4 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, -TUESDAY, SEPT _112th YEAR xxx ‘THE PONTIAC PRE —— EMBER ‘% we 21 mi 954 —32 PAGES ea 4 AL w SERVICE Lower Tax Rates Are Set In County a a nn Den RRA > a Clawson Backs Giants Celebrate Victory Clinching Pennant Race |Red China Row omit “rn oo nai Wins $6,500 Home Courthouse on Telegraph Road | Committee Head Says Supervisors Selected Best. Spot for County man of the special building committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervis- ors, today replied to Clar- ence K. Patterson, who had voiced opposition to moving the courthouse from down- town Pontiac. Clawson’s statement follows: -° “I feel that it is my duty as chairman of the Special ‘ Court House Committee to reply to the article of Sep- tember 16, appearing in the Pontiac Daily Press. I re- fer_to the article by Clar- ence Patterson. “Mr. Patterson is a highly respected citizen, an out- lawyer and a such persons can err. “Mr. Patterson is worried about Hin i ; : get ; iF I | ee i " . i | i t i if Hy : 7 il at iff ag 4 | te f i: z Dr. Sheppard Is Denied Bail Held in Jail for Trial | Oct. 18 in Bludgeoning | of Pregnant Wife i ! ; E s F E i ili + | i 1 at : i] 3 HT i i r F { ‘i iff | t bE i : : i F : reed iit tg i file i E i shirtsleeves, 15 chaplains landed safely minutes before their disabled Air Force C46 plane crashed and burned 7 pitcher Sal MAGLIE THE HERO—New York Giant teammates gang up on Maglie- at end -of- Brooklyn in Ebbets Field last night. rushes toward Maglie after taking the pitcher's toss to retire Roy Campanella. Center Lockman leaps. into Maglie’s arms. At right are. catcher Wéa Westrum, left, Lockman, Maglie, in center, second baseman Davey Williams (10), shortstop Al Dark, above Williams, and third baseman Hank Thompson, beyond Dark. Giants won 1-1. pennant winning game against At left Whitey Lockman (25) Fall Arrives Thursday \'54 Summer High, Low Temperatures With the approach of fall Thursday, a glance back at| other enemy vessels in attacks summer shows it was a season of temperature records. An all time teffiperature record for Sept. 8 was smashed when the mefcury soared to 98 degrees. On the opposite side of the ledger a record chill was established July 8 when the temperature plunged to 48. This broke an 82-year mark, éstablished in Sets Record 4 1891 when a 49-degree low Dutchman Sure of U.N. Position Dr. van Kleffens Rated as Shoo-in Choice for Assembly Presidency UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. @®—A Dutchman with 35 years experi- ence in international affairs was a shoo-in choice today for presi- dent of the ninth U.N. General ft ij r3f ! ft t ai if it | a re the county July 14 seriously threat- ened crops. and water supplies. On July 2 a “million dollar rain” temporarily saved most farmers During August, another farmers. Much needed rainfall which be- gan Sept. 13 saved fall planted (Continiied on Page 2, Col. 4) ar papers | | _=TAIPEH (INS) — Chinese Na- | ttonalist warplanes were credited Nationalists Tell ; of Sinking Ships Claim 15 Commie Junks Sent Down, 32 Others Damaged by Jets today with sinking 15 Chinese Com- munist junks and damaging 8 along the Fukien province coast of 9th Assembly .|ninth United Nations Gen- i representatives shortly Threatens Start. Fight to Seat Peiping | May Postpone Formal Organization UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. ()—A new fight over an- ticipated demands to seat Red China threatened to- day to delay—at least brief- ly — organization of the eral Assembly. Russia, India and some other Asian countries were expected to launch the new struggle to replace the Chi- nese Nationalists with Pei- ter the session's formal 0 @ this afternoon. genie of State Dulles Was band to lead the campaign for keépigff up the bars against the Chinése : The backed by Britain, the As- sembly un. tt the The same Both the Americans and the British were confident of a clear winning majority, To strengthen their case, U.S Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. in a weekend statement charged the Chinese Communists with 39 attacks in the United States. A Pontiag airman who spent a routine Saturday afternoon pass by attending the California State Fair | at Sacramento won a $6,500 home | which was being given away. The chance on the home cost him noth ing. He is Airman Second Class Dan- iel Greenwald, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Greenwald, of 329 Whit- temore St. He spent the afternoon land Air Force Base, and learned of his good fortune when he re- turned to the base in the evening What to do with the home posed q problem for Greenwald. The best cash offer he could get was only about half the home's value. He had no time to move it and any- way, he writes, he has no use for a home since the Air Force fur- nishes lodging, ‘ Finally he traded it for a luxury model car, whose value wag not far below the price placed on the home Greenwald is a mechanic with a weather reconnaissance squad- ron. He won the home, incidentally, on his mother's birthday. Greenwald has been in the Air Force two years. He enlisted in 1952, and had attended Pontiac 28 Hurt on Board NYC Streamliner as 9 Cars with some buddies-from MeClel-} - But Record High Budget Passed by Supervisors Pay Increase Is Slated for Some Employes at Regular Meeting Although an all-time high budget was passed by the Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday, indi- vidual taxpayers will be paying a lower rate than they did last year. The reduction in the rate from 5.25 to 5.14 mills was made possible through an increase in over-all county valuation, said Robert Y. Moore, chairman of the eounty Boiird of Auditors. “Several millions dollars in new buildings were added to the tax rolls last year,"’ Moore explained, Included in the county's $6,690,. 408 budget for 1955 is provision for - | 47 new employes. The new workers will be. mainly nursing and office employes, according to Cari John- son, county personnel director, and administrative classes and to most appointive and elective officials. Members of the Board of Au- ditors will receive $11,000 yearly salaries, compared to the current $7,500. Road ‘commissioners will receive $6,000 compared to the Leave Track MATTOON, Il. @—One person With the seating contest out of Eis Fipit oii Hil ‘ warships few” Red ships which fled in thick fog after an exchange of shells. No damage was reported er side. to é hier | Hh it rs | s7EE lf | ‘The NYC's diesel-powered South- Limited, bound present $3,500. Other appointed: officers getting boosts are members of the Social was killed and 28 others were in-| Welfare Board, who will get a jured yesterday when a New York | raise from $5,000 to $5,500, and the dog warden, who will receive | $6.20 _pegister to $9,750) and sheriff ($7,000 to $8,500). The three circuit judges, while having their county pay trimmed $1,000 annually, will actually re- ceive a total salary boost. A recently revised state law pro- vides that circuit judges receive $12,300 from the state, but not: more than $22,500 ag their total state-county income. Judges for« (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Cooler Weather Seen for Pontiac Tonight for a drop to 4 Two._Party Rule Campaign Issue : onard, f i | | L 2 ae Zz. : * Williams Meet In rebuttal Leonard said Wil- Mams cannot claim that coopera- tion, He said Mayor Cobo of Detroit Leonard charged Williams with had solved having the “unmitigated gall’ to a F ait ; 4 t | : i E i i | | k A FE Nixon in State Tod IV Tonight nomic course, followed for 20 years have accomplished the communist : aim of plunging this country “into rite i! j él . z ie af ‘under the Democrats, which would i Ni " > eC en oe ec testes ae ee ¥ « 7a | rf ag a ¢2 +H i | ! ci " rT Mitchel Blasts Hostility of AFL Labor Secretary Says Union Could Get More by Being Friendly ‘| LOS ANGELES @—Secretary of Labor Mitchell's appeal that the some fruit” They began their “‘hon- " trip about 2:30 p.m. a 3 Local Singers Will Be on TV -~ With Eddie Fisher The Four Joes, a singing group ‘'THE-PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 ‘aniich (ahi And It Isn’t Even Spring! aptary Police Foil an Elopement yes Alliance Ponders Mendes Plan for the Rearmament of West Germany LONDON (INS) — The British Cabinet meets today to discuss French Premier Pierre-Mendes- | France's new formula to bring West Gérmany into the orbit of a The Day in Birmingham - Commission Votes Down Bloomfield Sewage: Plan From ‘Oar Birmiligham Burean {ceptor did not come about. Bioom- BIRMINGHAM—Anticipated -ap- {Held township would buy into the Birminghani sewage plant. 5 proval ef, an agreement by An informa) meeting was set for tity commission whereby Bloom: | wednesday night, when commis- held Township would use ahd pay | sioners will meet with Edwin Gage | * lor the services of Birmingham's | and Richard A. Freund to go ov ral —-sewage—-treatment—_plant- _several alternative proposals sub | th tast night, by a vote ot ss [mitted by the two men for a park- | rough : pe |} ing lot to serve the downtown buai- | Lawmakers tabled further’ 41% | ness area: tussion of the subject until next! At a hearing two weeks ago. the | Monday's meeting. jcommission declared the necessity | One of the reasons for the change | of establishing’ a 227-car lot in the | was an opinion that the contract. block bounded’ by Pierce, Mernil had been negotiated in order to! Woodward and Brown supply services to the Garling Con- At that time. Gage and Freund struction Co., which is butlding 4 | opposed the lot site and-methods of 600-home development on ~the | financing, One of their proposals former Mercier Farm property in recommends utilizing the city's the township. Shain Park Conuniasioner Dean Beier, who gave an affirmative ned te the | agreement, said he saw ne the ? MKS, HAROLD B, DOREMUS last Friday. - The British will be hosts to a ine-power contprence in London Sept. 28, at- which time West Germany ‘s defense role and its relation to the North Aflantic Treaty Organization (NATO) will be charted, Mendes - France said yesterday in Strasbourg that if the nine- conference reaches agree- ~T ment on German rearmament, ex- wan Assn. of University Women Mrs. Haroig-8. Doremus (Ann perts could produce 2 ay lige bie Dr Robert T. Hatt, director of | Jossman), 0, of 2290 seed 20 ee ee aad the Cranbrook Institute of Science, , Dr, Drayton Woods; died last night =_ oe wale : and will welcome, the. women when they | of pulbar polio, She was stricken a Neate Germany o- gather at the institute at 2 pPM.| sunday and died in St, Joseph tish invitations to at- ;Dorts No McMillan will conduct | Mercy Hospital. peng Oth a tour of the building, pointing | ; 7 out new exhibits. The ae aes | = ee eee cnetithough | tvited —— — Struction company said tarium will also be open to the a. cee sea chalvael ole others | Lembours. Italy and Canada— tanks would be the any group eur ad C ty in 1954 | are expected to follow suit. ternative. They also informe the In charge of the program is Mrs in — ‘ =a 4 ar a In yesterday's speech to the rommission that at the request of ¢ K -Thingstad, a member of the Horm hee ay consultative assembty of the Eu- the Birmingham Board of Educa | AAUW education committee j the daughter of William R. and tion. a acre * | Besse Randall Jossman, former and Cranbrook roads ncaa tor ee come) Wanna | Pontiac residents and now of Day- served for a school will be accomplished whee the tona Beach, Fla. ' Ruth Allen Group of the First | ~ She was married to Harold B. Methodist Church meets at 8 to- Dorenws duly 1, 1946. Her bus- nighi ai the South Adams road band and a son, Steven Burke, home of Mre. A. Edgar Ebersole, survive. . | Other . survivors iher parents, include two sisters, iMra. Robert J. (Jane) Rioux, of ' Falls Church, Va., and Mrs, Paul $1 Sally) Harton, of Metamora. Mrs. Doremus was a graduate of Denison University, Granville, Ohio, where she became a mem- ber of Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority. She was a member of St. Andrew Episcopal Church and president of the St. Catherine Guild. The body is at the Huntoon Fu- |neral Home. Service will be at 2 p.m. Thursday in All Saints Epis- |copal Church, with the Rev. C. Drayton Woman \s Polio Victim Mrs: Harold Doremus, Former Ann Jossman, | t j } | in Museufna’ is the title of a talk to be given by reason for further debate on the “Margaret M Brayton, director of subject, for the Chiidren's Museum of the De] f —+tpet publ: schools af tomorrow ¢ -trst fattimecting of the loeal Amer a Howard Merl Conine. “Children Is Sent fo Hospital ” A Birmingham housewife, found poisoning June 15 beside the dead been treating the township’. sew He argued that the city had @ge with no remuneration for years, and would not “benefit fi fancially Beier “felt that new or future’ developments had fing on the contract Representatives from the mo bear oom é septa oiher al ‘g ors at the hospital felt she treatment of a type private institu- her husband, . Moore ordered the hospital thorize her suffering from the inhaled in the family garage at 1683 Cole St. i | Ej site near Lincoln had been . . i i? i i i The proposed ecéiitract would handie the sewage disposal — problem of the township until danuary, 19546, hen it is ex pected thai contracts for the pio- posed Bvergreen interceptor sew. | er. wil) be completed. BF Lower ‘55 Tax Rate Expected for County (Continued From Page One) f 5 3 2® z = i i Europe's defenses and said that if the London conference reached agreement, ‘‘this time the French Parliament will not wait three "* to vote on the plan, which . * in addition to Coffees for Quartun School moth ers are continuing, with mothers ; of third graders meeting tomor- The intereepter, to be shared in K Mis Thomas Woodworth's ‘by ares communtiies. wourt fur +]... will meet at 10 @m. at the nel the sewage into Detroit” for} ya;mouth road home of Mrs. Jolin | treatment. If the proposed inter-)p E:nmett. Mrs. Arthur Stuart. | ~ of Suffield avenue, will be hostess | ( b | li t ito Carol Stanton’s class at the | A representative of the advisory | George Widdifield and the Rev. sane time. Another 10 am. meeting is sched. vuled for the class of Grace Mack, jand will be held at the home of Robert E. Bates to Head committee of the local chapter of | Waldo Hunt officiating. Burial will Department of Music the United Foundation, is slated | be private otto speak at tonight's 6:30 dinner] Her family requests that in lieu at Boys School |meeting of the Kiwanis Club, at|of flowers, any memorial gifts be | m eee eeeeccsere 1954 Summer Sets Temperature Records (Continued From Page One) wheat from possible serious dam- age, agricultural officials report. Coroners Functions.. Employes Group Life Ins Extension SGerv Muron-Clinton Authority eo Insurance-—County Buildings... Fuse. = Juveniie Camp a Pontiac Child Guidance Clinic Plann Episcopal Church. He was a past . renee master of Pontiac Lodge No. 21, it Mer’s Burials............006 ._| He is survived by his widow, | goutheaste _| Mrs. Phoebe A, Ealson; a daugh- | ter, Mrs, O. L. Baker, of Running Springs, Calif.; a son, Ernest J. Ealson of Pasadena and four Boll Conservation... .....-....+ Tax Attocation Board none Township & City Tax Rolls 4 Township & City Treasurers’ Mrs. Horace Rettray, Wellesley ——-REOOMFIELD HILLS—Harry p. |e Community House. made to the polio fund. . . - Hoey, Cranbrook School headmas ° ~~, Clawson Backs Site Outside TB. Cases 4-H Club Premiums... Auditors Beas grandchildren. Japs Spend $42 Million Each Month on Pinball TOKYO w — Pachinko, a Japa-/| Drain Commissioner payee = 3 * S1B.85-2> a- $-=38 | 38 rereerreneee swim- goee¥ Res 83 Priend Probate Court neeeee Prosecutine Attorney Pianning Commission... ter - Deeds Administration eeuwpereee secteeeere HURRY! 223 We're Looking for the “Most Photogenic Baby in the Pontiac Area” State Collects $42 Sales Tax Per Resident hands, will undoubtedly be im- proved far commercial use and will be a source of tax revenue to the city and compared, with public ownership by the conuty, be an asset to the city ratiier than a liability “We have not tailed to weigh the potential of adver ¢ economic #Hfeet to the city by movin, the courthouse from ite center. We believe that private enterprise E ie F i i 2% ee beeee : Enroll- | i tingent sere cere eeneeeeee ger? on eeenee i eeeeerees —————i So esececcecs coeetseren 96,690, 408 ; driv © ter, has announced the appoint First tall dinner meeting of the ment of five new masters to serve | Albert MeClecry chapter of the on the taculty for the coming year | Unitarian Laymen's League will Returning to head the depart | be at 648 toniaht im te Com | On Telegraph Road ment of music and the glee club nounity ae gta . is Robert E Bates. who taught Ray == os : Law. (Continued From Page One) at Cranbrook from 194 to 1951. / on = David 7 is best for all of the county. not A Harvard University graduate. | ; bs wee: just the main street in the City of eaten hae (aut music at Bronx: | The Y Men's Club of the YMCA, | Pontiac and Greenwich County Day School | under the direction of Ernest Rob- — = aes i< Gommeien : : inson. project chairman, are add @mple for out present needs, pro- jing the final touches to. the craft | Vides plenty: of room for expansion - |shop at the rear of the building. | '" the years #0 come and we have | Funds were received through the | Unlimited parking space. The pres- with 25 years of aching expe- [annual Christ tree é ent courthouse and county office . He was with the Hitinets ( —The shop will outtitrert” wittt school system fer ll years equipment and benches to take and spent 14 years at Lake Forest | care of 13 boys and a leader for Academy, U., where be served jeach 45-minute period. Bird houses, as head of the mathematics de- clothes lime racks, toys, book partment and director of admis. | shelves and book ends are among the iterns to be made in the work —— shop Riechers received a masters de- A YMCA bus, a gift to the Y| — sie be cea occas hone, | from the club will be used for Wisconsin State Teachers College. | jon eerie ounene ng one Hugh M. Davissen Jr. becomes. ial overnight EE: 98 Tene 98 & member of the history “ae a ts mathematics departments. He has | over 12 years of teaching expe ‘Teence in preparatory schools, was graduated—trom—\- Miltary Institute and earned his masters degree in history at Ohio State University, Foreign languages and history | will be tadght by R. P. Hoover. | He holds a degree from Michi. | gan State © *, spent twe | years in the U. & Navy and ,Name Church, Offered as a_re- Adult religious instruction classes will begin at & tonight at’ Holy fresher course to Catholics. it is also open to others interested in the church. Ld . * Mrs. Pas! W. Dutton on the locations of the present county owned property will more than offeet any losses involved, ‘“t commend Mr. Patterson for frankly recognizing the need for new facilities but would expect no less from a man-of his caliber. We concur with Mr. Patterson when Funeral arrangements are pend ing for Mrs) Paul W (Gertrude | Morrison’! Dutton, 41, of 584 Park St., who died at her residence yes- | taught at the Munising High | terday after a long illness. School for three years. Another = Harvard University | be taken to Marquette for serv- he has been working as staff assistant on the | Hoover report. The Weather Py A A eeeter tow-¢6-08.> igh Weanes- 7 pete mee winds te west Tedder in Pontiac 7 a temperature preceding & « m at 8 Gm: Wind velocity % mph ~2s. with guste ep to @ mph a ae at 633 pm Pines Wednesday at 6.19 om sets Tuesday at pm fiees Wednesday ot 145 a m Downtern rateres 6. M..ceees OO Tam .* i: Bvcasess. 2 mm “ a @. I a Fe BS oe ; an. a] | | Her body will remain at the Maniey Bailey Funeral Home, un- til &:30 ‘pm. today, when it will ices and burial. ton is survived by a son, Paul Stephenson, of Sault Ste. Marie, Howard Morrison, quéite /Two Get Traffic Tickets _in Birmingham Collision | BIRMINGHAM | were ticketed and a six-year-old girl suffered a black eve following both of Mar- | |a collision yesterday at Northlawn and Latham . Injured was Charlene Whitney. Besides her husband, Mrs. Dut- | Jr, at home, one sister, Mts; Helen} nd two brothers, Charles and! he said, “The purpose of these gov- ermmental functions and offices is service to the general public and we should not forget that funda- mental fact. . .’ “We, the Board of Supervisors believe we are making a move which will be for the best interests of Mr. and Mrs. Oakland County.” FHA Probers | End-Indianapolis Hearings Today INDIANAPOLIS (INS)—The Sen- ate Banking Committee delves into more evidence today of purported windfall profits of millions of dol- lars in loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration. The hearings in Indianapolis, presided over by Sen. Homer E Capehart (R-Ind.) will end today after considering 17 projects in Indiana in which windfall profits by promoters were estimated to Also under scrutiny will be FHA-financed housing at the naval ammunition depot at Crane, Ind., colors for you, too! ($1 . * ea 18-20 N + to 7 — I” Yoo....say mest sport shirt lines! NO... cam phatically NO... says STRADIVARL. If you have a 3S-inch sleeve length, STRADIVARI offers you the magnificent, washable STRAD- O-GAB Sport Shirt in your collar sise, with "entra body length, and your exact sleeve length --» im 36 COLORS (red, bleck, pink, orchid, orange, spice, charcoal, ete., ote.) Yeu, your choice of 36 COLORS in 2:35-inch sleeve "length. “And, if you have 0 36 or 37 sleeve length, don't be disheartened. There are many HUB CLOTHIERS 0. SAGINAW ST. 0, sleeve lengths 31.37). Noroom diye fir ile der This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year at Statler 7 - ge fone or more children under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. %& If one or more children under 14 occupy a room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a | Bring the family for weekend of fue at the Detroit Statler! + Children’s menus * Battoons for the youngsters after meals * Formutes prepered | © Reliable baby sitters ¢ High chairs end cribs © A basket of fresh fruit in every reem occupied by children | @ Redie In every reom = ¢ Delicious bex lunches prepared @ Many guest rooms ere air-conditioned Children's pletes end silver | Ph. FE 8-1461 Por Appointment Now! . FIRST PRIZE Beoutiful 1954 SPEED QUEEN ELECTRIC DRYER : THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1955 oe ELEVEN. ale 4 ‘ es HIGHER-THAN-NEW HORSEPOWER! BETTER-THAN-NEW ON GASOLINE MILEAGE/-AND NOT A SINGLE TRACE OF CARBON KNOCK OR PRE-IGNITION AT ANY TIME —EVEN ON THE STEEPEST MOUNTAIN GRADES! Now—Gulf refines out the “dirty-burning tail-end” of gasoline—the.No..1 troublemaker in high-com- pression engines, Result: a cleaner-burning super-fuel that gives_you thousands of extra miles of full engine power... free from knock or pre-ignition. g ES wi hs Starting with your first tankful, this new, NO-NOX is specially blended for the short- super-refined, super-powered fuel will give you trip, stop-and-go driving you do most. “these immediate and lasting benefits: > No knock, no pre-ignition—even in > More complete engine protection today’s super-compression engines. Why? than the so-called “miracle-additive” gaso- Because the anti-knock power of new NO- lines. Why? Because Gulf refines out the NOX has been stepped up to an all-time high. “dirty-burning tail-end” of gasoline, ¢ a No. 1 troublemaker in high-compression > Stall-proof smoothness—no more wor- send of t , troubl kine di = led “miraci : ines—and then treats thi Super- ries about carburetor icing in chilly weather, ! of trying to Aight he with wins oddi- Refined NO-NOX to give e pagent or vapor lock on warm days. Instant starts, | ——_—_Sra—le gorenineGal bakers evening hem tom feming i> pres of protec poperten W pte rdf o-aving warm out the carbon-forming, “dirty-burning tail-end”—more than a cupful in every a A io against harmful de- T1404 why new Super-Refined Gulf NO-NOX gallon. Just look at the plates the Gulf scientist is holding in the unretouched pon gum. gives you more power-with-protection than photo above, and see what a difference Gulf super refining makes! > Extra gas mileage. Why? Because new you've ever known. ~aae =. See, oe —_ = 1 z { aR = Be TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 An Event He'll -Long back. Watch for crooked stocking seams, straggly hair, uneven hei Lacy Iron Gadgets Beautify Bathroom No Down Payment! 3 Regular $84.95 | PRE-WAY Oil Heater ‘5Q* and your old heater Get all the heat you can from every drop of ort with a NEW PREWAY. Sizes and models for every heating problem, ~ 3-4-5 rooms Forced air blowers available at slight extra charge NEW handsome = furniture cab- inets 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH No Charge for Installation : $80 Price Reduction Hamilton Automatic Gas CLOTHES DRYER Regular $279.95 199* © Sun-E-Day lomp senitines and tweetens the clothes ee ot ee INSTALLED Get Set for Fall's New Exciting Shows! See Them With Double Power Picture! MOTOROLA 17 Inch 1956 Table Model Top features in a compact ratie model. Sabre jet Tuner. Distant Selector Switch power picture. Gtere down, sound up styling. in a mesh-like form, has moved into the bathroom as well as to the living room. One manufacturer Expanded metal, the iron made | Let Friends Know You Are Coming | is offering a line of black expanded! |nyite Them to Be | metal hampers, wastebaskets, tis | ie holders” and wall” shelves. ~~} It's called “Chantilly,” and does | |look “Something like black lace. | . | The black is lined with white, pink, | By EMILY ea! . blue or yellow, and the manufactur- | My husband | er is planning a companion line in| and I are taking @ cross-country chocolate brown iron with beige} trip by car and will pass through You Are Staying A wife writes lining. — _ certain cities in which we have ‘ friends. Most of them we haven't Wait for Dry Day seen in years, some we have been out-of touch with. E-think it would be a splendid opportunity to re- Apply al} weed-finishés in dry, ,nonhumid weather. Finishes Your Guests Where! | paint, lacquer, enamel, varnish or shellac — come out best when the woodwork is treated with an. under- coat. Shellac ordinarily dries dust- new these old friendships. To try dnd avoid missing them when we're in their towns; could we write on and give them some idea of when we -expect_to come | through. Would this obligate them to anything?” | that you will not obligate | them to anything, the best thing | would beto telephone them when | you get in their city and invite | them te come te see you or have lunch or dinner with you wher- ever you are staying. free in 10 minutes. But for most desirable results allow at least three hours between first and sec- ond coats. | Now Offering * Gregg Shorthand (Beginner) | Dear Mrs Post: When traveling & Gregg Shorthand J\enccne who iss stranger, le Mt — ) | improper to start a conversation— * Stenotype | particularly if between a man and S r woman’ | * Sette aph | If it is really a long distance, | * gher |T think it would be quite proper. | Accounting It would be. better if the woman | started the conversation. | * prerene tion | Dear Mrs. Post: I am a woman in the late forties, have never " w# Executive | been uot. = ——- = | - . | ring wear and now I am going | Fe aires to buy one for myself. My ques- % Bookkeeping. tion is thi: Could I be criticized | if I wear the ring on my left hand? pl adalglenan | 1 would prefer to wear it there as shorter, intensive emer- [| my right hand is-my ‘“‘work’’ hand teed present Say emands, || tnt cn never fre ate comfort Day, Half-Day; and Evening There is no reason why you Veteran Approved THE ment ring ig no } BUSINESS J} ‘pect sre post: wun you please INSTITUTE 12.5.5, es 2 1 West Lawrence Pontiac Phone FE 2- so riarsdey evenings” ™™**” | like to make the package look as Private ®@ Party [Freezer Eases Job Rooms Of Preserving Fruit If you own a home freezer, your | fruit preserving job will be easier. | Jelly-making fruits may be frozen without sugar. The freezing | with bows and bows and bows! Accommodations for large or small groupe. thawing softens the fruit, releAdses Convenient Downtown || the juice and also causes the fruit Location color to dissolve in the juice. Then it's not necessary to heat juicy berries to extract juice. They Waldron can simply be crushed or pressed: T Many other frozen fruits need | HOTEL only the filiiiihtim of heating to Sho extract juices. Generally, pectin Coffee PP Fineeds to be added to fruit juice! 36 E. Pike that has not been heated to make | sure that it jells. > neers | ees ++ } = 3 LITTLE K Al-Gish CAT FOOD . “Cooked to a Cat's Taste!” From Fresh Caught Ocean Fish eC i a | ey > ey KiTThe e) | wt _ Send for CAT-O-GRAPHS cue ras ovr) P.O. Bee 1042, Becton 3, Mon. N94 Teechoss 3 tobete (8 en, ste) & 2Se. or 2 lebots (96 co. chee) & Bie ter cock copy of CAT-O-GRAPHE Veme | O Volum 2 0 Volume} O AE aay fe. , a oe ——- avian * ag es a eee ye ". - rere gneacd 5 a —— ee aa — — np ae seg mwsnele carmen cate, 0 + = toe } Uruguay isthe smallest of the South American republics. It-won its Independence from Spain in the 1820's, WEDNESDAY IS By SAUL PEI™ (For HAL BOYLE) AGENCY DRUG STORE Across from the Pontiac State Bank FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE-FE 3-7374 BED BUGS One Full Year Guerentee From Houses, Apartments, Room- ing Houses. Remain out only three hours. No signs used Rox Ex Company 114 Peat, St. Bh, Bids. FE ¢-0002 field—you know the byline as “'C. E. Butterfield"—is retiring as ra- | dio-TV editor of the Associated | Around here, that's a little® like | saying. the RCA Building is going to be torn down for a parking jot. | Matter of fact, most of us were | happily convinced that Charley | would still be writing about radio | long after NBC became a faded | dividend memory in the minds of David Sarnoff’s descendants. But Charley says he's tired and wants to go down to Florida and raise chickens. I don't why. The | kid doesn't deserve a rest. We/ were just getting him broken in. | . e -. R 4 ’ After all, he has only been writ- ing about radio more than. 30 years. He has been radio editor only 27 years. He has done his column only 22 years. With alf that, the boy is only | 62. He started young, at 14, on) his family’s kitchen table in Cham- paign, Ill, Chartey built an ama- teur wireless station in 1906. “In those days,” he recalls, “there were no commercial sta- tions. All I got was coded signals from the government stations. I | couldn't understand the code but it was fun for me, anyway. It wasn't for the rest of the neigh- borhood * * * “You see, I used an electrolitic rectifier to cut in on the house current, which was A. C. Every time I pressed down on the tele- » it dimmed all the) lights in the neighborhood. You} should've heard the squawks." In 1918, he e up to Chicago to do general buFeau work for the AP. Within a few years, he was finding stories to write about radio at a time when many people still couldn't spell the word. For ex- ample he wrote about Chicago's “silent nights.” On those nights every station in town closed up so radio owners could begin whirling their dials to see how many long distance sta- tions they could pick up. On a good, clear night you could get Los Angeles . * * Charley came to New York as AP radio editor in 1927. This was at a time when radio fans were just switching from battery sets, which spilled over and burned a hole in the living room rug, to receivers using house current. The big attractions then were the Eskimos” (an orchestra), Graham McNamee, and the Revelers* Quar- & P Gypsies, the “‘Cliquot Club | C. E. Butterfield Retires as AP’s Radio-TV Editor hadn't even had time to catch up with the name of the new medium "NEW YORK w—Cha ema ee head over a Butterfield story was: “‘Sight-seeing by radio.” s . * Charley was not only writing ; about the new gadget in the early thirties; he even built his own first TV set out of a kit of parts. His first receiver used a neon lamp instead of a cathode ray tube. Thus the picture was dark red and light red instead of black and white. You didn't have to be a grass- hopper to enjoy the first experi- mental programs that came. over Charley's set but it would have helped. Even with a magnifier, that set provided a picture only 1% I inches wide and one inch long. To see anything, he couldn't be any more than two feet away. In those days, about all there Was to watch was experimental pictyres transmitted by NBC, Char- Jey particularty remembers one tn which all that happened was that a wooden figure of a cat kept revolving around a turntable - But he watched that_ postage stamp screen and he watched and reported on everything that came with the bigger and better screens developed since. Now he says he's going to retire in. November, which—just goes to show ‘you how tough it is to hold on to help these days. Missatri has produced 264 million tons of coal since 1806 which rep- resents only about one per cent of the state's total coal reserves. t { _ THE PONTIAC PRESS,, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 Eyeing Food Supply From 1-Celled Plant are now going to the rooftops to help the world's food supply, Dr. Bruce R. Mead of the University a tiny one-celled plant known as chiorella. This plant, built up from sun- shine, water and small bits of chemicals, produces tons of pro teins and fats in a day. Harvesting will be simple — just a matter of scooping off the chlorella floating on the-witer. The university's pliot plant has been instaliedd on a bulliding rooftop. It has a small U-shaped 8 4 ‘ = ~ G S to leave the | the local radio pages with an exclusive story was the first transatlantic short } wave interview on record. The man } 'on the other end in Vatican City | was Guglielmo Marconi Even in those days, Charley was experts known as television. In that inter- view, Marconi told Chariey tele- vision’s chances were “rapidly” improving. Charley was writing sq long ago about TV the headline writers You've Never Seen Such | Clothes Washing Performance,..and ‘sucH S odemeadl (Peek ae — ay = @ ange wh! Pe bet emt eed coe —e- a ae abe con! Spee greeremten omettert te meee ete pets cad fo | tee ee eae mee heen seme | . SEE A DEMONSTRATION and 95 ree why — shen pos iheot AVG, FR tek at Don’ ities This big Feature of the THOR BEAUTY PARADE of VALUES! De eine meee ete (Ca « << F LAVOR e « « because it’s a balanced blend of the finest ingredients, choice flour, pure cane sugar, rich shortening and real milk solids which give it unsurpassed flavor. N UTR / Ti ON ee e because it contains vital nutrients that give children grow-power ... your family go-power... B vitamins (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin), Vitamin D, Iron and Calcium. 4 ” FRESHNESS e e « because you don’t have to guess with Jane Parker. The date is on the package. You can be certain it's ONLY AT AaP FOOD STORES fresh! & LOS ANGELES — Scientists | of California at Los Angeles has | begun a research project to trap | trough through which -will oir | culate water and a few chem- | | icals. Sea water alse will be used | to produce chiorella, because of | | the abundance of chemicals tn It. .-| Initially, the process will provide {rich supplements for cattle feed. | + When the fotxt ts | = | MRS, JAMES A. CURL Through Eastern States suspended sentence and was or- dered t6 pay court costs totaling $100 Donovan pleaded guilty to ob- structing Lapeer County Sheriff Clark W. Gregory in his efforts to oust the late Mrs. Elizabeth Ste- vens from her home in June, 1952. The farm had been sold at court order to meet an assessment against a bankrupt. insurance = Donovan, of Imlay Oty, plead. ed guilty before six other tarm- ers went to trial on similar charges. The six others were acquitted after their trial tast week in Charlotte. Similar charges against another farmer were dismissed by Judge | Timothy C. Quinn, * The stispended sefitence, handed down by Judge Quinn, apparently Couple Tour ends the long-drawn-out prosecu- tions stemming from the eviction. Two men, Floyd Schriber and) F-rwin C. Russell, now are serving 1! year prison terms for ob- structing justice, Clayton C. Gilli- land of Detroit, alleged leader of farmer resistance to the eviction, is appealing a 4% to 5 year prison | term cx ira: was ring! = —_—e: , Shirley Rauh and Hose Zimmer- | tet man were bridesmaids. Flower girl | was the bride's sister, Linda Wood- worth. -while Graham Curl, the bridegroom's brother bearer. THY) PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 Freer ere cm epee a oe ret oor ee .” 7 + MR. AND MRS. JOHN LANDS . DAVISBURG — Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. John Lands. They held an open house for .a few friends and relatives. residents. ‘Maxine Beadle Wed fo W. A. Hodgkinson NORTH BRANCH — At a Satur- day morning ceremony in SS Peter and Paul Catholic Church here, Maxine Beadle and William Allen | Hodgkinson were united in mar- riage. She is the daughter of Mr. |and Mrs, Orville Beadle. He is the son of the Albert Hodgkinsons. For the 10 am, rites, Maxine wore a gown of ivory slipper satin with beaded neckline, and a finger- Helen Parker, Peter Detwiler |Wed in Lapeer came the bride of Peter -Detwiler Saturday in a ceremony at the | Grace The bride Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carroll Park- | er of Metamora, The bridegroom | is from Grosse Pointe, A reception was held at the home | of the bride's parents following the The Lands are former..Pontiac | METAMORA—Helen Parker be- | Episcopal Church, Lapeer. | is the daughter of | || Install Neumann ‘\as Postmaster l\at Rochester ROCHESTER — U. 8. postal in- spectors turned over the post of- fice books to Cole L. Neumann at noon yesterday and officially in- stalled him as temporary postmas- ter at Rochester. Neumann, who ts 44 and the son of a former postmaster, succeeds postmaster Bushman. He fives with his wife, Geneva, and daughter, Karen, 11, at 315 Taylor St. The new postmaster is a gradu- ate of Rochester High School. He has a B. A. degree in journalism from University of Detroit, where he also studied commerce and finance. For the past 14 years he had been employed by Packard Motor Co Land areas of the world have an average population of about # per- sons per square mile. | Hear Ye! Hear Ye! | New All Risk- | Dwelling Insurance Covers More Risk! many other hazards in addition Such as varidalism, sewer backings, glass breakage, landslide and HEMPSTEAD for their new home at 201? Hoeft | Dr., Walled Lake, earlier in the summer. Mrs, Milligan spent one Sunday writing entries which ranged from serious letters to jingles. Altogeth- @r she submitted 27. The bride is the former Marilyn | | Flaine Woodworth, da’ of the | Russell Woodworths of Walled Lake. The bridegroom is the son jof Mrs. Florence Curl, also of | | Walled Lake Russell Curl served his brother as best man while James Combs and the bride's bro ther, Richard | Woodworth, were ushers About 300 \guests attended the | reception at the Farmington Amer tip veil. She carried an orchid on a white prayer book. Rosemary Hodgkinson of Caro, sister of the bridegroom, Was the bridé’s maid of honor and Mrs, Kelth Byers of North Branch served as bridesmaid. Register Tonight for Adult Classes at Waterford High WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The ceremony. The newlyweds will live | in London, England, and will sail | Nov. 10. A normal humap being--has 12 | ribs on each side. | to those of your present policy. Kenneth G INSURANCE When her students asked her the |tended by some 150 guests, Mari gecret of her success she said, “T) Owe it all to the public schools where I learned to write” a5en Secs New Officers Selected by 2 Farm Bureaus NORTH BRANCH — Election of Officers was featured at a recent For her wedding, which was at a = rowing demand for adult educa- — =e, Sie Se i programs ‘ats Waterford Margene and Larry Beadle, chil- lyn woté-a-gown of white chan. | . Township into its fourth annual} @e® of Mr, and Mrs, William | tilly lace over satin, with ballerina skirt of pleated nylon A satin headpiece decorated with pearig and sequins held her fin- gertip veil. Her bridal bouquet was centered with an orchid Joanne Curl, sister of the bride- groom, w was maid a honor, and Beadle, were flower giri and course for grown-ups of the area. . : ring bearér respectively, Under the direction of George Tramontin, early registration will| The bridegroom's brother, Fred, take~place tonight at the high | | was best man, and Charles Beadle school from 7 to 8 p. m. It is also | |served as an attendant. Ushers possible to register the night ot | ware. Wiliam Beadle and Keith class opening, Sept. 28, said Tra- | Byers, the bride’s brother and montin brother-in-law; Charles Dooghe { and Mrs, Howard Seclye, secretary. erford Township's library, on the Potluck Dinner a WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—The Dublin School PTA will begin its fall activities with a potluck dinner to be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday, followed by an evenin gof enter- tainment. goint meeting of the North Branch | and Arcadia Farm Bureaus. | Waterford Library Set Glenn Worgess was named gen bret director of the two ctube, with tO Open Wednesdays ion Bauman, chairman; Warren > Patek veo deivmen WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Wat- first floor of the CAI building, will be open Wednesdays frofm 12:30 to 3.30 beginning tomorrow it was announced by the library commit- tee of the Book Heview Cub this week. Mrs, Harold Pankner, in charge of schedules js seeking volunteers to staff the library on Saturday morning and also for the children's story telling hours. Contact Mrs. Pankner at OR 30638 Lakeville School Goes lon Half-Day Schedules LAKEVILLE — Lakeville School /was forced to put its students on |haltf day schedules Wednesday, due | We OVEFCrOweing. An over-capacity enrollment of | tes pupils made the decision neces- | jeary, according to county school officials | Brooklands PTA to to Meet BROOKLANDS — Brooklands PTA will hold its get-acquainted meeting at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the school. All teachers are expected | to te present. Refreshments will be served by the PTA executive committee. | the home of Mrs. Leona McRae on | West Main street. Co-hostesses for | A new course available this year will be in tailoring. Other popular | classes to be given are in begin- ning sewing, advanced sewing, blue print reading, shop course and typing \Credit Union Reports | Membership Increase WALLED LAKE — The Walled Lake School Employes Union approved 30 new members at their September board meeting, raising the membership to 164. Treasurer Bill Doggett reported that as of Aug. 31, shares balances totaled $21,534.52, loans outstand- | ing, $15.808.74, and cash on hand $6,577.09. Steps were taken -to fill three vacancies, and to arrange for a credit union mailbox in the school office BETTY JANE FOWLER Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Fowler of 443 Signet, Drayton Plains, | have announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty Jane, to | Wayne L. Morgan. He is the son | of the Clark J. Morgans of T7785 Allen Rd., Clarkston. No date has been set for the a Study Club Sets Meeting | WALLED LAKE of topics and plans for the coming County Calendar Ortenvilie Ortemvitie First Baptist Church will ebeerve Family Night tomorrow with e Assignment | | petiuck dinner served at 7.30 p.m, Metamora Metamora Birthday Clhud etl! | Horvest S Supper Planned Creait | and Thomas Ruhlman. A reception for 250 guests fol- lowed the. ceremony. The couple will live in a newly built home in Burlington Township. GROVELAND TOWNSHIP—The Mt. Bethel annual Harvest Supper will be held Sept. 29 at 6 p. m. | The church is located at Bald | | Eagle Lake and Jossman Roads. “« Re te ih wv WEDNESDAY-AT BOTH * - THRIFTY DRUG STORES year will spark the first fall meet- | T™ ing Of the Walled Lake Study Ciun, set for 12:30 p, m. Thursday, at Mra. Donald Mardwick Orten rite MOMS unit 14 will meet at today at the home Mra of Featherston, on West Mill street Watertera Marry the luncheon affair will be club} er... Pyaar president Mrs. Walter Heinke. tytneran Church will meet at @ pm Wednesda le the home of Mrs. Arthur Mrs. Lee King | and Mrs Florence | es i” - R48 RH White. with elt women-of the ehureh Invited, Mr. Mrs. Homeowner: CAST; 0:5 Casi-0-Stone is individually formed and CAST DIRECTLY ONTO “ YOUR WALLS, for custom appearance 'f you're confused with high { and ENDURING BEAUTY! pr ca low as. . “‘antees its workmanship, and quotes only one fair price to all. and workmanship OR FUNDED! TONE invites Vedi to discover the a ~aeeen “ CAST-O-STONE stranstorms rane, shin gle, Ick, block CONFUSION! . low prices... a8 . poor materials . poor workmanship, then il us. Cast-O-Stone guar- ices... High quality materials 20-YEAR GUARANTEE YOUR MONEY RE. NO MONEY DOWN TAKE UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY Come in or MAIL tecting on low-cost, per- TO: THOMAS CODY Oskland Co. Rep. 2619 Dixie Mwy.. Pontiac, Mich. meet Thursday evening at the home of , 77 East Huron < -4 809 S. Woodward ma) : eres TFRUCKS Pontiac and Oakland County Distributor SHELL OIL Company Products With added Fuel Oil Home Delivery Accounts to service, H. H. Smith has chosen two new GMC's to maintan Smith Oil Co,’s high standards of dependable and prompt delivery. ame TRUCKS SOLD and SERVICED by ies 3 es ‘CO. ' FE 2-9203 FE 4-4531 ’ In Tonkin, one of the states in cent Indochina, 60 per of the land. farmers own less than an acre of THE EVEN IF YOU'VE NEVER DANCED BEFORE... AT ARTHUR MURRAY’S enna a rt4y are oa their very. - right out dan frst lesson. ° « The whole secret it Arthur A ‘wom $ J 00 artuur murray School of Dancing 25 E. Lawrence St. TRIAL LESSONT | kept praying and pumping... .” 40 Hours With |Husband’s Body TOLEDO. Obio «—For 40 hours, ? after her husband died, Mrs. Iva B. Soncrant was alone with his | body on rough Lake Erie in their disabled outboard motor boat | “I prayed and I cried....only the | thought of my three sons kept me battling when the odds against me seemed so large she said yes- terday after fishermen found her 4% miles offshore and rescued her. . . ° Mrs. Soncrant said she and her husband, Joseph, 57, of Toledo, went fishing Saturday. The boat's motor stalled and Soncrant col- | lapsed while trying to start it. She said she did not realize Son- | eramt was dead for two hours. For 40 hours she tried unsuccessfully | to attract passing boats with} screams and a piece of her skirt used as a flag She had to keep bailing water from waves out of her boat to keep | it from foundering . * “One of my sons is only 3, and I ; though he needed me now that his father is gone."’ she said, ‘so 7 Three-fourths of the world's to tal population lives on only about Dette be bh bh bh wre Fidere! 5-4500 DIXIE HWY. (US 10) 1 Bik. N. of TELEGRAPH PeRVEIN Brug sky AT OPDYKE AND WALTON j NOW SHOWING | t bf A hn bh bh hh hn Box Office Opens 6:30 _—— eG ee ee ee eee ee ee Quentin Reynolds’ Story _ TONIGHT-WEDNESDAY MOST INCREDIBLE SI EVER FILMED! Uncensored Pictures of the World's Mest Primitive People! * Shocking .. . Startling... 4”* a ll A Al ii Ai Mi Ni Ni i i i i i Ni th i Ni i i Ni Ni tN i Ni i Ni a hi Nit hi i Ni hin Mi Ni i Ni i i hi hi tin Mi in in Mi Mi Ni i Mi Ni i hi i hh a A4.44444.4.46.4.6 44 bb bb bth bbb bb bh hh hhh ho Mh i A A bi a hi i i hi i a i hh nev at“ “HALF-WAY TO HELL» Zvoessves wrerrfgtrT'''''''''''''''''''''''TTrTrTrTTTT* “~wwevewvwwweef?fT:TTeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeemrrmereeeerereeeerrerrerreerereeeVVY" lll a hl Mi Ai Mi i tn ti in ti ti i ti ni Ml in Mi Ni i i i Ni i i i i i i i i in ii ind a ——— oe | ' | | : . WATERFORD DRIVE-IN THEATER Cor. Williams Loke-Airport Rds. Box Office Opens 6:30 A STRANGE ADVENTURE! + “a JEFF CHANDLER mcrae TUES.-WED.-THURS. STORY of a PASSIONATE LOVE THAT BECAME _ 2nd WAYNE TREVOR “DAY » STACK STERLING: HARRIS BERT ! NEWTON: BRIAN | 22 0 neers Woman Trapped ox re ! f ¢ 27, 19354 PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBE United Press Prev NEW LOOK FOR DAY—Doris Day seems real, “Young in Heart.” Co-starring with the blonde pleased with her new hairdo, “The Princeton | singer in the picture are Ethel Barrymore and Butch,”” which she sports in her forthcoming film, | Frank Sinatra. | ars no finer place to become Olivia to Make jrarew to mn shige Tt is “ ’ | absolutely wonderful place, ar Paris Her Home | my son _Benje loves it as much After Marriage | a as I do.” By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD uw — Olivia De-| role in the medical saga, “Not as ‘Alfalfa’ of ‘Our Gang’ ‘Undergoes Operation | LOS ANGELES u—Cari Switzer of the original ‘‘Our Gang" come- dies is recuperating after an emer- gency : Olivia is here to play the nurses! gwitzer, who played the role of “Alfalfa” in the early films, un- aur ny ; ‘On BOSTON uw — Remember that time) you can ‘save’ an ‘hour i hour of sleep you lost in Apeit| driving to the state capital at jwhen your state went on daylight | Montpelier, which is going back | saving time? on standard time ; Well, you can have it back next; In Maine, the Legislature meets | Sunday — unleis you live in|today on the “time problem. If | Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New| Maine doesn't stay on daylight | Hampshire or a few communities time, it could be quite a “slow’’ |trip from Portland to Boston, A . ¢ «© fast train takes about two hours, | ~The reason: the Massachusetts but if you left Portland at 5 p.m. | legislature decided last spring that| EST, it would be 8 p.m, EDT, |whatever benefits accrue trom| when you got to Boston. thaving daytight time from the last} You radio and television fans are | Sunday in April to the last Sunday | going to have your troubles, too, in September would be enhanced | Networks originating in New York, | considerably if extended to the last for example, will be on standard Sunday in October jtime but the programs will come | Rhode Island and New Hamp-jan hour later if you live where ishire followed suit and a few Ver- | the ‘‘fast’ time will be held over. j mont towns near Massachusetts or) Oh, well. Tt will be all over in New Hampshire figured -it- might | November lessen the confusion by doing like- | wise. | hhh, hour’s sleep trying to figure what time it is when you are in New| New Lake Theater | England, Without the aid of an) 420 Pontiac Trail WALLED LAKE abacus or slide rule you can sé@e MON, . TUES, - WED, there are jchances for some dandy \ instance: \ On Our Wide Mirecle Sereee 'in Vermont. time-saving. For If you take a plane from Boston to New York next week and there | is a good tailwind you can leave | at noon, EDT, and-sarrive at La- | Guardia Field at noon, too — EST, that ts. ih’ Or if you Live in Brattleboro, Rennington, Rutland or Bellows Falls, Vt. (all staying on daylight hd, hack heckecke che uh - oD. iE :§ Waa OL a aa. Jane Russel. in “The French Line” Also—‘‘Dangerous Mission” Last Times Today ! ENJOY COOL AIR} CONDITIONED COMFORT! HILD ... Ree Aner & AN'Dey” TOMORROW \f Gumday ........cossess Bee 5 Havilland is back in town, but only @ Stranger.” I saw her after she |derwent surgery Sunday night at-@—""™ to make a movie. She'll make | ™@de tests for the film, and she Paris her regular residence after | 45 in white gown and cap, ready her marriage to Pierre Gallante. | for surgery. She showed me a pile “Pierre is an executive of Paris | of rubber gloves, needles, scalpels, Match, the popular French maga- | etc., which she is learning to han- zine, and his duties keep him | fle under the instruction of a reg- there,” says Olivia. “Although my | !#lered nurse. home will be in Paris, I'l) make}, “We're going into surgery tomor- pictures in England, France, Italy, | TOW. Olivia said with anticipation. Spain — and Hollywood." | She explained that she, * . * herself wouldn't miss Hollywood e— fp Se e ’ Olivi said he | You forget that I was born in a r weather You forget how good it is | Gallante will meet her here in De | while you're away | it’s foggy all through June | wait after her divorce, * 28 «@ Before the deadline, she got in even see the sun.’ “But when you come back, you) -realize how: fabulous the weather | | valved with making ‘‘That Lady’ is “Human beings adjust to wher- | ever they are, and I must say in Spain and England, She came here immediately afterward. The | wedding cannot be done in a hur- ‘ry, because Olivia has to go | through some red tape in order to retain her American citizenship, which she intends to keep I asked about her plans for son Beniie “He is enrolled in a wonderful French school, and he loves it,"’ she said. ‘'We always think of the English schools as the best in the world. But the English and many Others told me that the French have the best schools, The French have the equivalem of a college education by the time they are 18." Is she concerned about Benjie | losing touch with his native land? | “Not at all, Benjie is a re- It’s Fun to Drink Out! MANNY’S W. Huron et Elizebeth Leke Rd. TUESDAY ‘WED. & THURS. markably American boy, Even at | 5, he is an amazing combination Lof an intellectual and an athlete. | The gentleness of the French cul- | ture will do him_ good, And he'll return to this country. peri- | odically.”* Frank | | Sinatra and others on the picture | 1 asked if a California girl like; Would be allowed to witness an forthcoming Japan,” she replied. “Of course, I marriage will take place some | | grew. up here and t-do~mtss-the } ime-after the picture 46 finished. You say, ‘Oh, cember. The marriage would have and{taken place sooner, except that | | I've seen Aprils when you didn’t | French law required a nine-month Temple Hospital. The trumpter swan, America. Keego Theater * AIR-CONDITIONED . | Free Sample at your Brug Store FOR THE RELIEF OF | RHEUMATIC~- _ ARTHRITIC | PAING *SURIN je @ best, efective weetmen fer pela veliel — act @ cute. et, Weare eee eas "IN Wha IF Gunningham's a sma Doors Open 10:45 A. M, “ ! STRAT ‘Ht | | | | | SOLn ALSO | . TOO YOUNG TO KNOW BRUTE WHEN TO FEATURES— |) io 11:07 - 2:36 = $4 6:05 - 9:35 aes OE CEM TEEMS WITH ITS FURY—SPECTACLE FEATURES — 11:05 - 2:30 = 6:00 - 9:30 P.M. TODAY t FRIDAY or SAT. — “Bey from Okishoms” and ‘Duffy of Sen Quentin” with a maximum weight of 40 pounds, is | the .heaviest flying bird in North) ' | | Blac k Shi } | - Sree oie 309 om || ADDED: — “The Miracle of Stersophonic Sound” — CinemaScope — starts FRIDAY !! + MARLON BRANDO ~~ ee saw 5 Sl SPREE Daylight Saving-Time ha 4 WASHINGTON @—A new book ~d--Rebert the hydrogen bomb more two years after former Presi- dent Truman signaled the start of development program. “The Hydrogen Bomb,” a copy- after Truman ordered a go-ahead on Jan, 31, 1950. Oppenheimer since has been barred from ac- Cess to secret data. . . . The authors say on this point “By mid-1952, the vigorous pat- tern of activity on the part of J. R. Oppenheimer over the years, re- garding beth the hydregen bomb j+and the strategic air comcept, had aroused the genuine concern of a small handful of officials in, Wash- Lad ¥ had no comment, saying he hadn't seen the book. The book, soon to bé published by David McKay Co. Inc. of New York, says there is no evidence that Dr. Oppenheimer took “overt action” to persuade scientists at the government's Los Alamos weapons labroatory “to strike against the President's decision* but that “there seems to be no question that his. opposition .. .| was sufficient to produce a wide- spread reaction.” * . * four years the United States lngeed | behind the Soviet Union in develop- Business Briefs Leonard Griffin, band director for Pontiac area public schools for the past six years, has been named manager of the Calbi Musie Co. band instrument department. Holder of a bachelor degree in music education with, graduate study at the University” ‘of Michi- . gan, Griffin has spent the Past il years as a feach- er and director of bands- in Mich- +gan.publie P St . onsenninenten « enor = . = i Admiral . .... 23.7 Jotns Man .. Produce Air Redue ... 362 aoe & x _ = Alleg L Gti ... 353 Kennecott ... 0.3 r0) Iding bETROIT rRODUCE os Bo SF ew & ... BY +. “priversan"h Ate eat tet a “CHICAGO @ —Most graing held | praits: apples, Crabappies. No 4338. ae Ae... Oe a ee BE * a ie a ‘ within narrow price limits if rela- eT aon Intosh, Not pao bv, an one GS tack aire... 13 tively quiet dealings on the Board apples, Wolf River. fancy 6.00 bu. Not ~~ Ld ee jenn 8 Cus $ ty : = Lort ; i Of Trade today. Wheat showed a | }i; 8° 0") FESS, a atten: Am M& Pay... 964 Meck Tre. 204 4 ™ Ore ._ Pield slightly weaker trend than the rest |¥o, 1.,'%2.00 Su Grapes, No. 1. 100 | Am N Ges 22 Martin Gi. 384 Jig enon | Am N Gas 2 May es: of the list. - Ane Eeataee, Siherte, wry mae | A Rad... 84 Mead op ar - , 4+ Am Attention was focused on Sep- | Ko 1. 335-9 ba: proce om uae fm Smenn 383 Moma cys. $14 : oer. % 32 ; pears, | Om, sti * tember soybeans, in which this was Rertioet. tency, $68 bu, We 1. 360-490) An TelaTel 1705 Motor Pd He ' the last @ay for trading. The open | Clapp Pavorite. tency a8 bu Wort | A™ Tob. Gh Motor Wheel 341 ; interest still was quite large in | 355-40 ou | Elums Prune, Wok. 200" am Mine 22 Muller Br. 384 this future. In other September |2.75% ou Gourmet me 6 the y polly “¢ mee oe = Be ' ~ ' = at a bles: Beans, green, flat. No 1 — ~— by Nat —. aaa been materially cut down in re-|; 00-150. bu. beans, “green. Kentueny | 4° : Nat Qyps ... 49 cont weeks. Wonder. No i, 2.50-3.00 bu, beans, green. | At) Roth MAD Mos $4.1 om . - 250- ; . - tat im 4... 43 one : : found, No 1. 2.50:3.00 bu: beans. Lima. ned Stert .,. 5 Bachar wep hs ts to torer, Bopun | Ramio Rent SuoSot ethan, "wat | Arcs essay Oe aay att , : o 1. . A - ex NY Air Bre. was % to Ye lower, Septem: | io" ts-2i5 bu Beets, No 1 wee0 | Bald Lima... 87 ey eee ie ber $2.15%, corn unchanged to %¢ | dos behs. beets, topped “Nol. 100-178 Bendix. av... 895 Nia M Pw. 912 lower, September $1.59%, oats Yq | %%, ,Broccell. fancy, 25¢ % bu. No 1. | Benguet ")” Nert & West a 160-200 % bu. Cabbage, No 1. 100-150 | pein steel T15 No Am Av 4 ' to os lower, September 76, rye 1 to | bu; cabbage, curly, No 1. 126-175 bu: | Boing Air... 60 Nor Pac oe | 2¥4 lower, September $1.4444 soy- | Soee. ' Sprout pete, Wo 1 100 apt Care | eee Ore =: M2 Cetus. O88 f beans % lower to 1 cent higher, | rots. ot , coe be: carrots. | wore Warn .. 916 Oliver Cp 4 " topped. ‘° . a ui wer = . is September $2.84% and lard 2 to 7| No 1, 22-26 doe Celery, No 1, 178-| price wee.” seq Owens Ti GI O18 (fs cents a’ hundred lower, [5.0 sen: cgay, Bot, 13) dos | Brus Balke .. 18 a es ie Ee Corn, _. %- - dd Co 1 ; September $16.70, e Gil cise, '2.15-2.95-tu. cucum- | Burroughs ,. 21.7 Pann =o | -- = 7 bers. piekle, No. 1. 3.73-425 bu: eucum-| Calum @ H 1¢§ Perem Pict .. 08 + . No 1, 280-3 60 Dill, |Campd Wy ... 23.4 Parte “ae i Grain Prices No. 1, cee behs. Eegplent. No “ Con Dey ..<.> OG pe OS : e8 long, No. 1. 60-| © shee Th } cig nee eae 100 pk Kohirabt No 1) 7-100 bu | Cont art’. ia@ RePsl Cole... 303 °¢ Ti wrenaect — Srann aay, | Leeks Mo 1. 1 oz behs Okra No Carrier, Cp... se Phelps OD 4x2 i Sept. . 1... 218% Dec. |... 1.46%, | § L398 Catone, groom. He 1. | Cass. alah See seg ae } Bee... 18% May. ae 5-90 doz behs; onions, dry. No \. 180- | Gater es 6 Std . o 4) i ese sieeom. > : 185 §0-ib tag: oplons. pickling, No 1} 20 1 March 43-2 ‘Boybeans— Some Parsicy: curly, We 1, 15-26 | comnece 3 y 4 Pilisby Mille 426 ij May 2.18% Sept ++ 303 | gos bens. Parsley root. No 1 1.85 | °°! Pit Plate G .. 505 Cora— Nov 2.66% Cert-teed 1956 h Sept... 1.00% Jan | ..... 260 | COF Parsnins. Ko} 200-25" > DU i Ches & Ob | 357 poled, a. Dee. oe---+ 188% March .°1.°" 31% | Popbera, Chyente: No T'shie ph pep, | SULA NW OE Radio Cp... 193 i ar 156% May... 2.73 7 : , Chrysler Rem Rand ... 24.17 a . — } pets, hot, No 3, 200-356 bu: oy pepe PSR ER LL Pt ea Uitte a Ropers | Stnnathe "SSS Rese By . Sept... .... 16.98 | swage ye | 408-138 bu: peppers, red. | Ciuctt Pes... 361 Reve Met... 15.3 4 sept. : we 16% Oc * 15.33 lo 1, 125-175 bu; Coca Cola ,,5.1146 y oT B Ml i econ ‘77% Boybean of] — Potatoes, new No |: 1 40-1 60 $0-ib bag: Colg Palo . os RKO Pict 4 Mards . "see Be 12.e8 | potatars. new. No 1 270-330 100-M bag | Col” cas 18 Rock Spe . . 203 ¢ May a Oct “a 1159 | mpkins, No 1, 100-125 bu. Radishes, | Con exis 455 Safeway St | 463 Rye— . Be 11.27 red. fancy, 1.00 doz behs. No 1, 80-75 dos | Con OF 0 at Jos lead . ”7 i a = behas: white, fancy, 100 dos | Consam Pw "3 & Reg Pap . 319 i reat ho 1 Mat Shar tact ban [Son FOL at Me, are ee ; ivestock : . But- con P pf 4% 1114 Shell ON .... 512 : ternut, No 1. 100-125 bu; squash Hub Cont 225 Simmons Ma I ~__* BETRON Livestock ~~ C 138s ; Gash Th 1444 @ineletr O ... 6] et —AP—The Detroit Livestock es Le wim = squash Lar aar Cont Mot suet Qecens. vee : $3 : - .. = = ; x—telable, 0 Barores, and gine | $246 240 taki, tomatces: Mol, 100-180 | Cooper Rng. 664 ou Myo. 88) ; openn. . > aor eC ae ks W - 03 { market not fully established: early sales | ‘Bip, topped. No 1, 125-225 bu frees My - Ses opt so OS = += mestly choice 260 ibs. Barrows and Lettuce and salad greens: Celery Cab. | Cunn Drug .. 283 a Brand . 3 gilts pene ee ee Ge lb. aver- > No 1. 15-225 bu. Endive, No 1, | Curtiss Wr ——. ar pan — . aa ages some bu, ched, iy nd. Se ae mete eee? |S. ay | NEB | Bee oe, Od St ae s ™. ral narrow for ava: uw 6 ‘he 412 “* j able supplies; fresh receipts mostly cows | bu. Lettuce fey No 1. cucka eae _ “ “i 12: Gtevens JP .. 44 : tow scattered snes gost end-choice fed | omaine Nerd Mhiae cy eet OE | ean L') fag. mudebener -. 17 < - s steers 21.06-26.00 most early cates pol en Greens pat Bh Fad 1.00-1.25 bu | mee t Kod 593 fun Ot a7 and commercial grass steers and heifers | Colard. No. 1. 125-150 bu. Kale. No. 1.| El Auto L 365 Swift & Co. set 11 $018.98: mostly &.00-10.09: some light Unorrete Mustard No. 1. 125-150 bu | El & Mus.In. 3 Sly Bl Pd a we eanners down to 7.00; rre o 1 . pina ° eutters and utility lighter Clas Pals | 1 $0-2.06 fo een curate ri po Pairs Mor . Be Tex G Bul 05.4 ; en 250. Market openin, tn me Fee Bet ted wee non ts 3 Timk "a hear ‘e ; steady for small supply vealers: rose 2 Gun meen “ga Trao-W Air 191 ; early sales good and ‘choice vealers 20 00- DETROIT (ote sGas Gen Pde .. @6@ Transamer 5 f 38.08: higher cholce and prime very | cases included fede th tag. cre | Gen Mills "1. eg Twent C Pox 275 scarce; come utility and commercial cobrastnapcen! pl bk Gen Motors 644 Underwa 30.7 4 weaions 18.00 19.08 Whites—Grade A, jumbo 55-60, wtd Gan Retrac we tn Carpias 4264 as ‘s00—ematt carly re- [078,, SO%), ‘are Be 89% Wid ave 8245; | Gea Tel... 338 UB Pac 133.3 | ~——sespte mostly slaughter sheep; no early (23 wid avg. 21's. grade 8 ‘ara na Gen Tire .... 374 a —— be " sales. 5 ——— Sef 48 ed. ave 45: wees 17 Gillette on. «, O84 United ‘ Browns—Grade A Lambo ay large 50 | Ooebel Br... 71 Ue beg the wH > - . oe — ~ to ee — ~*&4 & r CHICAGO CTVES SI. Wid avg. rire medium 27-31. wa | Goodrich |. ters CHICAGO (AP)—Galabie hogs 13,000; | ®¥@- 20: email 22. grade B. jarge 43-41. | Goodyear ae Te Ge. ot : general trade moderately active to slow ng eve. 47, grade C. large 22° peewees ee ae a US Rub 365 pg Eg Checks—18-21 + ami US amet of ose buik- 190-270 15~butebers 19.50 seo guxtaa ph daar a US Stee! 362 | 19 75; latter top since early AGO BUTTER AND EGGS aoa ee hg ee Gee sa i” February ih. 10 S top paid Z: ewieaco. (AP-—Butter firm receipts ee - 5" US Tod . . is underweights and lights 150-185 Ib 17. 004.313; wholesale buying prices ‘. to | Homestk “* 4a6 Van Reel Mu t 19.50; bu over tb ce; esi ” ae AA 56.15, 92 A 58.25. Hooker Ei... 82 We . 38 hghter eights 16 -inec; “areer tu oe B bs mC OS, pital” | -K *. OT Were B Pic PH .75-19:00; large dust Ra 4.2 Ld 600 i 15.75-17.75, Eges firm. recei €.547 wholesale 4 - f Salable cattie 22,000; calves 600; gen- (buying prices mL US iargé taaeae Pod - 7 were’ a 8 eral trade on simuguhter steers and (whites 50: mx Us meduim 28:\Interik Ir ... 16) este EI 11 heifers slow although fair wiry for |U8 standards Cuaeeins_ceonaete ae int Harv ....322 * ©c_163 Steers; market about steady with dirties 18.75, Pe 17.78 Int Nick |... 68.3 Wise Bl Pw o14 5. ail das Wrekicaeet caeee man r° ee eee be rs = , ; DETROIT rovlray Int Stiver ... 667 Yale & Tow 4 }— slow; early trade about steady; balls Int T fully steady; other classes steady: aver- ee a a ne ee on arn.. a Yat eat os age prime to high prime 1200-i318 Ip ao io ublity live : poultry w am E: aoe aa ae e chotee ~~ Heavy hens 17-20 ht type 14; heavy STOCK AVER. ' grades 28.78 - : | mast agg broilers or fryers (3-4 lbs): Gray Crosses} Compiled by The Associated Press : rete atl — ape ag 31; light broilers or fryers 20. capon- 2° 6 6 . 50 and nara — ettes 35-38; ckiings 30 breeder tur- Iné@ust. Rails Util Stocks ) seve loads keys, young vy type hens 30-32.| Previous day...1838 987.0 648 134.3 8-14.00: canners and cuvtere-ter-te-ce, | * thee se Oe OSS be mainly 700-925; utility and commercial rege oe ie ei oF ee + bulls 12 $0-15 28; and choice veal- CHICAGO\ POULTRY =| EBT OHO. ode. sos t ers 1800-22 00; to commercial 9.00- {| CHICAGO — AP— poultry omen OI -mibbhodes $08 3S es i700. = . on young stock steady on hens. | oe ee ry oe a4 368.9 Salable sheep 2,500; moderately’ active: 771 coops (FNday 1.056 coops, | ee $ St WH native spring lambs steady; yearlings | 188,461 Ib); f0.b ng prices un: me pile tees rs = at 005 weak to —-28-or-—-more tower: sisughter wt 19-193; uaa’ PT oa | Pry Pe sheep steady; to prime mostly good light hens 125-135: fryers or brotlers |NOOP today.....1639 069 0458 134.3 ager so lambs 18. 00- get old — bb ae “— 2 ww several lots choice and |; young ae ee prime 20.00; cull a good 10.00-17 00. (Rornblower Weeks) deck and load good and choice | Piguree after p sald * Fan Use"Weon = 90-98 m reertnge 15.00-16.50; three loads ¢ choice ahd prime.110 fb yearlings 16.75" ing. | panewns Rubber*... io-6 44 ype ng my lee Gerity-Michigane 2. Bg + pcos pacers soa.26 (With Milk Subsidy ESSE a \ sco rew* 2 y Midwest Abrasive*..... 64 q Briggs Declares $32.26 \ Rudy Migr eesces ot Suet DETROIT (INS)—Detroit school \W ope oer ene oa’ ai oa ividend on Liquidation it scl . ; bid and asked D m iy officials today wrestled with the DETROIT ®—Briggs Manufac- | problem of to take advantage FOREIGN & oe aa om een — a sen ayia “ae itl +i eutins ' NE A Foreign Fords Shown of Devel naie of a $50,000,000 per year student milk subsidy from , |the U.S. Department of Agricul- ture. Theoretically, Detroit could re- ceive $400,000 a year and cut milk pricesin- the seheols from five cents~a half pint to two cents a ‘haf pint, which would bé the low- school milk program in 1946. Lawson A. Wiles, director of school lunchrooms, explained that the present regulation requires that each school in Detroit's school sumption by 25 per cent in order to qualify for the subsidy which is aimed at..combatting a growing nationa] milk surplus. eat price since the start of the|%a° Holiand. ‘guilder) 26 @ cent; Italy ‘lira) .16% ‘as cent, un- system must increase its-mitk con- | others\.in cent pote onan 103 | aay cent; Great as 90 da: of rates foliow (Great 2.701546, off im rt York oe Britain Vis im (pound? wie ott ie ie of & cent; Gr 30 day futures 2.78 16/ rm ot _« cent, futures 2.79 18/16, off 1/16 (frame) emium ofr of & cent 2. eat Britain off 1/16 of « @ay / off 00% of Germany end Cone ent oe oes onan [Dalle Creek Gets |? Yoon ‘Arrested Hera: uc siumret. sto, tow| zeaeaty soe scot Some ee at the Ford in H sags, _ a was at t - as 5 SES ———— , rele Seeeechibit E20" OKs Dividend R sh Order {6G | tara C: Vaughn. of 15 La Carmel Hospital for observation. | plea of not guilty was entered by We maintain a direct line to a member of all '. — Pacha Around . — jag iplreny a ul 0 Pentiec Police fer two years on a —s H. Russel “er sot tor principal exchanges with oe ae side-by-side with U.S-made Ford |cents a share Monday on outstand-| BATTLE CREEK (UP)—State|“*#rse of furnishing beer to mi- Woman Hit by Auto, A ae nines a quotations service available at times. cars, trucks and tractors. ing shares of capital stock. It is| Police. flew 3,000 c.c.’s of gamma|"0FS, Was arrested yesterday by | Cutters Cuts and Bruises hes cr SEs band = ee ee ce ae cee cuae to. rane See he | Veusba seoteng © police, left| Mrs. Jessie Coleman, 64, of 5@| Mrs, Anna Herrin, 41, of 123% W. : Zephyr ag he pro te a ao taken ats board meting New | Jerry Lane, 14, who died ‘of bulbar | the Pontiac area in 1952 when he | Hamilton Dr., was treated at Pon-|Huron St. brought the charges] Cc. J. Nephler Co. areund Lore. i < : learned police were searching for | tiac General Hospial for cuts and against Cole saying he married her ; =e : ‘Robins. director of the |him. He was recognized while| bruises Monday when she was| Aug. 6 while still legally attached |] 14 Community Nationa) Bank Bidg. a . Calhoun County Health Depart- walking on S. Bivd, E. near the | struck by an auto at Pike St.|to Mrs, Maybelle Cole, 38. : _ ment, said about 30 high school stu-| Viaduct by DePauw. Vaughn will | and West Alley. Cole excused his absences from BURGLARY dents and friends of , @ 10th | be arraigned today, police said. | Pontiac Police quoted Mrs. Ruth| home by saying he was on secret | Your ions may not || srader, will get GG shots in an " D. a 2a oneal i seston for the Army,Mrs Her- FOR SALE ‘ ; tt to immunize them - driver, as , rin - be worth @ million dollars J patio ve |Comn Ockiond Youtie. (= a oe oe TEMPORARY GOVERNMENT HOUSING life's work — so protect [Imore than encugh” tortreat the| ay." oviae Loyal Order of the| Man Suffers Cut Scalp FOR REMOVAL FROM SITE them : casi salecias uP Seen doce te Sreie| Moose will entertain ten youths |First of Michigan Corp. in Two-Car Crash Here Seer Sous eraneeGucecwan eile rane, Homing An nares oe Tuesday, Robina said tom camp Quite’ Set 2 st Gets Ook Pork Bonds |, Meno ¥. cmt a. ous 8] PR Cea eet mh cee erates | W. HUTTENLOGHER Agency _{) 2202+.» the sim polio death ia S355 Mt, ‘Clemens ‘St, and| Oak Park City School District seaip cote this morning when the | Sir, Peniat, Michgan. fete romevel of She folowing uate #. W. Huttenlocher Mex E. Kerns year, Robins said then take the boys to the Pontiac No, 2, has. given a $1,500,000 bond! war he was driving collided with from their present sites yy 5 Eee The GG Was released\.by the | High football game, issue to First of Michigan Corp. | another auto which ran a stop sign 22 buildings consisting of 92 dwelling unify all located at 318 Riker Bidg. FE4-1551 Bi ciate Health Department and flown| The event. will be part of the|The issue covers 18 years with!a: Adams and Auburn Rds: 9c- Parkview Homer War Housing Project MICH-20219, ‘to Battle Creek by Cpl. Bertil |°@Anization’s Moose Heart pro-| interest coupons trom 1% to 3%) cording to Oakland County sher Pontiac, Michigan. State _F slot gram for children, according to| per cent. --4ff's deputies. « All of the above buildings are of frame construction built Funeral Plans Made son Er ay tol gc ‘ns ‘tsa |e ene a pn ena at : ee : . : Th not see 4 as Injured in Fall From Car | Moor a oe ras ef ae enl us Meen Af prune _ Mrs, Mary E. Spencer, 21, of 3366 Korte, who was uninjured, was heaters, ice boxes and hot water heaters now in the units FLINT CNG) -o=_ Fenians ar- re Rochester, suffered cuts | Boy, 5, Hit by Auto driving north on Adams, wo eonelorel ofg pot f Se hgnmay tnd to eek G Kellar, former | fell from & moving auto operated | John W, Higgins. 5, of 770 Osmun/ 7. Antend Conference | an | whol by her husband, Clasles, on De-|St.. was admitted to St.~ Joseph - id yesterday at the age of 75. | quindre road between Auburn and | Hospital for observation Monday Pontinn Coy aapiger_tante © “Let 9 couneeling Kellar, mayor from 1917 to 1920,| Hamlin Rds.“She was treated at | evening after the Child ran into| Wrenn and Superintendent of Pub- SGnaun cabs counties was an active real estate man for | Pontiac General Hospital, an auto in front of his home, ac-|lic Works Joseph B. Jewell are in the tand for Keljar Park and \ About 200 rivers and streams| of the auto, said police, was Rob- annual Municipal Public . Works ae est icy instrumenta} in the development.| empty their waters into.Lake Su-| ert W. Benard, 23, of 255 S. Mar-|Confetence running through =f, of many of-the city’s subdivisions. " =~ | shall Blvd. __| Wednesday. is 4 aang P . - » ww - « : e ma m _ 4 % se " 4. 4 1 oo K \ i i o~_ it a - i * es ’ ~ % ~ ay ‘ uy ‘ : i * : istre AE ; pea nee te ie pee ok. ®& re ‘ Bass | t* a fi ae tS ee Ce tiles Ce ee Ga AS ee eye 8! ge Se ee changed; | teseude) 3.60, un- changed; Sweden ikroma) 18.4, «an. changed; land ifrenc) (free) 23.33%. hanged; De ref ’ 14.56, unchanged. Latin America tine (free) 1.24, ; ffreey 166, un- cha ; Mexico 6.02, uncha H vene-| 4 tucia = +bolivar’ 03, Far East: Hong Sones dollar 17.50, un- changed Books on the sale of the ington. in Princeton, N.J., Oppenheimer | say THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 _|Book Says Oppenheimer Fought H-Bomb Until 1952 ing an H-bomb and that Opper- | "22. op-jother teading — al@hikt scientists, — were mostly fo ‘blame. Russia fi- nally set off a droppable hydrogeti weapon on. Aug. 12, 1953-—six months before this country did. “It was an accident bordering ab most on the miraculous," the au- thors say, that Dr. Edward Teller was working in this country's atomic program “where he could pit both his knowledge and his determination against. Dr. Oppen- heimer.”’ . ° . The book says most of the H- bomb work eventually was done at Los Alamos, but only under the goad of Teller’s “rival” labora- tory at Livermore, Calif, Truman and the Air Force both come in for criticism by the .au- thors for not pushing ahead with H-bemb development as seon as Russia had exploded - its first atomic weapon iff August 149. _ Of Oppenheimer's position on the H-bomb question, the authors “The plain fact was that on a question of overriding jmportance Dr. imer was wrong, tragically and frightfully wrong. . . It is not criminal to be wrong about-the weapons of the atomic age, my Oe fatal.” Offers to Dre Drop Kidnap Charge - Goldsmith Won't Press Case if Patinos Accept His Custody Right PARIS (INS)—British hotel heir James -Goldsmith has offered to drop kidnaping charges against his weajthy in-laws, Bolivian tin magnate Antenor Patino and his wife, if they accept his role as father of his infant motherless daughter. « Goldsmith ae his offer last night on the condition that the Patinos would not- contest — his right to care for the ailing 4 month-old Isabelle. whose mother shortly after the child's birth. The %)-year-old Briton said he also would offer the baby's grandparents visiting rights. Golfsmith’ won custody of his daughter Sunday after a bitter four-day court battle in which the Patinos Charged be was not a fit parent because: his frequent busi- - | ness trips kept him away from the ailing infant too much. Goldsmith filed the kidnaping charge when he returned from a business ‘trip and found that his his Paris apartment. the infant, thus leaving herself subject to the charge. Detroit Traffic Takes 2 Lives Monday Night . DETROIT (INS) — Traffic acci- dents in Detroit last night claimed the lives of two persons, one an S-year-old boy. The boy was Robert Duane »|Moore, the only child of Mrs. Gene- Hud- | vieve Moore of Dearborn, He was ruck dawn when he became” (Of fused in the middle of heavy traf- fic while crossing Greenfield north of Paul. The driver a. was fatally in- Pies ina the wreck | from which rhe was helping unload a piand was 55-year-old Walter Wuolujja, was in a daze, unable to give @ co- ah oe daughter had been removed from The Duchess of Durcal, Patino's estranged wife, admitted she held ‘at Bigamy Hearing Police said the driver of the car, | Lodge Calendar Special communication, Cedar ~ News in Brief Mrs, Katherine Reible at teers; uties yesterday that someone took a lot on Big Lake in Spr ingfield | Township Sunday. . Rebert Mueller of 3009 Ridge Rd., White Lake Township, according to Oakland County sher- | iff's deputies. } Ress A, Morgan, 62, of 184 Bon. dale St. demanded examination on a morals charge Monday and was released on personal bond by Pontiac Judge Cecil McCallum. The hearing is scheduled for Sept. 29 dack M, Lewis, %, of 2635 Aa- burn Ave., pleaded guilty to drunk driving yesterday and was sen- tenced to 30 days in Oakland Coun ty Jail when he was unable to pay a $75 fine and $25 costs He | appeared before Waterford Town- | ship Justice Willis D. Leurgy. Royal Oak Township’ Justice | Hendrik J°"Smit yesterday sen- | tenced Lioyd Pauling, 32. of 20254) | Kentucky, Detroit, to 30 days in Oakland County Jail after Pauling | pleaded guilty to driving under the | influence of liquor Window + Tadlock,— a $2 fine yesterday when he pleaded guilty before W. Bloom. ' field Township Justice Elmer C. | Dieterle.. Tadlock was — placed | on probation for 90 He was) arrested Saturday pa by Or- chard Lake Police. cost dames V. ind needs VA: Buchel ball (Pn Pe os 38301, ——— City Officials to Be at M unicipal Key figures in Pontiac's city government will attend the 19h convention of the Michigan Mir nicipal League jn Detroit this week ae ‘Some will attend all three days | ee ee row afternoon will be Willman and | City Attorney William A. Ewart. Ewart, who is also president of the Michigan Association of Mu- nicipal Attorneys, will also _pre- side over two other sessions later in the we\. Lt. Walter Krause of the Pon- tiac Police Dept. will take part Thursday morning. Jewell, superintendent of public works, will participate in a dis cussion on municipal engineering problems the same morning. All city commissioners but Harcourt 8. Patterson will at- tend at least one segsion, Will- man sald: Others attending will be Oscar Eckman, director of finance; Murray M. Ashbaugh, treasurer; Reed, purchasing agent; Ada R. Evans, Clerk; W. Ray- mond Ransom, assessor, and James R. Stelt, personnel direc- tor. Louis H. Schimmel, a mem ber of the Board of Education, will take part in a panel discussion on property tax Thursday afternoon Cole Stands Mute Accused bigamist Glenn J, Cole, Lodge, No. 00, F. & A.-M. Clarks- | ton, Thursday, Sept. 23rd, 7:00 p.m. told Oakland County sheriff's dep- | a 9x12-foot tent, vaued at $50, from said yes- | terday that thieves took a five, horse power outboard motor from | his boat on White Lake Sunday, | of 4310 Qgema, Fhe #0, of 117 Murphy St. stood mute |. . Fr ek tery tt naps _Automobile Insurance Am ean core may seh pe " . Just pick up your phone and call us for experienced ‘Investment — Facilities .- hae ot Your Finger Tops service on your investments. Your inquiries are welcome by phone, by letter or in person. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Member New York Stock Exchange end other leading exchanges PONTIAC OFFICES 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. FE 4-2895 —_— a Sn erent een nay 511 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & IL Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 5-3793 Donald E. Hansen Res. FE 2-6533 Aceident Insurance Burglary Insurance ~ Bonds—All Types Plate {NSEN Fire Insurance Liability Insurance Life Insurance” Glass Insurance ; | Marvin M. Alward, avditor; Frank}; . Mrs “Research is an organised method for keeping you reasonably dissatisiied with what you heave.” —Charles F. Kettering. 2 ee Sa er eT Leegue Meeting | Financing plans that make sense and save dollars! *» ae a « The soundest way to home ownership is via one of our low-cost mortgage loans, tailored to fit your special needs! Come in and let us explain our easy method of financing. Up to 20 Years to Repay! Capitol Savings & Loan Go. 75 West Huron St. FE 4-056! DETROIT EDISON COMPANY COMMON STOCK YIELDS ABOUT 4.7% Having paid dividends continuously since 1909, this stock offers an excellent investment in a growing Michigan atility. Telephone: WOcdward 2-2055 Finer or Micuicaw Corporation Investment Bankers BUHL BUILDING — DETROIT ~ NEW YORK CHICAGO STOCKS — BONDS Conswt us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds ;. + diem dina de to anager oe i SEAR: cy < 7 . a ; % dane " : ee sk Ag Be = + ayer. > -" Sie Si uy, ‘ ‘ ™ ” . ° j ej 5 yi ; } “ . i | imal + | ' ' | _ of ” * ‘ ‘ 4 rah. =. a . a 7 nt ae ix Ah 2 i 5 rs Sa? on TE PONTIAC. PRESS, ' TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 ae eee i i 14 ¥ —— , - . = -_ 1? elie EE = gy 1. 0% AS +4 8 v0 releah ‘ ; ; z © Fo September Bs. Show Business : ion + in es =~ ky 9 e: s — Sinema ~s _ a J Part ot” Bavthrent « Bection 1, - ’ | Mrs, Rachel} Jurn : be at 2.p.m. Wednesflay ; : ean ‘When Americans Mention Monroe. Up for Auction | nast cmesrvee tx sr iom tase rer iones sie Sait ay "bar, eae a Stir \¢ iffie rs = P, ff ep SR Rachel Jurn, %, was held burial im Elkland Cemetery: He of eats Eee th teen “Py e | They Aren't Thinking of Doctrine a {at her home, win burial in Imlay | ed Sunday Gel cene oy oo iy eee ee ——— Dineey Gepttsidens, ‘Dowagiac Welcoming |v Cemetery. ‘Sie died Sunday.| A bachelor, Mr. Battel is sur:| SSNs hence Sous 9 agten a . By EDDIE CANTOR --- Recently, a radio commentator, in an ad- Bu of “Surviving are four daughters, | vived by two brothers, John and minotes 6 gomenee font ana tt foots va Byed for Detroit Post Like everybody else in the business, I've tried [1D interview, tried to trap her by mentioning Prospective yers Alma, Mrs. Mabel Boney of Grosse | Daniel, of Elkland Township ning _ -_ Retires the Stanisiavsky School of Dramatic Expres-| {K-F Factory Pointe, Mrs. Lillian Kaufman of : Parcel No. 3 as Morgan Ret | to anaylze the success of Marilyn Monroe. * + ston, Mies Monroe treated him te « echolariy | —" Clipac, and Mrs, Clara McNary’ of Reuben Moore, @ +4 yy 4 - eo DETROIT «INS) — Speculation | more pleasant pastime I haven't yet discovered! 10. minute discourse on the subject. DOWAGIAC (UP) — Dowagiac is | Brown , a sister, Mrs. Martha nag i Service fpr Reuben a co-calied angerecncate iat’. be centered around Deputy Superin- | I did discover the reason for the whole coun-| Skeptics insist her press agent had a hand tn all set for the biggest sale in its ot New mgs two ery ee - ‘-_ ca Pe. erthonst ie et she Rerthuons ot ae tendent Kennedy Lawrence today | try thinking of “Marilyn” instead of “Doctrine” this, but so far I have never met a press agent history. ’ and conti Se pattie ar neral Home, with burial in the mee slong the Northerly. lise of the as successor to retiring Detroit ' when the name Monroe is mentioned who has ever heard of Stanisiavsky. Come to Ww — ny ‘huge ~~" $7,000,000 } timore— en ads - - Saints Cemetery, Whittémore. the said 7 poll, the woblsthe Police Superintendent’ Kawin S It isn’t just her figure which, to put it subtly ig it—neithee have I! Kaiser-Frazer plant here and all of Adam Joseph Bricker Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | southerly along and with the Weeerip ; is.special, nor her open-mouthed, provocative When a Japanese interviewer, in a trans- its machinery and equipment will Edith Saupp of Disco, and a sister-| line of the said Northeast % of the Morgan . "| WIXOM—Service for Adam Jo- Northeast “% of the said Section 27 Police Commissioner Pyggins re- | #!@nce, nor her walk, nor even her volce which | Paeifie telephone conversation, wanted te | be auctioned. Nearly 1.000 buyers ‘seph Bricker. 81, of 49700 Pontiac in-law, Mrs. Marion Moore of Roch-| 394 feet: thence Easterly slong end fused to confirm or deny reports | “someone has described as sounding as though | know who taught her that walk, Marilyn | are expected to be on hand for the Trail, will be held at 1:30 p.m. — ies of tee es ee that he would name Lawrence to’ it came over a transom. It's her sense of answered that she learned to walk when auction. Thursday at the Richardson-Bird Nathan John Wheeler east \ of une cnld Section 3108 tents _ the important post humor. : “ she'was 11 months old and hasn't had a K-F closed down the plant | Funeral Home, Walled Lake, with —_— =< ge digs parallel with the ad w line of lesson since. : } when it consolidated its opera- burial in Oakland Hills Memorial | John Wheeler, 53, of . Elm- heast ‘4 of the Piggins announced tate vester At ene thime. I thought Marilyn's press ; é : \e of the said Section 27, 324 feet to day that Morgan would retire agents were responsible for her clever Marilyn is practical Bhe knew she was no. —- Tolede after the merger ra Cemetery. He died Mon- a ade os Men s.paimt 19 he. Northerly line of the said Feb. 1, a month after his 60th comebacks, and indications of a busy brain. — actress to begin with, but decided to study and ot K-F and Willys Overiand. Surviving. besides *#!=0ins. ha m3 “32 years ago, was the youngest America beauty parade in a low-cut gown, | On dancing—and when she decided to learn all 7 er, K-F will not. decide im- | ‘Wo brothers, Frank of Scotfield,|two daughters, Mrs. Ann Thomp- — as Clartston Station School superintendent in the city’s history | someone told her she attracted a lot of atten- about baseball, she married Joe DiMaggio. mediately whether to sell the huge | 89d Shelley of Ontario. son of Lapeer, and Rosalie, and | ,,"yWicin® , only Rd and Andersonville” when he was named to the post in), a You can't do better. than that! P. 8 —She two sons, Nathan John Jr. and ROBERT WALTON, a It. jon Said Marilyn: "I noticed people staring ~. | plant -te the highest bidder, The Alice Debbie Dieht David. all at og _Seeretary. Board of Education: He held the job Jortger than any but I thought they were looking at my grand. SiG DOPE SOAG, Mer Oe 1 2Ove SI ee eer? company hag @ 24-hour option dur- WALLED LAKE — Service for ers, Oscar Wheeler of Greawvils: | itil nino Needleman saree rae “| marshal's badge “ (C opyright 1954) ing which it may reject any or all | aiice Debbie Dieh}, %month-old | ; : ’ | erATE OF MICHIGAN—in he Probate — officer in the history of the force : bids on the plant “ : ¥ |Ky., and Emery of Linwood, Calif | eourt tor. the County of Oskiand, as a climax to a highly respected — ~ ee ~~ - . : : - _| daughter of Daniel and Etta Dieht > 4 a sister, Mrs. Luther Dean, | Juvenile Dtvtsion. pede be gg gt ee - - Machinery and equipment, ‘how- will be at 10:3 am ae K . In the matter of the petition coneern- , Debbie Denies Feuding By New Citizens ever, will be sold right off tie from _ Richardson-Bird Funeral | isport, Ky oe Rms Guten gad Danas Morgan has cight precinct and With Maril - floor to the highest bidder. Home with buria} in Walled Lake | Mrs. William Steenson To Erwin and Alta Manshaniea pare twe departmental citations and it art yn Monroe = = | died Saturda t! ALMONT—Service for Mrs. Wil ents of said children + : ; 7" Annual Picnic Is e Major R. J, Weller urged Do- (Cemetery. She y a Petition having been filed in this Court « fe commissioner's — citation. YOLLYWOOD | (INS> Pert wagiac citizens to “roll out the | Pontiac General Hospital. | liam (Bessie May) Steenson, 69, of aleging tnat ae Soccebets of t » fi Ps P e parents o' id oa Renan ue beige "ie dint te | Members of Janice Antona’s cit- Mayor and Mrs. Donaldson, Judge | red carpet” fer prospective buy- Surviving besides her parents, = Johnson pred will be at 2 p.m. |are oh pall anda naa children ‘are. de- “He has done bis job with fair aarti Cone ™ Lee! balla izenship class and the new citizens | and Mrs. George B. Hartrick,| © of the plant, are four brothers, William, Wayne; | edn ) m Muir Sater thet. rer chuntree should be placed ness to everyone tie was firm |) to squash the latest Hollywood | J H. Russel Holland. Mr.endi , { Grant, Rober and four sisters, Funeral Home, Almont, with bu-| under the jurisdiction of this Court when he needed to be and if a situ rumor that she is feuding with league of Pontiac and their guests udge | cd al Never again will Dowagiac at = al rial in Almont Cemetery, She died| In the bame of the ialatl ihalace a Mrs. Lynn D. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. | tract industrial prospects | Barbara, Denna Mae, Linda ,of Mich ou ere heredy notili afise-demanded diplomacy he had. yeni Maley Meese [ Mneres Ot Cee Pee A FC. Huth Cc nee a. ia * a | Monday at her home. that the rearing on said petition will be that. His reputation and example | fact the young movie star | day afternoon for their 17th annual | { Mrs. G cone Dondero and at one time,” Weller Pag a — Mire, August Bantien | She is survived by her husband, held st the Court House in the City of are an example for every police OVD tossed = Marilyn a bouquet picnic in honor of United States ne Ford — ” ‘two sons, John Ward of Almont cf October aD. iit at ‘nine wesc’ "2 peal last mght after tossing a kiss to | Cunatitition day. saucy, For — pay dividends oon sate ovagayoeaaitiesaahbrad — aaa and Elmer of Byron; two daugh | fs forenoon and you are hereby — Praesens rantsinamngnrsneen ber one-and-only: _Fisher on _John—Waiker. ty officials hope Ss gust (Clara) Bantien, | ters, Mrs. Ruby Barkley of Almon Reereee) NES ent: Personaty, at) va | a 4 nationally televined show, NBC's l eieg pledge to vie Sa ae os ramaiie: tockwood- | sald--to--someonewho_will_either | Romeo. Plank Rd., were held (0 | 1.4 ates Ruth Davis 0 Gayted. | ‘being fmpraction) to make per. PTA Names Officers Operations Enter’ nent.” Zaunic gave the American's creed £ R d Hi il start a new industry or more 4M | day at the A.M. Tiffany “Chapel, | 10 grandchildren and two greal- [totic weevene erent. cag ‘Simeone and : | , ) When asked whether she had ngaged to ichar ' already existing manufacturing | | with burial in the Meade Ceme- | | copy one week prgvious to said hearing METAMORA New PIA offi “What the Constitution means to = grandchildren. in the Pontiac Press a newspaper printed te first indeed called Miss Manroe ‘‘Joe | 7 — Mr. and Mrs. E. | Plant here. Unemployment in Do- | tery. She died “Monday. and circulated in said C cers elected recently at the firs /me,”’ an original paper, was read| ALMONT ounty fall meeting were Mrs Richard | D'Maggio’s bat girl.” Debbie re- iby Mrs. Richard Shafto Miles have announced the engage- | Wasiac has been above normal| Surviving besides her husband, | ivera. Guligs af gel Geert. Gites Gn Yorks, president; Mrs James | Plied firmly ment of their daughter, Dora An- | since K- F closed down. jare four daughters, Florence, at | New- of Pontise in sald County, this 11th ay Messen. vice president : Mrs Ea- | “I didn't say it’ And he Members of the present citt- | nette Lockwood, to Richard Duane | Tours of the-city’s schools, new | home; Mra— Marion Friediman of | Menters- invited OF | 9 pease = = ward Brecht. sgcretary, and Mrs | “I am one of Marilyn's bi SS ae ee hospital and other facilities will | Detroit, Mrs. Joseph A. Hooker of | to Join Extension Club _ | * #» <»» jeden of Frotete William Skellenger, treusurer fans.” line of the United States Const: | 11, ix the-son of Gordon Hill: of | be available to prospective buyers | Armada. and Mrs. Shirley Me- Provate Magister, sutensie Dirt. a Debbie also denied flatly that tution. Those participating were Dryden. An October wedding will | Who wish to see more of the town, |Coomb of Armada, two sons, Ed-| METAMORA — Metamora Hills | Sept. 21, 1954 | d she and singer Eddie Fisher are’ Chela Hollis, John Sirignane, Noe held. Weller said. ward of Marine City, and Clarence | Extension Club will meet at 1: 30 | Grate or MICHIGAN—ip the Probete 1,207 Students Enrolle engaged ‘eeity Dubis, Charles tesa. ’ at home. also a sister, Mrs. Wil-| p.m. tomorrow in the home of court tee jibe County of Oakland, = . | ee Andrew Allison, Amina ime liam Wills of Armada and a broth- | Mrs. Carl Snover. M esa . | OXFORD - ee nrulliment WCT if . George Galstain, Mrs. Fongboner Re-5l Re-Elected Big Beaver Couple Set er, Frank Smith, of Massachusetts.{ Plans will be formulated for Yu- | wa ser Use ‘and ‘Gaylean Gee yoy figures are up about five per = U to Elect Officers George Land, Mrs. sehe ime. Oct. 23 Wedding Date ture lessons. W. Conse Mo. 3004) over last year according to R- , _by Goodfellow Assn ° ng Helen Mead Burget omen of the com- To Gaylord and Elleen Gee, parents F = BA ORTONVILLE — Flection of of- | —_ : oat aekCEe _ Ds. munity interested in tearning to [of said children Ambrose, Oxford sched superin . | Ball WATERFORD- “wee Fl BIG BEAVER Mr. and M ROCHESTER—Service for Mrs. | Petition having been filed in this Court tendent. Registered now are 1,207 | —— is scheduled by the WCTU . % iH L. Matatall, of 1061 Henrt-| Helen Mead Burget, 81, formerly make items for the home are in- jalleging that the present whereabouts , Fangboner was re-elected | /&!Ty ©- ’ vited end jat a 2 p.m meeting tomorrow in N ends nted in the pro- | ™r i be to att the meeting. | of the’ parents of the said minor children students. | aly apreae ' ident he W Town.|¢tta St. have announced the | of Marlette and Dearborn, wil aa’ austnoet ami" the aia anaen oon ee the home of Mrs. Clare Wolfe on | gram were Mexico. France. Italy, | PT®* of aterford marriage of their |2 p.m. Thursday at the William dependent upon the public for support eas = : < | ship Goodfellows Assn. Tecently. forthcoming P. | and that said children should be placed Bureau Officers Named ‘*" “street ae, ee See: Gia officers are’ Vernon | daughter. Patricia Lorraine; to R. Potere Funeral Home, with bu-| Almont Man to Marry | inion. jutasitiin of ini Court : . > Ukraine. Armenia and England. | aa prt James R. Currier, Ocf. 23. rial in Mt, Avon Cemetery. She | ¢:: : Te the same of the people of the State ARMADA — New officers of the | The average man weighs one | Mayor William’ — greet. | Price, vice president; Mrs, R. E. . Girl From Saginaw ; of Michigan. you are hereby notified that He is the son of Mr.and Mrs. | died Monday. the hearing on said petition will be heid Harold | Springer, recording secretary, and | 5.6, 08 (et ot 155 Wattles Rd. | Surviving are three sons, artiste ALMONT — Mr. and Mrs. Ar. $t'ée Court House onthe Bath dag” of and Mead of Dearborn, Edward of | nold_ T. Schirmer, of Saginaw, September aD Tobe at nine o'clock , le PTSA Plans Rochester, two daughters, Mrs. |} have announced the Pngagement |e a en woe ee “vata Maurice Watson of Rochester, Mrs./of their daughter, Judith Arnold sacar fe sp a J South Armada Farm Bureau are | pound more at the North Pole than ed the group a William Hammond, chairman: |at the Equator The-earth spins | Potter of VFW sented an | Clayton Soncrainte, treasurer. | David Proctor, vice chairman, | faster at the Equator, and cen- | American Flag. Mrs. Charles Proctor, recording trifugal force weakens the pull of a nrc recently | ! Joint Sérvices ahead =e secretary, and Mrs. D. O. Pom- | gravity setuted— trom Wa = House Thursday Helen LeBlanc of Detroit, mine | fo John Sherman Bishop. ‘| It being impractical to make persona! | _ rey, insurance secretary. te eee D. C., where she nie the = leone bisa: pen AVON SHIP — The ion grandchildren, also two brothers, He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. shell be served by" publication ota” copy | Carlisle Mead of Travis City and Leon T. Bishop of Almont. A Feb- | {hs pontise Pres’ a nesssaper priate of Pitgrim Congregational and | dale PTSA will hold an open house the Pontise Press a newspaper ted | ~ |Thornville Community Churches | meeting for their first gathering Julian Mead, of Wyandotte, ore & | ruary wedding is planned. | "Wotmecs =o Ck Ale 5. baw Mameger Biomed |. - County Births sty suemissnstaceeeas . gave a tew | Moore. Judge of sald Court. in the City | HOLLY = Lynn F. Parker was| y; oni ‘Sins Almont oe ence, gave a highlights was held Sunday at Metamora. +s : Tl iend Park. - ‘cin’ ee yanrep " ane | Pontiac in said County, this 1Tth day | finnounced as the new branch! snnounced the birth of a daugnier | OO OW Next Sunday's service will be at] at the school. x’ Mattes following described real estate will be gigeeDiemoer AD 19st st Cheryi Lynn bern Sept 12 Guests of honor who spoke brief- N: 3% p.m. at the Thornville.Church| Following the business meeting, George received by the Board of Education. 4 true of Prova Manager of the secretary of state > = Clarkston Bchool oat Diseetas, a wow = office today by Sec of State Owen |_ Mr snd Mrs HT. Youngpeter nave [Ly were Mrs. Mary Todd. Amert- | the following Sunday a film | teachers and parents will have a| CASS CITY—Service for ieee ous eed ee a “= NE nog, AE Bremen. ja | ta | _ Restoureat. 339 8 Bagmew. | hee wal is saROING ‘ £ 4 aerabet. dear brother of represent large No trav SINGLE MAN ON FARM MUsT 4 "Sau. Mr. whe en. Box 10 | WOMAN FOR COOKING AND inomino -' NTED. 5210 SASHA- BaP ener 4 PLASTERING : and Gttelley Brick- Married. ambitious, pot a have experience with machiner w a wi — pak? Tie GALae Weil | nes housework weekends. $12: 1519. ee R e Pw will be held Thurs- ing | eee Wises | Geed home ood wages. 3 | EXPERIENCED ee aoa be oo agiF _OR 3-706 LABY DESTRES WORK BY DAY | FLOOR SANDING OLD FLOORS AD meyers EM 38830, PE $1808 | day 3 at Le pm éive wine | oN Rocheste- nd oe, eee ee ES acs, em Thuredays. instructions @| oe _voct_ PE Sere Cart Bilis.¢ PB 35700. - PLASTERING from Richardeon-Bird Fu- repties strielly <0 me PI na eieabous e phone ¢ j 3 F%. prema MIDDLEAGED WOMAN WANTS BANDING AND! re 4 cn - neral Home. Walled Late, Mich- zoeme _Cvece_Sea. 6 ae | — or oe over 16 yre |E XPERIENCE D WAITRESS " ae) on. to 8 pm) domestic by day or week. No 10 vears experience. 57 RT tui Pious igen. Interment ot Cnbingd Bulle | he vor Pin setrans MUST ¥ Im person Motor Inn Rec | wasted. apply im person. Martin, | 4 ‘ pm, | ACCORLIONS OA TO vious domestic references. Can | Modern equipment. Joho Taylor, “OBERT 8 CHAPIN ~ Memorial Cemetery. Ar- 18. Avoly at Dinte Teation, _fy board FE 5602 elll's Restaurant Birmingham 138 , vers Jewelry Shop | beginners also & ive im. Phone mornings FE +044. _and hes Phone Lakid rengements the Richa tson-. person < — a — | 8 Woodward Center von, Ot your tome. S Ws MACHINE Bird Funeral Walled Lake “CP eRMANET SALES POSITION sha OPERATOR AALARY | — —* : oll now for fall, _ GiMbOOUAPHING TYPING — GBC: 1ARAGES Santor y Leach | _ Michigan. as uh opportunity for advancement | Real Fs state Salesman sade sete. Call VE 26833 Recessaty but must be BEGINNERS FOR PIANO LES-|” citaria: service. EM 3-2842 14520, 9605 20x20 9750. POR | comer ERENCHING CONTNE ~ SEPTemenn 1084, | to ee ye interested in making money. tpine ent, éetall. Start: | sens .._ Betty MeCartney, FE 2300. | at ORDER COOK EXPEAT. ne eee ee Sl ceed hal Rovere Mort, 60 Cher? Ci. sa8 | Tarast Bernese Tram ove to] Pall tie an.v. Aogly 1 pe “EXPERIENCED. WHITE =— Me ree eee: wine | UNA PAINTING enced day shifter night FE) => | sewers instatled. beloved husband ' | gene October GENERAL BUILDING REPATE. “ aod, _F ~ Auguste Conine. dear breiher of | Senet then dont woning pe | meaty em OY 6 Vote frame Tone <3, Press, stating S€*.| ow Hoss Svudie free Ti IMMINO oe : Mre May Treebridge anf Allen | ret—Oe ft ee graph Rae | ELDERLY DY FOR hovUsE- ie references Krego Harbor , ve Conine. Puneral service will be ang retirement benefits Apply in| — Sp work Liv _ Fe eC ae L TIME. EX- | ORADUATE Pl A held Thursday September 2% at, “Onn relitemem cae w SALESMAN “DISTRIBUTOR | - perience ry Apply io per | jessons $i Mrs. Henry “Bochhuibiog & Taxes 14 gotten "Otarch aoe wed bos. Keapie Pupemnem To sell the teens Water | Fl T | TER = gg Dyte, Uptown | _06_Ghasy f - oe : > > ~ eagers a . Sunete egies" wade Automobile Salesman tral SMA Vrms cede. “| PERMANENT Post. SALESLADINS, TOYS CARDS. an a = ior tae COOUNTING & TAX SERVICE We immediately need 3 FOR _AN_EXPER- werpsines: allet, . os —Bdw._Hawley. PE 32-2003. oe Regs 3 — oi | perience mes and can offer be hal = rr excep FITTER SEW. 1 Woedward. Bir pas Register for fall classes ISA Voorhees -81 Funeral Home | } sag ee Pim gy apes UseED Ce : SACAMAN rans y - ae ef , hes ay Jr ea ecaeecs ee ~~ AnAnnana a until Thursday morning at which Demonstrators “ian and oth time be experienced 22) Ww MAPLE. dept. Full or part time. Expe- Work W DR A. A. KANTER, FOOT 7 ~ ge hed “Charen ter ta Ay ge hire a —A.. SMOTINMINGIAM. rience mugoeeney. Peasy's. \¢ N. ae one 3% §. Saginaw St. = . . et Mr WATCHMAKER | ad a Aas BEAUTY OPERA.| Saginaw St ; DECORA’ sons Le citar Motors Inc 012 8. Wood Experienced Tmanent com. | PK whe has soe dealing 7 WOMEN CINTERESTED In amr |“? ie ge i ed Dressmaking Tailoring-+6 — ae 3or4, _Bumaeaten. MI pial charge tm cotebliched Jewel | tn n gh tan class clientele Jor Birm.| ine photographic pian | able. PEt A Walled Lake Michigan, deloved | es eee | wR. imetuding 2 nights Myers) ingham =" Salen 20008 | ALL KINDs mm Ate baY WORK PGA 32-2996 RENINGS. ALTERATIONS “AND DRESSMAK- intent of Dr cad tare tem | A t bil qevetry Ghev, Tel Haren Smee | eo ceviCe WORK LIRMS /WalTRies WANTE NTeD. WUsT BE, FE sett Pte ee O, wa Bg oo: ' & REMODELING a. VE +e. 9908 Ons Diehl; dear sister o: Center = oe 7 experienced. A reo | : ; Wayne. Grant Dien! utomoble iWtp. TV servic® Maw. Peis Se. Se fl gy Sirester’+ Poods Se tee | = and alterations 191 E. Huron. a Marthe Dent e Le oie | Sali walt ame C ens ¥ TY type Write Pontiac Press, Box 6. 5 Looe Aves, — . } } #1 ~ ——s Reed Set ten ene }~— this morning at 1030 a m. from | esmen | ware FIRST CLASS COMBI. re fn Wondan Y eee ae TENOORAP TEN ¥ceisaye : Plowing _16A the hardson-Bird Funeral We need several more men | nation Bump and paint man Oni hoes Sine on: | hone Else Fah office Some x ey WE SAVE YOU MONEY | __ Garden Plowin Home, Walled Lake Michigan to owt our sales staff those interested in @ salary fob | grees, a nee ¢ Drefecred 702 EDMUNDS & SON with Rev, Wendall sloch ote | te sell Amertea’s No 1} car, apply. Bring your own tools ce Dave Press Bo x 100 avk Bide FE 41574 Reliable wd = pullder with ' Interment at Walled Experience pot necessary Bud Shelton at Jerome s Bright p=: FOR ORNERAL OFFICE WOMEN WANTED *OR TELE. | Lake tery. Walled Lake, Best pay plan Insuran | Orchar’ Lake and Cass| work State age eqgerteme phone survey work ¢ hours Mich. - ; and tom avail- | Pes esse R Pontiac erees, = 108 Say Bap-rience ccuterien Can SEPTEMBER 2) eed. | eble pls Gemonstreter Call | WHOLESALE BEALER- WANTED. GIRL OR WOMAN TO La cans your ewn home Ouaran- Ann. 2990 Highfield | oe Hee sales man- Man with deomtedoor selling ¢ for 1 year old girl se BE ns and commission. Re- —— - "Tarold es: | a. -perienee. The W. iT Rawieigh housework No leundry = ps Pontiae Press Bor 04 gear mother of Steven —— expantion program to-| ing, must live im Call after 17 PRESS. EXPERIENCED. Deremus; beloved ager « Cy Owens Inc.| § e ith rg ae at wholesale head-/| noon, EM 3-410 "iA" cae ~ for night work ARE-Y¥OU Migeeg, See or LIVING 1x IN “basement — - , EF t in City of Pontiac ft Orrite ‘ Grae ‘stetee of Mire Salty Mortes, 41 8 SAGINAW py hare apitity to direct sales Om. ig hag yg we) te oe ee bo gee ly dg wil igkoce gt tow ma Ae MIE Jane | Rioux. “aa | oD FULL AND PART | force I. Good opportunity “10° | woMtaN UNDER 30 FOR COOK VE | alistieg customers, PE 1000, gpl te agellganaag= Cle gmraret tome. Apety G8 Greherd Labe | erie ee Voi Oe. taterview. advancement M meteor! ing end. Gounsteire “Capente of FOR SALE, 2 STEEL OVERHEAD i” woed doors with hard ware o Church with Mer C steve Sh ROUGR | Prevpoet “r on ation . Wem baal ame fF ink by ee By © Waldo Runt stfietating” inter: | | gpply et-tene Crescent Lake Rd pp an ” wie Rerait GIRL FOR MOTHER'S HELPER. | schoo age children MI 7 maebiod i Prank. xs fo cooking, mut like ehildren ~ ’ LADY A tin Rea een § and 5 o'clock at Roselawn Park Ceme patht store. Kuowledge of_peint| Priste renm and bath cith TY | WHITE MIDDLEAGED te - by the Hun- | | CARBTARIR - COUPLE 70 TARE helpful but not hevessary Inqutre MI “Ys08s live im @ nice city — = —_— i3 | ] Ce., care for school age iil y WHix. serene ce gaat hain Wolled Lake Live on —— Rox cue on and Bs | Ofat tor te seat R WOMAN TO RELF CARE fights, reom and beard and > ~ w \ eiiakelakaieheiea ua aaah } Collect rent end 40 om repairs. _Ask tor Mr. Stephen’. old girl and light wages References Write Boa 2, — . * —- pon - a ier ght die ae ew LE pensonens “ one a cook- Pontiac Press | ae Mildred ~Wetx: Write Geos, eal Press, ‘Box Ber ite _ Help Wanted Female ? Pe =M_ ioe 8) were | LADY TO BABY sIT 1 OR dear beer brother rs Margaret Purdy. | te iia. ea . ‘to + =~ oF Gah | -2_daxva per week in excellent Bmme Price and Jonn Weis. Pu. DIE MAKERS WANTED APPA MATING — NEW Coton oLoW °: cc ten th Pe, Forking condition: Must be de- peral be held Wednesday qo ecg | Ave sear Saginaw | Christmas cards, sell like magic L ve = Aner pendabi¢ and abd!: te follow meth- ‘ 2nd at 1 pm irom the) [rer ~ 12 am and 2 req TREE Synvios Fas roe 70 | er’s imstructions o ‘the letter. . Home, 3141 -Sasha p.@ ai eres on Boxes! Big ne Profits to | Gini Fon GENERAL —wOUsE: | fer lady living on area clase to , x. Drayton Plaine = CLOTHING MAN | 100 per cent. plus BONUS GIFTS! | ermking Stay tr—tts+—sy Josep: Mospitel An exellent swith . Wright Van Piew } whe woult tke 2 wevaty | Arsortment« approval. $1.25) days off Nl ¢T?08 |. opportunity for the right ledy Interment at Ottews | job with one of ine’s oldest t PREP tor prom ptness ERE. | GIRL OR WwowAN TO WATCH 12 Write Pontier Press Boa No. 36 | Yer guaiteations’ age and mar: | Ghicag e Crmen DOPE ML peas, le boy. 6 Cut 3 Mme | WANTED. RARYSITTER 6 BAYS Ie 2 ital statax Reply Pontiac Presa. a ce a a . pe Near —— of Dodge a nnn nnn | Bon 106 woth) chbicen Gs be: HOUSEKEEPER WHITE. LIVE) Bees be-e cada LOVING MEMORY OF James EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN OR | st ie’ tare and general house igs — Bre Ree OS | - away | farm by month Cart Devel, 9060) werk tm small home Sleep in. ____ Help Wanted 8 Pcs ton Rea ewan tor TY. resem ved woman welcome Phone MI ¢5481 an hs = sons Pacts th pickets erence necessary FE oee7e = After 5 = Fe | HOUSEKEEPER WANTED FOR! 3 Re Non agin hecessary Apply BEAUTICIAN Mat OR ave | otherieas ho Must stay pights _Maling’s Shoes $0 N. Saginaw. | Specializing in hair styling Ex) > roa, OL S3508" YOU CAN SELL OVER ~ | Royal Oak erea OL .>1808 FILLING STATION A” ATTENDA Tienced only Ann Young ‘88 eee SES _— FLOWERS ns experienced | a Lg 2 Maple Birmingham. MI TaDy To > STAY wire 2 ont | PHONE 4 UCERSED TS. FAL WEYWAW® ter wee REACTION es _Saase id Fe Ann Arbor FE ie or part time. _plumber ee ea : = ————" | No experience necessa NEAT APPEARING — WA Selon. 1008 N ain, scocmsicneec we. MANAGER pe ry: gy ey tereiee i pie tte OE Es Must. bp. thoroughts pom We can show you how in } Exe R. SOOREEEPER | ne eye Ft gee ray 20 Saree reine pertenced a. . Sen. trim Windows make reperte and! minutes. Bae ti tee Press el gp a een | pro- + .190e 2 - - mnmager wea fer bagel | Telephone and