“9 4
‘
THE PONTIAC PRESS
— : Cloudy, Snow
* * * * ~~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953—20 PAGES “S02, ES Wa” 1lith YEAR .
Inglis Denied Right
_to Close Racetrack
Millard Upsets
License Refusal
for Hazel Park Overrules State Action
Aimed at ‘Questionable’
Stockholders
LANSING (AP) — Atty.
Gen. Frank G. Millard ad-
vised the state racing com-
missioner today he does not
have authority to refute a
1954 license or. racing dates
to the Hazel Park Racing
Association because of
“questionable” stockhold-
ers.
Commissioner James H.
Inglis has said he would
refuse to permit the associ-
ation to o te next year
if he is upheld by an attor-
gag A reer ig inion.
ard said Inglis is
bound by an earlier State
Supreme Court opinion
which upset the racing
chief's attempt to force the
racifig association_to rid it-
self of certain stockholders
whom he claimed were men
of questionable character
with police records.
In that opinion, the court said
Prior to Millard’s ruling,
F reezing, Snow
to Mark Start
of Another Year
Freezing temperatures and light
snow will mark the first day of
1954 in the Pontiac area, according
to the U. S. Weather Bureau.
The bureau predicts a low of
from 14 to 18 degrees tonight and
a high of from 2% to 3 Friday.
Light snow also is expected to-
morrow, the first day of the new
year.
‘The mercury plunged to 15 de-
grees at 10 a. m. today, then rose
to 19 by 2 p. m. in downtown
Pontiac. A low of 16 and a high of
35 degrees were recorded here
yesterday.
Unusually cold weather for most
of the nation is foreseén for the
first month of the new year. Some
eastern states are expected to get
heavy sfiow, while only the north-
be spated ‘from the biting cold.
Sen. Knowland
Clashes With Ike Giving Defense Orders
to Unemployed Areas
Is Bad, Says Leader
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
Good Six Months Ahead ~“
Babson Predicts B usiness
Will Hold at Level Less
Than 8 Per Cent Under ‘53 ' “By ROGER W, BABSON
Business in Pontiac has held at healthy levels during
the year just drawing to its
1954, I expect some mild readjustment, with the average
for the new year falling perhaps 6 per cent or 7 per cent
below that for the past 12 months.
Chiefly responsible for the softening will be your con- close. Looking ahead into
i}
HE it ne {tii ad if
i
| P
iff i
gl Zi during the
. s |
: isl
FS ee Li
es aff
eats | to hold up business, at west and New England states will}: 2 Ex-Prisoners
Tell of Horror
in Soviet Camps Identify Four Other
Americans Captive in
Russia
BERLIN (AP)—Two
Americans released by the
Russians after years of im-
prisonment and forced labor
said today Soviet detention
camps are “hell holes”
where murder and violent
death are commonplace.
Leland Towers, 28, a mer-
chant seaman from San
Francisco, told a news con-
ference he had been a
card-carrying Communist
“but never again.”
Pvt. Homer Cox ft Oklahoma
City, Okla., said he was blown off
the aircraft carrier Yorktown be-
fore the Japanese sank her in
1942 “and that was a. picnic’ com-
pared to the Russian work camps.
Stark, La., American soldiers once
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 7)
|) Rescue Pair
From Auto Blaze Risk Lives to Pull Man,
Woman From Flaming
Wreck in Detroit
DETROIT (# — Two pedestrians
risked their lives to save a | man
Aisha efi
ahat re "Bs : :
eg
4 F)
i t ¥
°F rece ie ite [nf f Pai
cits i Fa : 5 ; H first half, t its ap-
i ;
i i 3
:
be.
Red Romania Told to Halt Publishing in U. ‘INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
2
Tax Decreases
Start Tomorrow Uncle Sam Will Present
Long - Awaited Cuts as
New Year's Gift
WASHINGTON (@®—Uncle Sam
presents:a New Year's gift tomor- |
row to more than 530 million in-
dividuals and 50,000 corporations—
"| the first general tax cuts in five
NY) of the tax-writing House Ways
not enough and he hopes for az-
other reduction as soon as pos-
sible. Reed also called for cuts
LONDON (®—Prime Minister
Churchill said today in a New
Year’s message that the possibility
of war has beerl reduced through
“the growing strength of the free ctl
ik creel
i if Rei
Bloomfield Hills Country Club. ——
¢
CHIEFS CONFER HERE—Four of the nation’s top defense offi-f
cials have been guests of Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson
(center) at his home on West Long Lake road, “With Wilson are
(left to right) Roger M. Kyes, deputy secretary of defense; R. B.
Anderson, secretary of the Navy; Robert T. Stevens, secretary of
the Army;-and Adm. W. J. McNeil, assistant secretary of defense.
Wilson said the group had mixed holiday relaxation with discussions
of defense problems. With their wives, the defense heads were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson at a dinner Wednesday evening at
UCLA on New Year’s Day.
Pasadena.
If You Drive,
Don't Drink Motorists Get Warning
to Be Extra Careful This
Evening
Pontiac Police and Oakland
Tee i
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2§6 253
i raf UH F &F PEASE
BF3 Ht
: PEE
ag i
:
if g i Spartans at Physical Peak
for Classic Rose Bow! Tilt By JOHN W. FITZGERALD
Assistant to the Editor
PASADENA, Calif. — “We are ready,” said Biggie
Munn, as Michigan State finished its last two hour
workout in preparation for the Rose Bowl game with
Surprising, after a year when State was hampered with
sickness and injuries, their physical luck has returned at
have not suffered
?
é i
1 ete Ty
e¥s
Secretary Wilson Host to Top Defense Officials
Pentiae Press Phote ml
|Sent Via Mail Order ts Given Legation |
+
Pamphlets Seen
as Propaganda
- Today; Is in Retaliation
for Bucharest Action
WASHINGTON ( U P )—
The United States today
ordered Communist Ro-
mania to stop publication
“forthwith” of the Roma-
nian News and any other
pamphlets published in the
United States.
The action was taken in
retaliation fora Romanian
Tmove banning distribution
of an American publication,
News from America, which
the U. S. legation in Bucha-
Local Churches
Plan Services Will Herald New Year
With Worship Tonight
and Tomorrow
By LULA OGDEN ity th ! i f } }
| i i 5 rest started publishing
three months ago.
: i
il ?
F
ze)
3 il 2
i
| ni |
Trophy
for Outstanding JA Work Jack Niggeman, 17, son of the John P. Niggemans of
1986 Lakeland Ave., yesterday was named one of two
outstanding delegates attending Junior Achievement’s
1953 Midwest Conference in Chicago.
Jack and Joan Dineen of Columbus, Ohio, were select: ed for the awards from a group of 500 teenage business
persons from eight Midwest states.
ie; ie ¢ at at $4.4 /E SE is ie a =e
3
4
¥
West Side THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953 ___
‘Commission to Plan Fire Station on |
|
Groups Confer
ac "4
“aah ,¢ gigs Sag
Mrs. Edwin McGraw
Monday Night on Delinquency |2t Site Bose rae camara te ome 150 P. State Graw, 50, of Boston, . a for
y oN e a \ , Prestige Sao to the music of mer Pontiac resident, died in a De-
Facilities for East Side 5 Hold Annual Meeting at | the “Shooting "a five-man | troit hospital Wednesday moa.
g« s combo from the @@ist- U.S. Air] Mrs. McGraw, was
Will Not Be Considered gore Children’s Home to Plan | Farce Band. at the New Year's | daughter of James J. and Mary J,
ie Ti “ Check Methods party Wednesday night. Lynch, was the widow of Mr. Mc-
ot This Time : . Some 250 patients attended an Graw. -_
o> | ren Birmingham Members of the county's police |earlier party Tuesday, at which ving are two sisters a
, eanauh pone organizations and juvenile court) the patients’ orchestra, played for brother, Mrs. Grace Omohundro in
: — ecole - probation officers met Wednesday | dancing. Connecticut, Miss Mary J. Lynch
siesi'es Ge need of oft id in Oakland County Chijdren’s Home Miss Dorothy Roe, recreational | and”J Lynch of Detrojt.
fire protection tactlibes may conm | to discuss better means of therapy @irector. and Dorr Fock-| Funeral 1 be Saturday at 9
t to Sects Monday em. | ating in the fight against juvenile |ler, a department supervisor, act-' am. from St. Charles Borromeo
=e.
Bloomfield Ave.,
He also served as constable there. on the company’s books. lity and township police depart-| mentalists
Hunt announced that 400 under- stationed in Germany, and six oth-
privileged children from Oakland | er soldiers from the Austrian occu-
County could be cared for next) pation forces. Democrat . | ‘summer at Camp Oakland and)
of 3360-Kilmer, Troy Township. urged that lists of eligible children |
Boys and girls from six to 14) thought and still think there is lots | years of age will be able to attend wrong with the capitalist system, |
|iiase'onnd. it preonat, periods, but the Russians are starting trom | will be-in Ottawa Park Cemetery,
| plans are completed by next sum-
| A first degree murder warrant cause without the intervention of | 7
of Birmingham, just in case he is| against Albert Munson, 28, of 412\the United States the Russians|, 4 daughter Marjorie at }
was approved by |
| guard at Pontiac General Hospital from the night he dropped into a)
is accused of shooting his 33-year- British sector cafe for a cognac.
old wife, Gladys, to death Tuesday
, PS ments attended the third annual | Force Base to donate their serv- | Funeral Home, 381 E. Grand Bivd,
an Shere) ol ie luncheon meeting. . ices at the hospital affair. Tb e|
Citieens Fire Study Committee Patrolman John Major of Fern- | five Sa M Sgt. aaa | Mrs. James Van Scoyoc
end the Birmingham Planning dale was chairman. Capt. Reb- |Jones of Philadelphia, Pa.;
43 . ert Richardson of Royal Oak and | Robert Lindow, Detroit; A. 3C.| Funeral for Mrs. James (Sally
Board Monday night. fe ae ee Sere hws Saha ree eh ; and S| Ellis) Van Scoyoc, 58, will be Sat-
urday at 2 p.m. from the Voorhees-
Siple Funeral Home. The Rev. Rob-
ert Fischer of First Baptist Church
Ww.
| Z Mrs. Van Scoyoc was the daugh-
| | f Red C m 5 ter of Newton A. and Sarah Jane
e 0 a p Winsett. She died early Wednes-
| (Continued From Page One) aver ning in St. Joseph Mercy
Leon Manley See
A Communist since 1947, Towers| Funeral for Leon Manley See, 53,
| said: of 3715 Lincolnshire Rd. will be
for |] don't _know any more what| Saturday gt 1:30 p.m. from the
‘the word Communist means. I | Huntoon Funeral Home. The Rev,
| George Murphy of United Mission-
ary Church will officiate and burial
' scratch. I love freedom more than! Born in Laingsburg Feb. 6, 1900,
ever now, although I still think} he was the son of Edwin and
there is plenty of room for im-| Josephine Ridly See. He came to
provement in the capitalist world.” | Pontiac 35 years ago and married
: | Knella Schram here April 14, 1920.
He had been an employe of Cén-
tence “didn't méan anything be- | Detense
Besides his
surviving ere two
| terms.
Cox told his story chronologically | pert in Lainesburg.
Mr. See died Wednesday
“T met a man and two women.
and : Albert West | FEB Prisoners White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
Sgt. Henry Hoyt of Pontiac: Hunt,
McCarthy, ~ er
;
Seek Missing NAS
| Livonia a virtual monopoly on run- . i} : the Rev. Paul Shippert will con clas in the Detroit ; he Cc i a = ? Road Commission ‘ » alae ta
| Parmenter sent a suicide note to |
site is the current choice for the
Eastside station. . . Christ Church Cranbrook wil!
hold a Watch Night service at
11:4 tonight in St. Dunstan's |
Chapel. There will be prayer and |
meditation, with special intention
for peace in the \ orld
. . .
Allied ‘Youth's annual ‘Snow |
Fiake Whirl will be held from)
30 tonight until 2 a.m. at the Ma-|
sonic Temple in Detroit Three |
orchestras wil] take over three |
ballrooms for the sémi-formal New
Year's Eve party. Andy Howard
Wally Engel, Tommy Weldon and
their orchestras will provide the
music * .
Our Lady Queen of Martyrs
parish will observe a Holy Hour
service from midnight tonight to
1 am. New Year's Day Masses
will tollew the Guateg schedule.
Although entries for the Junior
Chamber of Commerce “Light Up
Your Town’ contest are now being
judged, Frank Mulholland, project
chairman said today contestants
may turn in entry bianks through
the end of the week
While many residents have al
ready entered. Mulholland said. he
The Weather
PONTIAC AND VRCEINTITY — Pertiy
cleedy and cold tonight ond Friday Lew
Contes 6 h6Ute «68 ride, increasing
cleediness with Nght soew flurries, high
= te = Turning colder by night
Seuthwesterty winds 1¢ te 1) temight
shifting wert te corthweet Friday
Tedey im Pontiac
Lowest temperature prececing §@ am ,
W ind elocity 7 mph
Direction. West gets Thureday et $08 9m
Moon eets Thuredar ot 1 4 $m
Moon rises Fricay et 4 36 6 ©
Wetnesday in Pontiac
(As recorded gowntown)
tempereture : For months Hatel Park and
Inglis have carried on a. fight
Masses a; Holy Name Church) over policies for which the con
on New Year's Day, as wilh those) egce ‘ service, | , _Previoasly, he was defeated in nis wife from their cottage near three elections while seeking of- | \ianistee. Police searched in vain
for his body.
The Pontiac police chief said his
informant claimed a Birmingham
The dispute also has drawn the
| city efHazel Park officially into
the
Millard’s for St. Columban will be at the
Upton .School in Royal Oak
. -»
Le protest from the Hazel Park City |
Council against Inglis’ plans.
| The council. acting at a special
mecting last night, reproved Inglis
for what it called proposals “‘in- |
| imical” to the suburb’s welfare
Copies of a resolution were sent
Millard and Gov. Williams.
For the-last four years Harel
Park's economy has
been fied to racetrack revenues.
This year the ‘city drew nearly |
$450,000. in income from running
races at the track and another |
$40.000 from harness events. A new |
$200,000 city hall is being built
from racetrack mone)
Mayor Louis Elias, himself a!
shareholder in the track, said he
could not understand ‘‘Inglis’ wish |
to jeopardize honest —investors++
money because of a handful of.
suspect stockholders.”
Commarder of —Greater—Bene-+ ‘The Supreme Court decision
ficial Union Post 701, Amvets, ts | against Inglis last May in the
Claude Dalrymple of Keego Har steckholders’ issue said the com-
bor. He was elected this week and | - missioner had failed te show that
will be installed in February the stockholders: in question had
. any part in the track's manage‘
ment, |
Inglis sought the ouster of sev-
eral stockholders on grounds that
some had police records and that
others had relatives with police
records
Pontiac Youth Wins
National JA Honor
Jack-Knifed Truck |
Slows Traffic Flow BLOOMFIELD HILLS — South-
bound Woodward traffic was forced
to trickle through one lane for four
hours yesterday afternoon after a
truck-trailer jack-knifed near Long
Lake road
Carrying six tons «
{ I-beams. the
) aig? imme the hill south (Continued From Page One) om % intersection when an axie
broke. throwing out the trucks '" 1952 by Pontiac Rotary Club
beake system and causing the ve. The Rotary sponsors one junior
hicle to jack-knife across three of STOUP and coordinates the [Tro-
the highway’s four lanes gram in which seven local firms
Owned by the Typhoon Steet ¢ also sponsor groups
of Pontiac, the truck was drivep Other Pontiac youths sent to Chi-
by Norman Rowe, 31, of 239 W. Cago as delegates were Dick Lohff
Pike. Pontiac of 71 Summit Ave. and David Rob-
Further delay Was caused when inson of 42 E Iroquois Rd
: tow truck ~~ to Pf Goodwill Personnel Man
the trailer onto a different tractor
broke down. Normal traffic flow to Be FAITH Speaker
resumed at 5:15 p.m Alexander J. Waugh. | director of
personnel and public relations for
Goodwill Industries of Fitnt, will
speak on “The Parent's Respon-
sibility to the Handicapped Child’
Emancipation Day services, when FAITH meets Jan, 5 at s
planned by the Oakland County! P. ™. !
Ministerial Assn., will be held Fri- | The organization, sponsored ‘For
4») at 11 @ m. instead of today| the Aid and Instruction of The
as reported in Wednesday's paper. Handicappec’"' by Oakland County
The program, being held at New) Society for Crippled Children, |
Bethel Baptist Church, will feature | Meets at Stevens Hall. Public is|
Bishop G. W. Baber, head of AME |invited to attend. Emancipation Day Rites
Friday Instead of Today
churches in Michigan. Illinois,”
lowa, Minnesota and some Ca- : —— = apg Changes Plea to Guilty
——_ Charles R. Shears. 32. of 7
Carpenter St.. withdrew a plea of Pleads Not Guilty BIRMINGHAM — Theodere V
Myler. 47; of 363. Commonwealth,
Detroit, pleated not guilty to a inot guilty and entered one of guil-
ty yesterday before Oakland Coun- |
ty Circuit Judge George B.
artrick on a charge of sta
charge of drunk driving when Fape, He was remanded to Oak- [Hi raigned before Justice of the |land County Jail when unable
. 7-1) Peace John J. Gafill yesterday. |furnish $2,000/bond and sentence
BB) Trial wes set. tor Feb. 2. was set forJan. 8 {| RB ; 7 3 i
5 PE aR in if x ie : =o S| A pica j é ; \A\ A a
sth agen’ a ‘ & \ Ms } te keg deciston today came |
hard on the heels of a vigorous,
tman in 1952.
| lowest bidder
ployed at Murray Corp.
trolt.
Van Dusen, 2%-year-old lawyer,
has bope Repwhtican chairmen tor} The infermant farther sald the
the third Republican
since 1952. ; om
Prior to that, he served as vice *Ppearance Aug. 14 and five days
chairman of the Birmingham Re- | after the suicide note was Sent.
publican Club in 1950-51 and chair-' The woman, who asked to re-
Kuschinsky has filed his petition. | letter to de ae ee me | MSC in Top Shape
cry.” Dueee_ 8 essied 1° opened the informant wid Seaiey- for ROSE Bowl Tilt
Knowland Clashes rvssatszyeernce sod dreary ceenumny tetra
With ke Over "obs Dearbora Man : Boots Tops Off
“ muy Potking Meters DETROIT (UP)— An alarmed
citizen ran into the suburban Dear-
born police station early today and
But even if Congress
block or drastically curb the pro-|
gram, there remajned the facts
of Knowland’s unequivocal opposi- |
tion to it and the as yet unap-|~", a praised effect the incident might | ‘There's a man outdoors wreck- ;
have on Democratic support for |
Eisenhower's legislative program.
Knowland told a news confer- the tops broken
ence late yesterday the order | **veral of them in
- and station.
{rom normal procurement methods |
and channeled into jobless areas. |
Last summer, during Senate de. |
bate on the issue, he favored an
amendment which would have for-
bidden the letting of government
contracts to anyone other than the
He did not say yes-
terday whether he would go that
far now
Observers could not immediately
recall an instance when a major-
ity leader. on the eve of a new
Congressional session. had taken
truction of property, Damage to
the meters was estimated at $600. |
Widow Celebrates
Her 99th Birthday soak
|
)
Wednesday afternoon at a re-|about 37, of Hollywood, Calif., a
cealed weapon yesterday when leave Mackinac City daily
appeared in Pontiac Munici-| a.m. and every two hours there- | Joseph. z
f i
[ j
i
= a
two years.
taken to ca
| Russia, winding up at Workuta. At| World War II, is rurvived by two
was cut to | brothers, Chester V. of 3530 May- |
j }
| | |
i
“There was never any chance of David Acha of Pontiac. Mrs. Daisy
one | Miller in Idaho, Mrs. Ruth Cham-
e) | Moscow and the temperature last | Elizabeth Harris of Petoskey.
Mr Smith died Tuesday evening
been ro place | at the Oakland County Contagious
- | He underwent a minor opera- |
tion in one camp, performed by Mrs. Albert Zinser a Russian doctor who also was a | Mrs. Albert (Maude R.) Zinser,
prtecner. 64, of 346 Osmun St. was dead
identified
fe Straits Ferry Goes
on Winter Schedule
| after through 11 p.m. The ship will
| make the southbound
|
public issue with his President on ; ; : Ham Germany at the age who set the hearing for Jan. |St. Ignace at 6 a.m. daily and
Ss Genk pay wae of three in 1857, celebrated her| freed Pumphrey on a personal | every two hours thereafter through | Bad Check Record
opposition party (99th birthday Wednesday with her| bond and Allan on a $200 bond.| 10 p.m. The schedule is Eastern) OKYO (UP)—The Tokyo Clear-
Democrare cutnumber Republi. | 52% Jay Davis, three miles west| Pontiac Police said they arrested) Standard Time. ing House reported today that
cans, 48 to 47. in the Senate. The Jachasn. ‘both men in » bar Saturday night. Two boats will operate on ome | 33,508 checks bounced during the
96th seat is held by Son, Deccan | wee bad er ee em ® and a half hour schedules from | first 29 days of December, setting
of Oregon, an independent. Thus Seater her marriage, She has UNAble to Post Bond, ea eS tea rant ee: Cae
Eisenhower must have some Dem- been a ‘vidow 47 Her daugh Man Goes to il | . Ramen oaty. + 2 To Everyone
1540 UNION
1548 Unten Lake Bead. Pontiac - °
Open Daily 10 A.M. te 8 P.M. Open Daily 0 A.M. to 6 P.M. — Fridays ‘6 P.M. Thirteen former Communists
were among those admitted to
America thus far in 1953.
This unusual feature of the law's
operations arises from what is
termed the “redemption” portion
of the act. Special provision is al-
lowed those who defect from sub-
versive ideologies, granting U/S.
entry to those who can prove they
have deserted and have actively
opposed their former cause for at
least five years,
” 2 LOCATIONS
4464 Dixie Hwy., Diayton Plains
OR 3-9412
of +
While immigration showed an in-
crease this year, immigration un-
der quotas was still far short of
the numbers assigned the Various LAKE ROAD
best wishes —
that you may
144-196 Notth
extends to everyone sincere
A HEALTHFUL and A
HAPPY NEW YEAR |
| HOMADE "00 suor nations. .
oo * ~
Only 54 per cent of the annual
immigration quota of 154,657 was
filled during the year which ended
June 30. The unfilled quotas were
principally from western and north-
ern Evrope—Great Britain, North-
ern Ireland, Ireland and Sweden
showing the least relative interest
in America’s shores. Great Britain
and the hope Act Dispute claimed only 24,219 of the 65,361
quota numbers allowed them. Gen-
erally, northern European coun-
tries have the largest quotas.
There was no quota immigration
from the countries of southern and
eastern Europe—a point of criti-
cism by those who contend the law
was designed to discriminate
against the people of this region,
. * -
One reason is that quotas from
southern and eastern European
countries have been mortgaged for
years in advance under admissions
provided by the 1948 displaced
persons law, oo . *
A sidelight on the operation of
the new law is apparent relief from
congestion at Ellis Island, historic
haven of newcomers to America:
To strike the national origin
principle from the law, 31 mem-
bers of the House and Senate led
by Sen, Lehman (D-Lib-NY) have
sponsored a new bill.
7 . 7
The Lehman bill states a new
principle: That immigration is
properly a tool of U.S, foreign
policy and should be used as such.
, however, shows little
disposition to tinker with the Mc-
Carran-Walter act at this time.
There was speculation on Capitol
Hill that the Eisenhower adminis-
tration would settle, however, for
some minor amendments to the act
dealing principally with adminis-
trative operations that have re-
sulted in individual hardships.
————
White House News
Rated by Hagerty WASHINGTON #® — James C.
Hagerty, President Eisenhower's
press secretary, last. night nom-
inated these as the most important
White House news stories of 1953:
The inauguration; the armistice
in a; action of Congress in
“ ng 13 billion dollars” from
former President Truman's spend-
transcribed earlier in Augusta, |
Ga., said the President's Jan. 7
State of the Union message to Con-
gress “will make a very fine |
story.” He gave no details.
March-of-Dimes Drive
Tins Placed in Stores
unteer workers will seek to
$3,000,000 in Michigan during the |
March of Dimes campaign to fight |
and Northern Ireland, for example,
enjoy
att 23 W. Lawrence S.°:
Pontiac Glass Co. FE 5-6441
Baltimore Pleased
at Big TB Drop BALTIMORE ® — Tuberculosis
has been removed from the list of
“major killers” for the first time
in the medical history of Balti-
more after a 31 per cent drop in
the death rate of the disease.
Dr. Huntington Williams, health
commissioner, said the decline,
“truly phenomenal,” was due pri-
marily to a home-care program
and the social and medical ad-
vances of the past 10 years.
Although the number of cases of
tuberculosis in Baltimore for 1953
—1,393—was almost as high as the
1,493 listed in 1952, the number of
deaths fell from 416 last year to
280 in 1953.
Patient Colorado Police
Finally Collect Dollar
GREELEY, Colo, #®—A Corpus
Christi, Tex., resident sent $1 yes-
terday to Greeley police.
He thanked the police for their
patience, and said he was sorry
for the delay in paying an over-
time parking fine. “‘Most of my
creditors,” he wrote, “raise cain
for their money inside of 60 days.”
A check of the records showed ‘| through the years, the nation es- _
‘Driver Gets 3 Tickets
|in Less Than One Mile
CLEVELAND i — Bus driver
Delane Williams, 232, hit the traf-
fic jackpot yesterday. He got three
tickets for violations committed in
less than a mile of driving.
The charges were the same in/
each case: failing to pull his bus
|to the curb on discharging passen-
gers.
Patrolman Clement Kramer ho-
tified the driver of the first: of-
fense. He said he then followed
him in his patrol car and Williams
did the same thing twice within
the next eight blocks. U. §. Had No
Lynching in 53 Tuskegee Institute Will
Change Annval Report
on Racé Relations
TUSKEGEE, Ala. @ — For the
second year in a row, there were
no lynchings in the United States
in 1953, Tuskegee ‘Institute ar |
nounced yesterday.
But the famed Negro college
said it is dropping its annual lynch- ae so fo ce
ing report for a more realistic in-
dx of race relations.
Hereafter racial progress will be
measured with a new formula us-|
ing économic, political, education-
al and similar factors, said Dr. |
L. H. Foster, Tuskegee’s president. |
ot + 2
Dr. Foster said mob violence is
no longer a valid index of race
relations and that lynchings have |
lost their significance as a yard-
stick of race relations because of |
“changes in the status of the Ne- |
gro and the development of other
extra-legal means of control, such
as bombings, incendiarism, threats
and intimidation, etc.” | ~
The Tuskegee president said thé
study will likely compare white t
and Negro standards in four cate-
gories—income relationship, voter
participation, education, and em-
ployment.
CREDIT
13 NO. SAGINAW ST Fashioned for young men and
men who stey young!
Dr. Spencer Oates,. Optometrist
* 9:30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8:00 Fri. 9:30-5:30 daily
Although the death rate from
mob action has steadily gone down
caped only once before without
lynch slaying. That was in 1952.
Heiress, Latin
Wed in Rite
at New York
NEW YORK (—Heiress Barbara
Hutton was married yesterday to
Porfirio Rubirosa, international
playboy and. Dominican Republic
diplomat. It was her fifth marriage
and his fourth.
A 10-minute civil ceremony, con-
ducted in Spanish and English,
ended several days of speculation
that the marriage might be called
off.
The slim, pale, 41-year-old bride
was all smiles as the wedding rites
began, but toward the end she be-
came visibly nervous, Rubirosa,
45, tall, handsome and composed,
MORTON |
SALT
put a comforting arm around her.
The marriage was performed by
Dr, Joaquin Salazar, Dominican
consul general, in his Park avenue
apartment.
The bride, in a black taffeta
dress, contrasting with her blonde
hair, was attended by her 17-year-
old son, Lance Reventlow, her only
Gen. Rafael ‘Trujillo Martinez,
head of the Dominican air force
and onetime brother-in-law of the
bridegroom
Nearing an End
Removal Sale Tremendous Savings on
Wall Paper—Paints
Unpainted Furniture
WALLPAPER
FACTORY OUTLET xr
Tes
his ticket was issued*Nov. 7, 1948. rt
Ger eg
Vi
22 West Huron
77] Labbe
As tow as 1.00 down
B. F. Goodrich Tubeles
s Tires
DEFY
erie
rotect against bruise
— yet cost than any regular tire with
blowout-protecting tube.
‘he 30.95
Optometrist ond old tire ples tex ond your old tire
7.1015 se ©634,45 TAO-15 Stee A
7 North Saginaw Street .
Phone FE 4-6842 _ AUTO SUPPLIES $1 be Car $69
a ee _ Visor. ..... .$6.95 2 DOOR
Better Things in Sight $42.95 Custom 9’ Refrigerator
| YI) © Sez Gove 33, | Rane Closed Wedn Af ewe. gM 95
ee ee $9.95 Wheel © $2997 Discs ...... $7.95
? ELECTRIC RANGE
SAVE 50°! Ash; 2
$19.95 Steam fron | reduced te $7350
WESCO ROASTER | ELECTRIC DRYER Was $42.95 Ri by
| $9980 )
: | ) LQ Retvced to $2280 | reduces to $1690
TO ALL OF OUR CUSTOMERS! nADIOS 17” TY COmSOuE 6 Three Only One
As the sun rises a ae pt Rae
ae Red $1995 $ 995
On a brand new year! epee he 19 syeete 19 a5.
‘We take time out : MUD and SNOW TIRE SPECIALS!
Pa ae er 6.70 x 15 New Treade—Exchange
pimprenm see Oe NOS $25.10 Pair 7
GET THE WINTER TRACTION TIRE THAT | OUTPULLS AND OUTSTOPS THEM ALL!
PONTIAG FLOOR COVERING esti = y= om 379 Orchard Lake Ave. FB 2.2353 B.F.Goodric
pe
THE PONTIAC PRESS
SeSctee es wa mee
nex come, em Fema ov Bcw
Buhered ot Post Office, Pontiac, Mich as second ciess matter
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
a ae
Weather Ships to Stay Passengers as yell as pilots of trans-
atlantic planes should feel relieved that
. the State Department has decided to
continue 14 U. 8S. weather ships in serv-
' Last October the department an-
nounced that these cutters would be
withdrawn from the 25 ship fleet by
next July. While 14 other Nations are
contributing to this service, there is no
‘doubt that U. S. withdrawal would end
‘the-effectiveness of the seven year old
_ program.
* * *
| At the time it was argued that
transatiantic aviation had ad-
———waneed to a point where the
weather service could be supplied
- by planes in flight. Economy
~ also was a factor as it was pointed
out that operation of our cutters
cost $15,000,000 a year.
‘The announcement brought quick
objections from eight New York Univer-
sity meteorologists and members of the
_~— Alr-Line Pilots Association. In their
view the weather ships provide invalu-
able information to planes and surface
vessels.
: * * *
Besides being fixed navigational
check points, the cutters serve as
search and rescue bases and have
credited with saving many
lives in ship and plane accidents.
. ‘The State Department has done well
- to reverse this decision before it was too
late. .
_ Red Threat at Our Door It long has been public knowledge
that our Government is~ “con- ——————_—_—_—_——
by ee ge By te the use of af pews ted this news-
Ce es eal an GN AP mewn diapetches.
eS
. Press i delivered carrier for 40 cents
bBo wp A engl Be by mall ie
edjcining counties it is $12.00 @ year: a t
privilege.
x * *
That has been true this year, accord-
ing to Jonn P.-Lwacacos, Cleveland Plain
Dealer foreign correspondent, who has .
been keeping a close watch on them in
Europe. This year 140 of the 531 mem-
bers of Congress, or more than any
year since 1947, invaded the Continent.
Some of them, of course, went ,
for information, worked hard get-
ting it and returned better able
to serve their constituents and
the country. But all too often,
according to Leacacos, the
thoughtful investigators are out-
weighed by “the blabbermouths
and characters patently out for a
free vacation on the public till.”
* * *
The free loaders like the arrangement
under which they can draw on counter-
part funds without having to account
for them. These funds are-foreign cur-
rencies set aside to match aid received
from the United States.
“Congressionat—-counterpart —fund
users,” Leacacos reminds us, “have un- °
limited authority to ask for and get all
the spending money they want.”
a a
The result is that some Con-
gressmen were found to have
spent as much as $200 a day not
counting travel costs and allow-
ances paid from Congressional
funds. In contrast, the State De-
partment allows its employes $12
a day for expenses when they are
away from their home stations.
Rep. Horrman is right in proposing
to investigate the junketeers. Congress
should lose no time in stopping this
unseemly waste of tax money which
can't help lowering our prestige abroad.
~The Man About Town
Five Million Cards Our Post Office Handled
a-Lot of Christmas Mail
| mala or British Guiana have the Reds
| gained strength as rapidly as on the
French Island of Martinique. Lying
halfway between Puerto Rico and. the
north coast of South America, Mar-
tinique has a population of 265,000.
* * *
Politically its two largest cities,
Fort de France, the capital and
Lamentin are firmly in control of
the Reds. In Fort de France
—‘Conihittists hold 29 of the st
| council seats. In the Lamentin
council 14 of the 18 elected offi-
cials are Communists.
The mayors of both cities are Com-
munists and are highly adept at agi-
tating a largely illiterate mixed popula-
tion. Moreover, two of the island's
three deputies to the French National
Assembly in Paris are Communist lead-
ers.
* * *
One of the reasons for Wash-
ington’s concern is Martinique’s
relative nearness to both Puerto
Rico and the Panama Canal.
Another is the rapidity with
which Communism has spread on
the island with its sugar cane
economy.
Before 1946 the Communist Party as
such was unknown there. In the last
: election, April 26, 1953, Communist
) candidates captured 63 per cent of the
votes.
This helps explain not only why
Washington but other Caribbean capi-
tals are maintaining unceasing watch
on .Martinique developments.
- Junketeer Curbs Needed
If available data is accurate, there is
ample ground for the investigation into
Congressional junkets proposed by Rep.
Ciare Horrman. :
7 : For many years the junket has i
an-inerease of five per cent over last year. Each
day's mail was handied the same day,
being no delays.
“Why not do that every day’’’ phones
, “It likewise
would meet with the approval of most of us if
you'd also skip politics.”
A cock pheasant and harem of three hens are
daily visitors to the poultry yard of
Marding Lucas
at Williams Lake, and ‘peacefully eat with the
chickens who seem quite agreeable.
One of the reddest faces in Lapeer is that of
Newspaperman Bill Myers
whose Christmas cards were extra heavy, and
Bill forgot about the added postage. But they
were amply worth the “postage due.”
Enjoying year round protection from hunters,
the deer in the new Kent Lake Park in western
Oakland County have passed the 100 mark, and
Supt. David Laidiaw
feels this is unique in a section so far from their
accustomed northern haunts. _
Claiming to be the first of the winter to do
some ice. fishing on Pontiac Lake,
Michael Ladsome
phones that they're biting good, and seem extra
hungry at the late freezing weather.
Although quite industrialized, Oakland County
still maintains a top rank in agriculture. It has
just been selected as one of 12 Michigan counties
to have a winter grass institute. According to
Edward D. Longnecker,
state chairman for that work, it will be held
March 10 at a location to be announced later.
Since he long has been top booster and loyal
fan of the Detroit Lions, it is hard to reconcile
the fact that after Sunday's game
Bob Oliver
is advertising his personal automobiles for sale.
Word is received from
Mrs. Herbert Hanshaw
of Birmingham that pussy willows
menced to bloom on low land on the
Rouge River near her home just
recent frigid spell. , 4
ity of the lawmakers abuse this .
|
«hk. Yaad” +.
; ti r
ate a ‘y
. ESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953 __
‘ 4
pe hah aetetie Ld
a: - 7 od
A Promising Debut
Voice of the People
J. G. Asks ‘Is Rise in Hospital Costs
Necessary?’ CharlesE. Yaeger Replies ~ (Letters will be condensed when neces
sary because of lack of space. Ful) name.
requests, unless the letter is critical tp
ts natere.>-
I was extremely interested in
your news story concerning the in-
creased room, operating rates, etc.
at Pontiac General Hospital. If I
understand correctly, ward rates
From Our Files 15 Years Ago
NEW NATIONAL RULE bars
Golden Gloves competition outside
local centers.
“U. S. LABOR Bureau blamed in
Dies committee report for spread
of subversion.
2% Years Ago
TEN BEST MOVIE productions
of 1933 are selected; ‘Berkicy
Square;"’ “Smilin’ Through; "’ “Cal-
vacade;" “Little Women;” ‘‘The
Power and the Glory;” “Three
Wrong:" “Footlight Parade ;”
“White Sister" and “Only Yester- day.” jumped from $11 to $14 per day;
private rooms from $18 to $21.
Everyone realizes that living
costs have greatly increased and
certainly this would also apply
to hospital costs. The proposed
increases, however, do seem to
make hospital care almost pro-
hibitive to the average income
family, Was such a drastic in-
crease justified?
Fortunately, we carry Blue
Cross, but many families are un-
able to afford that much protection.
I'm sure your many readers and
I would feel better satisfied if a
more detailed explanation -were
given.
J. a.
Hospital Replies
The Board of Trustees of Pon-
tiac General Hospital is charged
with the responsibility of manage-
ment, operation and control of
the hospital under Ordinance 1177,
adopted on May 6, 1952. This Or-
dinance specifically prevides that
charges for hospital services shall
reflect all costs of the bospital. As a result of cost studies for the
year 1953 and after making pro-
visions for increased -cost of labor,
supplies and material, the replace-
U.S. Warning Over Indochina Situation
Muddled Because of British Hold-Back —
By DAVID LAWRENCE
WASHINGTON — The American
people are not being given all the
facts concerning the grave situa-
tion that has arigen in Indochina.
Officials here are not only mini-
mizing what is happening there
but they are issuing warnings to
the Communists about a possible
retaliatory action which has. no
sanction from the United Nations
or from the 16 nations which fought
against the Reds in Korea.
The Associated Press carried on
the night of Dec. 29 these three
statements which were front-paged
on many of the newspapers from
coast to coast:
“Secretary of State Dulles
warned today American air and
naval. power might strike at the
China mainland if Chinese troops
openly intervene in Indochina or
resume the war in Korea. . .
‘Dulles’ remarks reinforced a
similar warning he issued in a
speech at the American Legion
convention in St. Louis last
Sept. 2.
“In recalling this warning today,
Dulles ‘said any renewal of hos-
tilities in Korea or a Chinese Com-.
munist attack in Indochina would
bring an American reaction ‘not
necessarily confined to the par-
ticular area the Communists
choose to make the theater of their
new aggression’.”
The foregoing statements would
be meaningful were it not for the
fact that after the 16 nations had
issued on Aug. 7 their declaration
of July @ saying they would re-
sume hostilities if the Korean
truce were broken and warning
the Reds that*they would have to
carry the war to China itself if
the Communists broke the armis- .
tice, a clamor rose in Britain and
on Aug. 8 the United Press sent
tt.is dispatch from London: ‘ F
i i
I
i ag a
i 2 i i at the time and in full knowledge
of the circumstances.”
This, of course, was read in
Moscow, too, where it doubtless is
being assumed that Secretary
Dulles can issue ail the threats
and warnings he pleases, but the
British government is still not
committed to agreement or co-
operation in any military serise.
It might be inferred perhaps
that the United States planned to
“go it alone” in the Asian crisis,
but this hardly seems plausible.
Also Dulles not long ago said
the United States would not at-
tempt to dictate or coerce its al-
lies.
It is evident, on the other hand,
that the British government is do-
ing the dictating to America on
Asian policy. ot
* * , i ;
So far as the publi¢ -knows,
either from official statements in
Wastiington or from the revelations
in the debates in the House of
Commons, Britain hasn't the
slightest intention of carrying the
war to the Chinese mainland or of
checkmating by any new military
operations there what is happening
in Indochina. :
* * @
Coincidentally, Sec. Dulles is re-
ported by the Associated Press to
have said at his news conference
on Tuesday of this week that
American power to strike devastat- “
ing blows at any aggresser in the
Far East is strengthened despite
the projected withdrawal of the
two U. S. divisions from Korea,
and he added that, instead of try-
ing to meet any new aggression
j
cle ALT
Any warnings issued now, there-
fore, are predicated on the assump-
tion that in a forthcoming crisis 4 eaage?
Case Records of a Psychologist
Clarence is a good example
of “psychosomatic” ailments.
The human mind must be
occupled with something as
-long as we are awake. if you
haven't many outside interests,
then you may focus attention -
on your epidermis or its con-
tents and soon become a hy-
pochondriac, worrying unduly
over perfectly normal sensa-
tions. .
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
Case J-382: Clarence C., aged 48,
has a common complaint.
“Dr. Crane, I have a constant
ringing in my ears,” he announc-
ed as soon as he had-sat-down.
“H is driving me crazy. The
more I pay attention to it, the
Jouder it grows. .
“Do you think I am jJosing my
mind? Or am f simply growi
deaf prematurely?” :
Hardly a day passes that I
don't also receive letters from
some of you readers, who are
also troubled with ringing in the
Porgraits
By JAMES J. METCALFE
This year is over with tonight
... Its days are spent forever...
Earh smile and tear, each Yow
Sincere . . . And every new en-
deavor .. . To some of us it simply
means .,. Another year gone by
... The months and seasons were
the same .. . As every passing
sky . . . We had our disappoint-
ments and... By ordinary meas-
ure... Our lives were not neglect-
ed in . . . The moments meant for
pleasure . . . But that is not the
meaning true .. . Of any year on
earth .. . For every year is given
us... To be of better worth...
And if we sleep tonight and if...
We are alive tomorrow ... By
God’s good grace we still may
have .. . Some time to beg or
borrow.
Baering Down
By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER
(International News Service) =.
‘Year started slow but finished
faster than a banjo pick.
_ We're not forgetting the meek
and lowly inherit the earth. And
there's no way to avoid it.
Last year this time the Demo-
crats were licking their wounds.
There was plenty of sugar on them.
The old guard was practicing
a Republican coronation with
Homburgs for tiaras. And Harry
was getting ready to hand over
the torch of Olympic blame to
Ike.
The five o'clock Washington hos-
tesses were switching their tea
politics. Twenty years of democra-
cy leaves its mark on your pinkie
The new administration was
getting ready to re-do Sir John
Tenniel's famous cartoon of 1890,
“Dropping the Pilot.” Using Bob
Taft instead of Bismarck. ¢
The five percentaurs were hoss-
Focus Your Attention ,
on ‘Outside’ [Interests : “ears oF spots “before your ¢yes,
ete. |
concentrate on their ears .or on
the spots before their eyes.
But when you enter the meno-
“ pausé age bracket, or cut off
many of your former social and
church contacts, you may begin
to focus your attention on your
own epidermis or its contents.
If you aren't careful, you will
then become a typical hypochon-
driac worrying over this ringing
in your ears or the twinges of
pain in the abdomen, or your con-
stipation, etc. s
. Soon you: may become a victim
of your fear of cancer or of fi
sanity or a heart attack.
So quit being such a slave to
your “innards”; God gave you @
brain to act as directon‘of your
conduct, as well as your think
ing.
The emotions should never be
permitted to dominate your brain.
If you have ringing in your ears,
it could be partly due to physical
causes.
Perhaps you are anemic or need
a little thyroid extract. Or your
eustachian tube may temporarily
be clogged by inflammation, and
thus shut off the air connection be-
tween the throat and the middle
ear.
You can observe this clogged ef-
fect when riding in a fast elevator
which relieves it.
A quick way to become more
fascinated by external reality than
the Europeans will drop their cries
about “enlarging the war” or
“bringing on World War III” and ory
oso Wo ers, couetie ot in against the son was broken up when Everett Our Lord "was written in the eae © ee pepe yr pocion ep ny Pease ot te renarrestiin, net in
ees cae had little to say and then droned springtime, ms
(Copyright 1953) on tor on bow to my © : ——
Calcium in Natural Form or in Tablets
Is Assimilated as. Readil z
FE i
3 [
H
fi
|
a 1
:
: ge° “ i ‘i
ll eis
ie : a | i i rk as by Shots
Rochester Maps Plans for Sewers’ in Bren: THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DE
Church Groups
Plan Meetings
for Next Week ROCHESTER — Four women's
fellowship groups of the First Con-
gregational Church have an-
nounced plans for meetings next
week,
Priscilla Alden Guild will hold a
1 p.m. luneheon at the home of
Mrs. Hazen Anderson on Hamlin
road Monday.
Mrs, Emerson Caréy's home will
be the scene of the Mayflower
Guild luncheon at 1 p.m. Tues-
day. On the same day, the Mission
Study group will meet at the home
of Mrs, Julia Werth at 1:30 p.m.
and the Olivet Guild will gather
at the church at 2 p.m.
Plymouth Guild will meet at 7:30
* Wednesday «at the home of Mrs.
Ray Plassey and at 8 p.m. Mrs.
Cliff Van Auken will be hostess to
the Lamplighters.
‘» This NEW YEAR <
“Say It
With Flowers”
Rochester }
Greenhouses drat
Member F.T.D.
210 E. Third, Rochester a
OLive 2-9411
ring in the New Year
tol! happiness
_ bor you, forever!
PURDY’S
DRUG
STORE 321 Main St.
Rochester " MILFORD — Dog Quarantine
Law Proposed Hunt Possible Victims
in Southfield Township
Rabies Scare
SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP — A
dog quarantine ordinance for
Southfield Township was proposed
today as a result of the township's
rabies scare.
Township Supervisor William
Roesef pr opose ed it to meet what he
called an “obvious” need.
‘State Police continued a search
for more possible dog bite vic-
tims in the community after five
children had been bitten by a
dog belatedly discovered to be
rabid,
A quarantine ordinance would
require all dogs to be kept at
home or on leash.
The dog guilty of biting the chil-]
dren was a stray mongrel. It died
of its rabies.
National Guard
Trucks Used
in Mailing Rush
That fleet-of Army trucks head-
ing north on Telegraph road about
noon yesterday was not set on
quelling an upstate riot or repelling
an invading enemy as you might
have imagined.
They were 20 of 133 trucks bor-
rowed by the U. S. Post Office
in Detroit to put down another sort
wo wishers Via one by Christmas
eM-wishers via package and let-
tef.
Acting Detroit Postmaster Ed-
ward L. Baker said the trucks were
being returned to Michigan Na-
tional Guard units in Flint.
The trucks were used during
the Christmas rush to deliver
parcel post packages and shuttle
mail to and from postal stations
to depots, Baker said.
Baker said the trucks were used
free of charge in lieu of private
vehicles that would have had to
be tented.
“We saved a lot of money,’ said
Baker, “‘and our part of the bar-
gain was to keep up mainten-
ance of the trucks.”
Children Again Get
Fluoride Treatment Sodium fluoride
treatments will again be available
to school children in this area,
according to an announcement
the Huron Valley School
Board.
Treatments for sécond, fifth and
eighth graders are scheduled to
begin Wednesday.
quested to help administer the
treatments which will cost $4.
According to school records, some
2530 pupils were given the treat-
mehts last year.
3041 Orchard Lake
TO EVERY ONE OF YOU!
FROM EACH ONE OF US AT
Keego Hardware No. 1 FE 2-3766
reporters David Newson, 1 r FLEDGLING NEWSMEN—Entire staff of the
thriving Vinsetta Park Post work td meet the
deadline for Saturday's “addition.”
2, Howard Schuneman,
Musical Group
Plans Program Rochester Club Slates
Opera Affair Tuesday
Night in Library
ROCHESTER — Woodward Me-
morial Library will be the scene
Tuesday for the Tuesday Musical
Club's traditional Opera Night pro-
gram.
Featuring the 8 p.m. affair will
be presentation of popular operatic
selections by club and community
members.
Miss Mary Lack, a ‘soprano
whe recently arrived here from
Germany, will present several
Ukrainian numbers. She has had
training at the Italian Conserva-
tory at Munich and has sung in
Detroit opera presentations.
Other soloists will be Betty
Woldgka and Ruth Mallory. Also
on the program will be flutist
Ellen Purdy.
County Deaths John Oland
DRYDEN — Service for John
Oland, 82, will-be at 2 p.m. tomor-
row at Muir Brothers Funeral
Home, Almont, with burial in Dry-
den Cemetery. He died Tuesday
night in a Flint hospital.
He is survived by his widow
Mary; four sons, William of Al
mont, Steven of Dryden, and Ed-
ward and Chester of Capac; three
Volunteer mothers are being re-| daughters, Mrs. Pauline Drinkhorn,
Mrs. Martha Bowen and Mrs. Helen
Thiemkey, all of Dryden, two
brothers and 11 grandchildren.
ARMADA—Servic
Roy Conger was the A. M. Tiffany Funeral Chapel,
with burial in Willow Grove Ceme-
tery.
Surviving are his widow Ruby;
a son, Robert, at home; and a
Mrs. Shirley Chapoton of Utica: a
sister, Mrs. Bertha Kurntz of Im-
lay City, two brothers, John of
_ Fraser and Fred of Utica and four
ALL OF THE BEST.
IN 1954 FROM
LARRY JEROME ROCHESTER FORD DEALER
“FOR MORE THAN 25 YEARS—A GOOD PLACE TO BUY”
4 OPEN EVES Main Street at the Bridge
it Tt LH |
L. to R. are Pentiae Press Phote
11, Ronnie Douglass, 10, Editor Chuck Mitchell,
12, Ad Manager Jim Bernard, 10, and Assistant
Editor Ned Collins.
Oak's Vinsetta Park district, All the boys live in Royal
Circulation 146 in Vinsetta Park
Enterprising
ROYAL OAK—‘“Mr. Becker -yes-
terday fertilized his gras. They
put around their porch."
Little gems like that enliven the
Vinsetta Park Post, a two-page
mimeographed newspaper put out
by two enterprising 12-year-olds.
The pair, Chuck Mitchell of 1051
Oakridge and Ned Collins of 1224]
Mayfield, editor and assistant edi-
tor, respectively, publish the paper.
Assisting them are Jim Ber-
nard of 1102 Mayfield, Rennie
Dave Newson of 119 Maple Grove
and Howard Schuneman of 1312
Vinsetta Bivd.
Actually, the spelling in the news
tidbits which fill the paper is usu-
ally better—and the thought be-
hind them is pretty steady, too.
Take, for example, this bit of
holiday “Editor's Notebook’ col-
umn:
“We wish you a very happy
Thanksgiving. Don't eat too much
or your holiday will be in bed.
“As you can see you are get-
ting this paper early. We wanted
te have a special addition for
Thanksgiving, and besides that
we would like to have the week-
end off, We hepe you enjoy this
issue.”’
Further down in the same col-
umn, the post issued an appeal
for more delivery boys to handle
its expanding circulation. Boasting
of two youngsters who had just
joined the circulation staff, the
column editorially exhorts:
“They had the courage to take
the job. Why yz you? Just try also-had some pretty stone work
youthful sagacity from the pre-| -
12-Year-Olds
Turn Out Weekly Paper stencils and run it off the mimeo-
graph machine.
“The only hard time we have,”
assistant Editer Collins relates,
“is when the mimeo is in a bad
Along with its society, school
and neigliborhood news, editorial
comment and somé limited paid
jadvertising, the kids’ paper fea-
tures a “Basement Interviews’ col-
umn.
“What are you thankful for this
Thanksgiving,” was the question
posed to young citizens (mostly
staff members) down somebody's
basement (probably Chuck's where
the paper is put out).
Answers were a mixture of child-
ish humor and good ad- fashioned
common sense.
“I'm glad I can have all the
nce alcatel ad
ete “thankful that I ‘live in
America and that -I'’m not under
a dictator’s rule,” said a girl,
Another lad answered: “I'm
thankful that the United States has
Marilyn Monroe!"
Contest in Holly Vote
on Village President HOLLY—The only contest in the
annual village primary on Feb. 15
will be on the office of village
president.
Clare W, Lake, the present in-
cumbent, will be opposed by Worth
Hitchcock, both having filed nom-
inating petitions,
Unopposed candidates are George
Patterson for clerk, Anders 0.
Hustevdt for treasurer, Aubrey
Butler for assessor and George
Three trustees are to be elected,
so this will leave a vacancy to
be filled later.
» | Seek Robbery Clue
ROYAL OAK — Detectives today
continued to search for a clue to
the identity of a man who walked
into the Kresge store at 408 S.
Washington and took $127 from an’ installed
unattended cash register yester-
day.
Auto peavara in Rochester
Wins Ford Sales Honors ing salesmen class, were Merrill ‘EM BER ‘31,
1953
twood
Councit Makes
Cost Agreement Will Lay Storm Pipe |
on First Street; Pay,
Cost to $2,100
ROCHESTER — City councilmen
here this week mapped plans for
laying storm and sanitary sewers
in the proposed Brentwood Heights
Subdivision, located in the seuth- |
west section of Rochester.
The lawmakers agreed to lay a
storm sewer on First street from
Helen to Alice and to pay costs of
the operation up tg $2,100.
They also agreed to pay half
of the cost of laying a sanitary
sewer from the east ling of the
subdivision to an outlet on Quar-
ter Street.
They placed a $1,000 limit on the
agreement and stipulated that the
village be granted an easement
for the sanitary sewer across the
property between Brentwood
Heights and Quarter street.
The Council further stipulated
that future tapping on the sanitary
line would be limited to four per
house. ;
It was pointed out, however,
that the entire plan hinges on sub-
mission of a recordable p‘at, meas-
uring up to village charter re-
quirements, within four months.
In other business, councilmen
granted permission to Rochester
High School's junior class to
paint house numbers on curbs
for a tund raising campaign.
They also granted the Kroger
Gpocery6o. an SDM license trans- | SSSSSSSSSESSSSO
Winding up the meeting, it was
announced that Jan. 18 wag the
deadline for registration in the
coming primary election. Last}
day to file nominating petitions |
has been-setfor Jan..23. Primary
election wil] be Feb. 15 and general
election March 8.
Sky Watchers
Mark Birthday Milford Observer Post
to Hear Selfridge Base
Officer Jan. 5
MILFORD — Lieut. Col. Albert
S. J. Tucker of Selfridge Air Force
Base will speak when
Ground Observers celebrate their
Col, Tucker’s speech on what the
Ground Observers Corps means to
the U.S. Air Defense Command will
highlight a program scheduled for
8 p. m, at Milford’s Presbyterian
Church,
Sky watchers from Onkland
County's other Ground Observ-
ers’ Corps posts are lavited,
Mrs. George Eberie, post super-
visor, says the Milford post was
organized just ofe year ago. Some
115 observers now keep a round-
the-clock watch for enemy or un-
award
work. The Grand Rapids Filter
Center plans to, give the special
award to one of Michigan's 900
posts each month.
Metropolitan Auxiliary
to Install New Officers TOWNSHIP — New } funds.
fer trom 400 N. Main to 153 Main. |}
Milford | ’ Moreh “of Dimes Seeks
$3 Miltion in Michigan
WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN.
| SHIP—Roy Carman, chairman of
the township Marth of Dimes
Drive, which beging Saturday, has
announced that canisters for con-
tributions will be placed this week
in local business places.
He plans to have some benefit
dances to assist in the raising of
Carman hopes to top the $1,000
colleeted last year. James. Dor-
}rance is assisting in the drive
that runs s throughout January.
“Your Sterling Store in Rochester”
Open 9-6 . — Open 9-9 Dewy, Lake Jewelers © ®
309 Main Street Rochester, Michigan
1008 N. Main St. PUEVSIVSSSSIIIISSIISSSG4
195@ t
From...
Eva Bailey
AVON BEAUTY SALON Olive 27-8111
¢ mSSSSSSSSSSSSS $5699555880500000088007.
511 Main St., Rochester “cook-up” for yo ‘
Whetever ‘$4 may
We hope will be “pot-tyll
of of! thet's good im Titer
ROGER B. HENRY Broker and General Sales Agént
= OL 1-911
PONTIAC officers of the Ladies Auxiliary,
Metropolitan Club Spirit 60, will be
installed Jan. 16’ at the Commu- |
conjunction with the men's installa- |
tion.
Officers for 194 are Mrs. Stanley |
Mrs.
nity Club in Auburn Heights in| |
| 330-332 Main Street
OL 2-2121. — OL 1-9642 Special Prices on Floor Somples « - Demonstretors - -
Marked to Go! SUITES! LAMPS! CHAIRS!
DAVENPORTS! TABLES! BEDS! HASSOCKS!
WOOLRICH All Pictured
WOOLENS
BURR i Le A DWARE OCHESTE ri MICH. MUST GO AT
.
SIX. a a
America than in their own coun
tries.
All. seniors at Milford High
School, the three are “amazed” to
find
brated ome day in the United
States.
Betteke Van
‘ , who
PF comes from Hol-
land-{s staying at |
the Carl Hanna |
home. misses the
.’ two-day. c#lebra-
Aion of her people.
The Dutch re-
spect Dec. 25 as
they do Sunday
and religious cer-
Presents and toys are brought
to the youngsters, 2) days before
our Christmas Day, she relates.
“Saint Nicholas’’ fills their wooden
Shoes, which they carefully place
Three candles : . .
three- wishes jor your
year: Good health, a
generous measure of
success and much
happiness to every-
ELISABETH
by lighting a candle in a huge |
one! 11: people
brate
days.
weeks
wreath in the church
Elisabeth says there are no | Dee. 6, rather than our traditional for
_ Foreign Exchange Students at Milford
Find Christmas Much Different in U.S. Christmas trees in this country,
Hollanders use tiny wax candles.
A multiple celebration is had
by the people of Bavaria, Elisa-
beth Tiekert states.
Staying with the
Phil Haddrill fam- |
ily, she says the | “h the } . eae, muc same 85) superintendents will discuss @ pro- of
home city of Co-
burt also - cele-
two
In addition, each
Sunday for four
preceding
Dec. 25, “Advent” | time is celebrated |
Takes Big Posse
& platoon-of police officers, work- |, , . .
men, reporters and passerby | Hyshand, 29, Buries ednesday to round up a deer
that decided to take a look at
downtown Green Bay.
The 150-pound doe first was spot-
ted going through the main gate
.of the Northern Paper Mills plant.
Police were called as the_ invader
jooked the mill grounds over. Then
with officers in pursuit it crossed
the East River, smashing its way | bY he Hace that swept their home
through the ice.
this time a sizeable posse
the deer in full retreat. Offi-
it between a tank and
to. Conduct Watch Night DRAYTON PLAINS — Watch
County Studies '
Teacher Course Sthoo! Superintendents
to Discuss Program for
Relieving Shortage
Oakiand County public school presents in sight hefere Christ-
mas Eve. On the festive night
the presents are placed under
the tree without any of the cob
orful wrappings used here.
Another student from Germany,
| Hellmut Castrop, says Christmas
in his home town, Westphalia, is
Elisabeth's. ‘Hell-| teacher preparation program mut stays with! when they meet in Birmingham on
the Frank Jan. 6.
tons. According to Dean Waldon E.
All night Christ-| Lessenger, head of Wayne Univer-
sity’s College of Education, local
superintendents will be asked to
cooperate in this program which is
designed to help relieve the criti-
cal teacher shortage facing Oak-
lami County and other areas,
Under the program mature
women who have had three or mas Eve is cele-
brated with carol
singing and. much
gay activity. And
their “Kris Krin-
gle” brings the
*hildren's toys on |
HELLMUT
Christmas Eve
Though all were sorry that
Americans only celebrate the one
emonies take day, they agreed that the experi- entry hool
“place through the day and night. to Catch Doe | ence of Christmas here “tre-] seat on & tenevscmns
: - mendously interesting certain- .
ap getty a ol we By Invading Town lhy different than anything” they “We will review this proposal as
she says. There are presents, | GREEN BAY, Wis. ®—It took |°’°r imagined. a eecahent en te hee oe On
candy and usually a goose din- handle our part in this,”’ said Wil-
Wife and 4 Children DETROIT ®—Ross Hurst, 29, sat
paralyzed with grief yesterday
through funeral services in a tiny
church for his 25-year-old wife
Mary and their four children.
His whole family was wiped out center for training these potential
teachers. Lessenger said other
Oakland County spots where the
same program will be conducted
will be designated later.
“We hope this program will
morning. nize the challenge that teaching
Four caskets, all white, held the| can offer,” Lessenger said,
small family. The 9%-month-old
baby, Daniel, lay with his mother.
Patrici, 6, Hazel,.5, and Michael,
2, lay in separate caskets. These
words of conSolation came from
the pulpit.:
“We cannot drive out with words
all the sorrow of your heart—
but this young mother need not
weep in. Heaven for her children.
They are united with her.” |
Hurst was —silent_ through — the
ceremony and later at the burial.
Avon Mails Tax Bills
ROCHESTER — Avon Township
Treasurer Helen Allen announced
today that 11,000 tax statements
| have been mailed to homeowners. “No previous academic or prac-
tical experience in education is re-
quired, but those who participate
must possess al] of the qualifica-
tions of a good teacher, the ability
to learn contemporary teaching
techniques, and be sincerely in-
terested in children and in their
education.”’
State May Insure Billet
LANSING @— The Otter Lake
Children's Billét, owned by the
state but leased for 99 years to
today. of Daughter
Dr., Westacres
MISS MARY KAY IRWIN
Arthur Irwins |
Reveal Betrothal THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
WESTACRES—The engagement
of Miss Mary Kay Irwin to James
C. Marentette was announced this
week -by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Irwin of 7227 Arrowwood
The -prospective bridegroom's
parents are the Louis C. Maren-
tettes of Royal Oak. Before enter-
ing naval service, James altended
c University of Detroit.
Pn a ay — of | The department said preliminary
A summer wedding is planned.
7 Children Hunted
in California Valley
| (Bullet Bounces
StandsMute (Gi Bulr's Head, Hits Bystander
‘on Check Count Mis bystander liott of Traverse City and William
Oak Park Man Accused Moody of Benzonia tried to, shoot
of Passing $675 Check on ee ended
in Detroit | In the local slaughterhouse, El-
5 liott ahd Moody decided on shoot-
“OAK PARK — Standing mute | ing because the bull was too big
before Detroit Recorder's Judge | to be killed by conventional meth-
Frank G. Schemanske yesterday | ods.
was Leonard Schultz, 36, of 23160; Moody aimed the deer rifle at
oe ‘me Schultz, who has been free on out of the line of fire. The bullet
bond since a conviction in March, riccocheted off the bull's head and
1951. was accused of passing a whistled through the air, hitting
$675 check to a Detroit company Elliott in the right shoulder.
in payment for a diamond ring A doctor treated Elliott, while
and watch costing $199, other packing house workers fin-
| Sentenced to two to four years ‘shed off the bull who had not been
lin 1951 for breaking and entering, hurt much by the first shot, except
| Schultz has stayed out of jai for a probable headache,
| through an unsuccessful attempt
to win a new trial and a later
appeal to the Michigan Supreme
~—-
Holding Ex-Convict
on Narcotics Charge DETROIT wW—Recorder’s judge
Frank G. Schemanske ordered ex-
Automobiles 4oday. contain more | :
light bulbs than an average five-| New Year's Eve accidents have
room home. Current models have | been recorded since he placed the convict Joe Rocco, at whose home
‘police recaptured three fugitives from Southern Michigan Prison,
held for trial yesterday on @ har-
cotics charge.
| Bond of $2,000 was tontinued on
Bocco but no date was set for
| the trial.
Police charged they found nar-
| cotics in Roeco’s home when they
| recaptured the figitives in the 13-
the bull's head and Elliott backed | man break from Southern ,Michi-
} gan Prison.
Police Will Run ‘Taxi’
for New Year. Revelers
SARANAC LAKE, N. Y. & +
For the fifth year police tonight
will conduct “Operation Cocktail”
'_« taxi service for New Year's
Eve. revelers.
Chief William Wallace says no
| village police car and @ driver at
the service of holiday celebrants.
Report Record Yule
Mail Handled in ‘53 WASHINGTON ® — Christmas Phone FEderal 3-9350 Court, . j Schemanske set examina-| *" 4verage of 20 lights, and some
‘ion for Jan. 7 and released Schultz *5 ™any as 38.
$500 bond.
Webb's Real Southern Pit Barbecue 2001 Pontiac Road (between Perry and Opdyke)
Real Southern Pit Barbecue. Hickory Smoked Ribs. Chicken and . Sandwiches With Old Time Southern Barbecue Sauce
‘ Orders to Take Out
mail volume advanced to a new
record this year, the Post Office
Department reported today.
from representative post!
off indicated the handling of |
about 4 per cent more mail than
a year ago, when the volume
reached seven billion pieces dur-|
ing the holiday mailing season,
4
4904 Elizabeth Lake Road >
FE 2-6052
Good Neighbor Days
LANSING (UP)—Gov. G. Mennen 2733 Dixie
A
Men., Twes., ° KAMP INN RESTAURANT Highway ‘
Now Opea Under New Management
_ STEAK — FRIED CHICKEN — SEA FOOD
Open New Year's Eve and All Day New Year's Day
Dinner Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Thurs. 6 te 169 — Fri., Get. Sen. € te 19 . OR 3-9091
Secretary of Agriculture Reports
Snow Tire
*Q”’
“Double-Tread” tire ends need
for chains! When mud and snow
knobs wear off, deep sawtooth 6.00xn16 Reg.
$12.35—Now ...
tread remains. 6 months road
hazard guarantee; lifetime guar- |)
antee against defects. 2A8044
, | markets
wardi
{farm operations.
better living for consumers, based! The
Western Auto '° " — supplies of farm products |thus far has been two-fold. Our! iso, we had to deal with a|
Saginaw eS incomes to
reasonable prices This goal calls for plentiful .pro-
‘duction. for domestic and foreign
and for attractive, re-
farm pro
iducers. It calls for better living for ture, We have been,
}farm families in terms of physical) January, developing policies and
comforts, and for greater individ-| programs that will carry us to-|
ual liberty in terms of freedom | ward permanent farm prosperity— |
from government interference with | that will fielp us achieve this | bring our production into line with
It calls, too, for | promise of the future
We can reach this goal if we , lof our farm exports. Prosperity, With Abundant have the needed wisdom and cour-
age. This is the promise the future
holds out to. us. ,
Market at Home
ls Expanding |
Mainly, it is the promise .of | —
larger markets here at home. Our
|nation is growing rapidly. Already
we have a population of 160,000,000, |
and within the-next two decades |
this_total probably will pass |
200,000,000—a 25 per cent increase.
We are growing by more than
2,500,000 a year — approximately 1
EZRA T. BENSON
Secretary of Agriculture
wheat production within the quotas.
a ee ee ' cleat, wo pro-
In the Department of Agricul-
since last
on this in their vote on Dec. 15.
These are definite actions to
| market requirements—a basic need
Administration's problem | in the price situation.
first and most urgent job last
January was to cope with imme.
diate problems and difficulties, es- widespread drought. We have at-
tacked our problems here in five
CUVEE The s ign
of Quality
EAT THE BEST -- EAT AT HOMADE Yes, ‘for good food visit Homode — Pontiac’s finest
cafeterio, lunch ond bokery counter.
CHEF'S SPECIAL: Seturday
Chicken Fricessee on Teo Biscuit . 655
BAKERY DEP
Butter Top Bread
Peanut Butter Cookies
Plain Fried Cakes
Sugared Donuts
Fruit Pies , ee ee ee
Punch made to
‘es
o‘s.e © © ee eee
Wedding—Birthday—Party Cokes to order. Fruit.
order. Bowls ond cups for rentel.
|. 144-146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET ARTMENT
2/35¢
Doz. 39
“eee ee ee ee
sa t} ~
i pecially those involved in the down- | “&*
trend o res sinc a ang f farm pric since early | 5-Pronged Program
In February, 1951, farm prices i
averaged 113 per cent of parity. A for Drought Reliet
year later, they were 100 per cent; We have made hay and feed
of parity—down 13 points A year | available to drought-stricken farm-
|after that, in February, 1953, just | ers.
jafter we took office, farm prices| We have obtained freight reduc-
| were dowh to 4 per cent of parity | tions of 50 per ceut from the rail-
—another six-point drop roads on teed shipped in and cattle
| shipped out of the drought areas. P .
Farmers Buying We have set up an emergency
Power Declines credit program. | , "
Since then the parity retie tiene bought great quantities
farm prices has been relatively ae : We have cooperated in an ag
jstable. But as a result of these de- | in
| clines, the farmers’ net income in = beef merchandising pro-
1953, in terms of purchasing power, —
|was one third less than in 147— | We have used our full resources
end the lowest of any year since
|1940. Businessmen know that the Storage. »
jnonfarm part of our economy can-
| net long be prosperous if the farm
part is on short rations
To cope with our current diffi.
| culties, we have acted on a broad
front te bolster farm prices and
: whelmingly approved” marteting| As’ directed by Congress, we RAE thay: Beem have continued to support prices of
»! a | }
ed “ ’ } vA \ .
Production, Benson's
iF ii i basic farm commodities at 90 per
cent of parity, These supports have
need new tools, better tools, and a i Z
:
| 4 as;
de 2
+P
DANCING
I heartily agree that farm price \ .
OLD DU Join the Party
New Years Eve!
CH MILL 3211 Auburn Ave.
Under New Management—Carl Carmos
New Year's Eve
| FLOOR SHOW! j i 7
i
i . FLOOR
SHOWS! Fri. and Sat.!
DICK KEFGAN
and His i. b= | g
} li ; | i ¢i Come One! Come All! HARMONICA
WIZARDRY ae Dancing to
the exciting |
MUSIC of
ALVIN | if
| t
© Floor Shows
@ Noise Makers
© Favors
T f t : :
:
if .
i ! #3
4
ui sane F
with
NO COVER CHARGE WALLS ORCH.
DANCING te the Music of the New KIM-TONES! a Hats
Ld
Bob Lawson at the Organo!
SEVEN ey,
Scares Thief | Hollywood has been lax in develop- | Movie Gag
ling new stars Monroe is the only |
new ‘adie on the lst, which ts] BRIDGEPORT, Coan, (UP)—A dominated: by male stars of action package store operator, Palmtra
| films and musical comedy. zs | Rodequez, pulled an old movie gag Marilyn Sixt
‘at Box Offices 2=rxSneemns Sey, | 5 Saene Sa et ae j ‘ f - | Esther Williams, Margery Main look now,” she said, “but my hus-
| Percy Kilbride, Gregory Peck, Ava |
| ‘Name Is Only New One Gardner, Clark Gable, Burt Lan-| >and ts coming.” The gunman on Annual List Headed | caster, Jett Chandler, Jane Wy-| ‘ed and fled without bothering
by Gory C - |man, Abbott and Costello, Stewart |‘ notice if anyone was behind
y Vary Sooper \Granger, Jane Russell, Chariton | him. Her husband was nowhere im
, , | Heston, Humphrey Bogart and Rita | “ent. HOLLYWOOD @®—Marilyn Mon- | H
roe, who has won citations from | 4
many Army and Navy units, today Man Wastes No Time
was awarded box office honors too.| The selections of top western w
She was named aniétg the top| stars showed the dearth of horse - Te eet oe ae @—Po-
10 money-makers of the screen, _ | operas for the program market. In| "ce 47° looking year-ald Hollywood's sexjest dish ‘was |former years the top 10 were | state penitentiary prisoner who was
chostm among the winners by the | Chosen. This year only five were | released the other day. They say
'Motion Picture Herald's 22nd an-|>&med. Roy Rogers, Gene Autry. | he stole an automobile one hour | nual exhibitors’ poll, the most ac- | Rex Allen, William Elliott and | after leaving the prison gates.
| eepted in the field. | Allen (Rocky) Lane. Neither NS ee
| Rogers nor Autry, who have shared |
Here are the top 10 in order .. |the one-two position for many |
‘Gary Cooper, Martin and Lewis. years, is now making theatrical
— Ny Tres Ladd, Ren. | films. Both are active in TV.
Stewart, Bob Hope, Susan Hay-
ward and Randolph Scott, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER at\ 1953
New Year's Paper Hats
Noisemakers, Horns
Almost 81 per cent of all vaca- | Piper's Magazi Outlet FRIDAY
Ce et eee eS
New Year's Day
Matinee
STARTS 2 P. M.
On Our New
Giant Screen!
WARNER BROS
HAPPY NEW YEAR—The best for '54, from Tony and Janet
(Leigh) Curtis. Often called one of “Hollywood's most in-love young
marrieds,” these two know for sure whom they'll be kissing when
the clock strikes twelve, New Year's eve, It’s been a happy year for
the Curtises, twice they’ve worked together at the same studios.
TV Fails to Do Vaudeville
as It Was in All Its Glory By CARROLL ARIMOND applause by failing at their best
For HAL BOYLE trick two or three times before
CHICAGO W@-—In the several/ engineering it, the curtain came
years that big time television has| down. The panel of lights spelled
die ok teed tenn out “B” and the show continued.
tries at depicting time vaude-/ at no ti t .
ville as it was in its heyday. me Cos Oe pee
Thousands of dollars have gone) muscle into the act, It told no
into these efforts yet they turn up| jokes. It had no felt hat. It just
on the screen as basically: 1. A| stayed dark, -
master of ceremonies; 2. A song| Television may go to color or
and dance team with straw sailors,|even 3D but will it ever be able BALLANTRAE TECHNICOLOR
Phone FE 5-8331
Prices Mat. 35¢; Eve. Sun. 55¢
Children Always 18¢ :
IWQLIADIA La”
(de de dd
i. 2 oe ee eee & & @ eo fo fo & @ |
“MAN FROM CAIRO” & “CHOST SHIP
BAD MAN”
deol
See aag i
i 2. i a a a a i a a a a ae oe ee ee ee ee oe oe oe a a oe a ae © {ance did the panel of lights try to 2
They co-starred in “Houdini” at Paramount, then went to Universal-
International, (Tony's home studio) where Jane starred in “Walking
My Baby Back Home” with Donald O’Connor, and Tony had the
stellar role in “Forbidden.”
production that today would be/slid at high speed back to the
classed as audience participation. | stage.
That, Mr. Network, was vaude-
ville.
fat Risre 0.8 8 08 88
Keego Theater
Starting Today
Doors Open 6:45
“THE CADDY”
“With Dean Martin and
Jerry Lewis
—ALso—
Bugs Bunny Cartoon
Sear Review After scaring the wits out of
everyone by juggling Oriental
hatchets and knives like beer bot-
tles, this performer tied a small
grooved pillow to the top of his
head, Then, with a parasol in one
hand and a fan in the other, he
walked at a 4Sdegree angle along
rope stretching from the foot-
lights to the balcony,
En_route he faked several mis-
steps and near falls, torturing the
customers in the expensive main
floor seats, Finally, at the end of |
his line, he bent over and planted | his pillowed head on the wire. To)
the accompaniment of a siren
whistle blown by the drummer, he «7
~~
_¥% TONIGHT x
MIDNIGHT SHOW fe RS OPEN AT 11:30
* ON OUR GIANT * |||)
MIRACLE MIRROR SCREEN |\|)|)))
-- The poll points up the fact that! mobile. | tion trips in the U. 8. are by auto- | 5 Aut pond
—LAST DAY—
“BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY” and
“SWEETHEARTS ON PARADE” STARTS
TOMORROW
-HOL. PRICES—ADULTS...80¢ KIDDIES. . .25¢ FEATURE AT: 2:00 ~ 4:50 ~ 7:25 ~ 10:15
SLADE HAD A WOMAN... lithe of limb...bold in heort
...who loved him with all the fierceness of an untamed
animal...byt even as she.-gloried in his strength she knew
thet some day he would be token from her... violently.
Voull Never Fou PLUS: The Bowery Seys in “PRIVATE EYE" —— Shown at 1:00 —- 9:40 — 6:20 — 9:10 F, M.
ee ae
Doors Open at 12:45 P. M.
TOMORROW
YOUR HAPPY HOLIDAY HIT— ON THE WIDE MIRACLE MIRROR SCREEMI
In all great movies there are vital little
things so big in human understanding that
they have the power to move you deeply.
You know that picturés like “Come
Back, Little Sheba,” “Shane,” “Stalag 17”
and “Roman Holiday” are richly endowed
with these qualities. And 80, too, does
“Little Boy Lost” possess the same common
denominator, humanness. It presents Bing
Crosby in his most unusual, most dramatic
role with a unique cast drawn from the best
of the French cinema.
Even more than its successful prede-
cessors, “Little Boy Lost” is bound to be a
motion picture you will never forget!
and now... « PERLBERG-SEATON eacouction
LITTLE BOY LOST
BING CROSBY CLAUDE DAUPHIN FOURCAOE AS THE BOY
RG - DIRECTEO BY GEORGE SEATON
SCREEN BY GEORGE TON M4
-RPNES BY JONNY BURKE © UEC OY JANES VAN NEVER
ADDED: Novelty @ Cartoon @ News Feature At: 1.17 - 3:20 ~ 5:23
7:26. ~ 9:31
* HOLIDAY PRICES
. Adults: 806 — Child 25¢ ROMAN HOLIDAY
eS So
a
oe hae
diesen sn RIGHT :
desk, how }
a little help Cleaning it up?
addition to being untidy, a F person, for example, Fi gee did three or four years £54 od
qj 5:
if
iy ft H if 1
Hit 23 bi BE I
1.29
Reg, Size (¥2-gal.) 2.29};
Economy Size (gal) 3.79
from last year’s and these from
last year’s and these from the one-
receipts, tax returns, important |ot-a-kind papers, such as insurance
and unimportant papers are push- | Policies. discharge papers, equip- ‘ | ment warranties and tax reeords.
The more informal your filing
system, the more apt it is to be
used, Garrett noted. An expand-
can be expen-| '& paper letter file, for example
a venient and accessi-
you owe. him $20 on| be .
He advises using one folder for
In it keep all bills,
receipts,.cancelled checks and tax
“| form duplicates.
Hang on to all U. S. tax data for can you prove you've paid each year,
—— /
ly \ _j7
E asiest
m New Look
Entire Stock Children’s Finer
i off!
STAPP'S Children’s Fashion Center
ig 930 W. HURON STREET
igs Park tree in merchants lot beside Huron Theater) COATS
SNOW SUITS Coats in sizes 2 to 14. Veilvets,
Fleeces and Tweeds included
Snowsuits irom size 2 Weoter-
repellent ond warmly lined
Although tax records are out-
lawed after three years, except
in cases of fraud, Garrett says
the five-year rule gives Uncle Sam
plenty of time to check your re-
turn.
New call a buSinessman, a
banker or lawyer and ask him_
| what your state’s statute of limi-
tations is. That’s so you'll know
how long you should legally trea-
VfbP
Thus you see the color Vertically,
as it will actualy appear and as
the light affects it, on first one
wall and then another.
7 > 7
Mrs. L. W., Jr. “Would I be
making a big mistake to use a
patterned carpet on the stair when |.
the hall carpet is plain? Carpet
in both the living room on one
side and the dining room on the
other is the same as the hall.
“I think to match the stair car-
pet to all this is too much. Would-
n't it be better to vary the mono-
tony with patterned stair carpet
and continue it in the upstairs
hall, which is small and needs dec-
pration?” . :
Ne, you wouldn't be making
a mistake at all by choosing- a
patterned carpet that goes well
ii style and Color with the plain
carpet,
Mrs. C. C. “I have just finished
removing the old varnish from
some old wooden picture frames,
and I like the light color they are
now very much for the pictures
which will go in them. What can
be put on the frames for protec-
tion which will change the color
the least?”
Waxing does change the color
of the wood somewhat but gives
it richness. However, the coating
which will change the present color
of the frames least is water white
lacquer. j Way |nzt,
Owe Popularity
to Hollywood
was cramped by ordinary beds.
when a movie notable of consider-
able stature decided the conven-
tional bed was not for him and
asked to have one specially built
so that he could stretch out his
weary frame all of the way.
Bearing in mind the fact that
sizes are available on special or-
der.
The king-size bed is more of a
} |
eatly in Order
until the next premium notice &r-
rives to make sure there’s been no
loan or finished paying for the
ice box. I add te this list war-
ranties on appliances we've bought.
|King-Size Beds
Here’s how to let the New Year spirit |to dust through your hair in ‘a streak or all) sn
go to your head. These tiny sparkling star|over, A touch of pomade beforehand keeps
twinkles come in gold, silver or multi-color |them in place all evening long. ‘Columnist |
She Aims for Sky,
opie to Stick By
bofty Promises
The whole thing started in 1939
By EMILY. POST
A wife asks this question: “Am
I wrong, Mrs. Post, in thinking my
husband inconsiderate in always
opening mail addressed to me,
especially from my own family,
and reading it before I get the
chance even to see it?
“Not that there is anything in
these letters that I would be afraid
_| to have him see, but it is just the
want to have the righ
Wife Objects to Husband’s Bad Habit
of Opening and Reading, Her Letters principle of it. What fan I do to
make him see the error of his a ringbearer, or ts the ringbearer
Answer: Although the ring bear- .
er is more often a boy, a little | Sage, .&
girl would be very sweet and en- be
serns- B
33:
i
Your health tn °S4 depends on
your sleep .. . so resdive to
call us soon. . . to rebuild
your old. mattress or custom-
make a new mattress to YOUR
Good Luck—Good Health
*i EE tee i * gc% erg i biivize
3
ts E
+ i
Poet i iu ye i
i ids
| Ce tlir.s
itt 3
:
ie ag Fi
‘
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hE
;
i} AH sty Me Feil a
28 Peiirbipena
gees paint peepee rat Laser
i Z
Eeitigee
S55555SSS5SHHSSSTSTS
$5555555555059 2 ES specifications.
2 New Custom-Mede Mattresses
Pillows Renovated
Old Mottresses Rebuilt (one dey service)
Oxford Mattress Co. 332 West Huron Street
Fh) eR ce
® Y ‘ | | :
( ej. i) een oe
is ape inateatee Nee ce iene rae GP <
os
$4999999996
By MAUDE DONAHUE
The new year will be welcomed
in Pontiac this evening as friends
gather for traditional open houses
and parties,
“Nineteen fifty-four will find other
season an occasion for the visit
of family members from other
parts of the country. * “a Bd
Cocktalls at the Charles H, Al.
Year’s Eve. From there guests
will travel te the Charlies D.
Scribner home on Ottawa drive
for the entree and the Jack
Strait home on Mohawk road
for Getesert, Dr. and Mrs. Reb.
ert Lyons will host the party
afterwards at their Oneida road
home, r | E SUSE
F
i
i
Fi ef A , j hie isi i i
; ek
z
| ; o
& § i
Z a month-old John. Mr, Cvengros is tona Beach, Fis., are Caroline |
joining them for New Year's
and another daughter, Janie, is
home from Michigan State College.
. ¢ & Muecke and her niece,
Matteson, both of Lakeland road will welcome the new year |
with Mr. and Mrs: George Mor-/|
row, the Peter Metes' and Dr.
and Mrs. Edward Collins, whom
. | they will entertain for the evening. |
Charles Delbridge of Grosse |
With happy memories of the first Christ-
mas in their new-home, Sandra (left) and
Roberta Herrmann reluctantly take down
their Christmas tree in preparation for a
new year, They are the daughters of the
William L. Herrmanns of W oodbine drive./ Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bedard
Menfolk Plan Celebration Tonight |
Stoneycroft to Be Scene of Festivities
BIRMINGHAM — This New have been living éince their mar-, Bill's flance, Nancy Holmes of Niet il Fs
2 ; Ir
Birmingham.
| are entertaining for the immediate The bride-clect’s parents, Mr.
family New Year's Day.
Invitations have been issued to
about 40 to honor the bride at
an afternoon tea and shower on and Mrs. William Holmes of Lima,
Ohio, and their son, William Jr.,
willalso-be- introduced. They are
visiting here for the weekend with
the Sproulls. The engagement was
announced last fall.
rome Tone III arrived Monday eve-|+. st Petersburg, Fia.
ning from Buffalo to visit her They will spend about six weeks
family, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh White-| there with the two Winfree chil-
“i: , aS ee . 4 .
whe eA a. Se ee roo ae) ‘ Be gs Ne aero. aa.” jand Mrs. William J. Barnds of THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
-
1 | | Pointe and his fiancee, Maxine}
Appel of Commerce road, will at-
tend the subscription dinner-dance
at Northwood Inn. This dinner-
dance has become «a three-year tra-
dition with subscribers.
- . 7
~ Mr, and Mrs, Richard Dough-
erty of Berea, Ohio, with their
daughters, Pam and Linda, are
wisiting the Richard Doughertys
on Henderson street and the Hel-
lis Browns on Exmoor road, for
the holidays,
cd a 7
Mr. and Mrs. William Barnds
of Delaware drive. are hosts to
their son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
Arlington, Va., and their son, John.
—_ Barnds is also at home on
vacation from Princeton University
where he is a student.
i: - .
Capt. and Mrs. H, B. Dickie of
Mather AFB in Sacramento, Calif.,
are in town for the holiday. They
are visiting their parents, the H.
B. Dickies of West Huron streof-
and the Carl Hunters of South East
boulevard, and will remain until
next week.
. 7 *
Kay Lazio, classmate of Shelia
Bails at Marywood Academy in
Grand Rapids, will be a special
guest this evening when the N.
H; Baltees of Marquette street
hold their annual New Year's
Eve open house. Kay is visiting
for the holidays. * *« *
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McDonnel
of Old Orchard Trail are enter-
taining a small gathering of family
and friends for an eggnog party
New Year's Day - * = *
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Eames of |
Pike street will entertain their
usual New Year's Eve guests for
bridge, and special guests will be
friends from Cambridge, Mass.
* *« @
The Norman Buckners of Pine
Lake will attend a dinner party at
the Park Shelton Hotel in Detroit
as part of their New Year's Eve
celebration.
“e- @ ©
Mrs. Edward Koepel of Hough-
ton is spending the holiday with
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. M. F. Macaulay of
Motorway drive. Strains of ‘Auld Lang Syne’ Will Greet. New Year Area Merrymakers Will Usher In 1954 With-Parties Tonight
meadow,” while Mr. Wilson played host to} of the navy.
the ‘officials, Photographed today with Mrs. ‘ Mrs. C. E. Wilson (center) was hostess| Wilson were Mrs. W. J. McNeil (left), wife
this week to several wives'of Defense De-| of the assistant secretary of defense, and
partment officials at her home, “Long: | Mrs. R. B. Anderson, wife of the secretary Pentiae Press Phete
Ceremony Held Wednesday
White Shrine Initiates 10 In a special ceremony Wednes- | and on the table and curds com-
day evening Pontiac White Shrine | mittees are Mrs. Victor Badamer
initiated 10 new members at Roo-| and Mrs. Nita Payne. Mrs. Gilpin
sevelt Temple in the presence of| has charge of refreshments, and
135 members and guests. Mrs. Katherine Quick, Mrs. Irene
Distinguished guests introduced| Marian and Mrs. Wayne Scott
included Mrs. Richard Streiter of| have charge of prizes. Mrs. Al-
Royal Oak, worthy high priestess; | fred Martini may be contacted for
Mrs. Don Thompson of Royal Oak, | tickets, .
noble prophetess; Mrs. Kenneth
Spitier of Wyandotte, worthy high I
one of Wrandotte Srine 0: FE. r ed H all F eted
" Spitier, watchman of the . .
Me Sr ake Davey Gilpin de |ON His Birthday
trict deputy. Mrs, Fred Hall of Birmingham
Shrine were introduced, as well Among the guests were the
as guests from San Diego, Calif, | James Chamberiins, Mr. and ve
Pontiac Whtte Shrine drill team :
Ont., Mrs. Bedard's cousin, was
guest of honor.
for the holidays from Barbour Hall -| presented Mrs. Lloyd Wait, worthy | Leonard Walshes, the
high : a jeweled head | chkes and the junior Fred Halls. |
crown
arinttiated eto oni Mr. wna ure. | ive Lingerié s . Mrs. ¥ ,
J.D. Looms, Glen Nnn'care,| Correct Care
er ®
; red :| Mrs Berniece Cober poured. most satisfactory wear from them.
¢ eT —e be held J “" a lao 6 Oe eee Dee ae companied her mother, Mrs,} Christies to hold an open | party to an. it is allowed to rest between wear-
penied by , | Roosevelt Temple, She appointed | ings Therefore, it is more eco
committees with Mrs, E. J. Ziem | nomical to buy two girdles
Mrs. Earl Ross is cochairmat, | set In fact, it would be wise Military Academy.
if 3 é ai
be 1: |
3 | & :
SS Nancy Morse Becomes |e wis sa ce to rs.
Bri j i j Rite | st te wash tne garments tre
| from Derby, N. Y. Adjourning to) tored to California to spend Christ- Bride in Birmingham quently; this ts important
ag "| day afternoon in the First Meth-
children, Larry and Sharon, ac-| dist Church. Nancy mae saeews,
M9 HAIR BEAUTY
HS cola Waving 2 Spectalty | invest in a third set. That
you wit! have one to wear,
tron of honor and bridesmaids were wearing.
Carol Woodward of Wheaton, Ml.
Joanne Ruhkel and Julle Kelley of | Coming Events
length frocks of deep blue taffeta public installation of of
of white flowers matched wreaths
Mrs. James Cross, Mrs. LOY) Pyoper care of foundation gar
White and Mrs, Lena Sparks. - | ments is just as imvortant as prop- LOU-MOR ‘ = ee EXPERT
CLOCK &
WHTCH REPAIR »
45 South Saginaw il
and
as chairman. two brassieres rather than just one
to A Bright Prospero} New Year to All *
From
3 N. Saginaw St,
Her sister, Mrs. John R. Milll- | ™um wear, you should wash your
gan Jr. of Canton, Ohio, was ma- bras an girdles after every other
Birmingham. tte. | panes Redenan Lodge 480 will meet
They all wore strapless waltz- Pridey 96 9 p.m. in Be bel 01 6 Fork.
with shrug jackets. Their bouquets | Womens Literary Cie, will meet
; was best man and Robert Coffey,
Trego Prindevelle and Harry Pratt
brother of the bride, were ushers.
A reception was held at the Mildred Webster, Owner
* Leonard Baldassert-ot- Chicago | - Fine Quality PERMANENTS Complete Hatr Styling
of Chicago and James Morse, MODERNE BEAUTY SHOP
Ruth Hoskins—Manieurist ___ FE #-se33 Park Shelton Hotel in Detroit, For || S12 Pentine State Bank Bldg.
; _ |her southern wedding trip the bride ——
me ao aoa J "> g er 1 | Wore a gray suit and matcting
et met eves Ot awe ee your a o ,
flare up, don't wear a bluish-pink Concert Postponed blue-red cheek rouge or citek. Taboo the bite that exag-| . The first concert of the Pontise
gerates blemishes Symphony Orchestra original
“Cut out piece of advice and ly scheduled for Jan. 5 at Lincoln
ghow it to the mother who is sure | 7utlor High School has been post-
that the best shade of lipstick for | Poned until further notice.
that Bem Boe ar is a 1” gays a ANTED
Choose pink shades of lipstick W
ond rouge with a coral tone pref 3 Experienced donvinant. Red shades are also per- ;
missin'« provided they are clear. TYPISTS
fresh and free of blue undertones. A ith
If a teenager needs to wear a or anent position
|makeup foundation to. mask biem- | in Bloomfield Hills near
jishes, the shades that will best commuter stop.
} baffle out the bigs tinge of acne Geod Working Conditions!
as Good Pay!
cream range. chosing Call Mi 6-1184 for Appointment
For Glorious
eo a
SALE! BUSKINS FLATS
Reg. $4.98
’
“% Paik oe ae Sei te
Pe
‘Year 1953 Brings 7" ‘olor to
>-Today's Television Proarams-- Industry Facing
Castine! 2—WIBK-TV Channel 4—WWI-TV Channel 1-—-WXYZ-TV
TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS by prison sentence. (2)—| 12:30—(7) Stars on Seven. 2)—
Playhouse. Dan| Big Town. Steve Wilson witnesses | Tomorrow's Search.
in “Cruise to Colombo,” | dank robbery 12:45—(2) Guiding Light.
| Love-arid to Cherish.” wife de-
cides between husband and other
man on New Year's Eve.
10:30— (4) —Michigan Outdoors.
Mort Neff; film. (2)—"I -Led
Three Lives.” Richard Carlson
that causes trouble. as counterspy for FBI
7:38—(7)—The Lone Rapger. “In-| 11:00 (7) —Soupy’s On. Soupy
dian Charlie,” poses as gang| Sales host to Leo Diamond. (4)
member to get evidence for| —News. (2)—News,
sheriff. (4)—Dinah Shore. Pope | 11:15—(7)—Motion Picture Acad-
lar ballads. (2)—News. Doug Ed-} emy. Madeleine Carroll in’ “High wards. ° Fury.” (4)—Story of Time. Film.
:—(0—News Caravan. John (9)—Featurette.
Cameron Swayze. (2)—Jane Fro- | 11:39—(4)—Watch Night Service.
man Show, Favorite songs. Religious. (2)—Farewell to ‘53. 8:00—(7)—Quick As.a Flash. Faye! Celebration,
Emerson, Jimmy Nelson; audi-
ence participation. (4)—You Bet FRIDAY MORNING
Your Life. Comedy quiz with | 7:90—(4) Today. Groucho Marx. (2)—Life With | g:e0—(7) W. M. Kelly.
Elizabeth. Betty White and Del | 9:90— (4)— Playschool. (7)—Play-
More in comedy. house. _
8:38—(7)—Where's Raymond. Ray | 9:45—(2) News. .
Bolger gets surprise New Year's | 19:08—(4) Ding Dong School. (7)
Eve Party in new apartment.| Wixie's Wonderland. (2)—Jack
(4)—T-Men in Action. Treasury; Paar Show.
men track down crime. (2)—/ 16:30—(4) Glamor Girl. (2)—For-
Four Star Playhouse. Ida Lupino| tune Wheel.
in “House for Sale,” house hunt- | 11:¢0—(4)—Hawkins Falls. (7)—
ing wife encounters murder. TBA.
$:00—(7)—Motor City Fights. Ken | 11:15—(4) Three Steps to Heaven.
_Hammer vs. Stanley Mylinski | 11:39—(4) The Bennets. (2)—Strike
| It Rich.
11:45-—(4) Follow Your Heart.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
12:00—(4) Bride & Groom, (7)—
Comics. (2)—Valiant Lady.
12:15—(2)—Love of Life. (4)—Rose
Tournament 1:00—(2) You're What You Eat.
1:30—(2) Garry Moore Show.
1:45—(7)—Sugar Bowl. (4) — Cot-
ton Bow! Game.
2:00—(2) Double or Nothing.
2: 30—(2)—Houseparty.
3:00—(2)—Big Top.
4:00—(7)—Turn to Friend. (2)—La-
dies Day.
4; 30—(4)-—Sports
Feature Theater.
Colt.
4:45—(4)—Rose Bow! Game. (T)—
Auntie Dee.
6:30—(2)—Kartoons. (7) — Rootie
Kazootie.
5:45—(7) Weather. (2)—Spérts.
FRIDAY EVENING
6:00—(7)—Detroit Deadline.
Rocky King.
6:15—(7)—Sports. (2)—Featurette.
6:30—(7)—Ramar. (2)—News.
6:45—(2)—Weatherman.
7:00—(7)—Range Riders. (2)—De-
troit This Week.
7:156—(2)—Featurette.
7:30—(7)—Stu Erwin. (2)—News.
7:45—(4) News. (2)—Perry Como.
8:00—(4) Dave Garroway. (T)—
‘Ozzie and Harriét, (2)—Mama.
8:30—(4) Life of Riley. (7)—Play-
house. (2)—Topper.
9:00—(4) Big Story. ‘(7)—Family
Pride. (2)—Playhouse.
9:30—(4) Soundstage. (7)—Come-
back. (2)—Our Miss Brooks.
10:00 — (4) — Sports. (7)—Chev.
Showroom: (2) — My Friend Hi-Lites. (2)—
(7)—Cowboy
()—
Irma. 10:36—(2) City Detective.
19145—(4) Fights.
A1:00—(4) News. (7)—Soupy’s On.
(2)—News. —
11: 15—(4)—“Rasslin’"’. (7) — Mo-
tion Pic. Academy. (2)—Theater. .
-_
- Today's Radio Proarams - -
Programs furnished by stations fisted in this colume are sub ject to change without aotice
rv. OO CRELW, (see) ww, a WOAR, (119% wxrzZ, cre WIBK, (1400)
Tonrtont WXYZ, Gaxon Mote! 11 0—W Make Up Miné 6:45—WJR, Curt Massey
CKLW. Phil McKellar ww y Be Pa CKLW, News
- MeKens FRIDAY MORNING CKLW. Queen e Day
WIR. arm forum 19:46—WR, Recemary ‘ ah-> agen
Quartet CKL — Lh ss De ee Cr Ww, } * WwW. News ow Wendy Warren . ven WJBK, Rise “& Ghine Cxiw. Gur Massey JBK! Horsemen
. Chass 4—WWS News pat : —... 6:15—WIR, Clark Quartet
: ~ WXYZ, Pred Wolfe WJBK, Den a WXYZ, Lee Smits
6:20—WIR : WCAR. News CKLW.. Eddie Chase wae Be Pettey ew Dick Burris 5 ¢: WIR, Bod Reynolds
WIRE Horsemen Pred Wolte Ce, Gap scans WXYZ. McKentie
6:43—WIR, L. Thomas a wows, Davis Geax: Austin _ - ™ ¢:43—WJIR, Lowell Thomas
7:15—WIR, Muste Hall
SS we WKYZ, Dick 12:38 WIR, Helen Trent WXY2, Bill Stern wate Stern Weeyws Listen wate’ ee ow. Funen Levis uy. Lewts Pred Wolfe W. Year Bey Bes owe George CKLW, Austin Orant po Den McLeod T:S—WXYEZ, Show World : , D WJBK. Gentile, Binge WCAR. Club 1130 CKLW. Guy Nene
SARE Sher eon by tg 12:45 WIR. Jack White . |} CRLW. Tobs Dania WEYR, Ceres 1.20 WIR Family Skeleton » aR, Skeleton | 6:00—WIR, Jack White LW. Your Bey Bud News 3 an heotty WW, New Year , a= WXYZ." Lone pat 34) : Bpace WXYR, Dick CKLW. Gabriel Heatter Ww. Heatter cuLw. news, Cord FRIDAY AFTERNOON 1:43—WIR, Ba erree
JBK, News, oo , eg tees rents WEAR. News. Coffee ‘Wg Mews iumotond | Ent,’ perry ‘come
apie Ob WIR. Bud Quest CRLW: Austin. Grane pecan lames 0:00 WIR. Meet Mtiite SELk Sale Wem © WJBK, Tom $:00—WIR Mr Keen WCAR. News, Clu’ WWJ, Dinah Shore 3 City By-Line 6:3%8—WIR, Music Bat £188, » CKLW, Theater
W. Official ve WCAR, Messenger, Lady pay je poretne WXYZ. Byline
o:15—WKYZ, Gammy Ka: " . & WJBK, News. George
y Rave | 8:45 —WCAR Revive) 1:38 WIR, Dr Malone 8:15—WWJ, P. Sinetre 020 WIR. Town Meeting. WXYZ Breakfast Clud WWJ. Cotten Bow! WXYZ Sammy Kaye cane Vether Knows 200—WIR, New WXYZ, News, McBride g W, Crime Fighters WW). News CKLW. Your Boy Bud O00 OSR. Ceormente
YZ. Music WXYZ, Greakfast Chup WIBK, Tom George - . ope
WIBK. Hockey CKLW. Musical Airs WCAR. News. Club MXYR Band of tne Oay w . Take @ Number
OG—WETE, Vendercost WCAR. Nowe, Marche 1:45—WJIR, Orange Bow!
ww
CKLW 9.15..WJR. George Morgan WXYZ. Sugar
Bob Maxwell tone Your
QOeabriel Heatter WIBK Bow!
WCAR, News, Chub
Tom George 6:456—WXYZ Vandercoos
9:00 WW). Pht Barris
WXYZ, Ossie & Harriet
CKLW Ford Theater Boy Bud
9:38— WR, mCarthy WIR. Mre Page 20
WW, Bddie Cantor WWJ, Here's the Answer ‘Soun in Daal Boy Bud ae bf TE iy aes
CKLW. Sounding Board CKLW, Good Neighber Club per
wir > a Jos 2:43—WCAR, Clud 1130 9:48—WWI, House of Glass
WW. Finder MecGce caw i euscies 3:00—CKLW, News, Plano 10:00— WIR. Choraliers
on oe s WCAR, WN b
CKLW. F. Edwards WCAR Temple Academy pat : jews, Rhythm fs ha De
MIL -WEY2, Top of Town | 10:60 WIR. Arthur Oodtrey _ . . W. Eadie Chase CKLW. Prank awards WW. Top ° Wi, Weleome Traveler -WJBK, Don McLeod :
WXYZ, Hotel Edison WxYR, barre F Bae CKLW. Freddy Martin CKLW.,
WJBK, 16:38—WIR, Wieard of Odds
WW. Jane Pickens
WKYZ, News, Dinner
CKLW. Ray Girardin WCAR
WWJ, TBA 10:3 WWJ Bob Hope 1043—WIR. Ge w Toer WXYZ Whispering Streets nt Bf McKenste
WRYZ, Pre-Game Dinner CKLW 1¢:18—WCAR. Tempte My True Story 4:00—WIRK.- News
News Homechate WCAR, News. Mu
Bob Murphy
News, Temple
4:%—WJIR_ Countr
Mary Morgan +: WCAR, Sports CKLW. Hollywood Date
10:38-——WIR, Wisard of Odds
WWJ, Listen Washington
CKLW WNewe
WXYZ, Edwin C. Hil
16:45. WJR, Bevian
CKLW Quiet Sanctuary
WXYZ. Muste McLeod
ate
y Twhes
CKLW. Organatres WCAR, Harmony Hall ¢45.WWJ. Rose Bow!
11:08 WIR. News 10:43 WWJ. Break the Bant | Gean Don Ridier Ww, News, Roth WW. News WXYZ. Girt Marries awe WXYZ, News WXYZ, In Bermude CKLW Mary Morgan 6:08 WIR, News CKLW. Van ures Z )
a ° a ‘
WJBK. News 11:00—WW), Strike It Rich cae. peers Chen Senne a 13:15—WIR, Dance Party SAG Gen pne WJIBK. News McLeod "ws Laures Pert r ure’s y Sree eet Mare WJBK Dea Mcleed 6:18 WIR, Music Hall WXYZ Top of Tows CKLW Manhbsttean Musie 5:38 —WXYZ News, McK —_—
1 .38—WWJ, Laure CKLW 1:13 WXYZ Giagie’s Party CKLW, Wild Bul News
Army Tries Out
Reserve Plan New Vets in Six States
to Get Assignment but
Also Slashed Time
WASHINGTON ®—Draftees who!
get out of the Army in tw next
six months in six selected states |
will have time clipped off their ob
ligatory reserve status because the
Army wants to try an administra-
tive experiment.
Beginning tomorrow and extend-
ing through the first half of 194, ized unit or doesn't, a draftee liv
ing in New Jersey, Pennsylvania
Georgia Texas, Wisconsin or
Washington will have one year cut
off the six-year obligatory active
reserve status required under the
draft, act
That doesn't apply to draftees
in the other 42 states and the terri-
tories. The six states were picked
by the commanders of the nation’s
| six Army areas, each of which in-
clude severa] military districts or
states
What the Army wants to find out
primarily, is how the experimen-
tal system would work nationwide. |
Essentially. it is an exercise in
mobilization administration. Sec-
ondarily, the Army hopes that at
least some of the released draftees
actualiy will take interest and re-
port for periodic training.
Fun in Mathematics
Shown to Rotarians
NORTH BRANCH—A demonstra-
tion of the fun to be gleanéd from
mathematical studies. ii
strated by Albert Stickle. - high
school teacher, highlighted the pro-
gram of the Rotary Club this week.
Mary Ellen Kennédy,. Barbara
Tatar and John Currel were sub-
jected to tests by their instructor.
Superintendent
oo ki ee aes WJBK. Bod Murphy
Wesley Clayton sed 11:28— WIR WXYZ; Sports
Sacred Indian
Oath Protects
Mother-in-Law
LODGE GRASS, Mont. w — A
white man who participated in an
Indian ceremony was under sacred
oath today never to exchange
words or glances with his mother-
in-law
The oath carries a lifetime guar-
antee
It took a Crow Indian gdoption
ceremony to do the trick. Eric
Stainton, a Kentucky beverage
company official, became the first
white man adopted by the tribe in
i five years yesterday at a pre-New
Year's rite of the tribe's War
Dance Society.
The society held the ceremony
as part of a four-day jamboree
headdress and beaded moccasins
on Stainton. They symbolized
Stainton would be cared for by
his tribal parents and that he, in
turn. would assume the duties of a
One of the duties, listed high on | Midnight Muste
Indians’ list of social protocol, | New High Costs Has Tool - Up Problem,
Must Still Sell Sets in
Black and White ~
By WAYNE OLIVER
NEW YORK «—The year 1953 | brought the dawn of color to tele-
| vision along with a trebling of
stations and an increase of 642
million sets in. use,
The coming year 1954 holds
probably a rosier ouflook for
viewers: and listeners than for
broadcasters and set makers,
The TV viewer, for ° instance,
can look forward to further im-
black and white set at
price yet if he needs
possibly a color set late
if he is willing to pay
$1,500 for a 14inch model
programs a week in color,
TV stations and networks, on
ths other hand, face the tédious
and expensive problem of equip-
ping for color and starting to
produce the more expensive
Manufacturers have the task of
trying to sustain sales of black
and white sets, on which the bulk
of their business will depend for
the next few years, while tooling
up for production of extremely
complex and expensive color mo-
dels. .
But formal approval of color
standards by the Federal Com-
munications ‘Commission on Dec.
17, to take effect Jan. 22, brought
a prompt start by set makers on
color models.
They varied widely on prob-
able production for the coming
year, estimates ranging from
50,000 to 200,000 color sets —
but in any event hardly more
than enough to provide demon-
country.
CBS and NBC began limited
color teleéast ot regular pro-
grams, with tions they would
operate for the first few months
on rotating schedules until all
their programs had been seen in
color. ABC and Du Mont promised
to start limited color schedules
sometime in 1954.
But the owner of a black and
white set has little to worry about
since the color telecasts will be on
compatible standards — that is,he
can get them in black and white
on his present set.
The year 1953, meanwhile,
probably was TV's biggest since
it got under way on a com-
mercial basis at the end of
World War Il.
As the year began, 120 stations
were in operation and more than
240 more came on the air, with
new ones starting up at the rate
of nearly one a day as the year
closed. *
NBC estimated 21,234,000 sets
were in use’ at the start of the
year and its figures through Nov.
1 were running 6,600,000 ahead of
a year ago, indicating a year-end
total of better than 27‘, million.
Death Discloses
3 Marriages,
No Divorces
PHILADELPHIA (*—His “‘rou-
tine investigation’ following the
| death of a 64-year-old Philadelphia
jtruck driver has had “
ments,"’ reports Albert Rosenblatt.
The developments are ‘three
marriages and not a sitigle di-
voree,”” . ,
The truck driver, Samuel John-
son, died last week.
| Rosenblatt, special deputy inves-
|tigator for the city health exam-
iner, identified widow No, 1 as
Mrs. Mary Johnson of Greenville,
S. C.. and widow No. 3 as Mrs.
| Inez Johnson of Philadelphia.
The first woman married John-
|son in 1913 and the Philadelphia
|}woman became Mrs. Johnson in
1943
And, according to Mrs, Mary
Gary, a sister of the deceased,
| sometime between the two mar-
riages came Mrs. Orrie Dodson
| Johnson. Her whereabouts, Rosen-
blatt said, are. unknown.
Send Doctor's Killer |
fo lonia Hospital DETROIT «*—The man who shot
a nationally-known heart specialist
because he didn't like doctors has
been committed to the care of
| Recorder's Judge W. McKay
| Skillman yesterday ordered the
| commitment of John Sherback, 51-
jyearold killer of Dr. Edward
Spalding Nov. 30, to the Ionia State
Hospital for the Criminally Insane.
J
The Detroit
| while, awarded
who trailed Sherback.
job
i fie: fie ~ A z , two policemen and pointed
out to them.
TV, 4
which he could get—five or six]
stration samples around the — ‘ }
___ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953 |
paper hats is the entire Arnaz fa WAITING FOR '54—Complete with noise: makers, confetti
for midnight—and 1954. Mom Lucille Ball
let small fry wait up for the magic hour.
(left) and sister Lucie Desiree seem well prepared for the event.
Parents are stars of TV’s award-winning show, “I Love Lucy.” , waiting in
and Pop Desi Arnaz
Chubby Desi Arnaz
BOSTON ® — Meteorites bean
sOmeone on earth only once every
350 years on the average—and now
it looks as though one has struck
a guy who was wearing a tin hat!
This, indication of how times are
getting even.tougher for meteorites
came out in a talk before the
American Assn. for the Advance-
ment of Science, whose 120th meet-
jing ends today.
Dr. H. HY Nininger of the Ameri-
can- Meteorite Museum, Sedona,
Ariz., reported that a tiny object
having all the external earmarks}.
of a meteorite had struck a con-
struction worker ‘“‘on his tin hat’’
after first richocheting off a drill-
ing rig. = >. o
At ‘east, said: Nininger, that's
135 Reds Asking
for Repatriation Indians in Korea Talk
at Year End
By JOHN RANDOLPH
PANMUNJOM (®—Indian troops
made a year-end head count of
Chinese war prisoners in their cus-
tody today and 135 of the 4,385
checked asked to return to Com-
munist China.
An Indian spokesman empha-
sized that the count was not a
screening and did not substitute for
interviews, which ended Dec. 23.
| ‘The 135 of 4,38 tally was about | the
oui
iu : t
Meteorites Don't Often Hit
Man, Much Less Tin Hat
With Chinese Prisoners | A
4 ~~ 5
bEy g
2
; ;
ae oe (Editor's note: This ts the fourth
Of « series Gf uncensored and reveal-
Rt BR a
the Soviet Unien.)
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
Soviet Communists have a ready
Rules, but No Curb on
McCarthy Expected - In i
; : f
; i
Bg sf Be i pli
All the definitely identified iron
ered on earth so far, he said, have
con-
“bean-ball” is
iron theteorites which have hither-
to escaped attention.
af s
3
ues vie i! ere |
i i Ist : |
they have occurred, have | of any move’ t , among Re i
to limit. McCarthy's activities. He
meteorites that have been recov iat Follows
His Nose to
/ With Trebling of Stations
= ‘Commies Find ‘Answers’
-» |to Every West Accusation
Such as Poverty,. Religion there is an unique explanation.
They are all “professionals.
Some of these “professional”
| beggars looked miserable. A young
‘mother in Stalinabad, capital of
AP Foreign News Analyst — ‘the Tadjik republic, sat on a curb,
nursing _—There was
agony in her face as she cried
x * aS
But many of the beggars are
the halt, the blind, the infirm and
the aged. They gather pitifully few
kopeks from passing crowd, even
near the churches:
It seemed impossible to get any
accurate information on why these
In Kiev, capital of the Ukraine,
beggars, men women,
swarmed about the entrance to
Andreevsky, Cathedral, still in
operation as a place of worship.
They haunted the Lavra, the an-
cient Ukrainian seminary in the
heart of Kiev. I saw tottering old
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Ht TWELVE _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
Sullivan Award Army Major in Korea
Wins Easily Over Field
of Eight Athletes
Lee, twice an Olympic platform |
champion but inactive all |
is the 1953 winner of the | |
Olympics.
Charles Capozzoli of the New
York Athletic Qub, a distance run-
ner, ranked 3rd.
James McLane of Yale, an out- eid |
Hf Hi : : i e
5 ;
i j ag
In the 8th game of the season
against lowa State, O'Neal threw
two passes. The result: two Oak-
touchdowns
After that game Wilkinson paid
attention to the 176-pound
December, in practice for the
Orange Bowl game, he let O'Neal
run the Ist string almost as much
as the regular quarterback, Gene
Calame.
Wilkinson himself said he was
trying to develop an seria) attack
to use against Maryland, in fear
that coach Jim Tatum’s Terrapins ,,
might bottle up his ground attack.) “presccaaup G Maryland had the nation's best
rushing defense average, allowing
its opponents only 83.9 yards a | MeCerry, ¢
ing a punting drill when a line-
man fell on his chest, An examina.
tion disclosed a shoulder -bone
separation.
Jersey Numbers
for MSC, UCLA PASADENA, Calif. #—
be televised nationally
CLA 15 Brewn, bd
1® Villeeeevs, bd
zs Big.
Van Dyke Five
Year for _.. By JACK SAYLOR |also added the state PGA title
Walter Burkemo among the | at-Lakepointe. Snead returned to
fessionals, Roy Iceberg, Mike An-| Oakland County to equal Bloom-
dqnian and Lloyd Syron in the/ field Hills Country Club's course
amateur ranks — thosewere the | record with a 64 in an exhibition.
foremost names on the Oakland leeberg, Joe Kocsis, Carl Dan:
| County golfing front in 1953, lels and Gene Woodard quall-
Another big year locally Was! tied trom the area for the Na- highlighted by the National PGA tional Publinx at Seattle, Wash.
leeberg gained the 3rd round and
[Z j
Kocsis. the 4th, Woodard had
paced the qualifying at Morey’s
with 64409 — 133,
Iceberg. the former UD player.
also went to the finals of the De-
troit District tourney before bow-
ing to Bob Babbish at Meadow-
brook.
“ the best ball crown, edging Hard- Andonian won the City Medal
Play test for the 3rd straight time,
while Edith Wright took the wom-
en's title.
In other city tourneys, Glen
Harding and Betty Lou Syron took
the mixed two-ball foursome and
Stan Savage and Bob Boles won
ing and Tom Thum in extra holes.
Young Syron was the sensation
of the national caddie tournament
at Columbus, 0, unti] he bowed
in his quarterfinal match.
He had gained an alternate’s
position in the state meet, held
at Pontiac Country Club and
made the Columbus trip when
Bill Morgan, winner at POC, de-
cided to play in the U, 8, Jay- cee tourney.
Pontiac's Jaycee tournament was
held at Tam O'Shanter and was
won by Bill Sample with a 74.
In other tourney’s Tom Draper
and Bob Whiting won the Pine
Lake Ipvitational, Babbish and’
Chase Morsey took the Orchard
Lake Invitational and Al Krol and
John Kurach won the Powers
Memorial. .
Pontiac Country Club was leveled
by a $250,000 fire in April, but
the clubhouse was quickly replaced
and golf activity was not interrupt-
ed. ~—_——
——_
ee ee er
. *
>
- BURKEMO- ICEBERG
tournarhent at Birmingham Coun-
BAND ON COAST—Michigan
—. &
. ee
State College
band, 129 strong, arrives at Los Angeles for the| group formed and gave an impromptu concert to
Rose parade and the Bow! game, representing the | the delight of many State rooters on hand to greet
Big 10 Conference. Immediately upon arrival, the | them.
United Press Phete \ a
One Scribe’s Choices
“Petrakis’ Crew Marks
Up 4th Straight, Over
Fitzgerald, 65-18 By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK #—Employing once
more the practically infallible Tal-
bot system which enabled us dur-
Birmingham coasted to its 4th | ing the past year to predict Roland
straight victory of the prep basket- | LaStarza’s ascension to the heavy-
ball season with ridiculous ease | weight title and Native Dancer's
Wednesday night by out-classing | runaway victory in the Kentucky
Fitzgerald of Van. Dyke, 65-18, in| Derby, we are pleased to provide
the Maples’ gymnasium. our readers (all both) with an ex-
John Petrakis’ crew jumped
off te an #1 and had a
235 margit at the end of the |
quarter. Fitzgerald got Worse in- |
stead of better, trailing 38-8 at |
of Warners the halt and 51-19 after three | acAneNA, Cal. u — The ac) quarters. ; tors got as much kick out of rub- |
Spartans were shooting miserad- | pernecking at the football players |
ly and the Maples’ defense, led by | as the football players did out of
signal caller. All through | Don Dorough's 14
| |
|
| |
—— |
Ski Range Open
tiere are | Hills Ski Range opened Wednes-
the numerical rosters of the Michi-| day for its thir. straight season
gan State College and UCLA foot-| The resort's range has a light
ball teams, rivais in the Rose Bow! | base and two inches of fuif snow.
game New Year's Day which wil) | It is, located on Traverse City’s
| 110 points
$3-rebounder- Dick Muller, turned | pubbernecking at the actors-when |
in a fine job. ithe Michigan State team visited a |
points led the | Hollywood action picture studio.
well-balanced Birmingham attack. The studio, Warner Brothers
Muller added 12 and Mike Groves big sprawling plant, actually is |
in Burbank. The MSC squad re-
ceived the Class A treatment, a
tour of the sets and then dinner
with a group of stars at the com-
missary.
Flint’s Leroy Bolden attracted
the most attention.
Meanwhile another Eastern |
Michigan League club was not so
fortunate in non-league activity. |
Port Huron entertained Libbey
High of Toledo and was routed, 60-
that the big, walled area resem- |
Reater
Hotedaiss, ¢ a warehouse-like building where! a a caer y “Aren't you Leroy Bolden, the
Cantee, f 224 Groves, ¢ 80 20| Star player,” one of the extras
peere, S $55 Seiten! BS 9 leah he Reynolds. ¢ @6 6 Derengh, ¢ 4614; © My name's Bolden, but I'm no
| eee —- Ces 3 | star,” was his modest reply.
Watkinson. e380 6|: The team’s first impression was |
$3 ee?
1s i
“-—
e 58
FITZGERALD
BIRMINGHAM 5 8 8 Gta
3 6 18 be~6
jhistorical picture of warfare in)
medieval England, “The Talis
man.”
Hickory } On another. set. pretty blonde
‘Doris Day was acting in ‘“Luéky
Me'’’ with Eddie Foy and Phil Sil-
Vers.
Bolden, Billy Wells, Larry Fow!l- TRAVERSE CITY W —
western outskirts.
It publicity pictures
The players hooted when back-
field coach Steve Sebo also was
snapped with his arm around the
. 2 ‘ ‘et 4
\ Fe Top Harness Driver COLUMBUS, 0, — Del Miller,
Spartans Take Tour
bled a prison. Squad went Ist to | ing his team into the waiting
| field and the serious business of Oklahoma, Michigan - State, Rice, Both
Georgia, Texas Tech Picked to Win
clusive preview of tomorrow's bow! bad knee. No team can lose its
games.
Orange Bowl — The Oklahoma | along with Michigan State until the
Sooners will win that showpiece by | West
about two touchdowns, partly be-|large, sun-kissed lads belong on
cause the Maryland team did not/the same field with the little, un-
get voted the nation's No. 1 with dernourished specimens who annu-
its great quarterback, Bernie Fal- |
oney, sitting on the bench with a!
‘ Studio star,
The squad ran into Pat O’Brien
outside the studio commissary and
surrounded. him to take their own |
pictures. |
In the dining room, Frank Love-
joy, star of ‘Battle of the Bulge,”
director David Butler, O’Brien and
columnist Hedda Hopper were
among those who ate with the
team.
A¥hen Virginia Mayo, another
striking blende, showed up the
squad nearly mobbed her. An es-
cort finally rescued her and led
her into a private
After "
missary, was a
taking session. The
and football players
freely by this time
Munn finally broke it up by herd-
the day. finest back and be the same.
Rose Bowl—We'll have to go
Coast finally proves its
ally represent the Big Ten.
Cotton Bowl—Rice over Alabama
by anything up to three - touch-
r a Tight Score Figured Between Spartans, Bruins Aeros, Ea Points Seen as
Main Factors Rose Bow! Foes Boast
Similar Records for
Annual Gria Classic
By ROBERT E. VOGES
PASADENA, Calif. & -~— Most
tly heard prediction on the
Michigan State-UCLA Rose Bowl
football game tqmorrow is that
passing or an extra point
off the i
cf : i H | | rie it \ FF f 7 : Fy ci | i
: FEL
[fe
i é 4:
Ea Fe
downs, with All America Kosse
Johnson showing off big before his
first national audience.
Sugar Bow!—The crystal ball is
a little clouded.on this one, but
we'll string with the odds makers
and give Georgia Tech a split de-
cision over West Virginia.
Gator Bowl—Texas Tech, the
mighty scoring outfit from the
Cavazos and 21 other talented
backs, has to be the choice over
Auburn in what should be an eye-
filling offensive display.
> . >
Sun Bowl—Mississippi Southern,
Writer Selects UCLA, Terps
ss/and Texas Tech fo Win Friday's Bowl Contests the Tommy Yewcic
Speed MSC’s Asset
i z
Br Eel
ii thet ae5 g
Its Ist Defeat Southern Cal Comes
From Behind to Nip
Spartans, 75-73
in Sirti i :
iy Hh
UCLA and the Mid-Western group ‘Mich., gained the final
is solidly behind Michigan State. the National Junior BROOKLINE
‘seeded June Stack
president
’
Georgia Tech, Rice r
oh |Canadiens Tie Toronto,
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Rose, Orange, Gator Bowls Shape Up as Closest NEW YORK w—Close observers
figuréd today a.fotal of seven
touchdowns should’ decide the five
major New Year's Day football
bowl games
. . 7 -
Three of the contests—the Rose,
the Orange and the Gator—looked
close enough that the winning mar-
gin in each might be a touchdown
or less
The Sugar Bowl :.and the Cotton
Bowl appeared a little more one-
sided, although not by more than
a couple of touchdowns apiece.
7 - .
Maryland continues to rate a
slight nod over Oklahoma inthe
Miami Orange Bow! clash between yet,
| says he will be available for some THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSD. AY, DEC EMBER 31,
ranking clubs. The unbeaten Terra-|a favorite as the Midwest clubs
pins of Jim Tatum won 10 games
in gaining the No. 1 rating in the
Associated Press poll, Oklahoma
lost its opener by a touchdowill to |
| Notre Dame and was tied by Pitts- |
burgh but wound up No. 4.
The condition of Bernie Falon-
ey’s left knee may make this game
eveh closer. Faloney injured the
knee in his last regular game
against Alabama and it’s not right
although trainer Duke Wyre
action.
* . .
Michigan State figures to start
a new Big Ten winning streak in
the Rose bowl at the expensg of [often are at Pasadena. UCLA pins
| its hopes on All-America Paul
| Camerori.. Both. te ams are in fine
| condition
The Gator Bowl at Jacksonville
finds Texas Tech, highest scoring
major team in the country, rated
over Auburn, another explosive
outfit from the Southeastern Con-
ference. The team that can muster
the most defense probably will
prevail,
> . .
Georgia Tech's Engineers should
extend Coach Bobby Dodd's win-
ning bowl record to five games in
their - Sugar Bowl. meeting with
West Virginia at New Orléans. But
UCLA but it isn’t nearly as strong | the boys from the hills may prove what on paper are the two highest
East Is Jubilant,
West Blue for
Shrine Contest Injury to Sam Morley
Hurts Aerial Game of
Coast All-Stars
SAN FRANCISCO w — The East
was jubilant today and the West
a little bit blue on the last day
of drills for their clash Saturday
in the annual Shrine all-star char-
ity football game
The East is
peints,
The varying moods were the
result largely of the outcome of
injuries to All-Americas Johnny
Latimer and Sam Morley.
Lattner, who twisted a shoulder
in scrimmage Tuesday, definitely
has returned to form and the East
Will be able to take full advant-
age of the hard running back from
Notre Dame. And hard running is"
the East’s stock in trade this year.
West plans to rely largely on its
aerial game. One of the hottest
pass combinations in the nation
this year was Stanford’s quarter-
back Bob Garrett to end Morley.
But Morley’s knee, injured in the
last game of the season, has given
out twice in practice for this post-
season classic. West coaches are
resigned to the fact that if Morley
can play for even one quarter
they'll be lucky.
East squad will elect its captain
or co-captains today, and head
coach Ray. Elliott is expected to
announce his starting lineup short-
ly afterward,
MSC Fans Greet Band
on Arrival at Coast
PASADENA, Calif. (UP)—Michi-
favored by 64
gan State Band arrived Tuesday | "='et network.
and was greeted by a crowd of | 4
Spartan fans and Rose Bow! offi-
cials,
The band, 130 players strong, is
being quartered at Occidental Col- | (on.
lege. After performing between
halves of the New Year's Day
game between MSC and UCLA,
the band entrains for San Fran-
cisco where ‘it is scheduled to per-
form between halves of the East-
West game.
As the old year fades
away and a new one
bows in, our hearts
sing out sincere
wishes for your good
health and happiness.
The Sports Shop
16 Seuth Cass
UCLA.
41 Oregon Stete
19 Kenses
12 Oregon
13 Wisconsin
20 Stanford
44 Woh. S$.
20 Californie
Washington
Seuth. Cel. } j
’ os
Sleexu~~Zccone
21 Minnesota 0
2% T.C.U. ~
47 indiene 1s
© Purdue e
34 Oregon St. 6
28 Ohie S. 13
14 Michigea °
*2) Meaquette 15
212 90
GRID BATTLE SITE—Here's the site for the biggest football
game of them all. It’s the Rose Bow! at Pasadena, Calif. Michigan
State’s Spartans and the Uclan Bruins tangle here on New Year's
Day in college football's “world series.”
at the sides, above. Records of the teams appear
Bow! Lineup for
New Year's Day NEW YORK (UP)—Here is the
New Year's day bowl schedule,
with starting time (EST), probable
attendance and the radio and tele-
vision schedule: (Team records in
parenthesis) :
ROSE BOWL, Pasadena, Calif. —Mich-
igen State (8-1) vs UCLA (8-1), 5 p.m.,
EST, 160,505, NBO radie and TY.
SUGAR BOWL. New Orteans—Georgia
(8.2-1) we West Virginis (8-1), 2
vs Alabama (6-t- =
75.504, NEC radie and T
ORANGE Scineni, Fila —Okle-
hema (5-1-1) vs Maryland (10-4), 2 p.m.
CBS radic and B .
Fia—
Aubern (7-2-1) vs Texas or (10-1), 2
p.m. EST, 32,000, Mutes! Radice and TV.
SUN BOWL, El Paseo, Texas—Miss-
issippi Seuthern (9-1) vs Texas West-
ern (7.2), 4 . BST. ~~ ne TV, 3 lecal and & shicsiesipp! sta’ tiens te bread-
cast.
SALAD BOWL, Pheentx, Aris. —Great
Lakes Navy (7-2) vs Fert Ord ¢it-@), 3
p-m., EST., Ne
mitments
New Bulletins Ready
for Idle Fishermen Although ice fishing is in full
swing, not much more than a 10th
of a million and a half who buy
Michigan fishing licenses take ad-
vantage of it,
Those who have hung up their
fishing rods until the lake ice
melts can pa&s some of the time
with reading up on some of the
latest scientific fishing research.
The fish division of the state
conservation department has three
new bulletins, one or more of
|| which would while away some of
the long winter evenings.
Kovaleski, Brown Tilt
Marks ‘Sugar’ Tourney
NEW ORLEANS (UP) — Fred
Kovaleski of Washington, D. C.,
and Tom Brown, Jr., of San Fran-
cisco were scheduled to battle it
out .again today in final singles
play of the 17th .annual Sugar
Bowl tennis tournament, after be- Santee Shoots
for Bowl Mark But Wet Track May
Slow Star Miler at
New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS w — Kansas’
great miler Wes Santee goes
| against a wet track today in an
effort to set a mile record in the
Sugar Bow!l’s 16th annual track
meet.
Santee, America's chief hope
for the four-minute mile, will
be shooting for the 1938 record
of 4:10:7 set by Glenn Cunning-
ham, also of Kansas.
Earlier this year, Santee estab-
ae lsihed the American mile record
Texas | Of 4:02:4.
Track conditions may slow down
the flying Santee. New Orleans has
.| had rain for the past four days.
Santee faces some stiff compe-
tition in Sweden's Strue Landquist,
defending champion in the event,
and James Blaine of Texas A&M.
Landquist ran 1,500 meters in
3:44.8 last summer and his victory
last year establishes him as prime’
Tighter Rules
for ‘Trouting’
Up for Hearing LANSING W—A public hearing
on_proposed tighter regulations on
Michigan trout fishing has been set
to start at 12:30 p.m. Jan. 22 at
the Higgins Lake Training School.
‘All interested groups and indi-
viduals have been invited to ex-
press their opinions. Meeting was
called for im the afternoon to
permit delegations from all parts
of the state te attend,
with factory
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Coach Art Lewis has drilled his
Mountaineers hard for the past 10
days. Tech has been satisfied with
only one full-scale drill
* cm >
Injuries have plagued both of the
Cotton Bowl foes, Alabama and Christmas vacation, definitely will favored Rice, with Alabama the
hardest hit
Quarterback Afbert Elmore, in-
jured in a car crash during the
Alabama Coach Red
Drew said. last night. He added
that two other regulars, right end
Bud Willis and right guard Charlies not suit up,
on the flank
> . .
All America Kosse Johnson of
Rice was still limping at yester-'
day's practice session and did no 1953
Eckerly, would see only limited
action as will Curtis Lynch, who
is supposed to understudy Willis
Wishing You
and Yours a Healthful
New Year! ‘
—LExclusively for Men——
AL THOMAS
Health Club
In the Hotel Pontiac Al Themes
FE 5-9661
contact work.
EARLY
as the New Year approaches. Fis ICE FISHERMEN—Gabriel
(left) of 61 Pine street and Kenneth McCombe, 519
Going street, get in some éarly season ice fishing |
Smith temperature, and
in the arm,” for
hing on Wormer | pected to give this popular winter sport a
said he got some nice fish, however, on Tuesday
Lake, Wednesday, the pair had little luck. Lower jat at the same syiot:
PIAA
JZ
AAZL
LLL.
wae \ hndadi he ded hde ddd dd di dda!
From Your
FIRESTONE STORE. 146 West Huron Street FEderal 2-925!
ohhh hhhacharhcchchorhhndh
Pontiac Press Phete
consequently heavier ice is ex-
“shot
the holiday week end. McCombe
By BEN PHLEGAR
NEW YORK # — Four major
basketball powers held new laurels
today as they added holiday tour-
nament titles to their unbeaten
ca . =
Western Kentucky, the winning-
est school playing a major sched-
ule, ran its string to an even.dozen
with an 89-71 triumph over Louis-
ville in the final of the Kentucky
Invitational at Louisville.
Duquesne and Rice extended
their streaks to 10 each. The
towering Dukes from Pittsburgh
| Bowling Clinic |
Ta ral
: a a ae ee ee ee +
2. i. 2 te a a a a a a oe a oe oe oe oe oe ee oe 2; 4
a
ee ee ee oe ee ee ee ee ee
SN A NE a NR
A A a
>» * Dukes, ‘Toppers, Rice,
Duke Win Tourneys whipped Niagara 66-61 with jump-
ing Dick Ricketts hitting for 30
points in the Garden Holiday Fes-
tival in New York,
> 7 .
Gene Schwinger and Joe Durren-
berg combined in a late rally that
gave Rice a 65-58 decision over
Texas in the final of the Southwest
Conference Tournament at Hous-
ton. Schwinger scored 24 points
and 8 in the three-game run.
Holy Cross won the Sugar Bowl
Tournament with its seventh con-
secutive victory, 66-56 over defend-
ing champion Louisiana State.
* ¢ 4
Kansas, last season's losing
NCAA finalist but an early disap-
pointment this winter, captured
the Big Seven Tournament in ‘a
rough battle with Oklahoma 82-73.
Navy, the surprise of the Dixie
Classic at Raleigh, where it beat
defending champion North Caro-
lina State in the semifinals, ran out of gas against Duke in the final
and bowed 98-83
> . >
In the Capital Tournament at
Arlington, Va., George Washington
solved Richmond's zone defense
after a rough first half and won
the title with an 81-67 romp.
Connecticut surprised previously
unbeaten Dartmouth 70-58 for the
New England Tournament title at
Hanover, N. H.
* ¢ @
Oklahoma A&M dumped Okla-
homa City University from the un-
beaten ranks in the semifinals of
the . All-College Tournament at
Oklahonia City with a 65-590 vie-
tory. The Aggies will meet Santa
Clara, 539-51 conqueror of Wyoming
for the title tonight
. > >
At Jacksonville, Fla., the Uni-
versity of Georgia won the Gator
Bowl Tournament by upsetting
Georgia Teachers 80-69,
lowa Downs Uclans,
Big Ten Gets Split CHICAGO ® -- Last of the Big
Ten's undefeated basketball teams,
Michigan State, was toppled 75-73
by Southern California at Las An-
geles last night. The big ten broke
even in the night's play, however,
as Towa defeated UCLA 65-60.
Spartans take on UCLA tonight
while lowa will face the Tro
jans,
Other New Year Eve games will
send Michigan to Marquette, Notre
Dame to Northwestern. Red Wings’ Farmhand
Is Suspended by IHL
TROY, O. (UP)—Rod McElroy
of the Troy Bruins was under
indefinite suspension by the Inter-
national Hockey League today for
refusing to pay a $100 fine for
failing to appear for i. game at
Grand Rapids, Mich., last Satur-
_- an a —wingman,. is the
property of the Detroit Red Wings,
He ‘spent Christmas at his home
in Canada and did not show up
at Grand Rapids for the game
with the Rockets.
An estimated 75 million persons
saw the world series on tv screens, |
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‘
Aussies Keep Cup as Seixas Is Beaten
. FOURTEEN
‘ Ry WILL, GRIMSLEY
@ — Ken Rose-
@ pint-sized racquet rifleman
of 19, saved tlie coveted Davis Cup
for Australia today by mowing
down America’s depressed Wim-
bledon Vic Seixas, 6-2, rT at
A. . | " ity |
il i ‘ *
of 17.500 that filled every seat in| which forced Captain Harry Hop- | vantage, and that was that he had
ithe Kooyong stadium got a big
kick out of it
on Rosewall's service and looked
to be about to break Ken's delivery
for the second time in a row.
But the Austratian had the weap-
ons to run it out although Seixas
fought off three match points. Vic
went down fighting, but, at times
he was discouraged by seemingly
adverse decisions. He simply
didn't have the ground strokes to
win.
When it was all over, the spec-
Officials appealed ‘repeatedly for
jorder but the fans in the huge
‘i three-tier oval burst into a wild
frenzy and ignored the appeals,
Rosewall deserved everything.
The youngster came back from a
Barkeley Scores 18
Points in Bronc Win
up @ quick 4-22 halftime lead last
night to coast to an easy basket-
ball victory over Ball State (Ind.)
75-57,
Jackson had 19 points” and Bark-
eley 18 for the Broncos ‘as. they 42, Barkeley is a former Pontiac
High star.
Broncos: hit on 530 per cent of ef
32 S. Saginaw St.
SURPLUS
FE 2-0022
Mofisay
JOE and AL
WISHES
For a
Happy New Year
JACOBSON | still be in his teens, will take over 13 EEE man to bench him in the doubles |beaten Seixas in all their previous | low 19-year-old, Lewis Hoad, ready.
He lost his first singles match to
Seixas whipped into a 40-15 lead | dem evént
~~
of earth are at work on the skeet ‘half-dozen. meetings. For some un-
| Right down to the final point | America's Tony Trabert and was|known reason, Vic, even at his
there was doubt about the winner. |so unimpressive that he was re-, best; has folded before Rosewall. ;
lin the 4th game of the final set, |placed by Rex Hartwig for the tan- | And Seixas was not at his best to- jw the United States win back the
| day. Nor has he been since he ar- | cup? The Aussies are betting it will
He had one big psychological ad-'rived in Australia.
BIG JOB BEGINS—Heavy machinery for moving large quantities
range at Oakland County Sports-
men’s Club, preparing for expansion of the range. The additions to Ibe a long time. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
Both Aussie Cup Stars|Racing Sport
Now with Rosewall and his fel-
to fight off the challenge for years
to come, the question arises: When
—e
y
|
Are Only 19 MELBOURNE Ken Rosewall,
the youngster who took the final
match which enabled Australia to
win the Davis Cup for the 4th
straight year, is only 19 years old.
This was the lst cup competition
for the slightly built youngster and.
he was benched in favor of Rex
Hartwig in the doubles after suf-
fering a severe case of jitters in
a
a ed
Pontiac Press Phete
be made will provide adequate facilities for the 1954 Nationa] Skeet
Championships, to be held hére.
Young Backs
Face Burdens
in Bowl Tilt
Alabama's Starr, Rice’s
Moegle to Carry Brunt
of Teams’ Attack
DALLAS, Tex. ® — Bart Starr |
and Dicky Moegle, two of. the
youngest players ever to appear
in the Cotton Bowl — Starr will
be in his 2nd bow! game at the
age of 19 — fade the biggest bur-
dens tomorrow when Alabama bat-
tles Rice.
In the case of Starr, that pass-
ing man of Alabama, it's pretty
definite. He might go the full
60 minutes because injuries have
reduced the quarterbacks to.
Starr and a ftresiuman, Ollie
Yates, who has yet to play a
down of varsity ball, Similar Teams
in Gator Bowl Texas Tech, Auburn
Both Are High-Scoring
Split-T 11's
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. #—Two
football teams that could almost
pass for a‘carbon copy of each
other meet for the ist time to-
«+ morrow when Texas Tech and Au-
burn play in the Gator Bowl game.
Both are split-T teams with a
Texas Tech's Red Raiders roiled
up enough to be national scoring
champion with 428 points and take
12th place in the final Associated
‘runner of Rice.
Moegle, sweep
could find himself shouldering much
of the work in advancing the ball
if All-America Kosse Johnson, Owl
fullback, can't play at top speed.
Johnson__still favors an ankle
sprain but coach Jess Neely thinks
he will be able to play tomorrow.
It's sure that Moegle, barely 19
and destined to be a senior and
Joh
ONE FULL YEAR
TO PAY!
'
{BUY ON BUDGET! !
_MARKET TIRE CO
on's punting chores, Press poll.
Auburn's Tigers rolled up
enough to contend for the South-
eastern Conference title right
"down to the last game, led the
conference in offense and rates
17th in the AP poll.
These teams ar similar in many
departments, but there is one
big difference—Texas Tech is 1-
touchdown favorite to win the
game. Against a lone mutual op-
ponent Texas Tech was exactly
that much . Auburn tied
Mississippi State 21-21 and Texas | |
| Tech beat Mississippi State 27-20.
Texas Tech has more team
speed.- Auburn's line is heavier.
But basically there is more simi-
larity than difference.
NC State Body Studies
Weak Grid Situation
| RALEIGH, N. C. (UP)—A ‘spe-|
cial committee was named today
to study the entire weak football
situation at North Carolina State.
including the recommendation of
a successor for resigned head coach
Horace Hendrickson.
nouncement emphasized that Hen-
drickson was held in “high es-
\teém” by the school and it did penchant for rolling up touchdowns | have made the wrong decision. ...
‘rabdert
Rex Hartwig, 4-2, ¢-
* wen Series Films Reveal Gore
May Have Miscalled Play By JACK HAND
NEW YORK #—Diamond dig-
gings in winter quarters .. .
The “Billy Martin” story, base-
ball's answer to “The Joe Louis
Story’’ was screened for the writers
yesterday. ... It's a six-part thrill-
er with Martin playing the lead,
Art Gore cast as the villain
(Brooklyn version) and other Yan-
kees and Dodgers in bit parts. ...
Gore gets a split decision on his
controversial ‘“‘quick call at 3rd
base in the Ist game. Pictures in-
dicate he didn't make a ‘quick
call’ but they also show he may
Lew Fonseca, and nar-
— of the World Series pictures,
Hoffmaster Memorial
Is in Planning Stage LANSING (UP)— A campaign
to raise between $10,000 and $20.-
000 from Michigan sportsmen for
the Pete Hoffmaster Memorial
Fund will be launched in two
weeks, it was announced today.--
Hoffmaster was director of the
state conservation department for
many years until his death three
years ago,
Dr. Paul A. Herbert, head of
Michigan State College's depart-
ment of conservation, said the
DAVIS CUP RESULTS
MELBOURNE W—Here are the
complete results of the Davis Cup
challenge round:
all, Aestralia, @-3, 6-4, 6-4. TUESDAY 's
and Seixas eeates Head and
DAY
Hoad defeated Trabert, 13-11, 6-3, 2-6,
7-5.
_ THURSDA. (TODAY)
Resewall defeated Seixas, 6-2, 2-4, 6-3,
ee
Austratia wins, 3-2.
Notre Dame's 1953 grid squad
hails from 10 states, Canada and
Hawaii, —
WHAT A DAYTON | GUARANTEE | MEANS TO YOU... | | Every DAYTON tire }}|
carries qn Uncondition- ff
al Written Guarantee
meons that Day- ff}
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this wish:
Year for you.
Ss Li
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‘fed Qs : . i - 84 South Perry St. . A Very Happy
NEW YEAR
As the clock tolls the
end of '53, we make
May it
also signal the start
of a glorious New
PONTIAC MOTOR PARTS Automotive Machine Shop Service and Rebabbitting
“Parts Headquarters for the Doctor of Motors” -
expects the 700 prints will be seen
by 15,000,000 fans on 75,000 show-
ings. . He left almost 20,900
feet on the cutting room floor, re-
ducing 23,000 feet to 3,500 in the
final version.
One thing Be missed was the
gal with the mirror in the right
field stands at Ebbets Field. . .
Phil Rizzuto, Yogi Berra and
Tom Gorman attended, no doubt
scouting the Dodgers for next
October. ...
Whitey Ford should remember
Billy Martin in his will. ... If
Martin's single hadn't won the se-
ries in the 6th game, they still
would be talking about Ford's
“boner” in the 2nd inning. .
Whitey left 3rd too soon after Yogi
Berra's outfield fly, flopped back
and forth in the baseline and final-
ly was cut down at the plate....
It didn't seem to matter then for
the Yanks led 3-0 but it could have
meant the ball game. ... Films
show Whitey made it close, despite
his grotesque baseline dance... .
Cart Erskine’s steady pace on
the way to a new World Series
strikeout record of 14 ranks with
the better suspense films of the
year ... Too bad they dicn’t
get a closeup of Hank Bawer’s
face when he looked back to see
dunior Gilliam’s misjudged fly
drop in fair territory.
Boys on the baseball beat figure
Milwaukee must have another Years Old losing to American Tony Trabert
in the Ist singles match.
Hi
‘Left-Handed Welcome’
Angers West Virginia
Squad
By HAROLD CLAASSEN
1 NEW ORLEANS # — Football
has no fury like a team scorned
and that's what makes a mystery
of the Sugar Bowl clash between
Georgia Tech and-the maligned
West Virginia eleven.
games during the season, was
designated as Tech's foe and the
furore broke out.
Some of the feeling still persists.
Roy Hawley, West Virginia ath-
letic director, says the game will
be the most ‘controversial of this
year's bowls” although his team
is a 13-point underdog. He adds
that the critical acceptance of the
Mountaineers, one of the heaviest
and strongest college teams of 1953,
hasn't “hurt our chances against
Tech.”
Art Lewis, West Virginia coach,
hasn't let his players forget their
left-handed welcome. Clippings of
stories sharply critical of the Moun-
taineersdecorated their training
headquarters at Biloxi, Miss.
Before West Virginia broke camp
today for the 100-mile ride here,
Lewis said his players “were se-
rious” and that he expected them
..|to give a good account of them-
selves against Tech “unless they
are too nervous.”
Coach and the players have made
a crusade of the game.
Film Delays Mathias
on Way fo Marines SAN FRANCISCO ® — Bob
Mathias, Olympic decathlon
champ, and college football and
track. star, is detouring via Holly-
wood on his way into the Marines.
Mathias, who was graduated by
month, where the story of his trade on the fire for-an outfielder tis being filmed.
or they'd neve? have sent Sid Gor-
don to Pittsburgh . . . How about
Bobby Thomson of the Giants for
a starting pitcher?
Winner Gets Pep
NEW YORK (UP)—Matchmaker
Billy Brown of the International
Boxing Club announced Wednes- |
day that the winner of Friday
night's Lulu Perez-Dave Gallardo
fight would meet Willie Pep at
Madison Square Garden on Feb.
9 Wolves Bountied
LANSING @®—Nine wolves were
bountied in the Upper Peninsula
in November, the state conserva-
tion department reported today.
At the same time 288 coyotes,
all but 28 in the Upper Peninsula,
were bountied. The department
| paid a total of $5,220 in bounties
during the month.
Texas Tech added 8,000 seats to
Jones Stadium at Lubbock.
Game Men Urge Shortened
and otter trapping seasons for next
spring have been recommended to
the state conservation commission.
The commission will meet Jan.
14 and 15 at Lansing to consider
Trappers took a record 17,500
beaver in last spring's season.
Proposals are:
That the western Upper Penin-
sula season run from April 1 to
15, instead of April 1 to 21. Trap- ifs its would be six beaver and
otter.
? Z
i
! cept for a narrow closed
along Lake Michigan,
March 20 to 31. Limits
four beaver and three
year,
divided into, two areas with sepa-
rate, tore liberal regulations. a3 J sf
yon
HERE in 30 MINUTES
Tet
Phone FE 2.0106
Roll Out the Old— Roll In the New!
Open 4 P. M.
to 12 P. M.
NEW .YEAR’S DAY!
Plenty ot Open Alleys
To Everyone We Wish A
Very Happy New Year
Heaps Honors
on Shoemaker Santa Anita Officials
Present Jockey With
Handsome Plaque
ARCADIA, Calif. ~The racing
fraternity salutes the world record
breaking jockey, Willie Shoemaker,
today and gets ready for the
$25,000 San Pasqual Handicap on
New Year’s Day.
‘A field of about 10 horses is
slated to race in the holiday fea-
ture, a mile and‘ 1-16th event,
with Mark-Ye-Well of the Calu-
Pet Bully, Cyclotron, Indian
Hemp, Stranglehold, Grey Tower,
High Scud, Phil D., Mandingo and
Glisson, stood as an honor guard at
the presentation. ;
Shoemaker may be long on vic-
Slaughter’s Pay
Revealed From
Divorce Action
ST. LOUIS W Veteran out-
fielder Enos Slaughter, considered
one of the best paid players om
the St. Louis Cardinals roster, will
receive $20,000 plus a possible at-
tendance bonus in 1954,
1951.
With Good Equipment
Ice Skates . .$7.95 up
Skate Sex . . .$1.00 up
Toboggans,
S ft, ......§15.98
Hockey Sticks 75¢ up
-
j Cee Raw pees
} f
Nehru Feeling Pressure Chinese Fishermen Sat
From Inside, Outside Reds |Seek Rescued Pilot “ster By PHIL NEWSOM
Despite Indian Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru's determined | V@t areas both of India and Bur-
neutrality between East and West,
there are many signs that he is
nervous about the Reds himself,
‘“@nd has reason to be.
In fatt there is reason to sus-
pect that his frequent ‘‘preach-
ings” to the West spring primarily
from his fear of Red intentions to-
ward India whose 400,000,000 popu-
lation would be a great prize for
either East or West.
And that finally, much as he
fears Western colonialism, he
fears Communist imperialism
more,
Communist pressure on Nehru
comes both from within and with-
out.
One fairly clear— indication _ of
Communist intent came in Red
Southern Belles Rent
Most Cars for Dates CHICAGO (UP)— A lot of bach-
elor girls are using leap year tac-
tics out of season, a drive-it-your-
self car rental system reports.
The girls are renting cars. for
dating.
What's rhore, southern belles rent
more than northern dolls.
The firm, in a national check,
says it found that 116 of the 1,526
women interviewed confessed they
were renting cars for dating.
who said they were renting a car
as date transportation.
The highest percentage of wom-
en renting cars for dates was
Reasoning Is Logic
LUCEDALE, Miss. (UP)—When
|
idia will go Communist without dian government through Tibetan) ONG KONG (UP)—Thre Chi-! United Press Foreign News Editor | ‘Taders.
The maps
ma
reply that maps were “unofficial.” |
Frequent reports of clashes be- |
tween Indian and Red Chinese
troops come from the poorly de-
fined - northern frentier areas,
which just as frequently
officially denied.
The reports have increaséd in
volume since 1950 when the Reds
moved into Tibet with its 1,300-
mile common border with India. | bobbing in chilly waters, fighting
off hunger and fatigue. They pulled
him into their boat, gave him dry |
clothes and offered him food. Also disquieting have been re-
ports that in Western Tibet Rus-
sian air bases are being built , .|nese fishermen would like an
claimed for China| american World War II pilot to : j speak up and prove they rescued
I iries t only the bland | him when he crashed off Hong
a en Kong in 1944. They know his name only--Mathew J. Crehan.
| when’ U.S planes bombed Japa-
nese-occupied Hong Kong. <|
only about 300 miles from the In-
dian capital of New Delhi, and/| the hold under the hatch,"’ related
that the high Himalayas no longer | Eok_Kan-lo, one of the three fisher-
offer any assurance againt inva-| men.
Chinese maps obtained by the In- | 5#"- Internally, the pressure on Nehru
comes from India's own Commu-
nist party.
Compared to Nehru’s own In-
in the country, and many respon-
sible Indians believe that the next
four years will decide whether In-
the necessity for any attack from
_the outside.
At the moment, Indian Commu-
nists are holding their third all-
India Congress at Madura, Madras
State.
time stepping up their
America” campaign. which is gain-
ing steasily in popularity.
| as a gift, A shirt was marked “118”
| and bore the name of “‘M. J. Cre-
j
war, the fishermen
| applied to the U. 8. government
for some remunraction and were
fused the money,
But things aren't so good for
ithem now, and they need the
money. The persons who originally
investigated their claim, and most
| of the papers relating to it, cannot
be found. That's why they would
like Mathew J. Crehan to speak
| wp.
4-Man Buddy Teams
Boosting Army Morale The story began Dec. 2, 194,
Word seeped te villagers that a
plane had been shot down, and
the three Chinese began a search
for the pilot.
That afternoon they found him,
| _FORT DIX, N. J. & — Trainees
“We put him in the front part of | ‘" “@ special “carrier . company
went through basic training to-
gether. They eat, work and soldier
Three days later, the vessel | together and even spend off-duty
reached Nationalist-held territory | time with each other, They'll be
and the pilot was handed over to| sent overseas together.
Army officers. Before he left, he | Its a big morale booster, the
gave the fishermen some clothing | army says.
SIDE GLANCES
by Galbraith
“George hasn't had a drink since we snapped that candid photo of
him sitting on the edge of the bed last New Year's Day!”
af, = . Ox : - # 4 ,
*. ‘® i
; ne) ‘
a: o< ME Fa tte 2 SSS CSc aa 5
ee ee eNOS x >]
oe Bate pen oa Loe ; - d be
ion iB te as Te 8 Beran :
Sree sy St ed Sets aa ei) ft Oe oa i
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
CISCO. KID
offered $750. They thought they ¢
were entitled to more and re-
have four-man buddy teams, who| ©
rot bf
a de TS) =a
~
~~
Ss
TLL KEEP My
I'M GETTING TOO
FAT ---I'LL GO ON
MIND OFF FOOD BY
CONCENTRATING
A DIET DURING
' te f rt
* wii
ee ee THE NEW yr
-LRWE
Bu SH 4 LG
ta tn © 8 Oe 8 am end
a hy med Meee bem tom
pec-3!
ae
a
pr. fps | . SSA 5 eee
*
+ —
ed
—
Local Markets
Produce
Farmer to Consumer
P eat os 3 ‘Fe
PUDDIN’ IT AWAY—These Epsom, Surrey,;of the pudding in this enthusiastic sampling are
Eng., youngsters heartily agree that the proof of | Gillian Ockenden, 6, her four-year-old brother,
the pudding is in the eating. Those who approve | Timothy, and sister Julie, 15 months. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1953
waited Press Phete
4
| fully steady with Wednesday's low close
aT) ry) eae
BI! we) *) 1)
3 | 10 |
7
18 | 18 |
Bl
* Carnations, dozen awece 1.00 | i
signs were in | Chrysanthemums, dose... 1.00
issues as Mont- _
merican Can
American Cyanamid, Eastern Air Wholesale
Lines, and Zonite. The jatter stock DETROIT PRODUCE
Jost start following DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on
+ ay path had acquired Ly ji Sapmery Puls enarenter ne | Prutte: Apples. Delicious, yr, 5.00
Esther Lad. of Chicago. | bu, Ne 1, 360-400 bu; apples, . Ne i, 2.25-2.75 bu; apples, Jonathen, No
New York s Pera, a see wert. io 1, :
Figures after decims! points ere eighths | 6m Spy fancy. 400 du eee a Bose, .
Eup .. 37-4 Kroger -:..., S64) Vegetables: Beets, topped, No 1. 1.00-
og ied come Boros 12/128: taney, 128 doe bebe. Cabbage, ig Mped te fT eC ee weriety, Bet Sm bai cob o m6 & Mey... 644 D88* curly, No 1.00-1.50 bu;
I SES Locka Aire...” $13 Fed No 130-100 bu: cabbage sprouts - i
An Goel +t ee ee ruck’. 127 |h 180-200 bu. Celery, No 1, 3.06-3.80 Alum Co Am 605 Marah Field... 24.1 | S*, celery, No 1, 8-100 dos ;
Airlin ... 114 Martin Ol..... 166) Celery Foot, No 1 125-1758 dos bons. 8. Cen... 4 May D Str..., 262) Perenips, No 1, 1.25-150 % bu. Penne,
Am 32 «Mead Cp... . 284) No 1 80-100 dos bens Horseradish, No
Am b~ 5 ,., 426 Mid’ Cont Pet 664/1, 4.60-5.00 pk bext. Parsley, qurly, Ho am Ges & El 4 Monsen Ch... 8) (1. G-90 doz behs; parsicy > i,
Am oan Mont Ward... 8¢ | 75-125 dos bebs. Potatoes, No 1, 90-1.10 ete & Motor Pd.... 213) 80-% bag: potatoes, No 1, 2.06-2.50 100-Ib
Am § Ges ... 404 Mot Wheel.... 223 bag Radishes, black. No 1. 1.25-1.75 bu; am Red ...., 5 oln...., 204) radishes, red. No 1 65-00 doz bens. Am Seem... 08 Muelier | a8 eae gy hey | 1 3002 bu Sesesh,
Am “ “ : 1, 75-1.00 wu; squash, - Ae Suge [088 | Wash Kelv.., 16 No 1, 7-100 bu. Turnip, topped, Am. ochen GO Beh Bie. Fox | No i, 1.00-1.80 bu
y— dcotd He oo, 644 | Greens: Collard, No 1, 100-150 ou. p+ - weeee ene Nat “*** 394| Kale. No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu. Spinach, Ne 1, au ae ae peas Foes “3 a bu. Swiss chard, No 1, 1 00-
au ane zt uses @ > = Es bie ty
Atlas "Sie NY Air vee 327) Lettuce and salad greens; Celery can- , ey 2 : , NX Central... 102) bage PP | ghee Rees ’
Bell aes) ag RM Bes s/n NOS NO , ee a Bn, Sone Bi we am av... 3 DETROIT EGOS ». ve Ss ""ys-ta Mor Pee....... 8.1) DETROIT (AP) — The pries | | - on Te
~~ See ay pele BS 12] | were paid pet doren 10D. by re | ee 2.00% yy srsoe Bid Wests A Brk 22.6/ canners down to $7.00: wiility and | SP ceee LSIN Bop, 260
= oo Wane Atoi’’”. Seg | Sommercial bulls $13.06-16.25; most goed | Oats ~~ 2.45% oe Pe va Be Woolworth 29 | $3 choice 760-630 Ib feeder steers $1 | May aaa * Jan oo. 67
Johns Man . ° . h iefe iy , Sep. of --es ar 18
| Raley May ".. 1S Young 0 © W 25) sctne Tully steady bil week, buat? | RY" May 14 48 : } we cote y+ | Yagst 3? tT bo era] supply good and choice $23 00-31.00,| Mer #..... 1.10% oe - 46
Krmee 0. $38 | ivugais a otha Socal cad heed cere - J
STOCK AVERAGES mighes ey and commercial sara | | M Ad itt » mostly $12 00-20.00 ul a) 5.00.10 |
NEW YORK — Compiled by the Asso- | Bheep salable Bays . pone hw last 0ca an mi
ciated Press | Thursday slaughter lambs about steady
b 8 yee after a high opening Monday so 4 B . .
Indust Refle Util Stocks seerce. strong all week week's bulk h j 2
a anne cg ae ah tees |S et cana nee tee | 10 Bat ASSOCIation Noon Thurs. ....1447 32 S51 1084 at tne — Rwy » 108 | . ocsee eo" ; * eround vr) . .
|, Wem age IBS BSS feel | prime Shots TRY sme “en te-ni'th, | Ceremonies in Oakland County smaller volume utility a .
Beas ied HE Sag int | mee yeahhh Shall" fi [Courthouse last week saw Philip ( e ewe. , Tew ” r
ted fee csc 08d 8 Bek eek | igher: ull and utility ewse 94.00-4 00 E. Rowston, 32, of 24 Utica Rd., estimates for Monday tle ‘
foes tow ccs: AM SAE Bat ‘tig | calves 400: hogs 1.308; sheep 2.600, | Admitted to the State Bar of Mich etna ganw
DETROIT STOCKS CHICAGO LIVESTOCK other recent law © Ghustinver | CHICAGO (AP)—Salable 11,000 Pigures after decima! BF ths moderately active exremeny” uneven, | School graduates,
b - on | butchers to fully 1.00 lower: sows 25 ‘ Jud
Baléwin 12 «12 = $@ 88 lower: bulk cholee 180-330 Ihe 94.25. ‘ reut.v UG ge
D @ C Navigation’... 4 04 28.00: @ few loads choier 25.19-28.35: 240. | George B. Hart-
Gertiy-atehignn’® <<< 22-31, 270. pateners 2198-24 80. 380-Me ks | rj ¢ sponsored Masco &crewv . : 27 27 ? 55 Ir 21 00.2250 «ao fw leht sews Rowstan who has
a Al s ‘ tehtty e rood sce Midwest apremee + - rt Ragnar gg y~ Riggtrioom ti: olenitl served as the
wa Serew* is 14 ter steers and heifers irregular; salen Judge's court
“Ko sale, OM and asked .
One of the pleasures
ae of the Holiday Sea-
son is the joy of wish-
ing happiness to you,
Bi our customers and
but «
being
sleady few loads of holdover steers again
taken off the market; cows about
bulls and tealers active. strong
holte to low prime steers 23 00-26 25
commercial to low choice 18.60-223.50 a
few good-and choice heifers 17.00-22 00
utility grades down to 1050; utility and
commercia! cows §.75-12.00; canners and
cutters 6.00-10 25; utility and commerciai
bulls 13.00-16.58; commercial te choice
vealers 1800. 26.00: cull and wtiley
srades 10.00-17 60: mostly 12,00
Sa labile 1,000; run largely wooled | lambs steady, choice and
| Prime 80106 B wooled lambs 20.50.21.00.
jood and choice largely 18.50.2000. «
|} few culls as low as 1000; @ few choice
98 i> lambs with fall shorn pelts 20.00;
..* cull to good sleuughter ewes 4 $0-
| Foreign Exchange
NEW YORK <«aP)
retes follow «Great B
others in cents!
Canadian dollar in New York open
market 2:8 16 per cent premium oer
103.56% U8. cents, unchanged
| Burope: Great Britain (pound) 62.81
up. 1/16 of cent: Great Pritam 30 day
| futures 281, up 1/16 of a cent; Great
Britain 606 day futures 280 31/32, up
1/32 of s cent: Great Britain 90 day
} futures 280 31/32 up 1/32 of a cent
| Belgium franc) 2.00%, up 00% of
| cent; Prange (franc)
changed; Holland ‘guilder) 26,62
| changed; Italy (lire) 16% of a cent, un-
changed. Portegal ‘eseudo) 3.56, un-
| changed Sweden (krona) 19.3%, an-
changec Switeerland franc: (free)
23.32. unchanged; Denmark (Krone) 14.62
unchanged
| Latin America: Argentina (free) 1.26.
wnchanged: Brasil ‘free) 1.80
Mexico 1144, unchanged; Venesueia
(boliyar) 30 03, ,
fifty fou May this fresh, new year
to come, bring you the
_ wbmost in happiness .. 4 Foreign exchange
ritein im dollars,
aN te . 38% of a cent, un-
un- clerk since 1548.
The newly admit-
ted lawyer startea
at Detroit College ROWSTON.
‘of Law night school in 1948 and
| shouldering a double work load
twas graduated with a bachelor of
| laws degree in June of this year.
| te was graduated from Olivem
| College in 1942 with a bachelor
| of arts degree and served with the
|U. S. Army from 1$3 to 15, He
jis a member of Delta Theta Phi
| law fraternity.
‘New Layoffs Total
53,000 Workers By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Recent and planned layoffs of
employes in industry and railroads
; Which employ nearly 20 million
total 53,000 a survey has U
in November, 16,711,000 were in 3
i ; il <- ig
<8 af
i
#
a
=, - _
7
Ozzie Nelson
Has No Job—
at Least on TV
son. I mean.the one who is por-
“Ozzie and Harriet" over
“We've never explained what if E 8 74
ire Felt ste rll
WALLED LAKE — Service for
James H. Sanders, 79, of 2259 Ryel
Bivd, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at
the Richardson - Bird
Home, with burial in Walled Lake
: et &
i
. > Julius
either a “News in Brief Four windows were broken in
the home of Frank Bale, 555 Going
St. sometime Wednesday night, ac-
cording to Pontiac Police. :
quois Rd. told Pontiac Police
| Wednesday that someone broke a
| window in his home by shooting
BB pellet through it.
if your friend
bail, Ph. PE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell.
Knights of Pythias New Year's
party, 18% W.
mix. Dancing
door, $3 per couple. Koprince of 319 W. Iro-
.22 caliber bullet or a
's tn jall and needs
Huron. Food, favors,
9 ‘til 2. Tickets at
—Adv.
Kerr, H
Callahan
guards. Fire Fighters Get
New Officers WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —
New officers will take over direc-
tion of the township Fire Fight-
ers’ Assn. at its first meeting of
194 next Tuesday.
Heading the group is Clayton
Soncrainte, president,
James Donaldson, trustees; Charles
and Bernar¢ Torr and Russel! See, award McCallum and
and Floyd Gidley, guides,
about | years service. BOYES
Boyes is a native of Hastings. He
Mich. Business Briefs -
succeeds
_Death Notices -
DEC. 4 1953. GO FORD . OGLIFFORD,
. 986 Park St. Cooley Lake, Rt. 3,
Milford. 6); beloved
of Mrs. Ethel 6. Ford; dear father
of Mre. Maurice Mrs.
Stanley Baker and Fred Ford.
Funeral service will be held Gat-
urday, Jan
Richardson -Bird Chapel,
Interment in Commerce. Cemetery.
Mr. Ford will lie in state at the
Richardsen-Bird Punttal Home.
Milford. ‘
-_- -
NDERS, DEC. 30, 1953, JAMES
H.. 2269 Ryei Bivd., Walled Lake,
age 18: beloved husband of Mrs.
Bessie G Sanders; dear eae Mh.
brother of Mra. Mary James, Pu-
neral service will be held Satur-
day, Jan. 2, at 2 pm. et the
Richardsen-Bitd Chapel, Walled
Leke. Interment im Walled Lake
Cemetery. Mr. Sanders will le in
state at the -Bird Pu-
neral Home, Walled Lake.
im state at the
Home.
neral service will be held ‘Satur-
day, Jan. 2, at 2 pm. at the
Pune
ue of Perry Mt. Park Cemetery.
*. Smith will lie in state at the
DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home.
: ww
VAN SCOYOC, DEC. 30, 1953, GAL-
ly Ellis, 36% Hovey, age 58; be-
loved wife of James Van Scoyoc:
mother of Truman A. and
sister of
Mrs. Van Seo- 7. :
te at the Voor-
Home oor A en
Miller
Srrangements will be announced
later by the Sparks-Griffin Pu-
heral Home.» —
Rindly word
e day Ww ‘Some nest him. e m . ¢ day we know not
To clasp his hand in the better land to part
“‘gediv
thank
and
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Kel-
ann Fiorists- Flowers rrr * eee -~
SCHAPPER'S — FLOWERS
323 AUBURN PE 23-3173 \
Funera! Directors “4 ete eh he
Voorhees-Sivle FUNERAL HOME Afhbulance Service, Plane or Motor
FE 2-637
Donelson-Johns
The Pontiac Press
FOR WANT ADS |
_ DIAL FE 2-8181
From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m,
ease vew
~
No situation is hopeless
» where Classified ads can |
help! To recover a loss.
find a good job or fill va- } SLICE OF HAM
ete
42-37 AP Mowdemreret rs
Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Male Help 5
1
WANTED , Experienced
Truck
Drivers
APPLY AT WATCHMAN’S GATE
Fleet Carrier
Corporation
586 S. Blvd. Fast
Pontiac, Mich.
~ 23 -
# i
Adjusters
_ Investigators
Must Be at Least
. High School Graduates
Age 21-35
And Have a Car
General Public
Loan Corp. 69 W. HURON
FE 3-7181
NEEDED
Journeymen
Millwrights
Machine Repairmen
and
Toolmakers
APPLY
PONTIAC
MOTOR
DIVISION
Employment Office LENWOOD “AVE.
GAS STATION ATTENDENT.
nights erperiesce not necessary,
Northwestern ant Telegraph, Su-
noco Service ;
A-1 MECHANICS FOR
LINCOLN - MERCURY : REAL ESTATE SALESMEN |
No vestment, New business. § c
!
i
|
a] ; ae
gia
ee _—
~ any A : a > . iy 2 ae t+
. ae i - ail —
pe ee ag, i ES _ ~~
} . ; - ; | % ph oop 7 «fe —
4 { Sed 7 . —— .
' f ___f.. t Fa '; y) . (ek if d
Ras ae
; |
_Wanted Female Help ¢|Painting-Vecorating 11A| __ Building _ ___ ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, PECEMBER 31, 1953 we a
‘ citi Y 15| Wd. Contract ite a : a
WoMEN ~~ - ‘ : .
oem | PADWTING — PAPER RANGING, | PLASTERING: NEW & REPAIR. ww Migs. 3¢/FUNNY BUSINESS by Hershbe aA : Seep SEVENTEEN
aA. oa w wie | Moving & Trucking 12 Rpsomeerl. ON SUT or PE CASH : oe — — _ b= Line
. LY W SS ee ee -_ ns . . ‘ P , 0 ag = £ /?
ont PAY, YTS | ar ere He rcse Mavig | yor met DEPOSIT | igen oa ae umphries GATEWAYS.~to
Help 7 Sidtren, “Oesa 'wesse aaits ling FE cat Duudouing. grading and his 5 heed many land We TCAFE DE PALAISE - . fo, Spe) end citanctape 00, oon H
et > dy, tee | Paki eretor mower = [nga rama wgemey,| Tete LESS ear an el yy |. eiberesintates nguoe APPINESS
also wpist and seen cere time. rock filling, FE Nicholie @ | A A 1% Coma picket fence ona ow te Donelson Park ’ >
tor rE tae, > TaDCRIND. GiwenAl - W. Muren-8t. do ~ . Fage, offers early nem ton! le prectesty » sre | 1S IT AN INCOME
SST Se PE hae ANYTIME. PHON _Lypewriting Service 17 coveet of Ries Bide. CALL ite gee Se -, Modern famuy Poe. ae oe You WANT?
XPERIENCED, WAITRESS. ¢| INCENERATOR SERVICE ASHES ernie CASH FOR ¥ Fine basement” Dew ges fr dine, rooms. trsege 03 iy? Tas seven, teem bedroom
— a | & MA- ° water softener ° ~~ a
elsif, nous pe, fas ee re tae S| Sree Waa x] a SN. ee
ret te ee | van SETH MOVING —Sredwarane wewres—|. so a Fu price sik ein FRA | plat almoot ema New tn 100
cook, 921 W — es Van of Pickup Service FE 44804 “es ¢-+,es Cearreamg, ORG GUS Qeuee. Hu h jie tod “et the ‘al
yeueie tYPat cle HAULING OF any KIND REA | Dressmaking- | = NSON mphries — “Yoo Mont 8m :
—.: CLERK PER _ sonable, PE REA | Dressmaking- | avicring 18 A. JOHNSON ee new home a
position with old estab-| VET wiTit 3 = : VittagE 5 gn Brick Ranch Ho sia "an
months probation, ” sais three] want hauling PEs TROCE | TramLoRINO surTs FE 4288 story Sous a Alle You will find ev fsa a
"owed ad salary | te-| ERUCKING -& RADLING.—RUB | Bane Wert heration, PE 32004, E 4-535 glee, buneeiow on landecaved | be’ desired in this three FORGET W
tion, gle leave and eco | *RUCRING _O BAPLING. RUS | nee ent ey —tae _1704 S. Telegraph Rd. fa Ke Getesem Rome te, sactsteses : T WORRIES
SS re Se eet | opr gg sv avr voe [Eee [ERS Racine Sly | BAEtpac Hae ae | a stat Ta
Enclose picture if avaliable, Write MAN wirh & TON TRUCK WANTS Chiropodists = 20 P $200,000 water "Yeu, t. garage too! | ath erence 2 becom wang ot
_sice Br sich Wes pee oom te ter Payee | cdl] ow, eet te rans ope | ie iwc Grane | Eineaioethhs | Soe Ses,
eres ae PETRY | etek Hae Saag | ey Reo) St SE dt a tht Reni nt bt Sines | Saath La
ants. Mw __ ; ~ . mm MAHA A ‘ Schools Eve. . —% Angelus, Pu € ner Lake
Ethie Suetencas| ns iis vem “tat S}- Photo-Aecemsories 20 MA Humphries) =" “| Sie tania
minimum $b — = United a Quick service, PE | ~~~ ~ wwe nny rw Co-operative Realtors Exchange New Home—16% Acres :
oe aa waar rRecKio SPEED ORAPIIC CAMERA. _coorenative MEMBENS : renee TT eninge | Limite. Mew ranch tape *| vou BUY ir-we'li IngUKE I
- ne ERR KG — | SOUR ERY Oe 4 - v and Sunda . e'— size 28200
OCONEE —Go as ees ens ve care gos | Wonegs pen" Pace ee | Mure Py. Pe Sa209 ) WILLIAMS LAKE | | sapreal eo, Sates MAHAN
os TIVE O'DELL ROE | pS | eed Rent Estate 2 a 100 yo Nant ame atta. pmE Ae Fem Tae| pat serine Mnateatray REALTY CO. REALTORS
SECRETARY Local and Long Distanc SPEED GHAPHIC WITH FLASH| — . 5 > ~~ aan «ie. BESS Priced reasonable with $1,450 is neart TIVE
EXCEL! = SALARY & romat | roar - FE e Moving OA 82523, H <7 mn _ At Rap U. 5 Pet. OFF PAYTON PL AINS y ane ry rm or aw — ull o- ind 7 8
PLoYe TRU — m , i \ LAL Price AA.
TIBERAL BEPITA, & SURGICAL 3 PE Cine cr PEL" Lost and Found 21 am ond , “Unhappy New Year to you, too!” 3 bedrooms 8 vat: ° tere side “anywhere ins nr EAT ees
teeter boe Trucks for Rent| wucrereaon wee | Sekai meted Batts once i | i ee ek
ae lasve ane TROCKS. picked "up by. mistake dare Sak, quamyes pertenal coereee For Rent Rooms 32 Rent Houses Furnished 37 ey TWAN LAKE . John Kinzler, Realtor cue jocetion gar. fond \-—~
8 coat . - . : < ADRARALAN AARP IAAI “ 4 670 pay 5 ro]
DB BEX wern sarany |.” 7 "Sa" Boue sede Oe] plese ‘Ponueesteladum | PAUL D, HAMMOND SIOLE ROOM, ? BLOCKS To|t ROOM MoUWE AND Bara, Mop-|* Full ‘betepent feat e*'aEs cone ity Bitlet tS mange aot 2 St Le aie
APPLICANT BE WELL Ex- Pontiac ares and —_ . 26% W_ Huron. St. Realtor SLEEPING RMS. FOR CLEAN quire 690 Bay, ea In| Nice lot. ed at Sub. _Renmese pesherge : S
CONSCIENTIOUS.| Industri ] oar Soka Ga Office FE $7141 Eves, FE &--1864, center and school, $10.800. terms a . a water heater. ppines us by New
ereey between 11 a m. and 3 Walls and ee Saree lace, World Ray BR | pet ore a gt PARTY BEG quinks or Rent Store Space 38A IN DRAYTON — sanee. Terms, —— bath. large by : vedroume se
a =———_—___— | “Sawa tL - a jee, maw Bases cven-| want GOOD TWO DAMILY encés. PE 6-304 or FE Pert tee | (91,000 down buys, nice. Hvable G. 1. % 5 ag roo ie
sGrennes ines 2,10 3, Dour MANLEY LACKING | SEARPERED Lost: LADIES GOLD W Bet, wm pee cack Write Box 15 frp, wool Ane BOARD FOR . nome = garage, shaded lot, in- | 3 Dedroom ranch type. Down pay-| tables ot room for kitchen |
m3 =~ LP 2 beste LEY LEACH. 10 BAGLEY 67. | ono eee ee ares of _Pontiac Press, . and care br| WEST SIDE STORE All Si aoe ments sar at Ha. win leundry trate. Electid’ het
or more, Welle Bes 2, Pustice Pree estimate AyD REMOVAL. Ponting -petmecn Wed. ” } oO ee - a htleedalien wn) Y- 17 x 86 with| 9 Waler heater & sulomaiie ot fare
naira ane 18 ms the finder blesse phone. PE si tan Foams CoOL Meee ad hernece, Costes to | "SW, RAMEMENT OF ACRE pace. Located on
PART TIME ALTERATION LADY.| EXPERT TREE TRIMMI §-2613 ; Casm! Casul CAgml : OURO COUPLE” Wire OMe eation, $100 per month. OF LAND. $500 DOWN lot. A real large suburban
Cikbing 8 Nt BATION LADUE, | EXPERT TREE TRIMMING 5 RE Cost BROWN LEATHER | CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY — i Ae ETS Te : CRAWFORD AGENCY | "3% family. if you took Lng
. 8 N. Saginaw. moval. Ph. FE 54-6593, OR_3-2000.| im Kresges J:me = wea tase meng af your price and terms are right— nished of unfurnirhed. FE 45674. WARD E PARTRIDGE, mr FORD AGENCY .., . Buren Fe 8-2064| We know you ° home.
wo OVER” 2. STEADY ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS| CoBtals keys, valuable sepens we can get you cash for your SMALL APT. GARE POR 3 MONTH 4 u, Pe LR ak, REALTOR ‘5 es. PE 52131 or EM 3-500 =| «(ft ten't worth -=y
work gent pat eas te persen.| Sune by. fectory trained men | Reputlic ba02 “Reward ticulars, We will be giad to fook Preis “Ut momer worms REALTOR _— FE 28316 | 3 -Sesrte PB Sm; PR Ce | _Poretige bp TES SRO be See it today and make
| Crocker btw. il - Ottice Supply Co. iw. ead 7 aD BHLPOCe Dy TRAN opin as, Te ve you Wp. TO RENT BY LOCAL Bual- © West aren Berens re eo see] ig
ANYONE i us | eecavaciea Gained depot, Dec, 25. Finder may keep ON B , | aes man. bachalar -| sTORE, PORMERLY RUDY'S
coming ®& dealer for Stanley on agg ine onaptho, Suit money but please return. papers. nian: CLARK ~~ furaished. Fe |” aarkit- tr Ctarkston, a
home produste or having © porty ~ Goning, road ‘bldg. Pb. Fi 3-642, | Mrs. Theroux, 33 Portage. _ Open 9-9 TR on coma |i Te. ___ | _be available Janua_y 1. OR 34081
<= as PLASTERING Lost: BILLFOLD BROWN CON- 1326 W. Huron Street UNFURN. HOUSE — YOUNG | STORE FOR OR LEASE
— wes | os A IN¢ taining discharge lund "im couple, Works at Pusher Body] Bt at STORE RM. 1? BY 40
Ses See ORG POS | Re ES cnet, ae ret Bea Scale Be | FORAGE ELE Et? othe
~ee Seip Wanted 7 | Su,gurtien ai mates, of Late ng. Due ent Poser bt FE 43569 Hotel Rooms _ Kix vite Faeat
OPPORTUNITY ~~~ | Sn “ane ‘all troes of en (OST: BOXER, LARGE, PEWALE. otel Rooms __ 328 |" GOO 7 a
reg ae, WOMEN, afnat small ap- | fawn colored Children’s pet, re- File this telephone numbe - D FOR MANY
between, the ees * to ROY'S. 96 Oakland Ave. PR 2-407 ward MIM when you need expert tien HOTEL AUBURIN Business
interest - a i oral SUBURBAN SEPTIC TANK Lost: —— Or GLASSER, ON oy Le or sell, call Rooms by Dav or Week Such as men's r ’ pared street, $1,500
. dich Uphoistering —_13C & deal bere! There just isn't ELDERLY PERSON, D "YMBLER R r VALUET, Realtor om
a 2 . WANTED anything we can't sell Don't private = On 9-063. 1114 Josiys PE oan | 222 8. Telegraph = ELI ‘
clair CUSTOM UPHOLSTERIN call us if you are NOT D & OM , 00OB Doty “S * fundey 2 © 6) caine -IZ, LK. ESTATES
ence’ ont necessary. A Sox 13, | Pree estimates. Small repairs in Highest Prices Paid cil we Jour “Caw Suwret ey PU SEAUTIFUL, BRICK ras 7 One of the ;
: . your home Ai Yingling. . + - hemes
Eel clien . a ees! ae eee «| Partrid MYERS | 223Evs
B CURTON Upnotsten | VREELAND FUR Edw. M. Stout, Realtor |HooM AND. Boas IN” Wick ne Se oS wey Tl e down. 2, badreome sp, ul
Pree ee CO. | 1m. seginew st, PE s-sies | nome. 141 Owego, Muh’ the “outstanding. fos : SMGASESS 260s ‘GEeAeEs oot wast, “wal &
pitt. Tees eotinsten” , wars ee, is | — ee ree Room & BOARD FOR | MAN IN “ape consis of toot 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE . | Sturdy sttrective 5 ee Se
2s rE 67333, DAINTY MAID FOR. SUPPLins. TRADE OR SELL __Squthera home. F clous end lovely roms plus st | (Ny bath. Ist Moor. pomme ans im the sub. See |
DRAPERIES, —Mrs,_ Bur fh Trades are made, to satiety all tached garage ct) _ euctes EAR PONTIAC MTR. | fehauees eis, vigoulated, fal
covers materiale re omnis Sirense, “uth poe cap’ | Rest Apes. Perateed as | fs wikis cyigeer gril A PR™| [ov bore 2,rooms cen cod Rew] otes Pere, near “hus and en
ig Gee “gull coke ‘unaay fe as net feel otugsind. "| gait, MODERN apr. wae | drapsties, marble window. al Ce See he Te immediate possession Gniy f.0op| WLR. “ron vin. “enetint
re |, on REALTOR COOP MEMBER | _ Accomodsies wtilities furnished. | fireplace,’ aa, uitre-medern full! Seep you warm sil mag Coot H. Myers ~ win priviegss ae Lower
| MAKERS OF CUSTOM BUILT WiLL BOT Oa List TOUR +1557 |3 ROOMS AND BATH. COUPLE| ¢rrer, toemnevates,, Dechasaster. Priced “at Vie Comes beng, | Beat _Betete re +o La ee Mise ‘fave
Teen eR MCKINNEY at, 8 Rete waaes—par| Semngse sot ety many mer fei ws show you your sew home| py Eten) Sm, bar bam orth end
Thomas Upholstering | PRES LE “PLMCKINNEY [Be pages oe] Raw aoe aS | pinucrvcrtan nunc, |actlest ermerJzeaion| St coe et
erce . . pane
Phone FE 5-888 _h he aa 2 nods FOR 2 oo we INCOME PROPERTY wo gine bensufal homes frond rr mt a 40 SCENIC ACRES
> Man Ecae Want to Sell? "matures ex| Ehret eae See gcs| sett oe | eee be
Television Service 0 c i id “feat eat fire, alse Tent condition eterna. 2 Family Brick tigers. plsgtered al ots
ay mon? sun =v SERVICE. BUYERS WAITING. neat ¥ forte me ee a een || 8 8 ont mentghes ate beat 3 "dE rms 8 . sat oar
AY * - a 7 * |WARD E. PA bocoment, ; PR cs 0
M you he HOUSE. An sURR oes , IDGE or Ag “orn
ERY = ; 4 ins oeWaree a fs Sa weideine. Romeo pise0, sown, wi buy thls! attrac: REALTOR FE 2-8316 Seba oar aad pee se A, ks
NIGHT = - ( aterford CLEAW ROOMS KITCHEN. home. Huron . -
in MITCHELL'S TV KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Witt wey ears site for couple, no, arianers, 18 Srest Sooo oe tos ace GI bay now 4 ‘
100 WN. Sagmaw’ CPE 3-287) ‘i prog between . on East a. bedecsmia, ranch ‘
REPAIR SHOP 540 Nevada St tim ee Open to 8 for Your Convenience | *Dart™ crioeted_ fine ' oe et ha | Goa a _ mie -*
SERA TESS TY MEPAIE ANT | g Taare. ch Set, © be Gre, |e bese Rae wen mer tiatee ues|~- DORRIS & SON | ierinegaty fuven fanneusn at out ek sae
Bake Ee, anor, COM. | HANNA «Mean ne cittss te | LISTINGS WANTED — Bits petted wll er men | BW me Co-op Member | O85, SO eRnLEe ohn rwin | fens Re Ay
Building Service 15 Sar Fine Foam Wate] Byte & ‘ine ~ ee | et APARTMENT pam | een er — Pm eee Ad aid A ==
wren | OF SED ST rocsumals bor ons H. C, NEWINGHAM. [Rent Apt. Unturnished 36 W, DINNAN & SON A HOME OR YOUR 101% Ne Saginaw Street tmalier home. "eoed car ot
EAVESTROUGHING ‘ M. [- « _¥. PE 201 By ti
Bert gos ek ee |: OWN roses PS esiet ve, PE ou) 1-H. BROWS Reaktor =
me wewirs’—|-Knudsen ‘| oY, |e Johnson |="
. : @) Equity nein odd w= eh Be Rent be a
Sener? oF gee coz me | umatryicmnte| A Left |g. er se | IN PON 4
. ce) ‘ bed. . : : NTIAC —
gare| sfgrPan's Cech cae | Beet Stl te Se) A SR oo met oe Irs -.
eee Pe Bete TM MBCER. | : cnet Selerie® Bs a
pe by {8 WM. H. KNUBSEN . : New W est Suburban “i Evenings 4 cal hts. Beck FLOYD KENT oe
TOR = bungalow Hospital . . ‘ F
5 homes. | _ $10 7" 3 bedrooms full bath 200 . . ee
(o*| WANTED FURNITURE ek OY KNAUF, Realtor Pasee PE taste eves Pe Dito Three Bedroom | tele "nur" wt! cows nga Bot swarm spng| Starting His 3K Yea :
es argerees oo ; re sta |* see ee: ace Brick Ramblers} Pret tins ors vestooms tte | WISHING Y 7
. cl L & 8 Py -~ For Rent Rooms 32) Room Upren wira aputTs, . : very ine sendition turoughout, after 6 ‘call Mr. Inman ING YOU A
& land County's largest turn. nnn | FE 3660 . Attached garage. ige : HAP ,
dg Saath et | teow ten. M2 Bide OOS P PTEAat HOSTED, $13,725 toe emis oom S| WEE Eas treat. serv ry Hew. e
ATTRACTIVE ROOM: WEST SIDE, “apply 4 New, Low Seminole Hills hie 2 te this. comior
wal only. ‘ . sary ae Ag a home new Le a oe
ments you've wanted. 2 iets, ob e+ pe ci flagc an thera
tached ghrage. Other details ge- . = ;
ranch
ND HARGER CO. -— fPaing. Bestngse 00) A. JOHNSON, Réaltor
Huron St. Ph. FE 5-818 FE 4-2533
_ 1704 S. Telegraph Rd.
>
>»
Z
5 QO es O Co [Tj i al Hs |
lot.
WM, H. KNUDSEN
es ee ee
“Bo sale nq and asked
a One of the pleasures
HT of the Holiday Sea-
son is the joy of wish-
ing happiness to you,
our customers and
friends.
| James:A. Taylor, Agency Local Markets
Produce
Farmer to Consumer
THE PONTIAC
ye al i. 2 a}
a |
ead
= : * ae tlie > a ee ‘3
~ baad
a’
the pudding is in the eating. Those who approve | Timothy, and sister Julie, 15 months. — « at.
2
woatted Press
PUDDIN’ IT AWAY—These Epsom, Surrey,; of the pudding in this enthusiastic sampling are
Eng., youngsters heartily agree that the proof of | Gillian Ockenden, 6, her four-year-old brother,
Phete
A
but @ few loads of holdover steers again |
being taken off the market: cows about |
sieady, bulls and vealers active, strong, |
choice to low prime steers 2300-2625: |
commercial to Jow choice 15.90-323.50; @ |
few good and choice heifers 17.00-33.00; |
wullity grades down to 1080; wtility and |
cutters 800-1033; utility end commercial
bulls 13.00-16.50: commercial te choice
vealers 1800. 3600: cull and wtility
} Galabdle sheep 1.000. run largely wooled
| all classes steady, choice
Prime 80-1065 Ib wooled lambs 26.80.21
| goo end choice largely 18.50-3000: a
| few culle as low as 10.00: @ few choice
$8 I> lambs with fall shorn pelts 20.00; |
ag cull to good slauughter ewes 4 $0-
Foreign Exchange | NEW YORK
rates follow Oreat
others in cents! -
Canadiar ar AP Poreign exchange |
hi Britain im dollara
in New York open
market 2 816 per cent premium or
| 102. 56% USB cents, unchanged |
Europe. Great Britain (pound) 62.81
up. 1/16 of a cent: Great Britain 30 day
; futures 261. up 1/16 of aw cent; Great
Britain 60 day futures 280 31/33. uw
|} 1/32 of « cent: Great Britain 60 day
futures 280 31°32, up 1/338 of a cent
Belgium franc) 2 « Up 00% of «
|} cent: Prance (franc) 26% of e cent, uh-
, changed, Holland ‘guilder) 2643, un-
changed, Italy (lire) 16% of « cent, un-
escdde) 3.50,
| unchanged
| Latin America: Argentina (free) 1.24.
unchanged. Brasi!] (free! 1860 unchanged:
Mexico 11.44 unchanged;
¢boliver) 3003. unchanged
fifty-four May this fresh, new year
_ to come, bring you the
utmost in happitiess ...
w
| ae fim tet teen Se Veneruels .
the tendency
trend of the
moderated,
was quite brisk.
Higher major
-Pailroads, steels,
. televisions.
_ list were steady or mixed, ~ Carnations, dosen ........ 1.00 ’ Scattered Minus signs were in | Chrysanthemums, doren.... 1.00
evidence on such issues as Mont- -_
gomery Ward, American Can.)
American Cyanamid, Eastern Air Wholesale
Lines, and Zonite. The latter stock DETROIT PRODUCE
lost % at the start following the | DETROIT (UP) — Wholesale prices on had | the farmers’ publie markets;
report that it acquired Lady | Pruits taney, 6.00
Esther Lad. of Chicago. |e, No 1, 360-400 bu; apples, Greenings, i 4 : ‘ =~ i 75 bu; apples, peneshen, | “4
1 - . cy,
New York Stocks |i tm, ti is oe amin tera, erm ¥, ey, 4 bu; Ne il,
| agine mp «4 Ere one atl Bose, No 1, 350-450 bu. - PAGO «os 000 Vegetables: No 1, 100- cceeee 104 Lehn @& P..... 183 1.28: fancy, 1 ’ Cabbage.
Reem: BE ERPS 1 aura vane, Med, wet be, wae a ee i c q io : if s
=o: oe @ Mey... 004! red Ne 1 %9-1.80 be: ‘orem.
RS aS ote Or a . ° i.
Pf Gea” S05 Merc Pielas. ge]) crate: celery. Not, 6-160 doa bes: Airlie... 114 Martin Gi.... tad | celery root, No 1, 1.25-1.78 dos bens. ae Can 34 May D Str..., 269/Pershipa, No 1 125-150 % bu. Pennei, Am CarkPay 32 Mead Cp... . 284/|No 1, 80-100 dos behs. Horseradish, No
Te. ey ..., 416 Mid Comt Pet 664) 1, 450-5.00 pk bekt. + a ee eg
a ak hs M Word... 30 4-130 fon bebe ieiesonn’ ps Y gehts te re. es Shor “Pa...” 319! 80-1 Dag: potatoes. No 1. 2.60.2 $0 100-Ib Am BN Gas ... 404 Mot Wheel.... 22.3. Radishes, black, No 1, 1.25-1.75 bu; am Red ..... 135 Motoroia...., 294 ishes, red. Ne +. 65-80 doz hohs.
a e rere -£ pees Br -o-+ Shs | Resebegne No 1, 2.00-225 bu Ovnach> am o> Sass, Co-see Ne 1, 15-1.00 bu Am geet 1s # Nash Kelv.., Bs bard, No 1, %%5-1.00 bu. Turnip, topped,
Am vee Gh Met Gosh B., s03 | MO & 100-180 bu anae Cup’... vse 0. , Collard. No 1, 100-150 ou.
Armee wei: AY Nat bandos seg | Rate, Ne 2. 18-130 by, ‘spinach, Mop > Atehieen ..... Net Btl...... 463/200-1325 bu. Swiss chard, No 1, 1 0-
ait Bats Be Bat rma > tt) Me be siete: "0S bY Geel: Seg loupe nc t"4. cS MTa™ Cor oo Fs Same :.. a5 eM Ee... Bel. — -————— “ae
baa ar. ha Be Am Av... 3) - DETROIT EGOS I Sy
es | Nor Pac... sx. se E DETROIT (AP) — The following prices boos re Ou... 08 Ber Ot Pe... were paid per 4 fod. by first re | ° a> $y — F Boeing Airp . *) } ae WS it Seivers fof gage lols of government gred- as ;
Bore Warn ".. 148 Sy tas Whites: Grade A jumbo s6-¢7 weignted _—.*? 2 orem Pict 31.9 | SYS Prive 08. -h4 wid « 1“, sooce BRS Dev .. 31.4 | medium 44-48 ovg 46; grade B large Baines: 138 Petey we) 31 * 6-51 wid ave 40%. soos Dm oe* 1a | Browns: Grade A jumbo 54-65 wid ave p— 4h Ve Pepsi Cola r32 %, large 47-61 wid ov. 3
: Campy Wr 3 Peting Ds 3 42-49 wid avg 48; grade B large 44-48 Cos Dey ...., 124 peas D --. a3 | $Me ane athe: C large 42." Cheeks . sites Petty Soe — 48.8 4 Soe ' . PRN Pet ... 8 = =
) Se re So Ss CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS Celanese... 18.5 Pullman ns... 406), CHICAGO (AP) —Butier “Weak; receipts Chee & Ohio. 134 Bure On pes a 1.255.662. wholesale oqreny_peiens ‘% to q
Chi @ NW... 902 RKO Pic 11... 2:9| 2UCT! score AA 65; eR, ’ ___]
Cities Serv... 782 Rem Rand’... “° | nee Soe eS wastonsle a Cal S
— aa “| Seeud ous. ae US mediums 436, OR. ot 445: ow
Some Sela nn AOS Bape Mer... 881 Givrens receipts G8; eRecks ang dirties | Ca AGO um — Grains drifted ‘ Palm ..., 301 oo. @ —
3 ; 6 her, B.. 394 | - : aimlessly in a typicaily.slow_ end |
Cos GB... FF = Geevill ME. 388) cic agra? PouLrar of the year market on the Board — 4 Al RR 426! CHICAGO (AP) — Live poultry steady
Gon Pe pi 4% 306 Bears Roed .. 61.4 | “CCMPts 281 Coops fod paring prices of Trade today, Most cereals
st Shell OFF A... 78 | UPEhenged: heavy hens 33-28 t hens jopened a little lower although Cont Can... [5 Simmons _—,. 20.9) 19°28; frvers oF broilers 24-27; roost. Sone sine east at oni?! Sp ete 17-19; duckiings none ae was quite firm, Thereafter,
“Bern Be oem v hee ‘82 a slight strengthening tendency Crue sein 229 e+. 304 : DETROIT ProvLTsY developed, but it was hardly any- € wr. 7 sores 7!) DETROIT iAP) ; : met base - owe 202 e W ... 48lron Detrott. fer Fag Ag f -R- thing to get excited about. There
Bowe Ate. 8 Brand Bil ep wo wom was no incentive in the news for iJ ° On -Celt envy hens 30 teavy vrotiers
—s . 107 ta = tna bw or fryers under 4 ibe Barred ‘Rocks, 2» large scale buying or setting.
| a Pig © otal ty bia Oi hic 321 ; _ Wheat near the end of the first
Gavel ... #2 — 4 Livestock |hour was unchanged to \% cent
io tee t.. 64 ) eT |higher, March $2.06%, corn “%-%
— TY ge eo Sr “- 22 | PETROIT LIVESTOCK |higher, March $1.55%. oats % to
in ..: iS3 Tex O Bul .. 906 | , DETROIT (AP)--Hogs—-Galabie 36 Not | % higher, March 78, rye un-
“IT SSS BRewe, Be 9 | ittrend unchangea, nn’ * 8 | hanged to % higher, March boy Fron W Air 31 / , Cote—Galabie $0 Thareder's, martet | $1.19%, soybeans unchanged to % “ee Trancamer ... 276 * ~ fe- j 33; ceipts. Compared inst Thursday. ¢e- | higher, January $3.06 and lard : af fees Bs eee ie nk holiday end ‘x | unchanged to 30 cents a hundred
= Z On Cornice .| 73.7 | renters deedime; ree a : Asi. M4 On Pec — uggish. ; slaughter | pounds lower, January $16.65. . » steers and helfere weak to 80 cents Unit alr Lin 215 ue
Oc me Ry Pt, oa OH Aire... 473] Ones to p10 higher tember) end feed. Grain Prices Gt Weet s..° 173 United Op ... 3 | ers steady, week's bulk good and choice
Sreimeed ... 28 ous: i3:3 | 'e¢, steers lings $10. 00-28.00 CMICAGO GRAIN ° e. +593 © Rud .:... Bil Gees wen es Eke ie Se oe CHICAGO (AP) —Qpening gram Homestt i.) a Smet, .... 1184 W steers $36.00: eight head. pm on - Wheat 3.08% ay 7 ‘.
Hout Hersh .. 12 2 & Sicel...-. 387 | 80) m heifers 422.00; several loads most. | ¥*" ae in”
Bee By Relea HT kr cad Seateey Hee ene | Ys EON Baye Inand G0 .... 43 ee , aos $12.00-16.00, bulk utility and commercial Pig 155% ge geen
Inapir Cop... 215 WwW Ve Paip are | CONE, 81100-12.50, few commercial cows | * Lee, has 30%
sorte Ir ..: 168 West Un Tel 40.4 | $12.00 Gnd above; canners and cutters | 5°" 1se. owe * Soot = gna We TES HSE | mostiy 04.00-11.00, tow lightweight sheliy | 2 + a ~ ee 8 Int } ad . 1 wo $1.1) Cenmers down to $7.00; Bulk utility and | - N e Int “eo 4 wae 8. ** Seg | Commercial bulls $13.00-16.25; most good — 991 cu ++ 2.60%
Int fae ta 338 Walworth. 65.7 | end state 180-630 © fooder steers $19.00-| ay 228 '**' Jens 72 jokes Man ... 634 Yalea Tow 66 8 — Bep S Ges, . 18 Kelery Hay .. Ss poms 8 Oo od estien, Suite ee on oon: bei tae * ye May ...... 14@
BBE SS SS ES | hare atte ead ptm iee | =a os.... ma dividuals $32.00°33 00. with aa 4
saw ome omeet os ners we'd sr acat we Local Man Admitted mostly $12 00 00: culls mostly §5.00.10
— Compiled by the Anse- | Sheer s. Sle nene Com ed le
elated Press . , . iT? =redes anamter lambs ahowt sueer
) ; yo 6 18 © after a high oo + en —— B . . ‘. “a ne Retls Util Stecks | fcetce, strong all week we bulk hi | Assoc
: Met change . in _ +3 =i} re 3 goad te prime slaughter lambs. PS 1) ar iation
Neen Thurs. ....14¢67 3 8613 2064 710° includ'ng nwmerous 100 to 108 18 |
Prev. day ..... 1428 TT8 88.1 107.97 lots around 200 head strictly choice and C »e 8S to 68 Ib -lamBe $21. 10-21 75 ‘eremonies in Oakland County
| srenta “tes _— pony by 44 10.9 | smaller volume utility aid iow Mi 6 week Phil
Ss cove $908 003 Gag 118-7 | lombe, 01600-8000; very email opey | ourthouse last oaw ip e ewes . few head -
. Iesd fom cisss 00a TS bes ooa.| bigher: cull and wulinty ove scte.tee.| E- Rowston, 32, of 2 Utica Rd., - stimates or vr: e ‘
does ROS sso: BES SEE BLE OES | caiversoe nope Lave: sheep 2.008 reereeinty ; —— n DETROIT STOCKS CHICAGO. LIVESTOCK her recen é & Weeks) | CHICAGO ‘AP)—Galable hogs 11,000: ba R law
Figures after decims! points are ths | moderately active: extremely uneven, | School graduates, h Lew Noon | Svtchers to fully 1.00 lower: sows 35 Circuit Jud ge
112 12 $@ 88 lower: bulk cholee 180-230 the 26.25. |
D & C Navigation* G4 04 28.00: & few loads choice 25.10-25.35. 200. | George B. Hart. | . . 22 27,270 Ib butchers 2) 25-2450. 280-130 It) ri ck sponsored » oducts 3 ] 7275-23250 lereer lotsa chotee sows 350
Sake mee 0H 27 + 27 55 21 00.22 $0 a few hag nt sows Rowston who has Mie t Abr 4 Ls tehily e ood Pa e » p
Rody Min 27 32. Malabie cattle 1000 calves 000: slaugn. *erved as the Wayne Berew* 15 1.6 ter steers and hetfers irregular; sales judge's court | fully steady with Wednesdays low close
clerk since 1948.
The newly admit-
ted lawyer starte«
at Detroit College ROWSTON.
of Law night school in 1948 and
commercial cows 875-1200; canners end | shouldering a double work load
was graduated with a bachelor of
laws degree in June of this year.
me was graduated from Olive
Se. | College in 1942 with a bachelor
of arts degree and served with the
U, S. Army from 13 to 145. He
is a member of Delta Theta Phi
law fraternity.
New Layoffs Total
53,000 Workers By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Recent and planned layoffs of
4 employes in industry and railroads
which employ nearly 20 million
-+pears to have no visible means of
Has No Job—
| at Least on- TV
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD wW—Ever wonder
what Ozzie Nelson does for a
living? -
I don't mean the real Ozzie Nel-
son. I mean the one who is por-
trayed in ‘Ozzie and Harriet’ over
the ABC-TV network tomorrow
night. Like Fibber McGee, he ap-
support.
“We've never explained what
kind of work I do in the TV show,”
‘We don't sweat over the
‘isan Soamerioed for Gu" T¥ dune.
We just get the meaning of the
17, and Eric Hilliard Nelson, 13.
Despite their fame, they have re-
times.
County Deaths
Home, with burial in Walled Lake News in Brief Four windows were broken in
the home of Frank Bale, 555 Going
St. sometime Wednesday ‘night, ac-
cording to Pontiac Police.
duliug Koprince of 319 W. Iro-
quois Rd. told Pontiac Police
| Wednesday that someone broké a
window in his home by shooting
either a .22 caliber bullet or a
BB pellet through it.
if your friend's tn jail
bail, Ph. FE 5-5201. C. A. Mitchell.
Knights of Py
party, 18% W. Huron. Food, favors,
mix. Dancing 9 ‘til 2. Tickets at
door, $3 per couple. New Year's and needs
—Adv.
guards. Fire Fighters Get
New Officers WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —
New officers will take over direc-
tion of the township Fire Figh’
ers’ Assn. at its first meeting of
194 next Tuesday.
Heading the group is Clayton
Soncrainte, president
Golf, assistant treasurer; Donald
Kerr, Howard McCallum and
James Donaldson, trustees; Charles
Callahan and Floyd Gidley, guides,
and Bernar¢ Torr and Russell See,
years service.
Boyes is a na Business Briefs Donald L. Boyes has been named
general manager
. BOYES
tive of Hastings. He
i 3 8
3
aki iH E F I i
: 3
DEC. 30, 1953, IFPORD,
, Cooley Lake, Rt. 3,
urday, Jan. 2, ot 2 p.m. at the
Richardson-Bird Chapel, Milford.
Interment in Commerce Cemetery.
Mr. Ford will lie im state at the
Richardson-Bird Funeral Home,
Milford.
rs
brother of Mrs. Mary James,
neral service will be held Satur-
day, Jan. 2, at 2 pai. at the
Pabereen Eve Chapel,
See; dear father of Marjorie and
Robert Gee; dear brother ef Fred
and Herbert See. Puneral service
will be held Saturday, Jan. 2, at
Home.
SMITH, DEC. 29, 1953, CHORGE C.,
3530 Maybee Rd. -Independence
Twp.. age 37; beloved brother of
Chester V. and Car! Smith, John
Niekerson, Mrs. David Acha, Mrs.
Daisy Miller, Mrs. Ruth Chambers
and Mrs. Eligabeth Harris. Fu-
neral service will be held Satur-
Jan. 2, at 2 pm. at the
Davis Puneral Home
Kenneth Hutchinson
officiating. Interment in soldiers’
omg of Perry Mt. Park Cemetery.
F. Smith will lie in state at the
DeWitt C. Oavis Funeral
; @ear sister
Nerton,
Chapel y. Mrs, Van Seo-
Oc Will Me im state at the Voor-
hees-Biple Puneral Home.
ZINSER, DEC. 30, 1953, MAUDE R
346 Osmun 6t., age 64; beloved
ed Albert } dear moth-
er Mrs.
Anne Kinkeda, ’ ant ts ner
Bianenes Oder, Mrs | ang q ret
oor Julia Dalian, Samuel,
Brya Albert Miller. Funeral
will be arnouncec
later by the Sparks-Griffin Pu-
Dera] -Home.
-_
In Memoriam
him,
part again.
ly miss by Jim, Pear
Dickerson and Dauchters ”
- Cards of Thanks
recent bereavement
little girl W
. C. Geo.
Pursiey Funeral
and Mrs. LeRoy Kel-
3
BSCHAPFER'S — roger
323 AUBURN PB 32-3173
Funeral Directors 4
Voorhees-Sivle FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service, Plane or Motor
FE 2-8378
Donelson-Johns FUNERAL HOME
“DESIGNED FOR
BOX REPLIES
At 10 a.m. today
there were replies at
2, 3, 6 8, 12, 15, 19, | 36, 43, 46, 60, G1, 65, 66, G7, 74, 76, 89, 92, 98, 114.
<
¢
The Pontiac Press
FOR WANT ADS
DIAL FE 2-8181 .
From 8 a.m, to 5 p.m. He
[
ie cis
i : i i 774
lh 3: Py of
i Ht euseverw
S228352
No situation is hopeless
where Classified ads can
- help! ‘To ioer tare
. find a good job or fill va-
cant units call FE 2;8181. ‘ i ‘ . j 4
j SLICE OF HAM ~~
Wanted Male Help 5 Wanted Male Help 5
WANTED Experienced
Truck
NEEDED
Journeymen
Millwrights
Machine Repairmen
‘ and
Drivers Toolmakers
APPLY AT
“tr WATCHMAN’S GATE APPLY
~ -~ PONTIAC
Fleet Carrier— MOTOR _
PIVISION
Corporation
, Employment Office GLENWOOD ‘4 .
586 S. Blvd. East NTIAC, MICH.
Pontiac, Mich.
, JOURNEYMEN CAR- an PE 6-0326 penters FE ( GARAGE PART P.
mgreeuperi night. 18 ee. & cider » np TO > °
B+ tare: Caplianed company ; rah _Wayne, 88m to 0am train two y men i Zee ote ew GAS STATION ATTENDENT nights e7perience not necessary,
iarthwesteen ant Telegraph, rAd
Meco Bervice
CAB DRIVERS. FULL & PART
time. Day or night shift, 101
W. Huron, : x be paid .
9 N. Telegraph, near W. Huron
“ASST. DISTRICT MANAGERS Several ambitious salesm
bas . reas roo | REAL ESTATE
wen. Aime Wm be csmmnay 1 SALESMEN
work bagatodee Spo i Have for -time sales-
~ | _ Miesesegey.” Sxcaptionaitr’ “high | pam. Hust, Sun _aatomebiie apd training and) tast ‘rromctions will . Ge ner pow
a FE. eo " rative Exchange.
FURNITURE ow SY 7
nung: eae Septee, Pa D421. MAHAN
LEeTs ART YEAR TY CO.
BS Se | tt s - ry : BOY if YR :
“feian Teak epomremirs Me ex: | fortune, Sucndagie wih eh? Rewietgh's Devt. MCL-#84-0, yd paseste
es Gg ~~ et oli ie taves New" WAWTED:> Roo CARPEN- _feture. Bent, “ennene, Bis yy yt -1 MECHANICS FOR Yams ke _ - LINCOLN - MERCURY
oaaeep @ gs DEALER. GOOD PAY
Pa Me & STEADY. SEE MAL tome work, white or ommend, See SCANTLAND, 40 Ww.
ot ‘age. MOTOR INN REC PIKE ST. floor. 18 6 5 -6032.
wITURE 3 N. OUAR-
caret ean | Se eee ek Exe DaIveRs PULL-AND Page | WANTED: sALEaMA i time renta’ be-i Apply 438 ine covering & 4 Orchard Lake, 4 to € p.m. surance . acy
shantield ne auen ‘Co. FE
Adjusters Neer YeRe Soeting Genter Se" Gat Meet Investigators’ ed: Part time e
investment. New Susiness big To become branch office mane future, Write box 8, Pontiac Press.
fers. Rapid advancement out Wanted Female Help 6
standing salary opportunities Lary TO MOTHER
and employe benefite. ae ae arr:
Must Be at Least | ay High School Graduates cane TEA OF _DC-VE
Age 21-35 Say werk. con a tam And Have a Car walrti OM i AM. te &:
General Public
Loan Corp. — 69 W. HURON
FE 3-7181
E ienced Pre xperi sser
‘
To work om phone
"a \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,
L1LA
PAINTING . PAPER *
Temoved Senduchy. PE
Moving & Trucking 12
= hite or woman to live in our Gres te wi .
Help with general Beusework and | wants hayling FE tans eOoe re ‘ iar ee ee
private room, MI ¢saa9, ""*** aeurery an hrns et, PICKOP. 8 EXPERIENCED, STENOGRAPHER ~_ ‘ble tales call PE T-16E sayin
tor steady ciploymeat 56125. DELIVERY. ANY Thun haeae
SxPERIENCED WAITRESS 4) inccast son “amnvies PLM. to 2:30 P.M. 021 W. Huron Me ERATOR SERVICE ASHES
ELDERLY | TAKE| manure Pe soca” * eos
work, live im, FE _ asus . SMITH MOVING
EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER | Y®" oF Pickup Servic a cook, 621 W. Hur.- St ___ | HAULING OP any “rot REA FEMALE, TYPIST —,! Pe 26870 manent estad- WITH 2 TON STARE TAU
onths g vant hauling PE 4400s, =“
and ss, m
mum acc wage
~~ if available, W
sTENOGRA PHER_ yary
er ‘
erks 2h Birmings a
- OPPORTUNITY FOR EXECUTIVE
INDUSTRIOUS & TACTF
CONSUMERS
POWER CO. _ 2% W, Lawrence St.
WANTED: WOMAN TO LIVE IN.
eare for 2 children & do genera!
poose work, MA 42927 or OR
Women TO WORK ©” PHONE. STEADY
job, gov. pay if you qualify. 3
near x UCKING @ vlna
dish anytimes re 39296 © nd
CIGHT HAULING aT ANY Time in| PE 32500 iG aT ANY TIME
-| MAN WITH west. % TON TRUCK WANTS
Use oer any time PE 48421.
AND HEA ; i
Rubbish hauled, PES bee
SUDDEN SERVICE HES ROB bish and light trucking Fee Gavre
O’DELL CARTAGE Local and Lane. Siviaase Moving
ust TRUCKING, RUBBISH AND
ashes. PE 4-2266 or FE 2-7625
Trucks for Rent TRUCKS. TRACTORS
% Ton fr. mo Tom Stakes
and .r, Trecke
Pontiac Farm and
Industrial Tractor Co.
___PE ¢-0081—PB 4-1449
Business Service 13
WANTED CARPENTRY WORK.
houses, garages. remodeling. MT’
__8-2835 or Midwest 40663
SUBURBAN SEPTIC ~ 11K CLEAN.
ers, pake O- Lu MY 23-6431.
EXPF™ . /REE TRIMMING & RE- woving, FE 1-682?
JOHN'S’ TRENCHING _— ___s*PE SC5-5842
STEAM CLEANING — All.t of steam c done.
Pon’ Parm sg ~ A)
~~ EXPERIENCED
SALESWOMAN tn ladies ready to wear dept.
Top salary. Apply in person Sat-
aney between’ 11 a m. and 3
mn -
“7 will tse co ty or. ae write Boz %
Press, i LADY
PART TIME ALTERATION LADY.
People’s Credit
Chouing. 8 ‘daginaw. . :
iM. 2%, STEAD
“ork. goed ee ones
30 m Tson.
Crocker br wr .
YORE BE-
A oming 7 for Stanie
home or having « party
call 36228 _ - rT)
wid, to Ny to 8:30. Write
_ Box 6 Pontise |
°
; i | : gro
* 25% “i
‘
*t
, atte 55 He a i Ka
i :
i : | x
i e
:
Tractor Co. PE 4-046. PE 4-1442
ELECTRICAL
SEWER CLEANING
3
SAWS) MACHINE SHARPENED surs| MANLEY LEACH 10 BAGLEY ST. TRIMMING
Pree estimate PE 4-88065. rs
71-8628
EXPERT TREE TRIMMING & RE- moval. Ph. FE 56-6593, OR 3-2000.
¥ ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS
repaired by — men
2 &
y Co. 17 W. Law-
rence St one FE 3-013
Fea SR EE PLASTERING 30, | FE rE 5-0925. LEO LUSTIO |
A PPLIANCE SERVICES We service all makes of refrig-
erators, washers. clean-
ers, and all types of small ap-
: nov: 96 Oakland Ave.. PE 2-402)
SUBURBAN P TANK
cleaners Lake \ %
- ELECTRICAL
st rewinding 218 E. = Plains
ae on!
A & B TRENCHING
Tier _Wtd, Contract Mtga. 3¢/FUNNY BUSINESS |
IMMEDIATE ad ____ Building Seryice
Cnr, Sone ota a te
‘DECEMBER 31, 1953 =
by Hershberger
~ House Raising-Moving _ and excavel FE DE PALAI
A. JOHNSON
178 5, Teegraph Ra. - REWEAVING EXPER’ _ Bulls superbiy tailored
at our disposal to rehase pew
senal Cenwecte for
MAURICE THOME, D. 6. C,
1203 Pontiac State Bank Bidg.
cis 1)
Photo-Accessories 20A
' SPEED GRAPHIC CAMERA.
OA 86-2543
PORTRAITS FRAMES . COPIES.
Weddings, Formal & Candid. Lo-
Patin 1a
TI MEMBERS
Evenings and ie .
Wanted Real Estate 31 E-M
6 ne
SPEED GRAPHIC WITH FLASH
—__— OA 53
Hammond “Unhappy New ‘.car to you, 400!"
Lost and Eound nn nn Has buyers waiting for well lo- . ; _ cated homes in all price ranges For Rent Rvoms 32
WILL THE PERSON WHO Seepenns ann ———— up by mistake dark
PAUL D, HAMMOND
LOST, GOLD CROSS AND st L
FE 52443 BAVS 000 Camm Ce ae Wanted to Rent Pwr wr
YOUNG COUPLE WITH 1 8&CHOOL
child wants furn apt. FE MAN’S BROWN BILLFOLD, CON-| _ taining $150 and volnahte papers
Peddling Your Property? ft doesn't pay. Our memes of ve AFTER DEC 18, showing’ only to qua: COUPLE WITH 2 SMALL CHIL.
dren well managed would like
room
LOST, STRAYED OR SsTOLEN ae ——
Honey colored Spaniel Answers PONTIAC PRESS EMPLOYE DE-
te" r 5-53 sires bachelor apartment.
REWARD OFFERED FOR IN write Pon' . mation. on whereabouts of .2 7 Pe
| Humphries’ cations Seaman | New Home--16%. Acres
Telegraph WILLIAMS LAKE
WM, topated 9 gms & ee, Te
~ot inetalied. ruy ‘nearly
sil -titledie _gar-
Price $18 $00,
Youl) find no bet-
ter value anywhere in «4
emell farm. Eve. Mr. Meiser
PE 54-8004, down
DRAYTON PLAINS KEMPYF S&T.
2 bedrooms & beth. Utility, O)
furnace Forced air beat
tot 1b ed reasonab:
$2.00 down, . SYLVAN LAKE > geome & beth, Hardwoed floors.
basement. 2 car garage
Priced at $6.06. Bubd- John Kinzler, Realtor
Large lot, small home Low orice. |
NL 6a wv rE +400
Eve Ye 1810; OR 320%
Crawford ROOM
$ room house both fully modern. )
1469
WEST SUBURBAN 5,000 is the full price for this 3)
bedroom modern with oi] furnac
Excellent location —Terms. :
NORTH SUBURBAN.
evty | TERRIFIC
this quick. It won't |
, 614,000
FACT SIDE TERRACE erated Tooms, oak KEEOO HARBOR
2 story 8 room modern, 4 bed-
rooms, full 7 aute = oil GATEWAYS 16 a 2
HAPPINESS
| an" for
Fabctae a, Oren, “a FORGET WORRIES $1,500 DOWN
Wit make you the proud owner
this room and
2 bedroom built in i"
Offering a W liv room
basement mmo tad seteens,
; i
To Buy—To Sell—~To Trad
YOU BUY IT-werLi. INSURE
pe’
ment, off heat, pom | beat inside
_boat in 4, 96,500,
#1. , 7 EMBREE & GREGG
Por furpiture imevrance PE 4.0504
NEW AND
NEW BASEMENT OF LAND. $800 DOWN
CRAWFORD AGENCY : 5.2264
Eves. FE 45-2137 or EM 3-5042 REALTOR OPEN EVES. | 5 Oo BE OR 2141 Opdyke PE 46617; FE 41640
Vacant. Two bedroom bun-
~—Lakeland, Florida furnished
L.. H. BROWN, Realtor
garage Located on East
~otf Joslyn. $60 month pay-
ment, HURRY! :
DORRIS & SON - Coop Member W. Huron St. rE +s?
Tigds
New
Three Bedroom
: Brick Ramblers
$13,725 - New, Low
Down Payment full ; 7
R if VALUET, Realtor
+-ona4 | 27.5 Telegvagh
Partridge
ellent Corner Location F
ji | eS
aT stk
. ranch type Ramen,
brick siding. As low as $1,000 dn. plus mortgage costs,
John K. Irwin
A HOME OR YOUR
“one. 6 call Mr. Inman
Fe
=
iz Ed Pai [oie i
i z
“7 ie ‘3 8 = : Ee wy i E i Be ii ‘ i Ba
a - irs
-
IN PONTIAC
IT’S
FLOYD KENT
Starting His 38th Year
WISHING YOU A
HAPPY NEW YEAR
A. JOHNSON, Realtor |" 2533 | 1704 S, Telegraph Rd.
T : WiLL PLEASE YOU
the
, FS ee
ba Aha
al
OFFERS
Immediate Possession fe “40 §1.500, small down
payment
Huron Gardens
i, if: g
ce - “ 8 ity i F EPH | Ni
s, Rochester Area 3 20 A i 1 ne
ey
_GEORGE R. IRWIN
pore Te a FE vee ~ “All Woman Realty”
large pic- ate
Team end chimper are t
bots koje. Cums Must sacrifice
aes M. ELWOOD
oe ge we oe
STONE THEL
6 Room House, $1,000 Dn.
Member Co-operetive Realtors
sible to fully describe this
levely home Let one of our
bule entrance to specious |!
ing room. large picture win
ell, full tile
wer & colored
Piastered = paintes
walls, select o@4 Moors. full
2 88 F FHA terms
AY O'NEILL, Realt
W Huron Open 68
Prone FE Tero FE, Sher
Member © . Fachenge 8
2 ieft
RA it
De Voaiaell a Fa
See this 2 bedroom —
sbheq ups
“BUD” Nicholie
REAL ESTATE
$6, 950 Morth!r
Le ay pe — = 2 i] yu
xes end
eabelievenie price
TgeET ee
iil : inl if | For Sale Houses © “
LAKEFRONT
-
lavatory up, $20 ; with terms |
$375 DOAY N
o
plete exterior, studdings
var s, and chimney
Wood Co: f
ii oo After 5. m tt. 56 p.
PE ¢ios
i: |
RANCH . |a
off Auburn Ave.
must sell, $8,500. 7)
Ay eee te
Brick Fronts OPEN 1-8: |
PIONEER HIGHLANDS 645 Voorheis Rd -—Our new mode!
on |
senventonee; tive poe our
for © information
Gl RESALE
we Tinatly e Gt ie on |
ene of our ~~ = sua ad
2 bedrooms; tile
ment with Bo Pony ste |
; put th
= list to see Only ‘yoo
6 ROOM MODE: N
An 4 side location j
and in immaculate eondition; full
gas heat; close to
school apd anly §2.000 down
Murry,
Bedroom
Cae
| +e sure te check Ranch Home
ood’ Wilhame ‘ $450 Gown
oko ‘e. jot. vs range from
_C. Weod Co. 72s Willaims Take Ra, te
ree Kher 8. PE ¢ion
GILES. Only a Few Left
the fee
new homes we have left
Complete 5 room home with
fun 4 w
Tupooa ce bath metal
s and sink in kiteh
en Auto hot water heater
auto. of and
and. insurance. Call for ap-
pointment +
$2,000 Down
East suburban near Adams |
3 rooms all on one |
bese
aie Bee “this for sure.
$1,900 Down
Leeated on the northeast
side. mside the city a nice
3 bedroom ranch typ? 6
rooms al] on one finer also
attached garage thet has ell
saiuminum siding This house
pm cea ® large je ne
- euto_
Paton Let
be sure to sige eon ores
you buy
GILES REALTY CO
REALTOR
s2 W. Huron
___ Open 8 te 8
For Colored Famihes homes. Hard room
on — Auto,
Priced
Russell A. Nott, Realtor
17% W. PIKE FE 4.5908 | FE 56-4175
—
FDGE OF TOWN
6 acres with new brick sem)-bun
alow 5 lovely large rooms on
st fleor full high dry bese
ment with fireplace ree ts
room separate } +96tm
aw ei) furnace pace ee 3}
bedrooms ant etre beth
ond floer Truly a well oenigned
bome with many eastras A Pontiac This is very reason
‘ Pat ced
W. DINNAR & SON
66 W. Huron &t
For -or Sate L Land Contract 46 |
STONE We
oy. ne contract 1! months |
per cent discount. |
re yt} oe ask for Ted Me-;
Cullou:
Francis FE. “Bud” Miller |
Realtor
Member Co-operative Realtors
Excharge
, 19 J etyo PE 90089 |
Business , Opportunities a \~ LL
rans BOMES AND INCOMES |
‘all kinds PW. Dinnan and
Son “ew “perce
BEAUTY SHOP FOR SALE.
MA 41080
| TLEEES FORCES 648 OY SER. —
store.
R
a
tion &
BOK e
‘ail MA.
ment (1628):
| UP. Liquor Bar $6500 Dn.
Thet's Fight! Only 66.500 down and
this bar grossed _— the last
tt was im operation
burned in September
and. sewage are
me being — _ bar
living room work
ce for BK *, just Pt
+4) (1870).
STATE-WIDE REAL ESTATE SERVICE, INC
PONTIAC STATE BANK mpe
| Pontiar Office, Landmesser,
FE 41582
Money to Loan
nnn Stote Licensed | Lenders)
MONEY
WAITING You M ay Borrow
$20-S900
Today . Or rg vour bills. protect Your
credit
BUCKNER FINANCE CO. |
Above Walare
CORNER N 4”
FE ¢ SAGINAW & HU ‘RON
ALOANS $30 TO $300— On signawre omy
Household Finance
Corp...of Pontiac Vy S Saginas St FE 4-08.18
$295 "$500 QUICK FRIENDLY
SERVICE
“ow Leda > St at Cass
Phone PE 4-1538
Baxter &
Livinastone FINANCE CO
CASH PROMPT LY !
s since 1906
or come tn today. Provident Loa:
and 5 py La®-
tence St tiac 2.
NEED FROM
$25 to $500 Now! Here is the cash loan service you
have been jor
GET YOUR 10AN
IN ONE VISIT
Money to Loan “4
nets 4 ; a
NOW... HFC Comes to
PONTIAC 1840 Lapeer Rd. —_— MY 24611 er
Lake 7
leet CONTINENTAL Pad FT. PER-
manent bed, bottle gas, electric
refrigeration and brakes very
clean. $900 equity. Inquire Walt's
re Liverts 8226 FPigh and
paints, helper s bathroom fixtures
& compi-te line of other trailer
parts accessories. or
terms
very $74 prone
| Oven Evenings and Sunday PM
You. win | For Rent Trailer Space 51
America's est and Largest Con- “
quscments are gy oo Gnrdo ‘s trelier Camp. 3300 Eliz
borrow §20 to $500 quickly op sig- a
mode ‘without eadorecce fer any A ae sepa, Up oe meee Parkhurst ‘Trailer Pao MY Sasi:
you get 20mos. limos. @moa | Auto Accessories 52
$00 $675 $10.07 e164
insta ss "ime" hah 500 31.47 pak ~ SCHRAM AUTO PARTS che eS ee Si:
balance not eed . 2% | WRECKING FOR ARTS, “es Cans
> cent on that ps vot 8 : sod up Bucks. Forss vrolets,
excess exceeding fotos §=Oldsmobiles. Pontiac
oe = Ee OE ee Ray oe Abers. New ond
(Sages oe “Cire gore, ‘8 new e y. _.™ AND, a
HF AUTO GLASS
Co | peas FREE: One ound coffee to 6
Household Finance Windshiela” Hub” Aule -Olass “Co
Corporation of Pornttae:>| _ 12? Ostiana Avenue. FF}
ma i eas ou ts, Yan Poot FE TM Auto Servite 53
Generator & Starter
LOANS ~ Community Loan Co.
oh 30 FE tawrence FF 2-7131 FRIENDLY SERVICE
TEAGUE FINANCE
202 S. MAIN
ROCHESTER. MICH, . Loans TO 8500 CO.
L Rous D GOODs
Rochester OL 60711
| NEW!
$100 NEW!
QUICKLY |: On Your Name Only
Or Other Plans
Money for past-due bills, home or auto repairs, mec' Good
credit is all ‘ou . Other plans for $25 to 8500 in 1 day.
Phone FEderal 3-7181
GENERAL
PUBLIC LOAN Corporation
69 West Huron St.
Need Money?
$25 to *500
vate party, late motel ~e re
1 ruc is. a eal as voyr telephone, ies weak te e —
_ . Button MY
FE 5-812] For Sale Used Cars 55
BUICK ‘4 CONVERTIBLE. 3 3%
HOLIDAY “-X PENSES —Biwend Court. Cel anytime,
for a ether worthy purpose
Moe oate tity ome gt 47 CADILLA vo rst vie im e
ments. Libe 4 repayment plan +O fous PO gg We bl awe
erhauled. This is - beauty you
Home « Auto|
Loan Company ~
pase aD TE
~ WHEN YOU NEED ~
$25 to a We can neta vee we yor 2
— Sal : aca,
Pi, os cr-cch sh dns tee.
STATE FINANCE CO.
"Ne Pose’ Fa “sisne ™*
“as For Sate Mousetraiters 50
MICH-ARROW
ELCAR- RICHARDSON
mts Ot Parkhurst ‘1 railer
. = w Snes. Ser hone
¢ Also rebullt carburetors, tuel
RETAIL
i md lave @ week Sundays 8
Weekdays 8 to 68
* Hollerback Auto Parts
OO 8 .dwin FL 3-04T!
~ FOR COMPLETE
COLLISION SERVICE
Bumping. reinting. refinishing.
See Bod at
Oliver Motor Sales
S 2-9101
EPAIRS, BUMPING & PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATE
ALLY Pras ™* BRAID MOTOR SALES
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE
ear, cylinders rebored Zuck Ma
Shop, J Wood. Ph. FE
500 CARS WANTED |
BAGEEY AUTO PARTS | ne dollar oe bos d weeehed &
un of “Dh Tee vicky Res
ley FE 2-254 or PE 4
“Top Price for Your CG: ar as 2m ty . Original dark blue fin-
_Wanted Used Cars 54 cngtnn, "sedis “hoster $27 s
WANTED ” 1947 Plymouth
70 39/Sit Siete ease kt OUR CA sa Nag nb fd —— = real er St tin a
17 OLDs
450"! * rain ‘nestor, fatertee “tne ‘sot YOR PARTS me 8 ounce
uct R MART a ahead 11) & Montcalm FE +0230 tation $4 a month WE
TO BE OF E
SER
TO
IN-
From All t
v?
TH
GOOD
USED C PONTIAC RE
| HOPE
VEN MORE
VICE
YOU
1954
he Boys at
E
WILL
AR LOT
TAIL: STORE
For Sale Used Cars 55 For Sale Used Cars 55 55
FE 2-
See M&M Motor Sales
2,
WANTED TO BUY FROM PRI- Dixte Hwy
Huron Motor Sales
662 W Bures
ee a eusomere F
«| ict Gockhore te, Mt eT
One
Owner
RAMBLER STATION WAGON Custom Equipped.
AVERILL'S 2020 DIXIE HWY
2-0878 FE 4-6896
for top doliar on late mode! cars |
OR 31603 |
FE 2-2661,
Bright -
Spot
33 Olds con. cpe.
-|'53 Pontiac Custom sedan
"51 Olds “98” sedan
‘31 Cad. “62” Cust. sedan
"$2 Buick dyna. sedan
53 Chev. Bel Air sedan
‘51 Pontiac Custom sedan
’52 Pontiac sedan
50 Cadillac “62” cpe.
"52 Chev. Bel Air
"51 Buick sedan
‘50 Pontiac 4 dr.
"SO Pontiac sedan epe. sedan
‘51 Nash Rambler con.
‘50 Olds “88 ” sedan
iward ‘at 1. Mile Pd
incoin 63410
| 48 Pora 2 ar : ig Austip sauce Ses
‘83 Dodge Gyro trans. .. 1.445 } 50 Line Cosmo Hedra e7)
“Sat ine BLS ¢7 Buck Sedanet _........
{6} Ford Cust. 2 ¢r ie Fort Cust. &@ 6 = SPrTTT TT
a
i Chrys
| “Bob” Roles. Auto Sales
IT) S “aginew rE +700 |
mere TOR tase _Mugh _
| 1953
_ Chevrolets
15 Beauties To Choose From
Officials Cars
Demonstrators
New Car Trade=-ins
Big Selection of. ‘$1 Lincoln sedan
‘31 Ford Custom 8
49 Ford Custom 8
| 50 Pontiac Catalina aad
"50 Chev, sedan
1°50 Buick 2-dr.
"49 Buick sedanette
| 49 Olds 2 dr.
| 49 Studebaker Champ.
47 Pontiac sedan
“48 Chev. clb. cpe.
"48 Ford convertible
Bg RR
my Ol OU TL AL ALWAYS
DO BETTER AT MANY OTHER
AND pat PY
Body Styles_and Colors
as low as
$1495
MICHIGAN’S*
. FINEST THE JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC
mileage
=
OK. USED CARS
YOU WILL BE PLEASED —~ -
WITH THESE CARS
Serviced to Serve
in a
Separate Shop
‘52 Chev. 2 DOOR
Radio, Heater &
Powerglide
$1,195
'50 Dodge 2 DOOR
“Radio, Heater &
Fluid Drive
$645
‘'4] Ford COUPE
Radio & Heater
Very Sharp
$165
TWO
OZ Plym. 4 DOOR
Radio & Heater
Your Choice
$995
JACK HAB ‘Chevrolet S. Saginaw at Cottage
PHONE FE 4-4546
‘@ CHEVIE. « DOOR, FLEET “\me, good cond. OL 3-202. ;
’S2 CHEVROLET
—
MICHIGAN'S
FINEST THE BIG PAVED LOT ON THE CORNER OF
WOODWARD AND 13 MILE ROAD
CHEVE. ‘33 BEL AIR 4 DR. SUN
yo agarlaaee equipped, $1,695.
49 CHEVROLET
FINEST
ote abe nem, ow ver meages Wil Will help
~ $9 CHEVROLET _ seca
Radio, ater, n‘ce condition
throughout.
$595
MICHIGAN’S
FINEST THE PAVED LOT ON CORNER OF
Drive Out Today!
'RUSS’ USED CAR -LOT
gASE at Siena ay SS
Riatoe
"$0 FORD 2 DR.
"its Rpt Se
MICHIGAN’S
For Less 53 Pont, Cust. Cat., $2,495
’53 Pont. dix. 8 4 dr. $1,995
51 Ford Cust. 8 4 dr., $895.
'49 Buick super 4 dr., $695
"47 Pontiac 6 4 dr.,:
Anderson
Pontiac-Buick 7331 Auburn, Utica, Mich,
bog fA EAS ope er Ree ope ee . Bo ae a ee eS ee ey NR Se oe ty IE | OR EO eo. eee Bg, é Se Se ee Bee . d asi , ies Bite, Bar Se in i al opis Waa, ‘ ep ee eee oa a ‘ sid % f ‘ i ‘ ~
7 P| 4 * “ re, ‘ . . 4 . .
, - - * ° | ‘ 3 af
? . '
7 " aan foes
“+ >) THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1953
Sale Used Car Sone MODEST MAIDENS By Jay Alan| ‘For Sale Trucks B.) For Sale Trucks 5 | Sale Household Goods 66 | Sale Howuehold Goods 66 Sate Miscellaneous 68
e . . ‘ ¥ Dal — . 5]
. ‘|. ‘ Oc Tet conten PE 08 | Burm
arting S waver’ Beater. OPEN 8AM. TO8 P.M
: meer FLOOR SHOP | rms SUNDAY as )
The New Year | ” 8. w St, ot Bont baie : With \ $C) K ; GAS CLoTum’ DRYERS, 3 BAY | ?018 perty babi, LUMBER
fith a rate OW ENS “ei Bl Sand | VAS abe a a ave CHROME ETTE sETSs.
Clean Slate USED oo WAYNE GABERT'S | senve were coarse and kX a RY ci ar APPLIANCE SPECIALS} 8 brand h ssningion i rs
Pri ll . . . Meytag Washer, balloon roils, : Be eo om er ty “ES\-
rices On a eee he A-1 USED TRUCKS Se ae pare. and. be Sh ys —_— Se sai con” w. est si |<
inventory have been|, ‘ Ay Ohad Seren” Ee Serird ak e| ep Se Be seoneg fa] a
drastically reduced. Over RECONDITIONED ' |°S1 Ford F-6 dump, a real) 3 Sees’ record players... . "gap | 2 OTTLEG ee {64 garage ciding. ..-:.,; 9148
50 cars from which to RIGHT worker, a real money nt steeple tbe B AS rowan Pe al
choose. . IN A maker .....+0... $1,195 | Gover ‘vacuum leangre.” 30" bet Fe, Sali tnt Keoyon |? YOU ALE A HOUSE | sine 46 TO-'S3 SEPARATE SHOP Oral of in te Picigas 628 Dixie Mighwey. OA QUT To 8) ings
MODELS ‘$2 Ford }%4 ton pickup.| it 8 Saginaw st FE bein KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR, ke
us iy i bod ‘ Sort ear me A Senne ee $845 aktrnmestis TED MOLLY AOSD "Ge — “0 OR 30019)” ws New. Years
ctica a st s . beds, All “new you save. Closed | wy . rE A " _ 4
fn the following 7 yes ; Need a 4°49 Chevrolet stake, won't — ——— aah sores RrienT-Te on Burmeisters | Noe," ae seit coox =
5 be here long ...... $605 | Stoves Bovont ” sob & EX #5 Northern Lumber Co. | 5,,;"7rert - Buick Pj k U ?) sang 2 Mt a —4 i | Sar aeattadl SUPPL ¢ Wa 4
- e eq TV, 635. up. ; old. FE 1-6373
Chevrolet Take: Y D ‘$1 Ford panel, handy for NEW “APPLIANCE” FELEVISION. | Secter rive & pptiance, 422 W| ‘WED DELIVER | Boxe rorrins, soe ae
Oldsmobile ake Your Chaice of any business $695 aryer 38 per cent off while they | ELECTRIC RANGE, LAROE SIZE. | rea. Le-Le-
Pontiac Our Large Selection _ n*- -- “linge mh eee ce Toe -_ EM ae eek: os | BS BS = Bali symouts of Used Trucks 49 GMC dciatp, very ' wae AUTOMATIC, WARIEER, lash. Fesne OR 32717 Plaecu ad carta, Goobe,Fauy | regenera, ted fave Cue fore ae q
: _ condition, ready to go|—**O — DAVENPORT faucets, $14.95. Toilets, shoes cou
Nash fj to work .........- $995 cheat of deeeen: TORS in good condition pied, 600.80 ig ha Baby. Parakeets, 45 j
Many of these models 49 Chev. Seesteng coo ARR] Ph. FE 2-3285 Micniat Fryorcet, “SB™Or- an an Ste Sua late tom,
have ‘automatic trans- 8) Ford F-7 tractor —A|dasinie one ——g/OSPAQE , LDOR DOOR, tx7aé| 24137 ‘GUARARTREEL. ie
missions. “Now I want something nice to-go with this dress eat 1%4-TON PICKUP real beauty, plenty rug- | Pnrinisned drop leat tavies sie es Maton tangs 2 pig wil sac | r won oA SANDER FURNACE | Monge AnD AED Case ;
_—_ | Red, good rubber and} ged .........06,. $1,345 | Bocnzasen socae hich tines] APT e128 GAS RANGE (RURM-| fent Oanland Po Mena Paint | SEOWTERED ENOLIGH SETTER b
No Payments many miles left ; - cone Furniture. rest er. $128.50 value | eae pSuanily | 436 Orchard Lae, FE 54150 | baeneeuiee ton an
Until FEB. 15, 1954 aneale Used Cars 55 Sale Used Cars 55 Only $450 ‘$2. Ford tractor, F-6, | taste AMPS. EXQUISITE POL: BRAtaa rigorcecent 303" eS Sr ines Gaadee wceeene ‘eae + + il Missed oiame.
Oe, ; ¢ 4 ise res as | che a ve siume anteed 639.50 up Roy's replace- | —— 7.
C 0 E., good zee $1.245 ag Witlen a Pac: Sale “Miscellaneous 68 | mee: bd Oakland _Ave | Ceeed 6 weeks es. ae 2
F . _ gent, 303 —Orcbard_take Ave. | WO appoiniment FE?-190s. ~4
OLIVER END OF |'4Q Chey. [mms 5 x4 domo) “Sor SCHUREN [rae agra ce gaaers| TALBOT (eet cem at ° good tires, A-1 condi- & SAVE | Phone EM 3-364).
MOTOR SALES C)\W T THE YEAR ! | TOX. PICKUP Gil 5 ones cpr $1,095 | Where vour doltars have more gee | PRAY tanec ‘ent AND (USED | Meck, g8 Sno, 3 bow pine. ti | (oer —_ = fe- s J ° ies Ce ° ardie en and ore spray: | hundred; N
210 Orchard Lake Ave, ’ 4 SALE . | Special built boxes on this |, ie Acbure Beigua. sence af feat. Rototilers, args snd’ smal. outetion, 1028 Oaxiend om, | Pane ae: Sa —
FE 2-9101 * ™ SS Looks sharp, drives sharp,| #25220 tires & boo ‘er brakes << | Reg. 8% 30 gel Sule, gus. water inte eater.... $295 P arp Reg. 04.08 nouse pant $250 gal. | * KARAT BLUE WHITE rs heaters $30 50 Fouy, BRIDLE 6 eee Wi
is sharp: excellent tires. | $1195 i et ae pene cnc iimare | Pa shee ww afeliy's Maedemed 7 : 4:30. veer wr
$500.00 | CY |e." $675 | apy | peered SraFaae y= Dimtine Svecel maces same Sere ae TEE
; : . —_ “+ ! SPECIALS — |” ein “ a ay | REIMronceD IRD ConcneTe SEPTIC)“ Wanved Livestock 74 ~
Discount. " “th Qresevaner_¢ Gr_. Chamoten. BE SURE | JEROME | Pas pen es Beat ee tr payer] Pads be Cm i. “| LIVESTOCK OY ALL EINDS. FOR
OWENS)*"*" Rt eel ee ir ec 1953 Ford di , 4 pte ee rang EL Ack TS sane 4) Bape geet reeneneeeess eh _ Arnason Plumbing BLACKETT’S _ ‘Hay, Grain
Y ‘4h Buick, radio, heater, dynafiow, EST EE? —— mInge __ | outa t iy EE ed | ba We solver an Building Supplies ag. iy
our Ford Dealer 3 Gr. super. Stock No. 18iBB. TRUCKS! Saf! eactaoa Ei WEARING At g WANT
147 S. Saginaw St. $595 ____Motor Scooters 58 Oatiand urniture RANGISTOR NEARING Aids, Ciasnston | ore Kine fog ny, :
actor y Phone FE 5-4101 ‘ ‘cule & “nabs atmanas | ee Saginaw _ FE 2562) FE 21900 itil = Tune msc:| | Svea ’
PACKARD “ha ha THE ers 12.8. Paddock. PE eal sie Wall Tile. ..... 12c | ANCHOR PRRCES VHA AR | Oe eee anae i
“Offi ls’ a] gweey .oret “Sise! af 6 Cle All Cars 3 THRIFTY |; ae ‘DORLAP mcam yD me | i
icla Ss by - — aT. or Winterized TRUCKER For Sale Motorcycles — s9 Bonny Maid vinyl inlaid tle .. ter | tr STEKI but, CONSFRUC- 2-606% ‘ Tae
will tak equity fcr down pay- S POR PARTS b SEKYCE On 12 ft. Congoleum, 1% price! & in ae only $000, “aa 8 | coNeTRUCTED
ment on s house * 44681 after| & Ready to Go Marley Dyvidson, see Harie xoun| ALCOHOL 18 PROOF tte | Perry Fr 546s | trajler wagner i or) liver, OA O91
“LINCOLN-M. RCURY > . LOT _ldson Seles Co., 373 8. Saginaw, | S2°°* 141 W. Huron, FE. 4355 exrnUDED | ALUMINOM DOons. | _ Cleetvielen, PE See "Ey int" 4B wae bos
msl LINCOLN-MERCURY HOLDEN'S RED STAMPS , ; Hoats & Accessories 0 | Year End Clearance | Rg OT I et ly Fg Re ;
LARRY IS THE BUY | aves See JACK coumatin’eurenaaan, swunainn eran oe jecendtiened vp! igdows & doors, Reasonable, PE | lavve “tion of dao= chimes, ot
. COMMUNITY ~ late model....... $198. : .
JEROME . pan re sory" “ion” ise” rE Frasre cotemae ated Way rset reer, ae.
GMAC Terms HAB ORDER YOUR i” JONSON | CoS x sree $73. $3 | _ ine Oo., Huron,
MATR Tt BRIDGE | B i motor new. Garcrafi | $ Miegtrie Ranges.......... $21.50| sITRNACES
oy ae Hae ay All Cars Guaranteed Sate: spins & Paints of ret cli | dremrite (like Sew)... 6108-38 0 year eg paren. Square
CHEVRO Ee Ste Chet ie er Aa
Peery EL S. Saginaw at ma! tg rae rae ar re Stee Thine
otor es ‘ . . ’ 7
PHONE. FE 4-454 | Transportenion Offered 6| CLAYTON'S | BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES |
oo¢, plyscord, Weldtes, ete.
a , H $328 2 “Ak ‘
| i ; As i ti
on Ge conce 30 4 onseeeene “ ‘. ; ft cover
a ee bee Gere tees] 21) Es Sho'it“hich | Peltaser be tibet rR'MSE | mipornoaaaren navn wern| ire em so we sows Free) 3 Paes anes soe OMT Si ivi Wed ee __O8} i auto sor very wose. vont atl Paul <4 ae. Cyr Laamber Co Co. HA
ie. ceteris 2 ~ io A. Oskiand Baking Co. | swAP Im YOUR vzs on| ¢ ‘7 “Pena auto. washer, a...
Hye $3] sos Bessa" ver. Su porse aeezing a | OS Ey ere * ee a i peter tastes ae | AT ~an ea PRESSORS "83 Pontiac 4 dr. ....... 6... $1,508 ae : - 4 tr te ¥ peter Moving s40.00. Au guaraoived. PE ELEC SEWER CLEANER » Watt " fete
232 S. Saginaw St. . RIEMENSCHNEIDER | -
——BROS.______ ‘ ye equity, — B -| BEA floor Py chased. 5
‘Suios, fo. new or used | WALNUT * NE’S RENTAL Ay} tor ees, =6ss'§-«szDon’'t Miss This Ba ! a
Poa |S Ae are eee) | Raa <- ww ~ Ghee. ; . — REV SATIN, LATEX PAINT, BasY BLACK INC. : =
to No nh for, Dries
Ph. FE 29131 | Shc" Pere omens PREE ence) TO ge am “si wash « o Bo D. - $645 436 Orchard Lake, PE pint genuine fectery parte. me Dixie Hwy. —_ Waterfor@ =
— REPOSSESSIONS is finished roe test Ge tasteey eney EXT AUCTION ye MACHEN
RE SSESSIONS _ For a good used car that -S 1951 Chev. vicloug:: me? ns ee ae fo 1G, 4 rolewey -PLYWOOD _ ‘Poene PE. Sent a - Sm bd appetnemans « = ?
is ie sypgentcet call or see . : 4 ! ee east. beds, complete $16.96 New mat. | Al yds plain & a ane to es bw ' PE 2. -1084 - = ‘ i
tes | 1947 Ford pickup... . $375
1946 Chevrolet, 9 ft. ~» 217% stake. Gus «: céieds en vabiet coup EER PIPE St ein =
PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. | Su a tastes i
Se ie taal a , | COAL &
oa. 8 ait cal ave, PS B10 | ae ee ‘Cladksiin
cqartuneyTucy peace
: aa = - 5 a ae ne Bess + somone. to ASPHALT TILE..... 3c] ae
ae INSULATION 18 ee a ot th . . »
+——STORM DOORS __| it ae we” SE eee Stat COMB, STORM SASH Harold's 140 S Saginaw | wnet,tns | ig --
Pontiac Farm Sepply
«ane one re, Awning Type Windows | rx sso _ Pree
" eT noite r DED sTAMPs TODAY |
megs oot am zoune| Mz A. BENSON) ; | 8
!
"47 Dodge sedan... .$195
"47 Nash sedan. .....$198 i
eedan.....% ti ; ou
USED TRADE-IN | « ; od
‘a A COR 2T. $695 "CLEARANCE
49 Ford 14 T. pickup $395)
“wrrivat to
; day of a team of key advisers be-
fore writing the final draft of his Hii: ste
Pioneer look in on nine-year-old
after weak ice broke on Sylvan |
Jerry's heels as the lad sprawled
Pioneer. LAKE LOST; THEY WON—Jackie Sampson, 14, of 291 Pioneer
Ave., a Pontiac Press carrier and Jerry Sonnenberg, 15, of 274
Karen Bronoe] as she “warms up”
ake Wednesday. Jackie grasped
on the jee to pull Karen from the
water. Karen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Broneel, 330
&
HOME AGAIN—Mrs. Richard Hart, 185 8. Josephine’St., Pioneer
Highlands subdivision, hugs her 10-year-old daughter, Judith, right,
and Patricia Ann Brandt, left, of 275 8S. Josephine.
Patty pulled Judith from the icy waters of Sylvan Lake Wednesday
after weak ige gave way under Judy’s skates some_20 feet from |
shore. She was able to stay afloat until help reached her.
‘Narcotics Growers
Get Stiff Sentences PAW PAW @—Michigan's new
narcotics law-was thrown hard and
fast at two Grand Junction area
men_of-Van Buren County.
Joseph A. Fletcher, 57 and his
nephew Ejkis T. Daniels, 45, both
found guilty Dec. 4 on one count
of growing and processing mari-
juana, and another count of pos-
session, were dealt stiff sentences
by Van Buren Circuit Judge Earl
Pugsiey.
They received concurrent terms
of 20-3 years on the first count
and 510 years on the second
count. Police said they grew the
drug on their farm just outside
Lacota.
About 65 per cent of U. S. fam-
ilies own automobiles
$99555555555555555555510
2 a
_@ Happy New Year ¢ ¢ From e
e Cp ° 2 Feo les. e ) s CREDIT CLOTHING $
mn Employees e
4 8 N. Saginaw Si. S
mbsssssssesesesssesesess
BURMEISTER’S
[LUMBER oe ‘ i
Secretary of Labor Reports
(Editor's note: This ts another in
@ series of year end reports by mem-
bers of President Eisenhower's cabi-
net.)
By JAMES P. MITCHELL
Secretary of Labor .
The Department of Labor.has
its duties set only in general terms.
The Act of Congress establishing
the department # years. ago as
signed to it the responsibility to
“foster, promote and develop the
United States.”
It is my firm belief that the de-
partment must, as the first secre-
tary of labor stated, discharge its
statutory responsibilities ‘‘in har-
mony with the welfare of all in-
dustrial classes and all legitimate
interests, and by methods tending
to foster industrial peace."
The concept of fairness toward
every segment of the economy
which tecretary Wilson enun-
elated @# years ago will be the
policy of the department of labor
while I am secretary.
The welfare of wage earners can
and must be promoted with due re-
gard for the national general in-
terest. Labor is not a class apart.
Workers have interests, needs and
aspirations as part of the Ameri-
can public as well as in their role
as wage earners.
Since workers and their families
comprise the overwhelming ma-
jority of our population, their _per-
sonal welfare and the welfare of
the nation are frequently—but not
always—promoted or impaired by
the same developments.
Workers’ interests as individ-
wals and as members of the
public usually do not conflict,
but when they do, workers and
the Labor Department both must
put the national welfare first.
It does labor no good to promote
its own interests and wreck - the
American economy of which it is
a vital and integral part. .
Wage earners and‘ the Depart-
ment of Labor both have the in-
| New Year’s Day and
Saturday and Sunday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 10 o.m. te 3 p.m.
SHEET ROCK Hurry! Buy All You Need at $7 35
This Low Price!
4’x8’ sheet
PLYSCORE!
$575
7 BURMEISTER’S — BAB ORTHER ‘ 4 ) LUMBER COMPANY |
| “Wholesale and Retail ~
‘B197 Cooley Loke Rd. EM 3-4650 ond EM 3-3996 .
%
Here's another Burmeister
Bargain! 4'x8'x5%"" sheet, only
tettigence to recognize this fact
and -the good sense and statesman-
ship to make their decisions in the
light of this overriding considera-
tion.
Consequently, the Department
of Labor can actively promote
the legitimate interests of labor
and still be fair te other im-
portant groups and to the generat
public.
I have approached my task as
secretary of labor with an open
mind. For some years I have been
familiar with the work of the de-
partment. I do not think that
everything the department has
done during that period has been
right. Neither was everything that
has been done wrong.
| In the ft that reconsideration
of past cies is essential to prog-
ress, I am carefully reviewing all
the programs and operations of the
department and making changes
where changes are needed.
Nothing that has been done in
the past will be considered sacro-
scant, nor will anything that has
previously been done be discon-
tinved without fair consideration.
We shait change the method of
doing some things. and have ‘al-
ready taken steps to improve our
administrative machinery. We
shall change the emphasis and di- +
welfare of the wage earners of the |“ 1 His Department Is Trying to Protect
American Economy for Good of All basis, or whether it is better to
continue the present organization
on a line basis.
One thing is already clear,
however—the decision made by
this administration to give
——— Segre: XS. *
JAMES P. MITCHELLS,
sistant secretaries of labor, ap-
pointed by the President and con-
firmed by the Senate, authority
to supervise departmental pro-
grams directly is fundamentally
sound.
The department's legislative pro-
grams are primarily in the fields
of industrial relations, employment
security, and minimum wages. We
are working toward early amend-
ment of the Labor-Management
Relations Act of 1947.
The goal of our changes will be
to provide maximum encourage-
ment of collective bargaining,
peaceful relations between labor
and management, and a minimum
of government intervention in labor
relations.
The Department of Labg has
undertaken a natidnal study of the
federal-state unemployment _in-
surance system.
In cooperation with the state
employment security agencies,
the department has studied how
Army Paper Picks
Miss Cheesecake DARMSTADT, Germany —The
Army newspaper Stars and Stripes
has named Hollywood starlet
Kathleen Hughes as Miss Cheese-
cake of 1953.
This year's Miss Cheesecake is
blonde, hazel eyed, 5 feet 8, weighs
125 pounds, and has ‘a 38-inch bust,
36%-irich hips and 2444-inch waist. :
She's 25, a ‘native of Hollywood
and under contract to Universal-
International. °
Kathleen is the 10th uch titlist
the paper has named, Among her
predecessors—Rita Hayworth, Vir-
ginia Mayo, Marilyn Monroe and Pentiac Press Phetes
Ten-year-old
——__—_—_—&..,
unemployment insurance bene-
ficiaries are getting along on
the present scale of benefits paid
them.
~ Wé are~aiso- recommending ex-
tension of the unemployment in-
surance system to a substantial
number of workers not now
covered by it, including both those
working for small employers -and
federal employes. .
The value of the Wage and Hour
Law as a floor under our economy
is recognized. We are determined
that this statute shall be used to
give protection to the widest practi-
cable segment of our economy. It
is therefore recommended that the
coverage under the statute be ex-
tended to bring: its benefits to more
workers
We have also recommended
that the minimum wage fixed in
the statute be kept at a level con-
sistent With @conomic conditions
and the size of the work force it
covers.
It is futile to have a wage law
which provides an even higher
minimum wage for an ever smaller
number of persons.
Tt i ais6 Useless to have & law
which purpertedly covers se
many people yet really provides
protection for very few. Between
these twe extremes, we shall
steer our course.
The Department of Labor has a
great opportunity for devoted
public service. Aware of our re-
sponsibilities to the taxpayers
whose money we spend and to all
the people whom we must serve,
we shall attempt to give the great-
est possible service to the greatest
possible number of people. Shoulders Free
ito Fight Charge | i ———
Tool Industry Near Peak
fool industry had its second biggest
year in its history in 1953. Machine it year of 1943. t ‘
?
ws output reached an estimated $1,-
300,000,000, secorid only to the peak CLEVELAND &—The machine of $1,320,000,000 in the World War
so
It was Morris, too, who said
For Ladies!
Fashion-Right Comfort Sizes 442 to 9
Slightly
Imperfect at a small price...
Come in today!
$498
se98-
MERIT. SHOES 43 N. Seginew St.
would Tight the perjury
will
charge “all the way” and
“meet the issues as they come.”
A Kansas City grand jury Tues-
day charged in its indictment that |
the 55-year-old former St. Louis |
police officer gave false testimony
in describing his handling of suit-
cases containing a portion of the
record $600,000 Greenlease ransom
money.
A litle more than half of the
ransom still is missing.
Shoulders has stated the suit-
cases were brought to a district
police station along with Carl Aus-
tin Hall—since .executed with his
accomplie, Bonnie Brown Heady,
for the kidnap-slaying of 6-year-
old Boby Greenlase—shortly aft-
er his arrest on the night of Oct. 6.
mony of
Shoulders statement to be untrue.
Probe Gutted Ships —
for MissingMen PHILADELPHIA (®—Authorities
today probed the scorched hulls of |
two tankers which collided and |
caught fire yesterday in the early |
morning fog on the Delaware Riv- |
er. Five bodies have been recov- |
ered from the river. Four other |
crewrien are missing and pre-|
sumed dead. . !
Rescue craft, meanwhile, con-|
tinued their patrol of the crash |
scene, south of Wilmington, Del.,
and about 25 miles below Phila
delphia.
The ships, the 19,000-ton Atlantic
Engineer and the 10,600-ton Atlan-
tic Dealer, both owned by the At-
lantic Refining Co., arrived at the |
aboard.
Serve These Novel Desserts:
They make a good
party wonderful!
They finish a grand
dinner in royal
Bell Center Brick to ‘ring
out .the old.’ Ready sliced,
sqrves 8.
Coconut Snow Ball
Vanilla Ice Cream rolled
in shredded coconut and
Maple Leat Dairy 20 E. Howard St. Phone FE 4-2547°
Mathematics Parley
ANN ARBOR w — About 200
mathematics teachers from Mieh-
igan and Ohio will attend the fourth
annual University of
Conference for Mathematics
(Reprinted from “Nation's Business”) Canada’s forest areas. ———__ _
CLOONA
| 72 North Saginaw
“Where Quality Counts” N’s-
FE 2-161
from
Lotan's Market .
Employees Open 1:00 P.M. New Year's Dey
Large Grade A Hamilton
Sirloin Steak ~ 69°
Pot Roast of