVIDUALS and TEAMS
Sunday 8 P.M. Mixed Leagues :
SPILLWOOD LANES _ MATTHEWS. HSRGREAIES OVGePRE Fb tae OF HTL? ata Fh
a7 2h
Aili
New 5-D gasolene because it alw ays gets her started instantly,
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A
We love them both, and they both love New 5-D Premium Gasolene. ? : & ' :
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Cities Service 5-D Premium ”
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‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955: _ 3 a
\ (ene,
. tf
DETROIT, ®—The Coast Guard
‘nnocently interrupted a | Okinawa Troops Launch |
Mock Invasion of Island
- PT, BUCKNER, Okinawa @ —
Troops and tanks of the 75th Reg-
imental Combat Team. today
launched a full-scale training in-
sailboat | vasion against Okinawa.
The newly arrived %h. Regiment
ot the 3rd Marine Division de-
fended the island,
Drop in Home Building ~
WASHINGTON, ®—-The Bureau
of Labor Statistics attributes an 11
per cent drop in July home con-
struction ~ chiefly to a voluntary
tightening of housing credit. The
BLS reported yesterday that non-
farm housing starts in July fell
to 115,000 units from 129,000 in Reds Demand Confab
‘for Unifying Korea - TOKYO i»—Top Red Chinese and
Korean leaders chorused a new
demand yesterday for a Far East
conference to unify Korea.
Red China's Premier Chou En-
lai and Commander in Chief Chu
‘Teh both called for the conference,
provided for in the Korean armi-
stice, &
North Korea's Premier Marshal
Kim Tl Sung went further and sug-
gested a mutual North-South un-
dertaking not to use’ force, and
“speedy convening’ of a North-
.South conference to “discuss the
question of Korea's unification,”
The Peiping \radio, heard here, HALIDAY | —
NICK
WHERE GOUTH OF THE ‘ OF LUQUE So >
carried afl three speeches, made | ALLEY: OOP
+" ghouted back. “We're just on an/ June. l
‘ah a on the occasion of the 10th anni-
the Tupelo moved on. Although skunks sometimes de-| versary of Korea’s liberation from NO SiR! NOT
Sn stroy birds, they are regarded as | Japan. I HOPE HE'S | IF HIS TEMPER'S
-i valuable for destruction of | y scteemneirannitinremacseanios
ou Cannot see X-rays, pests.
BOARDING HOUSE
Lijuaaaz ANAS PB PARDON ME Ye ~ Pe ok Bae MOONEY<— BUT 1F JZ
= ON, CHUMS —— COTTAGE GZ fq . REWARD ~~ , : ) e PUDDING “TONIGHT, AND E wre pag Ren ar hae , ! \ONe a” », A 4 "1 a
: MAYBE THE WARDEN WILL) \E OEE Tey ON THE HOTEL Tl Gh ee an é, . } Ms fe EINE YOU YOUR OLD REGISTER me) lla. Xt , LUE Pea 9.1 ~ Wo Heenlin
‘ : ) te Ba waedecly ATTA # | Cope. 1986 by WEA Servinn, tnt. T. Mi. Rag, & Pot OF. | NANCY By Ernie Bushmiller
IT HELPS ME TO ENJOY OUR NEW
PIE
HOW MUCH
DID YOU SAy ?
HELLO---WEATHER | BUREAU--- WHAT'S
, A THE TEMPERATURE LU bs
| BES es Ih, £5
AN c _
Pe CNV ITA C TO FREE
* ROOM MAE LBA SPY AA (heh LD
CAPTAIN EASY
By Leslie Turner
NO, I'M WAITING FOR TWO
BABES WHO SLUGGED MME AT ‘TI
AND BOARD = THEN HE ACCUSES EM OF SOME FANTASTIC
CRIME... LIKE HAVING TRIED TO PUSH HIM
OFF A CLIFF, OR TO KIDNAP AND 208 Him! lf YES. HE HAS A PERSECU- TION COMPLEX AND OFTEN 0 CARS
L TIENT YOU SAW
1S IN. THAT TWO-
TONED CAR €
A MINUTE ER
FRON- | SO, MISTER-- " “
« fees YA . 7 . S * - * : ro
i wf a Ae } =~ —™ * \ a. és : . © @ eS. ! “~ aT
‘ . “7 x i‘ . * ,
‘y a « ‘ . r 7 Be ' Me - 7
aN: s — ) Bs n I / . = ‘ E : OB ~ : Dopr. 1955 by NEA Gervice, | ss... mA if -
. . 2 s . . as ni
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
ie Be io. ery ti!
YM SO Gad tS ff EES 58
EARIN ! BARE [| “4 ; OUST WANT TO SLIP Saree
AWAY psd
4p THAT
TDS
vane Nie
T" tS 4
' (ll fhpeeetze sh aren Gl —— “ :
\
, A ils
”
LIFE’S LONGEST MINUTE.
DIXIE DUGAN
FAN OUR ATTIC _ INST: ADY: rome — THE ELECTRICAL
DO IT YOURSELF
Ld
Zartina CG > ’ Me:
Prrictvws Sah — a
’ "it he’s able to sign checks again.”
Perera mrcnimannei™ * f * 4 i i > a:
i * age By g . ‘ x a
NA * f . * Ls ' 3 4
pee “TWENTY-0NE be ee , THE’ PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955 mene ane eget pe —a- ; een z ai - poy ma oe miner ncn inet lg
| MARKETS | Produce
|More Than 100 Youngsters
Here for Athletics’ Trial
Grains Seesaw .
in Quiet Trade CHICAGO w#—Grains presented
a mixture. of plus and minus
signs in relatively quiet dealings
on the Board of Trade today.
The market started out steady,
led upward by corn and soybeans.
But September corn quickly
dropped under the previous close.
Some wheat deliveries also fell | °c
back.
Main weak spot in the early
trade was oats, which have
acted a little better than the
rest-of the list over recent ses-
sions,
Wheat near the end of the first | DETROIT PRODUCE
DETROIT, =. _ Union Produce 6 (AP) ae Detroit
VOO Calif, flat box #0,
ys Fo t6s Seer 4 35. or .
ueberries: Mich . large 22-25 oumis. = =
00, and
48-1 tbh film sacks 4.80-4.i5,
16" certs Pascal 2-245 Mich.
+ itone ie A aft — Ae, = t © tettuee Ca tee ye
pack leeberg
2 dos 310-458 ‘mostly 3. 54.00, 1% dos 2.50-3.
$0 sacks: be bag as} med 1.75-2.26, large 2.25-2.68, Ye large 2. wash Yellows ooo 2.59, NJ, 1.26, lowe ' ;
1.40-1.. 60, |. Well over 100 boys, ages 16-23,
are participating in the three-day
| major feague baseball! tryout camp
bee conducted through Wednes-
Auto Inventory
Stocks Rising Automotive News Says
Increase Follows Slack
in July Sales
DETROIT (#—-Dealer —inventor-
jes of new automobiles totaled day at Wisner Field by the Kansas
City Athletics, :
A total of 100 boys reported for
Monday's opening session and 25
additional prospects registered to- -
day. The camp is under the super-
vision of Joe O'Rourke, Kansas
City seout, with an assist from
Herb Strunk of Berkley, aréa scout
| for the A's. ;
Heavy majority of candidates
are from the Pontiac-Detroit
area, but a few come from:con-
siderable distance to take a fling
at “big time” baseball.
| Two boys, Gerald Patrick and
Fred Berry, journeyed here from
| Copper City and Ahmeek iy Mich-
igan'’s Upper Peninsula, more than
600 miles away. Others came from ‘ellow
1.00-1.25, oft 1.25-1.40, Mich,
“9.50.
hour was unchanged to % lower, | Whites 2.25 836,262 units on Aug. 1, Automotive Lansing. Marion, Stockbridge,
September $1.92%; corn % lower | uniem “sihereie” steied’” Mich ‘Red ileus repartee loday. Flint, and Muskegon Heights in to % higher, September $1.26; | Havens Me, i 00-1.60, 2° 2.50-50, best - . Michigan as well as Hammond, In-
the .| until the list became mixed. . | pamdongar caperta Warduuns a) eat
a common share, in the same pe- | Detroit — — Callahan Zinc, yesterday's most Livestock ‘te Gas cuucectibde. memed Wiehi| riod last year. Sales totaled $250,- Bi nanoanyy oy BYE A Jumbo 61-67 iwetsht- | active issue off 4, opened today wavuasr unveeveon | te , -, i.
rage 62) large $7-99. wid avg | Sweep II, and the Falcon, a low 072,134 as against $234,550,689 in| medium “43-49. we are 4 47%, small Me: | on 1,400 shares off % at 5%. DETROIT, Aug 18 (AP)—Hogs—sal- | ot os tw rondste
2 eee half . 1954. The backlog ire son by Rr jamb Jumbo 89-65, wtd The steels w mostly lower = ase Prag shard os at el Te nlymaypcsl oom but | f i jan ere a aroun ete i Lj ~n a ire~ | ypes, : |
leary ar Loreal army pony grace rede 8 ts jorwe #4, mediem & cre! 2: | while sirerafin and coppers $F ie en ee eeauie eettees 1 lees | Were designed to suit Americ an
t ‘ ol were higher. The rest of the | 17.00: early sales US number i snd 3) tastes with no European influence. |
ape ag - oa Commercially grade ta list Was mixed to lower. CS ator cer fle ead cee TE powerful Flight Sweep 1) _ =
= a exe lange. 88. large Cattio—Galadle 3.000. Lereely = ® was built on a modified produc- | against $860,000,000 on March 31 wlan as crt a arse 38- ty Yesterday's Stock Market drift- staughter steer and yearling run; stock- “ml / . : alti ers and feeders very scarce: slaughter | ‘tion chassis, _ and “incorporates | : . | 1955. large 47%5-80, medium 41-43, small 28. ed lower in the slowest trailing {75 2"4 fenders very scarce: slaughter | |
one B sree 30. me | J uary { 1954. The Asso- se Thead bh ras and sine toe steers | many unique construction details. 4. 8, MAHONEY on ir
NEW YORK (INS) — American mediums, with ta supplies short ra pod, | poset Presa meme of @ stocks jig ae bulk feast cveregs fs: very began epee ye clagecidai) Financin / ans : ‘ ie chotee —
Smelting and Refining Co. an-| | seenap wun in ye imple malls barely was off 30 cents at $171.60. bread inquiry for chetee and 4 ‘by welding the front a = J. §. Mahoney Named g Pp )
nounced net income for the six | Se™ 2nd disappotating. Some surplus | prices initially were fractions tow. ‘dsughter heifers steady: cow |and body to the frame der | that make sense
months ended June 30 of $16,388. | Sear aupalee,Undergreare s0e7 efit higher to between 1 and 2 points pv, wesgy th lan weet, cn eR== Sas to Pontiac Position | eqaal to 73 com: Pr’. le | r . .
s woe —| ie * 6 «@ hate Ted ieiters 23 00; tow ales wey ished, closed-in effect. | save dollars! hare. This compared with $9,776,- steers and heifers 13.00-17.00; most sales | ; h _132, or $1.47 a common share, in CHICA ag toad far es bh aoe Oe Foremost Dairies, newly listed. etility = ea HE cae ecannere and Cut: | Only 53'y inches high, Flight Appointment of J. S. Mahoney -
the same period last year. Sales | receipts $01.234: wholesale buying prices on the New York Stock Exchange. Cubren’ Geuanie, a; veslons opening | Sweep I seats four passengers. | assistant sales promotion The soundest way to home ownership is with totaled $275.641.417 as against $227,-. wa se woe 8: pan) ‘ie tec 8 Ho | Started its trading career with —— i He ap ao-38 00 few" * nigh here > hr gored manager in Pontiag Motor Divi- one ot our low-cost mortgage loans, toilored | 201,315 in the initial: h graded steady, bala: 3 - s inches, more than g ! . . initial half of 1954. | a $.830 srbeleeale paring prices un. | Meee pte cenees berks _ Psaaar edi 00, most wiity wand com. = inches longer than a Plymouth sion's central office has been an- to fit your special needs! All - inclusive :
ae ORK Sete Dun and coueo's 3. rt gil ate mae aes | the counter. : LY A _ "ae “ = gps! ae id | ha Pp somneet by H E Crawford,.gen- monthly poyments often amount to less than
radstreet, Inc. reported that na- 26; checks 25.5: j sep —Calakte an eee = pe car windshield siopes sharp- onle mune ;
tionwide business failures in the a a Du Pont was off V4 at 2206 F'n Lambe 33.00. So carte cohes aoe |i at an angle of 36 degrees. Its “ “nee ; ned ‘the P fat Soest na] ata toe aay =! week ended Aug. 11 declined to‘ Poult at the opening, and U. S. St upswept rear fenders and taillights) “ahoney.- wha Jol the Pow-
169, the smallest total for apy week | oultry | started on 1,000 shares off '4 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK form a trailing fin motif accented | ac sales organization in 1949, has Ca itol Savin & Loan Co. apy | at 514 CHICAGO, Aug 16 (AP)—Salable hoes ),., - side character line. eld positions in ‘the Pontiac zones : this year. This figure compared | DETROIT oan 86 abe Prices ser — 9.000; “market fairly active early, inter DY & sweeping eee et iscated in Pantias, Ohishedan City
| with 213 casualties in the preced-| per pound {o.0. Detrot for No. } quality; Om the American Stock Ex+ {ver, a 109 | Other features — — end Rasans City. lla mast cosas 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-056! ing week, and 233 in the same | “¥* poultry up to 10 a.m change many leading issues traded | snd lighter, sows mostly steady, | in- side window glass, flared whee was assistant ‘zo nager | | week last year. Failures thus f Heavy hens 23-28: light ye Seg ti hang th ing slight-| “anges Weak: most US Ne. 1 to 38/ openings with ribbed chassis shield Post was nt ‘zone ma en esas memmmnramasammnameemnssmmemrmmanmmamemameamnnmmnmenn maeners n ANSAS zone. = in 1955 total 6,974, for a lier aioe oie: "buy ene Sai coals Wren ee ee ae 130, ses | and a unique two-piece counter. |i? the K City
: average of 218, as pacing 94 mene yf sar ee 1 i ‘oom + lara ahead LY Calvan Oil it a. oe oe vat wy 18 teas; 4 | Balanced. deck lid with spare tire | a 7 rn ni ’ 49 : s: = 3 "yee 180, brough transf t = : | al a weekly average ot 222; in| BF: Soin eben eyets | was up 1/16 while Techpicolar| 97% 00, butchers 1630; settee 8 —— in = = | Pontiac’ 1. Pitcbargh son paplnnd 511 Community Nat'l
| com : \ 0-15.50: Ib moun f Ls parable period a year ago. — meant: Marbes, gos. lies was off %%. onm meawrd eee me few ghetee oreend A > manager. | Bank Buil din g
Admits | Cc quality medigm — cotereq hens are| Were ae wri roy knife Gold, few ew up too © sag Beavier down to | UPPE
waits Larceny Count | ssaes_ Suey See coer 26 poms | Demon a aint twee 300 . ) -1568- Donald G. i 29, of 45 | seiee neste! Seat and gute wyhe aod mam sax wanes _pripines Sedetenr catia sreune tg News in Brief Business Notes 4 Phone FE 4-1568-9 costar weather had generally stimu- was mi at we oe i : Woodward Ave., Birm ted the demand on most all offerings. higher; heavier rs slow. @ few sale ‘
| ae une woe sey ere ne ge =e the _start. hetfers mainly. se méyr cow ireey Charged with reckless driving, D. H Pritt, Ponting representa. B A K 5 R & , H A N, S E NV ~~ a buildi County; CHICA uttry | ic SS os ows largely | William Schwartz, 19. of Walled | tive of ¢ ncoln National Life ? e Cheah rethcy Scorers oot! — — TA —. = Ad New York Stocks | osaee Rly pooy SF rede ee paid a $50 fine and $25 costs, | Insurance Co. is a. winner in a
sentencing for Aug. 22. ter cope, 131,807 Th\? heavy bens 31-34: a Obie ae |tales. good. and ebgiee steers 19-60-23.50: | Monday after he pleaded guilty be. | PCc!a!_ nation-wide ‘sales contest Richa Wi Boll dent light hens 17'5-18.8; ‘brofiers or fryers Air Reduction 233 tnt lary ..... 3 | Seerdl toad baeh ehalen ta avenegs lay after he pleaded guilty be-| ently concluded by the com- Donald E. Hansen ichard H. DeWiu man admitted steadling $24 38-31; old roosters 13.5-14.5; caponettes — 07.6 Int Paper ',,..103.4| Prime 22.18-2.80: ® few mostly prime fore Sylvan Lake Justice JoSeph hen 2-513 Res. FE 5-3793 from Tom: Kaiser’s Service Sta-| *% to ¢ I» 36. 2 Allied Eon "SES Int Shoe "71. 48.3 | steers 24.00, including & load 1.3917 Ib: | 1 aay, pany, been announced by Res. FE 2-551)
tion, Woodward Ave. and Fourteen ; ns Chelnera, 111 int Tel @ ivi. pag ogg lnapene wg gp Cecil F. Cross, Vice President |
Mile Rd., last July 15. Detroiter on Probation Sum 4 2, Jacobs. 85) yearlings to 23.00: utliity and commer-| Paul Maison, 26, of Royal Oak, | Director of Agencies, Aecident tasurance Fire Insurance . Am Airlise .. 25.4 zones, & me $3 ws le ryt ciap end sommner paid a $100 fine and $25 costs yes-| Each year the Company sates! A sbile Insurance Liability Insurance | %} In Oakton County Circuit Court |Am Can .. .. 93 Kennecott ....128.8| etal en BW Abe: sted p: ce after pleading guilty to driv- | @ month-long drive in honor of its utom nsu - .
Braklats—Uanchoons $| zor fm Pernt is Ge St Peek BA ise SR Ss ingen wt bq“ rman i room _he | Barglary tarence Lite surance —————}— > e : 625 Wives 2 stoc! ers an Ts ‘ust te lass nsurance
Meet Your Friends in the 2 placed on one-year probation and An Kew 33 a P| Le ag ey ‘omer mange 7 | Alve J. Richardem. | Personal nto — Walter O. Bonds—All Types
Riker Fountain. $\c George A howl “inc | Am Seating «.- 33-4. i San ye sty 30 torts. If your friend's in jah and needs | —————
Riker Bldg. Lobby ©) Respondek admitted aug. C6 wes. ee | Se Se SES en ee ee pins a OS SOUS Or Ota * hae Robert H. Wilkinson, Pontiac in- ee Seo eae wee ee , . Pia second offense of driving with- | Am Viscose . 57.6 \ earings. Wo. i and fall shorn pelts os. . sot ee = | surance agent, recently addressed WAKE UP WITH FLEAS
out a license in the county. ee Sac es aaa | the annual National Convention of : Bt 413 7 Firestone Balloting ‘the Columbus Mutual Life Insur- = ee
BED BUGS lo Arma Ck, gee ; STOCK AVERAGES 9 | ance Company at the Grand Hotel | Me “ ' : Hot Lunches for Schools rg hg Pe ¥ NEW. YORK, Aug. 1¢—Complied ty on Strike Thursday Lon Mackinec ‘Island, SS ae : | ; Associ ress . - :
One Full Yecr Guerantee |) LANSING #—Fourth class school Aveo Mig... 6? 3| "ne Aeeow 30 18 #0 | AKRON, Otio (INS)—Employes |“ Wilkinson's subject was “Estate . . ull Teer Guera d Balt & Ohio . 50 4 “Indust. Ratts Util Btgeks Pl P Estate Taxes | aay istricts may purchase or lease | readin ie 088 [ki Met change..... —S —. —3 at eight Firestone Tire and Rub- anning and Paying Estate Taxes |
From Houses, hot lunch equipment from general | Benquet 12 6 | Previous aay. ins with Income Tax Savings'’. . :
Houses. Remain out” }) funds without obtaining “compet: Paget $0.8 | Noon, today. 343 714 | ber Co. plants throughout the coun- : C :
only three hours. No signs used. || itive bids, Atty. Gen. Thomas M. an 7%, a2) TY are scheduled to take a strike) WHATEVER YOUR PRODUCT ompiete
Rox Ex Company Kavanagh held in an opinion today. 7S eer 11.0|-vote beginning Thursday. . _ Classified ads sell it! To place | Be ate oe :
«wt -, 68.41 1984 hi 5382| Meanwhile, negotiators from the |For Sale ads that attract a buyers, | | -) 20.8 e — dane Penne OX. Bids. FE 4.9002 U.S, farmers get one-third of 1 a “+ 22/1984 low, 198.9 | CIO) United Rubber Workers union | dial FE 2-8181. : nvestmerit
their income from meat ‘animals, | met He IT STOCKS and Firestone Co. officials con-| STATE OF MICHIGAN—in the Pro- ; 37.46 : tis ec. J be pre Co) “Yinve to huddle i ttempt to bate Court for the County of Oakland, epee Oe nue n an attem F ]
Me iss : me ~~ Pitigh ‘Ls gna work out a wage boost. “Soe ‘matter of ot the petition concern. | — a ’cici ities
os Bt a: “i04 “EL Negotiations began Tast Tuesday, | 26, Ane ond w iting, minors
FOR VACATION! ite “* de eee en wane er ae ee mores pare a. os + at Your Finger Tipe i i ry) ry 62 « Petition been filed in this. “) $ “P i 62.5 ne = ere 73 ‘The company employes some 22,- 4 ine ‘tite a py where- |
We Will Check ft Completely . a” Ta | _*ho sale: bid and ee eee dren te unknown eae folee Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced |
for You ant “a3.5| and_thet- said “raid =e Bex 96. 103. er. the jurisdiction of of this
and Give It an EXPERT TUNE-UP! 363 Roa 9 “WH WHAT'S - MY LINE? «rity, name of the people of the Sie —by phone, by letter or in person. aisases 46.6 , io r : “4 t th mT) q
Sey a words ltd to Ghia ae eee oh cy’ tae Magy ans a z PPO eS ex paar ea on aes . ARO. =e sed EE
: ‘Souct s * 33 commansed to sober pieetiallg at said |”
; . soa TK be being impractical to make personal | || ‘Member New York Stock Exchange and other leading exchanges
Service $2.9 col this commons and notice | :
3 ae thet’ By veerved by publication of a copy | PONTIAC OFFICES = ‘ DA Atte e—previcnr at eae Tr ai | . ee
1211 North Perry Se. cP and ‘eireuiated tn sald ‘County. 716 Pontioc Stete Bank Building At Madison Street 585 Witness. the Honorable Arthur & : 0.7 . Judge of said Court, in the oy FE 4-2895 FE 3-9557 vee OOL Fe of Pontiac “ie said County, thle 11th, '
=. me ee 1 | Ste ©°07 omenenstite® of Probate. :
ee pe ey a Probate Register, Juvenile Division. mt ;
eS * co wv? HS ‘ } : S
With ie _|||\covmecee|| STOCKS—BONDS || - Insure With Agencies , Sie eee ate Po | | Setikons Sinise es Wet . )
Displaying This. Emblem. | Fima‘h Beat’ She Foonahin Hal, Weineeder. aenenbet I! Consult Us for First Hand Information Tran W Air bed ae of a i St k nd ransemer ..+ $3.1 5 Pe 5, The change from Residence mn OcKS Q Bor ids
Prank Anderson Dantets Ageney Underwood .. 37.5 Bs Shh : pervisors os : : In Carbide .. 976 + warainn 13 * located Lake Road. in
Be a ceed | wie ree eens 3 We maintain a direct line to a member of ait¢ 7" on 16: “eo hire, Subdivision with up-to-the- 32. egg bem > principal exchanges up- minute |
; quotation service available at all ¢
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“THE, PON'TIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1955
James
AP AREMEN Tt
~_— ‘ap be married. Ove:
Exper In good health xpe ” ewpate work. Sal
dependent on abitity,” Be not omy Unless vou Want «a
oe omy ag | Kenneth @. nani
NEED A -FINANCE-
FIXER? Order Classified
| Want Ad number! good job. FE 2-8181 is the]
iMMEDIA aie for part time shoe salesman.
No exp necessary Acnly Malings
Shoes, 50 N
we Tne | STATE BANE BL
Midwest ig helen :
IONS AVAIL-~
Real Estate Salesman man will
FINISHER Excelsior Cleaners ©
Be canine
re ‘CEMENT WORK
LLOYD MONROE 4 q-
« {Man Pleads Innocent * a M ra are pera Places Commerce ies {Boy Scouts Plan|Margaret JoAnn Ca Fresnel corde ic oh tious Driving 4 Qi. a Man on 2-Year Pro! n
Point by Point Review W | ama bac somes Cat ieday Event Wed to Thomas D. Stone 2m: x, 20em, 0.2 Sa ; ; r aA day was on two- _ | dtiving when he was arraigned in f y ven _JAPEER iaptel Maes: ee on seemeer ae ee ae
,| Waterford Township Justice Court | ; the Rev. Father Jos. J. Bors’ in court costs by Oakland County Cir.
at u lic earing CE TEL 5: Yreops, the Church of Immaculate Con cuit Judge George B. Hartrick ange op was released on $250|- Slate Fair at ‘Waterford — vd “= pes — = Mar. Pang oohernggretigg ~
A clause ‘restricting the em- sail tie Sak te eovirw- ton we |e we Ving'a car which cok} Cay Building D, Stone. driving a car which collided with
ployment in city jobs of relatives | gestions ‘and new proposals. Sub-| izing its two riders. Sheriff’ - : _| The bride is the of Mr. soather June $5 st Telegraph Re.
sequently commissioners will hold | uties said Hanes’ car’ crossed the | | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Five | tnd Mrs. Edward M. ie Sie Gee ct es peer, and iy mannan wwe Gey several sessions to revise the char- | centerline on Walton Boulevard and | Boy Scout Troops and an Explorer aw. pattie onus haiine Y favored, although some pr - it | Struck Post have banded together to pre- | bridegroom is the son of Mr. and mney ie -
no restrictions should be set. » Preparatory to submitting sent a Boy Scout Fair Saturday at| Mrs. Henry Stone of 12527 Stras- ee mane The Charter Commission will | Gov. G. Mennen Williams be- the CAI Building on Williams Lake | 4S St., Detroit. Enters Guilty Plea by ; 7 fore the Sept. 9 deadline. Openings Are Listed road. The bride wore a walts length In Oakland County Circuit Cour Seaek, Gercetip beperview. . ke Man Mute | VOTERS TO DECwE Troops 31, 34, 51, 61, and 120 and) dress of embroidered tulle, tash- yesterday, Ford Landrum, ‘19, of
we ‘ *|Walled Lake Man ° If the governor approves the Airborne Di H Post 34 are uniting efforts for this| joned with a strapess bodice and 9613 G Fly Nem -gge ese il-
g:ltme residents took issue 8¢ | on Manslaughter Count | charter, it will then come before in I WG |b IvISION pier ghgn ge teat nge pred lalogrnnd eo eet to uttering and publishing ‘and he city-manager form of govern the people at an election, where it : . : was tiered in bouftant style, ment, and the question arose as Hubert Benton, 49, of 3183 Wood- | win “be approved or rejected by The local Army recruiting sta- | used to buy ing equipment. | she wore » fingertip vell held in eae ee
to whether election of @ mayer | jawn, Walled Lake, stood mute on | yote of the people. A seven-man | “0m today announced in| Exhibits and demonstrations of| place by a seeded pearl ban- Landrum admitted passing a bad
‘Wided ae the oven, some. od: {12 Onkland County Circuit Court bee to move to Bevepe eat epring n> | tal skits Sad onces cen mansantl| sae a mie Ave. *- vocating the mayor form and | and Judge. Frank L. Doty directed) Barnard today stressed the im- | der the Gyroscope rotation plan. ‘| for 3 p. m. and 8 p. m. : Mrs. Beverly Lancto of Flint . : others for the city- ' be partance of Fe: : M. Sgt. Raymond Barriault, sta- - oe ° si Pleads Guil are . Oat 9 eel ae = oe Pras . Door prises and @ grand prise | sisted as matron of honor and the “ Detroiter Pleads Guilty
being more efficient. driving in the death of Milton D.| daily from. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.| Ring to join the lth must be u—,' } ctr Bvt gorges MRS. ‘THOMAS -D.' STONE Donald Gutrey, ~25;~ of” Detroit,
Under the tentative charter, a grin 14, of 2515 Commerce. until | above average, both mentally and : oe lay City Little Kerol Haubrick ot |t Detroit and attendants were | charged with driving under the in- mayor aid mayor pro tem would | Rd.,.Commerce Township, Aug. 8/8 p.m, . and’ from, ly, to qualify for duty, | Kenneth Jones, assistant district | tapeer wag the flower girl. Ring- | Robert Holloway of Ann Arbor and | “uence of liquor, paid’ a $100 fine be appointed by the seven | PolicP™said Benton drove a car | §:30 a.m. to noon Saturdays The Airborne unit accepts only | commissioner, is chairman for the | bearer was Alan Secord of Sagi eee og ae ae ee ee city commissioners, rather thap which hit the youth riding his bi-| Everyone who lives in the boun-| Volunteers, Further information | event; George McMichaels is sec- naw | Thomas Dunn of Springfield, pleaded guilty in Bloomfield Hills
elected qualified mana-| cycle on Commerce Road. daries of the neW city must re-| May be obtained by contacting the | retary, and Harold Pattison, treas- Some 200 guests attended the | Justice Court. He eee before
ger ceca tb ren the —" ) Sn register in order to vote on the local Army recruiting - office at | urer. | ie | Best man was Henry Ruggiroli reception, lied Saturday afier- Justice Alva J.
. Given 2-Year Probation | charter and city commission, and 53% W. Huron St. Walter Day is in ‘charge of the oe noca at the Lapecr Country Cheb. , ELECTIONS ARE ISSUE , | to sign petitions for nominees to: program: Albert Lyons, prizes; Ed | Sets Sentencing Date vie mentyecs are ut | C p th
ea a ee ae mem Heras Dies of Krifo Wound |Gnion, meen farz| bm Wet tink | gar’ nme mh Soran COUMY Deaths the proposed non-partisan type of | yesterday, ‘ran . =| | pointed out. Rr ; ic! es; and Frenk yesterday pleaded guilty to grand, ymoo ek ee
government, whereby.city commis- | 28420 Woodward Ave., Ferndale. | = RAND RAPIDS W®—Robert L. Hickok, advertising: lareeny ar Cir-| Michigan.
signers would be nominated for a | was placed on os probation | Businessmen Meet ee — = SS cuit Judge Frank L. Doty set sen-|. On their return they wil! make; OXFORD — Funeral arrange- single election by means of peti-|and assessed $ court 8 by . . , jtel on a e in hig horme Aug.| An American patent conveys to tencing for Aug. 22. their home in Detroit, where the | ments for John Kent, 69, of Roch-
from resident voters. Some | Judge Frank L. Doty, UNION LAKE-—The Union Lake |6, died Monday at Butterworth| an inventor and his heirs the; Wells admitted stealing $73) bridegroom is a student at Wayne | ester, N. Y., formerly of Pleasant favored the partisan system with a} Williams admitted July 25 enter-| Businesemen’s Association is hold-| Hospital. Detectives said Har-/| exclusive right to make, use and | worth of clothing: and other arti-| University Law School. The bride | street, Oxford, are pending at the
primary . but here again | ing a Ferndale service station July | ing a luncheon meeting today at | greaves was fixing a — in his | sell his invention for a period of |cles from a Royal Oak homie |‘has taught school for the past two | Bossardet-Mabley Funeral Home. opinion: pn Mary's t0 ttiseuns future projects.-| kitchen —when—he ——— years. Jjuy 3 years at Auburn Heights. ‘He died: last night at Rochester.
& ; " mam ~ Se eygeecienes ee seememecmety GEES (
Death’ Notices Card of Thanks 1) _ “Help Wanted Male 6) Help Wanted Male 6): Help Wanted Male 6/ Help Wanted Female 7) Help Wanted Female 7) Work Wanted Male 10 Building Service 12
sciedaedehanacnssxineweevce | Sean 4 Be Bg fer, tee many | Ovticg, memanee 92 Se MEN WANTED SS ene oe a CHANCE | TELEPHONE OPER OPERATOR ~ 482.40 CARPENTER AxD CABIN Er “CEMENT—GAR ARAGES 1008. pone k sea and sympathies shown | Freight clerk © || .......-... ui SALES & SERVICE a large selling organization with Eee ei ee Murdoch me 2.7861
“eer. wa Auburn Ave, age 66;/ oS ue oar renee Seewerve: | Secu | as _Eeuipme at 1A | Doge Trained, Boarded 70) fl 23 bat -| encyRY” Sn
: sn 138 hye A Se z :
OID INE se yu 40s | GENERAL WAREHOUSE - CO. , ' . | OTHER CAMERAS & RovIPMENT AL DAMEDO BOARDED, | get mean eO: MOD: | aw Jeshes eacese Seles,
accented va teed | 9x12 LINO. RUGS. .§2.98 | ANCHOR FEN ES a Habbe tseined, Pere pickup and delivery. | used } months Por ale or wii 210 ‘Disie Nyy ns
: ‘an wet or’ MR 3-1355. ‘ + pe” pd ae . Wen “tare A em aier Wetter ae teen p Our. se
in Welt. | 13513 LIN | able—Pr rom the very ¥ best “import. + contr hoard motor in: Very good
PACKARD Manne gh —FREE ESTIMATES, FE 6-1471, a evere prates- Cate ‘sa MODEL. 97 FT. GLRAN. . ——
yi ind PiiaLawe | VOY. sional projector, $100 takes both, | BOARDING BATHING AND CLI i HP. oan
“Ford for ta teber at RUBBER! BASE ern, SateiGs | Artists’ supplies, hobby’ | gost over, SITS. just ae wow. | pnts tee Perry, 7m Betis og it ld Pe saa =
ERS 141 W. HURON, 3046 SL ear ‘Gate. Be 18. CATS BO — aver {4 rr a | CENTER
LIKE NEW. 6 P SR su »plies—check our clas- te not tren ¥, mo Nag, 0. Pen On. 7 “yr perry ee ramen el cra aol re OBILE we) ae smaguond se
dining room suite. Oblong eaten ication “Hobbies and | “On these meeting nétices you're getti Hotchities Sale Musical Goods 62 —bePh__ < eHRA CR ~CnAWT HOLID) vw rr.
Wabie DAVENPORT AND GW CHAR Supplies” No. 24A, “the word ia ‘ nae De ee ae ACCORDION. 4 BASS F _tay, | Grain & F 7 APARTMENTS i. welnle,Bacr
. 24A.. e word-is ‘s ders,’ not ‘hagholders’!’" RANCINI fice, 2810 Leroy Laue Case Lake,
‘ $24.50, china cabinet $9.50, Apt. : ame and case, Like new. FE $-200i. ate KIN BAY. PuONE SMA SwitZEen = ca *
Sear te tne ke | TL ON, PEO seas sore an ie BO TS | See Raat re me 34.50, — @ and stand baie coal, Hot water and pr ay For, Sale Misceflaneous 60) For Sale Miscellanecus Cur yiven_ Village PE 2-6766 : wo gongs by de drealaa Eootate i caadshe toe ape central ‘Deering ¥ of? us" ore
a tok aoe 5 hese 0.55 ere, eulomatic water heater, eee mn BasyY ol ORAN eran UsED. 0 BALES OF ALFALFA AND | *i#e Wud. Double fire, many t| server ons gee we ea
Platform Rocker $9.95. large abennnee copper pi mand Wood, se RENDALL'S itn OL = brome ay, 4 canis in field: 98) Paes. bee ais es eee ee Pr mn:
office desk $34.50 upholstered ae ok | Stee ead cond’ pose. Meteriais. save Mone at _ Steere ob Siam cents, from barn. 200 baise of] fraller package i history on th sa ae eae
Tooker 84 95, EiGuTs irre ‘SUPPLY? 2688 Perry! FE wa rN wood. Seer als: Y ATTENTION SUMMER VACATION-| {mothy at 80 cents. 2700 Bleetn tratier package ti history on this ic
e.| PEARSONS BANK FURNITURE o PE 4-6431. 4 mew oI rt BURMEIS’ ————— A ae tte General peyton, Wy
__ For Sale Clo thin __ 86 — Fay woene ante ave. 100 GAL. UNDERWRITERS AP- ccahehene CABINET SINK eg in. R {E I TER’ > Galas ta ¥! te 7" a way. Join GusTom | COMBINING WITH 8ELP ¥, Ting “Meme =" cal = ‘
rmers Gas Station $120.05 val) - | ecard » omen © with | propelied bine M — Gaerne OATS —woare ii
| a a ae ae s ea8u Fike eon Fe a errno a. eters. | a ares temic waluen These LUMBER | ie se esha PR oe while learn- sme now, On a *™ | Wow take your contract car, |. $18 ogartenie es my rg ts.
| COAT. comsiiarioa | ——— $eForE ' : aie : NAW ENKSER skED _W furniture, house jot of what hay 4 a _ese on “
Fox 3 trimmed eatez, Size ie . - 4 a py a 3 pote ol iter Ste opel HE - lifier, | eo bt AM- Grown ae cortitied vee = “on mi | bevel se pen CENT OFF ¢ ‘Loma
_fise, Pe base, . WALTON TV prices go up. Remade! your home | _ Lake Ave. 800 000 c te ee es oon apa Per, bushel. 88 E. Avon “hd. Oxford Trailer Sales a ae Co cruisers,
| Wa i tment. ee ; oF = ;. a ie
Sale Household Goods 57 (ewer Te | estimate MiDWEsT Eagiing ts ee semua Piaget om ccnditon: |e AUHRATS OF ==35 | Mad neeseattene eee oe mh A wrth id
style béd_ Mattress and box | or FE 6-1433. 2 Buys te meee — Weptua | Pia io sone 6 pacha. meer word. OA|. Mile Sonth of Lake Orion on uu | = aan
ANTIQUES: 7 TIOER MAPLE DROP| springs FE 3308) , Ses us for Mall your utiding needs ARO. Wt. GALA- | 62120. MY 2.0731
one BICYCLES. CHILDRENS 3| — bi “| AT BURMEISTER’ S |_ghere. Pe omen
hairs, fiat, | NESCO ROASTER CABINET AND | wheel cycle 6 ceamane BLACKETT’S OOn Paidea Aue wor ony (EROS ES UEAL SECONDION. __For 5 ‘Sale | Livestock — 72 PF TRAILER. 9 BEDROOMS, “Mercury Outboard
__ grill, $20. 416 Brooks Ave. $4.95 value $17.05. oe are BLDG. SUPPLIE S LOW.-BUT OUR SERVICE is| Practically brand new. @ shift. war full beth, Can be seen oh #05 . Motors
Hi |NEW REFRIGERATOR, DOUBLE | ‘lightly scratched. an Fiu- A MUST phos reasonable, 107 Mt. Clem- | 2 2 EXCEPTIONAL “BADDLE Lostiexen B4—- ey
“timed oak bed. Dinetie set and _orescent 393 Orchard Ave. 8161 Dixie H 3 YARDS TO 6EKVE YOU | st. _ horses and saddjes. H180 Allen \ié Pr TROTWOOD MOUSETRAIL- Genuine Parts, |
x 8. | - stove. FE 6-787. DULLDOZER-INTERNA? “n Cy maa TT SMALL ‘APY —PIANO. Banoain. | 24, Clarkston Ma e470 oo tery goed Se ck Peo Sales & Service |
ie | at MODEL OE CARREY HOO | Siae-taw MU aot vo paghe. TEM ar |S Rave © in| Sain re ear | Csment peeciaecRin. "| ge pg —pmepewe—on | eal eer ¢] troner 1363 __Diade, § fi ay ’ Uae rc Holly, Mich ve we
(Ew Wem c BAtas AND | oiroe teal tor vee COMPLETE WiTll | tata td, bine bas, et M Bi9 00 ise Pe vest acacia 0 Ewes, PLUS ‘REOwTERED | “Gpeat ‘TAKES 4 piel PE bia00 Z
7 ) on j WEEE At tian Ww WE
- cate ‘worn anes, Pa liad, side medic “6 oe Siche oheuts aie ot 1312". pine, shelving tte ee Pe on Otte, EM bine | AND Ones her traher Ee “Poste on heed et ail times. New
ONE {2x14 WOOL BEIGE AND dich rooms terrifie values. Th . oné fir std. |)’ Fe i Go6D ‘EWES: WERT LANG-| change. B. [Tele "| beats arriving week,
brow J eee ae values. “These are crate ing std. floort , Sale Office E i don, 4843 Pontiac Tr change. 8. [relesrene, og | bottom Be
abr Bow tag aleia Wincet = |S URCHIN | beset take nen |e td ic Me wR 8 | See ORs Sawipment SS pony. aapour anwese 0 | ra A Zine sss Toomin. “fees Dialer
NE USED OF is cl. PT. LARGE HOLLAND FURNACE. IN | 29 ee ek M 69900/A B DICK , MIMBOORAPE Ma. cart, Ale eaited gelding. rea No.| Cociey LE Rd. Piret teller &
PRE : 2” blanket Ins, 100 ft. ....... ‘eonavnnn, aera B , : y| __For Sale p Airplanes 86
|_BRo acY Mya} i ee =e ws sie. Ee tai | tite fie Pizscore var £ a Sa ion ys 628. - Sarksten, Mich, an ge Leake Ra.,| road i ovnnmar ee:
PAK-A-WAY FREEZER, 156 CU. a aaa, oa “TA we. oe clothes im excellent condition. | a8a%s W. pine, pl ood Sale | St Eq REO 9 OAITED ARE. “SEE TO
Pi Goed- condition REpublic | “trolus itiec stove 10, Quaner of | Sites. iz and 14 Very r Sls canbe lee por ol aes seid quipment | x) appreciate. LI 1-04 Champ. OR >44id of EM}
6100. r ¥ reasonable. | 1510 knotty Ca per M $160 60 adi Soh Ee
FORTABLE PORCELAIN LAUN-| washing r_beaiae oe 1908 Brom LIONEL DOUBLE oe ee Ae | Cedar teary Pe poo = b ee BOBTAIL SODA FOUNTAIN, 8 FT. “een ree ORrouD Pau. 3 ___4 Transportath tation Olfered | 87
dry Gee Reasonable. OR 3-277! _ bie Drive. Cass Lake. ne ection Diesel. @ guage. Four | Soll. him a : sees 99.85 _ Dottie’ bon, chesh. OR '3- fin _citer Mao ons. to college. Best | | LEAVING FOR SOUTHEAST
cc ntT — = ' om ain. a eh". Be o. '
PORCELAIN |B ‘pOUnLE sink 3. CLOSING OUT ‘About half price. “Mi vai “te |S P Comb. doorg Ee io Fr. SHOW CASE, #35. OR > ares . | a thre eles er Pr, Bight.
Plywood cupboard doors with) oe P ecenesce Landon. ? power mewirs, ‘rom | Fi vedio 21244 For Sale Poultry 74) se FOR PRO :
| ) se ~ colo * U fittings, pane —
Pal actrees of Blears | HEAD LINGLE a gree, PORAAGE ALL aR | x noes ma "=." “uail| Sale Sporting Geode 68 /n raw, suxremns pep 25 ear perso to help ante and. sare 3 roaster Bm) with ostat Sr oe d ear 4 \ sotis * share
jveounems | Sasi" casogits fas"tue | SMITHS, 357 S. Saginaw aig s" peasmypeceaceo | ,, "BEG: Talk tt 2 sommon.ons ponen| Bit Sats Se PONTIAC |-Hest=-niist q ¥ ge . . an rm am t .
_ |CTROLE PLUORRECERT bathtubs Crate marred 631.95 up.| IF YOU ARE BUILDING A|i; GitOe WINCHEDT! ie 3% MO. OLD. rote” 200 \
“PENNY | PAINT “SALE | tureg. Hts 9 brightest and La _SAVE Supply, 100 8. Saginaw St.| HOUSE. DRIVE OUT TO BUR- 13 GAUOE ‘WinCHESTER puMF. laying hens, CHIEF \ Wanted Used Ci Cars _ 88
louse Paint, 1 gal ........- as mogern ~ ta of bi for kitch- | 1 STORY CEMENT BLOCK Com- paged Load AND SAVE UP TO) 475 eM 3-423. . agre __ Sale ‘Farm “Produce 78 ‘, — ws
Gnd gal ab Fe .......cccne0s el ai room and rec. | mercial store building. Complete IN ALL che irs ARRELL GUN aNOP \ mIGM ¢ CHRAP & a ap CARS.
_. | Two gale f0F ...--sess cca Be | Tilton rooms, 611.86 Naiue, 4s 08, | Sum danny, winders. fant ee — ease. va aie Sects ~ BOICE'S LARD 78 OE TO ee | ae ore SF
marred. Call at |- i@, . + . ti or as ge : Tale
Rubber dase paint, gal ..... 63.8 | factory showrooms. Michigan. Plu- | Beeween 0:20 a.m. end 12.00 noon aoe te CORY LAKE RoaD |7* COMELETE CHANGE |— HE-HIGH-DOLLAR——--
Roller or pan lt ma /orescent, 3 Orchard Lake Ave, | = only. . ia, “GAUGE Y WINCHESTER PUM Get your canning peaches ond | IN BEAUTY AND Por high grede used cars. We -
1 gal. Bre & roller er pes 63.90 Cash PURNITURE | 82 GAL. i “HEATER 876 50 _tu aaa of shells and beagle. wh pears now some as low as $2.50 pl es paelagg pt emi need them. Drive the extra miles,
LOOR SHOP | 5 r +7881 | 30 gah, oute. gee neater. 10.06 | Northern Lumber Co. ot TR ss eupeet ¢ CONSTRUCTION. ed ieee nia ere
| Open_ oo 99 8. Saginaw GREASE TRAPS GARBAGE Laund iraye stand sucet $21 ‘3 | | Pontia on oer tone 3967 | BUY YOU R UR GUN” Otte a abel ais pis Day | ' , “HL J. ¥ ANWELT
fae en Flees arial TOILETS, use Tiny as : armee F | ses Telegrapn & 9 Mile Rd ON TIME South of Granger NOW ON DISPLAY A N 1250
"608 . ~ | Tile MISTO - VAN 1 NEL - AMER Ric "AN FL 14184 ’ ~~ CANNING AND. FREEZING | ri
i coLbspoT REPRIG. AND | MIRACLE SEODORANT, pins ‘ Sla bau h S Wyma, PRICE THE = — THEN GET
Hagie” apt. size gas stove,/Usea | Suly, S118 sens prepaid. ws FLYER TRAINS REINFORCED CONCRETE SEP- vA G gt the orchar & O \"" bE
_ only 4 months, MA 58601. / _ Mich. Dealers Be Owosso.) authorized . factory pon and | —tic_tanks Ph PE ee ac 630 Oakland Ave. Tura wert pe tnt rd. north ‘HUT HINS Ny \ BILL SPENC E
REFRIGERATOR. ELEOQTRI | genuine factory. parts. Free test REINFORCING MESH a ween Sashabaw » USED CA)
Nera tee uy Sou. |DRAW TITE HITCHES| Seca Pa apene cr Pos | Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 penaeatterl Re TRAILER | ercunana'tved SA" re eros
REFRIGERATORS. LAS? YEARS CHROmE OR CADMIUM PLATED Loy to cores REE Prd ed be h-w Leoeed teeen = pg ~ i y - cpg es M&M Motor Sales
1964 models. One ofa America’s kind bolt to the frame ac per sq. ft. cut to length. AF TOP , a 810 = a6 un eed rahe SA + un late model cars.
Sent yepads. Posse, (new. ee. vg ntl Ss thee B S5 — means "pet JOINT Pill, 93.35. delivered, FR 2-821 _ Walled “Lake. On 1h ae ‘On 3-003
. xie Bwy. r ft. O%e [oi tos os hiee s . ;
igen Piucres: ee-ridn FIXTURES AND CARRY BLAY LOCK lyons g tte _— Ree om pokes Road, \ Bravion Piains
9 Ave. __. COAL & BUILDING SUPPLY xi TOP soil. a : =
Caine | Tecgida' Sige etines| Gutabsediar acs |setatha Tabet "Pe. | Bam gees aye Som | pow bm Se oon ne 0. FE Ss181. | he pen $0 value, $3.25.| Birch flush doors, $7.95 | | STALL SHOWERS — COMPLETE | —?* 6112 oF FE a ___| PRACHES ARE BR 7 2630 8. Dort Hw
LD. Ex room, $10.06 value $5.95, : Ps with faucets and curtain. ¢6050/A1 TOP 2801, PILL DInT, iPe AT s0T- y., Pitmt
Y oS S| ee ee ite, sugar Paeaiaticn, Fee. ont He pa Ra $33.33. Lavatories, | crushed stone, ‘sand and aravel. ry SP ten wen 0 cm 0 vines $89 Be
‘ oe ————— = | _Fescent, 393 Orchard Lake Are. r nite pines ge 7 faueees, te fren he'so var _ Karl Mowerd, FE £29}. ste Ov new Hats models
PLE GREROGED ONCE | F COMPAR TESTE aia citi | Seuntne, “TN” cares, ike | ues, 4,88 Teen are taclory O3¢:| "ied, peat. and piece voll Llera | Dini Be Famed PICKED. set | * ae 0 tue, sctecn
ge, TE Gf si fer ¢ p.m.) niehen, sink, with, trim, including Wsdete at sew low price cade, Sittetgen Fhaerescent. ‘S| Sagem boen. bere | SeEy CLIT IS i FOR CAI ___ ot band trauiers. v
O00. | eta 4 “MACHINE | ees conten coon. ine. 05809 Fiywosd, pisin & deceratt SAVE ON OMICER PRICES sow | BLACK DIRT AND FEAT. Tat BE | trescme. © eCpashel a ‘ mrp ee oe
new cabjoet o.. For: | Quen daly 8 to 6; om. jo 8 | Combination degra coal and fuel off. Fi bin | - Sellvered_9@ 0m a oHatenery a i> 38 ralier - COMMUNITY
rnaso Insulated wall 18. Te ure 4 fuel off. Fill vour bin | STACK DIRT. SAND AND GRAV-| TREE RIPENED ibaa jon .
ot = . = a j ¢ Sc ss onew Supply = a, gree - ca Vat Snr aks Are. see Ritmates a call F i tne. pesshos. Pret house weet, of
age ren ar ain Bb ase ‘ersss| Exchange |..MOTORS-— Dressing table, #10. 1 boy's bike. Phone 130 i STEAM BOILER WITH GAS ae of au aire ow cence. Tor ya| Heowaerd and Den Green. FE XC a e VAS
Fe ao lires, O8 22598, | POR SALE 3 FOR SALE MALL, LAND CLEAR: BFE rorae a or burner ond contrels, MA 81300.) | +7¥ie ve -_t ems. : 803 N. Main, Rochest
ae | Ropes tree OR 2 | oy See ee mt ee | gue SLORM SASH | GRAYED at PON eae Ex ‘Sale Farm Equipment 76) Si0%Vles °F WY GY we pono ie il
B spicon 290% DE | rroon saree uncmTnes| gtler Fs Eine 8) gece Coren ttl rh ee | aE «! cena:
etn All excellent condition. are new Preach’ Floor s Sealer, 3.3 "petri AnD TED SED URW One | FE 4-6089 shige WA ~ FERGUSON OME, VACATION AND TRAV: | Worecked 0670, AaTe, ve OpEL
mir- | = out all lawnmowers at a | Pee sg ee eee ee _ast aa | dR ACTORS _ oe Meatiets Os ie, a0 SS Sees, | Bagley Auto Parts
weaning m ;| BARNES HARDWARE ter neuter for bouwctreders end | SEPTIC TANKS | PI ROM ROAD GRAVEL, FROG} Th cr meney Bee bower | ww as 24-40 montne- 19-904 eb war sani revere - : e 6 uM w we a
fe ein Olt TARE S | ae ee sr amines, re aoe Comoiete “insulation "if -aestrea.| S004. W SneT ele Cocrcue gran: | orks on your farm. Ask for e| PURCHA op USED TRAILERS, Ow ees
: . A. THO _- PE 08 pea—grasal.— : ee ar wo USED ORES AS LOW A898 For Sale ~ ks 90° --
SUE Ol TANKS “son, 60.8. Perry abup oe eed ve dirt and mason sand. FE 21768. AND BAV or Sale Usi Used Trucks” ‘Trucks 90 :
GENERAL ELEC-| C. Price. S— =
oe cite — 27S, gl 18 tn. tow, wary vented Pie 7 Ei. TRAILER. ER. LIKE NEW.| trie motor 970.60 value, $30.66 FactiesD ae _HOUGHTEN & ky ON pO ART STORE, at a a een a cL on Gane
Good washer, | SIC0E Tae ver ‘30. FE WASTER Re ee cn win FUR. piace wen he ia revel Pi-ren, 6o-s0- wad cestion -38-N Maip ee may Oe LB A a +8898. :
a af ins FREE STANDING TOMETS #2196 Reas. OR 3-8061, gan Fluorescent,.\ "303 orebard| Pusan FES @ Gravel. | "EORD HARVESTERS | Pansertice 4 Getic | ine TOM CHEVROLET #TAKE
. or madel hoover, e40 96 21x32 double sinks $ 9.08 aEDiciNE t CABINETS, 1 Ts, LARGE _Veke Ave, | Ee FORD HARVESTERS | "paies Open, Eres.‘ bun. PM
model Phitcs fence, regular | Washbowis with fittings é mirror, all cabinet, | SALE DRAFTING . 2 TRE ROAD GRAVEL iso “FF. Coftace ome | Cit CHEVROL, USED CASE ®
— bath sete with fitts ine lores i aelection wel meaiains avgies, board. Compieie set of § yards, $7.00 ND pepe} Nemb ‘Fox Blown | {aller $269 Dixie Rwy. Back of san ole ..
of floor model freezer, was $429.96 eS Korentie al | 7a me lesa ave $36. Set | Blackie’s Lumem, ine FORD « 4 YARD DUMP TR uex
“CRUMP ELECTRIC hacen Sagion, Michigan | 5 feseste tauieu running aching er, eeu faraiture aa pert | Om Mitford,
2465_Aubu yE 4-918 | Gan aTOVE Lt Ee — eee SUMMER SALE ._ ever built. = No ie oft or perused. | '47 FORD | s YD. Seas be i.
ages PO a wd TERS — ELECTRIC —anALLOW | Unlon Wrecking Co. Ine. otters) oaadE > _itsi_fei!"Boe0 thlinmens’ Ra A good one. $3 $106, Cash PE sist.
59 Gal. Electric| ts paaeee Yaipons aectane Gove pe | SocecSey feed dea : ~_Auto Accessories 80 San se v1. | Excellent condition Used jet | Prices & limited time ofily. and HOUGHTEN "k ‘Son oat New and Used
= =e | OIL FURNACE 115.000} and wash bow! 24 in. ; com! HURRY! Case Ferguson, New Idea aa
s.| BTU 17w Complete with | furnace. Thermostat ontrol_with Auto Glass Servi
$09.95, es Won : : |
cern oe oe ee weet ee, | TOPSOIL — |epiebebebatitice Tem a Auta Gas Seri Siepicine Chsiinrs, Lance 0 | wet.” E Le, a Aad Wour dervice? ‘Olas tae inated hhe e ; ss in ~ ae
mirror, all, metal cabinet. | 2x4, All lengths Je lin. ft. ___ FE 5-7284 tooth harrow. pad 1 "Zconemy WILSON. GMC . ae
mig So goccee gneiss Eee aaa” (aaa AMEE Mg POR| erga dee aaa Hr _~ a good deal, call PR Hae en ay OAKLAND AT CASS
af except er gains, “Mh niga su s rT boon on ft, : WASHED SAND SND GRAVEL, m + fon a., Milford,
Ave. : Rew Pivscore - $3.97 « sheet. a gs : Bulkier's Sup- “USED TRACTORS _ sees OPEN EVENINGS
MOWER TRACTOR sarin sti, otemvag, | 2 4 vues SLECTICR | Uced Ol] FE 2-9203: FE 4-4531
Tt seah ond sin kin of WE GOT IT AR MAKES, AND and 8c es INTERNATIONAL TON TO SELL! m eeu oe a 8. E then ph, oy LE radi na WY
TAKE & SUTHEAGE vas, Dest deliversd, §
‘| . OF THIS SALE Sk pales eS | on
Bring cen ena — or tralter. : For ; Z _
erry only)
AKG REG. BRITTANY ‘SPANIELS.
85-8684 UNION _ WRECKING 4,60, INC. | TERED — BRP wn ig eo p. ee mps With the purchase of YO
a “Brine at ine et — a * “Bh
rte Sales & Service” sCHRAM "G8 Pa PARTS | “fig: 388 Saerce, "Droit
2, E ntded D 2 . om a ; s
EDGICOME CON: | ante sect 8, te | i STR LURAT ;—TONG— span s0iRF FO CHa ON COAL g1.00 enn ever RECONDITIONED ss nnn SEDAN BPiveaes
=? table, 8] = + ry —_< c 3 ; ded Sere ps pet Y °
fe ee “1954 MOQELS
~ LARRY -
RO
Focheater Ford Dealer pratt
f a ee ~| : : i a Wa een : oa ‘ , | : "THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, dks 16,1055 :
For Sale Sere. R...: For Sale Care 91 ~_—_—s*#For Sale Cars 1 Or Sale Cars 91 For Sale Cars . 1 ve gg Proepentnomeamtrdatgy | les PONTIAC 2 Recuasanle eae VERY Pontiac spoon naDio, |} : PASS THE WORD, : —See__Beseenants ae at as md sa
| vedi: | s CIAL "BE ett "bu ttaghs L OLIVER | 3” spe Gre ; ar p 5 IAL weet Li ot fully Equi tncludidg Taxes and License | 55 OLDS. . yedan, and We tee 0 SS Pootige Cate. Fully Equipped : . , mm . | «| BUICK | HOUGhEN son GRE AT o"oooe seh Bond | Oe es wVGEE $5993 M If Your Old Car Is ; YOUR FRIENDLY OLDEMORILE | Sais suburban, Rand H. “n indie, and heater. 2 tone O. Worth $125 | ‘ue, wi 4 3 ox ho! no.et jis having a cleanup sale, 828 OMS TRUCE. oe 1-978 ee tig Bet ree) ass a 75. With Only Ten Dollars < and they are really clean- 1089 OLDS 4 DR. fans. 13 F ~ 1 sree scaiom 2 “FP and H, Woodward at 13 Mile - $53 “Mo. ($10) Down ing house. | Sere ae rly ® . = ielectog ot ramsporaton ee rAKeR a0. SEDAR 3,0 ih e || HUDSON. er RAMBLER| Fxqmple: | “wade | | a lurz Moros “alice Ge Goan A-] Buys) C rege : $100; | 8 W. Pike St FE 2-380 1950 Chevrolet 2 dr. Good Ol dsmobile ( 012_8._ Woodw: Penis = USED CARS 69 Nash 2 ds.....- $499 ‘49 Pontiac Sedan... 7 BR, wipe RO easing Radio and + = ty | gas 5 Westward ne ur saci |] 54 Chev. Di. 2dr. $1099 — °$6 Pontiac Sedan. . .$59 Bie rally ‘ee — heater os. 1955 Demos svumped. | SusmOnAM 53 Pont. Dix. 2dr. $999 "9 Ford 2 = jae bape Wood * 2 uae ‘ Courtesy Cars Woodward oft) Mane down and assume payments, 44 |] 169 \tore 2dr... $799 50 Hudson 2‘dr... $14 | cy Sacra Floor Cars WONTIAR 81 Abe NS RGOW isis s ard_Brim : 'S3 Ford Hardtop $1699 SO Dodge 2 dr.... $144 me. FE 4-00 OLIVER A Rocket, to Fit Your Bers Pe After @ om. "a ' PASS THE WORD eae $544 °49Chev. 2dr...... $144 ‘DODGE DELUXE SEDAN. ni Picket P 3 PORT AROUND | Sy Willys 2 oto; 46 Chev. Clb. Cpe.. .$79 ; 3 ; ' Bt _ © ’ 2 dr......- 1eVv. . see gages, BUICK | mgrge | ‘SS GEER ee [ini es Skee be : - IN SC Le 0 Haat Sob an a SSgrewesy sb Mie | OL V | 54 Ford Hardtop $1444 = ‘50 cee cl cians ore ed btn Ls ake AV
a.
i , rE ue _... | SAVE SAVE SAVE F d ——- : 52 Olds 4 dr. 88.. $899 30 For f.